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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-11-10 - Orange Coast Pilot. ·.· .. ·: . ... . . . .. ··: ... : . . . . . . .. ....... IPOITS PIEP FOOTllll Estancia ..................... 62 Laguna Beach ............ 23 Northwood .................. 7 eost. Mesa ............... 57 For complete coverage, see Sports, Page 7 ( SERVING THE NEWPORT -ME.SA COMMUNmES SINCE 1907 . ... . . . . ON 1HE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2000 ·Cost per vote was a Greenlight ·special •Supporters of the victorious growth-control measure also won when it came to finding value in the voters. Malthls Wlnkler OAl\.Y PILOT NEWPORT BEACH -For $3.50. you'd be lucky to get a fast food •val· ue meal.• Those two amounts represent the price tags for "yes• votes for each of the two growth-control measures on last Tuesday's election ballot. Having spent just $65,163, Green- light supporters got the much better deal per vote, compared to backers of Measure T, who spent $378,324. For $37.94, you can get 10 of them and Uµow a kids' birthday party. Or buy the kid two CDs as a present instead. The Greenlight initiative, which will put before a citywide vote any Coyote Fortunate U Chihuahua escapes run-in with coyote Malthls Winkler OAA.Y PILOT H eidi may not guard Taco Bell chalupas, but when it comes to defending her own life, the 6- year-old Chihuahua is every bit as heroic as her famous TV counterpart. After escaping from her owner's Har- bor Ridge home last week, Heidi came face to face with a coyote. Since coyotes give birth to their offspring in February or March, the young animals are ready to go hunting for food by this ti.me of year. "(Heidi's younger sister] Gidget came back screaming at the top of her lungs.· "/don't knowhow she got home. She was in bad shape and could hardly walk. She was a mess -sticky and icky." said Daidra Tillman, a real estate broker, as she recounted the night of Heidi's disap- pearance. "I knew something was wrong." Still immature in their hunting skills, young coyotes tend to attack domestic ani- mals, such as cats and small dogs like Heidi, rather than wildlife, animal control officials said. -Daldra While an encounter Tiiiman with a coyote would ------likely result in her death, the dog was recovering at home Monday from about a dozeri puncture wounds. But for two days, 1lllman had pretty much given up on seeing her dog again. •1 thought she was dead meat and had given up," 1U.lman said, turning to.Gid- get, who'd cuddled up on her lap. "Yeah, we thought we lost her, didn't we?• Then, as Tillman was working on her computer in the study, an excited Gidget came running into the room and led nll- man to the front door. "And there was Heidi,• 1lllman said. "I don't know how she got home. She was in bad shape and could hardly walk. She was a mess -sticky and icky.• development that allows an increase of more than 100 pea~-hour car trips or dwelling units or 40,000 square feet over the general plan allowance, passed with 63.4 % of the vote. Defeated Measure T proponents, who had suggested adding parts of the city's traffic phasing ordinance to the City Charter, used a bit of dark . humor to comment on the higher price they had to pay per vote. "So we were only off our goal by six cents,· said a joking Cltuence Turner, co-chainnan of the campaign. Only 35.1 % of residents favored Mea- sure T. Turner said Greenlight supporters had done a "very good job" in orga- nizing grass-roots support. ·1 know what it takes to do a grass- roots campaign,• he said. "My hat goes off to those people.• But switching gears, he added that Greenlight had benefited from many volunteers donating their time to the campaign. SEE COST PAGE 5 ,. "' •H1·•-T Money spent: "Yes" votes: Price per vote: .,, ••-s $378,324 9,972 . $37.94 Money spent: S65, 163 "Yes" votes: 18,626 Prke per vote: $3.50 Future of job center uncertain •Councilman-elect Chris Steel made closing Costa Mesa center central theme to campaign; loss of support could cripple project. Jennifer Kho DAILY PILOT COSTA MESA -With the election of Chns Steel to the Qty Council, the city's job center could be in jeopardy of losing city funchng. Throughout his campaign, Steel targeted the job center -where day laborers and temporary workers meet with employers - for removal from the city budget. The city opened the center more than 10 years ago to keep day laborers from asking for wor~ on street comers and parks. "The city should not fund the job center,· said Steel, who said the center attracts illegal immigrants and dnves legal residents out of SEE CENTER PAGE 5 OCCMuslim students stage demonstration • After college officials deny use of campus facility for program, group holds 'anti-Zionist' protest in quad. Dffpa Bharath DAILY PILOT r ORANGE COAST COLI.EGE -Rebgious and political tensions in the Middle East boiled over onto campus Thursday afternoon when about 20 students from the Muslim Stu- dents Assn. staged an •anti-Zionist" demon- stration in the •tree speech area• of the quad. 111lman raced her wounded dog to a / veterinarian, who kept her under obser- vation for the night. l't«>TOS IV GREG fllY I DMY "OT Heidi, a 6-year·old chlbuahua. foregt0und. recently survived a coyote attack when she wandered away from her Newport Beach home. Owner Daldra 11llman was alerted to the problem when Heidi's lister Gidget. left. ran home and barked franU- cally. Top photo, Heidi wean the battle ICUS of her encounter with the coyote. Tue students held signs that read • ADti- Israel. • lt Anti-oppression• and •we fear no one but Allah• as they walked from Harbor Boulevard and Merrimac Way to their campus. College officiab last week denied the group use of rooms on campus for the program SEE HEIDI PAGE 5 ... r &a ~ Orange Co.st College will hold Its lOttl .,,,.... F•ll N9edle Arts F.W fu>m 9 •.m. to 6 p.m. today and I e.m. to 5 p.m. Slturd.y on 1he c.npus. 2701 Fllnli9w "°9d. Costa Mesa. About UO woikthopi and ......,. focuUng on fashk>n des9\ llWlng, ~ ,.. .u and Image consulting will be oftftd. (71~ 412.,.,_ Ext. 1. • SEE STUDENTS MGE 5 --0.------' .... I PIU.-ES I SMIS 1 2 Friday, NoYember 10, 2000 .· ••••••~ TOllliHT Doily Pilot CHECK IT OUT Taste internationtAl jftlvor . . with the5e global cookbooks C an't get away to that ter- rific trattoria or rabulous forei~ bistro? Do the next best thing with multicul· tural cu.linaJy adventures in your own kitchen, laupched by cookbooks from Newport libraries. If you're tempted by •a repertoire of simple, delicious and feisty" dishes, check out the flavors loving region. U your idea of gastronotny extends to the Par East, look for a fusion of Asian, American and European tastes in •Btue Ginger,• by popular restaura- teur and Food Network cook- ing show host Ming 'JSai. Named Chef of the Year by Esquire magazine in 1998, the Emmy Award-winning star serves up innovative cross-cul- tural dishes and tips for work- ing with unfamiliar ingredients in his introduction to East-West cooking. Learn how to combine other intriguing flavors with Corinne Ttang's • AutbenUc Vietnamese Cooking.• Along with instruc- tions for stich classic dishes as spring rolls and leinongrass prawns, find mail-order sources and Web sites for securing hard-to-find items and personal anecdotes PHOTOS BY SEAN HUER I OAll.V Pl.QT Becoming part of the scenery, Mlllfl Rouse rehearses part of hls multl-medla opera. "FaWng Kansas• at the of Jami.e Oliver, England's newest culinary wonder boy, in "lbe Naked Chef.• Along with 120 recipes based on the BBC television cooking show host's philosophy of stripping down recipes to basics, there are mouthwatering photographs of traditional English favorites and international comfort foods in this hip approach to healthy home cooking. from a food writer raised by a French mother anda Chinese father in this new volume. Orange County Performing Arts Center In Costa Mesa. · A different kind of Venture deeper into Europe with "Italy Anywhere,• Lori de Mori's collection of Tuscan recipes that have been tested in Locanda Veneta, Ca' Brea and her three other award-wm· ning Los Angeles restaurants. The American expatria\e includes charming stories about grape harvests, the proper way to cook pasta and aspects of Mikel Rouse's multimedia 'Failing Kansas' retells 'In Cold Blood' Italian food in her new treatise to a way of life that eludes most Americans. U the contrasting tastes of Thai cuisine appeal, check out • Craddng the Coconut· by Su-Mei Yu, owner of San Diego's Saffron Restaurant. The sumptuous feast for both seri- ous and armchair cooks includes a fascinating look at the history and philosophy of traditional Thai cooking. After all this exotic fare, you may be ready for dishes more familiar to most Southern Cali- fornians. Learn to prepare excellent enchiladas, a magnili· cent Mango Cooler and fabu- lous Dan with •Mmico: One Plate at a nme, • the newest offering from popular chef R.tch Bayless, featuring traditional and contemporary versions of many favorites from south of the border. Young Ch•ng DAILY PILOT M ikel Rouse's artistic response to 'Ihlman Capote's •1n Cold Blood• can safely be called unique. Whether you love it, bate it, understand it or don't, you'll walk away with an emotional charge, the composer said. And that's OK. He is the first to say hi~ work is not enter· taining. Called ·Failing Kansas,• Rouse's 80-minute multimedia opera will make its West Coast premiere this weekend.at the Orange County Performing Atts Center as part of the Eclectic Orange Festival. There is music. There is song. There are spoken words and seg- ments of film cut to fit the text. Like an opera, the piece works with a story line, music and a universal thetne. . Unlike an opera, there are no sopranos, no tenors, no altos and no orchestra. It's one man interacting live, his voice multitracked on tape again.st a video backdrop, coinciding with segments of music. Rouse uses a new technique be calls • counterpo· etry, • where multiple voices speak in strict metric counterpoint. Viewers might wonder whether the piece is, in fact, an opera, which is what Rouse calls it. They might not. They might think it's classical, or they might think it's rap. Reac· tions are up ih the air, for now, bQt last year's crowd for Rouse's West Coast premiere of the opera !.Den- nis Cleveland• proved one thing: "People didn't know what to expect," said Craddock Stropes, director of public relations for the Philharmonic Society of Orange County, which runs the festival. •1t•s definitely a departure from what people expect when they hear it's an opera.