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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2002-03-10 - Orange Coast Pilot• s UN DAY EDITION • • llUllEI = Cloudy skies, ' ' ' but no rain. Forecasters predict a partly cloudy day. S..P-veJ SERVING TH( NEWPORT-MESA COMMUNmES SINCE 1907 ON THE WEB; WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM TOSHIBA SENIOR CLASS.IC GOLF Inside LIFE & LEISURE After talking about conserving personal energy for years as a professional speaker, Balboa Island's Sue Podany decided to write a book on the subject. See Page 5 Hank Adler, co-chairman of the Toshiba Senior Classic. talks with Assistant City Editor James Meier about his favorite part of the event and more. See Page 9 Inside SPORTS Costa Mesa High's Nick Cabico set a school record with 14 strikeouts (seven in a row at one point) en route to a seven-inning, S-2 victory over Pacifica in the Newport Elks Tournament. See Page 12 Ultimate CALENDAR Want to know what's going on in Newport-Mesa this week7 This month? Next month 7 Check out our Ultimate Calendar. S..P-ve& • s the corner Former champion's 7 -under 64 puts him in today's final-round driver's seat Richard Dunn DAILY PILOT NEWPORT BEACH -Even with another dirt-low round Saturday, Hale Irwin is still rolling up For more Toshiba - -Senior TOBHIB~ Classic coverage, see Page 10. The gallery watches as Allen Doyle digs himself out of the bunk.er on the filth hole. Doyle, Larry Nelson and Gil Morgan are tied for second. three strokes behind Hale Irwin. PHOTOS 81' STEVE MCCRANJ( I OAllY f1l0T 77-pldyer held before an estimated crowd of 24,000 in perfect weather conditions. Speaking of perfect, Irwin, who shot 7 - under-par 64 in the sec- his s~ves and grinding, like a mecb8.nlc ttnkertng with a finely tuned race car. ond round lo build a three-&lroke lead heddtng mto today's final round. is still trying to get there . "I'm going to try a new 3-wood and a new 4-wood right now. They're waiting for me al the dn- ving range,• lrwin said. •You're always perfecting.· lrwin, the 1998 Toshiba Classic champion, said "it's always fun to Irwin, the Senior PGA Tour's all-time leading money winner and career leader in victories with 33 tournament titles, started with a new set of goll clubs before the eighth annual Toshiba Senior Classic at Newport Beach Country Club, and, on movmg day, began to run away from the SEE GOLF PAGE 11 Hale Irwin shot a sizzling 64 at Newport Beach Country Club Saturday to take a three-stroke lead going into the final round. He tees off today at 12:20. BEHIND THE SCENES Keeping things up to par Gordie Fftzel ls a regular among the volunteers NAME: Gordie Fitzel HOME: Huntington Beach TITI.E: Standard beare" cCKhairman HE IS A major score for volunteer stan- dard bearers DAILY DUTIES Fitzel and co-chairman Randy Loats are often the first volunteers to arrive at the Newport Beach TOP STORY Country Club and usually, they're among the last lo leave. Long before the standard bearers tut the green wtth their score signs. Fitzel IS worlung to make sure they're eqwpped and that they report to the nght place on the golf course. Every day. each of the 26 volunteer standard bearers must have their standard -a sign mounted on a pole -a shoulder harness in which they mount the standard and a bib containing plastic numbers to announce the scores. And it's Fitzel's job to make sure it all comes off without a hitch. •After the volunteers finish their , SEAN HIU..ER / OAA.Y ,._or Volunteer Gordy Fltzel ls the standard bearers co-chairman for the SEE SCENES PAGE 4 Toshiba Senior Classic at the Newport Beach Country Club. Run or golf, its a beautifal da,y Don8.tion helps kidS to speak out Partly sunny, 68 degrees, 90% chance of fun. Today' forecast for Newport·Maa. At thin'ert moment, a thundering horde of runncn, joggers. walkers and shulfiers are a59elllbled at Fashion lslan<S for the 19th annual Spa.nt Run, which benefits local ~tary schools. •Rotary aub gift of~ th~apy tools will assist special education programs at Paularino Elementary. DMdre Newman DAILY PILOT ........ IDMYMOT Runners are huffing and puffing in a lOK, a 5K. le.ids' races and a 10ddler not. l'm not qUite reedy thll yeer. but if I *It to my tnWaing pro- gsma. I lbOuld be read)' b .. •ftckDir not by 2003, lfS I tglmaawdiand 1m.1111e ........ . ..... d • ...,., ... 10 .. . ............ . 4nf Alld .... , .., ·to ..... ,. Mia ,_ ma:ar••m 'WEEK IN ' '• CAN'T LIVE WITHOUT THEM "Qoll courses are like women, er, people. They all have 2 Sunday, March 10, 2002 COLLEGE AU GUnON Orange Coast Coll~ge Presi- dent Margaret Gratton announced Monday that she would retire at the end of the EDUCATION year. Gratton has been at the helm of the college for the past six years and is the only woman to ever bold the post. The Corona del Mar High School athletic community is mourning the passing of Doug Orr, 50, the popular school sports announcer who graduated from the campus in 1970. -Deirdre,.._,,.,, COYef'S eduatlon. She may be rNChed at (949) 574-<42.21 or by e-mall 1t d.,rdr&.newmMIO/af/~com. WOMEN LOOI FOR NEW ROBES .. A handful of Newport-Mesa attorneys are reeling from the results of three judgeship races last week, landing two women).n separate runoffs for a seat on the bench and sending the message that Orange County voters would not stand by w)tile a COSTA besieged judQt! MESA retained his seat. Vickie Bridgman and Glenda Sanders were both the top vote getters m theu races for Ordflge County Superior Court omce!> 22 dnd 27 respectfully. Bndgman, who lives m New- port Heights and works in the dis- tnct dttorney's office, garnered 46.2% of the votes. Sanders, a Corona del Mar resident with her own pracl.lce, gained 47.9%. Both will run again in Novem- ber agdlOst the second highest vote getter in their reS'pective office. Gay Sandoval and Karen Robinson also celebrated a victory last week, although theu possible future on the bench is still unsure. Sandoval -a former Daily Pilot columnist -and Robinson -a Costa Mesa city councilwoman - wdged independent write-in cam- paigns to unseat 1udge Ronald C. Kline, who faces felony charges of child molestation and child pornography. The Costa Mesa women Joined rune other wnte in candldates to defeat Kline by a two to on mar- gin. The group of write-in candi- dates gdlned 67% of the vote while KlJne garnered only 33%. The Orang~ County Registrar is scheduled to release individual tallies Mdrch 26. -Lollta Mllf'pet' covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949) 574-4275 or by e-mail crt lollta.ha~latimes.com. A ,BLEAK FUTURE FOR EL TORO Orange County voters stopped supeCV1sors' plans for an airport at El Toro dead on Tuesday, by pass- ing Measure W on a solid margin. 0£ the voters who headed to the poUs -a scant 32% of those registered -El TORO about 58% approved the deal and 42"1 .. re1ected it. The Great Park ulitiative, as it became known, rezones the closed El Toro Marine Corps Air Station from aviation to open space. Before the results could even sink m. Navy offidals said they were moving toward a plan to sell off parcels of the 4,700-acre base on the open market. That move would probably quash any plan$ for a Great Park, a proposal brought forward by Irvine Mayor Larry Agran and Daily. 2ilot. VOL 96, NO. 69 ntCllMSM. ....... Nllllfw lONV~ dill erent personalities." -~zoete.. professi<>NI golfing legend, pointing out that the ~ 8ffCh Co4.lntry Oub Is a •very enJoyM>le coorse to play.· ZMll« spoke 1Ue5day It the Toshibl Community Breakfast .i the Newport M1rriott. PHOTO OF THE WEEK 'DEVASTAnON' lllOU&lllS flOll 111 SCIJm: In a small community like Newport-Mesa, breaking news is a rare event. But by the looks of recent editions of the Pilot, 'you would th.ink the city was burning. lives of their pets. Especially when it was the second fire in a week at MonUcello Townhomes in Costa Mesa. It's my job to cover news, but it's no fun being the one to photograph people at their worst. lt was hard to watch the people devastated by a fire that claimed the You do what you can and hope people will under- stand your posiUon. My compassion for the situaUon hopefully was expressed by me putting down my camera and going over to the famlly to see how they were doing alter such a tragic situation. -Sean Hiller BALBOA ISWID AWi SENT TO PRISON A 54-year-old Balboa Island man will be locked away in state prison for 15 years to • life for inappropriately touch-PUBLIC ing three young girls, a judge SAFETY ruled Friday. Thomas Michael Murphy , was sentenced Friday morning after a jury, m November, found him guilty of four felony counts of lewd acts with a child younger than 14 years of age and one misdemeanor count of possessing child pornography. Each of the felony counts includes an enhancement that states Murphy corrurut- ted the crimes with the intent of gratiiying his sexual desires. - Newport Beach police arrested the former self-employed scuba instructor on May 2, 2000, after seiz- ing about 10,000 photographs and 200 movies from his computer at his Ruby Avenue home. 1\vo girls ages 9 and 11 came forward with the alJegations. . In other news, a Lido Isle home was destroyed in an early morning fire Thursday. The two-story house was gutted a day after it went into escrow. Investigators are not sure what caused the fire, but said it started in the garage. All six people who lived in the house and their dog escaped unharmed. -o.ep. 8hanth covers public safety and courts She may be reached at (949) 574~226 or by e-mail at dttpa bharathOlat1mes com. other South County leaders. Airport supporters also lost an alJy on the Board of Supervisors m Cynthia Coad, who was turned out of office by Fullerton Counal- man Chris Norby. -PMd Olnton covers the environment and John Wayne Airport. He may be reached at (949) 7644330 Of by e-mail at paul.clmtonO~times.com A TRIBUTE TO CHUCK One activist has come up with a titting idea to memorialize famed NEWPOR·T 8:Jtimator and lon~­ time Newport res1-BEACH dent Chuck Jones. Laura Dietz has announced that she will ask the oty's Parks, Beaches and Recre- abon Commission to look for ways to remember the recently deceased Jones in city parks - perhaps with images of some of hls beloved characters such as Bugs Bunny and Foghorn Leghorn. Businesses could soon receive filers from the city explaining ways to comply with new water- quality rules. The handbills, still in draft form, explain ways to keep pollutants out of storm drains. Big Canyon Reservoir wa~ut down after some residents report- ed seeing tiny midge fly larvae in their drinking water and toilets. Officials are treating the water with chlorine and serving New- port Beach homes and businesses with water directly from the Met- ropolitan Water District. Wells providing water to New- port Beach and Costa Mesa that had been shut down recently have been put back online. The wells m Fountain ValJey and Costa Mesa had been shut down as a precau- tion after public health offJoals announced the potentialJy cancer causing chemical 1,4-Dioxane had been detected in their water. The state's health agency has since ruled that the chemical is present in such small quanbbes that it does not pose a significant health risk. -haM Casagrande covers Newport Beach. She may be relChed at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at /uM.casagrandeO/atimes.com. Daily Pilot Notablt QUOTABLES- "We were just inside a minute earlier. " -l uHeMay, Costa Mesa resident.. witching he< home in the 100 block of Lexington Avenue bum on March 2. No one was injured, but several pets ~re lost in the townhouse fire "This is my worst night- mare." -El•lne Blue, owner of the custom tailoring shop Robertino's, on having her Via Udo shop bum on Sunday afternoon. The actual building had little damage, but many of the clothes suffered smoke damage "They just did not feel the need to obey the Jaw. But if everybody believed that, we would have dogs r unning loose all over the city. H -Sift-Snv• Shul~n. on why the Newport Beach Police Department has repeatedly ticketed Lynne and Philip Butterfield for let- ting their dog. Red Baron, swim in the ocean unleashed. The Butter· fields' contention that the city's leash laws do not extend to the water was quashed by an Orange County judge Tuesday. NOGO "I'm like the rest of you. I've got my finger crossed." -Supervisor' Jim Silv• on election night, speaking about Measure W. Silva, an airport sup· porter, did not get his wish Tuesday, as Measure W - which supports a park at El Toro - passed by around 58%. "It's absolutely amazing that a quarter of a million people went out there and bothered to write in someone else's name." -Ondy ar.nnem.n. manager for Costa Mesa City Coun- cilwoman Karen Robinson's write-in campaign against Superior Court Judge Ronald C Kline, on write-in candidates garnering 67% of the vote Tuesday in the race for the judgeship. "Ir seems unfair that he's going to be locked up with murderers and violent criminals." -FayArl-. defense attorney for Thomas Michael Murphy. on her dlent get- ting a sentence of 15 to life in state prison Friday for inappropriately touching three young girls. Murphy was arrested by Newport Beach police in May 2000, after about 10,000 photographs and 200 movies including child pornography were found at his home. ...... ,....... 8EAD£8S lt0nJN£ right No news Jtorles, illustrations. SURF AN D SUN Art Dlt«tOr (949) 642-6086 edrtorlal matt« or ectv.rtltements ~)S74:!1 herein <Ml be reptoduc:.ed without }oM.Hl>f'OSela com Record your comments lbout the WEATHER FORECAST ... ~ Dilly Pilot Of news tips. V"1tten pennlsSIOn of copyright owntf . knots In the •ft.moon. Wind ,,_,~ Today will be partly cloudy waves of 1to3 feet 1re expert-(949) 7'44JSI AO PRESS HQW IQ REACH US and partly sunny. H11f empty, !Ol.pllofotlM~com ed to build to 3 to S feet. A OIH .cttess Is 310 W. Bay St., Cosu OmJlltion half full. You decide. EJCpect a .-northwest swell of s to 7 feet Is NpaSWf Mesi, CA 92627. Offia houn ere high of 68 et arovod 2 p.m. The 0..,... ..... Monday. Frldly. l'lO • m. -5 pm . The Times Ortnge County ultrlVlolet Index will be 6, which expected. .... CJ1tne end c.ouru rwporw, (Mt) 57<M226 (800) 252-9141 Is modefat., SO you may Want to JUOYGm.o. • ~Olrtaor ~ • .,,.,_com COMECDQNS ~ put on some sunsaeen If you're SURF __ ,.,....,......., --0 ..... It " the Pllot'S policy to ptOmptty ~ (949) 642-5671 going tO be outside a while, ,,__ O..ector ~ ludlt~ Ml 574-Wl CDrrect 111 erron of wbst.lnc.. o~ <M9l w .. 121 low. will be in the lower 50s. Ewty motnlng higtl tide won->-~.__,. P1MM call (949) 574-4233. (cftolW tut the ctiance of r1ln Is forec.tst ens conditions ~ wtten't that EpawaSwp -...a-. ~ (949) 642-5680 -~ grut to stMt out wtfh. Eapect S.J.C.ltw\, FNtUIW ~ (9ttl 574.uA rn $f)ott5 (949) 574"4223 ~; w~ In the 2 to 3 foot r~. ~(dftot ~~tltMc.tom (949)57~» .... a.... The N4l'Wport tucM:ostl Mesi Dal'V ~fllC('49)646-4170 WWW.IMl.l)()N,~ ...., ...-,: www.turfrl<W. fffiW\ aiMe ltlotllfl «*n ~ll'td .,,,,.,,.,, •• ,.,,., .... "6oQJO Piiot ~t44-IOO) Is publhhed dilly Sports,. (M9) 650-0170 MloW ...... ~ drnforiel.t'*'-QI/It In Newpor1 hid\ ""' Coftl MN. IOATlNG FORECAST Of9 Cltyldlat E-tNtl: ~lotellti"*-tt>m ~11'-MW ............ ~iorlt ,,. .vllllbtt ontv by tub-MelnOf'lb OOl9 to thofw. Dpect light }KrtflJ meWelltlrllft.com Cotta Mtlll repoN(, ~ S7oWa7S W1bin9 to The Tim. 0r.nge County wfncts '° ~ blowing It 10 to TIDES .....,c.e-, lol.u ~dmM.(Olll (IOO) 25H141. In .... outllde of ...,,_ Of'ftcll (M) W..CJ21 20 knoll .. the west and 1'IMe ........ 1 --((jjtQ( Dlll*9 ........ 1wine1s F• (M9) '3t-7U6 ,...,,1~,J tcloQtlOl'I,... c.. ~,.....,,, ~ hec:hend c.. MeN. tut> nonh•""*' ._the afternoon. l:Oh.ni. U fMtlOW "'9fl'~fl"*COin .,,...... ·-.. IMiii.,_ ~to ttw Delly""°' ..... Wind M* wll bt ' to l f9tt l.'99•.m. UfMthlgih ---·~ ..,.. ....... *ile ~ by flt« CS. mall for SJO I* MINIW"'-~ .... Mif. ~swell of 5,... .. ,....,,.. f.dltor ...... a1 .. a....,....lN., , ;!I p.l'l'.L ""e-(M)'/7~ ~ .......... 51 ...... fllOf'lth.. ~ ""'* ............ ~ ..... night. ... ,._,,.,...::r-Mna~ .............. _ ....... ..,...,~ _,...Ck,,....,._ ..... ~-, ..... ..... u ..... ,....o.,-;;t: ... , 2 .-m s.nd ................... ........... ,.,.. ........ ~'1....,.. Gilltl!J 0.Sl.em\ 1111111 ._ ~ ........ ,_, P.0 tc. ofltD11.._ .... ._ WAIMTNIUIWI ..._ ,..,., ... ..,....,. ...... ...._ .. ...,,.,, t• Ollilll .... CA_. Cc1iPf> ....... ID10tlJO ..... Doily Pilot ' Sunday, Morch l 0, 2002 3 City gets first look at internal report Costa Mesa farmer helped raise crops and children •Details about whether Newport officials knew of improper dumping should be out in a week. June C.sagrande DAILY PILOT Young Cheng DAILY PILOT T he photo of Jacob Shiffer explains it all. Not th4t he's pre- dictable or stereotypical, but Shiffer looks Lookiil ~e part of a BAC pioneer farmer who ?Ot SO mvolvedm Costa Mesa's early years that people thought he deserved, at the very least, a park named in his honor. As you can see, he's wear- 'ing a blazer on top of very fanner-esque overalls and a plaid, button-down shirt. He's topped the look with a fonnal hat and is supporting hlplself with a c~e. You can believe he plant· ed lots of great crops, won awards for them at fairs, joined the local school board and left behind a legacy of 19 grandchildren and 46 great grandchildren. Shiffer amved in Costa Mesa in 1910. He moved out with his family from Kansas and settled in the part of the city known as Paulartno. The park named after him - Shiffer Park -is today at the intersection of Bear and Paularino streets. He grew pumpkins and squash and celery, said Gladys Refakes. volunteer at the Costa Mesa Historical • ii I ' ' .-. ~ ~· ---' .. '. ' r Jacob Shiffer Society and a longtime city resident. He grew lots of dil· ferent vegetables at once and often took home pnzes for his vegetables from local Ia.us. He and his family -he married three blnes and had seven children -lived near a r4i,l.toad station because that way it was easy for freight trains to trans port ShJ.ffer's crops to the market, Refakes said. The first house he lived m was tom down when the Corona del Mar Freeway was built. · He eventually lived m a house across the street from Shl.ffer Park, in what had once been a school house. Relakes said Through the years, he gol involved Wlth Costd Me!->"tl schools and served on the Paularino School Board for 37 years Relakes, reading an old Daily Pilot story fTom 1977, said he was di.so active in tus church for many decades. When he was 99, Costa Mesa deeded to ndffie a park in Stutfer's honor ~He was a pretty active guy,# Retakes said. Shiffer passed awdy at the age of 102 m the late '7M. • Do you know of a person, place or event that deserves a historical LOOK BAO<? Let us know Con· tact Young Chang by fax at (949) 646-4170, e-mail at young.changOlac1mes.com; or mail her at do Daily Pilot, BO W Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627 NEWPORT BEACH -An investigation to find out whether any emP.loyees knew that the dty was improperly dumping waste has been com- pleted, but officials said that findings won't be available for a week or more. Until then, officials say, it is not known whether any employees acted improperly or whether any disciplinary action could take place. A show to remember at Newport Harbor High For about 12 years, the city has been mixing some sewer debris -mostly sand, eggshells and raw human waste -with debris from stonn drains. Waste from these two sources, which was com· bined in a receptacle called a dewatering basin, Wt\S then sent to the Frank R. Bowerman Landfill in lrvine. Concerns that this practice caused dangerous heavy met- als to be sent to the landfill were assuageq last month after tests showed no presence of such metals. Nonetheless, city officials want .to know whether any city staff over the last 12 years knew it was improper and potentially hazardous to com· bine the two types of waste. The Costa Mesa law finn Rutan & Tucker U.P has inter· viewed city employees and is prepanng a report on its find· mgs. In a meetlng Thursday, city officials reviewed a draft of the report, but said they did not yet know whether any employ· ees acted unproperly, Assistant City Manager Dave Kilt said. • "The Boys Next Door" is still winning rave reviews and competitions months after closing. Deirdre Newman DAILY PILOT NEWPORT BEACH -Like any large high school, Newport Harbor High has its share of divisions among its students - financial divisions, ethnic divi· sions, academic divisions. For the fall play, drama direc- tor Gail Brower-Nedler wanted a show that would bridge the chasm between various factions by exposing the raw feelings universally shared by people, no matter what group they hap- pen to be in. She chose "The Boys Next Door,• a poignant rendering of four mentally chsabled men ma group home\ who have to deal with the possibility of their social worker abandoning them. The show earne d rave reviews and is providing the actors W1th an opportunity to pertonn for state legislators later this month. The contemporary drama, which was made into a 1996 television movie stamng Nathan Lane and Robert Sean Leonard, had a profound affect on the school by increasing the level of awareness and tolerance among student, said the main cast members. "Th.is slu>w touched every· one he re,• said senior Jason Kraft, 17, who plays one of the mentally disabled men. "There were some people on campus that hated me. Now 1 tdlk to them." The cast started rehearsing m late September and quickly bonded into a family-so much so, that they still have a close connection and a tendency to finish each others' sentence~. Their re hearsal schedule WdS inte nse since they had to be ready for school performances m October. ln order lo lllhab1t a world they had ltttle expenence m, they enlisted the help of Come Rausch, who used to work ell the Fd1rv1ew Ad ult Developmental Center and now works m the school's special Jmn Us As We Talie Our Next Step In lkclding The Future Of Newport Beach General Plan Update Neighborhood Workshops Monday, March 18th Council District S 7:00 p.m. -9:00 p.m. Monday,Aprll 8th Commercial & Airport Land Uses 5:00 p.m. -6:30 p.rn. CancraJ Library Friends Mtg Rm I 000 Avocado Awnue Muth Interpretive Center 230 I University Di'tve Tuesday, March 19th Council District I 7:00 p.m. -9:00 p.m. City HaJI Council Chambers 3300 Newport Boulevard Wednesday, March 20th G:oUnd District 2 7!00 p. · 9:00 p.m. ~ fftl Council Chambers 3JIO Newport Boulevard Honday,April 8th Council District 7 7:00 p.m. -9:00 p.m. Cemtal Library Friends Mt& Rm 1000 AYC>cado Avenue Wedn•1da,,April I 0th Council District '4 7:00 p.m. • 9:00 p.m. Newport Harbor Htgh School 600 frvlMAvenue T1Mlll'ml-.1Ai*tl 11th strict 3 .-9:00 p.m. ~llWi>Ort t+¥bor ~ SchOol 600frvlne~ educc1tion department. "We did exe rcises so we would know·what 1t felt like to I.le <ilscnrrunated against,· said juruor Rycl!l Bean, 17, who plays d mc1ruc-depress1ve Ryan Sdid that he and the other dctors a nd actresses invei.ted so much emotion in the chardcters that 1t was often hctrd to snap out of chdr.dcter. "We'd be m character from hall d1l hour before the show unW dO hour c1fterwords. We'd walk and talk like our chdfac- ter.o," Rydn sc11d. Even though the show ended its school run in October, the cast 1s sUU rece1vmg comph· mentary reVlews. •At the wmter fonndl dance, I went to eat somewhere and d womd.O told me that thlS was the most dllld7ing show she had Pver seen, not JUSt for a !ugh school pldy, but anywhere,• said sophomore Mike McLedfl, 15, who pldys the social worker, Jack. And at the d.OJ\Ual Cahlorma Educational Theater Associdbon competition in MonroVld edrber th.is year, the cdsl also made an indelible 1mpress10n on the judges and the commwuty W1th only a 10-mmute scene. "We're famous in Monrovid " said 1uruor Jenruier Kramer, 16, who plays the romdnl:ic lllter- est of one of the mentally hd.Tld- ica pped men. •People would honk at us and shout 'There\ "The Boys Next Door· • The cast won d !>lPw of award~. including 8P'>l Ensemble, and scored hve> v.hol· arsh1ps to dttend Cahlorn1d Youth m Theater Ody in Sacramento later th1" month The pnvilege enc1blec, them to perfonn the1T 10-nunult! ver- sion of the show m front of SldtP legisldtors and then m~t Wlth the pouuoan ... pnvately to con· vmce them to mcrease funding lor the arts Brower-Nedler hds even lofber dJllb1Uons for the show SmP would hke to see it per· fanned di a theater festival in Edinburqh, Scotlcmd hopeful- !\ nf'xt summer Ac, the ca'>t prepares to per· form once dgdm, they know lhey have aclueved something c,o in1m1tdble that they a re cilredd~ loolung bdck on 1t Wlth nosl.d.lgid • Evf'ryone is so proud of this '>hO\\ • sd1d Jason ·r trunk for dll of uc, it's the most dfficV.l.119 t>xpenenre we've ever had or ever will hdve • WE DO THINGS RIGHT! OUR MEALS ARE A TRIP TO MEXICO Ml CASA MEXICAN RESTAURANT WE TAKE DINING TO THE NEXT LEVEL! WE SPECIALIZE IN LARGE TOGO ORDERS PHONE AHEAD! 296 E. 17TH ST. COSTA MESA· 949·64S·7626 t/ WINIS IN 31 FUVGRS • t/ 3 STYLEI • •11111 10FUY• t/ 11 DRIFT •IRS ., lllUT FUii t/ Ill SlllRHEI ' ' I i I I~ I '4 SondOy, March 10, 2002 SCENES CONTINUED FROM 1 assignments, we have to take apart all the signs," he said. "Then. when we find out what the next day's pa.trtngs are, we have to get all their names on the signs for the next day.• Fitzel considers his behind- the-scenes work to be sup- porting the sllfndard bearers who, he says, have the really tough jobs. "They have probably the most physically demanding duties." F1tzel said. "In the wind dnd the rain and any conditions they have to be out there walking the fairway. It's hdrd work, but they got into it because they wanted to.• When Fltzel's job lS done nght, 11makes11 easier for the standard bearers lo do their JOb m full pub1lic view. An offi- aal scorer who follows them a.round lakes the heal off the c;tandard bearers by makJ.ng ~ure the scores dfe right. "I've heard of standard bearer!> having wrong scores before," he saJd, "But not this Loumament, not this year.• -June casagrande BEHIND THE SCENES Keeping it in llile The 18-year-old is checking their passes and their Caddies NAME:'ICatle Bottum TITLE: Police Explorer volunteer HOME! Huntington Beach SHE IS On her guard to ensure a safe, fun weekend of golf DAILY DUTIES Bottum is one of 19 yowig people from the Newport Beach Police Explorers who are helping keep things in line at this year's Toshiba Senior Classic. The 18-year- old student from Edison High School in Huntington Beach said the goH tournament is just one of the many fwt, interesting activities she has Please join,. CONGREGATION Shir ffd-Md 'd/ot for Passover Seder at the . 9RVINE • f(ARI01T c/fOTEL l 8000 VON KARMAN IRVINE, CAUFORNIA T'lwrsday, March 28, 2002 5:30 pm . .Jf.?abbi .--f?ichard Jleinberg & 0anror , f:"/rie Jhikler will conduct this 2,../ Night Seder. Adults: $48.00 Children: $20.00 Advance reservation & payment required by March 2{)h. ;//( .. /. 'f ~~ to (949) 551-0839 ext. 244 I Please Join US for our Open House I at our newest location in I Newport Beach 1401 Quail Street I (on the corner of Quail and Spruce 3 blocks east of Campus Drive) Friday, March 15 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Fun, food and entertainment ••• all day longl And, be sure to stop by to enter our Open House Sweepstakes for a $200 LBSFCU Savings Bond, DVD Player or Microwave Oven. __ ._ • .._... ... ,~ ................... ge .... .. ____ " --·······•-l.9al-.,. ... uot-CA-.elf~I••~------...... , .. _ ---------··--· -.................. -"""'-........ ··-·'· -c-.. _ ... ____ _,_ ___ .. ....._.._....., 1.111111 .. _______ LIMU _ ...... __ ., .. _____ _ I 562.598.9007 714.893.5111 --..,..;. ~-;c_ l.BSFINANCIAL ... Credit Union I OIWWJbsfcu~ J, SEAN HitlER t OAJl.V "'-OT Katie Bottum directs traffic at lot A for the Toshiba Senior Classic. been part of since joining the Newport Beach Country Club CHECK OUT THE 'CADDIES' Newport Beach Explorers this week, Bottum's is the first In addition to seeing lots three years ago. smile they see as they enter the of big-name goll pros and "It's a great organization,· , main parking lol On Friday, visitors from far and wide. she said. "I love it.• she was stationed at the park-Bottum also has a front-row The Toshiba tournament ing lot entrance checking park-seat for some redlly nice car has added a fun twist to her ing passes and credentials. wdtching. With Cadillac a Explorer experiences, which "Those meetings are really major sponsor of lhU. year's often means helping out at brief, but a lot of times the tournament. lots of golf pros the police station with derical Toshiba people come by on are arriving in some stun- tasks. the goll carts to check on us," ning "Caddies,• including "The weather has been Bottum said. "That's fun, JOk-Bottum's favorite, the really nice and it's been really ing around,. but always Escaladc. fun to be out here,• she said. remembering to keep an eye "TI1ey're supposed to ~ "I like working around a lol of out for the job you're doing. the m<>'it powerful SUVs on people and trying to make It's important to make sure no EcU1.h," she Sdid. "I'd love to them sn1.ile. • one would want to sneak III or hdve one some day." For some visitors to the anything.· -June casagrande COMMENTS CONTINUED FROM 1 really unpress your rnends with. A 26-rnile marathon is how many kilometers? 42.3257472. Can you frnd this lond of mfonnation anywhere else? I say you cannot. Speaking of kilometers, IS ii "kil-o'-meters• or "ki'-lo- meters?" It's probably "ki' -lo- , meters,~ Like centimeters and millimeters, IJul that always sounds funny with kilometers. Does anyone cdle about this but me? I guess not. Now I'm sorry I brought it up. This is embarrassing. Where were we? Oh yeah, the Spirit Run. I think big, raucous, out- door community events are great. We should have them INDEPENDENT JAGUAR more often. Most of us spend 80% of our time rn a house or an office. and the other 20"· .. alone in a car. Every once ma while, it's nice to get every- body up and out and all together in one place, where they can see cmd talk and shake bands and just dct silly if lhey want to. lf you can do that and ben- efit a good cause, so much the better. But doing it for no rea· son at all might be reason enough. I say, once a year, every city should do a city- wide block party, even tf il 1s an oxymoron. Close off some streets dncl invite everybody to bnng a few beach chairs and a couple of sandwiches and some sodas. No booths, no exhibits, no "taste of anything" -just sandwiches, sodas and people 2037 HARBOR BLVD. 650 5860 COSTA MESA CA 949 ?. BLKS NO OF TRIANGLE SQUARE WWW PERFORMANCELTD.COM For Ail Your I St. Patrick's Day~ I Decor & Party Needs ~ddiiional 200/o Off rrulling dround and introduc· mg themselve. to each other What do you Uunk? Too crazy? You<.leode. And today, dS you almost certdinly know. IS the final act for the 2002 TOl.tuba Seruor Cld.!>'>IC It's the seventh year for the Tostuba at the Newport Beach Country Club, follow· mg 1L'> debut at Mesa Verde Country Club. U you'ye hawn't been to d pro golf tournament, you should go, d'>sunung you're reading this on Sunday morning. II you're redding this on Sunday night, don't go. Wouldn't be prudent. Golf, like most sports, can be deddly dull on television, unless you're a ldrl But it's a whole dtlferent story in person, even for people who don't know a tlung about goll, like me. In every sport, you can't really appreciate the sights and sounds unless you're there, m real We, m the thick of 1t First all, d golf course IS a pretty place to be, no matter how you cut it It's a big park wilh a Jot of trees and vast stretches of grass that your lawn asp1res to but can never equal. Except for an occa.sion- al cheer or a smattenng of applause, it's a very quiet set· ting, thanks to lhdt loopy tra- d!bon whereby golf d.nd termis can only be played in com- plete silence Basebdll, basketball, foot- ball and hockey players can do their work mth thousands of fans howling cmd shrieking and cursing at them, but golfers and termis players Just can't do 11 unle!>s everybody IS really, redlly qwet. At lt!ast golf is consistent about the search for silence. Have you watched a woman's tennis match lately? On almost every shot, the place reverber - ates wtth tortured screams and grunts Crom the players. Both women sound like they're playtng with two broken nbs and a shattered ankle. But if someone in the top row takes a bite of a soft pretzel before a serve, the server glares ID that direction and the announcer says ID his sternest voice, "Quiet, please.• I don't get it. But a golf tournament is, for the most part, a qwet, subdued busi- ness. You do a lot of strolling from place to place, a few minutes here and a few min- utes there, aJways in search or a good vantage point. You watch a few players go by, marvel al how they can make the ball fly and jump and stop on a di.me, then move on to the next spot. You stare at the famous players, trying to decide if they look older or younger in person. · Later ln the ddy, you ttake out a i~t at the 18th green, watch o lew groups finish, ·ooh• and •aah• at the ,great hots, then get a dt11ik and stroll some more Very civilized. · So get out there, get going and do your thing, whatever said thing might be. Watch or do, run or wCll.k, broattie in br6athe out. •oOb • and •a~ • It's ipltng, '!9'nt still her , th' SWl ... :lbinlng, f\O WO~. J gotta go . Doily Pilot PUBLIC SAFETY POLICE FILES COSTA MESA • ltistol Strwt: Petty theft was reported In the 3300 block at 5:23 p.m. Thursday • Hatbor Boulevard: Petty theft was reported in the 2300 blodt at 3:50 p.m. Thursday. • Hylllnd Avenue Md Scenk Avenue: A traffic accident involving Injuries was reported at 7:23 a.m. Thursday. • F•lrview RcNld: A vehicle burglary was reported In the 2700 block at 6:28 p.m. Thursday. • Newport Boulevard: A commercial burglary was reported in the 1500 block at 12:01 p.m. Thursdey. • ptawntfa Avenue: A vehicle burglary was report· ed in the 2300 block at 5.01 p.m. Thursday • Paulaarino Avenue MMt PullnYn Street: A hit·and run was reported at 5:58 p.m. Thursday. • East 11th StNet: A peeping Tom was reported in the 200 block at 3:53 p.m. Thursday NEWPORT BEACH • Avocado Avenue: A hit· and·run was reported in the 1Cl00 block at 4:37 p.m. Thursday. • Channel Ro.d: A traffic collision involving injuries was reported in the 2200 block 10:25 p.m. Thursday • J•mborM Road: A com- mercial burglary was report ed 1n the 1100 block at 8 30 a.m. Friday. •Marine Avenue: Grand theft was reported m the 3000 block at 2 40 p.m Thursday. • Palm Street .net 84111boa Boulev..