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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2001-09-16 - Orange Coast Pilot• " • Aletha Anderson, chaJr of drange County's Race for the OJre committee. talks to Auls- nt Oty Editor James Meier the event, scheduled for 23. S..hge9 .. ... SllOl1S SUNDAY STORY Fi_nding-their way After years of drug addi.ction, Steve Wright and Michelle Slack are struggling to create healthy lives with the help of a local church group MJroS IY OOH UM:H Qllil.Y ... AIOlls Sieve Wrtgbt and hll daughter Steph*• S1Kk. 4, sit ID tbe motel room when tbey lift. _, Steplwde Is cmto.. md IMnd., 4 the Costa Mesa Motor Inn. wbeftl her mother Mlchelle, on atn, talks to a neighbor wllOe having a dgarette after doing laandly • .. Lolita ......., DAILY PILOT N early three years ago, Steve Wright was forced to bis knees by police as handcuffs were placed on bis hands. Wright was arrested on suspicion of possessing metbampbetamines and sent to jail. After his convic- tion, he was sentenced to 18 months of Drug Court, in which he was required to attend regular couh.seling sessions to kick his drug habit He was forced to leave bis girlfriend of nine years, Michelle Slack -also an addict -and their three children while he attempted to straighten up his own lite. After more than two years of sobriety, Wright. now 36, returns to his knees each night to tnank God for the blessings in bis life. •rve quit drugs for good. I do God now,• he said. Inspiied by her boyfriend's example, Slack is also on the road to sobriety. Like I8&11Y at the Costa Mesa Motor lnn. the couple is struggling to take back their lives fJan tbe nigbbnare S£EWAYMGE4 WORLD TRADE CJNTER, PENTAGON ATIACKED: NEWPORT-MESA REFLEOS ON A 'NATION'S LOSS TOPftOIY ~ llllCll ... I ICIOOL ICllVll• Becauae Of the terrodlt attacb on Tuesday Dioinmg, the New- port-MeA Uni&ld School Diltrkt ~led its school 'board meeting EDUClllOI ~~~ not ic:biiduled a sped.al meeting to make up for the cancellation. The next regular- ly scheduled board meeting will be on Sept 25. And Friday's school events also were postponed -menntng 1t was football Saturday this w_eek. _.,..... ... ... GIWl"leducltion. Sht ~ .. NIChed • .., 574-4221 «by. mlll8t~f#mK(Om. I LllTll llSS "IUC OPlllOI The Planning a:m>mtssion proved Monday that a good night'• sleep is worth ltiO.big a lit- tle public comment. COSTA MESA AB Robin Leffler, vice president of Cos- ta Mesa amens for Responsible Growth. approached the podium for yet another presentation in oppntifion to the proposed Home Ranch pro- ject. Planning Commlaion OJair- woman Katrina Foley infoamed Im' tbat public comment would be limited to new infonD4tion cmly. Poley explained the aamnls- sion's decision to nanow public comment was to prevent late might meetings like the last pub- lic hearing that lasted put mid- night. •tate night meetings affect our dedllon-making process the next darL° Poley said. Ul8 Planning Commil'km bu held four public meetings about the proposed development in tbe lat month, giving residentl plenty of opportunity to addrea the ooundl. People can aJilo speak mare at a Sept. 24 ltlldy HHloo, the cbalrwomml l8id. Audience neCtibD to tbe CIOlll· qiljijnft'I der4wlnn WU fliWid. · s.a,eiDlmben ot the audleDoe were~angesed bf .-cnmmtaigp)'I wtledllllo-MAA., including relldent Brym BeWey who stormed out of the · meeting in protest, tbleatening a recall eff orl But two others commended Poley, saying the commission has beeil IDOl9 tban open to public o»MW\l A.. people walked out of o-WI Cbaxnben. many noted tt*f' w.e relieved to get out by 10 p.JD.; _.,......,._a:Mneosta ...... She ~be,..... 8t CtiW) 574-4175 «by. mellt~CDm. . llllllD ,_ M..., I,~ been a rougll week. When 80meth1ng., terrible happena, you jwt don't want to do anything. nm " the way I leJt abour my ioutln:e acheduJe at work. I /ml didn't want lo lab a portralt oJ Qll)'Olle or cover anything tliat WQ.1111 reM- vant lo what waa go1ng on around the country. Being able to vlalt prayer aetvkea and meet men and women who were bondlng together a.a a nation made thJ.I week bealabJe. check far about $36,000 from a woman who bad flied and lOlt a sexual hara.mnent lawsuit against the dty'a police ct.partmenl June Romine and two other female employees -Kathy Sotb.ard and Nancy McAllister - had alleged their male colleaguel subjected them to lexilt llun and fondled them. Wb1le Sotbard dropped her laWIUit and McAlUl-ter settled with tbe dty, both lut year, Romine loll the cue in a jury trial in May 2000. -the judge ordered her to reim· bune part of the dty'l legal apemel. -0... ..... aa."SSMA*llMrlf1d ~She""' be,..... tit CM8) S7"""226 «byffneltlt~. I spent much ol my l1Qle tJm iwM at John ~ Alrport, covering our lociil ~it. 1b loolt out.Ide onto the ttumac and .ee airport.~ joining togeth- er to ahDw their auppott aild ~ • they waYed an Amerioan !Jag to One ol the llritt oulgolng ~­ ger llJghtl made thing• all right, /mt tor the nmteht. _ ....... ...... lllPl.IBI lbe terror that bit the world last week also hit home. Religious lead-llWPOIT en were scram-.. 111(1 bling to help their followers deal with news of the worst terrorilt attack in hiltory. Unes wound out of and around Nikki'• Plag1 in Newport Beach -a sign of Newport-Mesa community'• grl4lf and patriotism. . And three Newport Beach res- idents, all eyewitlleael to tbe attackl and the World 1\'acle Center's collapse, found ~ch ~ Hl.LER I DALY PlOT other amid the rubble. The two friends and an acquaintance, who were stranded in New York separately, made it home togeth- er and formed the permanent bond shared by survivors. Local events, of course, were eclipsed by the national tragedy. A county body approved the sec- ond·to-last step required to make Newport Cout part of the dty. And, amid the chaos, a spir- it of ccmununity continued to shine u Coastal Cleanup Day aimed to keep the &ck Bay a ttunning example of America's beauty. ---e rs ... C&MrS Newport leach. She~ be l"MCNd tit~ 57-Mll2 or by H/\111 etj&.N.C:Wf,.,,....,..c:otn, "/have to get up and go to •ri work too, but lt la 1mportant tor me to be here and IOf what I feel It llhould be important tor them to hear IL• -lr,mlMller. 1 Mesi Vffdt resident. on his opinion of the ffmltmd comment period. ' Beuley stonned out of Mondly's Pain-• nlng Commission meeting In proCl!st. • 1 may not haVe been born here, but I am wllltng to die for this country.• _....,,. ....... of Costa Mesa. on his willingness to sew. Sandoval Is 1 Mlttne reservist who was bom In Mexko. ·we are aD Americana, and we are aD concerned aboul what happened ... ·. We we aD part of the large family of the vkt1ma of these cowardly acts.. -H>lt ._A. L I 'II cNirmln of the pMc•aillllCll• deplrtn*1t of the ..... Sodlty of er.,.~ on the tin'Ofilt lltt-*'~ ·nu.~ hat beeli COOi• pared to Pf:arl HalfJor. But when you take an American jet plane lull of pasaengen and tum lt Into a weapon and h.tt a bulldlng wtth thouaanda of people In ll with the 1ntent of hurtlng them, you wonder where the humanity has gone.• -llilllllllllft ...... t. of T..,._ llallt\ ~ 1o the dlstNttlon of the Wottd 'hdt c.1tllr In New Yortt Oty. • 1 read a lot of boob. There'a not a novel whJch dora to go as tar aa thla becauae nobody ~beJlevett• . -· , ... ,..... .... c. ·~·· (MMne on the~ • It'a going to be eapeda!ly ' dlllJcult to talk about .wHt- nea w1UI the taste ol aahea ln our mouth.• _...,.......,._ of~ a.t Ylhn\ on hoW n... ' ·~ trlQldy • llffilct ~ ......... ~'Newv.r, which ttwU Mond9y. sundown. .. . . w turnout for COastal peanup Day ~ada Greenberg holds a capped syringe she found In ~ Back Bay during Coastal Oeanup Day. I ' rtbtt.rper LY PILOT I NEWPORT BEACH - tAfthough many who volun- ~eered to pick up trash in the Sack Bay area Saturday said µiey came to do something positive for their country in ~ht of recent tragedy, turnout 'Was down from last year's Coastal Cleanup Day . Organizers said about 800 attended the event. down from an expected 1,200, but chalked it up to bad timing. ·we're pleased with that considering all that is hap- pening in the world,• said Joanette Willert, an Orange plunty park ranger . Coastal Cleanup Day is a statewide event in which Newport Beach volunteers have consistently boasted the highest attendance numbers and trash collection in Southern California. Despite the drop in turnout, officials ~d Newport volunteers are J;till expected to top the list. People of all ages arrlved bright and early, gathering trash bags and gloves. After ~ up at a station marked by an Alpertcan flag, volun- teers loaded into buses that ~ansported them to various ~tions in the Back Bay. L . Soccer mom and Newport peach resident Jane Tuai said the Tuesday terrorist attack OD the World nade Center and the Pentagon not only inspired her to come but allowed her some time in her busy schedule to give back to the community. •This is the first year we haven't had a soccer game scheduled, so I wanted to help out,• Tucci said. Bob Hayk, 82, and his wife Pat, 79, said there wasn't as much trash~ they expected but did find a lot of cigarette butts and beer bottles. ~te the nature of the work, both welcomed the opportunity to help out •very great diversion to see everyone out here working together,• said Pat Hayk. •This is exactly what we needed after this week,• her husband said, finishing her thought Newport Bay Naturalist Iris Timmons said the event is just as much about public educa- tion as it is about cleanup. Volunteers who witness first. hand the amount of trash that ends up in the bay will be able to spread the message to not litter or dump things down storm drains. •Everything you put down those drains ends up in our water. Everything,• Timmons said. Now in its 11th year in Newport Beach. the event was coordinated by the county, Newport Bay Naturalists and Friends, and oth01 environ- mental organizatioos. Newport Beach police and fire depart· ments were on hand. as well as other community spcmas who provided water, coffee, fruit, muffins and doughnuts. PHOTOS BY STEVE MCCRANK I OMV PILOT Michael Heller of Buena Park digs through the under- brush for bits of trash ln Upper Newport Bay on Satur- day, which WU Coastal Cleanup Day. Donate your vehicle. 1-888-308-6483 Set hope in motion to improve local lives. • RVs • Boats • Real Estate • Tax Deductible ••• 7be Center taki?s the siage ~a.. ~~~· themter-~ accWmed ~~~ prays~ tn memoiVnn ot . the Yk.1ilm of 1\lialdaYI terror· ilt att.acb, performed at the OnmgeCoun-loold!I ty Performing BACK ~=terin Brubeck opened the 2001-02 lellSOD at Pounders Hall ttDs weekend ·Rent· bas been staged there. So bas •Annie Get Your Gun,• •Foae• and •t.a Bayadere.· Visited by top QDtcb enter- tainers from around.the world throughout the year, the Cen- ter is the biggest reasoo out· siders know Costa }l.1esa. ·it certainly put Costa Mesa on the map worldwide because every major peiform- ing arts group knows where Costa Mesa is now,• said Center president Jerry Man- del. •But the Center's bigger than Costa Mesa. It's a South- ern California venue.• Celebrating its 15th anniversary on Sept. 29 and looking forward to new facili- ties predicted to open by 2004 through a $200-million expan- sion project, the Center start· ed as an empty five~acre plot of Segerstrom land. In 1979, an arts activist named Elaine Redfield asked Hmry5'yij ...... .. lllDd he owDed .... to .... WM tbllD Cllled Soulll a.it Repertmy'I Pounb .. n.. a_ter. She tboaght tt ~be fitting for a awdMilledlld county c:xmmt ~. ~ltlom drifteted tbl land and an 8dcltkJnal St million for Ule deGgn. and constructioD of the Ceoter, Which WU called the Orange County Musk Center. In 1981, the name changed to the Orange County Perform- ing Arts Center, and in July of 1983, the Center bad its groundbreaking. The 3,000-seat Segelstiom Hall opened in 1986. 1be Center's Intematiooal Oaaic Dance Season launched a year later with the New York City Ballet Opera Pacific per· formed its first season there in 1987. Mandel said that before the Center ~ built. renowned operas. symphonies and Broadway shows had to be seen in Los Angeles. "lf we did br\pg a major orchestra here, they had to play at Santa Ana High ~ool or some place like that.