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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2001-05-26 - Orange Coast Pilot' I • • SERVING THE NEWPORT -N-E.SA COMMUNmES SINCE 1907 cipal gets surprise treat •Victoria Elementary's Judy Laakso is 'overwhelmed' by schoolwide celebration in honor c1her ~award Danette Goulet DAILY PILOT COSTA MESA -The tables were turned Friday at Victoria Elementary School as Principal Judy Laakso found hersell center stag~and teary- eyed at a special celebration in her honor. Every teacher and student bad a band in the surprise event, which honored Laakso as •Principal of the Year• after she was named a Princi- pal of Excellence by the Irvine Co. two weeks ago. Entire grade levels sang songs, recited poems, read Top 10 lists and even presented an ode they bad writ- ten for their beloved leader. SEE PRINCIPAL PAGE A 10 ' . SUMMERQsTOllES ERIC SANTVCCI I OAl.Y PILOT lblrd-graden from Mart.Den Elementary School kick off the unottldal start of 11UDJDer by launching Moe B. Dunes, a 20-foot tlberglaa whale, Into the water at the Newport Dunes R810rt during the '4th annual Whale Launch on Friday. Here's your guide to Newport-Mesa's upconiing concerts, festivals, parades and other activities Jer.ii'Mw Kho ind Mllthls ......, 0All.Y Pk.OT sand or taking in the latest summer blOckbuster fllm. So, get your pendb and caJendan oUt foi this sneak peak on a host al reuom ~ love the l8UCJl14 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .. • • • • er Let the beach be your playground Whatever your game, bodyboarding, surfing or llCJl.ling, here's some Ups on how to do It with sfyle o.nette Goulet DAllY P'M.ar A.°"'---........ _ .. ~-and tbe Dlitltll IOod tbe city ad dOg nmc. ... belt to know wbi119~·-.-. Bwm ~ 't kDOW wbll you're aoing.-r::•llM*• JWdo. DOD1be Elsb:z ~~ boa 'lbitl'tl-.. =::. .. noaaw .... llt llllil.nlla1 TV "': ......... ~ .... ".,..,.. .... =-_,.. ........... ...... . . Judy Laakso, recipient of the Prlndpal_ of ~cellence Award, gets a bug from second-grade students Katie Barr, left. and Holley Lengua after they pieoi nled her with Dowers during Friday's assembly to honor her at Victoria Elementary. Judicial Se·at not in Cox's future · · •Opposition by Boxer, with the party change of a Vermont senator, leads to his decision. SJ.cahn DAILY PILOT NEWPORT BEACH -No criminals will be facing Judge Christopher Cox any time soon. Rep. Cox (R- Newport Beach) on Friday sent let- ters to both of California's sena- tors, Dianne Christopher Feinstein and Cox Barbara Boxer, announclng that be bas asked President Bush not to consider him for a seat on the federal bench. ,,COX acknowledged late last month .d\at he bad talked with the presi- dent about a seat on the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, though at the time he said he was still uncertain if he would accept the position. But that Wf&S before Sen. James M . Jeffords (I· Vermont) announced this week that be was leaving the Republican Party and becoming an Independent. Jeffords' dramatic move turned control of the Senate from the GOP to Democrats and in the process made Cox's c:xmfinnation to the judidal seat at best a long, difficult process. The problem for Cox is a Senate tradition giving home-state senaton a say in judicial appointments. Under the •blue slip• policy, a single sena- tor can squash a nomination. . Senate Republicans were consid· ering changing the policy so only ooe -.nator needed to give approval. SEE COX MGE A5 II / / Remember, it's character that counts "The best teachers of hwnanlty are the lives of great men." -Charles H. Fowler Years ago, 1 drove on the feny and opened m car window to enjoy the view and fue ~y breeze. A woman sat nearby, then a bicyclist sat next to her, and they began talking. Because my window was open, I heard most of the brief conv~­ tion. The woman asked the man where he was from. "Do you mean where do I live, or where am I from?• be asked. "Either would be fine,• she said. "Well, I live in Coro- na del Mar, but I'm originally .from Ohio,• be answered. "No mat- ter how long I live in California, I'll never be Ondy Trone Christeson THE MORAL Of THE STORY a Californian. And 1 sure won't raise chil- dren here. There are no values here, and people are snobs.~ That was all I heard before I drove off the ferry. Their conversation was such a con-· : trast to one I'd had earlier in the day when I : went with my daughter Kelly to get new frames for her glasses. We went to a great : spot with great selections. The woman wait- ' ing on us was hiendly and, over the course : of trying on many styles and colors, Kelly ! and the woman chatted about families, jobs • and college. : Kelly finally made a decision. and I : returned a few days later to pick up the 1 glasses. The woman recognized me at once : and smiled~ .i · "You have a delightful daughter,• she !.said. "You didn't raise her here, did you?• 1 "Thanlc you,• I answered. "We are very : blessed .• and actually we have two delight- : ful daughters. You'll meet her sister soon : because she needs glasses too. We did raise°' . them here, why do you ask?• : . 1 :rve been' iy~c;>Ur coyntry for two years, •an.a we have teenagers 1n here all the time, : but they're usually ruqe,• she said. •1 ~assumed it W1lS becaiise this is California. I But your da,,uq~ter a.~ereni. 1 just won- 1 dertld why. .. . -. ~ f "It was a combination of God, ~at fami- . ly, great friends, great d)J.ldren and lots of ; prayer,• I said. "My hus&nd and I worked 1 hard at md love being pa.rents, but we also ! had a lot of support and involvement from : others. Plus, the girls have worked hard to ' make wise decisions.• · ! I thought about that interCbange lately ~ when I was asked by a precious young •friend named Kaitlin to be her guest at her : school's annual Very Special Person Day. I : was both honored and bumbled by the invi- • tation. : Kaitlin's fifth-grade class' guests included : grandpa.rents and other relatives, as well as coaches, baby-sitters, neighbors and other : friends. Kaitlin's classroom was alive with : fresh flowers, fresh faces, artwork, school- , work and a sign that read, "Put Your 1h1st : in God." , Guests shared memories of fifth grade, •and students awarded their special guests : with certificates honoring them for charac- ' ter qualities they admired. The qualities 1 included joy, kindness, love, faithfulness, I patience, perseverance, dependability and . love of God. ! Those qualities are certainly things we ! want in our younger generation, so they are 1 certainly qualities we all need to be model- : ing. I loved my special day with Kaitlin. It : was also a great reminder that young eyes • watch older lives, character counts and : mentors matter. And you can quote me on that. ., I =°~~~~!°!1'~2.!Cl>rillllO<Ml~ --·~Of WMnt1on to all people. It 11 a~ cbuich MrViDg p8opla ot all ages~ tbe Newpad Bw:b and ecrona del Mar--. •at 8 and 10 a.m. Sunday. Children s Sunda 8Cbool meets at 9 and 10 un. ChUd care ts availabJS at both servtces. Cathleen A. Coots~ putor. n.e church ts at 1601 ~te Ave .• Corona del Mar. (949) 6'4-0145. Daily Pilot GREG FRY I DAl.V Pl.OT From left, Lauren Jacobson, Matt RoUSIO, nunt Rosten and Anne Yelley wW be among the high school sophomores wllo wW CODflrm themselves In their faith this weekend at Temple Bat YUiil as part of the Festival of Weeki. . . . ~ Time for· the Feast of Weeks Temple Bat Yahm and Temple Isaiah to celebrate Beek. a volunteer administrator at the tem- ple as well as the music director. "She was a Jew by choice, and it is said that she was the great-gnmdmotber of King David .• . Shavuot with confirmation and remembrances Y~Chang DAILY PILOT I Miller explained another piece of history of Temple Bat Yahm in Newport Beach. behind Sbawot -the agricul~ element "Shavuot. then, tor Jewish people is the that ties into why the temple's 10th-g'raders greatest day in the history of the world. So will carry baskets of fruits and flowers. In I t's been seven weeks since Passover and temple members . know what this means: time for another celebration. we've been celebrating this for a long biblical times, farmers presented tbemse~es time.• at the temple on the heights of Jerusalem oo Bat Yahm's young congxegants will help Shavuot with the first fruits of their harvest. maik this Ume with a se:rVb-of oonfirma. This explains why the the Feast ol Weeks is tion. Tenth1J1.ade students will carry baskets also known as the Day of the First Fruits. of~ and fruits~ present tblfir goods 1be fannir •was to acknowledge that on the a'ltar as they JX)llfin:n t:bemseiveS Sun-God was the source of bis bounty and fruit. Passover celebrated the Jews' exodus from Egypt and is one of Judaism's two greatest themes. The second 15· what hap- pens this ~ee1tend ~ the Peast of Weeks. a.k.a. Shavuot, which celebrates Moses' receiving the Ten Commandments at Mount Sin.a.I. Shavuot will begin at sun- down Sunday and wW end Tuesday. day in the faith of )udakrn • fulness, • Miller sakl. "So before be could The sanctuary will be cleoora.ted with take advantage ol aJl th.al be bad gathered. abundant greenery and flo\Vers "because it be bad to give thanks to God.• says that when the Torah w'8 given, the There's a psycbology to this bumility- desert bloomed,• Miller Mid. •And the Jew-that at the end of his toil, the farm.er didn't isb people vohmt.arily accepted the Torah. pat himself on the back. but instead attdb- and what we're saying is that our children uted success to the rain and sun cydes pro- me voluntarily, ol their own freewill, aoc:ept-vided by God, Miller said Such ~umilily is a The seven-week successor to Passover symbolizes a spiritual liberation, as the Ten Commandments formed a new spiritual relationship with God. while Passover was the physical liberation from the Pharaoh. •we left Egypt in order to come to Mount Sinai in order to be liberated through God's law,• said Rabbi Mark Miller iDg the 1bnh in their day and in their lives.• theme in the Blble, even when God chose to Newptl't Beach's 'lllmple Isaiah will oe1e-give Moses the commandments at Mount brate the Feast ol Weeks its own way -Sinai. with a memorW service Tuesday for loved ·1rs one ot the smaller mountains in the ones who have palled away. On Prtday, the eotbe region,• Miller added. •And this sym· temple held a seMc:e dudng which caogre-bolizes humility and lowliness. The Torah Faith . CALENDAR POTWCK SUPPER A potluck supper and discus· sion of mission/outreach on the seventh Sunday of Easter Evening will be hosted by St. Michael and All Angels Episco- pal Parish Church at 6 p.m. Sunday at the chW'ch, 3233 Pacific View Drive, Corona del Mar. Free. (949) 6'4-0-463. AmRNOON OF MUSIC Newport Center United Methodist Church wW hold an afternoon of music from 4 to 6 p .m . Sunday as a church fund· ratser. The Rev. Catie Coots and the Rev. Bob Morley will per- .......,tr,._ cw .. .....,..._. .... -..... -..... .... -----..--- gants read from the book ol Ruth. . only nows down to the bumble, not up to ,.Ruth was converted.• said Flory Van the arrogant• • form. The concert wW be held ln the church sanctuary, 1601 Marguerite Ave., Corona del Mar. A freewill offerlng will be taken. (9'9) 6"·0745. FESTIVAL Of FAJTM Festival of Paith: Celebrating the God Who Calls Us will be hosted by Christ Church by the Sea United Methodist at 6:30 p.m. Friday, 5:30 p.m. June 2 and 10 a.m. June 3 at the church, 1400 W. Balboa Blvd., Newport Beach. (9'9) 673· 3805. A GRANO CONCERT Cantor Jonathan Grant and the Los Angeles Zimriyah Chorale will perfonn their annual grand concert at 7 p.m. June 3 at 'nml· ple Bat Yahm, 1011 Camelbeck St, Newport Beach. $36 for pre- ferred seating, $18 for general . admlafon and $12 for students and seniors. (949) 6«-1999. PEN1KOST SERVICE St Joachim Catholic Church will hold a service celebrating Pentecost from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. June 2 at the church, 1964 Orange Ave., Costa Mesa. The evening of worship will include a perf orm.ance by the St. Joachim Choir and will be fol- lowed by a coffee soc:lal. Pree. (949) !:74-7400. OtRISTIAN EDUCATION St Michael and All Angels Epis- copal ChW'cb will host lun- cheons to d.ilcuss summer and fall programs after tbe 10 a.m. services June 3 at the church, WUTllll AID SUlf COSTAMISA 3233 Pacific View Drive, Corona del Mar. Ftee. (949) 6«-0463 . PRAYER MEmNG Second Oiurcb ot Christ Sden· tilt will hold a prayer meeting focusing on guidance and joy from noon to 1 p.m. June 6. All are invited. The church is at 3100 Pacific V!ew Drive, Corona del Mar. Free. (949) 6«-2617. A GATHERING OF JEWISH MEN The Orange County branches of the Jewish Community Cen- ter and Jewish Family Services will join together to co.sponsor ~An Orange County Gathering of Jewilh Men• from 9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. June 10 at the Jewish Community Center, 250 B. Bak· er St., Costa Mesa. $39. (714) 755--0340. POUCI flUS ~ ..,. 16'56 Coron.del~ 16'56 ~MU 67156 ~lwt\ ..,,, • ,........., llo9d: A vehicle was reported stolen In the 2800 block at 4:44 p.m. ~. .... dpCMt Co.st MU S:!S p.m. -·"""Off"-· 2.1' Second hlgt'I NrA ........ " .................. NrA 7:5e .... -"HOtteM•o .o.r ... """ t2:11pin.-... ·--··U' sec.IM• 7:t0Jt&--.... 21 .... .. ____ .. • ,._llJllt ............ A rind tMft w. report9d In the 2000 bloc at 7:12 p.m. Wd--• ._. 17th Stnet: An embeulement WIS reported In the 200 block at 1:44 p.m. w.ctwct.y. • Doity Pilot ' ' f • • • Saturday, May 26, 2001 A3 Danger of nqrrow thinking in today's society hits home Tie day before Mother's Day, I wrote about . . showing rny wife, Cay, signs of love, affection and playfulness because I want both of my kids to see behavior in a marriage that works. · Among the activities I pro- moted was pinching. I also advocated opening the car · door for Mom and telling kids, when she is not aro\Uld just what a great mother she is. A woman reader called the Daily Pilot Readers Hot- line and complained that pinching is never a sign of love or respect for women, that women have other important roles besides motherhood and that my column wasn't a good one for women. · The letter is important both for the specific issues it raises but also as an indica- tor of just how narrowly focused we have become. Failing to see the bigger pie; Steve Smith WHAT'S UP? ture is not just this reader's problem1 trs now part of the faprtc of our society. We have become sO' locked into promoting the one item in our lives that we are convinced will make the world a perfect place that there is no room in our thinking for any degree of tolerance on the issue. In this reader's case, my pinching, regardless of where I pincp, how much I pinch, whether Cay also pinches me or even whether pinching has shown to have a positive effect on our kids, is irrelevant. She doesn't like pinching, so all pinching must be bad. She also believes that being · a mother is the end of the line for women. I have news for her. Our home is not a street in Rome, nor is it a crowded Tokyo subway, both places where men pinch total strangers for purposes other than genuine affection. '11\e Costa Mesa City Council has had political problems because of narrow thinking. . Councilman Qµis Steel, for example, is so deter- mined to rid the city of its valuable job center that he was willing to trade funding for Huscroft House, an important addition to the city's heritage, in order to get his wish. It appears that it was not possible for him to see that SUGG.914.• these two issues are oil and water and that his offer was not an effort to negotiate; it was a game, with important city issues as pawns on a chessboard. In Newport Beach, narrow thinking has locked.city leaders into focusing on the airport debate while the beaches are being ~lected. Yes, I know they. would protest that they are work- ing on the problem of water pollution, but in their most honest moments they should admit that for the next few year5 their resources are being committed first to get- ting an El Toro airport off the ground. And what is so bad about raising a daughter to be ~ mother? Unlike former President Bill Clinton, who claimed that being a mother was ·the most important job in the world• and then went . on to disgrace bis own daughter's mother, I believe that sentiment, and I stand by my comments !hat women are bettet at raising kids than men. Not always, but almost all the time. Motherhood is noble. Motherhood is the most important job in the country and perha}>s the hardest, partly because women such as this reader continue to place so little value on it. Being a mother never has to limit a woinan's hqrizons. It also seems to me that the nation had far fewer prob- lems with teen pregnancy and drug abuse when more moms stayed home. To this reader, I am prob- ably a sexist. But I am less concerned about her impres- sion of me than I am about · raising good children. So, with thousands of women I have spoken to and worked with over the last four years supporting me, I will continue to urge women to stay home with their kids as much as possible. I will continue to urge both men and women to start .making better choices for marriage partners so that fewer children feel the dev- astating effects of divorce, which still strikes about half of America's marriages. On Thursday night, our family had one ot the world's great pizzas at Nick's on Harbor Boulevard in Costa Mesa. On-O)e way back to the car after dinner, my son, Roy, asked me lor the car keys. "Why do you want the keys?" I asked. "I want to open the car door for mom the way you do.· he said. I was so happy, I could have pinched myself. • STEVE SMrTH is a Costa Mesa resident and freelance writer. Readers may leave a message for him oo the Daily Pilot hotline at (949) 642-6086. Spec t run1 Natur,Jh Meatless U~HlU~ Dogs. • ~4.Dip • Garlic Herb • Onion . •Onion s Mushroom ~ Vegdable 9 HAIN Mini M•mchies Rice Cake Snadm ==~•E• • Peanut Butta' REG. '2.55 3.1.R. Marin Brand Artichoke Hearts • Regular • SZ79 • Marinated AEG.'3.fi5 12 c. •SmattDe/J Jumbo~ Odestmll Fne Reg .. '3.49 MOTHER'S DOES INDEPENDENT LABORATORY TESTING TO VERIFY POTE NCY ON OUR VITAMINS a SUPPLEMENTS! Yllll S/\VI lJP l 0 Sli !101 PROTEIN ENERGY MFAL SUPPORT A llFAL'DIY llFART • 1.tGl.-fllNola-QllOS..,....... ·~l ..... ;ua-. ..... •91mc4et ·~·--·.c:-..1 •C11 .,. • ._.~ •0.1h 3 P--.it• ............. ...... hllibln •• a..---..~ , I ' . -. The coast is over AIOYE Jim Gillen makes a last-minute call to make SUJ"e his friend will be there to see him graduate with the Orange Coast College class of 2001. · RIGHT Running late, Lynn Reed of Fountain Valley hurries to join the Orange Coast College graduattng class for Friday evening's ceremony. PHOTOS BY SEAN HIU.fR f OAl.Y Pl.OT '' Public Invited 47thAnnual \1i1Eel!~Memorial Day Services l \I May 28, 2001, 11 :00 AM Floral Wreath presentation commemorating those who served In • WWI • WWII • Korea • • Vietnam • Persian Gulf • Featuring Muskal Sdectlons By: THE ALL AMERICAN BOYS CHORUS Complimentary Bot Dop and Sodas ~ ·Harbor Lawn -Mount Olive Mortuary & Memorial Park 1625 Giilcr Avenue· Costa Mesa <n•)S40 .. S554 ·· ., . {Aj,.lt/_ .. . . Tht urrrst 6 FU.est Benty S•11ly 6 JiJJ Strvitt s.Jo11 IN STAL . . . . . .. Doily Pilot Fliers warn of coyote attacks on Eastside • Resident puts up notices after fatal assault on her cat. DMpa lharath DAILY PILOT BASTSIDB -A 17th Street resident who thinks a pack of coyotes fatally mauled her.cat has put up fliers warning. neighbors of the threat. Jo Hendriks said coyotes are a problem for Eastside res- idents year after year. "I know several people in this area who have lost their pets,• sbe said. "That's why I put up the warning signs after I lost my cat, so my neighbors can be on guard and protect their pets." Hendriks said a neighbor found her 11-year-old cat, Stormy, a white Himalayan with silver highlights, hall eaten on a street comer. "The police say this is a problem only for the Westside,• she said. ·But there are people here on 'the Eastside who have lost cats and dogs." Hendriks' little white signs with orange letters caution res- idents that "coyotes are feed· ing on Eastside pets• and that "they have been seen in ~cks . killing small animals.• Michele Gourlay, a Santa Ana Avenue resident, said she was concerned after seeing the filers in her neighborhood. "I have a small dog, and I'm worried," she said. "I'm especially concerned if they are hunting in pat.ks.