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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2002-03-19 - Orange Coast Pilot·--...... • . . The sun's shining, and you can't beat that. S-hge2 SERVING THE NEWPORT -Ni.SA COMMUNmES SINCE 1907 ON 1HE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM 1UESDAY, MARCH 19, 2002 Mesa Verde man held on molestation allegations •Police say the 71-year-old will be charged with committing a lewd act on a 12-year-oldgirl Lolita Harper D AILY PILOT COSTA MESA Police are investigating allegations' that a 71- year-old Costa Mesa man molested a 12-year-old girl wbo reported she was attacked Saturday while selling candy. Costa Mesa Police Lt. Dale Bir- ney said Mesa Verde resident James Harper was arrested Saturday and will be charged with committing a lewd act on a child and kidnapping. Harper could face one to 12 years in prison if convicted. Birney said the investigation is ongoing and officers are looking into the possibility there are addi- tional victims. Harper is being held in OFange County Jail. The girl, whom the Daily Pilot has declined to identify because of her age, told police she was selling can- dy on Redwood Avenue for a school fund-raiser when she allegedly had the encounter with Harper. •He seemed like a nice man,• the girl said in an interview Mon- day. •I thought be wanted to buy some candy." She left bis house shaking, she said, and went to her friend's home, where she broke down in tears. "I wasn't going to tell anyone," she said. "But then I got sad, and I told my friend." The two girls then told the vic- tim's mom, who inunediately called police. "I don't want him to live by me," the girl said. Her family members said they are shocked that sometlung like this could happen Ill such a nice, seem- ingly quiet neighborhood -a neighborhood they moved into just a month ago. "I never imagined anything like this could happen to one of my kids," the gul's motber said. "I told ber to stay in the (area) because I thought it would be safer." The girl's mother said she wor: ried about her daughter and added that she was proud of her for telling someone about the alleged incident. People need to know that these things happen, the mother said, and not sweep them under the rug. The 12-year-old has been acting differently since the alleged inci- dent, playing by herself and not wanting to go outside, family mem- bers said. She agreed, saying she tries to forget about it and play with friends and siblings. But when it IS dark and she's alone at night, the unages of the alleged mcident creep back in her mind, she said. "I can't go to sleep at night now," she said. • LOUTA HARPER covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949) 574-4275 or by e- mail at lolita.harperO/atimes.com . . J .J:To-airport coalition sues over Measure W • Group of North County cities claims voters cannot decide fate of the closed El Toro Marine base's reuse. Paul Clinton DAILY PILOT NEWPORT-!'v1ESA -A group that sup- ports a proposed El Toro mtemabonal au- port filed a lawsuit Monday to overturn Measure W. which rezones the former Manne base to allow a Great Park. The Orange County Regional Allport Authority, a loose coalibon of North Coun- ty aties that includes Costa Mesa, filed the challenge, claiming the t.rutiabve is SEE MEASURE W PAGE 4 PHOTOS BY GREG FRY I DM.Y PILOT Newport Harbor students Thomas Folsom, 15, and Francesca Leal, 16, learn the ins and outs of restaurant work as they prepare ribs at Clayton Shurley's Real BBQ, 'fhere the cullnary students are helping as part of a fund-raiser for a San Pranclsco trip. Newport Harbor officials rework yearbook judging A Texas-sized fund-raiser Newport Harbor High culinary arts students get a taste of the real world in Newport Beach eatery DelrdNNewman DAILY PILOT A s the smoky smell of barbecued pork ribs permeated the kitchen, Francesca Leal and Thomas Folsom presided over the Texas-sized rack and sprayed it with a glaze of apple juice and honey to seal in the hickory ftavor. Francesca and Thomas, dressed in white coats and red aprons, got to be chefs for a day on Monday at Clayton Shwley's Real BBQ restawant in Newport Beach. Their stint in the kitchen is part of a weeklong fund-raising effort by the restaurant to help Newport Harbor High's culinary arts program. The restaurant, which opened about three months ago, will donate 10% of all sales made after 3 p.m. through Saturday to the program, Alhley 1'bona, 11, budles tbe sample tray In lrollt Of tbe SEE TEXAS PAGE 4 restaurant. where Ed Flemlng samples tbe beef brisket. joining the ranks of the Ctlrtoon world I n my lifetime, I have m t, through no parttCulai' fault of my own, some fairly import.ant people -a few generals, a 1en1tor or . two, a maa murderer, a many·tim• blgamtst, even a moVte Ital', althoUah well put her prime. With that u a beckgroUDd, I WOUid 1ay tbat one of the people I feel mc.t tommat. to bave met 11 Virgil Partch. . I f q.pc. that JDQft peo- ple• c.u draw IOIDMblDg that loab--•· bumlD • btilDg .... -ell1bwmn. bul .._ tbil ti M)'ODd me, wll6da •-.-rm =•11dWllM_..,.,, ....... ...,mn ............ ' • na del Mar for many years, was something ol an i<Dl among cartoonists. ffis draw- ings are instanUy recogniz- able. He put both eyes on ooe side of the human face. Small. lnsignWcant, b4rd.ly eartb- lbalcing, but no one el88 hid ever done it t)el(Jt8 (Pkmxo WU not a cartoonilt). I am b1unate to beve a mnbet of original Pertdl'I ~OD nay wall. I am tJwuu Of eiedl and I am =f bum-bled In eedl .... 1broUgb V119'L I 81t John ~wbD---·· =··~:. SHVDDICT .... • After a student admits to tampering with voting; changes are made to the high school's Senior Superlatives contest, leaving one student feeling decidedly artless. Deirdre Newman DAILY PILOT NEWPORT BEACH -Newport Har· bor High School senior Amanda Brown was elated when she found out sho bad been selected as most artistic female for the senior yearbook. For the 18-year-old, who suffers from attention-deficit disorder, it was a vote Of confidence, recognition by her peen and SEE YEARBOOK MGE 4 -.. CAllTOI SKHm Newport ~·puts IMir'I Wiiier supply under tighter CXJ4 rtrOl In ·~ to the Sept. 11 lllnOriSt .ttadcs. .. ._J SblClllwtcolUmnllt MMt ....... '-•••lllanato......, ...... ......... ,...... ... Cl I ml!V'81mt • Ab '" N 2 Tuesday, Morch 19, 2002 Kids Talk BACK Everything's green and everyone's helpful The Daily Pilot went to St. John the Baptist School in Costa Mesa to ask fourth-graders: 'What does St. Patrick s Day mean to you?' 'St. Patrick reminds me that he used the clover to remind people of the blessed trinity and, on St. Patrick's Day, I think about how I should pray to God that I can be more like St. Patrick. I am 99% lnsh. I always wear green on St. Patrick's Day and try to be like him by helping people.' . ANGELICA MORRIS, 10, ~aMesa ·~ ,.~, . '~ . . .--( .li·._;i .·· 4111111411 ' Vo. 'It means a lot because my principal (Sister Vianney) is Irish. I especial- ly like wearing green. My soc- cer uniform is green.' RYAN JACOBS, 10, Santa Ana 'It reminds me of Sister V1an- ney because she's Irish and she helps peo- ple so she's just like St. Patrick.' ELIZABETH KRIEGER. 9, Costa Mesa 'I'm part Irish and when I go to Ireland, I get to see my cousins. I've gone twice. My family has a party, and we Invite people and they can bring their own appetizers.' CHELSEA LIEBEL. 9, Costa Mesa 'It reminds me of love and goodness and of St. Patrick and how he helped every- one to under- stand the Catholk reli- gion. He was one of the best saints. I'm really happy about it because of all the parties and everyone wearing green.' JONATHAN KNAUER. 9, Costa Mesa -Interviews and photos c.ompiled by Christine Carrillo Dai¥Rilot. VOL 96, NO. 78 naMIH. ..... l'IAllllhlr 1aert~ ldllar NO'( OITTM. M a tillnt OiNaOr lAM ....... ~·Ona« l.pawaSJMP UC.tw\ ~.., ('M9JS?....WJ *"'"'*-~ ---· atrNtor .... ,.....11 .. }MPWll ..... ..,,..~ ..... ~ ,...,,,. ... . ......,~ (OflH.t ................. ............ ,.....,......, "'°'~ ~~ .. ,.,_ =·· ... ''" -··-""' lllEF LY IN EDUCATION Group honors Vanguard University president Dempster received the award Mar. 1 in honor of bis strong leadership in guiding Vanguard during a period of unprecedent- ed growth and ~ion. Munay Dempster, president of Van· guard University, hu been named the 2002 "Orange County Manager of the Year• by the Orange Coast Chapter of the Society for the Advancement of Management. The society annually recognizes busi- ness leitdets who have <fisti:"gulshed lhe_m- selves through the practice of effective management slcills. Doily Pilot IN THE CLASSllOOM - ' DON LEACH I OAA.Y PILOT From left. UCI Graduate School of Management students Dobin Yim, Michael Goldberg and Beau Schindler present a marketing strategy to Frank and Paye Clarke of Educate the Children, an organlzatton that provides books and computers to schools in need. The business of.giving back Deirdre Newman D AILY PILOT S ince Frank and Faye Clarke founded Educate the Chil- dren -a nonprofit organiza- tion in Hunb.ngton Beach that donates books, computers and soft- ware to impoverished schools around the country -they have mostly relied on word of mouth,' media exposure and a dollop of divine intervention to market their company. Three UC/ students volunteer to provide a marketing strategy to a nonprofit group recommended an integrdted mar- keting plan that included enhanc- ing the Internet content and streamlining tl}.e donation process. "We have looked up into the stars and said, 'Heaven help us,'" joked Frank Clarke. Now the Clarkes are armed with a more earthly strategy that relies on both old-fashioned and high-tech efforts, courtesy of three UC Irvine business students from the Graduate School of Manage- ment. The collaboration enabled the company to receive bona fide mar- keting strategies while the stu- dents gave back to their comrnuni· SCHOOL LUNCH MINU The ~-Mtia IJnifl«J SchOOI Oistrict offers mMU chbices Md> rJ.y .i ...,,,.,,.. fat)' sd>ools. SfudMts ~~ tarlan MttM If . The v.trie and may I» 9ltMr a MJMt. Yndwldt or hot enttM. School lunc:M1 are S2 Ndl. ~'J whart bff,lg WV«J this WHlc: TODAY Munchable Lunch Salad with fruit yogurt or beef ravioli, crisp green ty. The school encourages students to work with nonprofit groups as part of its Social Responsibility Ini- tiative. "The main goal Is to provide students with a sense of personal and corporate responsibility to the community, H Director Shaheen Husain said. HThey need to be aware of this, so even when they go back and start working in a pri- vate, for-profit company, they can institute programs there for corpo- rate social responsibility." Students on the Social Responsi- bility Initiative committee visit class- es throughout the business school, letting students know what kind of nonprofit projects are available. Beau Schindler, Dobin Yun and Michael Goldberg chose to focus on Educate the Children for an assignment about marketing salad with ranch dressing, freshly biked Whole grain roll, choice of fruit juice and milk WEDNESDAY Munc:hlble lint\ Sited Of ctilc:bn ~ Wldwich on a bun, potatO roUnds. ctioa of fruit. choice of mllk THURSDAY Munchable Lunch Salad or tWo beef or veggie 50ft tacos with fettuce, strategies because of the chal- lenges it presented. "It's not your standard run-of- the-mill marketing plan for an American corporation," Schindler said. "It Is certainly unique, and I think the opportunity for an emo- tional reward was greater wtth th.ts plan than with a for-profit organi- zation." The students visited Educate the Children's headquarters in Huntington Beach and applied marketing strategies they had learned in professor Mary Gilly's class. "It's ve ry hard to do a lot with a little, H Goldberg said. "You can't tell a nonprofit to do a huge mar- keting campaign. You have to be extremely creative." Because of the company's limit- ed financial resources, the students cheese and salsa, baby carrots with ranch d ip, cranberry raisi ns, choice of milk fRIDAY Vegetarian health sandwich or cheese pizza, peas, choice of fruit, choke of milk MONDAY Munchabae Lunch Salad or nacho Cheese pretzel, baby carrots with The students presented the out- line of their marketing plan to the rest of Gilly's marketing class last week and are nqw wnting a formal plan. The Clarkes were delighted with the students' suggestions. "The concept of using the Web site as a marketing tool is fantasllc because we've had it for a long time and never used it for that," Frank Clarke said. "We're going to take the plan and run with it, hopefully for a touchdown.