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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2004-09-12 - Newport Mesa Daily Pilot• COMMENTS& . CURIOSmEs Website stirs up some • passion T bey're called hot topics, or hot buttons. In politics, they're called "~rail isluea. • If you touch them. you1J die. Be honest. You know what they~ abortion. gay marriage. separation of dum::b and state. et cetera and so on and so forth. People tab Iida over them. They get passionate about them. They ftle lawsuits over them. They even smack each other in the moot about them now and then. Most people trytoawld them entirety. But there is a man In ~otai!!~ PETER such qualms. BUFFA In fact. he is downright fearlt$5 about climbing that long. lonely ladder to the JO-meter platfonn and dMng headfirst Into the pool of controversy. His name is Steve Gooden. a commercial real estate agent who desaibes himself u a conservative Christian and Republican. Steve wanted to put up a website about the presidential race. No bl.g deal there. A quick search of "Busb·Kmy campaign" on Yahoo.com produced 4,340,000 '--' results. 1bar'• a loL But Steve's website is different Real dlf[erent. It's called; "'The Passion of Ouist Who's Passion is Ooser7" Aside from the grammatical sin In the second phrase. the site is straigbtforwud and well-designed. At Its core is a simple question that is guaranteed to end up with someone wearing the guacamole lf you bring it up at your next dinner party. Who ls more like Jesus Ouist -George Bush or John Kerry1 Gooden'a site contenda that you should vote for the candidate who acom higher on the IW'Vey that b1I atte tell out. "So far. 75" of the people who haw visited the lite have voted that Bush's beliefs are cloeer to Jaus' than Kmy'a,• said Gooden in Saturday'• Daily Pilot article, ~Ukena presidential cancUdatea to ClJrlat. • Ii dlil just one more opJnion l\lrftYf h II not If you click on the Bullh tab Of the Kerry tab, you'Jl aee a c:hed:lilt of beliefs and vahJel beneuh that candidate'• picture, wtth thil IMCOa•DTS,hpM . ' • • Serving the Newport-Mesa community since 1907 SEPTElmER 12, 2004 . SUNDAY STORY to grow Local motorcycling scene as diverse as it is satisfying for those who like the freedom of riding on two wheels. Allcla Robinson Daily Pilot B y motorcyde. Newport Beach Joob a little dliferent than it does &om the endoeed bubble ma car. 1bert's eometblng fluid and barmonlous in the DXM11Dmt m the bdlc. and in the momtngyou can~ dWJ ~ or @le rtlllaWalltl be&lnnlng their day In Corona c:lel Mar. c.an and trucb don't look IS potendaDy deadly when PAYING TRIBUTE you're~ past them With the wind in your face. The attraction of motorcydes isn't lost on Mike Silvernail. He's been riding them for about 16 years. after starting out on dirt bibs u a child. SilYemaiL a resident of Huntington Beach. ride.e about once a month now. but be says he'd go every day if be had the time. "It's like a therapy session." he said SMSUNDAY,PqeM New seeds of peace planted in the Dunes Bvmt bdoP toptber churchei, families, dllldrm In an e!Ort to ~mote peace~ . tbe bndNp mtbe memory Of Se,pt. 11. ABOVE: Newport Beach restaurateur Dan Marc he a no pulls up on the side of The Arches ' restaurant on his custom Harley- Dav1dson He often rides alone m the mornings to clear his head before starting his work day LEFT: Ahne of motorcycles awaits repair s at Mach 1 Motorcycles KENT TQ{P"JN DAILY P1lOT ! i I •• " I I t! Al SUndly, ---12, 20CM GOVUNllENT liJJing time•s over for Costa Mesa city attorneys Coata Mea dty1dwon't be able to walk down the ball for legal help once the city ftnallzet negotiation• with the outllde law ftrm it cboae Tuelday. lbe city decided to trantfer Its legal coWllel from an in-house city attorney'• office to an outlide ~m to get a mc;>re dtveraifted level of expertile and keep co1t1 down. •Project.I to upgrade TeWlnkle Part will go forward except for expansion of the 10ftball fleldl, the Co1ta Mel& City Council d,edded Tuelday. A contract forcon1truction of the skate put wu awarded and groundbreaking 11 anticipated for later this month. POLITICS Nine seek to fill Newport lbch council seat Nine hopefull are vying to replace former Newport Beach Oty Councilman Gary Adami, who left for a job promotion in Wuhlngton, D.C.: John Blom, a photography studio owner; Timothy Brown, chair of the B.ngJilh and speech communication department at Rivenide Community College; Michael Browning, owner of a real estate ftrm; Leslie Daigle, a planning commlltloner and owner of a land-use comultlng bualneaa; Barry Eaton, a &•::nlng commiaaloner and retired p lng director; Olarles Griftln, a retired aviation engineer; Gerald Heger, an independent insurance agent; Richard Luehrs, pre1Jdent of the Newport Beach Olamber of Commerce; and Ron Winahip, owner of a film production company. NEWPORT BEACH Labor Illy a rough one for all on beach Big waves and a sewage spill brought the summer beach season to a close Monday, which was the last day of full lifeguard staffing on city beaches. Hurricane Howard caused big swell• that excited surfers over the weekend, but some of Newport's beaches were closed Sunday and Monday because of an accidental spill of treated wastewater from a Huntington Beach plant. •An environmental group sued the city last week over Marlnapark. seeking to overturn the resulta of the referendum on the November ballot If voters approve changing the city's general plan to allow the luxury hotel/timeshares for city-owned waterfront property on the Balboa Peninsula. Stop Polluting Our Newport leaden said the environmental report on the project approved by the City Council ls misleading and decepdve and voters won't know exactly what it ls they're voting for. RELIGION Lawsuits prove next step in church fight • lbe Bpiscopal Diocese of Loa Angeles on Tuesday ftled a lawsuit again•t St. James Oiurcb OD Via Udo and two other Southern California churches alleging that they committed a breach of fiduciary duty, among other things, when they seceded from the diocese. SL Jamet, All Sainta' In Long Beach and St. David's in North Hollywood broke away from the Eplscopal Olurcb USA and placed themselve1 under the Diocese of Luwero In the AngJJcan Province of Uganda, Africa. <llurch offldals laid that St. James ..... EK ·IN PHOTO OF THE WEEK 'ON SCENE EARLY' This image of an Orange County Fire Authority firefighter from Station 51 in Irvine was shot on my way In to Costa Mesa at the start of my work day. MARK C. OUSTIN/DM.YPILOT happened to be driving by as the cab became fully engulfed in flames, and before fire crews arrived at the scene. He's pulling hose from a fire truck u he prepares to attack the fire in the cab of a big rig on the San Diego Freeway at the Jeffrey Road off-ramp Tuesday.It's rare being able to capture an automobile still in names. I This incident did not happen lo our coverage area, but when opportunides such as car fires arise, we photographers have to take advantage. -Mark Dustin KENT TREPTOW I DAILY PILOT Debris is dumped into the Balboa Inn swimming pool Thursday, as an outlying building is demolished to make way for renovations. BUSINESS Balboa Inn begins major renovations Renovations began Jut week at the Balboa Inn, a landmark hotel built in 1929 that will get a $1.5 mllllon face lift. The revamped hotel will lnclude 11 new ocean view suites, a parking area, a pool to replace the exlstlng one, and a retail space that could become a coffee shop. The work Is expected to wrap up in June. • The United States Postal Service on Wednesday released a 37-cent commemorative stamp of legendary actor and former members voted for the 1ecusion because they did not agree with the Episcopal Olurch's liberal views on homosexuality, the divinity ofJesus Quist and the supremacy of the Bible. St. James officials say they own the land and the church building, but Bayshore resident John Wayne. The stamp Wat releued at a ceremony at the Grau.man's Otlnese Theater In Hollywood. Artist Drew Struza.n based bis painting for the stamp on a black-and-white publicity still of the actor taken during the flliplng of •The Man Who Shot Uberty Valance." the diocese maintains that they own the church and 1urroundlng property. Court dates have not yet been 1et for bea.rtngs. .,,.,,.,. of,..,,,,,. ,,.,.. or ftlMt .nonwyi lluat lttlw • ,,.,.,., """"'"' of btowl«lfw but omit ap1ra In any· partlcu1'lr /flWI IO A n.-1 to ,.i ucollll oplnlonl""" •hip OUI an IUll/UI lot, w 1NM u,,na worttrw C>; "'-" -GuyJilo=· z, Costa Ma. mayor, OD. deeillon by the Qty Council to do away wlth tu city attorney's otnce and contract with an out.aide ftnn. •H• doan't both.u,,.. any. II hal1f't ,,_,. muy around Mrr at alL 11111 Is wually a wry qui# neighborhood -molt ,,.opi. around IN,.. haw klds .• -ktberlne Mawdlda, a new netpbor of former Newport resldenu and NBA 1tar Denoia Rodman, who hat moved into Huntington Beach. "lnskad, th• dloau has ftl«l unulal and tnto,.rant lawsuits against thrn local churcha In an attempt to conjiscau tMlr propury and buildings." -A statement 1 .. ued by three cburcha, Including SL James In Newport Beach, that have broken from the Episcopal Olurch. "It's amazing what fnsh pal1tt will do for you. The claurooms look so beautiful and fruh. lt'I going to Na gnat y«1r." -Candy Sperllaa, principal of Wilton Elementary School in Costa Mesa, which wu extensively refurbilbed over tl}µwnmer with nd'lfaint, walls and carpeu, u 1ebool got ready to start. "We're suing because the /report} Is thlibfrai.ly mlsl«ullng and '°"'*"'"'""" may thenforw IMUl tM public to pau Measurw L by mlstaa by d«ielvln1 them. It's tt.c.plfw In · s•wral ways. 71N most Important Is that It doa not consldn tM main ali.nuutw -wln1 tM part for iom. 4ttroaiw park p"'J'OH, 1uch ai • "°"""' c.nt«,. -Ma-.., aecretary of StoP Polludng Our Newport, on a laWIUlt the group ftled ...Wt Newport Beach over Marlnapart. I I ' I I ... •• •I .. .. , .... , i111 'jJ .,. •' . .. • ~1 '-i ·' .J ... r: '" ... 1 r • • • • • • ·z t ' .. • I • I • • • ' --~~~~~~~~~~-~ • DailyAPilot --------i ' S&riMJ, !Isl•• -)2 ... Chronicling th~jouniey Of life · B Udunpromanl Try thrciwtn8 that WOid a.round at party, ind yWB eltber fuclnate people or frlatiten them; with. dMlereat ~ tbanocben. ...... ~ that teprHW dlla .... lie But dda rather omlnoua-toundlng wont la reprewntattve of IOmeddnl far .... threatening. It'•. type offlcdon that manyofua ra.d without knowing that lt la Bildunproman. .""' ... ,..,llw+' '•II) AS' by Md.1\dlaf UMI -i'lle~la .... ~.,, J.D.~ More recieD#Y )Mablllbed worb tbat can be delc:ribed u BOdun,prolDID Jndude • John Gdaham'• ........ ......... and~ .Klug'• -u.n. m A ..... a" In fact. you will tlnd quite a few boob that offer a more contemporary depicdon of this genre: to to make awe you're up on the latest In Blldungsroman, pick up one of the foilowtng titles at the Newpon 8acb Public Ubtary. 1be word ftnda ltl roou in German. meaning •a novel of formation" and ldentlftea a literary genre that baa been popular for centude&. The term refers to an indMduaJ'a quest for aelf and meaning agahlst aodal order and to the incidents that occw during tbia queat. The American style adds the element of the protagonist being a traveler .. Dhe from Ou_... Pier" by Ann Pack.er la the story of a young Midwest woman wboae GEi llNG Training sesaioM are evella~. Information: (800) 680-1993. INVOLVED AMERICAN CANCER SOCElY The Orange County Region of the • OETnNG INVOUIED runs AmeriQn Cancer Society ..... periodically In the Deity Pilot on a office volunteers. The society atso rotating ~ For Information Melca volunteers to answer calla about adding your org91llzetion for the unit's Helpline Info c.nter. to thla llat. call (949) 674--t298. Information: (949) 26HM48. ACAODK YEAR IN AMERICA AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY CosU Mesa families can hoct a DISCOVERY SHOP German student and eam up to The America"I Cancer Sodety $1,000 toward a number of C>i9ocMwy Shop needl urMl8f'd8d travel-abroad pflOgratnl. goods ad"t as docNng, furnlue. Information: Danielle Carpino. jewelry. eocwon.. er1Ciqla end (800) 322-HOST. ooledJ:.a to f\.wld the 80Ciety'a reeeerdl, educ:8tlon end ALS ASSN., ORANGE COUNTY pedent...W. pogran .. The CHAPTER goods mev be dropped off et 28>0 The Amyotrophic Lateral E. Coaet t-lghMI'(. Corona dal Mer. Sc:teroaia Aun., which helps ~ agM 16end older are people who have the dilOf'der ., needed~ hap IOrt doct-. that It aJao known .. Lou Gehrig's Cllhier, decorll9e, Sid do OOfl'1IUllar di ..... , needs volunteet1. ~from 10 a.m. ~ 6 p.m. Mondey Information: (714) 375-1922. ~ Seudey at the ume location. lnbmation: (949l 6111KT72 Al.ZHBER'S ASSN. Of ORANGE COUNTY AMERICAN CANCER SOCETY Support group leaders, family ROAD TO RECOVERY reeoun::e consultants, epecial The transportation program event volunteers, of'l'lce needs volunteers to drive cancer volunteers .... needed. patients to and from medical Vol~ may worll on one-time treatments free of c:Nrge. The profects or ongoing programs. required commitment is a few &14blisJml ;,, 1962 6UM:i6. 11Ktde"ly pimlyr.ed. 1be bso6ne tleea to New Yock Qty to pm new freedom and pea;pec:dw Oil her tun.are. The dOeaV!Mt of bet~ life and~ ... pnMnt altuadon makes for an bUelestlna atory of a womad• joumey to • lndependeoce. .... AP4h•Ad........_ of ....... <Jar' by Michael OW>on la a colorful DOYel about two boya from Broo.klyn finding themaelves and their puaion. 1llJdng place In the 1930'1, the two team up to create a comic strip about superheroea. The atory blends comlc book d:wactera and their life lloriea amid the turmoil of tbatpedod . -Secnu of the Tiii c.w by Thomas Fox Averill depict.a a hours eadl week or month. Drivers muat have a valid driver'• lk:enM and Insurance end be at least 26. Volunteers may Ute either their own vehides or Amerlcen Cancer Society vans. Information: (949) 261·9446 or «:0mer@cancer.orp. AMERICAN HEART ASSN. The American Heart Aun. is looking for volunteers to perform various general office duties In the main office and implement educational and fundralaing events through Orange County. No experience neceaaary. Training will be provided. Information: (949) 856-3555. AMERICAN HOME HEAllli HOSPICE PROGRAM The American Home Health Hospice Program needs volunteers to give emotional support to terminalty ill patients and their families in the greater Orange County area. Training Is provided..lnformation:(714) 550-0800 or (800) 540-2545. AMERICAN RED CROSS, ORANGE COUNTY CHAPTtR The chapter needs volunteers to address community groups about Red Cross services and to · Finest Prime Stults 11nJ Beef in Or11nie County · Frahm Gri/kJ Lobmr, Crab anJ SeafooJ in the area • Live Tribute to Franlt SiNttra Moru/4y mu/ Twu/4y Nithu from 6:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. BAR OPENS IJ 4:30 PM DINNl!ll IS SERVED MONDAY-SAnJu>AY PROM 5:30 PM For Raervatioo CaU (949) 646-7944 1695 lrvitN ...t..., Con. Ma. C4 HoMB OP THE PEAlu. Dvsr MAKnN1 $40 Ta~et GiftCard and Free Chiicki For Lifer Mii Cheddn1 For Life Pllll T~ CitftCaid ..... Onllne Banking ' Mii Visa Chedc cant culllwy comfns of age. Wei la the 104 of two restaurateur&, and the t'etponlO>Wdea and co01ict1 of tbla lifestyle have a deep Impact OD him. Comblnlng recipes. food history and the atrugles or a family, It porttaya lhe unlqualell of th.la way of life and the chOd that Inhabit.a thiaworld. "'Diamond Dop" by Alan Watt ls a painful yet engaging novel about a troubled teenage boy coming of age in the glitz and Oash of Las Veps. The bright lights of the city only highlight the sorrowfuJ reality of his life, his family and a fateful night From anotheT perspective, you can enjoy this kind of journey in viewing such classic films as "Zorba the act aa liaisons with the media in diaaater and emergency situations. Information: Lynn Howes, (714) 481-5376. • CHECk It OUT la written by the staff of the N.wport BNdl Public Ubrary. Thl9 week'• cofumn 11 by Kathy Bllflng1. AJI titiet may be reMfV9d from home or office compWtrl by aocessing the catalog at http://www.n.wportbeach l/brary.orp. For more information on the Central Library or any of the branch locationa, please contact the Newpon Beach Public Library at (949) 717 3800. option 2. Historical Society, a nonprofit organization, is seeking memorabilia such as photographs and stones for the museum's collection Volunteers AMMAl. NETWORK OF ORANGE are needed as docents and to COUNTY help with displays The Become a bottle-feeder or take in museum. at 502 S Bayf ront, pregnant cats at your home. Suite A , is open from 10 a.m. to Many shelters kill pregnant cats 2 p.m. Wednesdays and upon arrival. Dogs and cats are Saturdays. Information: (9491 aJao available for adoption. 675-3952 Information: (949) 759-3646 or http:Jlwww.snimslnetworlc.org. ASSISTANCE LEAGUE OF WHATS NEWPORT-MESA ~looking for varying levels ON TAP of ln'o'otvement al'9 needed to help the °'gai lizatiofl with its goal of helping dlidren in the oommunity. lnfonnation: (949) 646-6929. TODAY WHAT: 16th Annual Taste of ASSN.RENAISSANCE Newport CREATORS WHERE: Newport Center The Costa Mesa group sponsors Drive, Fashion Island and supports outreadl WHEN: From noon to 8 p.m community service programs, INFORMATION: (949) sudl as the homeless sanctuary. 729-4400, or go to Volunteers are needed. http:/lwww tasteof Information: (714) 540-5803. newport.com. The group Kool & the Gang performs BALBOA ISLAHO MUSEUM ANO tonight, as will the group tlSTORICAL SOCIETY Super Diamond. The Balboa Island Museum Jnd Sieve &r,a wniee tbe bcJo;k. It'• called 101 Coct-EITec1ive Ways IO locreue the V aJuc o( Your Home. · Number one on h&i ln1 Eltm1na1e the .. Yi.k-:s" flCIOr You M:e, Sttve 1~ an mve'tor He buy' ~s tha1 need help, fu.~ them up. Kil• thcm for 1 11dy profil Whal he love\, ~fore, I) w find .. y I.le:•."' Appeal m .t ho;lnc: When ll nonnaJ peN>O dmt'\ up IO I home for '»>le, WJ::, 11. 4ud look .... y, .. Y1li.e,, .. and dn"t"> away. lh.1t hou'>C h<b ··v11i.c.-,·· appeal ~ll:p one: IU c:lim1nat( thc "'Ylk.e~ .. Fa1:1ur Buy "mil or lwo of p~LIC 11.lfb411c b.tp .Uld fi ll them with c:vc:rythmtz ncn v .. 11ucl) rc'ICmbhnJ l!J'h on the propcny Wcec:b 'huuld bt: pulled lrom the tzo11ckm .tI1d rqil.J<.cd v. uh c:olorful pl.ult\ Old l"'lnl 'hould he \anded and repl<l41.'d V<1th lre-.h painl. TilC IJwn \huuld he P"lllpcn:d and brou11ht up lo 'J'<"l.'d \II uf th~·~ a "cry pra...llt..il way 111 \,t\,IO(t what rc:.tl C:\Wlt" pr11k"1ooab h3"c 'JJd lur tJ«.id<:, '"ur houi.e v. 111 ...:II far more qullli.ly and .. 1" IJr t>t-ncr p!"ll< 1f "uu mW..c: the 111cxpcn"vc: u"mell• t111pnl\>COM:llh lhJI hu1ld UJI v. h .. 1 I\ l1HT1monh li.11uv. 11 j' , urti JJ'I"'"' The l llllc: Jnd llhtfll ~ 111\C:\IL'd Ill \Ulh J JlfOJI!• I "'111 nul .un11un1 111 " (tfl.'JI de.ii and "'111 hr Ill!! 111 " 11rc.it f(IUm J111, 1um' •UI II Ix l•rr1!>1\ 1111pon.in1 \1.un l'll:•tpk h.·l1nc 1h.;1 11 .. mchu"•r,, Jn -...·~ JlJ'I k:h rrnl "1Jllll«n.111<c: 1 .. Ilk· h<Hll<', p<1lc1111.1 \ f\ 1,·v. h1•111d'<J~ .. ,,. 1h1tu>!li kc:l ,11unnl l.'rn11111tnJ lh h) "•·c:cl' .ir1d p.:d111\! p.unt l>o J lrnk "'''r~ rn.lli.i: J l1tt 111 11 •ll<.'\ I 1•1 1u~•h· tnlunnJl11H1 n .. ·~ tritirn_' rt•.11 l">l.tll", 'Jll 011.' ,11 ·1~11 "'I I :1 i 1111 \ .,,, Ill\ .... ,.h\lh ti hftt"lor1lr•W -t1 l J111•r W<mx h.JJ brm •rtlmx h11mr1 in Nn,'f>Orl lk.ith 11ncr I WJ'J 11rul IJ u·trl1 ( ..l)cJJI 'liruf>On Pro pm ml< 111.d u ·rU B.m Jrrr TO BEACH CAPTAiNS FROM THE "ADOPI•A-BEACti" CAMPAIGN FOR DOING THEIR PART TO • KEEP OUR BEACHES CLEAN <' M Sooday, ~t*"* 12, 2004 NATURAL MEDICINE CENTER Over 46,00Q P«ltleitli ffHted/ AcupunctUN • Hef'bl • DIM • Nubftlon I t I f .. • t I I P\OJ{f .\'-tl \. l'\I'\ "' \\ 11<.ll I I -I w.u diagnosed with peoriuis 10 yan ago. It narud on my arnu and erivate aias and then all over my boJy. The psorwu go< m.c real bad and it a.ffi:cted ~in Huang, my self cs1ccm. I wcnc to the medk:al doctor bu1 they LA< .. Oipl. AL, Dipl. CH. du.I no1 help me or ha~ an answer for my condition. ''""""' 111' ,;,, I .ilw.ayi heard •1 don't know• from them,'° how can r.,J.frm•"' s-,J.f I know 1heir mcdicacioo works. I w;u under their '"'"'",,] Q,.,,Jiry A"'"''"" r I 0 'th --·-' 0 "6-26 'V(CAOM l .1r11fVtl 1rc:umcnt 1or years WI no rguib. n ,v ... y , ' 2004, I c;imc ro the Narura.l Medicine Uti1er. I Or. Janee Yeh bcg'1n ue'11mum with acupunaure, herbal med1cme Pla.D .. M.SC., LA4. '1ntl nu1ri11on guidelines. I wu ;· · ·c a.1 fim, and 1 "'"''" 0.., '"' when I s1.u1ed 10 fed bcncr I I chat i1 migh1 <.Ji/•"""' a..,.,.1 •I tu 'th de ,,,.,,,.1 q ... ,,,,.,. A ... .,.,..,.. 1us1 work After 2 mont , e ahoul r pa.m weni l>o1 "''"""' ·'"'""an .iwar. .111d 1he ;inklcs 100. I have an improved <jualiiy r ffii{20 .MiNfrr£• nf life anJ fed bcuer a.bout myself. The psoriasis is 1 HEALIB 1 under rnnirol. I sleep bcner, my bowd mo~mcnrs 1 CONSULTATION 1 .Arc bmcr, rod I los1 weight. 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Offers good thru 9-30-04. 