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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2001-02-25 - Orange Coast PilotSERVING THE NEWPORT -W.SA COMMUNmES SINCE 1907 Inside LIFE & LEISURE Columnist Karen Wight tells why citrus plants, especially orange trees. are so appropriate to plant around your home this spring. Hint: this is Orange County. See P11ge 5. Inside COMMUN In FORUM . . • . ON 1HE WEI: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM SUNDAY STORY Newport Beach Councilman Steve Bromberg sat down with the O.ily Pilot to talk about where the El Toro airport fight is headed and how the city is doing in getting a second county airport built. See P11ge 9 . PHOTOS BY GREG FRY I DAl.Y Pit.OT Whenever Austin Russell, 5, develops a fever, his mother Shannon becomes concerned about its source -is it just the Ou, or is It a Oare-up of her son's mysterious illness that sends bis body temperature soaring as high as 106 degrees. Here, she takes Austin's temperature. In the background, Austin's 3-year-old brother, Grant, ts also feeling under the weather. · ULTIMATE CALENDAA: What's going on in Newport Beach and Costa Mesa this week? This month 7 Next month 7 Check out our Ultimate Calendar and find out. See P11ge 7 . Inside SPORTS ' Wh en I was at RIVING EVER Mysterious spikes in body temperature may be sapping some of Austin Russell's childhood but not the 5-year-old's spirit or sense of compassion, whicl} led him to create a toy drive for sick children Danette Goulet DAILY PILOT A t 5 years old, Austin Russell can spell complicated words faster than most adults. He knows all the planets and their moons and has nearly mastered the penodic table of elements. Estancia High wrestler Nathan Thaler waded through The Masters Meet at Fountain Valley High the hard way Saturday, in the consolations: en route to a berth at next week's State Meet. the hospital, they never He can multiply five-digit numbers in his head and was counting by threes at age 2. when his contemporaries couldn't count by one. had good videos. With Austin, logic prevails So I came up with this So when, on one of tus many visits to Children's Hospital of Orange County, the precocious tyke found the hospital's stock of videos and books sore- ly lacking, he did not merely whine to his mother. SM Sports, P1199 10. /\ idea to make other children at the hospital happy ' -Austin RusMll TOP STORY Rolling blackouts expected for summer • Assemblyman tells residents the bad news at energy crlsiS forum held at Orange Coast College. : ......... """ 0M.Y Pa.of COSTA MESA -Rolling blackouts are 8lmolt certa1n to occur um tummer tn Orange County, State Attemblyman John e.mpbeD (Jl·lrvlne) tokl • crowd of about ao people at ONngtl COlit CGlege Sllurd9y llftll'DOOIL c .. .,.......,.... ... Pllt otac • ......., .... ..,.. ._.1aa4am1t1 .. dlW ~••AU.Sletten Campbell's office bas been receiving about California'• energy ailil. Paneli1t1 included Judy Woolen, public attain director for Th• Ga• Compeny: Julie Puente. eucutive vic:e presi· dent of public: Alf a.in for the Otange County Bu1tnea1 Coundl1 and Kid Scherer, ='-~ °' SoUthem ·1 ..... ~ to do 11111 beolwe 511118,f'Mfll • Not Austin. He asked his mother, "Why don't we see about getting people to donate more stuff?" "When I was at the ho~pital, they never had SEE AUSTIN PAGE 4 Despite bis medical condltton, Austin la a playful and full of We as any other boy h1a ege. Internet Newport Mesa is quite q place W here to go. what to see, what to do. It used to be maps and tour guides. Now, it's the Internet. When I plan a trip, I tum to the Web to g t the rundown on the place -something t do often. Hotel.I, restaurants, local attractions, distances from here to there, blah. blah, blah. I have learned through hard·eamid expenence that some- ttmea the 1tuff 11 eccurete, and t0metilnes it tm't. The bardtit eerD8d experience WU a trip to tbe flatbeed lncUan RMerVatiOn ln Montana. J WU go6ng to tbe triMl olficel nortb °' !San hblo to do ail In• new. M llndmd the dNBI. -ollered to la .. • map a db•dlian1. Dma't ...... I 9Dlll 8Mm. wq'1' .... r .... 211t~ ___ .,........,.,.._,~ '*""' ca .. ns 1 Cllllii& •01t. • they said. with an oddly presaent ton of voice. When the tnp had taken at leut 45 minutes and 60 milel longer thaD my computerized.. state-ot-t.be- att ditections had predicted, I WU actually reedy to VlOlate the mun- ber-ooe manly man l'We: Never, ever. ever ask dirKtlool, oo matter how loit you are. I would have violated the manly man code g&Mtly, b\at tbei'e WU ~between me Md the bad· SOD aC9pt a baWk gliding OVW• biled Ind tblM ~ ttirtng at me tbrougb a bMbed wire Imm. ...... 11 .. 19* ........ ""' ...... ,,., ... , ..,. ..._ .. .,.., ............ ...... leRlllt loOk GI dild tr ta .. .,_. Dill_,........ .., 1aa.....acm..,,. .... • WEEk.IN . . . .. 2 Sunday, Febrvary 25, 2001 IF 'OILY PLIPPIR COULD VOTE "lt'tl a JJtUe tougher when you come out wlth a lllm that celebrates the joys and wonders of an animal. 1f I had dolphtns voting, I 'm sure /1d be Jn better shape." -Greg MtacGllllvray, Corona del Mar native, on the chences his nominated lmax film, •oolphlns," hes of win· nlng the best documentary short subje(t Oscar. I I YI I YI, RESORT. HILLO WHO·KNOWS? PHOTO OF THE WEEK Por ~other week, it wat all about Crystal Cove. Alter a trip to hll Piji resort took him out of the range of pres• inqulrte1, San Prandlco develop- er Mlchael Freed CRYSTAL finally 1ounded ott COYE about the 1tate'1 announcement to pay him $2 million to kill h1J lux- ury re1ort plan. During a Wednesday inter- view, Freed 1aid he would accept the buyout, ending hll more than three-year effort to build a $35 mill1on re1ort at Crystal Cove State Park. At a Jan. 18 public meeting in Corona del Mar, Freed found himseU at the heart of a mael- strom of public opposition to his resort. Complaining that his resort plan wa1 m11understood, Freed said he wanta •a project the com- munity can get behind.• -PM Qlnton COWl'I the environment and John Wayne Airport. He INY be rtached It (949) 764-4330 or by .-mall at pt11/.dlnton•l1tlmes.com. A QUiii HOLIDAY Wiii FOR ARIA SCHOOLS 'THE DANCE' It w41 a 1low week in educa- tion thankt to the debut of the Presldentl Doy holiday week in the Newport-Mesa Unified School Diltrtct. Students were off, the schools were dark, even the district office was a ghost town. But the Amert-IDUCATION can Bar Assn. still managed to ruffle some educational feathers with its dedlton to pass a resolution Monday opposing zero-tolerance policies at schools. The group tllOUlllTl flOll 1111 KINl1 Aa Wa aaalgnment was so lull of rhythm, music and movement, my goal was to convey a sense of that ktneUc envlronment Jn my photos. J locuaed on the dancers themaelves, and chose to shoot at an angle that would 1111 the background wlth the cJean, warm, neutral tonea of th~ 'ikx,r, I U8ed a technique thbr~l1bws a sen!e oi "· · the aub/ect'! movement to be ·t aptuted in a stlll Image. And came out with thls shot of dancers KaJ.noa Asuega, left, and Steve RJvera practicing at Lokelanl'a Rhythm of the lslanda In Costa Mesa. -Greg Fry 1 claims that policies that call for 1 the immediate expulsion or trans- l fer of students caught with drugs, ,alcohol and weapont violates stu- 1 den ti rtghts and do not allow ·them due process. Some school board members scoffed at their accusations, say- ing that the policy works, so the policy stays. It's a discussion that ts far from over. A student political action committee that spoke to the board about their concerns on the policy last year will seek another audience ln the upcoming month. -Danette Cloulet toven education. She may be rHthed 1t (949) 574-4221 or by e-m1ll It d1nette.go11/1te/1t/m1s.com. PLUCK DOWN MONEY POI YOUR OWN SIAT The Costa Mesa City Council gave its final approval to ita parka and planning comm111ioner oppointmentl Monday and alto postponed making a decision on a proposed overhaul of the dty'• residential development code• 10 it can notify more residents. Conl The new 1ton- dard1 would affect Miii the design and eon· atruction of two-atory homes and 1ec:ond·1tory additions tn all reeldentiol zones dtywide. City eta.ff will eend mailers to every retident1ol property in the dty, nm eeverol newspaper advertiaementa and hold o public forum on the 111ue. On Thuraday, the dty round out it would be saying "Hello" to a new reserved seating program at this year'• OrAnge County Pair. The fair board decided to offer 1,600 reserved seats at its open· air Arlington Theater for $10 each. The other 7,700 seats will still be free. -Jennlfw Kho CCV.rs Cost• Mesa. She m1y be reached It (949) 574-4275 or by 1-mell at)1nn/fw.khoe/et/m1s.com. A SLOW WllK, VIOLINT FRIDAY MORNING A slow week for Newport- Mesa'1 finest ended dramatically Friday morning as Costa Mesa police arrested an 18-year-old man on suspicion of sexually assaulting a young woman at Canyon Park. Annondo Lopez Gomez of Buena Park was COPS I tound hiding in a COURTS backyard aa Costa ·Mesa police, aided by the Huntington Beach Police Department and Irvine Police Department bloodhounds, searched the areo. Police said Gomez allegedly was seen running from the park by nelgbbon after an 18-year-old woman wu found beaten and screaming for help at 4 a.m. The victim was taken to Hoag Hospital 1n Newport Beach, where 1he was treated for a bro- ken non, jaw and cheekbone ond then released, police laid. Gomez wu being held in cut· tody on S50,000 bail. He face1 arraignment Monday at Harbor Jutt1ee Center in Newport Beach. -0..,. lfMll etft toWl1 QOpt end COUIU. She may be reached et (Mt) 574-422& or by 1-mell at dffpe.bMrethe ,.ttmn.com. •• "9 ... -... GMG ~I OAll.Y P!lOT WIRID FOR THI WEATHER Granted -Jim Pournier's prtvate weather staUon on Baiboa Peninsula won't do anything to stop the rainy days ahead. But all those beach fons out there wlll now have a NIWPO RY chance to get information on the sides every hour, on l l l CH the hour. Fournier, who UBed to publllh a weekly newsletter and wrote a book about Balboo's long gone wild days, fulfilled a childhood dream by recently installing the meteorological 1nstru- mentl on h.11 roof. Come summer, his onllne weather readings might even help keep away some beech goers and ease trofflc down Balboa Blvd. But then again, that might be withful thinking. A rainy 'summer day in Newport Beach juat seems a contradiction iii tenna. To check out Poumier'1 weather info, go to http://www.talesof balboa.com. DailJl!ib !IUQQS HOTUNE CA l2'2t. 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Jlnt 2~ -,..,'-0 ... , ... ~~ -~ 2-J' ,.. .... 17 Doily Pilot Notable QUOTABLE$ "Did you chop down the cherry tree1 Waa It you?" -Christy Roberta, 13. speaking to George W.shlngton efj() known ts H1I Piton, at •n Ovr Lady Quffn of Angels School event celebrating Presidents Day "There's so many lrona In the flre right now that my head is spJJinJng. • -Devld Mertlner on tM plens he and other Corui M.sa Ice $kiting rink supporters are considering now th1t let Ch1let NS closed "When all ls sold and done, you really need to look at what's best for the cottages.• -Michael Freed, developer, who hes said he won't oppose a $2·mllllon state plan to buy out his tontrect to create a rHOrt at Crystal Cove State Park I ACK l lY DRIAMS "My goal is to take my son shellfish . harvesting on his 18th birthday in the Back Bay. H -lob C:.uatln, founder of Defend tht 81y, on what he hoPfl to help accomplish with his envlronment1I tctlvlsm. His son 1s dut to be born M1rch 1 S "This is }U8t more postmodern JJberaltsm Jlghtenlng up of thl' rules In favor of a teenager'~ personal autonomy." -Wendy Leece, school boerd rMmMr, on the Al'Mrk1n Bir Assn. 'I opposition to ltro-toler•~ polkles ·r1te BTRPA propoBCJI la a slmpllatlc, sell-aervtng effort to shJJt the total burden of meeting the county~ aJr transportation demands on Costa Meaa and nearby communlUes." -Libby Cowan, meyor of Coste Mesa, on a pos.slbl• move by the fl Toro Reust Pl1nnlng Authority to flght for a lerger John Weynt Alrpot1. The planning authority meets Mond1y. "Costa Meaa and Newport Beach are nalve to thlnk that there are golng to be two a/rporta seven mne1 apart. " -Meow.ten, apok~ for rTRPA. on Cowan'• stance. POLICI flLIS . ... Daily Pilot lrle"'_ln THE llEWS '1 Airplane sufl'ers blown tire at JWA A Delta Airlines MD90 blew a tire while a.rrtvtng at John Wayne Allport Satur- day afternoon, an airport spokesperson said. There were no injuries. Plight 957 WU arriving from Salt Lake City when one of itS tires blew out at 4:05 p .m. After landing setely, the plane, carrying 150 passengers and seven crew members, was towed to the gate, Ann McCarley, spokeswoman, said. ·This only happens every now and then,• she said. Sobriety checkpoint results iQ arrests Costa Mesa Police arrest- ed eight people Friday night on suspidon of dri- ving under the influence after they were stopped at a sobriety checkpoint. Police said 931 cars passed through the check- point on Harbor Boulevard south of Victoria Street, and 878 drivers were screened. Of those, 83 were given field sobriety tests. Police also arrested five others on suspicion of drunk driving in the surrounding area and one passenger on allegations of being under the influence of dangerous drugs. The checkpoint was funded by a grant from the . Galifomia Office of Traffic Safety through the Busi- ness, Transportation and Ho~g Agency. Hispanic Bar Assn. fund-raiser planned The Hispanic Bar Assn. of Orange County is having its annual Installation Din- ner and Scholarship Pund- raiser at 7 p.m. Saturday. Victor E. Chavez, last year's presiding judge at Los Angeles Superior Court, will be the keynote speaker for the event, which costs $700 for a table seating 10 people or $75 per person, with a S25 discount for judges. The dinner will benefit • the bar association's schol- arship fund, which provides financial aid for Orange County law school students who are Latino and have demonstrated involvement in the Latino community. Information: (949) 794- 9200. · Costa Mesa's budget wins 3 awards Costa Mesa won three awards from the California Society of Municipal. Finance Officers for its 2000-2001 budget, City Manager Allan Roeder said. The city is the only agency to receive three budgetary reporting awards from the society this year - winning in all of the cate- gories it was ellgtble for. The awards induded the Excellence in Public Com- munications award. which the dty has never won before; the Innovative Excellence in Budgeting 'award, which clty won in 1996; and the Excellence in Operational Budgeting award, which the dty won in 1995 and 1998. A total of elx public agendas received the com· munications award, three public agendes received the innovative excellence award and 62 pubUc agen· des woo the award for operational budgettng. The IOdety al8o hu an BxceJJeoce in C.ptal Bud- geting award. but Roeder Mid Colt& MIN WM not eligible to l9C91Y• the ~ • award .mce lt doel not IMJb. um a ~ c:apbl bud· gilt doQo-l Put a few WOrds to work for you. Call the I I From 1ima beam to Louil Vuittm, from an tura1 dream to A~and Pitch, the tale of how South Cout Plaza came into being ii aJlo the story of the the Segerstrom family. The Segentroma arrived in CallfomJa from Sweden in 1898 and loold!J BACK leued about 40 aaes of land in Costa Mesa, where the family grew apricots. The family, then heeded by Harold T. Segentrom. Sr., bought the property in 1915 and began planting lima beans -the key to their success. Porty acres eventually became more than 2,000, and the family'I lima bean harvest became accepted as the best in the nation. By about the 1950s, the family expanded into real estate develop- ment Teo yean lat.er, the Segerstrom's dream -to erect a commercial cent.er -began to be realized. 