HomeMy WebLinkAbout2004-11-07 - Newport Mesa Daily PilotA
e
·COMMENTS &
CURIOSITIES
Costa Mesa ,
'The O.C.'
and the
Beaver
I 'm happy about It I really am:
as long as I don't ever have to
watch it. "The O.C.." that is.
I'm glad le Gron.ck Omnge is
getting lots of attendon from the
Fax series. We just had the cast ln
Newport Beach; Mayor Tod gave
them a key to
the city, etc.
etc. I just wish
it were a better
shaw.
Actually,
that's a litde
cold II you're
into
prfme...time
soap operas.
It's no worse PETER than any other.
0t course I'd BUFFA
rather have a
root canal without Novocain than
watch a soap opera. whatever
time of day.
Yes, the show is wildly popular
and yes. millions of people
aroWld the world tune in eve.ry
week to see what happens to the
totally beautiful but terminally
clueles.s Cohens of Newport
Beach. Then again. millions of
people tune in every week to
watch "Fear F1e1or."
Personally. I'm much more
interested in another television
series and a persistent mystery
that Involves that series and. of all
~ Costa Mesa. I've never
been able to solve It Maybe you
can help.
The series first ran a long, long
time ago -from 1957 to 1963 -
although. like ·I Love Lucy," you
can always find a renm of it on
some channel at some time or
other. I'D give you a hint "Ward,
I'm worried about the Beaver.·
You are very smart "Leave It to
Beaver.· of course, one of the
most popular 1V series ever, still
running in over 100 countries
arowtd the worid
So whats the coMection with
Costa Mesa? Don't get your shons
in a wad We're getting there. In
1986, I was in a Co6ta Mesa City
Council candidates' forum In the
course of my little speech, which I
thought was excellent. I
mentioned that I was in the
television production business.
Afterward. while everyone was
mingling and chatting and
pandering for votes, an elderly
man walked up to me and said, "I
assume you know about 'Leave It
to Beaver' and Costa Mesa."
"No, I don't." I said "But please
vote for me anyway."
He said that the producers
could never decide~ the
Cleaver family actually Uved.
although there was an occasional
hint about Ohio in varkn~
episodes. But one of the
producers had a relative ln Colt.a
Mesa on Pine Place. just off
SH COWENTS, Pa1e M
Daily Pilot
AT A GLANCE
ON THE WEB:
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FORUM
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Volunteers Pat Shafer of Newport Beach, front, and Mary Sethman of Huntington Beach come at least once every week to serve meals at the
Someone Cares Soup Kitchen on West 19th Street in Costa Mesa. The building used to house a Chinese food restaurant
Ghari.ty -~_Q\~~~Ss Tt
?
bt?gins .:;
~
at home
Westside organizations offer
a variety of social services to
people down on their luck.
Deirdre Newman
Da1lyP1lot
COSTA MESA -When
Gaudencla Alejandre's
8-year-old daughter,
Daniella, passed away, she
didn't have enough money
to pay for all of the
funeral and burial
services. So she turned to
Share Our Selves, a
Westside charity that
belpa those in need.
Share Our Sel.-es
contributed $2,300 to the
l
AJejandres, and the family
spent their life savings of
about $3,500 to cover the
rest of It, executive
director Karen McGlinn
said.
"Obviously this was a
tragic situation, but it
points out a more
systemic Issue that, in
crisis, people need help to
mak.e good cbolcea,"
McGUnn said.
People In crisis have
See CHARITY, Paa• A9
Wendy Weir works wrth kmdergartner Carolina Gonzales at the tutonng center at the
Someone Cares Soup Kitchen , which was started in 1986 by Merle Hatleberg.
ENVIRONMENT
Sage Hill School
student Enc
Hemmel helps
to sort
groceries at
Share Our
Selves m Costa
Mesa.
Pt-IOTOS BV
OOUGlAS
ZIMMERMAN
I DAILY PILOT
Pollution still streaming into water i
I
~Of violent crime are
up in Costa Mesa
Plvperty aimel in Costa Meu for the
flnt llx montbl of this ~ar were down
llicbdy in the city. but violent atmes
are up 8.~ from Jut year, aa:onUng to
data relelleCI tb1a week by the state
attorney pnera1.
In raw Dumben. that bolls down to
11 more violent c:rime8-124 lut year
compmed to 135 this year from the
month of January through June. Calta
Miia bad 909 reported property crimel,
compued wltb 924 tn the ftnt m
montbl of Jut year.
• Prmecuton are ukl.ng for a ball
bearing for l~year-old Greg Hakll, IOD
of former Allktant SberUf Don HUd1.
after be WU involved in an aDepd
alcohol-related traffic colllaton Oct 30.
Greg Haidl'• car croeaed a
double-yielow 1lne on Bdltol Street in
Santa Ana md ltnldt an oocomq car
just before 10'.30 p.m., otlldaJs aaid. A
prellminlly tell lbcMJd that he bad a
blood-alcohol leYel of .~. aa:onting
to police. Proaearton aay that violates
condldona of his bail while be awaltl
retrial tn a gang rape case.
• A Costa Mesa man was arrested
Monday morning after be allegedly
attacked a woman u she wa1bd to her
car ln an apartment comp)ex.
The woman 11>t away lifter be
grabbed her from behind, and police
found Joseph Anthony White, 19,
hidJng nearby. He was arrested on
S\!SJ>icion of two counts of felony aexual
batte ry for the attack in the 2700 block
of Peterson Place in <Aita Meta and a
similar one in October at a neaJby
parking lot.
• A succellful drug and weapom bust
in Costa Mela on Wed.nelday nJght alao
turned up three iJ1epJ lmmflraritt
being held Ip.inst theft wm. police said.
Police found three iDepl lmmlgrants,
as well as drugs and gum, in raida on
two separate homes on the north end
of town. c.osta Mesa Police mated five
gang members in the raid. and
Immigration omcers anested a sixth
man and took the three immigrants
LnlO custody.
EDUCATION
College district trustees
approve station sale
Coast Community College District
trustees unanimously approved to
fmali.7..e the $28-million sale of Orange
County's only public access television
network. KOCE-lv. to the KOCE-1V
Founda tion.Foundation
representatives Wednesday presented
an $8 million down payment to the
district, which will use some of the
money to add m ore courses to its three
community colleges' schedules.
• Student leaders at Newport Harbor
I figh School said they were upset
about what they called a freedom of
speech violation, after Newport-Mesa
Unified School District Supt. of
Secondary Education Jaime
Castellanos told them they couldn't
present a report to the school board
about plans for the school's
homecom ing fireworks show.
District officials calJed it a
misunderstanding because the district
hadn't had formal talks on fireworks
shows. They said that further
miscommunjcation arose because the
stu dents had called their report a
"presentation,· because it wasn't listed
on the agenda. and because the
i.tudents likely didn't receive word that
the district had banned fireworb from
campuses in May.
POLITICS
Newport-Mesa polls bustled
on Election ~y
Poll workers faced record voter
turnout Tuesday, and some voten faced
waits of more than two houn to cut
Daily Pilot pbotograpber Kent Treptow awgbt c.osta Mela
aty C.Oundl Candidates Mike Sc:heafer, left, and Bruce
Garlicb joking with each other as election lelUltl came in
Tuesday night. The two were at a party at the Golden Dragon
restaurant. m:.it.ed about their prospectL But after the final
rault.s came in, both Scheafer tod GerUch nanowty mlued
winning a teat on the dala. nu moment iD.ulClatel aome of
the exdtemeot and hopefulneu dW happens on election
night.
-Dally Pilot staff
COSTA MESA
1bree in, two out on
the City Council
•Planning commissioners Erle
Bever and Katrina Foley and
former Mayor Unda Dixon
knocked off two incumbents to win
seats on the dais Tuesday. Next
month, the three will replace
councilmen Mike Scbeafer and
Ou1s Steel, who ran and lost, and
Councilwoman Libby Cowan, who
did not seek reelection.
Foley, who ran for City Council
in 2002 and lost, said she isn't quite
sure yet who she will be most
closely aligned with on the council
but is keeping an open mind.
"Certainly Unda Dixon and 1
share a lot of values, but I'm willing
to build alliances with all the Ciry
Council members," Foley said.
"One of the other Import.ant issues
I think the voters were concerned
about is that the Ciry Council be
people who can work together."
their ballots. In races for state and
federal offices, Newport-Mesa voters
selected Republicans aaoss the board.
Newport Beach Rep. Chris Cox and
Huntington Beach ~· Dana
Rohrabacher will ~ to C.Oogress,
and John Campbell will become the
35tb District state senator. Garden
GroYeCiry Councilman Van nan will
represent the 68tb AMembly District.
whk:b indudes Colt.a Mesa. and
Bnt-time officeholder Chuck De\lore
will represent the 10th Aleembly
District, wblch coven Newport Beadt.
Newport Beldl Ubertarian Jim Gray,
an Orange County Superior Court
judge. WU ditappointed in bit bid for
the U.S. Senate ..,.t that Demoaatic
Sen. BartMara Bemer succeufuDy
detmded.
OOlD.AS ZIMMERMAN I DAILY Pl.OT
Costa Mesa's Eric Bever feels on top of the wot1d after his win in the
Costa Mesa City Counc~ race.
• Directors of the Orange C.Ounty
Fair agreed on a new requect for
bids on a 10-year lease to operate
the weekend swap meet at the
fairgrounds.
NEWPORT BEACH
A good day for incumbents,
a bad one for Measure L
On Electton Day, voters ln Newport
Beach spumed City Coundl bopefula
John Buttolph. Catherine Emmons and
Doloret Otting. and lnBu.d reelected
incumbent councilmen Steve
Bromberg, John Hdfeman and Steve
Rnunaky. Voters a1ao said DO to
Mealure L, the controYenial proposal
to change the dry'• general plan to
allow a waterfront hotel on the Balboa
Pmtmula.
•Qty planning commilllooen will
try to be.Ip St Andrew's Prelbyterian
Onm:h negotiate with oetghbon to
llddew a middle ground oo ltl
The board will officially begin
requesting bids Monday and will
accept the~ through Dec. 10.
Board members expect to award a
lease contract in January 2005.
expa.naloo plan.
Commisllonera had calJed for chwdl
admlnlstraton and dissenting
oeigbbon to gtve them a proposed list
of operating conditions, which both
sidel subniltted on Thunday. It waa no
surpriae tbtt the lists didn't match.
C.Ornmluk>pera said they will intervene
in an attempt to achieve a balance
whereby the church can fu1flO its needa
while not Ggnlftcantly affecting lb
ne:igbbora. :
Some of the key potntl of contention
are the chun:h's bowl of operation,
occupancy, perking~ no6le and
trdlc. 1be dlurcb baa had almott two
yean of c:Utamk>m with nefgbbon,
and the Ftannlng Commilllon bu been
through two a redudtom and p1an nMaona. •
~ tmlly wo'*«I hard
to do this. II uw an uphill
battle to do this, bemuse
many <f dw major
tnsdtudonl In the dty
mdon«J Olhm. I feel ua
lt UGI worth fM ejfon, and
I au(r UK1lt IO#f to wort."
-P.ltc .... Costa
Mesa Planning
Comm.lsatoner. who won
the thiJd seat avaflabje on
the Costa Mesa coundJ.
'Td ralher be In thirrt
)'Mat. rm not
surpristJd. ... I MVer got a
mailer out to the ab:smtee
IJOters. I know how to run
a aunpaign. but I don'1
~the Tf!SOUl'Cf!S to nm a
aunpalKfa." -on s.J. c:osta
Mesa a ry CoWlCilman.
who placed sixlh in the
race and lost his seat. as
dJd lncumbent Mike
Scheafer.
Nit surely uwn'l a beauty
ronu:st; o~ I would
haw lost People <W
sayifl8, 'You did something
ri&hL' 1 /ookforward to the
next four .)'m1J and
making a differma. .. -5-e--y.
Newport Beach CJty
Coond1man, who won his
race for a full term on the
COWlcil last week.
"It's a great opportunity
for me to thank re:sldent.s
for having mnfldma fin
TM} and dam& It for
.another four years. I
started in thl aunpa/g11
knowing I had a budglft
that um limittd and
knowing I dJdn't UGnt /my}
lwu. """"'*" by the
rampalp,. with my""" laJCialnf and my son in
hlglut:hool."
-JalmlWllermn.
Newport ee.dl aty
C'.ouncllman. who won
reelection last week
WE'VE -MOVE Of .. " .
l111ll111l111l111111ll111ll111l111l11111I
D-"Y P.11ot Reader
123~Street
~,CA USA
CHECK ITOUT
A storytelling extravaganza at the library . . .
AROUND TOWN
•Send AROUND 10WN hMN to
thil Dlltv Piiot, 1376 Sunftoww
Ave., eo.t. M ... , CA 92828; by
.-meilto
jd.beMontllatirnn.com; by fax
to (714) ~;or by calling
(71 .. ) 966-C81l lncluct. the time,
date end location of the event, ea
well aa 1 contact phone number.
TODAY
-,,,. Hobobn Chlcbn
(mergency• will be• play for
young audiences.. The 2 p.m.
petfonnance will be It the
Julianne Argyiw St.ge. South
Coast Repertory, 666 Town Center
Drive, Costa Mesa. Information:
(714) 708-6656.
A woodwoctclng .ew. wta be
held from 10 1.m. to 4 p.m. In
Bolldlno-10, 12 end 17 and et the
Pel"84fe of Products at the Orange
County Fair and Expolition
Center, Costa Mesa. Information:
(31014n-8521.
MONDAY
The ONrtge Emph Conflnnce
Regional Cheer Competftlon wlll
begin at 8 e.m. at the Bren Events
Center, 100 8Am Eventa Center,
University of Callfomia. Irvine.
Information: (949) 824-5000.
A Coneoliddld PIM WOfbhop
begina et 7..:JO p.m. in the Adams
Room of the Neighborhood
Community Center, 1846 Pertt
Ava., Costa Mesa. lnformatton:
(714) 754-4892.
lnltructor K.ty StNnhown wlfl
offer a aeries of beginning hatha
yoga olaues from 6:30 to 8 p.m.
at Temple Bat Yahm, 1011
Camelbadc St. Newport Beach.
Other claaaea will be held on Nov.
16 and 29. The coat la $16 for a
single claaa or $46 for the entire
aeries. Information: (949)
663-1825, tspgl@aol.com.
A ,...111 1tadw from the Sen
Ff'enclaco State Center for
Careers In Teaching will meet
with atudenta from 10 a.m. to 1
p.m. at the Orange Coalt College
Transfer Center, 2701 Fairview
Road. Information: (714)
432-5894.
T\IESOAY
Alumni of the Manhel 8dMN>l of
Bulin .. It USC will hold their
monthtv networtlng meeting
with featured gt.Miit Kevin Davia,
chairman of the boan:f, chief
exec:utJve and prettdent of Briltol
fftrmt. The 7 to 9 e .m. breakfast
wUI be It the BalbcMI Bay ctub,
1221 w. Coast HJghwsy.
Admlllk>n wiU cost $30 to $46.
lnfonnation: (213) 7«>-7800 or
hap:l~.mar#tall.uc«lul
web/Alumnl.~7doc_l""'223.
AfrM ...... Gnhlft'Wi••dun
of premature brain aging will be
held from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. at
Mother'• Marttet. 226 E. 17th St.,
Coata Mesa. lnfonnatlon: UM9)
631-4741.
A...,...,, 1bltfwftom Cel 8t8tll
Long Beach Will visit the Ot11nga .
COM\ Cottege Tt'9Mfw C«ar
from 9 a.m. to"°°"· The coUe~
la It 2701 FelrMw Aoed, Cotti
M.aa. tnfon'ndon: (71~)
432~ '
W!DNESOAY
.The12th ..... HoHoHelll9r
Boutique w\11 craft aele to benefit
the Fairview Oevetopmental
Center, home to aboot 800
disabled pereona. ~ 8 a.m. to
1 :30 p.m. 9V9nt will be It the
Fairview Auditorium, 2601 Harbor
Blvd.. Cocta Meu. lnfonnltlon:
(714) 967-6188.
A poetry ...... with Ive muaic
wtll feature poema by Jaimes
~lllCio and Jennifer Donnell,
with music by Courtney
Montgomery. The r.adlng will
begin It 8 p.m, at Atta Coffee
HouM, 608 31ti St., N.wport
Beach. Admlak>n will be free.
Information: (949) 876--0233.
A Carw 'hnlltlcM1 Wotttahop
wtll be held for people
contemplating a n8W line of wort.
The ftrst aesalon of the two-week
worbhop wtll be from 5 to 6:30
p.m. at the Orange Coast College
Re-fntry Center, 2701 Fairview
Road, Costa Mesa. Information:
(71 .. ) 432-5162.
Entllftalnen will sing IOnO• from
the big-band era et the Thursday
Morning Women's Club'•
monthtv Friendship Luncheon.
The luncheon will begin at noon
at the Radisson Hotel Newport
Beach, 4545 MacArthur Blvd .•
Newport Beach. Information:
(949) 646-9555.
A frM Mminar, •oigestion -The
FoundationforHeahhand
Healing,• will be hftld from 6:30 to
8 p.m. at Mother'• Merttet. 226
East 17th St, COS1i Mesa.
Information: (948} 631-4741. ""' -A NPf'HI 1tadai1toon UC,;;,;:,
will visit the Orange Coast
College Transfer Center from 9
a.m. to 4 p.m. The college la at
2701 Fairview Road. Information:
(714) 432-5894.
Newport 8.-dl Coundtwoman
Leafie Daigle wlll be the featured
guest at the Speak Up Newport
monthly meeting. The 5 to 6 p.m .
meeting will be It the Newport
Beach Yacht Club, 1099 Bayside
Drive. Newport Beach.
