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PHOTOS BY SEAN Htl.UR I OAlY PILOT
Henry Segentrom and designer Kathryn Gustafson lead guests across the Bridge of Gardens during the offidal grand opening
of the structure Thursday morning. The bridge spans 600 feet across Bear Street. connecting the mall's two sections.
I I
A arden
in the sky
South Coast Plaza fonnally unveils the ~ridge of Gardens. which center officials
I hope will increase business Confetti Butters in the sky above South Coast Plaza as the
Bridge of Gardens ls unveiled before a VIP crowd.
Jenntfer Kho
DAILY PM.or
W ith a rain of confetti, a flock of
circling doves and dramatic
brass band fanfare, the Bridge
of Gardens was formally intro-
duced to a VIP crowd at South Coast Plaza
on Thursday.
•That was beautiful,• said Alice Bruese-
hoff, who attended the grand opening. •It
was a great experience and 1 was just
amazed. I enjoyed every minute of it.•
demonstration and performances by several
bands.
But the star of the show was the great,
gray bridge over Bear Street.
In addition to the dedication ceremony
held under overcast skies, grand opening
events included •A Taste of South Coast
Plaza,• which offered samples from about
25 restaurants, a WoUgang Puck cooking
The Bridge of Gardens -a 600-foot-
long, open-air pedestrian walkway with
rows of steel ·wings• projecting from each
SEE BRIDGE PAGE 5
Irvine Co. throws weight behind Measure T
• After careful consideration and measured
analysis, officials say, Newpott-Mesa's largest
developer opposes Greenlight initiative.
AlexCoolmM
0AllY PILOT
NEWPORT BBACH -The
lrvtne Co. has thrown its sup--
port behind Measure T and
opposes Measure S, according to a letter sent Wednesday to
proponents of the 1\"afft.c Phas-
ing initiative.
•we are taking a position on
this issue as a planner and 111 a
company that has a long history
and a long future tn the com-
munity, and that aµes o great
deal about the quality of New-
port Beach,• said Gary Hunt,
executiVe vice president of the
Irvine Co.
Hunt added that the compa-
ny had conducted studies and
weighed the pros and cons of
both measures before deciding
to take sides on the issue.
The letter, signed by Hunt,
characterizes the 1\"affic Pha5-
1ng initiative, or Measure T, as a
responsible effort to address
•the legitimate traffic concerns
of Newport Beach residents.•
The measure would add
parts of the city's traffic phasing
ordinance to the dty charter and
nullify Measure S -also known
as the Greenllght initiative -
should voters approve both
measures.
Hunt described the rival
Greenligbt initiative as a pro-
posal that would end up ·dis·
couraging the dty's revitaliza·
tion, harming property values
and ironically leading to
increased traffic congestion.·
Measure S would require a
vote on developments that add
more than 100 peak-hour car
trips or housing units, or whose
SEE IRVINE CO. PAGE 5
, . . '
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2000
.
Shalimar
to restart
program
for teens
•Staffers are preparing to reopen
the entire learning center, but no
date has been scheduled .
Jennifer Kho
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -The Shalimar Learning
Center on Monday will reopen the portion of
its program alffied at teens because some
students are already falling behind m their
stud.Jes without the benefit of after-school
tutoring
·some of the teens are taking their most
challenging classes nght now and we want
to be sure they get help unmedlately, • said
Pablo R. Diaz, execubve d.uector of 1lunk
Together. which oversees Shahmar and bve
other leamlng centers. • Educabon IS their
bcket out of poverty and we want to make
sure they have a solid educabon •
Shahmar ottioals deeded to reopen part of
the center during a dosed meeting Wednes-
day. Diaz Sdld staff members are now work-
ing frantically to get everything done: lirung
up volunteers, malang schedules and con-
tacting students and parents to let them know
the center will be back and running.
Between 80 and 100 teens were active par-
ticipants at the 6-year-old center when 1t shut
SEE SHALIMAR PAGE 5
Neighbors
divided on
crow control
• Responding to residents'
complaints of noise, Costa Mesa
police shot and killed a dozen
of the large, loud birds last week.
Deepa Bharath
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -Residents are divided
over the action taken by police officers wbo
shot and killed a dozen crows with pellet
guns last week in response to complaints by
area neighbors.
Costa Mesa Police officers said residents
on 20th Street between Tustin and Santa
Ana streets tiled a fonnal complaint three
months ago with a petition signed by 23
people from 16 homes.
Lt Karl Schuler of the Costa Mesa Police
Department S(lid there were 225 of the large.
black birds flying and cawing in the area
early in the morning of Sept 21.
·1 was amazed at the number of birds and
the noise they were generating,• be said.
Schuler said he will return to the neigh·
borhood and shoot more birds if they return
in large numbers . ·we don't want to do that,• he said. ·aut if
SEE CROWS PAGE 5
2000 ~OLYMPICS
HOUIS
A quick
gulde to #uJ
weebmd
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-
2 Friday, September 29, 2000
Tony Award winner
opens 2000-01
Cabaret Season
at t~e Center.
Jennifer K Mahal
DAILY PILOT
F or Barbara Cook, liie has
become filled with
cabaret. The 72-year-old
soprano, known for her Tony
Award-wumin9 tum as Mari-
an the Librarian in "The
Music Man,• has not per-
formed in theate r since 1987.
Instead, Cook has brought
her melodious voice and pat-
ter to concert venues and inti-
·mate places around the world.
This weekend she opens the
Orange County Performing
Arts Center's 2000-01 Cabaret
Season in Founder's Hall.
•Jn a sense, I have a sec-
ond career,• Cook said.
CROONS
AT THE
FYI
WHA~ Barbara Cook
WHEN: 7:30 p.m. today,
7:30 and 9:30 p.m. Satur-
day, and 1 p.m. Sunday.
WHIM: Orange County
Performing Arts Center
Founder's Hall, 600 Town
Center Drive, Costa Mesa
~ $49 for early
shows. $45 for 9:30 p.m.
show and matinee.
CALL: (714) 5~2787
and Hart, Rogers and Ham-
merstein and Irving Berlin,
during her performances this
weekend.
The Cabaret Season is in
its third year at the Center.
As its name implies, the
series features musical talent
in an intimate setting. Audi-
ence members, 250 at most,
are seated at small tables
with drink service offered.
The AUanta native ·went
to New York in the last 1940s
to seek her fame and fortune
. in musical theater. She found
. the road difficult.
Barbara Cook is "fond" of songs by ~mposer Irving
Berlin. She performs this weekend at the Center.
•Jrs very sophisticated,•
Mandel said. •The setting
really caters to the singers,
for singers to identify with
the audience."
O ther performers featured
this season will include Ann
Hampton·Calloway, Aussie
David Campbell, Keely
Smith and Faith Prince.
"Candide" and "Carousel.• style is a wonderful way to
communicate.
· · "I had show at the end of
·ihree years, which wasn't all
)hat long,• said the Broad-
• way Hall or Fame inductee.
·~But it seems long when you
·cton't know that it's coming.•
· · Cook first made her mark
'on the City that Never
Sleeps in 1950, performing
In 1973, Cook began per-
romung in clubs again. She
made her Carnegie Hall
debut in 1975 and has been
placing her personal stamp
on songs smce.
"The music is not so differ-
ent". from musical theater,
Cook said. •The only thing
that is different is that
because I'm not singing as a
character in a show, I am
sometimes able to play
around with the music in the
show. This is the way Barbara
does it, not necessarily the
way the character does it.•
Cook may be a s~ar, but
she doesn't act like one.
standards at New York's Blue
Angel dub.
"I've seen Barbara proba-
bly 10 times,• said Jerry
Mandel, Center president.
"When I say 'cabaret singer,'
Barbara Cook comes to
mind. She's very special.•
Though she has recorded
numerous compact discs, won
a Grammy for her work on
•follies in Concert,· sung for
four presidents and has been
at the White House six times
-•not that I'm counting or
anything• -Cook still wants
to pinch herself.
A year late r, she was cast
as Sandy in the short-lived
"Aahooley" on Broadway.
llus started a career on the
boards filled with ingenue
roles in such musicals dS
Cook, who performed
recenUy at the Olympic Arts
Festival in Australia, said
she finds singing cabaret
She plans to do some the-
ater songs, including work
from •Annie Get Your Gun,•
along with m usic by Rogers
•1 think of that little girl in
Atlanta who wanted to sing,•
Cook said. •1t ama:zes me still.
I don't take it for granted.•
CHECK IT OUT
Can you pass Library 101?
\
I n today's information-driven
society, libra.rtes could be
your best link for. keeping
your edge. To learn how smart
you are about this vital commu-
nity resource, start with this
true-false quiz, then grade
yourself with the answers and
scorecard below.
TRUE OR FAUE
1. It costs money to get a library
card. ,
2. I can find a voter registration
form at any Newport Beach Pub-
lic Library.
). I have to wait until my 6-
month-old child turns 2 to bring
him or her to story time.
4. I can check out library videos
for free.
S. My son likes rap. my spouse
likes opera, and I like show tunes.
We'll need to spend a fortune at .
• musk store to please everyone
on our drMng vacation.
1 I. There's no good way to talk to
'!TY kids about books.
7. I need a library card to access
the Newport Beach Public
Library's new ProQuest database,
leading to thousands of maga-
zine and newspaper articles.
8. I need to walk Into a library to
ask a reference question.
9. I just Inherited a painting. I
think it's valuable. I can find the
artist and what some of his paint·
ings recently sold for on the
library's ArtNet database.
10. I've read all of David Baldac·
ci's mysteries. I'll have to wait
until he writes his next page-
tumer for new literary thrills.
11. I can find out what's on
library shelves at any time of the
day or night.
12. My boss wants me to do a
report about exporiJng our pr~
uct to Asia. The library's NetAcf..
vantage database practk.ally
writes It for me.
1l. Helpl My term paper on
Hfhe Tempest• Is due tomorrow,
but the library's dosed. I'm out
of luck.
14. I c.an ~ii my daughter In
college from the library.
15. I'm arguing with my brother
about who the American
League's Most Vlluable Player
was a yeer ago. I can call library
reference, and they will look tt
upforme.
1&. It's OK to wear pajamas to
the library.
17. We're moving to the East
Coast. and I need a job. I'll have
to wait until we get there to start
looking.
11. t'm In my car all day and don't
have time to react I can get books
on tape It the library for free.
1t. tf I w.nt to see live music or
danc., l'U Med to heed to • local
thmet.
20. Tl*w's no pl4Kf besides my
llvfng room for my son to study
wtth hll frtendlo
READERS HOJUNE
(949) 642-6086
CA 92626. Coprrlght; No new5 ftO. ri-. llkaVltlcn. edltol'lal metttt
Of ~ herein CMlbl
reproduald Without written ,,.r-
mlllk>n Of~ owner.
WEATHER AND SURF
Record your comments about
the Daily Piiot or news tips.
ADPRESS
'IDRRAYURIS
Balbol
7M9
l10IS
TODAY
First low
onSATUllAY.
. .. .
•ouet:s• stM1WI that Gwenneth Paltrow and
Andre Btaugher c.an sing. But where do you go In
Costa Mesa and Newf)Ort Beach If you want to try
·erutsm'" fOf ~tf7 oatebook takes a look at
our local karMb bin. Plus: A Reel critic tells
you What she thJnb of the film.
Daily Pilot
BRIEFLY IN DATEBqOK
Auditions for
'Hostage' at OCC
Orange Coast College's
Theater Department will
host auditions for its fall
production, Brendan
Behan's •Tue Hostage,•
from 6 to 9 p.m. Oct. 9-10
in the Drama Lab Theatre.
An Irish comedy, "The
Hostage• is the story of a
British soldier and his Irish
captor, who eventually
befriends him.
All roles have either
British or ~1 h accents, and
the actors five major
roles must able to sing.
Auditioning'actors should
be prepared to sing any
song unaccompanied. Good
Celtic dancers are also
needed.
The script is available for
preview in OCC's drama
department.
Under the direction of
theater professor Alex Gol-
son , the play will run
Thursdays through Sun-
days, Nov. 30-Dec. 3 and
Dec. 7-10.
The college is at 2701
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa.
Information: (714) 432~5640.
Music to the ears
of local families
Pacific Symphony
Orchestra will open its
2000-01 Mervyn's Musical
Mornings Family Concert
Series with "What's Your
Major?" at 10 and 11:30
a .m . Oct. 7.
The 45-minute concerts,
held at the Orange County
Performing Arts Center, are
meant to expose children 4
to 11 and their families to
symphonic music. The first
concert will focus on the
works of child prodigies,
such as Mozart and
Mendelssohn. The program
will also feature two
Orange County prodigies
-composer and pianist
Sebastian Chang, 12, and
composer Kit Armstrong, 8.
There also will be a
musical treasure hunt, free
to ticket holders, at 9 a.m.
for those attending the 10
a.m. concert and at 12:15
p.m. for those attending the
11 :30 a.m. concert.
Individual tickets are
$13-$16 for adults and $11 -
$14 for children younger
than 11. Subscrip tions to
the series are also avail-
able.
The Center is at 600
Town Center Drive, Costa
Mesa. Information: (7 14)
755-5799.
OCC opens it.s 40th
symphony season
· Orange Coast College's
Symphony Orchestra will
open its 40th season at 7:30
p.m. Oct. 15 with a concert
featuring an American pre-
miere by a contemporary
Russian composer and
works by Johannes Brahms
and Gioacchino Rossini.
•Ernest Hemingway• -
a two-act. two singer opera
by Yourl Kazarian -will be
performed in the second half
of the evening. The opera, to
be sung by soprano Deborah
Mayhan and baritone Benito
Galindo, received its world
premiere two years ago in
Havana, Cuba.
Other highlights for the
60-piece orchestra include
Brahms' Symphony No. 1 m
C minor, Op. 68 and the
overture to ·The Thieving
Magpie• by Rossini. The
2000-01 season will focus
on the works of Brahms;
three of his four sym-
phonies will be performed.
Tickets in advance are
$6, $10 at the door. The
concerts will be performed
in OCC's Robert B. Moore
Theatre, 2701 Fairview
Road, Costa Mesa. Informa-
tion: (714) 432-5880.
POUCI FILES
COSTA MESA
VOL 94. NO. 233
ntOMAS H. JOHNSON.
Publlltw
Our address Is 330 w. Bay St.,
Costa MMa; CA 92627.
HOW IO BEACH US
Orcullltlon
Corona del Mar
7M9 4:3Sa.m ....................... 0.6
• AVOClldo ltrMt: SM of '*Wtla was~'" the
200 blodt at 12:50 p.rn. Wednesday.
