HomeMy WebLinkAbout2004-09-26 - Newport Mesa Daily PilotII
COMMENTS&
CURIOSITIES
Nowa
that~ a
Roma
I 'm not where you are. Well,
actually, we could be in the
same place, but I doubt it
I'm in Rome, which Is in Italy,
which Is in Europe, whJch is far
away.
Mywtf'e
and I
journeyed
aaoss lhe Big
Pond as an
anniversary
gift to each
other. I'm not
going to tell
you which
anniversary,
=~can PETER
question. you
can probably BUFFA
ftgure it out: In what year did
men fint walk on the moon, the
Mets win the World Series and
the Jets win the Supe1 Bowt7 ff
you ctill can't figure it out, I can't
help you, but you should find
tOJDeOoe who can.
H1STORV IS HERE
We are in Rome for a few days.
then on to Aorence, Milano, and
finally, Stuttgart. which is in
Germany. which is a totally
separate cowitry. The li.aJy part 1s
my doing. due to the fact that 1
will ftnd any excuse to get here.
no matter how transparent, in
addition to having relatives
sprinkled up and down the
country. The Germany part is my
wife's, because she was an Army
brat who grew up in Germany
and wants to see if there are any
remnants of her misspent youth.
But I am just as pumped about
going to Stuttgart because we
will be there in the middJe of
Oktoberfest, which I have not
experienced, and which will
allow me to scratch off one more
Item on my "Do Before You Die"
list. I want to sit at a mile-long
table in a massive tent and lock
anns and beer steins wilh an
army of totally blitzed Germans
while all of us try to sing "Macho
Man." In the meantime, there is
plenty with which to be
captivated in the Eternal City.
1 have said for years that any
American who can visit
Washington, O.C. and not feel
moved should have their mover
-... checked. The same goes for
Rome, but for anyone from
anywhere, and that means
5" COMMENTS, Pa1• M
Daily Pilot
' " . .
SUNDAY STORY
P1-1:,,Tr 8f00UGLl\S llMMERMAN /OAkYP 0'
Sergio Ro1as uses his fingers to help him count during a flash card exercise with a volunteer at the Shalimar Learning center
Living up to its· name
Ten years ago, Shalimar Learning Center was a
haven for children hungry for knowledge in a
far-from-idyll ic neighborhood. Today, the center is
the driving force behind a thrivin g com m unity and
a model for other after-school programs.
Deirdre Newman
Daily Pilot
S halirnar. The word conjures
up an image of an exotic
place, an abode of bliss -
the literal transladon in the
Indian language.
In 1994, Shallmar Street on the
Westside was far from an abode of
bliss. Gang violence infested the
neighborhood. Drugs were sold out
in the open. The residents were living
in fear.
And then a catalyst arrived on the
scene, transforming the
neighborhoods menacing feel and
liberating its residents to feel safe
again.
The Shalimar Leaming Center was
created out of desperation by
neighborhood morns who wanted a
refuge for their children after school.
This fall marts the center's 10-year
anniversary.
Shalimar has received a host of
accolades over the years. spawi\ed a
clone in Arizona and some of Its
graduates have been the first in their
families to go to college.
"What they did for me is let me
dream and think beyond the streets
of Shalimar of Costa Mesa." saJd
Nadia Aores, 23, one of the first
students to attend Shalimar. •They let
me see so many different things that
s.. LMNG, Paa• A5
RAISING MONEY
Perry Hamilton, director of the Shalimar Learning Center, instructs the first·
and second-grade ch~dren to start on their homework exercises during the
beginning of their hour-tong session at the center The center has been
credited with helping many children m the neighborhood
A walk in the Bark
c.anines, crafty and
cute, congregate at a
dog show sponsored
by the Junior Chamber
of <:ommerce.
Allcla Roblnton
Oallyf>tlot
c:mrA MESA -B(s dolt. Hnll ~ IDd Mn a ttwr.~ dos Ft • dmlCI to ... Sllmdly in • doc lbaw 11 cbi ~Jlidt.
1119 ........ llild\ )Dar
CJMnt1w ~ 0-YME*a& ar ~ c-. ........... . •tt'r•_. .. ~ ................ , ... _ ......... ..
we • Iii ••u•• ......... l .. ~
-----~
• Al Soodly, ~ 26, 2004
GOVERNMENT
City C.Ouncil adds fresh
face to i~ ranks
There wW be a new face on the
Newport Beach City Coundl dais
Tuesday when Lealle Daigle takes
her seat among the six
councilmen. Daigle, who was on
tbe Planning Commission for a
few months, was chosen by the
council last week to replace Gary
Adams, who resigned to tab a
job promotion in Washington.
D.C.
• County park rangers will
soon be able to issu& civil
citations to people who violate
park rules. Orange County
supervisors approved a plan
Tuesday to train park rangers to
write citations and equip them
with handcuffs and pepper spray
for protection. A detailed plan for
the training is expected within six
months. Area parks under county
jurisdiction include the Upper
Newport Bay, Talbert Natw'e
Preserve and Newport HarboL
• The Costa Mesa Pub and
Recreadon COmmission granted
two youth sports groups the right
to light up the school athletic
fields they practice soccer on, but
it is not letting them do so until
mid-October because they didn't
follow the rules. The American
Youth Soccer Organization Oub
97 will be using the lights at
Kaiser Elementary School and
the Orange Coast United Soccer
Oub will Qe using its lights at
Parsons· Waldorf School
ENTERTAINMENT
Nothing arrested about
this award
One of the ciry's native sons
did Costa Mesa proud last
Sunday at the star-studded
Emmy Awards. F.stancia High
School graduate Mitchell
Hurwitz, creator of the Fox
comedy "Arrested
Development," won an Emmy
for his writing on the show, and
the show won four other awards
including those for best comedy
and best directing.
The show is set in Orange
County, and although Hurwitz
and his family live in Pacific
Palisades, most of his relatives
still live here. His mother, Judy
Gertner, lives in Costa Mesa.
Hurwitz's father, Mark. and
brother Michael live in Newport
Beach, and his brother, Greg
Gertner, lives in Washington, o.c.
EDUCATION
Sprucing up the sports
fields in C.Osta Mesa
Newport-Mesa Unlfted School
District officials said that they
were moving at full speed to
make sure sports fields at the two
Costs Mesa high schools are safe
for athletes.
The move to set things right
came after Mark Gleason, an
Estancia High School parent,
filed a complaint with the U.S.
Department of Education Office
of Civil Rights on Sept. 13. In it,
he said the district ia
discriminating against Costa
Mesa's schools with
predominantly Latino
populadons and working to
satiafy Newport Beach tchools,
which are predominantly white.
District officlala have said that
they want to work cloaely with
parents to iron out
communJcation problema wtth
the achoola ao that they can ftx
problenu on ftelda right away.
,.. ..
____ EK IN ..... VIE
A surfer drops under a ledge of falling water at 52nd Street
Tuesday as Santa Ana winds blow a spray off the lip of the
wave. The winds that prompted a red-flag wamlng-
meaning the risk of fire danger Is high -also brought wam1
water and high surf to the beaches. With the wind whipping
KENT TREPTOW /OM.Y PILOT
over the top of large waves, it is guaranteed our
photographers are going to hit the beaches. Although we
worry the photos may begin to border pn cliche, the images
are too lrrnistible.
PUBLIC SAFETY
Firefighters honor fallen
Newport Beach colleague
Newport Beach Firefighter Alan
Schmehi was honored with other
fallen firefighters at a memorial
ceremony in Colorado last
weekend.
Schmehl's death from brain
cancer last year was considered to
be on the job because he was
diagnoaed after years of exposure
to chemicals on the job. Schmehl's
widow, Judy Montgomery, and his
two young sons attended the
ceremony at the International
Aaan. of Firefighters Fallen
Firefighter Memorial with
member• of the Newport Beach
Fire Department.
• The clty of Costa Mesa la
offering dlaaster·preparedneaa
couraea in varloua neighborhoods
over the next month.
The classes will include
neighborhood watch information,
CPR training and basic emergency
readiness. Members of the Costa
Mesa Citizen Corps, who would
help city services lo a large-scale
disaster, are hoping to organize
more neighborhood groups of
trained volunteers.
• A Jamboree Road crash on
Tuesday killed 64-year·old Laguna
Beach resident Ralph Difiore.
Dlfiore's Ouysler Sebring
collided with an SUV driven by
35-year·old Tustin resident Martha
Lopez, who was also Injured In the
accident. Newport Beach police
are investigating the cause of the
accident, which happened in the
intersection with Back Bay Drlve
on Tueaday afternoon.
• A UC Irvine campua shuttle
bus caught fire and waa gutted
Thursday morning, the d ay before
classes started.
-Dally Pilot photo staff
Judy
Montgomery,
with her two
sons Scotty
Schmehl,8,
left, and
Jeffrey
Schmehl, 5,
right, hold a
picture of her
husband and
their father,
Alan
Schmehl, a
Costa Mesa
firefighter,
who died
from cancer.
STEVE
McCRANK/ DAILY PILOT
The 28-passenger bus was one of
· 13 used as campus shuttles for
students and faculty. State fire
investigators are looking into the
cause but do not believe it was set
Intentionally.
• The retrial of Greg Haidl, son of
Orange County Assistant Sheriff
Don Haidl, and two friends
accused of gang-raping an
allegedly unconscious 16-year-old
girl will not Include testimony that
a date· rape drug wu used in the
act.
Prosecutors and defense
attorneys agreed Thuraday on
what evidence will not be used
when the cue Is retried early next
year. Keith Spann, Kyle Nachrelner
and Greg Haldl are accused of
gang-raping an apparently
unconactoua girl at Don Haidl'a
Corona del Mar home in 2002 and
videotap ing the lnctdent.
D<;tily A Pilot
VOL II, NO. 270
"Owr the last ftw .)WJl'S. rw done a lot of iwrt. and
it's tabn time autJY from
family. With what's
happenal rlw last oouple
yazrs. il's just time."
-DonlWdlon
retiring from bJs volunteer
post as an assistant
Orange County lhertft. His
son. Greg H.a1dl. 19, ls
awaiting trlal on rape
charges.
-~ .... ... of101D ....... .... .... _.,, ... . .... ..
..,
'
DllyfllDt .. J
Jin IW.,,,,. tj/IN,...,,,. ~~II! c:oundl ~ "'°""1:
aeiimdel Wiil .penci cbe fundil
ALLOCATION OF FllfDS before the fundl are dllbuned.
Owr the put leWll llc:al
11»-~ years, the City hM ....... about
approved hcM lt 4-0 Sl.6 lnllUon ftom the fund. wtll lpend ltate enabling the Calta Mela Police
jJublic lllety fundt Department to obca!n needed
It It .receMt them. personnel, equipment and
which It la~ to do before technology. City oftldlll are not
it CID recetv9 the fuilda. aure bow much they will l't this
c.ouDc:ilwOman ~Cowan year but are &nddJ!"dng
wulbleOL • $166,000, which ii dole tO what
The funds are sMri out by the the clty~lllstyeu. ~
state through the Qtizeo'a are hoping to UM the money
Opdona for Public needs lnclud.in8 an em. police
Safety/Supplemental Law sergeant position, workstations
Enforcement Servlcea Pund. The and 1C9 kennels.
prognmwu~ to
provide funda to local agencies WHAT rT MEANS
to support cmmrt, &ont·line The dty is now eligible to
law enforcement needs. receive the funds.
BUYING OR SELLING
A HOME?
Patty Harvey
714.501.6110
Marianne Nahin
714.269. 7851 METRO
aJ Lora Vance R~~r
-...ci' Specializing in:
Sales & Rentals
throughout
Newpon Harbor
C.ulmlmr126 Yurs
Lora Vance Marlys Vasterling
(949) 673-4062 (949) 551-6789
Fax (949)673-4062
324 Marine Ave., Balboa Island, Ca. 92662
'
WRAP.UP .
of C.. ..... Odll IDd.
'lhecoundl
Coddoa ~l6cll ......
nftldek '°' Oii the bllot ..... Pl'opc*doq I.A. IO my could
appoYed ~--............ IUpPoi1jn( ~-111·---~nlA. let tr-'llillrrn ma.
wbkhwould ll••l*'•IL w0161-.1111p reetrlct the et.ate ...............
~lbWtyto~ government~
...... fundl to oaet the
..... bulllBt deftdt
lndudlng ddel' and coundet' Tbe...., of ddli bel1m!I
ahare or exiltlng Kies tuee.
property taut and '
whlcle·liceNe fee revenues.
PrOpolkW> lA better protectl
local~ public aafety,
bealthcaie and other eervlces u
The propolftion ls the raw.t or well u JR"eGla the state from
a bipanisan effort during the taking local funds. so it ii urging
budget negotiadons among Gov. wtera to support this·
Arnold Schwarzenegger, local propolltion and oppose
government& and other entities. Propolltion 65.
1b1s proposidon will be on the
WHAT rT iEANs November ballot. There II a
similar measure that the League The dty is on the record for its
Desiree N. Be...,.,
JeJiuice tm'!A a J!mil<>
WhW
REAL ESTATE
SERVICES
Newport Beach
(949) 760-5000
(949) 378-0513
JACOBS REALTY
John Jacobs, GRI
Broker
In Newport Beach
Since 1973
Bu.s:949-642-4400
John's Cell-463-9100
j ~ • h n c1 ro I. j •H:o hs (" ,hc:gl oh al. net
• PACIFIC
VANTAGE
R E A L T Y
Suunne Scholz
Pacific Vantqe Realty
28202 Cabot Road Sult~ 135
Laguna Nlguel, CA 92677
949.631 .0163
Alice Brownell -Broker Associate
f ,/1111d
f...', '
I .' I, I
Specializing in
Balboa Isla.nd
Direct Line: (949) 294-6495
Home Office: (949) 673-4547
Email· alictbrowne/J@mail com
Dana Pe1111
for yow "Nm ll'OIDd the
neigbborbood." ~Bal~
. Peninsula a NewP.Ql1 Belch"
Bua. (Ml) l7Nl99
Cell/Pgr. (litl) as.0998
Fu. (Ml) l73-M05
Can'*Y W .... RMlty Inc.
WHArSONaP -FYI ....... ,.. ............
WMAT: .._ Qy c.oundt =Courtlr ........ a.. m11dne '11'1lla=•
... 8:'30 p.m., Oc:L. t:JO a.m."""... = WI a-= City Helt, T1 Felt Oftw •7:30a.m.Md ......
CONTACT:(71•)~1 a.In.
--=~ ........... 1111 .... ,.....c..cw.. .. ..... Coeir= ..... .... Nlltpiwt ~
support of Proposnion lA NallJ .. Calm. .,..... Of,.......,_..... ..
WHAT WAI MID '-"'..,..~ COiton
"I can't atreu enough how 1he dey °' 1he ---....
important it ii to pus lA." --Soprano DerN ICltt,.. Councilman Allan Mansoor K.lnlw9 will pd>nn.
said. "Support or lA will have WHIN:2p.m.
the effect of ta.king the car WteE: The Or-. County PM>rmtno Ma c.r..r keya and whiskey out of the Segel 1t1om Hin. eoo Town
hands of the state legislators c.nc.. Driw. coei. Mee..
before they crash and burn INFOMMnON: TlcMa9 .... '°
our state with the flacal $78. lnform8tion: C7WI 558-2717
Irresponsibility of constantly or hap:l~.ocp1e.org.
taking our funds.•
Lido Park Realty
"Ljdo Park Specjalist"
601 Lido Park Dr.,
Suite 2-E
Newport Beach, CA 92663
(949) 675-2700
www.lldoparkrealty.com
Doug Clark
Offering discount listing fees far
referred clients with no sacrifice
in superb service
~
Pacific Wt-sum Properties, NB
Call (949J 636-199s far a free
quote. Save s10,ooo to s4,ooo on
a $100,000 home sau prtce
.. Paulson Realty Inc . ~9' 1221 W. Coast Hwy #113
• ~ Newport Beach, CA 92663
Nora lee
Broker
Real Estate
College Degree
949-760-6097
Get Top Market Value
w1thNan Tully
949.939.2461 . 949.219.2451
• Prudential c ..... .....,
23 Corporate Plaza. Ste 190,
N rt Beach. CA 92660
Carol Berry
Top Real Estate Broker
25 Years!!
Dyumic • E1ceptional • Innovative
ReSklential ·Investments
"Coastal to Desert''
Cd (949) 278-4955
-*' M &may, ~ 26, 200I
... .. .... •. ... -. • • • •
•. •
• .
