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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2003-02-16 - Newport Mesa Daily Pilot------- --.-. "? -e e INSIDE THE PILOT LIFE& LEISURE A new art gallery opens at the Camp in Costa Mesa. See Page AS ' t -.... 1:1 COMMUNITY FORUM Paul Folino talks to City Editor James Meier about the Perfonning Arts Center's $200-mtlhon expansion. See P11geA9 SPORTS UCI volleyball takes it on the chin, but men's hoops wins again. See Page 81 cot.WENTS& CURIOSITES Peter Buffa's column will return next week. ~ S UN D AY E D ITION Serving the Newport-Mesa community sin ce 1907 FEBRUARY 16, 2003 SUNDAY STORY Hol·ding th·eir own PHOT(:)S BY DON lE.N'H DAIL'!' PIL i Houseman Oscar Cervantes arranges chairs for upcoming business conference at Four Seasons Hotel Grand Ballroom Huntington Beach's new Hyatt Regency may offer more square footage, but Newport-Mesa hotels know their market and are sticking to it Paul Clinton Daily Pilot A new-kjd-on-the-block luxury hotel along I funtington Beach's coastline is expected to snatch some corporate events and larger fund-raisers away from Newport-Mesa. but locaJ hoteliers are confident the shopping and allure of the area will ultimately carry Lhe day. In late January, the 1 lyan Regency Huntington Beach Resort & Spa opened along a stretch of Pacific Coast Highway amid much fanfare The sprawling $120-million resort offers more than 110,000 square feet of meeting and functioo space. 517 luxurious guestrooms and a full -service business center. The hotel's 20,000-square-foot Grand Ballroom and 10.700-square-foot exhibition hall are also one of a kjnd in coastal Orange County. ·Anytime you have a new hotel coming in, it's going to have an effect on business.· said Mehdi fftekari. the general manager ~t Newport Beach's Four Seasons Hotel. "Inquiring minds want to know.~ Worrisome to some in the locaJ hotel industry is that none of Newport-Mesa's I 4 hotels -there are seven in each city General Manager Mehdi Eftekari talks about the service at Four Seasons Hotel that he says sets it apart from other hotels m the area. -offer facilities that can accommodate an event larger than about 500 guests. And none offer a conference center. TI1is point was not lost on newly elected Huntington Beach Councilwoman Jill Hardy, who in January lauded the Hyan ac; "!>Omething the Newport Reach hotels can't offer." F.ftekari\ Four Seasonc; counts 35.000 -.quare feet of meeting c;pace. highlighted See HOLDING, Page A6 KE.NT TREPT<JW / IC>EP£N)£NT Despite having Its own slow-growth law, Newport could see added traffic thanks to Huntington's new hotel. Not all Newport arms open to hotel Mayor fears Huntington hotel will increase traffic but Greenlight says it could be worse. Pa ul Clinton Dally Pilot NEWPORT-MESA-While locaJ hoteliers debate about how much business they'll Die to a new Huntington 8eacb resort. one thing seems catafn. Newport Beach. and perhaps Costa Mesa, will see more ttaf6c as a resulL The Hyan Regency Huntington Beach Resort and Spa. a sprawling mini<lty oriented toward drawing more corporate events. Opened lo late January. "'lbere's no qtiesdon our guests will be sbopPing all °""' Orange County," said Steve Bone, the re&ort's affable co-owner. ·0ur CUllOmen will shop at South Coat Piaf.a and Fashion Island." Newport ee.di "'"rMh DOt $Wprisingly, aren't~ furwatd to the l.ncrieMd tn1llc traveling soutbbot.md 00 Pacific c.out ~loco SMHOm..'-M TOP STORY . A method to their Second chance to care and give ' mad engineering After being told not to feed homeless in Lions Park, Betty Abbott and Jerry Face saw the light -Lighthouse Church. Deirdre Newman Daily Pilot COSTA MF.SA -The Ught- house Oaurch on the city's Westside was established to provide a beacon of light to the communJty. For the past month. that light has radial~ hope and encour- agement to those In most need of refuge -people who have found the~ homeJ and to need of meals. Putor Dale Fitch made the church avallab&e to a homelela outreilcb 6rt that Wat kkted out ot UoOa Put for not hmng a permit It was ao act of divine inter- vention that brought the plight of the outreach effort to his at- tention, Fltch said. He agreed without hesitation to provide the church facility since the ef- fort meshed with his philoso- phy. •1rs lmportant to me because I feel It's the church~ respon· slbllity to care for the poor and needy. not the gomnment'a (responsfblllty), • Fitch aa.ld.. "We're not attempting to keep people on the street. We jt.ast SON t9..UR I CW. V Pl.OT Bryana Marie Rlvas,16moinths,p&ays1ames wittl mother TN ... awtCE.,... M before kldt Satwdly. ~two • home6ess Ind M kt motel$. UCI engineering students show off their egg dropping skills for the 30th year of E-Week. Chr11ttne Carrillo Oaity Pilot UC IRVINE -B-Wttk ts back and people are till dropping qgs from a 10-atory l~r. building bridges out of Popsicle ti and catapu)t- ln& bean· across the c.amp But, haw no fear. each ewnt will bo closely super· vlted by underpadu&ie met· neera~ln ttalnlna and WUI be dorw In ttue enc,tneertnc FYI F0< more inf~ Of...,..... locations. call (94.9) 12"2065.. i hion. Engineenng &: better known E-Week. W9I return to ua for iu 30th ,ear na.- day and will IDdud t1ever compedtiona end enclneef- lng evt"Ots that~ rdlect tbia yeU'I theme,~ dae In· visible, Achlevtn1 the libpc»- 'blc. • •1 think £.Weft is a ..... time to celebrl~ tnlmuity: ll doeln't Juit h&Ye to be .... engineerinc. • Mid Mliry Lu. a third~year ~ ....... . "" INdalt -........ " .... , ....... M 1 t -------------...---~----........ ------ A2 Sooday, February 16, 2003 EDUCATION Newport Beach boy turns soap hearts into profits After attending at two-day school workshop on how to make soap at school, lO-year-old David Penner of Newport Beach decided to tum his new-found interest into a profitable business. He sold more than l 00 soap hearts prior to Valentine's Day and will give 20% of the profits to the Ameri~ Heart Assn. in honor of his grandmother, who survived a heart anaclc in November. The Newport-Mesa Unified School Disttict decided to move toward constructing a new building at Newport Harbor High School due to the instability of Loats Theater and Robins Hall. Both structures were determined to be seismicaJJy unsafe according to a study conducted by structural engineers. The board voted, in a 6-1 vote with Trustee Tom Egan dissenting. for a new building that will maintain the current fac;ade instead of retrofitting the old ones. • Ct1RISTINE CARRIU.0 covers education and may be reached at (949) 574-4268 or by e-mail at christine.carrillolaifatimes.com. NEWPORT BEACH City will look at luxury resort plans at Marinapark Councilmen Steve Bromberg. Tod Ridgeway and Don Webb will form a committee to examine a developer's plans for a I 10-room luxury resort on the peninsula at Marinapark. Residents who attended Tuesday's City Council meeting to support preserving the Port Theatre were " surprised to learn that an item on the agenda wasn't really about preservation. The city postponed voting on whether to designate three city theater., as "landmarks," a designation that would give their owners more freedom but would not bestow and historical or preservationist status. A fire station in Sama Ana Height!. would use at least S3 million in funds set aside fo r redevelopment of the area Though a handful of residents have protested. saying that they should not pay the full cost of a station that will serve other areru.. county supervisors gets the final say. •JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport Beadl and John Wayne Airport. She may be readled at (9491 574-4232 or by e-mail at june.casagrande<a>fatimes com. BUSINESS Ribs and burgers to replace Aysia I 0 I in Newport II was a week in which Newport-Mesa learned it had artracted two new restaurants and a health conscious-grocer. A San Bernardino-based restaurateur plans to install two family-style eatenes on Mariner's Mile to replace the failed Aysia I 0 I. Rib house Tony Roma's and lrish-themed Bennigan's are expected 10 open in June at the 2901 W. Coast Highway address. Also, San Diego-based healthier-foods grocer I leruy's Marketplace announced it would open a third Orange County location, in Costa Mesa. within the month. Henry's wouJd go in as an anchor tenant in Costa Mesa Square, which is located at the intersection of Harbor Boulevard and Nutmeg Place. Occupying a 25.000-square-foot space, Henry's will offer fresh fruit and produce, a deli, bulk foods and vitamins. • PAUL CLINTON covers the environment, business and politics. He may be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by &-mail at paul.clintonf@latimes.com ___.EK IN REVIE * PHOTO OF THE WEEK 'NOT INCLUDED IN THE ORDER' DON LEACH I DAILY PllO T This shot cam e at the end of a day where I went from one extreme to the other. I had already covered the end of a police chase. getting lo the scene quiclc enough for the arrest of a car theft suspect who crashed into the front of a house. Wa.llcing up to the scene, I could bear the employee tnS1de the res taurant using the drive-up speaker where food is ordered. telling looky-loos to ·please get of the driveway" w business could proceed despite the violent accident scene m front of them. People were so distracted, ii drove the food order guy nuts. People couldn't believe the scene in front of them. They would order and stare. Following that was a tour of the luxurious Costa Mesa Hilton, where I switched gears and imagined I W<l!> staying there for the weekend. WeU, that wasn't the case and I returned to the newsroom only to learn a high-speed collision occurred on Coast I lighway at Superior. Upon arrival, the SUV was upside down in front of Jack in the Box. Just a typical day? Not really, and hopefully this shot summed up the day I had: Busmess as usual but not really. -Don leach CULTURE Seniors take a stab at the dating game A dozen 'ienfors ci111ens proved last week that ValenLine's Day is no t reserved for young.-.ters. as they embarked on a pre-holiday dating game at a Costa Mesa restaurant. Eleven eligible bachelorettes competed for the affection of 74-year-old Frank Darlow at Maggian o's Uttle Italy in South Coast Plaza. Oarlow, a morucian and clown by trade, chose the company of a bright Seal Beach woman who was dressed all in orange. Darlow and Joan O'Keefe agreed 10 dine together in the near furure but did nol have unrealistic expectations. AU they committed to 1s lunch, they said. Dessen is still on the table. • LOLITA HARPER writes columns COSTA MESA Huge turnout cartcels redevelopment meeting A fired-up crowd of industrial property owners packed an auditorium in the Police Department Monday mghl to protest the city's tentative plans to add its properties lo the downtown redevelopment wne. But the overflow crowd was more tha n the auditoriu m could handle, forcing the Redevelopment Agency to cancel the meeting and try again in a larger venue m March. The city is contemplating ~ L[R/OAJlYPllJT Bachelor Frank Darlow, 74, of Costa Mesa gets a kiss from bachelorette Donna O'Keefe, 70, after she received a rose from him dunng a spmott of the TV show "The Bachelor" at Magg1ano's restaurant m Costa Mesa. Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays and covers culture and the arts. She addmg 434 acres to its downtown redevelopment zone. The city also released mfonnauon that the Redevelopment Agency owes more than $41 million in principal and interest on 6ve different debts. Some of the industrial property owners charge this ,., overwhelmmg evidence that, if the new areas added 10 the 1.0ne, the agency will U!>e the property laxes it coUects to pay off its debt 111s1ead of reinvesting in the area • DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers Costa M esa and may be reached at (949) 574-4221 or by e-mail at de1rdre.newman o lst1mes.com. may be reached at (9491574-4275 or by e-mail at lotlta.harper a lat1mes com PUBLIC SAFETY State says violent cri me dip~ 25 % in Costa Mesa in 2002 Crimes dropped in Costa Mcqa m almo'it every category during the first nine months of2002, the state Attorney General's office reported Tuesday. Violent crimes plummeted 25.2%, according to the preliminary report. The only category that mcreased was thefts. • DEEPA BHARATH covers pubhc safety She may be reached at (949) 574-4226. NOTABLE QUO TABLES "It's a beautiful littl.e island ... Sorm of the things that I've considered doing, as far as teaching up there, would be to teach a class about island ecology, which is a class I already teach here at OCC but it sttms very approprlale to U!aCh an island ecology class on an island.. -Dmnla Kelly, an associate professor of marine science at Orange Coast College. on the coUege'& January gift of an i'>land off British Columbia "It 's liighly uncommon [or someone to pose as ar1 attomey Did Goldstein de well as an aJtomey? lie s.ttmed to think so, altl1ougl1 other lawyers didn'L" -Jeannie Ma.e. an ~c;istanl U.S. anomey. on 1 larold Goldstem. a Newport Beach man FBI offioals say has illegally posed as a lawyer "I'm t'l'ry excited. We nl!t'd a good set of nbs un tllP boy .. -Don Webb. Newpon Beach counctlman, on a fony Roma's conung to Mariner''> Mile. which ts pan of Webb\ Ctty C ounnl distnct ·11w oty lias not rome out and said what tlm is gmng to de for us What tliey're Sl'tting up u this Plaborate structure that's getting locked in. It's liu ready, aim, jil?' and It's tl!rrorizing tJ~ hell out of tliese !NOP~ b«aWt' all tliey Stt /.J thl' misery /of the plan/.• -Roger Ma<t.regor. owner of MacGregor Yachts Ill Costa Mesa. on the larger number of Westside business owners that showed up to a \..i0sta Mesa Redevelopment Agency meeting to find out more about a cuy redevelopment project that wlll mclude them "It was really great and I really Uk.rd it. It's Liu, don't laugh at me because somroM e/M could laugh at you . -Joeh Jordan. a Mariners Elementary fourth-grader, on the mes.sage that Peter Yarrow of Peter, Paul and Mary conveyed through his song.'! for "Operation llespect" earlier this week Daily A Pilot Conil Wilson News assistant. OMS) 574-4298 coral wilsont!Nlat1mttS.com PHOTOGRAPHERS Box tSOO, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Copyright No news s1ones, 1llustrat1ons, editorial matter or advertisomenta herein can be r8Pfodvced without written perm1u1on of copyright owner. SURF AND SUN VOl. 97, NO. 47 lliOMAS H. JOHNSON Publisher TONYDOOEAO Editor Jt/DV OETT1HG Adveni1lng Director LANA JOHNSON Promotions Director EDtTING STAFF &J.c.m Man41glng Editor. {949) 574-4233 1.j.cahn• Jatlmn.com JameeM.- City Editor, (949) 76M324 ;.m..~l«fnw.com "°"" c.-. 5pofta Editor. 