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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-10-17 - Orange Coast Pilot.. .. SERVING THE NEWPORT -~SA CONJ.AUNmES SINCE 1907 ON 1HE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM Drug courts up for judgment • State wide initiative could end what advocates at Harbor Justice Center say is a promising program. Alex Coolman DAILY PILOT HARBOR JUSI1CE CENTER- Jennifer was a fresh-faced 17-year- old the first time she tried heroin. A decade later, her body and soul bad been ravaged by a habit she oouldn't control. Her addiction grew FIRST LOOK unW it destroyed her life , pulling her down into a grim world of homeless- ness, prostitution and prison time. "My whole day was spent getting more." the forceful, dark-haired 32- year-old recalled recently. Being arrested on drug possession or pros- titution charges and going to jail were simple facts of life. "I would do my 90 days and get back out and go back on Harbor Boulevard," she said. "Nothlng was different.• Today, something about her is dif- ferent. Jennifer works as a waitress in Santa Ana. She's sober, she seems collected and she's going to school to become a counselor for other people dealing with addiction. SEE COURT PAGE 5 GREG FRY I OMV Pl.OT Seventh-grader Jack Turner, 12, ls transfixed by a newly hatched Painted Lady butterfiy that was part of a project by teacher Susan Thatcher's jpedal day class at Corona del Mar JUgh School. Renewed opposition to skate park mounts • Costa Mesa residen ts say they were unaware how far plans are along for proposed West Side site. .... ...,,... Kho OA&.Y PltOT COSTA MESA-Earlier this month. Vaneaea Cocroft was oom- p)etely \UMlware that a skateboard park was behlg planned in her West Side neighborhood. Now, she and a neighbor, Hector Jimenez, are organizing new oppo- sition to the proposed location at Hamilton and Charle streets. The dty p lanning and parks commissions approved design plans for the skateboard park in August. The plans call for ramps, half-pipes and rails for varying levels of skaters, a shaded area for spectators and restrooms with compost toilets. Last year, O ty C.O\mdl members approved plans to build the skate park at Uons l>ark but later retreat- ed from the plan when neighbors objected. Cocroft and J imenez say they support a skateboard park but are opposed to the location because of safety, space and financial con - cerns. Hamilton is sucb a busy street. Cocroft 5aid, that she thinks people will get hurt and the city will end up having to close the park because or the liability and danger. Jimenez said the Slte JS not big enough to allow parents to watch their children skate and still have adequate landscaping. •This is a family -Oriented neigh- bolbood, • he said. ·u the park ts here, it needs to be family-oriented to be oompatible with this communi- ty. And the skate park can't be fam- ily-oriented when all we have space for is the actual ram~ and rails.• SEE SKATE PAGE 5 Residents feel like a boat out of water 111111 Ill CLUSIOOM . •Neighbors saddened by removal of area land.mark -a sailboat fiaating in the man-made lake at Vista del Lago apartin.ent complex. " out ol the man-made JAke at Vista del Lago -removing what some reskients ooDlid- eied a landmaii . Tbe boat bad been aJloat at Vilt.a del • Lago fOr nearly 30 years -u long u the • .,...._ .. have been around, Mid rest~ denll end IDem.ben ol the leuing ltaff. A aew ol about baJf a doun men frOm WUadagtan Boat Maven Ul8d a crane to 1tft tbe ftllel out ol tbe w...,. ad onto a tnldl. 1t wm be lbown to a~ buy9r at 1 a.m. loday, but mlgbt end up in tbe j\uak· ,...... llld JD SbuWn, Who WU °"'11 Ing .. ... .... al .. boat. .... 11 ·--:.r-to ~ .... ····-"'*:ti ............... .................................. .... mr rt llllr Mdll ID cati:la a .. JI J I el.!!.. 1IDll oat al ...... .., ,... .. _ ..... ....,... .. . . Sch ool ch osen Superior Court Judge Geoffrey Glass listens as a drug court partidpant details his successes found in sobriety. DON LEACH I DAILY PILOT to receive st ate funds • College Park E ementary included in state program to help unde rachieving sch ools improve on test scores. Danette Goulet DAILY PILOT COSTA MESA -College Park Elementary School will receive a $50,000 grant from the state th.is year 10 dJl effort to unprove student lest scores The Costa Mesa school is one of 430 statewide that hdve been chosen to paruc1pate in the lmmedtale lntervenuon for Under-performing SChoob Pro- gram. "I'm really thrilled and look- mg forward to the process: said College Park pnnopal Carol Lang One of the mteqraJ pieces of Gov. Gray Davis' Public Schools Accountability Act of 1999, the mtervention program targets schools that scored below the 50th percentile on the state Stan- dardized Testing and Reporting program achievement tests. With acceptance to the pro- gram, schools are awarded a $50,000 planning grant and must appoint an external evaluator to assist in creating a plan of action to raise test scores. Although administrators said they are not certain exactly when they would receive the grant money, they were told it will be soon. "We're in the process ol get- ting together a parenHeacher team to make that selectlon (of an evaluator} so that everyone is comfortable with that person.• Lang said. The evaluator then will help the school produce a plan that could bring in as much as $200 per 5tudent from the state during the oext two yeers to help put it into action. Wrth the benefits or the pro- gram, however, com senous consequences if scores do not improve. SEE PROGRAM PAGE 4 11111 ' -------• an rr.-• ... ~ ' ..... t -1 •tmr J ...... -'_ .-.. ... .. .. ...... ·a··· N .. ' Mariners disc~ion to focus on drug prevention Parents are lnvtted to attend a sut>- st.ance-abUse prevention program Thurs- ct.y night et MMtners flementaty School. The event will begin at 1 p.m. in the Penny Farrell Theater on the cam· pus. 2100 Mariners Ave., Newport Beach. The featured speak...s will lndude Dr. Daniel Headridc. the director of chemt- cal dependency at Hoatg Hospltal, and a parent who has battled her child's drug problem. . 'med. -ts f The program IS al a~ paren O students in the fifth grade and higher. 2 Tuesday, October 17, 2000 Daily Pilot Kids Talk BACK IN THE CLASSROOM Rainy day blues? We asked students at Harbor View Elementary School 1n Corona del Mar: What do you Uke to do on ralny days? I like to relax and stay in bed all day. SOPHIE LOYD, 10 Corona del Mar I like to sit by the fire witha friend and drink hot chocolate with marshmal- lows and watch 1V. KRISTEN CHAPMAN, 11 Corona del Mar I like sitting by the fire and drink- ing hot chocolate. TAYLOR OARK.11 Corona del Mar I-A ___ ..:; GREG FRY I DAILY Pit.OT Davis Education Center fifth-grade teacher Jaymi Ropp coaxes a smile out of student Bryson Huffine as she helps him with a math problem. I play Nin- tendo. I play with my toys in my room. 1 play with Legos. JEREMY HYTER.11 Newport Beach I like to watch movies and play board games. ASHLEY KATZ. 11 Newport Beach I like to go outside and run around in the rain. And I like to watch TV. JONATHAN TORRES, 12 Newport Beach I like to sleep in and watch movies and sit by the fire. SHANNON JOHNSON, 11 Corona del Mar So many l~ssons, just one class Fifth·graders at Davis Education Center tackle several lessons at the same time, with the same teacher. Danette Goulet DAILY PILOT ey were just like little adults. Smiling students in Jaymi Ropp's fifth.grade class at the Davis Education Center returned from recess quietly and took their seats. Before she beqan her next les· son, Ropp said sfie •owed them a treat• and offered the students a math brainteaser. •The number of doughnuts in four dozen, divided by six, doubled, subtract two, divide by two, .Plus three, times four, divided by eight, add one more than a dozen, and you should be at the number of eggs in one and a half dozen,• she saiCI. The class cheered enthusiastical· ly when she offered them one more. Then, amid a nearly silent room, she explained what everyone would be doing -about four total· ly different activities -and sent them about their tasks. Five students headed off to a bank of three computers, where they began to put together a power point presentation provin9 or dis- proving the generalization that people adapt to their environment. That's pretty impressive, I thought. While r coul<J handle the scientific and social ends of that one, I would have needed their help with the power point part. Another group of about six stu· dents gave tijemselves hands.on typing tests bn electronic key· boards. The · fifth·graders had learned where their fingers should be placed on a keyboara, and test· WEDNESDAY FYI • Who: Fifth-graders in Jaymi Ropp's class • W'heN: Davis Education Center • What: A smorgasbord of learning activity • Lesson: Differentiated instruction ed for speed and accuracy. "This is hard,• 10·year-old Luis Munoz Jr. warned as he explained the testing process. •1 th.ink it's pretty easy,• boasted Elliott Sneen. 10. · Each delighted in demonstrating their k.now1edge on how the machines worked. On the other side of the room. two other groups worked on division. One worked with Ropp on long division problems while the other group used number Wes to fill in the blanks on math problems. Four completely different activi- ties and the room wasn't even chaotic. It did not simply demonstrate Ropp's control or the students' good behavior -it was a lesson in differ- entiated instruction. Although Ropp said it can become hectic at times, she teaches kids at about eight different math levels simultaneously. Students' homework is not identical each night, but tailored to their individ· ual learning curves. All that, and some how Ropp keeps her classroom smelling espe- cially pleasant. • IN 1IE ClASSAOOM Is a weekly feature in which Dally Piiot education writer Danette Goulft visits a c:ampus within the Newport-Mesa Unlfled School District and writes about her~. Muncba~ Lunch Salad or pepperoni ~ ~ cbotce " 100% fruit juice and d)()Jce of MONDAY • Mwx:hable Lunch Salad or Pranch tned pep.. peroni pizza. choice "juice and ddm d iill1k millt . . FM>AY Munmable l.uDcb. Sal8d or chkken Permewl l8Ddwicb OD a bulJ. 'b9bJ amoD with dip, chdce d 100% fruit Juke end dXlk:e d milk • The Muncbable Lunch Salad c:oatalne tossed greens, cherry tomatoea. c.T.m.n aDd protein sources such u cb1111, laidknNr seeds, fruit yogurt, hOney-routild ...... and dressing. READERS HQDJNE (949)642~ ' Record ~ comments about the Dally Piiot or news tips. CA 92626. Copyright Ho MWI st~ ,., ~ edltoNI ~ « ~IWttl.....,.. c-., be ~ wtthout writtlln ,.,. mlll6on of~ owner. WEITHEl llD SURF ~ .... ~ POLICE FILES VOLN.N0.2A7 ADDftESS CM addra Is 330 W. Bay St., ColtA Mesa, CA 92627. HOW IO ltEACH U5 OWllielon 11155 nDa TODAY Arstlow CQMECDONS It Is the Piion policy to pl'Ompt· ly correct .ti errOB of SUbsUnc.9. ....... call (Mt) 57~33. m lhe Nwlpott INcM:osta Mlle o.lly ,.lot (USl'S.1"'"900) " pUO.; lllhed MoncMy hough~ In Nwlpott leectl end C.olta ..... lllbafipttotw _.. ...... oNt ti, ~to The nm.ar.,.. County -2S2.f141. In ... oubldl of Hlwplrt lled\ ... COlta Mlle, Mleo ..... .. 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SA • -• ............. KJ ............... ......., .... orlze them. . .,.......,., ......... ~ ...... ~ ~ chllchn Ind blby~ ·~_, .......... ., ................ .... \9rlng~. ...... Clll ......................... .. your Qr, ................. , ............. .... .. ~ wht'I your cs..._. ............ - tlon '° cNClt It. Do not ......... .,,.. .. ............... .._ ... ..... .......................... __ _ ... ............... . .. Daily Pilot Ever come cye-to-t:)Je wi,th a 15foot octopus? Postponement of debate angers district opponents • Rohrabacher reschedules because Congress is still in session; challengers say it's unacceptable. FYI The rescheduled debate will be held at 6:30 p.m. Nov. 1 at Orange Coast College, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. T he recent story about a giant squid brought up memories of a giant octopus I encoun- tered. As a mudflat urchin, I had learned how to catch an octopus at an early age: Just pour salt down a hole in a mudflat that is sur- rounded with clean shells and out slithers a n octopus. We all had baby octopuses in bottles of water at home. During my abalone div- ing days, I came into con- tact with larger octopuses with regularity. They were timid, inoffensive creatures with about a 3-to 4-foot span. So much for my early contact with octopuses. I fast forward to World War II days. I was tem- porarily on the staff of the 21st Bombe r Command on the island of Saipan. I Jived in a tent with some war cor- respondents near a nice lagoon. Because I had little to do in my job, I spent a lot of time in that lagoon with my ever-present swim fins and face mask. A war correspondent from Baltimore became interested in my diving, fre- quently borrowing my face mask to look at the fish m the lagoon. Well, one day, I was swimming over a rock the size of a small house and looked down into a hole m the top of that ro!