• c.dlMI Drfft aNI 0rw. ~ A Nt-enckUn was
TONYDOOIRO,
E1Mor .... CM-.
City £dlt« M•-LllE. ~City Editor
•• UICMAHAI. ~Editor
..-ai~
Spot'5 (dlt«
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CORRECTION$
It Is the Piiot's Polley to prompt·
ty correct 111 errors of JUbstance.
~ase call (949) 57~33.
m
The Newport~~
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outside Of NeWpor1 1-11 and •
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I I Doily Pilot
. .
Darwin Award winners go out with a bang
F inally. My favorite time
of year.
Autumn? 'Ihle. But in
thls case, the Darwin Awards
are what I'm talking about.
The Darwin Awards, as
you may know, have become
an annual tradition of honor-
ing those who were sent
hurtling through the door to
eternity by feats of mind-
boggling stupidity -either
1 by their own hand or those of
another. .
I The question of who can.
legitimately claim the covet-
ed title of "Darwin Award
recipient,• which is always
bestowed posthumously, is
getting fuzzy as competing
sources publish their own
lists of Darwin winners.
Be that as it may, each
and every nominee is a fasci-
nating study of Darwinism in
action. Being the slowest
runner on the Neanderthal
team was one way of win-
nowing the gene pool, but
today, not being the sharpest
knife in the evolutionary
drawer works just as well.
And so, here they are for
your consideration. The
names have been deleted or
changed, but the stories are
real:
• A San Jose man who
had been stalking his ex-girl-
friend confronted her in a
parking lot armed with a
shotgun. Terrified, the
woman ran to her car and
managed to get inside and
lock the doors. Enraged, the
man tried repeatedly to
smash the windshield with
his shotgun, wti:ich dis-
charged, killing him instant-
ly. There may not be a lot of
justice in this world, but if
you can find your way to San
Jose, you'll find a little of it
there.
•A mechanic in Alamo,
Mich .. was working on a
local farmer's flatbed truck,
which was making a loud
noise at high speeds. The
farmer had tried to find the
cause of the noise himself,
but failed. Being an experi-
enced automotive diagnosti-
cian, the mechanic had a
plan. While a friend drove
the truck down a highway,
the mechanic hung from the
suspension underneath so he
could detect the source of
the troublesome noise up
close and personal Unfortu-
nately, his sleeve met the dri-
ve shaft up close and person-
al, and the drive shaft won.
• A 47-year-old man in
Newton, N.C., accidentally
shot himself to death in the
middle of the night. A ring-
ing telephone on a night
stand beside the bed roused
him from a deep sleep. He
never got the call, however,
because he was also in the
habit of keeping a loaded .38
revolver on the very same
night stand. While fumbling
with the handgun in bis half.
awake state, a bad thing
happened, allowing him to
claim his place in Darwin
Awards history.
• The man from Newton
actually had to share his
award in the •weapons
expert• category with a
young man f.rom Dunkirk.
Ind. The Hoosier claimed his
award in his parents' rural
home while firing a prized
. ~-caliber muzzleloader
from the family's antique gun
cdllection. According to
investigators, the gun bad
mllftred and the young man
' WU checklng the barrel to
make IW'8 it was clear. Gun
.berrels are long and dark
and bard to see inside {you'd
know that if you were a gun
expert), wbk:h ii exactly why
the young man dec:lded to
, use a cigarette lighter to
shed some light on the prob-
lem. U you tb1Dk oil and
water don't mtt. try black
powder and an open Oa.me.
• In Bucbarelt. a Roman-i tan 90008f star and bill girl·
( friend wanted aome, um.
Peter Buffo
COMMENTS & OJRIOSITIES
qwet time together. As in
most of the former Soviet
bloc, one apartment can pro-
vide shelter for many people,
which makes it very tough to
find a good place to have
quiet time. The athlete and
his beloved chose to slip
away to the garage. wlierein
his car was stored. Because
50 degrees is a heat wave in
Romania, the couple thought
that letting the car idle. and
the heater heat, while they
enjoyed each other's, um,
company was a good idea.
It was not. After a thor-
ough investigation by the
Romanian police, tb¢r chief
investigator, Col. Dumitru
Secrieru announced the offi-
cial findings: #They
appeared to be unaware of
the dangers of carbon
monoxide."
I'm just a layman,
Colonel, but I would have to
agree.
• Now something from our
neighbors to the north. There
was an attorney -we'll call
him Bill -with a major firm
in Toronto. Bill was very
proud of the firm's offices,
which were on the 24th floor
of a downtown Toronto high-
rise. With the dty's severe
winters, snattered windows
in high-rises were frighten-
ing, but not uncommon.
Refusing to believe that no
one does anything about the
weather, the firm had special
windows installed that could
withstand the worst fury of
any winter's day. They were
so safe that Bill had a very
i,Jnpressive routine he loved
to perform for.new employ-
ees. Without warning, he
would hurl himself against
the floor-to-celling window
in bis office t() prove their
remarkable strength.
During a visit by local law
students, Bill set out to
impress them with his leg-
endary demonstration. It did
not go well. According to the
Toronto police, Bill crashed
through the window, falling
24 stones into the courtyard
of the Toronto Dominion
Bank. Clearly, it was a field
trip the visiting law students
will not forget. The firm's
managing partner said that
everyone was d evastated
and that Bill was Mone of our
best and brightest.• If that's
true, I'd love to meet the rest
of the partners.
This list is by no means
complete, but I hope you'll
agree that we all owe-.the
Darwin Award winners a col-
lective debt we can never
repay. Sad as it is, it may
well be true that the sole
purpose of some peoples'
lives is to serve as an ex.am-
ple to others.
I gotta go.
•PETER BlffA is a former Costa
Mesa mayor. His column runs Fri-
days. He can be reached via e-mail
at Ptr840aol.com.
as~
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line of Pride Mobility
Producu
• Service & Repair
• Imunmcie R.eimbunt;incnt
Specielilr
\
Friday, Sepeember 29, 2000 3
I
Democrat roasts party
• Challenger in the 45th Congressional
District hopes debates with Rohrabacher
will provide some drama in the election.
DEBATE INFO
Oct. 11. 7 p.m., Orange
Coast Coll~. 2701 Fairview
Alex Coollftan
DAILY PILOT ft
COSTA MESA -The
Democrat challenging Rep.
Dana Rohrabacher (R-
Huntington Beach) is blast-
ing away at his own party·
for its failure to provide
financial aid for his cam-
paign.
"They're not going to put
one nickel down here• in
Orange County, said Ted
Crisell, who's been cam-
paigning for more than a
year. #They've written this
place off. I'm the only guy
out there campaigning in
this county to have real
races." .
At the end of June, the
last date covered by cam-
paign finance records,
Crisell had raised just a bit
more than $11,000, com-
pared to Robrabacher's
$200,000, according to the
Center for Responsive Poli-
tics. In th~ ever-important
"cash on hand" category,
the incumbent still had
$62,000.
Put a few words to
work for you. Call the
Daily Pilot
CLASSIFIEDS 642-5678
His challenger? Zero.
And, Crisell said he did-
n't get any financial support
out of a recent trip to Wash-
ington, D.C.
"This whole election
makes me puke,· he said
angrily.
Lacking much money,
Crisell is hoping that a
series of debates in the race
for the 45th District this
month with Rohrabacher
will give the challenger
what the Democrats won't:
" chance to get some expo-
sure for his views on the
_. Road, Costa Mesa
Oct. 25, 7:45 p.m., CoM11ine
Community College, 12901
Euclid Ave., Garden Grove
Oct. 21, 7 p.m., Huntington
Beach City Hall, 2000 Main
St., Huntington Beach
they're the same positions
his constituency has loved
for years.
·People know where I'm
coming from. People know
where I stand,• Rohrabach·
er said.
ln the debates,
issues. Rohrabacher said he'll
"I don't think people are stress his support for free
aware of anything other-enterprise and low tax lev-
wise, • Crisell said. "People els. which are principles be
are so fooled by Rohrabach-argues are perfectly consis-
er. • tent with a sense of environ·
In particular, Rohrabach-mentalism:
er has a dismal environ-•A lot of environmental
mental voting record, organizations and people
Crisell said. '-Who claim to be interested
Rohrabacher, speaking in the environment are reaJ.-
from Washington, D.C .. said ly interested in government
he is confident of the elec-control and are more inter-
tion's outcome and assured ested in socialism than in a
that voters know what his good environment,•
positions are. After all, Rohrabacher said.
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TWENTY-THREE MINUTES
AGO THEY WANTED TO KNOW
WHAT YOU THOUGHT •
When h comet to bustneu,
Mina fn rhe right place at the
right time can't be ~ft tQ_
chance. rhat'• why It ma.Mt
perfect bUtmflt MnW IO tMe
The Toll RO.di. Thanlia IO a
congestJon and conlltivcdoa free
drive, you'll pt to your meett.p
and appolnunmb a lot .......
What do '°" think..._. iMd
. . ....
... ,...... • ..... 11 1 .. u;;
I , ' t I
Parents still waiting for word on child care Around
TOWN • County officials say they
are working hard to find a
way to keep low-income
day-care centers open.
Danette Goulet
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA-Parents with chil-
dren enrolled in !he county day-care
program scheduled to end in Decem-
ber continue to prepare for the worst
while state and local officials search
for child-care providers to absorb the
needed services.
•1•m really worried." said Silvia
Nava, whose children are among the
350 currently enrolled at the Costa
Mesa center, which also employs 60
people who will be out of work when
the doors shut. ·1 hope they do not
dose it because I don't know what I'll
do. I'm a single mother with three
kids."
Nava was one of many fearful par-
ents who at a meeting Thursday
received assurances from the Orange
County Department of Education that
all efforts were being made to solve
the problem.
•Parents are concerned and they
are not understanding that their chil-
dren's care w1ll be continuous,• said
EW.ri Chariton, director of child devel-
opment services for the coupty.
Chariton saJd she expects an
announcement within weeks from the
state Department of Education about
who will take over the programs.
"We will continue to operate
through Dec. 15, so the plan would be
to have the othet agencies ready to
open the next day/ Chariton said. ·u
will be a smooth transition. 11
The hope is to find a school district
or private nonprofit day-care pro-
gram that already receives funds
from the state to expand their opera-
tion to include the low-income chil-
dren.
Since the county announced the
closure of the state-funded day-care
program -which serves 900 children
and employs 200 people at 13 loca-
tions in Orange County -state and
local. officials have been working fran-
tically to find such a savior, Charlton
said.
In fact, since the distress call' was
made, several agencies have
expressed interest; some have even
vilited day-care sites, making Chari-
ton more optimistic each day.
•we always knew the Califomia
Department of Education bad to work
it out -it's their responsibility,• she
said. •But to see other agencies step
up and express interest has really
been great.•
But for the low-income families and
single mothers of Costa Mesa, the
solution Dl4Y not be the savior the
county is saying it is.
"They are saying we'll probably
have to pay more than at lee.st 50% of
[child-care cost$],• said Karen Rivera,
a Costa Mesa resident with l')vo chil-
dren in the county program. ,. All of us
here are low-~me. •
That will l~ve mothers like her
faced with the o tion of getting finan-
cial assistance to pay for at-home •
child-care pro ers, she said. And
she doesn't hav trust them.
In one case, e said, a home child-
care provider k t her sister's child in
a closet all day.
·we're hop someone w1ll help
us,• Rivera . •nie government
says they're so ncemed about kids'
education, but it starts in day care.•
VILLA NO WINE U ST A WINNER.I
TODAY
Borden Books, Music & Cafe
at South Coast Plaza will host
a two-day reopening celebra-
tion and fund-raiser from 7 to
9 p.Jll. in conjunction with the
Bridge of Gardens debut fes-
tivities, which will continue
through Oct. 8. Members or
the Philharmonic Society of
Orange County are invited to
a Benefit Days program at
the bookstore, which will
include refreshments, door
prizes, tree Tarot card read-
ings and caricature drawings.
The society will receive 15%
or all sales to its members.
Shoppers also may hear the
music of the George Matoian
Jazz group at 7 p .m. and view
Villa Nova Rataurant has received e prcstii:' Wine Spectator 2001 "Best of Award of
Excellence" for its wine list. The Best of ward of llencc recognizes restaurants with "very fine•
wine lisu offering breadth and depth t rdlca the rcstauranc:s' commitment to a wine program.
"We have worked very hard to build a strong wine list• said Andy CIUll, owner, "when I bought
rhe restaurant in 1993, there were many uablc wines in the cellu but they were not 5Clling. Tlien
che fire (Scprembcr 1995) really hurt o inventory. Once we reopened (in August 1996) I stepped
up the wine ~rograrn. I apprcoate wine an investment and the strong economy enables our CUS·
comers to en Joy Fine wines.•
Though the award ru:ogniu:s Villa N9Va's California wine list in particular, the lf2Jian wines arc
the current fucus. "1997 is a banner ycaclfor Icilian red wine, so I am really concentrating on build-
ing the lalian side of our propam'righq now" continued Crean. ·we have a great rcpcnoirc with
our supplien, which helps w in getting highly allocated wincs ... ir's an exciting time for the rcsuu-
rant and the award was a a nice bonus.•
Dine In A Romantic Setting
A Dining Experience to Remember!
,1976 Newport Blvd. • Costa Mesa (949) 645-8384
. ' ' Daily Pilo
an art exhibit The store is at
3333 Beu St., Costa Me5'·
(71•) 556-1185.
SATURDAY
Child's Pace, a nonprofit
child care program • for
schoplchildren, will hold a
rummage sale from 7 a.m. to
1:30 p.m. at 1860 Anaheim
Ave., Costa Mesa. Proceeds··
will help pay for a week of
camping at Blg Rock Creek
in Valyermo. (949) 548-8849.
Oasis Center will present a
weekend .workshop for entre-
preneurs, titled "How to Start
and Run a Successful Busi-
ness Anywhere, 11 from 9:30
a.m. to 1 p.m. at 800 Mar-
guerite Ave,, Corona del Mar.
An Irish festival will be held
from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Satur-
day and Sunday at the picnic
grounds and Arlington The-
ater at the Orange County Fair
& Exposition Center. $12.50
for adults, $10 for seniors 62
and older and students 13 to
26, and free for children 12
and younger. (714) 284-9558.
THAT'S YOUR FINAL ANSWER,
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Please call for hours, d1rectoos & ~rvations. -. •. (949) 723-0621 .a
' '
Doily Pilot
BRIDGE
CONTINUED FROM 1
side to support clusters of fut.growing
bougainvillea plants -was designed
to be a garden in the· sky.
Landscape designer Kathryn
Gustafson, who conceptualized the
architectural artwork, attempted to
capture the image of a bird in night,
said Henry Segerstrom, managing
partner of C.J, Segerstrom & Sons.
