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SERVING THE NEWPORT -ME.SA COMMUNmES SINCE 1907 ON DIE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM MONDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2000
·Judging the ~d of the preschool killer
• Jurors prepare to decide if
Steven Allen Abrams was
legally insane when he killed
2 children in Costa Mesa.
Deepa....,Mh
OALv Pa.or
It's been 1 1/2 years since Steven
Allen Abrams plowed his dilapidated
1961 Cadillac into a Costa Mesa play-
ground, killing Sierra Soto, 4, and Bran-
don Wiener, 3, and injuring five others.
The horrifying episode will forever
expected to make this week
as deliberations begin today
in the sanity phase of
Abrams' trial. They will
determine whether the
defendant was legally
~ insane on May 3, 1999 -the
remain a chilling part of the
city's past. The emotional
wounds of the parents who
lost their children are still
fresh. The incident has
etched an indelible impres-
sion in the minds of local law
enforcement officials and
community members.
But, were the children vic-
tims of aiminal rage in its
Topics and trends that
affect your life
day of the trag~y.
A LONG, DIFFICULT TRIAL
crudest and most frightening form? Or
were they caught in the cross-fire
between Abrams and his tormented
psyche?
That is a decision 12 jurors are
On Aug. 24, the jury
fowid Abrams guilty of two counts of
murder and several counts of attempted
murder.
SEE MURDER PAGE 5
Bl'M.ld.ng through her web, Juliane Plggot, 11, scares vlst
Elaborate haunted house built
by parents scares up funds for
Andersen Elementary School
Dwtt.Goulet
DM.Y PILoT
P arents beamed with pride as cllil-
dnm lhrlek.ed with terror.
A mother barely contained a
cbudde as her daughter burst into tears.
It meant the baun*I hoUle that 18Vel'·
al Andene:n ~School parents
stayed up an night to build was a success.
·1 thought it would be little kid stuff,
but it was really sauy, • said Alex Burk-
head, 10, who is in the fifth grade at
Andersen.
An elaborate haunted house was the
main attraction at a fund-raising event
that also boasted a pumpkin patch,
bounce houses, games, train rides, a bar-
becue and raffle.
1be event was put on by the Andersen
DEANI, Deds Elimlnattnq Andersen
Needs.
SEE HAUNTED PAGE 5
~~rl Beach leddefS sitting on a prqblem
Public
defender
Leonarc!
Gumlla
takes notes
ln court as
he listens
to dosing
arguments
with Steven
Allen
Abrams
last week.
DON LEACH I DAILY PILOT
Halfway
there for
occ arts
pavilion
• Last week's fund-raiser
brings collection for
the Costa Mesa college
building to nearly $1 million.
Danette Goulet
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -One million
down and 1 million to go.
Last weekend's orange-tie gala
brought in $50,000, bringing
Orange Coast College nearly
halfway to its $2-million goal to
build an arts pavilion.
•So far we've raised in pledges
a little over $950,000, • said Doug
Bennett. the executive director of
OCC's foundation. ·our goal is
$2 million, with the largest dona-
tion coming from the associated
students of OCC for $640,000. •
The students' funds are taken
from student fees and the profits
from the school bookstore, which
they own. Bennett said.
·we're kind of, like, investing
in ourselves because the arts
pavilion will house an art gallery
that will be used to display stu-
dent work,• said Nasser Khan,
OCC's student body president.
•And the cafe will be a spot
where students can relax -a
mellow place where students can
study.•
The pavilion will be a compan-
ion building to the state-funded,
$15-million arts center the school
broke ground on last month.
The arts center will house
state-of-the~art studios for pho-
tography, sculpture, draWl.Dg,
painting and film.
Within two years, 2 112 acres
on the southern boundary of the
campus will be home to the stun-
ning 70,000-square-foot, three-
story facility. Not since 19!M,
when the towering technology
center was built, has the 52-year-
old campus welcomed such a
major addition.
SEEOCC MGE S
-um .. • ___ ....... _II
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Sllf ICE
Orange Coast Coll~e's School of Sailing and Seamanship will offer a
non,redit keelboat class for women who have been on boats but are
beginning sailors. The class will meet from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sundays
from Nov. 12 to Dec. 10 at OCC's sailing center, 1801 W. Coast Highway,
Newport Beach. $215. (949) 645·9412.
2 Monday, October 23, 2000
SEAN Hl.LER I OAl.Y Pl.OT
Erik Elstad maintains three aquariums at the Marine Studies Center on Shellmaker Island In Newport Beach.
Age of aquarimns
Alex Coolman
DAILY PILOT
E rik Elstad still shudders when
be remembers the time the
long-jawed mudsuckers ate the
yellow-fin gobies.
·That was interesting,· the 25-
year-old Huntington Beach resident
said on a recent afternoon.
His tone suggested that •interest-
ing" wasn't quite the right adjecbve to
describe such slaughter.
Elstad is the man who maintains
three aquariums at the Marine Studies
Center on Sbellrnaker lsland, a Job
that has forced hun to learn, the hard
way, about the way animals behave
toward each other.
The glassed-in worlds he's respon-
sible for are intended to capture for
Sbellmaker visitors three different
kinds of bay enVlTonrnents. One is an
intertidal zon e full of waving
anemones, cruising opaJeye and scut-
tling hermit crabs.
The other environme nts represent
an eelgrass bed and -in the largest
Erik Elstad does what he
can to keep creatures
happy in water worlds at
Marine Studies Center in
Newport Beach
tank -a deeper water environment
that's home to a shark and a school of
darting fish.
Keeping the water worlds and their
denizens happy and healthy is diffi-
cult, Elstad said. He learned part of
the art th.rough a course at Orange
Coast College.
But a lot of his understanding of
aquariums comes from a combination
of marine biology knowledge and
practical experience: He also spent 4
112 years at a fish store, testing the
water and curing the aquarium crit-
ters of their various diseases.
Eelgrass, for example, seems like it
should be straightforward to maintain
in captivity: give it the right nutrtents
and moderate water circulation, and
one might hope that it would behave
like the stuff that sprouts in a subur-
ban front lawn.
But it's incredibly complicated.
#It just hasn't been living for a long
period of time," Elstad said. #You can
get it to grow for a month or so, but
then it dies."
And sometimes fairly simple ani-.roals, such as invertebrates, can be
more difficult than more complex
creatures.
·A lot of them require a lot of
micronutrients in order to feed. and a
certain amount of light," Elstad said.
The most stressful case came
recently when Shellmaker's stingray
was pregnant and also infested with
parasites. Elstad couldn't figure out
how to clean the ray of the parasites
without poisoning il
The solution turned out to be siin-
ple: fresh water, which sent the salt-
loving parasites searching for more
saline pastures.
It might not have made up for the
gobies, but it was a small trtumph just
the same.
Daily Pilot
Neuport Harbor's
hot.surf team does
more than just win
S cott Morlan, a math
teacher at Newport Har-
bor High School, is
chairman of the board.
Some of the current board
member standouts are New-
port Harbor High students
Robert Palm. a j~or; J.P. Col-
lett, a junior; his twin brother,
Morgan Collett, a junior; Sam
Schuclc. a junior transfer from
Hawaii; Josh Kast. a senior;
and Alex Knost. a sophomore.
Each of the students sits on
the board, and they do it
every morning, beginning at
first light until about 8 a.m.
Then they hop into their cars
and drip dry on their way to
class. The boards they sit on
are made of foam encased in
fiberglass.
They are members of the
Newport Harbor High School
Swf Team. Morlan is the
team's coach. The ooed team
of 43 practices daily. They
compete every Tuesday and
Thursday morning against
area schools -Laguna
Beach. Dana Hills, Hunting-
ton Beach, Edison, San
Clemente, Capo Valley and
Aliso Niguel
"The sport is really grow-
ing, as evidenced by the city's
Parks, Beaches and Recre-
ation summer program, which
has doubled since inception.
We now have two groups dai-
ly, which tells you the sport is
gaining interest,• Morlan said.
1be sport ls divided into
such categories as long
boards, short boards and body
boards. The judging fonnat
combines scorinq int.o a team
score, with points eamed for
wave selection. ride length.
spectacular maneuvers and
how the athletes work the
wave.
Much like other Newport
Harbor High School sports programs-girls' field hock-
ey (16-0 this year), sailing
team (1999 national cliampi-
ons), perennial powerhouse
Sailor football, volleyball. bas-
ketball, baseball. wrestling,
swimming and water polo-
the swf team is undefeated
this year.
ln addition to winning,
Morlan's class Is also very
Terrance Phillips
THE HARBOR COLUMN
much coru;emed and involved
with the ehvironment.
"The kids see firsthand
what is happening to our
waterways. Every time it
rains, I have to keep the team
out of the water for a few days
because of the contamination
and bacteria associated with
runoff. One day we were SJt-
ting on our boards near the
Santa Ana jetty and a 1V tn a
cabinet floated out of the jetty
My kids pulled it out of the
water and put it in the trash,·
Morlan said.
ln many ways, surfing
extends beyond the activity ol
just standing on a stick. The
activity has influenced entire
new industries in dres5,
sportswear, bathing suits, sun-
glasses and magazines. And,
it is essentially the activity
behind the creation of the
skateboard and snowboard.
Such companies as Quiksilver,
Ocean Pad.fie, Oakley and the
former Maui and Sons owe
much of their development to
swfinq and its culture.
ThISis agreat~and
activity that doesn t cost an
arm and a l~ t.o get into. That
is, of course, if you stay clear
of the great whites and tiger
sharks. Then the sport just
might tug at your valuables.
One thing is certain. you don't
have to be the fastest swfer m
the ocean· t.o avoid being bit-
ten by a shark -you just
have to be faster than the last
person trying to make it to the
beach!
• 'l&lllANOE ~is 1he Daily
Pilot's boating writer. You c.an reach
him via e-mail et ~II.com.
What's A four-week coane tor bidMdaals ~ ind Seamanship at OCC'1 of &iitlirig ADd Selu:n.ambij> at Sldlboat ....... imd pmm lemons
with intermediate Niling skills but Saillng Center, 1801 W. Cout OCC'1 19tttng center, 1801 W. ue available at Marina 8'lWng in AFLOAT little or no ~rtence tu.P.ning a Highway, NeWJ)Ort Beach. S79. Cout tlglaway, Newpolt Beach. the Belbo8 Pun Zone. Advanced
mid -size a uxiliary ~ boat (9C9) MS-9.U2. S115. '"8) ~12. c1MMS include DayigaUoo, big
• WMA1"S N'UJAT Is published perlodf.-will be offered by Orange Coast boat, powerboat, introdUdioD to
catty In the Dally Pilot. If you llt'e planning College's School of Sailing and 9fm9e C09ll Coll111'I Sclaool oC ~ CNllt ODii .... lcMol Of heevy weather and ftnt-mate
a Mtltbl ewnt. submit the Information Seamanship from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Salling and Seame,wrtp will ID" Saillng .... ,,....... di .,.. inltrUction. (949) 673-77631 the to the Oalty Piiot. 330 W. lay St.. Costa Nov. 11, 18, Dec. 2 and 9 at eent a nine-week marine dielel llDt. -.awdll. ----rtggtng Blue DolP"1D SaUlng Cub. {949) Mela. CA 92627; bv f.u to (949) 646--4170;
or bv e-mail to ~1/ypllotOlatlm.s.com . Orange Coast College's Salling IDeintenanc,,it coune frOm 1 ID 9 and Id 1'!pilr eoune flam 7 to 9 M.C-25251 or Udo SeWng Club,
Center, 1801 W. Cout HkJbway, p.m. Wedn81daya through NoV. 15 p.m. ~ tlnugb New. 20, at (9'9) 675-0827.
SAILING CWSES Newport Beech. S225. (949) a..s-at OCC. S4lllDg Oiater, 1801 W. OCC'1 Whig Ceatet, 1801 W. IOATlllTIU •f'iovlslonJ:ng for Coulal and Off-9412. COMt Hlgtiway. Newport BMdl. Co.I~.,, N9Wpcrt Bwb.
llbore Cruising" will be offered by S?9. (9'9) 615-9412. S79. ....12. . .......... 'wlrcm,..yoaoa
Prqe Coast-College's School of AllOll~---Miekc.'Oal'990D the W.W lia many weyt, wtlh single
~and Seamanship from 1 to 4 traditiOnal IDarlinelptke 1881D81l• A --a.llt •In•••• llflllldl Lwll .... • A I C1mf .. a...d -double ~ lllldrk: boats. p.m. Nov. ' at OCC's Salling Cen-1blp will be Offerei:l from 7 tO 9 p.m. Millng coune wm be oa.9d at w... ~ WIDdlmtm ad l'-14-boldertltlbo.m, pedml boats and 11ir. 1801 W. Coast Highway, New· Tuesdays thrOugh Dec. 12, by 1 :15 p.m. ~ tbraugbNcw. 4, toot• • •• .., ... , ... uor 115 nPiiboull for afflbal9 uie or auls· ~Beech. $44. (949) 645-9412. Orange Cout CGIJe9•'• School of by ~ Co.it Collllge'I SdJool P"Jlalll\...,721-ttao. Ing lbe bay. (IM8) 873-7200.
REAPERS HOJUNE
(949) 642-6086
CA t2626. ~t No news sto-
rlll. Rlustrltlonf. ldtt«lll mettw
Of ~her91nCM be
f'IP'Oduc.ed without vtTftWI I*•
milMof\ of~ fHIMI.
