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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-02-25 - Orange Coast Pilot. . 51 FRIDAY, February 25, 2000 SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA CONvViUNmES SINCE 1907 DAILY PILOT PHOTOS SY DON LEACH ANO MARC MARTIN I UUSTRATION SY MARC MARTIN I ARNOlD PALMER PHOTO 2000 CHRIS CONDON I PGA TOUR Among the star-studded Held in the Toshiba Senior Classic 2000 at Newport Beach Country Club are (clockwise from lower left) '95 kingpin George Archer, 1996 winner Jim Colbert, Arnold Palmer, making his Toshiba debut, 1998 champion Hale Irwin and 1999 playoff winner Gary McCord. Any way you approach it, they are the Masters Toshiba VI promises to mesmerize its fans, again. ask folks who operate Richard Dunn DAILY PILOT EWPORT BEACH - Part of what's so wonderful about th11 world of ~olf is that seniors can still play. While there's an argument for nostalgia, the crowd of fifty· and sl.xty-something P,layers are sharper with the itons and farther off the tee than most anyone paying to· watch them. If you ever did play any of them for skins, bring a full wallet Remember, these guys read putts for a living. Gary Player nught ~ 64 years old now, but don't count him out of any Senior PGA Tour event. Every week, there's heated competition wtth over • a million dollars at stake Arnold Palincr, the 70-year-old legend who ls playmg m his flJ'St Toshiba Seruor Classic this year, was ~fed at the Chairman of bl PGA Tour Polley B<>ftrd, cfiard Ferris, for ustng the ~•nostalgia tour• while g iii court two years age> at the Casey Martin trial ln BUgene, Ore. Perris added that golf are allowed at senior tour events because •th senior tour ts a nostalgift touP! where the main attraction ii the chance for teun to pay tp excess of 000 to play pro-am rounds marquee players. don't tb1nk there's ~abouttt,• Palmer told reporters. • 1t•s very compebtive. 1 think that statement was incorrect, and I hope (Ferris) reads just what I said• This business of seruor golf, whtch continues to enbce Madison Avenue and establish more senior-golf related publications on the newsstands, is serious stuff -for the amateur and professional. When the Senior PGA Tour started in 1980, it had two official events with prize money totaling $250,000. nus year, there will be 39 official tournaments and 45 events overall with total prize money at nearly $60 tnillion -an increase of $6 million from last season alone. · While players like Lee 1\'evino and Chi Chi Rodriguez draw a large . gallery wherever they go, there's a focus in their eyes come Friday, an attitude they carry throughout the . weekend no matter how many sword dances you e or groonside one-liners you hear. The bottom lino lS, if someone like 1\'evllio or Tom Watson or Lanny Wadkins were big winners on the PGA Tour, they will more than likely remain solid players, despite their aging swtngs. They're profeMionals who constantly work on their game, retool their clubs and study golf courses. •My God, Lee Trevlbo can •till play thii ~ gnNt.. Tosluba Seruor C ld.SSIC tournament director Jeff PUrser said. "Here he's won (27) events on the rcguldf tour and NdrEBooK JCl& .. IM •11-,.,.. ~ ee 7J_2r-~s The • Chdllenge. which was played m Newport Beach in June 1998. Baseball? • (28) on the seniors, and • 7~.u ... ""'~ he still Well, there's an occasional t.hree- inning burlesque of overweight fonncr players who' struggle getting around the bases man exhib1bon ..,.,~ ... A--.1'1 •• . /Me"' .. ..,. • 7'--c'-.. ... Ac,,,4... ...,, ... ~ dnves the ball 270 yards and 5bll hits miraculous iron shots. People marvel over the fact that he can still .-'~ ... ~ ....t play like that.• Pans yearning for sponsored e 5 1dl • t., . , . 4«F a{ """""" by 4 bubble- the past ts a ll'Si-...-..J • ~ .J-reality at -z~ ... ~ ~ gum card company, but no on takes it ~~cgestop • DaU,)pj)gt Senior P.GA Tour, criously. arguably the most successful old-ume,., game m sports. Do you see athletes from football, boxing or basketball continuing to carve their crttft after age 501 No way. Tennis? Sort of. You can throw a few names out there, like Jimmy Connon and John McEnroe, and fans Will always buy tkketa. But tennis beets up the human body and there are too few drawing catda to IUStAin a ......., • ...,..~.Jun GOlf l.s different. Even though there are fitness trailers at every stop and today's player lift5 weights routinely, the game is toug}\est on the psyche and nerves. Your hendl shake over four.foot putts whenS180,000 ll on the line, as Al Geiberger proved in last year'• ftnal round of the Thlhibe OD the lut bole. Players on tbe ...,_. toUr probably ,can't tm'D cm the bell at 9 S5 tbe.., IMy did at, say, 25, but thelf swmg is a senes of _ compensal.lofl!), ad1ustments and counterbalances. Off the tee, the ob1ect is to hit the ball straight. not necessary far, otherwise players hke John Daly would win every week. And those who play m long-dnve contests are not featured on ESPN That's why the sertior tour 1s more than nostalgia, but a thriving entity of excellent shot maker::. who wear advertisements on their caps, !>hirt sleeves and anywhere else a logo can fit. They wouldn't be in demand if they couldn't play well, and sponsors want lo be involved every step along the fauway. Still, the sertior tour beg for notable players from Y(' teryear, rec~ru.zable players who make a strong case for the nostalgia factor. •(The Scruor PGA Tour) is a blend of competition and nostalgia,• senior tour offl<:ial Um Crosby once said. •nu~ competition has been a large part of the tour's succ • but it's also because 0$ the great names who continue to play/""\. That's why it'~ Arnold 'V • Palmer and Walter Mitty. It's unique.• The unpredictability is also an interesting clement of the aeruor tour, which has been proven every ye(lr iri the Toshiba Cla sic at Newport Beach Country Club For example, we once asked in a Dally Ak>t-produced ~ MCtioll for the Senior a.me, Ike this one, ii the~ 8MC:b coune record d , held by several players, could stand up? A few days later Hale lrwm ftred a hnal-round 62 dlld passed 11 players on his way to the Lille. When told he broke the course record, Irwin asked what the prevtous mark had been. ·oh, shattered tt, • Irwm said calmly, when informed of the old record, accomplished eight times by six players. We also once suggested who to look for on the victory stand on Sunday, and didn't come close Alter learning that p1ck1ng a wmner is lIDJ>OSSible, we said last year lt's anybody's tournament, that 1t could be a veteran like Player, a fan favonte like 1\'evmo or a no-name player like 8\lll Thomas, who wa among the hn.t-round leaders in 1998. Nobody would've gu ed Gary McCord, who grew up urfmg m Newport Beach a a Garden Grove High tud nt, would wm last y ar. McCord, the wisecracking CBS golf commentator, hadn't won a townarnent ... ever. His caJ license plat t d "NO WINS• before th '99 loshiba. He'd gone 382 tarts on the PGA Tow and nior tour without a title. Anybody who put money on McCord winnihg last year had to be checked into a c:Uruc ol IOIDe IOl't. But that'• paJ1 of what makes lh1I game IO greet. It's Walter Mitty winning an the ...... tcM. And. -.... .. o1..,. ... al ..... =:,. wm w:m.:t* ZW ..,..., .. . . Amie's Anny, the gentleman Player and Jacobs' recoup from '99 head at least one favori~'s list. part-tiJne author and humonst, and even a dabbler in Hollywood scripts. McCord plays the senior tour as if it's a hobby. It would be too hwniliating for his Pl<lymg . !avontes in lh1s fwld is tough, but we'll TOSHIBA giw 1t a rip off U1e tee, · For stc1rters, cmy living, breathing .yolf fan would have to root for Arnold PalmE'r, making his d<'but tit the 2000 Toshiba Semor Clasc;1c at Ne wport &ach · CQunlry Club. As if I weren't exc1t<>d enough about Arrue showing up, £>ven my latest bp~ of Wh<>alies featur£>s the 70-yPttr old 1£>gend. for wePks, Toshiba Classic ollidals talked about this one bl'ing the best ever, the year they raise the bar, the yC'ar they reach~ million in chcuitable g1vmg to Houg l lospital, and all that But no one figured Arnie's Anny would be coming. No one Pxcept tournament direc1or Jeff Purser, that ls. No matter where Palmer is listed on the leadcrboard, there will IJe no bad lies. •tt is cntertahunent," PUTSP.r said of the Senior PGA Tour, which stops in the area next week for the sixth consecutive year, •and thero isn't a much more entertaining player than J\Tnif! ... Th~ event, which is on a LEADERS three-ye~ roll in terms of edge-of-your-seat finishes, has yet to have a player win twice. But, this year, with George Archer and Hale lrwin off to a hot start, maybe we'll have our first · two-time champion. Archer, winner of the inaugural Toshiba Classic at Mesa Verde Country Club in 1995, is third on the current seruor tour money list ($236,855) and appears healthy, having played in au four omciaJ events, while Irwin is sixth among lhe year's early money leaders in only two events ($174,675). We all remember Irwin, the two-time leading money winner on the senior tour, and his course-record 62 in the final round of the t 998 Toshiba, assisted by the famou's bunker rake at 17, which miraculously stopped bis ball from rolling in the lake as he got up and down to save par .• Even 1996 Toshiba winner Jim Colbert -like Palmer, a survivor of prostate cancer -is playing reasonably well and is ranked 24th on the money list ($66,855). U last year's champion, Gary McCord, wins again, they should check his bag for extra clubs. This guy's a television arJUJetata; Richard Dunn GOLF peers if hP. won ag11in. But, hey, gotr 1s, after all, a four-letter word. Bob Murphy, the '97 Toshiba winnc>r who i<; fulfilling prior commitment~ next week, is the only former champion not expcctc•d to play. But as far as persondl favorites, one of U1e players l like next week is John Jacobs, a vctercm of this goll course who app<><LTec.J in more Newport Classic · Pr<>-Ams (fonnNly the Crosby SouthPm) thlm any other golfer (13). It's Jc1cobs' tum on the victo1y stancl, especially after ldst year's upset Joss in d five-hole playoff to McCord. Jacobs had 1t won on the first playoff hole, but only a magical script by the showman McCord stole the lead role. Jacobs' chip for eagle from 90 fl..>cl tumtd the 18th green into cl rirc.:us lust I Senior PGA Tour Money~ (Yew to date, thn>Ugh GTE CJeuk) K. PlAYER. EVENTS 31 Jim Ahem. 4 32 Gary Pl~r, 4 uce Fleisher, 4 2 Dana Quigley, 4 3 George Archer, 4 4 Jim Dent, 4 5 Lanny Wadkins, 2 6 Hale Irwin, 2 7 Vi<ente Fernandez, 4 8 Allen Doyle, 4 9 Graham Marsh, 3 10 Jose Maria Canizares, 3 11 Tom Watson, 2 12 John Mahattey, 3 13 Walter Hall, 3 14 Lee Trevino, 2 15 Tom tenkm'>, 4 16 Bru<e Sum!TW'~ 4 17 Bob Duval, 4 18 Dave Stockton. 4 19 Ray Floyd, 4 20 Hugh Baioc.chi, 4 21 John Jacobs, 4 22 Isa<> Aoki, 4 23 Hubert Green, 3 24 Jim Col~rt. 4 25 Joe Inman, 4 26 John Bland, 3 27 Fred Gibson, 4 28 Stewart Ginn, 3 29 Bob Dickson, 4 30 Larry Nelson, 4 MONEY $405,160 $257, 191 $236,855 S186,B74 $186,110 $174,675 $171,525 $140,117 $139, 147 $126,858 S125,267 $124,400 $119,231 -$98,411 S94,098 $89,017 $88,791 $81,575 $79, 117 $76,808 $73,895 $70,602 $69,493 $66,855 $65,543 $64,994 $64, 115 $60,026 $59, 111 $58,800 33 Christy O'Connof, 4 34 Mike Hill, 3 · 35' Dave Eichelberger, 3 36 Tom Kite, 2 37 Mike McCullough, 3 38 8111 Bras!(, 3 39 Jim Thorpe, 3 40 Tom War~o,3 41 Tom McGinnis, 4 42 David Graham, 4 43 Jade Nicklaus. 2 44 J.C. Snead, 4 45 Leonard Thompson, 4 46 Marte Ha~, 3 47 Simon Hobday, 3 481:etry Dill, 3 49 DaYld Lundstrom. 2 50 Jay Sigel, 4 51 Bob Lendzion, 3 52 Doug Tewell, 2 53 Ed Dougherty, 3 54 Bob Eastwood, 3 55 Roy Vuclnlch, 3 56 Bob Murphy, 3 57 Larry Ziegler, 2 58 Gibby Gilbert. 3 59 Orville Moody, 3 60 Barney Thompson, 2 61 Howard Twitty, 3 T62 Gary McCord, 1 T62 Tom Weiskopf, 1 AR.Mel RE No wear lik SAYllCf,5 o/o . OFF · Selected Sole Merchandise. CORONA DEL MAR PLAZA (noxt lo Bristol Forms MorlcetJ 840 Avocado • Newport Beach (949)'644 -9888 it. . ' • year. He should have had a dance partner the way be was floppmg around. Jacobs went from twinkle toes to Chi Ctu's sword dance, then fell l>ackwcird onto the turf. But Mc.C()rd kept the playoff gomg with a stunning 18-foot eagle putt and the best act on the Senior PGA Tour for 1999 was underway. Other favorites? Wouldn't it be something if Gary Player won. It would be almost fitting for this townamE>nt, already showered with celebrated moments, if the 64-year·old gentleman captured the title here that would make him .only U1e second golfer in his'tory to win an event in six · decades (Sam Snead is the other). Player, one of only foµr players to win all four of goll's ma1or championships, has been a fan favorite in Newport Beach every year, giving impromptu clinics on the putting green and driving range, signing autographs relentlessly, never tu.rrung down an interview and waving and smiling at virtually every tum. The most traveled player on the senior tour is also its greatest ambassador. So, for sentimental reasons, I'm also pulling for Player. I'm also hopeful for the SS6,422 $50,647 S48.202 $48, 101 S46.525 S45,365 $44,457 S43,200 $42,791 $40,874 S38,282 $36,467 $30,097 $27,890 S27,247 $26,633 S24,075 $24,049 $23,366 $22,901 $21.371 S20,810 $19,660 $19.484 $18,675 S18,096 S16,580 $15,926 $15,742 s 15,310 S14,546 S14,SOO S14,SOO 64 Dale Douglass, 3 65 Jerry McGee, 3 66 Harold Henning, 3 67 Al Gelberger, 3 68 Gene Uttler, 2 69 Bobby Suoble, 2 70 Jim Albus. J 71 John Morgan. 3 72 Walter Morgan, J 73 DeWitt Weaver, 3 74 Rocky Thompson, 3 75 Jimmy Powel, 3 76 Jay Honon, 1 77 Tommy Aaron, 3 78 Tom Shaw, 3 79 Jim Holtgrleve, 2 80 Buzz Thomas, 1 81 Miller Barber, 3 82 Tony Peterson, 1 83 Arnold Palmef, 2 84 Clyde Hughey; 1 85 Steven Verlato, 2 T86 Jim Ferree, 1 T86 M ike Schmidt, 1 88 Walter Zembriskl, 2 89 Bobby Nichols, 2 90 Kermit Zarley, 1 91 Don Bies, 1 92 Calvin Peete, 2 93 Butch Baird, 1 94 John Calab<la, 1 95 Gay Brewer, 1 96 Jim Hill, 1 97 Dennis Miine. 1 tour's new kids on the block: Tom Watson (if he plays), Lanny Wadkins and Tom Kite, the ultimate grinder. It's hard not to cheer for Allen Doyle when you see his backswing. Makes you feel better about your own game. At age 60, Lee 1tevino would be a noble champion. Al Geiberger, who almost won in regula\ion last year at age 61, is always on the short list of hopefuls. But the appearance of Palmer is more than a pleasant surprise. It's shouting from treetops and rattling cages; it's Rocky Balboa coming home to PhiladelpbJa for his first championship fight; it's applauding golf's most popular player in the sunset of his brilliant career. So, in a three-month span, Newport Beach will have played host to perhaps the two greatest golfers of all ti.me -Palmer and Jack Nicklaus -in back-to-back events. Neither, it is believed, had ever stepped foot on this soil befoTe, and now they show 'up abnost at once. Nicklaus played with Watson in the Diners OtJb Matches at Pelican Hill GoU Club in December, ma.king his first local playing appearance, and now Amie will play for the first time in Stl,720 $12,692 $12,647 $12,415 $11,638 $11,116 $10,588 $10,005 $9,884 $8,048 $6,457 $5,404 $5,400 $5, 156 $4,415 $3,738 $2,941 $2,344 $2,220 $2,059 $2,0lS $2,024 $1,760 $1,760 $1,7.SO $1,650 $1,560 $1,540 $1,451 S1i! 15 )876 S803 $744 $600 Doily R(k>t the Toshiba. I • It doesn't get any bet;t~_..r than that. For tournament offi who serve as Hoag Hosp)~ volunteers, it's an equi~bl reward getting Palmer. Senior PGA Tour's Ch ty f the Year in 1998, Hoag turned the ship around shit;~ the event was held togeth~ by pins and needles in MWv' 1997 under a different 1 i'1li> operator. '• After Hoag came to Uie ,. rescue, the tournament has made a remarkable recov~ry from a dark past that · included lawsuits a • ,,., bankniptcy, a co~troverfj00 over a $25,000 food and )'ti beverage invoice, four 1: dilferent toumament 1"11 • directors in the first fou( .:i.l years, and great uncertainty abouf the tournament's future on the senior tour11 " schedule. But, it has come a loD« : way, baby, and these ~m the Toshiba Classic ~ n ~ considered the class of th~1 senior tour with over $1.M '! million donated to chart~" the f lrst two years under direction of chairmen H Adler and Jake Rohrer. '' Hoag's recent three-yeai agreement with Toshiba antt NBCC has paved the way through 2003, but it appeen 2000 is the breakthrough with one big army headed'j this way. INDEX Money leaders Course changes Super seniors Gary McCord l •99 Thriller Lowdown on Amie , Pros' ouCh list Hot spots Hahn's ha~ Al Gelberger Rookies Facts 'n figures , Weather Time capsule Volunteers · Patiling Schedule of events Piiot quiz Thefield My autogr6"t book' The feet are the foundation of your body, and can often cause BACK, KNEE and HIP pain. Pain is your body's way of indicating something is wrong. Dr. Vihinen can help relieve pain-through non surgical methods. • Bunion correction-No hospltalb.ation • Ingrown lotnalls • New treatment for fungus nail • Spedallzlng In the treatment of atbletlc & sports injuries • Ullll7.lng new computerlud foot analysis • Dtabetk •·ootcare and F.valuatloa Preferred provider for most insurances including Medicare 307 Placentia, Ste. 207, Newport Beach uu..,K...-p•1<'.n 949-645-.6544 ~ ' , ·- t~ily Pilot TOSHIBA • Wa•h· 1ngton State PGAfnd it • member ~· the Pacific North· west PGA Hall of FllTW ... Buitt a.'l&inge Julius rest.awn Jn Bellevue, Wllh .. In the early aos n:t rs still ll'IYOlved with it ... age62 llmed .. ~ onlO t h ., Senior P G A To u r with • Hcond· plaat finish at the 1997 National Q\.Ylify· Ing Tournament •.. A long-time ltlftdout on the EuropUn Tour, where he Won swert** ........ tint• rntf'NMir of the Euro· Pe In Ryder Cup team play~golf~ WOt'kSlg ··-dleasa~ In Mldrtd, .__ -'*-... ri mcMll1e.1119B Friday, February 25, 2000 S3 ANe-w(port) compleXioll· .. . • Host sit~ once again features alterations for ~filor PGA Tow:.stop, inducting the famous 17th. RkHard Donn bAA.l.i PILOT ' ldi WPORT 1, EAC~- ln keepmg . ·1·~ tradition, TOSHIBA ~Newport Beach ----'---pptry Cl.1b has slightly ed the look of the Toshiba Senior Classic. .£or members of the Senior P,s'.t,A Tour returning to the ~vent, they'll.first notice a n~w and improved driving range, then. once on the golf CO'Jl'Se• they'll detect two re(:.'Onstructed tee boxes on the front nine and a more friendly fifth hole, which has been tough on th~m in ~t t,,qµrnaments. · J:Jut the biggest change will come on Newport Beach's signature hole No. l:f bich was spotlighted in 1 when Bob Murphy 6aD an 80-foot birdie putt to ~a then-senior tour re<:ord ~-hole playoff against Jay 11. and again in '98 when e Irwin's tee shot was ped from .rolling into the by a bunker rake on bis · ,;ay to setting a coUrse 1rneord (62) in .the final round. ·•it's that local !<nowledge -you learn where the rakes are." lrwin cracked afterward, when he passed 11 players to win Toshiba Classic IV. .. The most compelling bole on the course now features a· second bUhker, strategically placed in front of the greert. With two bunkers,. fewer goU balls are expected to roll downhill into the large water hazard. . Instead, the sand will trap more balls in the sloped are~ below the green that has had trouble with coots eating the grass ~eeds and, thus, making the hillside rough too short to seize balls from speeding downhill. •with the new bunker configuration, it's going to give that hole a totally different look," Newport Beach head professional Paul Hahn said. •Before, with the bunker over to the right (of the green), it gave them an opening, where you could kind of feel your way into the green. But now you h'ave to go over the bunkers. •1t could be (even tougher). because or the vision that they have looking at the green." Last year, No. 17 ,,1 lyed many a tnck on the> 50-and-over field, pun pmg up the sconng averag1 to a tournament-high .2~3 >Ver pdr. I The hole, WhlCh ells I has d two-t.tered green Wll h 1 severe drop from th" t )p shelf, forced <•iqhl d••u >Je bogeys dnd four Lnp c bogeys lilst yr>11r, th• n ost in the loumam<>nl. Sul there -.houJcJ" >e no morf' rt>pet1t 1wrlonlidJ ces of Irwin's mircKulow. up Uld down \"lllh hcills nClw r 1!1109 off th<~ gwen cH1d m1 o he bunkNs. . •ffBy addmg '>IX, •pV1·n. eight y<Jrds or bunkf'f1 ·t mdkes 1t pretty n'lU<'h 1mpossibh-• to hit m l<> t.!1at bunker and hc1v1> 1t 101 into the ldkc, • cl uh pH''>•dc nt Jerry Anderson sc11d The dnvmg rdn<Jl' °c:red lS probably the next m0s re1d1cal changP-on ti· e :oursc The c nt.ue dret1 h 1s been ffidde level wh.tle h1tll 19 stdtions hdve been r 101.ed backwdrd, dosN to •h· •cart path, mdktng the hH ti1 ·~ disld.llces lonqer· A do ~en FlbNbwlt mt1L<, have been added, b-ul the scruc r ) 1ros will tut oU gras~ The concrete Cdrt p :tth hds been doubled in wicll.t dnd extended dt lhe end, ... ith d C.X.1N LFMH/ (JfllY P.10. The fabled rake that saved '98 champion Hale Irwin. tncinqln sh<Jpn lhdl provide., l iJ pdrkmg -spots • .ind c>d<,1er m dnd out dCCl-''>S "We've dl.sn ltlnd.sn.1p<'d in thE' nncitllP tuin circle d!Cd, • . AnclPrson SdJcl "It a II looks go<>d ThP r.inqe> will be in CJC1,1d '>hc1pc• for the players." Furtht r, N•~wport Beach superintendent Ron Benedict hcls built a mnund behind the t1Jt'l QIP(;,0 tll'lU r<'rnnstructecl the tee boxes at hole's tJune a.nd six Thl• mouncl beh.md the hfth grflen l<, expectecJ to h •Ip the pl~yPrs Wllh viswn to tl.e green dnd club selection on thcu a pprodch. Th<> golf co~c 1s dlmost 50 yNrs old and features ubout 2,000 tre<:s along 100 deres, including 631 palm trees, Benedict said But the rlub has a slandjng policy· As long as it hosts the EST ABLJSHED 1922 Toshlbt1 Senior Clds~1c, il wlll continu<> ,o pump dollM<. back mto the golf cour~P for 1mprow.m1ents, upgradc•s dnd redesigns. Following lhe 2000 Toshiba Classic, the club wQJ bluld a mountl behind the 18lh green in dn effort to rrec1te d l.lttle more "f]a!jh," .. Anderson sdid, "There h ds n~rtd1nly been a lot of history on th<Jt 18th . green the past two yedrs m the Tosh1b<1 Senior Classic • but the remode!ing will make st a more challenging hnishmg hole,· Anrl.erson said Last year, the club !>Cored dO ace \\ith its reconstruct.ion encompassing holes three, four and hve in the outennost comer of the golf course.· · The club, which has spPnl Ot.ev· 77th Year ---- about $500,000 the pdSt two yectrS on improvements to the golf course, added a rock retduung wall m front of the f~urlh green, along with a cdsradmg waterfall and an upclal(:-d UTigation system. l.ocdl wild.We also favored th~ unprovements to the r ldke, wtuch has been· inhabited by geese. ducks, tools d nd Egyptian swans. Ted Robinson, Sr., one of three qolf course architects m the ·history of the par-71, · b,584-y«rd ldyouc, provided the vision and work for the hrtlf-nul.Uon dollar Lmprovemenls at Newport Be<Kh Country Club the past two yedfs. In the tar comer last year, colorful fiord was planted on d mound seven feet hlgh bordering the lh.ird fairway ctnd fifth tee box. More than 20,000 yards of ctir1 was moved in thP project, whlch received rave revtews. Will.lam Bell designed the. ongindl course m .1952 when 1l opened r1:; the Irvine Coast Country Club, then Harry Ramvtlle pravtded redesign Ul 1973. Robmson was uutia.lly hlI'.:'d tor added cµtstic endedvors in 1985, after the cummt ownership qroup took over teak The Premier Steak & ,seafood House eafood Prime Rib Rib Eye Delmonico Porterhouse New York Steak T artare. (Prepared Table-Side) Steak Diane (Prepared Table-Side) New York Pepper Steak (Prepared Table-Side) Beef Stroganoff Filet of Beef Oscar Filet Mignon . * Beef Wellington * Chateaubriand Bouquetiere *Rack of Lamb Lamb Chops Veal Chops • Carved Tabk-Side Pictured >..bow: A.......t ~7"um.ing Ma.it.re D' of the Year Gibby Femuc n and OwM:r Dan Mar<"heano WEEKDAY ll/NCJIEON BLUE Pl.ATE SPECIALS OFFEHING Ov1.m 50 ITEMS Prm WEEK Au. UNDER $10.00 Swordfish, Salmon, Or Halibut (BlaCkened, Poached, Grilled, Or Sautccd) ~aked Shrimp Scampi Deep Fried Jumbo Shrimp Calamari Steaks Scallops Belle Meuniere Fried Deep Sea Scallops Australian Lobster Tail Lobster Thermador Abalone Stone Crab Claws from Florida . Maryland Soft Shell Crab Crab Cakes Alaskan King Crab ~ Bouillabaisse SUNDAY AND MONDAY NIGllT DINNER SPECIALS $I 5. 95 OFFERED AI.L EVE"NJN<; ENTREES SERVBD WITH Youn CllOIC:H OF ' )UP OR St\IJ\D, LUMPY MASllHl) POTATOES OR RICE Pll F OVER 30 ~ TREE To CHOO. 'E f.'RO~I I CtUDING . LITTl~E" Brr OF ITALY: BRHAST OF CHICKEN PARMIGIJ\NA • CHICKEN GA<.Clt\TORJ:. • Vlli\J. PICCATA CAI.AMARI OVER ANGELHAIR PASTA• CHICKEN PICJ\'l''l't. ~VEAL PARMIGIANA• RAVIOLI GNOCCHI OR TORTHU If I • SCAMPI OVER ANGBLHAIR P ~TA LJNGUINI & ClrA M SAUCE • ~D MANY MORB -, SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA COMViUNmES SINCE 1907 Other side of the fence •City. citing code violdtions, has thwdlened Krist0n Miller with criminul chdf~JPs-if she does not dller her new fence. Andrew Glazer D AILY PtLOl WEST SIDE -Ttw nty '" C<llhnu lwr <1 cnmin<1I 1111 ID.mq lwr IPnc·c!. Km.ten f\ltllt>r hvvi, 111 lhv i,anw Wf'!'.I Stdl' m•1qhhorhood lhr1t nly-hin·d ronsul!t1nh n1n- clt1clPd would 1>1• qrc-t1t ly llllJJIOVPtl 11 hcHl11'!1Wl1f'r~ !.urroundmg hc·r hunie. n ty cude vnforcement offtnr1b hm_•d hC'r. J\ncl fined ht>r d~Jdtn. Now they c1r<' thrc•c1tc•111ng her with cri.mmr1I ChdfUl'S, d,11mJng thc1t her nPw fc•ncc· -r111d prob- ctllly lhP old On<'. tu<> IS llll!fji:ll. "Oh my !JOSh, l W(IS llttl>bcr- C)dslcd," sr11d M11lc•1, who works c1t Gullenn<.1st<'r, <1 :-.mr11l Cost<1 MP~d comp<.1ny tilt.II llurltb ... torm droin!. To bnn~J tlw lc•1H'P to l ndt>, f\11llt•r would n1•1•d to n_.dun• ti hy C'l~J ht 1 nch1 ·~ or 111uvc• 1l 1 U IM•t closC'r to hPr hunH•, r1cn1rd- 1nq to d lc•llC'r ~wnt (() l11•r from ltH• nty'!> plc1nnmq dl•pttrlln<'lll tn N1w1·mlwr. cd!Js tor cornJn••nl Thur..dt1y. When M1ltPr bou~ht her smr1ll, e!Jyshcll IJlue home on Victonc1 Street ne.ir Pl<1centia Avenue 111 I ~89, Uw h-foot-high fcnc·c· WdS Wf'dk <1ncl numhlm~J. Ten yeM!-. lt1t(!I', shc • 'it.l id, 1t lookt'd muC'h worsP. "Thf' prt>viuus ownc·rs didn't _wc1ler-tredt 1t, so th!' nC>xl big wand woultl'v<' blown 1t ovN," !>he Sdld FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2000 lmwtlC'cl. up lhl·Jr ft1<«1cl1• ... .inti llunt lr1w11!-. But :-ix 1nonlh!> <1fl1·1 f\ hlh11 rC'hutll 1111' 1111tmq w oodc·n l1•n\ 1• ( 'odl' enlorcP11u •nt uffH't'I (~csry f\ 11'1 k, who isstu•cl Uw ntrll1uns. cl1d nlll rH11m rt·pt•dtc•d phonP Least Mdrch. MLIJN cll'etdf•d lo USl' $..5,000 ot h~·r lt1X fC'IUm to reconstruct her h•nl P . li<'r nc~xl-· do<Jr nc>iuhbor, Ro'>l' Pnn'. -;c11cl thf' nPw fence lookNJ l'Xt1clly tit .. sc1ml' a!. tho old onr, on ly !.lrnn9er. llJh_.a, w ho sc11d silt• hvt•'i "frum TAYA l<AS~UBA I DAILY P1LOT Kristen Miller stands nex t lo lhf' fen(·~ that surrounds he r house o n SEE FENCE PAGE A 11 Vktoria Street in Costa Me~a. Thl• tily says U1£> fen(·e is no t up to code. I CAN SEE CLEARLY NOW ••• MARC MARTIN I DAILY P!LOl The snow -covered peak o f Mount Baldy serves as a backdrop to the high-rises in the South Coast M etro area Thursday. Recent storms have lett a blanket of snow on the San Gabriel Mountains and more r ain is expected today. Annexation talks behind closed doors •Thursday's private meeting between city, ·county officials mark s beginning of cooperative effort to annex Sa nta A net 1 {eights. Fomrntion Comm1ss1on I to make change.· County supervisors James St.Iva and Thomas Wtlson - representing Costa M esa and Newport Beach, respectively -met with Costa Mesa City Manager Allan Roeder and Newport Beach Deputy City Mdnager Dave Riff on Thurs· day behind closed doors at the county offices in Santa Ana. Andrew Glazer D AIL\' PILOT NEWPORT-MESA -A meeting between city officials and two Orange County supervisors -the rirst session focusing exclusively on the annexdtion of unincorporated Santa Ana Heights -showC'd they rm! finally trying to untan- !Jle the territorial rnnJusion, neighhorhoocl residents said. "Ne-wport Beach and Cos- ta Mesa don't want a tug of war.· said Ed Hall, chairman ol Wt>sl Santa Ana Heights ror Newport Beach. a grass- roots group. "It's up to us, thP cities d11d (the Local Agency Everyone at lhe meeting dgreed it marked a new coop- eration between the cities WAXIN(.; POETIC: Poet Susan Kinsolving will read poems CD from her critically acclaimed collection. "Dallies & Rushes," at 7 p.m. today at BC>f'ders Books, Music and Cafe. Kinsotving has published poems in many' anthologies and _ magazines, including The Paris Review, The New Republk and Grand Street. lorden is at 3333 Bur St_, Com Mesa. FC>f' more information, call (714) 432-7854. HOURS A quick . guide to the .. wettkend POft 11IOSE A80t1I' TO ftUlefAGll: The Estanc .. High School pryA rummage' sale wHI run from 8 a.m. ·to 2 p.m. Saturday in the school's commons at 2323 Pt««ttla, Cost. Mesa. Money raltld from the Ate wHI hetp fund college ~lps. Tables •• wallabte for those wtlhlng to rent sales 5'*•· For more Inf~ a.II <M9>.MM11S. and the county. "The supervisors mdd<' d very strony commitment to assisting us wtlh annexation:" said Krff. "They said dnnexd- tion is very, very cloahle." In order to annex Santa Ana H eights, U1c two cities would ultimalely need approval from the Local Agcmcy Fonnabon Commission. The county, cities and res- idents of the unmcorporated .SEE TALKS PAGE A11 llSIDE 11n1001 Actress Nancy Befl catne5 a stir i~ South Coast RepertC>fP production of •All My Sons." an Arthur ·Miller play, running through Aprtf 1 . ~-- Parents respond to draft of new school rschedule • Mcm y oppose µroposd l's longer winter and sprinu brec1ks, but suggest mon• time off dl The:rnksqiving .. '· ... Danette Goulet DAILY PtLOl NEWPORT-/\IES·\ · Pct rl'nli.. ctr~~uroct lhdl r1 three- wt•ck wmt<'r lin·dk i... 11111 111t11 h Lune ott tor stuclPnts r11ler rPVll'Wlll~J Uw d1 ... tn< , . .., d fcllt ol d new schqol '>C'.hC'd11lc• Tht• prupo...i ·<.11 .ti• ·nclcH hct" pm5 rmrl con<; lor d1ffer- l'lll lcl 111t Ill''>, 1>111 11 111'>1 p rtn •11h o~J r0crl lhd' the current \ Wtnll'I hultcl<1y Wrl ... c 'I\• 1uql1. "Tim'-.· \\'!-'ek. ... .it c 'hn~lmt1.., 1s too Jong," saio f\11chl'llt'. C1dhnlll, PJ'..\ pn•s1dent ·at Adams Elemen- tc1ry SC'hool 111 ('o'iltt f\l1·~d. "/love it ... Whol I really love is that lhf'y are Jelling the parents have a say in this. That is just exciting lo me.'' Candi Scott PTA president Newport Elementary School d{'nt's lc>nming prnc~'!'. .... t'wport-Mesd Unified Sc hool District offioals last V.t'l'k dnnounced plans to rt•ctnrmge the school calen- cittr. makrng summer vaca- llun ... shorter dnd extending \\'IntC'r and spnng br.eaks. The chslnct's goaJ r!> to cre- t1 te a !icheduJe whcrP there ure shorter breaks I 1weeo sC'hoot sessions for students - <'s1wc1a lly lor those learning Lh<• . English lan!l .. 1ge, said Lorn McCune. dS<iistant '>Upenntendent ot human r<'!>OUices. Grdhdm 5a1d d long winter bn'ak -although n ot as l(~ngthy as swnmer vacation could sWl disrupt a stu- "One lhtnH brouqht up by Ule d!Slrict was how-does lt1 long sumnwrj 1111pt1ct Enyh~h.-language learners,• Grdhd111 s<lid. "Wa tt. lhrc<• Wl'Pks in December, they might hdV<' d · redl ht1rd turn~ grdspmg it. I don't think thrlt'S V<'ry good.'' Tho purpose behmcl the extended breaks, however. 1~ to ort er additional r(•med1aJ courses for students struggling with En9hsh, f\ tcCune said. I lowcver. parPnl!. rnntend that three weeks is too lony for cJ.ll students. "Three weeks at the holidays might be a little too 10119, • said Cdndi SC'ott, PTA presid ent a~ N ewport Ele- mPntdry Sct)ool. "Probably by. the time they get back, they'll forget why they are in school to begin with.• They have also questioned the two-week spring break. wl\ich might conflict with the timing' of the Stan· ford Achievemt-nt Test known as SAT 9. W hiJe the alternative schedule m~y work for stu·. ·SE E SCHOOL PAGE A11 lllU QAWlll5 -~---"' llllGal ----=~~~L. ( A2 Friday, February 25, 2000 Trauma, drama and the cause of it all Actress Nancy Bell brings down a house of cards in Arthur Miller's 'All My Sons.' Alex Coolman DAILY PllOT 'I ' Ndncy Bell pro- dmmed, "dJn the r(>dSon every- lhmg ts gomg to happen• ,_ It sounded like a boast, but that W<t'>n't tlw wc1y Bl"ll llH'dlll 1t. 1lw wmn •. m who holds the part uf Ann l>••Pve>r in Arthur Mtller's play •All My Sonc;" ctl South Coast Rep(•r Im y w11s l<1lking about her role 111 l11P dfdlllttlu: story Une. In c1 work full of brittle egos and frdqiJP !c11111ly myths, it's Bell's char- a\t1•r whc 1 hcts the plc-usure of mak- inq PVC I }'lllll1CJ shcttlN "I ..,, '" 1t d'• l:t 11<1 of <1 heroic act." 81'11, 11111 l<l(•cl "I \1•11 tliouyh1t dOf'C.. tf( '"ff I I~ Jll 'llJlfl• " "\II ~1y:-;1111.., .. r•p<'n.., lorldyand ruos ll111111qh \p11I I . · 1 h" pl 1 \ ,. h 11 h np.-11i>d on l3roc1dwt1~ 111 1 '"1 /, wc1<, Arthur Mtllc>r ., 111.,1 11t, , • ..,.,, II p11vc<l the way f11r ht'-11111'il fr111111us works - pld)" "'"h c1s l"hl' C1unhle" and "UP11th ul" S.il1•..,11l 1r1 " Ltkc• "ll1•t1th ••f ,1 ~ctlC'Smdn,· •All My Son..,· op•'n" tht> ltd on d sun- rn<•1111q pot 111 lctU tly 11wlodrdmd It tells th1• sll11\ 111 lop K.-Uc>r. d father who h1l'i 111 ·1•11 kPPptnq secrel5 about hie; li11s1n~·..,c; t.1rl1v1t1es clunng World W.11 II, illl I th<• 1ntndnce bf'twPc•n h1<; ..,1111 <1nd Deever that tht£>dl1"11S 1111'l<J>OSP C'Vf'rylhing. £>Pl'vc •r, re •f'ltn<J from trnumabc ex pP11<>111 c • ., 111 11Pr own family, looks lo Uw Krllc •r hrn1•whold as a sort of oa!-.i<; of p1111ty drHI forthrightness. "< hll' 11r llw rt•c1sons J want to marry 11110 tit.st fr1m1ly is to recap- tun• lhr1t lnlll)( Pll('<', • Bell sajd. But thP c lost>r sh<· comes to the fa11uly, thi> m11rt> dnngt>rous she beco1111·.., Ill 11 'Sh<> think.., <,lw's qomg to maftry the prirn" .ind 111c1ke Uu• kingdom 1wholf' t1q.un. ' wlwn m redllly her ivery prf•<,c•w" 1s tlw force that ~nnys tlw <1011H•c;h\ CdsUe c:rum- fbhng dow11 "Sh,.\ 111 .. ,,.turn of the ·repn><,r.;f>d, flp)I S11td of her charac- 1er JI Pr lu\ f' 1nh•mst, C hns Keller, "cdtrws ctll tl11s q1111l and denial Kh 1s Irk<· d wt11l l.Jetween them, cJ Ann Inc •<. to No<le thdt." Bf'll's c1tlP11l1on lo thP <>lructure of the play t1ncl hPr po<;1tion in it has a lot to do lwr unch•rstancling of Arthur f\11llPt's work dS a play- DON LEACH I DAILY PllOT Nancy Bell as Ann Deever in "~I My Son'J" at South Coast Repertory. FYI 'ALL MY SONS,' BY ARTHUR MILLER • WHERE: South Coast Reperto ry, 655 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa • WHEN: Today through April 1. Performances are Tuesday through Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 7:30 p.m. Weekend matinees at 2:30 p.m. •HOW MUCH: $18 to $47 • PHONE: (714) 708-5555 wright. • Miller was a tragedian in a very strict sense, Bell said, and the roles each character plays in •All My Sons· need to be understood as tragic archetypes. "It's a specific form with specific roles." The focus on the family struc- ture, for example, is a contempo- rary !lpin on ancient Greek plays about noble families. . #Miller's asking, 'What is the American royalty?' It's the small businessman. It's \,he head of the household," Bell said. And as in any good tragedy, a sort of family curse is the force that sends the plot spiraling inexorably downward #It's tt very specific form, and in d WdY it's very restrictive, but it's mcrt'dibly powerful,• Bt>ll said. #It pulls things out of people.• ' All the close analysis of play struc- ture does good things for Bell's act- 111g. Her work in SCR's prod11ction of #1l1e Pbtlander" last fall has just t>illned hl'r a nomination for a Los At1geles Dr.una Critie5 Circle award. In U1e earlier play, written by George Bernard Shaw, she hdd the role of Julia Craven. It was a part thut had her grnppling somewhat Jess wrenchingly with the demons of domesticity than sbe does as Ann Deever. '"All My Sons' has been so emo- tionally cathartic, whereas 'The Philanderer' was very technical," Bell sajd, But when it comes to acting Miller, she said, cathartic is the only way to go. No proper Greek tragedy couJd be acted otherwise. "The language in the play IS real- ly particuJar. It's the American ver- nacular of the postwar middle west. which is not the way we talk today. •u you don't really go there emotionally, it comes oil really falced and forced.