• This is one reason Rouse's work is part of the Eclectic Orange Festi- val, Stropes added. With the •Mag- ic Flute,• Mozart's musical falry-tale opera, showing through this week- end, ·Failing Kansas• is an interest- ing contrast. ·He's trying to challenge what we think of as opera,• Stropes said. •Co · · g people to try looking a e arts in ways they haven't fore.• To Rouse, his piece is a new art form, much like Capote's attempt to create the nonfiction novel. With •In Cold Blood,• which explored the 1959 murder of the Clutter fami· ly of Holcolm, Kan., Capote reacted to the killings. Rouse reacts with "Palling Kansas." "I was just very knocked out by the book,· said the Mlssourl native. "Richard Brooks had already made a great film. I didn't want to try to retell the story or anything, but I wanted to try to evoke the power, the spirituality." "Failing Kansas• is the first in his multimedia trilogy. The second is •Dennis Cleveland," an opera with singers in the audience that uses a live tape talk-show format. The third is "The End of Cinematics. • In front of a mike, in a black suit with a black shirt with nothlng in his possession but a water bottle at his feet, Rouse ran through the nine movements of "Palling Kansas• during rehearsal this wee!. , Video images designed by New FYI WHA"r. "Failing Kansas• WHEN: 8 p.m. today and Saturday WHERE: Founders Hall, Orange County Performing Arts Center, 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa con S18 CALL: (949) 553-2422 York film artist Cliff Baldwin flashed behind his still figure, accompanying his words. Scenes included the beams and supports of a bridge, the rear view mirror in a car, a carwash with a sign that announced "Only $6.95," and peo- ple talking. Most of the text was sung, some was said. It was compiled from tran- scripts from the murder trial, Pente- costal hymns popular in the Mid- west, diary entries and songs writ- ten by Perry Smith, one of the mur- dereri who was also a musician. The stage bad four mikes, arranged symmetrically, and Rouse moved from one to the next during different movements. "It shows a different sense of my relation to the scene," he said. "And different characters are speaking frOJll the mikes." "Pawlig Kansas" has already , been seen OD the East Coast. Reviews were positive, especially in the Midwest, which is odd, Rouse said. "It's so much about the middle of America," he said. •And I think "people respond to the emotional aspect of it, even if the technical end of it can be overwhelming: For cooks interested in a cui· sine that borrows from multiple culinary traditions, Gerald Hirgoyen's "The Basque Kitchen" features tempting recipes from the Pyre- nees. mustrated with photos of regions and dishes from both sides of the French-Spanish border, this offering from a Basque native named one of America's best chefs by "Food & Wine" magazine celebrates the unique cuisine of a food· BRIEFLY New play takes look at gun violence South Coast Repertory's 16th NewSCRipts season of staged play readings contin- ues at 7:30 p.m . Monday with a new play by Steven Druk- man titled "The Bullet Round." The commissioned work follow& a gun as it changes hands among trou- bled characten. Drukman is a frequent contributor to The New York Times, The Nation, The International Herald Tri· bune and other·publlcations. Neel Keller, associate artistic director of La Jolla Playhouse, will direct the piece. The cast ii yet to be announ~ed. nck- • OECX IT OUT is written by the staff of the Newport Beach Publk Ubrary. This week's column Is by Melissa Adams In collab«at.ion with June Pilsitz. All titles ITI8Y be reseNed from home or ofb computers by accessing the catalog at www.m-w portbeachllbrary.org. ets are $8. Information: (714) 708-5555. Pacific Symphony, union negotiations end The Pacific Symphony Orchestra recently ended negotiations on a new three· year collective bargaining agreement with the Orange County Musician's Assn., Local 1 of the American Federation of Musicians. The primary financial tenns in the contract, which ends Aug. 31, 2003, ·include wage increases of 3.5 %, 4.5% and 5%1 pension contribution increases of 2% over the life of the agreement and new procedures related to absences, chamber orchest:ta services and substitutes. READ£8S HOJ\JNE (949) 642-6086 CA 92626. c:owtght No news-. ..... lllustretlonl, edltorill mltW ot ~"' Mrtln an be ~without wrttt.n per- millkln of~ own.. WIATllll AID SUlf PO~CI FILES VOL M. NO. 261 ....... "'JOll• ON, ""'*"" Yaw DOCl990. w. SJ.~ Cltyldllor r·--. AlllilMf'll City ldltor •• ••IMMM. . ,...,,...., _all .. ....... JMl•RMCIC. ......... --,....,...., __ .._ ........ _,_ ... " ............ &AM IYl l ....... Record your comments about the Deily Pilot Of news tips. ADOIJE$$ Our...,_ Is 330 W. leySt.. C.0SU MIN,. CA 92627 • NQW TO llMlt U$ .QM II I n. Tlftill Orange County -lS2.f141 ........ a •D'led C9it9> W"'5671 =-(Mtt 642-021 ... ...,.u.,.., ,..,.CMf) 57~ ...... lpartl ,. (Mt) ..... ,70 loftlll: dllltypllcdlatlm• ~ ........ ...... OfllClt CM9) 142411 ...... P• (Mt)~MU• ~-,.....~-­• ....,_ .. &.-,.......,..,.. ___ Ck,. ..... -- ~ e.lbol 52147 CoroN del Mat 52147 c.o.ta Mesa 51147 ~leed'I "'47 Ne\'JPC)tt Coest 52147 .... ,._.,..., Pedlng .._ north'""' IOUdwMll wind ... fnlltelforWllll .. but lnmu11Jaaot iutf. UlalflC* -~····-·" ... , ....... ~ NMupwt. .... -.... -...2·1 lllddl"l.-------..l-4 -------2-1 c.dM.-.. " 2-il ..... TODAY First loW 1 :2l a.m ....•...•....•..•.. u..1,0 F1rst high 7:JI a..m.-..................... 6,0 2:17 p.m .. " .................. -0.1 Second"W' l:l5 p.m. ...... ; .............. A.I ~ Plntlow t:SJ a.m. ....................... 1 .. 2 ,.,.. high l:Ol e.m..-.... " ....... " .... 6.1 s-.tlow l:!l ....... -..... -."..O.S ....... •10 PJ.ft--..... ,_ . ...A,5 -• •• • COSTA MESA •Al....,.~ VIWl&lllsmwas ~In the 1800 block .t 1:11 a.m. Wtdnetday. • .......... Grand theft WM reported In the noG block .t 1!02 p.m. Wtdi.-.y. • ..... Drtu ........ lloelt A htt...orun,,... ~ W9S rtpOf1ed .t 7;ll p.m. ~ • ...... a.. A holne bur91aiYwma ~In h 900bladeat1:A1 p~. Wedi_.. . 11 .... ..._.__Grand d*t w,..,.. 1r1 h 100bladeat10:05 a.m. ~. NEWPORT llACH • , • ._. V.-... puihed • Plftr.ld ~on ••• ceu.lng bot\ Vlhldel to be ........ lri thl ,. blods It 7:15 e.m.......,. • -Cllllil II-41 A $1,900 rtrit-1'11111 • llallnhMetllllle1te.....,.1nt1W_. ..... noon...._, . ... J ,__, ..... ,.,...., ..... ,. llJIWAll •fr•oe_. .. ._..,.,...,. Daily Pilot > Groups sick of waiting for flu vaccines • Lack of flu vaccine doses in Orange County is forcing delays or cancellations of free shots throughout Newport-Mesa. A .. xCoolman DM.Y PllOT NEWPORT-MESA Orange County's Ou vaccine shortage is hitting the New- port-Mesa area hard, with virtually all of the local agen- cies that were )'lanning to give shots in the weeks ahead forced to cancel their offers. At least four November flu. shot distributions have been canceled in the area, includ- ing ones that were scheduled to take place at the Oasis Senior Center, the Costa Mesa Senior Center and the Jewish Community Center. Hoag Hospital says it has a small supply of the vaccine that it plans to make available at an upcoming clinic. But Debbie Legan, a spokes- woman for Hoag, said the hospital is so concerned about being overwhelmed by people trying to get shots that it's actually urging the public to stay away. "We're really concem~d about the number of people that will show up,• she said. •A lot of people are going to be disappointed.• Under ordinary circum- stances, the Orange County Health Care Agetlcy provid~ about 100,000 doses of flu vaccine to 130 organizations in the county, said Mary Wright, immunization project coordinator for the agency. Typically, those Ou shots are distributed in October. This year, }\owever, the company that supplies the agency had problems with one of the strains of the virus that is used to create the vaccine. "The Ou vaccine is like any- thing else,• Wright said. "It's got a production schedule.• But the agency did not realize until recently how far back delivery of the vaccine would be pushed, she added. ·We guessed wrong,• she said. •we thought Nov. 1 would be safe (as an estimat- ed date for delivery).• Rather than continuing to postpone clinics, the Agency opted to cancel its earliest shipments throughout the county. It's an approach, Wright admits, that may seem "somewhat drastic.