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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2001-05-05 - Orange Coast Pilot\ \ \ .. .. . . SERVING THE NEWPORT -NE.SA COMMUNmES SINCE 1907 ON THE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM SA1URDAY, MAY 5, 200 l ' €illtural -preservation or land grab? SJ.C.hn DAILY PILOT COSTA MESA -City offi- cials may have found a way to end their dispute with the own- ers of the California Scenario garde.n. But it could tum out to be as heated as the disagreement they are trying to solve. On Monday, the City Council will consider changing city laws to place the sculpture garden, . desigried by Isamu Noguchi in 1982, on the Local Register of Historic Places. Proposal requested by Costa Mesa councilwoman would allow city to put the Noguchi garden on historic places list, ending a dispute over how long its owner must maintain it for public use. city must get the property own-eliminate the age provision. The er's consent before putting a Planning Commission also building or structure -which in would be taken out of the almost all cases must be more process. than 50 years old -on the his-~ Notably, the change would toric list. oh!y be for the proposed 54-acre the San Diego Freeway. It was requested by Councilwoman Linda Dixon, who has long advocated preserving public art in the city. "I~ it's valuable to our city and to the future of public art in our city,• Dixon said Friday. Not all of her colleagues see it that way. "It's a taking of property owners' consent,• Councilman Gary Monahan said. "What bothers me is 1t isn't how Costa Mesa does busi- ness,• Monahan added, refer- ring to a lack of notification Moving streams Dow through the CaWomJa Scenario garden. running along sharply angled sculptures, d esert scenes and smoothly textured boulders. GREG FRY As the law regarding historic preservation stands now, the The altered code would add South Coast Plaza Town Center cultural .slgnilicance as a criteria project, which is bordered by for preservation, remove the Bristol Street, Sunflower need for the owner's OK and Avenue, Avenue of the Arts and SEE LAND PAGE A11 '----'---.....;:___...;,.:~---~-.... IOAllY PILOT - "I still feel like I 'm the lucki est man alive. We could have been torpedoed that day." Louis Nockhold, Pearl Harbor survivor • PHOTOS BY SEAN HlU.ER I OAllV PllJ)T Veteran Louil Nockhold ls the center of attention u daughter Cindy Kleczko, left, and Nancy Sale, both of HuatlDIJton Beath, join him for a pkture during the Pear Harbor convention at the Hilton hotel in Costa Mesa. .... ·vor's story Those who made it through Japanese attack at Pearl Harbor meet in Costa Mesa for the 40th annual convention. DMpa llhllrath DAILY PtLOT J a.ke Gray was a year old when his father, Jack Simons, took off to Pearl Harbor. He hasn't seen him since because his parents separat- ed. but the 53-year-old pri- vate investigator from Ran- cho Cucamonga knows his father is alive and longs to meet him. On -Friday, he made a trip to the Costa Mesa Hilton with the hope of reunlting with his long-lost father, and wishing that Simons might have registered at the 40th annual Pearl 'Harbor Sur- vivors State Convention. Gray was initially disap- pointed that his father had not made it to the conven- . tion. But his face lighted up SEE STORY PAGE A 11 Framed by 1111 brletrale, Pearl Harbor '"'8ru Cecll Ma1mln vblta wttb fellOw larvlVon at the convention. Ready to embark on a California adventure *Newport Beach resident :rom Holtom is about .. to take a major role in the redevelopment of schools in the Newpc;>rt-Mesa district. Dwtte Golllet DMYhOT Proposal would allowJWAto add. passengers •County officials will discuss on Tuesday whether to increase ·part 'of the airport's flight restrictions. Paul Clinton OAJLY PILOT NEWPORT-MESA Under a prebminary agree- ment released Friday, pas- senger trafttc at John Wayne Airport could increase more than 24 % after 2005. The possible jump in annual passengers, from 7 .9 million annually today to about 9.8 million, ts one aspect of Newport Beach's proposal to raise one of two flight caps at the airport. In exchange for agreeing to increasing the airport's passenger cap, city offioals want long-term extensions of the airport's other flight restrictions. The Orange County Board of Supervisors will consider the deal for the first time at its meeting Tuesday. Supervi- sors won't grant final approval, only begm dn extensive environmental review of the deal. "It's time to open the envi- ronmental review process,· Supervisor Chuck Srruth sa.1d Fnday. ·we need to start worlong on 1t at Uus point in tim. • e. In 1ts proposal, the city also proposes addmg four SEE JWA PAGE A12 More dangerous glass pieces found • This time, shards were placed in sand and playground equipment at a Newport Beach park. Dffpa Bharath DAILY PILOT NEWPORT BEACH Glass fragments in the sand and on playground equip- ment were found at a city park Wednesday, marking the ninth time that someone has placed either glass sherds or razor blades in places where young children could be seriously harmed. Families who had brought their children to the Buffalo Hills Park early and late after- noon discovered the pieces at the site located at the comer Clll..... . ......... 1h9y glWe I.II -""'bind 04Jt woundl. .. ~ ---'*"~·--­I.II• coc*le twrY cwa ..._ • whlle.~0/41 ........ ....... Deir ... t'lllllf• llDftal .. llr .... • In ............. --•"',.. ___ .. -. .......... 4t1'.Mlil•J -.......... , .... . .. ...,, .. ~ ..... -................ c-. of Port Margate Place and Port Charles Place, Newport Beach Police Lt. Doug Aelch- er said. This is the second tune glass fragments have been found in a city park The fDst incident was reported at Cliff Driv~ Park on Apnl 27, when a police volunteer found a tri- angular piece of glass wedged between the slats of a park bench. Costa Mesa and Newport Beach police are also investi-· gating the presence of razor blades on playground equi~ ment in both cities' park.i. On Wednesday afternoon, Elizabeth Marti.no was hav- ing a birthday party for her 6· year-old son. Joey. •we were almost done around •. when the kids ran SEE GLASS PAGE A 12 • a.uM-------• ua. • l•HU AM ... "' Niii• II .. •11 .. .. -. • A2 Saturday, f.i.c.t 5, 2001 Working to change our lives "The trouble with not having a goal Ls that you can spend your life running up and down the field and never scoring.• -Biii Copeland W e were a little surprised to see a new face in the room. The seven of us have met almost weekly for three months, and I wondj!red if we would act dif- ferently with a visitor. Then Becky, the leader of our group, introduced us to her friend. "This is Trisha, my TV producer, and she wants to watch our group in action. By the way, she'll be back next week with a film crew.· We all sat there with wide eyes and open mouths. ' .. ~ tt·· .· •' .. 'ii "Dott't worry, you'll be great,• Becky said . •Just be yourselves.• Ondy TrQne Christeson · , We're pretty good at being ourselves in our "Change Your Life" group. It began and is led MORAL OF THE STORY .. • t 4 I . . . . . . . .. OUR IADY QUEEN OF ANGELS .. Om Lady Queen ot Angell extendl tb1I invltatlon to the community: •anter, rejoice and be lad I" The church would like '1J to feel God'e love through the parish. Masses are held at ~ p.m. Saturday, and Sunday at 7 (no muslC), 8:30 (contemporary choir), 10 (adult choir) 0a:m 11:30 a.m. (cantor), and 5 p.m. (contemporary ensemble).:.~Jll.lamti P: M(~) ~~~past · The parish ts at 2046 Mar Vista Drive, Newport Beach. uuorma on. · ) Doily Pilot by my friend Becky Tuabassi, whose business and passion is to help people balance the physical, emotional, spirifual and mental . , -GREG FRY I DAA.Y PLOT Pastor Michael Decker and the Palm Harvest Church hold services on the campus of Costa Mesa Jligh School. . ., areas of their lives. She does all this through books, radio and conferences, and this June she will have a 10- week series on Monday momipgs on the CBS Early Shuw. For one o( those show_s, the net-· work wanted to air an actual group in action. When Becky explained this, she assured us it would be fun, and that they would probably only show us for about two 9r three minutes. It was interesting watching the crew set up lights,' move furniture and wire us with micro- phones. And whenever one of us made a mis- take, we reminded ourselves that they would probably not show that part. You probably won't see me spill water on myself or any of us in our tongue-tied moments. We are a very diverse group, but we all love God, and we pray for and love each oth- er. We share very honestly our highs and lows, our tragedies and triumphs. We also share our goals and dreams and give weekly updates on our progress, or lack thereof. Knowing that we will be atcountable gives the extra needed nudge to follow through on goals we voice. We have no pretenses, we come just as we are, and we share just how we are. Although when we walked in that evening, it was obvious that we didn't want the world to see us as we normally are. We looked around at each other again and burst into laughter. "I must say, you all look especially nice tonight,• Becky said with a twinkle in h.er eyes. But there were no pretenses as we spoke. I was especially proud of one woman who admitted a struggle that she hadn't told us about. "I decided to go for it if it will help others,· she said. "But I had to call.my mom and tell her today before she h eard it on national lVI" Normally we are committed to confiden- tiality, but we made exceptions that night. In fact, I expressed my desire about writing this weekly column to some of the same won- derful women in the group years ago. They en couraged me, prayed for me and February marked its third year. It's remarkable bow God works through people, either cheering us on from the side- lines, or joining right in the game with us. And you can quote me on that • ONDY TRANI OtlUSTE50N Is a Newport Beach resident who speaks frequently to parenting groups. She may be reached via .mall at clndyOonthegrow.com or through the mall It P.O. Box 6140-No. 505, Newport Beach, CA 92658. VOL 95, NO. 120 ftEAl)EBS HO'QJNE (949) 642-6086 Recof'd your comments about tM D•lly Pilot or news tlPL AQDRESS Our lddr9tl Is 330 W. hy St. Costa Mea, CA 92627. COftltECIJONS . ADDRESS: 1055 El Camino Drive, Costa Mesa. Worship services are held at Costa Mesa High SchooL 2650 Fairview Road. A map is available at the Palm Harvest Web site. .TELEPHONE: (114) 751-5397 WEB SITE: http://www. · PalmHarvestorg DENOMINATION: North Amer- ican Baptist YEAR otURot ESTABLISHED: October SERVla TIMES: Sunday wor- ship is at 9 a.m. School-age chil- dren attend worship with their families unW after the blessing of the children. Following the blessing, they are dismissed to attend Children's Chwcll. Mem- bers also meet during the week in small groups -Impact Groups -of five to 10 people for Bible study. Impact Group lead~ are trained by Pastor Michael Decker, while they also maintain the flexibility to address the sped.fie needs of the members of their small group. SENIOR PASTOR: Michael Decker Cof¥IOht: No 1Mws ltOf1-. lb tTdonl. edltofi.I INttM « ... tt.ments herein CM\ be repro- ®old without written permission of~owner. HOW TO BEA0t us are.de.ft lltOMAIH.JC:J9••• ~ ftlNY.....,. Editor MC'NIN. City Editor ~._., tt 1$ the Plot's potlcy to pror!IP.t- ly comet 1111 etron of sublanc;e. Pleate Q ll (949) 574--42)3. The 11mes Or.ige Coun\y (IOO) 2SM141 M4•11111• a..lfled (949) 642-5671 ~ "49) 642-4321 • ........ ~OtyEdltor •• UICMMW. ,_..Editor -cuuow. Sports (dllDf DU~ ••11aa .. 1 •• NMIEdlllot IOlml...._ ,...°"9* m The Ntwpoft ~ Miia Delly Piiot (UWS.t ....... ~ lilt* cMlly In Nllwport ... Md CoGMIM. ............ ..... able only by .......... The 1"'* Orlflfl Courtly...,, m. t l41. In ... OWllll of~ leldl Ind Calla~ ..,..,... dclne•hDellr ......... able only..,""" flir .. ,. ..................... ,... • CClllll ~(A._.......,. .. .,,, .............. ~ &)flal11 "11Ta '-" .... = ....... ....., .......... ft.O. .. ._C....._CA..._ NlwS (t"9) 642-5tl0 ~ ~ 574-4223 • Newt.. Sports F• (949) MM 170 E-m.11! ~*tdtrles.c.'Dtn MllftOllc. ""'""'Offb (Mt) 642-4321 """*' ,_ (M) Ql-7126 NlllhMllrlll.-~ .... . ~ ,,, .. '-.-,..,.. ,,,_, Harvest · Church PASTORAL STAFF: Diane Cbave-z, ministry coach; Robin Decker, office manager SIZE Of CONGREGATION: 50 MAKEUP OF FAMIUIS: Pri- marily families with school-age children NURSERY AND OtlLD CARE: Provided for infants, toddlers and preschool children. Parents are welcome to bring children of all ages into the worship service with them. The congregation feels it is important th.at kids know they are valued and loved. TYPE OF WORSHIP: Contem- porary and upbeat A worship band leads the service that includes song, prayer, a pastoral blessing of the children, testimo- ny and a pastoral message. TYPE OF MESSAGE: It is Bible- based with a life application. The topic is often drawn from the children's Sunday school curricu- lum. At other times, Decker addresses the particular spiritual and practical needs of the con- gregation. Whatever the topic, it is the same for pastoral message, the children's Sunday school and •.. the weekday Impact Groups. "izing. The congregation continu - RECENT SERMONS: •Three ally looks for ways to share nps Por Navigating Your God's love with others in practi- Puture, ••five lngred.i.eots in cal ways. They partner with Every Great Friendship,• "How · local businesses, education and to Live in the Midst of Contro-service groups to iJn.proYe the versy, • •mght Values for 21st quality of life for all members of Century Living" have been the the community. Recently, mem- titles of late. The text of recent bers gathered at TeWinkle Parle sermons are available on the to serve bot chocolate and Palm Harvest Web site. ma.rshmallows to spedAtors at a w-coMING SERMONS: On Costa Mesa High School base- Sunday, Decker will present a ball game. Members have also message tilled, •What Should helped to paint and refurbish You Do When God Knocks You school facilities in the city. Deck- on Your Buttr er is a member of the Cost.a VISrTORS' WELCOME: After Mesa Cusmber of Commerce seIVice, members meet for • and a chaplain with the Costa •doughnut fellowship.• Diedrich Mesa Police Department. coffee is served with doughnuts DRESS: Casual in a low-key atmosphere ideal MISSION STATEMEN't. "Lov- for getting to know each other ing God. Loving Others.• better. VJ.Sitars are welcome· to VISION STA~ ·w e exist join in to whatever degree they to build bridges to people in our are ocmfortable. community through service.• OUTREAOt PROGRAMS: Fam-INTERES11NG NOTES: Women ily and Friends Day is held one of the congregation will host a Sunday each quarter. Members Garden Tea and Brunch at 10 of the congregation gather with a.m. June 2. friends at a local park for a bar- becue lunch. games and social--MkheleMatT June 3 at the church, 3233 Padfic View Driri, Corona de1 Mar. Free. (949) 6«- 0463. Shavuot at 8 p.m. May 25 at the temple. 2401 1rYine Ave., Newport Beadl. Pree. (9'9) &ta.6900. WUTllll AID Sllf ftMNllA'l\MIS Balboa 67154 CorON del Mar 67154 Costa~ 68153 ~port Buch 67154 Newport eo.t "'53 WfllDMCAST w.. wffl be wMt· to~wtth occ8ontl 7.foot twefls. Condhklf 11 Wtl be felr to good. LOCMIOm Thlw.lgt Nlhport llll*lft ... .., '°""" .... -,.,. 1-5' ,.,. M' M' T1DU TODAY First low 2:A1 e.m .................. 0.03' First high 1:41 p.m. '"""'"'"""'" 4.7' Second low 2:33 p.tn .................. 0.3)' Second hlgt\ 1:52 p.m. .................... S.9' 3:2S e.m .... -...... -GAS' l:JO p.m. -·-·-...... 4.5' 5ec1Dndlow ...... -.. -.... -0.7' ~· t:D ... _, .......... OPt 1.1· - POTUJO( SUMlt A ~ supper and dilit'UlliOG ot _. lion/outnMlch OD tbe teYeDth SuDdg # 8-ter Evenmg will be b09ted br & MkMel and All~ Epilcopal ~ Cbuldi are p.m. May 21 at the ~ 3233 Pedftc: View Drive, CorODa cW M& ~· CN9) 644.0.63. POllCE flUS COSTA MESA • Aultln 9'rMt: Vandalism wa reported In the 1100 blodc It 6:29 p.m. 'Thunc:t.y. • _. ...., Str'9et: Grand theft was repoJUd In thi 600 blOOt et 12;43 p.m. ~. • IM 11'h ltNft A comn1etcS.I bufv'-Y was ntpOl't· ed In the 100 blodc at 8:03 1.m. Thundey. Doily Pilot . . Saturday, Moy ~I 2001 A3 Now you know the rest of the stories that mcide headlines They are the orphans of .news reporting. They are the people whose stories come and go as fast as flash paper, who make the news for theiI initial excite .. ment, only to find that when it's time to tell their epilogue, no one cares. Jerome Wilhoit learned that in pur soci~ty. innocence ,. is irrelevant. What really . matters is media portrayal of your story and how much mileage a source can get out of you. Three years ago, Wilhoit, an Orange County teacher, was accused of being far too friendly with his students. Believing him to be com- pletely innocent, I used Wil- hoit's story to win a column contest in the newspaper you're now reading. Recently, after he quit teaching and had his life turned inside out and upside down, Wilhoit was not only found innocent, but so inno- cent that the judge ordered all evidence of his entire Steve Smith WHAT'S UP? encounter with all law enforcement agencies destroyed. An important order to be sure, but no one is able to give him back bis reputation, '6Ild in the eyes of many he will always be guilty. To be fair, it should be noted that at least one newspaper report- ed the end of his legal saga and of the tum:; his life., has taken, but it did not refer to the media's contribution to his downfall. In Wilhoit, Orange County also lost just the kind of teacher we should be encour- aging to stay, instead of poin~g him toward the door. Wendy Leece also discov- ered the media's filsinterest · in telling the end of the story. A few months· ago. Leece was called a censor, the mildest of all the terms, for wanting to protect kids from what she believed was litera- ture inappropriate for chil- dren. Her story made major media outlets. But when it was revealed that her current colleagues on the 1>9ard of trust~es made the exact same move 2 1/2 years earlier but without any cries of censorship, no one cared. To those who reported Leece's initial request, it was just typical of her, and the subsequent evi- dence proving that her action was not unusual was not reported. Doing so would make some people look silly and perhaps even force them to say, "I was wrong• or ~1 am sorry,• and that just isn't done. We learn from this that it's OK to smudge another's reputation but any evidence of our own errors must be avoided. John Moorlach, Orange County's treasurer and a Costa Mesa resident, has also discovered that a fickle media can leave just about everyone with the wrong impression. In January, it was reported that Moorlach's department had made two investments of $20 million each in Edison International, the parent compa.ny--01, p.mong other businesses, Southern G.alifor- nia Edison, the troubled power supplier. Never mind the fact that at the time, the company had received top ratings from three invest- ment-rating agencies. Never mind the fact that the invest- ments are but two of the 9,600 Moorlach has made since he's been in office. Never mind the fact that the investments fotal only about 3% of the total value of the investment pool from which they were working. Some folks just saw blood and, at the time, everyone was in on the fun. Back then, Moorlach made some predictions about the investments and about Southern California Edison --and -surprise! -they've all come true. "If we would have sold both or (the bonds), we would have realized signifi- cant losses, but by holding them to maturity we haven't lost a dime,· Moorlach told me. "I said right from the beginning that Edison_Inter- national was like Orange County. U you sold Orange County bonds right after we filed bankruptcy, you would have lost mon~y. But if you held on; you would have made money. I felt comfort- able at the time with plan A, which was to hold on to maturity." Moorlach 's "buy and hold• is a successful strate- gy advised every day by Taste Adventure I Ready in 5 Minutes I Mail Orc)es9 Refried Beans Made wilh Organic Beans Instant Refried those in the financial know and it is working. The first ·note matured Jan. 31. The. second is due July 8, and Moorlach expects that it, too, will have been a worth- while investment. The success of the first bond was reported on a lim- ited basis but at least one newspaper bu{ied it, and all the repo~ I've read lacked the emotional charge of the initial reporting. Wilhoit is innocent. ~e didn't do anything her colleagues had not done. Moorlach was right about bis investments. I wish I could write that those are the ends of the sto- ries but they are not. In the minds of many, these good people will always be guilty. and you may not read it in a lot of other places but it's news to me. • STEVE SMrnt is a Costa Mesa resident and freelance writer. Readers may leave a message for him on the Daily Pilot hotline at (949) 642-6086. Crystal ·= Spring Water 1.(800) --66fl'I . ()I0)8) • Original . =~,,. s1~ • Pinto •Black IB=ollll!dRm~f ~~ -Frontera REED'S .,Ce~edl rea_ •Com •Wheat •Rb • • Kamut REG. ~.45 PACIFIC FOODS o.._.uc . Eniiched RiceMllk =::~,, ·1~' ~AK~OW FORMULA~ YOU SAVi SB 001 CIA Conjugated Linoleic Add 750MGCIA 'lbna/ir:z The Essential Supplement Cl.A has been shown In StudJes to Assist In*: • F;nhancement of Lean Bocb' Mw • Glucole MltaboHsm • Bocb' Fat Reduclioo • Mc•le Reteldlon A 'm.99 VALUE A/IN(Jlum/ Tortilla C"':na • Blue Oiips • ailli~ Prllfll SiZlt · <lp ' Reg.8449 Regs .. I '3.65 ~ .,16oz. '2.&5 ..& BURT'S BEES Whlllt of 1AJVe All Ntlblnll l.lptlllt:j Mitt/ ... ,.. oltllllift ~dnl Salsa Authentic lo IUcatan Medco • Roasted Tumato • Habanero • JaJapeilo ·~ft • Tumatillo 17 REG. '2.79 8.7S az. BURT'S BEES .AlnM .. .. BAND c ... All Nabiral Jamaican . Style Ginger B.,w ~ • Extra~· Premium Spk:ecS AA>le (leey Ginga' REG. ~.15 12 -~on • EstientJal Omega ~$ REG. '2.49-2.89 (;n?al .'Jlother:~ /)ag Gift!' Earl Mlndell's ''Vitamin Bible" Aei.'7.50 en ~ Bath" . K1l49 RED .... 6.1& -~·· BURTS BEES · smurn:amrs Fa&:WD! ...... ~:.-.. -=-· Few twr, Sldn. Hioillurilt lidnf ~ Naik! ·- • . . . . ... . . .. Daily Pilot A4 Saturday, Mar s, 2001 • Planners express concern about sea base expansion lo0kin9 417• expansion. While the number • Newport Beach project. of tightening up to reduoe the Orange County supervisors to will ~le be Larry Tucker of visitors bas almost tiipled to . . The main concern is the amount of view thatts taken grant the Scouts a rent-free, Conurussioner 301000 during the last five offidals want to ensure reduction of bay views from away to supp<>~ the project, 30-year lease extension. Pro-asked-uildinif metal roof years, the Scouts hope to a new Boy Scouts West Coast Highway. Right Gifford said. testers objected to the lea.sing Th~ 0 c:rn tor com-accoJDJXlodate 50,000 to sailing center doesn't now, there's an open space of Uke her colleagues, Gif-of public property to the also .t sc:' 0 Kiser, who 60,000 by 2010. . about 207 feet where people ford said she saw the sea base Scouts because the organiza· missi;oner eve sun reflec· Janes said the organiza-block too many views. driving on the street can look as a •great program and I tion bars gays from member-said tt could cause esidents 00 tion bad raised about $3.5 at the water. applaud the fact that there are ship. lion and bother ~omes over· million of the expected $4.5- Mathis Winkler DAILY PILOT U the project is built as pro-no restrictions on who can Commissioners, who peri· the bluffs whose million cost tor the project so posed, that view would participate.• · · odically stepped down from look the base. ail.in far. shrink by about 31 %, to 142 ·That comment came after the dais to look at a scale Apart fro: h the ~d s?t He added that the Scouts MARINER'S MILE -The feet, ~use a new, 8,215-David JMes, the cha1nnan of model and drawings of the building. ~ , c ;::a build· . bad"hoped to break ground in Boy 5c()uts have some more square-foot sailing building the sea base's governing com-expansiont. because they had near the eX1S~9 also ho September to open the new work to do before planning will sit parallel to the boa.rd· m.ittee, told commissioners not received detailed informa-ing, Scout offio~OO-~ base tor summer activities in commissioners will approve a walk. •the base is open to every-tion before the meeting, told to construct a .' Alto· 2002. proposed expansion of their In response, Commissioner body, regardless of race, project supporters that they'd foot rowing buil~g. would But because the orgaruUt· sea base. Anne Gifford asked Scout creed, color ... sexual orien-also like to get a ~~idea of gether, the e~o~ base tion still must get approvdl On Thursday, commission-officials to explore other alter-tatton or sex." the sailing buildidg's facade more than dou e e t to from the california CoastaJ ers unanimously voted to natives that would keep the 1n September, members of that will face West Coast from 9,943 square fee Commission, dty officials said postpone a decision until their views intact as much as possi-gay rights groups and the Highway. 22,060 ~are feet._ pl beginning construction in June 7 meeting, saying they ble. American Civil Liberties •1t ~e view blockage (to .An increase 1.1\ peo th: Se tember seems unlikely still had concerns about the ·1 would need to see a lot Union protested a decision by the bay) is acceptable, what USl09 the base prompted P TEMPLE ISAIAH OF NEWPORT BEACH (Co11strVat1ve) O!dn!l{'C•'\lnt)' fr~dh~t Syn"l&llll~ "YOU AAE A STRANGER HEJIE ONLY ONCE" Shabblt Wonlllp Htbttw School Ad11h Eduatlon Cou11!1eD111 Social Events $ RABBI MARC S. RUBENSTEIN l 40 I Irvine Ave Newpc>11 Beach (949) 548-Q900 Really! HARBOR CHRISTIAN CHURCH (Dlsclples of Christ) 2401 lrvfne Ave. Newport Bt1ch, CA (849) 645-5781 Science of Mind Community Center IHSP..