Information: (949) 224-2266.
THUR SO AV
A he eemlnar, ·ru-0ong EJ'MfVY
Heating;" will be held from 6:30 to
8 p.m. It Mother'• Maritet, 226
East 17th St, Costa Mesa.
Information: (949) 631-4741
The r.l ltunlc Show. a ehowcaM
for fashion and acceaaorlea. will
be held from 4 to 8 p.m. at
American Cancer Society, E.
Coast Highway, Corona del Mar.
The group wfll accept donltlona.
Information: (949) 840-4m.
NCN.12
tt.plst Ho•nee wll palfonn llt
I Chrfatmaa lte>f9'1 open houN.
She will pfay from 710 9 p.m. at
Noelle Meglque, 1720 s.nt.e AN
Ave., Costa Mesa. lnformatton:
(9'8) 8'2-0942.
~ ..... Edw8fd ..........
Ruth fnndtc:o and Chlzuko Judy
Sugha de ~roz wtll appur at
the Round Tai* West luncheon.
The noon .vent wtll be at the
Newpon 8uch Country Ctub,
•
1600 E. Coact Highway. Ttc:bta
will 0091 $60. (949) 8'4-9660.
The Admns School Community
Coffee wtll be • chance for
parents to meet school
administrator• and other patents.
The event will be from 9-.30 to
10:30 a.m. It the home of Kathy
Esfahani, 2874 Clubhouse Road,
Cocta Mesa. Information: (714)
42.4-7935.
lnvienton FoNm, the Orange
County-baaed Inventors' support
group, will present• seminar,
·e1ue Sky to Green Money.' by
members who will tell aucceu
atones. Registration and
networitlng wlll begin at 7 p.m.
for the 7:30 p.m. event at Science
Lecture Hall 101 , Orange Coast
College, 2701 Fairview Road,
Coeta Mesa. Admission will cost
$5 for members, $15 for
nonmembers. Information: (714)
540-2491 or
http://www.inventorsforum.org.
The FeJI Tnmk Show, e ahowc:ae
for fashion and accessories, will
be held from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. at
American Cancer Society, E.
Coast Highway, Corona del Mar.
The group wtll accept donations.
Information: (949) 640-47n.
The West Coast Gem a Mineral
Show will run from 10 a.m. to 6
p.m. Nov. 12 and 13 and from 10
a.m. to 5 p.m. Nov. 14 at the ,
Holiday Inn, 3131 S. Bristol St,
Costa Mesa. More than 76
vef\dora wfll sell fossils, beads,
J...iry, gemstones and mor-. ~
fnR91"-'°n: . *' • ~.M-ww.mzexpos.com.
NOV.13
~ Cutture NightwHI
include Vietnamese folk music
and dances, martial art.a
performances and a ~ide show
on Vietnamese history. The event
wiU begin at 5 p.m. in the Robert
B. Moore Theatre at Orange
Coast College, 2701 Fairview
Road, Costa Mesa. Tickets will
~ $10 in advance, $15 at the
door and $12 for students.
Information: (714) 7.21-6508.
A wmldng tour of the Uppw
Newport Bay Ecological Reserve
wlll cover about 'lne mile of the
Bade Bay, with stops for exhibits
and discussions on the bay's
history. Groups will begin the
tour between 9and10:15 a.m.
Tours will begin at the comer of
East Bluff Drive and Bade Bay
Road. Tours will be free.
Information: (949) 786-8878.
The Fan lNnk Show,• ahowaM
tOr fashion end acceuories, will
bt held from 10 e.m. to 6 p.m. at
American Cancer Society. E.
Coast Highway, Corona del Mar.
The group will eccept donations.
lftformatk>n: (949) 640-4m
HOY.14
a.tee RkNrdt, Mlthor of
"Kannlc RelltlonahlJ)9: Healing
Invisible Wounds," wtll ho9t a
f(armk: AelationahlJ>9 Worklhop
from 1 to' p.m. at the Center for
Spiritual D19covery, 2860 Mesa
Verde Drive Eatt, Cotta Mesa.
The co.t la $30, which lndudet
MUNICIPAL BONDS
ONE OF
• califomla's leading underwriters
• New offe~p available
•AAA.Bonds
• Non Rated Bon~
RBC
Dain
Rauscher
= Me: ..,... • .,,CM.
ii wdae.n 1ft a~
te11.1be boot deecEIM Che •
P'008M of piepD'I braid
dough lri the ew:ning 10 that It wm me CMm.lgbt and be reedJ
to bib Into loaws before Che
family awakens the om morruns.
"John PbOlp Duck.. by
Patdda Polacco, ii the lt01Y of.
)'OW1g MemphJs bay who tra1nl
his pet duct to do trlcb In the
fountain of a gJand hotel and
ends up becoming the
Ducbnaster o( the Pabody
Hotel
In "Wld mout Boob. .. by
Judy Sima and Marc Brown,
librarian Molly McGrew
introduces the animals in the
lunch. Information: (714)
764-7399, Ext 23.
NOV.15
The Fell l'nlnk Show, • ahowcw
for fashion and aocesaories, will
be held from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at
American Cancer Society, E.
Coast Highway, Corona del Mar.
The group will accept donations.
Information: (949) 6404n1
A frM boft9..denslty tcrMnlng
wtll be held from 10:30 a.m. to
2:30 p.m. at Mother's Maritet, 225
Eaat 17th St, Costa Mesa.
Information: (949) 6314741.
NOV.16
A support group for Celia<:
disease, a gastrointestinal
disorder, will meet et 7 p.m. at
Hoag Hospital, 4000 W. Coast
Highway, Newport Beach.
Information: (949) 644-4966.
NOV.17
•Full Bloom," • ledure on the life
and art of Georgia O'Keefe, will
begin at 7 p.m. at the Newport
Beach Central Library, 1000
Avocado Ave, Newport Beach.
Admission will cost $12. $10 for
members of the Library
Foundation and $5 for students.
Information: (949) 644-3296.
A Career T,.naition Worbhop
will be held for people
contemplating a new line of work.
The first session of the two-week
worbhop will be from 5 to 6:30
p.m. at th• Orange Coast College
Re-Entry C.enter, 2701 Fairview
Road, Costll Mesa. Information:
(714) 432-5162.
NOV.18
RecNtt.rt hom •boU1 20
University of Callforn1a, California
State University and independent
campuses will be at the College
Fair at Orange Coast College. The
fair will be from 10 a m. to 1 p.m.
at Orange Coast College, 2701
Fairview Road. Information: (714)
432-5894.
A~ horn UC Irvine
will visit the Orange Coast
College Transfer Center from 9
a.m. to 4 p.m. The college 1s at
2701 Fairview Road. Information:
(714) 432-5894.
NOV. 20
Untt.d S1Udiot of Self o.f9nN
and the City of Hope will host a
Kicb for Cancer "Kldc·a·thon and
Blood Drive" from 9 a.m. to 3
p.m. at 3636 Newport Blvd.,
Newport Beach. The event
Includes martial arts
demonstrations, a silent auction
and a mualoel performance by
Randi Driscoll. Information: (949)
722-0626.
The American Cancer Society wUI
hold • rummage .,le from 10
a.m. to 5 p.m. at 2600 E. Coast
Highway, Corona del Mar. Gently
used donation• will be accepted.
Information: (949) 640-4n7.
• CHlCK ff OUT \a written bV the
staff of the NwlpOft....,, Public
Ubrary. Thie wMk't~mo It bV
Bottl'Ne Md..ara('I. d\lldren'a llbraftan
et the Mertnen 8nnd1 Ubraty. AU
tldel tn9'( be,... .... from home
oro1nce~~ eteeeling
the catalog It
h~~
/lbnfy.org, fortnot"e Information on
the Central~ ot env of the
brand! locMioM, p-.. contact the
Newport e.adl Public 1Jbr8f'( et
(9491 717-3800, option 2.
WHATS
ON TAP
TODAY
WHAT: A woodwor*ing
show
WHEN: 10 a.m. to.4 p.m.
WHERE: euildlngs 10, 12 and
17 and at the Parade of
Products at the Orange
County Fair and Exposition
Center, 88 Fair Drive, Costa
Mesa laformation: (310)
4n-8521 or
http:Jlthewoodworl<mg
shows.com.
WHAT: The 17th annual
Newport Autumn Rowing
Festival
WHEN: Begins at 8 a m.
Sunday
WHERE: Newport Aquatic
Center, 1 White Cliffs Drive,
Newport Beach
INFORMATION: Admission
1s free, but entry fees are
required to race
Information 19491646·7725
Put a few words to
work for you . Call the
Daily Pilot
CLASSIFIEDS 642-5678
LOCK OR R.OAn I
S,IMw""t
You've fou.nd Che h«nc of
your drams, placed en offer
thac wu ~DI your
ftnanciAJ U rip DOW in the
midst of bein& procesacd. How
do you make cawn you act the
bell pouible a.oittelt ratc1
There ~ essentially three
t.hin1s you can do, each with
minor varutions. Fint, you can
just let your rate "float" wnil
the loan closes. hoping that the
lowest possible rak will be
available a1 that rime. Second.
you can "loclr.'' in your rate for a
specified pcnod of tunc at no
cost W1th most mortgage
programs, meaning that )OU
th1nk today· s rate 1s as good as
11·~ going to gel and you wane to
hold on to 11. ThJrd, you can pay
a ceruun amount of money to
hold today 's loan rate for an
even longer pcnod of ume and
guuantee that you won ·t end up
w11h a higher rate
You~. the problem with the
i.ccond opuon 1s that. due to
unforeseen ctrcums1anccs-hke a
\uddcn problem the seller ha.!i
with the clo~mg date·I!')
possible that }Our loan won •t be
able to clo\e before the lock-an
penod ei.:p1rt's. Op11on th ree
rake~ care of that but 1t CO\h a
h11 Or-the mmt tommon
appro.u.h-~ou c...i.n let the rate
float until up to ren da}' before
do\mg and lock m the rate
when )OU re certain 11 ~going
to me "'eed more information 1
Ju,1 call me ar 949-~.H-I :!OO or
\.1\11 m) w eb\llC\ at
davewong~ 'om or
ondordroad com
Dave Wong ha_' been 'ellmg
home\ 111 \lewport l:kalh \IOC.:e
IQX9 cmd '' v.11h Coa..'t "'ewpon
Propert1e\ Cold"' ell Banlt'r
SUN MIST
SPRAY TAN SPA
Spray an your tan
in sec nds!
50% OFF
1st Session
$1 S Value
Eu/IJliJW i1t 1962
Fitust Pri1IW s..ds nJ &ef U.
~c.-t,
~ Gri&J LJwtr. vu-""
S#fa-1;,. "-6'WI
U. T,W.,,,,. n-. ~
M..., tDWJ T-*J N1f'o
ft-''()()Ha ,. HJIJ,.,..
f
LMNG MEMORIES
Of Stan King, who.ZiVed by the board
PU8UC
SAFETY
POLICE FILES
COITA.U
.......... Wl:Athift o...,. ..........
~P.IOt
When Scan ICJng rode the waves. ll WU U If hJa long board
pew out of hta ht.
SUrtlng defined Stan's life, bis
babltat. b1s attitude and his
personality. He couldn't fathom
a Ute in whicti the salty, fishy
smell of the ocean didn't Unger
in his oostd1s.
Stan was born in Redondo
Beach, but grew up in Santa
Ana He surfed at C.Orona del
Mar State Beach since he was 17.
lb.at was soon after he crafted
his very 6.nit Jong board from
4·by-4 redwood posts smuggled
out of miniature golf courses.
He and his friends glued the
posts together and varnished
them to create a surfboard more
than 10 feet long and wetghing
close to 100 pounds. Back then.
Stan and his friends caught the
waves at the bell buoy and rode
it all the way in to the Ol.lna
House.
But to the young men's
disappointment, the
long-breaking waves
disappeared after the C.Orona del
COMMENTS
Conbnued from A 1
Victoria Street, and that the
O~vers· neighbors and
nejghborhood were modeled after
that little comer of C...osta Mesa.
"That's incredible!" I said ·eut
pleru.e vote for me. I'm
desperate."
I never saw him again. but the
story stuck in my mind The
problem was. in chose
pre·lntemet days. there was no
ea.<>y way of cheddng it out
A few years later, when I was on
the council, we were debating
whether or not to widen Victoria
Street, which would mean
condemning a number of houses.
which is a very, very tough
decision.
We had a number of Town Hall
meettngs on the subject and after
one of those meetingt;. as
Luxury
Performance
Value
Perfection Never
Loolced So Good ...
2005's Now Available!
Mar jetty was buUt. 'Ibey moved
south to San Onofre. He was one
of the ft.rat meinben of the San
Onofnl SWftng Oub.
Surtlng WU not memy a
hobby fot Stan. It wu a way of
life. He almott believed that he
was Hawai.lao. and when be
surfed. he pretended he was
riding the~ oft' those
etherul island&
He was ecstatic when be got a
U.S. Navy posdng in Waildld
soon after Pearl Harl>or. He
spent two glorious years there.
After he returned home, and in
the many decades that followed.
he never talked about the war or
much of the action on the battle
ships. All be talked about was
how he could never get enough
out of that ocean.
Stan was a wild child as a
teenager, and throughout his
life, he carried with him a little
piece of that child and a wee bit
of that mischief. During his
carefree teen years, be and his
friends would take some food
out of their moms' iceboxes and
head out to the beach for days.
Sometimes. they'd live on cereal
and peanut butter. Wben they
everyone was shuflling out the
door, I heard a woman say,
haJf-jokingty, ·1 hope they don't
take the 'leave It to Beaver'
house."
That stopped me short. but I
couldn~ tell who said it for aJJ the
people in the way. Now 1 was
dying 10 know if the story was
aue.
I made a note to try some of
the movie memorabilia shops in
Hollywood. There are lots of
them. but my f'a"W>rite is
Hollywood Book & Pomer, which
has an enonnous collection of
film and televWon scripts,' some
old and some not, some famous
and some not
On my next trek north. I headed
for Hollywood Book & Pomer,
hoping to find a script from the
first episode of the series. I found
something even better-the
script for the "Leave lt to Beaver~
pilot! I flipped through the pages
The Wealth Builder Program
Make Your Mortgage ~rlc For You
Instead Of You Worlclng For Your Mortgage.
Fund Your Retirement
With Money You Ate Already Spending.
After All, It's Not About Your Mortgage
It's About Your Ufe.
lnvnt 10 minutes of yotW time watching ow p1"9MtttrltiOll at
www.MortgageLoanFixer.com
X-MAS LIGHTS
INSTALLED
V< >tcd # 1 in Newport Harbo r
Any Size House o r Boat
Jim 949.697 .3993 ..... -
DailyAPilot
YOL 91, NO. 312
THOMAS H. JOHNSON
Pubtleher
lOHYDOOERO
!dttor UIACOIENZA ~~
l'romotlone OlrectC>r
Stanford
Charles King
mJd-70S.
raumect
bonW.lhek
perea11 Wille
more niilleWd
lbiui mild to
teethe~
Stan lleW!r
pveup
AU11ngundl
be couldb"t
peddle ow
any~.
but that was
way past his
He was an old -fashioned
tough guy, a proud surfer. He
talked about how be surfed on a
piece of heavy wood with no
leashes or wetsuits.
Stan also~ other sports
such as golf, tennis and skiing.
He loved to dive for abalone. He
enjoyed anything water-related.
Stan's other love was his wife,
Natalie, who died in 1996. They
were quite the couple. They
grew up less than a bloclc away
from each other in Santa Ana
and were junlor hlgb
sweethearts. They were
inseparable. Natalie never really
got on a surfboard, but she ·
as fast as I could and it didn't take
long to actually find exactly what I
was looking for -the Clea-m's'
address.
Was it Pine P1ace. you ask? Was
it? No. it wasn't And stop yelling
at me.
It was • 485 Maple Drive." I was
so bummed. And that's where
things sat -a quJrlcy story based
on two casual mendom by two
people I didn't even know -until
the Internet came aJong.
A few years later. once I got
over what a funny SOWlding word
"Google" was and learned how to
use it, I decided to tab! another
run at the "Beaver" story. By that
time, the show's producers, Bob
Mosher and Joe Connelly, had
both gone on to their greater
rewct.rd, but I did make a
fascinating discovery-the pilot
episode of "Leave It to Beaver"
never aired. You could have
knocked me over with a feather.
POLLUTION
Continued from Al
ter samples once or twice a month
and test them for Wrious kinds of
pollution and bacteria. The wlun-
teers also chedced twice a ~ on
, the ~ and other aquatic life.
which can indicate the health and
content of waler bodies.
Tusting was performed at 27
sites in three oounties. \\>llDlteers
checked for bacteria. dissolved
oxygen. arrunonia and nutrients.
The data ronfirmed that the
Santa Ana River and San Diego
Oeek have poor waler quality with
high ~ cX bacteria and dis-
!IOlved minerals, Hiemstra said.
'£hat's been shown by other stud·
lCS. but the overall project is still
valuable for various reasons. he
said
Pixing the problem; in San Di·
ego Creek will likely cost hundreds
of millions of dollars. so there's no
such thing a,, too much data.
Hiemstra said. And while the Santa
AFTER HOURS
• Submit AFTER HOURS Items to
the Daity Pilot. 1376 Sunflower
Ave .• Costa Me.a. CA 92626; by fax
to (714) 96M679: or by calling
(714) 966--i617.
MUSIC
WARSAW PtlLHARMONtC
ORCHESTRA
The War'SllW Phllharmontc
always ut on the eand aDd
watched her husband mater
theWIMll.