WllTllll lllD lllf POUCI flUS
VOLKN0.252
ftecord your comments about
the Dally Piiot °' news tip&.
ADDRESS
Our~ is 330 W. Bay St..
Cotta Mea. CA 92627.
COllllECIJON§
It Is the l'Mot's polky to prompt· Iv Ol)n'Kt ... en'On of~
,.... QI (949) 57~3.
m ,,. N9Wport ~Mee
0.-, flllot (IJSllS.144-IOO) Is .. llNd ~through ~
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~
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(IOO) 252-1141 ,...,...
o..lfled (Mt) 642-5171
~(Mt) M2~l21 .........
NtWI ~ M2·5610 SflOttl (Mt) 574-422)
*wt. Sporta ,.. (M9) 14'"4170
t .f'Mll: ~dnw.com
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74156
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74156
Newport Coast
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COSTA MESA
• La .... ..,.._ Auto theft W9S ~In the 2800
blodc It 9:01 •.m. 'Thurtd.y. • .,_ ... ,_ • ...._.Wt.._.. Ahft~
filonY Ml~ It 7:55 a.m. ~.
• V.dt .. llNet: Vll'ldelitm w '9pOf1ld In the 1100
blOCk It 11 •.m. Thwldly.
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Doily Pilot
COSll MESA PLANIHIG COMMISSION
On The FYI AGENDA WHERETO MEET
SOBER-LIVING HOME
The Book House, e Cos-
ta Mesa group home for
alcoholics who are sober
and trying to get back into
society, started in October
1998 in a Pamela Lane
triplex. The City Council
passed an ordinance in
February requiring permits
for group homes.
The Planning Commis-
sion wm hold a public
hearing tonight to• consider
a request for a permit by
the Book House operators.
What to expect: The
city's planning staff has
recommended the permit t>e granted. A planning
report states there have
been no traffic problems at
the sober-living home. The
report also shows the
home does not generate
complaints by its neigh-
bors. However, .the Police
Department has some con-
cerns because there have
been more than 20 nar-
cotics-related search war-
rants served in the square-
mile area around Pamela
Lane.
SOUTH COAST PlAZA
TOWN CENTER
The commission will
• Who: Costa Mesa
Planning Commission
• When: 6:30 p.m.
today
• WheN: City Hall, 77
Fair Drive, Costa Mesa
• Planning Commls·
slon: Chairman Walter
Davenport,. Vice Chair-
man Tom Sutro, Chris
Fewel, Katrina Foley,
Katie Wilson
hold a public hearing
tonight to discuss expan-
sion plans submitted by
South Coast Plaza, Orange
County Performing Arts
Center and Common-
wealth Partners UC. The
project calls for a new con-
cert hall, expansion of the
South Coast Repertory The-
ater and office space.
The commissioners will
review the details of an
environmental report, a
general plan amendment.
a preliminary master plan
for the Town Center area
and three development
agreements.
What to expect: The
city's planning staff has
advised commissioners to
recommend that the City
Council approve the
project.
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
OUR MEALS ARE A TRIP TO MEXICO
AlSO ON OUlt MENU: .FISH TACOS"
TORTILLA SOUP
CHILI SIZE
CHILI CHHSE OMElmt
WE TAl<E DINING
TO THE
NEXT LEVEL!
~~·~~·Yocw •~Cl.A!..'D•~• T~
• TN CM• ST'CAM ROOMS• MA.!ISAO£ • WbCHT W~ • PllRT.5 • FRD'f ~SW?
• M1D1cAi.1Y EnAlllJIHD ~ • so.Plwu1 HfMrH Q.UI • CHu> CAM
W£STCUFF PLAZA
IMnll Ave & 17th St.
Newport Beach
(949) 631 .. 3623
~Up
FITNESS CENTER
WWW
BLACKMAN LTD.
. . .
CORONA DEL MAR
2101 E. Pacific Coast Hwy.
PCH & Avocado Ave
949 760-9335
JEWELERS
A TIMELY REMINDER.
DAYLIGHT SAVING ENOS AT
2:00AM ON OCTOBER 29TH.
~
ROLBX
Celebrating the connty's dot-corns
• At the inaugural
Orange County
eWards, the Internet
industry's stars shine
in Newport Beach .
Mathis Winkler
DAILY PllOT
NEWPORT BEACH -
Scott Bass didn't even want to
come. The online editor of
Surfmag.com, Bass had
received a call that his Web
site bad made it to the finals of
the inaugural Orange County
eWards.
Thursday's event, billed as
an Academy Awards-style cer-
emony, honored the best in the
county's Internet world.
"There are lots of awards
on· the Internet,• Bass said,
mingling with fellow dot-com-
mers at the Orange County
Museum of Art. "It's 'come to
my site and grab a badge.'•
But clutching his eWard -
a glass sculpture made up of a
colorful •e• and a clear base,
Bass said be didn't regret hav-
ing taken the time.
"I couldn't be happier: he
said, his flip-Oops and casual
shirt right in line with the "Dot
Com Pinery• attire requested
on the invitation.
Fellow eWard winner
Shere'e Clock Cormier, the
president of Mymission.org,
said she knew exactly what
she'd do with her statuette.
"I think I might sleep with it
tonight,• she said, laughing.
OUNGE COUNTY
eWAIDS 2000
trttp:ltwww.rl«htil»lrd.com
Busineu-to-buslnew S4tvlcAt
http://www. 1121 OCHMllellu•.com
BusinesJ.to-<onsumer se;ovke
http://www.gareway.com
Business-to-business e-<omm«ce
http:llwww.Mazd<lusa.com
Busines:Ho-comumer HOmmerce
and best of show
http:llwww.stemc.l~l«tion.com
Educatlonllralni119
http://www.mymlssion.org
Nonprofrt/assodation
http://www.alisogolf.com
Travel
http;Jlwww.flr-lghtcom
Lifestyle
http:llwww.surfermag.com
Online publication
Proceeds from the event will benefit
Goodwill Industries of Ora119e Coun-
ty (trttp:llwww.ocgoodwfll.org) and
Another Byte (http:llwww.recycles.
orglbyte). Both organizations recycle
older computers for organization~
and individuals in need.
Some of the 200-plus atten-
dees certainly bied their best
to cyber-dress -a couple of
turtlenecks and T-shirts dotted
an othe rwise suit and tie
crowd.
Behavior wasn't quite up to
Oscar standards (did the fail-
ing sound system or some
snags on the PowerPoint pre-
sentations cause the
upheaval?) and presenters
repeatedly had to cahn down
the chatty audience.
But with phrases such as
•and the nominees are• and
•and the winner is." the orga-
nizers tried to lend some glam-
our to the affair. (Mind you. the
Oscars have dropped the politi·
ca1ly incorrect "winner' phrase
for "and the Oscar goes to.")
Wine, cocktails and assort·
ed cookies kept guests enter·
tained during the hourlong
awards ceremony.
When the statuettes had
changed hands, Graham
Mabon, one of 10 jud.Qes who
rated more than 150 Web sites,
said he'd been swprised by
one or two winners. While
design aesthetics, content,
teclm:ical innovation, function-
ality and interactivity all
played a role in selecting the
best, Mabon added that a Web
site's ability to provide solu-
tions for visitors had an advan-
tage over creativity.
Lisa Rubenstein, a Corona
del Mar Web site developer
who planned the awards cere-
mony, said despite some minor
problems, she was pleased
with the result.
"It was a first-year event.•
she said, adding there would
surely be a second one next
year. "It turned out pretty
well."
And Joy Hart, who scooped
up two eWards for her work on ,
Mazdausa.com, swruned it all
up in her acceptance speech.
"I know you are all going tc
challenge us: she said, receiv-
ing the Best of Show eWard.
•Let's just keep participating
and raise the bar every year.·
about Measure S (Greenlight)
Our opponents are saying things like:
WHOPPER #3. Under the terms of Measure S ~e could have had up to
55 citywide elections over the past ten years .
False. 'These wild charges led the city council to hire a consultant to see
what would have happened if we'd had Measure S for the last ten years.
Answer: ltll ballot measures per year, on the average. (Copy on
request.) Not t it:z elections, just l lh. ballot measures, each at a regular city
election. No additional elections at all.
Not only is the number 55 dead wrong, it is also a mystery. No one kno~s
(or will admit) where it came from. Apparently it is just a figment of some-
one's ~inalion.
NUt WHOPPER: llxo1181w coat
The ...... hive 13 ~ -much moNy for tNI cempajgn .. the
o1ttan1. so~ wll ..-W 13 •No on s· e.n.. tor wv ·Yes on s• 11t1s
~ ..... fxp9Qt It.
ThilJ ,.,,., dantt w.m JOU to run,.. own oltrl
Mcnday, October 23, 2000 3
. ' .. . .
4 Monday. Odober 23, 2000
DOVE: An art deco reproduction greets visitors near
the entryway of one Corona del Mar home th.at will be
part of this year's home tour.
LEFT: Lynn McCalllster, a chairwoman of this year's
sold-out home tour, stands in one of Corona del Mar's
showcase homes, in the second-level master bedroom
retreat.
Cruising on the home tour .
• Annual Corona del Mar fund-raiser promises
taste of lavish luxury -if you can get a ticket.
Danette Goulet
DAILY PILOT
CORONA DEL MAR -
It's like a Royal Caribbean
cruise ship -only better.
Stylish, handcrafted fur-
niture a dorns an elegant,
nearly decadent home with
its own movie theater on one
floor and a gym on another.
And it all overlooks the
ocean.
It is just one of the eight
stops on the Corona deJ Mar
home tour this year.
Standing in the living
room , or the master bed-
room, or the dining room, or
either study for that matter,
one has the feeling of being
on as cruise ship, as the
house is built into the side of
a cliff.
In the solarium adjacent
to the dining room is the
home's indoor barbecue.
While flipping the filet
mignon, the home's owners
can either watch the ocean
waves break on rocks below
or admire the hand-painted
mural they commissioned as
a compilation of all the exot-
ic places they have traveled.
And there are the little
bottles of sand that adorn
one wall -sand from more
than 100 beaches they
designed the furniture and
has spent 2 112 years creat-
ing the masterpiece home.
Having sold 1, 7 50 tickets
to Tuesday's event, Corona
del Mar High School PTA
organizers say they are com-
pletely sold out, but many
people are still vying for
tickets.
The main PTA fund-raiEer
have visited, including Bar-for the school, the borne tour
bados, Mombasa, Tahiti netted a profit of $80,000 last
and Panama. •w e used a lot of exotic year, said Lynn McCallister,
veneers, and we used work-one of the event's chair-
men from all over · the women. It is a sum they hope
world,• said Anna Shay of to top this year by $5,000 or
Solanna Designs, who so.
No matter what you're doing,
yoor ~own newspaper
RTS IN. •• Ody PfkK
We don't hove any future po/11fcol aspirations. But we have stronQ oplnJons
about a po/It/cal Issue -Measure S. We believe Measure S 'Will undennloo representattve
government In Newport Beach at great cost to tne clttzens and taxpayers.
•Tue money goes to acad-
emic enrichment." McCallis-
ter said. •This year what we
really want to do is enrich
music and the arts program.
These two items have really
gotten shortchanged!
Proceeds from the home
tour will also help to pay for
new software for the state-
of-the-art technology the
school's foundation bought,
as well as campus enhance-
ments.
·w e know we have the
bond money coming, but we
also know that may be a
couple years down the
road," McCallister said.
In the meantime, the PTA
members hope to make
some small improvements of
their own, such as baseball
bleachers, she said.
YES on s~§~llll Win do the trick
NOonT
Will make it st)cl(
Vote YES• S _.NO• T
qs"~~m We urge you to vote NO on S. !!ll!J~
U nm a tcherl (.Uality of Life
We were each honored to serve os Mayor
of Newport Beoch. We did our best to
reJ)fesent the citizens In working to limit
airport expansion. reduce traffic congestion
and clean up the Bock Bay. while hying to
keep our city flnonclolty solvent.
Newport Beoch today Is largely the product
of the past decisions by our elected
officials. We have low cr1me rates and high
property values. We have wonderful muse-
ums. llbl'Otles. retail focllltles and restaurants.
We truly enjoy a very high quality of lite.
Measure S Ercdes rur ~ty of
Life -~ to SS Citywide Electia)S
over the Past 'Ie'l Years
Meosufe S wfll do nothing to Improve our
qualtty of lfe and much to place It In jeop-
cxdy. Meolure S Is Pfes&nted as a meosu-e
that wlll ·require o pubic vote on mqor
ctevetopment prOjeets, • If you read It you' I
... that ~II not on accurate clofm.
In truth Measure S reqlkes a p.Jbllc vote on
Meas ure S will H::l:r i.b1.y Di vi.de
o ur Community and Pit Neighbor
Against Neighbor with Repeated
and Costly Citywide Elections
If we hold repeated citywide elections over
these ·minor· ·neighborhood Issues our
community wtll become horribly dMded
wtth neighbor pitted against neighbor In an
endless series of polltlcal bottles. Elections
cost money ($2-3 mllllon alone over the past
ten years If Measure S was In effect). They
also divert attention from Important Issues
such os pUbllc safety. Improving our schools
and plonntng our future.
Megsyce S makes city goyaromant
lrrelaygot. The time now spent anolyzlng
trafflc studies. enwonmentol studies.
economic lmpacta ond hokjlng public
hearings would become mere window
drwlrig. It woUd be repk>ced with 8f'dell
etecttonl detemWled by limpllltlc llogona. n. won't improve plonnlng or the quolty of
OUf etected offtclas.