• be added. •And you never beard them conectly." • Do you know of • person. pl«.e or event that deserves • historic.al Look a.dl7 Let us know. ConUICt Young Chang by fax at (949) 646- 4170; e-mail at young.changO lat/mes.com; °' mail Mr at do Dai- ly Pilot, 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa. CA92627. a-. 7:00 -• 7:00""' M-F • l':OO .,,, • 4:00""" Set r---~---~----------, I 99¢.A..,.. I I ~·1 .. I 1 · Gm 11ae11~ 1 I wtt111ncom1na Ol'dlr. No 11m1t. M1111 pr....c QQUPOll I 1 ·NQc Vlld w11t1 en; oe. a«er. I L---~~~-~~~~~--~ ~ 3305 NEWPORT BLVD. •Across from City Hair 67~72 Friday September 21st. The days proceeds will be donated to the American Red Cross to aid victims of our countries recent tragedy. Pnrpayment Requested. 'EXCLUDES SUEDE LEA HOUSEHOlD ITEMS BRAND NEW SERVICE! ... ~ ............. ,, t ..... ..... CtJl T 0 0 .... . , ...... ...,,,__ ...... ..... ..,, ......... "" ..... ' CDllAtmlA •Will ..... 911.-:A .......... , .. NPO't- ... ~ .... block. 2-.21 palhndly. ................ .......... ~ lion Of V.Mlpo.-W WM ......... at 10'.30 p.m. ~ •lll'llllllllr..e:AhOfne burgllry .... niported In .. 1JOObloct. 7;35 p . .m. ,.,.,,... ..................... ...... eo..t Drtw: Petty theft -repo.ud It 8:36 p.m. Thundly. • ..... Verde°"'" I.Mt A disturbance was report- ed In the 2700 blodc at 11:36 a.m. Th\Mlday. • Ntuup Dl't ICMllevani: \llrlcWism was reported In the 1600 blodc at 12:25 p.m.~. ... 11th 111...e: Petty theft was reported In the 200 blodc at 1:45 a.m. ~. ., .... ,..... ........ cmltla-.....: An auto theft was reported at 7: 11 p.m.~. NEWPORT IE.&Ot •Adda ~AA ~home burglary --~In the 400 blodrM 9'.12 a.m. Friday. ......... ~Loud JnUlk wm rtpOf1ed In the 2100 blodt at 1:08 a.m. Friday. • Clllal na Drtw ...t 0., SINK A trafflc acd- dent involving Injuries was reported at 1 :53 p.m. Friday. •w.tC099tl......, Md Sup9rlor Avenue: A tmfic collision Involving Injuries WIS reported It 12:.28 P.m. Friday. ................. S· ._. 0rtve: Vandal· Ism was reported at 4:48 p.m.~. CONTINUED FROM 1 ol drug addk1km wllb .. belp a&a loClll dllll'da .-.. For .. plll two M h tba ,., ............ wtlll Mni:lll m Mo11ma 11 MIA!W t'lnPh .,. ... rt <grsd ID -.m•· .. ..., ..... CIDlllD ol lblllr .. md .... ...,.. 1'bi dUdl -· bul that tam peo;. pleflan lbe. to ill Jrvtne~ tuaryoo~ Mtri9' 1bep1<9111:Dilllti-besed. te •11daig • CJidMlen ii ~==-~=":: •1t ii a W1Y ldltic. pbylicB1. echw;ntimel progiam. But we me not preachy er throwing B6bleil in their face, .. Zimmermali .. Besides the church group, Slack is on her own "pro- gram,• in which she attends various group meetings and . follows the popular 12 steps to retake control of her life. If she could have half the resolve Wright has, she said, she will be able to rid herself ofthebabil "Steve worked bis program like.be worked his dope,. Slack said "He puts every bit of his effort into it. . Getting arrested was the best thing that ever happened to him. Wright said. After his trial, he thanked the officer who arrested him for saving his life. However, tbat!Salvatbi came at a prtce -as a iesult of his arrest, Wright lost his job and the family Jost their apartmenl "I had to take care of myself before I could start taking care of my family," Wnght said BU~FA CONTINU ED FROM 1 live in ont of the other bor- oughs, on Long Island or in Westchester, in Jersey or Connecticul The majority of New Yorkers don't live in Manhattan. Some people do live near downtown, in areas like 1\'ibeca, Greenwich Village, the East Wlage and Soho - but small numbers compared to the total population of 10 million. You probably got here on ........ ..... -...... __ Sid"p!Jfm ... = welik IGr. mini ~ .. ::=1:.Dat ... off" •••• ·=--....,··•LtJ n I .A. _IDiig • 1 IDllP .................. ,.. caatt ~ OUIMIYel,• ~--wora at 1eut eo ~ .... ddVtDg • Ind. Helllllllw.llkcNatDai, • .,. ...... to __ bll ...... ilj gm fiid. WIMn ~ &mlld- .,. ... ..,..., .. bedr.ID ICbool clothes and ~. Wrigbt wt1l wtn 14-bour ~ be Mid. • •you CID't tell me we could· n't affont a nice two-bedroom apmtmeat far whllt we pay here. But our Credit is so bad, nobody will rent to us,• Slack said. She renrlnisced about their old living situation while Jooldng around their cwtent home. 1be motel room 1s j>iled high with boxes holding the family's belcogiDg&. Each ol them takes turm sleeping Oil the two twin beds, while the others sleep on blankeCs on the floor. . •Jt wem't a ooemHide house or sometbiDg you 1ee down in Newport. but tt was better than this, .. Slack said. Stephanie, 4, Sean. 7, and Steven, 9, are forced to find ways to keep themselves enter- tained during the summer months when they are not in school Directly outside ol the family's room is a lalge sign posting oertain restrictions. No nmnmg. No skateboards. Nobicydes. No fun. Steven said the subway. II you live in the outlying areas, you were on a train or a bus or both before you got to the subway. It took you somewhere between 30 and 90 minutes to get here. Depending on where you pop out of the subway, you've got to walk three to 10 blocks. Every comer of Manhattan seems =bly jammed with bull and people, but even more so in Lower Manhattan. But on a sunny, brisk Tues- day morning in September, you don't mind tbe walk at all. You don't dare show that, of cow:se, betDg a New York- er. You put on your sternest F I T I G V E s WAR E H·OUSE SA LE fNe're setting up a temporary warehouse at the Newport Beach Marriott Suites) S E PT E M B E R . 21 st-23rd . ... Iota of greet bHlca -leethera .. chinos ... mens -lots of klda F.ltlguH -caihmer• -G~ °"'1*!9tbe .. SteVeDMki he II ba'Pl>ier now. forced to grow up ·last, the 9-year-old remembers having to take care of bis younger sibliQgs while his parents were high or passed out •My dad used to hide his pipe under the radio so we wouldri't find it, but I always knew,• Steven said. Both Wright and Slack a.re surprisingly candid with their cb.iidren about their drug use. They started their habits when they were teenagers. "l'msony for the things I did while I wu high, but I'm not Mbamed of who J've become," Slack said. •My children~ 1mgbL I would be insulting tbeit fnleDigeooe if I tried to convince them nothing was going on before.· The mother of three also wants her children to be aware of the tragic consequences of drug use. She wants to ann the kids with every weapon possi- ble to fight what she believes is r=e face and walk fast. Very Owing that walk. you will almost certainly lllAke a quick stop for a cup of cotfee, a bagel, a banana, a jelly roll, whatever. You will stop at the same ooffee shop, band the man the same amount of money and get the same amount of change. A few minutes later, you'll reach the World 11-ade Center Plaza. About four blocks long on each side, the Plaza bas a number of ·smaner· build- ings on the pertmeter, 40 or 50 stories tall But the 1Win Towers, where you're headed. ri9e like lding white titans. t t'<Fstorles tall. poking two boles in the blight blue sky early on a September Tuesday morning The fast-moving rtVer of people surging toward the lobby doors ban awesome Jighl Fifty-thousand smartly I dressed men and women. more young than old, of every size and race and nationality, striding toward the dOOIS. America is going to work. Once inside, you know exactly which bank of eleva· tors is yours without a second glance. If you're headed for the upper floors, 80 and above, the elevator ride sWl gives you a little rush, altbdugb you'd never dare admU it An awesome "whoosh..• a~ sound and, a few .eoands later, you're a thousand feet above ..... =~ ~.;.:-:~'! ~ lllilMI they need ~ lMnl II tbat peo~ do c.;e ......... •Tb8f 819 IO ltoletect. baW DO..,..._ They are ~t::!. w:..tba~ who are wWhig to heii>. • Zimn141"1D1D Mid. Through the program, a mentor bas worked with SJ.adt lind Wlil# to create a budget and ensure the fe.lil1ly stafls ttnencMRy dlectplined. Wbl1e tbay are~· be!liallynllp'Nible, ~ Iii Motion~ tbeai ~ :Cr.es~~ &::=~-c:n~m'::~ =rredlildren" addicts, months, ~~1:;~ "My kids are little addicts in place them in ~ent boUli- the waiting. I'm going to do mg,~ the Churchs vam can . everything in my power to make · nectiODS. . . swe they don't fall, like I did," Slack's ~is to own a house Slack said someday with a yaro and a pick· Her drug use began with et fence. marijuana in high school. she "I know it sounds silly, but I said An oocasional joint led to just want to decorate my o~ alcohol abuse and heavier kitchen one day,• Slack said. drugs.1bankfully, she said, she She is swe the day will come avdded berdn but she bas dooe eventually. Getting sober was just about every other drug. the hardest part. she said. The Slack and Wright met when rest will come with bard work, their drug de!Uer'-orwhat they deten:ninAltion and God. call their •connect" -set them "With everything we've gone up on a blind date. through -and the hard times •How romantic. hub?" Slack we're bound to encounter in the joked. future-I still wouldn't trade my Drugs slowly began to take worst day sober for my best ddy over their lives. The couple filed high.• she said. false claims forpublic ass.istanoe to pay for their deadly habit. Not even the birth of their dlil· dreh could snap Wright and Slack out of their addictions. the earth. When you get to your desk. you say hello and settle in. Normally, you wouldn't pay much attention to the view. But on a morning like this, you can't help yourself. You swing your chair around, check your voicemail, and at 8:48 on a sunny September Tuesday morning, your life and the world are changed forever. Have you absorbed it yet? I haven'l In the quiet moments, getting dressed or driving somewhere, I sWl have flashes of doubt "Did it really happen?" I ask myself. •Is this real or am I imagining all this?" It doesn't last long. One television image is all it takes to sp4P_ ~ out of it Or ~that our daugh- ter was at 38th Street in mid- town when the first plane struck. Or that her husband, Ouis, was at his office in 1\ibeca, about 10 blocks from the World "Dade Center, with a perfect view of the north tower at 8:48 on a bright Sep- tember Tuesday mcxning, They're both fine, but it was the start of a 12-houi adventure, with Chris having to make bis way out of the war i.one on foot. then walk- tog .W blocks up the West Side Highway to find her. ln every ca~. nat- ural or man-made. st.cry after story emerges about lives that were spared or lost by the • LoMta ....,_.coven Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949) 57~75 or by Hnlll at folita.Mrp«O/atimacom. most subtle quirks of fate. A train that was a few minutes late. A dent.al appointment. A last-minute decision to grab a cup of coffee before stepping inside a door. People who should have been there but weren'l People who shouldn't have been. but were. Inaedible ironies, one atop the other. Ooe of the most startling was a line of copy on a brochure that Nora, a friend of mine, showed me. As a writer, you're always looking for a clever twist, a book, a grabber that will capture peo- ple's e.ttention and hold it. Nora picked up a World nade Center brochure as a souvenir on a trip to the Apple some 20 years ago. The cover is a beautiful aerial pho- to ol the World 1)ade Center towers presiding over Lower Manhattan on a dear, sunn~ day, much like last Tuesday morning. I,don't know if the head· line grabbed anyone's atten- tion when it was written. but 20 years later it stopped me in my tracks. The bold letters perched above the 1Win ToW· ers prodatm. "lbe Wedd nade Center-the Closest Some °' Us Will Bver Get 1b Heaven.