• But she argues that it's a step prefer- able to creating confusion through constant reschedul- ing of vaccine distribution. It is likely, the agency says, that shot clinics will now be rescheduled for some time in late November. And rather than staging the disburse- ments throughout the county, the agency will probably hold them in four or five central- ized locations. That's frustrating for agen- cies like the Costa Mesa Senior Center, which has a health expo where Ou immu- nizations were scheduled for Tuesday. The center will go ahead with the expo, said Jeanne Beach, a receptionist ~lb the center. But the lack of vaccine means a centerpiece of the expo is missing. •About 2,000 people attend the health expo,• Beach said. •There's a real high percent- age that just come for Ou or pneumonia (inununizations). • The center still plans to offer pneumonia shots, along with hearing evaluations, vision screenings and other services. At the Oasis Senior Center, Gwen Collins, president of the Friends of Oasis nonprofit group, said a Nov. 17 shot clinic has been canceled alto- gether. ' "This really is a ridiculous situation,• Collins said. Sexual harassment suit against police dropped A former Costa Mesa police officer dropped her sexual harassment lawsuit against the department Thursday in a settlement agreement. According lo a settlement finalized Thursday, Nancy McAllister, who currently works at the city jail as a cus- tody officer, agreed to dismiss her claim in retwn for getting back lost vacation time and gaining seniority in her cur- rent post, city officials said. Peter Buffa COMMENTS & OJRIOSITIES No money was paid to set- tle the claim. McAllister, who joined the department as a cadet, was fired in 1997 -just two days before she would have complet- ed her probationary period as a sworn police officer. She claimed she lost her job in retal- iation for complaining about the behavior of male police officers. McAllister was one of three female officers who jointly filed the sexual harass- Peter Buffa's column will not appear this week. •1•m too stressed over the election,• he explained. "I can't sleep, I can't eat. and now I'm confused as to whether I voted for the right man for president. I don't know what to do. But I'll be better by next week. I'll be back in action.,. ment lawsuit in November 1997. Kathy Sothard's case was dismissed without trial in April. In May, a jury decided June Romine was not a victim of sexual harassment. Costa Mesa Police Ctuef David Snowden has consis- tently denied all allegations. "We feel the re was no wrongdoing,• he said. ·w e did a thorough investigation and the case had no merit.• McAllister was not avail- I SUMMER DEMONSTRATOR BOATS AVAILABLE HOW! '· NOVIMll 11•1• --.,., _ ••Y 10.M llll THI WllKIN ONLYI HU I I able for comment Thursday. Although McAllister will not return to work on the police force - she will continue her job as a custody officer -city officials will certify that she has completed her probation period as a police officer. The depart- ment has agreed to help her get basic certification from the state Commission on Peace Officer Standards and 1\'aining. -Deepa Bharath Friday, Nowm~ 10, 2000 3 Costa Mesa High honors first principal • Adminisuation building is dedicated to Les Miller, one of the founders of the annual Fish Fry event. Alex Coolm•n DAILY PILOT COSTA MESA -Costa Mesa High School held a ceremony Thursday to hon- or the man who was its first principal and an important figure in the city's civic We. The school dedicated its administration building to Les Miller, who served as the school's principal from the time it opened, in 1957, through 1963. The ceremony was attended not only by New- port-Mesa Unified School District offtaals, including board member Jun Ferry- man and Supt. Robert Bar- bot, but also by members of Miller's family and the Cos- ta Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions Club. Also <in atten- dance were a small group of Costa Mesa High students. •He came out here from the Midwest, established his family roots here, gave back to the conununity, and he was truly a role model,· Ferryman said. ·1 just hope that some of the young people in the audi- ence take heed of some of the things he got involved in and try to mirror a true superstar like Les Miller ... Miller passed away in 1995 at the age of 80. Diana Carey. Costa Mesa'S current prindpa.I.. said it was an honor to have a piece d the school bear Mille.r's name. "l'm trying to follow in his footsteps, but I find they're very large and I keep falling m, • she said. Besides his work as an educator, Miller is also known as a man who helped start the tradition of the Cos· ta Mesa Fish Fry. The annu- al event is closely tied to the Costa Mesa-Newport Har· bor Lions Club, a group for which Miller served as pres- ident from 1946-47. Mike Scheafer, past dis· trict governor of the club, recalled Miller as a man whose v1v1d personality and giving spmt were evi- dent m tus partiopation in events llke the Fish Fry. "People rrught not have known tus name, but they sure knew tus face and they knew his i.traw hat." Scheafer said.!' Hank Pdnidn, former Orange Codst College pro- fessor and a local historian, had a few ruce Uungs to say about Miller as well. "He is d spmtua.J part of the bnck dnd mortar of this high school and also the community,· Panian said. "It is altogether fitting that @iii' ~~1N,,;the adrrurustration bwlding -~rw.be named m his honor .• Mattress Outlet BRAND NEW· COSMETICALLY IM~ Get the Best for Less! ~wlllllll•!P.!'l'~~ 3165 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa One BkK.k SOut.b ot 405 l'wy (714) 545-7168 01Sll1llwl .,~5! 4 Friday, November 10, 2000 TODAY Orange Coast College w1ll bold · its 30th annual Pall Needle Arts Fair from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. today and 8 a.m. to . . . . . 5 p .m. Saturday on campus, 2701 Pairview Road. About 120 workshops and semi- nars focusing on fashion design, sewing, quilting, needle arts and image con- sulting will be offered. (714) 432-5880, En. t . Evie Hansen. who ltreaet that Americans should eat seafood at least twice a week, will conduct cooking classes and autograph copies of her Dine In A Romantic Setting A Dining Experience to Remember! 1976 Newport Blvd. • Costa Mesa (949) 645-8384 ARoiJND ToWN · . . book at noon and 5 p.m. at 432·5880. Santa Monica Seafood. 1.SC B. SATUIDAY Tbe OASIS Sentor Center will hold its monthly pancake breakfast from 7:30to10 a.m. at the OASIS Senior Center, 800 Marguerite Ave., Corona del Mar. The breakfast includes cherry, pineapple or regular pancakes, sausage, coffee and orange juicev $2 for adults, $1 for children. (949) 644-3244. 17th St., Costa Mesa. (888) 762-3663. A travel documentary that tells •Mystery Tales of Europe• will be screened at 7 p.m. at Orange Coast Col- lege's Robert B. Moore The- atre, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. $9, or $7 in advance. Seniors are eligi- ble for a $1 discount. (714) Steve Buller, founder of Utab- based Superior Threads I.Be., will present a 60-minute workshop on specialty deco- rative threads at Orange Coast College's 30th annual Needle Arts Festival and Fall Fair at 2 p.m . today and Sat- urday. OCC is at 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. (714) 432-5880. , 11 C· f /t.1.twU"1 IT'S TIME FOR ... ~ f"4t' "'0"' r ,l(o. MI CASA . The Naturalists and Friends of.Newport Bay will give their first tour of the season of the Upper Newport Bay Ecologi- cal Reserve· starting at 9 a.m., with a tour group leaving every 15 minutes from the comer of East Bluff Drive and Back Bay Road. This begins the 32nd season of the monthly free tours. (949) 786- 8878. MEXICAN RESTAURANT L-unch • Dinner • Sunday Brunch 251 Shipyard Way • Newport Beach Please call for hours. directions & reservations. : (949) 723-0621 = .. Vam1shing Made Easy," a four-hour workshop offered by Orange Coast College's School of Sailing and Sea- manship, will be held from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at 1801 W. Coast Highway, Newport Beach. $25 per person, $40 per couple. The session will focus on such areas as teak restoration, and oiling versus varnishing. (949) 645-9412. Hair West Salon & Boutique will hold an open house from 3 to 6 p.m., featuring a live band and catering by Promelis Market, at 2817 Vtl- la Way, Newport Beach. (949) 673-4186. The C.S. Lewis Foundation of Redlands will present a Fae- , ulty Forum Dinner at 5 p.m. at the Costa Mesa Hilton Hotel. 3050 S. Bristol St.. Costa Mesa. The theme of the evening is "The Christian Scholar in the World of Ideas.• $35 per person, or $60 per couple before Tuesday. Prices after Tuesday will be $40 per person. $65 per cou- • ple. Graduate student prices are $30 per person, $45 per couple. Reservations are required. (909) 793-0949. Comedy at the Kitchen, a prime rib dinner and perlor- mance by stand-up comedian • Jeff Jenna, will be held at 5 , and 8 p.m. at the Someone , Cares Soup Kitchen, 720 W. 19th St., Costa Mesa. $65, or $50 in advance. (949) 548- 8861. SUNDAY ,, Salon Gregories will bold a cut-a-thon to fight Lou Gehrig's Disease from 9 a.m. 1 to 5 p.m. at 2000 Newport Center Dnve, Newport Beach. The salon requests a $35 donation for a wash, cut and style service that usually starts at $55 or more. (949) 644-6671. A semlnar on fakes and forg- eries designed to arm con- sumers from fraudulent sales practices will be held at 11 :30 a.m. at Glabman Furniture & Interior Design, 3089 Bristol St., Costa Mesa. (800) 298- 9055. MO II DAY Prtends of the Orange Coast Interfaith Shelter will hold its ninth annual FOCIS on Din- ing gourmet dinner series starting today and running through April 9. 2001. The first dinner will be held at i 6:30 p.m. at Gustav Anders, 3851 S. Bear St., Costa Mesa. An underwriter subscription including dining at the restaurants in the series is $100 per person. Individual dining events are $100 per person. (949) 645-5055. •'Jbe View,'" A Jewish Feder- ation Women's Division Edu- cation and Outreach program based on the format of the popular morning television program. will be held from 9:30 to 11:30 a.rn. at the Jew- llh Federation campus, 250 E. Baker St., Costa Mesa. F~. • (714) 155-5555, Ext. 222. Devtd Gabbe, autbor of two boOb on vegetilrian nutrition and cooking, wUl teach a coo~ clua titled • Adven- turet With Tutu. from 6 to 9 p.m: at the Coste Mesa Neighborhood Community Center, HMS Park Ave. $30, Dlul a S10 materials fee. (114) ~27-7525. lllSIAY n. CGlla Mela s.a. C4ift. .. will bolt • HM1tb l!xpO from I I.Ill. to 1 p.m. at the CON M.a Semor Center, -w. 191b St.~ Doily Pilot can receive service including pneumonia shots, health screen.tngs and speak with HMO representatives. Gen- eral participation ls free and donations are welcome. (949) 6-45-2456. 