HomeMy WebLinkAbout2003-06-01 - Newport Mesa Daily PilotLight rail's
'future' to
be decided
in Irvine
City's resid ents will
decide Tuesday if
Centerline fits. If
not, project may only
connect Costa Mesa
and Santa Ana .
Deirdre Newman
Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA Irvine
residenlS could knock 1hcir rny
off the propo..,ed hght-rail track.\
when 1hcy go IO 1he vo1111g
booth on l\Jt•\day
The Centerl.1ne pn>Jl'l I call'>
for an 11 .4-mile hglu rnil '>y\lem
10 connect Santa Ana. Co<,ta
Mei.a and Irvine
Nexl week. lrv111c \ioler-. will
face two choice-. on 1he baJl01
Meao;ure A i'i for the hgh1 rail,
and Mea..,ure B I\ aga111M 11
If the projcc1 d1e\ m Irvine. 11
will be up IO the Orange County
Transportauon Authority hoard
10 decide how to proceed Other
Orange Counly dill''> have
exprc~cd inlt•rc ... t 111 1ump111g
aboard once 1he 111111al
lhree-cily rou1e 1 ... up and
running.
Costa Me..a Cou11c1lwoman
Ubby Cowan expn..,-,ed her
hope tha1 Irvine vo1cr'i take a
long-1erm view of the• pro1ec1
·1 certainly hope that the
Irvine re'i1dent!> look 10 1hc
future and understand 1he
imponance of th1!> lo tlw counly
transportation syi.1em, even
though ii may not tool
1mponant IO them today,"
Cowan ~d. "In the long run
m 20 10 30 year.. 11 will he an
in1egraJ part of our
lransportation sy..1em. •
Oppo'>1t1on 10 1he light rail in
Irvine Marted in lhe Woodhndgc
community. but that area of the
project was dele1ed from the
route and from 1he city's general
plan.
The Irvine Ci1y Council s1 1ll
approved the Woodbridge
residents' propo..al to put an
initiative on the baJJ01 wi1hou1
any petition~. said Jeri Stately.
lrvine's city clerk. The <.11y
Council also puts ll'i own
initiative on the baJJol for the
projecL
1Wo coaliti on!> have formed In
the light rail project. The
nonhern coalition involv~ La
Habra and Fullerton The
western coalition includec;
Garden Grove and Huntington
Beach.
The original 28-mile route
was supposed to start in
Fullerton. The light ralJ project
was tabled in 2001 because of
INSIDE
nEPLOT
LFE&
lflSURE
Two Corona del Mar High
seniors share their love of
theater by teeching
younger dasamates In the
lchool ~oduction of •Alice
In Wondertand."
S..hgeAI
co.ENTS&
CURIOSITES
P.-Buffa'1
cotumn witl
rwcum n.t
wiek.
SUNDAY EDITION
Serving the Newport-Mesa community since 1907
JUNE 1, 2003
SUNDAY STORY
Fancies
PHOTOS BY SEAN HILLER I DAILY PILOT
Above, Jake Wirtz, 11, a Talbert Middle School student launches a glider wrth the assistance of Harbor Soaring Society member Fred Hesse at f a1rview Park.
Top, Ron DePinto, who flew P-51 Mustangs as an Ajr force pilot during World War 11, now earns his wings by flying model planes like the de Havilland Tiger Moth.
Glider fliers take to Fairview Park in Costa
Mesa to share stories about their
hobby and to watch their planes soar
Deirdre Newman
E very morning. gJiders grace the air
above the coastal plants of Fairview
Pat\. As the clouds drift by aimlessly.
they provide a picturesque backdrop
for planes of various colors and sizes.
Members of the Harbor Soaring Society have
been launching gliders at the Costa Mesa parlc
since 1972. Currently, there are about 100
members.
While the reasons for gettlng attached'to the
hobby are as varied as the planes themselves, a
common thread is the tranquil appeal of the
h .
"The nice thing about electnc planes an
gliders -it's a nice. relaxing. peaceful thing 10
do: said Troy Peterson, 27, who flies in the
morning and al sunset
Society members are Oying high these days
after the City Council agreed in December to
allow them to continue using Fairview Park and
set aside a specific portion for them near
f.slancia High School.
See FUGHT, Paa• M
TOP STORY
The Harbor
Soaring Society
displays a
frequency
control board
at f a1rview Park
to keep people
and aircrafts
safe from
confuSIOO
and any
accidents
Fish Fry returns to delight of locals
SPORTS
The Pilot Cup heetl up In
SetUrdeV'• querterfinell to
decide who wttl pley in the
eocicer tournament'• final
round \OCMY 8l the Costa
MeM Ferm Complex. ... ,....,
Aft~r a two-year absence, the once annuaJ
event makes a glorious return, bringing
joy to organizers and patrons alike.
DHpalhareth
OaelyPtlot
The puffy, whice clouds in Che
blue aky matched the plnk ooc-
ton candy ln blp below, and
1ummer ameUed a Joe like fried
Osh at Uons Park S.twday
afternoon. .
The fllh Fry, a 57·yMr-Oki
Co8ta Mela tt9dldon lhet Wu
~ta icdon for two )'Mr1.
rDllde "' triwnphent retUm SatUrday.
1ben -• .ma Crowd ol coinmunkJ ........,. In lbe
al\emoon Ind people win d
trickling In. Kids settamed ln
glee as they headed atr&Aght for
the rld Their ~nll gravi·
tated coward the tall that
served the delicioua batter·fried
Icelandic cod -ol:MoUsly the
main attrac:tJon at che cam1vaL
Long-time Cotta Mesa ...
dents were the ftnt to hit the
grounds.
·Oh. 1-w mMaed lt; 1a1et
w.nda Baae. •tt'a a .mll·town
dalr and tt'I futt die wide am·
b6ela thet'a ao mlqUa."
For nm s.ndlfef. tn lhe
... fllY ...... M
Al SuOday, Jtns I, 2003
.
NEWPORT BEACH
City Council questions
councilman's comments
City Councilman Dick Nichols caught
ftack (or comments at a recent Planning
Commission meeting and he could
even end up getting ceMured. Tue
councilman had told commissioners
that one of their decisions seemed so
wrong that it looked lilce someone
might have accepted a bribe.
Environmentalists and proponents of
a senior housing project faced off this
week in a battle over Bayview Landing.
The Coastal Commission will decide on
June 11 whether wetlands plants at the
site should spell doom for 150 unJts of
senior affordable housing.
Old Corona del Mar residents were
pleased to team that they remain in one
council district. Newport Coast and
Newport Ridge however, will be split up
between districts 6 and 7.
A $30-million state-of-the-ar1 City
Kall complex could be on the distant
hori7.on, but it will have to clear a lot of
hurdles first Council members will
consider at their first meeting in June
whether to hire a consultant to draw up
schematic designs of a possible new
building.
• JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport
Beach and John Wayne Airport. She may
be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at
june.casagrande@lstimes.com.
EDUCATION
School board adopts
behavior policy for adults
The Newport-Mesa Unified School
District Board of Trustees approved a
new board policy on civility. The policy,
created by a task force of principals,
parents and district administrators,
defines appropriate and civil behavior
on the par1 of parents, employees and
spectators while at school or district
events and Lays out consequences and
procedures for those who display
unlawful or uncivil behavior.
Only the second conductor to lead
the Orange Coast College Symphony
Orchestra in its 42-year history, AJan
Remington, who began teaching at the
college in 1977 and took over as
conductor or its 6()-piece symphony
orchestra in the mid-I 980s, will retire
next month. Remington has taught
courses ranging from fundamentals of
music to orchestra. and has acted as
musical director for two or OCCs
summer shows, "Pacific Overtures" and
"South Pacific.·
On Wednesday afternoon, fourth-
and fifth -grade srudents at California
Elementary School in Costa Mesa
participated in their final
Neighborhood Conservatory acting
class of the year. The students
showcased the acting slcills they had
acquired from the after school class,
funded by the South Coast Repertory,
for their parent!> with a performance
thal included all of the exercises they
had learned.
After 18 years, Sister Joanne Oare
Gallagher will retire as principal of Our
Lady Queen or Angels School in
Newport Beach at the end of the year.
Looking ahead toward future endeavors
in parish work. Gallagher will leave
behind a 50-year career in education.
Former Co-Principal Eileen Ryan, will
take over as principaJ of the school for
the upcoming year.
and may be reached at (9491574-4268 or by
e-mail at chnstine.canillo@lstimes.com.
COSTA MESA
Commission approves new
design guidelines
Hannony is out. but compatibility is
stlll in the revised zonJng code and
residential design guidelines for home
~EKINREVIE
PHOTO OF THE WEEK
'HANG/N' OUT IN THE SHADOWS'
Silhouettes are a trick of the trade. No matter what the
subject is, a silhouette always catch~ the eye. Daily Pilot
photographer Kenl Treptow found a nice opportunity 10 use
this technique in this week's photo.
KENT TREPTOW I DM..Y PILOT
busy subject environments, lilce Kent's peach shot Just a shot
of the people on the beach would be a scattered and busy
pictUre. But. by underexposing the subject, the climber really
pops out and the people on the beach become another layer
in the photograph. Silhouettes are useful in siruations when the subject can't
be identified for whatever reason or when a story calls for a
generic type shot that doesn't want to single out one person.
They also can be used to help the photographer clean up
Whatever the reason the silhouette IS always visually
pleasing. RegardJess of the subject matter they always make
pretty pictures.
BUSINESS
Swedish retailer IKEA
opens shop in Costa Mesa
America's favorite Sweden's
furnishings retailer is now calling
Costa Mesa home.
IKFA Orange County Costa Mesa
opened Wednesday with much
ballyhoo, which included an
appearance by celebrity Joan Rivers,
25 couples renewing their wedding
vows, a traditional Swedish
log-sawing ceremony, live music
and, of course, shopping.
The store, which relocated from
Tustin to its high-profile location off
the San Diego Freeway, is 308,000
square feet and boats some 9,000
products.
Swarms of shoppers descended
onto the store Wednesday morning.
Dave Burnell of Costa Mesa was the
first customer.
Homeowners received good news,
on Tuesday, when a regional real
estate trade group announced that
the mid-level Orange County home
expansions. The Planning Commis.c;ion
approved the changes Tuesday after a
few months of review. The changes wiU
now go to the City Council.
covers osta esa
and may be reached at (949) 574-4221 or by
e-mail at deirdre.newman@/at1mes.com.
PUBLIC SAFETY
Former pastor pleads not
guilty to molestation
A former Costa Mesa pastor on
Tuesday pleaded not guilty to molesting
DON LEACH I DAILY Pl.OT
A basket of fluorescent lightbulbs grab the attention of a child and his
mom as they shop in the new IKEA store in Costa Mesa on Wednesday.
had reached $448,41 O in April, a
whopping 20.6% increase from the
prior year.
Low interest rates, sparse housing
stock and desirable locations helped
drive Costa Mesa and Newport
a local teenager 25 years ago.
The Orange County district attorney
last month charged Denis Lyons, 68,
with one count of performing a lewd
act with a child and four counts of oral
cop uon. esa po ce arrestoo
Lyons on April 25 in his Seal Beach
home.
Lyons spent all of his years as a priest
in Los Angeles and Orange counties,
but remained the longest time in St
John the Baptist Catholic Church on
Baker Street -between October 1978
and January 1996.
Prosecutors say the victim was
about 13 years old in 1979 when the
alleged crimes happened. CathoUc
Beach home values higher, as well
• PAUL CLINTON covers the
environment, business and politics. He
may be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by
e-mail at psul.clinton@lstimes.com.
Oiurch officials said Lyons had
admitled to •improper behavior" with
adults In the past, but never with
children or young adults. Lyons had
made that admission in 1979 when he
was a pastor at e s a esa c
He was evaluated at the time and
determined to be .. not at risk.· officials
said.
Lyons is free on a $100,000 bail. A
pretrial hearing is scheduled for June
24.
• ~ BHARAlli covers public aafety and
courts. She may be reached at (949)
674-4226 or by e-mail at
deepa.bharath@larlmn.com.
NOTABLE
QUO TABLES
"{This] is the only
communltywide activity
that we had and we'll
soon ha11e. It's like a
reunion. There are many
,.,ple who don't see each
othBr at all. except at tlie
Fish Fry."
-Clu.tck C..Jty. the
master of ceremonies for
this weekend's Fish Fry,
on the event,s worth
"111is is something I'm
really tom on."
-Don Webb,
Newport Beach
councilman, on how the
city should replace its
City Hall
"111 is tournament
introduces soccer to a lot
of kids ... and the kids
get to play with their
school chums, so it has a
little different atmosphere
[for a tournament/
bealuse they're playing
for their school."
-Klft Mclnto.h, the
o rganizer of the Daily
Pilot Cup soccer
tournament, on what the
event does for the
cornmuniry
·rve lived here 23 years
and thought, '/low cool
would it be co be the first
guy in line.' I can always
drive by and say I was the
first guy through that
door."
-Dave BurneU, a
Costa Mesa resident, on
why he waited in Line so
long to be the first
customer at the city's
new IKEA
"It's been a real struggle
bealwe I think there's a
tension in the city
between those who want
to have community
identities, neighborhood
identities versui those
that want to have son of
a laissez-faire approach
We took direction from
tlu City Council to make
the process mere efficient.
I just hope it doesn't tum
into having less th.an
exallent proftt:t.s."
-ICatrlna Foley,
Costa Mesa planning
commissioner, on the
cornmi$sion's decision to
change home design
guidelines so that they
drop the harmony factor
and keep the
compatibility factor
DailyAPilot
ContlWlhon Box 1560, Co.ta Mesa, CA 92626. SURF AND SUN Newa auiltant, 19491 674-4298 Copyright No news stories,
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Expect fog tNs morning to • northwest swell of 6 to 8 feet
VOL 97, NO. 152 READERS HOTUNE HOW TO REACH US bum off earty In most p&eces 8nd IOUth awell of 3 feel
TltOMAS H. JOttN80N New.Editors (949)6'l2~ Cftuletion end linger In some c:oestal
Publisher Gina Alexander, Lori Ander90n, Record your comments about the The Times Orange County ...... through the afternoon, SURF TONYDOOERO Oeniel Hunt. PINI Saftowitt. O.lly Pilot or newe tis-(8001252·9141 with otMMtM moldv aunnv Edkcw Oetliel SCIMH1t ~ Ad¥erdliltg with hlgha from the mid-70a to look for aUght lnctMte In JUl1f Ol i 'lllO Our edd,_ It 330 W. Bay St., Coste Q111wi.d (949) 642-5678 ~.a.:~ ,...saw
MeN, CA 92627. Of'flce houra .,. Dllpley (949) 842~1 • the low IOI. However, the IOUthwMt energy today wtth • cm.'='9~. Mondey-~v. 8:30 a.m. -5 p.m. EdttorW bNchee lhould be. mud\ .. ltMdy flow of cNlt· to Promotionl Dlf9CtO( (M)P Ccwrr.S~• N9w9 10 deg,._ cooler with M ~rengtMtl. dNf».,,,__,, elllfimee.com h It the Pilot'I policy to promptly (1Mt)842-6880 off-ehc>N tw-. Monday Will b9dt down to
EDITINOITAff ~~. correct all enora of eubltance. ...... (949) 674-4223 Overnight. loot for the fog to waist-to m.t-h~ ~
&.J. c.hft PIMM call (949) ~ N9w9 Fex (9'9) ~110 roll b9dt In wfth ~ Tueedey't no beaer. M~. (949)574-4232 ...... ,... {949) fl60.-0170 tempentuf'el dipping to 66. The next IWllt iln't due for m ~ cJ.1typ11ote111tJ,,,...oom , .... /llM.~M<»•lllfJmN.com The NewPott ~ Meee ... a.. Mondfy. mote of the..,,.. •nodw~ •J.o.htl• ~com ,...Clnloft .......... .: w.w...-v: ........... Dally Piiot (USPS-1.....aoC>) II ......... Olllee (948) 842-4321
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no1thn 1 "''!t-. wll blow a..,_
Dally Pilot Sunday, June l. 2003 A3
LOOKING BACK
Newport's early shipping hero
FOR THE
RECORD
In a Thursday arude
r No deasion on new C.ny
Hall"), the amount of rev-
enue expected from the
complex's parlcing '>true
ture was incorrect. Ille
'>tructure would bring in
about $300,000 a year by
renting out the I 00 parking
spaces over and above the
350 spaces needed for city
visitors. People conduwng
business at City I laJ I would
continue to park there for
free.
Lolita Harper Daitt Piiot
H e bu been called a
protector of the city's
beauty. A folk hero. A
legend.
He waa Thomas Rule and
hJa tale bu left Its mark In
Newport Beach's history.
Rule WU the 11gbt band
man of Robert McFadden
and kept the boob and
handled the cargo.
according to excerpts from
"Newport .Beach. The Plrst
C-entury."
Newport Beach's poet
lawate T. Duncan Stewart
memoriallzed the legendary
Rule in a poem, ftttlngty
dtJed, "The Legend of
lhomu Rule."
in the second stanza.
Stewart describes Rule u "a
hero from the Civil War. a
Ouisdan man. devout and
fair. for strength few men
could reach hJs par, f cw
weights were more than he
could bear."
Rule wu immortali1.ed for
his courage, as be embodJed
that trait to his death. In
!act, he died While bravely
risking the haz.ardous bay
channel ln preparation or
the ship. the Newport. .
The Newport would come
into the harbor faithfully
every two weeks, crossmg
the sand bar only at Wgh
tide, Ellen K. Lee wrote in
the first chapter of" Newport
Beach, The Fl.rat Century."
When the boat was teeming
wlth supplies. lighters or
barges were floated out to
wlload the boat when it was
too heavy to enter the bay.
On July 26, 1887, Rule
drowned while marldng the
bay channel for the next
arrival of the Newport. ll has
been often said that the
tragjc drowning of Rule was
the last straw In convincing
the McFadden brothers to
move their shipping wharf
from the loner shores of the
bay to the oceanfront
And so, the construction .
Cool Calypso Wee
at
Tommy Baham
Tropica I Cafe
Open Sat & Sun at 10:00 a.m.
Live leland Muelc
8ulfd Your Own Bloody Mary 6ar
5peofal 5reakfa&t addttion& to Lunch Menu
&54 Avocado Avenue
Newport 8nc;h, CA
For Reeervat.tone -(949) 760-8686
ol the famous McFadden
Wharf began. complete with
a railway lnland to Santa
Ana. end the city's rich
enterprise took off.
"Rule was known for his
courage, his fea ts, his
strength. his love of cider
and his genial nature," Lee
wrote.
Webster's New World
Dictionary defines a legend
as, "a notable person whose
deeds or exploits are much
talked about In his or her
own time." Looking back at
Rule, It seems the stalwart
reaches the benchmark in
Newport Beach.
• LOOKING BACK runt
Sundays. Do you know of a
person, place or event that
deserves 1 historical Look
Bede? Let us know. Contact
James Meier by fax at (9491
646-4170; e-mail at
1ames.meier@latimes.com; or
mail him at c/o Daily Pilot, 330
W. Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA
92627.