• God bJess the bmooent 'fie· Ums and the feadea rescuers who gave their Iv. trying to save them. God bless this_ country. And may God have mercy on the mwderers who did this, because we won't. 42nd Anniversary • ,..,. IUPfA Is a former com Mesa meyor. His column runs Sun- days. ... mMy be relChed vi• e-mallat~. ''SELLABRATION '' 250/o OFF EVERYTHING IN STOCK Even More OD ~'s PargaP.t COunter 9 - Katen W-19ht NO PlAa UKE HOME Spendi ng September in : the garden I f your summer garden is beginning to look a little shaggy, it's time to pre- pare for the deep, warm col- ors of fall's harvest. Russet, gold, wine, red and bronze are the spectacular colors of the season and with some planning this month your garden can be ready to greet October and November's crisp, cool days with a blaze of warm tones. The first order of busi- ness is to deadhead -remove old flow- ers - Adding plants with a specific color scheme can have a dramatic from your "wow" perenni-factor in als. Cut the faded your garden. flowers and stems down to the first leaf. If the plant looks leggy, cut the stem back to the side branch. Eliminating old growth from your spent plants will encourage a new bloom cycle and help your plants to store energy for the dormant months. Old annuals that have performed their duties for the summer should be removed, and new soil added in their absence to prepare for new plants. U you're a garden novice, bere's a short list of plants that thrive during the ran season: chrysanthemums, black-eyed Susans, tuberous begonias, dahlias, zinnias and cannas. For beautiful fall foliage, add ginkos, Boston ivy, heav- enly bamboo and pyracant.ba. to your garden staples. These plants provide a blaze of red and gold in your garden. If you have the patience to wait weeks or months for new color in your garden, add crocuses for ~bulb color and plant late winter- bJOC)lning bulbs such as anemone, freesia and nard.s- 1\a. If you have a vegetable ~you can start cool- .. . I "' .. Ill Wllll F11&1Wp ,.,. ~"' ~ frOm *-* ... 9r'llf to O..· ~·--........ ~upl!¥thenglc ---.. WMk. SomMimll rMChing OUl ... tlldr'9 wfttl .,... CM\ llelp ... tn. .,.,, • llttie ....... . flw .,...,.. nUmbers to hilfp . • lthMarlll ..... llelporwe prOYldes courmllng for W1lml ot •aM. ..,. 11'-4'60 • Tha NadOnll Suic.ida Hodil'9., prcMdll alPPO't f<K ~ ~ ...... to talc wfttl. ca. 7"'-2.ul • f« ~ ..,.., tt.re Is ttW NMionlll Youdt ow. Hodlne ... 4G~ Sunday, s.p..mber 16, 2001 5 SEAN HU.ER I DAl.Y PlOT Yana Bridle of Newport Beach is passionate about being a photographer. Capturing moments Y~O..ng OAA.Y PILOT Y ana Bridle dropped everything for a cow. A professional Newport Beach pho- tographer whose clients have included presidents, actors, princes, governors, senators, prime minister5 and Nobel Prize winners, Bri- dle threw off her heels, biked up her slacks and ran through a meadow of wet grass to freeze forever the image of a calf being born. Her just-wed clients stayed behind to contin- ue hosting their Italian mountainside wedding last year. But Bridle didn't think twice. Her job was to photograph and capture the heart of the rural moment. The birth of a cow in the groom's Newport Beach's Yana Bridle won honorable mention in Nikon's prestigious Photo Contest International with a photo of a cow giving birth. barn nearby offered the heartbeat. Nllcon's Photo Contest International awarded Bridle with an honorable mention for that photo TRAVEL TALES last month. Her work stood out among 34, 187 entries from 73 different countries. The mention is rewarding, she says, and the contest is one of the largest photographic contests in the world, but the story of the newlyweds and the coun- tryside and the just Mdropped* cow ,is what she wants to talk about. But before she does, let it first be said, Bridle · throws off her shoes and runs. She runs from her dining ~oom to the bedroom to grab some-. thing she needs to show. She rushes from her seat to the stove to refill her llask-style cup of tea. She flips rapidly through binders bursting with negatives and photos documenting her liletime of 58 yea.rs. SEE MOMENTS PAGE 6 A father and son excursion to Austria and France YoungCMng D AILY PILOT N ot even a month has passed since Georges Roudanez returned from a European vacation, and the Newport Beach resi- dent already bas next year's trip planned out In February, he and bJs 12- year:Old son, Marc, will head for the Wmter Olympics 1n Salt Lake Cty. The t1ckets are bought, the car is rented, the hotel booked. Roudanez is just t.ba.t kind of dad. ·1 wish J could come back as my son.• joked Rouda:nez, 50. ·1 take my boy every year on what I think is an impor· ta.nt trip.• ~·1Nti. DESIGN CENTER "for All Your Decora,.,, Needs!" . PURNITURI! llEUPllOl.liln •Custom-Made furniture eSllp eo\1ers •Patio Putruture ·~es. Shades. & Bedspreads Tb& father-son duo just completed their mission for this year in France and Aus- tria. For three weeks in August. they landmark- hopped their way through both countrles before hiking four days ~b the Alps. •rve traveled all over the world,• said RoUdanez, a monagement conlult.ant ·The Himalayas, Nepal. but the most beautiful setting I've ever seen in my lifetime is in this aiea of France .• He added that when they hiked into the CbemmiI V41- ley and onto Moot Blanc- the highest mountain in Europe. at more tbul 14,000 MOMENTS CONTINUED FROM 5 SM~ bluntJy but ~. ltruggling for perfect ~ wllh hei Czech ICdmt and Ce.Wng things u ..rare. What did the bam miell lik81 Uke a barn, she inltltl. A b4m can only SQieU like a bam. The baby cow -did It have a row pink underside1 How small wats it? •1t was like a big dog." And trees. She loves treel. So much, in fact, that in a list of her loves, it's pre- ceded only by "family," •eattng• and "baking bread." Why1 "Because they}'e alive.• She calls her fifth love "being an American." Bridle arrived in Americit almost 32 yea.rs ago with her husband Mark Brtdle and son Tom -~ughter Moni- ca, a local kayaking star, wasn't born yet. They had escaped Communist Czechoslovakia because the 1968 Russian invasion blew anyone's chance of a promising future within the borders, Mark Brtdle said. So the family left under the auspices of a three-day vacation to Austria with small bags on their backs and the hope that a country -any country -would accept them. America, did. The couple was later tried, convicted and sen- tenced in absentia by Czech law for criminally escaping. The family never returned during the old regime and therefore never served time. But the Repub- lic's government has since changed, and Yana Bridle 11 l leel 1t'a my duty to docUJnen,everythlng in an event I'm hi.red to cover. And JI lt'a a cow, 80 be, it. " v ......... .,.... !led Oil ... ~ ..,... .... __ ._ ....... no1.-.it1111 .. GD." ~ ..... ,,. .... were Wlib tbe cow. il1Ult'I Wily the~ WU Dot In N8Ycft." Vows were~ rings were put oo and peo- J>Je were C:1JinkiDg the cbam-pagn,e. Somebody ...::------~-,.--·~. announced tbe COW WU going to deliver. Bridle visited la.st year. , swooped up her cameras "It was very emotional for and bee--11.ned for the barn. · me to be there bec4Wl8 it "When I came beck to wu 90 much the same and the~. people said, so much different,• she said. 'oh n>U smell,'" Bridle "It smelled like fresh green-la~ ery. 'Jbe forest smell WU the • MarkBddJe Mid·be's same.• impra11ed that bis wife found Today, after a cMkfbood beauty in an event 90 far in which film WU IO apen-removed from the festivities stve and cameras so rue and opuleDce ot a wedding. th.at Bridle learned every But then again. when frame counts, the high-pro-sbe'I behind a lens, Bridle file photographer shoots tends to make everything a everything from ground-Kodak moment That's bow brealdngs of local land-her professional career sta.rt- marks to portraits of presi-ed 33 years ago -after dential caDdidates. arriving a session late to a Her photo albwm are college photography class, sequential and dated. Steve she allot through a roll of Forbes autographs bis ' film in 15 minutes to catch laughing candid sh,ot: up with the other students, •vana, thank you for m4k-who were already develop- ing me look human.• Ptesi-ing ~film. dent George W. Bush ' ·1 ahot everything around repeats a waving pose in me -what was inside, out- one 1996 photo just like he side, everything on cam- did for Bridle in the 1980s. 'pus,• she said. Prime minister Itzak Rabin I The instructor was lets her sit in a room with ama~. He compared her him alone, without a single .work to Ulat of famed phO. security figure nearby, for a tograpber Richard Avedon. cozy, natural portrait 1Bridle admits, she .didn't Bridle said she knew she ,even know who Richard loved photography· once she ~vedon was. realized its human touch. 1 • All that's changed ,today, "I knew when I discov-11argely because anyone ered I have the ability to do t who's anyone bas probably something unique for some-! been photographed by Bri- body which would last for-die and huddled up with her ever,• she said. too. You'd need three days And that's what she did to hear all the stories, she during that fateful Italian says. And if you don't wedding. The daughter of a believe them. she's got the prominent and wealthy pictures to show. New York couple fell in love ·1 feel it's my d~ty to doc- with the son of a poor Ital-ument everything in an 1an family who had some event I'm hired to cover,· cows and some meadows Bridle said. •And if i's a and a livelihood that cow, so be it.• 50% OFF TOPIARIES & FLORAL Arrangements Home Decor • Spedalty Furniture • Silk Florals Custom Floral Arrangements Mon-Fri 10-6 • Sat 10.5 • Sun 10-4 369 £. 17th Strttt, Costa Mua, CA ,_,_~, 949 646-6745 i'" RO LEX "--"' ) Georges Roudanez and his 12-year-old son. Marc, hiked through the Alps during their vacatton. TRAVEL CONTINUED FROM 5 feet -the pair saw into Italy, Switzerland and France from -the same single point. In Paris, the travelers visit- ed the Louvre, Ch~ps Ely- sees, L'arc de niomphe and, of course, a locally famed ice cream parlor called Bertillons. •Tuey make their own ice cream, and it's a pretty well- known night spot,• Roudanez said. "Where most people would go for cock- tails, they go for ice cream sundaes.• Marc had a vanilla ice cream sundae on a crepe. Roudanez bad the all-Amen- can banana split. ·we were perpetually together for three weeks,• the father said. ·All day, every day.• In Austria , the pair stayed at a boathouse near a moun- tain that dipped "majestical- ly" into a lake. They water- skied, hiked up the moun- tains and Marc made friends with the little kids who ran about town at all hours. The food interested the boy. "They've got different kinds of food,· he said. "They didn't have hamburg- ers. I liked the food, but I didn't like some of the veg- etable dishes.• So when he landed at Los Angeles International Airport, Marc beaded straight for the terminal's Ruby's Diner. ·He bad a Ruby's turkey burger on American cheese, fries and a vanilla milk- shake,• Roudanez said. •He ran right in.• • Have you, or someone you know, gone on an interesting vacation recently? Tell us your adventures.. Drop us a line to TRAvn TAI.ES. 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627; e-mail yourtg.changO latimes.com; or fax to (949) 646- 4170. l8UOD .,.._ IUcb as beetl iDd tpmacb. Pall ii the belt time tO fertilble ~in yGW' garden:' Oowen, trees and sbNbi. lncOrporating fer- UliMt Into tbl IOU two wMb before planting ran color wtD tmure prolific bloOma-·' Peed estabU1Md trees ind grOund coven now and again In aDother month. Wait a month befo~ feeding recent tramplants. CUt roees and prune away twiggy growth. Feeding roses in Septem- ber encourages another bloom cycle for October. Any plants that are showing signs of mildew should be treated or removed to discourage the spread of disease. As the days grow short- er and the weather cools, adjust your irrigation. Plants need less water as the weather cools. Color combinations that provide maximum impact include yellow, orange and purple. Adding plants with a specific color scheme can have a dramatic "wow· factor in your garden. The cool purples and the bright yellows are great opposites that add visual appeal in your flower beds. Lavenders and salvias for purples, zinnias and gaillardia for oranges and black-eyed Susans for yel- low and brown tones cre- ate a beautiful landscape for October and November celebrations. U you planted pump- kins this summer, be sure that they get enough water through a bubbler or drip system. Overhead water encourages mildew and your plants will wither premafurely. U your pumpkins ripen before you are ready to use thepi, put them in a cool, dry place. Pumpkins can be stored for several weeks under the right con- ditions. Planting bold fall colors will guarantee a beautiful display in time for Hal- loween and Thanksgiving. nme spent in the Septem- ber garden pays huge divi- dends in immediate visual appeal and in preparation for spring's new growth, • KAREN WIGHT Is a Newport BHCh resident. Her column runs Sundays. ., S•turday Nights lhf..prll thru October J 949.492.9933 16111Amal ~ llilrbor llarltage Riii -I~' .... ft'•Rbwww 1111 Fiii' I ----e II ·' I; .,, .. Ii? I Fl.191 . , ....... ....... .... 