• Oty officials said they have received only one report of a coyote attack in Costa Mesa this year. But coyote sightings and attacks are pretty common this time of year as ~e animals hunt for food. said RObert Bork. a Costa Mesa animal control supervisor. •coyotes do have easy access to our dty, particularly through the Back Bay and Talbert Park." be said. Bork advised residents to keep small pets inside the house during the late evening and early morning hours, when coyotes tend to hunt. •1t•s also important to keep food sources like garbage bins away from the street because it attracts the animals,• he said. Bork said the dty sends out warning fliers to residents if coyotes are sighted. "So far this year, we haven't sighted any coyotes,• Bork said. Until animal control officials take over, Hendriks said she LS going to continue warning her neighbors. . "It's very important,· she said. "I think people have the right to know.• ~ SABATINO'S Lunch • Dinner • Sunday Brunch 251 Shipyard Way • Newport Beach Please call for hours, directions & refef\'atiOns. : (949) 123-0&ii : Unique Personalized Gifts for every occasion ChOO$B from - Personalized Mugs Laser Engraved Frames Photo Sculptures Sports Awards and much much morel .. . ' Doily Pilot BEACH CONTINUED FROM A 1 to the jetties anyv.t\ere from 40th Street to 44th Street, where you won't get run CMer by a surfer because they're not allowed. Don't go to The Wedge between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. -no matter how tough you think you are -because that is one place spongefS and surfers alike are blackballed. Know that blackballed means just what you think It does - access denied. IOOYSURRNG: Anywhere on Balboa from 15th Street south, you should be able to flhd a fun ride. If you are an expert. not a vacationing beachgoer, summer swells make anywhere from Balboa Pier to The Wedge a wild ride for a bodysurfer. But the beach breaks also make for permanent spinal injuries for anyone who gets drilled Into the sand. So be careful. SURFING: All other areas (non-beach breaks) go off when there is a Chubasco, or Mexican hurricane. But a top spot is the point at 18th Street. where surfers c.an usually catch a good hollow peak in the summer. Also, 56th Street is a great surf spot. as are the jetties -except between 40th Street and 44th Street, where, once again, surfers are blackballed -and the river jetties. For a beginner, Blackie's. just to the north of Newport Pier, is a primo spot. but watch out it gets crowded with groms and rookies. SWIMMING: Is best done by good swimmers with ocean knowledge (who know what a riptide is and how to handle it). Anywhere that is not infested with surfers, who may Just run you owr. Is a good spot. Cofona det MM Is one of the best - Balboa Pier to The Wedge Is the worst. (Once again, beach breaks equal spinal Injuries.) One last note: The best place to swim long distances Is the t)ay, JU$t watch out for ooau and kayakers. 51C*WW:tsdone down at The Wedge outside of the blackball area and down at the Balboa Pier outside the black- ball area. Also good spots: L Street and G street. or anywhere from Cofonado Street to The Wedge. SANDCAS1\E llUUDING: It's no contest -torona del Mar Is the place. Actually, there Is con- test. The annual sandcastle build- ing contest is held on Corona del Mar State Beach each summer. But If you get funny looks while building a sandcastle elsewhere -that's not why they're looking at you funny. FAMILY IEAOt (where screaming children may go unno- tked): Cofona del Mar and Balboa are the best for the whole crew. There are fire rings at both beaches, so you can spend a whole day out there and really tire them out. Or anywhere there is parking nearby, such as either pier. SINGLES (no screaming kid· dies running about) a..ch: Anywhere there is not parking. Somewhere you get to by bike Is highly recommended. S.ome sug- gestions Include West Newport or the far end of Balboa. DOGS: Are allowed on all beaches. on a leash. before 9 a.m. or after 5 p.m. they are never per- mitted on the boardwalk or either pier. KAYAKING: Probably the best place would be in the Back Bay. For those of you who want to attempt a paddle owr surf and through the whitewash, just avoid the blackball areas and swimming areas. ......... SKATING AND '*ING: Unless you're trying to get somewhere sped&. stick to the boardwall(. which runs from 36th Street to F Street on both the bay front and ocean front. •Use caution and go stow,• B~says. llARllEQJE: Open fires are allowed In the fire rings (and only In the fire rings) found at Corona def Mar and Balboa. These fire rings also make those the best night beaches. If you want to bring your own barbecue, make sure It sits up off the sand. Lowrlder hibachi's 'are not allowed. ROCK ~ING AND llOUU>BUNG: Is actually not allowed anywhere. '°'1trary to popular belief, and what the many chalk marks Indicate. boul- dering is not even allowed In that cove at Corona del Mar acrciss from The Wedge. VOUEYIAU: You can't miss them. They are the spots with those nets set up on poles in the sand. There are big contingencies up at Orange Street in upper • West. Newport. at Corona del Mar and at C Street. BOATWG ANO 90AT LAUNOftNG: The only place that allows large boat launching. that is if you don't own your own marina or dock, is Newport · Dunes. Hand-carried vessels, such as canoes. may be launched at 1901 Bayside Drive. Catamarans may set sail off of 18th Street and Bay. WINOSURRNG: Launch your windsurfer at 18th Street and Say, and head outside of the swimming area. !;. helpful hint: It's best to go when there Is wind. KITE RYING: Anywhere there Is wind should work. UfegY&tds prefer that kites be flown on less crowded beaches, which most are when It's really windy. (Blowing sand drives people away pretty quickly). AstuNG: Off either pier WOfks well, or off the east and west jetties. Rumor has It there is some killef surf fly-fishing at the Santa Ana River Jetty. TOURIST ~ Definitely the Fun Zone area. You can amuse the whole family there for hours. There's food ,nd shops, amuse- ment rides, harbor tours, para- saillng, boat rentals, fishing char- ters, catamaran trips. bars -the list goes on and on. Plus. If you're low on cash but want to get out on the water, you c.an ride the ferry back and forth from Balboa Island for only 50 cents each way. NIGHT SPQ'r. See tourist spot. (Unless you're a big partyer, then head down to Dennis Rodman's -just foUow the noise.) SC\J8A DIVING: Go south of Corona del Mar to Little Corona, but (I know you're sick of hearing this) not in the blackballed areas. SNORKELING; Once again, down south, Corona del Mar area -the rockier the area the better, that's where the fish hang out. The best days are a day or two after a southeast wind blows. That usually cleans up the water for a couple of days. TIDE POOL HOPPING: Little Corona and south, just watch out after a rain. Another obvious spot is the Bade Bay Nature Center. P£OPLE WATOflNG: Newport Pier, where bright and early with the surfers and fisher- men you can also find preachers (and maybe the Lord) and you can hang out with the birdman. cox CONTINUED FROM A 1 However, with Democrats taking control, the policy is set to stay as it is. Enter Boxer, who has made it clear since Cox's name first was connected lo the judicial seat that she would not support his nomination. Cox alluded to her stance in his letter to her. "On the assumption that you intend to (deny my nomination), however, I have asked the pre:s- ident not to consider me for a judicial nomination,· Cox wrote, adding that he would continue to oppose •this anti-democratic abuse of the 'blue slip' policy.•• Cox, who said in his letter to Feinstein that be did not want to risk leaving his disbict unrep- resented during a lengthy nom- ination process, could not be reached for comment Friday. Judging by his letters, the congressman could gq down as one of the major losers in Jeffords' switch: Feinstein had told the White House she would not block Cox's nomination, which would have paved the way for his a ppointment, . although Democrats probably would have still fought it. Cox puts a positive spin on his loss in his letter to Boxer, _saying it will give him •a much longer career in Congress.· "I very much enjoy the opportunity to serve our country by writing law, and perhaps someday l will have occasion to thank you for the role you have played in keeping me at it,· he wrote. A host of would-be replace- ments for Cox won't be getting that chance, however. Sc:Mdoy, Mat 26, 2001 AS Their list continued to grow in the past weeks. Elected offl. daJs who were considertng runs included state Sen. Dick Ackerman (R-Fullerton), Supervisor Todd Spitzer, fonner Assemblywoman Marilyn Brew~r. fitate Sen. Ross Johnson (R-Irvine) and Santa Ana Co\lndlman Brett Franklin. Nan-elected hopefuls indud• ed Newport Beach Realtor Bill Cote, Newport Beach philan- thropist John Crean and Newport Beach physidah Don Udall. Of all the possible con- tenders, Assemblyman Bill Campbell (R-Villa Park) and Tustin millionaire Mark Chapin Johnson went the farthest in their attempts, offidally setting up campaign committees with the Federal ~ Election Commission. Campbell, however, bad plunged the deepest, sending out a fund-raising letter Wednesday that, while still con- tingent on Cox accepting the federal seat, stressed the need for a speedy response. Campbell could not be reached for comment. Johnson said he had planned to wait until Cox had vacated the seat before beginning public fund-raising efforts. · Johnson also pointed out that it is still possible that Bush will . appoint Cox to a different post and said he is prepared to run. • 1 don't want to prematurely get out,• said Johnson, who has long been a board member or the Orange County Performing Arts Center. Johnson sa.td he also might run in the next election. depend- ing on the results of redistrictmg of the county's rongressional seats. .. ~ l ~t I. I. ,\.I/ I I' A I J l 'F JV Tl f R /.' CA . H /> C· I A1..swtl', IT'S TIME FOR ..• ["4t's ~or»"' ur:o. Ml CASA- Mattress Outlet Store 3165 Harbor BIV(j. Costa Mesa One lllodl Soutll ol •05 rwy s4s.11ae · Joie m aboad me 130' lli.stotic Tall SIU Amaicaa Prick for u adlillg 8c manorable camp ai ea/Catalina Waad. &:pt for Yowhs, Adults 8c Family • Sail Training • Snorkeling @ • Basic Navigation • K2yaking • Marine Biology • Island Expl. Hikers • Scientific Testing • Nautical Ans & Songs Beach P1r1iet. 'Barbccuca. Gamu • Aod Fuo! Umitcd (4) Fi~ day -ions • bOok early don't mU. the boat I Small groapt ~•unique «dlKatiooal ~ $350/ pp \\lllll< \'-.lllHll\<.I \1\1:1'-I h\111111 '\\ \' j II • 1 I" It I "'. • I I I I I " .... "ti • I' ' . \ 'I ' " Have lune-ti·, will travel. on the gp! KIDS ·LUNCHES Each meal Includes: • choice of entree •cookies • juice •grapes • goldftsh snack • a fun, reusable carrying case MEXICAN RESTAURANT 296 E. 17TH ST. COSTA MESA · 949-645-7626 • .. . . • Daily Pilot A6 Saturda)i Mar 26, 2001 Don't forget who the real heroe5 are this Memorial Day MAKE MEMORJAL DAY WEEKEND MEANINGFUL: For many, Memorial Day week· end is a time for the beach, sunbathing, boating, the Indianapolis 500 and barbe- cuing with family and friends and taking in Disney's new movie, •Pearl Harbor," which ls expected to set a record at the box office this weekend and earn the com· pany hundreds of millions of dollars. You can bet new movie stars will be made by the moVie. We will be in awe of the movie's special effects and the stars, and the movie will be nominated for a bunch of Academy Awards. Yet, let's not forget who the real heroes are on this Memorial Day weekend. They are the men and women who served and con · tinue to serve the country in the armed services. Many were wounded and died defending liberty, yet many served without ever seeing combat. They are heroes all. This weekend, in addition lo catching "Pearl Harbor,• display the American flag and consider attending a Memorial Day service at Costa Mesa's Harbor Lawn Cemetery or Corona del Mar's Pacific View Cemetery. Visit the American Legion Post on the Ball>oa Peninsula or one of the air museums. Jim de Boom COMMUNITY & a.uas Th.ke your children or grand- children with you and say thank you to a veteran or an active service member. Let them know the sacri· fices they have made on our behaU have not gone unnoticed and are greatly appreciated. HEROES: That's what men· tors are to children in Whitti· er Elementary School's HOST program. They come each week, spend an hour or so mentoring first., second· or third-graders in math and English. They listen, chal· lenge, motivate and help children learn tbe skills nec- essary to be successful in llfe. Ryan Schultheis, a junior at Newport Harbor High School, is mentoring as a way of fulfilling his high school community service requirement. Ryan has more than met the time require- ment and continues to men- tor. Newport Harbor senior Joshua Kast is mentoring four days a week after he completes his regular high school class schedule.For Joshua, it's off to Orange Coast College in the fall, and the children he mentors hope he will have time to continue to mentor. Joel Furman, a junior at Newport Harbor, finds the mentoring program neat and helpful to the young learn· ers. Joel, in addition to vol- unteering at Whittier, spends 1 1/2 bows a week at Her· itage Point, a senior center in Mission Viejo. There he meets one on one with an older adult, being a buddy, shooting pool, listening and talking to someone who oth· erwise would be lonely. Heroes all of them! You too can be a hero. Call the Whittier School HOST pro- gram at (949) 515-6898. <:ONFERENtt WEEKEND: Rotary District 5320 will hold its annual conference June 1 to 3 at the Hyatt Newporter. Many of the local clubs have canceled their regular week· ly meetings lo encourage their .members to attend the conference. Rotary District Gov. Price Shapiro of the Rotary Club of Newport Beach Sunrise and the Rotary International presi· dent's rep1e1entative Carlos Vasquez, will be honored by the Conference Committee at a reception Thursday before the conference begins. Ec;t Masry, the real-life lawyer wbo worked with Erin Brockovich, will be the speaker at Prtday's breakfast while test pilot and astr0114ut Doug Moss will speak at a luncheon hosted by Wendell Sawyer, president of the Rotary Club of Newport-Bal· boa. Friday night, Rotary clubs from Orange and Southern Los Angeles coun· ties will host hospitality suites for some 1,000 expect· ed guests. Camille Keith, marketing vice president with South· west Airlines, will speak at Saturday's breakfast Vasquez will address the luncheon meeting being hosted by Arnold Blaine of the Rotary Club of Newport· Irvine. Ron Millar, president of the Rotary Club of New- pbrt Beach Su,nrise, will host the Governor's Ball, which will be held Saturday night. The conference will close' Sunday after brunc:b. The non-meal time ses· sions are filled with sessions on drug and alcohol abuse prevention programs1 youth; the Rotary Foundation; Club, Community and Jntemation· al Service oppo,rtunities; nature walks; and a visit to the Back Bay Interpretive Center. Throughout the weekend, clubs will be rec· . ognized for outs1411cling pro· grams to their communities, youth and international ser· vice activities. ./ District Conferences are a time of learning, sharing and celebration. The 51 Rotary clubs in District 5320 have good reason to celebrate. WELCOME TO THE WORLD OF SERVICE CLUBS: Judy A. Brown of Ben Bridge Jeweler joined the Rotary Club of Newport-Balboa. SERVICE CLUB MEETINGS THIS WEEK: Want to get more involved in your com· munity, make new friends, network or give something back to your community? 1l'y a service club. You are invit· ed to attend a club meeting this week. Many clubs will buy your first guest meal. WEDNESDAY 7:15 a.m.: The South Coast Metro Rotary Club will meet at the Center Club. the Newport Harbor Kiwanis Club will meet at the Univer- sity Athletic Club, and the Costa Mesa Orange Coast ·Breakfast Uons Club will meet at Mimi's Cafe. Noon: The Orange Coast Exchange Club will meet at the Bahia Corinthian Yac:bt Club for teacher and ACE awards presentations. THURSDAY 7:30 a.m.: The Costa Mesa- Orange Coast Breakfast Uons club will meet at Mimi's for a business meeting. Noon: The Kiwanis Club of Costa Mesa will meet at the Holiday Inn to hear for- mer Assemblywoman Mari- lyn Brewer, the Newport Beach-Corona del Mar Kiwa- nis Club will meet at the Bahia Corinthian Yac:bt Club for scholarship award presen- . tations for two students from Corona del Mar High Sc:bool and University High School, the Exchange Club of New- port Harbor will meet at the Newport Harbor Nautical Museum for a Ladies Day program with John Kruse, who will discuss ·naveling the Elderhostel Way." • COMMUNITY a CUl9S is pub- lished Saturdays In the Daily Pilot Send your sefVice dub's meeting information by fax to (949) ~ 8667, e-mail to ~of.com or by mail to 2082 S.E. Bristol St. Suite 201, Newport Beach, CA 9266(>.1740. Gettins.. INVOLVED I • GEmNG INVOLVED runs periodically In the Dally Pilot on a rotating basis. If you'd like information on adding your organiza· iion to this list. call (949) 574-4298. ALS ASSN., P RANGE COUNTY OtAPTER The Amyottophic Lateral Sclerosis Assn .. which helps individuals who have the disorder that is also known as Lou Gehrig's disease. needs vol· unteers. (714) 375-1922. unteers, family resource consultants and office volunteers are needed. Volunteers may work on one-time projects or ongoing programs. Training sessions are available. (800) 660-1993. AMERICAN CANCER SOOETY The Orange County Region of the American Cancer Society seeks office volunteers. The society is also seeking volunteers to answer ~ for the unit's Helpline lnfoCenter. (949) 261-9446. goods, such as clothing, furniture, jewelry, accessories, antiques and collectibles, to fund the society's research, education and patient services programs. ne goods may be dropped off at 2600 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. Volun· teers are also needed from ·10 a .m. to 5 p .m . Monday through Satur· day at the same location. (949) 640-4777. ment is a few hows each week or month. Drivers must have a valid driver's license and insurance and be at least 25 years old. Volun· teers may use either their own vehicles or American Cancer Soci· ety vans. (949) 261-9446 or scomer@cancer.org. AMERICAN HEART ASSN. The American Heart Assn. is look· ing for volunteers to perform various general office duties in the main office and implement educational and fund-raising events through Orange County. No experience nec- essary. 1\'aining 'will be provided. (949) 856-3555. AMERICAN HOME HEALTH HOSPKE PROGRAM The American Home Health Hos- picey>rogram needs volunteers to give emotion!l support to terminally ill patients and their families in the greater Orange County area. lTain- ing is provided. (714) 550-0800 or (800) 540-2545. AMERICAN RED CROSS, ORANGE COUNTY CHAPTER ALZHEIMER'S ASSN. OF ORANGE COUNTY Support group leaders, ~ting Vol- ' AMERICAN CANCER SOOETY DISCOVERY SHOP • The American Cancer Society Discovery Shop needs unwanted ~ ..... lice .... ~ AMERICAN CANCER SOOETY ROAD TO RECOVERY The transportation program needs volunteers to drive cancer patients to and from medical treatnients free of charge. The required commit· Yl/e o/t«..the most teftoWnecl lnM ..._ ... :Jtetrnclodt Gentury, M arge Carson , Drexel Herl~ and more ... all at GWnoteed Bat Prices. For three daY' or\ly this savl{lp gets even ~r. We'll pay. your 6'ales taX-or 8ive ~ 12 momhi free fl~. Now ia the time to 1hQP at Tre&llftS, and let our designen help you make the iilht choice, every time • ................ .,..~.-..12 .. 1..,, ... s. ........ ,...... ~-Glllll WillllflJONalr•-.