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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-03-15 - Orange Coast Pilot. . . . . • ' ' . . . . .. ··----------..-.---~ .• . ' ' : SERVING THE NEWPORT -"MESA COMMUNmES SINCE 1907 . ~Y, MARCH.15, 2000 t : Steve Martie ~ ..,,.,.,. : same pieces of .• . history don't · needr~ng : T he road to hatred ends • at a P.O . box on New- : port Boulevard. It's from here that the -: Institute for Historical Review :· does its business. peddling its : long-running rant that the ' Holocaust.is a myth. Once an : in-your-face rallying point, it • has now emerged again - • glossed up as a scholarly • issue, a quest for historical ; correctness. But it ------ • remains a , place of • hurt, a · place of ultimate insult, a place where hatred grows. The group, its offspring • and its • brothers- • in-arms • have • been •. poking at • the Holo- • caust for . ye~. That some r igh t-wing g roup w ould have the audacity to make a contest out of the misery of the Nazi concentration camps was • more than he could stand. · They tumbled headfirst into the headlines a decade ago when they booked a confer- ence room at the Red Lion Inn in Costa Mesa, their cho- sen spot to gather and debate the credibility of the Holo- caust. But when hotel execs caught wind of what was up, . · they bounced the group. So they trudged off to Hunting- , ton Beach, where they found the reception wanner at Old ' World Village, a Bavarian- • themed shopping center whose owner was once accused in a lawsuit of play- • ing Nazi songs on Hitler's birthday. :. The Holocaust conference · drew a knot of angry protest- • ers and the gathering -such . as it was -dissolved into an · ugly confrontation, with the protesters shouting out •Nazi" and several of the • attendees snapping back • with •Jews." So much for • intellectual debate. The latest salvo comes : from a man named Bradley • R. Smith, who lists himself as • the director of something • called the Committee for Open Debate on the Holo- • caust. He is also a champion of the Institute for Historical • Review. SEE MARBLE PAGE 6 Sotos ·expected "to ·rile laWshlt MARIANNA DAY MASSEY I DAllY PILOT Cindy Soto stb in her dance stu- dio with a picture of her daughter, Sierra Soto, in. the background. • Parents of 4-year-old Sierra Soto plan to seek damages for playground tragedy that took their daughter's life last May. GNg Rlsllng DAILY PILOT COSTA MESA -The parents of a 4-year-old girl who was killed while playing at a day-care center last May are expected to file a law- suit today alleging the driver and preschool operators were partially to blame for the tragedy, attorneys said. After much contemplation. Eric and Cindy Soto made the decision to seek damages resulting from the death of their daughter, Sierra. Cindy Soto said she will donate most or the proceeds from any judgment to Sierra's Light Founda- tion, the nonprofit organization she created to improve safety guide- lines at day-care centers and preschools. Named in the lawsuit are the South Coast Early Childhood Leaming Center, the Lighthouse Coastal Community Church that owns the property, and 40-year-old Steven Allen Abrams. who report- edly drove his 1967 Cadillac through a playground fence, killing Sierra and 3-year-old Brandon Wiener and injuring five others. Abrams has been charged with two counts of murder and awaits tnal. The Sotos. who are divorced, said their -reasoning for the lawsuit was to prevent similar tragedies Crom happening. Still, many in the community were shocked when the Wiener family filed a similar lawswt in Jan- uary, days alter a memonal plaque for the tots was dedicated at the day-care center. At the rune, Soto said she, too, was stunned by the ERIC SANlVCCI I DAILY PILOT Crystal Lamb, 15, aloag with 16-year·old Alejandra Martinez; ln background, were panelists for •Teen Voices, Teen Choices," a Costa Mesa-based nonprofit organlzatton. Lamb spoke to Bolsa Grande High School students Tuesday about the hardships of becoming a mother at age 14. Baby steps or ears? Fio d ,r Andrew Gluer un er OJ DAILY P1Lor 'Teen Voices. Teen Choices• dreo how tough it is for a S he's told hundreds of chil- child to raise a child -a says local schools truth she knows firsthand. • · d But Colleen Allen and other aren t lntereste young Orange Co'1nty mothers · th · have had a difficult time taking in e program. their message to Newport-Mesa which focuses on schools, the closest campuses to the , .. , •Teen Voices, Teen Choices• pro-teen motherhood. . gram's offices in Costa Mesa. •1t hurts me that anybody would have to go through what I went through,• said Allen, 20, who gave birth to her daughter when she was a high school junior. • 1 want to help other people avoid it." Allen is one of about 20 young mothers -most of whom are still teenagers -who share the confu- sion, betrayal and frustration of teen motherhood with Orange County junior high and high school • SEE TEENS PAGE 6 Wieners' decision. In a letter released Tuesday, the Sotos acknowledged there are ·certain basic, cost efficient. reme- dial measures that could help pre- vent this type of tragedy from occurring again.• They pointed out that a concrete wall erected after the incident may have prevented the death of their child if it bad been built beforehand. Soto said •e tonsulted friends and family, contemplating the pos· sible backlash and outrage from the community. She says she hopes · her intentions will not be misinter- preted. When contacted Tuesday night. Sheryl and Rande Hawkinson, who run the day-care center, were dis· appointed about the Sotos' decision and referred any further questions to their ~ttomey. The Sotos and their attorneys will speak more about their lawsuit at a press conference scheduled for Thursday. County won't block annexation of Heights •Despite concerns that the airport issue might cause board's opposition. supervisors say they support 'the idea.' Noaki Schwartz DAILY PILOT NEWPORT BEACH -The Orange County Board of Super- visors has agreed not to stand in the way of the city's proposed annexation of Santa Ana Heights. ·w e support the idea that Costa Mesa and Newport Beach get together and explore the idea of annexation,· Super· visor Tom Wilson said. This comes as good news for Newport Beach city staff, who have been negotiating the city's largest-ever annexation effort since last fall. The complex annexation will include Santa Ana Heights, Bay Knolls and Newport Coast. Although it wa5 unusual for the city to request it, the super· visors' support is key. There was early concern that the county might block the procea because of Santa Ana Heights' proximity to John Wayne Air· port. Wtlson said. Deputy City Manager Dave Kiff said the announcement means one less hurdle for New- port Beach. Other issues have included negotiating water rights with the Irvine Ranch Water Oistnct, the county agreeing to a property tu split SEE HEIGHTS MGI I ~ Argyros pumped $1.2 million into 'No ·on F' effoirt: ..... 1111111 Ol 111111 : NEWPORT BEACH -Multimil· : lionaire bUlineuman George AlfJY- :: TOI poured 1620,000 into tbe pro· "' airport campaign in the flna1 w.ek = before vottft cfedded the .... of • t bigbly ch•:l:!~Uot meuure, .. 8CICICllding to lta-..Otl. ~ Aftnlm, who Uftl in Newport '9edi. cmatrtbutlld more than a1 .2 jnt1Moe tD _Jll'9Y9Dt the ~·ge of Mt-~ • initiative tbat cdl ~ ... two ..... --maaorttY far ~ aPiaoillal ..... ~aDd • tnnd1 • ._ . :rbi ___...._ 1' =t The Costa Mesi ........ Commmlan ...,o.,. • rww Target~teoN•1t'9 old Fedm a on....,. ~erd . .. ...,. ..... • 1111 .... 11111 NftCl,.art-Mlll tdm ...... membln ..... lft .... ment ~ \W • I d URMlr- Wty to .... ,.. cal111't MW~--­onca lt'I bull. ........... ' .. . GEI'I'ING INvOLVED ,. ...... , DllEOOIY • voumna Dm<TORY runs periodlc.-lty In the O.lly Pilot on • rot.ting bmls. If you'd like lnform.tlon on adding your organization to this list. can (949) 574--4228. CllSIS ASSISTANCE PIOGUM, INC. ' This nonprotit organiza- tion is seeking volunteers for its exJ>anding tratima respo{l.Se program. Volun-· teers would assist law • enforcement. fire fighters and emergency-type responders by providing emotional first aid and support to injured or trau- matized people. Other vol- unteers would provide dis- patch and office support. No experience is neces- sary, training will be pro- vided. For more informa- tion. call (949) 588-1414. DISPUTE RESOLUTION SEIYICES ' Daily Pilot plies or become a volun- teer to help children vic- .timized by child abuse. Volunteers work. with county referrals to assist high-risk victims of parental drug addiction. Drop off supplies at the Child Abuse Center Office in Costa Mesa at 2482 Newport Blvd., No. 7; or Union Bank in New- port Beach at 1090 Bay- side Drive. Call (949) 72i- 1.107 toy' more info"1}a- tion.. · · '1s1f.:_ HARBOR~ · AREA INC. • Call 642-6060 to he lp Friends in Service to Humanity (FISH) assist with the Mobile Meals program and provide ongoing emergency assis- tance to those in need. Both always seek volun- teer assistance in a variety of areas. For more infor- mation, call (949) 645- 8050. DON LEACH I DAILY Pit.OT World War II veteran .. Bud" Anderson and some of the popular war.era memorabWa at the Costa Mesa Historical Society, where he volunteers. Volunteer mediators, case specialists and outreach assistants needed to help in a variety of mediation cases. Bilingual language skills are needed for oflice volurtteers and for media- tors. For more . informa- tion, call (949) 250-0488. FRIENDS Of THE NEWPORT BEACH LllURY Volunteers are needed to staff the used book store located just ·inside the entrance of the central library. Volunteers must be members of the Friends of the Library and are asked to work one three-hour shift per month. For more infonna- tion, call (949) 759-9667. I . Keeping history alive EASTER SEALS • World War Il veteran 'Budl Anderson continues his service to country at Costa Mesa Flistoric<1} Society. Amy R. Spurgeon DAILY PILOT Boulevard on the west, and from Wilson Street to Newport Boulevard on the east. Over ·the years, Anderson has watched the city develop as roads, shop- ping centers and the Orange County Fairgrounds replaced wartime barracks. ·1 spend F A most of my base forces it to close -its doors three days a week. "It's a diity, aying shame,• Anderson said. •This is one fantastic place here." Anderson and others affiliated with the center hope the city will move it to a larger building at the fairgrounds. Many historical pieces sit shelved in boxes because there is no room to display them. Easter Seals needs volun- teers for ongoing clerical work and to help in pro- grams for children With f disabillti~s ;µid in special events. For more informa- tion, call (714) Q._34-1111. GIRL SCOUTS Alvin "Bud" Anderson's c~mmitment to serving his fellow man mdn't end with his service during World War Il. Since 1988, the 81-year-old Huntington Beach resident has clocked nt?arly 30 hours a week of volunteer work as the Santa Ana Almy Air Base guru at the Costa Mesa Historical Society. or energy here GOOD CAUSE on the his- tory of the Santa Ana Army Air Base,• he said. The Historical Society is housed in a timeworn, one-story building near lli- angle Square. It contains a wealth of information about Costa Mesa's history, including photographs, books, military uniforms, maps and exhibits. But Anderson prefers to focus on his work and the possibility that each day at the center brings with it the chance ~ ·, enlighten someone new with his wealth~· of information. • "The people that come in here think it's wonderful," he said, "I'll probably be here until I die or they throw me out. One or the other. ENVIRONMENTAL NATURE CENTER