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SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA COMMUNmES SINCE 1907 ON 'IME WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM MONJAY, NOVEMBER 20, 2000
.. A .Potentially Heep-rooted problem .m
AREAS OF SPEOAL
BIOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE
I ·Riding last week that
restricts runoff to Crystal
Cove also could affect
beach along Newport's
southern edge. II
Alex Coolman
DAILY PILOT
CRYSTAL COVE -It was a
striking victory for environ-
mentalists in the ongoing battle
to keep Crystal Cove clean, and
i1 also could be the beginning of
troµble for Newport Beach.
Po\-environmental watch-
dogs, such as Laura Davick of
the Alliance to Rescue Crystal
Topics and trends that
affect your life
Cove, the Santa Ana Regional
Water Quality Control Board's
decision Thursday that ho
runoff can legally be dumped
. at the state park beach was a
hard-fought triumph. It also
was an encouraging sign of the
board's willingness to tackle
pollution problems.
But Thursday's decision has
the potential to affect more than
just Crystal Cove.
1bat's because the rule that
was used to ban runoff at
Crystal Cove -California's
1972 Ocean Plan -could also
theoretically be applied to 33
other areas along the state coast
These areas, known as •areas of
special biological significance"
because of their unique envi-
ronmental resources, are afford-
ed a higher degree of protection
than ordinary beaches.
And one of these areas is in
Newport Beach.
SEE CLOSER PAGE 4
DON LEACl-V DAILY Pit.OT
The end of a walkway south of Little Corona beach.
These are some nearby exam-
ples of the 34 "areas of special
biological signtficance• that
are protected under Califor-
nia's Ocean Plan:
•c.tatln811&Md
There are four protected areas
on Catalina Island
• LaJola.
The La Jolla Ecok>gical ResetW
·~9-dt
Heisler Paric Ecological Reserve
• N9wport 9-dt
Newport Beach Marine Life
Refuge
• Irvine CoMt
Irvine Coast Marine Life Refuge.
This area includes ~I Cove ..
~State Water Resources
Control Board
Westside
meeting
focuses on
solutions
• Some participants say
Costa Mesa's plan for area
should have been scrapped;
all agree improvements are
needed immediately.
Jennifer Kho
DAILY PILOT
WESTSIDE -A Latino Commu-
nity Network meeting last week
about family issues quickly evolved
into a discussion about the city's
Westside.
Drummer Blgtra Klro-Kiro keeps the rhythm going on a conga while John Marr, right. plays along In the drum drde.
"The city spends more money on
other parts of the city because those
parts are more adamant,• said Phil
Morello, a Westside resident. • Peo-
ple with a lot of money -the
Segi rstrom family, Mesa Verde and
the East.side -are Ulfluendng the
Westside. They don't want things to
happen here that have happened in
other parts of the city. I think we
should work to figure out what out-
side infiuences there are on the West-
side and cut them off somehow.• Timeless
.REll71?HM
Bigira Kiro-Kiro's
fledgling drum circle at
Airlcan Comer Jn
Costa Mesa pulses with
good vibrations
StefMle Frith
DAllY PILOT
In one section of the circle,
John Man closes his eyes and
leans into his Djembre drum,
letting the rhythm of the
mu.sic take hold of bis body.
Elsewhere in the drcle,
"' • WHA't Drumming Orde
• WHEN: Sundays
• llME: 5 p.m.
• WHERE.: African Comer,
2584 Newport Blvd., Costa
Mesa
• CDSr. Free. Bring your
own drum. If pogible.
• CAU: (949) 650-7993
Shanan.a Perry grabs a small
drum. jumpe to her feet and
sways to the beat of tbc:M
SCOOP
around her.
Bigira Kiro-Kiro, his smile
almost as wide as bis over-
sized. bright yellow glasses,
leads the circle of about 10
people in an improvised drum
session at African Comer, a
shop that sells African drums
and artlfacta on Newport
Boulevard in Costa Mesa.
Since African Comer
opened in 1998, Kiro-Kiro bas
wanted to start a drumming
Circle in the hopes ot eventu·
ally forming a band ht could
SEE RHYTHM MGE 4.
ratk Sen. lerbua Boaer In vain.
8os9'. wtiO WM llnt elected to
11ae u.s. ,. ..... um. wm not
be up far rwel1ct1oa .gain until
20CM.
Baar WM YcMil Into Mr MC• __ ,.. ..... Nov9mber ... ...
w
PHOl05 IY DON lfACH I OMV l'l.OT
l>nmuDen O.Wl Hayaes. left. and
1Ud&er Campbell, rigid. keep tbe beat
at African Comer la Co.ta Meu.
'
Reporter •• ,,. Wedge. would be
• wm.ty draam -In 1975 New·
part a.em. ltom Will direct tbe
pDot lar .... wa NMwaak wt t.aa
.......... p.oduce.
• .... '""tbe lbow could ..... ·--.... • ..,cm .... •a..•
,...D tl1tncCllllli
--•4SlB 1a.ft ..... a
kd1D ... 1•' t•
Morello said he is unhappy with
the City Counc:il's decision earlier
this month to start over in aeating a
Westside improvement plall .
Since 1998, the city bas targeted
the aging, rundown Westside for
intense revitalization. The now-
defunct plan to improve the Westside
included making the neigbbOrbood
more pedestrian-oriented, replacing
some existing apartments with town·
homes or smaller home develop.
ments, and cleaning up businesses.
Morello said Watside residents
should leave the city out of the plan·
ning and try to persuade private
industry and businesses to help them
fulfill their improvement goals.
·we have to speubead this,• be
said. •1t•1 not going to be done
through government. It hu to be
done privately. When we have a
plan, then we should take it to the
City Council..
Thm Egan. another WestlkSe reid·
dent. arvued that the coundl made •
good decision.
•it hu been a good thing became
SEE WESTSIDE MGI 4
-aam ,------•
..... 1
-s _ ...... ____ ,.._,
..
'lllove the
SURFACE ON THE
Scuba training, consisting of six evening and two weekend day
classes, are offered at the Aquatic Center, 4537 W. Coast Highway,
Newport Beach. $200-$310. The center also offers scuba rentals,
special trips, repairs and air fills. (949) 650-5440.
2 Monday, November 20, 2000
SEAN Hl.lER I DAlY Pl.OT
Alisia Ford recently started rowing at the Newport Aquatic Center because she enjoys the team unJty of the sport.
Rowing to scholastic stardom.
Alex Coolm•n
OAJLY PILOT
A tunny thing happened to
Alisia Ford on the way to
college.
Ford, a 17-year-old Corona
del Mar High School senior, had
been running cross-country for
three years, but she found that
pounding the pavement wasn't
really her thing. It lacked the
kind of team unity she wanted
and left her unfulfilled.
What changed things for
Ford was a simple comment
from a friend who took one look
at her 6-foot frame and told her
to try crew.
Today, Ford is a six-month
mini-veteran of the rowing
scene. She's been pulling an oar
What's
AFLOAT
• WHAT'S AR.OAT ls published period-
ic.ally in the Daily Pilot. tf you are plan-
ning a nautical event. submit the infor-
mation to the Dally Pilot., 330 W. Bay St.,
Costa Mesa, CA 92627; by fax to (949)
646-4170; or by e-mail to
dallypilotOlatlmes.com.
SAILING CWSES
.Learn to ...U or wtndsurf at
Resort Water Sports. Windsurfers
and 14-foot sailboats may be
rented for $15 per hour. (949)
729-1150.
Sallboat rentals and private
lessons are available at Marina
Sailing in the Balboa Fun Zone.
Advahced classes include navi-
ffith a strong arm and good grades,
Corona del Mar Highs A lisia Ford seems
headed to a top-rated university
on an eight-woman boat, prac-
ticing with a girls' team at the
Newport Aquatic Center.
The team spirit? Ford said it's
pretty good in crew. • u we lose, we all lose,· she
scud.
And if the team wins, the vic-
tory is that much sweeter.
But what Ford didn't antici-
pate is the way joining a crew
team would affect her educa-
tion. Since jumping in a boat,
she's become a hot commodity.
Ford is a good student. She
gallon, big boat, powerboat,
introduction to heavy weather
and first-mate instruction. (949)
673-7763; the Blue Dolphin Sail-
ing Club, (949) 644-2525; or
Lido Sailing Club, (949) 675-
0827.
IOAT RENTALS
Balboa Boat Rentab can put you
on the water in many ways, with
single and double kayaks, elec-
tric boats, 14-holder sailboats,
pedal boats and runabouts for
offshore use or cruising the bay,
(949) 673-7200.
El4!$:trlc boat rentals ue avaJl-
a ble by the hour at Duffy Elec-
tnc Boats, 2001 W. Coast High-
way, Newport Beach . All boats
are equipped with window
enclosures and CD play~rs. lee
hopes to attend Brown Universi-
ty next fall, or maybe USC or
UCLA.
Her grades, though, received
a major boost from her partici-
pation in crew.
·u·s opened doors for me,·
she said. •A lot of schools need
crew girls.•
Christy Shaver, the girls'
rowing coach at the aquatic
center, said rowing women are
in demand now because of
schools' efforts to comply with
sports funding laws.
and cups are provided. Reserva-
tions are suggested. An hour
rental is $60. (949) 645-6812.
Sall airborne outside the harbor,
pulled by a motorboat at Balboa
Para-sailing near the Balboa Fun
Zone. A 90-minule trip is $45.
(949) 673-1693.
A motorized lounge cha1r may be
rented from Resort Waler Sports
at Newport Dunes for $25 per
hour. Pedal boats, electric boats,
boogie boards, kayaks, inflatable
rafts,, beach furniture and wet-
suits also are available. (949) 729-
1150.
Party pontoom. chaparral run-
abouts and family pontoons may
be rented a t Anchors Away Boat
Rentals in the Balboa Pun Zone .
(949) 673-3372.
Stricter enforcement of TIUe
IX, a 1972 federal law requiring
equal funding for men's and
women's sports, has meant
schools have to search for intel-
ligent ways to balance women's
programs against expensive,
traditionally male programs,
such as football teams.
"It's really nice,• Shaver said.
·we get recru1ting letters from
colleges all the time. They're
finding out that rowing is a way
of using• the money for
women's sports.
For Ford, who said she just
loves the spirit of the rowing
experience, the school benefits
are gravy.
·1 look forward to going,·
she said -just for the love of
pulling an oar.