-, ... .... The Orange County c:bapter of the American Red Cross Iieedi-·:.:>lun- tee~ to address c6mmunity gro~s about·Red Cross services and to act as liaisons with the media in disaster and emergency situations. Judy Ian- naccone, (714') 835-5381. Doily Pilot Saturday, Mat 26, 2001 A7 Cooking classes are starting to heat up ·in Costa Mesa D lsh is a new cooking school and kitchen store that carries gourmet accessories and offers catering. nie concept was started after two instruc- tors from the former Home Chef Cooking School and cooking classes in the south of France decided to open their own buslness. Tom Curran and Susan Borowsky offer hands-on cooking clas~­ .es, workshops and a series of basic and advanced classes. Dish carries cooking acces- sories by All-Clad and Emile Henry, as well as gourmet products, including oils, vinegars, mustard, jams and spreads. Dish has a summer class schedule through July on topics such as how to thr.Q.w a great dinner party, an ~ian-theme cooking class, a cuisine in Provence Greer Wylder BEST BUYS class, a vegetarian series and a Seafood 101 series. Dish is at 435 E. 17th, St., Costa Mesa. Information: (949) 574- 2433. Wllllams-Sonoma is offer- ing classes through July taught by visiting chefs, including Caroline Cazau- mayou, a native of Provence, Prance; Doris Kwon, who has studied with French and Ital- ian chefs1 Unda Steidel, an author who bas receiyed for- mal training at Epicurean in Los Angeles; Lorraine Lee Witte, a Chinese cuisine spe- cialist; Florence Bertheau, a French-born, classically trained chef; and Janice Morrow, owner of the White Apron School of Culinary Design. The schedule for June includes "Short Order Gourmet Dinner,• "Enter-: taining with Style," "Grilling: Happy Father's Day,• •Father's Day Celebra- tion.• "Vegetarian Bistro Fare,· •span.ish Pare." "Fire up the Grill: The 4th of July" and "It's the Berries.• In July, the classes will include •An Elegant Summer Pasta Par- ty." •summer Picnic,· "Delightful Summer s100 OFF Umbrella with p1rcllase of 5 piece patio set Cost of Operating a DUFFY ELECTRIC , BOAT could DOUBLE this summer! 8 hours of baycruising goes from $.50 to $1. 00 Still the best bargain in town. That's about $.04 per mile. Oh yeah,, .,., the boats recharge at night so don't worry about those pesky rolling • blackouts. Come sec the new 2002 Duffy 21 's: The Cruiser, The Qassic and The Signature Edition ... they arc awesome! Ordci a new DUFFY this weekend ana receive a full year of DUFFY CARE at no chatgc •.. over $2,000 value. ,. I I • '· ._. .. Desserts,• "The Big Easy. New Orleans-Style,• "Fla- vors of the Southwest• and "Elegant Summer Dinner in Paris.· The two-hour classes are each $45 and cl8$S size is limited. Williams-Sonoma is on the second level ol the Sa.ks Fifth Avenue wing at South Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa. The Amenc.an Cancer Society's Dlscovery Shop is now open from noon to 4 p.m. on the last Sunday of each month at 2600 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. On Sunday, there will be an end of the month sale. All spring clothing and spring fwniture will be 50% to 75% off. ·we have just received a charming dollhouse with fur- niture, great for that darling daughter or collector,• said Gloria Godfrey, Information: (949) 640-4777. Gardening secrets are on sale at Roger's Gardens, 2301 San Joaquin Hills Road, Newport Beach. The nurs- ery's private formulas of soil activators. flower foods, pot- ting soils and planbng mix are reduced 20% through the end of the month. The products were developed especially for Southern Cali- fornia gardens. Information: (949) 640-5800. • IEST BUYS is published lhundays and Saturdays. Send Information to Greer~ at the Dally Pilot. 330 W. Bay St, CQSta Mesa, CA 92627, or by fax to (949) 646-4170. Look Like A Million for A Lot Less Famous Parking Lot Party This Sunday, May 27th Drawing For $100 In Merchandise at 2:30! 9AM-4PM -ii • ~ 2731 East Coast Highway Corona del Mar, CA. 92625 2!?.!~?4?~~ I • I '" A8 ~May 26, 2001 TORIES Doily Pilot ·Fairgrounds ·ready:UJg for its };lig srunmer act . • The Orange County Pair will begin July 13, but preparations are well underway. DMpa lharath DAILY PILOT COSTA tvfESA -If sum- mer's almost here, can the Orange County Fair be far behind? Fairground officials say they are excited and all set to "1\vist and Shout• and wel- come "the celebration of cit- rus and sun" -the theme for the 109th annual fair. This year the gala will begin July 13 and end July 29. TEMPLE ISAIAH Of NEWPORT BEACH ( Constrvativt) Oritnce Counrys ~dllest Svna&Oflue "YOU All£ A STIANGER HER£ Ofllll ONCE" SWlbet Wl:lnWp HebmrSdool . • Ad.it Edeattol eo..a.c Social EfHtl $RABBI MA.RCS. RUBENSlVN 2401 llVI~ Ave Newpolt Beach {949) 548-6900. 4 , . ; • --.; ~-- -" _ 1,_ I il '"' ' !Not '*-tn'llMto ... ... beclUle .. nnl to. Worship 10:A.M. HARBOR CHRISTIAN CHURCH (Dl1clple1 of Christ) 2401 lrvtne AV9. N .. port h1ch, CA (949) 845-5781 ..... Dr.°"" Dolt TOPIC "The Road To Frretlom" Rev. Keo Gray "Citrus and sun is what Orange Cpunty 1s about,• said Becky Bailey-Findley, general manager and chief executive of the Orange County Fair and Exposition Center. •1t is in line with our goal, which iS to give a boost to agri- culture," she said. "And both citrus and sun have played an important role in agriculture in Orange County.• The fair has always tried to create a fun environment for families, Bailey-Findley said. Over the years, ,.. it has evolved into an upbeat event that welcomes and cele- brates the summer season, ewport arbor Luth•ran Church (LL..C.A..J 1N Dover Dr .... wport ...... tredltlogl Lutheran ....... Dnld MOftg4t Wonlllp a.Mee wtth Moir Communion 8unday •:111 em Newport Center United Methodist Church Rrv. Cachlctn Coou. Pastor 1601 Mugucritc Avt. comer of Marguerite and San Joaquin ltills Rd (949)~4S Sam {)Jlia W.rship Smtict I 0ftm Wonhip 11nd Chi/drmi Su""4y Sthool Youth mtttint Wtt~ ST. Mill PIF.sBYTERIAN CHUICH Worship 9:30 she said. ·we try to have sbme- thing to keep everybody · entertained," Bailey-Findley said. Fair otµcials prepare for the event year-round, Just as one year's event concludes, they start planning for the next season. Tb.is year, they have lined up several new exhibits and events for fair-goers, Bailey- Findley said. "We're really excited abotft our 'I Love Lucy' exhibit,• she said. •It's the 50th annivefsa.ry of the Lucy show, and we're sure it'll make a lot of fans happy." The Lucy exhibit is an interactive' one in which visi- tors can reenact immortal scenes from the 1950s come- dy series, including the stomping in the wine vat. Other highlights include demonstrations by celebrity chefs Tommy Thng and Gra· barn Kerr, and such spectac- ular rides as the 15-story- high La Grand Wheel. •It's as high as the Millen- nium Wheel is Paris,• Bailey- Findley said. •If Costa Mesa and .Newport Beach resi- dents ride the wheel. they should be able to find their homes." The Arlington Theater, which features the falr's pop- ular concert series, has got- I I 'I '-< ( l I ' \ I ~tMicbad&AllAngeb P...rxV,... .. M~. ~ dd Mat . ~4-0463 6IJ1UJING OUR FNf7ll UW1NG OlRJST ANDSEJMNGOUR<XJMMVNtn The R.cv'd Paa D. Haynes, R.cctor SUNQAY SOW>Ul.E 8 am -Holy Eucharist 9 am -Adult Bible Scu.dy 10 am -ClionJ Eudl.arist + A "A God-ccnrcrcd parish comrnunii:y, instructed ht~ Word of God and renewed by the Sainmcnu O ur Lady Quee n of Angels 2046 Mar Vista Drive Ncwpon Beach, California 92660 (949)644-0200 Fax (949)644-1349 Rev. Monsignor WJJiam P. McLaughlin, P~1or LITURGIES: Sarurday, 5 p.m. {Cantor), Sunday, 7:00 (Quiet), 8:30 (Cooccmporary), 10:00 (Choir}, 11 :30 a.m. (Cantor) and 5:00,p.m. (Contemporary) FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST. SCIENTIST 3303VlaUdo Newport Becrh 673-1340 or 673--6150 Chuxc:h 10 am & 5 pn. SUnday SdlOOI 10 am ~~·pll •Jf'I AD Abouc Me ••• lt't Not About Met• ten bigger this year. Its capacity has been increased. from 6,500 seats to 9,000. Of the 9,000 seats, 1,500 are available for advance booking. •Aside from tbe t,500, the rest of the seats will be free as usual.• Bailey-Findley said. The fair will also feature animals and agricultural exhibits from the fair- grounds' Centennial Farm. Orange County has a rich agricultural history, said Jerome Hoban, assistant manager of Centennial Parm. ·we plan to have several citrus exhibits in keeping with the theme of the fair, # he .id. •we hope to high- light the growth of the dfrus industry over the years, packing houses and the equip~nt they used.• Apart from the citrus, Centennial Fann will also feature the regulars, Hoban said. "Our baby pigs and calves are favorites,• he said. "The baby animals are always a big hit.• But more than anything else, the fair is an opportuni- ty for locals to "come home,• Bailey-Findley said. "It's festive,• she said. "It's like a homecoming, something to expect every summer.• BEACH SA;EYY TIPS How to handle yourseH in the wate1 Hoag Hospital's Project Wipeout aims to prevent neck and spinal cord injuries while at the beach. Here are some tips: •LIAM TO SWM. tt you can't swim and owrhNd stroke for at least 15 minutes. you should not be in the O<Mn. • WAJOt YCJURmF, NeYef swim .ac>ne. and swim'*' a lifegu«d wtlenever possible. • ICHOW 1"I I.MTS. check with a lifeQuefd to flnd out where shallow and deep areas are located. Do not essume that the ocHn floor has an even bot- tom. The sandy oce1n floor Is constentty ctwinglng with the currents. aeating both deep hotes and shaHow sandbars )Vith- ln minutes. · • DfV'I SAIB.Y. Don't run from the beactl Into the wner and dNe headfirst into the waves. Sandbars that can't be seen from the surface mlJ'f be present °' the w.ter may be too shallow, or both. Don't jump °' dlve Into the water from a pier or rodt jet- ty. From the viewpoint of a pier or~ water appears much deeper than It really is. \M\at looks like \0 to 20 feet of water IN}' only be 2 to 3 feet deep. Diving in could be 1-tal. • •SAFI ON 111180ARD. tf you're bodyu1tng or Boogie boarding, .tways keep your arms out in front of you to protect your hMd an(j neck. Always wear flns and a board leash. • WATOI 1"I WAVES. Stay out of the •uf zone.• Where the waves btNk. WINeS are et their most fore-"' here. and ewt\ a small wave c.an lift you up and throw you Into the sand. Avoid this by not trying to artd\ a wave too i.ta « by ducting under the W/Ne, • oowr AGtff 1111 mal&J't tf you ate pulled out to SN by a rip anent. don't S*'ic.. A rip current will pufl you ~from the shore, ~ It will not pull you under. Just swim parallel to the shor& until you are out of the rip, ~swim lo on to shore. • CAU. RM HEL'-tf you are in troob6e, call or wave for help. •JUST SAY NO. Never drink or use drugs at the bead\. It clouds 'f04X ability to make wise ded~ sJons. and that cnuld be fatal. ~,,,, ,,__....._OAioAI ,. MEMORIAL WEEKEND EIC>C>S*A*L*E*S**E*'V•E•N•T .v .. w. .. • CMJMNlnt c---s.r. ~L~.~ R es t a u ra n t · ----Established In 1962 ----- Stealt1 • Seafood • Coclttaiu Quality Service • Nightly Entertaint;nent ., ~ EL_~CH.......--.I'V ........... O. ..... \ . I I I I TORIES Saturday, IW:zy 26, 2001 A9 : A summer guide to patio dining in Newport-Mesa e temperatures are in the mid-70s. Gray May will soon give way to June gloom. The dawn comforter causes more dis- comfort than comfort, and your plants need watering every day. It's just about that time -sum.mer! And not much marks the begin- ning of swruner more than patio dining. Well. that and the accom- panying sunburn. The end of SchOOl used to be the great marker, but being so many years have passed since my last three-month vacation, I now use that tool of ancient scholars, the sun. The swi is plentiful, both .beat-' ing down and shining off the water at Ruby's at the end of the Balboa Pier. Don't be afraid to be a tourist in your own town, I say. And one place where I absolutely, without fail, take our out-of-town guests is this Ru;.,y's. I go there without them too. You can sit on the roof, a toasted sourdough/Parmesan/avo- cado burger in one hand and a beer in the other, and really, truly Kathy Moder DINING REVIEW understand what it means to be in Southern California. Surf, sand, ice cream soda and a sense of being _.an epiphany, Newport style. You can't get this in Nebraska. Nebraska also d6esn't serve an $8 cocktail, like those on the bay- watching patio at Newport Landing, right nexrto the Fun Zone. But then again, not much bay to watch in Omaha either. The location of Newport Landing's patio is perfect. You can watch the locals and the tourists, and spend not much time wondering which is which. You can also watd\ the fer- ries, the yachts and the kayaks, the seals and sailboats. It is all in good fun. So fun in fact, with the great music and traditional tropical drink.$, that people set up shop at Newport Landing. So this is a good place to come early and stay late -something only possible when the sun doesn't set until 8 p.m. For the more genteel set, the patio at the Garden Cafe, off of Antique Row on 17th Street in Costa Mesa, provides both the blooming beauty and the sand- wiches of summer. Sit on the quiet and quaint country patio surround- ed by roses, azaleas and ficus trees1 listen .to the trickling foun- tain, and snack on those summer favorites: lemonade ·and tuna sand- wiches. Of co\U'Se they serve a fine ic~ tea and turkey sandwiches here as well. I have mentioned before that this is a wondeitul place for those surrunertime parties too; ideal for birthdays and baby showers. But if you are really into cele- brating the coming of summer, hit the festive Plcante Martin's on Bal- boa Island. While they don't really have a patio to speak of, they do open the doors wide so you can see who is coming and going as you eat some serious »homemade" Mexican food. Try lhe tortas, taquitos and ~es. They are ·an QTeat. You can call out to your friends on the sidewalk (if Martin hasn't already) and have your friends join yo4 as they wane by, and.what could be more summer- like than that? Ii you don't know anyone, yell at me. I'll join ya. The Back Bay Cafe on the water down near the Dunes Beach is one place.that is all summer to me. They have a huge patio (with umbrellas for the sun-sensitive and for those who get crabby sitting in it) where you can enjoy a simple but good breakfast and watch the skilled and unskilled load and unload their watercr$Ut at the boat ramp. Classic riverij.ke entertain- ment and QTeat iced tea. Come back for their award-winning clam chowder at dinner time and officiate your own impromptu sunburn contest. Another·excellent people- watching place is Charlie's Chill, at the very base of the Newport Pier. Their patio sticks halfway out la Mesa. (949) 646-6650. of lhe Lab anti-mall .. Mem-drink or late-night snack into the boardwalk,. and the chances of an inexperienced in- line skater falling into your chili fries is not unheard of. I call Char- lie's Chili great hangover food, and I mean no disrespect by this. Their onion rings, chili omelets and chili dogs can cure whatever ails you, but I have found them to be partic- ularly effective after a night of overdoing it. If you hav~ eaten there once, you will eat there again. But their massive chili burg- er is also just the thing after a long day in the sun and surf. We are so lucky. Newport Beach is really the perfect place to cele- brate the coming of summer. Sum- mer itself, for that matter. All eight months of it. And with all of the restaurants and all of the patios and all of the sunshine, it is no wonder that the real tourists come. Treat them with respect. They may be sharing that very same patio with you. • ~THY MADER's dining reviews usual· ly appear every other Thursday. tunes being spun by their Summer HOT SPOTS they're set up a little bit like Goat Hill Bar & Tavern. The decor includes stuffed ani- mals, a Foosball table, video phis Soul Food Cafe blends while Elliot Lewis entertains two resident deejays. Dress games and a small dance BALBOA SALOON floor. Deejays offer music Patrons at the Balboa Tuesdays, Thursdays, Fri- Saloon are as varied as they days and Saturdays. Music come _young, old, surfer, styles include hip-hop, alter- preppy. But they share one native, house and disco. d .ecti E • 1 al Hours are 3 p.m . to 2 a.m. a J ve: veryone s oc · Monday through Friday, Employees say it's a rustic, 10 to 2 a.m. Saturday and well-seasoned bar where Sunday. The Inn is at regulars are plentiful and 179 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. comfortably mellow. Inside (949) 631-427.7. features include pool tables and a 12-foot shark hanging THE unu KNIG.HT from the ceiling. Its two claims to fame are that Den-A bar where the jukebox nis Dannell, from Social Dis-still commands a strong tortion, was a big customer presenee, The Little and a good friend to the Knight is usually packed business' staff, and INXS with tWenty-and thir- shot a music video there in tysomethings who enjoy the the 1980s. No cover charge. full bar, pool table and Open seven days a week American cuisine. The box from 10 to 2 a.m. at 700 E. offers every kind of music Bay Ave., Balboa Peninsula. through about 200 CDs, (949) 673-97&3. except perhaps new age, said one staff member. Food CHESTER DRAWERS INN specials include tacos tor $1 and unlimited spaghetti for A bar and grill that large-$4.50 starting at 6 p.m. ly draws rustomers in their • every night. Hours are 10 20s and 30s. Staff at the a.m. to 2 a .m. seven days a Chester Drawers lnJ'.l say week at 436 E. 17th ~t .. Cos- ATH-SNNS ~ GREEIC &.MEDITERRANEAN CUISINE ~ . ~ I _,~FEEL THE WARMTH OF THE MEDITERRANE!N \ ~ ~· l!AUTIFUl PATIO OVERlOOKING TH[ IA~ E S80 ANTON BLVD. COSTA MESA ~ ' (BEHIND O.C.PERFORMING ARTS CENTER) ~ WITH LIVE MUSIC HELLY DANCING HAPPY HOUR & FULL BAR LUNCH (714) 556-6555 EASY "DINNER www.ethenHgraekculsine.com PARKING teak Prime Rib Rib Eye Delmonico Porterhouse THE LAB ANTl·MALl Deejays and bands play in what's called the Lab anti-mall's living room between 2 and 4 p.m. Satur- days. This room is the open area in the middie, sur- rounded by retail stores including Urban Outfitters and the NaNa Store. Genres of music range from pop to experimental. The Lab is at 2930 Bristol St.. Costa Mesa. (714) 966-6660. lA CAVE Hot summer nights are a perfect time to go to La Cave, a cool, darkened restaurant bar that features · jazz by the La Cave Jazz All Stars, among others. The underground lounge has entertainment nightly. La Cave is at 1695 Irvine Ave .. Costa· Mesa. (949) 646-7944. MEMPH.IS ' Located on the backside MEMPHILL'S UGS & CARPETS tlWIAl'IWI -Fldoty s.,onds . Aiulugs 230 East 17th St. • Costa Mesa (949) 722-7224 www.rugsandcarpets.com Mon-Fri 10-6 Sat 10-5 the soul of the South with patrons in Mistral's cozy bar the vibe of the Southland, atmosphere. Entertainment serving dinner and drinks. runs from 7:30 p.m. to mid- Every Thursday, the Todd night seven nights a week. Oliver Quartet jazzes up the Attire is casual to dressy. No joint. On Fridays, a listening cover charge. Mistral is at lounge called the Bristol 440 Heliotrope Ave .. Corona Sessions is spun by Deejay del Mar. (949) 723-9685. Danny. Love. And every third Saturday, prepare for PIERCE STREET ANNEX Unknown Pleasures with eclectic tunes from 1977 to Pierce Street Ahnex 1984. Open till around 10 aspires to be a'European p.m. Sunday through Thurs-pub, with its square-shaped day, 11 p.m. (sometimes lat-wooden bar and fine. er) Friday and Saturday. imports. On the weeke nd, Memphis is at 2920 S. Bris-Deejay Johnny B spins a tol St., Costa Mesa. (714) mix of '70s, '80s and '90s 432-7685. music-from 8:30 p.m. to 1 :30 a.m. Admission is free. MISTRAL Pierce Street Annex is at 330 RESTAURANT, LOUNGE E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. (949) 646-8500. Mistral for dinner and· dr,in.ks is a good bet for a THE SHARK CLUB night of romance and enter- For a club experience, the tainment. Co-owners Jacques and Olga de Quil-Shark Club is your hot spot. lien and Ed and Patty ·The bar/restaurant/pool hall Waters are always happy to is the place to shake it with recommend an after-dinner hip-bop and mainstream & 8 UPHOISflflY • FABRIC and ·QESIGN r:;----iil 125% OFF1 I FABRIC l L!t'!!!!!' .!!..."