HomeMy WebLinkAbout2001-01-08 - Orange Coast PilotSERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA COl-AMUNmES SINCE 1907 ON 1HE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM · MONDAY, JANUARY 8, 2001
Hoag finds the right Rx for nursing shortage
•Newport Beach hospital scouts high schools for
students interested in health care careers, gives
employees ~2,000 bonuses for recruiting nurses.
Mathis Winkler
DAILY PILOT
NEWPO RT BEACH -
When Scott Sunco yrddudted
m May with dn d!>soc1ate's
degree m nursiny. finding a
job didn't rcdlly conc-f'rn tum.
thPy were going weeks
before yraduation.
The 30-year-old regi.stered
nurse now works at Hudg
H ospital's orthopedic dlld
neurology ward.
At first, Surico's exµen -
ence might sound like d
result of a booming economy
thdt lowers unemployment.
·Topics and trends that
affect your life
chief nursing admmistrdtor.
While still competitwn
w i th other professions pldy!> d
role in the statP's mounting
health care crisis, Mdftm sd1d
Californid's nursm B -;chools
simply don't hdV<' the
resources to edu!'t1t1• more
nurses.
Lind.d StevPnl>. clt•c1 n of
mctth, sciences und hcdlth
professions dt Ciohf Pn WPst
CoUege, agreed.
"We hdve rnon· ••ppl1r c1nb
to our proyrdm th.in wt• c1r<>
dble lo adrmt." ~h •· !)111d.
adding th at Cc11ltorn1<.1 w ill
need dn ddd1 l1011<1l '.,!'UlOO
While those t>n l1·r111y the
work force in fJre<.:edin!J
·yedrs hod stru~H.JIPd I<°> gPt
P.mployment, Suricn c1nd
<l bout 80'~.. of hb ddss di
H untmyton Beuch'~ Golden
West Colll'gf' k nt'w. when'
But H oag's chief nurse dnd
other health care profess1on-
dls see things differently dnd
hold Calilomia's nursing
shmtage responsible il'T!itf'etd.
RcJnkmy lctst in the ndllon
111 lf'flll!> of the number of
nurl>f'!> p..-r 100,000 popula-
tion . hctlf of the slcth!'s nurses
corm·· !rum olht•r parts of thP.
country. Sdl<f Rick MMtin.
liou~j's vu-1· president of
p11t11•111 CcH<' !>t•rv1ces dnd
SEAN Hill ER I :'>AILY P1l 01
SEE NURSES PAGE 4 Scott Surico has been hired as a nurse at Hoag Hospital.
A WE E BIT OF IRISH CULTURE
DON llACH I DAILY P1l01
!Ji.sh singer Gerry O'Belme was back in Orange County for the first time since the t 980s, performing at a Newport Beach pub. See story, Page 3.
Will Greenlight be rewritten by its guidelines?
•Questions a rise whether s tarting date for slow-growth
measure's 10-year 'look-back period' should be 1990 or 2000.
M•thls Winkler
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACI I -As City
Council members prepare to put
the slow-growth initiative to work,
some say they are concerned about
honoring Greenlight's language as
approved by voters in November.
,
The initiative requires citywide
elections on any general plan
amendment for a project that adcf's
more than 100 peak -hour car trips
or dwelling units, or 40,000 square
feet m ore than the plan allows.
One section dealing with the ini ·
tiative's implementation states that
#the C ity Council is encouraged to
c1dopt g uidelines to 11npli.>nwnt
IGreenlighll ... provided thc1t dny
such guidelines shall be cons1stpnt
with the amendment and 1ls pur·
poses and findings.·
At least six of the city's st•vim
council members must vote in fc1vor
of the guidelines. the ballot IPxt
states.
While council memhe rs will dis-
cuss definitions for terms such as
"peak -hour trips." "floor arec1" dnd
·dw elling unit." Greenlig hl's so-
--------
cdllPd "look ·back p<'nod·· hrl"
ra1sPd some concerns behrnd thP
ddlS.
The provision mtends to prPVPnt
dPvelopers from pushing projects
pdst Greenlight's threshold by
introducing them piece by piece.
Under the initiative, 80'¥., of pre-
vious general plan amendments
within one of the city's 49 distinct
n eighborh ood s #adopted within
SEE GREENLIGHT PAGE 4
Newport Beach counci/rha,n caught in a time U<atp
.... w.
SCOOP
I t's no tecret that Newport Beach
Councilman Slew Brosqberg is
an avid photography fan and
has ofterad time and legal expertise
to the Bal~ Perlonnlng Arts The·
ater Poundation, which (let'I keep
our t1r9ft C10111d) ftnally wtD open
the newly 1flltonld Balboa Theater
tbil JMl·
But Bromberg and hil wUe, "--
•: ou'9d~u an of a eomewbat \mean·
w,..IJ'W ......... a...vative
Nftpllt 8wb.
The couple are seriously commit·
ted to ·111e Rocky Horror Picture
Show.• the camp stage play and
subsequent box office hit that
recently celebrated its 25th anniver-
sary.
Get this: The Brombergs have
seen the show 42 times on teftlen or
on stage and Wied to visit regular
showings at the Balboa Theater.
They ftnelly bought a copy ol the
movie and indulged ln Its hy•atcal
cbaraders IDOlt reamUy on New
Veen .Eve. Now there'I devotion tor
you.
AU.•AMY'SM.c . Calla,... Comc9n>en a..,
ti 2 ... ,.....,...,
\
absent from last week's meeting.
when the big issue was the pro·
poeed skateboard park.
So what kept him away? Deser-
tion by lick employees at his
restaurant. SkOlh Mooaban's.
Faced with a crisis, Monahan
stayed at wtJrtt, waiting tables and
tending bar.
•1 bad a poblml at the restau-rant.• l'9 Mkt. •J bed DO help.•
who admitted she forgoes her usual
9 p.m . bed time to wttnea the clock
strike midnight ooe ttme zone rur-
ther to the west ..
#1 don't think New York ii
enough.• she Mid. •1 haw k> *Y
upunW ltmmMI0°*'81goud ,
then I feel like l"'9 dane my new
year.•
. f1ne then. Now, If.,... coukl
tell UI what oeletnlfiam W.W
been ml I IQ In .. WIDdy Oly.
we'd IUl'9ly epp•;* a. Until ...... h ... _, _,,
.,._...,.... 1d'nllltllr
yuurNot1 n .
City moves.
to tighten
building
standards
• Costd Mesd's ellort to
preserve the Edslsid P
evolves into new zoninH
codes for rcsiclPntidl
dev elopment d tywiclt'.
Jennifer Kho
D AILY PILOT
COST,\ 1\ 1 ESA Thi·
Pldnn10~1 Comrn1s!-.1on 1on1qhl
1s scheduled to lt1k1> r1 hrldl
look dt d nPw st>t ol pmpo.,1•d
rPs1denlJd I devL•l<JfHlll"'nt 7.0ll ·
rn~J ccxf Ps. which hc1v1• ht!1•n
111 the work!> s1nn• .J111w 111 rm
<>ff ort to prf'sPrvf' thP qu.aml g
ne1ghhorhoorl 11•1•1 of tlw
Er1!-ols1dt>
"Cosld /l.lt•!-.11 I" orw ol th•·
lci!>I commu.n1tll'S wh1•r1• you
~f·I' front dnd h cH k yc11ds:
~<1 111 Counnlwomdn 1\rtrl'll
Robinson "ThP!-.1' I rPn•nl I
!>fficiil-lol dl'VPIOpmt•nb ctrt'·
tdkmg dWtiY thdt q11c1ht y clnd
JUSt bein~J lln top Of otlwr p .. •n-
ple crPdtP~ strPss you nnqht
othf'rwtse nnt hc1 ve.
··11 w e hdVt> c1n npportun1ty
as d city to prevt>nt thc1t whllt•
presl:'rvrng thP qudhty of Co'i·
ta M esd thctl sets 1t as1dro tn1111
other cornmumties, why nol?"
The proposr>rl n tyw1d<'
zoning cod e.s. ii 11lt1mc1tl'I)•
dpproved by tht• C1ty Ctiunnl,
would requ1te
• bigger lot !.IZ£':: ..
• larger dnvPwctyt-.
• 11wre olf-slrC't>t pdrkm9,
• more rl l'>tdnn• hPtWPPn
£ndl0 building ....
• a more PXlC'O!>IVf' rPVWW
process for nl:'w dt>\'Plop·
ments as well ds rC'm(lc1Plinu
projects.
The rev1s1ons dlso would
reduc£' thP maximum huild -
ing heig ht, increase the
dmounl of landscaping
required and rt•qu1re devel·
opers to follow stricter archi·
tectural design ~tandards ,
SEE. ZONING PAGE 3
11111
QASSllD5 ··--···-··················-· •
PCIUCI 1IS----···--············-· 2
....c mm ··-···--···········-1
SPGllS ---·······-··--····-·· '
WIM1'S MM ·····--·-··--·· 2
'Above tit•
SURFACE
"South of the Border" will· be the th~me of Orang~ Coast College's 26th
annual Sailing Adventure Series at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Jan. 19 and 26 and
Feb. 2 at OCC's Robert B. M oore Theater, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.
The lecture topics will vary. Single admission tickets are SS to S 1.3; series
ticket.s are S40 or $45 . Information: (714) 432-5880.
2 Monday, January 8, 2001 Daily Pilot
State funds
sought to
fight runoff
• Newport Beach angling
for a portion of potential
$100 million in state budget
for cleanup of ocean pollution.
PMll Clinton
DAILY PlLOT
NEWPORT BEACH -Deputy City
Manager Dave Kiff says he would love
to see lhe city slice off a piece of a
potential $100 million that Gov. Gray
Davis wants to make available to fight
shoreline pollution.
The money could be used to fund
city programs that seek to clivert storm
water runoff and to repair an agmg
sewer sys~m. Kiff said.
~1 haven't seen exactly who's qual-
ified or where lhe funds go,· he said.
·we cert.runly would be interested in
getting our hands on some of that."
The money is expected to be
included in the governor's 5100-bµlion
state budget proposal being released
Wednesday.
Jf approved. the state Water
Resources Control Board likely
would be put
in charge of
d etermining
how the mon-
ey is spent.
GREG FRY I OMV Pit.OT
As gondollPr Jeremy Balmer mans the paddle, Corona del Mar couple Lorrie Levin and Ken Dufour enjoy a relaxing har bor cruise.
Orange
County saw
a record 38
beach clo-
sures last year,
due in part to
sewage spills
"l haven't seen
exactly who's
qualified or
where the
funds go. We
certainly would
be interested in
getting our
hands on some
of that." Love is in the water ~~;=d
on the beach.
The mon-
ey could be
Newport Harbor gondola
cruises often send people
drifting down lhe sea of
love and into marriage.
Mathis Wink ler
DAILY PILOT
Desp1tf' hov1nu cl splinlPr
sturk 1n th0 nnq finger ol her
left hdnd, Gt>orr11d Mahoney
"e<'nwd lhnllP<J cthout lhe ldlPsl
r c1trh hy hC'f <JOndolwr-,.
"WP JU<.t hacl lour (weddinq)
prop<><-uls 111 onf' rnqht: Mahont>y
SrtJd of lh1• ctpparent rww rc-<ord ctl
the NPwport I larbor gondola rn11se
husincs~ lhut !>hP c111cl her lctffilly
hc1vp ownf'CI for SPVPrdl yecH"S
S1tung in her Lido Mdnnc1 Vu-
ld{J!' ofrlC'I'. whc>rP V1•n1ce's trcid1-
t.Jonrll tr,rni.portdt.Jon vt·h1de <.ur-
rounds ht•r in forms r.mqin~J Imm c.1
ldr<JP lupt>!.lry dep1ctmq d gonclolc.1
sn•rw lo c.1 porrelc.1m vNs1on lhat
hokh hN hU ... 111(>!.~ rrtrd~. MdhOnl'y
'-<H<I couples celebrdb.ng golde>n
WE>ddmg anmversanes and 16-
year-old lovP-strnck teen<lgPrs
rnrnC' to glide dround lhe bat.