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-ORANGE COUNTY
If ~ PERFORMING ARTS.C ENTFR
\l(.IR5TRO~ HALL
1
(71.11)7550236 GltOUPSAJ.ES 1(7)4)740-7878
f71'1 556 :1787 INF0 1tMAfl0N --
(71') 556 27•6 nv . OCP.-.C OI G ao • OHICE IOA.M 6PM
BUTERA N EWPORT B EACH FIRST ANNUAL TENT SALE
3 0 -700/o OFF SELE C TED I TEM\ • J UNE 3 -7
1745 WL H(Ll fl DRI V E. NF Wl'OR I B lA(ll. CAtlfORNI\ 92660
Mll llNt. ROAD BY B AKER . H ENRlD ON A C QJJl~lllON \. R AIPll L AUR~N H O Ml
THREE
POTENTIAL
TRAPS IN
HYBRID WANS
By Daw ~nt
One.-uf the mos1 popul.ir h11ml"
lo~ progr.1nu in rcct~nt yl".irs h;a.\
httn the.-"hybrid loan." a mung.tgl"
th:u Uuts OUI "' .l Ute lo ... l"r th.lll
Th;ir on -;i cnmp:1rabk. rn!Tt'Ttt
fixed-rate 1().l_n .ind ''"Yl 1hc1c for .l
few ynn. ;ind 1hl",n 1hl" lo.1n
con~ns into .in .ldfU\Ublc Ull"
mongagc.-, usually .wi1u•11ng to 1hl"
o~·~ar Trl".isury sl"tu111y ()ntc
each year. h 's a wonderful lo;in
program and has u vcd tbouunds
and thowmds of borrowers a good
dal of money-bu1 there are thrtt
thjngs to warch our for
·~a~ acrually rwo loam
combined into one, wnh an
au1omuic rollover from rhc shon
~rm fucd-me loan m10 the
longcr-tcnn adjustable Look into
the fine pnnt. though, to ltt 1f
rh~ are any conditH>M on ~ing
able co gct that longc.-r·mm
adjustable loan au111mwcally-l1kc
being disqualified 1f you mili bte
~ems in rhe fim year of the
•Though the ARM that you roll
int0 afm the miual ~nod With the
low fucd rue lw caps on how high
n can go. tlM:rc art urually no a,,.
on how lugh 11 an go 1n the onc-
rime change from fiud-ra~ to
ARM. In 0tbu words. you could
haYe a s.75,. mr for Ii~ ,an and
Ihm, if the initial rate on a 1-yai
ARM is then 9.S,., that's wile~
your new loan could mn..
•Look cbdy at the ARM you will
end up wim. h may haw a hl&hcr
margin than do comparable AAMJ.
raulring in a hiabtt lnruat rate
fur the rut of the life of the loan.
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PHOTOS BY SEAN HILLER /DAILY PILOT
Blair Hamilton, middle, of Irvine and a Harbor Soaring Society member shares a laugh with Ralph
Morns, left , of Costa Mesa who's al so a member, and Don Hadden of Canada at Fairview Park.
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GIVE YOUR DAD
THE TIME OF DAY,
FATHER'S DAY IS SUNDAY, JUNE 1 5 TH.
ISN'T IT TIME
TO REMEMBER DAO?
i'
RO LEX
BLACKMAN LTD. ; m :~ JEWBLERS
FLIGHT
Continued from Al
LOVE FOR GLIDING
Karl Hawley, 59, has been Dying
gliders for nine years. I lis interest
evolved from the simple, but
often ovcrlook1..'CI pleasure of
looking up at the sky.
When he went to visit a
nephew who wortced in a hobby
{
, \tore, I lawlc.'Y spontaneously
picked up a gljder and decided to
!.'heck out rairview Park.
• lllCre wru., gce-1~ a whole tield
of JU'>t glider people." I lawley
..aid. "lhere were 50 people out
tlll're "
1-rorn ince~t and expenence.
he ha'> btoeornc one of the
hceru.('(i duh trniners.
' "If people wall by. I a.Jc them. 1 ·1~ you want to learn how to
I fly?"' I lawley c;rud. ~1 have a
buddy box -a cable that hooks
up to my radio."
hir Hon DcPinto, 72, an in1eres1
in ghtlcr.. was a natural
pmbtn..,sum from flying real
airplam'!> after he lo'>I 'iight in hi.\
right eye. l>cJlinto flew P-St
Mu~tang fightr:r.. puring World
War II. I le ha'> t.'igh1 planes
V-d!)'ing from one motor to four,
including a -.mailer l>Ca.le versio11
of a de I laVllland I JI I 82 l"iger
Mot11. wlut h he flew in England
m the late ·40-, a'> a uamer for the
Royal Air Rm:e. I le abo enjoys the
bonding among ht.'> fellow glider... · It.., ll.'laxmg for me," De Pinto
~d *It'!> a great '"JY to '>tart the
day and lenioy thef camaraderie
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949-642-4645
Ross Thomas of Santa Ana, left, and Don Ramsay of Newport
Beach look on as an electric plane gains altitude at Fairview Park.
of the other 12 to 14 people out
here."
And 1 lerb Hamber, 45, got
hooked on the spon by accident
He wanted to get his
14-year-old son offhil. video
game console and out into the
fresh air. so he got some glider..
for them.
After the fin.I day of Oying. hi.'>
son was not enthUSC;.-d.
YI le said. 'Dad, you '>pend thret.'
minutes flying and then a week
repairing it You don't know how
to Hy. You crdSh it. It may be a
good spon for you.'" Hamber
!.aid.
So Hamber'l> son went back to
his video games and Hamber
forged ahead with his gliders.
·1 thinJc it's fun." Bamber srud.
"You spend ume outside in a
pad. a ruce environment, with
good people."
TME ART OF FLYING
TWo kinds of gliders are
acceptable to Oy at Fairview P'.rl
-electric and sailplane glide,.....
1 lawley is partial to the
sailplane gliders. The.c ~ more
of a challenge since they require
more control, he said.
~The electric lglidersl just go
up, punch a hole in the sky and
do some aerobatics." I lawley said.
"It's boring."
Society members use a winch
that the society owns to law1ch
their motor1es.5 gliden.. lbe winch
is made up of two 12·volt
batteries running to a 12-volt Ford
staner motor with a spool
attached. 1he cord runs out 750
feet to a turnaround. then snakes
bad and hooks on the bottom of
the plane. like a kite. A foot pedal
activates the winch.
To launch. 1 lawley put his left
ann baclc. shouted the word
·launching." put his foot on the
pedal and let his glider Oy. It
quickly catapulted about 300 feet
into the air. He kept control of it
with a radio transmitter.
Sailplane glider operators are
comtantly on the lookout for
thermals -bursts of warm air
that provide lift to airborne
objects -even when they're not
Oytng their gliders.
Don Ramsay recounted the
story of when he and another
glider operator were sitting in
lawn chairs with their planes on
the ground. All of a sudden, a
pbstic bag that had been lying on
the ground tarted Ooating
upward
"We immediately launc:hed our
planes and followed the bag
around.'" Ramsay said.
Peterson is partial to electt1c
gUders.
'"J like electric because they're
quiet. convenient. a dean way to
8y. IOrt of a
friendly-neighborhood thing,"
Peterson said.
On a recent weekend. Peterson
was 8ying one of his elect.rlc
gliden. woUing on aerobatics
"It'• otMo\Jsly ~but
fun to sh.ow off and sometimes
people eg you on," ~n
iiak! "And the peanut pDery of
the other pilots who'll teO you
when you dkln~ do something ao
smoodl."
When Peterson was Dying his
glider on a Saturday afternoon, a
family on their way to a Mayfair
celebration at the school next
door was entranced by the plane.
As Peterson'1> glider rested on
the gras.s. 2V·-year-old Kaveh
Moaddeli kept aslcing him when
he wru. going to rum ic on.
After wc:Uting for some
pedestrians to pa.~s. Peterson
obliged and turned his plane on.
As the propeller whirred into
mooon, a startled Kaveh jumped
into hi.'i mother's arms. He
watcht.-d excitedly as Peten.on
executed loops and t~ with his
glider. Soon. he and his sister
were sitting in their mother''>
ann.o;. wau:hmg the red plane
streak across the doudy sky.
·I had a hard time getting him
in Ito the Mayfair)." mom
Kathleen said of her son. • 1 would
have had a much easier time if he
had 'itayed out here. nu ... i.!> a
beautiful plane.·
While many of the society
member,, try to help out
newcomer;, their help I!> not
alwa)"i appreoated.
·My favorite story ... Ramsay
said. "Someone came out with a
slow plane, never M.-en him
before. Oub members tried to be
helpful I le puffed himself up and
said. Tm a lWA pilot. I know how
to Oy.' Ten minutes later. he came
baclc. his plane in pieces and we
never saw him a~."
RELATIONSHIPS
Many of the more experienced
IUer.. take newcomer.. under their
win~ As one of the senior
members of the society at the
time, Ramsay helped train
I lawley, who is now the presidenL
Ramsay suffered kldney
problems and after Oying for
~ years, his health problems
kept him away from the ho~ he
loved for a decade. Recently, he
returned to the part and now
I fawley heJps him with flying.
*Karls come a long way. I can't
tell him what to do," Ram.'><ly
joked.
Peterson's mentor Oew
competitively and encouraged
him to test his mettJe by trying
out fbr one of the U.S. teams. He
rues an F-50 electric glider in
pylon racing. He got onto a
national team in 1995 and a year
later landed in Pr.igue to
compete. I Us team won third
place.
"It was amazing,· Peterson
said "It was one of the most
incredible experiences. I got to
travel aD over the world with what
started out as an innocent
~-
Peterson's Involvement with the
society has also provided a few
jobs. most recently with
MacGregor Yachts. After seeing
Petenon make a presentation to
the Oty Council to urge
continued use or the park. Roger
MacGregor oft'ered Peterson a job
...,.~
'"It~ grea.t. •Peterson said '"l'm
guessing lit'• because) you have a
common lnterat and you can aee
how people wo.t. and their wodc
ethic and how they lnleraet with
the other peop6e around and their
acoomptilhments..
• DelLM P.wWMtM COWl'9 eo..
M.-endm9Ybe~ llt(M8)
PM221 (J(br~.
dlift1nl.MMmllltl•~
Daily Pilot
PUBLIC
SAFETY
Barbecue, water
heater spark fire
A Newport Beach
man neaped without
injuries Saturday an.om·
Ing after the propane
tank of his barbecue
grill caught on fire lo his
apartment's balcony,
fire officials aa.ld.
Flreftghtera re·
spooded to the one·
alarm fire at 10:50 a.m.
after the Newport Beach
police helicopter con·
firmed that there was a
fire ln the balcony of the
apartment unJt lo the
2500 block of Baypointe
Drive, saJd Donna Bos·
ton. spokeswoman for
the Newport Beach Fire
Department
She saJd a spark Crom
a water heater in the
balcony hit the propane
tank causing the flre.
"The person had
stepped in at the time
and ls very lucky he
was n't near the tank
when it Ignited," Boston
said.
A fire sprinkler in the
balcony also sprayed
water helping firefight·
ers put out the fire
sooner, he said The
fire was ln control
within 20 minutes Bos·
ton said .
There was •minimaJ"
damage to the balcony
and the fire did not
spread to nearby units,
she said.
POLICE FILES
COSTA MESA
• wen Beller Street: A
vehicle burglary waa
reported In the 600 blodt
at 6:41 p.m. Thursday.
•wen Bay Street:
Annoying phone cells
were reported In the 300
blodt at 6:12 p.m.
Thursday.
• Bf'lstol Street: Grand
theft waa reported In the
3300 blodt at 3:18 p.m.
Thursday.
• fllifview Road:
Ponetslon of marijuana
waa reported In the 2600
btodt at 4:06 p.m.
Thu~ay.
• Fordham Ortw: A
home burglary WH
reported In the 2300
blodt at 2:45 p.m.
Thursday.
• Park Center Dnw: A
vehicle burglary waa
reported In the 3200
blodt at 6:47 p.m.
Thursday.
• Placentia Avenue:
Grand theft waa
reported In the 2200
blodt at 7:49 p.m.
Thursday.
• V.luco lane: An auto
theft was reported In the
2800 blodt at 2:59 p.m.
Thursday.
NEWPORT BEACH
• Corella: A vehlde
burglary waa reported In
the 1100 blodt at 11:31
a.m. Friday.
• JamborM and S.n
Joequin Hfftt roedt: A
traffic accident Involving
injuriea waa reported at
11 :07 a.m. Friday.
• Mein Street An auto
theft waa reported In the
400 blodt at 7:37 p.m .
Thursday.
• MecAlthur Bou .....
end S-Mtguel o.tv.: A
hlt ... nckun WM f9PO'ted
at 10:28 p.m. Thursday.
•Onp~A
hit-and-run waa reported
In the 100 bloc* It 3;12
p.m. Thuraday.
• s.n INno: A Y9hlcM
burge.,y WM reponed In
the 1800 bbt It•:•
1.m. Frtdlly.
..... "'9111: Art IUtO
theft w r9lpOftld m 1he
300 btodc "t:o3 1.m.
Fttdly.
PllllCI IMTllal
IEU.lllGIDWAY
Mortutity•~
~
110 ero.dwmy. Costa MM"a
842-9180
Daily Pilot
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'They bring a sort of innocem:e t1ml goodne.\.\ ro rh£1t1ter.
They r/011 't have a lot of the dramt1 that com£'.\' alo111< with k ids my "~'··
Stephanie Hutchison, 16, on teaching her young classmates the art of acting
Love of the theater
Two Corona del Mar
High students enjoy
sharing their passion
for drama with
younger classmates.
Lolita Harper
Daily Pilot
M an Partu. know-. how
important uw an., are in
a young per~on\
l'<luL-ation.
While mo'it teenager..
her age are al the mall or the l1tv<1ch,
Parks has taken her tune to ht'lp up and
coming actor. by d1rectmg ..ew111h and
eighth grndt• pupil~ 111 their ~huol\
annual perfonnance, "Ahte 1n
Wo nderland,"
Iler goaJ: to make t.Jm a mt'mornblc
and en1oyable part of thetr hve<>.
The Mad I faller. the U1e..l11re lat and
Alice make thei r debut at C.omn.i del
Mar 11.igh <;chool. under thc dirt'(. tum of
the -.enior drama ~tudenl. nw
17-year-oltl. who ha!> bet.'n uwolw d 111
theater at Ult' c;chool for 'iix yt'a1', hJ'>
laken on thl' la.'>k of '>haring ht•r low for
the theater wilh her lower da..,,.,rna11
The theater mentor progr<1m ha' a
four-year hil>tory at the high -.chool.
Older '>tudent~ are required 10 work
with the younger '>IUdents to cuhivate
thetr experience in VIMlal Jrl'>. wh ile
honing Ll1eir own 'ikill ....
~tephanie I lutdmon. who agn>t:d to
help P-.d'i choreograph the pro<luruon,
'Ml.id working wtlh younger '>IUdcrw, ..,
"refn..~11n14. •
• l11t.'y hnng a '>Ort of annott:n< ('.ind
goodne....'> to uwatt'r. · the I b }'ear old
-.aid. • they don'I h.tvt: a lot of the drJJlla
that rnm~ Jlong with lld'i my Jge •
Alon~ with the mnoccnn'. lOllll"t t.J1e
Senior Man Parks is dtrectmg "Alice in Wonderland" at Corona del Mar High with a :ast of seventh aricJ F-1~1 n ~ · rjr•r
111hercn1 challl'11g1·.., of workmg with 28
children l".irb and I lutthiMJn mu't
work IO gl'I tht· group to li,ten allcl
umpt·ratl' hut Llwv Me "a great bunch
of lrn.h "
I lut< h111-.on. v. ho-.e '>Jlt'llalt\ 1-.
hip hop t hon::o~aph\ ..aid licr role in
llw pl.1~ ha.' J!Jow'l.'J ht:'r tu rt:'V1'11 lwr
early tra1rung in the r1a .. c;1r dt1J1ll..,.
"I li p hop 1 ... 1.lt:'nwd lrm11 O.ill1·1 .111J
ld/.J' -we do a lot ol fil/.J' 111 1111-. pla}.
'ht• '>did · ll1i.., h.L., rl'allv ctllmH-<l mt• lo
go b,1d, lo Ill}' mol'> ··
Wlwn 1 llll< hi-.on hl'.ml thl' ht'dl' fur
mu ... cal nun1ht-r\ "PJinung the Ro't"'
lkJ" .i11J till' wa pJny 'n·m· ddn< 1·
1111JVt'' poppt•d mto ht•1 lw;1d \lw
'' rl·.111wd lllgt·thl'r hl'r lll'tltrH tu.ti
thon·11graphv. with 11tllt'r mon Ulllught
Olli lllOVt''t, lo l rl'dlt• .1 '\ lll'!'gt'lll
nu111ht•1
Hd1t•.1r....U' n111 tltr1·c lu1111'. Jun11g
\\l11l h P;irl.,, l1·.1d ... 1111 1,,,, rtlld I fl'\\
through tlwu -.p.·ufii r11h•, l'rup'
ll"tunw .... hlod .. mg. ""~"!-: .md
tl.111n11g lllll't t1ll t1>1111 · 111g1•1lw1 111 •1111·
NO PLACE LIKE HOME
111.t-.ll'fpll'l I \\llh i',1 1~-. 111111~' II 1
... 11111 ...
.. \l\l'l)ol'l•tl flt1l1lttr •I '•Id
f'.trf..'t pl.Uh 111 11lllllH l1 , II
11·.tl .1l l't'Pllt'ldl111 lla11.1 I
.rntl \\lll ht· m.qur 111~· r It• •' •
d1n'1. 1111g
•LOLITA HARPEfl
M rtJ "~ .,\ 1t •
Make a commitment to color
D o you have !rouble malting a
color commitmen1?
Du you love 1he look of a red
dining room, but you're afmld IU try ii
yourself? I'm going to give you a push
in the pigment direction -help you
ma.Ice a comm11mcn1 and give you
sollle colorful l>Uggesdon-.
If you're nervous abou1 pa.roting the
living room a deep brown, you i.houJd
'>tart with something smaller. The
powder room or a child' bathroom ,., a
safe place 10 slart building confidence.
The laundry mom i!'J another good
room to try: ii is small. compact, and
has plenty of white appliances that act
as a foil for dramatic color.
Oloose a room thal has good
lighting. or replace a ho-hum overhead
light with a recessed can or, if your
ceiTmgs are high enough, add a
chandelier. I'm a sconce girl myself, so
if you're up for a trip from the
electrician, run to a lighting store and
find .1 rool p.m ol
'-t'Olll t'' ta kl' ,I
cha111 t• on
'>Olllt'lh111g Olli etf
thc ord11ldr.
Nov.. you haH·
light. IA't\ 1.1ll .about
tolor
If you're th111kmg
red. Halph l..Jurcn'
1 lunung Coat Red I'>
a h'Tt'at color 1111:
rnlor "1ust nght
KAREN
WIGHT R<'<l dot"> requm• .1
few coat!> to gel the depth.~ if you are
on the vcri~c of a panic allacl after two
coats. calm down. It will ht-O~ < >r U'tt'
a darker primer coat, and tht•n you «.in
get away with fewer apphcation'-
lf you have a 101 of whitt• mold111g'
<ha.<ieboanJs. cawmenl!>. crown) or ,1rl'
planning on adding molding~. hrowm
are de rigueur. Another Ralph I .1Urt'11
color that satisfies UlC'
TRAVEL TALES
hru'W\11 grc·1•n gold rl'quin•mt•nh .,
hurl.tp 11 luok,-. w1·,11 wllh >(Olt.1, ,;re;it
\\llh bl,11 k . .ind work' With pla11n11111
< Jt-., llfl\.\ yo u'n, n•,1dy to ~et a httlc
hr,1vt•r ,ind muvt• on to tht• h~1ng mom
din111g rn111n. fam1I\ room. and ~II< h1·n
II \Oii ''-Jill J wJ.rm t olor lh.11 hlt'nd-.
with l'H'ry1h111g, I rJ.Jt'l'.., <.rm rtul < 111ld
'' t'J'>} on the C'Yl' and hlt•11d' '' nh
.tlmu-.1 t1ny rolnr -.dlt'nw If you \\Jill
lo get a ht1lt• d.irk1·r. Ill} pl'r't<111al
lavonte 1<, 1-r<Vt·c•c, l .1pen ree It IC)ob
h.id cm the uilor ""atch, hut 11 hJ!> fll'I
1h1' nght amo11n1 of golcl and grrt.•11 10
W\.C drama Wlthout bemg annoym~
If you're looking for il
1.111pt· gn'<'n gray. l·r.vee\ ~tbu'h ''a
w11111er lni" I" a "go anywhere" rnlm
c•ven a master hcdroorn I think 11 louh
>(ft'JI wHh black and wl ul<' accent~
Rl•Morauon I lanJwarc ha., "omt•
wondl'rful paint rnloN. Thl'y haw a
'mall palette. hul t'vl'rythmg they earl"\
I'>,, wmner. l'er.onally. nw favon te "a
p.111111,tllt'dl ft'ollll\' .. 111 11 ,., 11•11
gold, .1 hlllt 1.111, rl' 11111 I '" '\" • .11111
tf \1111 lll'l'd IO\\ Hill llfl I 1111 111 f'
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See HOME Pace A6
Chile's wine country provides a Napa of years past
South Am erican country the perfect place
for exploring many unexploited treasures.