1be 2000 Gingerbread Vil- lage to benefit Toys for Tots will be unveiled at 5:30 p.m. at the Four Seasoq.s Hotel, 690 Newport Center Drive. Visitors are welcome to bring a new, unwrapped toy in sup- port of Toys for Tots. (949) 760-4951. ~ FW Chao from · Food Sales West will speak at the Round- table for Women ln Foodser- vice's Orange County chapter meeting, which will begin with a networking time at 6 p.m. at Food Sales West, 235 Baker St., Costa Mesa. Chao is the restaurant and wine columnist for the Orange County Business Journal. $35, or $30 for members, $15 for students. (949) 798-8770. Mother's Market and Kitchen will present a free seminar on reversing diseas£ with aloe vera at 6:30 p.m. in the Patio Cafe. 225 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. (949) 631-4741. The North Face retail store will present a slide show and lecture with Aaron Barnes of Peruvian Adventures as he shares information about the Andes Mountains of South America, including summit ascents and following the Inca Trail. The event will take place at 7:30 p.m. at 1870-A Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa Free. (949) 646-0909. WEDNESDAY .. Uving Wreaths," a work- shop where participants can create a custom cactus and holiday wreath, will be held at 9:30 a.m. at Sherman Library & Gardens, 2647 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. Registration is $95. All materials are supplied. (949) 673-2261. A seminar on financial plan- ning for surviving spouses will be held at 6 p.m. dt PaineWebber, 888 San Clemente Drive, Suite 300, Newport Beach. Free. (949) 717-3915. Mother's Market and Kitchen will present a tree seminar on breathing techniques for healing and stress relief dt 6:30 p.m. in the Patio Cafe, 225 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa (949) 631-4741. THURSDAY The Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce will hold a 90· minute Breakfast Boost from 7:15 to 8:45 a.m. at the Costa Mesa Country Club, t 701 Golf Course Drive, Costa Mesa. $17, or $12 in advance. (714) 885-9090. The Luncheon Program of the Orange County Chapter of Round Table West will be held at noon at the Balboa Bay Club, 1221 W. Coast Highway, Newport Beach. Featured guests wW include author Maralys Wills and Orange County Sheriff Michael S. Carona, who co- wrote •Save My Son.• (323) 256-7977. llOY. 17 Karen Covell, ClO-founder of JC Productions and currently associate producer with the West Coast Producers Group, will be the featured speak.er for the Marketplace Women of Orange County luncheon meeting from noon to 1:30 p.m. at The Center Club, 650 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. S30. The group ls tak- ing reservations. ReMrvat:ions must be receiv~ by Friday. (949) 640 .. 789. 1be Orange County cUpter • of the Single Gourmet, an international ftne dining dub for singlet, invltel you to dine with them at 6:30 p.m. at the Antoine Pining Room. ,500 MacArthur Blvd., Newport Beach. 569. (9'9) 85'-M52. ·uaJ4iUe Ait m11 ArdlltlWM• Around the World.• a 90- min\lte benefit a.ctwe by Orange CoMt CGD9ge art bll- ~-or lltDl Vdlra· wlD be blld at 8 p.m .. at OCC'I ltoblrt 8. Moen 11-tre. 2701,..... ao.cs. COiia NIM. 110. ... , ce1c1t wt11 m111 AD~ tlelolO....OD_,..'Ddllll Wiii ... awhb'e ...... (114) 43Mbl. I • Doily Pilot Slf'UDENTS CONTINUED FROM 1 because they feared its con- tent might spark tension cmd offend Jewish students. The Mualim students' group also failed to follow proper pro- cedure in making their~ to the Associated Students Board. said Jim Carnett, spokesman for the college. "When they asked for per- mission. they said it was going to be anti-oppression week," he said. •Th.ere was no men- tion of words like 'anti-Zion- ism' or 'anti-Israel.' • Also, they hadn't submit- ted the names of ,speakers to be featured in the program, Carnett said. •If they resubmit the appli- cation and the student board ·approves lt, they are free to HEIDI CONTINUED FROM 1 While still shellshocked, her body covered with circu- lar bald spots from the coy- ote attack, Heidi appeared at ease as she soaked up some sun on Tillman's terrace. •she gets about anything she wants right now,• nn- man said, adding that Gidget had shown a lot of concern for her sister's well-being. •A lot of people think that !Chihuahuas) are yappy, ner- vous things,• she said. "But they are so cute the way they look after each other." Since Heidi's homecom- ing, the trio bas already started to take walks through the neighborhood again. CENTER CONTINUED FROM 1 ;i, the city. •we should use that money to address the prob- lems of legal residents - neighborhood problems such as street improvement, noise and crime.• Jean Forbath, founder of Share Our Selves, disagrees with Steel's stance on the issue, saying the center is an asset to the whole community. • I'm sure [Steel) bas good ideas for the dty, but I think he has to realize there is a place for everyone in a com- munity that hopes to be part of a just society,• she said. "Before we had the job cen- ter, people were complaining of day workers intruding on their comfort and property. People looking for work aad people looking for workers certainly appreciate it It's an example of how well a job center can work." Steel also advocates dti· zenship screening at the cen- ter and has called the cummt requirement that workers provide proof of legal resi- dency •a joke.• But without two additional votes for removing the center from the city budget, Steel will not be able to bring bis idea to fruition. Councilwoman Ubby Cowan, who was reelected Tuesday, said she will not be one of those votes. •J absolutely believe (the job center] ls an essential part of our community and it's a more cost-efiective mecha- nism for providing service to both laborers and those who hire them," Cowan said. Mayor Gary Monahan could be a vote in Steel's favor, however. He bu historically opposed using dty ~ to pay for the center-apectad to cost St39,9'0 1n um year'I $18-mJIHon operatmg budgM -end said be ~ like to 188 it become more telf-sup- ~ beUeft [tbe tob cm- ter) ii a drain oo the flnebdeJ '8Mcel of the dtY.. Mam- bUi Mid. •J think we're ~..:~T .-it on otlier • I ..... tb.nt .. • ~ to cMlge tbe employ9n .... U.... Wbo Wolk ...... ID ........... = .... ..... n. job cmtlr tD baftw pd'lall ,_..f,• ,,. dlf c:bllV8I • ... ........ par .. ldrQ• •• .. ~---·,,,_ .. .. ~IM ...... 11..., ~ .... -... ~lllllCIJMI .... u;T--=.=a go ahead with their pro- gram,• he said. Memben citbe MusUm Stu- dents Assn. said they were only trying to •present facts. and •put out more information.• •we're not att.add.ng peo- ple, we're informing them,• said Masood Tahir, the group's president •we're not anti..Jews, we're against the Zionist movement, the oppressors who kill innocent people and children.• Zionism took form as an organized political movement in the 19th century, but its roots date back to the 6th cen- twy BC, when Jews were car- ried off to captivity in Babylon and their prophets encour- aged them to believe that one day God would allow them to return to Palestine. Coexistence or Jews and Arabs, who are predominant- ly Muslim, is a long-standing GREG FRY I OAl.Y Pl.OT Heidi, front. and sister Gid- get cuddle up ln their bed. Owner Daldra Tiilman says that since the coyote attack on Heidi, Gidget has become more protective of her older sibling. Will the dogs have anoth- er chance to escape again? "The gates are going to be very much closed," nn- man said, laughing. city budget, Roeder said, adding that the dty bas not found private groups willing to run the center, although it has tried. Councilwoman Linda Dixon and projected Council- I'm not worried, my agent Is Cr•lg Brown lnau,.nce Call tcxlay for auto & home owner's Insurance! (949) 760· 1255 Fashion Island ' ' . '' . ilsue that bu caused violent Speech and actions confrontations and several become unacceptabl when riots since the beginning of they cross the line and p this centurf. nounce hatred, said Gary Members of the campus' Levin, usistant director of the newly formed Jewish orga.ni-Anti-Defamation League. zation Hillel said they are •Nothing has happened offended by the anti-Zionist here so far,• be said. •The and antMsraell statements. problem starts only when •Of course I feel bad,• said things get out of band.• Neta Yoffe, a student and HD-Demonstrators only want- lel member. •rm from Israel. ed to provide information that My family lives there. And the media is not giving peo- when I see the words 'anti-pie, said Syma Chaudhry, • Israel,' I feel hurt.• • member of the Muslim Stu- Amanda Dryden, another dent Assn. member of the organization, •Tue media always dedd- said she would have liked a ed what event they want to more positive presentation, blow up," she said. "And something less confrontation-that's true in this issue as al, from the Muslim students. well." •1bey could have said pro-The significance of the Palestine and still given us the issue is heightened by the same information," she said. fact that "both sides are very ·rm all for free speech. But bate passionate about it," said Jef • speech. against anybody, does-trey Rips, executive director n't have a place in our society.· of Hillel Foundation of COYOD DOS AID DOl'TS: DO: • Feed pets Indoors and promptly and cotlect their food onmctone. • Store pet food in animal-proof containers. • te-.p trash in sturdy containers and put It out the morning of pickup. • Clew bush and ucess debris from your yard. • Keep v-ds wel~Ut. · •Keep small children and pets undef·dose supervi$ion. • Keep pets on a leash when outdoors. DOWr. • LHve food or water out for wildlife. • Try to Qpture or handle wildlife. • Put tr.sh out in ptastic bags or the night before pickup. • Allow s-ts to run loose. • Fail to report unusual occurrences or encounters with wildlife to animal controt offldals. woman-elect Karen Robin- son, who leads incumbent Heather Somers by only 100 votes with an estimated 3,000 absentee ballots still uncount- ed, were not available for comment Thursday. Put a few words to work for you. can the Daily Pilot OASSIFIEOS 642-5678 New Beach • Uc• 0550290 50% OFF TOPIARIES, FALL WREATllF.S AND CORNUCOPIAS 369 E. 17th <:osta Mesa (Across fiom Ralph.) (949) &t6-6745 Mon-Fri 10-6, Sat 10-5, Sun 104 • Repiaeating the full . line of Pride Mobili . ty PnNluds • Sa rice ac a.pair Friday, NowNnbw 10, 2000 5 ~ SEAN ..UR I DAILY Pl.OT Usama Kahf, vice president and spokesperson for Mmllm Students Assn. at Orange Coast College holds signs mp- portlng Anti-Zionism prior to a march across campus. Orange County, an interna- tional Jewish organization. "I don't agree what they COST CONTINUED FROM 1 • U you would show that in the calculabon [of the cost of •yes' votes), I bet you that cost would equal ours,· Turn- er said. "Remember, Green- lighters for the most part are people that are retired. Peo- ple on our side -all of us are working.