1be <:OUple trawAed all CMlf
the wodd Utd acroet 1be
country. Stan had the bee.rt of a
peb1ot. HJa coQ9el'V8lfYe
oplnk>nt were u ftrmJy ~t.ed
in hla mind U bis feet were OD
the IUrfboud.
Stan and Natalie spent • year
driving cross-country and
venturing Into obecure parts ol
the country. He kwed an
adventure on land u he did at
sea and seemed to have a
PoDyanna.lsh attitude toward life.
He saw the good In people and
didn't believe anything bad
would happen to him And It
didn't.
On Balboa Peninsula. be was a
good neighbor. He worked as an
engineer for the phone oompany
and retired in 1979. He was
diagnosed With Pamnson's
disease about eight years ago.
But he always enjoyed his
communJty and his neighbors
and friends. Stan rode his bike to
the Balboa Pier and bad
breakfast at Ruby's at the tip of
the pier, even on days he didn't
ln the pilot, Jerry Mathers was
the Beaver, but the father. "Ward
Oeaver, • was pJaY"<1 by Casey
Adams. not Hugh Beaumont
Barbara~ was June
Oeaver, but Beaver's brother,
Wally. was played by Paul Sullivan.
not Thny Dow.
But here's the kicker. Aside from
the cast changes between the
pilot and episode one, do you
know where the ·rea1· Clea~
lived? They lived in ·Mayfield" on
"Pine Street· -211 Pine Street. to
be exact
Does the similarity between
• Pine Street" and Pine Plaoo in
Costa Mesa mean anything1 I
have no idea. But why would two
people make separate commen!S,
years apart. about "leave It to
Beaver" and Costa Mesa? Huh?
Aruwer me that. smarty-pants.
By the way. heres some more
interesting trivia about the
Oeavers' house. as if you haven't
Ana River ~ been greatly tested.
the monitoring project ah;o In-
cluded aeeb that haven't been
srudied before and aeeb that are
listed by the state F..nvironmentaJ
Protection Agency as impaired but
may no longer have the problems
that got chem on the list
"This program with the "Ulun·
teer monitors is doing the moni·
toring that the state would like to
do (but) for about half the price."
hesaki.
Th clean up their creeks and
coasd.ine, dties and water agencies
are trying a variety of programs
and testing new tecbnologies. and
they're attacking pollution sources
when they can find them. said Bob
Ghirelli. director of t.echnlcal serv· m for the Orange County Sanita-
tion Distrlct.
"I think we understand now that
the non-point-source pollution is
probably the laigest contributor of
poQution to our coastal stteaml.
rivers and the sboretine." he said.
"What's reaDy left is the urban run·
oft noo·point·80lll'Ce poDudon
~ wi" perform
P9nderedd't •Polymorphia" and
Olopin'• .Plano Conc8f1o No. 1 in
E minor, Op. fl• at 8 p.m. Monday
and Tueeday at the Barclay
Theetre, 42A2 Campus Drive,
11'\/tne. llc*m are se6. lnfonn~
(949) 563-2422.
Tl4E ENGUSH CONCERT wrTH
ANDREW MNClE
Period lnltrurnent group The
Englilh Concert and b vlolinilt,
~Mera. wll petbm at
ITMFORD CHMUS KftG
Aee:l3
9111••1 .... Belbot P9ftlnaul1
..,,. Oft: Apftl 30, 1921
Died Oft: Oct 27' 2004 8umVtic1 ~ DtUQhtlt, KtllH
Atzgeorge; 1nd flv•
grendchlldren
feel too well.
He talJ8bt his two ch.lldmt to
surf and two of bf.I
grandcbOdren as well. He was a
lovf.r\8 family man. Stan bad a
delk:fous ser11e of hwnor, which
sometimes bordered on the
obnoxious. But he was never
loud or boisterous. He just Ubd
to have a good time. Stan also
bad his collection of plaid pants
and Ouistmas pants with ducb
on them, wbJch always got a few
laughs and double takes at
parties and get·togethers.
When Stan couldn't surf
anymore, he could still sense.
feel and see in bis mind's eye.
what he described aa "the long,
feathering waves" or San Onofre.
The way they surfed in
"P.ndless Summer" was the way
Stan and his friends surfed.
been absolutely fascinated with
everything so far. The house.
which Is on the Universal Studios
back lot, was used in the 1~
thriller, "'The Desperate Hours,·
with Hwnphrey Bogart and
Fredric March. Five years after
·eeaver" had faded into rerun
land, It became the home of
"Marcw Welby, MD." with Robert
Young. How weird is that? Jim
Anderson from "Father Knows
Best" ends up living In Waid
Cleaver's house.
So there you have it -Costa
Mesa and the Beaver. If you're out
there and you know anythjng
about it, contact me at your
earliest convenienoe. It's
important
I gotta go.
• PETER BUffA i9 a former Costa
Mesa mayor. His column runs
Sundays. He may be readled by
&-mail at ptrb44'iaol.oom
chat needs to be dealt with. R
Sanitation dbbict offidals have
been diso is9ng pulling forward a
baDo4 tlaJe to dmge mddents a
yearly fee that would pay for dean·
ing up runoff. ~ters in the city o(
Los Angeles just appfU'J'ed a $500
million bond meam.tre to pay f9r
runoff improYmlentb.
·it talc.es money to pay for all
these progra.rm. and one of the big
issues is how do ~ oonti.nue to
pay for aD these programs.. Ghiidli
said
Orange CDunty S\JperWors or·
ganized a steering committee of
water officials to address water
quality is&JeS. and the 8JOOP plam
to pursue a possible runoff dean·
up fee, he said. ln earlie£ di<Jcu,,-
sion. the fee was expected to ranse
from $25 to $50 a ~ per house-
hold.
• ALJaA A(8G()N OCMW"I busine98,
politic8 and the environment She
may be ANldled at {714) 96M626 or
by&-mail at
alida.robineon@"1fime9.oom.
7:30 p.m. Tueeday at the Orange
County P!lfforming Ma Center,
600 Town Cen'9f Drive, Costa
Mesa. T1ctets ant $76. lnfonnatJon:
(714) 766-0236.
BE«>P CONC£RT
Trul'T'IP9f player Jadl Sheklon,
billed • an orlglNltOr of "'-t
Cont~. wtl perbm In two
concerts thet wtll begin et 7:30 end
9:30 p.m. on Nov. 12 and 13 et lhe
Orange County Pwtormilig Ma
Center, 800 Town Center o-tve,
w .. report..s In the 3IOO
bloc* et 1 :3' p.m.
Thuiadey.
•8MeollbMLAWhtcle
burglerywn reported Jn
th• 3300 b'oc:t 81 3:38
p.m. Thurtdey.
•H...tMw~:A
hit·and·run wee report9d
In the 1900 blodc et 3:45
p.m. Thur.day.
• HartMK SOUa.¥8"1 and
8ovth Coest Drift: An
injury eccldent wee
reported et 5:39 p.m .
Thursday.
• Maple Awnue: A
rHldential burglery wae
reported In the 1900
bloc:t et 3:14tp.m .
Thursday.
• Supettor AvetnHI: Petty
theft WIS reported In the
1600 blodc at 1:41 p.m.
Thursday.
NEWPORT BEACH
• Ch•nnel Place: A
vicious animal WIS
reported In the 4000
block at 1:61 p.m . Fridey.
• E .. tbluff Drtve: A grand
theft was reported In the
2500 blodt at 3:17 p.m.
Friday.
•hlrt\111 Drtve: Animal
noise WH reported in the
2300 blodt at 3:42 p.m.
Friday.
• MacArthur 8oulenrd
end Blaon Avenue: A
h it·and·run waa reported
at 3:08 p.m. Friday.
• Newport Center Drtve
EHt: A drunken
disturbance waa reported
in the 200 blodt at 12:33
a.m. Friday.
• Promontory Point •nd
Beyalde Drive: A traffic
hazard waa reported at
12:48 p.m. Friday.
• 45th Strfft: A loud
party was reported in the
100 blodt at 1:08 a.m .
Friday.
BRIEFLY IN
PUBLIC SAFETY
Nails, screws found
in park playground
A parent round nails
and screws strewn around
the play area of a Costa
Mesa park Saturday mom·
ing, police officials said.
The incident was re·
ported at Wakeham Park
in the 2400 block or Smal·
ley Road at about 11 a.m .,
said Costa Mesa Police Lt.
John FltzPatrkk.
Officers who re.ponded
to the call found three
nails and five screws In
the play area or the park,
he saJd.
"But they were not
placed in a dangerous
way,· FitzPatrick said .
No one· wu reported to
be hurt, he saJd.
Pollce combed the play
area with metal detectors,
but didn't llnd anything
else, FitzPatrlck aaJd.
Costa Mesa. Fortk:*ela and more
lnfonnation, cell (714) 6158-2787.
GllTM ENlfJB.E
PERF'ORIMNCE
The Or-. Co.It Cdlege ~
Eneembte wll perform d111fcel
worb ....... ig ....... of
music. The 8 p.m. ""~ wtll be Nolt. 13• ... ar._ ea..
Colegl Rne MIRedllll .W.270t ~Ao.d,CCMDMea ~
• coet Sl lnfomWllon: (714)
432 ....
SURF AND SUN
WEATHER FORECAST W9wt Vll4I be 2 tMe or._ on•
ncdrerlllt ~of •to•• .. 13~~---bew11t1rtv•10 ...... ~
...,_·w11be2t.ilor.._ °" •
ncrif\:VletWlll d4to ......
1219C011dt.
l'hllfta~ol ....
I on ... -. ... IOff'OWO
! \
I
I
I .
j
.I
I
.. . ..
f
' .. . •
I • '" . • ,.,
"This is one of the finest collections of oriental
rugs I have ever seen. I'm really proud to be a
part of this unprecedented opportunity to fill
your home with one-of-a-kind treasures at
I
once.,in-a-lifetime ~uction prices."
, " 0 f I IS • " .... ,.,,,.re• ....
FORU
~· HOW 10GET11\.a •ED -UClln: Mell to Ryen Caftllr .. the Deity Pltot. 1m SunflollWt' Ave., Com Mela, CA 82e2t. R I Ill • ti •= Cll C7M -•• ,_ 8nl ID~.._, ............. .
.,£.mil:s.nd to dallypUot•latifMMIOtft •AH correepondence muat Include futl rwne, hometoWn end ~ number (fot vetfflc8tlon purpow), The Pflot ""'*'the right to ecll .. ...,._,~•for dalftv tind _.., .. ..
EDITORIALS
.Trustee's sq~eeze
.will hurt students
C oast Community College
District tn.LStee Annando
Rwz retired from his
.• position on the board
Oct. 31 On Tuesday. he
was reelected to another tenn.
Make sense? No.
In a move a.o.. petty as it is pitiless,
~uiz. 61, reured Sunday from his
elected truste~hip and set himself
up to receive a doubled pension only
to run for reelection 'fuesday-an
election he then won.
By retiring on Sunday from both
his trusteeship and his counseling
job at lrvine Valley College in the
South Orange County Community
College District, the veteran trustee
is eligible to receive a $120,000
, pension while gening his old -well,
week-old -JOb back. Ruiz pulled off
I.his double-dip coup by taking
advantage of a loophole in state law.
The law allows a retinng public
· offic1aJ. employed with another
governmental agency, to receive a
boosted annuaJ pension based on
his highest salaried job if he retires
from both on the same day. Instead
of about $60.000, which he would
have received had he retired on
different days. his combined annual
pension from both jobs now stands
to be double that.
If!> not as much the loophole that
, is disturbmg but the idea that the
retirement and reelection sucks up
money at the public's expenae -the
district's, and by extension, the
students' and the taxpayers' money.
In this time of tight budgets. It is a
blow the district. which has to pay
into these pension funds, can scarce
afford. Granted. the man found a
gap in the law. Even board preaident
George Brown saJd Ruiz's move was
legal Legal, yes. Ethical? Dignified? A
good example for students? No. We
share the concerns of Dean
Mancina. president of Coast
Federation of Educators.
"Obviously. Ml: Ruiz knew what he
was doing was wrong, since he feJt
the need to deceive voters by
keeping bis plan to retire four days
before the election a secret.· he said
recently.
It wasn't the retirement. per se,
that Mancina questioned. It's that
Ruiz shouldn't have listed his name
on the beDot as an incumbent and
should haw informed the district
and voters of bis retirement more
than duee days before the election.
Back in 2000, Ruiz told reponers.
"Unequ.ivocaDy, Coast district's
primary commitment is to quality
education and to its students.•
Is it really showing a commitment
to students when such a leader
exploits the districts' pocketbook for
a buclc1 By taking advantage of that
loophole, Ruiz hurts the very
students be was elected to serve.
Voters have spoken,
now the work begins
I n Co'>ta M~. voter.. tos.'>ed two
incumbent') off the City Counal
and elet:te<l lhree new
member... 111cludmg one who
had served before ln Newport Beach,
voter.. returned all three mcumbents.
mcludmg one who ran unopposed.
So, wtuch caty moc;t nee<.b a !>hot of
pou11cal heahnK"
It tum..'> out 11·~ not Costa Mesa.
where Planning Commissioners P..ric
Bever and Katrina Foley, along with
former Mayor Linda Dixon. will take
seal'> on the toundl next month. It's
Newport Beach, where Councilmen
Steve Bromberg. John I fefTeman and
Steve Ho-.an'>ky return to the dais.
The reaMm. of tour.e, is the Vltnol
sull hangmg 111 the au foUowing the
vote on Mea'>urc L Voter. thoroughly
turned It d01Nn, nearly 2 to I.
o,agnalmK an the narrowest sense that
they do not want the stnp of land on
the Ralboa Penin'>ula known a!>
Marinapark where the American
~ l.egion. a (,u1 Scout house and a
'J11obile home pan sit rezoned to
allow for a hotel. More generally. the
debate turned on pt>rsonal attacks on
the man who proposed the
development and on the City
Council's handling of the proposal.
That debate illustrates two political
truths m Newport Beach. one far
more ..erious than the other.
The less ~g is that there Is a
'imall. vocal group of residents -
which. fairly or not. can be classified
a'i members of the slow-growth
Greenlight movement and the
anti-Measure L Protect Our Pub -
who have deep ~ta with 1 how city leaders are running
I Newport Beach. Their objecdons
begin with questiom of dewlopment.
but widen out to Issues of how
' council ~are run. how the
city's budget is spent and whether
residents are ~the treatment
and service they deserve.
The more pressing truth is that
there is an obvious majority in
Newport that has concerns about
how the city is handling
development Those concerns weren't
great enough for them to v.-•e anyone
out of City Hall. but there r mains an
obvious chasm -between aty and
business leadership on one side and
residents on the other.
1bat gulf is one city leaders need to
bridge. As elected representatives of
the people. their mandate is to serve
the interests of the community. and
they must now see that there are
many people who don't agree with
the direction the city is headed, the
trio of reelections not withstanding.
Their goal. though. does not have
to be reconciling with Green.light or
Protect Our Parks. City leaders need
to focus on the apparently wide -
but not deep -discontent in the
community. They need to reach out
to residents and ensure that they are
leading the city in the right direction.
Costa Mesa's eJected lead~. to be
sure, are not without their obstades
either. AD three "new" council
memben are seasoned in the ways of
City Hall. which fortunately will
smooth the transition.
The issues they face are not new
ones: .redeYeiopment of the Westside,
use of playing 6eids. managing the
budset and pWming the changing
nature devdopment And there ts the
expected cound1 divisions, with
Coundh:nen Allan Mansoor and
8eYS formins an~ bloc caIUns for limited government and
con1loYersial Westside renovation. wm f;)ley and Dhon amount to a
compedog twoeome1 How will Mayor
Gary Momban Ot into the mbl7
Such quesdoDI wtll begin to be amwerm tn the oomtng months. For
~ we abould trust the will of voters
in boCh cities and hope they Indeed
picked the best people Cor the jobs.
THE LAST WORD
1.
Not ready for his swan song
•
•
BOLTON
A WATCHDOG
New-look Collncil could; crackle
By Geoff Wtlt
W ell, in all over but Che
coronations now. The
campal3ning is finally
done, and we can only hope that we
will aoon be able to drlw down our
ltredl wbhout the visual bUgbt of
mnpalgtt ~off~ u. at
every tum.
J won\ eet Into a d.wcusaJoo of the
• ~tial eJection. except for 1h1a
pusing mention of the grin on my
face. Our local eledions have
certainly given us some interesting
circwmtances to consider. We in
Coita Mesa learned a dozen
candidates on the ballot plays havoc
with an election. 1b.irty percent of
the \'Ole$ cut for Qty CowlcU
candidates went to 1'alrtna Foley
and Unda Dixon. IO J guess we can
say -for the time bei.Qg-that
"cbfcb rule." "lmprover" F.ric Bever
~out Bruce GadJcb and Mike
Scheafer for the third teat by a
couple hundred wt.es. And both
Scbeater and Chris Steel failed to
convince enough votera that~
~to .retw1l b' loUryean.
ln Sleel't caee., IR no IWJ>ft.e.
· What did surprise !me WU that be
rDlnlged to convince nearly 5,000
~ d:Jal be mild recum rot
lnOtha term~ a iecoid of
dMsM non·~lishment ewer
dil put four~ The lw kM'lll
YUie .... ~to lally llmolt
12.000 VOtes -19" Of lhe wcee
CM; WlihoUttheJr ~In
the elef:tlon. l.be •c;ne m,111 hive
bMI 'V'Cl'Y dUfereilL We'll De\191'
•
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Time for accountability on Measure L
The raounding defeat of Measure L
at the ballot box tbould send a loud
and clear mesaage to the City CoundJ.
about not only the concern over
unfettered development of Newport
Beach'• ueetl. but the manner In
which the City Council operates tn
general.