1949> 574-4223 l'Oflll'.CllWMon •llltf,,,_com JoMJ.lentoe Alt Director I News Diet Chi.f. (9'91 57.M224 frn•.,.ntNOlatl,,,...com lllwMc()ri Photo SuperV!tor, (9'9~ 764-4368 lt:ll.p/'t0f0•1MJ,.,..com ' • News Edit.ors Gina Alexander, Lon Anderson. Paul Saitowitz, Daniel Stevens NEWS STAFF l>ffpe 8hanrth Crime end courts reporter. (949) !174-4226 dflOPIJ. bha,.th Olatlmn.ot1m June Cwrgnode Newpon Buch reporter, (949) 574-<l232 June.caUQrandflO /atlm..com PtMlll ClntDn PoliliC9 and environment reporter, (949) 784"'330 paul.clinton•latim.e.com LolUHerpet Columnist. cultu,. repc>Mr, UM9) 574-4275 lollta.ha,,,.,fllatfrTHN.com OeinhNewmaft Costa Meu reporter. IM I 674-4221 delrdre.MWmanOl1tlm#.com ~Cllntlo E~k>n l'tpe>l1er, (Mil) 57.M218 dlri«f,...t»rrlllo larinw com Sean Hiller, Don Leadl, Kent Treptow READERS HOTUNE (949) 642-6086 Record your comment• about the Daily Pilot or news tips. Addfolle9 Our address 11 330 W. Bay St .. Costa Meea, CA 92627. Office hours are Mondey -~y. 8:30 a m -5 p.m COl'NdkM• It 11 the Pilof1 policy to promptly corr.ct all errort of subltance PleaM call (949) 764-024 FYI The Newpo(t BNchlCoata MeN Delly Pilot ( USPS-144-800) i9 published dally. In Newpon Beed'I end Colt.a M.I, aublctlptlont are available onty by aubecrlblng to Th11 Tlmee Otange County (800) 252·9141 In ., ... outalde of Nowpon 8eadl and Costa Mesa, llJbecrlptlON tO the 0.lly Pilot lf9 eveflabte only ~ first c1 ... mall for '30 per month (f>rlcel lncluct. all 1ppllc:able .Ute end locel tax• ) POSTMASTEA Send addreu ct11ngee to The Newpon ~ M.,. 0.1ly Piiot. P.O. HOW TO REACH US Clrcut.tlon The Times Orange County (800) 252·9141 Adwrtlalng Clauifled (949) 642-5878 Olaplay (9491 642-4321 EdltotW New9 (9'9) &42-5680 8portll (Ml 57,....223 New9,.. (949) 64M170 Spotts,.. (948) 650-0170 E-m..I: dallypllot•1at1,,,...oom MMl\Otlloe ........ Olflce (9491842-4321 Bullnw,.. (949) 631-7128 Pvbli.Md by Times Community • N.ws, a dlvl Ion of CM lM Angefee Tlmee C>2002 Tl"* CN. All r1ghtl i-..fWd WEATHER FORECAST Where for art thou, constant weather? It used to be we could assume it'd be sunny 1nd warm. But now, we're cloudy and wondering If the sun wfll break through. Most likely, It won't today, with the slightest chances of rain. Our extra day off to honor our nation's forefathers will provide us aome sun, though. lnfonne1ton: www.nws.noaa.gov BOATING FORECAST The winds will blow a light a to 10 knots In the Inner w.ters today, with 2·foot W.V• end. west swell of 3 to 4 feet. The awell will build a coupte of fMt tNa evening. Out farther, the north~ windt wtn blow 10to15 knotl, with 2-to ).foot WBVee end • wtllt IW9!1 of & to 7'"'" Thi• twining. the IWlll wltl bulld '° 1to91-. SURF The latest northwest swell arrives today, bringing ua some chMt-to he1d-hlgh1 early, though we'll ... more In tho afternoon. It won't be the belt-looking swell. On Monday. the swell peak.a, providing ua more heacj..hlgha and overheads, but, again, It'• not going to be preay, We'll begin dropping into the Undef-.heada on Tu.day and Wedneeday wUI bade oft even more. W...quetey: ~.turlndet;org Height TIDES Time 8:241.m. 3:2!5 p.m. 9:48p.m. 2:58•.m. 8.38 ,_ high • • 1.31 fMt low :: 4.23 .. high '· 1.281"tlow WATER TEMPERATURE :: I .. 80degf9M ;. 'f • __ ----______ --------------------------... ·-• ... =!l!"W-----------!!!!!!!l ... ._,..,..11111a .. &l!lllltll!ll!!!ll'!'~Ll!!l!lll!!ll!lll!.!!!l!!!!!l!!!!!llll!!!ll!!ll!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!~ .. ~!L!_!!!~~!!!!lll~• GETIING INVOLVED • GEmNG INVOLVED runs periodically 1n the Daily Pilot on a rotating basis. For information on adding your organization to this hS1, call (949) 574-4298 FAMJLIES -COSTA MESA This team of community-based organizations, which works to provide youth and families w11h counseling, family support, health education, mentoring, tutoring, after school act1vit1es and kinship services, needs volunteers in all areas (949) 574-3976 FISH -MOBILE MEALS Call (949) 642 6060 to help Friends in Service to Humanity i: with the Mobile Meals program and provide ongoing emergency assistance to those 111 need Both always seek volunteer assistance 1n a variety of areas (949) 645 8050 FRIENDS OF THE COSTA M ESA LIBRARIES The Friends is a suppon group for the three libraries in Costa Mesa To 101n. help with fundra1l.1ng events and hP.lp µromotc hi.nary programs and service!. in our community, cull 1714) 556 4396 FRIENDS OF THE NEWPORT BEACH LIBRARY Thi' bo0kstore needs donattons for boolo.. S<tles Good quality ct11ldrcn s and nonfiction books art:.• 1•spenally ni,eded They mJy l.>f· ldt at any of the branch l1brar1rs Balboa. M cmners or Corona del Mar or 1n the special book closet next to the Fm•nds Book Store. at 1000 Avocadc: Ave Volunteers are needed to staff 1he used book 'ilON' whu:ti 1s ms1c:ll! the cntrancr of the Central L1br.Jry Volunteers must be members of thP FnPnds of the L1lirary am.I ,irP dS~ed to wort. one thrf"P hour shill per month (949) 75~ 9667 GIRL SCOUTS Girl Scouts of Orange County nP«ds volunteers who will be tr.imed as trooµ leader!. scrv,. on c;pec1al comm1n1 ls ancJ g1vf" lectures, rJPmonstrat1ons Jr lasses 17141979 7900 GIRLS INC. OF ORANGE COUNTY Volunteers are nrwded 10 off Pr Pduca11onal and enrichment opponunit1es for girts .ind boys f949) 646 7181 HOSPICE PREFERRED CHOICE Volunteers are needed to help make a difference in the lives of terminally ill persons and their families. Volunteers w ould assist them with nonmedical needs such as providing respite for the primary caregiver, running erTands. reading to the patients and w eekly social v1s1ts The organization 1s also looking for clerical and bereavement volunteers to assist with office duties Training is provided. (714) 980·0900. HUMAN OPTIONS The organization shelters, counsels and educates abused women and children. It is looking for volunteers. (949) 737 5242, ext. 24 JEWISH FAMILY SERVICE OF ORANGE COUNTY Volunteers are needed for Project Caring, which provides socializatton and cultural experiences, including Shabbat and holiday celebrations, to the Jewish residents and others at Fa1rv1ew Developmental Center in Costa Mesa Volunteers HadoptH a facility to provide programming of Jewish content to the residents on a monthly basis They must take a TB test and undergo a fingerprinting background check Volunteers are also needed to provide comfort and suppon to the Jewish terminally 111 and their fam1lles The group sponsors an ongoing Jewish healing suppon group for people with chronic illness at 7 p m Thursdays at the Jewish F<tm1ly Service, 250 E Baker St . Suite G. Costa Mesa Free Prcreg1strat1on reQuired (714) 445 4950 JUNIOR LEAGUE OF ORANGE COUNTY The orgarnzatton of women committed to promoting volunteensm developing the potential of women and improving commun1t1es through the work and loddersh1p of trained volunteers. 1s seeking new members (949) 261 0823 KAJSER PERMANENTE HOSPICE SERVICES Volunteers are needed to spend four hours per week v1s1ting patients or doing errands for them or their caregivers in communities near volunteers' homes (5621 622 3805 LAGUNA GREENBELT INC. Volunteers are needed to Sansui Sushi & Noodle House assist Laguna Coast Wilderness Park staff and Jam es Dilley Preserve staff and docents with hiker registration and general public orientation. (949) 488-0287 LAGUNA SHANTI Laguna Shanti, an organization that w orks with persons with HIV or AIDS, 1s seeking caring volunteers to assist with running the front office, delivering meals, providing transportation and providing complimentary therapies such as massage, acupuncture and c:tmoprac;t1c care. Lisa Togh1a, (949) 494-1446. LIFELINE LIVING CENTERS M entally ill adults rely on the Newport Beach center for residential housing. It needs professmnal fund-raisers to suppon and maintain this resource. MASTER CHORALE OF ORANGE COUNTY The performing arts organization needs volunteers for computer input, ticketing filing and handling phones (714) 556-6262 MENTOR PROGRAM YMCA Community Services needs mentors to make a lasting effect on a young person's life. S1udents 10 to 18 years old are matched with mentors to improve their school performance and self-esteem while developing pos1t1ve peer and adult relationships 17141 549 9622, eict 35 MOZART CLASSICAL ORCHESTRA Orange County's only nonprofit resident chamber ordiestra needs volunteers for ticketing, ushering, phones, mailing and help with receptions Nominees are also being sought for the board of directors 19491 830 2950 NEW DIRECTIONS FOR WOMEN INC. The recovery center for women with alcohol or other diemical dependencies seeks volunteers (949) 548 9927 between 10 a.m and 6 p m , or Joy, (9491 548-8754 NEWPORT BAY NATURALIST The Upper Newport Bay Nature Preserve 1s looking for volunteers lo assist with naturahst·led tours and programs special events and habitat restoration pro1ects The 1nterpret1ve center 1s at 2301 University Drive, Newpon Beach. (714) 973 6829. "The Biological Foundations of Ethics" Prtstntetl by Dr Francisto Ayala Bren Ptolessor, Sdtoti of Biolog«rJ SdnlSi lK lrme and 2001 #ationol Medal ol Scieoce lecipi«rt W•s4tJ, F.n.y 26, 2003 1:00,. t.dwt Cryshll Cove Wt .... S"41ttd C...tr, UC n1M "Vlcthns, Vectors, and Vaccines: ,.. ..,,,. .,.,, .. ,.,,,, ,. ,.. Jiff, .. _,. PrlSlllltt/ '1y Or. Anlltony )omtS Otpor1mMt of Moltc1'ot liolofr and lioclttmistry School ol liologkti ~ UC lrrinl ~,Aprll0,2003 7:00,. ladwt Ctysttl C.W. W•• S..... c.t•, UC ltWlt LOOKING BACK A woman of political moral convictions Fanny Bixby Spencer made it kn own ~he didn't care for war, but she did have sympath y for people when she lived in Harper, or what is now Costa Me~a. of wlm.h went to loyaJ employeel> and fo'>ter children. ~he aho left property for a oty pcllk and <..osta Lolita Harper Daily Pilot S he wa' 11ut your ;l\Nagt: 'Olll'ty 111..itrnn Whilt• hrnny H1xb\> Spenct:r t..ime Imm om· ol tht· wealth1cr,t famthe' 111 I ong Beach, -.he rarnt· to < .o'>ta Mt:'>d -then nam ed I larper -111 tht: 19l0r, tu t''>rnpt· lwr family\ cla'>'> po'>illon ')penet·r, till' d,lllghrer ol )oLham Hl\h\, tht• lt1tlll'r of Long Ht'at h. \'-•" .111 Jrl i..l pot'! d.Ild playwright who po-...1·-...t:tl di'>tinct p11ht11 .1J nwr.il tonvillJlllh tor,, w111n<111 111 hl'r limt:. She wht•111t•n1ly opptN•d war anti \\J' n1°\.1·r .1fra11J to -.pread her p11l1t1ral p11,11io11. <le'>pi te till' l.1rt ,ht• 1 ould11'1 even vole "\ht: ht1d 'm 1al po'lt11111 t1nd monl'y 011 \\hll h 111 11u.lulg1· ht·r whim ... :· tlw \1111d.1\ Pre'' lelt'gram \Holt• .1h11111 ht·1 111 1965 -..1w \'«L'> horn 1.11111\ \\l•,11111 Hl\hy in IH-Y .1ml gn'"" up 1111 J .!i.000 .it fl' r.11H h th,11 h 110\\ the Ulll'' ol I .ong Bt'.11 h f)ownl'y, l'Jr,1111ot111t and l.akt•w1wd. -..1w lollowt·d 1111111• foot-.l"t'P' 111 lll'r 'ou.di..r KranJlatlwr .111d ol1t•11 gor hn<..elf m111 1r1111hft• with lwr rat.l 1ut.I \'It'~' fht• Ollt.,pol..t•ll oil II\ hi\\ r11t" d plcl\ 1111t·d I lit· J,111 ol f'Jtnotl'-111 lll'I clltl'r thl' fir'>I \\Ofld \\.tr, \\hll h lll<lllll'd tomhat Ht·l ·•ll't' 111 tht· ll·n.,.on HEMPHILI.:S --RUGS & CARPETS 230 Eost 1 711> Sr • Cosio Mesa (949) 722-7224 -w 1 )' '1 J P"' ~A..r. t • .xJI 11 rnu-.t·t.l. 'Ill' and her l'4uallv polit1tall) n1111ded hll'>h • .md < Ml -..pl'nt l r lllllH'U 10 1 1.up~r lht' -..pl'nt <'r ... hou~ht a la.rgl' rant h 111 I IJrp«r JOU h1re<l 1mm1gra111 lt11111hl''> 111 ldrm tht: land \\llh 1111 olf,pr1ng Ill lwr OWll. "'Pl'llt l'f ..id11p1t•<l <1 nurnlwr ul t.li..a<l\allliigl'd rl11ldrt•11 .111tl Jl .. o 11pen1·d her homt· 10 lhl' lu1111l'll"''· pr11,11111tt'' ,1111J p11l111ral dJ•t.l n·lrg111u' rdugt'l'' ~lw tl1d 1101 .1llm\ ht·r 1 lult.lren to rt't II<' !ht• ph-1lg1· ol dUt'~'lJfllt' .it 't hoof \ht• 'tlr\ l\.t•d p11blit ldUllh trnrn 111.111'1' .1ml rt•111c111wt.l 'lllhlwrn 111 lwr hel1t'I'> \ht• d11·d 111 1 ,111u·1 111 1 •1111 .11 'i I 'ipem t•r It'll .1 'i.! ·, 111dlion ,.,I.Ill', rno\I Fanny Bixby Spencer "1 e..a Lib ra.ry, but specified that 11 couJd not be used lor military rrammg. em.:ampmenl for veteran~ KfllUJl' or rlw Bo> \touts. • LOOKING BACK runs Sundays Dt> you know 1>f a person place or f'vtnl thdl d,.s.,rvPs a h1stonca1 Loo~ Bc1c1<7 lt-t us. know Contact Jc1mP.s. M,.,..,, by fa,, di 9491 646 4 l?O P mail ill dfYtt•S n1f.'11•r a lc1t1mes. com or mail hPr iJI <.iCJ 0;,1ly Ptlot 330 W BJy 51 Costa Me!.a CA 92627 'llt •SA FULL BAR \1'\ "11 ~~AILS cmrw•mw1w" NO PASSPORT IS NEEDED OUR MEALS ARE A TRIP TO MEXICO 296 E. 17TH ST. COSTA MESA· 949·645·7626 11 ebba J NE•DLEPDINT DESIGN Mark Your Calendar Feb 18 -Feb 22 Spri ng Inventory Redu ction s a l e s 10% -50% off on Ca nvas 1n stock L6<'8 E:as1 Coast Highway Coron, Oe1 Mar CA 92625 ~49J 644 7904 1-1ours T .... F r1 I 0 rJ afT' -~ OGor-> Sat 9 OOarr. 4 00tirr' The Duffy Annual Pass Is Back! Get yours now, limited supply! ~ JY~ .• pay for t.hcm5CI~ in no time. Hurry! They will U out Sign up this Saturday, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Duffy Rental Offi c 2001 ~:rW9Y· R your pas by calling (9 9) 645-6812, 110 • No Insurance Costs •No Maintenance Costs • No Slip Fees, No Hassles • (;real J<>r brtSl1~ss. ft1mfl)~ friends and soul crotstng. • Ta!"e adt10ntage of tbe wonderful flttl of Duffy Boals • Com1'mletll location. fantastic amenities n. ,.,.,, """" ,,,.,.. .. L'll'ii """" OuftJy artc lkJll OlllP"'f WWW~l.'OID , M Sunday, February 16. 2003 OBITUARY Joseph P. LaJeunesse Service!> for longtime Newport-Me!>a resident Joseph I~ LaJeunesse have been held. Mr. LaJeunesse. a Newport Harbor I ligh graduate, died Jan 23. He was 50. • The Daily Pilot welcomes obituaries for residents or former residents of Costa Mesa and Newport Beach. If you want tottavEtan obituary pnntftd tn the Pilot. uk your mortuary to fax us the information 111(9491646 4170 or call the newsroom at (9491 764 4324 THINKING IN A SAUNA By Dave Wong < 011,11k r loll cm 1 ng \1111.lllUll\' I S11mcunc h;1' ol fered }OU J ~ub\tan11al amount of monc~ for your hume. 1 he deal '' ~er) appeJhng However. the~ m~ed ) uu 111 make up your mind 1rnmed1Jtd) hei.:Ju~e the~ have 111 mc)ve into your area. they havi: limited 11mc 10 l1nd and purcha'e their ne" home. and 11 you don't accept their ollcr. they have two other home' to make olft'.f\ on 2. The real t:\tJte :igrnt' reprt:,enung lour buyer' are .. 111111g "llh you and }Our re JI estale advl\or at your dlfllfll! room table. l:ach of them hJ' pre,en1cd a reJ'>OnJblc and attrJlt1ve offer Jnd your reJI estatr profe''"mal tum' lo )OU and a\k,. "How do you '' "h 10 respond 1" l. You are cine of 1he buyel"'> being repre~cnted in thr above offer pre,rn1a11on. Your reJI estale Jdvl\or ru\he'> ou1 to you with J rnun1eroller 'aymg th.11 you mu,1 re!