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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-01-28 - Orange Coast Pilot. . .. SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA COMMUNmES SINCE 19o7 If he's not.in a bar, he's behind 'em • Mark Dayid Allen has tallied 106 arrest.S for being drunk in public iitNewport Beach-the city's all-time leader. Greg Risll119 DAILY PllOT NEWPORT BEACH -Sw-passing the century mark m nearly any field or category is coris1dered an accomplish- ment. But not when you have been arrest- ed 100 times for the same offense -in one city. locks sitting in the doorways of stores along the peninsula. Sontetlmes he is belligerent; other times, he can be charming. Either way, he is usually stone drunk. This is the story of Mark David Allen. · aty's "All-Tune Leader in Arrests.• "No one has come close,• said Newport Beach police Sgt. Mike McDermott. "We've had a couple of guys who racked up a lot of arrests, but notlung like this that we can remember.· Allen could be dismissed as a hope- less case, a degenerate alcoholic that has been bounced from jail to halfway houses and back onto the street. But those who have dealt with Allen want to mtervene before the booze takes hls life. It hasn't worked before. And, it RUght not now. They know the road to F~DAY, JANUARY 28, 2000 Dating back to 1985, Newport Beach police have consistently encountered the same weather-beat- en face covered with sun-drenched Only 38 years of age. Allen has amassed an astorushing record of pub- lic intoxication arrests in California and Hawaii. Over a 15-year period, Newport Beach police have arrested him 106 times, a dubious distinction that has landed Allen the title of the SEE ALLEN PA~E 7 Mark David Allen .. THE LIGHT FANTASTIC Australian Craig Williams on Thursday looks at the many colorlul shapes' inside a luminaria called "Archipelago,• an inflatable sculpture made of plastic and completely lit by sunlight. •Archipelago,· created by artist Alan Parkin- son, was on display next to the Orange County Perform- ing Arts Center in Costa Mesa as part of "Showcase 2000," described as an international marketplace for pre- senters and educators lo select from a spectrum of artistic programs for children. "Showcase 2000" runs through Saturday. · · Costa Mesa scores show improvement •When compared to other schools across the state with similar demographics, local schools tared better or worse . DMMttte Goulet DAILY PILOT NEWPORT-MESA -While Costa Mesa's schools did not fare well in comparison to those in Newport Beach on the Academic Perlormance lridex, they did shine when put up again.st schools with similar demo- graphics statewide. "I'm optimistic and proud of the work that we've done,• said Susan Despenas, essistarlt superintendent for elementary and special educa- tion. Although scores for several Costa Mesa schools fell below average, officials are taking solace in the alter-. nate ranking measure. After assigning a nwnerical value between 200 and 1,000 to nearly every public school in state, the Cal- Uomia Department of Education broke schools down into 10 equal groups, based on theu API values. Schools with a score of 10 are ln the top 10 percentile while those with a ranking of one are in the bottom perj.... .... t centile. , ~ · 11 Schools were then given a third ranking. It is this ranking that has been either a help or hindrance to many schools. Eaoh school was compared to 100 schools with similar charactenstics, such as student ethnicity, socioeco- nomic factors and the number of English language learners. Schools were given another ranking between SEE SCHOOLS PAGE 6 11111 <D YOll OUGKl'TO BB IN PlcnJR.ES: OCC will hold a workshop for people interested in television and film act- ing on Fridays. starting today and running through Feb. 18. Registrltion is $115, plus a $3 materials fee. OCC is at 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa For more Information, call (714) 432-5880. ClASSIREDS . . -· _ 12 COMMBITS & OJRIOSITIES • .-3 IWllOOl 2 POOO Fil.ES _ -·"--·-.......2 MJ( llOOOS _ ..... 11 HOURS A quick guide to the weekend SATIJRDAY N1GKI' FEVER: Temple Bat Yahm will honor lts past presidents, founding members and former "Women of the Yffr• at a 25th ennlvenary party at 7:30 p.m. Saturday. The theme of the party wtll be •s.turctay Night Fft9r .• llckets, which Include I buffwt Md one cocktail. are $45. The temple Is at 1011 Clfnelback St .. Nw'POf1 '-"· SPOll5 -·-···-·-..10 ..... Newport Center the first casualty of Greenlight? •Irvine Co. cites the anti-growth measure as the reason for ending its expansion plans. Noaki Schwartz DAILY PILOT NEWPORT BEACH Ballots for tlus fall's slow- growth measure are not even pnnted yet and already it's affecting the oty's menu of developments. On Thursday, the county's 'largest develop· er, the Irvine Co., canceled its plans to expand Newport Center Executive Vice President Gary H. Hunt m a Jan. 27 letter written to the City Council, wrote that the mea- sure added too much uncer- tamty to an dlready llme·con· sunung and expensive oty planning process. "!The Irvine Co.) hds already spent several hun- dred thousand d<'lltus on lhe planning process If we were to continue, w<>'d have to double whal we had mvest- ed, • said spokesmon Paul Kranhold, addmg thdt dfter paying for an envuonmentd.l report and lrafltc analysis, risking a potential citywlde election was too uncertam. Phil Arsl, spokesper .... on for Greenbght -the group of community dchv1sls who drafted the measure -was caught off-guard by the actl9n and had no unmed1ate comment. J SEE CENTER PAGE 7 Day:..care owner stunned by lawsuit • Mother of child killed on playground files · suit; 'It's like a family member suing me,' Sheryl Hawkinson says. Greg Risling DAILY PILOT C'OSTA MESA -Sheryl Hawkinson is pained by the mght-page lawsuit blaming her and others for a wrench- ing tragedy that killed two of the many children she looked after at her day-care center. No matter that l lawkinson has had a heart attack, bat- tled through a dispute with neighbors over a concrete wall and had compLications with her own pregnancy • since 4-yeat-old Sierra Soto and 3-year-old Brandon Wiener died while under her care Now Brundon's parents have fired a !'.urpnsing volley, a law~uit cla1mmg lhere should have been better safe- guards to protect their son. The lawsuit comes 1ust three day after Hawkin on stood next to Brdndon's mother, Pam, at an emotional ceremony in which.-a plaque was declicatcd in oonor of the slain children. "We are really hurt by this,• Hawkinson srud. •Hon- SEE LAWSUIT PAGE 6 ., • ' J • 2 Friday, January 28, 2000 The Stuttgart Ballet ' . Following_ in big footsteps Stuttgart Ballet's artistic director still finds inspiration in the example set bf the former director under whom he danced. Alex Coolman DAILY PILOT W hen the Stuttgart Ballet first rose to international prominence in the 1960s under the British artistic director John Crank.o, it was Reid Anderson who danced in some of the compa- ny's most prominent roles. In ballets such as "The Taming of the Shrew," "Romeo and Juliet" and "Onegin" -works Cran.ko devel- oped specifically for his company - Anderson was always the lead. Today, Anderson, 50, is the artis- tic direc.tor for the Stuttgart Ballet, which will perform "Onegin" and several shorter pieces Tuesday through Feb. 6 at the Orange County Performing Art Center. Having stepped into the shoes of Crank.o, who died in 1973, Ander- son said he finds the former direc- tor's example both inspirational and challenging. "He was a very great choreogra- pher," Anderson said. "He was always there for us." . Crank.o also was restless in his desire to create material for his company, feeling that relying on a preexisting repertoire amounted to artistic stagnation. 1bis approach is "very impor- tant" to Anderson as well. In his view, it's a use of resources that benefits both the reputation of the company and the skills of its dancers. "One has to put emphasis on (creating new material] because it's part of where we're going to take this art form in the future," Ander- son said. "Where are we going, and what are we going to do with iW Anderson came to direct the Stuttgart Ballet 1996 after a stint as the head of the National Ballet of .. Canada. Since beginning wiO:i the com- pany, he has commissioned works from more than a. dozen choreogra- phers and overseen the develop- ment of a two-week dance festival. Keeping the Crank.o legacy alive also is a major part of Anderson's work. FYI THE STUTTGART BALLET • WHA~ Performing contempo- rary works and "Onegin" • WHERE: The Orange County . Performing Arts Center, 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa • WHEN: Contemporary works at 8 p.m. Tuesday through Thurs-- day. "Onegin" at 8 p .m. Feb: 4 and 5 and at 2 p.m. Feb. 5 and 6 • HOW MUCH: $12 to $68 •PHONE: (714) 740-7878 ·Artistic Director Reid Anderson ~ •1t•s very important to the public and to the dancers," he sai9. Anderson said "Onegin" is par- ticularly effective in achieving that mission because the story -t>ased on Alexand~r Pushkin's famous tale "Eugene Onegin• -has the power to appeal to a wide audience. "Many people consider it to be one of the greatest narrative ballets created in this century," Ander5on said. "It's the kind of thing that people nowadays still love and want to see. It's the kind of ballet where people that don't go to the ballet say to me, 'If this is ballet, I love it.'• Anderson said he feels senti- mentally tied to the piece just because it was a strong role for him when he danced under Crank.o. "That character was probably one of the best things I did, actually," he said. "It was a character that taught me the way I look and the way I act. It was just perfect for me." In approaching the role today ~d working with Ivan Cavallari, who dances the role of Eugene Onegin in the current production, Anderson said be works carefully to accentuate the strengths in Cav· allari's instinctive technique. "You're always drawing out of the person what is in there anyway and what has to be brough~ out to nail the role," Anderson said. "Each dancer will bring some- thing different. The dancing always stays the same, but the interpreta- tion can change a lot." •Onegin" is only part of the show the ballet will be pedorxning at The Cent~r. In additiop to the ' full-length work, ~hich will be fea- tured Feb. 4 to 6, the ballet will pre5ent several contemporary . pieces Tuesday through Thursday. The program of shorter works includes Mauro Bigonzetti's #Kaz- imir's Colours,~ Christian Spuck's "Dos Amores" and a piec,e by John Cran.ko, "Initials R.B.M.E.,. The latter piece, which Crank.o created in 1972, is a work in a con- temporary style. The title refers to the names of the dancers who first performed the work: Richard Cra- gun, Birgit Keil, Marcia Haydee. and Egon Madsen. Tellingly, Haydee went on from her role as a dancer in the piece to become the director of the Stuttgart Ballet in 1976. Her career path, moving from the incubating womb of the compa- ny to a position of artistic control and creativity, is one that many members of the company have pur- sued, Anderson said. He said some of the more promi- nent figures in European choreogra- phy, such as Jiri Kyllan, John Neumeier and William Forsythe, developed along the same route from their beginnings with the ballet. tntimately, the Stuttgart Ballet's reputation for cultivating talent..:.. a reputation that dates back to Cranko -is as good for the company as it is for the dancers, Anderson said. "In John's idea of a company, it has to be a warm kind of relationship so that they can make art together," be said. •If the process has been a positive one and if the danc~ have been able to work together, that shows up on the stage.# on SATURDAY In Saturday's Oatebook, get inside the heads of animators whose work will be shown at "Spike & Mike's Festival of Animation," through Feb. 10 at Edwards Cinema in Costa Mesa. Check1tOUT j Self-esteem 1O1: a course fo r teens , I n the perilous passage between ages 13 and 19, - teens face a minefield of chal- lenges -from resisting peer pressure to dealing with growth spurts. To ease the journey into adulthood, Newport libraries offer nwnerous resources. #Before you'll ever win in the public arenas of life, you must first win private battles ... •writes 1 v ·~ P-tt~ I I~ d4 41"'-•U ...... } ..... . """"'""" , ......... .. MICHACL Gu1u>,~ .... _ ........... Sean Covey in "The 7 Habits of Highly Effec-· tive Teens." To arm teens for bat- tle, Covey provides hupdreds of tips aimed at improving self- image, building friendships and achieving goals in an entertain- ing guide based on his father's bestseller. · For parents, there's intriguing insight into adolescence in "A Tribe Apart," offering a fly-on- the-wall perspective of the lives of eight teenagers. After spend- ing three years 'Submerged in their environment, Patrida Her- . sch concludes that contemporary teens hav~been left to their own devices by a self-involved gener- ation of parents, and rely on each other for advice on such profound issues as ethics, values and relation- ships. Wll1'• <11IOU1' l'M'll &&A•rM ,0 .. •Cl r Equally enlightening 0 is "Seen and Heard," a penetrating look into the S world of young adults that shatters the stereotype ia of uncommunicative kids. In can- did interviews, 50 teens reveal feelings, frustrations, hopes and desires with a bittersweet hon- esty that coUld serve as a tool to open communication between adults and young people. The unfiltered voices of teenage girls can ~ heard in "Ophelia Speaks," a collection of BrieflJln DAT~BOOK Museum showcases recent added works original pieces offering poignant commentary on the search for self. Writing on everything from eating disorders to politics, the excerpts provide a collective response to issues introduced in "Reviving OpheUa," the best- seller that prompted 17-year-old Sara Shandler to provide a forum for real-life Ophelias. For parents of daughters, "200 Ways to Raise a Girl's Self- esteem" presents strategies aimed at imparting a strong sense of self-worth in girls. Based on such principles as modeling integrity, articulating love and demonstrating respect, each tip is followed by specific exercises for parents and teachers. Those raising sons will find sen- sible insight illuminating the lives of both troubled and highly func- tioning boys in "A Fine Young ,,.. Jl-1.