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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1999-04-16 - Orange Coast Pilot.. . SERVING THE NEWPORT-MESA COMMUNmES SINCE 1907 FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 1999 Building a solid foundation for schoolS • In Newport Beach, parents pour hundreds of thousands of dollars into their children's education, but some question equity in the district. J E.....,1CA GARRl"iON W,Pill NEWPORT-MESA -Jarune Schroth's daughter hasn't started school yet, but when she does next fall, Schroth wants her public school to be every bit as a good as a private one. Unfortunately, Schroth said, neither the state of California, which this year will pay approxi- mately $5,500 to educate each child, nor the Newport-Mesa Uru- fied School Distnct, which may end this year with a deficit, can afford the fancy perks of a private school. DOWN So Schroth took matters into her own hands. In the fall of 1997, she and oth- er parents formed a foundation at Newport Elementary School. So far, the nonprofit, tax-exempt organizabon has raised more than $600,000 -more than $1,000 for each of the 550 students at the school. This is m addition to money raised by the school's PTA. Many schools that have PTAs also start foundations because they are not . . subject to the ruJes and regula-Newport Elementary are affluent. tions that PTAs must ab1de by. 1 the school does not qualify tor At Newport Elementary, the extra federal funds. "But the par- foundation has bought booltS for ents here pay taxes too. y,et they the library and pavement for the don't get that money So thank kindergarten playground. There goodness (the founddhon) 1s are aides m every classroom and here.· ennchment classes after school. Corona del t-.1ar High School "I've never been at a school parent Candy Light-Martmez Wlth a foundation before. and lt explained how she and other par- makes a difference,· said New-ents launched that school's foun- port Elementary Prinapal Denise dabon, which m the last three Knutsen, adding that because years has rd.lSed more thdn $2 nul· most of the children who attend lion -about $1,250 for f'dch of the school's 1,600 students ·We started b~ dsking for mon- ey from the pdrents, kind of emphas1zmg, .well gee. some of you have come from pnvate .,chools. so lf you would just give u<; some monev. \\ e could make Corona del r-.tcir 1ust as good as any pnvute <.chool, Light-Mar· tinez said ·And that'~ kind of how 1t qot ~tarted • Becciu~c the foundation, hke SEE FOUNDATION PAGE 8 Man wounded in gang-related street shooting • Shooter, companion~ flee scene after gang fight escalates into gunplay. ~ftilol COSTA I\ lESA A man WdS wounded Thursday evemng m what police are calling the city\ first gang-related shooting th1s year At about 6.30 pm. police sa; a fight between rival gdng mem- bers occurred m front of a houst> m the 500 block of V1c'lona Street. 1ust west of Harbor Boulevdrci One man shot another, Jnd then, as ht.!> VlCtlm lay wnthmg m d pool of blood on the curb, tlw shooter and hls comparuons flpd on foot. heading west on \ 1ctond Street The victim was taken to HOdg lt•mondl Hosp1ldl Presb~1ena.n dnd 1s exp<>cted lo ~un,ve his wound Pohce Oid not reledse the \'JClim\ name, but "did he was a Costd ~ lesa re 1dent and that he IS not d ]U\'POl)e As officers from the gang urut combed the n<'ighborhood m the I cldtk, Chiet ol Policf' Dave Snow- den said he doe~ not beheve the shoollng b a c;1gn of more gang VIOience to com<' m Costa Mesa, whach ld'ot year hdd no gang- n•latPd honuc1des and 1ust one gt1nq relatNI ... hootmg. "-lo, I'm not womed a., fell as tlu... hemg a ... 1qn of more to conw. • hl' sd1d But he turned and gesturPd to duster'> of pMents and clulda•n "atchmg the police colle< t ev1denn' •But what I am worned <1hout 1" that some little tflrl m ttw 'drd 1-. qomq to (qet tut SEE SHOOTING PAGE 8 ooN LEAC"4 /DAI\ 'r I'll.OT A line of cars WI the U.S. Post Office on Adams Avenue 1n Costa Mesa Thursday evening where Bob Adams organizes the boxes of tax returns. The post office had extra help to handle the rush of last-minute federal and state income tax Hiers. Arthur accident case takes new turn Journey's end nears, but one challenge r.emains •Amanda Arthur to hold presc.. conference dlscussing a 'partial resolubon ' of hN lawi,uil against Newport Beach. • EDm>R'S NOTE: Reporter Greg Rashng packed has bags and set sail aboard the tall ship H M. Bark Endeavour on Mon- day. Following is his account of the fears, feats and fun of the 5an Otego to New· port Beach ioumey DAY4 SOMEWHERE OFF DANA POINT -It is my last full ddy aboard the Endeavour, and we are sailing through fog as Uuck as pea soup. There 1S one ltlst rruss1on I must accomplish to turn myseU from a raw recrwt to a hall- decent sailor. It is an obstacle that looms over me every lime I venture onto the main deck. It's called a t'gallant (top gdJ- INDEX CIASSIAED __ ........... -.......... ..1 l O.JEIOOK ··-· .. -·.--........ _ ... 2 COMM8l1S ---·-·-............. 3 POUCI Fil.ES--. 2 PUil.iC MOTICl'S ··----.. -....... .10 SPOllS -··· .. -· .. ·-··--··'' WEATHER w' I 0 I fA I D I c 1=- greg risling lant), the tallest point on the ship. It stands 127 feet high, which tests the fortitude of average men. MOMENT ' ln order to catch the wind, the crew must unfurl several groups of sails. The most tmposing cite the t'gallants on the mam and fore masts. That means we have to do some climbing I left my hiking boolc; at home The lofty peak has become d fonnidable foe for most of us. with only a few haVing the chance to climb and reach the top It's not the fear of heights for me so much dS the fact that there 1s no protf'cllon around you. When our capldm of the tops gives us an order to bring down or Wt a particular sall, we must scale a rope net located on either side of the ship. Some of us sailing novices Coming late to his lifes calling Duncan Stewart expert· enced more m hjs hfe than 10 lives put together, though he'd never admit it. •1 never was cul out to be a success, really,• the d vel- oper, viohnist, community activ15t and poet, once atd. The Newport Beach rest· d ent began his career as a jazz violinist and won a scholarship to Julliard m New York. l lowever, when the Great Depression ~et in, Duncan gave up the viohn and spent yeaTJ trying to succeed in a vanety of other jobs. He taught for 10 yean t>erore making the shift to hotel owner. In the 1950., reaUiing the hotel busln was not hls celling, Stewart began 1portfasblng. Those dreams came to an abrupt end when Stewart realized he was •the Wet Coast's most high- ly unsuc· cessful sportfisher- man." So he beCeme a developer. Over the rnext 10 years. he built many houses that won national awards, 1ndudln9 eo1u .. nergy homes on Ne~ Bay. In 1980 be wa1 nalMCI •Mu-of the Year" by lbe ~rt Harbor Chamber of Com· m rce. • 1111. I ""· .. I 11 oo I I I, 1 I: , ii· I ltd· '" oil ''I" " ol .1. I ,, . 11 .. 1111• ,,, I ... 111••1• ,, ,1 11,. ''· 11!111 •· ,.11. ' lo ' I· . .. 11. I' .. ,. grab the ropes like a scared kit- ten while the permanent crew · mount a qwck dssault on the net. and they are up m no lime at all. I watch every step I make. precariously cllngmg high above the ocean Our hrst stop 1s at the "top" -a platlorm perched 70 feet high Our JOh 1s to mch our WdY out onto thP yardarm using a taught greased rope for our SEE RISLING PAGE 7 II ...... 11 \ (' \11111'-(l\ 1£ Plbt NEWPORT BE..\(.H \ for- mer Newport Harbor 1 {1qh ~hool cheerleader who 'oUeci the nt\ la..,t year. chargmg that unsall' roads contnbuted to a tray1c Irvin~ Avenue accident th<lt lc•ft her m a coma and her cla, ... matP dead, will hold a pies.'> conferf'nn• thi-. mom· mg Greg I\ 1unoi, the ld\\)W for the laxruJ)' of Amanda Arthur, said he plans to clliicuss "the parllal re_,olu- tion of her ccu.e The pres' conference may sig- nal the begmrung of the end of a year of legal wrangling betwet>n Arthur's family and th<' cit} of 72 HOURS 1 KNOWLEDGE IS POWER: The 20th annual Youth E~po \vill run through Sunday at the Orange County Falf & Expo 1ti0n Center, 88 Fan Dnve, Co ta Mesa. Events will be held m all buildmgs throughout the fair- grounds. Hours are from 9 a.m. to 3 p. m. today and 3EARTH DAY FESTIVAL· The! LAB Anbmall will pr nt an Earth Day F b"¥al lrom 1 to 5 p.m Sunday at IL.., CO'!.ta ~ 1 >sa loc:abon, 2930 Bnstol St Th vent will feature enwonm ntal orgam· zabons, live entcrtrunm nt. H •nna pamting, p ychic r adm "· hair ·wrapping and 9 am. to 4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Admi - sion 1s free. For mor information, • I 11!1·1 I 11111111 111 1. I ii• ,t brairlmg. 9 no therapy, rommu· ruty wall·hhng, specu\l m·..,tor 4 '\'I' ft' l., ' I I ' J l It l 1 , ' call (7 t •) 708-324 7. 2PROM FASHION SHOW. Bloomingdalc's wtll pres nt tt t 999 Pro1n Fa hion Show at 3 pm. Saturday an th Dre s Department at its fashion J land locot1on, 701 N wport C nt r Driv , N wport B" ch. Th v nt will katur mOd l horn th danc t aio from Corona del Mar, N wpot1 I tar· bor end na tln high choot . R •rvat ons er required. For mor lnrormat on, call (949) 729-6816. fe<;tiv1ti s and more. Admiss10n J.S free, Por more 1nformabon, call (714) ltltiO 41AWtOOM DANONG: A Vi nn Billi will be pr • sented at S pm. und y ttt the V11lag Crean in N wport Rea h. Th v nt will feature t)ftllroonl danc:lng m 18th ~tury sty win tasting, porve t tting, chamber nsomblel, must<: by the La Primavera hNnber Orehes\r and • silent au~ Admlllion SSO Dence lieaOM will be provld· ed ln the ballroom For more information, caU (949) 886-7~ Amanda Arthur f'.ewport Beach over the 1997 accident. The lawswt claimed that llqht curve , improper banking and a water-slick road con- tnhuh..'CI to the rollover aca- clPnl that lett one pd-.sl•ngl'r dt>dd, two t('t'•nc:1qer-"t.>noush m1trred dJld dn 0.ntue rommumt\ -;,tunned Ten Nt•wport Hdrbo1 liigh School studt'llL., wl'fe on U1e1T way I home from a f>art) "hen thctr 1989 SEE AMANDA PAGE 8 Police nab suspected burglar 2 Friday, April 16, 1999 date book Doily Pilol -I CHICK IT OIT I Bringing the Civil War to the here and naw W bile military technology has changed, today's headlines remind us, sadly, that bloodletting remains a method by which humankind attempts to resolve its conflicts. Just more than 134 years ago, it reveal the human element of war. In "What They Fought For," learn lb.rough letters and diary entries what motivated Union and Confederate soldiers to fight. In "'Hardtack & Coffee," read the story of everyday military life as experienced by men enlisted in the Army of the Potomac. In "Eyewitness to Gettysburg," revisit the scene of a pivotal bat- ceased on American battlefields, when Gen. Robert E. Lee surrendered to Gen. tnysses S. Grant, encting four years of civil strife, which is doc- umented m • tie from a wartime correspon- dent's perspective. CL t HT .IOM the Newport Beach Central Library's new American History Collection. lf you dozed through history class, take a crash course cover- ing the players, politics and events of a defining moment in America's past with "Don't Know Much About the Civil War.• With wit and empathy, this lively narrative looks beyond battles to the human misery the war brought upon a divided nation. Other essential facts and fig- ures, along with anecdotes that bring the dramabc struggle to life, are m "The Civil War Source Book.• In addition, ttus volume ' features biographies of pnncipal leaders, a glossary and sources of additional information. Nearly 2,000 images cb.rorucle the cost of com- bat in "Pho- tographic History of the Civil War,• a monumental collection that provides a dramatic record of bat- tles, leaders and landmarks. Oth- er visual evidence of wartime waste is in "The Photographic History of the Civil War,• five volumes of lilSightful text and rare photos that depict every aspect of armed discord. The collection includes numerous primary sources that Women were involved in the Civil Wax as nurses, spies and soldiers. Learn about their adventures in "Patriots in Dis- guise,• researched from mem- oirs, diaries and letters. Explore how children weathered wartime discord and bow the crisis changed literature for youngsters in "The Children's Civil War.• You can summon ghosts of past strug- gles on bat- tlefields managed today by the National Park Ser- vice. Most are surveyed in "Civil Wax National Battlefields and Land- marks,• a lively companion to historic sites featuring maps, bat- tle arialyses and excerpts from generals' diaries and soldiers' letters. Especially moving are sketches and artwork by on-the- spot observers juxtaposed with stunning new photographs of battle sites and landmarks. There's nothing funny about ariy armed conflict, yet finding humor amid havoc kept many Civil War soldiers marching onward. Their mistakes as they advanced are the focus of NCivil War Blunders," an account of often deadly miscues made by leaders who were allegedly drunk, cowardly and ignorant about battlefield tactics. • otECK IT OUT is written by the staff of the Newport Beach Pubfic Library. This week's column is by Claudia Peter- man. Evita revival at The Center features all Latinos .in lead roles ~Plot ' t seems only natural that a musical revolving around the meteoric rise in popularity of a Latina should be played by a Latina. Yet, despite the counUess productions of "Evita,• which has been translated into such languages as Jawioese and repro- duced in such faraway ~untries as Turkey, Latinos have never played the leading roles in th.is country. Until DOW. In the 20th anniversary production of Andrew Lloyd Webber's musical, which comes to the Orange County Performing Arts Center Tuesday through April 25, the three main characters -Eva Peron, Juan Peron and Che Guevara -are being played by Latinos. While th.is does not drasticaUy change the musical( some of the actors feel their Latino roots lend a certain depth to the characters. Tom Flynn, a Corona del Mar native who plays Magaldy, said of his Latino co- actors, "I think they have a certain fire and voraciousness. They literally have a hot-bloodedness from growing up in Lati- no culture, which translates in the musi- cal," Indeed, producers of the new produc- tion have tried to create a more authentic flavor. The actors correctly pronounce Spanish words like ·Argentina" as N Ar- hen-tina, • and the music has been given a more Latin feel. The revival has also kept the original stage design, which includes an over- head gliding screen and steeply raked deck. One·third of the set was built in duplicate and bas been transported from city to city. The musical is based on the life of Eva Peron, the second wife of Juan Peron, the 1940s Argentine dictator. Evita was born the fourth of five illegitimate children in a ramshackle farmhouse built of mud- bricks and iron. She eventually rose to become Argentina's most powerful woman. The increased interest for a revival of •Evita" is in part a result of the film ver- sion starring Madonna, Antonio Banderas and Jonathan Pryce, which was released at the end of 1997. The film, which introduced the musical to a new generation, received five Oscar nominations, including Best Song. This new orchestration will be performed ln the revival. Natalie Toro ls Just one of the leads ln "Evtta," starting Tuesday at the Orange County Performing Arts Center. 'EVITA' • WHERE: Orange County Perform- ing Arts Center, 600 Town Center Dri- ve, Costa Mesa • WHEH: April 20-25; show times are Tuesday through Friday at 8 p.m.; Saturday at 2 and 8 p.m.; Sunday at 1 and6 p.m. + HOW MUCH: $21 -$52.50 • PHONE: (714) 556-2122, ext. 209 own life and that of Peron. There are some similarities, Toro feels, between surviving as a woman in Hollywood and as a woman in Argentina. •I identify with [Eva) because trying to make 1t in my business as a Latina is tough. I understand what she went through,• Toro said. "I play her like a real person." Esparza's grandfather, who was involved in the sugar cane industry, worked with Guevara. "Che would come to meetings -(my grandfather) wor~ed with Che on a har- vest. He might sit at the table and while sitting there discussing sugar cane, he had blood all over his boots,• Esparza said. "I was raised to hate the guy. My family blamed the guy for the Cuban Revolution turning communist.• As a result, Espana has been able to do a significant amount of family inter- views as well as academic reading when researching the character's personality and mannerisms. He plays Guevara Na little crazier,· he said. "I'm not so reverent about him.• The research has paid off. Esparza's grandfa- ther feels that his portrayal is startlingly accurate. The accuracy in casting Latinos in the lead roles may create more believable characters "More specific stones are more univer- sal,• Esparzd said. " " .. BRIEFLY IN DATEIOOI Center announces 1999-2000 jazz season Natalie Toro, who plays Eva Peron, said that although she enjoyed the film, she was disappointed that Madonna didn't seem to draw on the parallels between her The actor who plays Che Guevara also feels he's been able to draw on his roots. Though H was comodental that like Gue- vara, Raul Espana is of Cuban heritage, it has been instrumental in his portrayal of the revolutionary. U having Labno leads helps the tale becomes more real, then Webber has been successful m tu.s goal of transporting the audience into another world. The Orange County Per- forming Arts Center has announced its 1999-2000 Jazz Club series lineup. Flutist James NeWton will be featured from Feb. 11·12. After mastering a number of reed instruments, Newton took up the flute at 17. He is recognized for experimenting with unique flute techniques found in modem classical music. In tune with Paul Anka This year opens with pianist Gene Harris Sept. 24-26. Blues pianist Hanis bas played with artists such as Andy Simpkins and Bill Dowdy. and has recorded several albums and appeared at the Apollo Theater backing B.B. King. With hits including 'The Tonight Show' theme and 'My Way,' singer/songwriter brings 40 years of experience to The Center with the Pacific Symphony Orchestra Contemporary jazz pianist Brad Mehldau will perform Dec. 3-4. The musician is known for his use of spacious phrasing and single-note fig- ures and phr~ses. Blue Note Records vocalist Dianne Reeves will sing at the dub Dec. 17-18. Though Reeves has performed some R&B and soul, her roots lie in contemporary jazz, Trumpeter Roy Hargrove lakes the stage Jan. 21-23, 2000. Hargrove has enjoyed a strong following from his com- mercially successful albums for Verve Records and sessions with Jimmy Smith on "Damn I~ in 1995. Cuban trumpeter ArtUro Sandoval Will appear March 3- 5. He is a protegee of Dizzy Gillespie a.rid a founding mem- ber of the Grammy-winning group lrakere. Finally, the season will end with trt.u.n.Peter Nicholas Payton from April 28-29. Payton bas received rave reviews from crit- ics and has been compared to Lows Armstrong. All performances are staged in Founders Hall. whith is set up liKe a real jazz club with cocktail service. Tickets go on sale tour to six weeks before each concert. Tickets are available through ncketmaster at (114) 740·1878 or (213) 36>3500. FOr more io.fonnatton,call(714)556- ARTS. I p ut your head on my shoulder,• croons Paul Anka. "Hold me in your arms, baby." Not a day goes by that Anka's songs aren't played on the radio somewhere in Orange County. This weekend, tum the radio off. Instead, catch the former '50s teen idol at the Orange County Performing Arts Center, where he takes the stage with the Pacific Symphony Orchestra. Canadian-born Anka first rut the national spotlight at age 16 with the hit "Diana.• The song was inspired by his neighbor, Diane Ayoub, whom he had a crush on. Ayoub was four years older than him. By age 18, Anka had five hits on the Top 20 charts. His suc- cesses as a singer include "Pup· py Love" and •vou Are My Destiny.• The boy who once took journalism classes was now appearing on Americdn Bdnd- stand. Anka's career has spanned 40 ye3fs. With more than 900 songs to his credit as a songwrtter, Anka is one of the most success- ful artists in the ind us try His credits as a songvrrtter mclude Frank Sinatra's signature tune -"My Way." _ Anka's early years were the sub1ect of a documentary, "Lonely Boy.• A sequel is planned. Anka has made his mark on television and film -both as a musician and as an actor. The "Tonight Show• theme lS an Anka original. It has been played more than 1.4 million times since its debut Anka started his acting career playing a G.I. in the 1962 Academy Award-winner "The Longest Day.• Anka also wrote • WHO: Paul Anica aM thie ~Phony Po ·r-+ : Orange rounty· Performing Arts Center. 600 Town Center Drive, COSta Mesa + WHEN: Friday and Satur- day 11t8 p.m. . + HOW MUCH: S52 to S22, $14 for student/Senior rush tickets + PHONE: (714) 755-5799 the film's score. Other acting credits include "Perry Mason: The Case of the Maligned Mob- ster" and •Mad Dog TI.me" with Richard Dreyfuss and Gabriel • Byrne. Though the Canad.tan is thought of as an American icon, Anka has been a popular per- former around the globe. He has recorded tunes in Japanese, Ger- man, Spam.sh, French and Ital- ian Anka has said he feels an alhmty for Italy, haVlllg hved there from 19b4 to 1966. His Ital~ ian song "Ogm Volta· bas sold more than three million singles ln 1998, Anka made a duet album, singing w1lh Celine Dion, Kenny G, Peter Cetera, Tom Jones, Frank Sinatra, Patti Labelle, All For One and Barry Gibb. Richard Kaufman will guest conduct the Pops through a pro• gram that includes the themes from •ume House on the Prairie" and "Highway to Heav· en." REAPERS HOTUNE • (949) 642-6086 news storits. Illustrations, edito-rial rNtter or edYertlttments herein c.11n be reproduced wfth.. ovt wrttten pennluk>n of copy- right owner. WEITH ER SURF POLICE FILES VOL 93, NO. 89 R«Ofd your comments .t>out the D•ilY Pilot or news tips. ADQRESS our ~res.s 15 330 w Bay St., Cost» Mes., CA 92627 COBRECDONS It IJ the Pilot's policy to prompt- ly correct •II errors of subsUnat. Plus. all (949) 574'4268. m The Ne....-port ~ M .. D•ilv Pilot (USPS-144-800) Is published Monday throuoh s.t- utd.ty. In Newport BNCh •nd CoN M--. subJcrlptlons .,. .v•ll.t>le only by sublc:r1blng .to The llmes Orange County (IOO) 252-9141 . .,, lfHS outside of Newport a..m end cosu M--. ~ptJOnS to the Delly Pilot ...,..,<lbfe only .,. by !Nll for s 10 per month. S«ond de post.tge p.id It COIU MliM. CA. crrtcts lndudt ell tpplicable state end lout taa) '°5TMAS- Tf It Send eddr• cNngea to The Newport~ o.lfy l'ltoc. 1'!0. lox 15'°, CCJIU Mesa. CA92Q6. ~No HOW TO BEACH US ~ The llmes Orange C01Jnty (IOO) 252·9141 ,..,,.,,..... Cl.-lfled (949) 642-5671 Otsplay (949) 642 .... 321 Edhlot1.ll News (949) 642-5680 Sport's (949) 574'4223 New\ Sports fax (~9) 64M170 £-mall: d•llypllot ... rthllnk.net Miiin <>Mc. IUllne Offtce (94t) 642-4321 BuSln. Fil (949) 631-7126 TEMPERAlURES Balboa 78157 Coron. del Mar 79158 Cost• Mesa 81157 Newport Beach 78157 Newport Coast 79158 """ fOlllECAST LOCATION SIZE Wedge ••.••. 2-4tsw Ntwport. • , . 2-4t SW 81ackles. •.•. 2 .... +SW RIYef J9tty ••• 2-4+ SW CdM .••••••• 2~sw 8GATING V.n.ble momlnQ winds et 0 to 6 knots becoming w.st-nof'1hwtsWty et 6 to 10 knots by the INf noon TIDES TOOAY First low 4:07 a.m ...•.•.• -0.6 fil'lt high 10:17 a.m .....•. 4.1 Second low 4:06 p.m ........ 0.4 Second high 10;16 p.m ........ S.8 SAn.DAY FIMlow 4!55 1.m .••••.•• ·CU Fim higtl 11 ·09 e.m .•••••• 4.5 S«Ond low 4;44 p.m •••••••. 08 St<ond high 'O:SS pm.~ .