Retain cur Qlality of Life
EVERV General Pion Amendment -no mot· PleOle. join UI In voting NO on Meoue s.
ter hoW llTIOff-once o ·certcin• threshOld Is Let'• retain the quolty of 111• we n<hl ef'llOV.
reached. Linder the tarma or MIQua s we And let'I fooul on ~ cOl.a'd "*"'"
r.QlAQ bQya bOO UP to 66 cltywtdo a1ec:;11g11 berl who wll help ua retcM our quolty ot lfe.
QVIC fbl ooef tao yecrt. WI cgyld hgy9 And thClnlcl IO much fOf the hOnor ot '9P'9-
ygtw:.I on ctvch Q)d Ddvaht .:bog! .._ tenttng yoo on our cttv courdl
llQO'= b atgttone l\llO a zcn q ,,.,..lppt
r '•f'An IQ g rJllMID Clld g l qp p Aft: fAA',.. t .. I tp P'W;Q'I rMkllcMJt,
Mattress Outlet Sto
BRAM> NEW-COSMET1CALLY NPERFECT
Get the Sett for Leal
• I fW
SliowNOID Hou.rt
Mon-Fri 9am-4:'30pm
711 w. 17th St. Suite A-5
COICIM.a
M'4U-3010
'IWI ... (Ill) ""
3165 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
.,.. lllocll IGUUI ol 405 l'WJ
(714) 545·7168
• ~presenting the full
line of Pride Mobility
Produc:u '
• Servic.e & ~pair
• Ima·~ Rambunement
Speodist
Daily Pilot
............ Of Orage
Coa1t CoD8ae'I Nonnan
I!. WatiOll Ubi~ will
hOld a bOok tale from 9
LJIL to 7 p.m. Tuesday
aDd 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Wectn.cky . on tbe first
Door of OCC't library,
2101 Paimew Road, Cos-
ta M.... Hardcover
bOob will be IOld for $1
and 12. Papei:beclls will
cmt 50 amts to Sl. (714)
02-5081.
TM 27ll .....i Home
Tour wOl be presented by
tbe Corona del Mar High
School and Middle
School PTA from 10:30
a.m. to 2:30 p.m., starting
at the Sherman Ubrary &
Gardens, 2647 E. Coast
Highway, Newport
Beach. (9'9) 644-8027.
Tbe Newport Buch His-
torical Society and
Friends will bold a
catered dinnet and talk
by speaker John Blaich at
6 p.m. at the American
Legion Hall. 215 15th SL,
Newport Beach. $15 per
person. (949) 675-6161.
A deMte OD .a.ortlon will
be staged from 7 to 9:15
p.m . at Orange Coast
College's Pine Arts Hall
119, 2701 Pairview Road.
Christopher Sherrod, a
graduate of Talbot Divini·
ty School at Biola Univer-
sity, will present the pro-
life side of the debate.
Stephen J. Mather, coor-
dinator of the United
Democratic Headquar-
ters in PasadeDa, will pre-
sent the ~ice side.
Dr. Charlei B. Green, a
profeaor of psychology
at OCC, will moderate
the debate. Free. (714)
"32-5725.
The Coloa.t William
Cabell Chapter w1ll meet
at 11:30 a.m. at the East-
bluff Clubb9'11e, 2-'90
Vista del Oro, Newport
Beach. The speaker will
be William Doty. an
archivist at tbe National
Archives in Laguna
Niguel. (9'9) •9'-3833.
Tbe HMltla luurance
C.OumeHng and Advoca-
cy Program will present a
semtner on Medicare
health plan Cbok:es at 1
p.m. at OASIS Senior
Center, 800 MaJVuerile
Ave., Corona del Mar.
The program Is part of the
Council on Aging of
Orange County. Free.
(114) 528-1258.
A 1 1._, •ta; rtlDg for
Women -'nlldng Con-
trol.. Wiil ~ 6 p.m.
at tbe ~ laland
oftiCe Of hlneWebber
Inc., -SU Qimente Diive, H9wjOrt Beech.
(9'9) 717;aeoG •
~==:-c:!~ men:e.. lb f 11 After-....... ~ 'iiltll be held fftlm~.!1e at the ~New-e .. w=~~~
129 ·-.
•
. . . '
Daily Pilot
HAUNTED vision of parent Mark Murtaugh.
CONTINUED FROM 1
~group was formed four years ago
to nuse money to fund the school's
em1clunent programs, such as music, art
and physical education, as well as prcr
vide teacher aids, after-school programs
and anything else needed at the school
He and two other dads, Scott Tucker
and Rich~. paid for the event.
except for a few donations from Gel-
mans grocery store and Price Cub, and
put it together with the hope of bringing
in $2,000 to $3,000 for the school.
·we thought. 'Let's see if we can
make this fly,' not kno~g going into it
if it would work,• Murtaugh said. "We .
really went out on a limb.• Last year, along with the PTA, the
group installed a computer lab at the
school.
"These guys are unbelievable,• said
Mary Manos, Andersen's principal.
•Tuey even stayed overnight to guard
the pumpkins they are so dedicated.•
H the crowds milling about all day or
the cash box that was already heavy
halfway through the event were any
indication, the trio's hours of hard work
were well spent.
The Halloween festival, which was
visited by hundreds of families
throughout the day Suncia_y, was the
"I liked the haunted house 1he best,•
said Alexa Friedman, 11. "It was scary ..
Then I figw'ed out who everyone was,
and it wasn't scary anymore:
MURDER
CONTINUED FROM 1
After the guilty verdict,
the trial entered its second
stage -the sanity phas~.
The prosecution, led by
Deputy Dist. Atty. Debora
Lloyd, has argued that
Abrams was aware of his
actions. She has maintained
that the defendant's psy-
chosis was a result of several
years of drug. abuse, not
mental illness.
Public Defender Denise
Gragg has insisted that
Abrams suffers from para-
noid schizophrenia and
believes he is tormented by
"brain wave people". who
wanted to make him a killer.
Gragg said Abrams killed
the children to get the brain
wave people to "leave him
and his family alone.·
The insanity phase of the
trial has lasted about two
months. Attorneys them-
. selves commented during
their closing arguments
about the length and the
complexity of this portion of
the trial -which involved
marathon testimonies from
psychiatrists and psycholo-
gists.
The long~st was that of
prosecution witness Dr.
Martha Rogers, who was
question ed by Gragg for
al.most two days.
Several witnesses have
taken the stand during the
course of the trial. Gragg
said Friday that she bas lost
count of the number of wit-
nesses she has called.
"There should have been
at least 30, ballpark," she
estimated.
Both Gragg and Lloyd
declined to comment about
the details of the case, say-
ing they cannot make any
statements until the entire
trial is completed.
TRUTH AND CONSEQUENCE
If t}le jury decides
Abrams was legally insane
when he committed the
murders, he will avoid the
death penalty and probably
spend the rest of his life in a
mental institution.
If he is found sane, the tri-
al will proceed to the penal-
ty phase -when jurors will
decide if Abrams should be
sentenced to death or life in
prison.
The Orange County dis-
trict attorney's office is push-
ing for the death penalty,
said Tori Richards, spokes-
woman for the prosecutor's
office. The district attorney
decided about eight months
ago to pursue capital pun-
ishnlent against Abrams.
"It is the district attorney's
policy to seek the death
penalty in such instances of
rampage killings that hap-
pen ~ public places,"
Richards said.
Prosecutors had also filed
a special circumstances
charge in January alleging
that Abrams was lying in
wait before he committed
the crime.
Abrams reportedly told
police be had wanted to
•execute" innocent children
in an effort to get revenge
against a woman who had
spumed his advances.
If Abrams is found legally
insane, he will be put in a
mental institution for an
undetermined amount of
time, Richards said. He
would remain !here until a
psychiatrist determines that
"he is no longer a threat to
society, " she said
·At such a time, (the dis-
trict attorney) could oppose
that decision, saying he's
still insane and go into a tri-
al," Richards said. "But if we
don't, he will be set free.·
That is the scenario local
police officials and friends of
victims' families say they
dread.
SEEKING JUSTICE
Dave Jenkins, a Costa
Mesa resident and friend of
the Sotos, said Abrams must
pay for the heinous crime.
"I'd see the justice system
as an absolute failure if he
~ver gets out," he said. "I'm
not in favor of the death
penalty because it's too
quick. A person who does
something like this must
spend his life in prison and
think every single day about
what he's done.•
Costa Mesa Police Chief
David Snowden said the
"defense's attempt to ratio-
nalize Abrams' behavior is
disappointing.
"The accused do deserve
their day in court,• he said.
•He got that day in court,
and the jury found him
guilty. Now it's time for him
to get what he deserves for
killing those children."
Snowden recalled the
horrible day when he sat
next to little Sierra's body
and later broke the news to
her parents.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY, BRANDON
Brandon's mother, Pamela
. .
Jenda
Bennu.4,
be1P9out
bermom.
Toni. by
plddng
out a
pumpkin
as part of
Andenen
Elementary
School's
Halloween
festlvtUes
on
Sunday.
SEAN HIU£R/
DAil Y PU.OT
Wiener, is trying in her own
w ay to find some closure.
She said she will go to the
courthouse today to follow
jury deliberations.
'I'll definitely be there."
she said . "It's very important
to me."
Both Wiener and Cindy
Soto have declined to com-
ment about the trial until a
final verdict is made. Both
have, however, been
involved in Sierra's Ught, a
nonprofit foundation started
by Soto to help make
preschools and day-care
centers safer for children.
Two weekends ago,
Wiener raised $5,700
through a bowl-a-thon for
the foundation.
"We're trying to focus on
the positive,• Wiener said.
"But it's hard. I can't find the
words to explain how (Bran-
don's death] has affected our
family . ."
Tuesday is Brandon's
birthday. It is the day the lit-
tle boy would have turned 5.
But, Wiener said she will go
to the courthouse instead of
the cemetery if the jury does
not reach a verdict today.
"Hopefully,• she said, "I'll
go to the cemetery.•
Monday, Odobefo 23, 2000 5
occ
.. • ,, f ,.,,,..
~ WPE'lld
a8QeiY Wtlll -lir both -~'rd lllld
madmtwad.
And IO die .... b
tbeam,_...~
forth. But ............ ,
fund tbe gaJleq.......,
because tt wan, aeteln
tradittOnal ~
Bennett lllid.
While aichited
Steven Ehrlich · of lM
Angeles has dengaed
both buildings, occ -had to go it aJaae •
raising the add:ltioDal 12
million for the arts peftl·
ion. They plan to begin
construction in 2002 or
2003, when the aJ1s cen·
ter is completed.
Along with the stu-
dents' contribution to
the 8 ,500-square-loot
facility, there have been
several other major cao-
tribulors.
Mary Lynn~
Rallis donated 5'6,000
for the gallery's book
nook, and for the mt
two years Mazda MoCma
has sponsored a goU
tournament that has
raised $55,000.
•There's another tour-
nament on March 19, •
Bennett added. •we're
hoping that will bring
another $30,000. We also
had some other sm•Der
gifts trom Pepsi, Padfi-
Care and the founda-
tion."
With a couple years
left unw the next
groundbreaking, OCC
officials say they are
confident they can raise
the second million.
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6 Monday, October 23, 2000
HWTOID
lllYOLVID
With less than
a month remaining
until election day,
the re's still time
to help your party
or cause. Here's
whereto go:
• DEMOCRATIC PARTY
OF ORANGE COUNTY
200 N. Main St., sarrta
Ana, 92701. (71 4) 835-
5158.
Website:
www.demo-0e-ca.com/
.
!3VOTE
ct)
• GREEN MR1Y Of
ORANGE COUNTY
P.O. Box 53561, Irvine,
92619. (714) 633-6550. .....
www.greens.org/
califomlalora~
• UBERTARIAN PARTY
Of ORANGE COUNTY
P.O. Box 27871, Santa
Ana, 92799. (714) 54().
5053.
Weblllle:
www.lpoc.org
• REPUIUCAN PARTY
Of ORANGE COUNTY
245 Fischer Ave., Costa
Mesa, 92626. (714) 556-
8555. .....
www.ocgop.org
Daily Pilot
II Ill UCE
THE CONTENDERS FOR NEWPORT BEACH OTY COUNCJI. DISTRICT 7:
John Herr.man
Tomlhomlon
.._..L~
THE CONTENDERS FOlf THE NEWPORT-MESA UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT
BOARD OF EDUCAT10N: .,_. ...._ wno represents East Side Costa Mesi. ls running unopposed .
_ Names In bold indlut~ and/dates profiled today
THE RACE FOR NEWPORT BEACH CITY COUNCIL
Robert . L. Wynn: LoOking for a little "consensuS
Mathis Winkler
OAJLY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -
The first thing any visitor to
the office of District 7 City
Council candidate Robert L.
Wynn must notice is that
there isn't much space left on
the walls.
Wynn has plaques of
appreciation from the Boys
Club of America, the League
of Cities and the Chamber of
Commerce. Others commem-
orate his stints as city manag-
er in Imperial Beach, where
he served from 1957 to 1968,
and Coronado, from 1968 to
1971.
But an aerial view of New-
port Beach, a painting of City
Hall and the city's seal clear-
ly show that his two decades
as Newport Beach's city man-
ager, from 1971 to 1991, have
left a lasting impression.
And on his desk, Wynn
keeps a paperweight that
displays a brass copy of his
Newport Beach city manager
business ca'rd.