• With a high percentage of the city's residents o~er the age of 65, Turner said his opponents were at a clear advantage. "Those people tend to think in terms of, "We don't want any more !develop- say," he said. "But I support their right to say it. Respectful dialogue is always healthy." ment). We're only concerned about ourselves,' • Tu.mer said. He added that the boom-• ing economy also had people less worried about jobs and maintaining growth. ·Would we have won had this occurred in 1994 7 I think we probably would have," he said. Greenlight supporters jumped on Turner's comment that their campaign had ben- efited from volunteer work. "That's exactly the point," said Allan Beek, who helped wnte the measure. "Green- light came out of the people. It wds a spontaneous grass- roots uprising and you can't buy that with money.• ~·~~ . -~ .. 9' ~,· -==-:MNCHITO :.~· .. ·~. FllfTM .ea. ... .., ................. . .,. JI.... --a ..... 6 Thursday, November 10, 2000 THELooK Daily Pilot ·"" Debra wears a platinum bezel link contemporary neddacie set with diamonds ($7,600). The matching bracelet sells for $3,500 and the Nlrings, from desiyner Elsa Pereti, • sell for $4,350. This nedd.-is called the HV-Une, • set with 121 round diamonds in plat- inum. The diamonds weigh 15.84 carats ($69,500). Debra has on a Tiffany bramlet with 35 round dia- monds and four mar- qui~ut diamonds ($45,000). The wrings are classic platinum, four prong, round dia- mond studs weighing 2.13 carats ($24,500). And how about a fancy yellow diamond weighing 4.19 carats set with two pear- stiaped diamonds, all with outstand- ing color, clarity and cut for $170,0007 I After HOURS • Send AF1'Elt HOURS items to the Dally Pilot. 330 W. Bay St .. Costa Mesa, CA 92627; fax to (949) 646- 4170 or call (949) 574-4268. A com- plete listing may be found at http://www.dailypilot.com. SPECIAL POLITICAL SATIRE Readers Repertory The- atre will present a reading of Howard Lindsay and Russel Crouse's satire of presidential campaigns and the American democratic process, titled #State of the Union,• at 7 p .m. Nov. 16 in the Newport Beach Central Library's· Friends Meeting Room, 1000 Avocado Ave. Free. (949) 717-3801. OPERA FUND-RAISER The Southland Opera will hold its first fund-raiser to support Southland Opera's Educational Outreach Pro- gram at 7 p.m . Dec. 1 in · Founders Hall at the Orange County Performing Arts Cen- ter, 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. The event will feature the Christmas opera #Amahl and the Night Visi- tors," wine tasting and a silentauction.Thereception wm be held in tne Back St.age. $100. (909) 623-6222. MAIO<ET PLAa The Orange County Mar- ket Place takes place from 7 a.m. to 4 p.Di. Saturdays and Sundays in the Orange County Fairgrounds' main parking lot, 88 Fair Drive, Gost.a Mesa. $2 for adults, children younger than 12 are free. (949) 723~6616. . MUSIC A BRITlSH TRIBUTE •Holstmanial" -a fall.. concert by Orange Coast College's Wind Ensemble - will be held at 3 p .m . SWlday in OCC's Robert B. Moore Theatre, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. The concert is a salute to British composer for winds, Gustav Holst. S5·S7. (114) 4~2-5880. ClASSY GUrTAlt ClaMical guitarlst Christo- pher Parkening will make hit Orange County P8rform· !pg Atta Center debut at 4 p.m. Sunday at Pound8rW Halt eoo Town c.nw om.. • He will perform • trtbiatll to the legendary Spanish gui- tarist Andres Segovia. $46. (714) 740-7878. DUBUNERS AT MULDOON'S The Young Dubliners will perform a courtyard concert at 2 p.m. Sunday at Mul- doon's Dublin Pub, 202 New- port Center Drive, Newport Beach, on the outer circle of Fashion Island. Free, (949) 640-4110. BAROQUE MUSIC The Harmonia Baroque Players will present a three- concert series, beginning with a program titled •Music for a Well-Tempered Audi- ence" at 4 p.m. Sunday at the Newport Harbor Luther- an Church, 798 Dover Ave., Newport Beach. The second program, titled #JI it is Baroque Don't Fix It,# will be held at 4 p.m. Jan. 7. The third, titled "Images of Melancholy and Mirth,• will take place at 4 p.m . May 20. All concerts will be at the church. General admission is $12, subscriptiOn price is $30. Discounts available. (114) 970-8545. . POPS, BRPADWAY ANDBIGMND Peter Nero, a pops con- ductor and performer, will join the P~c Symphony lhls suite of jewelry comes from the legendary Paloma Picasso, who has been design- ing for~ for many . years. Debra wears a grand 9okt nedrlM», 18k aod done In large hammer links ($16,000). Th4' ..n;,. are also 18k from Picasso with gold cushion cut dtrine stones (S24,500). The dtrtne Md gold ring sells for S2,500. 8.W.Cook DAILY PILOT Debra goes wild wearing this dasslc double strand of 9.S to 10· mm cultured pear1s neddlN» featuring a mag· niflcent tanzanlte weighing 39.09 carats surrounded by 20 diamonds weighing 4.96 carats. all set In platinum ($105,000). Her Nlrings are also cultured South Sea pearls with diamonds set in platinum ($12,700), and on· her arm is a brlMl9let con- sisting of one strand of cul- tured pearls ($4,850). Debra shows off a platinum neddacie In the Tiffany "bow" design set with 414 round brilliant diamonds weighing 9.43 carats ($42,750). The ring, also In platinum, features a fancy purple-pink round diamond with two pear-shaped dia- monds ($300,000). on Debra's arm, a platinum •bow• brec:elet set with 184 round diamonds (S20,500). Thi~ white gold nedd.cie fro n the Tiffany •streameri- ca' line Is set with 30 round diamonds (S8,500). Debra wears ·a bangle brlalet als11 from #Streamerica• set with 24 round diamonds ($2,800). The ....,... are $UOO and the rtng $1,300. A passion for PHOTOS BY JENNIFER TAYLOR I DAILY PILOT vice with a wire in his ear, kept a watchful eye on the goods. has no d~e to topple the nation, but rather to sell the nation all of its incredible jewelry and merchan- T he Look travels this week into the inner sanctum of Amerka's moSt famous jewelry store, ntfany & Co. The store at South Coast Plaza is one of the most successful in the world, led by Jo Ellen Quabs. When Tiffany executive sales personnel decided to change one of the items to be photographed, a full count was made of all the jewelry before the one item was removed and replaced. All very James Bond. Actually, seerecy and the result- ing inb'igue has always been a romantic element of the jewelry business. There are stories of fabu- lous precious stones: metals and the jewelry made trom them that have toppled nations and cltanged the world's course. dise. · Our model is the statuesque Debra Greco, an actress originally from New York, where she began her career as a dancer on Broad- way. Greco appeared in a produc- tion of • 42nd Streer and she was one of the Rockettes working both in New York and Los Angeles. In a private office on a mezza- nine level, through a security door, more than a million dollars in pre- cious materials were spread out on .a conference table. A security offi- cer, dressed in business suit and tie, looking more like the Secret Ser- Pops for a program of pop favorites, Broadway hits and big band sounds at 8 p.m. Nov. 17-18 at the Orange County Performing Arts Cen- ter, 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. $14-$72. (714) 740-7878. VARSITY TUNES #VarsitY Spirit," the Pacif- ic Symphony's next Mervyn's Musical Mornings Family Concert, will be held at 10 and 11 :30 a.m. Nov. 18 at the Orange County Performing Arts Center, 600 Town Cen- ter Drive, Costa Mesa. Mem- bers of the Pacific Symphony will perform everything from Tchaikovsky to music from the movie #Rocky.• Children 4 to 11 and their families a're invited. The event will 1 include a Musical neasure Hunt at 9 a.m. and 12:15 , p.m. $11-$16 .. (714) 755-5799 .. BLUES AND JAZZ Jeannie and Jimmy Cheatham and their Sw~t Baby Blues Band will per- form at the-Orange County Performing Art Center's J.P. Morgan Jazz Club at 7:30 and 9:30 p .m . Nov. 18-19 . $44 for 7:30 p .m. shows. $38 for 9:30 p.m. shows. The Center is at 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. (114) 740-7878. In Costa Mesa, Tiffany·& Co. She is a wife and the mother of a young son. Modeling has replaced her dance career, and she confes~s that she is really partial to platinum. ............... Cllill'-·YGlll•-a..-9•--· , __ •TMC.•lluM..._•..._.•.._.W._,.._ ............... ............. _,.._. .... ,... ..... a.•aucw Doily Pilot FRIDAY NIGHT llGHTS COM . UNIVERSITY o..A aa. MAR vs. UNlvasrTY • Slee: at Orange Coast College, 7 • lottom llne: Corona del Mar lost its outright Pacifk Coast League title with a Week 10 loss to Costa Mesa last fall and the Sea Kings are hoping to do the same to the Trojans this year. Many believed the PCL title would come down to which school played the best defense and these two have allowed the fewest points in league. Uni has given up 55, while CdM has surrendered 68. Sea King QB Dylan Hendy gets the surprise start. His only pass since breaking his left. non-thr01ling wrist. was an interception. TARS ALISO NIGUEL Auso Nlcaa.vs. NNPoRJ HAMoR • Slee: Newport Harbor High, 7 • lottom llne:A four-game Sea View League schedule has kept four teams in the pla~ hunt. but Harbor should have little trouble dispatching the Wolverines and gaining at least second place. Harbor is ranked tlfth in OF Division VI, but the best of the unlikely scenarios which could bring the Sailors a top-four seed would be a Woodbridge win over Irvine tonight. The resulting • three-way tie could, with a kind coin toss. land Harbor the league's No. 1 spot. This may let the Tars move past Irvine into the top four. JC WOMEN'S POLO . Pirates win twice,IDeet Golden West in the final • Cuesta and Riverside eliminated by identical 9-6 scores at SoCal Regionals. WALNUT -Orange Coast CoDege's women's water polo team bas set itself up for a fifth confrontation with defending state-champion Golden West fol- lowing a pair of 9-6 victories in the Southern California Regionals Thursday at Mt. San Antonio Col- lege. The Pirates (27-6-1) duel Gold- en West (32-1) at 6:15 p.m. Satur- day at Mt. SAC. In its first contest of the day, Orange Coast defeated Cuesta, 9-6, in the quarterfinals. Devon Wright scored four goals to pace the Pirates' attack. Neisba Hoagland chipped in wlth three goals while Daylene Coberly and na Montalvo each added single goals. In goal, Kennedy, the sopho- more out of Newport Harbor High. was strong, stopping 10 sbob. In a 9-6 semifinal victory over Rlvenide lt wu the same combi- nation which proved superior. Hoagland acored three goals and Coberly and Montalvo popped ln two goals apiece. ~bed 12 saves. ~~lmCllONAU O.flllflMI a...c...1.a..