Gondola tours are ottered by the
Gondola Co. of Newport, 3400
Via Oporto, Suite 102-B. The $75
cost includes a basket of bread,
cheese, salami, ice, glasses, a
blanket, music and a Polaroid
picture. Wine also is available.
(949) 675-1212.
Gondola Adventures/Newport,
3101 W. Coast Highway, offers
one-and two-hour gondola cruis-
es. A one-hour tour with cham-
pagne is $70. A two-hour tour
with dinner and champagne is
$180. Pickup is available at
waterfront restaurants. (949) 675-
4984.
Irvine Coast Charten In Udo
Marina Village offers two-hour
electric boat cruises with a
gourmet dinner. $180 for two
people. (949) 675-4704.
READERS HOilJNE
(949) 642-6086
WEATHER AND SURF
Daily Pilot
It m£lY not be
the Eiffel Tower,
but it:S-ours
San Diego has its Hotel del
Coronado, San Francisco has its
Golden Gate Bridge, New York has
a building the size of an empire, and
the French adore their Eiffel Tower.
It made me wonder-What do we
Terrance Phillips
THE HARBOR
COLUMN
have? We don't
have a hotel known
as the meeting
place that
destroyed a monar-
chy. No huge sky-
scrapers, although
there seems to be
many officials who
would approve of
that. Our bridges
are too low for
large yachts and
freighters; there are
no tall towers. ln
fact, do we even
have anything that
would quality as a
historic monument? Yes, we do.
The Balboa Pavilion was built in
1905. Originally designed M the termi-
nal for the Red Cars of the Pacific
Electric Railway, it also stood as a tlavi-
gation beacon for ships. The VictQrian
cupola adorned with 1,400 white lights
could be seen for miles out at sea. The
structure is recorded in the National
Registry of Historical Places and holds a
California landmark designation.
In addition to being the beachdrop-
off spot for the Red Car line, the facility
was designed as a bathhouse for "styl-
ish· beachgoers. Other features fol-
lowed, includmg a general store (which
still exists), a bowling alley and a
famous dance ball. Count Basie, Stan
Kenton and Benny Goodman were just
a few of the sounds th.at could be heard
on any given Saturday night
The Pavilion also became the birth-
place of a national dance craze that
swept the country, known as the
"Balboa Hop.· The Holiday Parade of
Lights boat parade began in 1908, and
the Pavilion was always the center of
the activity. ln 1932, the Pavilion hosted
the first surfing contest held in the U.S.,
as Hawail at that time was not yet a
state. Surfing's Duke Kahanarooku was
a frequent visitor, as were Hollywood's
social elite.
ln the 1960s, the facility expanded to
include whale-watching, sportfisbing
out of Davey's Locker and became the
home of the Catalina Flyer. The general
store is still there and maintains its early
1900s chann. Kayaks and other small-
boat rentals are also available through
the facility.
The Tule of the Whale Restaurant
and Spouter Saloon bar has hosted
everyone from royalty to reprobates.
Celebrities such as John Wayne,
Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall,
James Cagney, Tony Curtis, Clayton
Morse, Jayne Mansfield and otlumi
could frequently be seen in the restau-
rant and bar. The banquet facility can
host receptions of of up to 500 guests
and bas held more Newport HarboJ
High School proms and reunions than
anyone can remember.
I love the majestic look of the Balboa
Pavilion. and I'm thankful we have such
a structwe radiating its turn-of-the-cen-
tury charm and elegance. But we live in
Newport Beach, a place where histori-
cal significance is sometimes over-
looked.
ls it possible it could be tom down
and replaced by a hotel? Nah. It's a reg-
istered landmark and, besides, legions
of people would protest and uphold our
right to maintain structures and organi·
zations of historical significance.
• 1IMANa PfflU.9IS Is the Dally Pilot's
boating writer. You can rNCh him via e-mail
at ~ll.com.
•> POLICE FILES ril
Rea>fd your Comments about
the Dally Piiot °' news tJpa.
CA 92626. Copyright: No ,_ stc>-
rlei. llluntltlons, ldttori.I matter
Of~ het'ffl CMI be
r•oduold without written per-
million of ~lght ONr'tef.
......aATUMS
Balboa
TIDIS
10DAY
First low
COSTA MESA
VOL M. NO. 276
1MOMAS H. IOHNION,
PublWw
YONY ooaao.
Editor
u~
OtyEdltor
MWW•&m.
~City Edit« -·••MAHA&. ,....ldltor .,_ew-.
Spol1I EdltOr
DPWelGAa
Hlwlldllot
..-1.IMTOI,
f!eglo.lgrW
tnwMClCR'• ,..,...,, ,.,, ... ..
,,... .... Olreaot u.a••••
ADDRESS
Our addret& Is 330 W. BIY St..
Costa Mesa. CA 92627.
COBR.ECDONS
It i, the Pilot's PQllcy to prompt-
ly correct 111 «rOB of subsUnce.
l'teese c.alt (949) 574-4233.
m
The Ntwpolt luch.'Cost.a Mes. O.ily flllot'(USPS-14WOO) 11 pub-
AINd ~through SlturcMy.
1n Newport -..ct\ end emu MIN.
IUb9cl1ptloN •• awli.blt only ~ IUbtc:riblng to The nin.s Orenge
County (800) 252-9141, In ....
OWldt of Newport -..ct\ end
Costa Mell. sut.Jlptlom to cN
D.ity l'Clot .. Wllllble only bV
mlll b $20 '* month. Second ~ .... peid Ill c-. ......
CA. <Mt• lnc:IUde ............
Mii end locM ......., flOS'rMA$..
Ta stnd...,.. °*""'to The ~~~f!Uot, ,.o, IC* 1MQ, °""Mm..
HOW JO RE.ACH us
Orc.UIMlon
The limes Or1nge County
(800) 252-9141
Advel1lelnt a..lfled (Mt) '42·5671
Olsptay (M9) 642 .. 321
fdleorlet
N.ws ('49) 642-5680
Sports (949) 574-4223
News, Spoftl , .. (M9) ~170
E-fNll: dlltypl~com
Mmt()flb
IUllne9 OMc. (Mt) '42 .. 321
~, •• (Ml) 631-7126
___ Ol ,....,._
-.. -.........
711",,(J
Corona del Mar
711",,(J
Costa Mesa
79t'43
Newport 8ffc:h
7W.3
Newport eo.st
n/52
... POMCASr
,..,. conditions ecpect9d
wtth """" to Mist-high MVel CluMd by butkf..
lng northwest tMfl.
LOCA1'ION ..
-. 2•J -.,on 2·J
....... 2·J
.. Jetty 2·J
CdM 2.J
11:38 a.m ..................... 1.6
First high
5:321.m ....................... 5.2
Second low
11 :32 p.m .................. Ofl 0..4
Second high
5:17 p.m ....................... 4.5
TUUDAY
FiM low
•. -............................... h/1
Ftnt high
6.'(11 1.m..................... 5.6
Second low
12:291.m ... '" ............... 0.9
Second h6gh
6:1tp.m~ ..................... 4.5
• Giller Awnue: Possession of drugs was ~
ed In the 1200 bk>dc, at 4:30 p.m. Thursday.
• llrd ~ Awnur. Grand theft was .
reported at 1 1 :~ p.m. Thursday.
.
• "-I ...._ A chedcbook was reported st<*n
from 1 hospital room at l 2:50 p.m. Thunday.
• Jaiu • IFM 9'olld: A Coneunt security ~
was rtpOrtedly punched In the face ~ • vtltllDr
who Nf\aed to stop at the gate In the 000 blodt
l
I
Daily Pilot
II llllF
Senior center to
kick off fund-raiser
The Costa Mesa Senior
Center will launch its annual
fund·raising campaign today,
when honorary campaign
chairman Thomas McKeman,
the president and chief aec-
utive officer of Automobile
Club of Southern California,
will present a donation.
The event will start at 9:30
a.m . at the center, 695 W.
19th St.
The campaign will consist
of six fund-ralaing events
spread out over six months,
said Aviva Goe1man. executive
director of the center. The cen-
ter ts a nonprofit organization
that relies on private donations
and grants from the dty.
·we need to raise funds in
order to keep the programs
and this fadlity going for the
seniors,• she said. ·we want
to encourage the organiza-
tions and the community to
help my seniors to llve happy,
healthy and productive lives.
(The senior center) gives
them a place to look forward
to coming to every day, and
the seniors count on the facil-
ity to be open to them. If I
reach my goal, there is so
much more we can offer them
than we do right now. -
II it meets its campaign
goal of $100,000, Goelman
said the center plans to add
such programs as crisis inter-
vention, computer education,
a pen pal program and Lati-
no-oriented activities.
Santa's house to
benefit HomeAid
It features red mahogany
doors, hardwood floors, a fire.
place and more. But this house
is not for sale.
In fact, of all people, Santa
Oaus has already moved in.
This new 16-by-16-foot
Santa house was installed
Friday at Fashion Island in
Newport Beach, thanks to
Newport Beach custom home
builder Dave Mulvaney. A
longtime supporter of
HomeAid Orange County, a
nonprofit organization that
builds shelters for the tem-
porarily homeless, Mulvaney
dODAted bis time and matertals
to design and build the new
home for Santa. In addition,
Fashion Island will donate a
portion of the proceeds from
all photos wlth Santa to
HomeAid.
The house will remain at
Fashion Island and a portion
of proceeds from each year
will continue to benefit
HomeAid, which bas built 32
shelters, with more than $14
million donated in cash and
materials.
Fashion laland is also home
to the nation's tallest Cluistmas
tree, a 115-foot white fir that
hu 17,000 white lights, bows
and ornaments. The lighted
tree debuted Friday night in
Bloomingdale'• Courtyard.
Boutique to feature
homespun treasures
Forget the crowded malls
and insane madness of
Christmas sales during
Thanklgtving. Instead, find
that perfect homemade item
for friends, family and co-
worken at the eighth annual
Sugar and Spk:e Home Craft
Boutique, hosted by Kelly
C lark Creative Home
~from 9 a.m. to .. p.m.
Plidey and Satwday.