~ !!!!.. A!J eafood ISTA8USH!D ttJZ Swordfish, Salmon, Or Halibut (Blackened. Poached. Grilled, Our 79th Year-OrSautCed) New York Steak Tartare "I' I• ( I 'I:-.; i \\ I 11' \: '. ' I I.' ' ' \I ,'I ) I I I I \ ( I I I I \ ' I Baked Shrimp Scampi • {Prepared Table-Side) Steak Diane (Prepared Table-Side) New York Pepper Steak (Prepared Table-Side) Beef Srrog.anoff Filer of Beef Oscar Filer Mignon The Premier Steak & Seafood House * Beef Wellington • Chateaubriand Bouquerlcrc .. RackofLamb Lamb Chops Veal Chops • C.rml TJHNJM Deep Fried Jumbo Shrimp Calamari Steaks Scallops Bdle Meunierc Fried. Deep Sea Scallops Australian Lobster Tail Lobster Thcrmador Abalone Stone Crab Caws . from Florida Maryland Soft Shell Crab Cnbc.kes Al11k•n ~Crab Up BouiH•baiw WBBKDAYLUNCHEON BLUB PL4n S"1aALS OF•DlNG ovn so ITEMS PliR WEB. ALL UNDER s10.oo SUNDAY AND MONDAY NIGlll' DINND Sl'IDALS $15.95 OFFMED AU IIVBNING HNTIU!BS Sl!.RVBD WITH YOUR Otolal OP SOUP OI &\LAD. ~ M.UHSD PoTATOllS OR ~ PD.AP OVER 30 BN1'RBm To CHoosl FaoM INCuJDING}Jm.B BIT°' lJ1W>: • BIBASI' OP aocuN PAIMIGIANA • CltJaCilN ~ ._ VIAL PJd'4 • CMAMAll 0Ya ANGllLHAll PASTA ODIDN PICATl'A • VIAi. P>JNCV.M code is casual, but club attire is encouraged. Guests must be 21 or older. General hours: 11 :30 to 1 a.m. Tues- day through Wednesday, t 1:30 to 2 a.m. Thursday, 11 :30 to 3 a.m. Friday and 8 p.m. to 3 a.m. Saturday. There is a cover charge on Thursday, Friday and Satur- day nights. The Shark Club is at 84 t Baker St., Costa Mesa. (714) 751·6428. STUDIO CAFE Located on the Salboa Peninsula, the Studio Cafe offers a full bar and jazz. blues and rock entertain- ment every night. Hours: l l:d0 to 2 a.m. A cover applies Sunday afternoon from 2 to 6 p.m. when the Voodudes play dassic rock 'n' roll. Must be 21 or older. Dress casiial. Studio Cafe is at 100 Main St., Balboa. (949) 675-7760. LISTENING IS AN IMPORTANT PART OF OUR JOB When you arc working w11h a Realtor to find a home. tt is very important that your agent understands your criteria. A good Realtor listens cardull)', so be ~cry clear about the featuteS you wane in a home, Be clear about whit clements are ei...scnttal to you and where you arc willing to compromise When you stnrt looking at hpmcs. you may find that the ivailablc homes in your price ransc rcpre ent much mbre of a cl)mpromisc than you were vcl)al'Cd 10 mue. Let your qcnt kno• if you are willin.g to CQfl~idcr alternatJvc loan option to lncrnsc your buying power. DitcW all or the pusMblhtks. Would 0 ~ con'ildcr a hQu;c wi&b dw Amt tmen11te& lft I dift'aat 1ci1i.bort1oc>d, a "baady maa ~ •• ..Wlef ylfd Of f~ bedlooaa? A1 •• • •i" Md --eomimicU..n~ ......... 11 J011 "" Wiiti 'I ....,.., ftllil --~ .... ,.JfS .... 11.... Ud Jeff u•e 29 H .. rull .. ,_.el .-- ., 1111111~ .... .. •t• 'lid ........ .. . ,.. ... _ ..... .. .. • .. • . • • .. * ~ ' ' t l l • ' l t • • i l • I . ' . r J Al 0 Salurday, Mat 26, 2001 SUMMER CONTINUED FROM A 1 Chico, a variety group, on Aug. 7 at Uons Park, 570 W. 18th St1 and Cold Duck, an eclectic band, on Aug. 1• at the Farm Sports Complex on Fairview Road at Monitor Way. lnfonna1ion: (714) 754- 5654. JAZZ FESTIVAU Costa Mesa's Hilton Hotel and Holiday Inn will co-host the Costa Mesa/Orange County Classic Jazz Festival, starting with a kickoff party from 6:30 to 11 p.m. Aug. 3. The festival will be from 10:3Era.m. to midnight Aug. 4 and 5 and 10:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Aug. 6. The Hilton Hotel is at 3050 Bristol St., and the Holi- day Inn is at 3131 Bristol St. lnformation: (888) 215- 6222. Although promoters of the Newport Beach Jazz festival had a falling out with the Hyatt Newporter and moved the event to Irvine this year, the hotel will still put on its own summer jazz series. Nineteen concerts will be held June 15 to Oct. 12, including a July 4 concert and fireworks show. Musicians scheduled to appe.ar include Strunz & Farah on June 15, Pancho Sanchez on July 4, Peter .-...... --· White on July 6 and Keiko Matsui on Sept 7. 1be concerts will start between 7 and 8 p.m. S~­ tators can reserve seats tn the hotel's amphitheater, which has been equipped with a new sound and stage- llghting system. Information: (949) 129- 6400 or http://www. hyattnewporter.com. CORONA DEL MAI SCENIC 51 RUN On June 2, running enthu- siasts will again be able to enjoy Coro~ del Mar's scenic setting and raise mon- ey to make the village more beautiful at the same·time. The event, now in its 20th year, will include separate races for women and men, each race being limited to 1.~00 runners. Awards will go to the top three winners ln each category. Children ages 3 to 10 may compete ln a 1K •Dolphin Dash" race. Proceeds will be used by the Corona del Mar Cham- ber of Commerce to beautify the village, with a portion given to the city's recreation programs. Preregistration will be held from noon to 7 p.m. Wednes- day at Oasis Senior Cent~r. 800 Marguerite Ave., and from noon to 7 p.m. Thursday, and 1 to 9 a .m. and noon to 7 p.m. Friday at the city's Com- munity Services Department, 3300 Newport Blvd. lnlonna.tion:·l9'9) 6'4· 3151 or (949) 61pl-4050. llHT OUT AGAINST CllMI The Costa Mesa Police Department is collabomting with the dty to sponsor National Nigbt Out 2001 from 6 to 9 p.m. Aug. 7. The event, which will have as its Uieme •Gfve Crime and Pruos a Going- Away Party,• ""1 include block parties, cookouts, raf- fles and yo~th activities in neighborhoods throughout the city. . The National Night Out is an annual event held across the country to heighten awareness of crime and drug prevention, generate support and participation ln aime- fighting efforts, strengthen neighborhood '1>irit artd pollce-com1mµuty partner- ships and make criminals aware that neighborhoods are organized and fighting crime. Information: (714) 754- 4876. BILIOI ISLAND PARADE The Balboa Island Parade, which originally started as a cefebration of the island's new fire station, is now ln its eighth year 4nd will take place June 3 along Marine Avenue. About 75 groups and~­ viduals, rnany ~th home- AN~l,l<~lTI•: l{()W 1 1 4."= ( ~ A I ~ I ) I•: N ( ~ A I~., I•: I I ' o, , I , • ' ' ,, ' ' • • , f , •1 • ••l, FiM Ho11U F""'WlilfSI AlttHrw• & C..ll«H'1n Tr•'itio11•l to C..tt111~ Gift• & C""'°' D_gor Willi Lill & D~liwry Cafe Hours: Tues . .fri;i ~ Sat., 8am-4ixn; Sln ~. Sn-Zpn c.,,41,. to Cluuuhlins u,.,4 & R•n Boob Cilstom PidtltW Fl'UIU.I F11,.,.ihln Rntor•tio,. '"'' ,,,.d, mor1/ 949 722-1177 JJO EMl 17U. Slrwl Cod4I Malt, CA' (Sdiirtll ,,.,, '""' , . Senior Care Community 3901 E Coast Highway, Corona Ml Mar, California 92625 Crown Cove is a national award winning community overlook.in~ the Pacific Ocean and a canyon prcscrvc m charming Corona dcl Mar. Crown Cove offers Independent and Assisted Living Programs as well as our unique Journeys C Program for Alzheimer's and dementia care where "Lift's journty dotsn 't md with Alr.htimtr 's, 11 ntw chaptn btgins ~ CtRINGisaboutR~pect,Wannth,and Nurturing, Empathy and Individualized Attention; And to the staff at Crown Cove, caring is much more; it is our Uh focus. Crown Cove stands out among ocher Communincs for numerous reasons, but we bclievc one of our residents sutnJD.ari7.cd it best in a recent magazine art.idc: " This is the bat p/Ace to liw. The pNple 11re so frinu/Jy. thert is lllwttys someo1't to t4lJt r., or L CAn be lllone if I UNtnt. TIN food is Mlkiinu 11n4 ~ t!Mt works herr hm 11 wotUinfiJ mitlJe ~ 949-760-2800 .. Fax: 949-760-2839 email address: infur@crowncove.com • Lic.cnsc 130600)253 ·---- made noats: will march down the island's main street. A <20ntingent from the use Marching Band also ts expected to participate. The parade will begin at 11 a.m. and last about an hour. LaSt year, an estimated •.ooo people showed up for the event rzmd organizers hope to attract at least as many spectators this year, "It's just loads of fun and great for the kids,• said Newport Beach Councilman Steve Bramberg, who repre- sents and llves on the island. He will serve. as the parade's grand ma.t"Shal. Bromberg said street musicians and food stands will tum Marine Avenue into • big block party once the parade is over. ELVIS SALUTE The Orange County Fair- grounds will host the Endless Summer Classic Car and Motorcycle Show and Elvis Salute from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p .m . Aug. 19 at its Market Place, 88 Pair Drive, Costa Mesa. 'fying in with the anniver- sary of the death of •Tue King,· which is actually Aug. 16, the event will include an Elvis car award, barbecue, wienie roast and Elvis karaoke contest officiated by Elvis impersonator Kirk Wall, who will perform. Other Elvis impersonators are scheduled to perform and Elvis memorabilia will be displayed. Information: (949) 723- 6616. OLD GLORY BOAT PIUDE Think Christmas boat parade in the middle of summer. Just as they have done for the last nine years, members of the American Legion Yacht Club will present their Old Glory Boat Parade on July 4. The event, open to the public, will feature about 100 boats decked out ln patriotic colors and cruising the har- bor for several hours. Beforehand, spectators and skippers alike can boost their energy levels at a pancake breakfast from 7 to 11 a.m. While the boats are away -the parade will start at noon -American Legion officials will serv~ a barbe- cue lunch until 4 p .m . And although the Ameri- cart Legion doesn't have its own fireworks display, every- one is invited to stay and lis- ten to music and watch the firework$ display at nearby Newport Dunes. Boaters can register for the parade until the end of June. Prizes will be awarded for the best decoration and best animation, among other categories. Information: (949) 673- 5070. SUMMER CONCEIT SERIES Organizers of Fashion Island's summer concert series promise there will be some- thing for everyone, with mw.ic ranging from pop to rock, jazz, swing and new wave. The series, now in its 34th year, will begin July 18 with five-time Grammy Award winner Christopher Cross. On July 25, the Starship, featuring tvlickey Thomas, will play its string of hits, fol- lowed by contemporary jazz artist Scott Wilkie on Aug. 1. Royal Crown Revue will take the $tage with its retro- style swing music Aug. 8. The Nelsons, twin sons of the late rock icon Ricky Nelson, will play Aug. 15. A Flock of Seagulls will conclude the series Aug. 22. The concerts, which have drawn as many as 10,000 people in one night, are free but preferred seating is available for $15. Information: (949) 721- 2000. PRINCIPAi CONTINUED FROM f::!r -"I'm ab$0lutely speech-"" less,• a choked-up LaaM0-1 said when she finally took the podium. "I'm over- whelmed and touched Ay the time and effort put 14t~ this.. .. Laakso was inundated with colorful tissue-pa~l. flowers, a tiara, perso~: ized mouse ears and van• dus gifts, and several songs were written for and aooiii her. : The first-grade clasl. sang "I'm a Llttle Princi- pal" to the tune of •rm a Little Teapot" and kind"'4 garten children change~ the lyrics of ·a-I-N-G-0" to "L·A-A-K-S-0." Even Mickey Mouse lost tuS theme song for the day liS third-graders rewrote ~ words. ·- •111at everybody took the time and effort to IIU\k-e this such a special day for me -they really touched my heart,• Laakso said. • Students dearly ha~ a. hand in the sentiments' expressed ·in the varioU:s "presentations. lnterspers@d with the touching sen~­ ment of poems were lines obviously written by sftl· dents. On hand to witness her special day were a dozen of Laakso's family and d1S- trict staff members rangitig from maintenance crew workers and their direetbr to Supt. Robert Barbot. · Leading the ceremonies was Scott Paulsen, a well- known community mem- ber who is active in educa- tion and school fund-rais- ing. •She treats everyope fairly and is committed to seeing everyone succee41 • he said of Laakso. .l'tl .STRAWBERRY FARMS GOLF CLUB MEMORIAL DAY SPECIAL 2 for 1 green fees, after lpm May 28th "' " Scaawba1J fva ii pnudty .,._-..,.. " ~ ... Frilleys. ,.,_,........ •• ...... f, I ,,, f.or ,_,_does, cal ~') 551·181 J 11'' 11 Sttawlic.ty fwau Reed• lmnit, c.tmWaJ.011 V'tlk m &I --IUl~"O: I l£cwm ~ I can't believe ..... . Ies My Hoine I anchcapng or re--~. ia. your .....,.. to a beautiful new look for )'OUr home. FLOWbDALE cu mUie ,our ~-drama --Ink; ud inawe ,_,. ~. too! e.-c in ~ ud c1UaMr me ~ w1ao e111 .... cWIMnoe ... ,,.,.. ud ,_, ..... • 1' ~.party for the t i Duke DUke's Hollywood ' Cowboys to celebrate John Wayne's 94th I birthday with a party on the Wild Goose N o one living in Newport Beach can escape the influence of its most celebrated resident. After all, John Wayne Airport bears his ruune. Wayne, born Marion Morri- son. would have been 94 today. He died of cancer in 1979 at age 72. Duke's Hollywood Cow- boys, a group of Wayne look-alikes, will cele- brate the celluloid cowboy's legacy on Sunday aboard his yacht, the Wild Goose, with a celebrity dinner cruise around Newport Harbor. Among FYI •What A celebrity dinner cruise aboard the Wild Goose in honor of John Wayne's 94th birthday • When: 5 p.m. Sunday • Where: 2431 W. Coast High- way, Newport Beach •Cost S150, including dinner • Information: (949) 64S-9477 those expected to attend are· A.C. Lyles, who produced a number of westerns for Para- mount Studios, and Gregg Palmer, who shared the screen with Way;ne in such films as •lJle Shootist9 and "Chisum: 1' number of participants will dress up in western regalia, complete with gun bebs, cowboy hats and corsets foe.the ladies. Wayne starred in more than 150 movies, including "The Searchers,• ·nue Grit,· "The Sands of Jwo Jima" and "The Alamo.• Wayne look-alike Erm.al Williamson said the Duke has lasted so long in America's consciousness because of his charismatic personality. ' •tte bad a fanwtk charis-ma, and he knew''u; • said the actor, who portrayed the Duke \n"8 recent series of commer- Cials for Coors Ught beer. : Williamson, who moved to Newport Beach about four oionths ago, never met Wayne but said the star is omnipresent in the beach community. Prom the wife of the person . ,. SEE WAYNE PAGE A14 . ·a ioocJ CAUSE .. A wine-tasting event will be held from 4 to 7 p.m. June 3 at FMt Frame -end Fine . Art, 2867 E. Coast Highway, Corona def Mar. Proceeds will benefit Glenn Quinllven, a former volunteer for the American cancer Society's OisccwefY Shop in Corona del Mar, who has throat and tongue cancer. $20. (714) 962-2596. Saturday, May 2t>, 2001 All PHOTOS BY DON LEACH I DAl.'I' Pl.OT Angelika Nemeth's moves spin a veil into motion at OCC, where she will coordinate an lntemattonal Middle Eastern dance conference. A Mideast cultural feast Belly dancing is one part of the second International Conference on Middle Eastern Dance at OCC Young Chllng DAILY PILOT I t's been considered a seduc- tive, evocative dance and a sensual, scandalous, even • hoochie-coochie • form of groove. But today classical Middle Eastern dance also is recognized as an art that has been mis\lnder- stood. Sensationally controversial during the Victorian era, when people weren't accustomed to twirling torsos, the dance fonn is now gaining accredited teachers in colleges around the country. Followers are learning about Mid- dle Eastern culture to truly under- stand the reason and significance behind each dance, and the rest of the country is realizing that, llke ballet and jazz, it's an art to be taken seriously, experts say. "It's slowly getting set straight,• said Angelika Nemeth, a Middle Eastern dancer and instructor at Orange Coast Col- lege. 11lis weekend's second Inter- national Conference on Middle Eastern Dance at OCC ls intend- ed to further help dispel the myth that belly dancing and other forms of the genre belong in harems. Egyptian film and dance star Nagwa Fouad will pertonn tonight, along with Nemeth, Santa Barbara Above, Orange Coast College's Middle Eutern dance class prepares for tbls weekend's conference. At left, Nemeth displays a traclltional Middle Eastern danclng ouUIL dancer Sbareen el Safy and more than a dozen others from the Unit- ed States, South America. Europe and the Middle EasL The conferenc;e, which has as its theme •Dancing on Common Ground: nadition and Innova- tion,• will show how classical and folkloric forms of dance have been made more innovative. "Uke any dance form. there's change involved and it's made more interpretive.· ~emeth said. "It's such a tapestry.• The conference opened Friday with saeen.ings of foreign blms and a concert. discussion and pre- sentation on two choreography SEE DANCE MGE A 14 Pictures of ·Ainerica JoeBMllda lloditg'Ma's ·N1-tfall A.11 IAy DJumlDI • .. I Exhibit of prints at the Orange County ilOMottlle wortmlaa. Museum of Art tackles sodopolitical tOpics from the '60s through the '90s. • . . ' ' A12 Saturday, Mor 26, 2001 •SCHOOL: Mariners Elementary Guesman and Jennifer Seki.ok.a . • STORY LINE: Maria, a young • ACCOMPANJSn Sally Edmonds woman who loves to sing, qu~ons her decision to become a nun. She is • CHOREOGRAPHElt: Marie Mulroy sent by the Mother Abbess to be a ~ovemess for seven rebellious chil-• CAST J: Undsay Beaven, Lauren dren. Their father, a widowed ex-Call, Cameron Chase, Laura Clayton, naval captain, encourages marching Craig Douglas Clayton, Brianna Con- over playing, with little time for merri-way, Taylor Davis, James Doody, ment. Maria enchants the children Kevin Etter, Jessica Madvig, Dan . with her music and wins the eaptaln -Mulroy, A1lilon Pitts. J-'<:a Swan- over withhet charm. tusch and Nicole Webber •DIRECTOR: !(ate Dickinson • ASSISTANT DIRECTORS: Kate • CAST· 0: 1.em. Batelle, Luke Br\Plda, Andrew Clark, Charles Oement, Llly Dierkes, Alanna Fa.veia, Mic¥el Hel- GRAD Let them know how proud you are! ' ' fDch. Brett Houten, Betsy Martin, Sarah Roberts, Jack Robison. Ally Scbatzlein, Whitney Tessers and Jil- lian Urbaniec • WHERE: Mariners Elementary, 2100 Mariners Drive, Newport Beach • WHEN: Cast I will perform at 7 p.m. · Thursday. Cast D will perform at 1. p.m. Priday. •COST: S.S · • CALL: Sheree Hamilton, (949) . 631-1905 ' . .. Theater co~mrl:tt loses a champion ~.; ' . . ' °" \I\~ ByTom Titus OAJl.Y PILOT Karras in "The Exorcist," ha. was a dynamic presence. 1tiS • rQle actually was the lead, W hen you work in the but because he was lesser general vicinity of known than Max Von Sydiw, the entertainment who played the older pries.t.~ business, occaslonally you Miller received lower b~ encounte,r an actor or writer and was nominated in the • whom you particul¥1Y supporting category. He r ' admire. I, for example, had should have won. · '"' th~ privilege of meeting two . Miller directed his own v9 of my favorite writen, televi-script for the movie version-<ff sion legend Rod Serling and •Championship Season,• ,., :. stage scrl~ter Oliver Hailey, eliciting perhaps Robert )::::' before their much-too-early Mitchmn's best performance passing. as the coach. The reuniting11 Unfortunately, I never pa{-basketball players were an s.onally met Jason Miller, who all-star team -Bruce Derft.".: succumbed to a heart attack Stacy Keach, Martin Sheen.' last week, but I felt a kinship ijjld Paul Sorvino -and all ... to lliin nevertheless. We were rendered terrific perfor-''· born the same year, and both mances. Especially Keach'° grew up in sports-crazy then at the height of his : Pennsylva'nia cities. In later "Mike Hammer" populari~A. . life, we both gravitated to who was cast against type as writing, acting and directing a weakling junior high priQ.r -though his was on a decid-cipal. 