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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1999-10-13 - Orange Coast Pilot' . SERVING lHE NEWPORT -W.SA COMMUNmES SINCE 1907 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1999 THE FRED c 0 l u •• fred martin Children earn . points for presents • Families Costa Mesa program rewards good students with Christmas gifts to give to parents and siblings. EU!)l'GM Dctf Ph COSTA MESA -At 6 years old, Harvey Pleitez is a little too young to be earning a wage, but that's not stopping him from saving up for Christmas. Families Costa Mesa Director Leda Albright said the program is a lesson in hard work for the children, espeaally dunng the holiday season when the organization can be inundated with donatio~. •sometimes people are g;ven so many things that they lose an appreci- ation for what it takes to earn some- thing,• . Albright said. "We want to make it mean something for the kids.• A view of Crystal Cove from the other side. A long with •military intelligence• and •uCLA football,• one of the more laughable oxy- morons in today's vernacular is •responsible developeL • Harvey is one of 60 children in a Families Costa Mesa program that allows them to earn points for good schoolwork, attendance and citizen- ship. Those points will then be used toward gifts for their family members at Christmastime. The program was orgamzed by Dave Lewis, a program assistant who used to work with homeless children dt the Orange Coast Interfaith Shelter. Lewis was never able to implement the program at the shelter because chil- SEE FAMILIES PAGE 4 • DON LEA( HI DAI Y Pit.OT Harvey Pleitez looks at his handiwork planting purple napdragons at Famllies Costa Mesa as part of a new academic program. However, to my utter astorushment, I may well have uncovered one of such a species. He's Mike Freed of Resort Design Group, a.k.a. Crystal Cove Preservabon Partners. Mike takes considerable issue with some of the infor- mation about the proposed development of Crystal Cove State Park that I received from the Sierra Club and other sources. The situ- ation is this: The state paJks ser- vice doesn't have the money to mamtamits properties, By fer the most fodor in the cispute is public OW5S to one of ...... t.ulM beadt- es in b slatl. including Crystal Cove. The cottages there are on the National Register of Historic Places, and as such must be restored (or tom down). They could also use a working sew- er/septic system, but that's another column. Since the state Department of Parks and Recreation does- n't have the money to bnng Crystal Cove up to code, it sought a concessionaire. Pub- llcly, but quietly, the depart- ment issued a request for pro- posals, as required under Cal- ifornia law. Mike Freed's group came, saw and con- quered. What it proposes to do at Crystal Cove 1S an expansion worth about $25 million -all private money. But it 15 hardly the posh, sequestered seaside resort u:"l>,lied by the Sierra Club, etw. By far the most important factor in the dispute is public access to one of the most beautiful beaches in the state. The naysayers claim it will be severely restricted. Freed's development group insists it will be increased. Says Freed, in writing: •111e entire beachfront area -interpretive center, dive facility, art center, two public SEE MARTIN PAGE 5 CONAAO l.AU I OM.Y Pl.OT Sgt Tom Boylan ls hanging 'em up after more than 30 years on the Costa Mesa Police Department He is lookJng forward to peace and quiet in Reno, Nevada. Endofthes lb1y""' C ome Saturday, when his col- leagues say farewell at a retirement party in lus honor, Sgt. Tom Boylan pronu.ses to keep his speech short. The 53-year-old Costa Mesa police officer, who has a tough-guy exterior that covers a softer inside, concedes he may get a little choked up if he attempts a rambling diatribe. instead, he will let his co-workers take verbal shots at h,im as he gra- Known as a tough guy with a soft heart, Costa Mesa police Sgt. Tom Boylan calls it a career after three decades. ciously steps away fro~ a job that has kept him busy for nearly 30 years. "I'm definitely going to miss this place, especially the people, -said Boylan as he· neatly oi:garuzed papers on his near-barren desk. •rm easing out of my JOb more than any- thing, but to leave the daily grind lS tough." Boylan plans to move to Reno with his wile but will return twice a month to work on the department's unsolved murder CdSes. Boyldn is part of the detective bureau, specifically handlmg the cnmes against persons unit. He con- siders his current job the most rewarding bccau e he works vigor- SEE BOYLAN PAGE 5 Slow-growth measure effort plugs away MIUENNIUM MOMENT Everyone has a good seat •Proponents of so-called 'green light' initiative say they have one-third of the signatures needed to qualify for March ballot. SlL'V\N Mc:CoH'-tACX ~Nol NEWPORT BEACH -Proponenta of a mealUJ'e that would limit the City Council's power to issue developm~t permits have one-third fhe number of signatures needed to get the illltiative on the March ballot and aey they are not deterred by lack of support from dty offidall, The lnltlettve. u pasaed, would reqWi'e. =.::c.:~~~~ ...mm-tsapq>OMd ~--that would create more than 100 ~k-hour car trips, add more than 100 dw llmg units or add more than 40,000 quare f t of floor area. Phil Arst, one of the leadors of the initia- tive drive, sllid his group of re irlents has gathered 2,500 of the 7 ,500 needed The group has been collccling s1gnatures since July, and it has three more months hcf ore all the signatures are due, he s~ud · Despite the magnitude of what the 1nitia· Uve would do if ii does get on the ballot and ls ~sed. it bu sparked V4µy utile public lnterest or debate ln Newport Beech. But Ant said he ls not worried about get· tin~ all the required signatures. 1be summer seuon ls a1ow end we have teally concentrated our efforts and bWlt up DOW,• he Mid •llUI takes •wbDll to get pee>- Wif'..n the light go down nd the movie starts, Andrew Youngq\list f l right at home. The Newpott Beach resident, president ol Costa Mesa's Birtcber Construction Set· vices, ii an expert on movie the· ater constructiaiD and the retro- fitting of Mdlum IMtl • Alldlww Ye 1• YoUDGQUl9t graduated from occ ,ana w.ton to won on bMant ltedi\llawUDg ~ wtUl AMC ~1 in l98ot LocU wUI _.a.a..• dlm<:e to .......... blalUlll~ y~~ llWCllclinllt· 1ng tbe GDgcmg l'WM!ltm a1 .. ..._ nx District to consider selling property • School board, faced with costly task of ' improving deteriorating facilities, weighs the . sale of district parcels. J{,"' 4\ G \llRl..._I'\ fbttfb NEWPORT-MESA -As part or their quel>t to unprove crumbling chool bwldmgs, school board members told dis- trict statf Tuesday to research selling two p1Cc:'es of district property. The properties. a parcel in an uruncorporated area of Newport Beach near the pro- posed Banning Ranch develop- ment and another m Costa Mesa, were declared surplus by the board a few years ago ~bJc.e Fine, assistant super- intendent for finanoal seiv1ces, said he had ·no idea• what the propertl would be worth, but some have estimated the parcels could net the distnct as much a $10 nullion. Whatever the amount, the district badly needs it. In June, school board mem- bers leaml'd that the distnct faces $127 million m repairs to moderruze electrical sysl m_ and shore up leaky roof and flaking walls Board members mad~ clear that they have not made a dl>a- SIOn to sell th properti , but merely want to study theu opllon~. · · School officials have also discus. ~th possibility of ask- ing voters to approve a bond to pay for som of the repairs, as well a applymg lor state funclc;. SEE BOARD PAGE 4 INDEX ,,._. ___ , QA.WflD5 __ .....__ .. __ ,_' POUll FUS ........... _.._._.-J PtllJ( .mas ___ _ SPOll'5 ----··----'' WEllHEI ......... Hill l;*'it .... "' ..... ~ 2 v.dnesday. October 13, 1999 locals onb' Daily Pilot • 1. ILMlllC • mnars NOTE: The fol- lowlng in~ ts col- lected on a weekly basis at the Orange County C1ef'k Recorder's Office In Santa Ana. MARRIAGES NEWPORT BEACH • Alan H. Crafton and Linda C. Caplan, Sept. 5 in Newport Beach • Louis-Philippe Lalonde and Jane E. Gilbertson, Sept. S in Corona del Mar • James D. Newcomb and Lydia R. Bouza- glou, Sept. 5 in Dana Point • Kamran Siminou and Deborah R. Fineberg, Sept. S in Los Angeles • Lawrence P. Wein and Shayna H. All- corn, Sept. 5 in New- port Beach COSTA ry,ESA • Francis Camacho and Kathleen M. Gog- gin, Sept. 5 in Silvera- do · •David B. Reese and Lisa M. Guglielmi, Sept. 5 in Orange BIRTHS NEWPORT-MESA • Cicely D. Williams on Sept. 5 • Brooke E. Budmdn on Sept. 5 • Dawn D Duong on Sept. 5 • Meredith W AndPr- son on Sept. 5 • Scott T. Camey on Sept. 5 DEATHS NEWPORT BEACH • Cass D. Pipmo on Sept. 5 • Jean C. Rothrock on Sept 5 DUI ARRESTS The followmg were arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of an intooo- cant. They have only been arrested on sus- picion of a crime, and, as with all such crimes, they are innocent unW proved guilty. NEWPORT BEACH Ocl 6 •John Elliot Kahn. 34, Orange •Leslie Arm McCarthy, 45, New- port Beach • Cory William Winter, 24, Tustin Oct 7 • Donald Paul Jones, 31, Costa Mesa • Saitoare Gilles- Alfred, 31. Buena Pdrk Ort 8 • Melissa Mane Chapin, 34, Hunting- ton Beach Ort 9 • Tern Sue Keyser. 4 7, Newport Beach • Tma Lyrm Daly, 23. Huntington Beach Ocl 10 • Rosario Sp1eso, 25, Huntington Beach • Ramiro Perez, 31 , Garden Grove • Sean Mollay Van Allen. 20, Huntington Beach VOL 9J, NO. 240 CITCllll IP Wiii • • • Bloomingdale's at Fashion Island Four years ago, railed negotiations between Costa Mesa's South Coast Plaza and Bloom- ingdale's -the upscale, New York-based department store -meant Fashion Island ,had a better chance at landing the mega-popular store. For months. Bloomingdale's officials met with management from South Coast Plaza and Fashion Island to determine which shopp41g center would better setve as a strong West Coast anchor. Estimated sales tax revenue for the city that landed Bloom- ingdale's swelled to the $750,000 range. A 1995 article that ran in the retail publication Wome,:i's Wear Daily reported that some of South Coast Plaza's depart- ment stores, fearing competi- tion, voiced opposition to the possible lease, therefore "freezing• the deal. South Coast Plaza officials at the time said the article was m.isrepresentative of the actual discussions. The city-backed effort to bring Bloomingdale's to Fash- ion Island came just three months after the city council approved an additional 300,000 square feet of retail space at the center, according to then-City Manager Kevin MllJl>hy. "We've expressed to The lrvine Company, which owns Fashion Island, that we would be helpful in any way that we could in bringing Bloommg- daJe's to the city," he said at the time. Fashion Island spokes- woman Nina Robinson said the department store has been a welcome adchtion since open- ing to the public in November 1996. Bloomingdale's opened a Bloomlngdale's at Newport's Fashion Island. home store one year later in the Atrium Court at Fashion Island. "We are absolutely thrilled with Bloomingdale's," Robin-. son said. "They have been overwhelmingly positive with the center and Orange County shoppers.• But not everyone lS thnlled with the retailer. New- port Beach Chamber of Com- merce President Richard Luehrs said the store failed to renew its membership in 1998. based on a decision made in New York. Bloomingdale's has told the chamber that they have processed a new membership application, but Luehrs said he has yet to see it. He said he tS surprised that Bloomingdale's allowed the lapse in member- ship at all. ·we think that with the Pinkerton service scheduled for Friday COSTA MESA -A memor- ial service for community activist Sandy Pinkerton will be held Friday at the Costa Mesa Seruor Center -one of her favorite causes. Pinkerton, 75, ched Sept. 31 from complications caused by cancer. Her death came as a shock to friends and col- leagues, since she had remained active and continued to perform numerous civic duties up until a month ago. In addition to seJ'VlJlg as a board member at the Senior Center, Pinkerton was a parks commissioner and president of the Mesa Del Mar Homeown- ers' Association. As a tribute to Pinkerton, the multipurpose room a t the Seruor Center will be dechcat- ed m her name Pinkerton was a driving force behind the center's fund- ramng campaign this year. She was able to convince Orange Sandy Pinkerton. County 1Teasurer John Moor- lach to serve as this year's hon- orary acting chairman for the campaign. The campaign is also being decticated in her honor. The memorial service, which is open to the public, will begm at 2:30 p.m . at the Cost~ Mesa Senior Center, 695 W. 19th St. -Elise Gee VOLUNTEER DIRECTORY • VOWNTEER DIRECTORY runs peri- odkally In the Daily Pilot. If you'd like information on getting your organi- zation hsted, call (949) 574-4228. AMERICAN CANCER SOOETY The Oran~e County Region of the Arnencan Cancer Society seeks office voluntee rs. The society is also seeking volun- teers to answer calls for the unit's Helpline InfoCenter. For more information, call (949) 261-9446. AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY DISCOVERY SHOP The American Caricer Sooety Discovery Shop needs volun- teers from 10 a.m. to 5 p .m. Monday through Saturday a.t 2600 E Coast Highway, Coro- na del Mar. For more informa- tion, call (949) 640-4777. AMERICAN CANCER SOOETY ROAD TO RECOVERY This transportation program needs volunteers to drive can- cer patients to and from medical treatments free of charge. The reqwred commibnent is a few hours each week or month. Dri- vers need a valid dnver's license and insurance, and must be at least 25 years old. Volun- teers may use either their own vehicles or American Cancer Society vans. For more mfonna- tion, call (949) 261-9446 or send e-mail to scomer@cancer.org. commibnent they have made m the community, they should support their local chamber,• Luehrs said. ~They should be listed among us.• As far as the sales tax generated by Bloom- ingdale's, state law prohibits the city from disclosing infor- mation for any taxpayer, Sdld Glen Everroad, the city's Rev- enue Department manager. However, Everroad did say that department stores at Fash- ion Island dS a whole generat- ed $1.6 million in the 1998-99 fiscal year -up 5% from the previous year. "That's not bad,• Everroad Sclld. •1 would put those store, . tn the 'doing well' category.