7:11&& II .. && ....... ....... .-.. ...... ,...... .... ..... ~,8fll .......... ) •• , ................ 4, 11• 1.& ..... "'-........ 1:9I.&.1:11 ...... .. -........... . I. •t.a••t.a ............. , ..... ti l 5 Kl JI f ...... ..,.. .. . . . ULTIMATE COllTICT ISi Doily Pilot TODAY nm IClftGSn* ,_, r,anw•br. ~ = OCC\ 9'obert B. Moote ThHtte. 2701 F.itvlew Roed, Costa MeM ~4p.m. COlll: S2S.S31 ConlMt: (714) 432-5880 GUnAmT MC NICHOL 5' anwllCI br. Mlwpoft lluct'I Pubffc Llbtwles ---= Newport Be.di <Antr•I Ubnlty. 1000 AV'OC.ldo Aw. ~3p.m. COlll: Free c:one.t: (949) 717-3801 MoNDAY TUESDAY 11 119 THURSDAY ,. IOI r11 ... OI ,,,,,..... 11-2.t, 2001 A little night music Clfll.llWll Pacific Symphony Orches- tra premieres its new all- Beethoven concert series at 3 p.m. today with Cafe Ludwig at the Orange County Per- forming Arts Center. The chamber music concert held in the intimacy of Pounders Hall will be hosted by pianist Christopher O'RUey (above), a Van Cliburn Gold medalist and radio personality. The concert will consist ol Sonata in G Major for Violin ~ Plano, Op. 96; Sonata No. 2 in D Major for Cello and Piano; and Septet, Op. 20. 'IWo more Cafe Ludwlg performances will be held on Concert to help Hoag Cancer Center me._._ ... _ Saxophonist Eric Mart- entbal will play at a benefit concert for Hoag Cancer Center at 1 p.m. today at the Hyatt Newporter Out- door Amphitheater. m --Hoeg (MQr <Anter benefit ~ 7 p.m. tod9Y ..... ~ .. wpc>rUr. 1107 ~ ~ Newpon9eld'I c:G111: ~StOO ,. W.1nllll•a: {M9) 7&1234 5AnJIDAY · Jan. 20 and May 19. There will also be a series of Beethoven chamber orchestra pieces performed under the direction of Pacific Symphony's Carl St. Clair. The series, titled Beethoven at the Barclay, starts Oct. 14 at the Irvine Barclay on the UC Irvine campus. m -...: Cafe L.udw6g ---= 3 p.m. today .... Orwige County Pefforlning N9 CM1ter'1 Founders tW~ 600 Town c:..r Drive. CosU Meg co.t: S~S40 for the series. c.11 for lndlYlcfwl mna!rt prica ailfuinwtlon: (714) 7~7878. 7 SEPTEMBER ... ,., .. J 2 ) 4 s ' 1 I t1011t20M15 '" 11 • ,, ao 21 » 1 .>t25·l1·29 JO MAM YOUR CALINDAltS 17: Ro9t'I Hashlna begins ll: Race for the Cure -'lbn Klpp6 begins 21: Edectk Orange ~lvalopens OCTOBER IMTWTFS 12)4 .6 7191011121) 14 15 16 f7 11 19 ;I) 21 22 23 Jll 2S l6 D 21 l9 JO Q) MAM YOUR CALENDMS 5: Randy Travis with Pacific Symphony Pops J1: Halloween NOVEMBER IMTWTFI 1 2 ) 4 5 6 7 1910 O u o M15 0 f7 • " » 21 8 n i4 2S»fl>2129)0 MAM YOUR CMINDMS 11: Veterans Day 11: Tree lighting at Fashion Island 22: Thanksgiving 21: Swing! at the Center DECEMBER SMTWTFS I 2 l 4 s ' 7 • 9101112014S 16 f7 • " » 21 l2 ZJ ... 2S 21 17 21 l9 )0 )1 JANUARY I M T W T • I 1 2 J 4 s 6719101112 0 M 15 • 11 e 9 » 21 22 n » 25 21 17 28 29 JO JI FEBRUARY I II T WT • I 1 2 ) 4 s • 1 • ' 1011QUM15• 11e•»21»n J1125ll2729 ... _.., -~ -C1 Presented by J6plat --- . " l\t i'IH .1 '•' '• ~ • • TKI 09ANGC ClOWITY REG I Sf ER --111--ca.-,_ __ R031NSCM·MAY 8 Sunday/ Sepeember 16, 2001 • . Newport-Mesans expre~s sadriess, anger and grief· AT ISSUE: Tuesday's attacks draw speculation, reason and endls opinions. Laying blame on all fyfuslims because of the heinous acts by a few is like indicting all Americans because a few happen to be mass murderers. It is at times like this that we need even more input from the civilized Mus- lim community so that we may learn enough about their religion and cul- ture to hopefully prevent similar ter- rorist acts in the future. It is time also that we reexamine our international stance to ensure that our foreign policy is not unrea- sonably biased. There is certainly no logical explanation aside from fanaticism to account for these ter- rorists' total disregard of human lives, but even if we ara able to cap- ture or eHmtMte the masterminds such as Osama bin Laden. the threat of terrorism will not likely recede. It ts to our best interest' as a nation to try to find out why these people cpuld hate us so much ~t they would even consider blowing themselves up just to hurt us. Per- haps there is never going to be a solution to this problem, but not another American should die due to lack of trying. JOHN T.OilU Newport Beach Tuesday, Sept. 11, will be etched in history as the day the world changed. This will be known as the day ot a new reality, the day that we have to reckon with the internation- al terrorism directed at the arro- gance of the new administration's policies that not only anger our foes, but alienate our allies as well However, this reality is not new, but started with the initial bombing of the Wodd 'Il'ade Center years ago. New York City got off relative- ly easy, as the U.S. government bas anticipated an attack with biological weapons of mass destruction that would., and could, kill millions in New York. lb.en there is that question of the nuclear weapons that were lost (sold to shadowy groups?) during the break up of the Soviet Union. Of course, as the United Stat.es is the only superpower on this planet, we wiif be a target. But the solution to these new challenges we face is not more .tanks, killer satellites, or Star War systems, but a reamation that the challenges we face are not in the tnu:HtiQnal sense, but what bas been d8velopiDg for years: religious suici- dal fanaticism. What has happened regionally in Ireland, the Balkans. Central Atrica and the Middle East Js now happening globelly. This is the new reality. ~UL JAMES IALDWIN NewJ)ort Beach 'lbe other day, as I drove through the area on emu:1ds. I looked tor the Amerlcen flag in front of local businesses. I was saddened as I droVe 17th Street, put the grocery store that I have supported for years. There was no ~'"rberewu not even a flag piole. up (not too long ago), I remember t local grocery store . R•ders RESPOND putting the flag UJ>. each day and ceremoniously taking it down each night. The store also do6ed on Sun- days. I found it a sad statement of society that these displays seem to have gone by the wayside and was sadder still that I never noticed that before. Our society once assumed every American followed a spiritual path so strong that stores were not opened on Sunday. Now, the desire to be politically COll'eCt and separa- tion of church and state has put faith in the closet ... something to be held privately for fear of offending. Well, out of sight. out otmind. Chil- dren's sports, for example, now schedu1e events on weekends, leav- ing those who practice rellgkJD to be in the uncomfortable position ot tak- ing a stand against those scheduling the events. The terrorists, as misguided as they may be1 live their religion every walclng moment. Their actions are focused on what they believe to be the ultimate reward of their beliefs. It is this passion that allowed them to complete their heinous acts against humanity. The coming war will be one not :1J of our nations' military strength resolve, but one of humanity and the reign of good over evil If we are to S\JIVTI(e this war on an emotional level, we· need not just weapons ot destruction but of faith as well. We all need to embrace our faith, whatever it may be, and live it every day. The good people and religions of the world outnumber the misguided few. It is time to dis- play that we are not just a natJon with strength of arms, but also of faith. We can create a world where we all ·do unto others as we would have them do unto us.• MEGlWEEDY Costa Mesa nus was sent to me from my son's school. I hope this important campaign continues throughout our country. It is •The Power to Come Together as One• c.ampaign: In an effort to help America cope from its tragic events, please show the world the greatness that we all share as Americans. Please show your support by placing one red, one white and one blue ribbon on one tree in front of your home indefinitely. The red (ibbon signifies our hearts. We will all come together as a nation and again stand tall from the aftermath of this tragedy. The white ribbon signifies our thoughtfulness. We will help those in need and honor those that have lost their lives on tbil day. The blue ribbcm tdgnifles our strength. As Amertc.ans, we will not ~r dieams tor peace and Please show your support of this campillgn by pladng Ule9e ribbons on yOUJ tree. DENAMARIE AREUANES Conma Formerly of COila Mela I am wrlting to you about the destruction that happened on 1\JM-. JenrDGUD SOUtmllG IDAID day. My feelings cannot be desaibed in words, our country was attacked, thousands ot people were killed, 1 have repeatedly heard this called the second Pearl Harbor. My pain is not so much for the people that died. although it is very tragic to say the least. their suffering is over. My pa.in is for the hiends and family of those people, for our coun- try as a whole. 1 have asked myself a thousand times "What I can do to help, and there's not much, being one small voice in a nation where everyone is shouting. I am devastat- ed because of what bas happened here, because millions of people are in mourning for their family and friends that died. I am wrtting to ask for your help. On the night of Tuesday, Sept 11, I spent a few hours cutting up navy blue ribbon and putting them on safety pins, I spent a few more hours handing them out at my <X>l- lege and other places the next day, and I am continuing to do this for es long I need to. I am asking t:>eoPle to pin these blue ribbonl to-their shirt, bag, pW'Se, jacket, wherever, to show our sadness for tbe people who died and to show our support for the peo~sti.11 llving. ~ would · to ask people if they can spare a few bucks and 80IDl8 time to s1t down and make some ' ribbons. To wear one Oil their lbb1I for the next few days or weeks, to show that we are united in this tragedy, to show our compassion for America. I chose navy blue for a few reasons, it is the darkest blue, a feel- ing many of us are struck with after the deaths of so many Americans, but also because it is the color on the flag that supports the 50 stars. As President Bush said, freedom was attacked, these blue ribbons also support our freedom. We can all unite by wearing a blue rlbbon. so many people have been affected by this. What a good feeling it may be for someone whose son or daughter, mother or father was in those buildings to see so many people support them. Like I said before, I am only a small voice in a nation where mil- lions are shouting about this. I am asking to use your voice, to ask peo- ple to do this, to tell them this is happening in Costa fviesa and New- port Beach. It could happen over the entire nation. Already from banding these ribbons out for two days, I have had ~ple volunteer to go out and them. and give them to their fl'tends, family, neigh- bors and co-workers. l am tom between emQtions over what happened in New York. all of thOle emotions are too strong to be dalatbad with woros, and I think that inilldna and wearing these rib- bam wOulcl help bring us together. ~kelp m strong and support 9'dl c:itblll'. nm ii a time when per· ..... *'-lbould be set aside. 