As Segerstrom addres9ed the
crowd, joking with his wife and intro-
ducing Gustafson, he smiled continu-
ously -exceet .. t the very end, when
the explosive fanfare was a few sec-
onds past cue.
But the drums came to life, the
doves were released and the confetti
came raining down.
"The weather report didn't forecast
this,• said a smiling Segerstrom.
Walking across the bridge for the
first time, shoppers were quick to mar-
vel over the design.
SEAN Hl.llER I DAILY PILOT
People swarm across the Bridge of Gardens as opening ceremonies on the
Garden Terrace at South Coast Plaza conclude Thursday. The bridge cross-
es Bear Street, connecting the two wings of the shopping center.
"It's beautiful,• said Patty O'Leary,
a Newport Beach resident. "I've never
seen anything like this before.•
"It seems less like you're up there
because of the view 'you get,• he said.
expansion at the shopping center.
More than 40 new stores are sched·
uled to open this year. Th.ra Moroses, of Dana Point, said
she liked the "modem minimalist
approach• in the design of the bridge,
but was disappointed that there
weren't more llowers.
Those flowers will grow in time,
bridge architects said.
The bridge was not constructed
entirely for i~ aesthetic value, howev-
er.
South Coast Plaza officials expect it
to increase business because shoppers
are no longer required to park twice or
risk a mad dash across the street to
browse and buy at the Macy's Home
store, Crate & Barrel, or other shops in
the western wing of the center.
California Pizza Kitchen is one of
the businesses that will benefit from
the expansion. The restaurant is ready
to open next month, right at the end of
the bridge.
Steve Pearce, a Fountain Valley res-
ident, said the plants and the bridge's
design drew his eye away from the
nearby parking lot and the street three
stories below.
Now that it's open, the bridge has
paved the way for a whirlwind of
"We have the perfect location,• said
Fred Wolfe, senior vice president of
operations at the restaurant. "We have
..,wanted to be in South Coast Plaza for
some time, but this is the first opportu-
nity we've had. We're thrilled.•
CROWS
CONJINUED FROM 1
they come back, we have to.•
In an effort to reduce the
noise generated by the crows,
officers explored various
options, including poisoned
baits and spike traps. Howev-
er, Schuler explained that poi·
son could kill other birds, and
that the traps could potential-
ly cause nonfatal injuries.
He said that using the pel·
let guns last week appeared
to have been successful in
driving the birds away.
don't? That's cruel."
Others, like Ruben Cortez,
heaved a sigh of relief.
"When I went out to get
the..paper in the morning. the
whole place sounded like a
turkey ranch." he said. "Ilove
bifds, but these crows -they
just serve no purpose.
They're a nuisance.·
The city was forced to
address the situation for
health and safety reasons,
Schuler said.
The air-powered guns
used by the officers to shoot
the crows resemble standard
rifles and fire 4.5-millimeter
pellets. The birds were kllled
instantly by the pellets,
Schuler said. Their carcasses
'were collected and transport-
ed to the police department
for disposal.
The officers' action was
legal because crows are not a
protected or endangered
species, said noy Swauger of
the state Fish and Game
Department in Sacramento.
Swauger said Fish and
Game usually employs non-
lethal methods to move birds
from an area, such as blowing
foghorns in intervals or firing
blanks from blast guns. The
sound normally scares the
birds away.
QUESTION
SOMETHING TO
CROW ABOUT?
.. It Keeptable to shoot
Md kUI noisy crows
bec.w they cw • nelgh-
bomood disturbance? If not.
what would be an appropriate
solution? ull our Readers Hot·
line at (949) 642-6086 <>t e-mail
your comments to dallypilotO
/atimes.com. Please tell us your
name and hometown, and
include a phone number (for
verification purposes only).
SHALIMAR
CONTINUED FROM 1
its doors Sept. 15, Diaz said.
No date bas been set fQ1
reopening the rest of the cen-
ter, which served about 300
students, but staff will begin
discussing it next week, Diaz
said.
Randy Barth, volunteer
chairman for Think Together,
said the center was closed
because the staff felt threat-
ened after children and par-
ents protested the firing of
M~a Alvarez, a longtime
staff member.
Alvarez was let go because
she disagreed with a new
schedule which staggered the
times that different children
could come to get academic
help, Barth said.
Esbeydy Belrnontes, a 15-
year-old who has been
attending the after-school
IRVINE CO.
CONTINUED FROM 1
floor space is 40,000 square
feet over the size allowed in
the city's· general plan.
Measure T supporte r
Clarence Turner, co-chairman
of Citizens for "Il'affic Solu-
tions, the group to which the
letter was addressed, said
Thursday that he was encour-
aged by the Irvine Co.'s
s~ce. .
"I think it's a recognition
that Measure T is a reflection
of a program that has worked,
and it has worked substan-
tially over the years,· Turner
said.
Phil Ars1, a spokesman for
Measure S, viewed tbe
endorsement in dramatically
different terms.
"The Irvine Co. has shown .
its true colors,· Arst said in a
statement. "It wants to join
the other developers in order
to pave over Newport Beach
with a dozen major high-rise
buildings.•
Friday, ~ 29, 2000 5
tutoring prognu:n for three
years, Mid the two-week do-
sure bu had a drUtic effect
on her grades.
•I'm excited it's flnally
going to open again,• Bel:
mo~tes said. -When I wu at
the teen centet l wu a
straight-A girl. Now I have
Bs, Cs. even.OS in my c:l.ules.
My grades have really
dropped."
Taking difficult cl.asses like
biology and algebra D with-
out the one-o~-one tutoring
she had at the center, Bel-
montes said she had started
to lose hope in her potential
for academic success.
Now, she said, her confi-
dence in achieving good
grades ha.s been restored.
"Reopening the center ts
the best thing they could do
for the community and all the
teens,· she said. "U they did·
n 't, it would have gotten
harder and harder and 1
might have given up.• ·
Arst said the motive
behind the endorsement
appeared transparent: "hun-
dreds of millions of dollars for
[the Irvine Co.) and more
than 50,000 auto trips a day
for the residents.·
Turner said it would be a
inistake to assume that the
developer's endorsement was
simply a matter of self-inter·
est.
:'The Irvine Co. bas been
involved in this community
for years and years,· he said.
"They would certainly like to
see the city progress as it has
over the years.•
Hunt pointed out that
there is not much open space
in the city. He said the issue is
not one of new development,
but one of revitalizing older
areas of the city through
proper planning.
Arst fired back that the
exact nature of that progress
is a factor driving Measure S.
"The people of Newport
Beach have to take a stand
against the Irvine Co. and
others and say 'that's
enough!' • he said.
"This morning there were
only two birds llying around,•
be said Thursday. "Birds are
intelligent. When they see
guns. they sense danger.•
However, several residents
have since called the police
department to state their
opposition to the killing of the
crows. Some neighbors in the
area said they were appalled
by the action.
I'm not worried,
my agent Is
Cnalg Brown lnsu,.nce
Call today for auto & home
owner's Insurance!
~ !Ja{{ faire &
::::.:=:! Pumpfjn Patcli
Featuring: ~
"It's really sad people don't
enjoy nature anymore,• said
Evelyn Velky, who has lived
on 20th Street for 11 years.
"Why do we have the right to
shout with joy and the crows
(949) 760-1255
Fashion Island • Children's Activities .. ---~ N rt Beach • Lie• 0550290
,. __
II •• MWbdcrtee ..__,......,.
THIN so
FAST
• Nature Center Tours --·r--i~ ~-• Gins & Native Plants • BAK£R.Y
• Opportunity Drawing Hot Dog On A Stick 3 ttMJ I t. l.N\L:t '-"" t t.
• Food -Beverages -Muaic ~ .....-~-~ ........
M~ • Silent Auction
• Free Admission! ~ «. w • lMEIMm
Sunday 0Cto6er 15m
10amto3pm
160116tliStrut, ~ tBt.acfi
Par~ & ':Enter on 15tli or 16th
'.Pfu.se c4'I (949) 64 5"'489
fD'f in.fiirmatiqr;i "' "' flOiaturl
' ' . ·~ Tm: ' .
Robin Slndlts rnodlls
this s1• and wool~ ($1, 1 sot and ..... (1675)
In ~ broWn. Her lhoe,ahot.r~. Is calltd •snn.• end tt
COl'Tiel In, ""°"9 other
colors, ~ tnlkesldn ($275)-·~ ~ snakeskin .... (
e 'f a b u 0 u s
I
. ' '•
' Daily Pilot
are worn
~Sc.Je•
Ice blue
""'"' .__ .............. _ ... ($290). i
the new "allure-couture" gar-
ments.
The garments are a bit less
structured, wtth a bit more flare
In the skirt, including a tras>9-
zoid suit skirt. There's also a bit
-more flt In the jacket. All this
and fabria that are daring. dra~
matic: and very rich combine to
crMte ... allure couture.
Fer.ragamo
Add eccessorles that are
. designed to matd'I °' coordinate
wtth the outfits -they are call-
lrig the acc.-orles "collectlbtes"
-and you are very much a part
of the Ferragamo fashion state-
ment. From fine shoes to hand-
bags to DIWS to 0etts to fash-
ion jewelly to hats and boots
and more, It's all a part of the
· very chk world of Salvetore Fer-
ragamo.
South Coast Plaza store """" ager Donna Collett welcomed
The look and our Newport
BMCh modets Robin Sanders, the
1975 Ame Queen. and her
dlught« Kimbefty Christensen.
• Student et Orange Coast eoi.
lege, to display the collection.
We don't hove any future polltlcol osplrotlons. But we hove strong opinions
about a political Issue -Measure S. We believe Measure S wlll undermine representative
government In Newport Beach at great cost to the citizens and taxpayers.
We urge you to vote NO on S. "6'-~m g~~{) ~
Unmatched Quallty of Ufe
We were each honored to serve as Mayor
of Newport Beach. We did our best to
represent the citizens In working to llmlt
airport expansion. reduce traffic congestion
and clean up the Back Bay. while trying to
keep our city flnonclolly solvent.
Newport Beach today Is largely the produot
of the post decisions by our elected
offlclols. We hove low crime rates ond high
. property values. We hove wonderful muse-
ums. llbratles. retail facllltles and restaurants.
We truly enjoy o very high quollty of life.
Meaeure I lrbdn our Quality of
Lite -Up to II Citywide llectlon1
over the Past Ten Yeara
Measure S wlll Hontbty Divide
our Community and Pit Neighbor
Against Neighbor with Repeated
and Costly Citywide llectlon1
If we hold repeated citywide elections over
these "minor· neighborhood Issues our
community Wiii become l'lorrlbly divided
with neighbor pitted against neighbor In on
endless series of polltlcol bottles. Elections
cost money ($2-3 mllllon alone over the post
ten years If Measure S was In effect). They
also divert attention from Important Issues
such as publlc safety. Improving our schools
and planning our future.
Megsyce S mg km city goyeromeot
lqeleyaot. The time now spent anolyzlng
traffic studies, envlronmentol etudles.
economic Impacts and holding public
hearings would become . mere window
Measure S will do nothing to Improve our dressing. It would be replaced With endless
qualtty of Hfe and much to place It In Jeop-eleciloN determined by tlmpllstlc slogons.
ado(. Measure S Is presented os o measure Thie won't Improve planning or the quality of
that wJll ·require a public vote on major our elected omclals.
development Pf'OjeCts: If you read It you'll •
eee that this Is not an accurate claim.
In irufh Measure S requires o public vote on
EVERY ~ol Pion Amendment -no mat-
ter hoW amoU -once a ·certain· threshold It
l90Ched. under the tarms of MOQ!IUlO s we
M tjbgya bgd yp fa 66 Ottywld@ Wci!ool
AWr ttw oOlt tao yeora. We COUid bgya
~~ .
Retain our QUaltty of Life
Please, Join us In voting NO on Measure S.
Let'• retain the quollty of life we now enjoy.
And let'I focus on etecitnO council mem-
ben who Wiii help ut retain our quollty of llte.
And thonb '° much fOf the honor of repre-
eenttng you on our ctty councMI
Vdd b b'/ ~ ForTIGlllO SolJtlcft No Cl"I S. 'ffle Cl"I T • 128011on, U. .._, ~~.CA nMO 91PfWU629
Kimberly
Christensen
shows off
this wool
and
cashmere
V-neck
•Wfft«
($545)
womwith
the over-
sized lhllwl
($480) and
cashmere
drawstring
pllnta
($910). The
cream-
colored
outfit Is
worn with
logo.
inspired calf
pumpa ln
black ($275) and a top-ha~r
classic ........,..., also in st.a
black calf leather ($595). ,
:!i
will fl9t
be out-
done and
shares
the mod-
eling
spotlight
with' her
daughter as me
sports a
matching
wool and
cashmtre
knitted
logo
collt ln
cream .............. _ _. ...... ($1290).
Sanders
also shoWs off red and paprika blcol-
ored pumps known as "Sulvre" ($255)
with a matching red bfick-colored
hanclMlt ($550).
PHOTOS BY SEAN HIUER I OAllY PILOT
Daily Pilot
FRIDAY NIGHT UGHTS
10NIGHT'S HIGH SOIOOL flOOTaALL
MUS ANGS
SEAHAWKS
0cuN VEW vs. CostA MlsA
• 5itr. Newport Harbor High, 7 p.m.
• Bottom Une: Costa Mesa's
MustanfJS enter with the loftiest of
credentials, No. 1 in the OF Southern
Section Division IX football rankings.
Ocean View is 2-1 with a dangerous
quarterback in this fourth of five
nonleague games for both teams.
Mesa's attit ude will probably
determine the outcome.
April in
October
atUCI
• USC's No. 1 Trojans,
with April Ross in the
attack, invade Crawford
Hall Tuesday evening.
O n Tuesday, Oct 3, former
Newport Harbor High
volleyball phenom April
Ross will lead her University of
Southern California Trojans in their
7 p.m. match at UC Irvine's
Crawford Hall. use, which is undefeated this
season, is ranked No. 1 in the
nation by Volleyball Magazine and
No. 4 by the American VoU.eyball
Coaches Association. April, a
freshman, is a major factor in the
'lrojans' success.
With the ability to play any of
the positions, April lines up in the
middle blocking position, but she
also hits outside and sets during
Chartee Brande
VOWYIAll
specific rotations.
With tremendous
ball control skills,
she usually
passes roost of
the balls, also.
During the
three-year run
of CIF
championships
that Newport
Harbor has
enjoyed, the
other outside
hitter opposite
April was Brenda
Waterman.
Brenda, also a freshman, is
currently starting for UCI and
contributing greatly.
At barely S·foot-6, many felt that
Brenda would be too short to play
front row ln college. For UCI.