1be Idea was supported by the Costa Mesa Oty Coundl. who agreed to rezone the area from agri- cultural to commerdal use. The May Co. and Sean, then two of the most powerful retailerl in the area, agreed to occupy part of the space. May Co. went up in 1966 as South Coest Plaza's first building, and 86 other stores sprouted the next year. The complex held its grand open- ing in 1967. The interior was air-con- ditioned -which back then was a big deel -and had indoor palm trees. The plaza bas grown since then. The two original tenants are still there in some form. but other anchor stores have come in -Sales Pifth Avenue, Macy's, Nordstrom. There are nearly 300 boutiques and stof!!S now, with others joining all the time. 1 In the next two months, the shopping center will welcome Donna Karan New York, Yves Saint Laurent. La Perla, Polo Sport, Air de Paris and Z I I / I I I •I I ' I • I . Sunday, February 25, 2001 3 PHOTO COURTESY Of THE COSTA MESA HISTORICAL. SOCIETY In the mJd '60s, South Coast Plaza stood alone In what used to be a U:ma bean Held. Now, the shopping center bu become the linchpin of what ls known as the South Coast Metro area of Costa Mesa. Gallerie to its fold. South Coast Plaza has also spawned two bridges and a host of stores in the Macy's Home Store wing across the street. Altogether, officials estimate South Coast Plaza generates more than $900 million in sales a year. •1t changed the face of Orange County,· said Peg Peterman, a Costa Mesa resident for 49 years. •That's where (the city) gets its sophistica- tion, starting with that.• Peterman, who is a member of the Costa Mesa Historical S90ety, added that people enjoy going there so much that the shopping center is considered a recreation area in the county. Mary Ellen Goddard, a society board member, said that the hype surrounding the shopping center has anything but died down since it was built. •tt's certainly become the sh op- ping center m Orange County, .. she said. And the Segerstrom family IS still ambitious with their development plans. More than 20 years ago, they donated land and $6 million for the Orange County Performing Arts Center and South Coast Repertory, located across the street from plaza. A bridge connects the arts center and the shopping center, allowing people to dine in one area, and watch a performance in the other - after a brisk walk. The Segerstroms, now led by Henry Segerstrom, continue to own South Coast Plaza. They have been instrumental m the development of the area around the shopping mecca -donating more than $40 million to the Orange County Performing Arts Center last August to help it expand. They've also given smaller, but still weighty donations to SCR for its physical growth. • Do you know of a person, place <X f'\'ent "'that deserves a historical LOOlt MCJn Let us know. Contact Young Chang by fax at (949) 646-4170; e-mail at young.changO/ati~com; or mail her at do Daily Pilot. 330 W. Bay St., Cost.I MeY, CA 92627. Here are five reasons to choose Hoag_Heart Institute. The Gold Standard in Heart Care Hoag Is /be only bospUaJ in Orange CounJy f() receitJI lbe best rating tn all c:ardiac c:ategorles) and tbe mos/ jlvHlar rtlllnss by Heallb Grades, Inc., an mdtptJndmJ resmrdJ firm. 11Jese jlvHlar ralin~ place Hoag Heart /n.stllllJI In 11# lq> 10% In lbe counJry. And lJers are jil;6 "'°"' """""for dJooslng Hoag~ Jq>-ral«I c:ardiac am: "" ""'""" """' of aJl'dJac M1If0"$; rrgloMJ ~ in ~ jiroaJIJulW and lnt1tinenl rptitms,· ~~,,,,,,.in~;34~°""'8'~ fJl/yllt:ltlM; """11°"8~ '1 ninMn, in °"""" °*"'>'--)Wm In IJ "*'· IW "'°" lnformadon, aMl 9491701095 "' vllll """°·~""B· A Sina tJf ....•• ..., 4 Sunday. Febrvory 25, 2001 AUSTIN CONTINUED FROM 1 good videos,· Austin said. ·so I came up with this idea to make other cbildrerl at the hos- pital happy .• And so his video and toy drive began. A MYSTERIOUS ILLNESS Austin's unfortunate famil- iarity with the hospital's video collection began three years ago. One day, out of the blue, the then-2-year-old began to a run fever that spiked up to a life-threatening 106 degrees and lasted for several days. It was every parent's worst nightmare and one that Michael and Shannon Russell would begin to go through every eight to 10 weeks like clockwork. I• ENERGY CONTINUED FROM 1 we are getting dozens of e~ malls a day asking questions from •Why b4s my gas bill gone up,' to very sophistical· ed questions concerning the crisis,• Campbell said after the discussion, which includ· ed more than an hour of audience questions. •t want people to take away with them that we need more generators and a tree market because the direction we are moving in is not good.• Despite signs more than a year ago that California was heading into a possible ener- gy crisis, nothing was done. The issue came to the pub- lic's attention ln January wben Southern California Edison and Pacific Gas and Electric announced that they might declare bankruptcy. Since then, electricity prices have risen by 9% and parts of Northern California .have endured rolling blackouts. No one could tell the Russells what was wrong with Austin. He would show no other signs of illness, Shannon Russell said, just quietly begin to run a fever that would inevitably climb to 104, 105 or 106 degrees. Austtn Russell, left. rNds along with hll mother Shannon and brother Grant. 3, at home. Even though Gov. Gray Davis recently announced a plan to buy transmission lines from Southern Califor- nia Edison, regional rnanag· er Scherer said that residents should expect problems later this year. "lt's very frightening: she said. •1t•s lethal at that point.• The family went to neurol- ogists, hematologists, rheuma- tologists and immunologists. but no one could tell them the cause of Austin's illness. Batteries of tests were run. including CT scans and MRI tests. Doctors also began to look at Austin's unusual develop- mental quirks. He never had any interest in stories, fairy tales or fantasy and would never pretend as most children do, his mother said. Rather, Austin has always had an insatiable need for cold. hard facts. He thinks scientifi- cally and mathematically. Yet despite his seemingly keen intellect, Austin has extremely poor motor skills. He struggles to dress himself and, as a kindergartner at Andersen Elementary School in Newport Beach, is in adap- tive physical education. Doctors briefly considered that he may have a form of autism, but later set that theo- ry aside as it didn't really tit, Shannon Russell said. BUFFA CONTINUED FROM 1 An hour and a half Idler I arrived at my desllnallon weU over two hours late. 1 tried to explain myself, offering my Global Positioning System- accurate directions as evi- dence. They thought I was amusing, but the direcbons were hilarious. I'm sure they're still hanging on some· one's bulletin board. Anyway, after this last tnp. I said to myseU, "Sell, l won- Finally, Austin ended up under the care of Dr. Antonio Arrieta, a rare and infectious disease specialist at Children's Hospital. Austin is one of about 25 cases Arrieta said he bas taken on in which his young patients have periodic or persistent fevers. He treats the children for -periodic fever aphthous lesions pharyngeitis adenitis, • orPFAPA. Although Austin does not suffer from lesions in his mouth as do most patients with the disease. Arrieta suid he other- der wht1l people who've nev- er been lo the land of the Newport-Mesa c<1n hnd out dboul us on thf' Web?" Thl! results will surprise and dJTIUSe you. Mdybe. You live in Kankdkee, Ill. (not really, we'rf' just pretend- ing) -a nice town about 50- rniles south of Chicago. Your fnends dream about New York or Paris or Ta.tuti. But not you. No, not you. Ever since you were a little kid, your dream has been to see Costa Mesa. CaW .. to visit Skosh Monahan's, order a Black Velvet and watch the Dr. Antonio Arrieta of Children's Hospital Orange County has become used to seeing Austin during the boy's frequent trips to the hospital. f PHOTOS BY GRf,G FRY I DAI. Y PILQT wise fits the patient profile. "There aren't a whole lot of kids yet with PPAPA. • he said. "They do tend to be very focused kids, very high energy, but I don't have enough data out there yet. • U Austin does have the dis- ease, Arrieta said the good news is that it tends to disap- pear between the ages of 9 and 12. GOOD FROM THE BAD Austin's illness has taught him compassion for others beyond his years. Though he and his parents parade of life go by on New- port Boulevard. Your friends don't understand. But you know it's why you were put on this earth. You buy a Kankakee County Lotto ticket at the Piggly-Wiggly and wham, your ship comes in -$3,500 in cold, hard cash. You opt for the lump-sum payout - $1,500. More than enough to bead for the promised land. But first, some homework. Someone suggests you sign on to America Online's •Digital City• travel guide. Eating is important. You Senior Gift Communitr 3901 E. Coast Highway, Corona de/ Mar, Californill 92625 Crown Cove is a national award winning community ovcrlookin~ the pacific Ocran and a canyon preserve m charmfog Corona dcl Mar. Crown Cove offers lndcpcndent and assisted Living Programs as wdJ u our unique Journey C Program fur A.b.hcimer's and dementia ~ where "Ufa~ ~ li«Jn't tnti with Alr.hnm1T's, • rrew cbqln' 1Nti111 ~ C4RING u about Rapect. Warmth, &N Nartwiog Empathy and lndmdulDed .Adadoo1 And to the .wr at Crown CM. cuiDs ia much more; it t. oar liic fua.u.. C..0-0 OM m.nda out among other Commu nities for numerous ra.on, but we bdie¥e one of our raidcno .wnm.arimi it bat in a recent rnap:ine arcide: TIN;, ti# Hit._,. Ii#. 11# /#/* .. ,. ~ .,,,.. ;, Jwjll .., .. .., •MA-. w I'*' • ._ f I_,, ti. fa*!;, ""1id.w lliul *-_.,,,,,., '-• ••Ml rfol •1' &-~ 949-760-2800 . Fas '49-760-2839 .......... ~ U-••000111 ... are inaeasingly trying to com- bat his e pisodes at home, Austin said he wanted to IT).6ke things better for other ydung patients at Children's Hos~tal. "It was easy; we just went to my brother's school,• be sa,id of his plans for a donation drive. Austin's 3-year-old brother Grant attends the preschool at Newport Coast Child Development Center. Austin said be remembered similar drives when be attended the school. Within a day, collectipn boxes were overfiowing with between 300 and 400 videos, books and CD-ROM games. The bounty bas been spread out to recreation rooms on three floors at the hospital. "It's absolutely wonderful and for him to initiate this on his own -kids helping kids, how can you wrong?• said Patricia Dooley, the hospital's director of volunteers, who doled out the items. Austin hopes be never gets an opportunity to see the majority of the videos be helped collect. nus past week, his fever returned, but his par- ents are taking care of him at home. check the •restaurants• tab. Here's what you find out: The •Editor's Pick" of Costa Mesa restaurants ~ Maggiano's Lit- tle Italy. Sounds good. The next four ·costa Mesa• restaurants are Aubergine, Bayside, Bistan- go, and Cowboy Seafood. "Funny,• you say to yourself, "I don't remember those in my dream." The next two Costa Mesa eateries are the Ritz-carlton Laguna Niguel and French 75 in Laguna Beach. The last three are Pascal, Pinot Provence and ltoquet, two of which are actually in Costa Mesa, which is handy. Finally, there's the Ramos House Cafe, which apparently is in the San Juan Capistrano area of Costa Mesa. You say you want to see Newport Beach? Absolutely! There's nothing like it in • U it's a mild swruner and people aren't using their air conditioners so much, then we may eke out of it,• she said. •But if it's a hot swnmer, blackouts ranging trom one hour to one-and-a-half hours will occur.• Many audience members wanted tq know why the ai- sis ocurred ln the first place and what could have been done to prevent it. Others showed concern about possi- ble price increases. "What people need are incentives to keep them from using (too much energy),• Roland Boucher, an Irvine resident, said. "Raise the prices. Yet we have the tech· nology to lower those prices and we have power plants in Huntington Beach that aren't being used. I think there are things to be done that haven't been talked about yet.