Qdltmal gifts, deoora.Uom,
ClOUlltly aaftl, jewelly, amdlel,
decorative pWows and any-
thing else for the kitchen and
every room of the boUle, ae-
' ated by more than 30 aaften,
' will be on sale at 20082
Bayview Ave., a home 1n
Newpolt Beach. Molt lteml are
pdced at 1811 than S20.
lnformetion: (9'9) 752-8229.
t
COST~ MESI CITY COUNCIL PREVIEW
Onlhe
AGENDA
LISS 1UHIC,
THE IEnER
All envlronmental-
impact report for the Home
Ranch development shows
that a Susan Street offramp
along the northbound San
Diego Freeway would
relieve traffic congestion at
the freeway interc'hanges at
Harbor Boulevard and '
Fairview Road/South Coast
Drive. These locations are
expected to exceed capacity
if no improvements are
implemented.
WHAT TO EXPECT:
The City Council is expect-
ed to approve development
pfans for the freeway
offramp at Susan Street
COMMlnEE
APPOllllEE
The Traffic Impact Fee Ad
Hoc Committee has two
vacancies, one for a home-
owners association repre-
sentative and another for a
member at large to repre-
sent the community. City
staff have advertised for
these positions and, so far,
one individual has expressed
Interest. The individual.
Bruce Garlich, has served as
a board member and presi-
dent of the Wimbledon Vil -
lage Homeowners Assn. for
several years and has many
ties in the community, as
well as an understanding of
I'm not worried,
my agent Is
c ... 11 Brown lnsuNnce
Call today for auto & home
owner's Insurance'
(949) 760· 1255
FashJon Island
FYI
• WHO: Costa Mesa City
Council
• WHEN! First and third
Mondays of the month
• WHERE: 77 Fair Drive,
Costa Mesa
traffic issues.
WHAT TO EXPECT:
The council is expected
to appoint Garlich to the
Traffic Impact Fee Ad Hoc
Committee.
llCYCLI TRAIL
In April 1987, Southern
California Edison Co. grant-
ed the city a five-year
license allowing the 'City to
connect its bicycle trail to
the county's Santa Ana Riv-
er trail over Edison proper-
ty. In April 1991, the license
was extended for 10 years.
for SSOO. Edison has
requested the city renew
for another 1 ()..year tel'T'QJ
beginning in May and end-
ing in April 2011 .
WHAT TO EXPECT:
The council is expected
to approve the renewal to
preserve the city's link to
the regional county trail.
UNDERGROUND PLAN
Southern California Edi-
son Co. maintains an over-
head electrical system along
the east side of Placentia
Avenue, from 18th Street to
Wilson Street, and along
the south side of 19th
Street. from Monrovia
Avenue to Anaheim
Ne rt Beach • uc.-05 0290
Thursdly. NovtftM ll
11:00 1.m. • 1:00 p.m.
Thanbglvtng 0., lnlftdl
Feltunf19. ..
• New Otltans Oetp fried
TIM'by ¥lf1h All the Trimmings
• SfffoOd Bar reaturlng
lting Crib
• ~t FM>titis
• Gltdtll ffesh SNds
• Olef's GollnMt ftlltHS
·~ OlsMrU •
• 5moodlil Bat
• ~ 'Orqe .luict
• .... Chldlwn\ Wtft
• Mlldlf'*»;t ... uus--. srus • dlM9t ll llrd .-cM1111 ... J•Ja ,.., ......... .....
o.n.
COUllCIL
Avenue. The company has
requested the city desig-
nate the area as an under-
ground district by city ordi-
nance so a project to bury
the electrical wires and oth-
er equipment can qualify
for financial assistance.
WHAT TO EXPECT:
Council members are
expected to adopt a resolu-
tion declaring the formation
of the 19th Street/Placentia
Avenue Underground Utility
District No. 21 .
Support Our
Schools
Shop Harbor
Blvd. of Cars
I-1 .t\ l\ I ~-,J{
})j, J \ 1! l ·,,,..,
~
BRIEFLY IN
THE NEWS
Project Cuddle seeks
new toys, clothing
While you're out Christmas
i hopping for that special toy
to put in your child's stocldng,
why not pick up something
extra for a child or young teen
who might not receive any-
thing from Santa Claus.
A toy drive for Project
Cuddle, a Costa Mesa-based
nonprofit gro\lp that provides ·
emotional and emergency sup-
port to prevent baby abandon-
ment nationwide, will begin
Friday at the Orange County
Market Place and resume
through the weekend &nd
every weekend through Dec.
10. Anyone who brings a new,
unwrapped toy or clothing item
valued at $.5 or more for a child
or young teen will receive free
admission to the swap meet,
which is regularly $2.
Friday, which is an added
shopping day at the swap meet.
all shoppers will receive free
admission, and anyone who
brings a new toy will receive a
holiday gift and a free pass to
return to the swap meet
The collected toys and cloth-
ing are used for Project
• Cuddle's annual holiday party,
where more than 400 children,
ranging from newborns to 18
year olds in protective custody,
are treated to special gifts,
refreshments, crafts and games.
The swap meet is open
Saturdays and Sundays, as well
Monday, Nooiember 20, 2000 3
as the Friday after
Thanksgiving from 7 a.m. to•
p.m. at the Orange County
Fairgrounds, 88 Pair Drive,
Costa Mesa.
Information: 88-TO-CUD-
DLE.
Red Hill Avenue
bridge to reopen
The new Red Hill Avenue
bridge over the San Otego
Freeway and Costa Mesa
Freeway connector lanes will
open to the community for a
sneak peak at 12:30 p .m .
Tuesday. Caltrans will official-
ly open the bridge to trafCic
Wednesday evening.
The Red Hill Roll Out will
feature a brief program with
local officials and representa-
tives of the Orange County
Transportation Authority and
the Califorrua Department of
ltansportation. Afterward, local
bicycle ciub representatives will
break through a banner to cel-
ebrate the bike lanes that have
been added to the bridge.
The bridge was dosed in
March as part of the San Diego
Freeway/Costa Mesa Freeway
Improvement Project, a part-
nership between the trans-
portation authonty and
Caltrans. The bridge was com-
pleted a month ahead of sched·
ule. It was rebuilt and raised 18
feet to accommodate new lanes
between the two freeways.
The $.5.5-million bridge is pri-
marily funded through Measure
M, the sales tax initiative
approved by voters 111 1990.
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4 Monday. November 20, 2000
\
-
• 19 t ••
WESTSIDE
CONTINUED FROM 1
1t has energized the West-
side," be sa1d. "Now we can
do it right.•
Other residents -repre-
senting at least four differ-
ent community organiza-
tions -expressed concerns
about litter, parks, family
support, library services,
flooding and dty services.
The group also came
up with a list of possible
solutions.
Bill Turpit, a member of
the Latino Business Coundl,
suggested inviting council
members to visit the West-
side and starting a Westside
Pride campaign.
The camp aign idea,
which met with murmurs of
approval, involved forming
both a marketing plan to
highlight positive aspects of
the Westside and a group to
work on making improve-
ments, Turpit said.
Other suggestions
included a cooking group to
build solidarity, a city ser-
vice survey and a Westside
parks commission.
Several community
members said building
understanding is one of
their most important tasks.
Roberto Torres. a Latino
Community Network mem-
ber, called the meeting "the
beginning of a new hope for
Costa Mesa.#
"I thought it was great
that the groups decided to
work together,• said Kris
Day, another Latino Com-
munity Network member. •1
think we share many of the
same issues. Hopefull
will mean positive things to
the Westside.·
CLOSER
CONTINUED FROM 1
A SPEOAL Pl.ACE
This Newport Beach area
runs roughly Crom Cameo
Shores to Uttle Corona.
It's an area that's difficult
for the public to reach because
a wall of expensive homes
perched on tbe coastal c1if(
restricts most of the obvious
access routes. Only by hik1ng
from the north or the south at
low tide can nonresidents
enjoy the rocky, dramatic
shoreline.
Like the controversial
beach at Crystal Cove,
Newport's southern edge is a
spot where plenty of runoff
gets discharged directly onto
the sand.
Dave Kl.ff, Newport Beach's
deputy city manager, said
there are roughly five storm
drains that drain straight to
the coast along this stretch of
beach. And many of the pricey
beach-side homes have land-
scaping arrangements and roof
gutters that also dwnp water
on the shore.
The region is an enforce-
ment action waiting to hap-
pen, Kitt said.
RHYTHM
CONTINUED FROM 1
tour around the world. The
51-year-old Congolese-born
drummer has been playing
since he was a child and,
when he moved to Southern
California about five years
ago, he knew he wanted to
bring a piece of Africa with
him et it has taken the past
-...........~ and a half to form a reg-
ular drum circle, which me t
•J wouldn't be at all sur-
prised U the regional board
says 'OK. now that we're
addressing the lrvtne Coast
area, we should look at this
Newport section.'• be said.
What be's less sure about
ls exactly bow the dty would
respond if the regional board
decides to aack down.
"I'm not sure what we'll do
there,• be said.
A HANGING THREAT
It's far from certain that the
regiooal board will go ahead
and start tackling new areas
now that it bas dealt with
Crystal Cove.
For one thing, said Mike
Adackapara, division chief
with the board, it's sWl possi-
ble a state-level decision could
overturn Thursday's ruling. ·n is most likely that we
will see if this order is
appealed to the state board,•
he said. •u it is appealed, we
might wait for the decision.•
The Irvine Co., which was
named by the board as a prob-
lem Crystal Cove discharger
along with the California
Department of 'n"ansportation
and the California Department
of Parks and Wildllfe, said last
week it will probably not
appeal the discharge ban.
for the third time Sunday.
•The last week was so
fun." said Kiro-Kiro, his eyes
wide with delight. •1 played
here with John (Marr) for two
hours straight IJ was like,
wow, I couldn't stop, Drums
are a way to express your
happiness and, when · the
beat ts very good. it relieves
you.•
Perry, who has known
Kiro-Kiro since the shop
opened, agree.s the art of
beating a drum can cleanse
one's soul.
But the state board may
weigh in anyway, simply
because the decision on
Crystal Cove mJgbt be the
inspiration for future action
elsewhere.
Robert Miller, a spokesman
for the state board, said the
boardhAanot yet detennined
if it would rule on the question.
"They're probably looking
at it, but they haven't made a
decision as to whether or not
they're going to take it up,"
he said.
ln the absence of guidance
from hlgher·ups, Adackapara
said, it's certainly possible the
regional board will take action
to k:Ul runoff at other biologi-
cally significant areas.
A DRAINING PROBLEM
The regional board has
focused on Crystal Cove pre-
cisely because the construc-
tion there has yet to be com-
pleted, its officials say.