Brenda plays front and back row.
The understanding that she
learned at Newport for success is
an inspiration for her fellow Irvine
players.
During this week's match at
Long Beach State, Brenda blocked
Long Beech's 6-foot-1 outside
hitter. She is truly a role model for
all of thOle players who a.re not so
tall.
This hiatch provides an
oppom.llty for local volleyball tam
to watch u April and Brenda
continllf their college careen.
Former Orange County Volleybell
Oub p~ Chanda McLeod ii
also a ~tay on the UCI roster.
OlllliJ local voUeyball tr.luMD
are maldng their marks at their
coUeg~ Former All-CIP player
from °*°°8 del Mar HjQb, Oimitra
Havriluk. la starUDo for Welt ~ AnOtt. See Queen ii
Jamie ~ell, who ta traveling
with bet Stanford teun. Kristi Dil1t anotMr tblMooyear
ltarter ftlr Newport Harbor's
two-Iida State c:ham= ii the 'Md1Dg blocbr and at Duke
U ty wbanl lhe WU 19G9Ddy
named tlullk Cout CooleNDC9
PleyW the Week.
tu11UU1• fnietimen local.
.MeDIMli-......,. who attlnded
11 ltarUIMI fot ColumbM
Ulllllt..et, •II N9wpcllt Harben TMyWlll~•t
5.
---'Uc!.-:C:-11vwn
GuOt. Of
WDAY
•t.mt WMI<, our theme agcir&t C.orono del Mer was 'UrW die
Beast.' This Wiik, ff was kilcl of 'Unleash die least, Pmt II ": ~ • ... Odolier 2 honor•
VCMrS tWJ..Clf w.a llUCI ILAU Bryan Brelan4 Newport Harbor lineman ---
Sports Editor Roger Carlson • 949..574-4223 •Sports Fox: 949-650-0170 •Friday, September 29, 2000 7
Sea Kings outrun Roa~ ers
• Hacker, Alshuler shine in
triumph over Saddleback.
Tony Altobelli
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -According to
Corona del Mar High comerback
Charlie Alshuler, be was just at the
right place at the right time, three
times.
Alshuler's three interceptions and
one key deflection in the end zone
Hacker rushed for 209 yards on 29
carries and scored a touchdown as the
Sea Kings rolled up 327 rushing yards
on the Roadrunners (1·3).
•What can you say about Hacker,•
a relieved Coach Dick Freeman said
afterward. •He's worked hard aU year
for us and he's a gritty competitor who
refuses to quit.·
Sophomore running back Mark
Cianciulli scampered for 88 yards on
10 carries and had a touchdown. while.
sophomore fullback Matt Cooper
scored twice m bis seven carries for 29
yards.
COM
S'BACK
1t was not an easy task.
·we practiced against it all week.
but they ran it much faster than we
anticipated,· Freeman said. ·we were
beaten on md1vidual skill players like
Saavedra, Gonzalez and Isais, but we
hung in there.•
With all the offense, perhaps the
biggest drive for the Sea Kings came
when they d1dn't score any points.
Leading, 38-35, Cd.M drained near-
ly all of the fmal seven minutes off the
fourth-quarter clock on a 14-play drive
that covered 60 yards • enabled the Sea Kings to pull out a
thrilling 38-35 nonleague win over vis-
iting Saddleback Thursday night at
Orange Coast College.
• 1 was just trying to do my job,·
Alshuler said, following his defensive
performance. "Everyone did their job
out there on defense. I just happened
to make the interceptions.•
"Our sophomores clid a great JOb
tonight,• Freeman said. "We've been
working hard on our offensive game
and tonight, it paid off •
nine passes for 131 yards and had both
TDs.
Saddlebdck stopped the Sea K.mgs
on downs. but Wlth onJy 26 seconds
rema1rung, no timeouts dJld the ball on
its own 6-yard line. even the no-hud-
dle d1dn't help.
Alshuler also caught a touchdown
pass for CdM (1-3), but it was the run·
ning of senior tailback Blake Hacker
that sparked the offense.
It was CdM's smashmouth-style vs.
Saddleback's pass-happy. no-huddle
offense and both worked well.
Roadrunners' quarterback Saave-
dra threw for 302 yards on 22-of-38
passing and had two touchdowns. His
favorite target, Ismael Isais caught
On the ground, Joel Gonzalez, who
had returned last week to the Road-
runners' lineup from a collapsed lung,
gained 75 yards on 22 carries and
scored three touchdowns.
Trailing. 14-10, at halfb.me, Cd.M
outscored the Roadrunners, 28-7. in
JUSt over 13 mmutes to take control of
lhe game. _
Cooper and Cianciulli each scored
Despite the knowledge of Coach
Jerry Witte's no-huddle style, covering SEE COM PAGE 8
DON ltACH I OAll.Y Pl.OT
It's not a good situation fol' Dana Hills' Terrell Vinson as be is bammersandwiched between Chris Manderlno (left) and Nick Mogbaddam.
Sailors slice and dice Dolphins
• Manderino picks up 216 of his 256
rushing yards by halftime as Sailors
manhandle South Coast League foe.
Barry Faulkner
DAILY PtlOT
NEWPORT BEACH -The Newport Harbor
High offensive line provided the warm knife,
senior tailback Chris Maoderino the serrated
edge and the visiting Dana Hills defense the vir-
tual consistency of thawed butter during the
Sailors' 33-16 nonleague football win Thursday.
In the words of Sailors Coach Jeff Brinkley,
the la.rs (3·1 and ranked No. 6 in CIP Southern
Section Division VI), were •crisp,• during a first
half in which they scored on their tint four pos·
sessions and rolled up 295 yards.
The Dolphins (1-3), whose previous two loss·
es had come against bigbly-regaroed Fountain
Valley and Edison (by a combined :U points),
bad just 73 yards at halftime, leaving them.
down, 26-3, and with Uttle more to play for than
pride.
Manderlno, a former quarterback who
rushed for 226 yards in his starting debut at tall·
back last week, amassed 216 of his 256 yards
and 21 of his 30 caniet before tntemllssion.
Only the comfortable lead. eeemed to stand
between the 6-foot-1, 205-pounder and an
attttmpt at the late Andre Stewart's llngle-game
SAILOR
DOLPHINS
school record of 310 yards, set last fall against
Laguna Hills.
• (Manderlno) ran the ball extremely well and
our offensive line did an outstanding job," said
Brinkley, noting lhe return of junior offensive
guard Bryan Breland as a big plus.
Breland, who missed the fint three games
after undergoing surgery on his right hand,
played with a soft cast around the injury, ham-
mering away with his fellow trench warriors
again.st the Dolphins' fo~Uvee scheme.
'It's nice to have Bteland baclt, because he
gives us more size, strength and experience,"
Brinkley said. •our line bu really made
progress the last two weeks.•
Breland, right tackle Scott Lopez, center Jeff
Marshall, left guard Jim Erickson, left tackle
Robert Chai, tight end Joe Foley, fullback 'lravis
1riroble, and even receivers Brian Gaeta and
Mitch Gray, often created cavernous boles.
Manderino, whom Brinkley said is develop-
ing an already apparent gift of vision, did the
rest. He cut sharply to avoid downfield tacklers,
spun off several more, and merely powered
through those unfortunate enough to align with
his path.
In less than eight quarters at tailback (be sat
out the fourth quarter and most of the third the
last two weeks, after making the move at half·
time of the second game), Manderino has 565
yards on 75 rushing attempts, a 7.5-yard aver-
age.
Manderino was much better than that early
Thursday, slashing for 16, 1•, 12, then 38 to the
end zone to put the Tan a.heed less than two
minutes in.
Quarterback Morgan Craig capped the lee'-
ond Harbor scoring drive with a 1-yard meek.
but Mandertno scored from 6 and 2 yards before
halftime to virtually auure victory.
"Lut week, our theme against Corona del
Mar was "Unleash the Beut,' • Breland Mid.
"This week, it was kiild Of •unleash tbe hut,
SEE NEWPORT MGI I
U.S. hopes go down ·~e drain, Russians win, t 1-10 .
• A 3-o tirlt-quarter deficit WADI POLO
proves fatal for Americana.
SYDNBY,~ AUllrda-Seel· died"' .... trG\18 ICOl"lltll
ftnt ~in
wbk:b the lhmdrw took • c:aa·
........... 3-0 .... tbe Uldlld .....
......... polD ............ ..... ... at._ a,..., 011D11.
n.:.10. naa111.,. •. ,,. ....... A-.•"' _.. .... -11 .. an•,
• • •
. ' ...
"' 8 Friday, ~ 29, 2000
,, SPORrs . . . . ' .
.
Irrelevant Week produces $5,000 payoff for yollth spoils!
•Irrelevant Week founder Paul Salata of Linda Isle donates IRIEl l!UA..,. NOUS The group recently awarded ed volunteen, • ~" OCYSP Prest·! MliWAlll $180001n scholarships to 12 gradu-dent Ken Purcell. Many organlza~
check to the Orange County Youth Sports Foundation. groups like the OCYSP that knows a~ high IChool seniors. Over the tions have benefited over the ~
S't t..mS p ul <--•-where to spend lt, • said Salata, a put 29 years the OCYSP bas con-29 years! : CO '.A A -a DCUOta, The money represents part of the resident of Unda Isle. tributed more than S?00,000 for Tbil year'• (rrelevant Week hon1 founder of Irrelevant Week, pretent-proceeds from the recent 25th annu· Pollowtng a aports career during scholal'lhlps and to needy commu-ored Michael Green of Northwest..,
ed a $5,000 check to the Orange al Irrelevant Week, a week-long eel-which he played football at USC nity youth sportJ organizations. em Louisiana State, who wu th~
County Youtli SportJ Poundation ebration, which lncludea a banquet and in the NPL, Salata became a •The money we've raised and la.st player picked ltl the NPL D~
(OCYSP) in recognition of the honoring the last selection of the businessman and bas gained a rep-handed out to needy youth sports by the Chicago Bears. 1
group'• longtime clwttable sup)>ott National football League's college utation as a raconteur, hwnortst and groups in Orange County, as well as 1\velve former Mr. lnelevan~
of community youth athletic organ!-draft. showman. He is one of the founders our scholanhips to prep scholar ath· returned to Newport Beach for th~
zatiom and graduating high ~l "One of the things we like about of the OC"5P, which was estab-letes exists because of people like we.ek-long event, including the:
scholar athletes. this is we raise money and give it to · lished in 1971. Paul Salata and many other dedicat-1999 honoree, Jim Pinn. I
lclor9 br QlwWa
Dana Hills 3 0 7 6 • 16
Newport H..-bor 13 13 7 0 • 33
Ant~ .
Mt -Manderlno 38 run (Gaeta kldc),
10:19. DH · Jennings 42 FG, 5;41 .
Mt· Cta~(k~led), 1:52.
Mt · Manderlno 6 run pass (pass
failed), 4:34.
Ml· Manderino 2 run (Gem kldc). 1:39.
Third~ NH -Craig 1 run (Gaeta kk:k), 6:48.
DH -Vinson 3 run (Jennings kick), 4:58.
Fourth Qumter DH • Kelly 6 run (kick blocked), 7:22.
Attendance: 3, 100 (estimated).
INDIVIDUAL llUSHtNG
DH • Kelly, 14-92, 1 TD; Vinson,
12-52, 1 TO; Vierra, 8-6; Moline, 2·2.
NH • Manderlno, 30-256, 3 TDs;
Johnson, 8-45; Trimble, 3-22; Craig,
S.12, 2 TDs; Ortega, 2-8· Thornton,
Hi; Md>onald, 2-0; bad punt $nap,
1-ml~29.
INDIVIDUAL PASSING
DH · Vierra, 5-8-0, 100.
NH -~52. RlaMNG
DH • Waytand, 2-56; Garton, 2-39;
Jennings, 1·5.
Mt • GMta, 2-44; Vandersloot. 1-5;
Gray, 1·3.
~STAnsncs
DH NH
First downs 13 21
Rushes-yardage 32-174 52·l20 Passing yardage 100 52
Passing 5-8-0 4-7-0
Net return yardage• O 0
Sacks-yardage 4 ·22 C>-0
Net yardage 252 372
Punts 2·24.5 2·38.5
Fumbles-fumbles lost 3· 1 1-0 Flags-net yarct.Qe 3-22 8-80
llme of possessfon 20:56 27:04
•Punt returns, Interceptions, fumble
returns
DON I.EACH I DAILY PlOT
Newport fullback Travis Trlmble (above) gets loose for a big gain to set up a ttnt-half touchdown.
Below, quarterback Morgan Craig bunts through for yardage after scrambling out of the pocket.
NEWPORT
CONTINUED FROM J.
Part D.'
"We wanted to tear it up this week, running, and we did.
They didn't blitz a lot against us, but when they did, we picked
it up. We were totally prepared and we sliced through them.•
Meanwhile, the Harbor defense did its thing. util.lzipg a
new four-four scheme, with Trimble subbing for a safety at
linebacker, to keep Dana Hills' vaunted running game con-
tained.
Terrell VU'lSOn and Kyle Kelly, who came in with r.early 700
combined yards on the ground, combined for 89 through three
quarters. They got nearly half of their combined 144 when all
that mattered was the clock. .
Seniors Garrett noncale (two), Manderino and Ian Banigan
(one ea~) had quarterback sacks, while tackle Nick Moghad-
dam and middle linebacker Alan Saenz were additional defen-
sive forces for the winners.
Dana Hills used a pair of big completions to set up its first
two scores, a 42-yard field goal and a 3-yard Vinson run. The
Dolphins then cashed in a bad punt snap, which gave them
possession at the Harbor 6, for their final score midway
through the fourth quarter.
·we had a good first half, but then we got a little sloppy,•
Brinkley said. ·we don't want to be picking up those bad
habits, so. hopefully, this will be a lesson for us.·
lclof'9"' ~ ~dletledt 0 ,. 7 14. 35
CDfoN def M• J 7 21 7 · 38 ... ~ a.. · Del Fame 44 FG, 7:20. leaiftdou-tw led· Gonulez 2 run (Chevez kick), 1:57. ca· Althullr 11 pa from Hendy (Del FMW kid(), 7:54.
led · Gonulez 1 run (c:Nwz kick), 1 :24. """'~ QM · M. Cooper 1 run (Del Flnt9 kldc), 7:57. ca -Cllndulll 1 run (Del Fente kldt), J:25.
led· INll 15 P99 from s..v.dr• (Chewz kid!), tM.
c.M • ~ 54 run (Del Ferne kldt)t 1 :21. ...... ~
Ollit • M. (.ocJtS 11 run G'.>11,.... kldO, 1054.
led · llM 5 P99 from s..v.dre (kick
blodted), 10:0I.
led • GoNalu 7 run (Gonz.llla run), 1:59. An9ndenct: 500 (eltlmNd).
