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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2001-01-06 - Orange Coast Pilot. . . <. . ........... ...... . . SERV1NG THE NEWPORT -N8A. CO~UNmES SINCE 1907 ON THE~: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM WEEKEND-JANUARY 6-7, 2001 Christiail poet challeriges senior center •Costa Mesa's facility published Mabel Knowles' p oems for five years, but now deems them inappropriately religious. It would be our pleasure to pnnt dny poems submitted that are nonde- nominational.• Goolman said the deos1on was Young Chang DAILY PILOT of religion at the center _ d publlc supported by the Seruor Advisory place. Council, which is composed of Goelman •won't let me publish seniors who attend the center. COSTA MESA Mabel anything that \s of religious nature,• Though Goelman said she 1s Knowles, an 87-year-old Christian she said. ·1 tlunk that is wscrim.ina· almost certain she is nght about her poe t. faces what she calls discrlmina-tion. • policy, she asked Costa Mesa City tion because the Costa Mesa Senior Goelman, wtto became executive Atty. Jerry Scheer on Friday to look Center's n~w director has banned director in September, said the cen-into the matter. The center is a non- her religious rhymes, which ha,ve ter is not supposed to favor one reli· profit orgaruzation that is partially been published m the center.:s-.. gion above another. funded by the city and also relies ort monthly newsletter without contra-_ "We have asked that the poems priv&te donations. -- versy for the last five years. do not bring •savior' in or ·Jesus' in. Knowles has prayed before med}: Aviva Goelman, the center's We do not want to say anything that times at the front of the cafeteria for director, told Knowles that her "Try is offensive to any religion,• Goel-the same number of years as she's Prayer• poem was not suitable for man said. been subm.it~g her poetry to the ' the November issue of the center's In a writtell__!!sponse, Goelman ne~sletter. This week, leaders of the publication, The Chro~nide. added: ·w e cannot pUElish anyreli--Seruor Meals and Services progrdm Knowles said she questions why gious poems in our Chronid e. They Goelman would restrict he r freedom belong at ehurches, temples, etc .... SEE POET PAGE A6 GREG FRY I OAl.V P!LOT Mabel Knowles has had many poems appear tn the Costa Mesa Senior Center newsletter over the years, but now her Christian-themed poetry has been excluded from its pages. ON THE LOOKOUT • GREG FRY I DAILY PILOT John Kouraklis, 11, right, and Kevin Burzynski, 10, keep an eye out for whales ~d other sea UJe on an afternoon 1rip aboard the Reveille, one of three local whale-watcbJ.ng boats. ln the background ls another, the Western Pride; . Homeowner ·hopes new plans end remodeling controversy •After costly lawsuits and delays, new renovations for Samoa Place house are back to Costa Mesa staff for approv~. have new building permits for the renova- tions to her home within a week. "Plans are In the city's buildings division (of development services) and ready for issuance of new building permits any day now,• said Don Lamm, deputy city manag-~ er and director or develop.Qlent services. D•nette Goulet DAILY PILOT "Once those are Issued, the case is dosed as far as the dty is concerned." COSTA MESA -After more than 1 112 years of debates and a cosUy lawsuit, Mesa Verde resident Tracy Stevenson hopes to Neighbors who threw a wrench in Stevenson's original plans in May 1999, however, are el.so studyjng the new plans, ·and they are not entirely happy with them. Newport-Mesa investors ride rocky market • Wlt!t new year -and Nasdaq's bumpy start selling on Wall Street It's all rooted in the club's -Black Market Investment Group braces for 1995 origins, when mem- exciting season on Wall Street. bers settled on the Black Monday name -a refer· hut°""°" the chop~ waters of the em-e to the Oct. 1987 craah. 0MYPlu>T Nasdaq ompolito, seeing lt ii a constant reminder ol NEWPORT•MBSA their ~rtfolio gain • stun· the~ o( bUll I_,; nlng 7 % while the '1edl • markets. While the Nit al tble--*k· Welgbtctd Inda shed 39%. •w e Matted \he dub dw· = wodd crMW Md With 2001 beglrililDg to ing one bl the molt ad~ a.It ,..,, the llKk look much nu"' Jnd«'8· ~ In the ltOCJt market. Market ID•llllNat Group 9Clr -tbt N•Mq JOit 158 Mid Cart Miller, the dUb's lolre4. .... PltlMJ ... -dab Kling p.ident. ·rt Memben d .... dllb --t• .-s ...., Would ltmlMt \Ill ..... 'WIMat ~ =--~ .;:;:-:·· ... ... clkillg .-; ..... am. dOWla.· \Al #BTI, 1111 ........ Dl&mg--4 SH~M91M ......... '°...,...._ ·we're still looking at" the plans, said Robin Leffler, the Mesa Verde homeowner who led the coalition of neighbors who opposed Stevenson's remodeling. ·w e have an architect and a lawyer. looking at them too. There's nobody around here that 1ikes that house.• ln 1998, Stevenson began adding a sec- ond story and an attic to her ho.me on Samoa Place. Construction was halted when nejghboring SEE SAMOA PAG£ A6 ·Latest setback divides Newport Coast parents •Some say instead of opening campus in February, they would prefer to wait fdr next school year. Danette Goulet DAILY PILOT NEWPORT COAST -Whtle most pcir· cnts dre tdkmg the ldtest tn d stnng of delays m the operung of d pldnned school in stride. many dre asking why the district was tn a rush to open the campus Last l all dJ\y- w~ . ~The big question is, what wdS the big hurry to open Newport Coast m September 1! they werer'i't sure it would be ready,· said PTA President Denise Molnar, voicing the concerns she has heard from various par- ents. "Why did they push?" Although he called the ongindl 365-day construction schedule aggressive. Mike Fine, the d1strict's assistant supenntenqent of busmess serv1ces, said d1stnct ofhoals believed they would have the new school, scheduled to open Sept. 5 W1lh 350 students in k.mdergarten through sixth gfdde, com- pleted tn b.me. "It was a very aggressive construction schedule,· Fine said. ·Had we not had the wmdow problems, Ill hindsight. we proba- bly wouldn't have had it open Sept. l . It probably would have been Oct. 1." Responsibility for all three of the ma1or delays. Fine said, falls on the Efco Corp., the window manufacturer based in Momett, Mo. First, Fine said, the company didn't deliv- er the windows when they said they would -twice. Then, when the windows finally arrived, the district rejected them because they weren't right. The company's promises of a timely delivery and mismatched product have ensured they will have no shot at being hired again whe n the district's 29 other schools are revamped with the Sl 10-milllon school bond that was passed by voters in June. Fine said. The latest delay, whl.le the dlstnct waits for the replacement windows to arrive at the construction site, is to be sure everything is completed before students and teadrers move in, Fine said. ·we want to have the campus done before we open -tOO%:'he sata. Fine also wants students and the!c famt· lies to have an opportunity to vis.it the cam- pus before the school opens and tee~ have a chance to et up their classrooms m leisure. . When the school finally opens its doors see DELAY PAGE M --•• M Cl.DBS .. ca11mum..,. -All .... • ... At Nll..S • ... • .. Jt&& ... • A2 Saturday, January 6, 2001 Ondy Trane Christeson MORAL OF THE STORY Puttiilg away ornaments, but not sµrit •The omement.-0f a houae l8 the friends who frequent It.• . ' • -Ralph Waldo Emerson - I w hy is it that Christmas is like cooking a complicated gourmet mean-I heard a womari say to her friend. Several ot us were waiting for our num- . bers to be caIJed at the deli in the ~ and 'lhetWo friends were standing next to me. "It seems like you work forever,· she continued, "but then it's over before you. know it. and then you work forever to clean up afterward. It doesn't make sense. "I'm too tired to hurry up, clean up or cook up anything else for anybody. I told my family I'm officially off duty in the kitchen for the next few days. I've declared 1t 'ta.keouttime.' • Everybody within earshot started chuck- ltng. I think we all had similar sentiments . . ' . NEWPORT HAlllOlt LUTHERAN OtURCH Newport· H¥bor Lutheran Church. of Evangelic.II Lutheran Church of Ametic.a, ls dedicated to •4eam- lng the word. a.di~ the w-v, anchored In OWtst. • The worship Is welcoming, frlendty end hos- pitabte. The pastor Is David Monge.~ wonhlp is at 9:15 a.m. The~ are blbllc:.1lly ~ and engaging, using a lot of sto.ytetllng and humor. Sun<My school, for children 4 yMrJ through sixth grade, is at 9:301.m., anct edutt Sunday Khc>ol ls at 10:30 •.m. Chlld care Is provided for the 9:15 a.m. service. During the summer months, Sundly ic.nool is not offered. The church is at 798 Dover Dr1ve, ...-Newport Beach. Information: (949) S.3631. . Daily Pilot about the holiday season. . . I had another good laugh just before . . GREG FRY I DALY Pl.OT leaving the market. While I was unload.iµg .. ___ ...... Cathie Young, ~or ot adult ministries of SL.James Episcopal Churdl, stands In front of the church that wW be decomecrated. my groceries, my cashier was apparently • finishing a conversation with the woman ahead of me. "Tius year, I've made a New Year's reso- lution that I'm pretty sure I can keep,' the cashier said to the woman as she handed her the receipt. "Really? Tell me what it is.l've already · blown some of mine,• the wo~ replied. ·oh, it's simple really. I've resolved that I will put all my Christmas decorations away,· the cashier answered. "That makes sense. By when?' the woman asked. ·Ob, that's the best part,• the cashier said with a smile. "I'm aimiiig so low that even if I bip en this resolution, I'm pretty sure to succeed. I've resolved to have them all put away by Easter.· ~ Even the young man bagging the gro- ceries started laughing. I laughed again as I opened my front door and was greeted with yet more deco- rations waiting to be put away. I've been working for days to box everything. but I keep finding more. • The hardest part for me is always putting away all the colorful holiday cards that decorate my walls and halls. We received so many photo cards, and I love being greeted by all the happy smiles. Everybody who visits stops to look at them, and I do the same at other peoples' houses!( I loved visiting and being visited by fami- ly and friends over the holidays. I enjoyed the fun and good food. but I especially Jovi the different times we shared about what God was teaching us or .doing in our lives. We all bad a mix or joys and highlights, as well as some sadness or regrets. We ,shared a lot of laug~. as well as some tears. But in each oonversation, it was dear we were all thankful for God's love and faithful- ness. I also 9ejlSed that we're eager to see · what God has planned for us in the new year. I'm pretty confident I can have my dec- orations put aW&y long before Easter oomes around But as far as my family and friends are conoemed. tho6e are ornaments I don't have to pack away. I'm looking forwaid to enjoying them all year long. And you can quote me on that • CN>Y ~ CHISTISON Is a Newport Beach resident who speeks frequently to perentlng groups. She may be reached vie e-mail at dndyOonthegrow.com or through m. mell at '.O. Box 6140, No. 505, ~ B•ed\, CA 92658. Parishioners of St. James Ep~opal Chtirch, which will be deco~ecrated, tom down and rebuilt, take a look back· Dale's grandmother, Mar- aret Prick. taught him bow to kneel on the kneelers ot St James Epilcopal Oturch when be was a little boy. She taught him bow to pull out the padded rests from the bottom, when to kneel and what it means to pray with reverence. She held his hand as they walked up to take communion and gave him a prayer book when~ he was 9. It was one of the nicest gifts Dale ever received, be said. Sunday, he will sit in the pews at St. James and remember the feel of the padded kneelers, the skin of his grand.mother's hands Miii CAlllDAI READQIS~ (949)642~ Reawd ~ c:ommentl ~ ttw O.ilv "lot or news tip&. CA 92QC. ~No l'le'M ~ ,.. ~ edctoNI ~ or ~-.ts._..., can be ~ wlchollt wriU8\ per· nMlllon of cowtght ~. VOL 15, NO. 6 .,..,.,~. Editor u.c.-... a.,~ , ...... ----~ldltlor •I UlllilWW.. ....... fdllor --('Ml--..... ........... ........ .......... .... ~ --· ,., ......... ..,W!ZA .......... UlmJllll I flu • a .. I ADDIESS Our addrWll ls 3)() w. lay St.. ~ M9N,.CA 92621. HOW TO BEACH us ClfalWDft Thit ""'* Of.ng4t County (ll>O) 2SM141 ~ ..... Ol9lfled ~ '42·5171 Ollpllr tttt> I04J21 ......... ...... 142..., .... JM.4Z2) - ........ , ...... ,10 lofNI: --· ••lfm II _,, -.oa. ..... 0Mm~ta.m1 ....... ..,IJ"71JI ........ .... ca:....,.., .... .................. ,..... ________ _.. E · from .the pews and bow she talked to the Pf\ests· even outside the church doors, for the la5t time. The 54-year:old redbrick build- ing, located at Via Udo and Lafayette Avenue, will be decon- secrated at a 5 p.m .. ceremony Sunday. "' By next Christmas, the city's first Episoopalian church will be tom down and replaced with a larger fadllty to accommodate the win parish. which' has now ~ch~ 560 families. The build- ing now fits onlY. about 300, Tue proje,ct is part .a a ~er remodeling of the pari$h's' build- ings, which include a new ball. day school and administration building that opened four years ago. The congregation bas grown about 20% since these buildings opened, leoving little room for new parish- ioners, espec:ially the children. The new chwcll will cost about $3.4 million, but about $1.8 miU1on has already been raised, church leaders said. Congregants will attend services at what ~ to be a bank across the street until the .. tioo of Orange County Will hold a speaaJ evening event. "Geli-em Society u~. • from 5:30 lo '1:30 p.m. Jan. 21 at HabaDa Restaurant, 2930 Brta- tol St., a.ta MeN. The event ta for ltngles ••ut~ couplet between 2.5 ~ 45. A rainbnum p~ of S12 to the Jewish FYI • What: St. James Episcopal Church deconsecratlon • When: 5 p.m. Sunday • Where: St. James. 3209 Via Lido, Newport Beach • c.n: (949) 67S-0210 . new church is buill For Dale, 50, this means the end of a lifelong tradition but the begianing of a fresli batch or memories. As a young boy living in Bever- ly Hills, be visited Prick every summer in Newport Beach and attended St. James on the week- ends. Now a local resident. be has been an active member of the church since 1976. . . . Cousins were baptiz.ed there and la1e grandparents were given their memorial service$ in the'. nave, including Frick. •Tue life of the church at St James has been profoundly impactful on my life,• he said. "I Pederation Anllual Culpaign .. r9qulred. (114) '155-5555, Ext. 225. can picture and visualize so many things." • • Betsy Shelton, a Newport Beach resident and member of St. James for four years, remembers one particular service about the Holy Eucb.arl.st a y~ ago. The message moved her. • "It just really took it to a more personol level: Shelton said. •1 really felt that I truly was in the presence of the Lord, at bis table, rather than just going through a particular liturgy and type of service.• When she thinks of SL James, she also smells the ocean. The cbW'Cb, which Shelton delaibes as an "elegant, classic Jady," is a bit musty at times, with the sine1l of sea bree7.e flowing through the windows. "So it just has a really comfort- able feeling to it.· she said. For Dale, the church has the 4Tagrance ol incense. ~ "When we pray, the prayers 8l'e lifted to God in a sense,• he said .The incense fills the chwd>., and these are lasting memories for me.• WIATJlll AID SUIF POLICE FILES llMl'IM1UMS hlboa· 72143 eorona del Mar 12143 CostaMese 72143 Newport Beach 72143 NMpott eo.t • n.tiU W.a.cAIT ~to~ wevtl~~ J.fOoWl#tdfw mndldo•• tt 1he P'er . Srftll.,...,. lldln. • TIDa TODAY first low 1:11 p.m .................... .0.41 F1m high 5:52 •.m ..... --......... ..5.87 s.condlow "-~· .. --.r\I• SecondNgh 7;)1 p.m,, __ ......... -•. l . .W ~y FW.tow U."07 a.m.--... -1.91 Anthlgh l:l4 •""""--UI s.aiiniao. 1:SJ ·-·1• s.co..lhllh . 1:JO ......_,___u2 • COSTA.MESA • De Som ~ A new ruat scootef was noi.n from an open ~age In the 2000 blodt shortly eftet 2 p.m. Thunday. • South eo.t Dr"'9: A .w w. broken Into In 1he 1000 bk>dt shortly befwe 7 •.m. ~ • ....... co.t "-: A burglwy WW ,....,.. at Ml<y's ~ 5'a'9 .t 7·40 p.m. ,,.,,..., . NEWPOkT llAOt • al at II "-* A w.f bfolte Into 1 hom9 In thi 1100 block• Role• tDt.111 of 11.900 wiam .,,_......,,.,... •&hMrblt •inJPJft;MoMiyWU ... t i> • ••• lw 'II! Awwbraliln1Mo1n ... .-_..,,............._ •&cca..•--.....,. ....... ..... m '' Daily Pilot '\ . Saturday, Joouory 6, 2001 A3 It's my turn to .encroach on Fairview Park encroachers S wan Drive in Cost.a Meso ls a nice, quiet street with homes on the south side of the Mesa Verde neighborhood that ,. weeds and a satellite dish that is now being used as a coffee table or a wading pool -I couldn't tell. heanng or h.l!e a consultant or perfonn some other form of bureaucratic nonsense. Guillory told rne, I won't have to pay any property tax. .. back up to the north end of • Fairview Park. club who were conducting their preflight checks. (I'm 1n · the park often ll!'d it's occurred to me that these guys do a lot more checlo.ng than they do Oying. It reminds me of tbe •fishermen• who bring more beer th.an bait. but that's another column.) 