HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-11-08 - Orange Coast PilotOii 1'111 •• Complete election
results will be updated
on D•lly Piiot's Web site
•t 9:30 •.m. toct..y.
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. . . ' .
SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA COIVJ.AUNmES SINCE 1907 ON 1HE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM WE~ESDAY, NOVEMBER 8; 2000
PRELIMlllllY RESULTS
asoflem~
U.S. llPIESEllTITIYI
4Sth CongNaloftal Dfstrict
10) of '72 pr«inctl ~ng
(C-~ Wtit Newpoft) * DeM RohrllbecNf (Republican) ................. 64.~
Ted Crisell (Demoaat) .................................... .JOA%
Don Hull (libertarian) •......•.............................• .)~
<:onstance Betton (Natural Law) .•................•... 1A%
41th ~loftal Dfstrict
125 of 652 predncu repottlng
(Newpon BHcN * awtstopher Co• (Republican) ..................... 66.9'11
John Graham (Oemocrat) ............................ , .. 29.2'11.
Iris Adam (Natural Law) ..................................... 1.2%
David F. Nolan (Libertarian) .............................. 2.5"'
STATE SENATOR
161 of 736 precincu rtponing
J5th Dfstrict
(NMpo<f tlHch. COfr. Mn.) * Rol9 Johnson (Repubhan) ......................... 62A%
Steve Ray (Democ~at) ................................... 31~
Cindy Katt (Nat1Mal Law).. . .......................... J.1%
Paul l Studler (Libertarian) ....................•......... J.1%
STATE ASSEMBLY MEMBER
.. of 410 prKlnCU repon1ng 10th District .
(NMpo<f tlHch. Coti. Mn.)
Merritt LOl'i McKeon (Democrat) ................. ll.2% * Jotvi campbeH (Repubhcan) .......... 61.6%
Bany L Katt (~tural Law) .. . ..................... 2~
R.tymond 0 . Mills (RefOJm) ....................... 9"'
Bob Vondruska (Libertarian) ....................... 2.9"'
LOCAL MEASURES
NEWPORT BEAOi
•MNtww5
27 of 76 pr11e1ncti repcrong
Charter amendment to require voter approval of
certain amendments to general plan * Yes ...................................................................... 6~
No ........................................................................ 18%
• Mellt4We T
27 of 76 preclncu ••PQ<11ng
Charter amendment totequire voter approval fOJ
any amendment or appeal of certain provisions of
the Tt1fflc Phasing Ordinance
Yes.............. .. ................................ JS.~ * No............ . ........... -............................... '4.l'Mo
COSTA MESA . ..._..o
11of11 pr«inctl r~ng
R.tlslng hotel tax by 2% fOf acquisition of paru
and open spKe * v.... .... . ........................................... SJ.6"'
No .................................................. -................. """"'
COSTA MESI Cln COUNCIL
10of11 preonm ·~
~-IJopetl)
TllOl'l\ti L SUtro ................................. -... 7.2%
MlchHI D CliffOl'd.. ... . ..................................... 4.1"'
Eliubeth A Cowin .................................... 14~
William 1'9ftclos... . ........................................ 2.5"'
R<>nAld J. 0,.nnels. ............................................ ....-M.
K1ten L Roblmon ............................................ 12.l'Mt
Heather IC. Somen ........................................... 12.6"'
Joel Fwls. .............................................................. 10%
Chris St.el ....................................................... 14.4%
Dan Worthington ............................................... •~
Rick Rodgers ....................................................... 1.7"'
llWPOIY lllCH CITY COUICIL
(lhrN -IJ Ol*l) • District 2
23 of 76 prt<Jncu reponlng
Dennis P. Lahey ................................................ 22A"' * 0-, L Proctor ............................................ 65 . .J"'
S'ewn R<>Ymky ..................................... : ......... 11.~
• blltrtct 5
ll of 7' pr9CincU repotbng
PatrkNI M. llffl( ........................................... A1~ *ttew • .., ............................................... ~
Robert Schoonmaker .......................................... 14"'
• Dlllbict 7
23 of " prwcinas twpottlng Johft ... ...._ •H••·---HHH•H-• .. H•H••HO_O.Ja.2'Mt
Tom Thc>mion ...................................................... ~
Robert Wynn ...... ·--.. -....... -................... ..HA"'
llWPOIT ... SI Ullflll ICIOOl
llS1llCT IOlll Of llUCA1'IOll
32 of 169 pr.clnctt ~
(WvN -" "'*1) * ...... a. FkMw ............................................. 703"'
1i. Johnson ...................................................... ~
101 of 495 precincts rwportlng
......... Al'MJ * AnnMldoll"'*-.......................................... 17A%
Daniel Klttrtclge ................................................ '"'"' .......... "'-..
,..,, Fotblth .................................................... J7..,. * ,.,. --..r ................................................. _ .• 1.ft
COSU •SA IAllRllY lll1llCT
14 of .. pr.clnctt ~
Jim Fen-ymen .............. -................................ .,.., ..... * Alt...., ............................. _. ____ ......... ~
~ J. 5albn« .. -....... -.... -............. __ ~
.... IWI Wml lllllKT
lJ of 21S ~ ,..ung
left L Arnelon.--·--·-----7--Jotw\ •• ~ -....... _ .. ____ ,__.....__.. ....
Deny! Mlllel' -·----II.ft . ..., ............. ___ ._ ......
Don ·-ti.A ... e1••&111111-•1K1 29'17 ........... ...... I
~ow ........... --........... --··-·-·-.. ,..,..
Amt "9dl .. --·-·---'·"" ,._. L-•-...... -... -.-....... -.. 7'°"'
WCH•lUMW-~ ..... ,..... ........ ........... __ ,....,_,._""---~-· ........... ____ ,_,. ____ . . ....
---••••ctmr ............... ·--· ...... . ~ ... ...... ..
• reen 1
..
I·
DON LEACH I DAILY Pit.OT
A crowded room at GOP headquarters cheer at the Sutton Place Hotel as they watch voter returns on
TV showing George W. Bush ahead of Al Gore in the pivotal state of Florida.
Republicans,, Democrats
sweat out a re<il nailbiter
Election night is spent
nervously awaiting final
tallies in one of the closest
presidential races in
memory, but local GOP
leaders cruise to victory.
Alex Coolman
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -New-
port-Mesa Republicans waited
anxiously late into the night Tues-
day as Vice President Al Gore and
Texas Gov. George W. Bush
fought through the tightest presi-
llSIDE .
More election coverage on
P..-s3-4
• Proctor, Bromberg, Heffernan
appear victorious
• Steel, Cowan and Somers
lead in Costa Mesa
· · • Incumbents sweep in college
· and Newport-Mesa races
dential election in a generation.
At the Sutton 'Place Hotel on
MacArthur. Boulevard, Republi-
can Party officials and the rank
and file kept their. eyes glued to
telev1s1on· monitors showing
wh1ch states had been captured
by Bush.
Locally. Republicans lived up to
expectations. Preliminary nwn-
bers showed Reps. Dana
Rohrabacher (R-Huntington
Beach) and Christopher Cox (R-
Newport Beach) winning by large
margins. State Assembly candi-
date John Campbell and state
Senate incumbent Ross Johnson
also were cruising to solid victo-
ries.
Democrats, in every local race,
SEE PARTY PAGE 4
Voters flock to. the polls
With an incredibly tight
presidential race and hot
local issues, high percentage
of Newport-Mesa residents
punch their ballots.
Alex Coolman
DAILY PILOT
er Alayne Rasch on Tuesday after-
noon said voter response exceeded
anything she had encountered in six
years of doing the job.
·rve never seen (a turnout) so
heavy so early in the morning and so
continuously through the day," she
said.
With 445 of 2,039 precincts report-
ing, 289,782 of 1.3 million registered
county voters bad cast their ballots .
Nearly 875,000 Orange County vot-
ers turned out in the 1996 presiden-
tial election.
ea
Newport voters
overwhelmingly
back slow-growth
·measure; officials
say possible
effects on the city
are unclear.
Mathis Winkler
D AILY PILOT
.tk NEWPORT BEACH -The
city's residents handed devel-
opers a crushing defeat
Tuesday, overwhelmingly
passing the tough slow-growth
Greenhght measure and
rejecting a counter-inibative
backed by the build.mg mdus-
try and funaed largely by the
Irvine Co.
As a result. the oty's voters
will have the final say oncer-
tam general plan amendments.
Measure S, as the uutiative
appeared on the ballot, took
61.9% of the vote.
"The dam is broken,· srud
S~an Caustin, a supporter of
Measure S, add.mg that the iru-
tiatlve would spread to other
parts of the state. "Up to this
point, special interests have
had a lot of sway .... Greenlight
· will ensure that lthe people )
have the final say."
The measure proposes to
put before a citywide vote any
development that aUows an
increase of more than 100
peak-hour car tnps or dwelling
units or 40,000 SQU,jlfe feet over
the city's general plan
allowance.
Only 35.8°10 of Newport
Beach's voters -favored
Measure T, an opposmg uutia-
tive ·that would have added
parts of the dty's traffic phasing
ordinance to the City Charter
and nullified Measure S.
While commending their
opponents on running a good
campaign, supporters of
Measure T said Greenlight
could have a detrimental effect
on the city's future.
"Some businesses will leave
the city,· said Tom Edwards,
co-chairman of the Measure T
campaign. "People will start
SEE GREEN PAGE 4
A close election brought Newport-
Mesa voters out in strong numbers
Tuesday, with poll workers saying
they saw a better turnout than they
had witnessed in yea.rs.
At the Veterans Memorial Hall on
18th Street in Costa Mesa, poll work-
Stella Kahrer, another election
worker, said a surprising number of
SEE POLLS MGE 4
JENNF£R TAY\..OR I OMV "-OT
Unda Zlbdk takei time oat of her day to vote •t tbe
VeterUI Malort.I Hall Ill COit.a Mesa.
Fugitive returns to face DUI charges
NEWPORT BEACH -A 3 1-
year-Old man wbo Oed the Uni'8d
States and eluded polic8 for two
yean after being arreAed on IUI·
plcion of drunk drtvtng and
aaaulting a police officer wu
ldaedulad to return 1\mday mgbl flan~mted by. U.S; mar· lball, Nici .
Wayne Mlaor Oed to ...,.Plibnllly l .......
to appeu at HubOt Juatlce
Ceilallr. He II ~ lo be na_..., .. awm
... ...... dill ..
Cl1 JldlM w&a ..... to ............. .. ...., ...............