He still remembers his first
day on the job - Aug. 1,
1971 -when then-Mayor Ed
Hirth let Wynn in on the city's
most pressing issues.
"He told me the three pri-
orities for the city,· Wynn
recalled. ·create a general
plan, balance the budget and
control growth at J ohn
Wayne Airport."
The city's halls of adminis-
tration looked quite different
when Wynn first arrived on
the scene. The police chief
worked out of a rented office
above a paint store on 32nd
Street. The Planning Depart-
ment also occupied a rented
building.
"The city literally didn't
have any money,• Wynn said.
lWo decades later, he'd
helped devise a general plan
and left the city with hefty
reserves in its coffers. As for
the airport, that was one of
the things he passed on to his
successor, Kevin Murphy, in
1991.
·naffic was also a hot but-
ton,• he said, •especially on
hot summer days when peo-
ple came to the beach:
Wynn describes bis depar-
ture after 20 years in a matter
of fact way.
"ln the afternoon, I went
to the utilities yard and to the
deparbnents, • be said. "I
said, 'It was a good experi-
GREG FRY I DAILY Pl.OT
Robert L Wynn, who seeks Newport Beach's District 7
City Coundl seat, stands near a pool at his office complex.
ence.' I told them that I
inte nded to live in the city
and would drop by periodi-
cally. I gave them my city key
and went home.•
But when· he talks about
city projects that came to
fruition under his tenure, the
quiet Wynn lights up a little.
Things such as the OASIS
Senior Center, the city's cen-
tral library and the Upper
Newport Bay bridge were
projects that involved creat-
ing consensus. And consen-
sus is something that's been
missing from the current
council, he said.
"When you do things like
that, being a city manager
or a city council member
could be fun," be said.
"Indecision and lack of trust
are a problem.·
ROIEU L. WYllll 01:
• MEASURE S AND
MEASURE T:
Wynn opposes Measure
S •because ballot-box
planning Is divisive. I
think elections create
divisiveness In the com-
munity, and we don't
need more divisive-
nes s."'
Measure S proposes to
put before a citywide vote
any development that
allows an increase of more
than 100 peak-hour car
trips or dwelling units, or
40,000 square feet more
than the general plan
allowance.
He supports Measure T,
which would add parts of
the city's traffic phasing
ordinance to the city char-
_ter and nullify Measure S if
voters approve both mea-
sures.
• ORANGE COUNTY
AIRPORTS:
He said extending the
flight limits on John
Wayne Airport beyond
2005 is the city's •first pri-
ority. I think we've got
to try and g et that
extended as soon as
possible."'
Plans for an airport at
the former El Toro Marine
Corps Air Station should be
•put on th• back burner
to some extent.• he said.
He wants to start a dia-
logue with South County
residents when the John
Wayne flight caps have
been extended.
•Let's .... if w e can't
get support for a small·
er facility than an Inter-
nationa l airport."
• STATE OF THE BAY:
The city should look at
ways to divert runoff into
the sewer system instead
of d umping it into the bay.
he said.
.,Part of a solution
m ight be using more
reclaimed water. Maybe
there Is• flt there."
• IHNEUTION
PROPOSALS:
Wynn supports annexa·
tion of Newport Coast,
Santa Ana Heights and Bay
Knolls.
.,The city has done a
great job in getting con-
Mnsus there."'
• REDEVELOPING
OLDER AREAS:
He wants to look into
redeveloping Mcfadden
Square, Balboa Peninsula
and similar areas in need
of renovation.
•There should proba-
bly be some attention
paid to the Infrastruc-
ture of older parts of
the city. We need to
make sure that they a re
maintained and stay
attractive."
THE RACE FOR NEWPORT·MESA UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT
Dana Black: hnproving schools is her goal
Danette Goulet
DAllY PILOT
NEWPORT-MESA
·gang of five • began to
question the board.
They asked lf they could
raise money to keep the
teachers on. Her favorite place to be is
the home she has made for
herself and her two sons in
Costa Mesa.
When the board brushed
off the group, they decided
to take matters i.Qto their
As someone who really own hands.
knows the value of a home, After nine months of
Dana Black cherishes hers. research, Black and her
Bright and comfortable, supporters discovered
the restored home main-Steven Wagner had embez-
tains much of the original zled $9 million from the
1940s feel with wood sur-school district since the
faces, diamond 1970s.
eian~ =~=~ "I want to ~ee lat=~ur ~~~~
large windows parents as our school board
that allowed the N 1 member Jim De
mother to watch 0 · partner in Boom decided
her children in the district, and not to run fo~
the backyard. J want to see an reelection, he
But Black was suggested she
rarely just gaz-active student take his place.
ing out at her leadership." She took him
own sons. The up on that sug-
house on Abbie Dana Black gestion, and
Way has always --------Black believes
been the hang-she bas made a
out spot for friends of both difference.
of her sons. ·1 think we've made a lot
It was ber habit of watch-of changes, and I'm really
tng ou t for all the children proud of the changes I've
that was the first step to her made in four years," she
becoming a trustee for the said.
Newport-Mesa Unified Since rooting out the bad
Sc.b4o1 District four years eggs years ago, Black said
ago. she takes a more positive
It began in 1991. approach now.
•we had just done a Now, she said, she asks
jog-a -tbon and raised herself -and others one
$35,000 at Mariners [Ele-question: Whot is it you
mentary School), and two want to get done1
weeks after that we beord Her o.nswer ii improved
they were layii1g otf the art, schools and o tighter com-
mualc and P.B. teadlen at munity.
Mariners," aha recalled. •1 want to see all ld\ooll
•Pour monthl later, th• dia. at the Oittinguilhect School
bict came up With a S2·mll· level,• •b• Hid. •t want to non &nlitaka -a cleilcal see parents u our NO. 1
mi.take 1upp0Mdly. • pe,rtner in the diitrk:t, and I
Jnick and a group of~-want t.O tee an. adlft •·
~ later dubbed the ct.at IMdenblp. •
CNll ~/ DM.Y Pl.Of
Dua Black, ICbool board pnllkleDt oe tbe N9wpoit·Mw Uni-
.fled School Dlttrk.1. wants to tene another term.
Diii ILICI 01:
• CHARTER SCHOOLS
Black said charter
schools are great
because t hey •give
parents a choice, a nd
they're a community
collaborative, which I
believe Is the future
of public education. H
She has met with
local proponents of
Mesa Leadership Acade-
my a nd thinks it's •a
fabulous Idea -the
wave of the future.,.
But she also wants a
detailed explanation of
the proposed curricu-
lum and how academy
leaders plan to assess it.
•SCHOOL
VOUCHllS
•
She is •cteact set
against them ...
White she Is an advo-
cate of choJce for par-
ents, she Is also an
advocate of public edu-
cation. She said she has
doubts about how the
state will get the
voucher money to
schools when, historl·
catty, districts have not
received mandated
fun<h.
"'1her CM't per U8 .. It ............
........ enen.t .................. ....... ,,.
• 1111111 YllY ICIBI
llack atttibutes tM
recent IUCC9lleS on the
Ac9der1tk '9rformlnca
Index to new lndet--
.. W• had a ll the
pieces, just not the
l••dershlp. H
But she added that
scores are •not e ven
close to where they
n-.d to be.'" The
answer to bring them
up is to raise expecta-
tions and t hat the •key
Is In partnering with
parents."
e WHAi WOULD
YOU DO FllST WITH
TIE SCHOOL IOllD
MONEY?
•1 wanted ft to
happen y..twday -
dlstrlctwlde," Black
said .
If she ha d to decide
wh ich school to tackle
first, she would say
Newport Harbor High
School and Ensign lnter-
medlat•, beca use they
are two of the oldest,
with Newport Harbor
having been bullt in the
1930s.
• ZllO TKIUICI
-11n1m
TO CllHI Ill POUCn
She glWI th.i an
e mphatk Md resound·
Ing •-. • S1Yi"9 she
belllWI In .. ~tol·
.... polql. . ........ ...... ., ........... . ,.._ ... ...
--~· ........... ,..
•
When you net it out, there's no local newspaper better than the Daily Pilot.
The paper perfectly serves up local news, prep sports and community columnists
to each readers each day. There's ~ to clg about the Daily Pilot.
Got the. Pilot?
•
• •
.......... Ill -711111 ..... ......, -· Ow•• Cwt Coll• ...... .
after destroying Golden w.st 55-21. ---
Mc>rmy, October 23, 2000 • Sports Editor Roger Corfson • 949~7""223 • Sports Fax: 9.49-6500170
n ·0ai1J>• n
SPORTS HALL OF. FAME
CELEBRATING THE MILLENNIUM .-.
Costa Mesa
• Father Time has no clock on Tom Baldwin, who has
found happiness at every level in the game of football.
Richard Dunn
DAILY PILOT
M ore than 20 years
1111 ago, Tom Baldwin
realized what
coaching football meant to him
when he stopped doing it.
And, even tho\lgh Baldwin's
birth certificate indicates an
eligibility for retirement benefits,
the Costa Mesa High offensive
coordinator isn't going anywhere
soon.
At least not at this pace.
•1 have no intention of
retiring,• said Baldwin, who
turns 69 on Jan. 31. •Someone
said you might actually make
more money by retiring than
coaching, but you still have to do
something every day or you'll
wilt away. I want to be doing
something all the time and I
want to coach football for as long
as I can. Coaching is something
you love doing.•
Including three tours of duty
at Santa Ana High, two stops at
Santa Ana Valley and two at
Costa Mesa, Baldwin
bas changed bands 11
times in a career that
started at Long Beach
State in 1957.
Baldwin, a
dedicated economics
teacher at Mesa who
was able to coach his
grandson (Ronnie
Llevanos) three years
ago, enjoyed some of
his greatest triumphs
Baldwin said of his former
player, who teamed with Bengals
quarterback Ken Anderson in
the 1970s to become one of
pro football's most prolific
passing-reCeiving combinations
with 53 touchdowns in 12 years,
the seventh-highest all-time total
for a scoring duo.
Baldwin was Santa Ana's
bead man from 1965 to 1974,
then worked for the Southern
California Sun of the defunct
World Football League as a
secondary coach, Director of
Personnel and Vice President
of Football Operations. But the
league folded after two years.
"Th.at was a super time,• said
Baldwin, who coached with Tom
Fears and later went into the
player scouting business with
Fears, a Pro Football Hall of
Pamer.
Baldwin played football at
Santa Ana College and Long
Beach State, then started his
coaching career with the 49ers,
before landing at Santa Ana
High as an assistant
coach in '58.
The next year,
Baldwin helped open a
new school, SA Valley,
where be coached for
six years, then
accepted his first head
coaching assignment at
Santa Ana in '65.
In 1979, after briefly
working in the
insurance business,
Baldwin returned to
Santa Ana for a third as the Santa Ana head Tom Baldwin
coach in the late 1960s,
stint under Coach Tom
Meiss as the Saints won 10
straight games and the Century
League title, while reaching the
CIP Southern Conference
semifinals.
when nobody could catch Isaac
Curtis and Eddie Steward.
In what many Orange
Countians call a golden era of
high school football, when Coach
Clare Van Hoorebeke's Anaheim
Colonists were still going strong
and most of the county bad yet
to be developed, Baldwin's
Saints were a powerful force in
the Sunset League.
. Autumn games against Mater
Dei. Servite and Anaheim at the
Santa Ana Bowl and Anaheim
Stadium would outdraw the
f..ngels in those years. ·we really
packed them in,• Baldwin said.
~We played to a packed house
8 lot (at the Santa Ana Bowl).·
; In the 1967 CIP Southern
~n 4-A championship game
pt Anaheim Stadium between
f\llabeim and Santa Ana, a
owd of 26,383 watched Van
oorebeke's Colonists beat
win's Saints, 27·6.
At the time, the attendance
gure was the second-largest at
eim Stadium for a prep
ootball game. Today, it ranks as
sixth-biggest crowd.
'That '67 season, Baldwin was
g three key players for the
title game. But. earlier, the
ti Jmoclted off Servtte in
of about 20,000 at Anaheim um, and beat Anaheim,
bl the regular season when
Co&ooiltl were ranked No. 1 imd the Saints, at full strength,
W..No. 3. I •When Santa Ana pla~
Ma• Did (at the Bowl), people
~packed ln by ':30 in the
~· Baldwin Mid "When J die, I wut my PhM 1prtnkled
~ tM iitdeltMI a1'1d bl the ~ .. tbe Santa Ana
, WblD CUrtll WU 1.Qducted
'into tbl cw•uaeti Bengali' Hall
bfp.-jat119 .... '80l,be
~ ....... -~tbimto
.. ~-.... Riverfront ........ 119llalttime
~ tt-• • .,.
i 9llMC ·····-Wk to I pndnnnttllW ..
Baldwin said leaving football
coaching for the insurance
business was •the biggest
mistake" he'd ever made,
because "it wasn't what I really
wanted to do.•
After coaching with Meiss,
Baldwin returned to Valley as a
head coach (1981-83), then
wound up at Costa Mesa in 1984
to take over a sagging program.
Mesa's junior varsity was 0-10
the previous year and its
freshmen team was'0-9. •And,•
Baldwin said, •we bad nobody
coming back who started (on
varsity). Costa Mesa was pretty
much rock bottom when I ca.me
here.•
Baldwin guided the Mustangs
back to respectability and the
CIP playoffs in '88, Mesa's first
postseason trip in nine years. tn 1990, Mesa made the playoffs
again on the heels of Paclfic
Coast League wins over Century,
Laguna Beach and Estancia,
26-3.