• A few people in the audi· ence suggested solutions for Kankakee, bud. But don't put all your eggs in one basket. Let's ~what the Yahoo! dty guide tias to say about the jewel in the crown of the Cal- ifornia Riviera. Hmm, that's disappointing. There's only one Chinese restaurant -the Newport China Kitchen on something called the Peninsula. Hang on. lltls sounds interesting. Not one, but two dinner the- aters in Newport Beach! And I didn't think there were any. How foolish of me. There's the Gourmet Detective in the Irvine section of Newport Beach and the Killer Dinner Theatre at PJ's Abbey Restau- rant in the Orange area of town, just five miles from Dis- neyland. Better pick a hotel, now that we have the restaurants sorted out. There's the Four Seasons Hotel -first cabin, .. /'& uiiiiiuJtJtiJJ ~~-Gifts 50% Off Topiaries, Potted Ivy. Orchids, and all Floral Arrangements Exp. 3/15101 Mon-Fri 10~6, Sat 10-5, Sun 10-4 369 E. 17th Strttt. Cost2 Mesa, CA Phone (949) 646-6745 loaaid in W.-pon 1a019 from Ralph.I The FlnfSt Met.It cn1 Serutee i\1,1(}//0blc 5'ni"'f C.. MIMfw.-r JO,.,, TRI-TIP ROAST sc ULAR OR MARINATED ' ft;OllJ 1711111111t ... COlll .......... 7ttt ............. ND Mcln,·lll • 10'.GD tD l.'ODlllt. Doily Pilot the crisis -pointing out that the emergency seems to be manufactured from a politi- cal standpoint, rather than an actuAl lack of available energy. •rt•s a legal, not a techru- cal problem,• said Mark Shirllau. president and CEO of Aloha Systems in Irvine. •More power plants may solve the blackouts, but not the problem in the long run. I don't want to see 20 more generating plants built so that we can have a competi- tive market.· Business council spokes- woman Puente said she IS worried about how summer blackouts may affect local commerce. Most of her con- cern is targeted toward I.he businesses that signed inter- ruptible service contrdC'ls years ago. Those conlrdrls say that during blackouts and times of energy cnse'>, the businesses must shut down for an undelemun~ amount of time. "When these businessc>s signed the contracts. it Wds rare that once a year tlwy had to shut down,• Puentt• said. "But recently, they hdVI' been asked to shut down for up to 18 hours for two ddy'> Ln a row. lltls summer. 1t could become an intolerable situt1- tion. We are asking that t1 d business must be shut down they are given adequate I.line• so they can power up gener- ators if possible.· There are thmgs tl{at thP public can do to help. Scherer said. lndiv1dtipl' should make plans for their family, business or school an case of blackouts. She s,11<~ they should also write to thtf. governor, apd keep up to date with energy rns1s information. , For tips on evt?rythinq from turning off lights to buy- ing a new refrigerdtor, Scherer advised audienn· members to visit http://WW'.A see.com. Campbell srud that he 1s considering another commu nity forum in a few months. especially if the threat of swnmer blackouts conbnue<; "With the possible bldck- outs, we may need to do th1~ again. 111.ings like this hC'lp me learn what's going on too,· he said. very elegant, ·minutes from sparkling beaches and 36 holes of seaside golI. • Doesn't say what the greens fees are. though. How bad can they be? The Balboa Inn sounds lovely -"historic, Old World· style hotel located on New- port Beach .• Wait. this sounds interest- ing. The Hyatt Newporter overlooking the Back Bay. central to Edison lntemdbon- al Field, Laguna Beach, Disneyland and UniversaJ Studios. . Yeah, that's the ticket. Whenever we have out-of· town visitors who want to see Universal, l always suggest they stay al the Hyatt New- porter. You pracbcally fall out of bed into Universal Studios Could there be anything more convenient? l think not. Strange, though, isn't it? You thought there would be a lot more botels and restau- rants and stuff out here. It almost makes you think the only places that show up on the Internet are the ones that paid to be there .. Nab. that wouldn't be right. If it's on the Internet, 1t bas to be true. Doesb't it? l gotta go. • NTa """"' Is a former Costa Mew mayor. His column rum Sun- ~ He m.y be ruched via HNll It PtrlUOIK>i.CDm Doily Pilot Koren Wight NO PlAa LIKE HOME Fragrant citrus trees are essential for garden E very garden needs at least one citrus tree. It doesn't need to be big to deliver the sweet smell of spring, and it doesn't need to have a pre- mier location to provide you with a constant supply of fruit. Your citrus can be a dwarf tree planted in a decorative pot or a sour orange hedge to screen a fence. You can make a conventional The choice, such as a navel orange, or a decorative selection, such as a variegated lemon. Citrus trees and shrubs can be as large. as a standard tree or as small as a miniature dwarf variety. Oranges, lemons, limes and grapefruits are widely available. More fragrance of citrus blossoms is one of the best parts of a spring garden. The smell reminds me of Victorian homes with wrap- around porches. unusual citrus, such as kumquats and tangelos, may be easily ordered through a nursery or a landscape pro- fessional. The fragrance of citrus blossoms is one of the best parts of a spring garden. The smell reminds me of Victori- an homes with wraparound porches. Freshly picked grapefruit for breakfast. Mid- night sirens alerting men to light the smudge pots. Growing up in Riverside meant sharing an apprecia- tion for citrus groves. lt was a lifestyle for many families. The city was founded as a farming community. Land- marks such as the Parent Navel Orange Thee still stand. My high school, Riverside Polytechnic, chose green and orange -as in the trees - for the school colors. UC Riverside was built in the SEE HOME PAGE 6 -, . llP Of THl 'Wlll ' Drlviwg on a rciny clay Sunday, February 25, 2001 5 GREG FRY I DAit. Y Pl.OT Muralist Mary Ann Ford looks over one of four pieces she painted ln a Newport Beach home. TO E Young Ch•ng •nd Jennifer K M•h•I DAILY PILOT P amela Bethke and her hus- band Rick sometimes take drinks and hors d'oeuvres into their luxunous master bathroom and pretend they're picnicking in a European courtyard. Newport Beach home. "Wallpaper - it Just puts a color on a wall. Tiu!> is fun -your house starts coming alive." Murals and tromp J'oeil effects, like the ones artist Dana Ridenour created for the Bethkes, are becom- mg more and more popular as a way for people to add a personal touch to their mass-produced houses and apartments. With pnces of projects rangmg anywhere from $400 to $10,000, Ridenour said she has noticed more people getting creative with their wall space . Local artists find themselves busy transforming plain, white walls into works of beauty The arched entrance painted with two-dimensional cobblestones, the images of trees blowing westward on the ceiling, the statue of Nocturne with her anns swaying, the Venus in a shell painted on the wall near the tub -these touches leave little to the Bethkes' imagination. "It's a fantasy world,• Pamela Bethke said of the mu'rals m her Indeed. creating murals and tromp l'oeil has kept local artist Mary Ann Ford on her toes. The Newport Beach SEE MURAL PAGE 6 TRAVEL TALES Oimbing the heights of magnificent Mt. Whitney Young Chang DAILY PILOT On an 18-bour, 14,499-foot climb up ~t. Whitney in Northern California, Elsa Matthews, -Susan George and four friends got total.king. Not about work or money or houses or cars, but about families and past climbing experiences. It was a nonjudgmental group of people, Matthews remembers. A group that bonded over the common challenge of making it to the highest point in the lower 48 states. A group that shined the Oashlight for one another-, when it got dark. I And when it was over, when Matthews, George, Wayne Frey, Jim Palm.er, Doug Need an HoneSt I Rtlllble Plumber? . C· I A1.ttJ1tf, IT'S J"IME FOR ... PAtiqwri1.o. I CASA Branch and Karim Khoshab hilted up to the peak and then down to the trail-head togeth- er, they shared hugs and tears and the pride of having accomplished something that was once feared. "I felt like I was the king of the world, or the queen,• Matthews, 52, said. "It does something to your life.• George, 55, added, "It's the challenge. At tlus point m our lives, you say, 'I wonder if I can do that?' • The two Newport Beach friends put an end to that won- der in October and a.re plan- ning a follow-up trip this Sep- tember. George bad chmbed Whitney once before. Sbe swore she would never do it SEE TRAVEL PAGE 6 Eflectlw J..ary 1, 2001, a MW llw ....... busln•lel tD report lllforMatlon on certain I flf •••RI~ eo the Employment One..._. D1t r 111 111 (IDO). [)., _-· ,.·.).. . -...... _ ' ' • r ... t •• i • 6 Sunday, Febtuory 25, 2001 TRAVEL CONTINUED FROM 5 again. But when the trip aune up, and Matthews agreed to attempt the climb, George changed her mind. They trained for tline months, taking long hikes twice a week at Turtle Rock. sprinting for six miles twice 1a week at the same location and venturing up high altitudes tWit:e a month at local mountains, ihcluding Mowit Baldi and San Gorgonio. A wee¥ before their final chal· Ienge, Matthews and George climbed the Eastern Sierras. Matthews suffered a bout of acute mountain sickness. The high alti· tudes caused headaches so force- ful, it felt like she was hit by a truck, Matthews said. ~A lot happens when you get above 7 ,000 feet,• said George, whose biggest challenge was not getting dehydrated. Matthews remembers almost giving up entirely and threatening to throw all her hiking gear away. left WU tbe Owens Veney. To their ~ht lay more of Sequoia National Park. The scenery was inaedible, Matthews end Geo(9e 'remember. But it took a while to aee clearly. "Your mind 11 a little foggy, for one," Matthews said. •And you babble," George added. •111e words don't come out right. That's one of the effects of altitude.• A plane flew by when they WeM up top. It was almost at eye· level -a bright red and white Cessna 112 with passengers inside smiling and waving. •we could see what color hats they had on,• George said. Now back at sea-level, the friends say the trip has changed their lives. In their early 50's, Matthews and George are rejuve- nated and eager to take on their next outdoor challenge -surviv- ing in the mow, through a wilder- ness survival class they're current- ly taking. But the friends endured. The weather was nice the day they climbed Whitney. Matthews didn't get sick, and George drank plenty of water. They hiked through 97 switch- Matthews also treasures the biendships she has made. She says ti's a special kind of compan· ionship fonned between climbers. She doesn't get mad anymore about little things as often as she used to, and she says her perspec- tive h8.s changed somewhat. Susan George, left, and Elsa Matthews, both of Newport Beach, spent their vacatton climbing ML Whitney in Northern California. •it's almost spiritual,• she said of her accomplishment. "li you're into hildng, irs quite a milestone.· book, alongside the signatures of other proud climbers who had made it to the backs -diagonal paths carved along the mountain for climbers "because we're not mountain goats,• George said -and didn't "hit the wwin once. That's biking lingo for giving up and turning back. When they got to the peak, the spc friends signed their names in a guest top. . You really do feel something when you sign, Matthews said. But the feelings were less intense when they first arrived at the peak. They looked down both sides -to their • Have you, or someone you know, gone on an interesting vacation recently? Tell us your adventures. Drop us a line at 11tAVE1. TALES, 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627; e-mail young.changO/atimes.com; or fax to (949) 646- 4170. HOME CONTINUED .FROM 5 middle of an orange grove. The smell of spring in Riverside is a treasured memory. By now, most of .the groves have been sold .off and legions of tract hous- es have .sprung up in their place. The groves still stand- ing in town belong to fami- lies who can afford to be •gentlemen farmers.• Elec- tric heaters have replaced the smudge pots. The aging groves have not been renewed with younger trees. Lifestyles have changed, and the groves are more profitable as real estate developments than as fannland. But if your timing is just right on a crisp spring morn- ing, you can still walk along the irrigation canals and smell the flowers from a few remaining groves. The cool air combined with fresh cit- rus blossoms is nature's .Ptomise ol renewal . It's a smell I still covet - and a fragrance I want to share with you. Add a handsome citrus to your yard or patio. You can't lose. Beautiful glossy green leaves, delicious and deco- rative fruit, and every spring, the promise that all things old will be ne w again. • KAREN WIGHT is a Newport Beach resident. Her column runs Sundays. MURAL CONTINUED FROM 5 resident JJ constanUy bUl}'t going fiom site to site with her phone almost always ringing. It gives her very lit· Ue time for her own penonal painting. "My work gets done last,• said the artist whp likes the works of Winslow Homer, Edward Hoppe? and Pierre· Auguste Re~oir. "All of my business is the work on the walls.• Ford said her work brings a little whimsy into the lives of both children and adults, making what could be a generic living space into a personal sanctuary. But it is not for everyone. "It's for the child within, the adult who wants to be different and really personal- ize their home,• Ford said. Beyond the personal, ris- ing property values may play into why the trend is catch- ing on, said Ridenour, who owns Off The Palette in Cos· ta Mesa. Decorative touches often rall;e the value of a home when tenants move out. And paint is much easier than wallpaper to deal with when redecorating. "I think the prices of homes are such an invest- ment nowadays that ~omes are like (residents'] personal haven,• Ridenour explained. "With wallpaper, you have problems -to change it you have to rip it all off. For a bathroom it gets moldy and wallpapers fade.• Also, Ridenour said the cost of painting a mural on a wall can be comparable to the cost for wallpapering the same amount of space. "This is our fourth home. The other three houses all had wallpaper and it was all matching.