I
J
'
•
2 Wednesday, November 8, 2o0o
PIT 'OF 'THI WEii .
Sasha and Kasha
Suba and Kasha, two 8-month-
old, spayed female tortoise-
sheU/SUunese mixes, were rescued
from a Newport Beach trailer park.
They need to find a home together.
One is very shy, the other is more
outgoing.
Foster homes are still needed for
abandoned kittens.
The Animal Network of Orange
County bOlds adoptions every Satur-
day and Sunday in front of Ruuo's
Pet Ezpertence at Pubion lsland, 905
Newport Center Drive, Newport
Beach. •
The fund-raising arm of the group,
the Community Animal Network,
supports the medical needs of res-
cued animals. Volunteers are also
needed for Barnes & Noble's holiday
fund-raising opportunity.
Information: http://www.anlmal-
network.org or (949) 159-3646.
Doily Pilot
"In my first two to three trips, I was really enjoying working with other volunteers here." Gettl~. INVOLVED For. A
GOOD CAUSE
Edelene
MacDonald
She knows what's
in store for her
Edelene MacDonald doesn't
recall a time in her life when
she wasn't volunteering in some
capacity.
And she says she can't remember
ever having as much fun volunteer-
ing as she does in the American Can-
cer Society's Discovery Shop in Coro-·
na del Mar.
•I first looked at this shop from
across the street when I was at the
hairdresser's,• said MacDonald, 58.
·1 liked how it looked and I walked
in. And in my first two to three trips, I
was really enjoying wqrking with
other volunteers here.•
It has been more than two years
since she started donating her time
and services at the shop that sells
donated furniture and designer and
career dothing.
• GIT1WllG INVOlllED runs peri·
odlally In the Dally Pilot on a
routing basis. If you'd like Infor-
mation on adding your organl·
z.atJon to this list. call (949) 574-
4228.
AMEllCIN c111c11 soc11n
DISCOVERY SHOP
The American Cancer
Society Discovery Shop
needs volunteers from 10
a.m. to 5 p.m . Monday
through Saturday at 2600
E. Coast Highway, Corona
del Mar. For more informa-
tion, call (949) 640-4777.
AMERICAN CANCER
SOCIETY ROAD TO
RECOVERY
MacDonald, who spent 26 years
working as a registered nurse, per-
forms a host of tasks, from appraising
and pricing merchandise to customer
relations and negotiating with buy-.
ers. If needed, she would be cashier,
too.
ty, she said.
•My satisfaction comes froIJl
knowing that the money we make is
spent within the community here, be
it for research or to give a ride to a
patient,• she said.
we helped make some of it happen.•
Volunteering is also the best way
to get to know yom community, said
MacDonald.
wday afternoons with her husband.
She still works full-time as a nurse
consultant during the week.
But she always makes time for her
volunteer work.
This transportation pro-
gram needs volunteers to
drive cancer patients to
and from medical treat-
ments free ot charge. The
required commitment is a
few hours each week or
month. Drivers need a valid
driver's license and insur-
ance and must be at least
25 years old. Volunteers
may use either their own
vebides or American Can-
cer Society vans. For more
information, call (949) 261-
9446 or send e-mail to \
scomer@cancer.org.
AMERICAN
HEART ASSN. MacDonald works about eight
hours a week. Her main shift is on
Saturdays, but she pitches in as
required on other days as well.
MacDonald says she knows she
and others at the store are "making a
difference.·
•Normally, I would be here yack-
ing away with people, and every time
I'd learn something new or different
about what's going on around me,•
she said.
·I'm happy I'm doing it," she said.
·1 wish more working ladies would
take the time to volunteer. It's worth
the effort."
The American Heart Assn.
is looking for volunteers to
perlorm various general
office duties in • the main
office and implement edu-
cational and funH-raising
events through Orange
County. No .. experience
necessary, training will be
provided. For more infor-
mation. call (949) 856-3555.
Her greatest satisfaction is the
sense of giving back to the communi-
·sme, we didn't actually do the
research,• she said. "But we know
Of course, MacDonald has made
sacrifices, like golf and spending Sat-
-Story by DffSN Bhar•th;
photo by GN9 Fry
ALMANAC • John Nigel Lasso, 35, Newport
Beach
• Thnidad Estrada-Hernandez. 29, IEllHIOIS flows, budgeting and all asp«ts of dellel-
opfMnt accounting and reporting. Turner
Dewlopment Corp. Is a Newport B..m-
based player In the Orange County rul
~market. ... ~-J. ~
daughter of Arrtrf Col. Allert J. and
c.ltl.-:.• J ...... of Cost. Mes., gradu-
ated from the NrrttJ ResefYe Offlcer 1\'aln-
ing Corps Advanced CMnP at Fort Lewis. In
T«Oma, Wdl. She c~ a five VJeelt
course of intensNe mllitMy INdenhlp trein-
lng and evaluation uerckes In communica-
tions, management ~ suMYel training.
bsch Is • 1997 graduate of Matef' Del High
School In Santa AN and Is now attet ldlng
8uckneH Univenity In Lewtlburg; Pa. ...
Marine Corps Pvt. 'hr c. ....._ son of
Anita Slw* of Costa Meu, ha completed
t>.sk tr8inlng at ~ Corps "9crult
Depot In San Diego. He~ 12
weeb of training. which included 5 •.m.
runs. fletd ~ ftrst«t education
and assorted WlllflOOS trM1ing. Shri is 8
1996 graduate of Hortion Htgh School In
Santa Ana. He joined the Marine QWps In
March .... Costa ~ resident Jolwt --was one of the .....,ts Of the~
REAL ESTATE
COSTA MESA
Santa Ana .
• Isaac Wilbert Catitit.,.,.31 . Santa
• 3130 Manistee Drive $224,795 Ana ~"
Nov.3 • 2531 Colby Place $307 ,000
• 2330 Vanguard Way 1<202
$184,300
NEWPORT BEACH
• Ryusuke Murayama, 31, Costa
Mesa
•Kelly Elizabeth Phelan, 27, Cos-
ta Mesa
• 9 Thunderbird Drive $1.27 million •Celina Padilla, 45, lrvine
• Mieae Michaela Choi, 27, Long
Beach • 25 Long Bay Drive $847,500
• 2424 University Drive $237,000 Nov.2
DUI ARRESTS
The following people have
•Benjamin Ross Briggs, 34, Costa
Mesa
been arrested recently on suspi-
cion of drMng under the influence
of an intoxlcant. They have only
been arrested on suspicion of a
crime and, as with all crimes, are
collBidered innocent until proved
guilty.
• Richard David Galler, 32, Costa
Mesa
• Christopher Healey, 31, Newport
Beach
NEWPORT BEACH
Nov.5
• Leonard Eugene Davis, 47,
Newport Beach
COSTA MESA
Nov.5
• Christopher Allen Mynes, 26,
Brea
• Christopher Thomas Ermel, 32,
Costa Mesa
Nov.3
• James Ronald Seachrist. 57.
Newport Beach • Robert Stephen Tres, 35, New-
port Beach
•Antonio Eduardo Elena, 59, San-
ta Ana
• Sean Michael Shiffett, 24, El
Cajon
Nov.2
Nov.4
• Leonard Paul Salvador, 68, Cos-
ta Mesa
• Mark Alan Thon, 44, Huntington
Beach
Nov.1
• Gary Don Deadmon, 49, Costa
Mesa
• Johnfea Sevier m, 50, Laguna
Niguel
•Richard Scott Kuhns, 42, Irvine
•Miguel Angel Branez, 20, Long
Beach•
• Wilbw Anthony Figueroa, 37,
Garden Grove
• Jettiey Cale Whiie, 30, La Habra
•Michael Wiliam Bunnett, 44,
Dallas, Texas
• Thomas Henry Donatelli, 42,
Newport Beach .
VOLKN0.266
1"0MAI H. JOIMON.
P'Ublllltw
lOllY l:IDC~)D~_,O,,
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--CMlo.to9l Spot1I fdhlot ..,....., ....
Nlwtrdltor ,_'"..,.
,...~ .... -= ... ,........, .,, ..• ,. ••• oe... ....... ,..,
,
READEI$ HQD.INE
(949) 642-6086
Recotd yc>lK NlOOf...,m.""met-n""ts about
the Dally Piiot or news tips.
~Is 330 W. Bay St..
c.osta Mesa, CA 92627.
COltltECJONS
It Is the Piiot's pollcy to prompt-
ly ex>rreet aH erron of subNnce.
,..... c:.11(Mt)57~33.
m The Nlwpoft ~Mlle
~Noc ~1....,, Ill put,:
..... MOfldly through s.turdly.
In N9Wpaft leKtl Ind COit.a Mel-. ~ ......... onlyby
~IO to 1tW T1nm Onlnge
Cour1'Y Gloat BM141. In.,._ ~"' NMport leedl Ind Co.ta~ ......... tlO ttle
~"9at ........ ~by mall" far $10 per mondt Seoond
~.,.... peld at c::.-. MIN.
CA. ..... ~ .........
--mtal-...) POmMS-"9t: IMd ..... dw'll9.,..
~~*-~ ..... '-0 .... 1MO, c.. .. _
CA 92626. ~No news JU>.
r1es, lllustrationl, editorilll metw
or~ herein can be
,~Without written pet·
mbllon of~ ownet.
HOW JO 8EAQt US
Clrculadon
The llmes 0r.,. County
(800) 252-9141
Adv9l1lllng
a..tfl«f (949) 642·5678
Olsplai/ (949) 642-4)21
~
News (949) 642·5'80
Spotts (949) 574-U2l
,... Spotts,.. (M9) 6*4170
E.fNMl:~com
MllnOMle """*' OMcli (Mt) 142-432,
lwlne. r1111 (Mt) IJ1·71M .
~ .. ,..~.....-. ......... LGe.-..... .... _ .. _ ...........
Atltlott~ .......... '*'Of• ~ m.ntlon progrem this~~
Abbott Resowte Group Irie. In IMne. Miles
and two ~winners WW. c:holiin from
2.IOO entries to r..twe $1,000tohefp1hem ruch,,. ~ goek. 'The c..
Mesa '9dpllftt ii wefting tow.cf.
MbOioft Orifled P'tofmlow~ c.rtiflcate
• hCtflc COiiege tn c-.. Ma. He Ii the
menags for lmOrrMtlon ...... Gr~
ks hcbglng.
• ••••am~ts.,..,......ln --~ ...... dlnil,.,. __
llifomwdol1 tlD ~ Owii ¥11 -• (Mt)"""''°' « .... ..,.. '° ~.