>pond (read· aci.:cpll the counteroffer\ tenn' 4u1ckl~ or Jlltllhcr huycr \\ 111 get tht: home PUBLIC SAFETY POLICE FILES COSTA MESA • w..t Babr StrMt: A home burglary was reported In the 600 blodt at 11 :37 a.m. Thursday. • Baar Street: Grand theft was reported in the 3300 blodc at 2:30 p.m. Thursday. • Bristol Strwt: Grand theft was reported In the 3300 blodc at 8:43 a.m. Thursday. • Feltvlew Roed: A vehicle borglary was reported In the 2700 blodc at 8:19 p.m. Thursday. • Gol CourM Drive: Vandalism was reported in the 1700 blodc at 8:38 p.m. Thursday. • Harl>or Boulewlrd: Vandalism was reported in the 3300 block at 4:52 p.m . Thursday. • 16th Place: Forgery was reported in the 200 blodc at 2:24 p.m. ·Thursday. NEWPORT BEACH • Avocado Avenue: Vandalism was reported in the 700 blodc at 1:64 p.m . Thursday. • Back Bay Drive: A boat burglary was reported In the 1100 blodc at 11 :44 a.m. Thursday. •Wm Coast Highway and Superior Avenue: A traffic accident involving injuries was reported at 3:53 p.m . Thursday. • West Ocean Front: A garage borglary was reported in the 6500 blodc at 3:39 p.m. Thursday. • Old Newport Boulevard and Coast Highway: A hit-and-run was reported at 7:08 p.m . Thursday. • Plac:enthl Avenue: Vandalism was reported in the 150 blodc at 11:43 a.m. Thursday. • T91T828 Drive: A boat theft was reported in the 100 blodc at 8:21 p.m. Thursday. • Via Havre: Petty theft was reported in the 100 block at 3:25 p.m. Thursday. LOCAL MORTUARIES PIERCE BROTHERS BELL BROADWAY Mortuary * Chapel Cremation 110 Broadway. Costa Mesa 642-9150 CHANCE Continued from Al want to help them with training and jobs and help them be pro- ductive." The effort to feed the home- less was hatched in January 2002 by Betty Abbott, Jerry Face and some participants of the singles ministry lhey hosted. They de· cided on Lions P'ctrk as an appro- priate location for the weekend and passed out filers to notify lhose in need. They intended to do it as a one-Lime event and 'were ama7ed by the number of people lhat showed up. Based on the obvious need, the two continued feeding the homeless every weekend. But last month, residents com- plained to city leaders that feed- ing the homeless resulted in fe - ces, needles and trash in the park, said Costa Mesa City Man- ager Alan Roeder. Abbott and Face clajm lha1 they methodi- cally cleaned the park after the meal!> were distributed, even picking up other people's trash ell times. But because they did not have a permit for groups of 10 or more, police official!> told them they could not operatl' in the park without the risk of being ar- rested. Soon after, Abbou -;ought oul Fitch and asked him if they could uo;e the church. "One day, I was walking over to the Coffee Bean and God spoke to me and !>aid 'You need to get involved in the commu nity,"' Fitch said. "I didn't know how. The day after, Betty caml' and asked me. II was an answer to my prayers." The eviction from Uonc; Park turned out to be a blessing in disgui'>e as using the I jghthoU'>l' Church enahle., the organi.7.er!-w METHOD Continued from Al the Lngmeenn~ Student Cou11 ctl, which over.,er~ tht> event. Thl' event will al'>o include the l·nwTI:.CI I Career Fair that will have more than 20 local companie~ present to h elp boo!>I 1nterac11on and commu nicatwn be1ween engmeering .,llldent., and the eng1neer111g indu•.try at large. The goaJ. however. 1-. not 0111} HOTEL Continued from Al Newpon Bearh lor the t:lly\ 1op·fl1ght rE!'>laurants, pleasure harhor m rivy '>hopping. To Mayor Steve Bromberg, Newport Beach gets all of the No n1<.11ter wh.11 you ,.. clo1n9 your hometown nt'W'iPdlX'' ~Daily Pilot ..... " • expand their outreach to the homeless and the number of days they serve them. Abbott, who has become the volunteer director at the church, now offers a drop-in center start· ing at 7 a.m. Monday through Friday wilh lunch seryed two days a weelc and dinner available six days a weelc. She also coordi- nates hands-on activities like woodworking. "Betty's probably the only per son who could pull this off,· Ab- bott said. ~we just followed her lead." On Saturday. Abbott, Face and several other volunteers served up spaghetti and m eatballs, warm rolls and salad to about 20 hungrv people. As people lined up to get some of the tasty meal, Betty walked around the room, searching out those in need of a hug, a warm smile and some en - couragement. One of those was Belinda [who did not give her last name). Be· linda's mother passed away eight days ago and Betty embraced her as she would a dear friend while Belinda broke down in tears. "Belly is a beaucifuJ lady." Be- linda said warmly. Sauson Oarke. 32. partook in the church's genero!>llY for the first time Saturday. ll1e 32-year old painter from Beverly I !ills be came homele~ in December when he moved to Laguna Beac.:h to take a job that didn't pan out. "I thinJc ii'!> great." Oarke 'Hlid of the meal. One of the '>UC<:e!>'> :.torie' ol the outreach effort il> Scott Vin· cent, 40, who had been homele'>'> on and off for 13 years. Refore fmdi11g out about the oulreach effort, he dug mto tr.l!>h cans for recydahle mattnal to get enough money 10 eat. Now, Vincent ha'> a job in Santa A11.1, help'> out with the outrt'ach on tht' weekend to introduce a!>pinng enguieer'> to 1he world out'>ldl' of their phy~ic.:s. math, .,cienn• and en gineering cla.,w-;, but 10 intro duce the out'>ide world to tht• real lift' of an enginet>r "I li<.torically. when a 101 ol people think of engmeenng, they think of mechanital engi neering. but there's i.o much more to the field now," ..aid Bob (~1dy, the \taff advt'-'>r for lhe Eng111eenng Student <.ounul "IE-Wl•ekl givt''> 1hem J d1a11tl' to kmd ol work togetllt'r .md wt· bad Jnd none of the good from Lhe new hotel. "We will loM? out on that businC!>..,, but we wilJ gel their traffic,· Hromberg said " l"ha1 1-. unfonunate " Debate has begun over 1he city\ 2000 approval of the Greenligh1 ln111a11ve. which AROUND TOWN D~Pllot SEAN HILLER I DAILY PIL(J Betty Abbott. co-founder of the homeless outreach effort, consol5 Belinda, who shared news during lunch at Lighthouse Church m Costa Mesa on Saturday that her mother recently died. and .., engagl·d to AL>boll "Jo only nut need 111 Ix-lwre bul to volunwer my 11ml', 11 male~ me lt'l'I good .. Vim l'lll said r1tLh !>aid ht· b e.i~t·r w lwlp the honu:le!>.'> a., long a'> there• I' J need and .,,ml hl' ''"uld ulu mat<·ly like lo ohta111 lundmg 111 provide 1ub tr ,1111111g 1111 thl'rn " I ht• mort• I 1hmk ahoul 11. th" 1' mon· of d ... aft. pl .. 11 t Im rill' ho\.\ 1he ulher "''"' (11ving the puhltl ,1n<l tlwir fellow 'tudent'> a d1.t1llt' tu 'l't' t'ngrn<•ering m1111.1' 111 anion 1-. onh one Im 11.., lur '>ll1de111'> 111 l'·\\rd.. I he olht•r. 1-. to aHo\\ engi1Wl'ring -.wdent' ,, l ham 1• tu 11llt•ran ''"h -.111lll'nt' 111 otht·r \(Wt·r.tlt1t•'> '"11h1n lhl·1r .,anw '>l hool .. I he co1Kt'pt ol 1 t lt·hrt1t111g t•ng11wl'nng lwyond 1 ht 1 on hill'' Ill lht• dl..i IJ1hllt' h '>CHiii' 1h1ng I 1h111k l'\.eryu11t• h11d-. Ill 1en·-.1111g, .... 1d I krd.. require-. a two thud'> \Ull'r ma1rmty to appr<Nl' ,my llt'\\ largt• \Calf.' hot1•I or otlwr devt•lopmenl '"Ihm llll' u1, I lw 111111at1\ t' '"a.' pt1.,..,t.c.J. l'"-'>l'nllally, a' d re<,pon.,t• IO 1ht· Newpon Dum·., Waw1 lnin1 He,ort ·., earlll'r plan., 111 .idd a conference c.:enlt'r more information, call (9491 675·9708. homeles!> lthan IJOll'> Park!. Fitch !>aid. "We're· going to luv1 and care fo r thC'>e folk.'> no mar 1er what. It dot"ln't matter h11v. they .,meU or how they look lllelpmg theml L!> a rt'al pnv1 lege " • DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers Costd Mesa and may be reached at 19491 574 4221 or bye mail at deirdre newman a fat1mos com Dunn Ran~11. proll''>'>Or of ml' chdn11.al cilld aero,pac.:e 1.::nw nc·er111g "In the l'nd, E-Wt•ek becomes an 1mponan1 oppor 111n11y tor all of the other l'O>{I m·t>r<, to realti'e that they'n: all part of the world chan~ers. lht') all haH' a commonallly and that make., thl'm morl' comlort .1hle " •CHRISTINE CARRILLO covers educa11on and may be roached 111 1949) 574-4268 or bye mail at Jlflstm» Cdrrilfv a lat1mas corn lllH Phtl Mt. a C.reenhght reprl'-.t'ntauve, '>aJd Brombel'}!' comrnenL'> about the I lyatt wt•r•• ,1 .. .,elf defeating '>latement." ·· llte mam buJk of that Lraffit "·111 tw 111 I lunungton Beach.· Ar'>I -..ud. "If that ho1el were in \;e.,.,port Bcalh. 11 would be far \\ llf,l' lived 1n N1gena. from 7 to 8:30 p.m at St. Mark Presbyterian Churd'I, 2100 Mar Vis1a. Newport Beach. For more information. call (9491760-1691 TUESDAY Pa_" the Rula1d'1 The'e are nut the 11me' 10 "mg 11 The lall "· a good real C\tate advt!>Or will have talked 1hrough lhe\e eventual111e<. \\1th }'OU. along "'llh a dl\1.U\\tc>n of the l1kcl}' markcl value o( ) our home and }OUr 1rnn pcr,onJI need\ regJrd111g the.; \Jle nl )our property W11h ,1 good advl\or. you \\ 111 have a game plan and the \JUna won 1 get too hot! So. call me at 949 'i H-1100 or visit my web,nes :11 <Llvewongtcom or ondordroad com PRUIDflTS WEEKEND SALE! • Send AROUND TOWN items to the Daily Pilot, 330 W. Bay St .. Costa M esa. CA 92627; by fax to (949) 6464170; or by calling (949) 5744298. Include the time, date and location of the event, as well as a contact phone number A complete listing 1s available at www.ds1/ypilor.com. The public is invited to enjoy ·v.ohn and Piano Classics ft Violinist Larry Greenfield and pianist Susan Boettger will present a free musicale at 3 p m at the Newport Beach Central Library, 1000 Avocado Ave , Newport Beach For more information, call (949) 717·3816 "How to Send th• Most Effectjve E·ma11s· is the subject for a Newport Beach Chamber of Commerce business referral breakfast that wlll take place at 7:30 a.m. at The Pacific Club, 4110 MacArthur Blvd .. Newport Beach. The costJS $17 for members WTth a reservation and S22 for potential members at the door. For more information, call (949) 729-4400. D1wr Wong luu brm •riling homr1 m Nrwport Br111 h sma 198? and u "'"" Co11St Nro'J>hrt Propmm!Cold"vU Banlrrr. .... ORANGE COUNTY If ..JI PERFORMING ARTS CENTER TODAY The 60 and Better Dance Group will have its dance party from 1 to 5 p.m .. starting with an hour of danoe lessons. at the Holiday Inn, 3131 S. Bristol, Costa Mesa. There is a $10 adm ission charge. For MONDAY A Great Decisions discussion of ·The U.S. and N1gena Thinking Beyond Oil" is the fourth rn an eight-week senes on U S foreign pohcy topics. The discussion will be led by Jay Welsh. who has SEGERST ROM HALL 80X OFFICE IOAM-6PM WWW.OCPAC ORG (714) 740-7878 ffck•~--, (71 4') 755.0236 GROUP SALES (7U) 556-2787 INFORMATION (7U) 556-274'6 TTY Eleanor Cooney reads from and signs "Death in Slow Motion: My Mother's Descent into Alzheimer's• at 6:30 p.m. at Book Soup South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bristol St, Suite 2400, Costa Mesa For m ore information, call (714) 689-2665. A free seminar called •11 Zing the Missing Linkr will be held from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. at Mother's Market, 225 East 17th St., Costa Mesa. For reservations, call (800) 595-MOMS. WEDNESDAY The Newpott BMCti Nwtcomera Assn. will present a fashion show of the latest spring clothing and shoes. The show is 11 o.m. at the Wyndham Hotel In Costa Mesa. For more information, call (949) 645-9922. The Newport Rib Co. •nd ASH Harbor Area Inc. are holding a fund-rasing day at the restaurant. Twenty peroent of the proceeds will be donated to ASH to assist low-Income famillea In Orange County. The teltaUrant It at 2196 Harbor 8tvd. For mot'e Information, call (949) 615-3815, ext231. A frM Mmlnar eahd •HM11ng All.Stars" wlll be held from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. at Mochet't Martet 226 &st 17th St. COlta Me.a. For reteNlt1onl. 0911 (800) 696-MOMS. ROM KJnt Pf'Mnb Md 1lgn1 ·M~langelo Ind tht Pope'• Cefllng" et 8:30 p.m. •t Book Soup South CoU1 Plau. 3333 Brfttot St., Sutte 2.400, Colt.I M .... For more lnfonnetlon, ctll (714) 889-28M • • Datly Pilot Sonclay, Febfuary 16, 2003 A5 • • ezsure CHECK IT OUT Finding love on library shelves D idn't get your fix of romance on Valentine'l> Day? With 36.1 da)" left before f-:eb. 14, 2004, mlb around, there\ plenty of time 10 find ~rtual love m library '>tacks. C)ome of the most satt5fymg t\ 1n the pages of the Romance Wnter. of America'~ "fop Ten Favorite Books of 2002." Neai the top of the li<,t IS "BreathJng Room," I.he latc.~t from perennial fa vun 1 e Su'>all FJv.abcth Phillips.. On u•nier '>lllgl' l'> self help gum l~bcl f·avor, whose hfe comt."> cm.\h111g down after 'he lo'><..~ her money to an un'>CTllpulou., atrnuntant, her fianre to an oldc•r ~orna11 and her reputallon to headlines denounnng her al> .i fraud lsc:apmg to lu-.canr 1n DON LEA~!'< r All V PIL I Christine Miller and poodle Coco check out local art by Came Strom, left. and Jordan Fillers , abstract at nght. at new gallery at the Camp m Costa Mesa The center of ~J~- jENN IFER "R USIE rethmk her future, <,he suc<.-umh<> to the wtle-. of a I lollywood bad boy who tum., out lo be her landlord llw en<;umg mmp L'> waclcy and l11'>1¢'1tfW-a great re-ad for anyone who's ever dreamed of refonmng a devilish swtor A I~-; contemporary semng L'> the backdrop for Virginia !Jh•,' "The Wedding Dre9a," nm among the Romance Wntt'T'>' 2002 favorites. In post CiVll War Vuginaa. two widowed SISter. express their hope for the future by sewing a wedding df'l'S..'> for theu younger sibhng. While there'-; no groom m sight. the opurruc;oc ge<.ture '-t'nd'> a ™-'.icon of failh I.hat heralds c;unmer IOffiOITCJW'i.. Lolita Harper Daily Pilot A hmrn.•.,pun an ~dller\ umt•1led 1L'>ell an < O'>ta \lt>'>J on lnur..da\, .L, local an1"t' telebrawl.l 1ht·1r ope111ng nighr with a grand rt'< ep11on for the new local ani'lllC outleL Five regional ani'>I'> -Came ~Lrom, Michele Yu. Matt Berg, Kerry Brannan and Alex Cram• ho.,ted an ongoing art gallery at llw C.imp on Bmtol '\t.reet in which Iota! ani'>L'i ha'e a venue 10 d1l>pla> 1he1r work. The gallery '"a' \\ell a11endt><l \\llh cunous aficaonado., ~ho wanted to ... et' the talent ol tht•ar homl't<M11 artist" T ENTI The Jojopinkie Ga llery at the Camp provides a new art venue for Costa Mesa artists to display their works Berg, one of the up and commg ani't' who -;howcased their work at the gallery. employs a variety of media in h1'> p.i!nungs but has an affinity for watercolor; and oils. • fhere·~ a freedom in working with an element,· Berg said. "Water can '>O<>U1e or WJ Being a child of rnntrad1tt1on I have grown fond of u .. ang cwo dramatically oppo!>ed med1Lun' • The gallery was created to provide an outJet for the numerous Costa Mesa arnstS searching for a place to display theu accomplishments Strom. a Costa Mesa resident. gathered painters, ~ptors, photographers and sculptors, as weU as musiaans and dee-1ays to perform at rught receptions at a 2,200-square-foot space at the Camp, across Bristol from I.he Lab Ano Mall Strom said she encountered many NO PLACE LIKE HOME FY1 WHAT The Temporary Jo1opink1e Gallery WHEN: Now until M arch 23 WHERE: The Camp, 2937 Bristol St Costa Mesa INFORMATION: E-mail at 101opinkie ctyahoo.com creaove and LnnOYauve fellow arost~ tn her hometown but felt they did not have ample opponunaty 10 get their work out there The bloorrung artl'>t said sl\e wanted to give herself and her coUeagu~. an opportumty to expose thetr commumty 10 its own art s.. CENTER. Pae• A7 Family bon~ al'>O provide 50lace for Jewel Sabauno. 