1l edly loftier level than my With that sort of power, · community theater efforts. both as a writer and an act&. My Keystone State experi-one might have expected,~ ences resulted in a play career dotted with classic ~ called "Summer Lightning," plays and performances. But, whiCb was produced once, in much like Orson Welles ~ Westminster. Miller's became "Citizen Kane," Miller's la~ "That Championship Sea-work never reached that · son,• which won the Pulitzer 1973 level. Prize in 1973, the same year I started wondering wha"f he was nominated for an had become of Jason Miller Oscar fo'r his performance in -who is the father of actor "The Exorcist." Jason Patric -earner this ~ · When you see as many year when I reviewed his • plays as ·I do, it t~es a lot to one-act play, •Lou Gehrig " blow you away. When 1 first Did Not Die of Cancer,• at reviewed "Championship Orange Coast College. It had Season" in 1915 at South been nearly 30 years sipce ' Coast Repertory, that's pre-"Championship Season,· a,nd cisely what happened to me ~s;r~~~~~~o::- -I was stunned by its vis-prodigious talent. ceral impact. This was a play Sadly, the next time I read I wanted to direct on the community-theater level, his name, it was in the obitu-ary column (he <lied May and I got my chance the fol-13). ijut for that orie glortoUs lowing year. Nearly a 973 J Mill decade later, I bad the · year, 1 • ason er opportunity to play the role enjoyed his own champi-onship season~ of the mayor in another pro- duction of the play. Miller's literary intensity was matched by his dramatic power as an actor. As Father • TOM TRUS writes about and ' revi~ local theater for the Daily Pilot. His stories appear ThursdaY1, and Saturdays. .. I , A special page will publish in the Daily Pilot on Wednesday, June 20th to honor our graduates. For your daughter, son, friend or special someone be a part of this tribute for only $19 .00. Fill in the form below and mail it to us with their photo. Be sure to put the name and address on the back of the photo and we'll return it to you: Enjoy a Spacious Suite, Sumptuous Dining, Entertainment, Bingo, Crafts, Billiards, Beauty·Salon, Transportation to Doctor, Shopping, Fun Trips, Friendly Caring People. GRADUATE'S INFORMATION Graduat{s Name: ________ _ . School Name: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~- About the graduatt: Hobbits, inttrests or foture plans (Limittd to 40 word message} ~~iittJ~----~----~~~ . Addms:_....;. __ ~~----~~--~~ .. ; ... "Credit Cart/ No.: &p.:_ Signaturt for creJit card: _____ _ . ~f )'OU P•• you fB1I'/ a.do« S 19 chat mide pqiiiile co "Ody Not. 1 Mail dila ,_Wida photO ta 2001 GRADS Daily Pilot 330 W. Bq St • Colta Maa, CA '1l627 From $1,545/Mo. 2283 Fairview at Wilson Costa Mesa Minimum age 58 For more information please call: 949/646-6300 or Fax 949/646-7 428 H.J. Garrett Furniture Fine Furniture Since 1960 A Family Tradition of Provitling SmJict and Wilue 221S Harbor Bhd., t:'Allta Mesa (949)~0275 Open Mon. thfu Sit; 10 IO 6. $ua. l.2 • S • I -· • ••• • ... -· ~ily Pilot • 50bmit APTB HOWtS Items to the DAiiy Pilot. 330 W, Bay St, Cos- ta Mesi. CA 92627; by fax to (949) 646-4170; «by ~lllng (949) 574- QA, A complete list Is .vali.ble at ht/p:J/WWW.t»llypllotcom. SPECIAL FONDS FOR MUSIC 1'be Pacific SyD\phony Orch~tra League will pre- sent its annual fund-raising event, •Big :roys for Big Cowboys! from 6 to 10 p.m. June 3 at Strawbeny Panns Golf Course, 11 Strawbeny Farms Road, Irvine. $85. (71-') 755-5788. WINE FOR A GOOD CAUSE A wine-tasting event will be held from• to 1 p.m . June 3 at Past Frame and Fine Art, 2867 Pacific Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. Proceeds will benefit Glenn Quinliven, trlormer volunteer for the American Cancer Society's Discovery Shop in Corona del Mar, who has throat and fO'ngue cancer. $20. (714) 962-2596. !WARKET PLACE The Orange County Market Place is open from 7 a .m. lo 4 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays ~the Orange County Fair- grounds' main parking lot, 88 Pair Drive, Costa Mesa. $2 for adults and free for children 12 and younger. (949) 723-6616. MUSIC . PETER. PAUL AND MARY The folk trio Peter. Paul and Mary will perform with the Pacific Symphony Pops for its season finale at 8 tonight at the Or~ge Counfy Perform- . ing Afts. Center, 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. The program will include a tribute to the film music of Ebner Bernstein. $25-$79. (714) 755-5799. A NIGHT WrTH DONNY Singer Donny Osmond will perform Broadway hits and dassics at 8 p.m. June 2 at the Orange County Perform- ing Arts Center, 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. $39.50-$59.50. (714) 740- 7878. NEW BAND ON THE WALL Kelly Fitzgerald and her band Veslca Pisces will be inducted into the Guin- ness/Muldoon's trlsb Wall of Fame at 2 p.m. June 2 at Muldoon's Dublin Pub, 202 Newport Center Drive, New- port Beach. The band will give a concert after the cere- mony. Pree. (9"9) 640-411 O. MUSIC ON THE VERGE The Orange County Women's Chorus will present •w omen on the Verge• at 1 p.m. June 3 at Newport Har- bor Lutheran Church, 798 Dover Drive, Newport Beach. The program will include dvil rights songs and works by British suffragette Dame Ethel Smyth. $10. (949) 856-3181. JAZZ. FEST The Hyatt Newporter Sum- mer Jazz Series will open June 15 with Strunz & Parah · peffonning in the hotel's out- door amphitheater, 1107 Jamboree Road, Newport Beach. The Friday evening concert se~es tbrou~h Oct. 12 will feature Acoustic Alchemy with Paul Taylor, Bobby Caldwell and Poncho Sanchez. $25-$35. (949) 729- 1234. BAROQUE FEST The Baroque Music Festival's 21st season will begin at 4 p.m. June 17 at St. Michael and All Angels Church, 3233 Pacific View Drive, Newport Beach. The festival, which will feature music from the 17th and 18th centuries, will continue through June 24 at various location;. The four- concert subscrij>tion price is $85: single ticket prices are $10-$30. (949) 673-4299. ROCK 'N' ROLL JAM Dick Dale, the Chantays, the Bel Airs and others will per- form at the Endless Summer Rock and Roll Jam al 2 p.m. June 23 at the Hyatt New- porter Hotel, 1107 Jamboree Road, Newport Beach. Host- ed by Premiere Entertain- ment, the concert will benefit the Huntington Beach lnter- nabonal Surfing Museum. $45-$60. (949) 609-0341. FAIR MUSIC The Orange County Fair's Arlington Theater Headhne Concert series at 8 p.m. July 13-29 will f,eature such per- formers'"as Chubby Check- ers, the Village People; En Vogue and the Isley Brothers to fit in line with this year's fair theme, "TWist and Shout -Celebrate Citrus and Sun.• Concert admission is free with general fair admis- sion. (714) 708-1928. DRUM SPECTACLE Three world-champion drum and bugle c~rps will perform in "Champions at the Cen- ter" at 7:30 p.m. July 16 at the Orange County Perform- ing Arts Center, 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. $12. (800) 495-7469. SUMMER SONGS Fashion Island will kick off its annual Summer Concert Series at 6 p.m. July 18 with Grammy Award-winner \I < )\\ I H l\\ '\ \\ \ I < II I OH 1, 11 > '°'' •• Alm)• HOMEOWNEILS ·= ~ila] Si11tt 1957. ~ <.. ~ -----/ > ."-' 949-631-7740 441 Old~ l!hd.. N.part ~ (Neu "-I H_,;c.r) DATEBOo Salurdoy, Mat 26, 2001 Al3 Buildl.nq C-106, c.ost.a Mesa. $15-$11. (71") 957-334?, Ext. 1. THE RfAl. SHAICESP£NtE7 •'J'be Beard " Avon.• an Amy Freed play a.bout William Shakespeare and the writeri tbought to be the real autbcn behind his work.a, will preview through 1bwsday at South Coast Repertory, 655 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. The show will be staged at a p.m. Tuesdays through Fri- days, 2:3Q. and 8 p.m. Satur- days and 2:36 and 7:30 p.m. Sundays, beginning Friday and oontinuing through July 1. $18-$49. (714) 70&-55.55. SWEET AND HOT ·sweet & Hot: The Songs of Harold Arlen• will be pre- sented at 8 p.m. Thursdays through Saturdays and 2:30 p.m.. Sundays until July 1 at • Newport Theatre A\ts Center, 2501 Cliff Drive, Newport Beach. Call for prices. (562) 432-3713. SINGLE SHOW •See There in the Distance,· a one-woman show by Ruby Hinds, will conclude the Orange County Performing Arts Center's 2000-01 sea.son of "Saturdays at the Center" at 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. June 2 in Founders Hall, 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. $8. (714) 740-7878. This 1937 .. Manhattan" cocktail set by Norman Bel Geddes ls part of the .. American Modem, 1925-UMO: Design for a New Age .. exhibit on display today through Aug. 19 at the Orange County Mmemn of Art, 8.50 San Clemente Drive, Newport BeadL The traveling show, which features everything from textiles to tableware, ls culled from the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the John C. Waddell Collection. Museum hours are 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesdays through Sundays. Museum admJs.skm ls SS for adul1s. $4 seniors and students, and free for mem~ and children 16 and younger. (949) 759-1122. YOUNG PLAYERS South Coast Repertory's Teen and Junior Teen Players will present two public perfor- mances in June at the the- ater, 655 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. "The Wheels Keep Turning" will be staged at 4 and 7 p.m. June 2 and 1 and 4,p.m. June 3. "The Weather Started Getting Rough• will be presented at 1 and4 p.m. June 9 and 10. $5. {714) 708-5555. tunes at 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays and Sundays. Free. (949) 675-1922. Christopher Cross. The senes will continue through Aug. 22 with a mix of pop, rock, jazz, swing and new wave concerts at Fashion Island SATURDAY NIGHT R&B 900 Newport Center Drive, Gerald ~hibashi and the Newport Beach. Admission is , Stone Bndge Band play·rock tree, but preferred seats e..re and R&B at 9 p.m. Sa~days available for $1'5. (949) 721-at. Sutton Place Hotel s Tri-2000 • ~non Lounge, 4500 · · · MacArthur Blvd., Newport POP-ROCK AND RAMENCd . Tate 5, a funk. rock and Motown act, perfocms at 9 p.m. Saturdays at Carmelo's Ristorante. 3520 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. Solo guitarist Ken Sanders performs classical flamenco Beach. Free. (949) 476-2001. SENIOR CENTER AFTERNOON A seven-piece group plays big band tunes from 1 :30 to 3:30 p.m . Fridays at Oasis Senior Center, 800 Mar- guerite Ave .. Corona del Mar. $4. (949) 644-3244. Experience mnced technology In f umlture design_ for )'Ollr home or office. Ergo -customiuble fumlture and beds. Ergonomically desfgned for comfort and back support_ helpilli you to live and sleep better. er' go ___. ......... ,,.,.,,,-- custom1zed comfort MIX 1V£E SHOIS -fM ,.,,. « }abortt 11'1 HJdftla Drlw. lrriot • t0.811.0JJB STAGE 'lNTO lliE WOODS' Stephen Sondheim's fractured fa.uy-tale musical "Into the Woods" will be staged at 8 p.m. Thursdays through Sarur- days and 2 p.m. Swidays until June 10 at the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse, 611 Hamilton St. $15. (949) 650-5269. 'RUTlilESSI ' ·Ruthless! The Musical,· a dark musical parody about an up-and-coming child star, will · be presented at 7:30 p.m. Fri- days, 3:30 and 7:30 p.m. Sarur- days and 5 p.rn. Sundays throughJune17at1hlogy Playhouse. 2930 Bristol St, 'SESAME STREET Sesame Street Uve's "Let's Be Friends" will be staged June 14-17 at the Orange County Performing Arts Center, 600 Town Center Dri\le, Costa Mesa. Show times will be 7 p.m. June 14, 10:30 a .m. and 7 p.m. June 15, 10:30 a.rn .• ..2 and 5:30 p.m. June 16, and 1 and 4:30 p.m. June 17. $15 or $20. (714) 556-2787. SEE AFTER PAGE A1.t One big reason to buy life insurance. l can help you secure your child's financial future. See me for details: Steven Hill , Age nt lie.# OC80618 HAU fAI• a . IMIUIANC~ 350 East 1 7th Street Suite 2 11 Costa Mesa, CA 949-646-9393 • • ,_ .. .· . : . ·. -•I ART CONTINUED FROM A11 L8ri Pittman, Joe Bastida Rodrigu~ and Andy Warhol. Subjects such as gender and identity, violence in America, the American dream, cross-cultural ism and the Abican American sto· ry make up the chapters of this picture anthology being exhibitld at the Orange County Museum of Art through July 1. The posters cover the 1960s throu gh '90s. .•1 was interested in art that c6uld be provocative: that couJd communicate, that could draw from significant social issues,• Vure said. •1t•s about art's ability to communicate and the different ways that artists can tell a narra- tive.• The mediums include seri- graphs, lithographs, photographs and watercolors. The pieces hark back to the print revival of the '60s, when artists responded to political movements and protests through art. Masani Teraoka's MSanta Moni- ca Pier," a watercolor piece on paper of the man lunging for litter, falls under the umbrella of cross- culturalism but makes a statement about environmentalism and pol- lution, Vure said. The style com- bines the popular Western theme of pop-art and the Japanese tech- nique of woodblock print. WAYNE CONTINUED FROM A 11 who helped him get his new house to Williamson's new next-door neighbor, he said everyone seems to have less than six degrees of separation from the cowboy actor. MI hav~ gotten more infor- mation just by living down here,• he said. Williamson, a member of Duke's Hollywood Cow.boys, said plans for Sunday's party include anchoring outside of John Wayne's old house on Bayshore Drive and raising a glass to the silver screen leg- end. "When he said something, you could take it to the bank. He stood for America, Mom's apple pie ... everything good and decent,• Williamson said. .. . . f YI MIA?. •American Stones: From the Personal to the PoHtJcat• • --. Through July 1. 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday ..... Orange County Museum of Art. 850 San Clemente Driw, Newport Beach c:ost. $5 for adults. $4 for seniors and students, free for children youpger than16 and museum members CAU: (949) 759-1122 An untitled work by ,Guerrero- Cruz shows a .young flower girl in a white ruffled dress and an older. bride who has a skeleton face and lots of bare. teeth. She wears a wedding dress and both females are holding flower bouquets. This piece is about young women who get ~ed in ·hopes of finding their i@ntity, the artist said. Tbe skull represent$" the state a '\\roman enters when sh e depends on mar- riage to help herself get happy. •1rs like a slow death," Guer- rero-Cruz said. "You realize you ·need to be happy with who you are before you can do anything.• an eUe1 on top. ,Tbls piece by L4.d Pittman savl something about identity. ·r •tt's about how although all humans are destined to die, art will tr~d human existence," Vure said. •it's a painting abol.ll painting, the idealisril that the artist feels." Warhol's MElectric Chair,• a pink serigraph with yellow blws and a speclde{i outline of a chair, is open to interpretation. "Warhol was one of the least political artists in this exhibition,• Vure said. •He abhotred violence yet he did a series of works based on crashes, electric chairs ... and yet he cl8imed he was apolitical and indifferent to the issues." The pastels of the serigraph miX well and exude a calm, almost plea5ant feeling. Vure said the col- ors create a distance from the vio- lence of the image. •And sort of warns us alm0$t of how we can be indifferent to vio- lence when we're over bombard- ed with images, as we are," she said. • Joe Bastida Rodri~ez' "Night Fall As I Lay Dreaming• offers a different kind of warning -that of losing one's cultural heritage .. The girl dreaming about snakes and other worries symbolizes this f~ar. ... . . DANCE CONTINUED FROM A11 teams, Farida Pahmy and Mah· moud Reda, an<l Pouad and Mohammed Khalil One team rep- resents the nightclub culture of Middle Eastern dance, another per- forms a more folkloric, traditional style . Nemeth said both contempo.- rary and older styles will be pre· sen ted "because people need to know the source and honor the history of where it comes from before it gets too 'diluted in the · .American culture." Academic papers oq Middle Eastern dance will be presented this morning, and Fahmy and Reda . will offer master classes in the after- noon. More papers will be disctissed Sunday, and Fouad and Khalil also will teach ,Passes. All evening con- cert will follow. Today, Nemeth will do an innov· ative take on a classical dance. Wearing a handmade net of metal- work woven into fabric, she will present a style of modem Oriental dance with Persian music. Fouad, known as the "Rita Hay- worth of Egypt,•. will present a clas- sical Egyptian dance with theatri- cally reinvigorated twists on folk· loric movements. ' • t • t t t •I Daily Pilot u FYI • What: The second lntema-) tional Conference on Mlddle Eastern Dance • --.: A dance concert fea- t orlng Egyptian film and dance :t star Nagwa Fouad at 8 tonight; : various programs and presenta-I tions will continue through : Sunday. • Where: Orange Coast COi- iege's Robert B. Moore Theatre, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa • Cost $29 for tonight's dance. 1 concert · • 1 • lnfonnatlon: {714) 43Z..5880 -.~ • •• leaders around the world, i.P.cludin~ former President Jimmy Carter, and at the Royal Albert Hall in Londotn "It's actually very unusual for ~e to travel like this when it's an acad- emic presentation,. she said ru ; through el Safy, who served as ~t' translator. . G "It's not real big Las Vegas. But'! I'm doing it because I believe in ~ art, and I'm encouraging the other-•• dancers around the world to createi1 a high level of art with their Egyp~ ian dance." :!; El Safy said the milieu of inter-r1 national dancers gathering for the..1• conference allows people to witneGs different styles of dance in one place. "It's a once-in-a-lifetime event.'\..- Another w.6rk, titled "This Land.scape, Beloved & Despised, Continues Regardless,• shows six caskets with silhouetted figures lying in them and an artist dressed in 19th century attire painting at M All of the work ls really quite powerful and each one conveys its message in a very strong way," Vure said. An actress in more than 200 fea- ture films, Fouad has perfonned for . she said. 11 , .. •• L. .. AFTER tyol>erforming· Arts Center, tableware, is culled from the through June 2 at djr Inter-Mesa. Called "Major 600 Town Center Drive, collection of the Metropoli-national Art, 2431 W. Coast "ArVMinor Artists," the sho~' CONTINUED FROM A 13 Costa Mesa. Show times tan Museum of Art and the Highway, Suite 204, New-is connected to the annual •• 1 are ~ p.m . Tuesdays John C. Waddell Collection. port Beach. Free. (949) Imagination Celebration fas-;; . through Fridays; 2 and 8 Museum hours are 11 a.m . 548-6249. tival. Hours are 10 a.m. to 9 -I AN EPIC OPENING p.m . Saturdays and 2 and to 5 p.m. Tuesdays through p.m. weekdays, 10 a.m. to 7 MEpic Proportions, 8 by Lar-7:30 p .m. Sundays. An Sundays. Museum admis-SPOTLIGHT ON SCHNEIDER p.m. Saturdays and 11 a .m.1 ' ry Coen and David Crane, additional performance sion is $5 for adults, $4 The worlc of Dick.$on Schnei-to 6:30 p.m. Sundays. Free.·;; will k1ck off Orange Coast will be offered at 8 p .m . seniors and students, and der will be on exhibit June 2 (949) 759-1122. College's summer theater July 2; there will be no free for members and chil-to July 1 at djr International season June 21-24 and Jf°e show July 4. $28.50~ dren 16 and younger. (949) Art; 2431 W. Coast Highway, CATAUNAART 28 to July 1 at the Dram $62.50. (714) 740-7878. 759-1122 .. Suite 204, Newport Beach. An exhibit show~g Lab Theatre, 2701 Fairview An artist's reception will be .. catalina and the Channel Road, Costa Mesa . Show CALIFORNIA ART held from 6 to 9 p.m. June 2. Islands, Newport's Offshore~ times are 8 p .m. Thursdays ART "California: ThroughJhe Free. (949) 548-6249. Neighbors" will be open through Saturdays and 2 'AMERICAN MODERN' Artist's Eye," an exhibit of oil through June 30 at Newport p .m. Sundays. $9 or $10; paintings by Steve Simon, MINORS GO MAJOR Harbor Nautical Museum. •. , · discounts available. (714) ~American Modem , 1925-will be on display through The Orange County Muse-151 E. Coast High~ay, New.·. 432-5880. 1940: Design for a New Wednesday in the foyer at um of Art will present an port Beach. The exhibit • r Age• will be on display the New}>ort Beach Central exhibit of art by students focuses on the nautical hist&- RETRO FEVER today thJ':ough Aug. 19 at the Ubrary. Free. (949) 717-3801. partidpating in the Santa · ry Of Santa Catalina Island 0 I A touring production of Orange County Museum of Ana Unified School District's and other offshore sentinelsr "Saturday Night Fever-Art, 850 San Clemente Drive, DETAILS AND ABSTRACTS Special Studio program The museum is open from 10 the Broadway Musical• will Newport Beach. The travel-"Details, Faces & Abstracts,· through June 24 at the a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesdays be presented June 26 to ing show, y.rhich features an exhibit of work by Philipp museum's Soulb Coast Plaza through Sundays. Free. (94!J) July 8 at the Orange Coun- everything from textiles to Keel; will be on display location, 3333 Bear St., Costa 673-7863 .• mari n ers c h u r c h H OME OFFICES KITCHENS BATHS www.kbjcagnplanning.«» m . 714-965·0905 Fax 714-965-0264 18384 Brookhum Street Fountain Valley, CA YOU'RE INVITED TO A FINE AR7 SHOW KARBNILUME (O IL ON CAHV~ JODYOLSl!N (ACSY'LIC ON CAHVA8) SATVIU>AY AND SUNDAY MAY26AND27 6:00 . . .