TIME
DEPENDENT
CLAUSFS
ByD11w Wont
Yoo v. 111 generally find th1\
d.iw.c m n:al c'tulc purchase
1:untrach, u\ well a.' on mnny miler
u>ntrai.I\ m which two panic\ .igrce
111 pcrfonn lcn.Un 1~. II doe,n'1
\Imply mean that cveryuoc .igroc'
1h.11 111nchne..i. 1\ pretty dam
1mponan1 h nM:am., m man)' ra..-c,,
1h111 the whole ltlllNICllC>fl can he
i:allcJ off by one of the.-p.ll'llC'> 1f the
other p.iny doesn't c.:nmpk tc a
ccnam lllbk by the duh.' she or he
.ign.'Cd 10 m the ongmal con1r.ic:1.
If, lherelore," buyer ugn:'C\ 10
make apt>hc»l1on fo< purcha_-.c
financo.ng w1lhm five da)' of 1hc
date the: purcha\C agreement "
\lgncd, thnt " u b1n<.ling allrccmcnt
If he or 'he doe~n '1 do <;0, the ..ellcr
can 1em11na1e the 1grcem1:n1 JJid
accept anolhcr offer on h" or her
home.
Mattel"'., of cour.c, JJ'C ran:ly 'o
\lffiplc TIICrt: llld)' be CIRUlll'l3.0CC\
bc)ond lhc bu)er', conU'ol lhJt
dcldy applitalmn for tht: flflum.:mg
bcyood the five-day penod The
-.cllcr. unlc~\ he or she want\ to bt:
vulnerable lo a coun ac11on. will
m<hl likely wort. do-.cly ""''h .i
huycr who\C mlcnllon ,., dcarl} 111
pcrfonn w11h1n the attreed Up<>n
Hui the lac. I n:mam' l 1111e I' 111
the t:'-'Cnce Thi\" on enforceable
1ru1h 10 mm1 conlr.icl\. 10c wordm~
" there IO JlWICl.l ~llCI"'. and huycr>.
lrum hem!( 1.ikrn Jdvantatte ol
h1r more help. rnll rrie 111
1149 c; l l I :mo or """ my \A.Ch\11~'
JI d.wcwon114.cmn or
11riclordmdd com
Dave Wonjl hJ' hccn ,dim~
hurnc' 111 Ncwpun HcJdt ~me,c
11/MIJ and " w11h Cna.'l Nl"wpon
1•ropcn1c'/( uld1o1.ell Hanker
ADVERTISEMENT
Piano
Oeepa Bharattt
Daily Pilot
Robbie Robfoget was llk.e the
Rock of Gibraltar.
He wasdt supposed to
collapse. He wasn't suppoeed to
give In. because thoee around
him led off hit strength.
Robbie was cooft.oed to a
whedcbair after he got polio
while ftgbttng the war in Korea.
He had limited use of one hand
and one leg. But he could plclc
up the phone and write. And
that was good enough for bis
friend Bob Roublan, owner of
Crab U>oker. to hire him in
1961, 10 years after he started
the restaurant
The two first met al the Long
iMach Veteran's Hospital in 1951.
They bit it off right away. Bob
can~ put his finger on what It
was that drew him to Robbie.
·He was a good·loolting guy,"
Bob said •He had green eyes.
And once you knew him and
started talking to him. you never
saw the wheelchair."
Robbie moved to Newport
Beach to a home he bought for
$10,000 on 20th Street by the
BARK
Continued from Al
resa Croft, 4.1, of Stanton
Having only one front leg
doesn't bold Kylie back from per-
fonning tricks.
·She takes a treat out of my
mouth and she shakes (people's
handsl. ~ Croft said
ln addition to the competition.
Saturday's dog show included a
demonstration by a dog and ban·
COMMENTS
Continued from Al
everywhere. I love Italy because
of my background and
prejudices. But Italy is Italy and
Rome is Rome, and while the
hi'itory of Rome is not the history
of the world, it's pretty darn
close. As you stroll the
Colosseum. or the Forum. or the
Lessons
/or
Autistic
Children
Longtinv piano teachc now has
5 + years S1'Ccess with autistics!
949-552-3404
ANGEL'S AUTO SPA
c~;.~r$89
• Interior Shampoo Regularly $155
• Steam Clean Engine (Vans and Trucks Extra)
MAKE AN APPOINTMENT 24HRS A DAY
EXPRESS HAND WAX t29R9t~rty
With this ad. Offen good thfu t-JO.Ol
2285 Newport Blvd • C n~ ta Mesa
H 1 ir '"'' of F .11rvu•w Nt".'. I' HI · rl :
(949) 650-1009
Robbie Robfogel
bay.
He asked Bob if be could work
at the Crab U>oker. He offered to
wodc for free.
"I haw to pay you
something," Bob said.
So Robbie started off as
purchuer for the restaurant at
$1.50 an bour.
That job was the nucleus of
Robbie's life. He and Bob alwaya
talked about business, whether
Palatine Hill and the pounds of
Nero's palace, there is one,
oaglng thought that I just
cannot wrap my mind around I
am waDdng on the same stones.
climbing the same steps and
passing through the same
doorways as did emperors and
queens, popes and generals.
rascals and saints -many of
whom qualifted in more than
one of those categories -for the
last 3,000 years.
IN THE NEIGH80RHOOO OF
GOOS
Our hotel is a few steps from
the Pantheon. a masstve,
towering monument to all the
Roman gods built in the second
century by the Emperor Agrippa.
We start every evening by
watching the sun set to one side
of the Pantheon. and the moon
rise behind the other. The
evenings end much. much later
for some reason. with
unspeakable amounts of food
and wine.
The arts? I'D give you the arts..
It i.a sensory overload, three
times over, squared. then
doubled. Yesterday, we towed
the Galleria Borghese. which
holds what was the personal
a ... ., ......
....,orlkDply
OUla .. bMda. Bod> had
lb*pdoddet-.lght-God
... CllJIDJW llicond aod ~~bad a wsywttb
¥melon mid 01ltOmHL ffe WU = an4 htl mannen wae oi:.ble
He~ a IDIDtOr to the
~~attbe .-....r.m. Jf Robbie uw ~--not perfect, bJ would be the ftnt one to point it
out.
"Would you eerw that to your ramnyr he'd .... IOIDetimea.
for him. it WU either perfect
or nothing.
Dllgrunded vendon or
llappHera '#Ollld alwayl come
out mum bappjer atter meed.Ilg
with Robbie. He bad a way with
people. But it WU not mere
llDOOth-td;ing. Robbie knew
that the belt ttlck WU DO tricb.
He dealt with people honestly.
When be bad tome free time,
be laved to go to the bone races.
One dme. be woo $200,000 at
the track. He mw.ted the money
in a couple of on wells that went
collection of the Borghe&e family,
an ~wealthy band of
arlstocratl in Rmalaaance Italy
that sped•liud in producing
cardJnaJs, popes and palaces.
The ~story Borgbele palace
houaea room after room after
room of oDa and eculpturea by
Da Vind. Bernini. Rafael,
Calll.vagglo, and on and on and
on. At every tum. you're stopped
abort and struck dumb by a
painting or eaalptwe that shares
a room with 12 other worb that
stop you just u short and leave
you just as dwnbstruck. The
worb in muble are what I
simply cannot ~past. I just
don't get It Someone hacb a
really big drunk of marble from a
qlW'fy that is the size of a small
house and weighs seventeen
tons. I can understand that part.
But how do you get from that to
a figure of Jupiter, or an avenging
angel. or a c:barglng steed that
loob perfectly capable of leaping
off ita pedestal and into your la.p?
I can, and do, ata.re at the
m.b'ld-boggling worb of Bem.inJ
in the Plazza Nawn.a. or Nicola
Sa.M's Fountain ofnevt for bows
on end. If you can explain to me
exactty what happens in between
the big chunk of marl>le and the
~11 ..... M:M9y7,1t2t
OW.-: s.t 14, 2004 c.... ...... Pneumonia
....... -.,: ... tt..,.an. ~. haff•tter and
hatf.bf Olher. .. c1au: WMI t.. held It 3 p.m.
on T~ et FelrtMrwn
Mortuety, lqc8c.d " 1702
Fall'Nwn Ave. In Santi Ane.
dry and two race horMI that
went nowhere. ·
But be juat laughed about it
"Buy come, euy go." he'd uy.
The bone racee were not an
obeeuloo for Robbie. It was just
eotertahunenL
Over the 43 yan, he worked
at the Crab c.ooka'. be became
itl blgbat paid employee.
/ta for RobbJe, the restaurant
wu b11 llle. He came to wort
every day for 4.1 ye&l'I until the
day he bad to be hospitalized.
two weeb befote he died.
·1 m.lla him already, .. Bob said.
"I just saw him come in to wort
and Celt aecure rf8bt away. I
knew that day wouJd tum out
juatllne."
"I think Ira a good thing for the
axnrm.mtty berm• them no
other pllce to • the dop." said
'D'ent Dlmn, 50, of C.olCa Mesa.
who hril9 bis Labrad« ~
Qankbait, to the pm • couple
times a week. "I li\'e In an apart-
ment. and be wants to pla}("
• AIJCIA RCBMON OOY8f'9
bu.Ir-. pofldca Md the
erwtronment She m-v be reedled -
(949) 76M330 or bv HNll lit
alicia..robil.,,,tllatinw..a>m.
figures on the nm fountain -
please let me know at your
euilest c:ommlalce. But IO
much (or the Important stuff.
Pl\THS LEAD TO NII) FROM-
SOWi_,. HARROWING
Rome is also a whole lot of
fun. It's a maddening, frenetic.
round-the-dock circus and one
of the most int.emadonal cities in
the wodd. Just pau1e a few
minutes anytime. anywhere.
from a piazza to a bua atop, and
you will hear most of the
languages you're ever beard and
some you havm't. The Romam
are amazingly stoic throughout It
all. dealing as best and however
they can with the endless parade
or bumanlty from the four
comers of the earth that bas
never stopped and never will
Let's see. Whal else? Oh. yeah.
the driving. My god. the drtving.
You've beard something or other.
I'm Sun!, about drt'm'S in Italy
and espedaDy in Rome.
Whatever you've beard. it'a
worse. Much wone. I'm uaed to
driving in Manhattan. where
drivers believe that trafBc laws
are a rough guide ... suggestions
really. Italian drtvera are offended
by thesn. They bellew they are
CHECK IT OUT
unnatwal. They belkw GOO
~ them their pollldon on the
R*l at any IDOIDmt and
protedl them from making
conblCt with ocher obfecta, of
metal or ftesh. no matter bow
dose or haw fut. omtng always
requbea a tluny of quick
dedldona and appumdy. I have
not made a right one~ I speak
Italian faidy well and thought I
knew a few ame words, but I
hear dllnp al l!NU'f tum that are
lndedpbenlble, ~I can tdl
they're not good. We were &tUCk
in a traffic drde It Plmz.a
Venezia for ao long, the
centrifugal force wu about to
make us paaa out m4 I waa sure
we'd run out of pa before we
broke out of it 1 Well. the dme bu oome to
leave the Eternal atySi. I
will be back. and u it will
leaw me aW!llU\l:k. Not t ,
worty. We w0J taa lgl.in. I
IOfDeWhere Of\ the rOld to I
Tu8cany. Th borrow an old •
Roman pbrue. "Devo part11e.•
whJch ~ ..• ( goaa Sol
I
• P£TER IUfM la. tot.er~
~mayor. His c:oUnft ~ t
Sunct.y.. He m-v be~f":
IHT\ell et pfrb4•.a1Aam. I I
I·,. •
I . ~
Great guides for good-time getawa s
•
r I '" I I
LIVING ' . COl'lllrwd tom Al
teduced. com,.. Palm
<Apt.JimW....llld.• ....
atmerua.
And It II ad~ r'Tlbll
~bi-. ramwe. to mow• 8lildl md.:
"I thlnk It's more 6teadly lhln
~ ~ 11fO. realdenta of tbe before,• aald Palllda thqUlll.
~were COnltan~ • Who hiiJWM In lbe 1n-. Mid ~·Me.a ~ fof 21 ,.,.. and
Unil6icl SdlOOi 8(l9rd Member WOlb ... --~center. Daw Broch a former poJk:e •everyone WU ah.Id CO 1't., out
captaln who petrolled the area. on the street !before).• ,
lfJt used to be a place where St. AndmV'I ~
people were afraid to go In their ftnandal and wluntee&' .uppon
lrotlt yards, there were cars for the fledgling center with help
pNbd all over the stteeta and in from tbe 01-.Qee ~
(JQotofboUlel, the garaps uid Co~n ~ alien were unusable,• Broob Organb:adod. St Jollcbim'• said. ··If JOU drove onto the Ca!hotic Chwdl and~ m
meet, there were drug dealers Villon.
out in the open and stuff like
that..
After. gang lhoodng in the
neigbborbood. mothen •
orpniud to tab control of their
ltreet& Randy Barth WU the
heed of the mission coblm.ittee
at St Andrew\ Presbyterian
Onuch in Newport Beach at the
time. Barth, and other group1
Interested in the neighborhood's
salvation. lllet with the moms
and listened to their concerns.
Barth mnted an apartment in
the 700 block of Shalbnar for the
orlgioal center, whk:h serwd
elementary Khool students.
They expected about 30 cblklreo
the first day and 100 showed up.
be l8kl. Now. they WM co limit
enrollment to about 250 kids
because it's so popular, Barth
said. The center currently Mn"eS
elemeltary, junior high and high
school students.
,_.,...., .. PHOTOS BY DOUGlAS ZMiERMAN I DAILY PILOT
EnriQue Munoz plays oo the rais outside of the Shatimar Leaming Center before a session begins.
I
I I
' I
Barth loWlded the Shalimar
Leaming Center as an a,J19Wer to
their plea.
Police redoubled their efforts
to eradicate the gangs and
drug.dealing after the Shalimar
Leaming Center opened in the
fall of 1994, Barth said
"They didn't want any (of the
kids) getting shot. so they started
trying again, .. he said "'They ·
woWld up blocking off the
streets and eliminated on-street
parking."
The city's code enforcement
department also demolished
some dilapidated apartments
and created a small park. Barth
said
A few months after it opened.
Barth rented a second .
apartment in the building next
door for a group of
eighth-graders that became the
teen center. Another apartment
in that building came soon after
for high school students.
The apartments are brightly
colored walls with motivating
mantras like ·we are the
promise or the future.#
Staff members evaluate
students' skills so they know
what subjects they need help
with and monitor their progress.
The center recently started a
literacy program run by a
reading specialist.
l
The physical transformation
of Shalimar Street was a
comprehensive effort,
including traffic specialists,
the Fire Department, Police
Fridays are art and
enrichment days where the kids
do arts and crafts and music
Yesenia Orozco touches Monica Gallardo's nose while Jonathon
Rosas looks on. They were taking part in a game called ·Head to
Toe" at the Shalimar Learning Center.
I
•I ,
Department, engineering and
code enforcement, Brooks
said. The city formed an
apartment owners'
association to gain their
cooperation and a tenants
association, Brooks added.
"We followed a pattern that
r had been used in other urban
rede¥elopment areas." Brooks
said "If you make it so it's not
:A· real attractive for people to get
onto the streets, it cuts down a
Q
.,
Lot of the problems.•
The gang violence and drug
dealing~ been drastically
activities.
For most of the students.
English is not their first language
so they really benefit from extra
exposure to English after school.
Barth said
·At the start, we take kids that
don't speak English at home,
give them additional exposure to
English. teach them to read and
help them with their homework
-all this support that typically
their parents can't give them."
Barth said.
About 100 volunteers, from
churches and the community,
work with the students. One of
f..J1ab/11htti in 1962
them, Carlita ~uller, is a
volunteer from ~t. Andrew\.
·it mak.e., me aware of the
needs of childre11 and how easy
at is to help,· Fuller said. ·it
should make a difference.