Oille's wine producing region.
the Co1chagua Valley. which is
also prolific ln providing the
widest array of ~cu.hural
bounty.
Whal was our week likl'7
F.nvislon much vi lting and
soclaJl7jng with leisurely meals or the freshest food and mos1
deUgbtfuJ wi nes with much
attention paid to camaraderie
and friend hip while a blind
eye Is paid to the di!Kipllne of
the clock.
By Dick C1nnon
T hl'I pa5t March, my wife
Diane and J visited OlUe
and spenl three delJgtuful
weeks wfth our wonderful
&tends. the Silva Sante-Banez
family (KOC3, Oulco. Alberto,
30, Gorv..aJo, 20, Paula, 29, and
her S·year-old on Udo).
Thia was our Oftb trlp over
lhe ~an lo mil thls lncredlble
country and lm.met'H' oursetvtl
ln the U of thl!11p«lal fu.nOy.
OUr relationahlp and bond
bepl1 l5 yM.rt ICU when our otdC.t t0n. Jeff-thcil a junior
ll Corona dd Mar Htsh Slhool
-was an American Field
Service exchange student He
Uved with the family and
attended their local high
school.
lnc.ldent.ally. their endre
family has visited us twice ln
Newport Beach where our
community, rrtends and
netahbors opened their hearts
ancf ho~ to them.
On lhls latest vtah. we apent
the ftnt week wtth the famlty 11
their home lo Pladlll. a lmaU
town of&. than 8,000 people
about 90 mo. IOUtb of the
oatlOn'• ~ Suldqo.
Aadll& .. "' lhe bt.ttt of
Here in Newport Beach. we
haw all bo~t and
experienced many of the wines.
fruits and veJttablea produced
In the rtacWa area when we
have ahopped in our
upenn~ ts ahd dined In our
re taurant.
A week ln Placllla and
envtrona might be ciompvable
to, aay, cxperlft>dng the Nlpa
VaDey 75 yeen ago -low key.
8kJW peced wt.th an locn!dJble
qullliry ol lite built upon the ..,.,..ty ol the ..-th arid th
lowe and aljoyment o( fAlnUy,
frietMh and netchbon..
After a great first Wl'Ck In
Plac.Ula. we left with the family
in two cars and drove 600 mU
south to Pueno Monn through
lands or breath1aldn bt'auly
offerin cont nuous seen or
anow-aapped mount&UU and
vokai>on, vast ID and
nattonal fo The Al may
be mmparabl but not more ao
111 efther acope nor grandeuL
•
M Sunday, June I, 2003
SUN MIST FRY
Continued from Al
sheer delight or ·bumping into
people."
Come see the new EverWood0
CountrySrde blinds from Huncer
Douglas Overlapping
slats create a beautiful
board·on·board design
And che ·step-up· look
adds depth. d1mens1on
"You'll wallt in here and you
won't see anybody," he said,
"and suddenly you'll see some-
one you haven't seen in a long,
long time."
Sandefer said the Fiah Fry Is
a precious little tradition for
the community.
"It's the only local thing
we've ever had here," he said.
Rick Bell, 45, who bas lived.
in the city all hlB life, said he's
already savored the Osh.
~I think the fish is a little
cold," he said with a laugh. "It
needs to be warmer."
Bell said he was hoping to
run into someone he lcnew too.
"This used to be a much big-
ger event," he said. "Unfortu-
nately It's gotten a lot smaller
over the years."
The Fish Fry means a lot
more to the community than
the other bigger events like the
Orange County Fair, said Bran·
don Nicholas.
"This ls so much more per·
CHECK
Continued from A5
like Stephen Jay Gould and Jane
Goodall), Marie Pagel presents a
two-volume overview covering
life forms, developmental and
population biology, social
behavior, consciousness,
evolution of disease and even
art in prehistory.
and character co any room And
EverWood CouncryS1de will not
warp. crack. peel or fade Even in
humid areas or direct sunlight Come
see rhese beautiful blinds today.
For those more interested in
Oora than f'auna. MJchael Dirr
plants botanic, cultural and
landscaping details on over 400
species into "Dtn'I nee. and
Sh.rube for Warm (]bnates."
After earning acclaim for "Din's
Hardy 1tees and Shrubs.• the
respected garden authority digs
out data about planis that
thrive where winter
temperanu-es rarely dip below
free7lng in his newest illusttated
encyclopedia
'-••H•4••rlu •••
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aonal," he said. "It doesn't feel
like a commercial event.•
Davey Helm of Helm and
Son Amusements, the com-
pany that was running the car-
nival, said he expected the
crowd to pick up by Saturday
evening.
"Th.is ls just a trial run this
year," he said . "Next year, It'll
be thrice as big. We'll have a lot
more rides."
The Fish Fry Is returning to
Uons Parle after five years. It
was held in Orange College be-
fore it was canceled two years
ago.
Helm said the sprawling
grounds at Uons Park provide
an excellent venue for the fair.
"Th.is is closer to the beach,
it's safe and secure," he said.
"There's also a nice atmos-
phere with the trees and grass.
It's just good summer fun."
The Fish Fry continues to-
day from 11 am. to 8 p.m. at
Lions Park.
• DEEPA BHARATH covers public
safety and courts. She may be
readled at (949) 574-4226 or by
e-mail at
deepa.bhararh@larimes.com.
Turning to people and what
they've worn from the late
nineteenth century to the
present. Ann T. Kellogg unveils
designers who've transfonned
contemporary dress in "In an
lnftumdal IWlllon." In 164
listings covering such
trend-setters as Giorgio Armani,
Ouistian Dior, Gucci, Halston
and even Frederick's of
Hollywood. find details about
those who have most
influenced American fashion
sense, and how their concepts
have reftected societal, political
and economic change.
• CHEOC fT OUT is written by the
staff of the Newport Beadl Pl.ibhc
Library. This week's column 1s by
Melissa Adams. All titles may be
reserved from home or office
computer.; by eccessing the
catalog at
www.newportbeachlibrary.org.
TRAVEL
Continued from A5
Then from Puerto Monte, we
Dew by jet another 600 miles
further south to Punta Arenas
and the area or Puerto Natalas
that abuts the StraJt or Magellan
and the Torres de PaJne
National Parle. and lies a Uttle to
the north of Cape Hom.
ThJs vast, unspoiled region of
plains, forests, fjords, glaciers
and pristine lakes are inhabited
by few with nature's condition
as pristine today as existed
thousands or years ago.
This must be one of the most
undisturbed areas on earth
today and one can only say to
experience vasmess on this
scale is both exhilarating and
HOME
Continued from A5
lot of white, I have a lot of black
and I have a lot of other stuff
thrown in between. When Ben
and I got married, our first
remodel was the master
bathroom that we (yes, we laid
the tile) put black. and white tiles
in. Sever-al houses later, we're still
using black and white. If this is a
trend, it's a really long trend.
Still nervous? You could start
with some accent pillows or
rugs, but l'U say you're doing
IRVINE
Continued from Al
jurisdicLional issues.
Fullerton Ciry Manager Chris
Meyer said that if the project is
derailed in Irvine, Fullerton
officials would be interested in
reconsidering I.hear
parucipation.
~1r the central route does not
move forward, we would be very
interested in once again
examining Lhe underlying
premises or the northern route
to see whether or not it needed
to be tweaked or whether or not
the proposed plru1 was OK a-. it
wa.,," Meyer ..aid.
One way 111 RCI from FuJJertun
to Sanra Ana is through
Anaheim, which wa.c, alsn pan uf
the original route and aJo;o
pulled out.
John Nicoletti, the city's
public information manager,
said that o;incc a majority of the
City Council was elected an
humbling,
After more than a week spent
in the south of Clille, we
returned to Placilla for a final
round of hugs and tearfuJ
goodbyes. Then, via a night in
Santiago and a long weekend in
Duenas Aires, Argentina. we
returned home to our own
paradise, Newport Beach,
whence we reOected upon our
love for our friends and their
wonderful way of life and
Incredible country.
And. once again, we gave
thanlcs to the American Field
Service student exchange
program, where our very
s timulating and fulfilling
odyssey was born 15 years ago.
• DICK CANNON is a resident of
Corona del Mar.
yourself a disservice.
Paint is easy. Paint is bold.
Basically. paint is good. And
what's the worst thing that can
happen? You get to paint some
more. And that's not so bad.
Pick a room any room and get
a few tester quarts. Grab a roll of·
blue tape, a tarp, a brush and
you·re in business. A fresh coat
of paint can change the entire
mood of your house.
Be bold. Be brave. Be colorful.
• KAREN WIGHT 1s 11 Newport
Beadl resident. Her column rune
Saturdays.
November, Lhe new council has
not taken a position on the light
rail project.
Tim Keenan, chaJr of the
authority board, !>aid the board
hasn't thought too much about
what happens if Irvine vorers
reject the pro1ect because they
are confident 11 wilJ !>Ucceed.
"I will say it would make
thmgs problematic from 1h1s
pomt on if the Irvine voters tum
it down." Keenan said WI thank
thert'!> enough suppon. •
But ju'>t an case, Art Leahy,
chief executive of the authority.
is preparing some alternatives,
Keenan said
Some of the options include
c;tartmg the light rail with only
Sanla Ana and Co-,ta Me..a or
i:ontinuing north or Wt'l>I from
John Wayne Airport instead of
east to Irvine, Keenan said.
• DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers Costa
Mesa and may be reamed at (949)
574-4221 or bye mail 81
deirdre newman a la11mes com
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I: '
Al SUnday, June 1, 2003
FORUM
HOWlOGETPUBUSHED -L.u.ra: Meil to Editoriel Page Editor S.J . Cahn at the Daily Pilot. 330W. Bav St., Coate Mese, CA92627 • Ae1den Hotlne: Call (949) 642-6086 Fax: Send to (9491648-4170
E-tNl:Send to dailypilot@lstimes.com • All COrY'espondence must Include f\Jll name, hometown and phone number (for verification purposes). The Piiot reserves the right to edit all submission• for claritv and length.
EDITORIALS
A firestorm on
Balboa Island
A n unexpected
firestorm e rupted
o n the top of a
two-story home at
the final Newport
Beach Planning Commission
meeting in May.
During discussion about
whether to approve
construction on a Balboa Island
home that goes above what city
code allows, an incredulous
City Councilman Dick Nichols
stood before the commission
and said: "It sure doesn't look
good . It looks like you're taking
m oney for this one."
This statement, that someone
might be taking a bribe,
understandably upset members
of the commission, as weU as
others in City HaU and within
the city's governm e nt. Nichols'
coUeagues on the council are
taking it so serio usly that it m ay
result in his being sanctioned .
These groups are right in
being upset, but it is imponant
that any anger and most
certainly any punishment be
handled properly and not ge t
lost in related , but ultimately
tangential, arguments about
Nichols' right to speak his mind
or his duty to serve his
constituents.
This is not a case of freedom
of speech or an example of a
councilman d oing what was
best fo r the community.
Nichols has his own
o pportunity to speak at council
meetings and his own direct
line to City Ha ll to work on
be half of Newpon Beach
re~idents. lt is a case of
propriety and civiJity, of a
councilman stepping out of
bounds and making unfounded
a nd unsupported charges in a
p ublic setting. Had Nichols had
proof of these serious cha rges,
the firestorm would be burning
elsewhere. But he did not.
Jn a le tter to the Daily Pilot
aft er the m eeting, Nich ols
wrote: "I am new to the city
government." At some point,
being new is no longer an
excuse for such serious
missteps.
He aJso w rote, "I ran for office
to truJy represent the residents.
T his requires m a king waves
that are unpopular with the
entrenched powers-that-be."
That certa inly can be the case.
But those waves wiU crash into
nothing when unleashed in
Nichols' way.
Sho uld Nichols' be
san ctioned? Early evidence
seem s to create a case that he
should, but like the City
CounciJ. resid ents s h ouJd
withhold judgment until the
city looks into the incident
further.
On a wider le vel. this incid ent
provides Newport Beach with
the opportunity to put in place
a censure policy in the event
anything like it occurs again .
Such a policy would ensure that
any misdeeds would be
handled fairly and impa rtially.
Its creation should be part o f
the city's discussion.
Beach report card
• gives some pause
0 range County healthy
agency officiaJs tell us
thro ughout the winter
to stay high a nd dry
for about 72 hours after a
sto rm. They cou ldn't be more
right, according to Santa
Monica-based Heal the Bay.
The en vironmental group
released grades last week for aJI
of Southern California's
beaches. for the m ost part,
Newpo rt Beach fared well -so
long as the weather's dry.
During and after rainfall, mo-.t
beaches everywhere failed.
The lone exception in
Newport Beach see m s a bit
ironic: Muddy Creek Beach
received an A+ during the wet
season. It appears its name is
deceiving. Perhaps Ocar Creek
Beach would he m ore
appropriate.
But aside from that a nomaly.
high and dry seem s like good
advice. The majority of the
city's beache received Fs
during the rainy season. Those
beaches rising a tad above the
failing grade were Corona del
Mar. Crystal Cove at Los
Trancos Canyon. and 38th
Street in the harbor.
·1 he re were few s urprises in
the report, but among them
was data that reveaJed that the
water off the Santa Ana River
mouth is safe during the d ry
~eason. Other trouble spots
during drie r weather are 38th
and 43rd streets in the harbor.
·1 hat's understandable given
the m ore stagnate wate r within
the harbor.
lieaJ the Bay's fi gures have
made it obvious that people
should flock to mos t of
Newport's beaches d uring the
dry months, including the
warmer m onths that began this
month .
But Newport Beach officiaJs
must continue to work on
preventing runoff -whether
from inJand cities o r Newport
itself -fro m ente ring the
ocean. Progress has been
made. but the d a ta from the
wet months really shows that
runoff continues to be a
problem .
Only Muddy Creek seems to
d efy the odds. It's hard to
· be lieve the A+ grade for that
beach considering that the
c reek runs right into it. The
results seems a bit muddied .
THE LAST WORD
IKEA makes its mark
I ~ has arrtved. It's hard to
But what TKEA will bring
to the city and school of Costa
Mesa wUJ make ft all worth lr.
The Swedi"h funilturc core
has prom.l&cd to renovate
c.IUsrooms In the
~n·M~ Unified School
OiS1rk:t and hu given
f,
a uranc that at least SI
million wtU enter the dty'
coffers annually.
The flagship store opened
Wedriesday to abouc 2,000
customers.
Hope they dkln~t biiy ilJI of
the 8Wy bookcues arid
packages or SWedJsb fish. That'
enough to Uve on.
BOLTON
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
End to a story that started here
M y story actually begins on
Feb. 7, 1974, when my
niece, Kristy, was born to
Sue and Randy lCarjaJa after 20
long hours of labor and a ditncult
birth. Kristy suffered brain damage
affecting her coordination and
speech. By her first birthday she
had yet to take her first steps.
After exhausting trips to several
doctors and long hours of research,
my sister read about the lostlrute
For the Achievement of Hu.man
Potential in Philadelphia. After a
long wait for an opening. Kristy
was accepted. She was placed in a
special physicaJ therapy program
pioneered by the Institute In 1962.
The family returned home to Costa
Mesa with renewed hope that
Kristy would one day walk. They
sought help from the Daily Pilot,
asking for volunteers in the
commuruty who would be willing
to donate th,etr time for
•patterning" exercises to train her
brain and body to function
normally. Kristy needed to be
panemed l 0 times dally along with
other exercises, seven days a week.
The Daily Pilot ran the story on
Aug. 4, 1978, and again on Nov. 24,
1978. The outpouring ofvolunteen
was incredible. Randy said, "We
are a family unit here and we are
going to stick together until the
family is well again." (The family
now oon.sisled ot two sons, age 3
and l Y.i • with another son on the
way). Guess wliat1 Kristy did learn
Councilman had duty
to speak his mind
Newport Beach Planning
Commissioner Ed Selich should
probably rethink his position on
whether City Council members
should be allowed to speak at
Planning Commission meetings -
either that or resign
c·eommissloners have their aay.~
Friday). The Planning Commission
is no different than any other
committee or staff member within
city govemmenL All are ostensibly
responsible to the people. As we
recalJ, Mayor Steve Bromberg
served on the CMJ SerW:e Board of
the city for many yean and we
would flnd It not Improper for the
mayor co give public tndmony or
uk quesdona of that body, 1houJd
the need arise -or, for that matter,
any member of our elected Clly
Council.
Uch'a finding It an affront to be
qu tloned by anyone seemed
owrbeartna at beat. We mJlht make
n!ference to the city of Lot Angel •
where almost on a d&Oy bait
coundl members addreaa vlrlol.11
COl1\l'Rllteet and commlletoo.a
to walk. After several moves, the
JC.arjalas ended up in Colorado
because of the services and
programs available to the disabled.
Kristy attended a regulac school
with special classes for the
disabled. She was in a horseback
riding class for special-needs kids
and was a good swimmer because
of the strength in her upper body
from the patterning exercises.
Throughout the years of family
oudngs and vacations, Kristy was
always a part of the activities. Her
brothers were so loving and
protective of her. To think one
doctor said she should be
lnsdtutlonal.ized.
Sue and Randy went into real
estate so they could work out of
their home. Randy handled the
business and household chores.
Sue took care of Kristy all day,
every day. She was relentless in her
sean:h for speclaJ programs to heJp
her daughter. JCrlsty loved to walk
the mall for her daily exercise. With
intestinal problems plaguing her
throughout her life, it was
important that she walk regularty.
The merchants all knew her and
loved her. She had an lnfecdous
laugh and always a smile, greeting
everyone she met with a big hug
whether she knew you or not Her
dentist said she was the only
patient that bugged him when she
came for checkups. Kristy could
ooJy aay a few words hut
communicated so much warmth
MAILBAG
(assigned or not) regarding their
actions or Future policy
considerations unfettered by the
sensltJvity of the appointed
members. CouncUman Dick
Nichols had every right and
perhaps duty to follow hls own
conscience and ask whether he
needed.to ask to address the
long-term needs of the residents of
Newport Beach.
Selich needs to put his ego aside
and get with the program.
RON MO NfHA WINSHIP
Newport Beach
Residents lose out in
Costa Mesa -again
1 read with amu~esnenl the
artide of May 24 c·Second·atory
deal aomethJna or a success")
describing how Cotta Me'8 Mayor
Gary Monahan came to the tescue
to medi.te a deaJ between two
neighbors concern a second-tory
addition.
It .. just one more parado1t ln thl
city of paradoxical development
decision•. That la, how the ctty can
lhoot down one d~opment,
Kohl'I. and approve another, 1901
and love to all Sue would ask ber
who loved her and Kristy ~uld
say ·1esus· very slowly. Sue would
ask her where Jesus was and Kristy
would point to her heart.
Oo May 7, at the age of 29, Kristy
suddenly became ill and was
rushed to the hospital Wtthln a
few hours she was gone. She wu
an organ donor but because of the
infection within her body from a
ruptured intestine, only her
corneas could be salvaged for
tr.\llsplant. Even after her death
Kristy was making a dltTerence.
My ister literally lived to take
care of Kristy, her little angel. as
she calls her. Sue's unwavering
faith and strong family des will aee
her through this darkness. It ls too
soon for her to know what she will
do to fill the void left by Kristy'$
absence. I felt I needed to share
this remarkable story of a young
woman who has touched so many
lives in such a short time on thia
earth. As the pastor said at her
memodal service: "Krlsty knew
how to love.
She wasn't interated in objects
or things, but she loved life and
experienced all thaJ she could
despite ~r limitadon " Thil
family's incredible devodon to one
another has been '° upllftiJ\g to
me, I Celt l had to abate our atory In
hopes that this (Daf help othen
facing slmUar advemdes.
~QUl(TMA
Pico RJvenl
Newport Plua condos (there's that
Newport cachet, by the way).
Yes, the RJces were definJtely
penaJized fo r being the first on
their block with a second-story
addition even though It ultimately
met all the guidelines set forth. On
the other hand, if they had been a
developer wanting to build
four·story condos across the street
from one-story houses and for all
the rules had to be twisted, they
would have had the city lapping at
their door.