"It's a lot easier to eliminate
discharges and to deal with
these types of problems when
a project is not yet built,• said
Kurt Berchtold, a spokesman
for the regional board.
But for areas that are
already built up, trying to elim-
inate runoff after the fact coQ]d
be challenging.
•Drums are the heartbeat
of the Earth, and you just beat
all your love and energy into
it. And I want to be around
Kiro, because just look at the
light in his smiling face," Per-
ry said, pointing to Kiro.Kiro,
who smiled shyly in return.
• JeiSt look at him, and you
will see why drums mean so
much. They bring you love.•
n eena Robertson and her
mother are not as familiar
with the art of drumming as
Perry and Marr are, but, they
knew there was something
Doily Pilet
•Havoc• is the word
Laguna Beach City Manager
Ken Frank used to describe
the probaNIB effects of trying to
brtng bis dty into compliance
with a no-discharge require-
ment.
That dty, like Newport, has
a row of home!> abutting an
~a of spedal biological sig-
nificance -the Heisler Park
Ecological PreseIVe.
•All I know is that the water
goes downhill, and it's been
going there for 70 some-odd
years," Prank said. "Other
than diverting it into the sewer
system. I have no due what
we would do" if such dis-
charges were banned.
Newport's situation is not
as dire because the sources of
IUl'loff a.re more concentrated
than those in Laguna.
Blit it could still be a fonru.
dable task to keep the water
from running to the ocean.
Kiff said Newport would try
to comply if the regional board
sends the order.
"We would trytofiDda way
to work to resolve the prob-
lem." be said. "Because I think
the regional board has been a
good partner wi~ us on many
things. I would bate to have
us start thumbing our nose at
them.•
calling to them to make them
walk by African Comer on
Sunday.
"We were going to a store
nearby, and we heard the
drumming,• said Katherine
Robertson, 54, of Santa Ana,
softly patting the Djembre
drum in front of her. •1t•s such
interesting music, and 1t
makes you feel so good, even
if you are sad.•
'n"eena, 15, agreed. She
said even though Sunday was
her first time playing the
drum. she felt at ease as pa.rt
of Kiro-Kiro's drum circle.
' \ II I I \ .. ~
"lt"s great,• she said. "You
just try to follow along.•
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SPORTS HALL OF FAME
CELEBRATING THE MILLENNIUM
Estancia
Quot• Of
•DAY
•tt feels •eat to win agail This ya I won't hM m many
bruises m last year ~· • • Delf 'lal • _ •s r n • rr 'D .....
Amber StHn_ Newport Harbor High 9IClllSHMLOF,.... PM l.AWlllCI
CIF Division II girls cross country champion _ .. _
Sports Editor Roger Corl50n • 949...5744223 •Sports Fax: 949-650-0170 •Monday,~ 20, 2000 5
•we're happy to be in this game,•
said OCC Coach Mike 'nlylor. •Jt's
obviously a reward for the bard work
from the players and coaches. We're
exdted to play Cerritos, ~re a
very good football team.•
The selection committee, howev-
er, was certainly aware of the unique
ctrcumst.aoces surro11ndh:19 Cout,
which has dumfounded IDUlf with
victories over such community col-
lege powers u bowM>ound Palomar
and Ml San Antooio to beoome the
Cinderell.6 team of Southern Califor-
nia JC football.
Of.Pl(/• ("I' •
f u I ii rt 1 ''' 1 •
\.11it 1 An 1 ; ~,
The selection ol Coast is a sur-
prise in that the Pirates did not fit
earlier assumptions that a finish
among the top 12 ranked teams in
the state would be necessary for a
bowl bid.
There is also the •what-bave-
you-done-lately• factor. Coast has
won six of its past seven starts.
.
HIGH SCHOOL CROSS COUllllY STEEN
REPEATS
Newport Harbor senior tops ClP
Division II championship field. a~
Tony ~.
OMV PILoT
WALNUT -It's not called, •poop-ou.t" blD
for nothing.
The nearly straight-up climb am send even a
top aQSS country runner into a state of calf-
cnunping agony.
That's when Amber Steen ldcked the poop
out of the •poop-out• hill.
With runners slowing d()wn on the climb, tbe
senior from Newport Harbor High tumed OD
her jets and pulled away from the pack en route
to her second straight CJF Southern Sedkln
Division Il individual aoa country title wltb a
time of 17:38.30.
• 1 conserved energy early tn the race aDid
stayed with the pack: Steen said. •When w.
got to the •poop-our hill I decided tbars wblN
I was going to make my push and I did. It feel9
great to win again. This year I won't have a1
many bruises as last year.•
Agoura's Laura Jakoslcy was second behtnd-
Steen at 17:(9.5, while Senta ~'I Lod
Mann placed thiid at 17:57.1. They were tbe
only three runners in Division D with sut..18
times.
The Sailors, f1fth u a teem. will hope for m
at-large bid to the CJF state finals oat~
end in Presno. According to Coach Bric 1Welt. a
spot on next week's starting line should bi
theirs.
•They usually take three « four at__.,,.
schools from the Southern Section and we 1-ft
the top team time out ol that group, IO I'm Dat
worried,• 'I\veit said. •The gnMlt thing about
Amber'• race wu that she wu In total ccm.trol OI
herself, which means she had more In ber If lbe
needed it.•
ICDIT Tit£J'TC7N I DAl.Y P'lOT
Ne wport Hubor'1 Amber Steen collec:ta second ltralglat
CIF Dlvt1lon n cross country champtomhlp lJl 17:38.30.
It WU not neoesMJ')' U Steen jumped to tile
top of the pack right from tbe opening gun. ·o.
this coune, you have to pick and c:bome your
spots to go for tt: Steeri sa1d. •1.ast week at tbe
SEE NEWPORT MGI 7
Tars roll past El Toro, 12-6
• Newport Harbor will battle
Foothill in CIF Division I title
game Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.
Rk:Mrd Dunn
0Al.Y Plu>T
LOS ALAMITOS -Both coaches
showed the video of last year's semifi-
nal overtime thriller prior to Satur-
day's much-anticipated rematch
between Newport Harbor High and
longtime nemesis El Toro.
The early-morning video session
seemed to inspire the top-seeded
Sailors more than Coach Don Stoll's
Chargers, who served as Harbor's
postseuon villain last season. when
when El Toro's Trevor McMunn
scored the winning goal in sudden
death as the Sailors were once a.gain
denied their first CIF championship
game appearance sinoo 1987.
BOYS WATER POLO
A year earlier it was Foothill which
dismissed the Tars from the playoffs in
the quarterfinals.
•1t was a year ago (Saturday). and
every one of those guys played in that
game,• Newport Harbor co-head
coach Brian Kreutzkamp said, point-
ing to his n.rs (28-5), following a
redemptive victoty U there ever was
one, 12-6, over El Toro (19-12) in the
CIF Southern Section Division I semi-
finals at the Los Alamitos USA Aquat-
ic Center.
The to)rseeded Tars, reminded of
a bitter conclusion to their junior year
in boys water polo, started ta.Jd.ng Bl
Toro apart in the second quarter.
·usually in the thinl and fourth
quarters we show good team speed
(and pull away from teams on the
counterattack), but today it came in
the second quarter,· said Kreutz-
kamp, who added that bis teem
played its best game of the seuon at
two meters with senion Peter
Belden, Ryan Cook ~ Steven Jen-
drusina.
Since McMunn's winning shot a
year ago to upset the divisim'I ..:xlDd
seed, Kreutzk.amp said his team.
along with veteran coach Bill Barnett.
has tried to figure out •wbef9 it can
get back that lnchr
Newport Harbor bad plenty OI
room to spare ln this third ltralgbl
semifirutl clash against ~ permm.I
South Coast League cbampnm.
Now, the Sea View League~
on Sailors face Century League c::tma-
pioo Foothill in the CIP Dlvillan I c:bml-
pimship game Wedraclay al 7:30 p.m.
at Behnoot Plaza Olympe Pool
The "IUI, trylng for thetr ftnt CIP
SEETAltS,._7
Sea Kings march on, 11-4
• Young CdM squad will be IOYS WITll POLO
gotng for second straight CJF
DI•. II c:"b8.q>1onship a gainst
another fattriJler foe (l}ntversity).
' .
6 Monday, November 20, 2000
PllP lllEFS
.Morton to UCI BOwl-bound OCC wins
• CdM senior wins
SoCal boys 18 doubles. • Orange Coast earns Mission
Conference.Central Division
championship, bowl berth.
St!IW Virgen
,. ()1 ,lfHJt ( O.t'.f It.HI lww'90I•"'• .· 17 ~ o 1S 0 J -11 Corona del Mar DlllS High senior Brian 17 ar.,.. Comt ' 12 0 14 -J2 •
30 ...... .. Morton, who teamed with K.C.
Corkery to win the Southern
California boys 18a sectional
doubles title Sunday, has
accepted a tennis scholarship
from UC Irvine, accorotng to bis
father Glenn.
25 occ . ~ 13 .... fTom Hlgg5
Z121 Odele t.iled), 11 ~ DAILY Plt..oT
COSTA MESA -Remember the
ntans1
....... Qud ... 17 OCC • Kemp 4 run C... t.lted), 41 14:20
..
Remember the Pirates! ace ~18 OCC • ow.Jns A4 run (pm fllled),
11:A4 ',
Morton and Manhattan
Beach resident Corkery, defeat-
ed Rylan Rizza and Jeff Kazari-
an of Rancho Palos Verdes, 5-7,
6-2, 7-6, Sunday at Los
Caballeros Sports Village in
Fountain Valley.
Morton bad teamed With
Rizzo to win another 18s sec-
tional doubles crown in June.
Morton had said he would
not play high school tennis this
season. But he has changed his
mind, his father said, and ts
looking forward to helping
Coacb nm Mang's Sea Kings
gun for a CIP Southern Section
title.
Turs on road Friday
Newport Har-FOODAll bor Hlgh, the No .
4 seed in the CIF Division VJ
football playoffs, will square off
against Kennedy in a 7:30'p.m.
quartel'final at Western High
Friday. Kennedy (8-3) upset
host Villa· Park Friday, 45-14,
while Newport (9-2) topped
visiting Westminster, 41·7, in
the first round of the playoffs.
Newport Harbor Coach Jeff
Brinkley said Kennedy Coach
Mitch Olson had assured him
the Fighting Irish had arranged
to use the Handel Stadium
facility Friday.