· The students also intenct to fol- low up with the Clarkes to help them implement their marketing plan and facilitate its success. • IN 1"E a.ASSROOM IS a weekly fH1ure in which Daily Pilot education writer Deirdre Newman visits a campus In the Newport-Mesa area and writes about her experience ranch dip, choice of fruit, choice of milk • The Munchable Lunch s.&ad c.onuins tossed greens, c:Mrry t~oes, etlleken and protein source such • cheese, uio- flower seeck, fruit yogurt. honey-<pasted peanuts and dressing. No child /J discrlmlnatwJ :p:inst ~ of race, ~x. color, natlona = :y:: disabillty. If It is beliewd f dtl. 1* discrlmlnar.d 191/mt writ. llrlmfdlar.ly to the secm.ry of ~rlcuttur., WaWng- tor\, oc 20250. ... I. IMIM, READERS HOJUNE right: No news stories. lllustrltlont. SURF AND SUN MC>naor tditorilll !Ntttt"' ~ (Ml) S7<Mll4 (949) 642-6086 P.9tltwellomet.com Record your commentJ •bout the herein an be rwproducld without WEATHER FORECAST ..... lllOllMI, Dally Pilot 0< news tlPi-writt~ petmifllon of~ owner be encountered later. ..... ~ The sun wlll shine In New-~MoMJSI fal.Slf;o••'*•-com ADDRESS port-Mesa today, though SURF 22 ... Our addr.,. is 3JO W. hy St., Cosu OmMtlon hfgM will stay just shy of 70. Most waves should be In Mesa, CA 92627. Offla hours are Overnight lows~ be in the the knff. to wtist-hlgh D..-..... ~·Friday. I JO am.· 5 p.m. The Times Orange County high 40s. 01IM.,... ......... Cl4ll S74.qll (IOO) 252·9141 range todey, though the • ~com COMECIJON$ ~. w.dntiday wlll also be Orange County Hulth Care sunny, though highs Will -..o .... It h tN "'lot's J)911cy 1D pte)lnptly CIMified ~ 642-5671 Agency contlnues1ts ~ .......... 11..ot ""'°""'' (Me) 514-<U)J COfT'e<t all "'°" of wbstance. Ofsp&jy (9497 642-4)21 netr the mld-70s. loWs will ~today~ertng ,.,,.. c.llllflllldl ... ~ be sl~tly warmer In the .... a... ,._. Giii (Mt) 57~23J. EdtoMI low . t e wai.r of urt..n ,..._,... .. """'* ' NeWs (949) W-5'80 runoff from~ n6ght's m .......... .: ~ 5pottl (Mt) 574-422.1 storm. ~s aooklng ,,. N*Wpott ~Mee Oelly News fall ., 14"4170 WWWnM.noN.QOV. ewn smaller, thougt:\ Thurs-........................ ,,.... ,._ (USIS-144-IOCJ> II pYb!IWd CWV. 5pottl Fu cMI) 65CM>170 d~~-· ,. .......... "'~ lffetlanct c.. ~ IOA11NG POMCAST £-melt:~""*'°"' .. ..., c..::S:::m ··' ...... .,.. IWIWl6I Ofllj .., .. Tt)e nont*1y winds wlll • Mllr'IOMCll ~.sw1ridli.0t9. mlllng tD The Tlmel Or-..~ lullr9 Office (Mt) W-4121 bloW 5 to 15 knots "' the (IDO) 252-11• 1. In ... outlldit of ............ .--, .. (Mt) u 1 ·7121 Inner Mt.ti this~ T1DIS ~ ......... PMU, ~...,-c..-.,.-......... , ..... ""' .,.....tothi ~ .... ~ wtth 2·foot Wawl and I ,... ....... .......... ..... ~._, ............. Nililllllllllr .... ~ ....... Mlt ... of s ,.._ Not l:J2 •.m. ........ ........ Ya ...... mudlwll=--· ................... ...... ,.,..~ ....... GUI.._ .__. 12'.17 p.m. Z.77f91t-6')iii111•1 -.......... ....,llOM*ITllt . ___ Oil .. __. ... 5:07 p.m. 2Alf,tlltlaiw ............... """"" 111111 blaW ""* .... ,..._ ......... =-... ---::•Mttu•Mll .-.c... .... t.A --°'''° ..... _ • . . More security in place at Big Canyon BRANCHING OUT • Newport's main water $Upp ly is under tighter control following the September terrorist attacks. year, but levels are back down to what they normally are this time of year,.. said Eldon David.son of the city's Public Works Department. June C.Q9r•nde DAllY PILOT NEWPORT BEACH -In response to the Sept. 11 ter- rorist attacks, city officials have added a number of security measures at Big Canyon Reservoir. "We don't like to publld.ze the specifics of what's been done there, but, absOlutely, !-here are some greatly increased security mea- sures,• City Manager Homt!r filudau said. "Based upon those measures, we have caught some people who have gamed unauthorized access to the area.• Bludau said the people caught in the restricted area near the reservoir were skateboarders and that there was no indication that the intruders posed any thr~at to public safety. Further details of the incident were not available. "It's important people know that we're doing some- thing to protect it,• said City CoWicilman John Heffernan, whose district includes the reseivoir area. The heightened security ,measure11 coincide with a midge fly larvae infestation that closed the reseivoir in late February. After some residents reported seeing what appeared to be tiny, translucent worms 1n their tap water and toilets, the oty stopped all water service from the r~servoir. After treating the w'ater with extra chlorine and with copper sul- fate, which kills the algae on which the flies feed, the reservoir was put back to use on March 7. "They're not 100% gone, they never are this time of Heffernan said such natur- al hazards are just one more re~on to press for further protections of the reservoir, which is the city's main source of water. Newport Beach officials are seeking federal funds to help cover the cost of a large plastic cover for the reservoir. The cover is estqnated to cost between $4 million and $5 million. City officials have asked California Sens. Bar- bara Boxer and Dianne Fein- stein, as well as Rep. Chris Cox, to help the city secure the funding for the cover. The 200-gallon reservolf supplies 100% of Newport Beach's water during the \\Ut- ter months and about 75% during the summer, when increased demand requires the city to import water from local water agencies. City rethinks rent hikes at Marinapark • Whether increases to the peninsula's market value are fair is under consideration. June Casagrande DAJLY PILOT NEWPORT BEACH - City officials are reconsider- ing a plan to raise Marina- pa.rk residents' rents after an expert weighed in that a pro- posed property appraisal would be like comparing apples and oranges. City Council members agreed March 12 to hire appraisers to detennlne a fair monthly rent on the 56 mobile home park lots, where leases have just expired. But one appraiser, working on behalf of the residents, has written to the city to argue that appraisals don't apply because the city is offering only a one-year lease with two one-year extension options. "Comparing their rents to other mobile home parks really isn't fair.· said Bill Han- son, an appraiser who wrote to city officials last week on the Marinapark residents' behalf. "In an appraisal, we try to measure how things would do on the open market, but the terms of that lease are not measurable on open mar- ket because it's just a one- year lease." He described the proposed lease extension as similar to a "lease holdover." Such situa- tions, he said, are usually decided by negotiation between the landlord and tenants and not by property appraisals. Assistant Ci~y Manager Dave Kiff said he is reconsid- ering whether hiring more appraisers would be the best way to resolve the situation. "(Thef council decided to have a third-party appraise~ look at it, and now one appraiser has," said Ki.ff, not- ing that the city has often hired Hanson to do appraisals. ·we have to decide now whether to go ahead and hire more apprais- ers or bring this back to the City Council to ask if they want to reconsider.• The mobile home park residents' lease expired last week. C ity officials have advocated extend.ing their stay for a short time to allow for the possibility of a 147- room luxury resort to be built there by Sutherland Talia Hospitality. The mobile home park residents' origi- nal lease on the city-owned property includes a provision tbat the residents would vacate one day to allow the city to put the land to some public use. The city has proposed a one-year lease extension that would bring the rents to mar- ket rates, comparable with those at nearby mobile home parks. This would roughly double most Marinapark rents, bringing the $1 ,362-a- month lots up to $2,300 and the $925 lots up to $1,950. 1Wo years ago, residents offered to begin paying mar- ket rates in return for a long- term lease. But they have protested the city's proposal to sharply increase thelf rents without a long-term lease, call- ing it unfair and unrealistlc. "Those rates would be fair if you were talking about a longer-term situation,• Han- son said. •But in this case, they don't a pply.· 115~ Mattress Outlet Store BRAND NEW· COSMETICALLY IMPERFECT Ger the Best tor Less! ' I . ' ~. 3165 Harbor Blvd. ..., Costa Mesa • 0. Block South o( .05 rwy • • • • (714) 545-7168 TOOAY SHE lOST HU f1RST TOOTH. TOMOHOW SHE'll BE mDl•G OEITAl SCHtlOl. ._ __________________ _ l~ dw Sct.olan O'°'<r S29 Collqr S..uip "-· Onr d.y "°" ~~-thrm ~· thr '"ll'IJ 1hr nui J.y dwv'11t _.. 10 c.~ thr trurtd Tlw\ ..tiy •'• nr\a too rarty ro""""' ~ '" mr. «~ Nucad'I AnJ dw Sddm CliiocT .. Oi&lrvr S."'""' l'bn can rub \'V ~ ~ Wedi nlulMr tu~ tlnuh1liity in.I rn-....W .,. ... ., ..... ~hul11ri. Ouci-an hrlr 11\otM Y'V c+vjJ'.~ '1t .--canr nur. Telln ... Cll&illm~ ~ Pta'hrt llrn•• At 1141) 7U-M83. ~SMmt~ ,, __ ..,..,, ,.._ ..-..... ,_,,.,_ 1ii...i.--, .. -........ ---.. ~{ ....................... ~" .. """-'--'n.-.-•'-' ...... • --"' .. ,,_ ..................... -s.a.-~ """-' .... -.................. i.,.I ....... ,,._ ....... ,_ ... -.&I.II i...i ........ -... ... ....i-~ St ...... (~ .... -· ... "' iw.-.... """"" "'" ~ .... ......, ... ........,J -"(» ...... w.... s..th"'"'" Inc C~I ~..._ ,_.. ......... fM ..,...,.. NASO IPC GRAND OPENING Lunch • Dinner • Sunday Brunch • Steak • Seafo6d • Scltads •Hamburgers Join Us For BrunctJ Tuesday, Morch 19. 2002 S Third· grader Sculett Fatlon.t, left. Joins her Eutbluff Elemen· tuy School clus- mates ln cheddng o.ut a new tree planted at her ..-hool In cele- bration of Arbor Day. WE DO THINGS RIGHT! OUR MEALS ARE A TRIP TO MEXICO . Ml CASA MEXICAN RESTAURANT -w, • . "OUR SIZE IS THE RIGHT s1z1· -=-• A MEAT PAmE SMOTHERED WITH •._.,._ ,. OUR Ml CASA CHILI" BEANS. 296 E. 17TH ST. COSTA MESA · 949·645-7626 "Over 50 Years of fine Quality" All Types of Window Treatments • Valances & Cornice Boxes • Roman Shades • Blinds • Venicals •Shutters • Bedspreads Complimmt.ary Conndutio11 i11 Yo11r Hnu 2()() / , /c., 1 ;, •' · I '·· ._'\ '. 1 c.~1 ;-1 : 1/~~ DESIGN CENTER Factory & Showroom 1998 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa (949)642-8400 POLICE FILES COSTl MISA • HARllOlt IMJULIVARD: someone under the Influence and In posseulon of parepher- nalla was reported In the 3200 block at 12:04 a.m. ~ay. • QNTElt S1Rlft A·dlst\Jf· bance was reported In the 700 block at 12:041.m. Sunday. •EAST 17nt ~A com- mercial burglary was reported In the 400 block at 7:11 a.m. Sunday. • CAHAICY DRIVE: A vehkle burglary was reported In the 2600 block at 8:09 a.m. Sund~. • VICTORIA AVENUE: Lewd conduct was reported In the 700 block at 10:28 a.m. Sunday. • MERRIMAC WAY: Vandalism was reported In the 400 block at 11 :12 a.m. Sunday. VERDICT CONTINUED FROM 1 only time I'll ever make the pages of that publication. I also met Marty Murphy, Dick Shaw a nd the Interlandi twins. I can never tell them apart, but my friend Chuck Master~ insisted he could. It was not surprising that Chuck would know the car- toorusts. He had a wonderful capacity to meet and know mterestmg people, and he liked to dnnk, so he fit right m. Chuck was my favorite dnnk- mg companion wttil he died, and not even the approach of death could bow him. At my last meeting wtth tum, he and I shared a ldSl drink us111g those bendable hospital straws. Despite that. I'm not sure that Chuck could really tell the lnterlandis apart. I nev- er put tum to the test. The cartoonists used to meet at a certain bar in Lagu- na Beach. l would identUy the bar except that they kept changing bars and if I tried to identify them all, it would be simply a directory of bars. Why these people became cartoonists I haven't the fog- giest idea, but I must say the world is immensely better off for having them here. They almost invariably have an iconoclastic look on We that lets them detect the foibles and hypocrisies of daily life. ~ether they pay their bills on time or cheat on their W1VeS r don't know, but I've never met a stupid cartoorust. Some wimps, I suppose, but never one who was petty or disagreeable. The cartoonists I've met are loyal to their friends, which I consider a big plus on the calendar of human character, and I feel grateful to Virgil Partch for introducing them to me. • ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge. His column runs Tuesdays. •COSTA MESA~ Ni assault was reported In tl)e 200 bfodc It 10:28 p.m. Sunday. NEWPORT IUCH • MACAlmtUR IOUUVAllD: A trespasser was reported near the lntersectloo of Vllagglo at 3:58a.m. • ~ S1REFt. A case of Indecent ex~e was report· ed at '6:46 a.m. nNr the Inter· section of Seashore Drive. • Sl!ACltEST DltNE: A vehlde burglary was repo(ted at 7:52 a.m. In the 1500 block. • SAUSAUIO DRIVE:" vet\1· de burglary was reported at 7:30 a.m. In tfle.