The dty'• faiJure to articulate the
detaiM of the piopoeed project and It•
~ ln dealing with pUbUC
concmN doomed th.la pro~ &om the
.... '"" proponeDtl Ol MidftaPlrt Med IO look no tun.her dm IM City tar ... c:ollple.
...... •murilapal .....,, ..... to
eoa•1apubUcwetlillD•~
........ bldbelilttie.JdtD ....... ~ .... .. IOb= .... ,..... ... M.4.lillW
....... ,.... 111 9
'OR t:•IJJ II WW ..... I 9
.. ~-----="· IMtM'd' "7 • •
if
\ t
-.
A PROBLEM FOR
EVERYBODY
PORUM .
Clinic is where the heart is
M ......... , ... cAlil
•SIM Our SIMI Paee Oink belk!I her inildlcal
trilnlrtg. in llnll -
almote~
But Pereyda. 37, who In Oe10ber
btcame tho Costa Mesa dfnlO medJocal
dlrectot; hal found a home to pmmoe
her specialty: aenlng the medical needs
oft.he Impoverished.
At the clinic, &he IUpervlses a ltaff
that Includes fOUJ nurse pmctitionm1I.
two~ and l3 volunteen-
lnduding a detmatologl.st. a phyltcal
therapist, a surgeon, a nepbrologist and
a gynecologist.
The days are ~ with Pereyda and
her staff eeelng about 30 or~ -
sometimes 50 -people a day with
variou.9 medical probJems. Parking ls
cramped outside the dtnlc's modest
facility. Unes of famllla wait near the
clinic's doors for the three-decade-old
nonprofit's services, which also include
food and ftnandal aid to the a.reaS
lm~ed.
And yet. for Pereyda. who recently
moved from the Bay Area to Laguna
Niguel with her husband and rwo
children, the scene on any given day at
the clinic, though It's no utopia.
illustrates why people help people and
why pre-med students become doctors.
It's not about offices and paperwork. It's
about helping a man or woman who
has no medical insurance and has a
family to feed. With help for that early
diabetes. maybe that padent won't end
up in an emergency room or lose his
sighl
This is not an unfamiliar world for
Pereyda. a physician who honed her
skills at the University of Michigan and
Stanford.
Haw did you get involved with Share
OurSelwief
I had a good experience with the
empJoyer I was working with !doing
internal medicine for a private group!.
but I felt that I was not moving in the
direction that I wanted my career to
move in, nor was the passion that I had
for helping people who are underserved
being met I felt like I was.missing
something. So, I sta11ed looking around
l e-mailed Hoag HO'>p1tal's Hwnan
Resources Department. I pasted my
tw ricuJum vitae and boom. within 30
minutes. the I foag per'>On called me.
DON LEACH I DAILY PILOT
have never gone the extent they've gone
We see a lot of people with urgent-care
problems who otherwise would end up
in an emergency room
What we're finding IS a lot or our
patients have very severe chronic
illnesse<.. \0 we're seeing siclcer padents
who have more problems that require
more interventions. and more
medicauons. And wortdng under the
ronstra.lnt!> of a 6tt dinic. it can get a
l1nJe frustratinF c;ometimes.
What's the WOl"!'lt part -the l1l08t
chaUenglng part?
You aiwayc; want to pnmde VIP care
10 all your paoent\, and rhafo, very hard
to do.
.... 1 loc ~ dq V-i1c don hire.
wbidl J wms moll8 aca..camed to. Wr
l'llly. truly me ieelr'I Che~ poof.
people who 1ww two or dvee Jobe but
who f\.llt can't maR endl meet. 1beae
are ra.mm.-enthe families.
J rhlnk wbat'I reaDy pal about ~
clink ii that it really ii eervtng the
community tha1 lives In Co6ta Mesa -
mmd u tt ls. ~ are seutng
ie&Jittloelltadoo from aD the groups that
live here.
In many ways. I hope our dinic ~
a gieater educaliooal ro~ tn terms of
race relations and socio-economic
reladons. You kind of sit here and rea.luP
that anybody can be uninsured. It
doesn' matter what yrnj are like, what
your bedcgroWld was. where your
parents came from, you can end up
being an uninsured person
Do )'OU think the dtnlc will becomr
more of• hub. pvm the state of
~In our mu.ntryr
Absolutely. Commu nity cUrucs will
play an increasingly bigger role 1n betnK
safety-net prov1del""i, be<:auw healthcan:
costs are out of control -we all know
that They are out of control for peoplt
who work.
What oould you do betteT' ~t
The trend m th1<., clinic • ., typical of
the trend nauonwtde. that pt•ople ,lf'l'
sicker and they are older
'You kind of sit
here and realize
that anybody can
be uninsured. It
doesn't matter what
you are like, what
your background
was, where your
parents came from,
you can ertd up
being an uninsured
person.'
Pereyda was born and ra&'<l m
Douglas, Ari'l , a poor border town in
the southea'>I part of the '>la te, where
paying for medical school or even
medical in\Urd.nce, was not 111 the cards
for familie... But Pereyda. the
~ond-youngest of 11 children. made it
out of there And she newr lost an
mte~ in communJty me<l1ane. That
interest ha!. brought the b1lmguaJ
phyc;ician from helping to '>tall a clinic
m ~ Mateo to Costa Mesa. where
throur)l a partnership with 1 loag
I lo<tp1tal. her employer, she ha.., taken
the directorship at Share Our Sci~
Pereyda '>poke with the Pilot'<, Ryan
c.arter
I'm sure you could haw chosen
other~ within mectidne. Why a
dtnk1 And why In eo.ta Mesat
We 1ust moved here abour a year ago.
I was in pnvate pracuce for a year -my
lmt stint in pnvate praaice. But since I
go t out of re<tidency, my whole goal was
to work in a communtty·based d Jruc,
and dld that after graduating from
residency at 'itanford I went on to work
with the County of 5an Mareo and the
Pa.lo Alto Vererans I lealth System , and
the n went on to be medical director of a
brand new <>tan-up d mic in Ea.'il Palo
Alto. where we p1UV1ded care ror people
who did.n·1 haw in'>urance or who were
underinsured.
Haw long have you known yotfve
wanted to go into medldnef And how
long haw you known you wanted to go
lnto dds kind of medldne1
I grew up in a very poor envuonment
I was lucky. My dad was alwa)'))
employed and alway.. had health
111\urance. But mdl1y of my friend'
didn't. I rememtwr people making fun
of one of my be"t friends in elementary
" hoof because .,he MT1elled It rumed
out ~he had tht.5 horrible ear infection
because she didn't have ace~' to
healthcare. And I just always remember
foeling that jUSt wasn't a right Uung and
having t.tUs motivation that I wanted to
get out of the circumstance that I grew
up m and that it JW.t didn't seem right to
me that people would not have acre..'
to healthcare.
What's the best part or your Job7
Being a doctor I'> a ma1or pnvilege
Pt'ople open themselves up and you
l'nter inro their~ at a level or
wnfidence &hat is just really beyond
evt>n d ergy. lt'b a prtvilegt> to get to know
people in that way
We are lucky. though. 111 that we have
a good rPlaoonstup with I llMr,. and
Hoag ph~-..1nans who give U'> J 101 of
tn ·kind < arcwvero,.
Is ilitte anything unJqw about
practicing communJty mec:Udne ln
Co&taM~1
Ye., Palo Aho and Menlu Park whne
I workt·d. althouKh tht>y have many
rel entJy Jrri"ed 1111m1wan1 ... there., a
prerty E''-tahli\hed 1 omrnu111ty alreadv
With a lot nf dlll\ l'>m . ao; I'> lvplCaJ nf
the HJ} Area. rhl' l <HllmWllllt''> arr
'educarerl in the wn<>e that they know
what Lhe1r right!. are, they know wha1
to fight for. they know how IO put up ii
pohucaJ fight In that .,enw II'> quttt'
d rffe renl than here, Wht'TP rl·Ople Jrt'
very d1o;enfram h1'l'd in tJw.
community I th111k hao., 1hat ha' a little
bit 10 do \\1th tht• d1ffl'rent p11h11c-..
the Rav Area "er,u-. < >r,m~l' c ount;.
But it Jot''> makt• 11 that ml11 h rnorl'
diffirnlt
Bu t there are a lot ol wonderful
people here who help us our llw; clinic
I'> 'iU">lrunrtl hy dono~. by pt>ople who
donatl.' their llnw morwy. food.
rrrxJutL'>
Where I st>e room for 1mprtJ\emen1
would he to '>lreamltnc uu1 dt'altn~ wtllr
very Wand chronic pauenr.. I '>et> rnon•
here for U.'> 10 be ablt> lo '>treamlim· that
procesc; and aLtuaU\ take more pauenr-
m, '>'J that we 1 at<.h their d1<,('i!M' t•arht•1
before thev have c;evere, Vl'I'\ Lllo.,tl\
problem'>. For example Wt' l an lal t h all
earlv d1aheuc and mterwnt' <1.nd
et.lutJll' 'tO that 1ha1 peNm dot" nol ~·
on to require d1aly..1<, -"1 thl•\ dnn t w
bhnd. lo"< a foot or end up in
eme~enry room'> Jt all of r111r loc .11
ho'>pital., It aJJ adcb up
My goal would ht· 111 llllt'f\ t·rn· 1·.11 lit r
and pnl\1de d \\1dl'r rangt• r it
edu1 Jllonal 1np1r' to lht· '11111111111111\
I hdvt' alvJ ahw1v1., lf'lt th.11
comrnumt\ t h1111.., 'lll h •" II" h.1\ 1• .1 10• •
m edUlatmg otlwr lw~1hl11.m pro' 11 1•''"
and rummg lht-111 on 10 11111m111111I\
med1nne
Anything I dk1n't ~that I Ux>uJd
have?
I'm excited 111 lw llf'n-I nu I m ,1111
figunng out wh1·rt thmg .... u1• Jnd tht
l .. SUt'\ Ill tilt' U lllllllllllll\, \\hit Ii ,11\\01\'
play J role
It"; J prl\11t>gl' .uul .m hw111r to ll1 1
doctor \\e phvo,1uai1' ha\ 1 1 "1n,tl
re.pon<,1b1ltty 10 .utvancP ht•Jlthcart• 111 ,,
pos1uw way lo look ar \O< 1aJ /U\lt<t'
~.my ~hole career hao, alway-; been
geared toward bemg a ci vil servant. or a
public servant. It JU.Cit "° happened that
my husband changed jobs and wt'
mrM.'d out ht>re
To make a diffenmce in sorndxxly''
life. even ao; hard as vour day can he.
rhat'<. really. really. n-ally rewardin~
What's a typkal day Uke here7
A typical day for d nurse pracutioner.
for example. is filled with feeling really
great and then hear1c1che, becaui;e loL'> of
people come through here, and there~ .1
lot of people we have to rum away for
vanous l"{'a...ons -because they quahf~
for other programs or they live really far
away. TI1at doesn' make it easy
Every day yuu see people who are
really on the fringe.. People who <J-iould
FROM THE NEWSROOM
What kind or patterns of clink.al
ne«b of the people you serw ~ you
<Jedng In Costa Mesa?
The bigger pen.t·nta~e of people M
-.ee here are I .atmn'>. howewr. we are
'*.oein~ more and mon· fourth and
fifth·generaonn Amencan' averagt•
J<>e<> -who have fo<;t thc•r r 1oh ... who
lo..e their insurance or who ran·r ma.kt'
their in,urance prermumc; for their
wholt• famlly lntl'rt..,llngly. \Wre not
iso;ues. I thmJc. llrnt L'> "1111hnf'11I 111 \o\h,11
\o\I' are all about.
If \llll look at t'\t·r.i"lfl(h ''ho gill'" 111
medical school. ''t' ,1JI go 111 \ .. llh 111.11
c1t11111dt of .. ~l' \o\illll 111 ht•lp pt•oplr·
Jllll I wanr In mal.l pt'oph· ht t11•1
n wn. we ger JJdt'<.I along tlw pro< l'\'>
'ou get l<>-.1 m ha" mg 111 do \OlJr
day to <.lay actlVlllC">. wlwn• \1111 lo~t·t
\\/ti\ you reallv wanre<l to do tlm .md
what ~our pa-..,mn ''a.' fni nw<l1um
Hut we httve \<1Jl11ntl'<.'r dr>t tor-. t on1111g
here. and you l.m rmt 'l'l' 1h.11 1h1·\
real1/.t.'. u1" ,., ''In I \\l'nt 111 1111-d11 .11
'>Choo I
In Newport, parking seems more likely than driving forward
I got an e-mail this week from
a Greenlight leader, who I
will not name, who accused
us of badly misreading the
electorate on Measure 1.., the city
lnltlative that would have
rezoned the city-owned
Marinapart property to allow
the construction or a hotel on
land that ls now home to a
mobile-home parlc..
Hear that folb? The vote tn
essence preserves a
mobile-home pm on
city-owned beaches. not a park
that the Measure L opponents
kept referring to u they
falladoualy and succesafully
pulled the wool over the public's
eyes. The park la yet to be built.
But bey, eoO\llh of that, let's
pt beck to our alleged mJ&read
of the pubUc.
M I tokl the and-powth
•·ma.lier. we dJd not rad the
public wrona at all
We knew1be antJ·pvwth
fOIOll ~up thevoten
lnco an ftDodaDl1 ~ 'FOftl
the fictl and lmt.S
ooncenuateOft ~ ..... _..,...,_ ...
diM6aiplr.
111 lld "' ... pl'ldk1lld. ...... Gt .......
-~ . ., ............ 1tum1&d.e_,. tilh.a ........... _ _____ ..._ .........
~~;::-.::..: ... ~ .......... 1111111•-"' 1 ea ..
TONY
DODERO
and
consensus
from
buildeN.
Instead, the
fate of those
projects-
good or bad
-could be
subjected to
the emotional
whims of an
electorate
that won't
have the time to weigh
Important and practical
planning matters against the
impulse of stopping all growth
In Ill tracb. We worry about
that. too. We wony that the
public baa such low oplnlon of
developen that ft would be
unlikely I project &s
conUOYef'llal as the Dunes hotel,
!or example, could net get the
fair b,earlng It desef'Vft."
lb.Ii eAecdon prova ihat
polnL Grffnli&bt·rrlendJy
ClncldMti9 llb ........ , I\ In
and DllalWll Oldlll. Am ... re •--mdM 'I,
Ai 0 T continue ID loll M
lhl ..... bat any~ wkh
.. ward • u elDPIMftl In ll ptl
.Uwind.
........ ~The ........... ~,.... .......... ........ ...............
a; II l d•: .... °" -"'p :;: ·~ v ..--.
a mobtle-h ome parlc.
I just do n't see the resident"
no r the city with the will to
reach tn their pocketbook.-. and
turn that mobile-home park
Into an actual park that p eople
can use. which It really isn't now.
I hope I'm wrong. but city
hJstory backs me up.
Back when I was making a
living as a reporter, I covered the
story some 12 years ago of the
Castaways development. At lhat
time, the Irvine C.o. was ma.king
its pitch to develop the last
vestfges of open space it owned
In Newport Beach.
Problem was. the land to be
developed ringed the Back Bay
and consisted of auch
sentimental sites as the
Cutaways. the bJu.ff·top land on
the west end of the bay along
Dover Drive, and Newponer
North. a chunk or
eriiri.ronmeotally aeNtdve
propmy on the oppollte of the bay,J::. aaou the ac:reet from
dle Oepeunent
Then COunc:Uwoman ,._
Win. who .... Uwllyt been.
dlll ftCt Jn ...... apca and hll
my Utmoll·~ joined With
ochl!l'l Mb ..... WhOrft I allo
dMpiy ....... IO fonll what
.. ........... ihl Nlwpon
Colllll...w:y. n.e-.. ,.q, nable ...
WM•pawMIMl'-dlrllli ..... .. ., .......... Ot. .. , ... fO.,. ,.. t 111 ..... , ..... * ..........
4llm ·-RI
to S68 mi1J1o n . In an at·t of good
faith, the Irvine Co. even shaved
off S 10 mtlJion to offer the
property for SS8 million
The only ttung left wao; to
convince the voters to purcha\e
the property. To do ~. an
initiative was floated by the
conservancy. Measure A. which
if~ would place an
assessment on property ownero;'
tax bills to pay for the purcba5('.
For a price of about $120 a
year for most homeowners, the
conservancy would buy the land
and maintain It as open space
The cost was more for most
business ownen. particularly
the Irvine Co., the largest
landowner ln town.
StilJ, I remember there was
locs of momentum to pull off
this purchase with merchants all
~town donating money to
the oomervancy'I efforts and
~ed council membm
Owwct Turw and IMIJD
Hiit lining up to support the
~ ID 6aa, pay a vWt to the Hard
AoCk. c.te at JWbloa llland Ind
,.. wll lee I fol.alWn wt.th I
.... thal 111)'1 the money
...... .. then would be
dlll •r 1 IO che Newpon . eoa.en...,. ...... _ ... pea,,. • .., ..... ,m: I
,. .. P"'. .... ...
..... ..... OUl.WMK'f ...... ---....... . ,..., m,..-... ....-...... ......, ......
J '5 ... _ .....
•=-:=::~ .....
the conservancy plan<t, the more
ecologically sensitive. 77 acre
Newponer North sue will
remain largely undevelopt'd
TI1e plans call for walking trails,
reforestation of native plants.
habitat resto rauon and viewing
sttes for !)lat property. whkh
lies at the east end of the Back.