2285 Newport Blvd • Costa Mesa (Corner of Fa1rv1ew <n Newport Blvd.) (949) 650-1009 SUNMIST 50% OFF 1st Session $15 Value POLICE FILES COITA..U • w..t..._ICJMt:A commerd1t burglltywte reported In th• 1100 blodc It 4:62 p.m. Thur9d1y. • 8Ntol 811Mt: A commerd1I burglary was reported In tht 3300 block It 3:68 p.m. Thursday. •Newport Bou~ Grtnd theft wn reported In tht 2400 block at 8:60 a.m. Thurtdey. • Senta Ana Avenue encl Smelley RMd: A traffic 1cddent lnvoMng fn)uriea wat reported at 6:20 p.m. Thursday. ~UC SAFETY ~ ........ WIJ:Ahome burglery w rtpOt'Uid In ttM ..... It 11:301.m. ~. . • .... c.111 .... ,..,. ..... A~~WMl'9POfted It 1:21 a.m. Thurldly. • INIM"'•"* Acommerci1I bulll*Y WM repomd In the 3300 btoct at e:st a.m. Thur.day. • NewpcwtC.Wo.9'M w.t: Grind theft WM~ In th• 800 blocl It 4:29 p.m. Thuredey. •Ilda 8lrMt V.ndlMlm WM reported tn the 100 blodc It 12:50 1.m. Friday. PEACE Contilud from Al SepL 11 would be the p'Mtelt way to honor dMm. • be Aid. 1be ewnt -wb.ldl hun.clredl were apected to attmil -fo· cuted on cbJJdren, Turrell &&Jd. "Peace •tam with ow c!hJl • dreo, it 1tart1 at home,• be l&ld. ·u we can. plant that teed ln them when m.y .,. roung, it bod11 well for ow future." Although the event ii orp.n- t.zed by what 1\me1l cal1I •new . thought church•,• lt'• not about reUaton. be ll&ld. ·we d1dn't want to mate It about relillon," M Mid. •tt'• more of an event focuaing on spiritual prlnctpJ11, like doing L----------------------_.;. _________ _._J something · poaltJve in your SUNDAY Continued from Al "It relieves all your~ and headaches. It's relaxing." Even though he doesn't ride much. he lives something of a biker's lifestyle through his job as a bouncer at Margarttavil.le, Newport Beach's main stopping point for people from all CJVer Southern California who want to parlc their bikes and grab a bite or a dnnlc. IT TAKES All KINDS The motorcycling community in Newport-Mesa Is a diverse crowd. It includes the two main segmenis of the biking commwlity-Harley-Davidson ride(') like Silvernail and those who ride spon bikes, which are mostJy made by Japanese companies such as Kawasaki and Honda. "lne sport bike scene has grown tremendously," said Mike Boelhouwer, who Is In charge of parts at Mach I Motorcycles in Costa Mesa. "Every year it gets bigger." Motorcycles we~ Boelhouwer's first mode of transportation and nCJ\.\I he rides one to work because its a cheaper and faster corrunute. "It's like a big toy," he said. ·it's a big toy you can speed on, if you don't get caught." For some riders, motorcycles are a break from the daily grind rather than a busines& Walliam Burke is one of those. A retired corporate lawyer who lives in Costa Mesa. Burke bought his first motorcycle nearly a decade ago. and one of his first rides took him to Nonh Dakota to ~t the grave of his wife's grandfather. "It was a very adventuresome ride," Burk.e said ·1 went through about six national parks; I got caught in a bl11.zard." THE CALL OF THE OPEN ROAD In Orange County. Coast Highway Is the preferred ride because of the sceoery. but riders also travel inland to 1\"abuco COMMENTS Continued from Al instruction: HOick on the tab next to the ideas that th.is candldate believes In. M The boxes Include, among many others. ·Pro· family•; "Abstinence"; HPro life"; "Seek God for direction"; ·Heal the sick." What really caught my eye was that Jesus has his own tab, right next to Bush and Kerry. When you click on the "Jesus" tab, you'll find a list of biblical quotations beneath each of the beliefs you're being ~ to asslgn to Bush, or Kerry. or both. For instance, under ·Assist the Poor,· there Is this, from Matthew 25:40: "lhlly I say to you, in so far as you did It to one ofthese,the leastofmy brothers, you did it to me." Few people would confuse Steve Gooden's website with a scientific opinJon poll. No 6UrVe)' Is ever completely objective, and this one just ~pens to be a btt Canyon to stop at c.ook's Comer, which on weeends attracts hundreds of bikers to eat. drink. sodalize and look at the bikes. Newport Beach reswuateur Dan Man:heano Wees to take bis girlfriend and his Harley south along the coast to Laguna Beach and Dana Point or north to Malibu. stop somewhere for lunch and ride back. He oft.en rides alone in the mornings to clear his head before starting a ~workday at his restaurant. The Armes, where he's swrounded by people. "You have a lot of doctors, dentists, attorneys [who ride occasionally)," MardleaJlo said ·rm more ferocious with it I ride almost every day." His rides around Newport Beach are practicaDy one long sodaJ call. with Marcheano spotting business people and other bikers he knows on his rides and when he stops. The long rides are what Bwke prefers. Hls wife doesn't like the motorcycle, but she bought him a Harley Road King -a towing bike -because she knows how much he l<M!S riding, Bum said. When he's on a long trip. he avoids chain restaurants and eats in local joints to experience new things. He stops when he wants and changes course if he feels like it "I love to just get out. and [on a bike) you don't have anything between you and your SWJOWlclinS'o" he said more subjective than most. to say nothing of hugety influenced by your own beliefs. Tu be honest, some of the beliefs you're being asked to assign to one of the two candidates are a little hard to decipher. There is a "Do Not 0venax· box on the cbeckllst, which I would expect George Bush to win going away, but there la ai.o a MPay Taxes" box. I'm pmty ~ both Bush and Keny are o~ with paying taxes. There is also a box for •Assist the Widows." which is a good thing, although I'm not sure either candidate has staked out much of a position on that Gooden'• website is really the latest fteradoil of a premise that got a lot of attention In 2002, when an obscure organization called the "National Religlous Partnenhlp for the P.nviroomeot" launched a national campaign to d1lcourage ~from drlvtng SUV1 by ukiog du. QUeldon: "What kind of car Would Jeall driver It may have been ablurd. but the' Ha,a rnotaeycle mechanic at Mach 1 MotcrcycJes, wort<s on a ~e. KENT TREPTOW /ONlY PILOT TRANSPORTATION, THERAPY AND ADYENTUR£ Every motorcyclist baa their own reasons for riding, but many riders say It's the most fun ~ ever had If your job is straight-laced. having a moton:yde can express your bad side. said Brad Obhen. who lives in c.osta Mesa and worb for a custom bike painting shop in Orange. Bikers aJso use their bikes as a hobby to spend their money and time on. he said "It's like customizing your house for a guy.· Obhen said 'Women like to put up new drapes. Guys do that to their bikes.. While a moto~ provides a lot of freedom. It also requires concenttation and attention to safety. A rider has no protection from a Dying rock. something tumbling off the bad of a truck. or a careless car that veen too far out of its lane. Marcheano took a bike safety course when he started riding about 10 years 880> and he's never had an accident "I'm not riding a motorcyde to wind up in a wheekh.air, • he said 'Tm doing it for different reasons. I like the challenge. I like the camaraderie. Some people play golt: I ride a motorcycle." • AUCIA ROllNSON CO\l9f'I ~ politk:t Ind the environment. She may be reached at (949) 76M330 or by &-mell at alida.robln«H1tllatima.oorn question caught the nation's fancy, a lot. and popped up everywhere, from the Wall Street Journal to "The Tonight Show." Of the hundreds of~ that were olf ered for what kind of car Jesus would drive, I thought the bell-ringer was"• Chrtst-ler. .. According to Made Petraoca, one of the top ltalian-Amerlcan political sdentista, with an ot!lce in the Social Sciences Plaza at UCL Gooden's premlle la • ... not totally crazy. Bush h1maelf. when aabd who he conaiden the most lmportant historical figure was durin8 the lut presidential debate Mid Jesus Ouist." But it la a good example of bow timet, and rac., have changed, according to Pettacca. who referred to John P. Kennedy's preddlndal nee. in which he had to cUalan.ce bbNe1f repeatedly from .. c.athotic faith to quell lean that u the ftnt CatboUc prmMterlt. be might defer to Rome m.e.d of the c.onatltudon. ·Now ... ~w..rr. community. "A lot of people give up on peace too eully thinking that It's too big an iuue for them. But it's not. People can make a difference u individuals ... The event also featured guest speakers, includJng actor James Cromwell, music, booth.I and activldea for chil· dren from puppet abows to face-painting. Paru of the event took place under a large white tent. Rothman said her children look at such an evmt as an opportu- nity to fltNi the seeds of peace in their hearts. eval though they don't oompletely underatand the larger implication& Right next to where Rothman was sitting, several children were painting and writing mes· sages of peace on rocks. They take the rock home with them to remind them about the mes- sage of peace, said Elizabeth Lank.ater, who was running the rock-painting booth. "It will hopefully make them aware that I! they each take heart and think about peace. it'll spread around," she said. Peace begjns at home. said Barbara Everen, a visitor from Lake Forest. ·How can we have world peace if we don't have peace in our homes, communities and schools?. she said. "These churches getting together in· stead of competing against one another ln itseU is an expres- sion of pea,::e." Joseph Figueroa. 15, from Lake Forest, said the event wa11 a way for children and teens to learn about peace in a safe and fun environment. ~Thfs is a great (venuel be cause just being here is peace ful," he said. Mlt reminds you to stay calm and not get stressed out. If everyone is at peace, the world ls at peace.~ • DEEM BHARATH 11 the tnterprlse end gener1l 111lgnment reporter. She may be reec:hed at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail et deep•.bharathOlatimH.com. legitimate,· Petracca said "Both candidates openly talk about matten relad.ng to faith." If you want to see Steve Gooden's site for youraelf, grab your mouse and bead to http-Jlwww.thepasston ojbwh.com. Ju interesting as Gooden'a premise may be. I couldn't help but notice the age-old problem of trying to Interpret biblical refaences and apply them to present-day life, lib th1t quotation under the .Marrtaae .. category. from E.mdUI 20:)7: "You ahaD not covet your netahb<>r'• bowie; you lhal1 not covet your nefabbor'a wile, or hla male alaYe. or his ~or his as. or his-. or ~which belongs to your netpbor." Anyone think I'm going to touch lhart See pangrapb one, abcMr. "third-rall luues." I gotta go. • "18IUFM11 e former Cotie M-. mr/Of. Hie ooturnn Nnt Sundeya .... '"l'f be rtec:Nd by ~. ptlbtl•.at.oom. t l - ~­ Jt it '• n g tr n ll I. a r ) fl .' "you~ llYf MM that you btl.w ihould belddldto our ~l1ndlr. ,,..._ eofT\111 the <MM. time and .-ure of the ewfttto our new Clllnder 9'n\ell eddrw. ~ii: ~tdM•"'*"-com. ~ ltwll be ~to Include 9Y9fY .wnt In theallelldw, • ..,, ... Oi'Wwlll ......... '° edldng. SEPTEMBER ' • • I M ' .. . : I • ' I ) . ' :. . \, 'w I ... .. • '...... ' r , 1 i I t ~ • • r f ~.... I () ,'\ ' c.....) :.. l I ; .... : :·.. ' . .. Crtyof NB · Concert 1n the Parle, TBD Kom1trt OC Race for the Cure, Fasluon Island 5 6 12 13 19 20 26 27 7 Love N' Change 14 A PerfonnM!Ce In Poetry & Song, The Gypsy Den C.fe; Design of 11 o.c.de Fuh1on Show, N-D11wct1ons for Wom1trt and Recydftd Rags of Corona del Mar. Five Crowns R•staurant 21 28 Uw Entertainment • VIP Hospitality • Food & Beverages. Uniquit lhstyle Vendor PN..eatbia Fun for the Enltre Family at thii A....00. Seaside Venue OPIN 101H1 PUii.iC 10AM ·4'M Adrllllance: $.5 llOda '"* 12 ,.,..t • ~ $10 ~ to School Golf TourNtnent, Tustin R~ Flt/I Begins 8 15 22 29 Rusty ~m Fest1v.I, 0C F111rgrounds, ThN 9/f f Rolh~lt 2 9 16 23 Keys to Literacy 8001< 3Q & Author Dinner, Irvine Mamon Arts & Crafts Fest,.val. OC Fairgrounds, Thru 1012, Lido Yacht Show. Lido Marina V1llagl' (through Oct 3) 3 NBCC T.a ci Nev.pon.. 1 0 Fasiuon Island. 1 1 Thrv 9112 Sa,,d Sports 17 Hom•A>d Project 18 $"per Show, Playh~ Fasruon OC Fairgrounds, Thru 9/19 Island, Thrv 10130 Costa Me~ H'stor1ca Sooety Open House Emnc111 Par~ Coasta C e<Jn.,p loc11 t.e<Jc"es 24 Yam K.flp.r 25 1. 1' 4 '• I I I I I ~ • M SlMay, ~ 12, 2c:xM HOW 10 G£T PU8U8HED -f..lalrt: Maff to Ay9I\ Cen.r ft the Olffy Not 830 W. ~st, Co. Meill, CA 121Z7 •RI 1 u tis•• <*I (Ml) ea .... ~~ to (M) ..... 170 ~Send to dallypllotOlafim...oom •All coneepondMa ~ lnclklde ful neme, hofNeown end phorl9 numtier ffOr ~..,,.....,.The Not n11 ~ lhe "8M to eclt .. uubmiellont for clatity end..,.._ EDITORIALS We object to decision on . attorney's office I n a time of tight state budgets and an uncertain economy, it la difBcult to argue when one of our cities tries to keep costs down. There are occasions, hawever, when the i.eal to cut costs ~ questionable, and the Costa Mesa City C.Oundl decision to do away with its attorney's office and enter Into a contract with an outside furn is one of those instances. Al the le~t, It is a decision that seems to denwid more debate and deliberation than it received last "'eek. Our central concern is whether cutting the city attorney's office actually will save the city money The .,taff report. in our opinion, leaves that a large question. The attorney's office, which in past months comprised four employees and two open positions, cost the city about $4 J 6,000 for 5.400 hours of work annually. The finn the dty chose to negotiate a conuact with. Jones & Mayer, would cost more than double that. $864,000, for the ..ame number of hours. However, city .,taff members write: ~If the legal St!rvices are contracted out. it is anticipated that there will be a reduction in the number of hours of legal services billed to the City since attorneys will not be attending many of the meetings now attended by in-house legal staff" That seems a big "if' 10 us. At the least. the city will have to limit its use of attorneys to 2.500 hours a year -an average of just 48 hours a week - '>Imply to come out even. That sounds like a lot, until an issue tuts the city that demands several lawyers' time to handle. We also worry that council or oty Malf members will be reticent to call on attorneys if they know it will cost the dty. Beyond that. however, we are concerned about the speed of the decision becauae of the controversy that has sunounding the city attorney's office in the past few years. The review of the attorney's office that led to the council's decision, after all, came after the city was sued by fonner City Atty. Jerry Scheer, a case that waa settled for $750,000. While dty offtdals have said there was no connection between their decision to look at the office's efficiency and the Scheer suit, the timing ls coincidental enough that city officials should have been as careful as possible to assure residents that their decision was based on budget concerns and nothing more. The swiftness of their decision was not reassuring. Another troubling piece ls that the discus.tjon took place toward the end of a long council meeting, with the vote happening around l a.m. That seems far too late for such an tmportant vote, one that fundamentally alters how the city will do business. Finally, we wonder what this decision portends. If a key city department such as the attorney's office can be cut for budgetary reasons, where else might the knife slice off? Should the fire department be contracted out to Orange Coonty? Should the police department come under the Sheriff's Department. at a potentially substantial savfnss? By choosing to do away with the city attorney's office, city leaders have opened the door to these questions. We doubt· they are ones they aerioU1ly want to ask. A move not in the public's interest P eople who are suspicious of Coast Commurtity College lh.&stee Armando Ruiz' retirement plans certainly have good reason. Because of a quirk in state law, if Ruiz retires from his trusteeship the 'ialhe day he retires from his counseling job at Irvine Valley College -Oct. 31 -he could receive an elevated pension from the Coast district of almost $55,000 a year. Combined with the pension from his service at Irvine Valley College, he could collect a total annual penslon of about $120,000- all because be potentially could retire the same day. lbat's right., the law condones this double-dip. It allows such officeholders. employed with another government agency, to draw pensions from two jobs, based on their highest annual salary, if they retire from the positions on the same day. Ruiz' highest annual salary was $107,000, for his work at Irvine. But that's not all. In what could turn out to be a real coup, Ruiz. who bas Jlled to run for re-election to his trustee 1eat. could retire from both jobs on the same day, secure ~ bolstered pension aqd be re-elected to the trustee Mat on the board be just mired from. Al least that'I what memben of the q,ast federation of 'D:acben and Cout 'lN8tee Jerry Pattmon think ~ coWd do. We tb.1nk that kind of move would smack of linlng one's pockets at public expense. Ruiz has been quiet on the issue, and has not publicly announced any decision on retiring from his trusteeship. So far, it ~ he is running M an incumbent But lhose who are leery of Ruiz' tntentioos believe otherwile. ·1 think lt's totally Wlethical,. said Diana Sharp. president of Coat Federation of Classified Employeea, In a Sept. 2 Daily Pilot story. "I was surprised it was legal" No one can fault the man -who bas spent a lengthy tenure committed to community colleges - for finding a loophole that allows him to retire more comfortab~ Indeed, if he~ to retire from the posts on different days. hea receive just $5,000 per year for the trustee pension and the roughly $65,000 from the South Orange County Community College Distrlct, which Irvine Valley College ls a part of. If anything, perhaps this glitch should haw been foreeeen when Ruiz was elected to bis seat ~we share a general concern that this kind of attuation can arise, and we hope that by the time Oct. 31 ron. around. Ruiz wm do the rtsbt thing and either retire aft.-a long-lived, halthy career u a pijblic Mnant. and not nm u an incumbem. Ot let the voters fahty decide on NoYember 2 bis fate u an iDaunbent U'Ultee-~ hu not yet redled from that post. THE LAST WORD I Saying good-bye to 'The Worm, • BOLTON COMMUNITY COMMENTARY St. James not what it used to be F riends, It la with great sorrow that I read the reports of the members' disloyalty to St. James Episcopal Clluich. Newport Beach. and Bishop J. Jon Bruno. In 1961, soon after moving to th.la area. I was confirmed at St. James (along with several other people whom you would recogniz.e if J mentioned their names) by Bishop Eric Bloy of Los Angeles. It la incomprehensible to me that these new people are trying to "take over" the church. The Rev. Praveen Bunyan was called to St. James only a little over a year ago. and now be tbinb he owns that WI')' valuable piece of property on Udo Island. He doel not In those early days, St. James sponsored and began the million In Corona del Mar tnow St. Mld>aeJa and All Angela Episcopal Cllurcb), and alao St. Wilfred's Episcopal Olu.rcb In Huntington Beach. St. Michaels. and Harbor Day School (EpiJCopal} wu started on the property now houalng the Oasia Senior Center. The Rev. Ed Allen was leader of both. along with the rector of St. James F.piacopal Cllurch. I am sure Frank nane .. A bridge to more traffic at Gisler Avenue Re the suppoeed need !or a brtdge at Gtaler Avenue, I ddlnltely fed tt'a not needed and it would not help but create more traftlc than what it would be worth. ROBERTS. ROllllON c.o.taMesa Going beyond editor's column Re •Take lt even,• Manaa:lna Editor S.J. Cahn'a take 1D bla PoUtica Aaide column on the Xerry·au.b electton by comparing the out.come to the 1ucceaa or failure of th• oew aptn-on "Joey." he 1tate1 that lt the ahow la aucceuful, Bulb abou.ld win became voten might lbow tbey prefer famll1artty over chaqe. Lera tab lt • •tep further. 1f the lhow la 1ucuuful and If Buab wtm. lt wW ibow that Amerle&Dt prefer eomeone who lacb uy lntellltenc• iAd replacel b1t m1tC:afculattou. bJa empirical conduct and ldJodc ttatemaatl With What be thlnb JI humor. Cahn allo nodcel tbe....,.... ol ~P.clwU* ldcbn; 1'bael wbo ptOUdlydlli*JblD .. ... ~, ...... &tilft ... Cldl jiyljDIQ ........... prOfldldo; w. d11• • lllf*I ••• _.,... .... )' • I OD 11111111M ..... Gfmdllr •·' «• b' M ...... .. ...... _ ..... ~ ...... :,-:';f•tr· ........ .. ..,,.. • ..,.. .. Wt,. ,.. remembers those times. When we called a new IKtar, 'The Rev. John Aahey, be brought ua. alao, the Rev. David Crump, and th.la la when our church began to change. The 11 o'clock service became the "Clwttmatic" one with "speaking in toll8'l*o" and far-out practices more auoclated with bible-thumping Bapdar.s than Episcopalians. Many of the "Old Guard" left St. James and moved on to St. Matthewl. Santa Ana. or St. Michaela In Corona del Mar. where we recoplized our church, and the aervicel we were tJse4 to. I am IOU)' that we dkl that. U we bad stayed and fou&ht for the chun:b u we knew tt. St. Jama perbapl would not be in this meu today. We all loved the procea!onal, and the tnceme. and the Common Boot of Prayer-ftnt the 1928 venion and then the newer RJte One and. I think. then RJ1e 1Wo a am not u famOltr with thote. but I can lt1ll redte a lot of the 1928 book from memory). We were acdw in gu1Jda, Sunday ICbool and P.placopal IWDID~ IChoo1.. We held an showl, and~ bad an Eplacopal boobtore in the .Parlab Hall. MAILBAG operatedby volunteers after services. We bad a wonderful "Couples Oub, • wb.lcb sponsored trips for the Eplscopal Oilldren'• Home, and brought them to the beach every summer for a lovely day and picnic. Then. we coDected what we called ·A Book and a Buck for a Bus,· in order to buy a bua for thOte lddt. We never made enough for a real bua, but we bought a station WlgOn, which helped. Al one dme we even painted the Pariah Hall kitchen oune!va. All the friends I ever made In Newpon Beach I met at St. Jama Eplacopel Clwrcbt and they are still my frienda, and many are leaden of the oomnumtty. I could condnue for many pqea. but tbOle ol you who were of d:W time wOl mnember, and weep for St. Jama today, I'm awe, u I do. r don't really undentand bow there could be • member Uat of 1,200. The vote to "break &waf' WU 280 to 12. Where II the Riil of the coqrep!lonf Dtd only the 11 o'clock aervice get to vote? Who =5i.ic and bow dare you =-w.EGIAVEN Balboa llland CONTEMPLATING THE SEPARATION 'The break was necessary, but the political f al/out is distracting from the work of compassionate ministry we are called to do. My relationship with St. James continues as before, but perhaps with more resolve and a clearer sense of our mission. It hasn't affected my faith per se, but it does cause me to grieve for the Episcopal Church.' .. PO UM ._..,·au tr JI,.-. ~ MARI< C. DUSTIN I DALY PILOT Standing firm on church schism F or many, like St. James Olurch parishioner Galen Yorba-Gray, the Episcopal Olurch has strayed from what Yorba-Gray said are key tenets of religious faith; belief in the supremacy of biblical scripture and Jesus Olrlst. That's why he has stood firmly behind his Newport Beach church and its pastor, Pt alll'een Bunyan. as the church, with its 1,200 members, has broken away from the Episcopal Diocese and taken shelter under the Diocese of Luwero in the Anglican Province of Uganda, Africa. 1\vo others, All Salnt.s' lo Long Beach and St. David's in North Hollywood, have alao seceded, citing the Episcopal Olurch's liberal views on homosexuality, the divinity of Ouist and the supremacy of the Bible. In a nutshell, the Episcopal Olurch has simply lost its way on a path to salvation, St James leaders say. and people such as Yorba-Gray didn't like the direction. In a vote, 280 St. James members opted to break away, with 12 dissenters wanting to remain with the Episcopal diocese. Yorba-Gray, a parishioner at St. James for four years, sees the break last month as a glitch in his church's path, but one that has bglstered a sense of ld.igious mission. Before things settle down, congregants will have to get through what will likely be a high-profile legal battle over the rights to the St. James property. Olurch leaders have already been fired by incredulous Episcopal ruocese leaders, who have sent minions to the break-away areas with hopes of setting up new ministries and drawing in those St. James parishioners who disagree with the secession. A diocese lawsuit filed Tuesday alleges that St. James clergy and the board of directors are guilty of breaching their trustee duties and refusing to leave the property owned by Episcopalians. Meanwhile, Yorba-Gray s tands firmly with his church. ln the midst of growing legal and philosophical tumult, Yorba-Gray agreed to answer some questions from the Piiot'• Ryan Carter. How hM St. Jama' break from the dlocele affected you and your own reladoDlhlp with St. James, and ewn your own faJthf Hu It reinforced or challenged your rellglou.t belleftf The break was n~. but the political fallout is distracting from the work of compassionate ministry we are called to do. My relationship with St. James continues as before, but perhaps with more resotve and a clearer sense of our mission. It hasn't affected my faith per se. but it does cause me to grieve for the F.piscopal Olwch. Why II thll eecaslon atplflcantf P.arting ways with family and friends la always difticult, but Episcopal Olurcb USA'• drift into cultural accommodadon has broken down the diatincdve of the Gospel menage: All are invited to come, FROM THE NEWSROOM but come and be healed. changed and forgiven. How hu your own vtew of the Bpl9c:opal church changed aver tlmef What h8I turned you off about the Bp18copal Ow.rch at largef I was initially attracted to the Episcopal Omrch's openness and Minclusiveness~ as coming from a place of compassion. However. this view has come to fall short of the Gospel's call to repentance, redemption and transformation. The biblical narrative of the woman at the well offers helpful insights into Jesus' notion of inclusively. He welcomes a person who was. in effect. triple-marginalized then: She was first of all a woman, then Samaritan woman, then an immoral Samaritan woman to boot Jesus accepted her. listened to her pain, offered her spiritual help and then held her accountable for change. Episcopal Olurch USA has done a pretty good job of calling people to help others, but hasn't followed through as well on matters of spiritual and moral accountability. We view these as essentials if the Gospel Is to remain a unique and authentic call to a restored humanity. l)le men hiding in the shadows of the Samaritan lady's past also needed to step forward and stop using people, living a double standard, and accept the heart change that Jesus offered to her. lftm what I undentand -and plew c:oa19CI me If I'm wrong-St. ,_ _ .,....,... ecrlpture mcl an ..:aptaDc:e ol ..... -Lord and l9vlor • tbe one true W1lf to Ahadoa..Do,_ ..... , Yes. there are mmy bridges that try to aoes the a-n of our alienation from God -80me fine bridges as far as they go -bu1 Quist t,, the compJeted bridgr from God's perspeaiYe. How would you answer thoee who haft quadoned IUCb. foaued bellelr God offered Ouist to the world as an absolute response to our brokenness. Reladvistic philosophies similar to postmodern thought have always been around. Haw you talked about the chun::b'a lltuatlon wttb other parllb.lonenf Do they .. wttb you and PMtor Praveen Bunyun atancet Naturally we talk about it, and yes. we support him 100%. What's. Sunday eentce Ub noWT .. theft ...... that. eblft bM ~ .. there refle( rim that there II a IDOft OODUete belief Jn --Chrtlt -the snlorf There is surely relief on the one hand, but Jesus has always been real and "concrete" for us at St. James. as is our commitment to the scriptures as the maximum authority for doctrine and practice. On the other • hand, we all await the settling down and hopefully, the peaceful godly resolution of the legal questions that ' remain. What do you think of thla Idea of . Bllhop J. Jon Bnmo of the Loe ~ Dlocw .. , ........... to tn.bway uw mc:b • Newpon 8wh to 8et up new mbdlltl• ad mlnll1er to tboee wbo doa't ..... to ..., at the dlurc:he9f I think be is talking about an exttemely small group of people who would be equally at home in area F.plscopal chun:hes. but ~ bless those who differ, and pray for their continued spiritual care. '• 'Political junkie' lands seat on debate panel . ' ~wmendone cmAfe•• .. Ne:wPort·Mela OIJ °"n:I .... achool bout ......... ,_ ............ ofwhem die Clll f 3 &N .... Ind bOw 11 .......... llD leed. .............. wtdt ;er .. ::rc:-: ... 11111 •• • ................ I , aa '•ef--11 s uH11llllr•dOOI ...... , ..... 7 ... *l''•lt HAUOAVEW HIU.S UMt• 2801 Harbor View Drive• Open Hoose l-'f1Hn 3 bedroom, 3 bath remodel wkh fanWtk views. Denlne IC.ems 949.759.3758 ~Youns 949.75t.l70I CWhndjoy . I t has Deen 75 yeen. WtuaDy to the day, since a man named Sklney Davidson opened the front door In September of 1929 to let the Long Gray Une in at Newport Harbor Hlgtl. So It seemed appropriate to take a look around and you migllt be surprised al what I found a few days ago. I've always been a big fan of Howard Carter, the fell<7N who nosed around the Pyramids and found the remains of Tutankhamun, the boy king. So you can imagine the intJi8ue as I sauntered through the various nooks and cranrues of Ralph K. Reed Gymnasium on the ROGER Sailors' campw,. There have been a CARLSON lot of changes since those doors opened in the early 1930s, but in very shon o~er. the Interior of the gym is going to be unveiled and it is a masterptece, thanks to the coaching staff of Larry J lirst, Danny Glenn and Athletic Director F..ric Tweit, along with a couple of once-in-a-decade boo!.ters who have ~mered the scene and proceeded to make a m1e difference with their know-how. time, sweat and energy. fhere was a Nt'\'llJ>Ort booster a few yean> ago named lbm Williams. and the re.ult of his effo~ are still obvious with an awewme amount of work at Davidwn Field revolving around drainage, the level of the field and many extras, such as the palm trees. Tom Williams came and went. but he's still there. Now, Wt! have a couple of individuals .... who have 8m1 making hu&e wayes in the area of the main gym and when you c;ee what's been done it1J be clear to everyone that Ed Slater and Scott Burnham are two who belong in the upper echelon of the Long Gray Line. I've seen it in Its not-completely-finished state and it's obvious I llrst and Glenn have been able to realiz,e some long-sought dreams of a dassic field house. thanks to the efforts of Slater and Burnham. The Ooor is pristine, the striping comes down to just two options, the main hoops and main voDeyball layouts, and at opposite comers are tributes to the fairest of them all. George Yardley. as in wvardley O>wt. ~ The dungeon-like ceiling is gone and all of the leftover chalm and ri.lrra1f have been removed. including an estimated 1,000 feet of extension cords left over the years In the catacombs. New~ is expected to be completed later this week and the entire place has a coat ol paint which brings it Into a cllwic look that you just can~ find See BIG EASY, Pase 82 CROSS COUNTRY Host Anteater women second at Central Park MARK C DUSTIN I DAILY P1L 0 T Los Angeles Southwest Colege linebacker Nicholas Partner raises his hands m the air after recovenng a fumble on the snap wtje OCC quarterback Kyte Basanez (8) and the rest of the disappointed Orange Coast offense walk off the field in the second quarter in Saturday's game at L.A. Southwest. The Pirates lost four fumbles on the day. Backward· motion for Orange Coast Pirates lose four fumbles that lead to 19 points Saturday in nonconference loss at L.A. Southwest. Barry Faulkner Daily Pilot , LOS ANGELES -The brtght spots were nearly as scarce as shade for the Orange Coast College football team Saturday afternoon at sun- drenched Los Angeles Southwest For, despite a bright beginnlng and a flashy flnJsh. the Pt.rates dropped a 36-19 nonconference dedllon to the Cougars, who improved to 2-0 while dropping occ to 0-2. It was the sixth atraJgbt defeat for the Pirates. who, according to Coach Mike 'Dlylor, took a step backward from their season-opening 24·17 loss to Glendale. occ 19 LA Swst. 36 day." "After our (second) play [a 70-yard touch- down run by freshman tail- back Matt Pa- dilla), I thought we'd be taking a step forward." Taylor said. "Bui I'd have 10 say there was regression to· The Pirates fumbled four quaner- back-center exchanges. losing all four in their own territory, which led to 19 points for the hosts. The visitors also muffed a punt that Southwest recovered on the Pi- rates' 18, then pounded in for an- other touchdown that made it 29-7 with 11 :36 left in the game. Orange Coast. which had posses- sions of 23, 12, 18 and 16 seconds, averaged a mere 97 seconds on its 13 possessions, giving away field posi- tion, momentum. and. ultimately. its chance at victory. "There's no excuse for the [furn· bled) center snap!.," said Taylor. who altemared quarterbacks Otad Schrm- gel and Kyle Rasanez. the laner com bming with ~ophomore cenrer Ricley Mercado for three of the mLc,handled exchang~ The Pirares shored up problem ... with long snaps LO the lacldng game that plagued them against Glendale But OCC was flagged twice for hiltlng the Southwest punter. one such foul prolonging a drive that ended LO a touchdown. OCC also had one lack off sail out of bounds. had one punl travel just 7 yards. and committed the aforementioned muff. There were, however, '>poradK highlights for the OCC offense. as Pa dilla collected 124 rushing yards on 16 carries and BManez. coming off See OCC, P11e 83 \ ~.~12,2004 MEN'S ~ WATER POLO USC rallies to knock off 'Eaters Big second half lifts Trojans over UC Irvine, l 0-6, in Los Angeles. Second-ranked use scored mne sec- ond-half goals and wenr on to defeat No. 7 UC lrvme, 10-6, in nonconference men's water polo game at McDonald'!. Swim Stadium in Los Angele., Saturday. Freshman lhoma-. Hale scored all ol h1~ game-tugh three goals in the second hall IO help the de- fending national champion lro1ans erase a 1 I halftime ddic11 I faJe and Juraj Za10v1t scored back to-back goals in Lhe lhmJ quarter to lie lhe ~core al 3-3. then UU ~ophomore Cole Ruter put the Anreaters back up 4-J. on a goal with J:04 left in thar period Jame~ Shin scored I Y ..,cJ.;ond., la1er lO See POLO, Paee 82 IRRELEVANT WEEK Hoag with Minne s~ota Mr. Irrelevant 2003 begins NFL season today on Vikings' practice squad. Ryan Hoag. Mr Irrelevant IO 2(XJ.l. IX' gim the 2004 NI I ..ea- son on the pracoce <,quad of tht> Mmn1...01a Vilang, A 6 foot-l. .!00 pound ret e1Ver out of (,~tavus Adolphu., ( ol- lege in Minnesota I loag was signed 10 the prac- uce ')()Uad Tuesday. one day after betng waived Ryan Hoag by the Vtlangs. Hoag hooked on with Mmne50ta after ill-fated previou . ., stints with the Oak.land Raiders. who drafted htm with the last pick ui the 2003 draft. and the N~ York (11ants. This year's Mr Irrelevant. Andre Sorrunerseil. a former fatancia I ltgh 'tu· dent-athlete drafted ou1 of Colorado \tate by the Raiders. was relea-.t•d Aug .11 CROSS COUNTRY Blue shines on toasty day Newport Harbor senior captures Division II girls race at Laguna Hills invitational. For the majority of the high ICbool run- • • ~ . r • "' • . a ~. September 12. 2004 SPORTS . : BIG EASY practklel; Bef'ote Al 1rwin and hla llWim program go( 1tJ pool In 19'8 the Sailon had JWO opdons-"The Corona del Mar Mile,• which was a dash to the bay and~ or a saltwater pool In Huodngton Beach. the end theywae ...... alrml Ma-..n olftlll*ldaae Cotdl Bob l.Mbalift lnadJle~•DeLaS6. Continued from 81 anywhere. "You aren't going to believe this gym come Dec. l," said 'IWelt A blend or 1937 and the present. unique Is hardly the word. It's always been a great "home gym" and the vay tiled bleachers will have to wait for another time before upgrade9 are c:omidered.. Al one time it was thou&ht . some earthquake upgrades were Jn the woib. But from the $320 million acbool bond ~ passed in recent times, with various pipe .dreams regarding deteriorating athletic fadlilies, not a nickel b ' <>n its way to any athledc f:adlity ln the Newport-Mesa Unified 'School District. As usual, various carrots are offered to the voters. then withdrawn in the aftermath of victory for other necessities. I guess. The gym's format continues in its current status with the floor running from east to west and the "balcony" in place behind che east basket Originally the fioor ran souch to north with "balcony-style" stands on both sides. at the east and west ends of the gym. In the summer of '63, according to former athletic din!Ctor Jules Gages of Carlsbad, the west balcony was eliminated and the floor was changed to run east to west with accordion-style bleachers, a move undoubtedly made to avail more floor space over the major portion of day-to-day schedules. It also extended the length of the court So that's why the present ~balcony" on the east end is seldom used except for overtlow situations, because you're sitting in the end zone, looking through the back of the backboard, Photographers like it, because it's a different look for their lens. And sometimes it's a good place for the band In the early years an upstairs portion of the gym above the lobby was dedicated to boxing where the original athletic cfutctor, Reed. would put every freshman boy into the ring to learn the basics. It also served as a wrestling room. The girls gym, built in 1948, according to the retired girls P.E. director, Costa Mesa's Ellen Carico£, never did have any bleachers and the entire playing surface was used for games and The girls gym. DOW in a dilapidated state, ltill le!WS as a practice surface for Newport Harbor's glds volleyball and bask.etbaU teams, and the pool has long since been abandoned. Now it's full of cement and serves as a staging area. Soon the Sailors will be presenting their new sbowcue with a dtJcJlcation and call for help for additional funds to complete the task (the bleachers must be SO yean old). And. around Dec. l, the formal dedication, a night to honor George Harry \>a.rdley m. and a night for the return of the Long Gray Line. ••• While sifting through the echoes of Harbor's grand fadUty, some current items: Fonner Newport Harbor High standout Alyson Jenninga, DOW a freshmanattheUnlversityof Texas. is a starter for the Longhorns' ~ty as the Ubero. The Sailors' annual football extravaganza. the Battle of the Bay with Corona del Mar. bas been moved up a day to Thursday night, Sept 23, because of the school district's obsetvance of Yorn Kippur. And, the Sailors' nonleague duel with Corona de1 Mar in boys soccer Jan. 5 will be played at Orange Coast College, where they'H test the Pirates' PieldTurf. ••• l missed Fstancla High's football opener with Corona del Mar on Sept 3, as well as Mesa's opener Sept. 2, but I had a good excuse. I had heard of this high school football team to the north with a remarlcable record and decided to take a look. and lo and behold, the Bellevue High Wolverines proved worthy of their reputation after posting three straight Division 3-A titles in the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association. Before a Qwest Stadium crowd of 24,987 the Wolverines displayed awesome precision as they dominated Concord De La Salle, snapping the Spartans' 151-game winning streak with a near-unbelievable effort, 39-20. Al .~=:=am and .,. (Of $29.95. • • Bellevue. whh al~ sophomore~~ ror Coach aw Gone.two« roDed up .f63 yum on the ground. never threw a *We pue, did not punt. hid two penllltiea for 15 yai,u, fumbled once and bad no tumaYen. Aft.tr gMng up an 8-play acortng drive on the ftilt eedes. Bellevue responded wtdl. 74-yard touchdown nm OD bl ftnt map. and the WlMrtnel were olf to the race&. • c.omtderlric the IClaCdi olDe La Sde. it hM to F down• the °"* fnaedibJ,e tlellOl\-openlng ~ i>r llJ'/ Pftl> telm, eWlt en rowe to ending the loaJl!ll( spor11 winning.-in recorded history. BeDewe'a quartaback was a 1-year-old when the 8b'elk bepn. Bellevue HJgh, with an enrollment of 1,350, Is almOar in many ways to Corona del Mar. How'd they do ttf De La SaDe's system Is not IUbjeet to the patent proceee. and the ~with 13 returning startm. matched the wodt ethic and aeated • 8nt1y tuned variable wing-'t It was the fifth game of an extravagama called the Emerald Qty Jackoff 08ISic. De La Salle (0-1) returned to the field Saturday nlght, hosting aovt.s West. 11 bas been 25 yean since De La Salle lost two In a row. I saw Washington and Fresno State the nm day at Husky Stadium. and I have to tell you, in tenns of sheer execution, ft didn't hold a carulle to the preps on Saturday. ••• An attempt by the Newport-Mesa Unified School District to level a "$10,000 fine~ on the Corona del Mar High general education fund because baseball coach John Ermne and tennis coach nm Mang "improved" their fadlides, has apparently been scrapped That may be good news. I think. for Newport Harbor. Hey. see ya next Sundayf • ROGER CARLSON is the former sports editor for the Dally Pilot. He can be rea(tled by e-mail at rof}ttranddororhea@msn.com. PUS£NT£D BY TH£ CALIFORNIA COASTAL COMMISSION \ Call 1-800-C0~-4U or visit www.coutfot7011.org NeWport shines in tournament 1be ~rt Harbor ~ fteJd bocby team oulleoied four ~pponentl a combined 4-1 Saturday, but aetded for two wtna, one 1011 and a de at the Wettmlmter tournament at Weatm.lmter High. The Sallon opened the round-robin tournament - that featured 25-minute games -with a 1-0 Iota to Camarillo. 'Ibe nm defeated Sunset ~e rival Huntington Beach, 3-0, before knocking off Owni- nade, 1--0, and tying Glendora. 