• a-. 1104 ·6 Orenge eo.t " 1 2 2 • ' Qllllll • Glrngiln 2. '°°" 1, Gerow , ' ~ ,, blhDl:ilki 1. s... CMtdl ... ••11•a...t ·Wr11M~~ I. C1fl 1~-:rlllho 1. S-· 10. , . . ·~ -~ .. . ... . ' ....... . ' .. . ~ .. , ..... I Quote Of 1111 DIY ....... -.rs, Ms .. i.t ,.t al ow~ -sp.ed _• Brian Kreutllcamp, N~ Harbor water polo coach --- Sporls Editor Roger Carlson • 949-574-4223 • Spo'1s fox: 949-650-0170 •Friday, No...nber 10, 2000 7 Thunde~g herd devours T-wolves • Mustangs run wild, now HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL must wait for at-large bid to the CIF Division IX Playoffs. Tony Attobelll DAILY PILOT • • COSTA MESA-The Costa Mesa High football team did all it could to sway those in the CIF Southern Sec- tion playoff invitation committee dur- ing Thursday night's 57-7 Pacific Coast League win over Northwood at Orange Coast College. The Mustangs (6-4, 2-3 in league) ran away with it, literally. Mesa scored seven touchdowns on the ground and rushed for 486 yards. While the Mustangs' track meet was taking place, Mesa's defense held the Tunberwolves (2-8, 0-5) to 88 net yards and 23 yards rushing. "We had to get back into playing decent football and tonight, we were able to do that on both sides of the ball,• a drenched Costa Mesa Coach Jerry Howell said after the Gatorade bucket was dumped upon him. •Now we have to wail and hear what the CIF has to say as far as a , MESA WOLVES playoff berth. I think we deserve it.• Cabico, a junior standout, rushed for 245 yards and three touchdowns on only 12 carries, he caught two passes for 42 yards, he had an addi- tional 24 yards on punt returns, he intercepted a pass on defense and for good measure, he completed. a pass to Louis Day for 29 yards. The speedster had runs of 57, 54, 37, 32, and 24, respectively, and if not for two Mesa penalties that wiped out over 50 additional rushing yards, Cabico's numbers would have been even more staggering. • 1t felt good to get the ball and to help the team out,• Cabico said. •This was a big win for us. Our defense stepped up and played well and our offense took care of the rest.• While Cabico was picking. up huge amounts of yardage with each carry, sophomore Keola Asuega pounded his way for 108 yards and three TDs on 17 carries. Mesa's defense forced three inter- ceptions and seven quarterback sacks, keeping the Timberwolves' offense on scramble mode through- out the evening. Costa Mesa got on the scoreboard first when Asuega found the end zone from 6 yards out midway through the first quarter. Cabico streaked untouched for a 57-yard TD a minute later and fol- lowing Northwood's lone TD, he streaked his way for a 54-yard touch- down, giving the Mustangs control of the game. Luis Avalos connected on a 40- yard field goal to extend Mesa's lead to 24-7 at halftime. Cabico and Asuega combined for l dCJUfl I B• 1( h I •1 H' 1 l Thursday's scores Tonight's gam e (7) · three more touchdowns before Daniel Hunter got into the scoring act, rumbling in from 9 yards out late in the fourth quarter. The ~ustangs capped their scor- ing when senior Billy Jordan picked off a Timberwolves' pass and returned it 41 yards for a touchdown. Eagles tfill:e up for CIF • Estancia misses equaling single-game scoring record by one point with blowout. Barry Faulkner DAILY Pit.OT LAGUNA BEACH -The Estancia High football team pulled out all the stops in Thursday night's Pacific Coast League finale at Laguna Beach. And, as it turned out, the Artists' defense had very few of its own. The Eagles scored on nine of their first 10 possessions to earn an oppressive 62-23 victory, which, according to Coach Dave Perkins, puts them where they need to be heading into the CIF Southern Sec- tion Division IX playoffs. •we wanted to continue on a roll,• said Perkins, whose third . straight win put the Eagles in posi- tion to gain a share or the PCL crown, pending tonight's Coiona del Mar-University clash at Orange Coast College. If CdM wins, Estancia joins the Sea Kings and ltojans in a three- way tie for first, with a coin Oip deciding which teams represent the league as first-, second-and third- place entries. If University wins, the Eagles would move past CdM into sole possession of second place. And, at 7-3, 4-1 in league and ranked No. 10 in CIF Division IX, the Eagles may open their first postseuon since 1995 with a home game. •we didn't think about that,• Perkins said, denying any notion he wanted a big score to impress those who draw up the playoff bracket, announced Sunday. •we just came out and did our thing. Our kids are just getting very good at running this offense." Perkins also had praise for the defense, which posted a season- high five sacks (for 36 yards in loss- es), and largely contained the Artists (2-8, 1-4). •0ur defense played real well tonight." PerlQns said. "We did what we had to do,• The second-highest scoring out- put in Estanda's 36 varsity seasons (lt dropped a 63-21 drubbing on Ocean View in 1996), had an inaus· pidous beginning. 11ie Eagles tried an onside kick to open the game and Laguna recovered and drove to the 1, before settling for a 25-yard Todd DON LEACH I DMY Pl.OT E1tanda High'• Jesse Cardenas hammers Laguna Beach nmning back as Bobby Arroyo (51) doses In. HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBILL Merz field goal. '-From there, Estancia pretty much had its way, as 14 different Eagles can1ed the ball. three threw passes and six scored touchdowns. In all, Estancia amassed 541 yards total offense, while upping its 2000 scoring total to a school single- season record 305 points. ~Dior tullback Fahad Jahid rushed for 105 yards and two TDs on seven came., while senior back- field mate Andy Romo chalked up 88 yards and two TDs on 12 rushing attempts. Romo (now 988 yards) and Jahid (919) bope to both surpass the 1,000-yard plateau in the postsea- IOI\. . EAGLES ARTISTS Freddy Rodriguez also rolled up 90 yards and a pair of TOI on five carries, while Jeae Cardena. a stArting defenlive end, cubed in his only carry for a 1-yard touch· • down to cap the Estancia scoring. Quarterback Kenny Valbuena completed 7 of 8 passes for 178 yards and one TD, while backup A.J. Perkins completed his only pass to Danny Valbuena for a r- yard TD. Senior tight end David Stoddard cattght three passes for 125 yards, including a 55-yard touchdown on the first. play of the Eagles' second possession. 1be .Estancia defense, led by eods David Rodriguez and Cardenas. bounded Laguna quarterbacks all ~ RoddguBl was in OD three sadm. The Eagle secondary, which included. contributions from Romo and Javier Ramirez (ooe intercep- tion apiece), u well u Jeremy Valdel, A.J. Perkins and Preddy Rodriguez, also dkl its job. Ne~rt Harbor drowns Millikan •Rams are no match b No. t aeed in Division I~ 20-9. .. ~ IOYS ... POLO a.._.. .. ,,._,....ID .. tird ~ ... . ,,. ... """ .... •di$ .... > ·. , ( 8 Friday, Not.mber l 0, 2000 Dolly PilOt Sailors· break a few Harts SclM'9 "r 0-111n Northwood 7 0 0 0 • 7 Costa ~ 21 l 1l 20 • 57 • Ant~ CM • As~ 6 run (Avalos kick), 5:24. CM • Clbko 57 run (Avalos kick), 4;18. Hor -Bentrott 9 pass from Harper (Pacheco kick), 1:49. cM · Clbko 54 run. (Avalos kick), O:JO. Second Qu9rtM' CM • Avalos '40 FG, 4:32. TMrdQumrW CM · Clltlc.o 15 run (kick blodted), 7:18. CM · As~r: kick). 2~44. CM • Asuega 21 run (Avalos kick), 9:41. CM • D.Hu!Uf 9 run (Avalos lcldc), 5:04. CM • Jordan 41 lnte<ception return (kick failed), ]:39. Attendance: 750 (estimated). INDMOUAL llUSMING Nor . Meyer. 14-24; Crewel~ 2-mlnu5-1; Keating. 3·minus-S; Harper, 8-rnlnus-31. ..... ..,0-W. &tanda IS 1) :IO 14 • '2 Legunl 9-tl , 0 12 •· 2J .... Men 2S '::r1r- ... • llomo 12 run (I. Vele* run), 3:17. &t • Stoddard 55 pa from K. V.lbulna (11.tmku kid!), 2:27. r.t ·J.t\ld:rN~~. 6:50. .... Jehld .. ~=!ck)· 1:30. l!llt • O. VatbueN 1 PISS from Pertclrn (Ramirel kldt), 9-M. M • Romo 6 run (kick failed), 6:50. La · Bm:PISS from Stritemen ~fal 4:18. ait-F. ltn.r'l~ldck). 1:51. La • o..i.y 75 Piii from 8iodg9tt (pess failed), 0:00. ..... Qmrtlr . ... F. Aodr9m 551\1'1 OllrT*9Z ~ 10:35. Eft • c:ardeMs 1 run (Rllmlrei kid(), 9101. U • Blodgett 4 PISS from StMt9man (llodgett PISS from StMeman), 4:27. A~: 700 (estlrMted). INDfW)WU. ..... Est ·.W-.ld. MOS, 2 TDs; Rorno, 12-88, 2 TDs; F. Rodriouez. 5-90, 2 TOI; M. ~ 2-31; <Asili.t. 2-a; o. Rodnouez. 1-0; Gri~ 1·9; K. Valbuenl, 2·10: • Harbor rallies to win In four. lkherd Durvt OMV Pl.or NEWPORT BBACH-lt wasn't quite as . fancy and colorful as their green- shaded team picture at the ocean shore- line, but Newport Harbor High's Sailors got the job done Thursday night and advanqM! to the quarterfinals of the CIP Southern Section Division l·A g1rls vol; leyball playoffs. The Sea View League runner-up Sailors (20-9), unseeded in the Division I-A eliminations, absorbed a first-game loss to Newhall-based Hart, 10-15, then rallied to win three straight, 15-9, 15-7, 15-12, in the second round at Newport Harbor. Harbor, three-time defending CIP champions and two-time defending State Division I winners, will face long- time rival and tbird-seedecLHuntington Beach on the road Saturday night in the GIRU YOLLEYllLL. querterflnals . ·we beat (the Oilers) two straight ot the Orange County Cbamplomhips, but then they beat us three straight here (in a nonleague match),• Harbor Coach Dan Glenn said. •They're a very good . team. and they beat (Sea View champi· on} Irvine this year.