-d: A reckless driver was reported at 11.48 a m Friday • Riverside Avenue: Van· dalism was reported in the 300 block at 11 '.36 p.m Thursday. /l~IOllAl'f/JIUl/.J Jennie Viola Richard Jerne VIOia Rdlard, of Corona del Mar. passed away on Monday. Matdl 4, ~ after a lengthy Illness. She was 95. Mrs. Richard and her husbend. DICk came to Caifonia in 1928 from their home state of Wisconsin. DICk WOf1(ed in a small grocery store on W. Ocean Front in Newport Beactl before building his first of two super markets in 1948 at the entrance to Lido Isle. A second store was later opened in 1971 in Harbor VteW Hills. DICk was instrumental lf1 starting the Bank of Newport and WOl1<ed closely wi1h the Nixon f<>< President C8111l8ign. He retired several years later before his d9a1h in 1979. Jennie became active in runerous local charities 11"1 lhe Newport Beach area Some of these wefe Iha Shennan Gardens in Corona del Mar, the Ebel and Zonta c:ktls. and was a fwdng membef of Angektos de Oro. She and her famly were original ment>ers of Iha Baboa Bay Cllb and llVlne Coast Coootry Cllb. She was al90 active in the Christian Scienoe Church in Newport Beacti, the Newport Beach Phi&annonic and the Friends of the l..b'81y. Jennie Richard Is suMved by her son, John of Costa Mesa and ttlAl8 grandsons. Thomas, also of Costa Mesa. Michael from V8lenda and Peter who ~ In Oeldand. She also has two great ~· Conner and Jake. She was ilterr9d akwlg lide her Mbend al the Pacific VWM Cemetery aftef I pc1vate aecvlce. .. PIEllCl-1-IELL--AY Mort~* Chape4 CfwN!tlon r Doily Pilot SEAN Hlll£R I DAil Y Pll 0 I Sue Podany wrote a book on conserving your personal energy. She writes mosUy on the beach near her BaJboa Island home. ·z s Wlt Young Chang 0AlLY PILOT S ue Podany has a light fountain, the kind where orange light sprays up and down like water, because 1l "creates energy.· Balboa Island's Sue Podany has focused her writing skills on energy - the kind that keeps a person going. in the corners (and more obVlous areas) of Podany's home attest to her faith in creating good energy through the littlest Uungs. The author of "Energy,• released last September, says the force ts our most preoous gilt. Near the door of her Balboa Island home, she has another fountain with water cascading down a small stone wall. nus ere· ates calming energy. Her freshly cut orduds add to the positive energy and so do her many many candles -some lavender, some red, each set in a creative candle holder. From a Japanese mobile adorning the ceiling to the shoot- ing star placed above her brick mantle, the touches that pop up ·u you don't have energy, you can't accomplish the things you want rn life,· she said. "You don't Planning a profusion of potted plants Karen Wtght NO PLACE LIKI HOME I 've been laid back (a.k.a. lazy) about my garden this winter. Aside from pruning the roses and pulling a few weeds, it's been neglected. And it looks like it. I'm not quite ready to take on the spring face-lift with Oats of flowers, adding good soil and fertilizing, but I am prepared to take on some small-scale jobs. I need to build up to a crescendo and starting with my outside pots seems to be the about the right speed. A few of my containers are filled with "no-brainer plants,• God love 'em. Things like dipped box- woods are low maintenance and so far, J haven't been able to kill any. But occa- sionally, the boxwoods look a little lonely and like to invite a few blooming (949) ~ .. ,.~, ....... ,.,.. ............ '"" .. ... friends to spend a season with them. U you have a perenrual that longs for comparuon- ship, add a little color. l Wee simple combinations such as white flowers planted with some variegated greenery. U you're feeling perkier than I am, .go for a burst of color, but make a plan. Don't buy 10 dt.fferent SEE HOME PAGE 7 SEE FORCE PAGE 1 ( Sunday, Morch 10, 2002 5 TRAVEL TALES Golden • memones ofUtahand the Olympics Young Chang DAILY PILOT W hat remam.s at the front of Loren and RichaJd Monarty's memory of their tnp to Uldh idst month 1s not the women's hockey gdITle dt the Wmter Olympics nor the sk.J- ing dnd the yogd classes, but ice <1ngels And ice t•dgles, frozen gods t1ndgod-~ desses, even an Utah iced scene of d DurMloft: hon attacking a .. Thf;_ee_d¥ __ deer attempung lo nee. They amved at the spot of the lntemdtiondl Ice CCUVUlg Competition in Provo, Utdh dt dbout 1 l pm. They found more than 30 mtemabondl ice sculptmg teams from dround the world creatmg art 'V from 300-pouncl blocks of ice. "It was aU lit up by l.Jght, • said Loren Mondrty of New- port ~each "It was so cool because of the contrast of ddrkness and the water and the ice flying from the art.Jsts in action• Mon arty dnd her compc1n- 1on Richard trdveled to Sun- dance, Utdh to v1s1t Richard's brother Donald Monarty. For three days, the couple sk.Jed -actually. Loren Moriarty doesn't slo so she took yogd classes at the Sundance Spa instead -watched a women's hockey game at the Olympics and watched ice tum mto art. ·we love hockey but we aren't avid fans,· Loren Monarty Sdld ·we were JUSt redUy cunow. to see what a SEE TRAVEL PAGE 7 This unexpected combination of ornamental kale and string of pearls ls an interesting and dramatic choke for an outdoor pot. S£.ANHIUER /DAILY "'-OT NE WP.ORT BE.A CH PUBLIC LIBRARY Distinguished Speakers Lecture Series to tackle the world-at-large 5th Annual Martin W. Witte Distinguished Speakers Lecture Series, planned for Feb. -May, 2002 Newport Beach Central Library. ( i1-spo11sored by tlte Newport Hrad1 Public Library and the Newport Public Library l·i11111dotic111, thr four-program ~rrfrs will bring a renowned presidential advisor, public lira/tit ju11malist, revisionist l11storia11 and Prmwmist lo the pod111111 for provocative discussions about current a"d In tht' wake of Ebola 1:µidemics. anthrax at1acks anti tht' spread of AJDS, can th<' nwclical community win the war on inft-ctious clisl'as<.·s? ls bio-trrrorism an unassailable rnemy for l110s(• ho work to protect tlw 1 t . peoples? ·111l·s<.· ar · :t a few of the questions award-winning nwdical journalist Laurie Garrett will address when "ht' pn•sC'nts "Betrayal of Trust: The Collapse of Global Public Health" at the Nl'wport Beach Central Library. A.<:. the -;econd rc•nowned l'Xpert of the 5th Annual Martin W. Witte Disti.nguishc·cl Speakers L<'clun• S<'ries, Garrett will spt'ak al 7:00 P.M. on Friday. March 15 and at 2:00 P.M. on Saturday, March 16. Tick<·ts for the Friday l"Vt·ninj.! pro~ram, including a bu ff<'l dinner by ClaY1on Shurlt-y's Rl'al BBQ and live music by the Billy Erick-;on I >uo. are $55. lkkcb for the Saturday afl<·rnoon program. including light rcfrt>-.hmmts, are S 18. Fur mort i11format1on, call (800)2()().7094, or visit www.111wportk<Jclttiba11.orr Orfd dick on Hot Topia/DSLS. 6 TODAY SPtRJT,RUH SpCM llONd by: ·.10 .. Blue Cross of =:ashion • Island, 62 Fashion Island, Newport Beach When: 6:30 a.m. registration begins Cost S22 adults, S 15 children 12 and younger and seniors 60 and older. Proceeds will benefit Newport-Mesa schools Contact: (949) 450-4520 BOOK StGNING: JAOC KATU Sponsored by: Barnes & Noble Booksellers presents Jack Kates sign- ing •0on't You Know It's 40 Below?" wt.er.: Sames & Noble Booksellers, 901-B South Coast Drive, Costa Mesa When: 1 p.m. Cost Free Contact: (114) 894-4856 MONDAY ,, VIENNA PHILHARMONIC SponsoNd by: 11 Philharmonic Society of Orange County Wher9: Orange County Performing Arts Center. 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa When: B p.m. Monday through Wednesday Cost S34-S109 Contact: (949) 553-2422 TUESDAY 'LOBBY HERO' SponsoNd by: South Coast Repertory 12 Wl'Mre: SCR's Mainstage, 655 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa wt.rt: Through Maren 24. Show times are 8 p.m. Tuesdays tnrough Fridays, 2:30 and 8 p.m. Saturdays. and 2:30 and 7 p.m. Sundays Cost S27-S52 Contact:(714)708-SS55 WEDNESDAY PHOTO EXHIBIT 5pOlllOftd by: 13 Orange Coast College presents works by Los Angeles photographer Peter Brown When: Photo Gallery, OCC's Fine Arts Building, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa wt.rt: Through March 22. The gallery is open 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Mondays through Wednesdays, 10 a.m. to·10 p.m. Thu™1ays. 9 a.m. to S p.m. Fridays, and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturdays. Cost: Free Contact: (114) 432-5520 THURSDAY 14 'CEO EXCHANGE' Sponsored by: Assn. for Corporate Growth, F"tnandal Executlves Institute and the Forum tor Corporate Directoc:s Wlll pre- sent Wing Lam of Wahoo's and Sam ltl!Nll of Viking Components Where: The Sutton P1ace Hotel, 4500 MacArthur Blvd~ Newport Beach When: 5:40 p.m. eo.t: Free for members, S40 for nonmembers c.om.ct: (949) 476-20<>1. BOOK SIGNING: KAY LINDAHL 5ponlonld by: Borders Boob, Musk and Cafe presents Kay Lindahl signing "The Sacred Art of Listening• Where: Borders Boob, Music and Cafe, South Coast Plaza, 3333 Be¥ St~ Costa Mesa When:7 p.m. eo.t: Free C.orMd: (714) 279-8933 . CONTACT USI 00 y00 ~ an upcoming eVent? lhe Daily Pilot wekomtS subtnJssk>nS to , ntl WIMAft CAUNOAll • &.ITTlllS -Mail to the Daily Pilot. 330 W. Bay St.. Costa Mesa 92627 • MJC -Send to (949) ~170 • I-MAIL -Send to ~nnl~maha/Olati~com I0• 1HI Wiii 01IU•CH10·16, 2002 SPOTUGHT . Global h0alth talk lAUllE GARRDT SPUIS How strong are the world's public health sys- tems? Strong enough to help prevent the spread of the Ebola virus? Strong enough to help keep the world's population Tllf lttw "" Tl#lS IUTSlUllC Al/TllOI Of fll( Cl#llll ~-L. \ L, P ! L .\!{!,1 ~ .. 1 •safe from biological harm? Journalist Laurie Gar- rett, author of "Betrayal of lhlst: the Collapse of Global Pub- lic Health,• will speak to these questions Friday and Satur- day as part of the 5th annual Martin W. Witte Distin- guished Speakers Lecture Series at the Newport Beach Central Library. includes a buffet dmner from Clayton Shurley's Real BBQ and live music from the Billy Erickson Duo. Saturday afternoon's lecture include!> light refreshments. Garrett, a medical and sci- ence writer for New York Newsday, is the only writer to have won all of the top awards in American journal- ism, including the Pulitzer Prize and the Peabody Award. Future speakers m the series will include revisiorust historian Howard Zinn dnd economist Todd Buchholz. · FYI When: Newport Seach Central Library. 1000 Avocado Ave., Newport Beach The Friday night program When: 7 p.m. Friday, 2 p.m Saturday Cost S55 for Friday, $18 for Saturday Contact: (949) 717-3890 • Program to discuss problem of slavery 'SLAYllY: rt m11 DISTS' Whtle slavery has been outlawed in America, there are still countries in which it still goes on. On Wednesday, the Media Correction Group of the Jewish Community Center and the Jewish Federation of Orange County will present ·s1avery: It Still Exists.· The program will feature Dr. Charles ~acobs, president of the American Anti-Slavery Group, and Abu.k Bak, a slavery survivor from Sudan, speaking to the topic. Program co-sponsors include the American Jewish Com- mittee, Anti-Defamation League, Jew- ish National Fund, Mideast Reporting in lhlth, Museum of Tolerance, Olam Magazme, Stand With Us and Stephen S. Wise Temple. FYI Where: Jewish Federation of Orange County. 250 E. Beker St , Costa Mesa wt.\: 7:30 p.m. Wednesday Cost Call for cost. Reservations required. Contact: (714) 755-5555 PLANNING"' AHEAD 'CHEVAL' Equestrian artistry will come to the Or~County Fairgrounds with the opening day of •Cheval - Imagination at Full Gallop.• -...111191. Mlrdt20 SMAU BUSINESS EXPO The third annual Small Business Conference and Expo. with the theme "The Dynamics of Branding. ~eting and Sales,• will be held at Orange eo.st College. W.dnwlay, Mwd'l"D Daily Pilot MARCH SMTWTFS 1 2 3 4 s 6 1. a 9 (iO 11 12 u 14 if i] Q 111920212223 )I 25 26 §) 21 29 30 • MARK YOUR CAUNOARS 17: St. Patrick's Day 27: Passover begins at sundown 31: Easter p SMTW T fS ' 2 ) 4 s 6 78910 G)121l 14 15 16 T7 18 19 20 21 22 21 24 2S fl' n 28 29 30 MARK YOUR CAUNDARS 11: Newport Beach Film Festival begins 26: Newport to Ensenada race AY SMTWTFS 1 2 ) 4 ~61)7891)11 G 1'1Sl6 T7 18 19 20 21 22 lJ 24 2S 26 GI 21 29 30 11 MARK YOUR CALENDARS 5: Cinco de Mayo 12: Mother's Day 27: Memorial Day S MTWTfS 1 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 e 17 18 19 20 21 u 23 24 is 2fi n 28 29 lO MARK YOUR CALENDARS 16: Father's Day s 7 14 21 28 I IV M T w 1' F s 1 2 ) 4 s ' 8 9 10 11 12 1] IS 16 T7 18 19 20 22 lJ 24 2S 26 n 2'J JO 31 NUMERICILLY SPUllNG The number of vineyards/wineries in Newport Beach. FRIDAY 15 Where: SCR's Second Stage, 655 Town Center Drive, Cost.I Mes. UC llMNE SYMPHONY 5pOll90Nd by: UC Irvine's departments of musk Where: Irvine Barcley The1tre, 4242 Campus Drive, Irvine When: 8 p,m. Thursday and Friday eon $&-$12 Contact:(949)854-4646 SATURDAY "LOCXDOWN' $poNoNd by. South Com Reper\Ofy's Young ConseNatOfY's Jr. T°Mtl lltiyer'S When: 4 1nd 7 p.m. Saturday 1nd 1 and 4 p.m. Maren 17 Cost: $5 c.om.ct: (114) 708-5500 IUOIARD THOWSON Spci'90Nd by: Irvine Blrday Theatre WheN: Irvine Bardty Theatre, 4242 C..mpus Drive, l(VllW When:Bp.m. C09t: S27 or $33 c:ontad: (949) BS4-4646 LIU.Y ntl MOUSI STORYT1MI lponeond by. Borders Books, Musk Ind c.ate wtwt.: Borders Books. Music Ind Cafe, South Coast ~ 333J Bell' St, Com Mti1 When:1 pm Coit: Fr• CIA8'ht (714) 279oe91J Parto/.the Meny.p'e MU8ical • MornilJet F&m.ily COncert Series Maid\ '9 ac 10 8c 11 :30 a. m. Qra¥. ~ PcrfOrming AraCcnn:r • Daily Pilot ----· TRAVEL the dty's first vineyard and winery. CONTINUED FROM 5 women's h~y game would be like ... The women were very professional and aggressive and energetic.• Being among throes of Olympic fans was an experience in itself, s!}e added. Every- thing was more organizeO than the couple expected it to be and sports fans seemed happy just to be there, regardless of who won which game. After bearing about the ice-carving com· petition from a concierge at their hotel, the couple devoted one late-night outing to watching people melt lee wlth enormous heating plows. "They probably bad a dozen different tools they were using,· Loren Moriarty said. ·n was so dramatic." The carving went all night and the judg· ing happened the next morning. ·It was so exciting to be among people from all over the world,• said Moriarty, president of Newport Vineyards and Winery. •They had these big tools they were using to carve these beautiful, graceful pieces,• Moriarty said. • Have you, or someone you know, gone on an Interesting vacation recently? Tell us your adven- tures. Drop us a line to 1favel Tales, 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627; e-mall young.changO latimes.cqm; or fax to (949) 646-4170. Richard Moriarty, who was skiing in Switzerland last week. developed and owns FORCE CONTINUED FROM 5 have as much fun, you're more open to illnesses and ... you don't attract fun, ener- getic people in your life. We're just all little walking balls or energy interacting with other balls of energy.