0-0. Senior mldflelder Reese Sim- CROSS Continued from 81 won the Dtvtalon m team title behind Jack 1\.tmer (16:39), Ken- neth \\bng (16:.f9) and Ryan Guthrie (17:01), wbDe Annie St. ~ won the girls junior race in 19'.23 and .AD1aon Damon cap- tured the glds freshman race 'tn 20:00. CdM'• other top boys were Junlon 'IOmmy Hutchison (17:38), Tun Scott (18:31) and Ji- ho Choi (18:54) and senior Oiff 'Dlylor (19:00). The Sea Kings' other top girts were juniors Hila- ry May (19'.59), Nichole Slykhous POLO Continued from B 1 draw USC even apln at 4-4, then Hale put USC ahead, 5-4. with 1 :SO left in the third. The Anteaters' Colin Mello scored an extra-man goal 20 sec- onds later to knot the game, 5-5, entering the fourth quarter. Consecutive goals by Shin, UCI Continued from B 1 with 88 points in the 12-team field Long Beach State's Jim Gra- bow won the individual title with a time of 25:212 over 8,000 me- ters, followed by UCI junior Ricky Barnes in 25:35.8. Anteater junior Tom Whelan finished ninth in 26:00.5, senior mona ~ two goalt apimt Huntmcton BMctit while ...Uor filht wtnc . JuUa ~ edded the th1id IOU ~ the Oilen. Junior forward Sienna Palmer had an u.ut In the 3~ trl- wnph. Aplmt Qwnlnade, aenlor tnldftelder Jenny 'Iaylor bad the game's oruy go.I. Newport Harbor goalJe Ciara LaW'lence, a aertlor, bad eeven aavee apinlt Camarillo, one agatnat Huntington S,acb and two aplmt Glendon on her way to three shutouts OD the day. She played every minute In (20:13) and Christie St. Geme (20:•9) and aeniora Ahlia Kattan (20'.54) and Devon Ahearn (21!02). Allo In Dlvlalon m were Costa Mela. .Batancia and Sage Hill, which featured Kade McXeon running a acbool·record 20'.36 for the-I Jgbtnlng and placing ftfth overall In the freahman girls race. MoDle McGann was 17th out of 8' nmnen to the girls sophomore nee (23:03) for Sage Hill Senior Mlb Voge ran the quickat boys time for Sage in 18:06, while junior Zach Chandy WU clocbd In 19:08 and fresh- man Connor Role In 19:31. For Estanda'a boys, junior Er- . Juan Delga<Hllo and c.ameron Kataer in the last quarter gave the Trojam an 8-5 lead and USC secured the victory In Its season opener. Shin and Zatovic added two goals for USC while Hutten led UCI (4-1) wid) a pair of goals. Anteater goalie Joe Wynne had six saves, u did USC counterpart Don Ricci. Both teams compete in the Southern California tournament David Santos was 17th in 26:22.2 and sophomore nm Hearst was 26th in 26:43.2. Freshman Adrian Doty was 34th (27:003), junior Sil- vestre Uribe placed 38th (27:06.1) and sophomore Ryan Ketcham was 43rd (27: 10.8) to round out uas top aevefl runners. The Anteater teams will train in Mammoth next week before re- turning to c:ompetidon at the Stanford invitational Sept. 25. . fO&l tor the Sallon (3·1·2). OtMr s.oon wbo Mined pralae for tbeU .crons play were: MrUof ~ Mdntoeh, who •pubd tM mldAeld; een- lor forwvd Ainanda P&llon; and junior ceoter beet JadSe ~OL Vanguard streak ends • \'OIUYMLLa Vaquard UntvefJfty'a tix·matcb wtn atreak came to an end Saturday as La Verne defee.ted the Uona, 47-45, 17·30, 30-21, 30-18, in the Whlttier/Ocddental women'• volleyball tourna- ment nesto c.utaneda (17:47' and aeo- ior Alex c.ahuantzl (17:56) ran the bett times, followed by Brian F.ssen (18:19), Glo Rodea (18:29), Ben Monies (20:15) and CUrtis Fisher (20:•9). Coach OwUe Appell'• Elgle girls were led by senior Lucy Leon (24:25) and junior Jeaie Rincon (27:24). For Calta Mesa's girll. 10pho- mores Kyla Flores, Jasmin Day and P.m1ly Cotton were the Mus- tanp' only varslty competitors. while the Mesa boys were led by aopbomores I..u1s Genis and Mitch Friedmann. Rick Olguin showed promise in the freshman race, Coach Joe Buai said. hosted by USC next Saturday and Sunday. ....... ue1...~· UC Irvine -~ 1 2 1 • e USC 1 o 4 11 • 10 UCI ecorlng • Hutten 2, White 1, Bitter 1, R. Merlo 1, Mello 1. Sew. - Wynne,6. USC · Hale 3, Shin 2, btovic 2, Kailer 1, Zepfel 1, Delgac:tlllo 1. Seve1 -Ricci. 6. SCHEDULE TOQ\Y Soccer Colege men-UC Irvine vs. the UnMntv of WllCOrWin-Green Bev at Evanston, II., 10 a.m. College women -Sen Mal dloo 11t UC lrvlne, 1 p.m Be a Part of History! October 14th .. 17th, 2004 For more lnformadon vi9't: cdm2004.com "The 100 Day Countdown'' has begun ... • The Gala Celebration of the Century Blaclt Tu Gala Dinnn Danct Evmt Friday, October 15th, 2004 • 6 -11 p.m. The Four Seasons Hotel, Newpon Beach • lickct Price $250 • The Centennial Beach Party! Conctrt, FootJ t!r Fimuorlts Saturday, October 16, 2004 • 4 - 9 p.m. Big Corona del Mar St.ate Beach • Free & Open to the Public • The Gentennial FUWy BNCI Pqo A °""""'"ilJ F11mily Ctleb,..,, ~ SundaY, October 17, 2~ • 10 a.m. -5 p.m. Big Corona de! Mat State Bcich • Free &: Open to the Public ,,.~~tielA..u.ble • Pot llM* U.fotmnd M. CDDCICI ... Olt.f C111• •ill Pnundedon II (949) 675..0501. FNTQUMTU OCC-Pldlfla 70 run (l<ledcner kl<*), 12:61 LAIC-Munez 48 FG, 7:41. •OOND QUMTER LASC-Munez 28 FG, 14:155. LAIC-Munez 36 FG. 3:23. LAIC-Moore 1 run (Munez kid(), 2:05. ltm>QUMmt LASC -Singleton 9 run (kJdt blocked), 9:22. FOURTH QUARTER LASC-l.ewi1 16 run (Munez kid(), 11 :36. OCC -Aoki 2 run (pa11 failed), 2:24. lASC -Thompson 8 run (Munez kidt), 1 :24. OCC-Johnson 76 pau from Baaanez (pass failed), 0:17. A -400 (eat.) N>MDUAL RUSIMG OCC-Padilla, 16-124, 1 TD; Aoki, 3-9, 1 TD; Niutapual, 1-3; Basanez, 4-0; Sdimlgel, 2-mlnus-1. l.ASC-Singleton, 18-84, 1 TD; Carter·Brown, 6-34; Lewis, 11-33, 1 TD; Bell, 4-27; Thompson, 4-15, 1 TD; Moore. 7~, 1 TD; Mahaley, 3-8; Brown, 5-minus-17. INOMOUAl. PASSWG OCC -Sdimlgel, 3-11-0, 26; Baaanez, 5-13-0, 130, 1 TD. LASC -Brown, 3-8-0, 30. INDMDUAL RECEIVING OCC -John1on, 3-107, 1TD; Dietz, 2-17; Lauderdale, 2-17; Matsumura, 1-16. LASC -Bell, 2-17; Smith. 1-13. GAME STATISTICS OCC LASC F1rsi dowNI 15 10 Aulh..-yerdege 2&-138 &&-198 "9uong yeni.g. 154 JO ~ 8-24.() J..8-0 N.c retum y.,O. • 11 fl ' s.b-y8fdege 1 -1 3 -20 N.c y...s.g. l02 215 "'".. 4-26 3 4-3S.2 • htrnble9-fumblet loe1 ... 1.() Flegit-Mt yerdege S-31 •11& Tome of pccrrrr'on 20'.57 39 03 'P'llnc retu"" ~. lurn«>le rw!U<na PHOTOSBY MARK C DUSTIN/DAILYP1LOT Orange Coast Quarterback Kyle Basanez (8) directs traffic while scrambling m the backfield m the second quarter of Saturday's nonconference game against host Los Angeles Southwest College. Continued from Bl the bendl after IWting the open- er. cocuaected wllh aopbmnare receiver Brim JohNon for pm. of 25 and 75 yardt. the latter a touchdown with 17 secondl left to help ped Coast's largely mlt-leadini 265-206 advantage tn to· tal ofrense. Padllla. whose scoring bunt saw him llash up the middle, then bounce left and outrun the pW'5uit, had only one other run Qf more than 8 yards (a 14-yard pickup}. His triple-digit rushing output was the first for a Pirate since Week 5 of last season, when Josh BJack ran for 105 yards in a 36-6 win over Santa Ana Adam Kleckner followed Padil- la's sprint to payd.irt with a con- version kick to give OCC its onJy lead just more than two minutes into the contesL Southwest, which rushed for 280 yards in its season-opening win, also stuck to the ground Sat· urday, utilizing eight ball carriers in its double-tight-end anack that most often featured a wing- back and an I-formation. The Cougars. whom the Pirates topped, 20-0, last season. cashed in a 49-yard kickoff return after OCCs opening touchdown with a 46-yard field goal by Robert Mu- ne-1.. Munez added a 28-yard field goal after OCCs first fumble to pull the hosts within one, then toed his third field goal from 35 yards out to give the hosts a 9-7 advantage. On the first play after the ensu- ing kickoff, Nicholas Partner fell on an OCC fumble at the Pirates' 14 -yard line. Three plays later. 250-pound fullback Timothy Moore plowed in from the I and Munez's PAT made it 16-7. OCC fumbled away the first possession of the second half and Chris Singleton. who paced the winners with 84 yards on 18 car- ries. cashed it m with a 9-yard touchdown run to make It 22-7 with 9:22 left in the thlrd period. After an exchange of punts - an overworked OCC defense managed to keep the Pirates in :z ........ OCC's Rhett Hartsfield (34) pulls L.A. Southwest Coflege's Chris Singleton down for an unassisted tackle Saturday. the game into the fourth quarter -the Cougars fumbled a snap of their own to provide a glimmer of opportunity. But Southwest man- aged to recover on its own 18- yard line. A rougtung-the-lricker penalty prolonged the same Southwest possession, then, four plays later. freshman Robby Coveney mis- handled a running anempt to haul in a punt and Southwest re- covered. _.., TWo plays later. JaVuan Lewts swept around the right side for a 15-yard TD that all but cemented the victory. Three personaJ-fouJ penaJues helped OCC score its second touchdown. a 2-yard Robert Aoki run set up by a 25-yard ~ez­ to-Johnson aeriaJ connection the play before Basa.nez, who might have gamed a slight edge over Schnu- gel in the quarterback battle. found Johnson running free be- hincy.the secondary on the sec- ond play of OCCs next po~­ s1on to cap the o,coring. OCC sophomore out'>tde line- backer Joe Mitchell. a ..econd- team AU-M1SS1on Conference (Amencan D1w.1on) perfonner a:. a freshman. m1ured his left ankJe in the second quarter and did not rerum. The ankle ~ placed in an air cast and Taylor said It ma\ be a recurrence of a high c;chool m1ury that required surgery 18th Annual Harbor Heritage Run RUNNEWPORTI SK FEATURE RACE • IK FUN RUN/WALK /\ -- 1"--.. ~­ . f v. J;. \ . . ·-""",....._'"\-v\,... v LOGO DESIGN BY NICK CHAllLLON NHHS sruoem ~i;;.,,.YScllool OCTOBER I, 1004 NelpOlt Harbor High School Stldulm 16th St. & Irvine Ave., Newport Beach Plus Kids' Klassic Race and Free Fitness Fair RUN AS A TEAM Minimum 4, No Maximum rR;Q-;-.;~;o; F;.;. - - -- - .... ~lonll--111: 2004 NHHS Harbor Heritage Run PO Box 2934 Newport Beach, CA 92659-293'4 DODD OFFICIAL USE ONLY (949) 515-6611 To register onllne: www.kathytopemtnta.cofMlhr OHE AVNNEA PEA ~ • Pl.EASE PMfT I~ OlP* ate l()Cllllllilltl IWIE OOOOCIJOOOOOOOOOOOO AllST WT so OD ~~ DD 11man DO-OD-OD II F ADDllESI oooornooooooooooo ~ OOODDDDOOOOOOOOOOO I· ITlTI DD ZI' oDorn Wa~7:30a.m. · 2K 8:00 a.m. SK 8:30 a.m. M*E OO[}{][][}QI]D OD:• 0 • 0 mm 0 itmaiu 0 lliW[]TUI .. ~~~~~~~ Policy • By Fax (949} 63 J-6S94 <"-indlld9 '/OW-... p11one nurn1w IDd -·u c:.11 )'OU bKit wilh a price qllOCe.) By Phone (949) 642--5678 Hours By Mail/ID Penon! 330W...h)'S.. COllA ~CA 92627 At Newpon 8Jvd. a Bay SC. Rates and deadlinea ue subject to change without notice. The publiaber reserves the right to censor, ~lulify, revile or reject any claasified advcrtisemenL Please report any error that may be in your classified id immediately. The Daily Pilot accepu oo liability for any error in an advertisement for which it may be responsible ellcept for the cost of the space actually occupied by the error. CTCdit can only be allowed for the first insertion. J'elephooe 8:30illn-S:OOpm Monday-Friday D...._,,,,._.., art, Vlc1nliy Balboa lsl1nd, Reward! 714·381-4461 C...tC .......... Old Coins! Gold, silver, '"'*"· watdla, an~ coltect1blel ~2·9448 SSOO UWAID Lest -------Male cat, I& or1n1e cm 3111 striped tabby, (tommy) no collar, vic1n1ty Promontory Point NPB corner of CoHI Hwy & JamborH 714·225-4008 BfJERTUIBT =' 1310 Ginni EQUAl--Al•lmlmllflallll ..... -1111 OPPOlnm1Y J ... All real estate adverhs· Wll1t do you lhlnk771 •'1& In this newspaper 1s Alrfelf 714-9119-2323 subiect to the Fedeul w-11rfa11 com Few Hous1n11 Act of 1968 a' •mended which mat.es 11 1lle&al to a~vert1se ·any prefer e~e. llmltatfon or dillcrlminabon based on ~• color, refi&lon. 111, dicap, lam11iel stetus atton1I orl&ln, or an intention to make any s~h preference, hmlte- tfbn Of d1scriminatlon • !)us newspaper will not knowlnfly eccept any ildvertlsement for real estate wlllcll Is In vk>l•hon of the law Our readers 1re hereby tnfOfmed thet an dwell· ll)IS advertised 1n lllls f1iw591per are aveilable of 1n equel opportunity ~,MS CHll.D SERVICES .~c.... ... for Adoption SAT 12-4:00 PetSmart Costa Meu 17th I Superior, (Neat lo ~) 9&45l·"JZl2 -~r--.1 WCP•AlfGUS EOWIJISE , Wmll••• MlldmfJI NIWOffDJNOI Open House Suftd1y 2-4 333 Grand C.n.I Fantestlc c°''* waler· front 1"'/boat~I Gtut views. 4br, 3be. uPlfad· ~chan, llvina room & patio Only $2,195,000 949-362-1500 l21 Tl complain of dis cflminallon, call HUO loll· tt.e at l ·800·424-8590. --------I .... Offerilltl ·-· '-~ frnrnK.. Bafboe Island water1ront Service tor 12+ all mejor 2 ,_,. 2 .... ~1 ......... aer•ins_~plecH. First .. ft.. """' ......._ 1413 Fw••• 305 ~ mi>9695-2223 ~· ~nW.: m.NTED QUES corJs1ri rH.mns I I :: ..... rmr , ._.Am.CA9Jf1 -•-CA-~ SEU ,. ... ......... 11111111 ........ I I 11111• ff•dlll11 -......... ,.r.A.'111 HERSHEY, FRITO LAY & ' M&M VENDING ROUlES wmt LOCA TIOHS OHL Y m95 l-I00-914-'9IO COSTA alSA IOUll No Seflinc. llOOK In· oome. U2,950 Invest· rnent for Accounts, Inventory, Trelnln1. T11rltory. 900.373.5470 -fl;.... M35 NEWPORT CONSIGNMENT GALLERY .., ... $3.2915,<XX> own./ "' 9&362-1500 •21. r.-•• OPIMSAT-SUN 1-4 7IOS.....~ Comp remod lin&le fam llome. Moat desW nei&fl. Walk distance to Balboa Is F uh 11. Corner lot south of PCH 3br 2ba w/ample rm to H · pand _ Up1radull $1,329,000 By Owner 949-355-9130 949-719-9117 Of'aSAT·Mll 1 ... 7IOS.....9" Comp re!llOCI ..._.. fem llome. Most dnir nelatl. Welk dtstMCe to Belboe ls.'"" Is. Corner lot aovd! of P'CH. 3br Zbe w/emple rm to ea· p1nd . Uplredull Sl,329.000 1yOwMr 94t-356·9130 M9-719·t ll7 Index Oftll SAT-SUN 1-4 4HS.-414 Beau 2br 2Jla homt, Co· rona Hi&hlancb, ona of COM most popul., ar· eu. Remod rmtr suite illd lluce w .. ·ln closet, apac ba. French drs INdlftC out lo patio. Morel Prtvata Beacll accas. $1,349,000 a.... ....... t4t-271-HIO WM ·~&AH4M- COllOMA Dll MAa ... MLUIDS 4000. Sola Terrece ~ 3ba llomt, lot site 20.000 on the Canyon. Oua11 view. C01T19letey rernocWed. $2,435,000 Yee Peterson Pet.- Construction DeMcn INC. t4t-t2t-141 t In ttle Heart of the V1"a1• newer construe· lion 3br/2.5ba 1rut location under 11,500,000 front unit 80(). 291 ·3586 1501 llPl1t Ir ... ._<.-. 45' W'tde Lot Ocean View $2,495,000 Owner/Al•nl 949-222 [480 MISA VERDE POOL HOME Sw...,+na corMr srounda 1n prime tract loc. l·sty 4br, 2Jla, new & up1reded kltcll w/1renlte counlert, new wood/tll• floorln1. pfantetlon alluttars fr eatlly pelnte4 Inside/ out. $695,000 Call Coktw.n Banker Baacll· side 714·968-1200. Or.•• H•••• DellJ 1 _,,_ 260 Victoria. G·2. Rare Opportunity nHr Newport Beachl 28r 2.5Be Cofldo IPt>fOI 1089af Cepe Cod Style ideal locatJon, muter suite w/vaulted ceftinp, HOA, pool, ape. Secu.rad premises. $360,000 Cell 951-694-8016. IASTs.t OHM SUN 1-S 401 I ltTHST Prem block loc. beau maintained 3br 2ba llome. $869,000 William Rini Cati 949-548·2222 Otte 949-673·4400 X206 Oftll SAT 1-S H1H.__...H Tucked eway, llltl!Mt. bell COfflm, buu upcrad 3br 2.Sba, custom llome. Slate flf1 ttlfoupout. St>ac mstr suit• macnifl· WAUl,...I TO 8EACff Front courty•d/atrfum entry, Mw front cloofa. Optn ...,. adds lob of 14111lidll 4bt 2ba, up- •aded kttdlell. New rol- up .., .... $779.000 Call Coldwta 8an6111 S..cll· 9'de 714-968-1200. cent ocean views! -------Sl45.000-Sl60,000 Joe & Ellen Rocc.t ( J)949-53J.9587 (E) 949-633·9587 Al•NDOMO 1or1ecM11 2-sty In prime loc. Never used brand MW llitcll, ..._.., l-S walk·ln pantry. 3br custom atone floorlna & 25011 c.ein. W., new plu1ll carpetlna. ....,... C... ......., ~ -1liewsll w .. to shops, school & ....... Must SH to " .. :':..: ~ pwk. Rudy for lmmed eppredda. MclW rill lnl In CJ>. ~ ll'dl & move· in Reduced_ pa $1,791.000 For .. br er....__.._ ....._ a.... f0t quick .. 1e. '399.900 o..,,;"-C11 ~UAO ··-·--..-...., -Cell Coldwell Binker ~Oil 4900lf of llv. S..dtalde 714-968-1200 MOllT llOW OCIAll & rz.a,ID> .-... _... CITY YllWSI 3br 2.5be " ..... -...21m I•__.---.-.-.-.---COfnfll tMnil & Ot)'rnpk ._...., ~. MOtlYltff Mier iiiii;iiiiiin .. --~ZJU•• FamtlkVlllf -----... c... ........ HD MOT SPICIAL. ""-•'-" ---------REDUCED $100,000 AllllahlnlllnlD -llOI[ ROOM? ftlrldl Fant.me G«IW lol NMr ~ • 2.911 ltw'I 51ir .. tnd " c»41t-mll 1C1 lllR ....... 3 ~ Tap"h me. T,_ lned ..... In IOI c:owsa. picnic •-. h .. -~Tap ~ •• Country ldtdt. ~ bll.e Ina 8MUt l · ..... ~ + b1l'lll ..... r.ty, •• 2.5be. .... lllillrlrttail•• 2fp. eMrdll rm. .... room, hndl doors. fNM ~5'29~ windows. m.Hy ........ tree _. r.-f'aundL RY lnlldiVout. Fn pll = access. $12!5,000 Call ................. $1.191l.CD> • ~ .. '515 Co6dMI 8er1Mr -o,. s.t·S-1-s Cell Coldwell Bank., 114-a.1m ..,.. 11..._.im o..~':C··· S....A..W.. II Ill ..... GUMff IUOI COITMI =~.J:'C ' bridl ....... 2llr 2 5tle, bee111 cellinp, f91adqrun,......,. l)ltlo ~ ._ • dlt 2-o pr. $819.000. Cold· wd Brier Bac:hUde 714-968-1200 Oc••• View ltt•te Seperete ln·lew unit. Majestic 3+ 1toriH, pr lme corner loc. 5br. 4.SCle. La open llltdlen. bu1lt·ln mecffe eent11, massive oc11n view IMIW _. w/lundldl. $1,1115.000 ~ .... 8-'lllda n....-im 2Jlr 2be Condo z c ... newly reinod, MW ...,., le petlo, wd "'""· .Avel now 11800 512....,_ 3br 2be 1850 lfll• af SSSt.....U2S,._ IW pool. Froflt & ~ 21S Meift Street added petlo'1 Lob of Uw. ... ..ti In ttlis lllYtidlll on PIB type febulout new dqetop-_. 11169.9915 (IJ4) IMftt, minutes from 1 a...!........... SouUI tac.:':.:: Ste· er 11 nl • 'i1ew Pletlfturn l"ropertln 2br 2be ls.t9 ICIPI sf 949-715·315' deailJI« UPl"Met .enlte. lllrdl cabl· nets,~ llMI. w1.feu1w•. rnoldinl. MW be'I & llltchen. $799,000 --===- "IKPIMICKJI lllTAU Tliunday ............ Weidoetday 5:00pln Friday .................... 1bunday S:OOpm Saturday ..................... Priday 3:<>0pm Sunday ....................... Friday 5:00pm Sl 100 21w diltKll u.rut, urpoft, stor• unit. Hon ....... w l7tll 9&548-03SI .......... !tie Sunny eU Wed, se" WeW pool holN S28l50llll Ind pod ----1'73 I',, .... le ..., 2.J IA *• ..-. MMll rOCN9 3 fp'a IVell llOW ~lllO no pets, (Mt) 720-1515 IAYSMOUS 13000/lno Av811 Monti! to Monttl 3tlr 2be a-. ~42 ...... ~ ...... ,.t.M. " I 11pt_r_a'9 fl••• + ._,. ........ " 11 i=;n needed 1..-M 1 . ·l:C!Opm. .... .., "'4Ntta, l.l&ht t11111t. c.11 MMeO·mo I ". 'It .. Y8dlt C. ln~._..Fri-Tum Ill/hr. Fu reauine to 9'9·723·5151 or cell S-· lbw Mt·5M-02M. lt'1tltt1ola· "°"'°''" ~for· """"" a ,,.,. 1111111, Jld or "" MMlflldiA f -.....,,-n. C1lff0f11l1 lew fl: .... tMt .. " • ..... t.-1111 -llilt tot.If '500 Ot ,..,. <** Of .Wiiie) be lluMH by Ille C011tr1cton State UceMe lolrd. St8t. ..... ,... ....... eofttrldora l11e1Me .. llceltM ......... 11111•• ...... You .. dlldl .... IUtue of 1our llc11111d co11tr1ctor 11 WWW.~.Cl-l'OI( 'Of I00-12l•CIU.': Uttll· c....-eotttt1etor1 t1lll•1. Joh tlllt ..... .... tlllft ... • ..... "' "'* .................. ..., ., ..... llceMllll c..trectan . •• u .,11, ..... ., .... , ...... fot Ill yow boollll..,.._ A !>IY!oll lllldl ell 11~ .-cH744 Mofl·frl • ...., ... ., PLUG IN Plug into the Pilot Classified section to find seNices from electronics and plumbers, to landscapers and painters. InilyPilot .,.. ............ 2,... ..... ,...,. -AllUJ•F 4ADl llF11£,... , ........... tPwolowt ..... 7N!Hon~.) IC.... 9 <A.llte "*"'*"' 10Me.a.r 11 8per'lllh ... _ ......... ., ... .., .... 12~ ..... 13 .Mlgle pig 14 ............ 150.tludl(2wdl) 1eet-*up 17 °'9w a heed on 18 Higtlboln 19UUpoppv_. 23E'MWlQup 30R....,nymp. 32 HellP ol llOf* 36GOPfoee 38 AJr-ul«y OfV· 40 NBA '1 -Thurmond 43 Flst*1g kn 44 Ludicrous 45VCR musts 46 Valentine figure 47 Montana capital 48 Whlteboerd need 49 Dntiny 51 MoNlllty'I partner 52 Whale's diet 54 P1anllt -Hinee SS Martha ol dental ads 58&.eptng 56 Granted approval S9R~ir 60 Bike or tnke 63Story 64 Pus. as a bill 67 Walkman brand 68 Seit-move firm (hyph) 69 Whodunit suspec1 70 HS math , new--• &:r n..- MGllat'-1 "~°""bed -~-en. .,,.... .... • ,..., "f90ft111-mlfl'MrVy •Modle ... ,. ... ____ _ ........ • • CClftlee tlOlder9 -~LIMl-­IO Cdar.:b 8ptnge 9Ced. 91 ~ foldoltmt bl°'*9 92Loudhldl 83~•need 94 ........ • ......,, oftblll9 V7~#1d How91d • oe.. oont8lner 100 Muelcal "°"" 101,,_,. 102 ~ -Hopper 103 Orc:t.alra 108P.it 107 Blue wildflower 110 Titus or T,...n 111 -[)my O'Connor 112 SpUt 113 Did wrong 114 Strong eNer1t type? 115l.Mn 118 Wild hl:ne 118 Luigi'a f....its 119Phl S..- 120 Stlief '1 girl 121 Incite (2 wdt ) 122 Proceu ore 123 Squirrels INIS't 125 Author -Femer 127 Advanced, u casti 129 Alee off 133 Always, to Keats 135Easeld~ • Clhlllloll of MITJ0in9Wt S£W£R J£TTING ELECTRONIC SI.Al LEAK DCTtCTION friendly Senlce •••-•11 -•1•4 -..., • -l I , I ' ' J " J l ~· I ~· .. · I I', I ' fi'l If, l • \ • ~ 1~ \ I f t "i'": 1,,\\ \AVlH" THEODORE ROBINS DISCOUNT FROM MSRP ....... : .................. $2357 FACTORY REBATE ..................................................................... $1500 ii.857 J .J \18 AIJ!OMATI[, ~ow PK[, 1\111 !.ONOI TIONlrJG l'OWf H GROUP A1 !IMlfJ!Jf,1 WHf lLS AlJl()r,iA!IC AIR COIJOllllHlllJI, POWER \'Jt!HJOW~ I Of.KS CRUISE l 11 l TOW PACKAGE PHIVACY (,LASS ~M>8~:~rB~~.~.~.1.~~~.u.~r .................. ::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~ FMCC BONUS CASW ............ .. .. ..... . .............................. JlOoo *Must finance through FMCC to receive bonus cash. NET .. • • Customer will receive a certificate from Ford Motor Company for a Dell Olmentlon 2400 with lnte~ Celerone Processor, a flat panel monitor, and a Dell All-In-One printer. Actual configuration may differ. Customer responsible for all taxes and fees. Valid credit card required k> order. Upgrades and other Items available at additional cost to customer. Offer ends September 30, 2004, orders tor computer must be placed no later than October 31, 2004. Residency restrictions apply. See dealer for complete details." . 