AMERICAN
HOME HEALTH
HOSPICE PROGRAM
The American Home
Health Hospice Program
needs volunteers to give
emotional support to termi-
nally ill patients and their
families in the greater
O range County area.
Training is provided. For
information, call (714) 550-
0800 or (800) 540·254?.
AMERICAN RID
CROSS, OUllGE
COUNTY CHIPTll
The Orange County chap-
ter of the American Red
Cross needs volunteers to
address community groups
about Red Cross services
and to act as liaisons wJth
the media in disaster and
emergency situations. For
lnfomiation, call Judy Ian-
naccone, (714) 835-5381.
ASSll. IElllSSlllCE
CllATOIS
The Costa Mesa group
sponsors and supports out-
reach community service
programs, such as the
homeless sanctuary. Volun-
teers are needed. For more
information, call (714) 540-
5803 .
. WllTllEI AND SURF POUCI FILES
TIMNRA11MIS
Balboa
65153
Corona del Mar
65153
Costa Mesa
71/49
Newport S.ach
71/49
Newport Coast
7W55
WPOllCAS'T
Fw to good IUff
condltlont ~with
With~· to shoulder-
high waves.
LOCAnC* 1111
Wldgl J-4
""f'PO"t J-4 lleddn J-4
---~ M CdM J.4
11DIS
TODAY
First low
12:25 a.m .................... 0.8
First high
6:50a.m ....................... 5.3
Second low
1:07 p.m ... " .................. 1.0
Second high
7 p.m ............................ 4..8
12:54 a.m ..................... o.9
first high
7:13a.m. ...................... 5.7
Stcond low
1:41 p.m-.. ~ .......... 0.4
Second~ 7:42 p.m.,;._," __ u -,. 21•• ..
COSTA MESA
• .... 17'tt ttr.I: ~of marijt.NN WM Npe>rt•
ed In the 300 block at 3:04 a.m. Monct.y.
• .... 111h 9'reet: Vandl!Jsm WM repotted hi the 200
block at 10:50 •.m. ~.
•..., 4tew ...... Grand theft wes ~in the UOO
blodc at 5:47 p.m. ~.
' 1 ...,._ --·~ A commetdal burgWy Will
repon.d In 1he 3300btodcIt1:31 a.m. Monet-,,.
............... An Mlto tt*t W9 rtpOttld 1n-.
'700 blodc at 4:17 p.m. Mond.y.
• ................. Jtll ..... fil]l)IMlllit al
-.-NPOnld • l:JO p.m. s.u.,.
.• ... Jts•www .................. ..,..
daftr~-........ ,ctSI ..... ....
Doily Pilot Wednesday, November 8, 2000 3
PRELIMINARY CITY COUNCIL RICE ·RESULTS
Strength of Steel, incumbents
shine through in Costa Mesa
Proctor, Bromberg, Heffernan
ahead in Newport Beach
• Cowan, Somers hold
on to their seats, but
Chris Steel is top
vote-getter with 18 of
81 precincts reporting.
Jennifer Kho
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -In a
surprisingly strong showing,
candidate Chris Steel took
the early lead in the City
Council race Tuesday night,
topping incumbents Ubby
Cowan and Heather Somers
-who took the second and
third spots, respectively -in
a close race for three seats.
With 18 of 81 precincts
counted, Steel had 14.4% of
the vote, Cowan 14% and
Somers 12.6%.
Steel, who has been
defeated in nearly 10 council
elections, was elated with the
early results.
·1 didn't think I'd be in
there, but this is turning out to
be a good day for me• he said.
•I like the trend and if this
holds up, I'll be appreciative.
I'm very mindful that this has
been a loflg time in coming. I
don't want to count my chick-
ens before they batch, but it
looks like
Costa
Mesa's
going to
be stuck
with me
for four
years, for
better or
for
worse.• Chrll Steel Cowan
said she
was not surprised to be
doing well
•This is great funl" she
said. ·rm very happy and
I'm excited about working
with those who are elected. I
think (the results) show l've
worked well with the com-
munity, that the community
is responsive to my interest
in envisioning where we're
going to be in 50 years. I'm
excited to represent Costa
Mesa.•
With Karen Robinson -
with 12.2% of the vote -
trailing Somers by a narrow
margin, the incwnbent said
she just wanted lo retain her
seat.
•As long as I'm hanging
in there in the top three, I'm
happy,· Somers said. ·aut
it's a victory no matter which
way it goes. I've been so
pleased with the results
we've had in the past and
the things we've been able
to accomplish. We're just
happy the campaign is final-
ly over.•
Robinson was optimistic
about her pfospects, as was
William Perkins, although
he showed dead last at press
time.
Cowan encouraged the
candidates who came up
short to stay involved with
the community.
•There are a lot of com-
mittees to get involved with
and lots of projects where
we need good people.• she
said. •1 challenge each one
of them to get involved, par-
ticipate in those committees,
learn about Costa Mesa and
work together for the
future.•
Measure 0 -the pro-
posed bed tax which
required a two-thirds major-
ity, or 66.6%, for approval -
was not passing at press
time, with 54.1 % voting yes
and 45.9% voting no.
The measure would have
allowed the council to raise
the city's hotel tax from 6%
to 8% to purchase and
develop park lands.
• As returns trickled in late, candidates stayed ·
quiet about the outcome and the future of the
City Council. Proctor is the only one with a
seemingly solid lead .
Mathis Winkler
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH-With an but one of the Qty Council
races too close to call late
Tuesday night, the District 7
race mirrored the tight presi-
dential race whJle the biggest
fund-raisers led the polls in
the other two districts.
Businessman and attorney
Gary L. Proctor, 55, is likely lo
succeed Councilwoman Jan
Debay as the council mem-
ber for District 2. Steve
Bromberg, a 56-year-old
mediator, will probably
replace Mayor John Noyes in
the District 5 seat and busi-
' nessman and attorney John
Heffernan seems to have
taken the District 7 seat from
incumbent Tom Thomson.
At press time, Proctor had
65.3% of the vote, Bromberg
44.4% and Heffernan 38.2%.
Proctor, who bad made the
El Toro a.Uport his No. 1 issue,
said energizing the residents
to combat the threat of a pos-
sible expansion of John
Wayne Airport would be his
first objective as a council-
man.
"This is just the beginning.•
Proctor said, adding that he
hoped the victorious Measure
S supporters would direct
their efforts to fight for an
extension of flight caps
beyond 2005, when the cur-
rent restrictions end.
•ifs pretty clear that (voters)
don't want traffic,• Proctor
said. "We've got to face the
next traffic issue, which is the
a.Uport .•
Computer sales consultant
Dennis Lahey, 58, as well as
real estate broker Steven
Rosansky, 40, trailed Proctor
by a wide margin.
While Lahey raised $2,449
a nd Rosansky less than
$1, 000. Proctor collected
$47,180. An independent
committee raised another
$32,000 lo support his elec-
tion.
Just before 11 p.m., with 15
out of 76 precincts counted,
Bromberg said that it was too
early to tell whether he'd won
"I'm not going to get discouraged yet. .. "
-II• Johnson, school board candidate
GllEG f«Y I OM.Y f'l.OT
Newport-Mela ICbOol board ceadtdate Da Jobmoll reads to wly abllentee ballot nu.mben, showing her .trailing Martha Pluw.
Incumbents hold comfortable leads in college race
• With 101 of 495 prednd:I
reporting, longtime trustees
Paul Berger and Armando
Ruiz maintain leads.
Det•tte••••• 0MYftl.cn'
the election .•
·w e're just going to wait it
out,• said Bromberg, who had
raised $57,878. "It's a close
race. We're still having fun
with it..
Patricia M . Beek, 52, a
retired retail manager, close-
ly trailed her opponent late
Tuesday night with 41.3% of
the vote. She bad raised
$21,997 during the campaign.
Robert Schoonmaker, 68, a
retired engineer and the third
candidate for the District 5
seat, remained far behind the
others with just 14.3%. He
had spent less than $1 ,000 of
his own money in the cam-
paign.
In District 7, Heffernan, 50,
a businessman and attorney,
had a tight lead over oppo-
nent former City Manager
Bob Wynn, 69, who had col-
lected 36.4%. While Wynn
had spent $62,222, Heffernan.
50, a businessman and attbr-
ney had put up $10,500 of his
own money to run.
Incumbent Tom Thomson
was staying behind his oppo-
nents in the vote count late
Tuesday with 25%. The 55-
year-old real estate broker
had collected $43,577 for his
reelection campaign.
Martha Fluor
School board
likely to
remain intact
• Martha Fluor is well
up on her opponent
with about a third of
the votes counted.
D•nette Goulet
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT-MESA
Trustee Martha Fluor was
retaining her seat on the
Newport-Mesa school board
by a wide margin late Tuesday
night, leaving the previous
board intact.
With 50 of 169 precincts
reporting, Fluor was leading
her challenger, Ila Johnson,
70.2% to 29.2%.
When the $163-million
school bond passed in the
spring, many bond opponents
p romised opposition in the
upcoming election. Yet. with
three. seats up for grabs only
one challenger emerged.
Costa Mesa resident
Johnson stepped in to chal-
lenge Fluor at the last minute.
She was not willing to let the
three incumbents slide into
oftice without offering voters
an option. she said.
In· the last school board
eledkxi. two of the four incum-
bents lkated into oftlce unop-
poeecl.
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4 Wed~ NcMlmber 8, 2000
GREEN
CONTINUED FROM 1
discovering that the traffic hat
gotten worse. The ~
twe will deteriorate. I bope I'm
wrong, but I think that's what's
going to happen.•
While both small and laige
developments CWTently before
the city wW likely be brought
to voters for final approval. city
oftidals cautioned Tuesday that
it was still unclear how
Greenlight would work.
!3VOTE
Based on the assumption
that general plan amendments
made over the last 10 years
would count toward the thresh-
olds in each of the city's 49
neighborhoods, projects like a
2, 160-square-foot lobby expan-
sion and a 4"4<kquare-foot fil-
ing room will require a city-
wide vote, because both are
located in areas that have
reached their •construction
allowance,• said Patricia
Temple, the city's planning
director.
While Measure S support-
ers have countered that the
City Council would probably
adopt Tuesday as the •clean
slate• date for general plan
amendment accumulations,
opponents such as
Councilman Gary Adams
have argued that such a deci-
sion would likely be chal-
DON LEACH I DAl..V Pt.OT
Former mayor Evelyn Hart Is excited about the passage of Measure S which she helped
support.
POLLS
CONTINUED FROM 1
the people who turned out
had never bothered to vote in
the past.