As Mesa's hefd coach from
1SHM ~'91, Baldwin was among
the most colorful and quotable
coacbel of his time, often with
bumoroua commentary.
Baldwin served as an Uliltant
at Corona del Mar (1992-93) and
Chaffey College (199«-95),
before returning to Colt.a Mesa,
where he's in his fifth year u an
Uliltant Under Coach Jeny
HoWell.
Baldwin, the lalelt boDoree bi
the Dally Pilot Sports Hall of
Fame, lives in Santa Ana with
b!s wife Of 46 years, Caiol. They
have two grown children and six
graDdcblldrim ..
BaldwiD'w IOD, Duny1 wa
Santa Am High'• fOotball,...,. or they..,. tn urn. Hll
' ~ UMaol, w altar Mela ID t• and W .
ADOlber~ ........ =---=-~
DAILY Pl.OT PHOTOS BY JEt..NFER TAYLOft
Orange Coast's Vince Strang m leaves a trail of would-be tacklen in the Pirates' 55-21 victory Saturday.
/
Orange Coast College wins
back the Victory Bell with
an old-fashioned demolition
over rival Golden West.
Steve Virgen
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA - A lack of
preparation wasn't the case for the
Orange Coast College football team,
Saturday night. The Pirates were
ready for anything from executing
gimmick plays to woofing celebra-
tion chants.
The preparation paid off for OCC
as the Pirates gained 628 yards of
offense, a school record, that led to a
55-21 Mission Conference Central
Division victory over district rival
Golden West. OCC broke the record
of 587 yards set in 1950 against L.A.
Valley.
The Pirates paid their respects to
the Rustlers after the final gun and
then grabbed the Victory Bell, the
winner's reward for the OCC-Gold-
en West conquest. The Rustlers
owned the bell since 1997 after a 28-
6 win.
•Whose got the bell now? Hool
Hool Hoo-boo,• the Pirates chanted
as they rang the Victory Bell They
were singing to the tune of the .Bahe
Men's Jamaican anthem. •Who Let
the Dogs Out?"
•we knew we had it won.• said
OCC wide receiver Justin Dale, who
threw a touchdown pass and ran in
a score off a reverse. ·we were just
waiting for the clock to run out to get
the bell because we were ready to
do (the chant).•
The Pirates' singing was a worthy
celebration as they stormed to a 34-
7 halft1me lead, scoring touchdowns
on five of their eight possessions in
the first half.
OCC scored on itl first offensive
play from ~e.
After sendiDg the Rustlers three·
and-out, Pirates running back
Anthony Can:iPo broke away on a
limple dive play and ltretcbed it
into a 5'-yard touchdown nm. Cam-
po'• dash WU the flrst toucbdOwn
for the Pirates at LeB4rd Stadfum
this IMIOD.
•we have the tooll," OCC Coedl
Mike laylor Mid of the Pirates'
otteme that Nlhed foe 363 yards
altar gaildng j\ISt 294 in ltl fttst five
garnet ot the MUOD. ·we Just Deed
to get the ball in the right baDdl.
Obvloully, we're a different team
than what we were egaimt Rtver-
lkl8. • • ny1or wa1 speaking of the
~-· 17·2 k>ll to Riwnkla, s.pt. I, Wbm OCC tlnllMd wttb Giiiy 88
offeDllft yafdl.
Salurd9y nlgbl, boW9\c, wa a
dHhNm ltoiy • lbe ,..... (3-3)
··~ .... wlililma ltlMk to ............. Ooldm w.....,..., Ml
I •
OCC'1 Barret Burkett (25) latches on to GWC runner Robbie Ramirez.
occ
GWC
26th straight loss.
On OCC's second offensive pos-
session, the Pirates went for a bick
,play to incnue their lead. ·
After quarterback Nick Higgs
completed a 37-yard pass to
Jonetban Jacbon on a third-4Ild-
~ht. OCC ca~bt the Rustlers by
s\lrprile. On the~ play, Higgs
handed the ball Off to wide receiver
Vince Strang m Qllll1nq in motion
toward the Plratal' lide'i.lne. Strang
tbiai P.tCbed the ball to Dale run-
nlDO in the oppolite direction. And
Dele heaved a 40-yard touchdown
pell to~ Mc:Neece.
•we ran lt in~ and"I threw
an (lntel'Olptfion) beca\118 I couldn't
thlOw lt that far,• Dele NJd. •When
t came out here I Jl.ml said, •rve got
to ltay c:OinpoMd, • and I Just threw
It. "!bat wa ~ant touchdown pus
ever. l'ft beeil wanting to tmvw the
W. ?bey ftndy Jet me throw the sock..
Tbe ....... aCONd again JUll
bibe die lnl ~ came to an
iDd -occ .... dnaw play llt tbe plded .... OGld9a Welt w
aaa bllll. "";!:&,laen!lldU. W I» ...... .,. ......... Of
Estancia High, who went the dis-
tance virtually untouched for a 53-
yard touchdown.
The Pirates increased their lead
to 27-0 after Dale ran a reverse for a
44-yard score. Then, with 8:43
remaining in the first half Newport
Harbor High product Eddie Johnson
gave Higgs a breather.
Johnson led the Pirates on a 45-
yard drive in five plays ending with
bis 9-yard touchdown pass to Jack-
son. Johnson finished with with two
touchdown passes.
OCC took advantage of its favor-
able field ROSition throughout the
first half. Strang returned seven
punts for 79 yards in the fir6t half to
set up the offense. • .
The Golden West offense man-
aged one touchdown before half-
time. But, the Pirates' defense forced
the Rustlers to punt seven out of
their eight possessions.
•This is the most exdttng wtn I've
been in since the championship
game in "98 with Mater Det. • OCC
linebacker and former Monarch
Dustin Davis said. ·we were up for
this game. It wu Ju.st a great wtn. •
Taylor was a bit U11'9t wtlb the
Pirates' MCOnd b'alf, caWn9 their
performance ·~· Yet, OCC ltil1 8amed IOIDe btl In the
l«OQd Mii. The ts came
before the third ·quarts ended. Hig·
gs' 5·yard touchdown nm caJll*l a
seven-play SO.yard drtft that fea.
tured tight eild Ben PreclJtcQon.
who caught three pa11e1 for 81
yards Oil tbe ICOl1Dg dltve.
Tbwgh ~ylot WM lmpr•ed with .. ....,, ........... ....
to~ ............. ... ...... .....,.,~ .. ....
et l p.m.
..... 'nlylor. ·w. .... -....................
NmwllllD&GaldleWlit.•
.. . .
SPORTS
Steen second at Mt. SAC
.... ..,°'*""• Golden West 0 7 7 7 -21
Or.nge ~ 20 14 7 14 -SS
• Ant~
• Newport Harbor senior has
mixed results against two rivals.
Sailors roll. again
si1c~ w p o P~te~ WATER POLO
Belden had four goals, four assists and
VU men victorious, 2-1
SANTA BARBARA -SOCCEI Vanguard University was a
OCC -CMnpo 54 run (Pate kick), 13:37
OCC • Mc:Ht~ 40 pass from Dale ~ate kldc). 9:11
OCC • DIWtcins 53 run (kick failed),
0:04
5ec:ond~
WALNtrr -CROSS COUNTRY Newport Harbor
High senior Amber Steen was edged by
one rival, but bested another Saturday
to end up with a second-place finish in
the team sweepstakes race at the Mt.
San Antonio College Invitational.
· three steals as he led Newport Harbor
Hlgh's boys water polo team to an 11-4
nonleague victory over visiting Los
Alamitos Saturday morning.
2-1 winner in men's soccer at Westmont
College Saturday, keyed by goals from
Josh McLeisb and Devon Adams to
improve to 9-4-1, 6-1-1 in the Golden
State Athletic Conference.
Mathew Resor had seven saves for VU. .
llAYO.-. ..
OCC -Diie 44 run (Pate kick), 9:22
OCC -Jldtson 9 pass from Johnson
{Pate kick). 6:39
GWC -Zaragoza 1 run (McCall kick).
6:39 1hNd Quarter
GWC -Huey 4 run (Mee.all kick). 11 ·52
OCC -Higgs 5 run (Pate kick), o 36
Steen's time of 17:47 was 20 seconds
behind Sara Bei of Montgomery High of
Santa Rosa, who surged past Steen two
miles in and won her third straight Mt.
SAC sweepstakes race.
fowth Quw\ef'
OCC -Vallolo 26 run (Pate k1dt), 8 30
GWC -Kuresa 5 run (McCall ktek), 6 52
OCX:-Valanos 10 pa~ from JohMOn
(P •t• kick). 1 :26
Attendance: 1,700 (estimated).
INDfVIDUAL RUSHING
GWC -Whlte, 1~1; Kuresa, 7-40,
Steen, however, was encouraged
that her time was four seconds faster
than Fountain Valley's Julie Allen, who
defeated Steen head-to-head in last
week's Orange County Champi-
onships.
1 TD; Quintana, 7-13; Zaragoza, 10-41,
Ibarra, 3-7; Huey, 1-4, 1 TD; Ploorde, 1-1.
OCC -Dawltlns, 9-104, 1 TD; Campo,
5-58, 1 TD; Blanco, 8-50; Kemp, 6-47,
Dale, 1-44, 1 TD; Vailolo, 4-36, 1 TO,
Higgs. 3--21, 1 TO; Simons, 1-10,
Mdff.ce 1-0.
AlJen, running in the lndividual
sweepstakes race, finished fifth in
17:51.
Newport Harbor was 12th in the
ledm sweepstakes.
INDIVIOUAL PASSING
GWC • laragoza, 7-24-0, 87.
The Sailors boys squad was 10th in
the team sweepstakes, led by Orange
County champion Chns McMillen.
Gillhaim. 1-3, 25; Kuresa, H , 31
OCC -Higgs. 1().21-2. 167; Johnson,
4-7-0, 5&. 2 TDs; Dale, 1-1, 40, 1 TD
INDIVIDUAL RECEMNG
GWC ·Huey, 3·53; Watson, 2·21,
Rasmussen. 1·31; Aska, 1-25;
The senior firushed 21st individually
With a time Of 15:44.
Coaster poloists sharp
Kuresa. 1-9; Jones, 1-4.
OCC -Jackson, 3-61, 1 TD;
Fredrickson, 3-61; McNeace. 3·53. 1 TD. Dale. 2·22; Dawkins, 1·29; Fane, 1 15,
Strang Ill, 1-14; Valanos. 1-10. 1 TD
a.range coast Col-WATER POLO lege s women's water
GAME STATISTICS
GWC OCC
First downs 18 23
polo team blasted Merced in the semifi-
nals of the Long Beach Tournament Sat-
urday, 10-3, before fdlling to Golden
West m 'the championship final. 9-1,
Sdturday.
Rushes-yardage 44-134 38 363
Passing yardage 143 265
Passing 9·28-0 1 S 29·2
Net return yardage• 139 119
Sacb-ya~ge 1 ·5 4-32
Net yardage 277 628
The second-ranked Puates were
unable to make a dent m the state's top-
ranked women's team as Gold.en West
improved to 26-1 behind Anna Korobo-
Vd 0!> five goals.
Punts 9-363 2-44
Fumbles-fumbles lost 1-0 1·1
Flags-net yardage 8-56 12· 171
llme of possession 33'09 26 51
•Punt returns. interceptions. fumble
returns
Orange Coast is now 22-3-1 overall.
The men's team won twice in the
consolation bracket Saturday at the
Cypress Invitational, defeating Gross-
monl, 9-8. and Palomar, 7-3.
Fictitious Buslneu
...,,,_ Statement
The lollowino persons
are doing busWwiss as: COfONI del Mar Fit· neu. 21M 1 Pacific Coast
Highway. Corona del
Mii, CA 92625 David Jurevlch. 315
8th Slntel. Huntlnglon
Beectl, CA 92648
Scott '*-'· 315 8ttl S1reet, Huntington
Beectl. CA 92648 ~ ~ .. COl)-
duded bi: ~ • oeneral
pl r1nerlhip
Have you slarted
~~yet? No ScOtt J&nMn
This .iatement was
filed with the County Clerk of Orange County
on OOl28l2000
20001142023
~Od.2.~
CIU ClllllflM Ttay
(Mt)Mz..6171
PUCE llOTHERS 18.L lllOADWAY
Mortuary * Chapel
Cremation
11 O Broadway
Coet. Mesa • 1
Fictitious Bu1lne11
Hime Statement
The tollow1n9 persons
are dolllg buslf\egs as
Lowdown Fiims. 41 5
Emerson Street. #8.
Newport Beach Calltor·
"'8 92660
Gordon F rancts Blown
Ill. 415 Emel'$00 Street
tB. Newport Beach. Cat·
lfornaa 92660
This business 1s con
dueled by ill! llldMdual
Have you slarted
doing business yet?
Yes. Feb 2000
Gordon Fraoos Brown
Ill
This statement wes
filed with the County
Cleric of orange Counly
on 09/28/2000
2000H42115
Dally Pilot Oct 2. 9. 16,
23, ?000 M967
Flctltloua Bu1lnn1
Name Statement
The following per$OllS
are dOlng buslneSs as
A )lamhost com
B )IMS Tl 660 W Ba~r
Streel '276. Costa
Mesa, Calrtom111 92626
lnlegrated Mtero Sys·
tem & T echnOIOgy.