-\h!T~ TLt\~ ' ' Man." In addi- tion to explor- ing the biolo- gy and emo- tions of ado- lescent males, Michael Gurian calls for a shift in the attitude of society, edu- cators and the media in order to nur- ture adolescent boys into loving, responsible men. The sa.o;ie author provides guidance for bOys heading into ·puberty in "From Boys to Men." There's sound advice on every- thing from acne to romance in this thoughtful guide to the phys- ical, mental and emotional changes th.at can make adoles- cence bewildering. Finally, lessons of survival and success abound in "Chicken Soup for the Teel).age Soul ll." Along with guidance and encour- agement, teens will find inspiring stories that emphasize the impor- tance of friendship, family, self- respect and dreams in this newest addition to a series aimed at winning the game of life. • CHECK IT OUT is written by the staff of the Newport Beach Public Library. This week's column was written by Melissa Adams, in collaboration with Andrea Jason. High school troupe stages 'Glitz 2000' The <?range County Museum Newport Harbor }iigh School's of Art ~ showcase recent w~rks Dance department is gearing up added to its permanent collection--'1 to present "Glitz 2000 • a show Feb. 5 through May 14. ' The collecti,on of new works, of work choreographed and 1>7r- given to the museum as gifts formed by Newport Harbor High throughout the past five years, is students. ca1led •A Lasting Legacy• for the The show, slated for 7:30 p.m. individuals, corporations and pri-today and Saturday, is produced vate fotmdations interested in leav-and directed by Julie Simmons. A ing an artistic mark on the area. diverse, multicultural work, it Th~ Orange County Museum incorporates many different of~ 1S at 850 San Oemente dance styles including jazz, tap, Dnve, Newport Beach. Hours are ballet, hula and swing. 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday Th h · N H through Sunday. Admission is $5 ~ s ow is at ewport ar- for adults $4 for students and bor High, 600 Irvine Ave., New- non-mem'ber seniors, free for port Beach. nckets are $3 with museum members and seniors. ASB card and $5 without. For For more information, call more information, call (949) 646- (949) 759-1122. 7378. POLICE FILES J>ai¥Pilot READERS t:.IQIUN£ or advertisements herein can be WEATHER AND SURF reproduced without written per-(949) 642-6086 RKord your comments about the Daily Pilot or news tips VOL 94, ,.0. 24 ADl>RESS Our eddr.ss is 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627. '- ntOMA5 H. JOttNsoN. Publisher COM,ECDQNS TONY DODERO, It Is the Pilot's policy to prompt· Editor ly correct all errors of subsUnce. Please c.all (949) 574-4268. ---RAGLAND, Senior City Editor m NANCY 08VIR, The NeWpott IM<M:ou Mew Futures Editor 0..1ty Piiot (\JSf'S-14'-800) ls pub- ROGmt CMLSON. llshed ~through Satul'dty. $ports Editor In NewpOft Bueti and Costa MeMI, = .. 8\lallable only bv MMCMMT'IN. ng to The T11n11 orange fltvJto Editor County (800) 252-9141. In.,. AlllTHONY PIO(. outside of Newport IMd'I and News Edit« '°"" MeN. tub«riptlonl to the IOll J. SANTOS, °"'~ Pilot .. .vallabll """ by PageDesigner miH for S20 per rnorteh. Seaind dB polU9I peid.t a NOYC.llNI, CA (Prbl lndudl .. O..ified Adll9rtfslng ... and kK.11 t.lilllL) TtR: Send llddra::::. to LNMJOtMON. ~~ Delly PromotlOnS l'tlot. P.O lolc 15111. CGltll MIM. PlttMDD Stwt, CA tlQI. ~Mo MM IJtO.. Ollef Flnlncial Offket ries. lllulerMlonl, ....... "*'* mlsSion of copyrtghi owner. HOW IQ BEACH US Orculatlon The Times Orange County (800) 252·9141 Adwrtlsfn9 Classified (949) 642-5678 Olsplay (949) 642-4321 Editorial News (949) 642-5680 Sports (949) 574-4223 New!, Sports Fax (949) 646-<4170 E-mail. dailypllotelatimes.com Main Office 8UStness Office (949) 642-4321 Business Fax (949) 631-7126 Niliihed bvllrMI ~ ..... • llmes Mrn0t ~ ~ . WlllMm LoWlll. ... Editor s-.-..... ~ldttor MMMdn. Dll'ectot of Photography 5'*"-'~ Stn!Of fdltof, CoPr o.lk • ,,.n-OI. ,.,...._... TEMPERA1UR£S Balboa 65146 Corona del Mar 64145 Costa Mesa 66146 Newport Beach 65145 Newport C~st 65145 SURF FOltECAST The swell will be out of the west today for sets In the waiSt· to chest- high level. LOCATION 1111 Wedge .................... 2-lw Newpoft .... m..,, .. .,.,2•] W 81adtles. ........ " ........ 2·l w ~ Jetty,. . .,.,"'"".J•J W CdM.,,,_ .... ,nunue1HtN••2•J W TIDES TOOAY Fl(ltt low 10:29 a.m ..................... 1.5 First high 3:17 a.m ....................... 4.5 Second low 9:17 p.m ....................... 1.9 Second high 4:14 p.m ....................... 2.9 SATURDAY First low 11:44 a.m ..................... 1.0 First high 4':17 a.m ....................... '4.8 SecOnd low 10:27 p.m.-.................. 2.2 second high 5:'9p.m ........................ l0 -.........., SS COSTA MESA • Hart.or 9oulevard: A cellular phone worth $200 was stolen from a car In the 2400 block during the day of Jan. 16. • s.nt9 Ana Awnue: A wallet and tts contents worth SlOO were stolen from• car In the 1800 block between 1 and 5 p.m. Jan. 23. •20th S"9et: Several items of clothing worth $75 were stolen from • car in the 200 block the evening of Jan. 18. NIWfDmmACM • 9-) wa ad Dr1V9: About $600 was stolen from • home In the 500 bkxk. the e'tlening of Jan. 24. • w.t Cwt l .... w.,: A celluter phone worth S 100 was stolen from • business In the 2900 bkxtt at 11 p.m. Jan.22. • NI P_. C..... Ditwir. A ceflul.w phoM worth $400 Ml stolen from I bUslriesl lf'I the 900 blodt bltvfeen t ind 10 p.m. Jan. 2'. . .. '.,.a... ...... sewtll P'e<a of jlWttry Ind Clllh warth $1,635 wn ~ from a car In the JOO bladl the~ of Mn. ll . ,. Doily Pilot • Friday, January 28, 2000 3 Reports of viole:Qce tied to alleged immigrant smugglers ~ -.. .,,.. • After crossing border, _crlminlil cu!.tody in the Metropob- 'coyotes' often held illegal tan Detc>ntion Center in Los Ange-les, Harvey said. Preliminary hear-. immigrants against their will mg arc: scheduled for Feb. 8 at the until they collected $1,200 fee. U.S Di. trict Court m Santa Ana. They are scheduled to be Andrew Glazer DAILY PILOT 'I WEST SIDE -The landlord of an apartment where immigration officials say illegal immigrant smugglers lield dozens of their clients until they were paid, said he had been concerned about the number of people who were appar- ently living there. •Neighbors always complained about the noise," said Yun Yu, who also owns and works at Sunshine Liquors at 724 W. 19th St., which is next door to the apartment. "Some- times there were so many people." Yu said he frequently saw his tenant, Catalina Ramirez-Reyes, and others, leadjng vanloads of people into the apartment. nie apart- ment at 724 1/2 West 19th Street in Costa Mesa where INS agents broke up an alleged illegal immigrant smuggling operation. DON LEACH/ DAILY pjt.QT amugned there on Feb. 14. Harvey said INS agents were mveshgatmg whether the home was part of d larger network of immigrant smugglers. INS agents began staking out the home late last month, Harvey said. According to Crawford's teati· mony, they witnessed the suspects leading people from vans and a Chevrolet Subwban into the home. He said they appeared to b!? recently smuggled urunigrants. On one occasion, Crawford said he Wltnessed one man run from the van, apparently tryiJlg to escape from the smugglers without paying the $1,200 f<>P The driver of one van yanked him into the house by his shJJ1 and hau, the reports said. Agents from the Immigration and Naturalization Service's Anti· Smuggling Unit on Monday stonned the apartment at 724 112 W. 19th St., arresting six suspects who had allegedly picked up Mex- ican citizens near the U.S.-Mexico border, hid them from authorities and shuttled them to Costa Mesa. stacks of tires, 15 folding chairs, two mattresses and a pile of full trash bags were strewn across the frontyard. In the rear of the home, four red chickens in a coop pecked at the ground. Paty Madueno, a member of the Costa Mesa City Council's Latino Community Advisors, said immi- grant smugglers take advantage of poor, desperate people looking for a better life. St. Joac:b.i.ffi Catholic Church with immigrants who paid smugglers, or "coyotes,• to get them across the border. She said many told stories of the smugglers raping, extorUng and even murdering the hopeful immigrants. .._ the illegal immigrants $1,200 for their services, William M. Craw- ford, a special agent for the INS, said in sworn court documents. "That's about the going rate,~ said Robert J . Harvey, a supervisor of Santa Ana's INS Special Agent Anti-Smuggling Unit. "The}' otten try to show others that it would be stup1d to step out- ~ide line,~ Harvey said. •Jn this instance, it looks like they tried to get the point across to the others in th~ house. Smugglers msiy use threats of violence or actual vio- lence to keep people in line," The apartment appeared to be deserted Thursday. A pile of bro- ken glass lay in front of the home -where INS agents had broken though a window. Empty suitcases, Madueno has held meetings at "They're really bad guys," Madueno said. "The money they make is blood tnoney. They don't have shame. They will bum m hell." The alleged smugglers charged Josephina Cruz-Ibarra, Catalina Ramirez-Reyes, Idohna Rarrurez- Reyes, Miguel Plancorte-Sanchez, RJto Anante-Picasso and Armando Roman-Flores are being held m Harvey !>aid · most successful immigrant smuggling operations have wide connections throughout the country, even though they may appear to be small in a partlculM area . . How about using the budget surplus for a nationdl make-over? I never have one. Do you • ever have one? A surplus, that JS. There's a lot of that going around right now. The Costa Mesa City Council has the enviable task of deciding what to do with a $1.4-million swplus. I thought about it long and hard. My suggestion was that they dole the money out to all the for- mer mayors whose last names end in a vowel and who have been out of office no more than 14 months. They didn't hke it But if you think $1.4 mtl- bon is a big nwnber, try $2 trillion. That's a 2 followed by 12 zeros, as in $2,000,000,000,000. hnpressive, isn't it? That's what Washington just announced the federal sur- plus could amount to over the next 10 years. I don't care if your name is Gates, $2 trillion is a hard nwnber to grasp. 1ty tlus. There are about 200,000 peo- ple m Costa Mesa and New- port Beach. 'IWo trillion dol- lars comes to $10 million for every man, woman and child in the two cities. Nothing yet? 1ty this one. As a stack of thousand-dollar bills, $1 mil- lion is 14 inches high. A $1- billion stack would be 116 stories high -about as tall as the World 1Iade Center. And $1 trillion would be 220 miles high. Lay the·stack on its side and it would stretch from New York to Boston. Don't you Jove those goofy examples, by the way? "If you lined up all the squirrels in the world end to end, they would blah, blab, blah.• Anyway, the real question is, what will they do with that money? To update a line from Everett Dirksen, a trillion here and a trillion there and pretty' soo11, you're talking about real money. If you think the federal government can't get things done with billions of dollars, wait until you see what they can't do with trillions. This changes everything. The Mars Polar Lander was lost for a few hundred million dollars. Peanuts. Just imagine what they could lose for a trillion dol· Jars. You could send all sorts of stuff to distant solar sys- tems and lose it without a trace. • •Houston, any sign of that thing?" •No, Mr. President, we've lost all rontact. It's gone.· •Outstanding. Where was that thilig suppoeed to go a.nywayt• ·we're not sure, slr. It's l'fMllfaraway.• •OK o.i. Pleale oongrat· w.e...,.,1arme.• ·'lbmk yau. *·. A Mr Rlpublcim bave av;cfltda ....... 1ta oat.. ____ ..... .._~11mmfall. .... .. ... .,...._ 7 ,, 111 • ...,..,.. ....., ..., .1111. "lblla *Y moL Put malt al .. -- Peter Buffa COMMENTS & CURIOSmES the ultimate make-over. Speaking of make-overs, The.Pilot got one-again- but I guess tlus column just isn't important enough. Mon- ica Lewinsky? Make-over. Fergie? Make-over. Pilot? Make-over. Buffa column? Zero, zip, nada, bupkus. OK, fine. I'll do it myself. Actually, we both will. I've got some ideas. You let me know what clicks and what doesn't I'm tl$lking we cut down plus mto a Federal Friday on the copy, add some graph-ics and have separate sec- lhlsl Fund Everybody goes tions, like •Humor,• •Parent- to a fow-day work week. ing," "Games & Puzzles," Busmesses that can docu-etc. ment a loss of revenue from a However, if we do a four-day week can claim it h\µIlor section, I'll need some against their corporate taxes. new material, so send me Any shortfall to the Feds is -whatever you have. And offset by the trust fund and its please, no tired old jokes that annual interest. everyone bas heard before.-It Too complicated. has to be fresh, urbane and How about tlus? We land-clever. scape every highway in the Here's what I've come up country with ground cover with s0 far: d.nd really pretty flowers. It's I wanted to be a doctor, 1 • H ' ·, 1 • " t c ) 1 • 1 r ~ 1 •• 1 • We'ff updated our look at the Costa Mesa Soup&antatJon with: •A ...... _ __._.......,. •A•~lleftnplW .. ...,.,._....... ......,.,, .. ...., . .,.... .... ..,. ..,..,.., -~ .. ,_. ... Wi.,y ..... ...,....,. .......... -~-..., ... ,... ... ......... wl llOf9I -• '(,1 Sodril!'ln"""*"""llrid>t .... ........,n ·;:y_,, ~ii-x 0: COITA a.A• lSSS Mma"1t. • (fM) llHMI ~ ! •' 'i I "C... I ~--------------....--------------"to~ , t1.1tn wu1a1 • a 1 I ..................... I ... _.... I I ..,,Pi .._. .. JI ,,.. i ..... ... I : I "I' ~------------::.1..-- • I ' ' I ,. -. -.. ---· ~-~ but I didn't have the patients. What kind of coffee did they serve on the Titaruc? Sanka. Did you hear about the two dancers who got fired from RJverdance? They moved their anns. What do you think? Are those OK? Be honest with me. OK, maybe we won't do a humor section. How about Games & Puzzles? We could do a crossword puzzle. People Jove crosswords. You know, "pnnter's mea- sure,• "Hebrew month,· "Henry VIII's second wife,• a five-letter word for trilso- propanolamine -that kind of thing. OK, forget the puz- zle. What about riddles? Rid- dles are fun. Actually. I really do have a nddJe for you. If you're the first person to answer correctly, you'll wm ... I don't know, "<>methmg. Wait Now that I've made Uili. a contest, l have to dis- close the odds of winning. Odds of wm.ning something: Sllrn. Odds of wmrung some- thmg of value None. Ready? Good luck. MThe beginning of eterni- ty, the end of time and space, · the beginning of every end, and the end of every place." What am l? Think. Concentrate. You can do this. I gotta go. • PETER BUFFA is a former Costa Mesa mayor His column runs Fn· days. He can be reached via e-mail at Ptr84@aol.com. Sate January 27,· 28 & 29 (Thurs -Fri -Sat) No adjustments on previous purchases. Sale merchandise cannot be added to $100 club card. NEWPORT NORTH CENTER MocArthUf & Bison Newport Beach (949) 644-4477 BABY BACKS ... AND LOTS OF OTHER GOOD STUFF! • 4 Fridoy. Jonuory 28, 2000 Doily Pilot An 'Ave~age Joe' makes a rµn for White House. • While other GOP hopefuls fight Bush in New C4lled Russia the Evil Empire,· Hampshire, Joe Schriner hits a paik in Costa Mesa. ~-r~·~ C:~n~ Andrew Gla.zer doctrine o! •voluntary simplic-maybe send some money, then DAILY PILOT lty." we could really cut down on all •1 think America needs to the Cold War stereo~ing." COSTAdMES1Ah -While cut back on spending and con -.. h~el· mili~ ~ .. ; .. wgom.uldto many pre'it entia opefuls are swnertsm and start spending .... ua.au1 ..... , -r?