The Orange Coast College football
team won the Mission Conference Cen-
tral Diviskm d>ampimshlp with a 32-18
victory over visiting Saddlebeck Saturday
and made 2000 a season to remember.
OCC (6-4, 4-1 in the division) finish-
es as co-champion with Palomar, a 56-7
winner over Golden West. PUllerton
missed on its chance to share the title
with a 35-23 loss at Santa Ana.
Against Saddleback (3-7, 2-3), the
Pirates did what they have done since
their fourth game of the sea.son: Dig
down deep and come together as a
team.
One heartbeat. Once again, true to
their theme for the season.
Yes, Fullerton spoiled the Pirates'
winning run last week. But, OCC still
accomplished what nearly no one
thought it would.
The Bucs won the division title. They
beat powerhouses Mt. San Antonio and
Palomar. They finished above .500 for
the first time since 1993, won their first
title since 1990 and earned their first
bowl bid since '93.
•When we were down with an 0-3
reoord, 'fyrone McNeace came up with
the 'one heartbeat,' • said James
Dawkins, an Estancia High product
who ran for 134 yards and three touch-
downs on 18 carries. •And every game
since, we've played like one heartbeat.
Everyone just came together.•
With the Pirates protecting a seven-
point lead, Dawkins spun out of a tack·
le and sped toward a 52-yard touch-
GAUCHOS
down run to put the game away in the
fourth quarter.
After OCC Coach Mike 1\lylor con-
gratulated bis team and the Pirates in
tum poured water on him. Dawkins was
quick to give aedit to bis teammates.
"The offensive line did a good job,•
Dawkins said. "Without them springing
me into the secondary I wouldn't have
done anything.•
Gary Lewellyn, the 31-year-old
Orange Cbunty police officer, would be
among those linemen. Lewellyn, just as
the other Pirates will tell you, said OCC
deserves the Strawberry Bowl bid it was
awarded Sunday (the Pirates will play
at Cerritos Dec. 2).
·we beat (Mt. SAC) the No. 1 team
in California," Lewellyn said. "If we're
the only team that can beat them. we
should be able to get a bowl game.•
Pirates' linebacker and defensive
captain Dustin Davis agreed. The win
over Ml SAC and the division title put
OCC in line for a bowl.
•If we play our game, we can beat
anybody,• Davis said. "We're co-
champs with Palomar even though we
beat them. ('Ibe bowl selection commit-
tee) should consider us just because of
the teams we have beaten.•
OCC quarterback Nick Higgs said
the greatest moment of the season was
the upset victory at Ml SAC, 26-25, on
Sept 30. Perhaps even greater than
their division title, the Bucs are proud of
that win.
•That basically turned around our
season,• said HJ.ggs, who threw for 13'
yards and one touchdown. •we stuck
together and made lhe big plays when
it counted. We~ever gave up.•
The Pirates went to Mt. SAC with an
0-3 record and nine points to show for
themselves in those losses. The Moun-
ties had defeated OCC eight years in a
row. Higgs was 1 the last time the Bucs
beat Mt. SAC (1989).
But. Orange Coast pulled off the
impossible and drove its momentum
with four more wins, which included a
triumph in Pasadena, setting the school
record for offensive yards in a game
over Golden West, shocking Palomar,
and outlasting Santa Ana in a three-
overtime thriller.
The season bas been unforgettable,
especially for Taylor. There is a simple
reason why the Bucs were 59 special
this season.
•They've played to their potential,•
Taylor said. ·rve coached for over 20
years. I coached OD that Edison C1F
championship team (1979) and we obvi-
ously had some great, great players.
This team has some good players. They
have played to their level. This team
deserves a chance to go on and play
another week.•
w -8emlfd 21 p.-from
Whleldori °"""°" kick), 8:10 led -~.-i1run~ ... ,,~
from 'M'6eldon}, 3:12 .
...... ~LIJ..\• l occ -~4run<Pa~ ~· 10:57
SIMI -Arntson 22 fG. 5:2t ' '
occ-o.wklns 52 run ~ ldd(),
I •
4:20 I "' Attendllf'C8: &00 (~11 I , wvaw..•m•ra s.d· Christensen, 15-34, 1 TD;
eem.rd, 4-18; WNeldon. 9-7;
Herzog, 1-3; C.obb, 1-mlnUH. occ . o.wtclns. 18-134, J ~
Bllnc:o, 7-25; Dale. 1-23; tc.np. 8-16.
1 TD; Higgs. S-16; CMnpo, 2·3;
Mc:NeK.e, 2•2. I • WVIDUN.. MSl91G ~
Sed • Whleldori,•19-28-2, 270, 1 TD.
OCC -Hlocal. 12-25-0. 140, 1 TD. .mMDUM....,..
Sed • Chrimnsen, 8-132;
McCoonaclc. 4-31; BerNtd. 2 .....
1 TD; RlcNrds, 2·39; ~oo_ 2-9; Morgan. 1-15. . . ·-·-,.. j j •
OCC -Fredrldc.son, 6-72; oai., lf-37,
1 TD; Fane, 1-22; McNuce. 1·3.
GAME SYATl5TICS
SIMI OCC
first downs 16 I 19 ~ 29-64.241
Passing yardage 270 134
Passing 1t-28'i '12-25-0
Netretumy~• 9 15
~ ·~ 3 -22 Net yardage 3337 361
~fumbles lost ~: 6-~
Fltg5-net ya«Mge 10-97 8-76 •
Time of possession 25C:J8 • 34:22 ·
•Punt returns, lnt~fumble
mums
CdM:cruisestocrown
• Without hardly breaking a sweat, HIGH SCHOOL CROSS COUNTRY
Sea Kings capture the title with ease.
C orona del
Mar'sKaUe
Quinlan (left)
leads the Sea
Khlgs to another
CIP Dtvlslon IV
champlomblp.
At right. above,
Estanda'sl.lz
Hulpe (left) and
CdM'sSeuon
Meservey round
a bend during
Saturday's CIP
Finals. At right.
below, Cd.M's
Josh Yelsey
(left) and
Estancia'•
Humberto Rojas
await the
starting gun.
Estancia
second··Rt
Tony AJtobetli
DAILY PILOT
WALNUT -The CIF Division N GllU
finals in girls cross country ha d all the
makings of a good-vs.-evil novel for the Coro-
na del Mar High squad.
The times weren't up to the Sea Kings' sat-
isfaction, complaints about the beat, dust and
dryness came flowing out of the runners and
some coach from an opposing school was pro-
claiming, "CdM's going downl CdM's going
down!"
By the way, despite all the hardships and
excuses, CdM's girls repeated as Division N
champions by a whopping 78 points over the
rest .of the packl
•1t doesn't sound like a group that just won
a CIF title, does it?• CdM Coach Bill Sumner
said with ~ smile. "We had our runners grab-
bing their throat and making all sorts of funny
faces out there and I told them to just RUN!"
And run they did. to the tune of five top-25
finishes, including four runners placing in the
top 15.
DAILY Pll:PT PHOTOS BY KEN't TREPTOW
Senior Katie Quinlan led the Sea Kings'
charge with a fourth-place time of 19:08.3.
Jenny Cummins came in 11th with a 19:32.1,
with Season Meservey (13th, 19:39.4) and
Diana Hossfeld (15th, 19:42.1) close behind.
Sophomore Llnclsay Younnan completed
CdM's top five with a 20:01.7, good for 24th.
Sumner said. "Hopefully, we'll use this as a
stepping stone for the sta1e championships in
Fresno Saturday. We'll lb.st keep taking one
the pack, then turns it on late.•
But the senior powered through the infa-
mous .. poop-out• and "reservoir" b1lls to gain
six spots on the competition in the final mile
and a half,
"It really was dry and hot out there today,·
Quinlan said. "When that dust starts flying in
your eyes and mouth, it's hard to run.•
Quinlan was in ninth place after the
"switchback,• but used the final two miles to
gain ground on the opposition and finish
fifth .
CdM's 54 points was just a tad off the
team's goal of 20 points (five points shy of a
perfect race), but the 54 was still the second-
lowest team total among all schools compet-
t.og in all divisions. Only Peninsula's Division I
score of 51 was better.
"The good news out of all of this was that
we won the CIP title, which is very exciting,•
race at a time.•
The Sea Kings, ranked No. tin the state,
have successfully defended their Division N
title and will now look to defend.their state
crown next weekend.
Estancia senior Uz Hulpe qualified as an
individual with a tbird~place time of 19:00.3,
less than a second off her personal-best time
on the course and bettering her fourth-place
standJng from a year ago.
Hulpe started off slowly and was in ninth
place at the halfway point.
•All I want to know ls why she starts out so
slow,• Estancia Coach Joan Carlisle said with
a laugh. •she always starts near the middle of
Sophomore Diana Rosette missed qualify-
ing for the state finals, but still ran a solid time
of 20:07 .2 for the Eagles.
The state finals are at Woodward Park in
Fresno.
c:oran. .. Mw..,..
4. tcatte Qulnt.n, 19:08.3; 11. Jenny Cummins,
19'.32.1; 13. Sffson Mftelwy, 19'.39.4); 15. Diana
Hossfeld, 19:A2.1; 2A. l.Jnds.y Younnan, 20:01 .7. . .........
3. Uz Hulpe, 19:00.3; 26. 01.na ~ 20:07.2;
81. Judy Hernandez. 22:34.9; 89. StephaNe Melendez.
22!S4.3; 91 . ~ c..tw.ntzl, 22:58.&
Sailors, Sea Kini8 shoot for CIF titles
Tony Altobelli
DAILY ,,._OT
• CdM duels Calabasas
in Division IV final, while
Newport Harbor battles
Palm Desert in Division ID.
CLAREMONT -1\vo local
teams, two diffeient divfslon.s, two
CIP Southern Section titles at
stake.
Tiult'1 what awaits the New-
port Harbor High and Corona del
Mar girts tennll teams wlth finals
actiOn today at the Claremont
Club.
lbe Sa.Uon w1ll take on Palm
o..t for the DivllSon m title at
10-.30 a.m., while the Sea Klng1 go
up 11ga1Jwt CalabUu for the DM-
lk>D JV aown at 11:30.