8'eMDUAL ....... .... Gcwala. n.n. J TOI; s.nctlez.
J-1); SM¥9dr•, 1 ... c:.. . HeOM. Jt..209, 1 TO: Clendulll,
tNI. t TO: M. '°°'*· 7-2t, 2 TOc; Hendy, 1~.
.mMDUM.~
.... • ,...... .. 22-JM, JQ2, 2TDL
C:... Hlndv.l;tJ.1, 110. 1 TO. ...... _DfWl __ IDWIML"-...,_. ......... m . .zroc;1tu ·1-110;
~ a.u: ~ 2·24fs.ncher, 1·5. ci.-t •w.d. .... ~. Ml, 1TO;
....... Mt; MtCJlll.tl'I. 1·'7; ~. t•J.
eMmniinmc::I ... ~ ....... ,. 21 ....,_ ,. •tt .... S2-J2'1 a:,.... J02 110 u .... 1-11-1 ,..... M 42
... ...,.... CH) 1 .7 ,.,..... .u.. 4n
..... -NU J.M
'" ll =· 0.0 J.1 -HO f.90 =: I Jt:D M:J7 ~=-a;'1 ... ---......
COM
CONTINUED FROM 7
from a yard out on consecutive dri-
ves and following a Saddleback
touchdown, Hacker broke free for a
54-yard run touchdown, giving the
Sea Kings a 31-21 adva.Qtage after
three quarters.
Cooper mUJcled hi.I way into the
end zone on an 18-yard. scamper and
CdM led, 38·21, with 10:54 remain-
ing.
But no lead• LI safe agalmt the
explosive Roadrunners. Seddleback
took ltdvantage of a tumble recovery
off a CdM interception to maintain
possession. 1\vo plays later a S-yard
touchdown pou from Saavedra to
llail cut the lead to 3~27 following a
blocked extra-point attempt.
CdM punted on ltl nut poues·
lion and the Roadrunnen marched
down the field on aeven pl.aya, gain·
log 57 yardl. The ddve ended on a 7-
ya.rd touchdown run bY Gonzalez,
who allo barreled into the end %Ol)8
on the two-point play, cutUng the
lead to 38-35.
Alsbuler, fltttrigly enough, en<ted
the Roadnannen' JtDa1 drive with hi.I
third intercepdon. giving th• Sea
Klnat tbeir f1rlt Win ol tbe MPQD. "We've bung together all year
and we're not golng to quit,•
Allhuler M.ld.
Wlth the two coecbet good
ft1endl, PNieman baWd to ... anyone
lole. •W1n,-. or draw, lt'I alwaya
going to be • a.-game.. Pr9aun
Aki of Wlttel ·JtOllclraDDen. •1t•1
a1weya tun ~ .-(farmer Anablbn Hlglac *t Jeffy.•
•1t1D be .... ID ....., ~
tbat'• for ..... ,, •• = ...... lt'I
nlat to~ -111111 ...... your belt. ftMDy ••
Mesa tops Eagles
•Costa Mesa turns in its
best performance of the
season for Pacific Coast
League-opening victory.
COSTA l\lfESA -A rivalry can
motivate p team to great heights
and that was the case in Costa
Mesa High's t4-4 victory at
Estancia in a Padfic Coast League
girll tennl& opener Thunday.
•Because it was a crosstown
rival, everyone wu up and played
better," said Coeta Mesa Coach
Joe Havens. •This ii probably the
best we have played all year." '
MCIPICCOMT ~
ConA MllA 14, llWICM 4 ....... Havens (CM), def. Tteftln,
6-0; Oef. Nellor. 6-0; def. Ollteule, 6-0;
Let (CM), won, 6-0, 6-1, 6-0: Kim (CM),
won, 6-1, 6-2, 6-(). Doulllu ·~(CM), def.
c-lty·Htmlndu. M; def. lppoltto-
lrookl. 6-1: def. Wymiln-CutrWI. 6-1; vu-oo.n (CM), lc>I\ 1-6, o.6. won, 6-9;
~(CM), lost M, 2-6, won,
M .
Tars jolt Irvine, 15-3
IRVINE -freshmen Vaneua
Dunlap of N~ Harbor High
swept at No. 3 atnglel, while two
doublet teama .wept Thunday ..
tM Se.llOn def•t9d bc)tt lrvlne,
15-3, in the s.. Vlew lAigue gtrll
lm\ldl opener.
8dka .Buder and Kriste MdD·
tolb WOD NI thiM .... No. 1
douti* for NfttPQlt Harbor <•·3,
t-0 ID leegue) ..S ~ond toe.
0 ....... Tbe,... No. 3 dOu·
c
GIRU TENNIS
bles team of freshmen AJ. Olson
and Bonnie Adams also swept,
running their 2000 mark to 17-1.
Irvine fell to 3~5, 0-1.
MA Y8W UACKJI ~ ~ 15 --J ....... • Hhriclns (NH) k,;\ to Uaw,
2-6, def. Shleu. 6-t, def. Cannera, 6-0;
Nelson (NH) lost ..... won, 6-1, 6-2;
D~(NH) woo, 6-4, 6-1, 6-3.
DCM 11 • luder·Mdntoth (NH) def.
lhalr·Juna, 6-3, def, Connelly-Nguyen,
6-1, def. Kwak-Kim, 6-0; !(~Dobson
(NH) Ion 2-6, won, 6-1, 6-0: Ofson-
Adams (NH) won ,6-3, 6-0, M .
Yelsey, Singer sparkle
LAGUNA BBACH -Anne
Yelley swept at No. 1 llnglel for
Corona del Mar High and Klm
Singer mede bef aeuon debut with
a sweep at No. 2 =tbe Sea lncn defeated hOlt Beach. ~ 1n a Padfk: Cout gue gtd1
tem\lt opener Th\U'lday.
Singer, a Junior who baa recov·
ered from a shoulder injury, wu
down 3·5 and love--40 1n her ft.rit
Mt, then came back to ~ 1·6,
~ at love ip the ~-btee.k· er, 1.0 .
MmlC CDMT LIMUI CIM 1J. LAMM luae I ....... v.fMy (CdM) ct.f. lutW• =.,, Johneon. f.O. *'·Reed..
(c.dM) won. '" (7-4 6-l, , (CdM) IOlt ..._ wor\ 6-l. M .
o..61•. ~ ((dM) .. ::::~1\ds. 7·S. def. .
Wll ldmln. H. def.
Slitllll ~ M°"'*'·---~kllt.~ .. W?\~4'C.IC ·11-
MlnN (CdM) ... °" 04. 1 ... ,,
GIRU TENNIS
Prestigious
t6~team . 1 invitational i
on horizon
• Peninsula is the No. 1 seed in the I
statewide tournament at the Balboa!
Bay Club Racquet Club next week.;
I
Richard Dunn I
DAILY Pll.~T :
NEWPOP.T BEACH -Originally bill~
as a national tournament, host Corona de!
Mar High will instead line up its celebra~
girls tennis players against the best in the
state of California. I
Following the success of the boys nation1
al invitational last March, the tnaugur~
CdM-Pavilions All-American Classic is
expected to be one of the most competitiv~
girls team tennis tournaments in the nation
next week with 16 schools vying for top hon~
ors at the Balboa Bay Cub Racquet Oub. •1 Under the auspices of the National Higq
School Tennis All-American Poundationi
started in 1998 by CdM boys tennis ~ nm Mang, the event (Oct. 5-7) is consid
a yardstick of sorts for the year-end.in
national rankings by the USA Today.
Top-seeded Peninsula, the defending
Southern Section
Division I and ~.,....
national champi·
on, will open
against Edison in
the tournament's
first match (Oct.
6 at 11 a.m.) at
the BBC Racquet
Oub.
Earlier this
week, Edison
replaced Cate of
Carpinteria,
which dropped
from the invita-
tional.
Torrey Pines,
seeded second in
the All-American
Classic, plays
Newport Harbor
in the first round
at Palisades Ten-
nis Club in New-
port Beach,
headquarters for
the boys national
invitational (won
by Peninsula).
Several clubs, ,
including Pal-J
isades and BBC Racquet Club, have donat4
ed courts for the girls invitational. Parle
Newport, Costa Mesa. Tennis Center and
Newport Beach Tennis Club are also lites. '
Host CdM, under second-year coadl
Andy Stewart, is seeded third and will pla~
Granite Bay in the tint round Oct. 6 at Coa-
ta Mesa Tennis Center. ;
in the upper half of the tournament
bracket. fourth-seeded Menlo will face
Canyon of Anaheim in the opening rounci.
Menlo features one of the top playen in Cal-
ifornia, Ashley Upton, who began the year
ranked 26th 1n the nation in the glrll 1'9 and
No. 2 in Northern California. ,
Menlo of Atherton, the Sillcon Valley\
finest girls tenn1a team, flnilbed 26-0 Wt
season. Menlo also captured its ninth coa.
secutive Gfrls Private School Lague tide, ttl
third stralght CIP Central Cout Sectio6
championship and itl MClOlld CIP·USTA
Northern California crown in a row. )
In March, Coech Bill Shine'• boy1 tMlft
advanced to the f1nall of the CdM·PavtliOQI tJl·American Clulic. .
•1 tb1nlt the belt t.lrat·round match miaht
be Beverly Hilll and Clovis Welt (of !¥.-
no),• Mang Mid. ~·•
The cbamptomhlp match ii ll8ted ICfr
Oct. 7 at 6 p.m. at the BBC RacquM Cub.
The sem1finali are that day at 11 a.m. )
.
SPORTS Friday, Sep!ember 29, 2000 9
Esta:Qcia boys plow through University
-
MaAC COAST L1AGU1E 90YS ESTMaA 15, UMvasnY 0
1. Rojas {E), 16:48; 2. C'.asillas (E),
, 16:48; 3. Segoviano (E), 16:52;
4. Flores (E), 17:00; 5. Orozco (E),
17:00; 6. Gatchel (U), 17:06;
7. Haier (U), 17:0S; 8. Van Geem
• (E), 17;08; 9. Kibler (U), 17:39; 10.
Arayama (U), 18:07.
CoM 15, Nofmtwooo 48
1. Inouye (CdM), 16:33;
2. 'Beardslee (CdM), 16:33; 3. Yelsey
(CdM), 16:33; 4. Dillion (CdM),
16:34; 5. Hodges (CdM), 16:39;
6. Grod (CdM}, 16:40; 7. Pak (N),
16:49; 8. Gonzalez (N), 17:00;
9. Pomerantz (CdM), 17:36;
10. M«Atthur (N), 17:S4.
LAcuM IEM>t 24 Costa~ 37
1. Salas (CM), 17:34; 2. Zuchert (LB), 17:39; 3. Williams (CM), 17:58;
4. Peal (LB), 18:23; 5. Heatly (LB),
18:36; 6. R. Simpson (LB), 18:37;
7. Q. Simpson (LB), 18:37;
8. Osborne (LB), 18:37; 9. Greene
(LB) 18:38; 10. Powell (CM), 20:03.
MCIAC COAST LEAGUE GIR1..S
UMvuslrt 22, ESTAHOA 39
1. Hulpe (E). 18:45; 2. Olow (U),
18:46; 3. Manaflan (U), 19:00;
4. Moser (U), 19:24; 5. Rosete (E),
19:31; 6. Rattray (U), 19:50;
7. Colome (U). 19:59; 8. Nguyen
(U), 20:02; 9. Coffee (U), 21:46, 10.
Huard (U), 21 :53
CoM 23, NOlmfWOOD 35
1. Meservey (CdM), 18:20; 2
Bechtold (N), 18.32; 3. Farson (N),
18·38; 4. Morgan (CdM), 19:05;
5. Hossfeld (CdM), 19:21;
6. Cummins (CdM), 19:21;
7. Yourman (CdM), 19:41; 8. Long
(CdM), 20:09; 9. Brown (N). 20:33;
10 Schaffer (N), 20:34
LAcuM llEAot 18. CosTA MIEsA 37
1. Myers (LB). 20:59; 2. Fevina
(LB), 21:19; 3. Bello (CM), 21 :31;
4. Sanchez (LB), 21 :47; 5. Jennette
(LB). 22:00; 6. Jacobsen (LS), 22:10,
7. Bjelland (CM), 23:00; 8. Ooone
(CM), 23:19; 9. Gravis (CM), 23:30;
10. Velasco (CM), 24 :04.
WATER POLO
Estancia rolls, 18-3
· COSTA MESA -Estancia
1H.igh's boys water polo team
!had an easy time of it Thurs-
day, shelling visiting Ocean
..View in nonleague play, 18-3,
:to improve to 3-2 as they gird
for their Pacific Coast League
-opener with Costa Mesa
• 1Wednesd~cu
I lstMaA 11. 0cuN V.W J
()c.Nn View 0 2 1 0 • l
&llnda s l s s . 11
' IEIUID · Westf.il l. Thorpe 2. OJ. ~ 2. Hellmidl 2. Aycroft 2. Aeddod\ ._./ 2. Flifblm 1, C. Gl«y 1, ~ 1.
'~Woot.. 4. Menefler ),
Coast wins, 10-8 • ,.. COSTA MESA -Orange
Coast College was a 10-8
nonconleren ce winner in
men's water polo Thursday u
visiting Rio Hondo was put
away. .
Jeftrey Pratt scored thnMi
f90811 and Orlando : 4nd Christopher Le .SCSed two apiece for the tftr'a._, who imprOYed to 5--4,
,&•l lD Orange Bmpft ~~ __. play. Rio . Hvuuv
~to 9-51 l-0, ~~-1:--.. .. _.... , , a 4 · • 2t41 ·tl
:.-.-J. La I Ill . · ...,.,,.....,,, .........
E stand a HJgh's Li z Huipe, a bove,
beads for the finish line with
University HJgh 's Connie Chow
on he r heels. Hui pe won in 18:45 on
the Mason P.ark three-mile course.
At left, Estancia's one-two punch of
Humberto Ro jas (right) and Mike
Casillas have their way with
University's boys, leading a
1-2-3-4-5 sweep with comfortable,
and Identical times of 16:48.
DAILY P1LOT PHOTOS BY SEAN HILLER
• Estancia boys cross country preserves speed
for a Saturday meet and still wins, while Liz
Huipe dominates girls race in the PCL meets.
Steve Virgen
DAltV PlloT
IRVINE -As a matter of CR
pride and teamwork, the OSS COUNTRY
Estancia High boys cross
country team attempted to hnish together. W1Uun the last
100 yards, Eagles runners Humberto Rojas and Mike Cast.1-
las held hands as they reached th~ ftruSh lme. A tune offi-
cial shouted for them to let go -purposely finishing at the
same time is illegal and leads to d1squalif1cdllon.