·U4U puslung each other for camera more time with its families,• he $Od.al programs, such as the time in the blustery New said to a crow<$ of one. Peace Corps. HdJTl~hire cold, Republican More specifically, Schriner •1 think we should reverse candidate Joo Schriner played -who, when not campaign-the notion of war and declare with his family in sunny ing, is an Ohio-based journal-war on social injustice and Balearic Park. ist and drug rehabilitation poverty.• "Who do you tlunk the Sdllc counselor -is in favor or Schriner said he is confi- cand.ida.te is?• asked Schriner, appointing the cream of local dent he will win. He's taking 44, who wore two days of stub-activists to presidential adviso-his mobile campaign head- ble and a flannel shirt with ry positidns. quarters to San Diego this rolled-up sleeves. · Schriner S&fd that as presi-morning. •Average Joe~ Schriner dent, he would convert the His would-be First Lady, and lus staff -wile Liz, feisty White House into 8 homeless who is from New Zealand, said daughter Sarah, 4, and sleepy shelter. But Sarah may have she has enjoyed the rlde. As son, Joseph, 2 -have traveled other plans. far as friends and family, she the country since April. when •1 want to roller-skate said most have been support- he declared he would seek the there,• she said, running laps ive. Republican Party's nonunation around her father. •A few don't understand, for presidential candidate at Schrlner's foreign policy but many have helped us out.• the Liberty Bell in Philadel-platform is equally unique. He she said. "Others support us ptua. said that. if elected, he would with their tongues in their He has pulled his wlute, ask American families to cheeks." 1974 Xplorer van over at many become pen pals with Russian But Sarah was sincere in of Amenca's Mam Streets and families and create a mutual endorsing her father: playgrounds -the latter so rus understanding between the "I want him to be president kids ·would have a chance to nations. because he loves me and be play -to preach his political ."Owing Reagan's years, he plays hide and seek." • RYAN AAYBUM I DAllY PILOT Republican presidential candidate Joe Schriner discusses h1s policies at Balearic Park in Costa Mesa on Thursday . . Fashion Island embezzler sentenced to jail time Free low-tlush'toilets offered by water district • A former employee at the At Ease clothing store apparently stole $65,000 over a four-year period. Greg Risllng DAILY PILOT NEWPORT BEACH -A Coro- na del Mar woman who worked at a popular Fashion Island clothing store pleaded guilty Thursday to stealing more than $65,000 from her employer. Cynthia Maxfield, 39, :-"as sen- tenced to a minimum of four months in Orange County Jail Qn the condition thal she complete an eight-month program at a hallway house. lf she doesn't fulfill the requirements set forth by Orange County Superior Court Judge PACIFIC BELL 9 Wlr•u ' Craig Robison, Maxfield will be remanded back to jail. Maxfield worked at the At Ease clothing store for more than four years and apparently pilfered cash from the business throughout h er tenure. The thefts were cashless accounts in which she falsified customer returns and credited the amounts to any one of her six credit cards. Some of her former co-workers, who said they considered her a friend, were appeased by the judge's decision. "The judge was very fair," said company president Steve Knut- son. "We are thrilled about the judge's decision that basically says, 'fraud won't be tolerated in this county.' The message was def- initely sent to her." In addition to jail time, Maxfield can no longer possess credit cards, open any accounts or take a job . that allows her to deal with daily cash flow.· She was also sentenced to three years of probation. Most upsetting for At Ease employees was the trust they instilled in Maxfield, only to see her betray them, her former col- leagues said. Linda Brink, who also works at the store, kindled a friendship with Maxfield last year. The two women traveled to Europe, taking a whirlwind trip through London and Parts. It was Brink's first trip to Europe. Maxfield also endeared herself to Brink's 31-year-old daughter, who was suffering from a brain tumor. "Here she' is, befriending my daughter, and then she is taking monPy from some of our commis- sions, Brink !>aid. ·It dawned on me then that she was pretty ruth- less. · "I feel sorry for her. I hope she does some soul-searching and can help someone out someday. There has to be some good from the bad.• The embezzlement had a last- ing effect at the Fashion Island store. Prospective employees now undergo thorough background checks and their applications are sent to a fi.nn that analyzes them for any dishonest tendencies. All the measures were adopted after Maxfield was arrested last year. Knutson said there haven't been any cash shortages since Maxfield left, but he said the store's image has been damaged. "Our reputation has been hurt, something that probably won't go away for years, n he added. New toilets will oo up for grabS from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday by Costa Mesa and Ne~ Beach residents who are customers of the · Orange County Water District. To qualify for the free toilets, residents must bring a copy of their current bill and a picture 1.0. to the water distnct's headquarters al 10500 Ellis Ave. m Fountain Valley. The low-flush toilets, valued at $110 each, are designed to con· serve water, water district officials said. The new toilets must be installed at the address listed on the water bill. Each customer could receive up to three toilets. · In exchdllge, old toilets -which are recycled and used in pavement material -must be returned tQ the water distnct by Feb. 12. For more in!onnation, call (714) 378-3221. Your Choice S • ~ ~e& ~me~ ~Aow~~ ~ c s s w~··w~Vw~ ~"'? t, ~ ~~.Yd~~--·~ c Body Wtions, candks, aromatherapy, eic. [' Nokia 5190 ' for that someone special ~ TIME;:t'OR.T ASk about our Hotel Baskets. r------------, c ?MCk~~~ ~ ~"? ·S I I ,IS 7 ~ ~ For the one you love. See pharmacy for details. {, IA I ~ r---~~a~ ~£9"0/; ~--, ~ t EE i CI 20°/o OFF 12 ..J s I Any one regular priced item I t, I One cour.on ~r customer. Some r~trictions apply. Sec norc for detail~. Pmcripcions I J · not included. Cannot be combined with any ocher offer~. Expires 2/J S/00 I ~ L--------------.J « • I .. . , ON VACATION ' " I Daily Pilot Fridoy, January 18, 2000 5 Sylvia Davidson and Paula Godfrey of Balboa Island read the Dally Pilot while looking With fellow seniors at USC, Rob Williams of Newport Beach stands at the Brandenburg over the Tiber River In Rome, Italy. Gate in former East Berlin. Leigh Anne Rice ~d Kirsten Conklin of Newport Beach at the Louvre in Pads, France. FRIDAY, JANUARY 28 AND SATURDAY, JANUARY 29 SUPER SAVINGS THROUGHOUT THE CE~TERI A FINE AFFAIR ANTHONY'S SHOE REPAIR 8 , MAGNESS PASH ION THE BASKET CASE BASKIN ROBBINS BLOCKBUSTER VIDEO ' CATHAY NEWPORT RESTAURANT CH,.MPAGNll'S MARKET 81 DELI , CHEVRON USA COUTURE NEW YORK HAPPY NAILS · LABELS MAG18 DONUTS 81 BAKERY. MAILBOXll• NEWPORT . MASTER TAILORING fl!'IARCO POL'O PASTA HOU81: . NKWPORT NORTH CLEANllR8 ONI: HOUR MOTO PHOTO .. KTCO ltOYAL Jl:WKLER8 8ALON •aLCOUllT 'l'M• YIDSO SDITOll ·' Costa Mesa residents Jennifer, Kevin and Matthew Thomas pictured here on vacation in Uruguay at "The Eagle." · SAVE BIG - Great· Savings From Our Already Reduced Warehouse Pricesl 25% Off All Accessories .1.5% Off All Merchandise Add~onal Savings on Selected Merchandise Showroom Furniture & Accessories Outlet and· Discontinued Items, One of a Kind Tremendous Savings on MAtxnrnon, Drexel Heritage, Hldcory White, Platt & More ••• I l • 1 6 Friday, Jonuory 28, 2000 SCHOOLS CONTINUED FROM 1 1and10, based on how they com- pared lo each other. It is this number that has given many low-scoring schools a boost ~d taken some high-scoring ~ls down a few notches. Most NeWJ>Qrt Beach schools retained a high sco when compared to like schools, With the exception of Newport Elementary, which fell from a ranking of 9 statewide to 1 when compared to similar schools. So while some schools might be performing well above aver- age, they arc not necesearlly per- fonning as well as other well- above-average schools. In Costa Mesa, where many of the rankings fell below average, scores Jwnped m this category. Pomona Elementary school, for · instance, went from a 4 to a 10, Rea Elementary leaped from 2 to 8, and Whittier Elementary school received a 10. District officials are proud, Despenas said~f how Newport- Mesa schools stacked up against similar schools. "The information and the data that we've been gathering over the last two years has allowed us to focus on areas that need improvement," she said. Despite schools' successes when compared with other under- perfonning schools, officials said they know they have a long road ahead of them. "We're not saying these are acceptable scores," said school board member Martha Fluor. "We have schools that have recognized that" fYI I 1 ......... ... Ml ~ ... ClllAMISA R.....,Aln' SCHOOLS :r'-661 § ,. Clilfm• " 710 i 7 Coll ...... 95 511 5 • Dllvls 96 64() .6 • ....... 99 757 I 7 .............. ..., 96 769 2 • ~a• 100 610 . z • '° ........... 98 678 z 7 · ......... 93 581 ~ 10 .... 99 471 2 I Sonora 100 617 s • Vk1Dria 100 681 l • Whittier 100 498 3 10 Wilson ·98 443 1 s MIDDLE SCHOOLS -Winkle 98 584 ~ I HIGH SCHOOLS Cost.aMeN '97 653 z 9 Est.ndll 94 545 J 7 NEWPORT BEACH ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS AnderMn 99 933 lQ 10 tWborVlew 100 922 lQ 10 CALL FOR COMPLlllElfTARY CONSULTATION 949·721-1113 3eG WI MIGUEL DRIVE. SUITE 20)~ NEWPORT BCACH Dr. Elam'• llvt Surgical Broadcasts www.onllneaurgery.com ......... • -ll ...... • -Jg ..... J • m .. E\111'1-IOO D I MIDDLE SCHOOLS • ' • :-'11~ I HIGH SCOOLS C...1111 1111' ......... • llO JA • 1 NIW110ftHllllar 93 133 t 10 1999 STATlWIDI RANICINGs All JChools .,. nnlc«J in d«iln, or 10 eqwl groups, M:Cerdir>tJ to tM value of tMir APfs. What they mean: tor 1Ct Well abcM llllef~ 7 or I; Above avet9 5 or I: About .wr9 l or 4: Below average 1 or 2: Well below average 1999 StJaAA SoiOW RAHICINGS The S«ond decile ranklf>tJ com,,.res NCh school's APt score to those of other schools that have similar char~ima. The characteristics used are: • Student mobility • Student socioeconomic ·status • Percentage of teachers with full credentials • Percentage of teachei's holding emergency pet'mits • Average crass size per grade level • Percentage of students who are Engliih language learners • Whether schools operate mult1track, year-round pro- grams LAWSUIT CONTINUED FROM 1 estly, it's like a family mem- ber suing me.• On the first page of the lawsuit, Hawkinson's name is next to the man blamed for the madness, 40·year-old Steven Allen Abrams. On May 3, 1999, Abrams gunned his car toward the · playground at the South· coast Early Childhood Leam- ing Center. Along with Bran- don and Sierra, fow other children and a teacher's aide were injwed. A chain-hnk fence lined the playground, but did little to stop Abrams' oncoming Cadillac. The lawsuit claims Hawkinson bad sought to erect another fence, one stronger and more protec- tive. Indeed, Hawkinson said she did want to put up anoth- er chain-link fence on Mag- nolia Avenue for the remain-· der of the playground. But she can't understand why the lawsuit alleges she was negligent. #My children used the same playground,• she said. "Do you think I would want to put them at risk?• Evan Ginsburg, who re p- resents the Wieners, said the couple were apprehensive about naming Hawkinson in the lawsuit. They have a 2- year-old still enrolled at the center. •They really didn't want to go forward," Ginsburg ~~ Mattress Outlet Stor BRAND NEW · COSMETICALLY IMPERFECT Get the Best for Less! · 3165 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 0oe Blocll South ot •os rwy (714) 545-7 168 l111 IP1111 Planum -IRnlllDS, llD •111 25%0FF .. Dean Miller Becldin ~----~--==--- ".They really didn't want to go forward. She's close to Sheryl and the teachers. They thought about it Jong and hard and felt it was necessary at this point. H Evan Gins burg attorney representing the Wieners said. "She's close to Sheryl and the teachers. They thought about it long and bard and felt it was neces- sary at this point.• The Wieners are seeking $10,000 for funeral and bur- ial expenses and $50,000 in special damages. They also ask for punitive damages against Abra.ms and general legal costs. . Doily Pilot was .killed, and many of the other students were seriously • injured. A slew of lawsuits were filed a year later against the driver, Jason Rausch, the city of Newport Beach and a landscaping company. All of the suits were 1ettled out of court last year. But before a closed-door agreement had been reached between attorneys, one or the teens injured that night, Amanda Arthur, decided to drop her lawsuit against Newport Beach and the landscaping company. Arthur and her mother felt it was morally wrong to blame the two parties for the acci- dent. "The law requires plain- tiffs to file a suit even if it is against a party that bears a small responsibility,• said Jim DlCesare, one of the attorneys involved in the Irvine Avenue lawsuit. •Many people are forced to file because of the law. It's done in order to protect the client.• It is not clear whether any of the other parents who had children either · killed, injured or traumatized ln the There is a chance that , Hawkinson and the property owner, Lighthouse Coastal Community Church, could be dropped from the lawsuit at a later date. It is common when a civil lawsuit is filed that all parties involved are listed as defendants. day-care center attack . No set of lawsuits may have stirred more anger than. those filed after a horrific crash on Irvine Avenue in 1997 .