=k. I saw Robert Gordner · THE VERDICT the tentacle of a good-sized octopus. I told the corre- spondent. He conceived of the idea of taking an under- water picture of me pulling that octopus out of that hole. Splendid idea. Lousy execution. The correspondent made an underwater camera by simply putting his camera in a prophylactic. Then he went to the B-29 machine shop and had a spear made. And so came the big day. The correspondent sta- tioned himself and his underwater camera on one side of the bole. From the other side, I shoved the spear down into the hole. The theory was that the spear would penetrate the thin skin where the tenta- cle meets the head of the octopus. Unfortunately, the spear was a tad dull. lt just jabbed the octopus to the extent tha t he decided, all on his own, to come out and @)j~ Mattress Outlet Stor BRAND NEW · COSMETICAL.LY IMPERFECT Get ttie Best tor Less! ' em not worried, my agent Is Craig Brown Insurance Call today for au10 & home owner's lnsurJnce! Celestino's ._ quality MEATS '18 TIX' Finest Meat atl<1 semke Avallabl<' Smri'!t C#tA Ma. for owr 30 JU" CARNE ASADA GREEK MARINATED MADE FROM BONELESS LAMB SKIRT STEAK LEGS S6t: S6t: OUR FAMOUS MAUI BEEF RIBS ca.anNO'S SAUSAGI Of'11t& WDK1 POLISH FVl.L Of ZISTY Fl.AVOI 531: BONELESS SIRLOIN TIP ROAST ssr F0tsr OF THE SEASON FRlsHCOOKED LOCAL LOBSTER s16~ see just what or who was annoying him. The tentacles began to come out. They got bigger and bigge r and, when the head finally emerged, I esti- mate that octopus had about a 15-foot span. He looked at me with lhose hooded eyes. Now, when an octopus becomes fright- ened or annoyed, be spits , out a purple stream. I'm reasonably sure this octo- pus was really scared because he spurted out a huge stream of this purple liquid. The whole lagoon turned purple. I headed for shore and broke every record Johnny Weismuller ever had get- ting there. I looked back and there was the corre- spondent up to his waist in that purple water, wailing at the top of his voice. I wish I could say l swam out and saved him, but that would not be true. I stood there safely on the beach and told him to swim ashore . End of heroic story of the biggest octopus I ever saw. Needless to say, the corre- spondent got no pictures m that purple water. • R08ERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and former judge. His column is published Tuesdays. Alex Coolman DAILY PILOT COSTA . MESA -A debate scheduled for Wednesday between Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (R-Hunt- ington Beach) and his Demo- cratic and Libertarian oppo- nents bas been postponed, a move that has drawn flack Crom those contesting Robrabacher's seat in the 45th Congressional District. Ricardo Bernal. Rohrabach- er's press secretary, said the debate had to be postponed because Congress is still m session. The debate has been rescheduled for Nov. 1. "We were expecting (Congress) to have been done well before this week,• Bernal said, but delays have forced Rohrabacher to juggle his schedule. A second debate. sched- uled [or Oct. 26 at Huntrng- ton Beach City Hall. will go as planned. Ted Crisell, the Democ- rat who is challenging Rohrabacher, on Monday said he was frustrated by the delay, adding thdt he doesn't buy the argwnent that the congressman is too busy to make it to the debate. The late date is an effort on the. incwnbenl's. part to avoid publicly discussing his record, Crisell said. ·This man is not loved in the district,• Crisell said. c Lynn Pentz, campaign manager for Crisell, said Rohrabacher was trying to substitute spin for substance. •Tuey don't know what hJ..s real voting record is: she said, ·and when they don't know, they buy (Rohrabach- er'sj public relations." Bernal dismissed the charges. ·1 think that assumption is foolish: he said. ·1 think tus constituents are very aware of the congressman's posi- tions, and that's one of the reasons why he is elected by such large margms. • Don Hull, the Libertarian candidate in the 45th, didn't have dOY trouble believing that Rohrdbdcher's schedule was a busy one. ·He's probably votrng to spend more of our money,· I lull said. MEXICAN RESTAURANT Newport Beach police and fire offlclals are asking you to vote NO on Measure S. Measure S diverts funds from public satetv and makes It harder to proVide new public safety facllltles. It forces endless elections over "minor' amendments to the general plan of Newwrt Beach. Measure S jeopord- tzes the wonderful quality of life we now enjoy In Newport ~h. I'm proud to soy that cr1me rotes In Newpo rt Beac h have dropped steadily In recent years. Burglaries. rapes. assaults and other serious crimes are headed toward historic lows In our community. Ylhy would we wont to support o measure 1hat would divert funds from publk: safety and risk turning back 1he progress we've made In moktng Newport Beach one of the safest cities In Colfomlo? Measure S reQuWes every ~ pfOr'I amendment CN8f a certain -. ttYelhOld to go to 0 dtyWk:Je 8'ec- tton. Over the past ten Y9Cll we could hdve had ~ to ea ~ •cttont. 1he VOit mc:pttv of tt*9 OUR MEALS ARE A TRIP TO MEXICO ALSO OM OUR MENU: ~FISH TACOS" WE TAKE DINING TO THE NEXT LEVEL! elections would hove been over "minor" amendments to the general plan. A 1.CXX> square foot addition to a restaurant (Pascal's). a 700 square foot addition to a museum (Newport Sports Museum) even renovations to churches and schools and new fire station would hove required expensive citywide elections! Elections over "minor" Issues would divert time and attention from Important city Issues. All these elections over •minor" amendments would have cost city taxpayers mllllons of dollars and diverted time and attention from Important clfy Issues. They \tlOUtd hove been divided OUf communtty and fhey would have detayed Of canceled lmportont communtty Improvements and renovattons. F?f all these reosom please join Newport Beach's pubic tofety oftlclals In vottng NO on Ml II -I this~. Pt:aJSc*IM:> ~ Nhporf lloCtt lb10e &rllOIO,... A*B "*'' """'"""'' . - Tuesday, Odobef 17, 2000 3 .. .. 4 TU!Sdcry, Odob.r l 7, 2000 ...... TOWll • Send A"°'*° TOWN Items to the O.lly l"llot. 330 W. hy St;, Costa Mesa, CA 9262'; by fax to (949) 646-<1170; 0( by calling (949) 574-4268. Include the time. ~· and locAtlon of the event, a.s well a.s a contact phone number. A complete fisting Is available at Jrttp:/lwww.dallypllotcom. TODAY lbe Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce's Noon Networking Luncheon wtll hold a breakfast at 7:30 a.m. at the Pacific Club, 4110 MacArthur Blvd. Man- aging partner of Squar Mil- ner, Steve Milner, will attend. $20, or $15 for mem- bers with a reservation. Space is limited. (949) 729- 4400. PaineWebber will sponsor a talk on "Institutional Money Managers• at 6 p.m. at 888 San Clemente Drive. Suite 400, Newport Beach. Free with advanced reservations only. (949) 467 -6030. The Orange County Chapter of the Roundtable for Women in Foodservice Inc. will hold a talk about e-com- merce and today's technolo- gy in the food service indus- • PROGRAM CONTINUED FROM 1 While the first year is a planning year, if scores do not improve after the second year. schools will be subject to serious district sanctions. If scores do not increase after the third year, the ~tale takes control. That could result in the firing of the prin- cipal or up to 30% of the school's teaching staff, Lang said. "You're here for the kids, so of course you're going to work to improve their scores. llSI Ill . . WllllamClark wWpr11ent •staaespeue ID Soag• at ·-.. ·l.~ ·~tr~ . ~ .• ,>_ •. ~- 2 p.m. Oct. 22 at Borden Boolu, MU.lie & Cafe at South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa. Clark will put Shakespeare's poems and sonnets to music. . ., . (. . .~·-;,. ·:,~ , ..• ~. . . -"·'-"!O Free. (714) 556-1185. try at 6 p.m. at Orange Coast College, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. $35, or $30 for members and $15 for students. (949) 798-8770. WEDNESDAY The Newport Harbor Area and the Irvine Chambers of Commerce will co-host a joint breakfast with keynote speaker Rep. Chris Cox (R· Newport Beach) from 7:30 to 9 a.m. at the Radisson Hotel, 4545 MacArthur Blvd., New- port Beach. (949) 729-4400. That's what they hired me for,· she said, ·so it doesn't make me nervous." Having just received word that her school was chosen for the program, Lang and the school community are trying lo learn its intricacies and are exated about the opporturµty. "I think that it's a really positive thing for us and we're still really kind of learn- ing what it's about." said Renee Bowen, a parent and past president of the school's PTA. After the success enjoyed by Whittier Elementary School since it volunteered to participate in the program lbe Orange Cqut ~pter of the American Society of Safety Engineers will pre- sent an electrical safety sem- inar from 7 :30 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Country lnn & Suites, 325 Bristol St., Costa Mesa. $99. Seating is limited. (714) 284- 9737. The American Cancer Soci- ety's sixth annual Financial Planning Seminar, titled "Capitalizing On Changing Dynamics," will be held from 9 a.m. lo 5:15 p.m . at the when it began two years ago, district officials are pleased to see another area school involved. Whittier improved its score on the state Academic Perfor- mance Index test by 73 points -from 498 to 571 -over the last two years. "It gives (College Park) money to improve, the oppor- tunity for an outside evaluator ·and I think the principal sees it as an opportunity for growth," said Peggy Anatol, director of curriculum and assessment for the Newpott- Mesa Unified School District. "I was pleased that we were chosen." THE .JUNIOR LEAGUE OP' ORANGE COUNTY• CALIP'ORNIAt INC. ...... PAE•E",.. r / '! / ' / --- • • • QJluMu 191 • C I l I, 0 ' • Clubhouse at Pelican Hill, 22651 Pelican Hill Road South, Newport Coast. $95 at the door. (949) 261-9446. The Orange County cbapten of Women in Business and Women Lawyen Assn. will host a panel of women run- ning for county, state and federal offices at an event set for 6 p.m. at the Westin South Coast Plaza Hotel, 686 Anton Blvd., Costa Mesa. $45, or $35 for assoclatit>n members. Space is limited, and reservations are encour- aged. (714) 731-1077. Sandra Provost, A.G. Edwards, will sponsor a free workshop titled "What is the key to long-term investing and private money manage- ment?" at 6 p .m. at Gustaf Anders, 385 Bear St, #B21, South Coast Plaza Village. (800) 862-1245. . THURSDAY Hear updates from Callfor- nia Assembly candidates Lynn Daucher (R-72nd Dis- trict) and Tina Laine (D-68th Dis.1rict) at a reception at 11:30 a.m. at the Center Club, 650 Town Center Dri- ve, Costa Mesa. Four City Council candidates recom- mended by Women in Lead - ership and Assemblywoman Marilyn Brewer (R-Newport Beach), who ts the Women~ Leadership's founding prest· dent, will all<> attend. $45, or $35 for members. (9.t9) 64.t- 0218. The Newport Beach Central Ubrary will present a dra- matic reading of Ulllan Hell· man's "The Children's Hour" at 7 p.m. in the library's Friends Meeting Room. The Readers' Repertory Theater will present the suspenseful drama about a school scan- dal set off by a mean-spirit· ed student, during which the lives of two teachers are turnec;l upside down. The library is at 1000 Avocado Ave. (949) 717-3801. • · The Gentle Wlnd Project hosts a special healing event with an open house from 7 to 8 p.m. and a seminar from 8 to 10 p.m. at the Country Inn & Suites, 325 Bristol St., Cos- ta Mesa. $10. (800) 545- 7847. The Jewish Community Center will offer a salsa dancing class. Instructor Salomon Rivera will present a four-session class geared to beginners. Videos and tapes will be available for horn\:! practice. The class will take place from 7:30 to 8:45 p.m. Oct. 19 and 26, and Nov. 2 and 9 at the Jewish Daily Pilot Community Center of Orange County, 250 B. Bak- er St., Costa Mesa. $46, or $36 for members. Couple prices vary. (114) 755-0340. fllDIY Orange Cout College's School of Allied Health Pro- fessions wUl host an open house from 9 a .m. to noon at OCC's Lewis Center for Applied Sciences, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. (714) 432-5702. .. Eye on the Economy: Con- tinued Boom or Bust,~ a free program that is part of the Coast Magazine Distin- guished Panel Discussion Series about critical Orange County issues, will start at 7 p.m. in the Newport Beach Central Library's Friends Meeting Room. Coast Maga- zine publisher Jim Wood will moderate the program. The library is at 1000 Avocado Ave. (949) 717-3801. Astrologer Victoria Gross will speak about how.people born under different astro- logical signs communicate with each other -specHi· cally about conununicating with Scorpios -at 7 p.m. at Borders Books, Music & Cale, 3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa. (714) 556-1185. Water flows into sea off.Crystal Cove CRYSTAL COVE STATE PARK-Water flowed across the sand into the ocean at Crystal Cove this weekend. acrording to an environmen- talist who reported the dis- charges. On Friday and Saturday evenings, water was dis- charged from drainage plpes at the beach, said Laura BOAT CONTINUED FROM 1 'fb.e complex, under new ownership, is being remod- eled. Apparently, the new look does not include the boat. O'Keefe, who recently moved in, said she likes the ideas for the new design, but Davick, founder of the Alliance to Rescue Crystal Cove. Friday's Oow, which lasted for more than an hour, spilled into the ocean. A smaller dis- charge Saturday evening simply pooled on the beach. The subject of water dis- cbarges has been a touchy one of late, with the hvine Co. will miss the boat-especial- ly when giving friends direc- tions to her place. Another resident, Michelle Patty, who has lived in the complex for five years. was also sorry to see the boat removed. •1t was a landmark, one or the last remaining icons of Costa Mesa: she said. Patty said some of her neighbors have lived in the pushing state water regula- tors to clarify their position on the legality of dumping water at protected beaches like Crystal Cove. Davick said she intended to report the wa~ dl.scbarges to regional water board offi- cials Monday. -Ala COOlnw'I complex for 20 years and are especially sad to see the boat dry-docked for good. Steve Donnay, who recent· ly moved into the complex but grew up in the area, said losing the boat is unimagm· able. ·u·s sad to see it go. As a kid, I remember driving through here and seeing it all the time,• Donnay said. "It's been a part of my life.