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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2001-09-02 - Orange Coast Pilot. . -. . -r. • ..: ..,,. .... _.., __ _ . . . . . . SERVING THE NEWPORT -~SA COMMUNffiES SINCE 1907 Inside UFE & UISURE For many college kids, going back to school means living on campus. What can you do to make a dorm look less like a box and more like a home 1 We get people at Vanguard University and UC Irvine to tell us.. See P11ge 5 Curt Pringle, newly appoint- ed ~or of the Or•nge County Fair Bolrd, sits down with Features Editor Jennifer K Mahal to talk about the the board and what it does. 5"hge11 ...... SPOllS The UC Irvine women's volleyball team lost to USC. the No. 2 team in the nation. but the young Anteaters showed signs of growing up with a one- game win. Also, the Trojans' April Ross. a Newport Ha~ High • product. s>f•yed despite emotional pain from the loss of her mother Thursday. S..hge12 SUNDAY STORY . 'I remember my mother always working so hard to keep the bugs out of the huts they provided. My mother suffered mostly. • • GMG Ff«/ DALY Pl.OT Newport Beach nsldent Suzy KVUDmen ls reflecttve u lhe cl1*hes tbe 8dlonallzed venton of her llte, •stng To Me, Papa.• Her German- Amerlcan family wu deported to ber father's home town of ~-~Wald. depicted ln the painting at left, during World War o. During World War II, Suzy Kvammen of Newport Beach was sent to a Texas internment camp and then shipped to the country of her parents -· Germany YOWtga.... DAllY Pn.OT he's sitting in a private conference room at Hoag Hospital's surgery wing casually tolldng about the confusion during World War Il. How she and other German Americans were sent to a relocation camp in Texas. The hardships that fol- lowed after being deported to Germany. The leather factory she worked in as a teenager abroad. And more. .. But Suzy Kvammen is convtnc- ingly cool. Bl'unl Unemotional. Almost blase about her dramatic past. She's quick to dismiss iome of her thoughts as silly or strange, slow to dwell on anything for too long. time she buys shoes, she sniffs the pair first to see whether it's leather or pleather. ~·~ttbatin~.· Kvammen She 't realize the habit -until this w She was swprtsed. Dwelt OD it, I er c And then the 65-year--old starts talking about leather. But the first generation American . Why, yes, she can smell her way to a pile of leather. And any SEE CAMP PAGE 4 Kvammen returned to Germuy dmlng .. wan1Dg daysaf Waiki W•D· ... nmwtaect tbere unto 1951, wbenlbe ftttamed ... u n c IOPSIOIY Campbell: El Morro rent coti.ld pay fo:r: cove cottages . --,. . .,.;:. .... -. .. -..... _ --. -....... -. . -. SERV1NG THE NEWPORT -t/CSA COMMUNmES SINCE 1907 ON 1HI Wl8i WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM Inside UFE & UISURE For many college kidS, going back to school means living on campus. What can you do to make a dorm look I~ like a box and more like• home? We get people at Vanguard University and UC Irvine to tell us. See P11ge 5 ....... com•u•m FOIUll · Curt Pringle, newty appoint- ed ~lrector of 1M Or•nge County Fair B~rd. sits down with Features Editor Jennifer K Mahal to ulk about the the board and what it does. S..hge11 ....... SllOllS The UC Irvine women's volleyt>.11 team lost to USC. the Ho. 2 team In the nation, but the young Anteaters showed signs of growing up with a one- game win. Also, the Trojans' Aprll Ross. a Newport Harbor High product. played despite emotional pain from the loss of her mother Thursday. S..hge12 SUNDAY STORY ·1 remember my mother always working so hard to keep the bugs out of the huts they provided. My mother suffered mostly.· • • GREG Ff«/ ~y Pl.OT Newport Beach resident Suzy Kvuunen b renec:Uve ulhe dakbel tbe tldlonallzed version of her We, •stng To Me, Papa.• Her German- Amertcan family was deported to her father's home town of Pmtti.ba,Wald.4epk:tedln the painting at left, during World War D. "' . eo During World War Il, Suzy Kvammen of Newport Beach was sent to a Texas internment camp and then shipped to the country of her parents -Germany YCM.9110.... DMY PILOT he's sitting in a private conference room at Hoag Hospital's surgery wing casually talld.og about the confusion during World War ll. How she and other German Americans were sent to a relocation camp in Texas. The hardships that fol- lowed after being deported to Germany. The leather factory she worked in as a teenager abroad. And more. But Suzy Kvammen is oonvtnc· ingly cool. Blunl UnemoUoJW. Almost blase about her dramatic pa.st. She'• quick to dismiss some of her thoughts as silly or strange, slow to dwell on anything for too long. And then the 65-year-old starts talking about leather. Why, yes, she can smell her way to a pile of leather. And any time she buys shoes, she miffs the pair first to see whether it's leather or pleather. •1sn•t that interesting.• Kvammen quietly says to herself. She didn't fully realize the habit until this week. She was surpri8ed. Dwelt on it. even. But the first generation Ameriam SEE CAMP MGE 4 I ere TOP SIOIY Campbell: El Morro rent coilld pay for cove cottages Plllllll wou lb add to tbe pain of retuoling to school in 80 ~weather, only .mUes awaI f!om the beach, Or-oe Cout COUege students wwe faced with parking prob- , leml, long lines for books and overcrowded cla.urooms. Ofllda1s laid lllCAllOll enrollment at the college la up 11.2% from last year, with a total , of 22,501 so far. 1be number ii upected to me 3 to "~ when fall reg11tret1oo deadHnes are ' reecbed Wtth added students comes more demand for perking, books and dulel, oftldall said. One stu(lent said be had to sit on the floor in one of bJ,s classes bec:aust tbme weren't enough delu. • •And this wasn't a dass I was trying to add or anytbthg. It was a dau I WU registered for,• said 5 20-yeer-old Chad Brandel. S Many returning students -noticed more people on campus : and complained about long lines ; for eyerytb.ing from the bookstore .. to 'ihe bathroOm. but the biggest I complaint WU about parking. Parking between the hours of 9 a.m. and 1 p.m. wu deemed . impossible, students said. " -Lalltll IWper CIOWf'S Costa Mesa. She 11· may be rMChed M (949) 57~5 or tJv : HNll ~lollta.~mua:>t11. I •: WITllllD VICTORY Assemblyman John Campbell (R-Irvtne) got bi.I first taste of leg- " islative success Friday, when Gov. : Gray Davis signed bia tint bill into . : law. • 1be fresh· I llYllOllMllY man leglslator ! and car .. dealer was elected to bia teat in : November. • Assembly Bill 810 will pave the : way for patches of man-made " wetland.I in tbe watilll'lbad feeding l~ into Upper Newpad Bay. The bill gives the Irvine Ranch Water Dis- . trlct the pe>Wer to acquire land to "· install the wetlandl. s· The wetlands would filter pol- .. luted urban runott. deaning up I water before it enters San Diego Creek and Back Bay. _,... Cllnton CXMfJ 1he eiwtrt...,,.. Ind 111 John Wlljfta Alfpott. HI~ be Ned*' M ,. <t4I> 714-4.UO or bJ 4t4Nil It ,. ~mm. I DOll'1P .. _ . con·· l 1t'• getting harder " and larder to find a ;. •IA park top~ ., Costa try- ing to put together a game of soft- 111111n ... -.... Al I NDtd ~r Jn my bed for another couple ho&iia a;ep Oft a IWClllt Satur- day momlng, my pager *rted ,,.....,. I thoughl to myself, Ulould I check"' OI: Ji It /f!id going to be my annoying fdend ca1lJng belDre hit .,._ to WOife. I declded to loolc. It w.11 tlte Newpott leaoh Fire pepartment calling to give me a heada up about a atructure tire In Balboa. It am. me lclnd Ol lffl1Jke a fireman. I had to just throw on iny dOU... and gear and go. • By the time I got there, the th Wat ahocfy. out. But tiu. didn't bother me. Rec.ntly I llaw ,,_,,work- ing to make better contacts with the t1t9 at~nt COlf•D llDJllUD A 41-year-old Newport Beach woman was sen- tenced Thursday to * years ln prison after she "IUC pleaded guilty to voluntary SAFEn manslaughter for killing her hUJba.nd by running him over with their car last year. A Superior Court judge dedlned probation or a reduced jail sentence lot Leslie V~ Hout.en, who OD Peb. 2, 2000 knocked her husband K4IDQlth Jerome off bis bicycle and drove • ' their pwple Geo Storm aver him twice. That same day they had an argument about wbo WU to take the car, She had pleaded not gulltJ to the murder charge last year. But in June, aha took a plea offer from the Orange County dlatrict •tlalalf and pleaded guilty to the voluntary ma9Alaugbter charge. Van Hout.en's ettomey, Wlll9m ~.said-she had suffered for 17 years by living with Jetom.e, who hecaJled•acbronicabuMr.• Van Hout.en wiD likely end up spending about four years in ptlson as the judge gave her aedit for 660 days she baa already ipmt In jail. Jn otber court news, 0..-.. lodman'a arraignment on two misdemeanor charges relating to his allegedly loud~ P!9lJ la May wu put off from Wednesday to Sept 17, but not before attorneys from both.. -.,.... relating to discovery. Allo, a~ hM+1og wu pottponed. thil week in the case of Ramadan Dokovic, the Downey man aCCUled of pubildy lboOdDg and killing Newport Beach'• Mirolkv Made in May. The hearl.og was ~to~2.5. _...._ ....... QllWn puMC Mfli\y W counL lhe Ny be ruchld It {M) 574'42M "'by H'14111 et ._.,,,..,.tHMtlmes.com. ball or toeeer ~ i'wmli:ig into dlf • fic:u1t M the dty facing a mmch of free Ume at ttl 27 parb. The growth ol oigantz.ed youth • 1 Joved /uat IookJng out and aeelng nothJng but the Jee and the water and no aaphalt and ~nets .. -c..hlolt of Newport lllch, on Wsiting 1he Notth '°" this Sl.ml'nef. "The moat common mJsconcepUon la that we're all dead. It's really sad and unfortunate." -VldarteW... a Los AAgetes school tHc:her and ~of the Menominee and Lakota trtbes, on the mlslnfonnltlon she has seen about Nltfve Anwrialm. Sebanz 1ttended the 33rd annual Pow W'7N et the Orange c.ounty Fairgrounds on Aug. 25. ens.a "Ba;there cue going to be a lot o people uptet ~ut the e Change route.• -~'9ttt. longtime Balboa Penlnsull dvic ectMst, on the Newport Harbor Chlmber of Commerce's plans to shorten the ChistmlS Boat Parlde route and cut the ewnt to five days. beginning with the 2002 parlde. "I did not know that when you d.r1nJc and drive and ldll someone, that la not enough to convict you. • -Owta Potter. whose father ~ Boniface was strudt and kiltea Sept. 23, on the fNstmion lhe feels bec.M.tse no ctwges hive been filed egalnst drMr JMor'I T1f~...,, ~he test.d with I bloOd tlcohol level of .12 men thin two hours att.r the lnddent. Polk:e .... Still looking for~ "Whether I represent Lake Foreat and Irvine or Costa Mesa and Newport Beach, my po&IUon on El Thro remalns unchanged." _,, .. ,......_. ~ C.14l 1I (IMrw.). on wtwttw propcmd ntdistriding, which would glYe Costa Mesa and Newport leld'I to~ Ken Madcbc (R&rden Gro¥1), wfD c:Nnge his E1 Tot0 views. ~I Is lglinst the ldel of an airport at the fomw Mlrine bese. "How oan we feel comioltable and pray Jn a church where our aon la looked at dJlteren.tly, It'I a convenience factor, It~ llke aaylng 'If you're eaay to deal with, you ate welcome here.'" -~cam....., on~ his femlly stopped--~ ·-~~-Churdl '"'(.oN Mesi llftlr ~-.cs Nm a his wtfeto .... ,.. ~ dlltk IOl'I Cr9'g OUt Of. duttHpontoted '"'*ca.., bee.Mae 1he *"*"'~not hlncl9hlm. rJetting to the root @}'f'rfdangk Square's history doiunfri6Ji Younta O\Mg ol ~Boulevard was. OAtLV PILOT •1 got to Costa Mesa bi 1974, and r what WU considered downtown With the Yant HQ.me uplt41rl, , Co.ta Me.a 4lt the time WU~ Whole Foods Market in the ii1tich Oil the downhill alide, bl buemeot. m111icaJ group1 Mid. •11 just was not an area tbat ~ytng on a dals on the terrace and people liked to go to. It was k:iDd of , busy stJeetJ botdertng Us three daik. not very welcoming.