Casillas did not want to ddmage the tedln's lead so he
slowed up and Rojas fuushed the race JUSt ahead of tum as
Estancia runners took the top hve spots and defeated Uni·
versity, 15-43, in a Pacific Codst League dual meet Thurs-
day at Mason Park. ·ru just let him (Rojas} have the wrn for toddy,· Cdst.llds
said playfully. "We wdnted to finish together for pnd<> "
Rojas and Casillas rdn slnde for stnde dunng the ldst two
miles. Officially, they hrushed at the same t.J.rne. 16-48, Just
four seconds ahead of tedmmdte Lws Segovictno. Esldnna
sophomores Abel Flores and Gerardo Orozco finished
fourth and hfth, respecllvely, at 17:00. Sophomore Adron
Van Geem grabbed th<' e1ghlh spot at 17 ·08.
• MeanwhUe, the Estancia girls cross country team did not
fare as well m the rdCC As they took their mdrks, the whtS·
J.)e sounded and Estdnua lltnC'ht>C1 dnd watC'hc>d University
bolt to a lead.
Regardless, Liz Hwpe caught the front pdc k dnd madf'
her move tn the second nule takmu ov!'!r ftr'>I pldce It Wds
then that Hwpe and University's, Conru<> Chow took turns
holding the top spot, unttl ftndlly, I lu1pe's bur'>t in the ldst
100 yards edmed her mc>ddl1st title Hwpe f1n1shed less than
d second bette r thdn Chow at 18 45
"I didn't hedr the whistle I JU'>I dec1d€'d to qo when I SdW
everyone run, i Hwpe "id1d. • 11 (th<' stdrt) hurt my rdcc d llt·
tie bit because I tned hdrd to cntch up to thPm."
Estancia's Diana Rosete hmshed hfth dt d personal-bf-st,
19:31. "Thdt's my best so far." '>did Rosete. d sophornor<• m
her second varsity raC'e "Hopefully. I \Vlll llllprove. •
Eagles Coach Chdrhe Appell '>did that th<> ~11rls team was
without one of its top runners, Stephdnw Melt'ndez,
because she was 111 Estdnc1d hdd dlre>ddy lost Mdnlyn
Reich and Luch Valdez to kn<>e m1unes ldst week
Eslanod's Lindsay Freeman finished 13th with d 22 17
and Jessica Buller came in Just behind di 22 18.
• The Costa Mesa High b oys and girls cross country teams
lost their second Pac1f1c Coast League dudl meet Thur..,day
But, Coach Enc Davies sdld lhe tedrn 1s 1mprovmq
"We've got d lot of young ldces And lhl·~ 'rt• stdrtmg to
come into thetr own,· Davies said. "With each rdce thPy dre
getting stronger.·
For the Mesa boys, lrwin Sdlds eaml•cl ftr.t place with
17·34. Mustangs' sophomore Zach Powell ctl!.o hntsh<'d m
the top-10 dt 20:03. Laguna Bedch prevailed, 24-27
The girls were led by Eilee n Bello. who ftm sh<.>d third di
21.31. Chnstme BjeUdnd, Cara Doone and Lyndsay Grdv1s
hrushed m lhe 7-8-9 spots Lagund Beach won. 18-37
Bolh tedms (or Cosld Mesa arP 0-2 in PCL play
CdM girls r oll past Northw ood, 23-35
• Meservey paces the way for Cd.M girls; Inouye leads Cd.M boys to victory.
NEWPORT BEACH -Junior Season Meservey of Corona del Mar High clocked an 18:20 to out-
distance the field as the host Sea Kings knocked on Northwood, 23-35, in a Pao.fie Coast League girls
cross country dual meet Thursday at Bonita Creek Park.
Meservey crossed ahead of Northwood's Jordan Bechtold and Christi Farson, then Corona del Mar
poured it on with consecutive finishes from Elisha Morgan (19:05), Diana Hossfeld (19:21), Jenny Cum-
mins (19:21), Undsey Yourman (19:41) and Jennifer Long (20:09).
The Sea Kings (2-0). who will compete in the prestigious Stanford Invitational Saturday Ul DtVlSlon
I cirdes, are ranked No. 1 m Orange County and No. 8 in the nation, according to Hamer magazine,
which covers high school cross country.
Cor ona del Mar boys rip Timberwolves, 15-48
NEWPORT BEACH -Junior Ben lnou~was declared the winner for Corona del Mar High's dom-
inating front six as the Sea Kings ripped the visiting Northwood Timberwolves, 15-48, m a Pactftc
Coast League boys cross country dual meet Thursday at Bonita Creek Park.
Inouye (16:33) was followed by Cd.M's 1\"avis Beardslee (16:33), Josh Yelsey (16:33), Blake Dillion
(16:34), Dustin Hodges (16:39) and John Grod (16:40), before Northwood (0-2) could get a foot m the
door. Mark Pomerantz ( 17 :36) placed ninth overall for CdM (2-0), which competes at the Stanford lnVl·
tational Saturday.
TODAY'S MATCHUPS
The Newport Harbor High girls volleyball team will try to
end its losing streak at one match with a nonleague contest at
home against Huntington Beach, set for 6:30 p.m.
The Sailors (5-3), ranked No. 3 in O range County, were
swept at secon d-ranked Mater Dei, 15-6, 15-2, 16-14, on
Wednesday, but will have the hom e cooking tonight against
the Oilers. .
Huntington Beach (3·2) is looking for b4ck-to-back wins
over the Back Bay schools. The Oilers swept visiting Corona
del Mar, 15-12, 15·8, 15-6, on Tuesday.
Despite the earliness of the schedule, this will already be
the second meeting against the fourth-ranked Oilers for New-
port. The 1llrs were winners over Huntington Bea.ch al the
Dave Mohs Memor1al Tournament, 15-10, 15-4, thanks to the
strong play of ienior Taylos Govaan.
Govaara had eight ldlls in the loss to the Monarchs, but
ripped out 19 kWI fu the big four-game win over CdM la.st
lbunday. .
Here'• today's sports menu:
• 1be Orange Coast College women's volleyball team (5-3)
will by to stay u hMlthy u pOelllble agam.t San Diego City
College at 1·p.m. at Cotta Meae High.
Leedlng the Injury-plagued PUaa. ii Lew. WUIOn. who
led the Pntei With 1' kDll ln theb' loll to PUJmiar. Lauren
C8llity (lllt.m&I J:llOb) C:ldpped bl Wttb 1 t kila.
• Tbe occ men'i ...-r tMm (50:1-4, 1.0.1 mu.. ar...
Empire Ccdlc-) Will campN at SatilGO c.;an. .......
the .......... ....,. •l --....... ..., c.,-.
Boll Clt011 • .. -far 3 P,.m llalatllllll .. o•illiilGllOBCWtmag trtlltllilllll.'1111e
mm't ..._.., 2-t, Will .. w--. w.. 44 11 I a. •1'ilOCClll9il'l_..= .... fM) ...... . Mllalma4p.a'W••~m• _.., ... ~••• ,,
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
.......,
AuaA Mt.FAaL Q> .... °"' .......
009 CIUllllY
~au-. OllMl•C.. _ ...
FIELD HOCKEY
Newport wins, t -0
STUDIO CITY -The
Newport Harbor gull fteld
hOckey teem remelDed UDde-
feeted in SUnMt LMgUe play
and Mined ltl nllltb .......
Of the ...... with • 1.0 **>-
ry at lialwnl·VfV'1eh
'11lulidlly ........
....... M'W' MdC.-..
~~~~l
cs ··""'~
HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS GOLF
Sailors romp, again,
Estancia ekes it out
The Newport Harbor Hig h girls golf team earned its second
Sea View League victory of the sea on with a 136-153 wm over
Laguna Hills at Big Canyon Country Club Thursday.
The Sailors' Undsay Galbraith was the medahst. shooung a
44 on the par-36 course. Harbor's Kelly Hunt shot a 45 and
teammate Amanda Campbell carded a 4 7.
Patton's victory detWve for the Eagles
The Estancia High girlS golf teem defeated Laguna Beech
by the narrowest of margins, using their fourth player, Jenny
Patton, as lhe tiebreaker after the three-player formal ended in
a tie, 13$.135, on the per-32 Aliso Creek Goll Course m Lagu-
na Beach Thursday.
Christina Francis of Laguna Beech was the medalist at 138
lri the Pad.fie Coast League opener, but it was Estancia's No. 4
p&ayer, Patton, wbo beat out tbe Artists' Monique Walker,
51-60, and prowd to be tbe wtamng edge.
Anh Do led Eltanda Wiiia • .0. ~ Duch carded • f.t.
1\'ang Do sbot 51.
CdM Micomes Nal1lawaod with a lcm
I
..
10Fr
'
SPOrrs
c""=='=~· ., .... \tlw
.._.. dw8I carcma c1111 Mar,
;1$-µ,~iu. 15-6. n.Sallori ..... bf J 'lee CaiN.rw
., ... ., ... 13 .... fhie
ldDI ror the sea
5
blOC:a. 9'gbt ---two 8Cel • ...r c-=. bu 11
~ g8tll ti klDI and tOto lwl CdM put Bl 1bro'9 gtrll
~ wam, ls.;11, 15-tO, 15-4 ill ltl
Jeague.opm.r .
..... lledrilr bu l8YflD killl and l 7
..... tD )NK;8 NeWport'I ~ wDeyb8ll
...... 16-14, 15-8, .,... ~of league
dvalJMne.
NIMV .... • 4Dd M1gt= W...._..
Singleis ""91! leedS CdM's girls tennis
team pall Newport Harbor, 12-6.
CdMs gtdl ~ country team edges
the Sailon, 26-31. The Sailors' a.tlty
0-wtni wim in 18:37 while Newport's
'Jaimee 'nAel la teCOOd With a 19:04.
Cd.M's boys aoa ooun\l'y team
hammers Newport, 19-40. CdM's ~
........ wins in 16:07.
DON LEACH I DAILY PllOT
April Ross, leading Newport Harbor High last season en route to the Division I state
championship, Is the No. I-ranked University of Southern California's central figure.
Jolb W.'I quarterback arieak from a
yard out gives CdM'• football team a 12-8
victory over Santa Ana Valley in a
oon!eague game.
Costa Mesa boys water polo player
James Comfort's goel with 30 seconds left
is the winner in the Must.angs' victory over
Servile. VOLLE YBALL
CONTINUED FROM 7
the No. 2-ranked University of Hawaii
Wahines. They are playing very well and she
is the catalyst.
and Princeton. CdM's Corre Myer is the
captain-setter at Brown with Newport's
Laura Wells controlling the backcourt. At
Pnnceton, CdM's Marissa Becker is playing
backrow, while Sarah Petry, another out of
Corona del Mar, is a ke y factor with her
all-around play.
More fonner Newport Harbor players
making major conbibutions to their college
teams include Joanna Fielder at Michigan
and Shana Bannert. who leads Manhattan
College (Long Island).
Irs great to keep track of these players as
they continue their volleyball careers in
college. Tuesday's match between use and
UCI, as well as Nov. 5, when Colwnbia visits
the UCI campus, provides the opportunity to
watch these college players in action.
Estancia'• boys water polo team
captµres the Magnolia Tournament title
with an 11·10 win over Cerritos. Msk
Stepllem and CbAd llolleDNdl each get
four goals for the Eagles.
THUltSDAY'S cown5
Newport L.-dlng -3 boats 42 anglers:
31 yellowfin t\.lna, 3 white sea bass, 92 bonito,
52 calico bass. 33 sculpin, 8 sand bass. 3 halibut, Jennifer Carey, former Newport Harbor
setter and captain, is directing the attack for 8 rockfish, 1 sheephead, 1 cabezoo.
BSC 9903 ton or by your ellomey.
NOTICE OF IF YOU ARE A CREO.
PETITION ITOR or contingent cred-
TO ADMINISTER ~~°'fi': =· =
ESTATE OF: the eour1 and mall a
DOROTHY 0 . oopy to the perlOfl8I rep-.
BEAUCHAMP r9M111aliY appointed by
CASE NO. A204164 the eou~ Within. four
To all helra. benefl· monthe from the dlt• ol
cianet. Cfedltora, oonl· the flrlt illuance ol let·
1ngen1 credl1or1, and 1ers aa pro'flded In Pro-
P8flOOI who may Olher· baa Code MCllotl 9100.
wise be lntere611d In the The tlmt for filing dalma
will or estate, or bolh, of wlM not expire before
OOROTliY 0 lour months from the
BEAUCHAMP hearing date notic9d
A PETITION FOR above PROBATE hH been YOU MAY EXAMINE
filed by DAVID T BEAU-Iha ft/te ktp( by lhe court CHAMP 1t1 Ille Superior If you are 1 peraon in-
Court of Calilornla, terHled In the eatate,
County of ORANGE you maJ file wilt\ the
THE PETITION FOA OOUtl a Reqll8lt for ~ PROBATE r~aa ht clal Notice (lonn Of.
DAVID T BEAUCHAMP 154) of the llling of an in-
be appomted 11 per· ventory and apprailal of sonal rapiaMntahva 10 .... t• lllNll or of wry
adrTI41Uter the estate of petrtlon or •coount aa
the deoedenl provided In Proba1e
THE PETITION rt· Code MC11on 1250. A
quests the decedent'• AequNt lor Specilll No-
W1ll end codlcllt. If erry. t~ lonn la available
be admitted 10 probate. from the OOUtl clertc.
The Will and any oodloita Attorney for Mtloner:
ere available for ex-JONA l'HAN LURIE,
amtnatk>n 1t1 Iha file k~ ESQ. SBN 12S1H, by lhe cour1. SEAN K. HIOOINS,
THE PETITION re· ESQ. 8BN 1M97t,
quests authority 10 ad· McDERMOTT, WIU I m1n<ster Iha estate under E M E R Y , 2 0 4 t
lho Independent Ac1m1n-CENTURY PARK
1s1ration of EllllH Act EAST, Mth FLOOR,
(Thia Aulhorily wi• allow LOS ANGELES, CA
the personal repreHnt· toOl7-1209
al!Ve to take marry ac-Publlahed Newport
lions without obtaining Buch·Coata Meta
court approval Before OaHy Pilot September
liking cerurn very 1m-22. 28, 29. 2000 portent 1ction1. how· ____ __.FTh......,,.OiuZ~1
ever the peraonal repr•
sentallve wlll be required -------
to g.ve notice 10 1n-~e" J leresttd pertorw unlHa U
lt-.y haw wtlved notioe
or cooaanted to Ille
propoald action.) The
independent admlnl•·
trallOfl 1uttlorl1y win be
granted ulffaa an ln-
l•Mted per90ll files Ill
objection to the petl110n and lhowl good C8UM
why the courf atQild not grant !ht autho(lty.