· Officials at Bloorningdale's could not be reached for com- ment Tuesday. -Amy Spurgeon BRIEFS City to allow New Year's block parties The city of Costa Mesa will allow residents to cele- brate the new millennium right at home. The sale and use of certi- fied sate and sane fireworks will be allowed for the New Year's celebration. Residents may also organize block par- ties and apply to have thetr streets closed off. . The sale of fireworks wtll be allowed from Wednesday, Dec. 29 through Friday, Dec. 31, between 9 a.m. and 10 p.m. on those days. Revelers will be allowed to discharge fireworks from 4 p.m . Fnday, Dec. 3 1 until 12.30 a.m., Sat- urday, Jan. 1. Block parties will be allowed by application only and on a case-by-case basis, depending on location and the potential for traffic or safety problems. For mfonnation on how your orgaruzation can sell fireworks, call (714) 754- 5234. For information on block party applications, call (714) 754-5327 -Elise Gee Metro Pointe to hold college expo More than 25 colleges and universities are expect- ed to participate m an expo today at Metro Pomte The Metro Pomte Univer- sity & College Expo provides •one-stop shopping" for educational opporturuties .• The Expo is designed for adults who want to complete graduate or undergraduate degree programs, start ·a . degree or seek self-enrich- ment Representatives from the following institutions will be available for questions from 11 a .m. to 2 p.m.: Arnencan rntercontinen- taJ Uruversity, Antioch, Azusa Pacific, Cal Poly Pomona, Cal State Dominguez Hills, Chapman, Cal State Fullerton, Concor- dia University, Cal State Long Beach, Coastline Com- munity College, DeVry Insti- tute of Technology, Golden Gdte University, Marymount Weekend College, National University, Orange Coast College, Pierce College. Pepperdine, University Alliance. Union Institute, UCJ Extension, Uruversity of La Verne, University of Phoenix, University of Red- lands, Uruversity of Southern California, Vanguard Uru- versity of Southern Califor- nia, USIU, Western State ~ University College of Law, Webster University, and Whittier Law School. There is no charge for this event and parking is compli-• mentary, B£AQERS HOTLINE (949) 642-6086 or adwrtlsements h9rt1n can bt ~oduced without written per- mlKion of copyright owner. WEATHER AND SURF POLICE FILES Record your comments about the Dally Pilot or news tips. ADQRESS Our address Is 330 W Bay St .• Costa Mesa, CA 92627. CORREOJONS It Is the Pilot's policy to PfOmP'(· ly tOfrert all errors of substance Please call (949) 574-<U68 m The Newport BM<NCostl ~ O.ily Pilot (U?S-144 IOO) IS pc.1b- flsh«j MOf'ld.y through s.tUfday 11'1 Newport Beach Ind Cost. Me$8, wbscriptlOl'll ., • ..,.llabi. ~ bY M>tcroblng to The T1met Oraoge County (800) J52·t141. In areas outside of Newpott IMd\ and c.ost. MN. subtCrlptions to the O.Uy Not in owal!Mile only by maU lot J 10 .-montfl Second c1.n ~ pakl" eo.u Meta CA ("ktl lnt~ .U ~ .ute and ~ tae) flOSTMAs. TE". Und llddr-.. ~ tO The NMport ~Meil o.lly "'°'-r.o lol 1HO, Costa M9M, CA 92621 COpyright: No MM ltO- rlet. llluW~~ metW HOW TO REACH US Om.tladon The limes Orange County (800) 252-9141 Adverttsing ClaUlfied (949) 642-5678 Dis.play (949) 642~321 [cfitoNI ~ (949) 642 5680 Sporu(949) 57~223 News, Sports fax (949) 64f>..4170 E mail: daityp1lotOlat1mes com Mlin Office Business Office (949) 642-4321 8uSlneu Fax (949) 631-7126 ~t:IYJ1me~- •tlmft~~ ...,. W.....LobcW. u Editot StewMMIN. ~lngldlt« MM_., Olr.ctor of Photogr~ Shtlirl'Nn ~ 5tnlot ldltor. Cilflf Delk .,_'lll!WOI M IWlll _..,. ~MPEAATURES Balboa 83161 COf'ol'la del Mar 82/60 Costa Mesa 83161 NeWport Beach 8416() Newport Com 83161 St.MP FOMCAST The iouthwest M'ell fades today fOf' MU In the wals1- to cheit high lfff Wattr vhJbf1"1 Ind conditions wtll be ""Y good. LOCATION SID \Nlldgt. , , . , , , , , 2 5 SW 'Net~ ,,,,.,2 ... PN "'*Jetty ., .. . . 2·0W QIM " '••• .2 ... M TIDES TODAY First low 5:15 a.m .•••••••.••• 2.2 First high 12:09 a.m , •.•••• , •.•. 3.8 Second low 6:39 p.m ••••••••••••• 0.8 Second high after midnight " ••••••. n/a THURSDAY First low 5:41a m •••.•••• ,, .••• 2.6 First high 1 Ol am., .... , •• , .• 35 Second low 7:38 p.m .......... 1.1 Second high 12:04 pm . . .. • ... 4..9 COSTA MESA • 9ri1to1 Street A cellular phone wotth $200 wa~ stolen from a stOfe en the 3300 bloc:k between 5 and 9 p m Oct 4 • artstot S~ A backpack and •ts contents worth $400 • were stolen from a car In the 3300 blcx.k between 1 and 4 p.m. OCt. 1. • Newpott loutevent. Se11eral compact discs and a stereo worth S330 were stolen in the 2600 bloc:k during the even~ of Sept. 23 • S..Ow• Aw: Two 18-packs of beer worth $24 were stolen from a store Jn the 1100 bl<xk at 10'.45 p.m. Stpt.29 NEWPORT BEACH • la.I Cwt ~y: A cellular phone worth $200 was S1oltn from a Cat' tht 3500 block betwten ~no and 11 ·45 am 'ThundlY • .... C-.t .... CUU&jl A atlkJlat phone WOf1h $250 Wal = from• l'tltaurant In the 3200 block •t B:JO pm. Set· • .... DrM: " cenui. phone ~ • Mt of golf dubs WOtth $2, t 50 ~ stottn 'from • w In m. 1400 6kxk dur I~ 5undly wtnfng. • 4& I I ... ,_...,.. Se\ltfaf 1tem1 of <lothltla er1d pie· "'1'.• worth $!10 -.. sto1tn In the 700 blo& SUndey =-.Dtt.-A..._~~ws .. "°"" In tM ... btodl bit:J'ltn sand , 1 pm..~ . . . Doily Pilot llllfLY Car accident leaves pedestrian near death COSTA MESA - A 47- year-old Huntington Beach mn.n remams in grave condi- tion after he was struck by a slow-moving car Tuesday morning while he was crossing a street. Darnel Marr suffered major head lnjunes after bitting his head on the concrete as a result of the accident. The dri- ver or the velucle, 40-year-old Steven Tunothy Edgar of Hes- peria, may face vehicular manslaughter charges pend- ing a police mvestigation. , The accident occurred shortly after 10:30 a.m. at the mtersection of Park Center and Town Center drives. Marr, who works nearby, was walk- ing northbound in a crosswalk on Town Center when Edgar, driving a 1996 Ford Thunder- bird, made a left tum from a southbound lane on Park Cen- ter. Alarm chases away would-be robber COSTA MESA -A quick- witted Yorba Llnda woman used her vehicle's alarm to shoo away an armed robber who tried to steal her sport-ubl- ity vehicle Tuesday morning. The 53-year-old victim was shaken up but wasn't injured . after the robber crept up behind her and pointed a gun at her back. Police said the attempted carjacking took place around 9: 15 a.m. in front of a Mexican restaurilllt on the 1200 block of Su;>erior Avenue. The woman was returning to her 1998 Mer- cedes-Benz, which was parked near the restaurant, when the robber approached her from behind. The man demanded she unlock the door and get in the vehicle, threatening to hurt her unless she did so. Instead of domg what she was told. the woman hit the paruc button attached to her key chain, set- ting off the vehicle's alann. The robber turned and calmly walked away, p0lice said. .-. . # ........ .. ti .. .. .. .. PEDAL POWll Authorities said Edgar made a slop at the intersectlon before he hit the victim. Police suspect Edgar didn't see the pedestrian walking across the street. It was esbmated Edga.r was traveling between 3 to 5 mph at the time of unpact. •r imagine it was the type of vehicle that lured this guy to her," said Costa Mesa police Sgt. Don Holiord. About 1,200 cycllsts raised $440,000 this weekend RAFAEL DEFRANCO I DAILY Pit.OT Cyc11sts embarked on a 150-m.ile ride early Saturday morning at Newport Dunes and finished Sunday in Mis- sion Bay in San Diego. The money wtll benefit local programs serving those with the disease. "The serious injuries were ~uffered by the way he fell,• said Costa Mesa police Sgt. Kevm Lovelady. "He rolled over the hood and hit his head on the asphalt.• The suspected robber is described as Asian, about 5 feet, 2 inches tall and weighing about 120 pounds. He has a medium build with black hair and brown eyes and was last seen wearing black clothing. for the local chapter ol the National Multiple Sclerosis Society, said D1ane Parker, spokeswoman for the group. It was the biggest turnout -in terms of participants and money raised -in the event's 16-year history. Marr was rushed to Western Medical Center in Santa And where he remains in critical condition. Anyone with information is asked to call the Costa Mesa Police Department at (?14) 754~5281. -Greg Rlsllng I E')(l 15 IF IESTMllSTEI A Business Networking· Event of the Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce Tuesdav, October 19, 1999 5:00 -8:00 pm • Balboa Bav Club tnt• l#Sllflt, .... .,.,, ... c ...... 111111111 llS'l llllilll '-'C1•1cll111• .. ·tr111•11c11 •111111111111111 ........ ••111111. , ••• ,. 11111111111-•lt ........ ... Networking Hors d'oeuvres Cocktails Pr11es ~~-------------------------, I Free Admission to Connections '99 BusiMSJ Expo I I Tue9day, October 19 I I 5pm-8pm I I Balboa Btzy Club I I A~ Nltwol1dlig E-..r ".. IZlJ w c...i,,., . ,_,..,. ... ,. I I Nlwport Hlrbor NM Chlmlllr of COmrnerce ~., © I I Nnwort11e1 • Cod:Mlll • FflH • l'Wul ...,.. • I I •-~------~o:<9'9l~~~~~---J Due _, ~ pl!tcilg at 111 Bly Club, I FREE .,.wlbl Pf'(Tt1dld. NO~wlbl Mlable at"' Ckb. Thia ftllllt MMct and~ lot .,.. ont milt •••Y from the Expo and will run oonllnuOulty fTom 5:00 pm to 9.00 pm. Tht partq Jot 11 loc*d at Newport Hllbor l ullet'ln ctud\ ... ,...,,..,,..,. 55 Frwy Scdl. T11n1 tm Ntwpotf M. Ta.m Liit on 1 r St T&nV iJto Dcwtt-Dr. Ta.m Lii on tr a. T11n Alt#•~ lot. aw:rw,,..mmm . Drlvtno Soult on.--.. Rd. '°""1d COllt Hwy. Tum ,.. on eo..tHwy. TUmRl/lfonOCMIDr. T""'*"°" 1rSt. T001 1fiff' lnlo ,,, ptll(tv lot. (791 DoYlr °'· ). For into. call tl1e Chan1ber at 949-729 -4400 .. Cock1011s Phone Aheoa for Fooa To Go Your carpets remember. Pet odors and stains a free clean ing estimate, backed by our 100% Satisfact ion Guarantee. So, no matter w hat's shakin' at your house ... call COIT can.make your carpets and upholstered furniture less than fresh. ( Just call COIT and we'll give you COIT.::- 7ime for G {rt8Ji start."' Lie. #727306 ---------------------CA rp ets •Oriental t!r Area Rugs• Draperies• BlinJs t!r Wini/ow Coverings • Upholstery • !1ir Duct Cle11ning •• I ' 4 Wednesday, October 13, 1999 llllFLY Police submit cat cruelty case to DA Costa Mesa poUce on Tuesday S\lbmitted an animal cruelty case to the Orange County District Attorney's office for '~ review. The case is that of a Costa Mesa woman who killed and cooked her cat last week. , Tori Richards, a spokeswoman for the county prosecutor's office, said a final decision has yet to be made, pending further investigation. •we have the case, but it will take more tlme before we come to a deci- sion,• she said. The case alleges that 40-year-old Debra Kin- caid of Costa Mesa killed her 1 112-year-old cat named Beauty and then cooked it in ber oven. A putrid smell from smoke billowing out of her Park Avenue apart- ment alerted authorities. When they investigated Kincaid's home, police found several pieces of the cat in her sink. Kincdld w as taken to a hospital for psychiatric evaluallon She 1s also suspected of killing or po1somng othe r cats found m her apartment complex. Aruma1 cruelty charges carry a maXJJTlum of two years m sta te prison and/or a $20,000 hne -Greg Risling Doily Pilot ~ Triangle Square sues two former tenants .-. •Owners of shopping/ entertaiiunent complex claim businesses didn't pay rent before closing. · EussGEE IQ1y Pfd COSTA MESA -Triangle Square has filed lawsuits against two former tenants for breaking their lease agree- ments. Santa Pe Grill and La Salsa vacated the center without paying their rent,. said Kelly Bosche, Triangle Square attor- ney. The two businesses have been served with the com- plaints, but neither have responded. Triangle Square, which is rounding out its first year under the new ownership of CGM Investment Co., is undergoing a major transition. The center experienced a high turnover rate among tenants before and after it was sold by Capital & Counties USA Inc. In addition to the two restaurants be.ing sued by 'Ili- angle Square, the following businesses have either left the center or declared bankrupt· cy: Sfuzzi, Juice Connection and Ralphs. However, since the begin- ning of this year, Whole Foods and That's Aroma have opened in Triangle Square. DON I.EACH I DAlY PK.OT Adriana Melendez, 3, looks at her freshly planted snapdragon at Families Costa Mesa as part of a new academic program. Kristen's Llngerie • Loungewear • Gifts Westcliff Court • 1719 Westcliff Dr. MEASURE CONTINUEb FROM 1 ' pie organized, so now we believe we're moving forward." City council members and developers have been unenthu- siastic about discussing the con- troversial measure, called MPro- tection against traffic and densi- ty" or the •green light" initia- tive by its pi;oponents. The definition of •major amendments" appears to be one pomt of contention between proponents and city officials. While proponents say the. initiative would allow prcr Also, major anchor The Yard House is scheduled to open its doors later this month. Howdy Kabrins, former owner of La Salsa, said his restaurant had problems with the former owners of 1iiangle Square. La Salsa was the last remaining plaintiff in a 1997 class-action lawsuit brought against the former owners of the center after Juice Connec- tion anti Chong's settled. FAMILIES ·. CONTINUED FROM 1 dren there were always corning in and out of the facility. The program at Families Costa Mesa makes sense for the children there because the kids who come to the center are sometimes from low-income households and can't purchase gifts for family members on their own. Brianna Valencia, 8, said this will be the first time she's been able to buy gifts for her family. MI didn't buy anything for them Jast year because I didn't have enough money,# she said. Lewis said ge didn't want to just hand the children gifts. Rather, the program teaches children responsibility and rea1- world lessons such as budget- ing. ThP children, who are in the first through ninth grades, began submitting reports last Friday. The weekly reports from the children's teachers help Lewis monitor bow they are doing m school on their home- work, citizenship and atte.n- jects under certain sizes to be . completed, Counc:t.l.man Gary Adams said that it may exclude slightly larger projects that could benefit the community. •it would probably eliminate a lot of good small-to medium- size general plan amendments where the property owner won't have the wherewithal to go through with an election or be subject to the time implica- tions," Adams said. Paul Kranhold, a spokesman for The Irvine Co.. said be is reluctant to comment on the inl- tiative. •There is a long way to go before it's ever to be seriously considered by voters,• he said. Newport Beach Monday -Saturday 10-6 (949) 631-SEXY (7399) Solid 7ed Pati6 7~ Teak is now Affordable! We Buy Direct, Eliminate the Middleman! Compare our Prices! TeM9.cpeW Costa Me a Showroom by appointment 1240 Logan Ave. Unit H (OOf!Mr o( McClintock • Lopa) (714) 544-7288 (941) 631-3623 ,..::.._ .... ...... That IUit. whkh charged Th-" angle Square with mismanage. ment of the center, has since been dismissed, Bosche said. ~ Kabrlils said La Salsa's .. business suffered at the center because the project had been poorly conceived. Efforts to work with the new owners failed as well, he said. ~we tried to work with the new ownership, but they • weren't able to generate any ~ traffic for us," Kabrins said. ........ c.... ..... needs doNtJons of new~ ~ new houlehOld goods ~~thatCMbe purchmed by children In the progr.m. F« more lnfonna- tion on how to donlte, call (949) 574-3970. dance. The children can earn a max- imum of 36 points through December. The points will be exchanged for toys or household ~ppliances for family members. Harvey said he already is imagining what he will give his family for Christmas: a hat for his baby sister, a button-down shirt for his father and pajamas · ·for his mother. U he has points left over, maybe he 'll buy two or three presents for himself, he said. The program already has him motivated to do well in school, said Harvey's mother, • Blanca Pleitez. •My son comes home and says 'I was good today so I'm going to earn points,•• she said. "l haven't really taken a close look at the initiabve. • Arst said he believes oppo- nentS' have been increasing their efforts in the last few weeks by conducbng research to gauge residents' feelings on the issue. Corona del Mar resident and environmental activist Fem Pirkle said she received a phone call about a week ago from a market researcher who did not tden~ for whom she was working. Pirkle said she was asked numerous questions thdt eventually seemed to hone in on the oty's traffic phasing ordinance and the uutiabve. •Whoever was belu.nd (the - poll) does not want the inltiative to be successful,• Pukle said. :J. Arst said the irutiative would probably result in ofie to two additional votes per year. How- ever, the votes would not cost the city money because they ' would be part of the next gen-S eral election unless the devel- oper paid for an interim elec-~ tion, be said. Some are comparing the measure to the Sate and Healthy Communities Initiative, which El Toro airport foes are : pushing because it will require : two-thirds of county voters to - approve any construction of ~ new jails, &rports or landfills. " City officials say initiatives like these take the people-r invested power away from } elected leaders. i •The problem [with the , green light iilit4ltive) is it really ~ takes away the ability of the oty to respond to changing environ- mental conclibons, • Adams said. •General plans aren't meant to be static documents." Arst disagrees. •we need to establish Citizen overview," he said. "[It's] not the best way to run a city, but better than what we have now." BOARD CONTINUED FROM 1 Supt. Robert Barbot told boa.rd members that the impe- tus for looking into selling the properties came from the dis- trict's facilities adVlSOry comnut- tec, a group of commuruty members who ~pent two months studying bow to fix dis· trict schools. School board members also told district officiala to evaluate schoolS for tbCJJ' ability to with- stand an earthquake, and detcnnlne how much it would cost to retrofit sc.hools to bring them up to today's safety stan· dards. The earthquake assessment, whJch could be completed by next month. would coet about $20,000. Committee memben urged the c:l1strict to evahalta tbl earthquake Nfety, 'iaylDg lt would ma. no -eo ....-• Sl 27 iniWon on ,._.attno ' dooll If they 819 DDt .... : qu•ke Mfe • Daily Pilot BOYLAN CONTINUED FROM 1 OUlly to find justice for victims. U anyone was bred toj>e a poUce officer, it was probably Boy~. He didn't come from law entoi'cement lineage but hii supervisors said he showed uamplaJy quahties that made t:Wn a good officer. "He's got boundless energy arid is a team player," said Boy- lan's immediate supervisor, Lt. Ron Smith. "He's not a Lone Ranger type who wants all the credit if a case is solved. He includes everyone in the process and shares the suc- cess." Boyl!lll has been entrenched for most of his career with work typically glamorized by cop- orlented television shows. He's felt nauseating fear when breaking into a suspected drug dealer's home, uncertain about the next moment. And he's experienced the joy of solving a murder case traced almost exclusively through DNA eVi- dence the size of a pinhead. Fate was probably a factor on the start o! his career. Working as a cadet at the West Covina Police Depart- ment, Boylan was waiting to see which department would recruit him in 1964, shortly after the Watts riots. He was waiting eagerly for a call from the Los Angeles Police Depart- ment, but it came several days alter West Covina offered him a job .. He accepted the West Cov- ina position and considers hun- self fortunate, considering all of the problems Los Angeles has had with its police department. .. .. Three years later Boylan MARTIN EONTINUED FROM 1 restrooms [plus other new amenitie.s) -s,hall all be open to the publie." The resort cot- tages, a new saltwater swim- ming pool and new parking will be off-limits, except for registered guests. nus is certainly less exclu- sive than how the Cove bas operated for generations, with beachfrontcottagesleased from the state at what amount to taxpayer-subsidized rental charges ($500 to $1,000 per month). 'Ihle, they're basically Newport-Mesa police t.ake different approach to hiring • While Costa Mesa employs young officers, Newport Beach opts for more experience. In Newport Beach, the department The empty positions have qwckly has opted for an aging staff that pro· been filled through promotion and a vides more experience and leader-heavy emphasis on attracting cadets ship. The average age of Newport from the police academy. By the officers ls about 36 years old. But offi· begin.rung of next year, e&.ta Mesa weeding out poor candidates through its field training program. While the recruitment pool is shallow due to a healthy economy and an increased demand by police departments, Coste Mesa attempts to mold cadets to its liking. GR£GR1~ cials realize they will need to hire new plans to have 154 sworn officers, its ~ ... blood in the next several years largest force ever Veteran experience versus unbri- dled energy. because of an anticipated fiood of Yet, where Costa Mesa gains in retirements. numbers, it lacks in experience. Near- •w e are expecting a bunch of peo-ly three-quarters of its patrol officers •each department has 1ts own standards," Tate said. •Here m Costa Mesa, we have established a loyalty system• that provides longevity. We have very few officers who leave for another department. I think we will see the benefits of our hiring strategy These are intangible qualities often seen in police officers, usually depend- ing on their age. ple leaving over the next several have less than four years' experience years," said Newport Beach police and 37% have less than two years on Sgt. Mike McDermott. •Right now, we the beat. have a lot. of pros who have a better · Llke a professional sports team It's not to say an aging officer can't have the same vitality as a younger counterpart. Still, \he differences can be clear, judging by the departments in Costa Mesa and Ne\..rport Beach. ability lo pick out the bad guys.• releasing high'-pnced players for While both departments· currently young talent, Costa Mesa is lo<>kmg starting next year • · ·have staffs of similar size -Costa for a long-tenn payoff. Each .1S taking a different approach when it comes to the average age of theu forces. Mesa has 146 sworn 't>fficers and ·we have gone to a younger force Newport has 137 -those numbers with an emphasis on hlring entry-lev- tend to fluctuate. • el people," said Costa Mesa's hmng Since 1997, Costa Mesa bas seen manager, Hugh Tate. "With the McDermott said Newport Beach plans to hire two more officers during the next fiscal year for a school resource program. He added there are many benefits to having a force steeped in expenence. Costa Mesa has stocked its police department with scores of young recruits, adding about 40 officers since 1997. The average age of that particu- lar group, which comprises about 25% of the department. was 29 years old. eight retirements, many of them in amount of people we've hired over key positions including this week's the past several years, we plan to •When I started, guys on petrol had four to five years' experience .... now they have between 15 and 20," he S&d. •Having more experience helps in solvmg cases and we have less complaints from the public.• came to Costa Mesa, where he jumped from one division to the next. Boylan said the time he felt most like a cop was while working on the narcotics bureau, where be encountered some of the most dangerous criminals around. "I fell like a little kid in a candy store," he srud. "I could- n't believe the city was paying me to track drug dealers and kicking down doors." The job wasn't always amusing. Promoted in 1979 to sergeant, Boylan remembers one drug sting that qwckly could.have turned ugly. Ofhcers dITanged to buy 15 shacks, but that's still cheap. Much has been made of turning the cottages into "$700-a-night hotel suites." In fact, they will be completely overhauled and rent 111 the range of $125 to $400 per night. By oceanfront resort standards, that's almost a bar· gain,.especially with real· plumbing As important as what is done to Crystal Cove is how it will be done. Freed talks about his group's "envirorunental consaousness" and •a nun.i- mization of human impact on nature" and Crystal Cove becoming "a model for respon- sible development.• loss of Sgt. Tom Boylan, and has lost have a solid nucleus for about 20 11 officers to medical problems. years.• Another 11 were either fired or left for Tate said the department hopes to another department. make up for the inexperience by kilograms of cocaine from a reputed drug dealer and agreed to meet at a motel. Offi- cers tracking the suspect alert- ed Boylan and his crew, who were waiting at the hotel, that the man wasn't coming alone as previously expected. He was accompanied by some frien~. The purchase was made and the suspects were arrested, but the possibility of a shootout was lingering in Boylan's mind. That kind of uncertainty 'is nerve-racking , he added. •Even though you have your gun pointed at someone, you still are scared,• he said. "The fear mostly is making sure none Know what? He bas the cre- dentials. One ls a nature-based luxury resort in Fiji, developed in partnership with the late Jacques Cousteau and his son, Jean-Michel -definitely world-class environmentalists. Closer to home is the Post Ranch iI'l Big Sur, a stunning seaside escape with sod-roof · cottages dug into the hillside. Other rooms are on stilts among the redwoods. Only one tree was·removed during con- struction. Freed promises the same care and affection for nature of your officers get hurt. That's why good judgment is an important quahty for a police officer.• There were lighter moments during Boylan's career he won't soon forget. One time, when Boylan was driving back to the station dur- ing a graveyard shift, be caught an officer napping in his squad car behind a store. Boylan grabbed his flares from his trunk and circled the officer's car with the lighted sticks. The officer had no clue what hap- pened, but word got out in the depdrtment that Boylan was the culprit will follow at Crystal Cove, if its rebirth is approved. But he's in for a tight, and he knows it. Wisely, Freed has kept sev- eral local environmental groups involved m the plan- ning process. These include Fnends of the Irvine Coast, Dolphin Watch, Surfriders, Lagund Greenbelt, Village Laguna and Friends of Har- bors, Bedches and Parks. They don't necessarily endorse the proposal, but they know exact. ly what it is. In opposition are the Sierra "You can't keep a secret in a police department." he cracked. Those who have met Boylan know he has one distinguish- able characteristic: He's bald. While baldness isn't the most becoming trait among men, most of his counterparts were glad to see what was left of his hair go. "There wasn't much there when he opted for the new look," Smith S&d. "He was one short step from baldness • Boylan shaved his head on a trip to England several years back. He had promised his wife he would wait a couple days Club's Angeles Chapter, an off- shoot called Save Crystal Cove clnd Coastkeepers, among oth- ers His adversanes, Freed says, distort lus plan by quoting ·what may be allowed under the concession contract, with- out referencing what (the developer) is, in fact. proposing -one of the most grossly mac- curate allegations is that (we are) owned by The Irvine Company.• Indeed, Freed's company lS opposmg Irvine's residential development on the hillside before the makmg the final decision. But while she waS in the shower, he and his son took the scissors and went to work. "My wt.fe came out and she had murder m her eyes,• he said. ·1 thought I would come back to a lot of laughs, but peo- ple liked it. • So does Boylan have any advice for those guys who are thinking about going for that clean-cut look? •You have to have the nght melon to shave it completely,• he said. "One that is round without too many divots. Com- plete baldness only works for a few people." across from Crystal Cove. Public heatings on the future of Crystal Cove are six to nine months away, Freed says, followed by the mevitable Coastal Comrrussion hearing. That's plenty of time for an the players to get together and launch" search for the truth. Some genuine facts and a little understanding could go a long way here. • FRED MAR11N is a former New- port Beach resident who now wntes from his home in Fort Collins, Colo. His column appears on~ RUFFLES ·UPHOLSTERY Where Your Dollar Covers Morel WE'VE MOVED 1 BLOCK NORTH Sofa $10000-OFF Club Chair $5000" OFF "With a purchase of Fabric & Labor tll 10/20199 1908 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 548-1158 Award Win ning Italian Cuisine Twilight Dining Waterfront E11trees .from $6.95 Homemade Pasta • Fresh Seafood Veal Specialties For Reservations: During rlatienal Hunger Awareness Week Thursday, licteber lflth, 1'1'1'1 5:30 te 1:30 p.m. &euth C•aat Plaza • rtew Crate & Barrel Wing . 