We on Bemard s~et have bad
our pleas fall on deal eara. We will
receive no mJtlgadon, financial or
otherwise (check out the deal some
of the residents behind Home
Depot received). And Monahan, far
from tepplns in to help. bu
pushed the condo project all along.
We, the resldentl of Bernard Street.
have become a aacriftclaJ lamb for
the ultimate good of downtown
Coata Meta. Flnally, I want to thank
Councilman AUeb Manaoor and
thote aood dtilem of Cotta Mesa
who h&W't! apoken out aplnat thla
lrratlonal devetopm~t.
1'1MVIHMf
CoMaM-.
.......... .,.,. -· .... ,. ----·--,--... ~-----"""' - -.; ~-···--·· ....... ,. ·-
. ..
BIO
Age:79
Occupation: Retired owner of the
Golden Shell gift shop
Education: V·12 Navy program in
engineering
fllmity: Wife of 53 years Marge; three
boys; two gir1s; five granddlildren; one
great.grandchild
~ Little Balboa Island for 36
years
~: Scuba diving; shell collecting;
walking; traveling
Involvement: Newport Beacn Volunteer
Police Officer as part of police chief's
community relations staff; delivers the
City Council meeting packets to council
members
GROWN-UP ANTICS
'Well, what we 're
really friendly with
people and know
people across the
island. We 're the kind
of never grow-up type.
We go around and
tease kids and have
fun with them. For
instance, if someone
has an electric cart
and they leave it the
street with the key in
it, I'll drive it off Just
things like that. Just
having fun.'
FORUM Stxlday, June 1, 2003 At
SEAN HILLER I OM.Y PILOT
A continuing tradi tion
The brief Balboa Island Parade and one of
its stars enters their 10th year celebrating
the island and its fire station.
T he I 0th annual Balboa
Island Parade comes to
town at I I a.m. Sunday.
The two-block parade,
arguably among the
shortest in the world, runs down
Marine Avenue.
The parade celebrates the island,
but was held originally to coincide
with the dedication of the island's
new fire station in June 1994.
There are about l 00 entries in the
parade's I 0th year.
Among the long-standing
features are the Keystone Kops. On
Friday, City F.ditor James Meier
caught up with Ken Undahl, the
originaJ Keystone Kop. over at the
fire station. UndahJ, known as his
fellow Koppers as UJ BaJ Isle Ken,
discussed the somewhat young
tradition.
How did you become lmotved In
the Balboa Island Parade?
When they started to dedicate the
new fire station (in 1994), we round out
about it and the fire station was going
to have a show of fire engines like a
short parade. So we got together and
thought. "Gee. it'd be nice if we could
join in," so we asked if it was all right
and they said yes.
So we met over at a house on the
little island and planned the first
parnde and ii was while silting there -
and if you've been involved in
community pmjea.s. everybody's
talking and you can\ figure out who's
'><lytng what and I looked ar my wife
and said, "This sounds just like an old
Max Senate comedy. All it needs is a
Keystone Kop." She said, "Why don'
you?" So there we go. lbat's how that
came about.
(Now Newport Beach Mayor) Steve
Bromberg joined me. And then Earl
McDaniel joined in a year or so later.
I !es on the Planning Commission.
fhen we got Mickey Dunlop after he
retired. He's a civil service person. So
we're aJJ very much involved with
citywide activities.
So how many Keystone KoJ18 lift
ilien todayT
Four, we decided that if you get too
many, then it's not the novelty
anymore.
What qualJdes do you need
penonally to pull that oft"l
Well. what we're really friendly with
people and know people acl'OS.\ the
island We're the kind of never grow·up
type. We go around and tease kids and
have fun with them. For in.stance. if
someone has an electric cart and they
leave it the street with the key in it. 111
dnve it off. Ju.st~ like that. Just
FROM THE NEWSROOM
having fun
And for the lourth ul Jul). Wl' go oH·r
to Ca1al1nd amJ do 11 111 thC'1r p.m1d1·
We've been then· lour or five u ml"> now.
How hu the parade changed over
the yearsl
Ir\ becornC' mort• well l...1111w11.
F.verybody wanh to be in 11 now, '>() thh
year. our entnt") are OCJ\.-\1 nvl'r 100 for a
two-block parade We have about 4,000
to 5,000 people on the t'>land for 11.
Usually people part off the 1'>land
So how early do people show up?
A.boul 9 a.m.1
~meumt"> A lor of pt•ople will hnng
their chair.. out e1nd w;ut unuJ the
parade .,,an., It\ d!wa)" a hapf1) t mM.I
We don't have any of the problt'm., that
a lot of other parades haw had. We abo
retnforcements in help through the
Newpon Beach Police Oepi.lrtment,
through their Explorer group ;md other
volunteer policemen
The parade start., general)~ w11h two
motorcycle offict•r. corning dow11 owr
the bridge.
Why ls that how It starts?
'fhey U'>uaJly go down l'arh ... 1dr of
the Slret'l lo move rwople bacl... from the
parade route JU-'l to let people kno~ 11·,
coming.
What did the flnt year consist of?
WeU, we had Lhe Ftre DepJJ1mcnl
and lifeguards, a couple band<,, chlldren
-the fir..t year 11 W3..\ aunet.l at having
fun with the chtldren. And •,ome of the
luca.1 wuup., pul 111 .,maJI llo<1L<, fhell'
dft' prvt"-for many thing., 1n the
parade llwy changt• frorn ~ar to year
Who would you say hu morY fun:
the kids or you ~ the Keystone Kop?
11..tugh.,I l11a1\ <1 IO'>.., up. We h.ivt• a
101 of fun and '>Odo lhcy W(• hJve .i lot
of fun with the• youn~1cr-.
Now, I think the claim Is that this Is
the shortest parade in the world.
Jw.1 about One year. we called a
Marine station and med them if they
had a band or -.omethmg to march m
the parade. fhey aru.wered bad. "I low
long ts the parade?" "lWo blocb. • "\io1
miJe.,1 Are you sure7 I'm sure tI we can't
gel gomg m two bloclc..._" so they -.em
down a '>mall conungent. It W3..\ a wlor
guard Tht'> year's color guard IS the
Newpon Beach Police Explorer (olor
Guard. They're very good.
fhat\ another part of our theme m
the parade is patnoltsm. We have Pearl
I !arbor ml'Vlvor m the parade this year
nwy marched la.<,! year. TI1is year. WC
have a Marine sergeant and tus wife ru.
gtJl")l~ of honor. I le\ 1us1 a few days
bud. from Iraq.
Any ftnaJ thoughts?
Lome on down and enioy yourself.
We have the city offiaal-; and
dlgmtaries ndmg on convertible~ m Lhe
pamde. We havt> an IJvt.,_ ~aturalJy, we
haVl' an F.lvls.
Anydownsf
(Laughs! U!>.
Blair the exception, not the rule to journalism
T his will be the last you
hear from me on the
Jayson Blair scandal Sadly,
the name of Jayson Blair has
become as recognimble as, I
don't know, Chris Steel and Dick
Nichols are for making ttange
comments Ill council meetings.
Blair, if you don't know, ls the
New York 1lmel reporter who
made up stories and quotes ln
his meteoric rise to the top. And
as I reported last week. Dilly
Pilot ataffen were allo feeling
the It.Ing of bJs ICdoOI lib all
others In the news profeuion.
I Invited "'8den to COIDIDeDl
and here'• whit they bad to aay:
"What lhould have been the
JnOlt troubUfll ispec:t or the NY
Tunes llory WU che quettfoo:
Why dJdn't aD the people
lmoMd tn the fab lloriM apeak
up IOOMl'l" aa&d one relder.
•hople have doubted the media
for )'111'1." he continued. "The
allwr~ JOU 8ftl ~for mJabr be lbe l"Mndon that tn
the anent Woctd It 11 hlrdef for
.,..,... to lie. One art Would be
to hn! men b.a.nCe llDOOI
"'fGIW\\ ..t tD own up tD our .,.. .........
111111 *9--........... ....... -=
t
•For
imtance.
your (from
last week's
column)
hilarious
comment
'there is a
common ...._ _ _...... __ ...__. misoon-
TONY
DODE RO
~don that
minorities giet
banded jobs
they aren't
qualified fot' fre(ty funnyt
ObYioully mlnortdel are handed Jobe Ibey aren't qudfied for; that
II one ol the 1-ocll of the Blair
story-be WM only hired
becaute he Wiii blKk. I'm otJ tbe
IUbject now, but •dfwnlty' hiJing
merely ca.a everyone to
ueume that mJnoritles were not
blftd. 00 medt IO aU mlnorldet.
even the quali8ed °'*' are Cainted by the uaanpdon that
they dld not earn their potldon."
Thk comment tblnl me tor a
• couple ol reMOnl. Flnt. IM)'be I
milled 11. but rw,... .-my
newt~ In whlchNew 11J1tna. .... .,..., ... ..................
k 111_...,_
dr..n to him ........
young and brash and had a
knack for telling and finding
good stories (albeit fictional
ones).
The reader's comments that
•mJnorides are handed Jobe they
aren't qua.lilied for" just pnMS
my point about misconception
and carries on an awful and
W-lnfonned stereotype.
As an editor who bu hired
many joumalistl, minority ot
otherwile. I can vouch that
incompetence, lib ltl1l and
talent. Oowl rampant in every
nice and aeed. a.c:t to the
~resp<>,._, Here't another
one from a ~t racier:
"We tru1t m u our options
to .... eoun:ea become
nder," the reader wroce.
.Since large corpontiona tww
tnc:murlna cootrOI owr ftell
emaD ~ news toun:e1. and
ID<Mlt IOU"* Ougiit end tnWO pay the eame nne. we muat
beCome mote aidal-
Mepdcll -ol what the med6ii .....
HM~ inotber mllcol: r~ lb ao dlbunk. Mlaf
lbll mew die Dllr,.. 11 ..-at ....... Mmlllt 1nlililil
O•• :.'t"'-lls' 'r 1t..t lbe,.... ....... Ill lllrD br
the Otlcago-based Tribune Co.
that somehow we take our
man:hi.ng orders from them.
That would be news to me
and the Pilot staff. We are an
autonomous and independent
operation.
Thus, the reason you will see
stories on the same toplc ln The
Thnel and the Pilot from time 10
time. 1be dilla'ence is that we
write our stories from a
Newport-Mesa per'Spt'Cdve and
The 11mel writes from a regfonaJ
peliipecthe.
Al newt and business
decWom at the Daily Piloc are
mede locally, oot ln Los An&eles
or a...,. We certainly doo't
CU.CU. •odes among ounretws
and nor would we "9' dilc:u9I
cMll"lan .... ora.-Ot.
Int.ct. the obftcdw In ~
malnla-.n and~
news =-don I know of ls to pr.-and blllanced
repal1klg.
Tbe...a ..... beilobia ... by= thll 1n .. '° c:: .... '-:!':.=.'::tbe .... .. Ulllllla ..........
ap•'iw .. •••w1ncit• ... ...., ..............
But. not so this time:
·My sense of the Daily Pilot's
culture. starting with editor's
from many~ ago and
continuing through your own
reign is one striving for accuracy,
facts. and a minimum of spin."
he said. •while f may not aJwa)'5
like~ I mad in the Pilot,
it's DeVa' because of a lack of
trustwortbin
That's ls good to know and
thanks to that reader for the vote
of con6dence. Now here's the
final lab Crom another loyal
reeder.
.. WU enCouraged by your
column today, bcause it told us
of J'OW efJons to add t.he
Jlylon Blair blue With your
IUff.. the e-mail .aid. •t Would
hope fNf!fY nt'WS outlet in the
COW\try woUld do cbc tlml
thin&-bUt doUbt If they did ...
I ~the OIOY POoc doeJ.
rood job ol--tns l«\.ncy to &s~olche~•
tnow dwn hne been atticilml
In lhe pllt -prinwily.,,
penann1bo ~-am m.n llll,....._.._c:ammelilll ... ... ........ ,.. ...... .
,.... ......... fl ...... .... ................. ..
rman•llDIC JIOllllllntD
TEll rr 10 THE EDITOR
Tony Dodero is the editor. He
welcomes your comments
on news coverage.
photography or ott.
~ ........ " you have• mwege or•
lea. to.,.. eclcof, QI his
dintet line llt ~ l'JIM2ll ()(
theP h1ttaie.111
IQ ...... ...t ltbyHNil to ..,..,,, eek• 11 nor
..,..,._. • ._.o n 11"or
Mnd it by mlil '° 330 w. 8ey St..O..~CA.mn
•
l
ma CNnOH a1n.-
0pen House 1.spm
Maanlfkent View estate, quality with S bd.
suites 7.S ba. family room, library.
949.711.1526
949.644.9060
949.644.9060
NaWPOllT aaACH , ....... ...
Expanct.d Broadmoor Plan. 4 bet l ba. l.arp
lot. Pool, spa.NC, security~·
949.759.3741
.........................
·l
t49.759.371l
alC CAJnOM SU91.lll Iii Can)ion mate lewl. 4 bd. l ba. Custom:
Golf course view.
t49.759.l1l9
949.717.4750
'ol
949.717.4750
949.717.4764
COllONA DR. W SI.HI ....
Speaac:ular home~ rwnocWed in 2003.
finl1hini touches beinc c~ ri&t't naw.
949.644.9060
I
~·
QUOTE OF THE DAY
"I was pray ing the
whole time."
St8Phllnle ~. girts soccer player
GIRLS 5-6
Devoy
settles
debate
St. Joachim advances
to semis with 3-2
victory over Harbor
View No. 2.
Mel1nle Neff
Daily Pilot
COSTA MFSA -A little bit of
controversy arose in a girls fifth.
and sixth-grade quarterfinal soccer
game in the Daily Pilot Cup
Saturday at the Costa Mesa Farm
Complex.
But. in the end, the outcome
remained the same, as St Joachim
advanced to today's semifinals with
a 3-2 victory over Harbor View No.
2.
The controversy came about in
the beginning of the second half
with St. Joachim holding a 2-1 lead.
Harbor View's Shaye Bastien took
the ball down the sideline from
midfield, then curled in toward the
goal. She took a shot from the side
of the net and the ball skimmed the
ground into the goal.
Goalkeeper Valentina Buonanoce
immediately went to the head
official and told hJm the ball had
entered the net through a hole. The
official then waved off the goal, but,
See DEVOY, Pqe 82
GIRLS 3-4
Andersen
chalks up
goose egg
Melanie Neff
Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -With most of its
players returning from last year's
squad, Andersen has had little
trouble thus far Ln Its run through
the Dally Pilot Cup. The third-and
fourth-grade girls soccer team has
shut out all three of Its opponents
by the same 6-0 score.
On Saturday, Our Lady Queen of
Angels became the latest victim,
losing to Andersen in the
quarterfinals at the Costa Mesa
Farm Complex.
However, Queen of Angels
managed something against
Andersen no other team has done
See ANDERSEN, Pqe 14
Spotts Editor Rlchllrd Oum: (949) 574-4223 • Sports FH: (9491650-0170
DAILY PILOT CUP
BOYS3-4
PHOTOS BY STrVf M,-r RANl( DA· ( f>i
Newport Coast's goalie grabs the ball as a Mariners Christian player attempts a header in a seesaw quarterfinal in
boys 34 action Saturday in the Daily Pilot Cup. Below, a Mariners Chrisban player moves the ball on offense.
Lime with
a little twist
Potter's four goals pace OLQOA in 5-2
quarterfinal y.rin over Kaiser.
Barry F.ulkner
Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -Though the thjrd-and fourth-grade
boys soccer team from Our Lady Queen of Angels has
never won the Daily Pilot Cup. perhaps, now, the
competition should begin to fear the Oorescent green.
Dressed in loud lime-colored T-shirts, Our Lady roUed
past Kaiser No. I by a 5-2 verdict in Sat urday's quarterfinal
at the Costa Mesa Farm Complex.
cracked the sconng column.
Nick Poner scored the final four goals to pace the artack.
propelling the winners into today's 9:30 a.m. semifinal
against Harbor Day.
Then, Potter scored !Wice wnhm a om•-m111utr -.ran
eight minutes into the contt'l>t. I le fired a 15 yard hullct
across the net to lhe far po5t from ahout 15 yard-. out . then
juked a defender and cont11111ed on with the ball dO\\ n the
Michael Haeri opened the scoring in the first minute for
Our Lady Queen of Angels, who led, 4-0. before l(ajser
BOYS 5-6
See TWIST, Page B4
~ights flex in shining armor
Kaiser spreads field to
roll past TeWinJde, 5-1 ,
in boys quarterfinals.
Barry F1ulkner
Daily Pilot
cnsTA MESA -The Stars are
beginning to align for the Kaiser No. l
fifth-and siXth·grade boys soccer team
and Coach Leisha Mello said she has
the Galaxy to thank.
MeDo, who gukied the Knights 10 a
5-1 quartedioal victory O\ler TeWinlde
No. 2 in the quarterfinals of the Pilot
Cup Saturday at the Costa Mesa Farm
Complex. said she has used the
reigning Major League Soccer
champion Los Angeles Galaxy as an
example of how to use the entire field
to attack opposing defenses.
"I tell our guys they ha\!\' to
remember the field 1s "1d~." \1ello
c;a1d. "Everyone elo;e like-. to tr'O\.\'Cl into
the middle of the field, but "e hle to
spread the ball out to the 'Id('<,. I teU
our guys to watch the (,alaxy do tlw
same thmg. When they see tl1em
~ing the ball wide, it helps them
reali7..e 11 can work. I'm always yelhng
See KNIGHTS, Page B2
DAILY PILOT HIGH SCHOOL ATHLETE OF THE WEEK
Todd ·Macklin
CdM junior hurler found rhythm and zone at the right time,
helping lead Sea Kings to first-round CIF playoff win.
EYE OPENER
~Jlli
Sportl Hll ol ,_ __ , ... ......_
June 2 honotH
JERRY DEBUSK
Sunday. .J\.fie 1, 2003 11
THE BIG EASY
There are
highs and
then lows
I t was a week of h.tghs and lows.
First. the highs· Some things do
not change.
As an ex.ample, the 42nd annual
Athleoc Awards Breakfast presented by
the Commodores Oub of the Newport
Beach Chamber of Commerce on
Thursday at the I lyatt Newporter Hotel.
1 lonored were 15 boys and girls from
Corona del Mar High, and 15 from
Newport I !arbor,
and like clockwork,
yet another group of
high·ach.tevmg.
record-breakmg
champions were put
on display. What
beau t.ifuJ k.ids.
Rich Saul.
i.ubi.tituting for
Irrelevant Week
founder Pciul Salata, ROGER once agam '>howed
whv ~me refer to CARLSON
him ac; "The
pin-dropper." a!> he explamed the
difference between ·ramow;· and
"great.·
Th~ champions, their parents and
coaches mirrored a prev1ous group of
honore~ when the former Los Angeles
Rams great did his thing at the awards
b realcf ru.t.
See CARLSON, Pace B3
HIGH SCHOOL
BOYS TENNIS
SnydeF alls
in CIF final
After an upset victory in
semifinals, CdM standout
goes down to Calabasas
so phomore in finals .
Richard Dunn
Daily Pilot
HU NTINC...ION 81:.ACll -There was
morning magic in Garrett Snyder's
racket Saturday morning. but once it
turned 10 ahemoon, the Corona del Mar
I hgh semor c;tandout
played a dil'ferent
wand and came up
shon in the CIF
~uthem Section
singles champion-
ships Saturday at
<;eaQiff Countty
Oub
After knocking off
top-seeded Jeffrey
Das of Troy m the
c;errufina.ls. 6-3, &-4, Garrett Snyder
nyder squared off
agamst Calabasas sophomo~ Gary
Sacks in the finals.
Sacks, relatively unknown heeding
into the OF championships. continued
•
I
12 Stmly. Jooe 1. 2003
BOYS 5-6
.....
SPORTS
DAILY PILOT CUP
GIRLS 3-4
Top: Ari Arldersen player, left, moves the baU downfiefd io a hurry as
Our Lady Queen of Arlgels race to def end in girls 3-4 quarterfinal
Pilot Cup action.
Left: Ari Arldersen player lines up a shot on the goal as OLQOA
defender moves in during girls 3-4 Pilot Cup play.