"We've had quite a few
people who are first-time vot-
ers, and they're in their 40s, •
she said. •One guy said be
lenged in the courts since it
goes against the wording of
the initiative.
A 566,000-square-foot
expansion proposal by
Conexant Systems, Inc. a,ld a
250,000-square-foot expansion
project by Koll Center will def-
initely require a vote. The
had been a protester yea.rs
ago. But he had never voted.•
The most important factor
motivating turnout. judging
by the comments of voters
leaving the polls, was the tight
presidential race between Al
Gore and George W. Bush.
"It's important.• said Teny.
a Costa Mesa resident who
declined to give her last name.
·1 want to make darn sure that
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Conexant project bas been
removed from the city calen-
dar, but bas not been with-
drawn. Jbe Koll Center pro-
posal is currently before the
Planning Commission and is
scheduled for another hearing
in December.
The Dunes hotel project, a
one of (the presidential candi-
dates) didn't get in.·
Terry initially would not say
which candidate she was
referring to, but her comments
a moment later may have giv-
en an indication.
•It makes me angry.• she
exclaimed. "I bet three-quar-
ters of the people ~ho elected
Bush the governor of Texas
thought they were voting for
bis father.•
in Newport Beach. poll
workers saw extraordinary
turnouts as well.
"This is probably the best
I've seen,• said Gregory
Ernst, a poll worker at the
City Hall voting location, who
said this was his fourth elec-
tion as a staffer.
Despite the hype that
accompanied Measures S and
T, several voters at City Hall
said they had no idea what
the dueling city initiatives
planned resort with 470 rooms
and 31,000 square feet of con-
ference space proposed by the
Newport Dunes Resort, bas
also been taken off the calen-
dar, but has not been with-
drawn.
Since the resort has been
approved to construct up to
were about.
And Newport resident
Dennis Matthews said it was
Proposition 36, a state mea-
sure that would change the
way nonviolent drug offenses
are handled, that drew him to
the polls.
• 1 think people should
have a second chance instead
of going to jail.. Matthews
said.
Most people. however, said
they came out because of the
presidential race.
Justin Walseth, 19, was
voting for the first time. He
said he was voting for Bush.
"I'm confident• about the
Republican's chances for vic-
tory, he said.
To him, it seemed like a
Bush victory could make a dif-
ference in Newport Beach.
"Things we don't think
affect us actually do,• Walseth
said.
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· Daily Pilot
515,000 square feet and the
project is currently proposed
at 581,000 square feet, the
developers could probably
avoid a citywide vote by
reducing the resort's size by
26,001 square feet, said
Temple. The project will prob-
ably not require a vote if it
stays below 554,999 square
feet.
Largely backed by devel-
~opers and real estate organi-
zations, Measure T supporters
bad run one of the most expen-
sive campaigns in the city's
history.
Contributions to Measure T
came to $405,061, with the
Irvine Co. topping the list of
donors with $147,000 in con-
bibutions. The California Assn.
of Realtors gave $52,000, fol-
lowed by the Building Industry
of Southern California with
$24,500.
The Measure S campaign
raised just more than one-fifth
of the money collected by its
· opposition.
At $90,395, Greenlight's
largest contributions came
from Defend the Bay, an envi-
ronmental group that spent
$14,014 in the last days leading
up to the election, and Stop
the Dunes, a group opposing
the proposed hotel and con-
vention center at the Newport
Dunes Resort , which gave
$10,271 in postage, printing
costs and flier designs.
PARTY
CON.TINUED FROM 1
captured little more .than a
third of the vote.
On th, presidential front,
however, polls revealed an
excruciatingly tight race.
As Bush moved state by
state toward what Republi-
cans hoped would be victory,
they greeted bits of news
with deafening cries. The
news that •Dubya • had won
in Alaska set off a chant that
shook the room.
"Florida! Florida I Florida!·
went the cry.
The state of Florida, which
carries 25 electoral votes,
turned out to be pivotal in the
race. Early television cover-
age of the returns indicated
that Gore had captured the
vote in the Sunshine State.
But CNN and other net-
works later revised their
rep0rts on Florida to indicate
that the state was question-
able or possibly learung
toward a Bush victory.
Some of the Republicans
at the Sutton Place said they
found the poll juggling infun·
ating.
•1t•s nonsense,• said New-
port Beach resident Ron Win-
ship. •They should never put
a state in somebody's column
unless they're sure about it.·
Rohrabacher went one
step further in brief remarks
to the hotel crowd.
•They lied about Florida.
They tried to steal Mississip-.
pi,• Rohrabacher said. ·But
we're going to save Ameri-
cat •
For Democrats, many or
whom were gathered at Hen-
nessey's Tavern in Dana
Point, the night was one of
tense optimism.
Early in the evening, as
networks called the states of
Florida and Pennsylvania for
Gore, Orange County Demo-
cratic chairwoman Jeane
Costales sounded upbeat.
•we have so many people
out getting people to the
polls,• she Mid. •That's all
we've been doing. I think
we're going to win.•
Later in the night. after
Florida appeared to have
been taken by Buth and
many other states had gone
to the Republican as well.
Democrats were still manag-
ing to maintain what 73rd
Assembly District candidate
Robert Wllberg co.11ed a •res-
tive" atmosphere.
•core ts 100% in the
race,• Wllberg Mid u Florida
remained decidedly up for
grabs more than 98Y8D hOWI
after ill po:US had dosed.
•tte•s going to wtn. There'•
no doubt ln my IJlind, •
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Wednesday, November 8, 2000 5
~Rapping, rhyming ••• reading COSTA MESA CITY
COUNCIL WRAP·UP
.. • Students at Victoria
: Elementary are ,
•encouraged to read • ~ through state program ii called Readapalooza. .. • .,...,. llharath
DAILY PILOT
•R-E-A-0. Let's all read a r book today .•
• Children at Victoria Ele-
mentary School were singing ~ the refrain long after the
: music and fun-filled show of
" Readapalooza Too had end-
., ed.
• The group, funded by a
, state grant as part of Gov.
:.. Gray Davis' READ California
program, i9 on an eight-week
tour of California's elemen-
tary schools and made a brief
stop in Costa Mesa on Tues-
day to encourage children to
read through an interactive
20-minute live stage show
that included music, games
and humor.
The players were ·Dr.
Umlaut: the singing scien-
tist, and his rapping assistant,
•Lyric,• who amuses specta-
tors with his antics and sound
I effects.
Principal Judy Laakso said
her school was lucky to have
been selected by Reada-
palooza.
•it's a way of acknowledg-
ing our students for the con-
~ JENNIFER TAY\.OR I OA!l.V PILOT
Victoria Elementary students share enthusiasm during Readapalooza on Tuesday.
tinuing improvement they've
made in reading." she said.
The students, with the
help of parents and teachers,
read about 50,000 books last
year, said Laakso.
The louring show, now in
its second year, attempts to
capture the children's atten-
tion and motivate them to
read, said Lisa Fisher, spokes-
woman for 'the governor's
office of the Secretacy of Edu-
cation in Sacramento
•Kids have a lot of fun with
it,• said Fisher, who travels all
over the state with the group.
"It's funny. It's contemporary
and it strikes a chord with the
kids.•
It is also meant to remind
adults of their role, she said.
"We all have a responsibil-
ity to make sure kids are
reading,• said Fisher. •And
it's a serious and important
responsibility that will affect
them for the rest of their
lives.•
For the students. it all
boiled down to two things -
fun and music.
For fourth-grader Cody
Green, it was the rapping and
rhythms that did it.
"I totally loved the music,"
he said.
For classmate Christina
Bodnar, it was "everything."
"It was really cool." she
said. "It made me want to
read more."
Inside .
City Hall
WHAT HAPPENED:
The City
Council
unanimously
agreed to
establish
minimum waste-hauling
service requirements for
multifamily housing areas.
The issue was on the
agenda for Oct. 16, but it
was c;ontinued until Mon-
day.
WHAT IT MEANS:
The size of trash bins
and the frequency of trash
pickup at multifamily
housing areas must now
IN BRIEF
ROP offers basic
computer class
The Coastline Regional
Occupational Program will
offer two nine-week courses
on computer basics for adults
and high school students.
accommodate half a cubic
yard of trash per dwelling
unit per week.
WHAT HAPPENED:
The council voted to
hire Anderson/White, an
company in Alhambra, for
the seismic re~rofitting of
City Hall and Corporation
Yard. '
WHAT IT
Ml:!~r-
son/White
was the lowest bidder for
the project. bidding $2.8
million. The Governor's
Office of Emergency Ser-
vices has awarded the city
a S 1.3-million grant for
the project.
18. Cost lS $40, due at the time
of registration.
ln!ormabon: (714) 979-1955.
Farm welcomes
new addition
Rusty beam. causes parking structure to collapse
The cldss is designed for stu-
dents with little or no comput-
er experience. }he slow-paced
approach will be used lo help
students develop basic skills
and intrcxluce users to Microsoft
Windows, the Lntemet and soft-
ware applications.
The course will be offered
Wednesdays and Thursdays
from 1 :30 to 4 p.rn., beginning
Nov. 9; and Saturdays from 8
a .m. to noon beginning Nov.
Break out the celebratory
cigars, because Bonnie the
whlte-faced Hereford cow at
Centennial Farm gave buth to
her third calf. The newest
member of the family at the
Orange County Fairgrounds in
Costa Mesa is a 65-pound,
white-faced Hereford-Angus
cross heifer calf.
Both mother and call are on
display for animal lovers to
Vl51t. The farm is open to the
public from 1 to 4 p .m. on
weekdays and 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
on weekends.
NEWPORT BEACH -A
rusty support beam caused a
. 23-year-old building near the
Rhine Channel to collapse
Monday evening, officials
said Tuesday.
The office building's park-
ing garage snapped off the
main structure on Lafayette
• Avenue. People working in
the offices said they fell the
building shake around 5 p.m.
and ran out, officials said. No
• one was hurt or trapped.
On Tuesday, the garage
, was resting on the shallow
end of the harbor. One of the
• four cars in the ground-level
• parking structure was partial-
: ly submerged.
A supporting iron beam's
constant exposure to salty
water was what caused the
• corrosion that weakened it,
Your vote has retieved us-
Our thanks we can't te11 ••
' You heard and believed us -
God bless you! Famvetl ................... ,..
said Jay Elbettar, director of
the Newport Beach Building
Department:
"You could see the rust
marks on the beam,· he said.
"That was the only visible
warning.•
Elbettar said faulty con-
struction did not cause the
collapse.