ColOGI de1 Mar, the top seed ln
Dtw181oD IV, II steamrolllng
OlfoQgb itl apponmtl li.ke a bully
--lmida maaey. T'beS. a..124-2) MM won
~ ol .,. .... In tbe piayon..
lid""'I SM WIM oww Pedflat
tD .. wmd raUDd ad Cbaml·
nade in the semifinals.
•we're healthy and we're all
playing well at the same ttme,•
Sea Kings Coach Andy Stewart
said. •1 don't know much about
Calabaaas, but if we continue to
play the type ot tannil we're play-
ing, there's not too many teams
that can beat UI."
B1pedally in Dlvitlon IV,
where a 14-4 decUton over San
Marino ha.I been tha hardest
CdM bu been ~ ln these
playoffs.
In the shutout Win over Cham·
inade, IOpbomole Anne YeJMy
won 18 ol 19 geme1 ID her thi'M-
tet wtn. u did the No. 1 doubles
team of Britteny 1 Holland and
LeaUe o.mloo.
·0ur doubles uve really been
playing well Ltltely, • Stewvt Mid. • ActuaUr. ~ on tbe tMm
hel been qry IQOC-f ial. but our
doublet...._ haft i'MUy pkbd
uptbelrfllM.·
In SelwdaTt CD' IDdtridU9l
lndlwtdml ..... .._,_..,. at Cid
Raach Couatry Cub 1D Seal 8Mdl. v-.y ancs ._ .....s
GIRLS TEllllfS
into the Round of 16, u did the
Holland-Damion doubles combi·
nation.
Yelsey blanked Mater De1'1
Mldwlle Van Oppen. 6-0, 6-0,
and woa. by default over 'noy'I
AyaSakoda.
Reitz punished Joyce Kim of
Cypreu and Blperanza.'1 Kelly
Stx with idendcal 6-0, 6-0 leaom.
Holland and Demlon, top·
seeded ID doubles, eHmlMted
Michelle Dlnb and Kuen Bitan ol nor. e-2, e-3.
• 1be Sallon' .roed to the Division m tinaJI bU bMD a UttJe trtdcler,
butj\Wtu~.
After brMllDg peat savanna
(ta.o), La Sama (17·1) and St.
Lticy'9 (l,._.) ID tbe tint three
iOundt, Newpad, Hltied No. 3 ID
UM cllvisioll. oudated MCOnd-
111ded Mater o.t, t0-8, to
lidvua to tbe an.II.
Jt WM a told lint rCliund ol play --=· ....... ~ tobetbll ....... .....
....... --Mcaudll.
The lead stretched to 7-1,
before Mater Dei fought back and
won four straight sets.
But Newport hung tough and
came up with the clOle 98tl, u
well u the match.
Newport Coach PletdMr OllOll
believes the Palm DeMrt matchup
will mirror the lntenal~ ol the
Mater Dei clash.
•1 thtnk it's going to come
down to whidl team can stay more foc:Uled, • Olloo Mid. •Por
us to win. it wtD beve to take all
nine playen to play tbiii belt ten·
n11. We're young, but tbeY'v•
eamed the right to be ID the fioell.•
,A pleuant l\Ul>l1l8 tor OllOO'I
lqUed bu beeil the play °' Car-man and DlaDa KboUty.
·01nnen ... JUniot and ...
bad nmar plaY9d tennis on a
team befoN tfatl, JMI," OllOll
Nld. •J>liaDa itar'9d. tbll yMr CID
oar doUblel IMIDs, but I'" mov9d•to•..--· .... pleytDQ ... and ..... .
,. Delilt. .... top .... tn
tM di ..... lolt ID tta. 8DU )Mt
,.1oi,,....HU11 .
'
CIF finals
•Sea Kings' Beardslee, Yelsey also
qualify for state finals in Division IV. ~---
'
. .
Da~ Pilot SPORTS ~ November 20, 2000 1
NEWPORT TARS
CONTINUED FROM S
third quarter and build a 10-4
lead.
On the 10th goal, Cook,
who mastered a game-high
seven goals, scored from two
$1 DUabed on tbe llnt tiUe since 1984, have beoten meters on a counterattack
f didn't feel veiy Foothill twice this season in pass from Belden with 2:50 to
1 at the end 10 this three games. Tbe upset-mind-play in the third quarter, after
week. I dedded to wall• ed Knights knocked off sec-Belden made a steal at the
Preahman LaUNn Paul ond-seeded Long Beath Wll-other end to thwart a man-up
clocked the second-fastest son, 8-4, in the other semifinal. advantage for El Toro.
time for Newport with a Prior to third-seeded "There you have il Too
19:15.9, good for 26th place. Foothill's win, Kreut2kamp much Cook and not enough
Senion Sonya Mecbkor (46th. was asked wbicp team he'd McC'leave, • Stoll said, •For a
19:49.1), Erin Friedman (50th, rather face in the finals. half. we were still in it. But J
19;57 .5) and Natalie Sl Andre "Nobody wants to p lay think Ryan Cook and Peter
(59th, 20:21.9) rounded out Long Beach Wilson at Long Belden remember last year a
Newport's top five. f!each Wilson ~Belmont lot. My guys are mostly back
"The whole group diQ a 'Pla7.a), after (the Brwns) bave (next year), but we lose (148)
greMt~ for us,• l'Welt said. • won four CJF titles in a row,• goals in McCleave."
"Sonya and Natalie were said Kreutzkamp, whose team Stoll also did not substitute
both a\>le to shave off $bme bas outscored three playoff any players. •And they bring
time od'ber preliminary time, opponents this fall, 42-18. in new guys,• he said of the
while Lauren stayed steady: Newport Harbor, which Tars, "plus, they're the fastest
1Weit i was also excited defeated El Toro 18 days ear-team in the county.·
about freshman Amanda lier in a nonleague game, 14-While it has been 13 years
Abbott (tl'ttl, 20:26.9). ·E~n 6, pulled away after a 4-4 tie since Newport Harbor played
though her time didn't count in the second quarter. for a CIF title, the Tars denied
for us as far u points go, she "In my opinion, El Toro the Chargers their eighth CIP
ran an awesome race,• 1\veit was out of gas, especially title-game appearance under
said. "We brought her up to after that (11-10 overtime) Stoll. El Toro has won five CIF
varsity at the start of Sea View win over Villa Park (Tuesday championships. "And we've
League finals and she's got-in the quarterfinals),• been in a million semifinals,•
ten better and.. better with Kreutzkamp said. Stoll said.
each race." Senior Brett McCJeave, El After a 3-3 tie in the first
Newport Harbor's boys Toro's best player, scored quarter, Belden, who easily
didn't have the same quality from two meters with 3:59 left won all four sprints, scored
day as the girls, failing to in the second quarter, tying from the hole on the counter-
qualify (or the state finals and the game, 4-4. attack in the second quarter
finishing ninth 1n Division ll Bttt Newport Harbor with 4:24 left, giving the des-
port goalie Brandon McLain's
arm lo even the match.
Cook, who scored six goals
in Harbor's quarterflna1 win
over Loyola, fired a one-hop·
per past El Toro goalie Jere-
my Randall, after a pass from
senior Kyle Bean. It gave
Newport a 5-4 lead and ignit-
ed a ~o scoring run.
Senior Greg Worthing
scored for Harbor on an assist
from Cook, then Cook capped
the second-quarter scoring
with a lob from outside with
1:10 to play in the half.
Alter thelr 7-4 halftime
lead, the Sailors began to pull
away with three more goals
by C:ook, who scored on a
left-handed lob s.hot on the
counterattack, a fall-away at
two meters and another from
the hole.
"We kept dropping the
ball more and more into two
meters,• said Kreutzkamp.
Now, after having exor-
cised some El Toro-semilinal
demons, the Tars can concen-
trate on Foothill and go for
the school's 11th CIF title and
first in 16 years.
C. DIVISION I SEMIFINALS
Ne•wport .._... 12. El Toto 6
San by Quw1*'s
Newport Harbor 3 4 3 2 -12
El Toro 3 1 1 1 -6
Newpot't .._... -Cook 7,
Belden 2. Jendrusina 1, Uttrell 1,
Worthing 1.
Saves -Mclain 7, Johnson 4.
El 1bro -McCleave 2, Danna 1,
Wright 1, Fortney 1, Pattenon 1.
Sa~ -Randall 6.
JC MEN'S SOCCER
OCC keeps rolling
• Santa Barbara falls, 1-0; Pirates will host Rio
Hondo Tuesday afternoon in regional semifinal.
SANTA BARBARA -The dream season contlnues for the
Orange Coast College men's soccer team.
With a 1-0 win over host Santa Barbara, Saturday, tbe
Pirates are one game away from the final four in the Southern
California Regional playoffs.
OCC (17-3-4) will host Rio Hondo Tuesday at 2 p.m. Rio
Hondo upset Pasadena 2-1 on Saturday. .
Orange Coast defeated Rio Hondo 5-2 earlier in the season,
but Coach Laird Hayes said it is an entirely different team.
At Santa Barbara (13-4-6) Matt Moseley headed in a ball
from Dan Espinoza in tbe seventh rrunute and the .Pirates held
off Santa Barbara the rest of the way.
OCC goalie HUario Arriaga, an Estancia High product, fin-
ished with two saves, but he was aided by the crossbar toward
the end of the game, Coach Laird Hayes said
"They were just peppering it dt us at the end,• said Hayes.
"It was wild."
COLLEGE WOMEN'S BASKETBALL
Lions hammer Patten, 112-55
• Vanguard University
women blitz another
nonconierence victim.
COSTA MESA -The
Vanguard University
women's basketball team
made it two whopper wins m
a row, defeab.ng visiting Pat-
ten College, t 12 -55, Saturday
rught at the Pit.
they :.hot 58% from the field
en routP to the blowout.
LaTy1a Williams had 20
points for Patten (0-2).
NONCONFet£HCE VANGUAIU> 112. PATTtN 55
htten -Williams 20, Johnson
t7, Guardado 17, Martinez 1,
Lofton o.
3 pt. goals -Guardado 3,
Wilhams2
Fooled out · Feria.
with 191 points. •Jt's very dis-scored three straight goals to ignated visitors a 4-3 edge.
appointing,• Coach Biln Barry end the first hall, then tallied But McCleave (two goals)
said. three in a row to open the skipped a shot under New-
Jwtiolt Jesus Santana --------------------------------------------------------------~ Laura Lee led stx Lions'
players m double digits with
19 points, wlule ~th Weidler
chipped in with 18.