• ~HOLIDAY PARTIES .•. ~· and lots of other good stuff. Opeaat 11:30am GunewheretheM P,. are lolni for their holiday party! NOW! Ia The Time To Book Your Company Holiday LUNCH (or dln.nert) • Prtvate and Scml-prtvate Banquet Rooms Decked Out In Holiday Cheer1 (Groups of 10-90) • B!g Screen 1V. VCR. Music • Personaltzcd ~and Helfum Balloons '---::::;;;iii;:;;:=-------------' •Menus to Flt AD BUDGETS! • Let us show you why we say. 2196 Harbor Blvd .• Costa Mesa call (949) 631-2110 for lnformatton & reservauons "Once a rustomer •.• Always a custorntrr • Off-51te Cater1ng for AIL Group Sitzes ' ' • Doily Pilot SKATE CONTINUED FROM 1 The sk-ateboard park is expected to cost $603,472, •an exorbitant amount of money• co~pared with the estimated $250,000 cost of a park at Lions Park, Jimenez said. Cocroft and Jimenez said !he intent of their campaign is Just to spread awareness of the plan throughout the neighbor- hood. "We want people to know what's going on,• Jimenez said. The issue . has been reviewed exten5iveJy at Parks · CommiSsion, Planning Com- mission and City Council meetings, and the city sent mailers to immediate neigh- bors of the proposed site. But a conununication gap has prevented many neigh- borhood residents from under- standing the issue, Jimenez said. DON LEACH I DAILY PILOT Skateboarder David Ybarra, 17, left, talks with Hector Jimenez about the pros and cons of building a skate park at the comer of Charle and Hamilton streets in Costa Mesa. "We're a working-class community and, because of that, we don't have the time some residents in more afflu- ent neighborhoods might have ·to keep up with all the com- COURT CONTINUED FROM 1 And it wasn't the prison time that made her change her way of living. It was a pro- gram called drug court, which emphasizes treatment and counseling for nonviolent drug offenders. Drug courts are the subject of some debate this fall because of Proposition 36, an initiative that would modify the way the collrts deal with drug offenders. According to backers of the initiative, Prop. 36 is nec- essary because drug courts fail to reach a ·large percent- age of drug offenders. But as the politics swirl around the Harbor Justice <::;enter in Newport Beach, which started its drug court this summer. the program is slowly helping people, advo- cates say. munity politics,• he said. ·we try to keep up with what's going on, but our work and our family obligations bind us.• In addition, Jimenez said, Superior Court Judge Geoffrey Glass, who presides over the Harbor drug court, says the program is already starting to recover some lives that first looked like they would be lost. The difference between a drug court-style approach to drug offenses and an ordi- nary courtroom is the empha- sis placed on encouraging· drug users to take responsi- bility for changing their lives. "In a regular court, if somebody came in with a possession, they may get some jail time and then pro- bation. But there's not a whole lot of treatment involved," Glass said. Drug court participants, on the other hand, are immedi- ately plunged into a month· long detoxification program, taken to group counseling meetings and are ultimately expected to take steps to address their addictions. They are required to take regular Welcome to One M~~ ~ M~ill~~~ E "Your Southern California Mobility Specialists" -· AC«J>Ua Showroom Hours Mon-Fri 9am--4:30pm • Representing the full line of Pride Mobility Products • Service & Repair • lnsumnce Reimbursement Specialist 711 W. 17th St. Suite A-5 Cosca Mesa 949-642-2010 Toll Free (888) 447-9056 Pride Scooters from $149S ~ §~ck~ @"~,..,,(~9'"~ g: moat. extraordinary oolectlon of unique. one-of....-kR:t, ftne quilty French~ f\.mtln, .e« ···~ dllllng from the 18th, 19th Ind -tv 20lh Clnlurtea: the neighborhood has a high percentage of Latino resi- dents who traditionally rely on mediums other than newspapers or cable televi- drug tests, and if tliey flunk a single one, they serve time. For many addicts -those who lack the skills to live an ordinary life, much less one without chemical dependen- cy -the expectations of drug court are difficult to meet. •A lot of people would rather do jail time than to have this much structure in their lives," Glass said. "A lot of them just can't cope with it. n For some people, howev- er, the change from the pun- ishment-oriented method of traditional drug sentencing can make a life-altering dif- ference. "It's just a whole different set of tools,• said Jennifer, sion to get information. To help bridge the commu- nication gap, the city should inform Latino community leaders of community issues, who asked to remain anony- mous. •I've developed a sup- port group. I've kind of got- ten a little more hope." Drug courts have been around since the late 1980s; there are more than 400 such programs operating across the nation. Advocates of the programs claim that between 65% and 80% of people who participate in drug courts manage to stay clean. Critics of the courts argue that they don't meet the needs of most drug offend- e rs. "Depending on the coun- ty, the drug court system reaches between 2 % and 5 % of the people who are poten- tially eligible," said Dave Gridlock comr;1111 With density But YES onS Keeps traffic free Vote Y£S oe S ..ct NO oe T ~ 'nwMHG • Olloll' EXDa!if • Yocw • S1ltHO'Tll CU.-• Sncllll«l • TAlllQNG • T Al CHI• SnAM ltOOMs • MASIWlC • WtolT W.cl'CHEllS • Pl.Al'L'S • EXl'lllT ~ SWf • MDllCAW' EnMIU'llcD PlllrC-.. • ~ HtAtnl CU. • 09.D CW ESTCUFF PwA ~ ~ ~ CORONA DEL MAR Irvine Ave & 171h St. --~ 2101 E. Pacific Coast Hwy Newport Beach PCH & Avocado Ave (949) 631~23 FIT~~s c~~ER (949 760-9335 post information at all church· es in the community and send information home wiUl chil· dren at public schools, he said. Cocroft, who only sub- scribes to the Sunday newspa- per, does not read any local news and didn't find out that the site was being considered so seriously until she attended a candidates forum last week. She and Jimenez said they went door to door throughout the neighborhood, which is bordered by Harbor Boule- vard, Placentia Avenue, 19th Street and Victoria Street, and found only one person at home who knew the site was being considered. Cocroft and Jimenez have been passing out fliers in Eng- lish and Spanish with informa- tion about the park and the proposed location. As they stood passing out fliers in front of the site last week, they also discussed the issue with neighbors. The skateboard park has been the source of hea ted debate. In August, Parks Commis- sioner Mike Scheafer resigned over his opposition to it being built at Hamilton Fratello, campaign manager for Prop. 36. Fratello also crillcized the drug court system for the demands it places on judicial system workers. "It's so dependent on a judge who is really motivat- ed and really willing to get involved in the lives of indi- vidual defendants, so it can only grow so big," he said. But Glass said the impor- tance of the individual judge is one of drug court's greatest strengths. He believes the fact that addicts are forced to appear before him encourages them to work harder toward sobriety; they realize that somebody takes a personal interest in their condition. • r&J uiiiRwAJu11 ~Jo.rat & Gifts Tuesday, October 17, 2000 5 and Charle streets. Scheafer also claims the city attorney pressured him tv abstain from voting after h.~ sent the Daily Pilqt a letter to the editor. Other parks commissioner., also questioned the site but decided they did not want t.< delay the construction· an• longer. Other residents beside' Cocroft and Jimenez alsv protested during a series oJ parks and planning coIJlID.is. sion meetings. Some neighborhood resi- dents, however, are in favor of the location. "Having a skateboard park wduld definitely be better than getting tickets or getting kicked out from everywhere we try to skate,• said Corey Newman, a 15-year-old skate- boarder and neighborhood resident. "This is a good locatiou because it's right down the street from my house, but any- where would be fine as long as they make it soon. They said it would be done last July but then they flaked. It doesn't matter where you put it because there's going to be problems anywhere.~ v "!The judge) is the one the people want to please,• he said. "Those appearances (in court! are critical" to the pro- gram's success." For Jennifer, it was more than a desire to please the judge that made her come around. It was tmally widerstand- ing -as she heard her options of four years in jail on a possession charge. or a chance to try drug court - that addiction would sweep away the few remaining frag- ments of her life. "It's your own realization of when you've become power- less,• she said. "There was no amount of drugs that could help." 50% OFF TOPIARlES, FALL WREATHES AND CORNUCOPIAS ool ~mclttffrua 6or Q(( gour fjc.((~ un~l'ltth- Lota of noveltlea, candy com, caramela, pumpktn-gho1t-1lceleton chocolate aucll era, gumml spiders and worm1, dee tlve latex and mylar b1lloon1, and muc", much, morelll JELLY IELUES S~.50 PER POUNDI + Gift laalret1 A TllanU.lvlng 1tuffl . \. 6 Tuesday, October 17, 2000 Gay Geiser-Sandoval EDUCATIONAllY SPWING leave education to the educators T hose of you who studied the separation of state and federal powers must have enjoyed the presidential debates as much as I did. In an effort to deter too much power in a central government, the U .S. Constitution delineates the powers of the federal government. It left the rest of the governmental functions to state or local govern- ments. Dealing with foreign powers is for the federal govemrnent:Edu- cation is not; it is to be directed by local school boards. But in the frenzy to ·fix our schools• over the ~t few years, both federal and state legislators have been drafting laws and allocating funds for their pet projects. California, with its unusual system of statewide initiatives, has proposi- tions on the Nov. 7 ballot on vouchers and a decrease in the percentage of voters needed to pass school bonds. Whatever yow views about the propositions or politicians, does it bother you that we are getting fur. ther and further away from local control of ow schools? The presidential candidates have made education their main campaign issue, but federal funds account for only 6% of schools' budgets. I have more faith in teachers fix. ing ow schools then I do presidents. Speaking of school budgets, the Newport-Mesa school board last week passed a resolution showing that the district is in compliance with requirements for textbooks and instructional materials. The board found each pupil has sufficient textbooks and instructional materials consistent with the content and cycles of the curriculum frame- work adopted by the state Board of Education. District officials assured us money is no longer a stwnbling block; if a student doesn't have a book, it is a matter of conununicating that to the district. Perhaps a parent group on each school campus could swvey the teach- ers or students and ensure that our students have all the necessary books. • • • The PTAs of Corona del Mar and Newport Harbor high schools have taken on the momentous task of organizing College Night. Corona del Mar's College Night will be tonight in the boys' and girls' gyms. Workshops on financial aid and SAT preparation will start at 6 p.m., with 120 college representatives there from 7 to 9 p.m. The enthusiasm for college life is infectious. U your child needs motivation to get good grades, go to College Night, even if high school is still a year or two away. • • • ·speak Out,• a teen summit sponsored by Costa Mesa's Advisory Committee of Teens, will be held from 2 to 5 p.m. Saturday at the Orange County Fairgrounds. Admis- sion is by school identification only. Some teenagers think govern- ment doesn't care about what they think or thelr ideas. This is the dty's chance to disprove that theory. Teens will be surveyed in written form and in an M1V fonnat. Bands and other fonns of enter- tainment will be there too. • • • Tuenager Lawen Thompson, a recent Newport-Mesa gTaduate now attending Marymount Manhattan College in New York City, ii about to make the big lime. She made the flna1I for her ortgt· oa1 ~ composition, which pre- imered at her high 1Cbool'1 Acedem- k 01c:a.r Night Jut rail. Lut week, the went to Plorlda to tape ,bet performance, which can be 11181\ on the ~n show Nutb6gltar.C(l!ID. l can't watt ID tee our hometown gtrt'I nune in ~ oo Broadway. ,,... . silD IT ·rhe whole idea of a charter school i3 to give parents and laculUes more autonomy to Innovate and be cre- ative in how children are educated." -IYRON DE AJl.AKAL a community member Involved in creating a new charter school for N~rt-Mesa. I , i I I I I I I . . . . . ' ... GET IWllllED The ~lly l'ttot wekomel lett4n on Issues concemlno Newport 8ffd\ Met Com Mesa. There ate loor W'JS to~ In your com- ments: • tSf'1WtS -Mall to the Dally Piiot, 330 W. Bay St.. Costa Mesa 92627 • MAD1M HOTLM -C.alt (949) 642-6086 • MX -Send to (949) 646-4170 • E-MAIL-Send to dailypllo~tl~.com All wuespondenc• must Include your full name. hometoWn and phone number (for verification putpOSeS only). Daily Pilot ,,.-, Attacks don't .mean .Measure S-18-'any less wrong I t is disappointing to see recent ads attack-· ing police and fire offi- dals, myself and oth- ers for opposing the Greenlight initiative. 