• Bell didn't sound like she was going to ha Ye any problems going there, though. She was the one who was going to make everything happen. on SATURDAY In Satur~y'$ Detebook, photography dealer Susan Splritus i5 on the move - to a new location In a leu compkuous place. Why? She's going. corporate. Daily Pilot CHECK IT OUT ,~fi "1 lo Tackle a test tmtb . help , JI The secular side of sUrfers Video set to screen at Port Theater offers a side of surf culture rarely seen: Christianity. Nancy Cheever D AILY PILOT T herP's morE' lo professional surfC'~ than whdl their fans Sf'l' in magazines -more than lhP.ir awesome ability, more than n ftl<e. body and board. Tildt's the underlying message ln "Chanqc-s: o SO-minute video set to sC"n•1•n dl 7 p.m . Saturday at U1P Port Tlat>ttler. TI1<' vicl <'o d coUttboration betw('(•n Nt'wport l3 •acb flnanctal advisor Jim Babbage and 25·year- old professional surfer Bry,an Jen- nings -is a vehicle to spread their word: Christianity is for everyone. The documentary·style video of ministry includes mterviews with surfing pros who are Christian and •how they came to know the Lord and how it altered their look at life,• Babbage said. This dimension oI the surlmg culture ls rarely seen, Jennings said. •People see them but don't hear them talking, especially about their bellefs in God," Jenning s sai(i. Much of the video includc!s urf- ing footage peppered with tc~Umu­ nials from such urfers as nm Cur- FYI 'CHANGES' •WHERE: Port Theater, 2901 E. Pacific Coast Highway, Corona del Mar • WHEN: 7 p.m. Saturday • HOW MUCH: Free •PHONE: (949) 631-2880 or (800) 443-9935 •WEB SITE: walkingonwater.org run und Sklp f'rye. The rest contains interviews wilh friends and family ol Chris O'Rourke, the pop\.llcu La Jolla- t,>d~ed s u.tf cr who chNl of cancer in 1981. For the last three years of his life; O'Rourke, once a veritable ter- ror and fierce protector of his turf, became a kinder and gentler man with the mark ot Christianity stamped on biJ soul. •niat was the most powerful part of the mo\rie, • Jennings said. The film has opened the eyes of many teens wno realize that a life of faith is the life they should be leading, Babbage Said. •You have U1e opportunity for kld.S to see their heroes ln a differ- ent format ... hear their heroes talk aoout what they believe 1n.· Bab- bage said. While Jennings was growing up m the San Diego surf scene, he said he noticed he was fast becom- ing a role model for young ~. I , The video's concept came to b1ID after he started a Christian au.if camE! Walking on Water, for • •They listened to me no matter what I talked about,• J~ said. Prom there, Jennings said be asked b1I fellow ChrtstiaD iurfert"l tO shUe thelr experiences on ftbW.1 Bab~e, a member of Athletel tr! Action, 1eerned of Jeruiings' VU., which wu about half done, md the two decided to Join forces ettl take their show on the road. The video, targeted~ allllf areas, hal been shown tn Haw San Diego and the mid rout. •we bopO to reach u many people as poHlble, • Bab~ ~ Daily. P.ilot READERS HOTLINE (949) 642-6086 ex ~is.ments ht>r~n uin be reproduc.ed without wrttt.o ~­ minion of copyright ~ WEATHER AND SURF POLICE FILES VOL 94, NO. 48 ntoMA5 H JOHNSON, Pubhsllef TOHV DOO£RO EdrtOf JENIFER RAGLAND, ~l<Jf Uty Editor JASMINE LEI. Assistant City Editor NANCY OfEEVP, reatures FditOf ROGlR CAJU.SON, Sports Editor MARC MARTIN, Photo Editor ANrHOHY NCK. Mewl Editor JOSI J. SANTOS. P•~ NOY OITTING, a tied Advff 11t11ig LANA JOHNSC)H, Promotiom PMMOOSHAH. O'llf!f f1nanc:1 t Offt<tt RKOfd your comments about the Daily Pilot or news tips. ADDBESS Our~ Is 330 W, Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627. COBREOJONS It Is the Piiot's pollcy to prompt- ly COffect all ""°" of substMlce. Pie.,. ult (949) 57~33. rn TM Newport BucM:ost.1 Mela Deily Piiot (USPS-1~) Is put> lbM<I Monday through s.t.ufdly. In Newport BNch and eost. Mm, wbscrlptlons are ..... 1i.1>1e only by wblalbtng to TM Times Orange County (IOO) 252-9141 In.,.. OUUlde of~ 8eMt\ and eost. Miu. subtcr1ptlons to ttwt Deify l'llot ere evai!M>le only by malt for SlO per month Second d• postage peld • eo.1a Meie, CA. (rrlcal lnc:IUcle all eppliCM>le n.ta end toc.i t.a-. ) POS'fMA.S. TU: Send~-~ to The N9Wpot\ IHCNColU Mae Oltify l"llot. '-0. loil 1560. ~ ..... CA 9212' ~No new.-. ,..., ...... edttorial nMltW HOW IO REACH US OmAatJon The nmes Of ang County (800) 252·9141 AdvertilJng Classlfif'd (949) 642 5678 Display (949) 642-.4321 [drtoNI ~ (949) 642-5680 SpcrtS(949)574-4223 News, Sports Fax (949) ~-4170 E mall dailyp1lotOlatim~.com ~nOffke BUMnew Offlct (949) 642-4121 Bl.di~ Fix ('49) 631 71'6 Nilllll9d by 1""" Cllmm<!nlty Ntw\ • ~ "' ... 1.04 McJolft Tl!Mi. Wll&lm Lobdel, ....,. fd!tor ~ s-.~. ~Editor MMMlf9n, Dir«tOf of Photogrllf)hy .......... ~ Senior ldhor, CoPY OClk -"'-DI M ...,_ _ TEMPERATURES Balboa 61~2 Corona d I Mar 61153 Costa Mesa 63154 Newport Be~ 61153 Newport Coast 61153 SURF FOMCAST T~ werterly northwest· erly swt'll fades t~ for scn In the wain· to chtit high level. LOCATION SCZI Wedge ,_.,.,_.,n•-•2""4 W N~~ ............... 2-.4w Bladcies ..... """"' .... 2-4 w 11DES TOOAY Fl"t low 7;51 a.m ....................... 1.4 First high 12:56 a.m ................ 4.l Second low 6 :57 p.m ....................... 1.9 Second high 1:43 p.m. . .................. 2.9 first low 9:32 a.m ..................... 1.) first high 1:54 a.m ...................... 4 l Second low 7;59 p m ....................... 2 4 Sefond high 4 04 p.m ....................... 2 8 ft1wr Jetty •• u .... -... 2-4 W WATa CdM--. ..24w ~ 56 a>STA..sA • ~-....: A bkycSe worth S 179 we stolen lft b the 1500 blodt • 7:30 p.m. s.turday 10\ • w.t ..._ "'-': A leather notebook end Its c:ono 1 terrts worth Sl42 were stc*n from a car In the 1000 rt blodt ~Sand 6:15 p.m. Feb. S. • .... ._.._.A pair of~ several boOQ ComplKt discsWOf1h S1,475 Mfe st06en from. CM In 2700 blodt ~ 12:50 and 3:30 p.m. Ftb 9. , • ....,_ IO&lill'U•& A <.ellular f)hotle worth S 140 stotln from a CM In the 2100 blodt between 2:30 and l:JO p.m. Filb. 7. 1 • ...... IO&lllwu& A celtui.w phOne worth S200 wm stolen from a car 1n the 2100 blodt It no p.m. Filb u . ... .,..,IUOt J • 11111 c...t llW IS • A_., phone~ W9..,, ft'om. ~In the 2t00.~-*". .nd10~r&• ._... ...... ACOft'\PKtcllc~wonhS100- **"hm•csln ... lllodl.__..d,._ ._ DtJily Pilot amng airport issues to the highest authority od only knows. And He's not telling. I have two interesting eedeslastical developments tlU$ week for your consider-' is'TJbn. . The first is the appearance of a mysterious, ChnsUi.ke figure in a coal mining area of Pennsylvania. "What's Your Name?• No, not you. Him. That's his name. When people approach him, he politely asks them to call him "What's Your Nll!Re?" And, Lord, do they approach him Groups rang- ing from a handful to 2,000 people in and around Hazel- ton and Shenandoah have gatl)ered to hear him speak rWhat's Your Name?" caretµlly nurtures the visual image of Jesus. He looks to biMlWtYsomething with sboWder-length hair and a ~,beard, wearing battered leather sandals and a long, white robe -the only gar- ment he owns. He refuses to accept donations, other than fckSd'and a warm place to spend the night, which is how he survives. hN\ilame? • never claims to ~·J'e!;us Christ but, as you might guess, never denies it, eitm!r. When people press h1Ni bn his nom de Dieu, he says 'it represents •the deep mystery of God's name and the'Wlion between his name and our names.• ·Uh, OK. When people press bim on tifS' real name, he plucks a !l~odt answer directly from ffi~1New Testament: "Who is my mother? Who ls my broth- er? All who do the will of my F~tli~ are my brothers.• F'me. But that name, or th~~ck there<>(, is still tem- bly jlistracti.ng. • 11A's the biblical equivalent ol Abbott and Costello'~ "Who's on First?" routine. m1 Hi. I roeant to say hello thd1other day. I'm Jim Williams." 1 •Hello, Jim -What's Y/:Au Name?" ' 1 "Uh, Jim. Jim Williams. ~yours?" What's Your Name?" ·oK, well -gosh, is it ~30 already? Bye bye." •1.Far be it from me to tell messianic figures their busi- ness, but I think it's real bnportant not to hopelessly confuse people the moment ~ hit town. Of course, b6sed on the reports of mira- cles from some of the towns- ~ple, we may have.already moved well beyond the con- fp,sj.on phase. Some people swear they've seen "Name?" walk through the snow or preach in the rain, but his robe nev- Peter Buffa COMMENTS &CURIOSmES er gets wel Oth- ers say his robe is always . bnmacu- late (sorry) and never becomes soiled or stained. But the ·most com- pelling account by far came from a man who claims that • "Name?• fixed his broken- down car by simply placing his hands on the hood. Holy smokes! This gives a whole new meaning to •we can't touch your car until the end of the week.· Alas, as with most self- proclauned -or, m this case, un-proclairned -messiahs, it didn't take long for a few reporters to make a little rev- elation of their own. . The real answer to "What's Your Name?" is Carl J. Joseph, 39 years of age, com- plete with former addresses in Toledo and the Bronx. Shoot. What a letdown. I can't speak for Toledo, but I can speak volumes for the Bronx, which is where I'm from. You can find some tru- ly dJTlazing things m the Bronx, but the Mess1dh isn't one of them. The second revelation from above, way above. has to do with, of all thmgs, the El Toro airport brawl. Just about-everyone on both sides has weig hed m so far -politioans. activists, Airline Pilots For The AlI- port, Airline Pilots Agamst The Airport. unions, environ- mentalists, busmess councils. tribal councils. But this week, as report- ed in the Los Angeles Times, a ruling ca.me down from the' Chief Justice of the Most Supreme Court of All -according to the Clergy for Wholesome Communi- ties, anyway. That's the name of a newly formed coalition of 81 clergy mem- bers who have made a star· lling diScovery. In the theological equiva- lent of diving off the 10- meter platform into an empty pool. they have somehow concluded (don't ask) that God doesn't like airports. Well. You could have knOcked me over with a feather. After 12 years under the tutelage of Irish nuns and Jesuit priests, how could l have missed this? Communism? Bad. Lying? Worse. Indecent thoughts? Oy. But, dirports? Not a wo1 d Not one syUabJe. Say John Steward, pds- tor of a Lutheran church m Mission Viejo and head of Clergy for Wholesome Com- muruties "l think it's a b1bh- cal quesuon." An airport, he contends, as not "the loving thing to do • Hmm. I've seen more than a few pobtictans stum· ble into the quicksand of religious debate over the years, but it's rare to see a member of the clergy tum- bling backward info the cement mixer of politics. The very sbppery slope upon whicn Pastor Steward has ventwed is Uus -if an airport is unmoral or run~ counter to God's law, how rlo you exempt the people who support it from the same charge? To their credlt, some "Wholesome" members detected the moral and l<><JlC'dl blunder almost unmedJdlE>l)' ·1 don't think you can cdll people unloving or suggrst they are somehow ungodly if they dlsagree with my pos1bon on this,• said Rev. Fred Plumer, a Wholesome member. I don't think you can either, · reverend, but h<• just did. Nonetheless, for better or worse, the issue 1!-i out there and d emands d n•sponsc First or all, CJIV(>O the tlJllOUnl Of trnvehng ( do, If God really doesn't like air- ports, I need to know. From now on, I w1ll usk three questions when I check in "Are we on ultw? Have you gotten dn)' mt.'SSdQC.., from an older mc1n with d really deep vo1c 0? Did he• sound up!>et7 • · JI I get more thdn one yes. I'm m d Cdb to the nearest Amtrak station like d shot Secondly, Cdn we evRr really know how God feels about airports? 0 1 course we can. The answer coulclrl 't bf' more obvious if it were hcmg- ing from a freeway overpdss. Where is "What's Your Name?" when we need him? If anyone can solve this moral erugma, "Name?" is our man. We take "Name?" out on the rd.mp at John Wayne Air- port a.nd ask hlm to imagme that the asphalt is a 1972 Gremlin. A quick touch he re and there should tell the tale. So what's the verdict, •Name?" -does the Man upstairs like the e things or not? The .. Name• knows, every ti.me. It's perlect. I got- ta go. • PETER BUffA is a former Costa Mesa mayor. His column runs Fri- days. He can be reached via e-mail at Ptr840aol.com NEWPORT BEACH CITY COUNCIL WRAP·UP Inside CITY HALL I' WHIT HAPPEllED: The council voted to raise o1f-season parking fees at the 19lS at Balboa Pier and Coro- fll del Mar to match summer (iltes. WHIT IT.MEINSs Staff sur- veyed the majorrty of the pa rte Ing • facilities In ~1 Huntington ach, Crystal Cove and John Wayne Airport which all use the same n1te year-round. The new fees for Balboa Pier will be 25 cents for 20 minutes for motorcycles, SO cents for cars and S 1 for larg- er vehlcles. Corona del Mar daily partclng fees will be $3 for motorcycles. S6 for cars and S 12 for larger vehides. The council hopes that by having • single fee, It will .. Put a few words to work for you . ~, Call the DailyPilot 1 "' a ASSIFIEDS eliminate confusion caused WHAT HAPPENED: by rate changes, update the 1992 fees and create confor-Moving toward the annex- mrty throughout the city. The ation of Newport Coast, the projected revenue increase is council approved an agree- estimated to be between ment made with the Irvine S40,000 to $50,000 per year. Ranch Water District. WHIT HAPPENED: WHAT IT MEANS: The council voted to ~· Theagree-restrict skateboarding men~ is one in throughout the entire Arches a series of Interchange at West Coast tasks the city Highway and Newport Boule-must com- plete in antic-vard. ipation of annexing Bay WHAT It MEANS: Knolls, Santa Ana Heights and Newport Coast In addi- Complaints tion to addressing water pro- ~ were filed with visions, Newport Beach also the Police needs county support on a Department property tax-sharing agree- about profes-ment and must reach consen- sus on residents' annexation slonal skate-issues. boarders disrupting tfaffic in It was agreed that in order to film a video. Also, exchange for continued ser the skatebdarders reportedly vice. the water district will damaged the new landscap-give the city $25 million lng and railings there. In over six years. The council response, the couhcil voted will decide at a later date to restrict skateboarding what w ill be done with the activrty in the area. money Friday, February 25, 2000 A3 A PUDDLE WITH A VIEW ' • c.E.AN Hill.ER I DALY I'll.OT As storm remnants linger, junior Hlllary Ward is reflected ln a puddle of water .near the entrance to Corona del Mar High School. More rain is expected today. What's AFLOAT f • WHAT'S AFlOAT runs penOdi· : • cally 10 the Daily Pilot If you know : of an event or act1v1ty that could appear in this hst1ng, please mail the information to Daily Pilot, 330 > W Bay St., Costa Mesa 92627, fax 1t !. to (949) 646 4170. or e mail 1t to CJJ1/ypilor@lat1mes com C~BA T AIMING The AquaUc C~nter, 4537 W. Codsl • hqhway Newport Beach, off Pr.. scubct trauung cons1stinCJ of six evenmg cmd two weekend 'day c"ldsses Co<;l rang<>s from $200 to $310 Th<' cenlN ctlso oifer~ scuba rental!>, <,pecidl lnps. rep.ms and air tills For inore mformdllon, Cdll (949) 650-5440. IT 'S A DIVE At Dive-in Scuba, 2482 Newport Blvd. in Costa Mesa, certification classes for beginrung to instructor level scuba divers Me avail- -·able Other seMces ·offered include locdl boat C'hdrters, eqwpmenl sdl~ rentdl!> and repdtrs For more mfom1a- tion. call (949) 631-9288 OTHER RENTALS toon dt Anchors Away Boat R<>ntct.b m the Balboa Fun Zone ror more information. (au (949) 673-3372. The Harbor may not be Venice, hut you can always pretend Spend an hour on a gondola tour offered by the Ciondol.i C'o. of Newport. J400 Vid Oporto, Suite 102B. Cost u. $75 Pnce includes a basket ol bread, cheese. sala- rni, JCe, glasses, blanket, Sail airborne outside the harbor. pulled by t.1 motor- boat, courtec;y of HCJlbod Para-sdil.tng near the 13ctlboo Fun Zone A !-JO-minute trip costs $45. For more mformd· lion, call (949) 673-1693. -music dnd a Polaroid picture. \.Vme is available for pur- Rent a party pontoon, chap-chase For more information. aqdl runabout or famlly pon-cd.IJ (949} 675-1212. NHL~ CENnR I~ brings you up to 30 games a week during the regular season. Plus you get select games from the first two rounds of • the Stanley Cup• Playoffs. See the best ptayers, teams and match-ups from around the League -Uvel NHL• CENTER ICE• also brings you select Canadian match-ups including CB C's Hockey Night in Canada, and games from CTV Sportsnat and TSN. NHL Center tee is available on Comcast Digital €able . CallToday for a'$9.9a connectionl 1-888-COMCAST 1-888-286-2278 Offer good for primary outlet ................. • _. .. C11ll• •flilll1 .. ·' • When it comes to local news, I like it delivered fresh each day, not canned. That's why I read the Daily Pilot for all of its community news, high school sports coverage, and local columnists. And that's no malarkey . . Got the Pilot? Call 1 (800) LATIMES to subM:t1be • C8I (949) &42~1 to advet1iee ·~---... ................ ------------....._--~------~------...-------------------......_~~y ., 11 I I I ' • Daily Pilot Friday, Febrl!Pry 25, 2000A5 Parents cry foul 6n vote for school uniforms •A second vote has been set after handful of Andersen Elementary parents claim ballots were tainted. Danette Goulet DAILY PILOT Parents at Andersen Ele- mentary School will be asked to vote for ·a second tlple next week on whether to adopt a school lhliform policy for students. The results of the fifst set of ballots were supposed to be released today but a handful of parents have requested a second vote, saying the vote was tainted. .. "The survey that was con- ducted prior to the vote tak- ing place clearly indicated the parents' desire to have a uniform dress code at Xndersen by more than a three-to-one margin,• said Veronica Kubat. the parent who conducted the survey in November. 70% of the parents must vote and that 7 5 % must be in favor of uniforms. So when Kubat sent out ballots last week, she num- bered them so that parents who forgot to vote could be called and reminded to do so, she said. Some parents have objected, saying voters could be identified by the numbered ballots and per- haps even persuaded to vol~ a certain way. Now those parents are demanding another vote be conducted by the district. "What's happening here is a very despicable and typ. ically political nasty behav- ior,• said Kubat's husband, John. "There's a touple of "no' people that were so adamant about this not hap- pening that they applied pressure for a revote. • , Veronica Kubat denied that any parents were pres- .sured to vote in favor of the uniforms. "People were aware of the process all along," she said. which all parents were invited. At that meeting, she told parents bow the vote would be conducted. Cindy Dillion, another Andersen 'parent, said she opposed uniforms but did not know why the ballots were recalled. "(Kubat] did mention that people would be calling,• Dillion said. "I'm nqt in favor of uniforms. I think a lot-of people· are still trying to make up their minds. n Andersen Principal Mary Manos could not be reached for commeM. The uniforms issue has been a hot topic throughout the district during the school year. Several other schools are - considering a unif onn dress code. Kubat said she was unaware of any concerns among Andersen parents until the revote was announced Thursday. "A revote is fine with me," 'Kubat said. ",I just think it will affect the ulti-DON LEACH I DAllY PILOT In order to change policy, school officials declared that Kubat called a meeting weeks ago, she said, to mate vote," First-graders at recess at Wilson School wear a variety of uniforms. N_ewport Beach to hire public information officer • City officials approve spending $36,000 on the new.ly. created position for the next four months. Noakl Schwartz DAILY PILOT The City Council this .... week decided to try out a part-time public information officer to help with newslet- ters and press releases. "We have a Tesponsibility to communicate to the public as to haw we're d<;>ing, • said City Manager Homer Bludau, who .added that be antici- pates hiring someone within the next three weeks. For the next four months, $36,300 has been allocated for the program, which would help the city manager's office with press releases, media calls, the city's Web site and in-house publications. Those publications include water bill inserts, handouts from departments and the city's annual report to resi- dents. The position is meant to help the city become more . public-friendly and will not prevent citizens from speak- ing to council members or staff directly, Bludau said. The idea first surfaced at the council's Sept. 18. retreat, where council members dis- cussed ways of improving the city's communication with its residents, businesses and vis- itors. Staff began researching other cities and the ways Newport Beach could improve distribution of its information. "It's a way of trying to get Remember :when the dog gave the kids a bubble hath? .. Your carpet·s remembe~. - Pet odors and stains can make your carpets and upholstered furniture less than fresh. Just call COIT and we'll give you a free cleani ng estimate, backed by our 100% Satisfaction Guarantee. So, no matter what's shakin' at your house ... 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Af111 ~'II' rt'llltltA • / 1.,,1/ Mt ptr Clllo"'11ftr L Noi .--NI"'"'" ,Of1Wi11tJ ridl 4'#V ~lttr {1"4WH ~ '°""'°"· .J ________________ .._ _____ _ • information out to the pub- lic,• said Councilman Dennis . O'Neil. "I know we rely on local media to do that (right now}." Not everyone in the public is pleased about the decision to hire the officer. Phil Arst, spokesman for the slow-growth activist group Greenlight, said it's not that the public doesn't know what the council is doing, but that the council isn't listening to what voters want. Proponents of Greenlight's Protect from Traffic and Den- • sity Initiative, which would give residentc; the final vote on major developments in the city, say their measure is a result of that desire to be heard. · "I think this shows how out of touch the City Council is,• Arst said. "Instead of hir- ing a propaganda . officer, they need to lew.;;n .. to listen first.~ Even within the council, there were concerns. O'Neil and Councilman Tod Ridge- way questioned the amount of money that would be spent on the project. "Can we continue to add new employees when pasic servkes go wanting?• Ridgeway asked. While Rldgewa·y suggest- ed contracting an officer, he said the council needs to remain focused on what's important. ·we can't keep hiring new employees ~thout fix- ing Balboa Boulevard,• he said. In the end, however. the council voted unanimously to try the program through the fiscal year, which ends in June. RS! • • ROsallnd WllllMts, ~ao. Ne~Beach Conference and Visitors Bureau · . ' ... . I • 1 . The first visitor I welcome to Newport Beach each morning is the Daily Pilot. With all the community news, high school sports coverage and local columnists, the Daily Pilot will never be a stranger in my home. Got the_ Pilot? CaJI 1 (800) LATIMES to sub9crtbe • Celt (949) 842-4321 to advet1iae ... r J • -. • I -~ I I , . Da ity Pilot Friday, February 25, 2000 A7 Open priinary leaves county· politicos guessing • Election offers chance to cross party·lines, but voters may find they don't have much to say . in the matter. Greg Rlsllng DAILY PILOT In its heyday, a beauty pageant was known as a grand affair, p1ttmg gor- geous woman wearing the latest fashions and featuring their favorite talents. The crown went to the contestant with the best overall performance. That may not be the case come March 7, when Cali- fornia residents are asked to make their choice for presi- dent in the state pnmary. Because the state allows .registered voters to cross party lines and choose any listed candidate, political insiders have dubbed this year's primary as a newfan- gled beauty contest where the real winner may not be the one who garners the respective majority. The grand prize is dele- gates, the political version of a diamond-stuc;lded tiara. Get enough delegates in the prunary and a candidate will likely win the party's nomi- nation ln Califorrua, where the stakes are high and dele- gates are many, voters cross- ·mg party lines may be stunned to learn their say may not mean much. Under state guidelines, the popular vote will be counted and a winner wlll be determined. However the ballots will also be coded with voters' party aUlliations and a sec- ond tally will be taken. The candidate who wins the del- egates hinges on the result of the vote among registered party members. The tighter of the two par- ty races appears to be the battle for the Repubhcan npnunation. Texas Gov. George W. Bush is lioping to stave off the advance of Arizona Sen. JQhn McCain, who scored a double victory Tuesday in tus home state and Michi- gan. But both Demoarals and }\epubllcans are worned that many residents are unaware of the voting process. "It's a double-edged sword, really,• said Tom Fuentes, chairman of the Orange Couhty Republican .BRIEFLY ·IN ·1H£ NEWS Advertising firm adds new clients The Newport Beach- bdsed advertising and pub- lic relattons firm Estey- Hoover recently added four clients to 1ts roster. Woodside Biomedical, Inc. and Alacer Corp. - accounts worth more than $2 million annually - signed wit}) the agency to promote their products. Woodside produces drug-free medical devices used for the treatment of nausea and vomiting. AJac- er produces Vitamin C products. • Also jomjng Estey- Hoovor' ro ter are Vitalife, a cQ_mpany that produce vitan\in supplements, and Digi-Crane, a division of OConnor Engmeenng that produces camera support cranes. estey-Ho~ver. wbtch recently celebrated its 25th anniversary of busineH tn Newport Beach, will devel- op customized marketing plans for its new clients. Consulting firm expands omces Tbe Orange County offke fol BOO Seidman, L.L.P.,. an accounting and cotl1Ullin9 company, II remodeling ltl Colfa Mela ~ to IK'CCllJl• modatll ltl pmionnel growth ,,.. tbe .,.. ,..,. IDO ·Seldmen'1 <>rante Party. "It's an invigorating process to get more voters out. But there is a lot of mis- understanding about the pn- mary process. Unfortunately, that makes it all tbe more complex.• The opportunity to cross political lines during the state primary was pushed by Rep. Tom Campbell (R-San Jose) several years ago. Campbell, who is runrung for a U.S. Senate seat, lost a primary in 1992 .and may have benefited from voters outside his party. Voters in 1996 approved a state proposition to hold open primaries Opponents tned. to block the open pri- mary, but a U.S. Dlstnct Court judge upheld the vot- ers' decision. Michael Schroeder, an Irvine attorney and past chairman of the state's Republican Party, testified four years ago about the hazards of an open primary where crossover is a llowed. Given the rmportancc of this year's presidential race, Schroeder predicted people may be disenfranchised after they learn the results. . I \t;i 'ML[li/[)Al\.V PILOT Brian Glabman, along with his family's company, ls cele brating 100 years in the furniture business. "We have been trying to get out the word about the primary,• be said. "The respective parties weren't responsible for this.• Fourth-generation furnishings Schroeder conducted d survey in 1996 and found that the crossover mto other parties was less than 5" .. among voters. Glabman 's Furniture, still owned and operated by same Newport Beach family, celebtotes 100 years of business. He figures the pnmdry won't be adversely affected by the relatively new law. "I expect a big turnout of voters, but I think there will be little crossov.er," he said. "I don't think you will see any effect on the final results." Other political achv1sts don't agree. Jim Toledano, a leading member of the Orange County Democratic Party, said the opposition has the most to lose in this election. Toledano said McCain may wm the popular vote in CaWorma, but thinks Bush will receive the party's 162 delegates. "The Republican Party 1s headed for another train wreck,· he said. "Voters dorr't pay a whole lot of a ttention to techmcahties McCain will draw a lot of crossover votes. And, when people realize theu votes don't have anything to do with the delegate aspect, there is going to be a mc11or backlash." County office added three partners and 18 other pro- f ess1onals last year. Office manager Aldll Whiley said a more eH1C1ent work environment 1s neces- sary to cdlow the company to work effecttvely and allow for future growth Among the new person- nel additions 1s Laguna Beach resident ChristophP.r Tower, who JOined the company as an Audit Part- ner. Tower bnngs 17 years of accounting expenence to the job. Dance student makes second cut Costa Mesa resident Lau- ren Melissa Thompson, 17, was selected as a semifinal- ist in the jazz/modem dance category of the Spotlight Awards program of the Per- forming Arts Center of Lo Angeles County Noaki Schwartz DAILY PtLOT Somewhere m the Glabman show- rooms, among the chintz, mahogany dnd upholstered walls, are the ghosts of four gPncrullons. Th1<, year marks the furniture com- pany's 100th anniversary. But, pf>rhaps even more com- mendable 1s the £act that Glabman's is one of the> last remaining furniture busmesses m the nation that even after four generatiens is still family- run Jim Gldbman, who lS chairman of the compony's board of di.rectors, expldmed how his family's tradition works "One of the mdin facets is love and respect,· he said "The second facet and very unportant is that a father cannot be afraid to let his son make a mistake. That's how a family business survtves. • His son and the company's vice president. Brian Glabman, is also as proud of the fanuJy hentage as he lS of the products they sell. "!The styles) run from contempo- rary lo very traditional hand-carved Thompson, ti senior at Orange County I hgh School of the Arts, is now compet- ing to become a finalist The ctwar.ds have six per- formancP categories: ballet, jazz/modern dance, clasSl· cal voice, nonclassical voice, classical mstrurnental music and 1azz mstrumental music There are 67 senufinahsts m the six categones -more than 800 teen performers purt1c1paled in the competi- tion. Two finalists will be electod from each catego- ry. The Cinalistc; will perform ut a gala compctillon April 17 at the Dorothy Chandler Pavtlion of the Performing Arts Center.· The winner~ and run- ners-up will receive scholar- stup . ~~ Plumblq, Heatlq It Air Condltlonlni Cele•ratlnC 48 years of eenlce In yoar co .. aa111. .,......, jpiecesj, • he said ·we focus on pro- vidmg the best quabty at ternfic val- ue " It all begdn when Bnan's great- grdndfdther, Morns Glabman, unm1- grated from Russia I/I the 1800s. He wouJd make his dally rounds with' his pushcart in Chicago, offer- ing to refinish furniture. In the 1880s, Morns made a deal with Sears. With its support, Morn!i slowly built d business and eventually brought the rest of the family to the U.S .. With the family behmd him, he established Glabman Bros. in 1900 Morris' son. Donald Glabman, was another nsk-taker. He left for the West Coast and m · 1948 opened his first store in Califor- nia. Si.nee then, the Newport Beach farmly has bwll five other shops in Cabfornia, mcludmg the flagship store in Cosld Mesa. What 1s particularly umque about the store 1s that 1t offers full service - from refurblshing pieces, to mtenor design to delivery "The second fa cet uncl \. ery important 1s thut u futher cannot be afraid to Jct his son make u mi:;take. That's how a family business survives.'' Jitn Glabman Chairman of the company's board of directors, explaining how his family's tradition works On the most deldtlcd ll•vcl, it's all kept w1thm Gldbntttn'l> -within the family. The intenor dt•s1qn ol each room at the store channe penod1cal1y to give customers an 1clea of how they nught use t~e furniture. While pnmaril~ cont"mporary, tht• family chooses furn1tu1(• from all over the world. This spnng, they plan to op<m an anbques division in th<' Col>ld Mescr shop. "We'rn working di thP \1iholcst1lc level,· Bnan Sdlcl, nulmq lh~it they can offer the bPs l qt111ltly cil tlw rno.,t reasonable f>TIC't'. ... Ji ,• .. . . " " (A8 Friday, February 25, 2000 • Send MOUND TOWN items to the Daily Pilot 330 W. Bay St., Cos· ta Me-sa 92627; fax them to (949) 646_.170, Of call (949) 764 4330 A lrvme Ave., Newport Beach. For more information, call (714) 424-5060. complete· listing may be found at Tbe Bank of Oruge County da1/yp1/ot.com. • will laold a franchise mvc111t- TODAY Poet Susan KJnsolvtng will read poems from her cnticdl- ly acclaimed collection, •oaiJies & Rushes,• at 7 p.m. at Borders Books, Music and Cafe . Kinsolving hds pub- lished poems m ·many anthologies and magazines, including The Paris Review, The New Republic and Grand Street. Borders is al 3333' Bear St., Costtt Mesa. For more information, call (714) 432-7854 SATURDAY ment workshop at the Dou- bJctree Hotel. 3050 Bnstol · St., Costa Mesa. lWo es- sions of the $15 workshop will be offered: a morning sess1ou, from 9 to 11 a.m., and an aftemoon session from 2 to 4 p.m. For more information. call (800) 981- 6680. The Plecemakers will hold a peddler's market from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. The event, featur- ing e5 booths of old and new items, is free. It will be held outside the-Piecemakers Country Store, 1720 Adams Ave., Costa Mesa. For more information, call (714) 641- 3112. AROUND TOWN Newport Harbor High School will bold •parent University 2000," a special education commumty advi- sory committee meeting The event includes seminars on many different subjects for parents, includJng topics such as substance abuse prevenuon, language devel- opment and learning dis- abilities. The dtty starts with a conlinentdl brcakfdst al 8 a.m. and runs through 11 :45 a.m. The school is at 600 Roger's Gardens will hold a seminar on container gar- dening and hanging baskets at 9:15 a.m. The store is at 2301 San Joaquin Hills Road, Corona del Mar. For more information, call (949) 721-2100. Speak Up Newport's Wednesday meettng will address Measure P. The meettng begins with hon d'oeuvres at 5:30 p.m. and a presentation at 6 p.m. It will be held at the Riverboat Restaurant, 151 E. Coast Highway, New- port Beach. For more information, call (949) 224-2266. The Juvenile Diabetes Foundation of Orange County will hold its second annual VIP Monopoly Gala at the Newport Beach Mar- riott, 900 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach. The event wilJ include a silent and live auction for items such as a Goodyear Blimp ride, Edwards Theatre fami- ly passes, and more. Tickets are.$150. For more informa- tion, call (949) 553-0363. ~GOOD TASTE AND l GREAT STYLE I THAT I SERVES, YOU WELL I • Helen Grace Chocolates • Champagne Bakery • Mrs. Beasley's & Miss Grace Lemon Cake Co. . • Pasta Bravo • Pick Up St1x • Ralph'~ Mark •t • Starbucks •Champagne • Di Marie Interiors • Draper's & Damon's • Kayaks Weekend Wear • Matthew-Taylor's S CLIFF • Anthony's Shoe Repair • Bank of America • Blue Mambo Beauty· Supply • California Federal Bank • Crown Ace Hardware • Fast Frame • Images Hallmark • Mailboxes Etc. • Robert & Taylor Salon • Sav-on Drug Store • 'Shape Up Newport • Shell Oil • Westcliff Plaza Cleaners Ralph's M.lrket • Sav-on Drugs • I 7th Street at Irvine ~vc. ·Newport Beach . ' Victoria Seltz, author of Your Executive Image and Power Dressing will give a free lecture, "High-Tech Eti- quette," at 7 p.m. at Borders Books, Music. and Cafe. The store is at 3333 Bear St., Cos- ta Mesa. For more informa- tion, call (714) 432-7854. The Estancia High School PTSA rummage sale will run from 8 a.m. to 2 p .m. in the school's commons at 2323 Placentia, Costa Mesa. Mon- ey raised in the sale will help fund college scholarships. Tables are available' for peo- ple wishing to rent sales space. For more information, call (949) 645-{)715. The Jewish federation Young Business and Profes- sionals DiVision will hold the annual Herzl Society Advanced Gifts Dinner at 6:30 at the Newport Beach home of Blossom Siegel. The Herzl Society is a group of Jewish men and women ages 25 to 45 who pledge a minimum of $360 to the Jewish Federation's annual campaign. For more infor- mation, call (714) 755-5555, Ext. 225. Our Lady of Mount Carmel Church will hold a "Youth Against Violence" leader- ship service day from 10 a.m. to.1 p.m. The event will feature programs intended to encourage nonviolent conflict resolution. The church is at 1"441 W. Balboa Blvd., Newport Beach. For more information, call (949) 673-2719. SUNDAY Sterling Optical of Newport Beach will offer free vision screening and a raffle of optical prizes in connection with the Spirit Run. The screening will be conducted at the Fa'Shion Island Edwards Theater at the cor- ner of Newport Center Drive and San Miguel from 7 a.m. to about noon. For more information, call (949) 752- 5636. MONDAY A Great Dedslons dJscus- sion of "The Middle East at the Millennium" will be pre- sented by Bob Green and Ruth Fassett from 7:30 to 9 a.m. at St Mark Presbyter- ian Church, 2100 Mar Vista, Newport Beach. The non- partisan articles used in the Foreign Policy Assn. study material are used as the foundation for the discus- sion. A copy of the articles ttia t will be used in the remammg four weeks of the serie can be purchased at the church for $12. Por more information, call {949) 760- 1691, TUESDAY Mother's Market wm host a fr e seminar on dental health hosted by Todd B. Engel in the. patio cafe from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m, Mother's Market ls at 225 E. 17th St., Co ta Mesa. For more lnfor- mation, call (949) 631-4741. 