• lookl~· BACK sides, 'Ihangle • The 200,()()().sq.-foot ~ was Square ts the non-built as a three story structure with a South-Coast-Plaza Mediterranean-style of architecture. bub of downtown The land, of course, ii trlangular, Costa Mesa. which explains the name ntangle . Built in 1991, the Square (Buffa adds that he's always project redeveloped what was prevt-considered it to be almolt the town ously just a duster of.little business-square.) .,. es. There were a couple of dentists, Edwards Cinema ~ first in ~ectronics sbop6, a huge parking lot June of 1992. During the next 17 in the ~ 4;11d Just a "hodge-months, other stores bpened. Busi- podge of~· remembers Dave ness in the downtown 4IM of the Gar~, president '?(the Costa city improved ~esa Historical Society and a long-•you could see tbat'wbole drama Sq\181'9 u tbe oenter. • ' In 1993, tbe structure was named tbe ~Of the state chapter ol the AJnericaD Planning Assn. for plan- ning d8iign. ~ 'JOday, occupants of the CX>Qlplex indude Johnny Rockets, Whole Foods, the cinema, Dames & Nobles Boolclellen, the Yard House, Virgin Recon:ls and Color Me Mine. •1t•s nice to see SOOlething like that It works, from a poliUcal stand- point and that did what it was sup- posed to do,• Buffa said of ntangle Square'• eff~ on the dty. •u was suJ)po&ed to kick off this Renais- sance rebirth of the downtown area.• time resident of the city. play out.• Buffa said. •you couJd see Fonner mayor ~eter Buffa . " that kinda moving up and down remembers how different that stnp Newport Boulevard, with ntangle • bo you ""°" of a person, place or event that deMNes a historical LOOK MCIC7 Let us know. Contact Young Chang by fax at (949) ~170; e-mall at young.dlangO lafimes.com; or mall her at c/o Dally Pilot. 3'30 W. Bay St.. CoSU Mesa, CA 92627. Triangle Square ftnlsbed construcUon and opened In 1991. Before then, It was a hodgepodge of small businesses. ~Brief Ir _in THE NEWS City gets grant for beach improvements Newport Beach has received a $497,000 state grant to improve Corona del Mar State Beach. The city was notified about the grant late last month. Officials said the money will go toward improving the restrooms and concession area at the beach. The money comes from Proposition 12, a statewide parks bond passed by voters in March 2000. The bond issue raised $2.1 billion for projects. Next week, the city will send out a mailer asking Corona del Mar residents bow they would like to see the money used, according to a dtymemo. The restroom and shade structures at the beach are more than 40 years old and in need of significant repair. Balboa construction to begin Tuesday Heavy construction work is set to begin Tuesday in Balboa Village. The city is beginning the first phase of a $9 million effort to improve the district's aging infrastructure. On Tuesday, aews will start doing utility relocation work on Balboa Boulevard, between Washington Street and Bay Avenue. Heavy excavation is set for Sept. 10. After the utilities are relo- cated, the dty will install a sys- tem ·of storm drains, a new water main in Balboa Boulevard and new restrooms, and begin rehabilitation of the Balboa Pier parking lot. During the project, alJ busi- nesses are expected to remain open. However, residents and visitors will have limited access in the area. AMIK . SCllUL111Ell MIUCUWOllll 48, Newport BMCh ... C>mring force behind Measure A. the $163-nllllion school bond passed In June •.• Led vol- unteer army of thousands that got an amazing 71" of the wters to ._ themselves to repair the dis- trict's aging 5Chools ..• Figures he spent more ~ 1,500 hours on the measure m Also~ of the Newport-Mesa Schools~ ... Humble ... Environment.II engi- neer ... ~rried to Usa George ... ~ldren: Ryan, 16. and Heldl. 13 ... ~golf t.dly, skis and mot#rtaln bfkes ... Great at telling ditty jokes, • tllefrt he learned growtng up Of\ a wheat farm ." Has a ptlVate pilot'i license that he rarefy makes use of ... u.... ... a.tre- Coming Wednesday, SepteiJiber 26! . Don't mlu out on the Issue everyone wW be read.Ing to see who made the list lo 20011 Docked boat comes close to sinking Orange County Sheriff's Harbor Patrol rescued a sail- boat from Newport Harbor on Saturday, after it nearly sank. Roger Lockhart, 44, called for belp at 11:58 a.m. after he saw bis dockoo l>oat take tn water, Sgt. James Thomas said. The 47-foot boat had sunk to a point where its top was four inches above water. Using two fireboats with three pumps each, sheriffs pumped more than &,000 gal- lons of water out of Lockhart's boat. The boat was fully raised 30 minutes after pumping began, Thomas SaJd . Lockhart's. boat was bed to his pier at Via Lido Sud on Lido Island. Thomas said the bodl began to sink due to a leak in the Nthrough hole," which is usu- ally pluggerl with d hose attachment. FOR THE RECORD Rea Elementary School was inadvertently left off of the ·eac1t 2 School. list of 5Chools in the Newport·Mesa Unified School District ~ ran in Sat- urday's Dally Pilot. The listing should have read as follows: RN Ea.m.nt.wy School 601 Hamilton St. Costa Mesa {949) 515-6905 PrindPitf: Ken Killian Orange !2ounty .Craft @ : & Sewing Festival @ 1 10 a.m.-5 p.m. at Ora~e County Fairground&~ I (off 405 exit F•lrview. off 55 mcli OetM•rlF.ir) I September 6. 7 & 8. 2001 I I (Com• niu,...uy Ui• 6tli '°" uny ~ ,,.,.,..,,,.) I SEWING •QUILTING • ~ • NEEDLE·A~S I Su •nd tiuy the lat.e5t 5upplle5, f•tirlc5, notion!>. I · pattern& and tools .. •II under one roofl I For .add1t1onal ehow information vl•tt our wetleite at: I www.c;raftandeewln9feetlV11l.c;om or ~II: 1-600-96CRAfT. I I I FREE SEMINARS & WORKSHOP S~ I I {your ticket 1s goorl f or .tll .l ct;1r.1 -·····~··························· CONTINUEO FROM 1 ~~~~ ..., ......... ...,: 'D ...... Ofb;elng &bee a •-c:batr ol surgery Mrvl~ of the •uxlUA!Y et ..,.. • boUd member iii tba Ba....,, Hameoww'• Ann., •91'8~andasiaward· wtmdQg Ilda'-not to rDention a beer-<biiiker and datt·tb.row· er, she jokes -Kvammen's past continues to revisit ber in the strangest ways. *My memory has gotten so cloudy about things,• the Newport Beoch resident con- fessed. "But I think the sub- conSdous never lets go of the experience.• When Kvammen was 8 and living in Chicago, she and 11,000 German Americans were placed in relocation camps and seen as potential enemy aliens, a threat to America's national security auring World WM ll. While Japanese American internment du.ring the war is commonly known. the German experience is buried deeper in history, said Aaron Breitbart, a senior researcher at the Museum of Tolerance in Los Angeles. ( "But that was a cofllmon sort of thing that w~-d6ne in all countries,• be said. "If the person was in the _cOuntry when the wa.vbroke out,~they would bezerned as enemy aliens." Breit! largely attributes media coverage -or the lack thereof -for why the Japanese experience is better known than the German chap- ter of the story. A new novel by Pat Mc:Cw:ie Irvine, a former food COVE CONTINUED FROM 1 "The idea that one part of the park could raise revenue for the other part of the park to achieve an Overall public good just makes sense,. Campbell said. •If there 1s public support for this, I think we can get it done.• State Parks officials have said they will open El Morro to the public after the residents' BUFFA CONTINUED FROM 1 a holiday, but upon which tbey may touch shoulders in marching pb.alanx and feel the stronger for it• Personally, when I lay down.my tools of labor, the last thing I want to do is touch shoulders with people I don't know and march in a pha- lanx. but those were different times. Over a century later, those lofty beginnings are all but forgotten. I have been led to under- stand by friends who come from the great Midwest that towns back there still have .,_at• Pel· 1li"IA JJSl*t II buecl onJC•""'*''s put bUt tbrowlJa a ~6-OI Gdkin. PubUlbld a.,,Xitblk, ·~ Me • .,. ... ....... and~ ...... but Ne4DYm~. •J WM mlDUDdecl to U bbW lllaaY ~In tbii COUl'l• try were unaware that there were Germani, as well at Japanese, put into these camp1;" lniDe laid. "That was very important to me. The thought Of a kid over there in Germany attracted me tt> the story." Kvammen'1 father, Karl Lechper, was sent to a men•s camp in Bismark. N.D., in 19'3, A year later, the entire family was moved to a relocation 'camp in Crystal Oty, Thus. In tbe fall of 19", the Lechner& were sent to Germany, where they lived for seven years and adjusted from being Americon to being German-until mov .. ing back to the States to read .. just the other way. An identity nightmare, to say the least. And this on top of being a teenager. The easy part, surprisingly, was the Crystal City camp. •As a child, it had a whole different concept. It was won- defful, • Kvammen said. ·we had cactus. We had our own funny mon~y. But it was a ·hardship on the adults." She had to attend German school at the camp -learn- ing the language was difficult -and the adults ran little busi- nesses, including laundry and retail services. MI remember my D)Otber always working so hard to keep the bugs out of the huts they provided,• Kvammen said. •My mother suffered mostly.• The situation worsened when they were forced to move to Germany. leases run out in three years. •we do not intend to have them stay," Parks spokesman Roy Steams said. •we have a huge demand for campsites. This will give us more of those." The state plans to install 60 campsites for RVs or tents, pic- nic areas and parking lots, according to the 1982 General Plan for the park. With a softening economy, Gov. Gray Davis has warned of looming budget cuts in all departments, an anno\Ulcement that has called into question how the state will pay for plans Labor Day paractes and com- munity picnics and block par- ties, etc. U there are such things around here on the Big Last Weekend, I am not aware of them. I apologize in advance if ~ you or your group is throwing the 64th Annual "Samuel Gompers -Look for the Union Label -Labor Day" festival in Llon's Park or what- ever, but if you are, I missed il Around these parts, Labor ' Day boils down to this: beach, barbecues, sales. Once again, I will work assiduously to l avoid lbe wandering mass of humanity in seardl of long weekend fun. There is no beach inviting enough, no Sbe la~, recelHmg tJa9 day tbe bOmbs fell. Kftnpeen, u an Amedcan wboee dec- tioo lay wttb the American ~w~inthemid­ dle ole meet in Pwth D:n Wald Wiim AmeriCan pJaDi!li began '° Dr ovemeed. She be<:eme esdted and waved at her •American buddies.• Then boinbl .wted dropping, and the ldgh-tailed U to the nearest bo\118, "My guard.i.(ln angel sav~ me,• she said. Children 1n the small town, her father's home, pjcked on Kvammen endlessly because. she wore colorful Western clothe• while everyon& else went about in drab, village -garb. But after outgrowing her wardrobe, which was scarce considerin g she arrived in Germany with minimal suit- cases and the clothes on her bock, Kvammen wore dresses that her mother, Eleanor Lechner, made from red Nazi Dag material. Town residents often broke into the numerous warehouses Hitler owned around the country. Kvam.men's mothet made everything from bedsheets to dresses with the cloth. "lt was a poor material,• Kvammen said. "We'd wake up with red on our skin.