3333 Bear Street • Cesta Mesa tldJ prepaid• 850 at the deer 6reup1 et II er mere 830 per per••n >\dml••len Include• all tanlng1, live 1al•a mu•lc and dancing ' fer mere lnfermatlen er te purcha•e tlcket9, call: 711c.77L13113 . . ... ~ . ~ •• .-.·~.,., ·.i,·.,·· "I I .. • c • I • . . • 6 Doily Pilot • Sailors crush Woodbridge in Sea View duel, 15-8, 15-6, 15-2. JOSF.Pll Boo !Wf Pb NEWPORT BEACH -If the word •tuneup" is ever to be used in a non-car related manne r, tpen.the girls volleyball game between No. 1 Newport Harbor High and visiting Woodbridge certainly provided 1t Tuesday night. The Sailors used their entire bench in a 15·8, 15-6, 15-2, sweep of Woodbridge. Tue Sea View League decision improves the Sailors to 16-1 going into their big mdtch Fn day nig ht against Orange County's No 2-rated team, Mater Dei. ·We were getting everybody in," Newport Harbor C0c1ch Dan Glenn said . ·we used this hneup before, and we have to use thls bneu p We have to get everybody ready • . . GIRLS VOLLEYllLL Whether Newport Harbor could be better prepared is in doubt. The Sailors showed they have a deeper cast than a Woody Allea movie. Here's the run- down. Brenda Waterman led Newport Har- bor with seven kills. Most of he r time at outside hitter was in the hrst game, where she had five. April. Ross, Newport H arbor's k:ill- meister, led the team with 15 llSSlSts, and only had four kills in two games. Three of those four were tips off bad volleys over the net. · Katie King started off with e ight assists in the first game before resting in the second . Sh e had 10 for the game. Krista Dill ente red in the second game and started it with two blocks in a row. .. ERS She had five kills, four digs, lhiee blocks and an ace. Other notables were Taylor Govaars with four kills, Heather Cullens with five kills and seven digs, Andrea Schutz with two kills, two digs and an ace in one game, Signe Hillyaxd with four assists and two aces that closed out the match, and Shannon Backus with three kills, six digs and an ace. Picking one player who excelled 1s impossible. The point is, N ewport Har- bor can do a lot more than a King-to· Ross kill, and the Sailors showed it against Woodbridge. All the different lineups is just the Sailors' way of flexing their m uscles in fron t of the mirror. After all, it h as to get ready for that fight with the Monarchs on Friday. But first, Tues· day's reward : •rm giving the girls a d ay off tomor- row,• Glenn said. •w e haven't had one of those in a while." GIRLS FIELD HOCKEY ~ P0800A I DM.Y Pl.OT Newport Harbor's Lisa Owad (left) duels Huntington Beach's Alid a Santiago for possession in Tuesday's game. Newport pulls it out, 1-0 •Sailors regroup afte r a scary Oiler injury. l <N·l'll Boo ~Piot COSTA MESA Newport Harbor High's field hockey tedm defl"dtecl v1s1tmg I Iuntington Beach, 1-0. in a Sunset League gctme mclrr£'d by an injury dt Ha rper Community Center Tuesday. Huntington Beach's KeiLi Kedlc accidentally made con- tact with a Newport Harbor player in the second half and went <I.own hdrd Kedic did not get up and said she could not f£>el her lt>g~. ShE> <>ventudlly did gam sensation, and was takE>n off thf' fi<>ld by pdramedicc; with a pinched nerve Th~ 101ury proVldE'd a 40-minute break, which Newport usecl to regroup 10 a gdme that was being doIJl.lJ'lated by the OilPrs The 'ld1lors came out intense, and scored on a penal- ty shot lrom Kdhe Wclboum for the game's only goal. • Aflc•r thr m1ury. we focused better,• Harbor Coach Shdron Wolfr Sdld ·we got more support late rally and from behind And thdt made our offense more aggressive.· Newport only managed two shots in the first half, and the 01IPrs htld 1 'l shots on goal, but were turned away. Thdt's hecctU'l<' Newport Harbor's sweeper Shinn Oskooi was dll ovc>r thP pldce. Oskoo1 managed to clear most of Hunlln~1ton BE'dC'h's entry passes. "Oi.koo1 held a g reat game,· Wolfe Sdld. "Tha t's probably the bec.t CJdme c;hP played aJl year• Newport t ldrbor goalie Susan Lear made it e ven tougher for thP 01lerc; to c;core Lear ended up with seven saves in the 9c1mc, six of th em m the first half. She made two kick saves m the first half. and used her shoulder to knock away a shot in the second. I luntmgton Beach ov('lrpowered Newport Harbor again HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS TENNIS CdM knocks off University, 15-3 IRVINE -Anne Yelsey swept her singles and Nicole Cha rney and Ashley Jacobson swept in doubles to l ead Corona d el Mar High in Tuesday's 15-3 Pacific Coast LeaguE> girls te nnis wm over host Uruvemty. Yelsey won 6-3, 6-0. 6-0, while Charney and Jacob· son won 6-0, 6-3, 6-0 for the Sea Kings, ranked filth in the CIF-Southem Section DiVlSion I poll. Next up for the Sea Kings (7-4, 4-0) is a trtp across the bay to take on No. 2 Newport Harbor today a t 3. • LAGUNA BI!ACH Costa M a High girls te nnis team went up against the CIP Southern Section Divi- sion V's top rank ed Laguna Beach High and lost, 18-0, Tuesday in Pacific Coo!it League action. It doo n 't get much e r for the Mustangs {6·8, 2· 2), they travel to rival corona del Mar High, ranked No. 5 ln 01vi ton J, ThUisday flt 3 p .m. ~~~~J ~ V~ (Cd"') def A/II IC!fft, t>,1 cMf Wt!Jef. 6-0 cMf Ojln, f.o; Demlon {(AjMJ IOJ1 2.6, WOtl 6'1, U ClBttf (CdMJ km l .(I. 1'6,-won 6-J o.MttJ Sino-FIA!tor CCdM) def All NNM T.m, 7 S. cMf N ~~. "· o.t LM-M ~ 6-1. awn., ~ ICdllO won ..0. ~3. W. 1WMt i4rtfihfl (CdMJwon..,,t-J. .. I ~~ L.ll4'iNA ~ , .. COl1A ...... 0 ~ H-. CCM) Iott to ~1, N, lc* IO~ 04. IOft '<>Ward. 1.f; ~l(M} ~ 04, CM M Lft (CM) loll: f4, '"' l4 ....... tflivnh cc !Oft tO~ 14 '°" t6 ~ ~ 14. 1olt tCI urut~ 14: J l...iclln COQ s;1, 14, ''-: ~(CMJo.f,S.f,toi • ' Newport's Klm Erickson (right) baWes Jessica Condez. to start the second half but could not score . Besides the shoulder save by Lear, the Oilers had a shot that got past Lear and went across the mouth of the goal. Then Ked1c went down with 17 minutes left. After the scary d elay, Newport Harbor regrouped and matched Hunt· ington Beach's aggressiveness. Five minutes later Welbourn was fouled and awarded a penalty shot. She shot high to the goalie's left arid it went in for the game's only score. The win moves Newport Harbor (6-1-2) into second place in the league. H\lntington Beach (5·2-3) drops to third . . . ._ ... Wl(lll1ts6') ...... _,,, ... _ .... .... ........... ,w,i.w-.. ...... din .. -·· Dew Hol..,.., Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Famer w.dnmday, Odober 13, 1999 • Spa1I Edilor Roger COrtea1 • 949.57 44223 111 111 SPORTS HALL OF FAME CELEBRATING THE MILLENNIUM Corona del Mar • He has b een dealing with a hand full of h e arts, and the tougher it is, the more he seems to enjoy it. RICHARD D UNN Tiere are few structures ftl r buildings named after living human beings, let alone a facility with the name of the opposing football coach written in big block letters. But that's just what Corona del Mar High's football team sees this week. There is no escaping Dave Holland. Holland, the former CdM coach who led the Sea Kings to back-to-back CIF Southern Section Division VJ titles in 1988 and '89, was honored by the program when the CdM football . weight room was named after him in the mid-90s. Bu1 Holland, who returned to high school coadung four years ago when he accepted the Laguna Beach position, will coach Thursday night against the Sea Kmgs for the · first time m his storied career. which includes 112 victories and league Coach of the Year accolades four times. the kids could play football. Some of the toughest lods 1 ever coached were right there .• After serving as an assistant coach for a couple of years, the CdM head coaching job opened up and HoUand didn't hesitate, taJdng over the reins in 1967. In Holland's first term, which lasted rune years, CdM won its first football cbamplonstup in 1971, as the Sea Kings captured the Irvine League btle with Karl Killefer. quarterback Reed Johnson and runrung back Bob Ferraro. •Tue team didn't bebeve it could wm, but finally, in our senior year, Holland had us bebeving, • said Ferraro. who coaches with him now. "It was hard, because (CdM) had so ma ny losing years ma row.• But when winning turned to three straJght autumns of losing, Holland figured it was bme for a chdnge. •I really got discournged," said Holland, who Hollcilld th1S week has told Orange County prep reporters that the Paal1c Coast League clash against CdM (at Newport Harbor High) Dave Holland re 1gned and later dccepted an dssistant coadung position at Orange Coast College. serving under Pirates Coach Dick Tucker for four years (1 976 to '79). "I learned a lot from is •just another game,· but the reality is much different. It's homecoming fpr CdM (0-.S) and many of Holland's former players will be in attendance. •Playing Corona del Mar is real spedal," said Holland, who has the Artists (3-2) believing they can Win this year. •it means a lot to come back." The winningest football coach in Newport-Mesa District history (with 106 victories at CdM}, before Newport Harbor's Jeff Brinkley broke the record earlier this season, Holland served two separate terms as head coach at CdM, a total of 20 years. Holland, once a scrawny, 138-pounder at Garlield High in East Los Angeles, bulked up by lifting weights -a ranty in the 1950s -and played at East LA College and Whittier College, where his coaches included George Allen and Don Coryell, both of whom would become NFL coaches. ·u was a life-changing experience for me,~ Holland said of his senior year a t Whittier, when Coryell replaced Allen as the Poets' head man. "In fact, the way I coach, I try to coach like he coached . People think (Coryell} is a shy person, but he brought out the best In the guys he coached and made each guy feel like they were the most important guy on the team. He had a way of doing that.• Holland, who said every practice and chalk talk with· Coryell was •a coaching clinic,• returned to East LA College as an assistant coach while doing his graduate work, then coached at El Rancho High. Meanwhile, Holland became a black belt m lutrate, which helped form his coaching philosophy for · oHen ive Unemen. "It became tbe basis of the techniques l taught, keeping it unple with a lot of repetition,• he said. Shortly thereafter, Holland heard of an opening at CdM and arrived for a job interview he'll never forget. "I'd never expenenc·ed anything like u, • Holland 'ald. "I had come from alnlost the ghetto ln Bast LA, and El Rancho wos iimllar. with a lot of dty kJds and minorities. I bad coached a lot of minorities. But when I came down lO Corona del Mar and walked e h the quad durtnQ 1 lunch fot Ill tiitemeW, it WU like on a movie eet. Tbey were 1be molt ~Jooldftg people rd tWer ..-. J'd...,. ... ., -.y .~blue .,..S PIOPl9 .... ;pllcj. •tCdMJ ... .., 1lild beck. bUt vmy spede1. And I bmd out that Dick,• Holland ~d. •He kept everything m the right perspective. He never got excited or depressed. He JUSt kept pushing along and the kids always responded. He knows how to take games as they come and forget about it. He always had real good self-confidence and self-esteem. He was a great coach with X's and O's, but I think l learned more about the day to day, the ups and downs of football.• Holland returned to CdM as offensive coorctinator and coached under Dick Morris, who was Holland's asslstant the first time around. But when Morris was felled by a heart attack, folloWing the '82 campaign, Holland stepped back m as head coach and remained there unbJ 1993. •(Morris) was a good guy to work with, because he allowed hls (assistants) to coach and develop, and he was well-organized,· Holland said. CdM went 8-3 and made the ClF playo(fs in Holland's first yedf back, then cdptwed three straight Sea View League btles from t 987 to '89, including two CfP championships. "That was one of the be t part.!. of my life," Holland tiaid. "When the Katov ich boys (Todd and John} moved ln from Texas, they brought in a new philosophy - you don't win unless you practice hard. They both hod a really good work ethic, especially Todd, who was the older one. "The first day of practice, we're having a drill ... not al full ~peed, but pretty hard. And Todd whacked some guy that was heard throughout the whole school, and everybody started t!ghterung their chin traps. (The KatoVSlch brothers) were really the development of those CIP championship teams," Guf!J Ulte J en olt Willard, who later taned at lincbecker at Cal. twd Je1f Thomason, a tlgbt end who has played in two Su~r Bowls for the Green Bay Packm , also perlonnP.d for CdM in the era of three straight league champ1onr-hips. But aome of Holland' favorite Seo Kings wero those wtthout Uemendouti !!kill, but who played with enormous heart, like guarct Pat Kelly m the lat 80s, special tetrn player Ryan Dalton {n 1992-93 and quarterback Matt Evens. •1evans) typlfte<! a lot of Corona kids, overed\leven who ~ed with I lot al hMrt, 0 he Holland, two-time CP Dlvtlioo VJ COICh ol tbe V.. ad the State COllCb ol .... V..-1D 1880, •• "*"'* Gf die .,.., PDOl Spanl HAil of,._ celebrating the iDlllennlum Doily Pilot llllTWllllTI Mesa looms large in freshman football game against invading Eagles Thursday afternoon. COSTA MESA -Costa Mesa High freshmen football coach John Camey ran the same system in his 3 t years o( coaching, the last six at Costa Mesd. "Three yards and a cloud or dust," he describes his team. ·Every year, we do it the same way." With a team that thrives on physical football. Ccuney lS excited about the fact that this yedf's Mustang team is one of the bJggest he has coached. Entenng Thursday's game agalllSt cross-town rival Estancia, you can erpect Costa Mesa to try to outrnuscle the Edgles "We don't have a lot of experienced kids,• Carney said. "But we have ome pretty big kids. Pretty good ones " In ract, Costa Mesa is so erious about running, it's two star pldyers are linemen. Tackle Andrt.