'Tbe Oruge Co•tf chapter of The Single Gourmet wU1 hold a gourmet dining event at Bistro 201, 3333 Coast Highway, Newport Beach. Por more information, call (800) 750-E>JNE. WEDNESDAY Speak Up Newport's March meeting will address Mea- sure F. The meeting begins with hors d'oeuvres at 5:30 p:m. and a presentation at 6 p.m. It will be held at the Riverboat Restaurant, 151 E. Coast Highway, Newport Beach. For more informa- tion, call (949) 224-2266. Sherman L1brary & Gardens will hold a workshop titled "Cymbidium Orchids,• at 9:30 a.m. to discuss feeding, watering, repotting, light requirements and pest con- trol for the plants. The course 1s $20. Sherman Library is at 2647 E. Coast Highway, Corona .del Mar. For more information, call (949) 673-2261. The Newport Beach Public Library will hold a free noon program titled "UVing With Grief." Deborah Smith of the Pacific View Memorial Park will speak. The library is at 1000 Avocado Ave., New- port Beach. For more infor- mation, call (949) 717-3801. THURSDAY The Newport Beach Public Library will present a free program titled "Gondolas of Newport and Venice" at 7 p.m. Greg Mohr, president of Adventures at Sea Yacht Charters, will speak. The library is at 1000 Avocado Ave., Newport Beach. For more information, call (9•9) 717-3801. OCC librarian Viola M. Shumway will give a lecture titled •A Foreigner in a For- eign Lar}d -Growing Up in India" at 7:30 p.m at OCC's Lido Isle Clubhouse, 701 Via Udo Soud. The event is $.5 tor nonmembers, and seat- ing is limited. For reserva- tions and more information, call (714) 432-5087. The Parent Project, a family • survival skills series for the parents of strong-willed-; noncompliant or destructive adolescents, wm start a six- week session on March 2. The course meets from· 1 to 9:30 pm. Thursdays in the library of SIMC, 2985 Bear St., Co ta Mesa. To register, call (714) 424-7560. . Wedding coordJnator ler· bara Wallace will teadi a course titled •weclding b y Ehquetto for Bride5i oo Grooms" at 6:30 p .m Room 202 of Costa Me High School, 2650 Pa Road, Costa Me a. The fee is $49 per person or $79 ~or , people. For more inf • lion, call (714) 432·58 . ( OOR QUALlT~ . ORIGlNAU Ii __ ......... , .... f • AROUND TOWN Doily Pil~t ,. \~ your Job Search.~ The tree meeting runs trom 7:30 to 9 p.m. in the Stewart• Lounge at St. Andrew's. The church is at 600 St. Andrew's Road, Newport Beach. For more infonnation, call (949) 574- 2239. The Orange County Federa- tion of Republican Women wJ¥ hold a board meeting and luncheon starting at JO a.m. at the Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club, 1701 Golt Course Drive, Costa Mesa. Election consultant Michael Yilante and John McCain/ campaign representativ Linell Harvey will speal\ Tickets are $15. for reserv~­ tions and more inlormatio11, 1 call (714) 256-2260. I The Men's Breakfast Grqup of Saint Michael and All Angels Episcopal Church will feature Prof. Robert V. Htne, author of a mgmoir about blindness. The roup meets at 7 a.m. al oco's Fashion Island, 151 Newport Center Drive. A $10 dona- tion pays for breakfast dnd a . contribution to the group's · benevolent fund. For more inlormation, call (949) 644- 1145. MARCH 3 Orange Coast College pre- sents "Afric·a Camera Saiari, • the sixth progtam in its series of u Armchair Adventures," at 7 p.m. Clint Denn, an aclot, writer and o· cameraman/will present the program, whict. includes film of game preserves in eastern Africa and a visit to Tanzania's Ngorongoro Crater. The event is $7 to $9. OCC is at 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. For more information, call (714) 432- 5880. Adoption professionals will lead a round -table discus- sion on adoption at 7 p.m. at St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church, 6\lO St. . Andrew's Road, Newport Beach. Tue free eventis for people curi- ous about adopting a child and peop:e whose lives have been tm;ched by adoption. For mofe information, call (949) 63t-2880. The Orange County Fair and EJ:position Center will hold & gem, jewelry and bead show from noon to 7 p.m. March 3, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. March 4 and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. March 5 m Building 12 at the fairgrounds, 88 Fair Drive, Costd Mesa. Admis- sion is $3 to $4. For more information. call (760) 747- 9215. ONGOING A women's therapy support group meets to discuss rela- tionship isrues at 6:30 p.m. Tuesdays at 1151 Dove St., No. 105, Newport Beach. For more information, call Bar- bara at (949) 261-8003. The Friends of the Newport Beach Public Library Used Book Store needs to r~plenish its book stock. Patrons are wged to bnng in unwanted books. With the exception of law books or magazines, all donations -hardcover and paperback -are welcome dnd are tax-deductible. Books may be left at any of ttie three branch libra:ies - Balboa, Mariners or Corona ~el Mar. They can also be Jeft m the special book cla;ctn~xt to the store at 1000 Avocado Ave. For more infonnation, call (949) 759-9667. The Newport Beach New- comers Club meets at 10 a.m. the third Werlnesday of each month at different homes. The group of 1 about l 00 women go on the road, play golf, tennis, bridge and more. The group also holds several evening parties. Por more information, call (949) 854- 4501. St. Mark Health MJnistrles presents Love WitbQut Honor support groups for · women coping with domestic vib- 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 Vista Ave., Newport Beach. Por .more information, call (949) · 721-8079. The Jewish Family Service 'of O~ange County sponsors a discussion group focusing on issues, concerns and respon- sibilities of adult children car- ing for their elderly parents at 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays at 250 E. Baker St., Costa Mesa. The . _purpose of the group is to help children and other con- cerned relatives to ide~tify problems and issues and develop appropriate solu- tions. The cost. is $30.. For ·more information, call (714) 445-4950. llST IET Friday, February 25, 2000 A9 and Supenor Avenue. Lose the weight and have fun. For information, call (9.49) 65().. 1332. Jbe Sea Scoots' ship Del Mar 711 of Orange County offers a program for young men ages 14 to 18 mterested in learning about sailing, sea- manship, piloting, navigation and cruising. Meetings are from 6 to 9 p .m. Wednesdays at the Sea Scouts Sea Base, 1931 W. Coast Highway, Newport Beach. For more information, call (949) 642- 6301 or (949) 551-8591. The Oasls Senior Center of(ers ongoing assistance, counseling and referral se~ vices for seniors. For appoint-· ments or more information, call (949) 644-3244. The Costa Mesa Senior CIU- zen Square and Round Dance Club seeks experienced dancers to join its group from 9 to 11 a.m. Thursdays at the Costa Mesa Senior Center, 19th Street and Pomona Avenue, Costa Mesa. For information, Cdll (714) 545-. 5669. A free support group for cancer patients meets at 7 p.m. Wednesdays, and a sup- port group for people suffer- ing from chronic fatigue syn- drome meets from 7 to 10 p.m. Wednesday!i at the Insti- tute for Holistic li'eatment and Research, 4019 Westerly Place, Suite 100, Newport Beach. For more information. call (949) 251-8700. · Arthrttfs FoU.OdaUon instruc- tor Hillary Stone leads an exercise class at 11 a.m. Thursdays at the Jewish Senior Center, 250 E. Baker St., Costa Mesa. For more information, call (714) 513- 5641. The Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce holds networking luncheon meetings from 11 :45 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Costa Mesa Country Clu.b, 1701 Goll Course Drive, Cos- ta Mesa. Visitors are wel- come. Cost is $12. For more information, call (714) 885- 9090. 'The Udo Isle Toastmasters Club meets at 6:30 p.m. Mon- days at the Oakwood A'part- ments, 1700 16th St., in the clubhouse on the main level, in Newport Beach. For more infonnation, call (949) 515- 9470. - 'I Orange Coast College presents "Africa Camera Safari," the sixth program ln its series of "Armchair Adventures," at 7 p.m. March 3. Actor, writer and cameraman Clint Denn will present the program, which includes film of game preserves in eastern Africa and a visit to Tanzania's Ngorongoro Crater. The event ls $7 to $9. OCC is at 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. ·For more informa- tion, call (714) 432-58&0. Nightly meetings are offered in Costa Mesa and Newport Beach for anyone who wants t9 overcome ,nicotine a,ddic- tion. For a schedule ot more information, call (714) 774- 9106 or (800) 642-0666. The John Henry Poundatton sponsor3 U1e Comfort 'Zone, a mental illness support group, whidi meets from 7:30 to 9 p.m. Thursdays at the Llght- 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 healing support group for people experienc- ing chronic illness. The pur- pose is to provide participants with emotional and spiritual support to manage illness and its consequences. The group meets at 7 p.m. Thursdays at JewtSh Family Service, 250 E. Baker St., Costa Mesa. Atten- dance is free, but registration is required. To register or for more information, call (714) 445-4950. Scrabble Club No. 350 meets from 6 to 10 p.m. Thursdays dt Borders Books, Music and Cafe on 19th Street and New- port Boulevard, Costa Mesa. The cost is $3. New players are welcome. For more infor- mation, call (949) 759-4871. The Coin and Stamp Club meets from t to 3 p .m . Mon- days at the Oasis Senior Cen- ter. New members who are., interested in trading, buying and selling stamps and coins are being sought to join these informal meetings. There are no fees required. For more information, call (949) 644- 3244. Jewish Family Service otters ongoihg bereavement sup- port groups for adults at all stages of loss. The groups share expenences, 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 in 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 al 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 Balboa Island, Corona del Mar, New- port Beach, and Newport Coast areas are invited to meet others who are also new at the Newport Beach New- . Look in the Classified section in Saturday's paper. Publishing every Saturday until April 15th. . 1111••11m11 reveals Whac chc inaunacic companies don't wane you to know. w .. your car injuM> Yoa .., be tooll It S.J bt Wftkt. monchl Pl even years befott you experience ~in, 1affnda. lw1dache., tvtn anhritist Doa'I ...... ,_,met until you rad our frft repon. · ' •.. "· ' .. ) comers' Club. This group of women meets once a month on Wednesdays at different homes and locations. For more information, 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. Bak- er St., Costa Mesa. Preregis- tration is reqwred. Por more information, call (7 14) 445- 4950. A Dealing with Divorce sup- port group is oUered 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 Campus, 250 E. Baker St. Suite G, Costa Mesa. For more information, including dates 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 addresses i'ssues faced by couples where one partner is Jewish and the other is not, including raising children, observing holidays, displaying symbols in the home, as well as rela- tionships with extended fam- ilies. The group meets for three weekly sessions Wednesday evenings at Jew- ish Family Service, 250 E. Baker St., Suite 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 Country 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 The Newport Sports Collec- tion Foundation, a nonprofit organization. operates a free museum at -620 Newport Center Dri"'.e, Newport Beach. The museum, which bas one of the world's largest collectioris of sports memora- bilia, is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p .m. weekdays. For more information, call (949) 721- 9333. The Hoag Cancer Ce;t sponsors a free tai dU for intermediate to advanc levels from 10:30 to 11: a.m. ·Thursdays for people with cancer and their fami- lies. A beginner session meets 'from 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. Fridays. The classes are designed to reduce stress, increase longevity and pro~ mote a sense of well-being with basic, easy-to-learn, nonstrenuous movements to aid in balance and concentra- tion. The class iS free and taught by Victor Armand. No registration is required. The Hoag Cancer Center is at 4000 W. Coast Highway, Newport Beach. For more information, call (949) 722- 6237. Clothes From the Wardrobes Of The World's Best Dress-:d People FEBRUARY 2000 S M T W T F s -1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 11 20 21 22 23 24 25 28 tff'28 28 Eamous Parking Lot Party This Sunday, 9-4! ., ., ' f • AIO frkkry, February 25, 2000 On VACATION A Joe and Shirley Wlteck of Newport Coast took the Dally Pilot with them while visiting the Grand Caymens on thelr Caribbean cruise. SAVE MONEY! SAVE TIME! With the Daily Pilot CLASSIFIEDS CALL 642-5678 POOR QUAL:ll:Y; ·. ORJGJMC oc:*' ,;a, Doily Pilot A Polly Ober of Newport Beach and Patsee Ober of Laguna Beach visited Ute infamous Mercer House, murder site of the best-selling novel, "Midnight ln the Garden of Good & Evil," in Savannah, Ga. VOLUNTEER DIRECTORY • VOUIN1EER DIRECTORY runs periodic.ally In the Daily Pilot on a rotating basis. If you'd like informa· tlon on adding your organization to this list, call (949) 574-4228. SEXUAL ASSAULT VICTlM SERVICES OF ORANGE COUNTY Volunteers are needed to pro- vide assistance on the crisis hotline and at the hospital. There is a special need for bilingual and bicultural vol- unteers. For more informa- tion, call (949) 756-0677. COSTA MESA OVlC PlAYHOUSE · The playhouse needs volun- teers for ushering, backstage, mailings, typing, lights and many other duties. For more inlonnation, call (949) 650-5269. COSTA MESA HtSTORtCAL SOOETY The society collects informa- tion, photos and artifacts (elat- ing to the hi.Story of Costa Mesa and the harbor area. Vol- unteers are necdl."<i for clencal tasks, computer input and help ln the library. For more infor- mation, call (949) 631-5918. COSTA MESA LITERACY COUNOL • The Costa Mesa L!teracy - Center needs volunteer tutors to teach English dS a second language. A $.10 matenals' fee provides everytlung needed to lead a student through two skill books. To register, or for more tnfonnation, cdll (949) 548-3384 or (949) 548-6584 COSTA MESA SENIOR CENTER The multipurpo e senior ser- Vlces facility at the comer of 19th Street and Pomona Avenue seeks volunteers for a variety of tasks. For more infonnauon, call (949) 645· 2356 between 9 d.m. to 5 p.m . COSTA MESA POLICE DEPARTMENT Seruors age 55 und up are bemg sought to h<'lp stdff the West Side substation. Volun- teers would be asked to work two four-hour ddytime shifts per week and would be responsible for answenng phones, bicycle reg1 lral.Jon, fingerprinting, data entry and assist wtth other dtrw1de pro- jects. BihnguaJ scmor6' in Spamsh and English are also needed. For dll applicdtion or morP. infornh.lhon, contact Senior Volunteer Fred GaPc-kler dl (714) 754 -5208. COURT-APPOINTED SPECIA\ ADVOCATES Volunt ~ ctn• nt'<'ded to sf1rve as ndvocatps ror abu ed. .. ~ Mattress Outlet Stor MAM> NEW -OOSMf11CALLY IMPERFECT Get the .., fOf Leal 3165 Harbor Blvd. Cosbll'leM .,.. ............ .., (714) 541-7188 • Andrew Silva of Corona del Mar didn't forget to take his dad's Dally Pilot on a recent trip to Arizona. He ls pictured here at Bell Rock Canyon'near Sedona. neglected and abandoned children. Volunteers work one- on--0ne with a child for three hours a week. For more infor- mation, call (714) 935-6124. CRISIS ASSISTANCE PROGRAM, INC. Tius nonprofit organi.Zation is seeking volunteers for its expand.mg trauma· response program. Volunteers would assist law enforcement, fire fighters and emergency-type responders by providing emotional first aid and sup- port to injured or traumatized people. Other volunteers would provide dispatch and office support. No experience is necessary, training will be provided. For more informa- tion, call (949) 588-1414. DISPUTE RESOLUTION SERVICES Volunteer mediators, case specialists and outreach assis- tants needed to help in a vari- ety of mediation cases. Bilin- gual language skills are need- ed for office volunteers and for mediators. For more infor- mation, call (949) 250-0488. EASTER SEALS Easter Seals needs volunteers for ongoing clerical work and to help in programs for chil- dren with disabilities and 1n special events. For more infor· mation, call (11.t) 834-1111. ENVIRONMENTAL NATURE QNTER Volunteer trail guidel needed lo help viliton leu'D about th* envtronment P« mcn tnfor. mabon, call (949) 645-8489. • • the Child Abuse Center Office in Costa Mesa at 2482 New- port ~lvd., No. 7; or Uruon Bank in Newport Beach dt 1090 Bayside Drive. Call (949) 722-1107 ror more infonnation. FISH -HARBOR AREA INC. Call 642-6060 to help Friend'> in Service lo Humanity (FlSH) assist with the Mobile Meals program and provide ongoing emergency assistance to those in need. Both always seek vol - unteer assistance in a vanety of areas. For more mfonna- tion, call (949) 645-8050. FRIENDS OF THE NEWPORT BEACH LIBRARY Volunteers are needed to staff the used book store located Just inside the entrance of the cen- tral library. Volunteers must be membefS of the Friends of lhe Ubrary and arc asked to work one three-hour shift per month For moremfonnatlon, call (949) 759-9667. GIRL SCOUTS Girl Seoul.$ of Orange County needs volunteers to be trained as ttoop leaders, e rvc on special committee and give lectur demon trntion or classes. For more inform.a· tion, call (714) 979·7000. Gl'15 INC. OF ca+MGI COUNl'Y Volunteers are needed to offer educational and ennch· ment oppol'tU!ttiet for gitls and boys. For !\lore lnfoffi-wt • tlon, call (949) fW6·7t8t. ... .. Daily Pilot MARIANNA DAY MASSEY I DAA.Y Pl.OT Daniel Tapia, 10, of Anaheim checks out a beautiful day through the long lens of a telescope at Corona del Mar. TALKS CONTINUED FROM A 1 areas h<Jve struggle d to de termine which city, tf any, should absorb Sdnta And Heights. Under the current county plun, Edst Santa Ana Heights, 1f dnnexcd, would become p art of Newport Beach. Reside nts from West Sa nta Ana I lcighls, includ- ing Hdll's group, wdnl to fuse their neighborhood with East Sanld Ana Heights . The two neighbor- hoods are dwided by lrvme Avenue. "It's logical to b come one neighborhood, smce we hdve so many thmgs connected with them,· Hall said "And JUSl about everyone would prefer gomg to Ne wport Be<ich " The big question, howev- er, is wtuch city will take the land. •Neither city has ftlcd dn dpphcatton y et,• sdld Lawrence Garc1d of the ZAHER FALLAHI, CPA 28 yrs. exp. Ace.cg., Audits, Taxes 15% discount to CM Residents I (714) 5464272 Local Agency Formation Corrumssion The city councils of New- port Beach and Costa Mesd earlier this m onth decided residents should have an opporturuty to provtde input before a deciston is ma de . In coming months, the two cities will hold forums with Santa Ana Heights residenL'> about the implications of annexation. #We'll be givtng out infor- mation,~ said Roeder. ull's not going to b e a hard sales pitch.· But 1t mdy be a llght one. "Frankly, we wouldn't be out there tf we didn't wunt thr m to be a part of our com- muruty," Roeder said Roeder conceded that many residents, mcludmg those rn I fdll's group, may already havE' their mmds mdde up But he said tl's only fair to make the mlonnation avallahle #It's much better that we get recdbdck now Lhan tf we went <;1hedd dnd filed an appllCdtion w1th LAFCO," he Sdld. --ONE WEEK ONLYI-- 300/oott ALL NEW BALANCE APPAREL Good thru 2/27/00 ·"*~P\n· lance ~ trt-fve&~ . . Corona del Mar Plaza 932 Avocado t. (PCH & MacArthur) (949) 720-1602 DON'T MISS THE CHANCE co be in this annual issue thac>s all about Newporc Beach, Cosca Mc a and Corona del Mar! Publication Date: Friday, March 24, 2000 ) • FENCE CONTINUED FROM A 1 payc:heck lo J1<1yc hr'< k," r.on- sulted olft< 1ul from thP. c 1ly's pldnning d11p(1rl11111 nl lo 11l<1ke sum the new 11'111 c 111f•l c 1ty codes. Shf! :.dJd :.hP duln't want to ))Jll'nd th1• 1110111•y wi thout lwinq c ert,un the f<•nce woulcJ.stct)'. Slw s111cl the• plunners c1s.,.ured hN tlwn• wouldn't hi' c1 prohlPm But 1w1llwr ul th1• two planners ,f\11llC'r would hc1w• spok<'n with W11lt1 Bouw<ms-K1llN•n t1nd K1m- bP~ly Brcincll rt·'C dl11•cl hdV· mg (.I c onvt•rs.illon with twr heforP stw·huilt ttw IPnc c·. • " ( only n•111P111bc1 '-J><1ctkln1J lo h<>r 11fh•1 11 b1•c ctOlf• ct c Ocll' l'>SU!', • SCHOOL CONTINUED FROM A 1 clents m qr.ulPs sP\1•11 U11ouqh 12 who U1k1• lh<'tr II''"' m"ttlP Pcirly '>prinq, C ;rull<Jlll sc1icl l'h•· m<'nlc1ry stucl1•nls \-.cnilcl l:lc1v1 d tWO·WC•<'k IJ11•c1k rJCjht IJf'fOI!• lh<• hlCJ lt>SI. ~Tr-Um!J thc• kids you hctVI' two wePk'> off t111cl ttwn huVI' to come hc1c k c111d t<Jk1• d I Psi 1s · tough," CrdhcHll -.mcl ~11 Bouwens-Killeen said "And I woukln t havr· told her tlmt, CSJ)C(lcllly with thP. 10< atJon of h 'f h•ncc." Miller Si11d she wgr•·b not wntmg down the ndm<l of the 1wtson Shl' sµoke to "In court, 1t will hr> nt\' word dCJdmst them;," she Sdl<I. • But r woukln'I hdVP. qonP ah<'t1d CJnd ~pent thdl much monc•y if th<!}' didn't SiJY 1t Wd'> OK .. In Sl•plPrnbf'r Hl119, code f•nlorcc•nwnt offKc•r Mf•rk slc1pp<'d Miller with h11r I 1rsl hnP -$100. A month later, he• cl~l1vei(•d Hw nl'XI hnr> of $75, •Edrlwr this month, St1nd1d M . BPnson, <"hief of c odP 11nfmcPnwnl, !'>C'nl ·f\.flll1>r u IPrsc• lt>llN. II :.uid thr> honll'· ownN would ldCI' cnnumtl ch<1r<JPs 1f -.he d1dn'1 lmng hN c 011lcl c11ft>< l the yrc1d1111J. • Par<'nls wcrP t1Jsc1 <on- e Pmt!cl ethoul thP othl•r 111t11or thcmue: rf'lummg to sc huol l'c!rly. ·nw pwb!Prn Wlth sldrtmq m nucl-Auqust 1s thdl !>Oml' 111 out sc:hools don't hd\P d1J·Con- d1t1oninu," C:rdhurn scud. "Ev<•n slttrllllCJ m SPpte>mber c tlfl ht> qnwJm9 ·Kids dff' in-.truc"tl'd lo bring wc1te>r bol- llc•s dU 1h1• wuy through St>p· • l<•mbN rurr\•nUy." District otltcMls 'icltd they SAVE MONEY! SAVE TIME! With the DailyPilot CLASSIFIEDS CALL 642-5678 Fndoy, Febr"o ry 25, 2000 Al1 fen P. to codt• On Tu day rught.. Miller sa1cl shP mllmded to address (hi> City Council with her chlemmr1 But she accidental- ly went to the wrong room, wheH• she :.r1t through a Plan- nmg Cornnuss1on meeting thc1t Wds lwld r1l the same tame. "I've never l>een to a cty council nwNmg before, so I didn't rP<Jh:l<• I Wds at the wrong one until everyone stood up,· she '>t11d "1 rµshed ovP1 to th~ uty (Ouncil meet- ing, hut WdS too late.• Dhptt~ hf'T setbacks and lhrc•tlh from the c1ty, Miller • sa1cl sh!"s going to keep her fenc f• up. •I'm not going to tear it clown," sh~ st11d "I'm stick- ing to Whdl 1 l>t?lH'VP. •• JH~~c·nted the draft to parents tor thP l>Ol~ purpose of gain- ing ff·edbC:Jr k D<>sp1te lh1·1r many con- cpm..,, J><HPnts dre thrilled to lw c1s kr-cl for their input ctnd hd\'(' rt:sponded with '>ll9$JP'illfHJ cl WPP.k Off at Tht1nksg1vinu "I lovP 1 t." Scott !>did. "Whc1t I wc1Jl'f love t'> that th<·y ctr<' ll'tlln<J the pdrents h<Jve c1 sc1y in this. That is JUSt l'~nting to me• ~ M.l ~"' ml1m. ---, .. ··~·...,· ""...., .... --· .......... m11• A 12 Spom Editor Roger Carlson • 949~7 4-4223 • f riday, February 25, 2000 ~J•Of ·1111DAY ' •Playitg at Estancia has always been real good for us .... • Paul Orris. CdM boys hoops coach ... fth.21honoree PAUL HAHi Doily Pilot ~ea Kings a step away CIF Finals .berth Corona del Mar faces sizable Ill-AA semifinal obstacle BASKETBALL . in Centennial of Compton, and big man Myles, tonight. IMy Feullcner DAILY PILOT • • COSTA MESA -Corona del Mar High boys basketball coach Paul Orris tapped his vast coaching contacts to collect videotape and scouting information on Centennial · of Compton, which the Sea Kings host tonight at 7:30 in a CIP South- ern Section Division DI-AA semifi- nal at Estancia High. He might also have picked up the phone and dialed across town, where Newport Harbor Coach Latry Hirst has some firsthand knowledge of the Apache's top player. Ellis Myles, a 6-foot-8, 235-pound senior center, is two inches taller and 45 pounds heavier than he was last year when h e played for Comp- ton High, which was eliminated in a l>e how we defend (Myles)," Orris II-AA second-round game by Hirst's said. ~They really pound it in to him Sailors. That night, Myles, hit 11 of and he's really good at using his 13 field-goal attempts, including all size. To be honest, a big strong four three-point tries, to hnish with inside guy is the one thing we 27 points in a 6~-56 se~back. ' haven't played much against this Myles, who averages 22 points year, so it's going to take an adjust~ and 16 rebounds, as well as three ment. • fellow former Compton teammates, CdM will counter with senior accompanied former siX-year Joel Templeton, who had, perhaps, Compton coach Rod Palmer, once a his best game of the season Tuesday standout player at UCLA, to Cen-ma 57-55 quarterfinal triumph over tennial (18-11) this season. Notre Dame or Sherman Oaks. The Myles has apparently given up 6-7 senior scored a career-high 17 much of his peruneter game, con-points and added eight rebounds centrating on the low block, where and three blocked shots against the his size and strength are a con<;em Knights. But, probably less than the for Orris and lus No. 3-seeded Sea 200 pounds he's listed at, he doesn't Kings (22-6}. have the body mass to muscle foes. "A major focus for u~ is going to Orris said senior reserve Ellio(t Patterson, a 6-3, 235-pound senior with a football background, will be part or the rotation used to check Myles inside, while 6-3 senior for- ward Judd Hletbrink will also con- tribute to the cause. "We'll rotate some guys and probably give them some different looks, defensively," said Orris, who bas supplemented his traditional .man-to-man with plenty of matchup zone this season. The Pacific Coast League cham- pions, attempting to qualify for their ninth section title-game appearance -they have Jour championships - are paced offensively by 6-4 senior Kevin Hansen. Hansen, an All-CIF pick for last year's ID-A finalist, averages 21.1 points and seven rebounds. He scored 29, including . nine in the final quarter, to propel his team past Notre Dame. Senior point guard Alec Hanson avpages 11.9 points per game, while senior guard Brooks Monis chips in 9.2 ppg off the bench. Tem- pleton averages 6.4 points and six rebounds per contest and Hietbrink is averaging 5.6 ppg. The Sea Kings, after receiving a first-round bye, hammered Northview, 47-25 in the second round. They are playing their third straight •home• game and, with Tuesday's win at Estancia, have now played more games on their PCL rivals' floor (six, with five victo- ries) than ·they did at their own gym this season. "Playing at Estancia has always been real good for us." said Orris, who is 28-8 in section playoff games over his 1-4-year tenure. SEE HOOPS PAGE A 13 Are you CdM rolls into semifina.IS, 2.-1 old CdM controls from start to . I finish, stopping La Canada, 2-1, school? 'in Division IV quarterfinals. •Many in this year's Toshiba Classic field play~d in the Crosby Southern or Newport Classic Pro-Am. Richard Dunn GOlF . Before th~ Senior PGA Tour asked Hoag Hospital to take over the then- financially struggling Toshiba Senior Classic in May 1997, volunteers of the 552 Club, the hospital's fund-raising group, already had their oars in the water. For 23 yea.rs, members of the organization's golf committee operated. one of the best mini-tour events in the country, a two-day prt>-am in late January. The event was originally called the Crosby Southern and later the Newport Classic Pro-Am, which was sponsored by Taco Bell the last five yea.rs, enabling tournament volunteers to raise over $1.2 million for the venerable hospital. The pro-am featured journeyman professionals, budding stars and other pros trying to get back onto the PGA Tour. Now, many of them have come full circle and are prominent players on the Senior PGA Tour, which makes it stop next week at Newport Beach Country Club. In fact, an astonishing 21 players in 'this year's Toshiba field teed it up at least once in the Crosby Southern (1975-86) or Newport Classic (1981-97). Of the 21, they competed a total of 52 Umes -led by John Jacobs' 13 appearances, which stands as an all-time high by any player. The old Crosby clambake wu started at Irvine Coast Country Club (now Newport Beach CC) because Bing Crosby, the late entertainer, wanted a place to pla.y for those who didn't make the cut at the famous Crosby National Pro-Am at Pebble Beach (now the AT&1). The event quickly became • breeding ground for the PGA Tour and wu run by a c:ioUection ot volunteers who cared about Hoag Hospital and loved golf. So, when the senior tour came looking for a new operating clwity of the TOlhibe Claak:, lt called on an old friend, and, now, the tournament ts considered the dall of the d.rcuit, having rm.ad over Sl.5 million the · J>Mt two yeen with a II-million ftgure Mtabliihed u th.ii year'• goal. SEE GOlF MGE A1J Tony Altobelli DAILY PILOT M~ORONA W~d~ GIRLS s~s~ite going up SOCCER aga~nst a 20-mph first·half head wind, Corona del Mar High's gl.l'ls soccer team still managed to control Thursday's CIF Southern Section Division N quarterfinal contest from start to finish. The result: ·a 2-1 win for the host Sea Kings and a trip to the semifinals where they will play Chaminade, a 2- 0 winner ovet Louisville, Tuesday at 3 p.m. at a site to be detennined. •1 knew that as long as we get our scoring chances, we'll be fine,· Coach Ron Evans said . "We wanted to come out aggressively and that's what we did." A late La Canada goal off a penal-SEAN HUER I OAl.Y Pl.OT ty kick ended the Sea Kings' streak of Corona del Mar's Elisha Morgan (white jersey) reaches out from a colllslon with La Canada's Sharmlneb O'Farrlll. six straight shutouts, but their unbeat- en streak stayed alive at 12 (10-0-2) and their most important streak of all remains: they're still playing. "l knew going in that if we played our style of soccer, we would be able to win today,• Evans said. "La Cana- da only got one real good scoring chance and they capitalized on it." CdM (17-4-4), the No. 2 seed. jumped on the Spartans (6-9-3) early. With the wind bowling into the Sea Kings' faces, senior Kate Simon and sophomore Allison Harvey each had excellent scoring chances, but their shots sailed just wide. Fiilally, in the 20th minute, CdM attacked Spartans' goalie Amy Park- er, peppering her with shots. Parker withstood the onslaught with the help of teammate Brooke Yaussi, but within the mass of swing- ing feet, the ball deflected off a couple of Spartans' players and found its way AJ.llson Harvey (left), KrlsUn Hanson celebrate as La Canada goalie Amy Parker looks on in Thursday's game. into the goal, giVUlg the Sea Kings a 1-0 lead. None of the Sea Kings' players involved in the play could detennine who exactly scored the opening goal amongst the sea of hwnanity, but the PACIFIC COAST LOGUE BOYS SOCCER CHAMPIONS goal counted nonetheless. Not only did the Sea Kings with- stand the bJowing wind, but they only gave up one shot on goal in the first hall, while shooting 11 times them- selves. With the wind, it was all CdM in the second half, sending wave after wave of offensive pressure toward the h~less Spartans' defense. Simon, sophomore Kristin Hanson, senior Julia Livingston and freshman Elisha Morgan each bad excellent scoring chances, but their shots went on the wrong sides of the Spartans' goal. Once again, when chaos erupted in fJont of La Canada's goal, the Sea Kings took advantage. Off a header from junior Molly O'Meara, fJeshman Jennifer Long recovered the ·loose ball and squirted it into the back of the net, giving Cd.M a 2-0 lead at the ?0th minute. Three minutes later, La Canada too1' advantage of some CdM defen- sive miscues, as a Sea King was called for a foul, resulting in a penalty kick for the Spartans. "Our defense didn't track back on the play," Evans said. "We'll work on that in practice for Tuesday's game to make sure it doesn't happen again.• Heather Zaimes connected on the penalty kick, cutting the lead to 2-1. but CdM, which hasn't lost since a Jan. 4 nonleague setback to Edison, didn't allow another scoring chance the rest of the way. Sea Kings' goalkeeper Britta Vogele had two ~aves in limited action as most of the game was played on La Canada's side of the field. "This is a team that has played brilliantly for the past 10 games or so," Evans said. "We know our goals will come if we keep working hard." • , . _Do __ ily_P_ilo_t ______________________ ~~------~· ~)>(}l{'fS ~--------...;,_-------------F-ndoy~,_Februo __ ~~-2~s,_2ooo ___ A_l_3 TUCK & FIELD Olympic Trials lures CdM coach. and two of hiS club runners • CdM Coach Swnner will be at Columbia, S.C ., Saturday for race. NEWPORT BEACH - Corona del Mar High cross country and track and field coach Bill Sumner, who also operate s · Cal Coast Track Club, will take bis top two female athletes Saturday to Columbia, S.C., for the U.S. Olympic Thals, where the nation's best female marathon runners will meet to determine U.S. Olympic representatives. Only. runners who have qualified are invited to the Trials. Runners must have run a marathon faster than two hours 50 minutes in the last 12 months in order to qualify. Kathy Smith of lrvme, for- merly or Costa Mesa, will be making her tlurd trip to the Trials, Sumner said. Srruth qualified in 1992 and 1996 and bas a marathon best of 2:41 :19. Another Sumner pupil, · Kelly Flathers, will be making her first trip. Flathers' best time is 2:45:51. Sumner has hdd at least •.