•••• 5 9 ... lW S!AW:M P•tchy morning clouds today with denso fog near the coastline. The t99 should clear by the afternoon, leaving warm, sunny skies. A decre.smg south- westerly sw.111~ delivering sOtS In the waist-to chest-high ..... Winds •rt out of the west 1t 10 mph. Warm WHther shoUld stow with ut threugh the wetk· end. The sun sets to<»y et 7 25 p m COSTA..sA • "-'''--' Avenue Md ~ Street: A stereo and speakers worth S455 were stoleri from a vehkle Ap<1I 11. • FUiierton A~ and Buoy Sw..t: A stereo, speakers. amplifier and cast) worth $560 were stolen from a vehide April 11. NEWPORT llAot I • I . ..._ 80ulevard: A vldeot•~ w•' stolen end the ~mtc • • surrounding the ignltlofl on • vehkle was broken In th4t 100 bloc.k Apnl 9. Oamao-s were iso. • INtne A~: A S300 cellular phone was stolel'I from • patio table In the SOO block Apl'll 10 • ~ awt. "9cit: SOmeone lost• StOO cellular phone in the 1000 blo(k April 5. • Mmll a,.. ROed someone lost his waHet et the Herbor Jus· tke Center In the 4000 bfock •fttr paying a tr1fflc tltket Apnl 12. •• .., AueA .. : TVs. 'Ve.Rs end $Uffboanh worth ssoo Wlf't ~ from • r9tldlnce fn thl IOO btock ~I t. Daily Pilot louJs Urena leans into a 9ounnet taco during the iij, .. WUd & Crazy ~ Tacos" lund- raber for Share Our Selves ln Costa Mesa. The fund-raiser brings high- profile chefs from local restaurants to participate 1n creating fancy tacos. EUSEGEE ~Pb COSTA MESA -Thei:e aren't 1llany places a person could find antelope or Moroccan lamb tacos, l>ut at Share Our Selves Thursday vening, these •wild & Crazy" ~reations filled the plates of clinic upporters. The 6th annual Share Our elves Cund-raiser was an over- ilowing success with standing rnom only as diners lined up to ample the creations of Orange ounty's premiere chefs. Organizers estimated that they xceeded their all-time high -cltlendance of 300 last year. Valet i:tnvers scrambled to keep up with the can. piling up m Share Our • elves' small parklng lot and .iiarted back and forth through lraffic to gel the cars parked "across the street. "Every year it gets a little more crowded -we keep doing the r ight thing," said Chef Paul quicciarini of Robert Mondavi Wine & Food Center. Squjcdarini propared a semi- SITTING IT STRAIGHT +The March 31 Daily Pilot gave an incorrect name and website for Newport Beach-based SBN.COM . traditional taco made with camitas, black beans and pineapple salsa, and fennel and radicchio salad. Other creations. such as ante- lope tacos prepared by Chef Michael Kang of Five Peet restau- rant, were a little more adventur- ous. But there were plenty of mar- garitas and cervezas on hand to help the more squeamish to build up their courage. Chef Alan Greeley of The Golden 1hlftle, who is known for serving up some of the wilder tacos in past years, created a tasty Florida Keys Rock ShriJnp tamale with tomatillo and chipotle fon- due sauce and an exotic wild nas- turtiwn taco, made from a com- mon flower found in the region. The money raised goes toward building a kitchen at Share Our Selves that will be used for food distribution and job training to help people succeed by getting work in the food industry. For Chef Tony Zidor of 1\vm Palms, •wild & Crazy Taco-Tax Night" was a great way to sup- port a local agency. But the evening also allowed the restau- rant to test some new dishes on diners, said general manager Albert Kahn. Zidor created a Moroccan lamb taco with yogurt lemon sauce served with tabouli salad. For Pamela Chozen, a vegetar- ian, Zidor's creation was great even without the lamb. But Cbozen, who has attended the fund-raiser for the last three years, said her all-time favorite was Greeley's rock shrimp tamale. Ninoska Velo, a dental qssis- tant at the Share Our Selves Clin- ic said the tacos dished out Thurs- day were a far cry from the tradi- tional ones she's used to making at home. Velo said she savored the smoked duck taco made by Chef Laurent Nechin of Accentsffhe Sutton Place and looked forward to trying to make the mango and papaya salad served by The Yard House chef, Carlito Jocson, at home. "It's different,• Velo said. ".But they're good: THE Daily Pilot C la<,<,1f1ec1 ( ommunrty M.1rlwtpl.1cP I Grab Your Hat & Enter The Old West Costume Contest! Dre~s up like a 49'er from the Gold Rush days and be on the street Friday at "High Noon" for a face-off. The most authentic, most creative and siJJiest costumes will be awarded ribbons and prizes. Then, mosey on over to the Paint Your·Wagon Contest beginning at J PM each day, and see a Panning for Gold exhibit, plus other Gold Rush themed attractions. Enter contests up to 112 hour prior to judging. More Fun & Features Jazz Festival • Junior and Senior High School jaa bands will perf onn and compete rriday morning. Pampered Pet Contest .. Sunday, 1 OAM • See pets being judged in . categories of general appearance, furry coat, gigantic eye • happiest grin, best tail waggcr, owner look- alikes, silly pet tricks, and morel Wiid dence Experience • A hands·on tlispluy of educational, entertaining and quirky o;cicncc cJthibit~. f rr,t·nttd b.' lmugmntwn Gall~ry Friday, Sah#day & 5unday April 16, 17 & 18 "Days Of Old & Panning For Gold" This year's fun-filled family event pays tribute to the CaJifomia Gold Rush, and you can discover a mother lode of great entenainment. themed features and fun contest , plus an educational fair that focuses on the positi ve accomplishments of Orange County youth. FREE ADMISSION & PARKING! Hours: Fri. 9AM-3PM, Sat. & Sun. 9AM4PM ~ Friday, April 16, 1999 a A week of biblical proportions I nteresting week. Taxes. Earthquake. Plague. Pesti- Jence. (There wasn't really any plague or pestilence. I made that part up. I just like tbe sound of "earthquake, plague, pestilence.• Very bibli- cal.) First, taxes. It's always so heartwa.rming to see April 15 come and go. Post offices stay- ing open 'til midnight, the camar~derie of shared misery, the joy of sending your money to strange P.O. boxes in Fresno and Sacramento. A little bit of Americana. I must say, the IRS has taken Congress' mandate to become kinder and gentler tax collectors very seriously. If you have a chance, visit the IRS website. Talk about a make over. Lighthearted, great graphics, even a few jokes. It's like all of a sudden your CPA got a personality. I'd still rather deal with earthquakes. As temblors go, it was wimpy, but a quake nonethe- less. Maybe you felt it, maybe you didn't. Wednesday morn- ing, 11122 a.m ., 3.4 for you Richter fans. Ever wonder how the Rkhter scale works? It's simple. It was named for, well, a man named Richter, I think, who discovered that earth- quakes could be measured with a logarithmic scale from zero to -forget it. This IS too hard. Here's the deal. Thiee and below, you don't feel it. Thiee to five, is the difference between nervous and devout. More than five, you wish you'd been a better person . The temblor was 6.8 miles down. I don't know if that's a long way down, but it sounds like a long way down. When did "tremor" become "tem- blor,• by the way? It used to be tremor, now it's temblor. Who decides these things? There must be an 800 number on common usage that I don't have. "Common Usage, thanks for calling.• ·rs it tremor or temblor?" COMMENTS &CURIOSITIES "Temblor.· "Thanks.· "No problem. Hdve d nice day.• Like most things m Ille. this earthquake business is all reld- tive. My wife was home at the time, l was in Irvine. She saJd It was as big a jolt as the Northridge qudke I didn't feel a thing. I found out later it was centered beneath Fa1rv1ew Park (that'll bring those protect- ed species to full point), d few hundred yards from our house Three point four lS no b1q whoop, asswning you're not standing on top of it. It's hke the definition of a recession vs a de pression. When your neighbor gets laid off, it's d recession. When you get ldid off, it's a depression. Ever wonder how eMth- quakes work? It's sunple. The surface of the edrth lS made up of these huge Uungs ccilled teu- tonic plates, which I dssume are made in Gerrndny There are other things that happen deep beneath the surface, all hdvmg to do with vulcaruzed larva and, I don't know, dromonid or something that rushes to the surface and rndkes the teutomc plates bang together, which causes chipping, or in laymdn's te rms -"earthquakes." It's been a while smce we've had a good kaboom rdtUe rdt- Ue. And, yes, I know there are thousands of tremors, temblors, whatever, every day, but we ju t don't feel them. I'm very good with science, you know. Earthquakes are fascinating, though, assunung you live through them Primal forces, uncontrolled and uncontrol- lable. A bnPf remmder trom Mother Natwe that our place on this earth is cl lot more tenu-" ous thdn we rrught think It's dlso d big part of the Southern Cahlorrua mystique. You go-to Gary, lnd., (don't wor- ry, y.ou don't rea!Jy have to go there) and mention Southern Cabfomia "efiltbquakes• are m the top three responses. In fdcl, it's a lot of fun sccmng out-of- town guesb. I like to rock the dumer tabl~ with mv knee., then drop my fork and whisper, "Oh my god, this lS it.• The far- ther awd} they're from. the bet- ter 1t works Not everybody wiU think 11's funny, but it's worth a try when the conversation sags On the other hand, this whole issue of predJct:mg edrth- quukes slnkes me dS a little odd Once or twice a yec1.T, there is a bredthle::.s news report dbout scientists who are on the brink • of pred1cuny earthquakes. Uh, ok The re you dre, cnus- mg dlong on an otherwtSe plea-.ant afternoon when the traJhc reporter says. "Sig alert on the 405 north al Bol.sa Chlcd, Caltech predicts a 5.2 earth- qudke somehme lD the next hour dnc1 Wdtch out tor d ladder-.: in the No 3 ldne on the 5 south • at Culver Back to you Bob ... Other than hdVU19 a whole n Jot of time to pick a door Jdffib, 1ust whdl are we supposed to do? Ledve? Duck and cover? Assemble m qrou~ of 10 m the , nearest pdrk? I don't get it .: Death, laxes, earthquakes Don't worr;. be happy. there's no WdY out Stay calm, do what ,, I.hey tell you, tune in to those traffic re ports I gottct go _____ n • PETER BUFFA IS a former Costa Mesa mayor His column appears Fri· days E·mail him at Ptr84@AOL.com . Contemporary Sportswear for Women • !J::::,ei'f}ne't :J.e.ara • e eof'futo't dw£ahu e dpo'lfiWW..'L de.pawJE.i e ONE REGUI.AR PRICED IT M 1burs, April 15 -Sat, 17 1024 Bayside Drive • Newport Beach Bayside Dr. at Jamboree Rd. • ' ~ Friday, April 16 1999 . . District moving to meet priorities • Superintendent updates school board on progress \n achieving goals set by each district department. NEWPORT-MESA One of the hrst things Supt. Robert Bar- bot did after taking the helm of the school dJstrict last year was work Wlth '>Choo! bodrd members to come up Wlth goab dnd pnori- ties for every area of every department m the dJSlnct Tuesda~ night. Barbot present- ed board members Wlth his hrst update on di<;trict ofhc1als' progress m ach1f'vmg those goals. Though the vast maion ty of goals m th£> 3 1-pdge report dre stiU "m pro~JrPs-.," bod rd mem- bers neverthl'lt•ss Sdid they were •thnJled." "In the many years that I've been on the board, I've never seen as complete a report," said Martha Fluor. The report, which was accom- panied by hundreds of pages of supporting data, laid out exactly what district officials want to achieve, and bow they intend to get there.. . To improve students' reading, for example, board members have applied for and received more than $400,000 in state grants to train 800 teachers to help students read better. Julie Chan, who has a PhD in redd..lng and even a license plate that celebrates the activity, has given up all responsibilities except working on reading. She plans to post reading standards in every classroom and is writing a brochure to tell parents what their chtldren need to know. r: Doily Pilat ' Barbot sd1d tlw qodLS would help "keep the d1stnct on track.• They mclude everylhrng from 1he genefdl, such as "increasing student achievement with a spe- cial emphasis on reading dnd ~elling, • to the specific, such as llinng d educat1onal technology 'director. In addition, the district has offered teachers the chance to study for a master's degree in reading in the evenings, and holds monthly meetings to dis- cuss the subject. Local students learn CPR as part of course that has already saved lives "We've takt•n on a big chal-~enge, • Barbot said, dddlllg that ~us 1ob Wds to "establtsh • and "monitor" the godb "It doesn't medn we'll accom- plish 100 • ... " he sd1d "But we'll accomphsh a lot more by having 'them than we would Ii we didn't qave them" I• To hire an educational technol- ogy director, meanwhile, district staff have interviewed three can- didates, and intend to hire some - one very soon. Board President Serene Stokes sdid she believes the goals are dlready making a difference in the classroom. ·When you go into schools,• she said, something is "different .. you notice somethlng good is gomg on." ~fib NEWPORT BEACH -The instructioJ)S came out loud and clear. "Miss Johnson's choking! Get down there for 10 seconds; look. listen and feel," the lifeguard commanded. Miss Johnson wasn't really in danger. But if she were, the 30 sophomores from Newport-Mesa. high schools would have been able to help. You DESERVE THE BF.STm COME TO TUSTIN LEXUS This week, the students par- ticipated in cardiopulmonary resuscitation, or CPR, lessons. The lessons may have looked 4Jld sounded like other CPR courses, but the teaching tech- niques have come a long way since the old days, when 30 stu- dents huddled around one plas- tic mannequin, said John Blauer, communjty relations officer for the Newport Beach Fire and Marine Department. S12.EACH THANK YOU MUGS WITH• MINI-MUFFINS OR • CHOCOlAn CHIP COOKIES Now the students are ~ off with one mannequin each and one teacb8r per eight pupils. For two years ago, in an effort to increase commUnity ~. sophomores at local high scboo1I have taken one-week counes devoted to CPR, water safety education and 911 emergency access training. "The first time kids don't want to touch the mannequin,• Blauer said. •eut once they get used to doing it, they begin to focus more on the procedures, which are very simple. They are able t o practice the proCedures, and our hopes are that they will be able to save someone's life.• The lessons have worked, lie said. Last year Fernando Enrlqu~. a studen t at Newport Harbor High, saved his 1•y88J'- old brother trom choking. It's just such an incident that the students should be prepared for, said Nerm.tna Topalovic, who recently moved to Ne~rt Fire Dept. opposed t o millennium fireworks The Costa Mesa Fire Depart- ment is recommending that the City Council not allow the sale or use of fireworks for the millenni- um celebration. The council had asked that the j .. J I I echiCetton c1ua Wea11~ AIMn9 lia. NewpGl1 HutiOr tJb ! freeh••n Amy Roa pndlcel Cl'IL .... nnlatlves trom tile i NeWpqrt ~Pin aad MadDe.,..,....... were OD baDd to j demonstrate and ...,.. ......., .. lie con9c:t CPR pn>cedure. l Beach fiom Germany. In the earthquake-prone state l •If som~ne becomes unoon-of California, safety education j &cious, I can help them.• abe cluw are well worth the effort, 1 1 said. Blauer said. Topalovic said it would be •it's going to help our whole j useful to have a simililr pr~am dty be a little safer,• he said. I at schools in Germany. 1' •'Jbia is a small step in prepara-l "They don't have it in Uon for a big disaster. The more 'I school,• she said, •you have to peQpJe that are tra:hiea in s&fety, take classes and pay for them." the better.• BRIEFLY matter be looked into because a state bill was passed last year allowing the sale of fireworks from 9 a .m. Dec. 26 until 12:01 a .m. Jan. 1, 2000. Cities and counties would have to adopt an ordinance or res- olution for the sale to happen. Fourth of July fireworks ~e usu- ally allowed in the city on the h<l iday from 4 to 10 p.m. J FRl·I· 1{1·('()1{1)1·1) \1111\l l,\1,1 1'1 111\\l \lltl' Because the millennium cele- bration occurs at midnight, F~ Department staff recommend~ against allowing the use of fir~ works in the middle of the nig~. Staff also said they doubted allowing the use would cut down on the number of people dis- charging w eapons into the sky, which was part of the original intent of the state bW. 2-t 11< > l . RS < . \I. L t SOO l JI 7 -S<•JO 46770 Your &isting Jumbo may oow be a Conventional Loan. If it is-Refmaocing may save you $$$$. The Fire Department presen~ ed its case this week at a counol study session. The council did ™\t take any action. ,,, 46780 95% EZ Qualifying Loan!> and Other Special Programs That your Real Estate Agent may not know about. 4 7170 Have Lenders Bid for your Loan on the lntemetl A seTVice only a qualified mortgage broker can provide. Put a few words to work for ~ you. Call the A Courtesy of Bill Fallon at The Lending Group PURCHASE (949)7 59-5050 REFINANCE CA of R. E. Llc«IO 110097~ ~Pilot CLAS S 642-5678 Save the skin you're in. Saturday, April 17 • 7:00a.m.to1:00 p.m. Hoag Cancer Center 4000 W. Padftc Coast Highway Newport Beach Join us on Saturday, April 17• for a free bead·to-toe skin exam by a Hoag dennatologist. Limited appointments available. Rn•l'Wltion1 r•qulnd. Call l/800 514-HOAG (4624) no later than 4pm Friday, April 16 to reeerve an appolntmenL W. ·~ 10rry btll we will k wnab~ to occommodal~ wolk·IM. HOA£J9 C~ER CENTER .... I I• I • I ) I ~ . 1' . . JI. MASTEi CHEFS ~ft Wibon Elementary School student Marla Hernandez, 11, giggles. while waltlng for food to be passed around the table at Magglano's Uttle Italy restaurant in Costa Mesa. Chef George Poston Invited 12 fifth-graders to teach them how to fend for them- selves during unsupervised hours of the day on Thurs- day. Above, Poston passes out m1n1 pizzas to students after teachlng them how to prepare and cook easy meals at home. In addition to pizza, Poston showed students how to make tor- Ulla wraps Wied with ham and cheese, baked potatoes and strawberries dipped ln brown sugar and sour cream. KIM HAGGERTY-ZYLIUS • • • DAILY PILOT Friday, April t 6, l 999 $ BRIEFLY Albertson's market Fire Department sets reopening opposes fir eworks .. • I Albertson's in the Mesa Verde The Costa Mesa Fire De~ Center will hold d grand reopen-ment is recommending thdt ~ ing ceremony Wednesday to City Council not allow the sale or showcase the new sel'Vlces avail-u e of fireworks for the milleruU- able at the expanded store. um celebration. • The reopening of the 21-year-The council had asked that the old store, which remained open matter be looked into because dwmg remodell~g. will fedture state bill was passed last year events and a chance to win a trip dllowmg the sale of fireworks for two to New York City. from 9 a.m. Dec. 26 until 12:01 One of the additions to the a.m Jan. 1, 2000. store is a coffee and ice cream bar Cities and counties would located near the store entrance, have to adopt an ordinance or which offers selecilons of Seattle's resolution tor the sale to happen. Best Coffee. Fourth of July fire~orks are usu• The 49,000-square-foot store ally allowed in the city on the hol- also has a new video shop, dry-iday from 4 to 10 p.m. • cleaning station, seafood and Because the millennium cele- meat ·counter, hlm processing bratlon occurs at midnight, Fue center, floral center and wheel-Department staff recommended chalT accessible restroom with agamst allowing the use of fire- baby-changing stdt1on. An· works m the rruddle of the night. expansive meal center offers a Stdff also said they doubted wide vanety of lunch dnd dmner dllowmg the lliie would cut down selections, said Anne Alenskis on the number of people d.i$- Albertson's spokeswomdn The I chargmg weapons into the sky, store also features d Bdnk of which was part of the original America branch intent of the st.ate bill. Does your Rolex need service? ~ RO LEX Bring it in to your Official Rolex Jeweler in Orange County since 1959 for a FREE SPRING SPRUCE-UP For 40 years, we have been caring for the watches of discerning Rolex owners. While you wait. we will steam off the bracelet and ca!:le, polish the crystal and e lectronically check for accuracy of time. This is a "cosmetic spruce-up" and does not include opening the \\atch. This FREE OFFER is good through the month of April. l Nordstrom embezzler gets four years in jail CHARLES H. BARR • Judge also orders Faye Chizuko Itaya to pay about $1 million in penalties. ANDl(f'.W STEVrN HARRI ... llol"1 Piiol NEWPORT BEA Cl I -A woman who admitted to skim- ming hundreds of thousands of dollars from the Nordstrom department store here received four years in Jail on Thursday and was ordered to pay what could amount to more than Sl million m penalties. Fifty-year-old Faye Chlzuko Itaya of Huntington Harbor had plead gwlty to the embezzlement charges after a private investiga- tion by Nordstrom discovered that she had bilked the store out of as much as thousands of dollar!> each Week over a five-year period. In imposing ltaya's sentence Thursday, Orange County Supen- -Or Court Judge Margaret Ander- son invoked a special sentencing provision that allows for an addi- tional two-year penalty when a crime involves more than $150,000. 'Anderson also ordered ltaya to pay 1or the cost of Nordstrom's Investi- gation -more than $25,000 -as • well as reimburse the chain for the $150,000 that the court determined ltaya bad stolen. In addition, Jtaya also will be forced to pay 10°'o interest each year on the unpaid bdlance of her debt under a new state anll- embezzlement law. As a result, ltaya might never mdflage to pay orf the burgeorung debt. "The money went from every~ Uung from vacations and parties to financing the daughter's edu- cation at a private school," said Mark Sevigny of the District Attorney's Office, notmg thdl Itaya did not invest the money m any assets that now can be liqui- dated "She will have trouble paying this off unless the fanuly is willing to come forward with money, and I don't believe they will, since to date, the family has been unable or unwilling. I don't know which, to make any mearungful restitu- tion,· Sevigny said. ltaya is due to report for her sentence April 22 and will be eli- gible for parole dfter two years. ltaya worked at Nordstrom for more than l 0 years and allegedly began c;iphonmg money from the retail chain in early 1992 while employed as an executive secre- tary. Sevigny said she submitted cash vouchers to her superiors with drtl.f1oally bloated requests for employee functions, and then deposited the chlference into her PERSONAL INJURY ATTORNEY .~'.y. :'~-t):'•''•'. Law Offices of John Rapillo (949) 675-5060 Beautify Your Yard! • Stoflcwork, Patlos & BDQI • Waterfalls, Pools & SpeB ·~ ~dalM \Ve have over IJO years combined service ln this area. Our qualitN. creatiuity ancl service are unmatched. Together we will toke <·are of all your lancL';caJ>c and masonry needs. FARNSWORTH GLASSELL MAS< )~1(\" l 'O~ll~\.\·y (714~'34-7744 lk M8M'8 l .o\.~DS<' Pl! ( O~fltA.~Y (949)548..5132 ~ oaimo personal account. She also falsi- fied per..onal expense reports and skimmed portions of employee OOffiIIDSSlCJOS. By the end of 1992, Sevigny said, ltaya had pocketed about $48,000. By 1996, the year before she was caught, she had taken an estimated $187,000. .. Official Rolex Jeweler for ales and Service 1803 We'\tcliff Drive, Newport Beach (949) 642-3310 bady G'®lf. Fine Golf, Tennis, Resort & Active Apparel ' - And, don't miss the $5.00 to $15.00 S.I• bell Lady Gotr slncently •pprec:i•tes your ,-tron•I•· FASHION ISLA D ·ATRIUM COURT ' EWJ>ORT Bt:t\CH (949) 720-1996 ll • • • • • • -, . . ~ . • . . • . .. • • •• 2 Friday, April 16, 1999 CHICK IT 011 Bringing the Civi,/ War to the here and now W tule mllltaiy technology has changed, todays headlines remind us, sadly, that bloodletting remains a method by which humankind attempts to resolve its conflicts. Just more th.an 134 years ago, it ceased on American battlefields, when Cen Robert E. Lee surrehdered to Gen. Ulysses S. Grant, ending four years of civil stnf e. whJch is doc- umented 10 the Newport Beach Central Library's new American Ht.story Collection. If you dozed through history class, take a crash course cover- ing the players, pohtics and events of a defining moment in America's past with •Don't Know Much About the Civil War.