1bis is very atypical of the character of those pie· tured in the ads. To sug- gest that the rationale for opposition is based simply on developer interests and influence is woefully naive. Attacking those who have put the city's interests as a highest priority is indeed troubling. As the former longtime chairwoman of the state Senate Local Government Committee, I have promot- ed local cities as the entrusted body to iq)ple- ment accommodations for necessary services, appro- priate revenues, develop- ing and maintaining the local character of our cities. We elect citizens to do these things through a well-defined public process. Yes, we may not like all of their decisions, but we have the responsi- bility of electing people whom we think can best reflect our values and our views. We have recourse by changing our elected MAILBAG A long walk on a long bridge? The new Bear Street bridge is a little disap- pointing. It's a long walk from one side of South Coast Plaza to the other, and a long walk back, with shopping. So why are there no people movers on the bridge, like at airports? It would make the bridge a lot more shopper-friendly. GRANVIUE KIRKUP Balboa Peninsula, Newport Beach Not cawing over crow-killing humor Regarding Peter Buffa's Oct. 6 column in the Daily Pilot about crows. He has now contributed to the shooting of crows by kids with pellet guns given to them by their families for sport target practice since thousands read bis weekly articles. I do not find bis humor funny, just irresponsible. I do not like to bear the crows myself, as they are irritating, chase other birds away, etc., and they drive me nuts. 1 absolutely do not like that at all. I understand that per- haps if some of them are actually killed. the others will stay away since they are intelligent creatures. I do not like that either. I have never killed any- thing in my life, and hope- fully by the time I •kick the bucket• I can still proudly say the same thing. I do not condone giving Marian Bergeson <DMMllllY COMMINIARY officials if we don't like their decisions. That is the premise of our democracy- -representative govern- ment! We are enjoying a bur- geoning economy and have long forgotten the recession of the early 1990s. Now that there are more employed folks dri- ving back and forth to work, to the shopping malls, recreational pursuits and sometimes driving from homes in the Inland Empire because they can't afford the pricey housing of Newport Beach, the reaction seems to be •we have to put an end to all of this!~ However, we must rec- ognize that we can't stop growth unless we want to eliminate the opportunity of becoming g:randparents. However, we Can plan for a better future with responsible planning I effective transpoft4ltion and environmental con- trols utilizing new technol- ogy to continue to clean up our air and water. Can you remember the choking smog of just a few years ago, now greatly reduced? As we know, the city provides critical services such as public safety, local streets and roads, public trash collections, parks, recreation, libraries, muse- ums, arts. planning and zoning. These services must be balanced by an income stream that is pre- dictable now and in the future. The city also must adhere to certain elements in its general plan that are prescribed by state law, as well as the environmental safeguards dictated by federal, state and local regulations. Our elected representatives are entrusted with these responsibilities and are held accountable. Yes. most certainly we need more citizen partici- pation, working together rather than tearing down a process and degrading individuals and neighbors who want the same quality of life. Whether Measure S would have triggered 12, 25, or 55 elections had Greenligbt been in effect will never be agreed upon. The initiative requires a 10-year "rolling• retroac- tive application to each general plan amendment in each zone. Interpreta- tions will differ in honest disagreement. This is not the real issue, however. The real issue is that the Greenlight initiative is just bad policy. Expansion projects, such as schools, ·hospitals, churches, parks, office space, shopping mall reno- vation, small businesses, etc., going through numer- ous permits, environmen- tal review requirements at the Planning Commission level, then to the City Council, would then possi- bly have to wait up to two years for a municipal elec- tion because of the high costs of a special election. The cost of that election would have to be shared by the applicant and the city. What about the cost of educating the public on factors involved with com- plicated land-use require- ments and environmentaJ impacts in an objective manner, free from cam- paign rhetoric? What about the cost of tearing a city apart after we have all worked together to maintain a community that is sale, with good schools for our children and efficient ser- vices in an environment that is our pride and joy? What about the cost of failing to concentrate on our greatest environmentdl threat--the expansion or John Wayne Airport? We can all be activist citizens and encourage frank. open discussions on critical issues. Let's recog- nize that each of us have a responsibility to work within a system that will work for all of us. We need leaders who can lead and inspire the trust of our conununity. It's a good time to tlunk about that as each of us go to the polls. • MARIAN llEltGESON, a member of the state Board of Education, is a former state sec retary of education, state sena tor, assemblywoman and coun· ty supervisor. She lives in New· port Beach. the Newport Center area, which would be rectlfied if the open space above the library were turned into a park. Also, if the arts center were to take 3.5 acres of this space, it would be frur that the open space be replaced at another site, such as the Lower Cast- aways, which still has development entitlements. SEAN HIUER I DAlY Pl.OT The Bridge of Gardens, sans people movers, anqws people to walk from one side ol South Coast Plaza, across Bear Street. to '1Jlother part of the complex. The Arts Foundation people seemed to say that raising $12 million for the center would not be a problem. If this is the case, then at would seem plausible that raising a few extra million to buy replacement open space elsewhere, such as Lower Castaways, should also be possible, to be fair to the citizens of Newport Beach. lf the arts and educa- tion center is built on the site, then perhaps the foundation should also pay the park development cost on the rest of the site. since they want nominally free use of the city's land for the center. children guns for the sport of killing something; it is barbaric in a civilized, educated society. Now, some of his admir- ers will think it's OK to let their ldds target practice on crows, since they are not valued according to his article. I am certain kids with pellet guns kille.d geese, ducks and whatev- er else they could practice on in 1999 and this year at TeWinlde Park. He is con- doning this behavior. His article as a former Costa Mesa mayor shows a tremendous lack of respect and irresponsibility to portray humor at the expense of others. Wow, what family val- ues! ... PEGGY CAUtOUN Newport Beach Letters clear up crow mystery When I was a child, our next-door neighbor from Germany had shot a crow and hung it high in one of the trees on his property. I never saw any crows near ow houses. It wasn't until I read the letters in the Daily Pilot that I realized why. CAROLYN CARR Balboa Island Committee should hear whole story I was present at the Sept. 27 meeting ol the Qty Council committee meeting concerning the propoeed arts and educa- tion center for the open space site above the library. I dld not see bias toward the group propos- ing the center. All the speakers in favor of the center were given all the time they needed to expand on their views, to the point where the meeting went beyond · the two-hour time frame. When my turn came at 10:15, I was given only two minutes and was not able to finish making my points. I was trying to explain that the city bad two agreements that made the site open space: the 1991 library exchange agree- ment, and the 1992 circu- lation and open space agreement. In addition, the city's general plan Identifies an 11-acre parks deficiency in Costa Mesa City Hall. 17 Pair Drive, Cotta· Mesa, CA 92626; (11.C) 154·5223 All things considered. however, it would be the best policy for the city to abide by its previous two agreements and keep the site as open apace and make a park there. The arts and education center can be built any- where else, including The Balboa Theater, the Coro- na del Mar High School campus, next to the Orange County Museum of Art in Newport Center, etc. The open space. when gone, is gone for good. JAN D. VANDERSLOOT Newport Beach M.yon Guy Mona.ban CoaDdl: Eliz.abeth A. Cowan, Linda Dixon. Joe Bnc.kson and Heather Somet's lllWPOIT luc1 Newpott BtieCh CitY Hall, 3300 Newport mw., Newport Bw:h, CAWlee3; • (9'9) 944-3309 ....,., Jotua Noyei C.mdla Oarf Maids, Jan OM.y. Nam. <ltmr, Damte O'Neil. , .. . Quote Of 1111 DAY . . ;.. •1 was pleased with the way wt played, IM I was men pleased wflfi b way we c°""'9d ... " •M Oc*23lmr• TOii IAlDWlll Dartene a.Hey, Costa Mesa coach Doily Pilot Spof1s Editor Roger Carlson • 949..5744223 • Sports Fax: 949-650.0170 •Tuesday, October 17, 2000 7 Volleyball marathon a killer •Back Bay girls coaches say they probably won't return to Torrey Pines meat grinder. Tie Ironman ·Tttathlon was held aturday in Hawaii, but some ocal high school athletes were involved in a weekend endurance test of another variety in San Diego County. The girls volleyball teams from Corona del Mar and Newport Harbor each took part in the Torrey Pines Invitational Friday and Saturday at various sites. But Sailors Coach Dan Glenn and Sea Kings head man Steve Conti both said it may have been a farewell performance. Both coaches, though appreciative ol the strong competition the 24-team event provides, said a schedule which forced their teams to play two best-of-five matches virtually back- to-back Friday and Saturday, is clearly not in their best interests. Newport, second in its pool after Friday's competition, which ended close to 11 p.m., wound up winning the Silver Division (consolation) championship, defeating Bishop Montgomery in a final sweep. competed Saturday. •That's a lot of volleyball,• said Glenn, who, a few seasons ago, elected not to bring his team back to a Las Vegas tournament which featured a similar lack of rest between matches. Cd.M, which wrapped up its pool play at the same time Friday, was swept by Pacific Coast League rival Laguna Beach in its second Barry Foulmer PREPS •April (Ross, last year's national player of the year now starring as a freshman at USC) was a sophomore and she hurt ber arm in Las Vegas,• Glenn said. "I'm not sure she was ever the same and I think playing so many Silver Division consolation match Saturday. Harbor's Saturday matches were virtually back-to-back, while Cd.M barely had enough time between its Saturday contests to scarf down some lunch at a fast-food restaurant near the La Costa Canyon Higb gym, where both Back Bay powers matches in such a short time contributed to the injury. Playing best-of-five matches back-to-back is too much volleyball. And we did it two days in a row. 1 worried about my kids getting hurt.• Conti agreed that the mental and SEE PREPS PAGE 8 HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS VOLLEYBALL FROM THE LIONS' DEN CdM puts Costa Mesa away How is Vanguard U. doing this year? Well ... W:th all the youth, prep and community college stuff going on around this area, it's sometimes easy to forget about the four-year school that happens to reside in Costa Mesa. For those not familiar with it, let me introduce you to Vanguard University, home of the Lions. The fol.ks over in Lton Country have been making some noise in the athletic department and now it Tony Altobelh COWGES time they be noticed. Team-wise, men's soccer, 7-4-1, 4-1-1 in the Gold en State Athletic Conference, is slightly behind Azusa Pacific (ranked No. 2 by the NAIA). The Lions are led by senior offensive sniper, Diego Goni. Goni, a GSAC Athlete of the Week a couple of weeks ago, leads the Lions with 11 of the team's 27 goals. Goni is tied for third place among all GSAC scorers. On the women's soccer front, playing in a conference with three top-25 NAIA teams, including top-ranked Westmont, the Lions are holding their own with a 7-6 record, 2-3 in the GSAC .. Senior Ganessa Cobb's eight goals and four assists put he r among the GSAC scoring leaders, while Robin Landauer's 1.13 goals-against average is fifth-best in conference. OON lfACH I OAl.Y Pl.OT • Mustangs enjoy leads in the first two games, but the Sea Kings rally each time. Richard Dunn DAJLY Pn.OT COSTA MESA -It is different than in years past, when Corona del Mar Hlgh's girls volleyball team would race through Costa Mesa in less than an hour, leaving that everung's dinner plans as the only real suspense. These days, Wee in Monday's Pacific Coast League battle, the Mustangs play as a hungry team They pushed heavily favored Corona del Mar in the first two games and built sizable leads m both, but Coach Steve Conb's Sea Kings (8-5, 5-0 in PCL) rallied to win both games, then swept host Costa Mesa, 15-13, 15-10, 15-5. "I defirutely think we get more out of the match knowing we can come back,• said Conti, alter senior outside hitter Sara Derrung closed out the match with sut unanswered points from the ser- vice line, mcluding kills from the back row for Cd.M's 13th and 15th points. Deming, a left-handed hitter who played solidly for Cd.M in the Torrey Pines Tournament last weekend, finished with a match- high 14 kills, seven in the final game as the Sea Kings, ranked No. 3 in C[f Southern Section Division ID-AA, finally snapped a lengthy exchange of sideouts and won by 10. "The first two games were prob- ably ... the best we've played (in 2000), • Costa Mesa Coach Darlene Bailey said. ·we were pretty con- sistent on some of those long rallies. In fact, among the top five goalies, none come close to Landauer's 51 saves. CdM'a Katte Duggan (right) goes up to block, but Costa .Mesa's Katie Roche (1) ts there to put It back. SEE VOLLEYBALL PAGE 8 SEE COLLEGES PAGE 8 HIH ICHOOL fOOTIALl PLAYlll Of Tiii Wiii CCOACIU' AUCTIOllJ llWPOIT IAllOI SllLOIS CHRIS • C.J. MANDERINO COLLINS ~~1. ~-foot-1, 3 0 - two-Wll'f star pound senior rushed for noHguard, 168 yards he was in on Ind two T0s eight uekles on 34 cMrieS and .tded and added two QI pr& =:..