•w Canch is considered the hnchpUl in the line. ·He's a big, strong lod," d~sistant coach Kirk Bauenneister said. "He • dominates on the offensive and defensive line." Pauing Wlth Carich is guard Benny Wong, another big, strong k1d. "That's the strength of our team,• Bauermc1Ster said. "We have these b1g lads on our offensive and defeT1S1ve lines." · Fullback Jason Hurley, considered the hardest worker on the tedITl, will get the majority of the Carrie!. on the team. Tailback Nathan "Curly" Hunter will also see duty. "If we had to name a most unproved player," Nathan would be it," Bauermeister said. "Coming m with no experience, he has improved a lot." Costa Mesa will cllso gam another valuable piece of experience on Thursday, when lt hosts Estcmcia on the Mus- tangs' Cd.mpus. Ldsl year's Costa Mesa team won big, but nothing is a given Ul this rivalry •(Costa Mesa and Estancia's) kids played together ror years,• Camey said. •These kids look forward to 1t. • "It'll detemune who owru; the blocks· Estancia' team i built on potenllal Even though 1t is only 1-4, there are a lot of talented players emergmg, which lS the key for any freshman football team. The two tar players for the Eagles are quarterback Bobby Estrada and running back Victor Cannona. Estrada has thrown for three touchdown pas es on a running team. Carmona ls the te6m's leading rusher and has two touchdowns. But the Eagles have few players who have played organize>d football, ev(>n by fre'>hman tandards. •we only have two or throe guys with any footbaJl experience,• Estancia Coach Tun Parscl said. There are talented players emerging. Brothe~ Brian and Alan Rayner looked good on the line, with Alan playing tight end. J~ph Hemand 2 and Chrb Miranda arc also pan or an unproVUlg line. DcfenStvely, there' a bigger question. Defensive back JavJer Ram m and linebacker Kyte Caslllas have done well so far, anti Cannona ls the team's iron manj doing " nJco job at hn backer, as well u running bad" But tha unit as a whole sWI n~ to ovel'C'omc ltt inP.xperienre. Pat'llel feeb hi.I team hu yet to play its belt gam~. If thare Is a time for the Eaglet to come together, It's agalnlt aou·town rival co.ta M8NI. ·a we can't get excited abut our rtYa1. • ParMI Mid, •you can't get ac:Hed for UIJ'Oll'.• II ihere'I one tblng tbe Bal'-knew comlnO ba, ........ BllDcia-COU Meea Is. b60 deal . . . Sports • Costa Mesa (PCL) and hvine (Sea View) are this reporter's choices to win league football crowns. Rr the first tune m sJ.X have one of the league's best seasons, releaguing has two-way players in Calvary shuffled the deck, but the Chapel transfer Kettb Short five-team hllridS it dealt Pacific Newport Harbor (4-0-1) and. Coast League and Sea View Woodbndge (4-t) have received League football prognosticators plenty of preleague hype and appear no less stacked. both have spent time ln the With league play locking off upper half of the O range this week, however, it's time to County and Division VI Top 10 put my cards on the table. polls. The CIF Southern Section But Harbor's league-opening Division VJ' ballot I turned in clash with lrvine Friday may be this week had four of five Sea its first test against a Vlew teams in the Top 10. And playolf-bound opponent and the fifth team I would consider last year's 1--4 league collapse No. 1 J. after a 5-0 start leaves room for Three schools will earn skepticism. guaranteed playoff berths and Gradual.Ion took the core of the fourth will, in all likelihood, Woodbrtdge's 1998 CIF Division receive the division's lone at-VI chcUnpions, and I just don't large spot. But one dearly believe the league's best player, · quahfied to compete in the Shane Harris, has enough helft...: 10-team playoff bracket, will be to d efend the league crown the left out of the post.season picture. Waniors shared with Irvine last That team will not be Irvine fall. Still, I'd be swprtsed if (3-1-1), which should earn at Woodbridge doesn't make the least a share of its fourth Sea playoffs. View crown since joining the PCL import Aliso Niguel circuit in 1992. The Vaqueros (3-2) Is the wild card ID the have lost only to Mater Oei and equation. lmpre$S1ve showings IRIE•S PllPS harry faulkner against a rugged preleague slate (hard-fought losses to San Clemente and 1Taburo Hills) . has earned the resJ)4"ct of several area coaches. many of whom tab the Wolvennes as the favorite. I, however, am unconvinced the step up to Sea View circles won't dilute"5uch optinusm. Laguna Hills 13-2) faces the same adjustment after dominating the PCL dnd, having lost its best defensive player (Brandon Lamas) to a season-ending knee mJury, . appe rs to be~ po ~n d1scard at this point. Bottom line: Irvine wins 1t. Newport and Woodbndge batU Aliso for the two remaming guaranteed spots and Aliso edges Ldguna Hills to claim the at-large berth. As for the PCL, it is easiest to discard first. Laguna Beach (3-2) likely has its best team in a decade, but injury problems are eating dway at Coach Dave Holland's alr~ady canvas-thin depth chdrt. The Artists should have trouble wmning more than once Estancia (3-2) has the league's most explosive player 10 Marshall Hendricks, but Coach DavE> Perkins' rebuilding proiect will need another year of work. Watch out for the Eagles next fall, but don't expect them to close this milleru:uum in the playoffs, unless they can finish 5-5 and seize an at-large bid. Sea View refugee Corona del Mar (0-5) 1.S due for some good fortune and. sidelined QB Matt Moore notwithstanding, appears lo be getting its injured p layers back at the nght time. The Sea Wednesday, Odob. 3, 1999 7 King catch a break by QJ>enJng with hort·handed Laguna B ach and th y don't play the two ro-favont«'.$ until the final two weeks. U they can bulld some confidence, ID the meanl.lme, anything can happen Univen.1ty (2-3) ge~ one more nonleague tuneup before meebng Costa Mesa (4-1) in an Oct. 22 showdown which could , decide the league title. Coach Mark Cunrungha.m's Trojans have t"asUy played the toughest preleague schedule and have the county's SIXth-rated quarterback (Pat Josten). But they must play well to deny C0c1ch Jerry Howell's Mustangs the completion of their sell-descnbed "unfUW>bed business.• Bamng 101unes, Mesa has the most talent and hould seae its second outnght league crown m school history lf it can avoid the even turnovers it committed against Uni last fall, that IS Thankfully, l now pass the deal to the combatclnts. lt should be fun. HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL OCC drinks Palomar with 5-0 fourth-quarter run • Pirates' big fourth quarter sinks the Palomar men's water polo team, 12-4. Eagles fall to unbeaten Uni l~Uuoo~ SAN MARCOS-Jeff Pratt had ----...- three goals to lead Orange Coast P 0 l 0 College to a 12-4 nonconference wm over host Palomar College Tuesday in men's water polo . With the game still close at 7-4, the Pirates (14-3-1) scored five unanswered goals m the fourth quarter to put the game away. Eric Kim, Doug Jacoby and Kevin Becker each scored twice for the Bucs. NONCONFOENa ORANGE CoAST 12. C:V..Ss 4 Orange Coast 2 4 1 5 • 12 Palomar 2 1 1 O • 4 Orange Coast Pratt 3, Kim 2. Jacoby 2, Becker 2. Butler 1, Lancelotti 1, Alcarado 1 Saves· Oliver 8. Orange Coast blanks Rus tlers HUNTINGTON BEACH -""1111111~!"1!1~~ Apollonia Reyes scored two S 0 C C E R goals to lead visiting Orange Coast College women's soccer team to a 5-0 shutout over Gold· en West College Tuesday m Orange Empire Conference action. Single goals were scored by Diane Meza, Nicole Jankowski and Taylor Yurada. Dawn Hans had two saves to record the shutout for the Pirates. . With the win, OCC unproves to 5-8-2, 3-2-1 in conference. Golden West falls to 1-9, 0-5. Sailors lead Palm Desert by 20 NEWPORT BEACH -Newport -----Harbor High's guls golf team (8-0 G 0 l f overall, 4-0 in the Sea View League) continues to humble the oppostion, pickmg on Palm Desert Tuesday in the first-half of a home-and- home nonleague match with a 20-stroke margin through nine homes at 819 Canyon Country Club's par-36 course. Harbor's Kelly Hunt was medalist with a 47, while teammates Emily McKay, Shelly Roberts and Undsay Galbraight each carded 48s. IRVINE -Laura Cote shot a 51 to lead Estancia High girls goU team G 0 l f . Ill Tuesday's Pacific Coast Ledgue match against : Uruversity at Strawberry Hill<; Golf Course, par : 36,adueltlleEaglesfellbya 113-161 count : Rounding out Estancia sconng w ere Deborah : Wyman (53) and Lauren Young (57). : l.AsT WEEK'S BIG HRS ANO DfffNSM PLAYS NEWPORT HARBOR · Receiver Justin JKObs opened up a big hole for Chad Smith to gain 17 yards on a pass ..• Outside linebacker Andy bnkin and Jacobs teamed up for a 3-yard loss on a Magnolta running bac.lc -Bry.n ~ recovered a Newport fumble to maintain a drive _ End Br.cl • Rothwell came up wrth a drive-stopping quarterback sack Costa Mesa falls to Esperanza : for a 6-yard 1os~ to force a punt .. Rankm interc~ted a pass in the second : quarter and returned It 23 yards to Magnolia ·s 12. setting up a TD ... ANAHEIM -Joey Comfort dnd ----...-: Defensive end Nidl Ungsdorf pinned Magnolia back farther with a tackle Mike Whittman each scored u goal, P 0 l 0 : for a 2-yard loss .. R?lhwell followed on the next play with a tackle for a but it wasn't enough as Costa Mesa High lost to : 3-yard loss ... Jacobs ~ntercepted a flea-flicker and Newport scored on the . • following play ... Smith came up with a huge hit on a punt returner for no Esperanza, 4-2 •. Tuesday m nonle~gue boys : gain .. David Sprenger returned an interception 32 yards to set up another water polo. Whittman had three steals, while : TD ... Linebacker ~ Foley stepped up with a big hit late m the game ·~ Comfort had two steals for the Mustangs (8-8). : Dayne Pfaff pinned Magnolia deep with a big hit on a krckoff retum ·- Chns Dolloff had 10 saves for Costa Mesa : Ry•n Devin recovered a Magnolia fumble . . NONLEAGUE : EsPERANZA 4, CosTA MESA 2 CORONA DEL MAR -Cornerback David 8eMr broke up Costa Mesa o 1 1 o . 2 : two pas.ses ... End Jay Bottom blocked a field·goal attempt Esperanza 2 1 o 1 • 4 : and combined with end Scott Biggs on 2-yard loss to help Costa Mew; Comfort 1, Whittman 1 saves. Dolloff 10. :. force W~inster's final punt ... Eric Snell sprinted down on • kickoff coverage and nailed Lion returner at the 3 Safety : Ac:hlim Cooper broke up a pass and nearly intercepted • CdM rolls past Estancia : Outside linebacker Juon Kurtz recovered a Westminster fumble . Sun COSTA MESA _ : Fenton. Biggs and Br.ndon Johnson combined for a sack Corona del Mar High Y 0 l l ,E Y I A l l · ESTAHOA . End Kyte Westmaan had a quarterback sack girls volleyball team swept by host Estancia, 15-: and flattened a defender with a block on a punt return •. l 15 A 15 4 in p cif. C t L ti • Comerbadc John Alderwt9 clcxed qukkly to stop• pair of , -.., -. , a 1c oas eague ac on • fl ~ 1 f 3 nd 1 d End -..!...O Tu sd K D b d kill M • at passes ior asses o a yar s .. .......u e ay. abe uggan a seven. s, anssa : Rodriguez had a sack Outside lrnebacker Se.., ffteman Becker bad 21 assists an~ three kills and Lind-: stuffed a third-down play for no gain to f()l'.Ce a punt -· say Anstandtg had six kills for the Sea Kings, : Cornerback MMstuitl Hendric:b returned an 1ntercept1on 25 yards for a ranked No. 3 in CIF D1V1Sion IIl-AA : touchdown. Corona del Mar humbles Mesa COSTA MESA · CJ. ZUnfga returned an interception 42 yards for a touchdown late in the first half to ignite a string of 35 unanswe~ points ... Antony GNblsich was credrted NEWPORT BEACH -Taylor G 0 l f with four tackles for losses Jake OevelMd came up with McCormick shot an eight-over-par, • several tackles in the secondary Loujs O.ys defensive 43 lo lead Corona del Mar High's gi.rls golf team : work on special teams caught the coaching staff's attention _. to a 137-188 win over Costa Mesa High at New-: Willy Fr•ncio had two stops that could be considered of the TD-saving port Beach Country Club, par 35. : category Allison Schauppner followed McCormick : ~ Wtth a nine-over 44, while Knstm and Jack.le : rEl~'tt®rPJ ri McCoy each came m with a 50 for the Sea King:, : \g~ ') lJ lJ (7-1-1, 2·0-1). : . ~~----------~~-SCHEDULE DEEP SEA SOCCER Lions ramble, 2-0 lAsr WEEK'S HIGH SOfOOI. R>OTaAU. PLAYS Of 30 YARDS Ott MORE TODAY • W.Wpofo Community collegct men · Or~ Co/Kt It CyPmr. 3 p m. Community college women· OrlNlge COMt It cyptesi. 4 p.m. Htgh sdlOOI bovf • Newpon HMl«>r •t l.agUNI Hill\, 3:15 p.m. • S-C- College men · Point Loma ~­ •t v.ngUMd UnNenlty. 7 p.m. ...... Htgh tmool g.tts ·Corona def MAI It Newi>on Haft>of, 3 p.m. ·~ CommuMyc.onege women · s.ddlebldc at Orange Cont. 7 p.m • Goff High Khool g1tls • Newport Ha"'°' ~ MfriN, at Sanui AM Coootry Oub, 3 1 Sp m ' TUESDAY'S COUNTS Newport Landing -1 boats. 23 anglers. 166 sculp1n. O.vey's ~er · no report. HELP WANTED Costil Mesa H1gh's athletic department is searching for a boys volleyball coach. Interested parties should contact the Mustangs' athletic director, Kirk Bauenneister, at 714-424-8763. COSTA ?vfESA -Hayden Kelly and Ian Hatch each scored goals to lead Vanguard University to a 2-0 wm over Pomt Loma Nazarene UnJVer- sity Tuesddy m Golden State Athletic Conference men's soc- cer action. Kelly's goal came m the 19th minute, while Hatch put the game out of reach with his goal m the 69th minute for the Lions (8-3, 4-1.m GSAC). LOOKING llCI • 71 Marshall Hendricks (Estancia) touchdown run. • S9 · CJ Zuniga (Costa Mesa) run. • 58 · Andre Stewart (Newport Harbor) toue;hdown run. • 58 · Andre Stewart (Newport Harbor) touchdown run. • 57 ·Justin Jacobs (Newport Harbor) touchdown pas.s from Chns Mandarrno • 46 -Marshall Hendridcs (Estancia) run. • 43 • CJ. Zuniga (Costa Mesa) run. • 43 · Justin Jacobs (Newport Harbor) touchdown pass from O'trrs Mandanno • 42 · CJ Zuniga (Costa Mesa) interception return for touchdown • 41 · Mike Hayes (Corona del Mar} run. • 40 -Shaun Ferryman (Costa Mesa) pass from Dave We r • 36 · Mike Hayes (Corona del Mar) run. • 32 • David Sprenger (Newport Harbor} interception return. • 32 · Ardy Romo (Estancia) run. • 31 ·Eric Snell (Corona del Mar) pass from Evan Burden • 30 Ryan Ortega (Newport Harbor) run . • 30 · Matt Mueller (Estancia) run. • 30 David Beser (Corona del Mar) k1Ckoff r~urn ELIGlllLllY Scholarship • seminar ,., ..... DlilgD ....... ,.. 8 Wednesday, Odobtr 13. 