Inc .. (CA). 660 W Baker
Street 1276. Costa
Mesa. California 92626 This business 11 con·
ducted by 0 corporation
Have you started
dOlng ~ yet? No
lntegr1ted MlCrO Sys·
I) i ,t·o u n t Casket
I • 1 11••11 11ul f;1111.d "hf\ ht
C.n'"t Smti« •114 Qwdiry Gultns for lns
Direct Cremation .. $495
Immediate Burial .• $995
(lrttlwin C..S!t1)
Ptearrangcmcnt Programs Available for
Funaal 5avica. Cremations and Cukcis
1 11\11'\l<I .111•1'-\\I
I ' '·. ' i( \ " " I I
tom & Technology, Inc ..
Ibrahim Hasan. "Owner/
President
This statement wos
!tied w11h the County
Clerll of Orange County
Oil 09/28/2000
20006642105
Daily Pllol Oct 2 9, 18.
23, 2000 M968
Fictitious Business
Name Statement
The lollowlng per&onl
-do«lg ~-IMPAC Morlgage Ac·
ceptance CorporatiOn,
1401 Dove Street. New·
port Beactl. CA 92660
IMPAC • Funding Cor·
pora1ton (CA), 1401
Dove Streel. Newport
Beach, CA 92660
This bus1nest is con·
dueled by• a COfPO"lllon
Have you 1tarted
doing buSlfl8SS Y"1 No IMJIAC Funding Cor·
porat1on. Ronald M
Mornson. Off1Cef!Gen·
eral Coun&el
This stalemenl wu
filed with Ill• County
Cieri! of Orange County
on 09f26l2000
20001141713
Oll!lyPik>t Oct. 9, 18, 23,
~..l2QQ M97'
Fictitious Buslneu
Name Statement
The following peraons
are doing bi*-11:
Four Seasons In·
tenors, 422 E 19'11
Streec. Colla Mesa. CaJ.. llornll 92627
Jlllll K. Devidlon. 422
E 19th Street, Cotti M-. Calilolm 92627
Lori L Hartman, 422
E. 19th Street. Cotta
Meta, CA 92627
This bullf\891 ie con-
ducted by: a general
pattner.hfp
Have you etatted ~ businels yf/117 No
Lori L Ham'lln
Thie statement wu
filed wi1h the ~
Cleltt " Orwlge Col.ny on 1 Or'O:WOOO 2000IM2t11
=Oct.9, 1t.:3
STARTING
ANEW
BUSINESS!.
• • • • • • • • • • •
Fictitious Buslneu
Name Statement
The following pen1011s are dOlng t>usNss as·
G1zmolopla. 427 E.
17th Slreet, t122, Costa
Mesa, CA 92627
Omar Nushalwa1, 347
Woodland Pl., tB, Costa Mesa.. CA 92627
Tl11s bul!MM ts oon·
ducted by an indMclal
Hive you started
doOllg ~ '(fl(l No
°"*~· Thie l\lt.ment WU
hied with lhe County
CM " Ollinge County on 1 Oo'04l2000 20001142784
Daily PlloC Oct. 9. 16, 23. 30.2000 M972
Fictitious Business
Name Statement
The followlna persons are d'*1g buWieA as;
ocebulineSI com, 26
Mtllef1 Tra~. Irvine, CA
92620
Pll rice Ra.khshani, 26
Mlnefl TraJI, lrMe, CA
92620
Nader Raktilhani. 26
Miner1 Trail, IMne. CA
92820
Thia busin.ss is con-
ducted by: hulband and
wife
H1va you started
doing buslnen yet?
Vet, 811512000
Patrice and Nader
Rakhshanl Thil 11&*"8nt WU
hied wllh the County
Clellt " Orange CounCy on OW26l2000
2000ll4t751 ~Piot Oct. 9. 16. 23, ~ MW1
Flctltloua BuafMN
Harne Statement ~~ Prim Data Solu-
tion&, AllellJda FOf·
11.N, San Oemenlie, CA
928?3 T'lmoehJ D. Balint, 20 Avenldl FOt1uM, San
Clemenle. CA 92873 Thil bueirlMe .. oon-
clJdlld by: an ~
Hm you t !trJtd
The Sailors also got four goals from
Steven Jendrusina as they improved to
14-4. Ryan Cook added two goals, three
assists 81\d two steals.
The women's team (8-8, 2-5 in the
GSAC) dropped a 2-0 decision to West-
mont.
NluGllf Hr ••
flDOWMl
Shawn Johnson (8) and Brandon
McLain (5) combined for 13 saves.
MID.....,.,9
EsTAMJA ,_
The frosh-sopb also breezed, pasting
Los Al, 10-2. behind Nathan Weiner,
Charlie Hockenburg and Michael Van-
derburg. Each scored twice.
Riola sweeps past Lions
B. LAla u ~ersityA -VOLLEYllll
Ala.-.. •
CCWAaa .... to ruv was a Mla9MI&.
NONLEAGUE
NEWPOfn HAMOfl 11. Los AlAMnos 4
15-2, 15-9, 15-2 winner over visiting
Vanguard Saturday in women's volley-
ball. dropping VU's Lions to 2-16, 1-12 in
the Golden State Athletic Conference.
W..Wue a>
Los Alamitos 1 3 O O · 4
Newport Harbor 2 5 1 3 • 11
Newport -Belden 4, Jendruslna 4, Cook 2,
Snelgrove 1. Saves: Johnson 8, Mclain 4.
C>M.Nm c:GuY CCll•-
M8ml"UU.
Estancia splits at tourney SAMH ,..,_ F .. ~
CdM falls in four at SC COSTA ~ESA -WATER POLO The Estanaa High
ORANGIE COMT ~
IAIUIUl.L
_ s~::o~aLEd~~ VOLLEYBALL
High's girls volleyball team dropped a
15-11, 15-5, 13-15, 15-5 nonleague
decision to host San Clemente Saturday
night.
boys water polo team was 1-1 in the
consolation rounds of its own tourna-
ment Saturday. FOR THE RECORD
The Eagles defeated Pacifica. 12-6,
with Phil Westfall sconng five goals.
But, Estancia fell to Northwood 4-2 as
Westfall scored tWJce.
Cho was receiver
Lindsey Anstandig had 15 kills for
Cd.M, 8-7 overall.
Lions fifth in invitational
COSTA MESA
-The Vanguard CROSS COUNTRY
University men's and women's cross
country teams each finished in fifth
place at the Vanguard lnvitational Sat-
urday al Fairview Park.
Matt Thorpe and Frank Gamboa
scored two goals each in the victory
over Pacifica.
CdM hosts Servite today
The Corona del Mar
High boys water polo GAMERS
Saturday's accowit of Sage
Hill Hl.gh's freshman football
game with Saddleback Valley
Christian misidentified the
Llghtrung's Scott Cho in the
photo (80) and story, who
caught an 18-yard pass dur-
ing the game.
On the men's side. Josh Schultz was
the Lions' top finisher. He took 13th
place with a time of 28:23, while Steve
Lalim finished 17th with a 28:38.
team will host Servile today at 4 p.m. m
a nonJeague matchup of two of the top
teams m Orange County
DEEP SEA
SUNDAY'S COUNTS
On the women's side, Maribel Del-
gado was VU's top runner with a 15th
place time of 20:14. Beth Weidler (20th)
and Skyler Kaiser (24th) were next lo
finish for the Lions.
The Sea Kings ( 11 ·2). ranked No. 1 in
CIF Southern Secbon Division U, are
coming off back-to-back blowouts over
Estancia and Northwood, but should
have a much stiffer opponent in the No.
6 Friars.
Newport Landing -3 boats.
81 anglers. 26 yellowfin tuna.
14 halibut. 16 bonito, 27 sand
bass, 9 talico bass. 3 sc:ulpin,
3 sole.
D•vey'• Lodler · no report.
~:a.,,~~ No
This 1lalemenl was
hied with lhe County Clerlt of Orange County on I 0/05/2000
200<>e842910
Dally P1lol Oct 9, 16. 23. 30. 2000 M976
result the~ of CITY OF Fictitious Bualneu alive 10 lalle many ac· l"'ulda~ed d f NEWPORT BEACH N1me Statement hons wtthout obla1nlog "' amages or NOTICE court annroval BetOl'e each day of delay l'1 the The following persons ....
lllTIOl.lll of S500 "9r day INVmNG BIDS are doing business as: laking certain very im·
Each bidder shall Sealed bids may be BELLA FLORA. 107 pottant acuona, how·
submil. on lhe form reoel\led at the office of Palm, Balboa, CA 92661 ever, the personal repr&·
lumlshed with the con· lhe City Clertt, 3300 Rebecca Vlrgd, 514 E. sentallVe wiM be required
traCI documents. a 11$1 of Newport Boulevard, Oceanfroot Balboa. CA to give notice to In·
tne proposed aubcon· po. Box l768, Newpoft 92661 lerestect persons unless
tractor. on ttMs project Beach, CA 92658-8915 Th11 busmesa IS oon· !hey have waived notice
NOTICE TO as required by the unN 11 oo • m on the dueled by an indMdual °' consented to the
CONTRACTORS Sublel11ng and Sut>coll-31st day of October Have you 111rted proposed 9Clion I The
CAWNG FOR BIDS 1rae11ng Fair Practices 2000. at whd\ time such doing ~ r11 No independent adm1n1s·
Act. Pubt1e Con11act btda shall be opened Rebecca Vtrg lrltlOn authority Wlll be ~~ ~ Union Code SectlOll 4100 et and rwl lllf Thit sta1emen1 wu granted unless an Ill·
seq WEST NEWPORT hied with lhl County *9Sted l*'IOO hies an
High Dlltricl Eac:ll bid shall be ac-SOUND W"LL Cle111 of n...-County objection IO tne pelttiOn Obtain Documents " ~-'II'" and .............. """"' ~-·-companied "" a cer1llied TRANSPARENT on 10/12/2000 .. ..,.... """" ........ and Bid Due al Hunt· or ---'-·--'sw!.._._ ~ bid PANEL 20006843540 'Ntf1 lhe court Should not l!on Beach Union """'-.......... -"'""" the a•....,,_, H h School OislrlCt, bond 111 an amount not REPLACEMENT Daily Pilot Oct. 16, 23, ,,._.. --~ .. ,
less lhan t~ percent .,...._ of p~ 30 Nov 6 2000 • .....,, A HEARING on me 1 51 Vorklown Ava.. f -· bid ..... ·-,....... · ·· "'~ petition wiH be held on Purchasing, Room 361. (!0%) 0 the 10181 Contrect No. 3358 (rev) NOVEMBER t6, 2000 at
Huntington Beach. CA pnce. payable to the 1100,000 NOTICE OF 1 45 WI Dept L73 92646, (714) 964·3339 DISTRICT as a guaran-Englneer'e &tlmata PUBLIC AUCTION : p.m. The ~ .. ~ tee tnat 1t1e bidder. 11 Ila ~vedw!t Noooe 11~. localed al 341 City elC1. _,,.,, proposal is acoepted, ·-·-1 Dnve South. Orange, Due Dile Thursday. that the will CA 112868 November 9, 2000 al ahaU promptly execute Public Worts Dlrec:tot ull at UBLIC IF YOU OBJECT to
2:00 pm the ~. lu!Tlllh a Prospeclive bidders AUCTION on NOV· tile of lhe ........._
NOTICE IS HEREBY ~ FaithllA Per· may examme existing EMBER 13, 2000 11 ~ .....-
GIVEN that the Hunl-lormanee Bond 111 an sound wall plans and e 11 00 AM at. AL· ~ttJ°" ......_ and-:::
lngton Belch Union 1moun.!__ndnotedleu lhan1 typ!Clll post and sill LSPACE. 8584 HAMIL· :our ~~. °' Ille
High SCllOOI o.tnct. Or· 008 •IU r percen MC110n. and obtain one TON AVENUE. HUNT· wnnen cqecllon• With
ange County. Clidomla. (100%~1he ~ NI °' l*t documenls al INGTON BEACH, CA the court belOl'e Iha
acting by and ~Its pnoe, 1 ., .. _.. no coat al the offa of 92&46·7007 the par· hearing Your •P·
Go .......,. Boa""' Bond In an 1mount not the Public Works De· ---• -. of the tol-118"~"' ru, • leas lhan ~ hund-.. -..-3300 ~ ""'-,.. .......... , peeranc:e ~ be In per· Inaner referred 10 as --,..., pa1 •• ...,... lowing son °' by your anorney "DISTRICr. Ml receive percent (!00%) ot Iha lo-Boulevatd, P.O. )[ NAME • UNIT . IF YOU ARE A CREO-
'"' to but not lat~ than tal bid price, and tumlsh 17689 Newport Beach, INVENTORY IT,...,., _... .... ' "'" certificates eVideOOlfVI c• 26~D89l5, '-'" 0< OOt'fbngenf ........ lhe abov•1lat1d time, Iha ... _ ul ed I ... ,. JV TOM MILLER OBA rtor of the deoeued, you
aealed bid• for the I '"" req r nsur-Required Conlractor PROPERTY HOUSE must file your clalln with
award of oon11'11Ct1 for ance is in enect in Iha License Cl11SS1llca11on(s) REAL TORS, A022, the court and mall 1 Iha fo11oM1a project1 amoun11 set lor1h in the f9qlllred '°' this project HOUSEHOLD ITEMS
Protect: ~jd 1851 • general condif 'tfionl In A. 8 °' C-17 GLEN OUSLEY. E033. :::.:-::::r; Re<ooftng ~ 1• at the event o allure to For further lnfonnt· HOUSEHOLD ITEMS the court wimm tour
HuntingtOn Beac1'I High enter 11110 the contract lion, call Lloyd Dahon MATTHEW NALDRETT. months trom the date of Schoof and execute the re· Pro1ect Manager 81 0017, HOUSEHOLD lhe ftrsl ....,.. at let· ~Job Welle quited documenll, IUd'I (949) 644-3328. ITEMS t ..........._. Pro-t.s MCUnly ~ be lor· PubUahed Newport TERR ••c NIJOSH INS ..... -·-lfl
bef 26. ~~i ~ i.ited. The Flllhful P84'· Baach-Costa Meu G091.Y HO~EHOLO bR Coe» .:tiOtl 9100
B lorrnlnol Bond shel ,... n.-.. Pilol October 16, ITEMS The,_,,. tor filing clMnl inglon HCh HIP,h ITl8ll'I in lul loroe and el· 23,'~ wt1 ii not exp1re before School, 1905 Man. led ttwougn Iha guarM-MARCUS BRADFORD. our monthe lrom the
Hunllngton Beach. lee period aa epeCifled In M981 H0l3, HOUSEHOLD heanng dale noticed
Ucerwe: B or C-39 the Q8ll4l!8I condillonl. LEGAL NOTICE ITEMS above.