-e 41,b.letes qualify for the pie Trials in 1992 and , but is still looking for that athlete to make the U.S. ,_ ...... ~pie team. Runners must finish in the • top three a t the Olympic lh- als to qualify for the 2000 Olympic Games at Sydney, ' Australia. -by Richdrd Dµnn JC GOLF Pirates third CHINO HILLS -Kyle Wicks and Ryan Winston each a five-over-par, 77 for the Orange Coast College men's golf team in Thursday's four-school match against Golden West, Palomar and Santiago Canyon at Western Hills Golf Course, par 72. The Rustlers won the event with a team total of 391. Palo- mar was second at 395, while the Pirates (6-3, 2-2 in confer- ence) took tlurd at 398. Golden West's Jeff Green- field shot a two-over 74 for the low score of the day. Erik Herbert (79), Enc Hird (82) and nm Kato (83) round out the Pirates' scores. OCC will take on Long Beach City Monday at 11 a.m. at El Dorado Golf Course. SCHEDULE fODAY Eagles ·host Santa Ynez today • VlSiting Pirates test domin.ant No. 2 seed in CIF Divj..sion IV quarte rfinal match. It starts at 3 p.m. Bany Faulkner bad,• Crensha w said •w e'll DAILY PILOT JUSt hope we don't get any COSTA MESA _ The more rainfall (today). I'll tell you. it couldn't be m uch Estancia. High boys soccer worse than what we played U1 team enjoyed a rewarding 0 day Thursday, even though it (Wednesday at range did thin . . Lutheron). n • no g to unprove 1l3 Despite a soggy playing sterling 17-1-1 record. surface, the Eagles managed Before they squeezed 1n a practice, in between Wednes-to continue their season-long day's 5-2 second-round tri- offensive barrage, whlch has umph over Orange Lutheran seen them outscore oppo- and today's 3. p.m. quarterfi-nents, 106-11. nal against visiting Santa Senior forward Esaul Men- Ynez (16-2-3), the Eagles won doza had a hat trick Wednes- the coin Oip, averting a four-day to up lus team-leading hour bus bip to the Pirates' goal total to 39. Seruor for- campus. ward Cesar Terrones, a sec- Coach Steve Crenshaw ond-team .All-CIF performer and bis players also wel-last season, also scored corned the brilliant sunshine against the Lancers, giving and blustery winds, which him 30 goals for the season. combined to help dry out a Together, the two strikers rain-soaked Estancia held. have produced 65% or the It's a playing surface the Eagles' offense. Pacific Coast League champi-Even if that scouting report ons hope is completely gets to the Pirates. however, devoid of moisture by kickoff. Crenshaw is skeptical the Los •There were a couple of Padres League champions puddles ~d a couple bare can do anything to stop the spots, but-our field isn't too Estancia juggernaut. HOOPS CONTINUED FROM A12 Centennial, which tied for second in th.e Bay League, behind Il-AA quarterfl- na.liSt Inglewood, has won nine straight. The Apaches upset second-seeded San Dimas (24-4) in Tuesday's quarterfinals, 69-42, behind 24 points from Myles. Palmer's squad thumped Santa Pa ula, 80-33, in the first round, then topped defending Ill-A champion Cham.made, 51-49, in the second' round. Jamaal Barnes, a 6-4 junior swing man, scored 18 points against San Dimas, including eight dwing a 12-4 'fourth-quarter run which bro ke open a game the Apaches led, 38-29, after three quarters. He averaged nearly 15 points and six rebounds in the regular season. Anthony Coleman, a 6-10 senior for- ward, averaged nearly eight points dJld nine boards in the regular season, while Eric Alvarez, a 5-10 senior point guard, averaged 11.4 ppg. "Th.is division {combined from schools which formed m~A and m -AA divisions last season) is a major step up from what we're used to," said Oms, whose team won its two CIF crowns in the 1990s in TV-AA. ·combining the divisions has meant there are a lot of quality teams this year. The fact that two of the top four seeds (Morningside knocked off No. 4 Harvard-Westlake Tuesday) are left, backs that up. I'm. pleased with how we've been playing {six straight wins and eight of therr last nine). but at each new level, you have to step up." BOYS SOCCE~ •1 don't know anythmu about them,· Crenshaw sdid. "I wish I knew som~thmg, but I know they've yot to fig- ure out how to handl<> us. What typically kills mo-.t teams against us, is they're not able to sustain d high lev el ot play the entire gam(!. With our speed and the inten- sity or our attack, tearru; ttren't used to 10 players ulttlckmg them. We keep tedms on theLr heels and, eventually, they wear down We've hdd d few teams slay with us the h~t hall, but whcttt•ver approach they use, doeso't seem to hold up dunng th~ second hdlf." Crenshaw sa.Jd his ledm's dominance, wluch Ulcludes d 14 -game winnmg streak, has no\ created complacency. ~our kids are pumped up, but they are dlso very, wry focused,· Crenshdw sd1d "They're so focused, they're not out of control. Aite1 a vic- tory, they may let off d l!ttle steam, but all of a sudden, the blinders dre back on." Estancia, in its seventh Tonight's winner will advance to the March 3 title game at Loyola Mary- mount University,. against either top- seeded Bishop Montgomery (22-5) or Momingsi~e (20-10). CONRAD I.AU I DAILY Pit OT Alec Hanson (4) and his Corona de l Mar Hig h teammates tackle Centennial High of Compton tonight at Estancia High In the C JF Division Ill-AA basketball semifinals. It starts a l 7:30. CdM, Samohi duel today • Corona del Mar girls one victory away from a be rth in CIF Finals. Bany Faulkner DAILY PILOT NEWPORT BEAC H - The Corona del Mar High girls water polo team, com- peting in its first CIF South- ern Section Division IV play- offs, appears to have the hang of this postseason deal. Coach John Vargas' Sea Kings (19-11), bi-champions of the Pacific. Coast League, have dispatched three oppo- nents en route to today's 4 p.m. semifinal match against Santa Monica (22-7) at New- port Harbor High. •t•m really proud of what our girls have done,• Vargas WATER POLO said before rallying to elimi- nate defend.mg Division IV champion and third-seeded Rosary in Tuesday's quarterfi- nal. CdM opened its pluyoff run Wlth a 16-2 trouncing of Katella in the wild -card round, then thumped Orange League chdmpion Brea Olin- da, 11-4, in a first-round win. Freshman Danielle Carl- son leads the CdM playoff scorers with 11 goals in three games, including the ga.me- winner with four seconds left against Ros_ary. Seruor Melinda Tucker has eight and sophomore Lauren Guthne seven. Chriitma Hewko bas contributed four goals and fellow freshman Darueld DiGiacomo three. Adhering to the defensive pnnciples stTessed by Vargas, the U.S. men's national tedJTl coach and a former U.S. Olympian, CdM, Wlth senior goalie Arin Hendnckson amassing 26 eaves, has po t- ed five shutout quarters m the playoffs. Santa Monica, which split the Bay League btle three ways with Redon do and Peninsula, upset secon~­ seeded El Dorado, o-5, in Wednesday's <Jlldrte rfincll. Today's winner will advance to Tuesddy's chdm· pionship game at Belmont Plaza, against either top- seeded Sdnta Marganta (22- 6) or PCL tn-champ1on Uni- versity (14-12). COWIE, COMMUNITY COLLEGE TENNIS VU men roll, 6-3 OCC men fall, 7-2 . . .. OCC women win. 7-:2 lRVlNE -The Orange Coast College women' te nnis team won its Orangt~ Empir • Conference open •r with" 7-2 decision over ho .. t Irvine Val· Icy Thursday aft moon. Lot KutJZf.!r won, h·2, 6·1, m 1ngles nction, ,then tt•urncd up with Erica GOOde for a 6· l , 6.a wln In douhl The Pirates unproved ao 3· 1 overall. The loll dropl the La rt to 2-4 overall, 0.2 In conference. . -==~ -....1 ...... ic.-........... w..1 _,..IOCX> ... • MM....._ ~=::..--... ~"-: ~..... N. • '4,N. \ straight postseason. but in the qudrtNhnals for only the sec- ond t.une since winning the Southern Section 2-A cham- p1onship in 1985, h as blanked nme opponents during its current winnmg streak. S<>ruor goalJe I Wano Ama- ga dnchors dn all-seruor back line, wluch features sweeper Edson Anaya, stopper Omdr Navarrete. left fullback Fer- nando Medina and right full- back John Alderete . EstanCJa's nudfield is com- pru.ed or seruors lrvmg lslas. Jorge Lopez Ci)ld Lws RJvE>ra, as well a> 1wuor Armando Orbz Santa Ynez. coached by John Norton, defeated Sale- stcm, 4-2 tn the first round, then erased a 2-1 overtune deficit dga.mst Monrovia to clam1 a 3-2 second-round win. Victor Vasquez scored the game-wtnner dt Monrovia (21-4-2). Today's wmner will advance to meet either St. Francis (22-4-3) or San ta Pt1uJa (17·6-21 in Tuesday's semifindl. BASEBALL Lions blank Northwest Nazarene • Idaho ~chool proves to be no match for Vdnguard U., 9-0. COSTA MESA -Van- guard Uruvers1ty's baseball team exploded for its biggest offensive production ot the yedr en route to a 9-0 noncon-. ference win over visiting Northwest Nazarene of Idaho Thursddy afternoon. Adam Steckler went 2 for 3 with a home run, two runs scored and three RBis while KeVi.n Candelarta and Kurtis Broderson each added two RBis dp1ece for the Lions (2- 8) Joshua SteeJe ·(Orange Coast College) pitched seven score less mrungs, alloWlllg only ftve luts wbile striking out six The Lions blew the game open Wlth a five-run seventh inning, capped off with a three-run home run by Steck- ler. Vangudfd resumes Golden State Athlellc Conference play Saturday dt 11 a.m. with d doublehedder at Point Loma NdZdlene. NOHCOHF£RENCE VANGU.UO lJNMJtsmt 9, Notn'HWUT NAzAR£NE 0 ScON by Innings NW Nazarene 000 000 000 -0 7 1 Vanguard 000 112 ~ -9 10 2 Abshire, McCoy (7) and Warren, Steele, Shaffer (8) and Candelaria W Steele (1--0), L -Abshire (0-1) 28 M itchell· (VU). Candelana (VU). Lanba (VU), Davis (VU) HR -Steckler (VU), Broderson (VU). SOFTBALL Pirates fall to Hornets, 7-3 • Big second inning does in Orange Coast in conference open e r. COSTA MESA - A five- run filth lIUllll9 was too much for Orange Coast College's softball team to overcome in Thursday' 7-3 loi.s against visiting Fullerton in the Orange. Empire Conference open •r. Ltsa Sch1ro went 2 for 4 with three RBis, while Melis- sa Villa went 2 ror 3 Wlth a run 5eored and two RBis for the Hom ts (13· 1 overall). Metedith Mil and Ta ha TI1unnond eac::b had two bits for th Pirates (10·7 ov rall), whal Ron Sn)'d r had o hit, o run ~or d and an RBI. OCC 1 d, 1·0, before Full rton put hve runs on the board t.n th ~nd inning ttnd two in the third. ouw..-a11 sa1ca Fuu8'0ll 7. a..-CoMT J Fullerton lcrDre lllif =:, .. 7 9 1 Or-'9f COM 100 020 0 -l 7 1 ~ K. (I) ..S 'VbUng; Otteoe and v.ldn.. w. \ttfoi ..... L • ~ ll • $nydef (()CQ. ~toCQ.~(f) GOLF CONTINUED FROM A12 Last year, Bruce Fleisher skipped the Toshiba Classic on his way to earning Senior PGA Tour Player of the Year and Rook.le of the Year honors Fl eishe r won two of the first three tournaments m 1999, and firush.ed second m the other event, then raised the red flag for early-season burnout and withdrew from the Toshiba. Many of his old fnends from the 552 Club, mclud.J.ng Toshiba co-cbauman Ja ke Rohrer, • 'were looking forward to · seemg Fleisher again • Fleisher, now one of the top names on the Seruor PGA Tour, won the Crosby Southern in 1977 and played in the event again m 1986 Defending Toshiba champion Gary McCord and ·longtime senior tour players Rocky Thompson and Bob Eastwood are all former pro-dITI WUUlers ol the Crosby Southern Fleishe r, Eastwood and Ed Dougherty are former · winners or the pro field at the 1 Crosby Southern. All ot the aforementioned players are scheduled to tee it up next week in the Toshiba C lassic. Second in lme, lo Jacobs for the most appearance-; m the now-defunct Newport Classic -m terms of golfers competing m the T~bci -is Ray Carrasco wtth sa. Junmy Powell is the only one m the Toshlba field who played in the inaugural Crosby Sou.them in 1975 . At age 70, Arnold Palmer is the oldest player m the Tosluba Classic held, followed by Gene Llttler, who turns 70 on July 21. Miller Barber, next on the age IJst at 68, recently qwpped: ·1 won't say my goU is bad, but if I started growing tomatoes, they'd come up sliced " Barber, who holds the senior tour record for the most consecutive years wummg at least on~ tournament (rune), will be among those next week hoping to shoot h.i.s age. _)f Of the top 2~ money leaders on last year's Seruor PGA Tour, 23 are playmg in the Toshiba Classic. Gil 1 Morgan (who also played ill the Crosby Southe rn) and Vicente Fernandez are the only two nussmg . The Newport Beach Mamott will be involved m this year's Toshiba for the first wne. The hotel, adjacent to the second and tlurd holes, will serve as the television compound for ESPN, provtdmg the tournament . with :.pace from the parking lot near the tenrus courts. ln past years, the Maniott bas had other comrrutments dunng Tosh.Iba week. On Tuesday, the Mam ott will host a commuruty breakfast featunng McCord. •He'll be a not,• tournament director Jeff Purser Sllld. The annual To hlba Classic Jwuor Clmic will be Tuesday at • p.m. at the driving range, hosted by a senior tour player. This ye ar will include a special performance by Denrus Wdlters, a handicapped goUcr who l1as risen to prominence through severa.t national televis1on ap~~ances, utilizing a custom goU cart to perform tnck hoLs. Walt rs' m piration mcssagt? about overconung adversity will be shared Wlth dozen~ of youngsters. The Juruor Clinic 11 fr &nd lunch ts provided by the Toshiba Senior Cla.ssk. Tbe 9¥Mt. wlllda la I 1 thriving Wtth mo~ bolpttal#Y tents and totpOrate ponsonhips (about 2SO companies are involved ln eome capadty), feetw. a uruque corporaw pavWon at th l ?th gnen. Newport Beech •• signature hole. Three compuUel ... thUtag • *' bcli that wW be amat9d on dae ..a. •vau'll get'° It,.... ........ but a.~ ....... .., •• .. ,... ........... ,,. lNa _ _... .. .., ..... .,,? tr rt. lllM 13 .. -~--·-· • ) . \ • ' t J~ I World Cl111 D11lar1hl Serving California Since 1956 !.~JITTAGL $ (1102/024993) ......................................... ;.. 9 99 ~l!!!&~ $ (1036/030~)................................ 10,39 '96VWJITTA $ ~~ii~).; .............................. 10,99 '96VWGLS ~~,~~:'.'. .. $10,99 ]L~~!~GL $ (1083/808879)................................ 13, 9 9 !!~U $ . (1025/201'23) .........................•...... 13,99 ~~~BRIO GL $ , (100038/809A23(............................ 14,99 '99 VW BEETLE ~3~~6t.:: ................. $16, 19 2000VWBEmE Lib new, low miles, ICM! $17 89 (1064/All l68)................................ I '99 VW PASSAT =~~=-···········$20119 '99 VW PASSAT · $ =~~ ......... 22,99 -, .. Friday, Fob•tJOry 25, 2000 Al5 --.......__, f~--11 W *"-11 ~~JI MUC tonCU 11 PUaM: tm1C0 J _I __ NOllCI Of' T,.UITU'I cHtntooe Flctllloua 8ualneel CrTY OF Flctltlout Bu1lnu1 PUeUC: NOTICES I PU8UC NCmCU 11 PUIUC NOT1CU I IAli T.I . No. 1-. NOTICE Of Heme "8'91Mftt COST A MESA Name Statement ~..-Loan No. PETlTION TO The IOllOWlng peraona OAAHOE COUNTY, file fooo....ing persons °' ll1U !JA1Z OOCleOMCMt Tltle Ofder 1 are dolna buslnetf as· CALIFORNIA lie dOlng bualneu as (VCC a.. 61115) No, OOM1•H YOU M! ADM .. ISTER e) caltTOlnla'a Mact1 1 NOTICE FLOWER PROPER· .1~9TICB rs Hat.EBY ~AU~ UNTD!"UIAT ESTATE Of: M04orcyclH. b) LonO INVITING BID flES INCORPORATED, Q''Yl:..l'I ... • bel.k ..at la " R08SfT E. Madi Molou:yqea, c) T C 24' 18 Hohday Road. .._.to br lllldf, DATl!D CM/1111... O°NEIL AKA Long Medi 1 ~or· THE NO t E IS Newpon Beach CA n. ...... , wl UN&.Lll YOU T ROliR I WET c:ydea di Macn 1 Motot· HEREBY GIVEN lhet 92660 • ....... ...... O( Ille AC~ TO MOT'!CT O'NB. AKA cvae•. 1 S3 lndus1"81 H8led p1oposa11 tor Flower PrQpertl81 Ill· eclkr lllare: A.DIUANNA YOUfll ~Oftl! .. TYL. I R0eEKT O'NIEIL Wey, Cocta Meu, CA tumlatling tM tabOr, me· eo<potated, (CAJ. 2411 AUSTIN Uld GUISEP· MAY N SOLD AT 92627 terlali, equipment, HOhday Acea NewJ)Ol1 NA IOFJlUDA 40I E l'Uat.JC &ALL IP' YOU CASE NO. Lueng Ouoc Mach tranapottetion and aucn Seacn CA 92660 ltvcl .. Bai-. CA NEl!D AN l!XPl.ANA-A200917 1441 w Rober\& Full: other f10lr11es IS may be Th<a bulineH II C()(\· TION OF THt! NATU..E To •II heire, erton CA 92833 requifed f()f ltle con· OUC1ecJ by • OO'J)OfJtlOn DOii!& bluuwu ., OF THE P1'0CfEDING beneflciariet, cred1· Thai business la con-llructlOl'l on Suntlow., Have you 11arted , n"S 11M£ TO EAT AGAINST Y°'?; YOU tors, contingent Ouc:ted by an tndrvidual Avenue Improve· doing busmen ye17 All odl bu1-SHOULD CON ACT A oreditore, end per· Have you &tarted menta, PhaM II from Yea 16 Dec 1999 ..... er ... ~ LAWY~. A publlc 1on1 who mey other· doing bualnesa yet? 115 '"1 of U.P.R.R. to Flewer P1°.t:::rt1es In· ,...c(•l .._, -.l'CM(cs1 euc11on Hie to the b y J 1999 t 14 feat e111 of _...by die 1el.lert•l widlin highest bk:ldtr tor cash, wite • inter11tad In ea, anuary U,P.R.R. and Harbor corpotated seph W ., pMI llm.c yean u cashlti'1 check drawn the will or Htata, or Lueng Ouoc Macn 8 o u I• var d IS out h Mader. Secretary __. by die 1eller(1). are on a state or national ~~~~l~~KRAo:g:~FfT 111~11 wl~~at~~nb::~ CoHt Drl11e tntertac· 111~11 wi~~81f,:enbo:~~ .... _ •~-.. -11 •-r .u bank, cl\ec:k drawn by a EMMET O'NEI AKA Clerk ol Orange County !Ion lmprovemanla, Clertl ol Orange Counl" ,.,.. ............ ... ..,..,_ 1ta11 or federal credit L 02 15 2000 Proj9et No. 00<04 wilt 02 5 2000 ' ~ of die: cllicf c:~· union, or a check ROBERPTETOIT'N10EIL on . . 20006818779 be r~ed by the Cly on ·l • 200068111767 In office ot Ole tetkr ii drawn by a stat• Of A N h11 0 ty Pllol F b 18 25 ol Coita Mesa at the of· po 8oA J3t2 Newpon federal 11vlna1 and been filed by EFFIE ar e · • 11ee of tile cuy Clerk 77 Daily Pt10t Feb 18. 25 19'*. CA~ loan Haoclatlon, Of MAE RIVERA in the Mar ~.IO, 2000 F2?I FaJr Drive, Costa Mesa. Mar ~ IO. 2000 F27• ne umet•l and 11vlng1 auoclatlon, or Supeuor Court of Flctftlou1 Buslnff•. C.llfOfnia, until the hour Flctrtloua Business ...... eddrca of die uvrng1 bank apec:lfi.d Cahfomre, County of N•me Statement of 10 00 am, Mooday N11me Statement ~el(a) lalare'. PAUL D In Section 11102 of tht Ora~o. The lollowlng persons Maren 8. 2000 al which The lollowing per~:; ~'ETT. llOO Plclfic Financial COde and THE PETITION tre <S<Mno business as time ttiey will be openec:f ere Oo1ng busines,. as Olall Hl&Jlway. 1Jl5. •uthorlztd to do bull· requests that EFFIE COASTAL TREAS· publlCIY and read aloud Tre Bone 24'00 we.1 HndqJon Btacll, CA .nen In thlt stale will MAE RIVERA be URES, 2007t Cypress In th a Co u n ct I CoaSt Hwy Suite 12, 92648 be held by the duly arpolnted a• per1on· Straet, NewpOrt Beadl, Chambers Seated Newpor1 Beach. CA • 'Tlle ._11 beln& sold appointed tru1tee 11 a representatrvo to CA 92660 proposals ahaU bear the 92663 are ce11era1Jy cktcribed as 1hown below1 of all d 1 h t t Rita Marie John, title ol the worl< and JoAnn van Oylrn SALE OP EQUIPMENT right, tltle, ana Interest a 1 ':'~m~ or 1d 8 ~· a 8 20071 Cypress Streer, name ol the bidder but 2400 West Coast Hwy· a LEASEHOLDS SALE conveyed to and now 0 T':..eoceP;.rrhoN Ne:s,or1 Beach. CA no other d1st1noulsh1ng Suite 12. Newport OF ltNENTORY AND ~!° bl.:~,~.~~1 .. a~ r e q u e ~ t s t h e 9~11 busrness is oon· ~he~~ A~~~~:9:0es~ ~.~· ~:n 96~~ 2400 GOOQW1U. localed acrlbed property under deceden1 s WILL and ducted by an lndMduat lno tlme for the reoetpt ot West coast H.vy, Suue 408 'f ~ ruvcf •nd purau1nt to a Dffd cod1ci1s. 11 any, ~e Heve you s1111ed biat shall be returned to 12. Newpori Beach. CA • of Trust deacrlbtd edm111ad to probate. doing businest yet? No bidder unopened It shall 92663 8alboai CA 9'l662 below. The sale wlll be The WILL and any Rita Mane JOOn be the aote respons•blhty This business 1s con· . ,..:: '*':c Mk la m1de, but without cod1crls ore ava1lebl1 This statement was of the bidder to He that ducted by a general i* 1odlc ~( covenant Of warranty, lor examinetron 111 tiled with the county has bid 15 recetved tn pattnersh•P lllAlcd at ESCRo 0 HPfeHtd or Implied. Ille Me kept by the Clertt of Orange County proper time Have you 5tarted llEMPO . OW 11. regarding lltle, po1-court. on 02·15·2000 A set of Bid Docu· oong business yet? No l3807 Aliso Crttt ROlld, union, or encum. THE PETITION 2000$819772 men1s may be obtained JoAnn Van Oyl<e Sre. llO. t.a111111 Nlc~c:!. bfances, to pay th• requests authority lo Dally Pilot Feb 18, 25, at t!l,e Office of the Cl1y This statement was c~ 91677 and Ille lllUCl-remaining Pflnclpal administer the Htata Mar 3, 10, 2000 F272 Eng1nnt, n Fair Drive filed With the county ptre~ cllle la Marcll sum 'f b lh~ J'.~l(sl under tho lndepen· Flctltlou1 Bu1lneas CO&ta Mesa, Calllom1a, Cleft< ot Orange County 14 •• ..,... . secure 1 Y t 1 0 dent Adm1n11traJ1on Name Statement upon nonrefundable on 02·15·2000 'Tlle blll.k sate as Trust, whh lntar11t 1nd of Esta. tes Acl IThll T 1 •-·· payment of 125.00. An 2000681117611 --...a-. co California Unl· late charge& thereon · he ol,.,..ing persons ddl 1 1 h f D ·1 p F b 8 25 -· lded 1 th ' euthonty will allow ere d0tng business as a t ona c erg• o a1 y dot • 1 . . -.i Commtrclal Code '!.J.)ov d n t the personal repre· Spltltual Gulld ol $5,00 wlll be made II Mar 3. 10, 2000 F275 ~ 6~111d llddress ~nde: ihe ter~111~fc~~ aantehve to take America. 1129 w =led by m:rl 1~id Flctitlout Bualneu Ille e non wida v.hom Dffd of Tru1t, Interest many actions with· Balboa Blvd •B. New· r~en~ntsoma 1 Name Statement ':i.Y be flied 11 thereon. fees, charges out obtarnmo court port Beacn. CA 92661 =bet examined at th~ The lollowtng persons l'IDMJ'O ESCROW u. and· 1xpenH1 of the approval Before Chr1s1lne Caparelh, OfficeoltheCityCle1'11o( are oong busine~s ai. iQ1o7 Aliso Crttlt ROlld Trultff !Of the total taking certain very 1129 W Balboe Blvd lfle Cit ol Colta Mesa a) SHAOEZONES ' 2IO t.apu N'llffl. amount (It the time of 1mpor111nt acuoh,, 18, Newpot1 Beacn, CA B•d ~ants w~t not b) SHADEPOATS 536 ~ 92677 and the !Ml d.a). the fnlUal publication ol however, the per 92661 be mailed unlen the ad Sable Str Las FIO!e~ .., IWn clliml by lll)' the Notice of Sale) sonal representallve D o n n a • M a r I e ditional $S 00 chaige Is CA 92688 .... 's11A11 be Mardi 1eason1bly utlmateo will be required to Stenlake, 12066 COyna Included with payment Boltla and Mackrell JJ ~ wlllcll ii Ille to be HI fonh below. grve notice to inler St . LO& Angeles, CA l:ech bid shall be Inc {CA) 536 Sable \eii-. d.y bell re Ille The amount may be ested persons unle11 90049 made on the Proposal Str.. Las Flor:e~. CA 0 . greater on the day of h h d This business Is con· 1 h t p 1 th h 92688 •ICiP'ued Mlc dale 'r>eC1• sale. TRUSTOA:MAGOI t ey ave warve ducted by. a general orm, 8 " 8 • roug. This business 11 oon· lboYc.. IBRAHIM ANO notrce or consented partnership P·9 provided In the con ducted by: a oorporatron Fcbn&liy tO, ?000 MADELENE IBRAHIM, to the proposed Have you started tract documents, and Have you started AUL D BENNETT. HUSBAND ANO WIFE action.) The lndepen· doing business yet? No shall ~~e:m.J8"100 ~ doing business yet? •l Duly Appointed Trua· dent adm1n1strauon Christine Caparelli acer111 ..:•na Yes, 01 ·01·2000 pon &ac.b.Co.ia ttt. GOLDEN WEST authorrty wrll be This statement was ~ fr,~t 1 1 ;, Botha and Mackrell Mesa SAVINGS ASSOCIA· granted unless an llled with the County u1e 0 , ... amoun Inc . Doon W1l~am Botha CN"""6 37llOILT Feb TION SERVICE! co. A interested person. Clerk ol Orange County ::! ~· m~J~~: {PreSldent) 2'. iooo CALIFORNIA CORP<>-lrles an ob1ectron to on 02·15-2000 No ~r~al wn be Thts statement was ---------iRATION AtcOl'ded the pet111on end 200068111770 considered unless ac-filed with the County Flctlllout Business CM/27119118 11 lnllru· shows good cause Dally Pilot Feb 18. 25 companied by such Clertt of Orange County Nal'n• Statement mtnt No. 88-1t1tM In why 1 he co u n Mar. 3, 10. 2000 F273 cashier'• clleck cash or oo 02-08·2000 Tho lollOwlng persons book • page ot omc:1a1 should not grant rha STATEMENT OF bl<lder's bond ' • -200061119076 are dcMng buslneu as: Recotd1 In the otnc1 of outho11tv ABANDONMENT OF No bid sha·ll be con-Daily Prlot Feb 18 25. NUMAN EXCHANGE. ttll Rec:Ofdtr ot OR• A HEARING on USE OF FICTITIOUS sl<lered unless 11 ia made Mar 3, 10, 2000 F276 151 Terrau Court, ANGE County, CALI· Ille pet1tron will be BUSINESS NAME on a blank 101m Flctltlou1 BuelneH COsta Mesa. CA 92627 FORNIA, D.lte of held on March 16, furnished by the City ol Name Statement Thomas Johansen, Sale.:0311712000 at 2:00 2000 81 1 :45 p .M. The lollowtng persons Costa Mua and 15 maae Th lollo g ,,,. ,.,,,., 151 Terra~ Court PM Place Of Sar.: AT o L73 1 d haveabandQnedlheuse e wm ,..vr..,....s C · 92627. THE NODTH F•ONT in ept. ocet.e ol lhe llctltlous business In aCOOfdance with the are dOlng business aa. ostaMesa, A " " at 341 The Crty . provisions ot the M TI 550 N Pan«:enter This business Is con· ENTRANCE TO THE Onve Orange CA name J 85 s 18 5 Proposal requirements or #102. Santa Ana ducted by an lndrvtdual COUNTY COURT-92668_ Cleaners, 10974 Warner AvallCI class "A" (Gen· CA 92705 tilV8 r,ou started =:;. o~~ ~~ IF YOU OBJECT ~~~'CU:·11t,~tain Val· eral E~lneeMg) ~ MED TO)(, INC (Del doing bus~ vet? No SANTA ~ CALI-TO the gran1111g ol The Fk::tilious Busl· tractor ICenSe, 155 aware), 5 5 O N ~~atem:~nwas fORNIA Amount of the pet1tron. you ness name relerred 10 by the State ol Cahlor· Parkoenler Or , 1102 lll8d with the COunty unpaid balance and should appear at the ebove was lrled on nla. "'°'' be possessed Santa Ana. CA 92705 ,......, -• 0~ County other charne1· haa1111g and state 5-22·98 In the County ol by the contractor at the This business IS 000· ......,,,. "" •-· b ~me ol tl'le bid ducted by a COtpQtaUon 02.2... $322, 10C.74 Street your o 1ectrons or Orange, Onginal F~e • The oontf9cior US1ng a Have you started .. 20006820650 Addr111 or other com. hie written ob1ec 19966684249 crall or ctasslhcatlOrl not oomg business yel? OallV PtlOI Feb 25. Mar rnon d4l1f9natlon ot r111 trons with the cour1 Hoang Kten Do, 9766 shown on General Yes 1/l/2000 , 10, f7, 2000 F287 ,,.-operty: 118 VALEN· belo1e the hearing. Shriner Clr., Fountain Pravelltng Wage De· MEO TOX INC ut Bue ne.• CIA STltEET COSTA Your appeeranc1 Valley. CA 92708 termlnatlont may be re-David w Eaton ' N State t MESA, CA '2l'2t APH #: may be, in person or Thahh Gia Do, 9766 quired to pay Ula wage V.P ./CFO . •m• men 141~ Tht under· by your attorney. Shriner Clr.. Fountain reta of that crah OI olH· , This statement was Tt:,{ollo~~g persons signed Trustff di•· IF YOU ARE A Valley. CA 92708 slRceUon most dosely med with the county :,:ERl~AN ~~t'E~s: claims any llebllky for CREDITOR or a Thia bu~nesa Is oon· related to It ea sheoNn tn Clerk ol Orange County 151 Terrua Court. ::: ~="=.~~ ~~ cont1ngen1 creditor '!':ad by. husband and the General Oatermlna· on 01-19·2000 Coate Mesa, CA 928Z7 other common dealg· of the decee1ed, you Hoe Kiin Do Uons eflectrve attn. lime 20006817161 Thomu Johansen, 114rtlon If any lhoWn muat file your clarm The~ Gia Do of the call lor bids. Dally Prlot Feb 18~ 25, 151 Terreu Court, above' It n0 ltrffl wrth the court end This statement was The C~~ of the Mar 3, 10, 2000 ~278 Cos1a Mesa. CA 92627 addreu or othef com· marl a copy to lhe filed with the County ;~X.e~ the rlQh~~',!1:; Flctltloue Bu1lnH1 Tiiis bullrless Is con· mon designation Is personal repreaente· Clertt ol Orange County any or 81 bkfs Name Statement d\Jc:ted by en 1naMdual shown, dlrectlon1 to live appointed by 1he on 02·08·2000 The Contractor shall Thi lollowlng persons Have r,ou atarted the locatlon of the court within four 2.00068111107 comply with the are doing business as doing butnt$$ yet? No property may · be ob-monlh• from the Dally Pilot Fet>. 11, 18. provisions 01 Section Af11rma11ve HR Solu· ThOmu Johensen tafned by Mndlng a date of firtt !nuance 25, Mar 3, 2000 F257 1no to 1780 inclusive trons, 1797 Onole Dnve, This 1ta1ement was written request to th0e ol lette~111 provided STATEMENT OF 01 the Cahlorma Labor Costa Mesa, qe11fom1a filed with the County beneficiary Within 1 in section 9100 of NT OF Code th llfng rate 92626 Clertl ol Orange County days of the dete of first the California Pro· ABANDONME and ice~ P~r:ia es es· Barbara B Raabe, on 02·2o4·2000 publication of thla bete Coda. The time USE OF FICTITIOUS tabllshed by the 81rector 1797 Orible Orrve, COsta 20006820651 Notice of Sale. Date: for filing claims will BUSINESS NAME 01 the Department o1 In· Mesa, Calilomla 92626 ~·~t~ P11~1 ~ 25• ~~ ~!.,bfENuC~ ~S = not expire before The following person(s) dustriel Aelatlon1. State This business Is con· • • • """ lour month• from ha• (have) abanaoned o1 C.htomla which are ducted by an 1nd1vklual Flctltloue Bu1lneH POS~ :O-n~~r the heenng deta the use ol IN flctJlious filed with the Crty Cler1tl Have you started N8me Statement 1.fli ~IATION noticed above bus Ines s n am a : 01 the City ol Costa doing bu11oesa yet? No The tottowing persons S YOU MA y EX· Peacock Palnlfng & Mesa. and 1neu forfeit Barbara B. Raabe are doing bustneu as ~~I! COC~~= AMINE the f I kepi Malntentnce. 9291 penalllH presctlbed Thls statement was Newport FOfeSt Prod-1 e Lenore Or , Garden therein tor liled with the County uas, 15 Terreu Ortve. T8IONLVO "°s1UfTFOl.E ~ by tha court. If Y01~ Grove. Cahlomia. 92,µ1 nonoomphanoe o1 the Clerk ol Orange County Newpon Coast Callfor· .• "'"" ere a per1on 1nter11 The FictJllOUs Busl· said Code on 02· 14-2000 nia 92657 • SACRAMENTO, CA ed 1n the 111ate, you oeu name referred to MARY ELLIOTT 200068111674 Georg• Mlcnael 16821 Telephone Num· may file with the aboVe was tiled In Or DEPUTY CITY CLE.AK Daily Pilot Feb 25, Mat Sampson 15 Terraza r: (800)1M~7 Sala court a format R.e· ange County oo CITY OF COSTA MESA 3, 10, 17, 2000 F279 Drive, Newport Coast. statu1 Une. 11111 387· que~t for Special 03/0411999, FILE NO Publlahad Newport allfomla 92657 n21 !Ille McManu1, Notrce. of the llltng 19996785190 Beach·Co111 Mau This business Is con· ~~~~11 =re•:g of en mventory and Yewon Chon, 9291 Dally Pll04 Februaty 18, dvcted by on lnd1vk:1oat 0 • • eppreltal of altate Lenore Or . Garden 25 2000 Have you atartea 1 auets or of eny Grove, Cal1lomla 92841 • F267 doing busfoeu yet? No pautlon or account Junbum Kim. 9291 M11ie Sampson Flctltlou• Bu1lneH II provided '" 111c· Lenore Dr • Gerden FlctJlloua Bu1lnu 1 Thia 11a1ement was Name Statement lion l 250 of ihe Gr~e. Cahlomra 92,µ1 Heme Statement 9'led with the County The loUowing persons Cehfornla Probete ~~ bubs;"!s ~ The fOllow4nO pel'10nS a.11 ol '=8 County doln bulilf 5 11 Code. A Requ111 for h 8,. doinO busfnua u · 02·18· ~reg ft' sEA'vfcES Special Notice form Pl.('= ~hOn Hf.TECtfAl/TOCLINIC. 2~ 20871 Baachwooa 11 available from the Thll statement was 11801 Beach Blvd. DellV Pilot Feb 25, Mar Lana. Huntington oourt clerk. ftlecl with the County Stenton. CA 90680 10. 17, 2000 F289 Beach, c~ 92646 Att-y for Clark of Orange County Young Hoon Kim, ou• ue neN LHM• R Yerby, Pwddcw•: on 01·31·2000 1823 Blue Haven Dr , Heme Statement 20871 Beachwood .,_..Alen 20006'11371 Rowland Heights, CA The tottowtng persons La n • , H u n tin g Ion Reemueeen Dally Pilot Feb 25, Mat SI 17 48 "'doing business as Beacn. CA 92646 "~'end 3, 10. 17, 2000 F292 Young ~· Kim, 1823 537~ewportCtr Or Roaalle C Yerby, Couneeklfetl.aw Blue Haven Or. ' Newport Beacn' 20871 Buchwood 3856 E La Pelma NOTICE OF Rowland Helghll, CA ~nie 112660 ' Lano, Huntington Aw .. 1;03 APPLICATION FOR 91748 Uotln S.V.r. 537 New-Boactl, CA 92648 ~CA 82807 CHANGE IN This bOatness Is con· l>Or1 Ctr Or, Newport This buaiMN IS COO· 02124. 02/25, 03/02 OWNERSHIP "'fed by husband and Beach, C.hlomla 82660 ducted by a general OF ALCOHOLIC "" 8 Johnny Stelberger, partoe15hlp Tom M1dlg1n of BEVERAGE The registrant c:iom-,, ... 7 Newport Ctr Of The ..,, 1rant com· l •a I a y Th 0 m 11 SE merad IO transact bull· Ne........,. Beadl car.1or'. mencec:ito•ltanlattbusl· • ' LICEN nasa under the fiCtttioua ,.,..-J26eo ' nass under the lict111ou1 ~~~~~ Otte o1 F1Ung bu1lnt11 name or n. bullnffl la con-bualneu n•m• or •rnt tor w.-...c Cepl· AppUcatlOll names llltld •~ on 1~ ed boV on •• , .. _ February 17 2000 1995 dUctld by, co pennera namea t • • ta Inc. To Whom 11 May Con· y,...llVI HOon Kim Have you 11arted 113<W5 Publi1had Ntwport cam y~ .. 48 Kim dolno butlne • yet? No Lhnntl A Yart>y BtlCh·CO•t• Mau The Na~•) ol 1he T~ ttetemern ... Jolin suver Ro~C Yerby = Piiot February 2~ ( 1 / • Thia 1tat491Tl9nl WIS Th11 alalement was F ..., Appllcanl • • are llled With the County filed Wllh lh• Coul)fy lli.d with the CountY BALBOA I NO Clerk ol Orange County Clortc ol Orange County Cletil ot Ortnge County C .. ___ t ..... VILLAGE INN INC II_,. on 0Mo4-2000 on02-082000 on01-31•2000 , __ -· The applloant1 1 lwu aoooM1f771 . 2000M1flf7 2000N11H4 you wit find tbove are ·~Ric: Oaaty PltOt Fetl 11 . 11, Daily Ptk>l Feb 25. Mar Oatly Pilot Ftb 25, M1t Whit you need :::CO.if:v::" ~roi 25, Mtr. 3 2000 F265 3, 10, 11, 2000 F290 3. 10. 17, 2000 F2Sl1 81 the ptkl• 10 1811 a'rcoholl' FICtlilOue IUilftiii y should you subject lf & your family to PWinl inflated prices for alllEeU a semccs???? · .......... MCAlllT ....... lllia nl1C1 tin beWragM II Name ... ...._,, you Wlll'IC to p.ty 127-2tlMRINE AVE ~ whet\ yo.I rMd ~~A ISLAND, CA =:., Aid c1' M pgDP114 ='""r o1 lanee(l) IP• Orange Ctounfy, 9912 or: 47 • ON-SALE S. .. h Of• ~ FW,; EATING Beach, Calllornle PLACE 92946-2820 ,.ut>haheo Nt*pof1 Jeffrey Soot! Loop, IHCh·Coata M•n 9112 ....... Or., ~· Delly Piiot ,...,Na~ 25. =='· Ctllomll ja2000iiil--=a=f2lliiliili64il Thll blAalrlMe II OOf'I< .... 1"1 "~ OU:::. w ,: ·~ o~ .... :\, ._,.... yM? ~~~ 1Na IltU-m.t'-= OftOM Fictitious Buelneaa Name Statement The tonowtng persona are doing business as ADTAZ PROFESSIONAL SERVICES. 384 Pl1nce ton Or • Cosl8 Mele CA 92626 Allcial Kenny Y~. 384 Princeton Or Co518 Mesa, CA 92626 Thia business Is con· duaed by en tndrvduel Have you lltrted Oolng buslneas yet? No Allela Kenny Voung This statement WH hied with 1h• County Clerk ot o:;;ae County on 02·15· 20006'19773 Daily P11ot Feb 18, 25, Mat. 3, 10, 2000 F270 Flctttlou• Butln•H Heme Stlltement The IOIOW!ng perlOOI tre 40IOg bultneU as. Tti. Quffn BM, 1817 weatet1n OrN• ,, 03/ 1oe. Ne~ B .. cn. C.ittornla 92660 Suzenne M•rt• Ptllmer. 1817 WHtcflll C>nw 1!03/108. New =.a Bnctl, O.lltom•• enen flergo 1817 W•tdlft Oillle 1103/ 108 Ne~ n..en. CeMomia~ Thia butni t It COO• ~ by • gtn9r., l)tl,,,_Mlp Heve you attrled ~ bulNN yet? No Su11nne Marte P91mer Thie MtefMOt WH llleCt Wl1f1 lt!9 Cwnty ci..-0( OtetlOt County on o.n2 ·2000' Mlllll1Mt2 ~,...,. ... ..., 11.aooo nee. a..-.. ,.. ..... ............ ....... ......... pllY .... ,... ..... ....... .., Flctltloue Bualne .. N•me Statement Tl\o to11ow1ng per1001 are doing business H Automatrng BuSlness, 3228 DaKOll Ave • CO.ta Ml'a. CA 8:1626 Pete• l A G•uenbeck. 3228 Dakota Ave , Coita Mesa. CA 92626 l Illa bt.laineu II con· CSucttld by an l'ICIMOual Have you ~tarted domg bUSlnlSI yeJ? Yes, 1 01 00 Peter L.A Gruenbecii. Ttw 11atement wll Med with the County Clerk ol Orange County on 02·03·2000 20006818720 Dally PllOt Feb 11. 18, 25, Mar 3, 2000 F255 Fletltloua Bu1lneH Ntme Statement The lolloWlng persons are do<ng bus•00$!1 as Htlben Property Man· agement, 1300 Sr1~tol N •190. Newpon Beach £A 92660 Mark Hilbert 7 Ocean RiOge Onve, Newport Coast, CA 92657 This business 1s con· dueled by an 1ndlvldual Have you star ted doing business yet? Vos. f/1195 Mark H1lben This sta1emen1 was liled with the Counry Clerk of Orange County on 02-04 2000 , 20006'18820 Oatly Pltot Feb II, 18 25. Mar 3, 2000 F2Soe Fictitious Bualnesa Name Statement The lotklw1ng persons ere domg business as Critter S1"ers, 4200 Park Newport •20(), Newport Beach, CA 92660 Carl Eugene Anderson, 4200 Park Newport #206, Newport Beach, CA 92660 Thrs business 1s oon· aucted by an 1nd1vtdual Have you s1arted ao1ng business yet., Yes 1985 Cart Eugene Anderson Thrs statemen1 was fltea w1t)'I Ille County Flct1Uou1 Bu1lneH FlcllUout BuelneH SUMMARY OF Nam. Statement Name Statement PROPOSED The tollOW•ng per on' Ttio IOllowmg l>f)11<Jt1t ORDINANCE 111 001ng bu111-.u as ~rB OOing t1u~'''°'\ H CITY OF SuKe&na Maga. 3750 V11atworti.1 P1u<>uu.ona COST A MESA S.ar StrHI Suite I, 260<t S11n11 Ma A11t· ORDINANCE 00 4' S.nta Ana. CA 82704' nua Co\ta MeH CA ~edull.ld to bt tr1 1111 Gw n Sol\&ene 3750 112627 loice end efted JO daY' ~a1 Street Suite t, P11r1e11 Cha111ne liom ,1, aooptlOO on Sal\la Ana CA 02704 Soun, 2b02 Sal\UI Ana Fet>Nary 22. 2000, "° Tnll bo&tneS5 II con· Avenue Costa MHM waa ldopled by IOI docled by an lndlvtd\8! CA 92 27 IOW roll call VOIO Helle yuu srar1ed Tnls bUSllltH II coo cou Cll MEMSfAS: doing bu•1ntn yet., Oude<I by in 1no~ua1 Ayes: Mone ha n , Yes, 11110.'99 Have you 11111ed Cowan, Etleleton, G ... en Suleeena douig bVs•ness v ,., No Somtra. NOES: None TNI llllem&nl wH Pamcia Soula ABSENT: DO.on. ltled w11n 11'\e County Tll1s :1itateman1 wn Ordlnanc:e 00·• Clerk of Orange County flied w1tn lhe County a11'1endi. Chapter v Artl on 02-08 2000 Clerk ol Oranoe County cle 4 OI Hie 13 of thl'I 20006819085 on 01-12·<!000 Costa Mesa Mun1c1pal Dally P1101 Feb 11 18. 2000611111507 Coae co11ec11ng an 25 Mar 3. 2000 F256 Dally Ptlot Fl!lll 11 18 om1&SAOO In the develo!-1 Flctitlou1 BuelneH 25 Mar 3 2000 f lti4 rnen1 g1anoa11:11> lot ea· Name Statement NOTICE OF-labt1~timent!. wnero IQOd Thi f()jlowtng pet~ AVAILABILITY OF and beverages ar!!t fre dOlng business 8$ ANNUAL REPORT servoo COX CHARITIES FOR Pur..uant 10 ~ 1 °'' THE FULL TEXT al ORANGE COUNTY 6104(dl ol tne lnter,,al It .. c;ra li8r\('_.,, INiy 00 18012 M11cne• Ave So Rt!•enue Cooe notlt'J rs tead in tt>t1 C•ty Cl rt. s IMne CA 1126 t 4 hereoy g•ven Ulat II e an· Offic.e T7 Fair Oro" Orange County s nual 1eport tor the COsta Mf!Sa Un11td Way 18012 CALENDAR y11c1r Hl99 MARY T. ELLIOTT, Mitchell Ave So Irvine ot LUTHEf3AN GOOD Deputy City Clerk CA 92614 • • • SAMARITAN SOCIETY. Publtsned Newport This buSlneS!i 1s oon INC , a pnvata 1oun<.1a Beech-Cos1a Me,5r.a ducted by a c.orporatton 1100 is avaoabl11 at the Oa•ty Pilot February :.!:> Have you s.rarted foundation·i; prmc.1pat ol· 2000 doing bustnes& yet, lice lor inspection du11ng Yes, January 4. 2000 regular bu~1ne~s llOurs Orange County's trom830AM to500PM Un.led Way, Emmanuel tiy any C•hllln v.tto re V LaUena CPA Qull~t~ 11 w11n.11 180 days Thl5 11a1emen1 was alter It e aate ot this pub hied with the County lreatoun C1eno. ol 01aoge County Tne toul'ldatt00 i> pnn· on 01·19·2000 c par office ts located 11 20006817168 245 Heliotrope Ave CO· Da.1ly Pilot Feb 11 18 rona Del Mar, CA 92625 25 Mar 3 2000 F258 The pt1nopat manager of !toe loundat1on rs Jane Call the ~~i>117-°°~1rcH1e CPA Classifieds 301 e co1oraao Blvd; Ste 209, Pasad11na CA 91101 1949) 642·5678 Publlshed Newport Beach Cos1a Me•a ~~ PilOI February '25 F283 t;an t seem to FC\82 Flctltlou• Buslneaa Name Statement The lol1<>wu19 per:som are oomg l>IJ:..rne:.