• Bethke said. "It looked so 'de<:arator.' But for this one, I wanted my per- ' . Doily Pilot GREG FRY I OAll.Y Pl.OT Another palnttng creates the Wudon of atendlng one of the homes' hallways. sonality. • And personality is what she got. Bethke had always want- ed a cozy little Paris apart- ment, and the downstairs powder room was trans- formed to reflect that. With walls painted in thick stripes of pink and red, fluffy flowers with green leaves and a trompe l'oeil cabinet colored an old-world French country blue, the lit- tle bathroom gives off a Parisian feel. ·1 think it's a more mature person nowadays that has the confidence to do some- thing like this,• the client said. "With this, you have to be adventurous.• H you're the painter, you also need to get to know the client to figure out what they'll be happy looking at day after day . Some of Ridenour's clients know exactly what they want, Others leave it up to her, she said, in which case she tries to gage their tastes. Both painters said that many of their clients have become their friends. ni.sh Steele, who had Ford do quite a bit of work on her former Port Street house in Newport Beach, said that the time spent get- ting to know one another is important. A nautical theme matching a cherished bath stool was painted above the doorway in one bathroom. The dining room got a touch of tromp l'oell ·she tries hard to capture what her clients are looking for,• Steele said. Ford likes to add very per- sonal touches to her work - from painting the family dog or the family parrot into murals to recreating the rocky shores of Cuba ih trompe l'oeil for a lawyer who wanted to remember bis heritage. "I listen for their interests, sometimes their stories,• said the artist whose work can be seen on the walls of At Ease in Fashion Island and Baby Unique in Corona del Mar. One little boy told her about a frog his uncle used to keep in b1s pocket. The family's mural now includes the unlikely pair. In Bethke's bath.room, u you look closely at the paint- ed cobblestones on an arch near the bathtub, you'll see "Pamela & Rick" written in as if someone had etched the names in stone. "It'a not like [Ridenow's) houses are done in cookie cutters,• Bethke MJd. "With trompe l'oeU a.pedally, you oan aeete a world.• Put a few words to work for you . cau the IMUyPilot OASSlllDS I ---------~ e Board of Trustees the Newport Harbor autical Museum ially request the p~ast11e ofi ' Sumptuous Dinner, ho d 'oeuvres d Refreshm"':w•ll> ULTIMATE COllTICT US! Do you M¥t •n upcoming ~7 The Dilly Pilot wel· GOIMS submissions to ntl W'IMATI~ • unas -M.lt to 1he Dally Pltoc, 330 W. hY St., Cost.a Mesa 92627 • MX -Send to (949) 646-4170 • a.-MAA.-Send to dallypllotelatlmes.com Doily Pilot IOI nll Wlf« 01 llllUDY 2$-IMICll J, 200 J 7 TODAY 'CU.m.' Spoe ... edby. OpefaP~ 25 W1ww: Orange County Perfonnlng Arts Center, 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa wt--= 2 p.m. dosing perlorrMnce, Cost: $29-$107 Contact (714) 74().7878 MONDAY 26 CKJUA llARTOU Spoe....-by. Philharmonic Society of Orange County • Whete: Orange County Perlomilng Arts Center, 600 Town Center Drl\'e, Costa Mesa WhM: 7 p.m. preview lecture, 8 p.m. concert Cost: $55-$85 Contact (949) 553-2422 ~=y· SIMDtAA CB ORATION SpoellOnld by. Temple Bat Yahm WheN: Temple Bat Yahm. 1011 Camelback St.. Newport Beact1 WhM: 5 to 9 p.m. c.mt: Free Contact Beth Slavin, (949) 644-1999, Ext. 21 a>stA ..sA 0Wu9ER OF COi~ MONntLY MX9 SpOllllOred by. Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce Where: Romano's Macaroni Grill, 595 Anton 811/'d. Costa Mesa WhM: 5:30 p.m. CaK s 10. free to chlmber men'ben.. Contact (714) 885-9090 v .. SPOTLIGHT Playing on the green TOSHIU SENIOR CWSIC WEEK If watching a little white ball be putted, driven and slammed down the green is your idea of a wonderful time, this is the week for you. The 2001 Toshiba Senior Classic tour will begin Mon- day with player practice rounds. and it will continue through March 4, with the final round of championship play. All of the golfing events will take place at the New- port Beach Country O ub, 1600 E. Coast Highway. The inaugural tournament. which George Archer won in 1995, was the only one to have been held at a different loca- tion. All net proceeds tram the Joseph-and his coat in Costa Mesa MUSICAi. TAUS 1111 STAii · Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse's ·year of the Musical• will continue this week with its production of ·Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat. • FYI --.: CoN Mesa Ovic Playhouse. 661 Hamilton St. wt..; Through March 2S. Performance tlmes are 8 p.m. Thunc:t.ys through Saturdays and 2 p.m. Sundays. ec.t: S1S eane.ct: (949) 65().5269 FRIDAY ·~·s'MUC>t ADO M!OAI'( lllOTI•O' Spot ...... hr. South c:o.st Repertory 2 --.: SCR, 655 Town Center DrM, CostaMeY Toshiba Senior Classic go to charity. This year, the primary beneficiary is Hoag Hospital's planned Women's Pavilion. Senior Tour legend Tom Watson will speak Tuesday at the annual community break· fast. This is Watson's first appearance at the classic. A full schedule of events may be found at http://www. ToshlbaSeniorCJassic.com or by calling (949) 515-4840. FY1 T05MmA COMMUNrTY 9'EAKf'AST Spm ...... by. ~a Toudle --.: Newport Beadl Maniott. Fashion Island. 900 Newport c.enter Drive ~ 7:30 a.m. Tuesday ec.t: s 100 pet' person. Proceeds go to charity. Contact: (949) 515-4840 PLANNING AHEAD lltE LEIGH AND LUCY STEINIStG SPRT RUN A 10K ~a SK BaNna Man chase, a SK flmlly waltl. youth races and more will be f'eatured .t tNs ewnt, which benefits lc>Gal sdlCIOls. ~Mlldttt F£RRAGHM) FASHION SHOW The Guilds of,.. car-. whictl qipcwtJQangt~ PWb11•ig Ms~ wll preMrtt. SIMDe f9qglmo flBHon ~ W1• I l1•Mlll'dlM SATURDAY 'CN>CEI ... THURSDAY ( When: Opening night Is 8 p,m. Friday. ~will be onstage through April 1 .i 8 p.m.~ f~2:l0and lp.m.~ and 2:30and = ~ S21-S49 eo..ct: (714) 70l-SSSS FEBRUARY ... ,.,,. 1 l ) 4 567 1tl0 n12UW1516'7 •1t:io2112n~ P5 fl 'It 211 MMKYOUR CAllNDAM Auo .. ~ 21: Toshiba Senior PGA Golf Oassic MARCH IMTWTfl II 2 1 I 4 5671910 G 1201•Q "G 11 19 20 21 12 23 ~ 25 216 V 21 S )() JI MMKYOUR CAU'.NOAM Auo .. MMot: 11: The l.elgh and Lucy Steinberg Spirit Run 15: 30th annual Police Appreciation Breakfast 17: St Patrick's Day 29: Newport Beacti Film Festival APRIL SMTWfPS I l l 4 5 6 1 ' 10 n 12 u 1• e " ,, G> 19 20 21 22 .24 25 a;@ 2a 29 )() MAltJC YOUR CAL£NOAM Al.lo .. APtllL! 7: Passover begins 15: Easter 11: •foR• at 1he CA!nll!r 23: Seventh annual Tommy Bahama's Newport Beach Open Golf Tournament 27: Newport to En~daRace MAY SMTWT'S I l l 4 S 671910 0 12 G 1•1516'7 •19 20 21 22 23 <14 4'216 T1 ED 29 )() JI MARK YOUR CAL£NOAM Auo.,.MAv: 11: Newport Beach Jazz Festival 1J: Mother's Day 25: Pete<, Paul & Mary at the Center 21: Memorial Day 'JUNE SMTWTfS I 2 J • 5 6 7 I ' 1011120141516 G • 19 20 21 12 2l ;14 25 26 l1 28 29 )() MMKYOUR CAl.EM>AM Auo .. JuiE 17: Father's Day T8A: trreM!vant Weft JULY SMfWTfS 12).S67 I 9 10 n 12 Cl 1• 15 • 17 • 19 lD 21 12lJ)t25J5 f»21 29 to ll MAllllC YOUR CALINDAltS 4: Fourth of Juty ti: Orange County Fait begins 27: The Jones OJp Huttff Howser Califomia"s Gq/i Spomorc4 a.,, ASSllTANC LEAGUE of Newport.Mesa Wlaue; Marnott ~ttl 900 Newport Center Drive, N.8. Whens March 9, 2001 WhatJ Social hoor at eleven; Luncheon at noon; 1ndUdtng silent and hve We Need Book Donations NOW! for Our Bookstore i• the Mai1 library at 1000 Avocado Avuue, Corone del M1r All tOMATIOH ARE TAX DEDUCTIBLE STORE PROCEED~ SUPPORT LIBRARY PROGRAMS flt "•bf Cell '•HJ •• '7•-aon ., ti.. 8ttk1ltr1 et JSt-"67 tr •ri•t ..... i•t• .~. lttll 41rl19 ,.,,,., ... ,, MON SAT HJ W•"' • .; •,11, .. SUN I ~.- ~ 756 1 Center Ave. Huntington Beach (714) 895-8020 see us at www.oldworld.ws FATHER~DAY BUFFET F....n.,W,, 0-. ... P.irti•-- Plang a 8ar/8at Mitzvah1 Anticipating a Wedding? Then you need to attend: 7111 Annual SIMCHA AND CELEBRATION ~.,.mit1:ifl I:::. ..... ...... .. y... Dal9s \Vallrt•••.,, ~ 21, 2001 101l C•m•••ck It. nm.a SIOO p.m. • 9aOO p.m. N9W'part I 1 •ch, CA 9ld 60 (Comer of JomborM and Camelbock) Cw m•8f a wmiety..,, ••dr8!'1» In ,,_ w.t ,.,.111r ... •dtuh yf ... .,...,.., .,..,., • ...,., ... ...,,. ••d••'-t ••-~•mr.,., •• •••••nf ••d 11111 pll•t•• q lt1.-., n• •s p lt1ra, Dl/M~ Aa1•,._, ..., • ..., _, ... 1NI lnflJ' ....• z, IN MU .. C#.,.,, ..... 0,IH 119 .... • 1&11 .. .,. .•. , .................. , ..• ( Co MM . . . 8 Sunday, February 25, 2001 EDITORIALS Make runoff as important 1lll issue as El Toro I t was not a good week for anyone who enjoys New- port Beach's waters. Yes, on Wednesday a strong swell rolled through, bringing with it big waves for surfers who'd been suffering a several-week lull. But they didn't get to enjoy it because of several sewage spills that closed one of the city's top surf spots: the jetty, at the mouth of the Santa Ana River. , That spot actually e:iperi- enced two closings during the past days, the first when a pri- vate line burst and the second when a 1,000-gallon spill that closed a total of 2,000 feet of beach. A third.spill on Wednesday sent about 500 gallons of raw sewage into the Newport Slough, forcing its closure as well. That's far too many spills and far too many closures. Newport Beach businesses, hotels and landowners thrive because of the crystal clear water, seven miles of beaches and the world's largest plea- sure harbor. Huntington Beach in 1999 is all the example that's needed of what can happen if a city's major attraction is lost. There are many theories and thoughts about where urban runoff is coming from and what keeps causing these spills. It is not important to rehash them again. What is important is to urge Newport Beach leaders to take the problem seriously - as seriously as they take the El Toro airport debate or main- taining the flight caps at John Wayne. On those two fronts they are spending time and money lob- bying the federal government, other Orange County cities and county residents. It is time they do the same when it comes to protecting the city's precio'1S waterfront, which clearly is being polluted inland by other cities, by sanitation facilities and by inland residents. Such actions don't absolve Newport-Mesa residents from also making sure they keep the waters clean. And Newport Beach should actively work to get the message across at home about the dangers and consequences of polluted water. But the city needs to look beyond its borders. Recently, for example, lead- ers from Orange County's coastal cities attended the Orange County Coast Assn. 's annual state-of-the-environ- ment luncheon. Newport Beach officials should take advantage of such meetings to hammer home their concerns and demand solutions. Alter all, it isn't just Newport Beach residents who are on the beaches and in the water. There should be enough money to go around The-Newport-Mesa Uni- fied School District got mixed news this month from Sacramento. The good news was that four of its elementary schools, Sono- ra, Rea, Whittier and Wilson did so well on student performance tests th.at its teachers are eligi- ble for what amounts lo a bonus from the state. The bad news was only one -Sonora Elementary -stands a good chance of seeing any money because more schools than expected qualified for the reward. Despite setting aside $100 mlllion for the program, there isn't enough to go a.round to the 1,346 schools eligible. But teachers at the 280 or so schools that will get money can expect a grand reward: 1,000 employees with the greatest gains will receive $25,000 each; 3,750 staff members will receive $10,000 each and 7,500 others will receive $5,000 each. It is sad, however, that unex- pected success will not translate into expected rewards, and it is too bad there isn't at least a lit- tle something for everyone who helps teach our children. But even if those three other schools can't share ln the cash, they can share in the idea that they have made their community very proud by their accomplishments. ' . 1 • How To I GEi PIBBllED #The point that needs to I The O.ily Pilot wetcximm 1ette11 on .._ c:onc:emlng Newport Bea<:h and COStl Mesa be emphasized is that there will be no subversion of the public process. There are no backdoor deals. " I , •LETTERS -Mail to 6dit01fal ,.. Editor SJ. Caihn at the Dally Pilot, 330 w Bay St., C~ ~.CA 92627 • MADIJtS H01UNE -Call (949) 642-6086 • FAX -Send to (949) 646-4170 • E-MAIL -send to <UilypllotOlatimncom All eo«espondence must include full name, home- town and phone number (for verifutlon purposes). The Pilot res«ves the right to edit all submissions for darity and length. -SUNn Jord8n of the League for Coastal Protection, on fears about the future of Crystal Cove. Doily Pilot lENNtffR TAYlOR I OAll.Y PILOT The AES power plant in. Hunttngton Beach, near the border of Newport Beach. Econo:micsofCalifornia power crisis are Complex I laugh all the way to the bank when I think of the alleged consumer advocates' attack on utilities, which are the victims, not the cause, of our power crisis. I receive a royalty for elecbici- ty generated from geothermal steam. It is now more than three times the amount I received dur- ing January and February of 1999. The cost per kilowatt hour purchased by Southern Califor- nia Edison is more than it charges its customers. It does not take much brains for an honest man to see that this is unfair and won't continue for long. The majority's willingness to cheat a minOI:i.t¥ is a weakness of democracy, which establishes the value of our constitutional prohi- bition against denial of life, liber- ty or property without due Roy B. Woolsey SOUNDING BOARD process of law. One cause of our crisis is high oil and gas prices. The solution requires production of more fuel and/or development of alterna- tive sources of power. A short-term Band-Aid could be oil and gas price controls. But that would reduce the incentive to drill and .keep the price up m the long run. We need a state and national energy policy that will encourage oil and gas production and devel- opment or sound alternatives. Another cause is Jack of capacity to generate the needed electricity. Edison used onJy pn- vate funds for its generation at Edison, Florence, Huntington and Shaver Lake. Los Angeles took pdrt of Ecti- son's distribution system and gets power from the Hoover Dam at less than ddequate return on the taxpayers' uwestment. Generdtors are not d good investment because of the unfnenclly business atmosphere, particularly in California, and the prospect of arbitrary price con- trols, taxes and other (egulations. Former Vice President Al Gore's frequent Jdbs at big busi- ness ctid not help. We will never know il deregu- lation or the ubliues would hdve worked hdd the pnce of fuel and demand for electnoty not risen so drdlOaUcally and gas genera- lton capacity tncreased • ROY B. WOOLSEY is a Newport Beach resident Beli:S-argument f ar f rom convincing Ud like to take exception with Joseph Bell's colwnn ("Censor- hip deprives all students of full education,• Feb. 1) in which in one grand sweep he •backhands" Wendy Leece and "clears up~ the creationism issue. Personally, I agree with Wendy Leece in the examination of the viability of questionably controver- sial new books to the school read- ing lisl There are many people in the local populace who would rather err on the side of conservativism when it comes to keeping unnec- essary sex. violence or abuse out of the educational envirorunent for our young people. It is not a matter of censorship. The kids should not have to get a permission slip to study controver- sial material. rather they should not allow the study of overly-sala- dous mat.e.dal 1D our schoo.lt. As for Bell's sage advice about the •exploding• of creationism, is it not true that evolution is a theory and not actually proven? I'd call it pseudosdenoe when the theoiy of evolution is taught in schools as fact. Only 100 years ago, the prevalent world view was that the universe and tts life fonns Rick Rainey REBUnAL were the result of intelligent design from a supernatural creator. Darwin, in 1859, planted the seed for a paradigm shift in the world view of creationism with his book, •Tue Origin of Species.