• . The rural German land- scape -with cows and expanses of greenQy -con- trasted uncomfortably with the urban Chicago scene Kvammen was born into. The customs were new. The rules were unfair. Girls weren't allowed to wear pants -even wpile riding horses -but Kvammen rebelled and wore lederhosen (leather shorts) anyway. You can imagine the htJiassment. -They bad a little bit of a stigma on me as being' differ- ror the 46 cottages in the historic district. The historic district was plaood on the National Register of Historic Places in 1919 as a rare example of vemaclilar beachfront architecture. The former residents of those cot- tages left their homes on July 8, after receiving evidion notices earlier this year. Steams said it would take between $12 and $20 million to restore the cottages. In order for Campbell's plan to go through, the freshman legislator woultl need to intro- barbecue luscious enough. no sale price low eDOJJgh to lure me from my lair. As always, the high point of my long weekend will be Monday night, by the televi- sion. wat.ching one traffic reporter after another desaibe the endless lines of cars snaking their way down the 1- 5 and the 91. I particularly enjoy watching the freeway misadventures of the poor souls-Who made the worst travel choice imaginable - Las Vegas on a three-day weekend. · So try as we might, we find small meaning in Labor Day aside from summer's end. But , that, in itself, ls not without significance in our comer of the universe. After all, this is a beach community, is U not? But i1 isn't just the twice- daily crush on Newport Boulevard that is now trans- formed. Over the next few weeks, as the learning experi- -· Kw '" .. ilakl. ADdb'a l 11 lfget, llM\ WM different. By the age of 14, ~w:r: ~·-er mea· IUl#lg goOO.s .• wOlbCI' all ~id· fadlity that reeked QI die Wfuid aludp involved in leetber production. •Tfiil, apperently, was not a hardship for me because I guess I was proud I could sµp- port my family," Kvammen seid. Th thls day, she loves the ieather smell. · And the bomb-dropping aside, the American soldiers who invaded the town always treated Kvammen like a "Jlrin<:!eu." Sile got chocolates and orange• and other American (1o.odles galore. She got to stay out pa.st the 6 p.m. curlew to watch movies and walk ihe stteets with the sol- diers. The German kids, of course, grew more hostile and jealous. •When the invasion troops came into Germany, every sol- dier wanted to adopt me, prac- tically,• Kvammen said. Being sent to Germany also had a side benefit. She got to know her father, an unabashed drinker who Kvammen also calls a philanderer and wom- anizer. •My father was around more, he didn't have the oppor- tunity to roam around,• she said. •And I ne\rer really held it against him.• When the family returned to America in 1951, Karl Lechner remalnedJn Germany. Kvammen still isn't clear whether he didn't want to return or whether he couldn't. He might have been black- listed, the survivor assumes, because in America be refused to go to war against Germany, ud Iii Qaailllf lli9...,.d ID dfleAmdlf ~t, ao one tom~· Wbilli Kvauutiell r9tutQed to the .... the ... 15 . "It JWai 8 Vfl!1 JlberetiASJ feelipg, J WU ftfY~ IO cOme back. but by tbaD I WU 0 ~and very Ccafwied and very, v~ far behind iD the teeny bopper •.• you JmoW how AinertcaD teenagers are very f~willy and bappy·go- lucky people," Kvammen said. She's been back to Germany three times~ the '50s. Once in 1914, again in 1978 and most retently in 1994. :fhe first time, she went back to the leather factory. She cried, she wanted to just get out, she didn't really know why she felt the emotions she did. In 1994, her father passed away, and Kvammen went to bury him. She brought back a box of yellowed history. Karl Lechner's passport with a swastika on the cover, pictures, documents, various lists that don't tell the complete story. She hasn't gone through everything yet. •1 don't know why. I really don't,· Kvammen said. ·wen. maybe someday I'll go through · it.. The relics are kept at Kvammen's storybook home where a frontyard resembles a realized Secret Garden and wllere Puss, the cat, lounges all day on a white-paned win- doW$ill. The grassy area out- side with the flowers and patio table reminds Kvammen of her past. "I've got the greenery I had in Germany,• she muses. And, Kvammen said, that's a good thing. • YO.... OWtg writes fearutes. She may be reached at (949) 574- "268 °'by &-mail at young.changOJatimacom. duce a bill to change state law. Encouraging RV users from out The state cannot raise the El of town to use El Morro would Morro residents' rent more than • give short shrift to locals, the latest ~crease in the Campbell said. C<:>nswner Pricelndex, Steams MThat will not benefit local s&d._ people,• Campbell said. •u we Right now, the state nets . t th 1461 bisto . about $840 ooo per year from El can res ore ose n c Morro. ' houses, that will be something The stZlte bas also pledged to the entira community d Orange open up El Morro to the public. County could make use of.• "It's public land,· Stearns said. -state Parks should not be a renter to people living on public land.• But Campbell is less than enamored with the state's plan. ence resumes for the little ones and the big ones, the traffic game retUm.s to winter rules. Long lines of parent- mobiles waiting to drop off and pick up at K-through-8 sites, high school and college parking lots bursting with cars (luxury cars at the high schools, 1988 compacts at the colleges). You'll actually be able to drive on Coast Highway and find a parking space ahnost anywhere you want The fly- ing baQners tor ·captain Coal's Wme Coolers• and "KRRT -All Dreck. All the lime• will be gone, as will the small clutches of people with the disposable cameras, the madras Bermuda shorts and the black knee soc.ks. ln about six weeks. it'll be time to wrestle with the clocks and VCRs yet again, and that first shock of walking 04t of work in the dark. The college football season opens this .. • PllUI Ointan coven the environment and John Wayne Airport. He may be reached at (949) 764-4330 ex by e-mail at paul.clintonOlatimes.com. weekend, believe it or not. and pro football next week. More importantly, the • dizzying holiday spiral is just weeks away: Halloween, Thanksgiving 30 days later and 30 days after that, it's the big one, Edith. This is too scary. Wait, I have an idea. Since so few of us remember what Labor Day means anyway, nex1 year, we ignore it. Sum- mer isn't over unW we say it's over, whether or not the fat lady sings. God knows it's hot enough in September to fool anyone. Don't talk about the holi- days, don't think about them. don't look at them. I~ we have at least three weeks until Christmas decoratioos ..start going up. This year, we'll be totally pre~ weeks and weeks before lUlyone mutters the first ·Happy Whatever.• Meals planned. ~ wrapped. and it's still summer. This could work:. Yeah. I'm sure. Happy Labor Day. Now get busy. I gotta 9<?· ' • PE1B .,.,. Is a fQt'l"ntf ~ Mesa mayor. His cotumn runs Sun- days. He may be rucheQ via ..mell at PtrNelo/.tom. ....... , COl'IAMllA ........... AlllUtO Wlft wm r.,aollid In the blodt 1:56 p.m. -.:A home ~In dw at4:o?p.m. j ~. •Ha•er~:An auto theft was reported In tN 2800 block at 8:46 1.m. lhutlday. • Newpart ~All ..._.was report8d In the 2600 block at 7:31 p.m. lhuncNy. • .., JI •a Drtw: An auto theft was reported In the 900 block at 10:13 a.m. Thursday. • $o&lllt eo.t Drtve: A ' prowler was reported In the 1000 block at 12:17 a.m. Thunday. • bit 11th 511'..t: Annoy- ing phone calls wet'9 report- ed In the 2IQ block at 2:36 p.m.~ • I.Mt 11th str..t end lr'¥lne Awnue: An accident lnvofvlng an lrijury was reported at 9:21 p.m. Thursday. • EMt .. 5tN9t: Tres- passing WM reported In the 100 block at 9~45 a.m. Thursday. NEWPORT BEACH • w.t ...... loulevwd: Vandals reportedly poured an unknown type of chemi- c.al on • store's display win- dow. c.ausing perma~t darJlage, In the 2200 blodc at 11 a.m. Thursday. • c.t..lpa: Annoying phone calls were reported In the 2900 block at 5:30 p.m. ~. ..... c..-1-.-.. ,. Pet- ty theft was l'9pOrted tn the 2000 block at 2:.20 p.m. Thursday. • .... COMt...,...,. Boat parts wofth $-40,000 were reponed stolen In the 6m blodt at 10 a.m. Thursday. • Newpart °""-Drtw: A cellular phone was report· ed stolen from a car In the 100 block at 12:35 p.m. Wednesday. tt has been one year since you left ua at the age of 81 . We try to believe that you are in a better place, but It la hard. Not • day ps bv that we do not tt*'k of you. We arv left wttl ooty fond memorita, and fof that we are grar.ful. Thank you for being socn a good Pop. Hulbend, Grandpa 0,..0.., Bn:Jttlef, Undl and Friend. LM Fcnver: Jane, Juli, Lon1, Rob, Brad. Maro, Mary, Jaycee, Megan. Sydney, Bllylle, Rot:lt*, e.a. Ori, ~ Frwlde, Sharyn, ML ~ CalOI and J«ry • Doily Pilot David Silva INSIDE/OUT Going to bed dreaming of rice and beans I f the governor really wanted to solve Califor- nia's power woes, he might consider putting in a call to my mother, a proven expert in the field of energy acquisition and distribution. I imagine such a call would go like this: D~vis would, in tllat robotic way of his, say: "Dolores, they t~'.I me you know all about the energy business. So tell me, how do I provide power to my people?" And my mother would lean forward and answer: •Well, Gray, I'll tell you how I did it. Rice and beans.• The human ~Y needs about 2,600 e&lories of ener- gy a day to function properly, twice that if you eat like my brother Michael. Multiply that by six kids and that's 15,600 My mother was a big believer in meat. But when times were really tough, well, at least we calories had the rice every day. and beans. My mother was responsible for providing every single one of those calories, not even counting her own nutritional needs. For a low-in.come Latina mother of six, that meant only tw<? things: rice ond beans. Rice is one of the world's perfect foods. Irs rich in car- bohydrates and other whole- some nutrients. Almost nobody on the planet is aller- gic to it. It's easily prepared. and complements just at>out everything. But it especi.6.lly complements beans, another of God's most noble gifts. Beans are full of p~tein, are SEE INSIDE PAGE 6 I Karen Wight's cok.mn wtll return next week. SEAN HUER I OAl.V Pl.OT Beth Mc:J?nney, left, Amber Young, center, and Sarah Luckett have shared a dorm since freshman year at Vanguard UniVersity in Costa Mesa. Young Chang DAILV Pl~OT Fred looks absolutely exhausted. The old, stuffed-Pound.Pup- py has ears that droop so badly,. they spread across bis owner Sarah Luckett's cushy bed. He moved from their Bakersfield home to Vanguaxd University four y~ ago. This week, he found yet another refuge as Luckett, 21, started her senior year in a new ec-or Vanguard students and UC Irvine advisors share what makes a dorm room a home dorm room. She never sets up house without him. Never mind that he's old and looks a bit ragged and could, maybe, use a good spin through the washing machine. He's one of Luckett's dorm-dec- orating musts. Student are •very intentional in creating an environment they're comfortable with, something that feels like their home,• said David Gould, director of residence life at Vanguard. With the fall semester start- ing and Ikea lines snaking TRAVEL TALES through the aisles, college students and dorm-life leaders at Vanguard and UC Irvine revealed what makes a new college home livable. Luckett and her two roommates, Amber Young and Beth McKinney, chose to squeeze three people in a dorm for the sake of friendship. They conquered the feat of making three personalities show without driving one another crazy. Eacbjnstalled a single white SEE DORM PAGE 6 Dancing~ the tango across'Europe Youngehllftg 0MLY PILoT L ooklng for the Blakeneys? Follow the tango trail. , .. The Newport Beach couple vacationed in Finlabd, Swe- da and Depmark last month, bltting a tango festival at every stop. · , But let's first settle the dif- ference between ballroom tan- go, as most of us know it, and Argentine tango. The ballroom tango is just a dance with set techniques that everyone uses and ends up looking the same, Patricia Blakeney said. Argentine tango is sultry, complex, jazzy and emotion.al. she said. "You dance the way you feel it, not the way somebody else thinks you should,• Bla.k- -eney, 58, $aid. "Everything has feeling in Arg~ tan- go. You don't want to look like someone else. You want to look like yourself.