1•, I Forget race, age, sex. religion l\nd unite as Am.erlcans. I've never really thought much about bei,ng an American, buttlj'(e been thinking a lot about it the past few days. I don't know ~ne that was killed over there, yet l {lJTl still deeply affected by these events, and I realized that it.is1' because I am connected to ea~ and everyone of those people that died. I'm connected to them • because we live iii the same coun- try, a country that bas been attacked, a country that terrorists are trying to separate. When people commit hate '' crimes against Americans bee~ they have the same skin color as Osama bin Laden. the tenorist9 'are getting what they want. Wberlffle are separating because of race and religion. we are weak. We nee3 to stay together through this, w~ to be strong. I'm not saying wear- ing a ribbon will 10lve our prob- lems.. All I'm sa~ ls that lf you're wearing a rtbbon and you see someone else wearing a ribbon, you feel like you're closer to that person. You know that penon feels like you do, that person wu affect- ed too and wantl to support our nation and the people In lt. And the Closer we are u the people of the United States, the harder it will be to destroy us and out freedom. LAUM KASZYNSICI COltaMesa Dally Pilot BIO Name: Aletha Anderson Age:49 Hometown: Coto de Caza O«:upirtlon: Stay at home mom who never stays at home Volunteer. Second year as chair of Orange Coun- ty's Race for the Cure Education: University of Maryland, bachelor's in journalism Family: Husband of 15 years, Chris; children Paul, 13, and Amanda, 12 Hobbles: Her children's activities, reading when possible Activities: Bishop com- mittee at St. John's Epis- copal Church in Rancho Santa Margarita; not enough time for any- thing else A REWARDING EXPERIENCE 'I think so much of the Komen foundation and how the Komen foundation Ls run both in Dallas and here in Orange County. It's very volunteer-driven. 1r~ ;ust o'Verwhelming - th11 volunteers you meet and what they're wWing to do for the cause. It's just so needed. The women you meet who are breast cqncer survivors a:tad the stories I> y~u hear really move you.' I 11>1 1•11 1')11. llfl •11 I !111 1IU t ·<.1 lh I l>tZtM Sunday,~ 16, 2001 9 . Giving her time to fight Breast cancer Aletha Anderson, chair of the Orange Cowity race committee, talks about her dedication to the cause W ith Orange County's 10th annual Race fortheCure just a week away-it'll be held Sunday, Sept 23, at Fashion Island-last- minute preparations are being made at the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation office in Costa Mesa. On Thwsday, Assistant City Editor James Meler sat down with Aletha Anderson, now in her sec- ond year as Orange County's race chair, to dis- cuss her involvement and what it takes to prepare an event that will bruig togeth- er more than 25,000 racers. 1bis Is your second year as cha1r of the race ln Orange County. Where did you do It beforel In 1992, which was the first race in Orange County, I had a small part on the com- mittee and then we moved away and lived in Colorado for five years. And I became very involved with the race committee in Colorado Springs. And I chaired it there and co-chaired it there. So when I moved back here, I called them up and told them "I know a lot about the Komen Foundation and this event, what can I do?" So I ended up chairing it as soon as I moved back. How did you get lnvotved ln the event lnlUallyf I knew someone ... who was one of th.e founding chairs who brought it here and she invited someone she knew to an organizing meet- ing. There was a woman there who had breast cancer who spoke about it and !i&d "OK, before everyone leaves, you're all going to sign up to be on a committee,• and we all did. Seeing the event, rs jWJt a positive, upbeat event tbt it's just great to be iDYolved with. When I was in Colorado Springs, they were just bring- ing the event in and it was really fabulous to be Involved with something new and see- ing it grow. 1bat was really, really rewarding. Is that what bas kept you ln lt1 I think so much of the Komen foundation and bow the Komen foundation 1s run both in Dallas and here in Orange County. Ifs very vol- unteer-driven. It's just over- whelming -the volunteers you meet and what they're willing to do for the cause. It's just so needed. 'The women you meet who are breast can- cer survivors and the stodes you bear really move you. As the race cba.lr, rm also on the board here, and you see the need in the grant requests and to know how much the~ is really needed and put to good use here keeps you going. It just makes you want to raise more money because you know it's needed to help women end their families here in Orange County. II 8llCb race IUD•..,._ UODlll • ll WM DyoG M ... a.ey:·'Dgl . t really ii. Last year at the race, we bad a parade for the first time of breast cancer sur- vivors. And it was just over- whebnlng to stand on the stage and to hear the music and to see so many women in pink. At first, I felt kind of sad and I almost started to ay, and then there was so much positive energy. Most of them were so jubilant and happy and positive that I didn't feel sad at all. Obviously, it is very emotional for the SUIVivors who are there. But to watch people who have gone through something life- threatenin~ (be) stronger and more positive really lifts everybody up. How do you tblnk thb yeu"I na will be any dlller-ent. lf at allt Well, it's our 10th year so the things we do well we are trying to repeat again and keep it as orgcmized as can be and with as little aowdiDg as can be with that many peo.. pie. We're trying to finelle the parking and shuttle buses to make it even easier for people to get In and out. We're going to repeat the sur- ~·_ parade. We have a oe)ebrtty oomtng, ~we haven't done every year. We're going to have [IOI aka~ ing legend) Peggy Fleming, who's a survivor, there for the survivor oeremony. . We feel that the event is pretty well put on. We try to make it fun as well as mean- ingful and because it's our 10th year, we on the conunit- tee are just more motivated to do it well again. How many nmnen and spectaton do you expect wW Jlttend this yeart Probably between 30,000 and 35,000. Between 25,000 . and 30,000 will race. We had over 25,000 last year. And it looked like our numbers were way ahead [this year), but with the terrorist attacks this week. everYtbing bas slowed down just as everything has the last few days. We'll just see how things go as life gets back to normal. HM a fuDd.ndllng pl been ...... tbe Orange Countynml We'd like to raise $1.5 mil- lion. Last year, our net profit was $1.36 m1llioo, so we'd Wee to push owselves and let people know that that's a lot at mooey, but 1rs needed and if we raise more, we oan spend more on the communi- ty and treatment~ Llllll TO 111111101 We've put a lot more empha- sis on the pledge prizes that we're offerinq this year as a way to motivate people to bring in more pledge money. We definitely feel we're in the top 10 races across the coun- try in raising money. I believe there will be 114 Race for the Cures this year. How are the proceeds dtvldedupf 1Wenty-five percent of the money that we raise goes back to the Komen foundation headquarters in Dallas and that gets put in the pool of money for inter- national research. That's one of the ways they fund the grants and all of the research that they do. Seventy-five percent of the money stays right here in Orange County. We have a committee that's part of the board that will evaluate all the requests that we get. I ~the deadline is next week for any groups that want to apply for grant money from the Komen foundation for next year. We're required by the foun- dation to give away the money_ by the end of the year. 1bey reellt::t us to give the money to the community in a pretty prompt fashion. When It comes to lund- ralslng, lbe fo .. nddOG ao natved help from Follblala Island and Ame:rkma Expiw tbU yeu. 11 lhat IOmethfng newt Actually, that program. Charge for the Cure, mo&t of that money goes to the natiml- al foundation in Dallas. Some of that money Fashion Island will direct locally. The natiooal headquarters have a lot of companies that do promotions for it October is National Breast Cancer Awareness Month so a lot of campaigns will come out at this time. They did it last year, but Fashion Island is really pro- moting the program this year. So, tell me a lltUe about what goes Into organlzlng a race of tb1s magnitude. It's a lot of work. During the Friday night and Saturday before the event, we basically make a city behind PacificLlfe and that's a lot of work just making sure we get the right amount of tables, chairs and canopies. And we work very closely with the city of Newport Beach on the roads and parking and ctirecting traffic to make sure that goes as orderly as possible. We work throughout the year with our corporate spon- sors. And every year, those sponsors change to some degree and every year, they donate services of some kind and every year, that's differ- ent. So that just takes a lot of time. There's just a million details to get it right. We use about 1,400 volun- teers on race weekend, so finding those volunteers and assigning them takes a lot of coordinating. It's amazing that that many people volunteer and what people do to help us. They take vacation days to help us. It's just fantastic. Do you have anything else you want to add that I haven't uked abouU Well, I hope everyone comes to the race this year to help us celebrate the 10th event It's a real milestone and we're very proud of it I'd like to thank Orange County and the community because Orange County has really supported this event over the past nine years. We know it's because breast can- cer bas touched so many peo- ple here and they've respond· ed. It's not just that we put on a great event. It's obviously a disease that touches a lot Qf people and I just want to thank the c:ommunity for making us what we are, ooe of the largest fund-raising events in Orange County. We'd like to share our 10th annlvenary with everyooe. You can register on our Web site, http://www. oclcamen.com. We have all ot the det.alls about all the ~­ ent ways to register. Or you can register oo race mmning. On a penooal note, I've spent years volunteering fOI' the Kamen foundation and I'm not a survivor nor did I have anyone dose to me who bad been diagnosed. But last yeor, my mother was diag- nosed with breast cancer and she's 82. She's tine and that gives me just one more per- sonal reason tbll year to be at the rece and more motivation to do ft Fr:iends, falriily cheer flight attendant and hus~and ~ • After drlving from New York to Ohio, the locals make it back to the Southland with help from a ticket clerk. June Casagrende OAJl.Y PILOT ' Pour haggard travelers at Ohio's Akron-canton airport weren't surprised to bear they were out of luck. On an all- night drive they'd been turned away at a.iJports and car-rental ampimies throughout tbe east. •vou look tired,· the ticket clerk told the four men. whose faces must have reflected the horror of recent days. "Have you been here all nighU- "No,• said Newport Beach resident Rob Stewart. "We've been driving all night from New York." Those last two words changed everything. Minutes later, Delta tick.et clerk Robert Humes was running across the terminal to catch up with the four abell- lbocked travelerS and tell tbem tie bad found a way to h81p them getbome. Stewart. Lyle Davis ROb Stewart and Scott Ramser arrived at their Newport Beach homes at around 3 a.m. Friday after surviving the most har- rowing experia>M d their lives: watching the World Trade Center fall to ruin. The group was probably among the first to get back to the West Coast, Ramser said. Ramser and Stewart had been stranded in the horror- razed city until, along with Davis, they found a communi- ty in each other and a way home. Davis bad a rental car. With Wes Morrissey of Laguna Beach. the men started a croas- country drtve early Thursday morning. ~theircellulaimJ:· ::ri,: :£ ""t"'" ._ = Ung a ht home. AB those tiijp911 Ibey dedded to 8t Jeait try to Qlll a luger rental car. Sothey=m.Akron to trade m tbeD' Altima for a Crown Victoria and, on a longahot, uk whether there was any hope of catching a flight . The airport was almost deserted and Humes, who works at the Delta ticket counter, reported there were no flights scheduled from Akron to Southern California. ·we were all tbe way across the airport when Robert came running to tell us he may have found a way for us to get home,• Stewart said. Humes and several col- leagues helped the Newport Beac;h men get a ComAir shut- tle to Cincinnati, where ·they caught. 