Working one to one, almost
everyone can team."
fjght·year old Luis Aguilar. a
third-grader at Whittier
FJementary School, said he hkes
to come to the center to work on
math.
Shalimar also has a computer
lab. which help'> the students
compete on a level playmg field
with their higher-income peers,
Finat Pri~ Sualts and &ef in
Or1111ir unmty
FreslNst Grilkd lobstn; Crab and
&llfooJ ;,. tk ana
liw Trilnl.u UJ Franlt Sinatra
Motukiy 11,,J T un"4y Nights
from 6:()() p. m. lo 9:()() p. m.
BAR OPENS AT 4:30 PM
DINNER IS SERV£D MoNDAY-SA.nJRDAY
F1tOM 5:30 PM
For Reservation Call
(949) 646-7944
16!J5 InmuAw., Comt Meu CA
HOME OF nlE PEARL DUST MAJmN1
Jiii ~,...--,,, •
..
. ,,,..,,,.
...... 11 .. ,,,., .,,,.,,,.,.,.
Barth said. l..ast year. the <.enter
gave the 11 high 5.ehool
graduates who were going on to
college brand new laptop.,. he
added
In 1997, the church spun
Shahmar off as a nonprofit
organi7..ation -flflNK
"fogether, an acronym madt· up
of the goals of Teaching.
I lelpmg. Inspiring. and
Nurturing Kid!..
the nonprofit now boasts 20
after-school programs an Orange
County. St. Andrew's lS sull
involved as a financial donor
and provides volunteers. Over
the last l O years, it has given SI. I
million to the organization,
Barth said
THINJC Together needs to
raise about $2 million every year
to support all its centers, Barth
said.
HOPE ANO INPSIRATION
In addition to helping
students With their homework,
the after-school center help!.
them realize what 1t t.a.kes to
achieve their dreams. Barth said.
like when one student wanted
to be an architect but was
Oun king geometry. one of the
volunteers took her to an
architect0s office to hear
firsthand what k.Jnd of slcills are
nee~ to make at m that
field.
"We stan working on
motivation and inspiraoon and
they begin to think college •'>
pO'>.'ilble," Barth said.
flor~ lived in the
neighborhood when the
Shalimar Leaming Center wa.., m
11.!> embryonic Mages. N. a
teenager, she was nonchalant
about the center. she !la.Id But
once she got to know the
volunteers at the center and !.aW
how much they cared, Shalimar
became a significant part of her
life, she said.
"I've always said the k.ey to I.he
program is the dedication from
the volunteers,· f-1ores scud
"Because it's not only the
The center that sprung up out
of necessity is now a paqgoo of
after-school centers.
last year, THINK Together was
one of two organiz.ations
awarded as a top after-school
program in the National
Community F..ducation Day
contest, sponsored by the
ICinderstreet Corp
An independent evaluauon of
the program funded by the
Samuell Foundauon found 11 ts
one of the few after-M:hool
programs in the country that has
improved grades and tel>t sco~
among low-income English
Language Learne~
And the succt''>-'> of TI l INK
Together spawrll'd an
out-of-state affillate. Tl !INK
Together Arvnna. which opt'ned
an after-M:hool center m
Phoenix m Augu'>t
The Ari7..ona ccnwr evolved 111
much the '>ClJTle way as the
original -from the de-.1re of
church members 10 help at -mk
youth. sald hm Hrad.,haw, tlw
executive <l1renor uf 11 !INK
Together Arv.ona
BracbhaY. heard about
Shalimar through Barth\
sister-in-law. and came to Vl\11
c;ome of the centers in Oran~e
County befon.· det.1dmg the
program wa.\ the perfect model
to emulate, he ..aid
.. I was so impre-..sed with tlw
program . . what I ..aw tdlm1g
plate educauonall) and
certainly the mentonng
portion." Hrad".>haw !>3.ld '"C JI tlw
many characten'>tu.:1. of the
prow-am -thl' fact thl'
cornmurnty ~a.., \O mvoht·d
thought, th1., '' n•dll) the \'1.,1\! 11
ought to bt: do11t• •
• DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers
government She may be reactied
at (949) 574-4221 or by e-mail at
detrdre.newmdn a /a11mes corn
•
EDltORIALS
Linda Dixon Katrina Foley Mike Scheafer
Opportunity for
consensus building
in Costa Mesa
C ostaMesa
residents are very
fortunate. With
three seats open
this November on
'the City Council, 12
candidates, many with
top-Oight credentials, have
stepped up and offered to take
the job.
Now, the burden is on the
voters, and us, to decide
which of the 12 are capable of
leading Costa Mesa with
consensus buildlng.
experience and vision for the
next four years.
The three candidates who
we believe have the right
qualifications are Mike
Scheafer, Unda Dixon and
Katrina Foley.
Why you ask? The answers
are simple.
No one can doubt
Scheafer's commitment to his
hometown through his work
with the Lions Qub, ln
buildlng back the Fish Fry, in
helping to create a skate park
for local kids, in working with
Unle League and in his skill
on the council He works for
solutions to help the
community he loves and is
adept at building consensus
·with his council colleagues.
Dixon also loves Costa Mesa
and has proved it through her
eight years of work on the
Planning Commission and
four years on the council. This
30-year resident has been a
beacon in her College Park
neighborhood for years, has
tried to keep a balance
between the interests of
residents and business and
'has experience that no other
candidate can offer.
The mother of two young
boys, Foley has five soUd years
on the Planning C.Ommission.
She has learned how to
maneuver through the tricky
political minefields at City
Hail with light steps. What she
brings is a vision for the
future, a desire to make Costa
Mesa the best place for her
family to grow up that is
much-needed on the council.
Scheafer, Dixon and Foley
are the best picks on Nov. 2.
But like we said, the voters
are lucky.
Of the remaining nine
candidates, five of them stand
a bit above the rest in
consensus building.
experience and vision. Sadly
enough,incwnbentChris
Steel isn't one of them.
We've never made it a secret
that the positions Steel
advocates ln regards to Costa
Mesa's Latino community are
abhorrent to us. Singling out a
segment of the population to
blame for all of Costa Mesa's
ills is cowardly politics,
mean-spirited and simply
untrue.
But after four years on the
dais. Steel's mantra hasn't
changed one iota, as he makes
vague references about the
city's ·magnets" and how
officials are forced to "educate
and recreate" the Latino
population. It's a tired and
disgraceful refrain that has no
place in politics.
Indeed, Steel seems to have
even disenfranchised himself
from those who aided In his
election in 2000. Several of his
former supporters have been
lncreasingly frustrated with
Steel's council votes, which
are inconsistent with his
public statements, and for not
carrying the day on their key
issues.
Ollis Steel lacks the
experience, vision or
consensus buildlng skills that
residents of Costa Mesa need
for the next four years.
Those who do possess
many of those skills are Bruce
Garlich, Eric Bever, Mirna
Bwdaga, Dick Carroll and
Sam Oark.
Garlich and Bever are able
members of the Planning
Commission and
well-schooled ln city issues
and affairs. Garlich will
someday make a good City
Council member, but we just
don't believe it's his tum yet.
Bever is also an impressive
and quick study that we think
has a future ln city politics.
Bever is a driving force within
the Westside improvement
community and a needed
voice in the city. But the
council already has a good
dose of that viewpoint now
that Bever's close aUy Allan
Mansoor is on the dais.
A strong argument could be
made that Burciaga. the owner
of the popular FJ OUnaoo
restaurant on the Westside,
would be a much-needed voice
for the city's growing Latino
community.
We agree with that and are
impressed with her ideas and
energy. But like' Garlich and
Bever, we'd like to see
Burciaga, now a city pa.rb
commissioner, move to the
Planning Commission and get
better versed in city
government before making
that leap.
Carroll and Oark are just
too new to the process to get
our nod. but we were
impressed with their idea.$
also and expect to see them in
future races -Carroll
perhaps better suited for
school board.
Finally, It's time to talk
about bow our blue-chip
choices, Scheafer, Dixon and
Foley would be a good fit with
their colleagues. Mansoor and
Mayor Gary Monahan.
We can't think of a better
council that would balance
the lnterest.s of the Westside,
of businesses, of residents and
of the youth. It's a council that
the residents of Costa Mesa
deserve and one that we
believe will bring three keys to
success: C.Onsensus building.
experience and vision.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Habitat homes nourish community
the effect mer haw on the
neighborhood. There are two
projecu on Del Mar Avenue
that are kMty and are eome of
the best·maintalned unl13 on
the ICftet 'M we built those
hm...e. Che neWabon who
fought utcame to~
~wmtfrom~
pejorad\19 teraw llD ~
... to~ lblllr
~..,look. p;d ..
the HlblCll baalil.: 1fDe,.,.
laeer.ttWJ-•blw.dilJ mDitlilm iDd a.._.,
.. opertJ .... llli'llliDd. ,. ........ .. bwrC ............. _...
... I ''1'111 I 1111 It hllblla••·••'PSa .............. ,.... ............... ..., . ....... ~ .. r.. .............
Steve Bromberg John Heffernan Steve Rosansky
-Incunlberits are
l • •
ideal for Newport
City Council
N ewport Beach
voters have one
very easy decision
when choosing
whom to elect to
the City C.Ouncll this Nov. 2:
C.Ouncilman' Steve Bromberg is
running for reelection
unopposed. Even if he wasn't,
we think Bromberg dearly
deserves another four-year
term. He went from Balboa
Island activi5t to strong city
mayor in just a few years. He is
straight-forward In his thinking.
no-nonsense about running the
city and has learned about city
and regional issues. He will
serve the city well once again.
That he ended up with no
opposition for hls District 5 seat
is obvious proof we aren't alone
ln our thinking.
Oloosing ln the other two
races will be mor~ difficul1, ill>
voters are fortunate to have
excellent candidates in both.
The District 7 race between
incumbent John Heffernan and
Dolores Ottlng is a prime
example.
Ottlng is as schooled in city
issues, city regulations and city
workings as a perso~ can be
who isn't on a city council or a
planning commission. Her
commitment to the city is
unquestionable, as is her desire
to see Newport Beach be its
best. She has a common sense
approach to problems and is a
dedicated community
volunteer. She's well-known for
her direct, speak-her-mind
attitude, a quality that serves
her well as a watchdog of city
government. She ls a champion
of open, dvU govemmenL She is
one of the by residents in town
who help keep the quality ofllfe
in Newport Beach so high.
Much the same can be said
for her opponent. During his
nearly four years on the council,
Heffernan has proven to be an
lndependent t.binker and one
without ties to spedal Interests.
He asks tough questions during
BOLTON
council meetings and appears
to vote his conscience,
unconcerned with the potential
costs of going ag~t business
interests or those of the
slow-growth Greenllght group,
with which he initially was
aligned but since has drifted
from. We also like that
Heffernan ls not seeking
endorsements and is running
mainly on his record of service.
The biggest concern with
Heffernan ls his commitment to
servi.Qg the four-year term. He
came dose to resigning midway
through his term and was
polsed not to run for reelection.
But following discussions with
him, we are convinced that he is
determined to fulfill his
obligation if elected.
Heffernan and Otting share
many similar qualities and
positions, and voters would be
well-served by either. But we
believe they would be best
served by reelecting Heffernan.
He will off er the critical,
independent voice residents
need. He will make decisions
untied to any interest beyond
what he thinks is best for the
city. We also think that Otting's
role as a committed, dogged
outsider serves her and the city
best.
In District 2. voters will have a
clearer choice between
Councilman Steve Rosansky and
John Buttolph, as the
differences between them are
greater, especially on
development and
Greenlight-related issues. The
third candidate, Catherine
Emmons. needs a fulJer resume
of service to the community to
warrant eerious conslderadon,
and we encourage her to
volunteer time in rhe city.
Buttolph baa an impressive
resume for someone who bas
lived in the clty just five years.
He proved to be the catalyst to
get the Greenlight law altered
when It comes to measuring
how hotels affect tra1Dc. He
volunteered time with Friends
of the OASIS Senior Center. He
Is knowledgeable about city
lssues. promises to be
independent and a
consensus-maker and seems to
be a strong-willed, decisive
man. .
Rosansky, who was appointed
to the council a year ago, has
proven to be a thoughtful,
dedicated city leader. He led a
dramatic council turnaround
during his first weeb in oftlce
that ended with the council
supporting a state plan to·
remove mobile homes from FJ
Morro Village. This summer, be
stood up for his constituents
and helped force the Army
Corps of Engineers to back
dawn from a plan to dump
sediment from the Saota Am'
River on West Newport's
beaches. He bas struck a fine
balance between competing
business and and-development
lnterests and ha.s earned
favorable marks from the vast
majority Qf people who have
worhd with him this past year.
Plus, he seems truly to enjoy the
busy public side of his council
position, which involves
attending community events
and activities both large and
small.
For these reasons, we believe
voters should elect Rosanslcy to
a full term on the council.
It i.s notable that our three
choices are all incumbents. We
do not lifbtly urge votes against
lncumbents, nor do we
unthinkingly endorse those
already in omce. Fresh ideas
often can provide the
compulsion a council needs to
perform iu best-In the cases of
these three men. however, we
believe that their quali8cations
and accompl.Wunents riae
above their opponents'. They
have and wiU serve the dty well.
We urp votera to IUppOrt
C.Ouncilmen ~Bromberg,
John Heffernan and Steve
Rosaosky.
..
I
I
.i
1 1
JUST ASKING FOR
THE BASICS
'An ideal field has
decent-quality turf
throughout, is
literally a level
playing field, has
good irrigation
coverage and no
safety problems.
All we're asking
for are those
fundamental
basics.
Scoreboards and
all-weather tracks
would be nice, but
nobody expects
those types of
amenities.'
PORUM s..tdlr. ~ 26, 2004 Kl
A fo~used field of view
L eveUnc tbe p~ field
ta more than a ft~ of
·~for 22-year Co1ta
Mna reeldent Man
"GMMDIL.
Gleuon, in hJa aecond year u
president of the Glrla Soccer
Boosters at P.atancla High
School, bu been at the forefront
of an effort to get the
Newport-Mesa Unified School
· dlsti'lct to do t0mething about
what he and others sar ts poor
upkeep of Costa Mesas school
sports fields. ·
He went u far as charging in a
complaint filed SepL 13 to the
U.S. Department of Education's
Office of Civil Rights that the
district discriminates against
Costa Mesa achools with large
Latino populations by
neglecting upkeep of those
fields while similar fields in the
mostly white Newport Beach are
kept unspoiled.
Estancia's soccer and baseball
fields are spotted with ruts and
holes, and bleachers and
benches are dilapidated,
Gleason has said. The disrepair
of the fields is not only an
eyesore but dangerous, he said.
Di strict officials have called
Gleason's charges of
discrimination "ludicrous,"
though administrators said last
week they are working to resolve
field problems at Costa Mesa
and Estancia high schools.
At the heart of the issue is the
district's joint-use agreement, a
contract between the district
and the city that governs the use
a nd maintenance of the fields.
Two exist -one with the city of
Costa Mesa and the other with
Newport Beach. Gleason, and
others lament what they said is
the Costa Mesa agreement's
complexity and it's unclear lines
of maintenance responsibilities,
which have led to the city
simply mowing the lawns and
aerating them once a year.
Newport's agreement with the
district, on the other hand, is
much simpler and clearly
delineates responsibilities for
field upkeep, Gleason has said .
Of course, Gleason, a
marketing and sales director fo r
a software company, has more
reasons for such zeaJ . His
children are athletes who play
on the fields, and they and all
others have a right to expect
better-maintained, safe
surfaces, he said.
The Pilot's Ryan Carter asked
Gleason some questions about
the issue.
Why I• maintaining the ftelch so
important to youf
My kids and all the kids who have
played s ports with my kids since
they were 4 or 5 years old have to
play on th ese fi elds. They play on
high school teams, club teams and
rec reation al teams. Decent-quality
• fields that are sate seem like a
reason able thing to exp ect.
Judgln1 by the reaponae alter
your dJacrtmlnatJon complaint,
the dJatrlct aeemt to be expreaalng
an lntereet In aotvtn1 eome of the
aafety and coemedc lNuet on the
lleld, aooner rather than later. Are
you encourqed at all by the
IChool dJatrlct'a effort to Improve
the fteldaf Haw you eeen any
evidence of thl• yet?