Bay just to the north of the
Newport Dun~ . The 56-acre
Upper Castawa~ wiD haw a
different fate, though. Sitting
near the comer of Dover Drtve
and Coast Highway.
conservancy members believe
this bluff top parcel can be
tailored lo fit the recreadonaJ
nttds of Newport Beach
rea.tdents .. 'Castaways will be
mostly usable for people thlnss. ·
Jean Watt sa.ld. 't can see
continuing to uae It for the Boy
Scout Qunporee l!Yt"ry ~ for
instance.'"
Do .u thoR promt.e. or park
land eound fam.Olaff
Despite all tht momentum
and support fol Meuun A. the
rault. dear rMden. was noc a
goodooe.
M1 um Aw crounced at me po11 in Nufeiubir o1_ tm
wtch '5,.111Jdr'1 no IDdlft .
~,. ,..........,_.no Wiii on .. cw ....... ,., ..
I '~! bn I IM~Co. 1
TELL IT TO
THE EDITOR
TONY DOOERO is the editor
He welcomes your
comments on news
coverage, photography or
o1her newspaper related
ruues If you have a
message or a letter to the
editor. ~It his dir,ct tine at
(714) 966-4608 or the
Readers Hotline (71A)
~. 89nd it by.-malf to
tony.dodero~llltJnw.com
or dailypilot@llltlm.s.com.
or send rt by mall to 1375
Sunftower Aw .. Col'ta Mesa.·
CA92626.
[)eowloplng a pa.rt will mean
going to voters again, and we
saw bow1htt ended up.
What " Aid In our t'dltotials
about MarinlJpGt WU to tUa a
ttand for reuoo and fal""-
mucb lllle we did In 2000, knowlnC that the voten mtpt-
DOC WaDl to bl.w what Wit hlid to
~
--hoped dml tbly ... .... the factl.. !
d. --lflbeUd ...... ..
t.e ..... bOlll • ..... .
....... Md .... .. .. ._ ............ ' ..... .. ··-· .............. ....._ ...... .. . ......... ~ ... ..
,
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B R 0 A D W A Y ' S A W A R D • W I N N I N G B E S T ·M U S I C A L
ONLINE SALES BEGIN FRIDAY IGHT, NOV.12
AT 12AM MIDNIGHT! www ocpac.org
Box Office sales begin Saturday, Nov mber 13 at 7AM
at the orange county PerfOrmin Arts centerl
The first 100 ticket buyers at the Box Office receive FREE LION KING CD.
All others at the Box Office receive a FREE LIO KING T·SHIRT ~
Food, coffee, and newspapers provided by the Ora ge county Register.
Phone sales begin at 1oam on Saturday, November 15.
Call centerTlx at <714> 556·2787
Groups <20 or more>: <714> 755·0258
•one merchandise Item per order. per person whlJe supptles last 11ckets subject to appllcable service charges. Dates, times and
pnces subject to change without notification. orders llmlted to s tickets per person. other restrtctlons may aPPIY.
7 WEEKS ONLY! •·MARCH 10-llRIL.24,2005
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..... :,•~o. W...111*111-.:--,. elaoi l-.1'@1j lillt:ao ;
the iawe Cini= ittm..uoct.Y. e cbarhJ. when dwy need a hot,
hearty meal.
Both thlN orpnlzatlon1
attnct •• ....., poup of
clllDD uul a lot of kudoe tD
the commumcy for tbe wort
they do; But they have IJlo
hffn aCCUMd OI._.... the
Weltllde dowD liiJ iiidDg the
poor and doWIJ.ald-out to
Co1taU...:
Coutic;llm•n Quo¥ Steel-
who loll bit bid for reelection
Jut week-bu been one of
the mOlt WCal crldCI, lauding
the cbaridet for their
generOIUJ but recommending
that they' leave COlta Mesa
and atop attracting poor
people and lmmlpanta.
Similar charges have played
out during the city's put three
council elections, at least,
with complaints being lodged
that the charities' cllentele
creates a transient population
that drives up crime rates and
drivea down performance at
the city's schools.
The Westside Revitalization
Oversight Committee alto
mentioned the charities on
the Westside in its final report.
It recommended Lmposlng
resutctlons on organizations
along the West 19th Street
corridor -including
nonprofits -to lessen their
adverse effects on
surrounding public and
private property.
Officials with both
organizations insist the
Westside la where the need is,
and that's why they attract so
many people.
"Critics have a perception,
not a reality," McGllnn said.
"Whenever I hear them talk
about it being a magnet, we're
a medical and dental clinic
providing needed services in a
community struggling to
provide those services.·
BORN OUT OF A NEED
Share Our Selves evolved
out of a group of about 150
members of St. John the
Baptist Oiurch in the late
1960s. The group was studying
the Bishop's Labor Day
Statement on Justice of 1969
and decided to act upon their
desire to help othertt.
• fhere was a lot of debate
but we really wanted 10
chaJlenge the systemic issues
of poverty -that was 1ruly
our guiding princ1plt', •
McGlinn said.
After debating how exactly
to do that. the board members
of the group -six couples -
settled on just helping people
with the basics, such as food
and health services. she said.
"People kept coming and
saying, 'Can you help us with
this and that?' so we backed
into the social-service branch
of Share Our Selves," McGlinn
said.
The nonprofit bounced
around a few different
locations before settling at
Rea Elementary School, which
-------....... ... ...-.; .• .......... .............
IOdll • ¥1111 All01-llll•df9tlerill• ....................
In lNe bf,littM ''ft:t Sbebadafidr llJ
hot-meal pf'Oll'llD fDi' Miiion;
but wowd be IWUmed.,,
chUdreo knocldq on lMr door
ukina for foocl. lbe Hid:
Seelna the Med. lhe IDt tbl
city', penillallon to opeq a
soup kitchen and fed 30
people her ~t ~ay.
While both dWidet
continued to tbrtve, wama...,
they were evicted from the
location. Both pve dltferent
reuona why they were
evicted. ·1
McGllnn said neighbors
blamed Share Our Selwl fO(
the large inttux of lmnilgruta
occurring at the time on the
Weatalde. It wu asked to leave j PHOTOSBYDOUGlASZllEllWf/DM.YPl.OT
ln ..1,~~~ reall; ~Dllgranta ~teer receptionist Sharon Eklof answers the phone at Share Our ~s. The charity, located on
moving into the neighborhood Superior Avenue, can help with groceries, financial advice and a variety of other social services.
-not jUlt Latinos, but
Vietnamese, Cambodian,
Pacific Islanders," McGlinn
said. "Refugees were changing
how we see our community."
The Soup Kitchen was
evicted because the school
district wu conalderi,ng
reopening the school,
Hatleberg aaJd.
It was dme for both to take
charge of thelr destinies by
buying their own buildlngs.
MOVES TO THE WEST
For both, fate led them to
the Westside. Share Our Selves
purchased its building on
Superior Avenue in 1990.
spending $1.• mlUlon in
donated funds.
"We made a sirong
commitment tha1 we would
build a safety net and serve
anyone -the poor, the
vulnerable, those in need,"
McGlinn said. ·we never
discriminated against
anyone."
And even though they are
on the Westside. 1hey benefit
the entire community with
their medical clinic, McGlinn
said.
"We protect the community
because a lot of people who
come here are your service
workers," McGlinn said. ·vou
want 10 make sure someone in
your kitchen doesn't have
tuberculosis or hepatitis."
fhe nonprofit ">erves about
I 00,000 clients a yeat, said
Karen Harrington, director of
development. It has a free,
full-service medical and
d ental clinic for those without
insurance. Serving both
clinics are about 40 doctors
and 140 staff volunteers. Some
of the doctors aJso see clients
at their own offices.
While residents come from
all around the c;ounty for most
of the services, about half of
those who use the medicaJ
clinic are from Costa Mesa,
I farrington added.
The Soup Kitchen's journey
to the Westside wasn't as
i.mooth. First it moved to the
United Methodist Omrch on
West 19th Street. But after
three months there, a new
pastor came in and served the
organization with a 30-day
·evtction notice, Hatleberg
said. It ended up buying an
old Ollnese food restaurant
on West 19th Street lo 1997.
"This la my feeling -there
wu a need and I needed to flnP a place, because I just
can't see people hungry,"
Hatleberg said.
The kitchen mostly serves
ea.ta Meaa residents,
Hatleberg added. In 2003, the
Soup Kitchen did a survey of
Its clients and found that 519'
were white and 339' were
Latino. The survey also
showed that most people
came for a hot meal because
they were out of work.
Elissa Hunter, 42, who Js
homeless and pregnant, aald
the Soup Kitchen means the
world to her.
•lt's a blessing to have this
place here," she said.
For Share Our Selves, about
'
Share Our Selves has been on the Westside since 1990, when it
bought its Superior Avenue building for $1.4 million.
70% of the clients using its
general services are white.
About 709' of those using the
medical program are Latino
and about 60% of people who
use the emergency services
are also Latino, Harrington
said. MostJy families use the
nonprofit agency, Harrington
added.
SAVE T HE DATES
Buy • C8'd fol $50 to berMlftt Big Bi'oehlnlBlg SlaWt
SIV9 20% It 100 pMlctpdng Soulh Collt Plaa 8tor'M
WO &• .. IDII .. ..............
=:Z!91'!2i:::6ir ....
atlldr hm .-.0
..... cblilalir .... of me ....... n.:;:t?• ..
COHndl ... .,_....,.
daat. 91..a ..... to .......
............. ..,.... ., eltalCC
people Who burt the dly .....
WU I 'fOJunteer foi' Sharl Our
Sehw In 1978 but bellawt the
Wettslde would be better off
wltboutlt.
•That cbartty la a major
problem for why the Weatllde
bal an· tmage problem," Steel
MMl. '"theYre doing what
...,one lhould be doing ln
tbe moral, acrlptural aenae,
but lt'a Incompatible wlth aood acboola, low crime and
(hlgb) property values
becaUM of the conditiona that
rau1ted from them being
here.•
'Jbe aoup kitchen bu a
noble goal but mainly attracts
the bomeleu, Steel aaJd.
One of the
recommendations of the
WeatsideRevitall.zation
Oversight Committee's final
report la to require existing
and new businesses and • • nonprofits along the West 19th #.
Street corridor to apply for use
permits so they are
accountable for the actions of
their clients, committee
chairman Ralph Ronquillo
aald. The goal of the permJts
would be to lessen the negauve
effects on surrounding public
-·~ ·-::
and private property. ••
Hatleberg said her clien1s ::
are out of the area by 4 p.m. ::
during the week and therefore • -
can't be a nuisance. ::
·vou can come here a1 4·15 .-
p.m . and not see a soul in 1he •
area," she said. ·1 can't see
what the problem is."
• DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers
government She may be reacned
at (714) 966 4623 or by e-mail at
deirdre.newmsn@lst1mes com. •
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i
STEVE McCAANK/
Sage tM's Sarlh Geocaris reb.l'ns the bal it~ Lague semifinals
against carissa H>elbakare of Fairmont at the Bll>oa Bay Club Racquet Ckl.
THE BIG EASY
Getting
ready for
the Trojans'
day of days
ROGER
CARLSON
•
' •
_ ..
NEWPORI' 8F.ACfl -Sage Hill School
gids tennis players didn't walk away with
81.IY Individual tides following Salurday's
c:onclusioo of the Academy League cham-
pjonsbipe. but for one Lightning doubles
team. the journey will condnue.
Senior Sarah Flynn and sophomore Al1e
Hsu defeated c.apistrano Valley Ouistians
Debbie Aipovidl and Hanna Hanis. 6-2,
2-6, 6-2, in the league doubles semifinals
Satwday at the Balboa Bay Oub Racquet
MEN'S BASKETBALL
GIRLS TENNIS
Cli> to secure Bille Hil'a
pll«i::e ID the ClF
Soiwdwm ~ lndi-
vklual dwnpk>nehipl.
wbk:h begin ~ 20 at
lour lites, induding the c.o.a Mesa nmm Cents.
Rynn md Hsu, the No. 2 seed, then fell
to founh-eeeded 'Many Huang and Kath-
ryn Mcintyre of St. Margaret'a. 6-3. 6-3, in
the league ftnaJ. but remained upbeat.
ewn flashing smiles after the loss. The fi.
nalisb in singles and doubles qualify for
OF.
'Tu get this far ... no one expected u.s
to win. .. Hsu said
Sage Hill Coach A.G. Longoria said Hsu
and Aynn's feat is more impressive con·
sidering Huang and Mcintyre, along with
FlipoYich and Hanis. play mostly singles
during the regular season
STEVE Mc:awt< I DAl.Y Pl.OT
UC Irvine's Adam MetelskJ,oes up for a putback against Sinon Fraser's Aaron Christensen (34) Saturday.
An eaters up
~.~7.2~ 11
"It• hard playing a team of mostly sJn.
gles plllyen.. Longoria said .. (Hsu and
F1yno) had good return of serve. powerful
groundsttokes and Improved with the vol·
leys. which we ~ really been working
on. They are coming along.
"(Stephanje Langer. Sarah ~
Hsu and AynnJ are peaking at the n¢11
time."
Geocaris. \he No. 3 seed m smgl~ lo-,1
to evenrual-sangies champion ~..a
Aboubakare, a Fainnont freshman, 6-i.
6-1, m one semifinal Sacurday wtuJe
Langer. the fourth <,eeci, felJ to (..arm.'><!'>
older '>ister, Bianla, 6·2. 6 2. m Lhe olh~r
semifinal.
Bianca Aboubakarl' defeated I.anger m
the semifinals and C1t'OCal1~ m th~ leagui:
final last sed.'>Qn
See TENNIS. Paee 82
COMMUNITY
COLLEGE
FOOTBALL
Cerritos --
rallies to
beat Bucs
Orange Coast leadc.,
heading into fin al
quarter, but host Falcone.,
rally for 27-22 victo ry.
Chris Yemma
Daily Pilot
NORWALK -With five minute<.. '>3 '>(.>t
onds rernauung. dlld Lht> Ord11gt• t -0.1 ... 1
College football team down. 27 -2'.! .• uid
drivmg for the go aht:'ad o,(:Ore •• 1 mirror
image of their
sea.'>On flao,hed
before 11.
Pirates
quanerbad: Kyle
Basane1 threw a
pas!> to rere1ver
Shane Hoffman,
Lhe ball bounced
off I lofTman clild
SCOREBOARD
Cemto'>0 Tun Orange Coast 22
McCullouch in-Cemtos 27
tercepted to 1us1
about dmch Lhe
game for Lhe Falcon-. ">i.tturdav 111gh1 1n .i
Misswn Conferenn.· \rnencan D1\1,111r1
clash at Cenito~ Collt'gt:' .
Thr Puateo, fl ·El. 1-J in Lhe d1n,11111
got one l~t cham:e with JlN mort• th.m
two rrunutec; remilJJlmg. hut ldllH" up
shon on founh down m thetr 0\\11 tt·m·
tory.
·This pretty much reflect.c; what mu
entire season has been like • ()( ( l.oat h
Mike Taylor said. •tt was~ but 1101
close enough. We needed a few t:'xtra
passes and runs and we JU.St didn't ~et
them."
Orange Coast was com mg off a IO 7
105.1 to Palomar, decided by a touchdown
in the final 28 seconds. The first half of
Saturday's game reflected the same type
of performance.
With 28 seconds left m the first half.
Matt Padilla ran for a 7-yard touchdown
that put the Pirates up. 13· 7. after a
misled extra point
But the Fakons were not content to
cab tbat deficit into halftime.
. They tp>t the ball back and K.evtn
Brown duew a 37 -yard pus. to Anthony
aMr and a 22-yard touehdown toss to
Mkhld Olowtbam. and had 13 l«OOds
to ipme.. Just lib that. Cerritos (3-6. 2·2}
took. 14-13 lead into baJftime.
·Both me. lat two pm.es hsYe been
~"". ~ laid. ·1 don' fwJ .,., beaii' or any woae after this one.
tu In .. ~ When they ..a a ma.i ,,... In DO time lJ'.llt be--m hi bllll. mes wtlh 11*9 three cum-
Ollml. k hurt -•
..... )Id lbe ati.dt far 1bl l'tl9-.
,...... b 142 ,.. an 2S "1tllii*-
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... ... • ...... ....... CICICIDIC> 11aa11-eoc.i.---..-.--. ........ ., .. ...... ........ c-.., ........ .
,..:•-··· •t. .. ... ....... _ .... , .. ,... .... ..: . c ·1·----•n•• II 0 11111 ......... .... •• ., .. __ 111 __
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-, -,. ,.
The Cocta Mesa HJgh boys wa-
ter pol<> team defeated Troy,
10-S, In the championship game
of the Tuattn tournament Satur·
day at Tu.attn Htgll.
Senior Adam Do1J3las acored m goals In the dtle game, In
which the Mustangs outscored
the Warrlora, 5-0, in the fourth
quarter to pull away.
Costa Mesa junJor Kyle Thors·
ness scored seven goals to pace a
15·5 sem1flnal win over Laguna
Hills Saturday.
The Golden West League
champion Mustangs, ranked No.
10 in OF Southern Section Dtvi·
sion O, lmproved to 19-5.
Tllltln tlllUrMl1W1t
Final
Cost• Me.. 10, 'Doy 5
Score bv Quert8rl
Costa Mesa '3 1 1 5 10 Troy 3 o 2 o -~
Com Meu-OouglH 6, Yellln 1,
Thorsness 1, Spencer 1. Adamowicz
l Saves -Gatti 2
Semlftn81
Costa MeN 15, l.agun• Htffa 5
Score by Ou•rt8rl
Costa Mesa " " 4 3 15 Laguna Hills 1 o 2 2 5
Com M .. -Thorsness 7, Douglas 3,
Medina 2. Fisk 1, Roche 1.