1 a plane to San Diego. "They were wonderlul, they wtmted so much to do anything to help the New York sihia- tion," Stewart said. "They helped us with our bags and our rental car .• t Then Humes' team called Cfodnnati to tell them the men were on their way. When they got to that abport. the Southam Californians were greeted by airport ottidals and escorted to their gate. •ne patriotism in middle America was incredible,• Stewart said. recaDtng how peo- ~at the airport were hugging tb8m and wishing them well When their pJane laDded in San Diego, Morrtssey's wife Betty was waiting to drive the men to Orange County. •we are now four men who ~ joined permanently at the hip after living through that, then having eight hours talking about it together,• Davis said. ·rrs good to be home.· Ramser said that since get- ting home he's seen number of friends as well as bis family- though all four also have final- ly seen just bow devastating the terrorist attacks were. "It feels e lot better to be home than to be stuck in a hot.el room,• Ramser said. Newport-Mesa children try to niake a difference •Groups sold lemonade and decals Saturday to raise funds for victims of Tuesday's attacks. Lolita H•rper DAILY PILOT NEWPORT BEACH They didn't know any of the victim$. They've never met the rescue workers. They only know that their country needs their help. Children in the Newport- Mesa area showed Saturday that despite their age, they will do what they can to help to help the country move for- ward after Tuesday's ghastly East Coast terrorist attack. lWo separate clans of dlil- dren -none older than 10 -took to the streets Saturday to raise money for strangers more than 3,000 miles away. A group of nine children in the Harbor View housing development raised nearly $600 in four hours selling small American flag decals. The children asked for e donation of at least a dollar bufreceived contributions of up to $60. Matt Will~erson and Connor Gaughan, both 9, rode over on their scooters to give $20 each to the cause. And a number of luxury sport utility vehicles and Mercedes stopped to chip in. All of the pToceeds will be -sent to the American Red Cross, said 8-year-old Ryan Grable. Megan Rucker, 9, was among the children selling flag decals on Port Renwick. "It's my birthday today but I wanted to sell these before my party,• Megan said. Neighbor Gary Fren.kiel, owner of Tee Color Craft Silk Screen Printers, donated about 500 decals to the chil- dren when he heard of their fund-raising plan. •1t•s so great to see them out here,• Frenkiel said. "I know this whole thing is hard for them to understand, but at least this makes them feel like they are helping." Peeling the same senti- ment of empowerment, a fil· . ferent group of children set up a lemonade stand in Newport Heights to raise money for rescue workers who are working to find sur- vivors -and victims -of the World Trade Center attack. Jeff Newman, son of Newport Beach Police Capt. Tim Newman, and about seven of his friends raised about $250 selling lemonade, cookies and chips. ·we've just been talking about it at school, and 1 just feel sad because of all the people who died in the build- ing,• the 10-year-old said. The Newport Heights group plans to sell more lemonade today on Clay Street, said 8-year-old Andy Baker. CONTINUED FROM 1 Pentagon and a fourth plane noee dived into a rural area of ~rlst attacks do not reflect a policy or intelligenoe failure, Seleseres said. Rather, it's the inevitable weakne&'SeS d an open society that make the country susceptible. •until we make it imposSihle to gain access or make a fool- proof system that doesn't allow the 'bad guys' in, then some- thing like this can always hap-pen,,, Sereseres said. Sereseres speculated on some of the reasons why the attacks might have been car- ried out, including vengeance against U.S. foreign policy o~ as a way to escalate the ongoing conflict In the Middle East. Una Kreidie, an authority on the West-Islam cultural and political divide, said frustration and rage are inflamed when the United States takes advantage of its position as a negotiator between Israel and the Palestinians and takes sides. •Tue United States says (itJ is a mediator and is trying to reach a peaceful resolution,• Kreidie said. •If this is the cast, you can- not just say, 'Israel is our strongest ally.' This would create anger." Authorities are saying much of the evidence thus far, as well as their investigation, is impli- cating suspects from the Midcf:Le East, including Osama bm Laden. The appropriate military response to the attacks ulti- mately depends on the cause and will be the first true test of President Bush's foreign policy, Sereseres added. ln terms of deterrence, Patrick Morgan, the former director of the Global Peace and Conflict Studies Center, sug- gested the United States exert more pressure on governments that harbor and assist terrorists and increase its capacity to arrest suspected terrorists before they strike. "The United States has more intelligence capabilities to try and ferret out terrorist groups and communications ... than any other government,• Morgan Doily Pilot said •1t baa more leverage on the wOdd'I oths governments tbananyatber~ The United Statea II a tremendous. 1y powaful adar in tbia retard.. While the United States ooo. tinues to deal with the shock of the attacks on Ill nation41 psy. che, it also bas to deal with two types of severe economic shocks, saJd Peter Navarro,~ date protessor ol~and public policy fur the \Ulh(ersi- ty's Graduate Schoo! of ~gement. There is the possibility of a drop in both consumer con. sumption and investmen1t and the dsk d dsiDg dl pdces, \fluch could lead to a weaker ~ollar and destabilization of boqi the stock market and Jntemational monetary systems, he said. Navarro emphasized t:Qne IS of the essence. "If those two shocks a.rt? not addressed by the presideni and the chairman of the Fe4eral Reserve in an expeditiowl and proper way, we run the risk of a much deeper and longer reces- sion that will start here and basi- cally affect the whole Vf orld economy,• Navarro said. Another domestic challjmge is how the country's leaders respond to the issue of national security, Sereseres said. He issued a caveat about quick fixes that would infringe on the nation's basic values. ·Although I'm a foreign pol· icy specialist and support mill· tary action, my immediate con- cern is we don't start tampering too much with our basic values and our basic access and free. dom to move without too much obstacles,• Sereseres said. Bridging the gaps between the West and Muslims is also of paramount importance, Kre1die stressed. "It's the role of leaders -and the leaders in this country, that's the media, politicians, teachers, parents -to take this stereo- typing out of their minds and educate people that we live m a global world.• Kreidiesaid. "We can live together in peace and understanding. We have to teach them tolerance.• • Deirdre NeWl'IW\ covers educa· tloo. She may be reached at (949) 574-4221 ()(by e-mail at delrdre.MWr'Mf>Olatimes.com .. . . . . QUOTE OF THE DAY MOPENER ~ • 1 told our kids to go o~t and play hard ... there's thousands of people who ''l will never get another chance to watch iT,. a football game ... " .JJO.., IMMIU "lllylor, Orange Coast College football coach September 17 honot.e CHARLES APPELL )~ ,()oily Pilot Sunday, September 16, 2001 11 Boyce blocks extra point with 0:06 remaining to secure stalemate against 1\'oy after big fourth.quarter lead fizzles. Tony Attobeflt DM.Y PILoT with the visiting Wanton Satwday night at Newport Harbor HJgh. N E W P 0 R T ..---------. "I'd say we were pretty lucky to walk out of here with a tie,• CdM Coach Dick Freeman lald. ·we were out of gas and nay knew it. There was not too much we could do about it. Fortunately, Matt made the big play for us at the end. I wish we bad that type of penetration when nay was running the ball· BBACH Apperently, Corona deJ Mar High waterboys PauJ Niday and Gerard Porbes must have read the last page of SCOBIOlll Friday night's ~ 34 The Waniors (1-0-1) racked up 303 yards on the ground, most of whlcb came in Th>y's 21-point fourth quarter, helping the visitors rally from a 34-13 deficit. footbell so1pt before OIM 34 It actually took place. With CdM just one extra point away from a heart- breaking loss, both Niday and Forbes said out loud, ·ne game. We're going to be lied." ·we baa the big lead early and I think we got a Uttle complacent in the second half, but you have to give Ttoy a lot of credit,· Freeman said. "The Wa.rrlors didn't quit over there, but we didn't quit over here either. We just got gassed. We don't know how to play tired yet, but we'll get there.• Apparently, Sea King Matt Boyce was listening. The CdM junior plowed through the middle, reached out and blocked Troy's potential game-winning extra pomt with six seconds remaining to preserve a 34·34 nonleagaue stalemate CdM (1-0-1), took advantage of an errant Troy punt snap and used the • ODS Westminster foils man-to-man pass coverage with 287 aerial yards, three touchdown tosses, to surprise the Mustangs Saturday afternoon in nonleague football. a.ry Fulmer He lofted a strike to 6-foot-3 senior DMY Pilar Akilah Lacey for an 81-yard scoring WESTMJNSTER - In the second half of a rare daylight football doubleheader, it was the home run ball that proved the undoing for Costa Mesa High Saturday at nonleague host Westminster. play on the second snap of the third ------quarter. Then, when the Lions got the ball back on downs at their own 33, they needed only two plays to score, as Gonzalez found John Le behind a defender for a 67-yard run and catch SCOlllOlll that boosted the lead to 22-8. Mesa, which lost the f~eshman ea.ta-. 16 game earlier in the day, 21-6, closed ........... 22 The Lions (1-1), t.ak:lng advantage of man-to-man perimeter pass coverage by the Mustangs (1-1) rolled up 287 aerial yards, including three touchdowns, to earn a surprising 22-16 victory. Westminster junior quarterback Fidel Gonzalez, who completed 10 of 21 for 13 yards, with two intercep- tions, in the Lions' 35-14 opening- week loss to PacUica, confounded · Costa Mesa Coach Dave Perkins by "We put schemes in to make him throw to beat us and that's what he did .. . ,. Dave Perkins Costa Mesa coach connecting with wide- o p e n receivers all day. " Th a t wasn't the same guy 1 saw last w e e k , • Perlons said of Gonzalez, whomadehls varsity debut last year against Mesa by completing 6 of 9 for 194 yards and a touchdown. the gap with a 98-yard scoring drive, set up when safety Freddy Rodriguez intercepted a pass deep in Mesa territory. Nick Cabico's 2-yard touchdown run capped the 12-play drive and Perkins threw to Gary Gonzalez on a fake from kiclc formation for the two- point convetsion with 56 seconds left. Westminster's Frank Guereca recovered the en.suing onside kick, h6wever, and the Uons ran out the clock. for their first victory in their last eight games outside of Golden West League play. Costa Mesa converted three times on five fourth-down tries, moving the chains twice on fourth-and-two plays during each of its 1D drives. The Mustangs rolled up 230 rushing yards, despite surrendering six sacks for 39 yards in losses. But the Mustangs lost two fumbles and were penalized 11 times for 103 yards. Westminster produced minus 29 yards on the ground, but overcame that with a passing game that connected on 12 of 20 attempts. cushy field position for a four-play, 30- yard drive, capped oil by a 21-yard touchdown run by jtmioT Matt Cooper. Th>y answen!d back with a three- play, 65-ya.rd scoring drive. Following a 45-yard run by Jordan McCarthy, Will Otto scored the first of his four touchdown runs, this one from 5 yards out, tying the game. From there, cqM scored 20 stralght points to take command. First, junior Mark Cianciulli capped off a five-play, 55-yard drive with a touchdown from a yard out. After Ward recovered a fumble with 1 :25 remaining in the first half, CdM pulled out some trickery "(The Mustangs) played a lot of zone coverage and played off (the receivers) last week against Saddleback (a 39-13 Mesa win), so it took us a IJtUe bJne to figure out what they were domg today,• Westminster Coach Ted McMilJen said. "They totally stuffed our run, so give them credit there But we have some athletes outside and Fidel can throw the deep ball very well.