~ DarWin stated that if his theory was true, there should be a large number of •m between types• found as fossils. He also said that the absence of such intermediates was lhe •most obvious and serious objection• to h1s theory. It is well known that any true transiti.0041 species bas never been found in the fossil record. The famous fossil expert Stephen J . Gould and the Ameri- can Museum people are hard to contradict when they say there are no transitional fossils. In his book, Darwin sought to explain the origin of all life forms without the benefit of intelligent guidance or a supernatural act of creationism. Whal about the Divine Watch- maker argument? Bishop William Paley, in 1818, said of the watch •that its gears, springs and other mechanisms could never arise by the actions of random chance alone: Modem microbiology has revealed that the most sunple organisms, even cells, are incredi- bly complex machmes beyond our imagination, with "hundreds of factories" within each cell. Evolution's concepts of upward orgaruzabon and system assem- blies violate natural law, such as the entropy laws and the Second Law o! Thermodynamics, which says that order always proceeds downward (not upward) to disor- der or decay. Those who are artists or design- ers know the actual amount of thought, planning and execution that go into the making of some- thing simple, such as a painting. Why does It take such a stretch of faith to comider that we are all here as part of a plan executed by an entity larger than ourselves, as we consider the incredible myriad oI systems and life forms, that seem to work together, from our galaxies in space to the small t cell on earth? Personally, I'd ll.ke to see more open-mindedness on the part of the evolutionists. • IUCX MINEY IS• (OSU Mew rwsldent. School board trustee Wendy Leece~s commen~ are just precious I m't Newport-Mesa school board member Wendy Leece JUJt the cu t Uttl thing? Wltb bOT chwlllb. little-¢i 1tane1 on mro IOlera ID our .cbn<h. doem't lb just conjure up abDoll·torvotten or Sh!rtey nmipie lD •The UttJe COkloel • f can't you Just.-. the J)ludly L.eoe nBDdlng wttb bet b.ndl oa bar and gMDg \II • lt9'0. - pouty look u she lecturas ua in her Good Ship Lolllpop.voice on ·~­ modem Uben.Usmi· Whet an adorabae pbraMI . Of coune, all the aduhl Ln the room are dlUClding a bit to them· ...... bilalUM they aU Dow our own tittle Cutty 1bp bu DO Idea whet lbe j\llt Mid aDd COWdn'I deftne It tf !lbe bed to (DOW dan1 ~ ........... the Hl' dedln7tb.t II ._'t Why, and then ow own Uttlest Rebel strut. up lo IOIM conta.n· ki rou1 Uonel Bairytilore-llke tnlltM and 1hekot her little finger i.n h.11 face while warning of totJte •sUppery llOpe• he' hetMted for in({ boW. lby-golly·by1Jolh, we nMd to Mnd • •powwrtuJ met· N99 ID ldd8 • wt there beaause w may have • few animal alldt· ....... .oup •• .... ... wtlberl,,llbe'I pretty ii tough cookie nyway even if h r foe ls all beet r~ and her lower Up is atftrtfng to tre:mb~ a littl and ah '• ju1t abQut ready to cry. Oh, myl Doesn't It wann your heart? Isn't our Utile Mill Brtgbt £)'W JUlt adoniblel Can't you ]\lit bud· 1y ltJnd m Di\YIDIN8• Newpmt .... - Doily Pilot EL TORO AIRPORT IS A NECESSITY toMMUNm FORUM ~TOS BY SEAN Hl.l£R I OM.Y PILOT Sunday, February 25, 2001 9 1sn•t there a better~ than Home Ranch? Why b Henry Segentrom building tbe Home llancbl Doet be~ DMd the 1DCDeff Do we r~ aMd aae .mare mecica of comumertsmr tkM.!1 A ccm~y that 111Aa markets cheap bnlta- tionl of Orig1aa1 ~tneuf ~antrom'• ~thropy bu tnspiled coacert and per- form.lng arts. they re.lly more beautiful~ valuable than the flrit Ii? Of a lima beu sprouting b'Uou9h the earth m Ip~? We con drive for bundrect. of miles and He notb1ftg but COG• crete. glaa and stucco. Wbs• do we stop and 188 creation as it WU tilteDdedl 1 la the land so valuable that it must be destroyed to demon- strate its worthf If so, why not tMr out Central Perk and put up another World Trade Center or: Bloomie'1 basement? li Segerstrom really CUel about a legacy, why not create something Of lasting and eternal beauty? A park, a. place of solace for the weaiy traveler on the San Diego Freeways of life. 'There are a lot of people who want to separate El Toro and John Wayne. They're tied together. Everywh ere you look, in the-- papers, there is a need for airports. If we don't have an airport at A new flight · plan Or, are the colors stolen from nature more valuable? Blue of sky, yellow of sun, green and gold the color of younglimul Newport Council member Steve Bromberg is committed to an El Toro airport Don't recall Cowan, make M~an mayor agahi El Toro, how are we going to deal with the need, 20, 30, 40 years from now? We need El Toro.' SPRUDING THE ' RIGHT INFORMATION 'Virtually everybody, maybe not everybody but more than 90%, I talk to wants El Toro. It's just a Jack of information. And that's going to change. We're going to get the word out.' , LOOKING INTO THE FmRE 'Right now I feel we are doing everything the right way to get it done. I don't have a crystal ball, but I have a very strong sense we will have an airport at Bl Toro. It will be smaller than originally planned.' n the fall, Steve Bromberg, John Heffernan and Gary Proctor, were elected to the Newport Beach City Council in the biggest turnover in the city in two decades. While all three have vowed to improve relations between the council and residents, they also have energized the council on an old, lingering but also loom- ing issue: the El Toro airport. Monday night, the El Toro Reuse Planning Authority is set to reverse its position on extending the flight restrictions on John Wayne Airport, a move that likely will heat up the bitter battle petween North and South County once again. Bromberg sat down with Pilot City Editor S.J. cahn to discuss where that fight is headed, and bow Newport Beach is doing in getting a second Orange County airport built. How would you cbaracterlze the current state of the m Toro debate and the potential for c:omtrudlon of an airport ID South Countyf It's active and very aggressive on both sides. People have the idea we ought to can El Toro altogether and just concentrate on JWA (But) I really do believe that the potential for an airport Is good as long as we have the county on our side. The federal government wtll have to become involved 1bi.s II federal land and the need for more airports has become a national issue. That's why El Toro II so impor- tant. There are a lot of people who want to separate m Toro and John Wayne. They're tied together. Everywhere you look, in the papers, there is a need for airports. U we don't have an airport at El Toro, bow are we going to deal with the need, 20, 30, 40 yea.rs from now? We need El Toro. I thJnk a lot of people who think we should separate them. they're good people, but we haven't done a good job making lt clear why tbe issue needs to be tied together. · How a. .. MW Newpod llMdaco .,..._...._ oe,.,..1o1me111 .... Gmy ..... , cbmpd llMl dty. ....,._. ... , e1'->w•d._ EIToro .... f 1be ...... ba alwajl bean to support 1!1 'lbro. 1be three D8W COUDdl IMl!lben are "'Y ..UV. ID IOW TO COlllCI YOll MPllSlllllllllS aTY Of COSTA~ art°' ..,on llM>t Newpalt ... Qty Hall. 3300 Nii.,. lhid., 9*3, (Ml) .. , .. Colta Mele Qty Hall, 71 Pair Drtve, 92628. (114) '75'· 5223 ... ,_,Olly Aden Ca rW1S....• bfrg, N.-. cao... Jolm Hllllm-. .,._ O'.Nlll. the process. I don't thmk the stance has changed. South County has done a magnif- icent job of spinning their position to South County people and across the border to ours. That's where the prob\em lies. And you'll see our city become active in disseminating accurate information on John Wayne and El Toro to North County and to our own. A lot of those people dtdn't vote the way they did (on the anti-El Toro Measure Fl because they don't want El Toro. In those lunds of situa- tions, we need to become proactive to make sure every citizen knows the truth. Is the pr<Hlirport side of the debate losing the public relations battle to antt-alrport forcesf Why or wbynotf No. We have three of the five county supervisors supporting El Toro. The •debate• literature from South County is •spin• material. The pro-aiiport side, other than thoseactually invwved,Meseeing that without El Toro, we may well lose the support of the county as a need exists. I don't think it's a matter of win- ning or losing. Virtually everybody, maybe not everybody but more than 90%, I talk to wants El Toro. It's just a lack of information. And that's going to change. We're going to get the word out. What ltept do you tb1nk New- port Beacb ud other pro-airport g:roupt should tab to convince the r.t ol the county of the need for an airport al El TOl'Of 1. Pro--airport groups need to work together on the same page. 2. Commence an accurate and informative public relations program ·to our North County neighbors, some ot wbk:h may be ambivalent to the Issue, U8Ullliilg that Newport Beach wtll limpfy take care of the tuue. 3. Proper dlssemtnatton of accurate information on El Toro is critical. Are you concerned at all that stronger efforts by Newport Beach could backfire and increase the resolve of anti-aJrport groupsf No. Their mtent and goals are set and they have made those clear - the legal attack on Measure A. (The El Toro Reuse Planrung Authonty'sl position to oppose, legally and oth- erwise, the extension of the JWA settlement agreement is not.lung new. ETRPA has shown its true colors. They're now going to oppose JWA. They're not going to do anything on John Wayne. They don't have lhe power They're just very loud and vocal. They have opposed us on every- thing, on every inch of the way. And now it's tune for us to take the gloves off and show the true colors or ETRPA and show they are adverse to our interests. They always have been. What end do you foresee for the El Toro airport debatef 1. Strong public relations efforts in both North and South County. 2. The ultimate goal will be for a smaller airport with similar restric- tions to those at JWA. 3. Lots of "heat• with the chal- lenge of Measw-e A. Can you say, for sure, that there will be an airport at El Torof Let me just say this: This ls going to be very difficult. Anybody who doesn't think so is kidding them- selves. But right now I feel we are doing everything the right way to get it done. l don't have a crystal ball. but I have a very strong sense we wW have an airport at El Toro. It will be Pnoller than originally planned. More likely than not. it wtll have caps. MoTe likely than not. it will have time restrictions. It will be like JWA. We're com· mitted to making tt happen. ~ ~SAUMAEO SOtOOl DSlMCT Serene Stokei and Oevld Brooks Regarding Janice David.son's Feb. 20 CommUDity Commentary. As a recent City Council can- didate (in Costa MeSQ), I attend· ed several televised council forums. During each of these forums, I stated that Ubby Cow- an and the current City Council listened to the citizens of Costa Mesa and then completely disre- garded what the citizens had to say. . Despite this, the residents of Costa Me$a decided to reelect Cowan. I agree that during council meetings Cowan acts as if she ., •owns the city and acts as a dic- tator . .,, But it is too late I The citi- zens of Costa Mesa have spoken with their vote. At the present time, a recall is inappropriate. I am very glad to see that Gary Monahan has decided to listen to the community and act accordingly. Remember it takes three votes to decide an issue. With Mona· han, Chris Steel and Karen · Robinson on the council. I feel that the city is in good bands. Instead of asking Allan Roeder for a recall, you need to ask Roeder if it is possible to remove Cowan as mayor and return her to a position as council person. Monahan can then fill the mayor j>osltion. In my opinion, this would be in the best interest of the community. RICK RODGERS ColtaMesa Reagan comments were 'simplistic' D•kt Ol9oe: 1370 Adami ~. c.