Adamowicz 1. Saves -Gatti 10
Coast rules SoGll
•CROSS COUNTRY: Orange
Coast College's Kellen Acosta
and Ludi Valdez each won their
respective men's and women's
andividuaJ titJes while both Pi-
rate squads claimed team titJes
at the Commission on Athletics
Southern CaJifornla cross coun-
try championships Saturday at
Fairbanks Park in San Luis
Ohif>po .
fhe Pirate men and women
each claimed team titJes for the
third straight year, this time by
a wide margin. The OCC
women finished with 48 points
while Riverside came in second
with 114.
On the men's side. Coast,
which placed three runners in
the top four, tallied 38 points to
second-place San Bernardino
VaJley's 133.
Acosta finished in 22:27 while
former Estancia High standout
Humberto Rojas took third in
22:38. Jose Casillas finished
fourth in 22:47.
VaJde1, also a former Estancia
runner. took first in 16:04 on
the women's side.
Other Coast men finishers in-
cluded Ja:.on Valen7Uela (I 0th
in 23:20). Matt Staggs (20th in
2:1:53). Jesus Sala:rar (49th in
24:32) and Patmk fit1~erald
(5fith tn 24:40).
OCCc; Emilie Vo ( 17:04)
placed :.ixth ovrrall on the
women's side wh1lt• teammate
Gaby Santana finished eighth in
17·06. Nor Hernande" (14th in
17·20). Jewel Buttler C.ll st in
I 7:43). Rebecca Powell (25th in
17:48) and Jenny "iliwa (29th in
17:56) contributed for Coa'>t
Both Pirate squad:. will rnm-
pt•te in the ... tatC' finals Nov 20
..it Woodward Park in Fresno
'Eater duo in final
•TENNIS: UC Irvine seniors
Bnan Morton and Ryuc;uke
Kai.hiwabara won two men·,
tennis matchef> Saturday to ad-
vance to today':. doubles finaJ at
the Southern California inter-
collegiate:. at the Los Angeles
TENNIS
Coobnued from B 1
Tennis Cub.
Morton, a Corona del Mar
High product, and Kashlwaba·
ca. the No. 4 seed, defeated Billy
Mertz and Lu.tgi D'Agold &om
Alabama, 8-2, ln the q~
finals.
The ua twosome then
topped BYU'a Nlma Roahan and
Jose Lull Lechuga. 9-8 (8-8 In
the debreaker) to advance to
today's 2 p.m. dtle clash against
UCLA's top-seeded Alberto
Francis and Kris Kwinta.
Mortoh, beaten by UCLA sen-
ior Luben Pampouloy, 7 ·6, 6-0,
in Saturday's singles semifinal,
teamed with former Anteater
Jonathan Endrikat to win the
doubles crown at this tourna-
ment two years ago.
Pirates finish third
•WATER POW: The Orange
Coast College women's water
polo team defeated Fullerton,
6-3, in the third-place game or
the Orange Empire Conference
tournament Saturday at Cy-
press College.
Freshman Ann Marie Fisher
scored three goals, while Erin
Harvey. Laura DeMeneces and
Lianne Todisco each had one
goal for the Pirates ( 19-9).
Freshman Kelly Dargel had
five saves for OCC.
0...1n1• Empire Conftftnc• town1ment
Or•na• CoHt e. Fullerton 3
Seo ... by Ou•rttn Orange. Coast o 2 2 2 6
Fullerton 1 1 1 o • 3
Orange CoHt -Flaher 3, H•rvey 1,
DeMeneces 1, Todisco 1. s.v .. -
Dargel 5
Fullerton -Benton 2, Peter90n 1.
Saves Reves 2 •
UCI's Jones doubles
•SWIMMING AND DMNG:
UC lrvine freshman diver Jackie
Jones continued to sparkle on
the second and final day of the
Big West Conference men's and
women's swimming and diving
shootout Saturday at the Ant-
eater Aquatics CompleL
Jones won the women's one-
meter and three-meter diving
events in Pool A to produce
UCl's only individual wins. She
aJso won on the three-meter
board Friday.
Hawaii sophomore Nicole
Mackey, a former Newport Har-
bor High standout, won the
200-yard backstroke in 2 min-
utes. 1.23 seconds, and was sec-
ond in the 200 individual med-
ley (2:04 .21).
Four Anteaters earned sec-
ond-place showings. including
frt'shman Oielsea Negata (23.93
111 the women's 50 freestyle) and
I re-.hman fom Randall (21.24 in
the mt'n\ 50 free).
Sophomore Daniel Simonson
wa!i c;econd in the 200 breast-
'troke (2:07.2) and senior Evan
Mitchell was second in men's
three-mt'ter diving.
Allen Moheimani (men's one-
and three meter diving) and
Eddie '1'ral'O (1 :53.78 in the
men\ 100 but1erfly and 1:51.31
an the 200 back) led UCl's third-
place lirushers.
Also third for UCI were: Duke
Krautim (I :55.2 in the men's 200
J.M.); Franny Brittle (women's
one-meter diving); Eric Reilly
(46.34 m the men's 100 free);
and Lara Bjargardottir (2:20.02
in the women'f> 200 breast-
(
.. ..
. .
SPORTS
atrob).
The UO women eamed team
wfn4 over UC Santa Barbara
and the University of San~·
while faWng to Hawaii and
Waihlngton.
The UCI men were defeated
t>'cs~uhlngton, Hawa1l and
Fullen makes a stand
• WATBll POLOi Corona del
Mar Htgb aentor Brittany Pullen
made eight saves In two gamet
u 1Mm Gra.ffttl went 1-0·1 to
open play In the third annual
Speedo Top '° Festival at the
USA Water Polo National
Aquatic Center In Los Alamitos
Saturday. Former c.dM stand-
out Cl:uistlna Hewko, who now
attends Stanford, scored two
goals for the United States
women's junior national team
(Team Aster) in Its 7-7 tie with
Uvewire. The tournament con-
cludes today.
Lions sweep Azusa
• VOLLEY&\LL: Sonrisa
Peace tallied a match-high 14
kills while Kim Wynn added I I
to help the host Vanguard Uni-
versity women's volleyball team
snap a two-match losing streak
with a 30-23, 30-24, 31-29 Gol-
den State Athletic Conference
victory over Azusa Pacific Satur-
day.
With the win, the Uons (23-
11, I 0-8 ln the GSAC) moved
Into a de for fourth place In the
conference with two matches
remaining.
Marissa Cothran amassed 31
assists wbile Sevryn Demos and
Keri DeHaas bad 15 and 14 ~
respectively for the wtnnera..
'Eaters tie for third
• GOLP: The UC Irvine men's
golf team tied Long Beach State
for third place in the Del Walker
Intercollegiate tournament that
concluded Friday at Virginia
Country Cub in Long Beach.
'IWo Anteater players finished
1n the top ftve as sophomore
Brlan Bdlck tied for third at 2-
under-par 211 (70-71-70) while
freshman Garrett Sapp placed
fifth at even-par 213 (69-74-70).
UCI junior Jay Oloe was 28th
at 222 (71-73-78), freshman
Kenny Kim placed 32nd at 223
(72-73-78) and junJor Ryne
R1nd0eisch finished 50th at 229
(80-74-75).
Lamar won the 12-team tour-
nament with a 54-hole total of
862. UCI and Long Beach State
each scored 866.
Denver's Barrell Jarosch was
the medalist with a three-round
score of 4-under 209 (70-74 6!i).
The tournament concluded
the fall schedule for UCI. which
recorded top-live finisht'' in
three of the six events. UU re·
turns to competition 111 the
PING-Arizona lntercollt•g1ate
tournament at Arizona Na-
tional Golf Oub in Tucson Jan.
31 and Feb. l.
Long Beach downs UCI
• VOll.EYMLL: Senior out-
side hitter Kelly Wmg tallied a
match-high 27 kills and 17 digs,
but it was not enough as the UC
Irvine women's volleyball team
fell to host Long Beach State,
30-18, 33-31. 30·32, 30-25, in a
Big Wett Conference mat
urdjy.
NM&I 1lm Colda)oba ~~USCtaldlWdJllllllD
no ..... wmdli ~II the
od'f flal!l In tiw ~an ~~-bli tlnllbed. A vidt:lrY CMlf Nocl9
Dame mMDI the-&lc BoWI.. Trtlba White (16), Sam!
(11) and Amanda Vuquez
all tallied kil1I for the Ant
(16· 7, 9·5 In conference),
came ln ndJng a tru:e.
winninl sueak.
Alex11 Crtmet led the 4
(18-4, 10·4) with 19 kiJll
lowed by Makin! 'l'bom
with 18. Lona Beach Imp
to 13-1 at home this seuon.
1be \!Ott ~ MWU oakMll. In
fAct. bad bMD blld up for. --
ifter the ...... llllOll
b conduded, ID order to tied 1bl
reiult of the USC-Noae Dlmt
lllDI 1oto the mbt.
·Notre Dl.me'I pul ~ ,, • ti
IXeam season ends
IDlft·to·man." (Oridne ... ~ •AD we baY1 to do .II prote;c:t tbl
quartllback.. •
Aod. d1llN Ml a need to ID
the pp tot tba loll olAlbck
• SOCCElb The Vangu P..mle Pye. wbo bid been bt &
University men's soccer te the pme when he wal:ld
ended Its finest season n / through • elidlna gtali door.
school hlatory with a 5-2 lo o On the bUi fof the lbort trip to
host Azusa Pacific in ·a bea the Coli-.n. ~and hit
battle of the Golden State • ~ • to(letber, and not
ledc Conference champlo a wont was Mid..
the NAIA Region II se P1nally, ~leaned over and
Saturday. said to ~ "1be odds are wtth
Andrly Budnyy scored o WI today. Wt/re going to beat
goals to go with three usls these guys.. 1be pressure Is on
third-ranked Azusa Pacific 6· Notte Dame. It's very, wry
1-1), which took a 2-0 lea 20 ditftcultto go unbeaten for an
minutes into the contest. entireaeuon."
Nathan Kramer scored How MclCay anived at that Is
goals for Vanguard (16-5), anyone's guess, becawe pressure
assists from Man Hess seemed to seldom fall on the
Mark Babel. Irish's shoulders.
The game, however, r Nine victories were by an
ugly in the !>econd haJf, average of25 points a game, a
eight of the nine total car 34-15 win over Purdue was the
two reds and seven cautio closest encoWlter with the
were handed out. exception ofa, 17-15 victory over
OCC men fourth
•WATER POLO: The 0 ge
Coast College men's water olo
team lost to Riverside, 7-in
the third-place game o e
Orange Empire Confe
tournament Saturday at
press College.
Austin Price, Alex Ave
Todd Swanson and Paul
all scored goals for the
(6-1 8).
RJvenJde 7, °'~ eo. Scote by Ouen.n Orange Cout 1 2 1 o
Riverside 2 4 o 1
O...nge Cout -Price 1, Avet
Swanton 1. Coiner 1. S.vn -
Hellmich&.
Rlwnlde -Sewell 2, Otda 2,
1, Huang 1, Unger•r 1. S.vee
B•uer1eln 5.
• SOOCEll: Luc
scored on a penalty kick
second overtime to lift h
Riverside to a l ·O Big Wes
ference men's soccer wi
UC Irvine Saturday.
Senior Lome Howlett h
shots and sophomore t
Brad Evans had three for
I 1-0, 2-5·0 In conference}.
UCI goalie Cameron
made five saves, while
'keeper Olarles Alamo
!>ix.
UCR improved to 7-8-3-1.~
UCI's Barry hono
• WAJ'BR POW: UC l e
junior Drea8on Barry has
named the Mikasa Co· Play
the Week in Mountain
Sports Federation men's
polo.
Barry scored six goals l
weekend's two victories. e
scored a pair of goals ln · 7
win aver USC and a game gb
four in lut SUnday'1 10·6
over UC San Diego.
Pittsburgh. Ara Parseghian's Irish
were 9-0 entering the final week
to become the first Notre Dame
team to accomplish perfection
since 1949 when the Irish ran
their unbeaten streak to 38
sJraighL
Wboonstn. Air Force. UUA.
Stanford. Navy. Mk:bigan State
and Iowa. none could cause a
ripple In the ldsh confidence.
For Craig Fertig. bawever, this
wu the game that could catapult
him and his 'Do.Jana to the top, to
atone for three bltter losses and a
springboard to Puadena.
The former Huntington Park
High star.-be and Pete
Bealhard wen the ftrlt two
choices of MdCay during
recruiting wan -knew all about
the mystique of the lmh. and
haw to beat it. Hil touchdown
run In uses 25-0 victory over
Notre Dame on this same field
was the final nail in the lNb
coffin as SC rolled to its l 0th
straight victory to 1962.
Practice had been upbeat on
Bovard Aeld and on Tuesday the
lrojans' coadl took his squad
aside and lined them up near a
fence. He then took out a piece
of c:balk and drew eight figures
on the fence.
"All of these guys are blocking
for my quarterback," McKay said.
Fertig entered with all of the
experience one could hope for.
All of the routines were, well.
routine.
1beir demeanor~ strictly
"coat and tie, -and the coaching
SCHEDULE
10MY
W...polo
Colleg9 mtn-UC Santa
Bari>ll"I at UC ltvlne,
noon.
.. _ ... .....,. .. .., ..... did.,__, ................
.,...........,~*' ...
Cle··~ wbo ........ naa.
--..... llmco. 1blY win lMicb ll•MariMI
mdtbeJalw8'1t.dUI~· IWtflllkl ~-=-~~ .. c:onartbUdom Wld IOcdy
ca6.S to the a8lmtw llde ~
.. b11. HI bid..._ am~ the
.... In tbe .... up1111n tbt
.... bi. oae Olctw
OOR I t 1u wbk:h IDl1 Vuder
lmD fMi•I Id In lbl Blidilal
•ndMbhtaly behe ~ .,,.,...,.. '2·37.
~time l'ID In WllcO'llln.
\tinder~-.. me to lunch,•
M)'I the~ upbeat flerd&.
It w.i't hltd b Patig to
accept tberoa.ot·~ .. becl•• ldD ringing ID hll een
weie the c:ommenm by Mdiy u
they partied In the aftalDl!h of
the vlctoty tNflt Wllconlln.
McKay coDan!d Fet1fg fn the
middle of &.dvidel, )\Ill when
Ibey thought they might pt
cbewect out for bebavtor outllde
the bounds of .lhlrt md del,"
and laid. '"Yome the future of SC
football."
Fertig ababt his bead.
rec:aDiD8 the moment. •1t was
one of the gra.t motivadonal
speeches I've ever bad."
McKay let Fertiga 1apeb go.
turned. and proceeded to ask
Ferdg's girlfriend. Nancy, for a
dance.
In due time Fertig and his
friend, Nancy. would become
man and wife.
So game time was
approaching. Mater Dei High
product John Huarte, who would
be named the Heisman Trophy
winner in a few weeb, tuned up
with one of his favorite receivers.
future Rams star Jack Snow, on
the other end of his aerials. And,
lurking in the shadows of the
lrish defensive line. was Alan
Page and his allies. who had
allowed eight touchdOWN in
nine victories.
Clearly, Notre Dame was the
No. l ·ranked team in the nation,
and rightly so.
What remained was 60
minutes on the Coliaeum dock
to validate it.
And just enough dme for Fertig
to have his life cbanpd.
Next week: USC footbaB began
in 1888 and, over the course of 76
seaaona, just twk:e bad the
1rojlm beliewd they bad played
the game of their lives: A 16-14
victory at Notre Dame In 1931.
Game 6 of this annual series, and
on New Year's Day In 1939 when
undefeated and WlSCOred upon
Duke fell in the waning moments
to an unlikely pass-catch
combination known as Doyle
Nave to Al Krueger, 7-3, in tbe
Rose Bowl
Uttle did this Coliseum crowd
of 83,640 know what lay ahead.
•ROGER CARLSON is the fonner
sport.a editor fOf the Dally Pilot. He
can be reached by e-mail at
rogeranddorothea@msn.com.
SCORE IV QUM1ERS
Orange Co..t 7 8 8 o -22 CerrttOe o ,, 1 e -'Z'1
FltST QUARTER
OCC -P9dille 2 Ml (Klec*ner lddcl,
0-M.
SECOND QUM1U
C.-Brown 12 run l..18tnee ltlc*I. •:21.
OCC -'9dil18 7 run lkic* f811edl, 0:21. c.-CtlQWtMm 33 peea from 8rown
(J8mee kic*}, 0:13.
MROQUMTER
C..-Ollvtr 44 peee from Bfown ,....,,_ kic*), 13'.37.
OCC -IC)edow 21FG,1*-0CC -~ 5 ,_from
....... .,,.. flMed), 5:0l
f(g1'ff QUMTEJt
C..-Jotln8on 4 ""' (PMt Wied), l:M.
A-IOOl•l
ooc .. ,...., ... 211>1; .....
... ........ 14; ..... eel N; °"""9. 2-1.
Oii' -.lcltwoft. ..... 1 TD: "°""" 1N2., TD; ........ , .... ..........
=.-l::..,.~~
UCI
CClllllued tam Bl
dlldt tD 8'Q.
~18 ......... ..
-· lfll ... ... ...................
(32 Of88). ·rm an rm ...... ane.,.,. (~ -..i.· G1ols
llid. "'I wililled to cane out and
hlM •aood ~ bothin-~ and~ua
• teaQl..
Nnior newcomer Aaron fitz.