40-year-old ~of Samuel' "No Pl8Cie UR Take note of carpet care basics Hotne."Afterrunrungoffto Colorado on the back of a musician's motorcycle at age 17, Jewel returns to New York with her teenage son and tennlnaUy ill best friend While Dad's still not peaking to her, she 6ndc; welcoming anns elsewhere. in a couching story of love and las& 1lle action moves to Nonh Carolina in Stephanie Bond's "I 1bJnk I ~ You. .. In this comk mystery, three sisters tom apart by a man meet up years later. S lams seem 10 have d ratal attraction w rhe rnrpet an my house. Al> soon a'> new carpet arrive-;, marlong pcm jump to the Ooor faster. tar o,eem'i to stick IO the bo11om of feet longer and m1urie'i bleed more profu..ely. Although I am rarely the perpetrator of the disasters, cleanup seems to fall an to my job description. Or maybe I am the only one that cares if the carpets are clean? KAREN WIGHT savvier. cleaning products are a littJe better and the carpet is. well, more cleanable This is my first tum wtth wool carpeting. I thought it would be outrageou Jy expensive (it' not), spot cleaning it would be difficult (wrong again) and sheep Thmk lanolin. Lanolin as nature's way of keeping all those sheep dry and cozy. And Mother Nature continues to work hard once the wool has left the host. I won't regale you with all of my carpet disasters -I'm sure you have plenty of your own -but I do want to share a few tips that will help you undo the damage. See CHECK, Paa• A7 I'm sure the latest carpet incarnation at the Wight I louse wiU suffer the fate of that which has gone before. But this time, I'm a little professional cleaning would break the hudget (it doesn't), Wool. Think Lest you think that I'm a cleamng wunderkind or Heloise. I confess that everything I know about carpet comes from Brett Hemphill at Hemphill's Rugs & Carpets. Bren is my flooring guru. Over the years of TRAVEL TALES Visiting family in friendly and chilly By Debbie Dl1n1n tickets. They were also giving our daughter Molly the same I t was back ln September of trip as a graduation gift last year that my husband because she wu completing Jack and I received an her studJes at Olapman e-mail from ow son James, ln Univenlty. This seemed like the Biloxi, asking us lf ~ would proverbial "off er you can't like to join him. his wife and refme, • so we dJdn'U baby for the holidays ln The first thing we did was to Slovakia. Major James otgnan, go Online to see what we could U.S. A.Ir Forte, is a ·Hurricane learn about this country, since tfunter" who pilots WC· 130 we weren't even clear as to Its alrplan Into major storm location in Europe. We learned HIJ wtfe Sl.mona ls orlgtnally that It hu existed u the Slovak Crom Slovakia and has many Republic, having tepanted relatlvtt there, Including h r from the former Czechoslovakia parentl and ai.hllogs. She ln 1993, and ts bordered by UIW'ed us that we would be Auatrla. Hunpry and Poland • mott welcome 1t the flmlly and what ia now Called the hC>me tn PO~ and &he and • Czech Republic. Jamel would provide the alrtlne We new to Vlt:nna. Via Amsterdam, and were met by James and Slmona's father, Fero, who had made the five-hour drive from Poprad to meet us. We then located the Babnbof, where we waited for Molly to arrive on a t:ra.ln from Franlcfurt. (James was unable to get her on the same fUght.) A friend of James', In Germany, had made a two·hour trip to Frankfurt just to meet Molly's plane and that she got on the correct train to VlennL That wu Jut the lll"lt example of people t.Mre golng to pat lef\llhs to make th.II a wonderful eiperlenc:e ror Alter the lone drtve on k:y roads back to Popnd. we were Wdc:oined by SlmOm and ~ baby, her mom Anna and her 13-year-old brother Fero Jr. We ~re given an entire Door ln their large home that they built tb.emse.tves. Anna ls an orthodontist ln Poprad., a town or 44,000, nestled at the foot of the High Tltra Mounta.lnt.. She hu thn!e other dentists working for her. but because of the aoda.llt.ed health insurance. Incomes are f11 below what an orthodontist In the U.S. can command. We IOOO learned t.ba.t food pttpt.rat1oo durtna tbe hoUdayl wu a high priontJ A typkil breUfut lndud yosw1. breed. hlb fruit. • eelecdoo ol ... lMYD:.'iilM engmeenng house proiects for mv .. elf and fnends, he has never given ml' bad advice, always stands behmd has products I 00% and he and his dad art' two of the nicest guys on the planer What more can you ask for7 So. when Brett says "get wool." I get wool It's soft. beaunfuJ and e8S) to clean The most important maintenance step for any ~t 1 vacuuming. All carpets should be vacuumed at least once a week to remove din that has worked tts way 111 the bottom of the pUe. Even if you SM HOME. Pase M Slovakia .. I ' ....., ______ ._... ___________________ .._.._.._...__, ______ ~~~~----~~-----~---------------..-.~".""""".._.. __ _.... __ ~--· M Sondoy, February 16, 2003 HOLDING •IUI ul IUWll \IMlOn.. Jlle areu also offers a bevy of top-flight ~caurants. attrat:t:ive shopping de<>ti11nllons, the nation's No. 1 plt:asure harbor and many other recreational activities. Beach area t'> ..tbo a mut.h m• 1n sophisticated area• Continued from Al THE CONFERENCE CENTER THAT WASWT MEANT TO BE by the 8,000-square-root Palm Gardens outdoor tented area, the 6,600-square-foot Gran d Ballroom and a clubhouse at Pelican Hill Golf Course. I lilton Coc;ra Mesa, the largest of the Costa Mesa hotels, offers almost half the amount of function space of the Hyatt wich 46,000 square feel. That hotel considers the "There's a little more cachet llSSoclated with our name,· saJd Marta Hayden. the executive director of the Newport Beach Conference & Vtsltors Bureau. • lltere is a wonderful aura when you come here." Newport Beach lost a chance to attract larger events in 2000, when residents rose lo quash a plan from the former owners of the Newport Dunes Waterfront Resort 10 add a conference center in an expansion. l 2, l 6<l-square-foot Pacific Ballroom its crown jewel. I IUton General Manager Ri chard Ham acknowledges that while bis hotel hosts Its share of corporate events, the Hyan will be able to attract the large~evems. "It's a different world than I luntington Beach," Ham said. MOur target audience is different from their target audience." While a peal event at the 1 lilton would reach capacity JI about 400 guests, a filler at the I lyau could accommodate more than 2,000 people. Events larger than that would usualJy book the Anaheim Convention <.Rnter, which offers 1.4 million ~uare reet of meeting and function !>pace. Other lhan the Hilton, only the Westin South Coast Plaa, w1tl1 26,650 square feet of <,pace, can claim a significant share of the corpomte-l·vent marke1 in Costa Mesa. ln Newpon Beach, five hotels offer at least 18,000 square feet of function space. The Newpon Reach Marrion & Tennis Oub is the larg~t of those, with 41.000 square feet. lbe Byan Newponer, Sunon Place Hotel and RadJSSon Hotel Newpon Beach round ou1 the list. along w1tl1 1hc Four Seasons, of courw STILL HOST TO THE PRIME· TIME EVENTS Even though fears of a war w11h Iraq have had a cooling effect, Newpon-Mesa's ho'>pilaliry mdus.try appears fairly !>lrong. Local hotel opera1or. have been able to attract their !>hare of corporate eventi. and fund-raisers becau<,c of the area's allure. The hotels are posicioned closer 10 John Wayne Airport than the I lyau Regency, '>hortenmg the drive to and from the trd11sporta11on hub hy Event planners seem to agree. Perhaps one of Newport Beach's ritziest black-tie events each year is Hoag Hospital's holiday fund-raiser at d1e Four Seasons, now called the Chrisunas Carol Ball. Haag's 552 Oub fund-raising committee has already booked the hotel for this years event, which is expected to dlaw more than 375 guests at about $200 a head. But if given the opponunity, event organirers said they would consider the Byan, said Ron Guziak, the executive director of hospital fund-raiser the 1 loag Foundation. "The reality is l)la! the Four Seasons and Marriott are great hutels, but their ballroom!> are limited in size," Guziak ..aid. "If the occasion presented itself, we would take a seriou. .. look al doing an event at the Hyall Regency." TI1e Four Seasons. also hosts tl1e American Airlines Celebrity Golf Tournament every October at Pelican I lill. 'The event, booked until 2004, rais('s funds ror cancer research. Other annual fund-raisers at the !·our Seasons are an event 10 bl•nefit groups fighting pt•d1auic cancer, cystil libros1s ;u1d auti-.m. Ille hotel also c.11ers 1lw Candlelight Co11nm, the annual Orange County f>t•rforming Arts Cenll'r lund-raiM!r in Costa Mes.u. ·nie Newport Beach Marrion & rennis Oub host!> 1 loag's board meeungs and the annual Our Lady Queen of Angels fond-rai!ter. Marrio1t's Randa Rit'hardson, the director or ..a.les and marleting. can't help worrying about the Hyatt. MBecause of the meeting '>pace. it's going to have an impact on how we'U be able 10 hook business," Richardson ..aid. "Our biggest differentiating lactnr "'our locauon, our prmomiry to John Wayne Airpon and 1he beach. The Newpon Evans Hotels, at the time, proposed a· new 470-room hotel, complete with a 31,000-square-foot conference area, for property already approved for development. In November of that year, voters overwhelmingly approved the slow-growth Green.light Initiative, which _requires a two-tllltds public approval for any Jarge-scaJe development. The Evans group posrponed their bid to seek a vote on the hotel, eventually dropping the bid altogether. They sold the resort in August. Tut: new owners say they have no plans to move forward with the project. While slow-growth politics have halted plans to add a conference center to Newpon Beach, Huntington Beach has welcomed their new resort as a way to refashion a sleepy surf town in to a destination for corporate events. Surf City is in the midst of a race-lift that city leaders hope will add more retail shops and corporate events. Newpon Beach proper, excluding Newport Coast, is essentially built out the latest hotel proposal has met with heavy resistance. Sutherland Talia Hospitality wants to build a 110-room luxury reson al th(' !>lie of the existing Marina park mobiJe home park on Balboa Peninsula. Ocarly, leaders from Lhe two cities are approaching growth issues in wildJy divergent ways. "They probably need 10 grow." Mayor Steve Bromberg ..aid about his nonhem neighbor. "They are encouraging that kind of development. Our city would not be encouraging that kind of monolith." • PAUL CLINTON covers the environment, business and politics. He may be readied al 1949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at paul.clmton@latimes com Feet Hurt? ~~ BackAche?~ Knee Pain? Hip Discomfort? ----WE HAVE A SOLUTION! Millions of people suffer with lower joint pain simply because of im properlv fitted shoes and inserts. FOOT SOLUTIONS spcc1,ilizcs m footwear and custom orthoncs, fu by skilled professionals for the hare.lest-tu-fit feet. And, we do 1l with style ... l)1th\li1"1111\l;dt\ll411~.1•l1,,!1..,1l•1!.q.,11,°'"''·l111'111,.ltrll1 !11 !t 11'tt1i.'l1.I o\11 ·~ 1 •l.r' 1'., HOME INNO THEATER VATIONS AUDIONI DEO SYSTEMS D INSTALLATION SALES AN • Major Brands •Plasma TVs . • In -wall/In-ceiling s s • Wire concealment, oom peak er multi r • Outside speakers, mcludin g rock speakers emote (I Remote!!!) •Universal programmable 11 • Custom Built Entenainme nt Centers available Jim Kni ght ·79I8 949·~S7 a 11 d In 1 u r e d ~ I .. TRAVEL Continued from A5 cheeses and sliced meat and tea. The main meal occurs at midday and always features homemade soup, various ..a.usages, bread, possibly a venison stew, dumplings, potatoes, sauerlc.raut and home-preserved CruJt, which Is grown in summer on their property. The grand finale was a huge 'ariety of "Kolachy, • pastries dlld :.weet, 1.0111i11ud!I) replenished throughout the day. Wherever we vii.ited relatives and friends, we were created to meaJs with many different dishei. and were shown such cordiality in their homes. On New Year's Eve, the family was given a private lining 1 oom in thf' Atrlu111 Hestauram and Penz.ion in Poprad, which is owned by Anna's coui.in, with a huge feast µrepa1 cd hy fd.lnily J nd friends. The fin..'works that Fero Jr. set off riv,1ll'd those wt• see in profe'>'it011dl d1!tplay1> at home. i\ friend of hi-; who belongs lo a Lraveli ng dan1·e troupe entertained guests w11h a break dance rn11t ine. The ch11 h we attended in Poprad iv<>, builr in the 13th century anJ rnntains many wood 1 ..trv111~" that date back several l e111uries. It I!> believed that hi:ati11K the church will • ause damage to the1>e w oncicn Sl311Jt'S. fhercfore, those Ill u:) U1 attendance reh as if we HOME Conbnued from A5 can't see d1r1 on tht· surf,1te of the carpet. it's there. You urn'1 over-vacuum. Wlwn <;pill., and spot!> occur act quickJy. H the spill is liquid, blot with a wh11e paper towel or clean duth. If the mess is solid, <,coop 11 up with a knife or <,poo11 Different stain\ rt•411rre different "pollon'>." fhe cleanjng !tequeme ,., important, '>O uw produ1 I\ In the order h!tted. Sort drink.-,: cold watN and clear di!th-washing liquid or detergent powder. Ink (felt 1ipJ: warm waler, dc1ergen1 i.olu1ion and clear nail poli\h rcmove1 (preferably acetone) Datty Pilot Molly, Debbie, James and Jack Dign~n of Costa Mesa went sledding in the High Tatras of Slovakia. ourselves might have become statues of ice hy the end of the masc;, especially ~hen we were told it got down 10 15 degrees below zero. (We later lound ourselves que!tllomng this theory when we Vlsilt·u churche1> of simile.tr vin 1age in other towns when· heat wa~ turned on.) Our hosts took U'i 10 vi-;i1 J num ber of 1111errc;11ng towns. Levoca was a mf'd1eval royal "free town" that W<" an importan1 trading.· 111cr on thl' route betwt>en I ltmgat) and Poland. St Jakub\ dum h 1lwre hou~eo; the lari::e!>l wood laf\l'tl ahar in the world S0111(·hoh, 1111, .J1ar wa-, I r•11i-.p1n1 1·d dllU d1!tpla yed at thr I •167 World., Fair m Mo111rt'al We ·11 .. 0 we111 •11 1h1 '>•Ir ol Omcola11· dt•terg1 nl '>nlu1111n ammor11.1 -,11l111io11 I 1abft•,poo11 11 d1·,1 Jn11110111c1 10 112 l lip W•llt·rl. V11wgar 'olttllUll (I /"I l lit ,.!lilt v1m•g.t1 and :.:n tup ''"'''' 1 \'\1111t• ab'>w h1·111 powc.lt-r ball or 1.olt I. ~1Jlu \1 ,1ll'r. dl.• ... 11111.111 Owwing i.:um 11'>1' • frl'l'/ing agt'nt !like 1l l· t 11lw 111 .1 pla'>llt b.ii.:J. pick or '>CftlJW .. n j.{UOI 11w a dry d•·•111111g .. olwn1 hh· I urhonJ or I 1wr1,11w l'.unt lmll alu>hul or ITll'lh) lilted <.pirii... 11111wr.1l 1111 p1•n111w. dry 1 lt•ant11g -,nf\1°111, d1·1t·rgl'nl ... olu11un l'a1111 ll.111•\) u1ld watt'r. th.