• .is a) CLASSICAL OE SIGNS bl Cal eOe51gn oom c) Oes•gn 1ng Etega~. 1800 P"on Tifl1n Place Nev.pert Beath CA 92660 Linda L S<.h•ndl8• 1800 Pun T1tt1n Place Newpon Beacn CA 92660 Allllo M111ste1 B(Jyd 18-48 Port Cartow Place Newport Beacn c.a. 92660 • Tti<s 1>us1ne<>s s con dUC1ed oy co pann11rs Have you rotarteo do•n;i buslnhs ·yet? Yes 10-25-84 gel 10 all those repair 1obs Linda L Seti !l<l er Ths sta111mer>1 ...-.11 around the house? liled w 10 the County Cieri< of Orange Countv ..._ "",.,_,,._ ___ f:J on 02·08·2000 Lei the Claaalned Cler!( ol Orang111 Cuu111y on 02-15-2000 Service Directory 20006819776 200068111148 Dally Pilot Feb 11 18, help you llnd Dally P1tot•Feb 18. 25 25. Mar 3, 2000 F25J L,...;=.;,;;...;.;;=.;;..__--.....-.=.-1 reliable help Mar 3, 10. 2000 F269 The Newport · Beach/Costa Mesa Daily Pilot presents you with a GREAT OPPORTUNITY to l' promote antiques & collectib~, ~I Perfect for shops, dealers, ~. auctions, booksellers, decorators, ~·refinishers, art galleries -develop your business with us! Our Antiques & Collectibles Special Section Deadlines on March 17th. Don't Miss Our! Call Markey (949) 574-4246 STARTING ANEW BUSINESS?? • • • • • • • • • • • T'1~ U,.•I Deµrtmntt ,,, 1/,, D111I] p;41, u pkd~ tP ,,,,,, '"'" • "nu tn 'lft' nou1 1111111'4/lk 10 11tv1 #lttmuun \r/ ll 1U lfO&I. £4RCH 1/N 1111.,,,,,fo, )#11 Ill IHI C'trrl ~Mrl'• 1111/ la~ .JH tk 11m' '"'' tlir rrrp ID IM C111m llatd#,,. .4'41t111 AIV 7'hnt. -f t'OMM, "far 1/N searrh ,, romplnttl "~ will fiu JO"' forr110"1 "'"""° NI~ '"'"lfMf' """' iJw Co1111f] ~ pt1'1uh fll<t • Wttlt for fot1r Wttlo"' 1Wft11ml ~ iAJI! 11.J tlNn Jik ~"' 1n10/ ef p11'111 ,,,.,.,. ""1h 1ht C•111.11~ Clnt. PINM ''°I l>-J,. fik_ l'"'' fiui,...u "'°'"'" 1111~1 •1 tk [>,,,ii) PilM. 330 M 84) 'Si, c.,,., Mn.. lf.1'" """""'•pi,. ,W. rMI"' "' (919) 611-4321 irJ w t1.•1U ,,...~"'"'"I""""" for ,r• ,. IMJI, ''"' 1~~ '°1 ,,.,,u lfJH "1HU1Mw •"J.farrbn' ~Ji/iMw Nll"' •N .,.,.11,;JJ Ii,~.._ tlM # llWSI ,.., c..J w "'1!1'',.,. .... ..., . • ~ I . From art classes to trips abroad, check out your local senior cent From classes, clubs and health screenings in an energetic social setting, to lively day and extended trips, you can learn a new skiU,' discover a new hobby, or join in the fun of a recreational accivity at you( local senior center. processing, astrology, Bible srudy, creative writing and regional geography. Day Trips: . • Fri., March 3 J -Sant.a Barbara Orchid Show. Visir the show and orchid growers ranch. Lunch included, $42. Costa Mesa Senior Center 695 W. 19th St. Costa Mesa. a 92627 . ph.: (949) 645-2356 fax: (949) 645-4804 Activitia: . • Wed., Apri~ 19 • Ceny Center Museum. Lunch on your own, $15. • Wed., May 17 • Bell Gardens, Tcmccub. Meet Glen Bell oITaco BeU and take a train ride around the gardens, Purchase seasonal produce. Lunch included, $38. Gambling Trips: Am & crafts, scrapbook making, cards, bingo, cooking, line dancing, beginning cap dance, balance and mobility, French and Spanish, Tai Chi and yoga. •Tue., March 28 -Viejas Indian Casino. $5 Ga$h back. Discount book, $10. • Thurs., April 13 -Sanca Anica Race Track:. Clubhouse seating, lunch and racing programs, $29. Personal Enrichment: • May 9. • 11 -River PaJms Laughlin. AARP Mature Driving Course -55 !ALIVE, introduction co computers, word One breakfast buffet, one buffet of choice and free $12 ticket to casino show, $78 ~raff ':EUer{y ':Enjoy Premier 'lJay Center ADULT DAY SE RVICES We fill your loved one's day with pleasurable activities and friendships while you take a break from careglving. Of Ol'••OC co•••• 'Visit our state-ef tlie-art center (714) 593·9630 A Hoag Health Partnership 9451 Indianapolis Ave. (Bushard & Indianapolis) We specialize In the care of persons with Alzheimer's disease or a related dementia. Hunt! on Beach, CA 92646 Don't change your lifestyle ... Enrich it! At Regents Point Retirement Community, you can continue to enjoy aJI the things you love about Orange County. Whether it's taking a class at UCI, sodallz.lng, or Just playing a splrlted game of bridge with friends, living at Regents Point allows you to continue dOing alfthese things and more! Regents Point often the freedom you desire and the independence you 6pect ror your retirement. Our continu ing care plan is suited to meet your varied needs. ca.u Regents Point at (800) 278-8898 today, and find out why our residents aren't changing their laves· they're enriching them. Regents ~vesii'dUkeroie.m-Moie Aboac., • t The ur.tY.Ie At JleSents POlnt: Potn t 1 voar Nn« •\ 'Addnoti -19191 Harvard Avenue Irvine, CA 92612-4670 (800) 278-8898 www.scph.com I I Otf.:----9tlt11t---.,Jlp._ ___ ,.. ptjcJM--~--~-----~------.......... ~ ~) Nlme(s,,______, __ ~-----1 __ ..., _______ _ TK REP ~u Pt.int is--' .JtJ .,,,..,,. by Stn.tlNm C..bfa,,,;._ l'w1"1tm.,. H•-• ,,.,,__,,, ,,.,,fo,..1,.fit '"'l"J ""''"I~" U,,."lh f...WfJ m•WNnU "'1t11i1tfrlllU 1955. CWfo,,.,.su.~/,,nw IJ006J257 ~Mesa Verde~ R esidential Care Stated Cenified • 24-hour Assistance • Private Bedrooms & Bath w/Patios & IGtchencttc • Complete Activity Program • Medications Monitored I 661 Center St. Costa Mesa, CA 92627 By lkcm.ed nurses, clrliC'iow; meat .. , I rani,portatio11 to appoiutmctlls, adjoin Mei,a. Verde Couvruci.cr111 I loi!pital 949-548-107 4 Enjoy a Spa.ciou Suite, Sumptuous Dining, Entert&.inment, Bingo, Craft., BiJliard1, Beauty SaJon, Tran1portation to Doctor, Shopping, Fun Trips, Friendly Caring People. Fro,.; $1,495/Mo. 2283 Fairview at Wileon Cotta Meta Minimum age 58 f"or more information pl~calla 9-49/646-QOO or Faz ~J646..7G8 dbl.; $93 sgl. I • October 6 • New England Back Roads. Eight days. Arrive in Boston; visit Theater: · fumous landmarks, $1449 dbl.; $1899, sgl. • Sun., March 5 -Victor Borge Matinee • November. 2 · Netherlands, Belgium at Cerritos Center for che Performing and Paris, 11 days, $2485 dbl.; $3385, sgl. Ans. 1icketsln:ansportation, $65. The Travel Desk is open Mondays - •Thurs., April 6-Matinee Candlelight Thursdays from 9 a.m. co 3 p.m.; Friday Pavilion Dinner Theater to sec GREASE. from 9 a.m. -noon. Call (949) 64S.1032. Includes lunch, $63. •Thurs., May 4 -Palm Springs Follies. Lunch on your own, $55. Mini Trips: • October 23 -Arizona's Karchner Caverns. Four days, $399 dbl.; $499 sgl. Extended Trips: ,, •April 13 -Washington DC at Cherry Blossom Time. Visit the historical sites, $1299. dbl.; $1599, sgl: • May I -The French Riviera, Provence, Monaco and Italy. Nine days in Nice at one hotel. AlJ breakfasts; mdse dinners. $2,074 dbl.; $2524, sgl. Center Servius: Case Management, Counseling, Emergency Funds Assistance, Diabetic Outreach Program for Latino Seniors, Job Opportunities. HICAP, Home Repair Services. lnfonnation!Referral, Legal Counseling. Medical Equipment Loan Program, Resource Direc.tories, Shared Housing Program and weekly social calls to homebound seniors. 1 lcalth Screening: Preventive Haith Care for rhe Aging, Cheryl Lowes, R. VN., l~H.N., (949) 645- 2356. Offers basic hcaJth screening for &,.,,;ng Seniors Since 1977 PER H. TRESLER, LAWYER .•Wills •Trusts co avoid probate & minimize taxes • Durable powers of anorney including for heaJth care • Minimizing loss of as.secs due co medica.I expenses •Probates and conservatorships (949) 640_5969 • Rcprcscnm:ioo of heirs 2 12 1 E. CoastH~. #280, CDM 350 West Bay Street Costa Mesa, CA 92627 Tel: (949) 631·2212 Fax: (949) 631·2270 Creek Care,1nc. • An enriching environment with pets, children and gardens • Full·lune RN and 24-hour hCCN.Cd nur..ing with upcrt1~ in chronic di)Ca.~ management • MaMcr.. level ociaJ worker and support groups • Ho.,ptce service' for cnd-of·lifo care •Specially trained, compa.,sionate staff Residential Care fo r the Elderly • 24 hour proressionaJ and responsf\:e staff •Regirll!red nurw on call 2+ hows • Secure, wwn, home·lll.e 5'ttlng • Outside iCCtSS to all bedroom~ •Outside access to all bedrooms• Dally laundry and houst1.Cfpln11 •Assistance with medkations •Daily Assistance with bathing. grooming. dressing, tolJettng, and other personal needs • Regular observatlon of ~yslal, mental, emotional and sociaJ functioning• Planned actlv1tles Protective support for wandering • Alz.heamer's/di.>mentla support • 3 nutrillou$. well balanced mears •Snacks and beverages as d~lred • Spedal diets and special diet observation •ASK US -we will attempt to meet any special net<! or de1ire Unique Hoine Style Living Why pay more ... Uytq Traat $399• DITorce $289• Betate Pl•nntn1• Incorporatlon/U£ $399• /$439• Support and Vlattatlon llod.Ulcatlon $299• Wllla $29.95• Bankruptcy $199• Immteratlone $799• Buy a: Sell Alfeemente Probate Sentcee• /P'orrJY And more ... chose over the age of 60, including health history, blood pressure, height/wei~t, . . . . . ' v1s1on screening. urine screening, hemoglobin and blood sugar cescing, colo- reaal scm:ning, hearing testing, nutricion! medical counseling and breast self. examination. ' . • Wednesdays, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. •Every other Tuesday, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m! • 2nd and 4th Friday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. · ' I Suppon Groups: AA Men's Support, Arthritis Support, Caregiver Suppon/Al~heimer's and Parkinson's, Diabetes Support, Grief Recovery and Widow/Widowers Suppon. Center Traruf>ortation: •Medical Van, (949) 645-2356, ext. 19 •Service Van (949) 645-2356, ext. 23 Senior Meals/Services: Center Lunch, Weekend Meals and Home Delivered meaJs available. 1 1 Coastline College Classes 1 • Lift Your SJ.)lrlts with • , Strength Training Join instructor Sally Bartlett at ' OASIS on Tueday and Thursdaf1 from 8:30 • 9:30 a.m. for this newt strength training class. Participants will provide their own weights; Instructor will tell you 1 what to purchase during the first, class. Using hand-held and ankle ·weights, increase bone dens:v,• decrease body fat and help ' prevent obesity. , • • Physical Fitness For·0 .. Seniors West Newport Community Center 883 W. 15th St., Newport Beach Held in the gym on Tuesdays and Thursdays, 8 to 9 a.m. through June 8. For more Information, call Friends of OASIS, (949) 644-3244. ARMSTRONG FAMILY MALLOY -MITTE!tf Jewish Community Center of Orange .~ounty 25Q E. Baker Si .. Slc. C CoSu Mesa, CA 92626 ph.: (71"4) 755-0340 •fax: (714) 755-0370 Clu!M: • JCC Rwsaan Club will meet on Sunday, March 19. The monthly Sunday ge<-together features :r lecture, emert.11nmcnt ~d food. Cooiputcr lnsuuction: JCC' Ruch M. Kahn Center will soon ofter computer cl;mcs. Computer B;ic.i~ will be offered in April. CaJJ Donna Van Slyke at (7 14) 755·0340. Continuing Programs: • Oascu.won with Da\e Croner -Lively Monday d1 cu'"on group wuh Groner prcscnung readings from San Lcvin\on \ worb. I I a.m. and conurtue' aher lunc:h. • Car<h and Game!> -Poker Pal\ m1;~c Mondays from 11 .i.m. to 3.30 pm. M.1h Jongg mecu Mond.ty\ and Thur..dilY' from 11 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. I un<.h av:iil.;ihll' for garners ar $4 per person. , • Yiddish Hour Gcf\on Jcru' fHl~enc' YiddUh stories and song.\ on the \e~ond Thursd:ly of the monch. • Arrhritics Can Eterci.se -A reprcscncafive of lhc Archriti~ Pound11tion leads easy P.A.C.E. exercises (People with Arthrius Cm f11crci.)(l) on Thul')(fa)'lt, I 0:30 to 11 :30 a.m. Health Programs/Nutrition: • Hcalt'hy Eating -LcMn ho\v co be a healthy cater on Thursday. march 16 al a prcscnration sponsored by UCI MediQI Center. •The Nu~ is in • On March 16, nul')C Marilyn Geller will conduce free hcahh and fltnt:S$ ~ .. recnings by appointment for 111iliv1du<tls '1£t.' 60 anJ over. Screening exams include: blood prc'-\UrC', vision, urine and 1.olo·rc:craJ \\t:rC'cning~. plu> hcm~lobin. blood mg.u and hearing Int~ Numtional counM:hng and in,truction an breast ~If <Xan11nJt1on .i~ailahlc .• crl'Cning1 and health lt-ccun·~ on <,c~o11d fhur-.chy of every month · ·1 he Senior SenKC.\ Pro~um offer• kosher mt"jh, upponuni1 ics for M.)C..lal intcr.iciion .1nJ 'p.:ual programming. Houn: 9 a.ni. to 2 p m.. Mond.1y through Thur«lay, $4 per p<:r,on for •enior~. Ta' l lclp: I ht jl .< has been nameJ an offic.i;il VJ l'A (Volumttr' Income Tax Assistance) 'itc AssistM)C:C is ava..ilable by al?poimment only. CaJI Bc:uy Benowirz. (714) 755-0340, ext. 2(,0, . Pa.uover ObKrva.ntts: • Purim Progral)'l, Monday, Much 20 by R:ibba Moshe Engel and studcncs from the Hebrew Academv. • Punm P.irty. Thursday, March 21 fc:atunng pianM Srclla Voldrnan. d1rtttor of Kcvnotcs Music School in Tu~11n. ~ Purim Seder, Thur-.hy, Apnl 13 ~er I unchron held at noon ar the Ruth Kahn CAncer, $8. 50 per pcr\on. Rc<.crv:iuons a must; advan1.e paymtm. (714) 7 55-0340, ext. 260. Worbhopi: Bridgmg rFit L;l·nc:r.auon' A Worhhop for C.r.indpar.:nh and their (Jrmdchddrcn. Sunday, Mart..h 12 from 9:30 rop 4:30 p.m. - R:ibbi Alttr 1~ncnb.1um create\ a special ~pace that bridges the gener.uions umig mn~~ and Hon~ Re\crvauons mu\t ~made by Wednt'~day, March 8 JCC member~ (gr.rnclparclll/dul<l). $40; non-member~ (grandparcnch.h1ld), S'\2. need new headline for OASIS Center rrom cl:isst"S, dub\ ;ind health ~recninb" in an energetic soci~ ~rting. 10 li~cly Jay and extended trip), learn a new ~kill, J1\Co~er a new hobby, or join 111 lhc fun of a recreational :ict1vicy at 1hc~e IOC41 M'nior ccocers. Friends of OASIS 800 Marguerite <;orona dd Mar, CA 92625 ph.: (949) 644-3244 Activitica/Classu: CAram1c~; Bridge, ( r1. .. 1ht W1i11ng; Chinese brush paintin~. la111lwap<' p.11n11ng, watercolor; sing alon~. b.1l.111u· .ind °'"hilicy retraining; ballroom J.incang. chair l x1.·1l i": harha yoga; healthy c.iung: \lfl'nltd1 minin~ line dancing; Tai Chi ( h1h; 1oc.il lwdy conditioning and warer acrob11., and \ailing. Pcnooal Enrichment. A.ARP Mature: Driving Cl)Urw. ritplore rhe World, foreign polity Jis1;us~1on , memory enhancement, photo bb, PC compyter d:l! ~~ include lnrernct b.ma. Microsoft Word,. Excel for Wmdow; MAC buics a.nd opcr:mons; life h~tory, world gc:ograph)t Day Trips: • M.uch 8 -Norton imon M~l'um. Enjoy lunch on your own an Old Town Pasadena, S22. • M.uch 22 • P.ilm Sprangs Follac), $77. • March 28 • Pl-chanp Enlcn.iinmc:nt Center in Temecub. lnduJa tr.tn )port:uion, buffet lunch. free gift.~ ;ind muvcnirs. and free $5 video. • March 30 -Lcgoland. No host lunch. $43. . •Apri l 6 • Jap.in~ fcJ~. a guided mur of rhc Buddhiit Temple an Li Puc:mc:. Include' lunch at Bc:nih.rn.i's and .& visit co 1hc HUNTINGTON VILLAO I! Quality Apartments For Active Seniors 62+ 1 & 2 Bedrooms l'lus Private Share Units • Nnt to a shopploa ttnter, m1rkets, banks and 99f tore •Pool and pa • Rttttatlon center • Frtt stor1ae • Handicapped units • Rent lgdydcs all yt!IUJ Ccs:s • ~urlty ptcd • Tran portatlon nearby • Planned actl\'ltJes • Open dally/Walk·lns welcome 8()0.995.3993 or 714-840·1203 16171 Springdale St. Huntington Beach Opentod by Silver lnvcatmcntJ JIO 8S8-89<XI PAX 310-llSll·ROOI 111 I > I r 111, I• 1 , ( 11, Worlma.n ;ind fl·mple Family Homc~l1;JJ, ~39 •April I l -Cttl,bad flower f ields, dcx:enr tour. 1'u hmt lunch .ind a )!Op a1 Hadley's, )l(> • April I h \how Mc the Mont')". a guidcJ iour of th• federal Rc-.cnc in lo Aoide1 "1th lunLh .. t faa~ frtn-.h rtMauranc; af1t'rnoon guidl-d lour of the Wclh Farso •foiory Mu~um Lunch included. $18. • Apnl 26 • San Lua) RL')' Oown~ horoc 1nining tac~aty with a 1our anJ lunch at ahc S~n Lub Rey Counlry Club In 1hc oilic1110011 liisit the rC\ton:d ongrnal R:indm lru.tivmc'inJudmg the cllapd. $47 l..xten dl-d Tdps: • MJr1.h ·14-26 -Th:11land, SingJporc & I long Kong. Last minute tour sct·up for $I S91J dbl.; ~ingle. add $899. • May 14-J6 • L:iughlin/Goldcn Nui;get. Nine day~ in Nau .it one: hotel S70 pip Jbl.; $85, sngl. • May 12·2 I • Mackinac lsbnd & lrn:.ll Lakes. Sray at the world-f.1mo1U Grand Hotel and 1<1sit Chiugo. Green Bay, W1SOOnsm, Mackinac lsl.md. Mich., I folJand, Dearborn and more, SlO"'•I dbl.: S.2679, sngl. (home: pat.k up). • lune 4-9 -Gr.md Canyon/Ariwna, six d.1, ~ 'iii99 pip dbl.; SI, 120. sngl. • California Redwood~. incTudc:s Skunk Train to Fo rt Br.agg, tour through the Rcd·M"xf Nuional Park, Lassen Nauonal (>.tr~, Reno, Pondl·roj.,t !Unch. ·-29 pip dhl , S1Wl. ~ngl. • ~ln I r:inCl'CO, Napa and Sonoma ;iboard Amtrak tor Dly I includes breakfast, wine 1.1\1111g lund1 .md dinner prior ro amvaJ in 0 .1kl1nJ w1ch a \la} al the Waterfront Pl.u..i; Day 2 IUur S:an J'rin<.IM:O; Day 3 Sononu \X me ( oumry ;.i.nd V.tllejo with D:iy 4 111 thl Wrnc ( oumry. )679 pip dbl.; $899. pip \ngl. Upcoming 1rip: • Nm 21-26 -Missis.sippi Queen for I'hanlugivrng trip. Free flight if dcposac i~ . made by May 15. . Travel Office hours arc Mondays chrough Thund:lys from 9 a.m. ro 2 p.m CaJJ (949) 644-3244 for rcsc:n-ations. Human/Suppon Services: MILESTONE HEALTH CARE CENTER Milestone Heelth QinJ c;.,. IS• fu(1y /ioeftMd, 137-bed sklled nursmg fM:il:ty conven,ientty located ,,.., wveral prenwr 0rwige County medK;aJ centers. . Ow~ lndudl: • Long and Short Term Aehabitital!on • Licensed Social WOttler ProYldlng • 24 hour RN, LVN Nursitig Care Couociling ~ICM for Residents and Family • Hospice Setvm • ReCreelional and Social ActMlie$ • CustodiallResprte Serv1cea • Excellent Nutritional Care · Medicare, MedlCal. pnvate insU<ance and self-payment are 811 accepted methods of payment Inquiries and adm.ss1ons can be made 24 hours a ~~ days a week Please contact lhe Admllliona Director et (949) 631.-4282 tor 1 tow llUllllll'f· A New Direction In Lo~ Term Health care 2570 Newport Boule~ard • C~ U.... C.llfomfa t2127(t4t) ta1-4212 •Fu (949) 631-8681 ~~ THE JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTER OF 0RANCiE COUNTY senior Services Department Programs for Active Adults 55+ Stimulating programs In a warm and friendly Jewish environment Educational and cultural programing Includes lectures. discussion groups. day trips and entertainment. Other programs include health arid fitness. cards and games. and computer classes. Hot lunch served. Two locations: THE RUTH M. KAHN CENTER Jewish community center 250 East Baker street Costa Mesa. CA 92626 714/755-0340 THE EZRA CENTER 1770 w. Cerritos Anaheim, CA 92804 714/776-1103 Friday, February 2s, 2000 Arr Helpful Phone Numbers JGC Prime lime Activities for Acbve Adults 55+ JCC Ruth M. Kahn Center, (714) 755-0340 Adult Services Coordinator, Donna Van Slyke, (7 14) 755-0340, ext. 259 Day trips, Overseas tnps, Hazel Dyer (714) 755-0340, ext 262 Senior Services Programs, Betty Benowitz, (7 14) 755-0340, ext. 260 Vt1 ~~~~ ~~;p~H?r~~Ye1!:c~~~ E. · ' Newport Beach Lifestyle Affordable Prices!! • A bicycle ride to Balboa Fun Zone! •Clo e to restaurants and theaters! For your Pleasure ... 2 Clubhouses, 2 Pools, 2 Spas, fitness Center, Private Beach Marina, and Much More! RESALES FROM $35,000 NEW SILVERCRESTS FROM $59,000. AMENITIES INCLUDE MARINE & RV STORAGE ' I Call Jack (949) 723-4045 l ... --I' Cbu TRY Gt 'B Cb rv1\LESCE1~T Jfo s PJTAL . .Ne. ('o wwy C'lub Conralescent.f lospttal, Inc., a m ode rn. prirau, skilled m ffsingf acilil.LJ i.~ l0<·at((/ be hind tile · <Ulla. Ina Cmmtry ('/uh in the • \( H'f>Ort Bcarh Bark Bay anafour mi/l.c.; fnnuJ loag '\I< nwria{flospital Prrsbytorian -~mall !;4 IH'Clfiu:ilttJJ.familJJ ou nni mu/ 01><:mtrrl sinro 19?:;J. ~ittgl' cmcl duul>ln IX!d O<'<'U/XJ.tlnJ. u·ith l>atliroom cmci 11IKJW'er in 1 rmy room. 'Bmutiful swrowulirags., </llil'I, /><'<lrrfut e.ttdk>rtt ft)()t/, /uf.!11 3tc![f mtio .• '\hon <mcl /oug I• m1111e1<ws. 1\ , mr committed to JJmtfrlirigjim f>f'nicmal mro '4'lth ~w.. di r11itLJ and tTIS/>«:t m a l1w11 '-l1k1 utnto8f>l1ern :.?O U>2 santd nn Avt·nuc Sant. Ana Height , Ct\ 92707 (714) 549-3061 Col.for a tour andlVit ua or1 dw Wlb • , ................... ,,., .......... • I Al8 Friday, February 25, 2000 llw··, 1111111l•·•11ll111··~ 11r1• -11t.j1·11 10 1·h1111r•· "11lt11111 1j11l11 •. I lw 1111ltl1-lll'r 11'"4'1"\1'' Ill!' 11;.1h1 111 n ·11·11r. r• r·l,1•-ih rn I••' 11r ny•'I .111\ d,1-.ilwd 111h1·rt1•1·1111•111 Plr-11 .... • 11•111111 1111i' •HHr 111111 Hiit\ lw i11 \11111 1 111,,ifir·d 1111 1111i1wtl111td~. 'I lu· 1>.111~ P1l111 111'1'1·111• .1111 liHJ.rlih 1111 .111\ l'fllll i11111111d\4'lli•1•t111•111 lnr "ltid111 111.1\ lw 11··pott-tl1f1 1·\11·1'1 1111 tfi1 f'll•l 11(i'J11 •f',111' ;t• lll11lh 11< f'llf'H'tl fl\ tlll' 1·1 101, ( 1nli11",11111111\ Ir• jtllrnH.f 1111 ilw fii •I i11•1•t111111 Monda) ................. friday 5:00pm Tuesday .............. Monday 5:00pm Wt-dni> day ......... Tuesday 5:00pm By Fu ByPhone By MaWln Person: Hours Thursday ....... Wedne"<lay 5:00pm (<J-t1>} ti:H h·11l-t I'~ ""'II• 111•~ \Ullf 11.11111 11•1 t•IMit 1111111l•r 11t•l .. 1•ll 1 111\1111 lim L 1111h .i J'fK • 'I''"'" •H11) 11.+:!-.»11 .,H :\:IO \\ , ... , U1" ~t 1 l'l'l ( .11•ill \IN1 ( ~ \ C):.!1127 I r•lt plirn w ll;:i0.1111-.i :OOp111 \l1~1•l.1\-I 1111.1\ Friday ............... Thursday S:OOpm . ~ \\ ul~-111 II .IOi1111-.) IHlp111 . . \1 \,,.I""' llh•I .. \ ll 11 ,, \l1~1·I 1\ I rul.1\ . atunJay ............... Friday 5:00pm Index 1 ·IS llO·i•• 420 470. 471 • tff. 697 101 • 216 G} EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY I 1' ~ I l:~::s!~~! . :~!' . ·~ -... w~. ,, ..... _!!"!""'~............... CM SAT 8:$0.NOOH Ylll\1111 Plano Studio U1 • ______ ,, S1reet 28dm\ I 58a1tl, new WID. FP, ctamallc galld Peffact Newpol1 Coast Loe *OPEN SAT 12-3 * 28r, 2Wlla, STCUFF 07 WALNUT PLACE Excelenl tON & QUelttv, • SHOE STORY , carpet i*nt stove etc 9l'CIY On Ille bus.11ineu on edge o1 C<IM. AoofOl< 602 AVOCADO 1rt1, garage, frlo, W/O, HouHWUH, cloth111, ~ malOlingbench Pl1c4id A lJpaQle c ... .,. '-' Cm Of COSTA MESA $1095/Mo No p11s' 1&es center Periee1 Newpo11 10rnln ltom JOhn WaY,.. .... '8r 2B1 S270CVmo. S1650imo l*I• f month bookl, 1oy1, vldeor., to eel $2250 714-'27-otOO woroeos Shoe BoullM,1& An,,,. Hlal1tivtltls ... i.1•1t SPECIAL Irvine Ave ff, Call Olml~ Coast LocallOtl From AlrporVtrvlnl Spectrum 81 .... 28r 181 $1175/mo. Hc:Unty dep 714-tls-t120 apoltln99oods, lum 1 NOW HIRING FTIPT 1: -.....11tvtlltdlt"tf't4 Agt.94f.72M422Elt203 $1330 1-8118-279~51 73 Fwy From $1565 •STUDIO SnS/mo. iij 'Cjn 3br 251>1 ONn RRST GREAT SALE Of 1 •IERCHAla.1 SALESPOS.Mon-Satd 11111t11 "'"""Mi ti 1•" FIN AN CI N Q ~!~ ~~;.~· 1.ocfp _1·::;888-;;;::;;21;:;~~;;;;;:5::;1 ;;;::;;;:;;:;;;;;; ___ ... _t-_72_3-'_5_1_35 __ 1 Twnnme, guard gated tum. MtLLENNIUMf furniture. WMTIO 5 30 Sun 9 »1 ~ ... • .., .... , Wiik• •••1111 Miit•• ,,.,,_, ""w""'' ....,_. ,. 3 car gll, exec housing many househOld ttems, • • P1eMe Call M~S.b .. rt''"'"" ... ,,,. .. ,,"'· 800 290 1995 Best Value In Town on edgl o1 CdM Applox 1 ,. ______ .. 1 , S4250 Catt lor 1ppt clothes. Weda;;,~d . COAST OOIH HEEDS (cwety upb9IC ,..... thlilllllt1 ., 11m1at11llt1 --1 Br $750 IOdudes frfg 10n*I trom John Wtqrte 1IO HOl2Q=_,. t4f.29~30 Ollnll & ocher oc OLD COIHSt Gold dYer Sch ConaUlllnt Co. iliic}i ••m .. rn1 ulef. 1tlltlt1. X500 2Br $850 quiet, like new Alrpof1/lrvlne Spectrum I& 26f 2bl, wtry c:Jeii1/Cute Items Excelenl cond · ' ' WPS 1/phool All! c.t'ait .... ..,..,.1~'*""" Greattenants &localionl 73 F"Y From $1585 v1111lltd <*Is. W/D b.kup, ru1y 501 Plav• (VISll del jeweliy. watchec, ~. lllef2pm MHICMl}l12 aa1r-1 t1lt•• . ., .. llttallu Call 94t-5-484492 1-888·219-4451 2 car gw, waNt to aandl Oro & Vlita Parada Easl· collcllblel 949-642•94'7 MAIL OROERPlRRJN It •••t 11r 1tc• ,i11t11oc1, Open Sat & Sun/3020 JeYI • 12500/Mo. 28r 181 mt !!F~Slde!"'!""'!Lr~g-3'!!'!8r!""'!"2.'!!'!58!"'a-c;om._,I S14751mo. 94M73·7IOO WI) NS Sal 2126 8-1pm TOP Ui/RECOAOSI T W llallalleltt 4•u11M111Clel ' Mew, ..... VF~'""~er t~ EASTSfDE. Large 18' 18a ~POOT 2'erSLE1.~nA_Y ~~~ ::·~lum.lndry .. garup, =remodel,jlcll\b'FPln BIG CANYON OdOt•220°VliP1ilmio Jau A & e. Soul, Rock.~~ °t .. ~ I.I' .l.l••••r wllt •ti '•• v--48r 1....,.. ...... .._ ... 2 " ...,.. .......,....., "·. 2c ""1111 •·• ""'8 "'"0 ....... """E S"T '"2:00 9lC 50'a & llO'a 1 ..... ....:.7112 • • SnS,000 9-313-0664 ..,.,. up5tairs. """'· walk10 View $2250r'Mo Avt 3/1 lenn, I'll!! · S1esMno ·s:.~~ un "'"''"" w.-W::: Q';,Wn atze L MIKE 949-645-7505 ......,....,_ """'911 tm,1 .. , thtfltSI Suc:ceu Ptopeitin closet$, carport gas pwd. 413 VII Lido Soud. PINN Wei loc 4Br 38a. tnmed a...:;;·i~tio.1 ........ ._ ~NANNY ~ 1111ll1t1111lnlttt•llkllltlt nopea,S87511"no•S4ICUlfly Call 10.1173•1213 or 11·::1:rtl EASTSIOE28r1Blduplex, ocx:upency, Jdrll cond, lrg ,,_F --.... , I Pl<Mdl~IChocil •lttlllff" l't I•• hf 1tHt11 132 Llftl•~--i MMSo.3735 IMM7s.3551• huge yard, pee o1c 280 e. yr0. 1 yeer lea..-S450MnO clothu, etc. 474 WORK m lor a.yw old P!Ctl of tt• '"••r 111t1t11t• tut 111 """~ 11111 St. Tenenl wll lhow 949-723-09-40 or NIW'POf1 Bach Sat. only WANTED from IChool cook dirV* fwtlll•t• th11ll11f I• 11111 .; ...... FOASM.E I 11 I UR S1295hno94H73-3588 949·~ hm-Spm.Fumrture,CllMd occaslonatiy. and · r'ull '""'"" 1" ntll•"• " " NEWPORT BEACH 132 APT8 133 APTS ,.------•I Spaclou~dO ~ ruos. plcMes, nw· erraods Houta 11'1l111Y ....i '""''""' '"" 1"""' . HEWPORf BEACH NPf'MRT COAST 11> eom1~ 2er J BI i 1·~-1 llp, poo1. Vlf'I pnva1e & rors. 11n11ns g1assware, 10' :ipm.epm OYeml!til cali ,1a1a ti thctlmlu11,.., e1• 1111D * Bffulllul W•• Front _ • • ·r p:; ., . HouM smal '{!d, whlafd. QIMI pellt Ike ae11r1g alla stor system, anliques, HOUSEMAN ""9rll weekends dumg ltlt-1111 •• I'" m HM rtt Owner Is oot ol tfl8 coontryl 2Br 181 L-End Unit, ~ 1Br w...:.,ate n•llW ~wood s~~l-~ ~ um $149Stmo tot-144-5957 tables, chairs, · lacll MANAGER monlh Own car, lanae, clllHlJO •I •ti 3'8t 1 Agen1 941>-723-8120 ' • "'" ... -_-'11 H 5 • • "'111111 gat... .,.. ...,75-4912 183 ~ 0 311 Hallford Or. corner pus bflqlg1ound checll & "' W111tl1t1t1, DC 1111 '"'" The price wll amaze youl 1 pie 1~,, -..... pool ID FP·,....·~ .,...lie_,,..., _, •u . • · ..,_ 'YI'• 11AQ1 ~ deslQner ctolhe$ sz 2_. insurance Must be 81>11 to 1SR stubiO ga1ed ()()(Ml, ~~~Oo~ Pfa~. :,(er °';,,~':ct 00:1.:: 48i 2L teooaq fi new 3Br 2B1 Landmark Adult. . ) , FOR R8fT JlllTlb<>1"'81son code 1492 Manage luge OMV report Good pey 1 1. HOUSE• I lie'# liJCtUres. walk In ctoset. c 0 1 d we 11 s 1 n 11 er Coaat Location From = v~'·2~io bchdlw, HEW cerpet, paint, wld, NEWPORT COAST to enter eattte or home. Costa Mesa Cati Jeeo vacant, recessed Ughbng In Mt-733-60H. Sl330, l-888·279-445I n/pelS S299S 9'H73-8157 stove, dlw & tile S160Mno. SGC1 bamboo sota set $t95 Experienced In Shaw 714)444-1500, klldlon, St 15,000 Ownert ,______ must be 55t 949-769·1910 SUMM 3bl 2 5ba beautdut Gas frplc glo logs S9S, multiple duties, orage A •V.A.• Bkr 949-25().4525 ru ~1 ~ I J I J I I twmme tlo ra<I sec Makfta dllll $145, 16 pc cooking •nd Mlnlgef. 2 Days per • =·~~~~ lil!r1:,1:M:"ft:::~:fAtHJ==H=::11w=="°"'==· =·==~==t=~==Ol=S·=· :::11 .. -,.-=-~---ie---i• o:i-:00 i ~~,3-C:~ ;: ;:;~~ =-~'"!i,'~:!'. ~~\.f~!f,t ! oeaan & bay vus '49ll.111 .-. .. iofrf-m I 11 I excellent Ref. illelVltMnatorlnllruc> I SO DOllt • SO MOYUIC FAil COUNSELING FRU UST Of 00>.ES AllQll ~ 949-212 2837 202 ROOMS 430 GENERAL 94H31-4934 tor podionl F'ax r~ • 714·2BS-3071 • ~ uoo ISLE OP£H DAILY FOR RENT FOR SALE ·alto pager a to 714·•. ,.11se. HUCWAREPOS 71 •·Sl•·HOO IAYSIOE VILUGE 224 VII lltlaca Chaming. • • • 949-6S3-3650 , $39,000 By Owner r-7 /' ft_ lmmtc 48r 3a.. Frplc. new BELLINI CRIB, Chest, RECEPTIONIST/ 1 OPEN SAT-SUN 11... JDe 0 onw fa vd~~o-e~ffir Mocel °"8n!)ng Table, Toy Bo•. 4 SALES ASST "7' 300 E Cout Hwy 7t -MANAGERS Slool Play Tlbte, Sofa. , i I ~ lnCI Otgllrll«P! mobrlellcJml 2bflbl.new-'T '" HION 1s u-.o Beaut 38r2Bl2Qrgar. s c Stioler,Playpen.MlnlCond C18 'Wlmf """Word lnCI ~ H•H•HHH•-•• "'=·~~s =ln:·=gr~ $~S4 :~ ~~y $95000 94H4$-0814 OPPORiUNl'M8 ~":.!cs~ Gtt VETERAN REAL ESTATE ! HOMES Of.!~~~== living In Luxury =.:i;.-=~-= ~in:~ , ... ~, .• ~.~ ... ; ~~:·~~=, • THE WEEK Hurry "'°'111as11 Elll & .wt ~ .,. uo()t$(£ Cllarmlng 2lif Slllattd on blllAdlAly flOlta&J Prlvale Golf ~. end. dO" lflillaje NM'( • : Taylor 2. 949-64N722 p • 24 Hour Go1od 281 home, 2cll = F~ ~= WO\.Ff TAHNINO BIOS ~~ :::;;.:: 10 ~e. lwdubc ' : Showcase : ~"!-'t?"'>"~..__. ~jrkpJ/lJI e. . . •Full w~ cone'--............... = :.~s.:..:112 Lobby/Dlrecl d11I TAN AT HOME now '*Er' phontlr,:rson ~i:*Jm1~ • Homes _,.,..,.. ""' 4""""'' ljl (/ ''""' ·~·v""""'-.,~ ...... :.. T-........... "'"'· rsonHIFrH HBO, SVYOIAECTANOSAVEI Sanla Ana Club · • • up, 28drm'• lower French II I d I ............ vwrn.............. SP "'-AID COMMERCIAIJHOME 20382 Newpof1 Ivel. r111v1 tlld/or ~ For Sale doors. premle< loc111ont unpara e e n • E""""nl one or 2 58a. greenblltlbey vii'# N ' .,....,.-ool ' URIS trom $199 00 s.nt1 AnWeotu ...... txper ~ SallMd FY• In Our Sat S75000Bltr949-723-44!M ""V" 12500/mo. 949.m.1.u.. .i.cuui. Guest 1.,,, -~,,,,,....,,,,...,,.....,....,,,.._ Real Estate iLUFFs8esrevvS211K Orange County IWobedfoomplons 949-2»6100(cel) ~c~..i.o,':'5om'ossc L:~~ •AT EASE• L H 28 OCEiNii'iiitlOf/Cliittna .. ,. "'"' Call 1·"""-711-01sA MENS STORE Supplement I v1ew rC:s~~ v1ew11 Remodeled hOUse. FlitQ«ll, college and _,. ..., FIShlon l$l8nd 11now11111ng ~=~'!~ ::s~ ;::~.~=~~~52sea Frcm'1 ,795k>'5,100 ::~;:u::se =~i~Vr~Er ~coall(antss'~T:=ME"•~ t•. ~ ~~==• Deadline ~ ~ '::'1 ~r~ 1 -8 7 7 -6 8 1 -7 38 7 j • Fitness tocihhes ~s1o111ce, 2.se1, ~ MOTOR INN -• ~ -Tuesday SPM dows. vtew deck. Belbel sty, ~·v,!50051311 1..!..._ 22n H.lf1)or Blvd I BACK BAY CAFE Al carpel & more! Marl! & Lou· e"'flf" aA.l--at eAn n.-~1, $2600tmo.· A • ·~ Phone 94M4~ J TEM TO • S.Vera. PM so... • '"ROSI. IOI 949.2711-5252 JCS v 1xiuN1u >U u1mrc11 • Steps to Foshron Island, Q81dener and spe ca.rell • Cooks Open House Newpatt Beach Open Sal/Sun 114. 1119 CdM 51v 4Br hse, c:abll, w HOUSFHOLD • Olthwllhlfa llat1nga Avl • Lido 1111nd B11u1y wonderful reslouronts, lMWll'd Ln t4t-57H552 o. tern 1>1ll'd, walk to bell. Hiring ntNt tor FT & • "39,000 • 36r 28thll. new 3Br 2.581 Llixury Int with no tmkg.~ $475/mo (II AHnQv'£S PT poel1lon5 AWf 1n ~:~~~~ ::-! ir.'a'fl::'a~ ~:i shopping, ond entertoinmenr ~·2~ ~~ ulls pd) 14•99a..229 ~ l::' .:0,, ~ SPM ·11":0c:~LUS &oiler 949-642-3850 1204 RENTALS I Cow:crmu:s Relourct Dept It Paya to °'*' sAr.suH 1-4 a•c I _ .. -8 1 TO SHARE PAOOIN~ ~ ee8:lti. ~ Advertise TWHHoME Bordetlng Big ~-~·~ ,_ IW'I PoTrERv IMt-729-3883 Eoe Cyn Golf Coune. 2·:b's JlllPORftlAClt P9nthOllN Condo Fumd In ~~:(at Ford~:=-~===========:-i•-' "~~~~~~~~~~~~;:;-;:;;::;;:' ;;;;;;;;;;;;~· JM "*111 llll• oee~ $CASH PAJD$ BOAT MECHANCI Real Estate ... Ud0~-1 ... -ROme---.-LOYtiY~ ~ VYe11~Jfmvna FAIRWAY APARTMENTS EF~£'aJ1~ ror =::>.~y. Section ~~= i:;/~ -:;f;.~~,...mu AT BIG CANYON H81lrg3bf2Blnrbch.P111. tnN~~~ch 1n ~~Miff• Call Today II 8111 ~ Rea110r$ I'..., ....,..,...._ GATED COMMUNITY BY f~HION ISLAND W/D, FP. di"'. t Avt Now 949.673.6223 COid Stone crwy ii LISA 94H7 Ill Bayftont c.ommu.nicy with private beach Beautiful trwe-lined stree1s end golf COUfM $625/Mo + llllaslfoep IMIQng lun. c.ounltf 11111'1, & marina. Wallt '° Balbo. h t.nd 1bop•. views. Enloy cwefrM living In your large ~~~or female WANTED ~-~~on' ac::':P~ RIVERA Min~ta ft.om Faahion laland. &tn-~BR apartment homel ,.._,, • ...,.. Balta I ... large ipanmcnu with -ct bu mini NMlt'of'I Fem to Shn: lrg ANTIQUES Great 1C>61 IMH6Hlllll : 949-57 4-4252 firept-and printc pnp. • 1Wo-Qr ~ lum Twrhnl els to Fllh llJ _ C01t1 MtN LniOf center • ANNE •Wah«/dtyorhookups Fwyt.~JM~lh. · aeeb•FICMlMMgt up10 • • Boat alipe available • • FlrepCace (wood A""•) PlltO. decks, pool, i-c.10f.C Older Style Fwnitllfe 32K yr, • PIT Secretary up • WILLEY Sorrv No Peu .... lilt• aurroundlnol S750r'mo PIANOS .. Collectibles to 151< yr c•t MM45..aol0 • • ·, • Allr conditioning + utilltes 9'9-64<1.esr • "-'-" • r._, - • NOW LEASING lBR/lBA •Wot w 'NP Pifli!i• ,111t9 iJtCh ·s. .. -·A.< .. •()l'.u'"'.,._ CUSTOMEll SERVICE • 949-574-4249 and 2BR/2BA wich den • 52,260 to $2.500 be, Wether/Dtylf. Stepa $$CASH PAID$$ W~oomtd, peraorlltlle, $199S.$2800 Ple ... ca11(949)644-0600 Q to Hnd~~\~rioc,"50flno wi.UY'£8T~TU ~·r·=;'~..:'.o 10I ~ 1·:1111 CHRIS K. EDWARDS ~BA!!'!'Y!'!!Fl'l~~....,~""'"'!!'Ferr;-, Sllet • Rentlle !fl 2'lt 2b1 I cat encl Tiwoughovt the Cout pa,1ctng, pool. dock option 200• Trnatllorlt Ct058d no pelt. Avail now. rve IOld Llnr ES111t HOINI S1800moyrty 94M13-0640 Condol. Condo Convri1'6, , I 1 Oldai. HoWI. FOledt>lulOI. 10I APT8 P1o'bt11, FBI Seizure• MIM!lll•• 11aa Serving Newport, CdM --H wp<>l1 COM! For E~ ' 11on11 Service ult 949-723 5001 Hom6'Cel Of Fn &1111• Proper119t Cilifmin9 2or 11orit 110uM. a$Om ~I.lits pkJt I blj~ l8r Ujlplr unli. 4CM "" M3S.OOO ~t 049 723-4494 ann Ir a llfM '" Shcnchtf1 AvliJ 311~ IOr I mot II S3,956'ptr morih c.. K LM1deay ti ~ 644 1llOO tor rnlo • octAN vu LOTMSE 28( 281 FP,dUi)lr,SOOfttwy! Donna F11Ton, Agent 949 278.Ql.45 cell •THE• SHORES APTS Short term Corporate Rental a Starting at $1095/MO. Furnlahed epts 1v1ll. 8 block• from the beach. 94~2611 Please call (949) 760-0919 rn-<1ie1 , ......... r.4c WO/t\~ c11tnt•1r1 1 _...!:~=~~~~~~~~~!:~~=!::!::!:Another§~~Ene5~11 Commun~5~e5: .... !!-~5!:'1 Coat. MUI IPI room ' • ·~·-." • customer svc & prOdUctlon Ir •tv111 ba, shire gar, "WI PA'f MOlll $ FAITlll" Flex hours Fax reaume rel· • One Y11r's f rH Rent! • f rte Grocertes for Ont Y11rt • fr11 Utillties for Ont Ytarf Who Wants to live like a millionaire? • AJlrtlltlf f .. tf fumtture tf Your cr.otctl • Twl IMtlt's frH lent! • Two lilCll Crliltrs or Mountain IHIH! • f rtt Wttkf1 lllld Strvict for Ont Ytarl • Ont ...... , f rH Rtltt! • A ltw Rtfrtttrater Ind •renvtl • IM Ye« PaMS to EllWlm l#D.....,._.I ....... ,,, "',,,,...,,,,. ............. ,,...,,,, .... Tll• countertops, ll1rdwocl·ltYlt noon, """1rld closet doon. 81111..._, t1elo111rn. clMtlll t• .. ,,..._ ... SltM c1111n11tty w/mort pools..,.., tHlll. _,..,~ bask,..., fltMa. Wiii& to l.wpcwt h1ell ...... & ........ lent JM car It llwl from S7• to $1251 Irvine Avenue at 16th, Newport Beien (Ill) 711-1111 $450+ dip. no amolltf «encta to 94t-676-4179 pe11. MM*t412 15EliON§TAA'f6AI :!26Y.~J: ::="',::,=~~~ prof melee. W.,,_'*"91 Sltl Clemente llld llW'le l500 • utll MM424'll We C*l WOik. good pay,~ ' Ml IPPliltlCll • ~ . Cell """'•M. ~ Tine M.__1351'1112 VW-Wll~ FLEX HOURI SO ST LOOkina IOI Ill Ind 1Cmg 1UTH c3A pron. p.,, '° --tmrt. ~ AUCTJ• N llder per dtem Quick um ....... II. Boob. E** I ITIJMI Pref ._AM. CA am big '5 •XJ>I MJ)Of1 .,..., , .. -···-'-''* ,.,. lo 140'442·7349 AMNMME Ulll Ail' -----.,..... ~·.. • 1" ' ' • 4. • ' ~' \ .. ~ ( ,. .. '. . ' . . Send '"""" and Salary hlltOfY to HOAHBLOWUI Cl'IUISEI ANO EVENTS 243t W COMt HWY t01 Hewpor1 8Nch, Cl t2tN AETAll HALLMAl'IK STORE In NPB, now htrl119 Aaal MIMfll' W/1'1.pw, aaltt, FIPT 94f.721.t085 .. • patly Pilot • e,_ .. ~'[ -~ 1 t~i -=--CHAR--:-S-GO-RE_N __________ _ INa.-=o'!J::. ~·~.· Ctwolllt .._., t.lht, wkh OMAR SHARIF . ._...,. .... t n.1200 -ASS. cmtlt leanectrte le; IOii ti' Wlft:=:J:.1 tt l~~~'g~~ffS .Md TANNAH HUISCH :::· .._ lllldl IOll'lt 1.f00.7f.COAIT TLC Grat buy II Acura Leatnd ''L" ·eo CAbil:LAC concouo 111 seeeo Obo 94 ... 723 5861 Wtttt 4dr, "Va; llJIO NC 295 Hp Nolhllf low .. JlKlN<I VOCK.HS ti new otlinttH. 10hp 1ttw ~ pwr. Pl i>ti. pw: miltl. sea ...... ttw , mo,, JolWOfl Ml COWf, Gllv CfUIM conttol, ~Im caa. (212804) S24,98t North South vulntrablc Suuth lkal\ Trtllar, Jlnl cond. 511,500 13711 ml, IM, 1-owntr. l'IWll NABERS oM. MHI0-2585 COOd Sl.800 Mt-723-tta (7U)S4CM100 't7 l'ur.uit 2270 c.nttt Biliw M3 't7 CADiCUC CONOUfl 'ii Conte* T·top. out11~~· I 1e113sei Loadtd 131 eoo :'1c:i. c:' :,*'~ VHF, Fun.r10687llsh indef. STEALING BMW ' (20912/3XV09joi $27,957 ~=r:w:1 r.e'sr.:r,o MM4S-5900 COAST CADILLAC 94H7:H695 BMW Z3 '97 1 ·IOC>-79-COAST Low M4es cXDILUc bEV1tLE' 'ii • rou nt In I I (6780231 S28.2•5 1..ow mies w1111o tan 1n1e11or bllll? ._.... ~ UM>0CQ ST~AUNG BMW y.e Nofhtar,•xtnt oond cen Nip you ttt MOOtwtQI 94M4S-5900 (2798251 s16.988 ._ on top wlUI ltif BMW 3ti ICA 191 NABERS ttunclal dlfflcultlt1, WANTED Pnvala boal Pp Low lllllPt, Topltu! (714)540-9100 "'""· hOlllH, In NB lof 65" pOWtf boe1 (B7~3) $28,700 CAOlllAC DEVILLE '97 111Wt vecaeJon and Xlnl rtr1 94M74-0404 STtRUNG BMW S'""""1 •71-IM-1454 Ext 315 Mk IOI Ma" 94 .......... ....,. V·8 Northstar, ""'"'e _. " _..,........., Blut, bliance ol Wiii .BMw 321 c6Nv.'t7 &e1u-(2832721 $11.988 all 642-5676. ~Metlllc!s~ (7r.t:~~oo Wl!:ST • 108 NORlJI • K74 I;) QJ94 0 93 • 865 3 O A 10 7 6 O JIU EAST •OJ Q i{8S32 0 Q65 • KJ91 • Q IU4 SOU'IH •A9(i S3l o Vuld O AKJ07l • A7 The bkld1n1r SOlTlll WE.\I NORTII f.AST •• ..... 2• ,_ •• ,_ PaM ,_ P t f d I ml 133,000 ...... "°'"°'°' el6iillc Sd'fi o;;111t '93 u a ew wor s eww32iiA '•7 l..etthef.54.284m11tt.ASs. L ......... , ""'·-• """'"1m11.cr.•"'.,""""S) Open1na lelld: Four uf <> r-to work for you. cv..,.: .. -"'""'$29.ggs a..,..,. m'LAST' ~UNG BMW COAST CAOllLAC Nu-.htre is 1 tuuch ut larceny ,,._~~...