(§!Dld. a trlnl6=r with ltops at
WMhlngton SCate and Poitland
Sia. before playing last eeuon at
a community coUege In Thxas, had
a game-bf&h nine aaaist& He also
showed anippecs of being a aita-
tyst fur what lbtglw believes will
be a more up-tempo offensive ap-
proadl.
"I tbou&ht Aaron Wl.1 eft'ective
at times in the middle of our break. .. Douglasa said.
~ whose only poinlS
came on a tea>nd-half three-
pointer, waa1't the only newcomer
to mab an impresllon.
Darm1 FeDa. a 6-7 true fresh.
man hlt 2 of 3 from the field and 3
of 4 from the line for seYefl points
and also collected six rebounds.
Adam Metelski, a 6-10, 270-
pound junior transfer from a
r~ community college. had
eight points and dwe boards.
while jun.ioc JC transfer Shamar
Armstrong WM 3 of 6 from three-
point range to account for his
nine points..
Palrlck Sanders, a redsturt
freshman. had four poinlS and
rwo boards and 6-9 sophomore
Andrew 8rucbler chipped in one
point and three rebounds.
·For having seven new kids
who have not played a ~ with
us, I thought that was pretty
KOOO... Dougms said ·it's the
t.>ady season and there are some
things we can improve on. Rut I
thought we played with energy
and I thought we showed more
quickness on the perimeter than
we had la.st year ...
UC Irvine's Patrick Sanders (24) puts up a shot over Simon
Fraser's MeNyr1 Mayott Saturday night at the Bren Center.
The Anteaters' aggressive man-
10-man defense helped hold the
visitors to 25% shooting in the first
half (7 of 28).
UC Irvine's Jeff Gloger looks for a shot past Simon Fraser defenders in Saturday's exhib1bon game.
Bot after a Gloger follow shot
put the Anteaters up. 56-33, with
14:13 left in the game, Simon Fra-
-.er (2-9) began finding some of-
fensive Oow for a 9-2 run.
"Th~ time of year, it's hard to
-.ustain that defensive effort for a
whole game, .. Douglass said. "We
had ii early. Then, we had to em·
phasi7.e it again with a couple of
timeouts and I thought our kids
responded ..
wrs -The Anteaters en-
1. ountered a depleted Simon
I raser squad that has seen five
c 1f its top seven scorers from last
-.eason quit the team since June.
Uan head coach Scott Clark
has also taken a leave of ab-
~ce from the program, leav-
ing assistant RJch Olamben to
guide the school's nine available
players Saturday, one day after a
97-48 loss at UCLA ... Among
the annoUllced crowd of 889
Saturday was former Anteater
guard Mike Efevberha, who"'""
dismissed from the team 111
June ... Aho on hand wa.-. Bill
Czech, who coached f-elJs ..ti
Fullerton I ligh .. UU play.., (.di
State Loi. Angeles in another
home exh1h11ton game fhur'
day at 7:05 p.m .. before 111H·nin~
the season Nov. 19 a1 h111m•
against Cal State Do111ingu1·1
Hills.
Exhibition
UC Irvine 14, Simon Fntaer 62
Simon fntM<,-Christensl'n 11
Ch1r1eton 10, Mander 19 Mayou 10,
Maciver 8. Shab1b1 2. Zw1err1tw1~ 2
3·pl goals Mander 5, Maciver 2,
Charleton 1, Christensen 1
Fouled out Charleton, Unaegbu
Tec:hn1C11ls -None.
UC ltvin. -Ethington 14, Metelsk1 8
Gloger 22, Schraeder 16, F1ugerald
3, Fells 7. Armstrong 9, Sanders 4,
Brudner 1
3 pt. goals Schraeder 4, Armstrong
3, Gloger 1, Fitzgerald 1
Fouled out -None
Tedlnlcals None.
Halftime -UCI, 42 21
A Special Edition of Newport Beach Chamber of Commerce Lookout
!Advertise in the Official Christmas <Boat 'Parade
& 'Ring of Lights rprograml
AJJ/iutin Dim:~ ,lkcern!wr 4. 2004
~Christmas Boat Parade is almost here! N-~ the %th y.:ar, th•
~ diemcd ·~ W..,.,.,...,"will run from~ 15 -l!J.
The ~ l.,,.,,,., Hilt'Hr a; ""'1w .a..i.,,...... r Jtn.i •I
Loi'• A.,,... will be mailed to all Newport~ Chamber of
Comsnenz manbcn wl be ddiveted co mott thaft • ., IM..11"'6.
wich the ,_,.,.on,£• ... D. •tw' a1N Mdidoml bonus
dimibudon will be milable • numenu lites during the pluW
includi. MtU&oiK J'CICIW'llftb
UC Irvine's
Aaron
Fitzgerald
(3) drrves
the ball past
Simon
Fraser
defenders in
Saturday
nrght's
exhibition
game at the
UCI Bren
Events
Center.
f'HOTOS BY
S ff VE Mc CRANK
DAILY PIL 01 UC Irvine's Greg Ethington (42) goes up for a shot in the key
against Canada's Simon Fraser Unrversrty Saturday nrght
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Index
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& MISC.
GARAGE
sAl.E
1111-1770
... -
--.
...
IOOS-1510
'.
BUSINESS &
FllWKIAl
M&SISO
·~
I , I
EtfTERTAINMENT
Si*dal
E1nts_ _ 1310
I f OUAL HOUSllG
: OPPORT\lllTY
' 11 ·ctl t 1 llP ..-rt\lf'tl1S • •r"" 1111 f1~W~PJJH'f t\ t 1 I to lhe I "d~r al Tt1.u~11111. At I nl IY68
J l!lt'111tfl wfur h
,. • •I o ll~Y.°'I tu
I • tt1·-.. Hlr' prt'ft>r
t' h 111tf,.tfluri •H
IUlllll 1,h •fi h.r t 1J (JO
I ,t H It> ·la •llfl ".(tA
e lu .lp f,u111ll,tl ·.1.11u-.
• tf I II fl '''!lo' n UI rtll f ' t 1fl '1 11 ,a.; .. iny
' , 11 l•t • , .... 11m1t.1
0 ftt tJ1't lllllHhtl Utll
.. ''"'~''' IPl'f Wiii oot
9'.,,;11t.4t I • t~(lf Joy
r 111 t Uu nf f1H tPdl
,, , ~;lq h '" '"
tll'•f t Ph• 1.1A-Our
... f " ..... ,. hy'
1
111• I lt1.1I 111 r1wl'il
1•lv• 1 ti 1•11 111 Hh
I II f. ,., ' ·•-·HIJbljl
fl t tfll tf I 111111flUnth . ,.
101vl ''" •" d1\
•1111 1h1Jt1 ' tH tOllJ f,lU j~t I 1100 JI '4 1!'1'K.1
flift1ons 1483
:WANTED
.\NTIQUES
~(det Style Furniture
'?"N05 & Collectobl .. I "-. . : .
SJ6 C ASH PAID SS
2305--2490
HOME
FURNISHINGS
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NEWPORT
CO NSIGNMENT GALLERY
AHT10UES a cou..ecnBLES • lJPSCAl£ FURHmJRE
PW«:>S a ART
• lfrwl I'""" lt,,~l1U'd
• \it \hk llou.sd .JJI>
ot A \II Ill Y OL I \
• (In• l'uu or I ru1rc I ~me
• C •in••t<••mcno .\uq>ecd I h ill
•I "•" \.\la .1zp1 Appr.uu t.
• ll<ond..J & I .1<1 nlt"d
• k~ \CJ r I FRI ~\).A' ~l(()N rAi.~ \HOWllOOM
• In< .. ,u \In.. I 11.J uf 'l'l 1-wy
TOU.FREl
1-888-434-0722
9•116~(J 4970 , .. 414 0722
1941 NEWPORT BL. COSTA MESA
Tobi. w /Leov .. , to1ble
pdds. & cha11 s. low
hulth, RflOd cond $600
(9'9) 515 37/4
Buslnm
Oppoftunttles
Balnemland
4245 ~UNCH mu -Restdefl---... -,.i«-R____ CHAaM H . Spac10 u~
INI{"' etpanded J8r 28a, 1005
Fountain Valley
oFriance/boUdllo/sort. ot iwadl!$ -kllrlwl C. windows. romantit •Acqu1s11ton/dnelopment corner Fp, scraped eel.
loans P'Jl&O floors. ffench doofs.
0Conslrucl1on/permananl
loans
(Sriile Close)
eClty l.Jacson/plann1"1ZDllfnC
•Brol!ers LJCeflse #00473888
eCcntradlr lanse 1!>478'
<.IS,... Mmill UC ..,.. S1llD
2nd Trust Deeds
Available for NewPort
Beach Owners wi1h Substantial EQulty Loans to S5 million
No Brokers. Direct eapttal. Fast and Easy
MIA I G"*' lflC. Ml 72t-1MO
~.CO> Coldwell Banlter
Beachslde 714 968-1200
IMMAOaANT 2 STIMY.
~ 3br 2ba. -.how
stopper 1s loaded
w/l.IPll'acle:i newer root
rol up pap door . .U.m ~ $500.IXX).S6.J>,QX) Cal
Coldwell ~-Beacm;de 714 968-1200.
Hurctngton 8tlch
UNCH STYU l'OOL
HOMI. Brke lo beach &
h1tb0f Uperaded 4br
2ba. sin&le story homP
w/cer1m1c tole k1tch
clti, $4)atlOUS LR wkoty
frplc , L& bHky11 cl
w/pallo & iep 1ra•.sy
area $539 .0 00 c.11
Coldwell Banker Bu ch
Side 714 968 1200
JEWEUIY/
DIAMONDS/
PRECIOUS METALS
ffalldllsa 3I05 l'ftUIKDCIAl. ----""""'9U1
D•T IAG flXlll. Op-
por tun1t y knocks r ur
rently lh1s home •s ' 2
sty S br 7 ~b d
w/approved plan~ lor
conversion into hURt
duplec Amu1nie polrn
t1al• P11ced @ Sll~ 000
C1ll Coldwell Banker
Be1ch"de 714 !168 1700
Coost Col" NHck
()Id Coon st Cold, silver .
1ew~lr y. witches. anbQues
tOllK hbln 9'9 642 9448
Cats
~~R~~ PROPERTYFOR
M&M VfNOINC ROUTfS SALE 4500
WITH LOCATIONS ONLY
$999S l 800 914 9980
#I CASH COWi
90 Vtnd1n1 Mactunes in
JO lot ahons $9.995 Co1tt
Now' I 800-836 3464
COSTAIESA
524 W 19th St. 1or S1!11e1 lime.~ 714.317'6.DI
3610 (est Sl4e CM oflc
lt...ty to 1.-..dt new ~P~~e appro1 400sf.
E BUY ESTATES 11"' Ado11t11>n SAi 17 4 00 l'•l'.n1.11t Costa Mt!Sll
product unlllnfted pol1 179 Cab,,llo. quiet. $650
enhal tnvPSler/pertner to Marc.~949 fl.42 5171
S5ll\ Oan 949 'llJ 6916
fUUlOUS SUttf CITY
GIANT Huge Jbr. 2 ~'>•,
upei.de d do wnto wn
be1u l~ U•• dwnod
floor' t us tom paint
w/des1aner tau• ftn1\h
indoor Sil• walk lo
i-:tv'downtown $9'JJ CO>
Call ColdwPll Bcinkrr
Beacns.de 714 968 1200
1
1/th & Su1>er.01 <Ne•t
'" Ml .hdf+. 1 949 «t'i I 1l77 .1N:1 Vob!l.V\ ~ --
aftlmot..etwon.Of'g
I Oo~-. On flnp
'149 644 7l/9
OUAllTY IUTTINS & CATS! "'°" f l)I Jn l'INdtt Homes I Mo ". hqled. Blond I esled. I i.J f 'r l'fTlUT1 I llnlt. Na.I
... "' Shob OPwolrmed &
·" llfo.td ttAl. lH GUN!AN
I IH Week~ 12 4
IRVff S1'£ CTRUM r ASl«JN ISi.NC) --------'I 1 AllY KITT INS ho4
•,.,lid ...,f/11Y DonllJons 1505 r .. •·""d Mt>mo checlts
ll,ir;y & ~~Finl"
'"", 10126 111111 pwht rac D Jl. (117 I 'tit} Commnty Alwrwtl
Nt~W!:A PO Soi 89il
Now.opor1 lleildl. CA !l2ffJ8.
Flltnd 1s10 MISCB.1.AHEOUS
MERCHANDISE I
HJillfo CAT. •hort
ha\....I. white & ll"•Y
•p ... ches, Santo A-
H~h. nr botltbay.
9~ 463 7746
AP,PUANCES 3050 , 1 4a iftfh Sub 0 -
,,, 11•.w al 1 nnr1'11nn w1U1
11~1~ Slf!IJIJ h'
11949)'31 4019
I I l SEll
: .-nu• unwanlftd '''Ill\ thrnu11h tl.ns1f1ed
Mlscellaneous
MeRhand1se
I~ C'.M 1a'/IC. salt WIS
frJi l.arii. <UlloTI bme,
.a., ol M rad<. lilf\
l orab. ~. Clllllr &
Wmoir Sil TI0261 <M>
LOCAi ROUTE NU SAi lS
M.ilte $100t< r~stoclt1n1
in sl0<~ dowlays lnven
tory t111nin1. lemtOfy
and support $13,950
1nvestmf'nt 888 lo48 6889
usown GOlDMiHft
60 vendina mat hinest
eacellent louuons. •II
for $10.995 800 234 6982
HOMES FOA SAi. E
ORANGE MOO
COUNTY
UPO•ADID SPACIOUS
SlNGU STOllY Sweepm1
COl'n« 1rounds 1n p11ma
tr1cl loc 4br. 2ba. new
& up1r1dad k1t ch
w/iu1n1te counle<s. new
wood/tile floor1n1.
pl1nlllton shuller&
Freshly painted 1nllde/
out 1695.000 Call
Coldwell Banlt.er Be1ch
side 7t4 968 1200
OPllSAT·U 1-4 1726 .. ....,...,
&V.•• ....
t..lllle$710i000
lhlptrs.Blllllf• ..
lllP-1-581
C.l •541-2122
OPllUUNOAY 1-4
~ ......... ArH)
· 1&03 S.. Horse C.
4bf 2.5b• 2105 sf hlfhly
UPtrtded townhm. Walk
to allops, sdlls & r9$t
Hup landsc plft backyd
w/tf)a & patio, SVtlue
Rana• Prlcln1 $785,000
$815.0000 Asals12Hll
949 922 7457
Ope11 HeHo Defir
11-1,. 2&0 Vktorl1,
O· 2. Rtr• ()pcl«tunity
ntar Newport Betclll
28t 2 58• Condo a,t)f 01
lOlhf C..,. Co41 Styte
ldNI location. mallf
suite w/••ullld cellinp, HOA. pool, spe Sewrtd
!)fem ..... SJI0.000 Call 9151 "4·8011.
SlACUff GIM Modtl
perfect Costa! eleiµtnce &
only 2 'f'S old W... lo
~ la 2 \ty l'1 pted comm w/pool & Sil• 4br
Jba auest bt C. ba on
Int lewA. l8J9.<XX> CM!
CGldMI~~
714 9681200
UPGUDIS GAlOH.
Sinele Story Charmer
$550,000 R1nch shit
4br newer windows
throu1tiout lresh p•inl.
new carpet. newer roof
Wall to sdlools/shOj)\
Catt Coldwell B1nlt"
Buchllde 714 968 1200
HACH AREA POOL
HOME Ranch style I
stry. 4Br, many up
er•des. hrdwood ftoorln&
in entry. lutdt & hall
way Newly rellled &
plHtered pool S599,900
Call Coldwell Banlt.er
Buchsicle 114 968 1700
lllANOIHW
CUfTSM.AN
Of'DUUN 1-S
J11Newfllw .. M .
OCEAN VICWSU Natth
lliUlll 3 11 bf each
w/OWf.n ba BHU 6"11n
' ltni.tlld 12.395,000 A
Fer1usonlO•Y Proc>•it11 ~ll.-72!>-Bl
hcftint Wotw View
c...do Cre.1t vcw of
Tur none B.isin & <rty ~
Gfaoous 1Mo11 wfl4 hr sec
& tluol m.in 2br
Ol'fN SUN I 4
601 t tdu l'ar1< °'
Uoll •IA Sl,275.CO>
Mar y tou t< iehler
94'}.6'5 2100
~P.w~Really
OPIN HOUSI SAT SUN
2-4 B,. t fwnhm On B12
Canyon Cott Couru 4.4
C1nyon l\l111 d Or r ab
ulous 1so· Golf Cour~e
Views 1111 • den
approi /OOOsl vault
ceil. ~om11ltltly remod
eled SI 19"> 000 Pnv1te
sale. by <1Ai1 91') 718 I :Bi'
.. OaAUl'S IWfFS
TOWNHOMl
N-U•tl ... ler .. 4~ , ...... o ...... ..
2651 Vista Or-49
Op ... SUN 1-S
SalS.000
l'auls ... aoelty
949-U2 6419
EAST aLUFF
21S2 VIiia lltfrodo
llf DUCf 0 FOR QUICK
SAi I 11 4br Jba Peelt a
ho'> "'""W''· of upper Nr•wporl bAy $9W ()()()
Afll Ron f 1neman
JIO ll.fJ 4758
JIO 119 6990
Im ~ lril "' pr" .. ty ~· •• .,,,_ ltlClldrc
"'. I'\. °'""-r ll)tlOm .t<l •I<•">~ owller's phone
ntotCW'I, di: ~ U !Ill
.1ut11 Co1s1 B54S2.87l
Newport Coast ----17Mlru;.t
Ull
FlOlll IOW 6TATt
PBIWIHll.