•111 gt•nl <,111 1111111. dry-dl-a11111g -..11\1•111 Ule<t1 h 1 old water 111° 11w11.1 .. 11lt111011 If vn11'ro •1 1 h1111111 at ,ht' lhlHl~llt '' 1t•lll)! 1111" ·rn1r-.1·h '" • ·• the famous Spis Castle, one of 1he largest in Furope. The village of Pribylina is comprised of early settlers' homes that had heen relocated from all over the t ountry. Dressed in early Slovakian clothing, craftspeople demonstrate skills or long ago. Another day was spent sledding 111 the I ligh Tatra Mountains - rold but exhiJarating1 We would enjoy gomg to "lovakia aga111, in the spring or ,ummer. when we could visit plJcl'<o 1hat weren't accessible hccduc;e of the weather \u 11'-tomed 10 living in ""uthem Caltforma. we found our ~elvt'~ Md11na1ely • haUenged" on this trip! • DEBBIE DIGNAN i!> a Costa Mesa es1dent 4-hOrtl'lll Wool., of New Zealand mctk1·-, ,1 1 Mf>l'I -,pol rC'moval kit 1hc11 111.1kt·' tough jobs simple 111 111.111.1g1· 11. fJll, 1ts_go1 pri· 11111hh'llt'<I. 111d1v1dually JMl k.agl'U tarpt'I tlt•aning WIJ>l'' .. I low 1'<1'-Y IS that? I Vl'rV bu .. y frrn11ly "an uc;e a hl1lt• 1·x1r,1 ht'lp 1\-. I IYfll' 1h1., column, the \11ung1·-,1 ha' admitted 10 a tea pJrl\. a111dl·n1 Cirt·en C..atorade on tht' 1 Jrp1•1 m hf'r room She 1., 111 \101.11101111r Mo1her Codi:' '\o <19 I 1r'1 1h1· tarpt'I, then 1he ktlurt• It\ tinw for a Iii Lie 1 .rr1w1 111ag11 You tdn find the ~11 .. .inJ 111~ guru at Hemphill\ "'' I 71h Mrt•et 111 Costa Mesa. KAREN WIGHT 1~ d Newport 8e<11ti rrs1dan1 Her column runs -i;iturdavs THE MEANING OF NUMBER. ONE. WE HA VE A FEW REMAINING A ZURE SE RIES PRODUCED AT CR.EWE WHEN O NLY THE FINEST MOTOR.CARS IN THE WORLD WILL CX..1. AVAILAl1U: 2001 SERAPH, PARK WARD Bl o\C"-/81 ·\O. (X117569) 2002 CORN ICHE II BLACK SAPPI URI:' /MAGNOUA<X020X>) 2001 AZURE MULLINER RTICA/COTSW()U) ( 2002 AZ\JRE FORAN APPOINTMENT MIKE BURGER SALES MJ\NACER SILVER PEARl./STRATOS ()(01010) 2002AZ\JRE P'EACOCI</ MACNOllA (XOUIJ) 2003 ARNACE R DLAO</BlACK (X09304) 2003 ARNA CE T AKI1CA/STRA1 a;()( PREOWNED 1998AZURb 81..ACK/PAROiMENT - 2000ARNACE Bl.ACK/ OOTSWolD ( l918AZURI! Bl.A.Ck/ Bl.ACK (X6 I ~Pilot ONGOING • Send ONGOING it11mS40 the Daily Pilot, 330 W. Bay St .• Costa Mesa, CA 92627; by fax to (949) 646-4170; or by calling (949) 574-4298. Include me time, date and location of thct ev1nt, as well as a contact phone nUfnber. A complete listing is available at www.dailypilot.com. r..n. are Invited to drop by the citr of Costa Mesa Recreation Center from 2 to 6 p.m . M ondav through Friday for indoor and o~door sports and activities The Center is at 1860 Anaheim Ave. For m ore Information. call (714) 327-7560. The Newport Beach City Hall is ~isplaylng watercolor paintings by Juan Casado, Ned Parsons, Raymond Otis and Jim Teegarden through March 28 at 3300 Newport Blvd. For more information, call (949) 717-3870. The A ssn. of Business Servic:es hosts a networking meeting that deals with education connections from 6 to 8:30 p.m. on the second Tuesday of every month at the Holiday Inn at 3131 Bristol St.. Costa M esa. For more information. call (949) 805-0011. The Newport Beach Public library hosts an hour of stories and crafts tor children in kindergarten through the second grade at the Corona del Mar branch from 3 to 4 p.m. Tuesdays The library is at 420 M arigold Ave. For more information. call (949) 717-3800. fTee tours of the Orange County Performing Arts Center take guests to the dressing rooms, performer's lounge, badcstage and on stage at 10:30 a.m. every Wednesday and Saturday at 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. Group tours can be held by special arrangement. For more information, call (714) 556-ARTS. ext. 833. CHECK Continued from A5 ostensibly to make amencb. ln a fast-moving plot, the trio outsmarts a murderer. avenges the cad who beoayed them and musters the patience lo reunite their parents. The Romance Writers included CENTER Continued from A5 Various pieces were imaginatively presen ted, allowing the audience to enjoy every aspect of the work. Bright colors. elegant angles and effortful masterpieces caught the eyes of all who wondered through the rough showcase space. A variety of dimensions were represented and guest'> of the show stared intently at their favorite work. obviously struck The Newport BNCh N.wcomen Club holds a general meeting on the third Wednesday of every month. The organization is open to all women residents in Newport Beach who have lived in the area fewer than five years. For more information, call (949) 645-9922, or visit newcomers·n8wportbeach.org. Oasis Senior Cen18r holds a pancake breakfast from 7:30 to 10 a.m . on the second Saturday of every month. Breakfast includes pancakes, sausagei coffee and orange juice for $3, $1 for children. The center 1s a1 800 Marguerite, Corona del Mar. For more information, call (949) 644-3244. Macy's South Coast Plaza presents "Workshop ' Wednesdays: A Hands-on Cooking Class Program# hosted by chef Alexx Guevara. The class is held from 6 to 7:30 p.m . Wednesdays at 3333 Bristol St, Costa Mesa. The cost, including materials, is $30. To reserve a spot, call (818) 994-5075. Yoga and rhythm, "Yogarhythmics" combines yoga, dance and fun. The class is held from 4:30 to 5:45 p.m . Tuesdays at 2850 Mesa Verde Drive East, Suite 111, Costa Mesa. For more information, call (714) 754-7399. The Newport Harbor Nautical Museum offers the exhibit "Your Majesty, There Is No Second: The America's Cup 1851·2003" through April 30. The museum 1s at 151 E. Pacific Coast Highway, Newport Beach. Free admission. For more information, call (949) 673-7863. Interfaith couples with one Jewish partner are invited to participate in a d1scuss1on group at the Jewish Family Service of Orange County office The group Is geared toward dealing with issues between interfaith couples. such as raising children. Jennifer Crusie on their Li.st. ln "Faking lt." her newest caper. e'(eryonc's pretending to be someo ne else-including vudka·<>willing m atriarch (,we n . split personality '>!Ster Eve. and art forger filda, the youngest daughter, whose chance encounter in a clo.,ct with a sexy con m a n leads to mad cap mayhem in a by the work of an bf>fore them. Strom ..aid she got Uu~ idea for a gallery when she heard the Trilogy Playhoui.e had mysteriously disappeared in December. She contacted the management at the Uib and asked if she could use the theater space for her display. The old Trilogy '>pace was not available. but t.he Anti-Ma ll officials. who have a h15tory of suppo11111g local art, offered the space at the Camp. Shaheen Sadeghi. owner of the Lab Anti-Mall. said hi!> company "The Art of Making Pizza11 WE DELIVER NIGHTLY 5 -9PM NEWPORT llAOI CClAOliA Da. MAA iBTAL COVE WNADE 3423 'AA l.O) 3601 E lllAST 1-fGmAY 7955 E lllAST 1-0fNAY Mt.723.0701 Ml.175.4100 Mt.715.1117 FAX Mt.723.5147 FAX Mt.17!5.2216 FAX 141.715.1111 ------------1 $3DFF FREE I • LARGE PIZZA SMALL SALAD I • BUY ANY MEDIUM PIZZA & I I . -GET A SMALL SALAD OF I YOUR CHOICE FREE! I touPoN NOT VAUO IMTl-4 ANV On.ER OFF£R.'SPE04L PARTIO<>ATING 5TO'EB I ONL v UMrT ONE CC>..PClN PEP Ol=IOER SALES TAX MAY APPl.V MUST MENllCJN COJf'ON AT TIME OF CROEI:! .. CC>..PClN EXPW'!ES ~~ 28, 2CXX3 • ---------------SUNMIST 50% OFF l st Session $15 Value observing holidays. symbols in the home and relationships with extended families. The cost for three sessions is $45 per couple. Preregistration is required. Call to schedule date and time. The office is at 250 E. Baker St, Suite G, Costa Mesa. (714) 445-4950. Women 50 and older ca.n join a discussion group coordinated by Jewish Family Services to address issues such as anxiety, depression, relationships, loneliness and family. The group meets from 10 to 11 :30 a.m. Mondays at the agency offices. 250 E. Baker St., Suite G, Costa Mesa. Preregistration required. (714) 445-4950. Friends of the Newport Beach Public library Used Book Sto re are asking for patrons to donate books t o replenish the dwindling stodc. Books may be left at any of the three b ranch libraries -Balboa, M ariners, or Corona del M ar -or in the book closet next to the Friends Book · Store, at 1000 Avocado Ave .• Newport Beach. All hardcover and paperbadc donations, with the exception of magazines and law books, will be accepted and are tax deductible. (949) 759·9667. The Braille Institute off9rs free computer classes to people with fading vision who have difficulty seeing the computer screen. The Oasis Center at 800 Marguerite Ave., Corona del Mar, offers six sessions. Call to sign up for classes. (714) 821-5000. A spiritual care class meets at 7:15 p.m . Wednesdays at 3400 Irvine Ave .• Suite 114. Newport Beach. Call to reserve a seat. (949) 263-1462 . The Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce hosts networking luncheon meetings Wednesdays from 11:45 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Costa M esa Country Club. The cost is $14. The club is at 1701 laugh-out-loud read. When all this brealhJess romance leaves you ready to m ltivate something real, checlc out Judith Viorst's "Grown-Up Mani.age." In her newest volume. the best-selling author provides a synthesis of research, case studies and personal counsel about everything nuptial As insurance that you make 1110 your next takes pride in w.ing it!. available space as a venue for local arru>t!.. His company promotes a campajgn called Made in Costa Mesa to encourage city artists to present their products. ~trom is an abstract artist who u.sually works with oil paints and sticks. Her latest project is a Golf Course Drive, Costa M aa (714) 885-9090. A brain tumor eupport gn>up meets the first and third Thursdays of each month from 7 to 8:30 p.m. at the Hoag Cancer Center at Hoag Hospital, 1 Hoag Drive, Newport Beach, Free. Regjstration not reqwred. The group Is designed to help patients and their families understand and cope with the illness. (949) 574-6232. St. Andrew's Presbyterian Churdl hosts a m~ntal illness support group from 6:30 to 8 p.m. Sundays in Oierenfield Hall C at 600 St. Andrews Road, Newport Beach. (949) 574-2236. The Jewish Family Service of Orange County sponsor.s a discussion group for ach.Jlt children and their parents from 6 to 7 p.m. two Tuesdays a month at the Jewish Family Service office at 250 E. Baker St., Suite G. Costa M esa. $10 per person. per session. Preregistration required. (714) 445-4950. The Jewish Family S8f')lice of Orange County has a weekly parenting support group. Parents learn strategies for successful parenting and for dealing with the feelings and behavior of their children. The group meets from 10 to 11 :30 a.m. Mondays at the Jewish Family Service office at 250 E. Baker St .. Suite G. Costa Mesa The group will cover managing anger, anxiety and peer pressure children experience. Preregistration required. (714) 445-4950 The Costa Mesa Senior Center has ballroom dancing with live music from the Costa Mesa Music Makers from 7:30 to 10:30 p.m . every Tuesday night at 695 W 19th St .• Costa Mesa. $4 (949) 548-3884. Jewish Family Service of Orange County sponsors an ongoing anniver..ary, th1'> could be tht' be,t addmon to your "must read' list. • CHECK rr Ol/T IS wrrtten by the staff of the Newpon Beacti Public Library This week's column 1s by Melissa Adams 1n collaboration with Claudia Peterman All trtles may be reserved from home or office computers by accessing the catalog at www. newportbeadlltbrary org M.>ne!) of red painung~ de.signed to create an atrr10'>phert ui.ing the color. She mixes '>hader-. of red with splashes of oranges and yeUows to ad som e texture and depth to her piece!.. Strom likened her conceptual an to scribbling and then coloring over it. • Using the Latest Copying Technology • 600dpl Xerox Digital Output • Quality Color Coples .39~ • B&W Coples Small and large Volwne • laminating • Folding • Cutting • Stapling • Binding • Rubber Stamps ~ BLUEPRINTING • Large Vellums • Cad Plotting • Lg. Bond Coples E-mail your plot files to us at lagunaprint@earthlink.net Pick up & Delivery • Fast Quality Service Proudly Senring You Since 1984 11~· .Jtr,,.,, 'l;,.,.,,ip 1/,;;,b/,JI ~1.,lulirnJ .~.' Now Open Saturdays LagunaPrint I 1 ·,' c '''"1 11"' 1 ... 11111.1 Bc·,,. Ii (949) 497-6016 loH111111,pt1t1f t 1 t.'~S'\ < ttlU ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, • HARDWOOO •LAMINATES • CARPET • CERAMIC TU • VINYi. FLOORING ·~~!!9 l •fw@e4i!i SOtARIAN ~Al..\[Q!f 3/411 SOU> EXOTIC DUPONT HARDWOOD STAINMASTEA *449 -*1~~ from t11• TiaYertine 1s-x 1s• ........................ -................................ U eqt c.wrlc:: Tile ................... :, ................................. ~M u 11:tl l.a1*late ~ ........................... ._ ......... , ......... 111111c1a U 1111 . -,.., healing support group for the chronically ill. The purpose is to provide participants with · emotional and &p1ntual support to manage Illness and its consequences, The group meets at 7 p.m . Thursdays at the JeYw'lsh Family Service office at 250 E. Baker St., Costa Mesa. Attendance is free, but registration 1s required (714) 445-4950. Scrabble Club No. 350 mfftl from 6 to 10 p.m. Thursdays at Borders Books, Music & Cafe at South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bear St in Costa Mesa $3. New players are welcome. (949) 206 9822 The Coin and Stamp Club meets from 1 to 3 p.m. Mondays at the Oasis Senior Center. New members interested in trading, buying 11nd selling stamps and coins a're being sought to 101n these informal meetings There are no fees required (S49) 644-3244 Jewish Family Service offers ongoing bereavement support groups for adults at all stages of loss. Group members share experiences. hear how others deal with grief, receive support and learn ways to cope with sadness and loss. One group meets at 7 pm. Tuesdays at Beth Jacob in Irvine. The second group meets at 10 a.m. Tuesdays at Temple Judea Car Accident? Fn:e Community \ervtee Report reveah what mo~t 1murance companies don't want YOU to know~ To receive your tree cop\ m thr mail within 18 hour\. tall the toll- frer 2'1-hour recorded mrnage at 1-800-7074172. The c.all anJ the report i5 free co the tlm ..,~ caller\. CJ.ii the 24 hour reLorded me\~Jge today' Sonday. f ebrudry I b ?0(13 A7 m Laguna Hills. The third yroup meets at 1 p.m. Thursdays at the Ezra Center in Anaheim hee, but advance registration 1s required (714) 445-4950 J.wish Family Service of Orange County provides a support and dtSCUSS1on group for persons recovenng from dlildhood ur teenage sexual abuse The group meets from 8 to 9:30 p m. Tuesdays at 250 E. Baker Sr . Costa M esa. Advance registration 1s required 1714) 445-4960 Two-hour kayak tours wrth a I rained ndturalii.t ljU•de ore offered di 10 a m SundoY'> r. ..1m the N ewport Dunes W.uer1ron1. Resort The resort is <ll 1131 Bad< Bay Dnve. Newport Beacti $20, or $10 for California Wtldl1fe Campaign and Newpo rt Bay Naturalrsts and Friends members 1949) 729 n 50 A. yoga and dance class is held from 4 30 to 5 45 p 1T' Tuesd~s at the Center for Sµmtual Discover.,, 2850 Mesa Verde Drive East, Su1 1e 111. Coi.