Yes, I am en couraged by the
district's response so far. Estancia
High baseball Booste r Oub
President Dan Oliver and I auended
a meeting Thursday with
Newport-Mesa Supt. Robert Barbot.
Dr. Barbot accepted responsibility
for the current state of the facilitaec,
and expressed his commit ment to
addressing both short-and
long-term solutions.
Several of the basic safety issue~
have already been fixed, things like
broken fences and bleacher~. the
sprinkler control box in tht
long-jump landing p it, and holes in
the baseball dugout roof. The
district is pulling together the
pieces required to develop a
comprehensive solution plan and
we have been invited to participate
in that process. The city of Costa
Mesa has also begun to s tep up.
Would you withdraw your
dlacrtmlnatlon complaint If you
18W lmprovementf If so, what
lmprovementa would It take for
you to be convinced the district la
trying lta be1t1 If no t, why notT
I wiU withdraw the complaint
once I am satisfied that a long-term
approach to better management of
these facilities has been developed
and implemented. The current
conditions didn't happen overnight
and much must be don e to change
how the city, district and users
communicate and interact
What would the Ideal field look
llkef Would It have amenities s uch
u fancy scoreboards or
all-weather tradtaf
An ideal field has decent-quality
turf throughout, is literally a level
playing field, has good irrigation
coverage and no safety problems.
All we're asking fo r are those
fundamental basics. Scoreboards
and all-weather tracks would be
nice, but nobody expects th ose
types of amenities.
Have you, other coaches o r the
kids you coach auffered lnJurtea
apeclftcally because of bad fteldaf
My d augh ter and one othtr player
on her club soccer team both
suffered severe ankle sprains when
playing on the Parsons field behind
Estancia this past spring. Both were
out for severaJ weeks. Estancia
players have had a number of
similar injuries over Lhe pac,t couple
of years.
What do you make of part of the
dJstrlct's reactJon to yo ur concerns
that classrooms and other
academic requirements take
precedence over the fields -that
Measure A Improvem ents come
nrstT
As co-chairman of the Measu re A
Site Committee at Estancia, I fully
under'>tand the economic reaJitie'>
thal require academic and
s tructural requirements to take
precedence over a1hletics.
Athletic faciliucs are priority no 7
of seven on the Measure A li '>t and
they will not get done as part of
Measure A. However, "take
precedence" doe'> not amply that
the maintenanle and upkeep of
athletic facilitie~ can ju'>t be
completely ignored, allowing the
facilities to degrade to the point
where the safety of our lrJdc; as an
issue. In fact. Measure A i'i a perfell
lesson to apply lo the athletic
facilities. Measure A exi'>IS becau ... c
we ignored the infrastructure
requirements an Newport Mesa
Unified School District for 20-plu'>
years and only res ponded when 11
became a crisis.
Assistant Supt. of Secondary
Education Jaime Castellanos says
the high volume o f field use In
Costa Mesa and s taff turnover
contribute to the differences In the
Oeld-use agreements. Given
Castellanos' claims, ls It possible
that It's a futile exercise to expect
the fields collectlvely In Costa
Mesa to be u pristine as Newpo r1
Bea ch'af
It as absolutely not futtll' The
problem is not the high volume
itself. but the management of that
volume. Th e district and city need
to work. out a carefully coordinated
rest-and-rehabilitation '>r hedule for
all the fields in Co~ta Mt>'>a. both
city-owned and district-owned
Other cities manage high use
facilities quite successfully. It
requires clearly documented
management and communication
processes that don't currently exist
in Costa Mesa. The dist mt and city
have both said that they wall
COMMUNITY COMMENTARY
MARK C DUSllN/DAILYF1Lul
address this, but we'll '-t'C
What efforts do boosters and
coaches make to maintain the
fleldsf
Boosters and coache ... make
extraordinary l'lfort!> a1 the ( u ... 1a
Mesa '>Choob, JU..,t lakt> a hey do at .ill
the '>Chools an the dt'>tract The
coaches ~pend Jn enormou'>
amoun1 of their own tam e and
money tryrng to keep 1he1r field'>
respectable. Bui thert' ,., a lane
where the boo ... 1ers' rc!>pomibil11v ,..,
!>eparated from the da'itratt\.
Boo ... 1crc, simply cant make
whole!>ale repair'> to 1rraga11011
'>Y~tcm., or grade wholt' fields I ht·
di!>tricl ha~ a fundamental
respon'>1h1lit} to provadt' the
essenllal bJ..,at '>.Gari.., '<ll t t:r JI
Estancia as a perfect 111u ... 1ra11011 of
that fhe booc,ter'> pav for
absolutely everything u111torm ...
warm ups. ball'>, goah . .ind nlra
coaching stipend .... I ht• luh on 1 lw
team don't pay a pt'nrl\ '\11 tht'
d1~tnt1 need'> to '>Upph i... a dl0l t·n1
field with gra., ... on 11. which 11 hct'>
not done.
How lo ng h as this Issue been
brewlng7
For the last couple of yl'ar'i al
least. longer af you a'>k .,ome of
coachec, who have bet'll Jruund for
a whale
Sho uld the joint-use agreement
be ame nded?
The idea of thl' agrceml·lll ,.,
reasonable and 1111hc interc ... 1 of tilt'
community ac, a whole. hu1 1h1·
execu11011 of the agreement '"
seno u<;Jy flawed. a~ 1<, tht• dotu1111·n1
itself a~ a viabl<· cont rat t < ntll al
role., and rei.pon'>lb1l111t'' clfl'
undefined Term~ a'i fundamen1,1t
as "maintenante" are htgut:.
Communacataon I!> very poor
( oordtna11 on ,., non-exa\lent
There\ no anountab1l11y fhC'
1oant use agreement need., 10 ht
re wnllen or amended tu lull~
describe the <,pccafic rolt•., and
respon<.ibilitae'> of each of th<·
partae~. LanguJge throughout 111·1·1.h
to bt' clarified and lightened up
Oversight. t:omrnun1lat1on . and
accoun1ab1la1 v nC'ed to he
formalized. I handle contract ~ ford
Jiving and tht· < urrent agreemenl ,.,
a pretty pour tuntract
.i Costa Mesa loses on proposed fairgrounds move
ALLAN
IMNIOOR
AFTER HOURS
• Submit AfTEll HOUR8 ltem1
to the Dally Pilot. 330 W. Bay St.,
Coste Meta, CA 92627; by fax to
(949) ~170; or by calling
(949) 57M295.
SPECIAL EVENTS
LA DOLCE VITA
Honorary chairman Antonio
Cagnolo of Antonello
Rl1or1nta will host 1n evening
of live music and
entertainment, •La Dolce Vita,•
at 6 p.m. Oct. 3 on the VIiiage
Green et South Coaat Pleze,
3333 Bristol St., Costa Mesa.
Proceed• benefit cystic fibroala
2005's Have
Arrived and
Perfection Never
Looked So Good ...
rHe1rd'I. Tlcht• ue $150.
lnform1tlon: (71.-) 983·1393.
MUSIC
DAME Kltl TE KANAWA
Soprano Dame Kiri Te l<Aln1we
will perform at 2 p.m. tod•V In
the Orange County Performlne
Art• Center'• s.Qeratrom Hall,
600 Town Center Drive, Gotta
Mesa. Tidcets are $46 to $78.
Information: (71.-) 65&-2787 or
http://www.ocpac.org.
P£TERWHfTE
The Hyatt Regency Newport
Beach will host Peter White at
part of Its Summer Jazz Series,
sponsored by 94. 7 The Wave,
50% OFF
1st Session
starting •t 8 p.m. Oct. 1 tt 1107
Jambol'M Roed, Newport
S.edt. Tlc*eta ooet $37.90
(OCnMr~ tddSH).
lnformdon: (949) 72...-00 or
http.ilwww.•umm•rJuz
Hrl#.com.
http.:/~. TlaA:•tm11t.r.eotn. .. .. Thettv.a R111ncy ~
... wteeho.ctlc*IMll\ ..
Pitt of lti Summer Jeas.tee,
lponeored ~ M.7 TM W1vt,
UI ZWIRQ CHM9EJt
SOLOISTS
.. ....... MI p.m. Oct. 15 lt:l107
........... 9'oed, Newport Befd1.
Tkblit GOii $1'160 (Dinner
~ rtdd S28). lnfprmatJon: Th• Orange County P.rformfng
Atta Center'• 2004-2005 Concert
Serf11 tk*s off with th• Salzburg
Ch1mber Sofolsts. The
15-member entemble will
perform Mlectlon• by Moz1rt,
Mendetaohn ind Dvorak It 7:30
p.m. Oct. 4 In Founden H1tl, 800
Town C4"1ter Drive, Costa Mffl.
lidceta are S6e Ind lte 1v1l11ble
through the Center Box Office et
(714) 556-2787 or through
http:l!www.ocpllC.org.
TAKACS QUARTET
The Takeca Quartet will perform
ltring quertet pieces by Bartok,
Borodin and Beethoven at 8 p.m.
Oct. 7 at The Bardey Theatre,
4242 Campue Drive, Irvine.
Tidcete are $36 to $46.
Information: (949) 864-4646.
BRIAN CULBERTSON
FEATURING MICHAEL UNGTON
The Hyatt Regency Newport
Beach will host Brian Culbertson
featuring Michael Linton H part
of ita Summer Jazz Series,
sponsored by 94.7 The Wave,
starting at 8 p.m. Oct. 8 at 1107
Jamboree Road, Newport
Beach: Tickets cost $37.50
(Dinner Packages add $26).
Information: (9491729-6400.
http://www.summer
jazzseries.com.
LEIPZIG GEWANDHAUS
ORCHESTRA
The Leipzig Gewandhaus
Orchestra will perform Brahms'
"Piano Concerto No. 1 in D
minor, Op. 15" and "Symphony
No. 4 in E minor, Op. 99• at 7
p.m. Oct. 10 at the Orange
County Performing Arts Center.
600 Town Center Drive, Costa
Mesa. Ticltets are $79 to $150.
Information: (949) 553-2422 or
(949) 72M400,
http.i!Mww . .umm«
Jaz:z:#riH.com.
f1'ALIAN AFmtNOON
The P9dtlc Symphony will
perform MlectlOM from Mozart.
• Sholt.etovldl and Mlfl4eleaohn
at3p.m. Oct.171tt~Barclay
Theatre, 4242 Campu• Drive,
lrvlne. Tidcete are $46 ind $60.
Information: (949) 854 4648.
IGOR POGOR£UCH
Pianist Igor Pogore4id\ will
perform eeledionl from
Beelhoven, Sfbeflw and
Rachmaninoff et 8 p.m. Oct. 27 at
the 8erd8y Theatre, 4242 Campus
Drive, Irvine. Tldteta are $60 to
$100. lnfonnatfon: (949) 854-4646.
UC1 Svr.ttoNY ORCHESTRA
The UC Irvine Symphony
On:hestr• will perfonn
Hlectlona from Wagner and
Uut at 8 p.m. Oct. 29 and 30 at
the Barcbly Theatre, 4242
Campue Drive, Irvine. Tldtets are
$12 for general admiuion, $10
for aenlore and UCI faculty and
staff and $8 for students and
children under 18. Information:
(949) 854-4646.
WARSAW PtlLHARMONIC
ORCHESTRA
The Waraaw Philharmonic
Orchestra will perform
Penderecki's •Polymorph la" and
Chopin'• •piano Concerto No. 1
in E minor, Op. 11" at 8 p.m . Nov.
8 and 9 at the Barclay Theatre,
4242 Cempus Drive, Irvine.
Tidteta are $65. Information:
(949) 653-2422.
GUARNERI STRING QUARTET
The Guarneri String Quartet will
--.v Mii IMICl'I PUCl
Jaa9ndooe*t•-.W~
from noon to~~ 1hrough~9ndtrom
noon to2 e.m. ~..,_.
Saturdavt • Che Balboa Bev
C1ub a AlieOft; • 1221 w. ~
Highway, Newport 8eech.
lnfonnation: (Mt) 846--5000.
..... GltA WE£XEND JAZZ
Witter~ and DevJd
Alcantar, tM New Yof't Jazz
Connec1fon Duo, pfay It M80lm•
Glnaat261 E.ContHlghwayln
Newport at 8 p.m. Fridays end
Saturdayt and at 7 p.m. Sunday•
and Mondlys. Diena .Pftri jofn1
the duo on vocal• on Mondays.
It'• free. lnfonnetlon: (949)
673-9600.
THE VI.LAGE INN
The Vill1ge Inn on Balboa letand
offe,. great music Thursday
through Sunday nights. Roe
Kodz perform• et 8 p.m.
Thursday•, Road Dogz and
Martins at 8:30 p.m. Fridays.
Greg Topper at 9 p.m. and the
Derek Bordeaux R&s Combo at
6:30 p.m. The Village Inn la at
127 Marine Ave., Balboa Island.
Information: (949) 676--8300.
MUSIC AT THE GRIU
The Bluewater Grill offers live
music Friday and Saturday
nights. Greg Morgan. Nldc Peper
and Kelly Gordlen (known as
MPG) perform clHalc rodt, R&B
and awing at 8:30 p.m . Fridays.
Marvin Gregory and MPG will
perform clasaic rod!,, swing and
R&B at 8:30 p.m . Saturdays. The
restaurant ii at 630 Udo Parit
Drive. Newport Besch. Free.
Information: (9491675-3474.
REVOLVER
La Cave Restaurant offers
Revolver, which features DJs
along with imagery and auditory
delights at 10 p.m. Tuesdays at
.FIDELITY
INSURED DEPOSITS
-.nm111 ... c.w. .......,,.,,,Offer• o.vkt
~ Uw tribute to rrri
91nibfr0m &to 9 p.m.
McN•ya et 1• lrvlneAve.,
COll9 Meaa. lnformetlon: (Ml) -..?M4.
THE~LOUNGE
Le Caw A1lllanM offer• the
Underground Lounge, feetunng
,,.. VtNelj "n8lnG Bennett.
Martin and Sinatra from 8:30 to 9
p.m. Wednetdlyt at 1696 lrvfne
Ave., Cotta Meta. lnform8tion:
UM9) 84&-7&W •
PLAN BE
Le Cave Aeltaurant offera the
funky ~l Jau muale of Pl1n 88
from 10 p.m . to 1 e.m. on
fhursdeya at 1695 lr-Ane Ave ..
Cotta Meta. lnformatl0n: (149)
646-7944.
nt£ GINGER 8MER JR. TRIO
La Ceve Reataurant offers the
jazz fusion music of the Ginger
Baker Jr. Trio from 10 p.m. to 1
a.m. Frid•Y'I et 1895 Irvine Ave.,
Costa ~. Information: (9491
646·7944.
TODD OLIVER JAZZ. QUARTET
La Cave Restaurant offers the
jazz music of the Todd Oliver
Jazz Quartet from 10 p.m. to 1
a.m . Wednesdays and Seturdays
at 1695 lrvlneAve., Costa Mesa.
Information: (949) 646-7944.
PHH.SHANE
La Cave Restaurant will host Phil
Shane. a one·man music legend
who sings Elvis. Lewla,
Diamond, Orbison, Cash and
other music greata. The
performance begins at 10 p.m.
the last Friday of each month at
1695 lrvina Ave., Costa Mesa.
Information: (949) 646-7944.
MUSIC AT THE PELICAN
The Rusty Pelican offers the
music of Common Ground from
Wednesday through Sunday.
The band performs from 7 to 10
p.m. Wednesday and Thursday,
from 8:30 p.m. to 12:30 a.m.
Friday and Saturday and from 2
to 6 p.m. Sunday. The restaurant
is at 2735 W. Coast Highway,
Newport Beach. Free.
Information: (949) 642-3431.
MUSIC AT Pl.AYERS
Players restaurant Is now
offering live music from 9 p.m.
to midnight every Friday and
Saturday. Players is at 512 W.
19th St, Costa Mesa. No cover
charge. Information: (949)
646-5615.
MASSAGE THERAPY
By Certified And Licensed Professionals
• Swedl5tl
• Spa lteltrner ltS
• Hot S\one Thefapy
ssages
. 0156
, Costa Mesa
ges.com
• 20S off ol o one hour mossoge. Gift certilicxlte& ovorloble.