+Aaot.. C.... Mat1 ~"'"-::--' 5"M IOtJO • TOPIC "Spirit Works '11irough U1 ••• " s.twday Wotkahopi I 0-12 1mr.-Ai...c..M.. GW. fH1) "'°3199 Newport Harbor Lutheran Church (LLC.A.) T98 Dover Dr. Newpo6't a..cti TradHlonal Lutheran P .. tor David Monge Worship .. ~ with Holy Communion 8uncl8y 9:t8 em CHILD CAR• AVAIL.AaL• (941) 548 3631 Newport C'.aita Uniad M'ethod.ist CJiwdi ReY. CadJeen Cooa. Pastor 1601 M~tc.Avc. comer of Mitgucritc and San Joaquin Hills Rd (949)~•s &m Quitt Wonhip Smlict I011m Wonh!J 1uul Chiltlrtn's Sund4J Sthool Youth mettint wttlt.J Worslilp 9:30 I I ' I -,( ( 11 •\I The Rrv'd Pt!Ct O. Haynes, Rector SUNDAY scHBDUI.E + 8 am -Holy Euc.buUt 9 am • Adult Bible Study 10 am -Choral EucharUt A "A God-centered parish oommuniry, instructed bt the Word of God and renewed by the Sac.ramcnrs Our Lady Queen of Angels • 2046 Mar Vma Drive N~!t Beach, California 92660 (949)644-0200 Fax (949)644-1349 Rev. Motuig:nor Willi.am P. Mclaughlin, Pastor UTURGIES: Sanmby, S p.m. {Canror), Sunda.yt?:OO (Quiet), 8:30 (Contemporary), 10:00 (Cfi,2ir). 11:'° a.m. (Cantor) and S:OO p.m. (Contemporary}' ~------- FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST.SCIENTIST 3303 Via Udo Newport Beach 673--1340 or 673-6150 Oruic:t\ 10 cm• 5 pm. S\Snday School 10 arn ~, ....... pl! SECOND CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 3100 Pac:ilk: Vl8w Dr. Newport Becdl 644-2617 or 675-4661 Q\wdl lOam SUnday SChool 10 am Wd-*'t ......... •pm a 111 Wllchiclat 11 nocr11 tt s1dcn .. 11• .. bfwtthal .... •~· l'lllllf.w9c7 Brieflr.jn THE NEWS also mark the graduation of the studio's first Hot Yoyd Intensive and Ttainiflg for instructors. Studio to celebrate 5th anniversary Hot yoga is a type of yogd done in a room heated to between 90 and 100 A free Native American •oance of J,.ife" performance and a yoga demonstration will be included in the Yoga Studio's five-year ~nniver­ sary celebration Sunday. degrees. .. · The demonstration will ht> on Bikram Yoga, a type of hot·yoga. The celebration will dlso include food and must< The Yoga Studio is at 230 E. 17th St., Costa Mesd Information: (949) 574 - 9642. The anniversary, sched- uled from 5 to 9 p.m .. will 1:.1rr 5.;J/ll' ;)/)\'F .\'/ l 'N/ C .L\IP JoU. m abo&nl die 130' Utoric Tall Ship Amcr1cu Pr* for u aciting &'. memorable camp at -.tCatal.i.na Wancl. C-pi for YouW, AdaJu ac Fuiily •Sail Training •Snorkeling @ • Basic Navigation • Kayaking • M~rinc Biology • Island Expl. Hikers • Scicncific Testing • Nautical Arts & Songs Beach Partin. 811bcum. Gamet • And Pao! Umlted (4) F~~y 1a1ioos • book _.ty don't mY. die boet I Small pourt of&r 1 unique educadonal crpcricaCt.. $350/ pp \\111<11 \'\ lf lllll\<,I \l \111'\I l '-...,1111 II \I\\ 11 1 tH I 11 111111 'IL 111 e ; I ,, (I "-. ... j 111 e 1; \ 1 I ' \ \ 1 I I I I I I I •• 20% ENTIRE PURCHASE J69 E. lhh ST. I I ConA MHA Acaoss hto111 RAlplts I : ~!.!~!~ .. ~~~!~~~: • Tht~'!"'Y nol be~ wlil anyollw <i1C0111110t ~ L ou-m do nol lo t.o.f c.oloi OIOClids, lkint01e & ~ ~ Usiiiw 5/31/1001 .J ---------------BAY BOAT RENTALS l;,,,;/aJ ~' ~ G 1-J./t! Our pass is transferable to third parties. Great for business events, realtors, family and friends/ Our fleet is brand·newl Doily Pilot Saturday, May 5, 2001 5 Vanguard presents national conference Student play teaches that bullying js not OK • Sixth-graders from Andersen Elementary School help teach Harbor View students that intimidation is not funny. "One of the JitUe girls came forward and said, We all know when someone steals your lunch money -that's bullying. But itil the subtle stuff that really hurts.'" DanetW Goulet DAILY PILOT -Mary Manos, principal at Andersen Elementary COSTA MESA -Van- guard University pla'yed host to a conference Friday • that looked at the prelimi- nary findings of a national study that promises to have monumental effects on the Latino community. The small, faith-based school became the venue for the announcement because of the recent aQdi- tion of professor Jesse Miranda, director of the new Center for Urban Stud- ies and Ethnic Leadership. Miranda is one of two executive directors of the Hispanic Churches in Amer- ican Public Llfe project, which will examine the effect of Catholic, Protestant, Evangelical, Pentecostal and select other religious traditions on the political aild civic life of Latinos. , The completion of the first phase, a telephone sur- vey of 2,400 Latinos nation- wide. found that while reli- gion plays a prominent role in .. their lives, most are no longer Catholic. While th.is finding bas no · direct effect on the c:pmmuni- ty, Miranda assured that the studr will in the long run. • believe the obstacles and the impact lie tn focusing • and getting rid of the my_ths and stereotypes,• be ~·cf: Miranda, along with - gilio Elizondo, the d executive directbr of the study from the University of Notre Dame, and the pro- ject manager for the study, Gaston Espinosa, who is a visiting scholar of Latino studies at UC Santa Bar- bara, gathered nearly 80 academic and religious leaders, as weQ as commu- nity members, to act as sounding boards for their initial findings. With the help of these leaders, the study team hopes to fiDd a way to bring tbe,..... c:hwthes togeth- er to enhance Latinos' role in the community Gd raise Latinos' civic and political standing. •What I really love about this ls the catholic and Protestant chwch coming together,• said M4r1a Elena Avila, a prominent local activist and business owner. ·1 hope what we get from this we will be able to use in Costa Mesa. The church needs to be the change we see in bringing understand- ing and bringing healing.• The next phase ... of the study, now underway, is a swvey of 800 Latino reli- gious, political, civic and educational leaden. Danette Goulet DAILY PtLOT CORONA DEL MAR - Being a bully is much more than beating' someone up for their lunch money. You can be a bully by saying nothing at all. That is the inessage sixth· grade students from Ander- sen Elementary School tried to get across to Harbor View Elementary School students Friday with a play they wrote on the subject. When the Newport-Mesa Unified School District board passed a revision to the dis- trict's student conduct policy last month -adding bully- ing and intimidation to the things that wouJd not be tol- erated -the principal at Andersen, Mary Manos, went to her stude nts for help. She asked sixth-graders, as the oldest and therefore role models for the rest of the school, what they could do about the problem. "One of the Little girls came forward and said, 'We a ll know when someone steals your lunch money - that's bullying. But it's the subtle stuff that really Mike Dru.sic, 12, left, gets roughed up by bully John Joyce, 12, as they act out a scene from the play. hurts,'• Manos said. So the sixth-grade teach- ers and their students put together a play. It so Inspired Andersen students that they took the show on the road. They have since per· formed the musical for their neighboring schools. •I think it's really good because it really gets the point across,• said Kate Gritsch, 11, who plays a fairy who sets a bully straight, one of the play's lead roles. "It's a musiccil, so it gets a point across in a way that's still f.un. •1 think it's a great idea . THAi:·s YOUR FINAL ANSWER, IT'S TIME TO ... CELEBRATE CINCO DE MAYO ALL WEEK LONG AT ... Ml C.ASA OUR M EA LS ARE A TRIP TO MEXICO ALSO ON FISH TACOS, CHIU SIZE, CHILI CHEESE OMELET, AND MANY OUR MENU ... MORE SURPRISES. VISIT OUR .. . BURRO ROOM FOR COCKTAILS. OUR MARGARITAS ARE MADE WITH GOLD TEQUILA WE SPECIALIZE IN LARGE TO GO ORDERS TEAK FURNITURE .BLOWOUT SALE ,, 40' Foot Container Has Just Arrived! 50°0 FF THIS SAT. & SUN. • 10 to 4 because some people will be in here and you say jin the play) if you are with some· one who is being a buJJy then you are bullying,• she -added. "You can look around at some kids' fa'"es and see that they have. They still look kind of innocent because they didn't realize.• ·In the play a fairy con- vinces a bully to change his ways by showing the bully tha t what he may have thought was funny reall y hurt other children's feelings. The play got students at Harbor View thinking. "It's gOod because people will tl1ink of it now as buUy- ing and not think of it as kid· q_ing around,• said Kevm Corrigan, 9. ,. ..... l{\,fll,l•f \u:1• H 11,, \,iii 1hk'. ( .d 1 \ .. ,, I 111 \ 1iu11ll • Ra A2encv . Al1TO • HOMEOWNERS • tll.Ainf Sub1/iry S;-,,n 1957 .. ~~ ____ .... _ />-~ 949-631-7740 . 441 Old Nnrport 8111'11.. Ne..port Sada (Nair H-s Ho.piW) PHOTOS BY SEAN Hlt.l.ER I DAILY PILOT Andersen Elementary School sixth-grader Kate Gritsch, 11, plays the fairy princess in a play she and her classmates put together to illustrate an anti-bullying message. "Sometunes people do it other people's fee lmg are,· becduse they're kidding and agreed his classmdle they d on't know how soft the. Nicholas Gushue. r .. A6 Saturday, Mays, 2001 Doily Pilot • Newport Beach S best rummage sale rz,ext week SL Andrew's Prelb)'tertan Cburch will have its 36lh annual all-church rum- mage sale starting We<ines- day and running through Fri- day. It's considered Newport Beach's best rummage sale. The selection includes cloth- ing, toys, baby items, shoes, sporttng goods, electronics. jewelry, linens, housewares, furniture, tools, art, books and more. w All of the pr~ go directly to missions, induding many local charities, such as S.O.S., Fish, S.P.I.N. and Shal- unar Street, to name a few,· · said Karen Taylor, the event chair. #Those familiar with the sale know it to be one of the best in the area. Year after year. we have had great suc- cess -and hope to continue to do so: The preV1ew sale will be from 3 to 6 p .m. Wednesday, Greer Wylder BEST BUYS and there is a $3 admission at the door. :rbe sale hours will be 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Thursday, and 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Friday. There will be no admission charge Thursday and Friday. St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church is at 600 St. Andrew's Road, at 15th Street, Newport Beach. Information: (949) 631- 1854. Make Those Pati~ '1 Entries Beautifl A greai mixture of Boquet Stone, Riioer Rock and Red Brick JimJellilgs CUSTOM MASONRY 170 E. 17.lh s~. Suite 206 CottaMna (949~5-851 2 Scatt L 192 707 let Jim Jenn install your c1 yard landscar • Expert bric stone, ule < work. •Can recom quality des1 & landscar •Drainage problems?' solve them •We install drams. Why take' chance and I disapPointed? I the~I has satilfUd 1 C of customers over 32 year Definite standouts in swimwear can be found at two boutiques at South Coast Pla7.a, the Wollord Bouttque on the second level near Nordstrom. and at La Perla. on the second level next to Versace and across from Guc- ci. The La Perm Boutique is mostly known for its high-end lingerie, but it also bas a sleepwear line, a ready-to- wear line and a sWimwear . collection. n carries one- pieces and bikinis that range in price from $150 to $300. The exceptional suits may be specially ordered. Information: (714) 754-7500. The Wolford Boutique is mostly known for its fine hosiery and body suits, but it also bas beautiful swimwear that range in price from $130 to $220. Informa- tion: (714) 756-7900. Voracious readers may sign Exotic Merbau iii§Mliirl $ 799• Wtmny FROM Juncker'9 Solid Hardwood iii§Hili1i $ 799• Wlmnty FROM l=-'•-1 p ..... Wllsonar• Por•lca and Other Lamina .. • ON SAL• Starting • 1 49 from &Up •x1urec1a .. 1 ......... k Starting • 1 •• from & Up limited Slock 0( Installed Starting·•" from &Up . boys. There is also a selection will be story time, prizes, a up at Barnes & Noble Book-of women's -•-·i.•~g and coloring contest. refreshments sellen to get a Readers' UU\UU• and n>rh1n:i.c: taken bv Chi-Un "'ome a-~ries. It's open Y'''"~"'.':"' z Advantage card for $25. With u ........,...,., Chien. While the tea party is the new card, you'll get mem-from 10 a.m.. to 5 p.m. Mon-going on. mothers will ~et a bers-only discounts, tnvttes to day through Frida~ and from 10% discOUnt on all children's literary events and special 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday. It's clothing. Subtle Tones is in offers. The discoWlts include at 3315 E. Coast Highwa~, the Corona del Mar Plaza. 10% off purchases at all Corona del Mar. lnfonnation: Information; (949) 640-2781. Barnes & Noble bookstores, (949) 673-8033. including music, gifts and the cafe. There's also an addition- al 5% off on purchases on its Web site. The members-only events indude invitations to readings, book signings and author appearances. Barnes & Noble bas two locations in Costa Mesa -South Coast Plaza and nlangle Square - and another in Newport Beach at Fashion Island. Gianna is a new clothing and accessories store that . open~ in Corona del Mar. It carries all new styles of infant to toddler wear for girls and An4ttpcoming sale ~ fea- ture best buys on the entire Knoll Studio furniture line by such famous architects as Mies van der Rohe, Marcel Breuer and Frank Gehry. The sale is open to the public, and there will be discounts of up to 55%. The sale will take place from noon to 7 p.m. May 18 and 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. May 19. The sales will be held in Newport Beach at Systems Source Inc., 4100 Newport Plaza, Suite 150, and at Parron Hall Office Interiors, 820 W. Ash, San Diego. SubOe Tones will have a Mad Hatter tea party today from noon to 2 p.m. for chil- dren up to 8 y~ old. Chil- dren may come weartng their' favorite crazy hat, and there Matthew TayloT's is having a Mother's Day trunk show from 10 a.m. td 7 p.m. Wednesday. There will be representatives from Cornell 1\'ading showing their latest spring fashions, Dept. 56 will debut its new lighted houses, Lady Primrose will show its new lotions and bath prod- ucts, and Rochard will show its Limoges boxes. All visitors will get a gift. and door prizes will be given out throughout the day. Matthew Tuylor's is in Westclifl Plaza, at the comer of Irvine Avenue and East 17th Street in Newport Beach. Information: (949) 642-7311. • IEST BUYS appears Thuooays and Saturdays. Send information to Greer Wylder at 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627, or via fax at (949) 646-4170. • .A PlllllfHrilll bptmtttt Clit11ti N1vtr Forr.#! r:----;i . ......,r s .... " a , .. c., .... ....., ... I . Plllrl Facill ... , ....... ~ •F.Afadll .... I •k*Ftall..,. I 775 lmtSI., Sil. I L--":.~.JC...Ma. a mv (949) 515·41 AFrERAucno CE AND. . . ScRAlcH & DENT SALE NEWPORT DESIGN CENTER WORLDWIDE COLLECTIBLES AND ANTIQUES SO°loo.FF STARTS SATURDAY 10ani -7pm A Rare and Unique Array To Choose From • Furniture •Antiques •Art • Bronzes • Estate Jewelry • Persian Rugs • Antique, Old & New NEWPORT DESIGNHNTER 353 E. Coast Hwy, Newport I CA P.C .H. near Bayjlde Or. 949.723.6100 .. ( · Doily Pilot · l A" A.ssomnnu ef ~ Sa"1ds \ FRAIGHT FROAJ \JC/I> Zm P1111a With SpicJ Ptsto l'ttnta<o '"'"Napa Romano S!ZZl fNG WOK Dim S#m Statioll /Wnnn: Dd Sill Mlli a11d Sor,,, Chm, Porwt Fir«rtrin-W&n#IU with Pinuppk We Tri/Qn of Slllok,d S4Jmo,, Vodk• 11.N/ P1J>ptm1r11 T~ui/6 •nJ Cilantro, Ko1111 ~HR/MP AND Sl.1lll {)f> CE\'{( I Ir H,·lil' Altuk.11 ~Crab Uis . with Mep Lnnon Aioli 'DMHLE7TP. . WA FFLI.-, ,-IND C.RU'J\. t4 M"""'g' of S.W,d Frwi11 Tidnl IJUilk ~rm C"pes with Chocoltm Raspb""J Glau c RAH r IRVING Cnnfird Anzus Pnnu Rill AM ]111 IJJsamu· Orangr M~ Roastiii Porlt Loin wilh Grilktl PrtUh Ch11tNJ s \ t( J Ill R \ I >1 1 IC/If H11ngan11n Smolud /Jaron anti S1iry Chklml 'AltJ Pinrappk SaUS11tr />rJ1'Uf"Onau G"1.Ud Chiclm with Mrdttrmtrmzn CollS -Cow Brra:ihttu Cr111trd MaJ11 Mahi with Chi:h umr Vi~ BNiml Top lt,unti o{Vtal wuh Toastrd Shit11lr Mlilhrr1oms Grr111y W1i1r CINddar and Ch1potk MllSht:J Pota1«1 M>tln CHIWR£N . ...,.,.., am.DREN-... S32.,5 $14.!)5 PR£E I 0:00 llM -BrOO Pl'rl FOR RESBRVA170NS G/1Ll (!>l!J) 724 -;3640 r ~h; J ~ rv.2f.i1/tf't· I May 13, 2001 Snvingfrom 5:30 p.m. • $29.50 -~- Soupe au Pistou Frrsh diud VftUAbks soup with b,ans and pas14, jLzvorrd with fash basil and p~~san -or- Fresh Asparagus "Nifoise" Srrv,J with oliw oil vinai~tte garnishrd with diud tom11to, b'4clt olivrs and caprrs Grilled Breast of Chicken Srrwd with a Provrnral sauu ofiight cnam garlic and fash basil, garnishrd with sautlrd z ucchini -or- Leg of Lamb roastrd with garlic and hrrbs, srrved with vrgrtabk nzt11touille and garlic mashed potatorJ -or- Fillet of Fresh Alaskan Halibut Sautlrd on a bed of zucchini. 1rrvrd with a gazpacho sauc' and garlic mashrd po111tor1 -or - Beef T enderlain Roasud in a traditional prppercorn sauce, xarnr.shrd w1th "au pnn potators" and fash vrgeubks . Nougat Glacl An iu cnam 1011Jll.I with horuy. candird frui11 and nuts srrwd with 1traw""':Y coul/J -or - Tarte au Citron Homemiu:U kmon tArtkt toped with mrringue Mother's Day Brunch Sunday, May 13 201 Mother's Day Brunch Served 101Xlam-2:3)pm • Fresh Salmon • Crablegs Saturday, Mat s,'2001 A7 · I ~;f.Po~ ·~?!.~s~n~ysM.?i3~r' · Brunch Specials: (Served 10 am 'til 2 pm) Grilled Filet Benedict $12.50 Miguel's Eggs Benedicr using Filer Medallion. Served with Roasted Poracoes & Fruic Smoked Salmon Omelet $8.95 w/Spinach, Mushrooms & Tomatoes topped with Mixed Cheese served_ with Roasted Potatoes & Fruit Dinner Specials: ~:";~' -T (Available All Day!) ....., New York Strip $21.95 12 oz. NY Steak in a Merlot wine sauce w/Roasted W~nuts & Gorgonzola Cheese over Smoked Apple Bacon Mash 1 -. Poraroes and Asparagus . . Fried Calamari Salad $13.50 Over Red Leaf, Iceburg & Romaine Baby Shrimp, Cuaunber & Grilled Sweet Com served in a lemon Vinaigrene Drts.$ing ' & ... l\ ........ ~ .... : \,. I 11 . (949) 548-0099 2000 Newport.Blvd., Costa Mesa T.akr SS Sou1h 11> l'>th .St. U-Turn onto N°<""'l'"rl Bhd. (I ro111;agc ltoitll ' • I I/ 2 block, at l011l Si. " ' 101'/I( Special Champagne Buffet .- Served 101Dam-2:3lpm • Fresh Sushi ·All you can ear • Crab legs . Four Course Champagne Brunch SefvedlOOOem-~ • Eggs Benedict • Bistro's Famous Omlete The Hyatt~ ~lar Mother\' Day Brunch YAll show Mom how mud\ you appteciate hef, but also that you inherited htr mellent taste. On OU( lcwistl buffet. the whole famitj will find dozens of ~bog se1ecbons at our popular Omelet Station ~ omelets are ma to order. Thefe's Ibo a ClfW'l9 StabOn feetunng Prine Rb and Deep Fried ~ ~ Fruit and Sllads. • dmting ~ of mported and Doml5tlc Cheese llld freshly e.ktd Goods Mom IS SU'f to «Pf spfOltty er"1fts such a GorgoNoli Chden ~ ~ Oemt- gllcj, Glied Mlt'li Mahi, llld Mlple ~ ~Loo witt'I ~ Cre1rn Sauce. And, doni for9lt the ~ and Sosh! 8uftet ~ with ft$I Shrimp, Crib, ......... and C*°'1111 ,_.. kit tht ~. • Oysters on the Half Shell • C>fsters on the Half Shell • Seafood Omlete • b moufl wiNr1ng Oesllft s.ion IS Slft tel .... "" Ooni worry Mom. thft\ Mn ..... ctilldrwt's ~ "'6 c:NldNn wl bit~ wlltt blilll'.Jln. ......... "'°and 1111 and a.fls. U.. ,_~= .. IA Ltllll lil9 .... , .... ......................... C ;A ,_........,......._ ... 1 _____ ..... • Fresh Shrimp • Fresh Shrimp • Over 8 Gourmet Entrae's • Over 12 Hot ~ial Entrl!j3's • CaNed Prime Rib • Carved Prime Rib • CaNed Ham • CaNed Ham • Calved Ttney • CaMid Ttrtey • Seafood ()yllet8 Station • ()tlleta S1atJon • Asserted Desserts aoo Pastries • Waffle S1aticl'I • Assor'8d Oaairts Ind~ • Cafitmean Frerdl Toast • Cllidle Alsace looaine • Snded Salmon Bagel • F18sh Grilled HahbUt • Filet Mi!Jm Madall01S Mr...int:WI~ II 1' .. ............. flit. .... ei ...... .... ...... ...-y .... lllllz., "AB So~r~ Ma). 5. 2001 . ~~~~~~~~~~ 0 M OTHER 's D AY BRUNCH { at the 0 HO LIDAY JNN COSTA M ES A 0 { Hanford 's Restaurant f 0 l Oam to 2 pm, ( Sun.,May 13, 200 I A ,in~k· Rmi: for .tll STAR fERS ChampagM, Munosas and Bloody Mary' Smoked Salmon Imported & Domcsric Cheese DiiipJay Sliced Fresh Fruits and Bernes Mixed Field Grttns with all the Trimmings Four Different Salad Specialties Including our Special Greek Salad ... ~·1 RU ·.S Eggs Benedict Warllts with Str4wbcrry Sauce L el u' lakt· c.irC" ot Mom on rlii' 'PlTi.11 d.n· Cmrvm~ Station with Roast Pnmc Rib of Beef and Ham ' Saut6cd Cluckcn Breast in a Marsala Wine Sauce ,~Baked Salmon Piltt with Lemon Caper Sa Green Bean' Almondlnc • Roa.,ted Garli . Mashed Potatoes l>ESSJ..R I'~ • An Array of Oounm:t Dcsscn~ a.nd Pa., tries 0 s2 1.95 s is.95 s10:9s { Adult Seniors 55+ Children 12 & Under ' For M!j~~~l:.~ns Call • t7 I 4 ) 557-3000 '{ 3 13 1 So uth B risto l •Costa Mesa ~-~....... ~....... ~~-~ TREAT MOM TO A BRUNCH CRUISE SHE'LL NEVER FORGET ... l?tvlllOA~:TAt.mANT , ~"'-~~ Champagne Bru.nch Served JO a.m. to 3 p.m. • $16.95 D11nish, Pm h Frwit. PotltllJ of the DllJ> Choi.ct of Eas &Mt/in, Ortuln Suprmu, ChiJtm Crtpts, &11.footl Crtpts, RtNutetl &trrm of 8ttf • 11111 • Champ4gne Dinner Served 4 p. m.,., Four Courses • $34.95 Bay Shrimp Cocktail, Soup or SalmJ Choice of Entree; Roast Prime Rib of Beef, L.obster Them.zit/or, Surf & Turf, ·Swordfish, Breast of Chicken Newport, & Dessert RESERV·\TIONS (9·J.9) 673-342fi 15 I E. (.:O AST HWY, NEWPORT BEACH Learn Share Grow BECOME A DO C ENT AT THE ORAN GE C OUNTY MUSEU M OF ART Th e Cam i lle and Er i c Durand Do ce nt Council of the Orange C o unty Mu s eum of Art is ho s t i ng an informational reception for t h e 200 1 • 2 002 docent training pr o grams . Learn h o w y ou c an tour v i s i tors through exh i bitions a n d p r e s ent ar t edu c atio n program s t o school a nd commun i ty gr o up s . Eve ning a nd w e ekend tr ai n i ng o pp o rtun i t i e s are a v a ila ble . Monday, May 7 , at 2:30 in the Pavi lion of the Orange County Museum of Art 850 San Clemente Drive · N ewport leach Coll Davi d Cu rt ius at (9 49) 759-1122 , ext 204 for more i nformotion or to RSVP •Chicken 5andwlche6 • Freeh Salada • Prim~ Rib •Seafood $2895 •and more ... · Daily Pnot -~ 2196. Harbor Blvd .• Costa Mesa ~-'1' call (949} 631-2110 ~~ ..«_ for Information & reservaUons -varp~ .. www.rfbcompany.com lltf.f MOIHlll'\0\\ <.In wuh put<h.LI<' e>f r;ifc \fnlfi\.&lt Ut \<,...It.( )100 ()(I orm<>rr.I Unwind. ... Call (949) 464-6110 c.nrr ( tRIUICAlf ... Available for Mocher'~ Day for a complete list of servica Marriott's Newport Coast ViUu/Spa Pacifica 23000 Newport Coast Dr. • Newport Cout Take Mom To The HYATT REGENCY IRVINE For Mother's Dax Brunch Sunday, Max 13,2001 .• ~ ' ... ,. ~~ .. , .. ) Traditional Breakfast Items Omeletes and Pastas Made to Order Fresh Seafood Bar Peppered Prime Rib of Beef Roasted Tom Turkey Lemon Tarragon Crusted Salmon Prosciutt<? ~rapped Ch.icken Breast -Specialties from Crao Me in Elaborate Desert Display And Much.Morel Includes: Fresh Squeezed Orange Juice Champagne atld rbucks Coffee A Special Tr at or Mom Livt~mtrun • • • . • Doily Pilot Saturday, Mey 5, 2001 A9 S9, 000 reading books arrive at elementary schools BOOKS ARRIVED: 1hanks to the donation by Daily Pilot readers to match funds given by the Rotary Clubs of Newport-&1- boa, Newport-Irvine and Newport Beach Sunrise, some 9,000 reading books for Pomona, Whittier and Wilson elementary schools have arrived. · #May I say, "Thank you.' on behalf of the Whittier staff ' from the bottom of our hearts,· said Sharon Blakely, principal at Whittier School. "YoW' pub- licity, leadership and 'model- mg' bas made a huge differ- ence for our dear children. Mentors number near 90 now, all working with students weekly. I called Rotary Read- mg by 9 coordinator Roger McGonegal when over 4,000 Accelerated Reader books anived from Rotary and Daily Pilot conbibutions. We have prepared them for student use and have held a four-day Super School (over spring break) for 125 struggling read- ers featuring these attractive, nonfiction books.• Jim de Boom COMMUNITY & CLUBS 15. You may come to one or to all three for some coffee, punch and cookies while meeting students and faculty at each school We want you to see bow the books are being used and to thank you for your donation that made 9,000 reading books possible. Watch for your invitation. Blakely added: •1t is my belief that we must become a learning community if we are to produce literate citizens from our noo-English-speak- ing populations. By the way, over 320 adults are studying reading and English during the day at Whittier now." introduced Corona del Mar High School Students of the Year Ll.ndsey Younnan and Josh Ludmire to the Exchange Club of Newport Harbor. The students were accompanied by Corona del Mar counselor Kathy Hath and ,their proud parents. Both students have been accepted at Harvard University and have large lists of involvement in many school and charity activities in addition to partici- pation on school athletic teams. Congratulations. OCC SOENCE FAIR: EX04ANGE PRESIDENT TO VISIT: Gerald Franklin, president of the National Exchange Oub, will visit the Exchange Oub of the Harbor Area on Thursday to conduct a ·spe- cial induction ceremony for all new members, according to District President-elect Dick Freeman. The following day, Freeman will sponsor a breakfast with Franklin so members from throughout Orange County can meet and talk with him. More information may be obtained by calling Don Lake of the Orange Coast Club al (949) 673-7480. WORTH REPEATING SERV1CE O.UB MEETINGS THIS WEEK: • Want to get more involved in your community, make new friends, network or give some- thing back to your communi- ty? ny a service dub. You are . invited to attend a dub meet- ing this week. Many clubs will buy your first guest meal. MONDAY 6:30 p.m.: The Harbor Mesa Lions Cl\Jb will meet at the Costa Mesa Golf and Counb'y Oub. • TUESDAY 7:30 a.m.: The Newport, Beach Sunrise Rotary Club will meet at Five Crowns Restaurant for a program by Tom Heneghan of the lrish Tounst Board. 