• While in Selnajok:i. P\n)end, the couple stopped by the Tango Festival -a major annual event where everyone dances in the streets while bands play the tango, as well as other genres, and food booths and carnival attractions stand nearby. •Everyone goes in there and dances tango, they weer whatever they feel like. Some SEE TRAVEL PAGE I ... " '1 . , >"' ~ .. .. • " ,,.• •t ' ·. . ' .. ,. • " . .. • .. f \ - \ ........ bif4; It's Ul Pm:&:~ ·~~ ........ a.mm•ped CIDdle bold- .. Mad tilbfes oa.'\H the ~. Tbe~neowt­ des .... all readulble lying dOwn. •t've known freshmen who didn't want to do anything untl1 everythiDg was set up,• Young, 21, said. Demrating •gtves them a teD1e this ts mine,• McKin- ney, also 21, added. 1be three root111Mtes, who ~ to J;iave nearly perfect- ed the art of living together and remaining f.dends, also share similar furnishing tastes. Inflatable seats and ~ws are always tn. they Said. Decorating lights and posters of 'N Sync have yet to get old. Mike BOwer, director of public relations at·the univer- sity, said his son Jonathan never leaves home without the Pleystation. He is a junior transfer student at Vanguard. Another Mlared favorite touch are hand-painted pic- ture frames. Ikea sells three for $1 in an ilncolored, wood- en shade. McKinney, Young and Luckett paint them blue, a Martha Stewart green: rosier pastels and other sub- tle, soothmg colors. The minimalist, black-and-· ·TRAVEL CONTINUED FROM 5 dress fancy. Some are in shorts. There are thousand.S and thousapds of people,• said Blakeney, who manages a horse hospital in Cypress. The tango is the national dance of Finland, which explains why the .natives devote a day-to celebrating. But Blakeney's husband Bill, 64, still finds the tradition surprising. •1t•s unusual that in a country that's dark three months out of the year, one of the activities they're involved in is tango," be said. A news segment on 60 Minutes, seen years ago by the Blakeneys, showed that the Finnish people are more ONGOING EVENTS • Send ONGOING EVENTS items to the Daily Pilot, 330 W. Bay St .. Costa Mesa, CA 92627; by fax to (949) 646-4170; or by calling (949) 574-4298. Include the time, date and location of the event, as well as a contact phone number. A complete listing is available at http://www.dailypllot.com. The Costa Mesa Senior Cen- ter bas ballroom dancing with live music from the Peter Van Orscbott Ttio on Tuesday nights from 7:30 to 10:30 p.m at 695 W. 19th St., Costa Mesa. $4. (949) 548-3884. SEAN Hl1fR I oAJlY Pl.OT Sarah Luckett's longtime companion: Fred. rests on her dorm room bed. white toucl1 appears to have become taboo. ·This year it's really popu-"" lar to have bright colors like ·oranges, reds and pinks.• Young said. Students are especially opting for handmade or store- bought quilts an(;l rugs, which can add color to the noor. And photo collages 1D4Y be the most common ~IY· There are seve(al sprucing up the walls of the three Van- guard students' room. ··To kinda ~p a memoiy wall of their experiences at the school,• Gould said. Natalie Schonfeld. assod· ate director of residential life at ua, said tastes run the gamut on ber campus. "There isn't anything par- ticularly special,• she said. "It's more what makes stu- dents comfortable and makes them feel at home.,. Students th~ haven't moved in' yet, but past years have taught Schonfeld that no two undergrads decorate the same. But they do stop at some of the same shops. BD1 and Pidrtda B1akmey of Newport Beach spent Ume dandng across PlnlBnd, Denmark and Sweden ~summer. reserved in general and even speak less openly to one another. "But when they tango, it brings people together,• said Bill Blakeney, who works in Jewish Family Service of Orange County sponsors an ongoing healing support group for the chronically ill. The purpose is to provide participants with emotional and spiritual support to man- age illness and its conse- quences. The group meets at 7 p.m. Thursdays at Jewish Family Service, 250 E. Baker St., Costa Mesa. A~dance · is free, but registration is required. (714) 445-4950. Scrabble Club No. 350 meets from 6 to 10 p.m . Thursdays at Borders Books, Music & Cafe on 19th Street and \. the engineering department at Hoag Hospital. •Where . normally the men wouldn't be so open and communicate with the ladies that well, taJl- go allows them to do that. Newport Boulevard, Costa Mesa. $3. New players are welcome. (949) 759-4871. The Coln and Stamp Club meets from 1 to 3 p.m. Mon- days at the Oasis Senior Cen- ter. New members interested in trading, buying and selling stamps and coins are being sought to join these informal meetings. There are no fees required. (949) 644-3244. Jewish Family Service offers ongoing bereavement sup- port groups tor adults at all stages of loss. The groups share experiences, hear how TEMPLE BAT YAHM L'.DOR v~DOR Prom 0-nn't:ltton to GetU!mtton , Favorite$ include Ikea, Thrget and thrift stores, as vinta.ge-Iooklng furniture is trendy nowadays. •1rs beoome more cre- ative, • YpUDg sakl. •0ur frelbman year, (the stores] didn't have much. But now, there's a dorm section." Schonfeld~ why students ta1lie on the task of decoratiag IO seriously. •Because it's their home away from bome -they live witb us ~or Dine months,• she said. •'Ibis becomes an import.ant space for~·• We wanted to see what it was all about." Since first developing an interest in tango -it started when the oouple saw the play •nmgo Argentine· 15 years ago and fell in love with the dance -the Blakeneys have vislted Argentina regularly to participate in tango festivals. They have taken lessons there and danced at festivals everywhere from Stanford to Spain. They have become regulars on the intemattc>nal tange> drcuit. •Every time we travel it has something to do with Argentine tango," Patricia Blakeney said. - • Have ycx.i, or someone yoU know, gone on an interesting vacation recently? Tell us your adventures. Drop us a line to 1nMll ....._, l30 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627; e-mail young.changOlatimes.com; or fax to (949) 646-4110. others deal with grief, receive support and learn ways to cope with sadness and loss. One group meets at 7 p .m . Tuesdays at ~eth Jacob in Irvine. The second group meets at 10 a .m. Tues- days at Temple Judea in Laguna Hills. The third. .group meets at 1 p.m. Thurs- days at the Ezra Center in Anaheiin.Free,butadvance registration is required. (714) 445-4950. Jewish Family Service of Orange County provides a support and discussion group . to assist participants in their recovery from cbildhood or teenage sexual abuse. The group meets from 8 to 9:30 p.m. Tuesdays at 250 E: Bak- er St., Costa Mesa. Advance registration is required. (714) 445-4950. ttvadldlll .. aad'--~ Ind ..... tbat you ... ..... -, ... .,. ;au.'19 eating tbiml. an4 IOok ablOlutely delidoul laid <Alt ·nut to a~ Of nee. Add bllllDI to tice, or rice to ~.and you have a meal. ltkle and beam aie also =-~=t ~about them. My moCber could easiJY spend $200 a week-ttUs is back tn the '60s and 70s -on · grooadea; more if she wanted the Utde extras. like proper nutrition for her kids. Rice and beans cost pennies a pound, and a little went a long way. Oooe she bad the rice and beam goJng, all. my mom bad to do W4S find a cbickep or some other kind of meat subetance and her children bad A complete meal. My mother was a big believer in meat. But when times were really tough. well, at least vie bad the rice and beans. We'd ask mom what was for dinner, and more often thi\b not she'd say, *Chick- en.• Which meant c:hicken boiled in a pcit with potatoes and &e850nings, anQ rice and beans. Sometimes she'd cook the rice right in the pot with the chicken, and dinner would suddenly adopt a sense of ethnic pride and call itself amn con poll<>. Less frequently, about once a week or so, we'd ask what's for dinner and mom would say, "'Steak.• Which meant some cheap cut of beef boiled in a pot with potatoes and seasonings, and rice and beans. Everything had to go into a pot Beef. Pork. Chicken. It went further that way. Sometimes I would ask my mom what was for dinner just after my brother or sister had asked the same ques- tion, and my mom would get annoyed and reply "I,.ob- ster, • or "Filet mignon.· I'd say, •Really?" and she'd say, "No. It's chicken. Now go watch1V." Often, my mother would serve platanos, fried plan- tains, with the rice and beans. But these she conslii- ered a luxury, and they were the first to po in lean times. A plate of chiCken, rice, beans and platanos was the com- plete package, and an indi- cator of things going relative- ly well in our household. · Mom became a positive wi7.a.rd with rice and beans. She bad been preparing them since she was old enough to bold a pot, having cooked for her brothers and sisters, and by the time I ca.me along had perfected the art. She knew exactly the right cooking times, knew just the right amount of sea- sonings and stock and veg- etables to throw in, and when. My mother was famous for her Spanish rice and beans, Puerto Rican rice and beans, 8ITOZ con gand- ules (rice and chick peas - the mystery bean) -just· •bout any lice and bean dish one could imagine so long as it didn't call for expensive ingredients. The quality of my mother's rice and beans was the best part about being poor. Of course, my brothers and sisteB and I hJd no way of knowing that thb food served to us every day could n.¥t reltaUlaDfl allweJa*V ~ ...... ,.WU all w.1 L u.w. ~ ~-vilillty, tor--.,, tbiDI n.tilllr thlm rice and bMDI. -1 my)nother WOUid say, •Opie dly, you're~ to Wish you bad food like this. You'D go to bed drea!o- tng ot tt." OUr friends bad a greater appredation of my mother's cooking. We'd invite them to cUnner, and they'd say, •0ob, ts~ mom 9QnDa make rtce and beansr My siblings met I were always blown away by this reaction. To us, it WU like asking the cast· aways from "Gilligan's tslancS-: •Ooh, are you guys gonna have coconuts?" It didn't escape my moth- er's a~tion that anyone who dined at her bouse instanlly fell in Jpve with her cooking. F<>r years, she bad made a few extra bucks here and there selling plat.es of her food at holiday events and the big Puerto Rican Festival in San Pedro. She decided to get serious about it. She introduced her rice and beans to the menu of the cafeteria where she worked as a cook, and they became such a hit that she a,cided other items, like tamales and amn con pollo. She made so much money for the compa- ny that the owners expanded the cafeteria -which bad really been just a snack shop inside a department store - into a· full-fledged restaurant. And they made my mother the manager of it. From that base of opera- tions, she launched her catering business, Dolores' Catering. Soon. the Hunting- ton Park Chamber of Com- merce, the Huntington Park Police Department and City Hall were all calling her for her rice and beans. She catered weddings and birth- day parties. In this way, my mother graduated from wiz- ard to alchemist. She toOk her rice and beans and turned them into gold. She never made a fortune, but she made enough so we could finally stop calling our- selves poor. Some people achieve suc- cess by buying and selling real estate, others by playing the stock market. My mother soa1ced, boiled and simmered her way to the American Dream. Rice and beans paid for my mother's down payment on her h<me. They paid for my sisters' proms. They paid for my brother's class rtng and they paid for the suit I wrue at my graduation. My mother called me the other day as I was eating a Marie Callendar's frozen din- ner. She asked if I wanted to come over and visit her Sun- day. "I'd love to,· I said, ·sut I already have plans. How about next week?