3. The famous tUo bdr IS a huge d1sappoinbnent. I had hoped to be invtted over the fence for mint Julep or per- haps even something a little Webster Guillory doesn't seem to have any trouble making a deos1on on this one. He told me the Swarues are gwlty of sometlung called •adverse possession of public land.• Those glider guys can stay m my park And the IIam people too. The rest of you will have to cough up a conbibubon to my new and unproved bkJ bar tf you want to VJS•l ,., The park, you may recent, is a scruffy parcel of land(t ' about the size of two Disney- lands, but that's just my rough estimate. Running 'through FaiIView Park is Pla- centio Avenue. Several of the residents on the south side of Swan Drive have taken it upon them- selves to annex portions of Fairview Park, which is owned by Cos~ Mesa. The expanded property lines are a few hundred square feet each; except for one enter- prising homeowner who seems to have plans to gath- er enough public land to raise cattle. It should be noted that not all Swan Drive residents have annexed public land. The debate in town has San J Miso Soup Cup Steve Smtth WHAT'S UP? been whether the residents are doing anything illegal or immoral or both since the land they've grabbed is rarely used by anyone. The same Claim could be made about the entire Fai.rvlew Park. On Monday, J made the first of two trips to the land of the scofflaw squatters to see for mysell what the fuss was all about. At 9 a.m., there were six people in the park, not mduding the members of the radio-controlled gliqer At 3 p.m .• I ventured back out with my crack investiga- tive reporting team, which consisted of my wife, Cay, my daughter, Bean. my son, Roy. and his friend Kohl Jones. We rode our bikes over to the property Imes of the Swan Drive homes and began our uwesllgauon. Here's what I learned: 1. The population of Fairview Park tnples m the afternoon. There must hdve been 18 people in the huge park Monday. 2. The homeowners who have taken over the most land -sizable pieces of property -have filled 1t with cheap plastic furniture. d garden that couldn't grow r• .. •c. . • ~ Mail Older 1.(.800} • S9S'1 61#1 ()IOM5-l ~ · more lively, but the liki bar is out of commission and needs d pick-me-up in a hurry. 4. The crack team was more interested in tossing pebbles into a nearby wash tharl assisting me m my efforts to wm a Pulitzrr Pnze for invesbgabng lhls story. We came away with one main conclusion we did not think '4{as posSJble These encroachers have actudlly made theu annexations look worse than the pdrk itself. The curious part 1s that the city doesn't seem lo Cdre instead of unmed1ately tssu- ing an order to get off the public land and return 11 to 1ts natural scrufhness. city ofhoals chose to have a "The homeowners cannot take public land,• he said. Take Guillory's word for it and don't quesllon b1m-=... he's the county dssessor. So here's my plan: Because the homeowners claun a nght to the land because "no one· uses il and because the oty cannot see its way clear to chasmg them off, I am hereby qnnexing all of F81l"Vlew Park and claim- ing 1( dS my own. The park 1s obvtously used far below 1,ts capacity and the city doesn't seem to care whether residents take over tls property, so I am now. the nghUul owner. And according to the gwdellnes ••• My brother-in-law, Bud West. redds the Daily Pilot online from his home in Stockton He 1S an elemen- tary school pnnapal who knows ht'> stuff, and when be tells me I've mdde a IDJSta.ke, I listen Ldst week. I credited the dftl'>I Chnsto with erect- mg d CU!ldlfl ctcross -a Califor- nld canyon It WdS, m fact, a yellow fence m Sonoma County I dm sorry for the error • STEVE SMITH IS a Costa Mesa r~s1dent and freelance writer Readers may leave a mess.age for him on the Daily Pilot hothne at . (949) 642 6086 Lundt Special Penne with Roasted Garlic & Artichoke Hearts Pt!nne pasta lightly ~with roasted p,arlic. fat~ mozzerella. artichoke hearts & red bell i)eppers. Served with Chef Akasha's Frozen Entree Casseroles Locto. .. N7aMt Free a small dinner salad. Sff Choice of dressing 95 Serwd All Day • Pasta au Crats' • Tortilla • Florentine 399 •Com & Bean • REG. '4.99 9.5 WESTSCW. IMAGINE FOODS SOY DREAM I.M. Healthy Soy Nut Butter PeanutFtee •Creamy • ... Non Dairy Soy Beverage •Vanilla ~ •Plain ~oz REG. '2.45 • 32 OZ. :\. , .. \\ .\ 1 . \ ~ ~ ( ) \\. ~ •• Original • With·Raisinss-949 REG. '3.. -....-., 12 m. KASHI Go Lean Bars • OiocolalR Peanut 8uJtl!r • Strau'1eny Vanila anic Soy Milk Hlglt In Sof Aotftn, -I.ct~ •Vanilla· s.-.n •,Plain . -....-., 17 REG. "3.49 64 az. Sea Point Farm · Fro7.en E.damame V*table Soy Bean Rice Bowls •Mild 91~ Rm.~.99 •Dark •Crunchy •No Sugar REG. '4.915 .:2. ~ Yogurt ~7So; REG. ~.75 2.75 OZ. YOU ~AVE UP TO $15 00 1 • MGH PROTEIN • LOW CARR • DIET KIT . Kit Includes • The on,Jaal Tt.e:a~ Diet Formala : • Dletary Malti-Vitamia FREE • ~ Protem tow ean Meal·~ Greenwich Diet • = ~aal s-9 A99 Book -$21.95 VaJue REG. "19.99 -~ ~ METABOUFI' MEAL MET.ABOLIFI' 111ERMO-llEPLMDllM' OR SNACK GENIC DIET FORMUIA •a...N .... ...,_..._. • D'" I • •V..-. ._ .... a..a ... S• A99 ....... ~1'•0Z. 1000 ~9399 •• SUOG.tt.15 , • JASON 'S Natural . Biotin Shampoo or Conditioner SUGG.~2.• G Seed ':r1ract .. -11211 ___ 1 ~99 IUGG. '23.95 -~ 3D Clps • .. -·- . • • , . A4 Saturday, January 6, 2001 Doily Pilot Designer labels rriarked dawn at Nordstrom COSTA MISI can COUNCii Inside CITY HALL WHAT HAPPENED: The Oty Council agreed Mort day to ask city staff to draft a pof- ky revision to allow a city organi- zation to ~ exempt from charges associated with using city facilities and equipment. WHAT rT MEANS: If the council pMSeS the ordt- nance at a future meeting. the Ser- vice Organization Counc.11, which began meeting years ago at the request of city offldals. will be' able to meet at City Hall. The city ~i­ cy allows only non- profit groups to use city facilities, but If the revised ordinance i.s approved, any organization in which at least half of the members are Costa Mesa residents will be allowed to use city buildings at no charge on a first come, first served basis. VOTE: 3·1, with Councilman Chris Steel dissenting and Councilman Gary Monahan absent WHAT HAPPENED: The council denied Mayor Libby Cowan's proposal to con- vert the mayor's office Into workstations for all five council members. The workstations w0uld have included desks with filing drawers and a telephone for ea.h council member, as well as a small confer- ence table and chairs for meet- ings. Each council member would have also received a city computer that he or she could have set up at @COMMUNflY CHURCH CONGREGATIONAL .UNITED CHURCH Of CHRIST To s.llrtt ls to C..; To C.. ls to DO. ' Bruce Van Blair, Minister Chip Fisher, Pastor -Worship Service - 8:00 & 10:00 am 9:-00am Adult Church Schqol 10:00am-Sunday~ *Child C..-e Provided 611 Heliotrope Ave .. Corona del Mar (949) 6«-7 400 9 HARBOR CHRISTIAN CHURCH .l (DlaclplH of Ct1rlst) 2401 lrvln1 Ave. 1t S1nu IUbel Newport hecll Sund1y Worship -10:00AM Dr. Dennis W. lboft lllftillef (949) 845-5781 FYI starting Wedne$d&y. NEXT MEETING you can find deals on • Wh9t: Costa Mesa City desigher clothing at Councll meeting the Nordstrom semiannual • WNn: City Hall, 77 Fair collectors and couture con- Drive, Costa Mesa solida.!!gn clearance sale. • wt..: 6:30 p.m. Jan. 15 The final sale of the season • call: 014) 754-5028 will have an additional 15% off all fall and winter the ~tlon Of' at home dur-designer apparel that's reer Wylder Ing the terms. already reduced 60~. The sale will end Jan. 14 . Nord- WHAT rr MEANS: strom is at South Coast BEST BUYS The project. which was not Plaza in Costa Mesa. lnfor-,, included In the 2000..()1 budget. mation: (714) 549-8300. of last season, colors that was expected to cost $19,070. have been discontinued in VOTE: U you are ever in need of hosiery and bodywear. The The council took votes on two a television repair service, sale starts today and ends different office plans. and dead-Mike's TV & VCR Service J&n. 14. Information: (714) locked both times, with two mem-Center is very reliable and 556-7900. ben voting for the stations and repairs all makes and mod- two voting against. els. The shop offer~ in-home The America"' Cancer service, carry-ins and free Society's Dhcovery Sho p in WHAT THEY SAID: estimates. Mike's can repair Corona del Mar is having its ·1 think It's demeaning for our TVs, VCRs, video cameras, annual after-Christmas sale, elected leaders to have to conduct CD players, stereos and busln1$S on their laps in some o:x-with all furniture and pinter ner of the building.• said Costa microwave-Ovens. It also clothing reduced 25% to Mesa resident Tom Egan. "I mean, offers a home theater instal-75%. Also, all furs, leather really, why not have them meet In a .lation service. Mike's TV & and ski apparel are 75% off. park under a tree 1 It costs 50me-VCR S~rvice Center is at There is a generous dona- thing to run a busineu or a city, and 2610 Avon St., Unit B, New-tion for art collectors of appearances~ mean something.· port Beach. Information: signed and numbered WHAT HAPPENED: (94~) 650-4700. watercolors, serigraphs,· and lithographs. Discovery Shop The council voted to allow The best of the beS'NJ:t. Bart. a police service is at 2600 E. Coast High- ~ dog. to ,..;,. ond to hosiery is on sale at Wol-way. Information: (949) 640- be bought by his ford Bouttque in South 4777 . partner, retired Offi· Coast Plaza. The semian-· cer Paul Ellis. ( nual sale has selected There aJe more than 100 VOTE: autumn/winter fashion wrought-iron beds available 4-0, with Monahan absent f merchandise reduced 30% at Newport Bedding, and tQ 50%. The sale merchan-all of them are reduced dise is mostly trend items · 30% to 50%. The b~ds are Newport •rbor Luther•n Church """'", • .,. .. ..., ... (LL.C ~·· TM Dov• Dr. Newpot't llMoh Tredblonal Lutheran hatorO.vfdMOnge· WONhlp Servtc. wttll Hoiv Communion ......_yth1Sem II ClllLD CAR• AVAILAllL• (149) 548 3&31 New.,on C.catet United M'ethodUt Church Rev. C.athlecn Coou, ~or 1601 Maiguericc Ave. comer of Marguerite and San J~uiri Hills Rd (949) 644--0745 &m Quin Wonhip Service I Oam Wor1hip and Chi/Jrm's Sumllzy School Yci111h mttrint Wttlt ==:!rdJ~.!J First UnJted Medtodilt Cbutdl ol COlta Mesa 420 West l9tJa Street, COlta Mesa Fati..aGIWonMp lO:OOam IUc:har4 L £wtiic, hltor Ourm Sct.ool ,._a 10:15am 9'9-548-7727 \\int Michael &!II Angels P.dflc: y,_ 11 Margumr. • Coron. Jd Mi; • 644-0463 MnLDlNG OUR FAl71I: WV1NG OlRJST AND SERYING OUR <DMMUNTT'Y. The Rl!'v'd Pctef 0 . Haynes, Rector SUNDAX SCHEDULE 8 am • Holy Eucbari•t 9 am -Adult Bible Study 10 am -Cbonl Eucharist SAINT JAMES CHURCH EPISCOPAL :=~-~~ The Very Re¥: Canon David Andenon, Rec:tor 3209 VIO lido Newpoft Beodi 9-'9/675-0210 • 7:30 om Traditional., 9am~ 9 om Church Sc:hocil 10: "5 om Charismatic: ondW Noon "A God-ccmcrcd parish community, insrruclcd bt die Word of God and renewed by. die Sacraments Our Lady Quee n of Angel s 2046 Mar Visia Drive Newport Beach, California 92660 (949)644-0200 Fax (949)644-1349 Rev. 'Monsignor William P. McLauitfilin, P.Ulor . UTURGm.5: Saturday, 5 p.~[Canror), Sunday, 7:00 (Quiet), 8:30 (Cooremporuy), 10:00 (Choir), 11 :30 a.m. (Canror) and 5:00 p.m. (Contemporary) FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST.SCIENTIST 3303 Via Lido Newport 8ecEh 673·1340 or.673-{)150 O\urch 10 am lc 5 pn. Sunday School 10 CDD Wl<Swmt M11eD1gt 8 pm SECOND CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 3100 P<x:iflc vieW Dr. Newport Beach 644-2617 or 675-4661 O\urdl lOam SUnday School 10 am =rr!:' EIDdUs 15:18 • •four New Year's ~Jf-A11es1mmt · Questions" (Mal'fhcw '3:33·37) ready for immediate deliv· ery. Newport Bedding i$ at 1534 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. Store hours are 9 a.m. to 6 p:m. weekdays, 10 a.m. to S p.m. Saturdays and noon to 5 p.m. Sun· days. Information: (949) 646-3991. If you're already a fan of the beautiful interior designs by Barbara Barry, you'll probably love her Tranquility collection of crystal that she designed for Baccarat BouUque in South Coast Plaza. The col- lection includes tumblets, goblets, carafes, vases, can· dlesticks and more. The crystal is done in clear and her signature color, 'green tea. Wine glasses and water goblets in green tea are . priced from $245 from $250, and in clear from $130 to $135. The clear 'decanter is $495. Baccarat Boutique is on the mall's first floor, near Saks Fifth Avenue. Informa- tion: (714) 435-;%60.-- A children's portrait sale is underway at Yuen Lui in South Coast Plaza. For ·$19.95, you may choose- from six color proofs and get one 8-by-10 photo, reg· ularly a $52 value. The pho- to sitting must be made by Feb. 28 te take advantage of the offer. There's an adcli- CHOOSE YOUR HOUSE WISELY When you are looking for a ho.me. there arc some points you should consider when making your selection: •Check the physical condition of the property. •Is the land area ~uitable, is it too big or 100 small? •What about the location-are' shops. schools, doctors convenient? •Assess the interior design-will the layout wort or can it be modified to suit your needs'! •Take into account your furniture. but don't let it dictate your decision. • If the house has been renovated recently. did the local building department issue a pennit and wau the worlc approved? • Is there any development or road construction planned for the general area? •Arc there tenants ~urrently leasing the house? You might have to compromise on some of these things-no house is perfect-but consider these issue.<i and choose the best for yourself. Lylecn and Jeff have 29 consecutive years of real esta1.e experience in Newport Beach. For professional setVice or advice with all your real CliCatc needs caD Che E '1fiop at COILit Newport Propet*s . Coldwdl Banker (N9) 759-3796. tional $5 fee for two or more children. Yuen Lui is on the mall's third level in the Crate & Barrel wllig. Infor- mation: (714) 545-8845. Summerhill Floral & Gifts is having a 50% off sale on potted ivy, orchids, topiaries and all floral arrangements. The store is at 369 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. Information: (949) 646-6745. There are two plays on the stage this month at South Coast Repertory Tbea'(e, 655 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. #A Del- icate Balance" by Pulitzer Priz~er Edward Albee will pen Friday and run· through Feb. 11 . There are low-priced previews play- ing ~ow. The other play, "Bosoms and Neglect," is a dark comedy written by the author of "Six Degrees of Separation." Low-priced previews will begin Jan. 23. The play will officially open Jan. 26 and run,__ through Feb. 25. Tickets· and information: (714) ., 708-5555. • BEST BUYS is published Thursdays and Saturdays. Send information to Greer Wylder at the Daily Pilot. 330 W. Bay St, Costa Mesa, CA 92627, or by fax to (949) 646-4170. WHY PAY DEPT STORE PRICES? Visit our AREA RUG STUDIO Rugs & Runners on Sale .. Doily Pilot . . Saturday, Jonuory 6, 2001 As Bay Club work forces service groups to move meetings Newport Beach police promotes 5 ,. ( c HANGING LOCA-TION: In November, the Balboa Bay Oub -began a SSS.million expan- lion p rog:rani, which bas f<n'ed several community groups to find a new meeting location. The Rotary Oub of Newport Beach Sunrise has met at 7:30 a.m. Tuesdays year-round at the Bay Club Jim de Boom for yeaxJ. Rdtary O ub Presi- dent Ron Millar said after 0 COMMUNITY & CLUBS lengthy search a new meeting location haS' been found at the Newport Harbor Nautical George Cote, Bruce Coye, Musewn's Riverboat Restau-Wayne Crawford. John rant. beginning this Tuesday Dalenla. Flynn Loback. Ed at 7:30 a.m. McFarland, Charlie Markel, The 70-member Com-Jim Mlller, Fred Owens, Joe modores Club or the Newport Panartsl, Pete Peterson. Harbor Chamber of Com-Quenttn Quinn, John merce, which bas met twice a month at the Bay Oub for Richards, Jlm Schabarum, decades, is also moving its Don Stevens, Fran Ursini and meetings to the Riverboat Stuart Warrick. Restaurant From all accounts, it was a successful tournament and BUSY CLUB: In addition to the help or the Costa Mesa participating in traditional Krwarus-etatnv~tty holiday sel'Vlce club activi-appreoated. ties and with their families, members or the Costa Mesa LOOKJNG FOR GIFTS: Kiwarus Club spent four Newport-Balboa Rotary Club days between Christmas and member Dr. Millard New Year's Day as volun-MacAdam will lead a group teers at the Costa Mesa of four non-Rotarian young High School Girls Basketball • adults to Australia for a Winter Classic. monlhlong stay in March with Finding extra time in their Australian Rotanans and their holiday schedule were lamilies as they explore Aus- VILLA BELLA Consignment Furniture, T ime to redecorate your villa? T hink Villa Bella Old \Vo rid Fu ropl·.rn Hair (949) 515-1884 ~ 369 E. 17th St. • Across from Ralphs 11110 & Tustin) Mon-Sat ·• 10:30 -6:00 pm tral.ian culture, family life and various professions. MacAdam is seeking appro- priate gifts for the Rotary tam- ilies hosting the group study exchange team members. The~ gifts for adults and cllil . If your company has gifts such as pocket calculators, quality pens, CDs, cassette tapes, T-shirts and caps left over from the Christmas sea- son and would Wee some recognition in Australia, call MacAdam at (949) 644-5552. He will arrange for a pick up of the items. MacAdam and the team members will deliver friend- stup gifts to the Rotanans and their families in Aus- tralia on behalf the Newport- Balboa Rotary Club and businesses in the Newport- Mesa commuruty. WORTH REPEATING: From the Newport Beach- Corona del Mar KJwarus Club newsletter Scuttlebutt: ·For every action, there t.'i dil equ~ and opp<>SJte government pro- grdffi • SERVICE CLUB MEET· INGS NEXT WEEK: Want lo get more involved in your community. make new fnends. neMork or to glVe somettung back to your com- Now In Progress MEN'S & LADIES' SPORTSWEAR, Golf Bags,· Golf Shoes, \ & many other. items. Mon -·Fri 8:30 am -7:30 pm Sot & Sun 8:00 am -5:30 pm .... ., ...... J. 3100 Irvine Avenue • N.wport leach ---2· ... munity? 