~ .• SUf9S ~a nMr· lm.n.ptlon. UTlllCll UIW FREDDY FAHAD RODRIGUEZ JAHID n 6-foot. ~ 6-foat-2. 1. ,. , 5 • poUndjura poUnd~ wingback two·w•r Rllhed for --.. career-hlth -·-· 120,..on ........... ---111 ,........ ld? .. 'ID ... """ end two of ..... ,.. ............ COSTA MESI MUSTANGS LENNY ~ MICHAEL LUKEIA I~ MCGUIRE r,e 6-foot. 1 7 5 - AS·foot-10, 1 6 0 • pound senior pound junior, ~recetwr his first sUn c.aught two pesses for 29 athes.fety included an ~rd s , Interception ed wen and -he atso • Ind contributMI • p O¥ided ltfOl'.'9 • on special teams. run support. COIOlll DIL Atl SU llllS MATI NICIC COOPER PROSSER Ti'-f.foot. ' 0 • p o u n d =m:: ........ Mamr _. ...... • .. far. .. .... 10.. l..Asr WEEK'S HIGH SOK>OL FOO'BA.U. PLAYS OF 30 YAltDS oa MORE • 60 -Preddy Rodriguez (Estancia) touchdown run. • 54 -Fahld Jabld (Bstanda) run. • 47 • David Stocldard (Estancia) pass from ICmay Valbueaa. • 42 -Jon-Luke Del Fate (Corona del Mar) field goal • 41 -Keola Mmga {Costa Mesa) run. • GS -David Stoclclanl (Estancia) pus from ICeuJ Val'bama. • 32 -Andy Romo (Estancia) touchdown run. LAS1' wars M:a DlfBNSIVI ft.AYS CORONA Dl!L MM-ComerbiiCk .... aw ct• intettepted a pus ... ,_. J-. ~up tbe ..... to produce a 2-yarct as ... ~ ,.._ 1111 11 I diopped the quartarbick for 4-yard MC:k ... Pree....., ..... reaweNd a tumble, llltlina. up a CdM -~drift ... OUK:iulll reco..ed a.fumllle OD 8 ~ ... llDd .... =:.ROppilid NDalag bd lai a l·JMI IDlil ... O"'Mde rNc.1111111 ...... .., ........ ...... iDoWIDg CdMtDtlD Ol9• doWM ... Ops ct• W .. wttb Ilda tblnl ..... .., .................... ..... 9*y Bltf SiJillPll .. T ils'q~ ... ...,lara 3-yud km ..... ,.... .... ~-... .... '1*11 w:t ... PH 12.-ta.dl-to)', ckh'•-*llr•!llD ... ~an•Mn n ._..,...,..., Alie. wl*bWNCUUUadbJT ta..p. 8 TU9$doy, October 17, 2000 COM CONTINUED FROM 7 •r was pleased with the way ~e played, but I was more pleased with the way we competed .. We could've easily won those first two games. With more experience and confidence, maybe we col,lld have (won).• Costa Mesa (5-5, 2-3), led by senior middle blocker Casey Peterson (l2 kills) and senior setter Nancy Hatsushi, enjoyed leads of 5-2 and 7-4 in the first game. But, behind senior Lauren Nielson's serving, CdM came back. The first game was tied four times, the final time at 10-10 when Jessica Jennings and Lindsey Anstandig combined on a block, then Jennings' kill gave CdM an 11-10 lead. · Peterson barely hif a ball wide for another cct.M point, then Nielson's kill upped CdM's lead to three. After CdM scored again, Peterson slammed a two-banded first return for a kill and Mesa sideout, triggering a rally that brought the MU$tangs to within 14-13. Mesa staved off four game points, before Katie Duggan's kill for CdM, which set up game point. Anstandig provided the honors by spiking in the game-winner. Costa Mesa responded well after the loss, going up, 8-1, in the second game as sophomore Emily Abbott had two kills and Peterson chipped in with two kills and a solo block. Sophomore outside hitter Sharon Day's kill put Mesa ahead, 7-1, then a hit- ting error by CdM increased the Mustangs' lead to seven. •I'd like to see us be a better starting team,• Conti said. "We do a good job of finishing, but we can't spot Laguna Beach an 8-1 lead like that.• CdM hosts Laguna Beach Wednesday at 5:30 p.n\. The Sea Kings beat the Artists in five games in the first round of PCL play, but lost to them last PREPS CONTINUED FROM 7 physical fatigue the Torrey Pines event created was counterproductive. "When we lost our first consolation match, I wished, at that point, it was over,• Conti said. •After we went to the Silver Division and lost, I'm not sure what there was to play for. Some schools could probably benefit from the experience, but for us, it was m()re important to get some rest and stay healthy.• Compounding the workload for Conti's players was a five-game PCL victory Thursday over University, as well as another league match Monday against Costa Mesa. SPoRTs ' . DON LEACH I DAILY PILOT Costa Mesa's Emily Abbott (left) 'and Devin Denman combine to save a rally on a deep hit. weekend in a thre~-game sweep. In the second game, Duggan and junior Eleanor Mack, who served three straight aces, ignited the Sea Kings' comeback. Anstandig added two kills, then Deming and Jennings combined on a block to get CdM even, 9-9. The game was tied, 10-10, then the visitors went ahead on a Mesa hitting error, starting a string of five c;onsecutive points to conclude the game. Dem- ing capped it with a kill, Mesa also led in the third game, 3-1. CdM came back and built a 6-3 cushion, then 14 of the next 16 serves resulted in sideouts as the Mustangs refused to go away. After the exchanges, CdM found a groove and put the Mustangs away, scortng the game's final six points without a sideout and Deming at the service line, ending the match in about 1 :25. ·we need a day of practice,• said Conti, whose team played a five-game match Thursday, four-and five-game matches Friday and two three-game matches Saturday. Laguna won, 15-1. 15-5, 15-9, Saturday. •It's great to beat a good team any time,• Conti said. "But winning a league match is definitely more important that beating a team in a tournament. Sometimes when you lose to someone, it makes you a little more hungry to play them the next time. Hopefully, that will be the case for us against Laguna. We'll be at home, which is a nice situation, and our girls will be fired up." CdMjuniorJacquellne Becker will be among those helping the Sea Kings try to protect their PCL supremacy, but ihe 5-foot-8 setter is becoming as famous for her pipes as her hands. "From Thursday to Monday, we will have played six best-of-five matches," Conti said. STEVE MC CRANK I OAllY I'll.OT Taylor Govaars (center), Liz Lord (right) are two of Newport Harbor's keys In UUe run. She has sung the National Anthem at CdM sporting events, including football games. and consistently draws appreciative ovations for her superb rendition. Both Harbor and CdM hope they can recharge their batteries for important league matches this week. CdM hosts Laguna Beach Wednesday (approximately 6 p.m.), while the Tars host Sea View League-leading !Nine Thursday at 3:15 p.m. RANKINGS Irvine, ranked No. 2 in CIF Southern Section Division I-A and No. 4 in Orange County, swept the Sailors in the league opener, ending Newport's league winning streak at 39 matches, dating back to 1995. Harbor, No-. 3 in CIF Division I-A and No. 7 in the county, committed 21 hitting BRIEFS errors and hammered only 15 kills in the first meeting, a 15-3, 15-6, 15-8 verdict which Glenn termed an embarrassment. The Sailors have won or shared the last seven Se.a View titles, but will need a victory over the Vaqueros to have a chance at extending that run. CdM, ranked No. 3 in CIF Division ill-AA and No. 5 1n the county, is 13-0 in league matches since entering the circuit last fall. The Sea Kings.topped Laguna Beach. ranked No. 1 in CIF Division IV-AA and No. 6 in the county, 2-15, 15-12, 15-6, 6-15, 15-11, in their first league meeting Oct. 3. Conti said one event at which you won't see Becker singing is a CdM girls volleyball match. •she sang before varsity matches when she was on the N team; but I don't want it to be a distraction now that she's playing varsity,• Conti said. Doily Pilot EQUESTRIAN CdMriders capture second at IELevent •At Huntington Beach Central Park. HUNTINGTON BEACH -Riders representing Coro- na del Mar High combined to finish second in the varsity and junior varsity team stand- ings at the first Interscholastic Equestrian League event of the season Sunday at the Huntid'gton Central Park Equestrian Center. In addition to seventh- grader Nlcole Kim 's three first-place laurels, Julie Koet- ting earned one first-place finish (equitation) and Michelle McDaniels was sec- ond in hunters under saddle and equitation over fences for the Sea Kings. Sydney Farrer was third in IEL medal and fourth in hunt seat equitation, while Koet- ting added a fourth in work- ing hunters. t:ift,h-place finishes were posted by Newport Harbor rider Rebecca Walton (equi- tation over fences) and CdM's Whitney Roy (hunters under saddle), while Roy and'CdM teanunates Anne Schroeder (equitation over fences) and Amy Naidus (hunt seat equi- tation) added sixth-place fin. ishes. Schroeder and Koetting (IEL medal), as well as Roy (hunt seat equitation) and Naidus (working hunters) had seventh-place finishes. Katie Jones and Jessica Cardelucci also contributed for CdM. An estimated 100 riders, representing 40 schools from Orange, Riverside and Los Angeles counties participat- ed. The next two shows will be held Nov. 4-5 at the Oaks in San Juan Capistrano. OF TOP 10 GIRLS VOUEYBAU Division I-A 1. Mater Dei; 2. Irvine; 3. N.-wport Harbor; 4. M ira Costa; 5. Huntington Beach; 6. Foothill; 7. Ventura; 8. El Dorado; 9. Hart; 10. Oxnard. Sea Kings' Hendy out two weeks Division Ill-AA 1. Harvard-Westlake; 2. Bishop Montgomery; 3. Coron.I def ~ 4. La eanada; 5. Notre Dame/Sherman Oaks; 6. Alemany; 7. Pomona; 8. Gladstone; 9. Rosary; 10. Santa Paula. BOVS WATER POLO ' Divis.Ion I 1. Villa Park; 2. Newport HMbor; 3. Long Beach Wilson; 4. Foothill; 5. Harvard/Westlake; 6. El Toro; 7. San Clemente; 8. Loyola; 9. Capistrano Valley; 10. Dana Hills. Division II 1. Corona del Mar: 2. Los Alamitos; 3. Laguna Beach; 4. Santa Margarita; 5. La Habra; 6. Servite; 7. Buena Park; 8. University; 9. Edison; 10. (tie) Marina, Esperanza. GIRlS TENNIS Dfvfslon Ill 1. Palm Desert; 2. Newport HMbor; 3. Ltguna Hiiis; 4. Mater Oei; 5. El Dorado; 6. Santa Margarita; 7. West Torrance; 8. St. Lucy's; 9. Santa Barbara; 10. Westlake. OF Division IV 1. Calaba~s; 2. Harvard/Westlake; J. Coron.I del Mar, 4. San Luis Obispo; 5. Western; 6. La Canada; 7. Rosary; 8. San Marino; 9. South Pasadena; 10. Gladstone. 90YS CROSS COUNTWV DMSIONll 1. C:.nyon/Canyon Country; 2. Newport tWt»or: 3. Sultana; 4. St. Jolin Bosco; 5. Rubidoux; 6. Senta Margarita; 7. Paso Robles; 8. Tustin; 9. Orange; 10. Katella. I Division IV 1. Oak Park; 2-~a. Corona c1e1 Mer, 4. Fllll"l'IOfe; 5. Saltslan; 6. Big Bear; 7. 't'\l«a V1lley; l. Laguna hlch; 9. Marenatha; 10. Morro Bay. Gm.I CllOSS COUNTRY Dtvlllon. 1. WOodbridoe; 2. ~yon Country; 3. Mater Def:'-Newport....._, s. Sutt.na; '· .,... ONnde; 7. Vtntur1; a. s.n~ ~ 9. FoocNn; 10. vi11a P1rtc. DM1i1R f+I 1. eer-.. Mlf7 2. M«IMtha; 3. Or..net a..uetWen; 4. Olllt rlrk; s. DMlmOnd ~ I. "" 5lh': 1. Flintridge Slc1*I HMrt .. l.OUIMll.: t,; ..... d~ 10 .... ....,,.. • Junior quarterback is sidelined with broken left wrist, which was injured in the Costa Mesa game Friday night league. Woodbridge was paced by medalist Kelly Jackson. CORONA DEL FOOTllll MAR -Corona del Mar High junior quarterback Dylan Hendy will miss at least two weeks with a fracture in tbe growth plate of his left wrist, Sea Kings Coach Dick Freeman said Monday. Hendy. who fell awkwardly on the wrist near the end of the first half of a 37-7 Paci.fie Coast League- opening win over Costa Mesa Fri- day, went to the hospital that night, but was not examined by an ortho- pedist until Monday. Hendy, a transfer from Fountain Valley, had emerged as the starter after sharing time the first three games this fall. He has thrown for 434 yards and sjx touchdowns, completing 25 of 54 with sfit inter- ceptions. Until Hendy returns, junior Joe Barber will assume full-time duty. Barber has completed 18 of 46 for COLLEGES CONTINUED FROM 7 Also making an .i.rqpact on the , Uons' offense is fonner GSAC : Player of the Week, Betsy Nienhuis (six goals, four assist.I) and senior Shelly Bage (five goals, three assists). Brittany Braun and Annie Jacobs each have ICored lour goals to support the Uons' balanced attack. It may not be the belt IMIOn 1n the biatory of the VU women's volleybell team (3·13, 3·9), but Megan Oodfrey bu been putttpg up IOp\8 IOlid numben. GodfNy'• 137 cUgs &Dd her 3.A dlgt-per-geme avw1199 ·rana Mr Jn the top 110 ~ GSAC defadln. 238 yards and three ms, with three interceptions. Freeman said Hendy is sched- uled to Mve his hard cast removed in two weeks, at which time his availability will be assessed. The Sea Kings (3-3, 1-0 1n league) host Northwood Thursday, then visit Laguna Beach in Week 8. -by Barry Faulkner Tars toppled IRVINE -Newport GOLF Harbor High junior Kelly. Hunt shot 44 to finish two shots off the lead, as the Sailors were defeat- ed, 130-140, by Sea View League girls golf host Woodbridge Monday at Rancho San Joaquin Golf Club, par 36. Undsay Galbraith (45) and J\manda Campbell (51) also scored for the Sailors, who fall to 5-1, 2-4 tn If this has gotten you curious about the Uons, Just wait until basketball season. There may be a national championship brewing on the women's side. Stay tuned. , Newport Harbor returns to Sea View League action today against Laguna Hills at the Aliso Viejo Goll Course. Pirates topple Irvine Valley, Golden West COSTA MESA -GOU Orange Coast College's women's golf team combined to shoot a 352 Monday over the Mesa Unda course at Costa Mesa Golf & Country Club, good enough to fin- ish the day 2-1. The Pirates, who fell to Fullerton (342), but beat Irvine Valley (376) and Golden West (395), are now 6-8, 5-4 in the Orange Empire Con- ference. Julie Gutierrez-Parley paced the Pirates with an 85, while Maricela Dietrick shot an 86 and Jenna Coagratulatlou IO Cotta Mesa resident Ted Newland, head ~ of the UC lrvtne men's water polo team. He recently polled 650 C41"J' wins .