In many ways. she said, New-
port I !arbor's waters outshine the
cc1ndls of Venice, ltaJy.
"We have one o(the most bedu-
bful bdys m lhe world,' she said
"Plus. it's a lot cheaper tban gomg
lo Veruce. And lhe water is clearer
c.1nd it smells better."
Still. Mahoney is careful to point
<1111 lhat whtle her gondolas might
ht' manufactured in the Unlted
Slc1tes, lhe plans come from lhe
motherland. She is scheduling to
vts1t lhe buthplace of gondoJac; m
lhc• near future.
"I have to go pick up !goncln-
llNs' J hdts." she said, laughing. "It's
ct husmess tnp, isn't 1t? We have to
go soon, perhaps in lhe fall.'
AJlhough she defimlely will go
on a gondola cruise around
Venice's Cd/lals, MahonPy Sdld she
hd~ heard horror stones about lhe
Pxpenence. "The gondolier was
talkmg on the cell phone lhe whole
tune: she said
The options offered by the
Mahoney family's companies. Gon-
dold Romctnce and lhe Goru:lold Co.
of Newport Beach. range from mb-
mdte one-hour c:rulscs to elaborc.1te
dinm•r affairs on IMger, tented,
t>lectnc gondolas.
When 1t comes to the all-unpor-
tant 4uestJon of "Will you?"
Mahoney has worked out a regi-
men of wooing few·can resisl.
Nervous boyfnends usually fd.X
lheir love messag~ to Mahoney
before the big night, she said. The
letter lhen gets stuffed inside a spe.-
c1d I Jove bottle that gondoliers
secretly relea!>e into t.l;le water so
lhP girlfnends can"fish it oul.
"One time we had d woman say-
U1Q, 'I'm not gmng lo pick up a bot-
Ue from lhe water,'· Mahoney srud
W1lh d laugh. "And the guy and the
gondolier sajd, 'Pick up lhe bottle!'"
Upon return to the dock,
Mdhoney and the gondoliers -
mdny of whom row for locaJ col-
leges and spend about two months
training to naVlgate lhe gondolas
-hdve devised secret signs to
communicate.
"When the gondol.Jer tips his hat
to me, it says it's a 'yes,'" Mahoney
said, adding lhat she begins rtng·t
ing a bell to celebrate the new
bride and groom.
"She left the dock his girlfriend,
she comes back as his fiance· is
Mahoney's announcement to din-
ner guests 1fl nearby restaurants.
So far. only one woman has
reversed roles and ask ed her
boyfnend to marry her, Mahoney
said.
The guys. on lhe olher hand,
have a pretty good chance of hear-
ing what lhey hope to hear.
Out of more than 100 proposals,
only one couple returned wtthout
an engagement, Mahoney said.
"It wasn't ex.actly a 'no,'" she
said. "It was an 'I don't know.' The
guy was a l.JtUe premature in his
proposal She told him to ask her
again m suc months."
used to belp Dave Klff
fund lhe city's Deputy city manager
ongoing
repair of sew-
er lines and pwnp stations. Last year,
Newport Beach spent $1.02 mil.lion on
lhose projects, Kitt said.
Urban runoff also has been a recur-
nng problem, especially storm water
drainage into Upper Newport Bay
from the Santa Ana-Delhi Channel,
which funnels runoff from nearly 18
square rniles_of Costa Mesa, Newport
Beach and Santa Ana.
In 1999, Newport Beach had 256
closures or posted warnings, com-
pared with 158 in Huntington Beach.
Kiff said the city is higher on the list
because of I\ higher frequency of test-
ing.
· As the state Legislature hashes out
Davis' budget, state Sen. Ross John-
son (R-Newport Beach) will push to
bring funding to the district, said
spokeswoman Susie Swatt.
"We're going to do everything pos-
sible to get as much of that $100 mil-
lion for Orange County,· she said. "We
have suffered the most."
What's
AFLOAT
will sponsor a six-w eek dass on boating skills
and set:UTl4tlBhip begiruting at 7 p.m. Jan. 17
at the Orange County Harbor Department,
1901 Bayside Drive, Corona del Mar. $45.
(714) 628~9777.
March 24 and May 13 at OCC's Sailing Cen-
ter, 1801 W. C oast Highway, Newport
Beach. $215. (9A9) 645-9412. ·
ter, 1801 W. Coast Highway, Newport
Bee.ch. Tbe class, •introduction to
Shields," it the tranaitiOn data from UD411
·t>oatt to 27-lo 30-foot keelboatl. StucMntt
. Orange Coast College'• School ol SelllDf should have a solid grup of tbe bMlcl ot • WHAT'S AR.OAT Is published Mondays. tf you are
planning a nautkal event. submit the information to the
Dally Pilot. 330 W. Bey St. Costa Mesa, CA 92627; by fex
to (949) ~170: or by e-mail to dallypllotOt.tima..oom
SAILING CLASSES
The U.S. Coast Guard Awdllary!s Plotllla 27
Orange Coast College's School of Salling
and Seamanship will. offer four noncredit
keelboat classes for women who are begiD-
nlng sallora from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Peb. it,
and Seamanship will offer eight noncredit dinghy Ailing. Wltb an aide on Mell boat,
classes on operating the claulc Shields •tudetltl will learn rearnan1b1p skills, Rip-
keelboat from 9 a.m . to t p.m . on succeh pering, reefing, rigbt-ol·wey rulel, jlbmg
sive Saturdays and Sundays through and the MJe b andllbg of a Wgel' boet.
March and 1n May at OCC's Saill.ng Ce.n· . St 15. (9'9) 645·9' 12. ·
.Dailf Pilot READERS tjQIUNE CA 92626 Copynght: No news rto-WEATHER AND SURF POLICE YIPS (949) 642-6086 rie. 1floWa11ons. edlt<Ytal matte<
Rec01d your commenu .\bout or~ herein tan be
reproduced without wrtt1en pe<· TEIW'EltATUMS TIDES 0 hrtled, oe:a.iplecl V9hkiee ClOft~ OM f# the Daily Piiot or news tips mluion of copynght owner Balboa TODAY
VOL 95, NO. 7 ADDRESS 65146 First low ITlOfe peof>le are ~lly signlfkant If ~ at en
Ou1 ~ress 1s 330 W Bay St., ttOW TO REACH US Cofone del Mar 12:55 a.m , .............. 1. 89
unusual hour. They could be P<*ible lookouts for a bur-
THOMAS H. JOHNSON Costa M~. CA 92627 Clttul.tion 65146 Flm high glaly In progreu, ewn If !tie occupants~ to a.~
PvblfWr TM Times Orenge County Costa M esa
TONY OOOEJIO. COMEOJONS (800) 252-9141 65146 7:18a.m ................... 6 .75 •Mr,,..... mo¥tng llowty.,.. -"hout ...... or Editor 11 is the Pilot's policy to prompt AcfvertlNng Newport BeaCl Second low following • coune that appean ~ rx ~ ts LJ. CAHN, ly corre<1 all errori of substanc.e. Owlfied (949) 642·5678 65146 2:36 p.m ................... ·1.53
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. . .
Daily Pilot Mondoy, Jonuaty 8, 2001 3
Suds & songs:
Irish folk singer brings his m elodies to N ewport Beach pub
St•f •nie Frith
DAILY PILOT
G ently holding a guitar
in his hands, his melod-
ic voice drlfting
through the courty&rd at Mul-
doon's Dublin Pub in N ewport
Beach, Lrish singer-songwriter
Gerry O'Beime kept his eyes
closed during each song,
openmg them only to hear the
exoted applause that explod-
ed alter each tune.
On Sunday afternoon,
O'Beime performed to a full
courtyard as part of the pub's
efforts to educate the pubhc
about lnsh artists, as weU as to
bring more culturdl events to
Newport Beach, said Richard
Kaplan, the pub's special
events dlrector
The efforts include induct-
ing Lnsh artist!. in the pub's
Guinness Wall of Fame, which
began in Mdfch 1999. On
Sunday, O"Beime, 47, JOined
the like!. of Golden Globe win-
ner Tom Bennger. the Young
Dubliners and folk legend
John Stewart on the 30-brick
wall.
"I've been tracking Gerry
for a while now, his contribu-
tions, his lyrics, and I lobbied
very hard to get him here,• .
Kaplan said as he watched
O'Beime set up for the ihow.
·He pulls octaves out of his
instruments that you didn't
know even existed. He really
is legendary.•
Playing both the six-and
12-string guitars, O'Beime has
performed at the White
House, optmed for the Grate-
ful Dead and toured the world
Wlth artists such as the Water-
boys, Patrick Street. Midnight
WeU and Sharon Shannon.
He has produced several
albums and his first solo
album, "Hall Moon Bay."
recently was chosen as one of
the 12 best ind~ru:ndenL
releases of the year by Per-
formin g Songwriter maga-
2llle.
Having performed only
once irl Orange County with
his Conner band Thain to Sligo
in the 1980s, O'Beime said it
was a nice change to be back
in a small, friendly venue illce
Muldoon's.
"lt Is a thrill to be in a giant
venue, but I do Like small gigs
like thLs beca~e you can walk
about and talk to people and
they can come up and talk to
you,• he said before starting
his sound checks.
"It's so friendly; people
have already come up to me.
It's good to be out on a Sunday
altemoon and playing music."
Pub regulars Tom and Katy
Tackes of Corona del Mar said
they had never heard
O'Beune perform until Sun-
day but that it's hard to go
wrong with one of Muldoon's
weekly Irish events.
·Every time we have come,
we have never been disap-
pointed," Katy Tackes said.
"It's such a great venue. It's
intimate, you are close to the
drtist and he IO'BeirneJ
sound!> great. We just havP to
keep corning back:
DON LEACH I OAl.Y Pl.OT
Strumming his six-string gWtar, Irish folk singer Gerry O'Beime performs at Muldooo'1
Dublin Pub ln Newport Beach, where he was Inducted into lts Guinness Wall of Fame.
O'Beime said"hc will play
music any time dnd anywhere
-and does. He has hved m
Los Angeles and Pasadend,
and over the next few months
he will perlonn m Austrdlld.
New Zealand dnd HoLidnd.
Although .tus home 1~ in
Dublin, O'Beime ~did hl• ii. on
the road most of the year,
wluch allows him to get irlsp1-
rallon for different sorts of
songs.
O'Beime said he still does-
n't kqow how to describe his
music, but critics SC\¥ it is a_
rombinalion of Latin, rock
dnd, of course, traditional Irish
..
foll< songs.
·I am hopeless. but I reek·
on that people say it's all my
own and it's just whatever
comes out,· he said, a
thoughtful look irl ~-blue
eyes. "One day, l really m ust
get a satisfactory descriptic;m
of my mu.'>ic."