-3500 blodc. • MACAlmtUR CX>UWt. A bur- j11aty was reported at a business 1n the 4600 block at 11 :09 a.m. YEARBOOK CONTINUED FROM 1 a chance to be noticed for an art scholarship. But her joy quickly dis- solved when the award was taken away from her alter school officials discovered th~t a student on the year- book staff had tampered with the voting. The problem started earli- er this month on the day the winners of the Senior Superlatives were announced. While many of the categories highlight innate characteristics, such as best eyes or best hair, the most artistic title ca:"'ies the cachet of actually haVing tal- ent. ·It's like something you can put on your resume,• Brown said. •Private col- leges search for that talent. It's s~melhing you can brag about.• Brown, who has had a pe nchant for art since she was 2, said she was extreme- ly proud when she found out she had been chosen. But so many seniors were shocked by the winners' names that the uproar com- pelled school officials to investigate the voting tally. And unlike an earlier con- troversy at the school this year in which the judging of cheerleader tryouts was eventually deemed fair, the checking turned up surpris- ing results. One of the girls on the yearbook staff admitted she had chosen the winners her- self when she took the votes home to count. The girl, whose name has not been publicly disclosed, sent a let- ter of apology to Brown and the other winners and a new vote was taken. This time the voting was monitored by faculty, and Brown's name was no longer synonymous with ·most FREE Spring Spruce Up ..,,,.._ We will steam out the braccJcr and cue, polish the cry ta.I and electronically check for the ac.curacy of time, while you wait (fucsday through Satwday). If you wish, you may call fur an appointment for this FREE WATCH SERVICE. Offer good through monch or April. CHARLES H. BARR ............ ._z_ ~zcw:ft¥; .......... -Doily Pllot PUILIC Sl,ETY BRIEFLY IN THE NEWS Warning si~ posted near Newport Pier return to lowered levels. That could take as long as 72 b.ours . The spill was caused by a blocked private sewage tine at Ruby's Restau- rant, agency officWS said. The spill occurred Monday morning after the restaurant's pump system failed. The Orange County Health Care Agency posted a handtul of warning slgns 150 feet from the Newport Pier in both directions on Sun<;tay. Sewage spill closes 2 sections of beach Ruby's closed its doors ~onday after the spill. The Health Care Agency also The agency announced the posting at 2:30 p.m. Sunday, after detecting · heightened levels of bacteria in the water near the pier. The Orange County Health Care Agency closed two sections of beach Monday, after raw sewage 'spills in Corona del Mar and Balboa Peninsu- closed 300 feet of beach at Cameo Shores after about 200 gallons of raw sewage spilled into the ocean. The spill occurred after a clogged line caused an overflow at the city's sew~ge eollection system. The spill occurred at 187 Shoreclilf Drive. la. · Local officials and environmental- ists have suspected for some time that a plume of treated sewage.. releasecL into the ocean by the Orange County Sanitation District is depo!Jting the bacteria in the water near the pier. The two areas will be closed to swimmingr swfing and diving for at least three days. The agency closed about 1',000 feet up the coast and down the coast from the Balboa Pier after 500 gallons of raw sewage spilled into the water. City vacuum trucks recovered about 50 gallons of the spilled waste. The agency announced the clo- sures at 1 :30 p.m. Monday. Swimmers are advised to stay out of the water until bacteria levels artistic.• While other stu- dents were nonchalant about losing their Superla- tive status, Brown took the loss to heart as a personal rejection of her talent. . "Amanda's a really spe- cial kid. She's had a hard time fitting in. To be acknowledged for her art was like finally being noticed,• said Corrie Rausch, Brown's special education teacher. "It was the wrong kid for it to hap- pen to. For others, it just rolled off their backs.• Reeling from the slight, Brown and her mother con- fronted school officials and demanded that Brown's artistic talent be recognized. Assistant Pnnc1pal David Peterson offered to rectify the situation by giving her a special award certificate and plaque and hanging her drawings up in the school's main office. "(Amanda Brown) is a very good artist,• Peterson said. "I had the chance to look at sqme of her artwork and wanted lo acknowledge her ability." Peterson said he didn't know how the school would handle the situation if other students who had won in the first voting, but not the sec· ond, complained. But to prevent the voting from being manipulated in the future, Janine Pon, the staff advisor for the year- book, said students would no longer be allowed to count the Senior Superlative votes. For Brown, the chance to have her artwork displayed at the school is artistic jus- tice. •It makes me feel really nattered. Hopefully my art- work will inspire other peo- ple,· she said. • DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers edu- cation. She may be reached at (949) 574-4221 or by e-mail at deirdre.newmanOlatlmes.com. MEASUREW CONTINUED FROM 1 "unconstitutional, invalid and unenforceable.• The anti-airport measure passed March 5 with a 58% countywide approval. The airport authority's board endorsed the lawsuit at a meeting Wednesday. "We're still alive," Costa Mesa Councilman Chris Steel said about the prospects for an airport at the base. "We're still in the game, and we're somewhat optimistic" about the legal challenge. Steel is Costa Mesa's rep- resentative on. the airport authority's 14-member board. The authority filed the lawsuit in Orange County Superior Court on Monday. Joining the lawsutt are the Airport Working Group, Citi- zens for Jobs and the Econo- my, Garden Grove and Tom Naughton, who is the work- ing group's president. Nine North County cities, mcluding Costa Mesa, voted to support the move at Wednesday's meeting. New- port Beach Councilman Gary Proctor, who represents his city on the panel, was absent. Four other cities -Buena Park, Placentia, Seal Beach and Yorba Linda -also did TEXAS CONTINUED FROM 1 with the goal of raising more than $1,000. The fund-raiser enables the students to attain an authentic culinary experi- ence while the company con- tributes to the community. "It's wonderful,• said Francesca, a sophomore. "It gives us a great opportunity to get out into the real world before we're allowed to, and Celestino's quality MEATS l'rrnhu t' • St·,ilood • l>t'li Snvi111 O>slA Mtu flll1'i/.ia for '1M' 30 yum French Apple Stuffed Celestino's Frozen Turkey Pork chops or Beef Meatloaf Btkt 350· t kr. BW rrom 375' nra. s ~b. s2~1>. 1/2 umon Marinated CbJcken Celestilo's Famous ltlli11 Subs Citrus PIJ>!YI Marjpatecf Flsb Kabobs 55~b. Seedless Gra~ Red or Green not attend. The airport authority "has been on record that El Toro is a regional asset, and that this lawsuit is necessary to protect the interests of our con- stituents,• Cypress Mayor Linda Sondhi said. The suit challenges Mea- sure W, which invalidated 1994's Measure A, on several legal grounds. Measure A ini- tially installed aviation zon- ing at the base. But Measure W paves the way for the county to develop a plan lor the 4,700-acre base that would include a large amount of open space. The county has been pushing. since 1994, to bwld an airport at the base. Measure W proponents satd the challenge smacked of desperabon from airport supporters. "It's a desperate last chance,• said Len Kranser, the initiative's spokesman. "They're trymg to do in court what they couldn't do at the ballot box. They're trying to overturn the will of the peo· ple.• The lawsuit challenging Measure W claims the initia- tive is unconstitutional because base reuse decisions cannot legally be made by voters, said Fred Woocher, a coauthor of the lawsuit Woocher cited a 1996 bill it helps me understand bow hard people m restaurants work to get food to its best quality.· While the brick-and-mor- tar restaurant tS new, the company has been provid- ing catering services for the past 10 years and has donat- ed culinary equipment to Newport Harbor High 111 the past, said Tonya Roemmer, the restaurant's sales direc- tor. Shurley's wife, Sandy, is also a graduate of the school. Earlier this month, the students toured the restau- rant, which sells barbecu~ beef brisket, smoked pork ribs and a variety of other barbecue fare. Every afternoon this week, three or four students will help out in the kitchen and pass out fliers to nelgh- bonng businesses to spread the word about the fund- ral.sing. Sophomore Evangeline Airth said most of the busi- nesses ln the vicinity have been receptive, including an employee of La Salsa, who said he would welcome a change ln his routine. Janet Dukes, the school's food and culinary arts teacher, said she is grateful for the Shur- leys' generosity. • 1 think it's wonderful that a business would help support our students,• Dukes said. •For (Clayton) not Just to train the students, but to benefit our program and help them raise money -not a lot of busines es w1ll do that.• The funds raised will be Used to.sponsor the stu- dents' trip to cullnary acade- mies in San Francisco and Napa in April. sponsored by former Assem· bly Speaker Curt Pringle that named the Board of Supervl· sors as the entity empowered to drive the base reuse process. Of course, the Department of Defense has also named the county the formal planner for the federally owned land. But, on March 6 -the day after the election -the Navy signaled its plans to sell off parcels of the base to lhe highest bidder. The lawsuit also chdl- lenges Measure W as "vague and deceptive,• Garden Grove Councilman Mark Rosen said in a statement. The passage of the irutla· tive won't result in a Great Park, Woocher said, and mdy even lead to commerc1al development. ·we think they crafted a document which IS not legdl· ly sustamable, • Woocher said, "but is a document which was intended lo get people to vote for someUung they aren't going to get.· Newport Beach has yet to sign onto the lawsuit. Mayor Tod Ridgeway could not be reached Monday. • PAUL QJNTON covers the envi· ronment and John Wayne Airport He may be reached at (949) 764- 4330 or by e-mail at paul.clmtonOlati~s.com. ·we started planrung a grand operung party, then thought 1l would be ruce to spend the money helping kids to go to the culinary academies," Roemmer srud • DEllU>ftE NEWMAN covers edu- cation. She may be reached at (949) 574-4221 or by e-mail at deirdre.newmanOlatfmes.com. • • ·.,· .... "-~ Daily Pilot .. ... """"' ~· -----:---~-------------.:,__-------------------=1i=~~~ =.;';;:;:.·l"~'°'..:_di_. 