• Her book, subtitled "120 Easy Ways to Get It ... Keep It, and Keep from Giving It Away,• explains how differ· ent attitudes and nutritional habits can affect one's ener- gy, how ·energy breaks· can help rejuvenate, how certain things can zap your energy and how you can maintain high energy. "Tius isn't Just about hav- ing 1t but learning how to keep it and also learning how to not give it a.way,• said Podany, a professional speaker for more than 10 years. She was inspired to write her book because audiences, following her energy-themed talks, would ask if she had ever wntten one. Podany then saw a need. With a background both m fitness and busmess man- agement, the author also had experience observing how people take seven to 20 sec- onds to form opinions about other people. "Too often, if a person is not projectmg good energy. it . HOME CONTINUED FROM 5 things and expect a good show. Plant one ·or two types or plants, they get along bet· ter that way. U you want to try some- thing different this year, think about making a tiny vegetable garden in your outdoor containers. Lettuces are beautiful plants and come in a huge variety of colors and sizes. Plant an upright tomato in the center with a decorative support of some kind, and add lettuces and trailing rosemary around the peruneter. Edible beauty. I've been expertmenting with some succulents. So far, my favorites are the green DONATION CONTINUED FROM 1 school two-and-a-hall weeks ago, are courtesy of the Fountain for Youth, a consortium of six southern Rotary Clubs. The organiza· tion donated $1,500 worth of equipment, assessments and training materials to Mayer's becomes a bad opinion,• Podany said. One of her tips on retain- ing energy is not wasting energy on people you don't like. When you don't get proactive about confronting the person and instead sirn· mer with your complaint, you end up suffering while the other person has no idea something's wrong. "I've usually been better in being assertive in my business relations and not so good at my personal relation· ships,• Podany said. "So it's a learning experience for me too.• Her favorite energy breaks involve deep breath- ing, because she can do it any time, anywhere and it • helps her focus; journaling, to organize all the thoughts that occupy her head; and exercising. "I get the circulation going again,· she said. ·1 get oxygen in my brain, I get refocused and I can let go of my negative energy.• The book is available at Martha's Bookstore on Bal- boa Island and through Amazon.com. The writer. who is work- ing on a second book titled •Help, My Life is Out of Bal· ance, • often steps onto the beach that borders her home and sits in front of the water to relax. There was a time, a decade and some years ago, "string of pearls.• Do you remember those from the '70s? We all had them hang· ing in pots with macrame supports. Macrame. Doesn't that bring on a few flash- backs? Another friendly succulent is the Christmas cactus. These plants are very easy, and I emphasize easy. They grow with almost no atten· tion, have interesting stems that arch up and over the pot, and come in a great variety of colors. I have the white version, but there a.re fuchsia, coral and light pink specimens as well. I clumped several together for impact and have the pot on a table under a covered patio. They seem to be happy no matter what I do. five special education class- es for preschool students with speech and language difficulties. Students from all over the district attend Mayer's classes at Paularino Elementary in Costa Mesa. The donation enabled Mayer to purchase equip· ment that ls uniquely suited to her students. "The [equipment) is very specific to what our needs when life wasn't as simple. She raised two sons on her own, held three jobs and never let on how •crazy" things got. She was con- scious of creating and keep- ing good energy back then and says her methods worked. ·we were never really aware of the workload or the sacrifices she was making because evety time she was with us, that was all that really mattered,• said son Michael Podany, of Manhat- tan Beach. Llke his mother, Podany also visits the beach a couple times a week to sit and have coffee and •cleanse the soul• before be starts the day at work." ·1 don't necessarily use the tips that are in the book because 1 have a lifetime of experience with that," he said. "I've picked up a lot of those habits.• One of those is being grateful -something Sue Podany champions. "l Uunk it's one of the most important ways to stay m your own energy a.tfd your own power." she said. "U you focus on what isn't work· ing, you'll get more or that. If you focus on what is work- ing, you'll see more of that and attract more of it into your life.• One of my favorite con· tainer plantings lately was a mound of ornamental kale -which comes in white or purple -surrounded with cascading string of pearls. A friend and I planted this combination in her very large rusted urns that sit on pediments at the front of the house. The whole effect is dramatic and a little unexpected. Sooner or later the kale will get too leggy and she'll have to replace the center plants. And when she does, we'll come up with some· thing else unexpected. That's part of the tun. • KAREN WIGHT is a Newport Beach resident. Her column runs SYndays. are,· Mayer said. "They're a lot of fun. We want it to be something the willingly par· ticipate in." The equipment incbldes Max, the puppet with a mov- able tongue; a sample mouth with a movable tongue; fruit-flavored tongue depressors: and a crocodile flashlight so Mayer can peek inside the students' mouths. The money for the dona· TEMPLE BAT 'YA.HM UNIVER.SJTY 'IW1c 11 (J ' RABBI MARK S. MILLER Pl'~-. -L ILi# 11Rabbi Miller Will""""" tlw c)llflleM.,,,. ~ 7:00pm.~ Mardi l.j, 2002 ~ng ctlndvsioft ~ . ~""""""""" .....,. .. ,,... ~,,., JdltorNoll tndlt ... * .... 'lllJllllMIW•lr':fttlDOGIOf.at.LTIMIUWY#OUDa I 111 •lie lllMIW...,. ... 1 Ol ... MO' .... AISllMJl.~-1-- lion came from coins tossed into the founlam a t Fashion Island. The idea for donating the eqwpment to Mayer started with Pam Morris of the Newport·ITVlile Rotary Club. Moms' daugh- ter, Gina, is in the class smce she suffers from epilepsy that has caused significant speech and language problems. ·w atching my daughter • ON VACATION lD speech therapy outstde or school. they had this equip- ment and the school didn't: Morris said. ·When 1 told (Mayer) about the donabon. her eyes lit up hke a Chnst- mas tree.• Morris said the actual val- ue of the equipment is closer to $1 ,800 since she was able to score some discounts with the supplier. She said she has noticed a marked Sunday, Ntotd-i 10, 200'2 7 Bridget and women's bockey game at the Winter OtJqfi Ryan Gleason of Costa Mesa visited .... the Big Sky sld resort in Montana. Elaine and Fritz c. Westerbout Jr. of Newport Beach volunteered at Tenwek Hospital in Kenya ln December and part of January. Loretta Mullen of Costa Mesa vacaUoned at the Kytemo~ Abbey in Ireland. improvement in her daugh- ter's speech since Mayer has been using the new tools. •The ltids come home saymg letters they couldn't before This stuH JUSt helps,• Morris said. • Deirdre ........ COYen ec:tuc.- tion. She may be rffChed et "°'9) 57~221 CJ( by e-mail et t*lrdre.~times.com. UCI Symphony Orchestra 8 Sunday, March 10, 2002 EDITORIALS Electiofl results span spectrum For Newport-Mesa, Tuesday's elections were ~ model in polar opposites. On one end, there was the harsh realization that South County forces were able to use the promises of a Great Park to dash the county's plans for an airport at El Toro and leave a majority of Newport- Mesa residents with bitter dis- appointment. On the other came a new i.ufusion of faith in our democra- tic process after voters defied the prognosticators and ensured that a judge, who stands accused of child molestation and possession of child pornog- raphy, will not get a free ride back to the bench. First, let's deal with the disappointment. Though many have surmised that the Great Park was nothing more than a smoke screen to kill El Toro, the voters nonethe- less took the bait on Measure W and dealt what looks like a mortal blow to the pro-airport movement. Sure, there is now talk of lawsuits and even anoth- er ballot measure in the form of the V-Plan from the pro-airport forces, but securing an El Toro victory that way sure seems pretty slim today. Even if those efforts are suc- cessful , the blows to the pro El Toro airport campaign came from several sides. ln addition to Measure W's passage, a key airport proponent on the Orange County Board of Super- visors lost her seat to Fullerton Councilman C hris Norby. Norby, flush with campaign money from South County, has promised his supporters that he would end the El Toro efforts. Indeed, even Newport Beach County Supervisor Jim Silva has said publicly if Measure W wins, he'd soften his pro-airport stance. The final, and maybe most mortal, blow came from the owners of El Toro itself -the U.S. Navy. Our local congressman, Chris Cox, announced the very day after the vote that Navy offi- cials, who presumably had seen enough bickering over the site, were prepared to parcel off the land to the highest bidder, inStead of handing it over to the county as originally planned. With such daunting obstacles now in the way, we urge those who put all their efforts into the dream of El Toro to now refocus their energy on their own back- yard, namely ensuring that flight caps and curfews contin- ue at John Wayne Airport for years to come. Now back to the sun that shined on that dark day. Thanks mostly to the efforts of local attorney Gay Sandoval, county voters provided enough write-in ballots to force a runoff between accused Superior Court Judge Ronald Kline and another candidate to be deter- mined. Ironically, Sandoval may not be that candidate, even though the write-in votes would not have been possible except for her. That's because after San- doval announced her intentions to run a write-in campaign, sev- eral others quickly followed suit, indudlng Costa Mesa City Councilwoman Kare n Robinson. While we must remind all that Kline is only accused and not convicted of these crimes and obviously needs a fair trial, Sandoval's efforts ensure that voters in November will be able to choose between a judicial candidate facing such charges and one who isn't. As election victories go, this one was pretty nice. We only wish there had been more for Newport-Mesa to celebrate. OCC teacher of the year should be about teaching I f you haven't taken much notice of the Orange Coast College Faculty of the Year award before, don't feel too badly. Few others have either. . This year it's a dilferent story, however, for among the nomi-r nees is political science prof0$- sor Ken Hearlson, who certainly is now the most famous OCC teacher given last fall's contro- versy that swirled around him after Muslim students in one of his classes accused him of ver- bally attacking them. Hearlson, who wa.s removed from the classroom dUring an investigation mto the accusa- tions, was cleared of.the charges and 1s back leaching. And now he ls in the running to be named the school's beSt teacher. It would seem like quite o reversal, except for one thing: Hearlson was nominated for the award to keep aUve hil 1tory, whJdl be and supporters say railed questions about academ· SC freed.Om. We have In the put ques. tiOned ..... .-um~ .. We .._ ... .._..nUybelMtve ... ....,_. .. not tbe rorwn ...... .-..~ lbat'.baeon tbcJ9e who In the classroom -a difficult, often thankless job. Being able to reach students and get them excited about learning Is a gift deserving of award and recog- nition. Grandstanding about other issues is not. The f.ollowing teachers, their own peers say, are able to inspire their students: William B. Barber, associate professor of culinary artsi Barbara 8 . Bullard, professor of speech1 Gregory D. Clark, instructor/advisor, Student Leadership Programs; Lance Gilbertson, professor of biology; Valerie J. Hayward, professor of mathematics: Gena A. Hollan- der, instructor in anthropology and sociology; Rose Anne Kings, instructor 1n erchJtecturei Karen G. A. MQrtillaro, profes- sor of fine arts; Raymond Obst· teld, IUSiltont professor of Eng· lish, Susana N. Salessi, profes· sor of Spanish and Italian; and • Joy Zimmermann, profauor of Bngllah and edualtkm. HearllOD. by -.ny eccoimtl, allo ~a loYe GI Jeandng. u he WIDI tldl aw-. we Wit It wtll1-fartlmnMllll.mdDO OIMn. Thellmlll1dkl9flf .. 8WUd 11 nnt weM. Stay tuned . The silDIT l';J';u.u.. 'I believe it may work. It may not work, but why not give it a try.' The Daily Pilot wekome5 letttn on~ a>nc.eming NewPOrt ~and Cost.a Mell • t.EYTERS -Mall to Editorial P-oe Editor J..-. Meler at the Daily 1'ttot. j30 W. Bii)' St .. c~ Mesa.=-c.a11 (949) 642-6086 _ Co8t9 Mesa Councilman Chris Stffl · on a new ordinance the council tentatively_ approved that requires landlords to evict their tenants 1f they are found guilty of drug-or gang-relat~ offenses on the property • MADBtS (949) "*4170 : ~Send~ to dailypllotOl•tirnHcom All correspondenee must Include full name. home-Mid phone number (for veriflC.ltion purposes) =lot reserves the right to edit •II submbsk>ns for darity and length. Daily Pilot BOLTON ·. Parks anywhere 1f wants. Ditto. LETTER TO THE EDITOR Columnist hits home with 'Titanic' take I am writing to comment on Steve Smith's column (Family lime -·A letter of restraint," Jan. 26). Both my personal opin- ion, as well as my professional one, as a marriage and family therapist, is that bis column was excellent. What Smith said needed to be said and needs to be said repeat- edly, given the stdte of this society in which the laissez-faire attitude with our children has become more in the service of the parents' need to be safe, accepted and approved of. Parents don't want to ruffle the feathers in the parent- child relationship, they want to be a pal to their kids, do the easy thing and go with the Oow and make no waves at any cost. 1bis is less in the service of doing what's right and in the best interest of their children. Jt will imtill values and promote the growth of integrt- ty by setting an example by their own behavior. Yes, I have strong opinions about this, both personally and professionally. There is also something else that's going on al a deeper level still that I think deserves mention. It is something called •group think.• This means that a bunch of people corning together is a pow- erful thing that takes on a charac- ter of its own that carries a lot of weight and has a lot of impact A group has a mentality that is creat- ed by consensus, more covertly than overtly, and d.Lsagreeing with the group or having an individual opinion that runs contrary to the predormnant one can be cause for ostracsm and censw-e. It becomes hard to buck the group, and it takes real courage to do so. I was at a conference some ti.me ago, and the speaker was using an overhead projector and transparencies. ltouble was, the person who had set up the equip- ment had accidentally skewed thP projector to the left by 45 degre<>s so that in order to see it. everyonl' in the audience had to Wt his or her head to the left, ear to shouJ- der. It was very WlCOmlortable. One speaker followed another. hut none. checked the image on tht• screen. I was losing it. I was hoping beyond hope that someone else would brmg it to their attention I It seems I'm usually the one to speak up first in these situations) After 2 1/2 l\ouni, I could st.and 11 no longer. I surnmoned·up all my courage and said. •The image is askew. Would you please straight- en 1t out• Titterlng and sighs of relief greeted me. Whew, no nast) reprisals there. And so, Steve Smith. thank you for your thoughtful and tnteresting column. MAXINE B. COHEN Newport Beach Council steps out of step with Marinapark Drew Lowler . COMMUNITY COMMENTARY But Whal the majority of the residents ore saying through ~ht is thot they value less traffic, I noase and less density f!Vet increased services. As a council member, tf your vteWs are out 61 rync with tbe mAjority ot \he Tesidents, I ~y QUelUon whether you ll\ould even ~ on the City Council. look, II parents we Often ttm Override tbe;wiD ot our chlldnm and make dedl'ions that we think ate best for lham. But the iegu • ler9d ~ ol Newpm 8-i:b am not chlJdnm. They .,., bigbly edu- Olllld and. tly almolt ft'WV mea- ..., ~ IUDC!llllt;il and dJu. .. ,..., .. C8i"ble ol Ullder- -+tQ .. --et IMklDg mnt DIM )"'II** cm bow lilly Wllld•ID-9ft*tl-..._ ...... day. On the l.sSue or Jarq&scale pro- jects, the majOiit-y wilf of re5idents has been clearly voiced tbroUgh Oroenligbti onm Jn passing tho measure and a second time with the recent defeat ct tbP Koll airport Pl'OJect. Whit mma em~ evi· dence does the aty Council needf On ~ naUooal, l\lte and local level, we are a govelnment of majority. M ~ f1PN9C:":ta· tlves, the Cly o.d libould rep- .resent Iba~ wlD cl tbe resi- dents. n.ra Ibey wse lected tD ... Couadl._..,,..., we • ote your o '111'11111 m .... {lnd the ............. t ~:r,:.