01 FORD ESCORT ZX2 AC, CD, ~LLOYS, S POILER 1 R162794) •&995 01 FORD TAURUS SE PW, PL, TC, AT, AC (1A120962) •see& , 'f - 00 FORD EXPLORER SPORT 2DR PW PL, TC, CO, RACKS, PRIV GLASS (YUA0722•) •7995 - 01 FORD F-150 XL RIC A C, CASSE!!~.i..!'¥PLINER (1N~) •9995 ' .r· 83 PONTIAC SUNFIRE COUPE AC, CO, SPOILEf'..t ALLOYS (372481ua) •99915 IRFORD EXPEDmON E-BAUER PW, Pl:., TC, LEATHER, LOADED (VLC00084) •10.ees •FORD RAN8ER SIDAll &T ~'PL. .,-,_r .. D •n-:VE" Bil COMMENTS& ~ CURIOSmES Website stirs : up some .. • passion T bey're called hot topk:a, or bot butttm& In politics, they're called ·third-ran lasuee." Ilyou touch them, you11 die. Be honest You know what they are: abortion, gay marriage, separation of church and state, et cetera and so on and so forth. People tab sides aver them. They get pusionate about them. They ftle lawsuits aver them. They even smack each othertn the snoot about them now and then. Most people try to avold them end.rely. But there ls amanln C:OStaMesa who baa no PETER such qualms. BUFFA In fact, he ls downright fearless about climbing that long, lonely ladder to the IO·meter platform and diving headfirst lnto the pool of controversy. His name is Steve Gooden, a commercial real estate agent who describes himself u a conservative Ouistian and Republican. Steve wanted to put up a website about the vresidendal race. No big deal there. A quick search of "Bush-Kerry campaign" on Yahoo.com produced 4,340,000 results. Thar'• a lot. But Steve's website la different Real difl'erent Jr's called, "The Passion of Chrtst Who's Passion Is Ooser?" Aside from· the grammatical sin tn the second phrase, the site Is straightforward and well·dalgned. At Its core ls a simple question that is guaranteed to end up with someone wearing the guacamole lf you bring it up at your next dinner party. Who ii more like Jesus Out.st -George BUib or John Kerry'l Gooden'• site contendl that you abould vote for the candidate who scores higher on the swvey that hit alte letl out "So tar. 75~ of the people who have visited the alte have voted that Bush'• beUefa are cloaer to Jesus' than Kerry's," tald Gooden in Saturday's Dally Piiot article, "Webalte Ukena pnllidendal candidates to Ouiat." Is du. jUlt one more opinion surveyf It II not. If you click on the Buth tab or the Xerry tab, you'll see a chect&t ofbellefl and vahJel txm..th that candidate'• picture, with thia ... co.ENTl,,IPM . . 'Serving the Newport-Mesa ~ommunity since 1907 IEPTElmER 12, 2004 • . SUNDAY STORY to grow Local motorcycling scene as diverse as it is satisfying for those who like the freedom of riding on two wheels. AJlcla Robinson Daily Pilot B y motorcyde, Newport Beach loob a little df&rent dwl it does from the endoeed bubble of a car. 1bem'I something thDd and bumomous tn the moYemeDt d the lillllc. and in the morning you can mMI 1be '<'e81Jlltk>n or Clie rmtauranta beg!•.., their day In Corona del Mu c.m and ttucb don't look u potendaDy deldly when PAYING TRIBUTE · you're rushing put them with the wind in your fac.e. The attraction of motorcycles isn't lost on Mike Silvemail. He's been riding them for about 16 years. after staJting out on dirt bikes as a child. Silvernail. a n!Sldent of Hwltington Beacb. rides about once a month now, but be says he'd go f!Vf!rY day lf be had the time. "It's like a therapy aesston." he said. SM SUNDAY, P .. e M New se~ds of geace planted iri the Dunes BWmt bitnp U>&ether churches, fiirillles; dtAllm ID an elort to PJ:'OIDOte p era 8plnst lwk'mpmthe~ofSl.IJt 11. . . ABOVE: Newport Beach •PStaur ateur Dan Marcheano pulls up on ttie side of The Arches restaurant on his custom Harley Davidson He often rides alone in the mornings to clear his head before starting his work day LEFT: Alme of motorcycles awaits repairs at Mach 1 Motorcycles. KENT fRlPlOW OAA.Y PllOT 1' I • II r. I 1: ·' ., AZ ~' S.C.Mr 12, 2004 GOVERNMENT lilling time's over for Costa Mesa city ~ys Coata Mesa dty 1tatf won't be able to walk down the hall for legal help once the city flnallzea negodatlona with the outalde law firm it choae Tueaday, The dty decided to tranafer its legal coWllel from an in-house city attorney's oftlce to an outside firm to get a more dJvenifted level of expertise and keep costa down. • Projecu to upgrade TeWlnkle Parlt wtl1 go forward except for expansion of the softball fields, the Costa Men City Council decided Tuesday. A contract for construction of the skate park wu awarded and groundbreaking ta anticipated for later this month. POLITICS Nine seek to fill Newport lbch council seat Nine hopefuls are vying to replace former Newport Beach City Councilman Gary Adams, who left for a job promotion in Wuhington, D.C.: John Blom, a photography studio owner; Timothy Brown, chair of the RngU1b and speech communication department at Rivenide Community College; Michael Browning, owner of a real estate ftrm; Lealie Daigle, a planning comm111toner and owner of a land-use consulting business; Barry Eaton, a planning commissioner and retired planning director; Olarles Griftln, a retired aviation engineer; Gerald Hegger, an independent insurance agent; Richard Luehrs, president of the Newport Beach Olamber of Commerce; and Ron Winship, owner of a film production company. NEWPORT BEACH Labor Illy a rough one for all on beach Big waves and a sewage spill brought the summer beach season to a close Monday, which was the last day of full lifeguard staffing on city beaches. Hurricane Howard caused big swells that excited surfers over the weekend, but some of Newport's beaches were closed Sunday and Monday because of an accidental spill of treated wastewater from a Huntington Beach plant. •An environmental group sued the city last week over Marinapark, seeking to overturn the results of the referendum on the November ballot if voters approve changing the city's general plan to allow the luxury hotel/timeshares for dty-owned waterfront property on the Balboa Peninsula. Stop Polluting Our Newport leaden said the environmental report on the project approved by the City Council la misleading and deceptive and voters won't know exactly what it ls they're voting for. RELIGION Lawsuits prove next step in church fight • The Bplacopal Diocese of Los Angeles on Tuesday filed a lawsuit againtt St. James Cl:nuch on Via Udo and two other Southern California churches alleging that they committed a breach of ftduciary duty, among other thlnp, when they seceded from the diocese. St. James, All Sa.inti' in Long Beach and St. Davld'a ln North Hollywood broke away from the Eplacopal Cl:lurcll USA and placed themNlves under the Diocese of Luwero in the AnllJcan Province of Uganda, Africa. Cl:lurch oflldalt aald that St. James ~EKIN PHOTO OF THE WEEK 'ON SCENE EARLY' This image of an Orange County Fire Authority firefighter from Stadon 51 in lrvlne was shot on my way in to Costa Mesa at the start of my work day. MARI< C. DUSTIN/OM.Y PILOT happened to be driving by as the cab became fully engulfed 1!1 flames, and before fire crews arrived at the scene. He's pulllng hose from a fire truck as he prepares to attack the fire in the cab of a big rig on the San Diego Freeway at the Jeffrey Road off-ramp Tuesday.It'• rare being able to capture an automobile still in flames. I This incident did not happen in our coverage area, but when opportunities such as car fires arise, we photographers hav~ to take advantage. -Marie Dwtin KENT TRfPTOW I DAILY PILOT Debris is dumped into the Balboa Inn swimming pool Thursday, as an outlying building is demolished to make wa-y for renovations. BUSINESS Balboa Inn begins major renovations Renovations began tut week at the Balboa Inn, a landmark hotel built in 1929 that will get a Sl.5 milllon face lift. The revamped hotel will include 11 new ocean view suites, a parking area, a poof to replace the existing one, and a retail space that could become a coffee shop. The work is expected to wrap up In June. •The United States Postal Service on Wednesday released a 37-cent commemorative stamp of legendary actor and former memben voted for the secuslon because they did not agree with the Epllcopal Cl:lurch'a Uberal views on homosexuality, the dMnJty of Jesus Quist and the supremacy of the Bible. St. Jam es officials say they own the land and the church building, but Bayshore resident John Wayne. The stamp was releued at a ceremony at the Grauman'• Olinese Theater in Hollywood. Artist Drew Struzan based his painting for the stamp on a black-and-white publicity still of the actor taken during the fllming of "The Man Who Shot Uberty Valance." the diocese maintains that they own the church and surrounding property. Court date• have not yet been set for hearings. pailyAPilot .,,.,,_ oflUavl"f thlW or four ..,.,,.,..,,, tluu""" • ..,,., OINOUllto/~ bur""".,= In ony · pimk'MlM 60 M M«I to pt ut:ONl oplnlonl """ ,,.,,, OUI 411 11111/141 lol, IW MM Upml worti:,t:.'"". -Guyllo , Costa Meta mayor. on a declllon by the City Counctl to do awaywtth tu city attorney's oftlce and contract with an outalde ft.rm. •H1 doan't botlNr rM 11ny. It luun't Mn crm:y around Mrs at alL 'natl Is usually a .,.., quilt neighborhood-molt peopk around MIT haw kuu.· -Kadaerlae Me..utll,anew netpbor of former Newport reatdenu and NBA star Denn.la Rodman, who hu moved into Huntington Beach. "Inskad, IM dloceu has flkd 1nauk11 and intokrant lawsuits against three local churcha In an an.mpt to con/f.$cau tMlr property and bulldlngi. • -A statement wued by three churches, including St. James in Newport Beach, that have broken from the episcopal Cl:lurch. "It's amazing what fruh pal11t will do for you. 11a1 clauroonu look so beautiful and fruh. lt'1 going to be a great }Wlr.• -candy Sperllas. principal of WU.On Blementary School in Costa Mesa, which wu extenafvely refurblahed over the summer wtth new paint, walls and carpets, u school got ready to start. "W•'IY IWng b«:aus• tM (1Yporf] II ullb.r11i.ly mlllMullng """""'"*"'"'"""may thawfors IMul tlw public to pau MMIUIY L by mutau by 11«»1111n1 them. lt'1 d«:qtlw In · uwral wayi. TM most Important II that It dJ#I not oorulMr tu nudla ali.madw-1111111 ta park for'°,,.. ottfrl&tfw parlc pu1110H, ludJ 41 a """""' t:Mfn;,, -Mm--. aeaetery of Stop Polli.adng Our Newport, on a lawault the group flied aplmt Newport Beach over Martnaput. l ' I I .j •' •! .. ':,J • .J •' c. I ' .. •' .. ... "• . ' ,, 1 r • • • • • • • • •• • • • • ' I I I I ' ' ~ ; I .. CIECKITour Chronicling the jourriey of life · B Udunprom.al Dy ~cbalWWd around at patty. Uid you'J either 'Mdnate peop&e or frltbtea. them: But tbia Idler Ominoua•IOUDdlng word W repl:'elelltattft of IOIDeCbblg farleu ~ k'aa ~ of fiction that many og us rad wtthoutbowlng that It ia BDdunproman. wish a dMreallll ~lpecdwe dlAD Ocben. FemOw naveli that repneent tbll ~are •iW11 ?•11elRidd19 I I) ..... ~ M..t1'nla. md ... °*"' .... ~by J.D. ... More receDdJ ~ wolb chat cm be dw:ribed uBOd~ lndnde Jobn..Grlaham'a..,..... Howe,• and Stephen XIDg't "lleuta In Atlereb, • In fact. you will find quite a few boob that ofter a mote contemporary depktion of thia genre; 10 to make IUre you're up on the latelt in BUdunproman, pick up one of the following tltliil at the Newpon Beacb PubUc Ubn.ry. The word finds lta roots ln German, mean1nl •a novel of formadon• and ldentillea a literary genre that bu been popular ror centuries. The term refers to an lndtvldual's quest for self and meaning against aoda1 order and to the inddenta that occur during this queat. 1be American style adda the element of the protagonist being a traveler .. Dive from a-...... ~ by Ann Packer la the 1tory of a young Midwest woman whole GEmNG Training seaiona ere evallable. Information: (800) ~ 1993. INVOLVED AMERICAN CMCSt SOCETY The Orange County Region of the • GETT'NJ INYOlYED NOi American Cancer Sodety Heb periodically In the Dally Pilot on a office volunteers. The aodety al.a rotating besJs. For lnfonnation aeetca volunteers to answer calls about adding your organization for the unit's Helpline Info eent.r. to this list. call (949) 674--i298. Information: (949) 261-9448. AC.ADE* YEAR IN AMERICA AMERICAN CANCER SOCETY Ca.ta Mesi families can hoct a DISCOVERY SHOP Germen student and eam up to The Americsl Canaw Society $1,000 toward a number of OisaMwy Shop needa urMW1lled travel-abroad pt"Ograms. gooda adl .. dod*lg, fumilute. lnfonnation: Danielle Carpino, jewelry, ace~ ~and (800) 322-HOst ~to fund the eociety's reeeerdl, education and ALS ASSN., ORANGE COUNTY patient......W:. prograrr-. The CHWrER gooda may be dropped off 8t 2600 The Amyotrophic Lateral E. C08lt ttghwev, Corona del Mar. SderoaJa Assn., which helps Voklnt8ers ages 16 end older .... people who have the disorder al90 needed to help 90ft doltl89. that ia also known aa Lou Gehrig's caaNer, daconltla, and do~ diaene, needs volunteers. wed from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday lnfonnation: (714) 375-1922. ~ Saturdllv at the aame loc8tion. lnbmation: (949) 6M>4m. ALZHmER'S ASSN. Of ORANGE COUNTY AMERICAN CANCER SOCETY Support group leaders. family ROAD TO RECOVERY The transportation program resource consultants, special event votunteera. of'lk:e needs volunteera to drive cancer volunteers are needed. patients to and from medical Vol~ may wort on one-time treatments free of dlarge. The projects or ongoing programs. required commitment la a few Erwblish~J in 1962 ftud .. a.ddeoly panlyr.ed. 1be berOIDe .,_to NewYolk Qty to pm MW fieedom and perepedlve OD btt future. 'J'be dD-nma of her~ life and. ber ..-it altuadon makel for an Interesting atory ot a woman's journey to independence. ~A• •·c~ of KaVllller •Oat' by Mlcbael Chabon la a coJorfuJ now1 about two boys from Brooklyn finding themselva and their paasion. 'laking place ln the 1930'a, the two t.eam up to aeate a comic atrtp about superheroes. The ato.ry blends comJc book characters and their life atodea amJd the numoU of that period. -Secnta of the Till CaW by Thoma.a Fox Averill depicts a hours eadl week or month. Driven must have a valid driver's llcetue and insurance and be at least 26. Volunteers may UM either their own vehlctes or American Cancer Society vans. Information: (949) 261-9446 or 11C01TH1r@cancer. orp. AMERICAN HEART ASSN. The American Heart Assn. is ~ng for volunteers to perform various general offioe duties in the main oflice and implement educatlonal and fundraising events through Orange County. No experience necessary. Training will be provided. Information: (949) 856-3555. AMERICAN HOME HEALTH HOSPICE PROGRAM The American Home Health Hospice Program needs volunteers to give emotional support to terminally ill patients and their families In the greater Orange County area. Training is provided. Information: (7141 55G-0800 or (800) 540-2545. AMERICAN RED CROSS, ORANGE COUNTY CHAPTER The dlepter needs volunteers to address community groups about Red Crou services and to • Finest Prime Stelllu anti Beef in Orange County • Freshest GriJ/.eJ Lobster, Crab anti SeafooJ in the arra · Liw Tribute "' Franlt SinAtra Mo""'1y 11114 TwsMy Nights from 6:00 p. m. "' 9:00 p. m. BAR 0 Pf.NS AT 4'30 PM DINNER IS SERVED MONDAY-S.\'lvu>AY FROM 5:30 PM For Raenatioo Call (949) 646-7944 16!>5 lrviM lbw., CMtA Me111 Ct HOMB OP TKB PM.RI. Dusr MARTINI $40 ·Ta~et CiiftC~rd and Free Checki or Lifer PRllC~forUfe POI Titpt Glfttatd MllOnhlanklg PUI Wa Chide caid .. cuUJ.WY coming of ... Wes la the eon of two restaurateun, and the retpOlllibWdel and conlJcta of thia UfeslJle have a deep Impact OD him. C:Ombining tedpes. lood blatory and the atnJggles of a family, It portrays the unlqueoeM of th1a way of life . and the cbild that Inhabits thiaworld. #J>lamond Dop" by Alan Watt ls a painful yet engaging novel about a troubled teenage boy coming of age in the glitt and flash of Las Vegas. The bright lights of the dty only highlight the sorrowful reality of his life, his family and a fateful night From another perspective. you can enjoy this kind of journey in viewing such classic films as "Zorba the act es liaisons with the media in disaster and emergency aituations. Information: Lynn Howes, (714) 481-5376. • cttEaC" our" written by the staff of the Newport 8Mch Public Library. This week'• column it by Kathy Bllllnga. All titles may be reserved from home or office computers by accesaing the catalog et http://INww.newportbe•ch llbrary.org. For more Information on the C.nt,..1 Librllry or any of the brand! locations, !»ease contact the Newport Beach Public Library at (9491 717·3800, option 2. Historical Society, a nonprofit organization, is seeking memorabilia such as photographs and stories for the muaeum's collection. Volunteers Al9IAl. NETWORK OF ORANGE are needed as docents and to COUNTY help wtth displays. The Become a bottle-feeder or take in museum, at 502 S. Bayfront, pregnant cats at your home. Suite A, is open from 10 a.m. to Many shelters kill pregnant cats 2 p.m . Wednesdays and upon arrival. Dogs and cats are Saturdays. Information: (949) also available for adoption. 675-3952. lnfonnation: (949) 759-3646 or hrtp:l...WWW.animatnetworlc.org. ASSISTANCE LEAGUE OF WHATS NEWPORT-MESA \blunteers loolcing for varying levels ON TAP of Involvement are needed to help the organization with i1s goal of helping dlildren in the community. Information: (949) 646-6929. TODAY WHAT: 16th Annual Taste of ASSN.RENAISSANCE Newport CREATORS WHERE: Newport Center The Costa M esa group sponsors Dnve, Fashion Island and supports outreach WHEN: From noon to 8 p.m. community service programs, INFORMATION: (949) such as the homeless sanctuary. 729-4400, or go to Volunteers are needed. http://www tasteof Information: (714) 540-5803. newport.com. The group Kool & the Gang performs tonight, as will the group BAL80A ISlANO MUSEUM ANO tlSTORICAL SOCIETY Super Diamond. The Balboa Island Museum and TIIE "YIKP.S• FACfOR? S,IMwlVMf. Steve BerJet wro&e chi be*. ft'• called 101 Co«·EfTective Ways ID lncreue the v a1ue of y OW' Home. Number one on Im list Elunuw.e the .. Ylk'!S" Fact.or. You <iee. Steve 1~ an inv~lor. He buys hou~ llW need help. fixes them up. sellJ them for a l!dy profiL wtw he love\, lhcrcfore. is to find ''Ylkci;" Appal an a home When a nonnal peNln Jnv~ up lo a home for !>ale. W.e' .i 4utclc loolt, ~y~ -vike\1 ·and Jn-..e\ .iway. that hou\C h.i' 'I' 1le,·· appe.il Step on<: 111 cltmrnatc: the "Yu .. c:• r~tor Hu~.; rull or two of plbllc l(.ub.tl(C ha!(' ~ fill them With ever) 1htnl( .:-..en v.igucl) rcliCmbhnJ tru'h on the propcny Wccdi 'hould be: pulled from the Jarden.' .iriJ rc:pl.iLcd "-llh colorful planh ()hi p.smt 'huuld he sanded and repl<M.ed "'1th tn:.Jl pamt TilC 1 .. wn 'hnulJ bi: p.unperc:d and brought up ll• 'Jll:cd \II 11f llm I\ a VCr) pra<.t~J Wa) 111 'd) '"I! what real e"Jlc pri •k\\IOOllls hJ,c "1!d lur ~.idc' 'I' uur how.c: 111-111 -.ell I.tr more 4u1d .. ly and di J f.;1 t-.:11cr pnle 11 ) nu make 1hc 111<:\IJCll'IVC lt"mcll• 11npruvc111cni-th.ii hu1ld up "'h.11 ., lUITlmonh l no"n J' •Urh "J)pcJI · l1lc lune and 1111111<:\ 1n\c .tcd in 'uch .s proic•• v.dl n111.mmunt111 J (U'\!JI tkal .md .. ill hn11v 10 J grcJt re1um lh1' 1um .. u1 h• hi.· 1crnhh 1mpun.in1 MJll) rc••plc h•:l1c,,· lhJI houm:huH'I', Jn -cc PJ'I 1lclcrrc.t m.1tnll'OJ!lll I· tho; hnmc"• p11tcn11JI \ I'\ fc,. hurnd>u~e"· 1huuj!h kcl ,uun,·J ,·n11111w1.1ll) h' '"'"''' Jnd p.:dmg pJollt Du J li11k ,.,,rl m.ilo.,• J lut 1111111111<:) hir Uh•rl· int 'nn.1tHm n;~jr1Sm)! rt·J1 ,,1,11c lJll1twJ11.J.t•1~n l~tWlor \I'll 111\ "-<'h\lll'' JI tl.1 l"""""~·~ \. 011 ' 1•1K:lttnlr•'-Ml l • .. n /Jai•t ~mK h.i1 bun •tllmg homtr in Nro'Port &arh Jina I WJ':J anti 1> u'llli Co<ISI Nt>Wport Proprnw/( ol.du 'fil &mlur TO BEACH CAPTAINS FROM THE < "ADOPT:-A-BEACA" CAMPAIGN FOR DOING THEIR· PART TO KEEP OUR BEACHES GLEAN I ~ I I (.. • f: • r. M Sunday, Septtmbtr 12, 2004 ~ ~ •• , , ,. :" :"' ... ... .... • • • • . • .. .. • •• ... t ' , t , .. 1' r t ,.. ~ ~ • .... • . . • . . .. •• ,. ~ , ~ ~ • •, • • • • . Luxury Performance Value Perfection Never Looked So Good ... 2005's Now Avallablel NATURAL MEDICINE CENTER Over 46.00Q Pattmts Treated/ Acupuncture • H.-• Diet • Nutrition . . . . .. . . ' . P \ ( > H I / \\I \, I '. \ I '\ K \ \ I I ( • I I I • I was diagnosed wiih peoriasis l 0 years ago. It mrccd on my urns and erivate arcaJ and men all over my body. The psoriasis got me real bad and ir affected ~n Huang. my 'i<'lf t'Stccm. I went to the medical doaor bu1. 1.hey L.Ac., OipL Ar.., Olpl. C.H. Jid 1101 hdp me or have an answer for my condiuon. '---" z;~ I alwa)'S heard "I don't know~ from them, so how can c..;:f;_"'"'. "'•f I know 1hc1r medication works. 1 was under 1hcir ""';;rotz''it::ifa.i" 1re;i.1men1 for 10 years wiih no rcsulu. On May 26. ------2004, I c;i.me 10 rhc: Narunl Medmnc: un1cr I Dr. Ja.oc• y.,h bcgvi 1rc:armc:m~ with acupuncrurc, herbal mcdiunc Pll.O., M.Sc •• 1-k. anJ nutriuon gwddina. I was oprirnin.ic al fim, and c_,,t:,;;'"" ~~ if when I st<tned 10 feel bcncr, I though1 that i1 rn1gh1 M,J;,.,J Q:.':n·,, ,.,, .. ~....... jw1 work. After 2 months, the shoulder pain wc:nr o.n.,..u '" "'"'""•" awar, md 1he ankles roo. I have an improved gu.1lary r FREE-20 MiNUii• of life: and feel bmer about myscl[ The psort.L\IS IS 1 HEALTH I under control. I deep better, my bowel movements 1 CONSULTATION I arc bme.r, and I los1 wcighr. I fccl good and I am 1 ----------1 ~with the rcsul~ ._ -~ ~2_5 y~~)--' -~ e... ..._ ~·" NATURAL HEALING • GREAT RESULTS • SAFE & EFFECTIVE (' .. \LL t ·s (71_..) 