"There was nothing wrong
with the way it was built,• he
said. •And there is very little
that could have been done to
prevent it."
The next step is to .fix up
the structure as soon as possi-
ble, Elbettar said. The area
OUR MEALS ME A TRIP TO MEXICO
AUOONOUR~HU: .FISH TACOS"
TORTILLA $OU'
<HILi SIZE
CHIU <HUSE OMILITTt
WE TAkE DINING
TO THE
NEXT LEVEL!
around the leaning structure
has been secured so nobody
gets hurt.
-Dffpe Bharath
Thursday, November 9th
4:00 -6:00 p.m.
~A \'\lhale ~n~~~e
DON AND
AUDREY WOOD
Presenting
"JUBAL'S WISH"
Presentation Begins
at4:00p.m.
~C'-!Q
8"S4-IS28"3
A Boo~'°" W. of .a ~ 4 199 c.,.,,._ • Unl!!!!tty c:.m.r. Jrvtne
Saturday, November 11th Aw.W w~~
11:ooa.m. -12:30p.m. Michael Hague
Janell Cannon Introducing
~ 1.wwr1 Wh1ll1 •Book of Fairies"
Presenting
"Crlckwlng•
Special Reading
at 11 :00 a.m.
Friday, Nov. 11th
4-6p.m.
Thank You
The 552 Club Tag & Release Billfish Tournament
Co-Chairs. Lynn Cathcart and Keith Yonkers, would like
to thank the many sponsors and volunteers for their
contributions to this year's event benefiting
Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian.
IOPUS.
Tiara
y • c " ' s
TK lOQO
SOl.OMAN SMITH QUIKSILVER~ BARNEY
7burMment ~nt:
.............
ru I • c
-·,.....~
Gardon S. Bertenbrod< Merry Mol9-n.ylor
Richard H. Berg ~Mann, M.O.
Tim Chelf lM1Cia Ati~m Ru. ,... ...,._ Aocl'9lm
8t9iMn H. O.U11wltz, M.O. RldWd J. .,,_,
Arlene Hassard 0.. 8nowdln
Mme~ AOlleld&80IDlnor.,M.D. .... w. L:Mdll Cec ..... ....,_
LMyLLa__, A~18'll..,_•
.......... lltfllfW.
Dllr'9 Mandiri wmr m A. W..
•
Q1Dte Of
•DAY
•11 • sys1111, ,Ww ... ti hM •••a ~en .... , .... _.
Jeff lll"l.t*leY, Newport football coach
1· DJ;• 1 ·1 _ ....... 13 ..... ..-StWl.01.. (191$ QUiii _ .. _
6 Wednesday, Nov.mber 8, 2000 • Spom EditorRogerCorlson • 949-574-4223 • Spom Fax:"949-6.500170 Daily Pilot
Tars gu.n down Uni with both barrels
• Newport Harbor humbles
Th>jans with 15-0, 15-7, 15-10
triumph in first round of the
CIF Division I-A Playoffs.
Steve Virgen
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH -The most
CIJlciaJ point for the Newport Har-
bor girls volleyball team, surprising-
ly, came before the match started.
The Sailors used their warm-up to
get fired up and began with a 15-0
win over University that set the pace
for a three-game sweep (15-7, 15·
10) over the ltojans in the first
round of the CIF Southern Section
Division 1-A playoffs Tuesday at
Harbor.
The Sailors, Sea View League
runners-up, will play Hart Thursday
in the second round, at a site to be
detennined. Hart swept Thousand
Oaks, coached by former Sailor Tara
Kroesch, 15-6, 15-6, 15-10.
From the beginning of their
warm-up routine, the Sailors were
full of energy as "The Ruff Ryders
Anthem• thumped in the back-
~und. Harbor (19·9) followed suit
to'the lyrics of the OMX song: •stop.
Drop. Shut 'em down. Open up
shop.•
"We were just really excited and
pumped up for the playoffs," said
Harbor senior Taylor Govaars, who
bad a match-high 12 kiµs. ·we
wanted to come out and do our best.
We knew if we came out strong we
would do it."
The Th>jans (8-9), who finihed
third in the Pacific Coast League,
served seven times in game one, but
failed to gain any advantage or any
type or momentum, mostly because
of Govaars and Katie King, who
served up the assists for Govaars.
'
GIRU VOWYULl
King finished with 38 assists.
"We bad a really good warm~
up," King said. "We all have this
routine for the warm-up and we
were just teady to go, fired up and
focused."
Though the Sailors took a com-
manding advantage in the first
,game, University was able to
bounce back and challenge them in
'the second. The ltojans battled the
Th.rs to a 7-7 tie, before Harbor
scored the game's final eight points.
The Sailors outmatched the lto-
jans in practically every area of the
game: momentum. teamwork and
senior leadership. Before the match
started, Harbor Coach Dan Glenn
planned a special senior presenta-
tion as each senior was introduced
with their parents. Govaars, Colby
George, Brianna Brooks, Kristin
Maberry, Lauren Bald the adrenaline pumping,
and the return or Heather • Jt 'wm «> nice it was great.•
Cullen Inspired the rest to lltWe Heather The Sailors carried <>f the team. their momentum into the
"It was so nice to have (CUiien) bad<. third game as they built a
(Cullen) back," Glenn (Her} reti.Uil 13-3 lead. But. the Th>-
'Mid of the senior who I jans responded and
was out since May with a ta"8I the scored seven straight as
tom right anterior crud-premue oft Glenn substituted players
ate ligament. •(Her who entered the match
return) takes the pres-the ldda .•. • for the first time. As soon
sure off the kids. I'm as University came within
excited to have her out o.n Glllln 13-10, Glenn called a
there.• N9WpOrt HertiOr girts timeout. wr-+-"~ Cullen received dear--==-r--==:::::==-Harbor then came out
ance Monday, but was and earned a sideout
only allowed to play in when Claire Allen fin.
the back row. She said she will not ished Govaars' assist. Bald went to
get full clearance until Nov. 30, after serve for Harbor's final points as
the season is over. Christine Woller, who had 10 kills,
"It was just great being on the took the Sailors to game point with a
court again,~ said Cullen, who will kill.
has committed to UCLA. •Just to be And Bald ended the match with
with my team playing and to have an ace, her third or the night.
e·greatme orphosiS
• Santa Ana's 70-game
unbeaten streak a thing of
the past, thanks to Orange
Coast's 3-2 victory in Orange
Empire Conference finale.
COSTA tviESA -There are
theories about momentum and
how far it can take you, and how
long the staying power, but judg-
ing from the rejuvenated figure or
Orange Coast College soccer
coach Laird Hayes, it's a good bet
his Pirates won't glide down for a
landing in at least six weeks.
And that's long after the first
round of the Southern California
Regional Playoffs, which begin
Tuesday on the Pirates' field
against a foe still to be determined.
Hayes, who had see!) his pro-
gram fall to an agonizing 3-14-4,
2-7-3 in the Orange Empire Con-
ference a year ago, takes his Bucs
into Tuesday's playoffs with a 15-3-
4, 10-2-1 record and a current sev-
en-game winning streak, capped
by Monday's historic 3-2 victory
over rival Santa Ana, snapping the
latter's 70-game unbeaten streak
in a heated battle.
A day later, Hayes was still bub-
bling, ticking off his fingers virtual-
ly every player on the squad for
deserved laurels, as well as his two
•assistant" coaches, Kevin Smith
and Pat Callaghan, who are in
reality co-coaches working under
Hayes' self-described role of a
general manager.
The power boost into the play-
offs, which came about on Mon-
day, couldn't possibly have been
any doser.
The Pirates, who'll enter the
playoffs as the OEC's No. 2 entry,
withstood a furious attack from the
Dons in the second half after burst-
ing to a 3-0 lead before halftime.
In the game's final minute, San-
ta Ana had a chance to tie, but
Pirate goalie Hilario Arriaga, a
product of Estancia High and in the
midst of one or his finest games or
the season. deflected a shot for the
last of his 14 saves. As the ball
trickled dangerously close to the
goal, Coast defender Spencer
McDearmon gained control and
cleared the ball to midfield, ending
the Dons' threat just seconds before
the final whistle as pandemonium
broke loose on the Pirates: sideline.
Coast started the scoring early,
as Geno Vitale-Sansosti scored off
a cross from Josh Miller just five
minutes into the game to take the
lead. Coast doubled the lead 16
minutes later when Aaron Siemen
set Matt Moseley up with a one-
on-one with Don goalie Juan Mar-
tinez. Mosely filed into the lower-
left corner of the net for the goal.
1'oilller headed a pass from Jesus
CeJ:vant.es into a wide-open goal in
the -'1st minute for a three-goal lead.
but it was sbortlived as Santa Ana's
Alejandro Ucea retaliated with a
penalty kick three minutes later to
shave the defidt to 3-1 at halftime.
Santa Ana scored again early in
O range =e·s Matt Moseley,
who scored the
Pirates' second
goal off an
assist from
Aaron Slemen,
ls engulfed by
teammates
(top left) Dan
Espinoza.
(top right) Jesus
Cervantes and
Josh Miller in
Monclay'I
Orange Empire
Conference
conquest of
vlslttng Santa
Ana, which saw
Its 70-game
unbeaten streak
mapped bya
3-2 defeat. The
Pirates return
to action on
the <>CC field
Tuesday In the
tint round of
the Southern
CaWornla
Regional Playoffs.
IXlN LEACH I OAl.Y Pl.OT
the second half with an unasststed
goal by Roberto Fuentes to set up
the scenario as Santa Ana, 17-1-4,
12-1-1, attacked again and again,
only to be turned away, again and
again.
The win caps an incredible regu-
lar-season turnaround, which
Hayes attributes directly to his deci-
sion to bring Smith and Caflagtum
aboard in their cummt roles.
THE BIG BLUE
WRECKING CREW
Two former QBs give Sailors a 1-2-3 punch few can deal with.