1'ry a service dub. You are invited to attend a dub meeting next week. Many dubs will buy your first guest meal. • ' MONDAY: , 6:30 p4 -The Harbor Mesa Lions Club will meet at the Costa Mesa Country Club. The featured speaker will be Ronald J. Van Winkle, executive director of Ronald MacDonald House. TUESDAY: 7:30 a.m. -The Newport Beach Sunnse Rotary Club will meet at the Newport Har- bor Naubcal Museum's River- boat Restaurant. 6:30 p.m. -The Costa · Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions Club will meet at the Costa Mesa Golf apd Country Club. WEDNESDAY: 7:15 a.m. -The Costa Mesa Orange C0c1st Break.fast Llons Club will meet dt Mimi's Cafe ror a progrdffi by WW1am Dewan.an on ·Drinking Water Problerru.," the South Coast Metro Rotary Club,. will meet dl the Center Club, and the Newport I lar- bor Kiwanis Club will meet at the University Alhlellr Club Noon -The Ordilge Coast Exchd.nge Club will meet at the Bahtd C-onnUudJl Yacht Club for a business meeting. 6 p.m. -The Rotary Oub of Newport-Balboa (http://www.newportbalboa. org) will meet at the Bahia Corinthian Yacht Oub to bear DT. Jim Fallon discuss UCI's neuroscience program. ' THURSDAY: 7:30 a.m. -The Costa Mesa Orange Coast Breakfast Lions Club will meet at Mimi's cate. Noon -The KJwarus Club of Costa Mesa will meet at the Holiday ror Eagle Pnde pre- sentabons. the Newport .Beach-Corona del Mar Kiwa- rus Club will meet at Bahl.a Corinthian Yacht Oub. the Exchange Club or Newport Harbor will meet at the River- ~t Restaurant to hear Jack Molso discuss radio-con- trolled model airplanes. and the Newport lrvme Rotary Club (http://www.nuotary.org) will meet at the lrvme Mar- nott Hotel to hear about tbe new Mars rover from the Interplanetary Sooety. • COMMUNfTY • a.&.eS is published Saturdays. Submit information about service club meetings to Jim de Boom, 2082 S.E. Bristol, Suite 201, Newport Beach. CA 92660-1740, by fax to (949) 660-8667 or by e-mail to 1deboomOaol.com NEWPORT BEACH They're movm' on up -to deluxe positions on the force. Five Newport Beach pohce officers, two sergeants and thr~ detectives were promoted Friday morning. bY Ctuer Bob McDonell. "I'm the qappiest guy on the planet,· S&d newly pr<> mated Sgt. Steve Koudelka. Bob Oakley. formerly a sergeant with the belioopter program. IS now a lielftenant; and John Klem, supelVISOr of del.ectlves. tias cilso earned the rank or lieutenant. Koudel.Kd, Dale Johnson and Bill Hd.rtford became sergeants. Johnson. previous- ly an officer m the crimes against people diVl.Sion, will rerruun m that department. Hdrtford .will move from the · • vtce cUld intelligence diVlSlon to the patrol diVlSlon. Koudel- ka, will rem!Un m the trauung 1 and per'>onnel dJVlS1on, where ht> \\'ct.<i d background mvestigdtor. The Newport Beach Pohce Oepdrtmenl. filled positlons left VdCcUlt after the recent retlrements of Sgt, • Albert Fisher. Sgt Kent Stod- ddfd dnd Lt Don Chandler -Danette Goulet ...... &ctptional anti(uts of (u.litlj ran9in9 from T,IJJSU chtsts to small tnasures anJ uni(ut bronze anJ stont fJ'ArJtn pitets. ClrintSt anti(uts from a llistin9 uislrtJ uritnt41 art colltctor. Prints • Bronzes • Baskets • Screens • Scrolls • Porcelain • Clothing • Dolls • Ceramics • Lacquer • Kimonos • & Much More lilly .--i . . ...... 3441 ·C Via Lido (Ne;ir Vons P;ivol1on1 Newport Beach (<)!Jl)) 72)-~002 ,,nn S11 11l;ion f>prn $700 ...... • • A6 So!urday, January 6, 2001 DELAY CONTINUED FROM A 1 Feb. 26, the only things that will need be done are fut-up items, such as repainng dents and chlpped pa.mt, F'me said. The new date, however. has parents divided. Some say they would prefer students 1ust stdy at Lincoln Elemen· MARKET CONTINUED FROM A 1 Miller, who Laves m Costa Mesa, Sd.Jd the club sold most of its postbons in Cis<;o Sys- tems Inc., Noloa Corp. and drug-delivery g1dnt B1ovail Corp before the market went mto its end-of-the-year tatl- splll Cashlng out of the market m downturns IS also a prdcbce predched by rddlO talk show host d{ld Newport Heights resident Doug Fdbld.O A selJ·proclcWTled ·maver- ick· mvestor, Fdbld.O ddVlSes hlS llstenerS to use stop-loss ordprs -d sell order tnggered when d stock fdlls to a set pnce POET CONTINUED FROM A 1 told hl'r '>he I!. no l.onger to share rt•ligwus prdyers pllb- bcly bPfore n1ed!s "You mcly choose to say 'thank vou' pnor to the noon mEld), which 1s qwte accept- able. hut we must. given the ethruc dnd reti91ous dlvers1ty of our cqsnmumty, refrafn from bemg 111 any way con- stru~d ac; maybe bemg denorrunal1ondl, • said Loredclna Biro, executive director of U1e Seruor Meals and Services. . Goelman Sd1d ruors may bless the fo , bless lhe weather the ddy, but t.ary School for the remahvfer of the year and wait to move until the fall. • 1 think they should slow down and take a look at what the advantages are to moving in February as opposed to holding off until the next school year and taking anoth- er look at traffic issues, partic- ularly porking and cbildren crossing Newport Coast,• parent Steven Pink said. That way, investors don't ride a stock down to the depths, Fabian's investment advisor Ed Foster said . •we are recommending to people to be 100% in c.ash right now,• Poster said. Foster and the Black Mon- day members said investors should brace for more volatili- ty in the market, despite the Na.sdaq's 14 % gain Wednes- day, which Foster attributed to short-sell covering. •People's attitudes are still 'tech is the place to be,'• Fos- ter said about callers to Fabi- an's Saturday morning show on KLSX-FM (97.1). ·sut there's still a lot or downside risk." Investors can learn about the tax consequences of sell- ing a stock from Costa Mesa- . . Others say they understand the delays-as most Newport Coast parents are building new homes -but they want to get the liChool operating as 5000 as possible. •The school needs to be up and running,• said Allan ntder, whose child was scheduled to attend the sixth grade at the new school. •1t•s there, it's relatively done, we should utilize it.• based sen Signal. The invest· ment firm. founded in 1999, launched a Web site - http://www.sellsignal.com - to educate investors about when to buy, sell and hold a stock. Sell Signal co-fou,nder Rieb Finkelman could not be reached for comment Researching and pie.king stocks can be a rigorous process. Black Monday mem- bers said. By pooling their knowledge and resources - they each chip in about $50 a month -the club members find common ground before buying any1hing. •We're aggressive,• Black Monday member Kathy Spain said. ·eut we have to find something that appeals ro everyone before we jump in.· -· -~------.... -Wllhout religious connota-cenlE;r held a Hanukkah lions. mendrah-lighting_. ceremony "The meals are served by and -sum~ nonreligious Senior Meals,• she Said. "It's Christmas programs. includ· a federally funded program, mg cho11 performances and and federally funded . pro-decorating events. Goelman grams cannot mix church said she believes the center and state.· stuck to its policy. Saying "Thank you. God. •Hanukkah is not a reb- for the food we eat· is gious holiday, it's a festivity.• acceptable, Goelman said. Goelman said. ·we just tried ·All religions believe in to make i~ happy for the God,· she said, adding that seniors during the holiday.· she hasn't run across center For Knowles, happiness is attendees who do not found partly in sharing her believe in God. art. She said she has received ·1 would love to have the complamts from other opportunity to have The seniors at the center about Chronicle publish my poetry the prayers being said before because there's a message in lunch but not about the pub-them.• she said. "God gives lished poems. us talents to use, and I'd like During the holidays. the to use what I can." SABATINO'S Lunch • Dinner • Sunday Brunch 251 Shipyard Way • Newpor\ Beac~ Please call for hours. directions & reservatt0ns. -•. 3C (949) 723-0621 d Enjoy a Spacious Suite, Sumptuous Dining, Entertainment, Bingo, Crafts, Billiards, Beauty Salon, Transportation to Doctor, Shopp~ Fun Trip , Friendly Caring People. From $1,495/Mo. 2283 Fairview at Wilson Co taMeea Minimum age 58 For more information pleue calla ~---~1G8 11 .. SAMOA CONTINUED FROM A 1 residents complained to the city that the additions violated wning codes. . Daily Pilot Although Stevenson had building permits, dty offi- cials stopped construction, saying the attic was a third story and not allowed. Stevenson filed a lawsuit against the city in January 2000, alleging the council's decision was unfair because city planners, after review- ing he.r blueprints, granted her building permits for the renovations with the under-DON LEACH / DAlV Pltor standing that it was an attic. · Remodeling plans for the Samoa Place house have been The lawsuit ended ln a source of contention and litigation In Costa Mesa. June, when the city agreed ""to-.-....u pay Stevenson $260,000 to taper the roof on the home, lowering the height of the attic from 30 feet to 27 112 feet, she said. "Nothing will ever make up for the anguish it's cost us.• she said. "I won't know until its done if the $260,000 (will cover expenses of revamping plans). It's cost me almost $40,000 in attorney Gettin1 4 lRVOLVED • GETTING INVOLVED runs period- ically in the Daily Pilot on a rotating basis. If you'd like Information on adding-l'QlJ_r Qfgan1zat1on to this ~ist. call (949) 5744228. ALSASSN., ORANGE COUNTY CHAPTER The Amyotrophic Lateral Selerosi.5 Assn., whicll helps ~vidual's that have the dis- order that is also known as Lou Gehrig's disease, needs volunteers. (714) 375-1922 ,AlZHEIMER'S ASSN. OF ORANGE COUNTY Support group leaders, Visit- ing . Volunteers, family resource consultants and office volunteers are needed. Volunteers can work on one- time projects or ongoing pro- fees, and I've been renUng a place in adctition to tv.;o mort- gages.• Stevenson was also required to move a portion at the front or her house back to adhere to setback regula- tions, according to the settle- ment. Stevenson maintains even now that lhe attic she was grams. Training sessions are avai!able. (800) 660-1993. AMERICAN CANCER SOOETY The Orange County Region of the American Cancer Soo- ety seeks office volWlteers. The society is also seeking volWlteers to answer calls for the urut's Helplme lnioCen- ter (949) 26 l :9446 AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY DISCOVERY SHOP The American Cancer Soa- ety Discovery Shop needs unwanted goods. such as clothmg. fmruture, ~ accessones. anbques dlld col- lectibles, to fund the sooety's research , educa1.ion and patient services programs. The goods can be dropped off at 2600 E. Coast Highway, Corona <lei Mar. Volunteers are also needed from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday at the same loc;a- tion. (949) 640-4777. bUllding ongmally con- formed to aty codes. She sees the city's willing- ness to settle and quick agree- ment to pay the large sum as an unspoken admission of wrongful action, she said. As building resumes, both neighbors and aty officials said they will keep an eye on Uungs. AMERICAN CANCER SOOETY ROAD TO RECOVERY Thi$ traiisporfafion program needs volunteers to dnve cancer patients to and from medical treatments free of charge. The reqwred com· autmenl lS a few hours each week or month. Dnvers need a valld driver's license and insurance and must be al least 25 years old. Volunteers may use either thelt own vehicles or American Cancer Society vans. (949) 261-9446 or scomer@cancer.org. AMERl<;AN HEART ASSN. The American Heart Assn is looking for volunteers to perform various general. office duties in the main office and implement edu- cational and fund-ra1S1 ng event~ through Orange County. No experience nec- essary, training will be pro- vided. (949) 856-3555, .\N~I~IQUI~ ROW & GARDEN C . .\I·"E .. .\'t t U ' U t'..HfW', _\l'U."rf'~ (tU~.a \('L(h., T1·e.a~tl,,f "t'-~ (O t' yoto · ft 0 tHt' 1" FiM HotrU F•ncisld1tgJ Alttiq11t1 & Colltttibl" Tr111litio1111I to Cottage Gift. & G11rbrt D«or Wish List & Ddit1ny G~C~ C.Onlm P•lio Di1ti1tg BllJlkfasl, U.1tdt, Tab Ul"fUO B.v Cafe Hoc.n Tia.frf.. ~ S.. ;SIA ~atm- ·018Cover the Row, a wonderful Shopping and Dining adventure" Lowest Prices Ever! For a limit~tl tim~. you ''"' obtain specU.I c/.ose-out pri<n on Mission Styu forniturr. '7'11.ft~J in qwzrt.er mwn pi" INlk in tlu Mrk • finish. TMu 11~ l.owat pri<a"'" oJli'rWI 11, M"""°j for M i#um ~u ~"'-iltlrr. C1411fll~• to Cltanhlins Uutl & R•r~ Boob _, .. C111tcnn Pidwn F...,,.;,.g Funritun Rntor11tio11 •"" m11clt mon I 949 722·1177 1JO WI J7rlt Srrttt Cost• MtM, Cl\ (Bdii"4 H.,, l1t1t) ... • Doily Pilot .. Soturdoy, Jonuor). 6, 2001 A7 'Chocolat' proves to be yummy treat for Ora.vgewood Foundation B.W. Cook THE CROWD Asaeening of the hot new film "Chocolat" served as a ~n­ efit for the iliangewood Children's Foundation recently hosted by El Portal in honor of the opening of its new boutiques at South Coast Plaza. A crowd of about 400 guests atter\ded the grand ope.rung event. which began wit}l the screening of the film at Edward's South Coast Village Cinema and followed by an El Portal in-store soiree featuring French hors d'oeu~ prepared aJ'Hkerved by the stAll of Pinot Provence, decadent chocolate mar- tinis delivered by Skyy Vodka and an overflowing dessert table laden with Bodega chocolates -1ust m case the guests had not had enough of the chocolate theme -"How can there e'ver be too • \much chocolate?· mused Marla ._ Menzagoplan, El Portal's spokes- woman. ·w~ are so honored to invite the local commuruty to see this film and to experience our new stores, while at the same tune ratsing funds for the Orangewood children.• ' More than $16.000 was donated lo the foundation from the evening's revelry. The crowd was unpressed with the new 7,000 square feet of side-. by-side El Portal boutiques at South Codst Plaza. Showcasmg the finest selection of trdvel, fashion and business accessones, the El Portal signature, first establlshed by E.W Borsack m Ld5 Vegas, Nev., has been a family-run busi- ness for more than 60 years. Recently acqwred, the company lS now polSed to grow and expand, operung sQ_me 125 new stores wit.lull the next three years. Companng film notes, chatting about the actin9-0r.Juirette Binoche, Judi Dench dlld Johrtny Depp m "Chocoldt." the crowd - mcludmg Gary and MaxJne Coop· ~ ABOVE: From le ft, Jim Borsack, El Portal's senior vice president of marketing; Mr. and Mrs. Anton Segerstrom, the owners of South Coast Plaza; and Donald Borsack Sr. of the B Portal board of directors smile for the camera. LEFT: From left, Mr. and Mrs. James Edwards llJ of Edwards Theaters; Jim Bor- sack; BWur Walle rich , director of communi- ty relations at South Coast Plaza, d.lld Gene ) Howard, executive director of Orangewood Children's Foundation, share a moment er, Henri and Susan Samuell. Mitch and Lori Jun.kins, Richard and Beth GOChnauer. David and Glenda Mason, Laurence and Cerise Feeley, and Anton and Jen- nifer Segerstrom -roamed th~ new store w1th.El Portdl family members Jim and Renee Borsack . i;dfnpl.mg dehcaae!> dnd check.mq out the latest leather dccessone.., lrom Ball}. Bnghton dnd Celmt', l>Onw ul the hnt·.., earned tn the 't!Orl' \bo '>ponPd in the crowd were Peggy Goldwate r Clay television nP\\"'"'·omcU1 Vicky Vargas. Jl m and Patti Edwards, dnd Gene _. H owar d \\ho n>presented < )rc1nq1•\\ ood • THE CROWD dPPNr~ Thu~d~ dr)ci Sat urddys --IF' ~ A~gl))el, IT'S TIME FOR ... Mattress Outlet Store f~t's qour iK~ Ml CASA MEXICAN RESTAURANT ----• ...._, -.n r • ...... ....., .... .......... 27S 17111 st, 5le. I c..--.unw IJml .. c.f\ .kl Celestino's quality M EATS" The P1nes1 ,\fror and seniice 1\11(1/1<1blc Sntmet Con. Meur for""" 30 yun Stuffed CHICKEN BREAST SJt: l!O"Jv Lemon-Garlic TRITIPS sst: French apple stufl'ed PORK CHOPS _S3t: Celestino's New FRO'L»J SCALLOP POTATO s599.m J 165 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa OM 81oc.k Soulb ol •05 fwy 545·7168 Hodson Lighting PRESE;\,-5 The Bubble Lamp. by George :-.:elson A\'ailable for the First Time Since 1979 In ''arious Sizes Qua.lit;) L~h11~ni<.• for 30 Y•an O~n Tue' -Fn 9-.S. &1. 9-4 151(;4;r)n5s~~~34 ~\~~ IHmrA. "FISH TA(OS" WE TAKE DINING OUR MEALS ARE A TRIP TO MEXICO ALSO ON OUR MENU 1 TORTlllA SOUP TO THE • CHILI Sill CHILI CHEESE OMEUTil NEXT LEVEL! 296 E. 17TH ST. COSTA MESA· 949·645·7616 ,. CARPET CO L L E CTIO-N HUGE SAVINGS THROUGH JANUARY 31st, 2001 .Grand Champion Supreme Image Bigelow Bigelow . $ 99Mohawk ~-$ 2y2ohawk .1 sq.ft. ----------:-2 sq ft. Installed with 16 lb. Density Berber Podding 34 oz:·Geometrlc Berber w/Fleck tfy1or) Blend, 3M Everguad ~ lnsf atled with 14 lb Density Rlbbef Poddng ro oz Textured Saxony 100\~. 