•o M esa (714J 754 B99 ~ALDEN 'S r:1.00R Cm1R1'lc; . .\..-..:n n · .. 10"1 W 1'\P1'\X l 11\ rRI'' .- 1663 Placentia, Costa Mesa 949-646-4838 ~as .......... , .. , Harbor Eastt>luff A~rsen Lincoln Nitwport V1t.w COQSf Elvnentory Schools Hosted t1y Leigh and Lucy Steinberg Feat-urine gcli<S. Jo.mAo. 'Ju.Lea 10K Run/W•lk 5K RunlW•lk &Youth ~c;n IC l»m Toddler Trot v •(.•I 'tt f :Thaw to our Spon.of"9: f'tttchfr Jonti Mntorg" F.Mtd.s Thulrcs Wtlls hrgo ~I Laite Aq>i,, OMJ> ~ily Pltot Fash n I 111\J COX Commun tlOnJ OC F'am1ly KABC Crea & Robyn Most OC Mttl'O .,..~ .. ,-.~ Ths lMnt Co"1*'Y rtmcnt ~unit1 -v~::~~ A8 Sunday, February 16, 2003 Dffl Pilot 'I FORUM ~ HOW TO GET PUBLISHED -l..ettwa: Mail to Editorial Page Editor S.J. Cahn at the Dally Pilot 330 W. Bay St .• Costa Mesa. CA 92627 •~Hotline: Call (949) 642~ Fax: Send~~~ ~1~~ le~ E-maH:Send to dallypilot@latlmfJS.com •All comtSpondence must lndude full name. hometown and phone number (for verification purposes). The Pilot reserves the right to edrt all submlas nty EDITORIALS Breathe new life into Mariner's Mile, Old Newport M ariner's Mile and its environs have for some time now been a _ source of 1 msrernacion for city official . lhat wouldn't be such a problem except that thb Coast Highway strip of restauran1s, boat operators, car dealerships and clothing stores is probably one of the most visible in town. Bui its potentiaJ has seemed to elude it over the years. Businesses come and bu.,inesses go. Grand ideas are either wildly successful or go down in a blaze of bankruptcy. II ha~ aJI left the area longing for ... iability and a sense of pu1 po.,e. \dd tu the mix the nearby ... 111p of aging busines::.c::. on Old N1•wpor1 Boulevard and you IMV(' a pretty large plate to wdJe. I hen add to the mix newly c•ll'cted Councilman Don Webb, \\ho repre~ents the district that ~IJnncr' Mile and Old Newport Boulc•vard occupy, and you have tlH recipe for getting ~omcthi ng do11c. A recipe that starts wi1h a h.itc h of baby back ribs. Webb and other city officials a1 .plauded the new::. that the property that once housed the shuttered Aysia 101 restaurant on Mariner's Mile will soon host a Tony Roma's rib eatery and Bennigan's Irish pub. These popuJar eateries will be a nice replacement to the abandoned Aysia 101 site and will m ost likely provide that needed stability. But stability isn't necessarily the problem around the corner at Old Newport Boulevard. Here, the strip of restaurants, a ntique shops and office buildings are in dire need of a makeover. But to get there, the merchants and businesses on that road that once was the main entrance to town must come to consensus. Let's get the de bate started. The ideas for that area are endless. Perhaps combine Mariner's Mile and Old Newport for a grand promenade of restaurants and shops. Either way, what is needed is a vision for the future, a plan to end the endless cycle of failed businesses. We urge Webb and his council coUeagues to make this a top prio rity in the coming m onths and ensure that Mariner's Mile becomes a vibrant business district once again . Newport Harbor's heart goes long way N cwport Harbor High has plenty of heart to go around. About 30 students at the .,chool started a Make·A·Wish Oub in October that raises funds for children suffering from a disease. Little did they know that they'd soon help Hannah Whitfield , a Newport Beach 7-year-old whose sister JiUianne was among the group's members. More than a week ago, the club greeted Hannah, who is being treated for leukemia, to an assembly where she not only learned that her wish to go on a Disney cruise was granted, but where other students performed fo r her. From cheerleader; to break dancers and the dance team . it was aJI about Hannah, whose appreciation w(l!) evident in her smiling face. But while Hannah had a wish that came true, the entire high school has another wish in mind this month -that one of its longtime teachers, Jerry Tagami, recovers from a brain aneurysm he suffered. The 59-year-old Tagami was rushed to Hoag HospitaJ and. not long after, his 'itudents, too, rushed to the hospitaJ to visit him at his bedside. The 31-year Newport Harbor I Ligh English and film teacher has plenty of support in the form of family, friends and the entire school. Joe Robinson. a fellow Newport Harbor High teacher and longtime friend, said it best. "I told my students today .. in a world that's measured in dollars, here's a man that chose ... a life of a teacher, where you don't make a lot of mo ney, but you can make a difference in the world. At present, he's the richest man in Newport." It's only appropriate that the students' wish shouJd come true since they unselfishly granted another wish. The high school really does have a huge heart and we encourage the students to continue their giving ways. They. too, can truly make a difference. THE LAST WORD High hopes for Estancia ' 'I 've always believed footbaJJ is a game that should be fun, but It' m ore fun when you win.,. And with that. new EstAnda High School football coach Craig Fertig raised the bar higher than players over the last two season, have been used to. If they win more than one game this fall, they'll top the win total over those two years -one. The former USC tant and Oregon State head coach automatically brin somethlng to th team: hope -a hope for a wtnnlng season that was far out of reach fn ns past. There's no doubt that Estancia players will look forward to playing under Fertig more than they did under fo rmer coach Jay Noonan. Fertig has the blg league experience -he scouted for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and coached in the now-defunct World Football J..eque -that the players need If they have any chance of movtn,g on to college ball. Perhaps F.stancia will top rtvaJ Costa Mesa High to win the BattJ of the Bell thb year. tt hasn't happened l1nc:e 2000, but It' definitely not out of the q tk>n this time around. - BOLTON I Orange Coast College Sp-jng Break · 03 ... ' SOUNDING BOARD I• Council should work for residents ... • I .. By Sendra Genis Elsewhere. a commissioner endorsed gotten bogged down fo r months in the wrong cand.Jdat.e for a state continued, repetitive d.Jscbsslons of T rad.Jtionally, in Costa Mesa. ofilce. She, too, was yanked. relatively minor issues. They decide, commission applicants have Commission seats are used not undeclde and redecide bsues over been interviewed by the City Just to reward past supporters, but to and over, from wnlng mauers to Council as a whole and chosen by ensure ongoing fealty of political public Improvements. Now. they wte of the entire council Past laclceys. And that Is most definitely don't even want to commit to councils experimented with various noc how it shouJd be. commission nppomtments for any means of ranking candidates, This proposal is a bad Idea in and fixed time. Each council member weighted voting, etc., but it was or itself. However, beyond that. It's couJd rededde every couple or '• '• always a group project. symptomatic of larger problems weeks. ., In the early 1990s, we sought plaguing recent Costa Mesa councili. Finally. lhis/oroposal is just . candidates who were capable and First, the council seems unwilling another step own a disturbing path I interested in seYVfng the city. We or unable to work as a team, not just toward baclcroom politics ln the dty tried to create a balance with to appolnt various cornmissk>ns 1n a of Cosca Mesa. Whethtr ha ' •• commissioners from various parta or balanced matter, but in other discussion of the Home Ranch • the dty and with diverse strengths maners as well. That is not to say development agreement. spending ,,, and viewpoints. that all issues should be settled of the Segerstrom educadon •• For example, when wtanlmo~ endowment. or selection of Councilwoman Ubby Cowan was H~r. the coundl should study commissioners, it looks as If It~ the selected as a planning the issues together-without setting goal of some folb al City Hall to . . commissioner. It was because. 1n her a stopwatch. deliberate logether and keep the public out SomedlMs, they interview, she appeared to be bright. then move on. Together. seem to put more en~ into ttying knowledgeable about Costa Mesa Several council members were to evade open meeting laws than and Interested in is.mes facltlg wiIUng tO meet together to evaluate trying to comply. .. different parts of the city. And that is commission applicants, but othe~ Responding to those who how It sbouJd be. were not, wishing lnstead to carry on suggested the round! Interview Because selection was conducted privately. Too often, this is the case. commission applicants In an open by the City Council as a group, the . In addition, clisagJeements on one forum, Cowan ::feressed her desire . process wu open to the public, issue frequently splll aver ln(o for private lnt ewa. stating. "The ;\ though fe\t resJderus eYet actually acrlmooy on another. public wiD find out 1000 motigh.. • showed up. StW, the public had the Hand 1n glove with th.ls problem ls What a &bOckin display of cootanpc opportunity to observe and the scramble for more powt:r. What ror the pubUc. comment upon the proceed.inp. better way to enhance your poower It'' time our City Council memben And that is how it should be. too. than to pass out commission eeats as set aside any persona! di.t[erences ..,. Now. It's proposed that each political plums. to be grabbed back and ambitions to wo~ together tor ,, council member independently at the first sign or disloyalty? the public, In public~. We have select a comm.lasioner to serve at the Recent councils have also had e one new council member and a will of that coundl member. That tendency to micromanage, couple of relatively oew members WBYt ff they vote ~wrong/' they'll be reexamining. overruling or who are Just coming lnto their own removed. As practiced in other ddes, modifying a relatively Wgh on the council I hope they will be •at·will,. appointments are used to proportion of commJsslon dccl6lons. able to build a team with the othet control mo~ than Just commission Now. the council won't even have to councU members and the public so \IO wait until after the commission we can an move rorwan1, toaetbcr. to One loeal plannihg com.missioner meeting to start eecond gu ing tadr.Je the problems fadng our dt}( mentioned he wu tbinling of com.m.iS&lon votes. They'll be able to rwUtlng for City Council. He give ot'ders 1n advance. •SANDRA GEMS la a fonner Co.ta yanked off the coQUDiasion. Further, the council has repeatedly M ... mayor and oourlcll member. , HOW TO CONTACT YOUR REPRESENTATIVES crrv Of COSTA MESA Costa M..a City Hall, n Fair Drive. Costa Mesa, CA 92626, (714) 754-5223 Mayor: Karen Robinson COlanda: Libby Cowan. Allan Manaoor, Gary M onahan and Chris Steel crrv Of NEWPORT BEACH Newport Beach City Hall, 3300 Newport Blvd., Newport Beadl, CA 92663, (949) 644-3309 M.yor. Steve Bromberg Coundl: Gary Adams, John Heffeman, Olde Nichol•, Gary Proctor, Tod Ridgeway end Don Webb COAST COMMUNfTY COLLEGE DtSTRtCT Ofstl1ct Office: 1370 Adam• Ave .. Costa Meu, CA 92826, (714) 432-5898 Chenoetlof: Wiiiiam M. Vega Boerd: PrMldent Paul Bt~r. Viet Pr9aldent AtTnendo Ruiz. George Brown, Jeny ~tt•nM>n and Wen.t' G. Howlld; student ltUltM Derek Sheffy ,._ORT~ UNFED SCHOOL DISTMCT Dfstr1ct <>fib: a..A S..r St., Cotti Board: President Martha Fluor, Vice President Dana Black, Cleric Serene Stokes. David Brooks, Tom Egan. Judy Franco and Linda Sneen MESA CONSOLIDATED WATER DISTRICT 1965 PtacentJa Ave .. Costa Mesa. CA 92627.(949)631-1200 Board: President Jim Atkinson, Vice President Mike Healey, Trudy Ohlig-Ha11,· Fred Bodtmiller and Paul E. Shoenberger COSTA MESA SAHfTARY DISTRICT P.O. Box 1200, Costa Mesa, CA 92628-1200, (714) 764-6043 Boerd: Pnlaident Arlene Sdlat.r. Jim f9nyman, Art Perry, Greg Woodside and Dan Worthington ORANGE COUNTY BOARD OF EDUCATION 200 K.elmus Drive, P.O. Box 9050, Coate Mae, CA 92628-9050, (714) 966-4000 Ellnbeth 0 . Ptl"tttr, m.mbtt, TruttM ArN 6, Coste M ... , Newport BNd'I ~COUNTY IOMD OF llRIMSORS Hett Of Admlnl9ttwdon, 10 CMc Center MMe, CA t2e21, (714) 424-8000 ... I 11••....-.e: Robert Bemot • P1Re. s.nte Ant, CA 92101 ... (, • Jim Silva. 2nd District (Costa Mesa, Newport Beach), (714) 834-3220 • Thomas Wilson, 6th District (Newport Coast), (714) 834-3560 ORANGE COUNTY FAIR 88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa, CA 92626, (714) 708-FAIR Board: President Ruben A Smith, Vice President Patricle Velasquez. Randy Smith, Emily Sanford, ~gy Heidi, James Berktt, Deborah Cerone, leaUe A. Ray and Frank Barbaro STATE SENATE Aou Johnaon (R), 35th District, 18652 M acArthur BNd., Suite 395, Irvine, CA 92716, (949) 833"°180; fex: (949) 833-0698; Pren Secretary PetJoyoa, 19181 sn.1200 STATE ASSE-.Y John Campbell (R), 70th Ofstrict, Stet• ' 11 Ctpltol. Secntmento, CA86814, (816) 319-2070 E·mail: dl«rlt:f10•.-.mbfY.caoov '11 Kan Maddow tR), eem Ohlcrk:t. Statit '., Ctpltol, s.cr.m.nto, CA IAW, (918) t.: 1 (918)31~ • Or loc:ll offtot It 12815 Mein St., Sutt. 100, Gerdef\ GRM 82840; (7t4) S39-1- BIO Ae-:58 Residence: Coto de Caza for 10 years Position: Chair of Orange County Performing Arts Center board, former chair of South Coast Repenory board Occupetion: Chairman and Chief Executive of Emulex 1n Costa Mesa Ectuc.tion: Bachelor's in social sciences from Central Washington State University; master's of business from Seattle University '-mily: Wife of 20 years Daranne, daughter Courtney, 16 Community MtVic:e: Srts on six nonprofit boards, incl uding The Center; South Coast Rep; MIND Institute. Protect Tomorrow, Cha pman Universrty Hobbies: Nonprofit work keeps him busy THE EXPANSION 'We had a terrific gro undbreaking a week ago and we ·11 start construction on that project over th e next several week s. And it's exciting to get this thing rea lly rolling even th ough we won 't officially op en until 2006. These things take a while, but it was exciting for m e to attend th e groundbreaking. I think it's really terrific f or Orange County.' F O R UM Bringing forth results .J With Emulex Chairman and Chief Executive Pa ul Fo lino's help, both the Performing Arts Ce nter and SCR are seeing drea m s come true T he Orange County Performing Arts Center broke ground Feb. 6, among about 2,000 thrilled spectators, dancing bulldozers and eye·catching fireworks, on a $200-million expansion that will result in a new 2,000-seat concen hall and 500-seat music theater. Paul Folino, the chainnan and chief executive of Costa Mesa-~ EmuJex. now leads The Center's board, just as he previously did for South Coast Repertory, to which he abo donated $10 million toward its expansion and outreach programs. On Thursday, City Editor James Meter visited Folino in his EmuJex office to discuss The Center's expansion. his interest in the artS and his company's relocation to the Home Ranch 5ite later this year. What sparked your Interest In the arts? ' \\eU. tt gilt"> way. way back. You know, I'm a World War II baby hc>0mer, born tn I ~5. and my early childhood wd.!i growmg up m central "eattJe So. U1 my early years, I grew up in a how..ing pm1ect in Seattle. When I wru. about 8 or 9 years old. I Wd'> on one of U!o'il' education outrt'<>ch program., where they're bu .. mg kJd, from the I~ fortunaw path of town 11110 downtown SE.