• Ten Newport Harbor High School students were crammed into a Chevrol~t Blazer that overturned on the curvy street. One teen, 18· year-old Donny Bridgman, intend to take legal action. Hawkinson said her feelings haven't changed toward the Wiener family, although they may be sitting on opposite sides of the courtroom. "I blame this entire mess on Abrams,• Hawkinson said. "Pam means a lot to me. But I'm really tired and emotionally worn out. I just want this to end.• RUFFLES UPHOLSTERY Where Your Dollar Covers Morel -WE'VE MOVED 1 BLOCK NOR11t ' . Sofa $10000• OFF Club Chair $5000• OFF "With a purchase of Fabric & Labor til 2/4/00 1998 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 548-1158 • Lptionj, Oils, Toys & Camts • CD'• & DVD's • 19" -'34" • This Ad ls Worth 1 Fret Botti. of Lotion/or Yow~! • 1 \ • Daily Pilot ALLEN CONTINUED FROM 1 sobriety starts with hilTi.seU. •He's got more than a problem• said Stephen Bartol1 a deputy publlc defender who represents Allen. •we are going to try our best to see if we can get tum in a comprehensive rehabilita- tion program. . "In most cases, the people who a.re ready to get recovery do. Those who aren't ready don't." No one really remembers when Allen took his first dnnk -only that his stepfather died lrom a bout wilh alco- holism. Allen grew up in Newport Beach, .attending Newport Harbor High School' His need to be near the ocean is obvious, becoming a talented surfer at one pomt. He is also· handy with the brush, an amateur artist who likes to draw-glassy waves and sandy beaches. Allen has survived multiple near- death experiences. He was involved in a serious car acadent when he was a teenager and several years later, recov- ered from another traffic accident that required doctors to put a steel plate in his head. I le has been revived by para- medics after he nearly drowned off the Newport coast. He's been known to pound an entire bottle of vodka and still remain coher- ent. His blood-alcohol level has peaked well past .25 -nearly three tim~s the legal limit -and hasn't stumbled. 1.. •He's a late-stage alcoholic," said Allen's uncle, Brad Elligood. "One minute he's real sharp, and the nexl he stares into space. I guess he likes that style of life." · Maybe the person who knows Allen the best is David Sperling, who docu- mented his life in an 18-minute short . . film that debuted at the Newport Beach international Film Festival in 1998. Sperhng was inspired to film Allen's 'xploits when he noticed the frequency of his visits to Newport Beach City Jail. Sperling has worked as a civilian jailer for several years. . •He's sunk to a level most people haven't seen before," Sperling said. •There is no one else to blame for his condition but himself. But you can't help but sympathize with him because what if you were in that situation?" Allen's situation is a repetitive and often laborious one. Newport Beach' police officers have picked up Allen as many as three times in a 48-hour peri- od. This year alone, Allen was arrested on suspicion of public intoxication on Jan. 12, Jan. 14, Jan. 15, and Jan. 20. Allen is usually held until he is sober and released back into society. Police say each time Allen is ptcked up, they must leaf through a pile of paperwork they are required to file for every arrestee. · "He's a major nuisance to handle," McDermott said. •Here we are, trying to solve a problem and 12 hours later, we have to deal with him again. He's not the kind of guy any police depart- ment wants to handle." The s~te of Hawaii reportedly want- ed nothing to do with Allen. After Sper- ling's documentary, Allen was given a plane ticket to the Aloha State by his two brothers who live there. His sib- lings bad hoped Allen would change his ways: he didn't and was subse- quently booted. Allen hit the streets again and accu- mulated at least 85 arrests by Hopolulu police. They reportedly grew tired of Allen's antics and bought him a plane ticket back to California, where local police agencies have reluctantly dealt with since. What can be done for someone who require a vote. .. has received assistance but repeatedly succumbs to his demons? It calls for tough love from family members and the judicial system, said Tony Fusco, program director at Sober Llving by the Sea, a Newport Beach recovery center. ·n takes a judge to mandate treat- ment," he said. "People either comply or go back to jail. But some people are comfortable with that lifestyle of addic- tion.• Judging by the number of Allen's alcohol-related arrests, the grips of the disease may be strangling him. Fusco sai4 lifelong alcoholics like Allen are hindered by the lack of resources in Orange County. There are only a handful of licensed recovery centers and many of them don't have availability. Those closest to Allen have repeat- edly trted to help. They have offered treatment, but he haso!t ..been recep- tive. Family members have given him money, but be has spent it on alcohol. Sperling has updated his film, lengthening 1t to 39 minutes. He went to Hawaii and caught up with Allen in Honolulu. It took Sperling only 30 min- utes before he found Allen lying on a park bench. He hopes.to show the new version at the Newport film festival m March. , Allen appeared in court Wednesday. ready for one of his many dITdign- ments. He appeared sullen and sober, answering the judge when she asked him if he was serious about kicking his habit. He simply replied. "I'm serious, your Honor. It's been way too damaging . ., A sham or a genuine reflection of fl.is heart? Most ol those who know Allen have heard the promises before. "Until he wants to get some help, he wµI keep on dnnkihg," Elligood said. "We've trted, but he doesn't want any- one's assistance.• CENTER CONTINUED FROM 1 The Protect From lfaffic and Density Initiative pro- 1>9ses to allow residents to vote on developments that would require a "major• general plan• amendment. "Ma1or" is defiiled as creat- tng more than 100 peak-hour car trips, more than 100 homes or more than 40,000 square feet of Iloor area over What the city's general plan allows. These thresholds do not apply to the oty a whole, but to each of the 49 distinct neighborhoods, which all have a different history of general plan amendments. As a result, once any of the thresholds are maxed out tn any of these areas, virttially any development wowd The withdrawal of the Irvine Co.'s proposal ech6es the concerns some council members have regarding the measure -that it might scare away potential devel- opers and reduce Newport's choices. The environmental studies alone can cost any- where from $50,000 to $350,000, said Planning Director Patricia Temple. Center Qiegan two years ago and included thlee other property owners besides the I.rvine Co. The plan was to build two six-story buildings, remodel parts of Fashion Island and construct a 150-unit apart- ment complex, as well as a child-care and adult center on Avocado Avenue. The project was lumped together and would have required one general plan amend-1be proposal for Newport Friday, Jonuary 28, 2000 7 Allen, shown here as a child in his youth baseball days, grew up in Newport Beach. ment. !'There is a doomsday sce- nario here; make developing so difficult that no one wants to build,• said Mayor John Noyes. "I'm more supportive of retail development and hotels.• Noyes added the Irvine Co. probably made a head count and realized it would have tr.ouble garnering sup- port for the project. But Planning Commis- . sioner Ed Seltch had a differ- ent opl.D.lon He believes the Irvine Co. JUSt wanted to get out of Greenlight's firing range. "It's Just common sense,• Seliclt said. "The Gree.nlight initiative is slow growth and the Jmne Co. is a major developer in Newport proposing a major develop-- ment. Whal is going to be the lightning rod the Greenlight folks are going to strike ont• -------------Carpet Cleaning Coit's powerful mobi le carpet cleaning equipfllent removes ground in dirt to help extend carpet life. We are cenified to comply with all major carpet manufacturer's cleaning .. ... ~·-.... . .. .... specification , including tain resistant carpets. 1-800-FOR-C OIT Air Duct Cleanbi.g Reduce 11ir ~ntaminants and make your home smell fresh while reducing mold, fungi, and dust • Drape.ry Cleaning Coi1 's cxclu ive drapery cleaning removes make, dust. pollen, odors. and ~ii. We remove and rehang di'aperic at your - • 8 Fndoy, Jonuory 28, 2000 • Send AllOUM> TOWN Items to the 0.1ty Pilot. 310 W. 8aiy St., Cos· ta Mesa 92627; fu them to (949) ~170; or call (949) 764-4330. A complete listing may be found at dallypilot.com . TODAY QCC president emeritus David A. Grant presents a lecture titled •Tue Extraordi- nary Voyage of Ernest Shack- leton• to be held at OCC's Lido Isle Clubhouse at 7:30 p.m. Admission is $5. The Clubhouse is at 701 Via Lido Soud, Newport Beach. For more information. call (714) 432-5087. The Eastbluff Elementary School PTA will host a com- muruty education program at 7 p.m. at the school's theater. The Airport Working Group will discuss Plans F and G of the El Toro environmental unpact report, which are the backup plans for expanding John ~ayne Airport. For more information, call (949) 263-0708. The Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce will. hold a seminar on Microsoft spftware training from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Sutton Place Hotel, 4500 MacArthur Blvd., Newport Beach. The event is $69. For more · information, call (949) 729-4400. free for members, $10 for potential members. Por more information, call (S..9) 729· ... oo. FRIDAY OCC wW bold a workshop for people interested in tele- vision and film acting do Fri- days from Jan. 28 through Feb. 18. Registration is $115, plus a $3 material fee. OCC is at 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. For more information, call (714) 432-5880. SATURDAY Temple Bat Yahm will honor its past presidents, founding members and former ·women of the Year" at a 25th anniversary party at 7:30 p.m. The theme of the party will be "Saturday Night Fever.• Tickets, which include a buffet and one cocktail, are $45. The temple is at 1011 Camelback St., Newport Beach. MONDAY The Orange County Museum of Art will hold an illustrated lecture by Dr. Eric T. Haskell titled •Sites of Seduction: the Garden as Art,• from 1 to 2 p.m. The lecture is the first in a three-part series of talks, the fee for which is $75 to $80. The other lectures will be held Feb. 1 and 14. The museum is at 850 San Clemente Drive, Newport Beach. For more information, call (949) 759-1122, ext. 0. TUESDAY The Costa Mesa Senior Cen- ter will hold a 10-week writ- ing workshop on Thursdays starting today. The course runs from 1 :30 to 3:30 p.m. at the center, 695 West 19th St., Costa Mesa. The course is $30. For more information, call (714) 965-1176. The Nattonal Assn. of Wo- The Single Gourmet will men Business . Owners hold a gourmet dining event . Orange County will hold a at 6:30 p .m. at Bayside meeting from 6 to 9 p.m. at Restaurant, 900 Bayside Ori-the Wyndham Garden 1"1otel, ve, Newport Beach. For more 3350 Avenue of the Arts, Cos- information, call (800) 750-ta Mesa. Scott Bailey will DINE. speak on "How to Avoid The Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce will host an after-hours mixer from 5 to 7 p.m. at Buzz at the Beach, 3450 Via Oporto, Newport Beach. The event is Unpaid CoD$ulting in Today's Marketplace.• The event, which includes dinners, is $34 for first-time guests, $44 for nonmembers. For reserva- tions 8.Jld more information, call (714) 832·5741. WEDNESDAY OCC wt11 hold a seminar on fmancing a college education at 7 p.m. at the Robert B. Moore Theatre. The two-hour seminar will be given m Eng:. lish, Spanish and Viet- namese. oac ls at 2701 Fairview R<>jid, Costa Mesa. For more ihformation, call (714) 432-0202, ext. 28122. The Newport Beach PubUc Ubrary presents "Uving the Good Uf e on a Fixed · Income," a free noon pro- gram. Financial Consultant Jason Sherr will speak. The library is at 1000 Avocado Ave., Newport Beach. For more information, call (949) 717-3801. The Jewish Community Cen- ter presents •Memories are Forever,• a six-week course on organizing photo scrap- books. The course runs Wednesdays, Feb. 2 through 23 and March 1 and 8. Fee is $12 per session for JCC mem- bers, $15 per session.for non- members. The center is at 250 East Baker St., Costa Mesa. The Co~ta Mesa Senior Cen- ter will hold a Lite Story Writ- ing class Wednesdays, Feb. 2 through June 7. The Center is at 695 West 19th St., Costa Mesa. For more information, call (949) 645-2356. l THURSDAY South Coast Plaza will host the •Fascination of Orchids International Show and Sale" Feb. 3-6 at the Crate & Barrel wing of the mall. Orchids from more than 60 growers will be represented and each day of the show will feature seminars and speakers. South Coast Plaza is at 3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa. For more information, call (714) 435- 2160. The Costa Mesa Senior Cen- ter will hold an armchair trav- el class Thursdays, Feb. 3 through June 5. The Center is at 695 West 19th St., Costa Mesa. For more information, call 9949) 645-2356. Men's & Ladies' Sportswear, Golf Bags, Golf Shoes, & many other iten1s, JOHn LEOnHRD'S Q 0 LP • H 0 P Stoll HouA Mon • Fri 8:30 am -7:30 pm Sat & Sun 8:00 am -5:30 pm The Newport Beach Public Ubrary presents a free pro- gram, "Romantic RcJation- sbips, • at 7 p.m. Maxl!1c Cohen, marriage a.nd family therapist, will speak. The library is at 1000 Avocado Ave., Newport Beach. For more inf onnation, call (949) 717-3801. Saint Michael & All Angels Episcopal Church will host Richard Wallis, UC Irvine physicist, who will discuss the concept of entropy, at 1 a.m. at Coco's Restaurant in Fash- ion lsland, 151 Newport Cen- ter Drive, Newport Beach. A $10 donation covers the talk and breakfast. For more infor- mation, call (949) 644-1145. Tent Smooke, spedal assis- tant to Gov. Gray Davis for Jewish Community Affairs, will speak to the nendsetters of the Women's Division of the Jewish Federation of Orange.Cdunty at.a. luncheon at the Newport Coast home of Heidi Berkley. The luncheon is $25. For reservations and more information, call (714) 155-5555, ext. 222. FEB. 4 I I Orange Coast College will hold its fourth and final pro- gram in its Sailing Adventure Series at 8 p.m. in the Robert B. Moorei Theatre. The pro- gram, #Survival -And Beyond,• will feature Bill Butler, who will describe his experience of being attacked by whales and cast adrift for 66 days on a life raft. Tickets are $5 to $13. OCC is at 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. For rpore information, call (714) 432-5880. FEB. 5 The Ben Gurton Sodety of the Jewish Federation Young Business and Professionals Division will hold its inaugur- al event at 6:30 p.m. at the