• Newland, a lonner coach for both Newport Harbor and Corona del Mar high ICboola, beat JllK.'UDd- ranbd Cal. 5-4, Seturday for win No. 650, tban won No. 651 wttb a 5-3 wtn Sunday at No. • Stanford. Newlad'I c.areer nic::Ord iii 651 -l&t-5 and be bu tbe IDOlt wt.DI emoag NCAA W.-.,-Coecbel. UCI ta ...act ftfth nalioDally and , wlll play at Long --... ~ .. .,. . Quaranta carded an 87. The leading score was signifi- cant improvement for Gutierrez- Parley. At the same par-70, 5,551- yard course five days prior, she needed 96 strokes to complete the 18 holes. Fullerton's Hye Yoon Jung led all golfers with a 79 Monday. Mustangs fall, 148-164 COSTA MESA GOLF Northwood High's Timberwolves were 148-164 winners over host Costa Mesa Monday· in Pacific Coast League girls golf at Costa Mesa Golf & Country Cub 's Mesa Llnda course. Jean You was Mesa's top golfer with a 51 over nine holes. Also com- peting were Katy Renish (54), Shannon Riddell (60) and Celinda Sandoval (69). · Amanda Ch1nh of Northwood was the medallst with a 47. TODAY'S MATCHUPS JD~ waw polo, NewpOrt Harbor High ...... down riwl Colona del Mar, a.s. Tbe 5 ..._. Cllll lldau._ llCOl8S four goals, NewpOrt Harbor's football team defeats UDiventty, 21-7. Harbor qu:arterback Steve 10 W.._. o...,..,... 6 ol 9 for 73 yards And two It's a battle of two of the top teams in Orange County when Corona deJ Mar High and Laguna Beach compete in Padftc Coast League girls tennis action today at 3:15 at CdM. ...... Miiie ..... geta three.~...., ICGltl tine tor tbe Sea Kings. TDI. ~ naming back ltm11B OWMtsld cantes 15 tbDel rot 85 yards and a touchdown. The Sea Kings are ranked No. 3 in CIF Southern Section, Division rv. while Laguna Beach comes in ranked No. 1 in Division V. 'J1ae Colta Meie boys water polo team ramp1 pat l!st•nda, 19-8. Mela's S.. Hyltoa .._live goell um other Mustangs also g9t·oa tbe scoreboaM, including Robert ~ ...... Comatort and 1..-!0inol. all .nth three goals apiece. Estanda'• fOcitball team wins a 21-20 tbri1ler over Laguna Beach. The Eagles defense stops a two-p¢Dt conversion for the win. Est.and.a leads the game, 21-6, entering the fourth quarter. Eagles fullback BW Sandro goee for 30 carries, 139 yards and one touch- A win against the Artists would put CdM (12-2, 4-0 in league) In the driver's seat for the PCL crown. CdM1I football teem comes up a .little short and loles, 40-35, to El Thro. Sea Kings senior Josh Walz, who passes for 171yards4nd rushes for 74 more, is involved in all five tOUcbdown.s. He connects with 'IYler Stonebl'eUer for a 7-yard tOucbdown with 3:05 remaining, but CdM cannot camplete the comeback. down. David Hoag chips In with nine carries for 71 yards. In their 12-6 PCL win against University on Thursday, the Sea Kings were led by the No. 1 doubles team of Leslie Damion and Brittany Holland, as well as the No. 2 team of Kris- ten Griffith and Katie Tenerelli. who each 5Wept their three sets. CdM and Woodbridge battle to a 27-27 tie in football. CdM's Todd IUllarU finds Steve Bacon for a 31-yard touchdown to grab the lead, 27-24. The Sea Kings' PAT goes wide and the Warriors come back with a fi.eJd goal. Later in the week, Kehrli is out for the sea.son because of a freak at'Cident When be slices bis little finger on his throwing hand while cutting a steak at a barbecue. Making her debut for the Sea Kings will be junior Brittany Reitzra Santa Margarita High transfer. who is now eligible to play with CdM. Elsewhere today: Newport Harbor's football team comes beck from a 24-7 halftime deficit, but loses, 31-28, to Irvine. The Sailors' aim Morrell bu 13 carries for 79 yards and three toucbdowns. His scoring runs come In the second half as Harbor takes a 28-24 lead only to see it crumble. • Newport Harbor's tennis team. ranked No. 2 in Division ID. will host Irvine at 3:15 in a Sea View League dash. Newport Harbor boys volleyball wins its 10th straight match wUh a 13-6 victory over Sunny Hills. The Sailors' Rich Rullln.l scores four goals and 1)' Lunde gets three as the win catapults Harbor to a No. 2 ranking In CIP 4-A. • Estancia and Costa Mesa will renew their age-old rivalry in girls tennis with a 3:15 matchup. CdM boys cross country finishes fifth at the Ml SAC Invitational. The Sea Kings' 'fyler Beardslee runs a 16:25 to finish 17th overall. • In field hockey, red-hot Newport Harbor 15-1-1 overall and 10-0 in the Sunset League, will play at Westminster at 3:15. Mesa's Zeke Noonan runs a 15:59 to lead the Mustangs · to a 27-29 victory over University. Bruce Hancock comes in at 16:37 to help the winning cause. Cd.M's girls volleyball. top-ranked in the CIF Division 5-A, defeats second-ranked I,.aguna Beach, 15-11, 15-1, 15- 4. nacy Schriber leads the Sea Kings with 11 kills, wh'ile Lara C4tJbeD goes for six kills, 10 blocks and two aces. -complied by Steve Virgen • Newport's girts volleyball team, fresh off its play from the Tor- rey Pines Tournament, will JWDP back into Sea View League competition with a 3:15 home showdown with Aliso Niguel. •In girls golf, Laguna Beach and Estancia will match up at the Costa Mesa Golf & Country Club's Mesa Linda course at 3: 15. 15 minutes alter Costa Mesa and University, also at Mesa Lin- da. • At Aliso Viejo Golf Course, Newport and Laguna Hills will tee off at 2. GAMEBUSTERS CONTINUED FROM 7 · pass in the end zone ... Noseguard C.J. Collins penetrated to make stop for 1-yard loss ... End Garrett Troncale had a 1-yard sack and had two additional quarterback pressures ... Collins had a near-interception ... David Sprenger made a touchdown-saving tackle on kickoff return. •In collegiate actlon, the Orange Coast College men's soccer team will try to rebound from its 3-1 loss at Santa Ana on Fri- day with an Orange Emplie Conference matchup at Fullerton, begmning at 3. At the same time, the OCC women's team will host the Hornets. Cesar Romero deflected a pass and forced a fumble on Northwood's second po'ssession ... Romero and Stoddard combined to nail ball.carrier for 4-yard loss ... Matt Colby, COSTA MESA -Safety Michael McGuire intercepted a pass, giving the Mustangs excellent field position ... Tackle Antony Grublslch forced a llurd-and-long situation with a 6-yard quarterback sack ... Outside lmebacker Jason Hurley put a big hit on the ball carrier for no gain ... Outside linebacker Alvin Nguyen stopped a back in his tracks for no gain .. , McGuire put clamps on ballcarrier for a 2-yard loss ... Nick Cabico blocked a 42-yard field goal attempt. • Vanguard University will host the Master's College tonight at 7, in women's soccer action. Romero and Fahad Jahld combined for a sack .. . •The Lions will also be a host in women's volleyball with a 7 p.m. matchup against Cal Baptist. Comerback AJ. Perkins broke up two passes ... Stoddard -by Tony Altobelli and Bobby Arroyo combined on stop for 3-yard loss ... Safety Freddy llodriguez broke up a pass. MONDAY'S COUNTS Newport Landing · 2 boats, 45 anglers. 30 white sea bass, 2 yellowta1I, 40 bomto, 4 calico bass, 5 sand bass, 5 rockfish. DEEP SEA NEWPORT HARBOR -End Ian BanJgan stuffed a run for no gain ... Comer back Brian Gaeta dived to break up a D•vey's Locker · 6 boats, 91 anglers. 58 yellow-fin tuna, 95 yellowtail, 34 white sea bass, 33 sand bass, 13 calico bass. 15 bonito, 1 halibut. 26 sculpm, 8 barracuda, 1 sheephead, 2 black sea bass (released) . . -11 .-s-f ( MUCCIDll I wmmsf ( wmimll w.mll w.naal I Ml£NOll81 f F1ctttJoua Bualnna NOTICE t«1Tla! C:6 nus. be ..t b -~ r..-... IL 21111 Flctftloua Bualnes1 BSC 9955 IF YOU OBJECT to lngent e<edltors. end ~ ~ ~Of .... _....... •• ,,. N s•·t t NOTICE OF the "'entong ol rt. pe11-per10nS wtlO m11y Olher· Nllme Stltement INVITlNG BIDS 1iE"S SALE T.S. No: ='°7 . ar: vruAM il";flarUif. ame .. emen PETITION 11on ,,.you Should llWN' -be interM1ed., the The following pe1eons The Orange County Fl14676 Uail Codi: F -·-D£R A OEED Of-TUT The following peisone at the heamg and slate will or estate. or both. ol ere doing bu11t181a u SanHallon District. Calf· i...o. No 15dll631NON ~opmmallld-rt. DATED ll>-21•19119 IKfSS are doing business as: TO ADMINISTER your objections or tile JOHN E. AKINS aka The &tl&le Goo\ Guy & lomla. Wiii receive bide sarut.Ell AP No. Cl). .... by mllma Iba .,...,..... TO ,_, T AILOREO BASKETS EST ATE OF: wntten objec11on1 with JOHN AKINS Ilka JOHN More, 380 W Wtlson uni~ Tueectay, NOV· J06..oJ T.D. SIJlVJCE ~ ....,_ -YOU TAKE""''"'"' n..... 640 5 Grand Ave JOSEPH A. the coult before the EDWIN AKINS StrHt, B·105, Costa EMBER 1~ .. 2000, It COMPANY, a dlaty .. 1111(•) Clll Iba~ '-'n lf: ~~~~ l107. Santi AM. CA KEPPELER hu11ng Your ap· A PETITION FOR Mela. CA 92627 11:00 Lm. t:ilOI must be pc....i Tl'llMe _., lbaT 1111.,.~ ~~ PUB5690 SAl£. f YOU NEED AN 92705 0 y 20 0 CASE NO. A204390 . pearance may be In pe1· PROBATE hea been James Pttricll ' Mllfe1, reoeMld at lht Olttrlct• '3llowiils 4'eriltd Dlld al ::::",.,,,,. -,,.,11.,,.. 1 ....... -~TOI Of THE Linda O\mg, 1 To all helll, ~f1• son or by your anomey flied by HARRY 5. 380 W. Wlleon SlrMt, ~ Admlnoatrll!Ve Lobby °' n. WUJ. SliLL AT 1"''~ "' """ ..,_,,., *ltff Of THE PROCEfD. =~cg'A ~wport cleries, creditor.. cont· IF YOU ARE A CREO-CARMACK n the SYpt- 105, eo.ta M.... CA Pun:hasirlg otfice by the POBlJC AIX110tf 10 Flctltlo a Bu·'-•• NiS A6Al6T YOU. YOU -n..., "'··•neu '' ~ tnn.oont credrt«s. end ITOR or OOllll-O-~ cred-nor~Couolrt ~~E . 92627 d1te herelnabove Ml ntE HJOHE.ST BlIXlEll u ....... SHOil.i) CONTACT A lAW· "" """' ~r ~ who may other· rtor ot the~ you "'""'"' Thia bulinesa 18 con· lor1h, at wtlictl time !My FOR CA.SH (ill tbt &mm Name Statement YER Oii 11..f7·U. It ducted by: an lndMdual ~;ti; lnlt1ested In the must t\le your clarrn witt1 PETITION FOR cM:fed by 111 ~ will bl °'** and ex· wllidl-.......... Thi IOllowlng persona 1t• •L f'olwdolult Have you llarted wrll or 111tai.. or boeh. of the court and mall a PROBATE requests that Hav• you llarted amined at the District 1111 u..1 a...)-41cr.. are doing bu8lll9SI at ~ ll1C.. a tlll Oly dong bulkiesa yet? No JOSEPH A. KEPPEL.ER Q09Y 10 the pet.ona! 18'>' HARRY 5 CARMACK doing ~ y.o No Purchaalng Office, ......_ OlltdW • -. My Journey With ..,_, TIURM undlt nl Linda 0. Young A PETITION FOR ,_-cat1ve appointed by be eppointed u pe1· Je!MI Patrick Miller 10844 EI01 Avenue • ._.. .,_w ia CM1 JHUI, 735 Center ~ tD OllCI ol llUSI, Th .. statement wu PRoeATE has been the court Wllhin lour eonal 1991eaenlallve lo Thia atatemerlt wu Fountain V•=:· Calif<>(· c.oda a.. 2ll'l4h Strffl. Costa Mesa. Cal-~on 11.01-19119 11 liled wrth the C-Ounty llled bti JOYCE mon1hl trom the date of edmlnilt« the estate ot filed with the County nit. IOf the ' : 1--w.. .......... ._af' ilomia, m27 Document NO 1~ Cleril of Omige County ••nftTON ...... <'-~~ the f1<11 Issuance ot let· the deoedenl a.iti cl "'---,.. _ _., BLANKET .. ~T~•--,.._ Jennlf•r Hope ol Olfiall Alcoftls Ill .. on 09l20l2000 :::'"eou1t of ~~•·t':X""a. tefS 11 -"'"-' In Pn> THE PETITION r•· on ~ """""' FOff NEW OFRCE -..,. .--. .._ Webster. 735 C•nter altrce ol h A1mmr °' 2000M41143 ~ ot DRAN6e"ff bate ~.,..~ 9100. quests ni. decedent'• 2000tlM2213 FUANrTURE C:.'!..=--=-= StrMI. Colta Mesa. Cal-~ ..... C1f."'t£'4w Dally Pilot Sept. 26• Oct THE PETITION FOR The bme for liling claims Wil and codlclla rf any. Dally Pilot Ocl 3 10 17 SPECIFICATION lllldhril ..... llllDlldCI{ tfomla 92627 .......,..,, .,., 3. lQ, 17· 2000 T964 PROBATE r~ that Wiii not expire before be admitted 10 probtlte. 24, 200Q ' llzO NO. 200CWMO ~, Brtdley Mlchul Pnel1on Ind J JOYCE M ON be four months trom tha The Will 8nd any oodlc:ils s.ai.cs bids must be n.• • t/'::" -~ Webster, 735 Center PIMon. l'uslln nlT ""' FlctJtloua Business ............... u nar90nal healing dale nobced are available f0t ex· Fk:tltloua Bualneu Name Statement The followlng ptl"IOnl ~~~ 11one. 1552 e. Ocean 8oulev1rd, Newport 8eedl. Calfomla 92661 0... Edward CoNm. 1552 E. Ocean BotM- vttd, Newport Beech. Callfomla 92681 Thie bullnesa " con-dua.d by. en lndMdual Han you •tarted doing bu1lne11 yet? v ... 1tW1f1997 •. ..._....... • ... I .,_ .,.__. ,..~Mia Cal-a fCll'C llNntS, a lllla:W, ,..._. ........,,""" ,.. _ _.__..... ...._ ...._ .,,...,. .....,.,,.,,.., on u.. orm w.HllLllNA MAIUA VON ~ ~7 • Sa IMw .,....., ... ~ Name .... ,ement r~tive to admin-above ........... , 1n .... ·-_,., eupplled by the District _..._ ................ ,,.,,,_ --.... ....~~ • The followtng ""'l"IOl'll ...... r --MCate of the<»-YOU MAY EXAMINE by the coun In aCCOfdance with all ~..,)...,.. 1-.~ Thlt business It con· ,..~,,... Al butfr ,... ::'!de~"'t. the file kept by Ille cou.rt. THE PETITION , .. rv-...,_ ,,., lht .......-.. ...., • 7r7 • -· .-duded by. hu8bend and are doing Dli ""* as: .,... If .. thofily to Id-,.,.,,,_,.. "" ..,....w 1'911aJ21'21 • 8oa1t -TO THE Pacific. Po.nt Propeltiea. THE PETITION r•· you are a ~raon rn-que.,.s eu cations. $p9clllcatlona, P-. _ ~Ollicllla... wrft IGESTBIXlfftFOA~ 500t Birch SlrMI. New-quest• the ~· t11Hted In lht estate, ,,,.,._.,the eetate under bid blanb and M1her n. • e. aGiCll Cl{ .. a. Htv• you started 1.