6:30 p.m.: The Costa Mesa- Ne wport Hdrbor Lions Club • will meet at the Costa Mesa Goll and Country Club WEDNESDAY 7:15 a.m.: The South COdst Metro Rotary Club will meet at the Center Club, the New- port Harbor Kiwarus Club will meet at the Uruversity AUtlet- ic Club, and the Costa Mesa Orange Coast Breakfast Lions Club will meet at Muni's Cdfe. way Patrol Capt. Steve Beeuwsaert. 7 p.m.: After a 5:30 p.m. tow of KOCE-lV studios in Hunt- mgton Beach, the Rotary Club of Newport Balboa will meet at the Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club for dinner (http://www . newportbalboa.org). THURSDAY 7:30 a.m.: The Costa Mesa- Orabge Coast Breakfast Lions dub will meet at Mimi's to • hear from Gary Raporte on seruor meals and services. Noon: The Kiwanis Club of Costa Mesa will meet at the Holiday Inn for a Mother's Day program featurmg fash- ions from Nordstrom, the Newport Beach -Corona del Mar Kiwarus Club will meet at the Balua ConnUuan Yacht Club, the Exchange Club of Newport Harbor will meet at the Riverboat Restaurant for a busmess meebng, d.Od the Newport lrvme Rotary Oub will meet at the Irvine Mamou for craft ldJks by new Rotan- ans (http://www.nirotary.org). Next week, all donors to the Reading by 9 program wiq receive an invitation to d book dedication ceremony at each of the three schools being held the week of May That's a learning community. Orange Coast College geol- ogy-professor Jay Yett and 35 of his students have taken their geology fair on the road this spring to lnterested ele- mentary schools in the New- port-Mesa Unified School Ois- bict. I caught their hands-on displays one night last week at Pomona Elementary School, where dozens of children and adults had an opportunity to make an earthquake, see a volcano erupt and learn about rock formations. According to Yett, the program is a result of a grant from the American Assn. of Community Colleges to encourage programs in sci- ence in kindergarten through sixth grade. And the OCC Sci- ence Fair did just that. From Greg Kelley's. of the Newport-Mesa Irvine Inter- faith Council, Thought for the Day: ·education is the great engine of personal develop- ment It is through education that the daughter of a peasant can become a doctor, that the son of a mine worker can become the head of a mine, that a child of farm workers can become the president of a great nati,on. It is what we make out of what we have, not what we are given, that separates one person from another.· -Nelson Mandela Noon: The Orange Coast Exchange Club will meet at the Bahid Corinthian Yacht Club to hear California High- • COMMUNrTY & a.ues IS pub- lished every Saturday m the Dally Pilot. Send your service club's meet· ing information by fax to (949) 660- 8667, t--niail tojdeboomOaol.com or by mail to 2082 S.E. Bristol St, Surt.e 201. Newport Beach, CA 92660-1740. HONORING STUDENTS: Member Les Lonimer ~~8dl ~~ ~'e/UJ ~~~ Join l ~ (~14) 593:.9099 19881 Brookhurst St #A, & Adams At '\1crvyn's Cente r o· 0 D Y D E S I ·6 ~ Body Design is the ideal fitness destination for women in Orange · County. Body Design boasts an intimate, 'Jamily like" atmosphere that caters specifically to women of all ages and abilities. THERAPEUTIC BODY TREATMENTS A good firncss regime is made all th~ more com- plece by incorporating the excra edge thac total body arc treatments provide. Our botanical body crcatmencs smooth, soften hydrate and tone the skin leaying you feeling relaxed and renewed. BODY SILK-scrub and loofah -TURKJSH SALT GW-minmd salJ scruh BODY DETOX-herbal htat wrap ESSENTIAL OIL WRAP-hydraling aroma wrap ALOE WRAP-so01hing wrap TREATMENT Ann-ONS Paraffin nand dips Glycolk Peel C:Ollagcn sheet RcAexology foot massage Algae-C acaanent Intensive Ampoule MAsSAGE 1 HOUR 1-112 HOUR WAXING BROW CHIN BIKINI FUULEG LASH TINT I UP -UNDERARM 1/2ARM 1/2 LEG BROW TINT Mother's Day Gift Certificate , Choose from our menu of spa services. All certificate's expire from one year from date issued. SKIN CARE Every hcial begins with a dermal-analysis to determine the proper crcac- mcnt best suited for your skin's panicular needs. You will then cxpcri- en~ a deep and reviving cleanse, a gcnde exfoliarion co remove dull sur- face cdls, a luxurious massage incorporating rejuvenating Aromathmpy followed by a corrective treaanent mask and then a botanical hydrating cream co nourish and protecc. A heated hand treaanent and extractions arc included in all f.lcials. REPRF.SHER FACIAL DEEP CLEANSING FACIAL ANTIOXIDANT FACIAL AROMATHERAPY FACIAL BACK FACIAL TEEN FACIAL . REJWENATING FACIAL SERIFS PACKF.TS: Purchase Six Facial or Bodf T1t2tmcnCS. And R.cmvc Seventh One FREE. BODY DESIGN ;, ,..,. .... ., "*""" aJfo--Jad..-.. Wi "1Jin-ti# fclrairlrMMca • _, --'"'f • <:ardiovascular & Wt"ight Machines • Rchabilimion • Dana & Yep Oa.ucs • Seep Aerobics • Phylial 11w.ripy & Onhocia • Pi1-s • Pmonal T'1ining • me Wcighu • • I AIO Solu!day, May 5 I 2001 • Send AllCMN> 10WN Items to the o.lly Piiot, 330 W. Bay St.. C:O.. U Mesa, CA 92627; by fax to (949) 646-4170; «by calling (949) 574- 4298. lndude the time, dlte and locatlon of the event. as well as a contact phone number. A com- plete llstlng Is avallabl• at http:llwww.dailypllotcom. TODAY A bone show will tak&place from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. today and Sunday at the Equestri- an Center at the Orange County fairgrounds, 88 Pair Drive, Costa M~sa. Free. (714) 708-1662. The Costa Mesa Bark Park Foundation will host a rum- mage sale from 8 a.m. to 3 p .m. at Bark Paxk. at the cor- ner of Arlington Avenue and Newport Boulevard in TeWinkle Park in Costa . Mesa. Free. (949) 548-8521. A workshop on body lan- guage will be offered at 9 a .m. at Orange Coast Cdl- lege, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. $45 for registra- tion, $20 for materials. (714) 432-5880. Orange Coast College's Community Education Office will present a workshop titled "Tactics to Make E- commerce Successful for Small Business• from 9 a.m. to noon at National Universi- ty, 3390 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. $25, or $20 in advance. (714) 432-5880. A three-hour •tandJord Sur- vival Training• workshop will take place at Orange Coast College in the Com- munity · Sducation Office. The workshop will run from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. in Room 202 of the college's Lewis Center for Applied Sciences. OCC is at 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. (71•) 432-5880. . Dr. Peter Kumlc, cba1nun of the lbeologital Commis- sion of. Evangelical Fellow- ship and supedntendent of the Evangelical Church of Croatia, will speak at Van- guard University's com- mencement at 10 a.m. on C8IppUS, 55 Pair Drive, Costa Mesa. Call tor tickets. (714) 55~-3610. ~gle Square wtU host a Cinco de Mayd celebration from 11a.m.to10 p.m. at the square, at Newport and Har- bor boulevards in Costa Mesa. There will be salsa dancing and recipe contests and a wine-tasting fund-rais- . er for Costa Mesa High School's senior class. Free. (714) 722-1600, Ext. 26. The Uncoln Elementary Sto- rytellers, a group of about 50 students, will appear at 11 a.m. at the Newport Beach Central Library, 1000 Avoca- do Ave. Free. (949) 515-6955. "Finding a Thorn Among the Roses,• a three~hour work- shop designed to show reha- bilitation opportunities, will be offered by Orange Coast College's Community Edu- cation Office. The workshop will run from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m . in Room 202 of OCC's Lewis Center for Applied Sciences Building. Registra- tion is $59, plus SS material fee. OCC is at 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. (714) 432- 5880. Orange Coast College wW host cheerlead.lng tryouts from 3 to 6 p.m. on campus, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Free. {714) IW8-7223. Mystery writer T. Je!lenon Parker will sign bis latest book at 5 p.m. at Borders Books, Music and Cafe, 3333 Bear St, Costa Mesa. Free. (714) 432-7854. SUNDAY Orange County Muket Place will kick off the Straw- beny Sunday Pest from 1 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Orange County fairgrounds in Costa . Mesa. $2. Erik Lackey, (949) 723-6663. . The "Crulsln' Bock to the Future• car show will take place from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the picnic area at the Orange County Fairgrounds, 88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. Pree. (7i4) 826-1948. A garden tour wW be hosted by the Volunteer Assn. of Sherman Library & Gardens from 11 a.m. To 4 p.rn. at six different homes in Corona del Mar. $25, $30 on the day of the event. (949) 673-2261. Author WlWam McMurdie will sign his latest book about tales from World War Il at 1 p.m . at Borders Books, Music antl Cale, 3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa. Free. (714) 432-7854. TUESDAY A workshop on flnandng a business will take place at 9 a.m. at National University, 3390 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. $25, or $20 in advance. (714) 432-5880. Mother's Market wW host a semj.nar about vitamins at 6:30 p.m. at the market, 225 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. Free. (800) 595-MOMS. A "Meet Your City Leaden• event will take place at 7 p.m. at the Neighborhood Community Center, 1845 Park Ave., Costa Mesa. Pree. (949) 225-"296. WIDllESDAY A repre9ellgUve ~om the Corcord.la University's Admissions Office will visit Orange Coast College from 10 a,m. to noon on campus, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Pree. (714) 432-5894. Hoag Hospital will present a class on kypboplasty, a tech- nique to help straighten the spine and reduce back pain, at 11 a.m. at Hoag Health Center, 1190 Baker St .. Costa Mesa. Free. (800) 514-4624. All CaWomla rettred teach- ers are invited to join a lun- cheon at noon at the New- port Beach Golf Club Tee Room, 3100 Irvine Ave., Newport Beach. $16. {714) 549-0229. Tennls player John Uoyd and Bob Donatelli will offer tips for great play at 2:30 p.m. at The Newport Beach Tennis Club, 2601 Eastbluff Drive, Newport Beach. Call for prices. (804) 320-3232, Ext. 117. Hoag Hospital wtll present a •Herbal Overview on Menopause• class at 6 p.m. at Hoag Health Center, 1190 Baker St., Costa Mesa. Free. (800) 51 4-4624. THURSDAY The Uncoln Elementary Sto- rytellers, a group of about 50 students, will host a parent festival at UncolD Elemen- tary School, 3101 Pacific View Drive, Corona del Mar. Call for Umes and prices. (949) 515-6955. . The koung Executtves of America will host Larry Elder during a breakfast at 7:30 a .m. at The Pacific Club, 4110 MacArthur Blvd., New- port Beach. $25, or $16 for members. 1949) 759-5456. Mother's Market will host a seminar on positive parent- ing solutions at 6:30 p.m. at . the DUUket. 225 E. 17th St, Costa Mesa. Free. (800) 595· ' MOMS. A workshop for anyone interested in learning how to enhance his or her apprecia- tion of creative ~ression will be offered at 7 p.m. at the Newport Beach Central Library, 1000 Avocado Ave. Free. (949) 717-3801. FRIDAY A motorcycle show wW take place from 8 a.m. to 3:30 p.ro. at the Orange County Mar- ket Place, 88 Fair Drive, Cos- ta Mesa. $7 for adults, chil· dren 12 and younger will be admitted free. (949) 598- 5122. Children 's author Nancy Robison of Newport Beach will sign her books from 2 to 4 p.m. at Barnes & Noble Booksellers, 953 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach. Free. (949) 759-0982. MAY 12 A pancake breakfast Wl.ll be hosted by the Oasis Senior Center from 7 :30 to 10 a.m. at the center, 800 Marguerite Ave.. Corona del Mar. $2. {949) 644-3244. . ' .. ,, ' ~ Doily Pilot -.. A fteld trlp to tile Ho• Ranch property in Cos~ Mesa will be hosted by the city at 9:30 a.Jll. See the development proposals fbr the site. cal to make resenca' tioos. (714) 754-5610. "' ... Author Robe.rt ~ct.I will sign his new film books e.t..2 p.m. at Borders Books, Music and Cafe, 3333 Bear St, Cos- ta Mesa. Free. (714) 43~-' " 7854. The Southern Callfol'IJba Social Guide and Jewish Assn. of Single Professional8 will host an Orange County cocktail party at 8 p.m. at the Radisson Hotel, 4~5 MacArthur Blvd., Newport Beach. $20. (323) 656-7777~ MAY 13 ,., The Balboa bland Artwaak will take place from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. along the South Bay.- side promenade, between Marine Avenue and Ferr,r Landing at Agate Avenue i.a Newport Beach. Free. (949) 830-8098. ' , MAY 14 11 May 14 ls'the last day to see "Impressions,• an exhibitlO.!) and sale of more than 90 paintings by Southen;i Cali- fornia artist Val Carson at the Robert Mondavi Wme and Food Center, 1570 Scenic Ave., Costa Mesa. Open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Free. (714) 979-45\Q. --:-· "Dr. Seuss on·the Loose, w • special children's pajama story time and show, will take place at 7 p.m. at the Newport Beach Central Library, 1000 Avocado Ave. Free. (949) 717 -3801. . . NTINUED FROM A 1 II en he h eard that Herman nes, his dad's shipmate d the Oklahoma, was in ~ same room, sharing his ories with other sw- ,,•Yes, I knew Simons,• es nodded, looking at the oto. •He was a good sailor, of my gwmery gang. 1 ember him. He was a qui- tnan. You could rely on him r anything.• Gray smiled.· "I've heard about my dad nly from the stories my mom me,· he said. ·1 heard he iven to Commonwealth artners LCC, which owns ~ proper ty where the pguchi garden sits. · ,,,On Friday, Common- .ealth's planmng consul- t, Phil Swartze, said he lld not seen the proposed ange or heard from any- p,e at the city about it. He added that he was not ure if anyone from the com- any would be at Monday's ouncil meeting because he ad not yet spoken to his oss, James R. Anderson, a rtner at Commonwealth used to play the b'umpet. and the night before the bombing, they had a battle of the bands between the Oklahoma and the Arizona.• Gray was not the only one rejoicing in memories of the past. Several Pearl Harbor survivors in their Navy hats and badges met with old friends and talked about the days of yore. Martell Twitchell, 94, of Folsom was a chaplain in the Navy stationed in Pearl Har- bor at the time. "I heard three services scheduled tor" that day, and none of them took place,• he said with a smile. But he still remembers his dear friend, chaplain of the Pennsylvania, who was killed in the explo- sion. SEAN HILLER I OMV PILOT Louis Nockhold, left, and Cecil Malmin share a laugh Friday during the Pearl Harbor convention ln Costa Mesa. ·we had watched a foot- ball game together the previ- ous day,· be recalled. "Then we went to my house. It was my son's third birthday. We had cake, and he said he had to go back to the ship to get an early start on his services.• If they do attend, Swartze Orange County Performing said, they would be interest-Arts Cente r. ed in finding out if the The three groups' ulti- change would supersede an mate goal is to create a agreement Commonwealth pedestrian-oriented cultural is trying to reach with the arts district. city for its part of the Town Swartze also cautioned Center project. -that the proposed change The details of that agree-could have an expensive ment were nearly worked consequence for Common- out in February, but a month wealth, 1f it meant the com- later, council members failed pany would be required to to approve it because they get a state~approved envi- could not decide how long ronmental review of even Commonwealth should be minor repairs. required to maintain the Such reviews could take garden tor public use. as long as siX months and That was the last Twitchell saw of his friend. • 1 simply can't forget it because of the time we spent together nght before he cost $25,000, Swartze said. It is such reasons that had Monahan calling the propos- al •too blatant of a property taking.· The city, Monahan said, should be working with the property owners and other members of the community to come up with such pro- posals. And, he said, 1t is clearly dn attempt to get control over the Noguchi garden "This is just so bla tant,· he said. Dixon disputed that the died,• be said. Louis Nockbold, chair- man of the convention, is a true SWVlvor. He was a 19- year-old sailor waiting in line to iron his unifonn when the bugle s~unded as a warning to all on lus ship, the Honolulu. •I opened the hatch and looked up, and I saw a plane coming straight at me,• said the Newport Coast resident "The plane was about to bomb us, but we were saved by the USS Bagley destroyer.• The Japanese warplane exploded nght in front of his eyes. "I still feel like I'm the luckiest man alive,• Nock- hold said. ·we could have been tcypedoed that day.• .. For Jack Hammett of Cos- ta Mesa, Pearl Harbor IS not an incident. it's living tustory. a lesson to future generations cha nge wa s spec1hcally focused on the garderf "It's to preserve .cultural resources,• Dixon said. who also d isnussed charges that the proposal was made Wlth- out prope r notification to Commonwe alth. • 1 think I've been reaUy upfront with what r feel about the preser- vation of public art.• Dixon also stressed thdl the change would only cover Town Center and would not give the o ty carte bldnche to add buildings or areas to the reg1Ster. Saturday, Moy 5, 2001 Al J The former ~ Mesa may- or bas talked about bis expe- riences ln Newport-Mesa schools. ·our ybung people need to be aware that a s1tuation like that can come up any time,· he said. Interest m the infamous Japanese attack on Dec. 7, 1941, has been heightened recently with the release of the Touchstone P.ictures film "Pearl Harbor" coming May 25. Still, the annuaJ conven- boo to roost swvivors 1s not a place for a party o't moVle hype, but a reunion, scUd Mde Garcia of Sacramento. "Jt's a chdllce to meet old frie nds and re new fnend - stups.· she said. "More than anything e lse, it's amazing that we went through cill that and survw ed • Mayor Libby Cowan, who hds been leddlng the negol:l- at1ons with CommonwE>dlth over how long the company should mdintdm the q Mden, agreed Lhdl the proposdl 1s ·not something brand new · • 1 thm k the whole interest m preserving historical resources has been growing 1n the city,· she said, dddmg lhdl dller m1lJdl looks di the proposrtl 1t seemed OK to her · Monahdn said he doubted there will be enough vote" to pass the medsure. At the same time, the s====:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:===:===:;;;;;;;;;;...,..===:=m;;;;;;;;;;=====-=-mi===-iiiiiiiii-=:===:=:=iiiii:===:===:=================:;;:a:====:=a:===:===:===:===:==-lilE=== council did reach agree- ments for the development of other parts of TQwn Cen- ter owned by South Coast 'Plaza Partners and the SABATINO'S . I\,,,''" .1111 ,\ I .. 1 .. 'h1p1 II" ... 111-.1:.:1 ( II, •Dinner • Sunday Brunch Tht largtst & Fintst Bt11uty Supply & Full StTVirt Salon Sizzling Faptas Handmade Tortillas St'illing Manadl1s Margarita & Cerveza Bar ,...,....,. ... Order by the Dozen Ch1ngolin9as Enchiladas Fairtas Bumtos & Tacos Celestino's,. quality MEATS Ttle Finest Moor and &n;lce Auailable Smmrf Cosw MtM far .wr JO JUTI Our family serving your family fQr47years ORAISE coum EICUllVE DISTRIBUTOR ...--LIF-ETl-ME-.... OF LIFETIME GUARANTEE CARPET ---10-0l-BE-RB-ER ... CUARANTEE CARPET lifetime Stain Warranty CARPET $199 lifetime W11r W111111ty $249 ~': lifetime Cru1h ·warranty i': INSTALLED Lifetime Fa41 Warranty INSTALLED 4000 STORE BUYING POWER Car~!t Ce-~ T•• Wert•'• Lar1••t Cartel Retailer IF YOU'RE NOT BUY NG FROM US YOU'RE PAYING TOO MUCH Costa Mesa (949)650-7676 124 E 17 t~ If. FREE ·u......•....., ........... Trtplt ......... .. .............. ......... 1111111 FREE Irvine (949)831-0141 11111 .1. 1 ·a· I ) 12 Soturdoy, May 5, 2001 llllFLY II THI NEWS Pro-El Toro airport ad headed to cable They're finally answering back. Hoping to get the word out about the benefits of an airport at the closed El Toro Marine base, the Airport Working Group has pro- ' duced a television advertise- ment that will begin broad- casting Monday. The adr which' will appear on cable channels across Orange County, will highlight the positive aspects of the county's air- port plan, group spokesman GLASS Dave Ellis said. The spot will also try to poke holes in South County's central park plan for the base as an alternative to an air- field. Ellis said the spot, which was produced with a •very reasonable• budget, will point out that a park at the 4, 700-acre base •cannot pay for itself.• Irvine Smith honored by wat.er agency " Joan Irvine Smith was honored Friday evening . for her "dedication and endless efforts "to improve and pro- tect the sources of water in Orange County,• said Ron Linsky, spokesman for the lously placed the balf-inch- long, thin piece of glass on the slide. Earlier that afternoon, about 2:30 p.m .. Newport Beach resident Elliott Lowe's out to play on the slide,· she baby-sitter discovered the said. other fragment on the sand CONTINUED FROM A 1 It was then that Joey when she stepped on it and found the piece of glass broke it. between the slats on top of "It was ,definitely put the slide. "' there intentionally,• Lowe "We'd heard about it,· said. "But I didn't imagine it Martino said. "We were a would hit so close to home.• group of moms that didn't Officers are investigating panic. We asked all the kids the incident, but it is difficult to wear shoes and called the to say if the glass was delib- police. • erately placed in the park, Martino said it seemed Fletcher said. The incidents like somebody had meticu-have been reported as Fiw 11orru FtmtW.11'.I' AtttilJ"" & Coll«tiflla Tr•litioHI to Cott•11 Ci/ff & C•,.,, Drcor Wi1h Li1t & DtliPC?y Cafe Hot.rs: Tues.·Fri., 9am-4pm; Sat, 8am-4pm ; Sun. Omelette, 9~2pm National Water Research Institute. The heiress was given e' commendation by the Foun- tain Valley-based water agency at a dinner held at Newport Beach's Sutton Place Hotel As a child, Smith joined her grandfather, James Irvine II, on inspection tours of the Irvine Ranch water wells, reservoirs and dams. Smith and her mother, Atbalie Richardson Irvine Clarke, founded the institute in 1991 with several govern- ment agencies. The agency oversee water re$earch in the coµnty and forms part- nerships with local, state and federal governments to tap into grant money for water research. •attempted assault with a deadly weapon.• . "There's no indication this incident is connected to the others." Fletcher said. "But it could well be a copy- cat attempt.· City employees, as well as police volunteers, are con- tinuing to inspect parks sev- eral times a day, he said. "There's also a height- ened sense of awareness about these incidents in the COlllJ1lUnity, • Fletcher said. "We'll get a lot of these reports, some may not mean anything. But any and all information is ~eful to us and helps us in the investigation.· c.,,11,. to CJ11u11l11i1r1 U11I & R11tt Boob C.UtOfft PktM,. r,.,,,;,.1 F11mi1Mrw Rato,.tio11 •u ""''" mor1/ 949 722-1177 JJO Eal J 1111 Slrttt ~Mna.CA (Mi"' ,,.,, '""' 1 ... ua1NG··· •eeutaysrice F ,., •q. · Ml· yc1. • Raphael II ~ ................. .' ... 3S.99 ................................. 26.99 • Heritage .......................... 43.99 ................................. 28.99 • Handcl ............................. 49.99 ................................. 29.99 •, Konador .......................... 49:99 ................................. 30.99 • Pcrlato .............................. 59.99 ................................. 39.99 Th6.=:udc 1~1 . -~~ Cmu Shot> at the Ouu1t C4rt>n ComJNlny ;,, ~ CJifomili. •. JOHN BLOESER CARPET ONE Slru. 1179 2927 S. Bristol Street Costa Mesa (~~~!!:~~=4 ~ AL.so IN: lMff BMtj (jQJ 4J0.1JOJ .JUI""" (1 IJ) 6274738 'n. ..... • '11ii 1111 • r • 1"* .......... • '1111 .... 5eWlt ,,. .. No ....... 'l1lr .. kt I rt o.r""" C.0- JWA CONTINUED FROM A 1 . Oight gates to the current t4, combining two nobe classes and extending the nighttime flight curfew until Jan. 1, 20'26. Once the gates are built, the county could add 12 additional departures per day, increase restrictions on seat capadty and limit cargo OightS to tWo per · day. Those provisions would end Jan. 1, 2016. Restrictions imposed ln, 1985 on general aviation flights -including private air- craft, cargo and other opera- tions outside of the 11 com- mercial airlines -would expire Jan. 1, 2021. . The county, city and two airport activist committees - -EMBARK CONTINUED FROM A 1 •His role is the school dis- trict representative out there dealing on a daily basis with construction companies, inter- acting with contractors, princi- pals, any parents who may have questions.• Fine said. "Kind of an extension of me out there on site on a daily basis.• The position will not be a new one for Holtom. His work on Disney's newest $1.4-billion theme park is just the latest in a string of prestigious jobs for the Newport Beach resident. Before his five-year stint as a principal construction man- ager for Disney's new park, be was the project director for the Caesars Magical Empire in Las \ the AUport Working Group and Stop Polluting Our New- port -must approve any extension to ~ settle-ment agreement t is set to expire in 2005. Newport Beach Council- man Gary Proctor, who sits with Councilwoman Norma Glover on the council's ad hoc airport committee. could not be reached for CQmmenl Glover was traveling in New York and also could not be reached. The restrictions ~ in 1985 limit the number of annu- al passengers to 8.4 million and allow no more than 73 dai- ly departures. Per the airport's mandatory nighttime curlew, departures are allowed from 1 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Saturday, and 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sunday. Anivals are allowed from 1 a.m. to 11 p.m. Vegas. The budget on that pro- ject was more than $48 million. And before helping to cre- ate Caesars' lavish magical dining experience, he acted as a project manager for Caesars' trend-setting shops -The Forum Shops at Caesars iri'kas Vegas. The mall project of 80 shops done in an ancient Roman forum style had a bud- get of more than $55 million. Despite his extensive resume, Holtom said he is excited by the opportunity to stay near home and give back to the community where he has lived for more than 30 years. "I can stay local.