• 9 /27 /04 Nol ~Id wlltl oiler dbc:ounl offers New cvSlon'lers on
This special page
features
day spas,
workout faciliffes,
salons,
FREE REFERRALS
for Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy
We will attempt to find the
lowest rates available!
Friends of Hyperbaric Therapy
949.261.9900
No pair7l,
no doNn-time,
no kidding!
-~ -=
clowmimc, wl no recoway ti.md
• WER HADl REMOVAL
• WER VFJN 11lEA'.l'MF.NT
• THERMAGE FACELIFT
We Allo Sperieliw ia BitWratical Hormw 1\cnpy
\I I 1·1111111•'I,,1'1111•111\111• 1:1 ,•' ,.,,.,,I ',1.1. ' \
I I: , I .. : I • I I I ' '.It I I ', I 1 II I •I I I I • • I I I \ t. I 11 \ 11 I 11
EVENING HOURS AVAILABLE -PREE CONSUlIATION
EMAIL Oil. HABERME.HL at ~~.com
1501 Superior Ave., Suite 302, Newport Beach• 949"'4S-3206
9735 Wtbb..irt Bhd., Suite 414, Hills• 310-276-5890
ATI'ENTION
New Technology for Diabetic & Non
Diabetic Neuropathy and other forms of
Neuropathy & Vascular Disease
Affordable Anodyne Therapy
949.225.8900
NOW YOU CAN LOOK AND FEEL FANTASTIC
body and skin care,
weight management,
oral care, ·
aromatherapy,
holistic therapy,
cosmetic surgeons
and much morel
ToAdverli• in fM Next
Gorgeous Clothes
for workout & hangout
IN JUST ONE HOUR.
A smile you can't wait to share with the rest of the world. That's what we call Briu-Smik.
This new technology eliminates the need for messy trays and weeks of treatment The
Briu-Sw.ill system you have been reading about 1n Vogue and other fashion magazines.
is available right here in Newport Beach at the office of Dr J Foster Weems who 1s a
USC School of Dentistry graduate. It's a gentle, simple one visit procedure; and about
cff oe«t>«f r@n
YOU
Call
Lolftllne O'Donnell
M9.57UM5 Anna.-...
M9.57UM9
an hour Is all it takes.
• A Smile Makeover can dramatically enhance your appearance
• Smile Makeovers aren't extreme
•Any smile can be enhanced
A Smile Makeover can change your llfel
Or. Weems is an LVI trained dentist highly skilled in
completing smile makeovers as seen on Television.
Lesa than 2% of all dentists have achieved this level of education.
J. FOSTER WEEMS, DDS
1617 WESTCLIFF DRIVE, #201 •NEWPORT BEACH 9266() • 949-642-7998
www.jfostetweemsdds.com
I I
I
YOU CAN DO 1n11
Wiih l:f1p1IOlb in Huntinpn Ik~h
• • • •
v. ::tn~~ t ! § ~
i HI
1 ~if I ..,,,,
; .
!~ i' :>
0. :x .. ~I . --
:0 ~t~ ~ i I
0
i Io~
i ili1 1 ;fl
-0 •i [.
.. If • l: s fl'.1 ,c ,-·~.
•.1!..i. · I ·--' f'
t_JHI
F . J~I
'.h ' L ... · .. -. ; .. i. t.,. ~ ', 'g; -· ~~· '. ,:•,f':}~
~· r,·S
.
'
COMMUNITY
COUEGE
FOOTBALL ·
HOmets··
,I
finish off
Pirates
Orange Coast squanders
handful of scoring
chances to allow
Fullerton to rally, win.
B•rry Faulkner
Daily Pilot
FUl..LERTON -If a football game
was merely a turf war. the Orange Coast
College football team would have plant-
ed its flag in Fullerton territory Saturday
and proceeded to celebrate.
Instead. the Pi-
rates bad arguably
their most frustrat-SCOREBOMD
ing loss of the sea-
son -a 28-14 Mis·
sion Conference
setbaclc -falling
to 0·4 this fall and
extending their los·
ing streak to eight OCC 14
Eight of the first Fullerton 28
10 Orange Coast
possessions ended
on the Fullerton side of the SO· yard line.
but only two culminated in points.
OCCs failure to finish allowed the de·
fending conference champion Hornets
(4~0) to erase a 14·7 halftime deficit and
overcome some arypical mbcues of
their awn.
The PJJle.began poorly for the visi-
tors, u Pullerton's Camron Carmona in-
tercepted an ill-advised deep pass from
Kyle Basanez and the Hornets marched
87 ~ eight _.to ~ assure
the home crowd at Cal State Fullerton
that it might be business as usual for the
hosts.
But the Pirates had other ideas.
Defensive end Sam Islas forced a
fumble and safety Mordy Omguze re-
covered at the Pirates' 5-yard line to halt
Fullerton's next ~on and the of-
fense ernbalhd on its most impressive
drive of the season.
Exploiting Fullerton defense with re-
peated toss sweeps around the left side
and protecting Ba.sanez. who completed
5 of 6 passes on the procession, DCC
went 95 yards on 14 plays to tie the
game.
Matt Dawna, starting at tailback for
leading rusher Matt Padilla (injured an-
kle), ran 3 yards for the touchdown to
end the 6-minute, 23-second posses·
sion. Adam Kleckner added the coover·
S.. PIRATES, Pac• 83
STEVE McCRANK/OAILY PILOT
Costa Mesa's Jorge (Qoz (30) breaks taddes by l.agllla Beach defenders in the first half of Saturday night's game.
esa shocked
in second half
-:Alter leading at
halftime, 9-0, Mustangs
give up 10 points in
tough loss to visiting
Laguna Beach.
Rick Devereux
Daily Pilot
NEWPORT BF.ACH -Heads were
hanging low on the Costa Mesa High
sideline following the Mustangs' 10-9
loss to Laguna Beach Saturday night
at Newport Harbor.
"Apparently we're not a very good
football team.· Coach Tom Baldwin
said. ·11..aguna Beach) is the worst
opponent we'll have all year."
The Breakers (3-1) overcame a 9-0
halftime hole to score twice in the
second half for
SCXIEIOMD the win.
Costa Mesa
(0·4} received a
gift on La·
gima's first of·
fensive play of
the game.
Laguna 10 Backed up to
Costa Mesa 9 their own 5·
yard line after a
brilliant punt
by Ryan Bagwell. the Laguna Beach
center snapped the ball over
quarterback Talan Torriero's head
and out of the end zone for a safety.
Neither team was able to move the
ball in the first half, with the teams
combining for eight punts. The Mus·
tangs were, however. able to convert
a Laguna turnover into a touchdown.
On the Breakers' second series in
the second quarter, C.OSta Mesa Jine-
baclcer Randy Fea stripped a Laguna
running back and defensive tackle
Robert de la Cruz recovered the
loose ball on the 31. On the next
play. quarterback Ryan French
lobbed a jump ball to the 5-yard line.
where tight end/wide receiver Jeff
Waldron made a fantastic grab to
steal the ball away from the comer·
back. Waldron turned afterthe catch
and easily scored.
·0efensivety we played preny
good,· Baldwin said. "We dJdn'1 give
up any big plays like we have in all of
our other games."
The Breakers put together a sue·
play, 75-yard drive early in the sec·
ond half, capped off by Greg Arella·
no's 2-yard touchdown run up the
GIRLS VOLLEYBALL
Strmy, ~ 26, 2004 11 •
THE BIG EASY
'94 Sailors '
ultimate video:
Hitting the wall
T be heart and soul of every
succesafu1 football J>l'OIJl.Dl ls the
weight room. where the basics are
boiled down to the noise and din, and
an aroma of succesa
At Newport Harbor High the walls are
decorated with past glories and as you
leave there is an lnspirational message
painted on the wall above the door,
capped with the
classic line: ·How do
I want to be
rememberedr
How do I
remember the Tars
of '94?
It's been 10 years
since that
remartable
campaign of 14
victories, no defeats,
no ties. no
arguments. No
maner how good
ROGER
CARLSON
anyone who come'> down the lane.
nobody's going to do any better.
As a sportswnter. 11 was my annual
routine over 20-plu.s seasons to make
the rounds with the photographers ~
we conducted ·photo day." getting our
base material ready for the ~n. And
I always looked forward to lrvine and
16th, where the Newpon Harbor Sailo~
awa11ed As a spom. editor since 1988.
the rouune conunued for a ume. and
1994 wru. no different.
They were alwa)"i ready. never a
glitch. and the proceed.mg wa' as
smooth as stlk..
How do I remember?
Danny Pulido was a sophomore and
standmg 6-foot 4. weighing 190
appeared as if a (.reek god
What an emergence. con'>1denng tht'
Sailors' a11ack no longer included 1he
graduated Wade lih and a host of
others that resulted in JU'it three
rerwning offensive staner,
I had already spoken with the c111.1e h
Jeff Bnnldey, to put together m) hst nf
special subjects and he had offered
various inside mfonnauon to ass1.,1 nw
in putting the list together
Defensively, he told me the rt'al k.e\
was a 5-foot-9 no~d n.uned Bill
Johns. a -.econd-team all-kague
returner
The appraisal was glowing and 11 had
stuck m my mind~ the ~1lor<.
approached.
So you can imagine nw thoughts a'
this poli te. hap!))-and pleac;an1 lad with
an angelic race came fonh. repre..ent111g
Brinlcley's so-called vaunted defenc,e
Ifs the only moment tn an
a.ssoc1auon neanng 20 yearc, that I
found myself bt'hevmg Bnnkley wa'
either pulltng off an unheard-of pr.ml.
or was na1 deceiving me This ruce kid
can·1 possibly be the ~e'' to Harbor's
Sailors learning quick in early stage
Newport Harbor lost
seven seniors, but coach
has confidence team will
improve a lot this fall.
Bryce Alderton
Daily Pilot THE SAILORS
SPOR 'TS
MARI< C. DUSTIN I DAILY Pit.OT
Newport Harbor's Brett Auer, right, fires a backhand shot on goal against Los Alamitos defenders Saturday in the second quarter of
the South Coast tournament third-place game at Newport Harbor. Los Alamitos won, 11-8. Newport will host University next Saturday.
..
YOUTH FOOnALI
Seahawks soar on
road past Generals ,
HelfrlCh catches two
40-yard touchdown
passes in 35-0 Junior
All-American ~ctory.
MtdlMI IWfdcb ~t two
toUdldOwn pwel 10 apart the
N~-.,_ )Wllor Midget
SeabaWb' 35-0 vidory over the
Woodcreet Generali in a Junior
All-American football game
~18.
The se.hawb; who earned
their ftist road victory th1a sea-
eon. NCOYered an onside kick
on the opening kickoff and taiJ-
b8" back Danny Miller ran In
(OJ the team'• ftnt score.
In the aecond quarter,
quarterback Mitch Sands deliv-
ered a 30-yard touchdown pass
to dgbt end Andrew Yelich.
The Seabawb were not done,
scortni apin 18 the half ex-
pired. Sanda banded off to run-
ning back Coby Peterson, who
theD threw a 40-yard TD toss to
Helfrtcb, giving the Seahawb a
21-0 lead.
The Seahawb offensive line
1ri Jr. Qlnlc (7-and S.year-
old) play:
• Ca.tlc>n 14, SeabaWb 7:
Seabawk deflDllve linemen
Trevor ~. Colin Duffy, Ja-
mal BauJ and Jerem&ah Bar·
wick tackled Canon ballcar-
riera thro\l&hOUl tb"e contest.
The Seah"\wb moved Che ball
lD the second quarter on IU.DI
of 9. 10 and 12 yudJ by tall·
backs Nie Landattom and Clay
Woodward while qlmterback
Quest nuxton led the drives.
Running bacb Beau Roth
and Olad Sheldon. behlnd the
offensive line of AUltin Robert,
Matt McKinnon, Alex Puller
and Cole Collins, provided of·
fensive aparb ln the second
half.
The Colli tried throwing the
ball in the Jourth quarter, but
Truxton intercepted one pass
while linebackers Noah Howe
and Will Eary helped quell the
Colli' attack.
Olnt Henderson led the Sea-
hawks with seven tackles.
··Sailors isolated in loss ·~~~~3
<:athan Cokas pressure the
In Sliver Jr. Olnic play:
•Garden Grove 14, Seahawk.s
7:
Quarterback Oiue Porrest
hit Tanner Traglia for a 25-yard
touchdown pass ln the fourth
quarter, highllghtlng a 75-yard
drive for the Seahawks.
Newport Harbor
defense doesn't have
an answer for Griffins'
one-on-one play.
Rick Devereux
Daily Piiot
NFWPORT BF.AC..H -Water
polo 1s a team c,pon where a
group can rely on one another for
suppon and help. The Los Alami-
tos High ~ water polo team re-
lied heavily on the play of indi-
Vlduab to give the Griffins an 11 -8
victory over Newport Harbor in
lhe third-place game of the South
Coast tournament.
"They created a lot of isolation
situations for him," Sailors Coach
Jason Lynch said. "Our individual
defense wa.c, not as good as l
wanted."
Los Al took an early, 2--0 lead
before Newport's
•
1:ed a~
with 3:24 left in
the first quarter.
'That's when the
Griffins focused
on centering the
ball at two meters.
Oayton Snyder scored twice to
extend Los Al's lead to 4-1. New-
pon cut into the lead 49 seconds
later when Brett Auer set up fresh-
man Nate Castillo's left-handed
goal
"He's the best left -handed
player I've ever hand." Lynch said
about Castillo. "He has all the
tools and he's only 15. He could
make the national team some-
day."
Snyder had a spinning back-
handed goal with three seconds
left on the shot clock for Los Al to
increase the Griffin lead to 5-3.
Telford Cottam collected a aos.s-
pool pass from \nines and ecored
from the dgbt side on a sh-on-
five opportunity with less than a
minute left in the aecond quarter
to make it a one-goal game at the
half.
The Sailors converted three of
the four man-advantages they
had in the game. Los Alamitos
scored five goals on five Newport
exclusions..
~0ur goal was to minimitt our
ejections, and we did." 1¥nch
said.
Los Al scored twice to open the
third quarter with a 7-4 lead. but
Oay Jorth pounded in a shot for
Newpon Harl>or to cut into the
lead
The Grlflins ran a backdoor iso-
lation play on consecutive pos-
sessions, both times resulting in
great scoring opportunities for
Kevin Guerin. Senior goaltender
Michael Robin.son made a quick
save on the first attempt, but
BRIEFLY
Guerin was able to ftnd the bade
of the net the second time.
Jorth acored his second goal of
the third quarter to mah It 8-6 in
favor of ~ Al but Scott David-
son skipped a ball in with less
than 11 seconds left in the frame
for the Griffins. c.astiUo scored
from mid-pool as the quarter
ended after a foul pulled the de-
fender off him
Another lob pass to Guerin re-
sulted in another Los Al score and
Vranes scored on a man-a.dvan-
tage in the fourth quarter for the
11-8 final
Los Alamltioe ,, , Newport H.t>or •
8cof9bv0.-W. Loe Alamitos ) 2 4 2 -11 Newport 2 2 J 1 • •
Loe AJ-Snyder 3, Brode 3, Guerin 2,
OrAdlon 2, Levin 1. Sevea-Simon -
11. Newpott-y,.,,.. 2. c.tillo 2, JOrttl
2, Cottam 1. Sevee -Roblnaon 3
I
Lawrence impressive for Sailors
Seven ditTerent players scored
~n goals in three games Satur-
day for the Newport Harbor Hlgh
field hockey team in the Orange
County i.nvttat.ional at Marina
The Sailors (10-1-2) defeated
Santa Ana in the opener. 2--0, tied
Marina in lhe second game, 0--0,
and handled R>Urttain Valley. 5-0, in
the finale.
Oemmie Anderson and Amanda
Fallon !.COred goals for Newport in
the opener, while Julia Bemay,
Whitney Browman, Laura 'kssar,
Alley Ramser and Danica Kahn-
• bach scored agaimt the Barom.
• Harbor goalie Qa.ra Lawrence re-
• conled 20 saves again& Fountain
Vdlley.