• With wit and empathy, tJus lively narrative looks beyond battles to the human misery the war brought upon a divided nation. Other essential facts and fig- ures. along with anecdotes that bring the dramatic struggle to life. are m "The Civil War Source Book.· In addition, this volume features biographies of principal leaders, a glossary and sources of additional inlonnation. Nearly 2,000 images chronicle the cost of com- bat in "Pho- tographic History of the Civil War,• a monumental collection that proVJdes a dramatic record of bat - Ues, leaders and landmarks. Oth- er visual evidence of wartime waste is in "The Photographic History of the Civil War,· five volumes of UlS19htful text and rare photos that depict every aspect of armed discord. The collection includes numerous primary sources that .. .. BRIEFLY IN reveal the human element of war. In •What They Fought For,• learn through letters and diary entries what motivated Union and Confederate soldiers to fight. In "Hardtack & Coffee,• react the story of everyday military life as experienced by me.n enlisted in the Army of the Potomac. In "Eyewitness to Gettysburg," revisit the scene of a pivotal bat- tle from a wartime correspon·- de.nt's perspective. Women were involved in the Civil War as nurses, spies and soldiers. Learn about their adventures in "Patriots in Dis- guise,• researched from mem- oirs, diaries and letters. Explore how children weathered wartime discord and bow the crisis changed literature for youngsters in "The Children's Civil War.• You can swrunon ghosts of DON'T KNOW MliCH ABOUT' m ~~-®-lj -...,~-~L--' past strug- gles on bat- tlefields managed today by the National Park Ser- vice. Most are surveyed in "Civil WM National Battlefields and Land- marks," a lively companion to historic sites featuring maps, bat- tle analyses and excerpts from generals' diaries and soldiers' letters. Especially moving are sketches and artwork by on-the- spot observers juxtaposed with stunning new photographs of battle sites and landmarks. There's nothing fwmy about any armed conflict, yet finding hwnor amid havoc kept many Civil War soldiers marching onward. Their mistakes as they advanced are the focus of "Civil War Blunders,• an account of ofte.n deadly miscues made by leaders who were allegedly drunk, cowaJdly and ignorant about battlefield tactics. • OtECX IT OUT is written by the staff of the Newport Beach Public Library. This week's column is by Claudia, Peter- man. DATEIOOI Center announces 1999-2000 jazz season The Orange County Per- forming Arts Center has announced its 1999-2000 Jazz Club series lineup. This year opens with pianist Gene Harris Sepl 24-26. Blues pianist Harris bas played with artists such as Andy Simpkins and Bill Dowdy, and has recorded several albums arid appeared at the Apollo Theater backing B.B King. Contemporary jazz pi<ln.1.st Brad Mehldau will perform Dec. 3-4. The musician is known for his use of spacious phrasmg and single-note fig- ures and phrases. Blue Note Records vocalist Dianne Reeves will sing at the club Dec. 17-18. Though Reeves has performed some R&B and soul, her roots lie in contemporary 1au. Tuunpeter Roy Hargrove takes the stage Jan. 21·23, 2000. Hargrove has enjoyed a strong following from h1s com· mercially successful albums for Verve Records and sessions with Jbiuny Smith on "Damnt• in 1995. Flutist James Newton will be featured from Feb. 11-12. After mastering a number of reed instruments, Newton took up the flute at 17. He is recognized for experimenting with unique flute teclmi~es found in modem classical music. Cuban trumpeter Arturo Sandoval Will appear March 3- 5. He is a protegee of Dixfy Gillespie and a founding mem- ber of the Grammy-winning group lra.kere. Finally, the season will end with trumpeter Nicholas Payton from April 28-29. Payton has received rave reviews from crit- ics and bas been compared to Louis Armstrong. All performances are staged in Founders Hall. whidi is set up like a real jazz dub with cocktail service. Tickets go on iale four to six weeks before each concert. Ticketl are available thrOugb ncketmute.r al (114) 140-1818 or (213) 365·3500. for more infonnatLon,call(714)S56- ARTS date book Doily Pilot Evita revival at The Center features all Latinos .in lead roles oat,,.,. 0 t seems only natural that a musical revolving around the meteoric rise in popularity of a Latina should be played by a Latina. .Yet, despite the countless productions of "Evita,• which has been translated into such languages as Japanese and repro- duced in such faraway countries as Turkey, Latinos have never played the leading roles in this country. Until now. In the 20th anniversary production of Andrew Uoyd Webber's musical, which comes to the Orange County Performing Arts Center Tuesday through April 25, the three main characters -Eva Peron, Juan Peron and Che Guevara -are being played by Latinos. While this does not drastically change the musical, some of the actors feel their Latino roots lend a certain depth to the characters. Tom Flynn, a Corona del Mar native who plays Maga.ldy, said of his Latino co- actors, •1 think they have a certain fire and voraciousness. They literally have a hot-bloodedness from growing up in Lati- no culture, which tra.nslates in the musi- cal." Indeed, producers of the new produc- tion have tried to create a more authentic flavor. The actors correctly pronounce Spanish words like •Argentina" as •AI- hen-tina, • and the music has been given a more Latin feel. Natalie Toro is Just one of the leads in "Evita," starting Tuesday at the Orange County Performing Arts Center. The revival has also kept the original stage design, which indudes an over- head gliding screen and steeply raked deck. One-third of the set was built in duplicate and has been transported from city tq city. The musical is based on the life of Eva Peron, the second wife of Juan Peron, the 19•0s Argentine dictator. Evita was born the fourth of five illegitimate children in a ramshackle farmhouse built of mud- 'bricks and iron. She eventually rose to become Argentina's most powerful woman. The increased interest for a revival of •Evita" is in part a result of the film ver- sion starring Madonna, Antonio Banderas and Jonathan Pryce, which was released at the end of 1997. The film. which introduced the musical to a new generation, received fi'.Le Oscar nominations, including Best Song. This new orchestration will be perlormed in the re vival. Natalie Toro, who plays Eva Pero.a, said that although she enjoyed the film. she was disappointed that Madonna didn't seem to draw on the parallels between her • WHERE; Orange County Perform- ing Arts Center, 600 Town Center Dri-ve, Costa Mesa + WHEN: April 20-25; show times are Tuesday through Friday at 8 p.m .; Saturday at 2 and 8 p.m.; Sunday at 1 and 6 p.m. + HOW MUCH: $21-$52.50 + PHONC!(714)556-2122,ext.209 own life and that of Peron. There aJe some similarities, Toro feels, between surviving as a woman in Hollywood and as a woman in Argentina. ¥1 identity with [EvaJ because trying to make it in my business as a Latina is tough. I understand what she went through,· Toro said. •1 play her like a real person.• The actor who plays Che Guevara also feels he's been able to draw on his roots. Though it was coinodental that like Gue- vara, Raul Esparza is of Cuban hentage. 1t has been instrumental m his portrayal of the revolutionary. Esparza's grandfather, who wds involved in the sugaJ cane industry, worked with Guevara. "Che would come 'to meetings-(my grandfather) worked with Che on a har- vest. He might SJl at the table and while sitting there discussing sugar cane, he had blood all over his boots," Esparza said. "I was raised to hate the guy. My family blamed the guy for the Cuban Revolution turning com.murust." As a result, Esparza bas been able to do a signiijcant amount of family inter- views as well as academic reading when researchJng the character's personality and mannerisms. He plays Guevara •a little crazier,· be said ·rm not so reverent about him." The research has paid off. Espana's grandfa- ther feels that his portrayal is startlingly accurate. The accuracy m casting Latinos in the lead roles may create more believable characters. •More specific stories are more univer- sal,• Esparza said. U having Latino leads helps the tale becomes more real, then Webber hclS been successful 10 lus goal of transporting the audience into another world. In tune with Paul Anka With hits including 'The Tonight Show' theme and 'My Way,' singer/songwriter brings 40 years of experience to The Center with the Pacific Symphony Orchestra J p ut your bead on my shoulder,• croons Paul Anica. ~Hold me in your arms, baby." Not a day goes by that Anka's songs aren't played on the radio somewhere in Orange County. This weekend, tum the radio off. Instead, catch the former '50s teen idol at the Orange County Performing Arts Center, where he takes the stage with the Pacific Symphony Orchestra. Canadian-born Anka first hit the national spotlight at age 16 with the hit •01ana " The song was inspired by his neighbor, Diane Ayoub, whom he had a crush on . Ayoub was four years older than him. By age 18, Anka had five hits on the Top 20 charts. His suc- cesses as a singer in.dude "Pup- py Love" and •vou Aie My Destiny." The boy who once took journalism classes was now appearing on Americdn Band- stand. Anka's career has spanned 40 years. With more than 900 songs to b.J.s credit as a songwnter, Anka is one of the most success- ful artists in the industry. His credits as a songwriter mdude Frank Smatra's signature tune -•My Way." Anka's early years were the subject of a documentary, •Lonely Boy." A sequel is planned. Anka has made h1s mark on television and film -both as a musician and as an actor. The "Tonight Show" theme is an Anka original. It has been played more than 1.4 million times since its debut. Anka started his acting career playing a G:I. i.n the 1962 Academy Award-winner "The Longest Day." Anka also wrote • WHO: Paul Anka and the Pacific sYmPh<>fty Pops + WHIM: Orange County Performing Arts Center, 600 Town Center Drive, Corta Mesa • WHEN: Friday and Satur- day ~t8 p.m. + HOW MUCH: S52 to $22, $14 for student/senior rush tickets + PHONE: (714) 755-5799 the film's score. Other acting credits include •perry Mason: The Case of the Maligned Mob- ster" and •Mad Dog Time" with R1chdrd Dreyfuss and Gabnel Byrne. Though the Canadian is thought of as an American icon. Anka has been a popular per- former around the globe. He has recorded turies m Japanese, Ger- man, Spanish, French and Ital- ian. Ankd has sd1d he feeb an a!finlty for Italy, haVlng lived there from 1964 to 196b. Hts Ital~ ian song "Ogm Volta" has sold more than three million singles. In 1998, Anka made a duet album, s10ging with Ceh.oe Dion, Kenny G. Peter Cetera, Tom Jones, Frank Smatra, Patu Labelle, All For One and Barry Gibb. Richard Kaufman will guest conduct t.be Pops through a pro• gram that includes the themes . from •Little House on the Pralrle" and "Highway to l Jeav en." ~.~ot READERS l::tOTUN£ ~stories. illustrations, edtto-WEATHER SURF POLICE FI l IS (949) 642-6086 rial matter or edvertlsements , Record r;.r comments lbout herein can be reprodue«I with- the Dai Piiot or news tips. out written permission of copy-1'DW'ElllA1UltES 11DES Patchy momlng COSTA MESA right owner: hi boa TODAY • FUlt.11oft Av.nu. llnd 8uoy S~ A stereo and speakers ADDRESS 78157 clouds today with VOL 93, NO. 89 Our eddr• ls 330 W. 8~ St., l::tOW JO R£ACH US Corona del Mar First low worth S455 wer• stolen from a vehicle April 11 . dense fog near the Costa MeM, CA 92627. OtWMrtion 7M8 4:07 a.m .•••.... -0.6 • Mletton Awnue and luoy S"9et: A stereo, spNken, THOMAS H. JOHNSON. COB8£CDQNS The Tlmes 0,.nge COunty Costa Mesa first high coastline. The fog amplifier 4'nd cast) worth $560 were stolen from 1 vehicle Apt1I N>llsher It Is tn. Pilot's polky to ~-(800) 252-9141 81157 10:17 a.m .•••••• 4.8 should clear by the WILLIAM LOIOB.L. ly correct all errors of subStance. ~ Newport Beach Second loW 11 Editor Please all (949) 574-4268. Oa911fted (949) 642-5671 78/57 4:06 pm •••...•• 0.4 afternoon, leaving STEVl~f. ~ (949) 642~3.21 Newport Coast Managing fdfto( m Newport hactv'Costa M .. rdhorW 7~ Second high warm, sunny skies. A NIWfOltT 8EAOt I TINA llCMGATTA. News (949) 642-5680 10:16 p.m ...... 5 8 deerusing south ' AsslstMlt Mtnaging Editor °"l!ri Pilot (USPS-144-800) Is Sporu (949) 574-4223 • I. ae1Mae lout9Yarcl; A videotape w•s. 'tolen •nd the pl~tlc • S.J, CAHN pu !shed ~through Sat-News, Spof1J ,.,. (949) 646-4170 ..-POMCAST westerly swell Ii wrrounding the ignition on 1 vehkle was broken In the 100 : ~Editor unt.y In Newport BNd'l end f-m.tjl dallypllotee.rthllnk.net LOCATION SIZE SA'ltMDAY • Cost.a Mes..~ .... Wedge 2.,...sw delivering seu 1n the block Aptll 9. Oa~ were SSO. I STEVE UMIS, available only boJ ~ M*!Oftlm .. first loW \ News Editor 8Ullnes Office (949) 642~321 Newport .• , • 2-4+ SW 4:S5 a.m. ~ •••• , ...0.9 waist· to chest high • lnltnit Avenue· A S300 te!lulat phone WJJ .stolen from a ROGEll CNIUOH. The Tlmes Or_,. County ) 81ackies. , ••. 2-4 +SW ==-2S2·9141 . In ar..s ouUidit of 8ustne11 Fd (M9) 631-7126 River Jetty,., 2-4+ SW Flnt high ttrt•. Winek.,. out patio~ In the SOO block April 10. Newport h«h and Coste M.a, CdM •••••••. 2-4+sw 11:091.m •.•.•.. 4.5 • '°" OWt9I ..... Someone lost a S 100 c.ellul.tr. phone In Photo Editor sublo1pt60nt to ttw o.lly Piiot ~bY .,.,. St<ond low Of the WtiUl I 0 LYMWllOlA. .val'4lblt only •• boJ mtil fot Tm.~NM\ mph Wtrm WNther the 1000 block April 5. OftPlty Ad¥ertising s 10 per month. Second dM • Tlnw Mlmw Compeny ~ llOATllllG 4·44p.m ....... 01 • ...,. D rwe Roed Someone loSt his wallet at the HMbor 11A· = ptld at Cost.I MIN. CA. Venible morning Nt1'I Oil, ... ndude all appbblt wfnck at 0 to 6 knots sec.and high W>uld Ny with I.If tke Center in tht 4000 b4otk 1fttr ~ng 1 trlfflc ttdet April CJaillfied ~Hing 10:55 pm ...•••• S SI st.rtt and loal uus.) fl'OS'TMAS· w.t G. Miii 09llflj, btcOl'Nng Wiit. through the Wffk· &NM .... TtR: Send addr• chln9tS ~ "9lldlnt" ao 12. llrOmotlons The Newport INcM:Oltl ........ ~ northwtsWty at 6 to end. Th~ sun MU • w.. 8eJ AWftUe: TVs. vats and sui'ft>Oards V¥Orth SSOO were • PIU.MOO SHAK Delly fllllot. '-0 IO• 1560, ~ Vice~ Genw .. ~ 10 knots by the WATa tO<Sey at ns p m. Chief f'Nndal OfflCtr Mel-. CA 92626.. CQwl9ht; No 01-~CHM,._,_. 1f\9fnoon. TllUU •tAW: M noten from 1 ~ Jn the 600 block Apl'.11 I . b aily Pilot Louis Urena leans into a ~ 9ounnet taco .. during the .. Wild & Crazy Tacos" fund- rai er for Share "" Our Selves in Costa Mesa. . The fund-raiser );>rings high- t profile chefs from local restaurants to participate in creating fancy tacos. DON LEACH/ DAILY PllOT ~othilig taxing about tacos EUSEGEE lbl,Ph COSTA MESA -There aren't many places a person could find 4ntelope or Moroccan lamb tacos, lmt at Share Our Selves Thursday ~vening, tbese "Wild & Crazy" <reations filled the plates of clinic upporters. The 6th annual Share Our elves fund-raiser was an over- ilowing success with standing coom onJy a s diners lined up to ample the cre ations of Orange ounty's pre miere chefs. Orgaruzers estimated that they xceeded their all-time high .attendance of 300 ldst year. Valet lirivers scrambled to keep up with the cars piling up in Share Our -Selves' smcill parkmg lot and ..ddrted bdck d.Od forth through lrafhc to get the cars parked across the street. • "Every year 1l gets a little more rowded we keep doing the )'1g ht thmg, • said C hef Paul 1:)qu1cciarim of Robert Mondavi Wine & Food Center. Sqwcoarini prepared a semi- traditional taco made with camitas, black beans and pineapple salsa, and fennel and radicchio salad. Other creations. such as ante- lope tacos prepare d by Chef Michael Kang of Five Feet restau- rant, were a little more adventur- ous. But there were plenty of mar- garitas and cervezas on hand to help the more squeamish to build up their courage. Chef Alan Greeley of The Golden nutfle, who is known for serving up some of the wilder tacos in past years, created a tasty Florida Keys Rock Shrimp tamale with tomatillo and chipotle fon- due sauce and an exotic wild nas- turtiwn taco, made from a com- mon flower found in the region. The money raised goes toward building a kitchen at Share Our Selves that will be used for food distribution and job training to help people succeed by getting work in the food industry. For Chef Tony Zidor of lWin Palms, "Wild & Crazy Taco-Tax Night" was a great way to sup- port a local agency. But the evening also allowed the restau· rant to test some new dishes on diners, said general manager Albert Kahn. Zidor created a Moroccan lamb taco with yogurt lemon sauce served with tabouli salad. For Pamela Chozen, a vegetar- ian, Zidor's creation was great even without the lamb. But Chozen, who has attended the fund-raiser for the \ast three years, said her all-time favorite was Greeley's rock shrimp tamale. Ninoska Velo, a dental assis- tant at the Share Our Selves Clin- ic said the tacos dished out Thurs- day were a far cry from the tradi- tional ones she's used to making at home. Velo said she savored the smoked duck taco made by Chef Lcmrenl Nechin of AccentsfThe Sutton Place and looked forward to trying to make the mango and papaya salad served by The Yard House chef, Carlito Jocson, at home. "It's differe nt," Velo said. "But they're good.· SITTING IT STRAIGHT Qassified ads work for .. I • The March 31 Daily Pilot gave an incorrect name and website for Newport Beach·based SBN.COM . GET THE POINT? YOU! THE Daily Pilot Grab Your Hat & Enter The Old West Costume Contest! Dre~s up like a 49'er from the Gold Rush days and be on the street Friday at 0 High Noon" for a face-off. The most authentic, mo!>t creative and silljest costumes wilJ be awarded ribbons and f.rizes. Then, mo!>ey on over to the Pant Your·Wagon Contest beginning at I PM each day, and !>Ce a Panning for Gold exhibit, plus other Gold Rush themed attractions. E11ter contt.vts up to 112 hour prior 10 judging. More Fun & Features Jazz Festival • Junior and Senior High School jazz bands will perfonn and compete Friday morning. Pampered Pet Contest· Sunclayt lOAM • See pets being judged in categories of general appearance, funy coat, gigantic eyes, happiest grin, best tail wagger, owner look- alikes, silly pet tricks, and more! Wild Science Experlen~ • A hands~n t.lispl ay of educational, entertaining and quiiity science exhibit\. Prtw11rcl bJ lma1inati<>n Gal/try "Days Of Old & Panning For Gold" This year's fun-fi lled family event pays tribute to the California Gold Ru h, and you can discover a mother lode of great entertainment, themed features and fun contests, plus an educational fair that focuses on the positive accomplishments of Orange County youth . FREE ADMISSION & PARKING! Hours: Fri. 9AM-3PM, Sot. & Sun. 9AM-4PM 11. -' , -' .. ~--V ff.:· ') : OIWl8E COllm MIR. EXPOllTION CENTER ~ .yab @':~£!) 88 Fair D!We, Coela Mllll (Enlw 0. 4 o11 Al1lnglon Dr.) ~ b-r __ r;J Information: 7141708-3247 • Web~: www.ocf*.com Friday, April 16, 1999 A week of biblical proportions I ntereiting week. Taxes. Earthquake. Plague. Pesti- lence. (1bere wasn't really any plague or pestilence. I mad e that part up. I just like the sound of •earthquake, plague, pesWence. • Very bibli- cal.) First, taxes. It's always so heartwarming to see April 15 come and go. Post offices stay- ing open 'W midnight, the c1µDaraderie of shared misery, the joy of sending your m~ney to strange P.O. boxes in Fresno and Sacramento. A little bit of Americana. I must say, the IRS has taken Congress' mandate to become kinder and gentler tax collectors very seriously. lf you have a chance, visit the IRS website. Talk about a make over. Lighthearted, great graphics, even a few jokes. It's like all of a sudden your CPA got a personality. I'd still rather deal with earthquakes. As temblors go, it was wimpy, but a quake nonethe- less. Maybe you felt it, maybe you didn't. Wednesday morn- ing, 11122 a.m., 3.4 for you Richter fans. Ever wonder how the Richter scale works? It's simple. It was named for, well, a man named Richter, I think, who discovered that earth- quakes could be measured with a logarithmic scale from zero to -forget it. This is too hard. Here's the deal. Three and below, you don't feel it. Three to five, is the difference between nervous and devout. More than five, you wish you'd been a better person. The temblor was 6.8 miles down. I don't know lf that's a long way down, but it sounds like a long way down. When did "tremor" become "tem- blor,• by the way? It used to be tremor, now it's temblor. Who decides these things? There must be an 800 number on common usage that I don't have. "Common Usage, thanks for calling." "ls it tremor or temblor?" COMMENTS &CUllOSITIES "Temblor.· "Thanks." •No problem. Have d nke day.• Like most thmgs in bfe, this earthquake business lS dll reld- tive. My wile was home dl the time, I was in Irvine. She Sd1d 1t was as big a JOlt dS Lhe Northridge quake I dldn't feel a thing. I found out lttter 1t was centered benedth Fd1rvww Park (that'll bnng those protect- ed species to full pomt). d few hundred yards from our house Three p<>mt four is no b1q whoop, assuming you're not standing on top of at It's hkt> the definition of d recession vs . a depression. When your neighbor gets laid off. it's d recession. When you gE't ldtd off, it's a d epression Ever wonde r how edrth- quakes work? It's simple. The surface of the earth is mdde up of these huge things ccilled teu- tonic platei., wtuch I dso,ume arl' made in Germany There dre othe r things thdl hdppen deep beneath the surface, cill hdvmg to do Wlth vulcaruzed ldrvd and, I don't know dtnmonid or something that rushes to the surface and makes the teutonic plates bang Logelher, wh1th ca uses chlppmg. or 111 ldymdn's terms -• earttlquttkes " It's been a while <.,Jncf> we've bad a good kdboom rattle rdt- tle. And, yes, I know there ore thousands of trE>mors. temblo'rs, whateve r, every day, but we 1ust don't feel them. I'm very good with so e nce, you know. Earthquakes M e fascinating, though, ctssunung you live through them. Prunal forces, uncontrolled and uncontrol- lable. A bnef reminder from Mother Nature thdt our pldce on this earth 1s d lot more tenu- ous lhdn we might think It's also a big part of the Southe rn CaWorrua mysllquP You go to Gctry. Ind, (don't wor· ry. you don't redlly hdve to go there) and mention Southern Cdhlonuc1, "earthquakes are m the. top three responses. in ldc:l, it's a lot o! fun scanng out-ot- town guests. J like to rock the dinner table Wllh my knees, then drop my fork and whisper, "Oh my god, thl., 1., 1l. • The far- ther awa\ Lhe\ n fr 1m, the bet- ter it wor.ks. Not everybody will think its lunny. but it's ''orth a try wh(•n the conver'><:ltlon sag::.. On the other hdnd thl::. whole issue of predicting edrth- qudkes o,tnkes me dS d litUe odd Once> or twice d Y£>dl', there 1s d bredlhless news report about -.c1enllsts who arP on the bnnk of pred1cllny edrthquakes Uh, ok There you die, cru1s- mg along on dn otherwise pled'>dnt dftemoon when the trdthr reporter sdyc. ·sig alert on the 405 north al BolSd Chlcd, Caltech pred1cts a 5.2 edrth- qudke somet1mE' m the next hour. and Wdtch out lor a lddder.: m the No 3 lane on the 5 . outh • at Culver Bdck to you Bob OthE>r than hdvmg o whole lot of tmw to pick d door Jd.mli, 1ust whot dre we supposed tu do? Ledve? Duck and cover? Assemble m groups of 10 m lhl' • nearest park? I don't get it : Death, Ldxes. earthqudke'> Don't WOT?), be hctppy. lher<>'s no Wdy out Stdy calm, do what they tell ~ ou, tune m to lhuse lrdffic report!:> I gotta go • PETER BUFfA 1s a former Costa Mesa mayor Hts column appears Fn days E-mail h im at Ptr840 AOL com . Contemporary Sportswear for Women SAVING UPTO 70°/o /.;REDHOT / -SEASON SALE • '.De~ne't :fa,atH. • • Cof!ecto't dwe.atvtj. • dpo'fi:~ea.'l. d epawtn • ONE REGUIAR PRICED ITEM 11'urs, 15 -sat. 117 1024 Ba~side Drive• Newport Beach ~side Dr. at Jamboree Rd. • I ~ Friday, Apfil 16 1999 .. District moving to meet priorities • Superintendent updates school board on progress (n achieving goals set by each district department. ]f~A GAR.Rfi(l!'