• Saturdoy, May 26, 2001 AIS 'Cn" ·· · ~IEitv Golf ~ournament raises funds for ChildHelp USA r fo he Orange County chapter of ChildHeJp USA welcomed a large and enthusiastic field of golfers to its 19th annual Celebrity Golf C assie at Pelican Hill Golf Club in Nawport Coast. The mid- week event was hosted by local 1po1 ts legend ltlcb saw. formerly a member of the Los Angeles Rams foot- ball team. Saul is the hus- band of dedicated Child- Help sponsor Eileen Saul. Man about town, sophis- ticated hotelier and top Four Seasons in Newport Beach 1J1aI1ageinent execu tive Mehdl Eftekarl served as honorary chairman of the event. The golf roster included comics Jack Carter, WU Sb.rlner, Bobby Herbec:k and actor Bob 1>9maer. The lineup of sport stars included KennJt Alenndel', Vince Ferrag- amo, Dennb Harrah, Mer- Ua Olien and Ron Yary. A lively dinner and auc- tion followed the tourna- ment in the Pelican Hill Clubhouse. The auction raised more than $20,000 for the children of C hildHelp USA. The event was co- diaired by Leah Carrell· and Pattt Edwards with help from Child.Help USA board members Diana Miner, Car- roll Packard, Nancy WhJt· lock. Pam Buller, Tami Smith, Cathi Unvert, Bar- bara Ganahl, Dale San FU· From left. Patty Osllnker-Moore, Victoria Curtin and Sophie Hall Cripe took part In 1he Amelia Earhart Awards Luncheon at Sutton Place In Newport Beach to celebrate UC Irvine Extension's Women's Opportunity Center. Osllnker-Moore was this year's award redplenl lppo, Corky Winters, Ubby We rner and Jana Shuler. • • • UC lrvine is in the social news this week wilh recent back-to-back events promot- ing culture with content and health With humallity in our community. More than 300 people JOined together at the Sutton Place Hotel in New- port Beach to celebrate UC Irvine Extension's Women's Opportwlity Center. The annual event has been named the Amelia Earhart Awards Luncheon, and this year Patty Osllnker-Moore, executive director of the Mariposa Women's and Family Coun- seling Center, received the Earhart nod for her role in assisting women afflicted by vanous addictions. The event was sponsored by a consortium of involved local business leaders, induding representatives from Allergan Foundation, Nordstrom, OC Business Journal, Experian, Rohl Corp., Goodwill Industries, Northern 1h1.st Banlc. Pro- Care One Nurse Staffing Agency, Eastwood Insurance, Buchalter, Nemer, Fields & Younger and Combined Jew- ish Philanthropies. One of the most inspirational charity dinners on the calendar is without question the UCl Sil- ver Medal Award Presentation, benefiting the UCl Brain hnag- ing Center. This annual event is a gathering and a report on the state of mental health in our nation attended by some of the leading researchers, scientists and educators devoting their lives to both the understanding of and the elimination of a plethora of mental disorders and diseases. Last week, this distin- guished group gathered at Sutton Place under the direc- tion of dinner chair Mara Eyer-Hube. Several hundred guests shared in information about the Brain imaging Center provided by Dr. •. Steven Potldn. Additional comments were made by Dr. WUllm Bunney, a much loved and long-standing advocate of mental health From left, former Los Angeles Rams players Duval Love, Dennis Harrah, Vince Ferragamo, Lawrence Mccutchen and Gaston Green got together for Child.Help USA's 19th annual Celebrity Gold Classic at Pelican Hill Goll Club. issues vis-a-vis his associa- tion with UCL Bunney was joined by a Brain Imaging Center com- mittee led by Peggy Gold- water Clay and consisting of Sandra Brodie, Alpha Hahn. Erle Nelson. Robert and Margaret Sprague, Ron Nortek, Howard Charlop, Dee Harvey, Sharon Pfister, and John and Dorothy Belanger. Peggy Goldwater Clay joined Dr. Thomas Cesario, dean of the UCI College of Medicine, in graciously wel- coming the crowd who had come to pay special tribute to two outstanding Newport- Mesa citizens -James War- saw, recipient of the 2001 Silver Ribbon Award, and Carmelita Moffatt. recipie_nt of the 2001 Outstanding Vol- unteer Award. Proceeds from the event, which are expected to exceed $50,000, will be directed to the Brain Imaging Center's research programs at UCL Additional donors and under- From left, Kim Doud, Christine Bren and Nancy Card.in spent time on the course during C hlldHe lp USA's fund-ralser at Pelican Hill Goll Club. writers include Walter Schroder, Jean Alih'lcb, Sharon Lynch, Sheldon Rubin. Michelle Rohe, Dorothy Gray, Carl and Mary Raymond, Aram and Margie Keith. David Rubtnsteln and Matthew and Wll.Uall) Wltle. to name only a few. • TtE CJlOWD appean Thursda~ and Saturda~ RosEY's AUIOBODY S~"\IE u~ 30o/o on your Home & 1'uto Insurance You have the right to choose your repair facility Insist on the Best SA~co· M Cell Today for -:Z.. A FREE PHONE QUOTE Crllg lrown ln1urance (949) .760-1255 ~-~~50290 OUR $1\JOIO, YotM HOME OR oma Nl50NAllY DlSIGNB> EATING PlANS IOOY FAY TESTING I. GOAL SETTl'tG WOMEN & WBGKf TIAINNG WOIKSHOPS YOUNG ADULTS, SIMOIS N«J POST & PUNATAl EXP£1TS u..- 0..wr •-' t9 !--'" EXPOIENCB> EDUCA1B> NOFESSK>NALS Fint AppoinlrMnf Free •Z 1617 W9*iiff Or. Suit. 1 09 ,.,.........,"1 Beoch 949-642-5866 www.noxcuzfilne&s.com LIFETIME WARRANTY Full S.rvke Collision Center Insurance Approved Shop (949) 642-4522 • 26, '2001 ' ' .. Daily Pilot ·1 tink hn's a cnln swaggs.,.,. Sena Ynez diat fits tis "°'" up. Al least it has ii Iha past -• Steve Conti, CdM volleyball coach --_May21 t.ar. llOOll HllllllGTOI Sports Editof Roger Corison • 949'574-4223 • Sports Fax: 949-650-0170 •Saturday, Woy 26, 2001 Bl Sea Kings go for the the .gold today • Perennial finalists Corona del Mar, Santa Ynez, renew rivalry in CIF Div. IV title match today at Cypress College. Barry Faulkner Coach Steve Contl's Sea Kings DAILY PILOT are the defending Division I cham- CYPRESS _ Uke the swallows to pions and have split their last four San Juan ,-..;;.{.,tr""O, the boys vol-title matches, including a five-game ..._,,.., ...... win over Santa Ynez for the Division leyball teams from Corona del Mar m crown in 1998. and Santa Ynez high schools have Coach Chip Fenenga's Pirates once again navigated to Cypress have won the last two Division Ill College, where their quest for CIF titles, and have five section crowns Southern Section championships · since 1995, including a five-game has become almost instinctive. Division Ill triumph over CdM m No. 4-seeded CdM (15-6) is ma.k-1997. ing its fifth straight title-match "CdM is always talented, "said , appearance today at 1:30 p.m. in the Fenenga, who grew up in San smaller of the school's two gyms. Oemente and said he learned from No. 2-seeded Santa Ynez (19-4) Orange County coaches such as has extended its championship-Dan Glenn (Newport Harbor) match migration to eight seasons. before inaugurating the Pirates' pro- . They'll collide for the third time gram in 1993. "They're always one since 1997 in the Division IV title of the best teams around and they clash. have such a history of sQccess. • BASEBALL Mesa beats Mesa •Mustangs suffer a haunting loss as they give away the kitchen sink in a 5-4 setback in CIF quarterfinal al Bonita. Barry Faulkner DAILY PILOT LA VERNE -The Costa Mesa High baseball team revealed a chink in its Teflon Friday as the normally resilient Mustangs found a ClF Southern Section playoff foe they could not overcome: Themselves. Mesa (17-10-1), which had stepped past pitfalls all season, com- mitted eight errors and allowed five unearned runs in a 5-4 Division IV quarterfinal loss in eight innings at Bonita High. The Mustangs executed flawless· ly on offense to post single runs in the first, third and fourth innings. They also rallied valiantly lo tie it in the seventh, temporarily postponing elimination. But. when they took the field, the visitors turned the Bearcats (18-8-1) into benevolent benefactors. ·we probably should have won, 4-0, • Mesa Coach Kir1' Bauermeister said, just moments after the winning run came home on, what else, a Mesa throwing error. ·we didn't do the most important thing in baseball, which is play catch. That's the thing that got us here, but we didn't do it today. All their runs were unearned, so we pretty much gave them everything they got today.· BOYS VOLLEYBALL CdM added section champi- onships 19 1985 and '89 to the afore- mention~ spoils, and lost in the Division l final in 1999 in its other finals appearance. Santa Ynez alumni include for· mer Stanford All-American and cur· rent national team member Andy Witt; Mike Wall, named NCAA Tournament MVP after leading BYU to this season's Division I title; and 1998 C~ Division Ill Player of the Year Larry Witt, now playing profes· sionally on the beach. The Pirates are see~g to tie Loyola for the most titles (six), since the Southern Section begi\Il naming champions m 1974. "I umhc there's a certain swagger about 5anta Ynez that fires this team up,• Conti said. •At least it has in the·pasV CdM players also acknowledge the growi.qg rivalry, which could become an annual affair since se<;- tion rules now prohibit smaller schools from moving up to higher divisions for the playoffs. as CdM did the last two springs . matches. ·I think playing Santa Ynez gives our guys that extra little push." Alshuler's older brother, Dennis, now playing at Pnnceton, also bat- tled against Santa Ynez, a COD.I\eC- tion not lost on Fenenga. ·1 see they have a couple guys with the same last names, so 1 assumed they were little broth- ers,· Fenenga said. ·Our team knows the nvalry, ·said CdM senior Charlie Alshuler, who, like senior setter Evan Burden, watched the 1998 final against the Pirates from the bench after being called up for the playoffs. "Now, we get 'em again our senior year.• Burden said the Sea King upper classmen should be familiar with the Pirates' pedigree. ·I think it's going to be another five-game match, just like it was in 1997 and '98,"said Burden, whose older brother Greg, now playing at use. was a starter in both those The Sea Kmgs .. co-charopions of the Pacific Coast League, have swept playoff foes, Gabnelino, Bish- op Montgomery and top-5eeded Vil- lage Christian, yteld.mg 83 com- bined pomts. Santa Ynez. champion of the Los Padres League, swept Bishop Amat and Laguna Beach, before topping Northwood in four games in Wednesday's semifinal. The Pl.rates SEE VOLLEYBALL PAGE 85 TUCK ·AND FIELD Bonanza! Tars' Steen pacesetter •Steen tops the country in 1,600 with sizzling 4:43.75;' she's just one of many locals Sacramento-bound for State. Tony Altobelli DAJLY PILOT NORWALK -Just when you thought GIRU Amber Steen couldn't get any faster, she goes and tops herseU once again. At the CIF Southern Section Masters Meet Fn- day night. the Newport Harbor High standout did a lot more than just quahly for ne"Xt week's state preliminanes in Sacramento in the 1,600 meters She placed first with a mind-boggling 4:43.75, shattering her personal-best 4:47 .72 and topping the nation's best time of the season. "I'm not one for superlatives. but Amber's 1,600 was amazing,· Newport Coach Enc 1We1t said. "lt wasn't about qualifying for her torught. Her confi- dence is higher than ever. Whatever she does at state next week will not surpnse me one bit • Steen and Hoover's Anita Sira.lo were neck and neck for the first 1,300 meters before the D1V1Sion 0 champion turned on the 1ets and pulled ahead. Sir- aki came in with a very respectable 4:•4.75. Joining Steen at next week's state prelims in the 1,600 is Corona del Mar's Diana Hossfeld, who placed sixth with a 4:58.17, bettering tbe automat- ic qualifying time of 5:02.82 comfortably. Hossfeld trailed the pack for the first 1,000 meters but made her move and jwnped from ninth to fifth before finishing sixth, bettenng her person- al-best time for the second week in a row. "That's usually when I start to go.• Hossfeld said. "From there, it was a matter of just hanging oo at the end.· ·All I thought about during the run was gettmg to state,· Hossfeld said. CdM Coach Bill Sumner was pleased with Hossfeld's race from start to finish. "She was very patient out there,· Sumner SAJd. •Some kids, when they get to the Masters, they go for it right away and they bum themselves out. Diana waited for mistakes to be made and she moved up. It was a great race fo~ her.· Bonita Coach Chris Romero acknowledged his team's good for- tune. STM McC:IW« I OM.Y Pl.OT Newport Harbor's Amber Steen ts In prlllle position en route to a pubattng victory ln tbe t,800 meters at tbe Masten Meet Friday nJghL She sizzled wttb a ti.me of 4:•3.75. Steen also put together a solid 'Wl m the 3,200, where sbe was second behind Siraki tn 10:26.45, • • SEE ~EN MGE 15 SEE BASEBALL PAGE BJ Finishlilg Senior leader brought methodical work ethic to the diamond as he hoped to put in a fe w more shifts . • ~nut spmg and. .. bis l'OICb. and teumnatlM WOUkt a'-t DO OM will Work bariler to Gtr11Ct ~ounce OI ~ ~ tbe ·gllJDe too w.u eo blllfte he wm ewi' ,__Ml .......... pcaplMcy :=-.:;, .. would,.., ::::,.;:;:i~W:= .. ..,,an111• , ....... v ......... lllli • . B2 Sabda); Maj 26, 1001 I ' .. · · • · Daily Pilot Daily Pilot HIJh school boys TtllNIS Morton, Snyder advance toCIF • SellllS • CdM's Cameron Ball suffers unexpected loss to Crespi's Amritraj, who seemed to have a unique edge. Stev, Virgen DAILY PILOT HUNTINGTON BEACH - While Corona de! Mar High junior Cameron Ball played through some adversity and lost, the Sea King duo of Brian Morton and Garrett Snyder practically coasted in Friday's quarterfinals in the CIF mdl- vidual tournament at SeaChlf Country Club. Morton and Snyder, the senior/sophomore tandem, will face Danuen's Emll and Tom Novack m a doubles semifinal today, also at Sea- Cllff, at 10.30 am Ball, who has a 40-4 record in singles played m dual team matches t.hts season, lost to Crespi's Steven AmntraJ, 6-2. 6-4, as Ball battled a surpnse attack from the outset Amntraj's father, Anon who is not a certified high school coach, filled in as his son's coach and gave pointers while sitting courtslde. "He used to be one of the top players in 1he world," CdM Coach Tim Mang said of Anon AmntraJ. "And he's sitting there talking to his kid and coadung lum. (Ball) was having a hard time focusing That threw h1rn off quite a bit. By the tune he regained focus, it was too late." Mang also sa1d he spoke with on-site CIF ofhc1als, rerrunding them of rules. mcludmg coaches can onJy advise players in between games and only high school coaches are allowed to coach. Cresp1's pnnc1pal sent a letter to the CIF office requesting that Anon Arnn· traJ fill in for Cresp1's absent coach, according to Mang. "I'm not really happy about that,· said Mang. ·u he's going to coach, let us all know ahead of time. Don't surprise us with this stuff.• Meanwhile, Morton and Snyder won their first match by default. Santa Barbara's Kevin Yardy and Chase Mueller were no-shows, choosing to attend their prom instead. Said Mang. ·1 guess they didn't want to dnve down all the way from Santa Barbara and lose to the No. 1-seeded team.• · Morton and Snyder advance to today's semilinal when they defeated Orrin Franko and Andrew Cohen, of Peninsula. 6-2. 6-4. as the Sea Kings need but minor improvements, Mang said. "They're both pretty totfgh , • Mang said of the CdM duo. "When they're on, they're going to be the best. It's just a matter of being on the whole time to win the whole thing.• The Novacks, the No. 4 seed, scored an upset of sorts over Brentwood's Chris Den- nis and Arl Rosenthal. 6--', 4- 6, 7.5, to reach today's semifi- nal with CdM. The winner of the match wtll play the win- ner ol Thousand Oak.I' Pbillip Chang and Andrew Uu) vs. Mira Costa's K.C. Corkery and Ryan Pfeifle. DEEP SU BASEBALL CONTINUED FROM 1 "In a single-game elimina- tion like the playoffs, you're going to have to get some breaks,· said Romero, whose team won in the first round on an eighth-inning error, 4-3. The Valle Vista League run- ners-up also cashed irl some clovers in a second-round upset of No. 3-seeded Mon- rovia, scoring four times in one inning without hitting a ball out of the infield and col- lecting four double plays in the 6-1 triumph .. "Costa Mesa is a great fundamental team, which moved its runners around and got some timely hits,• Romero said. "We're living a charmed life.• The day began with promise for the Pacific Coast League's third-place team, when Josh Feldman reached on a leadoff error, moved to second on a sacrifice bunt by Nick Cabico and scored on a two-out single by Carlos Franco. But that was the only Bonita error and lone unearned run of the day for the Mustangs. With senior left-hander Jeremiah Haubrick doing his job on the mound, Mesa took a 2-0 lead in the second with a little diamond deja vu. Feldman led off with a sin- gle, moved to second on Cab1co's sacrifice and scored on Franco's two-out single. Boruto halved the dehot when Michael Jacobellis sin- gled, moved to third on a sac- nl1ce and a groundout, then scored when a routine throw to first was dropped on an apparent groundout. That was Mesa's hrst error, but 1t set a trend that will likely hdunt the Mustangs all off- season. Mesa pads::ied its lead W1th four singles in the fourth. with a Ca bi co collecting the RBI on an infield hit behind second base. But Bonita right fielder Mike Moore averted further damage by throwing out a Deacon Jones Foundation's casino night set for June 3 •The Center Club in Costa Mesa to host event. COSTA l'vffiSA-The Deacon Jones Foundation, estabhshed to benefit mner-oty commuruties across the United States, will hold its annual Monte Carlo Casino Night Sunday. June 3, beginning at 6 p.m . at The Center Club Vegas-style casi.no games, buffet-style dmner. IJve musical performance by "The Krewe" and a silent aucbon featunng sports and music memorabilia, will take place at the fund-rdlSer. Tickets are $125 per person, which includes dinner and $100 in gaming chips. The Deacon Jones Foundation is named after David "Dea- con" Jones, a NFL Hall of Fame defensive lineman, self- described as a ·quarterback killer." Jones spent 14 years i.n the NFL and 22 years working with various media and corporate entities before starting the foun- dation in 1997. The Center Club is located at 650 Town Center Dnve The event is also sponsored by Tiffany & Co. For mformation on the casino rught, call (714) 281-2832. BASEBALL CAMP Eastside Baseball Academy to host camp Youngsters ages 6-10 invited to weeklong camp. CORONA DEL MAR -The Easts1de Baseball Academy will conduct a weeklong baseball camp June 25-29 from 9 a .m. to 1 p.m. at Corona del Mar High. Registration is $125 i1 done by June 18 and $140 after June 18. Family and team discounts are available. The camp includes a T-shirt and daily snacks and ts duect- ed by Joel Desguin. For information, call (949) 514-0057. HEAD COAC~ I ASSISTANT COACHES CHEERLEADERCOAC~ Wanted Volunteers • Youth Football · 6occ~r 51en·Upe (Es6t Co5ta Me~a. We~t Newport Beach) WED., MAY 30, 6PM-9PM Marin~,..,, Bra nch Library 2005 Dover Ori~. Nmvport. B~ch Marin~,..,, Branch Ll~ry 2006 Ot;v,,r Ori~. N8WpPrt ~ Costa Mesa's Jeremiah Haubrick fires away ln a valiant effort against Bonita Friday, but a porous Mesa defense dJd hJm In. CHRIS URSO I FOR THE DAILY PILOT runner trying to score from second on a bloop single nedf the I.me to end the lfl0ll1g. The Bearcats posted single tdlbes m the fourth, filth and sixth cdshmg in, respectively. a two-out throwing error, d pa1r of miscues on the same aborted pickoff play, and a sacnfice fly that scored a run- ner who was not erased at second because a routine throw to the bag for a would- be torce was dropped. "We may hdve been a little too aggressive," Bauermeis- ter said. "Sometimes our guys pldy W1th a l.ittle bit of a foot- ball mentality and we have to work to calm them down. And. when your team makes a couple errors. I think it's human nature not to want to make another, which can make you a little tentative.• Showmg the trademark mental toughness wluch helped it set a new school sin- gle-season victory record, Mesa rallied in the seventh to force extra innmgs. Michael McGuire walked Wlth one out, moved to third on a hit-and-run Franco sin- gle, then scored the equalizer on Steven Shores' RBI single. Romero relieved senior starter Mike Medlock, who came in with eight wins m nine decisions this spring, and Daniel Hunter was hit by Scott Nestor's second pitch to load the bases. Nestor, however, worked out ol the Jam with a strikeout and a groundout and Franco. who came on m rehef to start the surth, worked a perfect sev- enth to extend the suspense Cab1co and McGuue wdlked with two outs to put Mesa a clean smgle awa) from the lead in the eighth But Nestor, who did not have a pitching deosion but had earned two saves. induced a grounder to third to e nd the threat. Moore opened the win- ning rally by reaching on a booted ground ball, then Ndlhan Surina's hard-hit grounder went through a Mesa infielder's legs for the second error of the irirung. . . . . . . . .. . Saturday, Moy 26, 2001 83 With Mesa executing a wheel play (sending the shortstop to cover third, allowing both comer infield- ers to charge a sacrifice bunt attempt). Patnck. Donegan bunted down the first-base line, apparently giving the Mustangs a chance to nail the lead runner at thud. But the throw was low and bounded away mto the spaaous foul territory, allowing Moore to score and leavmg some dejected Mustangs to shuffle off the field for the final ttme in 2001. "I'm proud of my team,• BauermelSter said. ~we ral- lied to tie 1t m the seventh, which shows the k.md of char- dcter these guys showed all year.