-. Mela 92626, (714) '32-58191 0 uaar. WUliam M. Vega ..... w ... Rowald, Dl*tt't omc.: 2985 A Beat St., Cotta Mee. 92626, {714) 42'·5000 ........... ,,,, Robeft a.t>ot tmA~TID ....... "T 1115....,..Aft .. COMa M.a 92121, (NI) 631·1• ..., ... hut..,,.. Am n'hlblllm• ...., ... fal'I ..... o.aaa. Jady PlwKo. Jim IWrymaA. MUtM !"'°\Wenctr Leeol. \ _,.Pl 11' .... 'lhldt Olllllg-tlal. Ja A .... a. Mmll1111,. .... I • ti's ~ •• -yau'rt Q coach Of Q ..... play-, yau hM Clftlin rt5fOltSllfWu _ • 8111 Workman. Former OCC coach ~ I • • • ] OH Fmary 26 honcne , TOii llTCHEIS 10 Sunday, February 25, 2001 •Sports Editor Roger Carlson• 949..S7U223 •Sports Fox: 949.6500170 Daily Pilot -lTCHINO UP Bill WITH ••• n • Former Orange Coast College fo~tball coach continues to operate at a very quick pace, and in many directions. Steve Virven 85-year-old father who lives in· DAILY PILOT Wtldemar and wants to stay in his ,. ere are no timeouts. There is place,• said Workman who travels no halftime nor pregame 1ilm to the town near Lake Elsinore at to have an idea of the future. least three times a week to care for Bill Work.man, a former football his father's needs, including real coach at Orange Coast College, estate issues. "It's just like when says his life is as busy as ever since 1you're a coach or a football player, retiring from his post three years you have certain responsibilities ago. /and you take care of it. You don't go Today, he must act quickly home until all the planning is done. without much plan. His father's 'Otherwise, you've cheated 75 health and his family's future players out of a chance to win. Yoµ depends on it. can't do that. It's the same thing. He reacts with strength from an This is just my job right now.• unwavering faith in God. And, be Workman's father, Jack. has lived draws wisdom from growing up in through two heart bypass surgeries. the mean streets of Bell, coaching He is now on the verge of going athlete~ numbering into the blind, while stricken with macular thousa(lds and winning top honors d,eqeneration, diabetes and at Whittier College, Edison High Parkinson's disea!e.IIn December, and Coast. he lost a majority of his memory "I'm dealing with an ailing SEE WORKMAN PAGE 12 Thaler shoots his way to Stockton · • Estancia High 215-pound senior comes back from second-round setback to qualify for the State Meet. FOUNTAIN VALLEY -Time wound down toward the end of the match and Estancia High senior Nathan Thaler was already snlil- ing. He was picturing himseU in Stockton. Thaler, the 215-pound CIF Southern Section Division IV wrestling champion, advanced to the State Meet after defeating Warren's Randy Jreisat, the Divi ... sion V champion, 8-6, in the fourth round of consolation of the Masters Meet, Saturday, in front of an over- flow crowd at Fountain Valley High's gym. Thaler will wrestle at the State Meet in Stockton's Spanos Center Friday and Saturday. He finished seventh and led a small but solid showing of New- port-Mesa district wrestlers at the two-day meet. Newport Harbor's Bruce Llm (119 pounds) WRESTLING •He's just got (great technique and mental strength),• said Ati- lano, who wrestled Division I in college at Northern Illinois Univer- sity. •Mental toughness is over half the need. He showed his strength. And, he has such solid technique it would be a shame for him not to succeed. I feel happy that be stepped it up.• The Masters' fourth round of consolation consisted of four matches and featured the stake: win and qualify for state or lose and go home. •tt's brutal,• said first-year Co- Coach Steve Perez who has taken much delight in Thaler's senior season. •1t•s been a great year all around for him. He's just made some mistakes (to get came within one win to qualify for state and " ... I felt he Corona del Mar's Aaron had aome Hacker (152) finished with a 1-2 record. his six losses). So, we don't know how good be ts.• 1baler, who finished 4-2 at The Masters, earned a bye in the first round. He then suf- fered a loss to Hemet's Ryan Griffin who pinned him with seven seconds remaining in the first period. weaknesses. So, I went at him and started to be aggreBBive. I won the round and that's all "It was kind of like awe,• Thaler said of his emotions upon winning the state-qualifying match. "(Jreisat) was tough, but I felt he had some weaknesses. So, I went at him and started to be aggressive. I won that count.I ... " the round and that's all Nllthiiln n... that counts. Stockton.· EstMdi 21~ 1baler steadily took down opponents in the consolation bracket, recording a major deci- sion victory to begin bis run. After a scoreless first -------- period, Thaler built a 6-He was awarded a win by default when the official called the match because of viola- tions from 'fytell Blanche of Bur- roughs. 2 lead. He slipped a quick reversal on Jreisat to open the second peri- od. Thaler then shot for two tak.e- downs in the final 35 seconds, scor- ing the latter with one second remaining. Thaler increased his confidence with the advantage as be allowed Jreisat an escape to begin the third period. But. Thaler later scored a takedown with one minute remaining for an 8-3 lead. Jrefsat managed an escape and then a reversal with 25 seconds left, but Thaler, a transfer from Newport Harbor who now bas a 43-6 record, held on for the victory. He jumped in celebration and hugged his coaches. 1baler became the tint New· port-Mes& District wr Uer tO ac:tvance to the state tou.rmment llnOe Harbor beavyweigbt Juoo Deere in 1996. •1 used to have a love-hate reJ.a .. tioosbip with competition.• l&Sd Thaler, who developed mental ttnmgth from a lportJ psymoio. ~· •Butt DOW it11 fun.• Alt1ilt mdurlng rigorous tralDl.Dg at a .,,....., camp In MimMlota .,... ,.pnmer, lbal. mapped out &II .,.,... for the MlllOD Del pl..-.d • titP to Stocktoa 00 top. Wbm bl ....... J'Ml Co-c.o.dl Matt .AKleno, 11Mller --the COlldl lf be Md Ille W: ddel ID ~· .. the ... M9ft. Thaler won his final match by injury default because Gary Ullerlch of Capistrano Valley was hurt in the match previous. After. qualifying for state, lndio's Geoxge Palmer calmed Thaler'• celebration with an t 1-t victory, Improving his record to 42-6. Um. a senior who finllhed as runner-up in CIP Divillon. D, fin- ished the eeuon l-'·6 for Newport Harbor. He lost in the fourth round of CODIOIAtion to Sultana'• Anthony An:huleta. a junk>r transfer from Cal\'ary Chapel of Selita Ana, who earned third place in state lait year. Alcbulet.a pUmed Um j\Wt before the eeooad-perlod buDer sounded. •n tMls like lt'• been a tough year,• Um Mid. •1 f~t I w~ really hard, but lt just wun't enough.• Said Harbor Coub DOmlillc BUkiDe, • ~) did a lot few our pro- gram. He wu f1Mt for our younger WI ....... 1blf l&W Whet ti tak9 ,., mc:aed,. ~a---bCdMWtio ...,...._ W ID Cll' DM1ba tv. b6Wid oUt Of Tbt MMtn ID GM dUrd roQDd of cwollUan. OMV l'ILOT ~OS BY SmiE MCC Estancia'• Nathan Thaler (above) gets a congratulatory hug from cop-coach Matt Atilano, after an ~ 8-8 declllon over Warren High'• Randy Jrellat at tbe Maiten Meet In Fountain Valley Saturday., -I Doily Pilot SPORTS Sunday, Feb!Uory 25, 2001 11 Corona del Mar sees endless possibilities •Nine returning players have the Sea Kings eyeing CIF Southern Section Playoffs in just second year from hiatus. Tony Attobelll worked our way to 17 players and a DAILY PILOT decent season. Now, we have a var- CORONA DEL MAR _ U last sity and junior varsity program with over 30 girls, so we're definitely year's 7-11 record was a surprise, going in tfie right direction." Just wait unW this year, according to The Sea Kings have nine players Corona del Mar High girls softball returning from last year's squad, Coach Terry Christiano. including Daily Pilot Dream Team Just two years after not fielding a selections Alissa Zoelle, Amy "fyson, team, the Sea Kings have pumped Casey Bunney, Meaghan Bunney new life into the program and are and Mijanou Pham. already setting their sights on the Zoelle, a sophomore, hit a New- postseason. _ port-Mesa District-best .456 as the •1t•s been an amazing tum-Sea Kings' shortstop and No. 1 around, "Christiano said about the pitcher. She scored 14 runs, had 16 state of CdM's program. "Last year, RBis at the plate and posted a 6-4 we started with nothing and record with a one-hitter as a pitcher. HIGH SCHOOL CIF PLAYOFFS "fyson was a strong defensive force behind the plate, while bat- ting .397 with 22 runs scored last year. Junior Casey Bunney will return to third base and find some compa- ny with Ashley Brown ·and Taylor McCormick. U she returns to her .333 batting average and 11 RBis from a year ago, Christiano will find a place for her on the diamond. Sophomore Meaghan Bunney hit .444 (24 for 54) with 12 runs scored last year, while playing a solid first base. Pham, one of the few seniors on th.ls year's squad, has been working hard on defense and will look to improve on her. 344 batting average from a year ago. She, along with I t•1 what everyone 1trtve1 for. a shot at glory tn the CJP Southern Sec:Uon Playoffs. Among the gladlaton. dockwbe, from top left Cotta Mesa'• David Conte (3), Corona del Mar'• KrtJUn McCoy, C osta Meaa'1 BWy Lund (7), Newport Harbor'• Aaron Yamal (25), B1tanda'1 Armando Ortiz (6) and Corona del Mar gtrll water polo standouts Jeutca Pries (11) and Daniela DiGtacomo. DAILY PILOT PHOTOS BY 'STEVE McCRANK AND DON LEACH Zoelle and Brown, will make a for- midable Sea Kings' pitching staff. "Our improvements from last year both on offense and defense has been astronomical/ Christiano, said. "Plus, with so many new faces, that was a beautiful surprise.• With all the returning faces and strength in numbers, the Sea Kings have gone from not having a team at all, into a solid playoff contender. •I never like to make promises, but I have no doubt that we have the talent to make the playoffs, "Christiano said. "We're all excited to get this season underway. With University, Costa Mesa and Northwood in our league, any- thing's possible, but our confidence is high.· , , f ' 12 Sunday, Februal}' 25, 2001 WORKMAN coNfi'Nueo FROM 10 and sense of his state of being. Work.man has since drawn closer to his father. But, as lus father, who is a cowboy al heart. Workman puts aside his emotions mainly because he must lend to Jack's buswess of land owned in Bell and Wildemar. "There are a lot of Uungs to take care of dnd he can't write a check," Work.man said. • 1 thwk it's safe to say that 1've become a businessman. I keep the books for his company I'm pretty good al divorcing myself from the emotion • Workman, 59, lives in Fountain Valley wtth tus wife, Shen. They have two daug hters, Julie and Jana, and six gr,mdchLldren from Jana, four girls and two boys Workman also teaches sue hours of l'XNcise dnd weight trauung classes on W!'dnesddys at OCC. HP '>dYS he rrusses coaching football becduse he sWl marntams a competiuve '>pint But, he had to stop coaching because ol bdck problems In Workman's ftnal two seasons, tus molhN rued, he learned he had prostate ' r1nrer, hlS father became ill and his back worwned to the point that there were threats ht• would never wdlk again. He lost 41 pounds before doctors forced surgery Smee then, his hack strength hds 1111proved and as of DecPmber, doctors said lhP1 e were no lfdces of cancer. "It's no longer what you want to do, but whdt you need to do,• Workman s&d of tus eXJl from a brillidnl coaching career that mcluded three bowl appeMances and a Mission Conference title 10 1990. ·1 was like d balloon dnd somebody sudde nly let the air out Mentally, I WdS overloaded. I would prefer lo be younger, not hurting dnd still lOdChmg • "God hds a redson for doing what he d()(>S, fl he said. "It'<; d ma lier of llsterung and ftgunng out if he's trying lo tell you somethmg. He has somelhmg else for me, loo. I don't know what it ts. But, it will probably be exc1tmg. • Like dn extrerrust without a mountain or a comedian without a punchline. Workman 1s without d fourth quarter. He now searches for dCllVltlf'S to fill the void of coa ching. H e wants to study to dcquue d real estate licen<,e. He wants to ledrrl how to speak Spdmsh. Workman would also l.Jke to be a consultant for a football team, at any level, for recruiting. He would a lso like to delve into golfing. But, he sWJ has to take care of his father. ·u 1 wasn't a codch, I would have been a Weguard dnd just hang out,· Workman said. ·1 really want to hang out, but I have a competitive edge. You can't fight that. You get addicted to ddrenaline rush. Now, I have no place to do that. I've had it all my life As a young kid, I grew up in the ghetto.• In 1998, tus first season away from coaching, Workman sd.id he had to get away from the Pirates and let Mike Taylor coach on tus own. Workman traveled to find a new football game. He and his Wlfe went to South Bend to see the Notre Dame-USC game. And, the season OR SAT Flot M. Oraat. 81 died on Ftb 23, 2001 tt homt with ftmlly In Ctrt1btd. Som Dec, 1, 1919 In Lo. Angel11. She w11 1 Balboa l1l1nd rHldtnt for 29 Y•rt before Moving to Ctrltbad In 1989. Her hu1blnd of 49 y11r1, Emit Or11t, precedff her dl9th .. well 11 aon Gregory Orut. She 11 1urvl¥ecl by '* daughtw Chet! d. Abbott and IO!Hn-taw Oreg Abbott, grtnd- clallgh1ert, Renee Or· NI and Adelle OW end her grandaon1 Dtryk OrMI, Remy Abbott I nd Skylar lbbott of Ctrtlbecl Ind IW!Mf· out llfe long lr1endt. '-====== A cetebratlon of htf .. fife It ICMdultct for V.A. IO MOY!.., Wed. Feb, 21, 2001 t FRll COUI 11tn1 100 AUUlt Of..._. : p.m. It Et.emal IMWA ""°' HIMI In ec.naldt, CA 1 for Info cell 14-tSWIOO v .. ,...r.-780-TM-llOO. Ettmel 1..,.: Hiiie It hendfln9 111 vr191tl4Mo.eow1 lt7Wl0!!Mnt1. J)i,tount (~~l'.l\l't I , I 1 SPORTS Daily Pilot after, he went to the Mia ippt-Aubwn matchup at 'Mitllissippl. They antved early In the week for both' games to see all the action outside the actuA.l contest. . - - •it looked like 'Field of Dreams, • • Workman said of the fan support and attendance at Mississippi. •1 tried to stay away from Orange Coast as much as possible because it was Mike Thylor's show and he's doing a great job.