1~9·::;;:~_!':V~_e~ ... ,. ... t AROUND TOWN •.Send QOUND TOWN Items to the o.;1y Pilot 330 W. Bay St,, Costa MeM, cA 92627; by fax to (949) 6otM 170; or by call· Ing (949) 574-098. Include the time, date and locatJon of the ewnt. •well • • con-tact phone number. A complete listing Ii available at www.dalfypllotcom. IODAY shears, will be provided. Everyone ii e~ to participate. Registra- tion ts $45, Preregistration ·15 required. The library is at 2~7 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. (949) 673-2261. TM Sierra Club wtll hold a meettng at 7:30 p.m. at 13'5 Park. Ave., Cos- ta Mesa. (949) ~5-6621. SATURDAY A collaborattve.ettort to restore tbe Newport Bay Nature Preserve will be held from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Peter and Mary Muth Interpretive Center in Newport Beach. The event, hosted by Orange County Harbors, Beaches and Parks, along with Newport Bay Naturalists and Friends, will give in~vidua.ls a chance to replant native bay fiow- Commerdal Ilea! Estate Women of Orange County will host •Capital Markets: Overview for 2002 • at the Pacific Club. The event will include presentations by various panelists. Registratibn will begin at 11 :30 a.m., followed by lunch at 11 :45 a.m. The program is scheduled from noon to 1 p.m and is open to the public. The fee is $45 per person, or $35 for members. A $10 fee will be added for tickets purchased at the door. The Pacific Club is at 4110 MacArthur Blvd., Newport Beach. (949) 475-7600 or www.crew-<>e.org. THURSDAY ers and learn its wildlife. The event is free and lunch will be provided. A 00-mlnute breakfast boost, host-Participants should meet in the ed by the Costa Mesa Chamber of parking lot of the center, 2301 Uni- Commerce, will be held from 7 to varsity Drive, Newport Beach. (714) 8:45 a.m. at the-Costa Mesa Coun-973-6829. trY Club. Tickets are $17, or $12 if ' prepaid. The club is at 1701 Golf 1be Service Corps of Retired Exec· Course Drive, Costa Mesa. (714) utlves will present a workshop 885-9090. introducing tactics for making e- Orange Coast College's 18th annu- al High School Dance Day will be held from 8 a.m. to 1 :30 p.m. at 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. More than 225 Orange County high school students and their fao- ulty advisors are expected to attend. (714) 432-5506. A cooking class tilled "The Great American Meat Out• will take place from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. in the patio cafe of Mother's Market. 225 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. $15. Reser- vations required. (800) 595-MOMS. The Newport Harbor Orchid Soci- ety will have its 18th annual Orchid Piant Auction from 7 to 10:30 p .m. at the Neighborhood Community Center, 1845 Park Ave., Costa Mesa. Free. (714) 647-7702, (949) 642-4148 or www.nhos.oig. WEDNESDAY The Newport Beach Newcomers will tour the Bowers Museum. Call to reserve a ticket and find out when and where to meet. (949) 644-4032 or (949) 854-4501. The Sherman Library & Gardens will present a class on orchard flo- ral design at 9 a.m. The class will teach floral arranging using an unusual design technique that includes fruits and vegetables. All materials, except for pruning 'lbe Newport Beach Chamber of Commerce will host the 31st annu- al police appreciation breakfast at 7:30 a.m. at the Sutton Place Hotel, 4500 MacArthur Blvd., Newport Beach. Call to make a reservation or be table sponsor. (949) 729-4400. The Newport Hills Garden Club's regular monthly meeting will take place at 9:30 a.m. in the Harbor View Clubhouse, 1900 Port Carlow Place, Newport Beach. Orchid expert Bill Austin will speak on how to nurture orchids for repeat blooms and care for both indoor and outdoor varieties. (949) 640- 1889. Environmental Nature Center founder Robert House will lead a walk beginning at noon at the nature center office, 1601 E. 16th St., Newport Beach. Free, bring a sack lunch. The walk will take about one hour. (949) 645-8489 A free seminar on chronic fatigue syndrome, or fribromyaliga. will be offered from 6:30 to 8 p.m. in the patio cafe of Mother's Market, 225 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. Reserva- bons required. (800) 595-MOMS. FRIDAY An introduction to Orange Coast College's Planetarium titled ·A Family Night at the Planetanum: Getting to Know Your Sky" will be held at 7:30 p.m. in the school's planetarium, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. $10, $1 for children 12 and younger. (714) 432-5880 or www.occtickets.com. ·t-SAVEALIFE commerce successful for small businesses from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at National l)niversity. The workshop is $25, which includes materials, and a $5 discount applies for those who have prepaid. Participants may bring a business associate along for free. The university is at 3390 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. (714) 550-7369. A swing and ballroom dance work- shop will be held from 2 to 3:30 p.m. for beginners and 4 to 5:30 p.m. for intermediate dancers at 3100 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. $20 per person. (714) 964- 3354. dance.netfirms.com. MARCH 26 A free semlnar tilled "A New and Different Look at Cleansin9" will take place from 6:36 to 8 p.m. in the- patio cafe of Mother's Market, 225 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. Reserva- tions required. (800) 595-MOMS. MARCH 27 The third annual Small Business Conference and Expo held by Orange Coast College will run from 7:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m . Co- sponsored by local chambers of commerce and small-business orgaruzations, this year's )confer- ence, "The Dynamics of Branding. Marketing and Sales,• is geared toward small-business owners who want to build an identity, refocus marketing strategy, set new mar- keting goals and objecbves, and expand their business. The expo will be held in OCC's Student Cen- :; SPONSOR A PET ••• I' For Only $19 You Can Help. Arc you an animal lover? Herc's a great way to express it. Sponsor a pct photo on our special "Save a Life" page publishing on Thursday, April 25, 2002. • • Your sponsorship will secure a space for a photo of a pet who is available for adoption and needs a good home. This special page has saved hundreds of lives all over the state, thanks to people like you! Be a part of saving a life and feel great about doing it. This page is presented in conjunction with local animal shelters and Newport Beach Animal Conuol Services. For just $19, you can add your own special thoughts under the pet's photo. It will display your name as the sponsor of this pct, or you may include a loving memory of one of your own cherished furry friends. SAVE A LIFE SPONSOR FORM Name·~---------------------.--...-.--------------Add.n:u: . .-;.. _ _;....;..;._ __________________ --'----'--------------- Cicy: Seate ... : ____ ....__.,,,_,Zip-· ------------------ Credit Cardi· Exp-· -------- Signature:;..· __ .:.....__:....-. _____ ....._--'...;_.,..-,--.-----~--- Phonc (oprion~)~· _;,.__,.-.;.... ______ .......;.. ______ ~--..~----...._~ For check. make payable ro: Daily Pilot Text to apP!M in 'Pl" below phoro, 20 Characters or leis. Choose One: Cl In ~memory 01----~----...:-;..__,,_,.__ _______ _ a~~~-----~--~----------_..___.._ Mail dUt Conn with your dlCCk or credit canl information co: S.W A Uk, % Daily Pilot, P.O. Boa 1560, Colla Maa. CA 91.IJ27 ter, 2101 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Advanced registration is $49 and includes continental brealdas.t, conference materials and parking. Registration is $79. (714) -432-5880, Bxt. 1. lbe Cotta Mesa Cbamber of Com- merce will host a business after- hours mixer at 7:30 p..a:h. ~t Z'Tejas Southwest Grill. The event is StO, or free for members. The restaurant is at 3333 Bristol St, South Coast Plaza. (714) 885-9090. Chlroprador John Kokooas and his staff will host a free Pressure Point Massage Workshop at 6:30 p.m. at Kokonas' office, 901 Dover Drive, Suite 234, Newport Beach'. The workshop will teach how to allevi- ate painful tender points in muscles that cause stress, headaches and muscle tightness. Bringing a part- ner is encouraged. Call for reserva- tions. (949) 650-6500. MARCH 28 A lecture on the pulmonary eHects of lung cancer and treatment will take place from 2 to 3:3~.m. The lecture will be hosted by the Hoag Cancer Center and will be con- ducted by a physician. Free. No registration required. The lecture will be in Conference Room A of the center at 1 Hoag Drive, New- port Beach. (949) 760-2103. The Newport Beach Chamber of Commerce will host a business after-hours networking event from 5 to 7 p.m. at the Clubhouse Restau- . .rant •. .Sm.uh..Coast.PJ.aza. 3333 Bristol St., Costa Mesa. (949) 729-4400 or www.newportbeach.com. Experts on both sides of the death penalty will meet for a symposium from 8:45 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. at the Irvine Barclay Theatre, -4242 Cam- pus Drive, Irvine. Speakers will include a U.S. Circuit Court Judge. a Los Angeles County chief deputy district attorney and pro- fessors of law, criminology, psy- chology, drama and media. $25, mcludes box lunch, and must be purchased in advance. $30 for a film screening or ·Dead Man Walking" and question-and· answer session with a symposium panel March 29 in Crystal Cove Auditorium of the student center across from Barclay Theatre. (949) 824-8294. Briefly Jn THE 11EWS Newport Beach posts scooter rules ln ~ to resident ~: tions abOut motor scooters, the • city has posted scooter rules on . 1ts Web site, www.city.newport- beach.ca.Ulll. lbe information, located under the "Current News" pull-down menu from the main page, includes all dty regu- lations governing motorized scooters. For example, scooter users must be 16 years of age, wear a bicycle helmet and ride on a street next to the right curb, or in a bike lane. ·we were getting a· lot of requests about scooters, and our Web site is the easiest, most convenient way to get the infor- mation out to as many people as possible.· Newport Beach Police Department Sgt. Steve Shulman said. UC Irvine hires genetics expert A world-renowned genebost has 1omed the faculty at UC lrvme. Douglas Wallace. who founded the held or human mitochondridl genetics with col- leagues m the 1970s, will estab- lish the Center for Molecular and Mitochondrial Medicine and Genetics J;iP w.ijl hold .a 1ront apnomt. menl m the Department of Ecol-· ogy and Evolutionary Biology in the School of Biological Sci- ences and the Department of Biological Cherrustry m the Col- lege of Medlcme. MJtochondna are the power plants or cells and have their own DNA, which lS inherited only from the mother. In his research, Wallace has shown that defects m nulochondnal genes are ma1or contnbutors to degenerabve diseases. cancer and agmg His work on using DNA vari- ation to reconstruct anoen:t human history has been a foun- dabon of the new held of mole- cular anthropology and is hailed as a sigruhcant achievement in paleoanthropology. . 'COMMUNITY ...... I I I --- Tuesday,· March 19, 2002 ·MAILBAG Keep intelligent design out of schools T his is ln response to a Community Commen- tary by Rick Rainey ("Pilot columnist too accept- ing of evolution," Feb. 26). If it gives Rainey comfort to believe in a busy God facilely creating planet Earth, as well as the millions upon millions otpresent and ~ Q'8atures in his celes- tial' la ts, then' so be il Every known culture and dviliza · tion has sought some answers to the great ques- tions of whence we came and whithet we go. U Ralney is really interest- ed in creation mythology, then he should know that the Old Testament's version is among the least interesting, inventive and exciting of the genre. · The enormous body of creation mythology IS full of fascinating tales and imagery. It deserves research for eer enjoyment, if noth-im} . However, to attempt to ' interweave the gossamer of leaps of faith fa six-day cre- ation, a 60,000-year-old Earth, humans in the image of God, etc.) with hard, scien- tific facts is an exerdse in futility. • Pund religi.Qus idfools. Publish anti-~blution tracts. Preach your biblical mytholo- gy from the pulpit, from the street comer and from the Internet. But, please, do not attempt to have that ancient mythology forced upon Cali- fornia's public school stu- dents. The world is confusi{lg enough and daunting enough already without deliberately turning out citi· fens whose Vl~S Ofllfe on Earth will be viewed with amused contempt outside the shelter of family and parish. I believe, wholeheartedly, in the freedom of religion, and I believe inalterably in our freedom from religion. That is the American way. WALLACE W. WOOD Costa Mesa Intelligent design may be proven yet The chattering classes are at it again: two letters on March 5 (Readers Respond, •Evolution wUis over a cou- ple readers"). And the same morning's Los Angeles Times reports on a quaint religious sect in Canada that preaches that "scientists from another planet created all We on Earth .• Now there's a revelabon. Whereas Newport-Mesa trustee Wendy Leece has heretofore only alluded to an lntellig~nt designer, the Canad.rans have outed him/her/them. I know how tempting it is to wrtte off designer creation as smoke and mirrors, but that's going too far. Wholly smoke says it all. .. DICK LEWIS Balboa Island In classrooms only teaching matters A!