A HEARING on the
petition will be held on
OCT08ER 19 2000 al
1:15 p.m. In bed: LZ3
localed at 341-The City
Drive South. Orange.
CA 92868. IF YOU OBJECT to
the gran1lno of Iha petlo
lion, you allOUld appeer
at the hearing and atat•
your objec110na or Ille
written objectlone with
the court before the hea~ng. Your •P·
l)MrWrCle may be In per·
~~
-1 .... • ·-. -4
A
GOOD
ADI
"~·--:--·'<:" .. -::-"'--· .~ ....... . ~-~-.·-"'~~
FlctltJOUI lklllMA NOTICE NOTICE OF ~,.,.. Stmment INVmNG BIDS APPLICATION TO Wl~~c~~~I~
,.,.. lotlowlno peflOlll The Orange County SELL ALCOHOLIC COSTA MESA PLAN· .,. doing bullnNa u: Sanitation Olatrlc1. ca1r. BEVERAGES NINO COMM.,.,.,...,.,
Tony S Products, 2000 lornla. will receive THE CITY 1HAll'.,' ~
S. P8r80fll St. ~ 57, M81ed blda until T..-c;s.:;;:o FAIR DRIVE, COSTA
Coat
9262
a
7
Meaa, Cal omla, day, October 1!1 2:000, Se9l 26, 2000 MESA. CALIFORNIA,
at 11:00 a.m. tllOI muat To Whom It May Con-AT 0·30 PM OR AS Tony John Stoldoaa, be rec.lved II the Oit-cern: sooN AS . PoSSIBl.£
2000 Panon8 SL Apt. trlct'a Admlnlatretlon The Name(a) of the THEREAFTER ON ~=Mela. Celifor· ~~the date •nd JAppllcant(I ) HOit/are: MONDAY, OCTOBER
This bua1nNa fa con-forth, at rwttld-.•= ~ JEON CHONG t , 2000 REGARDING
ducted by: en lndlvidl* wll be:J::!r ~ The applic:anll listed THE FOLLOWING AP·
Have you atarted and at ,....., above are aoolYlno 10 PLICATIONS. "... the Dec>lt1meiil. ~ Alex>-IF AHV Of THE FOL.·
doing bulir'9ll 'f9't'l No Dlltrici ollloe, 10844 B-hollo Beverage Control LOWING ACTIONS
Tony Stoldoea Ila Avenue. Fountain to '"I alcohollc ARE CHAU.ENOEO IN
Thia statement WU V.-.V. Callornla. beVer11gee at C 0 U R T, THE
filed with the County 8280&-7018, tor the fol. 2300 liARBOA BLVD CHAU.ENGE MAY BE
CIM of Orange Col.ny lowlno: STE N5, COSTA MESA, LIMITED TO ONLY on 09"13/2000 PURCHASE OF CA ll2S27 THOSE ISSUES SOME-
2000IM0413 FERRIC CHLORIDE ~ of '"*-• ONE RAISES AT THE Ody Plot Sept 15, 22, SPECIFICATION for: 41 _ ~ <>•• c: PUBLIC H"" .. "'ING OE 29, Oct 6, 2000 F§§3 NO. C.147 ~ """" • SHled bide mUll be ER AND WINE· ~BED IN THIS NC>
FlctltJout BuslMA aubmftted on the lonn EATIOO PLACE TICE OA IN WRrTTEN Name --..___. _......_. .,.. 1hl ciltrlct In Publlahed Newport CORRESPONDENCE ~ ..... ._,. ............... v1 Beach·Co11a Meaa DELIVERED TO THE The ~ accordance with all O.ity Pilot September PLANNING COM· ":.i~reen F1na:i.1 ::::-~ 29, October o. 13, MISSION AT, OR
Group, 183n Beach bid blenka and IUrther in-2000 f§O! PRIOR TONG THE PUB-
Blvd .• Suite 325, Hunt-formation may be ob· uc;. ~NNiNG AP· lngton BMcltl, Ca!Homla tM'9d at the aboYe Id-STATEMENT OF PLICATION PA..00·33 92'~6-1350 dreaa, telephone (714) ABANDONMENT OF FOA JOE!d ANO JOAN
Ruth E. Sully. 9081 962-2411. use OF FIC11TIOUS SC Mediterranean Drive Publllhed Newport LAUTEN HLEGER, Hun1ing1on a..cn. car~ Bu ch·Coata Meta BUSINESS NAME FOR A CONDITIONAL
lomla ~ Dally Pilot September ~ ~ .= ~~~1feEfl~IT W.elfo
Perry D. Noclfora, 211, 2000 the uae of the 11c1111oua ELDERLY RESIDEN·
15771 Grey Oak• F875 bue1neea name: TIAL CARE FACILITY ~ =!,''• SUPERIOR COURT ~'W':et ~"' ~~: ~~D 1°'AM8,!'~T8:~
This bu81nne la eon· OF CALIFORNIA, Unit D, COiia Meee. CA AMBULATORY SEN·
ducted by: an unln-COUNTY OF 821127 IORS (80 YEARS +) IN COfPOfated aaodatlon ORANGE The Flctltloua Buel-A FORMER APART·
oiler thin I piltr*"1lp 341 The C11y 011ve ,,... name merred to MENT PROJECT LO.
Have you atarted Poet Ollie. Boa 14171 above waa llled In Or· CATEO AT 1173 CEN-
ti'll bulSleel~ No • ~ TEA STREET IN AN R3 o-. o Orlnae, CA Mge on tm.'99, • -·1 · 9291!--1571 FILE NO. 1198878181 t ZONE. EHVIRONMEN-Thla ltaNment Wat IN THE MATTER Of Andrei Orozco, 703 TAL DETERMINATION: ~ ~ ~ THE PETITION TO Shalimar 10, Cotta EXEMPT. .,_,. "' ....,_,... ....._ .. , CHANGE THE NAME Meta, CA 8282'7 2. PLANNING AP· on CWt'Ol/2000 OF LAURIE MAY Maria Orozco. 703 PLICATION PA-OCM1
Olly Plot~: ZANE~ • :i.:m~ ~ Cotta ~.:.~~rg-D
22. 29, 2000 f§§3 OROl1' TO 1HOW Thia bu1inMe la oor1-AGEN 1 FOR PRINCE
..,._..._,_ •• _.__. CAUSE .... ~~ ~ by tutllnd enc OF PEACE LUTHERAN
r ... -v.---..,... -wife CHUACHJ....FOR A V/lllf. ..._ lllllment CAM NUJllBl!.R AndrM Orozco ANCE 1v LEGALIZE The fo4lowlrla petlOna A20N40 Thia utement wae THE INSTALLATION
.,. dolnD ~ M: PEllTIOHER(S) llled with the <;ounty OF APPROXIMATELY
Ode toy R9drlg Md LAURIE MAY ZANEUI Cleltl of Orange Cou11Y 290 UHEAL FEET OF Pll'bn•ICI, 2029 Loa-HASMAV'E FILED A on Ollt'1812000 CHAJN LINK FtNClNO .. ~ 8Mdl. CA PETTT10N FOR AN JOODll40IH WITHIN THE RE·
029oe ORDER TO CHANGE Olly Plat 8eGt. 29, Oct. QUIRED 'lO' SETBACK
Stew & Chol, 9931 NAMES FROM 0. 13. 29, 2@ FfZP ALONG 'TWO STREET
Central Ave .. ~· LAURIE MAY ZANEUI FRONTAGES OF den Gn>¥e CA AXA LORETTA MAY .,._...._.._ PRINCE Of PEACE
·. . ··~
··: ., .
SUPERIOR COURT
OF CALIFORNIA,
COUNTY OF
ORANGE
341 The City Ol1ve .
Poet Ollloe 8olC 14171,
OrWlQI, CA
8286)-1571
IN THE MATTER Of
THE PETITION TO CHANGE THE NAME
Of Kett Mltle Bobela
ORDER TO IHOW
CAU11!. FOfll CHANGE cw NAiii
CAM NUMBER: A204271
PETTTIOH= =-.Malle fled a paCltloll
for an Older to ct.nge
name(•) from Kelly Marte 8obella to Kelly
Au.tin
IT IS HEREBY OR·
CEREO 1hlt al pnona .,,._...., 1n tNe maaer
lpl)MI before .. ooult
In Oepettrnant No. 73 al
the OrWlgl Col.ny Su-
pe!tor CoUrt. II the ed-
dr-lhoM'I aboVe, on OCT 31, 2000, at 2:00 o'clock p.m., end then
and ... lhow l*Jll, " ll'ft. they new, why the
petition for change of
name(•) lhoukl not be
grantid.
IT IS FURTHER OR· OE.RED lhll a oopy al
tNe Older to lhow c:alJle
be publllhed In NBI Ca.ta ...... Diiiy Plot,
I ntW'Plf* Of gener9'
cln:ulallon ~ In
tNe OW'llyJ ...... onol
• wMll IOI' lour 000-
MC:UIMt wMlcl pltor to
the *t of .. '*'1ng.
DATI: llJt 11 2000 HOHORA9ll
STDHIN J. SUNDYOl.D, JUOGI
JUDGI/
COlllllUIONIR M
THI I UPI RI OR
COUftT Kelly Matte Bobe11a.
t 111 CMatlne Drive, Huntington Beadl, Ca. t:zt40
Publleh.cf Ne\lff)Ott
8HCh·Coata Meta
Dally Piiot 8e!Mmbef 2t, Octobet e, 13, 20.
2000 FW
Thia ~ le oon-ZANEUI, LORETTA r-au.inen CHURCH/SC HOOL, ~by: an lndlvlcllal MAY LARSEN TO Heme ltalillMftt LOCATED AT 2987 F1otllloue heinMt
Have you ltartld LAURIE MAY LARSEN The lollowlrla peraona MESA VERDE DRIVE Neme 118 ...... lt ~ bullr1-.,.Kl NO n le hereby ordered .,. dolnD bulilMt at: EAST IN AN l&R Z()tE. The folloWloa penona 8tM Chol tt)at all pemna In· JH 8Y91em1, 3433 ENVIRONMENTAL OE· ant doing~ ea: Thia -...ment WM teretted In tt111 matter Hollowbrook Clrcl1, TERMl .. ATION: EX· Ma111el WNtl,_~_!~~
flled With tM ~ ~ befor9 fie oourt Colta MeM. CA 9282e EMPT. ~ DIM ......,._.. a.it d Orange eouney 1ri ~ No. 103 John Oav41 Hamlin, FOR FURTHER IN-8Mdl. CA 9:ieC)
on OM171«J of tM Orange County 3433 Hollowbrooll Clf-FOAJMTION ON THE Gary Allan o.tel'holl, 11111111117 1up11tot Col.If et t11 fl6. de, OOIU MMa. CA ABOVE APPLICA· 1114 Safl!!ago Drive,
Oa11v Plat= .. Oa1. en. lhowf\ eove on t2t2e TIOH!,. TELEPHONE Newport Bffoll, CA 3. tb. 17. _ 1W Oe1aber 17, 2000, 1t Thia bueinMI la oon-(114)r54·5240 OR t2teO 2:CIO o'oioc* p.m. Md ~ by: ., lndMIUll ~~THE OFFICE Thia bullrMee le oan-!Nr'I Md "*' ._ Havt ycxi etarttd .,... , ~ Pt.ANNINO ~ by. an nMca.11
_...., 111'1fllV111\19, doing bualneea yet? DMSfON.1..-..~ 200. Have you atarttd
wtty lie j1e11110n fOr Y-. Nov 11911 n FAIR l.Mft. COSTA doing bu1iM11 Y9t? ClhlnOI d ,.._ lholM John o.vll HM*I MESA. CAUFOAMA. ,.. be grftld. Thia ~ .. PublllMd Newpon
ft .. """"' ordeNcf fllM wtlh tM County BHCtl•COetl MeH FIND
DEEP SEA
o.vev'S Lodter -7 boats. 132 .oglers.
274 yelrowfin tuna. 16 dorado, 22 yellowtall,
95 bonito, 53 calico bass, 23 sand bM!. 14 sculpln,
12 rcxkfish. 9 sheephead. 2 barracuda.
ae11•H •
iiOllCIOf
KllllMTO ADlllUIM
•
Cll
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.... ~ d .. Otder ~~ Cony Dtly Plat -··~ ::.:-: ;;:::b5i lllllllllM 21, 2000 I EfZI
mt*°' In~ ... ~ ,_ ....,_ ....... onoe l•IRlll • ii ~·!
• ..--._ oan-,........... •1111111 =-II I ml :.-:.·,.. r .---: :::: :::~to ........... ~... ft::;;.=::• PL••• 9' l lAlll • .._ ....... wt
IMTI: .. JM-~=-==• !} Gondola= ::--II 1 w1• ,.._ =-.. ......
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~P. Y: COfQN a. Mlt TIWll Ht•pott. 111 112 .,. ,.=-:;:• --fl9'M:~.: Ollla 11
CDMMllllW Of' ~~! 0 INt ClubhouM Avenue, After .. ......... 11 ...... .., V ~.·,_.
THI • IUPlfUO" ~-.~---OoloM ~Cit!, CA ... lldlfl-.. Ultl I: ..... ==.. COM I T,.... 9Woa Uo 11gtle. 011 ::.. ~ ...... C» ~ E. ~itt17 ..... CoMI 111 A_., Jw M. lttllllll\. 8M
COfClftll Mir • ~ dll =" leaCltl. OA .... ,_, ~ 1-tM,
1N. ~ II llft> TNI ........ II _. = ...... 0 .. , .. ~_.!!f"!!! lw'9ll Melll !Ir. • .,...._ W llr. "' ..,.... TNI llUllftllt It ,. ~wt: ~~-·= ~iJ:.-= --=·· ........
N •lfied ~ Y• 1• ~ ;!=-...... .CO.ta Meta~~~ ,,_ '-Tw.w ~.~.;:; ~-=== = ~ .. . -rnw."1a'Si ...... ____ ........