• Workman has moved on as he depends on his belief in God. He also maintains his health by Wting weights or playing basketball. He said when things settle down with the caring of his father, he plans to help a friend in a missionary ministry, aiding underprivileged families in Nicaragua and the Philippines. •Tue only frustration I have about that is we have places like that in our own country," Workman said. "There's a lot of exciting llungs to do out there. There really is." And, he believes there are reasons for everything. He d1dn't get the assistant coaching job at Whittler College that he was prollUSed by three school presidents. He didn't get the job he really wanted, either: head coach at East L.A., where he once played as a tailback. He felt like he was bemg slapped in the face, be said. H e entered tus successful stint at Edison by chance. He saw then-Coach Vince Asaro while walk.Ing into the same tax return office and Asaro offered Workman an assis- tant's job. At Edison (1971-1985), he earned Sunset League Coach of the Year honors in 1976, 78-81, 84 and 85. He was Orange County Coach of the Year in 1979-81, when his Chargers dominated the opposition with d 32-game winning streak and the nation's No. l rank.J.ng in 1980. Workman is also credited with starting the first drug testing program for high school athletes in the U.S. in 1985. in 1971, he told his wife, someday he would be the coach at Orange Coast. And, in 1986, his statement came true. He would have never gotten there had be received the job at East L.A. "Great job, great people. Who could ask for more,• Workman said of tus time at Orange Coast. "I didn't try to get to the university level or the NFL because I matte that decision. I wanted to be home. I wanted to watch my kids grow and let them know . who I am. I don't regret that. Would I like to be coaching on the sidelines at the Super Bowl? Who wouldn't? But, at what price? I knew I wasn't willing to pay that price. Most of the coaches have had a divorce . I didn't want one.• As The Daily Pilot caught up with Workman last week, one of his former players, Dave Lopez, approached him and gave him a great hug. Lopez credits Workman for getting him through college and earning a degree at University of Pad.fie. Workman says he can't go anywhere without bumping into one of his former players. And, he loves it. The encounters are Just one of many unexpected events and people that come through his life. "God is in charge,• Workman said. "We don't get to read the last chapter til we get there and we say, 'Oh, my gosh I' But, hey, you just ride it and try to enjoy it.• f ,..,.o·r • ~ CCIMMD&MM 1uac NGNl.O JC WOMEN'S BASKETBALL Coast eliminated at Bakersfi eld, 66-53 BAKERSFIELD -Orange Coast dropped a 66-53 women's baske(ball deosion to host Bakersfield in the first round of the Southern Regionals Saturday mght, exiting with a 16-16 record. Bakersfield (22-10) moves on to face Mt. San Antonio Wednesday. STAll l'\AYOFFS, SOUTillJIN lllGIONAL Flnt --' ~ 66, OlwilGl CoAn 53 Onlnge CoMt· Mitsuda 10, Ftent 15, Redmond 3, Melville 2, Nakano 2, Mojica 12, urp.n 7 Fouled out • Redmond aMenfletd · Suburu 7, L Smith 15. Srlkz 1, Sumlin 2. Colbert 15, WtlhalTli 2. Richardson 6, Spanier 7, Elliott 13. Fouled out • none Halftime Bakenflek:t, 26-22 JC WOMEN'S TENNIS Coast sparkles SOUTHWESTEAN TOURNAMENT Women First Round Singles • Sommer (OCC) def. Valverde (Imperial Valley) by default; Chang def. Rultermen (San Diego Mesa), 8-1; Mai (OCC) def. O'Leary (Palomar), 8-1; Brown (Grossmont) def McNamara (OCQ, 8-4; Lawson (OCC) def. Calderon (College of the Desert), 8-2; Bohm (OCC) def. Sambrano (Grossmont) 8-3 Second Round Singles • Sommer. Chang and Mai (OCC) bye; Fouraet (Saddleback) def. Lawson (OCQ, 6-2, 6-4; Bohm (OCQ def. Reagan (Cuyamaca), 6· 1, 6-0. First Round Doubles · Sommer· Chang (OCQ def. Baker-Cheney (SD Mesa), s-r, Lawson-McNamara (OCC) def. Rector·Silverra (Cuyamaca) by default.; Sombrano-Brown (Grossmont) def. Mal·Mazza (OCQ, 8-2. Second Round Doubl .. Sommer-Chang bye; Lawson· McNamara (OCC) def. Zamarripa· Valverde (Imperial Valley), 8-0. Semtflnail Doubles · Menzel· Altamirano (Southwestern) def. Sommer-Chang (OCC), 8-2; Lawson· McNamara (OCC) def. V. Part1da-G. Partida (COD), 8-0. COLLEGE MEN'S BASKETBALL Lions fall, · 79-.66 •Hope International breaks loose in the second half with 9-b llnd 15-4 spurts to top Vanguard. Tony Altobelli D AILY PILOT BREA -With a berth in the first round of the Gold- en State Athletic Confer- ence Playoffs already assured, the Vanguard Unl- versity men's basketball team is at Azusa Pacific Wednesday night (7:30), there was apparently not much at slake and the Lions played that way 1n a 79-66 GSAC loss to HoJ>4i! International Saturday night at the Brea Commu- nity Center. ·Bottom line, we stunk tonight," said Vanguard Coach Stephen French. •we were very unmotivat- ed and we had poor leader- ship from our seniors. We were just terrible.· Vanguard, which trailed, 42-39, at halftime, moved into a 49-46 lead with 14:00 left, but Hope, now 11-21, 3-15, went on a 9-0 run to take the lead for good. The Uons cut the lead to 57-55 on the strength of some strong play from Kevin Candelaria, but then Hqpe, led by 6-foot-10, 240- potJ.nd senior Axel Mara- garitha, went on a 15-4 run and never looked back. Ma.ragarltha led all scor- ers with 22 points and the GSAC rebounding leader pulled down 17 boards. Kemmy Burgess led Vanguard With 21 points, and Dennis Keane had 17 points and 11 boards. • 1t was nice to see Kem- my come around," said Stephens. •we're going to need him in the playoffs." GOLD8t l1'Aft ATNLS'nC CCU Na ta. ... 1111\GML 19. y,...,...,. ~ • ICnne 17, C:.blty 4, Corbfy 2, Burgen 21, Boys 8, c.ndelarla 6, Goldman 8. 3-f)t. goals • Burgess 3, Kune 2 Fouled out · none. Hope~· Maragatltha 22. _Gr-2. Rogers 6, Ste. 20, Hills 9, Houck 15, Tims S. 3-pt. goals • Houck 2, Sto. 1, Tlms 1. Fouled out · none Halftime • ~. 42·39. COLLEGE WOMEN'S BASKETBALL Vanguard breezes, 87-59 • Lions turn it up at the outset of second half en route to easy victory ov~r Hope International. Tony Altobelli Vanguard outscored Hope DAILY PILOT · at the outset of the second BREA -Vanguard Uruversi- ty was an 87-59 winner in women's basketball Saturday night over Hope international at the Brea Conununity Center. The Lions were led by Kel- ly Boeke and Rachel Pikse, who scored 20 and 16 points. respectively, as well as Beth Weidler, who had 12 points. Boeke was tpe leading rebounder with 11. ·we just needed to be more aggressive," said Van- guard Coach Russ Davis. ·we forced 30 turnovers the last time we played and only had five at halftime.• DEEP SEA SAlURDAY'S COUNTS half, 30-8, to break open a rel- atively tight game at halftime with but a 38-31 lead. Vanguard is now 1 y7-11, 10-8 w the GSAC. Hope falls to 10-22, 1-17. GOU>OI STATI Antln'IC ClONflDENa VNf/f11.WG 87, tb& ~ 59 ~ -Linderman 2, Weidler 12. Edmlrton 9, Huddle S, Seaman 6. Axekon 6, U.00.larla 4, Ditteob4r 7, Filue 16, Boeke 20. 31)1 goals -Flkse 2. ~ler 2. Seaman 1. Fouled out.· none. Hope lntemlltlonlil • BIJtby 2, Hamson 19, Gilae-8, Wyatt 8, Cerey 20. Odak 2. 31)1. goals • Yrey 4, HarrKOO 3, Gilctetie2. FoUled out · none Halftime · V;anguard. 38-31 Newport &Anding · 2 boats, 27 anglers. 9 white seabass, 16 c.alko bass, 14 whitefish, 12 sheephead, 5 sole, 4 black.smith perch, 1 sand bass, 1 sculpln. Davey's Lociler • 16 anglers, 1 boat. 2 cahco bas.s, 7 sheephead, 112 wtiltefish, 128 blue perch, 48 blacksmith perch, 2 sole, 2 opaleye. ------------.., 0 YU, IBL llY CM IAY VIEW GIANT l +dln1 2 ...... 1171,0IO Al!!!! Mt72H120 lndsrsdn 7 - ---~ ~ ~ _.,.. :' ~ • 1 •• - Doily Pilot Sllndoy, February 25, 2001 13 f ' . • ...... ~~ ~ ---' , ... . ' ' . . . Very Best Value in Aliso Viei~--'' ~... • • • .. I . • •. • • I ' I • . • • '1 ( ) ~ I l '~ ~ CORie Nee 10/,aeJOll }.1e 6eu1 missuw ••. Choose from 3 beautiful locations including St. Moritz, Barcelona ond Innsbruck. largest sq_uore footage in Aliso Viejo. 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Zto-!020 INOOfl'no,'"4-;.,,t''-· Otm1i. 2'9=2§9:0791 ltlancl ANIMAL ~ tttc>t to FU/lloll llllnd HtHZ·H7L lllfo M......U71 PlMll call today ::i L11111ry )bt 2be l1undry. :;" c:M:v Zu~~. ~J~ www.t nlmtlDflWOrl!.OCI MMllyo.J/1·21l~Ow71• Piii~· tun dtOk, 2-c gar, IHutllUI llt Ula 1811 W•-............ u1 ~ • Wh to l>Cll, nolptlaltmk, I f f1o111t w1111(t 8** Bly ••-,..., ....,.., n • L.0¥11111 ll\IQ l'vpplll • ------n! 41! S2&0Q S10-37Htp9 ~. 2 ao 11111 • AV.,... lnttmtl 714-751-2 3 l!lllt1 10 ""'-old 113 I LOCK TO OCIAH , Bdrm I bt Wt1n kllchentnl UOO/mo 1nc1uc:i ut"'1111 Ayell 3115 t1 H UI LI; pV1 yard. ptOI ~ P1r11111 on 11e 11000/H OCIAH VllW L.ar11 111 wmowtr gardtn1 O~ly OlotMall IPlot lot -.. eft !!19!! Mt720:0§21 -;oo~ !-<:et p::· ::,~:c, ~tty P!1~ ~.~~c:: i N: OCICAT LOVIAI 123~mo Ht·ZZ0.!§§5 rtnl looltlon 2323 lrvtne NO, All110D>ttfA!:OZ~ WAHTID. Unlqlle apotttd. ChltmlM 2llr llll 9o AY9 P11llcl! TtnOlt (phone .. -----.. kllltnt,J:UI, vtrt loYlng ,.______ ol PCH 'Petlo. CC*' bMma. on Psi! !o! ll!llOl!l!rn!!ll 1110 .. • I ~t4t-t4H473 1 1.a ... :a I Ip ~Mlltl ... ~1e IMft Sunny 38t tnCl 11111 ,.TTIAI I IOTTLI Ill~ Mtz~ nt11 CcM. ,.., 5: Y1*11 ....,_ fot 11MW I 0111 11 QOO.'Mo k 8"'0ltY Info AHllllAL NITWOftlC 21drrn 1 ltth PM Ct Bl!y,JtW1 LAAOI UHfTI AVAIL lllfo ........ nn Join Us. Find your sanctuary. We lcno.v h:lw epecl&I 'fOJ ire At Inner w I r8lall eicperier IOI 1'111'1 fer IW'ld Ibo.A v.<>men. WI went yo.J to ~ )O.l'88lf R bAj I CAr• 1h8t rellect8 yoJ tMrrta. 91',1t. nj eprtt M Pl'1 de 'Mrtl~ Rn.re 50 OO'Tl*'IY CU reilWW'IQ 810r9 ott.tlg WOOWl'I rittnate IClPS1I Hare, ---rd 1110l'T18hraoy i:rtX1.tCta 19 a piece to ,.,...._, fhd bet.a nj r'ICO 1 llCt v.111'\ yo.I~ Come ~te yo.s caw rd h:1 yo.s IWICtlby v.ttt1 ue tmw Sell le ~ op&'V1Q a store n South COMt fltua. We're loolci"9 lcY ~ energellC peo()le b tie fobWlg poeltO'e • Stot1 Managsr • Assistant Manager • Floor SUpervlsor At tnw Self. we beiM n oftemg a~ ~~that lnciJdel • 401 (\¢, ltOOk ~ rd PJ(:teM pls'l, IC1.ca1blll lllliltrot, wcaUcrl a'"(j l)licj holdlye. bcnA pow'ltlel 9'ld rtCllnMI rd glr'e"ClJI cl9COllU rd P'OCLCt llbMra Plelle fax C1 •·"* '/(:Al,..,.,... nj ~ lttt.-to: Nrrt Bollwtolc. ... Lie Dir.at; Atln: Inner W: ,u: (338) a1Mt85; H'Mll: nyW...,_11ctNCt.com WhM cMrllty bbwnl. ~ oomee to fruition. EOE Moll\llH to btlCh Ind F •tll•on I ala rid Call todly lo IHllVI IOUr new b11ch addrt1al Stlr1lnQ from I 1315/Mo ~tl-219·0714 ,llm MIM lit !f' Wiii' Fron! OuplH, J•rege, Wide drtYt up INOk doon, !!!fW.lnlmllnttwoA.ora •• 2• 1..... 11800/Mo 848 4·11277 Lido Ille tit 211 Fp, Ult llllh eti oktn1 .. -----.. ... •· 11• ..... __ T no f::'* '2800/rno Mt· DIM, UI :oezc.n.. We·-"""'""' 1or 1 """" ..._._ ...._ -...... .......... '" .,.y •..,,,.ryw "' 21r 2c ger ~ Mii 711 •• 01 131 ••• 1135 ... -.. .... '*1nl !WI ERA h"6Au & ,,,. ~-....... _, Mga·· 7.P..~11 rm~~ HMRHl§J lnlerlo! OOU!lytrd, 2 Oii git, °"""'°' u hout ... .. 1 • ~I UICUTIVI llARCH • ·~~ ., ,,.. we'tt Rootlt OMltne 111C»'Mo· n ... ,.,. on HP llYd ZHJOO .,,.,;y, money mot1v11*1 ua,ci-a1 ~ t:c;;''• c111111rr c11111 11 • DdrM .. -----"' tlr •Cl9n. Sol.ti al Hwy Uf 211 Ho11N * ptrtoll IO Join our awdl PIY lor "}OJI ._.. I tra~ ICIOIPlilV l9tUIMI lor • ~. 1v.1~ ~..l' 1114 :a I l ltoOr't.lo 8 J Johneoll MW Pllf'll 1111 pool , .,.,. ,.,,..,,._ , COAIT COIN •IDI ~ !~ 11111 I hl71.rroOt.7 Clll Clll 1rA IO!MOO=Ull t i! 111 I ..... ~IC:llflcll : tl~ "!;i; :i. "c;1 PMI Ct f!!!x 94t21t244i ~.12:t'ittflu~ •1• --~~:'!7.n::. ;·~ rtM'lt ;7~ ------~g~ '~c:' • )Sf!t II f4tOOQ:Ji4f IALIOA lj>ygllll HUI Hr Ull ~1!!1n t!~2·tM7, UNlllAllCH·1IO TM City M ..... Alelt1lllt Ctndlcllll m\111 Nivt ~ 2c ;er. new 0011rmet kh, tm1111t Jlf +Ult tl/lllly IAITllDI C.M. Le· 2 Oil Dr. Ill 1IO, °''""' Ca :.i ~::i,. ~ !!. 11111td=ptlM!lbly uo = I LOVILY 4IA 4IA HOMI D!H I lllfftklt vltwt Y11t1y ""· olfloe, detlOlltd homt. ::9% ~ u': ·~:. TO, """ICOADll Hitt ""'"""Ztd illlnClll ·~ In llhy/oountry OOIT... ...., Hot1fl leyfroftt, lrplo. l HH 13 500/t.to Lora 24·ht gue*911td 13780( Jiu A & 8 lolA Rook ~-· ·-00 CWbl -It!· " dlMllllt llt• elllllt °" lot. vm f!!!r. t!HZH002 mo OWrlly t4'-hH141 11tfitHf3 . ttc &O'i & eol, . 1"11°'000"-'Lt ''!!-<!.,.. YMIMT p11t1rrtd ... lary "11 In Mlclotolt Ollloe ,._..._of 111¥· a. ,,_.------. M!(E t4H!§:ZOOI • o .,._1111_,. , .. """'* .. 11NIM 81 rtqO "9aM Ill 'llDI IACK IAY mo. v .. 11y. IM• vanoe I '• -n I nr. 1111, 1 .., ..,, upper 1 • LOIT ' I •· t HI• _..,Cfl.....,.11t......,ntt4t0 ...... .....__ rMUmt ........a-020e ~ lllf patio, no ow ftttltm MHTHOU ::r:1. 11~~01~0 ~ 'OUNO 14'1' A •I Orowlna bllllnttl ""41 ,.ICl'110HllT _____ __. ~~· 328 Unlvtrt1ly, lllOl!tmoi 11HZJ:ZIOO • • a&I hllPI WOfll lrom heme. -~ ... ~~'11..:.r.:~~:»t:ao. 1111 ..... 11• '°' ~ ;una H, Ctl HtAZ'-2031 1111 ... I Qttod Im 1 .... 28r '°1111d Cit Blacll male Oldtr/E OOlll/DtfOI l&H + / -· -Oftlclt In lr.1M 12 "°"" '* ..._ ,...__ u .... 11 ............. ,.... mao. • ... , Ptfllln 1yp1 300 bloc* al wtc PT 1100044000 wtc.fT ..... Ill' M1 ...... WMk Will 1111!1 °" oom-.. ...., lltM PlflO Qll _,.. -""""" .,. 291. dlCldlld houat, 2c Ill Ml~ In Colla "6... I WIU. CAllll l'Olll YOU.• M 1!95*!! I00-1QZ·OIN Oflllt lft ~ ~· Pl"" Good *'* ~ -1t IO COlll 111111 end F• linllH'ldl 1v.81 lor rwit gar, A/C, no Piii. oonvn l1~H9! Appia, allopplng pailotlll Cell pl1111 eek ,., ,,..CIL~ttt ........ zo,.t..,.ZO...,ff,___ ;--No pet 8mc*I ,,.. enw • _ e1&0mo 11000 11e 011P011 ARQ! moo t4t11t1111 netda. 1'11111• eto Cal PANDA EXPA!ll Monts •ZIHOOO ·• llZh dlo 714+41'°353 l l10tlclt t4H8M20I .,_..,_ 14a..... ...... ._._ .. • -----· ---Ooean Pront 21r 11e llf Ill LM hit COftdo 1 • ''"ml I armi rnren In ,.__,_ ......_ ~ ...,.., • ""l'lldt OOfltOlll Jbf nlclly lllrntthtd, II~ •Hf Ill TCIWl\llON wtl •MelrOpOllii.!! UCI w .._,,. -- : 21• very tr; linotd yerd pr11ng, WMICtt·MonlNY -~ P"" IO Tr\lllgll 91¥ ~~ltd~ 0.;i:;, poo( , .,,... , KITCHEN CAEW I di'#, wd '*•· 2-c Qltlgt 0 teH920 O! m-nf-"U:! ~rplc Ill IM119 rm, dinlnO Fo. lllQ wro "'*'pet • - • .It~ 12ftwo artap.C,ntt'f· own lalllldl'y 1~1607~ '94g.300-~ ......... IAT:IUN M S!AVIC! CFtlW : 14_ ...