· the 56- year-old said. •As a longtime resident, I will look after these expenditures as if they were my own, because it is, in part, mine.• Although his daughter did not attend Newport-Mesa's Begm wtth a •starter Braoe1et• and &dd a slltte for eaoh tamtly membel', birthdays, anniversaries . and all her important oooas1ons. We engrave a n&me or~ on tb8 b&ok at no obarge. 14K add-on slides start at $180. CHARLES H. BARR .. Doily Pilot )' I Monday through Saturday. and 8 a.m. to 11 p.m. s: The curlew was inco rated into the county's m c- ipal code but could be over- twned with e successtul 1eyat cb41lenge. .,. The proposed tnaease to 9.8 million passengers at ~ airport ts a 16.67% jump from the current limit. but 24.n5% from today's level. 111 Staff members from the dly and cowity have been in t.aIQ since December neshing out the proposed extension of the 1985 consent decree. SmWi said he is ~ with ttiil direction of the talks. '1 "Prom where I sit, I'm ~ ried about protecting Newport Beach." Smith said. "But l'w got to make sure we can ~ Orange County's passen~f and cargo demands in the future.• public schools, H~lton h¥ extensive ties to public schoolS. His mother was a teacher, tXtt.b of his grandmothers W!:TP teachers. and his wife of mp.re . than 20 years, Mary Anhe, taught at Corona del Mar Hf~ School for four years. ,. , Those who know Holtom and have worked with him'~ the past are commendll'Xg Newport-Mesa for having made a great choice. "Tom has always been very insightful," sold Bob Hei.o:l,eA. the owner of Mowery-Tho~­ son Inc .. an Anaheim finn that worked on California Advei:i'- ture. "He knows what ~.to be done and will follow through. He has a good con- struction sense, very good w~y of handling situations. He )s fair -fair for owner, as well 8' fair for contractors. He will insist on things being done that are shown on contracts and, if they are not shown. be will be fair to contractor.• N.wAnfnll'• ' I Factory StcondJ MIRajl 230 East 17th St. • Cost.a Mesa (949) 722-7224 www.rugs.ndarpets com Mon-Fri 10-6 Sat 10-5 ~rden full of u:orthy ca,uses ·~ . T he 12th annual South- ern California Spring Garden Show opened Unusday evening at South Coast Plaza attracting some ·1,800 guests for a preview of the enchanting garden dis- plays that will be open to pUblic viewing and shopping dthrough this weekend. 1wOpening night was a fwad·raiser for Mission San JJll.Jl Capistrano, with Emer- ald Bay's Madeline Swinden working bard for the Friends Qf)Jle MiSsion and filling the q9µ.se , or should I say gar- ~ with donors from all oier Orange County and ~ond. Working with Swinden was a committee of devoted tndividuals dedicated to reno- ~~n of the Mission indud-mg Electa Anderson, looking Sin.ashing in ice blue raw silk. :rult-:>n Segerstrom was front M>~ center, sans pretty wife Jerinifer who is home with tfieir newborn daughter. ~erstrom introduced the snow and special guest Karen Hooges, director of horticul-'ttlte and resort enhancement ~<ff. Disneyland Resort. · Spotted in the garden, admiring the bounty and·the ~uty or spring, were Cecil- ia Nott, Noddie and Bill Welt-n&, Sarah and Michael Cor-~an, Elyse and Bruce Miller Anti Henry Segerstrom with Wile Elizabeth. ., "You know I had a special ~on in the garden in front c:Jf the new Z Gallery store," shared Henry Segerstrom, C.3. Segerstrom managing partner. THE CROWD Magazine, Americari Air- lines, Crabtree and Evelyn. Denman Tools, BV Wines, Kellogg Garden Supply, Dis- neyland Resort, Orrefors Kos- ta Boda, Coast Magazine and South Coast Plaza. The show is open lo the public through Sunday. • • • The graduating seniors of Assisteens, the Auxiliary of Assistance League of New- port Mesa, held their annual fashion show at the Hyatt Newporter. The presentation was sponsored by younger members of the group in honor of the graduating class, and their contributions through years of service to community through the pr<>"' grams of the league. enport for their support. ••• Fair Share 502 honored Newport legend Hans Prager for his 20 years of contribu- tions to many important Orange County causes. The April 29 dinner at Prager's Ritz Restaurant, fashion Island helped the Someone Cares Soup Kitchen in Costa Mesa raise funds to •bum the mortgage• on their prop-erty. . The black tie Sunday evening dinner filled the Ritz with patrons payin&!5° and more to have · er with Hans and Charlene Prager. Proceeds are expected to top $250,000 for Merle Hatle- berg's kitchen, which makes a difference for many lives each and every day in this conununity . ••• The sorority gals repre- senting the Newport Harbor Alumni Chapter of Delta Delta Delta came together for their 18th annual Rainbow of Hope luncheon and fashion show in support of the Pedi- atric Cancer Research Foun- dation. The Newport Beach Marriott Hotel opened its doors to some 200 women who joined forces to help children" survive cancer. Veteran fashion show pro- ducer Kittie Leslie handled the program duties, showing ott the latest trends from such stores as MiPlace and other Fashion Island bou- bques. The models were pri- Above, Delta Delta Delta alumnae Paige Baumgart- ner, Kim Rothwell, Debi Hayos and Theresa Sperle, from left, took part in the 18th annual Rainbow of Hope luncheon and fashion show at the Newport Beach Marriotl The event raised more than $14,000 for the Pediatric Cancer Research Foundation. At.-nght, Lori Contant, Wendy Schiff, Sue Cox and Dawn Sather, from left, spent time at the show. lion board who lost his daughter to cancer at dge 12, following a three year battle. The $50 lWlcheon fee helped to raise more than $14,000 for the cause. The lb-Delta gals have raised more than $80,000 for charity over the past three years. The afternoon was chaired by Sue Cox and Wendy Schiff. with support from Heidi Primeaux, group pres- ident; Diann Leduc, in charge or the silent aucllon; Dawn Tetrault Sather; Lon .. Saturday, Mats, 2001 A13 Contant; Ndncy Franks; ·Paige Baumgdrlner; There- sa Sperle, Jube Wagener, Debbie Grayston and Michele Cox. • TitE CROWD appea~ Thursdays and Saturdays · The man responsible for SOuth Coast Plaza continued, "'1 just ran into a woman I have known for 40 years. She opened the original I Magnin at South Coast Plaza many ~ ago, and now she's into More than 40 guests filled the ballroom for the show produced by co-chairs Robin Biggs and Pam Childress. Assisteens coordinator Anita Boyd welcomed the crowd with style and introduced the program, which began with an emotional tribute to each of the 20 Assisteens. Modeling was coordinated by Bloomingdale's Fashion Island, with praise directed at Julie Reynolds and Sara Dav- marily 1\i-Delta women. The · ";=========~!!!!!!3============!liE!::=======~======~-=======:!!!!ii!i!iiiiiii55=: highlight of the event came • .li.ndscape design." .'.SeQerstrom laughed and lded, "She told me she's ded her high heels for eakers, and that's she's hav- g the time of her life. What's in the form or a very emo- tional address by John Valle- ly, a member of the founda- VD-LABELLA · to me is seeing her ck here at South Coast after so many yeais. We e an extended family of Consignment Fumiture ple in this community con- < ' to this destination.· : The garden show, themed f'A G4fder;>..of.Fairyta.les and J:egends, • featwes a wonder- centerpiece of "Jack and e Beanstalk" in the atrium the center. MAY SALE 20-75% OFF • ~ Sponsored by a number of ~rporale citizens including ~tra.k. Westin Hotels, Sun-'°te't l'vfagazine, Wesh\'ays (949) 515-1884 369 E. 17th St. • Across from Ralphs (17th & Tustin) Mon-Sat • 10:30 -6:00 pm --Did You Know? , •That we are a full service nursery with quaJified .c.atifomia Certified Nursery Professionals and landsape designers. We can meet all of your gardening needs. Come in today to~ Nurseries and let us show you how." NUllSBH•S, lllC.--- COSTA MESA s.Yfl'A ANA 2700 Bristol St. 2800 N. Tustin Ave. (71 4) 754-6661 (714) 633-9200 COMPUTE lANDSCAPtNG • 4S YI.US EXPEIUENCE LICENSE# •SS3 TOM TANAKA, C.C.N.PRO . Manager f~ Nurwy-Calta Mesa Maste~ Nursery Professional Senior Care Community 3901 E. Coast Highway, Coro1111 tie/ M11r. Ctliifornill 92625 ......... ilfa9t:Ja Ill JICllll SA FECO' ~ Call Today for --- A FRE.E PHO -IE QUOTE Craig Brown 1~1uranc1 (949) 760-1255 l'.i.,hion hlJml !'lit."" >rt lie'.lch • U... • Q"i<;()l90 Save 25°/o-500/o Off Retail r---=1~ f:-1 When You Deal Direct 1 1:1 IB'tll' 1 I •"llNpvrc:NNola~poec. I with the Factory 1 S1 liv'ALuE 1 _______ _. We Also "Carry: •Teak • Cast Aluminum •Resin •Aluminum -------------------s100 OFF UUrella wttll purcUse of 5 piece patio set DOES LIFE GET BETTER AFTER 50? Find out May 15th at Huntington Terrace Jane Glenn Hass Author of "TIME OF YOUR LIFE" Hear Jane discuss the challenges, joys and benefits that come w.ith nucuriry. Jane writd about this vibrant popuJation in her nationally syndicated column. Al the tide indicates turning fifty is an opportunity to be more, do mort and enjoy more. l'i.IM!I .. llNIOll '-1\'I 0 Al 4 Saturday, May 5 I 2001 Golden .oldies revived for Center's stage By Tom Titus F ewer and fewer musicals are being written for Broadway consumption, financial considerations and risk factors being what they are. Thus, the oldies are being revived at a rapidly accelerat- ing pace. This situation extends to the provinces as well, with THEATER those communi- ties fortunate REVIEW enough to house a venue such as the Orange County Performing Arts Center. Next season, the Center's Broadway series will offer a revival-heavy slate of oldies-but-goodies alonl_ with a pair of newcomers in its nine-show lineup. The leadoff slot, Sept. 19- 23, goes to a show that lifts musical satire to a new level, •Forbidden Broadway.• Unseen locally since Saddle- back College offered its own version back in the mid-'80s, it's a hilarious put-down of the shows and stars that have become legendary, from Ethel Merman and Mary Martin to •phantoi;n of the Opera· and "Les Miserables.· The two newcomers arrive back to back -"Swing!· from Nov. 27 to Dec. 2 and "Blast!· Dec. 27 lo Jan. 6. ·swing!· is a potpourri of singing and dancing that spans the past 60 years in music, while "Blast!• features 60 brass, percussion and visu-· al performers in an explosion of music and theater. No story line, apparently, in either offering. The delightful Ann-Margret visits Costa Mesa from Feb. 5- 10 as the madam of "The Best lJttle Whorehouse in Texas.• This show has some miles oo it, but has been seen only once in this area, long ago at the now-defunct Harlequin Dinner Theater. One of the best musicals of all time on my personal list, "Kiss Me Kate,· arrives March 19 and will play through the 24th. Cole Porter's tuneful musicalization of "The Taming of the Shrew• was born in the 1940s, but recently enjoyed a whopping Broadway revival, winning five Tonys in 2000. Shortly after St. Patrick's Day, "Riverdance• will have Irish eyes smiling at the Cen- ter on a return visit March 26- 31. The celebration of Irish music, song and dance will feature an international com- pany. SEE TITUS PAGE A17 YowtgChang DAILY PILOT The attorney, the paint-seller and the retired mechanical engi- neer got together Tuesday to make music that seemed to make a tall tree branch just out- side the window wave in rhythm. It was chorale music -the kind with layers and echoes and IOU!. Conductor Wil.Uam Hall 1ed tbe William Hall Master Chorale tbot evening, fnteljecting com- ments, singing along and some- ' • I ' Music FR011 INOTilER EU a The Woody Herman Orchestra wftti tenor saxophonist ind arranger Frank Tiberi will perform at 8 p.m. today at Orange Coast College's Robert 8. Moore Theatre, 2701 Fairview Road, COSUI Mesa. $20-$25. (714) 432-5880. Love and . ' 'La :Bayadere' Paris Opera Ballet will perform Ny.reyev's version of the tragic ballet at the Center Young Chang D AILY PILOT I f the mark of a great piece of work -as opposed to something merely "good" -is that it stands the test of time, then Rudolf Nureyev's "La Bayadere" earns that title. The late dancer-choreographer first staged his version in 1992 in Paris, basing it on a ballet created by Marius Petipa, which pre- miered in Russia jn 1877. Set in ancient India, the story of love, jealousy and betray- al is one that spans not only time, but the globe over, says Agnes Letestu, principal dancer with the Paris Opera Ballet. "1 think it could happen now,• added Letestu, who will dance the principal role of Niki ya for this week's perfo{l'Ilances of •La Bayadere • at the Orange County Perform- ing Arts Center. ·1 lhink it could be a story of now.• The story is a tragic tale of two lovers - Solor, a warrior, and Nikiya, a bayadere (Hindu dancing girl). The Grand Brahmin also loves Nikiya and becomes jealous upon discovering she and Solor are together. On top of everything, the Rajah offers Solor his daughter, Gamzatti, for mar- riage. Solor accepts out of obligation. Ga.mzatti has Nikiya poisoned by a snake. The Aurelie Dupont wWportray GamzatU, lharlng the role with Marte-Agnes Glllot. times stopping everything because somethlng Just didn't sound right Then he made an annowu:emenl "I got a call from Rome today," bis voice 8{iloed in the St. Andrew's Presbyterian Olurch sanctuary. "The pope definitely wants US to sing the Mass, 10 we'll be in the first 20 rows.• Rehearsing for Sunday4s "Verdi and Friends" coooert in Newport Beach. cbonile mem· bers nodded. 1be D8WI W8I get- ting bigger and doler-not only will tbe uo-m.nber group • Grand Brah- m.in offers to save her life in ~xchange for his love. Ni.kiya declines and dies. Solor grieves and meets her in his dreams. Nureyev took some liberties with the piece, adding steps and technical difficulties to create some- thing in his style and to modernize a classical story, Letestu said. Judy Morr, executive vice presi~nt of the Center who oversees dance programming, calls his touches •the Nureyev nuances• apparent in all of his work. Letestu maintains this is necessary. •Because now people come to see a per- son, and they want to understand what they see,· she said in a lispy, French accent. •If we used old-fashioned, they don't under- stand the story. We have to be modem and very clear.• The dancer said the same applies to the way they move. A luxurious, extravagant ballet, "La Bayadere• is a grand production. Set designs reminiscent of royal courts in India will transform Segerstrom Hall into an exotic world this week. The costumes -far from the traditional tutus -include gold-trimmed saris1 yellow, green and orange dresses; and elaborately jeweled h air decorations. Ludwig Minkus composed the score, I FYI WHA~ "La Bayade re" WHEN: 8 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday and May 11-12; 2 p.m. May 12-13. WHERE: Orange County Performing Arts Center, 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa COST: $2~$85 CALL: (714) 740-7878 DailyJ>~t 'q "" '"~ I I ,.) .{2 .... ~ .. . . ' ,, II I ., ,u •• . . u Agnes Letestu ,., will dance the ' ' prlndpal role 'i.. of NUdya in ""' "La Bayadere'",; at the ,;-: Orange County,. Performing Arts> Center. r- "I · which the Pacidc Symphony ~· Orchestra will ::. perform this week. •And it's important to see"' Nureyev's 'KiogJ dom tn the Shades,' which ls the third act, " which is this ' extraordinaril.Y. beautiful post! tioning (and],. choreograph~' ing (of} ... dancers that-I think is ' .. tncomparai ble,• Mon said. · ·There ' are, of ; course, " many other 'Bayaderes' that are beautiful, but I think tbli -,-· .• one is extraordinary, and I ~~ people won't forget it." J Nureyev danced the rol~ f of Petipa's Solor in 1961. ~ Many have restaged the - piece, including Natalia ~ Makarova for the American ... Ballet Theatre and Yuri Grigorovicb for tM Bolshoi, but Nureyev's version stems from! Petipa's notes. • 1 The sets and costumes were created by I Ezio Prigerio and Franca Squardapino. f Some of the dresses are heavy, all are -;; beautiful, and none are hard to dance in ...., =~tr8:d~xtensive rehearsals, Letestu reas-~ "The most hardest is to be very pure .. very simple,· said the dancer, who's don the ballet twice before -once in the JO) of Gamzatti, once as Nikiya. ~ This week, the company performed ~I ballet in San Francisco. '"1 •The public is very good, very warm • 41 Let es tu said. •I feel in the role really ' inside, you know? When you d~ a role Yott have to do it onstage. U you rebea.ne yo"t can rehearse many months but it's not th• same. You have to feel the profession I • really felt it yesterday.• ' • j Daily Pilot ,,.., HOURS . . .,. • Send Ana HOURS Items to the .J)ally Piiot, 330 W. Bay St, Costa ..... CA 92627; fax to (949) 646-!~ or call (949) 574-4261. A com- ptete listing may be found at http://www.d•l/ypllotcom. SPECIAL SPRING BLOOMS The 12th 41lllual Southern ·California Spring Garden boree Road, Irvine. $500. (714) 755-5788. IMAGINE THAT The Orange County Per- forming Arts Center will pre- sent Cirque EO$ and Para- chute Express as part of this year's Imagination Celebra- tion at 600 Town Center Drive, C<?Sta Mesa. Cirque Eos will perform at 7:30 p.m. May 16 and Parachute Express will appear at 1 and 4 p.m. May 20. $8. (714) 740 ... 7878. Show will be held from 10 FILM AND ,VIDEO FEST a .m . to 1 p .m . today and 11 • Orange Coast College will a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Sunday on hold its 31st annual Student all three levels of the Crate & Film and Video Festival at 7 BarreJ/Macy's Home Wing at M South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bear p.m. ay 17 in the Robert B. Moore Theatre, 2701 St, Costa Mesa. Free. (714) Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. 435-2160. Sponsored by the college's PLAYING FOR CHARITY All-you-can-eat foOd and music headline the noon to 4 p.m. Saturday AIDS Ride charity fund-raiser at Chipo- tle, 2300 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. N~wport Beach band Redline 5 will perform two acoustic sets and sell CDs. There will also be give- aways. $10. (949) 646-1288. G4ftDENTOUR The Volunteer Assn. of Sherman Library & Gardens Will b old its fifth annual Gtlrden Tour from 11 a .m. to 4 p.m. Sunday. The fund- raising event will feature tours of six residential gar- dens in Corona del Mar. 5,berman Library & Gardens is at 2647 E. Coast High- way. $25-$30. (949) 673- ~61. BESOOAL The Southern California Social Guide and Jewish ~. of Single Professionals will present an Orange County cocktail party at 8 p.m. May 12 at the Radisson fJotE:l, 4545 MacArthur Blvd., Newport Beach. $20. (323) 656-7777. 1 SYMPHONY FUND-RAISER The Pad.fie Symphony Qrchestra will present its ~ual gala fund-raiser, themed this year after a Venetian carnival ball, at 6 p.m. May 12 at the Hyatt Regency Irvine, 17900 Jam- film/video qepartment, the three-hour festival is rated PG-13. $5. (71 4) 432-5180. EVIL'S BACK A reconstructed version of "A Touch of Evil" by Orson Welles will be screened at 6:30 p.m. May 19 at Orange Coast College, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Free. (714) 432-5725. MARKET pt,ACE The Orange County Market Place is held from 7 a.m. lo 4 p.m . Saturdays and Sundays in the Orange County Fair- grounds' main parking lot, 88 Fair Drive. Costa Mesa. $2foradults,children age 12 and younger are admitted free. (949) 723-6616. MUSIC SOUL AND JAZZ Jazz ~alist Carmen Brad- ford will make her Orange County Performing Arts Center debut today at Founders Hall, 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. Shows will be al 7 :30 and 9:30 p.m. $44 or $38. (714)' 740-7878. HELEN REDDY Pop sensation Helen Reddy will perform at 8 p.m. today with the Pacific Symphony Orchestra Pops. Reddy is best known for her many hits, including "You and Me "' CLOSING BUSINESS • NOTICE OF YACAN<;m . DATEBOOK Against the World• and •1 Am Woman.• The concert will be held in the Orange County Performing Arts Center, 600 Town Center Drtve, Costa Mesa. $23-$72. (714) 755-5799. SOUNDS OF WOODY HERMAN Moore Theatre, 2701 PaiJview Road, Costa Mesa. $25-$33. (714) 432-5880. GUR'AR ENSEMBLE Orange Coast College's Gul· tar Ensemble will hold itS annual spring concert at 8 p .m. May 12 in OCC's Pine Arts Recital Hall, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. The ensemble, under the dlre¢on of John McEnary, will peiform works by major The Woody Herman Orches- tra with tenor saxophonist and arranger Frank nberl will perfonn at 8 p.m. today at Orange Coast College's Robert B. Moore Theatre, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. $20-$25. (714)432,. 5880. . composers. $5. (714) 432- 5880. WIWAMSHAU MASTER OfORALE The Williams Hall Master Chorale will present "Verdi and Friends• at 4 p.m. Sun- day in St. Andrew's Presby- terian Church, 600 St. Andrews Road. Newport Beach. $20. (714) 997-6504. ClASSfCAL ANALE Orange Coast College's Symphony Orchestra will conclude its 40th season at 7:lQ p.m. Sunday with a con- cert featuring works by Rachmaninoff, Johannes Brahms and Aaron Copland. The concert will be held in OCC's Robert B. Moore The- atre, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. $6 or $10. (714) 432-5880. ROONEY AND FRIENDS Mickey Rooney will hold a ·command Performance" with Jan Chamberlain, Pete Barbutti, the Drifters, and Henry Cuesta and his band at 8 p.m. May 12 at Orange Coast College's Robert B. BRANO 1E.W • COSME7TCALLY IMPERFECT Get the Best for Less! BOBBY MCFERRIN Vocalist Bobby McFerrin, best known for the song "Don't Worry, Be Happy,• will join the Pacific Chorale and members of the Pacific Symphony Orchestra at 8 p.m. May 19 for a perfor- mance of Faure's "Requiem· at the Orange County Pe r- forming Arts Center. 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. Conducted by Mcfer- rin, the program will also feature improvisations, spm- tuals and jazz arrangements. $15-$49. (714) 662-2345. MELANCHOLY AND MIRTH The Harmonia Baroque Play- ers will present "Images of Melancholy and Mirth• at 4 p.m. May 20 at Newport Harbor Lutheran Church, 798 Dover Drive, Newport Beach. Concert features include guest soprano Mau- rita Phillips-Thornburgh and ensemble members. $12 or $10. (714) 970-8545. \ A NIGHT Willi DONNY Donny Osmond will perform at the Orange County Per- forming Arts Center at 8 p.m. ATHWMA"S GREEK '9 MEDITERRANEAN CUISINE f 1'.J(l) 1 IVI .Ml!\((·'· Kl LLY P/\~•(IN(, cir. "-\lllttl I'\!>.\) (H'f "· 1:.\'-\ llH'M '\t , J 0 0 ° ' Io 11 I June 2 in a show featuring songs from Broadway's cur- rent hits, as well as classics. The Center is at 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa . $39.50-$59.50. (714) 740- 7878 . BAROQUE FEST The Baroque Music Festival's 21st season will begin at 4 p.m. June 17 al St. Michael & All Angels Church, 3233 Pacific View Drive, Newport Beach. The festival will last throughJune24atvarious locations and will include music from the 17th and 18th centuries. The four-concert subscription price is $85. Sin· gle ticket pnces are $30, $25 or $10. (949) 673-4299. DRUM SPECTACLE Three world·champ1on drum and bugle corps will perform Ill "Champions at The Cen- ter· at 7:30 pm July 16 at the Orange County Perform- mg Am Center. 600 Town Center Dnve, Costa Mesa. $12 (800) 495-7469. JAZZ ON SUNDAYS Ordnge County saxophonist Nonn Douglas brings his own brand of jazz to Roy's of N£>wport Beach from 5 to 8 p.m. Sundays. Roy's is is at 453 Newport Center Drive, Newport Bedch. (949) 640· 7697. POP/ROCK & FLAMENCO Tate 5 -a funk, rock and Motown dCl -perlorms at 9 p m Sdturdays at Carmelo's R1storante. 3520 E Coast HJghway, Corona del Mar. Solo gUJtansl Ken Sanders • J,JOO Mi.JI !/J~8{<jnt'N .Jhi>)u#~lllA ' .?i11wil11H I.: ... f cr"~ fl11tlt' •, f!Ho<(y Yl"duc </H11vl10tt6t' !:hicu The Original MIKE'I CARPET$ OVER 25 YEARS IN COSTA MESA •Now Owned & Operated by Mesa Upholstery• CARPETS PLUSH • TEXTURE BERBER •13~ ~s~ Saturday, Mt1<t s, 2001 AlS perlonns classical Oamenco tunes at 7:30 p.rn. Tuesdays and Sundays. The shows are free. (949) 675-1922. SATURDAY NIGHT R•B Gerald lshibaShl and the Stone Bridge Band plays rock and R&B at 9 p.m Sat- urdays at Sutton Place Hotel's nianon Lounge, 4500 MacArthur Blvd., Newport Beach. Free. (949) 476-2001. SENIOR CENTER AFTERNOON A seven~piece, live band performs big band tunes from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. Fri· days al the Oasis Senior Center, 800 Marguerite Ave .. Corona del Mar. $4. (949) 644-3244. STAGE KIM AKIMBO "Kimberly Akimbo: a dark- ly funny story of a girl whose body ages almost five b.mes faster than normal, will play through May 13 on South Coast Repertory's Mainstage, 655 Town Center Drive, Cos- ta Mesa. Show times will be 8 p.m. Tuesday through Fri· day. 2:30 and 8 p.m. Satur· day and 2:30 ana 7:30 p.m. Sunday. $18-$49. (714) 708· 5555. TOM WALKER "Tom Walker" will play through May 27 on South Coast Repertory's Second Stage, 655 Town Center Dnve, Costa Mesa. Show bmes will be 7:45 p.m. Tuesday SEE AFTER PAGE A 16 Vinyls • Ceramics Wood • Laminates CALL NOW 642-8400 FREE IN-HOME ESTIMATES "l1ie City of Newport Beach is currently accepting applications to fill the following vacancies (4-year tams): DESIGN CENTER ''For All Your Decorating Neec/s!'' Board of Library Trustees (one seat) Arts Commission (three aeats) Paits. BeacheS cl Recreation Comminion (two seats) . Plannina Commission (two seats) f URNDUIU! 