3M Everguad E1ig1ble . . CERAMIC VINYL TILE BLINDS WOOD LAMINATES AREA RUGS .... Nat 1lw .. Wlnlndel 11w ... SlledkJn The ... S.-.ice · 1IW ... Nalllln l'llln n. Bmt 1neW1etian by Our own OeWa laMCU, .......... ..... 1l&it .... !' • A8 Saturday, Jonuory 6, 2001 Fond . of the 1950s Concert, upcoming musical highlight songs, spirit of the clean-cut decade Young 0-.ng DAILY PtLOT A dnenne Barbeau remembers lhe slra1ght-skirt incident. She made the dothing item Adrienne Barbeau mhome economics cldss as an e1ghth- grader. Her moth- er said she could wear 1t only wtth cnnolme under- neath - the poofy. duffon lay- ers that gwe Life to poodle slurts. ·So I went to school m Uus straight sklrt wtth all these lumps in it,• Barbeau said. She dlso trunks fondly of a boyfnend who sent her a purple Angora sweater from where he was stationed as part of the National Secunty Agency. That is how Barbeau remembers the '50s. It was a fun time -a tune when greasers ruled the school and The Platters. The Drifters, The Coasters, The Sherrels, The Chantels, and Little Anthony and the impe- rials reigned over the music world. "That's the music I love best,• swd th e 55-year-old singer and actress who will perform at Orange Coast College's "Forever Fifties· concert Sunday. The retrospectJve program will feature Barbeau singmg '50s tunes, along with The Crew Cuts and The Coasters. Best known for their hit songs "Edrth Angel· and "Sh-Boom,• The Crew Cuts were born out of the swing- style o( the 1940s. •Sh- Boom • hit No. 1 both nation- ally and internationally. Thetr other famous tracks mdude "P.S. I Love You " and "TI! Then.· The Coasters, who have sold 18 milhon records since the nud-1950s, boast such SEE ·sos PAGE A 10 i..11111lEIT Newport 8Hch bind ftellllt.s will be headllnlng the Galaxy Conc9rt Theater at 8 tonight. The group will be joined btj Orange County ~ Something CorpOrate, Vold and G.dfty. The~ It 3503 S. Harbor ltvd., s..nu Ana. sa. 014) 957 . · ·~ Daily Pilot I '" JUlt dlKvvered Wbll"9 tn !DY own blue ~arid I tbiDk It's .._me some ~OQCl. Mf llnt w -watch-:t::r'°°: Dolphins =-lions v... °"' bdaed. Ml'WmlVW Jlllllkw l'IU I WV\11\ iJM>oped muum- m11y cmto the water, three ~ ottered me trick guin with a wire trap that mapped at my finger when I tried to take a pece, and I didn't get 1Msick. An elderly man gasped · -when I told hJm I was a reP<>rter and ushered his two gTaDddaugbters beside me for a quick ' photo. · The boat didn't cap- size, tb.wldet didn't roar, and sharks didn't attack. GREG f«'f I OM.Y fl.OT Capt: Bill Scott pilots the Reveille through Newport Bay and out toward the open se~ on a whale-watching ~ Sure-, the great whale didn't show, but bow could I compla.in? I'd just 9P90t my weekday after- noon on a boat called the Rweille in tbe open. sun- ny air, Under the blue sky and on an even bluer sea. 'Ibis is, I'm told, all part Of whale-watching. H the whale appears, great H not. at least we soaked in the sun and saw Ole dol- phins. It Is the Ycxmg Chang OAJLY PILOT gray , S usan Taylor's purple blouse inflates with the wind. The purple thread on her straw cap streams behind her, and she dutches her young daughter. Maddy Havnaer, tight in her lap. The wind isn't too bad yet. Once they get out into the open ocearr aboard the Reveille, the wind may blow stronger and the boat may rock . harder. But it shouldn't be too much for Maddy, 3, to handle. After all, Taylor said she began whale-watching when slle-was aoout her daughter's age. The shine of a whale's skin enausted with bamades, the mammal's slowness, nearness and sheer size -it's not something she's ever tired of. "I tell you, they're just so big,• Tay-· tor said. "They look almost prehistoric. I was amazed that something that big could move as gracefully as it did.• They were playful and pleiiti.ful. Schools of them ~around right next to and under the t>Oat, gliding gracefully alone or in pairs or trios. They jumped baby-· jumps and dived back in. surfacing now and again m i g r a t i o n s e a s o n a g a i n ~U:~eif -~idi~. "Lookatmel" Uttle boys ran to the Taylor's shipmates aboard the r FYI edge ol the deck and Reveille, especially the younger ones, pointed. A few leaned over tbe rail Others ' waited for their glimpse of a whale Uus WHAT: Whale-watching excursions squeezed their tonos week. Young boys in Billabong sweat-. WHEN: 1 p.m. weekd2VC, noon and betWeen the bars, stiddng shirts leaned over the rail and were -1~ told •Please do not hang off the boat· 2:30 p.m. weekends half out of the Reveille. by Capt. Bill Scott. WHERE: Fun Zone Boat Co., 600 E. Tb8 mom wbo bad been Other passengers joined them at the Edgewater Place, Balboa Peninsula lealag against a wall front deck, standing for a large part of COST: $14 for adults, SS for children with •jacket draped over the two-hour trip in hopes of seeing a her bead rushed over to CAU.: (949) 673-0240 1~1.. 'T'--grand{ the gray whale. What they did see were ........,, ·' u.:: a r dolphins swimming at the bow and with the two granddaugb- sea lions lounging on a buoy, but it lagoons of Baja California. ten and a camera around wasn't too disappointing. The Nautilus from N~Wp<>rt land-bil nedc took pjctures. •1t•s really fun,• said Kevin Buriyn-ing and the Western Pride from Dav-Even I -• boilt-dlead- ski, 10. •111.ke seeing all the dolphins, ey's Locker also conduct whale· trips ........•. ingr lbark feariag,-.ea······"··"· the fish in the water. I just like the Gray whales migrate more than ~k-getting, non.:.outdoors adventure of looking out here.• 5,000 miles one way at about 4 or 5 ~-=-watched. The dol- Since whale-watching tours began mph without feeding, Scott said. They ,..._ were almost cute. Dec. 26, Scott and his passengers have-summer in the frigid waters of the ~~it was the prox- spotted the large aquatic mammals on Bering, Chukchi and Beaufort seas '. 1be uaat got me. three separate trips. Boats take_ off and the Arctic Ocean and spend the ao.e 1 = ~~ every day from the, ~boa Perunsula winter in the warm, waters of Baja. at m' feet; 1be dolphinse for two-hour exCUI'Slons to tiy to catch Whale-watching season ends near y a glimpse of the great whales migrat- ing from the Arctic Circle to the wann SEE WHALES PAGE A 10 'Scarlet Pimpernel' l>rings swashbuckling .adventure to the Center lly Tom Titus T o those of us who grew up watching the cine- matic adventures of Zorro and Scaramouche, "The Scarlet Pimpernel,• -oow rounding out a week's IHEl'ER engagement 11 at the Orange REVIEW County Per-. fonrung Arts Center, is a nostalgic experi- ence, a return VtS1t to the local Bijou. While the swashbuckling Is regrettably l.uruted to the show's cllmactic segment, the supenor voices of the three leading Pfi!donners make the wait decidedly worthwhile. The story itseU, now just four years from ltS centennial, takes on renewed style, Oou.rish and vigor in director-choreogra • pber Robert Longbottom's handsomely mounted pro- duction. Based on Baroness Emmuska Oray's tale of an audacious and reckless hero -a daring plotter who uses tricks and games against the cruelties of the F~ Revo- lution -•The Scarlet Pim- pernel• focuses on a brave band of Englishmen who risk theJr lives to oppose the Reign of Terror in France and rescue intended v.ictims of the guillotine. Their mysterious leader - an English nobleman whose French bride may be a col- laborator with the enemy - masks bis identity under a gW&e of foppish mincing, much like Zorro's Don Diego. Oilly the Pimpernel's Sir Per- c:y makes Don Dl~o look like Hulk Hogan by compari- son. Jn the cwrent production, creeled by Nan Knighton (book and lyrla) and Frank Wlldhom (music; also ro- wrote• Jekyll and Hyde• with Leslie Bricusse), there1 a good deal more pomp than circumstance as Sir Perc:y and his dandified cronies apply layers of primping and polish to their cover ldeoti- ties, to the utter dismay of their acquaintances. Ro11 Bohmer thrusts him- seU tot.ally into both incarna- tions of his title character, outrageously camping lt up for effect then bwsting into full tieroic bloom for the · actioln-laced finale. Bohmer'• exceptionally strong singing • SEE REVIEW PAGE A 10 ' I Daity Pilot Aft• HOURS ..'..~-.. • Send AP1"llt MOUltS items to the D.ay fltlot. 130 W. Bay St. Costa Mesa. CA 92627; fax to (949) 646-· 4170 Of a.ti (949) 57~268. A com- ~ llstlng may be found It http;llwww.~llypilot.com. SPECIAL MAGICAL TRA.DfTION Orange Coast College will host the Stars of Magic com- edy, variety and magic show for its 11th consecutive year at 8 p.m. Jan. 13 at the col- lege's Robert 8 . Moore The- atre, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. $14-$33. (714) •32-5880. MUSIC INDUCTED Singer/songwriter Gerry O'Beime will perform a free courtyard concert and be inducted into the GUinness Wall of Fame at 2 p.m. Sun- day at Muldoon's, 202 New- port Center Dnve, Newport Beach. Free. (949) 640-4110 'SOS FOREVER ' Songstress and actress Adn- enne Barbeau will head a lineup of 1950s stars - including The Cr.ew C uts and The Coasters -dwmg a "Forever Fifbes• concert at 4 p.m. Sunday m Orange Coast College's Robert B. Moore Theatre, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. $25-$33. (714) 432-5880. CENTURY SONGS "Songs from the Last Tum of , the Century.• a free musical featunng songsfrom the 1890s and early 20th century. will be held at 3 p.m. Jan. 14 in the Newport Beach Cen- tral Library's Fnends Meet- ~.Roo.m. 1000 Avocado Ave., Newport Beach (949) 717-3801. MOZART MEETS BARTOK The American Stnng Quartet returns tb the Orange Coun- ty Performing Arts Center at 4 p.m. Jan. 14 for the h.fth consecubve season m its sl.lC- season cycle. of Mozart quin- tets and Bartok quartets. The perf ormanoe will ~ held m Pounders Hall, 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. $36, '(714) 7.C0-7878 REMEMBERING CAU.DWAY A concert honoring big band and Jazz legend Cab Cal- loway will be held at • )>.m. Jan. 1.C at Orange Coast Col- lege's Robert B. "Moore The- atre. 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. The concert will feature smger and actress Chris Calloway, Cab Cal- loway's daughter, and the Hi-De-Ho Orchestra and Dancers. $25-$33. (71•) 432- 5880. MACBETH Opera Pacific's production of ·Macbeth• will debut onrthe stage of the Orange County Performing Arts Center on Jan. 16-21, marking the beginning df a yearlong com- memoration of the centenrual year of composer Giuseppe Verdi's death. Times are 7:30 p .m. Jan. 16, 18, 19 and 20, and 2 p.m. Jan. 21 . The Cen- ter IS at 600 Town Center Dnve, Costa Mesa. $29-$107 (714) 740-7878. INTERNATIONAlOREHESTRA The Dresden Staatskapelle orchestra will perform the music of Beethoven and Strauss at 8 p.m. Jan. 1 r al the Orange County Perform-· ing Arts Center, 60Q Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa $15-$55 (949) 553-2422 STAGE SCARLET PtMPERNEl "The Scarlet Pimpernel,· Broadway's swashbucklmg musical corned~ will be pre- sented through Sunday m Segerstrom Hall at the Orange County Perfonmng Arts Center, 600 Town Cen- ter Drive, Costa Mesa. Show tunes are 2 and 8 pm. today and 2 and 7:30 p.m Sunday $20-$55. (7 14 ) 740-7878 BALANCE ·A Delicate Balance.· by Edward Albee, will appear on South Coast Repertory's Mainstage with previews running through Friday and reguJar shows from Friday through Feb. 11. A pay-wbat- you-will performance will be offered at 2:30 p.m. Jan. 13. $18-$49. (714) 708-5555: • prem~ums .•. for up to 20 or even 30 years! Find out if a State Fann Select-20 or Select-30 Term--i:He Insurance policy Is rigtlt for you. DATEBOOK IF IT 1111'~ llROQUE. • • The second program In the Harmonia Baroque Players' three-concert lerles wtU be beld at 4 p.m. Sunday at Newport Harbor Lutheran Church. 198 Dover Drive, Newport 8eacb. $12 or $10. (714) 910-8545. GR.EASE The Musical Theater· Acad- emy of Orange County will present "Gr~ase· a t the Costa Mesa High School Theater, featunng the Spot- light Performers at 7 p.m. .Jan. 13, 3 p.m. Jan. 14, 7 p.m. Jan. 20 and 3 p.m. Jan. 21. the high school is a t 2650 Fauview Road, Costa Mesa. $9 or $6. (949) 646- 6624 .. A FAIRYTALE The Musical Theater Acade- my of Orange County will present ·snow wtute" at the Musical Theater Academy. 2488 Newport Blvd .. Swte C . Costa Me~. al 11 a.m and 2 pm. Jan 20 ana 27. $4. (949) 646-6624 TWO TREATS •Lou Gehng Did Not Die of Cancer· and "Where Were You on Your Ninth Bt.rth- day• will be staged m tan- dem at 8 p m Fndays and Saturdays and 2 p.m. Sun- days Jan. 26-28 and Feb. 2-4 by Orange Coast College's Repertory in the Drama Lab Stud1 0, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. $5 or $6. (714) 432-5640, Ext. 1-. MYSIERYAND MUSIC The Musical Theater Acade- my of Orange County will pn:seot "Mystery on the Htgh C's" at tht? Costa Mesa High School Theater, featunng the- Starlight Perhmners, at 7 p.m Jan. 27. 3 p.m. Jan 28, 7 p m Feb 3 and 3 p.m. Feb 4. The t high school IS at 2650 Fairvlew Road, Cost.a Mesd. $8 or $5. (949) 646-6624 ART MEET THE ARTIST - The Boudreau-Ruiz Gdllery will present an exrub1bon of the work of MeXlcan pdl.1lter and sculptor Juan Manuel de la Rosa, begmrung today through Feb 25 at 3000 Newport Blvd . Newpor't Beach (949) 675-4766 ALTERNATIVE ART Newport Beach C1tv Hall w1U display an by students at Back Bay and Monte Vista alternative high schools rrom q a.m to 5 p.m. Monday through March 6. The exh1b1t ts co- s ponsored by the Newport Beach Arts Commission and the Newport Beach Sunrise Rotary Club (949) 717-3870. lr1111 C1Ht,.1 IW UClUllf PfHIHl TlllllU ITllll llltrlll I Plllllf llmllPIHf l1Cl1•111: · ll)fl HCf4 Ml!-~ (111Jlf4 ~ tM lfUt ''" ... ' fr lilltfl -luiti•Nllrt• Wt1kMts "' ~ tNln · ll1t1itltMl P1.,11es ~It~ ytt rt.C~ f-1Nk' · fadllmt• S1ntcW1t: llamt ftni1llly ~ ~rtf\f pt11 r.1t1N1r4 Wit~ rfMW1Utf4 llll'tn · 1., el IM hw lnht110 Trilli" -4 c.'""n<''" c .. lpettt , -Mlmtt Tllntn (\y ....,.,1111) • MeWlt lrtititt Au11AM 11 Ne.•~' ' I A M I 0 P ·1 M I M ' ! ! :. q \\ION PA<OG{ rDR II I PR I l; ' . . . Call tocl.l\ In Sri 1111 ~n Appo1111ment 9-lS !>!>3 1!>88 f , 0 0 o , t • • f' !°':I 'o I , I ~ ' r' MONOCHROMATIC At! exhibition of new work by Marc:i.a Hafil will open at the Charlotte Jackson Fme Art on Jan. 13 and nm through Feb 12. The open- ing reception will be held from 5 to 7 p m. o.o the first day at the gallery. 2429 W. Coast Highway, Suite 101, Newport Beach. Ha.bf ls a major figure in the interna- tional world of monochrome painting. (949) 645-8685. DANCE UNIQUE MOVES MOMIX. a company of dancer-illusiorusts, will pre- sent "Baseball" at 4 p.m. Jan. 21 at Orange Coast Col- lege's Robert B. Moqre The- atre, 2701 FiillVlew Road, Costa Mesa The group is known for its otherworldly unagery, humor and ongmal use of props, IJght. music and the human body. $25-$33. (714) 432-5800. WORLD DANCE Orange Coast College's Dance Department will host a muJbcultural dance concert titled "Borderland" at 8 p.m. Jan. 27 m OCC's Dance Stu- ctio B, 2701 FfilJVleW Road. Costa Mesa. $5 or $2. (714) 791-1043. SoMday, January 6, 2001 A9 O 'Faolain as the topJc. The book. wtuch grew out of a • collection of O'Pablain's lriab • nmes columns, recounts the journalist's upbn.nging with eight siblmgs by an alcobobc mother and an accomplished father. The Newport Beach Central Library is at 1000 Avocado Ave (949) 717-3890 POETRY POETIC BEATS Pushcart Pnze-nom.tndted poets Lea Deschenes and Elmo Martm and percuss1o'n- 1.St Axel Clarke will be fea- tured at 8 p.m. Tuesday at the Gypsy Den Cafe and Reading Room, 2930 Bnstol St , Costa Mesa Free (7 14 I 549-7012. MIDWEEK POETRY A poetry reading featunng Mike Sprake and Katya G11- 1tsky will be held at 8 p m • Wednesday at Alta Coffee House, 506 31st St , Newport Beach Free (9491675-0233 DINING/TASTING GUEST OYSTERS The Golden Truffle R~taurdJlt tn Costa Mesa will fecsture oysters from around the world Tuesday through Jan 13 Th~ restaurant IS at 1767 Newport Blvd R~rvabons recom- BOOKS . -mended (949) 645-9970 A NEW THING The Newport Beach PublJc Library Foundabon's ~tanu­ scnpts Lecture Senes will feature Michael LeWlS, the · dUthor of "The New New Tiung, • at 7 pm Tuesday at the Newport Beach ~tral Library, 1000 Avocddo ve Newport Beach $8 or $ 0 1949) 717-3890 ARE YOU SOMEBODY? The Manuscnpts Book D1s- cuss1ons, sponsored by the Newport Beach Public Llbrary Foundation, will con- tinue dt 9:30 a m. and 7 p m. Wednesday with ·Are You Somebody?" by Nuala Green ~stems ~•international EAT OUT The Orange County Chdfjter of the Single Gourmet. dn rntemabonal hne cfuung cluh for smgles, invites you to dine wtth them at b .30 pm Thursday at Bistro 201 3331 Coast Highway. Newport Beach $65 (9491 854-b552 SAY CHEESE Whole Foods Mdrket at Tn- angle Square ·will host £.X>brd Dickerson of Neal's Yard Dairy. one of Engldnd·c;, mo~t famous cheese shop!> for d European drtlsanal chee!