Pacific sweeps UCI
• VOl.l.EYBA.U.: The Pacific
women's volleyball team swept
visiting UC Irvine, 30-22, 30-25,
30-23, in Blg West Conference
action Saturday night. Kelly
Wmg and Amanda Vazquez had
13 kills each for the Anteaters
(7-4, 1-2 in conference), who
lost their fourth straight.
Hess sparks Vanguard
• SOCCER: Matt Hess scored
four goals as the Vanguard men's
soccer team dismantled Alliant,
10-1, In nonconference men's soc-
cer action Sarurday night
Fmal slated at Om Mesa
•TENNIS: Lesley Joseph and
Denis 7Jvkovic, both of the United
States, will squaie off in the singles
championship match at noon to-
day in the USTA men's Futures
Tour stop at C.OSta Mesa Tennis
(.enter.
Lions fall in five
• VOUBYBAIJ.: The Vanguard
University women~ volleyball
team pushed defending NAIA
champion Presno Paci6c, but the
visiting~ earned a 26-30,
30-25, 30-28, 27-30, 15-5 Golden
State Athledc C.Onference W:tory
Sanmiay afternoon.
Jaclyn Lee paced the Uons
(17-5, 4-2 in conference), ranked
No. 5 in the NAIA. with 17 k:llls.
while Khn Wynn added 15 and
Keri DeHaas chipped in 11.
UCI 4th, 5th at Stanford
•CROSS COUNTRY: The UC
lrvlne women's team finished
fourth of 19 teams and the Ant-
eater men's squad was fifth of 20
teams at the Stanford invita-
donal.
Kim Ramirez led the Anteater
women with a fifth-place finish
of 22:07, Marie Nguyen was 11th
in 22:30 and Candice Proctor
WU 23rd ln 22:55. Kim Handel
ftnlshed 33rd (23:07)' Erinn l'1ln
was 4lst (23:21), Kelli Vander-
burg placed 43rd (23:22) and
Amber Gordon was 53rd (23:37)
to round out UCl's top sewn
runners.
For the Anteater men, junior
Ricky Barnes ftn1shed leWilth ln
24:15, Tum Whelan wu 28th in
25:09 and Tun Hearst 39th in
personally.
And, there wu the praence of
a nmnlng back named Brian
Johnton. a S~foot-8 lelllor.
•Everyone on the CMm knew
how good he wu, but nObody
else did." said Johna.
Orange High. with a lackluster
reputation, wu ftmt on the Ult
and brob the ICOdnl Ice before
Newport pulled away with a
28-10 vk:tory.
"everyone WU jUlt Clytnc to
figure out wbeN by ..... Mid
Johna. ·0ur ~John
Glomanl, calmed l\W)'ODI
down. No one led 11111 Jollrt G«OntaD!..
Jt-Glordmt. lild
McDW• who_.. die
..... ol• pilc:kpl .... 2IO
pll,.n In a fttull ,_,.round
cor-.dMt *C In I I m,., b
lbe-. '"'
Hlfl•Ocllll*Www. ...... , ..... _
nllldtl ...... ....
a Sii ....... ..
~-....... _
25:29. Andrew Garratt placed
42nd (25:32), David Santos was
43rd (25:32), Ryan Ketcham fin-
ished 61st (25:55) and John Kluve
63rd (25:57) to round out UCls
first seven.
Sea 1G.ngs at .500
•WATER POW: C.Orona del
Mar High's boys water polo team
(4-4) lost to lJl Canada. 9-7, and
defeated Marina. 11 ·9, in the
South Coast tournament Saturday.
UCLA edges 'Eaters
• WATBR POLO: Uc.A held
host UC Irvine scoreleea in the
second half as the 8rulm wmt on
to a 6-4 win in nonconfermce
men's water polo action Saturday
nlghL ua took a 4-3 lead at halfttme
on the strength of two e:ma-man
goals by junior Dreason Bury. but
UOA (6-2) m11led to wtn.
Junior goalie Joe ~ re-
corded atx stops for the Anteatera
(7-3).
Generals' quarterback in the
second ba1C while Vlnclnt Gal-
vez prevented Inside runs.
Grant Kellgian, Matthew
Morris, Alex SWigert, Sean
Mangano, Andrew Hicks,
Dutch Lamons Robert Con-
neally and Michael McKay
aided to the staunch ~fense.
Brandon Kula's 3-yard TD
run, with strong blocking
from Taylor McSunas, and
Helfrich's second 40-yard TD
reception, capped the Sea-
hawks' scoring.
In Pee Wee play:
•Carson 37, Seahawks 0:
The Colts scored on their
opening possession of the
game to take a 6-0 lead. Brett
The Seahawk.s' tried an on-
side kick, but Garden Grove re-
covered and ran out the clock.
Newport-Mesa WU led by
strong defense from Spencer
Lujan. Andrew Shearer, Olarlie
Padden, Lukas Nienhuis, Mar-
shall Sepulveda and nm McGe-
trlck.
Tate Smith and Taylor Ante-
nucci added key returns for the
Seahawb while the offensive
line was anchored by Max Carr,
Austin Arico, Quentin Moses,
Dane Valdivia and Smith. The
line opened holes for tailbacks
Jake Favreau, Sage Fleming,
Stephen Cureton, Porrest and
Traglia.
Lin'kletter blocked the extra-In Jr. Pee Wee play:
point attempt while linemen •Baldwin Hills 33, Seahawk.s
Steven Sheldon, Bradan 13:
Granard, Taylor Wheeler and The Bruins set the tone for
D.J. Hauaer applied pressure. the game by taking the opening
The Seahawks played the kickoff for a touchdown.
game with offensive linemen' The Seahawks answered on
Grant Frazier, John -Prickett, thelr first offensive possession
Hauser, Austin Turner, Luis with quarterback Blair Luchs
Sheldon, Jimmy Reed and leading an 8-play drive, result-
Spencer Haly. ing in John Barton's I-yard TD
Nico Napolitano and Steven plunge.
Sheldon anchored the line as The Seahawk offensive line of
tight ends. The Seahawk.s A.J. Swies, Mario Rosales, Ben
moved the ball on the ground Paul, Trent Anderson, Vince
behind strong blocking and Aqueveque and Zach Beaudin
running from fullback Blake paved the way for back.s Sam
Burkhart and tailback J.D. Ab-Barkely, Barton, Jeff Condino
bott. and Blair Luch.s.
Quarterback Travis Woloson Barkley had an interception
connected with Drew Diller for and some key tackles while
a 15-yard completion and a Swies, Otasen McNaughten
first down on third-and-7. and Tyler Barbato aided the de-
Sttong running moved the ball fense.
to the Colts 28-yard line before
two penalties and a fumble sti-
fled the Seahawks longest drive
of the game.
The Seahawk.s defense
played well the entire game
agalnlt a strong Colts' offense.
Satetiet Chrtl ·Brown, Macklin
Weinstein, Aaron Rentz and
John Barnett paaolled the sec-
ondary.
Unebacken Ryan Iverson
and Brett Klein provided strong
nan defneme with Mlp Up
front from Hunter DUm.nte, = Jakowlki and Uam
The Cotta returned a punt for
a toud>down lD the leCObd halt
and had a long ro run.
In Future Seahawk.s play:
•Newport-Mesa 20, Corona
0:
The Seahawb jumped out to
an early lead oo their ftrst drive
with a long run by Colin Bra.n-
denberpr and cru1led to their
ftrat victory. Anthony Battlata
added another 1aon1 nm early.
Nick Sperr, Colton BeDter,
Jack Genova, Will Favreau and
Jake Genova ad.fled the Pan-thm ofteme.
Newport·Meu quarterback
Kobe Beilter led auatalned
drMt with help from linemen
Phoenl& smtth, Jardan Brokaw, Luke~ Mn Durante and
Mtchi.el Brown.
CM-~. oenlW lnlipp9d bilall CM of end ION, l'A3.
llCONDQUMTD.
CM-Wlldron 31 Piii from~
, ...... kkt), 3:43.
.,,..,QUMTD
La-AIWleno 2.run CTorrfefo kl<*),
7:15.
'°""'" QUMTER La -Toniero 23 ftetd goal, 9:08.
A-8001..._I
NMVIDUAl. ltUSHltG
La -ANltMo, 21-ec>, 1 TO; Tomero,
~27; Brown, 2-44; Cogbum,
1-6.
CM -Legg. 18-63; Oulroi. 10-38;
frwnctt, 4-mlnw-17; Hunter, 2-12.
NMVIDUAI. PASSl'tG
La -Torriero, 13-1&.0, 86.
CM -~. 5-20-0, 74.
NMVIDUAI. RECEIVING
La -Cogburn, 4-18; Urben, 3-42;
Arel!Mo, 2-7; Whelen, 2-8; Brown,
1-12.
CM -Waldron, 4-58, 1 TO; Quiroz.
MB.
GAME STATISTICS
La CM ,.... .,..... lO 7
~ :za.m 31-133 ==ywcMge ,,.,:: .. ~ ........... yWClll. _,. 0 -* ••d9ee 2·22 •22 .... .,.......,. 117 ,.
"""" 7-34.4 10-Sl. 7 ~-2•1 CM) ~ywcMge &41 1•12•
Time "' ~ I°"' 23:99 2":01
"PUnl ........ ~.fumble rwturne
MESA
Continued from B 1
middle to make it 9-7.
At the end of the third quarter,
the Mustang defense forced a
fourth-and-one, but the Mesa
line jumped of&.ides to keep the
drM going. On the next play
Bryan Brown ran 41 yards to the
C.OSta Mesa 8. The defense held
tough and forced a 2J..yard field
goal that made it 10-9, lA\guna
Beach.
The Mu.slangs were able to get
past the SO only three times in
the second half, with the best
field posidon coming on their
first possask>n of the third quar-
ter following a Laguna punt that
put the ball at the 35. Bagwell
had to punt on 6ve of Mesa's six
second-half series, and the sixth
possession was the last drive
where the Mustangs turned the
ball over on downs.
A Laguna Beach player did run
into Bagwell on his last punt. but
no penalty was called.
·0ur punter got roughed and
they didn't call it.,. Baldwin said.
"That was a huge play in the
game."
A roughing the punter penalty
ls an automatic ft.rat down.
But the Mesa offense was un-
able to mcm effectively during
the game. 'fyler Lea rushed for
83 yards on 18 carries and Jorge
Quiroz flnished with 36 rushing
yards on 10 carries.
When French dropped back to
pua, be wu constantly pres-
sured by Laguna Beadl blittes.17
The Breakm only U1e two defen-
sive linemen. but up to six line-
PHOTOS BY STEVE M<:CRANK I OM.Y PILOT
Top, Costa Mesa defenders Camero Wynglarz (44) and Randy Fea
(35) send Laguna Beach quarterback Talan Torriero scrambling
with nowhere to run in Saturday nighfs nonleague game. Costa
Mesa led at halftime 9-0, but the visrtmg Breakers rallied to wm.
N>ove, Costa Mesa quarterback Ryan French looks to pass.
Laguna Beach's Mick Miettmen (29) manages to break up a pass
to Costa Mesa's Jeff Waldron in the first half in the Breakers' 10-9
victory. Waldron made a catch for a touchdown earlier.
backers. The various formations
and blitzing combinations con·
fused the Mesa offensive line.
whidl alJowed four sacks and
numerous pressures. French was
getting hJt from the blindside
often, and the blocking schemes
were not able 10 adjust to the
multiple blitzers.
"We're not blocking weU at all."
Baldwin said. "We start !Golden
West) League next week. and I
don't know what we're going to
do:
CROSS COUNTRY
CdM girls third, boys fourth
SCORE BY QUARTERS
PIRATES
Cootmued from B 1
sion kick.
()( C tackle Hyan Davi-. rt•t m
ered a fumble on the fir.1 play af
ter the en1>ui11g kldmff. bur thl'
Pirates opted for a pooch punl
punt and llll'>'>C'd fidd·goal trie..
from 42 f Hn.111 < .. .impo' wide left!
and 41 ).trd., lli..lt'<.kner wide
right), kept rlw v1s11ors ~ven
pomt!> behind
Orange Coast
Fullerton
0 14 0 0
7 0 14 7
14 when their en.,umg po"-~'>IUll
28 stalled at the I lomet..,· J3.
1 ulll'rton duwnt'd a punt a1
the OU .. I \ard hnt• on 1u. neX1
po.,-.e .... .,.on, then. aftt·r a Pirate
punt. regauwd J>O'>M.''>.'ilon al lht'
( )( ( i:J
I 1v1· play-. lc1ter. Manny Gut1er
re1 powerl't.l in from l yard.., out
to finalvt' tlw c,corrng FlRST QUARTER
Fun -Gutierrez 26 run (Garcia kidc),
9:17.
SECOND QUART£R
OCC Downs 3 run (Kledcner k1dc),
14.48
OCC Aoki 2 run (Kledtner ludc).
7 38
THIRD QUARTER
FuU Barfield 15 pass from Turner
(Garcia k1dc), 11 42
Full Bedard 40 1ntercept1on return
(Garcia k1dc), 11 17
FOURTH QUARTER
Full Gutierrez 2 run (Garcia k1dc).
406
A -400 (est)
INOMOUAL RUSHING
0CC Downs, 14 56, 1 TD,
Basanez, 14-49, Aokr, 11 31, 1 TD.
Niutapua1, 1· 10, Johnson. 1 8
FuU Guidry, 12 63, Gut1enez
12-58, 2 TDs, Rice, 5 29, Sramek, 1 9.
Amchir, 1 3; Wh1eldon. 1 minus 1,
Turner, 1 minus 8, team, 1 minus 1
INOMDUAL PASSING
OCC Basanez, 14 27 2, 159
Sctim1gel, 0..3-0, Haynes. 0 1 0
Full -Turner, 14 16-0. 218, 1 TO,
Wh1eldon, 0..1-0, Amch1r, 0 1 0
INOMDUAl. RECEMNG
OCC Lauderdale. 6-72; Dietz, 2 5,
Musso. 1-24; Garcia 1 16, Martin,
1 14, Johnson, 1 12, Hoffman. 1 8.
N1utapua1, 1-8.
Fun -Scott, 2 41: Dodson. 2·31,
Gut1enez, 2-29; Rugg10, 1 32, Weeks,
2 26, Barfield, 2-20, 1 TD. Vandiver.
2 16, Sehnaky, 1 23
GAME STATISTICS
OCC A.JU
FllS1 downt 20 14
Ru1h••·v••dege J7 177 32 1111
P-ngy•rdage I~ 211
P-ng 14-31 2 14-la.G
Net , .. urn yerdf• 0 92
Secb-y•rdege 4-23 2·9
Fullerton wt'nl three-and out
on iL'> next pO'l.">t'C,MOll and a
shanked punr covl'rt'd 1u-.t 17
yarch. '>Citing the \ r-.111>r~ up .11
the Hornet-. 10
Tight end Jon l1c1n i.1 '>tretdwt.l
lo haul in a na .. ant•t pa-. .. fur lh
yarth on fir' I do\\ n and thn.•e
Roben Auk! runs rnwrt'tl the re·
main1ng yard,, ~ 1hc ~ophn
more canit•t.l 111 from 2 y-.ir(h out
with 7:38 lt·lt in the h.1lf to K!Vl'
<XL a lead for the rlurd llmt' 111
four Kan1e-. tlus fall ex ( gamed 49 yard' 011 10
play'> with 11-. next po.,.,._..,,um
but punted from llw l·ullt•rion
40.
The I lonwl' opt·rwd the -.t'l
ond half with J '>lX·pl.1y. fi:l y.ml
touchdown drrve lo pull t'H'll,
then rnpitalved on ex ( ·, b1~t'''
m~take for another 'tore two
play'> aftrr lhe l'l1'iu111g k1ck11fl
llw '>UbJet t of the 1'1ratt''> h1g
gest rt•grel tamt• wlwn HJ~w1,
undt:r inten.,t• f>re.,,ure ac, he
rolled to h" right. loftt•d an er
rant offerrng direct(\ to m1ddlt•
linebacker Dillon Bt•d,1rd, who
wru. con!>pi<:uou.,ly po-.1llonccl at
lea-.t 10 yard'> from tlw nt>Mt'''
()(,( receiver
After hobbling tlw ,1t·nal gilt.