1191.,.m,ne•x • Custom-Made furniture SUpC<mrs • Pado Pumlture • Draperies, Shades. -~ .. . . Daily Piloti Al 6 Saturday, May s. 2001 DATEBOOK - AFTER . CONTINUED FROM A 15 through Sunday and 2 p.m. Satwday and Sunday. $18- $47. (114) 108-5555. THE TEMPEST Orange Coast College's The- ater Department will present Shakespeare's •Jbe Tem- pest" from May 16·20 at 10 a.m. Wednesday through Fri- day, 8 p.m. Friday and Satur- day, and 2 p.m. Sunday. The play will be staged at the Robert B. Moore Theater, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. $6-$9. (714) 432-5640. KINDERTRANSPORT "Kindertransport, •Diane Samuel's play about the res- cue mission that saved 10,000 children during the Holocaust, will be presented by Readers Repertory The· ater at 7 p.m. May 17 in the Newport Beach Central Library's Friends Meeting Room, 1000 Avocado Ave. Free. (949) 717-3801. THE REAL SHAKESPEARE? "The Beard· of Avon,• an Amy Freed play about William Shakespeare and other writers thought to be the real authors behind bis work, will be staged June 1 through July 1 at South Coast Repertory, 655 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. Previews will run May 25-31. Show times are 8 p.m. Tues- day through Friday, 2:30 and 8 p.m. Saturday and 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. SUnday. $18-$49. (114) 108-5555. SESAME STREET Sesame Street Uve's "Let's Be Friends" will be staged June a-17 at the Orange County Performing Art!i Center, 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. nm.es are 1 p.m. June 14; 10:30 a.m. and 1 p.m. June 15:· 10:30 a.m., 2 p.m. and 5:30 p.m. June 16; and 1 and 4:30 p.m. June 17. $15 or $20. {714) 556-2787. RETRO FEVER A tOuring production of "Sat- urday Night Fever -the Broadway Musical• will hit the Orange County Perform- ing Arts Center June 26 through July 8 at 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. nm.es are 8 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, 2 and 8 p.m. Saturday and 2 and 1 :30 p.m. Sunday. An additional per- formance will be offered at 8 p.m. July 2 and there will be no show on July 4. $28.50· $62.50. {714) 740-7878. ART MINORS GO MAJOR The Orange County Museum of Art will present an exhibi- tion of a.rt made by students participating in the Santa Ana Unified School District's "Special Studio" program May 12 through June 24 at the museum's South Coast Plaza location, 3333 Bear St.. Costa Mesa. Called •Major Art/Minor Artists,• the show is connected to the annual I 11 I ' \ \ I I ,, I ' I I I l ' I ' . • 'I \' I .; I A HUGE TOOL SHOW & SALE &" .· • ------ * ATI'!ND SEMINARS * * SEE HANDS-ON DEMOS * * ENJOY SPJ!O.AL DISCOUNTS * *LIA.RN FROM MASTBJl CRAmMEN * L~!!!!!!!~S!J~~ l * SD DIYALT, POll'ID-CABLI AND YORI* O~Wems ~ •1nternat1ona1 18r1~.Sale Orchids $1000 to $2500 MAY 5™ Now Open 181 SaturdQ •ch Month SATURDAY9-'PM . 1 OOO's IN STOCK m:MIJ!9liiMga;1IMiti4if4 Newport ........ °"" COlftlMl'Clat Orchid Nul"MIY &CASH 20382 Birch Stntet • Newport Beach Carol Beckwith and Angela Fisher will sign copies of their bOok .. African Ceremonies.. from 1 to 3 p.m. Sunday at a special reception at the Boudreau-Ruiz Gallery, 3000 Newport · Blvd., Newport Beach. Free. Space ls limited. Reservations requested. (949) 675-4766. The gallery Is also 'showing the work of Heriberto Juarez, above. Imagination Celebration fes· tivaJ. Hours are 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday and 11 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Sun- day. Free. (949) 759-1122. CALIFORNIA ART "California: Through the Artist's Eye,• an exhibit of qil paintings by Steve Simon, will be on display in the Newport Beach Central Library foyer through May 30. Free. (949) 717-3801. BALBOA ARTWALK The Balboa Island Artwalk will take place from 9 -a.m. to 5 p.m. May 13 along the South Bayside promenade, between Marine Avenue and Ferry Landing at Agate Avenue in Newport Beach. ~ Cfiic 'Boutique~ 'Desi_qner Clo tfiin_<J as "Feature(/ in ·Tina/ "Style 'tile" by 'Jil/ia11 'Ba rbari 'Blowout J(. ·r -c c-1 fi · . 40-.;0% off 'P ""'\)' ot Ill.CJ Select Items 9reat Sifts for .,"\1otfier's .'Day II (no pur~Ul.SC rrqr~wi~ e 'Ill 1 20 '/usti11 !'foe. Ste 'D • JV'e wport '13eacfi ( rh '8./odi. up from <PCJ{J (9 49)646-0 422 :.Mon.rfn: ro:ooam • 6:00 m • Sat: 1 l :ooam - The Newport Harbor High School Home & Gardm Tour Committee would like to express their appreciation to: Free. (949) 830-8098. HOSPITAL PHOTOGRAPHY An exhibition ol photographs taken at the Heart Institute of Children's Hospital. Los Angeles by commercial pho- tographer Walter Urie will be on display through May 22 at Orange Coast College's Photo Gallery, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. The gallery is open 9 a.m . to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Free. (714) 432-5520. IMPRESSIONS The Robert Mondavi Wme and Food Center presents an exhibition titled "Impres- sions" by Southern California artist Val carson through May 14 at 1570 Scenic Ave., Costa Mesa. Center hours are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Fri- day. Free. (714) 979-4510. CATALINA ART An exhibition showcasing "Catalina and the Channel Islands, Newport's Offshore Neighbors" will run through June 30 at the Newp6rt Har- bor Nautical Museum. The exhibit focuses oµ the nauti- cal history of Santa Catalina and other offshore sentinels. The museum is open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday at 151 E. Coast Highway, Newport Beach. Free. (949) 673-7863. PICTURE STORIES •American Stories: From the Personal to the Political,• a collection of art prints by drtists including Vito Acconci and Hans Burkhardt, will be exhibited through July 1 at the Orange County Museum of Art, 850 San Clemente Drive, Newport Beach. Hours are 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday. Museum entrance is SS for '• adults, $4 seniors and stu· ., , dents and free for m4mbers • and children 16 and younger. : (949) 759-1122. VIDEO FOCUS "• The Orange County Muse- um of Art will present •One Wall: A Video Series" ""' through Sept. 9 at 850 ~ .11 Clemente Drive, Newport ,. ·. Beach. The series will intro-: duce audiences to six South~ ... em California artists who incorporate video into their work. Museum entrance is ,, $5 for adults, $4 sl?niors and •· students, and free for mem- bers and children 16 and younger. (949) 759-11~2. ,,2 DANCE LA BAYADERE -The Paris Opera Ballet will perform "La Bayadere• at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday and May 12, and 2 p.m. May 12 and 13 at , Segerstrom Hall, 600 Town ' Center Drive, Costa Mesa. ' $20-$85. (714) 740-7878. I I BALLROOM FRIDAYS The DeFore Foundation for '' the Arts hosts b8.l.lroom dancJ ' ing ffom 8 to 11 p .m. Fridays11 • at the Defore Dance Center, ., 151 Kalmus Drive, Suite G-3,_; Costa Mesa. $11 admission · includes a free dance lesson. : (714) 241-9908. SEE AFTER PAGE A1f: Experience ~ tedlnology In furniture ._ ror your home or office. Ergo -customiuble furniture ~nd beds. Ergonomlally deslaned k>r comfort ~nd bact support.. helping you to llYe ind sleep betttr: customized comfort MUNCE SHOIS -4QS ~ er,,.,.,, 2961 HJdttla om. lnW • t4U11.01JI www.ergob9d•.com · ·~~~~~!~~ -~ .. , --' .... ' " ~. J • • CANNERY PAINTERS •PwMS • STANC.0 SIGNAGE SYSTEMS •THE Bt..rrERA COLLECTION Enjoy a ~ous Suite, Sumptuous Dining, Entertainment, Bingo, Crafts, Billiards, ~Salon, Trans~rtation to Doctor, SbOpping, Fun Trips, 4 Friendly~ People. ~ HAUTE CAKEs • BETAVIA DESIGNS & BETrv }£FPR.EY • CAROL AKlNS • N£JMAN MA.Reus & CO'rruRA •ANDREW GROM.EK OF CoVT\.1R.E FLOWERS •THE URBAN GARDENER • FLORA! 01?.StGN BY ENZO • FASHION ISL.ANO MERCHANTS • PACtFIC COAST FLORAL • NJIOO TwlGS • PLASTICOS • ATRJUM COURT FLOWERS • GARY'S ISLAND HOME All Tht /nmdibly Gracious And Gtnmus Homtownm, Who ~J Thtir Homa AnJ Gllrtlms To Tht Community. A1J °"1 Abmism, ~. & Unt/muritm, All TM /ltJ111t Tnr ~la.Wltm. From $1,545/Mo. 2283 Fairview at Wilaon CoataMeaa Minimum age 58 For more iRformation . pleaMcalll 949/64~ or Fax 9e~Dllnm . ' Doily Pilot CHORALE CONTINUED FROM 14 tOOtb anniversary d Verdi's death. About 800 singers from variom chorales will pe!form Verdi's Requiem Mass in a oonc:ert at St. Paul's Outside- tbe-Walls Basilica with the Santa Cecilia Orchestra. "h's Verdi's centennial year, &o they wanted to do a special cmcert. • said David Masone, general ~er of the William Hall Master Cllorale. .. Dr. Hall was on tour recently in Italy with the Chapman University choir and became acquainted with the director of music at the Vatican.• .But before they fiy over- seas, this group of various professionals from all over Southern California is focusing on its most immediate local cnmmttment Verdi's Pour Sacred Pieces at St. Andrew's. The first part is the• Ave Maria,• which is arranged in AFTER CONTINUED FROM A16 DANCE 204 Dance 204 offers private and group instruction in begin- ning and advanced ballroom, Latin and modem dancing at 204 Washington St., Newport Beach. (949) 675-9082. SENIOR BAUROOM lbe Costa Mesa Senior Cen- ter offers ballroom dancing t ml15ic of the Ray Rob- Combo for adults from mo to 10:30 p.m. Tuesdays. Singles and couples are wel- <t)me. $3. The center ls at ~5 W. 19th St. (949) 645- ~· · OANSCENE STUDIO Dan.scene Studio offers ball- rpom dancing at 8 p.m. on t\'e first Friday or each . month. $10. The studio is at 2980 McClintock Way, Costa l'Vfesa. (7 14) 641-8688. QeG BAND DANONG ibe Oasis Senior Center ~ an afternoon of danc- i4g...ta.'big band music: from --~ p.m. Pridays. C!offee and refreshments are served. The center ls at 800 ~erite Ave., Corona del ~. (949) 6'4-32.f4. • ¥GENTIN£ TANGO Benscene Studio offers tango Qandng from 8 p.m . to 12:30 ~ the first Saturday of •ch month. Dan.scene is at ~-McClintock Way, Costa ,. (714) 641-8688. . TAKJNG ADVANTAGE OF OUR RELOCATION SERVICES The services of a aood Realtor are especially imponant when you •are movina to a new city. You blow very little about the different aeipbothoods, the local martec itions. or the pouibilitiet of findina a put house in your price ~uaCllllfYCMI•......., ~to a tiw city. Al pll1 ol a Ulll .... ~ reb:adon mtwod. " CM pul yo. ia l09da wilh a~ lealtOf who cu mate hCMIM ...., • .,.... '11ley .ntl CUlllCt J°" befcn JC* arrive IO dilC9ll ............. ,.Will --. ............... ---~--Crfllria. ney CID .-id )'W lftlal---... ~ ...... l9d c~ILWlll) ...._ ... II\. ....... to 109· ,,.... ,o. lfrlye for yo. ftnC ...,_ ..... trip, die ... '"" be ~ 10 abow yo. die bell .._.for ... in.,,,."'°' ..... ...... ~ ... ud Jeff .... 29 1:9 ....... ,...ot ... ... 1t111••• .......... .. ...... ~ ....... .. __ _. .. .. ··-· .. Celll ... .. I . . .. DATE:OOoK . SokKday, Mays, 2001 Al7 FYI WHA~ ·verdi and Friends• WHEN: 4 p.m. Sunday WHERE: St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church, 600 St. Andrews Road, Newport Beach COST: $20 CALL: (714) 997-6504 numerous scale modes and keys. It's a piece Verdi wrote as an exercise and labeled "never to be performed bl public,• Hall said. This is also one of Irvine attorney David Wald's favorite Verdi pie<:es. "I like the way it's written in an enigmatic scale,• said Wald, who's been a chorale member for a year now. "It's not so melodic, it's very unusual. I like bow the har- monies work.· 1he second part is titled "Stabat Mater,• which means •weeping mother at the BOOKS SILENT JOE Mystery writer T. Jefferson Parker will sign his latest book, "Silent Joe,• at 5 p.m. today at Borders Books & Music. 3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa. The book is a muraer mystery set in the thick of Orange County politics. Free. (714) 432-7854. HEY MACI William McCurdie will sign copies of •ttey Mac! This is Serious Business. A Guy Could Get Killed• at 1 p.m. Sunday at Borders Books & Music, 3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa. Before his career as a minister, the Orange County resident spent three years in the Army during World War II. Free. (714) 432-7854. KIDS STUFF Children's author Nancy Robison of Newport Beach will sign her books from 2 to 4 p.m. Friday a~ Barnes & cross.• The third is •Te Deum. • The last is •Laude Alla Vergine, • a women-only song of praise to the \1.rgin Mary. Bruce Van Patten, a paint salesman from Brea who works in Los Angeles, calls Verdi's ~usic •tush.• Hall said the four pieces are dose to his heart. Verdi wrote them at the end of his life and two of the numbers need organ accompanimenl "So the [SL AnQ!ew's) sanctuary itself is a wonderful place to perform,• he said. •It's a very good sound." For Charles Brown. a retired music81 engineer whO's been with the group for 18 years, singing and being involved in the chorale is what he holds dose to his heart ·1 had read about it in the paper, and I auditioned to go on a trip l9 China with them.• Brown recalled. "The first , music was the Mena.rt Requiem, and I was hooked.· Noble Booksellers, 953 New- port Center Drive, Newport Beach. Free. (949) 759-0982. ROMANCE IN FILM Robert Badal will sign copies of "Romance in Film, Vol. 1" at 2 p.m. May 12 in Borders Books & Music, 3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa. Free. (714) 432-7854. THE BATTLE'S OVER Vietnam veteran Frank Pang- born will sign copies of his book. "The Battle's Over: A Vietnam Soldier's Poetry,• at 2 p.m. May 19 in Borders Books & Music. 3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa. Free. (714) 432-7854. OPRAH BOOK CLUB The Oprah Boo1' Club meets at 7 p.m. on the third Thurs- day of each month to discuss Oprah Winfrey's most recent selections at Balnes & Noble Booksellers Fashion Island. The store is at 953 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach. (949) 759-0982. RosEY's AUIOBODY You have the right to choose your repair facility Insist on the Best LIFETIME WA RRANTY ful Senb ColWon c.n.... Insurance ApproWd ShOp (949) 642-4522 • • STEVE MCCIW« I OMV Pl.OT Conductor Wllllam Hall leads his master chorale daring rehearsals at SL Andn!w's Presbyterian Chuttb in Newport Beach for the upcoming •verdl and Frlends• concert. TITUS CONTINUED FROM A 14 A hardy perennial slice of Americana. "The Music Man," plays from April 30 to May 5. We've all seen this one a hlllldred times, but few musicals make the prospect of a return visit so attractive. Break out the 76 trombones. Another American clas- sic, recently redone on TV, is Rodgers and Hammer- stein's "SoU;th Pacific,· which visits the Center from June 4-9. This tale of cross- cultural romance on an island at the height of World • War D has a score most the- atergoers know by heart - and it was only the second musical to win a Pulitzer Prize for drama. Finally, in an extended engagemen~"'IbePhantorn of the Opera• makes its third visit to Costa Mesa from July 31 to Aug. 24. Andrew Lloyd Webber's most celebrated musical contpiues to spin its web over audiences entranced by the music of the night. U we must have revivals, at least we have some sub- stantial ones to look forward to at the Center in 2001-02. • lOM mus writes about and reviews local theate< f0< the Daily Pilot. His stO<ies appear Thul'5day5 and Saturdays. II Ted Keegan in •Plwltom of the Opera," whlcb wW come to the Orange County " Performing Arts Center in July and August 2002. The 12th Annual Southern Cali~ / Spring Garden ..5h __ ____ . µ --- O ne of the natio n '.s top garden shows, ~~ California Spnng Garden S how is a must ~ :;,!:) ~rden enthusiast. Stroll b!:J spectacular competition grdens de.si~ b_y leading landscape probsionals and learn new landscaping ideas. shop 100 un19ue exhibit.ors and en~ fun and informative seminars from national grden experts. We'll even s harpen ~r grdcn shears!• Kids will love viewing the miniatun: ch11drcns£J grdens, creating speoal craft ~ and partiopabng 1n special events dcsi~ fur them. m E:xpenencc the •Garden ;1o mc• created b_y the V American lnstitut.c of r-loral Desi~ and select South Coast Plaza home st.ores featuring vi~ desi~ to. inspu-c the ima~nation using fresh Rowers, plants, and fumashin~ from Crat.e and r>arrd, dupuis, Laura Ashl<=:Y, Les lntencurs, · ~s Home~'~~, and z. Galleric. PaMclngand admiMion arc b . SHOW HOURS r-RIDAV ~+,200t IO a.m. -9 p.m. SATURDAY ~,,200t IO a.m. -7 p.m . SUN DAV ~6,200I n a.m .... 6:}0 p.m. A . • *' : , .... .-:I. ....... -·-~ ........... COAST A . . .. A18 Saturday, Mays. 2001 Quot• of 111EDIY .. •1 realy wantld to lnak fd naid _ • _.,1-. IOIGOUlD Nicole Madler, Newport swimmer Sports Editor Roger Carlson; 949.574'.4223 • Sports Fax: 949~50-0170 •Saturday, May 5, 2001 Bl lllH SCHOOL SWllllllllG Tars put . . . up SOIDe big time n ers • Peirsol, Lean double up for Newport, but Irvine wins the Sea View League championship again. Richard Dunn DAILY PILOT DAl.Y Pl.OT PHOTOS BY STEVE MCCIW« Newport's Morgan Craig {6) and Christian Berg-Hansen put up a block against Corona del Mar's Charlie Alshuler. IRVINE -Three of the four Newport Har- bor High swimmers in the boys 200-yard freestyle relay are playing water polo ln college next fall. The anchor, junior Aaron Peirsol, is an Olympic Games silver medalist. Sailors • in five Together, they kept Irvine from sweeping the relays Friday in the Sea View League swim finals at Irvine High. • Newport Harbor puts up big block to key 15-17, 15-12, 15-6, 11-15, 15-9 victory over CdM. Barry Faulkner DAILY PILOT CORONA DEL MAR -The New- port Harbor High boys volleyball team turned its only meeting with Back Bay neighbor Corona del Mar into a block party Friday rught at CdM. The Sailors amassed 10 stuff bloc.b in a tlurd-game victory to fuel a 15-17, 15-12, 15-6, 11-15, 15-9 nonleague tri- umph in the 165-minute regula.r-sea- son finale for both teams. The Sailors prolific blocking perfor- mance in the crucial third game came after they had collected just nine blocks as a team the first two games. No less than five Sailors contributed to the roof job, with senior Blake Tip- pett topping the list, taking part in six blocks. Senior Chnstian Berg-Hansen was in on three stops, while Greg Per- rine, Morgan Craig and Erik Peterson also chipped in. The victory for Newport avenges four losses to CdM last season, includ- ing the CIP Southern Section Division I title match. The Se11oo {11-7) are ranked No. 1 in Orange County amf No. 2 in CIP Division II, behind Santa Margarita, as they enter the playoffs next week. CdM (12-6), ranked No. 3 in CIP Division TV, enter the postseason after sharing the Pacific Coast League crown. Coach Steve Conti's hosts survived six game points to win the opening game, putting the Ta.rs away on their fourth game point on a Newport hitting error. The game lasted 38 minutes, typ- ical of. the workload required by both teams to combat one another's impres- sive defenses. Newport led early in the second game. which included deadlocks at 1, IOYS VGllEftf11 5, 5, 1 and 8, 10 and 12. After the last of those deadlocks, however, Harbor closed it out with three straight points, including a game-ending block by Tippett, which was, indeed, a Harbor harbinger. Tippett, who was told Monday he had mononucleosis, was deared to play Friday after results from a second blood test said otherwise. ·r don't know what I'm going to do,· said Newport Coach Dan Glenn, refer- ring to whether to play Tippett and risk weakening him for the playoffs. ·sut we lost four ti.mes to CdM last year, so I know he ls really pumped up to play tonight.• Tippett finished with a team-high 20 kills and eight blocks, while Berg- Hansen, a 6-foot-5 middle blocker, chipped in 19 k:ills and five blocks. Harbor junior setteJ Loyd Wright amassed 66 assists, while bis CdM counterpart, senior Evan Burden, fin- ished with 63. -------, CdM°i. Brian ;- Gallagher (10) sendl a message through two Sanon, but In the end It was Harbor which had theanswen lnftve games. CdM received 23 kills from senior outside hitter Charlie Alshuler, and 22 more from senior Brian Gallagher. Bur- den also utilized junior outside hitter John Grod, who pounded 13 kills. The difference, however, was in the blocking department, where Newport totaled 27 to CdM's 11. After trailing, 1-0, Harbor assumed command in the third game, but Cd.M forged a 4-0 lead in the fourth game, only to see the visitors rally. Newport pulled even at 5-5, then scored the next three points. But, typical of this crosstown rivalry, CdM responded to lead, 9-8. After Harbor tied it up. CdM got on a roll to claim a 14-9 edge. And, after the Sailors closed to within three, CdM fin- ished the deal on its second game point. Newport led, 9-0, in the deciding game, but CdM rallied to within 12-9. Then, after a Perrine kill produced a sideout. Tippett blasted back-to-back kills, the dosed the match out with, fit- tingly, a stuff bJoc:k. •Tuey just go so deep: Newport Har- bor Coach Brian Kreutzkamp said of the Vaqueros, who scored another league title with 640 points, followed by the run- GllEG FRY I OAl.Y PlOT Aaron Pelnol swims to vt&ry tor the Sallon at the Sea View Plnals. ner-up Sailors (432), Laguna Hills (360), Aliso Niguel (316) and Woodbridge (98). Of the eight individual events, however, Newport Harbor captured first place in five -two eoch by Peirsol and Ryan Lean and one by Andrew Cole·(49.19 in the 100 free). Peirsol. a backstroker at the 2000 Sydney Ga.mes, as having the time of his life swimming different strokes in high school. capped by league titles in the 100 butterlly (50.78) and 200 individual medley (1 :54.37), m which he destroyed the field, winning by more than seven seconds. Further, Peir.iol anchored an impressive league championship SEE BOYS PAGE 85 Mackey sizzles •She snaps Beard's league record in the 100 fly; Tars' Geehr doubles at Sea View League Finals. Richard Dunn DAILY PILoT IRVINE -The Sea View League record Newport Harbor High sophomore Nicole Mackey established Wednesday in the girls 1QO.yard backstroke at the league preliminaries was short-lived. . It lasted two days. But Mackey set her sights on a different standard Friday in the Sea View League Fmals at Irvine High. breaking the league record in the 100 butterfly formerly held by two-ti.me Olympian Amanda Beard of Irvine. •J really wanted to break that record,• said Mackey, whose 55.90 edged Irvine's PJora Kong (55.99) in the closest finish of the meet. •1 looked up (at the league record) right before l swam. and I thought to myself. • l'm going to do it.· In a meet like this, you're trying to go all out• In the 100 back. Itvtne's Diana MacManus, who swam at the U.S. Olympic Tria1a last year, broke Mackey's two-day SEE GIRLS MGE 15 ILOT HIGH SCHOOL ATHLETE OF THE WEEK . . •Costa Mesa sophomore right fielder bas been a ple4S&Dt surprise in the pitcher's dJ'cle as well .. . . f • f I f f t f . .. 82 Saturday, May 5 I 2001 • • Daily Pilot Daily Pilot SPORTS Soturdoy. Moy 5, 2001 83 ·cdM drops the ball • Sea Kings are left with onl y a half-game lead over the Trojans with two contests remaining. Barry Faulkner ~AJLY PILOT CORONA DEL MAR -The Corona del Mar baseball learn let another opportunity to chnch the Pacific Codst League lltle slip through its hands Fnday, but the Sed Kings still have lhett charnpi- onstup destiny m lhea.r clutch- es. • Nothmg we do next week wtll determine how the league 1!:. won." said Uruvers1- ty C0c1ch Chns Conhn after his Trojans edmed a 10-4 v1c- tory over CdM. ·(The Sed Kings) sllll have thdt m thea.r hands " CdM (I 5-8, I 0-3 m league) takes d hdl!-gdme lead over Uni into its hnal two gdlTles against Cosld Mesa (at'home Monday at 3:15 p.m. dnd at TeWinkle Pdrk Wednesday dl 7 p.m) The Troians ( 15-8-1, 9-3-1) once dgam rode thelf red-hot offense, which has dveraged 15 runs in four games smce spring break. But the visitors also got a sterling pitching performance from junior right-hander Matt Stone. Stone, who improved to 7-1, struck out a career-high nine, en route. to his first com- plete game this season. Only on e CdM run was earned, as Stone overcame five Trojan errors. After CdM worked out of a bases-loaded, no-out jam m lhe first, the Trojans took a 3-0 lead in the second. A tnple that short-hopped past a charging CdM outfielder was the key blow m the tnning. CdM battled back for two in the second, mcluding an RBI single by seruor Rory Mc Keever. Uni expanded the lead with two unearned runs the llurd, but CdM once again tnmmed the deficit to one. Sea Kmg senior Wes Hock.inson, who begdn the CdM third with d single, eventually scored on a wild pitch and M.cKeever pldted the other run with a sacnfice ny. CdM starter Cavan Cuyler matched Stone with three scoreless I.rulings Uuougb the sucth, but Uni erupted for four msL1Iance runs in the seventh to claim the three-game series, 2-1. Cuyler held Uni sluggers Kevin Conlin, bound for UCLA, and USC-bound Jay Nichols lo a combined 1 for 8 with four strikeouts. And the top six hitters in lbe Uni order collected five hits and no RBis. But, No. 9 hitter Bob Stoneking, a designated hit- ter who earned the pitching Vletory Tuesday against CdM, went 2 for 4 with four RBis. Ashton Chaney and Nick Gerakos. tutting seventh and eighth, respectively, had three combined hits and two RBis each to fuel lhe Trojans' t 2-tut attack CdM JUruor AU-CIF returner Billy Eagle went 2 for 4, dnd reached twice more on errors to lead lhe hosts, who also got hits from Keith Long, Andrew Johns, Eric Snell and Jason Savopolos. PAORC COAST &.