• GonzaJez didn't th.row the inter- mediate ball too badly, either, including a 16-yard touchdown al.ant to E.J . Miranda that opened the scorlng two plays into the second quarter. Jared Jenkins' convermon kick put the hosts up, 7-0, and they never trailed again. Perlcins said he eleded not to back off the man-to-man pass coverage, maintaining faith that his pass rush, which did produce three aadm, would limit Gonzalez's pessing eftec.ttveness. ·we kept getting after it because we wanted out guys to get all over (Gonzalez).· Perkins said. ·we put schemes in to make tum throw to beat us and that's what be did I put the blame on my sboulden heca•we tt'a my job to get my kids ready to play and we weren't ready to play.• Perkins downplayed the l p.m. kickoff, as well as the one-day post- ponement brought on by the terrorist attacks on the &at Cout Tuesday. "That's no excuse, because (the Uom) bad the same drcumstancea, • PeJtim sald. Costa Mesa's Nathan HURter (above) lat.cbel on to a.21-yard rec:epUon. Below, Keola Anega (4) races for yardage wblle shoving. Westm.lnlter foe Miele. Atrlght. qaarterbeck Both teams exchanged safeties in the second quarter. First a punt snap well over the head of Jenkins forced bJm to kick the ball out of the back of his end f.ODe to put Mesa on the boa.rd with 5:11 left in the haU. Mesa, however, returned the favor wbeo a snap went through the punter's bands and into the end zone, where 1t was also kicked beyond the end Une to give Weatminlter a 9-2 edge at intennilsion. MeM. wbkb moved the ball well on the ground much of the day, uaed 18 plaYI to drive 80 yard• for a touchdown on lta first aecond-balf po•e11lon. Junior Keola Asuega capped tbe dd .. With a 13·yard nm around the left tlde. A two·J)Olftt conversion pa11, tiowever, fell Incomplete and Meta milHd lta c:mnc. to .... tbe deOdt. lndbQo 9- 8, wttb 2.4. MCODdt left iD tti4t lblrd qUarter. il TliM'• WIMD Gcei • , ~ Md ••df< .. 'dtdtwoJl.!j .. ..... In .... ant ...... IDd bid ... 26-,... .... away ............ . wlio ~ to be 18'1 •• .,., .. niledoulOfbOt ............... Jesse Cardenu, whote 57-yard rumble set up Mesa's fourth-quarter ro. led tbe vtslt.orl wtth as rushing yards. Cabico sat out mo.t ol the first half with a nagging ba.m9triDg llJalD aJid Mesa's leading receiTer, Nathan Hunt.er, appeared to lpl'8in an eokJe in pea coverage in the tecond quarter end did not mum. 1Ac:ey flnllbed wtth 121 yards on foqr ~for the wtnnen. A. J. Peddnl lookl tor 1111 open reaiher bl Salmdays game. . . when baclrup quarterback Jonathan Hubbard took a backward pitch from quarterback Dylan Hendy and fired a perfect pass to junior K.C. Rawlins in the back of the end zone with 17 seconds left before halftime, giving Cd.Ma 21-7 lead. Cianciulli sparked CdM's next touchdown with a 47-yaro punt retwn, setting up a 5-yard scoring pass from Hendy to senior Steven Ward. The extra-point attempt was unsuccess- ful, making the score 27-7. Prom there, it became a Troy run- fest The Warriors rumbled 65 yards on 13 running plays and Otto scored from esa Doily Piiot a yard out, cutting the lead to 27-13. CdM appeared to regain the momentum on its next drive When Hendy found receiver Jett Reed down the left sideline for a 29-yard touchdown pus, making It :W-13. But that would be It on the o&.nslve end for the Sea Kings as Troy owned the ball for eight« the ftnal 12 minutes of action and scored three times. Otto (21 carries, 76 yards) and Luis Cardenas (17 carries, 138 yards) were the biggest thorns ln CdM's defensive backside down the stretch. ·we couldn't get OlD' defense ctf the field long enough,• Freeman said. 1 "Even when we scored, we did it quickly, so the defense was on the field a lot tonight.• Hendy ended the night completing 11 passes for 162 yards wiih two touchdowns and one interception. •He's been doing a good job for us,• Freeman said. "His looks and reads are getting better.• The game started with a moment of sUe;ice as a tribute to those lost in Tuesday's East Coast terrorlsts attacks. .. SPOitTs · Sunday, ~iber 16, 2001 IS CATa.&•WITH PaUl TI.me away from the game has been a welcome breather for former Corona del Mar High boys basketball coach. • I T~ Altobell! 0Aa.YPlm Tie sound of the squeaky shoes, ear-shattering whistles and the always- unusual soents of boys locker rooms lV8le replaced by fresh air, fresh fish and loads of quality rest and relaxation. Such was the summer or now-former Corona del Mar High J>oyl basketball coach Paul Onis. •for the first time in 31 years, I finally bad a sununer vacation,• Orris said proudly. ·1 went up to Alaska with my brother-in-law and brought home about 160 pounds or salmon from our fishing trips. It's such a beautiful area. I can't wail to go back again: Now with time on tus hands, Onis can think about more trips around the country, but for now. it's HIGH SCHOOL .. BRIEFS CdM girls sweep C«orla del Mar~ High senior Julie Allen set a course record for the second straight week with a time of 17:40, winoJng the Division n tWe at the Swmy Hills I 1nvttat1onal Saturday. The Se{l Kings won the team Division n title as they placed five runners in the top seven. The CdM boys team finished seoond in Division Il. Last week. Allen set a course record at the Laguna Hill!: llltltadonaJ Por the Coron.a girls, senior Becky CUmmtm came in second 19:'41 and, foDow1ng her, came r Katherine Morse with a 20:10 on the three-mile course. The fourth-and fifth-place slots were taken by freshmen Ablia Kattan (21:10) and Melissa Swigert (21:12), respectively. Sophomores Kinzie Kramer (21:37) and Taryn Kawata I (21:47) do6ed out the top seven. The boys were led by senior I Dustin Hodges, w~o placed fourth overall in Division n in 1 16:46. back to school to teach mathematics and geometry. "I'm also still involved in CdM athletics,• Oms said. ·I'm still the timekeeper for CdM football games and I'm active in other sports as weu.· or course, most people recognize Onis on the basketball courts, where he was the Sea Kings' skipper for 31 seasons, including 16 with the freshman team. Oms, the Newport-Mesa District career victories leader, was 229-199 in 15 varsity sedSOns, including CIF Southern Section Division IV-AA championships m 1992-93 and 1994-95. His learns won three league titles and were section runners-up in their division three times. "l'U miss practicing with the k.tds," Onis said. •ooing the drills, CdM senior Mark Pomerantz took sixth (16:56), while aopbomore Kevin Artz came in lninth (17:16). Junior Blake Dillion (17:32), aenlor Ben lnouye (17:39), topbomore Danny Quinlan (18:10) and sophomore J.C. 1'un!er (18:12) rounded out Newport Harbor's Dartagnan Johnson (above) fends off a Marina defender. top eeven nmners. 1be Sea Kings will c.'OIDpete their ftnt dual meet of the euon Thursday against nmmtty. The CdM girls have DOt lost a dual meet tn the past fouryean. fall in qUarters At rlgbt. Adam Kerm nmaJn for a aecoDd-quarter touchdown. and below, sophomore Matt~• looks for room to run u a Marina defender closet In. four-on-four and five-on-five drills, those are the things I'll miss the most. But I thought at that point in my We it.was time to step down and have someone new, with new energy and new Ideas come in here and make a difference.• Despite the fact that it's football season, this was a time or great headaches for Ortis while as a coach. "This time of year, I'd be trying to figure out who would be coaching the lower levels: he said. "I'd be wondering who my varsity assistants would be, I'd be up at 3 a.m. wondering if we were going to have enough sophomores for the sophomore team. All that fun stuff, I won't miss.• Replacing Ortis is Ryan Cuny, who made the bip from Nevada Union High in Northern California, down to Southern Califorrua and Orris is excited to see the •new guy• succeed. •He's a real good guy,• Orris said. "He works well with the guys and from what I've seen, he seems to have the same level of temper as 1 do. I have the feeling he's going to be on the scene at CdM for a long, long time.• Although he's only been out of the sport for six months, oms has already been thcown coaching offers, but he's tossing them back, like a bad Alaskan salmon, if there is such a thing. ·rve had all sorts of offers, from coaching seventh-grade girls on up,• Orris said. "So far, I've resisted them all.· Will the CdM fans still get to see Orrts al games? Sure, but don't expect to see the towel around his shoulder any ti.me soon. •1 still love the game very much and I'm very interested to see the progress of these players,• Onis said. In the immediate future for Oms? ·rube going to Illinois at the end or October and from there, I'm not sure,· Orris said. "I've got my first Christmas vacation coming up, so I've got to figure out what to do then, too." Paul Orris was a major fixture in Corona del Mar High's basketball program for 31 years. HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL Newport Harbor dominates Vikings to avenge recent struggles against Marina. Barry Faulkner DAJLY PILOT WESTMINSTER -In this lime of supreme patriotism, it was the football team for which Stars & Stripes Is not only a symbol, but a helmet logo, that appeared to recapture some old glory Saturday night. •Maybe it was fitting the team with the flag on its helmets won tooJght, • said SCOlllOAll Newport Harbor High Coach Jett Brinkley, Nau•Oft 28 after his Sailors' banner 28-0 nonleague .._... o triumph over Marina at Westminster High It was the first win or the young season for the Sailors, wbo tied Orange Lutheran last week. It was also the first win over Marina in three yea.rs, after tying in 1999 and losing last fall. •It feels good to get that first win this year,• said Newport senior quarterbaclc Morgan Craig, whose four touchdown passes were a c.a.reer high and the most in recent single-game memory for a Harbor signal caller. •Espedally against Marina. We've developed a little rivalry against those guys and this was the first time I've beaten them in three varsity seasons.· Craig's passing efficiency, be completed 12 of 14 to six different receivers for 135 yards without an interception, was only part of the success story for the Sailors. Junior tailback Dartangan Johnson dashed for 208 yards on 26 carries, 144 of which came in the first half. And, not so insignificant, was the play of the Harbor defense. Playing without one returning starter from last season. the Tars allowed Marina's deepest penetration to the Harbor 25-yard line, late in the final period. Marina, which scored 40 points in a season-opening win over Paramount. ran 13 offensive plays in Sailor territory and never came close to scortng. ·we bad extra time to prepare, when the game was rescheduled (from Thursday to Saturday, due to the terrorist attacks on the East Coast Tuesday),• Newport outside linebacker 1\'ler Miller said •Marina put it to us early, but we earned (the shutout).• Marina, operating in the veer, man.aged just 49 yards on the ground, u the Sailors stuffed nine of their 2A rushing attempts for negative yards. Eight more Marina plays picked up 3 yards or less and the Vtldngs' biggest ground gain (19 yards) came on the third play of the game. With a slightly ahered offensive line of tackles Robert Chal and John Debrott, guards Bryan Breland and Ollis Badorek, center Jeff Marshall and tight end Joe Foley m\l.lcling Marina's defense, John.son aiid Craig bad room to operate. Johnson produced 70 yards during Harbor's second- quarter touchdown drives of 76 and 69 yards, respectively. The first scoring march. wbidl took 11 plays, wu capped wben Craig hit Matt Casserly on a 3-yard play-action i- wlth 5:07 left before the bait. After Johnson bolted 45 yards on the f1nt play followtl:MJ ooe ol Marina's six punts, the Tari Deeded Pist tlnit men pays to double the )M(l. Crai(J bit -*ir Adam Keml cm a poll for 19 yards and a ·toucbdOwn wttb 2:1' Wt ID tt.11 leCODd quarter, then Kerns drtDed the 98CCIDd of * tow c:oGvenlon klcb to make lt 1,-0. JobDlon broke 38 yards to Mutna'I 31 .... ..a.I play .tte.r tbe teemd-balf kidEGG mil ....... Wiil $5,.... _ tbe Dine-p)ey, •yard drtfe lbllt ..... ti 21-0.. Mite Md>nnakt ceuglll m ~ lllllt..Stwkl d lllD tbe eDd .... to Pit• ..u..11 ... ..,.. ..... ·we w w 1ong ..._ • Wt• t t '$ t tilllL ·a ...,ede8r ........ eo-,.rd ..... _.. • Ntlitl"*llll*~•Mr• ... •.. -•< tlliJl .. a.lf•• .. =-., ,,, ...... '::::111 ••· ..• -..... --4 .... ..... ... .. .. ...._ ....... ~ ..... '" 14 .. • 16, 2001 COSTA MESA~ -Vanguard Untvenkywasa 3- 0 men'• 1occer wtnn.' over Menlo CoiUege in Pdday'i ftnt "'twO gllDel It the Vanguard University Soccer aaw Millt Hemltored df ma81111t frOai 1bOmu Drule.r, EltaDda High ~uct Annando Ortiz added a score and agisted OD Zach S.dler's goal. Tommuo Bland bad three saves in gaining the shutout. Saturday night the Lions sciuared off with Cal State Monterey Bay. And it was another shutout. M<lllterey Bay was a 4-0 Joeet as Matt He1S got bis fit1t collegtate bat trick, connect1Dg oft assists from Ricky Wade, Matt Swift and Jonathan Olinger. Ortizhad the other score, off the second of Swift's assists. Bi.and had three saves in this, bis second shutout of the tournament. Vanguard improvfes to 3-4·1 overall. Montery Bay is 2-8. lions lose twice The Vanguard cm University ~ women's'<.@ volleyball team dropped a J0.22, J0.28, J0.27 decision to visiting Westmont Friday night in Golden State Athletic Conference action. Megan Godfrey Jed the Uoos (2·8, 1·2 in conference) with 15 kills and 12 digs, while Carly Birkhauser added six kills and six assists. Saturday night, Vanguard dropped a 29-31, 30-19, J0.23, 30-26 nonconference women's volleyball decision to host Cal Lutheran ln Thousand Oaks. The Lions dropped to 2·9. HAPPY BIRTHDAY TODAY JANma RBMOM> • Orange Coast College basketball DIEGo GOM A Orange Coast College W men's soccer Auano MINOZ ~ Estancia W cross country ------------·----' scoan=0 rr '°"' Mesi 0 2 ' • -16 Wm1111l111ta1 0 t 0 13 -22 SIC09fW!m WM -MlrlnCM 7 pa from GoN* (Jenkins kidc), 1t :22. CM· Slf9ty <-r.nt punt 1N1P kkbd out ohnchone), 5:11 . .... -s.f9ty (furnl*d punt.., klcMd out of end zone), O'.A2. nmfW!m CM · Alulgl 1J run (pa felled), 0'.24. fOJIDleern .. • laclly 11 ... from Gonula Ocldc w.o. 1~1 • .. • Le 67 ,,.. from Gonzalez Ulr*lnl lddl), 7:11. Cll • C.lbko 2 Nn (G. Gonzalez ,,.. from ~G:SI. Mlll•a.!00~. FOOTBAU SUMM.ttlES nw•nn .... McDonllld .... ffofn Craig oc.ns kldl). 7:0. rMll"M"' ... -"-"" .... *°"' Omlg (Karns kldc). 9'3'. Mell•ca a,t00'91din•4. ... a .. • Jotnaf\ .,_ D. Mlrhill. 5-1~ ............ ,~ fndrw. 1-11; Olllg, ... Md>onlld.1~ lllr· ~~ &lgMmln. ... ~ 7--t: ~ 1·J;.,...,,.,, 2-2: ~2.-...... ,, . ........ ... pCJ ............ .... __ ,.... ,, 2 ,., • ....... ... . Ol'ug9Co..t Colleg8'1 Banett lharbll...cbea oattotlp a~ bdmded lor ClutaC'JwWi•ilw llWllY ....... occm11r.one: Below,Plnlel' Joil IMPon tdel ~~the 1•aellllbll twO-pomt COllY&Li ftall6anwm good, but the c69l would ba\'e none of It. STEVE MC CRANK /DMYPILOT Orange Coast has five turnovers, but nearly comes away with victory. StlW\llrgln OMV Pk.OT' I COSTA MESA -After battling with • vlsiUng Los Angelel Halt>or CoDege and giving up five turnovers, the Orange Coast football team was 20 yards away frolll redemption. The Pirates, perbapl, bad the opportunity to symbolize America II , l On a day that went without Major LA....._ 15 League Baseball and NCAA DtvtDon I occ 2t football games, the Pirates and Seebawb . played some football. The NPL abo postponed its games this week in the aftermath of th~ terrorist attacks on America. With m seoonds rematntr19, fourth down from the 20-y~ , line going in, the Pirates' Nick Hlggl picked up a abo~ snap that dribbled across the football fteld. He was tackled, the final gun fired and the game ended with the Sea.bawkj ralsing their bands in celebration of a 35-29 victory. ~ This was just another juco football game. But for a littl over three hows on Saturday, here at LeBard Stadium OCC and L.A. Harbor offered entertainment. suspense an a bit of escape from the tragedy that spilled out onto this weekend. "It was an emotional week for allot us,• sakl Bucs Coach Ml.Ice Tclylor. •1 told our kids to go out and play ban:l ... there's thousands of people who will never get another chance to watch another football game. We played foe the oountry and we played for ourselves and we played for our fans, but we just came up short. There's some things we need to correct and we have to get better.• Improvement is expected soon as. OCC will play at El Camino Saturday at 1 p.m. Against L.A. Harbor. the Bucs cut down on their penalties from a week before, but it was turnovers that cost them the game. Also, the Seahawks' vaunted passing attack became OCC's demise. With simple-looking pa.Ues, LA. Harbor quarterback Melvin Yarbrough picked the Bua apart with 298 yank and three touchdowns on 23 of 49 passing. OCC bas now surrendered 690 passing yards and four touchdowns in its first two games. Higgs, however, oountered with S<lOl8 power of his own. He threw for 285 yards and three touchdowns on 15 of 26 puling. Recetvem Vince Strang (three catches for 128 yards end cne toubdown), Jonathan Ja.cboo (4..s&, 1 TD) and tight end Brandon Hall (6-58, 1 TD) were the beneficarles. But Higgs saw his tipped pass fall into the Seahawk.s' bands for an interception in the third quarter. The turnover lf'd to Yarbrougb's 12-yard touchdown pass to Chris Christopher as L.A. Harbor ate up some clock. They used nearly five minutes and went 58 yards on 12 plays to gain a 28-17 lead. The Buar'(1·1) quickly answered as Higgs led speedy wide receiver Vlooe Strang for a SS.yard toudldown just~ seconds after the Seahawks bad ICOled. But a SS.yard nm by Brandy Ruael1. who rushed for i4J yards and two touchdowns oo 23 carries, set up ~ Yarbrough TD pe11. This time the quarterblck to wkle-open Jason Mttcbell, for bis aec::ond touchdown. Not abort on cbaracter, the Bua later came back another acore as Higgs lofted a deep ball to Jackson f ' 46-yard touchdown.. With lea than five minutes rematnlng, the Bua bad another d:dve end when Anthony Campo fumbled Oil Ulla$- and·tndles from L.A. Harbor'l .W.yard line. But the Baes were able to win the ball back after the Seahawk.s turned the ball over on downs, giving Orange Coast its last cbance. •we came to play, but when the slluatioo called for tt. we didn't do what was needed,• Higgs sakl. "They made mo1' big plays than us. But. when we do what we have to do, w~ can score at will. I thiD.k we were successful in getting everybodys' mind oft (Tuesday's tiagedy). The twnout wa& very good for a junior college game.• K CROSS COUNTRY nrateS sweep up on · Back Bay cOurses ·: Ifs e record day as Corona del Mar High wide receiver George la•Mr catches five touchdown passes to tie an Orange County • record for TD receptions in one game. Sumner catches six passes for tiw touchdowns and 154 yiu;ds to 1.ead the Sea Kings a 54-0 victory OVffl Garden Grove. Sumners sconng receptions come from 65 33 l,, 3 and 19 yards out and he grabs two touchdowns in the first ' ~when the Sea Kings jump out to a 26-0 lead. Cdl\1 running back D>m O'Meara chums out 147 first-half yards and two toucMowm on 10 rushes, ind uding a 64-yard breakaway to give CdM an 18-0 lead with 6:37 left in the first quarter. Sea Kings Bryan .... , (two), Mike Finn, Mark Hatfield and Justtn Shea recover • G8fd8n Grove fwnbles to spearhead a defense that allows just 55 total yards iii I tbe~balf. It takes more than five hours to do it, but the Newport Harbor girls tennis !~ pUUs off the m~st sigruficant ~core of the decade by hammering nationally ~ Penlnsula High, 14-4. Peninsula comes into the marquee matchup with 122-game winning streak. ·obviously we a.re No. 1, •Sailors Coach fletcher OlloB says. "We've felt underrated all along, but we showed the world we have· some talent on our team. Teams better be looking out for us.• Erica Nellon >rliWeep all three of her singles matches from the No. 3 position, including a 7-6 tie-br8ak win. Newport Harbor's No. l doubles team of Emlly Baker and Brooke Tllylor' also sweep as they battle through two hard-fought tie-breakers. m lbe Orange Coast College football team ends a seesaw battle with Pasadena fY.whm>. Nate Bennett kicks a 19-yard field goal with five setonds remaining to give th8 PJrates a 20-17 victory. OCC running back Wllllam League, who runs for 175 yeidl on 26 carries, sets up the game-winning field goal. •lt The Estancia football team grinds out a 29-7 victory over Buena Park as the •nl!aglal feature two 100-yard rushers. James Dawkins compiles 100 yards and two 1 tOuc:bc:lowns on 17 carries, while Manu Tantelu runs for 107 yards and one touchdown on 10 carries. Index II g -·-rJ .... a __ ... c __ .,.. SEllVICE DIROCTOIZY -for All Your HorM U1d lulinetl ~ -...................... II ..... -;; •• Ii ~ -.. ..-.-.i.w....._ .. ._.. .. ,..llM• SOORTs · ~. ~ 16, 2001 15 HIGH SOIOOl GIRLS VOWYIAU DAILY PILOT PHOTO BY TONY ALTOBELLI Newport Harbor's defense readies for a Huntington Beach serve. The Sailors were 15-6, 15-10 winners, but fell in the quarterfinals to Mater De l, 16-14, 15-1, at Huntington Beach. WATER POLO . Sailors fall, 15-2 Host Coronado ~ High was a 15-2 winner over Newport Harbor in a nonleague boys water polo match Saturday. Michael Bury scored I idfbor's two goals. DEEP SEA $A1UIDAJ'S CQUff!S Newpoft IAnd6ng • 8 boats. 135 anglen 341 albacou!, 25 bluehn tuna, 23 stc;p;.ck tuna. S dofado, 5 yellowta1I, 3 barracuda, 54 cahco bass, 209 sand bass, 1 -4 roc:kfl5h, 1 red snapper, 75 sculpin, 3 sheepht!ad o-y's ~. 6 boats. 159 .oglers 86 albacor•. 21 yellowta1I, 7 yellowfin tuna. 2 dofado. 213 sand bass, 30 c.llco bes$, 66 bonrto. 2 hahbvt, 51 rockflsh. 190 sculpln, 48 whitefish. 36 ~ 4 blade sea bass ~ COLLEGE CROSS COUNTRY Jones grabs sixth for Vanguard men VU women take 10th with Llz Huipe leading the charge. CHINO Vanguard University's Robbie JonPs pldred sooh tn the Tour of the Park Cross Country lnv1abonal in Chino Saturday His 16 09.50, with an average of 5 08 per nuJe on the fi 000-m<'ler course, led the Lions to d seventh-plan• finish out of the 12 <ichools thdt competed in the evf'nt. The Vdnguard women hnt!>heg lOlh d!'. Liz Hwpe. an E'ildnc-1a High product. led the wdy corrung di No 30 with a 24 41 .90. The Vd11guMd mt-n's shoWUlg mdud{'(.[ Steve 1..d.hm (38th l0.35). Kyle Kahl (61st 21 :27), Dt1v1d Johnson (69th 21:4620) and John Bensen (80th 22.20.50), placing m the top 60 out of 100 runners On the women's side. belund Hwpe, Cd.me Sarclh Hall at 35th Wllh a 24:54.60. Jenny Thune followed later at 49th m 25:26 50 Beth Weidler came in 57th (25:56) and Ashley Greer hrw.hed 79th (27:29.80) out of 100 runner Polley ByPll••I! (Q-49) M2-.">(J"'8 By MaMn Pei 80llZ Rut..., a111J 1lr1ullrnt' &IT mbJ!',.I lo dran~r .. 11l1ou1 110111.. llw pulth•h<'r rNO<'l"\I"' 1111' rigtu to f'f't1-.or. n.,.lm.•1f,, "'".,.. nr n·1"'·1 011• d11 .... 1fi.-il nclwn1'>«'mt n1. Ple8"' "'J"H'I nm 1•m1r 1h11r ""'' ltl' 111 """ c·ln•~rfif·d IHI 1111111Mhat!'I~. 111.-011.ll~ Pilot nrn-ph no haluhl\ for dll\ l"m>r Ill 1111 ••hl"ftJ .... llM'lll for .. tuclt ti lllU\ IM" rl''JMlll•thk ,., ... ,.1 r .. r rlw ,.,,.,,of th .. •pa•-c-artuall~ 1JCT11111NI h~ th,. rm•r < n·1ln ··•n 011h 1 ... alto .. ,.,( for rht ft n<t lllM"l"lion :\:10 \\ ..... 1 11,f\ ~1 l'N'I c ~)o.111 ''""'· c. \ •r.!1>2"' \r V..p-,,. llh•t • 8.1 .., ...... frlrpho11r a :1011111-:1.0<)pm ~ .... '"' \\ul~-ln ll;:J011111..:; 00)1111 '"-'"' -t ndo> .....-------ne.Dlne8 --------. Monday ............ Friday 5:00pm Friday .......... Thun-day 5.-()()pm Tuesday ......... Monday 5:00pm Saturdoy ........... FriJay 3:00pm Wednesday .... Tue&day 5:00pm Sunday ............. Fnday 5:00pm Thunday .. Wednaday 5:00pm .. . .. ' •, I r· ..a1 ATIENTION AGENTS I Adflrlll ... cu l&T Y(QI LOCA&. REAL UTATt EXJl!RTI ,AGE Glt•212•wlll fOllJ ,.._ .. :::-.=: Ollll ... 14N7t-aa °' MN1"4• .. ,,... .... , . ~ . • ., ..,,._ .... 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