• Getting by Hart's Indians (19-5), though, wasn't easy for the Sailors with 26 hitting errors. •Tuey kind of hung in there the whole time,• Glenn said of the Foothill League champion Indians, •but we made a lot of hitting enors. • Newport senior outside hitter Thylor Govaars, headed for Delaware, led 'the way with 20 kills and 10 digs, while freshman Alyson Jennings (17 digs and 11 kills) and senior Lauren Bald (18 digs) played solid defense. Jennings and Kristin McClune, a 6- foot-2 sophomore middle blocker who added 10 kills for Newport. were con.sis· tent bitting threats. In the second game and leading, 11- 9, lhe 1llrs tied the match. t-1, with four unanswered points. Uz Lord (nine kills and six digs) and Colby George com- bined on a block and a Hart bitting error gave the Tars their first win. Newport jumped out to leads of 8-0 and 12-2 in the third game, before hold- ing pn. Hart cut the deficit to 13-7 before losing .. In the fowtb game, Harbor managed a fast 7-2 lead, mostly on Hart mistakes. But Coach Shannon Martin's squad, which starts six seniors, came back and tied the game three times, tbe last at 1 t ..all. With Heather Cullen at the seIVice line, Harbor rolled off .four straight points for a 1-'·11 edge. George capped the match with a seIVice winner. ·u was a tough match,• Martin said. •Newport Harbor's just a tough team.• CM · Clblco, 12·245, 3 TDs; Asuega, 17·108. 3 TDs; Hurley, 7-40; Nguyen, ).-40; Hullige<, 4-27; D.Hunter. S.26. 1 TO. INDMDUAL MSSING Hor· Harper, 9·25-3, 101, 1 TD. CM · Hulllger, 3-7·1. 53; Cablco, 1-1-0, 29; A. Strickland, 0-0-0. O. INOMDUAL RECEMNG CMdenas, 1-1, 1 TO; Perltlns, 2-6; l«ame, 2-13; Romua, l-6; Ramif•z. 1-2; Bosch, 1-minus-7. U • Strateman, 5-32; Boyd, 7-17; Men, 9-mlnus-12; Blodoett. 1-23; Woods, 1-4; Darling. 2-0; Scanlan. 1·1. INDIVIDUAL MssaNG Est · K. Valbuena, 7-8--0. 178, 1 TD; Peftlns. 1-1-0, 1, 1 TD; Romo, 0-1-1, 0. CdM squashes San Dimas Hor· Bentott 4-34, 1 lD; Luc.as, 2-36; Kramer, H9; Meyer. HI; Gludke, 1-4. CM · Cabko, 2-42; Day, 1·29; Asuega, 1-11. La · Me!z ~15-1, 120; Strattman, 4-7-0, 31,2~-~· • Pacific Coast League champs breeze to 15-2, 15-3, 15-7 win in first round of Div. ID-AA playoffs. Steve Vlraen GIRLS VOLLEYBALL GAME STATISTICS Hor CM First downs 8 19 Rushes-yardage 21·23 48-476 Passing yardage 101 82 &t. Stoddard, 3-125; 1 TD; 0. Valbuena, 3-17, I TO· Jahld. 2-37. U • B~ 5-52, 2 TDs; Oaeley, 2·123, 1 TO; aoycf.2-39; Adam. 1-7; R. Cafon,1-6. GAME STA11STICS Est La First downs 18 13 DAILY PILOT Passing 9-25· 3 4-8-1 N@t return yardage• O 85 Sacks-yardage 6 ·36 0-0 Net yardage 88 643 Punts 7·l0.6 0-0 Rushes-yardage 40-362 21·111 Passing yardage 179 226 Passing 8-10-1 11·23·1 Net return yardage• 40 O Sa<b-yardaga ()..() s ·36 Net yardage 581 331 CORONA DEL MAR -So what if the Corona del Mar High's girls volley- ball team hadn't heard about San Dimas.? It didn't take long for the Sea Kings (17-8) to make an impression. After a 2- 2 tie, Cd.M took Ule first game by outscoring the 12-9 Saints, 13-0, and allowing them to serve just three times during the run. "The biggest thing you have to do is concentrate on your team,• said Cd.M Coach Steve Conti of bis preparation for the playoffs. Conti simply relied on his players and their desire lo improve. ·we're getting better," he said. ·specif. ically, our delense is getting better.• Fumbles-fumbles lost 0-0 1·1 Flags-net yardage 3-15 11-125 Time of possession 19:15 28:45 •Punt r@turns, interceptions, fumble returns Punts ()..() 4-36.7 Fumbl&fumbles lost 2· 1 2-2 F~ylfda9e 14-140 8-6S Tlme of poaession 26:02 21:58 •Punt retums, lr1tttceptions, fuontlteretums So what if there was no scouting report about the Saints? HIGH SCHOOl GIRlS TENNIS Newport buries Savanna, 18-0 •Third-seeded Sailors waste no time in rolling to CIF Division ill victory. ranee in the first round, at a site to be determined by coin flip toda~ All the Sea Kings had to do was real- ize the meaning of the match. This was the ClF Southern Section Division m- AA P.layoffs. And CdM relied on what got 1t there; Intensity, WQrk ethic and qassic teamwork, which led to a three- game sweep over visiting San Dimas, 15-2, 15-3, 15-7 lbursday at CdM. The Sea Kings move on to the second round where they will face NoTdboff at a site to be determined today. Cd.M's defense never allowed San Dimas to grab any sort of momentum. The Sea Kings' game plan was not catered to the Saints. Cd.M's first·round performance was more a matter of the Sea Kings not beating themselves. When they needed points they went to Jacqueline Becker, who served up 23 assists, and seniors Sara Deming and. Of DMSION IN ftAYOff'S NIWl'OflT HMICMt 18, SAVANNA 0 Singles . Nelson (NH) dfl. The Corona del Mar High boys water polo team, ranked No. 1 in CIP South- ern Section Division ll, will )lost Katella in the first round of the CIF Division n playoffs today at 3:15. NEWPORT BEACH Newport Harbor High's girls tennis team dispatched visit- ing Savanna in the first round of the ClF Division m Playoffs Th~day afternoon with an 18-0 spanking. The victory sends the Sailors into the second round on Saturday against La Serna, a 10-8 victor over South Tor- Dy_guaingio, 6-3. def. Parker, 6-2, def. Chems, 6--0; Hawkins (NH) won, 6-1, 6-0, 6-1; Dunlap (NH) won, 6-1. 6-0, 6-0. Doubles · Dobson-D. Khoury (NH) def. Noeloer-Tronng. 6-3, def. Tai-Tran, 6-0, def. Sevlno-Kim, 6-4; Buder·Mdntosti (NH), 6-2. 6-0, 6-0; Olson-Adams {NH) won. A win would move the Sea Kings (18-5) into Wednesday's quarterfinals where they would play the winner of Edison and Buena Park. They have lost three of their last four matches, though all three.Jlosses have come against some of the toughest schools in the state. Elsewhere today: STATEMENT OF ABANDONMENT OF use OF FIClTTIOUS BUSINESS NAME The following pel'I00(1) hu (have) tbandonecl ltlt l.e t:J the llc1ltlout bulinMI name OreamSavtl'9, 2208 W. MOOfa, Santa AM, CA 92704 The Flciltlool Bull· MN n.tme referred to ebo\19 WU flied In Or· ange County on 3130/2000 FILE NO. 20008824451 Ronald T. Ande1'9on, 2206 W. MOOft, Santa Alla, CA 92704 Thlt bualnt.. 11 000- ducled by Ill lndMdual Ronald T Anderton Thia t111tement w11 hied wtth the County Clelll ol Orange Comy on I 0/12/2000 2000814'495 01~ Ptlot NoY 10. 17, 21~ 1. 200<1 mo Flctltloua Bualneaa Name Stltement TN followmg peniona •rt doing bualnMe ... Garden Patti, 5025 Marwtibum Ctn:I•. y otbll Uoda. CA 92888 Todd 8 &own. ~1 Shady Ridge Lene. Diamond Ber. 91765 Rei-. v Brown, 2&41 Shady Ridge Lene. Diamond Ber, CA 91765 Thia bu .. ne.. 11 con- duded by hulbend Ind wife Hive you 1tet11d doing bu1ineu yet? y "· 21"'91. Todd Brown Thl1 1t1t1ment w11 flted with the County Clel1c °' Orange councy on I Ot'Oel200C> 2oooe1421n Deity Pllol Nov 3, 10, 11.~1. 2000 nov 6-2, 6-3, 6-2. re , .· , .. ~. • r _,_. ' CITY Of NEWPORT BEACH NOTICE INVJTINO BIDS Saai.d bldl ~ be rtc*ved eJ the olllce d the City Cleft. 3300 Newport Boulevard, P.O. Box 1788, Newpotl Beaon, CA 92668-i915 until 2:00 p.m. on the 211th day of November 2000, II which time IUCh bide lhall be oe>ened Ind reed lof JAMBOREE ROAD ZONE Ill WAT'ER MAIN Rl!PLACEMl!NT PROJECT CAllEL8ACK STREET TO UNIVERSITY DRIVE ContnMlt No. 3380 1343,000 Engineer'• Eetlmllte ~!I, PUbllo WOfb Olrectcw Proepectlve blddert mey obtain one Ml of bid doc:umenle at no coat Ill lhe db ol the Publlc Worb o.pert· m.nt, 3300 Newpor1 Boulevard, P.O. Box 1788, Newport Beech, CA 92~915. SUMMARY OF PROPOSED ORDINANCE CITY OF COSTA MESA A PROPOSED OR· DINANCE la echecluled for adopllorl It the~ lat City Coundl of November 20, . being Ofdlnlnce ~ 17, amendlna Tiiie 8 of the Cotta M... Municipal Codt to Mtabllth min· lmum Mrvlce regulr• ment• for multl+famlly rHldenllal houefng w.-t• hauling MtVlcel. THE MOTION to riNe Ordinance ~17 llm reading c:errled by the follOWtno roll c.ff vote: COUNCtl. MEllBE.•: AYES: llonehen, Cowen, f(lckeon, ~~on. NO£S: Nona. AISEHT: Hone. THE FULl TEXT of the Ofdlnanoe may be reed In lhe City Cllltc'e omc:.. 77 Fafr Drtw, COit.i ....... MARY T. EUJOTT, DlilMdY City a.ti Published Newport The Sea Kings are not coming into the playoffs setting the world on fire. • The Orange Coast College men's weter polo team, fresh off its last-second ! ••• ~ . I >-..... SUWAAY OF PROPOSED ORDINANCE CITY OF COSTA MESA A PROPOSED OR· DfNANCC la eoheduled fot~at~ let Cly Councl of Nowmber 20, • being Ordnance ~11. ~ Chllpler X of Title 2 of Cotta MMa Municipal Code per· lalnlng to "" conlllot of tnt.r.-code. THE MOTION to lllv• Ordinance ~18 llr1t rudlng carried by the folloWlng roll call vote: COUHCtL Ml1191"1: AYl!8: Mon1han, Cowan, lrlokeon, llomerl, Dixon. HOU: NoM. Al8ENT: Hone. THE FUU TEXT of the ordlnanct may be read In the City Clertc'I ottloe, n Fafr Drive, Calta ....... MARY T. Ulaft DloUIY ~ a.tr Publlehed Ntwport e .. ch·Coate Me11 Olly Pict Noioe11it. 10, 2000 ,.. ' , . ~ .-. ,. .·. Flctfdous 'B'*'-8 taime Statement TM folloWln!I peraont .,. dolr10 buliwila u: Sllope, 441 Felr DIM, SUlle 104, Coeta Meta. Cdfomie 92$26 Suunne F. Kelman, 441 Fair OJM, Suite ~ Coeta Mw. c:.1-~ Thie buelnlM " oon-~ by: 111'1 lncMMll Hav• you alerted doing buelntn yet? v-. e.'11,IOO Suzanne F. Kelman lhll ltetamenl WU ftled With the ~ Cltlll of Orange CounlY on 11101/2000 2000M414M Oa~ Pllol Nov. 3, 10, 17._4. 2000 FZ05 "'NAMe CAR NUlmER: A204IOt . P£TIT10NER(S) JOSHUA JEFFREY CHIOECKEL HAS/ HAVE ALEO A PETI• TION FOA ~ CADER TO CHANGE NAMES FROM JOSHUA JEF- FREY CHIDECKEL TO JOSHUA JEFFREY STRICKLAND h .. hereby onMred that all per110M ln- t11'Mted In tNa matter IPP!MI' beb'I thll court In Olpertment No. L73 of fie 8upet1of Court d Calfon1la .. tha addl9l9 ehown above on 1 "21-00, at 2:00 o'cioc:* PM, Ind then Ind there ehow c:euN, I llfY tiey have, wny tha petition for cNnge of ftllTl9 ehoUld not be gnned. It II fuf1hef ordered tl1lll oapy o4 .. order to etlOW CMIM be f?Ub-llfltCl In~~ Required Out "A" Contr1ct0< Uc..