---=-----149-645-5900 1-too-n.<:OAST mllfe 1dm11ed thin in duplicate HERE 'S A GREAT B~3P2!lJ:,!7 ~~~.&fr.,~.:~~ bndie Ellpenencoo plJym will go .....,.. ..........,... .._, --""" .. ~ ..... to grnt lengths '" lleiirth or o~cr- (V461m 129.735 pet vMle~5493) $8.988 tmks When this hand was playe<l m WAY _TO GET ::~!tr.1: (J14)5~~~00 , 1 pa1revtnt, fwnp¥k' w-.Heachcd JI C\Cry !Ail'>lc Oi'lt' occl.11cr ~OfCd llll .iti.olutt tup hy ""'""'"I •II I 1 tr11.k•' AlnK>\I iJcnli~'1ll 1uc11on' 11 1111 the 111blcs led io 1ht ~p;i(lc aame Al M'V• cral, West, rclu..:Ulnt' 10 k::ad fr1~11 11 \Uil contain in& 1map1 .. '""'" ef~1cd 10 kid 1 low diamond l~\t pu• uJl the quten and declarer 1o1ooo w11h the aoe Wuh no brc;ik in tempo. dcchuer r~umed the two or diamonds' Perhaps West ~houkl ha"c 1c11l;1cJ th.it 11 cwtd nu1 co t to rise w11h the JtM:k on this 111ck llowevcr. Wc~t chose to play low, and dummy\ nine woo Dcclan:r drew lf!Jtnps tn 11o1oo round~. lhen d1~ardcd three clutl fru111 the table on the rc111:11nint1 d1a moillk. 'The ace of club!\ wu Cl! hcd ond a club WM.(llrfed in dummy, arid Sooth d111nrd the reM of the \fl(;k\ 0cchll'l'f15 pl~ m11h1 Ol\C CU\I a trick, hUl only if uumps 1o1ocre J-1 1r1J the defender who won tnd.. t1o1oo du ft. cd ru a club. A$ Iona a.\ uumps dtv1d cd evenly. hov.ever, declarer -.ould 1o1o;n any return, d11w trumps 1nJ di\· uud 1.hree clut.. on the J1a1oorl(h, anJ emerge wnh the same 12 1nck~ tti.lt were avarlablc a the cards lay on 1 more normal hne CLIENTS COMINf TO (V~::,w1Gray~995 =~~~~ I SlEAU..O BMW (2065<V•OBL.949) 527 968 YOUR DOOR B~~~:rs~97 COAST CADILLAC .. 1-------.,1 I 1 l ~K3 I I • Sport Paclu!ge i-too-79-COAST 695 CARftTRN&Ull~.! 895 CARSIJRUCK8N&--RM -,., llll (T354391 129 995 cAou.uc sts 'tS -11".. __ ,. ,. STEALING BMW. Spotleu diamond wNle, ~~~,.~ 'I ') ' I ' . -·- 1Ttie Dally Piiot Wiii PUOllSh a T~x • Flnanclal Directory to isstst our readers In finding a ta~ professional. Rea cning over t0.ooo nomes In a hlgn-ena ,,..net. you are sure to find RDnY wno need your nerp. 94M45·St00 cf1((206omen.,~~:aes1~.~iia CHEVROLET LUMINA '91 MERCEDES E300 'et - BMW 328 ISA '97 coAsi'CAolLLAC Euro, V-6, 40R, xlnt concli· Turbo diesel, RARElll WHAT HAPPENS Low Wes 1-•""-Jt-COAST lion, won't IAS1l 38 morcf1s remalnino 0 (T.,•11~ ...... ,,,.. ...._.. (25593'1) '4.988 S733/mo or pav.,ooTI Is, .,.. s .. AU""' B .. -w ,iNA./ ClbilUc STS 'M NABERS $43,800, 12,500 mi; Blac:k/I 949-645:'590'0 Sl>Olless white damond 11n-(714)540-9100 Tan loaded! 949-720-9796 BMW 328 ISA 'M ~~~~)· 8T,7~~ CHEVRotEf VAN '95 Met~t 240 dtl 'n Black/Tan co•sT c•"'L' •c ConverSIOn. tow 32K miles, Slandatd trem. very ctean.1 (136253) 532,980 " ""' ...,.T bubble tap, lealhel powei low mi. xii-. transpol181lonl STERLING BMW t..00-'n-COAS &Ola tied. lotded! $3000 PP MM4WS.-. 94'"'45-5900 (205603) $16.988 BMW s2i IA '97 CAO'SEVlll.E ·eo NABERS Mttc:.dff MO SL ·ea co Chlngefl Otey/gtey, 451( low mllet, (714)540-9100 ~ Petftc:tl (W19792) $38,400 1,<>wnet, good condition. CHEVY MO. t.TotJ cOK: ~. ve. 2 •• STEALING BMW TOOQIOBO 941-722.oaoe VERSIOH VAN '13. loedld ps, pb, P!'f, .n.hc:a11, 149-645-Stoo CAO STRETCH UMO • ., Viper Alarm. enli lock new trn. upg ~ BUICK COUPE ·n braktt~ 11tnt cond1t1on. bell.._ ... 1 •11,450 SOK mltn, must NII S7000 Him 773-251·9498 obo. .....M..10t1 If YOU DON'T . I ADVERTISE? Friday, February 25, 2000 TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE tO The(IW looMld lnoceMI 15 o.Mt1 ftOm9d • 86 C" IOurw.* 81 T '°'*91 111111 .. Aunls llOd unclel f'IP~ 70 WMf• Kattr>endll .. DOWN I lodge 2 'GoSh" 3 Fondw 4 MOfll'• pl&nel 5 Tum to bone ti Gounnet • mushroom 7 ZONI 8 Truck fronts 9 °"*' I 0 Fused IOCIOlhe! 11 NotlrMh r ~ T urlush olfocilf 13 "NeY9f Sly ~-· • 21 PlttS 23 Cleopltre •• 9 24 TWlngy 25 BIMbel's 8enlls 26 Cf\ll'llble away 'l7 Wllehdog 28 Summer cooklf "'l'VIOOl "11ZJ.I ~VfO 30 lr~llru~ 31 JI.JU f\Oll'll ~ 1.gt•I 3e Rub ooll 37 Alnunm.er 38 Hl'-••nd ... wt 43 LL 0 hoklel 44 ·-Ille "911 ~·~· -47 Mar~9d oown •!I Naval ol!IC* 50 Pinr:tt !>!Sy~ ltlldf!f S2 Of c-1 ... 53 ~•rm blittcl•'9$ SS RMl!y IUI., ?.e C11it(Jmll 1 - Woodt !19 K>lten t c:ry &1 T1k• 10 tou<I 62 R11eettl6 CWCUll 113 ,., G.aiot go& My Gal -" 12 ,, ; smart move on your part W(Nld be to take advantage of our 1ncredlt>1y low rates and place your ad witn us Only S3s. IP9f week If you sign up for the $500. 714-632-«138 SN00 512"27.atOl bRAtN SVC VAN F'li'f llUICi< REGAi. LS '98 CMEVA~ Cavllltf 'ti ICJiipped '92 Ae!osw in V·S, alloys. lelltler. ASS Low!TM bt1 of t1tc8lier4COOd SSOOM>BO pllOl rartal $ C811rd-lnl Wltr., new T 0 0 Ls Ind All I AN MAXIMA 'ti ~.deck. im.wz1020t) $111.995 COAST CADILLAC 1.eoo-n.co 1101HING. STUMPED? r)ttre 17 weeks. or a minimum 4· week run at $40 per week. .. , ryt·, -~ j ~ • f; ,.,. I ._, I ~·-• I ,;'• " ..• ;. •\.·. . ':-:,,\ -··~, ...... ,. ...... ~,-.·:t '.I, , I: . "f 4..... . ... l ·r· ' -._t"'"T f20854/51'2s11 1e.m (&7l304} · ueaa 11HJH062 COAST CADILLAC NABERS . ~O EXPl.OVEA '97 f-e<>0-7'-<:0AST (714)540-1100 Eddlt Bautr Edlllon, whit., lpOllt... $21,000 94M55-M49 BUICK AOAOMASTEA 'M Low 51k mHes, beige. leather, rare model, MtNTI (411348) SU,988 NABERS (714)540-9100 I locus on 'JOU' netdi from Word, to 'M•n, lo Wtb r•s~MUI. !O ftM own on hne bu1111tu 8lu BoLOUC 949.646.4192 c.& (wt ..... IMJf1 OMC SLEE~. Clb '97 Alloys. btO llnef, pwr seat/ wl~.cd (20892/Sl.1169951 $19.995 COAST CAOILLAC 1-t00-79-COAST PLUG IN lhtJl{Pllot • Call the ~lassifieds (949) 642·5678 3SO mat PUBLIC NOTICE The C.hf. Public: Utilllcu Com· mlsslOO REQUIRES thal al uwd house· hold goods movers pnnt lheif P U C Cal T nt.mbtf; limos and chauffers pnnt their T.C P. number In al adveiwnent.s. II you hlvt I qutS• lion •boUI thl •· tty oC 1 mover, limo °' cfl8uffer, can PUBLIC UTlLmES COMMISION 714-5~151 ---- - ---- Coll The Pilot Classifieds at 64 2·56 7 8 to place your. G~roge Sole Ad ~ .. . Da • ''Pilot Th•Ntlghborf1ood Plumbtrl OWN a srwu ~;; Cll.UllHG PlCIAllST TWEEDY PlUMBING 949-645-2352 -.. ROOFING /GUTTERS c.a..forr-. sr.r. Lie M: C396 1~9 Al typn of roofirig 'and repairs Liabilty and W<rker 1 Cornpeosatioo Insurance Member Nlt.ional Roofing Contractor'I Assn Since 1987 • (948) 85().8851 -t¥1!\llt'OOI . . __ ...:...· " ~,j~-: . ..-; .... .., !&· .. "* .... ·~ . -: . . ,\, . . I ', I • 381 WALL COVERINGS FARntlNG INTERIORS lnstill•ion .. Aemavll ~Wlllcootei~ L•S60875 MH45-t32S 'tiiE STRIPPEAt Specilkzng Ill walplpet ramovll L'5111•1 714~50>7 . 1-~1 • GOl.OEN WEST• WIHOOW Cl..EAN1HG SllslldiOI'\ Gulrll'llM UC'd.'lrwurtcl 14M31-t 5&2 I* -=I ·~Wlndowt • Cef1atnteed W¥ wildo1 I 1*tO doorl Wt ltll Any l eU ~ 949-650-3214 \( HI I'' l)OOll UOC IOU J 7' . . . THE ART· of PERFO ' . CE ' j • . Califo~nia's Number One Jaguar Dealer . . . Serving Orange County Since ·1970 · · 1455 South Auto Mall D~ive, Santa ·Ana . ' (714) 953-4800 wwW.bauerj~uar.Com .. . . TOSHIBA ~ 1 FRIDAY, February 25, 2000 SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA COMf.AUNmES SINCE 1907 OAJLY PILOT PHOTOS BY DON LEACH ANO MARC MARTIN/ lLUSTRATION BY MARC MARTIN I ARNOl.O PALMER PHOTO 2000 CHRIS CONDON I PGA TOUR :Among the star-studded Held in ·the Toshiba Senior Classic 2000 at Newport Beach Country Club are (clockwise from lower left) '95 kingpin George Archer, 1996 winner Jim Colbert, Arnold Palmer, making his foshiba debut, 1998 champion Hale Irwin and 1999 playoff winner Gary McCord. Any way you approach it, they are the Masters Toshiba VI promises to mesmerize its fans, again. ... ~ ask folks who operate The Challenge, wluch was played m Newport Beach m June 1998. Richard Dunn DAILY PILOT EWPORT BEAC H - Part of what's so wonderful about th~ world of golf 1s that seniors can still play. While there's an argument for nostalgta, the crowd of fifty-and sixty-something players are sharper with the irons and farther off the tee than most anyone paying to watch them. If you ever did play any of them for skins, bring a full wallet. Remember, these guys read putts for a living. Gary Player might~ 64 years old now, but don't count him out of any Senior PGA Tow-event. Every week, there's heated competition with over a inillion dollars at stake. .A.mold Palme~ the 70-year-old l~end who is playing in h,is first Tos;hiba Senior Classic this year.. was lniffed at the Chairman of PGA Tuw-Policy Board, . 4rd Fems, for usmg the Won:ti •nostalgia tow-" while ,...,rin1g in cow-t two years • at the Casey Martin trial Bugene, Ore. Perris added that golf t'artl are allowed at senior tour eventa because "the senior tow 11 a nostalgia to~ where the mam attraction II the chance for emateun to pay in excess or 000 to play pro-am rounds marque« players. don't think there'• nOltaJgk: about it,• Palmer told reporters •ft's very.competitive. I think that statement was incorrect, and I hope (Fems) reads just what I said.• This business of senior golf, which continues to enbce Ma<.lison Avenue and establish more seruor-golf related publications on the newsstands, is senous stuff -for the amateur and professional. When the Senior PGA Tour started in 1980, it had two official events with prize · money totaling $250,000. This year, there will be 39 official tow-naments and 45 events overall with total prize money at nearly $60 million -an increase of $6 million from last season alone. While players like Ll>e nevino and Chi Chi Rodriguez draw a large · gallery wherever they go, there's a focus in their eyes com e Friday, an attitude they carry throughout the weekend no matter how many sword dance you see or greenside one-liners you hear. The bottom line is, if someone like 'D'evino or Tom Watson or Lanny Wadkins were big winners on the PGA Tour, they will more than likely remain sobd players, despite their aging swings. They're profeaionalS who ronstanUy work on their game, retool theU-clubs and study golf courses. •My God, Lee lfevlno can ltil1 pley this game great," TOBH•U •"'-,._ ~ ee ~2K-~5 Toshiba Seruor Cldssic tournament clirector Jeff Punier said. •Hero he's won (27) events on the reguldf tour and (28) on the seniors. and • 7~" ... ""'~ he still ,_,~ ...... -P,,,.,'4,., ""'-I ft# ~ • 7'-• '-1 ... A. A-. .,.,., ... ..... drives the ball 270 yards and still hits rruraculous iron shots. People marvel over the fact that he can still el' ?w'i~ ... jlW ...t Baseball? Well, there's an occaslondl lhrec- mning burlesque of overweight former players who struggle getting arolind the ba cs man exhibition play like that • Fans ycarrung for the pat is a reality at every stop on the Senior PGA Tour, ponsored • Smust., ... ~r {~ bya bubble- el' s. t., ... '*"'., gum card company, but no one takes 1t scnously. • PJlot arguably the m05t succes ful old-timen game in sports. Do you see athletes from · football, boxing or basketball continuing to carve thear craft after age 501 No way. Tennis? Sort of. You can throw a few names out there, like Jimmy Connon and Jobn McEnroe, and fans will always buy ticket.. But tmmls beats up the human body and there are too few drawing oardl t6 IUltaln • .._ ..... wdor tour. J\ilt GoU 15 different. Even though there are fitness trailers at every stop and today's play r 1ifti weights routinely, the game is toughest on the ptyche and nerves. Your hands shake over f our·foot putts when $180,000 ii on the line, as Al Geiberger proved ln last year's final round of the Toshiba on the 1ut bole Pi.yen on tbe _..bar probe~ can't tml GD tbe bell at~~ .. .., tMJ l' did at. Sdy, 25. but thetr swing is a senes of compensations. ddJustment!> and counterbalances. Off the tee. the object is to lut the ball straight. not necessary far, otherw1se players like John Odly would wm every week And those who play m long-dnve contests are not fedtured on ESPN. Thdt's why the senior tour is more them nostalgia but a thnvmg entity of excellent shot makers who wear ddvertisements on their caps. slurt slE>evcs and anywhere else d logo can flt. They wouldn't be in demand if they couldn't play well. and sponsors want to be involved every step along the fairway. Still, the senior tour begs l9r notable players from yesterycd.t, recognizable players who make a strong case for the no talgia factor. •(The Seruor PGA Tour) is a blend of competibon and no talgta," ·seruor tour offtaal Tim Cro by once said. •The rompctibon has been a large pa.rt of the tour'!i sucre.,~, but 1t' also because of the great nam s who continue to play. That's why it's Arnold Palmer and Walter t-.1itty. It's unique.~ The unpn.>dictability" also an inter tmg element of the senior tour, whirh has been prov n every year in the Toshiba Cta Sic at Newport Beach Country Club. For example, we once med ln a Deily PUot-poduced ~ lk1kln for the Senior Clallk:, Hbtbllone,lftM~ .... COUl98 recant of held by several players, could stand up? A few days later Hale lrwin hred a hnal-round 62 and pas!.ed 11 players on his way to the title When told he broke the course record, Lewin asked what the prevtous mark had been. ·oh. shattered 1t," Irwin satd ·calmly, when informed of the old record, accomplished eight times by six playe~. We also once suggested who to look for on the victory land on Sunday, and didn't come dose. Alter learrung that p1ckmg a winner is impossible, we aid l.t1st year it's anybody's tournament, that 1t could be a veteran like Pla)ter, a fan favonte hke nevino or a no-name player like Buzz Thomas, who wa among the first-round leaders m 1998. Nobody would've gu Gary McCord, who 9fi w up surfing m N wport Beach as a Garden Grove High tudent, would WU\ lac;t year. McCord, the W\iccracking CBS golf commentator, hadn't won a tournament ... ev r. HtS car licen plat read "NO WINS• before the '991i h1bo . He'd gone 382 tarts on th PCA Tow-and eruor tour without a title. Anybody who put mon y on McCord winning la t year had to be checked mto a clinic of som son. But that's part ol what makes this game '° gTMt. lt't Walter Mitty winning on ...... tour. And. fOf tbe ... of bM•ndl al labs 'WM wll ___.. ..... ,..... ~ .... .. ..,boclr ... • ' .. .I! fr dpy, FebtuoJy 25, 2000 Daily Pli>t TOSHIBA . Arnie's Anny, l:he gentleman Player and Jacobs' part-time author and humorist, and even d dabbler in Hollywood scnpts. · McCord plays the senior lour as if it's a hobby. It would be too humiliating for his recoup from '99 head at least one favorite's list. PJ,1ymy fdvorih•<> in this fil•ld is tough, hut we'll give• it d rip off lhe tee. Por slml<'l's, any living, breathing yolf fan wouJd have to root for Arnold PallnPr, making his debut in the 20<X> Tnsh1bc1 Scmior Clac;sic at Nf'wport 8 ('actt Cquntry Cluh. As if 1 weren't,. excited enough about Amie showing up, f'ven my latest bpx of WhPalles fcafures the 70-yf'ar-r,Jd lf"'gend for we1>ks, Toshjba Cla sic ufhc ials tnlked about tlus one t)f•mg the best ever, the yedr they raise the bar, the yNtr thPy rPaC'h $1 million in rhdrilable giving to I foaq l losp1tal, and all thdt. Rut no nm.> figured Amie's Anny would b<• coming. No one mrcc>pt tournament director Jeff Purser, that is. No mtlttt•r wherP Palmer is liste<l on th" le-aderboard, there will be no bad Ues. ~It Is c..ntNtcllnmenl," P~r Sttid or lh<' Senior PGA Tour, which slops in the area next week for the siXth consecutive year, "and there i5n't a muoh more entC'rlaining playf'r than Amie." Th~ f•vent, which is on a LEADERS three-year roll in tenns of edge-of-your-seat brushes, has yet to have a player win twice. But, this year, with George Archer and Hale Irwin off to a hot start, maybe we'll have our first two-time champion. Archer, winner of the inaugural Toshiba Classic at Mesa Verde Country Club in 1995, is third on the current senior tour money Ust ($236,855) and appears healthy, having played in all four official events, while Irwin is sixth among the year's early money leaders in only two events ($174,675). We all remember Irwin. • the two-time leading money winner on the seruor tour, and his course-record 62 in the final round or the 1998 Toslu'ba, assisted by the famous bunker rake at 17 , which ~aculously stopped his ball from rolling in the lake as he got up and down to save par. Even 1996 Toshiba winner Jim Colbert -like Palmer, a survivor of prostate cancer -is playing reasonably well and is ranked 24th on the money list ($66,855). JI last year's champion, Gary McCord, wins again, they should check his bag for extra clubs. This guy's a television wrnre:Jlab; Richard Dunn GOLF 1wNs if hP won again. B\lt, hey, golf 1s, aflc>r all, <•four-letter word. Gob Murphy. the '97 Toshiba winner who is fuUllling prior commiLmeoLs next week, is the only former ch<unpion not expected to play But as far as personal fttvorites, one of the players 1 like next week is John Jacobs, a veteran of this golf course who appedied in more Newport Classic Pro-Ams (forrnNly U1P Crosby Southern) than any other golier (13j. ll's Jacobs' tum on the victory stand, especially alter last year's up5et loss in a five-hole playoff to McCord. Jacobs had it won on the first playoff hole, but only a magical script by the showman McCord stole the lead role. Jacobs' chip for eagle from 90 feet turned the 181.h green into a cm.us last Senior PGA Tour Money LMden 31 Jim Ahern, 4 (YHr to ~. ttwough GTE aMSk) 32 Ga~ Player, 4 K. PLAYER. EVENTS MONEY 33 Chr sty O'Conn<>f', 4 Bruce Fleisher, 4 $405, 160 34 Mike Hill, 3 2 Dand Quigley, 4 $257, 191 35 Dave Eichelberger, 3 3 George Archer, 4 $236,855 36 Tom Kite, 2 4 Jim Dent 4 S1B6,874 37 Mike McCullough, 3 5 Lanny Wadkins. 2 $186, 110 38 Bill Brask, 3 6 Hale lrwm, 2 S174,675 39 Jim Thorpe, 3 7 Vi<t>nte Fernandez, 4 $171,525 40 Tom War~o,3 8 Allen Doyle, 4 1140,117 41 Tom McG nnls, 4 9 Graham M.irsh, 3 139, 147 42 David Graham, 4 10 Jost Maria Canizares, 3 $126,858 43 Jack Nicklaus, 2 11 Tom Watson, 2 $125,267 44 J.C. Snead, 4 12 John Mahaffey, 3 $124,400 45 Leonard Thompson, 4 13 Walter Hilll, 3 $119,231 46 Mark Hayes, 3 14 Lee Trevino, 2 $98,411 47 Simon Hobday, 3 15 Tom Jenkm~. 4 $94,098 48 Terry Dill, 3 16 Bru<e SummPrha~. 4 $89,017 49 David Lundstrom, 2 17 Bob Duval, 4 $88,791 SO Jay Sigel, 4 18 Dave Stockton, 4 $81,575 51 Bob Lendz1on, 3 19 Ray Floyd, 4 $79,117 52 Doug Tewell, 2 20 Hugh Baiocchi, 4 $76,808 53 Ed Dougherty, 3 21 John Ji>eobs, 4 $73,895 54 Bob Eastwood, 3 22 lsao Aoki, 4 $70,602 55 R~ Vuclnich, 3 23 Hubert Green, 3 $69,493 56 B Murphy, 3 24 Jim Colbert. 4 $66,855 57 Larry Zi:illler, 2 25 Joe Inman, 4 $65,543 58 GI~ GI bert. 3 26 John Bl.ind, 3 $64,994 59 Orvil e Moody, 3 27 Fred Gibson, 4 $64,115 60 Barney Thompson, 2 28 Stewart Ginn, 3 $60,026 61 Howard Tw1~, 3 29 Bob Dickson, 4 $59, 111 T62 Gary McCor , 1 30 Larry Nel~. 4 $58,800 T62 Tom Weiskopf, 1 AR.M9IRE No wear lik SAYIBQ,S 3 0FF Selected Sole Merchandise. CORONA DEL MAR PLAZA (next to Bristol Fonns N.orlcet} 840 Avocado • Newport Beach (949) 644 -9888 it. ---. -- c ' 0 • under· '* 60 In the tecOOd round of the 1997 Emtrlfd Coast 0~ Lone PGA winClmeat ;:r. yedr. He should have had a dance partner the way he WdS floppmg around. Jacobs went from twinkle toes to Clu Chi's sword dance, then fell backward onto the turf. But McCord kept the. playotr going with a stunning 18-fool eagle putt and the best act on the Senior PGA Tour for 1999 was underway. Other favorites? Wouldn't it be something if Gary Player won. It would be almost fitting for this tourname nt, already ·showered with celebrated moments, if the 64-year-old gentleman Cdptured the title here that wouJd make him only the second golfer In history to win an event in six decades (Sam Snead is the other). Player, one of only rour players to win all four of goli's major championships, has been a fan favorite in Newport Beach every year, giving impromptu clinics on the putting green and driving range, signing autographs relentlessly, never turning down an interview and waving and smiling at virtually every tum. The most traveled player on the senior tour is also its greatest ambassador. So, for sentimental redSons, I'm also pulling for Player. · I'f!l also hoperuJ for the . $56,422 64 Dale Douglass, 3 $50,647 65 Jerry McGee, 3 $48.202 66 Harold Henning, 3 $48.101 67 Al Geiber~r, 3 S46,525 68GeneJM~ $45,365 69 Bobby Stroble, 2 544,457 70 Jim Albus, 3 $43,200 71 John Morgan, 3 $42,791 72 Walter Morgan, 3 $40,874 73 DeWitt Weaver, 3 $38,282 74 RockyThomr.f'• 3 S36,467 75 Jimmy Powe • 3 $30,097 76 Jay Horton, 1 $27,890 77 Tom~ Aaron, 3 $27,247 78Tom w, 3 S26,633 79 Jim Holtgrieve, 2 S24,075 80 Buzz Th<>mas. 1 $24,049 81 Miiier Sarber. 3 $23,366 82 Tony Peterson, 1 S22,901 83 Arnold Palmer. 2 84 Clyde Hughey, 1 $21 ,371 85 Steven Verlato, 2 $20,810 T86 Jim Ferree, 1 $19,660 TB6 Mike Schmidt 1 $19,484 88 Walter Zembriskl, 2 $18,675 89 Bobby Nichols, 2 $18,096 90 Kermrt Zarley, 1 $16,580 91 Don Bies, 1 $15,926 92 catvln Peete, 2 $15.742 93 Butch Baird, 1 $15,310 94 John calabrla, 1 $14,546 95 Gay Brewer, 1 $14,500 96J1m H111,1 $14,500 97 Dennis Milne, 1 .. tour's new kids on the block: Tom Watson (if be plays), Lanny Wadkins and Tom Kite, the ultimate grinder. It's hard not to cheer for Allen Doyle when you see his backswing. Makes you feel better about your own game. At age 60, Lee Thevino would be a noble champion. Al Geiberger, who almost won in reguJation last year at age 61, is always on'the short list of hopefuls. But the appearance of Palmer is more than a pleasant surprise. It's shouting from treetops and rattling cages; it's Rocky Balboa coming home to Philadelphia for bis first championship fight; it's applauding goli's most popular player in the sunset of his brilliant career. So, in a three-month span, Newport Beach will have played host to perhaps the two greatest golfers of all , time -Palmer and Jack Nicklaus-in back-to-back events. Neither, it is believed, had ever stepped foot on this soil before, and now they show up almost at once. · Nicklaus played with Watson in the Diners Club Matches at Pelican Hill Goll Club in December, ma.king his first local playing appearance, and now Arnie will play for the first time in $13,720 $12,692 $12,647 .. $12,415 $11,638 r1.116 10,588 10,005 $9,884 ff·048 ,457 ,404 $5,400 $5, 156 $4,415 $3,738 $2,941 $2,344 12 .220 2,059 2.035 $2,024 $1,760 S1,760 S1,7SO Sl,650 $1,560 $1,S40 $1,451 $~115 876 $803 $744 S600 the Toshiba. ' • It doesn't get any be than that. For tournament offi~i1' who serve as Hoag Hospj.~ volunteers, it's an equi~abl reward getting Palmer. Senior PGA Tour's Ch f the Year in 1998, Hoag turned the ship around r the event was held togetli' by pins and needles in M 1997 under a different 1:-1 .., •n ~ . operator. After Hoag came to tpe , rescue, the tournament has made a remark.able recov~lY from a dark past that included lawsuits, a 'ltn bankruptcy, a controv0 .....U0 -i , ~."/,ru over a $25,000 food and :1 beverage invoice, four •1~ different tournament · ·1 1 ditectors in the first four' years, and great uncertainfy about the tournament's 1J future on the senior tour ; schedule. " But, it has come a loit« , way, baby, and these dam the Toshiba Classic is 0 considered the class of th'i' senior tow with over $1 .~11~ million donated to charil' the first two years under direction of chaJnnen H Adler and Jake Rohrer. Hoag's recent three-yew;, agreement with Toshiba arltl NBCC has paved the way through 2003, but it appean 2000 is the breakthrough with one big army bead this way. INDEX Money leaders Course changes Super seniors Gary McCord '99 Thriller Lowdown on Arnie Pros' ouch llst Hot spots Hahn's hangouts Al Geiberger Rookies Facts 'n figures Weather Time capsule Volunteers Partdng Schedule of events Piiot quiz Thefleld My autograph book The feet are the foundation of your body, and can often cause BACK, KNEE and HIP pain. Pain is your body's way of indicating something is wrong. Dr. Vihinen can help relieve pain-through non surgical methods. • Bunion correction-No hospitaUzatlon • Ingrown toenail • New treatment for fungus nails • Spedallzlng In the treatment of athletic & sports Injuries • Utlllzlng new computerized root analysis • Diabetic ••ootcare and t:valuatJon Preferred provider for most insurances including Medicare 307 Placentia, Ste. 207, Ncwpon Beach MH•rt:.r••1<'St 949-645-6544 • ww:r•Lli' I,,_ . . • I tct98i ly Pilot I Fri9or, February 25. 2000 SI TOSHIBA the coftMQlir t I v. • , ..... ="= o n • tourn•· m • ft t (nine) •• NI 11 of hll NA Tour ~ ~~­........... ··--··:...:. ~X-- MWn on tlws.nior P G A Tour . ~ Ind 1989 I M C lH()•pall a.-... ~ PGA Tour title ... at the 1975 ~ DaV1S, Jr.· QrMelr Hartford ()pin •.• Sewn· tin winner of the • Host site once again features alteratfon~ f.or ~fuor PGA Tour stop, including the famous 17th. Last year, No. 17 played many a tnck on the 50-and-over field, pumping up the scoring average to a tournament-high 253 over par. Richard Dunn bAA.Y PILOT ·~Id WPORT 1 v BEACH - . In keeping ·1 tradition, TOSHIBA ~ )'lewport Beach - -.,.. p.Ptry Club has slightly ered the look of the Toshiba Senior Classic. For members of the Senior PGA Tour returning to the ~yent, they'll first notice a 'riew and improved driving range, then, once on the golf' C04JSe, they'll detect two reeopstructed tee boxes on the front nine and a more friendly fifth hole, which has been tough on them in past ipµpwnents. But the biggest change will come on Newport Beach's signature hole No. l~ul"hich was spotlighted in 1~/ when Bob Murphy sank an 80-foot birdie putt to ~a then-senior tour record ~-bole playoff against Jay 11, and again in '98 when e Irwin's tee shot was ped from rolling into the e by. a bunk.er rake on his ,;ay to setting a course if~rd (62) in the final round. •1t•s that local knowledge -you I.earn where the rakes are," lrwm cracked afterward, when he passed 11 players to win Toshiba Classic IV. The most compelling hole on the course now features a second bunker, strategically placed in front of the green. With two bunkers, fewer golf balls are expected to roll downhill into the large water hazard. Instead, the sand will trap more balls ill the sloped area .below the green that has had trouble with coots eating the grass seeds and, thus, making the hillside rough too short to seize balls from speeding downhill. "With the new bunker configuration, it;s going to give that hole a totally different look,• Newport Beach head profess16nal Paul Hahn said. MBefore, with the bunker over to the right (of the green), it gave them an opening, where you could kind of feel your way into the green. But now you have to go over the bunkers. ~It could be (even tougher), because of the vision that they have look.mg at the green.• The hole, which also has d two-tiered Qt:een with a ·severe drop from U1e top shelf, forced e1gbl double bogeys .and four triple bogeys ldsl ycM, the> most in the toumam(lnt But there should be no more repeat pe>rformdnces of Irwin's muaculous up dnd down Wlth hdlJS now rolling off the green dnd into the bunkers "By adding six. seven, eight yards of bunker, 1t makes it pretty much irnposs1blf" to hit into that bunker and hdV<' 1t roll into the Jake,· club pws1dent Jerry Anderson scud The dnvmg rtlnge area 1s probably the next most radical change on the course The entire are« has been made level, while h1ttmg stallons have heen moved backwdrd, clo-.er to the cart path, making the hitting distances longer. A dozen Fiberbuilt mats have been added, but' the senior pros will hll Off grdSS The concrete cart path hds been doubled m width and extended c1t the end, with d • Wash· in gton St•te PGAand as • member of the Pac1tic Nort h · ...,,.. his W9Y onto t h • Senior P G A To u r with a second· place fini5h laurlh on Sen i or P G A Tour's ell time N:t't~ 23~ tides Wflt PGA Hall of Fame 1 ... Built an Or~ Julius restMJrw.t ln Bellevue, W.n., in the e¥ty IOI and is still lrwotwd with il _.age62. at the 1997 Nationel Qualify· lnQ Toum.tment ... A long-time sundout on the [UfOPMft Tour, wt.re he won W.1heflm • p&ey.r over the S2·. Sl-. $4- tnd SS-million lftlftc in senior tour Qrelf' Mm- .... Won ftlle umes on the PGA dboul $500,00Q the past two . yedl'S on unprovements to '!li1~~~;~aj the goU course, added a rock ii rcta1mng wall in front of the fourth green. along with a cuscadmg waterfall and dll updated UTigation system. Local wild.We also fdvored the unprovements to the 1<1.ke, which has been mhdb1ted by geese, ducks, C'OOL.!> dnd Egyptian swans. DON LEACH I DAILY PUOl The fabled rdke that saved '98 champion Hale Irwin. tnunglP. shctJH' that provides 10 pdrkmg spots und easier in und out dCC<•ss. ·we've dlso lctndscaped m th(! mJCJclle turn Circle ured, • AnclN'>On ·s .. ud. ~ ll flll looks good Th<• runcw will be in good shdp<' for the players.• rurtlwr, Nc>wport Beach sup<'nnte>nclt•nt Ron Benedict hd'> built a mound behind the filth qn•Pn dncl reconstructed the tee boxes i.ll hol<.ls thrf'E' c1nd soc Tht> mound l>ehmd the fifU1 yrf'en ,., expected to help the pl<ly•·rs with vision to thf' grN•n and club selecllon on their approach. The golf course' 1s almost 50 years old and features a.bou t 2,000 trees along 100 acres, including 631 palm trees, Benedict said But the club has a standing policy As long tts 1t hosts the ESTABLISHED 1922 To'>htbd Seruor Classic. 1t will conUnue to pump dollars back rnto the golf course for 1mprovemen~. upgrades dnd redesigns. Following the 2000 Toshlbd Classic, the club will build d inound behind the 18th green in an effort to crf'ate d little more #nash." Anderson Sdld ·TuNe has certamly been a lot of history on that 18th gre('n the past two yedis m tho Toshiba Semor Classic, but the remodeling will make 1t a more challengmg fm1shmg hole,• Anderson said Last year, the club scored an ace with its reconstrueHon encompassing holes three, four and hve in the outermost corner of the goU course The club, which has spent Ted 'Robinson, Sr., one of three qoU course arclutects 10 the history of the·par-71, · · h,584-yard layout. proVlded the vtS1on and work for the hdlf·million dollar tmprovements at Newport Beach Country Club the past two yPars. In the far comer last yeai, colorful flora was planted on d mound seven feet high hordenng the third fauway and fifth tee box. More than 20,000 yards of ctirt was moved an the pro1ect. which rP.Ce1vecl rave reVlews William Bell designed the onqmal course m 1952 when 11 opened as the Irvine Coast <.;ountry Club, then Harry R<llnville p1ovided redesign lll Hl73. Robinson wds 'iluUally lured for added drtistic endeavors in 1985, after the current ownershlp group took over. • I Our 77th Year ---- teak · Prime Rib Rib Eye Delmonico Porterhouse New York Steak Tartare. {Prepared Table-Side) Ste~c Diane {Prepared Table-Side) New York Pepper Steak (Prepared Table-Side) Beef Stroganoff Filet of Beef Oscar Filet Mignon * Beef Wellington '-tinlc 198.\ \\'inl· Spn1.11or: A\L·l/UJ ()/' l:'XCFI I/'.\'("/' The Premier Steak & Seafood House * Chateaubriand Bouquetiere *Rack of Lamb Lamb Chops Veal Chops * Carvtd Tabk-Sitk Pictured Above: Award Winning Ma.itrc D' of the Year Gibby Fernanda and Owner Dan Marcheano WEEKDAY LUNCIIEON BLUE PLATE SPECIALS OFFERING 0VEH 50 I TEMS PER W EEK All. l 1 DER $10.00 · eafood Swordfish, almon, Or Halibut (Blackened, Poached, Grilled, Or Sauteed) Baked Shrimp Scampi Deep Fried Jumbo Shrimp Calamari Steaks Scallops Belle Meuniere Fried Deep ea Scallops Australian Lobster Tail Lobster Thern1ador Abalone Stone Crab Claws from Florida Maryland Soft Shell Crab Crab Cakes Alaskan King Crab Legs Bouillabaisse SUNDAY AND MONDAY N1G1n· DINNER SPECIALS $15. 95 0Ff1:."RED l.L EV1£NI G ENTREES SERVED WITH YOUR CHOICE OF SOUP OH SJ\IJ\O, L UMPY MA HEO POTATOHS Ott RICH Pii.AF OVER 30 EN'I REES To CHOOSE FllOM I CLUDI G LIITl .. B Brr OF ]1'ALY: BREAST OF CHICKEN PARM IGIANA • ClllCKhN CAC:CIATORF. • VliAI. PtCC..ATA CAI.AMARI OVER ANGEUIAIR PASTA• CHICKEN Pl~ITA ~·VHAL PARMIG~A • RAVIOU GNOCCHI OR TORTELLINI • SCAMPI OVER 1EUIAIR P~A IJNGUINI & CLAM SAUCB • AND ~ MORB ' \ M Friday, February 2s. 2000 •Unique 60-and-over field, which features Trevino this year, plays a 'tournament within a tournament' ltk:hard Dunn DAILY PILOT N!WPORT EACH -U the Senior PGA Tour is a blend 9f competition and TOSHIBA nostalgia, where does that leave the super seniors? The 60-and-older crowd, this year to include Lee nevino for the first time, plays1a •tournament within a tournament,• a concept sometimes misunderstood by the tens of thou.sands of fans who come through the • turnstiles and roam the grounds. . Eligibility is restrictive, yet loose, depending on whether you're a Hall of Farner or among the game's all-time money leaders. Some fans watch them for sentimental reasons, to see if they still have it or for the beauty of a legend's swing. Uke a baseball swing or a basketball jump shot, golf strokes are unique in character and personality. No two are exactly the same. Think of Gary Player or Arnold Pal.mer and you probably know unmed.iately what their backswing is like. You can tell Trevino's walk from a fairway'-s distance. These are the real golden boys. While the senior tour, celebrating its 21st year in 2000, features th~ world's richest and most competitive fifty-something field, the Georgia-Pacific Super Seniors keep the nostalgia factor alive even more. Players 60 and over who are entered in the full-field tournament are eligible, but, without naming names, not everyone wants to admit their "super• status. At a press conference once to promote the inaugural Toshiba Senior Classic at Mesa Verde Country Club in 1995, Billy Casper, referring to the enormous popularity of the older players, joked that the tour might one day create , a •super duper senior tour• for golf legendS over 70. For the record, Pahner is now 70. Hlt's nice to have some newcomers {on the Senior PGA Tour),• Toshiba Classic tournament director Jeff Purser once said, •but if you MARC MARTIN I DAILY PILOT One of the great masters -60-year-old Lee Trevino. clidn't have guys like Lee Trevino and Gary Player, you wouldn't sell many pro-am spots, sponsorships and tickets.• "frevino, the six-time major champion, turned 60 on Dec. 1. The winne r o{ each designated Georgia-Paafic Super Senior event lS determined by scores' posted during the first two rounds of competition (Friday and Saturday). The super seniors compete for a purse of $200,000 per event, with the winner collecting $34,000, an increase from past years. On the Senior PG7( Tour schedule, only 1e- t9umaments this year will · have a two-day, 36-hole competition for super seniors. There are 45 senior tour events,including 39 official money events, on the 2000 calendar. Each super senior "tournament within a tournament~ is kicked off with a pro-am played Thursday of tournament week at a different golf course. For this yea.r's Toshiba Classic, Strawberry Farms Golf Club in IMne will host the super seniors pro-am, an event not open to the pubhc. There are 13 super seruors who partiapate in the pro-am, Purser said. While super seniors earnings are unofficial, the players are also eligible to collect prize money for their finish in the regular tourney. Five times.in tour history, a golfer bas won both the super senior and regular tournament on the same weekend. Hall of Pamer Player was the last to accomplish the unique "double dip• at the 1998 Northville Long Island Classic. JlDUDy Powell {1995 First of America and '.96 Brickyard Crossing), Dale Douglass ('96 ijell Atlantic Classic) and Bob Charles ('96 Hyatt Regency Maui Kaanapali ClasSic) have also pulled off the double. Last year at the Toshiba Classic, Al "Mr. 59" Geiberger came close lo winning both, capturing the super seniors title on Saturday, then ta.king a two-stroke lead on Sunday in the overall t()umament with a birdie at 17. But Allen Doyle and eventual Toshiba winner Gary McCord both birdied 17 and 18, and Geiberger • Daily PilOt missed a four-foot putt on 18 and bogeyed the bole to force a four-man playoff. Geiberger was eliminated on the first playoff, while McCord went on to beat John Jacobs in five extra holes. The super seniors competition started in 1987 when Howie Johnson topped an eight-man field at the Vintage Chrysler Invitationr with a 54-hole score of 216. Since then, golf heroes of yesteryear such as Miller Barber, Tommy Aaron, Casper and Player have competed for lbe super seniors mo9ey title. The super seniors se.ason concludes at lbe Ingersoll-Rand Senior Tou.r Championship Nov. 2-5 at Myrtle Beach, S.C. The purse at the year-ending championship is $650,000, with $138,000 going to the winner. The top 16 players on the super seniors money list are eligible lo compete in the Georgia-Pacific Super Sen-I ors Championship. The Toshiba Classic is the second super senior stop on the tour lh1s year, following the Royal Canbbean Classic at Crandon Park Goll Course at Key Biscayne, Fla. I I I I I I I" -~--·1_y_P_ilo_t __ ~--------------------------------------'-'-~--------------------------_;_--------F~ri~doy~.