SS,SOOiOOO
~.. w,.u.w
•s.u...2122
OPBISAT l·l . .....,
0c..•c...1.-
appro• ~sf. 1200 st
lot 61>< 6 lull b1. 2 1/2
ba Offered@
SJ 850,000 By Owner
AKh W1kom11. COfllact
I er11 Walkins 949 290 01~ I Of 949 370 9393
Al.TIU.A
L-o•t price condo with
2300 sf, sated commu
mty end unit with tar1e
w11p around y•rd, bHu
appointed Live 5 min
from beach
$ l l95.000 SUf1n1•
Meurer Plallnum Prop
•••·71S-11S6
MOl(l FOR SALE lood1 c1 ....... .
R1no11•tlo11 complet•
11111 Income ocun
views Cati f()( IPt)t Act
t<111h (949) 433 7963
Reach 80,000 Homes Each Week
For Only $32 per week (4week minimum)
C.I Lorraine at (949) 574-4245
RESIDEN rt AL RENT AlS
ORANGE 7400
COUNTY
Balboa lsJand
llH opt, rear upsta11s
unit I& decll. recent
remod $1350 md ut1I
Av1I n1ow 949 759 4519
SIH 2t.. lltltt C. briltit.
dinrm. hvrm, Ip. sun
deck. ear. laundry fac
$2:?00 9'9 376 9042
Balboa Plnlnaala
Y...ty fir, It• I c ear
l doof to ocean Sl:m'mo
AAl.o 28< I .58a, S 1750/mo A•--.-' aMlty (t4t) 67S-3663
( .. tsW. ~ small
I bf. Iba. non{smkr no
pel$. $900/mo ut11it .. s
included 949·642 7185.
o.4e. ... lbr lb•
w/c11port neM Tri Sq
I 5 m1 from bch, pted,
upstan w/balc-On~ 1975
down w/Wd Iris S9l5
9&MJ~ ~o.com
2br Iba Entslde plft
patio. I c:er pr 25J Coste
Mesa St Sl~mo Mow
Ml HOW act ~73 7800
Mom _._, ainlkl
.. ID _,., 2br U. tnnd
MW hmlley f ~rW'9d,
..... oplD15 ~-91112
-czww.r ... ~ .....
now 2.3.4Br s Pncas
~ from S950 &.T
Whit.I Aty 949-6~
Cozy studio •Pt na
k1tch, new t.WPI. I prt.iria
spc SIOOO 3008 1/1
Balboa Bllld !M9 584 !f>,:l>
"' ... Apt 1/2 bllt. from the belch on l2nd
St includu parl1.1n1
Sl280/mo Call Sam 9'9
278 7905 between 9a 5p Newly reftovete4 21r,
I le upper unit dli. to i-ti ,_ IA*. SltriOmo
~-9'9-629 1280
snrs TO 11.ACHI
Oeluae 7bf 7b1 rondo r ully furn enclo~d ear
$2200 !M9 ~ 4885
21r I le H-, bonus NP Ht s nice l br Triple•,
rm w/wd. new lutchon/ Iara• patio, 1ar +
bath, lrl&. no/amll/pet par~m& space, leund f.c
Sl29S/mo 949 646 8585 Sl500/mo 949 273 8820
,.... I I I I •• VIia ....... 1/1 u,,._
Lile. ,..q, ~ w/l&, Ui15 w/1ar11e, fplr. good
........___ I.ht ... loc1tlon Sl595/mo A&I ....... -. . -•• •••-400·lS20 now~'--~«.
7br. 2ba. EHWde frt Studio A,t. Brand nl!w hse 2 c tar. sm Mde yd
h&hl C. br11ht, w/d $1700 Avail NOW 217 [
•r r us ••••I now $8!JOm 20th 1 949 378 8999 Cdll Phil 949 725 8!13'> ---'•l"-------
•e-tlM [ashidf' 2 SO. Avoce4e, '-"' ot m;nten 2 car 111a1e.
Hwy lrt ht)me 2~ Iba, fplc. ~ho. nice trees
Ip ear wd hkup $1750 ~ ... '42 t541
AVI Pat !M9 71 9 2476
----( M4o, newly remod
Uflltt & !Hight 2•r, twnhm 11 3br 2 5b1,
lfo, new ~1lchen. bath yard. 2 c aar. back unit.
& Berber carpet Car. $2250/mo 949-466 7460
w ·d Sl%0 949 7"15 8!135
Wollt to ltooch 7br
p l,'e!)USly rd>uilt Midi
house i>YI paoo. iw .m
1t.1be. Ip I a ~lld1 snld
lvl. entell11ner~ dream
horTil'I S2IJl)n 9'9.el7 1{6 3
Laec :b ~ 7 p detldl
hm willll to bell 2 Ip,
Ultllrd pd ok 4lO Orct.i
S76i Tep Dec .._..
$.l1Ce 19'.Xl 9'6-981 8*
SIH 2~. ll&ht. 1try
~p1c1ous Ip 111n1te.
t11vert1n~. cust c.1bfnets.
wd hkup, 1•r earoener
no P4lh 1vaol 12 I 12595/
mo yt tse 949·644 1721
I ecws br
2 5ba den, tp 2 car,
1ated comm. pool &
apa Pet Oii 12650
Diane Coltr ano 949-
836 ·3730 nt
..... 4llr 2.5119 h.w,
:Bnsf. pvt !tPI. ~ pool,
ten. qi,.! So Coest "'*o.
l5e S22flOlmo C)tlj. ~
DanaPolnl
B11nd New Custom
Homel P1noum1c Oeean
View• f 1bulou1 3br
2 Sb1 hse Wottl tit 2 C
1ara19 AC. Ip Gor1eovs
1ranih countertopa,
h1rdwd firs. 2QCXH. sf
wd. froe. SJ900 Klein
M1mt 877 704 8649 a
9221 www kleinpfo com , ...........
llf & !Ir'• ........... _, .... ,
1:.L.l~"'ii:l
l.1111111 .....
2br dupln $115() 1ar,
61t Ordll4 SW, sa.., wd. kltch a1>9r1. new
bf•&ht a. clean. sharp, dlc:or. ocn view, ~..l
I 650sf S26r>O/mo no vary qu11t 949-414 """7
pets 714·840 2770
JH•loo (reoli 38r laflllllls
prlVlte location SJ250m ••••••hi 411r, a.,
28r 1in1I• level SJ500m $2300/mo. Move In now
Act 949 632·2191 Act 949-283-010I
0<•-fro•t Wl•ter
••tel 381 2Ba. I c 111
unlurn1shed Reduced to
$1800/mo Auoc11ted
Realty (949) 673 J66J
Y.-fy JI,, 21e, I t
11r. p1t10, $2100 mo Ake ?Br. 18<1 I c 1111
$1750/mo Anoc1alf'd
Realty 949 673 l66J
,~ Jt.. ._._, 1780
sf. Bay11d1e. "' Bison a.
JamborH 800 JOO 7711
$2100 WWW •sw.c-•n 1 l1h4f (...._ 28'.
281. 114t• awls floofs a.
paint Pool. spa, 1ar. r p.
W/d $2l!JO 949 930 7529
.......... .. 2be j»tJO, towmome, .., -. ~
rwnod, dbl Pl. pool mir.t
-$2«Xl 9&331Mi4W
Prtveto "--• on the
wal11 2bf, 2ba, nK.a
patio, f p $2600/mo boat
"" _.... 96-67J.«llB
• Bayfront yHrly 2bf.
2t>a Mn. loft F p 3 bltls
to ltuc h . dbl 111.
r2IDim "" 986'2 919.1
~ 8ldl bey hup Jlrr 3
fuH ba 1•ta4 comm, I t39d condo, 11 patio I ~=sr.:a~
c...e ,,... Jbr 2t>1, 1.41
p1tlo downstairs apl
slncte ,.,... no pelt
$2195/mo IN 4002 Rivet
Ave. 114.-.H..Jt21
a.Ac..-. .. al
... ~. 211 h car.,.,
rwnod, ht <*. l29IJ>
-..... Rh 9'N44-0195
0. __.. & ltgy Vll'W!.
Jbr <'b.J fp l)dhD O•tt
loolo.s er nbett Nr f ~1()11
ISiand UXX1 714 840 fi6Jf>
,,....... c...--~ ......... a. Bayfronto.
~ $liDl'm wlnw1 Ii
mo Wm Poll!. ~ llY'l1
l!llJll). pvt bd1 ~OO'I)
SI, Sle l'erlet I f.i1111ty
home 1111 1•d peh ••
IVa' nQW S3?"i(J, mo Yo•Jil
~ Sy o-16ll P~ St 949 887 131 I ,.-:--:-----
H el..... ''"'elleletl
4bf. ?ba ind lri1 6 w d
421 Tu\hn ,,..,.,1 Nov I
$3700 At t ~· ?1~ O/K'J
404 7b• h~t '°'"' yd w lount<11n be-;t puce on
I !do l\lt. by clubh\r
$.3995/mo 949 61'> 4041 --------,_...... ~ 59-.
Ea witeach C. .., !Yd>
UZ7 l Bab» ~ "*"' I. S7 .IX) Ael 9f) l44 97 4b
AlTIZIA 2bt d .. n ?b•
new r·pt wd lt1V • m1•
level eround flt uuan .\
crty VleW ti: b•<~voJ
$J!JOO 110 480 7964
T-e ve11t 4ht C(>,1
homt cut 111-.,..~ 1000\1
walll lo ..choul i5!IOO .,..~
106 7!>76 640 884 I
SANTA LUCIA
lbr • oHt l t gllf
Ul>fll" oldrd thl u out r o1b
marbio-•nd o-nrtr A.a~
at 5'lnl I notttt $IOXI mo
Stef.11nie Mourer Pl.Jt1num
___!:!oe> !M9 11 ~
CUSS/Fl ED
It 's tlu solu-
tion you 're
searching/ or-
whethtr
you 'rt seeking
a
home, apart·
ment,petor
new
occupation!
STARTING· A
NEW BUSINESS??
The .... NotlcM Depertment et the Dally Piiot Is
s>le••d to pnMde •~1oee to new bu8lnMw.
The ting °' 'IOJI FlcllbJt ~ Nlrnt S.ttment
111n lr1ipcnn& r.tl ....,. We can NYe you valutble tirnt
~ ~ b.,,., to ... Orqe County ~·AeoolOlf
In 8cwD Ana to ... ~ ~ (often rwltnld ...
OBA-•potno ~ Ai•), We wtll pubUth your
~ fWnt Wllnl once 1weekforfourWNks11
~ ~ llW Ind'*' .. ~ ptoof of ~tiOtl
... ~Reoofdlt.•wll.
Wt CM fax, •mllil Of mell you the fom'8 With
~byo&ar~ ...... lwnt.....,,.., • -"' .. -,.,., "° w . .,.,. .... Cotti ......
... _, lfll ofitt llMI I .......... II YG" hM ltl'I
• .. ....... Oil ... (Met 174-4251. w.·,. CIP"'
...................... to &;00 pm. QOllll ....... , ......
,
0
..........
~ ...
MtM$aPIJU&
IEtalOUYOTIOMY!
C1llfornl1 law re· .... tNt contrec· tor• ~fllf JoM ltllt total ll500 or mort
(IMar or mew•> Ill~ by h
Contr1ctora Stttt lkMM loerd ... .. ....... , .... that
eo11t11ctor1 IM~
ttlllr .............
111111 •1111e111&. Y•
CM dledlh ....... of yeur lle11111• contrtcttr et
www.ui.,a.p tr IOO-S21·Cll.8; Ulltl•
cetttM CtttlflCttrl
ltllflll; l•bl tlltt ......... *""°° IMl9tetat111'1-.1r ................. .., ........... .... c..er ..... ..
111111 al!!!!
C1i.i,1•• ... Can Ji..,, IMtM ..... ,....
WJl•k ...
llOO'IS ""' 2o ,_
Jo ... «t .... t o .,.
PCMte llOSTAM Con~
'00 NIW lop. & cyl. 44,7&81( mi, 110,600/obo ~mi
PCIBCltl CA,_ S '04
Pl1tl111u"' cotor, Xlnt cone. wut IMly 1!56.900
hall ••tr-1 ~306-Zl07
,_... tll '00 Hk
ml, Tiotronlc, IUv l46Jl!li Wlll&Zlf04 ~
~Rows~ 8-:tl
IOA11
fOID f -ltaD 2001 ..........
mlllt cond. tul btue. Sf>0'1I ~a. ctwome. lltw, 2111> ~ 30 ~
125.C!) obo 310.281.(S) ::'& ~ ~-::
HOl9A cav -01 ,..,.._ l232.SI> ~
lint COid. 4 cyl, auto,
27hli • .itY«. $15.000 •••••
Pf' 95-640-6275 -------... ,.. ..., aw'*-u· ,. ... ,,1... s ..
Icy! CM tow plcc. pwr ,_... ... pod con· ~ :=..."'"' '!'!!' ~ dit.lotl la Nlwpott Beech
--.,._, --~ Slt,500 ~290-0933
~ llaNnY made
av lfllt>i.. from 20ft ·
I OOft .• win to fest
949-675-4847
Best place
111111 nrld
to anert1se!
ca11 •·=-~~-, .. , at1 itl&42·5&78
I I • Pf • i·I • l1i
, •· i ',11 II t 1 1• .. f
*** 11HiU
11)piaf .... .,,,,... .......... . .......... "= ..... 11 ...... .. -• Olil,.. ........ I -~ ... ......... ..., ·~ .. .. .. •o.•••*-:.atMrt-•111111 .......
il't~L ~--.... ..... _ .,..... .... .... ..,. ·= ... -==:.r .. .. .,.. ............. -.... 17C»• •• ,.
S4 8erb ltvtly -~hi 36Yldl • 98L.Ny'troed
37hll~ 100~af llilfllllOll
39 Wordl d IA'WOYll
40 Ttndtt mMl
41 Qlya.
42 - -thoettrkig
43~tool
44 Torpid
46Gobldng
49 Mine flndl
50PodUn
51 Pwaman.....,..
56Scan
56Reeided
57 Pretoria coin
58 Q\ile lhlp,..
158 Have • er\ICk eo CltaVM member
81 Aloe -
82Not !hit•
63Play~~
64 Has the chair
66Paws
67 Pencil point
680og in Oz
69 Malcet angry
70 Hex
71 Owrc:Nrge, slangity
72 Rax fabric
73 Graduale digs
7 4 Almoet (2 wdl.)
..._TO TNI DUMPtll
714-9'1-1882 AVAIL.AILE TOOAYI IM!M73-!>566
I
101 Aol of....,..
102~ Ind Aueeel
103 Arlt Ind ttd
104 ~and eoundl
1 oe 8iobglcll group
101 Dllgl.ilt am
108Soot
1110ber.9
112Rmon
113 Fez's oounery
117 Rabbit hutch
118 1939 Lugoti role
119 Food &om heaven
120 Good-natured
121 Caui;it yal
1220pera~
12.i Hollooeed It
129 Veldt per
128EnWdlta
130 Hit a home run
131 A Barrymore
132 Eamng Sl1eS
133 Mars neighbor
134 Cut into small
pieces
135 Zeus or Odin
136 Fragrant
137 Watches secretly
DIUVDYrtOS
Movlna • Storap & Oetlvtrlff {!4!) ...... 26J
...
DOWN "°" ,...,.1 ... .--~ ..... 2~ ,., .......... , ............ 110ldl.•• .... ~ 721Gnohln
4 ... "~""'* &a.II•-7SFILMy ..
IFndcy 71 Alw9'.,,......
78d1Mdecn ne.t--..,. -' I IMs.Mv 78Tcnhr9Clllr I I 9~ 79Eellmy I
' 100c>llup ..... 800....bdly I
119'19p'9 82 Sul plec:iee I
I 12 a..ly ecnpll by 83 Rldle fw,... •I
13Tt1a4>rlm 84em.ito I
14~rwallll 85AfliP'~
16Lowbow l7Vtt'1)DO
18 VtnOf'l'ICM '""-88 Fonnll dlfa
17Glve--~ • Ouill ldlrlg
18 ..... flbric 91 Nom9d dwe9rlg
19Fotclout 92 &nlll numeral
20 Shipe' llootl 93 Hindu tNctierl
31~torg. 98 Movie'• need
33 Poet't OOI drllction 97 McM.-OOUlin
35Slgn 98Cottage
38 Notified 99 "Othelo" villain
39 Matterhorn echO 101 [Wt cheap (hyph )
·.ONull and -102 Pet boarderl
41 They need a PIN 103~
43Bays 105 Tied up
44 Comic -Cwv.y 106 Martini ingredient
45 Wall St landmartc 107 Outscored
46 Thin pancake 108 lrrvolunt.wy ~
47 BeloYesd 109 Oanke, in Otpn
48 Supply the banquet 110 Wedding
49 Citrus trees 112Un~ty
50Movequ~ 113 The ltlidc of things
52Tycoon 114 -pants
53 Banded stone 115 Water shde
54 Tangy taste 1 16 Promises
56 Fills the hold 11es:tmis~(2~)
57 Look at again 119 Face
58 Mountain top 120 Toddler s perch
60 Tobacco product 123 Eyebrow shape
61 Slurt slit 125 T'ai -ch uan
62 Cops to a felon 127 Fortas or Vigoda
65 Where Pago Pago is 129 Ooze off
66 Brawler's weapon
17 18 19
' f
,..
/
UDOISLE
$6,HS,000
'·
. ----:---
NEWPORT COAST
$2,219,000
•
.. )
I
BONITA CANYON
$1,749,000
NEWPORT COAST
$1,199,000
CORONA DIL MAR
$1, 191,000