1999 Sports IYIO Bullets bedevil foe HORNETS EDGE THE BLAZE, 1-0 . •Beach BUllets rally for 3-2 victory. I I t 1 o 1 t 7 : Krahe's score in the late going Joa .. , Kelly I I I I 0 I j 7 McElroy, Caro- Blues Brothen oU the acoreboard for the win. In Girls Dtvision 6 action: NEWPORT BEACH -The Newport Beach Bullets came frotn : proves to the gam~winner. behind to defeat the Beilch Boy , 3-2, in AYSO Reglon 97 Division 4 : COSTA MBSA _ Francis Krabe'• goal action. Patrick Murphy scored on a nice pass from Juon Segura for : late in the fourth quarter broke the scoreless the game-winning goal with less than a minute remaining in the: tie <iDd gave the Hornets a 1-0 win over The fourth quarter. Jonathan Mena scored the BuD~ts· first two g~als of : Bta2c in AVSO Region 57 Boys Division 4 the grlme, each to ~e the score. Tyler Parker asstSted on Menas sec-: action, His goal came off a comer kick from ond goal. Christopher Vu scored two goals for the Beach Boys, with : Jatfer Kattan. ll.Ile Cl•ure, Aabley Caiulau. Emily A1matu, Jealca Wertbellll. KAllSe Wade and Caitlyn Cday. Albley Kab. scored both goals for the Bubble ltoubte, with outstanding play from KaUe McKltterlck and goalies Albley Chan· dler, Katie Schulle and Jenica .Mllner. The Double Mint Girls were paced offen- sively a94inlt the Backstreet Girla by Sarah Folll.I with three goals end single tallies from ffanD8 Smart. Amanda Garrett and MadltoA Simmonds. an asslSt from Weston DunJap. : For the Blaze, which played short a play· Bullets Coach Nora Etter was pleased with the solid play or the : er ror the entire 60 minutes PbWp Ban&n, entire team, indudmg Chasen Murphy, Ryan Ramming, DUlon : Mike Kendrick and Cole Trtder played well Gledt, Justin Wbtaler, Andrew MarchJ, Kyle Wllllams, Luke : enough to keep the game scoreless up W)til Sequelra, Kevin Ettel', Brian Cunningham and Bradley Branch. : the final mlnutes. • USA Babe. 3, Bazooka Babes 0: Alexa McCutby scored two goals, while her twin sister, Alyda added the other to lead the USA Babes The Backstreet Glrls' Kate Ba.ldon1 had three goals in the contest ... The Sea Queens' Alexa Cohen and KortDe Korman provided the offense, while Alhena Uvadu, AJyua Hunter and Neda GbUleml led the defense against the Pink Poodles ... In the Double Mint Girls' game against the Bumblebee.&, Folks, Smart, Garrett, Simmonds, Haley Perkin.I and Albley 0.vil were the offensive leaders, while in goal, Margaret Valdff made scoring difficult for the Bumblebees . Courtney Lee, llandl Pullen, Nikki Ree«: In other Division 4 soccer action1 : In other Boys Division 4 soccer action: • Shockwave 3; Blue Vlpen 1: P~r Hapke sc~red the lone goal to : • Oulck SUver 1, Patriots O: Louis Bloche Jedd the Blue V1pers. Team defense was turned Ul by Santiago Cas-• scored the game's lone goal in the first half taneda, Jason yutman, Drew Wittenberg. Forwards Wes Parks. Hen-: for Ql,Jick Silver. Mui.la Scott had three assists, while Sany• Waclbwa and Amanda Shaw set up the offense with cnsp passes. ry Pyle, Marcos Castaneda and Mark Espinoza sparked the offense, : Solid defense by Mark Ftnster, Jarred whlle the rru~icld was handled by Max Royer and Darren Leggett. : AshJey and Hunt Rychel allowed Quick Sil· ln Boys D1vis1on 5 action: : ver to bold on for the win. Also playing well ror the USA Babes were MadJsoa KawoU1l, Lellanl Uvingston, Clar• Lope1. Erika Palmer, Megan Spindler, Caroline Pearson and Chrlsttne Barke. • Mlllennlum Ba.bes 1, Bruben 0: Kessa Puchlkolf scored the game's lone goal on an assist from Sonia Bui to lead the Millennium Babes. Caitlin Ahem and Uzzle Muttaugh led the' Blue Streaks m their matcbup with the Blue Tidal Waves .. For Potson Ivy, Valen Taylor scored two goals, while Jllllan Taylor and Brittany Martinez each added a goal in their game against the Pink Llgbtrung ... Goa.ls were scored by Michelle Marshall, Lelle Poztn and Monlca Schnapp to lead the Bl~ ing Tornadoes against the Maroon Monstetl) ... For tbe Killer Whales in their matchup with the Power Puff Girls, goals were scored by Courtney Welch, Alexandra Relnach and Alexa OsslpoU , .. Megan Rucker had her second goal of the season with an assist from Maddy BendelU, while Clare Dreyfus worked two scoreless quarters in goal for the Pink Poodles in one of their weekend matchups · • Tsunamis 5, Blue Devils 2: R.J. D'Cruz scored two goals, while : For the Patnots Julian Martsco Ben Ceasar Amador, Kyle Caldwell and Cameron Chase each added a : Witte Chrh Hollo~ and AJex Belov~ kept goal fo r the T~uruurus Assists came from Hayden Navarro, MJchael ! the p;essure on the enbre game. Blngham, Erik Bonn, Erle Holland and Cameron Holmes. : ln Girls Division 4 action: Goalte Danny Miller held the opposition scoreless in the first half, : • Cherry Bombs 2, Polson Ivy O: Katie wtule Rex Nelson, MJtcheJ B~croft and Stephen Reader played ! Kubas and Paige Otterbein scored the Cher- l'lfect.Jve defense for the TsunamlS. • ry Bombs' goals for the win. In D1v1sion 6 and 7 actlon: 1n the Boomslangs matchup against the : Balley Gardner, Undsay Norman and K. T. Molinaro recorded a shutout in goal for the Babes, while solid team play was twned in by Kara Percival, Rachel H eyler and Blair Ta.mutzer. All Stdr., godltes Jackson ca.rmack and Randall Hause stopped : Hillary Arnold led the Cherry Bombs' numerous ·hots, with effective defense turned in by Andrew Brown, ; defense. ln Boys DivisJon 5 action: Dom Palmer, Justin Cerratto and Kevin Wittenberg. Sean Davis, : • Galaxy Girls 3, Bubble Trouble 2: Taylor Will Connelly and Max Collins led the Boomslangs' offensive attack. : Beachamp scored all three goals to lead the Jn girls action, lhe Teenie Wahlnes, led by the offensi~e spark of : GaJaxy Girls. • • Blue Bomben 5, Blues Brothen 0: Parker ·Rhodes scored two goals and had two assists to lead the Blue Bombers. Nick Freeman and Mitchell Williams scored on Rhodes' two assists. Sayde Busby, Jessica Swift, Jordan Murrell and Cassie D Cruz. : For the GaJaxy Girls so.lid team play was In goul, Blakely Flcenlc and Ashley Svendsen stopped all shots : turned in by Rachel Haber, Jae Morosln, l11dt , dmC' thmr wdy, while Lindsay Anderson and Kimberly Flcenlc : Amanda Knuppel, Kelly Nelson, Kara r1nd1nn'cl tlw clt'IC'OSP. • Reed Willia.ms provided the Blue Bombers fifth goal, while goalies Camden Higgin.son and Bret Weinberger kept the Stor1n ra.ins all over the Gunners in girls under-14 duel, 5-0 • Kan Truesdell scores twice. <. O~TA f\1['°)A Tht• <.;tonn, AYSO f{pcpon 120 UncJ<>r-14 C.111 lc, team, hdd ht· 11 .. ltuuhll• dqdlll'>I till Gunners, wm- mnq S II ovt>r tht> wN•kC'nd . Kdrl Truei.dell '>< ored two godl.!., Wlth -.mql" tdlhc., r1d<l1•d hy Alyson Clark, Kayld Shirey dnd Kimberly Moss. \<,!'>t'ih wl·n· tum<'d m by Shuey clnd Ell1abeth Clayton, with other key olll'll'>lVl' c-ontnhut1ons from Gem.ma Western, Julianne Doelz, Danica Chris- tensen ct11d Lisa Evans. Brlttruty Rausch, Heidi Schultheis dnd <JOdll!''> Sardh Lambert dnci Jessie Slater, 10dnc1rwcl lo kc•t•p the Gunners riff ttw .,, mt•l>ourcl. LOCAi MOITUAllES Cemetery • Mortuary Chapel • Crematory 3500 Paciflo View Drive Newport 8ellch 844-2700 PIERCE UOTHEJIS IW. IROADWAY Mortuary * Chapel Cremation 1 I 0 Broadway CostaMeu 842-9150 "Affordable Alternative" Discount Casket, Cremation& 8urial Service Why should you subject your~ If & your fatn.ily to p2ying inflated price for ca ke & scrvic ???? Gall ToU free ,.,...~ Smiag OniAC I..,.,....~ un1der· l~ REG I 0 N l 2 0 Boys soccer act.ion: • Team USA 3, Night Hawks l: Andrew West scored two goals m the hrst two minutes of the contest lo Jedd Team USA. Solid defense was played by Jonathan Howse, Nick lppollto, Brlan Perez, Zack Waldron, WUllam Briseno and Cody Waldron. Team USA kept the pre sure offen- sively with help from CbrlsUan Medlna and Kyle Worel, while Eric West man- dged lo score the final goal. for the Night Hawks, their ctefense was anchored by Kenneth Zich, Daniel Freeman, Josh Sepeda, Garrett McMasten and Ernesto Castenada. ln Under-10 Girls action: • Wildcats t, Goal'ed Rushers 0: Kristi- na Roche scored late in the fourth quar- ter oH back-to-back passes from Lauren Nordstrom and Kelsey Mock. KaUe Holeman, Kelly Ryan and Brook Urmson helped the Wildcats with their offense, while Alexis Sellen kept the Rushers' offense in check with solid delense. • ShooUng Lava 3, WUdCats 1: Brook Unnson scored the WildCats' lone goaJ !ale In the fourth quarter. Goalies Theresa PfeUer and Kelly Ryan were kept busy for the WildCats, "811_ -~-] II "I'·~·" .. ..e-',1• -~I ~, : .•1 • -1 -· . ' COSTA MESA CA, 92827 94M60-7872 TIME 2:30PM STORED BY TH& FOL· LOWING PERSONS: E204 WIUJAM OOEU 0308F LARRANCE THOMAS 03100 COVINGTON MAATEZ 8028 ZOTOVICH PA· TRICIA C078H08STETTER KATHY C103 BOWIE PETER E202 8ESANCON DARLENE E245 NOEL SHELIA G3108 BOWIE PETER G314E HEARD ERICH N 17 TEASDALE DOUG PROPERTY 22301 20e5 PlACENTlA AVE COSTA MESA CA, 92027 949-e46-0609 TIME 3:115PM STORED BY THE FOL· LOWING PERSONS: E073 80UMAN RANDY E203 WEBER TRACtv PROPERTY 101 20eS PlACEHTIA AVE COSTA MESA CA. 802827 848 040 0509 TIME 3;1'5PM STORED IV THE fOl.. LOWING PERSONS: D139 CO\.EMAN RAY· MONO C023 MA YN AR CHAtSTOPHER C0215 MERCER JAY P'ftOPERTY 20139 2099 PlACEHTIA Avt COSTA MESA CA, 92027 IM8 0400734 TIME 4:00PM STORED llY THE fOl. LOWlNO PERSONS! 8078 SIWTH ALDRIN 81151 RITCHIE CHAIS C283 KLEIN MICHAEL C3tlJOHNSON WIL· UAMH. 045e 8AIA BOB C318 VOTENOA .. L JAMES A. PROPERTY 201153 20715 NEWPORT ILVO COSTA MESA CA, 82827 94~1612 TIME 4:415PM STORED IV THE FOL· LOWINO PUtSONS: E 1 1 1 ftEDROZA RAMONA H129 ,_..OTECTIOH SYSTtMS INC./ ARNEI. OU8TAV80 H201 ROMAN DORA DIAZ . ,.. ....... ~\O prior c1nc:1ll1tlon. Terme. tdMaftd reQU&ll tiOfl9 .,...... It ..... o.9d ... 1 n.. Md 20TH of ocro.,., 1 ... t1¥ NOrolnaec:o, tno.. 101 w.-1,.,,, A~. Olend-., CA 11201, (811124-t· 10•~.1. aonel No. 1157N2. 10113, 10/20 NOTICE OF PUBLIC 8AU! OF ABANDONED PROP!ATY ~ ii ,..,.by gNotn ltltt m. U!ldtt~ In ltndt lo ... lhe peflOl'ill property deecrlbld Mlow '° 1nlorc. • ,,.,.. lfnpoMO 00 Nld ~ und8t lh• canromli 8tll· :'1:,.~lf= N21100-21719) 'The~ .. ... 11. JP\de .... by «XJmpetlllY9 bldCllnO on h 1orl719t, II 1030 • "' • on "' "*""-._.. Mid proplfty ,.. been stored end wtilch are localed 11 17th Street Self Stor1ge, 670 W. 17th St . C-., eo.ta Mesa, County ol Orenge, Stale of Ca~lomia Urots and tenants hlted below Content• Include per- sonal Items. household QOOc:ls & misc ilem1 i76, James Rlchafdlon LandlOtd ntservea IM nght to bid at the .. ,e PUfChasea mu11 be paid lor at the time ol purchase In cash only All purdlased hems add "ea Is," and must be re· moved at 1he Ume of sale. Sale subfect to cancalletlon In the event of settlement between owner and obllgated pe3>'erlen'a Auc tion Servloe. 909·881·4113 BIN t 4683730099 Published NewPort Beech-Costa Mesa Dally PllOt Oc1ober 13, 20, 1999 W608 Acddoua eualneH Name Statement The following pel'IOOI are doing bu11nus H • JOHN ROBERT POWERS , 24310 Moulton Pkwy tlJM, Laguna Hilts, CA 92653 Southslar Entertain· ment, Inc., 9220 Sunset, Ste 100, W Hollywood, CA 90069 This business ts con-ducted by 8 OO(J)Ofltlon Have you 1lartld doing buaineu Y917 Yea, 8·31·99 Sou1h1tar En11rtaln· ment, Inc., Cana Olte, CFO This statement waa llled With the County Clertc ol Orange County on 9·15·99 19996805410 Dally Pilot Oc1. 1~1. 20, 27, Nov 3, 1999 vv610 CNS1745841 NOTICE Notlcl Is hereby g!Wn that Preferred Sank, headquartered at 601 South Agueroa Str"1, Los Angella, ca111omr. 90()17, fiat hied With lfl4I Fedel9l DIPo6•1 lneur· anct Corporation, 80 ap· pllc:allon to looet• a branch .. 2800 Mjclle!Jon Dl1v1, Suite 1470, lrvlne, Celltom&a 92612 My pertOn Wlahll.g 10 oomrnent on Ulla ppllea· llOtl lnllY Ille hie or 1'1411 ournmetU in wrltlnQ Wllh "'-r9glQnal dlrKfor of the Federal [)ep(>aft In• aurenoe Cofl>ofetJon at Ila regionlil offlol {25 £<Mr StNet, SUM ~'!#J, San Franciloo, CA 94105) bt!Onl proatH• ~=tlootiea PIOCIHlng "'9 be CXJm• pttMd no Mrtler INn lt'9 '!Mtt day IOlllJwtng ....., the dllte d laet ~ ~Of 1he dete of re<»lpl of the ~ by ..,. R>te, WfllcM.., 11 tet.r Tht P91tod mey be •ICl9tlded by the ,.. glorl8I dlrwCIOf !Of OCJOd CllUlt. The non-c:oft· ~~:.: ~•...,one ~~ '.:.,~": ....... In .. G: ltlott'I ...,. foonatlon In ltll non-confidential oortlon oC the ew!lcatlon Ille w11 be made avallable upon request. A schedule of charges for such copies can be obtained from the ~olftee. Publiihld pu15U8nt to Section 303 8(f) al lhe NIN and regutatloos of ltle Federal Deposit ln- auranoe Corporation. Preferr9d 8-nk LI Yu Chalrmll'I of lhe Board Octobor 8, 1999 Published Newport Beach-Costa Mesa Dally Piiot October 13, 1999 SUMMONS (CITACION JUOtclAL) W605 NOTICE TO DEFEN· DANT: (Avtso a A cus ado) PAGEPROMPT, USA HAL ANO SANDY LINDEN DOES 1 ·5 Inclusive YOU ARE BEING SUED BY PlAINTIFF: (A Ud le asta deman· <Sando). GEORGE RODDA, JR You have 30 CAL.EN· OAR DAYS after this eummons ts Mrved on va.1 10 Ille • typewritten llspon$11 II tl'llS court. A letter or phone cal w I not proted you; your typew11t11n r11ponae must be In proper legal loon If you want lhe court 10 hear your caM II you do not file your lltlPOl\ff on time, you mey k>M the case. and your wegea, money and property mey be taken WllhoUI IUl'ther warning lrom the court. There are other legal requlremenla. You may want 10 caa en etlomey right away. n you Clo not know an attorney, you may call an -11ome~ flmll 18Mce Of a aid Olflca (lllled In phone boo!<). 0e$f)IJOI de qua la enlTeguen 111a Q\ac:lon judicial us1ec1 11tne un pluo de 30 DIAS CALENOAAIOS pita PIMMl.lr una '91PUllta esc:rtta • roaqutnll 1n .... eorte Una c:u11 o uni ..made ..iefonice no te Ofrac.ra protecaol'I, IU llspuella 8ICl1ta • INI• qulN tlene qua cumpllr Q()fl ... 1onnalldedel ... g1l11 apropladH al usted QUlere que ,. oone UCUChl au cuo 81 Ulled no pr8Mnta IU rupuHI• 1 uempo, PUldt perder el cuo. y 11 pueden qu111r •u aalarto, 9U dlnefO 'f ()11'811 cx.ae di IU ~ sin ll'illo 9(1doMI por J>'il1e dt le COM. EJdtWI OltOt rtQUllllOll laOalll "'*'-QUI lo9Wd quler• nemar a un • b O 0 a d O I n !MdlatarNnte SI no OCflOCI • "" 9bo0ad0, puede llamar 1 "" MIWllCt di , ...... Ida dt lllo•• oa UN dldNI :=:-.:ct:. .. cl· CMINVll ~ ~C..) The,,.,. ..... of .. CIOUft " (II =..clhcdandlla COttl • cxu.TQF I CA.UFORNIA. COUNTY Of OAANGE, HARBOR JUSTICE CENTER, 4601 JAMBOREE ROAD, NEWPORT BEACH, CA 92660 The name, addntSI, and telephone number of p181nliff'• attorney. or p1a1n11n W1thout an at· lomty Is: (El nombre, la dlreoclon y II numero de tetefono cJel abOgado del demandanle. 0 dll de- mandante que no Ilene •booado. 11) ROOOA& ASSOCIATE~1 359 SAN MIGUEL, SulTE 203, NEWPORT BEACH, CA 92660 DATE: FEB 03, 1999 ALAN SLATER, C1ertt, by S. Pet111na=uty Published New Beaci'l.COSla sa Dallv Piiot October 131 .20, 21, November S, 19w W609 NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE OF: Gerald E. Tremble CASE NUMBER: A19928t To d hel,., beneft· darles, credlk>rl, cont· lngent CfedltM, and per. IOOI who may olhlnrriM be Interested In the will or estate. or both, of Gerald E. Tremble A PETITION FOR PROBATE has been flied by Liu Tremble & stephen LYM Busch In the Slloerlor Court ot Caltfom'9, County of Orange. THE PETITION FOR PROBATE reque111 that Lisa Tremble & Stephen Lynn Busch, be •P· pointed as pel'IOM.l rep· resentatlv1 to 8dmlnlst1t the tstate of the dece-dent. THE PETITION re· QUHIS the deeedent'I wll and codlcill, If eny. be admitted to prObatt. The Wiii and any oodtcila ar11 1vaUabll for ex· aminlillon In the Ille kept by the coon THE PETlltON re· ques11 authol1ty IO eel• minister lhl ettai. under 1he lndependen1 Admln· lltr•taoo of &tat• Act.. (T'tlla aufloftly wtl allOw lhl pef'IOMI ,.....It· et!Ye to 18ka many ec· 1IOr1I ~ oC>mlnlng ODOt1 ~ hfOf9 1'llllng o9rilln "*Y lmPOf • tent adlona, hQIWeYet, !hi pereonal ,.,,,...,,.. 