Newport Beach home of Jim and Marti Eisenberg for end of Sabbath rituals and light dining. The program is open to donors who will consider making a pledge of $1,000 to the Jewish Federation Annu- 81 Campaign. For iriore infor- mation, call (714) 755-5555, ext. 225. The Orange Apple Compu- ter Club's meeting will fea- ture Michelle Carlson of the Nova Developmen't Corp., who will present Nova's Print Explosion. The meeting will also feature beginners and advanced question-and- answer session, special inter- est groups, and more. The meeting runs from 8 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. in the Chemistry Building of Orange Coast College, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. For more infor- mation, call (714) 836-05,22. The Orange County Fair- grounds hosts a travel show from noon to 5 p.m. Feb. 5 and from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Feb. 6 in building Nos. 10 and 12. Admission is $6. The fair- grounds are at 88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. For more infor- mation, call (714) 953-4956. The Alzheimer's Assodation Gala honoring Maureen Rea- gan will be held starting at 6:30 p .m. at the Four Seasons Hotel, 690 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach. Guests of honor include Orange County Supervisor Tom Wilson and Peggy Gold- water Clay. Ticlcets are $200. For more information, call (714) 283-1111. The Orange County Fair- grounds will host a guitar swap meet, show and sale from 10 a.m. to 6 p .m. Feb. 5 and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Feb. 6. The event will feature exhibits of old, rare, new and used guitars, amps, banjos, effects, memorabilia and equipment. The fairgrounds are at 88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. For more information, call (800) 453-7469. FEB. 7 Four grandmothen will dis· cuss raising their families in the 1940s, •sos and '60s in dif- ferent parts of the U.S. in •areaktasi and Bubbe Meises (Grandmother Stories)" at 9:30 a .m. at the Jewish Feder- Daily Pilot anon of Orange Cotmty, 250 E. Baker St., Costa Mesa. The event, which include. break- fast, is free. Por reservations and more infomtdtion, call (714) 755-5555, ext. 222. Davtd Gabbe, author of two books on vegetanan nutrition and cooking, will teach Co~ki~g with Beans and Grciins'Trom 6 to 9 p.m. Feb. 1 and 14 dt the Neighborhood Community Center, 1845 Park Ave., Costa Mesa. The cost for the two classes is $30 plus a $10 materials fee. For more information, call (714) 327-7525. FEB. 8 George's Camelot Restau- rant will host a meeting to discuss a tnp to the Cote d'Azur in July 2000 as part of the Newport Beach Sister City Assn. The event, which starts at 6:30 p.m., features three entrees, soup or salad and wine, and costs $30. For more information, call (949) 833-5717. Sterling BMW will hold a fund-raising party at 1 p.m. to raise money for Newport Harbor High's Grad Night. 'fhe deale,rship is at 3000 West Coast Highway, New- port Beach. For more infor- mation, call (949) 673-5604. ONGOING EssenUals Counseling Is offering two free seminars on Mondays and Wednesdays in January and February. •Learn how to stop bmge eat- ing• will be 6:30 to 8 p .m. Wednesdays and #Are you concerned about your child's weight?• will be Mondays from 6:30 to 8 p.m. For more information, call (949) 548- 4437 .1 I A women's therapy support group meets to discuss rela- tion5hip issues at 6:30 p .m. Tuesdays at 1151 Dove St., No. 105, Newport Beach. For more information, call Bar- .bara at (949) 261-8003. OINER'S FEE Save up to $1001 • AQUATICS CENTER •AEROBICS • RACQUETBALL • PERSONAL TRAINERs •MAS AGE • CARDIO • FREE WEIGHT • STRENGTH TRAINING EQ • BASKETBALL . Deity Pilot 1be Friends of the Newport Beach Public Library Used Book Store neqds to replenish its book. stotk. Patrons are W"ged to bring in unwanted books. With the exception of law books or magazines, aU donations -hardcover and paperback -are welcome and are tax-deductible. Books may be left at any of the three branch libraries -Balboa, Mariners or Corona del Mar. They can also be left in the special book closet next to the store at 1000 Avocado Ave. For more information, call (949 759-9667. The Newport Beach New- come~ Oub meets at 10 a.m. the third Wednesday or each month at different homes. The group of about 100 women go on the road, play goll, tennis, bridge and more. The group also holds several evening parties. For more information, call (949) 854-4501. SL Mark Health Mlnistrles presents Love Without Honor support group~ for women coping with domestic vio- lence at 10 a.m. and 7 p.m. Mondays through December. The groups will meet for two hours at St. Mark Presbyter- ian Church, 2100 Mar Vtsta Ave., Newport Beach. For more information, call (949) 721-8079. The Jewish Family Service of Orange County sponsors a discussion group focusing on iSsues, concerns and responsi- bilities of adult children car- ing for their elderly parents at 1 :30 p.m. Tuesdays at 250 E. Baker St., Costa Mesa. The purpose of the group is to help children and other concerned 1elatives to identify problems and issues and develop appropriate solutions. The cost is $30. For more informa· tion, call (714) 445-4950. The Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce holds networking luncheon meebngs from 11:45 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Costa Mesa Country Club, 1701 Goll Course Dnve, Costa Mesa. VlSltors are welcome. Cost is $12. For more info~· tion. caJ!.(714) 885·9090. The Udo 1$le Toasbnasters Club meets at 6:30 p .m. Mon- days at the Oakwood Apart- ments, 1100 16th St., in the clubhouse on the main level, in Newport Beach. For more information, call (949) 515- 9470. The John Henry Foundation sponsors the Comfort Zone, a mental illness support group, which meets from 7 :30 to 9 p.m. Thursd~ys at the Light- house Coastal Community Church, 301 Magnolia St., Costa Mesa. For more infor- mation, call (949) 548-7274. Jewish Family Service of Orange County sponsors an ongoing Jewish healing sup- port group for people experi- encing chronic illness. The pwpose is to provide partici- pants with emotional and I ZAHER FA.U.AHI, CPA :~ 28 yrs. exp. · Acctg .• Audits, Taxes 15% discount to CM Residents (714) 5464272 ' spmtual support to man ge illness and its consequences. The group mPets at 7 p.m. Thursdays at Jewish Family Service, 250 E. Baker St., Cos- ta Mesa. Attendance is free, but preregistration is required, To register or · for more information, call (714) 445-4950. • Scrabble Club No. 350 meets from 6 to 10 p.m. Thursdays at Borders Books and Music on 19th Street and Newport Boulevard, Costa Mesa. The cost is $3. New players are welcome. For more informa- tion, call (949) 759-4871. The Coin and Stamp Club meets from 1 to 3 p.m. Mon- days at the OASJS Senior Center. New members who are interested in trading, buy- ing and selling stamps and coins are being sought to jpin these informal meetings. There are no fees required. For more information, call (949} 644-3244. Jewish Family Service offers ongoing bereavement sup· port groups for aduJts at all stages or loss. The groups share experiences, hear how others deal with grief, receive support and learn ways to cope with sadness and loss. One group meets at 7 p.m. Tuesdays at Beth Jacob m Irvine. The second group meets at 10 a.m. Tuesdays at Temple Judea in Laguna Hills. The third group meets at 1 p.m. Thursdays at the Ezra Center in Anaheim. There is no fee for these groups, but preregistration is required. For more informa- tion, call (714) 445·4950. Newcomers to the Newport Beach, Corona del Mar, Sal· boa Island and the Newport Coast areas are invited to meet others who are also new at the Newport Beach New- comers' Club. Tb.is group of women meets once a month on Wednesdays at different homes and locations. For more infonnation, please call (949} 644-0302. Jewish Family Service of Orange County provides a support and discussion group to assist participants in their recovery from childhood or teenage sexual abuse. The group meets from 8 to 9:30 p.m. Tuesdays at 250 E. Balter St., Costa Mesa. Preregistra· tion is required. For more information, call (714} 445- 4950 A Dealing with Divorce SUP· port group is offered by Jew- ish Family Service of Orange County. The group is led by an experienced counselor and meets at 6 p.m. Tuesdays at the Jewish Federation Cam- . AROUND TOWN pu:.. 250 E &ker St Suite G, Costa Mec;o. For more lnlor- mdtion, mcluchng datM and fees, call Heather Watson at (714) 445-4950. An interfaith couples support group is offered by Jewish Family Service of Orange County. The group add.re~~ issues faced by couplf'S where one partner iS Jewish and the other is not, including raising chlldren, obse:rvmg holidays, displaying symbols in the home, as well as relationships with extended families. The group meets for three weekly sessions Wednesday evemngs at Jewish Family Service, 250 E. Baker St., Swte G, Costa Mesa. For more information, including dates and fees, call (714) 445-4950. The Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce networkers busi- ness leads luncheon takes place at 11:45 a.m. Wednes- days at the Costa Mesa Coun· try Club, 1701 Golf Course Road, Costa Mesa. For more 'information, call (714) 885- 9090. The Walking Club of New- port Beach meets at 9 a.m. and 7 p.m. at Hospital Road and Superior Avenue. Lose the weight and have fun. For more inf ormabon, call (949) 650- 1332. The Sea Scouts' ship Del Mar 711 of Orange County off en. a program for yoWlg men ages 14 to 18 interested in learning about sailing, seamanship, piloting, navigation and cruis- ing. Meetings are from 6 to 9 p.m. Wednesdays at the Sea Scouts Sea Base, 1931 W. Coast Highway, Newport Beach. For more tn.fom1abon, call (949) 642-6.101 or (949) 551-8591. The OASIS Senior Center offers ongomg assistance, counseling and referral !>er- vices for seruors. For appoint- ments or more informal.Jon, call (949) 644-3244. The Costa Mesa Sen1or CiU- zen Squdl'e and Round Dance Club seeks experienced dancers to JOin its group from 9 to 11 a.m. Thursdays at the Costa Mesa Seruor Center, 19th Street and Pomona Avenue, Costa Mesa. For more mformation, call (714) 545- 5669. A free support group for can- cer patients meets at 1 p.m. Wednesdays, and a support group for people suffering from chronic fatigue syndrome meets from 1 to 10 p.m. Wednesdays at the lrtstitute for Hohstic Treatment and Research, 4019 Westerly Place, Swte 100, Newport Beach For more information, call (949} 251-8700. Arthrltls Foundation lnstruc· tor Hillary Stone leads an exercise class dt 11 a m. Thursday at the Jewish Senior Center, 250 E Bdker St., Costa Me a For more information, call (714) 513· 5641. NlgbUy nieeUng are offered m Costa Mesa and Newport Beach for anyone who wants to overcome rucotine addic- tion. For a schedule or more jnformation, -call (714} 774· 9106 or (800) 642-0666. The Newport Sports Collec· I.Jon Foundation, a nonprofit organization, operates a (ree museum at 620 Newport Cen· ter Dnve, Newport Beach. The museum, wluch has one of the world's largest collec· tions of sports memorabilia, is open from 9 a m . to 5 p.m. weekdays. For more informa· uon,call(949)721-9333 The Hoag Cancer Center sponsors a free tai chi class for uitennediate to advanced lev· els from 10:30 to 11 :30 a.m. Thursdays for people with cancer and . thelJ' families. A beginner session meets from 10:30 to 11 :30 am. Fndays. The classes are designed to reduce stress, increase longevity and promote a sense. or well-being with basic, easy-to-learn, non- strenuous movements to aid in balance and concentration. The class 1s free and taugtlt by Victor Armand. No registra· tion is required The Hoag Cancer Center is at 4000 W. Coast Highway, Newport Beach. For more information, call (949) 722-6237. The OASIS Senior Center oUers a ddily telephone con- tact program for seniors who have a limited local support system. For more information, call (949) 644-3244. The Costa Mesa Communi- cators Toastmasters Club meets from noon to 1 p.m. Wednesdays c1.t the Orange County Department of Educa- tion, 200 Kalmus Drive, Costa Mesa. Meebng are open to anyone who wants to irnprov~ his or her public speaking skills. For more information, call (714) 444-5030. The Newport Beach Distin- guished Toastmasters Club 1300 meets from 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesdays m Sgt. Pepperoni's meeting room, 2300 Snstol St., Newport Beach. For reser- vations or more information, call (949} 646·1274. · Mesa Messengers Toasbnas- ters C lub 691 Ul Costa MeSd meets at 7 p.m. Tuesdciys at Mesa Verde Uruted Methocbst Church, 1701 W. Baker St, Costa Mesa. Fo.r more inlor- mation, call (7111) 540-4446. Blue Aame Toastmasters Club 2717 meets at 1 a.m. Wednesdays at the Village Farmer, South Coast Plaza Village, 1651 Sunflower Ave, Costa Mesa. The meeting 1s free for first·bme visitors. For more tnfOnndbOn, Call (949) 8~5-4308. Toasbnas\ers Club 231 meets at 7 a.m. Mondays dt the Irvine Co.. 550-C Newport Center, Newport Beach For more inlormabon, caU (949) 733-2209 Harborlltes To~tmasters Club meets at 7 a.m. Wednes- days at the Bahia Connthian Yacht Club, 1601 Bayside Dri- ve, Corona del Mar. For more information, call (949) 293- 4630. Udo Isle Toasbnasters meets Mondays from 6.30 to 8 p.m 'at the Glendale Federal Bank Community Room, 100 New· port Center Drive, Fashion lsland, Newport Beach. For more information, call (714) 964-5314. The OASIS Senior Center offe~ d Care-A-Van trclhSport to lake members to appoint- ments and grocery shopping. The shuttle takes members to the center. For appointments, call (949) 644-3244. Friday, January 28, 2000 9 Tutoring ts available for peo- ple mtereste<l in readmg Eng- ' hsh but could use the help. Hourly rates and times nego- tidble. For more informabon, call (949) 851-1739. The OASIS Senior Center offers · v1suul-a1d screenings with a Braille lnslltule repre- sentative by appomtment. For mo1e information, caU (949) 644-3244. Essential Wf!lght Manage- ment offers mteractive and proactJVe we19ht loss groups .• Learn behavior modll1cation and other techniques to control your weight. The cost lS $20 Groups meet trbm 6:30 to 8 p m Wedne_'idays and Thurs- days dl 369 San Miquel Drive, Swte 350, Newport Bedch. For more 1ntom1ation, call (949) 718-~ll. The Hope Institute, a center for recovery rind tdl1llly educd- tion. offers a women's support group from 6:30 to 8 pm Tu~­ day!> di 2~ Bnstol St., C -206,' Costa Mesa. For more inlor- mat.Jon, call (714) 432-0020 The OASIS Senior Center hdS a walking group cdlled Walk- ers Not Rockers thdt meets once d week to enJOY sceruc wal~ in and around the New- port Bedch drea. For more intomrnllon, call 1949) 644- 3244. Women Helping Women offers a free peer support group for women Ul tr~1b.on from 3.15 . to 4 15 pm A1co- hoh0.