• •oh, oome over, Davey,• lbe iDsist.ed. •rm making dbmer.· That~~~· •What are you l' .Cbidten.. she Now, bow coul;d 1 say no totbatt That Dlght. I.went to bed dreaming d. doe and beans. • DAVID SILVA Is the dty editor of the GlencWe ~ a sister paper to the ~lly Pilot. His CDlumns wilt liA)e¥ occasionally on Sundays. He can ~ reecned by .mall at davld.sJtv.flllitlJMS.com. I ! \ l~ !~• l\ . ' ••MHW'tU• 11 - I Samantha Rekoon brought the paper with her on vacation in Maui. Aloha, Samantha. Costa Mesa Cadette Girl Scout Troop No. 762 went to Oahu.,Hawall, and remembered to bring their local paper along for the ride. 100;0 150;0 to ~ff w/ad SAT 11-6 SUN 11-6 1661 Superior* • Costa Mesa • 949-642-7600 "Next co Urban Rcfurban Vint.age GET FIT and GET ON TV A major television fitness company Is seeking 75 men and women In fflls area who are 20 to 60 years of age and are 10 to 30 pounds CNefWe/ght. wa are offering the opportunity to try on exciting, new, training system/ Qualified portlclponts will reoelve 6 weeks or more of Professional Fitness 1tolnlng wnlle testing some of the hottest 'nlNi<Xl'> the-scene• fitness equipment oocJ hcNe the chCnOe d oppeo-lng on · NdtlonOI Televfs/on, "''at' lbloluttly . ,. cod This could be the fltiOI t:no#iiOfOf that ~~getlnto '#Mt l:Jejf ~of. >GI 11&--0orri miss .. ~ Costa Mesa Jloy Scout Troop No. 188 hiked up to the top of ML Whitney on Aug. 19 with their Dally Pilot Michelle Way of Newport Beach brought a Dally Pilot with her to a Spanish Immersion program in the Domini- can Republic. Sh~ ts posing with fellow students. Mothers from Harbor View Elementary School relaxed on a Palm Desert spa vacation and still remembered to bring a copy of the paper. ' I set hope iri motion to improve local liws. • I I Satunl•y Nights April thru October 949.492.H33 Annual Harbor Heritage . Run -Free Rtnass Fair Olficoal W¥m up Race IOI e 5K FEATURE RACE 2KFUN RIMW.K KIDS' KLASSIC RACE ...... Od ... 8,21111 l\llwllll'lllm1IDI' 11111 lclllll ••••7:30Lm. !I 8:m LAI. Iii ltl8 I.II. ,,.......... ... \. ., ........ ., ... ..... .,.0.-... ... •hlf) 11 • lrvlll In. •TL& llllJr lcllll IP 4, 11 ........ .... ,.. ...... .. 7:111&117:11 .... • UCEllY Daily Pilot TOJ>AY ICOOTIR SBIU HUllTERIJUllWIEt HORY SHOW . 2 SpolWONCfby. Orange County FalrgJounds Equestmin Center Wherr. Fairgrounds Equestrian Center. 88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa When: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Cost: Free c:om.ct: (714) 708-1662 - MONDAY '-'80RDAY CARCRUISE 3 Spa ..... by. Orange County CnJisin' Association WheN: Orange County Fairground\. 88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa When: 9 a.m. to 11 p.m. SUndey and 9 a.m. to noon Monday C.olt: SS adults, S7 mlllWy and seniors. Children 11 and younger enter free. Contllct: (714) 826-1948 TUESDAY ntE PHOTOS Of lllANDAU. INGAU.S Spot.and by. Orange Coast College 4 WheN: OCC's Photo Gall«y, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa When: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday C.olt: Free Contact: (714) 432-5520 YIEDNESDAY 5 BOATING SKILLS QA.SS 5ponlond by. Flotllla 27 of the Coast Guard Auloliary -...: Newport Beach Harbor Department, 1901 Bay51de Drive, Corona del Mar When: 7 p.m. Class is six-weeks long. Cost: $45 lndudes text. workbook and graduation eom.ct: (714) 62S-9777 or (714) 813-7699 THURSDAY Mu.2001 cou.ECn0N MRTY Spol.and by. Jane 6 Magazine and Diesel WheN: Diesel In South Coast Plaza. 3333 Bristol St., Cosu Mesa When: 7 to 9 p.m . C09t: Free c.onuct: (310) 401-0702 CRAFT AND SEWING FESTIVAL Spot ..... by. Rusty Bam Promotions WhMt: Orange County F.irgrounds, Bldg. 10, 88 Fair Drtve, Cost. Mesa \ wt..\: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Thunday =Sat)#day Cone.ct: (800) 962·7238 - I I . COITICI ISi · . ., IOI 111 nl• Of AmlUll 2·1, 200 I SPOTLIGHT The Divas go ducky l.ll.IOA IUCH II.AIKO IARIECUE They don't quack. They don't peck. But they sure can float. On Sept. 9, the first Surfin' Ducky Wave Race will have the rubber critters bobbing in the water in a mad dash -actually a slow crawl -to the shore after being dropped from a boat. The du_cky race is part of the Balboa Beach Blanket· Barbec\ie, an old-fashioned afternoon event with pro- ceeds to benefit the renova- tion of the Balboa Theatre. The picnic is being organized by the Divas of the Balboa Theater Foundation. community picnic, even music. The Nomads, a surf band, is scheduled to play. There will even be a cutest bathing beauty contest for children ages 2 and younger. All together now - •Awwwwwww.• Best of all, the admission is free. It's the proceeds from the sale of barbecue and ducky race entries that will make money for the theater. Sounds like a good way to spend a Sunday afternoon. FYI WMt: Balboa Beach Blanket Barbecue WheN: Balboa Peninsula Park, .ctjecem to the Balboa Pie< When: Noon to 5 p.m. C09t: Free. Ducks for the dudty race can be punNsed for SS each. The first 10 to hit the sand win prizes. There will be a kite flying contest, a hula hoop competi- tion, a three-legged race, a water balloon toss -all of the things you'd want from a • c.ont.ct: (949) 646-5161 Let the good times roll at Saturday benefit MAlll IUS .. ca.mo llH1 Big Brothers and Big Sisters of Orange County will hold a Mardi Gras and Casino Night at the Vil- lage Crean Mansion in Newport Beach at 6 p.m Saturday. A live jazz band and a Cajun-style din- ner will spice up the party. There will also be a silent auction and casino tables. rn Whft: Mardi Gras and Casino Night -....: Village o.n Mansion In Newport BftCh • Wt--= 6 p.m. Saturday C.-.: $50 to~ I lg Brothen and Big Sistets-of ~ County ContM:t: (714) 544-7773 PWUlllSAHUD ~ WOrtc.on 'Pl building sk.itls and 'J04ll tan at the Conll'nodores Club's '40ttl •nn.uatl Sahdcastte con- test. The o~lr1cy temporary sculptures •• #\#\to look at. ...... s.pit.. TASTE Of NEWPORT ...,.. and nosh at this ttni d-v event tt\R fu.. tur9S foods from some of thebelt~ln 1he .... not 1IO mention f9buba niulk.. .._ ............ ...... ,. ., SEPTEMBER 12 9 451711 ''° 11 12 ?41 15 16 G • ,, » 21 2'l f.l>>tlS fD 27 •29 )0 MAM YOUR CALENDARS J: LaborO., 14-16: Taste of Newport 11: Ro5tl Hashanah begins 21: Race for the Cure 26: Yorn Klpptl begins 21: Eclectic Orange Festival opens OCTOBER S MTWT FS 12l 4 Q 6 78910111113 14 15 16 f1 18 19 20 21 22 2l 2A 2S 21> 11 28 29 )0 ~ MARK YOUR CALENDARS 5: Randy Travis with Pacific Symphony Pops 31: Halloween NOV MBER S M T W TFS I 2 3 456 71910 G> u 13 14 15 0 f1 18 19 20 21 e n 2A 2S .lfi El> 28 29 )0 MAM YOUR CALENDARS 11: Vetera~s D.JY 16: Tree Hgl)ttrlg at Fashion Island 22: Thanksgiving 27: Swing! at the Center DECEMBER s M T W T , s 2 3 ' 5 6 7 • 9 10 II u 13 " 15 16 f1 • 19 20 21 22 23 2A 2S 26.27 28 29 lO 31 JANUARY S M T W T , s 1 2 3 4 5 ,.. 7 • 9 10 11 Q 13 " 15 16 '1 . .., 20 21 22 n :z.t lS » 11 28 29 )0 31 FEBRUARY S MTW TPS 1 2 3 ' 5 ' 7 • 9 101112U1'1516 17 •1'»212223 »l5JIZ721 FRIDAY 17 SA1URDAY Call (949) 642•4321 Toda! 9'.uw:IA1 S.ptiaaber 9. 2001 1UX> Q11l -4:00 pm ma c:mono Stcat.e Beach 11;:r==:1 MoeC ~mqu. ScuMlOutla ~·1·-2"' fllon..Maslrn • 1' -)'" Mii5arrs • 1•-:!"' ~·1·-)" Most R-~ ()wr,111 ~ • 525 "-~-M.ndom (6) Eoch~ pcuddpmt w01 ncetn OlfS FRn l'OUNl-trip dcket to C..11-1 • ·--<•,,..,.,,,.- ~ c..-.,.,, .,, ..... ,1.eMt,.,, ~-.L ... ·~ .... rn. s.t. IC.,,_ MU,_ s.t. S.,C. II. 4 ,_ I• U ,_ -.. s.r. ~ "'-,. , ,. ,......,c..wa..-....... ,_ .... ____ .. __ ------·c:.... ---------QI .. a.-.. _,__ ___ ._. ............ a. .............. -~.o.. ---------- IDllO"lllS ~Congressmen, send tniS ~water bill down the drain . . : I t is time for both of Newport- = Mesa'• repleleDt.afives to • show their dout In the : Republican Party. A bill working its way · through the House of Representa- tives, which could open Newport Harbor to more pollutioo. deseJVeS · a swUt and final death. And Christopher Cox and D4na Rohrabacher need to strike the blow. • The bW. proposed by Rep. Jim Saxton (R-NJ.), would remove the harbor's federal protection as a •no-discharge harbor• and allow boaters to dump waste into the water that is less treated. than cur- rent regulations require. Parasites and diseases found in waste would make it Into the harbor. 'That's the water we swim and boat in. It's the water the luckiest among us wake up next to each day. It's the water that makes up the character of this town. It's the very same water that II14Ily, many people rely on each day for their livelihood. Local environmentalists, not surprisingly, have come out in harsh opposition to the bill. But it shouldn't end with them, and 10 faritbam'l Newport Beach Mayor Gary Adams has joined them aad has called on Cox and Rohrabacber to oppose the bOl. Still. we haven't beard a word from our local con- gressmen. but we a.re confident that the silence from our elected officials in Congress will end soon. It has to. Becalise the calf to arms in this instance cannot be too strongly stated -the health of the largest recreational harbor in the nation is at stake. Both men -particularly Cox. who is among the House Republi- can leaders by virtue of his role as cbainnan of the House Policy Committee -need to ensure this bill never sees the light of the Housefioor. And they need to make it clear to Saxton and their fellow Republicans that protecting our nation's waters, particularly New- port Harbor, is not a frlnge move- ment -it is very clearly the will and the interest of the people they represent. Let's keep the conversation about Hollle Ranch clean . . T here sure is a lot of talk around the campfire about the Segerstroms' Home Ranch proposal. And that's a good thing for the most part. but some of it has turned into name-calling and ugly words. And that's not good. The proposal is a mighty big one: A 17~aae Ikea furniture store. About 800,000 square feet of office space, 250,000 square feet of industrial and close to 200 homes, either single family or attached.. 