Volunteer trail guides needed to help visitors learn about their environ- -ment. For more informa- tiQn, call (949) 645-8489., ~ 4 • •• • • • EXCHANGE CLUB CHILD ABUSE PIEYEITION CENTER Girl Scouts of O range County needs volunteers to be trained as lToop leaders, serve on special committees and give lec- tures, demonstrations or classes. For more informa- tion, call (714) 979-7900. GIRLS INC. OF ORANGE COUNTY Volunteers are needed to ·~fer_ ec;tucati~,nal and enri.,thment opportunities for girls and boys. For more information, call (949) 646-7181. "I spend as much time here as I do at home,• he said. "The satisfaction of doing something for somebody is why I volunteer,• Anderson <Jdded. "Plus, I'm a soft touch. I can't tum anybody down. I've been that way all of my life." Anderson was stationed at the 1,336- acre base as an aviation cadet until 1946, after the war had ended. The base stretched from Baker Street lo Harbor Anderson's work for the society includes public outreach, answering telephones and leading tours of the cen- ter. A shortage in the center's volunteer ALMANAC The following information is col- lected on a weekly basis at the Orange County Clerk-Recorder's office in Santa Ana. MARRIAGES NEWPORT BEACH • David G. Isaacs and Shannon R. Brown, on Feb. 12 in Rancho San- ta Fe. • Stanley C. Lowenberg and Anne E. Steirunann, on Jan. 12 in San Juan Capistrano. COSTA MESA • Herminia Hernandez and Maria D. Rodriguez Ortiz, on Feb. 12 in Costa Mesa. • Brian W. Jeffery and Jerilyn N. Morris, on Feb. 3 in Santa Ana. • Ronald M. Kokawa and Rena V. Puebla, on Jan. 22 in Dana Point. •Erik J . Kristiansen and Stefanie L. Corkett, on Jan. 29 in Newport Beach. • Andrew J. McGehean and Shali- r1i S. Nair, on Feb. 4 in Santa Ana. • Brian L. Mirrotto and Shelby L. Hughes, on Jan. 22 in Sao Juan Capistrano. BIRTHS • Timothy E. Benson Jr. on Feb. 25 • Luke W. Blovad on Feb. 22 • Dylan R. Brady on Feb. 21 • Jonathan E. Call on Feb. 23 •Ashley K. Campbell on Feb. 21 • Shreya Chatterjee on Feb. 22 • Giancarlo C. Danese on Feb. 25 •Lauren M. Edwards on Feb. 24 • Blake S. Engleman on Feb. 24 DUI ARRESTS The following people have been arrested on suspicion of dri- ving under the influence of an intoxicant. They have only been arrested on suspldon of a crime, and, as with all such crimes, are considered innocent until proved guilty. COSTA MESA March 10 •Nicole Marie May 24, Costa Mesa • Steven Edward Palmer, Newport Beach March 11 •Huy Due llinh, 25, W ter • Akemi Yagishi , , Huntington Beach · March 12 •Martin Flores-Ramirez. 31, Costa Mesa • Ernest Arthur Stumpf, 27. Hunt- ington Beach • Robert Soto. 40, Costa Mesa NEWPORT BEACH March 7 • Tristen Oliver Byrne, 27. Corona del Mar March 8 • Jose Felix Nunez, 33, Hunting- ton Beach March 9 •Steven Michael Olguin, 42, Cos- ta Mesa • Charles Franklin Woods, 42, Newport Beach •June Aurora Palomino, 47, New- port Beach March 10 • Jill Marie Bright, 33, Laguna Beach March 11 •Alexandra Maxine Ball. 53, Huntington Beach March 12 . • Freda Jay Baskerville, 39, Vic- torville •Wade Alan Ewing, 27, Orange March 13 •'Richard Arthur Fenner, 51, Irvine REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS COSTA MESA • 469 E. 20th St., $420,000 • 2077 Santa Ana Ave., $425,000 • 2174 Pacific Ave., $246,000 • 1009 Nancy Lane, $190,000 • 2020 Federal Ave., $205,000 • 656 Surf St., $186,500 • 1971 Anaheim Ave .. $183,000 • 221 E. Florence Ave., $145,000 • 1994 Arnold Ave., $193,000 NEWPORT BEACH • 20401 Via lfovador, $275,000 • 2230 Donnie Road, $485,000 • 409 Bay Hill Drive, $657 ,500 • 1219 Santiago Drive, $825,000 • 1958 Vista Caudal, $400,000 • 78 Victoria, $745,000 • 1952 Port Laurent, $603,000 • 87 Pelican Court, $405,000 • 207 Coral Ave., $875,000 • 209 Sapphire. $1,005,000 • 706 Orchid Ave., $575,000 • 62 Royal St., $500,000 Donate new school sup- BRIEFS Scenic SK run looking for sponsors The 19th annual Corona del Mar Scenic 5K is looking for sponsors. Organizers are expecting more than 3,000 participants to show up to the June 3 event. Various levels of sponsorship are available, including the opportunity to have a business logo printed on the back of this year's race T-shirt. There will be separate races for men and women and several other events. including a 2-mile fun walk and a lK NEllHIOIS The director of ,...., Harbor Mont& sari <Ar'tlllr ... dlredlor of~-· ID BayMol411WiW'~--..... t. *" Nmld to .. 2DIJ0.01 ..... of the Lexlligton Who\..,........, of EWUIMs ~ Pl'ofmloo• 1he book recogui1111 Incl-~who..,. dlrnoei111Rid lilldltthlp ~ ec:hll\em.tt In 1hlfr prof Ion. M• .._ s. ... ton of Newport ...... Nlident 0.,. .... ,_ ........... honori fTom the U.S. Nm('s chlplell\--. ---lncMdull.,.... CD&arw. Fort JMbor'l In~ S.C. The coune _,_ s1udlr1ts 10.,,.... .... fw Pl'vtlltmlllo c..hollc. Jlwllh ... OllllOdcM ........ str.-s .. .....,.. .. of being llftow11h dp- .. lbout el Witt groups. -LI••• ._. ... •eon of Cata Mm ,.._ ....... , .... c. ....... t. t..\ pomalld In .. U.S. Nm/ to ttw ,_. of ~ Gll'dla.lllllm .. ., .,.. ... kids run. Runners will follow Corona del Mar's oceanfront bluffs and wind through residential areas. Walkers will .travel a different route. The top three finishers in each cate- gory will receive awards, including each child participant. All registrants will receive T-shirts and breakfast. The gourmet breakfasts will be provided by the eateries along the race's "restaurant row.• The deadline to sign up for sponsor- ship is today. For more information or to register, call Marilyn Fisher with Newport Com- munity Services at (949) 644-3159. -Noaki Schwartz . ••••Diil lp01llghts ... ~ ... In the community ....... chtt ncMwof1hy lufomwtlon to Ala Coolmln vie fu M (M9) 64M170; or lend Hnlff to d9/lypl- ~com . Dai~ Of~~CMlbe reprodutlld without written Pfi; mission of COS¥ight owner. WEATHER AllD SUlf POLICE FILES VOLM,NO.M HOW JO REACH us ClmUtlon The Ttmft Of.nge County (800) 252·9141 Adwet1iltl• C1-lfled (949) 642-5678 =.r') 642-4321 N.ws (Mt) 642-5680 Spcri (Mt) 574-<WJ Newt, Spor1I Fu (Mt) 646-41?0 Eof'Mll:~me.a:im Mllrt OMm lwinela Office (949) &G-4121 IUllnftl ,.,. (Mt) 6)1-7126 P\Alllh9d .. 111'9 ~ ~ ........ t;A flt Lat Mglll ""'*' """ --LeMll. u HIW ............ ::r:..ldlW OINCW fll ftl ''°~ --........ _..,.._CCWDllk ___ Ol,,. ... -- ·l l ~ Balboa 68154 Corona del Mar 69t'55 Costa Meg 70r'56 ~BNCh 69'55 Newport C'*1 69'55 Wf'OMCAST n. westew'ly ... ~the wne today for sets In the wMt-to chest-high ...... LOCA1IDN .... ~ ................... .l-4 w ~ ............... .2-4• lldJe'L ................. .l-4 w TIDU l'OOAY First low after mktnlght. .......... .nl• First h19h 5:08 •.m ....................... 5.J Second low • 12:25 p.m .................... -0.7 Second high 7!04 p.m ...................... .A.O 12:Clll5a.m ..... u ....... ""''"'1.t flnt high I 6:ot 1.m ....................... 5.6 Second low t :OI p.m ...................... -0.t Secondh6gh 7:• p.m. ... _ ................. 4A """' Jlfty .............. .J-4 w - CdM ......... ""··-.. "..Mw • t E --• 5' • COSTA MESA • ..._. ttr.e: A cenua. phone worth s200 was stolen from• car In tlle 3300 btock between 7:30 and I p.m. MMch4. • ...,.._ lloul1wnl: A car stereo and MWf•l Items of dothlng worth S600 were stolen In the 2100 block the ewnlng of M«Ch 5. • IMt 11th llrMt: A bkyde worth S 100 w• ltoltn In the 100 bk>dt the evening of March 2. NEWPORT 9EA04 • 1Mt C.wt '"""*»· A cetlular phone wonh UlS MS ltoltn from • CM In the J100 block ~ evening. • Ca:uwc 111119 .... A ~ worth SIO w-. .,._, from • home In the 1900 block SMurd9r ..,.,.. • ... ,, .. CmUllr ....... A Miii Ind ltl COiitlhlU worth -... ~ from • cs In .. Joo blodc • ..., 11 a.m. ... S:JO p.m: Mlldt .. • 99' ....... A_...,plcant_.. U00 W9llOlln from1csln1N• .... 111t11.-n' lndJp.m..,... - ' , I • \ Doily Pilot Wednesday, Morch 15, 2000 3 Planniilg Commission approves Target superstore • Project's main detractor, a resident whose appeal delayed the approval process by two weeks, ponders next move. Andrew Gluer a study session -from nelgh- DAJLY PILOT boring residents opposed to the plans. COSTA MESA -The #My Teaction is that the noise and traffic. •1. don't believe their noise and traffic reports are accurate. And there are more facts coming.· of the site to more than two other companies. Commis- , sioners were concerned that it would be difficult to coordi- nate more owners to redevel- op or sell the site if the Target store moved or closed in the future. spent an hour and a half "I don't think anybodt would explaining 34 problems he benefit from hearing this had with the development. again." His greatest concern, he Morelli, who has stated repeated Monday, was a pro-repeatedly he welcomes a posed garden center that he #neig~borhood-friendly Tar-·· said would bring noisy cars· get,• did not return calls for close to his two homes. .comment His attorney said Commission chairman the two havep't decided if they ~alt Davenport asked Morel-will appeaJ the project again. Planning Commission on · com.mission's decision was Monday approved a develop~ ··premature,# said Simone er's revised blueprints for a Wong-Easwn, attorney for Al giant Target store in the Hale-Morelli, who . appealed U!e 'crest neighborhood. project two_ weeks ago. · • The decision was made Morelli said the project's after the commission heard developer, Dayton Hudson . hours of testimony -tarried Corp., has not addressed over from its last meeting and neighbors' concerns about The new plans for the Tar- get Greatland store included an agreement from Dayton Hudson Corp. to. spend $30,000 on a fountain outside the center. The builder also agreed to leave a 15-foot space between the center's parking area and homes on a9jacent Shamrock Lane. • Finally, an..d perhaps .most significantly, Daytbn Hudson agreed to restrictions pre- venting it from selling parcels Morelli owns two homes on Shamrock Lane next to the l 7--acre project site at 3030 Harbor Boulevard. On Mon- day, he reiterated that .the developer leh him and neigh· bars out of "the planning ,process. Li to respond only to the "In the last two weeks, I've developer's revised plan. Per-.done a lot of soul-sE:arching," haps he sensed· another Morelli said Monday night. marathon s~sion . frorn "lf this keeps going, I think Morelli 'after It~ brought a · l 'll change 'my mind." .- At the Feb. 28 Planning Commission meeting, Morelli chair to the podium. The Target plan will now "We all know your basis be put before the City Coun- for appeal,· Davenport said. cil for final approval. Newport Beach. police honor top officers Greg Aisling DAILY PILOT NEWPORT BEACH -The Police Department recognized its top officers and reserves Tuesday morning at its annual awards ceremony at the Hyatt Newporter. The event serves a dual pur- pose -to honor those who have exhibited a· strong work e thic, and it's an opportunity for the public to meet the city's police force. Among those rewarded for their contributions include: • Mark JalJles, Officer of the Year. James has worked for the department since. 