£AGUE University 10, CdM 4 University 032 000 4 -10 12 5 CdM · 022 000 0 • 4 8 3 Stone and Conlin; Cuyler, Snell (7) and McKeever. W -Stone, 7-1 L Cuyler, 6-3. 3B -Stoneking (U) W LT HIGH SCHOOL BASEBALL Northwood knocks off Estancia ·CdM 10 3 0 .. Mustangs clinch CIF berth, 12-2 (Nortlmuil •Costa Mesa jumps all . over Artists with seven in Northwood sends the ~agles away with 15-hit attack in PCL struggle. •OFP!ayoffsberthcfnched first, closes it out in five. IRVINE -Esldncia High's lagles dropped d 10-3 Pacific oast League deosion dl Nort.h- ood High Fnday afternoon as the hosts struck early and Idle en route to a 15-hit v1ctory. Trailing, 6-0. the Eagles got on the board in the third inrung when J.B. Goff doubled to right and scored on Brent Davis' single to center field wtth two out Northwood, 5-8 m the PCL race. however. padded the mar- gin to t 0-1 through six before the Eagles struck bdck for two m the seventh inning lo soothe the wounds a utUe Goff got 11 started when he got to first bdse on d helder'-. choice, and alter Armdndo Orbz walked. the EaglPs moved both runners up on a ground out by DdVlS. Jordan Hdrt punched the ltrst run dcross wtth d base hit, and Ort:I.z came across on a wlld pitch. 0dV1S and Andy Romo were the onJy Eagles Wlth two tuts. DaVls was 2 for 4, Romo was 2 for 3. The Eagles (3-10) will try to bounce back on Monday when they trdvel to University, wtuch LS on a four-game wmrung streak and a half-game off Corona del Mar's league-leadmg pace. It's the first of two -Uruvers1ty 1s at Estanoa on Wednesday. MCIAC COAST UAGUIE NomfWOOO 10, EsTANOA ) Estancia 001 000 2 -3 8 1 Northwood 2•1 012 x -10 1S 1 Davis. Ortiz (6) and Lund; Kuykendal and Gragnano. W -Kuykendal. L -Davis, ~. 28 Goff (E), Lucas (N), Delong (N) 38 -Lucas (N), La~is (N). GALLARDO CONTINUED FROM B 1 Eagles in her varsity pitching debut as the Mustangs won, 11 ·0. •1 was a pitcher in junior varsity last year, so it wasn't totally new for me,• Gallardo said. •When I'm pitching. I just try to stay under control and throw as many strikes as I can. I was just out there having fun, like I always am.• FrukDtmm:s Unillersity 10, QM 4 Nor1hwood 10. EsWm 3 ,.... 12. Lag..na Beacn 2 Monday's swna Ccsta Mlsll at c.aron. delMll' Estanda at Urwenity ~Beadlat ~ Nt•wpo rt 3 12 -<lhheda: ~ btril Eridlx's KCDJ .... .,..t .. 'Mxxhidge 3 Lag. Hills S, Aliso NlgUel 4 J\mdg's 9illml Allio vs. 'Mxxh idge at \Mrd"ow Pan. 7 p.m. Irvine at Lagu'\a Hits Jbynday's 9lllm Na p mt ttlrtaar' at Aliso Niguel Woub idge at Irvine EN>REGl.AAA ~ COSTA MESA -There are still two gdmes left in Pacific Coast League bao;ebd11 dCtion for Costa Mesa H1gh's Mustangs, but what- ever hdppens next week against league-leader Corond del Mar, one ttung's for certdin The Mus- tangs have a date m the CIF Play- oUs and will in all probability be on the road as the league's No 3 representallve That's the s1tuabon after Kirk Bauerme1Ster's Mustangs belted Laguna Beach, 12-2. in a hve- mning mercy-rule rout of Laguna Beach at TeWmkle Park Fnday rught. Nick Cab1co went 3 for 3 with two runs and three RBis to pace the Mustangs T\.vo of those tuts came in the h.rst mrung dS he tut a one-out sin- gle to get it started Steven Shores, Darnel Hunter, Billy Halverson and Brent Stevens followed Wlth base hits after the second out, and Cabico capped it with a two-run single to give M esa p itcher Jeremiah Haubrick a 7-1 cusb.Jon. Five more runs poured across m the thud lJlJUJlg, keyed by Josh Feld.man's two-run double. Costa Mesa improves to 15-7- 1, 7-5-1 m lhe PCL. a 2112-game custuon over Northwood with two to play. MOACCOAST~ Co5TA MlsA 12. lAGuNA 8EAOf 2 Laguna Beach 100 10 • 2 5 1 Costa Mesa 705 Ox -12 14 1 Verdugo. Dy·Buncio (1), You~ead (3) and Baumer, Hite (S); Haubrick and Hunter. Carrasco (3). W -Haubrick, 3· 1. L • Verdugo. 28 -Bobst (LB), Hoopef (LB), Hunter (CM), Stevens (CM), Feldman (CM). her bat with her. She is hitting .465 this season, . much to the delight of Buonarlgo. "Her improvement on hitting has been just remarkable,• Buonarigo said. "Sbe still needs a little more knowledge in the strike zone, but she'll keep working at it and be one heck of a hitter.• Gallardo began her career playing baseball m years ago. ·1 re<:ently tried bitting a baseball and I thought my hands were going to fall oft,• Oallardo said. ·1 think $Oflball is much easier u far a Gallardo's versatility has allowed Coach Rick Buonarlgo to her ln the outfield, while allowing junior Tess Un~ the majority of the gs. I-========="==~ hitting goes.• '-Nat year, Gallardo will •we're stronger with b.or tn the field," Buonarlgo 14ld. •The grMt thing about Alejandro ts that she can play Ju.t any poSition we need her to be at. Ne1t ~ 1he could be pltdting, tn the ln.fteld, wtfteJd. Sbe wouldj)fObably catch for us if we needed bor to.• Gall.atdo just wan11 to h~ the team. wtMriYet ab• lllilY ~y .• ,.._ II dolpg a . ~Job ~ng IOI' us and t'm yery ,.,.~ far her, GallAnlo Mid. •1t wu an ~ ~ llO right fWd. but now l'ID mum UMd to It. II the a>edl nMal ma • t'DgooutlMN.• Wbemtr lbl goll, GaDaldo Ii brtnglbg t stay fit a.. o Mustang•' clleerleoder, when she's not playing year·tound softball. "Cheerleedlng will be a blalt, • Gallardo said. •1 can't watt for tMt. • ID *1111 of bepd high IChoCi< Gallanto liat & bUd tlmi Melng it wlUiOut ~Stains and di_rty urutomw. •t ~can't plctW'e m}'9'1f not J>liiylng llOftball. • lhe Aid. • ftl just IO .. &Uing out tbtn, ~ying wtdi my friendi. ( jutt ,_., to play feint••·. WbiD not OD tbii llOfttlell IWd. a.llldo ii a tJ'8 fAn ol--......... -.,..... a IWd I'd rWY llM• OM ll*>~ID mll1 .... • llld. •Jtl. ---~. Sailors put Warriors away, 4-3 HHHI SCHOOL VOUIYUU. • Lane's single cashes in the winning run j.n the fifth inning Friday. NEWPORT BEAC H -Alan Lane's run-scoring single m the fifth inning lifted Newport Harbor High's Sailors to a 4-3 Sea View League victory over v1sillng Woodbridge Fnday afternoon. The Sailors, who took d 2· I lead in the second inning. only to see 1t vanish in the top of the h.flh when Woodbridge tallied tWlce, turned it inside out, then relied on lhe relief pitctung of Chns Ward the final two mrungs to cash in The Sailors hdd two exlra bds(' h.its in their seven-tut attdck Mike Jones and Cody Forsythl' each had doubles. The victory unprovc-. lforhor\ record to 8-1.5. 3-1 2 m tlw SP.i View. Woodbndge fdlls to q. J 4, 4 I 0 SEA VIEW LEAGUE NEWPORT HARBOR 4 , W OODBRIDGE 3 Woodbridge 100 020 O 3 6 2 Newport Harbor 020 020 x 4 7 4 Peck, M iller (2), Pe<k (4), Beck (S) and Zimmer; Brown, Torre (5). Ward (6) and Brant. W -Torre. 1 0 L Peck 2B -Zimmer {W), Jones (NH), Forsythe (NH). 3B · Clark {W) STM MrtRAN~ I OAllY :>!LOT Newport Harbor's Jamie Diefenbach goes up to block against a kill attempt by Corona del Mar's Forrest Mack in Friday night's Battle of the Bay on the Sea Kings' Door. Newport won In five. Otn-50 SLk..~ in Scoc:I< 1993 or Newer Starmark Vehicles Qualify for New Car Lease Rates All thes..• Ml'Tcedes,&>n~ are $earmark certified far ap to ont' ">ear or I 00, OC() rrules m dc.ldia<m to the arigmal f(l("ton uarranr. Summer Fun Convertible Sale '99 SLK Roadsters starting at (7 to Choose) c119nt> '00 SLK Roadsters starting at (4 to Choose) c144no> '97 SL Roadsters starting at (3 to Choose) ( 114.sJa> '98 SL Roadsters starting at (4 to Choose) (UW6) '99 SL Roadster <•n6rt> '00 SL Roadster <•MM» 'O I SL Roadster ( lfHlS) '00 CU<430 Cabriolet Nav System, L01ded cont•n '01 CLK430 Cabs st1rtins •t (2 to ChOoM) (OJUff) I $32,990 535 ,990 '44.990 '54.990 '56.990 '69,990 '74,990 CALL '69,990 Spec'idl PuTcha.se -Very Rare '97 SLSOO La Costa Edition (9nltt) '$4,990 ltKMlllil . . , 84 Saturday, May 5, 2001 No doubt~ a shocker Roger cartson DAILY PILOT I 've had dreams ~imilar to this. you wake up in the middle of the night, believing some terrible mistake had been made, and it was too late to fix it. It doesn't take too long to ease the fear away, although there is always the notion that disaster is right around the comer. I guess that's why I hate the computer system which allows you to use all these gadgets to immediately drop things in on a page, yet can just as easily take it away. Sort of like ·uve by the sword, die by the sword. Here, and in most places these days, it's "Uve by the computer, die by the computer.· That's what we did Friday when a jolt at 10:08 p.m. turned the lights out. Richard Dunh and Steve Virgen were just winding down with their second swim stories from the Sea View League and Pacific Coast League Finals, and three- quarters of their stories were on Page B4. Tony Altobelli had returned from the Sea View League TI:ack and Field Finals at Irvine High, and was busily imputing his stories. I had. been dealing with phone calls, baseball, and other things. Barry Faulkner? He wasn't even back yet from Coro- na del Mar where he had done a double-dip, covering the Sea Kings' baseball game in the afternoon, then hustling into the gym for the'J>rojected 6:30 p.m. start of the Battle of the Bay with volleyball rival Newport Harbor. The volleyball match didn't start until after 7, and as many felt it would, it went five games before a final decision was made. By the ti.me Barry got back we were in the parking lot, watching police set up flares at the comer of Bay and Newport Blvd. - My pages were on my desktop, and Barry, Tony and Steve hustled off to the Times to finish their stories on our "Decade" line. So we weren't dead, yet. Stories would be finished. At 11 :57 the lights came back. and with their stories virtually ready, I was able to get them and place them on the pages. There wa.s, however, one problem. The jolt we caught at 10:08 still had its affect on our system despite the return of power. Power we had. System we didn't. My pages on my desktop weren't going anywhere. . The dock kept ticking and finally at 12:53, it was clear. the Daily Pilot could not be produced in time for its 1 a.m. ~from ~e Glendale production department to the Times in Orange· County; where we are inserted. The first Friday of May is traditionally a tough night for Sports, what with league finals in swimming and track and field, as well as the baseball races and, in this case, a volleyball showdown between two powers. nus time it was even tougher. These things are not supposed to happen. And, if they do, the power comes back and you bustle and you make it. Almost always. Coast dominates All-OEC COSTA MESA -Orange Coast College's men's volleyball team VOLLEYBALL garnered All-Orange Empire Con- ference honors, en masse, with B.J . Lightvoet and Nick Ptaschinski leading the way by sharing Most Valuable Player honors. The duo led the Pirates to a 21-2 record and a berth in the State Finals. Lightvoet posted 231 kills to lead Coast in that cate- gory for the second straight year. Ptaschinski recorded a team-high 920 assists. Chuck Cutenese was named Coach of the Year, and libero Ed Chun, Soren Schneider and Jeff Taylor were first-team choices. Dave Engle and Ryan Owens were second team choices and Morgan Jackson and R.J. were honorable mention. ··sPom Daily Pilot I• JC SWllllllNG Pl.rates shock GWC Tars repeat kingpins in 400 medley relay at the State Meet • SOLANO -Orange Coast College's men's swim team won the 400-yard medley relay title 'IbW'Sday in the first day of the CalifomiaS~~Swimmingand Diving Championships, upset- ting heavily favored· Golden West. ' The Pirates won by .05 of a second, posting a time of 3:26.28 to edge the Rustlers' mark of 3:26.33. Coast took an early lead with a blistering 48.93-second lead-. off leg from 1}'ler Townsend, then held off a hard-charging Golden West team. •the men all came through and did the parts we orchestrat- ed for them,• Orange Coast Coach Dave Salo said. "Jeff Spratt came through with a 59.9 split in the breast- stroke with T J Koppenaal fin- ishing a 51.9 split for the fly. With the 47.4 split turned in by Jack Yarbrough as a finishing touch, we held them off." In addition to winning the 400 medley relay, the men scored a second-place finish in the 200-free relay (Townsend, Koppenaal, Yarbrough and Pratt) with a ti.me of 1:24.97. and Townsend ea.med an indi- vidual title, winning the 50- yard free in 20.66. •Newport's McMillen, Peschelt shine at Sea View League finals. Tony Altobeltl DAILY PllOT ffiVINE -The warm. fuzzy feefing which was commonplace on the Newport Harbor. High track team, is offldally badt as the Sailors captured their second st.ralgbt Sea View League title Friday night at Irvine High. · •Newport had a great tradition of track exr.ellence for a number of years," Newport Coach Bim Bany said. "It's a tradition I'd lik~ to help continue." It took over 20 years for that tradition to be passed on, but it's there in full force. Newport won the meet with 110 points. breezing by Aliso Niguel (84) and the rest or the competition. Seniors Chris McMillen and John Peschelt capped off their league careers with some top marks. McMillen won the 1,600 meters for the sec- ond year in a row with a time of 4:25.31. Peschelt was close behind, taking second with a 4:27.32. Teammates Jesus Santana (fifth, 4:33.45) and Alec Urtu (sixth, 4:33.73) also post- ed solid 1,600 times. It was Peschelt's turn to cross the line first in the 800, winning in 1:57.16, edging McMillen's 1:57.37. Santana (2:03.81) took fifth. Peschelt led a· three-man Sailors contingent in the 800 and successfully defended his league title, win- ning the race in a 1:57.16. McMillen followed close behind with a runner-up time of 1:57.37 and Santana placed fifth (2:03.01). A two-time league high jump champion, Peschelt placed second ttlls year with a (6-feet-2). The 3,200 was Santana's time to shine as the BOYS TRACK & FIELD Sailors went 1-2-3. He won the event with a 9:55.93. McMillen (9:56.51) and Urtu (10:10.99) followed close behind. Peschelt, Richard Weber, Dede Johnson and Dan Moyer ended the Sailors' night on the right foot, or feet so to speak, winning the 1,600 relay in 3:25.80. II The 400 relay team of Adam Kerns, David ;i Sprenger, Johnson and Weber placed second with a time of 43.32. The 1,600 was a sea of blue with four New- port Harbor runners among the pack. McMillen, led most of the way and turned on the jets to win with a time of 4:25.22. Close behind was Peschelt, who passed a couple of runners in the final lap to place sec0nd in 4:29.32. Santana (4:33.45) placed fifth and Urtu (4:33.73) came in sixth. Sprenger was two inches away from a league title, but still posted a solid DlMk in the long jump (20-10). Kerns was fo~ (20-5), while Morgan Curtis placed fifth (20-2 /4). Sprenger put together a strong mark in the triple jump, taking. third (41-5). David Marshall was the lone Sailor In a stampede of Woodbridge Warriors in the discus throw and placed second with a mark of 146-4. The Warriors took the other top six positions in that event. Kerns used a strong final kick to place third in the 100 (11:59) and in the 200 (23.27). The Sailors' hurdles duo of Sean Tupy (15.79) and Moyer, (16.05) placed third and sixth, respec- tively, in the 110 high hurdles. Moyer (third, 40:01) edged Tupy (4th, 41 .35) in the 300 inter- mediate hurdles. Other notables inclu~ed Rion McKinney in the shot put (third, 48-0 12) and Johrison in the 400 (52.38). Coast's women -Katie Sack- ett, Laurelle Rzeszewski, Neisha Hoagland and Heather Lemke, won consolation in the 20() free relay (1:43.28), and Rzeszewski won the 50 free consolation in 25.00. Steen-roller , JC TRACK & FIELD Orange Coast's Fitzet Shurtleff honored • . Newport Harbor's Amber Steen wins three Sea View titles to give her nine in four track seasons. Tony Altobelli DAILY PILOT COSTA MESA -Orange Coast IRVINE -What Secretariat was to the 1972 C,Ollege Coach Gordie Fitzel, who horse racing Triple Crown, Newport Harbor ~tched retirement to head th.e High'$ Amber Steen was to Sea View League Pirates trfk and field program this track and field. seas?n• received th~ Orange · Steen, already a six-lime indlvidual league Emp1.re Conference Mens Coach of · champion .in votious events, added three more the Year honor. ' to her collection at Friday night's league finals · OCC sophomore Heather Shurtl-at Irvine High. eff, the cross country state champ!-Steen led the Sailors to a second-place team on, was awarded the OEC Womens finish with 85 points behind league kingpin Track Athlete of the Year in the dis-Woodbridge.Steen's fkst title came in the 1,600 tance events. meters where the senior standout stayed with _-I re~y .. di~t g.et a chance to the pack for the first t ,300 before turning on the ~eti.re, did I, srud F1tzel, ~ho cred-jets for a time of 5:02.69, her fourth t,600 league ited the athletes and assistants for title of her career. Teammate Lauren Paul was the award. ·1 now have more time fifth with a 5:23.88. to spend on ~ack and field beca.use Steen made it 2 for 2, defending her 800 title, Im not teaching. I have more time with ·a time of 2:12.79. Newport's Natalie St. to prepare. Its a good part-time job Andre came in seventh with a 2:31.20. for me that turned into a full-time After Steen dominated the field for the third job.• year in a row in the 3,200 (11:08.46), winning by Shurtleff received her honor after more thlln 200 meters she wraps up her Sea winning OEC titles in the 10,000-View League career wlth nine individual titles. me~r. 5,000, 3,000 and 1,500 races Steen wrapped up her night running the last week. Sbe will compete in the final leg of the l 600 relay where she Ashley tOK regional finals 10 a.m. at the Harri.son, Patty Vasquez and Lauren ' Hanson Southern California Prelims today placed third in 4:03.33. at Mt. San Antonio College. she In perhaps the closest matchup of the night runs in the SK finals a week later, at Newport's Amy Burlingham, Woodbridg~ 5 p.m. also at Mt. SAC. standout Ashley Sanford and Aliso Niguel's Whitney Harrison battled right down to the fin- -by Steve Virgen isb line in the 100. CLUB SOCCER GIRLS TRACK & FIELD Sanford had a slight lead, but the other two closed in at the wire. Sanford crossed the line with a winning time of 12.39, .02 seconds ahead of Burlingham. The sophomore quickJy bounced back, how- ever, and scorched the track in the 200, winning with a time of 25.48. The girls 400 relay team of Harrison, ' Vasquez, Hanson and Burlingham placed sec- ond. just behind Woodbridge with a time of 50.72. Elizabeth Clayton placed third in the long jump (16-fee~-3), wh.lle Evita Castillo (15-6 112) came in fifth. Jillianne Whitfield came through for second place in the discus with a solid mark of 98-5, and was third in the shot put (33-8 1/2), better- ing her personal best by more than two feet. Taylor Gov a a rs placed sixth in the discus (88-1 ). Patty Vasquez clocked a 1 :00.87 in the 400, good enough for fourth place, while Kristen McClune came in fourth in the high jump (4-8). Valerie Day placed second in the 300 hur- dles with a personal-best time of 48.80. She also took fifth in the 100 hurdles (17.52). Amy Ross (sixth, 31-8), Govaars (eighth, 29-91h) and Claire Allen (1 tth, 27-93/•). round- ed out the Sailors' competitors in the shot put. In a first for the Sailors' girls track, Halley Miller and Allyson Stoltz became the first two to compete in the varsity pole vauJt. The two- some tied for sixth with a mark of 7-6. Clayton came through with a third-place mark of t 6-3 in the long jump and a sixth-P.lace I mark of 51 .55 in the 300 hurdles. Teammate Evita Castillo placed fifth with a t5-6'h Clay- ton posted a strong mark in the triple jump (35-0). Castillo came in fourth with a 33.3112. DAVID YURMAN Sting takes second in California State Cup New track club set for Newport Beach JC BADMINTON Tran rolls I THE MIDNIGHT lCE COLLECTION,.. tfloMOlltt 111 Te• Ool4' .... Sto rTl11t sn .. , I . • I • 1 I" • After two wins, the boys under-19 silver elite team falls in finals. LANCASTER The Orange Coast United Sting, a boys under-19 silver elite team, claimed second place at the California State Cup last weekend. . In the quarterfinals, the Sting posted a 1-0 win over PC Heat, before defeating San Otego Fire, 2-1, in the semifinals. Ryan Lancaster and Brian Walton scored tbe Sting's oals in the two wins and u.sbed tbe squad into the amplonabip game against vu San Diego. 'nailing, 2-1, the Sting tied the game wben Cha.sen Mar· ab.all found the back of the net But it wasn't enough u the Sting tell, 3-2. FULLERTON -Orange • N rt B ch YMCA Coast College's Cynthia nan ewpo ea team meet at Newport saw her perfect record fall Fri- Harbor High Wednesdays and Saturdays. day, but her unbeaten ways NEWPORT BEACH -Olympic hopefuJs Wendi Ratjees and continued as she improved to Anne Parker have formed a new youth track and field club at 26-0 with a three-set victory over San Diego Mesa's Kat- the Newport Beach YMCA. The track club meets Wednesday sue Takahashi in community afternoons at 4 p.m. and SatW'day mornings at 9 a.m . at the college badminton at the Newport Harbor High track. o The participating athletes will have the opportunity to com-range Empire Conference pete in local track meets sponsored by the USA neck and championships at Fullerton Field Association Youth Development Program. Co~ege. 5 •Tue purpose is to educate the athletes on the proper ow 2-1 in tot& games mechanies of each event,,. said Ratjees, who finished sixth at played, she quallf:ies for the the 2000 U.S. Olympic trials in the bep~thlon. She also sta~ cham~lonships at Irvine worked as an assistant coach at UC Irvine this nAcrt season and Valley on riday and Sahlf- ll ed ~ -ear er serv as an assistant at Stanford. She will compete at nan will compete, along 1 the 2004 U.S. Olympic trials in the heptathlon. with Rosie Pham, who The track club, which bu 10 members, will be competing at advanced to the ,,.,, ... erftnals the Orange County Munidpal Athletic Allodation 1\'ack and bef f ... _... field Cbanlptonships Sunday at 'D'abuoo Hills High. ~~ ~J!; com tin •we are preparlniJ for a three-month seoson full of youth doW>tJ at the .~ur' nna: : track meets and tun, said Parker, who 11 training for the 2004 • well ' U.S. Olympic trials In the decathlon and pole vault. Parker is a ' Ai.so set for State the USA Thlc:k and Pield Allodat1on certified level t and U coach doubles teams of ~oehni and wu an Ullttant ot Long BeoCb State in 1999. Parker 1s Nguyen and Alitla Huyllb also the Central Orange Cout YMCA ti.tness c:oord1natot and and Tlna Nguyen d ~ can be reached at (949) 642-9990. . 0unynak1. an HF.AD OOACHf.S I ~ISTANT COACHES CHEER.1..P.ADEll COACHES Wanted Volunteers • Youth POotball Newpon-MaaJr. All-Ameriean • Full ContKt ~6 Teum • • Apl 7fD14' COiia Mela -Newpon Bada -Susa Am fer Wr tw .. ,.. MeGee ... .,, .. .,. .... ~,·-- . ' Doily Pilot SPORTS Soturdoy, Moy 5, 2001 85 Coro~a del Mar hands PCL title to Trojans • • Sea Kings lead with three finals in Newport Harbor's pool. PCL BOYS SWIMMING Mann at eighth (2:21.72). Estancia's 200 relay team of Tai Thai, David Silva, David Teixeira and Phil Westfall finished sixth in the 200 medley relay (2:00.49), while Westfall also came in 11th in the 200 tree (2:06.91) and 15th in the events remaining Friday, but University pulls it out. Steve Virgen TPe Sea Kings, the defending PCL champs, actually led, 414-406, with three events left, but the Tro- jans won titles in those events. swam well." Kim, defending his PCL title in the 200 indiVidual medley, lost by just .39 seconds to University's Jason Berlin, who touched at 2:00.50 and was 'awarded the Swimmer of the Meet as voted by the PCL DAILY PILOT NEWPORT BEACH -In a candid m oment, Corona del Mar High boys swim <;oach Tun Chaix extended h1s haiid to congratulate a dripping Jon Pendleton, University's Coach. 1hlth be told, the battle for the Pacific Coast League title was really between the two teams. And it was Pendleton and his Trojans celebrating with a swim after surviving the Sea Kings. Uni- versity finished with 577 points to CdM's 539, while third-place Lagu- na Beach had 315 Friday at the PCL CdM, which hosted the meet, came a,way with four PCL titles. Jw\ior Matt Meyer won the 200- yard freestyle in 1 :52.17, junior Sherwin Kim touched first in the 100 free (48.03), sophomore James Strack took the 500 free (5:03.19) and, in perhaps the most exciting race of the meet, Kim, Meyer, junior Michael March and junior Bobby Messenger won the 200 free relay. ,coaches. ' Costa Mesa's Mike Whitman, who won the 100 breaststroke last year, finished fourth (1 :07.22) and CdM's Marcello Pantuliano swam a personal-best to finish second (1:04.88), while Messenger came in fourth (59.13). Whitman also took Uurd in the 100 butterfly (57.15). 100 Oy (1:11.26). . The 200 free relay race provided high drama. Kim, Meyer, Mar$ and Messenger swam their personal best splits which gave them the cldse-shave victory over University. The Sea Kings finished in 1:13.97 and University followed at 1:31.99. "There was so much excite- ment,· Chaix said of the meet and of the event. •As the meet went on, you could sense the (point differen- tial) was getting closer and closer.• "l'!l very happy with the way they fil)ished the meet,• Chaix said of the Sea Kings' comeback froJ"Q the preliminaries. "Tuesday we were a little shaky. They came today and Pantuliano finished fifth in the 200 IM (2:13.34) and Strack came in sixth at 2:13.34 with teammate John In the 200 tree, CdM Junior Bran- BOYS CONTINUED FROM B 1 200 free relay, overtaking Irvine's 'fyson Beamer to put the Tars on top. "I'm real excited about that relay (which won in 1 :28.56)," Kreutzkamp said, "because three of the four haven't shaven yet and it was an Orange County-best time for the year (topping Uvine's 1:29.18). Those four guys won CIF (Southern Section) Divi- sion I last year.