Bedard hauled 11 111 and rumhlL•t.l
untouched to payd1n Maum 111
Garcia klck.t>d the third of h1.,
four PATs ant.l I ulll·rto11 had ,11111
needed
OCGs next 1hrt'l' po'>Se!>l>1on.,
reached as dt•t•p a., tlw ruJJerton
23, 25 and 9. rt''>pt'<'IJVely. But a
"~t·'n• gl'tllng do..e." <X .. <
< <hit h M1k1· laylor '><lit.I "We're
gt•tt111g lx'ttt·r .int.I our ofTen'>l\l'
'tan .-. wor~111g hard. Hut we
nC"t·d better pla) from our cor
ncrhJt~ aml wt· rwl't.l to m.tll'
tJm'>t' field goal'> llw field goal-.,
arl' J mt'llldl 1l11ng and a mo
ml'nlum 1h111g \\l' umtrol 1he
hall. then 1111-.-. a ~1< k
I )own' f>lt l..1·t.l 11p '1h nl'>lllng
yard., hy h.illt111w. 11111 'kit our tht'
final l\ .. o 411.trtl'I" Jltt·r '>Ufll r111g
Jdwr-.t· ent•t .... 111 till' ht'<ll
"II >own-.1 r.m out ol g<L'." 'wild
I J\ lt1r, \'I. h11"1 11•,1111 wa-. <ii'"'
\\l;,1lt•1wd hv 1111ur11·-. 10 offt·n'>l\C'
h11t·111a11 l1111ir11\ < rnwley anrl
-.Jlt'I~ "1;11 k \nm,dt·n Ba'>Cme1
al-.o ll'ft tht g.11111 l.111· , .. 11h an
Ull'>J>t'11ltt•d 1111ttr\ rh.11 did 1101
appt•.ir -.1•nc111-.
"( rm .. le\ hurl hi-. -.l111uldt•r
JIHI \nm'l.dt'n gol d111g1 cJ f,1\l1>r
"lid "\\-!' h.1d J 1111 111 ~'\.JY'
d111g1·c.J "
< rm .. It·\., .th"l·r11 t' Ill.!\ h.i\t'
hun 1110'>1 of .11J ,,, I><.<. Jlrl·ady
l.11 k111g dt•pth rm tlw oflt•n'>iH·
front. \'\.a'> e-..plolll•d tor four -.t'<
onc.J half "-'lb. rt"•lllt 1ng 111
lc"'t'" of 2 I vanh
B.l-.aJ1C't 1111lved l'1gh1 ret 1•1v-
er" to thrrM for I 'lY vanh. m
clud111g '>I)( u11nple11on., to Hyan
l..auderdalt• for 72 vanh
Illr Pir.111•, 11 .I yard' total of-
fenc,e wa' ,1 'ingie ji:aITil' high
th1<t c,eru,011. a-. wen· lhl'ir 20 first
downc;
'1 Bth Annual
Harbor Heritage Run
Nt11 yardllge 313 482 _ and Free Fitness Fair
P\Jnu &-381 ~31 2
FumOlet h.rmtllee io.. l.0 2. 2
Flev--net v..... 4.311 •tc> Trme of pornn'on 32-oll 27 !12
'Punt rt11urne, lnten»ptione. fumble retu,,.,.
QUOTE OF THE DAY
"/The field goals}
are a mental thing
and a momentum
thing. We conJrol the
ball, then miss a
kick."
•• TIYkw, Oranae Coast Colege footbal coach
SCHEDULE
:roDIW .....
COlliee men -UC INlnl w.. ,.,...... ......... --... "a.m.
CGl111 women -UIC•UC IMne,. 1 p.m. .
,,. --
/\
I ~ 8t ~---
' ..... F 'l"'\~.-y
~Z: "~se>W \.\~c, ""°'
..... /SC~O\....' ------~ ~ -':.1! l ~d/ .. ---r" ~ -------
LOGO OESIGH 8Y
NICK CttA Tll.l..OH
l'HiS 8TUOCNT
RUN NEWPORT!
51RA•ua
ml/WILi
MUCNOna
atYftl
lWRCWACT
fl~
THE COSTA MESA CITY
COUNCIL wlll hold •
public h .. r1n1 for the
ennu11 review of the
Citywide l reffic lmp1ct
F .. Pro1u m Oii Moodey,
October 4, 2004, 1t 6:30
pm., In tllt Co11ncll
Chemben of City Hell,
77 F 11r Dr1ve, Coata
Men
THE TRAFFIC IMPACT
FEE Prolfam hu been est1blish9d to ftn1nce
the 1mprov1menh nee
es~ry to address the
t umul1t1111 unpach ol
development w1 th111
Cost• Meu end to
tn1ure that lht sttnda1d
level ol 1erv1ce IS
m11nt11ned on the Tr 1lf1c Clrcul1Uon Sys
rem
AN AUDIT Of THE
Tr affic lmpect Fu Proar1m 1s ev11tabte for
review by the public at
the Costa Mesa City
Clerk's Office, 77 fair
Drtve, Costa Meu PUBLIC COMMENTS In
tither orel or written
form may be presented
dur1na the publlc hear
ina For further Inf or matoon, telephone (714)
754 5335 or vout the
1ranspor11t1on Services
Q1vmon 1t City Hall, 77
~air Ortve Cost1 Mu i, ¥onday tnrouih f rtd1y,
I 00 1 m lo S 00 p m
AJLIE fOLCIK Deputy
Cuy Clerk Coty of Cost•
'1eu ACCOUNT NO 01
Publuhed Newport ~1th/Costa Mesa Daily
ot September 24 25
"l7 28 29 30
October I 2 3 2004
• F528
; aTY Of COSTA MESA
•UQUIST FOR l'tOPOSAlS
FOtEUVATot
lUlfT9WKl SllVICIS
P.arow MO. 092204
NOTIC( IS HEREBY 41veN that sealed pro
Qosals shall be recerved "Y lhe Crty of Costa Me~a to w11 lhe De·
1:1men1 o f Public
VICU , P 0 Bo• 1200,
II Mesa. Cahforr111
92628 1200 on or ~elo1t IM hOur of 4 00
Q m on Octob,, 7 2004
11 shall be the respon
'11b1l1fy ol !he olleror lo
deltver the propo\11 to ~e Otloce ol the City
"~· 77 r air Ortve ~II Men C1hlo1 noa
1f'roponls shill bt
rtfturned to lhe 1tltnloon di Publlt Serv1cu
""•lhon lht \l td lomt 'f,""'' on a su l'd tnvt pt 1oenltl1ed on the
uls•de ''"'" the Oller qr s Business N1me
llropou1 item number
bentofy £ lt vator M11n
t~nantr SPr v•rts Ind
th• copenona date lhere
will Ot no pubhc oprn1n1
IJf J;MPOS.lh
Add•loooal topot~ ol tii• rpquol lor Prt>posal
.. a, be obtained by
tulhoro1ed olferor al the
1)1111 t ol the r aciltlln
Jnd E Quopmenl Super
lisor lohn Aeullar at l71 4) 327 7483 01
Rublu Srrvot•s Mdn1aer l)rure Hartley at 1714)
1~4 51&4 2310 Pl1cenlla
l\>tnut t lor\I bu11d1na on til e left J Costa Mesa
Publl1htd Newport
Be,ch/Co1ta Men Dally
Piiot Stptamber 25, 26.
1004 SaS730
1180
IGUMHOUSM
°"°"1llTY
All real »tit• advert1s·
In& In this newsp1per is aubttel to th• Federal r 11r Hou11na Act of 1968 u e mended which
malt.es It 11tea11 lo
1d11ert1se ·1ny prefer· enc1. l1m1t1t1on or
d1sc:rlmin1tlon blstd on
rtce, color. rtliaJon, su,
hand1t1p, fam1h1I slltus
or n111on1I orlt in. Of an intention lo mike any
such preference. llmlta·
lion or discrimination:
Th11 newspaper will not
know1naly accept any advert11emenl for real
eshte which is in
vlol1t1on of the law. Our
ruder& art hereby
tntormed that 111 dwell·
inas advertised on this
newspaper are 1v11l1ble
on en equal opportunity
bHIS To compt11n ol dis·
cr1mln1t1on. call HUO toll·
free 11 l ·800 424·8590
Auctions 1483
WANTED
ANTIQUES
Older Styk f11mlt\W1
PIANOS & Coll~ .............. ~ ... .....,,. ........... ~.,"""""""'
M CASHPAIDS$
~ .... °'....,...~
WI! BUY !&TATU .............. ~-
r~~!~~~~~!, ,l,.l~ .al ... ' 'It-'' ' " ' t .,
• ,, ,, •• 11~. "' ~., .. ,
'" •1•rnt 111•" 1 .tU
II\ 1)1 1171
...... We feto OCU
S.CC.. Collttt Patk waa
at Columbi1/H1nover,
Costa fftU, Set a. Sun.
WI SAT-1-4, SUN t -1
heu t•'llf •re, ''""' cl•thl"I • 41tllee, recw4a, 6..lla, etc et-,
CHILD
SERVICES
UVI IN CHllD CAil.
Local Au Pair Pr<>IJ•m
now accepttna host femlly
11>phcatlOllS for 1111 and
winier amv1ls Flnlblt,
klaal, 451n/wk Lowest
proeram cost avera&ina
S253/wk, per f1mt1y not
per child SX>-713·2002
www euraupair com
HOME
FURNISHINGS
Fumltllfl
r-y ...,_ style
S1Ct10nal w/2 oltomlns
Paid '3500 SICl'lfice $1400.
M:hen i.tJIB 6 dW'S, wood
w/ron paid $1500 ~ S400 Ct irfbman styte dastl
waH unrt paid saJOO, 1111
$400949·633·1445.
3460 ~64M922· JEWELRY/
SOUTH c gAsT DIAMONDS/ !!1~~.!,.n~ PRECIOUSMETAIJ ..... A.t,CAt270l
I' ...;... ''"' ...... • ...... ---~1"'9! c-1t Celn NHcla
Old Coins! Gold. 5tlvtr,
iewery, watches. 1ntiques
collecltbles 949-642·9448 Garage/
Yard Sain 1489 Cits ---------~-----~ CM SUN 7om-l 2, 2224
An•ht lm Ave ., off
Harber & Wit.en.
lOMC.,.cl left tV•rt,
..-... pot1•t"f,.,..,...
.--. c..h & (.arry.
......... """' for Adoption SAT 12·4·00
PetSmart C0511 Mesa
17th & Superior (Next
to r.tctwets) 949-.tSI '3'ZJ2 ea Vobltars I-*!
MESA VERDE
GARAGE SALE
SET FOi SAT OCT mt Hts1ed liy C.w..l W.
S..2pll, Ill Ille C..-.ltytf les1 V.W
.. wlbe l¥""91t..ti,.......i-.
Meso vn. ~ whe whit tt priipltt In tltls ,..-..ai1c.wwt1a.br
@949-574-3527
lys.,tlOa
-USCWTaY ML c.wt1 HERSHEY, FRITO LAY &
M'M VEHOIHG ROUTES WITH LOCATIONS ONl Y
S9995 1·800·914-9980
AISO\UTI OOlDMIHI
60 vt ndin1 macl11net,/
IXCtlltnt locationl, atl
f Q( s 10.995 800-Zl4-6982
Of•• Met1H D•llf 11 __ ,,. 280 Vlctotll,
0 ·2. Rera Opportunity
nHr ... wport B11chl
28r 2.N. Condo 1119rox
lOlhf Cec>t Cod Style
ldMI locatlon, mutw
ault• w/'lault.cl c•lllflll, HOA, pool, sp1. Secured
pr•mlMa. l360,000 Call
951-694-8016.
.. w..ity Ill <I praiwty b .... W/OWIW ,,......
prlcM, deacr11tlons 16-dr... own."• phone
nl.ll'Dn. * te.P~ SCIMI C011t ._2822
Q ......... .,.....
Stir 31)1+ dtn. dramatic
fir pl1nL_!~ory SFlt. 2 c aar. R:l(XJ/mo S617X
Veeant Alt 949·733-6074
4..ft!XMc•~ MAKE OFFERSllllflfllUI A• Redone In ' Out Peul Alt 949.290.3053
FGlnllln ValllJ
l'OOl S.ICW -BEACH
Pwftct loc, only a short drive to the be1ch, pier.
shops. Stt on oversized
lfOUnda w/2 $Ip l1wn
ar111 pooVsp1 4br 2b1
Bl1 tam II.itch &. dlnin1. l'rlct r.cluced $589,000
Call Coldwell Benker
BH Chaidt 714·968· 1200 .
Hldqtan Bach
AIANDONID. NHr
bH ch &. harbor. Euc·
utive 2·aty, cuf·de·aa.c
on huae pie sh1ped lot
w/RV perk Ina. 5br. 3
remodeled btllts, hlah
veulted c11l1, dtn. Fp,
new front l1w11. S740,000
Coldwell Binker Btactl ·
sldt 714-968-1200
HACUff IY-TKl·HA Model perfect Coatel
•ll11nce ' only 2 yrs
-------· old W1lk to bHCh La COMMERCIAL
PROPERTY FOR
LEASE 4502
Costa Mau IOOOsf sh09,
commercral otra perk·
1111. S%0/mo Avail 10 I
949 631 8812
Ce11 .... deli Left ... i..
C.nnery V1bal Appfok
I OOOsl space Includes
perl\1na ~. restroom &.
storeaa Sj)ICe UJJO/mo Avail 11/1 949-67J.f.02!>.
HOMES FOO SALE
ORANGE 5400
2·1ty In 1at1d comm
w/pool ' spe 4br Jba,
auest br ' ba on first levet $839.000 C1ll
Coldwell Binker Beach·
Sldt 71 4·968-1200
'AIMii• HOME NEAR BEACH HlatilY upar1ded
b11ut1fut 2·sty. 4br, 2b1,
ltall1n tilt 1nt st1te·of·
lhe·11 t 1ppl11nc es,
a11nit1 counters, clter·
r ywood t 1 bt n 1ts
$698,500 Coldwell Banker
BHChSlde 714·968-1200
..
NEED TO
SEll YOUR
PROPERTY
UR HOME
OF THE
EEKPAG
ON
ATURDAY
CAN HELP
CALL
-~ fft..S74-t24t
lAllAll ooc.11
'4t-S74-t24S
~ every a11. lftch
of this property hu
been remodeled · rt· deconled 1nd addition•
for pluall IMn1-3 A/C
slellons, aranlta II.It.ch &
petlo bar, llQ, •I•
security cemeru . In·
cludn plume TV1. 65~
home t:htltw in fem rm,
~yllehb throuahout, 'P• tub In mestw b11utlfut
pool &. sp1 M this plus some oc,.n view 1201
S.nt11ao Jecobs Rutty ' Investment.a. $2. lS0,000
C1ll Act John Jecobs 949-642·«00
O"N HOUSI SAT-SUN
I -t. 1906 Port Brlatol
Tuscany 1tyle home In
premier f1mlly n1l1h· borhood of HarbOf View
Homes. 5Br. 4.58t,
4000af, only one lot
from ar1tnbtlt. Vlk1n1,
sub·zero &. Bosch con· cealed 1ppl1, $2,650,000
Devid W11ner American
F 11'11 Properties 949-244·
7910
_. ... ,~ ... H._.,_.hc.i
'" rtmOd a .. eand l>etUYflle, tppl'OI 3tO() ''J 11 pvt p1tloa WfNmeltOnt firs. tome
¥ltw1 of coif c:ourM a1.m .ooo.u .1H.ooo Cllol ltudtt Barona Rt1I
Eltat• M-671 ·"'6
a.-...... s-, ...
100 . lc:tlol.1 """ 1206 v ..... 2.br. 2ba condo •/Mi I oc:un Yiewl In
.. ttcf c:ommunlty. Plen·
tatloft st111tten, e.rti.r
c~~· :.'.:.... tpa, om. 88Q. ,llW Birr 714·
Ml· 12.
Lido Island Valutl Newer
llfp 5 + office I 4 car
'"'''· 0.&11ner home. Only S2.9915,000 Have otlltra aollablt Call '•trlclt T1n0t• Nation·
wide USA 949-856-9705
IAITILUf' 11 SJ Ylete llltr_.