Below: A Harbor Day player moves the ball near the goal against St.
John in girls 3-4 quarterfinal in the Pilot Cup on Saturday.
PHOTOS BY
STEVE McCRANK I
DAILY PILOT
Brahs gets
·some help
Kathryn O'Conner's
hat triclc h elps
Seahawks advance to
semifinals today.
SteveVlrc•n
OailyPilot
OOSTA MESA-Ally Brahs
and Harbor Day'a third-and
fourth-grade glda IOClCel' team
continued their scoring
onslaught in the Daily Pilot Cup
with a 5-2 quarterflnaJ win over
St. John the Baptist Saturday at
the Costa Mesa Parm Complex.
The Harbor Day Seahawks
scored thetr five goals in the first
half. Brahs, who netted a hat
trick Friday, scored two goals,
while teammate Kathryn Conner
collected a hat trick Saturday.
Brahs bas scored nine goals in
the Pilot Cup, thus rar. helping
DEVOY
Continued from B 1
after a protest by Harbor View,
decided to award the goal.
"It went through the side of the
net,• Buonanoce said "'We all
saw it It was obvious.·
"The other ref said he saw it
too,• Lauren Devoy said
ln the end, Devoy made sure it
didn't matter. With five minutes
remaining. she took the ball
down the left side, wove through
several defenders and converted
a perfect left.footed shot from the
side of the goal for a 3-2 lead. It
was the second goal of the
eontest for Devoy. who scored
with five minutes left in the first
half to gjve St. Joachim a 2-1 lead
Sara Gomez got St. Joachim off
to a big start when she took the
opening kickoff and dribbled all
the way into the box before
slamming a shot into the comer
of the goal with less than 20
seconds expired in the game.
Harbor View came right bade
and tied the score. 1-1. in the
third minute when Linsday
Zotovich picked up a miss by the
defense at the comer of the goal
Harbor Day advance to today's
semifinal at 9:30 am.
The Seahawb went up, 2-0,
after Kathryn Conner scored two
goals on breakaways and added
another. Then Brahs finalized
thescoringforthe winners.
Harbor Day also received solid
play in the mJdfield from ICaytee
O'Connor and goalkeeper Jessica
Beyer recorded a sensational
save off a penalty kick ln the
second half.
St. John the Baptist, coached
by Angelo Lubino, scored twice
in the second half on goals by
Megan Crosson. Both goals were
assisted by Brooke Lux.
Charlotte Gadbois and Sarah
Cox also had assists for the
Seahawks. while Corinne
Damon contributed on defense.
MThe defense was superb,·
said Harbor Day Co-Coach Jim
Conner, who shared duties with
Paul O'Connor.
SATURDAY'S
SCORES
at Costa Mesa Farm Complex
Quarterfinals
St. Joachim 3, Harbor View 2
Carden Hall 3. M ariners 0
OLOOA 3, Andersen 2
box and angled it into the
opposite side of the net.
St. Joachim controUed the rest
of the half, led by Gomez. Devoy
and Lainey Prioleau, who
combined for nine shots in the
first half.
Harbor View goalkeeper Kytie
Edwards was imp~
lcnoddng down blast after blast
by the dominating trio. She
finished with nine saves, playing
in her first year at keeper, as St.
Joachim outshot Harbor VleW,
16-7. Valentina finished with two
saves for St. Joachim.
•••
ln other girls 5-6 action:
• Canlm IWl 3, Mariners 0: ln
a quarterli.nal match, Lorm
Degnmm. C.aroUne Hmdenbag
and Ou1ldna <Yrowa scored as
Carden Hall advanced to today's
semilinals.
Katz is double trouble
Harbor View
advances with 2-0
win over Newport
Heights.
Melanie Neff
Daily Pilot
COSTA MF.SA -It was a
picture-perfect pass and a
picture-perfect goal that helped
secure the victory and advance
Harbor View to today
quarterfinals of the fifth-and
sixth-grade boys ~occer bracket
of the Daily Pilot Cup at the
Costa Mesa Farm Complex.
Leading, 1-0, with five
minutes remaining, Sean
Donovan sailed a crossing pass
to a charging Michael Katz, who
slammed the ball 1.nto the goal
and secured a 2-0 victory for
Harbor View over Newport
Heights.
J(atz scored both goals for
Harl>or View. which outshot
Newpon Heights. 11-2.
·1 knew Sean would get me
the ball,• Katz said. ·1 just
wan led lo be there."
Harbor View took a 1-0 lead
when Paul Zubatov sent the ball
to Katz in front of the goal. Kacz
spun and shot it past Newport
Heights goalkeeper Andy Hayes
with five minutes left in the half.
While Katz, Zubatov, Dillon
Norton and Pierce Stemler
controUed the offense for
I larbor View, it was the defense
that kept them in the game.
Goalkeeper Ryan Kontra
made a goal-saving taclde in the
first half and Tommy Bangert,
who played in the goal in the
second. pulled down a penalty
kick by Jeremy Anish to keep
the shutout intact.
UThey were very aggressive,"
Kontra said.
James Cunningham, Miles
KelJerman. Jamie Heineck.
Jamie McKeman, Dean
Murdoch and Peter Inouye
rotated in and out and defense
and did a great job of keeping
Newport Heights out of the box
and keeping the ball out or
Harbor View territory.
Harbor View had several
scoring opportunJties set up by
6eld, WI t.:k ICl'Oll die ......
lplit two d f ..-dlMlll
doWn ... dlMllllllll .... . ,... ............... ...
................... " 2 ba2-0a_,. ••
Oll¥ld ~ ......... ....
lleclloi'~·· .. ... ... 10.,.. ...... ,.. ilhnt.a._ .. ... --••yxcttr ........... , I ...... ,.
MA HF 1 II
skillful passing that came up
just short.
Zubatov saved a ball just
before it went out of bounds.
chipped it to Katz. who sent it
back to Zubatov at the comer of
the box. Zubatov launched a
shot that skimmed over the top
of the goal.
Later in the game, Katz went
through two defenders, crossed
the ball to Norton, but Hayes
came out at the last second and
tackled the ball away from
Norton's reach.
Donovan set up Norton again
a few minutes later, but Norton
couldn't connect on a shot in
front of a wide-open goal.
MOid you see me blow it?,"
Norton asked at the end of the
game. •That was pretty bad."
In the end, the whole team
laughed at the missed •
opportunJties, happy to be
playing today against Kaiser 1 in
the semifinals at 11 a.m. at the
Fann Complex.
•They were the best team
we've played," Katz saJd. "We
just look forward to our next
game."
STEVE McCRN« I DAILY Pl.OT
TeWinkle, left. and Kaiser players due! in boys 5-6 quarterfinal Pilot Cup action SaUday.
Daily Pilot
CARLSON
Continued from B 1
Had a pin been dropped as he
told or the ultimate quest for an
athlete, or anyone else for that
matter, It would have sounded
like a sledgehammer. every student should hear his
message. often. Not just the blue
chips.
The Pilot profiled each or the
honored athletes in Thursday's
edition, but here they are again,
in case you've been on the moon
or something the past few days:
Corona del Mar's awesome 15
included Oaire Allen, Brittney
Bowlus, Man Cooper, Seeley
Cummins, Blake Dillion, Artie
Dorr, Ouistlna Hewko, Palge
Janes. Keith Long. John Mann,
Jaclde McCoy, Taytynn Snyder,
Genett Snyder, Amy Tyson and
Bart Welch.
Newpon's best were Amy
Burlingham, Amanda Campbell,
Andrew Cole, Dartangan
Johnsoo, Nicole Mackey, Kristin
McCune, Michael McDonald,
Jenna Murphy, Nedim Pajevic,
Hayley Peirsol, Ross Sinclair,
Michael Toole, Athena Vasquez.
Nathan Weiner and Annie
Wight
Over a third, 11 of the 30, were
aquatics standouts.
•••
At the other end of the
spectrum were two lows · the
losses of Beverly Salata, P"dul's
wife of 52 years; and a former
Corona del Mar High boys
soccer coach named Bill
Ashcroft.
Beverly's life was
memoriali7.ed at St. Andrew's
Presbyterian OlUrch in Newport
Beach on Friday with some 900
in attendance. and later
celebrated in Newpon <..enter.
A native of Los Angeles, 78
and the mother of Melanie
(Fitch) and Bradley. she was like
all ·moms." the hean of the
SPORTS
FILE PHOTO
Irrelevant Week founder Paul Salata and his late Wife, Beverly, enjoy a moment in San Otego.
family.
tier pho to wru. adorned with
the cardinal and gold of USC
and she left with "all her bases
covered."
•••
Ashcroft. a 92-year-old Coc;ta
Mesan and a native of England,
died on Wednesday of heart
failure, which is ironic inasmud1
ru. he was ·all heart" from day'>
ai. a '>Occer, squash and track
and field standout.
I le initiated club soccer in
<...osta Mesa in the early 'ti()<;.
coaching the Coast llanger. 10
three straight unbeaten ..ea .. on ...
and had coaching .,Ont!> dt UC
Irvine. UC Riverside and Corona
del Mar High.
Once a bobby with the
London police and a tramer wnh
the Royal Air force, he was often
intertwined with Daily PiloJ
Sport'> during the heyday of Pilot
Sport\ Editor Glenn White
(1968-78).
White, who could charm the
skin ofT a rattJesnalc.e one
moment, than write a column so
\Cathing that it would malc.e T.J.
!>uner!> appear like a career choir
boy. WdS devoted to Ashcroft and
h1'> ~nse of fair play.
So much tha1 White traveled
'>Orne 3.000 mile~ from his home
in CuautJa. Me)(JCO (~me 70
mtle., MJuthea'>t of MelOco City)
IO co .. IJ Me:.a 111 April lo deliver
an an11updle<l eulogy.
Aftt:r ">Orne conver.;,auon with
White (and perhapc; others)
A.,hcroft appeared to have risen
from 1he death bed with a
m1ratulou'> n:covery. but he
finally succumbed.
White. who read A.,hcroft
his eulogy Ill April, re1urn., 10
do it again on Wedne\day at
noon a t the Pacific View
Mortuary.
•••
Finally. it\ June, the month of
sorrow.
If I had m y way lhl'rt' would
be no prom .... diploma., would
be mailed out and ewry ... enior.
and junior. would be grounded
until July 5
There's no1 much dldntl' of
tha1. obviou .. ly. \O I \>\Ould 'l·llle
for JUSI finding \Olllt' \t.'nl!Jr'> Ill
remind 1he1r peer<, lhJt
aJthough they thinl they n·
indes1rucuble, [a('l'> .ind 111.rurt•.,
don't bear 11 out
Hey' ::,ee you nc~I \untl,1v'
2003 ROY EMERSON ADOPTION GUILD TENNIS CLASSIC
Seturdey l'ftUlta
Men 6'nglee
Open ... 5 ~mlfm•ls JMon Cooit 171 def Brendon Fellon,
6-3, 6-2. Oren MOlevHsel (31 def Bryan
Ju1mo ( 1 I. 6-4, S 7, 7 ~41
Doubte.
Open-415 ~m1finals
S.nrtnone-Ben1stone def
Heniandez·Hoffmenn (21. 7 ~61. 6-7(41
6-4. Devis P1te 111 def Letu Men Son Hing, 7~51 7 S
J581>d-5Mn1final• Devis Pete (21 def Devldaon Howie
6-2, 6-3. Aldndl Pugh (1 I def
Hernandez Men Son Hing 131, I> 3. 6-3
J!I
SMnrfinalt
Alva-Moore def Flennety f'Mti1 (21.
6-4. 2-6, 6-2. We1n-Wh11e (31 def
AnO"fO Beker ( 11 6-3, 3 ~. 6-4
4.0
5-m1f1nals
Curet Letllam (31 def
Gnogs-Mathenv (21. 6-7. 6-1 6-1,
Glazer-Hoffman (SI def Shows Smith
2-6. l';-3, 6-4
45
~m1fin•I•
Duddy Grey def Metcuyeme Wong
(3). 7 6. 6-1, Ouealer·Nelaon (11 clef
Capuano Miller. 6-3, 6-2
5.0
~mlfin11/1
Oo1 Linn (21 def Parente-V1lpara1ao,
4-6. 6-2, 6-2; Myers Treger (11 def
Zete·Adam1. 6-3, :HI, 6 3.
5.5
Sem1fin11/s
Hyman-Juneau def Brown Gnscom,
6-1, $-2; Kelty M1rzole 13) def
H1m1hon-JenMn, 7~61. 6-3
1.0
Sem1flnal•
Nguyen.Now!dl (31 def Ffentt
IVen.on. 6-2. ~. 6-2. Baez Croa (41
def Bonman-Oelaney t 11. 7-6, 2-6. 6-3
Women
Singtee
Open/U
s.mmn11i.
en.tlna Vi9'CO (4) def Elizebeth E11on
pe ;
Erica s.-t, 6-0. 6-2.
Doublee
" Semlfinat.
Comellue-Metheny (4) def. Huyn~ Tr en (8), 2.e, 1-5, 7-6(5),
Honreth-Morang ( 11 def.
McN.,,_.Sherwold (31, 7-6(61. 6-0
4.0
Semifinal•
Hemendez·f'wlrill def.
Swert>erg-Young (6), 6-1. 6-1; Howlrd-
Wegg def. Feul·McOontkl, 6-0, 6-3. · u
SMnlRflM•
Ooboe-Natlboff C3l def.
Kimbro-ftugglo, ~11 t;.7(6),6-3;
Brown-Wtlliemt CJe'I. Morgen-
num-~. 6-2, l';-2.
1.0 SMniflnll#
Hewb-Wilder def. Burlt...o.vld 121.
s99es
&UP
PHOTOS BY MARK C DUSTIN /DAILY PILOT
Top-seeded Bryan Ju1rno concentrates on the ball as he gets ready to make contact on his forehand
return. Jum10 faced 10th-seeded Tony Bujan m the Round of 16 in the men's open singles last
Sunday at the Newport Beach Tennis Club. Below, Allison Lloyd hits a forehand .
6-2 6-1, Hoffmenn·Ven L1noe def
Davis Lemons ( 11, 6-2. 6-4
5.WO
56m1finals
Worley Seeman def Canfield Wilson
121. 6-2, 4-6, 6-3, Glngow-Thomson (41
def. Bezmahnov!Ch Anderson. 7 6151
3-6. 7-6(31
Mill8d doUbliel
3.5
Semifinals
Nguyen-Nguyen def OeP11ul·Wein
6-7, 6-3, 6-3 121. Alva-T11kahash1 131 def Kinard-~ ( 11. 7·6, 7-5
4.0
Semifinal•
Helium-Hallum (4) def
Amen-Nehr1ictt·Mlhaloo (21. 7 6(21, 6-3;
um-Pham def. Albrecht·Bardna1, 6-3,
6-0. u S.mlfinnl
Banc:roft-Eperthener (~I det H1hn-
Neotu,,. (2). 6-4, :HI, 6-4. Oobos-
Aichardllon 181 def. Covey-Spear. 1';-1. 6-2
l.O
Semlflnat.
Frec:alosy-Ktdlols def Devie·Ooggrell
4TIRES ........ .....
1eena1a
111/10R11
1111TOR14
(21. 6-4. 8-7(61. 7~8); l.emon•Velpareiao
(5) def. Nicttolt-Sutherlend, 7-6. 8-2.
5.5
s.tnififlM•
IMri·RoMt (4) def. Mllltlop-Adame (2),
6-2. 7-6151. Corley-Thomeon t 11 def.
Motorcraft9 011 and
Fitter
Change
Bezmelinov1ctt-G1lm11n 2 6, 6-3, 7-6161.
6.0
~mt finals Finlay-Monk def. Bentzer Abella, 6-3,
6-0. Pooler-Fears def Kr1naon Shapiro
(1),6-4, l-6, 75
Sonday, Jooe 1. 2003 .~
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84 Smday, .Alne l, 2003 SPORTS
DAILY PILOT CUP
GIRLS 5-6
STEVE McCRANK /DAILY PILOT
A player for St. Joachim, left, and Harbor View, right, battle for the ball in girls% quarterfinal action Saturday in the Pilot Cup.
Lady Queen of shootouts
Dolphins slip past
Andersen, 3-2, in
best-of-five penalty
kicks after 0-0 tie in
regulation.
Steve Virgen
Daily Pilot
cosrA MFSA -If the Daily
Pilot Cup had an award for Best
Game. the girls fifth-and
sixth-grade girls soccer
quarterfinal match between Our
Lady Queen of Angels and
Andersen would assuredly be a
top nominee. The eventfuJ game
ended in a 0-0 tie, which set up a
dramatic penalty-kick shootout
Saturday at the Costa Mesa Farm
Complex. Our Lady Queen of
ANDERSEN
Continued from B 1
Angels won, 3-2, in the best of
five shots and advanced to
today's semifinal at 9:30 am.
With the shootout score tied,
2-2, Our Lady's Stephanie Nealey
lined up for the final shot.
Nealey, the goalie who recorded
two saves in the shootout, found
an operung at the bottom left
comer and scored.
·r was praying the whole
time,· said Nealey, who did not
know her shot would be the
game-winner. Ml was surprised
by that. But I probably would
have been even more nervous if I
knew that. (When the shot went
inf, I screamed so loud. I was so
happy."
Both teams entered Saturday's
game with two shutouts apiece
in as many games. During
regulation, the Angels outshot
in the tournament -a shot attempt. In
fact. it took two.
Taylor Wong's shot was the only offense
Queen of Angels m ustered in the first half,
as Andersen controlled the game and kept
the ball on offense the entire period.
McKenzie Brown scored two goals and
Sarah Craig added one, before Anna
Venturini tallied the final three of the half
for a 6-0 lead.
Brown scored the first goal five minutes
in when s e n e rou a pac ,
weaving in and out of defenders. then
popped a shot into the upper-right corner
of the goal.
Ten minutes later, Craig got the ball on a
breakaway and, with a defender giving
chase, slammed a shot just out of the reach
of goalkeeper Natalie Cllase.
Andersen. 7-0, including five
shots on goal in the second half,
but they could not get past
goalie Cicily Lewis.
"This was a great game,''
Angels Coach John Carvelli said.
MThis is why we do this. This
tournament is awesome. The
people involved, the refs, the
coaches, the parents and
everybody is so enthusiastic,
respectful and polite."
A.J. Rome and Amanda
Johnson scored goals in the
shootout for the Andersen
Dolphins. Jackie Smith. Kate
Baldoru and Nealey scored for
Our Lady Queen of Angels.
Lewis recorded one save in the
shootout and another shot went
wide right for the Angels. Nealey
had two saves in the shootout
and another shot went wide left
for the Dolphins.
Lewis finished with eight
saves.
"I was confident in our girls."
Carvelli said. "We have l\ who
are capable of scoring in that
shootout. fLewisl blocked two of
our best players. She played a
great game. We dominated that
game, but she really stopped us."
Lewis made her best save with
three minutes left. An Angels'
player was about to kick the ball
into the net from five yards out,
but Lewis slid and covered the
ball to end the scoring threat.
"We have a great group of
girls." Andersen Coach Jeff Rome
said. "Some of the girls have
been together for seven years. It
was son of a great way to go out
as a class. Everyone on the team
gave it their all•
Harbor
View, left,
and St.
Joachim,
right,
players
battle for
the ball in
girls%
grade
quarterfinal
play of the
Pilot Cup
Saturday.
STEVE
McCRANK/
DAILY PILOT
Andersen kept up the pressure and, one
minute later, Brown scored h er second
goal. She stole the ball from a d efender
and rut a sbot from just inside the 18-yard
box to make it 3-0.
play at school together and AYSO. So it's a
pretty talented group." SATURDAY'S SCORES
Then it was Venturini's tum, a~ she
Goallceeper Undsey Luke, who plays for
the Slammers, saw her first action of the·
tournament when she was forced to make
a save on Wong's shot. Queen of Angels'
Allyson Bernardy got off another shot in
the second half off a pass from Jeni
Penunuri, but It hit the side of the net.
at Costs Mess Farm Complex
Andersen 6, OLQOA O
Harbor Day 5, St. John 2
• scored all three goals in the final five
minutes of the half, two off assists from
Craig and one tlom Anika Gerken.