'That spurs many questions and rightly so. What will be its effect on traffic? Is the $2 million for Costa Mesa -schools worth the price? WW. the current Costa Mesa population be better or worse off? wm there be more jobs? Will there be more money in dty coffers? Do the pros outweigh the cons? We all should ask these ques- tions and the dty of1ida1s should find the answers because they are out there. But don't allow the debate over what lbou1d become of this open bit of land owned by the pioneer Colt.a Me1a family tA> tum bitter. Let'• debate the meritl of the _proposal and leave the conspiracy theodes and innuendo of back· room dea1I and brlbezy where they belong -in the trash bin. And when we have all the facts, we all should be able to share informed, thoughtful opinions with the Qty Council on what we think is best for Costa Mesa. Hopefully, they will list.en. In the meantime remember, the Segerstroms are not hit and run land developers. We all know the type. They make all sorts of promises and then when it comes time to deliver, the development doesn't come close to living up to its billing. The city is then stuck with a white elephant, and the developer, well. good luck trytnq to rope him down. That is clearly not the case regarding Home Ranch. These are the Segerstroms. A family that spends its time and considerable money making Costa Mesa a better place. These are the people who brought us, and con- tinue to bring us, South Coast Plaza. Metro Pointe, fine dinlng and entertainment and South ~Repertory and the Perform- ~ Arts Center, of which family pabiarch Henry Segeistrom recently handed over an addition41 _ $40 million toward expansion. So phse. Spare ualh.e talk about bow they don't care about this town. That simply ii not up fot debate. IHI UST WORD .. . A cell phone that saves lives! debeted the dangers ot dr:MDg and cha~. B\lt bl6ri aD CieD pbolMll ere llbllled .. tii.bai•dlt na. tr1 Wodh diet'kN"1 oUt tbt ~· 2' ~PUOt. Tbtiw we~ tbie WI OI tbrfle OrDge c.o.mty men wbo, aftw ttm bcNlt _. oa 111e N1wport Hmbelr, Ulid a cell~ IO cd bblifp. . 11llt ml M\19d a.II' ...... ..,,. ....... taoim '° .... ......... ..., .... NaW, .... ,.. .. m: ..... .. ..... ,, ............. _ .. ........... .. GETTING A NOT GlllLTf _.__ I 80,000. 00 VilDIC.T 110,000.00 'OUNCILNM SALAlY _ ..... _ f"1o.oo Pllt MONTH Cl FOR EVEIYTllNG El.3£ THfllE'J MASTElCARP II ._ ____________ ,;... ____ ....., ____ .;..., __ -:.;,~·l~·--,:,.,.;;...------"~o..:-·_t!4_::1~~1~\I~~ \I I FEEDBACK Readers discuss Newport Coast annexation AT ISSUE: Community activist Allan Beek says Newport Beach residents ... should vote on t he matter. E vidently success has gone to Allan Beek's bead ("Beek. launches anti-annexation campaign." Aug. 23). He appar- ently thinks that if people don't agree with his agenda, they shouldn't be allowed to live in Newport Beach. 1;be way people vote cannot be a litmus test for whether or not people can live in our dty. Beek seems to think this is Newport Beek. It doesn't matter that the am>exation may be advantageous to the city. If it isn't Ule wodd according tA> Beek. then tt is not accepW>le. J DIOY8d tA> Newport Beach In 1972. At that time, when I came home from work and tried to turn left from MacArthw Boule- vard. to Ford Road, I had tA> Walt for the light to cbange three timel because"of the heavy traffic. In cm emergency. if you !Mid to get from the east side ot Newport to Hoag Holpltal in the summertime, you bad to go around using Brlltol Street becauee Coast Highway was a parking lot II um 'What. Beek wanll to go back tot New- Polt Beech ii a woodertul place to Jive and 11 known as Mach . thtougbout the country. We dJd nOt adiSeve ttm Mr bulldtDg • fence around the cttY and ~ our heads in the sand. The thing I really find really ironic ls that Mr. No-growth wants to build an international ailport in El Toro. Evidently. the fact this kind of fa.dlity would dramatically impact the area and add an lnaed.lble amount of traffic to an already overburdened. system · does not bother Beek. If extreme growth in another . area would benefit his little comer of the world. so be il Your car may be from the '50s, but the year is 2001. LEONARD BAUS Newport Beach Not only sbould the citizens of Newport Beach ~ allowed to par- ticipate in the debate over the annexation of Newport Coast. we shoUJd be able to vote. I am against the.annexation bec.a\Jle: • the COit ot services may very wen outweigh the revenue gener. ated. Show us the figures. • as II, the city ol Newport Bea.ch ii IO spftled out tbat tbiere 1s no sense of oommumty, rathet we are a lt!iJlg ol commUnilial. I IUI· pect thi Newport Coast radderits will b8~demandina1n tbe coritat ol wmt8d ·..w. and atteotion. ' • geograpbkally, they have.no oonnedk>n to the reefc)( the dty. • the fed that many·°' tbel8 residents will be deluded by tbe anti-El Thro debate(~ opmon hM resUlted In a dllb--Ol the tacts about Daile, polhdlon, • etc.) is 'no little matter. They really belong in bvine. whole.tax monies are going to fight El Toro and increase planes over Newport. 1be real question is: What do we gain by having the down coast as part of the dtyf (Always won- dered how it became known as the Newport C.oast?) Is tt revenue? Then show us. Is it prestige1 Do we need it? Is it more ~for the Qty Coundl1 What is ill JUDY ROSENER Newport Beach My wife and I have lived in N~ Beach~ 1968, and every time we travel we come home and ay. •'lbank God we Uve be.re.• What we are tbaQkfu1 foe Is the proximity to the water, the educatkmal system and the loads ol biendl with limDar out- lookl. Howevif, when one looks at the am>exation of Newport Coast. I tee nothing there that fits with my definition ol Newport~ Stttina up on the b1IJa and away from the water, tbe Newport Coast and 1 have little or .nothing in c:ommon. We Would like the opportunity to aprw our feelings In a vote, wtud1 juit ~change the outx:xJme ot the ennaatkJo dedllon. If the majoitty ot ammt l'fllkSenta ol Newport wa 10 pro- ceed. '"5ued ~.vote, . IO be tt: But let U1 ba¥9 • ~ toviote GD lbe mds. .. *: OJPfCll) A. sa 111111• NeWpart 8Mdl L I .I .· CoMMUNrw,. . the fair I r Curt Prlhgle, president of the Orange County Fair Board, talks about the board and its responsibiliUes 110 Name: Curt Pringle Age:42 Residence: Anaheim Position: President. Orange Counfy Fair Board Job: Heads Curt Pringle & ~iates, a public retatlo s and consulting fir In Anaheim F.mlly: Marr1ied, two children · Education: Bachelor's In business administra- tion and master's in public administration from Cal State Long Beach , Of note: Pringle served as a state assemblyman repre- senting Garden Grove and Anaheim from 1988-90 and 1992-98. He served as $peaker of the Assembly in 1996. A FmRE FOi· THE AMPHITHEATER? 'Well I just think it's a shame that you have the largest outdoor facility in Orange County deteriorating. I thJnk with a lot of the aspects it's too big and can probably be made smaller and quainter, but usable, and have limited use.' C wt ~gle loves the Ore.nge County Pair and it shows. The former state assemblyman lights up when he Starts talking about bis responsibilities on the Orange · County Fair Board, which be was appointed to in 1998. This year was a banner one for the 1'1-day, Costa Mesa-based fair, which saw a 20,0oo increase in attendance despite raising the entry fees by St. Pringle, the new- ly appointed board president, hopes next year's water-related theme, WLeap into the Fair," will continue the upward trend. -He sat down with Features Edi- tor Jenn.lfer K Mahal to discuss his new position (a one-year term), the board and the Orange County Fairgrounds master plan. How did you get Involved with the Orange County Pair Boardf Well, the true story is that as I was leaving the (California) Legisla- twe in 1998, Gov. Wilson asked if I would like to be appointed to some- thing as I left. I was considering a variety of things, b~t one thing that's always been of interest is how the fair operates and what happens here. That had all of the the family votes behind it. . A lot of my time after the Legisla- ture was to focus more on communi- ty and family-related things, and this fits in perfectly. So I asked to be appointed here, and he was gracious enough to appoint me. Give me a quick explanaUoo of what the board does for the Orange County Fairgrounds and EsposlUon Center. Well, it's the board of directors for the overall operation here. A lot of people see the fair as a two-week event at the summer, but in fact with the hundreds of employees, many of which operate throughout the year to keep the fad.lily maintained and operational. to provide weekend activities, to pr9vide all the different programs and events that take place here through the year -the fair is a little dty living here all through the year and not just those two weeks when the whole Orange County community, if not the Southern Cali- fornia community, maybe really see it shine in its greatest fonn. But in fact. there's activities here through the year. Mainly serving the community. The Orange County Fair itself isn't a county fair, per se, but ifs a state agricultural district that serves this area, therefore all of the board mem· bets are appointed by the governor. And they operate here, all nine of us, to serve as a board of directors basically overseeing the daily opera- tional aspects of the fair. M the new president of the board, do you .have any parttcular concerns, or Ideas or d1redton that you would Uk.e to see the board take ln the next yearf Right now, we're in the middle of a master plat). which includes reviewing all of the buildings and operations of the fairgrounds itself during fair time and outsid~f fair time, and for the next year that is certainly going to be something we move forward with to ensure that we're looking at how the fair itself is operated and to maximize the use of its grounds. And through that process, there'll be a lot of suggestions for change, IDllllY of which will be adopted and moved forward with. But, part of the purpose of having a master plan wasn't just to do something, you know, uncoordinated. I think it"s impbrtant to coordinate all of those activities and to keep everybody informed, from the local reSidents to the city people and all the other peo- ple who are invested in the fair operation itself. What's the biggest challenge that....._ the board facesf The Fair Board itself, I mean there's no question that the No. 1 focus is how do you use this piece of property landlocked in Orange County to maximize the communi- ty's involvement during fair time and outside of fair time. You know, our mission is really to focus on our core principle, which is the agricultural foundation of this county, and make sure people are aware of that. You know we have Centennial Fann, which operates all through the year, where you have tens o~ thousands of school lads come and visit every single school day throughout the year, as weU as the fair itself to make sure people see the agncuJtural influence of tlus county. And sometimes that's lost on just bringing in big numbers and h~ving a big show. But. you want to be able to do that, to be able to grow from a fair that took one-week peri- od and brought in a couple nundred thousand, to now where we have 17 days where we h~d 843,000 people visit our fair this year. You do want to grow, but you also want to, through that growth, maxinuze entertainment value and educationaJ value that is our core ppnciple. What. If anything, ls golng lo be done with the Padltc Amphitheatre? For many years, it's been tied up in litigation and that is all basically cleared away. And that's really what gave us the ability to move forward with our master plan. We said, OK, let's look at all of the aspects Qf this property and figure out how to uti- lize them, both to ma.x.imi.ze the vaJ- ue on the fairground, but to be sen- sitive to the community around us. So the ultimate decision will be made down the line. In fact, I think there are many way to insure that anything that's done to the fair- grounds is done with the greatest sensitivity to the neighborhood. Personally, what .would you like to see done with the amphJtbeatert Well I just think it's a shame that you have the largest outdoor facility in Orange County deteriorating. I think with a lot of the aspects it's too big and can probably be made smaller and quainter, but usable, MARIANNA CAY MASSEY I FOR THE DAILY PllOl' and have luruted u~. 