> Anon} mous m<'ets from 6:45 to 7·45 a.m Monday through Fnda} in Room 3 at the OASIS Seruor Center, 800 Marguente Ave , Corona del Mar For morP. infom1ation, call (949) 644-3244 Wednesdays at 425 E lBU1 St, Costd Mesa. Topics include sell·esteem, exploral.Jon of feelmgs, com- murucotion, trauma recovery and personal support For more in.formation. call (949) 631-2333. ... • 10 Friday, January 28, 2000 Up for grabs • Tennis club is preparing for a 'Super' pro-am bash, which will get under way tonight with one of the more unique auctions of the day.· W:tha unique handicap system, even club players tan participate with the professionals this weekend at the Newport Beach Tennis Club, ID taking a page from the HuggyBear Tournament in Richard Dunn TENNIS New York that precedes the U.S. Open, organizers of the inaugural Paramount Pro-Am Classic are putting eight pros on the auction block tonight at 7:30. Amateurs will bid on the pros in an effort to join them as a team, then, following a brief handicapping session headed b / NBTC Director of Tennis Scott Davis, pro-am teams will enter phase two of the Calcutta-style bidding process ... all to raise funds for the Juvenile Diabetes Foundation. The three-day event, which starts tonight with the player auction and team bidding, is open to any player, male or female, with a charitable pocketbook, a decent game and a sense of humor. The handicap system, based on the strength of players, awards a certain amount of points to pro-am teams (to be determined after the initial player auction). Five points is about what officials have in mind to grant underdog teams, but the handicapping is subjective, and, il a team is deemed too strong, it could actually enter the pro-am with minus points. "You may see a team that is not as strong as other teams, but the beauty of it is that you get a great return on your money," NBTC owner Steve Joyce said. "It's like horse racing. If you bet the favorite, you get even money, but if you bet a team, say, at 30-1 odds, you'll do better.• Teams awarded points prior to the event can use them at any time during the match. Four matches will be played Saturday beginning at 9:30 a.m ., followed by a player party (the public is invited). The semilinals and finals are Sunday, followed by a Super Bowl Party that could be • the best in town -that is, if you even care about St. Louis and Tennessee. The pro-am is free and will feature Rick Leach, David Pate, Jim Pugh, Grant Connell and Davis. Leif Shiras will be the master of ceremonies. •At Uus point, we're ready for just about everything." said Davis, who is familiar with the event's format, having competed in the Huggy Bear Tournament last year with Pate, and won. Joyce said 60% of the pool will go to the winning pro-am team. with a •smaJ.1 percentage" going to the losers and the r t to charity. ·we want people ch~ring, • Joyce S&d. "This isn't going to be a tournament where people are sitting qwet in the audience • The Paramount Pro-Am Cassie is not the grand reopening of the club, Joyce said, because more remodeling is planned for the 33-year-old facility. But it ts the first big bash under new ownership. NBTC, Which lS sporting a aew logo around town, will have 11 television sett -including a big screen -in operation for the Super Bowl Party. Joyce allo said he bu purchased five satellites d11hes for the fadlity. "I'm not a sPorts her, per say, but I want (members) to have the ability to wateh football or tennis, or whatever they want,· he said. SEE TENNIS MGI 11 QMNOf 1111 DAY ~1 hm cu own rt cher, bemuse WI know .. desent It m fl uwen casslty, Estancia captain ~· ... Jcll31honirle 9'0RT'SHAU.OfflM. TUA llOISOI --!IOI- Doily Pilot Lagt1na Be~h forfeits nine wins • Artists lose nine wins, but CIF rules 6-fodt-10 center Chris Manker immediately eligiblei Mesa, CdM now tied for first. Barry Faulkner DAILY Pu.OT CERRITOS-. The Laguna Beach High boys basketball team will for- feit nine victories in which it used an ineligible player, interim CIP South- ern Section basketball administrator Hal Harkness said Thursday. The decision propels Costa Mesa and Corona del Mar into a three- way tie for first place with Universi- ty in the Pacific Coast League, which opens its second round tonight. Laguna Beach from Iowa in Decem- ber with his father, Steve, did not comply with the bona (ide change of address requirement in the section · . bylaws. Harkness said the section recog- nizes Manker has now done so, ma.king hhn eligible for tonight's 7 o'clock game against visiting CdM. "(Manker, averaging 20 points and 12.5 rebounds in 11 games) bas been ruled residentially eligible as of Jan. 24," Harkness said. ·we got the evidence we needed." U1llv1·1·.rty 11.1 }1 l 1 · f .. 1.rnu.1 11 l \t) 1 l . -.--.. -' ...__ • -~ 4 '~ .. •\ Tonight's games (7) ( J an . 19). With t h e adjusted records, Mes a (17-5) a n d C ·d M .( 1 6 -5) match Univer- sity's 3-1 league mark . Estancia BOYS BASKETBALL N-AA, falls to 3-17, O°". With only five regular-season games left, the Artists can not obtain the 10 wins necessary to be consid- ered for an at-large playoff berth. Coach Bret Fleming's squad must now earn one of the league's three guaranteed berths to play in the postseason . CdM, ranked No. 5 in CIF ID-AA, Costa Mesa, No. 7 in ID-AA, and Estancia, have already been assured postseason berths, due to a compromise made by the s~on office when it combined two divi- sions to form Division ID-AA. Harkness said 6-foot-10 senior center Chris Manker, who moved .. to Among the forfeited wins are r.. league triumphs over Cd.M (Jan. 7), Estancia {Jan, 12) and Costa Mesa improves to 13-8, 1-3, while Laguna Beach, ranked No. 7 in CIF Division SEE FORFEITS PAGE 11 Hith_ school 1·111 BuKETB LL Eagles topple Mesa,. 52-44 • Eagles earn Pacific Coast League road victory to join Costa Mesa in second place, but Mustangs retain the Lady Bell trophy by three points. Barry Faulkner DAILY PILOT a 29-19 intermission lead. E stancia Htgh's Lauren Cassity maintains possession as Costa Mesa's Jenny Earnest (34) reaches in with hopes o1 a theft. It was· Estanda, which stole the game, however, as the Eagles jumped on Costa Mesa early en route to a 52-« vtctdry In Pacllic Coast League play. CONRADlAU /DM.Y Pll.OT COSTA lvfESA -The Costa Mesa High girls basketball team stood on ceremony, but it was Estancia which was jumping for joy after the Eagles' 52-44 Pacif- ic Coast League road victory Thursday night. Barrera scored the final 12 Estancia pomts in the first hall, including a trio of three-pointers in the final 2:30. Mesa, victimized by 24 tum.overs against relentless full- court Estancia pressure, never got closer than five after the break. CdM hanuners Laguna Beach While Estancia reveled in ending Mesa's cross-town win- ning streak at five, the shell- shocked Mustangs, who sal- vaged the season series with a three-point edge in point differ- Barrera, whose previous ential, somberly accepted the a-. n. t..agLN 8-tl v perpetual Lady Bell trophy r , wta sz. c-.-. 44 which goes to the annual series winner. career-high was 15 points and who did not play in the first Mesa meeting, due to disciplinary rea- sons, finished with 23 points. But she had plenty of help. Sophomore center Erika Aval- os amassed nine points, 12 rebounds and six steals, while freshman forward Xochitl Byfield chipped in eight points and su <,.1tu1d.1y (nonleague) Costa Mesa also earned the NII ' awt at Cd.\ 6 p.m "celebratory" postgame rib din-CtamMlmat'v\bocblijf. 7 ner awarded the senes victor, but not before E5t411da pla.Dted a less pleasant taste in the M~~s· mouths. "This is the most emotional win of my career," said Estancia senior Lauren Cassity, who contributed eight points, eight rebounds and four steals to her first win over Mesa in three varsity seasons. It was also a first for Coach Paul Kirby, who had never won a game, at any level, in seven previous seasons coaching in the Mesa gym. ·we executed better on offense tonight than the fir5t time we played them (a 41-36 loss Jan. 6) and our defense has really been gettiilg better the last four or ftve games," Kir- by said. •Any time you beat Mesa, it's a good win. We called timeout (in the final minute), because we wanted to try and 1COre enough to win the Bell. But that's OK, we'll own it the next four years." Estanda junior Zuyin Barrera scored 19 first-half points, induding four three-pointers, and the Eagles {12·9, 3-2 in league) rode a 1•-0 run, spa.rinlng the tint and second qtiarten, to rebounds. Senior point guard Lisa Hirata had seven boards and three assists and sacrificed her body all night. Torey Matsufuji (four points) was also key off the bench, as E~tancia pulled into a sec- ond-place tie with the Mustangs (13-7, 3·2), ranked No. 6 in CIF Southern Section Division ill-AA. Junior point guard Nancy Hatsushi had five of the Mustangs' six first-half field goals and finished with a team-high 19 points. Teammate Jenny Earnest, who hit 9 of 11 foul shots, added 15 points and Autumn Smith chipped in 18 rebounds, four blocked shots and six points. . •we'll have our own rib dinner, because we know we deserve it,• Ca ity sa.id. • (Winnl.Dg) the Lady Bell would have been nice, but we want a league championship banner even more. This wa.s our third straight win. We have Laguna Beach Tuesday, then we get Corona del Mar (5·0 m league) at home Thursday.• ' Sea View-leading Vaqueros roll on •Irvine proves to be too much for Newport Harbor, 77-15. JoMptt loo 0MYPt0T them the ftnt time (a 59-18 loss)," Newport Harbor Coech Gregg Sav· age Mid. •11 you saw our team play tonight, you would think we were playlDO our ftrit or second game, and not our 21st.• Savage. •rm not happy by the fact that they uied thet.r full-court press against our third stringers,• he said. •They ICOred more points 1n the fourth than any oth· ·=· IRVJNI! -Thursday•• pm9 agamst Sea View League 1-der Irvine High was going to l>e ._ for Newport Harbor's g11ll beUetb&ll team. But few expected It WM IC*IQ to be tbll tough. The v~i..: .ner.cl the Sallon, 17. 5, on IM v~· home oowt. We played a lot betts •'rwt Jri1De (18-3, S·O ln ~),ranted No. 5 m CJP SOutberD sec:uon [)h.111oa l·AA. foUnd too many open *"' not to ICON. Meurwhlll, the Sdort didn."t maim • lbOt from .. ft.ad Ullll bar •n• ._....., ka ta.. Int, ...... ...... AlldaD bit • ...,.... Imm lllll*'J.S .. fUkiuit pw .. ..... v.e. wblda dklD, lldD 8Dd an.a. Broob led tbe SeUOrl Witb four pointa. BiODD W81 tbe only ~ ....,.. Wiiia mofe tbu one pl. na•-. two '-=-c--., lw ..... and .,:;!... ..... .... :=.:::..~ a 1edl -~_ily_Pilo_t __________ ~~~~~~SPORTS-~~~~~~~~~~~~ Friday, January 28, 2000 11 TENNIS CONTINUED FROM 10 Joyce sald his decision to hire Davi! in November as dfreetor of tennis was one of th~ best moves he has made. "I've never been so happy with ll!lybody I've had ort board,• Joyce said. •He's just the perfect person ... he's JUSt like the total team player." Davis, 37, was an infontlaJ teaching pro at Palisades Tennis Club before coming to NBTC. In his playing career, the doubles expert won over $2.2 million. He captured three singles titles and 21 doubles championships "It's a bit of a transition for me and it's definitely a learning experience, but I'm enjoying seeing the other side and being at a tennis club," Davis said. •Jt's a challenge for me.• ,_ Corona del Mar High ' boys tennis coach nm Mang, director of the inaugural Cd.MHS-Pavillons National High School All-American Team InvitationaJ March 16-18, said Green Valley from Henderson, Nev., has dropped from the event. Mang has attracted some of the best tennis programs in the United States and has established what will be the most official natlonaJ championship anywhere, but first-time tournaments are not always easy to pull off ... especially with schools coming from across the country. Some high-ranking schools could not attend, even though they were invited and wanted to come, because of travel restnctions over 500 miles. • RlotARD DUNN's tennis column appears every other week. ' HAPPY BIRTHDAY SOCCER CdM, Artists tie CORONA DBL MAR- Allison Harvey had a goal and an assist for Corona del Mar l-ilgh's girls soccer team in Thursday's 2-2 tie with vis- iting Laguna Beach in Pacific Coast League action. HlllVey's goal broke broke a 1-1 tie in the second half. CdM (11~·3, 4-0-1) got on the board on a goal by Alivia Mazura early in the second half. -: ~~--... ,I, '.·. •• ,· It'• 111 It*• ~day In Qaeetfted HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS BASKETBALL CONRAD LAU I DAILY PILOT Costa Mesa's Laura Muniz hangs on to the ball despite the defensive effort of Estanda's Lauren Cassity (33) in Thursday night's Pacific Coast League showdown between the two Costa Mesa city rivals. Sl!A-~ ·-11, NlMoOllT ~ 15 Sclof'9 j,y ~ Newport Ha<bor l 4 2 6 • IS IMne 19 20 17 21 • n Newport Haft>of • A$hton 4, ~~lo 2. ~ I, Vi!lqU@Z 0. Ga••do 0, ~fl 0, Broolii 4, Moore 0. Sandel 2. WoP~ 2, M<kam!O 3 pt. goali None fa.Md out • None Irvine -ThrNtey 18, Morot• 1•, Grechko 10, CMlson 6, Kamada 0. Ngo I l , OIYll 6. O'H1re 3, ~ S, Coleman 2 l-pt goak Grechko 2 Fouled out -NQoe FORFEITS CONTINUED FROM 10 All three, however, had their league tlUe chances sig· nificantly enhanced by Thurs- day's ruling. Laguna Beach won 9 of 11 games when Manker entered the lineup Dec. 17 for an Irvine World News Tournament vic- tory over Mark Keppell Additional forfeits, includ- ing four wins en route to the Century Tournament champi- onship, include Jurupa Valley (Dec. 18), El Modena, Sunny Hills, Cypress and St. John Bosco (Dec. 27-30) PCL colleagues alerted first-year Laguna Beach Ath- letic Director Jonathan Todd of eligibility issues surrounding Manker at a Jan. 4 league meeting. Todd. s well as first-year principal Stuart Sims, main- tained those concerns were MCIAC ClOASI' WWUI EsrAHOA 52, CosfA MlSA 44 lcOf'eby~ Csl.OOa , 13 16 11 12 S2 Costa MftA S 14 9 16 -44 &tancU a.trer• 2l. Avllof 9, C-ty a. Byfoetd 8, MauvfvJ1 4, Hir N O, Orellana O, lAnN!1 0. Villa 0, Rodri9uez 0, Oll•IA 0 l1>L golls -a.n .... 4, Matwfut• 1 Fouled out I~ eo.te .._. · HAbulhi 19, b"*1 15, Smith 6, CMon 2. Muno~ 2. Manhell O. Tr.,o 0, Hort 0, c:oop.. 0 3-pt pl.