-c=--,.." you.. lo tbe o.e .. ' Doily Pilot 810 Name: Hank Adler Age: 55 Residence: Irvine for 30 years Occupatibn: Accountant; partner with Deloltte & Touche Education: Bachelor's degree from UCLA; master's degree from Anderson School of Business Family: Wife of 31 years Marcia, daughters Julie and Sally Community involvement: Co-chair of t he Toshiba Senior Classic; treasurer of the Hoag Hospital Foundation; four years, including a one-year stjnt as president, on the Irvine Unified School District; board member of the Center of Democracy at UC Irvine Hobbies: Golf, reading and history ON l ROLL · 'We've got 30 of the top 31 money winners from last year, all five of the new entries. So, we'll probably .have the best field 'Of any Senior {PGA] event in the country this year. So we' re on a roll. It's going great.' I CoMMuNnY FORUM Sundoy, Morch JO, 2002 9 DON lfACH I OAllY Pit.OT Driving home a golf classic Hank Adler, Toshiba Senior Classic co-chairman, discusses the event and its fund-raising successes Golfers expect to pack their bags later this after- noon al the Newport Beach Country Club as the eighth annual Toshiba Senior C lassic runs its course. Five yedrs ago. those mvolved Wlth the event feared it may have run its course due to management problems. Since co-chairmen Hank Adler and Jake Rohrer took over the reins at that juncture, the event has raised $3.4 million for the Hoag Hospital Foundation. Jn 2000, the event became the Senior Tour's first stop to raise $1 million. On Wednesday, C ity Editor James Meier stopped by lhe course's dnving range without his clubs to talk to Adler, a former Irvine Unified School District board member, about the event's successes under partly sunny skies. What's been your proudest accomplishment relating to the tournamenn We've helped faohtate over the last 16 years about $6 million worth of charity to Hoag Hospital It's JUSt been a great thing. It's not my accomplishment. It's the commuru- ty's accomplishment. All we do IS help facilitate it. But it's been d gredl nm. Had a lot of fun. Ho'>pttdl's done real well by it. It's been a kick Whal are your thoughts on this year's tournament? Gaven 9/11, a couple years of bad weclther behind us, it's runrung just as smooth as cdn be. We're gomg to have d gredt tournament, great wedther over the weekend The forecast for Fnday, Saturday and Sunday 1s ddITl near perfect We're hoping to hdve big gal- lenes We've got 30 of the top 31 money winners from last year. all five or the new entries. So, we'll probably have the best held of any Seruor IPGAI event in the country this year. So we're on a roll. It's going great Obviously, it's been a major change since live years ago. Yeah. We've never quite figured lhdt out. But, yeah, the first year the hospital made dbout $600,000. We mdde $800,000 the second year. A nullmn the third year, $1.1 million last year. We'll probably make a little less tlus year -a tough economy. The fact we're making as much as we are 1ust is a tribute to th.ls community. Was there any consideration given to dropping II about Hve years ago? From the Hoag standpoint. we've been doing lh1s for 27 ycdrs. dnd we had had the Newport Cldss1c for 17 years. We rolled into the Tdco Bell Newport Cldss1c. We were makinq $300,000 d year. We stepped into the shoes of the guys who weren't doing a very good Job So thdt quest.Jon never wouldn't hdve come up for us We thought we knew whdt we were domg and that we'd be dble to pull ttus orr The truth is. we had no idea what we were doing. but we hired Jeff Purser dnd he did. so that's 1ust as good as knowing what you're doing I'm sure you're completely amazed at what II Is today. lt'S 1ust been a ldbulous result Jeff is walking over here and 1s someone you should interview, but he's probably the best hire I've mdde m my cdreer. He's 1ust done d fdbu- lous JOb for us. The sponsors dre happy. So we've got the nght chari- ty. we've got th<' nght people, got the right community 1t\ 1ust a great formula It really 1s It's d great deal. Are there any Ideal changes you would make to the evenn Not really. It's about as good as 1t gets. We'd love to have more spon- sors and more tents and more of a gallery, and every year 1t grows a bt- tle bit. Everything's moving m the right direction. I'd like to be younger What will Hoag use this year's donations for? All of about probtibly $80,000 or $90,000 will go the l lodg Womt!n's Pavilion. That's a huge proiect The hospital has d $50-rrulbon campd1gn gomg on for that So all the proceeds Will go to that. We did the emer- gency room tor a few years Then we dld the cancer cbruc Now wE>'re doing the Women's PaVlhon If we're lucky 10 years from now. we'll be domg the heart center or something Wee that What's your lavortle part ol the event? I Jove 1t all. And I really hkE> the commuruty brealcidst We hdd Fuzzy Zoeller speak ITuesddyj I le was Just letter fabulous. And, you know, we've had these great playoffs on Sunday afternoon. And everybody you know shows up sometime dur- mg the weekend. It's 1ust a great week. Any final thoughts? No. Keep the weather gods m our favor This doesn't run until Sunday. By then we'll know all about 1t The ground is sobd I mean, we can play m almost anytlung It's a lot more fun when it's not raining Critic~m s~ouldn't befall Newport mayor , HOW TO CONTACT YOUR REPRESEITITIVES NEWPORT-MESA UNlflEO sotOOL DtSTIUCT Dlslrtd Office: 2985-A Bear St .. Costa Mesa 92626, (714) 42•...SOOO Supertntenclent Robert Barbot Board: President Judy Franco, Vice President Martha Fluor. Clerk SereneStokes,Da:naBlac~ Poul Jomes Baldwin SOUNDING IOARD Every time we have a recession, the people wbo can't really afiord to live here have to move, and the people who can afford it come in. Yes, some- times younger families are forCed out by economics. In other wordl, · when timd are bad, things get better here, 1n my opinion. I remember when Newport Beach was a place for the wealthy from Pe.adena to have • beech bo\lle and to retire to. AacUt ii itill a place tot thf! ..utby to baft. ~ boUle and to ...... to. TMre ii noth· Ing wrot'9 With dUa. _.._,.. J-. •mayor Iii "° pamoea.Nlwpan fCll au. ,... end •.• ..., ..a not • w..llsy. IUdpWey" ~ his job and should not be slanuned for it because some- one doesn't agree with his observations about the state of Newport Beach. His role is to be mayor, which means to voice lu.s opinions and observa- tions, and lead the city in the direction he feels is right. Ridgeway was correct in bis ob5ervabons, although I don't ~nally agree with all of his goals about diversification and development. l doe~ that some devel- opment is gOod, but that Gree~ht he its place. The rea-1 estate develo~rs that in the put, without regard to 1en- slble p~ and quality of life lHUGI iiDd only pandering to profltl, bPe brought this t>eelduh to ~t upon themlelvei aDd ~ 1D4u1trY • ll " ~·rs job.., navi-........ .....,, ad I wllb him ............. woltd. OTY .. OF COSTA MESA Costa Mesa City Hall, 77 Feb' Drive, 92626, (71') 75'-5223 Mayor: Lirida Dixon CoUDdl: Ubby Cowan, Gary Mona.ban, Karen Robl.llSOn and Chris Steel OTY Of NEWPOW1' IEAot Newpoit BeM:ll City Hall, 3300 N9Wport BMI .. 92663. (9t9) 644-3309 . W.,.: 1bd ~ay C OOuy.AdilN. .... •ombell· NOfma Cilo'Nlr. Jolla I ....... .,_.. O'Nlll wl Olly .... Jun Fenyman, David BrookS and Wendy L.eece MESA CONSOUDATB> WAmt OtSnlCT 1965 Plaeenda Ave., Cclilta Mesa 92627, (9t9) 631·1200 ao.nt: Pftilldeat Jba Atkimon, 'Yk!I PreSktllnt Mike....,, 1hJdy ()blla.;tWl, Prlid Botkmlller and hul~.~ CORA msA wn • DDlllCl P.0 ... ~.1: ...... .... ,.. ,., 7Sf40l3 ..... Admll'8tt'h. .. ..... Alt....,. q..g W I 9'1 ..SO. Waif ' IJ'Dfl QUOTE OF THE DAY ..,You're always trying to get bette~, every hole, every day, every week •.. " Hali trwln, second-round leader at the Toshiba Senior Classic 10 Sunday, March 10, 2002 . TOSHIBA . SECOM> NXJM> SCOMS Hale lrwln 67-64-131 Lacry Nelson 7().64-134 Gii Morgan 6M6-134 Allen OoVle ~134 Don Pooley 70-6S-135 Mlc:hllel Zinni 69-66-135 Walter Hall 68-67-135 Sttwert Ginn 68-67-135 Dave Stockton 68-6&-136 John Jacobs 7()..67-137 Tom .lej\lclns 7()..67-137 Bob EastlNOOd 70-67-137 Dana Quigley 6~ 137 Bobby Wadldns 68-69-137 Jim Dent 67·71-138 Morris Hatalslcy 7()..69-139 Butch Sheehan 7()..69-139 Mike McCullough 68-71-139 George Archer • 68-71-139 Rodcy Thompson 73-67-140 Bruce Flel5tler 72~140 Wayne Levi 71-69-140 Fuzzy Zoeller 70-7C>-140 Doug Tewell 70-7C>-140 Tom Wauon 68-72-140 Vicente fiemandez 74-6 7-141 Terry Mauney 74-67-141 BobbyWalzel 72-69-141 Jim Albus 71-7C>-141 Ed Dougherty 71-7<>-141 Ben Crenshaw 70-71-141 Sammy Rachels 70-71-141 Joe Inman 74-68-142 Charles Coody 72-7().142 Jerry McGee 72-7<>-142 Al Gelberger 71-71-142 leon¥d Thompson 71-71-142 Christy O'Conl'\Of' 71-71-142 Jim Thorpe 71-71-142 Dave Eichelberger 70-72-142 G.1ry McCord 70-72-142 Bob Glldef 68-74-142 Martt McCumber 74-69-143 Mike Smith 74-69-143 J.C. Snead 73-7().143 Ted Goin 73-7().143 • Ray Floyd 73-7().143 Steven Veriato 73-7().143 Howard llNitty 72-71-143 Chi Chi Rodriguez 71-72-143 Jim Colbert 71-72-143 Hugh Balocchi 71-72-143 John Schroeder 70-73-143 John Bland 7~144 Jack Spradlin 74-7C>-144 David Graham 74-7C>-144 Jim Ahem 74-7C>-144 Oidt Mast 73-71-144 Harold Henning 74-7C>-144 Jay Sigel 73-71-, 44 Bruce Summerhays 73-71-144 Rodger Davis 72-72-144 lsao Aoki 72-72-144 Terry Dill 72-72-144 Watter Mofgan 72-72-144 lee "frevino 73-72-145 Hubert Green 72-73-145 Dan O'Neill 72-73-145 Andy North 73-73-146 Lacry Ziegler 70-7~146 Tom Wargo 75-72-147 John MaNffey 74-73-147 Bob Charles 74-74-148 £YE OPENER March 11 honor• DAREN MCGAVREN Sports Editor Roger Coflson • 949-5744223 • Sports Fax: 949-650-0170 Doily Pilot TODAY'S SCHIDUU 7:50 a.m. -Tom' Purtter. Gene Littler. I a.m. -Bob Charles, Jose Maria c.i1zares, Dale Oougles. 1:10 -Lany Ziegler, Tom W1190, John Mahaffey. l:20 -Hubert Green. Dan O'Neill, Andy North. l:JO -Terry om. watter- Morgan. Lee Trevino. l:M> -Bruce Summerhays. Rodger Davis, lsao Aoki. 1:50 -Oidt Mast. Harold Henning. Jay Sigel. ' a.m. -Jack Spradlin, David Graham, Jim Ahem. 9:10 -Hugh Baloatil, John Sdvoeder, John Bland. 9".JO -Howard Mitty, Chi Chi Rodriguez. Jim Colbert. 9".AO -Ted Goin. Ray Floyd. Steven Verlato. 9:50 -~ McCumbet", Mike Smith, J.C. Snead. 10 a.m. -Dave Eichelberger, G.1ry McCord, Bob Gilder. 10:10 -Leonard Thom9son, Christy O'Connor, Jim Thorpe. 10'.20 -Chafles Coody, Jerry Mche, Al Geiberger. 10:. -Ben Crenshaw. Sammy Rachels, Joe Inman. 1D:40 -Bobby Walzel, Jim Albus. Ed Dougherty. 10:50 -Tom Wllt5on, Vicente Fernandez. Terry Mauney. 11:10-Wayne Levi, Fuzzy Zoeller, Doug Tewell. 11 :20 -George Ardlef, Rodcy Thompson, Bruce Reisher. t1 :JO -Morris tiata~ Butch Sheehan, Mike McCullough. 11 :40 -0¥111 Quigley, Bobby Wadkins, Jim Dent. 11 :50 -JoM Jacobs, Tom Jenkins, Bob Eastwood. 12:00 • Watter Hall, Stewart Ginn, Dave Stodcton. 12:10 • Allen e>ovle. Don Pooley, Mkhael Zinni. Jose Maria canizares n-72-149 Dale Douglass 75-74-149 Tom Purtzer 73-7~149 Gene Littler ~7S-155 STEVE MCCRANK I DAILY PILOT Hale Irwin zeros ln on a putt on No. 4 during Saturday's run to a three-stroke lead heading lnto today's final round of play. 12:20 -Hale Irwin, Larry Nelson, Gil Morgan. OD OC BOYS _Spice [flrts Sharing tips among friends on the Senior Tour. Richard Dunn DAILY PILOT NEWPORT BEACH -There's nothing like the good ol' boy network of the Senior PGA Tour. One day, Don Pooley is struggling with his golf swing. He menti9ns it to old buddy Lany Nelson ddring lunch this week before a Toshiba Senlor C lassic Pro-Am at Newport Beach Country Club. Next thing you know, Nelson's - giving Pooley a five-minute golf lesson at the driving range, and, on Saturday. they both moved into contention in the second round. Nelson and Pooley shot 7-under 64 and 6-under 65, respectively, and while the difference in the purse distribution in the top three places is several thousand dollars ln the $1.5 million event, It doesn't matter among friends. •rve known Don a long time, ever since he came out on the PGA Tour 25 years ago,• Nelson said. •He said he wasn't hitting the ball well, so on Thursday I looked at his swing and I just got him back ln alignment. He was lined up to the rtg~\;..Qn Jbt...s.eDU>r --i'Our~~ of flie'"ffilie Lt's either ball position or alignment Anybody trying to change their swing out here ls going to have some real problems.• Pooley, who carded bis lowest round of the year in his fifth event, ls tied tor fifth at ?-under after 36 holes with Walter Hall and Monday quaWier Michael Zinni, while Allen Doyle, the 2000 Tosblba winner, Nelson and OU Morgan are Ued for second at 8-under aDd tryUlg to. catch Hale ltwin at 1 t • under. •t.eny'• bMA a real good friend,• Mid Poolef, 51, wbo made bit Senior PGA lbut debut lat Septetnber. •~) beipe4 IDe OD the ieguJal' tour, and cm WedM9day be (IUO~ to help eg8ba), and I thought be w .. kktdlng.· Don Pooley (above) and Larry Nellon (rlgbt), ln the hunt at the Toshiba Senior Classic Saturday. Pooley, who shot 1-under 70 in the first round, birdied the first thtee holes to instantly join the Saturday contenders. He bogeyed No. 5, typJcally the toughest hole on the golf course, but birdied No. 7 when bis 20-foot downhill putt on the most ievere green on the coune •bJt hard in the center of the hole ... t was very fortunate.• Pooley also birdied No. 9, then continued h1I assault on the back nine, making birdie on 14 and eagle on the par-S 15, when be holed out from. t.be bun.keT from about 40 feel At 8·under, Pooley enjoyed the second-round leed, albeit a sbort·llved one. Hit bogey at J 1 knocked him out of tbe top spoti then Irwin caught tmt to build.~ i.ecs. • l IMe It out here,• Pooa.y, who played tn the 1'77 CrOlby Southern Pro--Am .. Newpmt 8Mdl; md of tbe Senior PGA Tour. , It's a fan-friendly crowd at Newport this weekend. Rk:hard Dunn DAILY PILOT NEWPORT BEACH -M if this year's Toshiba Senior Classic wasn't spiced up enough, models from a local talent company are selling lottery ticketS this weekend at Newport Beach Country Cub to help raise Itloney tor the event's managing chality, Hoeg Hospital. . Bach ticket is $100 llnd f4Q.S can .win s!Weral pmes, including golf vacations and a Wave Runner, which 1s featured high abOVe the putting green area on a scaffolding. The models, who wear waitress aprons, are part of CUdee Hom's talent outfit called Candace Hom Images Com~y. Horn said the drawing today Is at 5:45 p.m. -or shortly tltter ttie ftMl round. for the MCOncl day In a n>w Satmday, :Toeblba otncWt a.Md lri on some of the Senior PGA Tour's new inltiattvel by bOllb:lg a fan-involved Queation & Answer session wttb ~ ?.oeu. end Chi Od Rodriguez alter the secotad found, An estimated aowd of 300 Bttened and pei1lrtpated ~ with Zoeller and~. wbo were CJrM1 wlll4bi•1¥•-s AllO, tOUJiMdDelil OffkMils dropP8d the~• aa =c:mlll folloW ~leaden (Hale lrWln and AJlela ~ 1j> 'tlMi , DOy1e tbot 3 •• • '1': ._ MC.lGIMI......, 1111 •• • Wl roUnd UDcMi' 70 bl t118 loUriMlllDeilt in .. mmf ......... diM~ ,... ftldlb. ~~a one-shot~ over lrw1n ._... ......... 15t the ... bQle on the gOlf ~.·BUt ~.-..ilMl......, diucle and JiWID dktil't. JrWm Uo bbdl9d ti ...... ...., ... ~ ,.,.,. t1 to r.n twb ... beldnd. Hmfileyed•dJWll~-·-·-....... ~~ ... a1ter wblthAppeae6flllllll ea. u,• _... a lllkMOl ICDN ~ hrlMlilll ....S• • Ri D a J t , ily Pilot SPOlt'fS ang is preparing to tire after 30 years of aking students' days . lways a s~dent favorite, Tim Mang will retire this spnng semester atter 30 yea.rs ~ teaching at Edison High. But the longtime Newport Beach resident, ong the winningest tennis coaches in CIF uthem Section history, plans to remam a!> orona del Mar High boys tenrus coach and ntinue organizing the boys and guts Nataonat 1gh School All-Amencan lnVltationals in ewport Beach. Mang. w ho grew up on Lido Isle and tended Newport Grammar School, Ensign or High and Newport Harbor High (Class of 59), teaches world history and has coached nnis for over three decades. zm ang Entering his 10th yedr as CdM's coach, 1ang is also prepanng for the thud annual oys National High School All-American vitational March 22-23, played dl pnvdle nrus dubs m Newport Beach Mang, who expenenced hedrt problems two ays after the girls national loumdment m early ctober, has ctlways kept a busy sct\~dule, but ready to slow down d Httle GREG FRY I DAlt.Y Pl.OT Tim Mang will J>e retiring from teaching this spring, but it's doubtful he'll be far from two of his big loves, tennis and his boat "I've had too much qoing on." sd1d Mang, ho hustles each day yomg from Edison to 'orona del Mar for prdCllce or a match, while rgani.zmg both nation,11 tournaments through ~ National High School Tennis All-Amencan ·oundation, which}le rounded In 1998. A former Ion~ member of the CJF team nd individual tennJS seeding committees. ang was a Vice chamnan of the U S. Nataonal ligh School Tennis As~ocial.Jon and VJCC resident of the Cal Coaches Association As a high school boys coach, Mang's record peaks volwnes for its<>H with a 290-90 mark III 8 years at Edison and 17b-30 record at Corond Jel Mar. • It amounts to 466 v1ctones on the prep level At CdM. three of h1'i 11 AJJ-CIF players eluded AJl-Americdns Brian Walden and enton Rhode!> m doubles III 1993 and Taylor Dent in singles m 1996 Dent, who won the CIF srngles t.Jtle as d freshman dnd turned profess1ond1 two yedrs Idler, reached the third round of lhe Austrdlian Open thJ.S year and recorded the faste!