Vanguard · lee 19, Weidler 18,
Emde t4, McKinney 14, Boeke 14,
Edmiston to, Candelaria 8,
Dittenbir 6, Huddle 6, Linderman 3.
(16:13,()) and Ivan Romero COM na Beach Coach Rick Scott
(16:15.f) , were the top-two said. "We were a little hesi-
rwmen. for Newport. placing tant and played slow, and we
38th and 40th, respedlvely. CONTINUED FROM 5 didn't play ow game on
Senior John Peschelt was defense, becaijSe we allowed
SJrd witb a 16:29'.8, while had steals. Artie to get those goals out of
Chris M~ slowed with ·1 thought this game would set. My guys were just too
back tightness, finished 56th be pretty tough for us, but I slow getting back, and we
with a 16184.1. definitely think we stepped it were not as intense as we
ns lµ '...._ tllrk up,• said Vargas, whose team should have been.• 1· Amber Steen, 17:31.J; bad defeated Laguna Beach After two second-quarter 26. Lauren hul. 19:15.3; 46. Sonya Bo ock. Mecf*or. 19"A9.1; so. Erin earlier this season, 9-5, when goals by wlus and a r ·et
Friedman. ,t:S7.5; 59. ~St. the Artists played without from the outside on a goal by
Andre~20: standaot Kirk Ziegler. Pantulia.no, Dorr kissed the
llap March and Bowlus opened back of the cage again on a
38. Jesus 16:13.0; the scoring for CdM, then backhand shot from two 40· tv.n Romero, 1fi15· 1; La Beach' 1te L le meters with 1 :08 to play in the 53. John~ 1 .9. guna s vor ';'/
56. on Mcllller\ • !34.1; iCIDred his first of three goals first half, increasing Corona
60. Alec um.. 6:37.0. on a lob shot with 1:00left1n del Ma.r's lead to 7-2.
the first quarter. Bowlus scored on a penal·
However, before quarter's ty shot lo open the second
end, Dorr scored on a back-quarter, then gave CdM a 5-1
hand shot from two meters to advantage with an impres-
finisb a oounterattack with 0:48 sive two-meter goal on the
left. giving CdM a 3-1 lead. counterattack, fighting off
"J felt our team in the first two defenders to score.
half was intimidated,• Lagu-Corona del Mar's goalies,
-·•·4111!ftc . . ~. -.;;.t
junior Sherwin Kim (three
saves) and sophomore Beau
Stockstill (six), who played
the second half, stopped
almost half of Laguna Beach's
21 shots on goal.
Courtney McKinney had a
career-high 14 points and 11
rebounds (or the Lions (2-0).
ranked No. 10 in the NAJA, dS
3 pt. goals · lee 4, Weidler 2.
Linderman 1, Edmistoo 1, E~ 1.
Fouled out • Edmiston,
Candelaria.
Halftime · Vanguard, SS-31 . In the fourth quarter, Coro-
na del Mar upped its advan-
tage to 8-3 on March's lelt-
handed outside shot with 4:32
left. After a goal by Laguna
Beach, Messenger scored
twice in the final period and
Street crowned the powerful
CdM counterattack with a
goal in the waning seconds.
Pirates edged by MiraCosta, 86-83
COSTA MESA -The
Orange Coast College men's
basketball team Jost its home
opener Saturday afternoon to
MiraCosta, 86-83, in noncon-
ference action.
The Pirates were led by
Nick Burwell's 29 pomts,
including six three-pointers.
while Ryan Earl ddded 17
points, eight rebounds and sut
assists.
JC MEN'S HOOPS
occ (0-2).
NONCOM BIENCE
MMACostA 16, OCC IJ
M~ -Adelman 26, Clarie
21, Collins 9, Adams 7, AustJn 6,
Lundberg 5, Oppenheimer 4,
Bonwell 3, Scott 3, Ray 2. C. DIVISION If SEMIANAl.S
CoroM .. Miit 11, ~
a..c:tt 4
3 pt. goals -Adelman 4, Adams
1, Scott 1, Austin 1, Bon11Vell l.
Scot9 by Qwr1WI Fouled out -None. 0r-. Coast -Burwell 29,
Ear117, Hagedom 14. Webster 8,
McKinney 6, Ubistre 2, Ventimiglia
2. Madrid 2, Rillefa 2, ~ l.
Corona del Mar 3 4 0 4 · 11
Laguna Beach 1 1 1 1 • 4
CoroM del Miit • Bowlus 3,
Messenger 2, Dorr 2, March 2.
Street 1, Pantullano 1.
OCC shot only 54 % from
the free-throw line, making
only 20 of 37 attempts.
Saves • Kim 3, Stockstill 6. Lll9'IM a..c:tt ·Lyle 3, Roguly 1.
Chad Hagedorn crashed
the boards for 15 rebounds to
go along wtth his 14 points for
3 pt. goals • Burwell 6, Earl 2,
Webster 1.
Fouled out· Burwell, Rivera.
Halftime · Mira<:osta. 52~. Saves -Bartels S.
ptlOfl8 book).
0e9'KH1S <f9 que le
SUMMONS eotregu.n •et• cttacioo
(CITACION 1udlctal usted tiene un plazo d• 30 DIAS JUDICIAL) CALENDARIOS para
NOTICE TO DEFEN· ~ 1r.11 r~
DANT (Avlso a escnta a mequme en
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AFRICAN DIAMOND Una carte o una
COMPANY, DREW lfameda teletonlca no le
LOVETI: THERESA otrecera Pf0(90Clo0. 1U LOVETT, and DOES 1 ,..._., esofta e me·
THROUGH 100. In· q00a titne que <U11Pfir
clutlve oon laa loonlilidll6M i.
YOU ARE BEING gales apropladH 11 SUED BY PLAINTIFF· usted Q!JW• que le cori.
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You have 30 CAI.EN-puede ........., el cuo y DAR DAYS after lhil le pu;;;;,;;" quitAlf 'tu
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*POON Ill WI oourt. Mn avilo .ctbonaJ pc>f A lelter or pMn9 call ~ de la OOlte.
wltf not protect you; YQIK Exlaten otr09 requill· typewritten reaponH toe legalet. Pueda qua
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Thefe are otti.f legal CASI NUllMER: ~ You 1MY (MulMro CW CMO) Wll1I to eel In attomey , OOCCot3t1 tlgtll away. If you dO not SHU.A .. nu
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aid oflloe (-..ad In nomtn y clrlCCQI de la
R OR ALAN SlATEA, C'8fil. corte ea) SUPE I by LARRY BROWM, COURT Of THE STATE Deputy
Of CALIFORNIA, 700 Published Ne..,.,...rt Civic C.OCer Drive West. -,.... Santa Ana, CA 9270l, Buch·Coal1 MeH
CENTRAL JUSTICE ~ . .ty ==~ ~: CENTER 2000 The r11ma. address. M•"]tJ.
and telephone number -----'.:.XL.X ol plainbfr1 anom.y, OI
plaintiff wolhoul an at-tQCAt
tomey .. (El nombte. .. '-.-cifecdon y el numero di
teletono del abOglldo del demandln1•. 0 del de-mandante que no ,_
at>ogado. 88) Kaltlennt I( Freberg,
Esq. FREBERG &
MANLY. 8001 lrvrne
Canter Drive. Suite
1080, lrvtne. CA 112618
(9'49) '53-11 11
OATE: AUG 07. 2000
-fl
PllEllCE -n.a IBllMADWAY
Mortuary * Chapel C...matlon
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa 842-9180
I) i st. o u n t < ~a~ kl' t
l ' J t I' , / '
<11,11·\t:I .. f',\\I
I . I I \ ' I. I
STARTING
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'.'I II Hilrl Iii 1\I f "IA I!
101. 216
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(9i9) 631-6.594
(l'lta..-t incfu& )'OUT natne and
11lt00t uumllC'r aod •·r'U C.U ~·ou
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Index
: .. -_,, -
I
" -· . ~.i -
SI
411
11
~-461
r
Monday ................. Friday 5:00pm
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I
DoilY Pilot ·. Monday, November 20, 2000 1-._, _,.----.... ~-----
CMllT CMO D0n Udo lklt Tit lor ..... JAQUAA XJ1 L 'W
::..., ~;..~ up lo 8611 Ind '-n 1211 or RD~ 40
Bridge
By CHARLES GOREN wtth OMAR SHARIF
and TANNAH HIRSCH
TODAY'S
CRQSSWORQ PUZZLE
-............. Llldlr, .. "*11nce, ""°" ~ 11-1311 d*llll 'CIA PIYI'** up WIW lrdl. @!H?3=7en BAUfR JAGUAR
ID fO". Oltlf COl ...... 1. ,..-------714-tlMIOO F• ~l No melt ----.-...;:.:..;=--
chtel. 1800)270·9894, JAGUAR XJ1 L 'W ~AH> IEOAH 40 ...,,.. lt.Ql2
BAUER JAGUM llMW 7351 ... 1111, .. 714-llMIOO
Oldll'llD811~wi.. low mt. prMM IW'lllll (3381111) $12,118 NAIERI
(?t4)14M110
ANSWERS TO WEEKLY BRIDGE QUlZ
poww, lllVlm cd lttfto,
1S1k ml, ~ body oond, JAGUAR XJI ..
Medi ale c:ornpreuor, IEIWC 40
-• YOUR HEAD In !5()0{cbo 949-J20.37t1 139• ~ VT.... BAUER JAGUAR
IWP'I? Do~~= CAOl.LAC CATEAA 'W 714-HMIOO ~::=II 'FRElloni. ~ . .!l..uali11on· • (=) lllOOMIOf, =-JAOUAA XJI ..
t --NABERS IEDAN 40 0) 559·1548 fJ1'l540-1100 ...... Mm www.1n1whorlzon.org -~ ........... ;..;.-:=--BAUER JAGUAR
IJclnMd, bonded, noo-Cldlllec: Dtvllle '88 714-HMIOO prot1tJN11lon1I Co. while, good cordbon. low ~·SCAN! mllt~e. $1,990 JAGUAR W 't7 ~·9 SEDAH20 .... .. 1567 134,195 97-6313
CADILLAC EldotlClo 't4 BAUER JAGUAR
V8, llhr, Norhw, irtru _--"-7""'"1';...:·15_,M'-=I00=--
Oldualll• ._.... 'W
OLS, tow 1a ni, ..,, CO
(31111522) $14,188 NABIRI
(?t 4llot01100
Ol' 1U1 ..... '00
1>11111 •• -*· co (211086) 111.-NABERI
(?t 4)540:!100
Q l · Ai South, vulnenble. you
hold:
••• o'u 0 KJ72 •A'U
The biddilul bu oroc:eedcd: NORTH EAS1" SOUTH t o ,_ Jo
~ ,_ ' What ICtion do you lake?