>C presenlabon and tasung dt 11 a .m. Jan 27 at 1870 Har- bor Blvd .. Costa Mesd Free (949) 574-3800 18r1~sale Orchids $1000 to $2 5°0 J .ANUARY 6th Now Open 1st Saturday Each Month SATURDAY 9-4PM 1 OOO's IN STOCK M it·'' i-P 9 I hN~OOl:t'hl-1 M ;f4 Newport lleach's only commercial Orchid Nu,...ry • - ... __ AlO Saturday, Jonuory 6, 2001 REVIEW CONTINUED FROM AB voice serves the show spec- tacularly on solos such as ·Prayer• and ·she Was There• and the full-blooded tno number •The Riddle,• which closes the first act. As h1s mystified wife, Amy Bodnar beautifully conv~ys her consternation botll ci~a­ matically and vocally. She is especially appealing In her solo •When J Look at You,• desperately seeking a trace of the man she manied or a clue to his strange behavior m whdt apparently is an unconsununated relabonship. It IS unposstble to view William Michals' French enforcer Chauvehn without Ulldgirung Javert In ·Les Mls- erdbles" (and, m fact, Michals hds played that role in the past, as well as the Phantom dnd the Beast, two other suru- ldrly dnven characters). His steely "cit.Lzen" is decidedly single:nunded, though Bod- ndr's Marguerite remains his (\chtlles heel, a dalliance of the pdSl now unwillingly serving Chauvelin's cause. Among the highlights of "Pimpernel" are the sooal t•ncounlf'rs between Chau- v1$Jn dnd Sir Percy, who, in fuU fey flower, mocks his nc..'mem-C,y-<wi~ ~"N mto "Shovelin." ll'!i all intend- E'd to butld arumos1ty toward a sword-sldshing showdown,, which more than delivers the good., though Marguente's bnPI entrdnce into the battle is someUun9.. of a contnvance. ~o other notable perfor- md.Occs are delivered by Btl- ·l} Shctrpe as Marguente's h('dd~trong kid brother, a nwmher of the Punpernel's bdnd. and Harvey Evans as Ony, d Plmpernel ally well dlong m years. P('ter Kapetan works both sides of the channel effec- tively as the befuddled Pnnce of Wales and the surly French leader Robespierre. Author Knighton has a lJttlc fun with history as • t I .. FYI .WHA~."Scarlet Pimpernel" WHERE: Orange County Performing Arts Center. 600 Town Center Drive, • Costa Mesa. WHe£ Cosing perfor- mances 2 and 8 p.m. today, and 2 and 7:30 p.m. Sunday cos~ S20-S55 • PHONE: (714} 556-2746 well. Those of you who may wonder how Madame Tus- saud's Wa.x Museum ong1- n.ated, wonder no further, thanks to an intriguipg bit from Darrel Blackburn and CONTINUED FROM A8 Easter weekend, but only to make room ror ftshing season. The Manne Mammal Pro- tecbon Act requires th.at all • boats stay at least t 00 yards away from whales. Ni sound travels better underwater, Scott said the mammals can hear the proximity of boats. The 53-year-old captain '/ knows what he's talking / about. Scott is at home on ¥ bridge of his vessel. . , He can step up on a plat- fonn In front of the wheel and stick his upper body through top of the boat When he does, he maneuve.B the steer- ing wheel gently with his feel ·u I had to get in my car and commute someplace on the freeway, l wouldn't live here,• he said. ·nus is as good as 1t gets. The space - it's phenomenal. To me, this doesn't get any prettier.• Elyse Krieger, a New Mex- ico teenager who soaked in plenty of 'Ocean-reflected sun this w~while visiting her grandfather. Milton Krieger, said she tasted SOple of that beauty. "It's fun being on the Stephonne Smith toward · the end of tlie show. I . · • ·-Visua~e"'SC&"l'llff°~ '· -;.--....-_,..,....._ Pimpernel" is a magrulicent production with Andrew Jackness' scenic elements serving as a splendid back- drop for Jane Greenwood's superlati¥e peFied costumes. Douglas Coates conducts the Scarlet Pimpernel Orcheslrd, a four-piece urut that sounds Wee far more with appropn- dte nounsh. They seek him here, they seek htm there, but they'll only find the elusive •Pim- pernel" at the Center toddy and Sunday. For adventure and nostalgia buffs, it's an E- ticket ride. • TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. Hi$ reviews appear Thursdays and Saturdays. CONTINUED FROM AS I hits dS • Yakety Yak," •Love PotJ<>n No. 9" and "Little Egypt.• "The music of the '50s was more ptellow, more pleasant to W>ten to, wi~ut all the language we bAve today,• Sdtd Ryan Beaa,who plays . Danny Zuko ilt an upcoming production of the '50s- themed musical •crease" that will dppear at Newport Harbor High School. "I just thin Is of the '50s as a time of love dnd stuff.· When asked to describe the '50s in a single word, the sophomore quickly said "Fun I" GREG RIV I OAl.Y PlDT Sea Hons, sunning themselves near the harbor's entraooe, may be 9eeD on whale-watching aulses out of Newport Bay. ocean, away from home, away from the mountains,· she silid. •And it's interesbng to see a whale and to teH friends that we saw that.• John Kourak.lis, 11. hoped he'd see a whale but was sat- isfied with the playful show the dolphins put on. • 1t•s cool to see them pop- ping up and stuff,• he said. · FYI WHA~ "Forever FiftiesH WHEN: 4 p.m. Sunday Fnend Cody Yu said he loved being on the ocean. The son of a scuba diverra whale sighting would merely have been an added bonus. Scott isn't Slgprised. It would take a pretty unappre- ciative passenger -to sulk after a day of relaxing on the sea. •Most just enjoy the ride,• he said. WHERE: Robert B. Moore Theatre, Or~nge Coast College, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa cos~ s2s-s33 CAU: (714) 432-5880 1 WHAT: "Grease" WHEN: 7:30 p.m. Jan. 18-20 WHERE: Robert B. Wentz Theater, . 'Newport Harbor High School, 15th Street and Irvine Avenue, Newport Beach COS~ S6-S8 Doily PilOt ........ ~, ,,. .... riDl*t ...... ... ~-walJlof tb8 boel Tbit IUD that beeton~~wu ::::.~the~•t Sea lions leied about u u tt were tM time, and bb'dl drded qlUlicallY abOve tM waeer\~,,~ do In pamtings. '-\_:._., Land, in the meantime, r.:~ =::!~act- ed, and Hunti.Dgtoo Beach came~ into view. It was then that our Capt. Bill ScOtt's words - •People go to work, come . home. They don't know that right in their back- yard are dolphins, sea lions and great whales• -made sense tome. Me, 01 an peopie. And no, the whales didn't join us, but 1D4ybe next time. • YO&lllG OtANG Is the fff. t\Kes reporter fot the Daily Pilot. CAU.: (949) 515-6341 The Crew Cuts will play Sunday at OCC. As a decade, it certdlrtly has been good to Barbeau. She made her ~ark on Broadway playing tough gul Rizzo in ·crease." which earned her a Tony Av>ard nomination. When she performs at nightclubs, her repertoire often includes The Coasters' •Love Potion No. 9. • She Invites you to our hdd to eliminate it from this weekend's program. but she'll always remember it as her "Grease" audition song. Barbeau said she has nev- er seen the John lfavolta- Olivia Newton-John ve.rsfon of ·crease" and that she does not plan to. •Tue original show was much more realistic,• she TIN~ d-Firusr &01JS.11'J • d-f,,/J &nitt s.i.,. be Or.11tt C...lll] ROSE PRUNING DEMONSTRATION ' Leam how correct Rose pruning multiplies blo_oms. Bigger and better ROSES from your own garden. " "?&•~'• Master Nursery Professionals will give this demonstration and 1nswer questions. · said. •1 think it's gotten much campier. I don't think it was as lightweight as it probably has become.· Vanessa Long, a junior at Newport Harbor High School, will play Rizzo in the school's production. She agrees the musical and the movie are two different shows. •Most people are going to come lo the show expecting the movie,• she said. •There are a lot of similarities. but a lot of differences. There are some different songs, a dif- ferent layout of things, and the scenes are m a different order.• No ma~er. Rizzo stays pretty much the same. ... ·She's the tough girl that has been hurt. You get that , in both,• Vanessa said. \\ lildllt ,.,ti.fl .I ll11\lcll. 1.1\\lll "' l11d1.111 ( litll. ltl\llll '"' ''""' I surancc ~cncv AtrrO • HOMF.OWNEaS ~ HiA.i:m 40 ~an In Busin~ss ~~~ _.,.___ ./ J"'·p 949-631-7740 4'1 Old Ntwport 8h.L • Nrwpott &c.dt (Neu ..... Ho.pit81) ,... .... ff..,, Cl/tllw ,.._., ""'-"' • tWf* Git,,,_,....._ ................. ..... ~,.,..,,u.... a-.-.. ....... •"""0-""-'M I I ~11 0,.Qii1rlt•J M..CW-01 ..... ~,. .... ii HIDCHIU , COMM Daily Pilot .. Looking . back is not a good council trait I t is, presumably, the hope of new council mem- bers to take office with a running start. And we're sure many newly elected officials are tempted to redo some of the actions of their predecessors. But that's a temptation they should resist. While we understand the instinct to give 'projects and policies a second look, and a third and a fourth, there is a fine line between bring-EDIJORlll ing up new concerps and rehash- ~g old ones. In reviving the debate over the skateboard park - approved by the Costa Mesa City Council in October by a unanimous vote -Councilwoman Karen Robin- son and Councilman Chris Steel have.not put any- thing new on the table .. . Yes, there are safety issues. There may be an alter- nate location to the site on Charle and Hamilton streets. And there is always the question of whether such a great demand for a skateboard park really exists. However, piose points were brought up from the r tery beginning -nearly 1 O years ago, when officials first started tossing around the idea of a skateboard park. Those points were still bemg hotly discussed in October, when the prdject· passed. The dialogue will probably continue when -and if -the park is built. Robinsqn and Steel joined the skateboard park debate late. They may have the best intentions in reconsidering the previous council's °approval of the project, but it still seems a little too much like polip- cal posturing. The skate park is an issue that a portion of the popu- lation is passionate about. It is a hot-button ~sue with- out being terribly complicated or too controversial. Reversing the already approved park without show- ing a new reason to do so is equivalent to scratching open an old wound just to watch it fester again. Furthermore, the city has already spent money and devised the plans for the project. So, review the park. Look at it -carefully -from all angles. But instead of repeating the concerns that have already been hashed and rehashed, find some- thing that hasn't been brought up before. And if there isn't anything new, look forward . Questioning the decisions of a pas~ council is sometimes ~ecessary, but repeating history is almost always dangerous. Where does it end? New council members are not elected to undo what previous officials did in the past, they are voted in for what they will do in the future. • New co:mdl members should make their mark by taking strong strides ahead, not by jogging in place or, even worse, running in the wrong direction. •vou can't tell whether it's good bees or bad bees. A DNA test is the only way to figure it _out. " J -DAVIO MARDER. of Bee Busters, j --"') on about 20,000 bees that swarmed Newport Pier on Wednesday ERIC HUTCHISON How To GETPmlBllED The DtUy Piloc wekonw lettm on Issues~ Nftwport ieed\ .rid Costa ..... • • LnTaS -Mall to EditOflal Page Editor ~ Le9 at dle Dally flllot. 330 W. lay St.. Costa Mesa. CA 92627 • MADIDIS HOJUNE -<All (949) 642-&>86 • PAX -Send to (949) 646--4170 • a.MA& -Send to <UllypllotOl.ltJrrws.com All corr~ mun Include tun Mme,~ town anc:1 phone numtiet <to< venrauon purposes). The Pilot reserws the right to edit .ii 9UbmlsUons for clarity and length. Saturday, January 6, 2001 Al I Heated debate. over ~kate ·park continues • AT ISSUE: The Costa Mesa City Council is reyiewing plans for the already approved skateboard park at Charle and· Hamilton streets. W e are in dire need of a skate park -dire need. It's pretty disheartening to bear bow these council people try to act like they R A want some things like E DEIS a skate park but then RESPOND turn around and say strange things about green space and so on and so forth. I don't }Snow. It's baffilng to the mind. Do ~thing healthy for the children for once. JEFF GROSSO Costa Mesa I feel that a skate park is not the city's responsibility. It should be a private industry, refer- ring back to the days of roller skating rinks. > I do not think taxpayers' money should be spent on a project that is uncontrollable and would be nothing but an added city expense. I hope that they (council members] will reView their thin.king on Uus pro- ject and act accordingly. SAM WAKELEY Costa Mesa My husband and I think that Ch4rle and Hamilton streets is a bad location [for a skate park). There is lots of traf- fic; rometirnes it takes five minutes just to pull out of our driveway. Also, with the fast-food place up at the comer. we already get quite a bit of trash in our planter because 1t takes about that long to ,have a taco and a drink. So we are against the (proposed park site), also because of the safety issue of children crossing the street ... A woman who lives across from the park site had mentioned her 9-year- old would have a terrific time·at it, but I seriously doubt that the 9-yea.r- old is going to walk up to Harbor Boulevard in order to cross the street safely. We are debrutely for a skate park. We just think that there is a better place for it. The duldren m Costa Mesa defirute- ly need a place to bang out and have a good time, possibly Lyons Park or Fairview Park. I know it's quite far out there, Fairview Park. But again, with the traffic and the woman already being hit on Hamilton Street, it's just a perfect example of why it's not a safe place. But the city does need additional entertainment for the children and the older kids who skateboard. TIUClA LEUCX Costa Mesa Yes, we defirutely need a skate- board park. There are so few places that our kids can ride. They're outlawed at all the places where.kids enjoy riding them. So I agree that we need one. In fact, I think we need more t)lan one. We need one down near the beach as well ·as up further in Costa Mesa. BUTYHARR Balbod. Penins\lla Turning airline 'ra[!,e ' into 'sage' is good fo r y our health . . ly Mld\MI Arnold Glueck • )t's the one ~e related to airports we can all agree upon and it bas nothing to do with the politi~f John Wayne or El Toro: e in · ewport- Dea1in9 with the airlines is tude in line. Once you leave keep the blood moving ~ very toxic at higher doses, a means you can check your luggage with greater coafi· dence that it will actually anive with'you. U everyoner checked luggage. boarding and deplaning time could be cut in half. . COllllllITT Mesa (and . CM•ITAIY South • County) : love to travel for vacation or tnwinen and that .rtteans more Qying, along with the fearotfr. - The (ear of flying now meam the dread of lots ol. unplanned extra time on the '·~a shortage of time f>etweenh---coonectin9 flights ud potential unplarin.ed dalays. Ma pbysldan who bas bMn tWned fnJrn a tabty ratklnel traveler lnlo a sbK· Ing~ IMll ol quiver· mg smy Putty, 1 mow tbaa mr- liM n.ge II not good tor-yow bMllb. What tbm lbould Jiil ..... pal 1191' do lo QI\-' ¥8t mg1 ID Mge lair tbe .U • o1 bll or bit WllQ-betngr Tbe lyDdrome of .Jrtine ,.. ... Dnt cs.atbed tn --·-· Tbe IDOlt .... ~ .. ct. cw~. Nm111 ..... AlltiD8I _... ............. 1n ~ .......... .. ';:111==-=-.................. ........ -..... ID • not always a •friendly skies• your house, you're on the process. These are the same road, so try to enjoy the ride . guys who rolled the •bub· You'll get there when you and-ip<>ke• concept over us get there and screaming at and then selected hubf with the gate agent because of the wOISt weather. Many snow delays won't change connections are so dose in the weather, just increase time and long in distance ..., yow stress level and your th.at Olympic sprinter ca.rt · blood pressure. Lewis would be stressed. Take a breath instead of Once, an elderly couple venting. You'll probably find standing next to m~ and the agent will bend over boarding the same connect· bacltward to help a consider- ing l)la.ne were one step from ate passenger. baVfng congestive heart fail- ure. And the writer ts only a radiologist who can diagnose disease but not treat il Airline executives are the Nlne sc:bolan who never edmowledged that smoke 1n row 20 of the smoldDg eec- Uon can drift to row 19 of the nonsmoking MCtlon. They alternated smokiftg and non- cmokin_g tedioos tlO M IO ensure ·the smoke WU ewrl• ty distributed. for so years. Ibey loftded the front of the plane ftnt until my I 0-per-old mece , pabUld out tbet ~ loedlDa tbe beet of lbe ... anitJt .... oae bout ol ••• rw tl1PtllDa • a.. .ec:b .... ·-,Alilia ..... Dal.., .... ..... ~,_--..... JWI...., ..... __ ~-, ca '° ... =•< .......... . ... ..... . well and can lead to dots in safer recommendation is to veins that go to the heart. A take physiologic replacement recent report from Japan doses of 300 to 600 micro- admowledges 27 such ~Im. grams. it needed. Get up and walk. ~ cially on longer fiigbts to . WEAR l.AYEREO QOTHtHG avoid •coach-class syn-Dress for comfort in all drome. • Some airlines have temperatures. published stretches and You may be traveling exercises that can be done from a frigid climate to even while sitting. 1 recom· Hawaii. but who knows what mend they do .it again. the temperature moy be on For exerdse in airports the airplane? du.ring delays, take advan· You may be sitting in tage of near-marathon-length unceptortable beet before airport CODCOW'le$ by walk-takeoff a.ad then ftnd your-· mg before or bet'ween Oights. self freez:ing rmcs..ir. A colleague always CllJ'· Wear layered dothlog so ries walking shoes in her bog you can ad1ust to W~tf'Yer and uses the time between . you encounter. Do oot _....... conneding ·ru= t&te a synthetic fabrics.. wbidl can. power walk. may Oasb Ignite m an emergency. gtve you tunny IOou. but YOU! beert wtll tbAnk you. ftM AHEAD. AVOIG S1'IDS Neub'dmelhe_,bY AYOllO Am M POOO p&annlng fv .a..d. 'Tlliu Is Plnd or bring bMltby Miier tbllD.,,.. wlla .. r0oct. AD mrtiDM wm prOMe 1n1emet. low·fat IDMll GD~ 0-* cie.