1988 and is assigned to the traffic division as a motorcycle officer. "He's a very steady and pro- fessional guy/ Sgt. Mike McDermott said. "I don't think he has ever said a harsh word to anybody since ... he's been nere. He's done a tremendous job." • Shelly Santy, Supervisor of the Year. Santy supervises the dispatch section of the support services clivision. She has been with the department since 1996, joining the Newport force after spending 25 years with the Los Angeles Police Department. • Jamye Rogers, Civilian Employee of the Year. Rogers works in the traffic division, where he takes care of animal control. He has spent 10 years at his position. • Chip Cuthbe rt, Reserve Officer of the Year. Cuthbert works part-time in the patrol division, where he belps with transportation needs. He also SS~ Mattress Outlet Stor BRAND NEW -COSMETICALLY IMPERFECT Get the Best for Less! 3165 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa One Block SOuUI ot 405 l'wy (714) 545-7168 r assists officers in editing and recording with the department's video cameras. Cuthbert has spent 16 years with the depart- ment. • Brad Walle, Volunteer of the Year. Waite was the depart- ment's first-ever volunteer, starting in 1994. He currently works in the traffic division. i Other service awards also were presentea. Officer Mike Deladurantey was given two awards -the Medal of Valor for attempting to rescue a drowning victim in heavy surf last May, and an Award of Mer- it for disarming a mentally handicapped ma n. DeLadurantey noticed the handgun bra ndished by the man was a replica and was able to persuade him to drop 1t and then surrender. TAYA KASHUBA/ OAILY PILOT ONE BIG SANDI.OX: Ana, left, and Martin Hemanaaez, with 3-year-old son Jesus, enjoy a day at the beach near Newport Pier. 1s01o OFF SERVICE Of ~~!.~lllCI~!~ CNl'(T·IJAAl'lll'I·~ • CHRISTINE ALBERS •EMIL RUTTENBERG ~ tJllllm 3/),JOO.Mln""Um d>I~ tn*'1 af/dt'I (.all (IOO)FOll COIT tor...._ • VOTRE NOM SPORTSWEAR •CASUAL & ACTIVE WEAR . •AND MUCH MORE " My Cleaning Secret,M: t:.:==::~~~~!!!!1!111!!11'""'"1 The unconditional love pets give you can be messy, but my neighbor let me in on her secret cleaning weapon: Coit. She told me Coit would give me the I kind of cleaning service I expected, or they'd reclean. correct the problem, or give me • full refundl That's what the 1 ~ Cott. 100% Clffn Gu•r•ntee is all about -unconditional clean! With over SO years of experience and millions of referrals, it's no wonder Colt is the most · trusted specialty cleaning company In the world. Now 1 depend on Colt to clean up all my pet accidents, especially the r-r-r-ruff onesfl For local service in your area, call". Costa Mesa (949) 642-0270 Huntington Belch (714) 842-0320 1~367-2648 COIT _; ... 0 0 I . Not Just Clean, Coit Clean.• -. . ' . . .I •' 4 Wedne~, Morch 15, 2000 Daily Pilot Dist[ict .acce:Pts offering from Vanguard • When universitf's new-arts center is built, local schools will be able to .use it for eight performances a year. Danette Goulet DAILY PILOT NEWPqRT-MESA Vanguard University in Costa Mesa has offered to share its future 1,500-seat per-, foi:rning arb center-with the school district, which gratefully accepted. The Newport-Mesa tJnified School District's Board of Education formalized an agreement with the university Tuesday night that will allow schools to bold eight perfor- mances a year in the new facility once it is constructed -free of charge. ·we're thrilled to have this opportunity,• said Mike Fine, assis- tant superintendent of business for the district. "There is also a mutual interest to develop a summer arts program for our kids.• The agreement allows for eight, three-day pe(f orma.nces per year and the development of summer art camps for students of all ages. By reaching out to the schools, the university hopes to support arts in the community and-broaden its fin8Jlcial donor base. "I thinkJt's primarily we want to be a good neighbor,• said David Alford, vice president of business and finance for Va~nguard . "But there might 15e donors that have some interest in donating now that the school district is-involved.~ The new facility is a joint vent ure between the university and the Newport-Mesa Christian Center, which has its offices located on the Vanguard ca·mpus. The center expected to cost $9 million. · When completed, the 55,000- square-foot facility will be a fully operational performing arts center with a hydraulically operated orchestra pit for 45 musicians, and a fly gallery for dropping sets, Alford said. There will be 1,000 seats on a split-level main floor with balconies that will accommodate another 500 audience members. Plans also include a spacious foyer, a choir rehearsal room, state-of-the-art audiovisual equipment, including a large video screen, two cry rooms for families with infants, a senior adults parlor, a 24-hour prayer chapel, 5,000 square feet of nursery space, two sets of restrooms, and an eleva- tor for easy access to all three floors. "It will be most unique in that it has a nursery, so that people will be ' able to drop off their kids and see a performance,• said Ch:ip Johnson, executive pastor of the Newportr Mesa Christian Center. "It's not in the plans yet, but we are also look- ing at putting laptop (computer) hookups at all 500 lower level seats.• Both the church and the school are in the midst of campaigns to raise the $9 million for the new facil- ity, as well as other separate ven- tures. / The church has set a goal of $6 million for the sanctuary/ perform- ing arts building and to retrofit the existing building, Johnson said. "We have $2.5 million raised in commitment and had a little more than a million come in,• he said. •w e reached $1,025,000 just two weeks ago.• . For the university, the arts center is part of a much larger fund-raising campaign to build seven new build-· ings on campus. The arts center will be l;>uilt on the comer of Newport Boulevard and Fair Drive, but no start date will be set for construction until l'flOre money b~s been raised for the pro- ject, A1ford said. "It's not immanent," ·he said. "But we'd like to have ground bro- ken in the next year." School board members are excit- ed about the venture and what it wlll mean for the district's students. "We have award-winning drama productions; however, we have only one place in the district for them - the Norm Lotts Auditorium at New- port Harbor High School that was built in 1930 and refurbished in 1977," said school board vice presi- dent David Biooks. "This gives us an opportunity to have a new, first- class facility for students.· OBITUARY parades with her father, Philip Coon. During these early years, she and her fami- ly vacationed often in New- port Beach and the surround- ing area. r.---------------~ 1- ... Calendar Shows 1 Natalie C. Moore P I Mrs. Natalie c. Moore, of I roud y Presents 1:-Newport Beach, died from ..,. A ,.I~ March 11. • I 7i~ e '1te4a I complications of a stroke I ~ I Mrs. M?Ore was born in · ..A ~./ _ •.. & ~ Pound R1dge, N.Y., and I ~""-~ ~fl.OW. ~'ate I moved with her family to She married USC class7 mate Deane B. Moore of A,rcadia and spent the World War Il years as a volunteer for the Army Canteen ServiFe at the famous "Hollywood Can- teen.• After the war, she and her husband returned to the family farm in Pound Ridge arid developed the property into residential lots. Mr. MQOre, a business executive in New York City, was active in the New York Shrine and was inducted into The Royal Order of J esters. The Moores were devoted to their prize- winning German shepherds and sailing, and were mem- bers .of the New York Yacht Club and Stamford Ya cht Club. Mrs. Moore was also active in the Republican Women's Club and served as a key organizer for Gen. Dwight Eisenhower's presi· dentiaJ campaign in New York state. I Om zoo Qu1llty D11/1rs Comb/Md with 31 Y11rs ot Exe1ll111u. All r,,_ of I Pasadena at an early age. She famitar1. G/1a. Sltwr. Art, J1ntry, PrlmfUm . An11rl'1n1111d m1tll mort... attended Ramona Convent II EVERYTHING FROM T.IN TO TIFFANY!!!! I ;:~·1~:1~~:dg!~~~~ I in fine arts from USC. She I I was actively involved in equestrian activities at the I c1 G' p 1 1 R 1 A I Flintridge Riding Academy I ,-, ne ,ass, ores a n and Rug spa r val/able at Shaw and participated in Pasade- Hours: Friday & Saturday 10-7pm •Sunday 10-5pm I na's Tournament of Roses I ORANGE COUNTY FAIRG ROUNDS. COSTA MESA. CA I I SS FREEWAY. EXIT AT FAIR OR. I I .&OS FREEWAY EXIT AT FAIRVIEW RD. I I SHOW INFO: (760) 943'-7SOO o r www.caJendarshows.com I $6 ADMISSION GOOD FOR RUN OF SHOW THIS AD SAVES YOU & FRIENDS 52.00 PER PERSON ZAHER FALLAHI, CPA 28 yrs. exp. Accrg., Audits, Truces I 5% discount to CM Residen1s (714) 546-4272 In the late 1950s, Mr. and Mrs. Moore moved to Fort Lauderdale. Aa. Mr. Moore, an avid yachtsman, became the manager of the William G. Hobbs Yacht Sales Co. while Mrs. Moore began a new career in real estate. She also coordinated New York Yacht Club social events for members living in Florida . After Mr. Moore's death in 1966; she added yacht sales to her busy schedule, but in 1983 returned to California to assist her mother, Lillian, in Altadena. Upon the death of her mother. she moved to New- port Beach to be close to family and friends. Mrs. Moore leaves two nephews, Kent S. Moore of Corona del Mar aod Patt G. Moore of Mootecito. No services are scheduled. Live Entertainment Nightly at 9pm Rich Fauno Sunday-Wednesday D ;J ;/' ;,/ ';/ D. 4, .. ~~ • F ULL SERVICE C OORDINATION Misbehavin ' Thursday-Saturday • ETtQUElTE SPECIALIST • CONTEJillPOAAAY a TRADITIONAL. 949•640•78431 www.bwal~np.com Doily Pilot • Send AAOt.N> TOWN Items to the Dally Pilot. 330 w. Bay St. Cos- ta Mesa 92627; fax to (949) 646- 4170 or call (949) 764-4330. A com- plete fisting may be found at <Ullypilot.com. 'TODAY The Orange County chapter of Women in Business will host a discussion and book- signing by Gloria Mayer, president of the Institute for Health Care Management a nd the author of · "Goldilocks on Manage- ment." The event will @ke " place at. 5:30 p.m . ~t the ,1 i Sheraton Hotel, 4545,'' t MacArthur Blvd., NeW?(>l't "' Beach. Cost is $35 for mem- bers, $42 for guests. Formore information, call (714) 731-. 1077. ARoUNDTOWN '·~. .J .,,,, ' The Orange County chapter of The Single Gourmet will hold a gourmet dining .event at 6:30 p .m. a t Fleming's Prime Steakhouse and Wine Bar, 455 · Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach. For more mformation, call (800) 750-DINE. The Four Seasons Hotel will offer a course tiUed "The ABCs of Table Manners" from 10:30 a.m. to 1:30 p .m. Saturday with etiqu ette expert Theresa Thomas. The $105 course, for children ages 8 to 12, will cover placement of napkins and uten- sils, posture, tfie 1nuances of eating soup and more . The Four Seasons is at 690 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach. For more information, caU (949) 759-0808. · Dr. Michael Corey of Corey Chiropractic will discuss ear and sinus infections at 6:30 p.m. at his office, 2867 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. To RSVP, call (949) 673- 8489. Orange County Coastkeep- ers will hold a general meet- ing at 7 p.m. at Newport Dunes. Shelly Moore of the Southern California Coastal Water Research Project will speak on NVisual presenta- tion or Composition and Dis- tribution of Beach Debris in Orange County.,. Newport Dunes is at 1131 Back Bay Drive; Newport Beach. For more information. call (949) 723-5424 . Borders Books, Music and Cafe will present the free seminar "How to Offend Everyone: Lessons in C ross- cuJtural Sensitivity" at 7 p .m . Samuel Scheibler, a consul- tant on cross-cultural aware- ness issues, will speak. Bor- ders is a{ 3333 Bear St .. Cos- ta Mesa. For more informa- tion. call (714) 432-7854. The beauty store Sepbora will hold a "beauty blitz• from 7 to 9 p.m., with hand massages, mini facial peels, complimentary make-overs and more. The s tore is at South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bris- tol St .. Costa Mesa. For more information, call l714) 429- 9130. THURSDAY The Costa Mesa C hamber of Conunerce will hold a 90- minute breakfast boost start- ing at 7:15 a.m. at the Costa Mesa Country Club, 1701 Golf Course Drive, Costa· Mesa. County treasurer John Moorlach will speak . The · event is $12 if paid in advance or $17 at the door. For more information, call (714) 885-9090. The Career Network meet- ing at St. Andrew's Presby- terian Church for the unem- ployed will featur~ Jacque- line Coudray of Matthew Ryan & Associates, who will speak on "Critical Commu- nication Skills.