-. EDo 6ondo 3llr :, ::J: ~ 0:0:: 11H10=1941 "" M01 ",.., Aw 17 Per Hour ' 2k lllOt IO beldl I bey 10 tww. n/tMil l llOO Cl' ~ ll'OIHT 11111 2IA tlM1tle llft = liMf ~ 1f ~ ~ ~ ........ : , • ·Am 1--· :i ~-c I: W, !.1'91!i!! HtoQ!l!O, lmmtcul&ll. bllQ!lt. 11P1* ~ ::::;. rum. ~ l¥CJdlta emry. oe up • 7c:.11 "-7 .. 11~1 • , -•ZfAI IMCfl Co: tint 1RftW10 .,._,.. ,..,..,,.,. 1 -11111_!1 '!/d1,. ~.,.!11~· ~--. po11 6 p1111, M fM m 19H1t21to .,. •1111 or : lilt, 1111. dtn, ~-nn, dn=tm, .............., _, .... ,_. ....,._,,, ·-, ID!.,' rrLW m ~ o1o19. 9L 1....a.--.1~111.,.. 821-2H•IS33 t Udo !tit QUiii 1bt 111wly -' Ollltt """°" ltltlld wfd. 2-c Ill' Wilk IO lltora' ~·.-!!!_ ~.!. D!!1_d 0.,... kit let., "'111'1 ""°' r.r ~ 141& Of11ft , ""10dllld, Q!lllOI, no ~ TOCll rlmOdtl • 191. 91' IClflOc*. 111 + 1111 • dip, ....... ., .... .,.... .. ,..,.. Hew _,, lillC*'tl "*' encl ~ -~ f'/J, l!taOfmo ~ llldUded ~ ~ }"'. Oe¥id IHH . Cont1C1 Cart It IOI\ le I MIDI l3200IMO _.. cdlte ind aholl, Info ... IU 1111 n~ '• ZH·m-ma ~. -~1t152Q tttgt.mt !mt !!M Aywl Mltd! I t4tnl·ll10 ...... btd&h. Cll*ll, TV. "'""""''""""'"' ·w~ ----------------------------, ""'° lllnllllit. e1'WOlll. IOOIOCllNR l'T lo! l'llot STARTING .ANEW BUSINESS!. 111111 I "'°"' ~LM1~ ol!lct _, HPI, _. dtyt CdM. ti ,lllx ~ -Call l4WtHIM Of lex IALI Ill IW!!! I t1HIHllO dllWG lltill, lf'll ~ QIVIM nttCltd IO ::.. ...:: ::; n: help ....., ~ .. hcnl morel l4.,11'·17H 9lldl mtlll. "°'lllleu pMQ, • 14 OrM • ...,.. l'T Ot ,,. .. ""l llve·lnt. Ho cert rtQ Z!ffiHllJ . . -. -~· • • I I .... .. ,... .......... tM llldtltt"' .. ~ llllJ,.... yow lo ctll e IOO number In wllloll theN ... ct.ve per 1111111111. - - - ANTIQUE l CLASSIC CARS 9 Cari , 2 motorcyct11, all tn p1rf1ct condition. 100% r111ortd. Salt all In one bloc::« or Individually Private Party OPEN HOUSE 101m-4pm Sat March 10 Sun March 11 2001 1121 w ~Ct g::. ... Mf.71H'11' TODAY'S PUZZLK SOLVSD • • • • • • • • • • • ..,. =-~ IW I fl@; it \ -. • A GOOD ADI , 14 Sunday, FebruOry 2s: 2001 TODAY'S SUNDAY PUZZLE AC"°88 19* 8LMI Md - 12~ 115noo1y one 21 GlOCllll • ~ 220..-...a - 23 Sc-k pJolld; ~CrOlbvC0-.-26~-l'f 2G ,.....,,., •• pronoun 27~ol •g 2.IF1110W1 2111Nll~"""G lOMaA-mgee l:>J~Clnnll 34 ()pgoeed 311 LllfV9 ,__ 38 Item "' • IQYW .... ~ 4 1 S.I• 43 Mlddltng gr- 44 r hlrd Moflday 111 January rionor" 49 '"~ ~Clill-~ S3 -munstw !>o4 Fail()QOm• '» -OU1 uMd llWl'lily ~S.1""9 57&-d•-U<• !>ll Lik~ h GOO bO Gardner ol ·Tne Bern'OOI Cor'IMH ' !ii Cnec.~ (;2(lehCIOUI £,J Fr"" 1 SllOUSO r;i Pe.-~, ... ,,,,., !.-' .,, .. ~ y, G «cr to< "' • 61 "'•"""'-=""-'56 a.,,-.g lollo•• llO a.woe • CMINCO ;'() ti/Me r-wte Nllet 71 Glac.at "poch 7'.) Hondu gam "'11 74 UwMy 7!1 AvthOf Wilde ,.~ .... .,::r=--- ., au.I tlld al fQllSll .. ~ ~ 815~ lll!Heca~-'** 88-lheblll .-y llOCems-VIP ti 1 """*"'* Q2 lmp--w.-y IM o.wy ft"1'Mt 95~ tleAe!or~ 'lllc.Na 98....,.tnto 98 Gold tfl Acapuloo 100 Dawn deny 101Feeltlll 102~111NWt I 03 " -No Angelt" 1040ldlllll!Y t08Novel•G~ 107 Coug#9 108 Lovert ,_? 109 Haca.. ,_ 113 ·vou bet' 11' Modroght m .... 115 Moeorl>k• 118Goel 120 Lote OI memory 123Rowtnn-i 12' F-va peny 125 Blend 126 Cer1ain l'tOrM 127 f ell.,,. 130 Motc><-moufl I 34 Th91 l)lace 1 JO en s conc:ern 137 S.nget Acm 138AtVut ... ...- I 39 Aanng 10 go 140 M nM prodUCll 14 1 Impudent 142 [)1~()1 143 Tot DOWN I Fiflr-tc.pltrldW. ~ a~ •Qiop,..... . 5TOOll GIA IO..._ .,,_.,..,,. 7Cray ·~111111 ti Pnlltlful IX*" 100eri .. Clfg 11~~ 12 8oWt boU'daly 13 89*-ps10CI 1• Uncoln·• ~ 18.Jon 18 -~Nl90!W 17 Oel. 31 eounclt 18111IClUICI bt OtQPefl ltl.o.elii. Sil°'*'° 31 Spite ()( 8!endll 33 P«lll 36 Oec*1I out 37 s.v.d per1ecdy 311 Oll,a.ly 38E~1*1 40 GOllli«I UI) 41 Ppi.c 42J~lnlo 44 Veel 9'ld porlt 4!) Dec4ll1lul ~ 46 Slant«! print 4 7 Sllgebrutl1 State 46 Oillgf9r "' Type OI rll)I 50 Glrlllo ,....,.,. 51Mec1Wr.,_,111ip 52 Moder-."' n~• 56 s.it.ac tor. 57Gt...tiome 511 Putt O<A OI Join! 58~-62 Samuel o.m-ia 83Mala - 84 lt>lenor &8 Smll amounCa See previous page for answers. .. • ..,lllly _ 10~Atftll 72,.,... n~mood 1•0. 18 a....o molcllrGS na-on·,,_,,,. 78 T ropctl MIOd 711Eepon IOWillbP 61~ 82 VelY9ly llbr\Q ee 8*llY "'* f/7~ • ~. empla)ote 90~ tll~ 113 F..-io 9WOrd 95Cnm .... tie Mellle Welgm llnfl tl7 UMd • 9'0Pw111Ch 101 Curv• 102 u~ • ounon? 100 Sit OI atraw 105Agf- 108FClftat_., 107 Kind OI Wll 1081.1 .... llzzy 110 A -nympw 111 L.oc..91 II• 112~ 113 ~ 8'ytY* 116PNl«I 117 Lllal Grett let!• 118 Tom.lo w.,n1ng 119 Put lor1ll ""°" 120J-•thlp 121 Dodi 12:2 Celhed•• 1111'1 123 Ana ol JUI 124~•part 128~ 129 USN olllc9r 131 MutwnmllO - 132Yo~ 133 N#>ny'a o!ltpr1ng 135 Com put• In "2001 • •• Bridge 8Y CHARLES GOREN with OMAA SHARtF and TANNAH HIRSCH PLAY OR DKFENDT Doth vulnerlble. Nonh deals. Bllickwood. in which thc 1.111.Q ol llUmpl counu as ICC, llhowed four conll'Ols, five beans asked about lhe queen of l1Ump6 and the •ix,hcan reply confinncd po1cwon of her mAJC$1)' alona with thc k.JnA ofhearU. That was all South needed" IO bear 10 M•hool the moon." NORTH • KOJ4 • A IC J lO 7 l AQ •A WEST EAST • 9865 "? Vold 0 9763 • J 10 6 4 J • Vold <:>Q86SJ ? J 1052 •Q97l Declarer won the fin.1 tnCk wuh the 1ee of clubs and, after cashing the kln11 of spades io leam of the bed brealt, drew the ootatanc:Una lNmP". A heart 10 the kin4 brou&ht mon: bed newt and. althou~ declarer could ,et up the 13th lnck wllh a ruffing finesse of the queen. the dosed lwJd lack.eel an entry 10 casb the lung or d~. Down one. SOlTTH •A 10 7 J l 94 K84 • K 8 5 Tiic bidding NORTH EA..\I' 2• h...s SOllfH 2') It 1, 11 sll1lllge hand. Declarer can come to 13 trick.s by ~f1<:ing one or his sure tricks! Aller discovering the INmp break nt cnck 1wo, declarer 1hould lead the queen of diamonds and overuike wnh the km11. Next. declarer ruffs the losin~ club high. then draws the l'Cl1lAirung trum~ dt..C-iVdmg. heart from dummy. After cashing the top hum. declarer leads the Jacl... ruffing out the 4uecn. Dummy·~ low heart goc:5 away on the k.uig o( dubs and the ace o( duunond.s 11nd ten of hearts U\kc •he last two trick~· 21:> Pua 2• l • Pua 4NI' 5< p-5 . 6r 1'11.V ,. l'll5S p .. Operung lead· Jacl.. of • Study the d1ogr1m. Would you rather ploy or defend 'ICven spade~ after the lead Of the JOCk of clubs? Tiic opening bid WM an anifica:il game force. the response was waiting and the next lhrec bids were natural North ·s fC)ptJn'c m Key-Card If you rilCked up .di the tnck\, we woold hate to play m your g;unc BMW 3291 '96 Caw, SM!/ ~ lap, ,.,. adlllon, lpCll1 & luJCury pac;il(.lge. 6 CD c;hange. r Chrom• 171n wheeis handl ,,.. phone mini condltlon, 55k mt $2000 714-~73 BMW 3281 'ta s.pd, •pol1. co (4E8LTM) '30,1186 CREVIER BMW 114·835·3171 BMW 3211 'ta ~ Vwy CINnl (G05592) 129,995 CREVIER BMW 714-835-3171 BMW 5281 'te auto, loacltd •'°9llon• (3XVF2M) Ut.995 ,CREVIER BMW ·~ 714-835·3171 BMW 5281 '99 tuto, clMn, 1711 ml (T25150) $35,995 CREVIER BMW 714-835-3171 BMW 5281 'tt ""°· V8, wtllte bMuty (4FKFOe5) 134,995 CREVIER BMW 714·835·3171 BMW 740!1 'ta 91tck w/'19'1, lo ml (M12372) 139,995 CREVIER BMW 714435-3171 8llfW 740! .. Blad! "1'blld. lo mllaa ( 4cfft028) S41.995 CREVIER BMW 714-835-3171 CADILLAC CAT£RA 'ta low mi beige. tin """· (0721321 StS.988 NABERS (71'1540-9100 Cadilltc Concoutt • lo "'· Nolttlllll, 114* clMll (272595) s 1',988 NABERS (7141540.9100 Cedillec Coup O.Ylllt 'et Low ITi, '1(1, ltllht< t334348) $6,988 NABERS (714)540-1100 Cdllc Sevlllt STS '16 1ow miles, V8. Nontw1a1 (824649) $17,988 NA&iRS (7141540.9100 Cdlac &.¥1118 ... Low sn. mlat, mntt1 11oy1 (ll053&t) 116.988 NASERS (714 )!40:'100 --. -i1 ;c;· ~-~.....l , .... r r .--~-.. .J Lind "°_...,. RoYtt LWI 'ti l!lllMlii ... CO ~~-~== ;;; its.no t4ff4+ttll8 WUI RX IOO W 4x4, dvm ..... tmrf, loW '*4. • CD cllgr, White/Ian llllf 129,m ot>o P'H?t3§88 lillldl llPY w.., 70ll + "' orig -· ""*'· llAly IOlded. ,_ elf, lilt• new cond, Vln-f 651291 O C A4.*> 9loMt W50 Mwet.1 ... IEACEDH Ml UO 'tt 1 Cl! mi, Biid! wAatl IMfler CHEVY Manta Ctrto 'IO ln1"1Clf, $37,500 or !aka Origlnll Owntf, txcellenl CNfl< IMM 949-574-4820 condition, 40K ""· private 1!!!1Y $2500 94H37·2144 CHEVY 8UIUABAH 14 Xlnt cond, new • uphol, tllw, cue1olll CD pleyer, 4X4,~llQ,11~ Mt-75~-1111 CHEVY VEHTURE '97 STD PASSENGER VAH, euto, AC, PO, PS. 111111 lock bfttH, illHm CAIMlte, tinted wlndowa, 511( 1111, 110,197 Mt-$74-044 IY~HMIH495 CUU20 Callriol9t '01 (Ql56502) ..... 2K llllM, Won't Latt F1ttchllf ~ Motorcata UM24·1401 JAGUAR XJE 'f7 ve, c1 ... 1c. white conv, tng, body, tlrH · Al. Hetd• minor eo.-ttca. $29.500 ..... 723-3371 ~ ltJS V12 COll$lt 'tO •!Ii Orig m, melalllc !*Ill ltalhar, chromt whls. garaged, non/smoker laWous boct1 & mechanical cond, superb value Vln#t72518 $9,995 0.C. Auto Bkr 949-586-1 eea OldtmoOMa AtotncY 't3 low milal, ltalht<. moonrool (008734) $8,988 NABERS (714)540:1100 Ol.DS • ROY ALE '92 Aulo, lllMd wlndowa, PS. PS, CC, Ml-fm cauen., ""' loca brtkM, .. pwr, 58K ml, 1 own« SS500 141-514-U« IYMlwkndt 6'2-6""'495 POLICE IMPOUNDS C.ra/TrucklllSuv'a From "°°' F« .... call I00-31H323 axt 272t s.turn SU 't3 low "*-· lilJIO, c::IHn' (342882) $5,988 NABERS (7141549=9100 suoo Roedaw '01 (18049'1 . '74,990 2K Mllaa, Clw-. CD Fltlchtr Jonat Motor«*' U8.f24-1401 S43CI san '00 (105t11) lee,990 10K m1ea. ar..t Tamw Flalchtr Jonat MolorQl'I IN.f24·1401 S43CI Stdtll '01 (147tOI) *·"° LllJ Tu Pllcl, Hurry Fletchtr ~ Motorcan IU-824·1401 · Doily Pilot Tor«a Ctlca OT .. Convt. IUlo. "'· IUa pwr. .... ,_ ll>Ollar. ~ (2.2945/054-41 i s 18.201 South ~r 841-722·2 T orota Ctlca OT '00 Ail, (\Al poww, -· co. ll'IOOIWOOI. IPC*'. lloyl (~r.! 117.901 Sou1h Cout Toyotl 141-722·2000 Toyot.e Corolla LE '00 Ctrtlfled, air, f\ll power. -... co pllyer, 12273&'345844 S13.801 South Cout Toyota 841-722-2000 Toyoa Corolla CE 'ti Al#), ... f\I pwr, Cl9Mllt {226311286293) $10,901 South Coe1t Toyotl 149·722·2000 Toyota Corolla LE W ,..., ... f\I ~. NM'M. lloyl (22l501/004587 $11,201 South Coelt Toyota 949·722-2000 Toyota T-Pldrup 'ta Auto. lit, CUI, llidef, ~.&hell._ (~1 S1 1,301 South Cout T oyotl 849·722-2000 T oYOta Corollt CE '00 Certlfitd IU10, lit, lull power, casstllt. (22A981'341116 $12,701 South Cout Toyota 949-722·2000 Toyotl Sianna LE ._ Al.JttJ. ,.., • llA pwr, cass. CO, ABS. tow 1*o, ~rid!. (2272&'046704 S1a.001 South Coest Toyota 949·722-2000 T oyola Solara SE '00 V6, certllled aJr, lull pwr casseae, CD player, (227~1!17133 $18,901 South Coett Toyota Ml-722-2000 Toyota 4 Runnw SRS 'It V6. II.Co, &tr, !\Al ~~. CD. run boltdl. nldl (227491122980 ,901 South Colr Toyota 949·722-2000 't4 Honda ~ 4dr LX Auto. very c:INtl, ongonal -IOldtd, $7900 obo 114-434-9700 _ ''"' HOME, HEM.TH AMJ 8UslvEss ~ -u 1220 ---111-wj lw..tml I• mml l-~l l"-""=l l~--=11• --I \\11 'i Mi\llAl-TY 1,.,-nw1l J'1('r,.rt""f •H funiJ .. fllh1f'-t11•n h .. n •l .. "1 MrJ h\ tR\ 1 ltleo '• .. •j le. 1m1n .. t Wa\ •2~ I '"t•• ''C''•• 1 t1.i9 548-3329 HWE Tix StNlet POLICY In an eHon IO oltl!f lhe best selVIOe po&Slble IO our rllld- e~ end advertisers. wa Wll requ11e ConJraC1ora who •dv•'1•S8 '" the ~ 0Hecl01y lo 1nchlde rheOf Con1rac101s lice nae numbe< on ITlell advtrtlM· room Vour «H>PQrabOl1 It greatly appreetaltd 224 ADDITIONS /REMODELING FARTHING INTERIORS KACl!en ' Balh I ~ and Room AddibOOI L•560875 !M9-64S-9325 238 AUTO SERVICES COM 5Ell ,f' ,,-,ll mr.fn CA~•El ·. ;>H ','ff. C LE.ArJ11l1-, Clean All 5 Rooms $99.00 Fre M Clean Al Carpets Only $149.00 (or less) Up to 6 roorn9. 2 blthl. 2 haUa and h1 ol 1~111 !ruck Mollrned Equlpmtnt Spot RtmovillQIPre·Sponlno Furn•ure Movlno SeMng 0C tor 10 Y•n Pull FREE DuPollT Tll\.Oll WINI Oll"'1D .m:ltlHJ. " CARPET -ti CARPET o Repairs. Patching. lnslaP, Couneous Al1y lliz• jobt Wholffale! 94~92·0205. RGE Carl* a..ntng $9.95 PER ROOM $59.95 HOME <» prociJcl ra18d '1 %.~1: UctnN 18L016964 CUSTOM MUSClE CARS TRua<I CAM & BoATI • Restoration • 8odY • Engine • Petri\ WOf'k 2045 PlAcEHnA AVL, EM (949) 548-0670 ( m IA~ 1 _1 ·_·_-_11_1 HOME flair ~~e/R~~ rortelaln • Fibe<Rlm Sink\ • Showl',.., • Countm 949-645-7723 •) r-1-r.r-.--~ "~""'"f ~I , .~-,,. J HolM a.nlrlg By Lucy Dmcl Vllllllnl Contnle1of LICEHSEO COHTRACTOh REPAIRS • PAINT Loclll rats, rtllONllile m. A Concl14e a MMorvy Co. No jab IOo sm. Al MIVlcasl Home lmprOYtments and 12 y..,. Exp. Offloel loot Bridt Blodc Slane W,,,,._, Repair, remodel, (Ina, epe. more Small jabt Ok. 20vra 949-248-8657, 91631-4980 Lt747441 71~ new seMoal t4M46-345e •-e. Gaty !MH4~SV7 Lon lo dtln FrH "t l()yrl exp, bonded Nlnd, r-*>19 rtr• E•1'11M HoUHCIHnlnt 949· eSG-n10. 9'~73 Marla'• ttouMclNnlng. 11 clean )'OU! houee kif $50 & up. lic:/8ondtdJW1rr1nty 17Yrs EJ!P. t4tMM()51 Geeenl COlllnetlas CmtomHoma AU Acldhiou RemocleUq KJtdtelU/B•tlM WbadowlllDoon • ar I --· • .. .,. -. . :. . . ... AIOZHomt ~ Rtpalra, Et.c1r11;1J and Plumbing Ltc•6SOS24. Call 714-211-7115 or 14t-2'6-8018. Ytrd ONrHlp, trff lllm- mlng, htdglt. ptlm trffl, ~ removal. mllnt. 714· QUALITY CRAFTSMAN 848-1130 OI 714-496-7031 20 Yem Exp8lltnoa Ref's Adc&tions • Kitchen Battwoom • Repoln Cal the leadtr In So. Ca5fomio Fne ~ Uc# S77'12 ' rM YOUR HANOYMANI MARK !IAHIJ0.9525 JUNK TO n4E DUMPlll 714-.... 1"2 AVAlLA8Ll TODAYI 9*!7H588 NEW TkEATMENT l'OR Ot•<>Nl PAIN ~ Nec.k, KMe, Hip or ShovldM •No~ • No H ........ ltulioft •n»m GENERAL REPAIRS ,....,. -Owt.fty .... Kitchervt3Mtl Repeir Cruur Topa • Srit Waw Hellt«'S • FIXWreS Wood SlnJCW'e Repes-c.... ........ a c. llUIUl-1114 FIND CREDIT CARO PROCESSING Acotpt COOi Ceid Pe~ In erry tysit bus MlRCffAHT SEA"1CES .... 752 ... 700 ext.. 103 The Calif Public- U ll htl ea Com· mission REQUIRES that an used house- hold goods movers print their P.U.C. Cal T number. limos and ohaulfers print their T.C.P. numbef In d adYeftiemenls. H you have a ques- tion ~the. lty cl a moYer, limo 0< chauller. caM. PUBLIC UTILITIES. COMMISION 71H58-4151 WIUWIS MOYIHG Local/Long Ol•lenctl Storege. Sholl Notice LIT172527, lnu9CI F.,.,.., Owned. c.11 800-324-esob ()( 71+nt3ff4 ' NE I'.' PORT PLAS TER1NG "" ... , ............ lllp\ ... ... &OCATINO ~LIM .................. 675~304 .._ .. ·-··-.• =-·-"'-• ~ Roonna SpeclaU•t• ............... ..,.,, .. .,... 949-722-8846 714-7Sl-8846 u..,..,_ - WATl·.RPROOf l\OOFING SELL