. ~Pb NEWPORT-MESA -On e of the first things Supt. Robert Bar- bot did after taking the helm of the school distnct last year was work with school board members to come up wtth goals and priori- nes for every area of every department m the district. Tuesday rught. Barbot pr~ent­ ed board members with hu, hrst update on d1stnct officials' progress in achieving those goals. Though the vast majority of goals in the 31-page report are sWJ "m progress.· board mem- bers neverthelt>ss said they were •thnlled. • "In the many years that I've been on the board, I've never seen as complete a report,• said Martha Fluor. The report, which was accom- panied by hundreds of pages of supporting data, laid out exactly what district officials want to achieve, and how they intend to get there., To improve students' reading, for example, board members have applied for and received more tban $400,000 in state grants to train 800 teachers to help students read better. Julie Chan, who has a PhD in reading and even a license plate that celebrates the activity, has given up all responsibilities except working on reading. She plans to post reading standards in every classroom and is writing a brochure to tell parents what their children need to know. \ Doily Pilot 1 Barbot said the goals would help ·keep the district on track." They include everything from the general, such as "increasing student achievement with a spe- cial emphasis on reading and &peUmg." to the spec1.hc, such as liinng a cducdllonal technology 'director. In addltion, the district has offered teachers the chance to study for a master's degree in reading in the evenings, and holds monthly meetings to dis- cuss the subject. Local students learn CPR as pait of course that has already saved lives • "We've taken on a big cbal-~enge, • Barbot said, adding that his job was to • eslablJSh • and .~morutor" the godls. · "It doesn't mean we'll dCcom- ?.lish 100%," he satd. ·But we'U accomplish d lot more by having 't)lem than we would tI we c.tidn't }Jdve them.· 11 To hire an educational technol- ogy director, meanwhile, district staff have interviewed three can- didates, and intend to hire some- one very soon. Board President Serene Stokes said she believes the goals are already making a difference in the classroom. "When you go into schools/ she said, something is ~different . . you notice something good JS gomg on.• NOAXJ SCHWARTZ ~Pb NEWPORT BEACH -The instructions came out loud and clear. "Miss Johnson's choking! Get down there for 10 seconds; look, listen and feel,• the lifeguard commanded. Miss Johnson wasn't really in danger. But if she were, the 30 sophomores from Newport-Mesa high schools would have been able to help. This week, the students par- ticipated in cardiopulmonary resuscitation, or CPR, lessons. The lessons may have looked and sounded like other CPR courses, but the teaching tech- niques have come a Jong way since the old days, when 30 stu- dents huddled around one plas- tic mannequin, said John Blauer, communjty relations officer for the Newport Beach Fire and Marine Department. S12.EACH THANK YOU MUGS WITH• MfNl·MUFFINS OR t CHOCOLATE CHIP COOKIES Now the students are peited off with one, mannequin each and one teacher per eight pupil. For two years ago, in an effort to increase community ~. sophomores at local bigl;l sc:tioOll have taken one-week COUl'l8I devoted to CPR, water saf~ education and 911 emergency access training. "The first time kids don't want to touch the mannequi,p." Blauer said. "But once they get used to doing it, they begin to focus more on the procedures, which are very simple. They are able to practice the procedures, and oUJ hopes are that they will be able to save someone's We." The lessons have worked, he said. Last year Fernando Enriquez, o. student at Newport Harbor High, saVed his 1-year· old brother from choking. It's just such an incident that the students should be prepared for, said Nenn.lna Topalovic, who recently moved to Ne~rt Fire Dept. opposed to millennium fireworks The Costa Mesa Fire Depart- ment is recommending that the City Council not allow the sale or use of fireworks for the millenni- um celebration. The council had asked that the Beach from Germany. •If someone becomeS UDCOll· &dous, l can help them,• she said. Topalovic said it would be useful to have a similar p~am at schools in Germany. "They don't have it in scllool, ~ she said, •you have to take classes and pay for them." BRIEFLY matter be looked into because a state bill was passed last year allowing the sale of fireworks from 9 a.m. Dec. 26 until 12:01 a.m. Jan. 1, 2000. Cities and counties would have to adopt an ordinance or res- olution for the sale to happen. Fourth of July fireworks are usu- ... I{ I· I· I { F ( . ( ) I { I >I· I ) \ le 1 I\ I 4 • \ 4 • I I '\ I 4 "' \ I \ I H , '\ .!~ I H ) l . RS < . \LL 1SOU 1 ,, I 7 -X<lJO 46770 Your Existing Jumbo may now be a Conventional Loan. If it is~Refinancing may save you $$$$. 46780 95% EZ Qualifying Loans and Other Special Programs That your Real Estate Agent may not know about. 47170 Have Lenders Bid for your Loan on the Internet! A service only a qualified mongage broker can provide. A Courtesy of Bill Fallon at The Lending Group PURCHASE (949)7 59-5050 REFINANCE CA otR.E. LdOl 100975 In tbe ~-prone state ot Califorilia. sat~ educatk>n clauet are well worth the effort, Blauer said. •It's going to b.elp our whole city be a little safer,• he said. · "lb.ii IS a small step in prepara-!I tion for a big disaster. The more 1 people that are trained iil sate~. j the better." ally allowed in the city on th~ h~- iday from 4 to 10 p.m . J Because the miJJennium cele- bration occurs at midnight, Fia Department staff recommend!!@ against allowing the use o( fire,. works in the middle of the nighJi. Staff also said they doubted allowing the use would cut down on the number of people dis- charging weapons into the sky, which was part of the original intent of the state bW. The Fire Department present,.. ed its case this week at a council study session. The council did ~t take any action. Put a few words to work for you. Call the Daily Pilot .': CLASSIAEDS 642-5678 1 1 r Save the skin you're in. Saturday, April 17 • 7:00a.m.to1:00 p.m. Hoag Cancer Center 4000 W. Paclftc Coast HJpway Newport Beach Join us oo Saturday. April 17* for a frtie head-to.toe skin exam by a Hoag dennatotogist. Limited appointments available. Ru•nalioru nplnd.. Call 1/800 514-HOAG (4624) no later than 4pm Friday, April 16 to r11erve an appolntmenL MW'n! IOrry btit w wiU be WWJbl110 accomnu:>do.11 walk·llU. Ho"':t CANCER CENTER JI. aASlll Cllf S Lett. Wilson Elementary School student Marla Hernandez, 11, giggles. · Wblle walUng for food to be passed around the table at Magglano's Utile Italy restaurant ln Costa Mesa. Chef George Poston invited 12 ttftb-graders to teach them how to fend for them- selves during unsupervised hows of the day on Thurs.- day. Above, Poston passes out m1nl pizzas to students after teadllilg them bow to prepare and cook easy meals at home. In addition lo pizza, Poston showed students how to make tor- tilla wraps filled with ham and cheese, baked potatoes and strawbentes dipped in brown sugar and sour • KIM HAGGERTY-ZYLIUS • • • DAILY PILOT Friday, April 16, 1999 $ BRIEFLY ... I Albertson's market sets reopening Albertson's in the Mesa Verde Center will hold a grand reopen· ing ceremony Wednesday to showcase the new services avail- able at the expand~ store The reopemng of the 21-year- old store, which remained o"pen during remodeling, will feature events and a chance to win a trip for two to New York City. One of the additions to the store is a coffee and ice cream bar located near the store entrance, which offers selections of Sedttle's Best Coffee The 49,000-squdfe-foot store also has a new video shop. dry· cleaning . s tation, seafood a~ meat counte r, film processut§ center, floral center dnd wheel· chair accessible restroom wtlh baby-changmg station An expansive meal center offers d wide variety of lunch and runner selections, said Anne Alenslus, Albertson's spokeswomdn The store also features a Bank ot Amenca branch Fire Department opposes fireworks • ' • The Costa Mesa Fire Depan; ment is recommending that the City Council not allow the sale or use of hreworks for the millenni- um celebration. • The council had asked that the matter be looked into because ~ state bill was passed last year aUowmg the sale of fireworb from 9 tt m. Dec. 26 until 12:01 a.m. Jan. 1, 2000. Cities and counties would hdve to adopt an ordinance or resolubon for the sale to happen. Fourth ot July fireworks are usu- ally aHowed m the city on the hol- iday trom 4 to 10 p.m. Because the millennium cele· · bration occurs• at midnight, Fire Department staff recommended against allowing the use of fire- works m the rruddle of the night. Staff also said they doubted allowmg the use would cut down on the number of people dis- chargmg weapons into the sky, which was part of the original intent ot the state bill. Does yo ur Rolex nee d service? ~ RO LEX Bring It in to your Official Rolex Jeweler in Orange County sincc:: 1959 for a FREE SPRING SPRUCE-UP For 40 years, we have been caring for the watches of discerning Rolex owners. While you wait, we will steam off the bracelet and case, polish the crystal and electronically check for accuraq of time. This is a "cosmetic spruce-up .. and does not include opening the \\>atch . Thi~ FREE OFFER is good through the month of Apnl. Nordstrom embezzler gets four years in jail CHARLES H. BARR •Judge also orders Faye Chizuko Itaya to pay about $1 million in penalties. ANDRFW STEVF:!I.! H AIH.:f ... lb\' mir NEWPORT BEACI I -A woman who admitted to skim· ming hundreds of thousands of dollars from the Nordstrom department store here received four years in 1ail on Thursday and was ordered to pay what could amount to more than $1 rrullion in penalties. Fifty-year-old Fdye Ch1zuko Itaya of Huntington Harbor had plead guilty to the embezzlement charges after a private investiga· tion by Nordstrom discovered that she had bilked the store out or as much as thousands of dollars each week over a five-year period. In imposing ltaya's sentence Thursday, Orange County Supen- -0r Court Judge Margaret Ander· ..son invoked a special sentencing provision that allows for an addi· tional two-year penalty whe n a aime involves more than $150,000. Anderson also ordered ltaya to pay 'tor the cost of Nordstrom's invest:l- ~ation -more than $25,000 -as well as reunburse the chain for the $750,000 that the court determined ltaya had stolen In addition. ltaya also will be forced to pay 10% interest e()ch year on the unpaid bdlance of her debt under a n ew state anti· embezzlement law. As a result, ltaya might never mdnage to pay off the burgeoning debt ·The money went from every- thing from vacations dnd parties to financing the daughter's edu· cation at a pnvate school,• said Mark Sev1gny of the D1stncl Allorney's Office, noting thdl ltaya did not invest the money in any assets that now can be 1Jqu1- dated. "She will have trouble paymg this off unless the family 1s willing to come forward with money, and I don't believe they will, smce to date, the family has been unable or unwilling, I don't know which, to make any mearungfuJ restitu- tion.• Sevigny said ltaya 1s due to report for her sente nce Apnl 22 and will be eli- gible for parole dfter two years. ltaya worked at Nordstrom for more than 10 years and allegedly began siphoning money from the retail chain in early 1992 while employed as an executive secre· tary. Sevigny said she submitted cash vouchers to her superiors with drtifioally bloated requests for employee functions, and then deposited the dlfference into her Beautify Your Yard! • Sloncwork, Patlo-. & BJJQ, • \\ atcrl'alls. Pool &Spas • Land9Cape LfsQ1Uu« lVe have over 40 years combined service in this area. Our qualit!J, crmtivlt!J aml sen.,ice are unmatched. Toget her toe will take care of all your lancLitc:ape ancl nwscmry needs. FARNSWORTH GLASSELL t .. \\l>S<' 11! < O~W.\~ • (949)548-5132 ~MSO:\~Y ( O~IPAX\' (714>4t~7744 IA!: IQHl70 ~ ' personal account. She also falsi- fied personal expense reports and skinuned portions of employee cornnussiCJns. By the end ot 1992, Sevigny srud, Itaya had pocketed about $48,000. By 1996, the year before she was caught, she had taken an estimated $187,000. ' Official Rolex J eweler for ale~ and Service 1803 Wc"itcliff Drive, Newport Beach (949) 642-3310 bady GE , If Fine Golf, Tennis, Resort & Active Apparel low-Out t .._ .. - I 50· IO«Mt (on Mleded items) I yl And, don't min the $5.00 to $15.00 Sales bell LMty Golf"' slncently apprecl•tes row piltlon•I•· ~ASHION l LAND .. ATR IUM COURT EWPORi BEACH (949) 720-1996 • • • • • • • • • . • • • • • .. • 6 Friday, April 16, 1999 • ' Chamber, city begin· campaign for 17th Street proje€t • Officials say the proposed improvements to the busy street will benefit Costa Mesa businesses. elect representatives to sit on an ad·hoc committee that will have input on the project plan, Naghavi said. An example of possible city action would be to move the Photo Lab structure on the southeast cor- ner of 17th Street l\fld Orange, Naghavi said. m EUSE GEf ~Plot COSTA lvlESA -Officials from the city and the Chamber of Com- merce a.re cooperating on a busi- ness outreach program to help alle- viate concerns about a project to widen 17th Street from Orange to Irvine avenues. "What causes concerns to arise is no information or ousinlorma- tion, • said chamber president Ed Fawcett. The outreach effort kicks off an overall campaign to involve busi- ness owners in the process of ·plan- ning the unprovements, he said. The city is in the initial stages of planning the project, which would widen 17th Street. The street, one of the major east/west corridors in the city and d significant commer- MEET OUR MEMBERS Member for 10 )'l'Jr~ Occupation: HomemJk<·r Why did you join Shape-Up~ [ lelt rnmfonablc 1he lir>t 11mc I w.ilk<·J in ShJp(·· L:p I likrd their drrob1< Jnd c>.cru" !'rogr J"1> and the frtendh• mff. Goals: lo mdinta111 gwJ h<'Jhh .ind my Ggurc My parent\ were sicklv & I wan1 IO avoid heah:h problems. cial district that contains about 500 businesses, is already at capacity, handling more than 33,000 cars a day. The improvements are meant to alleviate traffic through nearby neighborhoods, increase safety by cutting down on the number of dri- veways and left turns and help make the street more attractive by adding landscaping and pedestri- an-friendly features, said Peter Naghavi, the city's transportation services manager. Meetings for different block areas will be held April 28, May 5 and May 12. Naghavi will be mak- ing door-to-door visits to speak with individual business owners in the weeks before each discussion. · Meeting participants will be given a full presentation about the project and have an opportunity to &ub11r11 S4JJi,,gton Member for: 10 years Resulu: Same dress s1u-for years. I feel mnrd and able to do the sporLS aaivi1ies I love! What do you like about Shape-Up? I like the privacy. members are here to workoui, not gossip. This allows me co enjoy my workout & nm fed 1mimida1ed. The city is in the very early stages of the project. having just finished a feasibility study. The results of that study were present- ed to the City Council in March and outlined estimated costs, right· of-way requirements and several alternatives. The project will take about four years, with. an estimated five- mol)th construction phase to be completed in November 1002. A $200,000 environmental study will begin in A~gust. There is no. funding yet available for the design, right-of-way or construc- tion phases at this time, although Naghavi satd he expects the pro- ject to qualify for grant money. Although a project of this size will have inevitable impacts, they are much lower than originally expected, Naghavi added. City staff bad expected the 17th Street widening project would cost • Environmental asse.s;sment phase -AugUst 16, 1999 to April2000 • ~ Phase -June 2000 to July 2001 + Right-of-way Appraisals and Acquisition -July 2001 to July 2002 + Construction -July 2002 to November 2002 about $18 million, but because the city will need less lahd than expected for the project, costs will be closer to the $5 million to $7 mil- lion range, Naghavi said. Right-of-way requirements for the project range from 18,278 square-feet to 34,500 square-feet, depending on what alternative the city goes with, according to a staff report. •I don 't see it happening in the near future, so I'm not going to be too concerned about it," said David Lee, who helps run Photo Lab, a family business established in 1989. Faweett said be believes the improvements can be business- friendly. "You want traffic flow to improve, you want left-tum access to the businesses and you want a good-looking improved roadway.• Fawcett said. "What we don't want is what Santa Ana did to busiiiesses on 17th Street. They put in a median with no left turns." City staff would prefer for. the project to have a combination of painted and raised n;iedians along 17th Street with a reduction of the humber of driveways, Naghavi said. There .,. three mMtings scheduled for bus'"-°""*'5 in April and May. The meetings will take ~ .t 7 p.m • .t the Welti F~ bUlldlng, 301 E. ' 17th s~ Here is the schedute: ~ • ~. April 28 for 17th Stfeet buslnesses from Orange to santa AN; • Wed~. May 5 for 17th Street businesses from ~nta N Ana to TuStin; + Wednesd~. Mey 12 for 17th street businesses from Tustin to· Irvine. Fawcett said he anticipates a lot of questions at the public meetings and hopes individual owners can see the long-term benefits ol the project. "They should be interested and concerned, but not alarmed," Faw- cett said. New study warns of El Toro airport noise· ANDREW STEVEN fiARRis I loud noise will "severely impact" D!if Pikit more than 9,500 homes and 30,000 IR residents living in the immediate VINE -El Toro opponents vicinity of the proposed airport. Thursda.y rele~sed the results of a HThe county gets ·all excited new s~ay which they say shows because they say that the average that noise levels at the proposed noise level is acceptable ~ said airport will far exceed the effects Meg Waters spokesperson' for the P.romised by Oran'ge CotJ?ty ofti-ETR.PA gro~p. "But anyone who's c1als who support the pro1ect. lived around an airport can tell you The study, commissioned by that the average doesn't mean a.ny- lbe El Toro Reuse Planning thing, because you take the big Authority, asserts that persistent numbers and the little numbers and then blend them together. But it's the big nwnbers that wake you up and rattle your teeth in the mid- dle of the night• The study surveyed residents surrounding the John Wayne Air- port about how often and how much the noise levels bothered them. The study then took those results and superimposed them over the El Toro site to assert that airplane noise would disrupt homes as far away as Orange and Dana Point. "SALE" MARATHON SOD OVER 1.CXXJ SQ FT.ffiEE DELIVERY NO. 1 33¢ per SQ FT RUFFLES UPHOLSTERY NO 2E 35¢ per SQ FT IN STOCK/PICK -UP, 5 SQ FT ROLLS • $2 99 EA Where Your Dollar Covers Morel Club (949) 646-7441 Sofa $10000* OFF Chair $5000* OFF *W ith a purchase of Fabric & Lab or til 4/23/99 New Location Same Street 2 blocks North 1998 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA-548-1156 "The county bas created a 'bluffer' zone by claiming that no homes are going to be impacted by an airport at El Toro," said ETRPA chair Susan Withrow. "This is bla- tantly false ... Tue county needs fo stop trying to massage the nun'l· bers to mask the impacts of El Toro and deal squarely with the facts of how a real airport will affect the nearly one million people in South County.• ' Airport proponents were quick to criticize the study, however, not• ing that even its backers acknowi· edge that it is not scientific. "I think it's pretty transparently flawed from a couple of stand· points," said former Newport Beach Mayor Tom Edwards, a sup. porter of the El Toro project. "They tried to extrapolate all types of things from their numbers and I don't tlunk the data supports • it,• Edwards said. . Orange County officials have proposed a corrune rcial airport · serving 29 million passengers per year at the current El Toro Marine. Air Station, which is set to close in. • July. .. ' I need 100% clean. So I call COIT! "Allison is 5 months old now, and she'll be crawling soon. So I need my carpets to be deep do wn 100% clean. That's why I call COIT And that's why I've always used COIT as my four other kids grow up. Using CO/Tis the next best thing to new." For over 45 years, CO/T's advanced equipmen t and fully trained, certified technicians have provided the mos t effective cleaning available for all cypes of caq~ets, rugs, draperies and upholste1y. CO/T's professional care and Eersonal atten tion to detail assures you the fines t res ults possible; and we guarantee it! Call Today for a FREE Estimate! lJ,,f4 Sl•<lf4 •It• Al/t"'• M111lurf(t .ti"""'-'' --------r I I I I I I SAVE %OFF Carpet Oeaning ~Cleaniol ON Upholstery Cleaaiog Am llug Coning Spring Arts & Craft Show April 17-18 Saturday & Sunday 10 a.m. -6 p.m. Pa intings, handmade quilts, collectibles, je welry, handmade dolls, African art & more ! Admission is FREE WJL.W.il4----~orket ~ 'On1heLake I 1• I I On Like \li ... -.ion \ it'jo at tht' cornt·1· of \ i-.t.1 ell-I L1)..!c1 ;11111 \Liq.,!llc·rilt· l 1;1rl,\\,I\, \lj..,..,jo11 \ ic ·j(I "DO YOUR OWN WEDDING, WE"LL SHOW YOU HOWi Call us at 1-888-500-5566 ror lorormalion W J\ I~ I ~: I I < > l : S I~ Tile First, Tile Origintil, Tile Best Spring Holiday Vases, BasketJ, Ceramics and Supp/its at Discount Prices. Sunflowers lots of varieties available now .............................. 15 each Tuberose best fr agrance of all fl owers ..................................... 7 5 each Iris violet or blue tall spikes .................... : .................................• 75 each Daffodils bright yellow springtime fa vorite ................ $3.SO per bunch · Stock popular fra grant fl owers in great colors ........... $2. 7 5 per buneh {"*1..W& B11\111Cl (.c~11r1 An:them1 11111• Bu II~ <.'•Ill r U600t\ l . .a111hcrt St #710 5140 11 La Pill me Ave 0 Ktll<>U ((.'t'lll1'fl\!i'9.,!! • 1.amhftt) cou .. tw. .... ~""·lrfl-•h~) (9•9) ~•1-5566 (71•) 779-5566 lfOflrr: Mo,.. Tfum 'OM·$,,,. • l 'rl 'at-4 I* • So18:JO ""'"" pM ' COSTAMDA IJ<>ll Lopn An. Duo't Be tltt~rod (l .uul ,.,, die ~ •M\lllt. 11(11 t.llllclM) (714J 545-0310 ......... Doily Pilot LAND, HO! • Send MOUND 10WN items to the Dally Pilot. Around Town. 330 w. Bay St., Costa Mesi 92627; fax them to (949) ~170; or Giii (949) 642-5680, Ext. 228. A complete listing of Around Town can be found at daitypllot.com. Seifaring life of the 17.00s will come to life when Endeavour anives in Newport Harbor today. °-"'"' ABOARD THE JlNol!AV- OUR-A pjec.'e of ~ tmto.. r:y wl11 cruise into Ne~rt Har- bor today, an undertaking unlike any other, ~ H.M. Bark. Brideavour, a ~replica of an 18th cen- Uolry sailing vessel, will rest at a doCk for 10 days attet IDUing m arduous tfip from San Diego. ~ ship will be tr&DSformed mm an active sailing veSiel to a Unique floating museum. Ne~rt officials eagerly ka¥e been anticipating the ~·.s arrival for months. •The paying public won't be disappointed,• said Endeavour qt.pt. Chris Blake. •People who visit the boat will get a better appreciation of what went on and how seamen lived 200 years ago,• he said. •A lot of people have been awestruck by the ship at previ-· ous ports.• . The special visit is part of the •.l~ip's worldwide tour that f?.egan in October 1996. Since leaving Freemantle, Australia, where the replica was built, the 5,bip has traveled more than :w.ooo nautical miles. Tbe Endeavour wUl bead north, up the Amertcan western waboard, ending up in Van- couver, British Columbia, before returning to Australia. .