· The meeting mo/come to S 0 UR Cone .. Your Southern California Mobility Specialists" Prick Uft Chain from S49S FREE HOME DELIVERY JI:. ucep~J Showroom Hows Mon-Fri 9am-4:30pm 711 W. t 7ch St. Suire A-5 Costa Me!a 949-642-2010 ToU Pree (888) +.7-9056 • • Representing the full line of Pride Mobility Products . • Service & Repair • lnsur.mce Reimbursement . Specialist Pride Scooten from $H9S • runs from 7:30 to 9 p.m at the church. 600 St. Andrew's Road, Newport Beach For more mfonnauon. cdll (.949) 574-2239. Hoag H~th Center will pre- sent a talk by Pen Gundv, Hoag Hospital pcd1tltnndn, who will speak on dltentmn defiot disorder from 6 to 7.30 p.m. The health center 1,, dt 1190 ,Baker St., Costd Mc'>u. For reservations, Cdll (800) 514-HOAG. The Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce will hold its I ldll of Fame Awdfds pre'>E>ntd· tion from 11:45 d.m to 1.45 p.m. at the Westin South Coa$t Plaza, 68h Anton Blvd.. Costa Mesd Tickets are $30. For more mfomtd· uon , call (714) 885-9090 The 552 Club Billfish Com- outtee will hold its Tdg & Reled'>e B1lU1sh Tournament meeting dt 7:30 a.m. at Hoag Hosp1ltll Building 44, 1 Hoag Dr., N('Wport Beach, Suite 322 Colf<>e and a continen· tal bn.~dkJdc;t wtll be provid- ed To Rs\ P. call (9491 574- 7208 The Udo Isle Yacht C lub will host a discussion and book- signing by Charbe and Man· lyn Dowell, world travelers dnd authors of "Kdwabun· ga'!> oulh Seas Adventure Blue Water Cruising in a Twentv·Fool Boat.• The €'vent tdke'> pltlce at 7 p.m. at lhe Lido lslc1nd Clubhou e, 710 V1d Lido Soud, Newport Bec1ch Cost 1s $5. For more mfonnallon. call (949) 675- 4406 RUFFLES UPHOLSTERY Where Your Dollar Covers More! WE'vE MOVED 1 BLOCK NORTH Sofa $100°0• OFF Club Chair $50°0• OFF ·with a purchase of Fabric & Labor t1I 3/22/00 1998 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 548-1156 WESTCUFF PLAZA lrvioe Ave & 17th St. Newport Beach (Smee 1982) ~e-~ CORONA DEL MAR FITNESS CENTER PCH & Avocado Ave Corona Del Mar (949) 631-3623 (Opening Apnl 200<1/ .com .. FRIDAY WbJtuer Law School will bold its annual law symposium, •fntellectual Property on the Pacific Rim: Asia Labn Ameri- ca and the Uruted States,· starting at 9:45 a.m. The school is al 3333 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. For more infor- mation, call (714) 444-4141. The Orange County FaJr- ~rounds will hold a cralt •show featunng a raffle for an Amish quilt, from noon to 8 p.m. Admission to the craft show is free. The fairgrounds are at 88 Faii 'Drive, e osta Mesa. RafOe tick~ts 'are $2. For more inforn'l\~tion. call (323) 462-2424. . Borders Books, Musk and Cafe will host Victoria Seiti, author of "Power Dressing" and "Your Executive Image.• who will discuss "Using Your Image in Mar- kellng Yourselr at 8 a.m. The store is at 3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa. For more infor- mation. call (71 4) 432-7854. The Orange County Fair- grounds will host lhe Costa Mesa antique show and sale from 10 am to 7 p.m. Friday and Saturday and from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday Admission ts $6. The fair- grounds are at 88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. For more infor· mation, call (760) 943-7500. SATURDAY The Alzheimer's Assn. will hold a serrunar bUed "Every- thing You Need to Know About Your Home· from 9 to 11 a.m. at Edwards Big New· port Theater. 300 Newport Center Dnve. Newport Beach. The senunar is free and matenals and refresh- ments will be pro'(lded. For Wednesday, Morch 15, 2000 5 re~rvations, call (800) 660- 1993. ext. 40. The eosta Mesa Hlltortml Society will hold an open house from 10 a.m. to 3 p .m. The event will feature histor- ical displays such as hand- made dolls. antique irons and more. The Historical Sooety is at 1870 Anaheim St., Costa Mesa. For more infonnabon, call (949) 631- 5918 The Four Seasons Hotel will offer a course titled •Tue ABCs of Table Manners• frp m 10:30 a .m. to 1:30 p.m. with etiquette expert There- sa Thomas. The $105 course for chtldren 8 to 12 will cover napkin and utensil place- ment, posture, the nuances of e abng soup and more . Pour Seasons is at 690 New- port Center Drive, Newport Beach. For more information, call (949) 759-0808. Victoria Seiti, author of "Your Executive Image,• will give a free lecture . titled "International Savvy for Businessmen and Women• at 3 p.m. at Borders Books. Music and Cafe The store is at 3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa. For more tnfonnation, call (714) 432-7854. The Boy Scouts Sea Base will hold New Crew Orientation Days starbng at 9:30 a.lJl. Saturday and Sundax_tor vol- unteers interested m work- tng as crew members on The Argus, a 95-year-old tall slup. Crew leaders help lead educabondl sailing trips for Boy Scouts. Volunteers do not need sailing experience. The Sea Base is at 1931 W. Codf:;t Highway. Newport Beach. For more mformation. call (949) 642-5031. Solid 7ed Pati6 t~ Teak is now Affordable! We Buy Direct, Elimina1e 1be Middleman! Compare our Prices! TeD~la Costa Mesa Showroom by appointmenl 1240 Logan Ave. Unit H (conxr ol McClintod: It Lopa) (714) 544-7218 DON'T MISS TH£ CHANCE to be in this annual issue char's all about ewport Beach, Costa Mesa and Corona del Mar! Publication Date: Friday, March 24, 2000 Call by March 9 to be a part of this special edition. For Advertising, call (949) 642-4321 ~---''Pilot ._va \trt-•t,, • 1 ,. . . 6 Wednesday, Morch 15, 2000 Council OKs $30K.for film festival •The revived showcase of independent movies will begin its eight-day run March 30. NoMI Schw•rtz DARY PILOT NEWPORT BEACH The new Newport Beach Film Festival received a major pat on the back Tues- day from the City Council, which granted the event $30,000 -10 times the amount awarded to the for- mer festival. The council approved the grant in a 7-0 vote with little or no deliberation. The now-defunct New- port Beach International Film TEENS CONTINUED FROM 1 students. They have told and .retold their personal, often painful stories to more than 3,200 stu- dents at county schools since July, said Bridget Reilly Walin, the peppy director of the pro- gram founded more than five years ago.· But Newport-Mesa schools have not been as eager as campuses outside the district to welcome the speakers, Walin said. "I call them, I pitch the pro- gram, I send them fliers, but they're just not interested,• Walin said in a classroom at Bolsa Grande High School m Garden Grove, where she led HEIGHTS CONTINUED FROM 1 and conVU1cmg Newport Coast residents that annexa- tion is the way to go, Kiff said. Once the city borders of Santa Ana Heights are decid- ed, the next step will be for Newport Beach and Costa Mesa to meet and file an appli- cation with the Local Agency Formation Commission, the state body that governs incor- Festival only once received $3,000 from the city during its four-year run. The original festival folded when founder Jeffrey S. Conner declared bankruptcy last fall. "I think (former festival organizers) asked every year, but were never able to pro- vide me with as much infor- mation as I needed to make a recommendation to the council," said Assisumt City Manager' Sharon Wood, adding that the current group of local business peo- ple, members of the Newport Beach Conference and Vtsl- tors Bureau and UC Irvine and Chapman University faculty, is much more orga- nized. • Wood said that because a panel feafunng Allen on Tuesday. Lynne Bloomberg -head of the local district's Sale and Drug Free Children program -said Walin's fliers just aren't compelling. She said poor salesmanship, not district prudishness, has kept the speakers out of Newport-Mesa schools. "She's not trying hard enough," Bloomberg said. "There must be some sort of communication breakdown." Walin, who has had no problem selling the hourlong discussions to .classrooms out- side of the district, said she isn't convince<I'. "It's very unusual," she said. Walin held the first "Teen Voices, Teen Choices" work- shop in several years at a poration and annexations. The commission will then make the final decision. Kiff said Newport Beach will propose drawing the line down hvine Avenue, giving Newport the east. side and Costa Mesa the west side of Santa Ana Heights. This is still a hotly debated topic within the Santa Ana Heights community, which does not want to be divided. Residents argue that a split would threaten its identity. Representatives from both •Natural, Safe, Healthy • Personaliud One-On-One Counseling • Eat Real Food • Body Fat Analysis &et• r ,.....,......,...,.._.. KA.RENEWS Owner, Counselor Same owner I lyrs. 660 Baker Sc., Sre. 331 • Cosca Mesa 714-241-1570 1-800-924-4258 .. M ANYWHERE IN THE U.S.A . Keep $300 to SSOO Ev~ Month and Earn Thouunds SSS with · Your own I-Business , the new festival board--was • able to gtve her basic infot- mation -such as a budget and how many screenings would be featured in New- port Beach, city staff was able to recommend the grant to the council. However, festival spokesman Todd Quartararo pointed out that the $30,000 ls still a fra~n of what most comparable festivals, in cities like Palm Springs and San Francisco, request from their . local government. · Last winter, the council . gave the festival $7,000 to help with start-up costs. Council members at the time agreed to consider chipping in more if all the screenings took place in Newport Beach Newport-Mesa school last week, at Estancia High School •And even then, we went under the guise of another pro- gram," she said. Walin said she isn't sure why her group hasn't been invited to Newport-Mesa schools. Perhaps residents don't think teen pregnancy is an issue here, she said. in' 1996, there were 186 · teen pregnancies in the New- port-Mesa school district, com- pared to Garden Grove's 482 and Anaheim's 941, according to the National Center for Health Statistics. But another program volun- teer, 20-year-old Lorraine Guerrero, said she thinks .the district is being irrationally conservative. "They think that it's not an issue there, that they're all sides say they want to be part of Newport Beach, whjch has kicked up some bitter feelings in Costa Mesa. There is also the lingering tSsue of finalizing negotiations with Newport Coast. Six weeks ago, residents there threatened that unless the city spends all of the $25 million it would receive from the Irvine Ranch Water District on their community, they would oppose the annexation. However, Kiff and Mayor John Noyes, who m~t with and after supporten recruit- ed other sources (>f funding. Organizers were able to attract more than $540,000 in sponsorships, but could only secure $56,000 in cash. 'That prompted them to approach the city just weeks before the event's start date. The festival begins with a ga).a reception March 30. Indeed, the biggest~dlffer-. ence between this year's fes- tival and those in the past is that the new event Will cen-• ter enti,rely ·in Newport Beach. The eight-day event will feature 137 shorts and 45 fea- ture films. There will also be a two-day seminar series for the C<?rnmunity April 1-2, Quartararo said. good kids," said Guerr.ero, who became a mother when she was 17. "But I know plen- ty of straight-A students wbo have children." John Carney, head of phys- ical education at Costa Mesa High School, said he didn't know anything about the pro- gram but would welcome the speakers. "I might have looked at the letter and thrown it in the trash,• he said. "But l don't think l would. I know those types of things are important." They are also important to Walin, who graduated from Estancia High School in 1986. "It's personal for me," she said. "Maybe the need isn't as high as other areas we focus on. but I'm from Costa Mesa. I was born at Hoag. I'd really like to get into this area.