979-9791 , ,-, II.al •• I ..,,,, ............. \ ". ( 11\l.1 ''' '·' l .lrl .. 1111 ' 'l .!h .'to I:\\: -1 1 ,,-,, '' ··m •\\I 11\111 : \\\\\\.11,11111.al111nl1lincll ANGEL'S AUTO SPA COMPLETE $89 DETAIL •Buff & Wax • Interior Shampoo Regularly S 155 • Steam Clean Engine (Vans and Trucks Extra) MAKE AN APPOINTMENT 24HRS A DAY EXPRESS HAND WAX s29R~1:"y With this ad. Offers good thru 9-30-04. 2285 Newport Blvd • Costa Mesa (Co rner of Fa1rv1ew <c•' Newp o rt Blvd ) (949) 650-1009 SUNMIST 50% OFF 1st Session $15 Value POLICE FILES C08'TAMUA •WM..._ "'9ft A commerclel burglary wt• reported In 1M 1100 b4ock It 4:52 p.m. Thur1day. • In.tot ltrMt: A com~rd•I burglary Wll reported In the 3300 blodc at 3:66 p.m. Thuraday. • Newport Boulevard: Grand theft waa reported In the 2~ block at 8!60 a.m. Thurtday. •Santa Ana AwfMM MCI Smelley Roed: A trlfnc ecdd9nt lnvoMng lnjurl .. waa reported at 6:20 p.m . Thurlday. PUBLIC SAFETY ...... ......_Ao-.-. burglely Wll repo"9d In the 2000 ~It 4.'CM p.m. Thuredey. • ""90rlil-...e: Peay theft WU ,..,ortld In the 1100 block It ~158 p.m. Thurtday. •WM 1tdt ..,_.end HMMw lode.C Vendallem wet ~Id It 8t02 p.m. Thur9ltay. NEWPORT MACH • Antigua Wly: • .,. burvtary W81,.,,.. In 1he 1700 bloc* .. 12:01 p.m. Thurdy. • .,.....ltrMt:A~ burglary WM rtpOftlld In the 2300 block at 12:'3 p.m. l'hurtdlV· ,• ...... W1¥:Ahome bUf91ety w. repof1ed In the tlOO bloS n 11:301.m. Thuredly. •o..d~and,..,._.. Awhlde~rywu~ It lt21 1.m. Thurtdey. • INIM M'•uti: A comrnercf1I burgtary WU reported In the 3300 blodr It 8:39 e.m. Thu redly. • fMwpot't C.... DIM w.t: Grand theft wu repoftld In the 800 bk>dl It •:28 p.m. Thurtday. • lllh e...t V1nd1Hem Wll reponed In the 100 block et 12:501.m. Friday. PEACE Conlbled from Al Sept. 11 would M tbe peatm way to honor them.• IM Mid. lbe nent -Wblcb hUndreda were ~ to attend -ro. cU..ct on cbdd.reJt. Tunell Mld. "Peace atarU wtth our chiJ. dreo, tt atart.a at home," be Aid. ·u we can plant \hat seed In them wbeo they are young, lt bodes well for our future.• Althou&h the event 11 organ. lz.ed by What 1\ln'eU calla "new. thought chu.rcbea, • Wa not about rel.Igloo, be Mid. ·we d1cln'1 want to make h about rellgloo. • be aald. "It'• more of an event focualng on splrttual prlnctplet, lib doing L---------------------"--.:.._ _________ __. something positive ln yow SUNDAY Continued from Al •it relieves all your stress and headaches. It's relaxing.• Even though he doesn't ride much, he lives something of a biker's lifestyle through his job as a bouncer at Margaritaville. Newport Beach's main stopping point for people from all over Southern California who want to padc their bikes and grab a bite or a drink. rT TAKES ALL KINDS The motorcycling community in Newport-Mesa is a diverse aowd. It includes the two main segments of the bl.king community-Harley-DaVldson riders like Silvernail and those who ride sport bikes, which are mostly made by Japanese companies such as Kawasaki and Honda "The sport bike scene has grown tremendously," said Mike Boelhouwer, who is in charge of pans at Mach 1 Motorcycles in Costa Mesa. "Every year it gets bigger." Motorcycles were Boelhouwer's first mode of uansponation and now he rides one to work because it's a cheaper and faster commute. "It's like a big toy," he said Hit's a big toy you can speed on, if you don't get caught" For some riders, motorcycles are a break from the daily grind rather than a business. Wtlliam Burke is one of those. A retired corporate lawyer who lives in Costa Mesa, Burke bought his first motorcycle nearly a decade ago, and one of his first rides took him to North Dakota to visit the grave of his wife's grandfather. "ft was a very adventuresome ride," Burlce said. "I went through about six national parks: I got caught in a bliz.7..a.rd." THE CALL OF THE OPEN ROAD ln Orange County, Coast Highway is the preferred ride because of the scenery. but riders also travel inland to Trabuco COMMENTS Continued from Al instruction: •Qjck on the tab next to the ideas that this candidate believes in." The boxes lnclude, among many others, HPro·family": HAbstlnence"; "Pro life"; HSeelc God for direction"; "Heal the sick." What really caught my eye was that Jesus has his own tab, right next to Bush and Kerry. When you elide on the HJesus" tab, you'll find a list of biblical quotations beneath each of the beliefs you're bein.g asked to assign to Bush, or Kerry, or both. For instance, under ·Assist the Poor,• there is this, from Matthew 25:40: "lhl.ly I say to you, in so far as you did It to one of these, the least of my brothers, you did it to me." Few people would confuse Steve Gooden's website with a scientific opinion poll. No survey Is ever completely objective, and this one just happens to be a blt Canyon to stop at ~ C.orner. which on weekends attraas hundreds of bibra to eat. drink. socialize and look at the b{kes. Newport Beach rmaurateur Dan Marcbeano likes to take his girlfriend and his Harley south along the coast to Laguna Beach and Dana Point or north to Malibu. stop somewhere for lunch and ride back. He often rides alone in the mornings to clear his head before starting a busy wo!Xday at bis restaurant, The Arches, where he's surrounded by people. "You have a lot of doctors, dentists, attorneys (who ride occa.sionallyl," Marcheano said. Hl'm more ferocious with it. I ride almost every day.· His rides around Newport Beach are practically one long social call. with March.eano spotting busines,, people and other bikers he knows on his rides and when he stops. The long rides are what Burke prefers. His wife doesn't like the motorcycle, but she bought him a Harley Road King -a touring bike -because she knows how much he love$ riding. Bw:ke said When he's on a long trip. he avoids chain restaurants and eats In local joints to experience new things. He stops when he wants and changes course if he feels like iL "I love to just get out. and [on a bike! you don't have anything between you and your surroundings,• he said more subjective than most, to say nothing of hugely influenced by your own beliefs. To be honest. some of the beliefs you're being asked to assign to one of the two candidates are a little hard to decipher. There ts a ·no Not Overtax" box on the checkll.st, which I would expect George Bush to win going away, but there is allo a •Pay Tuxes" box. I'm pretty IUre both Bush and Kerry are OK with paying taxes. There ls also a box for ·Assist the Widows,• which is a good thing, although I'm not sure either candidate baa staked out much of a posidon on that. Gooden'• website la really the latest iteration of a premise that got a lot of attention in 2002, when an obecure organtz.ation called the "National Religious Partnenblp for the F.nvtronment" launched a national ca.mpal8Jl to dlacourage people from drivtng SUVa by ald.og dUI queslioll! °'Whal k1od of car would,_. d.dver It may haw beeo lblurd. but the Ha,a motcrcycle mechat1ic at Machl Motcrcycles, works on a bike. KENT TREPTOW /OM.Y PILOT TRANSPORTATION, 1ltERAPY AND ADVENnlRE Every motorcyclist baa their own reasons for riding. but many riders say It's the most fun they've ever had. If your job ls straf8bt-Jaced, having a motorcycle can express your bad side, said Brad Obhen. who lives In Costa Mesa and wolb for a custom bike painting shop in Orange. Bikers also use their bikes as a hobby to spend their money and time on. he said Hit's like customizing your house for a guy,• Olshen said. "Women like to put up new drapes. Guys do that to their bikes." • While a motorcycle provides a lot of freedom. It also requires concentration and attention to safety. A rider has no protection from a ftying rock. something tumbling off the back of a truck. or a careless car that veers too far out of its lane. Marcheano took a bike safety course when he started riding about 10 years ago. and hes never had an accident ''I'm not riding a motorcycle to wind up in a wheelchair," he said Hl'm doing it for di11erent reasons. I li1ce the chaDenge. I like the camaraderie. Some people play golf. I ride a motorcycle.· • AUCIA ..-.soN covers buaineet, politlca Ind the environment. She may be rNd\ed et (949) 7~ or by e-mail at alid1.robffl«>n@latirrw.oom. question caught the nation's fancy, a lot. and popped up everywhere, from the Wall Street Journal to "The TonJgbt Show.· Of the hundreds of answers that were offered for what kind of car Jesus would drive, I thought the bell-ringer was ·a O:lrist-ler. • According to Mark Petracca. one of the top Italian-American polidcal scientists, with an oftlce in the Social Sdencea Plaza at UCI, Gooden's premiae ii • ... not totally crazy. Bush hlmaelf, when aaUd who be considers the most important hlatortcal figure WU during the lat presidential debate aaid Jesus Out.st" But It ls a good emmple of how times, and racee. haw changed. acconling to Petracca. who referred to John R Kennedy'I prelidendal race, in wb.k:b be bad to dltearn blmaeJ.f repeatedly from bSs c.tboUc faith to quell fem that u the ftnt Cat.bo& president. be might defer to ~ lnltead of the Conldtudon. "NoW, 44 )'Mn later, lta community. "A lot of people give up on peace too· euily thinking that It'• too big an luue for them. But It's not. People can make a difference u lndMduall." The event also featured guest speakers, Including actor James Cromwed, music, booths and activities for chU· dren from puppet shows to face·palnting. Parts of the event took place under a large white tent. Rodmwl said her children look at such an event as an opporru · nity to f/CNi the seeds of peace In their hearts. even though they don't oompletety understand the larger implications. Right next to where Rothman was sitting. several children were painting and writing mes· sages of peace on rocks. They take the rock. home with them to remind them about the mes- sage of peace, said Ellzabeth Lankster, who was running the rock-painting booth. "It will hopefully make them aware that if they each take heart and think about peace, it'll spread around,· she sajd. Peace begins at home. said Barbara Everett, a visitor from Lake Forest. "How can we have world peace if we don't have peace in our homes, communities and schools?" she said. "These churches getting together in- stead of competing against one another ln itself Is an expres· sion of peace." Joseph Figueroa. 15, from La.Ice Forest, said the event was a way for chlldren and teens to learn about peace in a safe and fun environment. "This is a great (venuel be· cause just being here 1s peace- ful," he said. "It remlnds you to stay calm and not get stressed out. If everyone Is at peace. the world is at peace.· • DEEM BHARATH 11 the enterprise and generel Htlgnment reporter. She may be reeched et (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail et dHpa.bh1rathO/atimes.com. legitimate, .. Petracca said. HBoth candidates openly talk about matters relating to faith.· If you want to see Steve Gooden'• site for yowself, grab your mouse and head to http-J/www.tlwptwion ojbush.com. AJ Interesting as Gooden's premise may be, I couldn't help but notice the age-old problem of trying to interpret biblical references and apply them to present-day life, lib this quota.don under the •Marriage" category, from Exodus 20:17: "You shall not covet your netabbor'• bouw. you abaD not covet your netchbor'• wife. or hla male II.Ive. or his llaft1Sld. OJ' his ox. or b1a ua. or =~ch belonp to your Anyone think I'm going to touch that? See paragraph one. abcM: "thlrd·rail lsaJeL • I gotta go. • PfTa IUfM It I fofmtr eo.t.I Mete mayor. Hit column rune Sundiyl. ... mey be reecNd by ...,,.. at /lftM•IOl.oom l ttelt :I. reda · fo- ald. :hll- be eed mg, • :an- ew- not ! It 'It'1 on tng )UI on hat ea est tor .le. tll· to he ge ok ll· in ey he in m S· !y m S· :h 1e Tl .e e. d n d , :1 e _. s.r.y, ~ 12, 2004 M SEPTEMB-ER ' . . . . M ( ) •• i I ., I l ' : . ' ;, . Vv I I ' • • ' :, I r I i I I I< I " • f '.. I I I ,\ I ~ :. ' I J i .. : .\ r City of NB · Cone.rt in th• Parle, TBD Kamen OC Race for th• Cure, Fast11on ls/and 5 12 19 26 6 13 20 27 7 Low N' Change 14 A Performance In Powy& Song, The Gypsy O.n C.fe; O..ign of a o.c.cJe F•shion Show, 1ffw D1f9CfJOns for Women and Recycled Rags of Corona d.I Mar, Five Crowns Res~urant 21 28 Uw Entertainment• VIP Hospitality • Food & a..ogea, Unique lhstyle Vendor ,,._wtationl __ Fun for the Entire Fomfty at thia AlitOOU s.oaide Venue OPIN TO ntl PUIUC 1GAM·4PM Ad!Mlance: $5 (Kida Uftder 12 FtMI • r.tdng: S 10 1 8 8MJc to School Golf 15 Tou~r. Tustin Randi Fa// Begins 22 29 Rusty B•m Fest1v•I, OC F•1rgrounds, Thrv 9/1 I Rosh HaUianall 2 9 16 23 Keys to Literacy Book 3Q & Author Dinner, Irvine Marriott Arts & Cra~s Fest•val. 0C Fairgrounds Thrv 1012 Lido Yacht Show, Lido Marina Village (through OC1 3) 3 N8CC T.a d N.wport. 1 0 Fashion ls/and, Thru 9112 5.tnd Sporu 17 Super Show, OC Fairgrounds, Thrv 91l9 24 C..bot-0.y C.r Cru1M, 4 OC F•1rg~nds. Thru 916 1 1 HomeA1d Pro1Kt 18 P1aynou~ Fnh10,., Island, Thru 10130 Costa Mesa H1stor.ca1 SOCJety Open H· use Esunc·• Pa'1< Co•std C ean~; local bPacnes Yom~ 25 • . ,: ' g 4 ca a .. M Suncsay, Se~ 12, 2004 HOW 10 GET PUaJ8HB> -LAailrl: MaH to fly11n c."9r' It the o.lfv Piiot, 330 W. 84lv it., C°"9 Meile. CA 9m'7 •Rt c ' c H •es Cll .. la ... ftlil: ~to C• ..... 170 ~lif:~nd ro dallypllotfllatimn.com •All con-eepondence rnuec lncbtt ful ~hometown end phcW'9nwnblt(for~.,..,a111). ~Nol •••rws f'9 ,._.to dll eubmlHIDM fordlrity Md llnglh. • • EDITORIALS We object .to decision on· . ~ttomey's office I n a time of tight state budgets and an uncertain economy, it is difficult to argue when one of our dtles tries to keep costs down. There are occasions. hawever. when the 7.eal to cue costs ~ questionable. and the C'.osta Mesa Oty C.Oundl decision to do away with its anorney's office and enter into a contract with an outside fum is one of those iMtances. At the 14St. it Is a decision that seems to demand more debate and deliberation than it received last week. Our central concern is whether tutting the city attorney's office acrually will save the city money. The ,taff report, In our opinion. leaves that a large question. The attorney's office, which In past months comprised four employees and two open positions. cost the city about $416,000 for 5,400 hours of work annually. The firm the dty chose to negotiate a contract with. Jones & Mayer, would cost more than double that, $864,000, for the ..a.me nwnber of hours. However, city Maff members write: Mlf the legal ~rvices are contracted out. it is anticipated that there will be a reducnon in the number of hours of legal services billed to the Qty since attorneys will not be attending many of the meeting5 now anended by in -house legal staff.· lllat seems a big "if' to us. At the least. the city will have to limit its use of attorneys to 2.500 hours a year -an average of just 48 hours a week - '>imply to come out even. 1hat '>ounds like a lot, until an ~e hits the city that demands several lawyers' lime 10 handle. We also worry that council or city !ttaff members will be reticent 10 call on attorneys if they know it will cost the city. Beyond that. however, we are concerned about the speed of the decision because of the controversy that has surrounding the city attorney's office In the past few years. The review of the attorney's office that led to the council's decision, after all, came after the city was sued by former City Atty. Jerry Scheer, a case that was settled for $750,000. While city offtclals have said there was no connection between their decision to look at the office's efficiency and the Scheer suit, the timing ls coincidental enough that city officials should have been as careful as possible to assure residents that their dedslon was based on budget concerns and nothing more. The swiftness of their decision was not reassuring. Another troubling piece b that the d.i.scuMion took place toward the end of a long council meeting, with the vote happening around 1 am. That seems far too late for such an important vote. one that fundamentally alters how the city will do business. Finally, we wonder what ~ decision portends. If a key dty department such as the attorney's office can be cut for budgetary reasons. where else might the knife slice om Should the tire department be contracted out to Orange Qrunty7 Shouldthepolice department come Wlder the Sheriff's Department. at a potentially substantial savings? By choosing to do away with the city attorney's office, city leaders have opened the door to these questions. We doubt they are ones they serkn.Wy want to ask. A move not in the public's interest P eople wh o are suspicious of Coast Community College lhlstee Armando Ruiz' retirement plans cenainly have good reason. Because of a quirk in state law, lf Ruiz retires from his trusteeship the <>rutie day he retires from his counseling job at Irvine Valley College -Oct 31 -he could receive an elevated pension from the C.Oast district of almost $55,000 a year. C.Ombined with the pension from his service at Irvine Valley C.Ollege, he could collect a total clllJlual pension of about $120,000 - all becauae he potentially could retire the same day. lbat's right. the law condones this double-dip. It allows such officeholders, employed with another government agency, to draw pensions from two jobs, based on their hJgbest annual salary, if they retiJe from the positions on the same day. Ruiz' higheat annual salary was Sl07.000, for his work at Irvine. But that's not all. In what could tum out to be a real coup. Rui7.. who bu tiJed to run for re-election to his trustee lftt. could retire from both jobs on the aame day, secure the bolstered pension aqd be re-eJected to die trustee aeat on the board be just retired from. N. least mat's what members o1 the q.t Federation of 1\9achen and Coast lhlstee Jerry Plttenon chink nt c.ouJd do. We think that kind of move would smack of lining one's pockets at public expense. Ruiz has been quiet on the issue. and has not publidy announced any decision on retiring from bis trusteeship. So far. it aeems. he b running as an Incumbent But those who are leery of Ruiz' intentions believe otberwlae. "I think lt's tntally unethical,· said Diana Sharp, president of Coast Federation of Classified F.mployees. ln a Sept. 2 Daily Pilot story. "I WU surprised it was legal." No one can fault the man -who baa spent a lengthy tenme committed to community colleges - for finding a loophole that allows him to retire more comfortab~ Indeed. if he were to retire from the posts on different days. he'd receive just $5,000 per year for the trustee pension and the roughly $65,000 from the South~ Qrunty Conummlty College District, which Irvine Valley CoDege ls a part of. If anything, perhaps this glitch lhouJd have been foreseen when Ruiz was elected to bis seat Nevertheleu, we share a general conc:em that this kind of situation can arise, and we hope that by the time Oct 31 rolls around, Ruiz wfD do the right thing and e1tber retire after a long-lived. healthy career u a pubic aenant. and not run u an lncumberu. or let the voten faldy dedde 00 Novanber 2 bis fare .. Ul Incumbent trultee -who hu not ya retired from that poll. THE LAST WORD $aying good-bye to 'The Worm' A n o~n letter to an the N~·Mela rMtdalla Who co_,hMd WtMiD lhe Ojlily Pilot ran aton. oa ,.,_. NM'•tar aDd DCIW ...... PfNport rMMal Dnaai .... . OnC9 ,.,.an.._~ u..r.cc ..... .-.....,. ~--·-,-· HilW' a • ••~If•!