· Just for comparison, Peirsol's 50- yard split an the relay, a blazing 20.9, was far quicker than the Sea View League championship time of 22.31 in the 50 free by Irvine's Beamer. Aside from Peirsol, seniors Joey Snelgrove, headed for the Naval Academy to play water polo in the autumn, Steve Jendrusina (UC San Diego for polo) and Peter Belden (UCLA fa.-P<>lo) form the Newport Harbor 200 free relay. "Their time (Friday) was less than a half second off their best, and I think when they're shaved down, you'll see a . pretty good t.ime in CIF. • Kreu tz.kamp said. Distance freestyle standout Lean finished first in the 200 free ( 1 :46.60) and 500 free (4:35.30), well ahea~ of runner-up Phillip Kim of Irvine (4:58.62). "We can't touch (the Vaqueros) in depth, but we can place with them with our top guys,· said Kreutzkamp, who was hired recently as men's water polo coach at Golden West College. Newport Harbor senior Ryan Cook was ninth in the 100 free, but swam a personal-best 50.59, a CIF-qualifying mark for the first time this season. That was the only new CIF-qualifying time for Newport Harbor at the league finals. Cook swam a 50.90 last year at the league finals and didn't make it to CIF. "Typically, we want to have our best times next week, and starting today our top guys will begin to taper and shave down for next Friday (for the CIF Division I Finals at Belmont ' Plaza Olympic Pool in Long Beach).• Cole also enjoyed a second-place finish in the 100 backstroke (53.55), behind Irvine's Gonny Shimura (52.08), while the Sailors' 400 free relay of Belden, Lean, Cole and Peir- sol ended·second (3:23.61) behind the Vaqueros (3:16.67), who led from beginning to finish. Peirsol, who said he might swim the ,500 tree and 100 back next year in the league finals, will compete Wednesday in the ClF Division I Pre- liminaries in the 200 free and •maybe the 100 fly." Pei.r5ol was pleased with his win- ning 50.78 in the 100 Oy, in which be beat runner-up Shimura (52.55). "I think that's my best time (in the fly) -I love the fly," Pelrsol said. •A day like this is relaxing. It's not like a national meet." Newport Harbor's 200 medley relay of Cole, Sean johnson, Lean and Jen- druslna placed third in t:.•5.27. GIRLS · . CONTINUED FROM B 1 league record with a time of 55.63. Mackey, who set the recoi'd at the prelims in 57 .30, posted a 57 .23 in the finals. In addition to Mackey's Sea View cbampt- onshlp in the butterfly, Newport Harbor cap- tured three other individual titles. two by Car· lyGeehr. The Sailors, who finished second behind Irvine in all three relays, placed second u expected in league cbemplomhlp points behind the Vaquerot (560 J)OUlts). Newport Harbor (455), Laguna HilJI (376), Woodbridge (312) Oi1d Allio Nkrudl (204) follow9d Irvine. •we Just go rtglit ~b ttlll meet (with· out shaving or tapering), Newport Harbor Coach Ken L&Molit Nkl. ~. Geehr, tOpbomore Hayley Peinol end ...,.. Jennifer Arrow haft beell the SdoN' b6g point ...... tldl ...... and it _., mucb---In the ..... ftna.11. o-tw. a juldar, won the ..... dM'mpl· Cllllblp ID t11e • fr1utyle (1:51.36), lOUddng " GREG FRY I DAlW PILOT Newport ffal:bor HJgh's Ryan Lean (above) and Carly Geehr (left) were two of the Sailors' brightest stars in their competition at the Sea View League swim finals ln Irvine High Friday afternoon. well ahead of Irvine's MacManus (1:55.36) and Kong (1:56.15). Geebr also won the 200 individual medley in 2:04.55. -------went on to qualify for the 2000 • Jt'a ~tty Sydney Olympic Games. g~,.., l'm In club, Mackey has defeated uuu. Sandeno in the 200 individual In the 500 free, Peirsol was a clear-cut winner in a sizzling 5:00.26. She was followed by Aliso Niguel's Jaqueline Welch (5:37.16) and Newport H arbor's Paige Lans- ing (5:42.73) and Peggy Beebe (5:46.53). happy ... • medley and every freestyle event. but has yet to beat her in the fly. Mackey will no doubt square oft . again.St Sandeno again at the CIP Fina.ls next Friday at 8elmont Plaza Olympic Pool in Lon9 Beech. Newport, Harbor was second ln the lOO medley relay (1:50.86) wtth Mackey, Anow, Geehr and PeinOl, recond in the 200 tree relay ( 1 :•4.42) with Erin Ball. Jeake Ball, Mai ~jl .. ma and JenM Murphy, and tec:ond But topping Beard's Sea View butterfly mark Friday wu a thrill for Mackey. "It's pretty ~. • she Mid. •rm happy." "It wu e helluva swim.• LaM· ::=:::;;:;;::::=:;;:;::;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;! ont Nld. •we knew comiDg into thil meet that tlMll1t would be ..... bi tbe 400 free relay (3:36. 16) with Oeehr, J>einol. "Nlma and Mackey. In Me~ record-letting bUtterfly, she iUll didn't top h• ce.reer be9t of 55.4, 8CX'Olll- plilbed In a dub IWUn meet IMt Y"f• But her 55.90 WM a ....--belt docking. •1 wmt lo brMll 5' (_,....) at CIP. • Mkl Macby, W.O Dllad ~ ID ..._ fty lat J'*' at tbe CIP .......... lec:tlM Dltlillon I Plnd behind l!l 'nn'I KdllD ~ wbo Uood Neel, and the 100 butterfty and 100 beck were two ol the blgg9lt nM.'89 Cl the dey. c.tty GeiW we knew Wll no~ Hay· ley hinal we knew W DO pebllllai tlDd ~ Anow, • bnl t ......... \IP two 1PC* 1n tiae 200 IM (wt.a D plllC.s mthfn 2:20 .• , •.• In tbl 100 he. .... BltD 8d I ' 'Id Mb ID 5e.'ll, Wldlll AmlW plemd Md tD .. 100 ..... (l:OUI). don Powers finished second, three seconds behind Meyer, while March came in at sixth and Kevin Amendt followed in eighth. Costa Mesa junior Steven Thomas finished 15th. Messenger finished third an the 50 free (23.18) and CdM sophomore J ohn Money ci,Ulle in sixth (23.99), while teammate Ryan Moore ended ninth (24 .20). CdM freshman Robert · Fries took sixth in the 100 fly (1:00.65) and Amendt followed at seventh (1:01.16). CdM had three Sea Kings fuili.h in the top eight 10 the 500 free, and 100 free. Meyer (third), March (fifth) and Powers (5*th) came an behind Strack m the 500 free Mone y (sixth) and Garrett Bowlus (seventh) fol- lowed champion Kim in the 100 free. PCL GIRLS SWIMMING Bayes . ·shines inPCL • Corona del Mar settles for second and fresh.man Kim McKay wins 500 free. Steve Virgen . DAJLY PILOT NEWPORT BEACH -For Costd Mesa Hlgh's Enn Bayes, Fnday was all about going out on top The M~ tangs' seruor used the Pa.ct11c Coast League guls swimrrung fin als to dls- pla y a memorable farewell that capped a bnlliant two-yedr domi- nance in the 50-yard fre~style. Bayes, who has dropped Just one PCL loss in the 50 free m two years, defended her title m dramatic fashion at Newport Harbor Hi~h's pool. She ·set a meet record with a 25.05 swun, .23 seconds faster \han the previous best and just .01 better than North- wood's Emily Cobb The Uruvers1ty Tro1a ns won the meet and the PCL title with 536.5 points. ahead of second-place Corona del Mar with 499 5 and 500-free champion freshman Kim McKay (5:19.06), who contnbuted m the top 200 tree relay with seruor Lauren Powers, 1wuor Heather Hapeman and freshman Vivtan Liao ·1 wanted to get that fourth patch for CIF. • Bayes said after her rerord- break.ing SWlffi. "It was awesome to win the league tJUe, being the defending champion. There were so many fast guls m that race.· · Bayes. who will study to be a teacher at the Uruvers1ty of San Diego. finished second ID the 100 free (54.38), corrung m behmd Uruvers1ty's Jessica Hayes. Hayes completed an All-American consideration time, 51.40, and was crowned Swunmer of the Meet as she also won the 200 free with an automatic All-Amenccm fin- ish in 1 :51 .45. Corona won the dual meet season. edging University. 86 5-83 5, tn a matchup that was deoded by the hnal event on April 11. Sea Kings' Coach Doug Voldmg still took pride m hls team's effort on Friday. "The girls chd what they were asked to do,• Voiding said "I'll sbll take my team over any out there. We did our best. 1 wouldn't trade any- thing for these girls." CdM sophomore Bnttney Bowlus (200 free), Hapeman (100 free). sophomore Niki Hendnckson (200 individual medley and 100 fly), sophomore Christina. Hewko (50 tree and 100 free),. sophomore Jack.le McCoy (100 breaststroke). McKay (200 IM and 500 free) and Powers (50 free and 100 Oy) qualified for CIF in their respective events and will com- pete in the southern Secbon Division n preliminMies Tbunday at Belmont Plaza. Costa Mesa senior Jody Marti~ novicb finished fifth in the 200 IM (2:16.56), breaking the school recOn:1 previously held by her sister, W ndy. Jody Martmovich qualified fOT CIP with her finish, but she says she bas an AP calc\ilus test at ber bigb school on the same mommg ol the pnilimi- narles. Sbe Said abe will txy ~.,lille her test Later m the day .Sbe won LaSf~ year'l 500 free and finilhed 9eC'Olld on Friday in 5;31:99. Estancia'• day featured time tmproYementa • 9elilol' Jender Cat- sity WU tbe oNy girt wb6 ach'eneed to the~ ftnall. She am.bed 9'gblb an u.e ~ "-(27.37) •w.·na nae wonled about where we p11iee. • ~ O>edl Bob a.-dU'Uk IM4. • .._. now, It's d •boul -~.-.--.· .... ..., ..... Of ;:,~==-==­r:::t. ':',.!:::: = = _.._ ha• H111 e , U..• MIS-'! XtllraPla.__._ ..-.. a. 772 I .... _ ......... ' It '9:tl1 5 I . - ... Polley ByFax (949) oa1-659-. ByPh11ne (949)"642-5678 -ii By Malllln Penom Doily Pilot Monday ............... Friday 5:00pm Tuesday ............. Monday 5:00pm Wedn esday ........ Tuf'tiday ~OOprn Thursday ...... Wednesday S:OOpm Hn1r.i. und d('adllneii lltt ,.uhjt',.t 10 l'haugt> Y.rilllolll notict'. 'l11f puhliel1rr rr~rvr!I tlw right to ft'llM>r. ""°luMify, rtvise or rt'j~'t uny dMsilit'<l u1lwrriM'111e111. Plt'ttM" report ma~· rrror 1hu1 mu~ Le in ~·our rln.f~ifitd ad. i1111nt'Jin11·l). Tht Daily Pilot o«·rpt.i 110 li11hili1~ /or any rnur iu rut a1lvrni~f'1U<'rll for "·hirh ii mil\' lw n·i;1>11mihlr c·xl·rjit for thr co.·11 .of llu· -;putc· 111111011~ l)('t'llpir·d b~ dw-c·rror. CmJi1 c·1rn onh· bf' allo~·NI for tlw (Pltlt"(' 111..lude your 11a111c 1md phonr nwnlM!r 1mil •·t'll call you bocJc •irh o prke quott.) 330 West Boy Street Gosaa Mesa, GA 9'2627 At N1"A11ort Bl~d. & Ba~· St. .Friday ............. Thursday S:OOpm Boors Saturciay .............. Friday 3:00pm fin-1 i11~ni11n. Telephone 8:30am-5:00pm Mondl\}'-Friday Walk-In, 8:30am-5:00pm Monday-Friday Sunday ................ Friday S:OOp.n > •• fl/>"" .. ..... . ' ' , . .,. ~ ..--- 1 ••• ----- -- ' • i Index EIMCE DIRECTO -fof' All Your Home and Busineu Needs - 420 .-...... . • II ..... -·· -. 101 • 216 .... .. lpsk:a ••rv•I•_. ...... !!J .. - 'I Reach 80,000 Homes Each Week For Only $28 per week (4 wk, min.) 400. 412 •7•. 478 ~ ......... at 642-5671 d4 Flctltloua Bualneaa atiooa in Land Ute liml- Name Statement talions) of !he require- The lollowina persons manta o1 the California are doing buefnesa as: Environmental Quality A.) EduExecutlves. B.) A~OTICE IS HEREBY Kl2 Handhelds, 1765 FURTHER GIVEN thal Santa Ana Ave .. IV103, Costa Mesa. CA 92627 said public hearing will Karen Marla Faalm· be held on the 17th day paur, 1765 Sanla Ana of May, 2001, at the Ave.. Costa Meu, CA hour ol 9:30 p.m. In the 92627 Council Chambers ol the This busmen is con· Newport Beach City ducted by an individual HaU. 3300 tffwport Bou- Have you alerted levard. Newport Beach. doing business yel? Caflfomla. at which time Yes. 411/2001 and place any and an Karen Marie Faslm· persons ln18resl8d may paur appear and be heard This slatement was thereon. If yoo chanenge llled with Iha Coonty lhlS project In court. you Clerk o1 Orange County may be limited 10 rllslng on 04/11/2001 , onty thoM "--you °' 2001eee12ss someone .,.. ralMd a1 Daily Pllol A'1' t 4 21 the public hearing de· 28, May 5, 2001 siM89 .,9Cribed In this noliCle or In written cor· rell)Ondence dellvarad to the City at, or prior 10, the public hearing. For lntormallon call (949) CrrY OF NEWPORT BEACH NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Coda Amendment CA 2001-001 (PA2001·075) NOTICE IS HEAEBY GIVEN that the Planning Comm1SSIOO of Iha C'tty of Newport Beach will hold a public hearing on the appllcatlon ol lhe City of Newport Beach lor Code Amendment CA 2001-001. An amendmenl lo Section 20 25 020 (GEIF Dlstncl Lind UM ~egulationa) ol lhe Zoning Code to allow sernor CllJZen housing 1n the Government. Educe· lional, and lnslltutional Faclhtles (GEIF) Dletnct wrth e use pennil NOTICE IS HEREBY FURTHER GIVEN that this project has been r• 1118W9d, and II hll been delemvned It.el it is cat· eooricallY exempt under Class S (Minor Alter- 6«·3200. • Stavan Klfff', Sec,... tary, Planning Com· mlaalon. City of Hew· port Beectt. Published Newport Beach-Colla Mesa Daily Pilol May 5, 2001 Sa497 CITY OF NEWPORT BEACH NOTICE OF PUBLIC H{ARING General Plan Amendment No. GPA 2000-oo2{C), (PA2001·050} NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Planning Commlaslon of the City of Newport Beech will hold I public hearing on the appilcallon ot City of Newport Beach for Genet1ll Plan Amendment (GPA) 2000.00~ end Bay Element The Harbor 1nd Bay NOTICE IS HEREBY Element 11 a new op-FURTHER GIVEN thal lional alemenl of the Mid DUbll<: hearing win General Plan. The Har· be held an Iha 17th day bor 1nd Bay Element of May, 2001, at the oontaJned goals, poll· hour ol 8:30 p.m. In the cles. •programs lo ad-Col.Inell Chamber1 o1 the dreM utee of the water Newport Beach City and waterfront property Hall, 3300 tffwport Bou· In Newport Bay llOd Har· levard, Newport Beach, bor 1nd auPl>Mtmants CaWornla. II which time provlslons ol ·the Land Ind place 1ny 1nd all Use 1nd the jlec:fealion persona Interested may and Open tJpace El.. eppear Ind be heard ments of the General ther90n. If you challenge Pl1n and lhe Local this project In court. you Coaat1I Program Land may be &mlted to ralslng Use Plan. only lhcee IMuea you or Coples of the someone elle railed at propoead Harbor end the public hearing de· Bay Element ire 1vail-scribed In in.a no&. able et the PlllnnlnQ De-or In wrlllan cor- partment. City ol New· raspondence delivered pOtt Belctl 3300 New-to the City at. or pn« to, pOtt ~ITd. Newpoit. !he public hearing. For Beach. C1llforn1a. inform1tlon cell (949) 92658-8915, (949) ~-3200. 644-3235. The propoeed Steven KlMr. Secr&- Harbor and ~ Element t1ry, Planning Com· may also be viewed at mlsslonh • City ol Newport the City of Newport Beac Beach web aile al Publlahe<I Newport www city.newport-Beach·Co1t1 Mesa beach ca us under lhe Daily Pilot May 5. 2001 "lnfonJ\atlon & News." Sa498 NOTICE IS HEREBY -------. FURTHER GIVEN ltlal a Negellva Declaration has been prepared by the City of Newport Beach In connection with the applicallon noted above The Negahve Declaratlon states that. the 1ubject developmenl W1l1 noc re- sull '" • ~ effect on the enwonmen1 It is the preeent inlenbon of the City to accepl the Negallve Declaralion and suppol11ng docu· ments. This la not lo be CO!lltlued as either ap- proval or denial by the Ctty of the aubjed ap- plica 11 on The City encounigee members ot Iha genat8l putJlic to r• view and commanl on this documentation PIERCE lllOTHUS IEll IROADWAY Mortuary * Chapel Cremation 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 842-9150 SEU . your stuff through classlfted! City of Newport Beach PUBLIC HEARING May8, 2001 Community Development Block Grant Funds AdministeRd by· HUD (Department of Housing and Urban Development) One-Year Action Plan FY 2001-2002 The City of Newport Beach will hold a Public Hearing oo May 8, 2001, at 7:00 PM for public review the draft One-Year Action Plan, including funding recommendations for FY 2001-2002. Public comments arc welc.ome and cnc.ouraged. Public c.ommcents will be incorpor.atcd into the final plan to be submitted co HUD. To comment on the One-Year Action Plan, plca$C attend the Public Hearing at: City of Newport Beach City Hall, C:Ouncil Chamben 3300.Newport Boulevmd Newport Beach, CA Or lend a letter to: Dao.id Trimble, Associate Planner uty of Newport Bcadl P.O. Box 1768 .,,. Newport Beach, CA ~2658-8915 Or PAX your a>mmeou co (949) 6"-3250 If ,ou haw 1n1 questions on CDBG activities in NertPort Beach, pleuc ClOfttlCl Mi. Dinid Trimble ar (9i49) "4-3225 • • PubiMed Newport Bach.C.0-Mai Daily Pilot May S. 2001 s.496 , S l1-atJl'!lrlll ·~:nll 11J:all·:~1 OPPOATUHITY All ,.., estate ldvlrtislng In ttll1 ~Is subject to lhe FtOel'll Fair Housing Act of fll&a as 11M11ded wtik:h make• ii Illegal to 11Mf11se •1ny prtlertnce. Hmltation or dlsctiminatlon basacl on race. colOf. r.aa- 1on. SIX. handlcap, tamllal SlatllS or Rlllonll origin. or 111 1ntenhon to lllllce any sucll preference. llmilatlon or cliscl1mmtion. • This newspaptr win not knowingly accept any 1dverllsemen1 tor real estate which is In violation of tile llw Ovr readers are ht11by lnformell tllal all dwellings ICMr1lsed In this newspa.pe< 111 avallable on ari.IQUll.=Ql:l'tlly !mis. To com n ol discrimf- natlon, HUO lol·lree at 1-800-424-8590. Et> VAN DEN IOSSCHE REAL ESTATE BAOKER LOCAL SIHCf 1970 949-650-0943 www.newportme11 hom11.com 3 WAYS TO BUY A HOME FOR LESS MONEY ~ REPORT Anll1bl1 Fr19 rlOOlded message 1..eN-22W912 ID lt014 OPEH ANAT.stJN 1~ OPEH HOUSE SAT 1-4 1019 Dolphin T~ a S11m111W11k ecx.t. N.B. OVER $500,000 Altdrlg S232.ooo. Miiiy ~ PRICE REDUCTION pl!! Bia. 714-967·~898 • ., ' Cir ,..... Oii • ownlad lot. a.-o.ooo NW71-1 ... N~~!~G., -~_:l_ll_I FIND Classifieds (949) 642-5678 ~8lot Et> VAN OEN IOSSCttE REAl ESTATI IAOIC£A LOCAL SINCE 1970 94M50-0943 www.newportmeaa hom11,com STARTING ANEW ' BUSINESS?~ • • • • • • • • • • an apartment through classified Tht Ltial Dq>11rtmtnt ltt IM !Mily PJ/41 is pkaml to 11n1u>1met Ii new strVitt now 1twtilabk 1" MW bu.sintssts. ~ will now SEARCH tht Mmt for yo11 111 no txtrd ch11rgt1 •nJ savt you tht rlm111"4 the trip to the Co11rt Hotm in Sttnu AM. TINn, of etJl"lt, 11ftt1' tht 1t11rrh is (tlmp/dd ~ will ft/.r yo11r fini.rina bwinm """" 1t1umm1 with tlH 0>11"'J Cink, p11b/.ish ontt • Wttk for .fo"r 11.1«b" fflllliml b, /Aw•"" 1hm fik yo11; proof ofp11bliei11ion with tlH CAll"'J Ckt-k. Pkm sto/ by 1" fik yo11r finltio111 lnu1MU r111t.mun.I 4t tht D.ilJ Pt''4t, JJO W. Bay St, Coult Mt111. If you "'"""'Ml ., pkAI# c4'J 111 •t (949) 642-4J2 I 11,,J iw wiH ,,,.fu •"""tm'i"IJ for }ft tO 1"'""11 this proffli11n bJ 1Mil . . . If l"" '"°""' htlw •") farthn-lfWl'i!IN, pk.ie t•J/"' """ ""' will bt mort ,;,.,, .tf# ~ AllUI yo"' GooJ /11rk i11 JOii' M1ll lnuinm/ A llUST SELL 12 CANYON ISUHO 28R 28t OPEN IUNOAY 1-6 '271,000 ~l -• i~, .~., ;•.. . 'Chilnrtlng smi-RJdgt G.-1 C4mmc#tlfy '*-IO Fd«ln llWld. 3IJr flU ~--from '""''"· ~ cintng and kJlch«t. f l. 150. 000 ()wnr/Ag! 949-640-5291 Giant 6 + Guest 2 Kitchens, 1 Block to Buch. $695,000. ASl!l!t 949-723-8120 New Oceanfron1 Liiting Owner Builder Agent 94~723-8120 BEACH DUPLEX 1695,000 4Br I 3Br Agent 949-723-8120 PORT STREET OPEN HOUSE Sunday 1:»5:00 20C)f POtt a.i.. LOllWI Prad 240ty " ,, cl HaJbor """"' HomH Porttflno ModtJI ~ cond Ooet lo IChools and 11h/111c 111/ds Utl.000. EO VAN OEN 80SSCHE REAL ESTATE BAOl(ER LOCAL SINCE 1970 94M50-0943 www.newportmeaa home a.com f "' • ltlttd ... Udt ........ ll,7'f,OOO l't'fd ..... ,...... Hf.7'7·11N ......... a....-.......1.....,.,..,..._.1 .. __...,"' ...... pool, "' ..... --- Cell 71Wl1-G111 »END an ..,_rtment through ol-tfted I Obily Piiot 5oturdoy, Moy s; 2001 BT 111w .=1 _l·=u; ==-===1~1·==~=1tr-=E=Bl~l=420==0ARA=S=Al===l '41t~114llaAW1l I• -==1 Mt °" 1111 8t. • !Nine . ,.... Ava. In Newpcwt 8Mcll Few ISoclt to Ntwpoft Lux ,. ~ gated, Old! / ~ Beacti'a bell llepl Cloet IO beCl & UCI Mm IO ft wtume,:w /) , ,4 ~~ '= ~ ::.:., jll:o f'il:O: ~ -=-~~ 'T7 _ fi1a,· {)l(e-1$' UPlf(IKg • :J: enc1 lklgt 11oor ea» Id. 94H32• • ,. Ccnclo .,_ l4. ,,.... I f(le-'IT 8Vllllablt In e ~~ 'Ntwoort en.. Um lllwNe *1tll. 100 doeet. celh eel, ST. ANDREW'S RUMMAGE SALE envilonmM 8tmting 81 3& ~se.. 1800sf ~ ~ ~+W: ~ '1585.oo. Ntxt doof to W>e, fllllble WID dbl c1ep, 1w1 now MN41-7ltt Newport's biggest and best sale to benefit local charitin West Ciff Pim and ljlplQI(. Al! $2590 94lMl31 ' 1 3 mies from the beedl. NB ~ ""' Preview Sale: For serious antique hunt4:n. and ,,_,, ...,,. .... pnon IO 2br/2ba rrr • argam s op~rs. May 9, 3·6 11.111. $3 ciqnulion 1:1t Cd today lo _ft .... an """'· •l900. v......, ... ~ 1919 1 b . h All tor Mlrtem quiel Stldo Br. ' -. bctl. or"" lem Pl8' u"" + tile door. 1~.f3H ~ pallo. Gated, NW ' """"' $49'' ..,,.,., = .C::: 1 ~8: I I · Call 949'644-1124 dep t ~ 9-63S-2670 Rrmamage Sale: Ma) 10, 9:00 a.m.-7:00 beach. pi1(g aYIL S80()'mo 154 ftOUIMOlllOI tar new lnl . S115Molo t • omri1 t p.m. and May 11, 9:()() u.m .• 2:\)() p.m. ·lncldl. • Ulls. 949-67S.9360 . a&1 M.Ffl'i .. • indudes u11a.8': garage. '°" -ITANDD cw'S 600 SL Andrews Road (at 15th Stilrvine Ave) _,. Studio new Interior !...~ i I kilcllenette, s700IMo. ' hmvna1u cH'UiCH Newport Beach, lnfo: 949-631.· I 854 101 . APT8 LOVELY 48ff 48A HOME ::i~~port 11R..ity New IJ25eq ft Pt11hi.U1e "NO FLEAS" CORONA 1111. MAR front patio, trplc, double Ext. ~"':,~11= MARKET • RUMMAGE 471 EMPLOYMENT 476 EMPLOYMENT Ctt. Peek view of bey of 1BR 1BA Townhouee !!Ip op!lon MH75-1Gs SALE. 1111'11 Pn Mint-OProRTUNmES OPPORTUNITIES ~'°of~28rw1:;~~: Y11rly~1~i ~~0t:W~ FYOllbldg lorlle500-1196 ton• Newport Ave In lJtls wall Retllol'I MM7!:1061 Avllllblt lmmtdliltlyl sf X/Mlte Square. 10840 ea.ta ...... Illy 5 ' &-3. c ======.:: GENERAL JOBS shoos fnck1.Shela 94~~~ S1&4Wo 1-tae-773-7908 WatrwK Ask about Hi~ • ~ sMI... Bat PIMe For Postal & Wiidiife Fields . 1155 ~l'Bl.s I c,n~38=.:r 281 =· lnt1mtt 714-751-27 7 .NP&sU':'.. 11aeT':::o'::ple Sa6~7 s:~~n~A:::k L1199 Studio Apl New rVI' MRI •Newport Beach 1105 Glenwood Line, 1-800-329-0542 x258 r,:,1.no~ts.1o:sj~~ large yard, $2, • for 450 • 1800tl .viii, 11.25 him, tools, colltctlbln, ~ERVA110:V GROUNDSKEEPER inclldes ulits Mt-720-1566 into caD agt 949-717-4720 &:ct.sf~"':" hou!!w!rM, c:loehtt, tte.. AGE.VI'S For Lg NB res prop Prune. Oc11n Front 2.Br 1B1 Blutti Witerlront E. • Quiting BuslnHI end Full·tlmc weed. roow. spnnkJers etc I I nicety furnished, lau~ 3br 2\llba, lam rm, 2300sl. I I LMvlng Town. This is a lg. Giy & ewnlng t.l1ifts Sp~ Enjlish Expire! s a 110COSTA :ra P~n PWoeekfylnort 32c-Monh3-a:-4,3942~ ~ lr~· 210Mt-~lt~~ To::;~~~crs must 94~-~~~~9e1k00 Chns • • ... ,,,_, "' BIG CANYON 281 2Ba • _ Ing, landscape & office Higl NOW HIRING' Belt E'Slde loo wAlatd to 2b1, den, 2 cer ger, Condo. Private pa/JO. ,=,~, ~ and llJPl)lies. paint· 1cr Phone 1epresen1a11ves Full find 2l3f 281 Mttr ......... recently updlttd, $2$50I WID Barller LARGE UNITS AVAIL · ~ lumbet _.... or PT, $7-$8/hl no selling __ .., mo. 714-289'91U · carpet, rge 10X28, 12X24 12X28 start· iingsng 'tio-xe'~s, ~-''"Ing '&,......lots. • llalth, Ua11Jillnsul'&OO! Call 1·800-831-6717 walk 10 trl·sqr, oar. !Vpets. master. Clean/bright AvaJJ . O • .,.,.,._ •~ ~...,u, • 401·Kl'Wl $138Mno lse 9(9-64().~ Now. $2SOCVmo Agt. Cind ing .-.mu. ,,.....wx 1211 more! Sal., 7am tih we're • l'akll-lloa 28r 281 very lrg. ~ ~ area. rai crpt, pilllt, blinds, qUel. clean. no pelS/partys, $1350/Mo. 949-646·3827 159 LWIHll>-9'9·159·3719 clearance. Al t.l1ilJ drive-up. sCikl out! 4827 CofUlncf Of. 'Uq!·~llllt1111Jl"'10011 ~ 24 hour gate access. Xlnl CdM X St PCH & CWneo nm """' Gorgeou1 S.lcoutf 5Br tor commercial use H~ Di 949-760-0929 F.Mahll;,hcd In l!HI In COAONA DEL MAR cu1tom .. __ '°' •--·· US S1or'9I Cen1ln 559 447 5655 r,., .. ~"""'' ,..,.,,. --1852 sm Blvd CM • • and W""111!( Sl,OO<nlo 01 19,00<nlo c ' tum/shed. Judy Kolar & Clll 94M73-6300 Salt Sat. 71m Antiques 'all "" "'"" Co. ~9-376-5518 inftatable boat & motor, -888-313-4744 Newly Rtmodtltd 2Br 2Ba, Frplc, evil! now, S2200Jmo. Flrlt 1 Lut, Nwpt Hghtt 3Br 281, 2c Cell ~•371>-3019 gar enclsd rear Yid. pets ck. Approx eoo.t ltorl ffont. furniture. stereo. & morel Excellent tlrttt frontage 2907 Piiia NB, EastBllAI loc It 1652 Newpolt Blvd Pacific View Memorial in Coronl del Mar Is cur· renlly hiring futt and part time Accounting Clerka, Front lobby reeepllonist.s end Funeral Aul1t1n11. Tialnlng ia provided. Call 949-644·2700 please ua tor O.bbil Chan. THI 4f&LLUP OHAlllUllOll Client Coordinator * Does your sophisticated personal touch make a dlffefence in service quality? * Do you loYe to coordinate efforts and follow them through 7 *Can you anticipate needs and ask smart questions to help dlents get the information they need? *Are you a warm, outgoing person who builds friendships and networo easily? *Do others do more for you because they like you? *Can you prioritize the urgency of competing demands. juggle multiple taslcs,and folloW them through the completlon 7 * Do you consistently trade and measure service quality to Ol'Chestrate people, schedules and resources for optimum productivity; effkiency and quality? * can you dear the air to help others comfort and resolve conflicts to work as a team? * Do you immediately follow through on details and get things done? *Ase you a systems-minded perfectionist. motivated by deadlines? * Do you take ultimate responsibility fo( dlent satisfaction? If so, come join our research team! We seek a pr6Ject administrator to coordinate the efforts of sales, technical, and researdi profesOOnals to bring together f!!Vefy detail of huge projects. You must have the sophistication and poise to work with high visibility, internationally known dients with style and !:1race. You will coordinate projects with various lntervie)lvi"9 facilities, via phone and computer, track timelines, minimize costs, and be responsible for perfect r~ds and billing of high-dollar accounts. We seek a positive, team person who can help others dp more. If you have exceptional talent to or.~ate teams for perfect project completion. CALL NOW to arrange a CQnfidential interview with Don Dusatko (949) 47 4-2710 www.gallup.com THI GALLUP ORGANIZATION equal opportunity employer ELEGANT SENIOR LIVING Enfoy a spacious sult11, flflt8flllinment, cralts. fun ,,..,., ttansp0'11JtkNI, motel COSTA NEUPORTE' 949-646-6300 nHnun 419! 