VISion 2004 offers sneak peek at centenni~ plans
•Corona del Mar group
wants Coast Highway
to be more pedestrian-
f riendly for village's
1 OOth anniversary.
Mathis Winkler
0AJLY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH ,-
Although mdny Corona del
Mar rns1dC'nts und business
owners already have heard
dbout dn umb1t1ous plan to
revdmp Edst Codst Highway
for the v1lldg<>'s centennial in
three yedr!., those living and
working in other pdrtS of the .
rity recently had a chance to.
tdkC' a look at the V1s1on
2004 project for the first
lime
ProJPCt supporters out-
lined thC'ir 1deds .u-a meeL·
ing ldst wPek sponsored by
Spc>ak Up Newport, a non-
pMllsdn, nonprofit group
dPd1cdted to promotmg
sonal weltdfP, educating lJle
public and improving local
governmPnl
The pldn would ·provide
a front door to our communi-
ty that we can all be proud
of," Sdld Pldnning Com.mis·
BRIEFLY
Cox loses two staff
members to Cheney .
Rep Christopher Cox (R-
Newport Beach) has lost two
of his nght-hand men.
Cox's chief of staff, C.
Dean McGrath , has been
named deputy chief of staff
ZONING
CONTI NUED FROM 1
including more variety in
building heights and roof
forms, more offsets and
building projections in
home facades and
enhanced detailing.
In June, the council estab-
lished a temporary moratori-
um on small·lot, multifamily
developments throughout
Costa Mesa in an effort to
preserve the Eaststde's
neighborhood character.
Last month, the council
extended the freeze to gtve
the dty more \i.tne to work. on
the new development •tan·
dardJ, whlch would apply
throughout the city If
,apprOftd.
Plamllng Commluione~
WaU Devenport, Katrtna
Poley and KAltle WU.00 MJd
they are likaly to :r the :r=t=~ .... ~ lft9ct lbM tbe
-·· 1:1 .. al -al tbe ..... ..Wtara21..,..
' •
FYI
Vision 2004's.present ation
will be broadcast on..New-
port Beach's local access
cable TV channel at 8:30
p.m. Mondays, Thursdays
and Saturdays.
green ones 9nd park bench-
e dnd water fountains
would help to create a n1cer
atmosphere for pedestnans.
But with about 40,000
cdrs passing d aily along
Corona del M ar's ma1or thor·
oughfare, Selich said not to
expect drastic changes.
red.lily for the cenlPnnidl cf'I·
ebrallon.
Tak.mg care of the cldbo-
rate green aredc;, whH"h
rnclude a village park dt the
corn~r of l\.larguentc
Avenue and Ec1st Coac;t
Highway, will cost more
money, Sehch said.
Sales tax revenue or a
•
pdrkmg district might be
wdys to pay for the additfon-
dl c·osts. he Sdid.
Corond del Mar resident
dnd real es tate breker
Rochelle Liss said the pro-
posed changes are "terrific."
"That's why l Live in the
vllldge," she said. "It's differ-
ent than Newport Beach."
Councilman Steve
Bromberg. who attended the
presentation, said the plan is
_ ai;i •upscale project that fits
exfremely well in our city."
"There may be some bur-
dens." he said. "But hopeful-
ly the benefit that will coll)e
out of this project wlll out -
weigh the burden." ·
sion C hairmaT'l Edward
Selich , who ·lives in Corona
del Mar and is coordinating
the project.
·we all have to realize
thdt Coast Highway is still a
major highway," he said,
adding . that Vision 2004's
hope is to make the street dS
comfortable as possible for
pedestrians.
/(e/ax ... ('a II
Divorce
Wizard
Our Understanding and Compa4lSion Can Work Magic!
Vision 2004 proposes to
transfer control of the stretch
of highway from Caltrans to
N ewport Beach, which
would allow the city to add
plants anc;I create outdoor
dining areas to make the
street more pedestrian-
friendly.
"There are a lot of things
on this plan that do not meet
Caltrans requirements,• said
Selich, adding that the state
Department of Transporta·
t ion focuses on cars. not
pedestrians.
Some of the changes that
have ~en .suggested
include filling street medi:
ans with plants to create li n-
ear parks along the high-
way. Existing gray light
poles and traffic ~ignals
would be replaced with
for Vice President-elect Dick
Cheney.
McGrath, 47, joins anoth-
er of Cox's former staff mem-
bers, Lewis •Scooter· Libby.
50, who was named
Cheney's chief of staff in
December.
Since joining Cox's staff in
1996, McGrath has worked
closely with tht! congress-
man on several national
FYI
• Whlrt: Costa Mesa Plan-
nl~~mission meeting • • 6:30 tonig_ht
• When: City Hall, '77
Fair Drive, Costa Mesa
• llwfornwtlon: (J 14) 754-
5245
Selich sa id the group
hop es to conclude similar
presentations by the end of
the m onth and presoot a
report to the City Council m
February.
If au goes well, he said,
the highway could come
under city control by the
end of the year, w1th Cal-
trans' funds for improve-
ments following m early
2002.
While the money would
help pay for .the project,
Selich sdid the group is try-
ing to find other state funds
to complete the plan.
Even if Vision 2004 is nor
complete in three years,
Selich said, at least parts of
the plan should become a
security issues, including
Cox's report on China. H e
previously held posts in both
the Bush and Reagan admin-
istrations.
Libby served as a legal
advisor on Cox's policy com-
mittee, along with M cGrath.
Cox has elevated policy •
advisor Peter Uhlmaon to
su~eed McGrath.
-f'aul Clinton
Robin Letner said she strong-
ly supports a few of the pro-
posed revlslons, includuig
requiring neighbors to be
notified of two-story remod-
eling• and design reviews for
remodellngs, put would~
more sped.fies to emure that
houses blend in with the rest
of the neighborhood.
Douglas Watson of CQfta bou5Hlg units have.~ Wilaon Meta Mid be strongly oppos·
said . es the propoeed regulations.
·1 think (the ordinances) •They've got some will preserve the residential .aa~ Id feel of the neighborhood gran~ eu about what
because if you have a de.nae, the dty ts all •bout. but l
m ultifamily feel you lose that think ltbe Qty Councill ls a
seme of nelgbborhood. U.ttle out of blCb wMb IM
•M y biggest concern now commumty,• ... ......_
is that we're got.ng to loee the ~ :' ~
number of ava.Uable hou.lng
stock, butl think tt'• a worth· amDUDI Of fr11dam. 9'adl •
while trade.• lar tbll ,..... al kRa •••
Poley Mid she hope. the 8ii4. tMI Ii =...., la revtaiom wUl proW1e IDClfG tlldal ._ ...,.
open space and better pro-•1 tlllllk II tbe Jects. . . m01t impoNlat. .........
·Whlla.l am IUppoidw of thing we MW, .... I ......
tbe ordinance, my . .,._..t when I ... ll llppmtly
COllC9nl ill that .. adltNlil daiOW'a-..y. I we...._• lat
tbe'*lltilgneedlollla.dly al fi111• .... -•
aDd cou.atr.· •Mid. •wn. pftiblllly aae .-. tD Ill*•
t1y111g tD rb' Ha Hs••• ~ -I ... ft ..a Millil v.r9 I Hll•l i. ~
• Le~ul DocullJent AH iJtann,/Ftl111Jo( Dirurt t' • M1•d1utio11
• f)1"omt1\IU1 " • Cliild!Spouml S11pp11r.t Calt-11lu110111/Modlflr11tu1m
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Vlalt our popular weltalte: www.dlvorcowl.anh.oom
(800) 382-3793 call ua for a private conauHaUon
•
·.
....
4 Monday, January 8, 2001
I
NURSES
CONTINUED FROM 1
nurses by' 2006. ·Tbe
resoutees are not h~re to
admit more.•
Although Hoag hatn't
experienced major probl'1Jll
1n hiring enou~h nurses,
Martin said a. need clearly
exists to prepare for the
future.
' LURING PROSPECTS
The place to look for pos·
sible nursing candidates is
junior high and high school,
Martin said,
•These are the individu-
als I'm going to need in five
years.• he s&d.
As a result, Hoag sends
recruiters to schools all over
Orange County to get stu-
dents excited about the
health care field.
Initially. the 1tudent1
seemed skeptical about
even liltening to the villton.
•1 noticed that some of
these guys just passed that
nuning info along,• Wong
said after a few boys near
the front didn't bother to
look at he r bandoui.. ·
But once Wong began
sharing her own story with
the group, ears started to
perk up slightly more.
•rve seen somebody di~,
in front of my face and l'ye
seen somebody live ~use
of something I did,• she said.
•once you've experienced
saving someone's life, it real-
ly mask!i the rest.·
Sure, situations have
come up that have pushed
her to the limit, Wong said.
During her practical train·
ing In college, she once was
assigned to a lockup ward
lor the criminally insane.
•And what an experience
that was," she said. ·1 was
sitting m the bathroom,
thinking, "I can 't go out
object on the table.
•ttow do you stick that
gun tb.lng lnf• the ukiKI
with a worried expreulon OD
her face.
•Don't wor_ry," Wong
responded, taking the
instrument in dne hand. ·u
I'm coming at you with one
of these babies, l!J.l give you
a Jot of drugs. You won't
know what hit you. 1 can
suck yow appendix out wi~
this."
Womack seemed uniure ·
whether she really had to
know all that much. "That's
grosst• she said.
After Wong wrapped up
her presentation, Yates hit~
the students with some hard
numbers.
•Wherever you guys want
to go, I can guarantee you
that there is a job there wait..
ing for you,• be said, adding
that typical salaries range
from $18 per hour to six-dig-
it annual pay checks for hos-
pital executives.
Standing in front of two
dozen students at Irvine
High School recently,
Michael Yates, who w~ks in
Hoag's recruiting de art-
ment, began his pitch Wl a
simple question.
J there and de~ with these
\ people any more.' "
. Wong then picked up
medical tools she brought to
give students 'an idea of
what her work involves and
was right back on track
about praising her job.
Still, Womack, who plans
to become an FBI investiga-
tor, and he~ classmates said
they probably would not
choose nursing as a career. "Is there anyone in this
room considering going into
the nurs~ profession?" he
asked.
Apart from Mary Wong,
who is a registered nurse in
Hoag's radiology depart-
ment and came along to talk
about her experience, ~l
hands remained down.
"You don't count." Yates
said, turning to Wong.
Advertonal
by Paul ~rech
URWC. a MNllt .,...,,, • SWllOMH
J~ ACITOlfNH.D
PUTilNG KIDS IN
1HEIRPLACE
If you are the parent of a yOWJg
child who has found the uislallalion
of cluld safety seats to be
cumbersome and coof\Uing. you
are DO( alooe. .Accorditlg to the
National Jiigbway Traffic Safety
Administration, up to 85 <Ii or child
• safety !C3lS are installed inconudy.
With th.is in mind, a new installation
system has been developed lhal
involves the placement of metal
bars belWcen the vehicles' rear
seatbacks and cusltions. These bars
are designed to accommodate the
latches on c-0mpatible child seats,
which snap or hoolc onto the
bars. Thc.<ie lower anchoring
systems cornplemem the top-
tethering system.~ that already
appear on most new vehicles. By
September 2002, all cars and light
trucks will carry the lower
mounting system iu well.
HINT: By SeplClllber 2002, all new
chi Id uf ety sears are required to
incofporale lower aocboJ potnts mlo
their design.
TROUBLES WITH
AIR BUBBLES
A spoogy fed of the brake pedal
should lead C11 ownc:n to ched
their auromobiles' brake nuld
levelJ. Hit is oecwary to DI fluid.
have the auto tectmiciln chect out
the re.uoo for lbe fluid loss. Brake
pedals may tho exhibit ~
due to air ·~ in the tnte
hyd.raolic system. When th s
happens. dqmaing the brake pedal
cauSC.<1 the air to compress. As a
result, the air bubble abtorbl IOme
o( the prcSIW'C that is suppolCld 'tO
be reserved for Che sy5'em. This
reducea prt&llR in the bnle
calipers llld wheel cy~ to · •
.~ brlkina power. To l'CIDO'fe
the air, the syam muu be blDd. At
the &amt time, it ls • &ood idea to
replace all the bnte fluid. whidl
lblofbt moi.tbft C7VCS time. This
rnoumre can boll upon bird tnkitla
and ame bnlb faiJan:L
Keepina your fluid '-vds .., Is )I•
one miall dlinJ )'OU CID do IO
your car'• top pcdorMMCt.