Bids stlll be r908IYed The DISTRICT rt· NOTICE IS HEREBY K.E AUCTION YOU MAY EXAMINE In lhe place ldenhlled Ml'Vff Iha ~l to reject GIVEN that the Board of SERVICE. P 0 BOX the file Mp! by lhe court.
aboYe. and &hall be Education of 1tle N-· 508, PATTON. CA If you .,. a perlon In-
opened end publicly ll'IY or ell • or 10 port·Mell Unified 92369 terested In the ntata. !Md aloud at Iha lbove-walv1 any irregularill" School K E. JACKSON TEL: you may file with lhe
•taled csat., time and or lnlormllltlat In any Dlellict of Or· 9 o g • e 6 3 -1 1 3 1 court a Requell tor Soe-
plaoe. PWll and~ bids°''" the bidding. ange County_. f9CIM AUCTION BONDI clal Nola (IO!Tn OE·
cd>na.a on 1111 at the 1~3~ ~S.: ~on ii: 3f11'°~·'!:l 723-41-19 154) "Iha tllng ot an ln-addrMa ~ aboYI. , ...... ,.,.,.,. Iha n-....... Oclobef 2000 at the P11bl11hed Newport vtf1101y and ~ d In aooordllla wtlh Iha ......., ..,.,.,., .,.......,. • • Beach·Coata Mesa --.. ---... -of -n-.,__,, ... In-Purchulnn Office of - -"' "' -·1 orovtstonaandof Celifomla uiiW A;~"; Iha lliCI SchOOi Olllrict. lo-:'Y~ October 23. petition Of ICOCMM'l1 • ~ Stlte of C.hlomla ,,.. cated at 21185-6 &ear • ~~ In Probate Profeulona Coda dellr'lnlMCI the _,,.1 SWMI. CCMlll Mela. CA M9§2 Coda aec:tlOfl 1250 A Secciol1 702l 15, and -~-, ..,....,. I ...,.... ..__ Reqll9lt tor 5'*11111 No-P\Alllc Conlt8Ct Code prevalling ratH o •£_,., a ........ , ...... 8SC 1817 lice lofm It ~ ~ 3300, Iha owner wages II Iha toe.Illy In Nici bidl wll be ~ NOTlCE OF from Iha ~ dllll..
_.._ llll Iha bldciar wtllctl lhll wort! le to be opened and IMO tor: •ETITION =:? ._ a It' •• ,..__ h I I perfoimed Copiel of MUStCAL ,.. -.. •• ~en 1 8 c aH • ttMH rate d9t«mina· INITRUlllENTSI TO ADMINISTER A N "· aOOtt, llcatlon of oontrac:tOf't Ilona, .,. on file Ill fie • IOUIHllNT/ !STATE OF: UQ. ... ,.._
llcenM noted aboV9 11 DISTRICT, and coplH SUPPUll LAWRENCE LAMa t "'!:?t .. ltl9 tnn. !tie bid le ............. ....,_, _ _. upon Al bldl.,. IO be In ac-Im PAM eubm1nec1 Purauant to .,_, .,. ....,.."..., ...... ~ ............ ...-.. ALBERT PALA m DA. aft. m, 1ue11w1 and request The oonlnlciOr co,,_..,.. '""' ......,....-LAWMNCE A. COtTA •IA. CA
Proreulon• Coda shall po91 a copy of MoN, lnHvctlonl, anct PALA ab ..._'11 ..
8ection 7029.15, no ll'llM 111111 81 eedl )ob SpeclflcellOnl lhet .,. • ... -.-1 P'"' .a P"bll•"'..,. w-wport made •·The connaor 11111 on .. In .. o11ce of.. -"'"........ ,._ 8• .....,. ....... ,..., ~ :-' ine:.. ~ rz_.~~ ': ~Dll-0:,:. ~ .. NO~ 0:::"~·~ ::. -.. COfllr9lll .,,... -~ 211&-• ... , ..,..., ---.... cont· 'l7,. llDOO .. ...... ~of,,.. C0111a ......._ CAtMll --.. ._. MFtl3 Co•---~ kl ,.... of "11" kl -lflOerll credtcwt. and .. oi.tal 1111 .. COi" WOl1UM'I ~ bf A ~ ...., ~ Mio '1Wlf o1W-ND1a °'
....,, ... Pl'Ollt"Y '*'" lrl .. ~of ::..::..~~ -. • lr-....acl In Iha Al'llllCAlm TO -...... ...... Iha Iha llOf'MIC.1. ol .. ---.. Of ..... Ot ball. d --• No bidder 11\I Y HO lllllidlr tfrMt LAWMNCE Al.8EAT mJ. M.CGllQI IC =-=-~~ ....... ,,,,.,bid tor I=--=-~-= PN.A ... 1.AWM~ Diiie~·--= ::.,-,.:.: ~.: =:o'°'~ (46)-,. IMr .... ~ALAPALAeU I.AW• 1111\ OtMlr 11. ............... °'*~iii: ~ ~ ....... ,.:.':'~ = ~ ......... Clft.. ~1'1111 VOid. • .. 123110 fi lie Nik~ The ~ d ldlD-.... • ANDMW 0 ..,,. ....._... If ..
-.............. coOt .. oorftd IOn of .. ....... MA.-Jll • t.":: %Ai .... ... .,...... .!*• 1111 II .. ~ pnllflllOne Mae1 UNlleCt .._. Mr 0-. If ~
:;,;. :::'C: ....,111 Dlddet to flllll • ,.. .., or II PQR 11lle .. _.., _.
. -.
~.:..· .·
NO TIC£
INYmNG BIOS
Notice Is hefeby gr.,
th11 the Board of
Tru111eea of the COiet
Community College Qia.
tnct ot Orange County,
California, '111111 ,_..,..
sealed blda I.II> IO but no laler lhan 2·00 p.m
Tueeday, NovenC>er 14,
2000, II the Puld\aslng
Department " 1he Dit-tne1 located at 1370
Adan'll Avenue, Bldg 0, eo.11 Mesa, Calllomta,
at wtldl llme blda Wiii be
publldy 098'*2 Ind ,_, lor
PURCHASE Of THR£E
(3) VEHICLE$; COAST COMMUNITY
COLLEGE DISTAJCT • All bide are to be i'I IC·
cordance with lhe Bid
Documents Which I ...
now on file and rn1y be
8KllAd "' the office ~ the Dw**>r c:J Pun:N ....
Ing " the Dillrlet. No bidder may
WIChdrr# hoa ~ lot I pe-
nod of torty-fMI (45) Cllyl .,,., .. dml9 ...
tor lhe °'**'41 .,.,.,,
The Bolrd of Tl'*"9 ,_..... the l)rillllege at
rejec:ling arry ind .. bil'9
or 10 waive any lr-
rtgula rlllea or 1n•
fotlnallliel In arry bid Of
In the bidding. lloned: 191 1'00ER w,
DAVIS, Director of
PurdlMing. Coal Com-'""'*Y College o.w:t Mlllrtile: ~ 23 ..
30. 2000
Open T utedsy, Holl· .....,., 14 2000, 2 p.m.
Bid No. 1822 PUbllltled tMwpoft
Beach·Coata Mff•
Dally Pilot Octobef 23,
30. 2000
'We'll
A
NI II I ..-W.,... """"'"" the auc• ~ ~ .. ~ Yl!Off -.-.-
....... ...._ ............................. :11= ....... •
p I I C.. .. =:::~-=:-.-:....-:..,._Ille ...... •~ =-1£:ql=m:11 "~Ji? .. ;..:..':,,,. ... .., .. :-=or1111...-• ...,-,.,.-= r • .. • _ _.. .__._ ... ,._. -or,.. ... ~lftr ~llllA t& Mi _.., ..... !!!!!l.!'~........ ....... ICHOCi. .. ~ ·;.
-. ·~ --... ... of 0.-.. I::..'':..-=
.. a: ~t~S .. . .......
Rar~ tmd dc.tuU lot-s ltl'f 11uJ1j~ to d1ar~'I'
"'ithout oociN!. ni.., publisher rescrvrs thP
right 10 t'.fnsor, redwiry, "'vise or reject
•oy da. ~mett adverti.'lf.1ne111. Plr11se report
rmy r.nur tbat mai l>t in voor clas~ifitd ad
i111nw"1ilt1ely. ·nu• Daily Pi~1t a<'<'~p1:1 110
liuhility for 1my t'n'Or in An ~.dvtn1semcnt
for "'l11d1 it mav l>C 1't!lpomiJhlr rxt't'f>I for
rhe rO!lt of the :;~tee actually <~upiecl hy
di.I!' ,.rmr. Credit 1·11.11 only hr allowt>d for thr
r.n.1 inscniuu.
•V.A.•
SIDOlll·SllOYNe
FREE COUNSELING
Fiii LIST Of .a.IES
HUONAREPOS
7tc.IHllOO
ti
101 • IH
Beat Buy1 Hotllat
,_. 10 best buys In
your specific price ranoe. Free recoided
mess. 1-888-465-5'792
IOl1040. 111 Team R.E
BEACH COTTAGE
$425,000 2·STY .......
ON THE WATER
Amaz.tng Low Price!
Agent (949) 723-1120
OPEN SUN 1-4
lllctc Bey Vu Compound
SAii •1.415,00l).1,750,000
Gll9d Oil! Soer1ieh Maneion
rNfK 5500 af, 5o Qlll', ••
pool, hfdwd ft19, OVtlf 113
-. Ml* -Chis tn..i propelty. Owner/Agent . . 94!1=§:42·9666
Bit C..,.., FM Bedroom,
loUr bit!\ CUllorlized home lillJNd on lergl prlYltl lla1
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Pr<!p!!1!•. 949-759-3729
By Fu
(949) 631-6594
(Pi.-11-e intfudt }0t1r 1141111' bud
11IJ01"' nuo~IC'r 1111d u 'll aU )'Vil
lud •ith ti pM tj1U1lt.)
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By .....
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At rlt•l'Of1 Blt·d. ~ Day St.
Index
-,,.. -.......
ENL.H
(714') Ml.o47l
EMaJI:
•• hh'h~-
ii
Hews
Telephone 8:30um-5:00pm
Moodev-frida
Wulk-fn 8:3buJ1~:00ym
MoodA)'-frid.ty
-e.
I
,,....1
~~
I .. ., t •• .'. .., ,\:::ti. , •. ,_1L ; 1-~-... ~·
,........ ~ -----
1·
., ... ,.
"llTAUHNT
COOMft' -Nie. .,,_ In~ .........
M11R A11i11f "' ...... TIMll CM. MtU40ID
allal, ..................... •1.1•------..............
-
2
'I Rl11·10ZP
-.Y AT MDlill ~---MID .. ~ .... -=·=
Monday ................. Friday S:OOpm
Tuesday .............. Monday 5:00pm
Wednesday ......... Tuesday 5:00pm
Thursday ....... Wednesday S:OOpm
Friday ............... Thursday 5:00pm
Saturday ............... Friday ~:OOpm
' .. .
.,..... be ""Y of °"
of -compll'llM. ctMdt """ Iha local 8ltt9f 8usll!IM 8u-,_, belcw9 you ~
any~°'"" fOf Ml'Vlcel. RMd
and undlBtand any
conlnlelt befcwe you•
1l9n.
MEDICAL Bl.WNO Ftne&t aoltware, !raining &
SIC>OOf1. lnvestmen1 from
$2,495. Send for lilanclng
avlit. Island AU1omated
Medlc8I SeMles, Inc.
(800)322·1139 ext.2101
www.buslnffs-atartup com
(CAL'SCANI
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but Statewidtl 1450 25-WOfd Id dn:ulallon o4 2.89 mllllon 17 4 c.lllornia
naw1J11p1ra. Naclonal
necWOflc ldYertillna lllo
avall1bl1. CA[ SCAN
(1118)288-6010;
(1116)288-6019 www.Cll-acan.com
(CAL'SCAN)
...... ,
'11 ~ Devldtol'I Dy!ll
Wide Glide 1340cc, blod!
udlebaos. wlndshleld. many ems. «iy 3200 m.
clean, ITlU9I see. $17,995
949·673-4399
AUDI 1983, IOCS V~ • ..0-,
lhel wNle, ... l)M, QH'OOf,
llMn cat. 2 IOlnl 11111111. ...,..,, sa m1. ...,. Cond.