8ut I don't know when or how to ever get to that point. But, those are things That will be discussed over the next year or so to insure that we're beLDg responsib~ in our acbons. What ls your favorite event that happens here at the falrgroundst It certainly is the fair. My family, for the three years I've been on the board, come every night of the fair. I feel that it's a board member's responsibility to be here and bring guests to see things. And it's funny, certainly the kids want to go on rides every night, so we limit it to a couple of ndes every rught so we don't totally get thrown apart. But every year it seems like we find one thing that we want to take all our friends to see. This year it was in CentenniaJ Fann. They had three separate sows deliver piglets, so we had 28, I tlunk, -or somewhere around that nwn- ber of baby pigs -and to see them all through lhe stages. And then we had the first ever ,call that was born at fair time here. And you know what. every night we went to visit, there were mobs of people gathered around the babies, and to think that, yes, that really is the purpose of this fair. To show peo- ple and to ma ke people comfortable with anirnaJ husbandry issues and U1ose trad1bona1 issues that this county was founded on. And to make people feel a part of that and enjoy that and sense that. And this year, that really was our favorite part of the fair, Just looking at the baby ptgs. What are your thoughts aboµt the possible school donation? AT ISSUE: Segerstroms pfedge $2 million to three Costa Mesa schools if the City council approves Home ~nch. IMder1 RESPOND ple wbo 0 llve in the dty and try to navigate the streets without pro- trad.9d delays? One mo1e wbltt of the smell of money ii in Order. South Coe,t Plaza, the ~1bom Aagahip, is reJ>!llted to have ~ated revenues of nearly $1billionin2000. These figures ere not made up. Just do an Inter- Ml ll8Ud\ on your computer and statt kM>klng. Do the •fortunes• of the SegerltRllhl merit an undem- able~ in Costa Mesaf ~ tbe pbtue •wretched ~· bieGiD to stir tn your t.boughtsl ll tt bu1 let the Oty Couodl know what ii on ~ mind. , School and Estanda/TeWUlkle, or $200,000 each. Is this money avail- able for immediate spending each year, so that after five years the schools have received and spent their money while Ikea traffic goes on and on? If this pnndpal is to be con- served and only the interest spent ea.ch year, then a return of perhaps 4 % calculated with a simple inter- est fonnula would net e.ch school an amount that would inaeose each ~. beginning With $8,oOO at the end of the first yeer, roughly twice that the next yeer, etc., to a maldmum of about 540,000 in eve Anteaters iooldng for a higher view on the Big West Conferei;ice mountain. Tony Altobttll O.u.v Pit.Or CRAWFORD HAU.- With five seniors and 10 runners with collegiate ex~erience, the UC Irvine men's cross .country team appean to be heading in the right direction. "1 stilJ think we're a team of the future, but we've got a good, solid core of runners on this squad,• UCI Coach Vmce O'Boyle said. •1t•s bard to determine a. favorite in the Big West Conference, but I think we'll be fine." UCl's top retW'Iler is senior Jon Doroski, who placed ninth at last year's Big West Conference finals and qualified for the NCAA Regionals. "He's been here for three years now and be knows what it talces to get the job done,· O'Boyle said. ·we're going to expect some big things from him this year." Junior'Il'avis Modsoli. Mike Arp Sr. Mike Beadle Fr. Jules Castano Sr. Jon Doroski Sr. Rob Evans Jr. Juan Garcia Sr. Andrew Garrett Fr. Sean Geraghty Fr. Eddie Guerrero So. Thomas Har1ey Fr. Brian Harrison Jr. Humberto Hernandez Jr. Aaron Jacobsen Jr. Jeremy Johnson F~ Brian. Moncreif Jr. Travis Morisoli Jr. David Santos Fr. Tom St~ Fr. Matt Udink Fr. Coedt -Vince O'Boyfe who had a standout track and field season in the steeple- chase, placed 23rd at last year's Aztec Invitational and O'Boyle sees ltim among the top 'Eaters. Junior Rob Evans enters his third year of running for UCI, according to O'Boyle, after bis strong summer workouts, the sky is the limit. "Once he gets a couple of races under bis belt, he shou1d be right up there,• O'Boyle said. "He's going to surprise some people out there." In addition to the veterans, O'Boyle has assembled some talent for the future, including fresh.men Mike Beadle, David Santos and Thomas Harley. The best thing about our freshmen is that they all came from quality programs," O'Boyle said. •niat gives them a head start comlng in here with those credentials." In terms of conference success, O'Boyle knows this is . a work in progress, but the work is starting to pay off. "Individually, we're doing well, but I'd like to see us to well as a team, too,• O'Boyle said. •A top-three finish in conf.erence is a good goal to shoot for witb this group. Feisty bunch O'Boyle's Anteaters have an opportunity to be strong for several years to come. Tony Aftobelli. DAILY PILOT CRAWFORD HAll- No seniors? No problem. What the UC Irvine COll.EGE WOMEN'S CROSS COUNTRY PR MEW Amanda Armstrong Jr. Courtney Baird Jr. Tessa Cendejas Jr. Meghan Chase Fr. Janelle Del Soldato So. Ondy Fierros Fr. Melinda Fuller Jr. Tl'fsha Harris Jr. Veronica Herrera Jr. Jenrn. Keith So. Jenny Uou Fr. Julie Manson So. . Lisa Massoth Jr. SUUnne Purmort Fr. Kim Ramirez So. Pam Smith So. Kelli Vandef'burg Fr. Kaleenl Yee Fr. Katherine Ziegler So. Coedt -Vince 0'8oyte OAl.Y Pl.OT PHOTOS 8Y Sf.A.N ttiER Anteaters' Saml Cash (left) tries to tap at tbe net as USC's April Ross (14) deft:nds. ANTEATERS · FALL IN UCI talces control in Game 3 to force a fourth game with natien's No. 2 team. S~Virgen 0.6jY~ CRAWFORD HALL -Fresh.man Dana KW'Zbani ol the UC ltvlne women's volleyball team empbaticaDy slammed the ball onto USC's side of the net for a game-winner and Chanda Mcleod jumped so high she probably could have cleared the volleyball net. The Anteaters celebrated a 31-29 third-game victory and showed much maturity to attain the win, but UCI fell in four games to USC, the No. 2-ranked team 1n the nation, Saturday at Crawford Hall in the· Marriott Sunset Showcue~ ' USC won 30-1-', 30-16, 29-31. 30-20. •we're j\lst so young," Anteaters Coe.cb OlaJtie Brande said of hil aquad which featun. no seniora and at times bu five freshmen on the court. •we did some things very well. But the continual intensity wasn't al'way1 there.• McLeod, one of the "oldest" players on the team and one ol ooJy two juniors, dammed bome t• kiDI in the match ud WU instnimentalJn the tl\trd-94JD8 victory. Prelbman Kelly Wing al9o earned t• kiDs, while Alhlie Hain, another fre1bman, led • with 31 Ullstl. UCI aophomore Brenda Waterman. a Newport HarbOr High product. delivered lQdip. ThJjan ~April Rem, another Newport .. Harbor produd. oampJed 11 kllll as abe ·sat out Game 3. Ross pteyed despite the recent death ol ber mOther, Ma.tgte, who dlecl of brea1t can~r Thunday ('" ~ltory). USC Co.ch Mick HaliiY Mt Ro. Iii Gamt3 blc:a ... be ..... b8 Want8d to gtie tdl := pa.y.n an oppoltUllly to tbe 'tictoi'r -tM 1"ljllDi ... Do ..... CJ( Yoadl ...... aae.-..Jes K•W.-led Wtlb. JDatdo.-Hgi 1' .......... nMi TrojaDI ~ .. .-w111a •• , ..... balt••••·t3lild ~u ....... patDll 11 luidlbi \ aerved. Down 14-13, the Ahteatliin wenr out at rot4tion. giving the point to USC~ the Th>Jam then ICOr8d 15 ltraight. · ROii later ended the game withak:Ul . ucrs 'licllory tn Game J came d.pm ndlMbl. The ADIMfen (0-2) lost four points on net l8l'vel or ..me. lbiotl that fell out of bounds. Yet they overoune ttae errors 8ad '*4yed with USC thnNgbout u thfr!9 were 16 tie• and four lead cN"91'. • il'h• Trojans ( 1 ·0) earned match pomt, 29-28, gatnlng · l8l'flCI .. Haa.y Ulid blll lllle ....... tD bdal .. Plbl. lklt. McLMd ........ to bot lb8 ... ild D'11W-lllld Cella ................ )Md. Md.-d 0 2 ~&11 ... d'l ldl ......... •(UaC) ........ tMt ,..., ............... . ......... 5 .. , ..... . ,...,... ..... a. ................... Alh1ie Hain (left) paaes. Below, UCI CC>Kh Charlle Brande offen his team Ross shows heart .. Former Newport Harbor High volleyball player competes despite ·emotional pain. CRAWFORD HAU.-Sbe played Saturday night in the f1rat round of the Marriott Sun1et Showcase because that!s what her mother would have wanted. USC sophomore April Ross, a Newport Harbor High product and· the 1\'ojans' budding star, played in her tee.m's season-opener despite the death ef her mother Margie, who passed away Tbunday after ~g breast cancer for the past nine years . •She's playing because her mother is watching ber, •Jaa' father, Glen. said before the nojaDI' match against UC Irvine at Crawford Hall •April knew her mother was sick and it would be a matter of. time before she dled. Jt'1 1till painful when it actually occurs, but I told her, • u you decide to play, we'll support --~~~~~~ you.'" Ross declined "She is playing because her mother is watching her ... " Glen Ross Bronco Manager .. • ' I j I ,. I I I Sunday,~,, .._ z 2001 IS / L?ngtime Sports Information Director for UC Irvine has seen the best and worst collegiate athletics has to off er. Tony Altobelli 0AAV Pit.or CRAWFORD HALL -1Wo decades have not slowed down the enthusiasm of UC lrvloe Assistant Athletic Director of Athletic .. Conununications Bob Olson. •I wouldn't still be doing this if I still didn't love ·~· • Olsor_i said. "Sure it bas its ups and downs, just like ~y )Ob, but working in a college-based environment keeps you young. It's very refreshing to work with such great people.• Olson is the main link for UCI athletics which connects the events. coaches, scores and players with the national media. "It's definitely much more than just keeping stats, that's for sure,• Olson said. "My main job is lo be the liason between lbe alhlebc program and the media. The publicity of our sports programs is unportant lo raise awareness of what we're doing around here to the people in the area.• That awareness has taken a tum for the better following the recent Teinstabnent of baseball to UCl's cataJog of athletics. • "When the students voted to help support athletics, it was one o( the happiest days I've had over here,• Olson said. "The willingness to support really reinforces me staying here at UCl. It's fantastic to see such a strong suT>port from the students.· Olson's trek to Irvine began in Fargo. North Dakota where he grew up playing football, basketball and baseball. After some brief success as a high school baseball player, Olson focused on school at Soulbwest·State in Marshall, Minn., where he majored in hotel managment. "My sophomore year, my roommate al the time was the interim SID {Sports lnfonnation Director) and so I helped him out with some of the work,• Olson said. "My junior year I became the interim SlJ? and got involved writing press releases and domg stats for the school. Suddenly, my quest for hotel management started to fade. I realized I would much rather stay m hotels and not manage them." His senior year, Olson transh!rred to St. Cloud State, one of the top mass communication schools Ill the country. "I started worlung for the football, baseball and basketball teams in the SID office and lov~d it,• Olson said. •After I graduated, the SID resigned and I was fortundle enough to be named the SID al age 22 Sometimes you have to be at the Tight place at the nght time.