11111! ~ II .il mm iqloltaM
dim "'WI yos 1lriba. Al C l P
(~10). " .. bm ., i.e1p
tolve ~ pmblcmi. pro¥ide
ICheddd .......... -..... .,_ '* ... by ........ ~ "'-fi&k WI bow_..,_,....
bltaite It'• ... " Ill Wiii&: ...
our CSI SJYI • l'Cllilllle
pttfann.a .......... tlllle
1n .,. -• pallllil*. 'lllil'• Mift we cm'-,.., am
cl' cw-..,..m•• *1dmiil..-llllif'1.AltMA
~ame--PIM ali
·w e can save your life in
15 minutes,• she said, hold·
ing a tmy piece of wire in
her hand that looked like the
spikes of an umbrella.
•All we need to do it put
one of these little babies in,·.
she said. •It keElps blood
clots from m9Vlllg1 from the
legs to the lung and heart."
Senior Juliet Womack, 17 ,
seemed drawn to a larger
GREEN LIGHT
CONTINUED FROM 1
the preceding 10 years• shall
count toward the threshold,
which is the trigger for a city-
wide v.ote.
While Greenligbt's lan-
guage seems to suggest that
amendments since 1990
should count, city officials
have recommended to set the
starting date for the "loak-
back period" as Dec. 15, the
day Greenllght became law.
Greenligbt author Allan
~ said a 1990 starting date
is n6t tn anybody's interest,
adding that the later date-was
·consistent with the spirit• of
the initiative.
Voters would have to deal
with more ballot measures,
such as a 400-square-foot
general plan amendment for
a filing room now before the
dty, he said.
Developers, who opposed
the initiative In the first place,
also would lose out with an
Ml want to be a .c)octor, •
said Omar Ragpute, an °18-
year-old · senior. "When
(Wong) talked about saving
people's lives -that sounds
great.•
Carson Morehouse, a 15-
year-old junior, said his own
hospital eJtperience as a
result of a kidney problem
had turned him away from
considering health 'Care for
good.
•1 can't stand what they
do,• he said. • 'Cause I've
.
FYI
The Newport Beach City
Council will meet for a
study session to discuss
Greenlight guidelines at
4 p.m. Tuesday at City
Hall, 3300 Newport Blvd.
earlier starting date, Be~k
said.
"The person who sued is
going to have to take the
blame for those extra ballot
measures,• he said. •Whoev-
er sued would look pretty
ridiculous.·
Beek said the Greenligbt
team realized that the initia-
tive's reference to the "pre-
ceding 10 years• should have
been changed.
Bur trying to gather
enough signatures to get .the
measure on the ballot, Green-
light supporters decided
instead to leave the text alone
and look to the City Council
. to adopt appropriate guide-
lines later, he said.
But Councilman Steve
:!H)!i~
Mattress Outlet Store ·
,_...._ • ...,_•YIM •....,_CU-•-• :r-•T•Oll• ........ •_• __ W_•._.. • .._,_.._
.__. • -~·llM,......_....CU.•oaaa.
... . . .. .
bad it ell done to me and it's
not nice. I can't do i• to
10mebody after knowing
what it feels uu:
Wrapping things up by
banding out key cha.ins with
a plastic, blue surfboard
adorned with Hoag .. s logo,
Yates said that after « little
over two years of visiting
schools it is still too early to
rate the program's success.
•we don't have a tracking
mechanism,• be said, adding
that some job applicants
straight out of college stated
that they bad become aware
of the hospital through guest
spealdng engagements.
EMPLOYEE BONUSES
Back at Hoag, Martin said
hospital officials have come
up with ideas ~temally to
attract -and keep -nurs-
es.
Hoag has introduced an
incentives scheme that
rewards employees for
recruiting new nwses, he
said.
The $2,000 ·bonus gets
split ih two, with the first
check coming after the new
recruit stays for six months,
the second after a year, Mar·
tin said, adding that 35
etlployees have 1received
the money so far.
So-called "new graduate
programs" help new
employees to ease into the
job by alternating time on
the ward with classes for the
first few weeks.
Marilyn Marie, who
joined Hoag in February
1999 to work in the oncology
ward, said the program had
made her transition from
Bromberg said the proposed·
starting date wotlld not follow
the initiative that residents
voted on.
•My goodness, I just don't
know how at this point in
time you can get around the
words,• be said, adding that
he still hopes to hear argu-
ments convincing him that a
setting a 2000 starting date is
within the council's scope.
•1 can't imagine how any
reasonable mind would want
more elections than fewer
elections: be said. "But we're
not in a position as a matter of
law to rewrite (Greenlight.)"
Although she supports
the 2000 date, Council-
woman Nonna Glo'<f!r said
she doesn't want to adopt
guidelines that amount to
rewriting the initiative.
·rm just looking at what is
going to be the best for the
city,• she said, adding that a
later starting date would be in
the best interest of business
owners in her district.
And since a lawsuit
against guideliDes is some-
thing to reckon with, Glover
said the city might as well get
it out of the way.
"No matter what we do,
we're going to be sued,· she
said. •1t•s maybe better to
have that happen sooner tha.D
later:
Gree.nligbtopponentssaid
a legal ch.alle~e to~ 2000
Do lly Pilot ·
college to ihe bo1pita.l a
whole lot smoother.
The program·•made a big
difference," said Marte, who
graduatea· with an assod,-
ate's degree rrom Golden
West College.
•we had a lot or feedback
and still, even after almost a
year, you can ask experi-
enced nurses questions.•
Marte said she went lnt9
nursing •blindly" withoµt
knowing much about the
profession. She said she is
happy with her position now
but can see ~erself going
back to school at some point
to obtain a bachelor's
degree.
Sitting In the break room
on the nursing tower's ninth
floor, Surico said he plans to
return to school in Septem-
ber.
He said be plans to study
for bachelor's and master's
degrees at Cal State
Dominguez Hills while con-
tinuing to work at Hoag.
What will happen then is
still up in the air, Surico said,
adding that he has been
interested in nursing ever
since he cared for his dis·
abled parents.
Becoming a nwse pral:ti-
tioner in pedia,trics or family
mediCine is one option, he
said . Lobbying legislators to
reform California's health
care system as a member of
-the Ametjcan Nursing Assn.
also interests him.
·some people want to
make money.• he said.
"Some people want to have
fun. Some people want to
hear a thank you. And that's
kind of where I'm a t."
starting date was a possibility.
"There a re people out
there who might jump on that
and say, 'The law is law,'"
said former Mayor Clarence
Turner, wb.o co-chaired the
opposition campaign against
tJte irtitiative.
#Quite frankly, I think that
if they change (the date) to
2000, they jeopardize the uu-
tiative, • he said, adding that
Greenlight supporters should
instead present an amend-
ment clarifying a 2000 start-
ing date to voters in a future
election.
"You can't go along and
pass an initiative based on
certain verbiage and then
arbitrarily change it. People
told us what they want~ and
that's the .way it should
remain."
Mayor Gary Adams said
be also has some concerns
that council members stay
true to the text or the initia-
tive.
But he said that City Atty.
Bob Burnham, who compiled
th.e proposed guidelines, was
"very comfortable that we
c~ 1defend a starting date of
2uoo."
"We need to talk it
through in the public hearu:,g
(Tuesday) and come to some
consensus: Adams said.
Burnham said the pro-
posed guidelines In bis staff
report were still in draft form.
•1 intend to listen to all tes·
timony and comments as will
the City Council,• he wrote In
an e·mail, adding that be will
not discuss the matter pub-
licly before the meeting.
IT'S TIME FOR ...
Wl TAKE DINING
TOTHl
NlXTLMU
.. , .. ->
-~· • le I: '-~_...,.... __ _.!.,._ ____ •
cc::>STA IVIESA
\ r.
Producing a good community newspaper isn't child's play., But the Daily Pilot, .
with itS local news, prep sports and updates on the West Side -makes it look easy.
Ifs the neW$P&P8r I've grown up With, and I'm staying with. No kidding .
.
Got rhe ·:Pilot?
.
Quote Of
•DIY
·-Jclmy 1 s honorte ..
JIM llllSON ..
6 Sports Editor Roger Cort.on • 949-574'223 •Spotts Fox: 949-650-0170 •Monday, January 8, 2001 Doily Pilot
tfl t11 s · ors sizzli11g
Sports Hall of Fame
Celebrating'tlre millennium
Corona del Mar
•I re was a real bruiser underneath and, perhaps, the
epitome of a Jack Errion-coached basketball player.
Richard Dunn
DAILY PILOT
T hose .rpart of Corona lft
del Mar High's CIF
Southern Section
· 3-A basketball championship
1111981 will always vow that
theu coUcctJon of Sea Kings.
under Coach Jack Emon, was
the best ever.
After dll, five stdrters were
eqwpped wtth D1V1Slon I college
ability dOd some believe it was
the most symbolic Enion squad
with its ughtfisted man-to-man
defense and hall-court offense.
Last summer. the '81 team
even captured the annual Jack
Enion Memorial Classic, a CdM
fund-raiser and popular day-long
basketball tournament for
alumni. They did it, somehow,
without Mark Spinn.
But, two decades ago, Enion's
Sea Kings could not
have been without the
6-foot-6 center and
inside moscleman in
their CIF 3-A tiUe run,
which included
area pick by the Daily Pilot along
with teammate Jeff Pries, Spinn
controlled the right side in the
low post and used strength and
technique to outrebound, and
generally outp1ay, his
competitors.
Spinn, who battled severe
tendinitis throughout his'career
and spent countless hours icing
his knees. enjoyed a three-year
varsity car~r under Errion in
which the Sea Kings compiled
an eye-popping 65-14 record.
Spinn, Pries, Steve Moore,
Mike Hess and Chris Lynch
formed one of the finest starting
quintets in CdM annals, bi>t
physically Spinn was just trying
to survive. ·
·1was17 and getting out of
bed like Nick Nolte in the
openihg scene of (the movie)
'North Dallas 40'· (with body
parts aching and cracking),•
·-~
'
said Spinn, who, by
bis junior year, had .
stopped trying slam
dunk in practice in an
effort to alleviate pain
in his knees. upsetting defend.mg
champion La Qwnta
and 6-9 two-tune CIF
3-A. and Orange
County Player of the
Year Johnny Rogers.
-...... ~
-" Rogers, a threat
Spinn, however, was
so salid underneath, he
earned a scholarship to
UCI and played under
Coach Bill Mulligan.
But Spinn's streak of
injuries escalated and,
after two knee both inside and outside Mark Spinn
with a great shooting operations, a stress
fracture in his shin and two
concussions, he told Mulligan. to
give his scholarship to someone .
touch, averaged 32.4 points per
game that season and later
played professionally and at UC
Irvine.
But Rogers bumped into a
defensive roadblock in the '81
CIF senufmals, a memorable
48-29 CdM victory as Spinn &
Co. avenged a 1980 setback
against La Quinta in the CIF 3-A
finals at Long·Beach State.
Then a skinny 193-pounder,
Spinn was the primary source in
a CdM defense that limited the
entire La Qwnta team, which
averaged close to 80 ppg, to
fewer potnts than Rogers
averaged in the season. Spinn
held Rogers to SIX points.