$9.500i0bo. ~72().3711
TOYOTA TACOMA 'ti
XTRA CAI AT only, 11X
1111,ACA-.I (M7'25513) 116,UI
714-444-5200
llllW.., w
4-0r, Alplnl WW.,NlftM-.'911C111R1-
(fE11880) 132,115
STEALING BMW
MM45-5900
BllW Z3 2.3 't9 1311 ml. chrome pacQoe, black/
blaell. c:d w/ premium
80\#ld, loaded. $31.000.
949.574.9295
llllW za w
11 K ml, 1.1 llr
(BIOOOOI $23,155
cAEVIEA llllW
714-83W171
8llW za • me 1111, u 11r
(£11383) 125,115 CAmEA llllW
714-83W171
llllW za • 211(""' 1.1 llr ~A llllWS'M.*
11..awm
..
Dally Pilot
llUICK ClHTURY '00 l TD. leath«, 110W11f ..,,
bll. cf Wllf., ~ d
(217818) SHl.988
NABERS m')l40.!1oo
luldt lllllon W'9)ft 12
k)i, IUIO, We. pc, pb,
C:C, ""Y c:IMn, $2900.
pp 949-842·1520
CAOIUAC Eldondo 'f7
Lo "'· tin """'· Nollhlllr l«l108I) 121 -NABERS '
C714)$40:!100
CHARITY CARS Donalt
'tOU< vehidt SMn on
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-to lll'Ullllllna llmlllel 1 ·800 ··H2:44 51 . www.chultyun.org
(CAL'SCANI
r~·.--_ _..,...,
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( . . . ..:..___· __, -·· __ .j
CORVITTI 1 .. 2211 ..............
All °"°"' '7.1111 ...._.71IO
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FORO EXPl.OfllR '95 l TO, low mi1e1. "81llef,
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lllw, lllOOnrOOf, prw pq, (849841) $15,988
low 1111. very c1N11 NA BERS '"201'2) $21,9115 _ _....,(7..:.;14,.,l!40-~!:...:.100::__
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23lt ml, S8.200'0bo CaM
94M76-0101lwlek days
9'9·644·8559/•t•k·tnds
FORD WIHOSTAR '96
7 pusenger. low mtlet.
beige. excellent cond1llOfll
(A233111) $8,988
NABERS
(714)540:9100
--------0 YES, SEU MY CAR --.,
LANO ROVER
DISCOVERY '94
83K ml, $9,500.
949-650-7160 -JAGUAR XJS '1134
Gl980 Y9l'f pd cond. new tires, lo mluge, $2500
714-322-6721
Bridge
Bv CHARLES GOREN whtt OMAR SHARIF
Md TANNAH HIRSCH
ANSWERS TO WEEKLY BRJOOI! QUIZ
Q I • Easa-~ vulnenble,you
hold:
•AQJIUJ l\7 JH <>H •11
Penner opens the blddina with one no
t.n.unp. Whal do you respond?
A -This ls no problem. You wan! IO
p11y same in spades llld nothlna
else, 10 bid four 1pedcl. If you Pl•Y
transfer bids. lnll\5fer in10 spades
and then bid game.
Q l · Neilhcr vulnerable, you hold:
•AK J 11152 "1 6 J -J 7 • Q 6 5
Partner opens lhc blddina wilh one
hcan. What do you re pund?
A • Again. no problem. Other than a
suit !hat will play ror one kMer c>ps»
site a void. you hive LiuJe more. "The
w1y IO describe this hind 1s to jump
to four splldes. Tiw wlll 11e1 panncr's
mind 11 rest about I.he trump suit
should there be a slam in thc off111g.
Q 3 • Bodl vulnerable, you hold~
•A J 9 ~ 6 Ii J 10 911141 • J 6
• Panncr opens the btdding with one
spade. What do you rcspond?
A • Your hand is not good enough to
respond two diamonds, and !here 1~
no reason why you should even want
to. With three good trumps and ruff-UlJ values in boch clubs and hcatts, a
1'111JC lO IWO ~ slllllds OUI.
Q ' • Neither vulnerable, you hold
• K 10 '6 ·;. 8 S 4 .l > A J 7 J •II
Panncr opens the b1ddmg w1UI one
club. What do you ~pond?
A • Then are thole who always
respond in a four-ard ma.!« Whc:n pmmer opens I.he biddina m • min« 1ui1. tn I.he lrnmocul wOl'ds or Samuel Goldwyn. include us out!
1bc Comc1 me&hod or handlina four-card suiu is to bid I.hem up the line, '° the recommended raponse ii one
diamond.
Q 5 • As Soulh, vulnerable. you
hold:
•KQ J 1 JC 4J <'J U •9143
The b1dchn11 has proceeded;
NORTH 2.AS1' SOUTH WEST
•• 1~ '
Whal do you bid now.,
A • You have a bal1111ccd hand with a
stopper m the enemy suit. That Is the
book description or. one-no-trwnp
response on hands of up to I 0 points
1n h1Jh cards. Since '/OU an: ICling volunlalll)4 thu btd IS forward· go111g, not a stgl) or v.cakncss. The
weak actioo IS f pass
Q 6 • As dealer, you hold:
•Al 4 AKQ106 •AK9114
Wha1 lj, )'our opening bMP
A • If you play forcmi two bids, by all meanj, open 1wo diamonds on this
lluu-loscrhand. However, i( you
nrc among the majon1y who play
two clubs as an anJfk 1al demand
btd, the problem with opening rwo
clubs here ts that panncr·~ hkely
response or two diamonds robs you
of the bidding space 10 accurately
dcscnbe your two-su11cc Open one
dmmond and jump ~h1f1 into club!i nex1, If thc auction pcnmt>.
Monday, Odober 23; 20()() 11
TODAY'S
CROSSWORQ PUZZLE
II
Run your ad In the
Newpoft Beach--
Costa Mesa Dally
Pilot and the
Hunting Beach-
Fountain vauey
Independent to
~!~~?:: 1~~11-~11-~sl $3750. 714·322·6721 . . . . . .
reach over 100.000
homes. Fax us this
form with your credit
card # or mail with I
a check today!
.,...___ ----0• ~-o,.._-._ o ... ...,.. §"• o..._ __ c ,_.._ Pru---._.,_ o ..... ...._..§_...._ ·--o..._.....,. I_._ ""-'-"' a-'"""""'---a ... ~-a-r-a-..-''O•• 8.=-.-g~ 8:::.:::::. ::::..-::: Run for a week! If
your car does not
sell. we·11 run it for L ... =.=:::m~::::..c.:,.~~wv·
another week FREEi -, - -~ -- - - - - - -
All for Just s10·. ~Ot Indel!endent
MAZDA 629 lX 't6 4--dr,
Red, ~ pwr. lthr, lllHOOI,
3911 rrM. 1 owntf, reconlS,
$11,500 949-723-1504
IMroldM 220 18'3
Wh~ 4dl, 6cyl, rlldial tires
MS gieat, nice car moYjng
$1650 714-542-4282
llerc:edle 450 SEL 1 m
wllle 40', sunrool, 12at Ill,
~~~
lilen:edal 580 Sl •
Dark charcoal, lhowroom,
2 IOpl, 11()11 freeway ,..,
$16,995 000 949-719-2311
MERCURY COUGAR '15 XR7, leather, Aeto pkg,
II.II* stlllp! (600148) $6.988
NABERS
(714)540:9100
OldtrnObllt Cutlua 'ff v-a co. 1ow miles. bl! o1
WllT ' PflVIOUS rental! (334952) $12.988
NABERS
(714 )54o-t100
Oldamoblle Sllllowt1e '00
Dull dr I 12' ml. f9W lir,
(211065) $17,1181
NABERS
(714 )540:9100
POHTIAC GRANO AM 99
PW, VI, AT, POl, *9o,
-. • llQtl
Oldlmoblle Delta .. Royll
'17 V-6. aulO. p -~ AIC. ps. pw, pcl, cc ltllfeo. new
batttfy. ttrts & startlf,
exa!lene cord Cal Sim II
714-892·9979 $2495 000
MITSUBlSHI Mlflge 99
Blllnc. of warranty, AT,
AC, & morel
('574479/ S11,995
... ~200~ 1 695 ~s1 1 695 ~~s I (IA100011) $15,999 . . . .
(I041943) -714-444-5200
714-444-5200
• PORSCHE 993 '97 8lk/ Col.c>e. bladl. Tip, premun
SOUICI. supple leathef 1111
POtmAC RREBIRO 94 extended warranty
T-8ar, lllop, lo lo ml, $53.000 949-719-1111
(.-mutt _, Sl995 I Call Clmlfled Today I
714-444-5200 (!Mt) 142-5171
BUICK REGAL GS 97
Lo mi, loeded, IUptf• dllrved & more!
(1273549) $11,999
714-444-5200
'te FORD F-150 XLT SPf
Cab., 3-dr. 4x4. towl"lj + more Only 14k mi Xlnl
$23.000 pp 949-515-936
TOYOTA 4-$lUNNER '94
S-spd, V~ ~CUI. II pwi,
~-IOlded •Int cond
dependable new "'~ 115~ 1111 $13 750 Call
Steve 949-&45· 7332
SELL your home through c .. 115jfjed
Can't seem to
get to all those
repair jobs
around the house?
NOME, HEALTH WJ 8UsMsS
~ ......
POLICY
In .., "'°" to °"' lie blst ..va PQlllJll lo CM Nld-
11'1 n:f~ .....
requh Connc:ton wtlo
ldYltlile In IN Selvlc:t I Ow9ctOfY IO andude lhelr Ml Contractora l lcen1t
numbef In thllr ~ 1111n. Yw co-operdon 11 '-... -,..-~--,.-..... -m--' .... ,_ pgl!d. .............. ...._... ....
11IINGS
ro BllY.
trsALL
HERE
BYmll4f
IN a.ana
(!Jfa.P
, I ( •-• "
I
1-800·~5 9 -7181
~-...
r
I
I t
I--. . .
\ -I
for al yow needs... !..
EZ Mortpgt SSS
Onlu~orm~
IA & 2ndT11&11 Dmis
RaidencUJ, Commm:i;aJ ac Hom~ lmpl"O\-cmcnr
888.933. S626 www.nacwo~m
DRIVER
PAIVA TE DNVEll _.. MW
luxury ctr. PIOlesllcNI & ~c..T~
-.:j
PUBLIC
NOTICE
The Cakf. Public-Utlllllts Com· mmion REQUIRES
lhll .. UMd llUe-hold goode tnMn Print lhW P.U.C.
Oii T runblr. llfllOI
Ind chlllflerl prtnl
"*TCP.,...,.
lnll~ ....
fyoui.t•.-
llan lbcU .... ., ~ • ...,.,.,, '"° ~~
COIM8'0N
n..-..1s1
CHUNG'S PAINTIHG
77 v .... &p • Gree! Pnce!
Guaranlte Wen • frM Ell l.1375602 714-53&-1534
c-tel Pllntlng 20yrs f Iii pnc:es • lnlel10I • Exl
Pwt. Local Aeler9l'ICll NB
-Ron ~417
U<E'S CUSTOM PAINTIMG
PtOleslionll. dun. queilly
work_ Int/ext & docks
ll703468 949-631~10
RAINBOW CIACl.E llAIHT
P~lot/ext HoulWAfll ~ fOb! Frw ...,._
Lt58Ge97 71~
• TOP QUA.UTY * Vtty ~ L~naulld
1..1648228 Jay 94H50§0!!!
WOMAN TO WOMAN
PAINTING CAU MH31·2111
LICENSE 1735171
r:-9~~
' .
...... .,_,~
... LOCATING
BKntONIC S&M LIM
Dl1KTION
fn-lys-.ke
675-9304
1111~,nDOl'ftOodl Pluftbtrl
DIAIN a llWll ';:::
a.LU9IG fl'ICIAUST
TWUOYPWMMG
949""5-2352 -..
ALL DRAINS UNClOGGEO
·-··--··-·-..._._,_ .... .... _
71'-895-6677
~ . .
lZ
' . . . . . . . .
, Odobet 23, 2000
. .
NOT SO. MUCH ·p ·RE-OWNED AS . . .
PREVIOUSLY ADORED.
After reviewing 21 pre-owned vehicle programs, lntelliChoicee named Jaguar Select Edition the
country's Best Certified Pre-Owned Program and Best Pre-Owned Warranty.e
• 6-year/100,000-mile
warranty
• 120-point cosmetic &
mechanical inspection
• 24-hour roadside
assistance
• Financing and leasing
option
• Available at
authorized Jaguar ~ ,
dealers only _ ~
Daily
JAGUAR
SELECT EDITION
PRE -OWNED AUTOMOBILES
Bauer .Jaguar
1455 South Auto Mall Drive·
Santa Ana• 55 Freeway at Edinger
714·953·4800 • www.bauerjaguar.com
.
Q; "• Jad• •9•ing new-car warranry plU1 the Sdea Edidon premium wunnry, wbicb ~ cov .. for • Mldidaall 2 ywil '°.000 .U.. GD d' ....
1996 .... ,.. .... I 1 or new. <:mer .. i'>r 1995 model yat whida will dlfFa. see JOW' .... -.. Ii oa cllia ........... Not ... ID ....... Mlc:t
.....,,*biGa1faeflic.,www.in~.Sepcemberl999miew~2lnwau&aun:rpropw.~dldfora..,.._,_.._.....__. • ..,,
JAGUAR er Will .a>ni/u.. 02000 J.-Can.