"A lot.of our core group played last
year," Andersen Coach Oaudio Venturini
said. ·we have some club players and they
In the second half, Oaudio Venturini
relaxed the offensive pressure and had his
team play defense to keep the shutout
intact without rubbing It in. Queen of
Angels was able to put some pressure on,
but Bemardy's shot was the only one of the
second half.
TWIST by, once again. shooting across team last season. said her team ball just outside the right
the goal into the left comer of -played its best game of the goalpost early in the second
Continued from Bl the net. tournament Our Lady tied hall
With a 4-0 lead and the game Mariners. 4-4, then defeated Nolan Mena was a catalyst
apparently In hand, Haeri was Mariners Christian, 1-0, in pool for Kaiser, coached by Gerardo
right slde, 6nishlng a long solo dismissed early so he could play. advancing as pool Jimenez. The Knights advanced
run with a shot inside the near rush off to his baseball game. champion over Mariners by out of their pool by defeating
post. Kaiser then closed to within virtue of one fewer goal SL John the Baptist, 4-3, then
Our Lady goalie Parker 4-2 with goals by Aaron allowed. topping SL Joa~ 3-1.
Reuter made three saves, Cervantes and Joel Karen Potter concurred, Olris Haas, Jack Presson,
including a diving stop late ln Vascomcelos, but Potter booted adding that the players seem to Colin McNemey, Erle
ihe ftrst half that preserved a home a direct lcict &om about be moving better as a team at 1.amucien, MJtc:bell Meleski,
3.0 halftime lead. while 25 yank out to finalize the both ends of the field. Brecht Van't Hof, Kent Smith
Jonathan Walsh anchored the ecodng for Our Lady Queen of Kevin Cortez made five and Anthony Prandlco aJso
back ltne to keep Kaller ~ co-<:oached by the first-half saves for Kaiser, contributed to the victory for
contained. mother-daughter tandem of before gJvfng way to Aaron Our Lady Queeo of Ancel&
Polter ICOred ap1n eerly in Karen and JeMica Polter. White, who ICOpped three
tbe lleCOnd JO.minute t.Jf, Jesa&ca Pbtter, a aophomore abots.. lndudlng a one-handed •••
COf'.l\'erting a c:roa &oni 1-Wri on the M.ter Del ffWt vmlty ·~ in which be defJected the In other 'JOyS 3-4 acdon:
f '· ,
Daily Pilot
BOYS 3-4
Dolphins rally
for 4-3 victory
Mariners Christian's
' three goals in final
six minutes key
quarterfinal win.
Steve Vlr1en
Daily Pilot
COSTA MESA -There was
so mucb excitement, even
several parents were left
drained after an emotional
Daily Pilot Cup quarterfinal
soccer game between Mariners
Ouistian and Newport Coast
Saturday at the Costa Mesa
Farm Complex. The two third·
and fourth-grade boys teams
battled throughout 50 minutes
of well-played soccer. The
Mariners Quistian Dolphins
overcame a 3-1 deficit, scored
three goals in the final six
minutes and won, 4-3, to
advance to today's semifinals.
Steven Miller scored his third
goal for the game-winner with
one minute remaining. Miller's
hat trick was thoroughly
impressive, considering
Newport Coast had not
allowed a goal in its two games
prior to Saturday.
Mariners 01ristian will face
Rea today at 9:30 a.m. for the
right to play in the
championship at noon.
MWhen they went up, 3-1, I
thought we were dead and
buried," said Mariners
Quistian Coach Phil Miller. "I
didn't do anything. The players
were the ones who turned it on
and won this game. That
sh ows you what kind of spirit
they had. That was one of the
most exciting games I've seen
in quite awhile."
Newport Coast Coach ·net
"Ted" Bui also thought the
game was exciting and
competitive. He said, even
though the Coyotes built a I ·O
halftime lead, he thought his
team was playing catch-up
because one of his best
players, Quis Freeman. missed
the first half.
Newport Coast went up. 1-0.
with five minutes left in the
first half. Connor Gaal struck
for a goal after his shot sailed
over the goalies' head and
outstretched hands.
At halftime, the Coyotes
hoped for the return of
Freeman. who came late from
a baseball game. Mere seconds
SATURDAY'S
SCORES
at Costs Mass Farm Complex
Quarterfinals
Rea 3, Adams 0
OLOOA 5, Kaiser 2
Harbor Day 2,
Andersen/Lincoln 1
Mariners Christian 4, Newport
Coast 3
before halftim e ended, •
Freeman sprinted onto the
field, smiling and reveling
amid cheers from his
teammates. who welcomed
him with hugs.
Five mjnutes into the second
half. Freeman quickly made his
presence felt. He scored shortly
after Gaal's sideline throw-in
near midfield. Freeman used
his above-average speed to
create a breakaway and
finished it. Two minutes later,
Steven Miller broke Newport
Coast's 131-minute shutout
streak after winning a ball 15
feet from the net.
I lowever, five minutes later.
Freeman scored another goal.
giving the Coyotes a 3-1 lead
with 13 minutes left. But the
Dolphins remained confident
because they had more scoring
opportunities than Newport
Coast. But the Dolphins just
weren't finishing. until they
went on their three-goal run in
the final six minutes.
Miler scored from I 0 yards
out to draw the Dolphins to
within 3-2. Then. with three
minutes left, Mariners
Cllristian received the benefit
of an own goal. as the ball went
off a Newport Coast player and
into the net. The Dolphins'
Oaniel Gills was credited with
the goal.
In the closing moments of
the second half, there were two
i.toppages because of Newport
Coast injuries. But the Coyotes
kept coming.
Steven Miller, Timmy Root
and Sam BarkJey were
responsible for several scoring
chances for the Dolphins.
while Andrew Bohne and
Daniel Tobeny controlled the
midfield. Goalie Oark Cashion
anchored the defense. David
Moore, Cole Gennrich, Michael
Bui and Hunter Molnar also
contributed for the Coyotes.
whose goalkeeper was Scott
Youngman.
STEVE McCRANI< I DAILY PILOT
A player from Kaiser, left, and Our Lady Queen of Angels, right,
are not doing the latest dance step. They're keeping their eyes
gt ued to the ball in boys 3-4 quarterfinal action Saturday.
• Uncoln (No. I) def. • Harbor D9y 2, Uncoln (No.
Andenen on penalty-kick
lhootout: The teams had
l) I : ln a quarterfinal. Harbor
Day Jumped out to a quick 2-0
identical pool records, each lead but Uncoln fought back ln
ha~ beaten Rea, 6-0, and the second half when Gooding
tied n they played each launched a 25-yard shot put
other. That set up a the Harbor Day goalie. Uncoln
penalty-kick shootout to mounted a furious rally In the
determine which team would last few minutes, but Harbor
advance to the quarterfinals. Day was able to wtthstand the
Uncoln beat Andersen ln the onslaught and preeeM the
lhootout when Kiel W.., win. Uncoln coeches am--
Nldt ~ .. Nick Oad and ~and JabD Omd
JA Dllwn Md\ drllled their praieed the e«on ol both teams
penalty kkb into the back of stad.ng, •0ur ldda fought hard
the net. lJn(1o1n goalie Andrww and repreeented Uncoln well.
McC.anMdl atopped two We're proud ol them and -Andenen ,lbota to aecure the • wfeh Halbor o.y luck In tbe
win. eetnilL.
' ' ,(
\
SPORTS
GOLF
Fund-raiser is driving for children
P laying a round of golf
with rwo football players
quickly proved that a golf
ball can be hit much
further than my thin frame is
able to produce.
When Newport Co&t's R.J.
Kros and San Diego's Dukie
Williams swung their driver1>, a
"whoosh" !IO<>n foUowed and the
ball would 7jp off the club ao; If it
had just been launched with
rocket fuel behind it.
Watching these soaring drivt'S
provided the m01>t entenainment
during the Ornnge County
Qlapler of OUJdhelp U~ 21 SI
annual Celebrity Golf Classic -
hosted by fonner Ram1> all-pro
center Rich Saul -held May 22
at Pelican Hill Golf Oub in
Newport Coast.
Williams retired in 1988 after
spending seven sea'iOn~ a:. a wide
receiver with the llaiders and was
part of the silver and black\
Super Bowl champion'ihip team
in 1984.
The left-hander powered
through a golf ball with a torrid
tum, blasting his driv1..~ d own the
fairway. often catching the down
slope to add 20 yardi..
We playt!d a shamble fom1at,
which allows team member; 10
MACKLIN
Continued from Bl
BRYCE
ALDERTON
place their
ball at the
spot of the
best drive and
each play out
the hole from
there.
Net.>dless to
say we used
WtUiams' and
Kros' drives
almost
three-quarters
of the tinle.
'flle cart Wtlliams and I rode in
contained an elet.1ronic yard~e
guide, which allows you to see
how much further you bave to
the hole, or how far a drive sailed.
One of Kros' drives wound up
294 yards from the tee, a shot
that wouJd easily clear my best
by 40 yards. And that wouJd be
pushing it.
Where I lacked in drivi~
distance, I uied 10 make up for in
iron play or around the green~
After sending my tee shot on
our opening hole in the shotgun
format -the par-3 'lixth -into
a Wttd-covef('d hillside. I faced
an eigh1-foot pun su-dighl
dawnhiU. I tapped the ball softly
and let it roU into the cup for a
birdie for our fivewmr, which
also included quaner horse
jockey Ciery Boag and Mighty
Ducks' radio and televlsion
analyst Brian Hayward.
That pun quickly erased the
memory of the 7-iron I shot over
the green moments earlier.
Memories will remain in my
mind from this day: from Kros
and William.'i reliving the rigors of
training camp, laughing at the
top or their lun~ about the strain
their bodies took. to Boag. who
sneaked behind and shocked
Wtlliams in the back of the neck
with a toy "buu...er" the si7.e of a
silver doUar.
We shot I I -under on the
par-71 Ocean North course, not
enough 10 win, but a pretty solid
round in my book..
A different kind of "shock"
~urrounded me the entire day.
from the m oment I anived at the
cow-se to the minute I left, I was
treated like a celebrity. just like
fonner football greais Deacon
Jon~ and Vince Ferragamo, or
actors Robert I lays and Bob
Donner.
Event co-chairwomen
Olristine Bren and Debra
Violette. along with Eileen Saul
and countJess volunteers,
re~atedly asked if I needed
TODDMAOWN
llorn: Sept. 17, 1915
Hometown;~
Buch
hardly come as a surpn-.e to < .dM LA>at h John
Emme.
d~n't like a pitch. he'IJ
show iL n le mec.:hani~
have been fine. He just
had to work on hi'>
tenacity and location. I le
has done a fant~lk job
and he ha'> been great."
HettiM: 6-foot·2 Wettlht 165
Spoft: 8He~ll
~ PltchefkencM
fl.+def
c:o.dl: John Emme
F....._fooCStnk ,_..--.: •stwett•
anything and feverishty wurkl-d
to ensure I had a group to play
in.
The emphasis of the day's
eveots shouJd be placed on the
money raised to aid abw;ed
children.
Eileen SauJ said proceed!.
totaled a littJe more than
$100,000, similar to last year\
figures.
"Way to go" and a "thank yuu"
to all who made the tournament
possible.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
CelebrafJflg the Dally Pilot's
Athlete of the Week series
TODAY
22 -Martt Meyers
Orange Coast
Men's basketball, '02
19 -Joe Barber
Corona del Mar
Bovs tra~. ·02
prepare for the 2003
season. l11ii. year. hl· ha..,
been coming into h1'> own
He said a lot of tha1 had to
do with hi!> game
preparation and h1c,
teammates.
·Ever since after the Pnde of the Loa-.1
lbumarnenl. he has l:>een throwmg that way
every ume out," Emme 'Wild. "I le h.c. gotten
10 the point that we now expect 11 and that\
what every pitcher want.'-·
Ma<:klin\ dl"\tre to wm
ha1> alc;o been helpful
throughout hio; playing
da}~ which ~an with
only modera1e sucu~ in
the Newport Beach IJttJe
Le·dgue.
.... ....._. _,...-: "Pltdllng.
"I've been k~pmg the
ball down. 1u.-.1 '>taytng
calm and no1 gt.'llmg too
ex.clled." Mack.Jin said "If I
get too exated. ru try 10
mw;cle the ball If I !>lay
calm. my arm '>ldy<. more
relaxed."
Macklin'!\ progression ru. a pitcher rook
dramatic suides when the CdM jwwr ~tarted
to calm his competitive !.ptnl. I le ha., al\Y-d)">
wanted to win. He just needed to relax a hu.
~~~~
] for 4, inducing I J0to hoft'9 M'I with
fOUt ltlls (in I 1~1 wtrl llt Llgunl
a.adl April 25)..
On the day when he
starts a game, Mack.Jm
devote. sigrufican1 wne to
preparation.
"Todd has really developed as a pitcher,"
Emme said ·1 le.new he had great -.tufT. hut
there were just a few change.. tha1 he needed
to make. We abo lei him commurnu.ste Wlth
!catchers Danny Marin-i-:inn and Wt..,..,
Presson) and call pitche<.. n1at al'>O hel ped
hinl improve. tie has heen a dominant
pitdier the past month and a half.
• 1 wa!>n't o ne of the
better player. m li1tJe
league,· Maddin ~d. • 1
didn't come around until
later. But, IU1tk League!
was fun and a ll'ammg
experiepce. •
After UttJe League,
Mad~lin competed fo r a
few travel team.'> and
"I try to stay focu'>t'd cm
that game throughout till'
day." Mack.Jjn '><Ud. "It ..on
L::====================~ of hurts my grade-..
n. '"'*In~ He 1tnw five
fOUt-hit lmir9 to lmpr°""'9 to 6-2 ~
aho hit I thfw1V\ homer to tMilp SH
KJngs trotftOI ~ ••l. In the flnt round of the Of Southern Section
o~ rv playoffs May 21.
DllJPlll
Coll«ror rpotU CMd .,;es
"Todd h~ alway:. had a great a1utUlJe."
F.mme continued. "I le te nd., to wear Im
emotions on his sleeve. Sometiml'S. if he
began to gain confidence. Last year, as a
sophomore, he i.aw action on the mound m
only three mrun~. yet he continued to
because I think about the
game so much. When I get on the field, I ju'>t
try not to get too amped. I.At.I week.. I juM '>di
in the comer and took deep breath5.."
SNYDER
Continued from Bl
lus breakthrough -.ea.<.on ~th a
b-1, 6· 3 vtctory over Snyder in the
utJe malch.
"Maybe I left some or lmy
game in the semifinal match!. I
didn't have the magic in this lfi·
nail match." said the Universiry
of fexas-bound Snyder. who~
prep career includes one more
match -the Clf Division I team
championship again!.t ~ta Bai·
bara on Wednesday at the Clare·
munt Oub. where the Sea King:.
wiU try to win tJicir third ..ectiun
titlt: in five year!\.
"It's been a great individual ca·
rcer, I guef>S. I'm looking forw-.ild
to WedneM!ay's team champ1on-
~hlp march. and hopefully we'U
bring home the bacon," added
Snyder, who won ~uthem Sa·
llon doubles ulle<. the la5t 1wo
'>t'a.l>O ns.
Snyder, the No. '1 o;eed. elimi-
nated Stanley Sarnpamch from
< re<.centa Valley. 6·4. 6-4. in the
Hound of 16, then <,wept Brent·
wood\ Enc McKean. 6-3. i' ·6 (3)
m the quarterfinal'>
C..,nytler, who IO'>l to Das in a
third '>Cl tiebreaker at the Ojai
Valley fenms lournament, up'>t'l
the top c;eed in the ..emifinalc, m
cunvmcing fa!>htun.
~11day .Junt' I l'OO J 8!>
• 11 wa..' a gJ"t'dl ~nubnJ.I, • <.JM
toacll fun Mdllg '>Cl.Id "(...im:tt
wus l'l'a1ly into 11 II wa.' .s l.u1w-.
uc win for tum."
In the champton!>hlp mart.h,
Sacks w.ed a ~erful forehand
to dominate matterh early. wl11l1•
Snyder W3.) &till tryulg tu ctdJlbl
to hi!. new opponent • I lwt'll au
other thing I didn't le.now wha1 lo
expe<-1, beca~ I had nt'Ver
played l~d.'>I befurc, • \nydt.>r
"MIJd.
"Garrell didn't hdVt' 11111t• tu fl>;
we our a game plan," MclHK '>illd
l:arHt'r tJrn, year. '>ad.,, I ti, WUI I
the boy~ I lh national utJc di tJ1<
Muter.,paw champ1rn1'>hl(l'> 111
I~ Vega.'>. qualified tor a prn
challenKer tourmm1ent dn<l fin
i~hed 1htrd at tJ1e I ...t.'>tt.'1 fsowl 111
the I&.
"My KOci.I at lhl' htwnr1tn~ 11f
the year ww. lo \'\ 111 ( II ... "'1< b
\ald. "I le.flt'\'\ II \'l.J..'> J lllUrlldllll'lll
I'd Wte to wtn, bu1 d'> J '>Opho
more you ldJl 1 red.II} n.pt.~1 tJtut
There are J lot ul ~ood plJ} e1'
who are in 11
Snytlt:r. \'\ 1111 Wd.'> proud ol ""
~m1final win brult· \a\ b '>t'rl.•'
for the fir,1 urnc at I. :; 111 thl· -.t·<
und -,ct l orntnK 111 1lw nl't 011 Jll
O\.erhe.ttl '>rlld.'>h for d -tlJ ~J t•dgl
then \'l.1 nntnK on \.st~' lung \.Ill
ley. ~d. .. '>. hu~t'VN. hrukl C...n\d1·1
in the next ganw. ~huh 1111 ludnl
an t>lu:hc1Ilge of drup ,hot,, 111 ,,.
ture thl' thamp1011.,h1p
~u ,,
{rraJ,·,
\~ ....__";/
SOLIS [..';\"ES'T .'lE~'I' (} R' JI I 1
Stock Market's Up. Stock Market's Down.
An you um! of the inanK ~· bdiavior o( the o:wilt1> If wu ~"'"tre.l ">~'" men wmc ha~ '11ruli:fut with Eric~. Learn how to guMillll('t' g10.,.1h
wnh no ri1~ IO yow capital! Elie A. Sofa u ~ c~rtilicd finan,1.ll 1'14nn~I ( 11'
wiLh I~ ycan CXJXrie1¥t. OnMU.W. io b<J'I' he tw ~Ip«! hu d1rn11 ln'<•I
L~1r money wucly to dity call sleep at nighL
When: Tacsday J1mt. 3rd
lime: 8:30 am
Where: Coco's Rat.tan.at }4-46 f.a.st Coast HWY, CDM
949-723-1 167.
"RMIL 1111mbrr 0111, 11ntr I.S< lll0111J· RM1t ,_. rvo. ~ Jorxn "'" ni.mbrr o,,, "',J. "!! •
lnt A .... Cfr l k .. UU C. Dltl • M971l • ----I,__....._. 1111. ...... ......a,: ~ ...
Let them know how proud you are!
THI S YEAR 'S SU MM ER RESOURCE G UIDE
• Weekend Act1v1tie s • How to Get There and Where to Park
• Summer Sports & Camps • Fourth of July Along the Coast
• Dining Destinations • What's Happening & Where -All Summer Long
• Art Festivals • Calendar of Events
Don't miss this great opportunity to have your advertisement be seen
"ALL H summer long by our readers from Sunset Beach to Laguna Beach I
AREAS OF CIRCULA'TION INCLUDE:
DAILY PILOT -Friday, June 13. 2003
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COASTLINE PILOT -Friday, June 20. 2003
\
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Total distribution: 78,000 homes
Daily Pilot
949-642-43 21
I. "OUllA I lACIC th flU1fO• h'I• INDEPENDENT COASTLINE PILOT
949 ... 642-432 1 949-494-4 32 1
A special page will publish in th<• Ddily Pilot on Frid.ly, jun .. 20 lo honrn
our graduates For your dau~htC'r, son. rnend or spec1dl someonl' bt• ,1 p.1n 01 1hi-
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M.J1I this form with phofo to
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D AILY PILOT
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
& MISC.
GARAGE
SALE
BUSINESS &
FINANCIAL
1010-1770
230S·2490
. -.--,..