& best teacher of the year awards go, the Pilot's con- tention that best teachers sbo\ild be about best teaCh- 1Dg is right on target (Editori- al, "Teacher of the year should be about teaChing," March 10). As the 1998 winner of such an award in my own two-collego di lrkl, 1 am con- ttently reminded thnt our .ttorts to be great tcochtn must be et the heart of ell we do. At lmportaal u ac.deudc freedom may be, nothing II more Important than hbw we engage our m.ldentl -wttH lmqw~ politM energy met mtbullMm. ID tbe Vital Wllll llltlllltlie ''~ ..... lag ......... LD IRllllllM,_ ,._,,.. . 'We intend to keep our campuses sale ancJ will do everything in our power to ensure that happens.' -Newport-M esa UnJfied school ~rd trustee Jim ferrymM on the i:fistrlct's decision last week to expel three students for possessing a sawed-off bat. chair> and pocket knife Daily Pilot . Standardized testing can appeal to students ... A s we enter a new era of civilization and begin to undergo the mass quantifi- cation of life itself, everything must be represented in tidy little numbers. The goal ls no different in regard to public schooling, and what better way to tally up the intelligence of students and teach- ing abilities of instructors than good old standardi~ed testing? Give all students in a state the same test so you can gauge, com .. pare and, ultimately, judge their performances on a fair and equal basis. However, in its simplicity lies its complexity. The chief concern with stan- dardized testing is, of course, apa- thy. So, measures must be taken to ensure that teachers and stu- dents alike try their hardest for such an immeasurably important event. Unfortunately, laws have been creat(!d to avert negative reinforcement, so we're left with an incentive sys- tem. Methods such as funding, funding and funding have been devised to keep fhe admin- istrations in line. Money is infi- nitely important Matt M edith to the schools. In er fact, witb just a couple million more dollars, we couJd probably run the schools in the absence of faculty. Only then would the pin- nacle of human development be reached. But what about the students? After all, we're the ones who take the tests. What's in it for us? Absolutely nothing. Do you think we could give a flying J;ioot whether our school gets an extra $10,000? It's not like we see any of the money. We all know that mil- lion-dollar grants go toward com- puters that cost more than small Japanese cars, as anonymous Swiss bank accounts mysteriously grow larger and larger. So, we need inc;entives. Creative, appeal· ing incentives. Airline miles, life- time supplies of pudding, a spot on the •Real World" after gradua- tion, tickets to Britney Spears' concerts, a job at Starbucks - things that high school students can relate to. But all of these cost valuable dollars. Thus, the question remains: What bas absolutely no practical purpose or tangible meaning. to students, yet interests them nonetheless? For those of you who said independent thought, kudos. After years of public schooling, it should be clear to students that independent thought has no place in the •real• world, yet we are still fascinated by its poetic beau- ty. Therefore, if the need for inde- pendent thought was somehow implemented into these tests as a clever ploy, dimwitted teens would be fooled Into having some interest in the test. The graders could, of course, instantly throw away the questions that require thinking -better yet, bum them, in case ideas were to spread -for the mere existence of those .ques- tions woUld accomplish tBe task. Students would attack the tests with vigor and excitement, scores would be high, and the govern- ment would award the districts with funding, funding and per- haps funding. Llfe would be fur- ther quantified, and therefore more meaningful. And if we're lucky, we might get some funding out of it. •MATT MEREDmf is a Newport Harbof High School senior ~ columns will appear occasionally in the Community Forum section. READERS RESPOND FU PHOTO I OAl.V Pl.OT A skateboarder catches alr u be p racUces near the beach in Newport Beach. Residents urge skate park construction AT ISSUE: Costa Mesa has built a mobile skate park for skateboarders to use. This is in response to (Readers Respond, March 12) "Residents push for places to skate." We really wish th~re was a p'8ce closer than Irvine or Huntington Beach to tAke our boys. We stumbled upon the Irvine skate park off Walnut Avenue last month during soccer p1ayoffs, and we'v.e been back there at least eight times. It's perlect. They have rental gear available, supeMsioD and a fenced skate area with a variety of rails, bowls, etc., for all levels of skaters. And it's for those that Roller blade as well as skatebOard. I voiced my opinkn through the Daily Pilot in Feb. 6, 2001, (Mailbag, ·Newport-Mesa needs skate park-or two") ond it seems that another year bas gone by witbout anything ~ttve Mppen· 1ng oo this subject for tbo&e that enjoy this •sport.• I would like fo everyone to have the oppor- tunity to skate within their own dty. A skate park seems like the only solution for what the dcy seems to imply as destructive behavior. ~ far as the Newport-Mesa Unlfled School District being involVed. one suggestion ~ht be to sen the ifnall paroeJ Of Jiild"tliat they own near 16th Street and Whittier Avenue to New- port Beech. ilDd build a skate perk and greens for aD to enjoy. This could be managed by the · Para and Recreation Department. Or how abOut the vacant land that parks and ret119tion 8cquired along COMt ~ey just IOutb of Superior Avmuef Just bow many gens • atkD are gc?lng to cantinLle to be benlMd and ••btet.d for enjoytng the ·~ ~ New,pOlt Jeedi ~-MMa kJdl ......... ..i: ... :.: .. .:=:.. .......... .... ......... tadm. .... .... .. ,................... .. .... ......... ' Poul James Baldwin COMMUNITY COMMENTARY Educatioii needs to be . more worldly A recent 28-nation civics survey has found that half the students had no grasp of democracy, lacked clarity about the Constitution, elections, voting systems or the role of groups like trade unions. This is what the newspaper The Australian report- ed about its country's students on March 6. U this report was describing stu- dents in the United States, California or Newport Beach, then they would have added that the students were deficient In geography and foreign languages. I challenge anyone to go by one of our high schools and ask a typical student where Slovakia or Uruguay is. Or what the official lan- guege of the United Nations ls. Now having gone lo Newport Ele· mehta.ry, Horace Ensign Intermediate School and Newport Harbor High School, I feel I was very lucky and for· lunate to have had teachers that encouraged me and everyone else to learn. Sure, some of us were a bit rebellious, but discipline and mob.vat· ed teachers did make ah impact on . many of us, and we did learn at times. But times have changed, and now we live in a global IOdety, and the stu- dents in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District must be taught in accordance with these new challenges that are being presented to us. Although I do not have chi)dien of my own, I believe education ta an imperative and the future Of our IOd· etyand~.1~..m and every parent to get 1nvotv.d :Per· tonally in their cbUd'S eclutadoa, not only helping With~ b\at =====·~' ln order to fadlitate belW educa· tion, l belieYe that ...._., •>1'11 should be COIDIMbM'ata wtla .._ ~ of-wbkh .... of tb8m. BiOalWDt....... --lent ed\atian. Of a.II ..... ov.trtnrir1-.. Ind 1111111111• :.:.~.:,.., .. dlln'l=r-•--lr· ... , .. :,... -·.-~ .... ••llllilfi QUOTE Of THE DAY •we played well enough to win. But we have a long way to go. We have a long way to go this week ... • Dan Glenn. Newport Harbor High boys volleyball coach Doily Pilot .Thrown to the · T-wolves Northwood's emergence as an athletic power doesn't bode well for Pacific Coast League rival Corona del Mar. For those who haven't noticed, Northwood High, it's campus st.ill pristine and still months away from graduating Its inaugural senior class, has officially claimed Its long-rumored status dS an athletit power. And, haVlng taken enough lwnps its first two or thiee seasons of varsity competition (depending on the sport) to keep 1t just under the releaguing radar, it will be terrorizing Pacific Coast League compebbon -namely Corona del Mar -the next four years as a member of the powe rhouse projection program The Tunberwolves, now fully fanged in about every sport there IS, won the school's hrst CIF Southern Section crown recently when the boys soccer team, wtuch finished second to Costa Mesa in the PCL race, defeated top-seeded Bonita, 2-1, to claim the Division IV title. The Northwood baseball team, with Irvine High transfer Ctlris Lewis, f ,. Sports Editor Roger Carlson • 949-574-4223 • Sports Fmu 949~50-0170 HIGH SCHOOL BOYS VOLlEYBAll Mwd't 2S honor• KATHY MOWCA-SCHAEFER Tuesday, Morch 19, 2002 7 a Stanford-bound shortstop who was an All-Sea View perfonner his first three seasons, defeated defending PCL champion CdM Friday, 5-2. Lewis unleashed three home runs in three at-bats against the Sea Kmgs' ace pitcher. Afterward, Northwood Coach Rob Stuart, DALY Pl.OT PHOTOS BY DON LEACH Newport Harbor's Greg Perrine drills the ball past two Northwood defenders to cap a long rally ln Monday's title decider. Barry Faulkner PREPS another Irvine defector, downplayed his team's favored status, though PCL coaches have dearly tabbed the T·wolves the team to beat for months. One of Stuart's assistants ls Aron · Garcia, the fonner Northwood UWe League legend who starred ln football and baseball at Irvine, where he was also a member of Coach Teny Henigan's football staff. Coach Rick Curtis, another former Irvine employee, guided his Northwood football squad to a 10..0 regular season with its first ~Dior class last fall, outscoring five PCL rivals, 194·51. Fonner Estancia High and Orange Coast College coach Tun O'Brien led his boys basketball team to a 10-0 mark against PCL competition to claim the program's first league crown this season. Boys volleyball, sans seniors, shared the PCL title with CdM last spring and this year's squad met Newport Harbor in the title match of the Orange CoUQty Championships Monday night. And that ls just off the top of my head. lrvine High folks have foretold of the flight of thelr top athletea to Northwood since before it opened and their worst fears have come to fruition. For athletic purposes, Northwood High has assum~ trvtne's former high profile, while the Vaqueros are left bailing water from a s1nking athletic ship, of which the captain and crew will soon be kicking themselves for not being more proactive about leaving the Sea View League dUring SEE PREPS M GE I Harbor topples Northwood in championship match to kick off monumental week. Bany Faulkner DAILY PILOT HUNTINGTON BEACH By • defeating Northwood, 15-5, 13-15, 15-10, in the title match of the Orange County SCOlllOID Volleyball C hampions hips ~ ~ Monday night at Edison High, New- port Harbor went where no Sailor boys team has gone before. Yet. despite unprecedented back- to-back Orange County titles, Sailors Coach Dan Glenn was quick to poUlt out bis team ls far from where it will need to be to make a run at the Sea View League and CIF Southern Section Division n chantpionships. •we played well enough to win,• Glenn said. •aut we have a long way to go. We have a long way to go this week." The victory, keyed by tournament Most Valuable Player Greg Perrine's match-high 12 kills, began a five-day period that will see the Tan visit reigning CIF Division ill champion Santa Margarita (tonight}, visit Huntington Beach (Thursday) and host defending ClP Oivl1lon lll . champk>n Mira Costa (Friday). •we bad a Jot ol unforced errors. so Brian Gaeta of Newport Harbor slams the ban at a key moment ln the Sailors' Orange County ChamptoDsb.lps conquest Monday. this probably was not very good volleyball to watch.• Glenn continued. •out I can't remember ever winning two (Orange County Championships) ln a row. I'm exdtedJor our kids.• · Perrine, who pounded through two Northwood bloc kers to e:itend Harbots lead to 8-6 in the rally scored thlrd game, then added his final kill to make it 9-6, said bis team. as it did last season, bould gain confidence from adding another tournament title. "Coming in, I thought we were a liWe undenated, • Perrine said. "lbis will definitely be a confidence booster.