O ne would think Newport Harbor been a thorough stifling or a Uon
High middle linebacker Alan squa~~. ~ came in averaging nearly
Saenz would have no uae for 36 pomt.
quarterbacks. But former quarlerbac:U Their outstanding play, however,
are a different matter. has not been a surprile to Coach Jeff
Two of the latter, in fact, flank Saenz Brinkley.
to form the three-man Sailor lineback-"With Alan (All~ and the
1ng corps. Newport-Mesa District Olla.Mt
With Cbrll.Mandermo, who ste.r1ed Player of the Year in t•J Md Cbril
1-' vanity games at quartarbedr.. aDd (tbe Daily Piiot Sea \llew ~ MVP
Andy Rankin, wbO qUmtarbacbd the a year ago) comtng back. tmnt ww. ·
freshman team th.-IWIOm ago, the IOIDe tugh apectatiioal f<W lldl gsvup, •
tno bat helped make tbiDQI tWllcult for 8dnkJeY Mid. •And ~Md lbowD
oppQling lignal callen ana running • tbe year before be cOWd do tbe job
tNtCU, alib. (with tome ~time IPllDlna-
By ~ ... liDM»ckMI make the MaodiltDo -dim---MIU majodty ol tbe t8ddll b tbe Sailon 1\mDey).. •
and tbli .. .u; ~-0.W, Vendllly bM bwl .. ., tor ..
wblda .,.... e-.-7m pounds, tbtl•--· .. blggelll cuaauldft let -=::'7~~ ~ .. .....,...,,.,_
=..~·4 .. =.i::o1tbe ~=~~ =-7·2.2-llD....,.,ud aa~-dll 'tabld,IO tD .... tbllr 15tll .,....tOD we kilinit be add_,.. llaUDd, •
•IPllllPl911••111••a•• ID .. llllt =· "'nlr.., 9lkL •AD11A1m bM bw a 111•-.M ~ at .......... ~ ...... .,..,
Ci81tl .. °"~ tlto wilWl .... alil9tD ..... lrMf1llllllddOwlleiUC..wd1Mr -.a-11•1n1;,_..~tDIMe ..._.two ... ldl'•mlDtbllDll.12' llll1r.1¢MMlo-ftlaa-.m
--· Tlletwolm~ ... ,~ .............. _ ......... ~ ..... --......... . .. ,--.................. ~----..... ,.
Daily Pilot
GIRLS GOLF
Tars' Hunt
gets berth
•Newport Harbor
golfe r will compete
Nov. 21 in CIF tourney.
NEWPORT BEACH -
Newport Harbor High junior
Kelly. Hunt will compete for
the third time in the CIF indi-
vidual girls goU tournament,
scheduled Nov. 21 at Mission
Lakes Country Club in Desert
Hot Springs.
Hunt qualified as an alter-
nate, then received the bid
wh en a competitor · from
Irvine High d ropped out,
Newport Harbor Coach Jim
Warren said.
She will join Corona del
Mar High seniors Taylor
McCormick and Allison
Schauppne r in the event.
YOUTH TENNIS
Corum among Costa
Mesa junior satellite
tournament winners
• Area products
Gingold, Van Lenven
also take tennis titles.
COSTA lv1ESA -Cbartle
Corum of Costa Mesa defeated
Parker Kelley of Manhattan
Beach, 6-0, 6-2. in the boys
8-year-old division finals
Sunday in the 13th annual
Costa Mesa Junior Satellite
Tournament at the Costa
Mesa Tennis Center.
In the boys 14s, Corona
del Mar's Nicholas Gtngold
knocked off Andrew Nguyen
of Fountain Valley, 6-1, 6-0,
for the championship.
Costa Mesa's Karina Van
Lenven won the girls 12s title
with a 6-4, 6-4 victory over
Stephanie Langer (Irvine).
SPORTS 'Nednetday. Na..mber 8, 2000 7
MO IOLDlllG IACI OCC ToSblba Cl•llk scholarship fund
extended to Newport-Mesa District
• Four local high schoOl students will receive
a $2,500 grant. as well as a Toshiba computer.
· NEWPORT BEACH -Now lD Us secood 10Lf year, the 1o.b:lbe Senior aa.ic Scholarship
Fund ii e.zpanding to beneftl tbe Joe.al high
schools.
The scbolanbips, which indude a $2,500 grant and
Toshiba computer, will be presented to one senior from
each of the four bAgb schools in the Newport-Mesa Unified
School I>istrid.
In 2000, the scbolanhip's inaugural year, it benefited
five schools in the Irvine Unified SdtOOI Distrlct. Both dis·
tricts will have redpi .. ts in 2001. ·
The program ii a joint effort by the tournament title
sponsor and operator, H90Q Hospital.
Applications for the Toshiba Senior Classic Scbolanlhip
Fund are now available ln the counseling departments of
the designated high schools -Newport Harbor. Corona
del Mar, Est.and.a and Costa Mesa.
To be considered, applicants must be a high school
senior, rank in the upper half of their graduating class,
receive two recommendations from sChool representatives,
and demonstrate leadership and/or involvement in
extracuhicular activities or community service.
DON LEACH I DAILY PllOT
Orange Coast's Matt Moseley {9) maintains control as
E,flcb school has been asked to nominate at least two
candidates by Jan. 27, 2001. Scholarship winners will be
announced Feb. 27 at the Toshiba Senior Cassie Commu-
nity Breakfast a Santa Ana College defender tries to hold him back
ln Monday's Orange Empire Conference men's soccer
duel on the OCC campus. Coast snapped Santa Ana's
70-game unbeaten streak with a 3-2 OEC triumph.
The seventh annual $1.4 million Senior PGA Tour
event. hosted by Newport Beach Country Cub, is Feb. 26
through March 4. Details: (949) 515-4840.
Riptide hammers Tustin twice
•Girls under 15 travel team
rips 19 hits in doubleheader,
winning, 14-4, and 12-1.
The Riptide, a girls BOBBY SOX
under 15 traveling fast-
pitch softball team from the Pacific
Coast Bobby Sox, crushed Tustin, 14-4,
and, 12-1, Saturday in a doubleheader.
In the opener, Ann Marie Topps hit
two doubles and a triple, while Lauren
Gega and Jullanne Bass had two hits
apiece. After an Amie Benjamin home
run and an RBI double by Darci
Pennington tied the game at 2-2, the
Riptide sent 13 batters to the plate and
scored nine times in the fourth inning.
ln the second game, the Riptide
jumped out to an 11-0 lead after two
YOUTH SPORTS
innings and never looked back. Topps
went 3 for 5 wilh five RBis, while Jen-
n1fer Gummerman, Sasha Grumrpan
and Kelly Pfeifer each added key ruts.
Newport falls to MV, 6-1
The Newport ROLLER HOCKEY
Harbor club roller
hockey team was defeated by Mission
Viejo, 6-1 . Chase Kelly provided lhe
lone goal for Newport, while Guy
Vacker, Jason Spenser, Calvin
Anderson and Jules Bates put together
strong offensive support.
On defense, Kelly, Alex Whitesides,
Vincent Mungo and Jeremy Truelove
led the way for Newport.
Eight in row fo r OCU Rush
Girls under 12 team CLUB SOCCER blanks Arsenal Red of
Ontario, 2-0.
The Orange Coast United Rush girls
under 12 club soccer team won its
eighth straight contest by beating
Arsenal Red of Ontario, 2-0, on Saturday.
Robin Ibbetson opened the scoring
in the second half with a goal off a pass
from Cindy Mendoza. lWo minutes
later. Mendoza scored off a pass from
Ibbetson.
Brittany Koster, Courtney Anderson,
Amy Staudinger and Jaque Anderson
provided offensive support for the Rush,
while Amanda Shaw, Tort Rocke, Elyse
VanI..eer, J ennifer Powell, Samantha
Castillo, Sasha Key, Chelsea Wisdom
and Brianna Baker led the defense.
Dar•ullAw '@
Gurr• c.o.sr
ala CIDUN'lllY
JC WOMEWS SOCCER
Pirates fall
to Don~, 3-0
•Tuesday's loss drops
OCC to fourth; playoffs
are not a guarantee.
SANTA ANA -The
Orange Coast College
women's soccer team must
now wait for an invitation to
the Southern California
Regional Playoffs following
Tuesday's 3-0 Orange Empire
Conference loss to host Santa
Ana.
The loss drops the Pirates
(14-8-1, 9-5 in conference) to
fourth place in the OEC
standings.
A win would have given
OCC second place in confer-
ence and an almost cerlaln
tnp to the playoffs.
Following a scoreless first
hall, the Dons ( 14-4-5, 10-2-2)
scored two goals by Ana
Medina (66th minute) and
Ana Velazquez (68th minute).
lWelve minutes later Med-
ina added an insurance goal
to complete the sconng. ,
Goalkeeper Amanda Bell
had seven saves for the
Pirates.
NICE__.
IB11MUWAY
Mortuary 1t Chapel
C""'8llon
11 o Broedway
Costa Mesa
M2-91&o
l)i,lOlllll ( ~~l'~kct
I ' ' 1.11• I ... p' I
•••'11 '\l,I ... \">\\\
I
I
STARTING
ANEW
BUSINESS!;
'
.... -· -
, • '. '· I I I
• ii
-Deadllnes -
• Monday ............... Friday S:OOpm
Tuesday ............. Monday S:OOpm
H1111.., und clra<Jliurs nN iwhjrrt 111
d11111gr wi1hout uoticr. The p11hlisl1t·r
rrs1·rw·s tltr riµht to r1·11sor. 1·l'dll:i:.ify.
J'f\ri!'C or rcj<'cl 1my rla'lsifird
u1h·rr1i:ic•111c11t. Plt·u~· rq111rt uu~ rrror
th111 mny Ix· in ~our rlo .. silii·<l utl
i11111u~liu1rly. Tlw Duily Pilot urrqll.,
110 liuhil itv for um 1·nw i11 u11
By Fax
(949) 63 1-6594
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By MalllbJ Person:
330 West Ba'' Street
Costa Mesn. (;A 92627
.\t 'Xrt.1111n Rivet. & Ba~ SI.
Wednesday ........ Tuesday 5:00pm
Thurs;lay ...... Wednesday 5:00pm . .
u1lvPrli:,<'nlt'lll (or \\hie·li ii 1111.1~ lu·
1t·:.ponqihl1• t'\('C'fll for 1lw f'll!-1 nr tlll'
' .,part· 1wt11ully rx·fupird h) 1111' rrmr.
(Plt·uM' i11d111le your oamc 111111 pl1ol!.t' 11t11nbr,r
ruul \\ 1''11 ('1111 ) 011 hurl wi1h u pric•t 111101r.)
Hours · Friday ............. Thursday 5:00pm
I Cmlit can oulv II(· 111111\\ rd for 1111·
fir-.1 i11..,1•rtio11. Telephone 8:30am-5:00pm
Monday-Friday
Walk-In 8:30am-5:00pm
·Monday-Friday Saturday .............. Friday S:OOpm
Index
, .... -.
• .•• , r , ' g
',~ : ..