• Franco and Shores, both seruors. bowed out with three and two hits, respectively. while 1umor shortstop Billy Halverson added two hits and d run for Mesd Mesa. which bowed out in the quarterfi.ndls for the sec- ond tune in three years, outhlt the Bearcdts, 11-6. and left 11 men on base Medlock and Nestor had two hits dp1ece for the wm- ners. OF OMSK>N IV PlAYOffS Quarterflnail BoNrrA 5, CosTA MESA 4 Costa Mesa 101 100 10 -4 11 8 Bonita 001 111 01 • 5 6 1 Haubrick, Franco (6) and Hunter; Medlock, Nestor (7) and Logan. W -Nestor, 1-0. L Franco. 5-3. FLETCHER )ONES MOTORCARS ********* Weve ~ot a Lot to Celehrate. 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This is what it's all about. / The Newport-Mesa Junior High District Championships, where TeWmkle reigns, where the new stars are revealed and w• some boys become meo. } Chandy, dressed in red tights and bis blue Harbor Day jersey, broke records in the 400-meters (57.10) and 800 (2:20.3) in the sev- enth-grade divtslon, ThUJ'6day at Corona del Mar. After bis 800, he displayed a look of disgust. "I could do better,• he said. ·2:16 .• Chandy's record in the 400 was better than the 58.00 ran last year and his 800 feat bested a 2:20.78 of two years ago. Caponera also broke the record in the 400 (55.25) in the eighth- grade division, cutting more than a second off the previous record, 56.60, set last year. ·1 know that every runner has a breakdown point,• Caponera said. DAILY PILOT PHOTOS BY SEAN HILLER Some big ttme efforts we°' put forth by TeWl.nkle Intermediate's Marlo Herrera (right) . ln the bo~ f!lghth-grade 1,®C}, Jasmine Day of Costa Mesa (above) ln the. seventh-grade long Jump, and Emily Foster of Corona del Mar ln the seventh-grade girls 1,600. Lower right, Ensign's Whitney Blue gets a championship hug tram friend Danica Kalmbach after winning the C Division high jump. .· ' . •1 wasn't going to show The CdM eighth-grader was a bit intimidated by Te\A.lnklio's Geo Matias, before thel ra The two traded leads in the half and ro.n side-by-side for next 100 meters, before Ca onera pulled away, slightly, ~o , the stretch. Macias finished 55.34 and the close-shave lo5s ed to have o.n eHect in bis high j p. He deared 5-0 to finish , theti shook off bis slump with a .record- breaking time in the 800. Mad.as paced himself ill the first lap and turned on the jets CfOSsing the line at 2:10.6 and shatt~rtng the previous best, 2:18.1, set last year. •1 felt heavy at the beghWUng of the (800) race,• Matias said, ·But, I . . Daity Pilot track and · field just picked Jt up. At least I got one medal this time .• grade di\rision, they settled for sec- ond, just two poiots behind cham- pion Ensign, which bad 80. Macias, who will attend Estantia High next year, won three district titles last year, in the 1,600, 400 and 400 relay. ln the C Division, which is 5- foot-4 and under, TeWlnkle's Alex Cahttantzi won the 400 (1:00.8) and edged the previous record by a tenth of a second. ,, In the eighth-grade division, ·Ensign's :Jonathan Szecsei als? broke a record. His came in. the shot put, with a 50-3 (49-11 was the previous best). TeWlnkle won the overall team title with 293 points, Huntington Beach-Dwyer followed at 209 and Ensign came in third with 139. The Thojans also won the sev- enth-grade title and, in the eighth- Dwyer won the C Division with 109 points, edging ThWmkle (108). TeWln.kle's Pateh Abdul (C divi- sion), Dwyer's Yuki 1re1 (C) and Ensign's Spencer Link (eighth- grade) were triple winners. Abdul won the 1,600 (5:0~.7), 800 (2:22.4) and shot put (41-51/•). lrei claimed victories in the 100 (12.J8), 200 (25.W) and long jump (17-0). Link's triple came with wins in the 100 (12.03), 200 (25.39) and long jump (16-10). TeWinkle's Adrian Jimenez (seventh grade) was a double win- ner with victories in the 100 ( 12.32) and the 200 (26.09). •Tuey are just an excellent group,· Ai.man said. So many wins, so many stories • Harbor Day's Swigert is the only triple winner of the day in the girls compeiti~n at the district meet. Steve Virgen DAILY PILOT CORONA DEL MAR -Six years GIRLS ago, they swam for the same club and developed a friendship. But then Blair Zeiser and Ahlia Kattan went their separate ways. Zeiser went to Ensign Intermediate and Kattan left for Corona del Mar. Their paths crossed again Thursday, at the Newport-Mesa Junior High District Track and Field Championships at Corona del Mar High. And even though they competed against each other in the eighth-grade division's 1,600-meter race, they renewed their friendship. Before their race, they agreed to attempt to fin. ish in a µe and during the run they rooted for one another. Zeiser won by a leg, literally, after the two ran side-by-side, almost as if they were holding hands. After the race, they shared a 1\ug. ·1 love you,• Kattan whispered into Zeiser's ear, while officials appeared puzzled, confu,sed as to whoY{en.·· ' · At the finish line, Kattan leaned forward, but Zeiser extended her leg On her last stride. Zeiser finished in 6:00.7, her personal best. and Kattan followed with her personal best. 6:00.8. •1t didn't matter who won,• Kattan said. •Just as long as we both did well.• Said Zeiser. •we just wanted to push each oth-er.• The 1,600 race was just one of many story lines at the district championships. In the seventh- grade high jump Costa Mesa High sop'1omore Sharon Day's •J:itt1e• sister, Jazzy, came up big with a personal-best 5-0 clearance. •1 was just a little SW'prised, •Jazzy Day said. ·1 knew I could make it.· . Afterward, her mother, Yolanda, gave the elder sister a playful warning. ·1 told Sharon, •you better look out you're going to have some competition,' • Yolanda Day said. •(Sharon) just rolled her eyes and said, 'Oooh 5-feet. Wow.• • In the eighth-grade division, Harbor Day's Melissa Swigert made a name for herself as the only triple-winiler of the day. She won the 100 (13.19), 200 (28.35) and broke a to-year-old record in the long jump (15-0). The p{ev\ous best was 14-8112. She led Harbor Day to the eighth-grade cham- pionship, yet Huntington Beach Dwyer won the overall team title with 190.5 points. TeWinkle came in second with 164 and CdM finished third with 161.5. The only other record-breaking performance came in the eighth-grade 400 relay. CdM twins Alexa and Alyda McCarthy, along with Vanessa Fallon and ~ Senartne, completed the relay in 54.51, besting the 54.97 set in 1999 by C-0rona del Mar. In the C Division, for those 5-foot-4 and under, Ensign's Krystal Wright tied the district record in the 1,600 (5:52.6). In the seventh-grade division, TeWlnlde's Amanda Loera collected two titles with victories in the 100 (12.«) ~d 200 (28.49). Daily Pilot Costa Mesa's Sharon Day (rStJht) lea.pt over tbe bu at 5-foo~8, good enough for second la the high Jump and a Ucket to Sacramento. At far right. Newport'I Amber Steen and Corona del Mar's Julle Allen embrace at the conclusion of the 3,200. Both quaWled In the event for State. Below, left, two more Saaamento-bound athletes, Corona del Mar's Josh Yelsey, and right behind him, Newport Harbor's Chrtl McMWen. The two went 2-3 In the boys 1,600. .. STEEN CONTINUED FROM B 1 bettering her school-record time of 10:27 .20 she set two weeks ago at the Division II preliminaries. "Her opening 1,600 (5:04.7) was faster than she's ever gone before,• 1\veit said. ·She was in an area whe re she'd never been before, so she definitely got a great workout tonight.· CdM's Julie Allen hung tough with Steen and Sirak:i for the first six laps, before finishing fifth with a 10:50.07, good enough for next week's state preliminaries. Another Sacramento-bound local is Costa Mesa sophomore sensation Sharon-Day, who finished tied for second in the high jump with a mark of 5-foot-8, easily surpassing the 5-61/4 qualifying mark. Riverside North's Chante Howard cleared 5-10 to .win the event, while Day and Crescenta Valley's Emily Forsythe tied for second. "She's peaking at just the right time,• Sharon's hither and jumping coach Eugene Day said. "We've been working on the ground-level stuff this week because she's got the hops already.· Before the running events began, CdM senior Jaycee Mahler was one of two athletes from Southern Cali- fornia honored with the Earl Engle- man Award for her achievements and her ability to overcome obsta- cles, both in and out of the sporting world . "To me, that's better than a state championship,• Sumner said. "She's come a Jong way.· BS Yelsey, McMillen go 2-3 • Both are heading to Sacramento in 1,600. Tony Altobelli DAILY PILOT NORWALK -The 1,600-meter race at Friday BOYS night's CIP Southern Section Masters Meet had a ton of local flavor. Corona del Mar High senior Josh Yelsey, Newport HATbor senior Chris McMillen and Estancia sophomore Humberto Rojas, joined the rest of the best and all per- formed well. To the surprise of no one, Big Bear's Ryan Hall dusted the field with a time-of 4:04.24, surpassing the CIP South- ern Section record of 4:05.40, set by Garden Grove's Mark Schilling in 1972 .. In the battle for second place, Yelsey and McMillen battled Burroughs' Tony Ahr and Don Lugo's Arturo Gar- cia for most of the race. Yelsey, making his first appearance to the Masters Meet, hung near the back of the pack before making his move in the final lap, jumping into the second spot. ·1 tried to stay patient and in the fourth lap, I reeled them in,• Yelsey said. "I'm looking forward to Sacramen- to. It's going to be a lot of fun.· McMillen was one runner Yelsey caught, but the senior didn't go down without a fight. He stuck to Yelsey and the two went at it for the final 250 meters. Yelsey's 4:·14.62 edged out McMillen's 4:15.42. Both times are personal bests for the second week in a row. Ahr (4:16.76) placed third, while Garcia (4:16.76) placed fourth. .... "l'm whipped.• was all Mct-.tillen could say afterward . Newport Harbor Coach Birn Barry was a little more talkative, saying, "It's a testament to four years of hard work. He's done a great job all year and he deserves to be right where he's at.• Rojas also put in a late kick and finished sixth with a 4~18.67. Despite nearing his best-ever time, be narrowly missed the automatic qualifying time of 4:18 . .tO to advance to the state preliminaries. ~~~~~e~~~~~·~Saril .~~-~~~~ team's focus sbak~n by at the school ilnd the father of junior Tie entire tee.in attended tbe he's going to come dOwn with us Recreation STANDINGS reserve middle blociar Roy funetal Pridey and did Dot practice. (tloday). 'Ibis will be a real issue for death of popular parent. Johnson; died ni.day. •h's JiQIDg to affect us,• PeneJMla us, but we'll show up and do the CYPRESS _ Corona del Mar •1rs nic.-e to be able to play for saic:t,,f'ibit''grief that bas blanketed best we can.• High boys volleybell coecb Steve a cbampioo.sbip and be a part of the~ community. •Sam wu the QJotl Mid five CIP Southern Section that.• Sant.a Ynez Coach Chip capettn of our CIF cbamplomhip AliolMr .._ didlDg champtonalUps tbe J4lt seven Penenga said. •aut when foot~ team in 1969 and be sent ~ton today ii the venue. ~ bas ~ Santa Ynez a tomething like thii happens, 1t ~to Santa Ynez, iriclUdtog CdM'l lUt four trips to the CIF ~bJa swagger. really mat.es 8YwybOdy realize playen. He wu tide maU:b have been in the But the Ptratel, who meet the there are mlldi mn importaDt bad a big impad on CIODegit'I b6ggl!Jr' 3,000 -t gym. Sea IQJ9 today at 100 p.m. In tbe ~· • 8l9a and he WU med 1'ba llNDer gylD. where tOday"S C1P Soiutbiaai Sec:tiaD ~IV Pene,nga Mid foUi' payers, still !;If al ,.apla. I get choked 1c1P matda wiD be held. bu a teating .. match at Cyprw ~.have gtieving, were unablil to play in tbe JUii abo\lt him. • Cllf9".!ilY of 1,200. bMll ~ lolemDly since Sam Pirates' MmiftiMI ~over • ii aneone wbo bu~ -by lllny ......._ SHORES CONTINUED FROM 81 Gladiators scored f fifth to pare the 1 "His RBI single. first was big, beca gone through a str where we were lea · g a # lot of guys on base, ~ Bauermeister said . we don't score there, be our kids start g, 'Here we go again.' .... •And his home after they had just four runs. We got a bit in the lnning, b was picked off on run. 1be next guy and it looked like wouldn't get an Steven got 8Ve:fY fastball and bit it Cenat in left-center While bitting 15 RBJs and 16 runs. and UC> pl.a cWwe, Shores allo contributed ~. •Jie'I Dot a real vocal guy, but i.peded by tbia kids end ...... IM"'D"'tle, • Ba'*1D811ter laid. •tte tlYiD9 to._, ... ~ ...... ~-.. Yl~*-dt ~ofb .. blll •Jt'I the G1Uj ipOlt I play and I late it.• ~Mid. He IUd Im b•1W ,.._ ~~ dily IMct blda ... cow"'•· ...... "*'· be ....... _..,... .... ,. llllla~ ~. -:ttllllt ............ ............... -....... ............. Alll .... l·WllWlml .,....., ...... . ................. ~ ....... VOLLEYBALL CONTINUED FROM B 1 bave surrendered just 79 points in the playoffs. t Burden will dlsb'ibute kill opportunities to senior outside hitters Brian Gallagber and Alshuler, as well as 6-foot-7 senior middle blocker Ponest Mack. The Sea Kings have also consistently relied upon aenlor Genett Macklin, junior John Grod and sopbomore Bart Welch.. Santa Ynez features 6-8 junior Matt McJClnney, whom Conti Kid bas played both out- side bttter and middle blocker, as well as IUmted 6-7 Junior aetter J.T. Gilmour. Mc:Klnney, leegUe MVP this year in buketbeD and von.y. bell. •""'lled 'J:1 killl and t l blocb egalmt Northwood. CQmwr, wbo will .tc*t .... ~and tanner ,.... ltar Marai9 et USC oat -. bed l t ldlll ID the _.,.,.., wtn:. Jta Ort-. • )uaD' ....... .......... .,.._ Mllll ,... .... Ml.-... , ..... ~ Wiii. ... rs .. ........ Nlllllf .. ~ ... ill!IOOW ttr•I< 1 S II \J.._ Udaa .... , ... .. _ ............. . -:-IQ J l\r."m;:fl. mm la ._ - player. Fenenga, wbo said this year's team is better defensive- ly than some of its predeces- sors, noted Matt Mosebar, a 6-- 9, 260-pound middle blocker who conbibuted to the last two CIF championships, has been missed. since be elected to con- centrate on preparing for a col - legiate football careei at UCLA. •w e could have used (Mose bar) against (Mack), •Feoenga said. Defame and determination. however, are CdM trademaru and Conti and bis players believe tbe Sea Kings are pe~ at just the right time. •we a.re playing our belt vOUeyball. "Conti Said. 9There are stUl a few little tbingl we could do better, like m"""9 too many eervea. But we're not m•khMJ u many iinfoi'ced sron • we wwe eerty Ill tbe ..... .. SUI Alllb\iMir, •w.w aae ~ .... w.u ..... ...,.. ltldllkour......nWll .............. ...... wlilo ** CJllm' .. -1dM!nl --Ilia ..... Dl'1illa I ...,_ fll .. .. IGftlal' ....... ... bd.llMmfll•• I I . ···----~ I· .=--... · .. -.... . ... .· .r. Polley Rate.i auJ <lrudl int'li a.rr subjrrt w cbunl(t' witlioul 11otire. Th" p111'4l•1bt1r ~h'fS tl>t r~h.1 I,() CCUtlOI', red"Hify, te\isr. nr rej11C( sm' dlilil!Uicd ut.IVf'rti~1·1uriu. l'lru. e l't'porl any aror th.at 111u\' lw in vour clM&ifind nd im111rcli;1H·ly. rJiw Duil)' Pilot lll'Ceptt 110 li11hili1} fo r uny t•rror in nu udvr.rti:;1·u11·m for whid 1 ir mav lie rc11pow1il1lr l'l.N'pt for thr oosr of the ~rai:I' IJl't unlly occupitd by 1Jic r.Jror. Cn·1li1 n 111 ouly IJC ullO\red for the rinic i11 .. 1•rtio11. ' -......,.. - ' ' • r ' :·-e· . I ' I NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE T.S. No. GM- ~V Loan No. 001183046 YOU AR£ IN DEFAULT UNDER A DEED OF TRUST DATE> 3171187. UH- L.US YOU TAK! M;. T10H TO PROTECT YOIJR PROPERTY, IT MAY 81! SOU) AT A PUBLIC SAL!. IF YOU HEED AH exPLANA- -T10N OF THE NATURE Of' THE PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER. A public 1uctloh salt to the highest bidder tor euh, cutiler't check drawn on • state ot natlonal bank, check drawn by 1 Ital• or fiderll credit union, Of I C:l!Kk drawn by a ltlte Of fadetal uv1nQ1 and loan uaoc:lltJon, Of saving• usoc:lltlon, or Mvtnp bank specified In SectlOn 1102 °' the FlnMClll Codt Ind autllor1ztd to do bual- Mll In thla ltltt Wiii be held by the duly IPPC>lntad truattt. Tiit Ufe wm be ll'lldt, bUt ~ covtnant OI Wlrrlllty, upruaed °' lmpllad, regarding title, potMssion, Of encum- br1nea, to utlaty tht otlllaltlOn HCUfad by 11kf0Md ol TNlt. The underalgned Trultff dlsclllml any ll•blllty tor any . Jncorrec:tneu d tht property lddtul « oUMf common •• lgllltlon, If any, lhown her'lln. TRUS- TOR:1"0MAS sto!ER· MAN AND MARIANHE .SHINWf HUAAND AHO WIFf "ICOfdtd ~ u lnatr\lment No. 1Mt27M In 8ooll ,,,., ,.... "-or omci11 "9COrda In tM omce or thl "9c:ofdtr °' Of'· ANGE County, C.llfor· • oa or lllt:1/2/l001 It 2:00 PM Alce d Salt: AT THE NOftTH ,RONT ENTRANCE TO THE COUNTY COURT· HOUSE, 100 CIVIC CENTIA OM/I WEIT, SANTA NfA. CAU- fOlltNIA Pr= Ad-chi• It pu ad to be: 1ts NOTOH LAH& COSTA Ml!SA CALJllOflNIA 1212'- -N'H I: ,, .. ,14-41 TM total amount .. and by uld 'Instru-ment .. d the time d . 1n1t111 publlcltlon or ttlte nocle• It .... 7,UI, which In-cludes the total amount or the unpeld bll.lnce (Including ICCMld lftd unpeld lnterat) 11'4 1euqnlble eltlmltwd costs, ..,_...., Mid ldll1nc .. It the time of lnltllf publtc.tlon ot tNt no6ce.~ ~uf: IOVICU, INC. 1Mlf SAN l'Ut· HANOO MIUION ILVO IUfTI #20I MllllON HILU. CA ttMI {111) M'l ...... DUOM!GA Al#42710 Im, 112. Ill , ... 101. 216 r1J . By Fax . .-... (949} 631-6594 ' (Pl~ in1·h11l1• ~'our 1111mc amf phone nwubfr 1111d """ 'IJ rnll you h11tk. .,;th a prilll' qu0111.) By Plllone ; t (949) 642-5~7U I Hours ~ M.all/ln Pel'80li: 330 We~t B"v Screc·t Costa Mt•Mt. GA 92627 A1 NnlM>r1 Bl~d. & !lily St. Monday·: .• ·:::: ... ::.:. Friday S:OOpm. ~esday •. ~ .......... Monday S:OOpm , W~nesday ........ Tuesday 5:00pm Thut'ffday ...... Wednesday 5:00prn Friday ............. Thursday 5:00pm Saturday ........ , ..... Friday 3:00pm Telephone 8:30am-5:00pm Monday-Friday Walk-In 8:30am-5:00pm ·Monday-Friday Sunday ................ Fnday 5:00pm . I Index ' --. ' ...... . --1. 420 a IJ - ' ' . ...... Cl . -~~ -~· .. .... , _ __.. c -.. ' I • 470·478 ....... EIZVICE DIRECTO -For All Your HCNM Md Busanesf Needs ,.. Ii ,--....... ••••••n1111'lli••I• 6M·6•7 Reach 80,000 Homes Each Week for Only $28 per week (4 wk, (nin.) ~ Lanai• .. 642·1678 d4 LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT the City Council of the City of Newport ·Beac.h will hold a joint pu~tic hearing regarding;. ( 1) Preliminary Budget for the 2001 -02 Fiscal Year, pursuant to Section 1102 of the Newport Beach City Charter; and, (2)-the City's Appropriation Limit for the 2001-02 Fiscal Year, pursuant to Article ·t3B of the State Constitution. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT said _public hearing will be held on the 12th day of June, 2001 , at ·the hour of 7:00 p.m. in the City Hall Council Chambers, 3300 Newport Boulevar:d, Newport Beach, CA 92663, at which time and -place.interested persons may appear and be heard thereon. ' TOTAL BUDGET ALL FUNDS -INCLUDING CAPITAL lMPROVEMENTS: Salaries and Benefits Maintenance and Operations Capital Outlay Capital Improvements Other Charges Total Budget APPROPRIATION LIMIT: Article 13B Appropriation for 2001 -02 Fiscal Year Total Appropriations Subject to Limit Amount Under LimJt $66,720,650 30.735,257 748,9 12 34,876,034 2.456,667 $l3S,537,5SO $94.050,612 67.108.999 $26.941.613 ,I ·1 '°"TUNIN M ... .-. IMlflillo 11111111 ........ ..... ID .. federal fW ltoiltiftQ Ad of 1111 .. elllMillii wllldl _... It ...., to ---.,,,., . "*""'· ....... Of~ ...... on race, cmor. "'9· !Oft. .. hllldlt.lp, falllllll 1111111 or ll9tlonll Dtiglft, Of an llltaMlon to ,._ eny well Pf'll«•nct. limlta1ioo or~· TIMI~ wlU not kncrwlngly accept any 1ctvertlsemant tor rail ..... -"'ch It In vlollllOf'I of "" '" Our ...... "' hereby lnlormtd thlt 111 dWlllllOI tcMttlMd In thlS nMSPlf* 11'1 Mllabll on '"equll~ Of: 111$11. To com of dltcl1ml· 1111ion, HUO loll·lr• al 1 ·800-<424-8590. p Hom: BUYING SUPERSTORE ~\Wl~lhwl llXM RM EUt Lon. f1"~frte (.ll!