• Senior outside hitter Brian Gaeta added 10 kills, while senior Erik Peterson, an all-tournament choice, chipped in seven. Jamle Diefenbach, a 6-foot-8 sophomore middle blocker. contrtbuted four tuls and two stuff ' • blocks. Senior Redge Bendhe1m also provided a spark, lacing two aces and three service winners, induding two darts that Northwood passers shanked late in the third game. to all but seal the victory. Northwood Coach John Gaido said serving was the difference. "Their serving was excellent and we missed some serves at key times,• Gaido said. "You can't make those mistakes against teams like Newport, because they will gobble those up and make you pay. I thought Newport played very well.· Newport, however. had one more selVlce error than the T-wolves (6- 5 ). The Sailors also bad five mishandled balls. five tutb.ng errors,' two miscommunications that led to balls dropping, and a handful of violations at the net. "Our moveme nt to the ball wasn't very good,· Glenn said •we have a lot of matches this week, but we really need to practice.• After a dominant first game, Newport watched the Timberwolves claw back to force the decisive game. But, the Sailors' experience appeared to swface in rally scoring. • 1 saw a mirror image with our team and theirs, in terms of bustle, working hard and effort,• GaidO Mkl. But Newport just d id a better executing on top ol that.· Senior setter Loyd Wngbt, last year's townament MVP, amU9ed 30 as5ists and one stuff b1oclt to help tbe Sailors defend their title. COASRRS: OCC AMl11S Of THE WEii Eightin, _what? --·--Some people Should take their p.c. and stuff it in a hoop. •lndiaftt" eo·~· Wbellm'lllll'I. nidm • .. .. ·-• .. Yalk:M.• ............ c:m... • ..... ..., ...... 4. '71• • .. ..... OK. ........ .. SPORTS OoitY Pilot . Pos~eason roads get .. New CIP playoff groupings will shake things up for Newport-Mesa schools, but the news is generally good. Berry Faulkner DAILY PILOT two Division VI crowns lo 1996-97), including the Division VU title-game combatants the last three sea.sons, Los Altos and Charter Oak, will replace the Golden West League. Jeff Brtnkley, who said be was happy to be left tn Division VJ. The Sailors have reached their division title game five ti.mes the last 10 seasons, including titles in 1994 and '99, and have gone to the semifinals two other times durlng that span. playing. l know La Mirada (wblch elimina.ted tbe 1\us in tbe semifinals, 13- 10, in overtime) beat Los Altos last year (20..13 in Week 3). • Jast week. were relegated to playing In divislonS based on enrollment and not competitive equity. Mang's Sea Kings, wblcb won the CIP Division V crown last spring and are among the Division V favorites this season. will be in Oivisioo I next season. CJP Southern Section playoff pairings announced Monday should add difficulty to the ~n roads of Back Bay high schools, wblle Costa Mesa and Estancia, shifting to. the Golden West League, figure to fac:e weaker playoff competttion ln virtually all sports, beginning next ran. ln football, Newport Harbor remained in Division VI, which will retain the Century, Empire and Suburban leagues. However, the Miramonte League, which has produced its division champion the last six years (Division vn the last four, after The Golden We&t League,. which will also include Ocean View, Saddleback, Santa Ana, Westminster and Orange, will shUt to Division VD, joining the Almont. Del Rio. Mission Valley-and San Antonio leagues. - The Sea View bad produced nine straight dlvlslon champions, befor~ Ma.yf alr defeated Suburban League rival La Mirada for the Division VI crown last fall. ·1 thought there would be some jockayln,g around with :Hart being moved (from Division m to Oivision ll), • Brinkley said. •with them looking for someone to fill that hole (in Division Ill), there was the possibility of us moving up. I think (the Miramonte League) is a very comparable group to some of the (playoff} teams we've been ln addition to Los Altos (the Olvision VU champion ln 1999 and 2000 and runner-up last year), Charter Oak (which won Division Vil titles in 2001 and 1998 and lost in the final the two years in between), ,md Wilson High of Hacienda Heights (the 01vls1oo, VI winner in 1996 and '97), the Miramonte League will include Bonila and Garey next year. Glenn's boys volleyball program, currently in Division n, will rejoin the Division 1 arena next spring. "It's the way it should be," Glenn said. Newport will compete in Division I in¢\s tennis.boys and girls swimming, girls soccer, as well as boys and girls water polo. The.PCL, including Corona del Mar, will remain in Division IX for football. The division retains its five current leagues, including the Freeway, G8rdeo Grove, Orange and Valle Vista. The change was not a surprise to Newport Harbor High football coach News of tougher postseason competition was greeted with ex.dtement by CdM boys tennis coach Tun Mang and Newport Harbor boys and girls volleyball coach Dan Glenn, who, until a change in playoff procedure paMed by the Southern Section Coundl CdM will be Division I in boys water polo, as well as boys and girls tennis. The Sea Kings will be Division II in boys volleyball. girls water polo, as well as boys and girls swtmming. SCOlllOllD SMKlngil 15 Woodbridge ) ijdM hammers Woodbridge C orona del Mar singles standouts Cameron Ball (left) and Garrett Snyder (above, right) both swept their singles matches at Woodbridge Monday to pace a 15-3 victory over IRVINE -Corona deJ Mar High singles standout Cam- eron Ball won 18 of 20 games and the No. 3 doubles tandem or Erik Frisbie and Brennan Roberts swept to lead the Sea Kings to a 15-3 nonleague romp of host Woodbridge Monday. the No. 1 spot. "I don't think we've lost to Woodbridge in about five years," CdM Coach nm Mang said of Sea Kings' former Sea View League rival. C.moM oa. MM 15. ~ • J Sing*· c.n-on Ball (CdM) def. VIII I.Inge. 6-2, def. OijN. 6-0, def. Manus, 6-0: Snyder (CdM) won, 7-5, 6-2, 6-0: c..m.n Ball (CdM) lost. 2"- won, 6-3. 6-0. the Warriors. At right. the doubles team of lsseJ Salda (left) and Tyson Hunter are ln a commanding presence en route to a sweep of the Woodbridge lineup. Garrett Snyder also swept In singles for the victors (7-0), who received a doubles sweep from TYson Hunter and Issei Saida In CdM visits Laguna Beach Wednesday in its final tuneup before hosting the Corona del Mar All-American Invitational Boys team·Teimis Tournament. which begins Friday. Doublea • lYf«! Hunter· lsMI Salda (CdM)def.~ 6-1, def. Brenner-Goldberg, 6-1, def. Hsueh-Ormont. 6-4; Bryan WtKWN- ~ Miller (CdM) lost, 6-7, won, 6-4, lost. ~-6; Erik Frisbie-Brefl{IMl Roberts (CdM)won, 6-1, 7·5, 6-4. DAILY PILOT PHOTOS BY DON LEACH PREPS CONTINUED FROM 7 the last releaguing process. The good news: At least Costa Mesa and Estancia will leave the PCL behind to compete In the Golden West League, beginning next fall. However, PCL holdover Cd.M could be among those thrown to the T-wolves for at least the next lour years. lbe amorphous Newport Ella Tournament is pow history and Costa Mesa High baseball coach Kirk Bauermeister assures me It will return to a -more-convtmtional look next season. This year, with an odd U-team configuration, It was broken down into the 16-team Costa Mesa Division and the eight-team Foothill Division. The Costa Mesa Division, with Mesa, FIGHTIN' WHAT? CONTINUED FROM 7 Musllrns, who believe "Cluledeil" are • th..ot&blos, because the Crusades of long ego con isted of Chri.stiant of Gtt-"t Bntaln, drlvlng back the MUlb.ml, whO bed been invading and conq~ ~ amounts of land in and around Europe rot a thousand yea.n or so. Uthe Eaton High Flgbtln' Mell a.re under fire, then how mu.Ch longer can there b81Uch eotiti In the CIP SoUthem Secticih a tbe Alemany Indian.t, Alha.mbta Moon (musums who invaded S~), App&e Valley Sun Devill, Apple • Valley ChNti$n Wamon, AIOldl& Apathei. :AZuu Aztecs, Baker V4Uey Brafft, IMptill Cbtlltl.tn Wamors. seneow ~ a.verty HOJe Nonnens. Big PIM W.nott. aiallwm CbdllieQ Wanton or Bunt pd IUi ... lndiUWf 1bM'IJ'lll .. •8dB .. fllllll SoUtMrD s.dllm ~ JioW........ -. c.111, ' Newport Harbor and Estancia, pJayed a straight 16-team bracket. The Foothill Division, including CdM. dlvlded into two pools, with each school playing the other three in its pool once. They then paired off with schools from the other pool tor a fourth game. Of course it took about three games into the event to figure this format out, by which time, we'd already misled readers and confused ourselves beyond frustration. Finally. both pools intermingled to milk the fifth game allotted teams ln a 24-team tournament. Hence, Costa Mesa finished up with a loss after playing and winning its division title game seven days before. So, after typing the phrase •in the fifth-place game or the Newport Elks Tournament's Costa Mesa Division," we had to try -and Inevitably fall -to come up with a way to describe a meaningless final •tack-on" game in some way that made sense. Vikings, 'llutans, Argonauts, Gaels, Fighting lrlsh, Saxons, (what's a Griffinf) or the Gaulsf How'd you like to be a.o. Oakwood Gorlllaf OT a Coachella Valley Ara~ Or an Ojai Valley Spud? Or a Thatcher Toad? What happe.111 when a Pomona Hfgh ... team gets matched up with Queen of Angela Academyf It would be the R.ed Oevtll againat the Angels. How 'boUt tbe S.vanna Rebellf Or the ~erful R~C'8 Academy Rebell? And When la aomeone gOlng to complain ab6ut the JUbet AdM!emy ~hting Frogtf And what't the ROJ'Y on the Rio Hondo Prep Katesf Who care1f l can't even firid a ~in my drat 1980 WebMer'I seventh new coUeglate dtCttooaiy. What's Rio Hondo bytng to pullf And bow ebOUt u. &elnttf ~ are SlllMlal.,. ....... ---~St. a.. .ag1111ana.Mlon. .. .. .,, ........ Another source of constemaUon ln our newsroom recently was Corona del Mar Higb's decision not to score two season-opening track and field trl-meets. I wondered aloud if every athlete had received a hug and a ribbon at the finish line, at the expense of competition. But, upon further investigation, Sea Kings boys and girls coach Bill Sumner at least bad a good excuse. Turns out, Sumner knew running a three-way meet wouJd be exponentially more difficult than the typical dual meet and be turned out to be correct. He didn't want to be scoring the meet, run out ot light to contest the final event(s) and come off looking like, well, the guys running the Newport Elles Tournament. Sumner said he and bis staff of volunteers, including several parents, learned a great deal about 1J'Oning out potential kinks in the process and he'll be happy to score trl-meets next season. Glve the man a hug. The dimwits at Northern Colorado need to get a grip. And a We. There's another avenue here ... wait until some of our slo-pitch softball teams and recreation basketball team.a get wind of the Pightin' Whites. . ... While on the subject ot poUtkaJ correctness, is it really neceuary to refer to a loser's bracket lo a doubJe.ellmlnatlon affalr as a 'secorid.-cbance• bracketf I always mew it u the •io.et1 bracket.• It's for teamt wbo JM in t.twi opener, and one more Jolt and they're out. What'• wrong wtth reaUtyt The newest ~ty tat Memt to be the "Sliver Division.• Now we're comb_\g up with tournaments productng Gold PMiklil chunpk,>M and Silver DiYtRon ~ even on the tugh lc:boOl l*Vwl. ~ .......... ..-llD-~po11d6i1C01Md!llJAtlWll I .. g JDlnlh lil •le.-..... ,.,., .. WOid II • ....., 'Dtftml ~ :er• • . ..,....,.... ... _ -- ..... ADid a ...... SIP' :tt;... .................. ., " BRIEFLY Estancia's Cassidy finishes third Estancia High junior Jason Cassidy finished & third in a field of 43 in the 15-18 age division of 0 a California Junior Golf Thur event SatuTday and - Sunday at Temeku Hills Golf Club. Cassidy shot 77-73-150, three shots back of Oxford Academy's Lenny Park and one shot behind runner-up Casey Satori of Oceanside. It was Cassldy's second top-three finish in a CJGT event and qualltles him for the CJGT Tour Championship later this month at Los Senanos Golf Course in Ollno Hills. Cassidy was also third in the February CJGT event at the Costa Mesa Golf & Country Cub's Los Lagos COUBe. He was also second 1n an 80-player field at the junior tour 54-bole major held at Singing Hills Resort in November. He bas finished ln the top 15 in six of 10 winter state and regional junior tour events. He has also been medalist in four of bis f1rst tlve high school dual matches for the Eagles, with a nine-hole ICOrtng average of 36.2. Corona·del Mar's Chamberlin sharp Corona de.l Mar Higb's Brad Cbainberllil [_QJ carded a 1-under 35 Monday at Oak Creek Golf Cluti to pace the Se4 Kings to a solid 2g;atroke lead over lrvtne in nonleague boys golf. The sea Klngt (3;2 m OOinplete matcMI), who'll flnisb the 18·hole match up with nine holes of play at Newpon Beech Country Club April 17, g,.bbed ttMt c:ommandmg i.a by vtrtUe of Cbamberlln'11tn>ng lead, ea W.U •from the p1ey of Nick Shelman (37), Am Cblkovam (31J, C..., HacUa (38) arid Tun PrOhl1ng (' 1 ). .. ' W L I ''11 ''I 11111 .' () ;~~~~J I,,,,·'' Ntqll• I , 1 __ ....... ..AJ N• '"port tt.11hor () j Mandan 1mrn l..'9nt Hills s. ... "POl"t Mllbar .. Irvine 6, Aliso Niguel 2 w.dnndin llillDll rn ~idge at ,.;,_.t Hlrbcr 1AgLn Hils at Aliso Niguel TODAY'S SCHEDULE IAHMll Community college -Orange Coast It Saddleback. 