-.ti0IJ41), and IDUJ~ DOW bne ~ ....... ~type, J'*-"' ban yw cm ....._ ndm city mape. poww up OD llDDfllNM ~and"'-~ orJIMltlof............... ..... ...... ~boc*.A or._.. ... mgbtl. IN• *' ol '8 wodt ~-bouilef,....a1 ... ,.,. ..... ..... ., .. ._ .... ... .... :e ........ ~ ••a-~•,_,... .... a .......... ... 11 possible; seied tbe earner wt.th the bub tha.t 1S most <Xlll- venient to your destinalian. For example, I recently was able lo Oy direct. nonstop. In half tbe time and cmt to. meeting tn· St. Louit b'i OndiDg en aidioe with us b.ub m that city. ~early nights~ possible. The bub lyAllD bu a domino efted IO that any delays or probleml only become wane as tbe day goes on. U yow flight ts dUyed Of~. )'OU Mve mar. time to mu. ......... plul and adjUll to ......... .....,... "* wPlugl IO mjnhplM beb6el aytng and lnmllllkl· ..... .., ...... By incaji0116ig a- ........ ,... nftll ~-==== ~ ...... , 11dtmod .. &• ......... .. 11a11· .. '=S Alllilll : ...... : r:-J::: .:,. *r ,. .... ...... ,., .. a: I" I I .. . . - BOYS SOCCER Sailors find win column •Keams' fourth goal of the season seals win for Tars in a 1-0 decision over Edison./ Tony Altobelli DAILY PILOT NEWPORT BEACH -rt wasn't the way the Newport Harbor High boys soccer tea:m wanted to cele- brate its first WlD of the season The S{U.lors (1-3-3) defeated vis- iting Edison, 1-0, m a Fnday after- noon nonleague tilt, but the game was stopped early due to dn injury to a Chargers' player. With dpproXlffiately 20 minutes remairung tn the game, EdJson's Jarred Zitt and Newport Harbor goa11e Duke Burchell came togeth- er in a vtolent collision whtle pursu- ing a loose ball The contact sent Z1tt dwkwdrdly to the ground, where he landed on lus head and was knocked unconscious. After d minute or so, Zitt 'regained consciousness and was reacting to various mouon tests administered to his hands and feet by the Newport BE!ach firemen paramectics. Z..tt was taken to Hoag Hosp1taJ and, accordmg to NBFD Captam Dave Mais, early indJcabons looked good •He was becoIDJDg more and more coherent the more we talked Wlth him,• Mais said. ·He was responcting well to our motion tests and from what we saw, it looked like a neck sprain and possibly a mild concussion.• According to Ectison Coach Bn- an Middleton. it was the players who decided to call the game at that pmnt. "It was a preseason game and we were pretty shorthanded com- mg mto the game to begm wtth, • Middleton said. •As far as the play goes. it was just one of those 50-50 plays. Hopefully, he'µ be all right.• Newport Coach Matt West agreed with the decision to stop the game ·1 probably would have dene the same thing,• he said. ·Any tune someone on your team goes down. there's a letdown by the whole team. The game JUSt tsn't that unportant. • The m1ury dampened what was a solid wip for the Sailors against the defending CIF Southern Sec- tion DiVlsion II champions (4-4-3). . "We've been working hard all season and this is a game we can defirutely grow from,· West said. ·we've had a layoH the past week or so and we started off a httle slow, but we got mto the flow of the game as 1t wore on.· After a sco1eless first half, New- port's Adam Kerns recovered a loose ball in front of the Edison goal and snuck a shot into the lower- right ~Ornt!r of the net in the 47th minute. lt was Kerns' fourth goal of the season. •We hnally had a bounce go our way.• West said of the play. "We've bad a lot of bounces not go OU[ way, thus far, so it was mce to see one bounce.in our favor.• SEE SOCCER PAGE 85 . Quote Of ---W. play on such a fint h whm tt comes to execu1on. If we nm a bod pcm or o bod dedslan, ~ comes bed and tuts us big time ... • Pa ul Orris, CdM boys basketball coach Sports Editor Roger £orison • 949-574-4223 • Spom Fcoc 949-65~170 • So1urday, January 6, 2001 Bl Yarnal-not very ~eighboi-ly 8 Newport Harbor guard pours in season-high 26 points to help put away familiar Estancia foes. Barry Faulkner DAil'( PILOT NEWPORT BEACH -The Newport IOTS .,..QtSDS Harbor Hlgh boys bask~ball team ........... managed to knock off the rust accu- mulated over a 13-day layoff Fnday rught . Putting away pesky intra-dl.stnct nvdl Estancia, however, was, perhaps, more problematic, as the Sailors, ranked No. 7 in Or~e County, improved to 13-3 with a 61-51 non- league trtWJ}Ptl. The VJeto~ was especially sweet for Sdllor seruor Aaron · Yamal, whose 26 pomts were one shy of the career rugh he established last year agamst tus "hometown· Eagles • (YamaJ) lives two doors down from (Estanoa starter) Ces<il Romero, so you knew he'd be hred up to Pia17 us.· . Estanoa Coach Chns Sorce sa.id _ •(Romero) was on my All-Net Learn and J went to school ~cah Young (another Estancia sldrter) from~ 8 at Christ Lutheran," YarnaJ said. "I was ~red up torught. • In adctiUon lo neigb.f:>orhood brnggmg nghts1 YdillaJ said he was determined to recapture the -------- aggressiveness that helPed hun earn first-team All-Sea View League and HI wanted to All-Newport-Mesa DlStnct laurels drive more last season ·1 wanted to look to dnve more and dish. This is and dish,• said the Uu.rd-year varSJty f be t performer, who had scored at least one 0 my S 20 points m only three of his preVl-efforts of the ous games thlS season. "This lS one . 'ally of my best efforts of the year. espe-year, espec1 dally offensively.· of lensively ... " · Yarnal, wbo added four assists, rur a three-pointer i.n every quarter and Aaron Yamat finished 9 of 16 from the field N~ Harbor (56.3%). senior He opened the sconng W1th the -------- first of two straight Harbor three- pointers, wruch forced the Eagles mto perpetual catchup mode. YamaJ extended the Tars' 12-10 flrst-quarter lead by opening the second penod with another three ball and the scrappy Eagles (5-8) were never closer than three pomts the rest of the way. Harbor, which takes a five-game wmrung streak mto tonight's 7 p.m. nonleague home date with Fountain Valley, put together a 12-2 run in the second quarter, when Estanoa went more than four minutes wtthout a held goal The Eagles trailed, 33-22. at balftllne, then outscored the Sailors, 29-28, tn the bnal two penods. · ·we knew their record wouldn't mean anything." New- ·port Coach Larry Hirst said. •They'd won three of their last fotlr and they'd averaged 70' potnts m those games. They're patient and very oppoJ'tw$tic. • In contrast to Estanda's fast-paced tempo i.n last week's Coast Holiday Cassie, Newport was coming off pre-Christ- mas tournament action m Washutgtoa.,..wli~e the shot dock does not exist. "Without the shot dock, the pace of the game was a little slower,· YamaJ said ·we had to get used to playillg more STM MCCRANK I DAll.Y Pll.OT qwckly tonight. Newport Harbor's Chase Cameron lays a shot past Estancta's Matt Cachola. SEE NEWPORT PAGE 85 Sea Kings·fallto Mission Viejo, 63-41 • Just too many scoring spurts for CdM to overcome. Tony~U DAILY PILOT CORONA DEL MAR -The Coro- na del Mar High boys basketball team heads into Pacific Coast League play on a down note, losing to visiting Mission Viejo, 63-41, Fri- day night. . ·we 'played well early, but Mis- sion Viejo would go on a sconng spurt and we would fall mto a lull,• CdM Coach Paul Orris &aid. "At times, I thought the lad! played like they didn't believe they could com- pete with them. We've got to learn to BOYS BASKETBALL play tougher When the other team gets on a roll.• Seruor Eric Snell led the Sea Kings (6-10) W1th 13 points, whtle senior ldea.n Shahangian chipped lD 12. Corona del Mar hung tough early with the Diablos (11-5), but a 12-2 run dosed out the first quarter with the Sea Kings in a 17-7 hole. Mission Viejo jumped out quickly in the second quarter. scoring five quick points for a 15-point advan- tage. CdM r~ouped and cut the lead down to rune before another late- quarter run (11-2) extended the Dia- blos' lead to 18. ·We play on such a fine line when 1t comes to execubon, • Oms said. ·u we make a bad pass or a bad deas1on, it comes back and hurts us big time.· The lead grew to 20 in the thud quarter before CdM managed to put together a solid 10-2 run of its own. Snell and Charlie AlshuJer (six points) helped cut the Mission Viejo lead down to 14 and put the Sea Kings back into the ballgame. •rt was a nice run for us,· Oms said. •we seemed to pick up our intensity, but that's so hard to susta.m over a long period of tune: Cd.M's 10-2 spurt was countered by an 8-2 Mission Viejo run and the lead was back up to 20 after three quarters. The Diablos were led by TraV\S Niesen (14 pomts). Matt Cole (1.2) and Joe Aeskoski (10). "They had some sue on· us and they were able to take advantage of that,• Orris said. The Sea Kings now enter the world of the PCL. where they play at Laguna Beach Tuesday rught at 7. Despite the tough start, Oms believes that it's still not too late for a team twnaround · •1t's-a pretty compebbve league,• Oms said. "j,JJ>.iYemty and North- wood appea{to oo the teams to beat, SEE COM PAGE 85 DAILY PILOT Hiii SCHOOL ATHLETE OF THE WEii Calculated behavior Tars ·, Katherine Belden ~ •Numbers are hard to come by for opponents faced with attacking Newport defense keyed by this junior tandout. ,• . " ·12~..a,.;,6,"'2001 - ' --_.,. __ ............. - • --· • • • ·. . . J ' 436 ~ehiCles ·wefe Purc~~d faSt year. · .. - ...., ' • r ... , . • )Cl '* Yeah, · amazing, huh? + MISSION VIE&..10 . · The future is now. Whats next .. ? ,. , .. w~wJ&xusmissionyiejo~com • . . . . • . Doily Pilot • ' \ I .. . ' ..... • .. Daily Pilot SPOIUS-? Saturday, Jonuory 6, 2001 IL1 Tars -bull way to 6-3 victory PCL, SEA VIEW BASIETUl.l SCHEDUUS •Belden, Wight lead Newport Harbor's triumph over El Thro. GIRU WATER POLO that, it's a matter of who's in better D~ ~n shape. My team took 10 days off for ...... , r-IUI• Cbristnla.s. • NEWPORT BEACH -Team depth In the fourth quarter, it appeared the tack with 3:39 on the clock on a pus from Belden, then Booth scored on a counterattack pass from Erin Ball with 2:52 to play, giving the Sailors a comfort- able 6-2 lead. • ~ the quarters went on, we wore down, because (the Sailors) were in bet- ter shape, so I'll take the blame,• said Stoll, whose team defeated Villa Park, 10·5, Thursday in its first game ha.ck from vacation. MaftC:.r ~!-z-(7......, .... to • c.otoM ;;;;;-.t lAgur\I l..ctl; eo.t. ...... ~ UrWwllty. Northwood. ..._ ti · Norttlwood 11t CorON del Mar. e.oa .... 9t UnNenlty; Estlnda llt~e..dl. • ..-.. 17 ·~at Cofone deil Mar. Nor1hwood ft COila Mesa; L.lgl.w\e hlch .t unMnlty. ,_, 1t · Unl¥enlty lit Corona del Mar. Ulgul\I hlch lit Coste Mea; N«'Jlwood •t ~. .... 14 • CoroN del MAr lit Com Meg; Unlwnlty lit ~ Northwood It~ a..m. ,_, H • IAQuN l..tl •t Cofona def M¥; Esi.nc&. lit Coste Mew; Northwood •t UniYenlty. .... ,, • Coron. del M¥ at .eventually took over in the fourth quar-CbArgets (7-2) stayed with the eggnog ter Friday for Newport Harbor High's while the Sailors continued with pool girls water polo as the host Sailors scored laps. On·defense, the hosts deilected two on three counterattack goals to break outside shots (by Wight and junior open a close game. -------standout Katherine Belden), "We use a lot more people "An Um while senior goalie Heather than they do. We kept putting Y e a Deyden recorded tour of her Northwood; Unlwnlty at Costa ~ twice, including once on a penalty shot ~ a..ai lit Esttnci•. with 2:08 left. Then Newport Harbor's Coste~':~~~~· ln the second quarter, El Toro scored in fresher bodies,• Newport team comes 14 saves. H bo C ch Bill B After a 2-2 halftime dead-Murphy tied it, 2-2, with 1:33 to play on •t LllguM a..ai " a player advantage. Belden and Booth • ,_, • ·Corona del MM lit uniYersrty; ar r oa amett back lil<e that lock, Belden r,.,..red fTom seven said, following his team's 6-3 ' ...... .,, nonleague victory over El it's a matter of meters out with 4:48 on the bad shot deflections on defense in the ==:'=-Be.ch; Toro, ranked 10th in Orange who~ in better clock to give Newport Harbor second. .... I ·Costa MeY at CCHON del County. the lead for good. Belden also Barnett said his squad had several Mar; Esi.ncl• •t unlvenity; Laguna scoring opportunities in the third <{\lat· Buch at ~ tllrts The Sailors (10.1), winners 'shape. My , scored the game's first goal of 10 straight games and com-team took 10 from 10 meters out ter, but •just couldn't putt.be ball away." ~ LL\~ C1 p.m..) Newport Harbor which hosts Carls· Mn. t ·Corona def M¥ •t LagUN ing off a championship in their Seniors Erin Ball and Emily ' 8...ct\. Costa Mew lit ~ bad today at 10 a.m. in a nonleague unlwnlty lit Northwood own tournament la.st week. days oil for Glassic and sophomore Jenna Murphy sparked the Sailors' game, will travel to llvine to open Sea Mn. 11 -Northwood at c:,orona del View League action Wednesday. Mar. Coste Mesa lit Unrwnity. En•noa outscored El Toro in the sec-Christmas ... " third-quarter defense with ond half, 4-1, including three steals, then Harbor freshman ·Wednesday is the game of the year,· lit~ .'::!ci. •t CMON del Mar: Barnett sail'I. • Northwood •t c.c.i. MeM. LaguN counterattack goals in a row Jessica Ball opened the fourth ... 8MCh llt UMenlty Mn. 11 · Uniwnity at Corona del Mar. i..gun. INCti •t Costa Mew, Northwood •t en.nci. in the final period -two by quarter with a steal at two NONUAGll sophomore Annie Wight and meters, but the Tars could nt>t one by senior Jenrta-Booth. . convert and maintained a slim •1 put in a couple of su~s and (the one-goal lead. NEwPo«r ttAMOll 6. EL TOllO J 5cDf'e br QuerWs El Toro 0 2 0 1 • 3 Sailors) countered us,• El Toro Coach After a save by Deyden with 4:2Q Jo Don Stoll said. •But it's not (my players') play in the game, the Sailors scored on fault, because they just got tired and the counterattack after a long pass, Newport got a couple of counterattack Wight's first of back-to-back gdals. goals. Any ti.me a team comes back like She scored again on the counterat- Newport Harbor 1 1 1 3 · 6 El. Toro · Nicholson 1, Sonnenfeld 1, Hedley 1. Selves -Hardie 4. Nawport tWbor • Belden 2. Wight 2. Murphy 1, Booth 1. BELDEN CONTINUED fROM B 1 ,. . third-team All-CIF Southern Section for the 19;99 Division I champions as a freshman, then second-team All..cIP as a sophomore. •And that's defense.· Though not imposing physically (5-foot-9, 130 pounds), nor blessed with elite speed, Belden's best attribute tests above her shoulders. ' ·She's really smart,• summed up Barnett, a two-time men's national team coach whose experience helps him appreciate a high aquatic IQ. •She's very good at knowing what the other girl is trying to do, and knowing the correct way to go about stopping her.• .Belden's intelligence, reflected by her 4.2 grade-point average, as well as recruiting interest from Stanford and UCLA, was. ironically, an early stumbling block to her polo career. Though growing up in an aquatic family (brother Pe1er, a senior, was CIF Division I Player of the Year for the Tars' section champion boys team last fall), she took awhile before dlving in. ·1 dabbled with the swun team at the Balboa Bay Club, but I was kind of lazy when I was little." she said. ·1 was a.little nerd, who liked to sit around 'M-liome and read a lot. It was Peter who finally motivated me to play.• • Her brother motivates her still. She also has learned techniques watching him and Saves -Oeyden 14. the rest of the Newport boys team play. Belden said sbe believes the sport 1S 90% mental, but not all that has to do with intelligence. She also cites concentration, focus and confidence as vital parts of her package. •I try to focus on the game I'm playing and the girls I'm defending,· she said. "You don't want to get too cocky. but you have to ~e confidence. I like to think I'll be able to stop the better players. Even when that's not possible, ypu have to think that way to give yourself confidence.· Modesty factors in, as . well. "l think our defense bas come together,• she said. ·It's not just one person.· Specifically, Belden cites patience and finesse as her primary weapons in the bole _(the iirea designated for the two.meter set) . ·vou can't go conking the girl in the bead." she said with a laugh. ·1 use my brain.· In addition to helping shut down offenses, . Belden rounds out a balanced offensive attack. ·she really has a good outslde shot,· said Barnett, who saw Belden collect two goals, four assists and four steals against Santa Barbara. ·And she's one of our secondary setters.• Belden said she likes to create most of ber offensive chances on counterattacks. Leadership is yet another quality she brings to the squad, according to her coach. "She has good relationships with all the girls, which helps keep the team together,• Barnett said. ON ·1HE MEND en the Corona del Mar High girls ankle sprain, the Sea Kings are r!lldY to basketball season got under way, turn their season around with the start of the birds were singing, the Dowers Pacific Coast League play, following were blooming (yes, even in December) tonight's 7 o'clock nonleague finale against and all was right with the world. · El Toro at the Sea King Dome. Then, following a 3-0 start, a ~ark cloud Despite the team's eight-game losing hovered over the Sea Kings and suddenly. streak, Davis was able to see some younger life w~t so peachy. players jump into the varsity spotlight and A slew of injuries, combined with some bad some pretty an upf orgtving schedule put CdM in impressive results. a tailspin of enormous proportions. •Before she went down, Gone from the llnetlp was last Lauren Snell was playing great year's Padfic Coost League co-Most for us,• Pavis said. •Only a Valuable Player, Krllt1n McCoy tQ freshman, she really stepped it what wu later diagnosed aa a up for us. Pellow freshman . • bruUed kidney. Gone was Kristin's Colleen Mark.a has also be9l a silter, Jackie McCoy and her 10 . Btrong force for us wlth our points-per-game average to an ankle starten inJUred. • . illjury. Gone for the put seven In fact, throughout the year games with a fractured wrist bas the inJnry or nu bugs have taken been junior came Hawkins. ala......L.