>attle 10 M.'t:' live pro<lul-Uon and that Wcb my first ~Ufl' to live pmducoon:. of the aru.. really. It was anualfy my fir..t expo!>ure to kid'> m other part\ of the city. 100. who hJd dtffe~nt ltfe-.tylt."> than I wa..<, growmg up under thl· '>t,:t>Nri1111 lh1'411t-r IO t"Xpal\d what M'ri.> d1m1g tht·n· toda)' I.ht' exparu.ion ol firoad\>\<-..i} d.u11 t' opt-m, t'lC.. It gi~ u. .. tt dianu· 111 contmut" to bnng the best of tht' be-.t into I h'ange < ,ow11y and 11 ..J."' give-. ll\ dll opponwuty u1 • .. umt.• of tho..e venut.., .111 gt-I fll'>t run producnon\. )Ntud1 we can't do nght n<J\~ be<.aU"-' wt· llL'I don\ have tJw availabtlll} •11 llmt' -.kit\ to en.Wit· U.'> to do that Wowdl1'1 11 ht• >-,'Teat 11 wt' wuld bnng fir.I run BroJd\"a~ pnxluc uon., 10 C >r,mgc C 011111 \ for J lungt•r nui dfld wouldnt 11 !>1· gl'l'Jt to t'>.f)dlld our olknn~<. 111 orwrd and diim:.e and WlJllll th<it '>Ide of tlw t-tjUJt1011 a.c, well And }OU nl:"ed h•1lh ul thl'lll to t'Xp.t.nd the t'dUlJUOn Olllrt'ill h progrdln You've gtven millions of dollars and count.less ho~ to both South ~ Rep and The Center. Do you think there will ever come a point where yutlll say. "~rry. I'm spent1" \\ell I m .1 pi111 of llw c >r<ingt' < ~ Hlllr} < '111UTIUllll\ ( )rJJlgt' ( JJll/11\-' J gJ't'dt plJu· lo rJt..,_, 1 f<imd'f I hJ\t' anothn thrt't' vear. d' <1 lxklld nwmllt:r o.11 '-.c R thl'\ r11tatt tht·ir ho..inl member' t'\C'I"\ ntnt• Vl·.ir. -..,., I'll hnt.'>h oll rny tl'm1 tht·rt' .u1d leave 11 111 wry g<xKf lwu.t-. Inn \\1•1.,,, t'> llw t urrent pn..,rdcn1 ii 1hc11 hodfd I It' rvplalt"tJ me. I h•, c1 gn-.11 1-(11\ <Jlld J gn.'itl leadt•r .md tht•\ 'n· l'\<'ll domg ht·m•t trxlav thJ.J1 \o\ hu1 I \o\ a' li•Jdmg that lx)ctfd C to. er .ii llw C .t•ntt'r, I \!' '1grwd up for lhn't' \ t.>df°'> J11t'tr hodftl I hair, '>t"r\f' thn·L· 'rl"df ll'mt'>. "o I m looklllg forward t11-.t•f'\1ng m\ thrt't' \1·3r wnn ~' \>\l'11 · '>l't' \\ht:rt· \'\l' R'' fn,111 llwn• Are there any other projects you'd want to take on? \\di. I m \l'I) .iu I\ t·f\ mvolwd .ti ~) that \\<LS my fir,1 t:Xp<l'>UfC lO II and l'w aJwii)" kept an mtere<.t u1 the arl-" from I.hat urne forth In h1¢1 '>t'huol I played ba..'>eball, baili-tball. foo1ball and all of thaL I actually ongmally went to school on a baskt'thall c;cl1ol.u-,h.ip, <,() I didn't '>pt>nd a 101 of ume 111 u1e cir1.'> 111 high ..chool But dfter I grc1duated. Jtld .....;.....;;;..-.:.. ______ _:::..=~;.;:...;--._.__~.::......,;=----' ,> < h.1pmJ.J1 .ind thl"'I h.t\ 1• .t fTldl'" 10 m11l11m pruje\1 e\p.111d111g lhl'.'tr liJm '4 h11ol and \\t 'e ra1'4't.i 1bou1 5111 r111lhon ul that I rn hc<idmg up uwt m coUege whent'Vcr then· \V-J.'> an oppo numty to '*'c 'il)rneuung in ~attJc. I .ilwcl)"> look advan~e or th.it So that\ when• the mtt.'l"l">I realh dl'\clopt.'tl I low long ago c:.Ud you get involved in South Coast Repertory? Ive been on that boanl about '>IX or ...even year... It\ one of thO'>C.' where I JOtned and !>aid "I'd love 101om. I do111 have a lot of ume f'U ~t lO the ba<.:kground, glad to help 1t finanaally • You land of learn about youn.elf .t$ you go. If I get mvolvt"d in a pn>Jt'<.1. 11'<, hard for me not to go full thronJe So very qwclJy, I got more actively mvolve<l 11111 and eventually became pn.">ident of the board of ln.L'>l~ there and the head 1>f the campaign to rru.se the S50 million to develop that enhanced facthty. Whal do you think The Center's expansion wm do ror Orange County and Costa Mesa as an arts hubf WeU. again, let's go back to SCH fur .i S('C()nd Look at SCR I thmk 1ts beyond anyone'<; expectatJons. ThlS project I think reinforced to Orange County what you can do when a group gets together to make something happen. 'That was a great experience and SCR's now the best center of its land in the UnJted State5 for its particular venue. When I was approached about joining lhe Performing Ans Center board and looked at what they wef't' planning to do. I felt the same way There was a great opponumty to ot"4le one or the finest centers of Its kind in the United States and as I got invotvl'd in that. I had to link SCR and the Perfomung Ans <:enter together as what a great thing for Orange County. And I approached It from a busin~ perspective. too. There are three reasons for me 10 get mvul'Yed. Om'. tht're\ lhl' l ultural ~pt.'< l. enhannng the l ltltuml il.'>fWt 1 lwr\', \\1uch h,1, \iilue m It' 1Mn nght llw ...C'{;ond on1• t'\ lht· t'tlu<:at1or1 .111d outreach progr.1111., that both till' Pcrlonmng An, ( t'lltt'r and ',( .ll h,1w \'v1u•n we nimplt.·le th1' f>IOJl't t. \'\l hJ\I' Ult.' .ih1Jll) to tuuth ..i.buut 5()(),(J()(l lid., ,, yi:ar through till' t'<.!Ul Jiii 111 outn•.tt h pmgr.uru. lhroui;1 lhc:· ( .l:nter And tJwn you throw m another 150.000 through SC R We haw the ab1h1y bt·t\\.l't'll tht">t' rwo aru. compleitl.., to toud1 b !O 7 millfon kids uvt.·r .i dN:Jdt· Tiwt' another rea'><m I got tn\olwd m that becau-,e I remember thl· unpact 11 had on me a-. a lod and newr would have had the opponurnty to do that without the outreach program And the third rea'on I go11mnhl'd wa., purely a hu'>llle....., rt'd\on. C )111• ol t.hl' big fhdlleng('"> 111 Orange Count\ Wl' haw a great chmdlt.'. 1t\ J weat plat l' lo h1,t•, hut it's al"'' one of tht• m<>'-l t•xpc.•n.,rve plan" tu live m the lJ .!'!. 'ic> when you'n• a company like rmulc·\. who' the \'\.'Oridwide markt·t ~an· leader ui our part1rnlar pu'(:l' of the bu'm~. you're aJwa)"> trymg to ret'TUJI the be<.l of the be<.t m the mdU'>U'y to 10111 your compan). \nd unte again. Or-.inge County L'>n't the 11.'<L\t expensive place 10 live Inert•, J great dunate, hut there m't'th to be other reasoru. for people to rnme 'uu need two thinW> 10 help nn the recruiting p~ over .md ahove 1u.'>t haVlllg a gre-.it company and a great market. and that 15 a 'itmng edutaonn.tl ~em, which we have. and you nt't'tJ to have a trong culruraJ ava1Jability because people want thmw. to do So SLll and the Performing Ans Center are extensions of that culruraJ cent{'r that providPS us with tool' that help us recnut people to Orange County Ir's not uncommon for me to take a gu~ to SCR or lhe Performing Arts Center as a gue<;t that I'm trying to l"l'CT'Ult to Orange County. lhat's hel~ So there's a business rea<,<m a.'> well. FROM THE NEWSROOM What plays woo.Id you like 10 <oee the Center and SCR bring to Costa Mesa? \\t·ll the\ re total" J1tl.-re111 k.11111' nf w1111l" what I likt· ah11ut '-' H '" <1' to1 u' un hnngrng Ot'\\ pl.t\">. \.\orld J>h'll\lt'l"l.._ 111Jh \>\ h.11 thl'\ n· null'tl frn \1 .111\ o nt' gl\l'n Ull 1l ...c H lid.\ .111~'\I\ here from 40 to 10 1 ornm1"1""' 11111 to playwn~l!. tu .~nil' Ill'\'\ V1<11r1..-, .tnd thetr g<>ctl I\ to hnng ,L, lllcill\ 111 lhO'>t' ..1.'> tht.'\ lafl. \.\1th quaJJI\ 10 'il11Jlh C .u<L'>t Hept>rtory and Unmgc C ..ount\ And for their efions in U1at tln'a, Ult'rl' .trt' J h.°'\'\. ruhv.er PrV..es <ind c;rgmlilJlll tlw.uer award'> undf>r thetr hdt-. f,,r dmng 1ust that. \\1tJ1 the l'itpansion ol ')( R. <Hll' of t!w WC'.11 advan14.'l"S Wl: haw and onl of the lcx11'>t.., n<M "m Ot."\'\ pl.t) dt"\C'lupnwnt lor young audtt-nCC'>. And th~· haw pl.1,wnghL., wmnu.-. .. mm>d to dr. t'lop hr.ind nt'\" pld)"> for yuungt·r audlt'Ol l" ln.u wa ... om· or the re.L'><>n' the bodfll \~a.., -.<> 'iuppomve u1a1 thmugh 1h1" t•xpcJ.m1on I ..tlwa~.,; ust• U1e wore!' h,lf(.fware and 'iOftw.in·. the u1eall'r' tht· h.1rdw..i.re, but the pruwdl'Tlmmg 1 ... tht ,uftware -lhdt ll wtlJ WV(' llS d th.Intl' Ill enhance tht.' '>Oftware COJllt'lll or the h.i.rdware and. \'£'!'\ <J'\on.I). \WU bt.• hnnging c;onw of th<N.' Ol>\\ pl<>\.' .1rm'' tht• fim.,h lmt• And th.it'' what n-all\ t•xntec. me about what !'-.< ·n ha., tlw 11pponW1lty to do Thert>'> no douht 111 m\ mmd owr th~ next fivt• to IO \t'·"'· tht·rl·ll be another fl"\, Pultuer Pnn..., lor 'llll1t' of thO'>t' JU'W plCl)" ...._,_'l.le O\Tr to tht• Perfonnmg Arts < er1trr. fhe Centt'f tSn't l".~noall\ .1 creator. they're J pre.entf'r I thmk tht.> e pan .. ion of Tht> Center oiler. us tlw opponun.irv to not onJ) expand the ')mphony and other venue. m thr nC'\" wmplex. with the Paafit Symphon) Orrhesrra being the re<Jdenl symphony, but 11 enables w. to expand becau<.<· \\'t'I'\' essen11ally at capaaty now And 11 gives us an opponurury by th.it relief valve 10 move the symphony aero"' the sueet. enhancing wha1 '"" tlo there. and at the same ame. 11 frtt.. up t ;1111paig11 lrtll\llllltf't• a.' \o\t'U Orn g<MI '' 1•r Ult' llt'\'.1 ft"' \I'd.I"> "10 rai't' Ult li11iil S.!11 nulhcm of tl1<1l ldl11pdl.~1l t<1 1 n·.i1r •Hlt' of tilt: !in<...,t film .,.huol' m tht' I lnrte<l '•all" n~t lll'rf' m our uwn ho.11 k\;mJ Ill < >rJ11ge I . .ount\ ii!> \>\di \\11dl l'\llll"> me 11 \llll thml ahout "-< H the l't•rtomung '\n.'> (..enter, ( h.i.pman·, 11lrn -.ch<Kll expan,mn. the wrnmnn thn·dd throughout all of tho'>t' " 111 ht• thl· \t f'\ bt."t a1 whJl Ull'\ lli mdt\1d11all\ \ci thc1t exntt"> mt'. It' tun ht•lflg cl pare of <,(Jnll'Ultng \\1\t'f't' \OU re ,IJuotJng 111 ht the ht..,t ·\nd Ul<l 1 h.i' rt'\\ctrd' of II' IJ\\1l \\1lt'n \'OU gt'I tho'>(' .tl ro'>.'> rhe fint'>h luw What more will fmulex be ablr to do that h can't do now with the ~ to Home Ranch? Hight°'""· IH· bt>t·n 111 thJ.i, fanltr. for JU'>l .t It'\\ month'>. fmulex 1i, m four d1fll•rt•nt bwldmic-m thi... rnmplex '>ptt·.1d out all ovt'r the place So 111 tht' LN four or fiH \ l'dJ">. \.\I' \'t' gone from Otlt' hlt·anon lo nCM four Ole goal w1th th1· n~ corporate ht>adquarter.. L\ 10 ){et t•wrvhod\ undt•r one roof 111 a campu.' t'll' mmmt'lll It., fLbl a more effit wnt \o\ .1\ to run \1>ur bU-"'1nt"-' 'tou lent.Mo tht old l 011ver.<1ttun of managing wtule w;tlkmg around. wtud1 l' J commm nldJWgemt•nt 'ryte ~ pn>ll\ hard ro do tht W3\ \.\l'n '>IJUC1Ured toda\. Jl1a1 pm1t'\.l., mCMng cilong. \.\t> hopt· tu ... 1.in mcMn>t m late next fall I wanted to 'tav in the Cc~ \iC!'a an•a It could h.ive been t"'cLSJer to m<1w 11110 t'Xl.<.tmg otlke space 'iOmeplare el"4.· tn Oran~ Counly. but I'm pretty rnmnune<l to 'raving tn < '°"ta Mesa. \'\.ilich an' tht• mots of the company Tiwy'vt> bfton here for 24 years and I didn't want to ~ throu¢i a lot of lhangt> trauma for the employee'> to cummute 'iOmeplace ebe So 11 ~ an opporturu[}' to do somedung Ye1)' ~ to home here and 10 get lhe office spatt wt' needed We11 have abou1 240,<XX> t;<l ll<ifl' ( eet. Keep those clean and tasteful letters coming ' 'D on't you know those lettera are aU just part of a write-lo campaign'r the city official asked me at breakfast one momlng. He WU referring to a string of letters that he said was written by several members of one particular group. Then there wu the phone call from a local actMat wbo aald be doubted lhat a letter writer who appeared ln the paptt a couple dayt before acrually did exiat. I WU pretty ture we had Called to ftrify the name u per GllJ poky. I told the caller, bUt could I be abeolutejy turef Unfonunacety not. TONY DODE RO Deliberate going. even when we make the write-in phone call. r.ampaJgns to Ju t to be clear, we do h ave root or some rules of the road here. confuse our There are a couple or wa)'$ to readers are get your comm ent.a.ry in the typically t-asy paper In a couple dllfertnt to pot. but fonns. lt's no t so Letters to the ed itor and easy when a Re ders Hotline calls are handful of mailer and concise, about 250 people. wbo to 500 words. Community aU hare the CommenW1e or Rebuttal an wne polnt of bo longer, usually 500 to 750 vi~ wnte 1e«rr1 to exp wolW their~ with a ctnaJn In all thougtl. we penon or with our n requlrc that the leetM writer CICMl'llL Or If eomeooe clalma pnMdci a neme. 6nt and lut. to be eomeone they ve not and lddrea. rtcy ol teUdence and man.-to kttp -charade phone num for vetifla And we will call to verify a letter writer' exi tence or to double ch eck lhe pelling I)( their names, especially when our suspicions are high or if the writer has never written to the paper before Do letters to tht ('(Jltor g l edited? Vi they do. nust is often 0 common mis~n:eptJon that tjnce It ls the writer's op1nioo, ~don' have.to tdit th I n or comm ntary on the But tbaf not true. l.tttt>r writ don't alwa dd: v.1th Just their oplnio Lett arc , offft1 fX'Ppettd Wllh th Wrlttr's wnioo of the th.al ~ ottd tu" "' and, lf WP ~~-------\--~..--~~~ ----- can't verify, Wf' edit out of tht' lener We typicaUy t'dit leuers for otht-r ~ :i1 ~I. tf a letter,, mean-pirut'd. or 1s fuU of name~calling. or · lat'l'd with raost or btgottd languilSC"· ~ will th r edit out lhe oll'endit'8 wi>rda or kill the letter. Wf! require decorum Ol'ld wte and ~ncy on our editorial or rourw. I'm onty lptUirtg for the Dl.ily Not. Not nery newspaper mt aJnf' N OD left But fQr the moet pan. 11 ~nil wants to ttt t r oplrilall ~ti ndy. • ftl'}' ,-~omn ... up rftlilJ:e ~names. TB.1. rr ro ™E BJnOR Tony Oodero ia the edftor. HI ~your comments on MWICOll9nlge. ~ °'°"*'~ ......_ TogMamsr rgeor -.ld • ...., '° .. tdllDr cell hitcl,..hll~ Ofht ftan•• ...... • ea t,01 ..., .. Mnil11 ....... t , , .... n una• Mnl ....,, II 1 m or..- US. mell •D'l W. a.y ~ 0-M.. CA..121Zl I ( I AlO Sunday, February 16. 