· Newport Coast residents last Friday, insist that despite the appearance of a six-week lag, negotiations are moving for- ward. "There really wasn't a gap.· Kitt said, adding that the city had been corresponding with Newport Coas~ represen- tatives through letters and over the phone. City staff hopes to have all loose ends tied up by April in order to file a completed appli- cation and have a hearing with the commission br late spring. • Eurof>ean Facial • EkctrolY$is •Waxing • Aroma Turapy • MasSQle • Rain Drop Th.trapy • f eatMring Dnmalogiea9 Products Dr. Kevin F. Priestley 2101 East Coast Hwy. Corona del Mar CA92625 Tel. 949.640.7030 Fax. 949.640.0356 E-mail priestleychlroOhome.com S•pll•nM•cler Branch Manager . MARBLE CONTINUED FROM 1 Smith successfully placed an ad in the campus news- paper at Orange Coast Col- lege. The ad-"Holocaust Studies: Appointment with Hate?• -asks students to challenge the Holocaust an(! the survivors of tb,e.World War n concentration camps who have passed along their, eyewitness accounts. The adt which Smith has managed to place in hun- dreds of college newspapers, ls designed to have a qoasi- intellectual appeal, as though -two generations removed from World War II -it's OK to second-guess the nightmare that was the Holocaust or to rethink the number of Jews who were put to death in the concen- tration camps. A few years back, the Institute for Historical Review puplished a ~hal­ lenge -and put up a cash reward -to anyone who could prove that the Holo- caust took place, that Jews were gassed in the Nazi death camps. It was the sort of taunt the group seemed to re~el in, a cruel game that masqueraded as a history exercise. And someone took the group up on its challenge. His name was Mel Mermel- stein, a Huntington Beach businessman and an Auschwitz survivor. The ad was an affront. Mermelstein had lost his mother in the concentration camps. He'd lost his father. He had lost a brother. And be had lost both or his sis- ters. That some right-wing group would have the audacity to make a contest out or the misery or the Nazi concentration camps was more than be could stand. So he took the group to court and -as il it was even necessary -won a court order stipulating that the Holocaust was real and that Jews were put to death in the camp's gas chambers. When the Institute for Historical Review balked at paying up, Mermelstein took Doily Pilot • the group back to court. It took fow years, but the group paid him $90,000 in annual installments. And, just to drive his point home, Mermelstein took the group back to court again when it was six days late on one of its installment checks. The group was. forced to cough up another $38 in interest. Mennelstein has made a life cause of preserving a record of the Holocaust. Irle lectures in schools, he has built a museum at his busi- ness, be bas written a book on his own experience and considers it his moral obliga- tion to fight those who "chis· el away at our remembrance of the past.• But they won't go away. Smith, the man who placed the ad in the Orange Coast College newspaper, even names Mermelstein in the ad, dismissing him - along with Simon Wiesen- thal and Elie Wiesel -as •problematic eyewitnesses.· And on Smith's Web page, Mermelstein is brushed off as someone who sued the Institute for Histori- cal Review because he "lost sleep.• His name tumbles into a laundry lisf of supposed Holocaust myths, everything from the Jnstitute's claim that Hitler never ordered the extermiilatioo of Jews to his revisionist arithmetic that as few as 300,000 Jews actually died in concentration camps. Is th.is a history lesson? ls this a stimulating intellectual debate? Is this something we hope intrigues young college students hall a century removed from the Holo- caust? Is it somehow acade- mically challenging that a man who lost his entire fami- ly in_the Nazi death campsA · be taunted and mocked? ,; Or is this j\,\St hatred, hatred with an attitude, even? Mermelstein remains vigi- lant, but takes it in stride. "Do I really need people like this to know that my mother and sister and my family died in the gas cham- bers?" • STEVE MAR8lE Is the managing editor of Times Community News. He c.an be reached at steve.marbleOlatimes.com . Wbo1 optrllting on your hllirl Lani is a fonncr actress whom for 25 )'Cln has pracriccd as a licensed barber, co~ITl('lologi"· physical rhcrapm, Europon f.acfaJ spccialis1 and manicurist. For a prccmon luir cu1 and a steady shave or a rcla.xing f.acitl... Corn1 V"uit uni The M•t;ic To11eh 25 Yun ExpnieNa 714-540-2218 1500 Adams Ave *103 • Cotta Maa Nsnv~ onn 1 .. ~ .... ,, I ---------· (949) 711-6111 • ' / Quote Of 1llE DAY ., ._. 17 of our outs W!fe ei1heJ pop-u~ or strikeouts. We definitely need to get our offense going heading into leogue ... ". Kirk Bauermeister, Costa Mesa coach ltl Dail¥ Piki • ... Mlwdi 20 honcne Sl'Oflmw..1..0ffM1E scon CAIPEITll rr.-.,..,..-.. ...,,.,..,.. Daily Pilot Sports Editor Roger Corl$0'1 • 949.57 4-4223 • Wednesday, Morch 15, 2000 7 CdM's baseball game with Redondo and landed 30 feet from CdM's center lions' liebengood perfect U fielder, scoring a runner from third (Uld nion suspended after 42/3 innings. confusing everyone. But since the inning Joseph loo , wu not completed, the game didn't count. DAILY Pit.or • "No matter how Weird it ii," CdM (3-1) REDONDO BEACH -'The tint game Coach John Emme, who &pent five years at of a scheduled doubleheader between Redondo Union before coming to the Sea Corona del Mar High ,and host Redondo Kings, said, •if they counted it as a loss, it Union's baseball team almost went lo tbe would have been a bummer.• record book as a fluke loss instead ol a sus-GdM's Alex Swanson went 2 for 3 with pended game for CdM Tuesday evening. one RBI, one run scored and two stolen On the las~ play of the game, Redondo bates. His teammate, Billy Eagle, also had U nion hit a supposed game-winning two stolen bases. Keith Long, Dave Knecht "triple• in a thick fog with two outs in the and J.D. Martinez all had RBI singles for bottom of the fifth inning to~ a 7-6 lead. the Sea Kings. CdM pitcher Eric Snell was Redondo's (3-2) Ryan Sharman hit a tow-solid in 2113 innings of relief. ering fly to center that under normal cir-The option remams to complete the rumstances would have been a routine out. game and play the second game at a later Instead, tbe ball was engulfed by the fog date, but Emrpe 14id it was doubtful. •Sophomore hurler spins second pertecl gdme in school history wilh 2-0 win over U. of Mobile. MOBILE, Ala. -Gi.nd Llebengood became th<' -.ec· SOFTBALL' , ond pitcher in the history of Vangudrd Uruversity ~olthdll to throw d perfect gdnW c1<> the Lions de£edled lhf' llfJ'>l University of Mob1Je, 2·0, in the second of lwo qamt'" played cfn Tuesddy L!ebengood struck out 1 l and joined Beth Howdrcl u'> U1e only Lions Lo rel1r<' dll 21 batters faced. Howcird accomplished the f Pdl m 1994. V d I ; Vdl\dkl'n dnd Jill Jp.,c,rn wch lw l RBI sm(1l(W. f01 Uw Lion-. {14· 101 T h t · Liebengood Ltoll'> )<,.,, Ill lhc•ir l1r'>t qttm<> ol thp cldy, 4. 1, to tlw Un1vl-r'>ll} ol lnldr· nc1te \\111cl ol T<'Xd'> \,inqu ttrt.I \\Ill tc.1k<' on Mustangs shut down, 1-0 •Stevens' two-hitter goes for naught in 1-0 Mustangs' loss to Los Amigos. Tony Altobelli DAILY PILOT COSTA MESA -In one of the BASEBALL better-pitched games m recent . memory, Costa Mesa High's base· ball tedm was edged out by Los Amigos. 1-0, Tues.' day night at TeWinkl<' Pdrk. Too bad the outfielders missed a good chunk of the excitement. With a heavy fog dnd a chance of canceUallon hangmg over the field, Costa Mesa right-hander Brenl Stevens and Lobos' hurler Rafdel Jesus pressed on and mandged to shut down the offense of both t<?dOlS. "ll was 1usl a well·played game on both sides/ Coach Kuk Bduemu>ister sclid. •Both teams' pitchers took advdntage of the elements. It definitely was tough to ee up at the plate for both sides.· Stevens struck out IX, while t1Uowmg only one run on two h1ts. "He was able to get three different pitches over for strikes and when you do that you have a great hot at winning,• Bauermeister said •His curveball, change-up and fastball were all working for h1m • But m the words of the '?Os rock band, the Doob1e Brothen.. ·Jesus was just all right tonight.• Rafael Jesus threw a complete-game three-hit shutout with eight stnkeout.s, retiring 12 of the last 13 batters he faced. He also scored th • game's only run on a two-out, RBI tnple by, Jesus Rudarte, who e two triples were the lone tuts by the Lobos (2-3). "I le pitched real well tonight, but we made 1t pretty edsy-for him." Bauermeister said. "l think 17 of our outs were either pop-ups or strikeouts. We dcf- tn.itely need to yet our offen~ going heading into league· With one out m a scoreless game, Jesus reached first bdSe on a walk. After a stolen base, he reached third base on a ground out. before Rudarte sent a long drive deep Into the ped·Soup sky, finding the Lert-field alley and scoring Jesus easily. M esa (2·2· l ) bad its best chance lo score m the lhu'd inning when B1Uy Halverson led off with a walk. But a failed sacnfice bunt attempt leftttalver- son at hrst. A two-out smgle by Jo h Little moved I lalverson to second, where he was stranded. "We didn't get our bunts down and that hurt us,· Baue1me1Ster said. ·we really have to focus on the Costa Mesa' s Brent Stevens fires away in pitcher's due l Tuesday night a l TeWinkle Park. little things to be succe sful. I told th<' quys thdt we can't rely on the three-run home run hkl' Wl' did lt1<,t year.· Nick Cab1co, who came mto Tuesddy'<, gttme with rune hits in nine conSOt'\Jllve at-bats. struck out in the ftrsl to end the streak, but went 1 for :l for th\' game. The Mustangs open up Pan tie Cott'>t Leagtw action Fnday at 3:15 pm. when the} ho-.t drch nvt1I Estanoa. ·u·s gonna be an emot1ont1I gdme, • Bduenne1 tl'1 Sdld. "They're always like that when Wt> plt1y them · Steven Shores was the other Mustt1nq to record d hit off of Jesus, but his stelldf d1vmg snt19 at third bt1se endPd t1 thtrd-mnmq rctll v hy lht' Lobo., De.,plle lhl' lo:-.,, Bctul'm11•1-.ll•r hked \\ h.it hl• ... dw out there • t wa<, Vl'I') plt>rl'>l!d \\1th our p1trhmq dnd our dt>lensc• tomqht, Bt1uemw1.,h•r '>ctld \\ l''h ' ct \ £>!) younq tedm .met llrn, w1U lw r1 qo1>d lt>t1rnmq lt•-...,1on for our rlub Tlwrt• wert> "<>llh' po-.1t1\ <>'> Wt' frln l<1kl' lrom this qt1nw. thdl''> for -.un• • NONlEAGUE Los AMIGOS 1, COSTA MESA 0 Le» Amigos 000 001 O t 2 o Costa Mesa 000 000 O O 3 2 Jesus and Bruno Stevens and Fa1ardo W · J~us. 2 1 L · Stevens, 0· 1 38 Rudarte (LA) 2 HIGH SCHOOL BOYS TENNIS Alabdma's Spnng Hill Uni- vNsity in a doubleheader toddy before competing in the University of West Aort- da Spnng Fl.mg Tournament Thursday through Saturday. NONCOM'BtDKE U. Of INCMNAT£ Wott0 (TEL) 4 VANGUARD U. 1 UIW 010 120 0 • 4 7 2 Vanguard 100 000 0 • 1 7 1 Lopez and Kunz; Atchley, Smith (S) and Devey. w · Lopez. L ·Atchley, 3-4. 28 • Daniel (UIW). VA.NGUARD 2, u. ~ Moeu 0 Vanguard 000 002 0 • 2 S 0 Mobile 000 000 O • O 0 3 Liebengood and Devey; Richardson and Allen. w · l.Jebengood, 1C>-3 L • R!Chardson. Davenport continues her assault • She takes care of Conchita Martinez easily in quarterfinals at Indian Wells. 