811\19 _.. tie ~ IO ~ nolca IO lnt9"""9d p1raon1 unltH t~y ~ ~ notkie Ot con1ent1d to Iha propoMd action.) The In depandent admlnl•· tnltlon euthoftly ... be ~ unlNt tn In· fe1'91eed PMOn ,... 11t1 ObllCC10n IO the pettllorl tind llhoWt aood '** wtrv "' coUlt ltlCluld not "rt.Z..-=r"ari .. pellllotl _. tie ""° on 1Me.tl It 1141pm In Deoc. l71 IOclMcl et :M 1 TNI cty DrM. p 0 .. 1•171 ~~., .. =::: .::.::= ...... ,..,, °' ....... ...... CllMt .. ,.......,.,, stopping a combined eight snots. Alexis Sellers, Alexa Aguilar and Samantha Strodel kept the game close for the WLldCats with their defense. ln Under-10 Boys action: • Red Bombers 3, Bad Boys 0: lrevor McGulf, Adam Seagondollar and Peter Schreyer scored to lead the. Red Bombers to victory. Goalkeeper Nlchola.s Vlnson and Dontay Le$ser started one of the Bombers' scoring drives, as well as keeping the Bad Boys off the score- board. Francisco Moreno, Ranny Martinez. Josh Gonzales, Gregory Vinson and Anthony Arellano stopped numerous Bad Boys' offensive threctts for the Red Bombers. In another victory for the Red. Bombers, 4-0, over lbe Hornets, SeagondoUar had two goals and Schreyer added another for the win. ' ln Under-8 Boys actJon • A.J. Roth !lad two goals and Matt Viles had one goal to lead the Rockets. Strong Rockets defense was per- formed by Alexander AlUone, Ben Nordstrom, Jonathan Knauer and Pre- ston Schow. For lhe Fireballs, Kevin Kiser scored the team's Jone goal, while Leo Brown, Jack Klng and Brandon Karr kept the game close with SQ\ld team c.lefen c. •wearance may be In Actttlou1 Bualneea Flctltloua Bualneaa Glau Service, 1983) pel'IOll or by your at· Name Statement Name Statement YOfbe LJnda BMl:.r.. ~ IOmey. ., The folloWlng persons The 1o1iow1ng j>9l$ON 8, Yoroe Unda. 1.Aflfof-IF VOU ARE A CREDI· are doing business as. art dolnQ buslllell ... nil 92886 TOR or conllngent crldl· CENTURY 21 BY THE F•bt>fo, 1397 O.rlnaford Teonlcad, Inc., (CA), tor of the de<leasld, you SEA. 2121 Padlic Coast St, Cost•~. Ce11lor· 19831 Yorti. Llndll SW., must 1111 your c:ta1m wllh • Hwy., Ste. 230, Corona nlll 92626 SUit• B, YOfba Linda, the OOUf1 end ma1 a copy del Mar, Ce.tifomla 92625 MFL Interiors, Inc. Celifomlll 821186 IO Iha personal repre-Gary Leroy Mitc:Mll (CA) f397 Gar11ngloro This ~ II con- atntatJve appolnled by (Broker of ReConf), 1025 St., eo.i. Men, CalllOf· ducted by: a corporabOfl the court wfthln four CcMrl8 Hills Roecl, Cov· nfa 92626 Haw you 11al18d doing months lrom the date of Ina Calllomla 91724 Thd business IS con-bu&lness 191? No lhe first tasuanoe ol tel· Nedda Luc:ia M1'chell. duded by. 1 corporation Teonlcad lllC:, Pattl J. tm .. pnMded In Pro-1025 Co'llna Hills, Aoed, H•ve you l1at1ld doing HIMI VP bate Code Mdlofl 9100 C<Mna, Califomla 91724 busineSs ye!? Yes, Thl9 ttal1menl wu The time lor th dalms Erin Kathlen MllcheM, 5 09'02/1999 llled with 1t.e County wlH not expire befont four Savona Court, Newport ' MFL tnterlore. Inc., Cler1< of Orslg8 County monlha lrom the hearing Coul, Calllomla 92657 Michael P Layman. on 9·17·99 c:tata nollced above. Thia business Is 000· Treasurer 1"9SIOS721 YOU MAY EXAMINE duded by: a general This statement WH DaNv Pilot sept. 22, 211, the file kept by th• court partnership filed With the County OCll ff, 13, 1999 W571J If you era a peraon In· Have you started doing Clelt( 01 Orange County Flctltloua Bualne .. terested In tile estate, buslnNS yet? No on 9.7.99 N8m• Stai.rnent you may Ille with the Erin Mitchell 199H8045n The foltowlng pertOnS court a R~t for sgri This statement wa.a oa11y Piiot Sept. ~~1 29, •re doing busine .. 88: dal Notice (lorrn DE·1 ) llled wUh the County Oct. 6, 13, 1999 YY560 LKDB Aasoc:Jates, 19631 of the llUng of 111 ln\len· Cleft< ol Orange County Flctltlou1 Bu•lne11 oucartu. Foothlll tory .nc:t 9J)pralsal of 11· on 9-8·99 R h ca...__ ... "2688 tat• usets or of any pell· l99M&047M Name Statement anc . "'"''-• llon or account ea D8f!. Pilot Oct. 6 13 Tht lollowlng persons Cr11t1ve Concept• Id a I p b t w • are doing buttn811 as· Softw1r1, Inc., (CA), ~ ~ 1;~ 8 : 20, 2 • 1999 602 z GOLDEN RULE. 1833 32025 Virginia Way, Request for Soedat No-Fictldoua Bualne .. IE. 17th SL 1210. s.ma Laguna Bead't, Calltomll b fonn 11 avallable from N•m• Statement Ana, CA 92705 12651 1Mcourtcler1<. The folloWtng persons M erch1t1 Lynn Lloyd Whll1horn, Atlom.y fOI' thl ere dolnQ business 11. Zolman, 1833 E. 17U\ St, 26031 La Cuesta Ave , petttloner• l(jlt( tf Owens Paint· 1210, Senta Ana. CA ~ Hiiis, Callornie T1rnothY R. Buac:h a Ing, 876 Pm!OO Of • 92705 The busiMll 11 con· Mllry Alleen Mathll1 CO&te Mesa, Califomla This bullnlls. II con· ducted hM-: a nanenal The Buec:tt Finn 92626 ducted by an lndMdual pe~ .,... 202 Dupont 0r.' Kirt( HIWfl1 OWens, 876 Have you ataned cbng Hh'I you et&l1ed doing ltvtne, CA 92112 Presidio Or., Costa business yet? No bu·""·u ye"' v ... ATTORNEY FOR Mesa, Calrlomla 92626 M~ Lynn Zolman _,. " ' LIN Tremble a ThlS business rs oon· This statement wu OM>111999 Stephen Lyl'!n Bu.ch dueled by an lndMdu.I filed wlCtl the C<Mity C1111lv1 Concpets, Published N•WPOrt Hew you stal1ed doing Clelt( of Orange County Software, Inc., Atta O.· Beech.CO.ta Mesa DallV business ye!? Yn on 9-17-~ h1!fh~tZmen1 was Pil<>t October 13. 14, 211, Kirk H OWene 111KIN051'39 ... 1999 Thia statement wes Dally Pilot Sept. 22, 29, mect wl1h the County WTh606 flied With the County Oct «f, 13, 11HHI W581 Cle~ of 2-'ge Coul'lty -------Cllr1< ol Otwlg8 Cconly on o·25-.. Actltloue Bualne11 oo 10-4-99 Actltloue Bu.lneea 11MllllOH13 NarM St.tement ttlMl01260 Name 8t.aterMttt DaNv Piiot s.c>t ~129, The followlng pel'IOOs OallV Pilot Oct. 61.1~-Thi followlng persona Oct 6. t3, 1999 w582 .,. dOlng bualneal u · 20, 21, 1999 VYtJW •tt ~bullnl11 as: FfctttfOua luaineH •>ORANGE COUNTY Flcthrou• Bualneaa Cl~R3t25 i ~ Name Stat9ment Bl.IND AND SHADE, Nam• Statement • • ., The loltoWlng pe.-one b) OC BLINDS, 24991 The lolloWlng persons S.nta Ana. catlfomla are dolnO bualnM8 u · Sun11t Place Eaat, are doing busfneas es: 92JO~ Galt n 3125 8 WHl Coast Ftent111t. Lagun. Hiiis, Callfomta EndteN Nitro, 2751 94J, SI. L'nt• M•' 18242·G McOurmott, 92653 Bayatlont or Newport CeMfomta 'mo7 • lrvlnl, Callfomla 02626 France a Gerard Beach Caflfoinla 92663 Thlt bullnell la John•Clto, (CA), In· Doha~41J91 SunMt Kenneth Scott New· ducted by. an fndtv.:;;-corp orated, ~eo3 ~la 9~ Hiit, hofl, 2300 F•lrvl1w HIM y00 at.rte<! doing t:ciahof'9~N:=' Frederic A Nouchl, ='g= MeN, CeU· 1 ~u0:t? No ll'lll' bu9lnell Is con· 25082 8unae1 Pf1c:1 Thia bullnetl II ooo-1 T~s acat:ienl WH dUctecl by, a oorpcnMon w..t. Leguna Hflfs, C811· , dueled by· an lndlllldoal j lllecl With the ~ • H.w you •llM1ld doing tomla ln653 Hl'le you sblrted dOlrl9 Clefll Of,.__ r .... .-u l bullnMi ~No Thi bullnt11 is con· ~· yet? No · I on 9_24.99·-·r """"""' Jo II n-c Ito, In· doct.cl by I general i<.nneth S. Ntuhofl 1111110etll • ~. 8'94l Johll. ~,.hip l1ed.......,., Th.. atatement WJ• Otlly Piiot Sept 29 I ~PrWdellt) ~~ .. No ........ 11 ~tk :'&the = Oct. e. 13, 20 •• 19" flied Wllh...,;:n'eo:; Francia Gerard onl0-&-99Mge WlitM,Cleftof~CounlY Dclt1et'Y tHllllJmS ACihlOue BUelMei I on 10-1·• Thia atatelMl\I waa D4i1Y Pt1ot Oct 13, 20. Heme ~t ' 1111HD1'9'1 ftled ~ = . 27, Nov 3, 1899 W804 Tht fOIOWlng peraone ~ PllOC OCC ~ g::~-..,.. ! FlctHlou•8U81nee• ·~~~as 20, • tltt 1HIHOl172 I Heme.........,, RESCUE CAY8TAI. Flc1111o• ••uu11s ..... , DellV PlloC a.pt. ~~1 29, The ~ '*"°"9 CQVE, 11'1 Domll'lgO ,..,_ .. llRtlM Oc1, tJ, 131 1919 w575 ere Oolna bulirillll •: DIM A"4 l , Newpof1 'n. ~ '*'°"8 STERl.lllQ LOCk & a.di, c.Mtom1e 92Mo w.·dcllnQ bullr*tea: Flctltlou9 8uetne.1 KEY, 808 l.UMn Ln , Mary.,.._ 771 Ooml· PAEMll .. MM MAR· ,.._ ........_,t Colcll MM91 CA. ne2e ngo OM, APt L, New· KHTING, Jll 19 ......_ ~':oino~ ... ~~~~ =.olwf\, Celifolria ~ ~ CID* Floor OcMHtna. CA neaa TIW b\lllnttt 11 con· v~ 9211 Obeldlln. w.iil· Oebnt Gell Cook. IOI duct9d t>V: en lndMdual 1t ~. lt,"'-'*11110n m11c:..,, C8lbrile N9l3 Lllllen Ln I co.c. ~. ... you •tted doi'9 • =.c: tallb.,:,!, Inc, (CA), CA l2IS!I • bua1r.a y.t? V-. LA*.._= tn1 Oblldllt\ W..t· 1llll ~ .. con-Otl'l1fM 11 ., , """"" ~... ... lly. hUlbnt nl ~.... leedl, Clllcirtlla 1llll ~ 11 con-... Tllli ... .,,..... W81 Thia ....,_ II ~ dUCll8d ~ a COfpo!llOll .._you Milftld doing tlid _.,. hi CountY cUild}!\ • ..... HIM you ..,... dalna ~ -' No a.-o1 ()f9l1fl CqurWy ..,..,..,. bulllneM ~ v-. 7'11/ ~flt. Ooall: cn N7• w· ...... II OIM Cl. CGael UlllllleH -£.:.._. OMldliln, tnc,...,. na 11121PMM w a. ,.,. -. ~ ""' . ... ""' .. caunw oat. t. "· •. ,... ... ... n.ra .. ..,,.... .... °"" at °'*"' ~ wm _. ... ~ &1.~= an•n .. ,m ...... ~., ... ::.,r~~ on t-IMt DllrPlill a.•· ...._ •n. •• tlfJINJ"' .,11111111 I O!!.$ t!, 1 _M?t .. -~ or\_ ':a'a. :-,:. ~ =Od \:.to G ~-... , I Cl9114811 L8IAI. NOTICE ntl OHIO OMSION OF 8ECUNTIE8, PUR· SUANT TO OHIO RE· WIED CODE aw»TER 17f17 AND Ct1APTE1' 1tt, HAS ISSUED A NOTICE OF OP· PORTUNITY FOR HEARING TO GECKO HOLOINGJ.LiNC. THE NOTICE GES '!'HAT GECKO HOLD-INGS. INC. VIOLATED OHIO REVISED CODE SEC'TIONS 1707.44(C)(1) BY SEU· IN<f UHAEGISTEREO S'E c u R I T I E s ' 1701.U(B)(.4) BY ~NGLY MAKING FALSE REPRESENTA· 1'10NS CONCERNING MATE'RIAL ANO RELE· VNIT FACTS IN CON· NECTION WITH THE 6ALE OF SECURmES, •'f7'07.44(G) BY KNOW· ~y EHGAGING IN N;JB All> P8AC1JOES WHICH ARE DE· CLAREO ILLEGAL, FRAUDULENT OR PROHIBITED BY CHAPTER 1707 OF THE OHIO REVISED OOOE AS FURTHER DEFINED IN SECTION 1707.01 (J), AND IS ENT1Tl.EO TO A HEARING AS OE· SCAIBEO BY OHIO RE· VISED CODE CiHAPTER 119. A COPY OF THIS DIVISION ORDER IS AVAILABLE FROM THE OHIO DIVISION OF SE· CURITIES, n SOUTH HIGH STREET, 22NO FLOOR, COLUMBUS, OHIO 43215. Published Newport Beach.CO.ta Mesa Dally Piiot September~.:. October 6, 13, 111W WS86 BSC8800 NOTICE OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER T g .... g ••t · ll• PAUL AONALD COX .UPAULR.COX CASE NO. A1•1a To al heirs, benell· *'*· creditors, oont· lngent Cl'8dllon, and per· eons Who may oCherwlM be lnterelled In lhe Wiii or eatale, Of both, of; PAUL RONALD COX aka PAUL R. COX A PETITION FOR PROO~ TE f\aa been filed by ROSEMARY COX In the Suoerlor Court Of Cellfom'!, Coonty ol ORANGc. THE PETITION FOR PR08ATE requeet.e that ROSEMARY COX be ap· pointed as personal rep- resentative to admlnlater the eatate of the dace· dent.' THE PETITION ti· quests authority to ad· mifllster the estate unoer the Independent Aclmln- lstratloO of Estates Act. (This AuthOrtty wt" allow atlve 10 take many ao-dona ~ ot>l8inlllg CQH1 llOl>IOYat eetore taking cerlaln very lme>Of· Ian! 8C1lOnl I riowever, the penonaJ repretent· attve wilt be required 10 gNa notioe to lntltet18d persona unte11 they have waived notice or contented to t h• propoMd ICtlon.) The In· dependent admlnlt· ttatiOn authority will be granted unless an In· feresled person files an objection to the petition and shoWI OOOd cause Why the court should not grant the authority. A HEARING on the peUtlon will be held oo NOVEMBER 4, 1999 at 1 :45 p.m. In Dept l.]3 lo-cated at 941 The City Dr1118 South. Orange, CA 92868. IF YOU oeJECT to the granting of the petition. yoo should appear at Irle heating and state your ·" I 'II " ' .. . ' ,,,,.. ·-. ~ -. -. -=Iona ot Ille Wtll\en iOnt wllh the OOUl1 e the heanng Yoor lpC)eltaoee may be ln person °' by your at· tomeY. IF VOU ARE A CREDI· TOR 0( contingent credl· tor ol the decl41aMd, you mutt Ille your Clalm With the court and maH a C!J9Y to the PtrsonaJ rep...,. •entatlVe appointed by the coun Within tour monthl from the date of the first lsauanoe of le1· ters as J>fovlded In Pro- bate Code sec:t1on 9100. o1 ...... ..-.orocany petition Ot eccount .. provided In Probate Code MCllorl 1250 A ~· tor $pedal No- llQe '°'"' II avalleble from Iha COUl1 c6eltt. AltOIMV fof' tM ~ NORAH M. •ORRtSON, ESQ. a8N 16840, IMO WAltNER AVE., HM, fOONTAlf( VAL· LEY. CA 8270I P\lblished Newoort Bea~ta Mesa Dally Plfol October e. 12. 13, The ttme for tiling dalm• WT598 W111 not el(pire before four --8-SC--88-1-3-- months from the healing dare noticed above. NOTICE OF 1999 YOU MAY EXAMINE PETITION the file kept by tl'le coun. TO ADMINISTER If you are a person In· ESTATE OF: terested In the estate, STEPHANIE SUE yoo may file with the MARQUIS eka ~i~t<:ei= for Spe· STEPHANIE S. DE·154) of the filing of an· MARQUIS Inventory and appralsal CASE NO. A 199062 To el heltl, l>eneft· QeMa, CNdltorl, cont· lngent creditors. and I*· aona Who may OltMWWlle be Interested rn 1t1e Wiii Of Mtale, ()( boltl, of: STEPHANIE SUE MAR· OVIS Illa STEPHANIE S MARQUIS A P~TITION FOR PR00ATE has been filed by.JOSEPH A. SCHENKEi. "' the Supe· riot' Coutt or Cet•lomla, County ol ORANGE THE PETITION FOR PR00ATE requests tt1at JOSEPH A. SCHENKEL be appointed as personal rep<esentatl\'e to admln· 1ster the estate of U1e de· cedent THE PETITION re· quests the decedent's Will and cOdiqls. If any, be admitted to probate. The Win and any oodlclls are a11a11abte tor ex· aminatlon In Ule Ille kept by the court. THE PETITION rt· ByFax By Phone By MaMn Person: (1>-t1J) 1>:l 1-h:l11i (9i9} hi:!-~i(,~ll Wednwlay, Odober 13; 1999 I . . . ' . -•• j • l .· QUMlt ~ ID lld· ~Soul\,~. CA 1' ...... lrl ,_ -., mlnllter 1he eatate under 928e8 ycKI =--l'9 the Independent Admln· IF YOU OBJECT 10 Ile • COUft a tor 8"- letfallon ol Eitel.. Act. gfWlbng of Che pelllion, a.I Nodcle (This Authority will allow you lhOuld -wear at '1e OE· 1 ~)of,_ -.0 of WI the petlOl\4l repreeent· l'IMl1ng and state your ~ and ....., aUYe to tall• many eo-~ 0t Ille wtln.n of "'8te ...... 