Gl EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
All real estate advertJsmo In t111s newspaper Is subject
to the federal fJir HouslOQ
Act ot 1968 as amended
which makes It illegal 10
a<lverllse "any preference,
limita!Jon or diSCnminaUon
baS8d on race. cot or. reM<i· Ion. sex, llandlcap. fam111a1
status or national oriQin, or
an intention to malre any such prelerence. limitation or dlscnm1nauon •
This newspaper wlll not knowingly accept any
adverHsemen1 ror real
esllle wtuch is In violation
of the law Our readers are
hereby informed thal all dWell•OOS advertised In this
n~r are available on
111 equal opportunity basis.
To complain of cllscrimt·
natlOll. call HUD loll free a! 1-800-424-8590
1 HOUSE&ICONDOS FOR SALE GENERAL
•V.A.• so llOMI ·so llOml
FREE COUNSELING
FRH UST OF HOMES
HUDNAREPOS
7t4-53'4500
. • T . . •, .. ,
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1. 15 420 1L'1
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101 • 216 430·461
_ ... -;.-
• ' 4 . .... -470 ·471
• ~.6, a
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690. 697
...... .............. ., •. __
Reach 80,000 Homes Each Week
For Onty $28 per week (4 wk, min.)
Call Lonal• at 642·5671 x.24
22 HOUSE9.fCONDOS ·FOR SALE IRYINE
75 N:Oll! PROPERTY UNITSISALE 1 1'°~J 1 113 ~11 •-JJ 414 -11·~11 ·~1 1 ·~1 . COSTA llESA . . lllPORT COAST . HOSTING OPPORTUNITY. MOVlffO SALE
Woodbridge Location by C.M. FOURPLEX For Siie
pools & 5911s, 28< plus deli The . 5prc;e Slieets•. Mesi
(could be tlllrd bdrm) nice Verde's btst rental neigh·
pnvale comer lo! w/lenclng. botf1ood. New on the mBIMt
2,58a, Vllited ceits, Fp, 2c al $549,000. Cd N'igel, agl
8tl garage $295,000. Monie '°' details. 94g.~32S0
Ruggieri, Agt949-J00.8600 ------------
1
32 HOUSE~ 1 I 11°cosrA = I
. ~BEACH . Slwp CIMn 2Br !Ba,
single gar, near shops alld
Abaolult Bea1 Valutl OCC. $895/Mo. VACAfff
Gated Medrtr 3Br 2.SBa 714-540-f151 agt
home or bay w/oonvn f>OO! & """ EASTSIOf! BACK BAY spa, ody $449,900 Palrick ....
949-BSS-9705 AQI. =-~ w"ir. S::
BEACH GIANT NO PETS .... 949-631-7113
7Br 4Ba, 3 car garage
$824,900 •COSTA MESA'S BEST•
Junk>! t bedroom and a
Open 'frNI heart alld your ARCHITECTURAL urge E'Sldt 3Br 2.SBa 38r Houle lam rm, Fp, 111. home 10 an exchange 11U-DIGES1 DESIGNER
Townhome Back Bay view, yard & BB-i!. COIMl pool, dlotl They bring spending FURNISHING $150,000 Oii oew ~ w/d hie~. spa, 2 cat gar. Avail Nov 15 money, Insurance. speak 3-yr old clnlng room and
2c a" gar, $2000/Mo, S3500!Mo. !M9-644-4426 good Eng Ir sh, IMrig room fumi!ure tor
949·e42·6048 • w II I en r o II In 12· 15'1(, ol wholeslle cost
2Br 2Bt "The Summit" h I g h achoo I . Kteisl 11.piece French !Oft E SIDE CM btlutlfut 2br Large airy condo. 1 yell 1·888·552·9872. ifon pelio tet, B & 0 ErilM· 2bl tiom.. Av1ll lrnmtd. tease. no 9ITlfu'slpets. (CAL 'SCAN) talnment sys1em, Orlando $130Mit0 Agt Ritt Wide $2150l'Mo. 94M22·5837 or AB'a SaSIOOe Red
149-720-7311 949-227-2272 for showing I I sunoii. Bact:ati~ elC .. 402 LOST a ean for IDOOintment any·
Mesa Vlfdl 3°' 2.5Bt nice I I FOUND lime. 949-'i21-42n Must condo, lmmed avad. Need 202 ROOMS . . .. be rr ~I 1-12 r.:: ~ $~:4= FOR AEtfT Found Ortngt U. Mini MA ER
CkA> Houle lllWI. then ceK Cit 10f24. Vlelnl1y of Solld Ou Antique repio-
Pelllck 949-856-9705, !QI. Suguloaf/Stonecrau ductlon dining room ~.
Moltl '° F.V • ..c.lt 71+!39=7011 claw teeVpedulal 48~ MANAGERS roul)(f. wllmea (72-48 • SPECIALt: Lott Cat, black collar I OYal) 6 chlira, (2 ann 4 lide) "9. Medi Meda. Rtwwd cervtd . pelOOQ btok. xtnc $154.00+ tax 'fMv SotlnGdtltlW'"*• H.B. COl\d. S80Q, 714-968-9421 (Must pr....c lhil Ad) 7t~ Of 309'31&2 . ..... .
On The Water
Amazing low Price
1 bedrooln, quiet g.eted • 4br ~ CW-dHac, *
communily wlpod & lemlis ~ely renovated · ~ :i ~ Loet Dog 18yr old t.male
1
.. ~ I landsclP'd gtounds Grey/btk CoclcatloO Nov. LIVESTOC~ F~TURES, 24-Hour 2nd, needl medcetiori Vic . Lobby/Oirecl dlal Ocean Blvd., CdM tewanl
phones/Free HBO. 949-675-3311. 91675-2311
ESPN & Oise/Pool &
Easy access to fwy, beach avaJtabte now, $2395/mo
and maJs 714-557-oo75 ---"14_,H'-=-544088'-==--Agent 94!H23-8120 ------------Sllldlo ~ (mid P8111t1)
SCOTTS
LAGUNA NIGUEL
Now Hiring
ALL POSITIONS UP TO S12/HOUR
INTERVIEWS BEING HELD DAILY
BETWEEN 9:00AM TO 8:00PM
3SOo BRISTOL ST., COSTA MESA, CA
*PRIOR RESTAURANT EXPERIENCE PREFERRED
w/vautted ce1ls, sm yard, avail N<w 20, tst, last & dep,
132 APTS
NEWPORT BEACH Jacuzzi, Guest laUll' I '20 GARAGE I cty Cloee to 405 & 55 SALES
Local kltt.nl, Cits, clop
fof edoption every We I Sun'• noon-41>1'11 Fuhlon .. ________ .._ ___ ......,_
lellncl ANIMA.l NETWORK
$7SOIMo. 949-675-9360 ~======
Beach Cottage
$3~~~~
Cl111lc Showpiece
S569K Welk To Sand
Agent 949-723-8120
Excftlng Condo on ,,,. W•IW Great ViflW cl Rhine
Channel & Ocean, 2Br
2.5Ba. uc:vnty & doorman,
$995,000. A.faiy Lou Klehler,
agt, 94U75-~700
Oceenfront Cape Cod
New on Market Agent 94H73483
OPEN SUN 1-4
Baell Bay Vu Compound
SAM Sl,495,000-1,750,000
Gated old Spanish Mallsion
OY9f 5500 sl, 5c gar, llptl,
pool, hrdWd flra, OYlf 1/3 ecn. MIJ9I see this UIUll8I
property. Owner/Agent . 94!1·642-9666
LMge Ftmlly Home on a
9200 " lot <48f•, 3.58tfl. atlldy. fOllllll livlng rOOf'N
cjr1ng room, $899,000. ~ Llbesh. !QI. ~
Fwy1. Uln'I from O,C,
Fafrgrds, college and
bdls, Walking dis·
tance to shops Ind
restauranta
COSTA MESA
MOTOR INN 'lZT7 Harbor Blvd
Pllone MH45-Cl40
Info M ..... 2271
www.1nt1111l111tworlt.org
CM/Multl-COndo Sale! I I Sit 81-12p -lll1ERCIWDll 2400 Elden Ave. (park· WANTED
Ing lot) • Santa lubel L.. ---·--------~-
COAST COIN HEEDS
OLD COIHSI Gold, sivtf,
jeweky. watches, anhqun. collec!!b!ff 949-642·9'4 7.
ti UOHEL TRAINS " W111ted BroltM'Comolele
$$Paid$$ Private Party
71 .. 2M-719S
TOP SS$/AECORDSI
Jazz, R & B. ~ Rook,
tlo, SO'• & ws MIKE 94N45-7505
CUBA CULTURAL
TRAVEL
Costa Mesa Based tour operator seeks
OFFICE MANAGER
$30,000+ a year starting, based oo
experience.
Applicant must be bilingual in Spanish (spea
and write) proficient with Ovlckbooks and
Microsoft Office, detail oriented with strong
organizational and record keeping skills.
can ~chacl at (949) 646-1nt
HUllllll Rffourote RECEPTIOHIST Frr
Pettonllll Commi..i-, Data entry stills, Won! & Ocean View Schoel OieCrlct Excel rwquired. lentfltll
Commlsllonera MM ae VEG FRESH FARMS
membe11 ot a 3-membtr 500 EM1 01111get101pa,
p11aonnel cornmlaslon. Alwheim. Call JOr appt:
Mettl monlhly. 18lj)C)nlbe _---!.7.:..;:1"4:;.:::·'4<46=·8~800~tor ~ policy, ICla
as an appellant body on --------
nonteaching ~· dis-Ciptinlllln llltlng -we•.
netds to reside within
OcHn View District.
Appllcltlon detcllnt Mon., Nov. 20, 2000 at 4;30pm,
For more Info Clll chclor.
Claulfied Ptraonnet at
71W47-2561 ext. 1400
Retell TEUSCHER CHOCOLATES a CAFE
Were ~ for exp'd
... people for °"' new •tot• opening
aoon It Fllhlon le. We
WI/II tun & lnllQtllc people lof F/PT. Ring
ue II Mf.nMI01 IO
HI 14) lnttMewt
PtMM be --that the llatlnga In thlt
cattgoly may '*"*" you to cell a too
number In which
thtrt It a cMrtt "" mlnu1e.
Ml II MARS
$3,000IMO. (realistic)
20 Vending silea, no
comptlttlon, 6 hre/mo,
H ,800 ~Hh required
1=8()().29M601 (24tva.)