~ 1 ~out None unfounded. The issue was raised again at a Jan. 18 league meeting including principals and athletic direc- tors. But, believing they had followed transfer eligibility rules, Laguna Beach allowed Manker to play and score a career-high 31 points in a 75· 52 home win ove.r C<>sta Mesa the fallowing rug ht. Harkness would not reveal specifics surrounding Manker's eligibility, but it cen- tered around bylaw 219. Tue rule requires a transfer student to complete a bona fide chaoge of residence, effective- ly discontinuing use of the for- mer residence. before the ath- lete can compete at his new school. Steve Manker said he has lived with Chris in Laguna Beach since they moved from West Des Moines. But Chris' motJ'l(!t and Steve's wife, Cindy, has continued to reside in Iowa. TODAY'S SCHEDULE . • Soomr: High Jd>OOI bo>'s -eon.. ~ ., ElUnd-. l 1 S pm; Corona d.I Mar 11t t.guna hect\. 6 tS pm. Newpott et IMne. 5 pm • Glrtl...., ~ fooltlil .t ~ 3·1S Mesa trips Eagles, 2-1 • Day scores 13th goal of the season to help the Mustangs defeat rival Estancia. Tony Altobelli DAILY PILOT COSTA MESA Freslunan Sharon Day and junior Fernanda Velazco were enough offense for Costa Mesa Hlgh's girls soccer team, knocking off vtsib.ng Estancia, 2· 1, m Pacific Coast League action Thursday afternoon. •Both teams know each otber so well and with the rjvalry, each team gets very fired up,· Mustangs Coach Dan Johnston said. •We managed to keep the pressure on and it paid off for us.• Day's goal was her !3th of the season for Mesa (8· 3-6, 2-2-1 m league). which turned out to ba an unlucky number for the Eagles (5-9, 0-4 ). "It's frustrating,· Eagles Coach Anton Striegl said. "We're getting so close to turning the comer. Com- pared to where we CdlT\e from, however. I'm happy with our overall improve- ment• With most of the game played in the Eagle:.' zone, strong play was provided by Estancia goalkeepe'r Helen Flores, who had 13 saves, including some point-blank stops "She's been awesome Hi9 h school girls SuCCER in every game we've been m, • Striegl said. "She's an mcredlble athlete and 1t was her play that kept us in the game.• Day scored the game's first goal in the 12 minute off a breakaway. opportu- nity by seruor Julie Kroen- mg. After Kroening's shot was saved by Flores, Day recovered the loose ball and scored into the empty net. Estancia tried to stem the pnslaught with long lead pasS'es, wluch provid- ed a couple of scoring opportunities. • Minu tes after Day's goal. Estancia freslunan Kathleen Curran nearly lied the game, but her shot sailed just wide. . "We tried the long ball on them and it worked for us a couple of times,· Striegl said. "It ju;;t came down to a couple of mis- takes here and there that cost us." Estancia used a burst of offensive pressl.1J'e to tie the game in the 32nd minute. Off freshman Ruth Chavero's comer kick. a Mustang player missed a header, allowing the ball to go right to senior Becca Silva, who tucked the ball m the upper-left comer of the goal, knottmy the game at 1-1. ln the second half. M~a continued to put pressure on ·Flores, but tht• semor stood tall, making lour tough saves m d row ·Helen is n tremendous goalie,• Johnston smd ol the Eagle"' k<'epN. "It wt1s hard to get onf' hy hN today.• Finally, Mesd mctnaged to take the lt'<td m the 63rd minute Neither IE'am could con- trol a long kick mto th<• Eagles' zone before Mesd·~ Llsa Dunn corralled the bdll and fed It to Vt,lazro, who snuck the ball past Flores Estanoa had one hnd.J chance to be the 9dflll! on a free kick Wlth approXJ· mately eight minutes remammg, but the shot sailed tugh and Wlde. "We're gett.mg there." Stnegl said opl!mi"t1cally. "We're workmg hard out there and we'U get a cou-· · ple of balls to bounce m our direction tf we keep up the mtensity." The middle of lhe field was the key of th<> game, as Mesa seemed a half step ahead of the EdglE:!s throughout •we dehrutely won the game 111 the middle.· John- ston Sdld of his sweeper play "Sharon Day dOd · Julie Kroening n·ally did a gr~al JOb of controlling the game and c:onlrollmg the · loose balls • .Newport's comeback falls short, 3-2 • Sailors make up two-goal deficit, but Irvine prevails. Joseph Boo DAILY PILOT IRVINE -Thursday's game between Newport Hdibor High and Irvine's girls soccer led.01 was a reaJ bambumer to say the ledst. That is, if you saw the second half. The Sailors almost pulled off a wild comeback from a 2-0 deficit against their Sea View League nval, but the Vaqueros held on for a 3-2 tnumph It's ITVUle's (7-10-2, 2-3 in league) sec- ond win over the Sailors. and it drops Newport to 1-4 in league, 2-9-2 overall. ·1 really hate to lose thls one," New- port Coach Jason Sorrell said. The h.rst halt was pretty lethargic for Newport and • Irvine. Both teams exchanged long kicks for most of the hall. But Irvine got the lucky bounces, two to be exact It scored 10 lhe 25th minute when Holly Rife's floater found JUSt enough space between Newport's goalie and the crossbar. Irvine's second goa.l cam~ 18 minutes later. When Irvine's Kun Titlmpo drove the ball, it ncocheted off T1ampo, sailed toward. Newport's god!, dnfl dgam squeezed in just over the goalie. ·The second half got rough, with two yellow cards issued The Sdilors also came out firing and scored m the halt's very first nunute. Newport's Lauren Birchfield found the ball m a melee m front of an empty lrvme g0c1l and knockE>d it in. Ten minutes later, Satya Tweena scored to tie the game at 2-2 "We did absolutely nothing m the fa.rst hall,• Sorrell said "We had to mcredse our intensity, and that's what we did in the second• Newport later hdd a chance to take' the lead when a hands Vlolation was called on Irvine Just outside its penalty box. But the Sailors' shot was cleared away. In the 20th minute, Nichole Fourruer knocked in a rebound for Irvine's wuuung goal. Newport goalie Heather Metcalf had five saves, including a danng grab on a Irvine breakaway. Sorrell also cited Meredith Miller for her aefensive play. Davenport reaches finals at Australian Open MELBOURNE, Australia -Newport Beach's Lindsay Davenport advanced to the finals of the Australidn Open following Thursday's 6-2, 7-6 (7-4) WUl ove.r fellow American Jennifer Capriati. Davenport will be up against top-seeded Martina Hingis today m the championship final. Davenport donunated the 22-nunute first set, dropping only hve points on her serve, while twice breaking Capnatl on her erve~ Capriatl, hampered with an abdonunal strain, fought back m the second set to win eight straight points, rall)'Ulg from a 2-4 deficit to be the set at 4-4. But Davenport, numng a strained left thigh, regained the momentum and ouUast· ed the 1992 US Olympic gold medafu.t. -. , ·, . ·~1' .. , • SEP21, 19M ALAN SL.A TI:A, C*1t (Actual1o), by JANE M. ,IGUeAOA, DepYty Publ~New~ Beach-Co11a Meaa DellV Pilot January 7, 1 ... 21, ~8 2000 CNSH68733 F209 12 Friday,~ 28, 2000 1. as 101 • 216 ~ft'---. 'ti""~'· . -1 (:· --· _ ........ ~,-'.... ~.1 ISE u-·· . : ~ .. J_ .,,_ ~-t. - . ,.._,.,"'r'-I ~' ~ . .. ~ . . . . ' • • ~ w • 420 ~ . t • 'I ;· • -· .., .... - It 430. 461 ':"Q.f.,..,~ .,. . -; . ''' ). ... -.. . 4IO. 416 690. 607 Dally Pilot· ~, ,1.i • '. I •I. 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Vila Comiorttbl• 2Br 181 Balboa bay VllW. vaua c:eol, HOUM w,'ha/dwood lloofs, Vp, v.ld Inside 2-cat space, lareptaee. garage. 51111" $1800 619-227-7384 y11d, $1695/mo Avalable Ftb 15 .... 949-675-4912 Open Sit-lido 1• ,,,,. 481/38a ~ lav room, Ntwer 3Br 28a. 2 car lormal cirlng, 2 upper gatlQI, 2 decks, nice ..iew, ex1eno1 sun decks, 2c gar, 2 blocks 10 beach. no pelS, $175,000. Bill Grundy $2SOOlmO 31o-37o-3999 RHHO<t .. 9-675-6161. 'OCEAN SioE PCH' 1 112 t yr LNM 2Br hoUse in blocb to bMchl 38r 2ba, gated comm. 2car gar yaid. 1 11ory. Yr1V ltlM $2900. avall 2/10 $1,850/mo Ag184M54-65IO tst+sec Cal agent Julie 949•759-3734 lor detds. I 160HOUSf&ICOfl)OSCOST'°:llSA-l Newport ShorH New 4br """' 2ba, steps 10 beach. gar. v1"1ed co«, w/d avail 2/1 $2495/mo 149-930-7528 EASTSIDE SPACIOUS Model Perfect on golf 2 Lg. br, kids/pets wel· courM 1Br VIII• Point vi ... C()fldo. F~ amenlt18S come, garage, pvt ya1u, & ~tylel Stsro'Mo S1495mo 949-548-3959 Move·lfl tomorrow•! Agt Sii 281 ROU.. Custom Bll1>all 9491644-9060 x302 Bull1 pelS olt credl problems ~ call M Of ------- Tony 714-375-3075 1238 1-FORA~~ I Very nice 2br 1 'Aba .__, 2 story wfttl I IPf'l9t S1250mo 949-760-8364 :;;;;;;;:=;;;;;;;;;:;:~ E'SIDE 38r, din. FP, foroed Yllll. racentl'i rarno<leled. $1495/Mo O•ner/Agent 949-&t2·9699. 1 17·=-1 48' 3Ba 2·Sly, gar, ~ blk lrom Cresent Bay Beech. Oceen Vu, rlmOdelld, new Clfp8t 121 Cment Bly. S27SOJMo. 714-381-4828 11.:::MEI Oc9en View Condo $1500/Mo. Near beleh 281 (O! 1&+<18n) 111.e1 Gated comm wfpool. spa. 1em1s & Motel MANAGER~ •SPECIAL* $154.00+ lax Wldy (Muit present lhlS Ad) 235 rms & kllcllenllls Silualed on beaulllully landscaped gtoundl$ FEATURES. 24-Hout Lobby/Dheel di al phones/Free HBO, ESPN & Olsc:/Poot & JacuUJ. Guest laun- dry Closa to 405 & SS F'!f'(S Mm's from O.C. Fllrgrds, college Ind bchs Walking dis· 11nca to ShOp5 and rutaurents COSTA MESA MOTOR INN 22n Hlrtlor BIVd Phone 9'M45-4MO 111 cntr New paint, carpel & &:=====:!I lppla South t~ lots ol C.M.lnr <>r.,. eo.s1 Col-sun & oceen vu• f!Ofn ~ 1egt quiet home rvsmkg S1000lmo + II? uH1 • -.... •• • • • .... , ~ '°' lllidl lllM ,..,. Eatab 20 yn ~ ttldll ~ '' .... ...,.,.c;n ......... Sllouf'd possen 111009 lncludH full t111111119, 51'1111 pe1 all .. M.u.9599. $$ CASH F'AID $$ pMrie 11les ~ be TNCkl toole. luppllff CdM Sil.,. houM lialf •• · •• ....... Of~ld & hive li1l CU5t MMl1-6609 '*" plu• utiliOH 2 ;ooma WE BUY ESTATi!S MIVICe Plll nl t-OOfMI I & bath laundry melt • ~ ' ,,.,,, •l'ldlt w"u 8enlf4 i*G Ind .Wik plan 484 MOHEY I snf'd. C11114M40..0f52 °\11( PAY MORE s fASUR0 EXOTING NEW OFFICES = Et:e·=~=: TO LENMWANTED II OPENING SOON Markey DllMls, 330 Wiii • • 208 OFFICES 1 ' Bay St COila M.. CA Do you hive tlNnetll FOR RENT/LEASE • POSITIONS NEEDED 92627 oi lax resufM IO probl•m•? No er1dlt? ' R (949) 631 6594 Bid credit? Tht wwn -.,..Sh-,-,..-o-tf-lclltr-o-nt-19-11"""' I • l.IMO D IVER •SANDWICH SHOP• • Cted•I? Stll11tig olf • vnell 41>1 Old Newpon Blvd • AOMINISlWlvt Surrell IH cost• M•u. !\Md• or b19 bu•lnaH C•11 u• Great locattonl D•YI I L GtAPllKS help. Al)ply In ptl'ton et t..f8MSM066 PrinlWOIX 949-722-6138 .-•• I ~ ' • 1673 lfvlne Ave. tO. PHILANTHROPY Ofe •p•ct •in E11tblulf lWJl 649·4922 """4illi? • OfflC£(OVlllts SECRETARY P1111tme fOf Emerging artjat &Hkl Exec D1CJ9 IOdv rooms • --• AGOO SUYIC(S CPA tlml. Mlcro10ft 2000 11119•1 fOf emlll monty 120-140sq It CIOflV8fljent loc 1' so UTH cg AST f»ro hetolul. 21)-25 "'" '* grent. 949-64().6177 some S't'C's 949-640-2142 A UCTI N PuASI <.AU DolOJllY week. Houri are tle•lb... Are vo11 drowning In ISl-7SS.OSOO IT 231 Good NnM of humor a overdue bllla? Stai.wide I 11 2202 So Main St. must. Pay per Hptrlenc.. Agency can help you tet 400AHNOUNCEMENT .• S~ ~n•, CA,~2.1~1 :a-'AX79ttsu.4•5639 10 • Jent. 94MS2·1CMO or tu beck on top w•th eny . . . ..;....;..~..;.;..........:...· _J,· Reaume to t4M74-75S7. llnancl•I dllllculllH, •HOAG HOSPITAL* bu•lnuHt, homu , THRIFT SHOP 450 APPLIANCES boall, ha~• v1cttion atld 17/POMONA, UNIT F-2 BOOKKEEPER UNfTED COLORS pertOllll ln-536-1454 OPEN T\JE·WEO tG-3 Of BENETTON . GE FRIG ~FT In tlil'd HB aa:t COfporst• Otflclt • World sso 94s-218-1 oo1 ~ro1~ '~ ~:i:; • PIT Ac1m1n•wttive I Cl.ASS Of AME Soltwa!e IS Altlltlflt §uitar Show! 454 FURNrruRE I ~.!~ ~ ~:!:.C •ii 1 OOO's .... ------"'·' resume lo 714·891 ... 208 Of lof our PIT rvw•-• Lovt Seat. Ovtrtlud, Cell 71' 373-2500 for appt. 15-JMws s*";_ luy, Sell, 1\'adel :!·~~ll~~,~~1 =::: BOOK IEEE PER MUS1 bet sell &t.arterl $)rengc County made by People L~r wlOufck Books & peyrol, M1crosolt. Oll1ce :.::.ihlr9Jounds 1 lor $275 °' 2 ICll S5"40 expenence t0< CPA office sx•ls req'd Grea1 Feb.• 10,6 949&463766 Fax1esto949~ caaual wo1k1ng .1 • OE 1nv11onment Fax & , 10-5 ll1tf111 leather sola & loY• MONSTRA TORS resume to Kns11e M!at newshl.,.rawed.very WeneedhelpnowlPTlood 714-754-1129 r'!!~:!!!!~·-J~4!..!~9~ soh.'top QuaJny was s2ooo demos needed trom co~ to .... w: $800949·261·9933 San Clemente ano IMne 690 POWER BOATS Outboatd MOIOf. '93 Johnton 115 HP. EJ!teilenl cond•t•on only Sl,950 949-721-1660 35' s11ve11on l fi C1b111 1999 5allS ~ ucri lice $1751< 2..CS4s 281 2bl 5yr wairanty fully loaded 94M75~9 692 SLIPS/DOCKS /MOORINGS -------. :-:-:~'""-'-~;;...;:.;,,,;....;;..;;=-W1canw0fll,goodpay.exp WhlUW•t h R1llan &ownawlilni:esa .. Cd LOST & HCtlonel couch & two Tina 949-8fl8.l3S7 eict 2 FREE DOCK 10< el9C1nc O! FOUND chairs, exceDent condtt1on• .,,.....,..-..;....;.~~;.;..,,;;.:.;.,:;.,. .--------pov.er 18·2511 111 etch IDf $500 949 ~5.7475 EnterpriM Rent·A-C• NB PARKING use o1 boat Easy access •PIT Lot Attendant Batbo&'PCH 949·722·6700 FOUND DOG Golden Retnever Found on Jan t9 1n F v can 10 desc:nbe 714·962·8968 FOUND WEDDING RING Cal to idenlily ll'ISCnpbon 949·541HS3S 456 PETS/ Call Scott 714-27CM301 SAIL ONLY 50l1 max. 1411 I I AM houra required. Account Mgr UV Accoant m1n1ger belWTl puvate re:.ldence ESTOCK FRONT DESK needeO 10 manage the Udo •.a• waler pwr lnCl<I -'!""!!""'""!""'!~...---' FIT •KP pret'd tlul v.11 train parl<inQ operallOO 01 a S700lmo 949·120 0299 FOUND white buch CIUIH r ' kid• wood wegon. !Mt-645-8013 Lost chocolate ltb 5 mo malt puppy IH I M«l CM ctr wuh 1-21 Call Ry11114~6-1947 LOST MALE YOUNG CAT GREY W/whlle ptwa. E StDE Costa ....... can tvta. 94t.S15.0337 Lost Jen. 21 Himelayen kitten. Whit• amo old malt. Me11 \ttr«M .,.a, REWARD 714-444-3499 412 CEMETERY LOTS PACIAC VIEW MEMORIAL LOT CHOICE LOT 909-658-4995 Pedtlo View Pnme Loe Magno1ta Coun. hlHtop ~ burfat niche Asking S4K 9"49·706-0907 al1er toam 88 GALLON nitil person Fllll benelrts large t.ledltal cencer 1n FRESH FISH TANK With To aoolv contact Jonalllan Orange County Re· llghts 3 hller:.. s1anc1 faSh ~f800175"5-34N 638_~ 0 8!J'N!esB sponslb1llt1es incl $150 714 540-5995 ~·· _,,,., .... u _ hiring, sch1dullng, HOST/ESS coordinating pa~ing 460 MUSICAL Flvt Crown• Reataur1111 ~ = ~ INSTRU.,ENTS 3901 E. Cout Hwy. .. IPPIY Mon-Sat 91-4:30p data blH 1Nna18" mer-. & toml1'UllCatiOO S TEIN WAY BABY GRAND tit 10tn. 1esl0tad HOTEL pt11ec1 cond must sacnricei Portofino Bch Hotel $25 ()()() 9-49-722·8144 -------. ..,. Htnng 1mmed1ately ... SS FfT & PfT Exp a .. but not req'd ..,. Front Desk Person ..,. Maintenance Apply Within: 2306 W Oceanfront Blvd Newpon Beach NICI< (10:30-S:()()pm) Fax: 949-723·~70 w1lh property llllll899f tnd tenants Houts lft Mon t!Yough Fn tram approx 8 JOam to S 30pm Compe1it111e Sallry Please call P1ul tor interview 800-701·3763. 