• interview, they made me an offer and I needed about five seconds to m&ke up my mind.• Now, 20 years later, Olson has seen UCI go from a 16-sport, 10,000-student population to a 23-sport Division I pr<>gr8.IU with nearly 20,000 students enrolled. •J can remember when there wasn't a whole beck of a lot a.round this school,• Olson said. "But when the community began to grow and the population started to rise, I further realized the importance ot letting people know about what was going on over here.· That importance has been further complicated ~th th~ computer age. "Th~ internet bas made my life easier and baider al the same time • Olson _ ~d. "I'm lea.ming something new on Ute computer every day. The kids coming out of college hav~ a head start on some of us. My last year or two in college, we were still m the typewriter age.· A day Olson still looks back on Wlth distaste was May 26, 1992. That was the day UCT officially eliminated baseball, cross country and track and field from athletic competition. "Without a doubt. It was the saddest day in my tenure here,• Olson said. "It was a tough decision that the administration felt they had to make. It effected n~t only coaches and players here, but good fnends of mine had their lives altered from that aTlllOuncement.• Thanks to the student support, as well as support from UCI Chancellor Ralph Cicerone and Athletic Director Dan Guerrero, the dark ages of Anteater athletics appear to be over. ·He truly is the heartbeat of the athletic department.· Guerrero said. "The gTOwth we've experienced over the past few years is largely due to the work Bob has been able to do for us. He's a ~eat source of information and, bottom line, he's 1ust a great guy. He's well respected by everyone in the department.· Olson has three assistants, i.Dduding 13-year veteran Stacey Shackelford. "Her hard work and effort has been' tremendous throughout the years,· Olson said. ''l'm grateful to have someone like Stacey as my right-hand person.· Men's basketball coach Pat Douglass knows the unportance of Olson and appreciates tus efforts. "Bob is always very professional with what he does and he definitely makes my job a lot easier.• Douglass said. ·He's dilligent, enthusiastic and he understands what we have to do as a team and coaching staff to perform our duties with the · media. Plus, on the road, he's a lot of run. too.· AD Olson has to work on is tus UCI football predictions. in a Dec. 19, 1989 story, Olson told L.A. Tunes reporter Helene Elliott, "It's very possible it (football) will be here before the end of the 1990s. • Bob OJ.so . SEAN HILLER I DAILY PILOT· n has been In the wings for the Anteaters for two decades. Ols_on remamed at St Cloud for four years, but the Minnesota climate started to become a bother. "The winter months began to gnaw al me so I decided to s~ wbal else was out there,· Olson said. "I found out'that UCJ was interested in filling their ~ID position, so I started to do some research as to where UCI exactly was. J managed to get an "I said that?" Olson said with a laugh. "Well, I guess I was off on that one.• ., .ts Coasters are in the title mix in Mission Conference football; Martin Janzon moves on and the OCC women's golf team is short on numbers. 0 ruge Coast College football coach Mike Taylor stood at the podium and told the media and his colleagues that the Pirates needed some retooling on defense. At the Mission Conference Central Division media day Monday, Taylor said the linebacker position would need the most work. The Pirates teceived a quick fix in the form of prep pheoom Marvin Simmons, a 6--foot-t, 220-pound linebacker who practiced with the Bucs 1\Jesday. Yet, tf the news would have came a day earlier, the media and coaches' poll of the Mission Conference would have bardl1 chaliged. Palomar, the co-champwn.a with Orange Coast last year, stUl remains u tbe team to beat. Though the Bucs beat the Comets last seuon, Palomar ll the b>osensus favorite. Both Mialon Conference DiedMa Uld coaches polls ranked Palomar NO. 1. '!be Bucs came in at No. l. and Saddlebeck. Santa Ana. Fullerton and Golden West rounde<i out the Central • DtftllOG. • :J'be Cometa return en all-coGfereooe player It Mcb polltion..moet notably ~ck ~Goodenough, tb8 MJllkm COriferenca C4lilial Dtvtslon "°"~ ~the year. Wbo Jmowt ii SbnmOlll' ~Would -.;. ljaiide •difference ID tM nn"ngl.1beie .. -~~ Plr8tll ..... ~· Nglrd to ......... -~~­Haw lbe...,.,,. plly on t;e ~ obttDullly I ........ ..,,.. ve tM c:me,tbe Ca6Dlel ha.; .... at lt.1'1111yemr,tbeCaa1t1Wlllllmltba ..._ Dll1p.& CDsaal'*OillMI._ a.. ~dl*tlblalf*,.. ea tin over the hump. The Gauchos and Hornets will be ln contention for the title because of their defenses. Saddleback's defense features local players in linebacker Marlt Hatfieldl and defensive lineman Joe Shea, both of Corona del Mar High. .Sbea returns from Colorado State where he was a walk on last year. • OCC women's ioccer coach Barbara Bond is a bit more proud this season. Four of her pasl assistant or players are now coaches in the Orange Empire Conference. Fullerton's offense will not be much of a weakness. Hornets quarterback Brian Bartczak, though not as mobile ~ last year'• signal-caller Jet{ Crooks, is a premier passer and has the tools · to get the ball to bis talented wide receivers, sophomore Terrance Moore Steve Virgen COASTERS . Bond's assistant last year, Brandee Craig, is now a walk on coach at Saddleback College. Craig was an assistant with Bond for the past eight years. She also played for two yprs at Coast, where she was a sweeper on the 1987 and 1988 South Coast conference championship teams. Pam Lewin, another fonner Pirate (6-5, 195), freshman Justin Jones (6-3, 180) and 2000 Mission Conference honorable mention Jeff Weber (5-9, 160). Golden State will rely on its defense tbJs year to have a shot of b.realdng its 3011ame losing streak. Uke last year, the Rustlers are short on numbers and lack depth within the1r offensive Une. who played for Bond, iS the new coach for the Fullerton College women's.soccer team. Lewin's assistant is Kim Cahall. who also played atOCC. t-lonlque Brass, who played for"OCC and was Bond's assistant for t.bree years. is now coaching at Irvine Valley College. •rm pretty proud of that,· Bond said. "When your job is education.and here are these athletes who learn and they move on and. they go on to teach and coach. that's what it's all about.• JCBASKmALL Coast hoops continue to beef up coaching staff OCC's Spencer hires new assistant COSTA MESA-Orange Coast College men's basketball coach Steve Spencer bas added another coach to his staff, hiring Scott Coopman as an assist.ant, Spencer announced Saturday. Coopman. 28, comes to Coast after a five-year stint as an assistant at Westmont College in Santa Barbara. He graduated from UC Irvine with a degree in social ecology. At Westmont. he coached on the staff of John Moore, wtio bas compiled a 93-34 record over the past four-years. •Any time you've worked under a great coach, as Scott bas with Coach Moore. you're going to know a thing or two about basketball,• Spencer said. •Scott bas a great work ethic, a love and passion for the game. a tremendous knowledge of the game and he's very loyal Those are the qualities you want in an assistant coach.• In addition to working at Westmont. Coopman bas also worked at several high-profile basketbell camps, including UCLA's and Stanford's. At UCLA, be worked with Spencez, who was an assistant ~ the Bruins under Steve Lavin and served es the coaching director of the team's baaketba11 summer camps before coming to Coast. In August. Spencer hired Brad Wright es en Uaistaht. . YOUTH SOCCER • t SIX returning letterman, in addition to an b;npr9isiVe yOuth mix, give Sumner a solid group for, the 2001 campaign. • T~~ DMYPIOT CORONA DBL MAR-Oelpite the loss of two top veteran runners to graduaUon In Ja.b Yelley and Travis Beudllee, the Corona del Mar High boys aou country team keepe rolling rtght along and. by the end of the year. should be a m~or factor ln the ClF Southem Section finals. •1t•1 going to be tough to replace runnen like Josh (Yelaey) and Travis (Beardslee), but we're returnlng five runners wtth vanity experience and TODAY'S SCHEDULE they are all better than they were 1alt year,• CdM Coecb Bill Sumner Mid. •we've IJot a lot of young talent on this team u well and by the end of the year, they should be where they need to be ln order to be succe11tu1.• Lut years Sea Kings finished third ln tbe PacWc Coast League, but will look to improve thanks to the return of m nmnen with varsity experience. Depending on the course, Sumner likes his cb4ncel wtth senior Duittn Hodges and Newport Harbor transfer, sophomore Kevin Artz. •Dustin ls a mui:h ......... .--. wblle~ bu DION l!pMid. • &ma•u•kS. •Jk6 WUl be up there ID e.dll race.• ' Other CdM ~ wtlh UY, vanity . experience include aeiilora Mark Pomerantz and Ben Inouye, junior Blake Dillion alld ao~ores Donny Qu1nlan and J.C. 1\.t.roer. "Tbele guys~ been through tbe battles and they bow what to apect, • Sumner said. .. Ma team. OW' goel ta to be a top-four team In the CIP. but tn the back ot my JJllnd., I'm always tty1Dg to figure out a way to win CJF. Now that we're 1n Di911ion n1, teaim like La Canada and Nordhoff wlll be the favorites.• Among Sumner's oewcx>me11, senior Md Gugthau tiM bwl a rpleuant &llpd,l,e liDI» c:OllllDg ov• from the buebellteal. ·He Dliedl a... muntry lmowledgre and needs to get into cross country lbape. but when be does, he's going to tum a lot of beads out there,• Sumner said. •He's dynamite." Jotntng the Sea Ng•' squad include senior trac ster Chris Caipenter, sophomore gb jumper Chris 1Ung1trom and opbomore Brandon Brocamao AB far as league goes, E.ttanda ls still the team to beat.• Sumner said. "They're loaded for UU. yeu, but we've got some strong runnen over here too." COWGE WOMEN'S socaR So. So. Sr. Jr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. So. So. So. COLI.EGE WOMEWS socaR Anteaters chew up Falcons, 2-1 WOMEN'S VOWYBAl.l VU drops two Vanguard spank nonconference foe. 6-1 MIUTARf ONLY ARE YOUR LANDLORD ACT NfJN ·OWN P¥1N No Closing Cost If you're a Yet or wi1h actMi Wty with a monthly R:orne of Sllm/roo+ You may (J181ify b a VAl.oen!:_ll)to $200.(Dl With no daMl and 00 dosl1g cost or up 10 $250.cDJ wi1h lime cbMl. Rates 'rti1f ... be lowac FREE UST Of HOMES VETERAN Rf.Al.ESTATE 714-53WD Im .... °"'*" Oo you know wlMltt your . C11?1 It? • CMll Mlnlglmerll :~__....... ~°7~M Prat 11'1 .i • Pitwm Cf'A 20 YMll Elp. ....... 1011 AIR FORCE ACADEMY, Colo. -UC lrvtne's women's soccer team, on the strength of Julie Scb.eppele's gOal ln the 67th minute, picked up a 2-1 victory over the host Falcons at the Falcon Invitational Tournament Sat}lrday. Sarah Halpenny got the game's first goal in the 27th minute off an assist from Natalie Franklin. 4 ........ ,j~~ ... ~ '.-.!.--........ I .-.I . .... _..,. . . " . -,... ,,.-~ ·,, . ' .. . . •• ' ...... ~\L. ·-l IRVINE Vanguad University dropped matches to Texas-Permian Basin in four games, and Dom.1nlcan College in three at the Concordia University Tourament Saturday. FREE~ You've heard Rhout Viasra ... but have you tried it? • Viagra luccal ii ~ton propaute. . Get ......... ,._ . ...,... .... .,.; ..... ...... 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