1 0 r A N TENNIS WELLS -Aus- trdhdn Open chdmp1on Lmdsdy Davenport ol Newport Beach again dis· pldy{'d unbeatable form Tues· ddy by thrdshing nemesis Conchita t-.ldrtmez to reach the serruhndls or the Tenrus 1'-ldsters Senes The second-seeded Dav· enport has had trouble in the pd'>t with the sucth-seeded f\ ldrtmez. but donunated the Spc101ard m an unpress1ve 6· 2. l'i· I Vlctory that took only 62 minutes. Ddvenport. who bad pounded France's Julie Hdlard-Decugis by the same b·2, b-1 tally in her last match, Cdme into the quarterfinal trutlmg Martinez, 7-3, m their career singles meetings. ·Today I Uunk I was JUSt t1blt> to overpower her and keep d pretty good level of consistency,· Sdtd Davenport, the reigning WLIDbledpn chdmpion dnd 1998 l).S. Open winner ,. "I Uunk today I combated everytlung really well .. real- ly kept the presswe on and ke>pt the balls deep. served very well. • 1 never really ever got do e to bemg broken. That qdve me a lot or confidence \vhen 1 was returrung. • Davenport's serrufmal opponent Thursday will be 59th-ranked Russian teenag- er Elena Demenbeva. • VI ll-711n <~1~il·an ln vitationct 7 COM I PAVRJONS NATIONAL HIGH SCHOOL ALL-AMERICAN TEAM TOURNAMENT Dr. Michael Krop LIGHTNING Dr. MkhHI Krop Senior High School MIMnl, Fla. Seed: Fourth Hlghl19ht: 1999 district c.hampions in school's first year, and ranked No. 6 in the state of Florida School lnfonnatlon Founded: 1998 llnillmeltl: 2,270 Nlc:low: lightning Colon: Blac.1<, silver and purple Ad*9ts: 1410 Countrytlne Rd., Miami, Fla., 33179 Coedt: MichHI Kyprlu ... pleywa: Sane1110 OIMnday jr., ranked 42nd among juniors In the wortd, eccording to lntemetion.1 Tennis Federation; 11"- ....,,~1w-, ~· rried '2nd last yur in F icN Tennis Amoci.tlon 1• sing'-s; ICewln ,., ... ,., sophomore. rried 11"' ... ~In FTA 111 ~ V'n • bl AtM "-IQPhomcn; -...... lopf'°"'°'9; .._ ..-11ptouore;-.. a...- ~ ........ ti\ . , ........ • ......... EllLIS At c.o.ta .......... Centw, 10 a.m. from Palos ~ Pt-sulA H!Gl4 from ~. Conn. CHUIM AulJf.MY At c-tll ..._-... ~ 10 a.m. ff'Om Lyn<hburg. V1., E.C. Gws HIGH from Cllf)ef"tino, MoHTA VISTA HIGH • First round Wtr\nerl' It c.MTC. I pm. MNe ;1rt11Mdt,_..0Ma. 11 a.m. "'°"' ffw\O. Cl.CMS HIGH "°'"No ~.orood. HAllll~Wl$T\Ml ....... rt ........ Cll*i '' ........ fnlm Loi.,.. BMN1WOOO HIGH "°"' MILml. "· °"· Mlowl I(~ HIGH • ,.,._ raund wlnntfi: M .. TC, 2 pm M,_.• ;n•'lll•• a tL U --. "°"" •9.t u GO d, Co. CHIMY C11wc HIGH Pn1m '*• ..,_ CINTllWfl'l HIGH M....__ ...... Cllllt.t1e.M.' Pn1m Alhlner\.. MKo Sotool. ,,.. ........ 8'0t4Y CowGI ,., ........... ~ • llC., p.m. MP. G 11i1111111Cllllt. ... ..., ..... a'' M.Y.HGMa_,..ScMool .... ...._ .... ~.~ .... ... a s ..... Cllllt. ...... .............. ~ ..... "-· . ....... ,.._ ........ .:. ·. . ........... ,,,, •"-'*"::J ' .. . I ._lo School KNIGHTS Menlo School Athertou, Calif. Highlight: CIF Central Coast Section and Northern California champions in 1999 School infonnation Founded: 191 s ~1:530 Nlduwne: Knights Colors: Navy blue and gold Addi 11· 50 Valparaiso Ave., Atherton, Calif, !M027 Brotth.J. College Prep BRONCOS Brophy CoU~ ,,.,,...._, Phoenix. Aria. Highlight: Arizona state champions 1996 through '98 School infonnation Founded: 1928 Enrollment: 1, 140 Nktmame: Broncos •Colors: Red and white ~ 4701 N. Central, Ph~nbc, Ariz., 85012 Coach: Btll Woods -~1Dcld~ jr. ranked No. 6 last~ in the Southwest Tennis AssodMion16s singles;._.. SR\11 Jt sophomore, ranked No. t in the Southwest Tenni5 ~tion 16s singles; Nldi W1ll 1~ Junior. ranked 10th in the~ Tennts Association 16s ~ Jiiiie ...... sophomore. rried No. 2 in the Southwest Tennis Auociatlon 165 singla; ...... ~junior. rn.d llnd In the 5outhwtst Tennis ,_Ddltion '"~--·· .. -...,..,,.... 11'tt In .. ~ 1ilrN ... Dclllelott 111 ..... ' f f ~ ····· .~ _8_w.dne~_ado):_._._1<NJ_~_h_1_s,_2_000~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~f>()i{fS~~~~~~~~~--~~--~~~~~Da-i_o/_P_il~_ YOUTI SNITS Yankees blast Cardinals. 10-3 • Kalke's pitching, hitting proves to be the difference for CMALL's Yankees. COSTA MESA -The Costa Mesa American UttJe umEUAGUE League Yankees defeated the Costa Mesa National Cardinals Saturday in majors' interleague a <11on. • · Jordan Kalke hurled J}u'ee innings of scorele$S, one-hit ball td record the win. He also went 3 for 4 to s'park the offense. Other Yankees doihg the.job with the b,ats were Brandon Hottman, Isiah Werdel and Skyler. Cozad. The Cards' Evan Van Geem held the Yankee's to only one hit in four innings of relief work. Ensign slips past Dwyer, 2-t Ameba closes out •Under 14 boys team finish third at Section t t championships. IRVINE -The Newport Beach Ameba of AYSO Region 91 finished third Saturday tn the bof$ under 14 Section q championships at UCJ. Following three straight losses ~tp 18 wins in a row, the AJ.neba tin8lly fell, 3-0, ro San,J\ian 'Capistrano in the S4;tmifinals. • Owad's overtime goal wins it for the SeaBees' eighth grade girls soccer team. HUNTINGTON BEACH -YOUTH SOCCER Ensign Junior High's eighth AMEBA -Back row, from left Sergio Luna, Eduardo Garda, Mike Rlcbanllon, Arthur Perez, Erik Zepeda, Kalo&il Dutro, Taylor Conant,-Brenden Zlmmer and Coach Jim Noonan. Front row, from left: Devon Andrade, Eddie Zepeda, Brandon Sowen, Mu Petty and Ramez Wlssa. Not pictured: Mike B\lry and Jose Ceja. · The offense was led by 1' Bnmden Zimmer, Sergio Luna, Edd.le Zepeda. Eduardo Gard.a. Mike Richardson and Jose Ceja. with midfield support by Ramez Wl.ua. ~n Andrade, Mike Bury and Ertk Zepeda. The Ameba used a trapping-style or defense, Jed by Artlnu Perez, Taylor Comnt. Brandon Sowers, Mu Petty and goal keeper Kalona Dutro. grade girls soccer team defeated Dwyer, 2-1, Thursday afternoon. Dana Owad scored in overtime to give Ensign the win. JulUan Austin scored the first goal for the SeaBees, while the midfield was controlled by Casey Ibbetson, Megan Dias, Lauren Curtis and K.C. McKanna. Cost.a Mesa 120 swamps Colorad~ River Invltatlonal BUll.HBAD CITY, Ariz. -The IYSO Costa Mesa boys under 14 soccer The annual Ameba Soccer Academy Awards Banquet is planed for the first week in April, with approximately 1,500 Ameba alumni scheduled to attend. For information on the festivities, contact Coach Jim Noonan at (949) 123-1031. Ally Stoltz, Robin Senour and Vanessa Pinzon kept the offense going, while Kelly Boler, Janelle Arnold, Holland Osadche, Kerrie Gates and goal keepers Jllltanne Whitfield and Amanda Wltbnan anchored the defense. team from AYSO Region 120, captured the Col- orado River Invitational with a 9-0 win over Simi Valley. In the fpur..game tournament. Costa Mesa outscored the pack, 15-1. SAILl~G VOYAGERS YAOfT Q.U8 200~Series R-..2 (Balboa Pier to Casino Point) Class A • 1. Sqvenger, Biii Taylor, BYC; 2 .. Pendragen, David G~y. SSYC; 3. Fee Event, Chuck Wert, BCYC; 4. Sorcerer, D. Rosenelll. M<Keever, BYC; S. Roller, Mike Hatcher, DPYC. Class 8 • 1. Pussycat John Szalay, VYC; 2. Dutchess, Tommy Smith, , BYC; 3. Obsession, Bill Apps, SBYRC; 4. Problem Child, Dan Rosen, SSYC; 5. Indigo Tiger, John Mack, VYC. R-..3 (Casino Point to Balboa Piet") Class A • 1. Xena, Carl Swaisgood, SSYC; 2. Sorcerer, D. Rosene/B. McKeever, BYC; 3. Scavenger, Bill Taylor, BYC; 4. Roller, Mike Hatcher, OPYC; S. Cha Cha Cha, Larry Walter, NBYC. Clau 8 · 1. Pussycat John Szalay, VYC; 2. Dutchess, Tommy Smith, BYC; 3. l kkety Split, Joe Degenhardt, BCYC; 4. Problem Child, Dan Rosen, SSYC; S. Obsession, Bill Apps, SBYRC. TODAY'S SCHEDULE •B...e..!I College • vanguard Unlv«Slty at Dallas Baptist. doubleheader, 4 p.m High school • Irvine at Newport Harbor, 3:15 p.m.; Estancia at lM Amigos. 3:15 pm. • n-.ctr llltd .fleld High schodl boys and girls • Fountain Valley at Corona del Mar. 2:45 p m. • Yolleybllll Community college men · Mt. 5an Antonio at Orange Coast. 7 p.m High school boys • Irvine at Corona del Mar. 6 p.m. • SWlmmlng High school boys and glrls • Irvine at Newport Harbor, 3 p.m.; Woodbridge at Costa Mesa, 3: 15 p.m. · • SofdNl&I College · Vanguard Univenlty at Mobile, Ala., noon. COmmunity college · Golden West at Orange Coast. 3 p.m. •Tennis COmmunlty c.ollege women Orange Coast at El camino, 2 p m High school boys· Sunny Hills at Corona del Mar, 3:15 p.m. • Goff COmmunity college men · Orange Coast at Palomar, noon. High school boys • Newport Harbor vs. Marina, at Meadowlark GC. 2 p m ; Costa Mesa vs. Tustin, at Tustin Ranch. 2:30 p.m. Costa Mesa trails Tustin by nine strokes COSTA MESA -The Costa Mesa High boys golf team will hope to play catch-up in the second half or GOlf a nonleague match against Tustin today, after building a 190- 199 deficit Tuesday through nine holes at the Costa Mesa Golf & Country Club's Mesa Linda Course. Joakim Rising paced the Mustangs with a one-over 36, fol· lowed by teammates Jeff Montoya (37). Lou Carrasco (40), Bryce Sheridan (42) and Nue Kahele (44). The match resumes at the Tustin Ranch Country Club. -- ( )i,(.ount ( 'a"kct • I ' ' ' ' I ' • BRliFLY Estancia's Collier, Flaherty double • I I •Garden Grove takes 400frern1ey-1 GMdlnGrow,s·2sn occ 100 ooo 'OOQ · 1 s 1 Tars handle Artists ~-Riverside 030 OSO 2Jj • 1312 2 nonleagi.te meet. ca-~'°"~" Carey, Canada (7)and Keller. NEWPORT VOUIYIAl.l 200 rMdleV ret.y · I GMdel\ Grow, 2 1111 Mansfield, (no name) (6), Martinez BEACH - C 0 S T A 200 ft"· 1 Flel..rty 1£>. 02.67, 2 tonQll• (9) Farmer (9) and Thornburn • · SWIMMING CGG>. 2'44-"4. 1 JC~<£>. nu~. • · Senior Billy Clayton pounded MESA 2001,...1 F1et..rty([)U 9 51.2 8ec1Md W ·Mansfield.L ·Carey,1-5. 23 kills dN H bo CGG). 2.SS.J.4; l. FoW:ng, CGGI. l os 16 2B • Cameron (RCQ, Farmer (RCQ. . an ewport ar r Estancia High junior Somer so""· 1 Zulllln CGGl. 2111; 2 J ~tv 3B • Stone (RCQ. HR . Farmer (RCO. High teammate Kent Turner Flaherty won two events. tE>i:~·.~=G~l·:~:,·2 Sllzl£>. added 12 to pace the Sailors including her d ebut in the 1.38.SO;l P.ttonlEl.1 .. 10 OCC bounces back to a 15-11, 12-15, 15-12, 15-4 200 d i di 'd } di 100 frN. t Pe.., (GG), I 2.0S. 2 lJMon } b U b U -yar n vi ua me ey, IGGl. 1:1o.so, 3 1 Cat.Mty<El. i.2119 non eague oys vo ey a but the Eagles were defeated soo "" · 1 ' c.u11y !El.' u n. 2. zu11.tn1 COSTA MESA TENNIS victory over visiting Laguncl by nonleague visitor Garden (G~',,5!~:/~GG~!:.·:~1 10 -The Orange Beach Tuesday. Grove, 109-61, in girls swim-1001>«1t 1. Bed¥dlGG>. 1.i.u7: 2 Coast College women's ten· Lloyd Wright had 47 assists ming 1\tesday. Flaherty also ~~ <GGI. 1·35·79: 1· a.d«tsc't>e< IGG>. nis team rebounded from a for the winners, who are 7 ·2 won the 200 freestyle . 100 b<eas1•1 L eaulty <o. 125·78•2· ,..,. disappointing loss to Santa including best-of-three tour- The boys dropped a 104• (GG). l~.44, 3. t..m(GG), 1•46,19 t tch 400 ''" ,.,~. 1 G¥cSen Grow, 4.36 1a. Ana Monday to top visiting namen ma es. 59 decision to Garden Grove. Fullerton. 5-4, in an Orange David Colli er was Estancia's Tigers topple OCC Empire Conference match CdM tops El Toro only individual winner, dou-R 1 V E R . Tuesday. bling in the 200 and 500 SIDE _ Host IASEIALL occ improved to 5-4, 3.3 freestyles. in conference. 80vs Riverside broke open a 3-1 ~ GIMJlll 1CM. EnAMOA st game with a five-run fifth, OUNGE..,.. care am 200 IMd'-Y rel»y • 1 Estancia (Wwstf.tl, OllAMil CoAsT 5, ~ .. Fwbwr\ 1 !Wllrrwd'\ eo11i..1. 2 os" then added to the damage to C'--'-• Ohanesian (F) def. • 200frN 1 Collo«(E).20681,.2 ~ cl · 13 1 O E ' -...--(GG>. 2 11 so. 3 11m110 <GGI. H6 JO aun a · range mp1.re Keijzer, 6-3, 2~. 6-3; Goode (OCQ 2001M 1 ,.~ <GG>. 2. Gambot CD. Con.lerence baseball win over def. Angeloni, 7~. 6-1; McNamara 21~ !: . 7' ~ <GG>. 2S 10. 2 f,,_ <El. Orange Coast Tuesday. (OCO def. Ctitellanes. 7-5, 6-4; n si. l r., .. .,. CE), 2160 Freshman first baseman Yoshida COCO def. Baker, 6-0, 6-4; n ,1~ '~~fld1~~C:>· n t.. 2 a .. i. (GG), Eric Wiethom, a Corona de! Pham (F) def. Andrews. 6-3, 2-0 100 "" , ll-<GG>, 1 01.00. 2 5p11>-Mar High product, had a pair retired; Sheets (F) def. Nagashima, 91ff (GG). n I. l G4l"llboa (£). 