4 PHONE REPS. FIAi ttme, energelle toi Mortgage Co. eam 10 $600 _, week + benetlb Sales •xi> prer d Contact Met Ma 949-250-5719 e-mail. portofinoOnevi portbeach.com. 478 l!Uftlovue""' Web-site: ~n. '•ron' www.pcrtoflnobeach SERVICES hotel.com 462 SPORTING e PT BOOKKEEPER OOODS e SERVERS e HOST/ESS _.20 GARAGE /EXfRCISE EQUIP. tor Rffl11119nl In Cotta SALES Mtaa. CALI. MM45-«IM PIHM be IWtrt thlt the llatlnga In thl• celtgOry m1y require you to call 1 900 number In which thllr9 It 1 chwge per mlnull. Stlllonlty ex_erc1 .. Blc,_. I ~ 2:00 end 4:00 ""0o-ver-Sho<e--s-Gw-1ge--S,-'lt cit very good tond w'hoan MONDAY THRU FRIDAY Sat 8·12pm HseNd items, reading. distance $375 I PIT General Office bedim tum, lamps & nu:h Cash 0ntv 949·548·9702 NB Tra"91 ~ M-f 695 CARS/TRUCKS NANS/SUVS MERCURY &ASL.£ 17 LS Powet locks & wlndow1 $2500 Tf...,1....S ACURA 1"4TEGRA 84 5 epeed, AC, 100l<m~ new liming btH, 1 owner, very cltan. SH, drive l c:om- P••· SISQO 714-146-1067 Acurl L•nd .. L. '90 Whte 4<11, vs auto AJC ~hi, I"' PINI, ps pb, P"'· Crul$8 c:oolrol am tm c;ass, 137k ml. snt1 t•a....ner mint Cood $9.300 949-723-1963 BUICK COUPE ·n $500. 714-632-0038 BOICIC LE SABRE '87 L TO, low 33lc ml, beige lltlr. co. and 11101e' Supe1 cteanl (511326) 514,988 NABERS (714)540-9100 CADILLAC DEVILLE '9i Silve1 llhl id~ conc)tion, V8 Nor11Wl81 new ctr uldt4n (719378) 518988 NABERS (71 4 )540-9100 ESTATE SALE 4&8 llERCHANDISE tor IPllt .MMS1.o300 -~___, ~altc: Sctn DeW'llle ·13 morel 1319 OxlOld IJ'I NB I I 11am-3pm f7/fv caa Joan I I SAT/SUN WANTED m ~ .. Oltt\atd -OPPORTUNn'EI. Low mtl8$, beige Ian mt quehly ciy5111 re!rig. dollq ~ore lmmadate lellher excelenl c.ond.:lon bookst*IS wiuciues COAST COIN NEEDS oP8'WlO WI tlSI • 1270607) $11.988 ,colectcw rard abimS OLD COINSI Gold ""81 . 94~2243 Pltatl be Wirf of out NABERS Cal 714·969-9152 )e~ry. walehts ll'CIQIHIS, RETAIL of -compMIM. (714)540-8100 ESTATE SALE co~bles 949-642·94-47 SALES ASSOCIATES = :=1,::,~ CMvy Coraict 14 6 ~ 228 Via M.-.tone NS, Udo TOP SUl'RECOAOSI • FUU.·TIME/PART TIME reeu btfort rou lefld wo. &'C, 11 pc;wet, Olk ml. Jan 27 28 29 9·2pm Jan. R & B, Soul. Rock. STATIONERY I PRlNT1NG any money Of tees 7•~Clllent cordt'Oll ~ 800 Antiques. MahoQally tum etc 50's & 60's e.n.fttllttalnint:,eft(;9 for NrVicet RHCI 14«>8 1657 cos jewelry, Norttake chnl MIKE 949-645-7505 rnel'll. Ptlont 14 ·1200 end I.WI~ 1ny Chevy CllNll'O ·12 V8. 5'Ver. Geiman crystal, new I P9rtonnel Otgt. contract• btfore you 1uto. lloys. pwr Wllld di. lnen, oflental lum & ac· 474 WOftK I NEWPORT STATIONERS algn. 1 NC, SHARP! Aeo Dec 00 cessones. painllf1gS, NOS WANTED NEWPORT BEACH.IAVINE r $1450 obo 949-6:!'1·3852 Vl!llage clothes. ran11n lurn ~1~= -=~:=,, HERE'S A ~REAT SAT St·1p home IXP in multiple " electronloS, fum, clothing dutlea cooking & MfV· WAY TO GET smal 8'lOI , l\$11Nd hems f Ing arnmat & e11 care 704 NARCISSUS Rel1 849-631~934 MOVING SALE SAT 9-2 20432 SANTA ANA AVE rOO:~P8f5~rs. no pall. 11gt11 ~ pivs, $350. ~~=========================-=::::::::============~=====·==··=1=5:£=~==:-:-:.L..::llddsuUJ71+556-6378 l to work for you. :[~~~:~:: .. ~:::::_ CLIENTS COMINf TO Slit Sat 7·? 412 1n Dlhfil O.rec:1cw ot ltrst lf'l'IPlesllOl'll you 1 Do o R COM Lsnpa, kltm !Ible Mo!Nlled 8 ..ting to un, TV cloCtoes. bar S1CIOS etc. IWw« phonll 8CCIOUfU SAT a. tum houMhold 1ec11v1bte. hl1ng, •Ofd • • I • ·-· ·--~ Tell your loved one how) dj;ecial tpey are ... and Say 970pp,_y C/JafentUtej 9ty ~.Pf 0'a/U1/uzej g)f!J' V11lnt1llft1 M~1S11s~1 Appr11r:nt F~b. J4rlt ,, ' -:, . . . 4 ~"'" PAX Ihle fotm to (Ml)'31.ell4 --------------...--i~NQ __ ....,.. __ ...-------------~-------------·-__ 111_"4_ .... e.aci.....-_______________ ....... __,111 {" . ' -. items. bedcJing. ttothel Pl'OC9Ulng Spenish hllplul toys, books 4H Ogle, C.M. S1Mv, mtdlcll & dent.II (olf ol lrvlnt Ave) FIT, win consider PIT. Cell !Of Interview 714441-1918 1 44() llSCB.LANEOUS I Fu re1ume. 714-141-3222 FOR SALE 1 ~pt. Man199t Tum -------' Mana!1""*"( 111/1\ .. Exctualve Center Club strong teasing and Gold Memberahlp pp. maintenance skllls Cell 949-859-1502 needed Rent 1nd or 949-212-3396 Sllaly In tlltianoe IOI mMlgetn(ofll ol 18 ullt Aj>t communly In the WOLFF TANHINO 8EDS ~ ol Coit• Mt$a TAN AT HOME C1ll (114)133.f409 BUY DIRECT ANO SAVEi ._ _____ _,, COMMERCIAL/HOME Art you gOOd on 11\t urwts lrom $199 00 phone? Smell ~rowing LO# M011Hy Paymane MeUical Co req 1 hard AIEE Co10r C8talOil worltlng. PIT ma1kete1. Clll 1 800-711-0lsA Generous repeal comm on accll opened+ btslc -------I00-201·2«2 l !!I~ I wO:.~t~~s~~e _ 1 d • S1or1 F a.sNon Is nee<IS •PT Rec.lvlng e Admlnlatr1t1ve Aut 1 ITEM TO lo etor• mlftlglt AoPIY In pereon or Clll Hou EH OLD \.Nnn ..... 7H·llll ,m c11tkliSOfi«I Polt1I poeltlonl CllfW rierllM>ltM No ft~ 1aqulrid 8enel1t1 For n . 111a1y 6 iosang lnlo cal (630183&9243 et. 175 1-lpn 1 cl!y! A\llQU\ ROt>l>.'I COi I H 111111 t """ ff" .. , P1U II M\ $CASH PAID$ Ill)'<'• r~ 111 N1 "'°"" l\\'~d1 919 67~J.G22J BILLING CLERK :\ppc.1ri11g ".1turd.1~' from l .11HLH~ 22. 2~11111 to .\pril I:,, 2000 The Dally Piiot wlll publish a Tax & Flnanctal Directory to assist our readers In flnc:ung a tax p_rofesstonal. Reacn1ng over 40,000 homes In a hlQh ·end market, you are sure to find many wno need your ne1p. A smart move on · your part would be to take advantage of our lncredlblV low rates and place your ad with us . onty $35 per week If you stgn up for the entire 17 weeks, or a minimum 4· week run at $40 per week . Size of Ad • .. ; 14 Friday. Jonuory 28, 2000 TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE C.il lor Anlwlrl • r..--.. .._..,....._ ... ,.. ..... 1«J0.37tH800 ext. a>efe 500 Coll The Pilot Classifieds at 642-5678 to pl ace you r ~oroge Sole Ad ~ Da' ''Pilot f 220 ..,,, T AXES TAX & AocoumtNG hoFESSIONAlS El«tronk fili with ca pttpentioa Raund11n l io l diyt wuh RAJ. Call NOW! 949-ISl·"7' !"" -• • • 1 . ' .·. • Resldenlalolb ~ 0 c. ,.,, •. Oualy ~ Aeucn- llblt. Bomll ~548-7803 HOUie Clllfilni Ii ("'"' Leal rtla, reuonllblt 11111 12 v .. EltD. Olllca aool 9*241~ 8.'a31-4980 ttOlitidiinlni • &p'd R1l'1 • Wllly/Bl·wllly/ Monthly WHkenda too. Great l'ltlll 0.24H504I 1Mt-54M285 Perform1nc1 Pr111ure Wllhlnf Commtfclal I 111ld1nllat Free HI Cf ii VICKY' We ofltf THE IEIT HolM anCI Window Cltln-~ 1~•XPlfllnce, )(lrll ,.,,, ~. ?14-668-0395. .-:. ~ ...... ... • 'J ' 1_;j_' _ .. f,• .._j ,_ :•:L: .. •" • . . ., ' ' . ' .• ·t ' '. ... .... . t ' I ' -• ' • . ..J •• ~· ... ••••••••••••••••• : TIINKIWRrTE ! • !Of ~Mt •• !~on1~: • 1.;;-¥< • • Oulck. ICXUl&I, • • hllpllA SUI lllm-5pm * : Mtt411cn : • •••••••••••••••• PC PllVAn lWoNs I locus on 'fWI netds from VtUd, to ~ to Web march. to 'fOAJt own orHint businm ltulol.Duc: '49.646.4192 ~ '""-... ,...,,. C"~.~ • ,, · .. ·. ' . ' .... . c-·: --":'. ' --, . •'T ..... --• _,. l C.n't eeem to get to .. lhot• rtpM fobe •round IN houM? Let1M M21111ed ............ ...,, ....,,.., ... ........... 8y CHMUS GOREN wi&h OMAR SHAllff .rMI TAHNNt HIHSCH POINTS, SCHMOINTS 8uth ~ulncrablc Ease d<.'1115 By IJ!rccmc:nl, Sou1h'• Jump over c.11 was "'eal. Nurth'' lhe no trump was lhe Grand Slilll\ Fur«. 1\l 1n1 panner 10 bid st\en w11h 111>0 of Ill.: WEST •964 NORTH •AJl7 SJ2 OAK 0 A10'5 •Vold EAST 0 J97SJ o 7 •KQH • KQIO o 0100 0 6 4 Ihm: lop honors; llJ Sou1h Jul) obhgei.I Ea•t's i.l<iuhlc wl\ more: •: from a leehn& of 1nsuh 1han any firm conviction lha.1 1'-: ira~ slam could be delca1ed. D:clarcr soon demon Slllted lha1 111 11 oK."Compli~hcd was 1u add 1nsuh 10 lnJUJY. The <>penmg club lead W&$ ruffed m dummy. and a \f*le was TUffed high m lhe clo~d hand. A low dll· mond 10 lhe nine provided 1he en1ry SOUTH •Vold •AJ 63 0 86 o KOJ832 • 10f8S 2 The bidding: . F..AST soum WFST NORTH I• 20 3• 5NT .... 70 .... .... ~ .... .... .... Open1n1 lead. ~na of • The ltlllbookl lCll you that 37 points are needed in the combined handJ lo have play for a &rand shun. That is true if lhe ha,nds are more or leu balanced. Frealt distributions, howevet, make a mockery of the poinc count, as this deal 1llUS1T1tcs •for a secOl!d p8'lc ruffed high, end a trump to the len 11llo11>cd dciclarer 10 rufh lhinl sl)illle with the king. It was then a simple mailer 10 draw the last trump. ca.ID 1he oce of spades and dummy wa,, high. So 1 comb1nCJ 22 high-card pomts pro¥Cd to be cnoosh to mal<e a g18lld slam. wtl1le lhe opponents could not coiled ITIOl'C lhan eight tricks with lhsir 18. The ahotils or distribution are 1 hazard that C\Cn the Titanic can- nOt overcome MERCEDH 000 'ti Turbo dlHtl, AAREll 3tmonh ~. S 7»'nlD 12.500 .IR. IJIG' Ten~ M~m-t799 Doily Pilot ·, ,~··4!'111.-: ;) •• J I 1 l'ft1 " . '.I!', p,& ,;'I I' ' I I ~'Ii Jltt' ' ,, ,. ......... -l ---.t. ~-·~::;·., ·'] .-4w: •. : .. ~ Metoury .... QI wtn'fr I HMM MOfU • ve. 111 conc1. .-o. ~ VI. Al Poww, cc. ·tilt, PQW9I 1m1m ,.. .-, 1 111r10 cu .. 111, CD, ct111M' lllll lir 1)9 . MllWf, lllOOlllt, LOADIDtl (V<lli2117) s12,m ~ •• ~'ob~ 0= ...... ~ ~-_ .. ..., ..... _wos_s ___ _ Wt'l/lflJIQI~ Inter. IOI( ml ....,.._. -~-' llwfyl ga19ged & CO'llftd ,.....,......,7rr1 "f22..ii........., .. ,...700,_.........r llJll reco«S$, Lomw ~ OlDIMdlltl mAO 'H if lool(lng tor 111 SEC w....... ••ft .... _ .. ~ v• CD $23,500 949'e5().7272 ....... -· ·-..... v. • bll o4 werr., pi8't'IOUI renlll. • ... (362117) $13.988 V8, lit . II.Co, rut NABERS powll ledltt, CIM. Ill, (714)540-t100 CIUIM. <IUll w bigs. OUSSMOliCE ciitlUi 'ii (THl1oos1) s12,1n Whee, ve aceltn conct- Ken Gr~ • tion. new car ndH1 ~S22~ (30l043) NABERS $3 988 lliticury Coup ao '" (714)54M100 ve, "'oond, 5 spd, atie. ltn/ PlYMOO'TH GAlND Im cass Iii, pwr seat, VOYAGER 92. e cyl trOl'IC & CNIM, r/5'>0fe1, sun root, ,.., ale. loeded, alt pwr !>'"" wtW, dl8I alt l>aOI $5.800 714-608-1557 (XSMUal) S1f,m Ken Gfody llneoln Mercwy 714-IU .. 700 MERCURY M~lque '" Nt cord, &UCO, 1u1 pc1wer, bll, cruise, am'lm cass. dual tlr begs, lloy wtlells. (XKt1M33) 111,m Ken Grocly Uncoil Men:uty 714-622-8100 !'ANOE ROV!R 'ti Whitt wllM tltw lflltr, "=" ......... c 471( 1111, U4.IOO Cell Tim HNM-41 ... Voluwegen Jetta OLX VRI '17, l.Oldtd. C'IJllOm wtlllll. new •••. 43'1 mi. $15.995 M9~·12S4 vwdLSJmX 'A Fully loadtdl Red, OrNl condltllln, llOK ml1 I Diie CD1. pn1111 IOUllG, m111t 1111111491. Mf.54M7SO M&M TRADERS 4LL MAKES & MODELS We come to ycu. Nothing c ver 10 years old. • MefCUfY uy;tique GS 'A Nr cond, llllO, kll powet, -· Cl\JIM, llllt'lm cass. dull Slmplif y your life through CLASSIFIED air bags . n..llJ.n.'t..1-(WKM371t) $10,m ~DAI\ Ken Grody 8'2-68 78 Uncoln Mefcury 714-622....,00 (949) 642-5670 STAR1!1NG ............... ....__....!"' c~I A NEW Ford E.xplorw 'ti JEEP ORAM> CHER()f(EE CHEVY CAVAUER '17 Nr cond, s aottd, LS. llf'I Im casa, bid liner. CUSlot!I bt.rnper, prll!lll#n ~. (Vtfnt01) $10,177 Ken Qrody Uncoln Mercury 71 "622-8100 CAM Hoo 4"11 llCi ii vs, air cond, auto, Cheyenne. co. am'lm, llOw, •• bid llnlf. premllrn MIMll, pot#llC' llMllng (T'E1"'31) $14,771 Ken Qrocly Uncoil Mlrcllry 71"622...,00 F0td Aerott• Won Xi 'ef ve, alt cond, aufo, am'lm CUI, root flClc. Oii, cnUt, ~.zr-1 ~ Kin Qrocly Uncoln Mlfcury 714-622-8100 FORD CfOWil vlCiOlii 'i2 Nr oond, VS, auto. ful power,. am'lm CMI, lit, CtUIM, cklal llr begl. (NX243.m) M,177 ken Grody Uncoln Mlrcllry 71 "622.f?OO On the move? C.11 C•••lfled ' '! ', \ •!'. ,, • u ' ' ' Newc...u..-... R.AMitiM·T- • SWM.u. tJnr* • ltntirt .y,..w.11.-. a.;,. PMl /SPA •l.to. .... ,a.... F.. • Ntw Oiwi11 • C-.. FUE ESTIMATE (949tz22 . 7478 - lnTe""T"' ·, --. ............ Tl ~~~"i:1~ BUSINESS?? Ken Ol'octy '* flterc:edu ~ 300 st u;::,:2=ry . ·11 Greet toold119. chalcol blaoMan Int, fully loaded. e Honde Accord EX ·es ablolulel'f btlt cooditlon • • • • • • • • • cxqle, while. 4cyl, IUlo. 42k $2.S,200 obo 949-&I0-?100 ml, suntt, nu hi aw cord Mlfe«ll• Eno Cabri°"'- 113,000 ObO M9-844-8311 •15 LTD Conv1rtlbl1, HOndl CAX 'iO SmoQcS ~own 1op, 51pd. NC, co. mechft. tan wenor. exctlln cond, *t =~flOO fully loaded , chrome wheels. 63k mies, 1 owner, INFIHIT1 Ibo ·11 $50,000 Ml-721-107t ~·:~ "Y· IUI*~ NABatS (114)54M100 • • -·--.•A\M3 .' . '•' /"' I I . !·,. lmpr ,,. ........ Do llllteMI · .... rllatlle. OllllY. Air• 71~7185, ·~1296 • M T • ES1lnatel HOIM=~ 6ma1 Jobi Oki IM90962 Duenl ...... 112t HOii@ MITOAAMN ,._..., d1•111 • ffM EIL ~ C1rpentry/El1ctrlc/Tlte Ol'Y'#ll S!MrD job ok. l.Q! "'" ctwfl n~ n..-.1aa AYMMU TOOAYI MN7Hlll ----:..r. • l ~ 1• : . ., ~ . "'"' Call the Classifieds 1949) 642·5678 GARDENING Relablt & ~ Wolle al ReasonatH Rat• Cal Ed Barrtll 11 MN4W371. SHANE~ (~~l-11(lt /1111 rt mrJ.)i'Mtlm Trr,. r11rrl111'11ilr1t1'otiRN111n The !Jglzl Department llt tlN Dai'1 Pi"'t is pk11Sul to announu 11 new mvil'e now ar.taibtbk to new businesses. wt-wiU now SEARCH tbt name for you at no extra char:e. anti Jiii'< yo11 the time and the trip to tht Court House in Santa .Ana. Then, of cowu, after the uarch ii computed Ulf' will fik your fictitious business ruzme slllltemmt with the Counry Q"lt, publish ona a weelt for four weeks 11.1 rrquireJ •1 law anti then fik your proof of publication with the County Ckrlt. Pull.Te sUJp by 10 fik your fic;titioUJ businm s111temen1 at the Daily Pilot, 330 W. BaJ S stA MesL If JOU CAn'"!t stop by, pk1.Se caU us aJ (9if9) 61(2-4321 anJ we tui t arrangements for you to hantile this procedure by mat!. Jfyou should haw an)' forth" qucstiom, pk ase caU us and JI~ will be more than glad to assist you. Good luclt in your nnv business! PUBLIC NOTICE The Calif. Public- U t 11 tt I es Com· mission REQUIRES lhlt •• used house· hold goods movers 1>nnt their P.U.C. Ca! T number; timos and d\auffers pnnt thelr T.C P. number In all edvertisments. If you have a qU8$· tlOn •bout the leoal- lty ot a mover, lfino or d\auffer. can: PUBUC UTILmES COMMISION 714·558-4151 n ~·~ f-=-· .. ;1 I • -. ll I ' ........... . HANDMADE OLD WORLD PAINTS INTI RJOIV00£RIOR1 f,,.rntJ ,,.,,, Atdmli11 LIME WASH BON COTE FRISCO MILK PAINT For Elmum C-111cr ROBERT ISBEU COMPANY Profau•MJ p,,;,.,;,,, U.: 1490SO Td. 9•9·'°"·)006 Pp. 949.S80.9626 lnt/w 5'NIJ Jobt 0 K • f.,. Prwlwr iAfo 111.62 • I . --~ .. ' ....... ' .' '~:,· .i 1, "'· •. r~'t1 • ' W ,., .i.. _JI J, ~ . . .,., . . ( AFFORDABLE ROOFING , ........... ....., ...... All.,... .. ...,... 714/115·1177 ll1lld Teller ,,.,, ...... " £1'Mll I· 1! I A• Composih~n & Orof'il1lls, Cmmoho~il English, Ott011m 101 iii 141·144· ,,.;,'\t" ·-• J . : .. ·. '' ltl I' 1>11011 UO« IOI; \\1ndowSt·,...n Suet'n Dnon •h' ... Fr-'C' Estim•e \\'• m•ke hOoM ~It TJ, .... 1.3118 Can't ... mto U-' to .. thoee repair lobe •round the houM? Let lhe CIHalfled .............. ..., ,...,,..Ind ,...........,, Air Conditioning, Cassette, Airbags, Power Steering. 2-Year/24K-Mile Full Warranty & Roadside Assistance. 1 O· Year/1 OOK-Mile Powertrain Warranty. Model 1V75M3 . . . . . - Automatic, Air Conditioning, Cassette, Power Windows & Locks, Tilt. Power Steering, Airbags. 2-Year/24K-Mile Full Warranty & Roadside Assistance. 10-Year/100K-Mile Powertrain Warranty. Model 3B24K9 . DISCOUNT FROM MSRP • Frldoy, Jon~ry 28, .. 2000 JS World Class Dealershl Serving California Since 1956