INC 500 parllll ~ny "°'*I new co, on the io.
temet, M tuldl on 11-27
eptdal . pr .. teunch Qpply. ~NOW 1:f77 .. 1Mtlt
• Doily Pilot I -
D YES, IEU. MY CAR
-, ---------
Run your ad In the IGtm.,..,.-----------
Newport Beach-
Costa Mesa Daily
Pilot and the
Hunting Beach-
Fountain valley
Independent to
reach over 100,000
homeS. Fax us this ,,_o.ct~a-fonn with your credit .,. __ ..,..,.. ____ MacW---
card #or mail with I 8:;-8::::=. 8~"":.. Pru---a ....... a---......a-..~ a check today! 8: = g :::..1:" 8:::"""..:.
Run for a week! If 0 "-0 '-._ 0 "'"-. ., ..... g~ ..... s= a:;::::=.!!..-:: your car does not -·a...-m•-•°""'-°'_, sell. we'll run rt for l __ ~.!"'~-~·'= ~ .. .:...-_.-.. __
another week Flt&! TM:l.Jlo:ln •
A1tforJusts10·. -!!~!uvt 1!!..<k~l!..4.£~
CADLl.AC CAT!RA ..
low 1111, lllOOIW'OOf.t..... co (004712) wi.-NAIERS
C7U)54H100
CADILLAC CATERA 'f1 llllct. low 1111, pi1Mlnel
(1414CM) 111,• NABERS (714)540:1100
CADLl.AC DEVLLE '00 low 1111t ml. SMr ....... (224746) 132,988 NABERS
(714)540:1100
Cac11ac s.vta. m w
1• ml, .... pM!i, rNnt
('*31) 125.111 NABl!RS (714~t100
Chevy Altro Cargo Van
'91 ~.AT, Pio llbt, tlb,
AIC. 11111-fm, 120k ml, $4200
949· 722· 1170
CORVETTE 1984
22k Miles, Uke New, All Opclon1 $7, 750
94MS0.71SO
CORVmE 1995
S apd, 73k Ml, $17,750
94M50-71SO
CORVmE 1995
S apd, 7311 Ml, $17,750
94M50-71SO
DATSUN 280Z 75
57 ,000 origNlll mt. auto tic.
II t'IOClldl, rlll rel! 111111>' p ,950. 949-7S3029
THE RJOHT11ME
NOfth-Soulh vulnerable. South deal~.
NORTH
•962 ~ A74
0 QJ95l
•73 WEST •OJ 1015 I:' /198 0 7
•J986 SOUTH
•AK3 ., K65 o K43
• AKS2
~ •7 4
ti Q93l
O A 1086
•Q104
The blddina: SOUTH WFST NORTH F:AST ,._ 2NT P-JNT .... Pus
Opcrung lead: Queen of •
The lhrust and p:ury of a good
declarer and a fine defender is fasci-rwina. Even !his seemingly pedestri-
an hand contained a 11ic1ical baule.
The auction was routine. With an
all-prune hand, South was well with-
in the range for an opcrung bid of 1wo
no trump, and North had ample 10 rai~ 10 g1me but not enou~ to COO·
Sider lam.
Wesl led the queen of spades and
declarer was faced wnh llll 1mmedia1e
problem: Should, South hold up one
round on the ooenlna lead? No way. A ibi.ft to beartl or clubs
miah• prove ca1astrophic and, ii
spades were 4-3, the suJt ~no d\reat, if Jpedes WQ'e S.2, East could
be &ivcn the lead Wllh impunity
since, after the second round of the
suit, llW ddeodcr would have no sJ>ldc 10 return. Declarer won with !he kin . U ~y. when trying lO set up a ~Ull II ~ ri&l\I IO Ir.Id ioWard the band
Wllh IWO bonon. Hcfe, however, a
bad dwnond 91)111 camed no problem
if West held the ~· SO declarer lhou~lfully led the klna or dimnonds
at trick IWO. II WU WI 01 lUtn LO
shine -the king was allowed to hold
the trick. Declarer contlnl.lt'Jd wilh a
diamond. ww diJcardlna a heart.
and. had an honor been played from
dummy, P.ast would have ducked
again and declaier would have been unable IO come IO more than 1wo
lriclts in the sµi1 and c1aht overall.
Bui South coumcn:d cfegantly by
playing low from the table. forcing
Easl LO win the trick.
The spade return was lakcn wilh
the ace and a diamond to the ,acJt r~ the acc. SlllCC the ace of hcaru
Wit.\ sull on the bollrd as 1111 enlry to
the e'111blishcd diamonds. declarer emerged with nine tricks.
FORD MUSTAHG '98
VI, low ml. 5 Spd. lllv
MAZDA MX6 '91 llilvtf.tlue Oldlmobllt Cutlaa W
(ZHM4) S15,tee NABERS
(714)$40=!100
FORD WINOSTAR '96
7 pasHnger, low ITltles.
belol. exot4tenl condition' (AZlJ19) $8.988 NABERS (714 )540-9100
inl. good cond. moon-roof, Wht, low mi. non-smoker
d auto, asking $3750/obo (355812) $10.988
cal Chad 94!H~ HABEAS
~ 190E 23 '86 (714 )540-!100
°'11 b/AJ/gry 11'11, al'llf. •· pw. RANGE ROVER '.-I ""°· cass. ra '*· l46k Hae everything, fully ll1I $5300 obo &49-548-39()() loaded lnllde Ind out.
MercedM MO Sl 'II $5!0(¥obo MM7S.1300
Dark d\an:oal, showtoom
Fonl Btunco XL T .. ISUZU TROOPER '19
fllll alze, wtlite/WI lthr, 4X4, full ~. AC, ,_
4311 1111, lllUlt -$21,000 """' & twaka S40CXllobo
2 IOpl 11411 F-.y mill. TOYOTA 4-ffUNHER '91
$16.995 obo 949-719-2311 4 ... aulD. dlll oonc1. 12a
..._.. 5eO Sl... 1111. whil•. oogrnel -
Showroom cond. chrome $7995.'0bo 9'19-548-383&
Mlc:hllnl. 2 topl, ill i.i. lllw, firm. MM73-27.-I MM75-l300
FOAO CONTOUR '98
Full power, AC, cnilM,
... OOftCL l5IOCWOBO MM75-1300
FORD EXPU>AER 115
LTD, low mlee, lelfler,
moonrocl IOd '"°"' (849841) $14,988 NABERS
(714l540=!100
LANO ROVER
DISCOVERY '94
83K ml, 19,500.
Mt-SSO. 7160
Lexue 300 Coupe '92
53k ml. always gaiaged,
ahowfoom new. many ••· .,.. 111,500 714-641~
local $14,950 714-7Sl·2464 3281 'f7
2-<loof. GIMfV"Send M3 '97 (11"34265) 121.9815 4-dr=c ""wh.it.M.Alb&adl.._. STt.AUHG BMW
(IE11 • $32.115 _ __,M:;:;M4:-=;::..W.:.:IOO=---AUHG BMW
MMU-5900
SELL
vaur unwanted
ltema through cia..ifled
5211 ..
4-door, Alpine ~
(IW41525) 537.9815
Smt.JNG BMW
MM.45-5900
fbE, fkTH 1lfJ IUIESS
~ .....
HOME flair • ,,,.,.~
Rtgluf1/Refurbisfi
Poromln • Fibefglau Sinks • Showen
Councen
949-64S-n23
an
: • 1."'' , '"' (' I -I r /
r
1-800-559-7181
rr--·~-----. -.,
I
""' .. MAI-. Tc.-(
·~l"9r* .......
•Tt U.t 1~ ......... ,
•WO..-L& ,_. Ntwa...:.. c:-FREE ESTIMATE-.
<9t9tz22. 7478
' -~--..
I I
Lt 0 I &.-W. .............. ......... ,...,.., ........ ,.
PUBLIC .
NOTICE
The c.M. Public-U ti llt I H Com-milllon REQUIRES '* .. u..d ...... hokl goods lnCMrl 11Mt ttltlf P.U.C. tll T IUnblt; .,_
lfld c:ftdwl prtnl
tlllrT.C.P .........
Intl ......... ''°""""' ... . .........
llY d •..... ho u-:c-~
COlllllON
714-tll-4111
Wednetday, November 8, 2000 • 9·
-.-....~~To~oA~Y~'s .......... ..._·I CROSSWORD PUZZLE _
691 TRUCK TOPS
/ACCESSORIES
LlllT!bw racti I« T oyoUI
T100 lhef'l-bed $200 obo
Mt-631·3100.
SELL YOUR CAR
IN CLASSIFIED
1"'~botftood
l'fumb.rl
c.All & .... ~
QINMO SPICW..ST
TWEEDY l'lUMltNG
949-445--2352
-3C -ALL ORAM U~M:lOGGED
Can't seem to
get to all those
repair jobs
around the house?
Let the Clauffled
Service Directory
help yoo find
rellable help.
·-··--··-·--~·~-. "°"' l'Ollm-714-895-6677
--~~ ...... Ct ..... ~ ......
~---f_.r.-··
~··.
# • fl# • • , •
10 Wednesday, November 8, 2000
' '
. . . . .
\.'\ I '' \ I ", ( ( ) I< \ ', \ I I ( I ' I I
YOU 'LL LOVE .THE .WA RR ANTY
AT FIRST S I G HT TOO .
(
After rev iewing 21 pre-owned vehicle programs, IntelliChoice• named Jaguar Select Edition the
country's Best Certified Pre-Owned Program and Best Pre-Owned Warranty.•
• 6-year/100,000-mile
warranty
• 120-point cosmetic &
mechanical inspection
• 24-hour roadside
assistance
• Financing and leasing
option
• Available at · 1
authorized Jaguar ~
dealers only _ ~
Daily Pilot
JAGUAR ·
SELECT E DITIO N
PRE-OWNED AUTOMOBILES ,
Bauer Jaguar
1455 South Auto Mall Drive
Santa Ana • 55 Freeway at Edinger
714·953·4800 • wwW.bauerjaguar.com
ea..r.,o u.dudcs remaining new-car warranty plw the Select. F.d~n premium wunnty, which pnwideo ""'""F IOr 1111 ldditbuil 2 .,..,.i 50,000 mllll on elltllile
t 996 iDodel year vehicles or newer. Cove~ for 1995 model year vchid~ will differ. See your daler fot clccaila oa mil limiuid COWi~ Not aD can tD be .W • Ma
Edidoa. •JauelliGhoice Inc., www.intellichoice.mm, September 1999 review of 21 manufaaurer prognma. ,.._ ded for lat place. Por men infaf•lt'Dllf al 1-IOO 4
JAGUAR or visit www.jaguai:.com/ua. 02000 Jagaar Can.