-1: a b1te out df everyone on the Mn. 2J • Co<ona del M¥ lit con.a Mesa; UnMtnlty •t Estancia; Northwood •t lagun• BH<ti. .i-. 25 • Ltguna Be.a. at COfona del Mar; Estancia at Costa Mesa. • Northwood at university. Jen. )0 • Corona det Mar at NOrtnwood, Uni~ at Cona Mesa;, lAguM Beach at.Eruinc1•. for Ex~mple: Prom 3-0, the See Kings fell to 3-8 Tony~ team except junior Courtney and the birds and flowers gave way PREP HOOPS 11 Kawata, the onty CdM player to IS C-clau Sedans ,_ •1 a,990 .. '9S Cl20 (2JISSO) '99 E5S AMG '63'90 to bandages and ice packs. have played in all 14 games. •eoy l tell you, when all the "She's a bard·D098d lnjwiel started occu.ntng, 1 began drtvi.ng competitor,• Davis said. "Courtney II a rare uch ~ carefully. • CdM Coach 'Plhod commodity. She &boots threes and lbe ablo m ' --, does a ,,_t job on defame. Bven ....,...,.b Oevll Mid. •Our team bu been through a ir·~ .......,"'» lot alteady and leant .. hasn't even started sbe'I not very big, she pley. tough out yet.. •-there.• Now that the smoke hU deUed. loot "Big·time lOIM9 to big-time teams like fort.be See IChvts to be a tama tn the Padfic noy, San Oemente and lrvtne lent the See ·--v Kings to tbe mal , Cout Leegue. But now, the SM KiDgl are healing at •tn •way, the tnjurlim might be a J\llt the =t time. The u...r ... siltan are blirdng an c:tilgulle, • .,._ Mid. "Our ,._ ........ , younger p&eyen wbo ~ -~ MUty l , wbUe Hawkinl bM a11o wm goa. tbat muCh p.ytng Md our 1ta111n ICJIM. playing time OD bet .roed to ret'OY9fY. 6e.a it~wUI be e lot ..... and th.at With the ietWD ol .. McCoyl and lboWd ....... for \II t'OIM .___ Hawkinl, the S.. ""'--(5-9• heft wcm .._... . --.-.-.-J tbne. e I two al tlMllr lalt a.....-. A1W tbe 111NM-r9lb d CdM ..._b. "h ......... 5-.m.. ~ dclll't lac* lar 0..-lo .......... ....... =-~~--· ~-= "Wa'NjUll--lotUI ....... .. ...... .-. ............ n'DIMllllM.-W. ........ 1mow-. ... ..._cm&tq1 .... .... ...,................ ..., .. n1,,,.-, ... -~ ....... 1.-offr D n' ' allDll ... atllgla -.w.'llD .. blllweca 28 E-Class Sedans ,_tJl,990 '96 EJ20 (006718) • 12 M.=a1a SUV'1 ... tJJ,990 '98 Ml.320 (OS0669) • 6 SIX RcNMlsters .... tJl.990 ,. Sl.K2JO (Olll26) I 9,<n> Miles, fvl)y ~ ( 308.J) '99 C43 AMG 16.~ M11CS. Bl.ck '43.ttO (&31274) 'O I CLKSS AMG tf 6.ttO 46 Mae. Luxury Tu Nd.. (17U7l) '00 i.~~:•otltO • .. 84 Saturday. January 6, 2001 . C osta Mesa's Daryl McDaniels (right) tias bis game face on, and (above) gets the edge on Magnolia's Jose Martinez. Below, Julio Ramirez of Costa Mesa ls locked up atop Matt Lopez of Edison. DAILY PILOT PHOTOS BY JENNIFER TAYLOR LO cal ,. • Newport's,Lirn, CdM's Hacke r and Estancia's ' ' Thaler sparkle at Eagles' wrestling invitational. Steve Virgen DAILY PtLOT COSTA MESA -Ll.ke a volcano about to erupt. so was lhe Estancia Wreslhng Tournament Friday night. Newport Harbor High's Bruce Lim (119 pounds) absolutely exploded. Meanwhile, Corona del Mar's Blake Hacker (lpO) and Estancia's Nathan Thaler (215) were definitely active. AU three won enough matches to advance to today's semifinals. The tournament actio,i begins at 10 a.m. in the Eagles' gym. Lim, d 5-foot-4 seruor, was unseeded m the tournament. He burst onto the scene with a huge victory over Magnolia's Uriel Chavez, radked No. 2 in Orange County. The win put Lim into today's serrulinals. "I 1ust want to come in here and win 1t all,· Lun srud. ·nus IS the first tough tournament for me. When I'm in lhere, I just have to be tough and gut it out.• Harbor Coach Dominic BuJone called Lim's victoty his biggest of the season. BuJone missed the t9ur- .. ...: ... "';). .. .. WRESTLING nament seeding meeting, thus denying Lim a seed. The situation might have worked in Li.m's favor. He certainly surprised Chavez. Lim actually dominated Chavez. Lim built a 6-1 lead in the first peri- od with quick takedowns. <;:havez seem rattled and. stunned. In the second period, Chavez went out with blood time and nev- er appeared the same .. Lim increa~ his lead to 8-2. And, in the third, Lim scored two more takedowns and an escape for a 13- 3 victory. Hacker's win to advance to the semifinals lacked similar dramat- ics. But, Hacker's performance was sufficient. He scored a 12-7 win over Vince Giordano of San Clemente. Hacker's first match of the day was a bye, so he had to wait it out before wrestling in round two at 6:30 p.m. He said he sat at Estanoa since noon. "I'm not myself today,• Hacker said. "I'm just preoccupied with other trungs. I haven't been healthy. I need to find my rhythm." Hacker entered the tournament with a knee injury sustained in football. He put aside the ailment and took out Giordano. Hacker ended the first period .. with a 5-2 lead after a takedown and a~ubsequept near fall. He con- tinued to work ~n Giordano in the· St'COnd with another takedown. Giordano fought back, yet the peri- od ended with Hacker still leading, 10-7. Hacker was warned for stalling • in the third and he scored a rever- sal to dose out the match. "I've probably given up more points than I have all year," Hack- er said. "I just didn't feel like wrestling today.·· CdM Coach Gary Almquist said what he saw was not the real l-lacker. •No offense,• Almquist said. "But (Hacker) shouJd've ripped that kid apart.· After going toe-to-toe for two periods, Thaler ripped his oppo- nent in the c:hampionship round. He pinned Ed Figueroa of Saddle- back with 55 seconds remaining., The two went scoreless through two periods. But, then Thaler woke up with a reversal with 1 :30 remaining. He continued with his move to throw Figueroa over ahd pinned him. "I felt him break," Thaler ·sru.d. "He was soft and he didn't have much musde.· Thaler had been sick with the fl\l for the pas.t w~k and said ht? lost five pounds. He also said he Daily Pilot to se CdM's Ben Wynkoop (on top) grapples with Estancla's Joey Marin. felt 75% during lhe day's matches. Thaler's endurance impressed his coach. Said Eagles Coach Steve Perez, "Wrestling 1s all about puthng togeth4;?r when things are bad. That's what (Thaler) dJd torught. Hacker did the same with his' injury. Those two and Lim, keep an eye for lhem when CIF comes around." Estancia's Jeremy Valdes and Victor Carmona were one match away from advancing to the semifi- nals. Valdes rrussed the opportuni- -ty by one point. Christopher Sepul- veda of San Clemente scored one point on an escape with 1 :20 remairung and won the match, 5-4 The young Mustangs of Costd Mesa were right m the truck of 1t. Mesa's 130-pound sophomore. Matt Grub1s1ch debuted with a pin. but lost his next match. Mustangs' Coach Matt Kellog had just five wrestlers compete in the tourney. His excitement is for the future and he was pleased with Grubisich and Myron nacy (145) who lost his first match 16-15. Newport Harbor's Bruce Um (left) has 'D'oy's Dave Marzan locked up. Far ~ght, Taylor Habldni of Estanda zeros tn on bis foe at ·the Estancia invttattonal Prlday. ' . nrates know that feeling of ~madness' Tiat feeling of "March Madness" began Thursday or the Orange Coast Co~e men's basketball team. So what lf it wu an ugly brand of basketball? The final three minutes of OCC's win over Irvine Valley mirrored the intensity of a Pinal Four game. Yet, this ls January, but with the competition tn the Orang Empire Conference it might as well be like March -toumamern time. The Bua •upset• win at lVC, the No. tO·ranked team m the llate.11 pertlapa OCC't h$ggest victOry of the MUOn Yet, the pjratel rilJOht potnt to their 87-84 will a9e1· Col.leg ot the rt as tfte bjlggie. ~· wheli Coast pulled off its win over the Lasers, the Bucs not only strengthened themselves in the OEC standings, but t!tey .. made believers out of their most impOrtant critics: themselves. WhlleotherOECteamsbave received notice and rankings, Orange Coast is in the background, underrated because all the Bua have IS Nack Burwell, as mAny would think. · But, that ii .why tho 72·66 victory over IVC is so hugo. Jt proved the Pirates can Win when Burwell'• ahoodng touCb II off. i1'bily can tum to Ryan Earl for h.lJ penetration or they can go dOwn low And INlde to Chad Hagedorn. • OCC'a triple threet WW be much n~ In the OEC becaUle the Piates are definitely not among the favorites. The favorite? 1bat would be Saddleback, the No. 3 team 1n the state. The Gauchos are the team to beat in the OEC bocause they are old ~bool, methodical with the fundamentals. Pi<:tuM five John Stocktons. Feb. 1.C at Saddleback. The OEC also features Fullerton. But. the Hornets fell to the Gauchos at home Thursday night. Fullerton can still contend for the OEC title because the Hornets had their chances against Saddleback. After Saddleback, the OEC 11 wide open, an.other r uon for the Importance of the Buc::s' conference· o~lng Y\ctol'Y" The B~ Steve Virgen •• COASTERS Rlvenide is another team that can vie for the championship, The Tigen are No. 18 in the state and th y began the seuon need vidoriea agalnlt the other lNJnl, and UMm bope they bring tbeb' •A• againM tbe Gauc.'bol. r.n~e at badle, and With an 4!Uf 83·61 Win over GOJdan Weitt. • team that will mOlt likely be at the bottom of the OEC. Tbe Other oontenden ere Sen1a • ~a and IVC. Cypr will have to unprove quickly U it wants to make any noise. . The Sues wUl face Cypress today at 5:30 p.m. The feels at OCC's gyxn will probably be near-empty, wbJcb amazes me. The competition in the OEC should gtve ·basketball fans plenty to watch. But, it's almost com1cill that juco basketball in th818 ports is so underappfed4ted. OK, I'll get off my .oep box. 5eriously, the OEC IMIOD lhOUld make for greet dram. ID tbe weekl to coma After the 8ucl IOall down ltVlne vaa.y, ~.,. __. .. a.rt aQd ~. -"'l'W't ....,,. Mt~118rf· ...,, l'ti. bDW "°""'..., . ' .. ' Dolly Pilot ~SPORI'S Clrs pion Bnuen -fiont r0w, from left: SbaDDoD RoMn. s.ra Gomez, Lauren DeVoy, korl Erhom; Kelly Hee1U111 ud Erm Miller. Back row, from left COKh Kirk Mcintosh, Stephanie N~, Meghan McMahon, Allee Cope, ~Snyder, Maggie Demay, Kiity Stotdl ad CC!!Kil Jack (;qmei... _ 1Bfeakers ·rule! •Newport girls sweep Premier Division at Costa M~sa Classic. The Newport Beach Breakers, a girls under-10 progressive soccer team from AYSO Region 97, captur~ the Premier Division championship at the Costa Mesa Classic, defeating a strong field. The Breaker& posted viqories over La Mirad~-~-,~-Hawthorne (S·O) and Tustin (4-0), ea.ruwy a place in the championship final against an experienced South Irvine Gold team .. The Breakers came jhrough. with a 2-1 YOUTH SOCCER .. victory With goals by Sara Comez and Maggie Bemay. The midfield of Shannon lloban, Lauren DeVoy, Kori Erhom, Ke.Uy Hee.nan and ~ce Ce>pe supported tbe front line the entire toumament, generating many scoring opportunities for strikers Erin Miller and Gomez, who scored four and five goals, respectively, over the course of the tourney. . ~ ' Solid defense was displayed by Meghan McMahon. Katy Storch. Amy Snyder and Stephanie Nealey, allowing just two goals over the four games. . SOCCER CdM wins three at Costa Mesa Oassic CONTINUED FROM 81 . Newport Harbor's Aaron Yamat drives toward the basket as Ellasar Maldonado of Estancia defends In Friday night's nonleague basketball game. Newport was the winner, 61-51. STEVE MCCAANIC I DAILY PILOT NEWPORT FROM 81 Hust gave lus team rruxed reviews. • ·We did some good things offensively, but I think yt>u could tell we were trying to shake a little rust off,· Hirst said. Sorce said hls Eagles, who visit Hunting ton Beach tonight at 7, should b(> encouraged by their effort. \ •Boys unde r-14 squad from AYSO Region 57 fares well in weekend tournament competition. COSTA MESA -The Corona del Mar boys under-14 All-Star squad from AYSO Region 57 earned three wins in , four contests at last weekend's Costa Mesa Classic. held at Estancia High. The Sailors also had a familiar face back in goal, wtth Burche ll playµtg his hrst game afte r his duty on the football team. He posted six Sdves, including a btg stop off 9.0 Edison free kick late in the game. "He's our foundation back there." West said of Burchell. •Duke's defense helps create our offe nse. It'll take a little while for Duke to get totally comfortable back there, but you could see he was finding it even in his first game back.· In the opener, CdM took care of Costa Mesa, 5-0. Erle Stemler led the attack With three goals, while Kyle Jung and Ajay Sahl added single tallies. CdM's lone loss came at the hands of Garden G rove, 2-0. Sah.i and Kurtis Luebke each had opportunities to score, but Garden Grove was up to the task. Corona del Mar rebounded and blanked Tustin, 5-0. Peter Stemler bad two goals,• while Bob1>3 Schooler, Matt Storey, Brandon Ballbeck, Tyler lance and Casey Flynn each added assists. In the finale against 11erra Santa of San Diego, two goals by Schooler and one by Lance was all ~ needed in the 3-0 win. The Sailors will try to ma ke it two in a row tonight at 7, when they host crosstown rival Corona del Mar. "It's going to be electric,• West said. "Playing under the lights against CdM. It doesn't get much better than that." RUDAY'S COUNTS Nl9'wpot't Landing -1 boat, 12 anglers. DEEP SEA 1 calko bass, 5 sand bass, 2 sculpin, 1 sheephead, 1 wtii~efish. • · Davey's Lodcer -3 boats, 50 anglers. 111 scu lpin, 64 sand bass, 5 calico bass, 2 sheephead .. Chembers FlctlUous Buslne .. CfTY OF Mdltlonal .. 1a ot the Name St.8tement Name suwment Name Slltement • U (the Satlors) were t.n the Pacific Coast League .. they'd be the favonte and we lost by 10 points to them,· ... Sorce Sdld. ElJasar Maldonddo paced "the Eagles with 20 points, while Young added 16. Yamal said he wouldn't wdi;te any hme enJoymg those braggmg nghts. "I'm gomg to go to Cesa'r's house (todayl dnd heckle htm, • YMnal Sdtd with a srrule. lCHEDUlE SATURDAY • llMketball College men · Vanguard Unrwrsrty at·Fr~ PacifK. 7 30 p m College women • Vanguard Un!Yel'5ity at Fresno Pacffic. 5.30 pm Community college men • Cwess at ~ange Coast. 5.30 p.m Community college women · Cyp<ess at ~ange Coast. 7 30 pm High Khool boys Fountain Valley at ~ Harbor, 7 pm, Estanc:1a at Huntmgton 8ead1, 7 p.m High school girls El Toro at Corona delMar, 6p.m • Wlltw po49 High school g.rls CcJrlsbad at Newport Hartx>i, 10 a.m •Soaler High Khool boys Corona del Mar at ~Harbor, 7 pm High school girls · Corona ~ Mar at~ Harbo<, 5 pm • Wi'ftttlng High Khool -Newport. Corona del Mar, Costa Mesa at Estancia Tournament. all day Fktltious Busfneu Name Statement Thi lolloWlng ptr1IOnl .... doing~ .. T d>trt Anahtlnf pt\lr· meey, 1236 N. ~ Ava.. Anaheim. CA U801 No&. lfNlllng Bide may The following l*'IOOI The· followlng pef10nl The· 1o11ow1~...ona COSTA MESA be obtained by avthor· -doing~ u · era doing~ u: are doing u : 8 B NOTICE INVJTING lied vendots at the Of· Talbert Foun .. 1n Val-Zpellbound Reoorda, Tal~rt Santa Ana OME UYING BIDS FOR A flea of the Purchallng lay Pharmacy, 9930 2618-8 W. Columbine Ptlannacy, 1002 N. Falf· SUP£.RSrt>RE Network Pharma· ceutlcelt, Inc. (Oelware), 511 Amigo• Drive, Rtcllandl. CA 9237'3 Thil bualrllll .. con-ducted by. a COfPOl'llion Hav• you alerted doing buslne11 yet? v-. 11/01199 Network Pharma- Cltlllcel9, Inc Thll ltattmtnl Wit fl1td with the County an Of a..,. eou.,.y on 12/1W2000 2000N4"40 Dtlv Pllol Dtc.. 23, 30. 2000 Jan. e. 13. 2001 St1§1 ml'J',~~ pll.'~. ~ ,. -. _.... . . ~ -· ' . . -" .... , .. ,_ EJ.IHIAIWAY Mortu.-y • Ch8pef Cremlltion 110 Broedwey ' DISCREET Supervisor, 77 Fair Talbert Ave., Fountain Ave., Santa Ana. c.lifor· view Slrffl. Santa ~ ~ VIOi ~ NON-LINEAR EDIT Drive, Room 100• eo.ia Veley • CA moe nil 92704 CA 92703 '100. lbi Ell.lie SYSTElf ~bl=-N= Network Pharm•· bora Sage, 28t8-8 Network Pharm•-~~.f1'e~, .. BID fTEM NO. 1058 Bt1ch-Co•t• MHI ceutlc:als. Inc. (Oebi· W. Columbine Ave , cevtlcala. Inc. (Dela· _...~ ,....,......,., ..... ~r IS HE111eey ware), 511 Amigo• Santa Ana C•lifomia ware). 511 Amigo• \ll.&.Rt\\IMQnr 11&1 ""''~ "~ Diiiy Pilot January e. "-'-· .,.__ 927'" • .,. Ori C ......... r.ow.- G".c-u -... __._.. ........... 200l ""'''· ,....,1nd1, CA ~ vt, Rtdlandt. A , ............ -.. ......., on.,.. •----92373 Thll bulintN II con-92373 l ..... 7JJ.41$724111'1 wll bl ~ by lhl St4ll This bu1rMw 11 con-ducl9d by: en ~ This bu11n1M II con-~ .!'._ ~~Mffl IO ducted by: a to1pc111t100 Have you ll•rt•d ducl9d by.• corporallon ~.,!:'.~ • ,,,. ""l. P.O Have you 111rt1d ~ bullrllel yf!l(I No Have you •tarted EMAIL__..____ ~· =._1200• PUBLIC NOTICE doing bU1lne11 yet? Z90ta Saa. doing bUtlMll yet? '"===--===~ on or btfo1e Ill hour (i cm OF Yn, 11101199 Thll .UlllMllt w11 Y•. W011'99 • • 10 00 .a--NEWPORT IEACH Network Pharma· flied wtt;h the Counly , Network Ph1rm•· V.A.. IO MOYI_,. ; a.m. on --• OIUlk:ell. Inc. Cleltl of n--,..,........., ~ tnc. 22, 2001. It .t\11 be lhl City Cou1clt .........., / ...... "'"' ........ ", ,....._ iMpOl.itiay ol ,_ ~ a....-e °' the Pruad G . .--,, Vice on 11 17f2000 Pl'ued G. Reddy, n.,. def to dtlf\oaf ,... lllicl to Pr11ld1nt ltOOM41101 Prllldtnl ..,. Clly Cleltl Ofllce by Cly °' Thil ~ w.. Dilly Plot Dec. 18, 23. Thil ltattmtnl Wll the ~ announotd Nlwpi>rt lelcl'I -li1td "lWlttl the ~ 30, 2000, Jan .. 2001 filed with ttlt County lime; ~ Locabon noo Newport C1e1t1 c1 <>ninoe CountY · suez C1e1t1 of <>ninoe CounlY llo ... rd on 12/tanooe> • on 1211anooo Cit; cl Me9a. T1 u v • · ltOOM4tut ~ Buslnee• 2000N4_,7 Falt Dftvl. Room 101 , Newport a.ch DeitY Pilot Die 23. 30.. Heme ata"m•ot Dllllv Piiot o.c. 23, 30. c920!! MMe, C.llfomla CPOLAMllNtN•'•NtOON 2000. Jan. a. 13, 3001 Thi following ptflOnt 2000. Jal\. e. 13. 2001 ,;;:·hi be r«unitd St10Z .,. dolna l:luelnttl u: ____ _,s..,a""-4§ .. 5 lb IN attention of the --~NOA ~ 8uel Mara Flnenclal. 2152 f'ta.. ,._.._ .......... _ a..._. .-.--~ • ,,... Dupont DltYt, Sit. 108, ""' ....,,., '"""'' _,. ~ 1tl. 20011 • Heme 8tstcment ~ CA 82t12 111111 limit. In • IMltd . l :IO .The lolowina l*'IOnl Richard Denni•. :::,. ldtnldltd on ~ ere dcllnQ ~ M ' 22388 Vlldlmole. ,... !!-_ .,._.._..Witt_!!~ ,J;~ ~. Talbert Huntington llan VIiie>. CA al8I ,_.. ............. ..... .... ............... a..c:t'I ""-"'*Y· lllOll ~ ~ • con-~o...::: 16~ ~': ~ Ave • l'tUnt· dU*CI by: a "9d pert.. ~at 10:00 am pennt to l*"'I ,. IM lllQtOn 8Mdl. C. t2t4t nerlNp or • eoon ......., • of ,. ~ *" end Network Pharma· Hev• you started FREl c ...... FREI Utt Of.._. HUCWA MfJOt 71WUHOO ........ E...- E..il: wt91etdfte.COlll AEVfAL!D ,.::.~ ..... tlDA 'e :;:.ne Toi,,_..._ •• 1..-..U1 ...... IDt 1• _.............._ ~ bow ..... of .. bOlt 09Ut.icele, Inc (ON-~ tMlrlw "" No Pl'..,_ on wart), 111 Amtooe R1ci1ant O..W. L..IM~lllli...A 21. 2001 111 .. eo 111 uaec1 .., -:-= om.. ~ndt. 'CA lllW •••• '*"' ... ~ ~ * m1a lltd w111 the eouney =-. ':.:' .. ::= Thia ~ • oar.-0.-d 0-. Cour'lly C."!",.~oe 1•a11 .,.,..... cadld "¥: a _,_..., °" 1 MHCIOCJ C.0.taMeu. la~ Have you 1ttl'te4f 1111••• .. -.,,... ,...._ **" ~ ,.., Dlll.r ... 0.0. 11. Q. ............. -v-. 11101111 111;'~ JM. .. I001 ~ Outctoof w.tworll Pharmt• ...,a °=L~ ~OlnCAeddf, Wit '* ~ -..... ... ""'""" ... I ... ..... Tiii I rl llWI W .................. = ..... r-~~.=r •=:•••••t•1•11 IPlllllllllM_, -= =: .. .a.J:t ~-=-,..~ •• Saturday, January 6, 2001 BS NONLEAGUIE NEWl'Oln' 61, EsTANOA 51 5a>f-e by QUllrt8rS Estancia 10 12 12 17 . 51 Newport 12 21 11 17 • 61 Estanda • Maldonado 20, Young 16, K. Valbuena 4, Cachola 4, Prado 4, D. Valbuena 3, Romero 0, F. Rodriguez 0. 3-pt. goal~ ~aldonado 4 Fouled out · none . Technicals · none. Newport Harbor · Yamat 26, Melum 13, Young 10, Peterson 5. Pemne 2, Diefenbach 2, PaJevic 2, Cameron 1, Hill 0, Trimb~ O 3·pt goals · Yarnall 4, Pet~ 1. Fouled out · none Technicals · none. COM CONTINUED FROM 81 whtle Costa Mesa plays real solJd. I truly believe that if we can play the w.ay I think we're capable of playing, we can compete with anyone m the league· NONUAGUE MtSSIOH VIEJO 63. CoM 41 M1ss1on Viejo 17 18 14 14 · 63 Corona del Mar 7 10 12 12 .. 41 Mission Viejo .... Niesen 14, Cole 12, Fleskosld 10, Va~ntlne S. Villanueva 5, Miller 4, Ralph 4, Moses 3, Hanson 2. Garay 1. 3 pt. goals • Niesen 2. Villanueva 1. Fouled out· none. - Coronll .. Mm' . Snell 13, Sh~ng1an 12, Alshuler 6, Marston 4, K. Mancillas 2. Brewster 2. Richardson 2, Grey 0, Glass 0, Reynolds Or B. Mancillas 0. 3 pt. goals -Shahanglan 2. Snell 2. Fouled out · none. .. 86 Saturday, Jof\uory 6, 2001 • ' -•I { . ,.--- L ' l ...... ~ ;;;·. ,• -. -' .,, Lo• . f 151 HOUSEM:OllOOS FOR llJff GENERAL ..... dtl • ..., S175CllMo. 381 home. comer lot. Bkr 9-t9-493-0761 (am) 946 .l!!!lpero New 01t Be£,lcl1 Aut9matic, Full Power Per/Mo. 39 mo.lease + 99c + tax Closed end lease J9 mo. 12k mi. per year, .20c ~r mile thereafter. $4,450 total to start. Total payments: $12,831 +tax. Subject to prior sale and credit approval. Prior rental. Price good thru 01/07 /01 . (283460) • FV Oft l*lg lor 1M 1123-1118 "x..... ~ 10840 Wllf* ""'1. .. H SoMd lnllmll 714-751-2767 &tllle .. Set, 8--12 Anliquta, Ylntlgl oolllc-.... tum. Ill & men. 253 Cebtllo 1 bit E cl 1711, CM a.. ... Sit. .llri. .. ... ,Piii-Lots cl ctochel booQ. IOp. kltdlen stuff, bend uw. kids bed """-' nu:h mm! 2800 CM:ib St N!!!port Bwh. ~~~-.-rwf , . ., . "~ . • '! : ' M!HW wo~ro WOllfOl _you ~'·~~~ BABYsma. NEEDED kw llroe lamly In Allo Viljc> lite tollekNp'ng. Piii ~4-4248 lor ll'IOl'I dtl•ll• _ 2LivHOME,. EIJer care comes hoTM. WORK FOR THE BEST ~Aide I Cvegfver9 I Comptinlone FOR PRIVATB DUTY • $350 Sign-on bonus for l..iYC-ln ~ dw driwwidi awn car. • Minimum 2 ytan apcrieooe widi Ahheimcr, Danenda or Gm-¥. • Live-lo / Lm-Out I '4 hr I 6 hr I 8 hr I t2 bt Shift Available. •We offer cxcd1ent bcndi!' I Training / Top Pay / -401 K P11n Join the LlvHOM• T~•ml ............ c:.JI ,,,.,, -CW) 9JJ. S#O ·c.11 :.:.·:;n:i,_"° o--. a.JI A.UW.. -(11(>$) JUH# '' ~. •• • ... I .••. I. I 'I.... '1 ( ) ' I \ ? • .-.......... .,., hOur ·-... ~ .,. .... ,,, ................... 'I r ,, r Saturday, January d. 2001 B1 for al your needs .. I tt CAAP£T fl CARP£T fl CLEANIHG C.rpel, Floots. Rlpllra, P11clllng, lnstaU, Windows, Homte & Offices Couneoue. Any llzt Jobi. Ouelilv w0t1d Free tslimate Wholellltt IMM?Z-0205 DALE'S 714-17.0158 SELL your home through classified Everyday is· a great day in Classilied! ·' ~a part of it, place your ad today! (949) 642·5678 COMPUTER ASSISTANCE • your pace 0 your home OI olc IO(Mjual ~. Internet, Program lnstalla· llOll Dennis 949· 723·9372 IT SHOULD BE FUH 211 ELECTIICAL SERVICES SMALL JOB EXPERTl DUNCAN ELECTRIC Loe11/0utdc rnpontt SetV1Ce/Aemodels 20 v ears e.peoence U275870 949-650-7042 r LICENSED CONTRACTOR No fOb IOO sm Al INllVialsl Repaw, remodel. lens, l!)l. MW -MH4S,!l5! • Ellctrlcll Conlnldof • Holne ifiaoNt•• Oltllld Rel9orlll ,..., le •581521 949-644· I 101 DOOR STVCK11 LOWEST PRICES GUARANTEED/ $amt dly 24/tv SVC Re!J'ir/r91>l1ce. all bra11d1 Stcllonal ~ dooq and openers 5eMclng oc lot 23Y11 ~ lJct 610983 714-M4).G391 Slull<>d Carpen!<>• El<>ctr 1c 1an'P!umber I ~o:= I ~,~~~e= --repair and remodel Issues. VARI) CLEAN-UP Tr-Pruned & Removed, Sptlnldet1 Rep11red, new Keith 94~74-1748 laWlll Call 714-7S1-3471 QUALITY CRAFTSMAN Yard Clean-up, tree trim· 20 Years ~ Rers ming, stump removal. l1M YOUR HANDYMAN! l\edOt•. palm trees, 714 MARI< 949-650-9525 84&-1130 01 7/496-7031 Yard Clttn Up, $9nnlder 1304 Repa11, Ma111tenance, Tnm ._ _____ __. Tr-24 Yea11 &peoence Free Est ~1 LICENSED QUALIFIED HANDYMANl GENERAL CONTRACTOR No job too BIG oumal Uc• $17992 (949)837-5642 SEMI RETIRED CONTRACTOR A toZ Home ~·a JUNK TO THE OUMPlll 714-963-1882 AVAILABLE TOOAYI !MH73-S561 ~m If~ ilie ~lution roo're~ for.~cr rou're~ i~o~ af'OO~ · ~oroov GMAT FIMWOOOlll Repairs Electncal and •ru S95 112 COid $175 11.t COid Plumbing LH:•650524 Ttmlic hlldwood ma f1tt Call 714·2'9·7185 or d!!rYe!y' 714-MS-I 432 t4t-24H011. REACH 80,000 fftJMES $ EACH WEEK FOR ONLY . perweek W.mi1. At Costa Mesa Lincoln· Mer • •' l! • '-,1, nt-•·tJCr~an!1.ig ng com PHEN+DIET r..,lrtt Mi4al ta;. la,,.. $~9' /tc1n1 Moeth "-:J '/ with eh .. e4 ln<h.J<J llq-(....,,,..,,.. In I V...11 VIAG T C"t.C>t•croncl(...,o•ch HormvNr Ptor«w NEW TREAl MENT FOR C llttONI< l'AIN B•• k Ne< k. Knee I f1p Of \ltou1Jcr •Nu '-turwc:,-y • Nu t tc-.-plcahzatton -800-700-8774 TIE TO BE<* YOUR HOME IMPROVEMENT PROJECT? ca• • plumber, painter. handy- !Tllll, or tll'f of the great Hrvlcei lis1ed heft In our ctrectOfYI THESE ~ LOCAL SVC PEOPLE CAN HELP YOU TODA YI 330 MOVING I 'I STORAGE your home through classified PUBLIC NOTICE The. Calif Public· U111tt1es Com· llllSSIOO REQUIRES that all used house- ...... .,,.., .......... l'Wlfl.OCAJlHO IUCftONC S&M LUI( DfTICT10N friendly 5-vke 675-9304 - ~ Roonna Speclallata 949-722-88-46 714-751-8846 goods~ pnnt the11 P U C Cal T number. ltlnos and chauffers pnnt lhetr T. C.P number Ill al advel1lsmentS If you have a QUeS· bOn about tile ~ rty oC a mover, hmo or chauffer. can. PUBLIC UTILITIES ~~~ , .. UPHCU11!11'1 I OIAIN I SIWU ;.• • • COMMISION 714·558·4151 ~SNCIAIJST TWEEDY PLUMBING 949-645-2352 -:mt • All ORA~S OOCL06GEO ·c:mtm~fJfllR •lmll••ma •I.di ID&i ... • ·-M-IOS PlllmC (714)141-1947 G 6 G UflHOlSTERY Since 68' Q.-m ...... uphollltly • OO'ltn, If)- • l!p!!I i1~12 I* COYER~~ I FARntlHG INTEAtORS lnsllllalion • ~ Discount w~ Lt560875 ~ TiiE STRIPPER! SpecaalZJng In wallplpef removal L1511141 714-9'3-5037 EXPERT Drain Cleaning Plumbmg repaors 20yrs ,q, ,t,Q worll guarameed STEVE 714-S45-8298 WE GALS lhOUld hlng togetller Stnp rnslll. ~ ell pall1I.. PIC9 tc. ,. crazy Ll7l5976 949-631·2111 IQEST 6 REASQNABLE PLUMBER No drail dean- '"9 l •506586 T0<1e1s.srn11.>. snower rep 714-23S-91 so RAIHSOW CIRCLE MAJNT .. PRECISE PLUMBING P I Aepaots & Remodels arntong· ntext House/Apt FREE ESTIMATES quahty fOb' Free e$bmate Lf687398 714-969-1090 l•569897 71~ CHUNG'$ P,t,INTING 27 Y..,. E"P Great Pnce' Guarantee Wort< Free Est U375602 714-538-1534 1 ~ SER~I Pool & Sp. ~ seMCe IKE'S CUSTOM PAINTING & rep&llS o1 pumps filters Proleis10nal. clean. quality heaters. plumbing & eleclnc work ln1/exl & docks (Acid wash)• 714-404-7526 U703468 94!Hl31-46 t 0 • TOP QUALITY • Very Compet1t1ve l1censelBon<led/lnsured 362 ROOFING /GUTTERS U648228 Jay 949-6~5066 ....-------. • TOP QUALITY • VefV C~truve license Bonded/Insure<! lJ648228 Jay 949-~5066 26 Yun Exp Qwr.er wOt1cs on 11141 10tJ im.nor1Ex1enor. Aets Cal Gene Peters * Mt-854-0512 • A GOOD ADI Cll (Ml) 142-1171 CALL LORRAINE Ar 949 ·5744245 s ... 88 Saturdoy, January 6, 2001 I TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE STUMPED? GOOD JOBS. REilABLE SERVICES. IN'fERESTING THINGS TO BUY.· ITSAU fflERE EVERYDAY IN CLASSJFJE/1 (949) ~-5678 I Brl!91• 8'i CHARLES GOREN wtth OMAR SHARIF end TANNAH HIRSCH , WEEKLY llUOOE Q UIZ Q I · Ball· West vulnerlblo. you hold: •A62 c;:i AJIO o K106S • AIS ~__..~~ ·~b'~~ Stay hollw • --onllne. Flexl>illly, $500-$700CWmo In yQK tpll9 time. Slt!Hly· 1tep 1ysttm Complete training Free 11110 IOCM9M713 www.pul!!lfob.com •AQJU q JO OU• QU The blddln• hM micecded: NOlmf IA81"' 80lml W1rST lo· ,_ I• ,_ l• .... ., W1Ud ICtion do )OU lake? ' Q 5 • 'Boch vwnc:nble, ., South you bold: ~~wri,,. •• 1'1111 10 ,_ 1Q .... ' What do you bid rtOW7 .. NOTHING, Volvo of Orange County =Certified.Pre-Owned ·=· -------.,.. aMw -------For ultimate peace of mind, every Certified Prc..OWncd BMW is btclced by The Certified Pre-Owned BMW Protection Plan, covering che vchide for up 10 2 years or 50,000 miJes (whichever comes first) furm the date of apiration of die 4-ycar/SO,()()().mile BMW New Vchide Limited Warranty.•• The Protection Pbn includes rwo key demcnts: Certified Pre-Owned BMW Limited Warranty .. Baclced by BMW of North America, Inc., and iu r12rionwidt nmvork of BMW an1ers, covered rq>airs m made only by BMW-trained technicians wing only genuine BMW rq>lactmcnt paru. BMW Roadside Aaistance .. Pe:w;c of mind follows you anywhere in che ,USA, 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. 1998 BMW 740i PRE OWNED LEASE FOR 26,062 Mi, Load«! with Options ! $4,995 ror.al ro SWt. 10,000 mi per yev. 25¢ per actss mile. Tor.al payments s $28,303.00, Residual $22,S46.00. l.cro security dq>OSit, (Ml8781) •TAX ON APPROVED CREDIT '97 J18i '98 j.IOi ~ i.-Mi. llloclt (UW4) $19~ ,,_CA. a.-('C')92Sll~---- '97 ZJ '98526i s-tpd. i.-Ml. Ead• Cond 0XE.)Ot9l .. • $.20,995 Au>. Solftfw/Crcy (W-41946) ............... ·-··--·--....... $34.99$ '97 3281 '98 S21Ji C-.C4.0.-0"11K.o7J ---261tMi 1-.Solwi 24KML (4Q141'J-----"4,99$ "97 3281 '98 74<HL Alia,,,_~ ~263) -· ·-----. .Y/t Mi C4. ,_ s-d. 81.ur IM1t71l).-.-· ----·· -.261t Ml .,, 3281 '99 "'' A-. Spott Plr&. QI (4CUK4SOl-$.26,Jl9J CA.~ wlS.woll (~H~S>-----·-~ WJno '.N7$1HL s.,4.Sk.te.yl441J04>--3~Ml ll1ch·IMKt.~~MMl29> ··------291tNi '97 1281 ~ '98 7"11 ,_, ,,,_w/SIMIWOMSJl ... ua.m c.i. <rhe•/Clilr!4T'V"31l---·-.-...-IJ1~ ,_WI -. ..,,. '.91 140a • C-.Sillo.wolllod<Mlm?l ---·-.. ,.-., C4S-..C-.(MllS9'1 -"--~..._~:: ,,, nal . '99 S2M ,.... llod-..,...OllYXM-__....--~J ll\MJ<m•'°'------'-U..991 ,. M.J . ,,_ 1"'11L -44m.Q~fE*l'l f-~1/,#1 ,.._<A. ~t4AM41>------$.J7~ 497 JM/ • 1"11L ,_,,,ou.a..-rtm11~. IJJ~ a-.c.1w:x,,1s1------IJ'-'" '99.JZM 'nZJ ,..._,,_ai-M11•lll7l6l IJJ..991 aSi1owf4.Jf.J S""'1J 'Rat.au low .,4.9°/o APR oa epprowd cndir •ALL Cati&ed to IOOK Mi • ~ More <:crti8ed • U.Hr, ....... Aabcaaccl Pr.Oneel BMW"1 to Q009el t Plua m. 39 morAh doeechnd i.-on~ cncSt. 2()c per mile CNll '21( mt1-/,.ar. ' at lhi1 pric:i9 Total o+..-off $2.428 91 . (902191) ~339 i>ermonth Sunroof, leather, power windows, power locks, cfVIH control ·929,900 orlNMfor ~99=:. • Ptu.tax ~mo. lec:ue 15'~mi1e <Mr I~ per~ On <:Yd. TotJI ~ $3 . 6. (00938') lntegra LS Cou e '94CHEVY '91HONDA CAVALIER CONY CIVICLX Red, auto, AC, ps, full pwr, 4-door, white, auto, AC, ps, · cass, a steal (P 1502) full pwr, all tricked (Pl 429A) $3995 $4995 '96FORD '93 CHRYSLER TAURUSLX CONCORDE V6, silvu, auto, AC. full pwr, 4DR, V-6, auto, AC, full pwr, lcachcr, moonroof, alloys, nice, Di«, car {20808A) a very clean car {20769A) .$6995 $6995 '91BMW325 '99DODGE COUPE NEON Auto, AC, full pwr, -4DR, white, auto, AC, low, moonroof, alloys, low, low low, m~cs (Pt375) miles, one-of-a-kind {P 1491) $8995 $8395 . '95ACURA '97 ACURA 2.2 LEGEND COUPE CL COUPE Champagne, auto,.\C, full 5~, moonroof, leather, pwr, moonroof, leather, oys, a certified car, a alloys, a rare car (20632A) bargain at (P1563) .$13,995 $14,995 . '92 TOYOTA PREVIA ~GON 7-pass, auto, AC, ps, full pwr, a good family car (20764A) $5995 '91.ff:fiR_ QIEROKEE LIMITED 4»i White, auto, ps, AC, full pwr, leather, alloys, top-of- the-line (2082 IA) · $7,295 '93 VOLVO 850GLT Red, 4DR, full pwr, runs like a mouse w/slippers, .2 to choose from (Pl477) $8995 '95 LEXUS ES300 Green, auto, A<;, full pwr, moonrool,lcather, alloys, a gorgeous car (Pl568A) $15,995 . . Saturday, Jonuory 6, 2001 89 3.5 RL· Sedan 2001 ACUllA MDX '93 MAZDA 626 '93 TOYOTA -'92ACURA 4DR. ES; V6, auto, AC, full CA.MRYLE ' INTEGRA pwr, alloys, moon roof, a lot .ffttt,v.rbice, auto, AC, ps, full 4DR, auto, AC, ps, fuJI pwr, of car for the money {Pl 493) pwr, a crue bargain (PI489) fow mi, good trans (20550A) $6595 $6595 $6995 '96 CHRYSLER '94HONDA '97FORD SEBRING LXi COUP.E ACCORD EX AEROSTAR V6, auto, AC; full pwr, 4DR, 5-Spd, AC, ps, full pwr, Auto, AC, full pwr, a great leather, moonroof,_ alloys, leather, alloys, moonroof, this priced to sell is not a misprint (20488A) family car (Pl 542) $7995 $7295 $7995 '97 .MAZDA '96 CHRYSLER '90LEXUSLS MIATACONV TOWN& ·400 White, 5-Spd, AC, full pwr, COUNTRYLXi Pearl whire, auco, AC, full pwr. fun in the sun (P 1499) VG, auto, AC, white, l~ther, alloys, leather, rnoonroof, alloys, the $10,795 the top-of-the-line (P20790A} right color (206 l 9A) $12,995 $12,995 '98CHEVY '96 MERCEDES '99HONDA ASTROVAN C230 CRVEX Champagne, ~UtO, AC, 4DR, champagne, auto, AC, ~4, black beauty, CD, alloys, low, ps, full pwr, 7-pa;ss, low, low full pwr, leather, alloys, true low miles, make offtr (20799A) mi, like new (Pl4l9) luxury {P1522) SAVE $16,995 $18,995 • .. -· BIO So!urdoy, January 6, 2001 I 2000 Escalade Stocil 1212990V &1ver Sand List Price $46,925 SALE $39,995 .-m ftlitii= .. F .. 1• .... » . . . 2000 Seville SLS : • ' I ' It List Price $46,048 · SALE $36,995 ~B!J .m:-.19-ic--..t ' " Stock #COl8838Y Rain For.tt I • ,.- Daity Pilot v { 2000 Seville STS List Price , 192 SALE $43,995 ~14'4.fll•ll!f' SAVE ~IG ON ALL NEVV 2000 & 2001 OL~SMOBILE MODELS ~T NJ.\BERS! 2000 Bravada Stock 170855 FOAMER DEMO List Price $32, 105 -··-sALE $26,995 tncludM $3000 .-B!Jllidill•» ~=- 2000 AlERO Sed an ; • 1' • , I' Stocil 170874 • List Price $17, 785 SAL~ $14,995 tndude8$2000 ~m =-zm:x., c:~ 2001 Aurora &oek ~111093 GM Company Cw List Price $31,240 SALE $27,995 lndudees1soo ~M!J.Uif-. ~ OVER 50 QUALITY PRE-0\NNED VEHICLES AVAILABLE 1 88 BUICK LE SABRE V6, light blue, runi great! (.461054) 1 93 OLDSMOBILE CIERA V6, auto, 81Ceellent condition, ideal transportation oor. (357885) 1 90 BUICK RIVIERA low milet, excellent condition, wper body style! (106089) 1 92 MAZDA MIATA . Red, low miles, xlnt condition. (30.4913) 1 90 ACURA LEGEND Sedan, w+tile, xlnt condition, MW car trad.-inl (003300) 1 91 CADILLAC ELDORADO Touring, low miles, red, moonroof & morel (608793) 1 93 OLDSMOBILE~ Touring, rare model, moonroof & morel (3Q87l4) 196 CHRYSLER LHS While pearl, leother, alloys, monys extrosl (102654) 1 94 CADILLAC ELDORADO VS, Not1hs1or, hhr, alloys & morel (6147.U) ~&J~~~~!!.~~Y!~~9) ~?2m2W,~2!!~~ ~~H1~5 :!.U.~1v~t.~EY·h~!, ,fl!i 195 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE I.ow mila, V·8, 4.K.4, leolher, CO and manl (78A870) 197 JEEP GRAND CHEROKIE I.ow mil.., whi•, ~condition, new c:or trod.-in. (743162) 195 ~HEVROLn BLAZER - 4.K.4, IOw ,., leoltw & moreii2'3&933) 5 2,988 53,.988 5 5,988 56,988 57,988 510,988 510,988 5.to,988 511,988 511,988 512,988 ~12,988 . 514,988 514,988 517,988. 517,988 518,988_ ~18,988 521,988 5 22,988 5 23,988 5 24,988 · 5 25,988 5 29,988 .. 5 29,988 .5 2g,988 533,988 :!U~J!.~e,~~~~'93843'' . 513~988 · 514,988 s14,988 s14,988 ( I I '·, • i \-, .. \ I (' ( t : I ' I I .. ( I I ' -, 1 t p,. i ' I • ' ' NABERS GO 2600 HarbOr, Boulevard • Costa Mesa --------(811>° 527· 1844 www.nabe1WC1uto.w11 ......... ':9tL•1!!111!1•:1,-.:a-. ... ., ... :li:~~ .-.. .......... ..... .. • '