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Polley
RaCf'o, nnll 1lcodli111" 1111• '!1tl1j1·1·1 10
rhanw-'lt•it.houi 11t11ii'r. 'I lw publisht•r
~4'11 fl~ ri~hl 10 c'f•nsor. nwlwilifv.
l't'ri!IC W' 1'(,j1••·t tu1y d u., .. ific·cl •
11dv(•rtio;1·11w11t. Plt'll"c' l'l'f1<1rt 011~ 1·rn1r
tlml mt\\'-lo<' in \·our rl11 .. ~ilic·d ucl i1111111>di~11·I~-. Tiw l>uih Pil111 1tff•1•t"
110 linltilit~ for 1111\ c•1111r i111111
11dvl'rtii.rnwnt for\\ ltidt 11 11111\ lw
n':if'IOlli ililc• l'Al'f'fll ror tlll' 1'0"1 .of tlic•
11pur1• ~f'llJ111ly 1,,.n1pi1·tf h~ tlw <'rror.
Cn-dit ra111111h lw 11ll11w1•d for till'
fin.t ill'>f'l'I i1111.
Bow to Place A
~ D
By Fax
('>49) 6~i l-<>:>9i
By~ By Malllln Person:
(9-t'>) <>i2-SC178 :i:10 Webt Bn, St rt'f'l
CoMa ~fc!m . <:'\ 92627 •
\1 \c'"'I"'" Rh1J. & Rio !'It.
(Piro-<' incl111lr \our munr 11111l 1Jh1111r 1111111IH'r
111111\\1."ll 1·ull \•IU IMrL "ith 11 pri1·c· q11rn1•)
Telephone 8:30am-5:00pm
Monday-Friday
Hours
Index
-. ·....:: -
\Valk-In 8:30arn-5:00pm
Monday-Friday
Monday ............... Friday 5:00pm
Tuesday ........•.... Monday 5:00pm
Wed11e8Ua} ........ Tuf>lJday 5:00pm
Tliursda) ...... \\if"dnef.Ja)' 5:00pm
Fn<lay ............. Thursday S:OOpm
Sa1unla} .............. Friday 3:00pm
. .
' -· l
• I • __...
a ERVICE DIRECTO 480 ••••
-for All Your Home and Business Needs -
101. 216 •io .... , .................... .., .• _ ..
G)
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPOflTUNITY
All ml esl.1te aelYlrtlSlllQ
In !his newspaper Is sul>jfCt
10 the fecMirat fair Houstno
Act ot 1968 u amended
which makes It illegal to ~OU ·any preference. ltfiltatJon or discnm1m1100
i.ect on llOI, cOIOI rlliQ-
• s&ll, landlcap. lamtlW
OI natlonal origin, OI
lnltntlOll 10 make any ~~.bm1t1bofl
tfllts newspaper wtll not knqwlngly accept any a4verllsemtn1 tor real eslttt which Is In violation
of'IM llW Our reader& are ~ 1nto1mtd that alt
dlWllll1gS idwftlSld '" ll'llS ~are avaltablt on ~~lll!y basis. T comolaln of discnml-'· Clll HUO tel-fret at 4 8680
•V.A.• ..... _...
hu CCUISElJ1«l
FllH USl'~ES
HUONAREPOS
714.ai..aaoo
'.'I 11 llAll ''' 011 I ;JAJI
. '( . . \.
I. --r J t~·~.-~
r"J
400 . 412
Greil Location I $379,900 !Ml M5tr 8' 5Ules pU 1111 open loll l)lffea lor an ale
Fam nn. ~ PY' pa1IOS ptua 1
redwood sun-declt ewer 2c
gal Oococny Momlon. "" $379.000 g.g.582· 1322 Of
!M&-S&M 322 (cetll
32 ltOUSEs.tONOOS F<>A SALE NEWPORT BEACH
WATERFRONT
BARGAIN!
The Price Wiit Amaze Y out
Aplt (948) 723-1120
UDO ISLE
BA YFRONT EST ATE
48A USA view of Hol1h
lido Cllannel, Newport ~. Lg f)W A &oet
• $3,liS0.000
t49-7'M051 241n
r· ---., .-,
470. 471
690. 697
Reach 80,000 Homes Each Week
For Only $28 per w eek (4 wt<, min.)
Call Lonalne at 642-5678 x24
VACATIOft JRESOAT RENTALS
"'** 2 • 311dly lum
tlld9d glr. Slep$ to beedl. no pell. !MH75-7t30
balboabNchrtnlAl1.com
441 ANTIQW/ART /COlLECTI8lES
WANTED
ANTIQUES
Older Style furnitu"
AVV VI"""'-~ Sal, September 30th, 8am • ~.-.en• W...ont I _FOil ~ I Ntfghbof Gange S.letll PIANOS & Colle<:tibltt
IO noon. 616, 618 & 620 •\,.·-·-·O'fu-• ~------' Ordlld Ave .. COM 111 !l!eYl $$ CASH PAID $$
FV Oft bldg tor lie 923-1196 sf X/Mlle Square I 0840
Wamer -'sit about Hi Sptld
Internet 7t4-7St-2787
e SAT SllECTACULAA 1
lam-12pm ,..frtllunental
Items SC· $500 ~. flnelll
rare otJiec1S 'rt ·111. memo-
,.iiq 208-21 O Carnation
In bid! lll!x. COM.
Sit & Sun Mplft Sob love
.... dnlg chan, l!>0'1 &
txtrCIH 9QU!ll. electronlel, Weber sea, lldils doCtlM and eoceuolltt & mllc t03a & HOO Sea ln., COM
r---~----f
.. J . .
CW"l9~0I ..... "--
W£ BUY ESTATES
·-·~-
1414 WW I
471 EIPLOYMENT
OPPORTUNITIES
BANKING
1 ·~~1
---EEO
SALES/MARKETING
ReprtSnJt MDrriott's most anticipoted resort
at Marriott Hotels & Trade Shows.
If you mj<Jy sales & worlcing with tN public.
t« want you on our te11m. Grmt tflming
potnitiJll, approx 25-29 hours pn uittk.
Pltast Cllli Stepklln~ Nd.son.
(949) 464-6418 or fax ttSume
to (949) 464-6310
Admln A.ulstan11
Event Coontlrmot
Fff. lllolldl~~ TeUI llllQ
Call 1-IOH57 ....
·12 Fr~ Se1>l!mber'29, 2000
TODAY'S
CROSSWORQ PUZZLE
PU'f A Fl~W WORDS 'l'O
WORK FOR YOU! CAU ..
CIASSIFll~I) 'l'ODAY!
f)49 642-5678
... CUITOM CAIMTI • lntttlletlon, rt·l1cl11g
~ kllchtn •111*1
"" !!!II
---~~
'
••
Bridge
READ nm ricruu I .
North-Soulh vulnenlble. East deals. blucprinl ci die lloldinl lhll c:1n prove I bcnlnza IO cleclmu.
NOR'lll •AK62
I:? K.Q1074
WEST
•98 1;1 3
0 "' •73
0 Q 109' 2 •AQJ92
EAST • J 107'
1:?6l o U5
• 1085' SOUTH • Q5J
I:? AJ985 o KJJ
• K 6
The blddin : EA.~ so6nc WEST ,_ IQ ?PO' ,_ JI:) ,_
..... 4• ,_ ,_ ...... ,_
Openutg ICld: Three of 'V
NORTH
)0
J• '"
High on lhe h.sl of conventions lhal arc ITlOlil abused 11 lhc Unusual No
Trump. gcncrally employed to show
the 1wo minor suits. We can 1olerale it
when II ii. uxd to lhow I hand that is
c11tremcly diMributional with vlnual·
ly no defensive S1J'Cogth, or with 1
powerful 1wo-su11et. But when ii is
uoocd oui on hinds wilh 1101T1e def en·
s1vc rucngth, It usually does more
twm tha.n good bec:1usc It dtlws 1
We do (IOI blow whit would have
~ had Well .unp1y pmiied South 'a cipenlna bid. A.J ft WU, die UllUMlll No TNmp overcaJJ eoabkd
NoM-Soulh 10 laundl IJllo a cue-bid-
dlna 1equence that p them m a ia-IOnlblc llNll alam that hid ICveral ~all of which wOllld ~e Jed
to delal on any Jq1lwl line <4 play._
With the knOwledae chat West held
at least I 0 carda In the mloor 111111,
declaru toot wb.&t would have beetl
111 lrlti-pcrcenllp line under differ·
enr cin:Wnltanca. The openioJ lead
WU won in hind. Declan:r chW
another round or lrllmi-· Ihm les&ed
aplldes. When that IWI broke 4-l,
declaru ndl'ed the last 'l)ede. CMhed
the ace of diamoodt and' then nn die mt of the b'Urnpl •
When dwnmy's last ll'Ulllp was
played IO reduce everyone IO lhree
cards, declarer came down IO lhe K J
of diamondl Ind K of clubl. West
still had to dilc:atd from Q I 0 of dia·
moods Ind A Q oC club&. lC West dis·
audcd • diamond. declarer would
seote rwo diamond triclu and surren-
der only a club Irick. U We5t kept lbe
dilmonds and l*ted wilh lhe
of clubs. a club to lhe king ~
would force West to lead •-Y from
the dlamood queen illlo deciam"•
laUICe. A f oolisb bid had convened
12 Iffy triclu into a sure lhingl
Ptettt bl IWM M tlM llallnge In INa
ca9gOfy llllY ,.......
you to eel! I to0
number In which
ltllf'I le I ~gt per
minute.
WAfflE I IAGE.L SHOP 4 SALE Mbol llMnd.
Or11t loc tol111ll1I 1 !!!Hp!!! ... • ....
&MAU. JOI EXP£ATI DUNCAN ELECTRIC l.oceVOuldc lnponM
StMct/Rtmodtll
20 yMll tlq)llttnct
l.1275870 P4H50-7042
LJC(NSEO CONTRACTOR
No jab IOO 1111 Al MMcttl Repelr, IWllOdtl, .... apt., ,_..,..... ...... ...
I• IWWD91
To Place an Ad in Classified
Call (949) 542-5678
"GRAND ONNIG"
CADILLAC CATEAA 't7
....... low 1111, lllOOnl'OClf (172271) ., ••
NAHAS
1!14)14H100
GrMt fllwood a,i.cwtll
Pllcl • good ~ W15
S70lhall cud, 'f 251cotd
Frt1 d!!\!!Y 714:§!432
Mlr1cl1 Touch 110 -------
MAFEW
WOIDSTO
WOllFOR
YOU
(949 642-5678
.., ..... '"""
Homa ~-lnCI llllft.81'M1~
"" Ollx
·-------_..,
........ 710 s. Bfodllult !I· Anllllllm 714-75Nt'71 PUBLIC
NOTICE
The Call. Publlc-
UtllltlH Com· mlulon REQUIRES
.. .. UMd holll.-hald goode moYttl !lrint their p .u.c. Cll T nt.ml>et; llnoa
and c:hauffen pMt
fW T.C.P. number
In .. ldlrtl1lll 1111111. tt you hlw I ~
tloil lbolJt h leoll-My of I l'nO'llW, ino °' dllufJef ell: PU8l.IC UTILITIES COMMISION
714-558-4151
00001 CARAVAN '13
l48k rn. V-6, tit, 7 pall,
new ~ lnCI *•· 111111 111!!11 f3!!00. M§!-7454
OOOOI DtlRAHOO 'ti Mu1t letl 14K 11111 M001Wal2 . ... LAND AOVlR NEWPORT HACH ~s
OllC Jl/llY .. 4WD1..~ SEE m
f52100tllUIJT 111,150 LANO ROVER NEWPORT BEACH
MM40of445
JAOOAA W 'ti
ConWf1llM 20
...... • IN20l' BAUER JAGUAR
714-!!HfOO
JAGUAR 2000 I-Type ve lltdll1 40
IC2.l85 ~ BAUIA JAGUAR
714-16MIOO
JAGUAR XJS 2 t 2 Con\ltrtll!M 20 131,115 IH241 BAUER JAGUAR
714-HMIOO
JAGUAR 2000 I-Type ve...,, 40
IC2.l85 ON253 BAUER JAGUAR
714-KMIOO
••••• .lttp Clltrokll Umltld
~'::'·
• • • • • ...., Onnd Ctllrotlll ..
....., Dwldloft 't7 ~ ldnl ooncillon, ~ Glldl. Loedldl lotdtd. Sell ml, $15,850 ~ U 3TC0230 IMH7S-307a
HONDA CMC 'W 1U1o JEEP WRAHGLEA '93
28ll nt ~ ac, de, ~ 414, 67" mi. big wllltil,
power, 1mlfm 1t1reo, Bilcinl IOp, CIO, sylltm. ~2.500. 9'9-752·1075 $9000 ctJo 714-317.0164
All DRAINS uriClOGGfD
-~: . .... -··--·-·--imm·~-_ .. __
71 .. 89>6677
l:>aily Pi~
I
r'· , -. :-~· ' 'L • ,,,,. .. . ........ Ii: ... ::1 ..,. '. ' ·-<..I. ••
MercedM MO IL 'ti
SllOMOOlll cond. clllome t.lcNh. 2 ••• r.i ....
loc:8I 114.9\!0 714-751·2464
111SAN 300 IX 't'I 2+2. a C"tf, Mo, NC. 11.t
pwr. em-Im. lnleli. QlllOm ..... ff.• MttU·2702.
OldMI allll Cudltt • tow IN. V.f. CO & more
(334862) S13.988
NAlllll
(714)f10=!100 '
•n. -... ..., ,. 11r
949-7'2l-8846
71"-751-8846 u.mw 5
t
. . . . .
~.~.!>m ..... $.11,599
'98VWJITTAGL $11 99
llVWmtH6WM1u.121 ........ I 0
?!,~~1 ............. $12,990
~.~.!~ .... $.13,990
~.~~~ .. $13,990
~.~~-.... $14,290
:!!~~... .. .. $14,990 .
~·w•n ............ s 15, 690 .
~~.$16,990
I•
l
• • • • ·It Friday, Seplem'ber 2~. 2000 • • • . . . · · Daily Pih•=
CALIFORNIA'S NUMBER ONE
JAGUAR DEALER
FURTHER EVIDENCE THAT
BEAUTY IS HEREDITARY.
)AG~
THE JAG UAR S-TYPE
STARTrNG AT $43,095
THE JA GUAR XJ SEHIES
STARTING AT $56,245
THE JAGUAR XK CONVERTIBLE
STARTING AT $71,795
THE ART of PERFORMANCE
1455 South Auto Mall ··Drive
I
Santa Ana • SS Freeway at Edinger
7 14·95 3 • 4 8 0 0 • www.bauerjaguar.com .
2000 S-TYPE AJ-V6 MSRP $43,09S; AS SHOWN, 2000 s;.TYPE Al·VI MSIP Ul,5"; TAX. TnU UCENSI le EMISSION PEES EXrRAo 2000 XK8 CONVEIITTBL£ MSRP
$71,795• 2000 )g8 MSkP S%.l45; TAX. 11Tl.E. LICENSE k EMISSION FEP.S EXTRA. ' '
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