0t of any lions wlthoot Obtaining ObiecClOnl with the court peacion 0t ICOOUl'll u coun approvel BelMt bef0<e 1he heanng YOl.Jf provided In Pro1>1te taking certain vety lmJ>Of· appearance may bt In Code MCtJon 1250. A tanl d<>nl, hQwever, ~ °' by yoAJr at-Requeat tor Se>edal Ho- ttle pel'IOl'\ll rep<e"'1t • . tioe form II avalleble from alive wOI be reQu\19d 10 OU ARE A CREDI· the QOUrt '*1c. OMI notlee to Interested TOR "' QOl'ltlngtnt Credi• P9ddolier "' Pro ~ peraona unlHt they tor ol lhe deoeaH<I, you JoMPh...., lcftenUI, have waived notice or mu.et, ... your Clalm Wiit\ 2l702 114ttl Avenue consented to the, thecounandmallaeopy Soutl'I Eut. f1CM proposed action.) Tl1e In· to ltltl pel'SOl'llll tep<a· Kent, WA llOl1 dependent admlnla· sentellve appointed by PIJbll.tled NeWOOC1 trali<>n 1uth011ty wta be the coutt within foor Beach-Colla Mesa. DlllY granted unless an In· months lrom lhe date of Pllol OctOber 8, 12, 13', terested person tlle1> an lhe l1rst issuance of let· 1999 objection to the l)etitJOn ters as provided 1n Pro-1 ______ wr~59~7 and snows QOOd ceuse bate Code aecllon 9100. Why the coon should not The time for llllng da1ms grant Ille authonty will not expire before tour A HEARING on the months from the hearing petltlon will be held on date noticed abovci OCT00ER 28, 1999 at YOU MAY EXAMINE 1 45 p.m. In Oeol L 73 lo-lt1e flte kept by IN court. cated at ·941 The City If you are a per~ in- Polley Call Caa.tfted TodQI .842-78 Hutt'' uwl 1!1•111111111·, un· ,111111"'' lo rl11111~1· \\ 11li11111 1101111• llw p11hli-h1·r 11'•\'r\I'' ilw 1t!!l11 111 1·1•11-ur n•rl11--1f, """"" 11r r1111•1·1 .111~ 1·l;1•-ilii·il 1t•h1·ni·•·1111•11t. l'l"•h• n·1H1n 1111\ 1·nor 1hu1 11111\ 111• i11 \unr d11--ifi1·1l 111I i11111w1h.11t·h rtw Daih P1l•11 an·1·pt-rn • lial11lil\ for'"" 1·n11r 111.rn111lwni~·1111·111 fur~ lti1·li 11 11111\ lw• n•,p11n-1hl1· 1·\i'·1·p1 ft11 tlw 1·11,1of1h1· •pm·•· u1·1t1all~ 1wrnp11·!1 '" 1111· 1•rr11r ( n·d11 •'a111111l~ lw all11~1·tl fur 1111· f1r-.1 iu ... •nwn Pl,,..,.. nt-h"h· \tt11r n •• ,,., .,ml ,J,,.,h n11111lw-r 1u1I "t' U qtll , .. ,. I• 1··L f. ltla • P"',.. •JH•Jlt 1:\0 \\ ,.,, ll11' "i1 n·1·1 (·•"I",,,.,, •. {.' ll:!ld".' \ '"'1"rrllh1I ~ tt .. , 't ----. -Deadlbtes ---- SERVICE DIRECTORY -For All Your Home and Business Needs -............. ......, ...... ,.. ...._, • WI ._. et 642-1671 a.246 -. . .,-. .. ' ., ~ I .. I '-I • '.. . ' ~ . ............. • * ·* a SOLD-o • * * : SHOWCASE t * HOMES • : FOR SALE t * In Our Sat * t Real Estate t t S~P..lementl t : HOMES OF t 1 THE WEEK i * Dl1pley Ads t t Start at $751 * * Deadline * .. * t Tuesday SPM t * Open House * t Ultings t t Only $151 t * Deadline * : Thursday SPM : * tt Pays to * l Advertise t : In the Best t :. LOCAL t • Real Estate • : Section t t Call Today!! t t USA RIVERA t * 949-574-4252 • t ANNE WILLEY t : 949-574-4249 t ··~········· . .. .. . . -t ' -' . . ·,· ,. . . . "' •• --:-. l ... iiMUiifiil fownhOmit 3& 2.581, loldld ~. 2e ger, 1178,000." &II & ~2J:Jlor, Agta. NU HOMES E SIDE FROM BUILDER Open Sat-Sun 11~ 25V ~ 2541 &na Ma Avt. 4()(, 2.6 bl, appl'OOI 1800-2000 eqlt. 2 CM 119- ltl(lle. Stll1iiQ • $356,llOO M-n2..f12Cf 949-648-7801 OPIN ION 1 :oo:i:OO 2053 8"'11WOOd E llcle "°'*· ovtf 1500lf, el(• ~ remod, ~ Olk, tnartlllJlllt, •kyll•. ., .. u ~~~ ---- ~ .1 r • , •. Townhouee-31k 381 frplc, ram nn, llv nn, wood fire, prof'I decorated, private Piiio. 2c gwage, $380,000. llfoklf 94M43-3840 38r 381 on Greenbelt. 1 Bt & 1 Ba doWns\alls. Rare private dltveway, canyon view. crit $419,000. Agent ~73. Ext. 216 FOR SALE GARDEN STYLE 2 Slory Prolesslonal Medical 6 Dental Bldg Located Westclllf Dr. NB. 90% Leased FOf Mote lnlo Call Coklwlll Brier Commen:ill 877~ coiMEAaAt. STOAU'RONT SEAL &Cff.212-A Main St. 1100 SQ.FT. Good Loe Avall Now. e.11 Jim Kfltlnlrt ft 562-69M600 THE SHORES APTS 1 & 2BR TOWNHOMES $300 OFF MOVE-IN Selected Unit• ............ Stlrtlng O $1095/mo. Mo to Mo ...... "W• .. •pet" community . • blockl fromhbMch. •••44 2111 ~ ........ . .............. ....,,. ... ,........,. ;,yr;:-• . .;. ·~ . ' 1 .. , -. ~··. . ... FSIOE BACK BAY 2& House Fp, Qleat yard, 10t1 of Wldowl $1295 + dlo. 329 University IS. Lisa. 94~.ll 12BA ill HOllt" ~ N:;;;pit Hghll horC .,,, beck yttd, gar,. W/O SUOOIMO 94MSC).8874 Iv m!9 ., 2ba ~ '"" 41111. AC, llllld hlalpl, comm pool/1pa, 185 Tlfocco '1200/rno. Avall now. AQt 71+2'7'*5 Motel MANAGERS •SPECIAL• $154.00+ tuWkly (Must PflWll "" M) m tms a ICllChlnlCtl. Sla>ated on bealllfUly ~~ Lobby/Direct dial phonta/Fr•a HOO, ESPH & OieclPOQI I Jec:uz.zl, Guett llllndlY CloM to 406 6 6$ Fwys Mln'a Item 0 .C Faitgrdl, college 9ld bdllWlilq~ 10 ahopl & ttalaut*'lll • COSTAMESA MOTOR INN un Harb« llVd Phone MM41 4140 Hours Monday ........... S rida~ 5:00pm Thursda\ .. "''ednesday 5:00pm '"'' 1111111l1' u .m11111-:i on""' \lu111l11-I r.1L.1 Tuesday .......... Monday 5:00pm Frida~ .......... Thursday S:OOpm Wt:rlne,.Jay .... Tul"sda} S:OOpm alurday ........... Friday 5:00pm \\ .1IL.-l11 ll;.Ul11111..:) Ollp111 e Blue High Schoof LocbrL Plck\IS> In alle'( at 215 lrta Ave. Coronl del ..., ~·' -·"";·~ l -w-. . . >' ' tn-: .. ' '' ' ... ~ . . ----- ' T • Call 842~8 • Put a few worde to work tor you. \loud 1\4 r1tL\\ Attention! Must have truck or Van, llabUity ln1urance with proof or paymtnt1, drivers license, social security e•rd, and cle1n D.M.V. print out. The Newport Beach/Costa Mesa Daily Pilot presents you with a GREAT OPPORTUNITY to promote anti.ques & collectibks.. Perfect for shops, dealers, auctions, booksellers, decorators, shows, re.finishers, art galleries -develop your business with us! SPACE DEADLINE: OCT. 22, 1999 MARKEY FOR MORE INFO! 949/574-4246 Pilot 'Wed'nesdo'i, Odober' 13,' 1999 . ' TODAY'S 'CRQSSWORP PUZZLE APPOL\'DIFNf SnTfMS Ff/Pf liar & "'""'1'.I!. '>hlfu. 812-8~0 Per Hour Tc•>-J>rochar.. higher • llnlth, ll<wtal ·~ • 4<11 K l1an ·~~110111 • U,... tcm (fllf*"TIK•t &t. In 1989 In I O!ltu :'olc!lll • and gTI>"i"ll Call for oppL 1~313-4744 RelallSallt UHlTEO COlORS OFBENmON louttl Coett PIU.a FIT $Mv + C001'R PIT~~ We •• loold!llJ for susier salll people wt#l Iota Of 8rllfl1Y & eolhutlasml " you ere ll'IOllYated Ind dependable, AW'/ In person Wa Wiii "*' Put a fevv words to work for you. By CHARLES GOREN with OMAR SHARIF and TN4NAH HHUCH I• ' . .. ,• ' . ...... ~ ..... ., .. cond °"" '**""*'°'· 2 dOof, Ill\ ...... llMICll. .. •, ..~l.:~ -· . •' ' ·, I I Lo IN. ""· u pwr. ... FON> TMUNDOllllO .. roof rid!. pitvacy g1111 v.e, 1U10 nns, we . ...._ ...... ......,..737 .. 111 ...... iii THE RIGHT TIME c.I '°' ~ lnltflo( lul l>O'*. rJc, IUll · root, only S9,SOO . LDUI 0# 901>-734-6494 w~ 't1 Lind"°"' blec w w &landed. VII'/ low..... ~· ~~.~ Both vulnerable. ~t deals. NORTH · • K4 o KO 108$ o·K64 •J71 SOUTH •A6S1 <:? J o OJ 5 • K 10643 The bidding: EAST sount WEST .... l• .... .... .. .... .... lNT , .. ,_ .... .... Opening lead; Pour of <:1 NORTit IQ 20 3Nr The Good Book tells us there is a time 'for everythlna under the sun. South attacked the right suits at the right tlme to land a tough' no-trump game. North's two diamonds, the fourth suit. was ~ game force that said noth- ing about the suit itself -an lnvita- PINN bl wary of out of .,.. COl!lf)IAIH. Check with thl local Sett« Bu1lne11 Bu· reau bttott you Miid any money or ftff for MtVica. Rtad Mid uncs.r.tand .,,Y con- t ra cta b1for1 you 11'.gn. I"° tionlll jump to 1wo no 1Nn1p m•ah& =-::.'ii': it::' have been more detcnptive of IUl,000. Ml-582-0041 or North's acc:leu holdina. Souch's 94H44-1219 rebid promixd a diamond t.aoppet llW hOC 'U and North J)l'OCC!Oded to 1une. Wt"""*......,, IUIO, lit, West lecf the fOl,llth best heart. and llovt. nm. co. (519411) declarer realil.cd lhal the~ might not Cal'°' ainM Plll*IG be enouih entries to the North hand LDU1 OF WE&1'W41Ttft to develop and run I.he hearts.. --..nm.-•,__.""""'.Tr..,,...-- lnstead, South opted to play on club&, ~ so the k.ing of heal1.s was put up from Exc1ll111t co11cl, fully dummy and it held. Proceedins w11h =1= the planned campaign, a low cJub was led from dummy 10 the ten, FORD EXPLOMft XLT W which held. 31k ml, .,.., ltlr, tu1 pwr, ft was now tempting 10 cross 10 the ~ ed. llcril. root reek, king of spades to lead another club, P ~ glaas (A60668) but that would have exposed the con-LEXUS~ c;:""~ U'ICl to defeat East could grab the (714)992"'80I ace of clubs and perseve~ with ' spades, and the defenders would col-Ctianc.e.,. lect 1wo spades and their three aces 111 find before declarer could establish nine you w tricks. 'Instead. declarer· shifted the what you nMd attack to diamonds by leading the• at the price queen of diamonds and, when lha1 you want to pay was aJlowcd to hold, continuing with when you read the jack. East held up a4ain, but with; tM Cl8Mlllede two diamond tricks an the bank declarer was ahead of the nice. A every day Mtt loedtd, Int-Im~. ' "" COf1111111r, l7SOO oeo 4 322 75 909-337-2 tee 714-540-589511H&H11e lbOs EUIO i5 FORD bPEDttiON ... Call '°' CUNll1 J)llt*lg E....._ n~··· u. -· LPUS OF WESTMINSTER --' IUIO, ,.,., n1•~"'80I lull PM. PM ...... ~.yy-= ftalltlK lola•vllt •• 8 I( m I ( A 1 6 6 7 1 ) LEXUS E.8300 '91 New lltHlb1ttery/palnt Cll lor cunent Pllcillll Clll lor curreri pilclrlg All PO'fl', _.. CMe, LEXUS OF WES111N$TER LEXUS OF WESTMINSTER tune \r 11 t I U 111 J:-: 'A Ji~f~"':.11 p;.& .!!.; l! \; 114 Ton, 2WD, 11Clllent Call tOf cur1erit pricing ....,., loeded, 12k ml. oc.1 Cond, 70K ml, 111,500. LEXUS Of WESTMIHSTat blul. perfect, like new. MN4t-7M1 MM75'411M (714)H2-t906 $43,500 94M7W64f WTY J10 1u tExus SC300 •w toya1a &11Ca ot,. ::..~1~'\::!f",::r. L~~·gr,.c:i~ ~~ .. ~~tf;·t:; $9t96. 714-SS.11 1 ~1~U'6906 949-729-1525 MMIM-4120 LE 0 scsoo •99 volvo SflliON WXOOR J11p Grand Cheroki• Cell for current pricing 240 DI. '16. 4 cyt, Wlllle In Llteclo '93 While, fully LEXUS OF WESTMINSTER color, (mllm caas. very loaded, V6. ABS. new 111'81, (714)892..ffOI , c:INn, 1 owner. 9511 ml, 1-owner, all records. LJnC:Oll'lcontiNntaliiwtV $2.850. 714-966-8360. •"*;.11.,.conc1121~:12.eoo 79, Gold, leather 1n1, etass1c. vw IOI 'ii .. .._ • I ahOwroom cond. reduced lo UNIQUE, SHOWN IV APPT Lind Rover Dif9I& 110 S2195 obo MMS0.2115. ONLY. l'600 1914. Rare collecdble jeep MAZDA iixs '93 .... 72M609 type 4l4, 1-owner al tacl()(y A\110, ruby red, A/C,, all pwr, •VW DONE BUGOY• options. Call for detafls. 111111 I am-Im ster cass. linl. cruise/ Has bett of~. mull deliver 28.SK/offer Leave 11". 36.850 ml, new Urn. xtnt tee $5500r'080 or tradl I« msgaller6pm 916-489·2739 cond $7500 9'49-497-4803 trucll 949-MS-9t37 x23 spade to the king provided the entry for another club lead and; no maner how the defense continued, declarer had nine lricb. 1-~1 DIESR HIGHWAY COACH RV, 871 Vhng, auto 111111, light oalc lnlerlor, $30.000. CALL 90M43-2501 1 695 ~1 ACURA 3.0 CL II' any 6300 miles, white, lmmaculale, 6 cyl auto, tao leather lntetlor, LOADED $23,500/obo. 949·227·1301 * ACURA 3.0 CL 98' LOADED. any 6300 mlles. white. lnvnaculate, 6 cyt. auto. tan lealher Interior, $23,sro'obo. 949·227-1301 If you're looking to repaint it, replace it or restore it, look in the Pilot Classifieds to find the service you're looking ·for. POWER I BOATS BMW3181 'N S tp, Avur blue, tow mllH, CD, al•m. tlnttcl wlnctow., $23,900. MUC&-2601 CARS $10().$500 & UP POUCE llllPOUNO Hondu.T.-. Ctlevya......,.. Spelt REN through C1asslfled *Mere. 8hp * Uke new, less thin 10hrs 949-759-7059 Ultlitln. c.a Nowt 1-100·772·7470 Ext mo " ~4-~'" .•. ·-·;en HOME, HEAL TH AND BUSINESS ~ ...... * CEIUNQ DESIGN * ACOUSTIC REMOVAL KHOCKDOWN TEXTURE APPLIED. • 71U10438S ... ,....,..~ " f .• • ~ .. • >4 U'I~ FARlMNG INTERIORS KllChen I Bath I Remodel Room Adcltlol-. ... V1sllMC l..l560675 94MMS.9325 -·J7= . ·' _, .... ~ HOME flair &ulmJ> IUi/IUi1. Regl.ize/ReTurbis~ POf'Cel.iin • F ibeiglass Sinks• Showers Counters 949-645· 7723 .. ,.....-.:r;:,J . ' ....... • I j •• ' •• ,,. ••• 1' ... . . I I\ I I\ ( tlllll ( \l<I Local Au P~r Program~ Qualified Holl f¥111lies. Cu-urally Enroehing. fleioble. Legal, •Shn/Wk Many Au Pau~ 10 choose from · M:rilf! c~ Sl4(Vwlc Call 800-713-2002 www.eurau~r.com BucDtt l Btoom1 Cteen-lnt Svc. Corrdeee clHnnQ ~or home n-.t reta C .. _M9-72~7. ERVICE l2L~) VICKY'S CLEANING We ollef THE BEST House & Window Olelll1ing. IOyrs experience, mt rlf'I VICKY'S 714""'"°'95 &tell Bloet Stone Tiie Conerate. Patio, Ortveway, Ft-epic BBO'a. Ref's. 25yrs exp t erTY 714-557-7594 * BRICK WORK * Small jobs & repair work. C1ll DOUG HARLINE 949-645-4762 David Ventura contilCtor A Concrele & Masonry Co. Brtck"Blocll"Stone'Walkway U7'7448 714.Q$9-M92 SHANNONSIOE CONSTR Concretel'MasonlYIDralnage systems, Hlllskfe repairs. . 714-540-7739 AFFORDABLE, FAST, RWABLE, PERSONAL SERVICE SURFSIDE INTERNET All DigiUll S6k Connecuons • rm 1st Mootb! • rm Setup! • UDlltnJted A~ • Lecal Aces Phont Nllllber. All for $87 .00 equal to $6.69 per month! When you !1pi up on lint at '""'~ 18600 Masn Sllul 129S Hunungtoo Beach, CA 92648 J-87SURFSIDE (l·Bn.873-7433) All ~•II Servlcn 35 VII .• Frtt Estimate Ll30864 9714-$72'2116 ARCHCR1Ff 0£SiGN LIGHT SOFFITSIAACHES NITCHESICLOSE:T&1>00R REPAIRS / 714-413-7001 WlffHO£Ff ORMU ~~1re!: IM00030 71 .... 1441 ' . -~ I'.~·.· .. ·. .. '. 11 \ I' • '' 1' ,, t• I I l \I I •I New Co..Ulliaodd Rm Addith>a • Tuiut • Stt!Mctcr Uppadt • Rewin • Trwblahooti91 ~·Pool /SPA • la/Olltlloor U... SALEUSERVICHINIT\. Hardwood, Vinyl, Ceramic Pergo, carpet. MC. VIII 1.1708279 71 ...... 7IOO I• ~J JUNK TO TKE DUMPlll 114-tl&-1 en AVAILABLE TODAYI MM73-5566 ISOI ·=I BOTTLEDILO .. perGaL in-~-mlm.For ~::. 13,000 CHILDREN DEAD ... from iniestin1 si'!'ple housthold cfe1n1n& P!'oducls that are In your home ridit nowl Don't put your lids at risk lny longer. lntroducina all natutil non-toxk cleaning produ,ts. EOlBLE so ~r kids will be ufc. CALL TODAY Mt 22.t.5200 . "~ ~-~~~...-: . . ',, : • -• • f NATURAL VIAGRA ~OW-Hnal FornJa llMd *"' dloulandl al ,..,, for llMl'llN ' pocAnCY Only $69 for JO cllr ~ CAU. HOWi ,., 11+.noe ~-.. ,, .. ·--·-.~.'\" .• -. . ' .. 1r I r ~.-~..:· ~ • , ' . ·-"<"~ EXPERT CLEAt+-UP T~ Non-lcenMCI oontra<:tof 714-7514478 mo clEAN OP fr11 Trfrivnlng. Hedges, Palm Trees, Removal. New l.lwnS I Plants 714-608·3300/ 71' 4-960-8502 SHANE'S Cnnlr11inll1111ilvllp' I.Aun rfln/:y1rinHtr1 Trrt rtu'flln1taN"ti1dllrtt11itt t!r p~l CHUNG'S PAINTING 24 y..,. El(!> -G.reat POO.l Guetantee W°"'· Frtt Est. L'375602 71'·538·153" IKE'I custOii PliHTIHd Preltlllonal, ct.an. quallly work. lnV1xt I docks. Lr703"68 949-631-4610 oulDTY cAAE ~ 20 YRS F•r prlon • lnltnor. • Ex· llflor PW., local references NB area. Ron 94M45-7133 Ao&ft lliltll PiOtl Parintlng lnlellor/mllllor, SIMI !obi OK Deco Painting & Llmt ~646-3006 p Ll49'350 bwe'1 Palntlnt Local ref's 25V11 exp. tnlerlot/EXlenor OUlilly WOfl<I 714/754r'6199 ~ 940ltl0Ve013 26Y ALITY p)JNf1NG TOUCMUPS TOO 2A HoUll • Rldlard Sinor Llt28064' M~95M892 ~ . ..,.~ p .; ' -.......r .... · ' -JI ' t .. OF" - . '~ \ PLUMBING I ........ ,., .......... ... lOCAJINO IUCrllONIC RM UAIC DITlcnoH M.Mlylerft• 675-9304 ~712497 ..__. 'lllflf flCD .... ·~Dflm ·Mll&IBTlllla ·fll&lmt·llm .......... 111111· 141 ·141·1211 ~ -.... ; .. - 1 I I I 1 I. ' ·~ " . DO YOU SPEAK SPANISHf Leam NOW at yoo1 own DAN DAWSON PLUMlllHO =~~= Repa11, Romodll, Repipt, Orllns 2'hr MIViCt ~ gu ayatem replpu. UISS4722 MM4U120 ¥"""' -. .