• .. ......... _.,, . ::r:.:-5-· ....... ,. - the a.th. NO men Wiid I BOLTON ----~-- COMMUNITY COMMENTARY St. James not what it used to be F riends, it ls with great sorrow that I read the reports of the members' disloyalty to St. James Episcopal Ouuch, Newport Beach, and Bishop J. Jon Bruno. In 1961. soon after moving to this area. I was confirmed at St James (along with several other people whom you would recognize if 1 mentioned their names) by Bl.shop Eric Blay of Los Angeles. It is !ncomprehensible to me that these new people are trying to •take over" the church. The Rev. Praveen BWlyan was called to St. James only a little over a year ago. and now he thlnb he owns that very valuable piece of property on Udo lsland. He doea not In those early days, St. James sponsored and began the million in Corona del Mar (now St. Michaela and All Angels F.piscopal Onuch), and a1ao St Wllfred's Episcopal Chureb ln Huntington Beach. St. Michaela, and Harbor Day School (Eplacopal) wu started on the property now housing the Oasis Senior Center. The Rev. F.d Allen was leader of both, along with the rector of St. James Bpiacopal Cllurch. J am sure Frank 'lk'ane A bridge to more traffic at Gisler Avenue Re the supposed need for a bridge at Giller Avenue, I deflnite)y feel lt'a not needed and lt would not help but create more tra1Bc than wtw lt would be worth. Going beyond editor's column remembers those times. When we called a new rector, 'The Rev. John Ashey, he brought ua, a1ao. the Rev. David Crump, and this la when our ch\.D'Ch began to change. The 11 o'clock service became the •(]wWnattc• one with "speaking in tongues." and far-out practlces more uaodated with bible-thumping Baptists than F.pilcopalians. Many of the "Old Guard" left St. James and moved OD to St. M.att:bewl., Santa Ana. or St. Mk:haell in Corona del Mar. where we rec:osntzed our chwdl, and the eentca we were uae4 to. J am sorry that we dJd that If we bad stayed and fought for the church u we knew it. St. Jame1 perhaps would not be in th1s me11 today. We all loved the pl'OQellional, and the lnceme, and the Common Book of Pr.yet -ftnt the 1928 Ymloo and then the newer Rite One and, I think. then Rite 1Wo a am not u famfHlf with thoee, but I can ldD redte a Jot of the 1928 book from memory). We were active In guilda. Sunday IChoal and F.placopal summer ICbool. We heJd art ab.owl. and evm bad an Episcopal boobtore in the Pariah Hall. MAILBAG A reminder to carpool, please Driving our carpool of Ill atudenta to Corona de1 Mar Hlgb School thll morning. I wu 1tuck in tnmc for awhile. Looldng around, J nodced not one car around ua had more than one 1tudent in IL Thia afternoon. J wu ltU.ck for 2S minut.ee in tbe letl-baod turnJnc lane trytQg to 11t lnto the blah achool puidQI lot-traftlc WU stopped in all dlrectlona; When It ftnally ltarted moving, 15 mt.nut.ea after the Idell got out of achool and I actually got Into the Jot, all I NW wu •Ingle Idell gett1nc into these eedanl. SUVt and other can that bad all been ldlinc for almoR halt ua hour. What are we t'*'dD1 our lddlf lbla la a twp wutt of pa ind pollutant to our lk*. I undmtand not wandng kids to walk md aOM the buiDI ~ ltrMCa of MacAnhUr Boulmrd and )unbOIM Road wbJle people are nub.lai to work. but'-"• at leui cu .... -the buMI. We need to ..... ow childrm~ ..... .,, ... . 1peWIQs-Palullllii ....... .... tO.t.ha\d&Wur ............ .. rtabt tbia'I to .. ...... 11., ....... operatedby volunteers after services. We bad a wonderful "C.Ouples Oub," which sponsored trips for the Episcopal Oilldren's Home, and brought them to the beach every summer for a lovely day and picnic. Then, we collected what we called ·A Book and a Buck for a Bus," In order to buy a bUJ for thoee kids. We never made enough for a real bus, but we bought a atation wagon, which helped. N. one time we evm painted the Parish Hall kitchen ounelvea. AD the friends I ever made ln Newport Beach I met at St. James F.pllcopal Owrcb, and they are adD my fl1endl, and many are leaden of the eommunlty. I could condnue for many pages, but thoee of you who were of that dme will remember, and weep for St. James today, I'm aure, u I do. I don't really understand how there could be a member lilt of 1,200. The vote to "break away" WU 280 to 12. Where la the re1t of the congreptionf Old only the 11 o'clock aervice get to vote? Who are you IU1't and how dare you ~c=..a1tfGMVEN Balboa llland j ' CONTEMPLATING THE SEPARATION 'The break was necessary, but the political fa/lout is distracting from the work of compassionate ministry we are called to do. My relationship with St. James continues as before, but perhaps with more resolve and a clearer sense of our mission. It hasn't affected my faith per se, but it does cause me to grieve for the Episcopal Church.' .. PO&UM ..... INJt ta t.zat A7 ,. MARKC. OUST'r./DM.YPl.OT Standing firm on church schism F or many, like St. James Olurch parishioner Galen Yorba-Gray, the Episcopal Olurch has strayed from what Yorba-Gray said are key tenets of religious faith: belief in the supremacy of biblical scripture and Jesus Olrist. That's why he has stood firmly behind his Newpon Beach church and its pastor, Prawen Bunyan, as the church, with its 1,200 members, has broken away from the Episcopal Diocese and taken shelter under the Diocese of Luwero in the Anglican Province of Uganda, Africa. 1\vo others, All Saints' in Long Beach and St. David's in North Hollywood, have also seceded, citing the Episcopal Church's liberal views on homosexuality, the divinity of Christ and the supremacy of the Bible. In a nutshell, the Episcopal Olurch has simply lost its way on a path to salvation, St. James leaders say, and people such as Yorba-Gray didn't like the direction. ln a vote, 280 St James members opted to break away, with 12 dissenters wanting to remain with the Episcopal <liocese. Yorba-Gray, a parishioner at St. James for four years, sees the break last month as a glitch in his church's path, but one that has bolstered a sense of religious mission. Before things settle down, congregants will have to get through what will Ubly be a high-profile legal battle over the rights to the St. James property. Olurch leaders have already been fired by incredulous Episcopal diocese leaders, who have sent minions to the break-away areas with hopes of setting up new ministries and drawing in those St. James parishioners who disagree with the secession. A <liocese lawsuit filed Tuesday alleges that St. James clergy and the board of directors are guilty of breaching their trustee duties and refusing to leave the propeny owned by Episcopalians. Meanwhile, Yorba-Gray stands firmly with his church. Jn the midst of growing legal and philosophical tumult, Yorba-Gray agreed to answer some questions from the Pilot'• Ryan Carter. Haw hM St. Jama' break from the dloceee affected you md your own reladoftlhtp with St. James. and even your awn faJthf Hu It reinforced or challenged yow religious beUefaf The break was necessary, but the political fallout is distracting from the work of compassionate ministry we are called to do. My relationship with St James continues as before, but perhaps with more resolve and a clearer sense of our mission. It hasn't affected my faith per se. but It does cause me to grieve for the Episcopal Olurch. Why Is this eecwlon lllpltkantf Parting ways with family and friends la always difficult, but Episcopal Cllurcb USA's drift Into cultural accommodation hu broken down the distinctive of the Gospel message: All are Invited to come, ~ FROM THE NEWSROOM but come and be heaJed, changed and forgiven. How bu your own view of the F.pl8copal church changed over dmet What bu turned you off about the F.pl.tcopal <llurcb at large I I was initially attracted to the EpiscopaJ Olurch's openness and ~inclusiveness" as coming from a place of compassion. However, this view has come to fall short of the Gospel's call to repentance, redemption and transformation. The biblical narrative of the woman at the well offers helpful insights into Jesus' notion of inclusively. He welcomes a person who was, in effect. trlple-margi.na.lized then: She was first of all a woman, then Samaritan woman, then an Immoral Samaritan woman to boot. Jesus accepted her, listened to her pain. offered her spiritual help and then held her account.able for change. Episcopal OmKh USA has done a pretty good job of calling people to help others, but hasn't followed through as well on matters of spirituaJ and moral accountability. We view these as essentials if the Gospel is to remain a unique and authentic call to a restored humanity. 1Jle men hiding in the shadows of the Samaritan lady's past also needed to step forward and stop using people. Uving a double standard, and accept the heart change that Jesus offered to her. From what 1 undentmd -and plale c:onect me If I'm wrong-St. Jamea 1e1111 blblbl ICl1pture and Ul llCa!ptaDee of ...... -Loni and llnlor • the one true way to laMdon. Do JIOCI ..,.t Yes, there are many bridgles that try to cross the ct..m of our alienation from God -aome fine bridges as far as !:hey go -but Ovist ~ th«ompleted bridge from God's perspective. How would you aDSWa" thoee who haw questioned IUCh a foc::wed beUel1 God offered Ouist to the world as an absolute response to our brokenness. Relativistic philosophies similar to postmodern thought have always been around. HaYe you talked about the chu.rdn altuatlon with other parllblooent Do they...._ with you and PMtor Prneen Bu.nyul'I staocef Naturally we talk about it, and yes, we support him 100%. Wbat'I. Sunday eervk:e I.lb nawf .. theft • lm9e that • ablft bae bappenedf .. theft relief. gtvm that theft le a more c:onaete belJef In ~ Outst -the ..mart There is surety relief on the one hand, but Jesus has always been reaJ and ·concrete• for us at St .• James. as is our commitment to the scriptures as the maximum authority for doctrine and practice. On the other , hand, we all await the settling down and hopefully, the peaceful godly resolution of the legaJ questions that ' remam. What do you think of th.la Idea or Bllbop J. Jon Bnmo of the l..o9 ~ Dlocw eencllng prtem to bre:Maway arw mch •Newport Bwh to let up new mlnlmiel and mlnlete:r to dlOee wbo don't want to Italy at the churcbeef I think he la talking a.bout an ememeJy smaD group of people who would be equally at borne in area Episcopal churches. but we bless those who differ, and pray for their continued spiritual care. 'Political junkie' lands seat on debate panel ,: r---------..... !· TELL IT TO TIEEDITOR ., HA~VW.W tM.LS $2,ltt, ... 2801 Harbor View OtM • Of>en House l-4ptn 3 bedroom. 3 bath remodel with fantasdc: ¥iewi. D•nln• Kem1 949.75'.3751 Galhndjoy · • "lllO,~Vll.LAS .,,.,... 303 ... HHI Drive• Open House 1-fpm listefuJ villa nestled on 84' Canyon Golf Course. S~eYoun1 949. 759.l7ot fOllowing , the ·long gray line I t ha.9 been 75 yean. vtrtuaDy to the day, since a man named Sklney Davidson opened the front door In September of 1929 to let the Long Gray Une in at Newport Harbor HJgb. So it seemed appropriate to take a look around and you might be surpriaed at what I found a few days ago. I've always been a big fan of Howard Carter, the fellow who nosed around the Pyramids and found the remains of Tutankhamuo, the boy king. So you can imayJne the intrigue as I sauntered through the various nooks and crannies of Ralph K. Reed Gymnasium on the Sailors· campus. ROGER lhcre have been a CARLSON lot of changes sinc.e those doors opened in the early 1930s. but in very short order, the interior of the gym is going to be unveiled and it is a masterpiece, thanks to the coac:hin8 s~ of Larry Hirst, Danny Glenn and Athletic Director Eric 1Weit. along with a coupt or once·in·a·decade boosters who have entered the scene and proceeded to make a true difference with their knuw-how, tune. sweat and energy. lllere ~ J Newport booster a few years ago named Tom Wtlliams. and the re.ult of his efforts are !>Lill obviol.1.5 with an awesome amount of work at Davidson Field revolving around dramage, the level of the field and many ext~. such as the palm trees. Tom Wllliams came and went. but he's !>rill there. Now, we have a couple of individuals who have.beal making bugle waves in the area of the main gym and when you -;ee whats been done it'll be dear to ~ryone that Ed Slater and Scott Burnham are two who belong in the upper echelon of the Long Gray Line. I've seen it in its not-comptetety-finished state and irs obviol.1.5 Hirst and Glenn have been able to realize some long-sought dreams of a dassic field house, thanlcs to the efforts of Slater and Burnham. The floor ls pristine. the striping comes down to just two options. the main hoops and main volleyball layouts. and at opposite comers are tributes to the fairest of them all. George Yardley, as In "Yardley Court." The dungeon-like ceiling is gone and all or the leftover ~ and riffraff have been removed. including an estimated 1,000 feet of extension cords left over the years in the caracombs. New lighting Is expected to be completed later this week and the entire place has a coat of paint which brtnp it mto a clas.* look. that you just can't find See BIG EASY, Pace 82 CROSS COUNTRY Host Anteater women second at Central Park MARK C. DUSTIN/DAILY P1LOT Los Angeles Southwest Colege linebacker Nicholas Partner raises his hands 1n ttie air after recovering a fumble on the snap white OCC quarterback Kyte Basanez (8) and ttie rest of ttie disappointed Orange Coast offense walk off the field in the second quarter in Saturday's game at LA Southwest. The Pirates lost four fumbles on ttie day. Backward motion for Orange Coast Pirates lose four fumbles that lead to 19 points Saturday in nonconference loss at L.A. Southwest. Barry Faulkner Daily Pilot LOS ANGELF.S -The bright spots wen! nearly as scarce as shade for the Orange Coast College football team Saturday afternoon at sun- drenched Los Angeles Southwest For, despite a bright beginning and a Oasby ftnish, the Pirates dropped a 36-19 nonconference dedlion to the C.Ougars. who improved to 2-0 while dropping OCC to 0-2. It ~ the sixth straight defeat for the Pirates, who, according to Coach Mike Taylor, took a step backward from their season -opening 24-17 loss to GJendale. occ 19 LA. Swst. 38 day." NAfter our [second! play (a 70-yard touch down run by freshman tail- back Matt Pa· dillaJ. I thought we'd be taking a step forward.~ Taylor srud. NBut I'd have to say there was regression to· The Pirates fumbled four quarter- baclc-center exchanges. losing all four in their own territory. which led to 19 points for the hosts. The visitors also muffed a punt that Southwest recovered on the Pi- rates' 18, then pounded Ill for an· other touchdown that made it 29-7 with 11:36 left in the game. Orange C.Oast, which had posses- sions of 23, 12. 18 and 16 seconds, averaged a mere 97 seconds on its 13 posse~ions. gwing away field posi· tion, momentum. and, ultimately. iLS chance at victory. "There's no excuse for the (fum- bled! center !>nap!>, .. sa.td raytor. who alternated quarterbacks U1ad Schm1· gel and Kyle Basanez. the latter com birting with ~ophomore center Ricky Mercado for three of the mishandled exchanges. The Pirates shored up problem" with long snaps m the klclong game that plagued them against Glendale But OCC was flagged twice for hitting the Southwest punter. one such foul prolonging a drive that ended in a touchdown. OCC also had one kid.· off sail out of bounds. had one punt travel just 7 yards. and committed the aforementioned muff There were. however. sporadic highlights for the OCC offen~e. as Pa dilla collected 124 rushing yards on 16 carries and Basanez, coming off See occ. Paa• 83 • 4 ~. $eOtafrGer 12, 2004 I I MEN'S , WATER POLO USC rallies to knock off 'E aters Big second half lifts Trojans over UC Irvine, 10-6, in Los Angeles. Second-ranked USC scored nine sec· ond-half goals and went on to defeat No 7 UC Irvine. I 0·6, in nonconference men's water polo game at McDonald's Swim Stadium m Los Angele<, Saturday. Freshman Thoma~ Hale scored all of his game-htgh three goals m the -.econd half to help the de fend.mg nauonal champion Tro1am erase a 3 I halfume deficit I lale and Juraj Za1ov1l scored back-to-back goal<. m the third quarter to tie the '>Core at 3-3, then UU sophomore Cole Bitter put the Anteaters back up. 4·3, on a goal wtth 3:04 left in that period Jame<> 5hm scored 19 <iecond' later to See POLO, Page 82 IRRELEVANT WEEK H oag with M innesota Mr. Irrelevant 2003 begins NFL season today on Vikings ' practice squad. Ryan Hoag. Mr Irrelevant in 2<Xn Ix' g1m the 2004 :-.;n ..ea son on the practice ..quad of the M111nt: ... ota Vilong:c,. A 6-foot 2. .!00· pound n"<:e1ver out of (,w,1avus Adolph~< ol· lege 111 Minne!>Ota. I loag wa., signed to the pr.ic- uce squad I ue<->da>. one day after bemg waived Ryan Hoag by the Vtk.inW>- Hoag hooked on wtth \itinne!>Ota after ill faied previous sUnL'> with the Oakland Raider;, who drafted him with the last pick m the 2003 draft. dlld the New York Ciiants. This year·s \.Ir lrreJe\'·ant. Andre Sommer;ell. a former b.tanna I ligh 'tu· dent -athlete drafted m11 of < .olorado \tate by the Ralde~ wa..<, rdt>,1-.(>d .\u~ i I CROSS COUNTRY Blue shines on toasty d ay Newport Harbor senior captures Division II girls race at Laguna Hills invitational. For the majority of the high IChool run- oers SalUrday in the seuon-openlng La- I ~ r. l I i: • • -82 Sunday, September 12, 2004 SPORTS BIG EASY Continued from Bl anywhere. "You aren't going to believe this gym come Dec. l,N said 'IWeit A blend of 1937 and the present, Wl.lque Is hardly the word. It's always been a pat •home BYID • and the very tired bleachers will have to wait for another dme before upgrades are considered. Al one time it was thought . ~ earthquake upgrades were ln the wom. But from the $320 million school bond issue passed m recent times. with various pipe .dreams~ deteriorating athletic fadlides, not a nickel Is <>n its way to any athledc facility :in the Newport-Mesa Unified 'School District. As usual, various carrots are offered to the voters, then withdrawn in the aftennath of victory for other neces.sides. I guess. The gym's format continues in its current status with the Ooor running from east to west and the "balcony'' in place behind the east basket. Originally the Ooor ran south to north with "balcony-style" stands on both sides, at the east and west ends of the gym In the summer of '63, according to former athletic director Jules Gages of Carlsbad. the west balcony was eliminated and the Ooor was changed to run east to west with accordion-style bleachers, a move undoubtedly made to avail more floor space over the major portion of day-to-day schedules. It abo extended the length of the court. So that's why the present ''balcony" on the east end 1s seldom used except for overflow situations, because you're sitting in the end zone, looking through the back of the backboard. Photographers like it. because it's a different look for their lens. And sometimes its a good place for the band. ln the early years an upstairs portion of the gym above the lobby was dedicated to boxing where the original athletic dilfctor, Reed, would put every freshman boy into the ring to learn the basics. It also served as a wrestling room. The girls gym. built in 1948, according to the retired girls P.E. director. Costa Mesas Ellen Caricof, never did have any bleachers and the entire playing surface was used for games and practices. Delore Al Irwin and his swtm program got lb pool In 1948 the Sailors had two options-"The Corona del Mar Mile,• Whldl was a dash to the bay and back. or a saltwater pool in Huntington Beach. The girls gym. now In a dllapldated state, still aerws as a practice surface for Newport Hart>or's girls volleyball and bubtball teams, and the pool has long since been abandoned. Now lt's full of cement and serves as a staging area Soon the Sailors will be presenting their new lhowcue with a dedication and call for help for additiooal funds to complete the task (the bJeachecs must be 50 years old). And. around Dec. 1, the formal dedication, a night to honor George Harry Yardley m. and a night for the return of the Long GrayUne. ••• While sifting through the echoes of Halbor's grand f'acility, some current items: Fonner Newport HaJbor High standout Alyson Je~ now a freshman at the Untvmity of Texas. is a starter for the Longhorns' ~ty as the libero. The Sailors' annual football extravaganza. the Battle of the Bay with Corona del Mar, has been moved up a day to Thursday night, Sept 23, because of the school district's observance of Yorn Kippur. And, the Sailo~ nonleague duel with Corona del Mar in boys soccer Jan. 5 will be played at Orange Coast College, where they'll test the Pirates' FieJdTurf. ••• I missed F.stancia H.igtis footbali opener with Corona del Mar on Sept. 3, as well as Mesa's opener Sept. 2, but I had a good excuse. I had heard of this high school football team to the north with a remarlcable record and decided to take a look. and lo and behold, the Bellevue High Wolverines proved worthy of their reputation after posdng three straight Division 3-A titles in the Washington lnterscholastic Activities Association. Before a Qwest Stadiwn crowd of24,987 the Wolverines displayed awesome precision as they dominated Concord De La Salle, snapping the Spartans' 151-game winning streak with a near-unbelievable effort, 39-20. Af. the end they win ClllllD&a.knle •a m11an olnllpdilue Colda Bob Ladouclll\ ~~•DILis.ia. :..Tbe pne tape cw DVD II avalllble ac~eom and II* for $29.85. • Bellevue. whh. l~ ~=~--rolled up 46.1 yum on tbt ground. never duew a .awe p.. did not punt. bad two pes>lldm for 15 yards. .fumbled once and had no tu.m<Mn. After gMng up an 8-play ecoring drive on the &st aem., Bellevue responded wl1h • 74-yard touchdown nin on hi firlt map. and the Wllwrtnel wese olf to the~ c.onatderihl the ... itlebldl_... .... ot De La SIDe. tt btl to go down. the moet lnaedlbJe Wl-opmlng victory 6x ID)' prep c.m. ~ en route to~ the lonlmt sports w1nn1ng mw 1n ftlCOlded history. BeUevue'I qtmrterback WIS a 1-year-old when the SUe.ak bepn. Bellevue High. with an enroDmeot of 1,350, la llmilar ln many ways to Corona del Mar. How'd they do tu De La Salle's system Is not subject to the patent process, and the Wolvertnee, with 13 returning starters, matched the wodc edUc and aeated a ftnely tuned varl.able wing-'I h was the fifth game of an ema~ called the Emerald Oty Kickoff Oulk:. De La Salle (0-1) returned to the field Saturday night, hosting Oavis West It bas been 25 years since De La Salle lost two in a row. I saw Washington and Fresno State the next day at Hu.Ky Stadium. and I have to tell you. In terms of sheer execution. ft didn't hold a candle to the preps on Saturday. ••• An attempt by the Newport-Mesa Unified School District to level a MSl0,000 fine" on the Corona del Mar High general education fund because baseball coach John Emme and tennis coach Tun Mang Mimproved" their facili1ies, has apparently been scrapped. That may be good news. I think. for Newport Harbor. Hey, see ya next Sunday! • ROGER CARLSON is the former sports editor for the Daily Pilot. He can be 1'88(.'hed by e-mail at rogersnddorothu@msn.com. PU.S£NT£D BY TH£ CALJJORNIA COASTAL COMMISSION call 1-800~0AS:f-4U or visit www.eoaldOl')'Oll.ors OAACl.lE. BllEFLY Newport shines. in tournament . . ' 1be Newpon Harbor Hl8h fteld bo:c:bY t..