·Jack had us so well-prepared
for what we were lrylng lo do,•
Sptn.n said ·we played
straight man-to-man, and great
man-to-man defense is helping
the other guys out. Llke (Errlon)
would always say -it's help and
recover. You help out and get
back to your own man.•
That night in the '81
semifinals, CdM's defense was
as close to perfect as Enion or
any other coach could possibly
imagine.
These days, Spinn can speak
humbly about holding one of
Orange County's all-time greets
to a mere half dozen ln a
gigantic: CIF semilmal. But it is
still considered one of the most
unforgettable feats ln Cd.M's
celebrated hoops history.
Spinn, a two-time All-CIF
3-A selection who averaged 15.7
ppg hls senior year, and the rest
of a solid CdM cast defeated
Tustin in the '81 C1P 3-A finals at
the LA Sports Arena. It was the
school'• second CIP title under
Enion, followtng the '77 squad
with Jack Tuz and Alex Black.
A fint-team All-Orange Coast
else. ·
In his third practice as a
freshman_, Spinn took a charge
from UCI All-American Kevin
Mage:e and landed square on his
head. Three days later, Spinn
woke up.
•I was trying to show the
coaches that this kid from
Corona del Mar could play
defense,• said Spinn, who
would've made Errion proud
but suffered his first concU.ssk>n.
After the injuries got the best
of Spinn, he transferred to
UCLA, where be planned to
major in English and let his body
heal. Later, he played intramural
basketball and helped his squad
capture the 1983-84 UCLA
intramural cilampionsbip.
·ey the spring of '84, Spinn's
enthusiasm for the game
returned, inspiring a comeback.
In a formal practice for walk-on
players the following autumn,
where two of 15 players would
secure roster spots on Coach
Walt Ha.zzard's Bruins, Spinn got
hurt again.
It was another knee injury·
and a few days later Spinn was
back on the operating table.
•Now,• Spinn said. •u I play
(basketball) for a half-hour, I do
my Nick Nolte imitation for two
weeks. So I don't do lt anymore
and I don't play in the alumni
tournament"
Spinn, the latest honoree in
the Daily Pilot Spo11s Hall of
fame, ls an executive reau.lter
for an lrvtne marketing
communications firm. A former
Los Angelel Tunel ~ter.
Sptnn, 38, II single and lives in
Aliso Viejo.
. . .
Eagle~ suffer pair of setback$
IOYS USIElllLL .
Cout League opener agaliut
ttOlltown rfVaJ Blt.aDC:lli.
Maldoaei.to w., tmown out
lmmectile.ty ~ om oftldmL wHh
w.bom tbl guard !Ude cont.Kt.
Sii EMiLIS 11M1 7
..
•Peterson, Young step
up to extend winning streak
to six with Sea-View opener
on tap Wednesday night.
llWTy Faulkner
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -Convention-
al wisdom didn't look so smart against
the Newport Harbor High boys basket-
ball team Saturday night.
With enough coaches to fill a mini-
van soibbling scouting notes along the
top row of the bleachers, the Sailors' «·
36 nonleague victory over visiting
Fountain Valley likely produced as
much shaken confidence from future
Sea V\ew League opponents as frustra-
tion from the fired-up Barons.
As the final eight minutes unrav-.
eled, so did the best-laid plans to sag off
supposed offensive soft spots Erik
Peterson and Steven Young, both of
whom drilled pressure-packed three-
pointers to help keep the Barons at bay.
Peterson's three ball broke a 30-30
tie with 5: 11 left in the game. The 6-
foot-3 junior also sank two free throws
with 38 seconds ll:!ft and ecimed
postgame praise for his defense from
Coach I.any Hinrt. .
Young, a 6-2 senior. connected from
beyond the arc with 2:59 left, lifting the
BOYS
BASKETBALL
Tars to a 37-33
lead that was all
they would
need.
Young also
netted a pair of fourth-quarter foul
shots and added two rebounds and a
steal in the decisive period, in which
the Ta.rs took controJ of a game that fea-
tured six lead changes and three ties.
The vital contributioris from Peter-
son and Yowig. as well as sophomore
reserve Nadim Pajevic (four points),
complimented the work of Sailor stand-
outs Aaron Yamal, Tony Melum and
Gr~ Penine.
,.. As the season goes farther and far-
ther along, teams are focusing more on
taking away our first and second
options,• Hirst said. "That's why it's
import.ant to get some strong play from
the rest of our top seven:
Hirst said Peterson's post defense
was pivotal to a strong Newport defen-
sive effort. Fountain Valley hit just bet-
ter than 25~o of its field-goal attempts
(12 of 47). The Barons, who committed
four of their 10 turnovers in the final
5:28, including two on charging fouls,
were 1 of 10 from the field in the first
quarter and 2 of 11 in the fourth. Young
and Perrine took charges for the Turs.
·1 told our kids during a timeout
about midway through the fourth quar-~
ter that this is what our league is going
to be like every single night,· Hirst said.
·1 wanted to see if they were going to
pass the test."
The Tars (14-3), ranked No. 7 m
Orange County, passed by limiting
Fountain Valley (9-7) without a field
goal the final 4:55.
Newport also picked up more points
at the free-throw line, netting 16 of 21
to the Barons' 9 of 12.
Yamal had 11 of his game-high 13
P,Oints in the first three quarters, includ-
ing an athletic three-point play which
gave the hosts a 29-27 at third quarter's
end.
Melum chipped in 10 points and six
rebounds, while Pe nine, the junior
point guard, had a team-high seven
rebounds, as well as five points, two
assists and one steal.
•tte was our Door general out there
tonight." Hirst said of the 5-11 Perrine.
The win. was the sixth straight for the
Sailors, who open Sea View action
Wednesday at Irvine High.
Matt Ball and Zach Wheatley paced
Fountain Valley with nine points
apiece.
. • .IENNFER TAY\.~ I OAl.Y Pl.OT
Corona del Ma.r High's J aycee Mahler, Jett. maneuven against Newport Harbor defender Lauren Birchfield..
Sea Kings · strike e·arly
.... -
• CdM defeats Back Bay
rival Newport Harbor, 1-0,
on O'Meara's goal.
s.-varven
DAILY Pilar
NEWPORT BEACH-After Corona
del Mar High's Molly O'Meara con-
neded for a goal 57 seconds into a non-
leogue girls IOCCel game against Back ·.
Bay rival Newport Harbor, it appeared
Gl.15 the Sailors were tn for a
long night. SOCCER erJ:. Turs proved oth-
But, the visiting Sea Kings still fin.
I.shed on top with a 1-0 victory in a clas-
sic, intense battle Saturday night.
CdM's Lauren Shepartbon faked on
a free kick as she ran by the ball and
O'Mea.ra followed, sending the ball
mto Harbor's goal
Yet, ~ action went pack and forth.
to say the least, as the Tars answered
O'Meara's g~ with several attacks on
offense.
The loss, certainly, did not dampen
the spirilll of Harbor Coach Jason Sorrell.
·we did enough where the girls
came off the field thinlcing that we did
not deserve to lose that game• So.mill
said. •The score was a little bit irrele-
vant. I felt we baB the better cbanoes (t.O
score)." . •
SEE GIRLS PAGE 7
HclrbOr reclaimS Bell trophy
• Sailors shut out Back Bay
rival Corona del Mar, •-o.
NEWPORT BEACH -T' With a
1trong ·•UIV• of momentum and ~ c:oft!kleDCe, the Newport
HarbOr ttigb bop IOc.ar *ID won
b9ck .... ..,.... ... trophy wltb
8 .. .0 Dall'N .. *'lalJ 099' Back
Bay rival Corona del Mar.
IOYS The Sailors hoisted
the UOphy -which SOCCll goe1 to the winner or
the ennu&l malchup -
• awa from lhe Sea Kingl, wbo bad
pos....Son fO( lbe put yeer.
The ,.,.. (l-3-3) built • 3.0 lead
bef on balltime and goalie Duke
Buit:Mll put oa the ftnilhmg touch
two mlnutel Into the MC.'ODd ball
Whim be IClt1nd Oil • .,..., ldC::k.
~ .......... BUrcbaD Mid.
•
•My senior year, g0tn9 out with the
Bell, I really like that.• · ·
Burchell qukkly reboWlded alter
tweekirig hll left ankle in the first half,
H sat out for lell than four minutea
He finlsbed wlth nve ..... And ta\
relief, J '1o~e turned ~
three llVJtl.
CdM (2·51 COWd not find uy
rbytbm and Harbor look ~
In the 13th mlDUle. ney Mm put .tull
' ' .
• ' i ,
' ' • • I
'
Dolly Pilot
GIRLS
CONTINUED FROM 6
Still, the CdM victory was
huge for the Sea Kings (14-1-
2), not only because the win
came over their rival, but
because · they maintained
momentum without their team
captam. The Sea Kings
showed why they are ranked
No. 6 in Orange County and
No. 1 in CIP Southern Section
Divis~?~}V. ereseason .poll.
COM·!f' Margit Vogele left
the QaJI}e just before the first
half ended when she suffered
a cut i.nches away from her left
eye. She could barely open her
eye after the injury and she
went to Hoag Hospital when
the gwne ended to receive
four stitches.
Vogele, injured when she
co~lided with a Harbor player, -
Sdld she felt an elbow hit her
eye. She said she should be
ready for Cd.M's first Pacific
Coast League game Tuesday
at Laguna Beach. ·a was upsetting that I
couldn't play the whole game,•
said Vogele, who chose to stay
BOYS
CONTINUED FROM 6
enough on a shot to get it past
the CdM goalle.
The score seemed to gwe
the Tdrs llfe They played
with more passion and con-.
lmued to thrive on their
advantage. '
"We're a hungry team
right now." Harbor Coach
Matt West said. "We have
high expectations for this ·
year. We really wanted to see
tbat we could get some
results·
· More results came for the
Tars m the 22nd minute,
when Mttch Gray delivered a
9ear-perfect pass to Adam
Kerns. who finished for the
EAGLES
CONTINUED FROM 6
ttie player's momentum car-
ried him past the completion of
a play near the official in the
dosing au.nutes of a 59-48 loss,
acco~g _!o Estancia Coach
I
SPORTS Monday, Jonuory 8, 2001 7
and watch the game rather
than receive treatment imme-
diately. "I wanted to stay to see
what would happen. 1 really
didn't want to leave. r was glad
that we still woo. We played
ha.rd.·
highllg,ht-type plays ln the sec-
ond half. CdM's Lauren Loe
kiclted a nice pass to Jaycee
Mahler who almost scored, but
for Harbor goalie JIO.lss8 'fyler's
hero1c save. 'fyler made seven
of hei nine saves before half-
time.
Sailors' Lim captures second
The 109 of Vogele present-
ed a great challenge for the
Sea Kings. They responded
with their ninth shutout and an
awesome display ot desire.
CdM goalie Britta Vogele
also made a huge save when
she kicked away a scoring
chance and collided with Har-
bor's Kiltie Younglove, who fell
to the ground after the crash.
Britta Vogele remained on her
feet and jumped over Youn·
glove on her way back to
CdM's goal.
• Estancia's Thaler, Carmona take
3rd and 4th, at Estancia tourney.
COSTA .MESA -Newport Harbor HJgh
seeior wrestler Bruce ~Um came exauciab.ng-
ly dose to the 1 19-po~ championship, but
had to settle for second place WRESTLING at the 37-scbool Estancia
Tournament, completed Sat-
urday at the Eagles' gym.
before wrestling tus flrst match lie defeated
Ryan Whelan of Huntmgton Reac.h, 5-1, but
Hacker injured his knee.
Hae.km bad bwlt an 13-1 record before
defaulting Saturday
The Estanoa tournament fedtured 335
wrestle.rs, competing on SlX mats
Centenrual won the tedm tltle, wtule
Payson of Anzona, last yed.T's champJon. fin-
ished second. El Dorado wcts Uu.rd.