• . .
' '
-. _..._ -.. "
l ESTAn
R SAll
3010-3940
500S-5150
: Colledlbla/
Memorabilia 1160
Lost 1505 Cab 361Q FO•GIT THE SJOCIC
--------------MAUlTI ~ r-*ir lOST DIAMOND RING
@ Ho a& Hosp1tlll
I undra1ser @ Edwards
Theitlher 1n womens
restroom REWARD ~
6'13J703
100+-mcua> KJ'rTDG, needs only one around '°" ss • •rcottDS nc 1m. Cll:lllL. [le. !Os ~ !Ds
Ill Altec. sp... hAle MrC>S
Mike 949 645 7505
EHTERTAINMENT
Calendar of
Evenes 1310
(QUAl HOUSltG
OPfOl1lllTY
JEWELRY/ 3460
DIAMONDS/
PRECIOUS METALS
c-o Coln Needs
Old Cc1111sr Gold. \!Iver,
Jl.'WClry, w"tches an~
collectibles 949 642·9448
CATS. DOCS pllOI05 on-ft level par Iner on lruly
www.a•••llfwo'k.orl prom1s1n1 product line~ ~ faslmn lsUnd :.m Slly's the hm1t. Se11ous
DAY tU.lli QWW1TU u II 94 9 295 5824 98-644-2279 meetlna i1 ppo1nl me nt fl& SPAY lor ,_,..,.. aiAI •on .. 1x ______ _
gt al ~ 949-533-0411 Riii EsbD
PetAdopaons 3660 SeMca
CO-She.,Mr<h all
colors. all sizes for
adoption to qual1t1ed
homes WWW 8VHCU8 0<8
O< 714-773-5915.
........ ,0w .... Office .._..._,t
MMmtoNG
NOf'al'WS
All rul estate adver
h\ma 1n tho\ newspnper
IS \Ubit'U lo th~ ~ edeu1I
f dll Huu"na At I ol 1968
a s dmended wt11<h
m•kn ot 1lle&"I lo
<1dver hs~ "1ny pr eler
ent e l1m1tat1on nr
d1sc11minat10n baud on
race, tolor. teh&1on se•.
hand1,llp larwh.il \latus
01 nahonal 01111111 or 10
01tenl1on lo makt' any
su'h prele1~"'"· 11m1t;1
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Auctions 1483 MISCEUANEOUS ~====:;;;;;;;;;;;:: MERCHANDISE
1470 ,_. 1reo, Sh 200
Nowpert ...... Ca. t4t-71t-4600
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rt'aders are hereby
informed that .ill dwell
Inf\ ad•er ttsed 1n lh1s
newsp.iprr are available
on •n equ•I OPPor tunily
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cr1m1nation <llll MUO toll
lree al I 800 424 8590
Estafl Sales 1486
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lradewwlO\ ln. Vintaee
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PIANOS i C.olledib4es ·~-·-....... . s..--......... o-... ,_~ ...
$$ CASH PAID $$
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SOUTH COAST AUCTION
2202So.ll.i.!ll
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Newpon Itch OdCArt l lh LOST Cocka~ pey, wtirte, Soo ......................
yelluw, °'"~ cheells, wll ocicats@cybefhollone com
wlJIS11e Name Sk1tlfu Hurry SSOO 949 646 8473 Rewdlrt 949 232 5999 St!ll :yo ur Car
In ClaU /flt!d I
Laree earden waaon,
do& house, double
stroller 949-515 9312
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Up to 70'r. off' 40a60.
~dOO. S8xl20 Best
Oller! Can Deliver'
Roy (800) 499 2760
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AAA VENDING •oun
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1111 lor S10.fB5 lnl-ZJ4.6£2
HOMES FOR SALE
ORANGE 5400
COUNTY
Balboa Plnimlla
503 ... ..,.. Comnwaa'
rllMdnnbll mued ~
dose to fun Zone
$799,<IXl 8kr 9&251·9'44
CoronadllMar
New u.-. 5Bt plus
bonu$rm rt~ ..
Custom pool. spa &
Gazebo to the I& .__,,,.
decll on the upper ie...i
VtSUs bl~ UM! Of
p anile nlllf tMe & lots of
love SI, 950.000 Judy
Kobr, Blu 949 J76 5576
JASMINE C•JH Sin&
story 2br 2b1 den Roaers
Cardener landscaped
Handicapped ready Very
low ma 1nl .f.ssoc
w/tenn1s, pool
Call for appl By Owner
949 640 8777
------------------,_,,.,. er... r abulous
ioc.t>on on the areenbeltl
3br <*\/wort.Olli room.
u tr1 II !iv/rm w/fp. ac.
pie 11\*ded. poots, ~·s
& tennes. $799,000 Judy
Kolar Btu ~ J76 5576
TODAY'S CROSSWORD ANSWERS
N.wWmp,,,......
l ocaibof1 & VllJd
:& SI :.mJ.1JJ
:& Sl.ZJ9.000
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BJ ~ Ptud C.Rly
9&nl-Oll2
O"N SAT-SUM 1-4
715 AVOCADO AVI
Wall\ to COM Villa1e
beaches. F adlion Island
Prtce R1n11 $395,000 to
S.425,000 714·39&·9661
• •COMING SOON• • C.....C.-4el-
c ...... ·~COASTlM llU&.TY
t4t-7St-0177
'llMI ISTATIS ,ATIKI TINOl.I
N.ATIOMW1Dt USA
94t-H6-t70S
www patr1cllten0f1.com
1515 loll 1516
PERDIDO-Por Favor
ayudenos encrontar
nuesbo perro de Familia.
Perdlclo 4119/03. Hay
premio de $400.00 para
informacion que nos
ayude encontrar Nuesbo
pero gutrklol U1m1r
949-842-6453
Lost/Please help us find
our lost famlly member.
a::ost on 4119'03. There Is
a $400.00 reward for
lnfOrinltlon lucllng to . Still Missing!! ..., whereabouts.
; HELP!/ Please call
: 949-842-6453
-
Index
\ ~
' .,,. . .
--
'.a,.i ----
llWPOIT IOOt
Of8I SAT-Siii 2-S
-~"'*rt 122u1nwe ID.,..
Hi&NY waded 21r 2ba
condo. Westciff area.
$393.lm By Owntt
~'9'2
• lll"1"4sltw C-r-ys
fhe ~I of £~ in
tht5 ~ 48< 2.5&
w/a wtne celllr. llbraty
i1nd panot amec v~ ~om
!Im bluff tap home. You
mus t see th is
one .S:Z. 799.<XX> -et . Joan
9e9-707-4440
A aoqsm s. sao
Mr.dlus bq fW p6;w\
hl11h ce11rn11~. curv1na ~case, llUb«le F p, I
prmet tutdWI. ruslDm
~' more..Sl.l!IJ.ax> MlchMI lln1unan. c.o.sar..
Relit) ~759-0tn
""" ,............ DXl5f home on 1 owrwed lot
wtU> seer.: -48t, office. 38a. le p<. FR. la
wup •ound y•d. Marble.
p .-.te. CO!J11S llllllys, 11111 so-pQstM 1V -et Stew t•t .... SO-U10
0.0.. Set & S.. I 2-4 ~JC~C-1
2Br Ea Bdaul Gem
MmW wlfp & b*orly Wiii
blr. patio w/bria'\.
SI /HJIDJ I&!. Bil Wt"1t ~l<l'iO
S..,. Te n. .._. and
YoU p<MICy • tool One of
the larlllf$ lots .. lido s.. :& JM. 11 bldly.9"d. II 2c P $91!>.000 t...ry
SctwTwdl ~J.lCXll
NfW ON THI MAUET
o,_ S•t 2-S
Onofor4•4.lVI ......
Or Sbr 5ba. 2 c aar,
Sl,795,000 By Owner
71 4 357 !>450
,.IMI ESTATfS
'AHJCI( TlNO•E
NA TM>NWIOE USA
t4t..aS6-t70S
www palr ldllenote.com
,........., 58r 28a, afiie·
sac local1on w/pool
Princ:ipeh only please
$615" l e•shold Oouc
BIAley. Blu !I& nJ>. 110ol
~ ........ <><-V c...,_ -. e 2.158&.
~ 2(XX)sl Not lls1lld 11'1
MlS Undler S900.000 ... Ocxc an ~1996
Dl-.Coltr-.
•• C.llforUst,,._ ••
,,,,.._, ... C_.,f 1£-'ty
t4t-U•-J7'0
.... o..&-11 l /2. 2/1. rut Sale As 1s1 eat
offer over ssi.>.CXJ>
949-81-8128 ~
~ n.1-20201 ~
Se.&-& f>.5&. 553' st. Sl.8> Mi. Broller !MS-251·
9444 -~.or1
lllCOURT llSJ IUYll
•Br 3 58• Twm, 3400 sf,
$895.000. •Jt. Onld
Pnnc:e 949-718-1520
HUSTllSW
ltG 11.ACH HOUSE
4N 2.SIA • SHt,toO
AetNT t4t-21t-2SSt .....-eo..
OPEMWM 1-S u .. above tho clouds.
ocean views I 1e .. 1 holfte 2br, +-!Mn, Gated
comm $851..000
P\ATINUM NOnanff
Stefanie Mtwer
t4t-71S-llS6
S._...-.-4
wlnnfna IJ'roc*fleld
hOmt, built In 2000 3bf + office Allofoa 3700sf.
$1,)lt .... Pt.A,... fltMM'llTtlS s .. r.1111 ~ • .,
149-715·31!16
,_.IHATIS
•• nlCll f9IOll
UTIOllW• RA ... ~ ..... .,..
W-patrlell-t COIW
I
RESORT/
VACATION
PHOPERIT
FOR SALE
MISCEllMEOUS
RENTALS
==-IAYVllW HltGHTS
(6) lOAlO SZOO. (?) l50d
$250. pvt prop., lilC .... sow ~~.36a
AESIOENTIAl RENTALS ORANGE 7400
COUNTY
YIMLY 38'+-deft, 2 58.t,
2t pr. Sln8'I family home.
I dool' to lht bMc11
Avllllal* now s:MCXVmo
Assoalted Realty
~
21w I .... bu~t·tns, wd,
frpk, parlun,. la stor_•ce
loft. No peVsrnll. SI 1aV
mo('Ylse.~
8allOI Pllltanll
lit 2.,. 2h charmln1.
slqis to beach $1590/m.
1544 Mtr1m11 Of
94t-67S-1Ha
~•·. th, w• •• '-de, bay, quiet. ,., • patio,
n/SIT\/pet S2JOOm yrly,
!MS-26.l-19111. pm ~
711 a..._. ::mr 2Be. Im badl ~ pvt lndry,
1 carport. SZDVmo. a.rt
& R.dy1 9&251.o9444
~c-...-..
J+.2 "" 2c ... i ~
$'M by 524 S.W.d Rd.
Key --to pvt. 1-d\. L'lll~~
A Cvt Afte ........
1800sf. 2 Mstrs, 2 1/2
baths, FR, 4 patios. Pvt.
aar W/O, Pool, Spa.
Tennis $2600 M9·723
1141°'310 4n 7930
a-SU99' deen furn
2bf 2b• (2 "'* ... wtpvt dds) town IDm
4 blls hm bd\ .......,
noPltno9'1dalcs .. SZ19!irn tm Nlrdllul 1--...s7....,.,
''''"' 11, 2 .s1. Holtse, newly remodeled,
Fp, A/C, wfllrlpool b.tb. $3300/mo !M!M63-llfil
........... •1••/ ..... S.. "*Y w/llll(h ===== 1 ;u; 2bf 2.Sh twntlm. ec, wd, l c pr + l c
cerport. P'ool & 1191 Sl&OO.!Mt-67S.7183 r1Mt., , ......
...,..,.., ~ Fp,
W/d ... lc ......
!Wt rri Pit ""' Slmtl !l._ ~MIJl lab •11o1-.~ ..... hwt~ Slm'mo. .-~ ~
""""' •23Mm1 II lJll lllllt
a...c.~~
Home 2Br 2B1, 2 car
11r•1e. 2 bHchn. A/C.
ava11 7/17U 998-1758
UOO YIA.llY LJASI
Bill CRUNOY RCAt TORS
t4t-67S ... 1•1 ........, .....
Penlnwll StudlO Apan
men!& nall Act $750
$950 !M9 673 7800
MlY ...... lbr lbl.
Bly view, Pril Pt ,..,...
M uta incl S1m'mo. Avril
lrnmed 9&9.l).5978
.. ,., ....... 21><
yearly rtntels a1t S 1400
1950/mo. !M9 673 7800
949·673 7800
HA&I OFf ht MO llNT
fOf fTlO'IH1 June 1 w/12
mo ie.. Hew remodel
Cept Cod style comm.
w/new dishwasher &
refnaentor. carpet &
---Ill Wldtw/dtys, inUdoe @ apt ll!f SUBS 28t SI~ Cal Lon (949)
~Z22• Of 7l4-633-1!192
._ .., Pvt bmtl -
tWbar Illa. 2& ui.. 3Xlll ID~.--.~
Sl700m be 949 718·1400
,.. ()m lM'lwn petm.
amn 2b l.!ibl Pltlo. pod/
1111.nuPIMl,~2c .. ct SlJ!JO 9&293-€Jl
.. c..... 2b' .,. Cord>.
lJ:X>+s(. fnpc, 2 patx.,
newly decOfalad, w/d
ll1lllil SJ85Qn 7l4~1
...... '-" 2Br 2Be. rw#tfJ remod!lllld. r p, .ct ~cl. .... ~
IAYVIEW HltGHTS
20101 Cwireu St. 2b', ok , 2ba, MW kit, w/d. $2250m.
Ill Ctwaty ~500 3648
l•••~l111ff 3 br 2ba
townhome, 2 c a1r,
comm pool. Aat S2JOO
t4t-67S-7100
llACON U.Y /IAY ~
upstairs 2br 1 SO• tp,
'"·-. wd hllup yr be $2600/mo 949--673-8411
o.M. ...... ....... h home, 2--... priv
ptbo, comm pool 'ii' •
S2!l15 ..... "°"' ~
LU. 0. T1oe w-
3Br 281. 18'~8 W/d ,
built Ins. sm pet ok
Hup deck facena th•
channel Poss slip 6mo
lease I yr S3200m •1t
Shefry@ Ctnnery. !M9
723. Sdl/1811-961).9667
...... ""'-.... Gtelt
twWb»hood 48f &, FR,
lit w/Fp. -~ S1!Dn • 9'9-55011
LWe t.rtr-condo 28t
[lepflt and lrrin'wlculale.
lflOWed W/aflf1'ow«I Cledll
II/pets SJ.900/mo yrty
Owner/act 9&718-2nt
0 .. .... SIMOOllS b a.. I& decll. FR. lrOy rm.
2c pt. S4900rn I 'I' lease
Av .. &11!> 9'~21&5 a...-I• New,~I
Beyond dur fT9'C. 48r ...
den. &. wine a.bl.
ttnaced prdens w/>mws.
Jlal\lmo yny ct. O.wod
Prence 9$n 8-152D
Remis Wll'llld 7880
•osr-1Wo,lltefw'o ...... _...,_, .....
COSTA MISA. HI, N"
11• 11A HAVE A DOG.
$ 1000/MO. UfS. CUOl th-$74-4241
11 'f I I & Af• ~ s.,p...t ..........
Uport -Pratdum or PT flea NMn. Must know Quidlboolu well Resume
to fu 96<442 T3t9 or QI 949.W 7D>. I,.....__...&/•
man.aced a buMneu, co -..yo.. .. , ....
ID ,_ NI lam 7142'.B&Jl'
HIVOIS WANTID
Hwrport ' Hunbf11ton Bd\ Sit your O•n SC:hed\llef
Part or tv•·IJme na.lable
S7!>+/day lun-hme
CaM llllS--OOl-WORK
Ill ...., @ -1)-0.{mm
S-.. ,.. Deckhand
Cap on hstuna yac:ht5_
Based in Newport Beach.
Fex ,_,.to~
w,......wi.... ....,ny1 .....
OmlW•Wlyi
1949)642-5671
PAIT-1111
lBUIAIU1ll5
Pet manenl •nd Summer
pos1toons 1n the lone
8e•ch Are•
Up to $300 per week
(depends on up )
Worltr M--n.w..
4,...~ap..
& Set,t--t,....
Will Ir ••n l11endly r II!
spons1btt persons to
conl•ct potanttal < u"
tomers OVef lht phone
ind provide mlOf mal1on
1boul free services that
our 1rowm1 mor teaae
company ho to oller
( ntoyable no prenurt
po11t10n w/erut ulary,
bonusM . and future
CALI. ~ RESORl:S
@ l.afi6.262"8344 ~ fAX
RCSlM TO
~1427
Nf-SCHOOl TIACHE•
neeckd to worll on well
estabhsMd prt school
Apphcanl n~ed 12 un1l\
of ECC and a <le•r
11ndeutand1n1 ot •htld
development [&per req
Crut tum of lu<hen
lo wor~ with 949 673
8233 c.-.m Ctwl1ty
PubhV11n1
'ROMOTIONS
or,UTM(NT
Coownurwty ~\ ..
0rllf'I'! County ~s f ..
Ttme penon lo ~
and wule Slor!9S !)M1IO
!Ml• rt community -15
a ule and ~ P9S
and secttons l sce~I
communcatton •115 ...,,91
wel wM the publlt. llnnw
AP style, QulltkXJ>r~
Pho!OShop. Muth /vj C. e
ator, Proficient on MAC
and PC. CCI du11n
u pertence p11terre d
Prooff eadln& test Or ua
w~r~ed EOE E .<cellenl ~nef1t
pado.llfle Cma4 resume.
Wfltll'IC ~ Ind ui.y
r eq u111 m en t a l o
llla.pnion@ aam-.com
EM SM.a. Trendy ~
doClq •• 11'1 ~
.,_,, 1$ i... 1or se
nl "W"l Bnlb .,,.._ 871
~ Q.l 310.311·5616
nu-a"s
Appl. Sotton
S9 00. Si&50 t)IJf hotrlt<
aimm+ bonilie Pd ....,.,.
ntf'l h per pl!fo ~
Wlb:lnwS Z> 'fWI Co HB
Honest,IC:leln ' Lllflm* EJMonment. Cll 1-a» 163
cm .2~
SELL
your unw•nled
items lhrouah •lns1lied
!J?each 42, I(}
Ad>moblles -
A.eomodVI ..
IMW 5251 '90
Cold, low •Mot, runl
11eall Fully lo•ckd .sxxi
CB> 9fi fJil U01
IMW ll 'U -· 4411 a..lllM n• S ~ lndtlO datk ~ lod'fl ,..,.. lf"lt.
beaCJtJful or• l.WNr t.ad t ond Sl4.995 vrt7!B241 ~SJ6.8888 e., ----l 111tdL ''6 CO«twy
I owner cloth 'le<lls PWT
.uh ' -~ ,,,,..., 2911 ~· $4600 714 '.:bl 6187
c..-.c..,..~• ~ kJW mo Sivs w,-tl.
top, ? Or, NY ri1 ~~
cond $31'1> 949 548-0425
Cedllloc '02 DeVtHe
Sedan 1911 m1. while
o•lm .. l lthr, CO, Onslar
v•l37943 $24.995 u ve S20ll Im & w1rr inly
0 111 Bkr 949 S86 1888
www.0<,.....l.c-
fOH AUOSTA• 'ts
at, air 5 pass ~ m1,
utrn . A I condl $3900
949 12? 8?91
for4 ·•s ••••••• Conv•rl1bl1 or 111n al
owner. solrd car Sl9 995
Obo 949 719 2943
!J?eaders in :JCeapf!rl Yleach,
Corona def !!Kar, <.Xewporl Co asl,
Co laJKesa.
uf on I.his
f:!1'£_f9o/. ~1 1efdl
:flo(J)Case
ne 2.5, 2()()J
e 1Jead'line: ne I <1, 2()()J
{orial7Jead/ine: June 16, 2()():J
'ly llPilot ANNI • (949) 574-424
I,
\
I TODAY'S SUNDAY PUZZLE
ACR088
1 Pry open
8 Lineman's coup
, 0 Wine Yelley
1•Dog nails
ie~a sylable
21 PIUa
87 This. to Joee
88 Moreno et al.
89 Phnlber'a tool
90Va•area
DOWN
1 OuUaw Jamee
2 Trojan War llOfY
3Beh1Mora
78Whinny
79TOl)eka loo.