-• .,_ ol MM m po11 Beach. CA 92660 Wil and cocjc:ils, II eny, you ma_y file ~•th the the ~1depeode111 Admln- formatlon mey be ob-.1 ,.,.. a um. doing buelrlMI vet? No (MA ,..._, o1 t111 Urllld ,,.._ ·--K. ,.....__, 1520 ..._ • ..._....... to ......._te. COU11 a ReqlJelt few Soe-ist1ation of Eltltes Ad. t8lned at the above ad-_., .. ~ Jerwill11 = Webs111 .......... 'i:''Cish 1 c.alHr's """"'' ...._ ~-°"'Wil'"1" -~ any"'..:::::..,, cial Notice (form OE· (This Authority wl" allow dr .... ..._..__ (7'•) "-. C • -Thie ... -ement w11 =·.:?........ ~ 1 ...... -Highland Drive. Newpor1 ''"' .,.., """""' 1 t • ...,...~-,.. -_.......... ... ..,_,. ..,_,, ., -... Beacl\. CA 92660 are available f0t ew· 154) ot the ft~ ol an in-the pereona repr-n · 593-7583. :::-: Sel ....::;; ~ ~ n...'!!. 9!'~ l90nll ~ a cf'lldl dr-.n Kathenne K. Zeiae1. amrntllOn In lhe file k891 venlOry end appraisal of 111111 to take many"'~ Publish~ N•wport ,_.. Mil Z9, lDOO a ..,_,. "' ....,._._,.. ~ft, ~I .. or._. Cl9Cit 1520 Highland Onve. by the oourt. telall assets °' ot errt t1on1 ..,thou1 obta"""• Beech·Coeta Meaa ... No. 3000CDGl19 la on 10l05l2000 UflOI\ or I cllleltdrlllft ~I Ntwpolt BHch. CA THE PETITION r.. pehllOn Of acoount u court tppl'OVal Belo1e o211lty Pilot October 17. 8oalt _ P-. _ Cl{08> 200081421115 Ila Of ltdllll swngs llld g2eeo quests authority to ad· provided in Probate laking celtaln v•ry Im· 000 cal ._. ia .. ._ Delly Pilot Ocl to. 17. ~~:'f,..,.~ Thie businea la con-miniltef the telat• under COO. MCtlOll 1250 A portant ec:ti0n1, how· -_____ T.:..:02....,4 ... P 24. 31, 2000 I245 _, ... ,_.. duoled by. hulbend and lht lndep•ldel• Adnwl-AeqtJ9ll tor S9ec:lel No--· the s>tr.onel rei>r• Cl{ 1111 ....., Cl{ ca. ICllOitd In ldOll 102 al wilt istration o1 Ellate. Act. ta form is evailable MrllatlYe Wll be r1lq!Ared AH01 ea-,; \'OU STATEMENT OF t111 filllno.ll COdl end Have you alerted (This Aulhonty Will dow from the court clerk. 10 give no1ice to m. IF YOU ARE A CREO. ITOR or CXlf1IJngenl cred- llOI ol Ile decMMd you mus1 Iii. YOAJ1 dam with the court and matt a copy IO the pet90llal rep- ltsenlaM ~ed by the COUit wtthln lour monthl from the date OI the firal lsauance ol let· ltr'S .. PfOlllded In Pn> bell Code MdlOn 9100 The time '°' filing clelm6 wlll not expire before tour months from the hearing date not~ above YOU MAY EXAMINE the fife ltept by the court If you are a peBon wr tereeted in the ntate. you ma_y file With the COUit • ~ for Sl»-01al Notic• (form OE· t 64) ol the fifing ol en in- Vent<>ly and ~ ol IStall .... OI ol tny pel!tiorl 0t eccount as provided In Probate Code Mellon 1250 ... ~ for Special ~ ta lonn is available from .. oour1 dttk. Attorney for P9tttiol1t1. Hllny s. CenMcll. &q, S8H 1355et, Abomly II i..-, •14 L 1 Tth S1reet. .,,.. 201, Cotlla ..... CA 92127 Publlah•d Newport BHCh·Costa ...... o.ily Pllol October 1 o. ChaN Coroum Thie ltatamerlt WU flied wlltl tM County All IN CG'AULT \JN. WITHDRAWAL ~ tD dO Mllllt 1n doing bualntH yet? the peraonal rtpftMnl· Attomey for Pe11t1onw: tereeted pellOlll unleM ~A COD Cl TRUST FROM Wt -) It 1'I mil y Ocl 1 oo ettv. to talc• many ac-RENEE M. RAITHEL. they ha\4 wtlwd notice _____ T~M .... 2 ... 3_.8 l»-11iD APRIL 19, 1!199. PARTNERSHIP .._ '9 1111 ..._ ;ev.n 1<.1 z.-t1oos without ot>talrung ESQ. S8N 1M216, or c:ontenled to IM •------• 18, 17, 2000 °"" al Orange Counly on 08l28l2000 2000IM2122 ~ Ocl 3, 10, 17. 196§ UMLISS YOO TAD OPERATING ==:-:... ...... --: This statement -• court apprOYll. Before PAUL, HASTINGS, p1opoeed ICllOn.) The ~-~Pllml:fTY. rt UNDER ............. filed wi1h the County taking c.rtaln veiy Im· J~A~'" l~~n<?-~a~'::!!n:!: ,..,.... .....,....,.. FICTITIOUS --....... -""~" QMll ot Orange County portent tctions, how· WALruo ...,.. tra ....... av .. -.. , -.,. MAY 81 ICID AT A . -,_, -on l 0/06/2000 -lhe ............. , ...,..... Its Town Centw Dr.. granted uni.ti an ln-PUKJC SAL&. If YOO BUSINESS NAME ... ..,.,.... tD 2000ll42t14 ..,,... ;ii;-~ 11th Ao«, -..eel peraon 11te 111 !ED Alf IJCIUNA.. The tollowrng '*"°" !!!.."'!T~'!·,.•~ ~ PlloC Oct. 10, 17, to -notice to W.. C0911 ...... CA obftdllOtl to 118 petleior'I TION C:6 nm MATIAI hu withdrawn u a gen-=°..,::: ,_n :·.... ';::::.! ..,_, t~~~ -u ......... • tH21-1t2• end st10W1 good CllUM Cl 1111 PIOCBllDO«) eral pertner from the =.. ~1 -Iii~ 24• 3t. 2000 T21§ ::'~ve"""'~ ,;;;;: Published Newport 'flt'1 the ooutf tholJld not ~-~ _.., .,_, pa--rahlp N\A-ttlno _,.. u .. , ,,. B h C M .... ..._ •• -. iiiiiD' cDrocfA "'* .. lhe lietlllOW'~ :':..":: ~ 1~ Actltloua Bualneu ~'.i ~ o!;yc P.io':'~ober '1'<:. II';'." HEAAINO"Jft the LAWYD. a 411T neea name o1 Prectlc9 .., o.s of Tlllll Tiii Heme Stlt9ment l~t edmlnl•· 16, 17. 2000 ~ wll be hlld on S'TlllT, MIWPal.T Solution• at 26108 ~ '*-'°"' 011c101C1 The fol~ ptf10n1 ._..._ a·"""""-...... ... TM23t NOVEMeER 11, 2000 al llACll,CA nm (If Marguerit• Parkway. IS -IOlcl ..... Thi .,. doing bullNll as: ==~ VJ;;; ;;;' i; BSC ........ t.45 p.m. In Deal l.73 ·---·-Sulle B·18, Mission ... ..._ 11111 allW JPJ Ci>nlultlng, 2483 ~ pnon file8 an NOTICE'CM: located 9t ~1 The Clly ........ fl ......, ii Vle6o. CA. 826912 Clllftlllllll ..,.._~.= lrvlne Ave. F2, Colta oti;ec.11or1 1o the ~ Ol1ve South, Ofangt • .._ ...._ •__.,ii 1N Act1t1ou1 au.. of .. u = Meta. CA 92627 and ahow9 good CllUM PETmON CA 1128118 .... ••ilia ......... net1 Name referred lo a. • _, Ill Leonard J. Jomslcv. ..-. rt. oourl ltlol.lld not TO ADMINtSTER IF YOU 08.JECT to -« ...._i above wu filed In Of. :ttr iiiil.C.:: 2463 lrvfne Ave. F~. ~ h IUlhorily. ESTATE OF: ::. ~~ ._ .. _,,.......... =·County on Jan. 29. ........ T_.. .. Cmla Meta, CA 112627 A HEARING on tM JOHN E. AKINS et .r..__ end..,.. .... • a• ...._ ALE .......... 20008817937 dllllll -~tor q t-~~11~ Pul'Ml.F2 J~ ~ wll be hlld on lb JOHN AKINS ...,.., ~. or -.. .._ __.. • ..,. ,_, .......;.;. ol flt .. •TIJ,. ,,ve. • ....,.... NOVEMeER 2, 2000 et Ilka JOHN EDWIN •--.--·-llllJ ..... « ~ Full Name 8nd M--........ -Meta. CA~ 1:45 p.m. In~ L73 AKINS wrillen objeetlol• 'lllftl'I _..:...9 ~ drtM of the Pel'IOll -.,., ..... _,,,,_, n. butintae 11 con-.._._.. al ..... 1 ,...... the C®ft Ntore the -..--ar Wlthdrewlng: Sl\aron ......._ 11 ~. "'°"" ducted t.u; a _,..i ,.,._, -""1 CASE NO. A204411 heerlng Your •P· ---... • " 1111 Renee Blalnt , 2405 ...._ Md ... .. Ill w,. ---Ol1ve Souttl. ar.nge. To e1 helra. benell-pMrWa mey be In per- Classified is CONVENIENT whctha yoo'tt ~sdliliet ;s kding,~lm tila yoo occd! C~IFIID (~9) 612·'678 ~.'~ :,; ;-..: Bonole Piao., Co8ta :-.:.:;::i-: pe~you a1art.cj CA 92988• aariM, crtdltor9, oont-ton or by your m!l!'nly· O:..~ will i.. Meta. CA.. 92927 lllllMd. *· doing bualnMa y•t? ;=============..:..::====::;:=:.:..:=======.:=======; • • _, -......... Signature: Sl\aron R. = ., ...,.. Y•. 5-1-1111 ' ~tk .._.., ....... Biil,,: .... e!Mnt WM ..... ~ Leonard Jomtlcy SU~l:Z~G Ac111oUe .... .,... -lfmU•hf n. tied WICt\ the Courtly ':':. ,_..., Thie mtement wu ,._. •••1••~ ~s_a • .. ii .. ~~ County r.:'""'.,... .._ ~ :"er!;.= .:-~ -..-llli' _. 0... on 1 lllOIM2.4t1 •..,....Ill ... --~ on 1cwenooo .-.......... ...... • "'·...... lllHUllA M~W OMA • 1• ;:,,-oew-. •Noe OC11 10, 11. -., • •" T• ~ P11a1 OC11. 1G.17. A ~-=-Ml. 111t.•Af •PM ON ~·RIO ng --= .. •lt...l-.... >._.a._ __ ~ ..... DM1 Ello ...... 1IOI •. llallf .... 10 .-..0 Nalce &:\ .... II II~,; w. C4Moft. ... -•M!mfll• .... :=:.r-~ ll1m ca.----(9.. ... .. .. B US.'LN~'SS ~ n. .............. -• ~ CllnNl'IM. ..... OIMo __.. --... ,, .... by. en........ C11Aa. CA M.. e11 New. ?; IOOO, ..... •7a;~=· ~··· NW. e Hew you NftM -~-.---10:a0 Ml • 8llirWlg -I ' -,,.. fa110w4nt per· .. ...._,..,No " ............ ..,..,... ....... ::a: .... llM·tt!MJ ~ '=er:,'!: ... ~~·,.Jr': ;..:.:. =~ =~ --·--•• ............ .. tied wlll .. ~ ._. ., ......... fl4ll IS14'79 ·a:.~ ..._ ..._ ,..., Qllll ... ~ ~ ....... .,._ .. t1a :J11n 11e1n. HcMe-:"'•aP!••iiiii ~ ':""'~°'i121 l . Oft 1~....-~ en llOlll .... C.r..1 • ~ n:,• ... ~ ""'£#"=' =~:.. -= .. =-r .:= ~ ............ !!:J!!!, h-j~ ~=1:\11 =• • t.ymen, I:!!.!'!!!; ::. ": ::!':' ~ .. 1 ==~ ..... c::'1:......... r-=-,:'a~ ™ff£..::: ~~ 1n .. _. ua a: 1111 1• IM...... .... CA ·------.._II .. ~... -.u..ie.u.. • • • • I ) . ' i . ' " • I I : ' ' I I _.·• .-,,,,,. I !=iii;;" .... I ' • . • I ' I . --• ,.~:'=. ---- Monday ................. Friday 5:00pm Tuesday .............. Monday 5:00pm Wednesday ......... Tuesday 5:00pm H1111·~ "111 l 1l1•mlli111•:1 nm 1ml1jN'1 ro 1·lum~rr "i1IH1111 1101i1·1·. Tlt1• f>llhlii.hrr n·..t·rvr~ thr n~hr to 1·1·11.,.ir. n·du:.:oif~. n·' i-.· or rrjN"I 11m 1·lm.~ifi1•1I H1h1•rti>t(llnl'lll. l'IPn'i'I n'J>Orl 1111\ 1•r1or 111111 11111\' 1,.-iu ''our l'lll:obiflt'(l 1111 i1111111•1liut1·h Tiii' n 11ily 111101 111'(•.-pti. 110 linliil111 rm tlll\ t•rmr in 1111 uJwn ii-t'lrtl'lll for wltlrl1 it 111i1~ IJt• n.'&ll01ti.ililr Clr'Cf>I (or tlw 1·0•1 11( llw ~pun• ur11111ll~ oc'<·upi1•d I.I~ 1111• mw. C11•1li1 n1111111lr t11· ullmw1I for th1• fit'' 11i-1·rt i1111 ByFu (~,Ii<)) 6:i l ·(>594 (l'lei"!' ifll'll~lt )oilrll~llW •1111 "'"~If' 111uul"'r a1wl .. ~·u, gll 11~• b.ck •11b • fl"''t 'II''"' ) . By Phone ('>iCJ) b42·f.>6711 By MaMa Penolu :J:)() Wr.,t Buv S1n•r1 Col11R ~fo:>a, CA <>i627 ~. N.-wJJfwt llhcJ .. 11.y 81 Timrsday ....... Wednesday 5:00pm Friday ............... Thurs<lay 5:00pm ~ EOUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNI I Y All n1al estate advertising In this newspaper Is subiect to the ~ederal 111ir ttoos4ng Act 01 1968 as amended which makes 11 Illegal to 1<1vert1se ·any prelerence. hm1tauon 01 d1scnmlna1ton t>ase<I on race cOlor rello· ion, ux. hand1C.lp lam111.11 stalus or na11onal 0<1g1n or an intention 10 mate any sucti preference l11n1tahon or dlscnminatJon l his ntwSJ>aper will not knowingly accept any a<l•trhsement lor real mate which 1s in viobt1on of the 1.1• Our •Wiers 11e 11111by inlormed that all dwtU111os advel1•sed m this neWSj)lplr Ml 1~1l.1b11 on an equal Ows1turuty bUIS To rom n ol d1sc:11m1· nation ca HUD toll flee 11 I 800424 ~90 tH~ FOfl SA1.E GENERAL •V.A.• so 110111-$0 IOrull FREE COUNSELING FREE UST Of HOOES HUDNAREPOS 114.534.1100 Vf HRAll Hf Al I SIAll HOMES OF THE WEEK ShOWCIM HomH Fors. In Out Sit Ae91Eltllll ~dll Stlrt It •. Dudllnt T~SPM Alto ... Open Houte Uttlnp AYI. DHdtf nt Wednesday 5PM It Paya to AdvertlN In .... Btlt LOCAL Rell Ena Seetton Cell TC!dlJ 11 LISA RIVERA MM74-4252 ANNE WILLEY MM7M24t HOMESELLEAS Find out what the home down lhe at1Mt lold for F rte oompAtnztd Isl cl 8!$1 home ..... and current hstlnga FrM rlOOfded meu 1·88&-465-5792 IOI 1041 1st Team RE. I• II 101 ·211 19 ltOUSESICOll)OI FOR SALE HUNTIMGTON BEACH Best Buys Hotllst reveals 10 best buys In your 1pe<:1fic price range Frff r8()0fded mess 1·88&-465-5792 11>11040 ISi Team RE 132~1 BEACH COTTAGE $425,000 2·STY ....... Ab1olute Bt1t Value! Gated Medrtr 3Br 2 58a home rw bay w/oomm pool & spa °"1 $449,900 1>11rick 949-856-9705 Ag! 33~ FOR SALE NEWPORT COAST Southern Ctlllornla AltlCllll Old homnttld + "'911, 35 l«H•$99,000. t llOIK Colorado Sj)llnga Historic dwtlllng neslltcl amid rolling lieldt witll ASSOC/A no R!ALl'Y r.:gllC)W ll10Ul\tlln vltwa. JIM JACOBS T terning with deer, elk, HHTl-MI tumkayf Nell ID IOOOa o4 acrM ol rtcrMllOnll land. MlllUIM IO woM-fll!IOUI while waltf rall!flg & l!y· flat""9 on Mtrwa A!Ytf. y.., round I09d. .... I La aaa:m I 8Mll rwnod 2bf 2bt, 91' laundry, Ir~ berber, 1 blk from ~ lt800t'mo 949-I 1tOCOSTA :m I E SIDE, pgllC)W 3bf 2bt, 4 car gar. La~d, ~. t93B la 94M45-3113 >"The Pllma mol* home ~ ai.t ez access lo S5 walk to shopping "'23ft T rali.r ulls paid, qul8I pYI apace S55MAo + S55<Vsec. "" T ralar 1pec1 avail S495lmo • S4!Wsec. Sorry no I!!!! ~ tBr 1 Ba Apts In a.utllul Gnad = wait IO Theatera/shop n·Square sns. w=ge. Ing. em closel Prop Mngt. t.a7'7·70W648 I 9224 1122 IR~ I Regenia Point Retirement Community In Irvine. Oller& Ille freedom you desire and the lndepend· eoce you expect for l: 111tifement. 800-278· 98 I a4a.-·=I tbr APT ci-lo oc:.an, IOllll view. t ~"ii =.--St~~ ·---.::: ................ .............. ··-..... ..... ~ .... E**"'1I lnn:i1Q Tiiiy tnqUt '* al P*'llllll Cell Red c...k .._ _____ ___, Ranch tolt-lru I" "°':r;B i 1-•n-11•-•u1 (CA!.'ICAN) ... 1· •ml NO MONO DOWN . F"•llld~ • no doMI Pty!!lllll m. llC:O'dJd """ 1~101 1°'3 111 T"'11 R £, Saturday ............... Friday 5:00pm !ml ii 2tO· a•• 420 rJJ II •N·•YI 2Br 281 TWnhM 2 blocka lo ocean, p1rldng. new paint. carpet. avatl lmmod $ t ,895/per mo Agent 949·717·4732 l'eoal E SIDE CM 2br 1ba, garttt, yd, laundry rm, 111 Walnut tA MarlMlt 7t4412-3111 • 540.-e NwpC Hgllfl 3Br 2.58t !*II den. IJPQJICled. 2c garage. $2 4so.'!M 1519 SalU Ana Ave Bia~ tBr Dplr 111 Tn-Sqr, CW1o1n l1tenor lll!d, g1r, <lnvtwly, dbl dsts. FP. Ilg blckyard $1050/Mo 949-283-0239 Lg 38r 2.58a Iv rm, Fp, lam rm, formal din nn + guesl hM wllg liY area. bl & bl Lg. =llo· rMcely tandsceped. 00/mo !M9-640-1327 IUIMlfT ...... Fll 1 °1 ..... Motel Andenon Bay Window• (Pair): 8'x 4'. 45' ICW14·P4040-CW14, with CU«nelll grids. Brand Newt $t.~ ea. 94~720-8075 Local kltt.111, c ... .t. ~ '°' adoption """ --· • Sun'a n~m F11hlon lalllld ~Af. NETWORK Info MM44-227t www.anlmalnetwortt.OfA BMuty Ocllntor Warn.cl for bes1 location In NB Rental or commlaslon. cal 949·646-2093. MANAGERS t SPECIALt $154.00 + tax Wklv (Mull present tnls Ad) 235 rma & ldlchenetts. Srtuatld on beUluly landscaped grounds FEATURES 24-liout Chiropractic oil needs Friendly seff·starter PT. CHINA fof ... Ctwtm. SPOTI'ED CFA OCICAT r~ wl lnlln. bil a TIM Spodt. 5pc jlilce set· KrTTiNS Smart. playful, + not nee 714-662·21 t8 tings S40 per pl*» Nlllig very kMoo $300 ·s&oo 9"9-48~!M24 •.