·Everyone else rose to the
occasion.• Cd.M Coach Ron
Evans said. "I felt we had bet-
ter opportunities (than Har-
bol), Harbor is a great team. I
don't \h.in.k that Harbor played
above its head. They are a
dass team. Any time we play
them, it's going to be a good
game:
The Tars (6-4-2) nearly
evened the score in the final
ITUJ')ute. Harbor sophomore
Arny Burlingham raced out on
a breakaway and almost
scored after her kick sailed
wide left.
"The score doesn't reflect
1t: Burlingham said. "But. we
showed that we wanted to
play, that we're improving and
that we're ready for league:
Harbor's readiness led to
goal and a 2-0 lead.
Then, V(ith four minutes
remain.itig in the first hall.
Harbor's Kevin Campos
kicked w another goal.
• 1 was Just trying to show
them what's up.• said Bntt.a,
Margit's twin, who brushed
with six saves. ·1 took it per-
sonally (when Margit was
injured). I tried to tune 1t out.
But, it made me (mad). We
were all focused after that."
Said O'Meara: •Everyone
on our team did a really good
Job of settling the ball, playmg ......
our game and playmg with a
lot of heart, because that's
what the Harbor-Corona game
LS about. It's who wants 1t more.
who has-more heart•
on the scoreboard, but Coclch
Pat Callaghan thought they
improved.
"We're !>1rugg.hrig,' Caildghan
said. •We're a young team.
And, we have developed
slowly. But I'm look.J.ng for-
ward to the league season. 1
think we'll be compebbve m
league.·
Lim, who earned a 15-3 wm over an oppo·
nent from Katella m the semifinals, battled
Centennial of Corona's Matt Schuum vahant-
ly into overtime, before falling, 10-.8, m the
title match.
Estancia seruor Nathan Thaler fuushed
third at 215 pounds, whtle sophomore team-
mate Victor Carmon.a was fourth at 125.
But Llm, who went 4 · l in the tournament
to improve to 17-2, was the only f.inalJ.st. He
built a 5-0 lead with a takedown and near-fall
in the first period. but Schuum outscored him,
6-1, in the second to forge a deadlock. Botti
scored twice in the Uurd period, before Schu-
wn earned the deosive takedown less than a
minute into the first tw~l)linute overtune
. period, accord.mg to Newport Coach Domlfllc
Bulone.
"It was a heartbreaker: BuJone said
Corona de1 Mar seruor 160-pounder Blake
Hacker defaulted tu.s matches Saturday
because of a swollen knee, an existing injury
he aggravated Friday while earning a berth m
the semifinals. ·u it would've been for CIF, • CdM Coach
Gary Almqwst said, ·we would've taped tus
legs together for tum to wrnstle. But, (Hacker)
is a tough lad. He'll rebound. We wa.at to get
tum i.n the state tournament •
After sitting out the hrst round Wlth d bye
on Fnday, Hacker waited nearly seven hours
Newport Harbor strook 'snapped
NEWPORT BEACH -Newport Harbor
HJgh's girls water polo tedlll hcsd 1\.s 10.qame
wmrung streak come to dil end Sdturday
Carbbdd'<, Scottle Schde-· GIRLS POLO fer scored dt the buzzer ~
the host SdJ.lor., llr.>t the non-
ledgue contest, 8-7
Newport 1wuor Kathennf:' 8~,lden i.cored
four goals and seruor Jcnnd Booth thrPw 111
two. Jenna Mwphy-also had a goal tor Hctrbor
( 10-2), ranked No. 3 m Ord.Oge County
Booth scored twice m the hndl penocl HE>r
·second goal gave the• Sailors d 7-6 lPdd But
Carlsbad scored l'.ol.1ce with I 21 remdlllll1g
Orange Coast men triuniph
COSTA l'vlESA -The Ordllge COdSt Col-
lege men's bdskethclll tPcim tughhghted JOCd.l
college action Sdturddy with tln 88-78 Ordllge
Empire Conference> homt· win over CyprPSs
OCT aot 17 pmnt!. each from COH.EGE Nick Burwell dnd Rydn Webster
HOOPS The OCC women d.rom>ed d
48-37 verdict to vu.1tmg C'fpress
Saturday. despite 13 prnnts from Knsten
Urban The Vanguard men \\ere defeated
74-62, at Fresno Pdn.hc Fndd'y where VU's
women di.so lost to the h<>!>t ',urihlTds, 77-°55
I
CdM combated Harbor's
play with a relentless effort
CdM goalie Geoffrey Collie r
finished with six saves.
mduding an outstanding play
m the 48th minute. He was
one-on-one with Meek, but
Collier .ended that scoring
chance with a dive and
stretch to tum back the shot.
Harbor will open Sea View
League play Wednesday at
lrvme,. the defending league
champion. Meanwhile, Cd.M
will take on Laguna Beach to
open Pacific Coast League
action Wednesday.
HIGH SCHOOl IOU
NON LEAGUE
HUNTI~ 59, ESTAHOA 48
Score by Quarters
Ertancia 12 9 15 12 . 48
fey 9, Edmunds 7, Fendon 5, Clark 5,
Torres 1. HAPPY BIRTHDAY fJ.so Andy Almquist nearly
scored, but his free kick sailed
wide right in the second half.
CdM's Brandon Fenno almost
kicked in a goal, as well. Min-
utes after Harbor's first goal,
Burchell had to dive to stop
Fenno's shot.
"We're trying to build
some momentum here.· W~st
said. ·we believe m each oth-
ef". We just want to keep
working and we feel like our
opportunities will be there
and they were tonight."
Huntington 3 13 8 25 · 59
Estancia · Young 22. Maldonado
10, Rodrig~z 9, Prado 3, (ac~la 2,
D Valbuena 2, Romero 0,
K. Valbuena 0.
3-pt. goats · Maldonado 1
Technicals -Rodriguez 1, Maldon-
ado 1 (ejected).
3-pt. goals Ball 1, Fendon 1,
.Edmunds 1.
Fouled out · Ball.
Newport Hart»« · Yamal 13,
Melum 10, Peterson 7, Young S,
Perrine 5, f>a1ev1c 4, Diefenbach 0,
Cameron 0, Hill 0
3-pt. goals . Peterson 1, Young 1
HIGH SCHOOl GIRlS
NONLEAGUE The Sea Kings failed to get
Chris Sorce.
EL Tc.> 48. ColloNA oe. MAii 35
ScON by ~rters
Sorce acknowledged con-
tact was made, but said Mal-
don.lldo stumbled away from
the play before colliding with
the referee.
The play· typified a frustrat-
ing finish for the Eagles (5-9),
who overcame a 26-21 hall-
time deficit with a 9-0 run to
start the third quarter.
Estancia took a 36-34 lead
into the final quarter, but the
Oilers (8-7), who topped the
Eagles, 67-51, in a Dec. 20
tournament dash, rallied.
Huntington Beach · Sullivan 13,
Austin 12, Janovick 10, DeHart 8,
Bailey 6, Anderson 6. Vanvoorhis 4.
3·pt. goals · Janovick 2, Bailey 2,
Anderson 2. Austin 2.
NON LEAGUE
NE.wPaRT 44. FouNwN VIWE'f 36
Score by Qulwt9l"I
El Toro 16 13 9 10 · 48
CdM 9 12 7 7 -35
El Toro -Twaddell 16, S1ckmeier
11, Quiroz B, Travers 6, Dellatorre 4,
Hansen 2. Tan 1
3-pt. goals -SKkme1er 3, Travers 2. c,oron. del Mar -K. McCoy 12,
Gruber 11, Kawata 9, J McCoy 2.
Pham 1.
Diii! SU
Fountain Valley S 12 10 9 -36
NeWpon 13 S 11 15 ·'44
Newpott ~ I 1>cMt I 3 '""9't<! 3 ui< .co IN•>. ~ ..,..., N\• 10 ~u p.n 4 ~.od
I bl..:~ SU ~s •«'"-
OF Southern Section rules
reqwre any player or coach
e1ected to sit out the next
game. Fowrtain ~ley ·Ball 9, Wheat· 3-pt. goals • Kawata 2. Gruber }
Oevey'I l.Odi.. l -·, "" .t"'.j•t<s 1 b~
Ynd i....,. 1 Ull.(0 -16 ''"''"'" 2 ...-wtt H'• t..ss
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llleaMCI llld ~ID The lollowlng pefWON the court and maH • JANUARY 25, 2001 at
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locllld rd mew. ~ This .,Pualnast la con-lour mon1tla from th• Wllttan objecit0ns wrth
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Adrian A Cl!l9nl on 11127/2000 NOTICE Of ptlltion °' tcCOUnl u
IF THE ABOVE AC·
TION(S) IS/ARE
CHALLENGED IN COURT THE
CHALLENGE MAY BE
LIMITED TO ONLY
THOSE ISSUES
RAISED IN WRITTEN
CORRESPONDENCE
DELIVERED TO THE
ZONING AOMINIS·
TRATOR PRIOR TO
THE ABOVE DATE
FOR FURTHER IN·
FORMATION ON THE ABOVE APPLICA·
TIONS TELEPHONE
(7141 754·5245 OR CAl.L AT niE OFFICE
OF THE PLANNING
DIVISION ROOM 200 n FAIR ORtVE. COSTA
MESA. C~IFORNIA
Pubhah•d Newport
Bncti Cos11 Mn•
Oa•ly Pilot January 8
2001 •
t.1034
What
happens if
you don't
advertise?
NOTHING.
TN• ~•ment wu 2000M4mt PETITION provided In Proti.ta
llltd wltl\ the County o.lly P*'I Dec. 25, ™ TO AOMtNISTEA ~ -:r1on~,.:. Call the ~1~1~ Coldy Jen. i. 8. l&, 200'M030 ESTATE Of: tloe '°"" .. avallablf Classifieds
2000tM735' BSC 10182 STEPHEN M. SAU. from tn. COUl1 clM.
Deily Pilot Dec. ~1 25, NOTICE Of CASE HO. A2054U Att11nwy tor ,....,... • (949) 2000. Jan. I, 8, l!IJOI PETmON To all '*"· btntll-.,..... c. Hswr. bq.
____ ___...M..,...02..,.§ TO 'ADMINISTER ciatlte. ortdit0t9, cont• \~~~) ... llO ~J2 ~~78
Flctttlou. 8ueinMI ESTATE OF: lngent crtdlton. end Newoft hMft. CA Vlf ~
Heme Stmment COAIHNA MEYER =:°: =-= :: HMO ~ Pik>t
Fictitious Buslne11
Name Statement LARZELERE
The fo41owing persons Ch1rl11 Laverne Jr ..
arzv.a~ ~~er:::sln •9• 74, resident of
temationat zoo. Newpo11 Newport Bueti, CA,
Centi! Onve &i.te 203 lor 17 years. Sunived
Newpon B11ch CA by hit wife, Norma,
92660 daughter, Leigh1nn
~ream Ketyan 2332 Jorln. son. Donald
Elden Ave •9 Costa Larzelere brothtr,
Mesa. CA 92G27 Richard umlere and This business 1s con· ducted by an indMdua! •I• grandchildren.
Have you alerted A private l1mlly
doing business yet? No urvlca honortd him.
Abraam Kelyan Donations t& Tht
This ..'ll1tement wes Amerlc1n Heart
tiled wllh 1~ Cwnty Aseoc., PO box 6046
Cl8f1I o4 o..anoe County 1rv1nt ca m 16 on 12112/2000 -'-'-r~=-~.;.,._ __
2000&141034
Ody PllOI Jao 8. 15 22.