(i ~ F1't Golt Rtpo IJst VA & FKI. ~Comt' All ars rWJtd (al TcxBj (7141SJ4.UOO24 flf'1 vecma Rell Estate ~ llell1C1ICn "Wt EMAIL: wtQVOm.c:om :s . ·= .. ........ ......... LOCAL llil 1'111111 ...... Cll TC!dJIJ I LllA RIVERA MM7MIU AlllE WILLEY 14H1M241 FIXER UPPER BARGAINS T1-homle Med Worll. ,,.. computertted u.t of Prop«tln. Free~ meg. 1-M6-223-H12 IO '1040 48 months Per Mo. Orean Breezes, Cool Pri~ ... Saiurday, Mtf'l 26, 02001 ' B1 I 110COSTA = I ELEGANT SENIOR LMNG Ef¥0Y • spaoous JUI!• entetfUlment crahs fun lt¥IS lnll1Sp0tlall0n ~ COSTA NEUPORTE' 949-646-6300 mnrrun !Q! S8 GOOD JOBS. RELIABLE SERVICES. NTERESIING THINGS TO BUY. ITS AU HERE EVERYDAY IN CLASSIFE/1 (949) 641·5678 Sales Office Hours: 10:00 :..... 5:00 Friday -Tuesday The bean of Oran~ Collnl}' is )OUn ln this ndghborbood that Is just mlnutes from the beach. Con\enlentl) loated to the 5S and 405 frttWa)S. hopping, dining and eotenalnment are ju t moments awa) at nearby Trian~e Square. South Coast Plsu.a and Fashion Island. Bay Street Vlll.s, Oran~ County's most affordable new community! ,.110 . APTS 11110 -Am,. ·. COSTA MESA: : COSTA -• .• ., From ,low $300.000 (949) 650-1440 New proj«t coming Summer ZOOI to • Stanton. Call Bay SL for more Info I . COSTA MESA I SOU1li COAST METRO .. Charming JI.nor. I iedroom atld 2 8.droom I 8alh. 5UllOUl1ded by lemt, pool Ill giued commtnly ,, &151(V237fl16lr------1" •.lot's. co•• '7 ISUT51l (V23!11852l--Lowmi, 11" •ltot's. CDIZf,95 W S10GTA IW15al5811---·---White. i..tt..r. Z1K mi W S10GLT(WM88.t691----Silvtr. lll•!Mr. co.Sa# 1f SJOOLTIW14184091 .. --u•tt..r. co. moonroot l11,!Sl5 W S106LT IW24161171-·---Bleck. moonroof, JHthtr, CD W S106LTIW1452619!-.... MOOtllool, lt1tMr, tell, /Aw,,,; W SJDGLTIW1'97198)-... -Whltt, ivoryft•thtr. co W SMitTIW24930291-... -... -..... -~ ... Slivtr. IHm.r. co W $11TS (W24647851~·-.. ---······--LNtMt, CD, JS "'1 W $"15(W2497662l---L.ow mi l111hff, CD, S,.; W VJf WAS IW24219771 S1w<. .us. 4fK-' 1' V.TA WASIW245199ll----L11dl«. CD, t1oP W ~TA WAG(Wl375195\...;!:..--L.Hdw. CO, •lot'f -~ WMIW'lli1t~CD.11r.W .,....,~,,_.,.,,....,.._..,. Wr-.A .. (W2413911 ...._...,_CD Wr1Mf..,fW241235'1-W-...._CD • ,., .. ~1,.__ ........... • ..,-~, .. 1'1·•·~--­• 1f VMr WAGIW246l'3151---AWD. CO,,._ 5,.; 1f nf WAG IW11Ms.t97 -·----Wllott NllfY lnlMr 1f WI WAG (\WMn111-······----6-CW. i.11Mr. CD W S9ffW11282741-· .Low tnt. i.1tti.r. CO w SJf1W11J4416l _smr. i..iMr. • "'1 WS!f IWl131195) Low nt1.i.ttber11f,95 1' S11GLT(X!IO)C1l-·LH"-CD, dot'imJIS If VJl1! WAS IX25434161-.._......_$ilvff. ~,.,,, If C1' CO#VOW0037lll llK nw. ,..,,..,_CD W S11GtTM6S2369l ~~CD • s•TIY'Z-6246861 udtet. co.,,,_,,,_ •S11&U1~1 ~co-- • $11RT(Y262531~ SMt co . ._...,. •v.T..,IVZIBIQ Milt....,_CO WrMUl ... ~»-t._CO .. WrMUI .. fY26G29)...u..tCD ..... ..... ....... (Y'a1172)-UWM( ...... ..-.(CI • ....,,,""'----~ --..o .. W09rC9flU1CS .......... ' tlfliti111141friai~J,E~ i:I Floot PenthouMI 11·c:e1 28A wlLoft, ~ Vdld~l: Av:J.~.13 IM-273-710t N4IW dlcor 28d28I Fum. l1"-:lll IM. $2300 unfum. 12100 pool 11>1. NC. gar. Avlll now. 949-37IHl809 38' 281 Channer, _. IO I Penln1U11 Point Cb""* vfflege, Frpk:, W/O hk-i.IPI. 29r 2Be, din. 2 ~· 1c gara91 t piitg epece. reoencly ~led . $2200/Mo. 949-640-~4 Cal 14-289-9166 1190~1 Ocun Front 2Br 18e ~ furnished, la~ ~~~ . . 11·.:n1 S8r 281 iHollM trp, ~ Incl c AYll now $1 657 St. = 0 TO!tl Rty 714-540-73 FOR wse Ill Cell 28r 281 W/O 1*.ups, ~ ~2Be, Uy f\mleMd 140 Ahrt. $1425/mo. 6 lhnJ Oct 21, 2001 do not dlltultl tenanta. !M 380-9492 Cal lJndsly 94H40-9632. lM'9I 28r ... 2~ gnge, ......,. * 2.581 mlclo, lplc, wld hk~. frig. 111111 OIW, W/O ~ dbl Cit Ill ~~new~ f,;· no A/C. Avel .k.wl9 20. BOM.to. Cal lor appt IC> 38r 281 ~walk IO view. 2110 Thorin Ave. village, Frplc, W/O '*•· (Yic!ofla/b!y} 949-631-4622 ~·~:· 38r 281 Houte gar. Fp, pvt ~tio. yard. Drive by Ottty. 38r 381, frplc, WIO. deck not dl•tulti i-nts. wlvtew, gar+ CllpOll. w ... 2718 POllola. Avail now IO ~ or beldll $310CW S1750lmo. 71~..S11t or mo. 949-760-18&4. 714-5-40-3666 CllMmlttg 28r 28lf + Ole. 1172 ... 1 Fp, _,...~Mt. tc gsr. -bdt ca.. Avail now. 419.5 ~ ! '80GMo. IU9-76().3 01 FOR LEASE Ill Cdl:I EltlCUllve Condos. In 3Br -Uy flMnllhed ~ gulld-glled comm, ~ 6 lhnJ Oct 21. 2001 pool. M.' rm Aleo. 1 -380-9492 ..... +.432·1653 .. 2001 LINCOLN LS Auto. AC.1..eadJer. Altoy Wheels, All Power a Muoh Men SpectKular OoNl'I V1eW walk 10 town & beach. 3Br 31h&, gourmet leltdltn $7500(Mo. 949-707-7583 1·=-1 tEXTRAORDINARV. Contlmponty home In glou1 81y1llorn. from bMchl Large 58 48A~ offlCllllbnlry. 3 frplc'e gNcl comm Yrty/ monthly MM464111 Eucutlvt ler91 2 .... CKY 6 281 home on end of cur.-...., """ZJ:• ~·2 • ~· MM45-1521 ~ C'9lt Lui lmmlc 3Br 2.581. 1800ef~ kM>a, rnaible W/O , dbl Q!lf $2350 94 140 GOOD JOBS. R1!LLUJLB SBRVICBS. JNTBR.BSTING THINGS ro BUY. JTSALL THBR.B HVBRYIMY JN CLASSIPEDI (94!1) 642-$678 2001 LINCOLN TOWN CAR Older $bile,........ PIANOS~ Colldlilu . ......._. __ ·--·-·~.....-. .. CAIHMID .. .................... WI 9UY llTATll ·~~-­.. ,..... car JSI GrJr 1rr JTS at-ea me Women's and home store is looking for one Full and one Part-time experienced sales associate to join our team! Flexible schedule required must have positive attitude and ability to clicntclc and develop a relationship with customers. PIC1l5ant working environment and gtcat benefits. Please Call Le Ann (949) 759-7985 in Fashion Js/,and is seeking an ~unts Payable person. Will assist controller in accounts payable and bank reconciliation, book.keeping. Must be accurate. Alln: WOltt From Home Up to $2M7!1Hr. P/T.fff llWl7-21S4 www.extremeceahnow.com ', -· .. ~ .. '· -;; . . . ., 1&..:_ ••• ,-.. . . ·-. ·- • Up to 1&-25ft * Sall or Power-sale & quiet Bay Is. near fun Zone 949~73-1943 Cl4lllc Slwtle • low ml, .. ptlll, ""· (82e184) $15,988 NAllRS 1714)MO:f100 Clidlllllc !Mlle ... Low mies, ,...,,.,, lloyl (82'4619) $12.911,8 ------NAIERS 1114)540:!100 Cdllc ..... SMnilt ~. ""* (8.13143) $11.9118 NABERS (714)M0:!100 C..mllc Slwtle 't1 SM, IM!her, delll (808273) IU81 NUEAI 1714)ff0=!100 i1rflito,... dmll. the 43trl A11"""1 &rvice on the ~LlNCOLN MARKVIIl 81act/tan ltbr, CD dlgr. nwf, chrome "1lls .t men J 42,,J Offici"' .Anniwnluy Memorial Bay Service Monday,. May 28, 2001 : 11:00 a.m. Pacific V1n11 MOnorilll Parle 3500 PtltlJK y,. rm., }I,.,,,,...., Cl/il!• . 949.644.2700 Have A Garage Sale! c:::-11 tah-li=»llcat c:::•---··•-c:1--c c:_ .... _:11 -.... --~--:7- 1Dca s:a•---"V"ca-...-ca-.--a---•-~d• 'OOTOYOTA 4RUNNERSR5 One owe. aaly 9K Iii~ <Dct-.rliwinm 2001 MERCURY GRAND MARQUIS LS Sf J,950 $25,950 017671 '00 LINCOLN '99 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL NAVIGATOR 4X4 Fully lolded. ltht. f1Ct ca oner. ce1y m .m. <D Wiii', pat buy dip, ..... flci. nt ... S2f,950 SJf,950 4JVZllO 192 MERCEDES ·soosEL Wlrittlgrey lltw, CD dlgr, dlAme Wbl'i illlmle. cond, '99LINCOLN NAVIGATOR 4X4 Oly IOhi, <Ddllr.""-iltlk, fJt:l. nr. ho11 s23950 SJS,950 (1Zl)l336) c;. ... ~ AtoZltollll--•lt fWnodl1ng a ldlllona. an time a an 8udDll. IW'• l.H5052A. 11...-1195 or 9flfflf, llM -=1 COMPUTER HELP! ............... .,.. ...... .c ... i .. ' . I .. AL 'I LAWN SERVICE TIM Trtmmlno. ~. • ~Rtilllr · ,,.. Ell 11wil-2M2 H GARDENER U foflllllly trllned, vaat llplllenct, ... hom. "" Ml .!lo!! 11t-m1 l30 ~ Svc, 11rrt Elp WOik. y1lld ., 14>, trtt tnmtTMnO. plantiog, .... 714-436-1518 YARD ClEAN-UP T,..._1'11.Nd & RemoYed. ~ Rtoairtd new --<:ml )14-751-347e Ylnl CIMft Up, Install ~. Ma111tenenc.. Trim Tr... 24 Yrs ~. Free Ell MM50-1711 I ar..!Wfl,-= I Additions • Kttchen Bathroom • Repairs Coll !he leader in So. Colif omio m. fslilalt lld smn S>.1ilf'<I C;irpenter E Ip ctr 1c1.in/Plumber I'll help you resolve those nagging home repair and remodel Issues. K•lth 949-574-1748 A to Z Hollll ~__.. Repairs. Electrical and Pbnblna IJcl650524 cau Ju-211-nas or 9*24M01C. Dfynl Alpalr I T t rturt Stnp Wallpaper Paint T~. ~ ,obs oil' 714-21o-M34 HMdy.fiten. Contncton £Jec:1rlc, f'lumbln9, Dty.tl. c.rpentry. LbnMd. 71~ QUALITY CRAFTSMAN 20 v ... &perin:e IW"I rM YOUR HANOYMAHI MARI( 94~952S W11ter Tltt Handyman Mast• Carpenlll 25 Yt111 ~I POl1tollo Ooots & Wrdtl#s FtOC* & Deeb CIOW!l Molcing Phont 949-510-5365 Pagei 714·298-S400 JUNK TO lltE DUlllPlll 71 ...... 1112 AVAIUllE TOOAYI MH?H!!f I· ·=I FREE VIAGRA You'vt heard about Viagra ... but havt you tritd it? • Vuagr.a success iJ dependent on proper use. Cet Wonudoe from • pbywldM who tptd•he In Sa:ual ~--­pedoc-4 Oftl '2 vu.-Cink.al SWin <All'°' toM ... . .. ..... .. ~ (Mt) u....noo w.e.~com NEW °J"UATMENT FOR OftONJC PAIN Bed!, N ed, Kn-. Hip or Shoukk. •No Surae.y • No Haepitaltuck>n -800-700i77 1~-"='I ,..10 ... YOUR.._ M'tlOYllllJfT PROJICn cal I plurilber, p1lnttf, handy· ,.., ot eny of .. gr11t .stl'ViCH lialed tlefe In OUf dlreclOl'yf THESE LOCAL SVC PEOPLE CAN HELP YOU TOOAYI ·-----· ' I!'. I ' I I ' I • DONTGlT RID Of R' I Use ~ ~~of~ =~ brurtrday. Fft lb.rs RH. ~71~ Cd 71~ SoiMny eon.1 Concrete" Briok. Block waU, patio, Driveway. Stone. Pllnttr, Uct746686 714-5'2·712t * JEEF MOVERS * Save money. Lowest ratt 24/ws. 7 days ..... Same day 118MC11 1ic1r1e T · 159404 ?14-53t-t9H O'RYANS MOVERS Antiques pianos and llpPlencet 1pc ()( ent hie, Call & save MM2Mel9 PUBLIC NOTICE The Calrf. Public· U11lit1es Com· m1SS100 REOUIRES ht al used house- tlOld goods moY81'S prin1 theif P.U.C. cal T fUT1ber; lmos and cllauff8'S print 1t1811 T.C.P. tumer Wlal~ If you have I ques- bOn ab(M the leoll- lt'f " a mowr. lino or chauffer, cal: PUBLIC UTILmES COMMISION 714·558~151 . . Bridge TODAY'S I CROSSWORD PUZZLE _ ...... ., .......... ... LOCAnNO ILltTaONC MM LINC Dll'ICTIOH ,,.....,..,.. 675·9304 All DRAINS UNCLOGGED •mlfll,__ ... ·-··-•IBIMM --·-fllf-. .._ (114)-1111 ~.., t ,,,,, 1"'~ DUIN t llWll 'r:;:;: CLWlllG IPICW.trT lWlEDY PLUMBING 949-645-2352 -.. PRECISE PUJllBING RtcJUI a AtmodN FREE ESTIMATES L1687398 714-9!19= 1090 WEEK.LY BRJDCE QUIZ Q I · Neither v\IJ.ncnlble, you bold: • 7 o K JIU 73 o Q U 2 • '5 Q ' • Boch V\llnenbk, .. ScMab )'Oil hold: •Q7'1;1 Kl7 6J o Jt54 •t Your riahl-hand opponent opem 1bc ........_ ...,,. .. ,_ .... ~.~ biddln& wbh one Club. Wllll llCOcn m~rm ... iAST-SOUTH do you llk.e? Io 2• ,_ 7 Q 2 . BOlh vulnerable, as South you Whll ICtion do you tac? hold: · Q 5 • Neither vulnerable. you hold: • K J U o Q 6 o 95 • K J 10 7' •KQll976•l r;;9 0 6 •K95 What is )IOUT opening bid? The blddin . bu oroccedcd: Wt!t7 \rdlmf EAST SOUTH l o ,_ l!Q 1 . What llCtion do you take? Q 6 • Not vulnerable, '" South. you hold: Q J · As South, vulnerable, you hold: • •AK76 c:i ll -o1 AK 7J •A865 Th¢ bidding ha.~ proceeded: • A 9 J Q J 9 5 o K lO 8 2 • 7 6 J NORTII EAST SOUTH WE.\T The biddioa has proceeded: 3':< ,.. ? Wl'.ST NORTtf EAST SOUTH Wlw do you bid now? Jo Dbl ,_ ? Wlw ICIJon do you take? Loolc for UllSl< rrs un M unduy CAD SEYLLE m '15 PNrl lffllWltlU, orig own«, IMMac, chromt ..... ""' loeded. pp f12.!50 !4H7M4?1 CHEVY CORVETTE '95 Trtplt ~ l-elld. ?Ill ... t!!,500. .-11eo CHEVY CORVETTE '84 Whltie, 2.41( ml, 11,500 MH$0-71IO awy.a. Sebrtng Conv .. Yt» IU'IYlllr flMl In tilt 81#1. Champagne/Ian leather, AC, pd, pe, pb, pw, Uh, 11t<eo cue, new brakes. pd, 111111 cond. $15,900 Obo .... m-10 Mazda TllMM 1001 SUV, ES va. 41A, ~ mi. new 214'01, ptt1ect. pp, $22,000 M•11&-0251 IEflCE.D£S 8NZ C230 .. Sliver w/blll Inter, co dllngw, .. ""'' -Ill, SW flll'll m.nct wwr. @.7SO Mt-21C>-1472 ....... U20 '97 52lc ml, blk wlbl.k ltlv, CD. phone, booka/recOfda, beeutltul orig cond. #757944 p.8.996. 949-5116-1888 Bier ~llomlnlSR 't5 V6 350 q. 4X4, 9911 ml. orig -· blac*lten ltllr, mnfr, CO. c:h<ome fully Sltuln SW·2 'ti AT, AC, Slwp (115102) l1U79 Theodoft Roblnt llWSW512 Toyota Camry 'ti F!Powfir, V9rf C111r1 (872t"l CCCCCCS13,t?I 'Tlleocl«t Aoblne .... 35W512 Toyota Sltnnl 'ti F"'°'*, ""• AC (1322CM) l1t.179 Theodore Robins eaa.35W512 A AR i 'CiP UI C IC s F ~~~ lJ N DU E A E l E .. "y p NIA d EA S E 9 -P 8 N S- ABAISE DI "'I LS ICll N S .1a~1~ .,_,.,( .& a~N S RT HIV -.. v AM •A I A •U SIU A MU S I I ~~ ·r A I I ... I -l E S I T 0 II! F E A TS U N S A ~ER AA F .& g N T -.. TA I M An s:. Cl F -l "'A I( S A IE D • N ee D • E l SE HOHEST & REASONABLE PLOMBEll l.1506568 No drain cleanlng Senlol dlacol.nt1 11 .. 2JM150 FORD~ Eddie .. ,------, Belllr 1ttl ~ mi, 18" • -=~·~"l • • IUlptlllion. ~ "41111 s.. IOaded, beautiful cond, $10,995. financing warr aval. vP6TTT'l91 oc AA#> 8kr 949-58&-1888 Toyota 81 LE. 1511 ICIUll ml. ~ laclory Wlmlllly, auto, 1p1r1ong blaclt. grey lnttriot. fully loedtd, IQ new. smells ntW '697512 $13,250 94~586-1888 8kJ TREES ,.,.. ...... ~ &Y•"CW... 714.435 $24,500obo 714-7~ @574-1946 ford hp6orw Xl. T 'M AT, lfpwr, lloy'I IM2254) sa,m. Theodore Aoblr'9 llU5WS12 Ford Prolle OT .. Mild. Ullr, Loedld (1111'*1 . sa.m. Theoclon Aotllrll ffW$H512 Ford Ranger 4WD 'ti X Cllb, XU , l.09ded (1135247) S1',f71 Theodott Roblnt llWIW512 FOfd ~ va LX 10 F~ lold9d. dlln. llrJl!n ~. 10 co clsk dlengtr, ~ •nl $40000 Pp 714-~75 Ford Thundlftllrcl '97 AT, AC, Mor-. FIP'flr 1121112) 111.179 Theodott Robina ~12 HON>A CMC UI 't? Oltufnll -· low 5811 ni. .,,,.. ..... co. $10,500 Mt-71M113 HONDA aYIC 2000 A'*> Trans. AC, pb, pt, w-lm .-.0. co, 114.800 714=§4H235 Oldlmoblt Slthoulttl .. GlS. Beige, tan llw, co. (2QJIO) $15,m NABERS (714!540:9100 PlYMOUTM FURY "8 383 Engine. Needl brakes, head gaskets and rninof body rt08lr s 10,000/060 Call 562~3587 Can't Memto get to all those Npalr jobs around the house? Let the Cleaalfted Service Di rectory help you ftnd . reliable help. Look tor answers on Monday. Everyday is a great day in Classified! Be a part of it, place your a~ today! (949) 642·5678 -------· b~ a MW -------· For ultimate peace of mind, cvuy Cenified Pre-Owned BMW is backed by The Cati.flCld Pre-Owned BMW Protection Plan, covering the vehicle for up ro 2 ycan or 50,000 miles (whichever comes first) form the dare of a piration of the 4-ycar/50,000-mile BMW New Vehicle Limited Warranty.•• The Protection Plan includa two key elements: c.enified Pre-Owned BMW Limited Warranty ,. Backed by BMW of Nonh America, Inc., and 1u nationwide nctWork of BMW c.tnrcn. covcml repairs are made only by BMW-mined technicians wing only genuine 8~ replacement pans. BMW Roadside Aasista.nce ,. Peace of mind foUows you anywhere in the USA, 24 bours a <hy, 365 days a year. 1999BMW 528i . 16K Miles. Pmruum !*bie' S499S.OO l<Jllll to -bro security dqlohl. I 0.000 1111 per )Ur leMt. 20e peu.xcca nule.. (4KB8144) 1998BMW 740iL CD. Pllont, ?7K ml I $499~ 00 row to &mt. 7.cro teeuril)' depo&it. I 0.000 ml per ~ c:'°'4:d end lcale. lSf per ex~ mile. (M21600) PRE O R • .. • • ii ,. BIO ·Salu!day, Mar 26,'2001· . e • I I 1llaFORD 11171BUZU 11111 NlllllAN EM:ORTW&#LX HOMall/EPU 6EllTllA AT, AC, clean. Auto, AC, clean Clean & Economy (123417) (658352) Car (763757) s597s $8976 '8976 .,,.FORD 1llllMAZDA 1117 l'OllD E.,llO PROTl!llE ,,,,..,,._LX Club chatsau, AT, AC, loaded. AT, AC, alloys, losdsd. (A63856) (179671) f/pwr. (127112) 1 10,976 1 11,976 '11,976 11111/EDDIE 100l'OllD •oo•~• llAUEll EXl'LOllER COllTOU/laE Al.Tiii/iA Lthr, loadsd, cln. A/T, A/C, f/pwr. Low mllBS, V8ty (818845) (109025) c/Bsn. (183248) ,.1 13,976 1 13,976 114,976 fllll MEllCU/I ........ y .,,,,,,,, VIUAllEll COU8All .,.,,~ Full Power, Clean, V6, AT, f/pwr. A/T, f/pwr., CD. Low Miies (J19238) (634619) (298004) 1 15,976 115,976 115,976 , .. t:llllY61.i/I ... ,,OllO ... ,,0110 BE.,,11111 JXI Dl'l0.11 XLT l'·.,60 XCAll Convt., /1ather, AT, f/pwr., AT, AC, f/pwr. loadld. (270373) •lloys. (A14944) (A47557) 1 17,976 1 17,976 1 17,976 WRlllllW·1• ·-TOYOTA Yl1 ~ r;onaMW VM 4 •MlTJSM W lll'OllT·J'JIAD Lthr., qUld s.atlng, AT, roof, alloys. AT, f/pwr., alloys. loadld. (A14888) (058517) (A54242) 121,976 '21,976 121,976 •11t1 FORD PROaEaT 5-SPD., lthr., loaded. (113109) $8976 100FOllD FOCUllLX Lo, lo ml. (123498) 112,976 1llllHONDA CIVICLX A7; AC, f/pwr. (558819) 114,976 W l#llt:UllY WUUftll AT, AC, f/pwr. (611560) 1 15,976 11111 l#l'l#ITY 1-ao Leath1r, roof, alloys. (603722) 1 18,976 11111 FORD TllllllllEll•lllD AT, AC, f/pwr. (106315) $8976 11111 TOYOTA COROUA AT, AC, f/pwr. (254664) 1 12,976 1117FOllD l'·ntlXt:Aa Auto, V-8, Full Power (C02717) 1 14,976 11111#/aAN MAXIMA Flpwr., xtra c/tJsn. (810947) '16,976 ••l"OllD Ml#TAllll llT Convt., ltJathtJr, /oadtJd (2174lU) 1 18,976 2000 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA, CA, 12828 . .. Fl•• (BBBJ 353 8512 ••Wl'l'lilu Aaol&aa• . . .. •-.JIEIEP •114 FOllD 11111 JEEP 11111 FORD WllAllQLER vtl"LOll/111 XLT CHEROKEE nt:OllT•-Clean, Summer T, f/pwr., alloys AT, AC, cln. AT, AC, f/pwr. Fun. (412036) (A42254) (529797) (195753) •8976 $8976 $9976 '10,976 11111 llATURN ._, TOYOTA 100FORD 11111 llATUR# BC-R CAMllY EB CORT •w-a AT, AC, cln. F/pwr., Vty clea AT, f/pwr., AT, AC, sharp. (272754) (872199) alloys. (167806) (165802) 1 12,976 1 13,976 '13,976 113,976 ••l'OllO 11111/'DRD ·ooaoOBE ••CHEVY llAl#llll 4WO IX1'UJllBI ll'OlfT OMOTAXt:a &4atl Xcab, XLT, F/pwr., CIBlln. Auto, Full PowtJr, Full Powsr, losdtJd. (835247) (895223) Alloys (559364) 4 Door (180191) . 114,976 114,976 .1 15,976 1 15,976 100HOllOA 11111 l'OllD ••CHWY ... ,,111111 ACCOllDBE _,.TAllllllT 1 llOll Xt:Aa * ...... AT, ~C. F/pwr., V8, loadtJd. F/pwr., alloys. 15 Pass. V-1 o, (009485) (128330) (137799) Loadt1d (A41730) 1 16,976 1 16,916 116,976 ~17,976 11111 TOYOTA ... ACllllA 100HOllDA ·-~ •1•11111A l/llUllllA LB PllaUa. ..,...,,N F/pwr., n1ar AT, AC, f/pwr., AT. alloys, load«I. V·B, Auto, AC. (132204) •lloys. (009213) (002565) Alloys (123683) '19,976 119,976 '20,976 121,976 Daily Pilot · 0 . . . . . . . Tot.I amt due 0 alanina includes sec. dep. $f18UO. Adi reeldull •,741.20. To~ of PllYfnents $10,286.40. GAS Cap cost *15,977 12,000 mlM pet year. 154 •mile for excess miles. On ad 11PPfVV11 by Am. Honda Rn. Corp. C21050t 260-hp 3.2 liter SOHC 24 valve VTEC™ V-6 engine (Type S) 1 YEAR 12 000 MILE LIMITED FAaORY WARRANTY '97ACURA '97ACURA '97ACURA '97ACURA '98ACURA 0 9 7 ACURA 3.2 TL 3.5RL 3.0CL 3.5RL 2.5 TL 2.2CL Certified Certified Certified Certified Certified Certified (P1624) (P1609} (Pl621) {P1615) (P1618) (Pl 581} 5.9% OR6.9% 5.9% OR6.9% 5.9% OR6.9% 5.9% OR6.9% 5.9% OR6.9% 5.9% OR6.9% '98ACURA ~~ '96FORD '95MERCURY '93NISSAN 93 TOYOTA GSR T-BIRD VILLAGER QUEST CELICA. Certified Auto, ps, AC AT/AC, F/Pwr Maroon only Auto, ps, air Auto, V6, AC, ps Auto, AC, moonroof r-(Pl620) (PI452A) (Pl626) (PI566) (21115A) (Pl578) · 5.9% OR 6.9% $6,495 $7,950 $8,950 $8,950 $8,950 I '92 INFINITI '97VW1 '95 MITSUBISHI '98NISSAN '96VW '96FORD Q45 JETTAGL MONTERO ALTIMA JETIAGL EXPLORER 4-0oor, Alwr, auto. AC. Opwr. ml roof, 4-Door, auto; AC. s/roof. a dean Auto, V6, AC. ps Auro, AC, ps, CD 4 Door, m/roof. 4' Door Xl..T, V8, Blk. Lehr, le.bu. a n~ ar. Only (21 I 9SA) car, great uans and onlr (P 160 I) (21008A) (Pl595) only 28,000 miles (2111 lA) Full Pwr, Alloy (210888) $8995 $8995 $10,950 $10,950 $1J,995 $12,995 wlikEEP ~ACURA F MITSUBISHI ~N!xc:lflA GLER INTEGRA YDER GST CONVT. Sport.l-Doar.414...-., V6, S4f*IL/£, 2 OOor.<lpC)ft. red;~~ Auto, AC, F/~1-. leather 6 specdi <D di • ~ pa.CD.~t.idl.alap (Pl631) must tee! {Pl 26) (212 19A) ('n>oolll) $14,295 $14,995 $14,995 $69,995 .. r * '95 FORD THUNDERBIRD Ye, LOW MILES, SUPER CLEANt (114171) . * '95 CHRYSLER TOWN&: COUNTRY VAN WHITE, LEATHER, MANY EXTRAS (592323) * '91 CADil..LAC SEVILLE 8'LVER, LEATHER, GREAT BODY STYLE! (IOl27I) * '92 HONDA ACCORD EX AUTO, MOONROOF • MOREi NEW CAR TRADE-ml (010570) * '95 MERCURY Vll..LAGER 7 PA88ENQER, U!ATHER, MOONROOF a MOREi (J13571) * '88 CADil..LAC ELDORADO ONLY 41K MILES, WHrTE, LEATHER, COLLECTOR QUAUTYI (818282) * '92 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE BEIGE, TAN LEATHER, RUNS SUPER, CLEAN IN a OUTI (ioeeM) * '9SCADILLACSEDANDEVILLE UQHT BLUI, NAVY LUTHER, HOH-lllOKM, Cl.IAtfl (213112) . * '00 CHRYSLER CONCORD . • .. LVEA, MANY UTRA8, WONT~ (1283M) * '98 MERCURY SABLE LOW ..... W, MANY !XTRM, NON41101C1A (t1-) . • ' CADILLAC SEVILLE , HAMt8T GREEN, AU.OVS, 8UPE'R CU!ANI (~148) * '95 CADILLAC SEVU...LE STS Ld# MIU!8, BLACK Cttl!RAY, CO, ALLOYS 6 MOREi (82te74) * 'QB CADILLAC CATERA wttr., TAN LIATHIR, 1iANY UTMI, IAUHCI OF WAAAANTY (Olo*O) * •gt CADILLAC ELDORADO T()(JR. LOW -.U. BLACK. U!AlMER, CO 6 llOREI (to7181) * '99 CADILLAC DEVILLE W111'1 P!ARL, TAN et.01M, AU.Oft a llOAll IAUNCi OI' WAAAANTY (72Mll)