58 Dttlgntrt 2Br/2Ba fum'd S01 Fullerton Ave. $25851 $2500 unfurn'd $2200 Mo. Chns 949-646-1340 pool. spa, lndOol garage, Avail now 94•760-3187 CM S15GIWmo + MCUrity Fri 8-12, s.t S.12 2 desks d9potlt. Cell Sheryl • (1 large W/Crldenza) 6m WHtport Propertltl for <inino set, 2 small loYeseat, UDO ISLE TOWNHSE dttalll 94M73-5300 etcl 717 Santana Dr. (Irvine 38r 2"26a, dolille Ollf&ge, .:..Te::.:.rr..:::tce=-l ----- EASTSIOE 2 Stty TwnhM FOR LEASE In CdM :=motp, w~= I• Am•W I Store fhcture/Equlp. ety1t ll)l 2br 11hba, 2 pvt 381 2Ba, tully lumshed _ • LIQUIDATION! 100'1 of pe~ spc;s plus storage. Jun 3 thru Oct 21, 2000 38r 281 Newport Penln ; lllrh: Madlx Shelving: BOAT DOCK CREW person, boating 11per helpful. Apply In person 10em-2pm Wed lhru Sun. 1801 Bayllidt Of. COM Chlropnctlc Ofc Aul PIT am 01 afternoon Ptionesl ~. fax C9$ 714-662-019() or 714~12-4277 Health Care • Fronl Office PT 20/llTI: Enthuslastlc, sett·mottvaled & well groomed peison v.hO lhnves or1 the challenge of be1ng par1 of a rapidy expanding 1nnovabve tieanh care office Must have great people skills answei pnones. type sehedule appo1n1tnen1s alld be 1 OO"o P<ol8SSI008l ~lrt1ve wage DOE Call 949-673-8489. or fax reSlJme 949-673~937 I ~PPO=~ I ... I 6_90 ___ :0_owe_AT_~ .... 1 Ptuet. be Wll'f of out of 1r1e c0tnp1nles. Check with tt11 local Better Buslnesa Bu-reeu before you Mnd 111y money or t"' for Mt'llcH. Read end undt~llnd any conlnlctl before you t lgn. Boston Whaltf 21ft, 't3 Owage Kini c:ond. 250!1p 'l'amaha ste1eo GPS. llUIO .pilot, ban tank \/HF vldeo tlsh finder seats 7 custom cover tandem 11 a1l111. bot - IOm patnt in water now Asll $251( !M9-760-9656 ~-1073 leave rT!Q. 949·380-9492 ...,,...., ·-""". _...., loc. HorMbldt Rldlno Leseons Baler; Shopping Certs. • ..,,.., "t'V'-_... by Pron. For adl.lts & chi-Showcases; MOREi See ad 28r 28a • omc.. 1c gar, 2 car gar. w/d NI~ ..._ In ~ · in ''Misc. I« Salt" -a-....... s.__. S2300/mo 949-293-4632 ...... "'I age, selling. ·-w"'"' _,.,.. u.. n•• washer/dryer Ip, new · Pony p!!tl!! 94 13-6140 28r 1.58a. Fp, ger. no patS, Berber carpet & paint 40 Famlly Yard Salt! for $1195/Mo 1665 Irvine f', $ Ntw~ort Htl9ht1 Ni:c""'D: .., ...,,..,. ,. ~Scoutl. Sat 7-1 0 '7. ""'"7""9422 ~ ... 203ve1eoomo cal 949-760-3101 1Br 181, ,.. ~ ~ •• ,.,..,,......, Cludl of of c M. .,,,.. £v-l:AI r1d hottllt diet of tht new O.slgntfl 2Br/2Be Furn P• ng, Ovit' gerege. Mllltnlum unbtlltvebly (corner ol 23ld & Orange ) Cozy fumlahed Studio Condo. $2500 Un-furn SHOQ/mo. t4M73-~IOO '-t rHultal Cell Liu clothes, toys. camping Sl4> ne T~.,,,. /"-" $2200 Pool cna sec "'"' 562-42t-9000 pfie!, furn, wld, Mote! ar ·.,... w.......,, cov av&ll--now tc9'.760-31S7,,.... 3Br 2\'.IBe Townhlt • prkg, ~alar paid, no cent IO Hoag, Ip, w/d, pool, Store A UfW'E pel!. I m 949-642·2818 2Br 1Be dut>fex upstairs ~ ~~c:~-=~ LIOUIDA~! 1:f.~· of $1550 oc:n vu a\'I 6-10 Lg lttm1: Madix Sh1Mng: ~S:?:.: nu~· ~1~ ~2~1:~ Sludlo new Interior, ~~=! ~r1~ bl'lnds, W/O hk·ups. gar kilcheoene. $70M.Ao. in '1lllc. I« Wt" $!300/mo 949-722·88!1 CA.MEO HIGHLANDS Balboa Newport Retlty 119 180' QCUll view S8I 281. .. 723-4U4 Ext. 18 open lloor plen, meny ..2Br 281 Upper Condo upgrldtl w/sub aro h1g. S1125/Mo. Galed area. ·=I Am HUNTINGTON BEACH 2llf' 2.8e c:lolle to shop6 & beach, schools, frwy, Fp, enclsd garage $1200/mo Avail 6/t !!iS-729-081 ~ 71"'33-4565 2 garages, no pets. Ager1,k I 1&0n11: =:.;.1 ~i:::g=~=, -------COMMERCIAUHOME 28r 2..581 T ownho1JM on I I urllll from $199.00 LOST TITIUST 14RON Senlot SR STF. Blaclt. Loll ~ 11 • Costa Mesa Cot.wltry Cloo (T otll Joint Open) Cll 94lMl7S.3391 WALK TO THE BEACHll MOO llo~n Bonu1 on lit mo. Rtntl SpaCIOUS 1Br/1Ba. peaceful setting $102<Wmo. Sa~ $960 on 1 yw ·1eae1 714-9e0-2468. Wis near beaeh. lncd yard. f#wport Coat a..utiful GD 89AU•I --Low=Monll'iy_;_::=..:..:.Paymenls'-"-'=--Fp. dbl gar, extra parl(ing 2Br 281 condo In gai.d -FREE Color C.taloQ $1395/Mo 949-642·9699 community, 2 °"' garage, ______ _. CaD 1-1100-111-01sa •n. n. l!N.fdy. FP, pool & ~ ...,_. uT •1 ...,.. 1.5 ... large yard, ga-Ava.ilaibjt lmmtd ~ ,...,.. "" •2 LAKER PLAYOFF• rage. creel~ check req'd, mo. Aaent 949-759-$791 218 Goldenrod In tht TICKETS, mid court. nMr pets welcome. $1400/mo. elley. GREAT STUFF, floor, Incl perking. 949-642·5937 ldlcfl .,.. ........ offtct ffO!l'p!lr tu-720-1450 I I Bl'Mttltaktng Newport fle dol!!!i l!!l!!!a * . ,~a :; ~"°'.': ~~ ~~11'~~.Ba~.lpvt ~~ ~ 1-~ I • • lmmed. nice oond. Mary Pee O.K. Neer Faah Is. dllle. ~ ,, VERSAILLE CONDO Torel Really 714-54().7355 $1610. (877) 471-6725 2935 Sela JJ:"f .. F !Br !Ba new paint & caipet Like neio kitchen $1200/Mo 949--448-9833 Private ltudlo In nice area IJ1Jl's & meals IOf quiel plelsetC ~. Pool. green. bell $2!>00m 949-64().4615 UOO ISLE qult4 1 Br newly remod1f1d, utllltl11 lndudtd, gwage. no pets, S1450lmo. 714-rn·9272 STUDIO Balboa Pen<n clMrl & quet, aeparate Jul 38r 281 HouM gar. Fp, pvt patto, yard Dnw by orty Do not dlsturti ltnents. 2718 Portola Ava~ May 15 $1750/mo 714-662·3111 Of 714-540-3666 kll, S8751mo. ~ uns. T·---.. .-.. ~ ""· nlamkg/pets. 949-673·5~ ...... """" .... ...._. """ 38a, 3c garage. $3,SOO'Mo. Many others avMablt. 19- 949-S52·6700 -~1 Motel MANAGERS • SPEC.AL• $175.00 + tax I/My (Musi preeent this Ad) 235 ll1lS & lolc:herletla. Situated on beaulilully land9captd grounds FEATURES: 24-Hour Lobby/Direct dial phontsfFrH HBO. ESPN & Oisc:.IPool & Jacuzzi, Guest llun- lty Clote to 406 & 56 Fwys. Min's from 0.C. Faffvrda, college and bells. Waling dis· tance to shops end mtaurents COSTA MESA MOTOA INN '/Zn ""'* 8MS Phone 94M45 4MO llOvttO .,. 11yf9 Piano. tNlds, furniture, clothes. llntns, books, appl's, etc. Priced to ... 1317 Alhbd ln., NB, Fri 8-111 Sat 7-12 MOVING SALE K1M1019 Wllhlr • DIYtf very llOOd cond., S140ft1. Al9o cidel 1!_111 lor sale. 8-12 Sat., 4908 River AYe. NS llo¥lng Salt 5/S, Wpm AntiqOta, fumilurt, cam- ...... c:lothlng & hculthold. 112 Crystal Avt., Balboa, LftUe Island (II alley) an apartment := ~ hat have we done for you late We're waiting to give you ~ $300 off your move in, _ 7 __ $200 off your secu~ity deposit ~.~ PLUS Save up to $1200. Call Rob, Corina, Ryan or lisa for details 888.641.7632 ~ - WANTED ANTIQUES Older Style Fumitu,. PIANOS a Collectibles ·~-·-. -. -·OIO<o ,,,_ $$ CASH PAJD $$ GrWp;et'90f..,..,.~ ::64M922e SOUTHC8AST AUCD N 2212S.. ... 91. .._AM.CAl21CIJ -·~CA121' HOW OP£H I Trt11u,. Hunilr Colldlbltl • Con a'l g n 111 en I 1 132 ClbrillO Street, C M. Slql & WhMlng PoGery- Vi n1 a ga Jewelry-Antique Dols. Come end Set U.l We hllve a lcl of lb llernt, II VlfY 1-*'11 ptlcttl OPlH 1t:CIM:OO, T~ _..........,., •. YISMIC. 1-~1 Mr'~'?'11451ea. Ole Stowe, 1145. )(Int Cond ...... " .. . ·-r-,. -.--~ . . y I .. ~ . . ... , .. FT/'PT S1lt1 Po1ltlon1 Avail. Upscale Newport Beach cuslom furnt1ure store. MlJSI have an eye tor deSlgl1 and colof and some sales exp. 94!M40-1233 476 EMPLOYMENT OPPOATUNmEs PT Lite Housekffplng 2 days per Wtt!k hatt day Balboa Peninsula Please ca• tor wet 949·675-6226 RECEPTIONIST Saturdays only 8 30a·Sp Busy real estate office 1n NPB Please ta• info 10 Joan 0 949·640·7429 Rtl1il M1n1gemenl/ Salel Llditt IHhion jewelry I handbag boutique In Newport. FT/'PT IYllllblt. Fex 949-759-1794 Of cell 949-759-1791 Siles Ptt1on/M1n1ger FT /PT tor gff1 & home deco< shop Ftex1bte salary cp. portunny tor advancement Ron or Mary 949-640-7373. SELL Secrtllry. 1n1wer phona, computer literlt•. proficient In Word/Excel. Organized and detell ori- ented. Good pay & btnl. Fu rea to Mega Mlrket!J1g 714-556-5530 SERVERS end BUSSERS Pt/Ft. Italian fine dinner house 1n Newport Beach Five years fine dir\lllg ex· penence req'd A#( In pe!SOO Bttwetn 4 & 6pm. 3131 West Coat Hwy, NB Can't seem to get to all those repair jobs around the house? Let the Classified Service Directory help you find reliable help. Newport Beach Bou1lque Hip Womens Ck>th1ng and Accessories Sacril1ee $15,000 hnn 949-97s-m 'MUST SELL' Local Vending Roule. high fttldy Income Only $6250 lnvtll FREE INFO 1 ·809-65S-8443/24hr1. MUST SELL VENDING ROUTE HIGHL 'I' PROFITABLE FREE INFO 1-800-98CM948 24/MRS 1690 =I 1-~1 BMW 3251 '89 _ -Whlta, 5-lpd, ,_ tiiiJine,• ' $3000/080. MMSU384 8\llclc Grand Sport Rlvltrl '65 \1·8 auto lthr int. lull power brakes W!RdOWS steemg am'!m st8f80. alloy whlS, $7500 949-28(}4402 Buick Rtgat "17 V6, llllo .. AC (2l122A) $10,950 South Coat Acun 714-979-2500 CldilllC OeVlllt C<>nCOYrl '95 60l\ • m1 NonhSlai metalltc green tan topltlhr piem wtieels. garaged non smkr hke new cond $11 995 OC Auto Blirs 949-st6-1U8 1999 DISCOVERY Per.Month OVER 45 PRE-OWNED LAND ROVERS IN STOOK B8 . ~ May 5, 2001 I TODAY'S ~CwR~O~S:iMS.&.;WL,;IO~R1a.1D~P..aU~Z-Z.,.L..,E _. Bridge By CHARLES GOREN with OMAR SHARIF Md TANNAH HIRSCH .. WEEKLY BRIDGE QUIZ Q l • Vulnerable, you hold: Whal do you bid oow? •Q7 O A' o Kll5 •AKJ91l Q 5 • Both vulnerable, IS Soudl )'OU Wlllll ii your opening bid? hold: Q 2 • Vulnenblc, you hold: • 1'7 o A lot o IUO 7 U l • A Q What b your openl'll bid? Q J -Vulnerable, yoo hold1 •AKQJ72 O A O Q543 •U Tull bidding ha.,~ W~ NORTII BAST SOlml ,1• ~ .... ' What action do you take? • Q It o \tad o K Q 109117 l •A I< 7 4 Q 6 • Neil.her vulnerable, u Soulh Partner opclll the biddina with four you bold: spades. What do you ret1pt>nd? • A Q 9 51 <;I K Q' 6 0 K Q 10 J • J Q 4 -AJ Soulh, vulnerable. you hold· The bidding has orocccdcd: SOlTl'H WF.S1 NOR111 EAST •Al o A761 o AQHJ •A4 The biddint has orocccdcd: 1• ,_ INT Paw ? SOUTH WESf NORTH EAST What do you bid now? Jo ,_ '" Put 7 Look for answt!rs on Monday. llEACEDO 190E '15 OldlllloMe Slboulllt ... Deft tu, chrome wheels. GLS. Beig9, ..,.. llw, co. new llr-. N mlNoe. S3950 (242DIO) 11 ..... .... 1SM301 or MAIERS 949-640-tnO Mk tor Lany (714)540:9100 ctlry* 1.111eron u eorw MtrCldel co sa • '113 8811 ml. V&. turquOIM, Olarnood Sloe, n.wss, Pf Int. Y111t IOp, _. Olla 11'9Y llhf Int. 2nd -· orty cond S3.995 lllnf297514 03k mi, drlvtt like newt oc AA1I/) 8kt 949-58&-1888 $10,750 obo 714-171-2011 PORSCHE t11 TARGA 2.7 11174 CIMalc, -pelnt. 20ll ml. on c0tnpte .. engine Nl>Ulld. wlS CllM. $11.000 M~77S2 Ford TIUNI 'II Mtn:tdH M0SL '19 Toyota Cellca' 13 --•c ....... o..,. ...... ,..., :.... •-• IUto, AC, lllOOlll'OOf _..,, ... p, moon....... """ --v··· eteme ... """ (P1571) 11.950. {21110A) 17,950. yMr modtj, ctwomes, new South eo..t Acurl South eo.t Aan IOft top, xlnt ttwoughoul 714-179-2500 714-179-2500 $17,500 714-751·2.414 1nf1n1i1 a> 't1 eonv 7811 1985 TOYOTA PU ml, boob, l9CO!dl, wit. tan ~ ~ '95 ~t~G ~B, ~21V':' llht, co, ~ whetlt, (P158&) Sl.195 •t I like new ooncttlon $7,995 SolAtl Co.t Ac\ln S3500 MN74-0505 Wit 5972111 oc AAJto Illus _ ...... 7...;...14~·17"'"'-•-"'2500=--------941·5!§=1888 GOOD JOBS. Mlleublltll 1b*ro SA '15 V6 350 q 4XA. 8 ml. orig OWllllf. bleclu'llll lllv. rml1. CO. chrome luly io.otd, beaublul cond', $ 10,995, flnanono Watr IVlli. vfnl6777291 oc AtNJ Look for answers on Monday. ,,..., XJA 't5 5411 m1. ""111cr~94"""'g.511&-=-'1=eaa""--- .. ------.,. .. _____ -------~Co r~ i:; llllMWll Mcrilfo '15 RELIABLE SERVICES. NTERESl1NG 111INGS TO BUY. ITS AU 1·~11• .-11 ·~I a~~;;~~ _cn_=.i_ ... """1~..:...:.ve.=~:...: .. :=~=~-1Q,950_ CADLLAC DEVLLI 'IS CADIUAC EldondD W C.-.C Sev9I 'M ,,_., XJS Conv 'II S cyl. Low ml, Ice~ .,, Wl"'9 s-1 .... llw. 51k ml Swnlll gl9en. ..... 3Sli Iii, BM*. co. clllome (233192) 110,188 (802576) $20,988 (833148) $17,966 wNI, .. ,.., vinl252641 NABERS NABERS NABERS $27,996 ~-aval 17141!4M!OO C714lt10:!100 1714)f40:!100 OC AA111l~1f88 MltNlllhl 30000T SL 'f7 Hpeed. AC. PS (P1518) $13,950 SolAtl Co.t Acwl 714-979-2500 CADILLAC Eldcndo 'ti C..-..: 11¥111 '15 ~ Kt500 S1ep 8ldt Lind AoWf DllocMry LE T ...... ml ~"" ml, 4l Wht. VII, et, fully .. 36k ml, Ill lectoly _,, NIIMI! Altlma 'II our, 300 H.P., ..,.. • low """ tedllr. rnoavt loeded. s big. llerm, tlnl, wlllltllan llhf, (lual ck1ne eulo, AC, ~ CO (&OOOllll) $21,188 (820043) $14,908 new tir". 6Vt' lilt. cuet mntf, 111,.gec1. nollllllc like (P1515) 110,950 NABl!RI NABERS . . 1ttreo too much to llslf new Sf9,92 vinf867'21, fl. ~ eo.t Acute 1714)f40:!100 1714ll40-9100 $19,SOo Cd 941-463-9493 nenc*lQ avel. oc AtNJ Bkrs 714-179-2500 d!!x or 949-651-9294. ....-.1 .. SEU .. YOUR CAR IN CLASSIFIED HERE EVERYDAY IN CLASSIFEll (949) 642-5678 Doily Pilot Run your ad in the Newport Beach-Costa Mesa Daily Pilot and the Huntington Beach-Fountain Valley Independent to reach over 100,000 homes. Fax us this form with your credit card# or mail with a check today! Run for a week! If your car does not sell, we'll run it for another week FREEi All for just $16 •. ----------------------D YES, SELL MY CAR Name City Zip Phone 0 MC 0 Y$ 0 D Mil Please Check Pertinent Boa -Maki Model ----- 0 •O.....-. 0 "--ts.la o--Price ----0 v-e O --o Tin1ec1-D-ll'.-o--o-c--04a.,_ o-~ Di..-..°""' O a 11peec1 O AMll'M a-Own -CJ NI~ CJ C:..-Col1lrOI CJ Mo'/ -CJ ~-Cl~ Clo...tom~ OF\A-Cl lllny!Aool 0~--- ..... toa Dally Piiot 330 w. Bay St. Costa Mesa, CA 92627 Phone: (949) 642-5678 •Pam (949) 631-6594 · ~ot Volvo of Orange County =Certified Pre-Owned = byaMW For ultimate peace of mind, every C.Crtified Prc·Owl\cd BMW is backed by The Certified P~Owncd BMW Prorectioa Pia.a, covering the vchidc for up to 2 years or 50,000 miles (whichever comes fim) form the date of apirarion of the 4-ycar/50,000-mik BMW New Vehicle Limited Warranty.•• The Protection Plan includes two key demcnts: <:enified Pre-Owned BMW Limited Warranty .-Backed by BMW of North Amuica. Inc., and iu 1121ionwidc ncrwork of BMW ~nters, covmd repairs art made only by BMW-trained 1cdtn1cians using only genuine BMW replacement pans. BMW Roadside Auistance ., Peace of mind foUows you anywhere in the USA, 24 hours a chy, 365 dlys a year. 1999BMW 528i 16K Mila Plun1um !*bael S4m.oo IOIAI io 1Wt.1.ero 1CCW1ty dtpolit. 10.000 ml per yev ie-. 2<i. per e.MlCN mllc ( 4KB B 144) 498328; Au10, SilYn wfllladt CV63'XJ6) ................... 27K MILES/ '98Z3 2.8Lu, CD, S-Spttd («QU726l ............... 19K MJLESI '98MJ Auro,CD. Whirt(E13188) ....................... 18K MILES/ '98 328i CntHrtil* Spon. co (Y880o40) ................................ 27K MILESI ~:Wu"!1Sanc1 <H600721 ................. 25K MILES/ W5281 ,,,_,a>. et Mold («YK62Jl ............ ~OK MILES/ .. S4/N . ,,,_, 11Ur-wfCftr(W61110> ................. J7K MlLES/ ~ 6!"'; W'Dit.r <MIWl) ............... ..nx MILESJ ~~,,~.~ ............ 18KM1U!SI PJlB LEASE OR ~MO. ~540i Llladtd wirh Opcions (4DKS62.6J ........ LOW MIL£Sl '995281 Eura Ni«. Whlrt CW3m3) .................... 24K MILES7 '98ZJ Low Mila. 2.81..cr (lXJEm) ............................... $2~.995 '99Z3 law Miles. 2.3Lcr (F79783) ................................. $23,995 :!!.~~~~·~·-·· ................... $28,995 Z!. l!!~ISand (W31773) ......... ·-· .. ··--· $29,995 '98 J281 u,,,wniJ,16 law Miles. 8W:Ji (48XXI I Sl---· .... __ .4_ .• $33,995 '99528i Aum, ISKMila,Q)(4flCF06S) •. ~-......... $33,995 I '995281 Z!. ~ (4mOS3) .......... _ 21K M1LESJ 6uw. 16K Mila. Nlc:t (4KllB144) .. _, .. ,_ ..... -~995 1!. ~,.. UJ6sm .•. ___ ........•. JOX Milo/ 3t ~i~~~ -·-........ -... $37.995 ~ 1.S'f Mott (H691112).-............. 28K M1L£SI ~.:~la (LS3746>-----····· .. ·---.. $39,995 •Jtata u low u 5.90/o APR oo appnmd aedit •AU c.tiW to lOOK MJ • Many Mon Cettifftd • U.Ht, 1:11 fef+ ·'"'rtwcl Pie-Ow-' BMW'• ro CbooeeJ •Al \w.ldee ....,_to Prior s.Je, Plu CUt • OfU Espira S o.,. A.ftr:t Publication Uc•n, Dec r.. a Afpto..cl CncUt ·~ ............. CREVIER BMW SMll AM Aato Mall, 55 P1awal at P.cllnpr I • --1.. .____ • I I eel tined Pre-0wnec1 Piece Of ~Mind • Comprehensive 141 point Inspection • 24 montha/24,000 mlle certified factory llmlted warranty plua •RY remaining orlglnal f8ctory warnnty •Optional 12 months/12,000 mlle certified fllctory llmlted warranty • Optional 24 months/28,000 mlle certified t•ctorv llmlted wananty • C.rfax vehicle history report • 24 Hour RNdalde Aaalat.nce • 8 deductible for repalra covered • Low finance •nd/or 1 .... 1'8ta• 1999 C70 CONVERTIBLE '18170GTA 16K mi, leather, CD (WZ494806) '18170TI 34K ml, leather, CD (W2464785) '18 V70GLT WAG 37K m, tllbo, leather (W2414478) 'llllO St.9, 39K rri, leather (W1134416) 'llllOT-1 Silver, moon'OOf, leelher (XI023258) '00 ¥70 AIR WAI 17K ml, leather, co (Y2679772) '18170GTA Si1'Je1; leather, CD (W1508371) '18V70WAQ 41Kml,ABS (W2421977) '18 Y70QLT WAG :n< m, leather, CD (W2435770) 'llUO Low ml, leather (Wl131195) 't1C70COllV 18K ml, leather, co (XJ003736) '00 V70GLT WAQ v.ttte, laattw, co (Y2666163) 4.9o/o APR FINANCING '18110QLT Tllbo, leather, CD (Wl418409) '18V70GLTWAQ 37K m, leather, CD (W2361120) 'llY70GLTWAQ :n< ml. leather, co (W2412354) ·'lllTOGLT l.ealher, CO, ab/S ()(1580047) COOITOAIR Vwtite, ~ abys (Y2651928) '00 .... . 16K rri, ...... co ()(1111~) '18170QLT SWef; leather, CD . ('Nl488469) 'llY70GLTWAQ ~e. leather, CD .. (W2473919) 'llVIOWAQ 6-0,i, leetta, co (Wl047717) '1117071 5-Spd, 16K rri, ~· ()(2611868) .OITOGLT SMr. leather, 00 (V2662369) «oo CTOHT COIN ~ 2K ml, leetw (XJ014365) \ ' I .. ... I S.U ,Y<Hlr M""4JQtd ed u.--. lb• _.,, rwayl Plac. a cla••Vf-ll a# today/ (94!J) 6.:1-$678 MAm7 . WORDS TO WORK FOR YOU (~~M2.;67s COMPUTtA ASSISTAHCE • ~ pec:e • ~ home Of olc. lnclwl.i Colclwlg. Int.met. Progrwn lnstallt- lion. Dennis 949-723-9372 IT SHOULD BE FUN tt GARDENER H Formally 111lned v111 .._ ____ __. ~.Ila.I houri,,.. ~ -** 71W'Tl-1130 ~Sw:,1~~ Lnn WOl1I. ywd clelf1 IC>. 1rH tnmmtng. planting, lf)!!!klel! 7 I H3§= 1518 F I ND ~. an apartment through classified 2002 BLACKWOOD Let the Claalfled s.rvice DfNCt°'Y help you find ntllable help. White/Grey Leather, Power Windows/Locks, Alloys, Loaded (2X1Y088) $5950 2000 Linooln C.Ondo.mcal . Fully Loaded, leather, factory Warrancy. Great Buy (4JYZl 10) 1990 Lincoln Town Car Cartier Leather, Moonroof. CD, lmmac Condition, MwtScc (JJCP855) $5950 tmMerceda SOOS EL White/Grey La.tbcr, CO Clanger, Chrome Wbccls, lmmac Condition (2ZU1.9)6) • • Saturday, Mat 5 I 26o 1 AU DRAWS lflCLOCGED WATERPROOF ROOFING R.-roota • RePl'ln F,_ E.stlm8t• Al lYpes of Roofs All Wotk OunlntMd Ud.,_ (949) 631 -1085 Trllfllfllrt9, R~l & y.,, Cho.,. 714 .435.17 ~td!t ~IC 62•707 Big MIU. TIM s.vtce Tree 1nmmmg rlmOYal ~ gnndng. yWd ~ up ~,.. ... •• 115 ••• I* n~l On Shit IBM 'a TyplWlttln al mall• Sol5 lie. Sr Diie. Recondl1ion IBM a $125 00, 714-336-9945 Of 336-9945 388 WAU •COVERINGS THE STRIPPER! Sc>eaUmg in WIUpapel rllllCWll ltSl8241 .... ~1211 FIND an apartment tin Pl~ 11 • SPWllRS I ~ . . • • • 1m Mercury 1996 Lincoln 2000 MCJ'!=W'Y Sable Wagon Mark VIII Grand Great Family Car, Blac.kff an leather, Marquis~ 3rd Scat, Power CD Changer, Red/Grey Leather, Windows/Lock, Moonroof, Dual Power ScatJ. Im.mac Condition Custom Whttls CD Changer (3VEW72'4) &More &More . • (4RQN150) (4JZA722) '7450 s13,950 $16,950 2000To~m 1999 Lineoln 2000 Lincoln 4RminerSRS Na~ga.tor 4i4 Nayjptor -'x4 1-0wncr, Only 9K 1 Owner, Only Only lOK Mi, Mi, Moonroof. 26lc.mi, CD&arigcr. CD Changer aod COChangu. Chromes, Fact0ty Much More Phone. Factory Wuranry & M<>f'l' (0176717) Warranty & More ij2·U~n (4F..PH901) • I I . . . ,. Daily Pilot BIO Saturday, Mar 5, 2001 1 New 2001 Focus Z X 3 THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS ~rtified ~ ·s9oooaE '*93FORO •971suzu •f14FORO 'BB FORD 'BllFORD •1111 FORD •9t1JEEP •st1aMc OMNI ESCORT Wllll LX HOMME ~UI' EXPLORER RAllBEll PICKUP PllO•EBT TllllllllE•/llD WRANBLER SAFARI AC. very c ln. AT. AC. clean Clean truck, great AT. flpwr.. alloys AT. AC, clean. 5-SPO., lthr., AT, AC, f/pwr. Clean. Summer AT, f/power. (441095) (123417) mileage (658352) (A43763) (895304) loaded (113109) (106315) Fun (412036) alloys (565972) 976 $8976 $8976 $8976 $8976 $8976 ;9976 •9s FORD •9sFORO 'llllFORD '1111 TOYOTA •1111MAZDA •119FORD •97FORD •ooFORD WINOS TAR ESCORT SE WSll ESCORTLX CAMRY LE PROTEBE RAMSER XCAll TMJllOERlllllD LX FOCUSLX AT. f/pwr. AT. AC, f/pwr. AT. AC, cln. AT, AC, f/pwr. AT. AC. loaded AT. 6 cyl, loaded AT. AC, alloys, Lo, lo ml. (A 14538) (195753) (215651) (286825) (179671) (A91597) f/pwr. (127112) (123498) 10,976 $10,976 $1 0,976 s11,976 $12,976 s11!1976 $12,976 •BIS MAZDA •99sATURN •99 TOYOTA •119sATURN •oo /11188Altl 'llBFORD •119FORD •11t1FORO •gg HO/llOA MILLEN/A SC-2 COROLLA BW-2 ALT/MA EXl'UMEll ..r TAURUllllE Wl/llDBTAR C/VICLX Lthr., roof. AT. AC, cln. AT, AC, f/pwr. AT. AC, sharp Low miles, very F/power, clean Fully loaded, AT, AC, f/pwr. AT, AC, f/pwr. loaded (120919) (272754) (254664) (165802) clean (183243) (895223) alloys (171011) (A16103) (558819) $ 12,976 $13,976 $1 4,976 $14,976 $14,976 $14,976 $14,976 •1111 MERCURY ·ooFORD •oo MEllCURY 'llllBMW ·1111 /11/l!lllA/ll ... MIEllCllllY •ooHO/llOA •1111,0RD ... FORD SABLE LS WOii FOCUS E WSAll COUSAR 112111 MAXIMA ~WAllOll At:COllDBE Mll6TIUlll llT Ul'i.OlllEll Xl.T AT. AC, f/pwr. AT. AC, loaded V6, AT, f/pwr. F/power, alloys F/power, xtra F/pwr, 3rd seat. AT, AC F/pwr., VB, AT. flpwr., alloys (611560) (239552) (634619) (K53914) clean (810947) alloys (611~60) (009465) loaded (128330) (863418) 1 15, 976 $15,976 $16,976 $1 6,976 ~16,976 $16,976 $16,976 $17,976 •1111 VW #EW •BB FORD •11at:1111YAER •ooPOMTIAC '1111 l'ORD ... 1111'/#ITY 'tlllACIMIA '1111 TOYOTA 'OD HOit/DA BEETLE F-1tiOXCAB 6EBRlllll JX/ BRAllD PlllX MUaTA/111 llT 1-80 //llT611/IA LB 6/E/11/llA ,.llELUDE AT, AC, f/pwr. AT. AC, f/pwr. Convt.,. leather, GTP Edition, Convt .. leatht1r, LBather, roof, AT, AC, f/pwr., F/powsr. rear AT. alloys, (437769) (A47557) loaded (270373) loaded (204058) loaded (217484) alloys (603722) alloys (009213) AC (132204) loaded (002565) 5 17, ,976 s1 7,976 $1 8,976 $18,976 1 18,976 1 19,976 '19,976 $20,976 'OOFORD 'INI FORP E·ttlO •01 exnORIEll ... TOYOTA ... UNCOl.ll F-1llO CO#f/EIUIO# f/A# 6POllT·Tll.AC .. .,...,.,,,. AT, VB, c lean lthr.. quad seating, AT. f/pOWBr. Fully loadBCJ (A0348) loaded (A 14888) alloys (A54242) (J07712) '20,976 76 21,976 '31!1976 · llnlCI Dlpt. llali .... llt.M 2080 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA, CA', 92828 . Toll-Rae (BBBJ 3lJ3 81S12 / . ' . . ' • • • • ' t • Saturday, /iioy s, 2001 B 11 ' ' ' ' ' ' , ~oast Acura 2002 ACU.l IA TL-S Totlil lnitilll pmt '5524.38. A4 ,..._. ... 753.20. Total of payments $51,342.24. GAS Clp coet '82,243.88 7500 miles per year. 15$ 1 mile for excess mies. On~ IPPf'OVllll ~Am. Honda An. Corp. 260-hp 3.2 liter SOHC 24 valve VTEC™ V-6 engine (Type S) 2002 ACU 2002 ACUllA . RL RL-NAVI . 1 YEAR 12,000 MILE LIMmD FAaORY WARRANTY '97AC '97ACURA '97ACURA ~97ACURA '98ACURA 3.2'TL 3.5RL 3.0CL 3.5RL 2.5'TL Certified Certified Certified Certified Certified Certified (Pl624) (P1609) (P1621) (Pl615) (PJ618) (Pl581) 5.9% OR6.9% 5.9% OR6.9% 5.9% OR6.9% 5.9% OR6.9% 5.9% OR6.9% 5.9% OR6.9% '99ACURA '98ACURA '9f.CHEVY '96FORD '95MERCURY ~93NISSAN 3.2 TLNAVI GSR UM INA TAURUS VILLA.GER QUEST Certified Certified Auto, ps, AC Auto, AC, ps, moonroof Auto, ps, air Auto, V6, AC, ps . (P154n (Pl620) (Pl 452A) (21 l lOA) (Pl566) · (2111 SA) 5.9% OR6.9% 5.9% OR6.9% . $6,495 $7,950 $8,950 $8,950 '93 roYOTA '97BUICK '95 MITSUBISHI '9BNISSAN '98VW '96FORD CELI CA REGAL MONTERO ALTIMA JETTA CL EXPLORER V6,Auto,AC Auto, V6, AC, ps Aluo, AC, ps, CD 4 Door, m/roof, 4 Door, auto, ac, (21 l22A) (21008A) (Pl595) only 28,000 miles (211 1 lA) f/pwr, VS, leather (21088A) $10,950 $10,950 $10,950 $12,995 $12,995 '99 MITSUBISHI '99NISSAN '96LEXUS '99HONDA '98:ACURA ECLIPSE .MAXIMA • SC300 ODYSSEY 7YPER Nice car Loaded Loaded Auto, leather, AC Low Miles (Pl59n (2074'8A) (Pl606) (P1592) (Pl6J6) $15,950 $16,950 $20,950 • $23,950 C4LL FOR PJfltE . . ., I ' ' . ' . ' . '. , ,, . Devilles • Sevilles • DHS • DTS • SLS. • STS . One 2002 Escalade Left! .. . . 2000 CADI LLAC (ATERA 1 93 FORD THUNDERBIRD Low miles, auto, V-6, ,_ oor trode-inl ( 11A1 nJ 1 93 CHRYSLER TOWN & COUNTRY 7 passenger, leather, exc.llent condition! (592323) 1 93 MERCURY VILLAGER l.eolher, CD, re« oir and morel (J 13571) 191 CADILLAC SEVIW Si'-. i.e.;., ~ dean! (806273) 1 92 HONDA ACCORD EX Auto, I.al, moonnxJ, and more. N.w oar !rude-in!. (0105701 1 93 CADILLAC DEVIW Low miles, im blue, lealhw, great ll)'lel (2331921 1 98 FORD WINDSTAR LX Low miles, ...+wt., Ian i.a.her, .._. m and mcnl (A 145661 1 98 OLDS~OBILE SILHOUmE GLS B.lge, Ian leather, CD, dual doors, re« oir. (2'2080) 1 95 CADILLAC SEVIW Low mile&, i.e.;., whit. peorl. deonl (82616') 55,988 56,988 57,988 s7,988 s7,988 510,988 514,988 516,988 516,988 11 NEW 2000 0LDSMOBILES 1 98 CADILLAC ELDORADO Tour, 300 H.P. Nonhslor, low miles, many 9ldrasl (6000661 1 99 CADILLAC DEVIW I.ow ma., whit., pegrl, Ian ..... & bolanCl9 of ""'°"°"'Y· (725668) 198 CADILLAC SEVIW Low mil., polo WW'• Ian l.olher, V·8 Nothb, bolance or worronty (902235) 198 CADILLAC CONCOURS Low mile&, ...+ilt pearl, Ian l.olher, bolance cl womny (7 A026AI 199 CADILLAC ELDORADO I.ow UK mil., l.olher, bobQ cl womny, ptW'lious IW1lal. (600769) 100 OLDSMOBILE SILHOUmE Prwnier, ¥id.o ~, ,.... oir, CD, dual doon and mor.t (3"8569) 198 CADILLAC SEVIW STS I.ow 211.: mii., bloc:lt, leolher, CD, alloys and -t 190688n 1 99 CADILLAC CONCOURS Low 20K mi'-, polo, tan lealher, CD ond lllOIWI (705523) 1 99 CADILLAC SEVILLE Low mi'-, V·8 nonlutor, many eiicll'utl (93767.C) 1 01 CADILLAC DEVIW 5 21,988 521,988 523,988 524,988 526,988 $~6,988 $26,988 $28,988 $29,988 , 196 CADILLAC SEVIW s.amlet WW'· .... auper dean! (83314) 517 t 9 88 Low 12K .-, ....._,tan lealher, CD, 'On.stor', bal ol WDn"., I""· ,..,a, I 114230) 197 CADILLAC ELDORADO·~ 1 99 M5RCEDES BENZ S320 · Tour, 300 H.P. Ncwhlar; bb*, Id-, moonroof, CD and fllOf9I (607596) Sfl.., 0-i...r,...,., dean, -oar lrude-inl (4216821 199 CADILLAC ELDORADO 'Mlil9 ,_t, Ian l.alt.r, rrtOl"f ..-.. Slit mil.. (602576) --( I · r r·) • 1rf·c1t "J<' {·ct1on ... ,Jrf·,1t 1 ·; :·. 1 .