~f~ebrvo;;..;..;..;~ry~2~5,~2~000~~S&>..:... .. ..,. on Se.nlor PG A ,..., ... r.: .. ~d third mener 11st .... Wlnc:Mne .._llGA Senb's' °""""Clftlhlp • NA .......... bmed ... TOSHIBA ..... ........ ........ t h • . . "'. weelr· end w •• longtime club pro In northern F_,. .. . Play9d co-. gimgolfatflcld. de StMll Wida Hulllrt ~ -...sa. .. I r 1 t . ..... , P Cl A Tour .... at h 1997 I e I I Atlentlt a..lc: and folloteed 1t up Wlltae~VI(• "'Yllltelnthe --V--llth ~Gllllt!Utt Ollilc ·-Won w. ... on -. P G A Tcu"" led ... drtul lft s." d ~In 1980 Played In tht old Croq Soult- ern at Nl•Plf1 Beach In .. 19705. b.tla .... made ·the NA ..... St. ·A def ending Champion in broad{ c8St) daylight •Striking a McCord for all reason s. Richard Dunn OAA.Y PILOT .NlWPORT BEACH-• Gary . McCord has never been the same TOSHIBA s\n<:~ winning last year's Toshiba Senior Classic. • .»¢ore 1999, McCord was go'U1 wisecracking loose cannon behind a microphone as an •analyst.· for CBS. For road travelers listening to books on tape, he was the voice and author of ·Golf for Dummles •, •Golf for Dummies Il" and "Just a Range Ball in a Box Full of Titleists." McCord is so self-deprecating, hls automobile license plates read •NO WINS," but he had to change them follOWing last yea.r's Toshiba victory at Newport Beach Country Club, where MeCord and John Jac-obs turned 1t into a made-for-television event during their five-hole playoff. iNot long after Mct:ord's wio ...-his first in 383 starts, ew-pmpassing both the PGA Tour and Senior PGA Tour a.nd spanning more han 25 years -he drew-the attention of three characters one.night at San Francisco's Union Square. "They've got the Jerseys on with the hood on, following me,• McCord said. ·1 thougbt, ·nus is gomg to be perfect,' so I'm lund of. • speeding up and they ard· noticeably speeding up, and there's this big old thing at Union Square right in ttie middle. So I've got to go around this thing and go to the next block, and then across the street is the restaurant (where he was meeting a friend). "So I'm hurrying like hell, and I can't get by them, and all of a sudden here comes these three guys and I got d tug on my jacket. And I go, "Here we go. Here is my wallet. Here, guys, take 1t. · The guy turned and looked at me and sa1d, "Are you Gary McCord? Great win!' "That's when I knew 1t was totally different. I thought I w'as going to get mugged and they congratulated me.• McCord's win at the Toshiba Classic not only helped him pave a new path m his playing career, it set the stage for his title later in the year at the Tour Championship. He ended up m the top 10 in seven of his 17 starts and earned more than $58,000 per tournament "The whole year kmd of changed for me (alter Toshlba), • sdld McCord. who made his television debut m 1986, after falling into the job., "Goll was very difficult and I had to laugh at it to keep out of the asylum,· said McCord, who never finished higher thc:Ul 59th on the PGA Tour money list, alter 1ouung the tour m 1973. and claime<,I his sense of humor paid off when his break m telev1Sion came up. Previously, M cCord saJd he had no ambition to enter the 1V business. "The only asptrations I had when I got out of college was I didn't want to work, l.Jke all of us derelicts in the 60s," Sdld M cCord, who grew up tn Garden Grove and became a two-time All-Amencan golfer al UC Riverside "I hgured that (golf) was the best thing to do. And then golf became work ... it became work and a lack of income. And, then, just by happenstance, 1 got the television lhlngs lined up. All the planets lined up, I was at lhe nght place at the right time, and the producer and dlrector liked what I said and he kept me on." Jlonest and observant, McCord was a natural, even though some consider hls humor more meverent than funny (officials at the Masters, for example, won't have him back). But McCord believes a few laughs are importdnl in golf, even ·if his style is, well, unexplainable. "I don't have a (broadcasting) style. I don't know what (style) lS," McCord saJd "I remember d long time ago when I was just starting to work for CBS, 1 asked Pat Summerall, •Pat, what shouJd I do? We've got these guys who are all def:uute -they've won this and they've done that And, you know, here I am 1ust nothing, just hanging.' •And he goes, "Just be yourself. The camera will catch you if you lie.' So I'm just, you know, Souµiem California here. I'm just kmd of goofy and I had a fdl English guy that I could attack (Colin Montgomene). so 1 started having some fun with it. Bottom line is, we're in the entertainment business. Have some fun with it, get some laughs. Be a little chllerent and make sure they know you were there." These days, rans certainly know where McCord is. After winning in Newport Beach, McCord, sort of the Bob Uecker of golf. had a change of schedule. "Last year I was gomg to play six to eight or rune . events maybe, and just have some fun," said McCord, who ended up playing 17 events on the senior tour and earning a whoppmg $993,291. So can McCord keep up the multitasking momentum, which includes playing on the seruor tour, commentating for television, and book-and movie-scnpt wnting? "I have no pace. l have a slow gallop," McCord said. "Bas1cally, what I'll try to do is do what I was doing last year, but at my age (51) I can't remember what I was domg last year, so it's perfect I'll start off brand new. It's a wonderful thing, this seruor tour." In last year's Toshiba Classic playoff, McCord again made himself comfortable in front of the camera, while beating longtime buddy Jacobs m hve extra holes. On the memorable fl.f'St playoff hole, Jacobs chipped m for eagle from 90 feet, and, as the gallery erupted, Jacobs did his best urutation of Chi Chi Rodnguez' '!)Word dance and then a backward tumble McCord matched Jacobs when be sank an mcredlble 18-footer for eagle, and with the cameras rolling. motioned with a curled mdex ringer for Jacobs to come and fetch his bdll from the cup at 18 as fans went crazy again. Jacobs retneved his ball, then chucked it mto the crowd of 10-deep people. "I JUSt decided to go dlong with J.J and have some · · fun," McCord said, "and that's kmd of what we ctid · the rest of (the tune), JUSt mostly entertamment and 1t 1ust happens that we played decent in the playoff and 1t was qwte fun.• McCord sald the feedback he rece1Ved after W\.nrung at Newport Beach inspired him for the remi:W1der of the year and chdnged the lace of the semor tour "lt helped mouvate the tour to gel gomg that year from Hale Irwin and Gil Morgan wmrung every other toumdment to see two icliots like J .J. ond I having some fun cllld en1oymg the game and putting on a pretty good show,• he added. • McCord provideq playoff drama, television theatrics . in unforgettable finish on the Newport Beach CC greens. Richard Dunn DAILY PILOT NuWPORT BEACH -Just as fans thought1nolhing could top the drama of TOttHIBA the previous two Toshiba Senior Classics, Gary McCord turned the Senior PGA Tour stop at Newport Beach Coun- try Club into a made-for-television event. In one of the most memorable finishes in senior tour history. McCord, who had never won a 'PGA or Senior PGA Tour event in 382 previous starts, won a five-hole pJayoff and incited the crowd with antics rarely seen in golf. Bob Murphy won a senior-tour record nine-hole playoff against Jay Sigel in the 1997 Tushiba Classic, then Hale Irwin shot a course-record 62 in the final round to capture the '98 event with the help of a now-famous bunker rake, which stopped his ball from rolling into the water as he got up and down to save par on 17. But last year, McCord and John Jacobs, friends and fellow Scottsdale, Ariz., residents, kicked it up a notch in the first playoff hole and provided ESPN with "Toshiba's Wonderful World of Goll." "I wanted to keep going," McCord said after draining a four-foot birdie putt on the 23rd hole to beat Jacobs and win the $180,000 winner's check. "The TV was on, and I'm a little bit.of a ham, anyway." · McCord is the wisecracking CBS goU commentator with the barbershop-quartet mustache, author of two goll books and regular contributor for America ~e and Goll Digest. But he could not have written a more colorful script for the final round of · the '99 Toshiba Classic. In regulation, McCord needed birdies on the final two holes to get to nine-under-par 204, but still required help from v~teran Al Geiberger, whose bogey on the final hole created a four-man playoff. While it was great for many fans to see "Mr. 59" atop the leaderboard with a chance to win, it was equally as heartbreaking to watch the 61-year-old blow a four-foot putt for par, which paved the way for the Toshiba Classk's second playoff in three years. "You give away a lot out there, and you never think you'll get an opportunity to redeem yourself, but once in a while you can get back . into it,• said McCord, who felt his putter bad failed him in regulation, even though he shot two-under 69 in µie final round. "Somebody let the door open and I took advantage of it.• fl: THIU THUi., 4-7pm . ~2~~~5 ·~HOOnll ·~ wt• P1!.~£':UJ.ZERS IUa•MDrOICICIN--..------" .. - -, , j ~ . With McCord, Jacobs, Geiberger and Allen Doyle going into a playoff, it didn't take long for the must-see stage show to escalate. On the first playoff hole (No. 18), ' McCord was the only player to reach the green £n two, while Geiberger and Doyle pitched themselves into position for . makable birdie putts. But Jacobs made those shots moo~ by chipping in for eagle with l}is wedge from 90 feet. As the gallery erupted, Jacobs, also a free spirit, pranced around the fairway in celebration, did an imitation·of Chi Chi Rodriguez's sword dance and then tumbled backward onto the Newport Beach turf. McCord, meanwhile, was waiting to try an 18-foot putt for eagle. Mer order was restored from Jacobs' jubilee, McCord rolled in the putt to extend the playoff. t The back-to-back eagles on ·par-five hole No. 18 electrified the huge gallery that had swelled to 10-deep surrounding the green and trimmed the playoff field in half, eliminating Geiberger and Doyle. 'Tve played with Gary enough to know that he doesn't make that putt for a $180 Nassau, e Jacobs said, "s9 I was sure he wouldn't make it for $180,000. • After sinking the putt to match Jacobs, McCord, with the cameras ·rolling, motioned with a curled. index finger for Jacobs to come and fetch his ball from the cup -and the gallery went crazy again. Jacobs retrieved his ball, all .right, then heaved it into the crowd. "That was fun," Jacobs said. "I hope the people enjoyed the show." McCord and Jacobs parred tpe next two playoff holes (16 and 17), peppering each other with the sQrt of spirited banter you would have expected if it was just the two of them on their home course. Instead, the playoff pushed deeper into prime time and the Toshiba Classic provided the Senior PGA Tour with. its best theater in years. On the fourth playoff hole (No. 18), both players hit theiI tee shots into the right tree line. Jacobs hit out of trouble by hooding a three-iron and driving it under a tree brand). while McCord, with barely enough room for a back.swing, launched a three-wood that stopped just a few yards from the green, a classic case of one-upmanship. Jacobs pitched past the pin and McCord took advantage by chipping within three feet of the hole for an almost tap-in birdie putt. But McCord was so nervous, he missed the putt and the playoff was extended again. •That (putt) was like a staggering drunk,• said the animated and sell-deprecating McCord, who, mocking himself, had automobile license plates that read NO WINS -a fact that would change following the fifth Toshiba Senior Classic. The match-play duel continued to a fifth playoff hole (No. 16), · where McCord hit a nine-iron tight at the flag, leaving him a four-footer, while Jacobs' wedge landed about 35 feet short. This time, McCord didn't miss the putt. Even during the awards ceremony, the two continued·to show off, as Jacobs tried to grab' McCord's wiiutlng trophy on the 18th green. McCord ended up playing 17 events on the Senior PGA Tour and earning a whopping $993,291, a pretty good average for. a part-time golfer ($58,428 per start) who can no longer be labeled the Bob Uecker of golf. McCord said the feeqback he 1 received after winning at Newport Beach inspired him for the rem.ainder of the year and changed the face of the senior tour. . "It helped motivate the tour to get going tha~ year from Hale Irwin and Gil Morgan winning every other tournament to see two idfots like J .J. and I having some fun and enjoying the game and putting on a pretty good show,• he said. •so everybody liked it. Most f)j the players en masse were really gracious about saying how much they enjoyed it, and it was great for the tour, and it really helped get our tour in the paper there for a little bit.• . @ Hyatt Newporter, Newport Beach (on Jamboree, 2 blocks from the PCH) • -9 Hole, par 3 short game facility -Overlooks the Back Bay & marina -Great work on the short game -Corporate/Group tournaments -Lessons & Golf Fitness School (949)729-6193 Orange County's Best Kept Secret! Brina this ad ... ve $3 OD replar peen rea Valid up to 4 people until May 1, 2000 • Daily Pilot r I crown came It '66Texn Open ... Has won events '" Australia, NeW Zealand, 6-· many, Italy, Deft. mark ind Switzerland ege65. TOSHIBA Dave Hill ,,,.d Orvllle Moody • ~ one ttroke for the la\t of his six Senior PGA Tour titles ~t the Rancho Murieta Senior Gofd Rush In 1989 ... Won 13 times on the PGA Tour, includl~ tow Memo p h I • op.. ... Winner of the 1969 var ~ Tro- ~a= on three lJnlll!d States Ryder Cup teams_ Firilhed•· ond the PGA 'b.r's ITIMe't list in 1t69 -age62. Joe lllllAN .. ,. . __ ,,, v.. .. the Senior P 'G A lour .•. SucceH f u I I y defended his Pacific Bell senK>r Classic championship I.st year by two Jtrokel at the Wlhhire Country. OWDOWN ON A R N IE • Everything you ever needed to know about the King: I • His 60 PGA Tour wins trail only Sam Snead (81), Jack Nicklaus (70) and Bel.l Hogan (63) on the all-time list • A winner of eight major championships: four Masters, two British Opens, one U.S. Open and one U.S. Amateur • Was the first player in PGA Tour history to reach the $1-millipn mark in official earnings, achieving that feat at the 1968 PGA Championship in San Antonio, where he finished tied for second J- • Named Associated Press Athlete of the Decade·for the 1960s • Won seven professional major championships: the Masters (1958, '60, '62 and '64), British Open (1961 and '62) and 1960 U.S. Open • Named Hickok Athlete of the Year and Sports Illustrated Sportsman of the Year in 1960 • Tied with Jack Nicklaus for the most consecutive years winning at least one tournament (17) • Named PGA Tour Player of the Year in 1960 and '62 •Led PGA Tour in earnings in 1958, '60, '62 and '63 • Appropriately, the annual award for • leading money winners on both the PGA Tour and Senior PGA Tour is named for him • First player to. win the U.S. Open and U.S. Senior Open (1981) · ' • Won last of his 10 Senior PGA Tour titles at the 1988 Crestar Class.ic, a four-stroke, wire-to-wire victory. • His 22 Ryder Cup match victories was once a record (22-8-2 overall), since surpassed by Nick Faldo (23 wins) •U.S. Ryder Cup captain in 1963 and '75 • Member of the World Golf Hall of Fame, American Golf Hall of Fame, All-American Collegiate Golf Hall of Fame • Last PGA Tour victory was at the 1973 Bob Hope Desert Classic, an event he won five times • Named Golfer of the Century at the centennial banquet of the Golf Association of Philadelphia and received the·Distinguished American Award from the prestigious Jonathan Club in Los Angeles PERSONAL • Underwent successful prostate cancer surgery on Jan. 15, 1997, and continues to spearhead the Senior Tour For the Cure program, a national campaign to promote prostate cancer awareness • Wife, Winnie, died of cancer on· Nov. 30, 1999 • Maintains an active business schedule with golf course design, construction and development • Principal owner of Bay Hill Club and Lodge, site of PGA Tour's Bay Hill Invitational •A pilot of considerable renown, he holds one world aviation record and was the first person to receive a Citation 10 aircraft off the production line • Chairman of the Board of The Golf Channel • Has two daughters, Peggy (2-26-56) and Amy (8-4-58) and six grandchildren • Born: Sept. 10, 1929 • Bir:thplace: Latrobe, Pa. • College: Wake Forest University •Joined PGA Tour: 1955 • Club affiliations: Latrobe CC, Pa.; Laurel Valley Golf Course, Pa.; Bay Hill Club, Fla. • Full name: Arnold Daniel Palmer GA;"' An- IS he d fifth at senior to ur ·~ Nat1ooal Quallfy- 1n9 Tour namen1 in 1997 to earn his inrtlal exemp- tion on circuit ... Winner of the 1976 Kem~r Open on the PGA Tour -· age 52. Friday, February 25, 2000 S7 RMtks sec· ond on sen ior t 0 l.i I S all·t 1me VICI Ory h~t \Vitti 25 t11l •s, rnclud1119 tive senior majors ... A two· time senior tour Player of the Year and leading mon·· ey winner on cir· cult in both 1997 • Awarded PGA of America Distinguished Service Award in 1974 • Four-time Vardon Trophy winner (1961, '62, '64 and '67) • Has 17 career holes in one, the latest of which came on his home course, Latrobe, Pa., Country CJub, on Sept. 6, 1997 • Height: 5 foot 1 o inches • Weight: 185 OAll.V PILOT PHOTO FILE Arnold PaJmer bmst onto the Tour after~ '54 US Amateur. i' RO LE X BLACKMAN LTD. ~: fi3 :~ JEWE~ERS • • • 3408-1 Via Oporto, Newport Beach 92663 • 949·673·9334 »lit tit# <>lfkll tJlillllilW }n'tl? llort I" Nf'tll(POl'I lht'tlt«I }tUt owr IM hrld1r f" /)do M"""" Villatt Your Official Rolu Jew~l~r ..... .,..,,.,.,,, ........... .,,, ,.,""..,_ ,,.... ...... _,...,., "" ,......,,.. ....... C....... ..... MJ/111 ......... ---·------- ...... , ..... w • v~ s~ QAAN N~M Etd~ p~ ~ F'-'7~ 4Ctt~'4l Elegant, one of a kind selection . of Hom e Decor, Gifts, & Exclusive Styles of Candles Corrzplete Custom Flora~ Department I. Here's the order of the toughest to the easiest. Richard Dunn DAILY Pt~OT N1WPORT EACl l- isting the golf holes at New-. TOSHIBA port Beach Country --- Club and providing d brief description of each.one for the Toshiba Senior ClassiC has become a Daily Pilot tradition for the seruor PGA Tour stop. But, with a new twist for 2000, here's how the holes stack up in order of toughness for the players from last year, mcludlng a four-year history or each hole since Newport Beach took over as the host site. The cour.,e's signature ~5Jiii) hole played havoc on the ~ seniors in 1999 with a scoring avernge or .253 over par, the highest in the tournament. It's the most famous hole on the course, with Bob Murphy's 80-foot putt in 1997 to win a record nine-hole playoff and Hale Irwin's miraculous up and oown for par in 1998 with the help of a bunker rake. But it's also the most difficult. In '96, the par three ranked seventh in toughness, then rose to No. 2 in '97 and tied for first in '98. It stood alone as the !lardest in '99, forcing the most triple bogeys (four) and double bogeys (eight). Last · year it yielded the fifth-fewest birdies (23) and caused the third-most bogeys (52). A mass1ve lake creeps precariously close to the green and a large bunker guards the front right of the two-tiered green. A second bunker was added in front of the green last fall dnd will come into play for the first time. Fewer balls are expected to roll downhill into the water hazard. The par four ranked as the .~~ toughest hole on the course ~in 1996 and '97, and was fourth in '98. Before last year's event, the hole was shortened 25 yards, from 455 yards to 430, but still earned the second-toughest rankmg by inducing the most bogeys (67, tied with hole No. 9) and a scoring average of .236 over par. The hole plays uphill dJld upwind, requiring a mid-to long-iron shot to an unf nendly green bordered by two bunkers, but players should have improved vision to the green with a new mound behind 1t, providing better definition of distdnce. In 1996, the first year the event was played at Newport Beach, Jlm . Colbert made d living on No. 5, lapping the Held with birdies in all three rounds to win it. The par four, dogleg right :~~~ plays tougher than it ,..., appears, because there's no reference point to Judge your distance to the green, while large trees guard both sides of the fairway. It ranked as the second-most difficult in 1996, the third toughest in '9] and the hardest overall in '98. Last year it spelled the most· bogeys (67, tied with hole No 5) and produced a scoring average of 227 over par. It also tied for third last year (with hole No. 8) in yielding the fewest birdies (22) and was home to the third-fewest pars (140). The hole where Gary .~ lf.:"4 McCord clinched his -., five-hole playoff victory last year, the par four fedtured the fewest birdies m the tournament (14) m '99. Jn 1996, the 437-yard hole was the third-most difficult on the co.urse, then i.n '97 it fell to 10th, wnen it yielded 25 more birches than the previous year -the biggest mcrease of any hole. In '98, it ranked seventh, then • got tougher again last year with a scoring average of .185 over par .. Player$ can hit out of bounds to the left, and the long-iron approach · must contend with two bunkers up front and a rolling green Tite 418-yard par four, if nothing else, has been • consiste-nt for the seniors. It has given up the sixth-fewest birdies three years in a row _:_ 26 last year, 24 lil '98 and 23 in '97. It features a dogleg left, while intimidating trees line the fairway on the left, prompting players to c.lr:ive down the righH:enter of the fairway. The rolling green is well-protected with bunkers. In four years, no eagle has ever been carded on the hole m the tournament. A surprisingly dilficult par three (203 yards), the hole surrendered the third-fewest birdies last year (22, tied Wlth hole No. 9) and the fewest on the front nine in '9S, the year it caused Hale Irwin's only bogey while shooting a course-record 62 in the.final round. The hole usually plays upwind and a steep bank on the r'ight makes for a difficult up and down for par. But what really makes it tough is a tricky green. Putts break away from the Pacific Ocean, · incongruous to most greens on the course. It ranked in the top five in terms of toughness three years in a .row . (including the third-most difficult m '98), and last year it produced a scoring average of .133 over par. From the tee, players 190k • into a horizon on a slight dogleg nght with a downhill approach to the green. The left side of the fauway is lined with tall trees and the right side is fraught with large, deep bunkers. The par four has some length (397 yards) and players need a well-P.laced tee shot. The small, well-bunkered green has never allowed more than 29 birdies in the tournament, and it has been one of the toughest holes on the back nine in the first four years: Its overall difficulty ranking has been eighth, sixth, sixth and seventh. The par four features .~~ probably the toughest ,..., green on the course. It has great undulallon and each putt unveils a subtle new break. Last year, it caused the second-most double bogeys in the tournament (sllC). From the tee, long bitters play over the big tree on the right side of the fairway; for others, the best play is dQwn the middle with ~ long iron. It is advised not to bit your appr0c1ch above the pin. MAAC MAAnN I DAILY Pit.OT South Africa's Gary Player tees off on the 17th, a wicked par three with the payoff just bey~nd the bunker. dl.Iecbons off the tee. The hole is both sides of the fauway. .. To open the back nine, ,;~tf.t the par four has two 'Wf bunkers roughly 250 yards out, so an accurate tee shot is important. The small, elevated green must be taken' into consideration on the approach, while several bunkers also pose a threat. In '98, the hole logged the most pars in the back nine (169). Last year, there were 155 pars, third among back-nine holes. The par three fedturns d .:5ft severely sloped green, so ~. there are fewer birdies than most expect.· 1n four years, there has been an dverngc of 36 25 birdies per event, mostly the result of good tee shots from 170 yards out. The ·right side of the fauway is out of bourids and the left side of the green is guarded by a pot 'bunker. In terms of toughness, the bole bas ranked 12th ('96), ninth, ninth and 10th. . The 143-yatd par three is .:~ sort of hidden i.n the far .., comer of the course. but it is one of the prettiest holes on the heels of last year's renovation that included a rock retaining wall in front of an undulated green. A spectacular water hole, the seniors shot .030 unde r par last year and made 41 birdies, the third-most on the front nine 111e players' 2.97 stroke avernge ldst year ranked as the easiest par three on the course. The par four IS dlmost dn ~--automatic par for the ~. seniors. In all fow tournaments. the hole hds ranked first m pars, yielding 172 last year, 180 m '98, 170 m '97 dnd 172 in '96. The wide fairway parn.llel~ the adjacent Nev.rport Beach Mamott, and NBCC bead pro Paul Hahn said the ball goes m different uphill from tee to green, and a The par four (339 yards) last year drive to the nght side of the proVld~ the most bmlies on the fauway allows for an approach that front rune (58) and the third-most avoids the large bunker at the left in the toum~ent. I~ had the front of the green. fifth-most btrdies m 98 (54) arid, In four years, only one eagle has '97 (46), and the fourth-most m 96 been accomplished on the hole (56). _ ;n •97 by David Graham in the Distance off the lee is not ~ r t d important as placement, while a us roun · two-tiered green can leave a tricky The par four has a narrow ,.,51,j.) landing area, 'requiring a ~. precise tee shot, while the approach must navigate dround several eucalyptus trees that spring from the front right of the green.· The amount of birdies it allows consistently ranks the hole in the top si.X. Last year, it surrendered the fourth-most birdies in the tournament (53), while the seniors enjoyed a stroke average of 3.918. The par four hiiS never ~:.l'~cl caused a triple bogey in ,..,. four years, and last. Y.ear it supplied the field wiUi the third-most pars m the tourney (165). A shorte r par four (344 yards) with a wide fairway, it features a small, elevated green. Off the tee, though, it's almost impossible for th«.> pros not to hit the fairway because of its generous width. The only par five on the .:~ front, the 549-yard hole is a ,..., walk in the park for most seniors, causing the fewest bogeys on the front last year (22) and givmg up the second-most birdies (51). The tee box is the highest point on the course, with Views (on clear days) of Catalina lsldnd and snow-capped ML Baldy. The Bdck Bay is also visible . The green ls reachable in two for long hatters, but a pond to the left or the green and bunkers on both side can present trouble. A fnendly start for the ,::.:ilia seruors, the opening hole is .. a short dogleg left with trees and bunkers lining approach. The hole provoked only 23 bogeys last year, second on the front nine. • No. 18 -The par-five N:• finishing hole (510 yards) .., was once again birdie heaven, allowing a tournament-record 99 m '99. In three of the four years, 1t has ranked as the second-easiest hole on the course (in '97 it was the lhud·easiest hole). The fairway is wtde and uphill, beckoning the players to lay into the driver. The green is reachable in two if the seniors avoid the bunker to the front right. Aftei: producing 21 bogeys m both '97 and '98, there were only 14 last year, the second-fewest bogeys in the tournament. In four years, there has never been a triple bogey, while one double bogey has been recorded each year. . The par five 1s golfing .:~-I paradise for the seniors. ~ The 492-yard hole has been the easiest on the course all four years, including last year when it relinqwshed the fewest bogeys 1Il the tournament (13). Last year, it provided by far the most eagles (eight) and the second-most birdies (93). The green is reachable in two and is guarded by several bunkers, indudUlg a treacherous pot bunker to the right. In '97 and '98, the hole led the tournament in birdies with 85 arid 88, respectively. CAFFE PANINI Now Open In Ne~port Beach The same great food as our location in Corona del Mori Enjoy breakfast, lunch or dinner on our garden potiol O~n 7 dcrts a week, 7am to lOpml I POOR QUAL:l_T_Y. • I Doily Pilot O_BJQINAL: J b ' 2000 TOSHIBA SENIOR CIASSIC TOSHIBA 6fff3 HOT SPOTS Newport Beach Country Otib head pro Paul Hahn's favorite hangouts. 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The firm's success is returned to the clients in rhe form of personalized atrenrion and first c.lass concierge services. "We wanr co make every client feel special and imporcanr wh il e havipg the most pos icive real cscace experience possible," scares Bob Dyson. Our new office at 2101 E. Coast Highway in Coro na dcl Mar, shown here', offers w rhc rcsidcn~~ of coastal Orange Counry ch<.· following amenities: • Veteran rc.11 co,catc professionals spc.:ciali11ng in the Harbor Area • On site; legaJ, escrow and marketing support scafl co handle che administration of ALL transactions. • Jn cerior de~ign crviccs for use both before an d dfccr the home sale . • Courrcsy U\C of limou inc, vans, trucks This beautiful custom buit home at Ironwood County Oub in Palm Desert f eotures o wonderful floor pion. Separate seating and dining areas inside and o wonderful patio area outside alow for cozy ctmers or grand scale entertaining. located in a cul-de·soc with great mountain vfm. Please coll Lisa Jobe at (760) 779-4197. No expense spored In this •it0 FEAR"' estate! On .7S o<r• lot ovedooldng golf course. The finest quality · throughout, including limestone flooring, marble, p111ite countertops ond uniquely designed 1r" floating slain. Entertaining oreo with sporklina pool, spa Ond fiflpit. Please cal Scott Worr111 at (619) 989·9~. r Doily Pitot and airplanes • Inccrnet accessibility and inrcrnati1nal networking • Cross-market advertising and markc:in (i.e. Palm Springs, Newport Beach d Rancho Santa Fe) adding co the exposure of listings and awareness of buyers • Television advertising . • Golf course community networking· • Dyson and Dyson Charitable Foundation · Allow chose of us ac Dy ~n D}rson co prove to you chat we noc Oil} represent Newport Beach's unique lWcsty~ but we exemplify the success of all of · residents. "' , CALL US AND ENJOY A HIGJ-ffi LEVEL OF REAL ESTATE SERVICE! Situated next to Vinlaft Cowse, the 3 bedroom residence offers comfof eleoan<• wht1e the 2 btdr 2 both gues1house provid. • of the Santo Roso Mounta1 Owners would consider o posw trade up ta Newport lto<h. coll Dun<on Forgey 1949) 717-SI 11. ' . Sweeping penthouse views of Turning Basin, city li9hts and sunsets can be yours wit~ this Lido condominium. High ceilings and an open floorplan conti:ibute to the spacious feeling of this home. Remodeled with the finest quality materials including hardwood and marble floors and a gourmet kitchen· with hand..cut Vermont stone counters. Please coll Michael Morr at (949)-717-51.11. .. Build your own spedoculor dream home to suit your own toste and design on this fobulous bay ond ocean view lotl Prked btlow oll oiher comporoble lots in this prestigious gole, guarded community. Don't miss out on this great opporlUflily to hcrve youf dreom be<ome o reotrty. Pleose coll Morion Phillippi al (949) 717-511 1. 314WIPIEU This townhome is port of die '*1 complex in Eostsiclt Costa Me,,. 3 large bedrooms, 2.5 baths and a private polio with stone gorJen. Largest floorplan In Brinonywpods, whith indudes rewrt-style living vmfi conm.Qty pool, spa and tennis cwt New roof. Be close to Newport Beach, freeways, South Coast Plaza ond the Bock Boy. Please coll Duncan Forgey al (949) 717-5111. ' .. .. ~ TA T Versatile 5 bedroom Somerset pion with 1 bedroom down. Prime inner loop location just steps from greenbelt and near local schools. Original bur meticulously maintained and in move-in condition. Newtr point, carpet and vinyl plus mirrored wardrobes and celling Ions throughout. 5tepdown living room and family room with fireplaces in eoch. Please coll Michael Morr at (949) 717-5111 . located on the ground floor, two blocks from the beach, this 2 bedroom, l .2S both condominium is on excellent opportunity for buyers looking for a I-level home. Newer Berber carpet, a refrigeralOI' ond a washer and dryer. Underground parking facilities. Community amenities 'ilWde a pool, spa, teMis court and o clubhouse. Please call Morim ptilppi at (949) 717-5111. LEAS IN 209 VIA CORDOVA Otomotic executive home on on oversized lot. Home features downstairs master suite, floor-to-ceiling winaows, sunny kitchen with granite countertops and wine storage. There are 3 bedrooms, 2.5 bat~ with large living area, formal dining area and o hu~ fomi~ room. Included with this offering is o priYtite west foe· ing wraparound polio. This is the best value on lido Isle. Please coll Duncan Forgey ot (949) 717-5111. .. -Enjoy this contemporary home with panoramic views of the boy and Pocif ic Ocean from this 4 bedroom, 3 both with great potential to remodel! Gofed entry intQ this easy flowi11g floorplon including family room with fireplace, vaulted ceilings, and gourmet kitchen. Entertainment oreo with large yard and soothing views. Please coll Marion Phillippi at (949) 717-5111. As a homeownef in Granville, Honey Hostetler knows the delights of this guord·goted development. Bordering the fairways of Newport Beach Country Oub, home of the Toshiba Classic Golf Tournament, most condominiums boost golf course views. Granville residents olso enjoy their own community dubho~e with pool, spa ond large polio. Pleose coll Honey Hostetler al (949) 71 7.5111. " .. . ~512 Fr IF 25, 20oo Newport Beach head pro offers insights to the best places to watch the Senior Classic. RktwdDunn OMV Pi.,or EWPORT BEACH- Considered a dlstomer-frlendly golf course for fa.nS who roam the grounds dwing the Toshiba Senior Classic, the Newport Beach Country Club offers a wide variety of interesting locations from which to choose while watching the world's best golfers over age 50. Whether you plant yourself behind a green, sit in the grandstands at the driving range, stroll around the putting green or follow a favorite player, there's something for everyone on the par-71, 6,584- yard layout encompassing 100 acres of prime real estate for the Senioi PGA Tour stop. In keeping with Daily Pilot tradition leading up to the sixth annual Toshiba Senior Classic, here are the course's "hot spots,• this time with opinions from Newport Beach Country Club head professional Paul Hahn. Hahn, 46, would be eligible for a sponsor's exemption in four years. But, for now, like the rest of us, his views of the Toshiba event come from outside the ropes. There are three spots in particular where Hahn likes to watch the action: · t) 1be seventh green: It's the most •severe• green on the golf course, according to superintendent Ron Benedict, and the green's great undulation provides many humbling putts for Newport Beach Country Club members, as well as the pros on the Senior PGA Tour. "For me it's probably the most fun spot,• Hahn said .. ·with that green having a big undulation and sloping in front, I get a kick out of watching the pros try to negotiate H and (sometimes) three-putt. One player even four-putted last year. It's fun for the (club) members and fans to sec how the pros can make mistakes just like the amateurs do." A par four, hole No. 7 unveils a rubtle new break with each putt. Last year, 1t caused the second-most double bogeys in the townament (s1Jt). 2) Hahn loves standJng in the sloped area between the 16th fairway and 17th green, where he can watch golfers' approach shot to the 16th green and also see tee shots at 17, the club's signature hole. "From across the lake, you can see where their tee shots land at 17.8 Hahn said. "Obviously, that shot at 17 is not an easy one for them from all the way back (185 yards), then you get to see them pull that green." Last year, No. 17 played as the toughest hole in the tournament, yielding the fifth-fewest birdies (23) and causing the third-most bogeys (52). It ranked first in forciilg the most triple bogeys (four) and double bogeys (eight). 