-n oulleonld foW' opponenli a combined f· l Saturday, but settled for two winl, one loM and a tie at the Weatmlnlter tournament at Wettmlnlter High. 1be Sallon o~ned the round-robin townament - that featured 25·mlnute games -with a l ·O loa to Camarillo. lbe Tan defeated Sunset League rival Huntington Beach, 3•0, before knocking off Ownl· nade, 1--0, and tying Glendora. 0--0. Senior midfielder Reese Sim- CROSS Continued from Bl won the Dtvtsion m team title behind Jade 1\1mer (16:39), Ken- neth Wong (16:49) and Ryan Guthrie (17:01), while Annie St. Geme woo the glrta junior race In 19'.23 and Alllaon Damon cap- tured the gldl freshman race 'in 20:00. QIM's other top boys Mre junion Tummy Hutc:hlaon (17:38), Tun Scott (18:31) and Jl- ho Choi (18:54) and senior our 'Dlytor (19:00). 1be Sea Kings' other top glds were juniors Hila- ry May (19:59), Nichole Slykbous POLO Continued from B 1 draw USC even ap1n at 4_., then Hale put USC ahead, 5-4, with 1 :50 left in the 'third. The Anteaters' Colln Mello scored an extra-man goal 20 sec- onds later to knot the game, 5-5, entering the fourth quarter. Consecutive goals by Shin, UCI Continued from B 1 with 88 points in the 12-team Heid. Long Beach State's Jim Gra- bow won the individual title with a time of 25:212 over 8,000 me· ters, followed by UO jwl.ior Ricky Barnes in 25:35.8. Anteater junior Tom Whelan fln1med ninth in 26:00-5, senior mone tc0red rwo ~ .,.mat HundiJlton ~while eenior i'leht •wtna .Julia Bemay added the thbd aoa1 ~ che OUen. JwUor forWa.rd 5'inna Palmer bad ID uallt In the 3·0 trl• umph. Apinat Ownlnade. eenlor mfdftelder Jenny 'Iaytor had the pme'1 only aoaJ. N~rt Harbor goalie Ciara Lawrence. a sedlor, bad .even aavee ~ Camarillo, one apinlt Huntington B,ach and two aplnat Glendora on her way to three shutout.a on the day. She played every minute ln (20:13) and Cllrtsde St Geme (.20:49) and eeniora Ahlia lCattan (20-.54) and Devon Ahearn (21:02). Also in Division m were Costa Meta. Estancia and Sage Hill. which featured Kade McKean running a IChool-record 20-.36 for the Ugb.tning and placing fifth overall in the freshman girls race. Mollie McGann was 17th out of 84 nmnen In the girls sophomore race (23:03) for Sage Hill Senior Mike Voge ran the qulcbst bo)'I time for Sage in 18:06, while junior Zach Oumdy was clocbd in 19:08 and fresh- man Connor Rose in 19:31. For Estancla'a boys. junior Er- Juan Delgadillo and Cameron Ka.lser in the la.st quarter gave the Th>jans an 8-5 lead and USC secured the victory in its season o~L Sbln and Zatovic added two goals for USC while Hutten led UO (4-1) will} a pair of goals. Anteater goalie Joe Wynne had six saves, as did USC counterpart Don RJcci. Both teams compete in the Southern California tournament David Santos was 17th in 26:222 and sophomore Tun Hearst was 26th in 26:43.2. p~ Adrian Doty was 34th (27:003), junior Sil- vestre Uribe placed 38th (27:06.1) and sophomore Ryan Ketcham was 4.3n:I ().7: 10.8) to round out UO's top seven runners. The Anteater teams will train in Mammoth next week before re- turning to competidon at the Stanford invitational Sept. 25. Fil for Che Sallon <3· 1·2). Other Slilon wbo llined pnile tot their ... play were: tenlor AlhleJ MdnlCNb, who 1pubd tbt mldfteld; MO· lor fol'WU'd Amanda Fdon; and Junior center back .Jadde 'Daytor. Vanguard streak ends •VOUJmlAJ.,l..i Vtnpard Univenlty's llx·match win 1trak came to an end Saturday u La Verne defNted the UonJ. •1-•5. 17·30. 30·21, 3CJ.18, in the Whlttier/Ocddental women'• volleyball tourna- ment nesto c.utaneda (17:4~ and aen- lor Alex c.ahuanczl (17:56) ran the belt dmel. followed by Brian Buen (18:19), Glo Rodea (18:29), Ben Mora.let (20: 15) and Curtis Fisher (20:49). Coach Owile Appell'a Eagle girls were led by senior Lucy Leon (24:25) and junior JesaJe Rincon (27:24). For Costa Mesa's girll. aopho- mores Kyla f'lora, Jumin Day and BmlJy Cotton were the Mus- tangs' only varsity competitors, while the Mesa boys were led by IOpbomorea Luis Genia and Mitch Friedmann. Rick Olguin abawed promise In the freshman race. Coach Joe Busi ea.id. hosted by use next Saturday and Sunday. USC 10 UC Irvine I UClrvlM ._.bj~ 1 e USC 1 o • a t0 ua acoring -Huu.n 2. White 1, Bitter 1, R. Merlo 1, Mello 1. SI~ - WynM,8. USC -H•le 3, Shin 2, Zltovlc 2, Kaiser 1, Zepfel 1, Oelgedltlo 1. S.V.. -Ricci, 6. SCHEDULE ~ Soccer College men -UC Irvine va. the Unfverltly of WllCC>rWin-Green Bay .r Evanlton, • •• 10 a.m. Colege women -Sen FrwlCieco at UC Irvine, 1 p.m Ia on Be a Part of History! October 14th -17th, 2004 For more information visit: cdm2004.com "The 100 Day Countdown'' has begun ... • The Gala Celebration of the Century Blaclt Tit Gala Dinnn Dance Evmt Friday, October 15th, 2004 • 6 -11 p.m. The Four Seasons Hotel, Newport Beach • Ticket Price $250 • The Centennial Beach Party! Concert, Food d-Firrworlts . Saturday, October 16, 2004 • 4 • 9 p.m. Big Corona dcl Mar State Beach • Free & Open to the Public • The Gntcnnial ~ Be.ci &.po A om.munity F11mily Ctleb"""1. Sunday, OaObcr 17, 20<M • 10 a.m. • 5 p.m. Big C.orona <kl ~u State Beach • Free &: Open to the Public ~~AnUWe For D* ~mac.er~ C6f C-.,M ~onndecioa • (949) 6?S;-0501. OCC-Padilla 70 run (Kledcner kldt), 12:57. LAIC-Muna -48 FG, 7:49. •COND QUMTD LAIC-Munez 28 FGr14:55. LASC-Munez 36 l=G, 3:23. LASC -Moore 1 run (Munez kldt), 2.1>6. 1*tO QUARTER LASC -Singleton 9 run (kidc blodted), 9:22. FOURnt QUARTER LASC -Lewis 16 run (Munez kict), 11 :36. OCC -Aoki 2 run (paaa failed), 2:24. lASC -Thompson 8 run (Munez kldt), 1 :24. OCC -Johnson 76 pau from Basanez (pall f1iled), 0:17. A-400 (est.) INDMOUAl RUSttNG OCC -Padilla, 16-124, 1 TO; Aokl, 3-9, 1 TO; Nlutapual, 1-3; Basanez, 4--0; Sc:hmigel, 2-mlnua-1. lASC -Singleton, 16-84, 1 TO; Carter-Brown, 6-34; lewis, 11·33, 1 TO; Bell, 4-27; Thompson, 4-15, 1 TO; Moore, 7-fi, 1 TD; Mahaley, 3-6; Brown, 5-minua-17. INOMOUAl. PASSltfG OCC -Sc:hmigel, 3-11-0, 26; Basanez, 5-13-0, 130, 1 TO. lASC -Brown, 3-8-0, 30. INDMDUAL RECEMHG OCC -Johnson, 3· 107, 1TD; Dietz, 2-17; Lauderdale, 2-17; Matsumura, 1-15. LASC-Bell, 2-17; Smith, 1-13. GAME STATISTICS OCC LASC 15 10 2!>-1311 !56-1118 151 30 •24-0 3-t--0 11 9 1-1 3-20 J02 215 4-26.3 4-JU 4-4 1~ !>-JS •96 20'57 3903 'Pl.In! r.WrM. lnt•rcepl1<>n1, lumbl9 ...ivrne PHOTOS BY MA~ C DUSTIN I DAILY PILOT Orange Coast Quarterback Kyle Basanez (8) directs traffic while scrambling m the backfield m the second Quarter of Saturday's nonconference game against host Los Angeles Southwest College . Continued from Bl lhe bendl ilfta ltartina the open- er, connec:ad with IOphomore receiver Bmn ,Johnson for plna of 25 and 75 yards, the latter • touchdown with 17 aecoodl Left to help pad Coat's largely mll-- te.dlng 265-206 advantage In to- tal offense. Padilla. whose scoring burst saw him slash up the middle, then bounce left and outrun the pursuit. had only one other run of more dw1 8 yards (a 14-yard pickup). His triple-digit rushing output was the first for a Pirate since Week 5 of last season, when Josh Black ran for 105 yards in a 36-6 win over Santa Ana. Adam Kleckner followed Padil· la's sprint to paydirt with a con· version kick to give OCC its onJy lead just more than two minutes into the contest. Southwest, which rushed fo r 280 yards in its season-opening win, also stuck to the ground Sat· urday. utilizing eight ball carriers in its double-tight-end attack that most often featured a wing· back and an I-formation. The Cougars. whom the Pirates topped, 20-0, last season, cashed in a 49-yard kickoff return after OCCs opening touchdown with a 46-yard field goal by Rohen Mu- nez. Munez added a 28-yard field goal after OCCs first fumble to pull the hosts within one. then toed his third field goal from 35 yards out to give the hosts a 9-7 advantage. On the first play after the ensu· ing kickoff, Nicholas Partner felJ on an OCC fumble at the Pirates' 14-yard tine. Three plays later, 250-pound fullback Tunothy Moore plowed in from the I and Mune-is PAT made it 16·7. OCC fumbled away the first possession of the second half and Chris Smgleton, who paced the winners with 84 yards on 18 car· ries. cashed it in with a 9-yard touchdown run to make it 22· 7 with 9:22 left in the third period. After an exchange of punts - an overworked OCC deferu.e managed to keep the Ptrates m :z ....... OCC's Rhett Hartsfield (34) pulls L.A. Southwest College's Chris Singleton down for an unassisted tackle Saturday. the game into the fourth quaner -the Cougars fumbled a snap of their own to provide a glimmer of opportunity. But Southwest man· aged to recover on its own 18· yard tine. A roughing-the-locker penalty prolonged the same Southwest possession, then, four plays later, freshman Robby Coveney rrus- handled a running attempt to haul m a punt and Southwest re· covered. lWo plays later, JaVuan l..ewls swept around the right side for a 15-yard ID that all but cemented the victory. Three personal-foul penalti~ helped OCC score its second touchdown. a 2-yard Rohen Aoki run set up by a 25-yard Basane-1- to· Johnson aerial connection the play before. Basanez. who nught havt gained a slight edge over Schmi· gel in the quarterback battle. found Johnson running free be· hind the secondary on the sec· ond play of OCCs next po~­ sion to cap the sconng OCC sophomore outside hne· backer Joe Mitchell. a second team All -Mission Conference (Amencan D1vis1on) performer a!> a freshman. m1ured tu'> left anlc.le in the second quarter and did not return. The ank.le was placed 1n an au cast and Taylor !>aid it may be a recurrence of a high school miurv that requrred '>Urgery 18th Annual Harbor Heritage Run RUN NEWPORT! SK RATURE RACE • II FUN RUN/WALK _/\, 11' (~~8' I :~ • a• A ~"l"'ltml,~-v -~-~"~BOK 'r'1 c;~ _;SC~o\... ~ --LOGO DESIGN BY NICK CHATILLON NHHS STUDENT -s'a';rRD'TY Sdiool OCTOBER I, 1004 tlewport ttnor HJgh School Stldulm 161h St. & Irvine Ave .. Newport Beach W•nn-~ 7:30 •.m. 2K 8:00 •.m. SK 8:30 a.m. IOds' Kllssic Race 5-7 year-olds 9:15 a.m. • 8-10 year-<>lds 9~ Lm. Plus Kids' Klassic Race and Free Fitness Fair RUN AS A TEAM Minimum 4, No Maximum rR;Q-;s;-~T;o; ,o.;. - - - - - .... ~ fl>nll lftd ..... 2004 NHHS Harbor Heritage Run PO.Box 293-4 Newport Beach. CA 92659-2934 DODD OFFICIAL USE ONLY (949) 515-6611 To r9gllt« onllne: www~ .. COIMhr ONE RUNNER P£R F°"91 -PUASl PAINT cPlu> ooc-119 ICXlll)llOt 000000000000000000 FIRST LAST so OO ~J:OD M F --O 12n"* o o 13-1s a 016-180 o 1e-2• a i I I ' • I t t Policy . By Fax (949) 631-6594 (Pleue inclllde your -lllJd phone number end we'U c.iJ you t.c:t w1lh • pnoe quote. ) How to Place A CLASSIFIE. By Phone (949) 6'2--5678 Hours By Mail/In Person: 330 Wett Bay SU. C... Meaa. CA 92627 Al Newpon Blvd. • Bay St wednaday .............. Tuelday 5:00pm 1bUnday: ........... Wedneaday 5:00pm Friday .................... Thursday S:OOpm Saturday .... ~ ............... 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A11 real est1te adverlls Whit do you thlnk771 11)& 1n this newspaper Is AlrF tlf 714·989·2323 sub1ect to the Federal www. 1N11ir.com F111 Housln1 Act of 1968 a~ amended which makes 1t 1lle&al to ••••••• CHlD SERVICES a~verhse ·any prefer e~e. l1m1t1tion or dilcm111natlon b1sed on rte•· color, reliaJon, sex, "'nd1<:ap, l1m1ll1I status QllW...-....._ 0( n1tion1I orl1in. or 1n 0 ..:=_,.__,2375 1"tention lo make 1ny --sllCh preference. llmita I~ or d15':rimin1hon • l}us newspaper will not k11ow1nafy 1ccept any advertisement for re.I estate which 1s 1n v(9l1t1on of the l1w. Our readers ire hereby informed that 1H dweU· •ncs advw trwd 1n this nfwl9ac>er are avallable °' In equal opportunity ~SIS HI compl1in of dis · c6mina0on, call HUO toll· f~ 11 I 800 424·8590 c-•c...Mffch Old Coins! Gold, silver, jewSy, witches, 1111.iqiMs cdlectlbles 949-642·9448 .~cm_., for Moc>tion SAT 12-4:00 PetSm1rt Cost• Mui 17th I Superior, (Nut '° Mict191B) 96-451 ·'JZJ'l. 111111 Vob1llen ,_.., TlllY llTTINS N4 e)eld UJWY. Oonltions ne.dld. Memo en.dis: ~ I ..... SW'it Flrd' non proM fu D l> amsa>. Conndy Annllf NetwGri1. P.O. Box 81162 ~ 8-11. CA 93158. ••Clll-• ·-·· 1413 flmllrl '-~ lmmlc. ~vice for 12+ '" major urvln1 p11c11. First 3G5 ~-SZID> 9&982223 i{liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ ANTINTED QUES IO&d« Styte Fum1bn ~le~ . ._._._ ~~--·;;.,..-., ____ _ M auY l!STATU ............ Mondly_ COfJSIGrH.HrHS COSTA MISA ROUTI No Se!Mnt SIOOK In· COIM. 112,950 Invest· ment for Accounts, Inventory. Tralnln1. Territory. 900-373-5470 AISOWTI GOlOMMI 60 v111dln1 rMcillnlsl .. cellent locations. •• '°' 110.995 I00-234-6982 HOMESFOASALE ORANGE 5400 COUNTY NIWOffUutGI Open HouH Sund1y 2·4 333 Grand C1n1I F 1ntast1<: corn« w1lM· front w/bo1tdoctll Gtut v.... 4br. 31>1. llC>lfld· Id kitch9n. Irvine room I p1t10 Only 12.195,000 949-362-1500 •21 N•w Off•r"'tl •-• B1lbo1 lsl1nd waterfront 2 unit. 2 boet Oocb. sedudld. Colirls ls6al1d end of m.nd w/l car ... Sl.295,000 own./ .,. 949-362·1500 •21. OPlM SAT-SUll 1-4 7JOS-.-Dr Comp remod slnale fam home. Most dalr nel1h Welk distance to B1lboa Is Fash Is . CMner lot south of P CH 3br 2 ba w/ample rm to ea· pend _Up1r1d11ll 1.329.000 By Owner M9-35S·9UO 949-719-9117 3435 ...................... NEWPORT CONSIGNMENT GALLERY AHnQUES • CXlLl.B:TBe • ll'SCA&i AJAHrTUAE PW«lSIMr • Rn.ii Prias Ralttal •WtMakr~U. • CASH BUY OllT'S • One P°ltlClt Of Enim fMM.e • ConJignmcn11 Eaoq>ccd Daily • U..tc Sala • IAcal Appnillla • Bonded & licawd • IK SQ FT FREEWAY FWJNTACE SHOWROOM • lnC-Me.; Endof55Fwy 1W..PME 888-434-0722 OPOe SAT-SW. 1-4 7JOS---9r Comp remod slnlle f1m home. Most d4tslr neltdl. Walle clist.nc41 to 81lbol ls. F 1111 ts. Cornet lot sovttl of l'CH . 3br 2bl w/ampte rm to H · p1nd Uplredull $1,329.000 1y Owner 949-3&5·9130 949-719-9117 Index orD SAT-SUN 1-4 4JJS.W-414 S..u 2br 2ba horM, Co· ron• Hielil1nds, one of COM most popular w · eu Remod mstt suit• Incl hup wlll1·in closet. spac b1. Frencll dfs ludlna 01.1t to patio. Morel Priv1t1 Beach auess. Sl.349.000 .._.._ hl'rt.e t4t-27t-Ht0 WM ·~&a-. CoaoMA DIL MAii HtGMl.ANDS 400 0. Soll Terrace 4br Jb1 home. lot sl11 20,000 on !ti. C111yon. Ocean wtew, cornpMtly remodeAed. $2,435,000 Vic Peterson Peterson Construction Oeslp INC. t4t-t2t-141 t In the Hurt of the V1ffa1e newer construe· tion 3br/2.5b1 1re1t loc1t1on under Sl,500.000 front unit 90(). 291 · 35ll!i 150 l ... nt .,.. .. _~ 45' Wide Lot Oc11n View $2,495,000 Owner/Aaent 949-222 f 480 MIU VERDE POOL HOME Swe.pln1 corn• 11 ouncls in pr lme tr act loc. I -sly 4br, 21>a, new & up1rad1d ll it ch w/111nrle count11s, new wood/tile floorin1. planlltlon shutters. F resllly painted Inside/ out. $695,000 Call Coldwell Binker Be1Ch· side 714-968-1200 Or.•• M•••• D•lly I _,,_ 260 VlctOfla, G -2. Rare Opporlunlt1 n11r Newport 8Hchl 28r 2.581 Condo approx 108'9sf Cape Cod Style ldul locltlon, mast• suite w/vautted ceiffnp, HOA. pool, 199. 59Cur1d premlsa. $360.000 Call 951·694·8016 IAST SIDI OPOSUN 1-5 401I1tTHST Prem blodl foe , buu m1l11t1ln1d 3br 2b1 home. $869,000 Wiiiiam Rl111 c.tl 949-5'1-2222 Otte 949·6734400 X.206 ........ , ........ . 1•••4•1. 450 C1111· llf ldp Cir. 3br. 2 full bltll, ftnt rm, MW roof cul· d•·llc location. Cife1tf1111~. 11.050.000 ly owner for eppt call 949-650-1351. < ............... . 58f. 381 Home' 1&59,000 Owfl«/Aont 949-22z.I480 OPlll SAT 1-S 25112._.....H Tucked IWIJ, inbmlta bch comm, beau upcracl 3bf 2.Sba. custom home. State firs ttwouthotil 5'11c mstr suite m.,nlfl· cent oc11n vl1wsl 1845,000-$860,000 Joe & E IMfl Rocca 0)949-533-9587 (£) 949-633-9587 HD HOT SPICIAl. REOUCEO 1100,000 Fantmtlc tor'IW lot. ,_ ,. IQ part& ,...,. 3 ,,,,, cour-. plc:nic .... ~ ~ trlls. Beaut I· sty. 40t, 2,Sbl, •eat roont. hnd1 doors. fruit 1n1 Mid ,... ,oundL RV access $625,000 C.11 Coldwll ..... e.:t.11 714-968-1200. I' .......... cau.T IUOt anTMI R1mocWld ~ ~ 2-sty w/wtrlta pldl4lt 1.1CI ' bricll Wlllw.ys. 2br 2.5ba, bHm c1llln1s. fenced doc 11111, ~ P9tio ~ '*"' ' dlt 2-c pt $819,000. Cold· wd Blnllw 8achside 714-968-1200 Oc••• Yl•w llt9f• Separete ln·ltw unit. M1111tlc 3+ storl11, pr UM corner foe. SIM'. 4.Sbl, ll °"" kltclleft, WAUr/l•I TO BEACH Front c.owty•cl/•ttlum 111try, Mw front doou. °"" delilrt adds lots of wnlilftt. 4br 2111. up· .,lldld ~ New roll· up pr .... sm.ooo caN Co~ B1nkM S.1ch· llde 714-968-1200. UAMee*U IOfl.OUS 2·sty In prime loc. Nev• used brand MW kltcll, w1lk·ln p1ntry, 3br custom stone floorln1 I Mw plusll c1t119tln1. Walk ta shops, school & parti. Rudy fOf lmmecl inove·in Reduced. Pflce fOf quicll SIM. 1399.900 Cell Coldwell Binker 8elCll1idl 714-968-1200 bui"·ln media cent•• iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii m111lv1 oc•1n wlew .,_.. .,.. w/lundac:t. 11.~~ ...... 8uchlida 714-.. 1200. HAUOa MIA RXa Great Int trld loe.. l • Sty 3br, 2N. I.& flllnlly, kitc'*t & dWnc w/""4 l•dlfl windows • .,.,., new on matMt. $515,Cdl Coldwetl S... BMctt- slde 714-tel-l200. 2br 2.bo CoMo 2 c ..... ~rll'll04. ,....,,, le Pltio. Ml 1111!'0.-I -11100!ll2 ... ..-..--.. ...... NEED TO SELL YOUR PROPERTY UR HOME OF THE EKPAG ON ATUIDAY CANHBP CAii.. OP8I NOUll IAl .... 44 Bayer.a c..t NB ~ .... brWit • 3be anlD .... CICIWlft, 19.lllf ~--9967""74 PMCNtA•KV.W GWfTFIXER 48R + F AM1t. Y '"' + J8A AGT. 949-4'6-0912 ...... c.... ........ ...... Must see to ......... Mow rid Inf Sl.1'91.000 For 1111 br o.w;,. Oii ,...,_LIAO "'°"' IOWOCIM & an WWSt 3f)r 2.Sba comm tennll & Olympic pool, motlv1tH Hier .. Act. 949-2.3Ul46 ...... wsce•wous lllTALI l1•1•el14 Jw I.Ale •0.11 ...... . s.-.......... . Sunn1 all tiled, "" 2tla, winter rate, furn water pool llolnl $2850lll SMnlo Ill •ZDC146 Ind pool rlWI .... 1173 - RESUHTIN..fENTN..S .......... .. 1• YUaYLMllS ,,_ _,, 0-ff! ...... , ..... II 'I .. ,._Ide ho•e ._ ,_ ,._2J'HlAI Cllm'fY ....... --~-·­........... .....,M111 ............. ................ -... = ...... ...... 1 .. ,,.. ..... ..... .... ••--•m•• lt'1tht1oll- tion JOI'" uartlrbag/or· wltttlttr C1llfornl1 I•• ,.. ... !Mt ..... ... tllllnl JMI .... tot.i ll!IOO « "*' (llllor « INl•ilta) .. llc:IM8d b'/ the Contnc:ton St1t1 Uc:Mle loltd. Stat. .... ,... ..... cefttrectora lnc:lu4t llllr llc:8lll8 .... on .. ~You -. c:tltdl tile ttltua of rour llc:en11d contrec:tor 1t www.~c:a.eov or too-nl-Clll.' Unll· cet1Mtl contrtcton t1kl111 Joh t111t tOtll lell tfUNI l900 INfat 1tat1 111 tNli' efvwtlM ........ . .., ...... ........ .... CMtrtet9f? ..... , A·llW9YaM 1Mtlll1 r!fece *""'*· ~ ....... ,..... 001117JA •cme A -JIW9YaM ........ flfec:I ceMlllO. ,., .--....... I .... -.7JA.9Gm &;iii111tA I I ,.,_, IJ6 'lttl, wtllta. ltfv Inter, orlln OWMf, aood COlldltJOn S!l900 • M9-91MOllO LIXltl eX.70 HOI 0 Tl: Nawllilloa, a>,,. .. ,.,_... ..... ._ wh, 7 ...... 1112.m> •nD-1721 aerce4H ltee•tlf•I ........ Clll nt l'IWlt ooM. """ 31,0CI> ml, ...... by •• lltlll * ~ ....... to ..,...at. 123,000 MMM--1<156 COMPUTER HELP! --·--. .......... llC•llC r 1 wQMc -::a .... •• •1•-1* ..... .aa. .... eQa ... Qillll*'t. ... .. .... !! ... ,. ~""' ==-71U1 8' PLUG IN Plug into the Pilot Classified section to find services from electron ics and plumbers, to landscapers and painters. l>'dily Pilot i I ii· ,j I """'''ll 1!, r.1 ,,~.!pl 1(1• ... ,.,....., ........... ,....., -~ .. "oil 1111 I NMll 5MOlt .... IPl'olawl .... 7 No-ion (hypl'I.) ·~ 9 Curle .... 10Me.Gew 11 6'*lilt'I 911 *'*' 12 ON-Cllled "*"-" 13""'9eplg 14MeMlec.pM1 150.llad (2wdl.), 18Chec*up 17Dr9W a bead on 18 Highbof II 19 Lb poppy 8Nda 23 EYMng up 30 RNer nymphs 32 HNp of ltOllee 36 GOP toes 38 Air-ufety org 40 NBA'a -Thurmond 43 Flahlng lure 44LudleroUS 45 VCR musts 46 Valentine figure 4 7 Montana capital 48 WN!eboerd need 49 Destiny 51 McNally'a partner 52 Whale'• diet 54 Pianist -Htne1 55 Martha of dental edt 56 Sleeping 56 Granted approval 59 Repair 60 Bike or tnke 63 Story 64 Pus as a blll 67 Walkman bfand 68 Self ·move firm (hyptt) 69 WhOdunrt suspect 70 HS mattt .. 71Cel---11,._.,..,. 1., ...... ,.. 11~· .,, ... 110.-1-1 110..... OWlf/IMd 80 IQngllliy Ind ()om 81~ 12~d~ 13Moclke -~Pi--­........ ··~~ 180....L.Mee.-. 90 Cdcndo $iltlngil aced 91 o.man follclol1llt bl°"*9 92 Loud 1tltm 93 EndotMr't need 94N .. ain.t 915 MuMt.m olfia.ia 97 N4leMr'I -.ld Howwd 98 Glat oontatner 100 Mu-=-t nolM 101 PMMnt 102 Goeeipy -~ 100 Orc:hettra 106 Pelt 107 Blue Wiidfiower 110 lrtus or Tr.,_,, 111 -Day 0 Connor 112 Splrt 113 Old wrong 11 4 Strong silent type? 115 LHfl 1 HI Wild horN 118 Lu9 s t•ewells 119 Phr Beta - 120 Sister a gr<I 121 Incite (2 wds ) 122 Process ore 123 Squmels away 125 Author -Fett>ef 127 Advanced, u cuh 129 Race off 133 Always. to Keats 135 Easel display -. 1 • , ~ -f I ., ' I .I ) '