2 p.m High IChool -Corte Mesa at Nor1twoood. 3: 15 p m , C0tona del Mar It EsUnda, 3:15 pm, Sage Hill atSl~S.l15p.m. YOWDAU High school boys • Ni!WpOft Harbor at 5¥rta Ma<garrta, 6 15 p m , l.oWll at Costa Mesa, 5 p.m IDlm COl'l\ml.Wllty college men · Orange coast at Saddleback, 2 p.m. Community collegt! women ~at Orange Coast. 2 pm High IChool boys ~Harbor at Aliso Niguel 3 p m ~ College • Vanguard Universrty at Azusa P«ific, doobl~adef. 2 p m. High IChool • Newport Harbor vs Costa Mesa, at TeWinkle Parle, 330 pm_ ut•G Ip f ....... ' -= (' • llGH SOIMl IASIUU. Sailors see a 4-2 lead , wash away Newport Harbor scores four runs in the second inning, but Laguna Hills rallies. LAGUNA HILLS Newport Harbor High-r s baseball team jumped to a SCOUIOAID 4-2 lead in the second s.tlon • inning, keyed Laguna Hills 5 by a two-run single by Ryan Heenan, but the Sailors couldn't make it stand up as Laguna Hills rallied for a 5-4 Sea View League victory. Ryan Torrey and Shane Glerin also singled, but that was the extent of Newport's offe051ve work. The Sailors fell to 3-5, 0-3 in league. SU VltW LIAGUJ lAGuNA Hlu.s 5, NEwParr HAMCllll 4 Newport Harbor 040 000 O -4 3 3 Laguna Hills 210 200 x • 5 9 2 Ton-ey and Pemstein: Walsh and Hicks W Wahh. l • Ton-ey, 2· 1 28 -Barnum (LH) -· .. -·· ... ' .. ~ SPORTS --~,.,DI• ~I Tuetdoy, ~ 19, 2002 9:· COMMUNITY COWGE MEN'S GOlf Pirates' Wicks sizzles {67) TRACK AND FIELD, CROSS COUllTRL. .. Allen picks Stanford CHINO -Orange Coast College freshman Kelly Wttks, a product of Edison High in Huntington Beach, was the medalist at the Pirates' men's goll match with Santa Ana College Monday afternoon at El Prado Golt Course, logging a S-under 67. CdM star set for two sports for Cardinal. CORONA DEL MAR -Corona del Mar H.igb seruor running standout Julie Allen, a four-tune CIP Stale cross country hnalist who won individual ClF Southern Section lJtles in cross country, as well as track and field, wUl continue her athletic and academic careers at Stanford Uruvers1ty, she announced Monday Wlck.s went out in 31 with five b1rd1es, and came home wl1h a 36 two birdies and two bogeys). and used just 28 putts to close out his card. He pact>d a 364-397 Orange Ernpue Conference victory over the ~~ . OCC is now 14-1, 7-0 in the OEC Allen, who won the CIF D1vW<>o m section cross country crown last fall and went on to finish second at CIF State Finals m Fresno, said she chose the Cardinal over UCLA. Dartmouth. Yale and Division m Pnnopia. She will run cross counuy and compete m track and field in Palo Alto. The rest of the Pirates' lineup consisted of Frednk Svanberg, who shot par, Lou Carrasco with a 1-over 73, Brock Noteboom (76) and Eric Moore (76). JASON AIGNER e STEPHANIE WOOD ...... lom: Feb. 10. 1983 e & 5-foot~ 150 Sport: s ming ·Stanford just suited me,• she said. • tt suited me Wee a glove. I liked every aspect about it. The people Me more like me, as far as-goals and the-ways they go dbout accom- plishing those goals.• Allen, who transferred to CdM from Fountdl1l Valley High before her junior track and r1eld season. h~ dchieved virtually au the goals a prep runner could m Southern Calli om.ht Ewnb: Breaststrokes. individual med1ey After wuuung the Paofic Coast League md.1vtdual cham- pionslup last fall, breaking a 10-yea.r-old course record at Irvine Regional Park and leading CdM to the league cross country title, she capped her SE!d.SOn by firushmg Uurd at the prestigious Kinney lnvltat10nal. -.: Freshman High school; Villa Park Coeck Don Watson and Dave Salo Mtljor: 8' logy fallortt. C Mexican or Chinese Fevortt. movie: •fight Club• llelt _... moi1•1t: "Team boncring and dropping 11 seconds in the SOO free In my senior 'Jeaf of high school .• Athl9tl9 of the Week X: Season- best times In the 100 (1:13.AS) and so tnasutroke (33.43) and 100 incflllidoal medley (1 :06.66). She then had a storybook lrdck cdIDpaign. wtnrung ledgue tJtles m the 1,600 meters, the 3,200 and fuustung second in the 800. She repeated those hrushes at the section finals, scoring 28 points to help CdM repeat as CIF Divis1on Ill champion. She was fifth at the Southern Sect.Jon Master. Meet m the 3,200, but hrushed thud in the Division HI state final in that event last spnng Daily Fib She said she is undecided on d ma1or. but is happy to have the recruiting process belund her "It's nice to know for sure where I'm gomg to be." she Coll«tor rportS card~ 0.2-S l>dld. -by Barry Faulkner Actltloua Buslnffa Name Statement The following persons Bfe doing buslness as a) AAahtlm Yellow Cab. b) Yfl/M:Nt Taiu. c) Yellow Tex1C8b. d) Yellow Ceb Buena Park e~ Yellow Cab Anah8fm. Yellow Cab Anaheim ills, g) Y Mt<iw Cab F ufferton fl) Yellow Cab Ora!, I) YelOw Cab B<ea. Yel- low Cab Genlen ove k) Yellow Cab Yorba Linda. I) Yellow Cab Irvine, m) Yellow Cab Tustin, n) Yellow Cab Vdla P811t. o) Yf1flta# Cab Cypress. pl Yellow Cab l-09 AlltMol. q) Yellow Cab Santa Ana, r) Yel· low Cab Fountain Val· lay. a) Y~ Cab Hunt· ington Beach, t) Yellow Cab Costa Mesa. u) Yll· low Cab Newpol1 Beectl. Y) Ytfl,ow Cab La Habra W) Yellow Cab Wnt- mlnaler, •) Yellow Cab Services, y) Yellow Cab leuing, z) Yellow Cab EnterpfiaH, 1619 E Uncoln Ave Atlahetm. CA 92805 Yellow Cab Compeny of Northern Oranoe Coo!'tly, Inc., (CA). 1619 E Lincoln Ave . Anallefn. CA 92805 TM l>Ullness 11 con· duded by a corporalion Have you started doing bullnesa yet? No Yeflow Cab Company of Northern Orange County, Inc. Diane Slll(Jle. Vice P"'51d9nt l'h11 siatement was filed with the County C1ef1I ol Oranoe County on 03I05l2002 20026194892 Ody Pilol Mat 19. 26, Ao!. 2, 9 2002 T620 Public Notice Nol1C41 is h41feby given that tile undet$lgned will be sold II public eudlon on Apnl 2. 2002 at StaNlng Scholat'I Mini· Storege. 1957 Newport Blvd , Coeta Mesa, CA 92627, (949) 631-3379 11112701 B/2703A, Deborah Diedrich & Darin Hodowanu1, hol»ltlold & giu1lgl Landlord llSefWI the ngtlt to bid at sale. Cash only. Sale II M>jlct to c:anoellation In the ._..., of Mttlen'Mlf'lt bltwffn 1andlotd and obllglttd party Starving Scnolare Mlnl·Storege Published Newport Buch-Coate Meu Del'1 Pllo4 Mitch 19. 26. ~ T!!17 LEGAL NOTICE PROJECT OESCRIP- NOTICE IS HEREBY TION: Wort! includes. GIVEN ttlat the Board ol but le not ffmlled to. lhe Education of the New-lolk>wlng: Replace four porHAesa Un1f1ed (4) Obsolete oil ~ volt· School District of Or· age 1wttohe1 and ap- ange County Wll r8C)81'te pro•lmately 10,000 sealed bods up to e 00 lineal lee! o1 deienorated a m. on April 3, 2002. at elec1rical cable the Purct\aslno Ofhoe o1 ESTIMATED said School Clslnct. lo-CONSTRUCTION caled 111 2985-B Bear COST: $150,000.00 Street. Cocl.11 Mesa. CA Nolt: Pr11M Blddet1 92626 at wtllCh 11me who do not !Met the &aid bods wiM be publicly quellflcatlone In the opened and read for Contl'9Ct ~umertt1 Windows Computers, ""Y not bl ellglble '°' Laptops, Fiie Servers, ewerd. Peripheral• and Sup-Bidding Documenis plies w1111 avaJlable lo Blc). All l:*ls .,. to be rn llC· dtfl on WEDNl!SDAY. CQfdance with Condi· FEBRUARY 27, 2002, hons, lns1ruc1t0ns, and and W'Bfe ISsued al Specifications which are DESIGN & on file In the o111ce o1 the CONSTRUCTION Purchallno Director ol SERVICES said School Drstnct, UrwerSlly o1 Callfornea. 2985-B BHr Slrtel IMOll, 3500 s.rtcley CO&l8 Meae. CA 92626 Plloe. IMne. CA A Performance Bond 92697·2450 may be requlrvd at the (949) 82<Hl630 <*scretlon cl the Dlstricl Hot Line: No bidder may (1411) U ..... 117 Wilhdl'8w hlS bid for e pe-Chedtl for e nott-re-rlod o1 FORTY-FIVE fundaibll fw wll bl ,.. ( 45) days allier lhl di• quirwd In flt amount ol set for the opening '25.00 I* Mt ol Bld-lhereof. ding Documenta. The Board of Educa· Clledcs are to be made tlon of lhe Nawpon-payable to "The R&- Mesa Unified Sc:hoo1 ""111 of the UnNelSlty ol Dlstncl llMHV•s the Cal1fom11 " righl to r"8ci lll'IY "' .. Sealed BIOi ~ flOC be bl<b and ooc neoessarllV accepted atter 2:00 accepl the lowest bid. P.M., THURSDAY, and to waive any In· MARCH 28, 2002. formalily "' lrregularily 1n Bid Sea.inly in the lllY bid receiYld amount of 1 °" of the NEWPORT ·MESA l~ Sum 8-se Bod. ex· UNIAED SCHOOL DIS-eluding alternates lhaW TRICT of Orange accompeny Neh Btd County The 5Ufe1Y lssulno the tel Sh--. L Ching, DJ-Bid Bond shalt be. on the ~or of PUl'chaalng Bid Daadlln1, an end WINhoullng adm1ned &Ufety lnaurer 7141•24-50n tas defined rn lhe Cei- Pubhshed Newport fomla Code of Civil Buch-Costa Mell Procedure Sachon Dally Not March 19, 29, 995. 120) 2002 J§!i A mandatory Pre-Bid Conference and man- DEFERMENT dlk>ly Pre-Bid Job Walk Of BIOS were conducted on ~~to oondition1 THUASOAY, MAACtt 7, Pl eecribed by flt l.l'ld9r· 2 0 0 2 , beg:, n n 1 ~ PMiapents met at Presldent's Conference Room. Univ81511y of CIHfomia. lrvlne Mel1I Office Boilding 4004 Mesi Road. Suite 3000. IMna Catlfomia 92697 (949) 82-4-6630 AtTENOANCE AT THE PRE·BID CON- FERENCE AND JOB WALK IS MAN· DATORY FOR ALL PRIME CONTRAC· TOA$. THE MEETING ClOSEO AT t:o5 AJil. ANY CONTRACTORS ARRIVING AFTER TittS TIME . WIU NOT IE !UOl8lE TO PAA- TIC1PATE IN THE 810 PAOCUS AS A PfttllE CONTRACTOR. Only b1ddeta wtlo per- tidpete In both 1he Pre-Bid Conference end the Job Walk in their entirety Wiii be llloWed IO bid on the Projed IS pnme contractora For lurther Information, oon- 16C1 UCI Contract1 0. panment within Oeeign & eor.tNction Strvtceil Br9nda R. HocMnhlA 111 (948) 824-4n5 The luccessful Bidder and Ila SOboontractora will be rtqUlr8d to folow flt nondilcrWnnllio ,.. oulremenll sat lor1h In the Bidding Documents and to pay prevalllng w• rates at 1he ioc.- tion of lhl WOftl The IUCCHSfvl Bidder will be requited to ,.,. .... the fono.Mg State ol Cel1fomil Contraclor'a 1icenae current II the time ol 9'lbmlsaion ol the Bid LICENSE CLASSIFICATION: Electrical Contrac10! LICENSE COO£ C10 Other Project Specl- flca: Bidder OulHftcatlone celled for to be eutwnm.d .i time of bid lndudl, but -not na 1 'It llmllilcl '°: 1 The Contra>r .... have been In buslnest under me lame name' and California Contr11c· tor's UC.-for a m1n- 1mum °' 5 eoot1nuou1 yeen pnor to the bto opemng Gate for !his Pro1ec1 The l1eense used 10 satisfy t111s r&- quirement shall be ol the same type required by the contract 2 The Contr1IClof 5'lal prOYlde a nwwnum al 3 ref~s for prOje<:ls simtlW In 1oope and size to this Project wtlrch have bffn auccessfulty cone In Iha Stale al Cek~ dunno the at 3 years The ~ 006I al rn most be over $250.000 00 THE REGENTS Of THE UNIVERSJTY Of CALIFORNIA F~~ Pubh1hed Newpon Beech·Co1ta Men Daily Pdol Marth t 9 Fictltk>u• Bustneaa ...,,,. Statement The ~ persons .,. doil1g ~ -·i Flora llella b Rora Bela Pl!*, m1 Croddy Way. Unit C Santa Anll CA 92702 TerHa Mangum 21661 Brookhulst St Huntmgton Beach CA 92648 Thia bullne5$ Is con ducted by' an IOOMdual Have you started doing business yet? Y81 9/01 Ter-Mangum This 11atement wu filed wl1h th• County C1ef1I ol Ofange County on OV1 v.!002 2002ttt215t Delly PtloC Mar 19, 2e '9 2. 9, 2002 T§22 SELL your home through classified =·~eon~~~ promptly at t : A.. ~~ra:c7 ~ ...-.-W-ha_t_h-ap_pe_n_s_H_y_o_u_d_on-'t-... VOLTAGE SYSTEM • BEALL GALLERY advert1"se?. (PROJECT NUMBER 9"0311) 6 Cl.AIAE TREVOR BREN NO TiHlNG TMEATER (PROJECT NUMBER etll037) UNIVERSITY OF 8 CAUFOONIA. IRVINE IRVINE, t«~_:r.~.:~ Call the Classifieds (949) 642-5678 DAY, MAR<:ff 111, 2002 ~Pilot hU been deferred .., 2:00 PM.., THURSDAY, MARCH 21. 