1 OJ 0 6-1 6-0 soo ''". 1 co11rer <E>. s 57 19, 2 Mad of hits for one of the few OCC ~ . lceizjer-Goode (OCO (GGJ. n I. 3 v~ (GG). "t. positives. Riverside outhit the def. Sheets-Oharisian. 6-2. 6-3,· 200 frM rott.y I GardM Grovt, 1 4S 44 1001>«11 . 1t.ongw»y(GG).nL,21 visitors, 12-5, dropping the McNamar&-Yoshlda(OCQdef. ~~~~h <E>. 1 1s 12. l a He11m1ctt <£>. Pirates to 5-13, 0-7 in the OEC. Angeloni-Baker, 6-2, 6-2; 1oobrffn. 1 M~b lGGI. 12094. :i OltANGE E-. core ECJta Pham-Castellanos (F) def. te111Mrn(l1, l.ll6l.l nothitd. RMRStDE 13, OllANu CoAsT 1 Nagashlma-Glbson, 6-1, 7·5. p ' NEWPORT BEACH GOLF -Four Corona del Mar High golfers earned a share of medalist honors as the Sea Kings completed a 407 • 427 nonleague boys golf victo- ry over El Toro Tuesday at Big Canyon Country Oub. Joe Kwon and Chris Fran- ta shot 78 for 18 holes and Michael Yu took over for an Lll John Kwon for a combined 78, as well. lnnes MacDonald (85) and Manuel Ferna ndez (86) rounded out the scorers for CdM, which improved to 1-2. .. r •· ~· -."~~ •I · .. :,'4 I f I .. I I ~ ...... \ . • I Daily Pilot I . • ... ~~,· ,. .. TN ..... '900ft ol .,. 8e(jtif Mftlfn f'ounda· t10n II ~. M the ...... nolld beb#, fof ~~~ clllnf'I wtlO IO l9QUllll ""*' 180 days 1tler publlc:atiO!I ol lhll noclce Olll ~llV The Seotl'ltrol!l Foun· dallon, 3315 FalMlw Road, COsta Meaa. CA 92628 The prindpal manager 11 Maril Helm. Praaldent Publlahtd Newpon B1tc h·Co1ta Mesa = Pilot Maren I 5, W73fJ SELL -· "°'"' . -cllaellld PUBUCNOnCI CITY OF COSTAMUA 200NOOI CONIOUOATEO ~ ACTION PLAN PUBLIC HEAIWtO. COllllENCDIEN1' OF 30 DAY FOR PUBLIC COllllENT PERIOD, AND UT1UZA TION OF UNADJUSTED 80% HOUSEHOLD MEDIAN INCOME STANDARD N°"°9 '' n.r.ov gtven ttiat the City of Cotta M.la CltY Council will hold a pUbllc hearing to dlloula and~ 1119 • B 1.u -~ ... :,.., ' ,c:.J . ····· C ll y I @ f 0 . enforcement ICIMtlel 10 • IOf 200(}2006 ~ '8061<?00 rH,,.ctivtly ensore the m11nt«ianc. "*'Y per. Pl.n and 200(}2001 ~ fl'OfTI nUO b ltleM pro-ot decen1, sale anc:t sant· IOI\$ 9UCh as nutrillon '°" PW\, 1l* .._yeei grwna. The Pl.lbliC heat· wy hO\lsing programs allO heattn 8f'ltt one-yMr plill'8 .,. Ing,, Pf9C)eratton ol the • ~ehabtlital!On loent care progquna ~ In compllltnQe crilt ~Ion P\91\, and 30 and grants 10 addless • SeMCes tor pef'IOllS w111 ,..,_. rwaullillonl dly ~ cx>rnment pe· 1'11 needs o1 iow.and With dlAb•llUea such as 12• Cf'R!1J 1hl dnlft nod "'"' the ltaMory verv low-Income home· renabilttallOn programs ~ 'WI de· requiremen!S lot plan· owner• who rHIOe 1n for housing end IC· .,_... the City'• PfbY ning and l(>plylng for 1ub$1Mldaro l'oOUSlflO oesslblloty lm(:>r0\/9fll8n& houllr'O and ~ tedilf'9I tunoa under the • Emergency Ind transt· to pubffc laol1tie1 oe"'IOf!m911l needl ano COBO end HOME pro-tlonal hollamg programs • SeNices for chtldren ldlin4llies ~ lO ll'Wlll . for Oomeless persona Md youth SUdl •• youttt ldcnU ttleM netdl. The City ol Colla and pe11001 at·nsk ol counseling and alter The Adlon Plan de· MIN propoaea IO Ubff· blooming homeless school programs llneates propo aed ltd ltderal COBO and • Suppc>ftlve services toi ·Public lae111tv improve· actlvhit• to be funded HOME lundt to under· the homelesa persons rnents (Oevelopmenl ol under.the U.S. Depart• taken tht following and persona 11 nlk ol the new Downtown ment ot Housing and Ur· actM tlel durinp the becoming homeleu Commun11v Center) ban Developmant't 2000·2001 liaca )year • TransltlOOal hOuslng for • AdmlnlstratlOl'I of lad· (tiUD) Community De· Which wtlt ~n J ~· bha1:e~~d ~men end e~J:":J',;~~em61yo1 velopment Block Grant 2000. Ind• June • I er ' ran Costa Mesa an6'or the (COBG) and HOME In-2001. . • • ServlcH tor persons In veslment Partnerships Propol8d Use o( uansltlon trom hOme· Cos1a Mesa A"develop· Act ~HOME) programa. 2()()().200t CDBG a.nd leuneas to pennanent ment Agency wlll ... """"'"""' HOME Funds hOllSlng p10111de resources lor The ly "'· .. .._..... to ,.. • al nou!sl me lollow1n r rams ll -·----rl 4'9·41l o~ \ Wednesday. Morch l 5, 2000 9 7 11~ "*I:.,. w• In support ol lht n t t tty ncll Ill oownwatO bMed nu- 2000-200t Aclion Plan Cnambt11 1t Cotta the Colla...._ HouainO metOUt netlOnel ecio- • RtNlbll<tatJon ol rental Meta CilY Hal. n F111 and Community De· nomlc Ind ~Jon p1cpe111es 10 eqianc:t lhe onv.. Coita Men Call-~ Department. llCIOl'I The City nu supply ot 11foro1blt toma Al lt\ls lime and n Fa•r onv.. Colta blMr'l 1~~~': housing plac. 1ny and 119 per-Mesa. CA 92629 Ptr· to ~· Ile • ConStNCtiOn °' nt... IOOI lllltrtst.0 may ap· 90llt wanting oopjtt ol 80'!C. 118ndard T1'lll MW own111h1p 01 r1n111 p11r and bt heard the drttl plana INiy Income 1t#lelard Wiii be· housing thtraon come to the HouUl9 OOtM ~ JllV t . • Ftrsl i.me home t>uyer 30 Olly PUblic COm· Ind CommUfllty De· 2000. •I'd wll be reY!Md down paymtn1 IS· ment Penod vetopnlent Department, aMUlllY Thi• new 5tan- 11Stance tor low· and A 30-day put>lte com· 5ttl Roof C.ly Hd dan:I (b •l'I eYerage mod1r11t·tncome per-ment peflOd lof the Ol'lll Use ot Unaotusted family al tour) 1rw 1\11td sons and Costa Men 2000·~ Conaolldtted 80"4 Housetio!O Median beloW Police ott.c:ers· Plan and 2001-2001 Al:-lncomt Stanaard Fot tuntlef lnfomll· • Mo11gage credit tlon Plan will oommenoe This pobllcltlon alto tiOn, oonLtet Muriel u11- cert1liqi1e program 10 Maren 16, 2000 and Will s8Mces as nollce mat ma11, Redevalopmt nt assist moderate income end April 14. 2000. The the City ol Costa Mesa and HoullnO Mana941r. hrst 11me hOmebuyera Oralt plans are currently has choHn 10 utilize Iha (714) 754-5435 Notice ol Public Hearing avaltable tor public re· una<ljusteo 80% hoUS•· Publish' Maren 15, ~ The pubhc hearing 10 view, and Ille llnal draft hold m,cllan Income Publlahed Newport r111rew t he dratl pl11nwl~beava11Jblelp< standard 1oqualitv .par· Stach·Coata Men 2000-2005 Consol1dal•O 18V11W by April 14, 2000 ticipanls lor CD9G and Daily PilOI March I 5, Plan and 2000·2001'Ac· Comments on ttle draft H0"4 E lunded pro· 2000 • llon Plan will be held at Consohdated Plan and grams. tn past years W733 6 30 PM. Apnl 17. 2000, Action Pia!\. mav l)e HUD ad1USted Ille 80% median income standard ll.11t 111.I .1. 1•1111 ... II• ... 1., ... 1 ltt' l1Jtl:.!• "1111 .. 111 """' ,. I h• 1'11ltlt-l111 " ., II•. "" 11~111 1u • ··11·111 tt d.1-·1h n·\ 1 ... • ur r• I'• 1 .111\ 11.r··lllf'•I 11h1·111-t111• 111 l'lt.1•• '''I"'" Ill\ 1rntr 111.11111,1\ I" fl \ftlll I I t·•tl I" 1tl tllllltt tf1.111•h I ltt l>.irh 1'1lttl llf I ' I''' lltt ~ l1.1f11lil\ ft1I olll\ • 1101 Ill Ill oltl\t 111"'111"111 l•tl l'hlf 11 II 111•1\ "' !I c::J ~ lb' Fa.~ . By Phone Bl' ~lalWn PeNNt: . I• •("•l1•il•l1 • \t •I'' l•tt 1111•1t•I ul 1lw •p.11 ,. ,11 1Ut11i\ •• • upwtl 11\ il11 , 11111 ( 11d11, 1111111h 111 .llo\\• 1l lu1 1h1• lir-r 111 ... ·1111111 191 ·II• .,. .. ,. SERVICE DIRECTORY -for All Your Home ~nd Business Needs -................... ..,.ttlllO.oM._Lld!~ftl.fw°"'lnt t''°" ..... 1•c.I ~It M~N71 a.Ml Gl EQ(JAL HOUSING OPPORl UNITY ...... ttl*HHtthltlt llllill ...,.,.. It •"ltd .... f .. . .... , ... """lllf Act et , ... " ........... "'*' ...... .. .... 111tt ... , '"'"'"'· ll•ltttlH tt fltcri.lot lltl ....... 111Ct , ""'· ""''"' ........................... ......... tfltltl, ............. .. .... '"' ••d '"'"'"' . ........ fltclll 111•1•. Ult HWlft•tr wllt H I ........ '""' .. , •Mflll•· llffl Ill rttl ttlllt wllldl II .. ......... .. .. ... °"' """' tit •trt•Y lllterMf tlltt Ill ......... tftt•tlttf 11 .. 1 • .....,..., .............. .. .................... , ... ,,. . ... ............. Ill IMI r•11tt II 1.-•I"-'" ............. DC_,.._ all llUI ".,... .. • ·:~~ -:-·:··~ .T/,. ' -" • . . I • ; l •• A 40 acrta·$18,llOO great clbin ..... pj!Yacy. lrld mGl#Uin-Mwt, good _..., 1111 E11y ttrma C .. AZLR 1·818·547·0 28 (CAl'ICAN) ... ,__., .. ·~ . ..., -• 1 .. ..; ~":;..'". ~T1'~ ._ .. " ... ' ' .. ·a• '-' • ... FAIRWAY AA\IUMENI'S AT BIGC.ANYON GATED COMMUNITY IY MSHJON ISLAND BMuclful "" lned ....... Md golf courM .... errz.c:::... ~ letge .,__,.,..... • tf+111fwr"dl'fW hootupa ·~fwood&llllll • NT OOl.-0.lllng •Wtt w • 11.2'11 '° 11.500 ..... ~~·· ,.,,,N.,_ . " NOW UASING 19'/laA. zaMM ... z11112aA .,. • ._ ··~ . ....... 7'°"°'1' - 11111 1o 11 11·,11-1 McMI MANAGERS •SPECIAL• $154.00+ tax Wklv !Mus1 presem this Ad) 2:)5 rms & lutChlnetlS Sltualed on beliJIMy llndlCll*I groundS FEATURES 2Hiour LObbyl OlrtCI dill pbontSIFrtt HBO. ESPN I DilclPoot I JICUlll. Gutsl .....,. c1ry CloM IQ 405 ua Fwys Miil's from 0 C Feirgrca. ~ Ind bells Wat.#lg dis llllCI to $lq)I Ind .......... COSTA MESA ..-OTORNH 2211 """°' IM ll'MlleMtlM tMO 11 tll ll-t:!•0 th-.. I \ti \\ t'-1 ll.11 "tr• t'I I 11-11 \11-.1 I \ 11~,,~- \ \ • II .\ Io ... , Hours 1.1.,.1 ... 111· .. ill1111 ·,11111'111 II I • \\ 111.-111 .: :11 .. ,., ·, 1111,.111 II I . "" . . ..~,.,. ~ .... l c.,.·,'""' to _to ..... ~ ,..,.., ,.,... ................. Ul ...... . ... s1 ........ . .... ,.. ... ........ ------Deadlines -------. \111111l..i1 .......... 1rnlJ)1:00 p111 Thur-.tlJ~ .. \\1·tl111•-.dJ1 .i:llOp111 I 111· .. dJ1 . . \lund.n ):IM lpnt h1tlJ\ ........ l'liur,-.tlJ\ .):OOpr11 \\1·d111•,dJ1. f11t•,d,1~ i:INlp111 'JtunlJ~ ........ J ndJ\ :):OOr11n • • Full-time IM1 & m'1llllf! !>lllf6 Top-producers higher • llal!A. Onitrl a--r •l<t K"'9 • l'wlt1Db• •l;J -vra~ ,.... . .., ..... ........ a.I& ......... ............. ._ ...... ,.. .... ,,,, ..., ..... .. ........... ... ··-.. "" .......... ,.. .. • ,• 10 Wedn.day, Mardi 15, 2000 TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ..... • 1 1 1e' 11 G ·11 ~~-=.:r.:'.~--.,.,~ =.,.~:.;r *==-="' (2ml72) .... -..-.n. .... ltt.0001t..-.Ot ... ,,,. ....... 2 TWO SHOTS A.ND~ arr OF CARE ....-__ , ... --.. ~••w•1 ... ......!::-~-~!.....,.... en~ u.•11111.-..-. c:.Md..-......-vw 1011ov1N •n. e~'ii -.._ • .,_.., lodil.ULTAT.-iCm!I. ......... ml, WEST • 1017 NORTH •AJ43 0 1093 o Al •K632 0315 0 J 105 3 .,, SOUTH • K9Sl /O AKJ4 0 '2 '"'5 EAST •06 o fU 0 K.964 •Q 1084 .. ... dlfonll ....... (SIDt5) 17• ~....... ..-... cardlon. $9,900. Mlil woukl make dne no trump die Bott c .. llcd ea.cur. ~ • I~ 112,m 11.e l5e 8803. ~ ~ "'*" or diamonds. •. ....,.7 _ (?!•)l!Nl• I , .... :=? M ~w end decllm could coun1 aven f1ISI CAllUAC lfMi r...-.. DlllM Olji(p A ...... 'W A &ricks, one in di.monda end IWO °' , ... 1'M:OAIT lllOdll.io: ~ lfwlrt. Low 5500 mlllt ~. -~ each of tbo ocher Sllill. 1Wo •• .,. eADI LAC ...... .. :-: .... ~ =I b , lllOClfllOCll, co ' "'°"' ::!;! ~ ~ C::;t~ ~ ~ :t:'od": e~IOO/obo .1 (723838)MAllM '24.988 LJ~ J?. finesse, but declwer cannot alf(J(d to llllllf, SIDie bllck ._._ 7!.._ ............... Ci6 'If (?1•)14M!OO rT e~t loce 1 trick in Ibo malon early since ltclOOIC»= ---the defenderi can~caih 11 leas1 four · COAIT 81.E, ~· eel, ,..,.._..COl......,,.W• ~ tricks in diamonds. , '"'°°" =.. ':_7 VI • 1111• ,.... •· WN!f, o11g .,.., Ollnces in ,Ibo majors can be com-Clbllit Iii DiWll W c5Ulie5> lt81115 Oooc1 cond. pa, rlllo. AIC. d(,( blned, however, wilhoul running 11* S1111rV ._ fnllfl, dlrolM COAST cAlllLLAC I 1800 obo 7t4-54S-0088. risk. Finl cash lhe lee end kin, in, wtlelll. C8llkd ...... .t ... JliCOAlf .. . M one bC lbC.: majors, In lhe hope of llllllf. A8S •· • ' JlfiJIJI llilt 'f1 ro,~uvA&.OH XL.I W ~ droppii\&~dle queen then. if the lady (~~ 127• llDM.., · llDAN • , 1£/ A does nOI !(!POI'. CW the finesse in CAD&.&.AC --11.ol 121,• IMIZf ' ' ~ The blddin1: __ the-Other. Suice you hive a combined 1.-.1t-C0MT MUIR MCIUAll IAUa JAGUAR SOUl1I Wl:S1' NORTH EAST · holdina of eiahr splldes end only ClblllC llWll 'iO 11•--... 