-... 10< Btach,Coata Meaa Delly Plot Nowmbar 10, _____ .... F ..... 71...,.4 2000 Ihle l>toled • For 1Uf1ti.f Inform.· lion, can Mb Sinlloor1. Profecl Manegar at (940) 641-3342. Publllhed Newport 811ch·Co1t1 Mu• Delly Pllot ~ 10, 15. 2000 F7f3 MC 100M NOTa OP "'"'°" TO ..... AllH llTATI OP: ...... .IOM ICNMll ... ···-J. IQNll CAMllO....,. Undsey Anstandig -the duo had 12 kills and three aces each. Becker also finished with six digs, three kills and one ace. · "I have to be that fire," Deming said of ber role on the team. "I have lo fire everyone up. I want to make people realize that we can beat anyone.• The Sea Kings never stopped believ- ing they could win against San Dimas. Deming served two aces in the second game for an 8-1 lead. Becker, Anstandig and Alexandra Selicb also served aces as Cd.M blew out the Saints. Said Anastandig, "Because of CIF. everyone is fired up and ready to get into the finals.• Cd.M maintained its intensity into the third game which allowed Conti to play junior varsity players brought up for the postseason. Lauren Loe, a former N player, served for Cd.M's four final points. She had two aces, the last closing it out. 10-9 wino~ Fullerton, will play Citrus at 1:15 p.m. in the Southern California Regional quarterfinals at Mt. San Anto· nio College. • The OCC women's volleyball team will by to stop Golden West's 82·match winning streak tonight at home (7). •The OCC women's basketball team kicks off its 2000-2001 season at the Chaffey Tournament with a 3 p.m. con- test against Selano College. ,-.-... -. . ... ~ ... ~-For fUr'1er In-formation call WH Armand el 94M44·3043. ~~ KalW A•ouroae Publlal'led Newport 8HCh·Co11a Mui o.lly Plot Nownar 8, 10, 2000 WF2§9 Polley tlutf'.'1 and drndlinf's UN' ~ul>j~·1 to clumge witho111 llf>lit'r. Tiu: pulJlislwr n:11t'rv1'~ the ri1<l11 10 rf'usor. rodoi;i;ify. Monday ............... Friday S:OOpm • Tuesday ............. Monday 5:00pm • 11'Vi~ or n•jrc•t m1y du.,~ilird udvt:rti~cmt·llt. Pli·u,c n·port 1.111) t•rr11r that mtiv lw in 'our 1·ltu,.,ifi1'<1 lul im111e1li~u·I~. 'Ii ... 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R & 8 SOIA Roi*. .. 50'•' 80'1 MIKE 9'N45-7505 • 10 Friday, Novwmber 10, 2000 • TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE STUMPED? Cat for~.,..__.,_,,_ • ll!c,. _ 1~ ext code 500 i 220 ---I I * Accounting I Fln1ncl1I s.Mca, for indiY or sm IO mid size busiless BusineM Plans can 94N37-2.ooe CUSTOM CREATIVE TlLE LEWIS CONSTRUCTION lnllallations, slate, ceramic. AemodelinQ • Handyman marble, llOne. Eatab ms 1..1o1 704m Local Retldent M12044 J9fl 714-11281 714·557-5825 Bridge By CHAALES GOREN with OMAR SHA.AtF and TAHNAH HIRSCH DOWN TO THE IARK RONFS Neilher vulncr.ble. West dean. tlon w• oatutal, with Nonb'a three ~~& duee nouumpu a WEST •0763 ~KQ5 <> 10 •A987J SOlfTH •A IO 0 AJ82 c AJl764 •Q East's club bid persuaded Wat IO 1elect the ace of that IUlt for lbeopen· Ina lead and play anolher club. Dc:clam ruffed the conllnuadon, cashed the ace and king of spedcs, then ruffed a spade high. Dec1- retumed to dwnmy with the king of trumps and ruffed a club 10 complete the elimination or the bluck aults. A lnllnp 10 the queen extracted the lut enemy fang, llOd it was lime to iWt hearts. Declarer led the nine and. v.heo East followed low (COYering woukt oot belp -declarer would play the jack Ind arrive ll the same endina), declarer ran It LO West'• queen. Opening lead: Ace of • A convcnrion&I bid led 10~ unfor. lunate early defense. Dc:clars did not allow the dcfcn5e 10 recover. The defender now had a choice of ways to commit suicide. A heart return would be into South's ace-jack ienace. and a blaclc suit would allow declarer lo discard 1 hcan from dummy while ruffing in hand. Wilhout 1 club lead, 1len defc:me can defeat the hand. East can win the fim club lead and return a heart, assuring West of two lricb wink that defender still has safe exit cards. Or a shift by West to a trump or spade at trick two would have the same rnsult. Declarer does n()( have the enlriea to cxcane the endplay. Try 11 if you do not bcl ieve us. By partnership l&J"Cf'llCOI, ~1·s one no trump showed clubs and a major suit. Even with that weapon in our arsenal, we would have preferred a takeout double ~Ince the West hand is suitable for play in any one of the three unbtd 1.ui1~. The rest or the aoc· ,.._.be_M Ille llttlnge In ttii. raqih . FIND ~:71to0 number In which thlr9 II • dllfVi I* minute. ....... be _, of Olll of -COf!IP• It&. Qledl .... Iha local 8ettef BuslMM 8~ ,_, blb't ~ ~ eny _., or "" fOf MfVkee. RMd llld undefttand any connc:ta b9foN you elgn. · an apartment through classified! INC 500 parent COfl'4llllY A OISHEYINflJNASCAR Homll ,_ co. on lit ft. DfSTRIBUTORSHIP 11m1t. WI 111.n:ft on 11·27 $1675 t /wk. potenllal. No special ~ oppty !!Ing $8595 IOCM00-7151 c.. ** 1.f1"7.e1Mtcl2° POLICY lo 111 e!lol1 ID ofter 1111 belt S8MCI! possible 1D OU' ~ !'IS and advellllela. we wit requore ContrlciOfS who ildverUse in the S.rvice Directory to Include their Coniractors pc1n11 number 1n their advtrti ... meot Your co-openitlon ii greedy aepreciattd Fix Grout.Com Tiie ""*' • Rllb •lllM (714) 2544178 Lf223.443 1214 c::11~1 Undecape • ~ Mllnt. New lawn, epmlder lnf1lll 224 ADOfTIOHS /REMODELING FARTlilNG INTERIORS K'4ctleo f Balh f Remodll Room AIHliona... Vilt/MC L#56Q875 949-645-9325 : -1 :'. • ( • .. 1·800-559·1181 211 QVMNQ /MAINTENANCE ~·· HouMdtaning HomlS • J«s • v~ Weellly, bl-weekly 1 time, excellent rer1, rNtonlble rates, lic:enae 714-8112·2290 '· DflYWALI ... f'AINT lXP[HTo., . ang ape .Acoustic Aemov81 .Patchwork . Int/Ext Plllnllna No job to llmalll 20v .... ~ 11.-.543-1410 rtpeir, lrM trim & -· yard clean up 94~551-4387 ---~· ··.-..... ~ ... l -----· ...:J ------~}_. ·~-~ r--.--. - --, L,.,_. --~-.. ·-j •I I.___· _•_I DUFFY 11FT, ,_. hint to l•cm=I find. Excellent CGfld. 110,000 PriYlte PIW1y. N!: 7ll;: 1024 1--==I CaillK ._.. 811 .. White dlelllond, Low ... (.,504) m.- NABERS Udo Side Tie lor lll>oet (!14\$40-t100 141 to 8511 llOd *'1 1211 ex ~AllrO C.,,o Van ll1dlr. ... ernnc.. rl!f/d/ W8lar !ndd, MM'TS-7677 , AT'& ltle. llb, NC, 1nHm. 1 ni. $4200 -BOAT DOCK 949-722· t 170 $250t\to. lnduCIM Ulilitiel. 4002 River. ~ Blecl'I CORVETTE 1984 714-639-:1923 2211 Mllet, Like New, 1-~1 All= $7,750 94 7180 CORVETTE 19115 BMW la 'IO Gold. Ne>, 6 spd, 7311 Ml, 117,750 MMS0-7180 .. pwr, 15<* 11'11. loaded, main! recordl, pl"1I wtlll CORVETTE 1995 $8,000 obo 94H42..S788 6 spd, 7311 Ill, 117,750 8llW 740I 'II Nlvy IWTen, MMS0-7180 xlnt condition, mended WllTlllly, • ml. pllone. DATSUN 280Z 75 co p.yer, .,. peclalgl. 57,000 orlglnel ml, auto tic. 1 llin otvome Wlleela. Bett you'll llnd1 $34.500. al reconts, reel reel lhelpl 949·574-2670 $3,950. 948-759-3029 CAO ELDORADO 'II FOt'd llnlnoo XL T W Xlnt condition, 111,000 Ful al:ze, wtllteltln lttW, Daye 11+444-1123 &we M44WMS 4311 ml, llllllt -121,000 tlnL MMn-2717 FOii> CCINT'OUR ... ~.~ ......... .... lllllll90 MH'!t1• '°"° IXPlOlml ... LTO,low mlta. lellllr, mooMIOI llld "'°"' (848Ml) NAHM 114.811 (!14)140:f 100 • FON> llUITANO OT'll ~-·"1i~ NAHRI C?UlHO=tlOO FON> WllllTAR 'II 7 pllllllglr, low mlM. = •llClllenl concltlonl 19) 11.988 NAHAS i!14)54o-t1!! am.I TROOPER • 4X4, NI .-W• AC, lllW .................... NM7f:1IOO LAND ROVER DISCOVERY 'M l3K m~ St,500. 949-850-7180 Llxul 300 Coupe '12 53l ni. alwlY' glllged. lhowloorn IWW, meny n· DI 11~500 714-141-il089 Ulcdn Encullw '12 ... ~. wtl rnlk1llined. $695(). 714-558-1121 MAZDA llXI '11 liMlotlue lnl. good cond. moon-rool, 11uo.~obo. Cll a.I 949- lllercedte 1tof 2 3 '86 Diil w,,y it. lllll, •• pw, *90. ca.,,..'*· 14ell Iii $5.300 obo ~54&-3900 lllercedte 580 SL 'II D8ltt cllllooel, lhoWloom, 2 IOpa. 11411 FIWWIY mies. $18.995 obo 114719-2311 lllercedte 580 SL 'II ~ cond, chlOme a.tillh, 2 IOpa, • l'AI, •• loc:ll 114,960 71HS1-2464 .., 'f7 ... r ....... (IE11llO SS2.M STtRUNG 8llW MM4Mtoo Oldtlno'oll CUllw .. wi.. low ml, non-tmOlcer (356812) S10.988 NABERS (!14154N100 PRECISE PUlllllNG Rlplirt & Remodlll A\EE ESTIMATES lJ6!73!l8 714-51080 itt . .... -··--·-·--......... ----71'-895-6677 • Doi1y Pilot ot••• '# c...... ... wi..1ow1111. ........... (3'9118) 113.811 ..,...._. (!1411 .. 1100 Ola DHt Cllllw 'W v~ co. tow m1ta. 1111. c1 WWI'~ .... (3.'M 112.11111 NAllRI aJ4114N1!! OldlJ D'olt ...... '00 Dlltll dr, 1a ...i.,.. *· (21118) ., .... NAHAS (714!!40=1100 RANQ( 9'0VEA .., :::.. ev=l"::ic. '::Z H!!O!ol!O Mtf1!::1100 TOYOTA ....uNHlA 't1 °'· -*>, lllnt cond. 121k IN. ..... = ownet, sm5K)bo.54&-3836 VOl¥0 NI ... 5 .. 4 dr, NM I loab .,...., Newly~· retlable, ..... . 275 MM2WIOI ml 'f7 2-doof. OreenlSlnd lm4215srJ.u.o eJ:-• NM4Mtoo . .. 4-door, Alpllll Wllla'Slnd (IW41~ 137,185 STE 8llW NM4WIOO , .... 4-door, Alpllll Wllla'Slnd 1"111::&...o ,..SAS.- .......Wtoo 1·-=•I Llllnller flCilt for Toyota T1CIO lhoft-'oed S200 otlo MM3t41!! . Cen't l4Mlfn to get to ell thOM ar3~se? Let the Clealfled Service Directory help you find reffable help. TUTOR Give Yow a.Id tM Extra Hp $119 in Writing, ~si1ion nQli , Grommar, Reodi ond U.S. ~story ....., ........... baleltl ...... WHY (Mt) 72J.1372 - . . ' . • I t ' I ~()Nl~ll\tll~J): 1 • I f t I . . . . . . ~!!,~~-~---~ 10, 595 ~!!~~··· ...................... $10,995 ~'~~) ................. $11,395 ~J~~.~ .................... $11,995 ~~ ......................... $15,495 ~~~'-"""'""""'''"$15,895 ?!~·-·····$15,995 ··~---····-: .... s11,s9 r=~,,, ?.,!,~~-$17,99 . . .. -..., .. . . . . . . "'. . . . . . . 12 Fr , NoYember 10 2000 . . . FURTHER .EVIDENCE THAT· BEA-UTY ·IS HEREDITARY. THE JAGUAR S-TYPE \ STARTING AT $44,250 )AG~ THE ART of PERFORMANCE THE JAGUAR XJ SERIES STARTING AT $56,950 THE JAGUAR XK CONVERTIBLE STARTING AT $74,750 ... • • . . . . I •t" . • • "' ' .. • • j • .. • . . .. " .. " ltulicate your phone number to enter drawing: • .