>l serve (144 mph) m the history of Wl!llbledon ldst year. Mang's Sea Kings won Cir: championships rn 1999 and 2001, while finishing among the top- hve nal.Jonally ranked teams, accordmg to USA Today. III three of the past four years. At Edison, Mang's Chargers capturPd rune Sunset League titles from 1979 through 1988. In 1982. he was voted Cdlifom1a Tenrus Codch of the Year, Western States Coach of the Year and National High School Coach of the Yedr Runner-up Mang coached Lh1.> Orange Coast College men for one season m 1990 d'> the Pirates lmished 17-3 with a No. 5 <>ldlC ranking He was also CdM \ girls coach for four year<;, mcludmg gwdiny the celebrated 1997 squad to a nataondl champ10nsh1p, d teclffi led by Nadia Vaughan (Notre Dame). Many, a former Weguard dl the Lido Isle clubhouse, taught the youngsters of many I lollywood celebnt1es how to Sdll m the 1950s when Newport Beach Wd!> still considered a !.mall, quiet beach dnd hMbor town for summer residf>nl'> But 11 was tennt'> thdl Cdptured Mang's heart, and hb playing cc:1reer included successtuJ stops dt Newport Harbor under Gh>flil Ba-.sett. the legendary former UCLA men's tenn1'> coach, and Orange Coa'il ColleqP under l\launce Gerard "If you work hard you can bed I othrr.," Mang once said These days, Mang enJOY" tdkJng v1.,1tors out on hlS bodl for fnendly harbor tour'> OLF: Hale Irwin enters today with three-stroke lead ONTINUED FROM 1 ldy in the last group on Sunday," and he'll get Uaat hance today as he tries to become the oumament's hrst two-nme wtnner. Allen Doyle, the 2000 Tosh.ibd Wllliler, Larry elson and Gil Morgan are bed for second at 8- nder and will try to catch lrwin. Tied for fifth at -under are Don Pooley. Walter Hall and Monday ualif1er Michael Zinm. "Keep 'em commg. • Irwin quipped after riday's first round, refemng to his age (56) and billty to seenungly st.ave off a new crop of 50-year- lds each year. wtu.Je continuing to dominate the niorTour. lrwm birdied the pdr-4 No 16 to separate lf from Doyle and move to 10-under. lrwm's ead stretched to two strokes when Doyle bogeyed e par-3 17, alter tutting his tee shot in the ngnt unker. With the ropes dropped behind lrwtn and Doyle for fans to follow at 18, Irwin birdied the par-5 finishing hole, where a bunker shot from 60 feet landed three feet from the flag ·1 hit a lot of fairways and greens,· said Irwin, who won the '98 Toshiba with a course-record 62 in the final round with the help of the Famous Bunker RakP at 17. whlch stopped his tee shot from rolling in the water. "When I shot that 62, I don't want to say it was a rnirade, but I was making putts that day and greens were not as smooth as they are now,· said Irwm, who has won 17 of 22 events m wtuch he has led or been tied for the lead after 36 holes on the Senior Tour But how unportant IS the second round m this tournament? In the previous seven events, the 36-hole leader has won the event just twice - including Doyle's ram-shortened victory. Jim Colbert enJOyed a monstrous five-stroke lead after the second round in 1996 and eventually won the second annual Toshiba Sen1or Classic by two shots. Irwin made eight bt.rdies Saturday, but t\ was his par at the par-4 No. 7'tlt'at "turned things around · Irwin htt a "very poor 2-iron • to the green. but recovered with a ntce sand wedge to within three feet of the pm on the most severe green on the 6,584-yard layout. Irwin, who bit a tree on the hole, called 1t "a nurade par.• But he didn't climb to the top of the leaderboa.rd until the back nine At the par-3 No. 13, lrwm stroked a smooth 5-iron to within three feet and made an easy birdie putt to fall to 8-under, creating a three-way logjam at the top with Doyle and Nelson. Then Doyle birdied 13 to drop to 9-under, but that lead lasted only two holes, because Irwin birdied the par..S No. 15. the easiest hole on the golf course, to square matters. "fThe greens) are still a httle bumpy. but they're COWGE BRIEFS Dave Stockton fires toward the green at No. 2 in Saturday's play at the Toshiba Senior Classic. He~ live strokes off the lead heading into today's final round. SEAN HIUER I DAILY PILOT much more mature these greens,· lrwm said "They've done a wonderful 1ob wtth these greens In fart, they've gone a wonderfuJ JOb with the whole golf course. It's very difhcult now to say that a ball took a bad bounce The ball rolls pretty true • lrwm added that part of the challenge at this stage In his career 1s the challenge itself. "You're always trying to get better, every hole, every day, every week.· Sdld the three-btne U S Open Championship winner, who won Uus year's ACE Group Classic ln Flonda for tus Senior Tour- record 33rd title Tom Watson, who started the second round with 12 straight rounds of par or better, the longest streak on the Senior Tour this year, went south quick on Saturday, but rallied on the back nine and finished at 1-over 72 Anteaters maUI Montana State Anteaters' Endrikat, Morton, O'Connor and Bjorkman lead the way in 6-1 nonconference rout. Jonathan[Jj] Endnk.al. Bria.n Mort· on, Sean O'Connor and Oreg Bjorkman Ill won 10 aingles and double to l ad the UC lrWle men's t ruliS team to a 6· t noncoMerence triumph ov r visiting Montana State SatunSay. - UCI crew sparkles UC Irvine captured'~ tllles Cb the men's ~ Novice 8, Second _ Novtce 8 and tho women's Novice 8 at tbe Parker Cup at Newport Hart>or Saturday. The Anteater men's aew returns to action 5aturday, facing UC Santa Barbara, Uruverslty of San Otego arid Chapman Universty at Newport Haibor at 7:30 • m. .................. t. sosu. t'l. .1. uo ~ 9:01;.S. UO.t-5t • .. ........... ·-'· K>SU. 7:1), l . U0.1>9. • .. ....... ,_ ' UQ, 7:20; l sosu. 1;>&, W ...... .._ •• ,~.Ht, 1. IMI, ?JG. W 111.._a-1 LMU, 71J,: 2. ~ .,. .... UQ,r.11. ........... ,.I.IQ. -;l.JDSLI. .... ..,,.,.. ........ ,.ua,~2. ~--·-' .... J:M'l.l.MU. . Anteaters win, 8-7 UC lrvtne's wom- en's water polo team ~ pulled out an 8-7 Moun- tain Pacific Sport& fed· eration vlctOry t the Unlw:ritty or the Paci.he in todrton Saturday on lb strength~ Erica Horman'a aa>re w1th 1:17 left.~t wu Harman's only goal of the game and camo after Padilc (2-6, 0-3) bad r&Wed wtth UU'ee uoa1s tn the fourth quartet to ue it at 7.7,. The AntMton (3· 11, t .:3 lD tho · MPSf), scored the ftnt tbrM goals ol the game and bad• 74 tMd after• tow.goal butll in the third quarter. Mollth P•mandl'lt led the Anteaten WHb four god. zdn• 1 'Eaters finish sixth T he UC Irvine ~ men's golf team tied for sl.Xth place out of ,. 19 teams in tho Pac:dlc Coast Intercollogiate tournament at the La Purisima c.olf' Cub in Lompoc. San Olego State won lhf! 5-4-hol tournament With a lot l of 866, 12 shots ahead of runn r-up Fresno Statela 878. UCJ and vw tied for slx1h •t 899. ~aC'l.fiC' Jason l liglon wu tbo l..ndMdualchampfon with a 4·under total of 212. San Dkgo St.ate's John ueber and ~ warman ti«! for RCOlM.t •• 2-uader 214. JWOOl'Mike ~WU UCJ'I t~ flAltber la R l It plem at 223 (69-80-74). Kevta S..vw.......- 27tb al 224 (72·75·77), Na• Ya• 39tb et 22t (74·74· 18), Jtll Cobura 59lb •• 230 ~77,n), ..sat.a :AnMboag ... e7tb .. ra.11 17$-77· 7f.). Sunday, Morch 1 O. 2002 11 COWGE IASEIAll Anteaters see it slip away at San Diego State, 8-7 . UCI loses 4-1 lead after 1 •h innings, and 7-6 lead after 61h in San Diego. SAN DIEGO -UC lrvme's basebdll leam fell to 12-12 wilh an 8-7 nonconJPrence los-, dl San Diego State Sdturday dS the hosts, who used six pitchers, scored twice m the seventh inning to pull oul the SCORllOAID dec1Mon, which took three hour.. 44 rrunuh•s Ante11t9n 7 McHt Anderson was 3 for 4 s.in Diego St 8 for UCI, and Jon I lorw1t1 Wd'> 2 for 5 with d triple Aho wtth bd<>c hits for UCI wnP Chns l\.1tller. RJ Brown, Stcvt> Guthnc. Grt-gq Wdlli!> and B.J Eucce. Sc1n Diego Stdl<' poundt•tl Antec1ter,' pitching for 14 hits, including four tor extra hd!>es as the Aztec-'> 1mprovl'd to 1 b·h Thpy'U vie dCf•Hn. toddy di UCI, '>lartlilg al 1 p.m MON<ONFEIDKI • .1 s~ DEGO Sr•n a. uc a.w-...7 • 2"4::~·:n;r~ ~ > .. ._..t1'··'"''"~1r ."> -'·-" UC lf'\11ne 220 000 300-::r 10 1 San D~ St 100050 20x 8 14 2 Smith. Ak1ot (S). Rauhna•t•s (8) and M111e< Shortell, Hamhom (6), Harang (6), Fielder (7). Moat (7). Ring (8) and Allen W Fielder, i 1 L Alstot. (}2 Sv -Ring (n 28 -Cota (SD), McL1ntock (SD) 38 -Horwitz (UO). CotA (SD), Allen (SD) COLLEGE MEN'S VOLLEYBALL Pacific sweeps Anteaters UC Irvine'> men's volleyl>dll tedm WdS d J0- 18, '.l0-2.1, 30-28 v1rtun of vL-.11.Jng Umvcr;ity of the Pdc1.ht Sdturday clrnppmq the Anlcdters to 10- 11 5-10 m ".1ountdl.J1 Pc:1nJ1c Spon'> Federation pldy dl Crawtord Hall Thl• Tiger'> (7 · 13, 5-11 1 tut d spN"tdcular 500 tor the match led by SPan Rodger.,, who hdd 13 ktll'> with no error'> 1n 17 attempts AMon Wdc-htfogel led UOP with 15 k.ill'> and 12 digs Martin Beml.,(•n added 11 lulls and Chru. Tamas had 48 dSSist ... Enck Hell•nth1 led UCI wtlh 12 ktlls Jimmy PPl1el totaled nine k1lb and Rul>s MdTchewkc1 ddded seven kills for the Anteaten., who ho!>t George ~la.,on Tuesday dl 7 p m . JC BASEBALL Pirates drop third straight SANTA ANA -The Ordnge Coast College baseball team suffered a fru<,trabng day on the mound and lost II'> third straight gdffi<'. d 12-9 sc•lbdck to Ordnge Empire ConfNence host Santa Ana Sdturddy After traihnq. 8-0 the SCOUIOAID Pirates ( 13-6, 2-4 III the OEC) retalaated with three run'> an "ratn 9 the thud mnmg. three m the Santa Ana 12 fourth and two m the sixth. but sUll tralled, 9-8. Santa And then held off Coast down the stretch OCC sophomore c-dtcher Ryan Hanson went 2 for 4 wtth a '>Olo home nm. two runs scored and an RBI, while '>Ophomore Jeremy Lahmann finished 2 for 5 with two doubles and two RBls. .. We've JUSt been shoaling ourselves m the foot, not talung advantage of opporturubes, ·ace Coach John AJtobelli said "We get momentum golilg c1nd tum around and shoot ourselves m the foot We've had opportumlles to be undefeated an the hrst round of coruerence We've been gelllng good h1thng, but not bmely tutting " The Pirate'> will wrap up the first round of conference play Tuesday. hosting Golden West al 2 pm QlANGE 1m1 cotmota ~ AMA 12. 06'MGll Co.uT t S-..t.,'"""9 ~Coast 003 l02 001 • 9 10 1 s.nta Ana 260 102 IOI!· 12 13 1, llfffer, Wilham1 (2), Allen (5), Pinney m. Treeot (8) .vld Hanson. Ramir~z. Carlin m Mid Ortll. w . Ramtru. L. 8-w, H 211 l..lhmal'in (OCQ 2. MllJ>hV COCO. St8nt9vt (OCQ HR · Hamon (OCO, Frrilon (SA), <*cNi (SA), c.ttlo cw PREP TRACK AND FIELD Allen getting well IRVINE -Corona del Mar High track and field standout Julie All •n, still lowed ftom a bout with the nu. had enough ln the tank to W1D the 1,600 and 3,200 meters and d un AthJc of the Meet hooor_s Saturday at the lrvlne tnvitatiOMl at lrvlne 1 llgh .... Allen, a ruor. was the ton locdl wanner, clocking a 5:07.l m th t,eoo 11.0d n t t 05.6 m th 3,200. Newport liorbot: boy l ,600 rel y of Matt bey. Zach 2.amow, Pet r Bass nd Dartang n Jol\nSOO w nd tn :l:Jl.9 , JohnfOD, Adam Kerns end D.\vld ~ preogcr OK\'n comblned · to f1n.t b third in thi 400 rCL\y n U 28. Sprenger. a senior, w lhlrd m the tong )unfp (l().10), WhUe CdM ~Joe Barber was lourtb in the lbOt put (49-8) CdM's 5-111 C\Mter; Katherine~ 8'Jdty CUmaiinillbd ......_ Swigll1caerM1'dtO6nllit tourlb m 11w 1,eoo 1Wy 1• 15). ........, • ...., ..... -the .... frOlll Monli "° 0 5 •, aeiled ,.._a IWllNmll< 'Med_. Mailll. bmlllll---0 ...... tllmi ...... .S ....... '° ........ ..... OIM ..,..._ ...... Alta ....... .. •cun• ._ A 12 Sunday, Morch 10, 2002 SPORTS GllLSSOCCB Burtiri.gbam SeaViewMVP ,. lany F.utkner OAllY PILOT Sai11t NicK ; All-American forward among eight Sailors named to the coaches' all-league selections Mesa's Nick Cabico breaks school's strikeout record facing his final batter in 5-2 victory. ·Newport H~bor High junior forwa.Jd Amy Burlingham, who made a pair of All- American teams tb1s season, Is the Player ot the Year to highlight the coac:bes' All·Sea Vlew League selections. A speedy scu:ing threat who can create her own sccdng chances or finish on set plays, Burlingham helped Coach Jason Sorrell's Saibs cmtend f<r a league title. before setlling for 5e00nd place. She was a first-team all· league perfooner as a sophomore, when she also earned second-team All-CIF Southern Section Division D honoIS. Joining Burlingham on the first team are · Newport seniors Tory Manchester and Amy Ross, as well as freshman sensation Erin Hardy. Taryn Ramson. Kate Younglove, Kristin Nahin and Lauren Birchfield represent Newport Harbor on the second team. Manchester, a midfielder, and Ross, a forward, were veteran members of the program, helping the Sailors post their first four CIF Southern Section playoff victories the last two years. They were both second- team honorees as juniors. Hardy, a stopper, earned Sorrell's praise all year for her unsung steadiness on the back line. Using quickness and antidpa- ~on, she was able to single-handedly thwart opposmg rushes, often before they became scoring threats. Ramson, a junior sweeper, was joined on the back line by semor fullbacks Birchfield and Nahin. Flamson and Birchfield were first-team all-league picks a year ago. Younglove a iuruor IIlldhelder, will be among those who try to carry on the recent resurgence of the Sailors' program next season. BOYS VOUEYBAll Sailors finish eighth SAN DIEGO -The Newport Harb6r High boys volleyball team defeated Santa Margarita in the Round of 16, but dropped its next two matches Saturday to finish eighth in the San Diego Tournament of Champions at Francis Parker High. Stew Vlrven ONLY PILOT COSTA MESA -.------ Nick Cablco's chance to break the Costa Mesa H lgb si n g l e-game strikeout record came down to one 2 s batter and the SCOlllOlll Mustangs' senior ace made the most of it PKlfla He rang up the 23rd ......,.. batter he faced (Alphonso Auelua) to notch bis 14th strikeout, leading to a 5-2 victory over Pacifica and the Costa Mesa Division title of tbe Newport Elks Tournament, at the Mustangs' field Saturday morning. Cabico's 14-strikeout performance, which also included seven straight strikeouts, three waJks, two hits and one run (scored off a passed ball), bested Jeff Goettsch, who struck out 13 for the Mustangs in 1983. "Tha t was a great pitch ing performance," Mesa Coach Kirk Bauenneister said. ·He had everything going for him and went out and competed after he was a bit shaky in the first inning. He just setUed down and did what he can do, pitched the way he can pitch. I was going to pull him after the (sixth) mning, but he wanted to go for (the record) I told him he'd gel one batter, and he struck out his one batter. OthefWlSe he would have had to come out.• Cabico struck out the hnal'Seven batters he faced, throwing 1ust four balls. He also scored a run, stole a base and nearly collected a home run after sending a shot to the nght field fence, but that was caught In the fourth inning. Capo slams Sea Kings CORONA DEL MAR -Visiting Capistrano Valley had as many grand slams as Corona del Mar had solid hits in the Cougars' 10-0 baseball victory Saturday in a Foothill Division consolation game of the Newport Ell<s Tournament. CdM junior catcher Nick Karpe, a transfer from Mater Dei, carried the Sea Kings' offense, going 2 for 2 with a double. Freshman Wess Presson was also credited with a bit for the hosts (2-3), who visit Redondo Union Tuesday at 4 p.m. for their final Pacific Coast League tuneup. Jeremy Burchett made CdM pay for a two-out error with a slam in the third inning and Cody Campbell also drove in four with one swing in the sixth for tbe Cougars. NlWPOII PIS IOUINMfl f'Gothlll DfvWon CONOldor'I CNls'rMNo VAUD 10, CAJR0NA DIL MAii 0 C.plstrano valley 10ot 004 1 -10 9 1 COrona del Mar 000 000 O • O 3 2 Fabian, O'Oonovan (6), Burchett m end Linn; Stodcstlll, Ptlam (6} end l<.erJ>'. W • F.t>lan, 1-0. L • Suxbt!ll H . 2B • Burchett (CV), COrde< (CV), l(arpt (CdM). HR • Burchett (CV), CMnpbell (CV) Costa Mesa lngb pitcher Nick Cablco struck out 14 Padftca batters ln Saturday's 5-2 victory. "l knew I would come out rusty,• said Cabico, who walked two and allowed a hit to load the bases to open the first inning. •After that I started throwing strikes. Tt had been a while since I was in the bullpen.