1144IMICIO A ~ ~ 3NI' .._ seven helns. ii is obviously better to ~ blue, INlhlr, _. JM1UD IJI [ 'f1 TOYOTA TERCa 'IO try to fell lhe queen in Iha! suit and, if ~ .,_,. woni leltl llDM e Coupe au101111llc IOK GOOD you hive no luck, reSO(t 10 heans. (81 t57S) ' •18.988 ..... 11411 mlll, ....... coniitlont Openina lead: Queen of o Whal 1r1p mu.st vou.1void? To. lirs1 NABERI •••-........ (571t~") .., ,,_ .. .. . .. h the \( , (7U)MMtDO ~ ... -1---........ ....-AD' I Herc is 111otbor Iheme you miah1 c151~ • ina. of spades. Why? ,,____ ,__;n• recogniu. It is falrlv common, but ShoUld I.hit fe1ch • siofleleft~n CADILLAC lewlla Ila W JAdUiii 1J1 L 'f1 • DO • • • • , ~ West. East's len will be a S{Of>' ~ 280 H.P. ,.,,.._ llDAN ti> :~extracareisoccasionallyneed-~11~~·J!:~~~.k~'t°o:e ~~~~:·:.~ -:....~..,. HERE'S A GR&·· fllorth·Soulh were usina a l.S.17 'East's 10 will pennit you to collecl / .._..... 11441MIOO ft I :"J:~. ~': ==i~i"~!~. ~~ ~~spades lric:ks Vil 1 linesae for tbo . ~Cl~ 't1 maliiiii 'f1 w•v TO GET industry standard. Allhouah probing Low 21k mllll, dtetrf, ... .,.. •llDAN ti> l1-41M ft I ... .. . .... " . ' .. .. for a spade lit wilh the S11yman C®· mt COnd bll ol wer -· • {~~:n:~ss;~fr:c:iheN~ 1817486)~:·· ~ CLIENTS COllNC _TO ' t-. ~-m~e! "1~::"~.-a YOUR DOOR.f mctcer, ctvome wtlMI, 11441Me00 ...,_,ABS MOHEYISl-HOLONJI Acura Utend "L" 'IO (4FOU48n $27,9n note?-Top $ paid now 1or White, 4dr. Vs, auto, A/C, Low Mies ~ ~..:..~~c -~::: Piii Trust OHds, Mortgage ~r_ IUll J>Wf, ps, fpb, pw, (SVSOOG\ -129,995 c™nnc STI '• m.-....... Notes aus;iesa Nolft rn-CIUIS8 conl!ol. am-m cass. CREVIER BMW ....,....._ hel1la.ice Problles IOM. 137k ml, SIWf, 1-owner, mini 1tW3Wt71 8.225 CCll1llled miles, ~..=AR ance settlements atid othet cond $8, tOO Ml-723-1163 aiiW 32i1S 't7 llhr. 8oM c..'CO. chrome parlodlc peyouta. Calf ACUAA RL U '91 Automatic, low Mhe, ~I ~~ '*i:Je.995 JA:,. X.:, W Werwty at JG WericwMh SEDAN t0 (T33280) $25,995 COAST CADLLAC 111.• • 1MMS 1 -8 0 0. 4 5 4 -9 3 6 8 . $35,995 N-4891 CREVIER BMW 1.-.n.coAST BAI.la JAGUM (CAL'SCAN) BAUER JAGUAR 11..awm CHEVY MIWA "' 't2 11• .. MIOO 7t4-95MIOO BMW ftil 'it -""""" BMW 13 ·e1 Low miles. co & morel 25111 ~· JAOUAR XJi 't7 5-speed, Low mlles, lOllOed (3VTS851) $33,995 =·~":rt_ ,.· ahlrp. Sii.• ~ t0t7-4111 (B8274n $21,995 CREVIER BMW 14gso, 9'9-723-1504 IAUER JAGUAR Ate '1011 drowning In CREVIER BMW 7tW3W17t .,.._.,,,. 11.........0 oV'lfdUt bllle? SI._.. 7tt-nWt71 BMW 740l 'if ..._~' Agency Cln help you,.. BMW Z3 '91 Sllvet w/Gttty, co. Morel • 20t( ,;::,v::1 ~ Due co technical difficulty, the answers to Saturd.ay's crossword will be run at a future date. Sorry for the inconvenience. beclc .on top With 1ny 5-Sad,sMrw/blac:k,lowmi (OH35917) $32,995 MMS0-'1IO JAGUAR JUI '17 -t1n1ncl1I dlfllc11lllH, (4ANB762) $24,995 CREVIElt BMW llOAN ti> bualnUHI, homH, CREVIER BMW 7t4~Wt7t .... t7....a boltt, hlw WIQtlon Ind 714-8354171 BUICK ctNTUllY'W" CHEVY TAHOE LT ... IAUER JAGUAR ~:~1:~~54 L:!':.!.1~ott:.J1 ~~~::'·~W: ~·~C:-.:S~· •JMP~1'0 '11. ME.~BL lllt.D~ Unlimited Income pocentlal. No exp. necessary. Free lnlo & CO-ROM. lnvMt. $4,9951$9.995. Flo. avail. 1$1end AIJlomatlld Medieel Services . Inc 800<122·1139 eX12101 www &leetronicbilng.nel (CAL'SCAN) NEW AUTOMATED HOME business. Ouickly eam a fulHlme lneome, no selling, ldlrrited Income, Vlsll ltlp:/ twww.relirequlcldy.net/ca 10 $88 Wld hear I comPete pmentalion.(CAL -SCAN) TAXES TAX ac Aca>UNTING PRoF£SSlONALS Elearoaic · wid; cu pnpena.. R<iwida "' I '° J diyl widi RA!. c..11 NOW! '49-&SI-6 flOllCY In an t11o1110 ofter the *' seM:e possible 10 our ANl6- ers and ICMltllslrl. we will require Contractors who ldverlise In the Setvlce Oirectoly to hell.Ide lhlllr Con1r1c1ors llcenu runber In theil ~ mert. VOA.II cc>q>lfllion Is S£~~6Y hidden chllgesl SlllQle start II $43, Mlnjed 2W2's $13, E flllngfree .. ~711 ~ :-' ,-T •ti .. -I , 1 • f ' . . . -II~ -. • : ; !I IP ~ >;. r ._, ~· •.. ' t,::. .. .... -. ' .. ~-·"" ·.v--·- HOMERair ~it;f Pokelain • Fiberglass Sinls •~ Coontoo 949-645-7723 CoosoidalAI debts! Same (Y01534) $26,995 (426312) St7.988 (4APV890) 126,978 4-WO.lm'lmcllk.pwunrf. day approval. Cut peymenls CREVIER BMW NABERS COAST CADIUAC llhr k'C. $4K below 1*11 be><* up 10 50%11 No appllcallon 714-835-3171 (7t4)54o-tt00 1.-.7'-COAIT $438!WObO. 848-780-291 4 'AVOID BANKRUPTCY. 1111111 1 ·800·863·9006 BUiCK REGAL LS ii DATIUN 'iR1 AoediiiW JED &WI) CREAOkd 'SIOC>colleclloncals. not ?T $.,.... I exl.949 .. www.help·pey· Ltlllhef,clSllcd,llloys,3.8 Fllrtedy conv. ISS,000. LAREDO'tS~lnl. 'Cul finence dlllges. ·~ Tru~I· ~ffdr. M':oa:. bills.com (CAL'SCAN) BMW Stll.. v(561 •• AJJ5S11' pl1ot rerMIS.16,899 7t~Hll Flitf loedld. Vjl, AIJS, ·new 10 wx.. rr 38k Mies co Nioel -liW · iiil ii sun i001 hi. ollll ownet, al l9COl'dl. payments up 10 • OetJc Noles, 8uslness Noles, n-1• IJI (C51304)0 • $21 995 COAST CADLLAC 5·•--", ,,..,, ... ,210: 8eUlll. Mull 111110,690 consolidation. Fast Ap-herllance Problles, lnlUr· ..,. · 1.-.n.coAST 71a;; UA .. oeo ... 121-4f72 provall No credit cneck. Bad ance M111ements and other ·-¥ CREVIER BMW .., ... ..,.,...,..,,.....,.,._......,,.,.... credit no problem. periodic p1youls. Call · 714-ISS-3171 CADILLAC CATEM 'ti DRAiH SVC VAN AliY JEEtWMNCILIR 'IO 1soo1210-9994, · Wtl'll; 11 JG WentWOrth owN,lorZOft~ 8llws1il 'i1 Low31oorrtes1Llllhef,• t<Mloed'92Aerostarln ldlltcond,~~hlnl (CAL'SCAW) I • 8 0 O • 4 5 4 • 9 3 6 8 . BOAT FREE DOCK low Miles, !.Ulo, Take rs· balance al ~ 1~ cond. $SOOO'obo. ~ wtl .. 1 I ot>o. HOMEOWlfM WITii (CAL'SCAN) IHCLIJOED.ClllordNJs :v= $2299S l90825)NAIERS $20, rng,~1J.nd I.LL! l:°liao'fi CREDIT worries may now Penny 7tt-557-1100 112 CREVIER BMW ' (714)5tM100 FORD E'XP£bifiOH 'ii 1t11 -.....,_, ....,.., ~ca~~ 'o; = SE·LL ~ 71WSWt71 CAOll.LAC Conooun 'ii Eddie Bauer, hhr, cd I CO. 1 °""!'.t..!'~ lel1dll lhll 111 8iiW 311fh7 Chrome wheels. casslcd 1t1CMr 3nf INI. Chrome MMtMtl7, .. ~ over the ptioneeann ~· • Clanlllecl Auto. low mies, loadll<lt stacker. lealhlr, ABS -..: ABS.,.., M: M 416 IL WWWiih 0 b II g. ti 0 n . c a II I your home (U39659) $18,995 1 (n5167) $35,978 (4CX1om 128 .. 1185 '7S ~ 120lt ml. HI00-70o-1242 ext 308 th I CREVIER BMW OOASTCADIUAC COASlCADILA"' .. new, ~ lllm. (CAL'SCAN) • · L ~gttc asslfled 11wu.am 1.-.1t-COA1T 1.aoo.1MX>A1T 18.850. lltM42·2305. 'T • ( i _: ~ ' . -~. ' ..... rr; 1 ..... ~· ~,. ·,·· HOmMITOM'TION fll1•1•1 ... • ,_ IA ~ Cir penlry/Eleolrlc/Tll• OIYMI. 8MID lob ok. Loe "' .. °"" n._.. (119-lmftT ·==· ... -~ ........ .. .....,.,.,, 949·64 2·1610 Hlth . colHterol, over ..... .... lo lnc:rtMe enerw1 ~ nu1r111on11 lolllUI II EA UM: ...... ........... GAADENNQ ~ & Ouall'/ Wcn • ReMOillble RIMI. Cal Ed Bentll • ...... 1111. PUBLIC NOTICE The Clllf. Public- U t 11 lt I u Com · mission REQUIRES that .. UMd houle- hold goods mcJIW911 print their P •. u.c. cal T number. llmoe and chlllllltl pflnt their T.C.P. nurnbef In .. ~ If ~ hive • quit· lion abcM lhe llall- Ry of • "'°*· "'° ~~s OOlllSIOH 714-55M151 Pf.l<)ff'...~l<HJ/U ,,,\INT rr~<. ·-· -- r------,_,-.,, '" ' ' L_ ____ \, . .,,"'' rne Dally Pilot wm pu1>11sn a Tax • Flnanc1a1 Directory to assist our readers In finding a tax professional. Reaching over ~o .ooo nomes In a n1gn -end market. you are sure to find many wno need your ne1p. A smart move on ~our part would be to take advantage of our lncredlblY low rates and place your ad with us. Only $35 per week If vou sign up for the entire 17 weeks, or a minimum 4· week run at $40 per week. TAX TIME IS COMING Size of Ad 2x2 ' I I . . . . ,..-.. r r :""T",._,.-:- ,...... ·-' .. ' . _.' ,,,, I . i . . WHAT . #APPllS II YOU 001'1 AIRIRSl'I 110111118 Call the Cla11lfled1 · ' . 4 • .. 1"/w CiVIWAI~ · August 1999 F1 AR NIENTE Barrel Ta ted .l"\. Score 95 .. 100 WO\\'! 1997 .$99·99 Cab . . ···························~············ . ALLO SONOMA "Frei Ranch" 1996 Cab •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• GALLO SONOMA "Laguna Ranch" 1997 Chardonny ND ALL-JACKSON CHARDONNAY $899 Reg.$1099 "Katherine's" CHARDONNAY $1Q~99 _I Reg. $1399 SPEYBURN IO YEAR OLD SINGLE MALT SCOTCH M,~JACKSON MERLOT •te~.$14~ $_ 14 99 Reg. $1999 .CITADELLE GIN 7SOml Reg.$22" • • ' ( ~ p'liu~ ~It~ -$~~~w~Jr ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 1'~;-;:Cape _Colours~,,,,;;;;,,44 ~P he11in Blanc 'l11°ul.l I l· !\\ ll~' 1hl 111u I krl' -\\h If I kn11\\; l )n 11' \\'" 111 1 m.nl r,I, 1 \\!Ill t lub. d\l' l' •re l 11!11111 .. \\t1• tn\11hl·,l 111 1 t111.k \H1.· ... k. llw ,ur- 1'111.1· l k.mul 111' tl1l I , , 111'1lt:.!111.1.·J 1_h1.· 1'r11 .. c '" u ... I 1111 ll1•1 111111. ht, 1 l lt1·11111 Hl.11h-. ha I 1..h1 likL· rhi ... ,·,1lt1L'. ( 'hl nm HI 1 '' !.!l'l' l h• t1''i l'1 l 1n l .tllf,1m1,1 Ir "',dl11\\cd IP ~ruw .1lm1hl \\II I. \\ilh l111k ll'~ 11,l 1 ,, 11-IJILllll...'. \11.·IJ .... fl.'•llllln!.! In ,1 ldt n t k"L't qu dll\ !.!I IJ'•'' In dw :--11·ll1 nl'1 -1.h 111. t Pl:--, u1h .\tr11... 1, thL· !.!rtmth '' 'l'\'L'n~h lim111..·d "'"'" tl1.,1111u ... 1 r 1hl tnll."11 .. 1t\, 1 tl l\••r-) u'll likl· the JlllLI:, hll \I 11 'II 11 I\ l rill \ ,lllll'. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• {111$1/'0ut P·liti"'J Michael Paul 1998 Charlionny \\, t: t.hl1.1.I t h1' l 'h,111.h inn I\ l.1 .. l \\L'1. k. h 1u11LI ll 111 h~ Lfl'I'· llutl·lilk,I 11h.t \\1.·ll r11rn11.k1.I. It , .. 11\.!htt:r m .. r, k· rh m llh''l l ".1 !11, in11t'h1r,\,,nn 1\-.. hut 'l I\' IL lfl ... hm1• Rn~ul.1r J'l llL 1--::-1 'N. \\ L' h iudn .1 "J\1,1( L 1.1,I" 11 :..'.l'l 1h1.· l'l·I I r11.1. .m.J 1rl· 1Hl• i.1 .. dt 11 ·,,,r h.1lt ·1'n1.l: $ 99 Crystal Geyser Drinking Water 1.5 liters 2~ R $ 00 +CRV ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• HEALTHY ftEFRESHAAENT ¢ 20 oz. R g. 99¢ +CRY 17111 ... 1111 I I .. . -- .. ·---- ---+t~ 1ITH STREET tjfNGS I PACIFIC COAST tllGHWi\V Dominus '96 Ferrari-Carano 11Tresor Reserve" '94 Legacy '96 Opus One '95 Penfolds "Grange" '93 Rose nblum Trio '94 St. Supery "Meritage Red" '95 . . Z ..... $119.99 $84.99 $64.99 $99.99 $149.9~ $159.99 $33.99 $29.99 CABERNET SAUVIGNON Arrowood .. Sonoma" 196 Beringer "Knights Valley" ··95 Beringer "Private Reserve" '94 Caymus "Napa" '96 Chalk Hill "Estate" '96 C los Du Val "Reserve" •95 De Loach "OFS" '95 Gallo-Sonoma "Estate" '94 Gallo-Sonoma "Frei Ranch" '95 Gianni Paoletti '96 Grgich Hills Groth Groth "Reserve" '95 Guenoc "Becbtoffer IV Reserve" '95 Heitz Cellars "Trailside" '94 Heitz Cellars Wfrailside" '92 JOJel'h Phelps "Napa" '97 Penfolds "Bin 707" '96 Robert Mondavi "Oakville" 196 Staglin Family 196 Stag's Leap "Napa" 196 ·--·· -·~ c:rumbull "Oakville" •97 ZD "Reserve" '95 MERLOT Arrowood "Sonoma" '95 Casa Lapostolle "Cuvee Alexandre" Clos Du Val "Napa" '96 Free mark Abbey "Napa" '96 Gallo-Sonoma "Barrelli Creek" '94 Kenwood "Jack London" '97 McCray Ridge "Two Moon Mtn" '96 Pine Ridge "Crimson Creek" '95 Ravenswood "Rancho Salina" '96 Rombauer "Napa" '96 Stags Leap "Napa" 196 Swanson "Napa" '97 T ruchard "Cameros" '96 ZD "Napa" '96 CHARDONNAI $32.99 $19.99 $89.99 $69.99 $32.99 $49.99 $24.99 $49.99 $18.99 $37.99 $36.99 $32.99 $129.99 $29.99 $39.99 $79.99 $29.99 $59.99 $39.99 $44.99 $27.99 $18.49 $49.99 $29.99 $17.99 $24.99 $21.99 $14.99 $22.99 $29.99 $19.99 $19.99 $21.99 $26.99 $21.99 $21.99 $23.99 Arrowood "M. Benhoud Reeerve" '97 $32.99 Beringer "Private Reserve" '97 $32.99 BV "Cameras Reserve" '97 $20.99 Chalk Hilf '97 $28.99 LIMtTEo Chateau St. Jean "Robert Young" •95 $18.99 De Loach 110FS" '97 $24.99 Far Niente "Napa" '97 $34.99 Guenoc "Magoon Reserve Unfiltered" 196 $27.99 Landmark "l}amaris Reserve" '98 $26.99 Longoria "Santa Ynez" '97 $19. 99 Mer Soleil '97 $34.99 Pine Ridge "Dijon Clones" 198 $20.99 Ridge "Santa Cruz Mountains" '96 $22.99 Robert Mondavi "Cameros" '95 Rosenblum "Lone Oak Reserve" '97 Steele "Bien Nacido" '97 $19.99 $24.99 $24.99 + • TltJU--- HAllP Cf R G11in Stout 6 .. pack ... Reg.$699 12oz.-6-pack $599 Reg.$899 . .