WEST ....
A· The double fJt and the fact lhal
all yoar hi.ti ardt are wcxtina Improves tTie value of your hand
enonnousl)' Since panner is clearly
better than minimum, cooperate by
raising to four clubs.
•BOAT SUPt nt1CW fof 11ft DUFFY,
CtNtlve ~t· ec;uekletld.~144
(814744) $13,1188 JAGUAR W '97 NAllERI SEDAN 2f>
(714!540:1100 133,995 97'6358
Q 2 • Boch vu.IDerable, as South you TOYOTA "fMINEA 't1 hold: ...... aulc>, mi cond, 121k
GOOD JOBS.
REUABLE .
SERVICES.
'NIBRESl'ING
IlllNGS
TO BUY.
ITS ALL
HERE
EVERYDAY
IN
CLASSIFEIX
(949) 642-5678
Ovlc~ ' Otllen. Sri Wl'9drt. ...... oMlt ·~,... 90llltJll,... a.~n42
Caclllc Se¥llle '97 BAUER JAGUAR .
low nw. llln llw,bll ol _., 71 '-9U-4800
ml, while, ortginll -· • K Q J 7 J o J '6 o J 10 J • A I $7!9!!'Qbo. 9'i-5'!:3830
(M0994) $21.998
NABEJIS
17141540·9100
CHAArTY CARS Donate
your ~•hlci• Seen on
Oprah and Pl()Clle Maga·
zlnel Tax deductible, free
IOw We prOVide donated M1clts lo lll\l!lairlQ famil.
111 1 ·800;44f.445 I
www.chtrltyc111.org (CAL'SCANI
FORD EXPLORER '915 LTD, low mitt, lealtler,
moonroof llld mm!
(849841) $13.988 NABERS
(714)540-9100
JAGUAR W '97 YOlYO •'IO
COUPE 20 5 lfl, 4 cir, rune l 1oob
...... 17'6242 gratl Newty ........
BAUER JAGUAR rtllebM, ..... ff271
714-953-4800 ... ~
JAGUAR Xl(8 '97 I I
SSS,915COffVT2017-6348 •,a.am
BAUER JAGUAR . . 7 t 4-95)-480()
JAGUAR XICI '97 ~~lholt~'°'~O::
COUPE 2f> MM314100. $50,9915 17-5351
BAUER JAOUAR
714·95MIOO
Land RoYW OltcOV9fY ..
Red vrllan lealller IOI. 39lt nw, many tJllas. $26, 900
FORD F150 XL '97 949·887·4549
PUf AFEW
WORmTO·
WORK FOR
$I 1·500· Auto. AJC. lon9· Uneoln E.tecutlvt '92 btd, shell, 2411 mt, 3017
Bltll> St., CM 714-549-2565 Full Power
FORD WINOSTAR 'te
7 passenger, low mltet,
beige excellent c;ooditlonl
(A2!l319) .._p,988 NABERS ~
(71 4)540-t100
JAGUAR XJI '98
SE.DAN 40
$27,115 IM37I
Well Maintained
$6,950 714·558·1121
MerCldll 1 toE 2 3 '86
Dllc Wirt Ill SOlf "'. pw 51tfeo. cess. ntee car 146k
ml $4900 obo 949-543-390()
ME.AOEDES seo SL '81
Orgln "'*· butgundy/ bwgundy, convt, lthr, chrome, 1021( SHl,000
YOU
(~~Mi~78 BAUER JAGUAR
714-tSMIOO 714"964·5328 .. _____ ..
:7-:.,j"'/, ""~ (" ·-1' ,"'
r _.., ... ' .
1-800-559-7181
The biddina has orocceded: NORTH EAs1' SOUTlt l o ,_ l•
2• .... ' Wlw do you bid now?
WEST ....
A • In the modem style you can btd
two hearu, fourth-suit fon:ine. That
says nothing about the bid suit but
crea1e1 a fon:ing-to-Jameauction
and asks panner lO furtherdescnbe
the Nonh hokiinJ. If you do no1
have this aadget m your anenal, the
only other option is a jump to lhrec
diamonds, and it reall_y makes no difference whether it 1s forcing or
not.
Q J • Ai South. vulnerable, you
hold:
• '6 J ti AK 10117 6 o K 10 2 • 7
1be biddma has oroceeded: NORTH £AS1" SOtrm l• ,_ l o
l• p-?
What do you bid now'!
A • With only I 0 high-card pomu
and nothing m partner's suits, a jump to game is out of the question.
More prudent is an mviwional jump
to three taru and, should panner
bid three 00 llump, ICCept lh,al dee•· lion.
Q 4 • 8odJ vulnerable, as South you
hold:
• K J9 o A Q 11 o K 73 • 115 '2
The biddina has oroceeded: N01l111 bS1' SOUTH WEST
1• lo T
What do you bid now?
A· Do not ask partner to do what
you should do yourself. A jump to
twQ no trump would l\04 be forcing
and might be pused. With an open-
ing bid facing an open mg bid, jump
to lhrec no trump.
Q 5 • Neither vulnerable, as South
you bold:
• I o 10 7 6 4 2 v K Q J 6 S • 'J
The bidding hM orocccded: NORTH EAS'J" SOUTH
l• .... t ;
2• .... ?
Whal action do you Ulke'!
WEST Paa
A • You have almost the '"'orst ~s1-
ble holding for lhis aucuon -ihe
hand might not produce 1 ~rngle trick for partnct To bid 1hrcc dia-
monds. lhererore. migh1 cata~h the
contract to unmanage<1blc height~.
Instead. warn partner of the probable
misfit by b1ddrng two nu trump.
Q 6 • Vulnerable, you hold:
•KQ54 2 Q 10 S • K JO 98 J
Panner open~ the bidding with one
diamond. Whal do you re~pond?
A • This depends on a style. If you play that a rwo-over-one response b
a game force, your hand 1s noc quite
suoog enough for that action. so you
must respond one spade If not. your
diamond' fit and srngleton hean
makes the hand wonh a response of
two clubs
llCE'S CUSTilM PAINTING
Proltalonll, c:ltln. QUlli!y
worll Int/ext & docb.
Lt7034e8 949-831-4910
OUICKIOOKS PAO
WOAD PAOCEHINQ
.--------. INTERIOR I EXT£R10R
I -ma: I CAL~~~~2111 In my home • low ,....,
~. Cl! .. 11NQ23
1-:.-.1
FARTMltQ INTtAIOfll
IQlchln I !WI I Rlrnodll Room Adltlanl. ~
U5@75 NH45«1:25
HOME flair • &IW~ Reglu~sfi PorcCl~rn • Fibefgl.us Sinks • Showen
Counlen
949-645-7723
CUITOll CREATIVE TU ~ .............. OlflRic,
11111t11e, "°"" Elllb 1m ..,.. JI! Z1W1M!!1
Fl10rout.Com
Tiil Alpllrl .........
{N~=71
e
{ 1 I ' r ."" , \ ~ l '\ l .". t r J f
I'' f I I
'
Witter
l'1lt HMdymln
--~ 25 y.,.. EJlfl ~
YARD ClfAN.UP No jab too llNl
Tl9ll-f'n.rltd I ...._.,, Pho!le 148-510-5385
~ Reoend. ,_ Plgtl 714'2lll-5400 i.-. Cll '1~751-M11 .. _____ ...
M1t TO TME OUMPltl 11 ...... 1m AVAi.AiLi TOOAYI
MH7HH!
~--=--~, ~· .. _aJ
.. ---~
• j . .
. . LICENSE 1735978
PUBLIC
NOTICE
The Caltf. Public·
Utllitlu Com·
n.lon REQUIRES
ht d ~ houle-
hold goods moY9ft
j)rirll thtlt p .u .c.
Cit T runblt; lmol
end chaufttta print
II'...-T.C.P. number inll~ W_you hew • ~
1lcln lboli .. lealt-
lly d • lllOY9f' ino « c:Munlr, c.11:
PUBUC UTlUTIES
COMMISION
714-558-4151
~'-~
...... ~~ •. _~<r.,~
c
All DRAWS UNCLOGGfD
•-.m..-mma ·-··-··---·-"'--~ (714) ... 11C7
PflECISE PlUlllBING ~ I Atmodell FREE ESTIMATES L'687398 714-1169-1090
9
f I 1f 0 •
10 Monday, ~ 20, 2000 .. Daily Pilot
'' I '' \ I '·" ( I ( ) I< \ . ' l I I ( ( I : '; ' ' • l l I ' I I
.
NOT SO MUCH PRE-OWNED ·As . .
PREVIOUSLiY ADORED.
'I I IJ..'.;
,. ~ ...
.,..,_
' ..J•&l\11(
" ,,,, .. ,
I I
After reviewing 21 pre-owned vehicle programs, lntelliChoice® named Jaguar Select Edition the
country' Best Certified Pre-Owned Program and Best Pre-Owned Warranty.~
ii
• 6-year/100,000-mile
warranty
• 120-point cosm etic &
mechanical inspection
• 24-hour roadside
assistance
• Finan cing and leasing
option
• Available at
autho:rized Jaguar ~
d ealer s only _ ~
I !
JAGUAR
SELECT EDITION ~
PRE-OWNED AUTOMOBILBS
I
Raper Jaguar··I;
1455 South Auto Mall Drive
Santa Ana ;. 55 Freeway at ~dinger
71 ~-953·4800 • www.bauerjaguar.com
Coverage includes remaining new--car warranty plus the Scl«t F.dition premium. war~ry, which provides coverage for an additional i yeanl 50,000 mila on eligibfe
1996 modd year vehicles or newer. Coverage fur .1995 model year Vehicles will differ. Sec your dealer for dcuila on thia limited coverage. NCM all can to be IOld u Sclea
Edition. •IntdliChoicc Inc .. www.intcllichoice.com, September J 999 review of 21 manufacturer program.. Jaguar tied for fint place. For more infOrmation. call t-80()..4..
JAGUAR or vii.it www.jaguar.com/w. C2000 JIP8:" Can. ·
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