~ The historic vessel serves two purposes: While at sea, she ii home to tluill-seekers and sailing enthusiasts who pay to climb aboard for five-and nine- day trips. 1 When it docks, the Endeav- our takes visitors to another RISLING CONTINUED FROM 1 footing that looks more like a high wire. We throw our weight onto the yardarm and grab hold o( a rope, letting loose the sail. Imagine trying this feat when it~ or when it's pitch dark the only light is from the s1)rs overhead. • lt is quite remarkable the ship hat had only one person fall over- ~ spice it departed in 1996. • He Happened to be the boat's s4f ety officer. He was rescued by ~ crew a few minutes later. ~at's more amazing is that no o~ has fallen off the tops or the rdpe nets . • Thursday I climbed to the fore- ~t platform, worried I might slip from the moisture that had a~tumulated from the fog. We fiflished our job, but my adrena- li{le was still pumping. I wanted to go up to the t'gallant. No such luck, as the wind was birely blowing. My chances were f$ling away. I jumped down the rope lad- der and hung my head a little. •What's wrong with our r<l1ghie-toughie sea dog?• s&d ntY captain of the top, Todd, 5110uting a common bUe given to U! plebes who are on this trip, r~ering muscles we tlfl>ught we had lost. ·1 didn't get to go all the way tq the top,• I replied. ·~e day, mate,• he said, ·~u might get your moment." Paying passengers already are ~oming sentimental. They are ~g photos with their mast aews, exchanging business cards ~d sharing memories of when ~y first met earlier this week, "'1Ucb seems like yesterday. It's odd. When I boarded Sun· d , I couldn't wait unW the end o the journey. No one will admit it, but I some of us want to stay on er. I know it's crossed my . No matter how dirty we gtt, the hours of sleep wo man- or the amount of soreness eel, we have f 05tered some- &peeial and unique on that is difficult to explain. · ve me another day. piece and time. Both abdft ud beloW decb, people am IMm about the trawll Of Lt. Jamm COOk, the 8Xplorer Who dMu18d the Pacific Ocean in the 1700., and his crew. Attention to detail wu Important when building the $'10 lblWon Endeavour. From the a~ sleeping quarters to tbe intricate predllon of rig-. ~ the ules, the ship must clotely nurror its predece&sOr. • Life on boent isn't any differ- ent than it was ln the 18th cen- tury, With the exception of a modem galley and mandated navigatiOn equipment. Crew members pass time by catching a catnap, reading a book or playing an instrument. Life at sea can be rough. It can be tougher without something to pass the time. Visitors will walk -and sometimes aawl -the length of the 109-foot ship. Volunteers will provide the ship's history and lore that are both infonna~ tive and interesting. The ship has fascinated peo- ple around the world. When it sailed to Whitby, England, where the original Endeavour was built in the 1700s, more than 120,000 people crammed the shoreline to welcome its replica back home. The city's population is only 14,000. •Tue exciting thing for this harbor is that this is the first event of its kind to come here,• said Shelli Smith, director of the Newport Harbor Nautical Museum. •The ship has a place in maritime heritage of the Pacific Ocean. I think we will get a tremendous response.• TODAY The walking club of Newport Beach will meet at 9:30 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. at the comer of Hospital Road and Superior Avenue in Newport Beach. There is no cost. For more information, call (949) 650-1332. OCC's summer and fall applica- tions are available in the school's admissions and records office, 2701 Fairview Road: Costa Mesa. SummersessionsbeginJune 1, 14 and 28. Pall semester begins Aug. 16. For more information, call (714) 432-5072. The 20th annual Youth Expo wlll run through Sunday at the Orange County Fair & Exposition Center. 88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. Events will be held in all buildings throughout the fair- grounds. Hours are from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. today; 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sat- urday and Sunday. Admission is free. For more information, call (714) 708-3247. The Desert Coast Region Sorop- limist Legislative Forum will be presented from 11 a .m. to 4:30 p.m . at the Doubletree Hotel, 3050 Bristol St., Costa Mesa. Lun- cheon keynote speaker will be state Sen. Dee Dee Albert. Albert will speak about ·california's New Leadership and Vision.• nckets are $55. For more infor- mation, call (619) 453-5979 or (714) 540-7000. A program titled Emergency Pre- paredness for Y2K will be pre- sented from 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. at OASIS Senior Center. 800 Mar- guerite Ave., Corona del Mar. For more information, call (949) 644- 3244. Mattress Outlet Stor BRAND NEW -COSMETICALLY IMPERFECT Get the Best for Less! , J 3165 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa One Bloc:ll South ot .\05 Pwy 545-7168 Sabatino Tummy Peter Phil Vince Flavorful & Delicious Lunches & Dinner UUqlM •IM,_ A clfatnC rooim a\albbk for cn-P '**--'lnp and priY1l&t l'iuldloGI 723-0621 Pkale Call For Resen•tions and Dirtdiorul 251 Shipyard Way • Newport Beach AROUND TOWN Learn to dance the salsa, one ol · Friday, April 16, 1999 .. • • .. today's most popular dances. at FREE TO o• IU"r 7:30 p.m. at the DePoro Dance ~ - Center, 151 Kalmus Dnve, Suites G-2 and G-3. Costa Mesa. Open dancing to all kinds of mUSlc will follow until 11 p.m. Admission is $8. Call (714) 241-9908. SATURDAY The Junior League of Orange County will be having Its final membership information meeting for 1999. All women mterested in becoming a community volunteer or learning more about the effort of the Junior League are encouraged to call the organization's headquar- ters. Call (949) 261-0823. Junior Joumallsts will be present- ed from 9 to 10:30 am. at the OASIS Senior Center, 800 Mar- guerite Ave., Corona del Mar Sign up and learn how to be a newspa- per reporter. The class will run through May 8. Registration is $72 for Newport Beach residents and S'/7 for non-residents. For more information, call (949) 644-3151. OCC will present lts 11th annual Safety at Sea seminar from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the school's Sailing Center, 1801 W. Coast Highway, Newport Beach. Registration is $45. The fee includes lectures. demonstrations, exhibits, course materials and lunch. For more information, call (949) 645-9412. "Divorce -A New Beginning," a workshop for men and women in the process of divorcing or recently divorced, will be presented from 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. at the offices of Marriage and Family Therapist Maxine B. Cohen, 180 Newport Center Dr:ive, Newport Beach The cost is $40. For more mforma- tion, call (949) 644-6435. GHOSTWRITER For Hire Adman/published author seeks new asslgrunents, 25 }'ears experience, ADS, BROCHURES, VIDEO SCRIPTS, ARTICL.f.S, DlRECT MAil AND BOOKS, Hourty or by ~t. 949-631-0402 www.wrlte-4u.com • #' ~ .-.. ,-...._,--·....,..:;t·..,..... ":""" The Dor Shen! ( ... second generaUon") Song and Damce Troupe from Israel will perform 1n honor of Israel's Inde- pendence Day al 7 p.m., April 27, at the Jewish Federatlon Campus, 250 E. Baker Sl, Costa Mesa. Tickets are $10. For more information, call (714) 755-5555, ext. 221 . Dinner by the Bay ••. Enjoy a relaxed dining atmosphere on our heated waterfront patio. Weekly specials include: -Fresh GRJLLED SEAFOOD- Si%%ling FAJITAS -Pasta & Chicken and our spectacular PRJME RlB Cvtry Thursday through Sunday s~rvtd 5 p.m. -9 p.m. (949) 729-1144 I J J J &cit 8Gy Drlv~ -Nnvport lkaclt -Off Jantbortt Rd. OM bf«Jt from PCH GUEST BOAT SUPS -tREE PARKING . . : . . '... ~ - Healtby> Wealthy eJ WiJe 10,000 Baby Boomers are turning 50 every day. Sy the year 2000, the number of people reaching 83 years otage will triple! Tod0t\ '• 50-c1t1uns attn t just g~tring oldrr, tht'.\'01T ~ning better -in tema of health. enerK'. viWil) and di<1posable income available to pend on products and 1<en.1u• . Ne\\ port ~ach and Co u ~\cq '"nion. ""ti"" m Oran~ County and shop locally and <44% or our ""aders are over _._..._,.. '45 yun of~! Publication Date: Thursday, April 29 Deadline for space and copy: Monday, April 26, at 5 p.m . Camera ready/ rel ·e: Wednesday, April 28 at 11 a.m. Call your advetti ing ale rcpre ntati 9491642--4321 today at Inquire about two :one discount. \ "I FOUNDATION (0NT1NUED FROM 1 those at Mariners mementary, Newport Harbor High School and Estancia High School, is incolpo- rated as a private, tax-exempt organization. it can pay directly for, among other things, computers, technology aides and a college counselor to help students through the tricky job of getting into the right school The foundation is not required \p report its revenues and spending lo the district, but Martinez said the foundation keeps scrupulous accounts and has a professional auditor look over its books. Many parents who are active in their school's foundations say they got involved to fill what they saw as a desperate need for additional funds. "Any extra, above-the-norm acaaemic program. we're funding it," said Karen Harrington, who directs Newport Harbor High School's foundation. "I've never been in another school district.• she said. •But it does seem like we have financial problems.· Harrington said she and other parents work on different commit- tees and school unprovement orga- nizations to make changes dis- tri.ctwide in addition to focusing on individual schools. HBut change is a slow process, and if you want to have an impact on your child's education, you do have to take matters into your own hands," she said. A court decree in the 1970s, Ser- rano vs. Priest, ruled that all school districts in the state had to equalize funding to wiUun $200 of each oth- er. But money given by private foundations IS not included in the calculations. "The private foundations are one loophole through which par- ents and communities (can) raise money for schools while staying under the spending cap,• said BURGLAR CONTINUED FROM 1 found in lus house may link him to those crunes. In the course of investigating the seven burglaries on Balboa Island, officers m the Crime Suppression Unit idenb.fied Riggs as a suspect and set dbout trying to catch him in the act of committing a crime. Started in 1995 with a $161,000 federal grant, the crime suppres- sion program frees up a few detec- tives from their day-to-day case- lQClds to study oune patterrlS and hit upon likely suspects. The pro- gram is now funded by the New- port Beach Police Department. "They go through parole records and find out what crooks have pnor connections to the city,• McDermott said. Police also meet with probdtion officers to find out if any local parolees may be up to no good. It was m Just Uus way that detec- tives keyed upon Riggs -who is on parole after serving time in state prison for being m possession of . narcotics and a firearm -as a pos- sible suspect in the Balboa Island burglaries. Thursday everung, police wait- ed outside Riggs' residence in Westrrunster and then followed him. •It was pretty good surveil- lance,•. McDermott said. •1t•s actu- ' ally fairly ctifficult to do, because all ' .. ' . Bruce Fuller, a profeaor ot Educa· tkm and Public Poticy at UC Berke- ley. •1 think it's a tricky policy issue,• be added. oot1ng that foundations me •ironically strongest in commu- nities, like Newport Beach. where taxpayers have been opposed to school bonds and other tax inaeas· .es.• • Fuller said this •Balkanization of society• results from parents accepting low funding of public schools as 1oog as their children's schools receive extra financial help. •1 don't think the state can say we're going to forbid private foun- dadons, but there's got to be a way to equalize it in middle-class and working-class communities,• he said. Local foundation leaders said attempts to equalize funding in the Newport-Mesa School District by taking money from one school's foundation and spending it dis- trictwide would probably not go over well. •Tue whole reason people start- ed their foundations is so they can spend the money as they see fit,• said Anne Ramser, president of Mariner's Foundation. She pointed out that parents give more when their children are in the primary grades, and their donations taper off as their children get ready to leave the school -a sign, she said, that suggests people would be ·unwilling to give as much if the money wasn't going to help their child. As a result, some schools in the district get more money than oth- ers. The Newport-Mesa Schools Foundation, founded in 1982, gives equally to all schools by providing grants to teachers. In addition, in the last five years, an anonymous donor bas given millions to schools across the district But there are far more founda- tions for Newport Beach schools than for those in Costa Mesa. Parents at Estancia formed a foundation to support all the schools in the Estancia zone this you have to do is step on the wrong thing .... It's fun.• Police saw Riggs case several houses in Huntington Beach, West- minster and Newport Beach before he went onto Lido Isle and disap- peared down a dark side yard, McDermott said. But when he came back to the street, detectives picked up his trail again. There they split up, McDermott said. Some detectives continued to spring, but the group's priJnary PUIJX?Se is to promote pride in the EsuinC:ia zone, and the group has- n 't raised any money yet. Costa Mesa High school does not have a foundation. And echoing these tren<:ts, the money PTAs are able to give varies widely as well. At Sonora Elemen- tary school in Costa Mesa. wbicb has a mixture of middle-class and working-class students, the PTA last year raised $21,000. Lincoln Elementary School's Parent Faculty Association, by contrast, raised $110,000. Board member Martha Fluor said she sometimes worries that individual school foundations are "not a unifying force within the dis· trict .• Fluor Said she thinks it is .fine for foundations to raise money to aug- ment the curriculum, but it "becomes an equity issue• if foun- dations are paying for things at some schools that other schools do not have. But Ught-Martine-L, like many parents involved in school founda- tions, said parents are merely try- ing to make their children's educa- tion better. "The parents in this community are committed to providing the very best education," she said. "Maybe they want more than the state of California can provide.• follow Riggs, while others contact- ed a resident from whose yard Rig- gs had just emerged. The resident confirmed that property had been stolen from the garage, McDermott said. Police aept behind Riggs as he returned to his car and caught him in pos- session of property stolen from the garage. "Everyone's out there whisper- ing and following this guy around.• McDermott said. •1t was almost Bra&Pantg Sale Kristen's Lingerie • Lo.ungewear • Gifts WestcHff Court • 1719 Westclfff Dr. Newport Beach Monday -Saturday 10-6 (949).631-SEXY (7399) No epeclal onlen Daily Pilot RICK HEARN I DALY Pit.OT Costa Mesa police officers make a sweep on Victoria Street looking for evidence after a shooting. SHOOTING CONTINUED FROM 1 in the crossfire)." "But knowing my depart- ment, we'll have someone in jail ARTHUR CONTINUED FROM 1 Chevy Blazer struck a median, flipped and rolled on Irvine Avenue just north of Heather Lane in the early morning hours of May 23, 1997. Donny Bridgman, 18, died like an old movie. A couple of times they had to stop, and stay in the shadows.• After they arrested him. detec- tives searched Riggs' house and found what they believe to be more really quickly,• he said. Sgt. Clay Epperson added that police believe there are "more witnesses out ther~.: who witnessed the shooting, but are reluctant to come forward. Police describe the shooter as a Hispanic man, 25 to 30 instantly. Dan Townsend suf- fered brain damage, and Arthur was plunged into a coma for more than three months. Her plight became a cause celebre in Newport Beach and beyond. Bill Medley of the Righteous Brothers held a con- cert to raise money for her med- ical bills. The Dally Pilot named her the most influential person stolen proper!¥. Police have now turned their sleuthing skills to try- ing to locate robbery victims who to determine whether any of the valu- ables found in Riggs' home are stolen items. years year old with a thin build, a gaunt appearance and a pock-marked face. He was wearing a white T-shirt and o white hat. Anyone with information is encouraged to call (714) 75~- 5053. in the community in 1997 for her inspirational . will to live, and People magazine wrote an arti- cle about he r "miraculous• recovery. Since corning home from the hospital 18 months ago, Arthur has worked to put her life back together, enduring · hours of speech and physical therapy and completing high school. .. • -· 259 days. • Sports Editor Roger Canson • 949~7 44223 HllH SCHOOL 1.-- ·:Sea Kings' girls slip past Irvine .. Morse, Kling, Cummins shine. Llz Morse, Ainsley Kling and Jenny Cum- mins led host Corona del Mar High over Irvine, 74-67 in a girls Sea View League track and field meet. Thursday. Morse took .first in the 400 (58.6) and the 1,600 meters ni Gelder in the high jump (4-10), twin sister Jasmine Geider in the long Jump ( 13-10) and sophomore Erika Jennings in the 300 hurdles (55.0). The Eagles fell to 1-3, 0-2. (11.81) and long Jump (18 feet, 10 inches) as the Eagles defeated host Laguna Beach, 71- 51, in the Pacific Coast League. -.(5:24.0), JO..ing won in the discus throw (78-9) and the sbo't put (31-10) and Cummins fin- ished first in the 800 (2:26.2). • Costa Mesa seniors Jamie DeNoewer (800 and 1,600) and Shakena Henderson (shot put and discus) doubled in a 77-50 setback at Costa Mesa. Henderson's mark in the shot (34-8) was her career best, while freshman Karlene Cluff (high jump) and Candace Nicholson ( 100 hurdles) also won for Mesa (2-2, 0-2). The Eagles (1-1 in PCL) were also led by event winners Josh Veach (124-2 112 m the discus), Griffin Crogan (43-2 1/2 in the shot put), Tony Magana (10:29.8 in the 3,200) and Alberto Munoz (4:40.8 in the 1,600). • Corona del Mar slips -At CdM, Zack Zarrilli, Reid Glyer and Josh Yelsey each won two events for CdM, but the Sea Kings fell to Irvine, 75-61 in Sea View League action. In other girls track and field Thursday: _ • Newport Harbor (2-3, 1-2) dropped an 80-52 decision, despite victories fTom fresh- man shot putter Rachel Beard (a personal- .: best 35-9), Krista Dill (discus), Leah Zaby :·(season-best 26.37 in the 200), Amber Steen -(1,600) and Alida McFall (3,200). Junior •.April Ross returned from a knee injury to : win the high jump (5-3), ed~g senior team- :-mate Jennifer Gilli's career-best of 5-3. In boys track and field Thursdar. Zarrilli won the 100 (11.1) and 200 (22.7) meters, Glyer took first in the 300 hurdles (44.0) and the triple jump (36-9) and Yelsey won the 800 (2:06.3) and the 1,600 (4 ·36.6) for the Sea Kings. • Jones, Herberts sharp -at Santa Margari- ta, Trevor Jones won three events and Curt Herberts took two in Newport Harbor's 76- 52 Sea View League loss to host Santa Mar- garita. Jones won the 100 (11.34), plus the 110 (15.31) and 300 hwdles (40.64) for the Sailors (3-1, 2-1 in league). Herberts took the 800 (2:02.51) and 1,600 (4:37.06). • Mesa lndJvtduals shine -Costa Mesa had winners in eight of the 15 events contested, but visiting Laguna Hills was a 70-57 victor. • • Hulpe, wtns twtce -in Laguna Beach, : 1:standa sophomore Llz Huipe won twice, • the 1,600 (5:41.6) and 3,200 (13:01.3), but • Laguna Beach topped the Eagles, 79-47 Oth- er Estancia winners included freshman Han- • Orozco, Golf double -at Laguna Beach, Senior Manuel Orozco of Estancia won the 400 (53.9) and 800 (2:07.4), while freshman teammate Juel Goff was first in the 100 Junior Greg Stewart won the 100 meters (a personal-best 11.09), the 200 and the long jwnp, while Bruce Hancock (800 and 1,600) and Robert Hulliger (shot put and discus) both doubled for the Mustangs (3-1, 1-1). RA VIEW~ llOYS ...,,.... 75. eo..on. .. -,, 100 • I. z.rllll (CdM). 11.1; 2. lMnan (I), 11.4; 3 MofTk (I), 11.S. 200 • 1. lMriHI (CdM). 22.7, 2 Mor· r1s (1), 21 2. ). Lemon (I), 23 s. 400 • 1. 8.-nl (I). 53 1, 2. lliwt• (I), Sl.l; l. Kr-(CdM). 54 0, too· 1. YefMy (CdM). 2:063. 2 Kt-(CdM). 2.100; l OrdunH 0), 2:10.4. 1,IOO • 1. Ye!~ (Cdf,4). 4.36.6; 2. Ferrell 0), 4:37.l; ). lollnge. (I), 4•"6.7. J,JtlO • 1. Shlplro (I), 10t12.9; 2. farml (I), 11Ul.1; ). Ye!My (CdM), 10:JSA. no,... 1. i...mon 10. 166, 2. G'Yef (CdM), 17.8; 3. My9' (II. 19.2. JOO It · 1 Glywr (C'.dM), 44.0; 2 lln (I), .... s. ) 8MChotf (I), 4'.0 .. ~ • I. lnllne, 44.7. 1,100 ~ · 1 IMne, 3:36.l. Ml • 1 a.Iler (I), 5-1; 2. Hletbrink (c.dM), ~ l Swlnon (I) 8lld Btown (CdM), 5-2 u · 1. Myw (1), 1M 112; 2. Quill9n (I), 11H. l. Glywr (CdM), 17-7 TJ • 1 Glywr (CdM), J6+. 2. Qull~ ru. ~ 112, ) a.It •(I), lS-11 rY·1Grinenko(l),12~ 2 ~ (I), 1~ l . KiWf (CdM), 1CHI. SP· 1 Johtvon (CdM) ...... ); 2 Shock.-t (~. »-10; ). llodl (I) .... OJ. 1. Fenton (<.dM). 1461; 2 Johnlotl (CdM). 136-7, J Shocbt (CdM), 1~5 saA YllW LIAGUl.G&.S ClaMJM-. MM 74. ._ 67 1oe-t S...Cl).tl.0;2 ~(1).ll.S;l ~ «M(CdM).13'.Jell 1 ......,(CdM)27..J.2.8- (J). 21.f; J l'nldndt (I) 27 I. 400 • I L ~ (CdMl. 5U; 2. Hswy (CdM), 62.3, 3 Ordunu (I). u..t .. -1 C\ln1INl'4 (Cd-.Q. 2:26.l; 2. K. Mor1ll (CdM), 2.27.2. l. C.W CO. 2.29.l. 1,IOO • 1 L Morw (CdM). 5.24.Q; 2. OM'nmtns (Cdf,4). S.31.0;) ~ (CdM), 5.ll.0 :I.JOO • 1 Quln&.n (CdM), 1 1 Sa.9, 2 K. Mone (CdM}, 12.'06..2; l . l.J\lwmol'e (1). 12.SOt 191 M • 1 Moublr~ (I), II 7; 2. Oorlmwt (CdM). 19 O; l Dubin (CdM), 19.4. JOO M • 1 ~(II. 51.7; 2. How..u (1). Sl.S; 3. OomMn (CdM), SU 400.....,. 1 !MM, 546. '·'°° ~. 1 eoron. dll M«. (Cummlni, HM'9)\ Ubuda. L Mont), 4.10 37 IU • I. Bf-(CdM), So(); 2. ~ (1), .. l. lef'r.l(err (CdM). ...... u . 1. Whitley ro. 1 ... 10; 2 ~ (I), 13-0; l . lef'r.l(err (CdM) 124 Tl • 1. hrM«<T (c.dM). &S; 2. Whitley (I), 2.S-11 "" • 1. Nobel (I), H; 2.111'.cfrldt (I), 7-4; 3. NIA. 5'" • t. Kling (CdM), lMO; J. Okbon (CdM), »4 112; S. Maddtn (I), 10-2. Of· 1 Kling (CdM) 71-9; 2. Ayshlen (I), 71- 4; l . Mln ll (I), n.f>. MCIAC COAST LIAGUI llOYS LNIUM Hru.s 10, CosfA MIM 57 100 • 1 S~wt (CM). 11 09; 2 Ool (lH), 11.J; l Wlbon (lH), 11.5200 • 1 SMWWt (CM). ll07; 2 Monten"OIO (lH), 2.) I. 3 ltemp (LH), 24.l .00 • I MontWl'OIO (lH). S2.S; 2. Tten (CM). SO; l. Stewns (lH). S5 7 ... • 1. Henc:odt (CM), 2'°"> 2. ~ (LH), 2'.'08.1; l . Ortlz(CM). 2 08.6. 1,IOO· UiMcock (CM), 4AO; 2. Pl1ce (LH), 4.45; 3. llocN (lH), 4:49. U00 • t, LYf'Ch (lH), 10.Jl: 2. ~1111M'Z (CM), 10-52. l WW!w(LH). 11'.07. 1'0 ... • 1 Wlntef(LH), 15.9; 2. Qun (CM), lO OJ, 3. Tr•n (CM), 20.2 JOO .. • t Winter (\)1), 4l 6, 2. Tr.,, (CM), 44.l; 3. ZirMlef (CM), 47.1 • .00~·1. UguN1 Hilh,4502.1,IOO ~ • t. Colta Mes. (S~ e>.y, Tttl\ ...,,_ cod!), 3 50 Ml • 1 Young (lH). 5-1. 2. Pt'Q (lH). 5-1, 3. o.y (CM), S-4 U • 1 Stewal1 (CM). 19-2; 2. Craft (LH). lf.2. 3 WlnlM (tH). 1•10 YJ • I. O.tft (lH), 41-11/l, 2. ~(LH). ~ J WW(CM),)S.11 N • Hot conteted IP • 1 Hulligef (CM), 47 ~ 2 a.-(LH), 43 ... l ~ (lH). 4J.l OT· 1 Hul- llger (CM), UM, 2 hnger"d (1.)1). 126-l. l. Gttfflm (lH). 111.0 MCIAC m.uT LaAGUI ~ I.MUM Hru.s 77. C'.anA MaA 50 ,.. • 1 Scott IU1l. 1l O; 2. ~ (lH). 1).04, ). Lee (CM). tl 4 200 • 1. F1.nt (lH). l5.I; 2. ~ !Ui), 27.1. l ~(CM), 27.S 400 • 1. ~ (L)l). SUS. 2 ICtoefWl9 (CM). 1 :00 1; J Gttffllti (lH), I-Git .. • 1 ~(CM), 2:2', 2. H9gon (LH). 2 «t ) M (CM), 2 42 UGO· 1 OeNoew9 (CM). S 37, 2. Coa (LH). S;S4, 3 Srnon (LH), 5.51. l,.200 • 1 n-(lH). 12.J7; 2 .._.. (lH). 11:.45: 1 Hitt (CM). JS) '00 M 1 Nlcholton (CM). 11.l. 2. Jwtlcowdll (CM). 115, l NtCtllo9l (LH). 