4br Sbe l'ttll·•·boo
vltws of 119per Newport
bay, Mt.000 Alt !ton
flMma" 3U>·305~751 310..339-3990
OPIMIAT ll-1 17 ...,.._,
St.MlcW
Showcase. model pecf plen 4lar1111 home on
prime cul·dt·llC lo t
overlooks meadow Lt
m1tur1 true. lush
landsc. too meny up·
l redu to llst ll
l ,489,000 Pecillc B1y
E1t1t11 Petrtcia Lann
bllr/own 949·274·0203 .._,..c_._......,.
""'"· Muat sH to appreciate Move riht Inf
Sl ,799.<XX> For 1111 by
ONrwtll,. Cll ~1140
SlneltmllD
Two 8uch cloM Income
ptopertln, arut cash flow. 9 Unlta 12.100,000
4 unlta S97S,OOO Sell« Mt4J QUlctl a.ale fl m
tmWltllCy Bast num·
btra In QC Keith Larson
Fin\ THm Rttl Estate
949-433-7953
SO MUCH fOI SO
llTTlll R•nc:h styl e ch1rmer Uplftded 38r
buuty Features incl
rtmod f1m1ly II.Itch, new
cabinets . re cu u d
H1ht1n1. ench1nt1n1
1ard1n window. remod
b1th. Too many u tru
to hat. SS39.000 C111
Coldwell Banker Buch·
1ldt 714-968-1200.
3br 2!Jt Wi'IW ,...., -1WMq7 ,.._ID
~. "6n. .... .,
mUVmo •~ llll
llt ..... st, Sbr 2ba.
$2600 2br lb1 11800
atudlo SH O YIAlLY
RINTAU Clll i'J4.0'8
CoranadllMlr
..... Cr-*., ...
OCNll & IVMllbtlt ""-· .............. ltlldl
T1t1 Ep Af MMl74512 ,.... .. "" ......... 211r, lbl. ......_ fp. w/d.
Wiik '° lwtt ~ sietmo ~-
nt1 n-. c:ondo, 2c ..,,
w/a, rafrl1, "°'"""· Sl950/m Qlsl ~ l~
323 D1hll1 949-697·8437
Ill, HA COMDO
W/OCMll V.W, pool, 2-c
11'·~•/d, ~ ....... S2(0)lmo {Ml) 117-2532
St-.t• f-fly H-• Jutnlne CrMll 3bf. 2b1,
SJOOO/mo a.curtt1 S2000 71~9009 ••t 20
llr, J ,Sle -hedi 11ew kitchen, carpet, tll• a. 0111, w/~1 petio, I"· S3200/mo ~9-644·9564
Stu41e Apt., fw11'4 "' Tri Sq, cool. QUttl, incl
dtcll, ator_., ps, wet.er.
lv'pl! lll2Srro 949-612·2818
Mifw ..... -..
.,......, '" l mill to
beach. """'*' ctil$, stove. ir._ '*' fin & more l JI L l .. 5t Mt-546-2421
USTSIDI STUDIO
w/111tcn1n1tt1 quiet cul·
dt·u c. avallablt 10/1
$575/mo 949-M5-7883
'-tlWe 2fr C....,.. L11.. yard, no pa{s,
Sl295/mo 2625 '1 Elden
Call Lind1 IM9-S48-484&
2l>r 2b1 2·1evtl twnltm
In Vlllatt CrNl1, 3"6
Mudowbrook, remod,
wat.k>Soc-t2c
.itxfl ~ ,., Mow " NOW!
1f1S1700~~
Sir, 21• Ouple11
downll1ira, 1ar11e. pvt
lrWy rm. $1700/mo no
clop 370 Roct.t. 0oen
S.t·Sun 12-4 ~564-5534
'"' Sltle 2br lb• home . La yard, pets welcome
Lots of up1radea. S1900
m0<1 Info949-121·8600
lnt114e Hr, l'/• ..
Home. F p, ear •1•. l a tot
~oot, no pets, S2000m
n Sunday. lla·2o.
W1lnut IM9~92-eo22
NB VIiia lltlboa, !u1ury
studio condo, AC, WO,
nu ctrptta, 1renlte ,
p1Uo, PoOI. exercise rm,
H C: bld1, t o ll t\OW
$1450/mo IM9-U5-1221 ,......,_._,.ec
3br 2.!lba townhm. lfiOOlt = ~iim cerport
3br 2bt hat Bluff townhome. 1pac:lou1
holM, front ~II. 2 cer
p . cloM to comm p00I •at '23SO 949-673·7800
~er.. t'Mhn .. ,...,., 3br 2.5111. wd
~t5°}ilnf7JfOO
YIAaLY IAY JIONT
211r. 2!Jt. 2< .,.. Q!Ql/mo
• 2llr. 2ba. 1 bll to
oc..\ P' $l~mo ~ ~ ltL 95&')JJB3
,_ .... SllOO/-...... Can be lw'llilhtcl
3llr • 2..5bl. ll'llO. F p, IM1ly
""' ..... 94~673-0181
WllttM ........ 111111
now ocunlront &. off
the wat11 2,3,4 &. 58r'a
• Y..ty ._ ....... avail
now, etudlo, 38r. 381 &
an tdor1b!t bay front Cell to e11 Cannery
Rtntals Inc 949-675·4606
UlitN-frM1t-4111t townllm 2br + loft 2.Sba,
\wt ywd ..... countln.
hrdwd r.i«1, IVlll Dec ~ ?fi0.835.1497
OtMle NIWtr 2br. 2IJI
tDtomalTII 2 cs ettlc:hld
prep, S2950/mo evail
now Cd Alt 96-494-8964
ac.i vu dlQdl lwn. ..
nu. tranite. travtrtlnt, brend nu carpt/pnt.
blcar9t ddlr, ... 2
pool .. SOii 9&23UlA6
.._ , .........
CQnl ca. irra.. ~ IWldat1 2< fl/I, • ,...,. ..--~ ... \\115
no Plb sao> 9&9?2-1517.
CUiTOM IXIC HOMI,
11.ACHflONT GA TIO
For l 111e $4500/MO
Preato1oua Cypress Cove, Sin Clemente 3br 3 &b1 pvt bact.y1td
w/w1ttr fill
D1vld S1nfor d
714 412 11955
PLUG
IN
Plug into the Pilot
Classified section to
find services from
electronics and
plumbers, to
t;a1t!orn1192627 COUNTY
Balboa Island
llAUTY & THI HACH.
HMODlllO llACH
GIM Sprawllna l·sty
3br. 2b1 Incl u tended
muter w/LR wetk·ln
closet. hua• ad·on ltm rm, pr1v1te sp1. $640,000 C1ll Coldwell Binker --------
Buchslde 714-968-1200 ~ Sult 1-5 ® 423 AllSO Avt Just completed
Hantucht stylt custom
home This !h, 4.h
~ ,_ IMI «Xlllf (I
IT'S A IOI SOUTH COAST MITIO Dutt
muter suite. model
perfect home In Stied
comm. tr1verine flOOf·
Ina. lnaldt lndty. A/C. Tr .. & pool vlew1 from
ovt patio, f ym ' picnic 1ru S4 9.900 C111
Coldwell Banker B11ch·
side 7J4 968·1200.
EASTSIDE 12000/rno 3Br 281 l·story house, 1tnt
cond. blptrd Pat North
Hills RN~ 714-34S-6100
landscapers and
painters
NlWO,,lllNGI
Open House Sundey 1 ·4
333 Grand C1nal
Fanlultc corner water
front w bo1tdoclll Greil
views 4br Jb1. upped·
ed kotcnen. IMnf room I
P•ho Only $2, 95,000
949·362 1500 x21
Hdngtoct Hlrtlos
WAUl/llKl TO BEACH
Front courtyerd/1tr1um
enlry, new front doors
Open des11n 1dds lots of
1unll1ht 4br 2b1, llP·
srad4td kitchen New roll·
up 11111e S779.000 C1ll
Coldwell Binker 811ch· 1idt 714-968-1200 New OHtrl"fl l•rt
81lbo1 Island wt\trfront ·~·111• ... •11------2 unit 2 Wft tRldli,
S«lucMd, ColtlllS ~
end of bland w/2 ca-
l• •a• S3,295,<XX> """*I aat 949-362-1500 a21.
Balboa,.,..,.
'RICI QIHKID
2 ADJOINING LOTS
Sl,995,000 714-969·49111
SEU ...... ..........
B~S~~~
"&..e '4 'P"4wlljd ~" 949-844-0195
AIANDOMID aoraeous
2·aty In prime loc. NtYW
used brand ntw kite.II.
w1lll ·1n pantry, 3br
custom atone floorlnf, I
new plush cerpet na.
Wilk to ahopa, achool &
perk RHdy for lmmtd
move-In Raduced j)l'lct for quicll sale. $399,900
Call Coldwell ll1nlter
B11ch1ldt 714-968-1200
0.-ht-S-1-S
73 l5urlln11mt. Hoftll
Perk 2bt 2.'bl townhm,
end unit, cuwd ptM • S550K Alt 949-4111-4190
..._ ... "°"""' kll:tw\ ~IPC*.dlsYywd
c*"b w/blld! honed rutm~~= ~9&~
9&721-57'6.
Tnllll
~i!/:: Blakely
Johnson &
Ghuan, lnc.
CDilPJ>.Hf1111 and ArchitectuN
ev•da Offke
2 Yra. Hfwl Dlt. lwn 1 na br 2.5bt Alt 3 c ,,,
Wd fh. ...... fl>. w/d.
.... tZl!O ~sat~ Act www.lllM!pro.GOm ........ ,-.y..._
-.. :Ila. din. 2< .,, fl>.
tw*"1la .... pmlllt
lill1l9I. ""' ~ '*'di.--~· ~714-&1421 -::-
Hl'f,fOlll MACH • COST A M( )A
Daily Pilot
c 1. ....... 1111 c1 <111111r1111111v rJ1.11k1·1p1.1< ..
8JO 11 M An:httedurll, Structural Md Civil
Eng~ ftrm wtth atnc. In R8flo 8'ld LM Vega.
We o«.t-contpetitlw ....,_, r91oa1t1on ~ ..
and .. ·~ bendta PllC*llge. See CM' W9belt. www.bjglno.com fer moN lnbmMlon. ·
BJO le Meklnt motivated and quallfted lndfVldual• to Join our dfftgn t.am.
Project Architect
NV Heh UoenM, MS Aicl'l 8'wf e+ YNta .,,.,_nee ~vate W'Chltectunlf
&m(•) ooonftnettl.~ ~ ·~ conctMI and lnduatMI projec:ta. Strong comput8t ... (WAD 2004) tnaMgll'nlMtt ol ptOject p.,
tchedule Md dlf9Ction of ptodudtcn ltd.
· MUZ ISU• ......, w tfl ral estate
tenllorr del" for 1ou1 ~ newspeper.
Miult M I Mff ·tl.-tina. ~MdM.t>leto
..-ate new buslMU. Competitive salary pkn
commlalon 11 well 11
ettractive beMflta pro-
·-lnduclltlf 40 l K, m141ceV4ent1 /•lslon,
llld nwdl more. •
rteue fu r11Ume to:
Nt-611-!914 IOI
California lew r•·
•• tNl coMrlC·
ten ~--tMt lotll '500 Of .......
(llllor or ....,..)
i.. llclnMCI br the Contractors St1t1
llcenle 8oat4. State
... allo r..-• that
contrectora lnchlde
ttlelr llC:enM number
Ollll...,.....YOll
.. dleO '*" at.tut ef rour llcensd
contractor et
www.all.ca.10• or I00·'2l·CSLB. Unll·
cettMCI contr1etou
takhtl Joh that tobl .... tllen $500
Mil state In tllelr
lffffttMtMnl• Ulat
..., •• not lk•llM4 • tllt C:O.tr actor• ..
•Beautiful Yellow/Black
• 130,000 or1ginal mtlee
•CD Player .
• Air Conditioning
·Sunroof
• Excellent Condition
• 5-Speed Manual Transmission
Car Cover and Bra Included.
Must See to Appreciate. $6,300
... 233.2008 ( ...... , c...... '91
White, ftltt concl. cat IOA11 IOAT llPAllSI ptloM, loaded! low ml,
,., ll500 949-646-1740 ....... •15 sewm
a-, ........ Carlo ~ ..., l&ft ail .... IOATIUS/ 2 door. avto, 11cdent
COlld, 4711 ml, new tires, ._ '*1 12tn on no
M500 obo 949-673-4743 lnllnl bltt. ~ 8lldlol' llOOMal wW1. ~ "" dis. lAlll:llll6I ... er-Ylderte ~~~
2000 lint ~. top of bolt. NB tl(p. Wll 111 b STOM6E tlle liM, less than 55K l/2 ol pwct.e COil
'"'· J930094!H75-11149 Mf.7Jf.0105
.... .., fw reM.., •1aODU•.a · .. Se , ... , to 35ft on Balbot Island 2Jld own, ,,.,., c:leln, l900/mo c.u new ltlw ... ta. •Int cond ........ d t4t-M2-1SOO &21 Cillt£A T BUY $9000 dJ
--.n1-2141 ne1wt-•••••••• .. M9-720-QJ42 easywayl SELL IMl9-S'9911T ... """1 ,,,., MIW Int •• tnrl. . .. , .. your stuff • co. loadild. 11!511 ml, Clesslfled ed SJ.2.000 • 9&D'5l512 today I bough
YW llllU as 'N classified! Ytlaw, Oil CIOnd. IC,. II*>, 642-5671 IS mi. C.-tta. ,,
IZl.lmr'ollo 7J4C44564
11
te~ & tr .. tnmina. ~ trimmed, skinned,
...... (Quilty II not ,....,.....)~
7148-ll!H
DOWN
tRalit90illlt~
2 ....... -.y ....... u.. .. ,.... "'°''.....,., t , .......
·~......,, 1c.om..to ....
IDIAdMg
• I.lee the pencil end
109'1w.rt ·-~
14Blundert
12 OrMded 9lCllfM
f3Str~
1 • H8rn1e11,,. lrlcwmlly
15Bldlop.a
1&~
17 FaYOritilm
18 To be, In MonlrMI
19 Barn colora
210...W
29 s..dood gami9h
31 Follow order1
34 ..... couple
36 Good engine eound
37 Popular ooolde
38 Dropping IOUnd
41 Caipture
42 Songwnter Janis -
44 Nautical positlon
45 Scoots along
46 M1 l..anchester
48Gfent
49 Netghbof of Senegal
50 Fight locale
51 5-l Kennedy
52 Hull's bottom
53 Ll1tle
56 Abs netghboB
57Vagabond
58 Japanese dogs
59 Posted a parcel
61 Vrkrng name
63 Cenaus rnlo
65 Arp apart (2 wds )
67 Jungle chargers
68 Costne< Of McHaJe
70 Typing slotl meas
11 12 1 14
~en
•OMslonof MIJTJ~
1t.k ....... ......
72 .... ....
'.:U.:'
71T ..... 1"--
71...,_'1Ah-., ........ ...
a~..-..
85.Mcquee'girt
• OotcelY'• dog
80Blow8"y.•d
91~~-· 92 Tu! deYioe
94 H.r alt8Ctlmlnl
98$1y
99 9lCn 90Cillly
100 An Ander.on
101Mlne.,....
102 Number ot ~
103 Type ot wof
104T~a*>Pe
108 Muee of hielDty
107Lampreys
108 Road "'llP into
1 10 Hindu title
1 12 Brazilian port
115 Done wrttr
116 NoYe1ia1 -Rand
117 FlnlnOed
120 Bt1ef time
122Wuteume
123 Gets 1he sudl out
124Yewn
125 Odd facts
127 Pigeon's pe<dl
128 Gener_, Powell
129 Long-answer exam
130 Wrnter jadlet
131Pd
132 Ear deaner
133 Kansas town
134 Cattle calls
135 Thlci! carpeting
136 Venel\8n magiWate
138 Gumshoes task
139 Sharp turns
t40Coup d -
141 Take a chance
17 Ill 19
C..-/f&• ....
filoM'n ~ eap, st*'rt nh. ~ le. CPR est. 00
exp. ViYlan 714 251·9673 SEWER .l:TTING
ELECTRONIC SLAB
LEAK OE TlC TION
Fnendly Sefyoce
t4t-•7S -tJ04
--~oom l •JSU91tnsurf'C!
•