29, 200t M036
Can't eeem to
g.t to all thoM
repait' lobe
around the houM?
Let the c .. aa1n.o
S.rvtce 0 1.-tory help you flnd
... 11at>te help
PtDCt llOTHUS
IEU. IROADWAY
Mort11a1y 11t Chapel
Cremation
I 10 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642-9150
Discount (~asket
C 1 l 111 If It 1 I I I I ti I l ~111 11 ,, f \ l ~ '
C.n"1 &n,,, r """ Qtu}Jt] c...Ms {.r I A1
D~ Cremation .. $495
Immediate BwiaJ .. $995
• (hklllb. C.....Skfr1
rn:arrangcmcnt Programs Avaibblt for
Funeral 5emc.a, Crcma1 ions and c.Jtns
c Cl\11'\IU .......... ,,.
I ......... ', . I c \ ..... ,, I I Thtdcil~ •••• :!,~•· ~~ ot P1u.~~~~c•do••• Ne~•"• _.:_ _ .,. m: CAN NO. A.208• "'~ M ......... ...... -.. ______ _. ~ ~. To ... ,.,..._ beneft· A PETITION FOR l~200...,.I Jlnuely a. t. ,------------------.....;;;...;.....;;_.._ 270 S MRll 91.. Mt oia1*, c:ndlton, OOtll• PAOBA TE hu be4M'I • 101 t2.3'. CG91a ....... Inger!& crtdl!Ora. Ind -.S by M1UAAD SAU. IM303
Cdoimle 92820 PMCN "9IO nwt °'*" In .... ~ Coun of THE COSTA MESA Alcltwrd ll'aul Wiid, .. b9 ............. In h Celdomla, Cou.my of ZONING ADMINIS• 270 8 ..-ol II .• Q,ite .. 0t ..... , Olf bOll. ot ORANGE. TRATOR WILL
IOI ~. C4*a MIM. CORINNA MEVER THE PETITION FOR AENOE:R A DECISIOH CallbNa 92129 IA89 PA08ATE ,.._ INll ON 'n4URSOAY. JNtN. ~ ~~ PR~fJITI!: .:: ~ ~:: ~1\r°~.:f
. Hav• you atal1ed fllecS by 81"EPHfN 0 ,._..,,,. '° _.... THEREAH Ut ON ~buelrieea ~Ho IAll8 11'1 1M ~ !!.. ...... al Ill .._ .THE FOLLOWING f'llUI Coul1 4'f Calttomla, _,THE... ~ _ IT£MS· TN9 ~ ... eow.v d OftAlifOE. .. ~'.'...,... .... 1 ZIOHtHG APfl\JCA..
STARTING
ANEW\
BUSINESS!
~ ""'o1.=. ~ 1"£ ll'f:mlON FOR ..... IUl'lority '° ef. TIOH V...00-54 '°" ..._... ---v PADBATt ,.... ... ......, h -wider DAW> HAMl90NI
Oft 1111 11VttDt O. · M19 119 .. • dll$1 & ..... ,.._ pACtflC KU WIN:-e • e e e e e e • e • MlllltlM1 ..,,....., M ....,,.. ......,.. d ~ Acll. LLUIO"NEAL =: ~ :n,a. ....... ,. ti» .._. ~ ~,:,.:::. CCIMMUtetCATI<mS
_......_......__· _T":"::,..aw-t.1.z ::.:-d,. • .... 90 ..._ ,_. -ONJUt. MJEHTa RM
A ~ '" 1111 .... ...._. ~ ::··~~ ,,_... ._ .. ,..."' ..,. .......-..... ~ cuwns ~ ~1 ...... OlftlM '""1 lllto flO' A ~ C:00: '* '"" "' "71 ........ ,. ~ ,_. Tow. UIE '9IMfT .._... • Ml CIW =-~..: TO AU.OW N4 1"· &-~ 0..-. ::..s:: --.. =r~ ~ • '°" OMCt .... ..r=:. = -Nm..M ~ I!~.,,_-• __ .. • .. WJ011'DUl 'TO'M ~ .......... ===-~ °'THI AD-~~]._.._..,_.._ .-~-'\:1~ .. e ..... M -., ij!;ft K"~~--~-;lltiffii
t '
-
Polley -Deadllnes -
Monday ............... Friday S:OOpm
Tuesday ............. Monday 5:00pm
llntt'" uud cJrndlj111•1; un· 1111hjt'<'t HI
d1u11,.:1• 1A•idumt 1wtkr. 1111· pullli!!h11r
n·-.t·nr~ llw right to 1•n1s11r. n•c-110.~i(}'·
n·vi'it' or rrjc·1·t nn~ du.,.,ifit•d
111lwrti'-('111t·11t Pl1·a..,.. n•1w111 Hll) 1•n•or
1ho1 mo~ lw• in ~our rla~~ifircl ml
11111111 .. tiuu·I~. ·nw Dwl~ Pil01 1w1·1·p1 ..
110 li1tl11li1~ for ~II) l'm>r i111111
By l'ax
(9+9) 631 -6594
Byl'hone
(949) 642-5678
By Malllln Penon:
330 Wr t Bav 'trect {;~ta Mesa. CA 92627
\1 \npon RIHI. Ii.: Bu~ ~,
Wednesday ........ Tuesday 5:00pm
Thursday ...... Wednesday 5:00pm
nth 1•rt i-..•1111•111 fur • ltid1 ii 11111\ '"'
n''IMlll"ihl r r\ffJll for 1h1· ro.,1.or 1l1t
~pan· urt uully oo·upit-11 ll\ 1h1· 1•rnff.
( :mlir nm'"'~· Ix· ultO\\'l'll Cur tlw
1i1 ... 1 i11,1•11 iou.
. ~------
I I -_,,,,., -
(Plt·1ht' 111duc.lr \OtJr namt a11rl phoot numht1
1mcl u "ll 11111 \IH1)1A1·~ .,1th a pricT q1lfl4c )
Telephone 8:30am-5:00pm
Monday-Friday
' • I ·I • II
._
·--420
Gt
EOUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
Al real estate iC!vtt1lSlnQ
111 mis ~per IS subtld
10 Ille ftderal f11r HOUsll\Q
Aci ot 1968 as amended
wh1th makes 11 1tltgal lo ad'ttrlJst ·any preference
hmlllllOll or discnm111at1on
based oo race cotor rtho·
llll1. sex lland1cap tam111a1 status OI nar10111I ongin, or
an 1ntent10n 10 make any
suth prelerence. lim1t1b0n
or 111scnm1nallon •
Tilts newspa.per wtll no1
knowingly 1ccep1 any
advertlsement tor real
eSllle y,tuch is m violatllll1
of lhe law Oui rl9ders 11e
htreby informed tllil all c1w111nos ~ 111 tlliS newsQ11* ;n 1v11111>1e on an l!QUll oppottUnity ~
To compl1m of dlSClllllt·
111bon. QI! HUD toll fret at
1~24·8590
1 ~
GENERAL
ONE STOP 'HOMEBnl~G
SUPERSTORE ~ ""~ ~ ... Jt-,<.fl IC,0., il'.f t!:.l. t,.,.n ~ ~"-:.O.Y" r '?'(' C:!:'Cl 11'1.wl f 'l• ~. :>eoo Ls
~Al> f W. \l.t'( Tl' N .!1M>
"Ulr!I Cd lOO. ..
l.U0-7lUIS7 l4 hn
Vf1'1'an Real Emtt
"' '""' EMAIL "~e11m
ti •
rl .. ----
' . .
101. 216 \ ao-461
F'J --~ -
----
400. 412 470-471
1HOC~
GlMEAAL
AVOID
SS ca.tJy SS
Buyer TrN>S SEFORl'.
8uyl1l9 I home ,,... "'9ol1
kllntlllM .,.
' blggett buyer hpl end
how to rlOld "*"· Toll "9e nMg 1-Hf.231·'441
IOI 1011 AR!!ll
.. , ---
1·:n1
IAYRIOOE TOWNttOlllE $fNlclcMl9 3lr 38a, gltld _.,tu. 2 .........
2 car ICt fir· S2J75hao. at•St2.a52
W• IO und 211 °'91111
38t 281 new catplpe/nl.
blindl. lower unl. I cer g11t
$1975 949-673-7800
So of Hwy Stuclo pv1 encr. w .. ~"' Condo 2Br 281.
kltchenelte, walk IO beach, I/NI pebO, Fp. pool, IVpetl/
shops, Ulla inCd S5751mo. 1mkg $1250/mo
949-723.5024 or n3-5os 1 949-548-4193, 645-1419
Notlu of O.l1111t, muet
Mil, --ofter, SMe,000 401 S-1 Dr. Agt Krtlly E'Sidt BICtr Bly
Mt-293-14'7 18' loll no pees, IYll
beglnnng in Feb $89S'mo 949-574-2031
lloltl
MANAGERS
• SPECIAL• $154.00+ tax Wkty !Ml* preetnl .. Ad) ~ ""' & llillillnlOI. 5a*9d on i-AUy Ill~~ FEATURES 24-Hour
lobby/OlrK1 dial
phonelfFrM HBO. ESPH I Oilc:IPool I
Jlcuul, Guest laun-
cty Clote IO 4051 55
Fwys. Min'I lrom 0 C
Fllrgrda, college Ind
bdls. Walking cit·
lltlCt IO ll1ops and
rut1uraot1
COSTA MESA MOTOR INN rm 1t11t1or IMI "*-'4M45 ....
,
Friday ............. Thursday S:OOpm
Walk-In 8:30am-5:00pm
Monday-Friday Saturday .............. Friday 5:00pm
r,.•._.----
. .
Old« Style Furniture
PIANOS & CoH.ctlbles . ......,_._
·-·-·~-$$ CASH PAID $$ .. ~ ............
WE llUY ESTATES
• """*""-"IMdlr -Ula"
C~rJSIG~.~E~.T~
'I' I , . I
c . j
.. 0 .-416 ................ ,, .• _ ..
Reach 80,000 Homes uch Week
for Only $28 per week (4 wk, min.)
Call Lemd,-• 642-5671 x24
2LivHOM E~--
Elder care comes home.
WORK FOR-THE BEST
Gerontology Aide I Careglvere I Companion•
FOR PRIVATE DUTY
• S.350 Sign on bonus for Li,c.fn carc:g1vcrs ch~1 driw: wich own car.
• Minimum l yc.11~ cxpc:ricncc wuh Al1.hc1mcr, Demcnlia or Gcra·Psych.
• Live-In I Live-Out I 4 hr I 6 hr I H hr f 12 hr Shift Available.
•We olTcr acdknt bcncfics I Trainini /lop P~y / 401 K Plan
Join the LlvHOME Te•rnl
LO•AneeiM GUI M~hu.i • (JZJJ .93..J. 5880
Onintte Ceuntr c.u ~,.,.,.u, (919) 794-9470
TOP SSSIRECOAOSf Cemertllo Jan. R & 8, Soul. Roclt, C.JJ AJJu,,,, · (805) 384-9488
lie. 50'1 .& 60's
MIKE 9CH4H505 ~=v:';:;·:":-:u:::·::·:·;-;:-1-w: ... :::·:":::·::· ::_::-_w_.~";:"":;::: ....... :;:::::::;:.oOillft;::. ::::;:·=· =
I BABYSITTER NEEDED •RESTAURANT• I I 4721CMU>~ I &~~:=t-= ~4:s:,;; • ·.--=
d1t11t1
BABYSrTTER HEEDED
lof 11rge I~ II Alllo
Vi Utt houtekMpng ~ 949-57~48 lor men dtllilS '
..........