80 Baobell 8Wlt(d
81 Wlnddir.
83 Ulmoei degree
840u1 ot bed
22 Mad IClentist's a de
23 Condo<'• ,,..,
92 Cloeo-llttlng
93 Germen ertlcie
94Edge put
96 Set or too1s
97 Ash without a hcense
99 Balpwk figure
4 Con9Umef gds
5 To t.tai.
6Ughtlunch
7 Shepatd or Cranston
8Wiac hrs
9Cabt>9kln
~ Blow1orch uaer
86 Stone Age too
B9Zlgzag 2• ~a S'lOOze
25 Thin strip
28 Sighteeelng tnp rr Memorizea == 32 F1nlt gear
M Some game
38 Porgy'• love
102 Temer of filmdom
104 BNn huH
105 Potsonous 1n111<e
106Male bee
107 MuslCAI combo
108 Runmng mates
1 0 Bloc~headt
11 It's - -(NASA OK)
12 Upswepl hairdo
13 Quiver 11119'
14 Unfeehng
91 Plav'u biles
92 Lin on the beedl
95 Female rllbbll
97 F011c PW1
98 KlutZ'a cry
1000uarry
37 Solivan and Murmw
38Let ra11
11 O Unaerwater &tl<>cMrs
112 Sa~1ng veaaels
114 Good n ~eKICX>
1 15 Win Oll'8f
15 Remd< or Trevino
16 Emir, probably
17 Wound up
1 8 Booome llWll/'8 °'
20 Raced off
101 Motel plus
103 M,mfCkecs
105 Requested
106 Fluffy
107 Walrus tooth
109 lmpon car
111 Senato output
1 13 Potential
39 Uniform trim
41 Owls' queties
<)lair
4' Poet's COf'ltracilO'l
45 Made merry
•7 Raucous laughs
49 -to sell
52 BkM1 OtJt
53Skewer
55 Funny TV &how
58 Unfounded report
80Newoop
62Preeege
M Needle or rlo
86 Hlgtl mountains
68 Acted.Ides
67 Teen'a denla
69 Rocker -Oceetl
71 Judicial order
72 BtOOka or Gibson
73 Had supper
74 G~er
75 Amafllo nllllve n Rollo"'9f Wbf
78Making do
80 lntunales
82 Scritltlle m
M Gather logether
86 ltke permed har
C•lilorni• lew rt·
QUirP th•t conlrec·
ton tMllna jobs th.It taut $500 cw more
(Wlor Of IT\lterills)
ti. bnsed by the
Co11t,.cton Stete
Lie-8-d. SI.It.
llW llllO r eqwru that
con ltec:lors include
thw liclnM ~
°"·~YO!I
c:.1111 chldl the st.bis
of 1o ur ltcenHd
co11trect o r at
www.e&lb.c•.10• or
800·321 ·CSLB. Unll-
unHd cont,.ct0<~
talll111 fobs tlllt
totel less thi n S500
must state in lllllr
1dvertl11111ents th•l
ttley .,., not licensed
by tt1t Contr1clor1
St.ea l iceftM 8-d.~
11 7 Tidy the lawn
119 Poeses9ea
120 Hanging ornamen1
1 ;>1 "'"*t 11 mudpeck
123 Happy event
1~Swetva
126 Aloof
129 Dressmaker's cut
131 Grubby
132 Mu1ele ctir dial
133 Mink or ch1nch~la
138 Gariah light
138 Colo netghbo!
140 Casuet farewell
141 Smoked meals
142 Long emsy strioe
143 Caustic so uuor
145 Slope ft:>Udeted
loddlo
147 Authentic
149 Orcnestra memDe<
151 Enticed (2 wds )
152 Olatney Stone ,ocaie
153 Perry's penner
1 !>4 More hlgh-mtroded
155 Breezy talk
156 Robins' bills
157 Long-tailed animals
158 Tr&tlofia sauce
EFFIOENT
AIR SYSTEMS
C-20 520089
(714) 114-2007 HI 112.ffM Ml (Mt) 72H717 , .. " .......... lllct11D
FURllACE
SA1 F
R•RFvmaa &
Miiiy Coclt Upgradlt
75,• ITU frtll S1* 1•.•rrum..,..
Plus ~ l*Tllhl. & code llPO'ICltl
914 2007
28 9-digil 10
31 Pan of mph
33 w • tlJmilSlhere a'8nce
35 Saerrttsfs question
38 r omin.teUe<
39 Prominenl 008eS
40 Railroad t.rmlnal
42 M1n1-play
44 Pvt ·, 1uperiors
45 Weather warning
46Gloomy
48 Cook slowly
49 Tot'a transpon
50 Oeode. as a jury
5 1 Pu1 tnlo effect
S2 Portend
54 Nobelist nun
56 Polit cal cartoons
5 7 ISIS hUsbal'ld
58 Heavy -ba"ld
60 Ladder pen
61 Wife ot Geraint
63 Veto
66 Family connection
66 Mos1 weird
70Wh1m
73 Harrow parts
74 White water cralt
75 EilpioS•ll8
I#
:rouble'Tlakar
1 14 Fugue composer
116 6anktupllng
118Food
1 20 Arizona city
122 Comte·booll thud
124 Like e desen
125 Block as a 51ream
126 Jlfy
127 \40f1k& quarters
128 BYmp1un
130 Lucky numbe1
132 Fables
133 AIUrTllnum wrnps
134C~o
135 Typo of rocllot
137 7i ch
1 39 B!llcer'e dozen tn Rcme
141 Sentry's cry
142 Brain pan
144 Chaney of lllmdom
146 \4oon, poetically
148 Pa1eozo1c e g
150 Early 1azz
• •llSINISS •U~
UPCr•des, Repairs ol
Computer. Net...orks
£ veninp/Wedlencb Co~Utiv• prices
for Qu•lfty servlc.
949...a..11n ,..._.,._.2n
ke
licensad EIKtrical
ContractOf. Small
iobs st.rt1n1 et
$79.95&11p.
Spec:1elizln1 ln
Aemodelin1 It 111
home wlrin& r!Mds,
Comnv'lnclust/Res
1-I00-897-100. l
l rkll It.di s .... Tiie
Co11cnte. f>tlbo, ~
Firepk, 88Q. Ref's 25Yrs
[Ip. Twry 714-557-7594
~
MUD MOU IOCNIJ
MlOlmNS & AEJOlEl.f«> l f577982 949-709-5642
o.._Nl 1-l11
YOUllMOMI YlnOYl.MDn
FREEllHtOllE
UTIUTEI
I llllPECTIOM SQOO>INC.
b J'OU' Qllllf'Ull' llow1 jia lib ,out CU, dwy
NOJlm Call •e."'"'· -·Wt pelnler. ndyiMn,
.,,. • inrmlll dunrr • cw 111y of the sru t -m .. 11uec1 her• 1n
.... Clllllll
35" 011 ~~$" ... 2 1 ...... ,.. .......
,. • ' f ~ ·-
~ . I ' ' • ' I
I ,"it i I l • ,
;·-:t)(l • ) ,, .-, :
':~.ra~7
dma and -dea. We CUI U'IAlltt daQ IO
J'OU' new CiOlllflU"J. We
.a 111> llftwotb blc atld
Wall. R-.llt -
Cabk/DSUDW..up Modems-Co.!p&ete M.11 1...--~ ..
,. ,. ., ,,,. Ult "" ~l:tia NCnrUI._
M9·394--290S
IJC. l<IOC:.
s
your stuff ..,..
classifledl
-Mrvice dHctoryl THES£ LOCAL SVC
P£0Pl£ CAN HELP
YOU TOOAYl :::1:. ............. L.-lenw& ... ,.,,
wrrfllOlfT HYWM&. ~...-.n.~
All pNMS am/\'J.lob 6 .......... 2!1Yrseap
~·.tr .. IJc;llN.• ... StMa3
et nu»1w
a.1111 .... (.....,.
~ o.i!:.m:=:ac. ~.~. ........... ......,.,,
l~---••l•h ......... ~ -~l~ l1275170 MMM).)OC2 11•m.a ..
UC... CotmllK1'0I ........... ,.,.
-~---_..., ~.•••11u11, ...... , .......... ,., .... =.. ....... .............. (!!!] I -
Bridge
Sy CHARLES GOREN w1th OMAA SHARIF
and TANNAH HIRSCH
YOU BE THE JUDGE
Nau-\ulnerable. Swlh deal~
l\ORTH
INn ralte 10 pmc ~ hl\e been pusilJarumoui in lbe C.uftmt
West led the IC\'CO of lpldn. CO';·
creel by the ten and ,act and lllkea
wilh the ktnl Oecllrer pla)ed the
Icing al diamoods. taken by East's acc. and bade came the eap of clubs. Smee there wu no way to oocne IO
nine !ricks w11hout IWO in club!..
dedurer look the lille$:.e. West
grabbed the king and ~vened to
'~· and Ea...i ·, A 9 over the table·,
queen assured the dt:fenckn. of four
incks in the suit -down 1v.o
• Q 104
AKJ9
864
• 5 2
WEST
•73 ;;7543
'; 98 7
• K643
.:ASI
•A J 986
108
AS32 •87
SOlTrll
• K S2
0 62 re: J 10
• A J IU V
The bidding
What'' your verdict"
SOlTJ'H WF..'i"r M UU 11 •..A.'>T
It all loob pn:ay normal. hut that
l\ DOI the case. South blUlldemJ biidl)'
by playUIJ lbc ICO of Specks t'roro
dummy Ill trick one! S!JPPOiC declar-
er had called for the &able\ queen
imttad of the let>. Eu CUil 'NIJI. bul
canoot conunut !>Oldt:s w11.bou1 ii'.
mg South two tnclcs tn the \U1L
l• ,_ I ••
lNT '"-J~T Pav. ,_ ,._
Opening lad 'i<1cn 111 •
Study the h11kJ1ng and pl11> 111 tlm
deal, then decide Did an>unc .:rr in
the bidding or plJy" If '"· "'ho'!
The auction I\ rouunc Wuh a
i.ound opening bid. "'h1~h was
improved by the k11..,11tun uJ lhc long
of s~ behind the ct\t:rldll.
Soum\ hand v.a.1 ea.ti~ "'urth "rebtd
of one no uump for North Ill do I~
Be~ defense 1s for EL\l to 'luft to a
d uh. but declarer counters by n~ing
with the ICC Of clubs and play1J18 the
king of diamonds. Thill line lo<ie1
onJ y if WCM ha-. the ece of diamonds
and bast the kin& ol clubs. bul lbc
auctioo indicates th:IJ E.lst ll I WOO£
favorite 10 hold 1 miuing ace. 1f noc
both of the key canb Should the! DOI
~ the ~. ~ wre to congraw~
East for such superl> dt:femc
a-4 Rovet' '91 DI•·
covery LC 4lk m1 4y1
warr av111I d1~ metalll<.
11reen/t•n llhr. huled
seals, dual mnr I btdU
ttlul oria tond, ear ae~o.
non/smkr, mu~t 1ee to
appreciate v•9'.>8741
$13.995 8lu 949 !>86 1888
-.ec.,.l.corn
uxus soosc '91
Foiest areen Ian llhr
SHU, CD Suntuot •II
pwr lo•Oed r lnl cund
$9,900 obo 949 171 '>1>49
Mez4o '99 Mloto
Conv 45k mo •ulo
silver. tan top pw pl
A/C. CD supeob hk~ nrw tond v•l 19743 $17 99'>
hnanc1ne & w•rr a nly
ava1l Bkr 949 !>86 1888
-.•cpobl.<orn
MOCIDIS 300CD"""iS
Rare Coupe Blue nalu
ral looks ano 1un\ great•
$4500 obo 949 !I I'> ~;>
Morco4oa 'DO l 310
16k a<lual m1 lull
factory warr tu1quo1u
blue/o •lme.tl llh1
moonroof CD t hrornti
whk one of the lownl
mrl" Mercede\ ul th• year m C•hl v•!>57t'91
$29.995 hnancin& •v411
Bkr 949 !>86 1888
w-.oqiwab.com
Morco ... a 'I I 560 Sl
wtute/lln. 1mma~ •~tu, 1\111.,..,_ .. ~
ctrone!.. $14.<lll n~l'JI ~
MllCUllY Grand
Mw,.ul• '92 •Int «ind
tthr 14711 mt •II pw1
super rel1<1ble New
b<akt\ lttt'> b•ll~ry
Slo/.)() obo 949 719 l'.>11
SELL
your stuff
through
classified!
.... ( u,
Get your y•rd lookln&
lb best lor the !illml1W
Yarddlln~~
~ .... ..,~
W9lkend & eve QUOlCS
Xtre H-4 Sorvlcoa
714-CV ....
fJf <,TOR[ • Rf P41R
& RI \100ll l"«G
COlllUTf """' llAlll'RNAJla
No job loo s111.1Nl
h•ythlnc lrom ~loPIMbrW
rr"u t1111•t•
'"":::fl ,.,..,, ... , ,.
'HIWPS AUTO
91 IMW :J2JI
Conv leathef lfllenor.
A beauty
(19llll) $18,980
OO•MW M •---
8&atk w/p ay ptemtum
~
!19388) $2.8,980
99 """""' .,,.,,,.. 8'4c. k chrome wlleets
.,, tu cle~in
c 1939/) SZ8 980
0 1 l'ortdte ,....._,.
Only 11111 Mo, HR( Ptf
l0tmanv wheels
1193941 INQUtfff
66 Ponclt. 926
S C....,.
Blad1/clean tan ltlll
luM •er.cw<!>., rare hnO
092881 Sll.980
96 IMW NOi S.-.
I uwntf luut Newport
Seclitn &JUI records
t lwomed wheel5
1193401 W .980
OO }oplsXP
~ w blxk 12'(
m1~ perlect
1193811 $45,980
9' t.1un GS 400
Pre1mum w'-15, CO
'>llKk -.unr ool
092861 $18.980
02 Forti , """' only 496 mtles
(! CJ384C) SJ3 980
oo J...-s-r..,.. I 21i mo lthr moon r ool
( 19314> $25,980
'9 MIZOXUO
bLxk w 'l>litdl leattw
ctwomed wneek
I I !002 I St'9.98>
949-574-7777
f'HILll'S AUTO
~
lDl9QID
I OllNSOM coarAMY ~wa ~
Mark 949--650-9525
THIHANOYM.Ail
All wOfk (Ull'IUllHd
........ Uectrbf. Docn. FMtl c=p lie. 95394 E .....
NM TO , .. DU•lll
714 968-Ulll2
AVAll..ABLE lOOAYl
949-673-~
-'HU..S AUTO
••IMWUfll corw. leather W>lertor
beeutyl
(193301) $18.!8>
OOUIWM ....,_ -.v. ~w/pey
ptemium wnem
( 19388) $2.8,!8>
H IUZSLSOO
Stl'm pey futher
premwt-a
( 19390) $27.980
Olf'endw1 ... F\lt
only 111( ""· HAE per formance wheels
( 19394) JNQUIR{ I
"'"'-SllYtf w/Bladt Only
) II( Mc. wry CINn
(19413) $55 980
ff NIW T«ll S.-. one-· local New
por1 SldM1 areat
records chrom.S ..tlls.
(19:),t()) S2'2.B
OOJ...-XU
s.i-•!SUd 1211 ""· Plrlect
(19381) ~.-
91 l•UW GS JOO
chrome Wills low
mtles, sunroof
(19418) $23.!8>
01 '-'I , ..,,,,
Only 496 mile!.
(I 9384C) $33. 980
OO~S-T"'°
12)( Mole. w 1e;1ther
tnt moonr ool
( 19314) 125.980
n /IUZ OXJ20
bl.tdl w"'4adl lttw. '"'°"*' wheels ( I 9.m) $26,980
94 ... 574-7777
f'Hal'5 AUTO ......... '*"
H ST MOVllS SSS/Mr.
Senq M ca-tn.nd.
n 631M4 ~~2378
3ZJ.G>.9971 Cllll
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Cellf Public
Ultl1tles Commission
requires tfl•t el UMd
household a oods
movers print their
P U.C Cll T MlmMr.
lfmos ind chauffeurs
print their l .C P.
numtler 111 •• edvw· •-nts If you hne
1ny quallotls Hotit
the le1•hly ol •
m over , 111110 o r
ch.uffwr. cell:
~wramn
COIUllS_. .,, ...... ,
..... ~C.tme.••· ..... ,....,, ...... cac-..ne•• •
Soodly, .Arie l. 2003 17
ftdl lKIN -~. ~~~~~~ lllCBJNEOU$ CR~YIER
--., · ..
NEW2002
MINI COOPER
Sl.flOOf I PfOUI PKG
16'~0YS.CO
m,~
IATntSPlln
(0318)
•
• LITS llll(J!! IT'S FUii
******** 55 FmAY @ EIVall
SNff A MA AUTO MAU
(lll)IU..9IOI
....... SAUTO
n•wn•-lthr ll'lbrll>f buutyl
949-574 7777
P'M&W'S A&ITO
$ 0 0 $ scutc1 WM
s.t... '9t ~ose
2.5RS, bl•ck buutr
lmded, nnf. al RS opt.ora
$10.500 714 751 2464
Velk••..-'00 1-tt.
2811 mo. sperkhna bltck/
oatmul. auto. mool\rl,
CO pw. pl, alloy whls.
like new. vtn'470055
Sl2.995 ltn &. warranty
anti Bkr 949-!>86 1888 www~l.c-
vw ~ Gl "90 5 ~
sbck al records IJ.C 1111""°'...,,. fTl9'Y enr m.'
$1900/obo 714 47) ~
SEU ,.. .... ....
Wlllllll IMS .... ~ .... 0-io ~ expl Ml pey
1vwyfwpna1b'rQIAI
cs v.... or trua. Pl'd "• or no&. c:.11 Od Mey @
lmnlk> Id.I s.-7P '31-l!Dl or JlA..328 3221
CASH JOI CAltS
Wl MlD YOU. CAlt
f'AtD fotl Otl MOT
...UU.lf'S AUfO
ASIC fOlt MALCOLM
949-574-7777
BOATS
Power Boats 9615
·oo ' "' Duffy lledri< bodt 1 o-d"d•ed hv
8albtMI ~ "'1-l ,...
S II (IX> 00tJ 94'1 M /'Of-,
I SO NEW & USlD IOATS 0-,...,.. I OAl SHOW
Mery 29 "-I
hi,,_ 16l>-374 1671
Sallboats 952()
Holbor 10 "3 I
Nf"W flr-t flti l If•• SI l 000 ,,,,.,
949.733 1153
BOAT REPAIRS/
SERV1CES
BOATS SUPS/
MOORJNGS/
l.AUNCHJNG/
STORAGE 9680
t3 n Sllf' AVAJL.AaU
IN NlWf'OIT llACH
$1500 UASl
949-500.IOOS
IOi\T Sirs HOW AVAii.
Cal lu we kxatJllfl ..oo
de!&. w •• -"'-ord*'l 949-675-4147
SELL
your stuff
through
class1f 1edl
PLU G
IN
Plug 1ntrJ thP ?11
Class1f1prj wr 11)r1 iu
find SNVICt'' frr_,11
electronio arn1
plumbers. tr,
landscap£>r<, ,31111
pa1ntl'r,
......
Daily Pilot
Class1f1Pd Community Marketplac~
aPtt Slttl•t•
AlllAl UHi
Kelli Yow 0oga • cm In,,., Own Hanll
(949t &11·5n1
...... inMmoisco--·-au. 49 M S-USI
··~"' MSTJ-..i SEWER~mNG
EUCTROMC SlA8
U M OClCCTIOH
Fr~i S.vic•
949·t 1S·t J 04
M...Jc f'eel & Sf!e h<
Weellly Se••«~ l ·'l"'•
ment Rtiu11r,. In""""
C411 t4t .292-7173
~ullers
a-.w ....... Rt•multflt'
& R•p•rr S RllS.clen1ri l
Comm s.-1931 l lll!ll'.81
9&6M-5B«l Tl~ll }I)