3) The driving range: As players warm up for the1t round, or work on their swmg following 18 holes, it's ct great place to get a more personal experience from the pros. ·1 spend a lot of time at the driving range -on purpose,• Hahn said. "I need to be there at the range, serving as a liaison to the (Senior PGA Tour) n.tles officials, but I love being down there and watching them hit and watching to see what they're working on and listening to them chat. That's probably my favorite spot.• As a general rule, it is widely believed that the two best ways to watch a golf tournament include: Selecting "It's easy for fans to get · caught in 'the lle1'd' that way, especially if you're following someone like Arnold Palmer or Lee Trevino ... # Paul Hahn Newport Beach CC head pro a favorite player (or group) and 'folloWing him, or situating yourself behind a green and watch the threesomes play through -you'll probably be an expert on the nuances of that green by the end of the day. When following a certain player, it is best to stay ahead of the golfer and let the action come to you, instead of standing at the tee box and trying k> catch up. It's easy for fans to get caught in "the herd• that way, especially if you're following someone like Arnold Palmer or Lee Trevino. (If you 're interested in watching tee shots, see Hahn's suggestion about the driving range.) 0ne of the best places to watch the action, according to this reporter's viewpoint, is the tar comer of the goH course at · the par-three hole No. 4, where players hit over water onto an undulated green. If properly seated behind the green, fans can also see the fifth tee box. The area features plenty of trees for warm days and !united foot traffic because of its remote location. Another favorite "bot spot" is the busy intersection encompassing four greens (2, 5, 7 and 11) and three tees (3, 6 and 8). The best way to get there is walk alongside the No. 2 fairway, and, by the lime you reach the green, you'll see a lot of activity. The area also features th~ highest point on the course. On clear days, fans can see snowcapped Mt. Baldy to the north, Catalina Island beyond the Paafic Ocean horizon and the Upper Newport Bay to the west. • Night Lit Driving Range • Free 18 Hole Putting Course Tournaments & Banquet Facilities • Senior Discounts ' Private & Group Lessons Availab]e • ' Where Champions Play ... GARY MCCORD, THE 1999 TOSHIBA SENIOR CLASSIC CHAMPION the past four years, as home to the """' Toshiba Classic, a Senior PGA Tour Event, we have had the pleasure to host many of the legends of professional golf. Play the course the champions play and take hone your very own personal trophy ... Another perfect day at ... NBCC. • • Doily Pilot c.a 11 for starting times: 714/543-1115 TOSHIBA RANGE HOST OF THE 1999 U.S. OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP QUALIFYING THE NEWPORT BEACH COUNTRY CLUB 'SPECIAL $ LARGE BUCKET W/COUPON Expires 3/31/00 .. 1800 W. Santa Clara, Santa Ana www.riverviewgolf.com Bristol Street (south of 22 & 5 fwy~.) to Santa Clara.West on Santa Clara to dub. C-411 DokJrts Virtue for mnnbmhip infomuttion 1600 Eut Pacific Coa.n Highway Ncwpon Beach, 9266o {949) 644.9550 (;Qrpom1t dnd chnrilJ 1olftoum111111:ntt 11rt ~komwi on MoNiltys (A/J llrl111 ~n llo'llnt. r,_um11mm1 Cooftlin11tor t < ' Doily Pilot wlnnef .. 19 P G A To u r tit I e s wllh his biggest trfurriph coming at 1112 u.s Open at Pebble leech ... Illas PIA Tour's lead· lftg .Jft9fWY win'.. rwr In 1981 end 1• and was first 1n tour h~tory to reach S6-. S7· . ss- and S9· million marks in career e19rn1ngs ... Captain of U,S Ryder Cup team in i997 and played Qn seven American squads ... age 50. Gene LlttLER HM won29 PGA TOUI t It I es. lnclud· Ing the , 9 6 1 u . s . Open at Oakla.nd Hills CC ... Has eight official senior tour v1cto· nes a~ won the 1981 L~ends of Golf with Bob Rostxlrg and the . . Played on WWfl u . s . Ryder Cup teams and received both the Bob Jones and Ben H~ Award~ in 1971 .w Loves clatsic cars . .. 969. Friday, February 25, 2000 SJ3 ··~Mr. 59'? How 'bout 'Mr. Nice Guy'? - I . Mr. 59' seems to be a flat-out winner every he steps on the fairways, and you can't help r oot for him regardless .of his competition. ...-LOu 1uORT BEACH -It was a thrill e Al Ceiberger, TOSHIBA of the nicest in all of sp()rts, atop the erboard in the final round st year's Toshiba Senior sic at Newport Beach try Club. eiberger, as most have otten, had a chance to it on the last bole. ut, while it was great for y. golf fans to watch •Mr play so well, it was y as heartbreakmg to ess bun blow a four-foot putt for par that would've ·ven Geiberger, 62, his fU'St ·or PGA Tour btle slllce 1996 Greater Naples .) lntelliNet Challenge. e affable Geiberger, a~. forced a four-man yofl, eventudlly won by wman GdI}' McCord, and everybody remembers what happened from there. Geiberger, who has a history of playing well in Orange County. would've been only the sixth super senior (60 and older) to capture both titles -the regular Toshiba Classic championship and the •tournament wiUun a tournament" for the super seniors. Five times in Senior PGA Tour history, a player has won both the super senior and regular tournament during the same weekend. Hall of Farner Gary Player was the last to accomplish the unique "double dip" at the 1998 Northville Long Island Cassie. Jimmy Powell (twice, the 1995 First of America and '96 Bnckyard Cr<ming), Dale Douglass ('96 Bell Atlantic Classic) and Bob Charles ('96 Hyatt Regency Maw Kaanapali Classic) have also pulled off the double. Last year, Geiberger won the super seruors title on Saturday, then took a two-stroke lead on Sunday in the overall tourname nt WJth a birdie at 17. But McCord and Allen Doyle both birdied 17 and 18, and Geiberger missed his putt on 18, a par hve arid one of the easiest boles on the goU course, and made bogey to force a playoff. Ge1berger, who was elurunated (along Wlth Doyle) on the first playoff while McCord went on to bedt John Jacobs Ul five extra holes, went for it on hlS approach shot at 18, instead of ldying up, and it cost him dearly. Hts ball . flew to the nght of the green · and into the roLI;gh, leaving him some work to make par. 1)-ying to hold on in a . horse race, Geiberger hit a bad chip shot at 18, tandmg just off the fringe. where he ne.eded to g.et up and down for par to wm the toumameht But Geiberger's two-putt set the stage for one of the most dramdttc (and hilariou~) playoffs in semor tour history, begmrung with the first playoff hole when Jacobs ctupped m a 90-foot eagle from the throat and followed it with a twinkle toes dance celebration McCord then kept the playoff alive with an 18-foot eagle putt, and, as the gdllery e rupted, molloned W)th d curled mde)C flnger for Jacob'> to come and fetch his ball from the jar a nd the crowd went crazy agam. Jacobs retrieved McCord's ball dlld threw tl mto the crowd. Ge1bcrger, meanwhile, quieUy went back into clubhouse, anq, in the end, Newport's Favorite Waterfront Bestaurant Italian. Specialties Piano Bar Nightly ~~Late Night Dining .}~For Reservations: 9491642-7880 3 J 3 J West Coasi Highway :: Newport Beach was lost m th(• shurflf>. Nu pr~ss rnnferenc e~. no teleVlsion intorv1~ws But •Mr. 5!-f" chd • E'drn S8H,OOO for Ill'> second-pldc~ lw <1nd threE>-round ·204 (6CJ-h6-b9) Jn fdct, G<'1bt•1CJN en1oyed on<' of the finest seasons of <1ny plc.1yPr ovc•1 IJO years of u~.J<' on thP s<•mor tour m 199q, muking 2:J t1ppcurdnces c1ncl Winnmq . $559,062 in offlndl monPy (34th on thE> money hc;t) his h1ghf''>I IOtdl stn< P 1993. Getb£>rgf'f ntdcf(' ht'> 111c1rk 1n the Georc11c.t;P.t1nflc \upe1 Seruors comp~tilion 111 '<¥! with thr~(· win.., {mcludrnq Toshtbdl c1nd a hfth-pl<1< e hnish on the c;upcr '>enior<. money list with $277,687. The 1996 Semor PCA Tour Comeback PlrJyl'r of tlw Yl'ur, Ge1ber9er won 11 llm<•'> on the PGA Tour -his hi<J~Jt•st tnumph conunq di th<' 19bu PGA Chdmp1onsh1p. I tc• earned his ruckndmc whPn he post~d thf> first sub-60 score 10 PGA Tour history, d .59, en rou!l• to tht• 1<)77 Ddnny ThomcJs·M<>mph1s C lassic titlP But Ge1bNqcr, who pluyPd at USC, hds dlso plc1yt·d well m Ornnge Count~. me ludin<J winning the 1956 SouthNn Cdltforrua Aluuteur Champ1onsh1p at Santa Ana Country C'lub Geiberger dlso cctpture>d the '59 SCGA t1mc1tt-our lltle at Oakmont. •Mr. 59" I.led for second t1l the 19&1 Ordnge County OpE>n t.1nd finished in the top 1!> 10 th<' Sdme event in 1960 <1nd 'h2, when the event was hoc;ted by Mesa Verde Country Club When 11 was the I ld1g Open at Mesu VNd<> in '68, Geiberger cJgam placed 1n the top 15. In the mdugural Tostuba SPmor C'luss1c dl Mesd Verde an '95, Geiberger tied for t>1ghth In the 1996 event, ht! llNl for 11th when 1t was pluyP.d dl Newport Beach C 'ountl) ('lub for the hrst llnw. Ge1ht•rger 1s dlso a hero to c1notlwr s<'gment of the world for d .. ,cto:y fdr greater . thcin <1 PGA title or d 59 on his c <1rcl. Al the· end of his PGA Tour ccHPPr, he hdd so much trouble w1th his stomach and low sugc1r thdt d toumdlllent ch>clor, John Perry, prescribed c1 cl11>t of peanut butter and ·icily sdndwiches to be cdJTied oround 1n his goU bag. To this. cJ,1y he still endorses Skippy Pl•t1nut ButtN. But, then. Ge1berger came down with tl devastating tllm'ss clnd was required to undergo an "ileostomy, • a • & surgical procedwe in which the colon is removed and bfe with a bag at your side tS d~manded. Many people stay away from regular soaety, but Ge1berger merely tned to shoot more 59s and became the poster boy for a lot of folks who believed you couldn't do that m his condttion. Prior to the Ralphs Serum' C"ldss1c at Wllshlre m October 1995, Geiberger told the Los Angeles Tunes: •1 remember I had been encouraged by the San Diego footbdll player, Roll Berurschke. He had the same operation a -year before and he was ~eady back placekicking for the Chargers when J got my operation. It was such a Wt for me, I try to tdlk about my expenence, hopmg it will tell others not t o qwt. It's unportant. • Ge1berger's the type of guy who still smile!. after missing four-foot putts Wlth llUes on the line, a rarity anywhere. No o ne ever sees tum throw a club or kick sand 10 a bunk4'!r He'll never bite a cadd1e's hedd off for giving him the wrong yardage. If you see Geiberger al the dnvlllg range or putting green at Uus year's Toshiba Classic, SdY hello. He'll smile and say hello in return. j'ine 'Dining "'Esta6{isfiments Liio 'Marina o/il[age wants to Congratufate tlie City of~ ~!OJ ..... ant !Hoag !Hospital for Spons~ of. • .. . ' Iii \ I • ' ' • • I 4 I I ' ' I _8_J4 __ Fn_doy,~,_Februo~-ry~2_5~,_2000_· ______________ ~------------~~--~----------------------------------~q ----Do--il~y-P1~·1ot 1'09HIU The rOOkies: WatsOn, -Kite·· arid ·WH,dkiitsY •Time flys department: These three are the Senior PGA Tour's new kids on the block. of the Year {1993-94) Dave Stockton, referring to the top-notch rookie threesome. "We've come through a dry spell with few real name · players arriving. The three of them coming out at once is real important, something we've needed. They'll motivate everybody out here, and they'll motivate each other.· Richard Dunn DAILY. PILOT NiWPORT EACH - The mile- stone year 2000 the TOSHIBA world has counted down to is also the year the Senior PCA Tour has been anxiously awaiting. If age 50 is the beginning of a new lease on life for _ professional golfers, then the new millennium is the start ' of a new era on the golden-age tour. While the sixth annual Toshiba Senior Classic at Newpoi;t Beach Country Club will for the first time feature 7Q-year-old legend Arnold Palmer, it also represents a changing of the guard with senior tour rookies Tom J<,j.te, Lanny Wadkins and Tom Watson -one of the finest first-year classes in tour history. When Wadkins hoisted the trophy of the ACE Group Classic championship Feb. 13 in his first start on the seruor tour, it was symbolic of the tour's overnight metamorphosis. Two weeks after Watson's THE UNIVERSITY ATHLETIC CLUB -one of 50th birthday last September, he captured the Bank One . Championship in his second start on the senior tour. And for Kite, a winner of 19 PGA Tour titles, including the 1992 U.S. Open at Pebble Beach, -it's just a matter of time before he takes his place on the victory stand in a senior tour event. It could even be in Newport Beach. "The senior tour is built on the names of its players,• said Bob Murphy, the 1997 · Toshiba Classic winner, when he topped Jay Sigel in a then-senior tour record nine-hole playoff. "What draws.people to us are the great players they have followed their whole lives. n Watson, eligible to play the last 2112 months of the 1999 senior tour season, enters Ulis year with the loftiest credentials of the trio, having won 34 PGA Tour events and eight major championships, including five British Opens as he staked claim to the most dominant player of the late 1970s and early 80s. "This is just what the senior tour needs,• said two-time senior tour Player Watson, Kite and Wadkins bring with them Ryder Cup captaincy and major titles, but more importantly to the Senior PGA Tour, they carry in their bags a medley of competition, reputation and fan appeal, the basis for the 21-year tour that names its award for the leading money winner after Palmer. "There are going to be a whole bunch of great players coming out here soon and I look forward to that," 1999 senior tour Player of the Year Bruce Fleisher told r~pc>rters late last year. "Hey, maybe it wiJ.1 make it a lot tougher to duplicate the kind of year I had, but I think that would be a pretty tough thing to do anyway. You always ~ant tO play against the best . · players.• The effective length of a player on the senior tour continually finishing among the top 31 money leaders is, no matter how great the bringing a whole new look co Orange County's premier private athletic fraternities - proudly announces new ownership and management! We're building on UA~'s winning history as the exclusive gentlemen's athletic cl ub in Newport Beach, our stace-of- che-arc facilities. With only a handful of memberships available, be sure to call for a complimentary tour and guest pass. Otherwise, you might have to join the crowd ac one of those other places. 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In his PGA Tour career, the Stanford graduate won two Masters titles, one U.S. Qpen and five British Opens, ranking him 11th on the PGA Tour's all-time victory list with his 34 wins. Watson was the PGA Tour's leading money winner five times, including four years in a row, and is the last player to win the same tournament three years in a row (1978-79-80 Byron Nelson Classic). A six-time PGA Player of the Year, Watson played on four U.S. Ryder Cup teams and captained the 1993 squad to victory at The Belfry. Wadkins, who won 21 titles on the PGA Tour, including the 1977 PGA Championship at Pebble Beach, became known as a gunslinger, taking pleasure in facing tough opponents, a precarious pin or a particularly tough golf course. Ci;eam-puff courses are not his style. Wadkins, the 1995 U.S. Ryder Cup captain and eight-time member of the team, became the ninth player in senior tour history to win in his first start at 'Naples, Fla., when he prevailed in a three-hole playoff that began with four players {Jose Maria Canizares, Walter Hall and Watson were also in the field). Wadkins, whose last PGA • Tour title came at the 1992 Greater Hartford Open, won three times in both 1982 and 1985, placing second on the money list in '85. Kite, the PGA Tour'.s leading money winner in 1981 and 1989, and the first in history to reach the $6-, $7-, 8-and $9-million marks in career earnings, became known as the ultimate grinder, getting every inch out of his game. Like Wadkins and Watson, Kite was a U.S. Ryder Cup captain (1997), while playing on seven American squads in the biannual competition. Also unique about the senior tour's rookie trio is that their reputations were built during a soaring ' television age, as their victories and personalities were witnessed by millions 1 of fans. Now, those same fans can watch as their golfing lives begin again at 50. The Secret To Living Well™ Membership Warehouse FOR BUSINESS &.HOME A DIVISION OF WAL-MART STORES INC. Clll 1 ....... ·81ml r.1111 IAM'I Clllll 11111'111 Yllll . (949) 589-9793 ~.tijerucreek.com .............. ~ .......... _ ..... _0o __ il_y_P_ilo_t ____________________ ---'--------------------~---------------------------------F_rid_oy~,_Fe_bruo __ ry....._2s~,_2ooo ___ S_l_S TOSHllA WEATHER REPORT Probably the best ddvice for Toshiba Seruor Classic fans would be to take along a sweater, whether you're an all-day juruoe or perhaps just spending a morning or af temoon with the pros. Weather reports show the recent rams across Southern Califorrua should be making their final bow on Sunday, leaving the pro-celebrity phase of the Classic high and dry on Monday, and the rest of the wee k appears to be m the low 60s and partly cloudy, le nding to spectaculcµ days for the last few days of February and into early March. Mornings are often dominated by cloud cover, but by 1 p.m . the sun should be breaking through, although it won't do a lot for picking up the temperatures. FA CTS 'N FIGURES • what: Toshibd Senior Classic • Who: 78 Seruor PGA Tow profess1ondls; 54 holes of stroke TOSHIBA play with no cuts • Wbe re 1 Newport Beach Country Club, 1600 East Paclflc Codst Highway, Newport Beach • Whe n: Feb. 28 through March 5, 2000 .(three-round semor tour play is March 3-5) • Purse: $1 .3 nullion; winner receives $195,000 • TV coverage: ESPN (live), March 3, noon to 2 p.m.; March 4, 3 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.; March 5, 2:30 p.m. to 4 p.m. Schedule subject to change • Past champions: 1999 -Gary McCord 1998 --Hale Lrwm 1997 -Bob Murphy 1996 -Jim Colbert 1995 -George Archer (al Mesa Verde Country C lub) • Course designers: Ted Robinson ( 1985), Harry Rainville (1973), William Bell (1952) •Layout: Par 71, 6,584 yards • Operating charity: Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian • To urnament chalnnen: Hank Adler and Jake Rohrer -· Tournament director: Jeff Purser • Monday qualifier: Strawberry·.t~ Golf Club, Irvine ·~ •Tickets: Advance purchase (good any day), $14 Smgle day (Monday through Thursday at gate), $15 Single ddy (Fnday through Sunday at gate), $17 Week-long badge (Monday through Sunday, grounds only), $50 Season clubhouse badge (Monday through Sunday, grounds and clubhouse), $100 • Information: call (949) 515-4840, or purchase bckets online at www.Tush.ibaSeniorClassic.com Lose Inches, Wrinkles & Double Chin with "SYNERGIE" Revolutionary Vacuum Massage Technology NON-SURGICAL FACELIFT Call (949) 515-4FIT (4348) 440 E111t S1t1enteuith Street ,.. Co1t11 Mes11, C11 92627 , 11 Awlfd ~ CtMIUd Oplfv.-Tour 1162, .. --=-• U.S. Op9la tVtfth, lowlnt ~-.. , , h ... • n ~iev: u • s f19tited ~ t h • Ama 'tW *"°' c ome· gre1t teut • "I It l;I a c It ~·· W•h .. ,. 19" PGA from • . ty rt to MM Ch1mp1· s•rlous er!Joys S1 mMUon us.~ ... ~on--onship .. auto acddent ~ ... Has in PG.A Tour ttne R)dlr l.oni wtior tour ... Had lftOdw datmed .92 career ......... events worldwide In Newport tor dtll C'llN It 1989 moment ~----scary a ~,,.,,,... ~nBell when he 111195 whh '° titles on first time ... Slnlor Nmd ft .. OIMC -Hcnorect str\dtJi= JIGA Tour -W!n· tour was~ ner of fo\W Mas-l.wgely "*--°' .,.....,..,. ~Golf Wrtt.n -11151. .... Hoglr\ .t 1'75 ap.n _91J. ten, two British him-.970. \ $100 grand Hole hi One Challenge ••• 13 Seruor PGA Tour players will have a chance to win $100,000 with one sWing of the club in the MFS Hole In One Challenge, held dunng the Toshiba Senior Classic March 3-5 at Newport Beach Country Club. 170-yard par-three hole No 13 will wm 100 grand in the MFS mutual fund 01 h~ choice With each hole m one, d $50,000 annuity will also be donated to the tournament's lead chanty, Hoag Hospital Poundab9n number of winners, so th<~ prize will be dvailable to each ol the 78 pros on all three ddys ol pldy. Any player who aces the There is no cap tlil the MFS lnve ... tment Mdnage- ment, i:I gold sponsor for the 2000 Toshibd event, 1s credit- ed with invP.nting the mutual fund m 1924 .. "G~eat courses, great rates ... paid for itself after one use." Choose the perfect club! 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" "The Right Tools For The Job" ELECTRIC · GAS •Golf • Con1111erclal • Industrial • Recreational • Turf •New • Refurbished • Used • Sales • Service •Par.ts • Rentals Ask About Our Senior Citir.en Discounts ~ ... 949-515-7960 Fax 9A9-515-796A I I 516 A Doily PiJQt ___ F_~ ___ ,F_ebruory __ ~2_5,~2_000 __________________________ ~ --------------------------------~--------== - ToshiQa Senior Classic is on a roll. Richard Dunn DAILY PILOT ORT CH- the Toshiba Senior Classic flourishes TOSHIBA in prosperity in its sixth year, while having featured some of the most exciting golf on the Senior PGA Tour, the event is a classic rags-t<rriches story. From almost disintegrating in May 1997 to becoming the q1ass of the circuit under the q:ianagement of Hoag flospital, the J"oshiba event bas an unparalleled history. Here's a timeline of some momentous occasions: •June 16, 1994 -The first reports of a Senior PGA Tour event possibly coming to Mesa Verde Country Club were published with National Car Rental bidding to become the title sponsor and the Orange County . Sports Association serving as tournament operator. In September of that year, with National pulling out because of an impending sale, Bob Neely of International Sports and Event Marketing came into the picture with his client, Toshiba, which bad long desired to sponsor a maJOr l)>Orting event. Od. 25, 1994 -OCSA 4itnounced that the ~ugural Toshiba Senior 4=la.ssic would be played at Mesa Verde in March 1995. .5 Andersen. ocsA xecutive director, was ed as tournament ector of the $800,000 •vent. • •nuth be told, we've been working on (coming to Or&nge County) for four years, but we couldn't get all the ingredients together,• said Ric Clarson, then the senior tour's director of administration. • Mardi 10, 1995 -After a mad scramble beta.use of less than five months to prepare for the county's first senior tour event, the Toshiba Classic becomes a reality with a pro-am on opening day. • March 19, 1995 -Only two days removed from deciding to retire at season's end because of a degenerative hip, George Archer shoots a six-under 64 in the final .rolind to win the Toshiba. "Golf is a crazy game. You do things you're not supposed 'to do,• said Archer, required to take a daily df.>Se of lndocin, an anti-inflammatory, before teeing off. (Archer has since had hip replacement surgery.} • March 31, 1995 - Andersen abruptly resigns · from OCSA, two weeks after published reports said the tax-exempt charity was suffering from serious financial debt. OCSA later declared bankruptcy with debts reportedly of $1.5 million. •April 14, 1995 -Disputes between OCSA and Mesa Verde become public, including "petty• financial issues, according to OCSA business manager Bob Atwell. Mesa Verde had a solid core of volunteers, but the club struggled with sufficiept parking. The future site of the Toshiba event is up in the air. •June 3o, 1995 -Neely, who orchestrated a thtee-year deal for his client to become the title sponsor, becomes the tournament's executive directdr and hires Michael Garey as• the tournament director. •July 17, 1995 -The Newport Beach Country Club iS named as host site of the Toshiba Classic and signs a two-year agreement with Neely. •March 17, 1996 ~Jim Colbert enters the final round with a huge five-stroke lead and wins the second Toshiba Classic by two shots. •1 can't play much better,• said Colbert, who added that Newport Beach was "the perfect seniors golf course." Hard-charging Bob Eastwood shoots a · final-round 64 to tie a course record, but still comes up short. •June 7, 1996 -Neely replaces Garey with Stephen Wagner as tournament director •to make the event more progressive and more profitable for the charities in the ensuing years." It means the third tournament director in three years. • March 10, 1997 -The thi{d Toshiba Classic opens, but not all signs are good: There are player no-shows for the Monday pro-am and the much-ballyhooed Tuesday Shootout is canceled for the second yeai; in a row. •March 16, 1997 -Bob Murphy defeats Jay Sigel ip a record nine-bole playoff with an 80-foot birdie putt at 17. Murphy flips his putter in the air, knocks off his straw hat and puts his hands on his head in disbelief. It would be shown throughout the year on television replays. "I was sort of getting dizzy, going around and • around and around," Sigel quipped or the playoff, which was topped a year later when David Graham beat Dave Stockton in a 10-hole playoff at the Royal Caribbean Classic. • May 10, 1997 -fu an unprecedented move, the Newport Beach Country Club ownership group ·issues , a statement to Neely and the senior tour, termj.nating any further interaction with the operating charity. The club cited payment defaults, including a disputed food and beverage invoice of $25,000, as one of th€ reasons for its decision to sever ties with the tournament operator. •June 24, 1997 -It's Hoag Hospital to the rescue. Following an acrimonious split between the country club .and ISM, the Daily Pilot gets word that volunteers of the venerable hospital's fund-raising entity are close to an agreement with the senior tour to take over as operator of the event. Volunteers of the 552 Club, which organized the Newport Classic Pro-Am for Hoag, were sought after by Seruor PGA Tour official Tun Crosby, who had long respected their work. Jake Rohrer and Hanle Adler are scheduled to share tbe role of tournament chairman. • Aug. 28, .1997 -Hoag is formally announced as the new tournament manager and signs three separate agreements with Toshiba, NBCC and the Senior PGA Tour. "You will see a significant change in the proceeds generated to charity in this event," Crosby said. •Sept. 19, 1997 ........ Lured from the tour's event at LE Grand Rapids, Mich., Jeff Purser is hired as the Toshiba Classic's new tournament director, the fowth in four years. • March 15, 1998 -Hale lrwin provides more magic for the tournament, shooting a course~record 62 in the final round to win the event. .lrwin gets a big assist from a now-famous bunker rake at 17, which sCops his ball from rolling into the water as he gets up and down to save pdr "It's that local knowledge. You learn where the rakes are," lrwm cracked. Copping a tremendous final day; Rohrer and Adler present a $600,000 check to Hoag Hospital on the 18th green. •May 27, 1998 -With the finaJ accounting completed, tournament officials announce a mind-boggling sum of $701,000 for chanty. •Nov. 20, 1998-Hodg 1 lospital is announced as the inaugural winner of the Senior PGA Tour's Charity of the Year. Rohrer and Adler are invited to Goll World Village in Florida to accept the award. "This is an award that can be shdled equally by everyone who is involved in the Toshiba Senior Classic,• Adler said. •tt took hundreds of volunteers and sponsors to make this tournament the success that lt is .• • March 14, 1999 -In possibly the most thrilling senior tour event of year, Gary McCord wins Toshiba Semor Classic V in a five-bole playoff, tu.ming it into a "made-for-teleV1S1on event• with hilarious antics rare ly seen in golf. Jn the four-man playoff, Al Ge1berger and Allen Doyle • are eliminated on the firit <J hole, as John Jacobs chlps UJ for eagle from 90 feet, then dances a jig in celebration, does an imitation of Chi Chi Rodriguez's sword dance and tumbles backward ont'O' the fairway. • I McCord, though, sinks an 18-foot putt for eagle to 'extend the playoff, and the two play off eac:h other the ' rest or the way. Meanwhile, over $800,00Q is donated to Hoag, the · largest second-year gilt m tour history. The event also • owns the record for the biggest first-year donation and the largest for the hrst two years combined (over $1.5 million). • Feb. 9, 2000 -Arnold Pahner, perhaps the most famous player in goU history corrunits to play in Toshiba Senior Classic VI, marking the first time the 70-year-old legend will play in the event • Feb. 14, 2000 -Toshiba and Hoag Hospital agree on a new three-year contract, while NBCC also reaches a three-year deal with Hoag, keeping the event going through 2003. •Toshiba is proud to be involved in the Tostuba Seruor Classic, a toumamen that has captivated golf fans and profoundly impacted so many vital charities in the process," Toshiba executive Joe Fonnichelli said. . Added Purser: "Newport Beach Country Club iS quite simply the home of the Toshiba Senior Classic. lt is the perfect course for a senior tour event, and their entire staff is really corrunitted to hosting a tournament that stands out among the finest on the schedule.· • March 5, 2000 -and th~ winner is ... Tom & Sharon Jackson invite you to join them email tjacktonOwtbtvl.com TWO FOR ONEPRIONG PANAMA CANAL CRUISE ' CRYSTAL HARMONr -Limited Availability-· NEW ORLEANS-ACAPULCO APRIL 20th-MAY 1st WORLD TRAVEL (1W~~__, ... VOLUNTEERS Cbalrmen Hank Adler Jake Rohrer Volunteer Ston1ces Pete CUneo -Volunteer Coordination & Commumty Promouon.s John 01.marto -Voluntf'Cr Rt-cruibng llon Singer -Volunte<>r Unlformi. Faum Vitali -Volunteer J lospit&lity Sponsor Services f>ean Gale -Credential Venfscauon Jadde Bouchey --Credentials & Hosp1talsty Sheila Thomsen -Will Call Professional Player Sen1c:. 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Mich •. ~ TOSMIU ·. - part of a thrtllln9, and hilarious, playoff In last year's Toshiba Senior Classic, John acobs (left) reacts after slnklng a 90-foot chip for eagle on the first playoff hole, setting the stage for Gary McCord's 18-foot eagle putt to square the match that eveptually went five extra holes. In the four-man playoff, Al Gelberger and Allen Doyle were ellmlnated on the first playoff hole. After Jacobs chipped In with his wedge, he danced a jig In celebration, did an lmltatton of Chi Chi Rodriguez's sword dance, then tumbled backward on the turf at,Newport Beach Country Club, which has played host to two playoffs (encompassing 14 extra boles) in three years. McCord bea t Jacobs In the playoff. O ther tournamel?t sights: Al right. Lee Tre vino putts out on the 8th green before a large gallery, and below, from left: Walter Morgan putts away on his tra demark cigar, Gary Player tees off with that lnlmJtable swing and Al Gelberger waves to the crowd after yet another conquest WHEN THE GOLF COlURSE GETS BORING IT'S TIME FOR ... ·Ml CASA MEXICAN RESTAURANT OUR MEALS ARE A TRIP TO MEXICO Mouth-watering entrccs, a relaxed dining atmosphere and pario seating with a delightful view of Ncwporc Bay make for a refreshing break in your day -Newport style! Open even days a week fo r breakfast and lunch, 7:00AM-3:00PM. (949) 7 29-1144 1131 B•clt B•J Dm1t • Ntwp1ri Bt•(h Off /•1doru HoaJ • 011t l>lorlt t6Jt of PCH • GREETING CARDS • PAPER GOODS • 5TUFFED ANIMALS • CUSTOM GIFT WRAPPING • 6ALLOONS WE DELIVER (See st or• for defllll} Award Wmmng Seafood Chowder made Jrtsh daily. Optn 7 days for dinntr starring April I WEDDINGS • ANNOUNCEMENTS CUSTOM INVITM'IONS .. •u.t ollr trained stlllf capture that special moment" ' ' MON·SAT M CU.. 270 E. 17th St., Co.ta (948) 7~·1803 I ALSO ON OUR MENU: HERE, WE . "FISH TACOS"' TORTILLA SOUP (HILi SIZE CHILI CHEESE OMELETTE MAl<E DINING MORE THAN A MEAL! Our Naine says· it all. Newp_ort Tobacco FASHION I S L A N D I 11 \ { ~:::1 . g ,;f't:.tVitw fl/ ,N1~ ·y11;.,~ f//lef llWlt' fo /,(;tr tk:~~~ IY'/l/lt'l;;_k.11, • The finest selection from all over Ule wor .~ -~"'*~ •. )~.9),,.J (949) 644-5153 .... ' • • l>Oily Pilot Chempl· or.hip '" Claimed unoffl· c I a I Senl or British Open .,.. 1994 ... Was 1992 PGA Club Prof&. Siooal of YHr ... Didn't play golf until he taught himself at • 2S .. ~57. Pilot Quiz L o n e senior tour title came at 1 9' 1 I an k , 0 n e Classic ... Owns two PGA Tour titles,· as well as four Georgia Open Champl- onShip$ aAd sev- en Georgia PGA Championships ... ....., cc:.,. 5MU ... ad di tion t6 golf ... ~yed In more than 30 evenU last ye1r for ninth st= season ... 111 Fellowlhlp of Christien Ath· letft ... agelO. YOU ·PUT GOLFERS WITH THE PICTURES? 3 4 5 7 8 9 10 uosdwo41 pJeuO<l1 Ol 'adJ041 w1r 6 :~!M1 pJeMOH ·a·:uo1.,po1s al\eQ l :peaus ;)'f ·g :sapel() Q08 s :sqo>er u4or ~ •we4eJ9 p11\eo £ '14J><>!P8 46rH z 'J<16Jaq1a4>!3 a"eo l :sl:IJMSNY HEDULE OF EVENTS l Sunday, Feb. 27 -Celebrity J P~Am Kickoff Party, 6:30 p.m. to 9:30 I p . (at 19th Hole, Newport Beach : C ntry Club) • Monday, Feb. 28 -Celebrity IP -Am, shotgun start at 12:45 p.m. 1Uesday, Feb. 29 -Community • Br.eakf ast presented by Deloitte & Touche, 7:30 a.m., Newport Beach Marriott. Defendin1;1 Toshiba Senior Classic champion Gary McCord is the featured speaker. Player practice rounds -all day Junior Clinic, 4 p.m., at .practice range • Friday; February 25, 2000 Sl9 e w n s t II r • e nnior to u r tltlH, • 1th biggest win com- ing at 1tll Van· ~ Champl· Gnlhlp ... Won 10 ewnu on 1982 SPICil Colst mini· tour lft Florida , •• tMe rtcOrd for . faueu round In u . s 0 p. ft hlstory; t w 0 hours 13 minutes In 1971 at Cherry Hills ... Spent several years working In c oo st ruc·t fon while ~ gotfk't..,.ttme ....... Dall¥ P.ilot PARKING THOMAS H. JOHHSON Publtshef TOHYDOOE.RO Editor • ROGER CARLSON Sports Editor MARCMAJmN Photo Editor lANA JOHNSON Promotions WIWAM LOBDEU. . TCN Editor STEVE MARBLE TCN Managing Editor ADDRESS Our address 1s 330 W. Bay St, Costa Mesa. CA 92627 Sports (94'V 574-4223 News. Spo<ts Fax (949) 646-4170 •• • ,Hi& IMlFl a ... of Senior ~bl events, lndudino 19!11 San llJGe's a. tc -\tby ~ amcr.t 9M!ll )en afuy 1-6 HIW ssn DI ti} ~1he~ ~ betM91 wns onf'eei'CUt-He ta .Jl!o dained three f'GA Toll ... Wf1 f1e ... ~· .. 1916 Fht t« N w Ori •ns QJen -Is (ff of 14 <hl-<*wl _ A.4d NASCAR l3Cl'g fan cwld tw considenld being ind.«i il 1he ~ nfw!f\an _.ge fiO E·marl dailypilotOlatrmes com Pvblilhed by TitMI Communtty Newi.. • ,.,,,,.. ,,.,,'°' (Omplny. ....,. Parld~ is in ilire~ D, The Dunes off Bad< Bay Road, and E. on the north side of Fashion Island. w ith shuttle service from both sites. O.ICIOOT....,CHMrlf1"a- Wednesday, March 1 -Classic Pro-J,\m, shotgun starts at 7 a.m. and 12:45 p.m. at approximately 8:30 a.m. Thursday, March 2 -Classic Pro- Am, shotgun starts at 7 a.m . and' 12:45 p.m. Saturday, March 4 ...:._ Second round of Toshiba Senior Classic, t ee times begin at approximately 8 a.m. Friday, March 3 -First round of Toshiba Sen ior Classic, tee t imes begin Sunday, March 5 -Final round of Toshiba Senior Cl assic, tee t imes begin at approximat ely 7:30 a.m. _asters \VEEK- ON TH E GOLF C H AN N EL April 3rd -9th, 2000 Joill lKJr \\CCk lo.1g "11urc 10 \l.i\rl ,, 2CXXJ. Jlll~ \\'<.d.; kid.\ off" ah~ \~ll:1. i.11 \VcdnNby n1ghc p1cv11.:w. r~n each night \\t.11 hnng you 'JX'C1.ll cd1rion' of Gut F C!·NI R \I .md Vu \\'f;k\ FoRU.\I 'lJrunng complete: cm'CrJh'<.' llr 1hc J.1y\ c'rni' B"mur' rt\ 01..f MOJtm. 8rrtl11.JI' w tt'n • TM (~lj Chamul. ) Ill t-I : ~n@om~~!l 1 c (1-888-288-2278) e . TOMMY AARON JIM AHERN JlM ALeus lsAoAOKI GEORGE AROIER HUGH BAIOCCHI Blfl'CH BAJRD Miu.ER BARBER . DoN BIES JOHN BlAND B1u.B~K JOSE MARIA CANIZARES RAY C\RRAsco Bos CHARLES JIM Cowrurr · CHARLES Cooov JIM DENT Bos D~KSON TERRY Dru.. Eo DouGHERTV , DALE DoUGLASS Au.EN DoYLE Boa DUVAL Boe EAslwooo · I DAVE ErCHElBERGER BRUCE FLEISHER AL GEJBERGER FRED GIBSON STEWART GINN DAVID GRAHAM HUBERT GREEN WALTER ffAu. MARK HAYES HARow Hf.NNING DAVE HnL JOE INMAN HALE IRwIN JOHN JACOBS TOM JENJ<JNS ~ . , ·. --. t • CITY OF NEWPORT BEACH On behalf of the City Council of Newport Beach. I offer you a warm welcome t.o our flne city aru:t to the Toshiba Senior Classic. As you travel throughout Newport Beach. you'll see the pride that each rest.dent shares in this witque and wonderful t.own. Please take part in our world class hospltality, our .fine hotels and restaurants, our prosperous professional centers and harbor; and some of the best shopping qnd entertainment areas in the cowitry. We are proud that the Toshiba Senior Classic has chosen Newport Beach as its lwst city for the stxth stratgh1 year. Tosh1ba. in corlJunctl.on wu.h Newporf s own Hoag Memorial HospUal Presbytertan. makes this a top stop on the Senior Tour. Again, please er!}oy Newport Beach during Toshiba Senior Classic week just as Newport Beach residents and vtsttors do each and every day. Plan to bring your clubs and your game back to see us again and again. John E. Noyes Mayor of Newport Beach ' WALTEI\ ZEMBRJ KJ LARRY ZrEGL.eR