2002 -·--- STARTING ANEW . BUSINESSrfi • • • • • • • • • -. - ~ £004L HOUSUIO OPl'OATUNITY ~ real ISlale adYeltlslnQ In I.his IWWSPll* II subject to the ftclerll Fair HovsinQ Act of 1968 IS ll!Mlndld wlllch mikes II 111tgal to advertise ·111y pr1lu1nce, Nmltltion Of dtscrlml111tlon based on rac:t. color, rttio· ion, MX. llandiclp, famlflll S!llUI Of flllionll Oflgin, Of an Intention to make any such preference, llmflalloo or discrimination.· Thia newspapef Will not knowlngly accept any adverllsemtnt lor real estate wlllch ts In vlolatlon of Jht law. Our reader1 art hereby informed that 111 clwe"tnos advenfsed In this newspaper ar1 IVllllablt on an equal oppol1unlty blSJL To complain of dlsctlml- natlon, call HUD IOIHret at 1 ·800-424-8690 BUY WHOLESALE DIRECT • WholeHll ~ ol Oullily ...... turtd HomM Sevt up IO $40.000. QIUll'll'lteld t..111 the HCl9'I ..... ,. don' wanl you to know 1 ·8 0 0 ·242·0080 (CAL'SCAHl POLICY In Ill eflon IO olltr lhe bell ARTisTIC aervw;e l>OMl>lt to OU! IMO-TILE .. ,.,. STONE 1111 and adYll1iln. we wt reqtllrt Contract0<1 who ~ ...._ adVtl1ile In the SeMot c..r... • I'~ • SI.. Olfectory 10 include their .. , do my ""'" qjj0/111 MNXlt Contreclor1 llctnH (949) 413-TILE number 111 ltleir adYertile-, s ment Yr:M CCHJCllfllllon • ......... . gr!lllY IOl>!!C!l!d • CUSTOM CAEATIYE TU w.t.llllllonl, ... Cltllmic. llllltle. .. &till 1'79 .. 12CM4 Jeff 71W1Hll1 ' ONLY 4 LEFT CUSTOlll ttOllES -2..llA ""°" ..... 000 SATfStlt 12-6 MO Ekllll ,.._ ... 72MIOO ~ E llJE CM 1• 21ST ST. Nr:tM w.,' & ....... ,,_ "' high. '400,000 Mt-nMIOO ·:a Vllw of Wllllndl & c..... 5Br 3.5111, ~ bllll In 1114 lllPGll J,OOOll, = ........ ..... !G~-3244 562 ..... 7111 ,,,_, Pwflld ft :":: = 3Br 2.5&1 homl room. goutrr* kif. gotplOUS ~ I/Id =-~ ,001 iug. 720-3900 COM PITTER HELP! .......... ~ .,.. ...... flC•llS .... VOl*v ~ IClllldaa 9dl ca.. T Lllx, ~ T~. 1A111:* 2000 fl -48r now 38r, 2.5bl, lg 2c T.:"· SG.000 Eflll • Almax IM~I www.~...itt.com ~,,.. ....... lrDm .. 21>1 ~ loc-.d" 11-nJ " • aik1Haq Cit ~ll!pl lot. nJ~ ,,.,,,, 5,000 Attchor Propri!! M=7ZO:J!O!! 1111 """"' T'*"'-NI~ Qrwldt °'*' 811 • Be.ft '"' End """ • f ,,,,,., "" ... ,,_. .... 000 "" ,,,. """'°" 9-cll .,,, Courw, ..,,. , '*"' _,.,.,... ,., + din ., ....... ,,.,.,,, HHSZ.f41t PRIME ESTATES UICa l ac... Views! egt. Pltrtck Tenen 94M5f.1705 WWW.Dlb1cbtll0f9.- ~YIN::?.: Modi! ptlllCf 39r hol.a 'lll'pltotllll -ywd wJalnvn pool~& PTlllCQ.~ www.l!!triclrteoore.9!!1! Clllllc Udo Femly ~48r U8e Conw ~ Llltlng !II!.: M-72H1!!} ~ Sun 14 • ltuntllng ~~piopMyln ~ '**' ~ ""*"· hltrJ-wood lloots, Ff'lllCll dootl, high ~ IJfrd • l'lfY ==-~ T._ NT.~ .. ALL ~ WEDO"AU. SeMc.e. ltwol, l.IQhllnQ. Remodels. 5"tftlo t 888.407 .9001 llyftt•! (~9) 642·5<>78 ' ,. r-.: • • • • : ~~j a.ct Nlwpoft &tMI Y_..Old~ mnlan & ~ Pano ... cl:: t.y. lbcU CICmll ~-NNrly ~ ICN lol mey be ·-P!lcld• ~Wd YIM, 11.548.000 Of Ilda. 9leillf Inv. IMN4UellS .......... 58' 5.581 :J.E old homt. IWldM . protl llndtclped Jlc., chllcnnl ~ S1.350,oo0: by ~ Only. ~ Plllllmd Owner/BIU'. 94~500-7125 OPEN SUN 1-4 7Ul!logll 2 *"'.::Z. ......... --........ 2.a. .wlew. Upgredlcl thrlMKlt. lluu Ind· ...... ..,.. In oond. 8y Owlw ...,.,000 MM1,.2100 ........ Plln 1 ..... Air Ube ' Clf =--....--.1111 floon, r..:':: --.. ....... er U ,050,000 MH1W1M Open..., t-6 ~PIMDr. SNIT PAJ..AZZIJ largest ~ 5bf. 4.5be. S1.G25,000 Sletn Muw $2.050.000 9'4~715-3!56 °f:w~-6 4 SANDY COVE 5br, 4.5be. $1,850,000 Sltllnil Meurer 94t-71~15e C.ustomer -S.otisfaction -Al~of' (onstriKfion home repair. ::t'9 too PUf AFEW WOIDSTO WOllRI YOO ~"2-"78 WYE THE BIG CnY BEHIND! Nttw ~ lwdlfldl """* loclfld on 11-quilt C«rlrll CCllll In Mono Bly. Pr*»d from .,. __,,00() mbayhomu.com 1-800-576-2811 1-.-1 I REALFSl'ATE I ~.~on ~Yo:ung For All Y011r · RMI £.slal.t NudJI 714-43-2-7873 ·;·--.-:1 ---- ~I .._ _: .. I .... I. PUBLIC NOTICE The Caltf. Pubic-U tlll t lu Com- mialion REQUIRES thlt .. Ulld to.- hold goodl ITICMlr1 Pl1nt !heir p .u .c Cl! T runber; llmoe Ind chaufftra pnnt 1tlllr T.C P. runber In .. llMltsntenlS. " )'OU twve • ciu--tlon lboUI .. leglf- lly of • ITIOYtf' h> or cider <*I: PUBUC UTILITIES COMMISION 714-558-4151 -----Beallllne8 ------. Mooctay ............ friday S:-OOpm Frid•y .......... Thurl'lday 5:00rm TIHlllday ......... Monday 5:00pm Saturday ........... Fri<lay 3:00pm W~y .... Tu'*'ay 5:00pm Sunduy ............. Friday S:OOpm Thu •. W~neiwlay S:OOpm •BAL90A ISUHO• llw 111e 1 cer llllf9ll 1140011110. Ag1nt MM7,.7IOO Interlor/Elterb Deccnthe PUatllC ricllm llatc:fdlg Rob Isbell • Owner Costa Mesa. Ca (949) 646-3006 Cel 949-887·1480 • --.:y"ry>' .• -'!' ro: ';f •• r:J""""' 41. \.'I.'. ........... '·. , "'',... ....... :::o~.== M rwJ:"' n .... .,., ..--... I I . •! ,. 3Br 1 Bl on Huge Lot S1850(mo. llll Sydney 94~1320 . E'Slde '8r Sia near Mlrinlls. lrg Wn home -llm rm. hlty ""· Fo. Ze Ill' f245Mno ~H:Jf-7951 OUET EAITSIDE 281 191. I <M gar.gt, new carpet, kllohen and btlhroOfn l1400'rno ....... 1903 ..... ., Zll ~ [ 8'de 1bt ofdJr. ,.., 71~ llovM on 1tlef, with www.""1boonl.~ fenced ytrd. '7t5111o. tomnt.lllnt Mt-75HOll • la. 211r Zll • 1 llf Unllil Aval I'> l 11!951mo, 510 Vz FtmlMI. from 5875 -t1100.· wfFf> a CdM °'*1 w.d Sp, SI.fl Ip raid. Wiik IO thope/bMcll ~574-7701 •112 Bllr M!g=3!!!!0 '!i1••!l I• ===::::: ...... ,,.,~ .. '"JOCA11NO llK'TllOMC ILU UM DlnlmOH .............. 675-9304 All DRAINS UNCLOGGED •-.m..-... ·-··-··-----·-1111-. ..._ <nQ•1IO Doily Pilot --. I • 1,. • , .. Hr f .Ila 2 atory f Qllllflollll, fjl, 2 ...,., 2c ... COin pool, 12 NMtit !a 116'Clmo !4t29;Hp> e. ... ., 288, 2 - ...... ""' c.pal ' P*ll. tu Jae• llytt f22P!o. MHIMl30 IT\DOll • • 18'1, 0..-......... -- -to $1,115 MM73-7IOO 50' To IJuJ, New O.V,,,,.,bipl Gr.ruJ lh-Opnti"t RAtaS~cUJ Mn-11nu US. WttlJJIKM>ni AHil. 118 11th Suect Hu.ntington Beach 714.m.4178 1-RM~1 ~a.:~°' lr;one fl()(). 1800lt Below Market Rent. 949-752·2222 HUNTIHOTON BEACH Prme ~ Bldga Cell Patncll Teno1e N1hOllwlOI USA 9'49-8S6-9705 ... - LOST OR STOLEN LMt eeen Dec. 14, comer of W1190n and NeWport Blvd. Older Style Fllrllitln PIANOS & Collectibles ·---·-• 54.,._ • Ainim • O'fic.• F~ LARGE REWARD For Info (confldentlal) Jack Russell Tenter . Oclcat kitten•. C FA, Leapord took 1llk11 $40().$500 rat11 exotic dloc· ()late !pOll!ld 909-734-TTT3 SHORES INTERIORS FLOOR SAMPLE LIQUIDATION SALEll AU-PRICES SLASHEDll Uphollt9fy, lMnpl, ec:ctlhorltt .. I 2640 AVON STREET NEWPORT BEACH off Rtv.llde 6 Plclftc Coat Hwy 949-642-2255 • --T~, Mardi 19, 2002 Bridge BY CHARLES OOAEH with OMAR SHARIF Md TANNAH HIRSCH TODAY.'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACA088 ,,....,_ 1 Gourrnend't a ~ 80Mlr. ~NEVE& LEARN ~ ~ ts -on On*d> a ~ Neither ~ulnerabte. Sovlh dealt. ltive -for tMcoul not penaltlCll ~~ == ~ : = ~ Since Soudl aurcly bad eilhrt the ICC 11 Type t1 Cf...w NOR'llt •KQU O A o AQJ9 • Q fll SOln'H •A 1065 o Olll 0 I{ 5 •AJ6 £AST •J74l l 1-1 94 0 10'7 J • 10'7 4 NORTH £AST Dbl ,_ 4N1' .... '"• 00 .... Operung lead. Si. of <., ll 11 amazing lhlll. afler all the )'e4IS Trump CouD Tommy bad been play· ina at the dub. 1hcrc were 1t1ll regu· W's who would double: bllll wbm boldin1 lou of uumes. Tommy's knick Of ~'Onlinl • wiLard declarer when faced with a bad lrump brealt wu not enough IO convince them of the follr of rbeir ways. - West s jump IO two beans was pre.- emptive and North's double was neg- or~ ~ c!Ubl for tbt opeitlng bid. 1e -aoom Co\lftlY" ee ~ • llllll Nonb 1 Bllckwood inquiry was = ee frler.- inuimicalty1oun1hnd.looldn1lll tt)e ~~ LaYt 111 Vena 70 =.... NOf1h..South cant. only, 1i11 sPlldea wu .n ucelletu contract. Since 19 Bunllneand 1I WOtrt Thawny was at the hcJm, East'• dou· 20 = lfw '-DOWN ble caised a worried frown IO appear 22 ""'* jolly 1 Olwle d "The on Wal'1 brow! 24 PvlomAnlK't AV' Tomny woo the opcnlnj lead m arlme 2 W.d!M dummy with the llCC, came IO lwnd =~~ ! ~ . ..-ilh the -ins o1 d~ and led• u l"Nll 11ur ~ -trump to the queen. West '1 heart du· 32 G911 •o 5 Mid cmti card WU hardly I surprUe. The ,.Ck 35 Mew 8 Elner8ld Of of clubs -flllCSlled, IOW!g 10 the. ~ "'***" 8liffl'*• km&. and rbe hean return Wt'lll to ~~ ~ = wn>ng dummy's singlelon ace 39 Plml9 tnb8 t 8teel s*iw Tommy ame IO hand with the 11CC 41 Svv• lll8'I -.... of clubs 10 ruff a hl:an on the 11bk:, 42 Heild, •llinpily 10 NldlMme lbeft CMbedd~UCCll of d~ 46 a..~ 11 Ugft ~ -for-11 club-. . followed -by the -CiballL 12 Amp ......... -queen o( club., on which declarer 47 AOL -aoM 13 .._,., twl9fly shed I heart. The groundwork Wti 48 = g :::,.:. OtJ1 complete -£1.\t wa.s down IO noth 50 .......,.., ll8lpet 2!5 Ao8d ~ ing but four uum~. wlulc dunvny M IVry ~ 27 PC_.., held K 9 of sf*ics and a w1Mtt in Sii ~cool-= each minor SUJI and Tommy hid A 10 down (2 .. ) 29 .. 6 of apedes and the 4oecn of hcaru =--~-,::--"l::""''""'C- The eight of club!; wou led WI ruffed low and Tommy uvcrruffcd wilh the six. The queen of heatU wa.' ruffed with the kmg of spades iu l:.a3t undcrruffed hclpleasly, and the marlced ~ of the ien of sp.ide~ allowed TOOllll)' IO ptek up P..a'll 'S ttumps and land anochcT typtcal 'lam llo!IH t p t FT Knowledge ol~ia.a. CPA olfa Mi NP8. Fu Low lntarut Debi CoMolldltion & Ptraonel Loans lhru lie/bonded lenoera No '" Oulcll -~ Ct.ERICAl PT, gllWll ofbtor RE_..., ... NPB. Ceaual ottlca. Cell ~ MM73«l25 EXP€RfEMC£0 DfllVERS WANTED! Regional & OTR tidied oppol1UnllleS s 1 ,000 r1l5Ulll 1•21M111. Fll\lnNI Help • lnformltion lmmedlltt Aeeponsel c.11 866-322-saM =I o..tty 1 lft Eledrlc 'M S11,R INlt condition. 1-. ......,,...,1 ~.=-~eom:: hew deen dnwlg r900rds 800·978·&848 (CAL'SCAN) 211l Duffy demOllstllllOll boll, Gally mooet w1refng 48 boll premun pcMll mol· or. -equipped SAVE ~ 714·840-S829 1-~11-,.,=1 l·T.:I GARYS ISUND Newport BeacMrvlnt loc'a currently hiring F/PT sales associates. Flex hrs. Xlnt benefrts. For interview Call NPB Christina 949-640-2371 Irvine Jed 949--450-0895 ~ ~ '01 Duffy 21ft ~ 48V power. teak tablas, frig, sunrl, tMll. co plyf new 11yte endoaule. '*5 new $26.900 714-t5M011 '71 Dully Mec:1rlc: 1811 blue & wtllte gr.at cono. eeldom used $5500 obo call 1eo-344-, oeo Robert SeDyou,. U#WOftl'd Uenu lb, 'tUJI way/ Place a cla$~1Ul '°"""' (949) 642-5678 l~:=;;:-..,;;./:;;:: ... M.·:..;....:;~;..::-;,...·-"111=::~ 1411~ I AHNOUMCEllEJfT t...o M8ldl ~ Pay+ vrnm•-•- flOA *2 pOllll ~ ~ B78'-0760~ Feder e I II Ira --------------.. S 13.21-$24 56'llout FUii bllltb'iitid ~ *"· F« ilb 7;30am· I 1 pm CS 1..-.n&-9083 (CAL"fCANl Off1CE MANAGERISetRETARY PIT. Aul>le tbn ~~~:5:- Compulef Ulerale Mlaoeoft Olllce: Word, EllC84 1n<1 Ourlook WIQM P" upenenoe Al ages encouraged ID apply FAX RESUME: Mt-641-1313 l'AOVEN SYSTEMI 1150Cllnlo/PT S5000 + /rrlo "' trallllnt PfOYlcled I00-211-1251 Of •lal1 .... ~- •PT SWIM COAaM ....... "°' Padllc eo.t Aquatic'•· Newport lwfl. Ctl ... 1. SALON Cll9 MlllCll In 1-~1 Potec"8 c.rTWa .. ...._... 500 Sl Ao8d-COVE MOTORING ~ s..• V25t2 ,.., ·11 1ow mllelQI 11nt cond. l.oeded+ lllrM. ooml BMW m '00 S8l!b 1001 .., !vt!loe n~ Z8dl 81k11* 121,115 V,_1 S!Mrlgrwr S13.tt5 V1448 BMW mica '01 ~ S31,tt5 V1S70 BMW 32lci '00 8l.lc:Ullll 134,115 .,... BMW 328cl '00 Blec:Mllk $34,995 V11020 BMW s:zlle 't7 &urp SN.m m• BMW Dll '01 $31,115 Ill* BMW 52511 '01 ~ S31,115 Vf1'1D3 8ltlW 5211 't7 ~ S24,tt5M351 8llW ml ... S6Nllt1lli $31,115 Vtf1f7 52'11 .. oey.lblk 124.115 Vt31111 sw.u °"'** 00 ~ $11,195 Y0035 Vobwg Nlw ._ '00 ~ S14.995 V1247 w.tlnl Udo cou '01 Golcl/lmt $12,515 V08IO Jaf11ar S-Typy 4.0 '01 21k rrw lul factory wan "** '*-blue cr.-n lhr mooniool. co ~ ' smells new $38.995 ¥416797 8't 94~ 1888 --X.IS 'M f!ql, C«ri, eclli rrw. tell bkie. ottmeal 11111. bl! top, co. CllrOml WllHll. bHUt cond. $16,795 11111t457291 9ltr 94g.586. 1888 MM'C8dee 5IOS&. .. Crum pull, wtlit&'lln ltllr lhowrm ~· chrm, 2 lop! $15,500 714-751·2"64 Nilan 200 SXSE..fl 'te Showroom. 36k "" red IUIO, loaded. moonrt. ~ W!!Q $8950 714-151 ·2464 ~ Cllll8I SL 'M V63188kmlwll~ lf1I ~ IOUllCI 12 dllc CO gaf1l9'd non smlu i-Jt ()l\gttnll oond. $5895 11687512 ~ 949-5116-1888 Salum Sl-1 't7 1 -49k mi. wo. AIC, pb, pa, am-Im, cua, giaat COlld ~ '*-book, 5SQOO obo 714-840-9&40 <Clhe Newport Beach/Costa Mesa, Balboa Island, Corona del Mar 2 c:t9 .,,, ., COiia .... ..., T rWlgll $qi.Wt.. $140. .... M61$:9M2 Daily Pilot p·resents you with a great opportunity to promote antiques & collectibles. Perfect for shops, dealers, auctions, booksellerst decorators, reftnlshers, art galleries -develop your business with us! } . Ask about MJVFJlIDRIAL SPACE "'1 your business In this award wtnnJng l[Jtdal~nl . .. 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