•••ti 949-646-8473 COOK WANTED Lobby/Direct dial phonel/Free HBO, ESPN & Otac:IPool & Jacuui. Guest laufl. dry CloM IO 405 & S5 Fwys Mil's lrom O.C F 111gtdl. college and bchs Walklng dis- tance IO S/loc>I and 1estturants COSTA MESA MOTOR INN 2217 Hiib« Blvd Phone 94H4S-4840 WANTED STUDIO 01 t Br lot prot'I lemale Wl'smd &-' dog. N 8 01 H B prel'd 949-574-4221 Nwpt Hgllta smal nn aval '" Nee 2Bt 1Ba apt, patio, cablt, ~ inclds una. Aval 1111 949-466-0870 N.BJW. Oceen frontl22nd. •••• JACUZZI BATH TUB NEVER USED 949-278-2902 N'SYNC 4 TlcMls $1~MCll cal 714-87&-8497 WOLFF TAINHG BEDS TAN AT HOME BUY DIRECT AMJ SAVEi COMMERCIAL/HOME units from $199 00 Low Monthly -FREE Color ~~ Call 1..80(). 711-0t sA 2 ELECTRIC HOSPrTAL BEDS S150 EACH 94M44-4412 Prlvale room. untumlshed., --------, ahare bath. utls peid, non 448 ANTIQUUIART lriQ, kttch-ite. laundry. COUECJ8.U t Bloc« to Newp<>fl Pier S550 'l0/pt1 mo. Ca• Sam 11 949-67s-.4808 (Between ------- 9•·5p 1 m Royal Cwa:nl I * ro"E!'.I~ ., -APPDAIML& ~ Ccnifit'd Antique & Resident~! Contt'ncs Appr.usah VIVIEN L. HESSEi (714) 84 l-0473 E-Mail: hcssclviv@aol.com FV Oft bldg tor IM 923-1 t96 1-.;;.:.=-..:i.::..:..:..;:=~ I al XIM•lt Square 10840 Walflfll Ask about Hl Speed ~=..;:~~~~~I ln1•mtt 714-751·2787 Airport ll'ff CPA Illa. ground 1loor window ollices w/conl1111111Ct. teoeptlon & f!orage 949·252·8192 12•0FORE I lnduttr1ll • Attal! HB. W.,..,.,IGoltllfd 720lf ltwv 11 GOif. Call '°' dttah. 71W41-tl5t I~· With To SublHH $$ CASH PAID $$ -.... Of~--WE BUY ESTATU ·~&>encty­ ASTDr' ~ l__ _ _ I .:64M922~ SOUTH COAST AUCTION · 50Q.900sq tt office In 22eZ ..... 9t. Newport tr• Oca41Y by S.. AM. CA am °'9 1. Ctl ~}ff70 .._&i-CACIJIO l•--E•m 11•--ILt I ···············~···················· : SENSATIONAL : FLOOR SAMPLE SALE • • • • 30o/o to 50% OFF • • • • • : ELEGANT NEW ARRIVALSlll ! : SOFAS, CHAIRS, LA.a a MORE : ! IHOREI "iiRiOHS : : 2940 AVON llREET, NEWPORT llCtt ! • CALL MN<G-2211 * •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• MAJOR ABSOLUTE AUCTION Sebdly, Octcl>tr 2811. 480 -tann In 15 --"Ont :!m._YlrfM..!.: =: l·--·•I rtv.r lroruoe Locettd 1n Central ~lrglnla near Lynchburg Call for brocftn CcMirO AMly & RAM ....., l a... Aucllon Group bOnd Dfytf llfva ~ .. M854el09 (800)~2901 new 100/&otfl Of WWW.COONTSAU· :.7.:..;:14-""S40-4993~=:....----CTION COM ('JMF9S) ICAl '!CAN) I , .• , ...... ....., ...... . .--.anew~ ..... ~ -~ 4lnlnO '"' cNta S56tl """"" ..-on bllclll r;· & nuble cdlte 111111 In tJllclll Clll .... PIMM eel to dMcltbt a:!::....i:Mt'42==iu1.=31=..-- 5!H45= 73f5 K..-OW•*' ~ WMrr1 DOG brtlldrilnl (Cllria c..i &J::'~ r:"ooo'° .;A new Dltaml. QllNY Vt9f!R r-·-.~· ---. . \". I , t.,.... . '. ....S- se-ock Bar • Grtl I I 2133 Wtll Coeet Hwy, NB 4".sr·•u= MH3t·5'33 n PfT .CUSTOMER SEIVIC( for POSTAL STORE In Biby Grind p!lllO dnt oond Fashion Island $7 50/hour ~ $1450 Ml lrMI ~ 7141457-4863 714/S27.o900 1--=1 COAST COIN NEEDS OLD COINSI Gold. liver, jewtfly, walehtt, antJqutt, ~ 949-&42·9447 ·:i UOHEL TRAINS 't Wanted Brocktn/Comc>lelt $$Paid$$ P1ivll• f'.>ar1y 7t4~7"3 TOP SUIRECOAOSI Jazz. A & 8, Soul. ~. elc. 50'1 & 60'1 MIKE 94~7505 DAIYEA·COYENANT TRANSPORT 'Coast to Ccmt nn 'T-Slalt up to 46 Ctnls "$1 .000 ~ on bonua tor e;qi oo drw- .,. For •tptrienced dnY8l'5 t o801M41-4394 For owner operators 1.an~1s Graduate driving studenCs 1 ·800·338·6428 (CAL'SCAHI DAIVEA/OTR TRACTOR· TRAILER. Join the CAST Gold Rush! 'Team Drivers 'Drivers 'Orivln(I Students 'No H· ptllenct al ... Call Wanda 1·888·8t0·2778. CAST EOE WF. !CAL 'SCAN) n/PT s.1.. Position• Avall. UP9Ctit Newport Buch e111torn 1umitute co. Mlilt r.vt an eye tor dteigrl and color. and tome ..._ •xe ..,....tm Bat ..... fw Malm.nee. FT 11MBatP_,ac :1:'~~ Te W.n.t 1or ,,..... & "'*'-D1AiM APPOL't'l'Jl&.W id ~cement woit. SEiiiM ~ NII ::: : fuU·Ume 4011( EOE. Send ,.._ w/ (~11 A nmlJll! 'ihlfts • ..., l9Q ID. PCM \ Hunlinq_lon . undmar11. g 12-815 20880 OMJ1C101 i.-. H B. Top-Producers CA 92648 Pt.st ct1 111,.hcr 7t4-980-6475 ot tax .,., r...,,. lo 714-960-0697. STOCK/DELIVERY must be 2t or -wftll dttrl driving record. FT. .. nm. Wint c.k9 Clll 94~ Tttcller Asst Ow $500 Hiring 8otu eicp AD 1or Tutor Time Q1ld Cale NPB Must bt ECE qualified wlprt·achoot c;laSS(OOITI exp xn btnel Ca.II SUI\ 94fl.955-2tln OI Wkdaya 94~859-8953 CAREER OPPOfmJNITY Elm up to $45,000 PQ.C' r::~~~ 1J1J1t1 reqiRd Ctl Tan 1DI lrul 888·860·6593 En 4391 ICAL'!CAH) CREDIT CARO DEm Avoid bankNptcy 'Stop CIOltc.1lor'I c1111 ·cu 1n1nct c:hllVll ·cu peyrnentS 14> lo 50%. Debt cor llOldaiOl 1 Faat Approval! No Cfedtt cheek (800)270·9894 (CAL'SCAlil ATTENTION HOME Tttclltra B u y E A s I 0 w n • r s $500 • Hiring 8otlUI Glow PulcflaM 01 retlnenct a wlOUt laleoled and loving home now wilh no down· t9111l Followlna pc>1 evtlf ...-out o1 ......... , lriant·Prlldlocil Teaclltf/ .,.., .. _ ... or ......- Van 0cMr Full Btntl. OCiiia, 90 'ff lb!td. 8 114" APR e 59 Tau .,._.. & Tuition rtlmbulUmtnl o1 new and txdtlnQ ~ MlsaiOll Viejo 94H59-8953 grama Call 800-~ 7 499 or NPB 94M65-~( .. c""'A""L'-"SC"-"'A""N~>---- r~ ~~=,.. ...,I and Savel ColNntfclal/ 10 I -·-Home l.llits ffOl1I St99 00 ---·UI low monlhly peymenta Flit <dot~ Cll W HE£D A LOAN? Try IDdly 1-300-642· 1310 debt OOl llObitlol~ C\a (CAL-SCAN) PIY""f1IS up to 50"4tt Bad ' •n &PLOW I . IEIMCEI Cftdil OK. No ~tlon , ... ~ 1-30().893..9009 Ext 949 -~·pay­ bll oom !CAL'~ • llal~ lhlll I • tcll·li 1W NvraM; AH9 $3~5420 .--------•Pu!,..... per di~. Med 5ufg. EA. 1~ , • ·-1m1 --i,_ ICU. DOU, IW, oontrac:b ...,.. "'"t""l-• em. FT/PT. 888-S21·5636 t:...u.bl"'hf•I ht 19119 In I'"'"' \lC"'a Aeoeptlonl1t/Cuhler Md 11""'1~ Ntwpo'1 Htlbol Naufical C'alt ~ .. --~JI MuMUm. Glfft VlsitOll "'i1!!-88M~~·M~7~44~! I llMI .. OWi "" World. !:: Gift Shop cashief & phone. PIT week·tnds req'd. 949·675·2355 RESTAURANT COOK.fir ~ Nae :::Ji ~~~ ....... be -ltllt flt fllttnp In ttlla Cllllgory llllY ~ you 10 call • toO nu111btf In wlllcll ""' .. • c:twve per 111lnutt. SELL your home through classified 'IO StlAtc* 24ft open, "'"' engine, low tioura. nltr. nt¥er llshtd Immaculate, Sl9.500 949·642·5-488 SELL your home through classified Have A Garage ·sale! Call the Piiat Cl•••lfleda at EB4BJ B41ii!-15B7B ta Place Vaur Gl•r•a• Bale Ad I Ddily Pilot Tue.day, Odober 17, 2000 J 1 -_·_J • tllllot llodl, IO I WOlfly 501C3 =:.ae:. 1111111 & "'~ ) 722·7822 CLMSIFIEO CLASSIFIED (Ml 542-6178 (IM9) 54Me1a -, Run your ad in the ~:-:------------ Newport Beach- Costa Mesa Daity Pilot and the Hunting Beach- Fountain Valley Independent to reach over 100,000 I VecllCn. 0"" 0 •'ISA 0 AMl homeS. Fax us this "'-~~lial!5 foon with your credit .._ ,.,., t.bif;--- card # or mail with I a check today! Run for a week! If your car does not 8:._... g==~ g~~ Pta---o..,., "'-D ·--.-Q.._c.-., D·---a---.....ol'dllo.·" o·... a .... ""'..._ a ... .._ o-~o --. a~..__ ·11 v • 0 . .,..-.0...-.. 0 ,,,.._ ............... ,,~ a ... ..._ a .. ~ a,..... ........ IO:M0'9.-. .. -~,.."',..&.,'"JI C.C-"-..(.AiQC sell, we'll run it for L __ ~~~~.!''= ~13'---__ another week FREE! T\li:~l All for Just s10·. 1.!""'1'1 110t Indep.£,.ndent l•cm i AUDI IOCS 't3 V -&, 4 ct, wllile, a• powtt, aUIHOOI, ll\'l/lm CUI, 2 eound "8lm lthr, 5211 ml, showroom oond f9500(obo, IM9· 720-3711 BMW 5251 '15 B11Ck wltan Int, pn1mlum pcllg. warr IO $100,000. XJnl oond, new tires & brak .. , * ml $18,900/obo. Brl1n 949-723·2028 CHEAP FJNF..SSE ) WFST • 10743 QQJ973 0 Q86 •8 sourH • A965 "1 A6S o Jl • AK92 EAST • KJ 2 Q 84 o K 1093 • Q 1063 The bidding: l'.AST souru W~'T NORTH 14 INT l'til . JNT .... ,_ Pau 1 price occasionally. 1blS deal. from the match bctv.een Italy Ind Ru ii. Mlows why. The hah1n ~'ll clocled lO open one club, and the Ruuians reacbc:d dlrte no lrUmp in quldc tune. When West elected w lead the queen of hean , declarer could vinu ally platee e"cry clltd. Declarer won in Mild with the lee, crossed 10 dummy by Ulking the nwt.ed rtnc 9e or the ten of hc:arts. then led the jack or clu~. Ea~• covered whh 1hc queen, declarer took 1he king and noted lhc fall of lhc ciahr from W~1 BMW 525 '90 Gold, llAo, Opening lead: Queen of Dcchm:r re1umed lo the table with a heart 10 kutg and led Ille four of club!>. Ea.~1 followed smoochly with the thiu. bu1 declan:r unhes11~11ngly played the deuce. When I.he four held, declarer repealed 1hc duh ftne-.se and had nine 111ck' four clubs, lhttt hcaru anJ ~ tnd. elk h in diamond\ and beans. With Ea.~-WC\I ~1kn1. 1hc wne conlr.icl w~ rc:.ichcd in lhe 04hcr roon1. and the lead again wb 1hc queen of hcan_~ Declarer won and led a spade 10 the: queen. l°'tng lu thc ktn{. :-low dcdarer needed four d ub Irie ~ so. 00 fC[!lltntn[I 1hc lead, declarer 1ncd 10 drop the 11uecn down1wo .. pwf, I 50k ml, lolded, malnt rtcOtdl, prem wtlls $8.000 obo 94H42-3788 BllW 540I 'II B*klblk. au!O, lolded, lpOl1 llUSP • 65k IN, tJICtln concflllon, $41,000 pe 81&-522-8080 Bulctt Pa111 Avenue '17 10,800 ,... sand txcel«ll concillon, 1 owner S14,500 !M9-6«-4498 Cedlllac SeYfllt '93 Sharp! 4-<lr, low IN, CfllllTI lltv, ntW brts, new banery, loedtdl $10,500/obo 949-631·7370 CHARITY CARS Oonlle 'iO'Jr vehk:te Seeo oo Oprah/People Magazine• TIX dtduct1ble. fret low. We provide donau1d vehl· cles to struggling lamlltes. 1 ·800 ·4'2·44 5 1 . www.cherltycan.org (CAL'SCAN) coRvmE 1984 22k Miies, l ike New, All Optlona S7,750 949-650-7160 CORVmE 1995 The World Junior Championship. played in Twtey in July. was woo by Norway, with lhe Netherlands second and ISl'ICI third. The evcn1 had every- thing -excellent pl11y lll1d def~ and momcnlJ of hllllri1y. Those who s)'lllCmically use ligh1 opening bids must be prepared to pay FOffO f 150 "17 4WD, towing. I*! 21K. 1<:7372412178 S1 "'50 LANO ROVER NEWPORT BEACH 14M4o-M45 GMC JIMMY '118 4WO, 29K, SEE m 1521001/3007 $18,950 LAHO ROVER NEWPORT BEACH 94M40-8445 LAND ROVER DISCOVERY '94 83K ml, ·S9,500. 949-650-7160 LA DISCOVERY '98 Ful ~. bl8cil bttuty 1754733/9047 CAU LANO ROVER NEWPORT BEACH 849-6411-6445 LR RANGE ROVER '96 Full power, 42K mllttl 133765112834 $29,950 LANO ROVER NEWPORT BEACH 94M4M445 Mazda Miltl '90 Rtd Conv, 5spd. llW1I cond, 47K actual mi. ong DWn8f new bm, $5500 949-72().1722 6 lpd, 73k Ml, S17,750 LHlll SC 400 COllpe '97 949-650-7160 WhllWn. phone Nak. CD. Mlzde Nl\lljo lX 414 '91 Blue, auto. V6, al pw1 new bres cc. mrvf A:C $5800 obo Jiit oond ~&-548-1537 excetltnl cood111on. pp MERCEOiS 300 E '87 108k ml, rebuilt engine, Melallic Stiver/Gray inttnof, Mtnt ce>ncnon. $9,995 W• Go Fast! Call 949-850-2162 MtrC-. 580 SL '88 Dark charcoel,· shOWroom. 2 lops, 110k Freeway miles, $16,995 obo 94&-71&-2311 Oldltnoblle Otl1I 88 Roytl '87 V.fl, al.40. p 5111, A/C, ps, pw, pcj, CC, llertO, new banery. tires & stant1, excelenl cood Cal Sam at 714-892-9979 $2495 obo • PORSCHE 993 97 81k1 Coupe bladt TIP l>fllTlVT1 sound supple ltatlttl 1n1 exltndtd wa11an1y TODAY'S CROSSWORQ PUZZLE DATSUN 280Z 75 $32.000 MM40-4092 57 .000 ongir1ll ni .-a •c. .. r9COldl rttl rM1 ll\llpl UHCOlN Contintnlll '90 $3,950 ?'H23-1504 wlvtt w'bllt ltahr tntenor '-<Ir hM power ltile new $3750 714·322-6721 MERaOES Ml 2000 320, 8lt ... bl9Cll ti 636351'3231 37 ,995 LANO ROVER NEWPORT BEACH 949-6411-6445 @ ,000 ~9-719-1111 Toyota c.tlca Con\I. ·921 -~ I Red ~ milts t•ctlltm condt11on $6900 obo 14t·71H220 SEil CUSSIFIED It's the sotutJoo you're 5al'Ch1n& DODGE DURANGO '91 Mu11 Sttl 14K ml , '8007S3l'2ll8:2 128,950 LANO ROVER NEWPORT BEACH 94~5 JAGUAR XJS '834 Green. \llK'f pld cond. new tun. lo mileage. S2500 714·322-&721 SELL your unwanled rtems lllrough claSSlfled '118 FOflO f ·150 XLT Spr Cal> 3-dr 414, lowing more Only 14k rru Xlnl $23,000 pp 94&-51~ Toyoa LANOaruSIER 99 3500 mn.1 Ub New!! fCM8902/3165 44,995 LANO ROVER NEWPORT BEACH 94H40-M45 ror-wbaber your stuff you're !ittJUng a through home, apanmcn1., classified! pctornnv occupadool HoME, HEALTH AND fJuslNEss A ADI ~ ..... _ERVICE . ' . I .,' 1-800·550·7181 ~---~ I . .. . . I I ! • • ... •_. Mn* CMA1M TU t ID•l .......... ............ , .. m M Ill Dff1""1 . tor II your needs... ~ PUBLIC NOTICE The Cafil. Public· Utllltles Com· mlaslon REQUIRES that .. UMd hotll.- hold goods rnovtrl J>MI lhelf P.U.C. Cll T runber. lmol and cllauhre pnnt M T.C P numb« in .. llCMrtlllnlnlS If you hive.~ tlOn aboul .. lealt- lty d • mcMf, "'° OI dlllAlilr, Cit. PUil.iC l1TllTIES COMMISIOH 714-551"'4151 FIND eo.tal Pllntlng 20yY'I Fllr pnces ' lnltliOt • Ext PUlt. l.ocll Rt"'*1ces NB 1111 Aon ~2417 CHUNG'S PAINTIHG 27 YM11 Ello • Greet Price! Gu1n1n1et woni · Free Ell. Lt375e02 714-538-1534 IKE'S CUSTOM P AlfTlltO Ploftlslonll, c:ltln. .-lilY wor\. lnt/eXl & docb. L1703468 94H3!-4610 - '°"N~flborltood ~I DIWN a SIWll-= CllMINi SNQAUSf ~DYPWMllNG 949-645-2352 -.. All DRAWS UNCLOGGED ._...,._ ... ·-··-··---·-"'-. .._ (714)-llO • CllOlla ... __ ··-·-C... ..-a-1-.. ----· 714-895~6677 949-722-SM6 714-7Sl-SM6 u..,...,_ -- r· -~ -~-~ r • 0 a: ~ ~I ( . ~ \ ~ "' -i ' J N .... 7 DUNCAN ELECTRIC SMALL }oB ExPERTt LocAL-QUICK REsPONSE t!9M~ir' •SINKS RejinU •COUNTERS • PORCELAIN SHOWERS : n~RGLASS (949) 645• 7723 - •Rntocfdl •Ugbt Fixtum I ·y:7.Jiil •Upgnula '_: eOtttlm (M9) 650-7042 .. ~ LIFE• HOME• CAR• BoAT LES TURNER -lNSURANCE (CID10.1191Q 901 Dowf DriYe, t2SO • ~Beach, CA 92660 ~49) 645-0868 .. • • • Look for these experts daily In the service Director; .... ~~~w~ Ptt DoorsfSaecns/Grillcs ~ Screcn/Glassinc ~ finest Quality WE SCREEN AT YOUR PLACE 1-888-96-SCREEN • .., .,, .., .., ., ., ., .., . .,, .., ' .., "' . .., 1.., .., v .., .. v ..,. .., iv v v v • • llAln'll •sc:•ow INC. • •Ownecf by Audrey T~ Over 20 years experience in . •Land •Exchazi ~~'Il°llfl .... 1~1 ~~c~w •Commercial ...,., ea,. About The Land And nio.. Who Buy & s.11t1• 949·646-8782 • ~_Tortgage . ~:i.-rMadcr -1,.~~'-~,~ ........................ --;.A . .t,.,,,.,...,~ .. llWl>-'i-C ,; ul. , F1IAIVA. ~ u... .. :9JW-"H ""' i.ir ·~11·:,~ -· ?<. ~ . • • --:> ., . •