111. JOO H • 1 llutllier (1.)1), SO.l, 2. Jriowllll (CM). S2.6, 3 Nidlolton (CM), 54 6 400 ~ • I. ~ Hilll. 54 3. 1,IOO ~·I IAgllN Hilb, 4:21. IU 1 Cuff (CM). ""-2. (tie),_,..,,. (I.ti) -' CllholQ (\)1) ...... u · 1 Griffith (\.H). 1~ 112:; 2. llMNnr (LH), t ... 10 112, 3 ICtOenlng (CM). 14-0. TJ • 1. Gtlff1th (l.H), 35-Q: 2. ltuhlzer (LH). 34-S; J ~I (CM). »2. PY • Not contefted. IP· 1. Hendlf1on (CM), ~ 2 OMM (\.H). Jl-4; l. Gru- bhlcl\ (CM), 27 .. Df· 1. ~(CM), 11S4. 2. Cerio (CM), 19-S; l . '°'* (1.)1), 17'9. MCIRC CIOAST LIAGUI 90YS EsWIOA 71. ~ llMdt 51 10CI • I Goff(£), 1 U1; 2 Crutcher (El. 11 8. l Gn-•ld-(l8), 12 1 100 • 1 Wolfe (\.I), 2• 1, 2 Bell (LI), 24 ), 3 Grltw•ld (LI). 24 9 400 • 1 Orozco (E), SJ 9; 2. Wolfe (\.8), 54 4. 3 Bell (ll). SOS IOO • 1. Orotto (E), 2~07 4. 2. Moore (LB). 2 OI ), l ZU<lter (LB), 209 5 1,too • I Munoz (E), • 40 8. 2 Moo<e (LB), 4:42 1, ). Zuclttt (LI), 4.48 6 l,100 • 1 M-O-"-([), 10 29.8; 2. Appell (fl. 10'56.0: 3 Inouye (E), 11069 110 ... • 1 Henderson (LB), 17 6; 2 Dyll.,([), 21 1 No third JOO IH • 1 Hen· denon (LI), 45 3, 2 Edw11tds (LI ), 51 24, 3 Wood {LI), 52.1. .... ~ • 1 Ert•ncUI (Goff, Crutcher, Oy\H end c:oncepclon), •7 42 UOO ~ 1 ~,,. a..m, HS.09 Ml· I. Wood (LI), 5-1. no s«ond °'third u . 1 Goff(£), 1•10: 2 ~ aon (E), 17-t; l Crutcher (E), 17 2 TJ 1 Wood (UI), 37-6, 2. Goff (E), 16-3, 3 Fkher (!), 36.o "" • not cont.steel W • t ~ (E). 4l 2 112 2 Rorne<o (E), 41-6, 3 \/Hd'I (£), 40-5 OT t Ve-0. (£), 126-2 112. 2 l\omero ((), 119-0. 3 Zlldltf (LI), 1()6.7 Mc.IC mAST LIAGUI GIRLS ....__ 91A0! 7', EltMaA 47 100. 1 Johnlotl (LI). 12.t, 2 J Ge<dw (E). 1) 02. l H Geidef (£), 1J 51 JOO · 1 Ct-(ll), l6 7 2 Johnlon (LI). 27 A, ). Mtwwk1t (LI), 17 s .... , er.mm (ll>. Hl1 a 2. ~ m. 1 os °" 1 ......,. ion (ll), 1 06 l IOO "Ill.. I lrooNn (UI), 2 J6 I. 2. ton.ies (t). 2411; l Krlctl (LI), 24).J 1.-· 1 Hulpe ((). S41 6. 2 lf.y (ll). S 44 1, ) If own (LI), S 57 9 l.200 • t H\llpe <n U-01 l. 2 CMlulntzl (E). 1 )'()9 0.. ) Alf01fO (E). 1l 16 1 100 " • 1 WMnlg (UI). 19 9, 2. Murr~ (LI). 20.1.. no lhl«I MO H • 1 Jennlngl <n ss 0; 2. Mutt.y (Lii. 5' se. 1 w..n.g (LI). 57 1. 400 ~ 1 UguNI hactl. 57 7' 1,IOO ~ • 1 ~ h.o.. 4.20'6 HJ 1 H Ge1c1et <n • 10.. 2. lenntn9J m. • 2; 1 Cobb <t11. ""2. u . , . J. Ge!det (E), 1). 1 O; 2. lwl (LI), 11·9, l Merli (E). ll·s.fJ · 1. Kr.ch (LI), 29-10. 2 Cobb (LI), 2t.o 112; l. Sltw (£), 27·10 ,, ·I. w...ilg (UI), 13-6; 2. """'°"Y (LI), 27-2. ). V. ((), 2'-3 112. OT -1 Wlenlg (LI), 1()0.7; 2 \lega (l). 7't-5. l AntNny (I.I). 7l-3 11J QUOTE Of THE DAY .. "Spmt 115fast115 you a11flw!hefirst330 ym'ds and THEI star1 fU' kik _ • Bob tt.lley, Former Newport Harbor track and field coach, describing how to run the quarter-mile. Daily Pilot 9 111 pjlot HI SPORTS HALL OF FAME CELEBRATING THE MILLENNIUM OB HAILEY Newport Harbor • 'Uncle Bob' ruled the lanes in the '60s and '70s, but ·· he was much more than simply a great track coach. TONY ALTOUHlJ F ormer Newport '8lli Harbor High runner lllltll Vinnie Mulroy once desoibed Coach Bob Hailey's comments of how to properly run the quarter-mile. "Bob told me, 'Sprint as fast as you can for the first 330 yards and 11-fEN start your kick ... " The legend of good ol' "Uncle Bob" is alive and well throughout Newport Harbor and the local area as he enters the Daily Pilot's Sports Hall of Fame, celebrating the millennium. Both a former track coach and biology teacher, Hailey looks back on many ups and downs dunng his 36-year teaching and coaching career at Newport Harbor. A career involved with sculpting kids into adults and overcoming crippling setbacks. ·111e thing I miss the most is working with the kids,• Hailey said. ·watching their minds shortly after graduatmg fTom Colorado State. He arrived at Harbor in 1960 to fill a vacancy in the soence department and became an assistant track coach under head coach Bill Straw. He was named head coach three years later when Straw retired. Hdiley remained head coach unbl 1979 Dram.age problems with the track had been a problem for years and when his plight still fell on deaf ears with the distnct hierarchy, Hailey stepped down. perhaps yea.rs before his time. His We would change two weeks later As he was parked and facing lus open trunk a drunken driver smashed into the back of Hailey, crushing Hailey's legs into the rear of tus car, then sped off, leavmg the former coach helpless on the ground. He learned to get around with the use of a cane, but Hailey endured 17 years of nuserdble pain and countless operations on lus legs . develop and grow was Bob Halley the most satisfying thing Always the stubborn opb.rrust, Hailey d.ldn't let tlus ma1or setback l could ever do." In Bob Hailey's 16-year tenure as track and field coach at Newport Harbor during the 1960s and '70s, he coached the Sailors to six Sunset League championships. But perhaps bis most dominating era was a seven-year span fTom 1973-79 which tus athletes captured five league titles, ran up dual-meet winning streaks of 26 and 29 and set countless event records, some still yet to be broken. Perhaps one of the greatest eras of any coach in any sport in these surroundings. "That 1979 team was probably my most rewardmg. • Hailey said, recalling those memorable champ1onslups. ·1n 1979, we had probably the least talent of all my champ1onslup teams, but not only d.ld we win, we won by the largest margin of any wmrung squad I had Just goes to show what hard work and belief will get you." Some of the greats Hailey coached throughout tus years were shot put legends such as former world-record shot-putter Terry Albritton, state champs Jim Neidhart, Mark Stevens and David Kwrasch. All were heavily influenced by Hailey and all have gone on to other success, both on and off the t:tack. Hailey came to Newport slow hlrn down. ln fact he even would scrape cultures off lus leg in his Biology class to aid m tus students' education Uncle Bob finally retired from Harbor for good m 1996. but then, lus We was challenged again He was involved m another ca.r acodent nus time, a head-on colliSJon m Newport Beach cost what was left of tus right leg. but not tus unflappable pos1uve outlook. NThe accident actually worked out for the better," Hailey said. •Now 1 have a prosthesis on my nght leg, I can get around better now and I'm not m as much pam as before." Hailey recalled learning to tunctJon with a new leg was not easy. •1t was like teaching a baby to walk.· Hailey remembers. "But I had Mom (Hailey's lovtng rucknarne for his wife Dorene) crackmg the whip on me so l got learned pretty fastt• Desp1te being retired. Hailey is not slowtng down. "Well, we painted the lllSlde and outside of the house and we got back from VlSiting (son) Jeff in Austraha." Jeff Hailey is currently competing m the Weight Pentathlon m Austraba and is one of the tops in his age class of 35 and older. Always pushing, hke father-like son IEllNIS Overall winners are Ensenada's true champs a Kings shut Sailors t in singles, completely, continue unbeaten ways. Roy Disney, Of Mickey Mouse fame and his boat Pyewoc.ket. didn't really Win the Newport-to-EnSe.nada Race last year ... it was Minney! La.It "eer's overall wtiiner was a wooden-hulled, full-keel 30-plus·yMr-old schooner calloo Scunafung, owried by Ernie Minney. Min.Dey, proprietor of •MtnDey'• Yacht Surplus" on old Newpiort Blvd., took home the President Of tb8 United Stales Th>phy for belt eorrected time. A. nk'e .. t ii to tee ~ l1lg boats ntiriilg the N WJ>C?rt·to- Emenada Race, boOt like PyewOcl<et, ZeP/lyra, Chnatlne, nlXl Dancer and MognJtude. it's clearly not what the race ls all~L 'nds It• race where almost any bolt caa eter, have a Cbailce at win.iling its cl45S, and aefinitely have a good time. So you see It wasn't ballonl.St • ocean-racer Steve Fossett and his high-tech Star1 and Strfpea dual·hulled rocket, nor was it Roy Disney and bis boat Il41Iled ofter th back cat in the story, Bell. BOok and C011dk (Pyewoc.ket). It was Samarang, an older and heavier wood boat with soils made of old Levts with a little nylOn thrown in. It wu wonderful to have o boat built Of tlmtief, abej>ed by old·wortd shiJ)W'rlgbla and aoftlmen, nK"emt the pn.stiglous ftat·piM'e honor. IOAllll . other exotic ma riels uncommon to most of us. lt's becoming IO out of control that the average rich man can't afford to sail a •big boat" anymore! This actlvity callod ya<:hbng ren 9 t • w bll perwve. Mon yd 't grow on ; k.nowt nm1e Minney oo.i. we'IW, clid. The 1999 race is shapmg up and appears entries will exceed 550 boats. From a hellroptcr, peenng down at 550 race boats and numerous spectator craft. it will gtve the appearance you're looking into a Maytag. Tho boats churrung before th start -what a wond rfu1 display of organized chaos. With recent weather blowmg as at h , maybe eve.ryon wtll have rnore time to pend at Huaso.ngs Cantina and th Bah.ia Hotel 1>4tio. E¥ n though th re~ dra v rything from Kevlar to canva , in r aty, it' always an v nt with a reape where you mix • 200 pounds of dollors and JUSt and w ter. • However, it was A.L. Barr of the San Diego Yacht Club aboard MJd<ey, a 46-foot PCC, that co.rrected out in a bJne of 19 hours, 4'7 mi.Du and chang Y. macho m n. A.L. •Mickey• B4rr w a lady a.nil fir.it to WU1 th En~.nada Rae Congrotulotions to Bob DtckcSOO. who kn w th ans"° to who w th winner of I.he first race In HMS. Dickson ln th • Ahmanson-Skyla.rlc·Dick..son Ro.cc· lhi weekend, hosted by Nc~rt H rt>o1 Yacht Club, a r that originated in 1955 and ha now odd th •oa non Thophy• fn honor of his father, the lat Jim Oick:son. • Th wporMo·Ensenada Race begin on week ftOm today You're n too old to ha ft good 'timel f It t I CllDULI Sports .I 111 f I ..... _,,_ L • "' :\Nall ~school· CoroN ~I MM n..._PQtt Harbor, 3;15 p.m . Orange Coast strikes in late going, again, 11-8 • S'-iffball Ccnimunity college -Otange Coest tt Sanfa Ana. 3 p .m. Hlg-.•school ·Newport Harbor at WHodbridge. 3:15 p.m. • T90ttfS •Thompson socks 13th. FVllERTON -Orange CO{\ t Col· lege's Pirates were t 1-8 Wil\ners over host Fullerton Thursday, tmproving their Orange Empire Conference baseball record to 8-7 (21-14 overall). spot wtth o pou of doubles. Azusa Paoflc tmproves to 26-12·1, 16·7 in the GSAC. sec falls to 18-21, 9-14. ...-.-NM.-ntcuss a ct ---~ .. 1«1 SoC,el C.olleot 010 000 000 • 1 • 1 day's one·ttroke defeat by Pac:ibc Coa't League and tntraoty rival Cot· ta Mesa Thursday, eflming a 212-221 home win tn a nine-bole match at Mesa Verde Country Club. sec women•s tennis falls COSTA MESA -1.Jndsay Ooy41 and Miehe.le Tamplin won both lrin· gle. and doubles for Southern Calif or· Dia College, but the Va.nguards lost to Point Loma Nazarene 6-3 in Golden State Athletic Conference women's tennis Thursday at the Costa Mesa Tennis Center. COmrnunlty college women -Orange C~ft .it Orange Empire Conferen<e Tourn~ment. at Fullerton College. 1 p.111. • lrtuf< and flefd ArlM l'ecl1fc 210 410 OOa • • 9 o st ..... Dowdy (4). Low.y (7) Md 04ll1I. Melkrey end~ W • ~ 1-2. L ·St.I•. 28 • 80oth (SCC) 2. Sendlu W>. Griffin (AP). H" • ~ (An, Griffin ~).. s.nch.z (AP). Joey Mueller was ithe low man for Estantja, though Costa Mesa Junior Jeff Montoya ·captured medalist hon- ors by carding a pair of birdies for a 1 • under-par 35. . ,.... ......... N •11111 • l;ti9!1.school boys and girls -Costa Mesa 41l Tustin Relays, 2 p.m. The Sues scored three in the sev- enth and four In th.e ninth as they once again surged in the late going, slamming fow doubles, two triples and Brandon Thompson's 13th home run, a two-run shol Fullerton fell to 18-17, 5-10. Danner sharp, Eagles fall COSTA MESA -Estanda High sophomore Joanna Danner went 2 for 3 with two stolen bases, scored the Eagles' lone run and allowed just one earned run while throwing a com- plete-game six-hitter Thursday. But VI.Siting Aliso Niguel WOO the Paci.fie Coast League softball game, 4·1. Estancia'• Tom Rauscll 141), Mesa's Donny Miller (43) rounded out the top four, while Eagle teammates Matt Wehr, Peter Andersen and Greg Rausch all shot 44 to help the bO!Sts get their first. league win in tluee matches. OCC's Jaeger in the final .,..._,..., • SWet'1mlng C0tflniunity college men and women -Ort1,d~e Coast. Santa Ana at Sadd'· >ack College, 2 p.m. • --~ a.we. CQuT 11, FUu.srote • Ortnge CoMt 012 001 l04 • 11 II I Fullerton 102 200 201 • • 13 2 PULLERTON -Camelle Jaeger continued to roll for the Orange Coast College, advancing to the women's singles final in the Orange Empire Conference tennis tournament. H1Qh school boys and girls -Loara at E~Ancia, 3 p.m. • Volll'yball Co nunity college men -Orange Coau.•t Golden West, 7 p.m. loRlck, IMlg!on (•). Colemen (7), l'lritln (9) end Thomplon; er-. Cruz (81 end Pote!n. w · ~ 2·1 l • Ctvz . ~l. 28 • Pohle (F). llomprey tn. PoMln (fl. ~ {()CC), H«nendu (OC:O. Wehlbnnk (OC:Q, Oflandos (OC:Q. )8 • Oetlt (OCQ, Wantbunl< (OCQ H" • Mceu. (F). FiKhe< (f), ThofflplOn (OCQ Junior Debbie Wyman's RBI single scored Danner, who singled, stole second and third to bring tbe Eagles to within 2-1 in tbe fowth inning. Estancin fell to 8...f, t-1 in league. Bryce Sheridan (46), Brian Jones (48) and Steve Perez (49) also scored for Mesa, which fell, to 5-4, 1-2 in league. In the quarterfinals, Jaeger defeat· ed Fullerton's Heidi Stone, 6-1, 6-2, then won against Coral Conley of Riverside in the semis, 6-1, 6-4. Y 0 L L E Y I l L L~, Alumni game Saturdax NEWPORT BEACH -Newf" port Harbor High boys volleyba1J coach Dan Glenn is seek:in,g alumni from the Sailors' program for Saturday's alumni game with his varsity, which will begin at. 1 p.m. Htc:rt school boys -El Toro at Newport Harb r 5.45 p.m.; Corona del Mar Uni nets victory at Mesa In other quarterfinal action, OCC's Margo Verhagen lost to Karen Amos from Saddleback, 6-0, 6-2. at Wt,. c1bndge. 5:45 p.m.; Estancia sec falls, 8-t, in baseball at U• ' •rs1ty, 5:45 p.m.; Costa Mesa at Lau na Beach, 4:30 p.m. • Goll HiQI \ChOOI boys -Newport Harbor at S1Q-1mento Jesuit Tournament. • CrP • Coll 1e men and women • Orange Coa\t t State Championships. AZUSA -Southern Califom1a Col- lege dropped its sixth straight base- ball decision to host Azusa Paaf1c ThUTSday as the host Cougars record- ed an 8-1 Golden State AthJetic Coo- f erence victory behind an attack which included three home runs. MON:~...-. AUlo ....... E:stMaA 1 Aliso NIQUel 000 21 I 0 · 4 6 I EltenN 000 100 0 • 1 s s HNth end Slwllttl; J. o.n,_ ~ c..ctlole. w . Htieth, ~ l • J OW\Mf, 9-4 Eagles putt Mesa away COSTA MESA -The Estancia High boys golf team avenged Mon- COSTA MESA -Costa Mesa High doubles partners Josh Monis and Farsbld Kazi won a team·high nine games, but visiting University, No. 5 in Orange County and unbeat· en in Pacific Coast League action, claimed an 18-0 boys tennis victory Thwsday. Mesa fell to 3-9, 2-4 in league, while the Trojans improved to 11-3, 6-0. Jaeger finished off her busy day by teaming up with Denise Poirel, defeating Merrill Baker and Kim Cb6- put from Fullerton in the doubles quarterfinals, 6-3, 6-1. "Anyone interested shoul9, show up," said Glenn, who added, "the alumni lost last year. and that's the first time ever that Sacr" 11ento, 8 a.m. Enc Booth was SCC's only bright . : -. 41 , I, ., ., • I . . . . .. ' -1~~1 ~ -.fb~'.' ''?-'~ ~.· ·• , . -. -· ,-, ' . -. ' . ·~··., Fic..Wloua Bualneaa court should not make an pUOllcadon of WI Notkle • ...-. Is ........ wNdl P.M. In Deot. L73 tooat-within the City la • Vital ~h·ne Statement order declar1no Jonalhon .,.._ you raoalw __, lnctudM .._ ~ 9'IOUnt ad 9t 3'1 The City publlc MMoe and the1 the following Pt~ Gutierrez free from peren· notloe. (rl•H• UH ot tM ~ ~ Driw P.O. Box 14171 ·~· aa:umulallon, col· 0 business as; tal control and custody and •IA>1481 ) YMI mun ,....,. accr'Ulll and Or~ CA 1281 a-lee1loil, and dlspoeal Qf b11tties T'hereputlc a pr099r subject fOf adop· ....,. .,, ........ =:: ...,.... lnt•HO and ,.. 11571 aolld waste and ,.. ..,..._ 1151 Airway Ave .. tlon. ~ .. -~die Clunl't ~ .. ~~-~ IF.YOU OBJECT TO cyclables la a matter of '!b. I osra Mesa, .c A Yoo haw a ttght to ap-,.. -~ .._.... -..-·---·---the -•rrtl.... of t .. _ gl'Mt publk: concem be· pear In person andlor by -an: -m ._..__, • 9'I time of lltlUll publl-•· ... nw cause Improper control of Wein, 300 s. counsel. H you wish lo be ~A~ c.aon ot tNa noac.. petition, you •hould auchmanaiswoufdaublect liiiMNc1ors Rd., t38, repreNnted by an attorney W ·c.m.r c. Dlted' Matctt 21, t• appHr at the heering the City to poCentlal llablllty, .,..... d Bar. CA 91765 and the oouri delermines 927'1;1 !: :&:; 1~ fUCH K. CAlllt..00 AU&a-•nd •tate Xi:" objeo-damages and penahlts .t>us1ne11 Is con· you cannot afford an al· d=• of the .,. of the TNIJ VIC9 ~ ~~ .. or •. written and may create a public lndlvld I tomey one wm t>e •"-In ...._ '"·-~--•-•......... ----... _.. .. one With the A•"•snoe alt pollution lire 1Y an ua pointed' tor you ........ :!'d Co·-•,.._..,~:::.__-""' ~COM-~:,:.. court b•fore the hear-,..,,_ ' ' •rant has no4 yet .. "'"""' ........ ,,.. .,..,_,.,. ..,_ .. ,.., -hazard, W.statlon, and ..,., D lransad bualneSI charge 'The f.UW. ta dlMly fie ~ fmM), Ing. Your llPPMtanCO other problems anec:t•ng ~Ile licl•tlous bull· If you laff to appear at the and MC\M'9 a Wf1ftad ctllM IUITm 2ITO "'tJ'tiHDA&i. m.y be In per9on or by the publlc: healttl. nlety me or names llst.ed lime and place slaled .utlno en .,,._It In the CA t1'~_l829t ~ your attorney. and welfare; and, abo\19, tile court may terml· pro~ In 1N I~ l'Ofl S ~ IF YOU ARE A WHEREAS, non-ex- To• weon nate your rlghtl to the con-Court wtl reeu1t In the T10H CALL: (ttlt Jl'M'1'21 CREDITOR or a contln-ctuslYe franchises lor the r~titement was filed trol and custody of the mi· ~ Mino dedePM • ~ 412. "9. "11 gent creditor of the use of public streell 10 '1ltt 11 , county Cler1t o1 nor child. onferM fot19'l to the St.ta deoe .. .ct you mu.-file provide oommerdal solid Qrar·ii County on 3·22·99 DATED· MAR 4 1999 ofCallfomleandAlll•IAld CHS17024H your oleim with the waste heullng Hrvioel will , 199111797192 ALAN SI.ATER, CLERK ,...,.,. • 1N proWioo• NOi ICE OF court and mail • copy to promote the public health. Da 'r P1lo1 AfK. 2, 9, 16, OF THE COURT of Helfth and leteey Code Kill .. TO thep•raonalreprffent• aalety. and wellare by 23. 1 "~ FS43 BY: DIANE WEBSTER, ~ ncJ.!. ": ~ ADaS&S 1 BC tlve appointed by the promoting permanence I Ffct'tlous Bu1ln .. 1 g~~',W CLERK OF THE 04/HS, 04/23, 04i30• ESTATE OF: court within tour :~1~:S~!~ ~n~ N;-,rne Statement LAW OFFICE OF WES B1f month• from the date provide auch servloe and T f llo I .... RY ELIZABETH ORR. NO-e ,... ..._, .......... 1 of flret i11uenoe of .... ,11 ,.. Cl hf () wng persons '""' ...... ........ ""''""~ FREDERM:K . .:~ aocoun ....... ty to u1e ty are n •g business as: 900 EAST KATELLA. SAU! T.S. No. 81:aa10 • ...,.___, latter• 81 proY1Ved In tor compliance with current S TE F OR GE CA • ....... NO · -•10 YOU --• aectlon 9100 of the L·~r\;~::O:'°~~ci.~0fo: UI • AN • MEIN omrAULT-UlllCa CASE NO. A191810 California Probate Code. :~.future stale mandates, Alan111.1s. Calitomla 90720 :wJA~J~~·9TOO A D&D 0. TRUST, To aU helra, benefi. The time for flQng WHER.EAS, rursuanl to Er'' Van Preag, 250 El TERESA GALVEZ DATED 121a'17, UNU!SS clariH, creditora, con-o1 ...... wUI not el(plre Mlde XIII 0 the City Oam Real, Sul1e 111, GUTIERREZ YOU TAKI! AC1lON TO dngent credltora, and before four month• Charter and pursuanl to Tus1n 1. Gahfomla 92780 Published Newport PttOllCI YOUR ,..,.._ peraona who m-v other-from th• hearing date Sections 49500 lhrough Je"-'' Campos, 250 El Beach·Costa Mesa Dally l!RTY, rT MAY U 80LD AT wlH b• lnterffted In noticed above. 49523 ol the Public Re-Cam" ' Real, Sulla 111. Piiot March 26, Aprfl 2, 9, A P\BJC aAL& lfl YOU the wiU or eatMe, or YOU MAY EXAM-1-0Uroes Code. tile City Is TUS1!"t. California 92780 18, 1999 F8"'2 :mTHEANNA~": both.1. of: WESTERN INE the file kept by the aU1honzed lo enter Into GI< r11 Rodriguez, 250 El °"'"01121 _,O•C~Q .......... _ FAEuAERIPETITlCK UN0DNSE'f~ court. If you ere e p•r· non·excluslve franchise (:1immr) Real. Suite 111, ~· --· ,_ I t tad · th agreements for com· tus11., Cahlomla 92780 NO....,... OF .,,.~'RE Y?.h_ YOU SHOULD COft. b e e n f I I , d b y eon n erea in ,.,• merdal solid waste ~- Th" business '' con· ' -1111c:K>v TMa A LAWYP. NOTICE KINGSTON LINDSEY In aetate, you may 1 1 tlon services with prtvate ouch·d bv a genera'\ pen-~~~ IS HDtl!llY GIVIN ~ ~ the Superior Court of with the court a formal solid wute hluters. and, (18r""" HCTIOH 11471/11488 ~. """*" ~ Celtfomla, Coun"' of R~ for Speojal WHEAEAS, Kavin Ray Hu you starled <lotng -· 1'tAL.E10H .... ..._ ., Notice of tn. filing of en DemoWon. a pr111ai. dam· l . -... yel? Yes. ANO NOTICE OF QOSTA ........ CA '21121 Orange. ·1-ntory _ ___. -r-'s• ........... ----. ..A. ~; tmNOE.D FOfffJ'NRE •aMUOI"~ Num-THE PmTION r• ~r~t9ta ~ 0~ of ~"'_;' .;piic.b Je~ampos "'l'f:~ ~TH bar: '22..ot.a wt11 be qu .. ta that KINGSTON any petition or account =:·....,,a Non•xduslve ....... -1 t t ,,.__,, IOld • .....,.., .ucaon .. LINDSEY be appointed .~___. I • -'V F , ...... ~a amen was,....., SECTIOH 11481.4 AT ne"NOiTH MOHf ...... raonal r~r•Hnte-aa pro .... wu n .. cuon wasi. randllM thet with " 'l County Clerk of .... 1250 of the California satisfies tile City'• appllca· Orar County on 3-04·99 On MAROf 30 1Ht .t l!NTRANCll TO THI! tive to adml etar the Probete Code. A Re-tlon requirements 199111715121 731 8"AUMNt APT.' C, COUNTY COUlnHOUSE. Htete of the decedent. quest for Specie! Notice NOW. THEREFORE, be Oil I• Pilot Apt 2. 9. 16, COSTA MESA. CA.. the 1'00 avtC CEN'T!R 0NYi THE PETITION r• fonn la _.....11 ........ , from it __ ..... __. ~-City 23. 1 •· '1 F652 property deeortbed ee: WEST, SANTA NM. CAl.J. queete euthority to .,,.,_,. ,..~·~o1-· u_:i: N~· ~on 4121111 , • 2:00 edmlnleter the •ltllt• the court clerk. """"""' .... "' ·- SUPFRIOR COURT OF t1.200 U. I. CURRENCY l'M. to the hlghUt llldder, und•r the lndapandant ~...:z t' r:-=•llllllcDllll•.:. ~ ~:a~r\ng lhaM _JJ\E STATE OF _,...attMUIMofNll. Adminl1tradoo of Ee· D ........ M I •• be __ ........ ..,,, on •~111 26, ClEDtORNIA IN AND WH ••IHd J> ..... uant to foic.uhotca.,.,..1cMdr tatN Act. (Thlsauthorl-•-. -999'7'00 ..., FOR THE COUNTY Hellttl end la~ ~ *awn on 8 state°' n.-ty will allow the ptl'9on-Iii ,.._ !oon·tr!:~ner~~ ;i)FORANGE ~8JU~~1 '1~~ :n;i~c=.r:=-alrepreHntadvetoUlke =..·-=--~ In the City Councll Iii~ THE MATTER SHEAFF'& DEPARTMENT. Inga and loan HIOCS.lon, ma~ eodon1 without CM/1e, CM/19, M/23 Cnambera, 3300 Newport ~1HE AOOPTION The ,,..,...., -wH Hired uvtngt uaodMlon. « ob nlng court epprov-RESOLUTION Boulevard, Newport ~~~l~~:~N ~latlon~t •..::::::; ==-bank~ ~~~4:,~~g.:~~~~ NO. •23 ::~·~'';:."::~0 ~ ~NO. AD 68147 11312 of the HNlh and 1111 and authortud to c1G however, the parson8' A RESOLUTION OF tr115at~u~rel~mh IP~~~ W""'"-nifty~. You.,. ,_.. bua1neM tn Cdfomla. The reprff•ntetJv• wUI be THE CITY COUNCIL .... ,.._ ... 2 .,_,.... Cl r ATION AND '!¥ nadfted ~ ~ 1811 wtl be _. ~ required to gtw notice OF THE CITY OF pursuant to the loltowing G~lt! E OF HEARING ~ ... -... -'!! conWNfC ot -.mncy, to lnte,.at~ peraont NEWPORT BEACH terms and oond1tlon1: .CfllPETmONTO f:i.lttt.::::'3:~ upreuortmplled.l'egef'd-unlu1 they have DECLARING ITS IN-a. Franchise elfect1v1 O~C'LARE MINOR to':!...-Ing ttt1e, poa1111'aA, Of waived notice or con-date: May 28, 1999. •' (REE FROM ll'Ol*tY .. tety~ .~ encumo..w-'° ud""" eent· ... to th• p~os_... TENTION TO CON· b Ouarterty franchise ••• en4 .. f _....., ----., ... .., DUCT A PUBLIC l"""".:6.561 olg~·mont""' , .. ,$TODY AND 11 .. -.. tM obi""-Mall'ell..., •A•1-n.I ...__ I .... ~ ""' ,. ,..,.. '"1 •' -.......... --· _, -uv , ,... _,. • .-HEARING TO CON ·-~s for, ... ft-' -ar .... • • r'lNTROL OF You n ~thee If tM Dalid ol TNlt tt• dent admlnl1tretlon • '""""' ,.., ••• ,. "" • f:: .. __ ,_ to --........ cuted by JOAN M HOUOI!. ~~...._.ttu w'" .. _ g~~... SIDER THE GRANT· Ira • term lncfaulng • IOHN DOE ,.....,. -·-... M UNMAIUUED ........, .. ., ........... ., ,. .,. ,_,..., 0 ' 1% rr year with I cap ~ 'N DOE orl9ltww of tNe pntpetty, -·-:::;-"' unleH an Interested ING OF A N N-EX· 10 5 • ~. punuant to Hellltl and • .. -. ,_....,.. on penon.filn an ob)eotion CL US IVE S 0 LID · ~t1ri R~H~~::.~0:~ hfety Cod• Section tn• reconled~ to the petition end WASTE FRANCHISE ~~~ree:to~=: 41128 .. ~ at 8·30 A.M , In 11411.&~ must fie • ~ No. ~ ehowe good ceuH why TO KEVIN RAY With renewal r1ghts Dltpr11•-icnl L72 ol the Su· = In 1Nstllttne ~ omci.i ~ 'ot QA. the court ahould not OEMOUTION. upon mutual agreement o1 ~' Court of 0ranoe You,_.. fie tNa~ ANQE. CelhmJa. The.._. grant the authority. WHEREAS, the City the franc:hlsM and City ,. t l("(:aled al 341 Tfie 1N ~ Court of the ~ MCUt9C1 19y Mid A HEARING on the Council finds and de· d. The City lh8J not Mt ~ '"· Qfange. Calllor· eour.ty of Or.,.. .-., IMlrumlnt.• ot tttt u.. petition wit! b• held on terminel thal the c:ollectlon the Franc:hlsff'I bin '111• lllril. t .hr·w cause why the d*ty 130t 4¥ of the flnt ol lntitll blk.etlon c:A thla May 13, 1188 .i 1 :45 of solid waste led e. F11tnctllsee lhaD In----~~~~-'----'....,;;.;.;...;.:.,...:..;;..;;.:....:;.;.z..;.....;.;....;._;.....;.;...;..;...i.;:;;..;;:==~:;=.:;:=::::=....=:....=..::::~.....:.~~-=.;:..:......::.;.~.;..;.JL...:.:.~~~,;,;;...z.;;;;.;.:;;;,;,;;;:...1 demnlfyendholdhermleas TARTING A NEW City from envlronrneotal U· ability for the f,.nc:hilee'1 operations In the City and shall pay to tile City Environmental llablllly Fund, on a quarterty balll, 5.5% ol giou IWC81pta for an oomrnerdel solid west• handling 18Mees provided ~tythe Franchisee In tile 1. F111n<lhl1ee ahan in· demnHy end hold City harmle11 from S*l&lllea and damagu tor !allure to ITlfft cvrrent and future state recycllng require· men11 with raspect to the portion of tile oommerclal solid waste ttrMm col- lected by Francihleee. I US/NESS?? • • • • • • • • • • Tht l.Aglll Dqummmt 111 tht Daily Pi1"t is pkastJ to a1VU1un« tl MW ln'tl~t now atldiltzbk to ntw businasa. ~ will ntnu SEARCH tht NlmL far you Ill no extra dM'ft, ttnd SllW JO" tM tirM "114 tht trip "' tlu Court Hou.st in S4nl4 An11. Thm) of ~"l'U, 11ftn tlN u.m is "1mpktd aw wiU fik your fiaitiou.s businas ume Jtlltemmt with tht Coun11 Ckrlt, /"blish ona 11 ~tit for four i«tla 11.1 rrlJuirrJ by "1w 11n.J thm fik your prHf of pubuation with tlN CounlJ Cln-lt. Pkase stop by to fik JO"' ftaiti.ou.s busintJS JlllUmmt 111 tht D•il-J Pili>t, 330 W. &ty St, CoJ14 Mna. Jfyou &annot :t"" pkase call us at (!)49) 642-4321 anJ t« wi/J mdt amzngnnmt:1 for JO" tfJ ha this proutiun Ii) m11iL Jf yo11 1ho11/J haw ll1tJ fanh" fJUDlions) pktm Cllll us anJ aw will be morr than il.tuJ Ill assut yo11. GooJ I~ in your nnv businns! 18~ °'~in=:= r\ghl \o deilgnae. dilpoMI IKllltlel to be used by Fnanc:NMe. h. FrandllMe llhall be re- sponllble for aN blling and oolleellon fof' Its ac:coums. I F~ lhal not be revoked unlell th8f9 .. de- """ l#lder the agreement. j. Prior to obta"*'o a Solld WUtl Franc:NM, flt aoollotirCa thel Mllsfy the C'li)"a ·minimum qua II· llca'tlona ~ lllbilllY ln1uranc1; •qulpmenf. ~ Of aolld ••te r.outatlonl, loed ~ programs, etc. k F'11f'Ch19 .. IM" mMt Clty't requ!f9mtnetl IO Im· p1emen1 recycling and 90Ul'CI 19dUatlOfl publlO edl.allon tc1M11411. I. City has •utl'IOl1tY to an· nual!Y eUdlt 'ranc::NM4t'• II nandal ~ ,..-ing IO lhe~oflMlr9• quited und8t !ht frlnchlM m Ffllf ICNNe .,,.. oom• pty Wlf\ .. '*'· ,..,., laws •nd ft?Ul•llona, """" and OOfldlliolll d the fnanctUI ~ Cly Charter and MunlGlll•I ()ode. 2. The City pfq)(llet IO oft9f a non•llCMlll9 told ....... collalon franchiM IO eec::t1 al lhe lolC:Mtno 16>-plcara llMtd ...,. . -Pet . ld'8 ""° IWW'I WI ~ The singles final is today at 2 p.m. The doubles semis and finals are at 3:30 p.m. and 5 p.m. respectively. bas happened." H In Of obie<:tlon to the proposed 1,.nct11... may IPPMf befor8 the City ~ and be heard on the dale llnd lime lillild abolle. a. Kevin Ray Demolttlon. KeYln Ray, OWner 3. This Resdutlon of ln- 1entlon lhaA be publshed In the City' I olfldal fl8WI· paper with 15 days of Its adoption ahd at IMst 1 o dey9 prior to April 28, 1999. ~ this 12th day ol Aofl 1999 ft/ D.nnie D. O'Neil, MAYOR ATTEST: ISi Lavonne M. Hand ... , CITY CLERK Published Newport Beach- Costa Meu Dally Pilol Apr1116. 1999 F859 Flctltloua Bualnn• Name Statement The followlng pensons are dolno business as: Shared Resources, 4425 JambotM Rd., 1155, New· port 8"c:tl, Call!. 92660 Newport Fede11tl, a Cell· fomla Corponltlon, (Cell· fomla), 4425 Jamboree Rd., 1250. Newport Beac:tl, CA 92660 Woodrow Raymond Stone, an lndlVkJual, 4425 J,amborM Ad., 1155, New- port Beach, CA 92660 Thll bu$1neu Is c:on- duded by; joint vencure Hava you started doing bullneas ye1? No Woodrow Raymond Stone NeWJ)Ort Fede11tl, a C.I· lomia Corpotallon, William P. Cottle, Chlel Flnan<:l91 Officer This stat9ment WU llled wittl the County Cler1t ol Oraooe County on 3-1 &-99 ~ -1'"'718417 t1attv Pllo1 Mar. 26, ~- 2, 9, f6, 1999 F&40 Flcdtloua BualneH Name S1aitement The following persons are dolng t>uslnus as: No Worr(s, 17665 Sl(y· par!( Clrcle1_~ulte G, Irvine, Cellfomla llltl14 Scott Alan Nesbitt, 214 Cedar, Apl A, Newport Beacti, Callfomla 9266!J This business Is con- ducted by: an lndlvldual Have you •tarted doing bullneas yet? YH, 03/15199 Scott Nesbitt This 11atement wu flied whh the County Clertc ~ Orange Coun1v on 3-23-99 1"91717W Dallv Piia( Mat. 26, Arif. 2,9, fe, 1999 F835 F1ctldoua Buatniia NMM Sutement The followlng pefWQnl are dolnQ business n: Gat11C 1>unn 3400 Av.. ol the Arta1 tE119, Cocta Mesa, CA 112626 Klyono Tomoml. 3400 Ave. ol tile Altl, tE119, Cos1a Mella, CA 92620 Thia bualneas la con- cluded by: an Individual Ha..,. you started doing buslne11 yel? No Klyono Tomoml This 1ta1ement was filed wilt\ 1tMI Coooty Cleltl of 0111nge County on 3-23-99 1'tH71740t Dall)' Piiot Mar. 26, Aor. 2, 9;f8, 1999 F838 sU ERIOR COURT 01! CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF ORANGE, 341 The City Drive, Poat Office Bo.a 14171, =1~~ IN THE MATTER OF THE PETITION TO CHANGE THE NAME OF Cherri H:"ft LoM Nguyen end oeng Huy PMfn on behlH of chlld, • minor. a.ny T~Phtim ORl>ER TO SHOW CAUSI! FC>ft CHANO! OF NAME CASE NUMBER A1M402 P~TITION!A(S) OMM Huong Loan Nguyen end Hoeng Huy Pl\am oo ~Of dllld, • minor, 8ettV To-Uyen Pham HAS Flt.ED A PETITION FOR AN OAD!A TO CHANGE NAMES FROM BETTY TO.UV£N PHAM TO oeAHNA TO-VI Pt1AM It It '-""'V °""'" ~ d ~ ltll...-.ci In .. meftlt appear befof9 .. aJIUl1 In~ No 703 of lhe OrlN1Qte County. SupertOr Court at lhe ~ 9hOwn •t>O¥t M 6-'4, tHI, et 2 o'ctodl p m., ltld llen Ind ltlef'a = ::-the II~ "'rJ ~ c# ~ lhoUld oot beh t9'~ Otdlt1'd INt • copy of 1111 Ofder 10 ltlOW <*Jae be published In NS/ Cccta Mesa Dally Pilot, e newspaper of general cin:ulatlon publlahed In Chia eooo1y1 _ at IMlt once a week IOI' four consecutive weeks prior to ltle day of the l'learinQ. DATE: MAR tt, 1• JAMES A. JM:l<MAN, JUDGE/OOMMISSIONER OF THE SUPERIOR COURT CHERYL THOMAS, ATTORNEY AT LAW, 200 SANTA ANA BOULE· \/ARD WEST, STE. e60, SANTAANA, CALIFORNIA 92701 ATTORNEY BAR 1: 79555 ATTORNEY FOR: PETITIONER Published Newport BeactH~osta Me$8 Dally Pilol Mardl 26, Apr11 2, 9, 16, 1999 F837 NOTICE TO • CONTRACTORS CAWNG FOR BIDS SCHOOi.. DISTRICT: NEWPORT ·MESA UNIFlED SCHOOl. DISTRICT PROJECT: BID #07·99, CONTRACT IO!J·99 CONSTRUCTION OF NEWPORT COAST aEMENTARY SCHOOL BIO DEADLINE: JUNE 181.. 19", AT 2:00 P.M. PLACE OF BID RECEIPT: FACILmes & OPERATIONS, 2985-E Beet Street. co.ta Mala, CA 92628, {714) 42.4·7S30 Pl.ACE PLANSIDOCU· MENTS TO BE PICKED UP: Same 81 above. PLAN FEES· $250 00 (REFUND WITHIN 30 DAYS IF YOU DO NOT 810) WAUCTHROUGH: MANDATORY walk· through Is ldleduled !Of May f2, 1999 al 8:00 a.m. ProspecU\19 blddera are to meet at Fac:llitles & Opera· lions, 2985-E Bear Street Costa Mesa, CA. Cell (714) 424-7530 for detallt. Bldl wlll not be a<Xl41pted from contractOfS not attending tNs walkthrouQh. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the above- named School Dtatrlet of ar.nge County. CA, acting by and tnrough Its Govem- lng Boetd, heraina"8r re· lefT'ed to u "DISTRICT." will reoeille up to, but not later than the abo\19·5~ time, eealed bids for the award of 1 ccntract fOf the above project Bide lhaft be f"9Cl8IVed In the plac» Identified aboVe, and lhall be opened and ~ read eloud at the above- Slated time and place. Eadl bidder mull tubmlt whh eacn bid • certified Of cashiel'I ct** payable to the DISTRICT or a bid bond In the loon Ml f0f1h In the contract documentl In 11n amount not le&a than 1 °"' of the maximum amount of bid u a guaran- tee that tile blOcJer wlll enter lllto the pfOPOled contract it tile same Is awarded to such bidder. In the event ol faffura to enter Into said contract, auch M· cutlty wl" be IOffelted. The DISTRICT 19MIWI the rtght 10 rejec1 any or att bld.s Of to waw. ll'IY Ir· regulal1tle• or ~1111e1 In any bldl or In ~ bid- ding. No bldd•t inay Withdraw any bid for a ~ rlod of 7S days altel' lhe date Mt IOr the opening ol bids. The Dtatrlel hN obWlned lrom the Director ol lhe De- penment of Industrial~ Uana the geiwal pr......,,g mad pei diem·~ ena the general PraYalllnO rate for holldlly and ~ woltc In the loC9lllY In wtwah tt11t woltc .. IO be peltonned totead\aaft.~ or ~ of WOftl ""°9d to •JllCIJtt .,. oontt*Ct HOii- ~ ,. ... lhal be paid -ap9dned In the cdltdNt betgalnlng eQIMIW!t ap-~to Ndl pa~r mh. ctntlllcllllOn Of type oC WOl'tl ~ on . .,. pr~. CoplM of adied· ulet of (at.I '° del""*'8d ara Oil,.. It the Dl•ttct of· llOe and .,. ~ IO any lnl•1'9•ted pany upon ,.quell In 9"COi1110CI ~ aectlol\ tm.2 o1 .,. Cellofnle UlbOr Codi ... Cont~ .,,.. peal a OOPY of tt11t dMll'fTllMlon of ~ ,... of """' at Mdl Joli ..... The tc:h~ ot Pef ctt.m wtg8t .. baled upon I WOINnO di ol e4Qtl( hOlh The ..... ro, tdcMy *°Id OY9ttlme ~ lhll be .. ime and ~. The Contractor and any ~s)ahall~ notltullll'lfll..-0 ,._of IO aN WOiMl'I employed by thetn In IN eKeootion Of the contlKI. A Payment Bond and a p.mm.nce Bond INlll be requlr9d prior to •'*Ullon of the conttac:1 and lhal be II\ the 10rm Ml IOlth In lhe c:antrw:t documents. Ead'I bidder shall be I ~ oooCIK10r put• ~ '° the 8uslneU and Profnslona Code and be llcenMd In the lollowN d ullllc:allon: ,. A .. Of "8" GOVER...O BOARD lal Edpr Hayea, ln'-'1m Executive Dtrec1ot Facll- 11,.. • Operation• Published Newport Beac:h- eo.1a Mesa Delly Polo( Apr1116, 17, 19, 20, 1999 F864 NOTICE PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT THE City Council of the City of New· pol1 Beectl wRI consider tile vacahon and abandon- ment ol 1 portion of Avocado Avenue. The vacation proce11 wiU be oonducted pursuant to the Cellfomla Stfffl and Hioh· ways Code Seciiorl 8300 · Public Streets, Hlghwayi and Servloe Euements Vecatlon Law. The portion of Avocado Avenue proposed for 'l8Cltlon Is delCti>ed u foloWa: The1 por1lon of Avocado Avenue In ltle Qty of New· port Beach. Cot.ny of Or· ange, State of Callfomla deicft>ed u folowa: The nor1hwe1tertv 23.00 ffft of AllOCedo All9flV8, 50 00 Ifft wide, In 8lodc 328 of Corona Del Mat T,.c:t es shoWn on a map thereof filed In Book 3, Pa09I 41 and 42 of Mil· celfaneoul Mape In the of· flee ol tile County Recorder ol aald Counl)'. RESERVING lllertfrom an .. aemen1 for...,., llne purposes over said nonn- w•• la r I y 23.00 leat bounded on the aou1hWNl by th• northwesterly piol~llon of IN toulh· weata lint of IM alley, 20.00 ffl wide, lo aald Block 328. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN HEREBY that Ille City Counct of ltle City of Newport 8"Ch has Mt Monday, the 10ttl of May, 1999, at IN hour of 7:00 P.M. u the time. and the ~ Chambers as the plac. for the healtnQ at an per.ont lntere1tecf IM>< objecting lo ltle or'OOOMd V9Call0n, and iUJ' Ccty ~ at the aame ume and pl.ce wtl hear lhe 8¥1· defQ oll•r9d by arry pef· aon lnterHted In the prq>oMd atl'ffl ltghl at way vacation. IS/ Lavonne M. "-rklffe <:tty Ctertc Chy of Newpoft 11..ch Publlahed New1>ort Beach-Costa Mesa Dally PiloC April 11J, 22. 1999 FTh860 ! ~ ... ' .... ;..c •• McNAU.Y James lllchffl McNally, 78, of Irvine, passed away April 13, 1*· Ht was a former financial manager IOf AllOO Anln--' dal S.rvices. He Is suMved by Ills clllldren, James M. McNally, Jr. (Colleeo), Robert F. Mc:Naltv, Patj A. McNally and Mary E Mcffally.:. grandchlfdiwn, Kate, t:rin, wa and ' 3~ancj~= end brohlr. Thomas A. McNally (Jacqueline) A Funeral mass Wil ~ c:ale- brltecl al 10!00 a.m. on Satu!Oay. April 16, 1999 at Our lJIOy Queen of Angels Churdl, 2046 Ma.r \llata Drtve, Newport Beadl, CA:_ BRAMAN JoAnne L Braman, 68, hOmemaker from Newpol1 S.ch, passed away April 15, 1999. She Is aurv111ed by her hl.lsband. Rldlard "Dick" Blaman, son, Mitch (Regina) Braman, daughter. Ula (John) Lesinski, = ctjldreo, B<en and Bfwnan, Ryan and ~ Lesinski and sister, Sharon Sterbenz. Vlsflatlon will be tram. 1 :00 to 4:00 p.m. on &.t- day, Ap111 18, at Pac:fflcl Vt.w Mortuary. F~· SeMces wll be held 11 :00 am. on Monday, April 19, 1999 at Pacific vi.w Mortuary, 3500 Padfle. View Drive ,• Newpoi:t Baach, CA. F1ctltJoua BuelMe• PACIFIC .... ~ Name St.tement ., .. " TN to11oW1nO pe!ION MEMORIAL ~ ant doing bUslniu a. Cemet..., • M-· .-.. WHITWORTH DESIGN, _, -·-.r; Chapa( • CnN'nattXy ~=~~ A~' 3500PecltloViewOl1w1 c.lilomla 92824 ~ 8MCh Ronald Duane 844-2700 Whllworth, 3 4204 ll11=::~:::=~~"t ~~.J ... u lve da Ave .• II ,__,_ CT~J::r· llU...-rAY This bullnua II con-MOft\J.y * Chapel"' dueled by an lndMdual Cremation HaYe you •tal1ed doing ~~ 1~ero:=y Thie ~ WU riled •-91-~ the COunly Clerk of 1•----------.. Orange County on 2·24-99 ,.....,..,. Dely fl'lot Mar. 2t. Aof, 2,t . ft 1909 F'41 "Affordable Alternative" DiscoUnt a.s~ cremation a .. Burial service ................. ..,,..,. ~ ......... ,..,.t ~tMeMth~ -~'='°"' A gtneral ~ ot ~R. 2030AUJ~rbor ~~~~ lie OccupMt ~ .,,. =7 eo.. Mela. CA. = .,.. .. follows. (:apllal Fleet s.McM ~~~UPAHT tnc.. (CA), 2030 ~ OESCAIPTION lfwd, CC.. Meu. CA. A~1 . USA CAADEN, ~ bualneU II con-BOXES, MATTRE!.S..t by: CLOTH,· BOOKS, G~ ducted • a COl'pOrllon Cl.UBS HIW )'Ol.I ttal1ed doing A · 23 5 M A R C Y btMlrwayel? No HERNANbez. MISC. ~ FIMt SeMcn, BOXES, CLOTH, VAC-I~. Meltl C>zonur, UUM Ct.EANE.R P~tement WU flied A·262, TOM MOSNOT wldl ,. CounCy Oerti °' TOOLS, MISC. BOXes: Ofange ~ 00 4·14·99 ~~~.ri~~bRLUGGAGE, 1"91119'797 A·286, VfNCENT R. Deify Piiot Apr. 16, 23, BURG, CAR PAftTS, 30.Maytl, 1999 F865 MISC FURNITURE , COUCH, MATTRESS NOTICE OF A-310, PAUl L • PUtlUC SALE BRESTVANSKY, BICY· The mSn1 lt04'9ge fac:IUty, CLE, MISC. BOXES • .-....<I""" to the provisions A-340, REBECCA ........,._.,, RAYMOND, MATTRESS, ot OM8lon 8 of the Busl· BED FRAME, BOX nH• and Profe11lons 8-012, DON FUNG, JR., eooe. ~er 10, Sec1lon BOXE 2J707(a), hereby gives S, FURNITURE, N'OTIC£ OF PUBLIC LA.DOE.RS, TOOL BOX, 9'1-E. SUITCASE EXTRA SELF STORAGE D-299, SAUNDRA D. Wiii conC10Ct a l>Ubllc sale Of HARTMAN, BICYCLES, lt1e comenta of the storage C L O T H , V AC u u M ,(s)) ..,. below CLEANER, MISC. r /ie =ts betnQ E·273, TINA M. lold to the highest bidder, FERACO. HOUSEHOLD IOf lawful money o4 the ITEMS, REFRIGERATOR, Vf11$ed States Of America T.V., V.C.R., LADDER (~). Pubffshed NeWJ)Ol1 Beactl-•llle uJe II being held to Costa Mesa Dally Pilot ~lsty a landlord's lien and April 16, 23, 1999 be held at: F861 ' 92 Sampson Lane, --::P"'."'.U::::B'!"'L'.":IC~H~E~A~R,..1.;...N~G~S ~~.e:.etlMay 12, ~:~~~~w~ 19'9 at 11 A.M. COMMISSION AT THE AUc::tiO(lee(s Name: K.E. CITY H~.1.-71 FAIR Phone I (909) DRIVE ~ 1 A MESA, 31, Addtas: P.O. CALIFORNIA, AT 6:30 5, Rialto, CA 923n, P.M. OR AS SOON AS : 723-41-19 POSSIBLE THEf\EAFTER The po~llc la Invited IO et· ON MONDAYJ APRll 26, 'Rates and dradlines arc subject to cho1w<• without notirc. The publisher reserves tfir tight to rrnsor, rrdnss if y. re' isc or reject 4ny cla~sifiecl advertisement. Please repo11 any error thnt mnv be in \Our cla:.~ifi<'tl ud fmmediatcly. The Daily J>'ilot ncccp1s no liabilih· for unv error in nrtodvcrtiseme111 for wh ich it 111ny be rr:.ponsiblc except for the cost of tlw spocf' nctunlh ocrnpird lw the error. Crc<l1 1 cnn on lv he ullowe<I fo1 'tlw fir r inM-rtion. · -- ' I • . . . ~,. .:... I • , g 1 ·II . -,_, . II G:t EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNfTY .,,.. ................. .. .....,.,,.,.. .... F* "''fair ........ Act If 1•. ......... lcllllllll•ltll .... 1 .. Mwlftilt •• ., ,,.. ..... .. '~ • 216 . . . . ~ .. ~,• I OCEANFRONT ON THE SAND 4Bldroom 3 5Bath Custom BIA Home In P1fvllt <Mtd- Galtd Conm.llllly. Too Many FNtUres To Ult Hert. Cel For Delab. St.II taoo. 949-597·5549 No Agenes Cals l1•1t1U11 1r "1erl•l11t111 ....... ract.ttltt ......... .................... ....... lfttll, If ........... . 11 .._ aay uctl ,.. ... rHCt, ......... ~.· n11 .. ..,,,., •Ill "' ......,, ...... ..., ......... .................... 11 ............... 0. ....... .... kn-, ,...,... "'' llJ fltfllllft lltlf111tf II ~laj ......,.,.,. ......... .. ~........, .... T .... .................... ~Mt'ltll1~.r. _...........DC ...... ~.-·---· ,,, , ... I • I I I I I : SOLOll :..ca.e tfc>IM-for jg._ In our Saturdly RMI II Eltm~U !ffcimft otthe WHk DIMiilv Adi S'8lt ........ '751 • Didr'8 II T...-, 9t SPM °'*" Hol.M Llll9 '151 Oadna~IPM I I CALL r*vtt -UIA K. RIVERA " NN74"4212 NNWl.LIY ·' MN74"'24t IOUTU 61 fHE HIGHWAY NEW TOWNHOMES 908 Begonia. ~~!000 0.5 Segonia, ~JIOO OcMrl VleW Decil.f'llns AW/I.. John ~Agent OPEN HOUSE FRtDAY 10AM-2PM SPYGLASS 2 Mom>'# Bay Of $1,359,000 THE TERRACES 3510LllcAYe VAM 142Sl,OOO•l48U76 HARBOR VIEW HIU.S 1221 KMI Dr. VRM 1111,00NMl.OOO PftOUENTW. CA MAL.TY ........ IOU™ O' 1"1 llGHWA Y 300 Femlell, 9179.000 )11femlMI.9117.000 1.'1111 r.-..1 tllOdl IO Oen Joli11 ICannty, Agent ~ ,. ~~TH! FOLLOWING APP\.ICA· TIONS IF ANY OF THE FOl· LOWINO ACTIONS AAE CHALLENGED IN COURT THE CHAUENGE MAY BE LIMITED TO ONLY THOSE ISSUES SOME· ONE RAISES AT THE PUBLIC HEARING DE· SCRIBED IN THIS NQ. TICE OR IN WRITTEN CORRESPONDENCE DE· LIVERED TO THE Pl.AN· NING COMMISSION AT, OR PRK>R TO. THE PUB· UC HEARING 1. APPEAL Of ZONINO ADMINISTRATOR'S AP· PROVAL OF ZONING AP· PLICATION ZA·99·06 FOR ARCHITECTURAL QESIGNS. AUTHORIZED AGENT FOR ICI HOLD- 1 NG S /STEVENS 0 N RANCt1 PARTNERS II, OF A PLANNED SIGNING PROGRAM FOR HAR· BOR CENTER, INCt.UO· ING A FREE·STANDING SIGN ON WILSON STREET (37' HEIGHT PROP.; 2S' MAXIMU~ HEIGHT ~CYN. & AP· PROVEOI & 2, FREE· ST ANDING SIGNS ON HARBOR BOULEVARD (36' & 40' HEIGHTS PROPOSED· 25' MAX. HEIGHT Ail.OWED; 35' MAX. HEIGHT AP PROVED FOR BOTH SIGNS), LOCATED AT 2300 HARBOR BOULE· VARO IN A C1·S ZONE. ENVIRONMENT AL DE· TERMINATION: EXEMPT. 2. EXTENSION OF TIME OF A ONE-YEAR AP· PROVAI.. OF PLANNING APPLICATION PA-98-26 FOR MELVIN L SUM· MER, JR., AUTHORIZED AGENT FOR THE CITY OF COSTA MESA. OF AN AMENDMENT TO THE ~TE~ Pt.AN FOR THE COSTA MESA COUNTRY Cl.UB TO IUCHi A 1,540 SOFT. EXPANSION TO THE CLUBHOUSE FOR AOOITIONAI.. GOLF CART STOAAGE, LOCAT£0 AT 1701 GOLF COURSE OAIVE IN AN l&R ZONE ENVIRONMENTAL OE· TERMINATION EXEMPT. FOR FURTHER IN· FORMATION ON THE ABOVE APP\..ICATIOHS, TELEPHONE (7141 764-5245 OR CALL A'f THE OFRCE OF THE PLANNING DIVISION, ROOM 200, n FAIR DRIVE, OOST A MESA, CALIFORNIA. Publtshed Newport Beech-CosUI Mesa Dally Piiot Aprll 18, 1999 BSC8283 NOTICE OF PETlllON F658 TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF: DAWN OGDEN CASE NO. A196562 To all heirs, benefi· O.rles, creditors, cont· lngent creditors, and per· sons who may OlllelWlse be Interested In the will or est~.'!! or bOth, ol: DAWN OGDEN A PETITION FOR PRO. BA TE has been filed by NANCY TRAIN In the 6u- 1>9tlor Court Of Cdfomla, ~olORANGE. THE PETITION FOR PROBATE 1'8QUeSta that NANCY TRAIN be ap- pointed as personal t9pre- untat1Ve to administer the estate Of the decedent. THE PETITlON l'8QU8StS the decedenrs Will and COdlcils, If any, be admitted 10 probate. The Wiii and •ny oodlclls are avall9ble for examination In the nte kept by the court THE" PETITION request& dlOl1ly 90 adminllter N ...... ~ h lndej)erd- enl Admlnlltl'lltlon of Es· ..... "°· (Thia Auttlol1ly wl• alow the p.rsonal t9p· rnenlatlll'e '° -. many actlOM Wlf'OUt obtaining court ~proval. Before t8ll1"g cen.in vary Jmpor· Wit ad!Orll, howewf' fie personal rapreuntative will be t9q\Alred to glVe no-tloe to lnt91Mted pel"IOIW unteta they have waived nodce or conaenled to the proPQMd llCllon.} The In· dlpenden1 edlnlnlatratlOn •Ulhotlty wiM be Qflrn.d unleu en lntefested P8f· son ,.., an objection '° tne petition and s1lowt good cause why tne coon stiould nol grant the aU1horlty. A HEARING on 1M peU· 11on wll be held on MAY 8, 1999 at 1.45 p m. In Dept. L13 located at 341 Tha CllY Ottve South, Orange, CA 92868. IF VOU OBJECT to the g1111'1tlng ol the petition, )'Ol.I should appear et the hear· Ing and 1tate your = llone or hltt written tlorll wtth the court be ore the hearing. Your ap- peerance may be in pef'IOl'l or by your attorney. IF YOU ARE A CREDI· TOR or contingent cllld1tor ol the deceased, )'Ol.I must Ille )'Ol.lr dalm wl1h the coort and md a COf1't to the personal representative apodnled by the court Within four monttlS lrom the date ol the first IHuance o4 letters as provided In Pro- bate Code section 9100. Tha time for fifing dalma wlll not expire before lour monttw lrom the heaMg dale notiQCld at>ove. YOU MAY EXAMINE ltle file kept by the court. If you ere a pereon Interested In the estate, )'QI.I may file with lhe court a Request tor Nocioe form DE· Fletftlo~• Bualne .. Name Stai.ment The lolfowtnO p.rsons .,. doir'G bustneu as: Cllttera Pet Grooming, 10661 Elhs Avenue, Foun· lain V.,ley. Callf. 92708 Margo I. 8edof 6905 Seashore .ortve, Newport Beac:h, Ca. 92663 This business Is con· duded by· an lndlYidual Have YoU started doing business yet? Yea, 3117/89 Margo I. Bedor This statement was flied with the County Clerk of Orange County on 3-16·99 199917eeeo& Dally Piiot A.pf. 9. 18"' 23, 30, 1ggg ~855 Flctlttoua Bualneaa N•~ Statement The 104lowlng persons ara doing bustneu aa: The Heaf\I Patti Counsel· Ing Cenler, 12881 Knott St.. Suite 111, Garden Grove. C.lfomla 92841 Wendy AM Bradadl MFCC, 16099 Warmington Lane. Huntington Beaci'l, C.llfomla~9 Thls business Is oon· ducted l>y: an Individual ......,. Y'O" ~ ~ bu11MM vet? Y•, S+9f WfJfttty Ann 8ntd4ld1 Thll ltatement WU fled With \tie County Cltrtc of O<ange County on 3· 11 ·99 111117MOM Dally Pliot A.pf ••• 11, 23, 30, t099 F857 Flctidoua Bualneaa Ham• &Qtement The followlng pef'IO(lt .,. dolna business as: Hutton ' Company, 24~ Newport Blvd , Co1t1 MN&, Caltlomlll 92827 James 0 Kenny, 2455 Newport Blvd., Costa Mase, calitomia 92627 Thia bUllness Is con· ducted by: an Individual Haw >'Oii started doing business yet? No James 0 Kenny This statement was hied With the County Cltrtl Of O<anoe CounlY on 4-15-99 1""790002 Oa.lly Piiot Apr. 16, 23, 30, May 6, 1999 F867 NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF: ESTELLE MAHONEY aka ESTELLE JEAN MAHONEY aka ESTELLE J. MAHONEY CASE NUMBER: A196668 To all heirs. benell· clarles, creditors, cont· lngent creditors. and per· sons who may othe/Wfse be Interested In the wlll or estal8, or both, ot ESTELLE MAHONEY, 1118 ESTELLE JEAN MAHONEY, aka ESTELLE J. MAHONEY, DECEASED A PETITION FOR PRO. BA TE has been filed by Jean Margaret Robinson In \he Sopertor Court cf ca11- lotnia. CGlny ot o;;r· POITION FOA PROBATE iequelll hit Jeen Ma'V119t Roblnton be eppoinled .. peflOl\al r~toadn*tis· cer the eatai. ol the oec.. denl THE PETITION l'eql.leltl Ile Oec:iedlnt's Wiii Wld eodlCMs. If MY, b9 lldrrwMd to P<Obete The wll and any COdlCllS are avdllble for examination tn the Ille lceoc bv the court. 