· Tl)e Mariners (3-1) scored one run in the first inning, but Costa Mesa (4· 0) answered with three runs. With the bases loaded, Mustang seruor KeVUl DeSandro, who went 2 for 3 with three RBis, smacked a triple that hit the left -field fence. It scored Cabico. who walked to reach base, and A.J. Perkins, who singled. Mesa senior Michael McGwre, who went l for 3 with a walk and scored two runs, bowled over Pacifica catcher Scott Tompkins in his attempt to give DeSandro another RBI. Tars edge Brentwood NEWPORT BEACH -The Newport Harbor High baseball team had just two hits, but still managed a 7 -6 victory over visiting Brentwood Saturday in a Costa Mesa Division consolation game of the Newport El.ks Tournament. Ryan Heenan had the only hit, a single, m a five-run fourth that broke a 2-2 tie and led to the Tars' everung their record at 2-2. Cody Forsythe pitched a complete game to earn the victory, while senior third baseman Jon Vandersloot was the defensive hero, making a diving backhand stop to rob a would-be double and makmg two other fine plays, according to Coach Joel Desguin. Cameron Pemstein had a two-out RBI single in the second for the winners, who open Sea View League play Wednesday at Aliso Niguel NIWPOIT EllS TOUl!WIOO c:a.ta Mete DMllon COnlOletlon NEWP'Olrf HAMCJa 7, IMrnwooo 6 Brentwood 002 022 0 • 6 9 4 Newport Harbor 011 500 0 • 7 2 4 f>ttiffef, wgoy (4) and 1'errin, Fonythe end Pemstm. w · Fonythe, 1-0. l ·Pfeiffer. 21 ·Mann CB). Marlls (B). COWGE somALL Co~ta Mesa senior catcher Mike Catrasco, battl.Dg clf!aoup, ?>enta 2·2 pitch to deep center field that produced a ground-rule double and brought in M~ulre in the third lnning. M~uire. who a1so stole a base, scored again in the fifth inning after DeSa.ndro dUpped a base hit to left field. Cabico retired the side in order in the third, fourth and sixth innings. Pad.fica hit just two balls to the outfield against Cabico. "He can't blow people away con· sistenUy with his fastball, but when be gets bis breaking ball over and we can put in a change-up for a strlke, he's very good,• Bauermeister said of Cablco. ·As bard as Nicky's worked in the last four years, be deserved a chance to (face one more batter and break the record).• Cabico was pulled after his final strikeout, and Bauenneister gave him a hug at the mound and said, "Good job.· Sophomore Ad am Jorgenson relieved and got himself out of a bases· loaded jam, allowing one run. The Mustangs will face Capistrano Valley of the Foothill Division in a fifth game of the Newport Elks Tournament Saturday. Before that. Costa Mesa will battle La Qwnta in a doubleheader Tuesday at TeWinkle Park, starting at 3, then open Paafic Coast League play Friday afternoon at home against Uruversity. N1WPO!I BIS IOUIMllQI! c.o.tll Mme DfvWofl cN&nplollllhlp COsrA MlsA 5, PAORCA 2 . Sc:oreby ...... PiKrfo 100 000 1 • 2 3 2 corui Mesa 301 010 x. s 6 o Enrada. c.aruey (S) and Tompkins; c.at>ico. Jorgenson m Ind CMrasco. W · C.abicO, 2-0. L • Estrldl, 1·1 28 · ClnltCO (CM). 38 · OeSandro (CM).~ Vaqueros top Eagles COSTA MESA -Estancia High stdrtmg pitcher Casey Gates blanked visiting Rancho Alamitos for three of his five innings, but the Vaqueros wound up with a 15-4 baseball victory Saturday in a Costa Mesa Division consolabon game of the Newport El1cs Tournament. "Gates pitched really well,• said C.K. Green, who assumed bead coachmg duties Thursday after Doug Deats resigned. Green also praised bis team's defensive improvement, which resulted in only one error. Senior Paul Flory tripled in Justin Lund to tughllght the Eagles' six-bit attack Estancia (0-3-1) visits Los Amigos Monday LD it's final tuneup, before hosting Laguna Beach in Friday's Pacific Coast League opener. NIWPOII IW JOUllWlllI C.osta Me9a DfvWon aM• a l1tlon RANOtO A&AMTos 15, EsTMCIA 4 Rancho Alamitos 300 026 4 -15 18 1 Erutndl 002 001 1 · 4 6 1 -'ummings. ~ITI (4) and Otl«osa; Gates. HalMf (6), Glffson (6), Lund m and Lund. Gfff1on (7) W ·Cummings. L ·Gates, 0.1. 2B • Co~o (RA) 3B • Flory (E). Greg Perrine (nine kills), Erik Peterson (elght). Brian Gaeta (seven) and Jamie Diefenbach (su) paced the 15-8, 15-11 wm over Santa Margarita. Vanguard sweeps The Masters Newport then let a 13-10 second- game lead slip away in a 15-9, 15-13 loss to Royal, before falling to Sea View League rival Woodbridge, 16-17, 15-6, 15-13, in a match in which both teams resting some top players. "(The Wan1ors) a.re good,• Newport Coach Dan Glenn said. "They're going to be tough to beat.~ Peterson and Diefenbach had 10 kills apiece again.st Royal, while Dane Louvier bad a teem-high elgbt kills against Woodbridge. The Tara host Laguna Beach Tuesday at 5:30 p.m. Ll.ons sweep a second double-header in two days. COSTA MESA Van guard University's softball team racked up Its third and fourth victorles over a span of two afternoons Saturday as the Uons followed up Friday's sweep of Hope International with a sweep of visiting The Master's College in Golden State Athletic Conference play. Gina Uebengood tossed a four-bitter in the opener en route to a 3·0 victory, then Marcikea Ball limited The Mast~r's to three hit.I ove r flve lnn1ngs ln a 9-1 nightcap win. Uebengood struck out nine to up her record to 10-4. Rachelle Rolle got the big hit when she delivered a two-run double in the fourth inning to snap a scoreless game. In the five-inning nightcap, the Uons used four bits and two walks to rack up a five-run secoqd l.nnlng. Usa Jackson's bases-loaded biple was the highlight. The Uons are now 21~8-1, 6-2 in the GSAC. The Master's tell to 16-11-1, 2-4. Vangu ard plays a pair of double- headers at the University of Hawaii-Hilo Tuesday and Wednesday, and bas a dou· HIGH SCHOOL SOFT8All bleheader wtth Chaminade Saturday to wrap up the Uons' nonconferen<;e venture in the islands. GOUllll mu ADUDC CCllllllllCI ...,.., VNflfiN/lllG J. THI ~I 0 Tht Masten 000 000 0 • 0 4 1 Vlng\wd 000 201 II • 3 4 1 Rkbr and Dn!non; ~Ind Rollt. W • u.beligood, HM. L • IUc:ktr, 12-6. 2B • Rollt M. 0.-2 VANrllWD t, TMI MAsm(s 1 The M..n 00100 -1 33 VllflllUll'd 150 03 • ,. 0 Klein. Rldt• (2) and °'9f10n; llall Ind ~ W • Biii, 7_.. L • Klein, ... 5. 38 • .lacbort M. Newport Harbor sails to tournament championship Unbeaten Sailors rack up fifth straight victory1 Moore spins one-hitter ln Tars' 5-0 title victory. COSTA MESA -Newport lead through lour ~. but • Harbot Higb'l IOftbe.ll tMm won NewpOrt delivered three In the twice on 54~ datmed the filth tnnlDg i.nd four more in tb8 COit.i Mete lnvttattona1 cbam· &1zth to tum 1t lllto a runaway. p60nlhip and ran ltl nacord to 5· Then tbe Sailor• duel•d O wtlb vtctodea over Corona del Anaheim for the crown and Kim Mer~) and AnaM1m (5.()) at Moore spun o oo.bltter. ~~Par Harbor broke U open 1n tho n. s.uon punllbed nval ttwd Inning wilb three nw Olf CA:nM del Mar With a tS-hil singlet from S.brtn1 Couch, attd. keyed by the Athena Vasquez, A1blef p1 d ::-r-d C1kber Amanda Gl6UO'ri and IMdWt BelltCten. C wtl. 1i*o wu • for 4 \irilh An tnnlllg lat.r, Jemaller a ...... 11111111mandtwo1'\1111 GU1111Denua1 OIUIOG Md' ...... a-.rClllpt•• ...... 0.-dll .JJeki 1 4·2 aDdlbeSdanbldwlurnm __ ....._ 4 to up the mar,gln to 5-0 and Moore went on to finlsb tho Coloniatl off. • COl&a M.a raWed tor a 5-t victory over Pacmc Cout League rtval Corona del Mar lo um third place. Ann Marte Thppa and Jane-- C YaJQamoto boUl went 2 for 3 and drove In 1 run for the Mu.tangs (3·1), who allO had twt> htta from Mkhelle Miller. Toppj alllO JMde an over-me. lhoulder catdl al• would-be 1lngte to center llakt to belp thwart a .,. .... loaded opportunity lor CdM !la • ..... fourth. , Mesa outhit ..tbo See Kin , 10-5, after f&lllng 1n tb cham· plonshlp .emifinol to Anaheim. •·1. . CdM'• Gaeey Bunney doubled mo run &nd Azny ~ aliO dOubled egelnlt M.,. Katy R ot1h had two of Me11's three hU.a against AMbehh =••••?" ....... ...... "-4C::..M11Mt c-.o.a Mm 001 oao . 1 > z Mlhe6m I ... •• 1 S ~end OIMlllcx~­~ W·L.,....an. 4-1. l.·~ :l·t. Dolly Pilot t HOOPS HONORS Ne~ort's Whitfield first team Sailors' Vasquez also recognized by coaches' All-Sea View girls ba5k etball selections. Barry Faulkner D AILY PILOT Newport Harbor High sophomore Jillianne Whitfield has been named first-team All· Sea View League by the drcUlt's girls basketball coaches. Whitfield, a 5-foot-7 forward- guard, averaged 10.8 points tn eight league games, including a career-high 21 to key a 46-44 win over Aliso Niguel to end the Tars' 20-game league losing streak. She also had 10 rebounds in that game. Athena Vasquez, a junior g uard, represents Newport Harbor on the second team. She averaged 4 .8 points against Sea Vlew competition. Laguna Hills senior guard Megan Aaker and lrvine senior Kristin Thawley, both of whom have signed to continue their careers a t UC Irvine, shdred Player of the Year honors. COACHIS' 2002 All-SIA YllW LIAGUI GfalS IASlmAU ~ofdteV.W Mec}lll Al!il.~. l.lgUna Hills Sr Kmtin Thawtey. lnnne Sr. AnttMITI Jillianne \Nhltflekl, Newport Hart>or So Ahl S~ Woodbridge Sr Kathryn~. Woodbridge Sr Michelle Sanford, Woocbidge Jr Olrtsten O' Allesandto, l.lgUna Hrlls Jr. Nlllki IC.Amadi. kViM Sr Allison Hab«ost, AIKO Niguel Sr. SemndtMITI Athena Vasquez, Newport Hl!bo< Jr Laoren Riiey, Woodbr1<9! So. Stephanie M1rks, Woodbridge Sr. Lindsay Yocum, Woodbridge Sr. Katie O' Har1, Irvine Sr. Jamie Salz, Aliso Niguel Jr Heather Hlberost, Aiko Nlgutl Fr PONY BASEBALL Mohler fans 18 Shaun Mohler recorded cl no-hitter with 18 st.riJceouts to lead the Dodgers over the Cardinals, 8-1 . 10 a Corona del Mar Pony Division game Mohler's performance was supported by steady offense that included Bobby Manning, who had two tuts, and Jonathan Kroopf, who hammered out a home run. Dodger catcher Matt Doran also turned in a valuable effort. LATE MEN'S COLLEGE HOOPS SUMMARY lfG WIST CQtlBDKI MIN'S TOUllWl8II Semtftwwl UC 5MtA llMMllA &a. UC lillY'llm 61 uc:sa . Hull 11, Follow 13, NdMlye 7, Jone 21, At.lko 6, SllufUoty 0, OIMfr 2, W.-d 4. Vult<Mdl 2. WhitehMd 0. ).pt. pis · Fullow 2, ~ 2. Hull 1 Fouled out -none TIChnlall5 • none uo. Zumk o. H.llTls .. hr.ta 11, GtMn 17, Hood .. OwlSt o. e.u.is11.as ... OltMO 6. Kormll\ 0 )..pt. pis. Hood 2. Hams 1, Gr--. 1 ~out • HMM TechnlcM • none ~me · UC &Mot, ~21 HAPPY BIRTHDAY Celd>rating the Dally Pilot's Athlett of the ~k ~rlfl i i I I i I I lOOAY -C.ollligl WOfMrl .... ~ •UCIN4nt,1t-.m. T DER TO SEL BO FAC DA AU I H I0'1 Slit an sue ord kllO adv C>.r Co nu ~ G:t EOUAl HOUSI~ OPPORTUNITY LEAVE THE BIG CITY BEHIND! New PtestlplOUS beachslde home8 localed on the QUoer c.ntrl/ Coest "' Morro 881 Pnced lrom the S6CO 000 mb•yhomd.com I ·800·576·2811 HOMES OF THE WEEK 8howc111 Homtt For Sate In Our Sat Ditty Piiot .... , Estate ~I ~lay Ada SC#t It $85. Deiidllne TUllday 5PM Also... ~Howe Uednp Avt. DeadUnt Wtdnt1day SPll ... It Pty1 to AdVtt1lM In .. Belt LOCAL Rell Estate Stctlon CIM Todiy II LISA RIVERA MM7W2S2 ANNE WILLEY MM7W249 • ltOOSWCOHOOS FOR SALE CORONA DEL ~R Belt P1llt of CdM 281 28i house• Loll 3 Fps WIO. trig 1 car gar • carpoit 433 112 Btgonia. S429K By Owner IMH9'-3357 °'*' Sun , .... Bfllutlful/y Des.gned froot condo 3bl .lla custom hn4lles tnougntout' gourmet l!llehet! S859CXXJ Coe1tline R..ity IJ4H59-0ln Op.n Sun 1-f Gotgeous latpe rear unit• ?Br 2 SBa martlle. tra~mne etc Otteted at S889 000 F0t more 08/llJI! please call Contllne Re•lty IUl-15Utn A 2Br 2 sea home in the hean o4 the 1111tage. hntShed W1ll1 beallt~ut appo.ntments Olfered at $669.000 CaJ fOf <kll8'1s Coeattint RNlty 949-759-01...:..;77:..__ __ _ 3Br 3.581 Classic custom Conao Marble granrte. lrawmrte Top o4 Ille line a~ enclosed pabO A Must See· Ottereo II $999,000 Coastline R..ny 90·759-0177 Stunning E.iec 2.Br Twmt Spacious end UM 2 SUll- deds and patl05 comm pool spanen1111>eacl\/v111age ne~111y 5459 000 Prud Ca Any 8 J 949-721-0132 2Br 2811 houM 3 trplc s • cs tno 1 cer Qill • C1tpOrt 4JJ 11'2 ~ No pets vitf $639.000 By Owner 949-49&33S7 SELL your home through classified ONLY 4 LEfT CUSTOM HOMES 3811 2.SBA FROM $4M,000 SAT/SUN 12-6 2450 Eiden "'-Mt-72~ ONLY 4 LEfT CUSTOM HOMES 38R 2.58A AlOM S4ea,OOO SAT/SUH 12-5 2450 Eldin ,._ 941142s-oeoo E'Sidt Vllutt 48r home 1n good condl1roo 0!1 pnme strHt wAMQe 7500d j)llYatll ya1d, 8Ql S.g.ass.9705 A Stutinlng TownhouM style propll1y In Bekolrt Nothing has been ove1looked Travertrne. HardWood lloors French doo<s. H'ljll cerilngs and I very ul)9reded patio w/ex- lllMM! bnclcwon<. eat. Bob Te1~ 714·S~j() • COi.LEGE PARK • 381 28& 2400s t • 3ca1 gar mstr bf ste w"'1 $81.N, RV parkrng $424.900 Agen1 714-545-0318 1·3 ~1 33591 IC DIN Vista Or OPEH HOUSE SAT/SUH 12-4 Outstanding oppty ocean Views Total remod. 3br 2 Sb~ condo $395 000 949-322-0932 180' W• Front.ge CUllOnl nllrfrt homl wl p'tt doCk. lower ..... 11,200,000 'llr, wftlrfrcnl home with ptlnte dock. mtn ... $532,000 The WIWfront $pedlllll Wendr Webb lrlonteclto Piii! 1 OPEH SUN 1-5 4600st St>r 5 5ba J car garage ocean YltWS up· ~· marble ftoors. grlfl- tte counters Stefanie Meurer $2 OSO 000 949 71S·31S6 E'Side Aen1a1s 28' 1 Ba w garage. $1525/mo & 38r 2Ba w/garage. $2195/mo 191 Mla!lOl!a 949-&t!>-3683 LARGE TOWNHOUSE 2br 1.5ba, yard, quiet, clNn s 1250/M(). Mt-673-5535 Ad'ienc.d RMI E.ltlt8 Mt-n~mo I ~ OF ~ESOslli I I U ~ I LEAVE THE BIG cm E'Slde 2Br ue. new crpe Ill'• 1 apace WIO l*·upa DIW we1 bat 178 Cea1 pt $1,350/mo 949·673-7194 EASTSIOE CM STUDIO ... 111 rencecs ylld PET OK new carpelivlnyl, parm & appliances Alt UUs Paid. Avaiable Now $72Slmo NEWPORT BEACH BEHIND I Cal 10< 1n10 71Hi45-0442 OCEANFRONT FIXER Not For The Faint of Heert agt. 94&-723-8120 Oppy ~ Bdl ao. Turnkey tu• spac twnhse approx 2000 s! was 4br riow 3br 2 Sba, lg 2 c attach gal $409 000 E.ihel KrilWCZ 0 Rema.l 949-644-4321 www ethelkraw1tz com ~ s.wtltul offered at $699, 000, complere/'y renovated ff! '99, large 4•tcllen w•staintess •teel applS. 281 2Bil. l>OnuS room wrrfl own ~ RobfHt Tat*?< !JQt 9'19-338-8885 Newport VIN BMglinl Modej pe11ed 38r 2 sea hOuse wlpnvale re.r yan:t wlOOmm pool & spa agl P Ten0<9. ag1 94~9?o5 www.pettlck1enore.C1>m PRIME ESTATES Lots 6 Ocean Vlewal agt, Pttrlck Tenore 949-85&-9705 www.petrlcktenore.com Waterfront Pamoram. 90ft Frontage S595,000 !Qt. Mi-72W120 New Presrlg!Ous beach$1c1e homes lociltea on the QIJIOr Central Coast "' Mcwn> Bat Pnced lrom /tie S6CO.OOO mb•yhomu.com 1·800 576-2811 119 APTS HUNTINGTON BEACH I 1L DEL~ I Completely Renovated Great Locatlonl 2Brs Bridget Apartment• 714-842-2411 Oceanalde of Cont Hwy Wiik To 8Ndl & VllllQel 2 T ownllofMs. 2Sr 1.5111 Md\. Ho Pelll. s 1750/mo. Terry, 1111 94t-71t-2007 WALK TO THE BEACHll $400 Move-"' bonus' Nee 2Br/181 Sl1751mo. on 1 year lease 714 960-2468 Close to Boch 28< 2Ba So. of Hwy Studio "' 1 ball\ new carpet and pa1n1 ga bright, new paro1 & w•nd<lw rage no pe1s s 139s1mo kdchentte, walk ro bead! & • s 1100 sec 949-854·2926 Shops $m ~9 m 1138 Remodeltd S1udlo upper unc wlkrlche!'I no pe•s.Jsmkg $1 125/mo U!ls rctd a•a~ 416 L.Nve VM k>I p1ope<1y management 949·?22-sns 110 APTS COSTA MESA Everytlllng Brand Hew' BACHELOAS· $731.·SSOO Huntington Pointe Apts Call Now! 714-5*-7441 30 Sleoe to Sand S1udl0 1 & 28' 1Ba $105MIO & E'Slc»-Bacld>ey Studio & $1600iMo 949 ~2-2566 1 8drmt S850-S950. Qltld. pool. gwages IVltl, spe, •STUDIO• wlprlute no !)!!!. 71~ entrlne9, lg ~ioe.ts. trlQ. perking, pool, util Incl _$800/_1 mo 949-440-4615 lovely Oat.cl Comm. 1 Br 1ea Aiu-SSSSlmo .. ~no & gar to $875/mo w 'pabO & re· served carport lndry tac on srta Wiik to Tn-Sqr Kletn ~ en-~9 x 9200 e.cn 112 mitt, neer Hoeg Lg tor, dt'w. walk·in ciolet S995m ntpet avl Y22 1401 S!pno! Ave 94MCUIJI Spectacular Apartnunts 2 BR, 2 BA with Yard $23SO g. $2SOO I Br, with BaJconr $1400 Mk Abo9t our Wiater SpedaN ~ Prlvile Pitlo5 • Tiled Entries • c~ WOod Bwnlng F1repbces • PriYilt & Marilla• Spatkling Swimming Pool •~ Tropkal landsc.apllll.• Seconds to Balboa lslilld, ~~ Shopping Center, Fast.Jon~ & Cofone dd ~ The Newport Mattu Apt. Homee 919 e.,.w. o.M. Ne ..... lleedl (94'9) 76().-0919 I N ewNG.cont 154 HOUSESICONDOS FOR REHT BAUIOA ISWI> 28' 1 Bii yeat!y 1 "'°'* ., beactl good 11118. clMt1. WIO tcceS6 $1~mo 1111. Jim Heydorl! 949-675-5069 3Br SS. Duplea 1 house to beach S2200'mo Alilo 28' 28a S 1 eoomo Bocll hive new carpe11pe1n11!100ts.w1n- oow covenr.gs Year lease 71 4 974-068'1 159~ FOR IBT COffOMA DEL IWt So CdM, 2Br 1 Ba S1500f "'° No sn*wpets 505-tl2-M26 1lb1y11em10aol com 81ytron1 Yearly Renlll• 40r, 2.Sbl on N. Blytront 0 Ruby Buth·Newly • 2Y!Br 2th81, 510'Ve tog * Lg 28r 281 * w•d 9<1rage Fplc S2500lm $169!.mo 510 ,,.. Femleat remodeled $5000/mo Alto • 3br, 3b•, on S. Beytron( f1clng PllVllllon S5SOOlmo c.n Don or Sally 0 Rumbold R11tty 949-675-4822 2Br 181 Apt pa•• nq CdM Open weo 50 Sun 1p !1_45umo 949-673-3039 ~9-57• 1101 11 ·2 SELL yoor home t11rough class1hod 3Br 38• Condo 1 c garage wClrpon •d ~no smkg peis o~ S2500 mo Call 949-678·5892 ~·HOME, ~EALTH /BJ BuSINESS ~ ~ ERVICE · Rf:CTORY ~ 11"' ~ 11•a:=11~~1 .. _312 __ c_Le_:-_1N_G ... ARTISTIC T11.t; •W STONt: r,..,....._,1......_. v..-·P.....W.•"'- /,/,1 ml,,. N quq}lll work (9•9) 413-T~~fi CUSTOM CREATIVE TllE lnstallalJOnl slate. oeramc. marble Slone EIUtO 1175 .. 12044 M 71WtMll1 1.1AKY sa-. Atpllfed Aegtoutlng & lnslallbon OEAH TIU MM7W015. 71~ 714113-2031 , .. CWMDI lllAINTENANCE S111AU J08 EXPERTI DUNCAN ELECTRIC LocaUOuici l9IPOflS8 S.MCt/Rtmodtla 20 y..,.. £qienenc:e Ll275870 949-65(). 7042 UC£HSEO CONTRACTOR No jd> too am Al_, ... 1"1'10dt11. 11111, spa. MW ...W. t'91t5315f The .. In .. WM! far IMI ~ Mrirq'ltglllllQ ntlillllonl. 