2003 AFTER HOURS No.1 in B·flat minor on Mard'l 12 and 13 at 8 p.m. Tldcets are $19 to $59 and will be performed at • Submit AFTER HOURS items to Orange County Performing Arts the Daily Pilot, 330 W. Bay St., Center's Segerstrom Hall. Tldcets Costa Mesa. CA 92627; by fax to are available at the Center Box (949) 6464170; or by calling (949) Office, online at www.ocpac.org 574-4268. A complete hst Is or by calling (714) 740-7878. The available at www.daffyp1/ot.com. Center is at 600 Town Center Onve, Costa Mesa. MUSIC THE PRAZAK QUARTET NEWPORT BEACH JAZZ. PARTY One of the classical music world's The 1hlrd annual Newport Beach leading international dlamber ensembles will perfo"" on March Jau l'arty will be held at the 13 at 7:30 p.m. The quartet will be Newport Beach Mamon Hotel performing Beethoven's String ends today. The festival will Quartet in F No. 1, Janacek's feature the Bill Cunliffe Tn o. Mary String Quartet No. 1 and more. Stallings and !tie Houston Person The Prazak Quartet will perform Quartet. The hotel js at 900 Newport Center Drive at Orang('"County Performing Information: (949) 759-5003. Arts Center's Founder's Hall. Tidcets are $43 and are available GRAMMY NOMINATED JA1..Z at !tie Center Box Office, online at TRUMPTER IN CONCERT www.ocpac.org or by calling Grammy nominated 1azz (714) 740-7878. The Center is at trumpeter Terence Blanchard will 600 Town Center Drive, Costa be in concert at Orange County Mesa. Performing Arts Canter's VIENNESE DELIGHT Founders Hall on Feb. 28 and March 1 with performances at Cafe Ludwig's host pianist, 7:30 and 9 30 p.m. Tickets are $52 Christopher O'Riley, will take the for the early shows, $48 for the audience on a musical tour of the 9:30 p m performances and are cobblestone streets of Vienna. ava1l.ibl~ at the Center Box Office, The show will take place Feb. 23 onli11ti al www.ocpac.org or by at 2 p.m. in Founders Hall at 600 calliny 1714) 740-7878. The Center Town Center Drive. Tickets are 1s at 600 Town Center Drive, $45, (714) 556-2122. Costd Mesa MUSIC AT THE TEE ROOM WESLA WHITFIELD The Mark Davidson Tno, with Ron Wesla Wh1tf1eld will perform at Eschete on guitar, performs at 8 Founders Hall Tuesday to p m Fridays at the Tee Room. Saturday at 7·30 p.m Tickets are 3100 Irvine Ave., Newport Beach. $49 600 Town Cenler Drive. (714) $10 cover. (949) 756-0121. 556-2122 JAZZ TRIO RICHARD STRAUSS' "SALOME" Gulfstream Restaurant m Opera Pac1f1c will un11ell a new Newport Beach presents a 1azz production of Richard Strauss' trlo Sunday through Wednesday USalome" The opera as regular entertainment at 850 embodies sensuality sexuality Avocado Ave .• Newport Beach. and willful indulgence The Hours are 5 to 9 p.m. Sunday and opera will lake place Feb 25. 6 to 10 p.m. Monday through 27, 28 and March 1 and 2 with Wednesday. (949) 718·0188. evening performances at 7:30 pm and a Sunday WEEKLY JAM performance at 2 p m Ti ckets The Studio Cafe presents are $25 to S120. It will be Monday Night Jams from 7 to 11 performed at Orange County p.m. every week. "Wanted· Performing Arts Center's mus1c1ans include guitar players, Segerstrom Hall. Tickets are bass players. singers, drummers, available at the Center Box keyboardists and others at 100 Office, online at www.ocpac.org Main St., Newport Beach Free or by calling (714) 740 7878. The (949) 675-7760 Center 1s at 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa MUSIC AT THE GRILL The Bluewater Grill offers live VAN CLIBURN GOLD PLAYS music Friday and Saturday TCHAIKOVSKY nights. Greg Morgan, Nick Peper The Pac1f1c Symphony Orchestra and Kelly Gordien (known as will welcome Stanislav MPG) perform classic rode, R&B Louden1tch performing and swing at 8:30 p m Fridays T cha1kovsky's Piano Concerto M arvin Gregory and MPG will ' Daily PilOt perform classic rode. swing and 'PROOF' organized by the Cranbrook Art through Marc.ti 2 at the Orange R&B at 8:30 p.m. Saturdays. The "Proof," the Tony Award-winning Museum, will be on display County Museum of Art, 850 San restaurant Is at 630 Udo Park play by David Au bum, will play at through April 27 at the Orange Clemente Drive, Newport Beadl. Drive, Newport Beach. Free. (949) Segerstrom Stage, South Coast County Museum of Art's Satellite Porte's wor1t deals with issues of 675-3474. Repertory, 650 Town Center Gallery, South Coast Plaza, 3333 shelter, poverty and Drive, Costa Mesa through Bristol St .• Coata Mesa. Zines are displacement Museum houra are MUSIC AT THE PELICAN Sunday. It tells the story of a publications -like magazines -11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday through The Rusty Pelican offers the young woman who looks to created by individuals or small Sunday. $5 for adults. $4 for music of Common Ground from disoover how mudl genius and groups. Museum hours are 10 seniors and students, and free for Wednesday through Sunday. The insanity she has inherited from a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through members and dllldren younger band performs from 7 to 10 p.m. her brilliant father. Performances Friday, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday than 16. (949) 769-1122. Wednesday and Thursday, from will be at 8 p.m. Saturday and at and 11 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Sunday. 8:30 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. Friday and 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. Sunday. Free. (949) 759-1122. THE DEAN A. SMl'TH: Sat\Jrday and from 2 to 6 p.m. Previews $19 to $44, regular run NOCTURNE EXHIBIT Sunday. The restaurant is at 2735 $27 to $54. (714) 708-5555. DOUBLE HORIZONTAL Dean A. Smith, an Orange Coast W. Coast Highway, Newport Dewey Ambrosino's exhibit College jewelry-making Beadl. Free. (949) 642·3431. 'LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS' "Double Horizontal" will feature instructor, will have an exhibit at The Sage Hill High Sctrool "Brown Note Lounge; an the College of Fine Arts West WEEKEND BLUES Theatre Department will offer installation of two molded Gallery at Cal State Fullerton Anthony's Riverboat Restaurant "Little Shop of HorrorsH through plywood sub-woofer loveseats through Thursday. The Dean A. in Newport Beadl presents The Sunday. The play, directed by Jay that play en original bass Smith: Nocturne exhibit is of Balboa Blues on Friday and Louden, will be performed at 2 composition, and whose biomorphic steel sculptures .. For Saturday evenings and Sunday p.m. Sunday. Tldcets are $5, 3443 frequencies are tuned specifically information, call (714) 432·5725 afternoons. The program features Pacific View Drive, (949) 219-0900. to the building's architecture. The jazz and classic rode tunes for exhibit will also include a video DANCE dining and dancing. Anthony's is 'FIDDLER ON THE ROOF' projection of Oskar Sdllemmer's at 151 E. Coast Highway. (949) Vanguard University will present 192546 "Triadic Ballet.H The THE STUTTGART BALLET 673-3425. its third main stage production of opening reception will be The Stungart Ballet is said to "Fiddler on the Roof:' The play will Saturday from 7 to 9 p.m. and run offer some o f the best dancing in POP-ROCK AND FLAMENCO open Thursday and run through through Marc.ti 22 at the Shed at the world today an doffers Tate 5, a funk, rode and Motown Feb. 23, and a second leg will run 3000 Newport Blvd. Information: repertory highlights such as act, performs at 9 p.m. Saturdays Feb. 27 to Marett 2. It will play at (949) 723·3406. "The Seventh Blue," "Cindy's at Carmelo's Ristorante, 3520 E. the idlool's Lyceum Theater, 55 Gift," "Sunday Symphony," as Coast Highway. Corona del Mar. Fair Drive in Costa Mesa. JANE Hill well as a full length ·Romeo and Solo guitarist Ken Sanders Information: (714) 668-6145. "Local Scenes," art by Jane Hill, Juliet. They will perform M arch performs classical flamenco will be on display at the Newport 18 through Marc.ti 23 at the tunes at 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays and 'KAVALIER AND CLAY' Beach Public Library through Feb. Orange County Performing A Sundays. Free. (949) 675· 1922. Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist 28. The library is at 1000 Avocado Center at 600 Town Center Driwe Midlael Chabon's play "The Ave .. Newport Beach. Free. (949) in Costa Mesa. Tickets are frorf). SATURDAY NIGHT R&B Amazing Adventures of Kavalier 717-3801. $20 to $75 and can be purdlas9'1 Gerald lsh1bash1 and the Stone and Clay• will be presented at the box office or by calling Bridge Band play rode and R&B at Monday, Marc.ti 3, at 8 p.m. at the 'IN THE EYE OF THE (714) 556·ARTS ~ 9 p.m. Saturdays at Sutton Place Irvine Barclay Theatre. Tickets are BEHOLDER' • Hotel's Trianon Lounge, 4500 $35 and $29. For tidcets, go to the · An exhibit of w orks by Michael ALVIN AILEY DANCE THEATER• M acArthur Blvd., Newport Beach tidcet box office, or call (949) Perez and Kirsten Prosser will be One of Amerioa" mo" I Free. (949) 476-2001. 854-4640. on display at Bayside Gallery celebrated dance companies, Restaurant, 900 Bayside Drive. Alvin Ailey Dance Theater, \ttll STAGE 'LARAMIE PROJECr Newport Beach, through March 1. perform at Segerstrom Hall Orange Coast College 1s staging (949) 851·918. Tuesday through today. "AN EVENING OF IONESCO" Moises Kaufman's "Laramie www.studiogallery.net. Performances will be given at Orange Coast College's ijepertory Project" March 19 through Marc.ti p.m. each day. Tickets range #It company will feature several 23 in the Drama lab Theatre. BRAVO PHOTOGRAPHS from $20 10 $65. 600 Town short plays by one of the theater's Tidcets are $12 and $8 and are Wor1ts by famed Mexican Center Drive (714) 556-2122. most famous absurdist sold at the door and by calling photographer Manuel Alvarez playwrights, Eugene Ionesco. The (714) 432·~. Orange Coast Bravo will be on display through MOMIX: OPUS CACTUS production runs Saturdays and College is at 2701 Fairview Road, today at the Orange County Human bodies metamorphose Sundays through Feb. 23 in the Costa Mesa. Museum of Art, 850 San into a single serpentine figure, Orama Lab Studio. Curtain is at 8 Clemente Drive, Newport Beadl and dancers shape·shih into p.m. Saturdays and at 2 and 7 STUDENT-DIRECTED The works will be shown exotic birds, flowers and cactus p.m. Sundays. Tldcets are $6 or ONE-PERSON PLAYS concurrently with "The Spent of and other forms with visual $7. For information or tidcets, call "Solo Voices; a festival of Mexico:· an exh1b1t exploring splendor and theatrical magic. (714) 432·5640, ext. 1. Orange srudent-directed one-person plays, Mexico through the eyes of Exquisite costumes and Coast College is at 2701 Fairview will be staged Marc.ti 1 and 2. at 8 modern photographers including illusionary visuals, sublime Road. Costa Mesa. p.m. Saturday and at 2 and 7 p.m Henri Cartier·Bresson and Edward modern movement and on Sunday. Tldcets are $6 and S7 Weston. Museum hours are 11 Olympian gymnastics combl 'TWO GENTLEMEN OF VERONA' and can be purchased at the door a.m to 5 p.m. Tuesday through into this transforming event William Shakespeare's "Two or by calling (714) 432·5725 Sunday. $5 for adults, S4 for beauty, humor and spell-bind' Gentlemen of VeronaH will be Orange Coast College at 2701 seniors and students, and free for power. Tickets are $40 and S3 performed at the South Coast Fairview Road. Costa l\.tesa. members and children younger The show will be g111en at the • Repertory on the Segerstrom than 16. (949) 759-1122 Barclay Theatre M arch 27 Stage from Feb. 28 through ART through 30. with shows at 8 p.4 March 30. Preview tidcets start at MARJETICA PORTC and a Sunday matinee at 3 p.nw $19. For tickets, (714) 708·5555 or 'ZINE SCENE' An installation by Slovenian artist Call (949) 854-4646 or go onllni v1s1t www.scr.org. "Zine Scene;' an exhibit of zines Mar1et1ca Porte will be on display to www.thebarclayorg Dance Lessons: $15 • a Every green is a dance floor when you have the grace and game of Chi Chi Rodriguez. So why shou ld you pay a visit to the Toshiba Senior Clas sic? ~ C~lON~ r Q' a ''$ Well , there are more reasons than you can shake a putter at. .. March 17-23, 2003 Newport Beach Country Club Advance-p"'rchase tickets are S 1s.' Call 949/660-1001 or visit WE 'RE CELEBRATING WITH BIG SELECTl°ON ON LY $489PE1 MoNrH J $489DowN PLUS TAX ON APPROVED CREDIT CLOSED END LEASE ~MONTHS ONLY $489 DUE AT SIGNING ON APPROVED CR£DIT MoDEL 9420 IS AVAILABLE AT THIS EXACT PAYMENT TIER 1 & SIGN 'N DRM ONLY ExCLUDES APPLICABLE TAXES AND FEES No SECURITY DEPOSIT REOUIRED 12 (XX) MILES PER YEAR EXCESS MILEAGE 15ct PER --~.,,...----- PRESIDENTS ' WE EKEND AND BIG , BIG SAVINGS~ 0NLY$399 PER MONTH, PLUS TAX ON APPROVED CREDIT CLOSED END LEASE '5f MONTHS ONLY $999 DUE AT SIGNING ON APPROVED CREDIT MODEL 9'Y:fJ W\TH VK. GN. WL. LM OPTIONS ONLY IS AVAJL)Blf AT THIS EXAC PAYMENT TiER 1 & SIGN ~ DRIVE ONLY ExCLUDES APPUCABLE TAXES AND FEES NO SECURITY DEPOSIT REQUIRED 12,(XX) MILES PER YEAR EXCESS MILEAGE 15¢ PER MILE O"LY $489Pt1MoNrH/$489DowN PLUS TAX ON APPROVED CREDIT CLOSED END LEASE 42 MONTHS ONLY $489 DUE AT SIGNING ON APPROVED CRE;)IT MODEL cr:JJJA S AVAJLA8l£ AT THIS EXACT PAYMENT TIER 1 & SIGN 'N ORM ONLY ExCLUDES APPUCA8lE TAXES AND FEES No SECURITY DEPOSIT REQUIRED 12 (XX) MILES PER WR. EXCESS MILEAGE 15¢ PER 3.9%APR~ . · .. CALL NOW!ooeon~ $21,655 ooeo~ $23,995 oneon~ • ' • r-.. • •• • '.4 ~ . •· , I. ,-.•• r. ~· •• ~ ·.: ,',',;~ ·:_. ~ -------. -.-,--,. ---~~~- : . . . . '°·. ~ . -. ;, I II • I. ' . "" l ---~·--'~_...t_.1 OOUlllfll• ~ MITIUlllHI ECLIPSI 032166 I T5995 $12,997 '00 078599 I P5674 $37,954 '02 HONDA ACCOID EX V6 012797 I T5835 $18,788 ~ 052453, ,.,., ~ '99 LEXUS GS400 020856 / P5683 $30,777 ,,.. CHIVWOLO BLA211 164524 / T5800 $13,977 '00 ACURA 3.2 TL 024740 I T5811 s20,9n ~ BMW7401L L37669 / T6040 CAu Nowu M Lau1RX300 t '00 TOYOTA SIENNA XLE 203692 I P5960 $20,792 '00 LEXUS ESJOO 080839 I P5681 $24,9n '00 8MW5281 409040 I T6011 $31,997 l ... '97 LEXUS LX450 180712 I P5952 $25,9n . •99 LEXUS LX470 025947 I P5721 $38,997 w laulSCJOO 000728 / Pl970 $23.997 '99 LEXUS RX300 031696 / T5764 '••GllOO otl0Glf17!11 ....,.............. ..,,....... ---... 1: --'IT.., • • .. _ 1.1. f _ . ~. ~-·l"' ---~--.......... -~ "---......_ ---- '00 LEXUS GS300 086724 / P5717 $29,987 '01 164524 / 15800 ----. -. "' ~ ~ . ~~·:~ _ _:_ ~ --- - -. -- -·_ -----I ' { ~ ( Art:hltectural tour-de-fon:e. Open, airy floor plan, amptuous master suite, bay views. gourmet kitchen. MICHAEL SALAS 949.370.7792 OPEN SUNDAY 1-4 3 CELANO CT . Newport Coast. V'iewl 2 Bd. 2 Ba. with many u~Move-1nl R08 GtEM 949.759.3797 One of the first "Sea Captain• dwellings on the best loollout point lot. TOM THOMSON 949.718.1547 8-gant Belcourt townhome OWK 3,000 eq. ft. in a grut location. COMEGYS & PETERSON 949.717.4750 .. Large original home with interesting design. Front rowviewsl KERNS & GOOD 949.759.3758 Magnificent oceanfront contemporary home in exclusive Smithdiffs. State of the art interio~ MORPHY & BUSH-STRONER 949.759.3731 • Uniquely deslgMd home wrth beautJful ocean and amset vi9ws. Walle to bndl shops and restaurants DANI GOLD 949.230 2323 Tranquil and pnvate loation with panoramic views. Designer upgnides throughout. Lush landscaping. 949.644.9060 --~··-fl .. -~ , . .. North Laguna duplex with garage and owners unit with ocean view. SYDNEY GIELOW 949.400.1320 Front rr:7N location. Golf c:ouiw view. French Provence home. HINMAN & HINMAN 949.759.3705 Remodeled single story 3 Bd 3 Ba. home With pool ROBIN CHESNIE 949.717.4793 en. of the finest atHS in ~ Coast. Great ocean views from this 3 Bd. 3.5 Ba. home. 949.644.9060 .. GN9t home on exara large lot Home opens out to irMting. ~ laidlc:aped yard with pool. KIM BIBB 949.718.2747 Coveted bayfront living. Shared dock extended -;· for large yacht. 4 Bd. 3 Ba. plus bonus rooms. 949.644.9060 \ Sophisticated and charming Master suite opens to solar heated pool and exqu1Site yard RICK LANGEVIN 949.759 3759 2 ~.llld'"$Jl locai.d in downtown Laguna. Gr.at c:umint income. 808 OITUWO 949.718.2717 •• ,, ' I I