'fHE" PETITION f9QU9IU authOl1tf IO admns1et h mate tnSer fl8 1~ 8"t AdmN!ratlOn Of Es· &ates Ad {Tiiis avltlOtlty wi• allow the pe110nal rep-resem.tiva to 11M many actk>nl without ObW'\ing court approval Before taking Olf\IMn very tmpor • tan! llellons, ~'·IN personal representative Wiii be reqult9d to give no- tice to Interested peBOnS unless !hey have waived notlc:e or oon1en1ecs to !tie Pftl90Md action.) Tha In· dependent lldminlstratton authottty W1ll be granted unlns •n lnterMted per· aonltles•nobjedlontothe petition and shoWs good cause why the court shOUld noc arant the authority. A HEARING on the petl· lion Wiii be held 00 5-13-99 •I 1 45 p.m In Dept. L73 located at 341 The Clty Drtve. P06t Office Box 14171, Orange, CA 92863-1571 IF YOU OBJECT to ttle granting ol the petition, )'Ol.I should llj)pear at the hear· Ing and stare your =· lions or r11e written • lions with the court oni the hearing. Your ap· pearanoe may be In person or by vour attorney. IF YOU ARE A CREDI· TOR or ex>ntlngent Cfeditor of the deoeaS4ld. you must - Flctltloua Bualneaa Name Stat.ment The following pe~ .,. doing bUSloelS as· iBalport LOdt & Safe, b Bat>oa LOC6t & Sale, C Newpor1 Arn lode & le, d) Newpor1 Loci! & 5ale, e) Newport Beach Loci! & Sale, I) Newport Coast Security Loci! & Safe, 1n Riverside Ave . St9 I, Newport Beach, Ca1nom1a 92683-4032 Panda Corpor'ltlon, 1n Riverside Ave., Si. I, Newpo n Beach, CA 92663-4032 This buslnns Is con- dUCted 111¥:. ~ .... "°" ...,. «*'II ~"9f?Y•. OM>1/1 .. Panda Corpor•tlon, SUlan Warwldc, Pt'Hfd:1111t'" .:-fie~~,. OfMOe~. 30~ Piiot""' 9, ·~il . NOTICE OF ~!: APPUCATIOH TO••• SELL ALCOHOUC: : .. &EVERAGE&• .. • 0.. d FlllnG AoclllCllJOn;: MAR 51, 11189 . ,.., To Whonl It May Cofw:.m• -Tha Name(1) Of the ...... Appllclnt(S) 11,1.,., ': • BARN FARMERS ,. '. STEN<HOUSE INC u The appllcants lfsted above .,.. llOOMna eo N " Depertment . ~ ~ • ~Control 10 ... U:ohollC beW,.O&I ... 3012 NEWPORT BLVD NEWPORT BEACH ' " CA82883 For the toloWing lvsi-of1e ~ 41 OH-SAf.E ' •. BEER ANO WINE · :·, EA TING Pt.ACE - Publlthed ~ a..cn- Colta Mesa DdV Plldf Ap111 9, HI, 23, 1990 ... F856., C~'t Mem to ... get to all thoee .., • repair fobl ' I around tha hOU•?r •• Let the Cl••fftecl ht"Wlce DlrectOf7 help you find rellabl• Mlp. M2-M71 ..... Monda y ................. Friday S:OOpm Tuesday .............. Monday S:OOpm Wednesday ......... Tuesday 5:00pm By Fax (9-t9) 631-6594 (Pl1·11~ incfuik rnur 1111tnt a1ul pJ1,.nc 11111111.it-r •nll u• 11 cnll ~011 hnrL .. it h II I'""' <JUllk ) By Phone ('>49) o·t2-:"',o"78 By MaBiln Person: :no Wc:.t Rav trr<'t Co ... 1u ~'""fl. C',\ 92o2-:' \1 \, "t••n Rh1I ~ 11.i, ..,, Hours T1'lt-p honc 8 ::Wnm-5:00pm \l11111lin-~ rula1 \\'ulk-111 U:30mn-3:00p111 ~l.111111\-Ft Hll\ Thursday ....... Wednesday S:OOpm Friday ............... Thursday S:OOpm aturday ............... Friday S:OOpm Index . r• .. ' . ,.1 ... • ' J .. . ~ . . . . ·,·· .... , -J~ ••• ,. .. .''f : 420 J ·j 220 . 391 • <'!If"'.~~ .., . ' I t ... ' :: ~ ..... , •.• -•• · ..... ,· ·,~?t"~ :-.t·-'-1--. ' ., .j ~('· ..... .,,. . '· .. ; ... ' • I -~.,. .... ·, . . I . ~ .... ·~ -' j • ·~\.A E SIDE CM IMMACULATE 2br + dtft, twMmt 1,mst. "8W llJl)l's, hnd\ drs, YIUI Cllrs. lOt. tmnl 1251,000 (Open SUit 12-4) 2Ht Eldeft t8 Katttllln McNtmM Bkr 714-114-1101 oPEAHOOse FRIDAY 10AM-2PM COSTA MESA EAST SIDE 2tl83 Satltl AN. ~YI L130,000 PRuoomAL CA flEALTY MM44"200 . ~ ·. 1 ' . . ' " ' • .. ... .,r-.. • ·-.. ' . . -r . DI.GOO WNT~llO '. 4to. 412 'HARBOR VIEW HOMES' SBM&A Mlw Homt <I dtckl. (OPEN SUN 1-6) Vtn9d0 ma1t1t In al bllh, 1807 '°" TI111n. Remodetld ......... .... .. ...... .......... IOOlll, .... gar .... _ lnCI ~ 21 so +If 3br hlr<MoOCI lloors a.a Glundy down with 'th bedt"m up. BY Aesllors 9'9~s-6t6t OWNER $6191( 14~720-1MI FASHION lsllHo LOC NEWPORT AXER WTTH A l: Sat.Sun 1o-4) VIEW Remodeled 38t 28a, Ht Hl*1Wd) llyridat Sbr new MldoWs l dooll ~ twnhme, 112hf -...-graded ldl. lelgl loC. $739, comm. lnct 2 "'* ates, ,... Age JolWI 8uTkt 9'9-7~9314 mtl1llt In be. 2 car ttt.c p . OPEN HOUSE Af S3M MH40-0S» FRIDAY 1CWWPM hio CYN GOH COUiM 'V.._, OPEN SAT.SUN M HARBOR HIGHLAADS U C1nyon Island Dr, HP8 2012 D11na lalt atir Ube, frplc, MWIY decor VRM Iota 1110r11 M10,000 ~.000-'528.!76 8y 0.-... 75M27t BAYSHORES 1~~~ .. OPEN SAT 11·2.. sm.ooo (2552 Vista Dr.) BELCOURT 3bf 3.5ba + MP otf. W/ 37 .,,,,_ ......... on gourmel lillc lonnll din In Ill ---· .... open ftr jiia;i $1.275,000 VRM Clll ~.tsr" $459,()()().$529,8711 BAY FRONT/DOCK 1~W::, "=1fe~' '395.ooo oP1rw • suM 1'.:4 HARBOf\ oo\IE 2304 FAIAHILl DRIVE 1438 ==' Way (nn Awl'Dfd st) $74 .OOO 38r 288 on 1..1g kl4. taaml. HAABOR cove ~ ~.0.NC tocallan t<l40 NawpOOe( Way ~IO 14351( Chlt5h, S?d.000000 ~M42.oen , -W iSUHO HAASOR COVE .()HI. Y SSH,000 1439 Sea RldOI Dr 21hclln 2.Sball. 8edC Bly. 1729,000 llAft ...... , Pvt~ w/ Wllll11111 Pp 149 .... -174& HARBOR vtEW HOtoES NEW 181/ila 4 a~111, 1830 Port~ Vetlldo n111t11t In ti 1>111'1. :.; $ 1,0ll9.000 ' ~ 11'1. Ell HARBOR VIEW HOMES 149 ~161 1112 POii ~ eYN fOWNAOa ·--·-.. , CIOCW•O ... ilff;W. ·1 fWMd, Mir • Se88.000 -. UM, cornet unit. ~VIEW HOMES ,_.. ......_. Gow l1ld\ ... ~ ~ ..... 11 ...... ~.~t-1~4 ""'',_,_..., ~1 wt,ooo sm.ooo !1.., ...J:'z:t'!: HAA&oR VIEW HOMES _.,.. ,_.,.,,.. --1~5$ POC1 EdwllW 411 ... Hlftlar~ .000 ..,,..._,...., .... ,., ~ t car ... ~ lat HAMOR VIEW HOMES ;-O:.:.t..,.~ m•,_~ lRI IUM CON60 ,_..D ~111 11 •, a. --. MUOINTW. CA MAL TY 1tN 11r1 ............. MtH4 taOO ..-. Ir°"""..... llOllif llWN......, .............. =-·-··.... .. ......... ~ -UDllMld ,.. ... *~ W lOW Ni ..... )11-Wt0 •• °"" ..._ i1,141,ooo mm m m ... llPQlldlld loolftg, tollell llli 1~ =r...~·rrr~ .r:..~~ '71~1Ml1Gf7144'1 .. 117 I_.. ..... °""* fiWKlfii... ~ .... ... -LIU, ....... a ... ,..,,_,, • ._.... ~-:::: -.. .. ._...,, T9 ,....,... L.;_~a~·!·~·e·~·!-!·!!-r~ Cllfllftll •• I 1 N. 430 -461 NEW ON THE M.ARKETI 23 Clermont Open SAT.suH 1-4 (S1. Mlc:htl) Mod oertld. elnglt 11m llmt. Galt lutrdtd, Panoremlc city ght/mtn vltwl owntn'8• 5'71,000 ..... 720-1175 Spectacular ocn • cyn vl9Wt Sbr, 4ba, h dwd fin, O¥WStacl llllW bf, prof ~'1.1•.000 http~ -emone.nal (!14)13 ... 1154 E-ReiltORa OPEHOUSE FRIDAY 10AM-2PM NEWPORT RIDGE VISTAS 24 ~ $850,000 e UNNY PATIOt lMll' 28r, 11a. Rttrlon!ot! WIO, l tJWMo. t.c .. HM*-""i-w!Ui5 ~-_ .. -..... ; ., If ... • } j. • t..J}...._ • f I ·, I ' \ 'f'(IJ• . -.·~·"" •('o Yo ·~ f • :'· :"4\ k • • I RENT 1hrouOh ctantned Vtty Ctun 1 Br 18i up111i11 F/P llunClry, llec:tric gait, catpOll, lnl8ICOfTt ~ + dee> & good ad. Set Miit • SU Avocado St •C·101 bttWMl'l lt·2p !MM42·9'12. 1 ~=1 CLOSE TO 8EACHll 2br, 2bs, lrplc, patio, cOlll'tyd, p , comm IMld, No peta. SlSSO 5'2.S92-511S FADlWAY APARI'MENTS AT BIG CANYON GAT'ID COMN\JNITY rt l'ASHJON ISLAND ~ ..... lnad ..,._arid golf OOWM ..... ~---....,..~ .... 1, 2 or S 8A........,,. hcimtl ............. ..... .,,.,......,... •P\ ..... ...,..., .... •NIOOftd•: •• •WltwlntMd$M •Mllm_..... ' . ., ... ..... .,.... ........... _ - 690 . 697 - ~I{ ': . . . ' . : I • '• ' "" .. -;.. 1, I I••· • LIVE IN LUXURY ! y 1 APARTMENT HOMES Exclusive Fashion Island LiftStMlt • conc1erae Sc"'H:e • 24 HR Fitness Center I Bed /n"'t S I 09, ' Bed/den frortt St 825 W her/Dryer lntru Ion Alarms Courmct Kitch ns Elevator Access • 24 HR Secunty Cate • Clubhouse Fadllty · 2 Bed frOlfc S2 2' 5 2 Bed/CJen 'fro• $2885 ftrepl 9F'oOtCe11 Condo Specs Subterra~n ~ Jlj"I Custo"' Hom1 Design P'Clf'"" A~ Wit CALL FOR APPOINTMENl (949) 706-9696 • -t , .... -:, .• •\4~ ...• ;.·'· .-t~·~ AREA COTTA I~ AOOllS I :.....:.1-:'1 ~I ·~~ FOR RIH1: ~ NPI 3 8lOCKS FROM ICK. 1 »A'& BAY CONDO Cl1ge Stir 2ba "°'*· 1 room Avail ~~wood scream com-1475 • cNpollt a 113 utlL ::ttll9!ill 2c11 garage. -.Id i-. up 1 ===7"::14-:::::35=5=·11=7':::::::-:;.. ,;:-~ Days 714-751 9151 •~ •· 6~1100.IEves 71'4·~·1488 mlll. 1 B A enc:ed "ARST WEEK SPCL ON • I car gl(, w/d hoolwp. •• I ROOMS s1•u 00 • 1teoe1a Mtu St. S13751mo _. '"· + ~5-95671909-3.17-11242 Tu. f:Mtum: 24-ln. hnt ;~,w Park: huge bf'1i DMk/D.D. PhoMal f1M -11r·Uba lwnllm, built In HBO/ ESPNIOl9C t l.octl .p( BBQ, littlleh 2 cat fat. Chinntll/ Swlmmklg Pool & <i:~Pfll, $1200 MH'45-1179 Htltld ~ r·182 HOUSESICOHOOS ~ ~ FOAR!NT: NEWPORT 8E4CH ~ 4bf 3bl houM Incl ,.._ ~ottage on 19 lot $3000. No pets Oey1 ~7000 l301 Of -· MMS0-2302 NEWPORT TERRACE 3br Yiba Vp pa11o. gar age. ...fhkuiis lfl l'IOYSO. pool spa S,..:ICICXA pi/I( ~kt 1:1 "!1~ Js ~ 149SlnM> 909-24Ht57 • •eahire, S13t51Mo 'argo •Studio Sepa1ate BR aiea !RLl{t'ia~hiOI) ' \ , t • t •r 640 077 Newpon Hel9h11· 21>< 2ba. 2 , rltf gar, lrg bl ov.r gar huge b~.:~•r l>ut nlct min 10 bch. k $2300 !149-862-1745 100 ISLE bay lront on • .bllac;h. 3 01 41>! Jo~ hJ111W~ .,.... mooring . .iri waillilikl ~mu 949-67J-6t03 Uuldry!Neny fwyl; 405 5S1Mnta ,,_,from O/C F~cohge. Shopping Mllll. 8-:tlw' ............. COSTA MESA MOTOR Hf tt1'7 ..... llhd.. c.. ..... Pflenel (M9164Ml40 204 RENTALS TO SHARE CM bcxlnc:y 1enlor 55/F Shr big new galtd, pool. cat1, 2br S150, 1 br • $'450 949-631·2111 NEED 1 ROOMMATE STEPS TO BEACH Only $42<#m< Quiel area. good llviog condl 11ons 949-075-4968 CM (Mell Verde llH) Apt, 2br, 2ba. Female pref, Av1ll 5·1. $400/mo . 714·979-5519 lt4 GARAGES SINGLE RAGE I om E'11dt C.M, Mtu Dr, V«Y private. II 00/mo. IMM42·96N 218 · RENTALS WANTED Loollln9 for clffn Guest HOUM Of 181 In Back t>ay, N8 oi CM area Prol'I female S4~ $550 Dana ~9-283·'4575 , ..... .,..., Pl1vllte Soccer LA1ton1 F1IMy qUllllfled USSFIUU'A coecll. Eatlbll•hed Ellt• SocClf Cerller MM7.._2. l•u••FOUNDI CHU.D'S GLASSES FOUND ON BROADWAY. PlEASE CALL ~5-0521. LOST on Euttr Dayl Biown \bys!>inian Cit 'Peaches' Weanng tao wlwrong 1rea code Vac·PromontOIY Bay N B area ~9-675-6269 Sell your extra hOUf$9hOld Items in Classified -OCIAN VllWI 6300 Sq Ft In l•autlful _.... ... ~---Fasltlon Island Want to Edwards, Corona del Mar Plaza & libr:tj.The world is at your doorstep! 230 Newport Center Dr. Please Call Joanna Tarpley at ~·.-·····.'l ~ .. _ .... ·~., j .,. . ' . ·. ,, iiOVIHO ulf.uf 10.J Btdroom Ml. 50ln T V Ind .., 9CJUIP., bled! "" sci•. WIO. do4hee. booQ Ind mor.I Also lie Maril VIII~ 2725 SAHIOf¥Eft DR. C.M • MOYW.a SALE SAT f.1 wld, 1'9friaerllor, glal top dl~{eble wlchelre, 40~w· 11!tii.= Or,~r Penn) Oak i.lded gla11 Curio c.blMCe, king wtlltt lton • 1¥111 l»d, king pint hand pelnt9d CMOpy Dtd w/drnMI', chair•, tabln, plctur.., l'llOf91 ·-c1 .. .m.41 Ma ... 78 -J w• f ._.T : ~~.r· .. ' Win. in. ,,,, in / .,.,.. ,~ l••· · '"•n! In (Jb ervance 0f Natio~al Pet Week, May 2-8 , 1999, 1.~ "!'•!!1 Antique glt.-g tMli. w1'4 chain $450, new coftet table dal1I Wood $175, mirror $25, kltd1en '-*" & panlJy $250 '°' both & Sonv stereo S290 94H«-60t6 / 949-729·3543 Beautiful 6tt Dt1k I '9tumil 11 n Credenza, cuttom eo d wood, $800. Exec chair, $200, Mt-75M275. ·Grandtlther clock' Upgr8d ,.;del Chtnywd. Nu Howard Miiie• clock, mint cond. $1 lil.Yobo. 714·1661M7 Hef'ftege 36" round INthtf topped table with 4 malehlng chair$ per1ect condition MMn-8933 RENT , throug.h classified We will be featuring a page for our BEST FRIENDS and why they are adorable! HERE'S HOW: 1. Send a photo of your pet with this entry blank. l.. Send $10, check or your credJt card#, a photo of your pet and this entry form, to: l'I I._, < J.1,..,ifil d lh 111. ;_~o \\. H.I\ 'I. < 11 .... 1.1 \It...,,, < \ ·>~h~- 3. tntri must be received by Aprll 30, 1999, Spm. Photos Will be r tur ned to address provided. Do not wrik. on photo . You may also drop thJs by our office. Winner will be ~bosen by random drawing, and notified by phone ou May 7"'. Publication Date: Wednesday May 5th, 1999 1\IJ;",~Pilot ~~~··· Pet'• Name: My pet'• moat adorable • becauM: Name Of Owner: AddreH: City /State: ----------------••·-----I tliillilllili __ liiiiii _______ ..... __ ........... ____ ~....._. ............. M•Ti nu.ow MOii ,.... & t:..=; ::t=.!4~ ,....,........., out ... 10IH•person. full & Part TliM -.u. Ontnge Caun~ & Long lch, Terrltortea avollaltle. UOk t 1 •t year potential. Salary • CoMmlulon, Stock Option•, lenefih. fax re•ume to hY• S. at (949) 515·1025. Animal Hotpltal In FV ..-d1 Reetptlonl.vr9chnlclan FIT. SalUfday & holdlYs • most np nol 119C 714-962-1369 APMll'IDIElll' Mi'IW Ff/Yf~ cii~ 11 Per Hour ~~ ·~~i-• tot.JC •1'&111~ •U..W.t...,,_ &tabltshcd la 1989 and lrowtili • C..U Cor appmnt.mmt 1-888-818-4744 .. ReNunlnt BACK BAY CAFE SeMrs PM ':::: At1f*f In person Newport Duntl Resott Hunwl AllOOrta Ollice, M-TH 1-~31 Back Bay °' Beach, Mf.72WM3 EOE \.. . -. - • ''J,.-I .. ., ' I~•!,• • Alt Kk1d9 of Jobe For Alt Kind• of ~. ~ ......... , . ~~-ij =-=-~~f: :-==~ =~~~t :.~111111 FT'! • ~ .. Mi:-•aWdl. • ~T~l~M~E~S~O~RA-N-G .... E__,,C_O_UN_T..-Y~IS~N~O~W~ =ca:;&. ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR ITS ~.,,:-=it·l& *ieiJ SALES DEVELOPMENT "' 01N1uc on IOOKEEPEft REPRESENTATIVE a DAVI A wm MM7M10ot "' The Sales Development Represen1atives sell 'Jlmes Orange County subscriptions to prospects at hiJh profile venues such as: college campuses, fairs. edublt. shows llld seleci retail outlets. Also. the Representalive will secure access to gated buildings. THE SUCCESSFUL CANDIDATE WILL BE: • Independent and reliable • Flexible with their schedule e Professional in appearance e A "go getter'' and "self-starter0 • Must have reliable transportation •Bilingual (Spanish or Vietnamese) a plus The Los Angeles Times offers a competitive compensation and benefits upon qualification. Qualified candidates may apply in person, by mail, or by fax at: The Times Orange County Comumer Marketlna Sales 1375 SunOower Ave Costa Mesa, CA 92626 Pbone (714) 966-4591 You may also rax to (714) 966-4590 or lltDd via the Internet to a.lex.mora@Latimes.com Contad: Alex Mora Equal Opportunity Employer SALES ACCOUNT REPRESENTATIVE (FULL TIME $25-30K + INCENTIVE) The Los Angeles Times is seeking bright, capable individuaJs who are looking for full or part-time employment with an established, yet expanding organization. Sales and Dislribution staff will work at our Orange Coun ty Consumer Marketing Regional office. The Sales Account Representative will work to achieve sales goals within an assigned geographic area. The individual will maximize sales by developing strong partnerships with existing accounts, establishing new outlets and adjusting distribution volumes. The Representative must act as an ambassador for the company by always maintaining appropriate appearance and demeanor. THE SUCCESSFUL CANDIDATE Wll..L HAVE: • 2-4 years of sales, marketing or related experience required • Strong problem solving, decision making, organizational and planning skills • Excellent verbal and written communication skills •Ability to work a flexible scheduJe including Saturday & Sunday • PC skills required The Los Angeles Times offers a competitive compensation and benefits package. Qualified candidates should send a resume with salary history to: The Times Orange County Employment Office 1375 Sunflower Ave Costa Mesa, CA 92626 You may also fax to (714) 966-7751 or send via the Internet to jobs@latimcs.com Equal Opportunity Employer hdliiililli~ =::.:=~~ tor t19-350-l807. Salet..--We lurnlah accrtdll irw... 15'Wo com1iltb1 + 15% bonlll. Cal 714-561-31 Vi S111art CustOlll« LIYklit tnllnM. People Ee''· .. tllln, Stm ""' F~ V!lly 714-841· TUCHBi CM!. PRE.scHOOL T.acMr to CO·teach UCVIRVINi. NAEYC. ACCRED, ~. Mi., xllt wkQ cond., benlMa. S8-$10lt1R. i:1T 9'4N54-6030 * 'TME iliAIOX • ' Courter fUl1)llt *"8, PllS1 lhlpplng. ~. oCtlce 949-642-6211.2 T'AOCiC DAMA WAHTEO Musi have Class B ~ & dean OMV l9COrd. StM!t. Call MM7&-M74 Have A Garage· Sale! ~= ... ,.., ,-rl -.. ·~ ~ -..__ . . Call The Pilot Classifieds at 642-5678 to place your Garage Sole Ad I ... ·-' ..... ' ~ ~ . . . ~ ..... ' . ·-----_, .. ., ..... . ~ .. ~ .... .: l • < . , .. ' .... ·.·~ . ·~ ,Y. • ·" -~··~ 50 Ff sUfS IN BEST AREA Of THE BAY Cll lor cletlll C~NNfRY RENTALS MM1MeOI o<J• Run your ad In the ~ Newport Beach-' r Costa Mesa Dally Pilot and the Huntington Beach- Fountain Valley Independent to re~h over 100,000 homes. Fax us this form with your credit card # or mall with ~ ·a check todayl -· Run for a weekl If your car does not -sell, we'll run It for w. another week FllDI • Atl for Just $10·. Why play Hide 'N 8Mtc Wfth chlldcare'? Cati Cl•••lfled todayt 842-ee78. r----------------- 1 D YD, IEL1 MY CAR I I ,.,.-------------~ .- 1 .,.....,..-------------. - I car I ·~ I I ~,,_.-------------~ C>d-MC o-QNlll • 'I 0 1 ··: -~--~--·----- :;.:--=:r-1:.-1=-::..-:... -·-----·-----........ ------··-.. _ .., _____ ... -=:==~~~~------------------4 ~ . . ' ,... .. . ·,·, ,.·.• ••,r ·,, . ; • •,I All plleua/amallllg J*.ClEAHI DI. ... .... .. L"400030 71 .... 1441 ••' 1 f I J • ·-.:-·r,•; . , I cttf'YILER LE IAflON 1 ... 4-dr, power, ....... deM. new amoo cer11t1c1t1 11995 obo. 941-723-1504 Eddie BM* Explorw 't1 tultt loldtd. mt cond. bl~ dltlry cond. ~ kll. Olla 1ifla & Ill $12,500 obO 714-318-9421 . Ford Bronco 1tl5 4x4 Fl/tf loaded. tuW gr_, wl lln lelltllr lnleflor, tow l*g, 1-owner U'lt cond s 1 e.soo ot>o t4M4S.2I04 FORD cOHTOUR Qt 'if Auto, Ile. llm'lm caa, Iii, cc. pw. pt (VKl56568) S11,9911 .or.,. COiet Jeep leuzu 714-S4Nm) FORD CROWN VICTOAil 'fl {vtnl141482) $8995 Sonny'• Wk: Pontltc Buick 714-444-5200 FOR6 EiJi¥OfW spon 'ii a.. uo. ~· '*°· PIMCY gllu. (87 $20,890 . LEXUS OF R 714-1t2.g901 FOAD MUSTANG 'M V6, IA::, ~S. wr.'lln CISI, lit, low r*I (TF209575) S9.999 0\'11191 Coat JMp le1m1 714-64M02:1 GEO PRIZM LSI '93 !\W035183) $6595. ~ny'1 GMC Pontltc Buick 714-44W200 HONDA ACCORD UC 'N 19K milel, IU10, mtfYoJ power leatures. (000848) $15,988 Nabel't Oldtmoblle Cldllllc 714-540-1100 HOHDA ACCORD lX 1iri 4-<lr, S.tpd, xlnl cond, new lirll, gretl shape, IUlll perted. 114k ml. $3750 714-212-4501 MONDA CIVIC EX fi Whllt. Priced IO ... (5179$2) $11,988 LEXUS Of WESTMINSTER (7\4)m.f90t Jaguar iii 1H1 ~ modal BllcMan Ir(, 63k '"'· loedld, s1000 down asaume s 11,500 pp 94!Ml73-0411 JEEP CHEROt<EE 'i3 6 <¥ . .-0, t/c, lm1m c:us. ed. .low,.. ((Pls..<>531) $10,1199 Orlfl9I COiiet Jeeo ltuzu 714-S4H02~ KIA $£i>AIA LS SEOAH 'ti Aulo, lie, pis, llMm cus, IA!. p!iof rental (W57102411$8,999 Ol'enga Coaat Jeep ltu.w 714-54~ CEXOs ES 300 ·ii Ith<. co. moonrool. (178131184ne) $24,995 TUSTIN LEXUS 714-544-4800 LEXUS ES 300 '96 Lfw, 40lc milll, CO, dl<ome ... (17820(182760) $24,995 TUSTN LEXUS 714-544-4800 LOOS ES 500 ·ii Liiv. co. chroml wl*. moon-roof (I 773&'143878) $21,295 TUSTIN LEX\JS 71t5444IOO CEXOS ES toO 'ii Rutw. ... moonmof, co (17612/138168) $23.095 TUSTlfl LEXUS 11-.su •eoo ---- ,,, .... . ".: .. . ------- ,. .. . ....... . . ' 111111 COUNT YOUR TRICKS East· West vulnerable. East deals. usina the ~ina·trick count. and a tWO·dub btd hould have a muj. mum offour. However. P.ast's band is balanced despite the Sta-card minor suit, so an openina btd or cwo no trump would have been a beller choice. Even wilhout a spade lead. thtt.e no lnlmp can be made (South cannot eacape an endplay), so South's four-spade sacrifice deserves note. It was clear East's thrce-no- lNmp rebid was based on a long, run· ning nunor. NOJlTII • 754 0 9764 0 3 WEST •J2 • KQ65l EAST • K9 1;1 85 o AJ2 0 9872 • 109 8 7 3 SOUTH o AKJ 1054 •A4 • A21086 3 o K 103 o Q Wesc led the eighl of hearts, and East could ICC a Irick in each side suit. TilC seuina Irick woukl have to come from trumps, and even that was likely 10 vanish if declarer could reach dummy in a hurry. When Soulh covered the opemnJ le.cl of I.he eight of hearts wilh I.he nine, Ease could not afford to duck. Playing the jack would have been good enough. but Base elected co rise wilh the 11ee as declarer dropped the len. •J The bidding: EAST SOlTl'H 2• 2• 3NT .. ....... Openiria lead: Eight-of o Be aware of bow many tricks you need to make or defeat a contract. Thal pennits you to determine whether anything unusual may be necessary or whether you can afford to play passively and collect cricks as they come due. Only a heart continuation would le.cl to the contract's demise. but even so the defender had to be cart:· ful lO return I.be jack of hearts Lo pre- vent declarer from gaming entry 10 dummy. Declarer won and led the queen of diamonds Lo Ease's king, and I.he deuce of hearts permitted West co ruff to complete the defen- sive book.. Eventually the ace of clubs scored the selling trick. We do not think lhat I.he Ease hand qui~ measures up to an artificial two- club opening bid. East has five losers r ... /.· "' ...__ · .. ~1._ ·1-J, > ·\ •• ~:. ' . ·-•. 't. • . .....,., . LEXUS ES 300 'M cd, ctvome wtllels. ( 17704/ 134795) $23,995 TUSTIN LEXUS 714-544 4800 LEXus ES 300 'M CMhmet• Beigl. lllv, co. (\7664114226n $23.995 T\ISlll{ LEXUS 714-$44-41GO Lfius ES 300 w Wl'M, ""· low mies. co ( 1770&'140846) $24 .295 TUSTIN LEXUS 714-544 4IOO LEXUS ES 300 '16 33k mies, co. cnrome ..tU (178211149523) $24,995 TUSTIN LEXUS 71t-54H800 LEXOs ES 300 '16 Llhr. 25'1 mies, co. moonrool. ( 178271158707) $26, 795 TUSTIH'LEXUS 11-.su 4800 LEXUS ES 300 'M LIIV, 33lt mies, CD, ctvome wl* (17822/152100) $25.295 TUSTIN LEXUS 714-544-4800 MEfiCED£s:BENZ 300E ·as 3.21lr eng, mt conc:I, CJD, TO.P. ~ w/12 morChs rlll'lllirh:I Wllh $2500 dOWn §49-499-8730 MERCEDES C:220 'ts , IUIO, llt, lloys, 221798) $20,995 f WESTMINSTER 71'""2~ . -. , . I . . I •. • ·. n .,., ,-17fn· ... ' ... · .. '' .. ~ ... --,.,..,·-1~~~,1~ '1 ... _ ... .I ~7.,.• . '-~~ .. :·' . >· ~ ~ MERCED£8 210£ 'n Sunroof, auto, lo9dld, 1 OWIW, $2450 714-56.0161 kcede• 300£ 1ff1 6 <¥, auto, IJC, IUI pwr. tm1m CISS. CC, sM, alovs, new eng, 19,000 obO .. ~150. Mercury T,_ LS 5edln '17 Auto. ale, llm'lm cass. loW mlles (VW658483;.::9 Onlnge Coeat \ml (714)5AM013 NSSAN PtCIHIP XE 17 6MVlm Clll, cd llliCkM, M: ((VC330249) $10,999 Onngt Cout JMp leUDI 714-54Nm3 OLDS EIGHTY EIGHT 'IS Auto. elr, f>W'. IJlcQI, ~. tloya. rJc .... (824736f $9,999 LEXUS OF wESTMIHSTER (714)et2.aol oLbsM<>BiCE AURORl 1H 1~ ml, wtrt prl, 11111 llhr. lloys. bll. of wan. (100803) $2e,988 ....,.. Oldamoblle Cldllltc 114-540-9100 OLDSMOBILE BRAVADA '84 Lo ml, wtt ~· 111\ llhr, 4x4 c >ct.=ii. Cldllltc 714-540-9100 OLDSMOiU SilhoU9tt• 'N Lo mies, dUal doors, llv, CD Bal of Wllf.(269913) $20.988 Hlblr'I Oktlmoblle CldlllK '714-540-1100 PlYMOUTH NEOH UP '17 Aulo (W11241048) $8895 Somy'1 Gmc Pontltc Buick 714-444-6200 Plymouth Neon ... Aulo, tic, pis, am1m, pllor rental (W0679035~9,999 Of tngt COlltt ltuzu 714-54 PONTIAC Grind Prll SE 'M (Ylnl341863) S9. 695 Sonny'• GMC Pontltc Buick (714 )444-5200 PONTIAC GRAND AM SE '14 Auto tic ~-c/c. a . rJw, ~ (RM503768) $7 999 Of ange Cout Jeep LI uzu 71 4-S4..a2:l PONTIAC SUNARE '97 (vinf607864) SI0.695 Sonny'• Gmc Ponlilc Buick 714-44.W200 PONTIAC SUNFIAE 'N (vinf557018) SI 1,995 Sonny'• Gmc Pontiac Buick 714-444·5200 Pontltc Trenaport 191 &own, Just Ille ~~ lfor your aummertun (299744 $19,999. lEXUS OF WES NSTER 71Wl2-'toe PORSCHEl11 CARAW 'iS llllf, NC, lmmlc, low mies, 11500 down, assume $17,000. pp t4M73--0411 SATURN SU SEDAN '16 Ale,~. lll'f'lm ClllS, lllt, cc. al-loVS. rJw (TZ383507 )$ 11.999 Orenge Cout Jeep 1111.111 714-S4M023 ... ,,..~··-., . . . •TREESl Toppd~. Lawns, 1prl nkler1 ,cln·up 714-751-3476 The Calif. Public· Utllltlta Commlnlon REQUIRES that all UMd houlthold goodl movera print their P.U.C. Cll T number. lmoe end cheuff9lt prltll their T.C.P. number In aa adYefit. mtnll. " you hlVt • question about the legelty d • mo¥9r. Imo or °*"«, Cll: PUBLIC UTUTIES OOMMISION 714-651-4151 Toyolll Taeoma 4x4 xcab 'M Bllt. 5 spd, •• lul pwr pack, moonrool. (114087) $18,999. LEXUS OF WHTMINSTER 714-192.g• TOYOTA TACOMA '115 {Ylnl012880) $9,995 Sonny'• Gme Pontltc Buick 714-444-<5200 ' I I TOYOTA 4-f!UN.NER SRS 't7 2 wd, moonrool. alloys roofracll. (038922) 123.895 LEXUS OF WESTMINSTER 714-m-ltol -_.----- ... -....-. ,. ....... , . ,.,-, 1 ----- ,• t• •" I•' I J ••, Friday, April 16, 1999 13 TOYOTA 4-RUNHER LTD '97 Aulo, elr, alovs. co. lealhlf (027783) $24.895 LEXUS Of WESTMIHSTER 714492.uol TOYOTA UluNHEA 'N Auto, lir moonrool, llovs 11K mies (028649) $20.790 LEXUS al WESTMINSTER 714-m-ltoe VOl VO t10 '116 Auto, 111 lul pw1 slll lloy$ ltw (089n1J $19 899 LEXUS Of WESTMINSTER 714-192-ltol ts MZB WO V-8 .:.- IC lllv int • c:assefte . ...-. euslom wlU CNISI OOf'lln[ powet, S32 500 949-&&S-2251 I l\J \ . I ' i '. , f ' -. ; ] '':".I\· --- I • I --....... :-· .. '? ............. l,::;rw-=~ ftiiiZJQ ; ~~. uiii14TT.;. =i _ _ {/ttt!r . . • -•. . =-.... ~ ... _ -· "lo EDINGER