Apply In plf'IOf\
~ AVOCldo A~.,
Newpol1 Belcll
Corona del ... Pim
O ' m
.... If,]' ,._1 •f! I .....
Doily P0
ilot
" CAD llVLLE '11 1 OwMf, pM COlld,
• .. ,....,, 11al"t1IMCI, roo.a a *IVM 1*flct.
l4'09 ....... ~
' '
FORD TAURUS 11
Sbelon WlfOll, 7?Jt 1111.
lll*d wllldowl. rocif .. ............ Sl55Cllobo
MM54-5412 Hllll
lamarbtl!!Q t tarthllnk net
JEEP WRANGLER 't:2
Wlllt, 4 cyl. s 141. 4WD, AC, 1lar111, SMOOlol>o
Ml-574-1307
. '
Bridge
ANSWER.'J TO WEEKLY BaJl>G! QUIZ
QI · ~-~I v11lncrable..you
hold:
• A6l 0 AJ 10 o K 106' • AIS
Partna opml the blddula Wl\h one
diamond. Wb&I do you re'f)Ond?
A -This Is 'textbook slclWion. With 16-18 poinll and. 4-3·3·3 hind Jlll•
iem, rupond to any one-level ope1>-ina bid with 1 jump to Wee no
trwnp. There is no 1U1011 to mate
ID excepdoo with this hand.
lllEACEDES *60 11 Q 1 • Both vulnerable, as South you
Turbo OolMI, dnl cond. hold:
2S ~ Cl9MI ~.,....,
S3995/obo 94292~7 • Q J 4 A H 74 l v A J 1t • 4
~ 4605El 7$
White, sunroof, kMldld. 120k 11'1, CA emog ciert. llW'il
$3650 716«N711
~ 5eOSt. ..
Red bel!Ay. -Ire. 1111 YM1 model, chl'ornM, new '°" lop. aoe ~ 117,900 714-751·1*
MUaO SUV W
TI* II • Dllmond,~ ~~~
..... 24-1401
M3 '97
4-0ocw. LNltllf
(E11llO) 1432.115
SltRUNG BMW •
Ntwpoft 8Mcll
MM45-SIOO
Nllaan ~ NX 87 20'
OOIC>t 13911. melalic """· auto ~ newl~ks & alternator. 111ry clNO
$1995 949·586-1888 Btr ·
Oldemoble Clen 't3 YI. wtllll. t1celent ~
(3578a5) S3.tll
NABERS
TilC h1ddmg blll proceeded. NORTH EAST SOlfTH
I• ,._ I
2• ,_ ' What do you bid now"
A· You &TC cenainly headed to game, but the question is w~'! Since your hean 11111 is noc good
enough (Of 1 Jump to t.hrcc hcans.
which '' no longer forcing m any event. you hive to temponz.c Wltb a
bid of two d.11monds Any nc"' 'ult
by ~ponder rs a one-round force. so
do not worry about getung left then:.
Q J. Neither vulnerable. you hold.
• 10 K IUS AQl7'J2 • 10
Pmncropem the bidding "''\hone no ttump What do you rc5pond'.'
A • II ~ onl) natural 10 1ump m your M:ven<ard sun. assuming three
dramoncb is forcina ui )'our meth-
ods, but 1o11pt><>Se Lha1 partner "'~ to
respond to three diamonds with lhrcc
no trump. What now? No tn.1mp
could u~1ly be mlenor 10 1 hcan
con1111Ct FU"St check: on the possib1.lt-
t) of• 4-4 hean fit b)' employing the
Staym~n t.00~~11on. Bid '"'O club!.
•AQJU o JU o U • Qt5
Thi biddina lw moc:eedcd. NOll'nl IAsl' . SOtmf WEST lo ,_ t• ,_
2• ... ?
What llCtlondo )'~lab?
A · Yes. you do b•ve a five-cud
major, wluch pllltncr railed. I 0 brgh·
card poi.nu and • NltlllJ value. but ~ jlOincs CODSill rnoatly of le<:•
ondary honors md the runlna value 11 in panncr'1 auiL Since there ta no rea1C?f1 toe~ your combll)Cd • eldi produce pmc:. do noc
a sale pllrtial by probins W1hu Pus
Q S • Both v11lnerablc, as South )OU
hold:
•AQJ5 .K J 97l "AQ •K 7
The biddin hlJ eeded NORTH fA..~l'TH Wt.ST I• ,._ 1-,.._
l ,._ !
What do you bid now?
A • This 1~ a simple ll\lllter of anth
mctJC. You have 20 points 1n high
catds and can cxpec1 a m.Utmum of
I 3-14 from panner. 'That g1 vc' you
enough for a &mall slam bu1 OOI
enough for 1 Jrand. So do no1 waste
tune and elTon Bid su he11u
Q 6 • Vulnn-.ble, )'OU hold
AJ 62 AQI • AJ IOSJ
Your right-hand opponent ~ns the
bidding with three heans What
11&.'tl<lfl do you Ille"
A • Almosl surcl). you lurve the bc$t
hand 1.1 the table. HowcvCT. the pre-
empt bas done II\ work and. jtnce
your long 51111 •~ m nuddhng five-card.
mmor, any <1et11>11 you tal.c " fraugh1
with risk If )'OU do ICI, WC have.
meaky rcg11d '°' those "'ho try
0 YES, SEU MY CAR
-., L L=_..(7'""1....,4)..._540---...-ll..-100,___ Q 4 • East· "'bt vulncpblc, u South
hold:
t.hrcc no trump Bamng that. "'c
would ~ UI the flllJll hopt 1h11
panncr his enough to reopen with a
;loublc.
Run your ad in the
Newport Beach-
Costa Mesa Daily
Pilot and the
Hunting Beach-
Fountain Valley
Independent to
reach O"Ver 100,000
homes. Fax us this
form with your credit
card # or mail with I
a check today! I
Run for a week! If
your car does not
Orr
rw--.. ...., ____ MilOll---
o.c...., o.__ a ... .__ tt....-D•• I........_ o..._.._ ru---o--21--0 ................ ~ ... a...... .........._ .. ._
o ............. ac-e.... -...... ·1•00• s~---g= a=-== ::.:.-::
-... "-.... llOW ..... C-._CA_I sell, we'll run 1t for L .. -_ ~.!"'~~·-=~ .. .:..-__ _
another week FWIEI • • • ·
All for Just s10·. ~t lndeP-!=ndent
HOME/Wir
=::~ Potcib.ln • fibergl~
Sinks ·~ COUQlers
949-445-7723
. ·v ..
CUSTI* CMATM TU ~ It' . u ....... camlc,
11111t111. .... &eMt tm "121* .!!!! U4'1,_1
WXY .,_.. Rlplhd.
~-~ 71tt1ttff!
~ •l4iP1 .•• .,.,._,
Oldarnolllll Cuti.N 'It
Bt.at. ~ 1a 111 V6
(339542) $13.981
NABERS
(714)540-9100
PAS$AT GLS WAGON, '01 m..stt (2 ll ltlll price)
1 E0042M/1 E032457
l.uxuty ~g. llloy ....
McKIMI Volkllfl9CMI
IU..541~517
PASSAT GU, 2001 m.-12 1t lhll pricll
1P00172111P001540 Lllhr, till, llloy ....
McK-Volb•990fl
lll-541.0S17
PASSAT SE.DAN '2001 ,,... (1 .. Ht price)
1POOt1 t5l1 P0171H
~eound .....
McK111na VolklWlllOft
... 541.0S17
SELL
..
Ylf'd ~. lr9e tnm-ming, atump removal.
htdgM, pellll ~. 71 4
84&-1130 01 7/ .. 7031
Sk 111 •1 t ":H 1)f1 r
F IP• I· , 1 111 Pl11r11l1f·T
AIOZlbM ~1 .. -• ~. Elldrlc:ll Ind Plumbing liet 650524
C1ll 714-21t-711S or
!4!=24M011.
r
,·~n -. ,.
1'• •
' 7. . •
-t' ,. ... •
Tell Us About
YOUR
GARAGE
SALE!
IB
~
MOndoy, Joouory 8, 2001
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
14
5281 ..
Autio, loedld w/Op11oMI
(W531•) '31.996
CREVIER BMW
714-ISS-3171
528i ..
Auto, Sllv« /Bid
(W Gml $34.,995
CRtvlER BMW
714-Us-3171
~-Auto, Prwnillln Pldalot
(Y25150) --CAEVIER BMW
714-135-3171
740! 98
Blue Gley,-e.uty
(L.50512) $36.995
CREVIER BMW
714-t35-317t
521 '99
CO I MclR, 14K lolllea
(4fl(f065) $36.995
CR£V1ER BMW
714-US-3171
74QI 98 CD, Pncrne. White
(4ATU7421 537,995
CR£VIE.R BMW
714.US-3171
Call Classlfled Today
(949 642-5678
PUBLIC
NOTlCE
The C&frf Public·
Ut1ll111s Com·
IT\ISSIOll REOU I RES
thal al used house-
hold goods movers
pnnt their p u c
Cal T rurCJer: imos
and cnautlers pnot
ltl8ir T C.P. number
111 .. advel1ismellts
II you have a ques..
ban ebotA .. ,._.
ft'/ cl I lllO't'9f, inc
Of c:hllllfel. cd·
PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISION
714-558 ... 151
'
7'°'1 ..
4«, lllw, Chlome Whl•
(M10964) $42.995
STERLING BMW
Newpott 8-:tl
!14t-645-S!IOO
CNh s Call s In • 11111111!
Any r .. mn1nQ Cll' OI 1!\JCI,
85· 99 groow pollulers
eccepled Wt ... 11 neces-
ury 58('11 114111>9 lnarn
9'9-586-1888 ~ 121r.s a
Mek 8k1
,...~ .... ,,, ....
949-722-SM6
714-7S 1.:as-46 .._ -
•
. .
' • •• • ' ~ • t ! ' 'I
.. . .
JO Monday, January 8, 2001 Daily Pilot
{
I
" I 1-..: \ I "'-( I ( ) " \ "'-( I I l ( ) l "·· I '1 ' ' : ',, ( ! i ' I I I
' •I
O T s.o MUC H PR E ·-OW NE D A S
PREVIOUSLY ADORED.
---
,( . .
A ft er n'\·iewing 21 pre-o\\·1H·d V('hicl<' progran1s. l ntelliChoice® Han1~d Jaguar Select Edition the
<·ou11try ·~ Best Certified Pre-(),vned Progra~ a nd Best Pre-0\v ne d Warranty.~
• (>-\ear/ 100 ~000-1nil~
''"a r r a 11 t v
• 1 ~0-poi-nt ·osmctic &
n1ec ha n ical inspection
• 24-hour road ide
assist a nee
• Financing and leasing
option
• Available a1
authorized Jaguar ~
dealers only _ ~
JAGUAR
S ELECT EDITION
PRE-OWNED AUTOMOBILES '
B~uer Jaguar ·
1455 ·south Auto Mall Drive
Santa Ana ·• 55 Freeway at Edinger
714-953·4800 • www.bauerjaguar.com
. ,
Coverage indud remaining new-car warranty plus lhc Select Edition premium Warranty, which provides COYCrtge for an .dditional 2 yeai'tl 50,000 miles on eligible
1996 modd year vchiclCI or newer. Coverage for 1995 model year vchid will differ. Sec your dealer fur details on chis limited cxwcrage. Noc all can to be JOld u Select
Edition. •JntclHChoicc Inc., www.intcllichoice.com, cptcmbcr 1999 review of 21 manufacturer programs. jaguAr tied for flnt place. For more information, call 1..:aoo.-..
JAGUAR or visit www.jaguar.com/us. C2000 jaguar rs.t•
,,