30 + )'Mii PP ft!t'Com1!!d MH45-M7S , .. ~11 ... • lllw. • lnlllll Woodl'C1rpet/Tllell1m1nate Roon•~. 9-s 11t.f1'M211 FM Ell li.w•.cal _ A•~Q- C.ustomer -S .otisfoction All phases of construdion home repair. ::::te too ... ,ftJLllt Mark 949.650.9525 ~~ u::=·r= .. Houatdeel1log • El.p'd WklyfBl·Wkly/MonthlylWeeft. ends Great r1tes• lmelcll 949-546-4285 9''278-0837 m MISC. SERVICES I REAL ESTATE I ~ .... Ron ~Young FtJr All Yt1ur Rt'al Estatt' Nutlf' 714-432-7873 .......... . ..... =. = ~-:..-= 1-&946-3257 too big. ITMriDr & Ext11tor 1'0ll FE ""*" 7!tt91=!!!f. , ...... , [· =o:I JUNK TO THI °'9111 7t ...... tll2 AYMAlll TOOAYI MH!MIM MOVIN·MAN c..u. Cour\80ld &Cl*!> PWa. Antlqll9 Fl9I WlllCINtlel F,_ Elltimllta9 949-371-7825 330 MOVING I STORAGE PUBLIC NOTICE The Cahl Pubhc· Ul11tt1es Com· m1ssoo REQUIRES that all used house- hold gooos movers p<Vll their P U C Cat T number. !lfT10S and chautters pnnt lhett T C P number 1n all adver11~ If yoo have a QUds· bOn abOul Ille legal· tty ol a rnoYer, limo 0< chaufl8f, cal . PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISION 714·558·4151 .. 1340 p~ II 35' PLWG 11312 IG~ I Chung'• Pllnlllt!i 27Yr •lP ~========~===~ Greel Pnce Guaraniee Worlc Free Ell L•375602 714-5381534 7/39().29'5 IKE'S CUSTOM PAJNTIHG Proleuton1I. dean. qua111y wort lnteflOfleld and OoCks Lt 703468 94~1~10 Marti tenncn·1 Plintlng lnVE•I Custom Parnt1ng EXPERT Orlin Clllnlng 17Yll up w'1peaal 1ins11es Plumbtng rap11rs.. over Free ltl M~ 251'5 ~ AJ wort! Plfl- teed STEVE 714·S45-8298 RAIHBOW CIRCLE MAlHT Pui~lnUld HousetApl quaflly ,001 Free tsMllllt Lt5611897 714-636-81188 wAnuaoor aoonNG ~·~ Ft'M &timMrM Al 1Ypee of Root. All Wont Ckwllnteed 949) 631·1085 ' • 2 [ If ~Mwd\l0, 2002 Bridge ly CHARLES GOREN ~OMAR SHARIF end-:T'~NAH HIRSCH WK DON'T BELIKVK l'f 8olh vuJnentHe. Soulh deab. WE.\I • 8.l NOmf • ICJlt C1 K75l ~ 108 7 •Q86 ci OJ 1064 o ICJ •J95l EAST • 972 ,, 8 (/ Q642 •AK 10 74 SOUTH •AQ654 ~ A93 A95J •.l Openm11 lead Queen of Fal~ard~ arc usually effccuvc only ugauut top-notch playe~ your oppoocnt ha.• 10 be dutt good to dmw the "right" conclus100 from the card you play. nus 15 01\C or finest b1L\ or dcccpoon we hAvt seen m ycur' Mu'I pla)'cr.. would be h41>1>y wnh dcclannit two •p:tde<i but \of1chflCI Scamoo. of Miami Beach, pl•)'ing in 1hc \anderbdt Team Champ1omh1p a few yean .igo. Liked lu.s aces and dis 161~ CORONA DEL llAR D"tbUdon enousb io con.U'ICI ror rour ..-S. He WU ltol lOO lhrillod whmJ West " led tbl qUICCO el bean.I and d~ ~ COUDl dpr Irias ID bJ"1 cardl and a ninlh could come from diamonds in a number of way1. A 10th WU oowberc l.o liatlL So, after &6t followed to the fiist trick w11h the ciahl of hearts, Sa.mon drooped the nine from hand! .Not surprislnaly, West lhoualu that .declarer hlld to hold a singleton hw1 and that c:ontinuing the suit would only help declarer ICt up dummy'• king. A ahift WU therefore lndieaied, so the deknder exited with a l.nlmp. Declaier won in dwnmy and duclted a diamond to We1t'1 jack. who returned aoother trump. taken 111 dummy. Dec~r came IO hand With lhc ICC of duunoods. dropp111g the kina. cuhcd the ICC of spades and pcne· vcred wnh aoocber trump. Forced 10 make 1wo discards. West "knew" which cerds in his hand were uscl~~ -the defender stuffed two hearts! The ace and king of hearu picked up the outstanding cards in the suJt, set· tmis up • long bean on the board en which declarer discarded 1hc lot.mg club. Now a diamond was surrcn· dered, actttng up lbe nine in the SUJ1 as the fulfilling Irick while declarer ~ltll had a trump as an entry 10 cMh that card! I lit ' • • Nlwpol't IWFta 4& .. houea. i..toiy, 3000d, 2c gar. 510 Alleo. l3ot50 ll'lof1 *"' ok. Mt-7»7364 n. 8116 38r nr Boyl I GJm dub a-~ """ ll()Ci•. wd If. gat. pools $2275/obo. 949'644·t491 38r 28a "°'* Slep! IO beach, Frplc, 2c gar, wfd ~ IG09SS to pool & ten $2800/mo. 949-72t -&422 Large 38r 2Ba $2950/mo. 714·336-9100 www.turlboom.com/ lorrent.htm E'Sldl lovely collage. 2Br 1 Ba. Ing. lodry fl gat, wood Illa, to from & bedl yaltl. pet neg. s 17©'mo Ulla & gat· den&f wl(;ld 9'9-631-1131 On Big Canyon 11011 2Br 2.5be, 2 story town oouree 38r 2.SBa, newly home, frplc, 2 petioa. 2 cat remodfi&d, 2car garage, gar. comm pool, 62 Nlvane $295Qm Kay 949-856-3t20 S11l5CYmo. 949-293-4830 PRIVATE IAYSHORES Gale gulrd 38r, 1~ Fp, get. -to pvl bdl S3600ln I• & 1u1 '4N7'W011. NEWPORT CREST 38< 2.68a • lul OOINlll view. S275CYmo. Oevid Pri0091 pQ! 9'9-718-1520 NE~POAT ISLAND 1,..... 4&fS8I Blyflont $4000 S8r/29a Remodel 12500 SBr/2Bt Remodel $2200 1 Br 1 Ba Blylronl s 1500. David Prinell, Coldwel BltMr ~7t&-1520 38r 381 Specloill T wnhme, !'P· 2c gar. geltd comm. wld l~ljllfpool. $2800/mo. !Ql 94~759-&410 SHORES INTERIORS FLOOR SAMPLE LIQUIDATION SALEll All PRICES SLASHEDll Uphotlttfy. LAmpt, ~.I 2640 AVON STREET NEWPORT BEACH off Riverside l Plctflc Cout Hwy 949-642·2255 1-~-ar:11~.~~~~~~ I u•=l l'"~I Udo Isl 38r 28a condo - --pl!lo, Fp, w/d, lllljll lo bey QUl9I & pron ws + tn 1J1C11 ldtlenl. call, dogs 1or \All. ?4ffiH!l!18 adopljofl rllln or "*'!, _., Sat~ noon-4pn l"lllhion llland AHJMAL NETWORK Into MN44-227t www.anlinalnetwOl1r.Ofl m£ 30 DAY WEB USl1HG FOR DOGS 141-451...ol COM s11M 2bf hou11, w/plof fem. Aval! Howl Oclcat 11111ena, CFA. 1950/mo Incl ullllllH. Leapord look attk11 Mt-721 ... 2t S400-S500 rare exotic cnoc- olate !pOtl8d. 9()9.734·7173 GAAYS ISLAND ~ BeecMrvlne loc1s currently hiring F/PT sales associates. Flex hrs Xlnl benefrts. For 111terview Call NP8 Chnslfna 949·640-237t lrwie Jed 949 ... 50-0895 BMW 5.251 't3 Perfld White Stdan With Bleck l.881hef! Low Miiie St4,980 (117565) Phllllpe Aulo 14M74·T7T7 BMW 5401 Sedlll 't7 Sliver w/Blk lthr. 381< mt $32.980 (t17485) Avell Now 31>< 2ba llC)JS8 den lg dee* pvl bell new pa•nt r~s t; ·-· etc LM E 00 H7J.t336 I 1IO *lrll A MU91 Sell Sp« 2Br 28a. Fp many 11111111. no pets.' smkg S 1695 949-760-0189 714·S4&-6283 Enjoy Cruhlng Suf1 38r 2Ba. upptf Int "'°8n, _'JI, $3500 yearly Prud Ca Aly. B J JolvllOO 949-566-111 7 1---=I 1·~==1 lwllC1•l•t E~ PaSSNe Rehlb mec:IWles. -ol ........... ol·lhll art. mmt oond, ~ $43,000 sac St 2,000 LOOKING lor JACK I JIU. PT 1 00-<I 30 or 6:30·9:00 Jack & JMI are 1eam players and art lun to WOii<. wlltl. they llao 991 llckelS to con- oelts & W1f1 bonUMI They lell Is tfla1 You? Pldtlc Symphony Talefundl119 CamolllQn Eve & Sa1S lilt ?tHT&-2398 RHllur1nt ....,.,stan for ,_ sub &anOwd1 chu1 opening mid Mlrctl Compelrtve Pay + bonUS 858-764-0760 MISSY ::rr .. ~ BMW 740ll '13 83k ml. books. ltCOldl. DI owned. sMr. grey ~ luly loadld. t>aut ong oond S13.995 v367S9t Bkt 949-58&-t888 E'Slde Ch1rmlng 1Br Hou11 water & gardener paid. lenoed yard. peis ok itt951mo MH48-3958 3Br 1 Ba on H~ Lot S1650imo. agt. ~dney 949-400-132 Nr T rYngll eq rtlllOCWed t br 1 bl dupll•cioJi:· bldtyd, WIO, S1 . .., .. 4-1 94ws:Ml2:39 38r 29a • T Gt.Illy Aldone 2c garage on QUi9I culo()e·sac S2.295mo aQ1, S'/dll!Y 94~t320 Chinning 1 Br hollll watei & gardener pakl, fenced yard. carport. pet1 Ok. llPPI only $1000/mo 1018 W. 181h St. 94MIM035 3Br 2Vzea Towntiom.. wfll!IC 2Vx gar, wJO Nt.yp&. r.-J>Ull.Cl"*'1kl & ~ CIOw covers Nwpl1 Harbor Sett chi St 60().S 1800/mo year lie 714-974-0U7 Solcloua Townhou11 3&r, lemlly room, t.nnla & pool. S2,695hno. lg!. Vlc*I 141·723·8t00 38f ze. Sdigle family home oo Newport ts des.rab4e, ~. wale to beach, pvt lg pa1Jo & pvt paJ1I. '1 t!ro'Wll. Avll!A ill Aenl. 949'67s-3600 Ea9altM Slllte t Br 1 Bl. Penlhoull. pool. flCUZZJ. SIQlf1ly ~. wall IO beactl, 11115/mo 94!1-723-0788 MOllL! 50' To/Ju.ch New Ownnshipl Gr/Ind IU-Openinx RAlu SpeciAJ M ... 71ntrU5. Wttily/IGtJJn. AHiL 118 11th Strea Hlllltiogton Beach 714 .... 41711 TODAY'S SUNDAY PUZZLE ACROSS 1 Goose eggs 8 Wnting need 11 Ory out 161njUfe9 21 Verdugo of 111m 22Summon 23 Utah neighbor 24 ·01ve - -Don't pollute" 25 Shaggy bovine 26 A\IOld e>Cqira!Jon 27 Mallet 28 Delicate purple ?9 Unhatched fish 30 Milk producer 32 Tease 34 Mlstortunes 36Dnnk 37 Bus1riess lettef abbr 39Decay 40-stnp 42 Team cheer 43 Average grades 44 Not wasted 46 ls 1mpof1ant 48 Countl'y cousn 50 Met prooue11ons 53Agree 54 Asian 1mpo11 56 A...alds 85 Tibetan OX 861nnames 87Nametn architecture 88007s ·-To Kllr 92lngenuous 94Exotic 98 Half ol ·deux" 99 Listen In 101 Urban trans t02 Get away from 104Sash 105 ors dinner 107 Sickly look 109 Talles an oath 111-llU t 12 Chatter on 114 Vloous 115 Belief systems 116 Unlounded report 117 Twtne t 19 Fast Jets 121 Chapeau's place 122 Low V04CeS 123 -year 125 Hybrid cttrus 127 Edj ble root 128 NOi often seen 131 Woll Man portrayer 133 Sat tor an artist 134 Old 50k:ller 136 Pendl end DOWN 1 Striped an1ma1 2 "The Holtow Men poet 3 Change 1he clock 4 'Double Fantasy" singer 5Smooltlwood 6Era 7 Prevent 8 Racehorse. slang1ly 9 ..:.. out scrape by 10 Did a second draft 1 1 Baby swine 12 Nabol<ov herome 13 Talk wildly 14 Comedian Chase 15 More saCfed t6 Radio aperators 17 Cry Of dlSCOVW)' 18Wakeup 19 Mulllplex ofler1ng 20Foottalls 31 Warmonger of myth 33LD or cc 35 Speak highly of 38 Medical worker 40Telegram 41 Babies beds 43Granted 45 Tree fluid 72 Moon goddess 74 Ruttle 76 Name tn tl'9Ct«s 79 Casual farewell 81 Listener's need 82 Bandleader Brown 84 Tell a whopper 8BClods 89Unmoving 90 Actor Romero 9 t Gooda alternative 92 Finally (2 wds ) 93 Takes care ot 94 Ermine and mink • 95 Pieces ol news 96 Toy soldter 97 Comes clo&er 100 Islands to Cousteau 100 Glttery fabOc 106 Way over a fenoe 108 Saloon slgr1 (2 wds) 110 Handle sklllfUly 111 Sprinkles llghUy 113 Compass pt 116 Comic Chartone 118 Festive 120 Nigh1 racket t21 Grew lncleors 122 Poker Slakes 124 Olctoberfest 1unes 1216 Cook•selling org 121011ercame A1rpott Of11ca 50«9 310.541Hl682 2082 84*nesa Ceni.r °' · AtMM Club Equipment IM18 800-1800sf Below It department stor9 pnon MatMt Rent. 9411-752·2222 tttn11sg11r4tess.com/2412 EXEC OfFICES F1Slllon la· ta.nd, N.B 3 Avail Furn/ unfum Shared conftrtl'1C8 room am S700 ·S800. .. ollice. T !!CY. 949-640-1770 242 OUAUTY USED COMMERCIAL Fl'TNESS EQUIPMENT Great for home l1Y'1I MoYing & need to ... lJlefhsa & Slair· HUN'TlHGTOM BEACH maaer Cardio EQUIP Nii;. Prme ~ Blcjgl Illus & MlgllUll1 Strength Cal Pltrlck Tenore Equipment 949-721-1739 NlbOnWlda USA @49·856-9705 1 • ~ I 1211 RENTAi.i i _ WANTED COAST coeN NEEDS OLD COIHSI Gold, 111vtr. jewelty. watches, antiques, coOectJble• !MH42"9447 TOP ~ECOROSt MARKETING Clllcago bMld fleld Mlclgt agency -ka FT high "*9Y level lllld Mktg rtpe, IMflOll tor operation of retell 11mplln9 ~In OC. EOE Fu or E""'*' r-..ne to 312· 787-5211 or umping ~rultertllotmlll.com Attn: o.c. Receptlonltl PT rapMI Rehlb tnl't lnnovallY8 ohnlC Sports Therapy S 1 2hr Simone 141-515-7878 Blic* c.i1tufy '00 6 cyt. AT. PW, POL. cc. lilt, Pfseat. ASS. ltaeUon control ('33421) St3,997 NABERS CADILLAC (714)540-1100 8ulcll l.aNbrt .. 6 cyl. at. pw. pdl, Ill, pl ..a,Aes.nno-. ( 1511902) s tel ... NAB(RS CADILLAC (714 )540-t100 8ulcll Plfll Awe. '00 pw, pdl, p/9Mel, ~ ~ od. IMltw ('125741) 117..1.• NABERS CAOILL.A\O (714)540-t100 Jazz. A & B, Soul, Roell. Aeetaunlnl , Bll1lnCllr * 50's & OO'a Pff ' Wllfland cook. Buick Regal GS 'It ABS, CO, fully loedad, low ml, lelOier (M~~RS CAoti.il'c'95 (714)540-1100 MIKE 94H4S-7505 Cal T~ PM t -------MM44-otl0 n. ,,... L01f • 1 8lr t Giii In Cllfll __ ""91D __ I 479 -=:m I LOST OR STOLEN Last seen Dec. 14, corner of Wiison and Newport Blvd. LARGE REWARD For Info (confidential) Jack Russell Terrier 949-548-·1235 COM SUN •10, Morning , .. ,. -1 Clnyon Rd/Seawlfd R<[ ••• -Oak I 111l1e antJque WANTE~ flm!lur!. -" !ljy -------- ,..... bl .... lhlt 1111 llatlnge In ltllt catlgory ""Y ,... you to Clll a 900 n11mblr In which """' .. • chlrga per minute. Cldllac Se¥111a m va 't7 low 1111, lull ""'. lllv. ("21m) '20.• 1 •0PPOR= I NABJr.~~c Caclllc: 8"91 Sl.S ·oo '*"° caea, ed. ~ lul pwr, "" ...._ bl nry of OUI (1144002) la,515 ot -compenlee. NAURS CADILLAC Ctlacll """ .. IOC8I 1714154!).1100 Better BUllMN Bu- l'MU l*Oll you Hiid CMwoMt Altro .. any l'llOMy °' tMt aw.o CAM, pw, pell, cd, fOf ..me... Reed lthr, GM ollt, ,_ IC and underallnd enr (117-.i31 l11MS conlredl before you NABERS CADILLAC elgn. (714)S4H100 Chevfolll SulM1len LT 414 'ti GO Hug b!1ldY 61 Rounded seed pod 62 Dattodll staner 139 Tarzan companion 140Legenos 142 Tefl (on) 46 Cellar growttl 47 HaJf.frozen 49 Torso 1nlormally SO Happen 1211 Marsh blrdS 129 K11cnen weer 130 Hall of·Famer Pee Mill s.wnt ..,.... for -I 412 ~I ~ ·.:::r:: for 1 471~1 AAA ADVIL·BAYER· AL.EVEll 60 loc lilts Do you eem $100!<? You low mt. _, clall\ lull pwf lllv IDw pckg 3111 .... -('16185) S28.5'16 IWSEJIS CAOILI.AC (71415*1100 64 Perry's secre18ry 65Contamer 66 Like gelahn desserts 66 Say pos1t111ely 70 Two-fold 71 C~orado Indian 72 Beatrice's admrer 73 P o service 75Found out 77 Tlmetable into 78 Cardinal (2 WdS J 80 In an odd way 83Gaveln ' , 1 o43 Attlst's plaster 146 MO's g(S)up 146 cara ~castle t48 Yellow-brown 150 Frequent 152 Dollops 154 Dangerfield per.;ona 155 Ador Alan 1 se Come next 157 Mounta t 58 Soomllll looll 15'1 Llllgallng HIO Te>c* out 161M 51 Piicher s target 52 Assuaged 53 Bounoe !5!5 MOMA arttst 57 Pasted 58 Gladden 59 Potato Of' egg - 61 Aftlnlty 63 Mule's SOl.nd 68 l11<Jeases the pnoe (2Wds) 67HObo 68 Leae11 des!Jrlalion 69 Teleeoooe leas Wee 132 Kind Of 1adle1 134 Sports locale 136 NOC these 137 Elllr1h tone 138 Domineering 140 HI 01 AK, oooe 141 H H Munro 143 8loW hard 144 Fairy·tale monster 147 Before mar1111ge 148 ,...Md~ 151 S.m. -• CA 153 Ulmann of cinema I couldl FT/PT Inv req 1·~¥&!6. 24hra ~ Maner Mllllr 10 Oownl &rn CREAT • Wortc -y 5hfL Candy V£NOINO ,,. In °""" County Fr11 lntol I00-74f:970f, l4fn. Low ln1ereat Dell! Coneolldlllon & Pert0nal Loana ttlru lkllbondtd lendl11. No fee. OulClc !!!u4!! , ........... CllMolll Tahoe LT ·VI 't7 PIMlll, ASS, lllf90 e., CO. IN. tow ~ (~RS CADILV.c'116 m • )540.t 1 oo .lllp Gr8ftd Cllln*8e L TO '15, tlcyl, orig owner. llwy m11u. boo~s. rtcordl, White/grey Jltv. co, beautillA OfiOlnll oondillOO, $5,995 Bkr 9'~18811 Und Ro¥9r Range Ro¥9r County LWB '16 84k m1, blue/Ian lthr, CO, moonrf, new ahocka. brush guard. be1ut orig cond. $12.995 ~ e.r. 949-586-1888 Laua 08300 't4 MooolOOI, le&lhlr, lo rN, Stll.980 ('17670) = .. ~ Laxua LS400 .. Oelk grey w/fPf th lr1t. co. ctwome wheels. li't oond, ll8lt mi, $18,900 949-71~9505 lalua LS400 'ti Datil 'Jlf'f wlgrey Jltv Int. co. chrome wneeta. mt cond. -Ill!, f18,90Q. 949-719-9505 Uncoln COf'lllnellMI .. By Ownel-Mult SN! F"9y Loaded. co ~. alatm arya. cell phone. hlalild 11!1 ... ta. chrol!ll nma. dlfl- l'lllla ~. I'*> llNO- l!!t!!. $9985 94U73-47'8 Muell .... c-'12 87k ml, boob. reoorta. 5lpd. wtlea, blc ri, MW 10p be1ut orig oond. garaged. nonlsmkr, mull -lo IP" preciate Vt757291 $5,760 Bkr 949-586-18811 Ponllec: Orllld All 8E '01 4 cyl. PW, pdl, ... Cid 1~sc~2r (!14>S40=!100 Amllp"-UHSEW Factory W1~Fully ~Illa Only $38,990 (11 l'NMpe Auto Mt-f74-mz is our community. We live and work and want to make a difference. We ~~•Kne education is the biggest single factor necessary for a successful future for our children. So, we're putting our money where it counts. For every car sold at any Harbor Blvd. of Cars dealership, we WJll donate a substantial amount to die Newport-Mesa School District So far, we've donated $200,000 this year! We've " begun to make a difference in neighborhood, and you can t l~:\Rl'-l\ ; ' ': ( : ~ Sim~ofVTf1Qllll Designed as a hidden retreat, perfect for one couple and elegant, intimate entertaining. GOOD & KERNS 949.759.3752 OPEN SUN 1·4 23 ULTIMA Spectacular view from ttus 3 Bd. 3 Ba. Altezza villa. BATES & KONFAL 949.439.8687 Oceanfront duple• on sand. lfwo deeds. 3 Bd. 2 Ba. plus 2 Bd. 1 Ba. PAUL WRIGHT 949.717.4.745 On the boardwalk! 3 Bd. and living room with fireplace. ALLISON'5ESEMANN 949.718.1524 Estate siied parcel on the main channel. Large dock. KAY POLOVINA 949.759.3783 • Building srte over one 80'9, pnvate dodc. Enjoy breathtaking, endlels views a.nd sounds of the .... JEFF & LYl.EEN EWING 949.759.3786 Custom 4 ¥ plus study, large family room, and gourmet kltch9'1 Pool and spa. HINMAN & HINMAN 949.759.3705 Private family home In Harbor Cove. 4 Bd. plus office. ENGLEBRECHT & PARDINI · 949.290.6000 Gorgeous custom rebuilt In 1991. 5 Bd. with 2 on the first floor. Latge lot. UNDATAGUANffil 949.718.2369 13.5 acres of dnNm property. Close to Village. ·MARCIA BRASHIER Dover Shores front row view home. Ra,. cul-d4HOC location. 949.718.1508 DAVID McCULLOCH 949.718.1549 8ayfront condo with lots of upgradM. Slip available. LYNNE VALENTINE 949.887 .1200 Stunning well designed 3 Bd. Totally customized and remodeled. LINDA TAGUANffil 949.718.2369 Exceptional home with back bay and ocean views. Media room and pool CARIYOUNG • 9497182746 Spectacular e•ecvtive 5 Bd home 1n wonderful gated area. SHARON GRIMES 949.466.5756 The ultimate party home. Huge bonus room. 4 Bd. 3 plus a.. • OAVIQ McCULLOCH 949.718.1549 .. _, ,