HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-11-21 - Orange Coast PilotSERVING THE NEWPORT -NJ:.SA COMN\UNmES SINCE 1907 ON ntE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM
Cramming for tQ.e electoral college
• Ne wport Beach resident
Lane Sherman, one of the
state's Dem ocrat electors, talks
about the situation in Florida,
her son and love of politics.
A.lex CoolmM
DAILY PllOT
NEWPORT BEACH -This time
around, a lot more people know what it
is that Lane Shennan does.
toral college.
She was a member of California's
electoral college delegation in 1996, but
there wasn't much controversy sur-
rounding America's system of voting
back then.
Four years later, a muddle of a presi-
dential election has made the general
public aware of something Sherman has
known all along: the college, inconspic-
uous though it may be, wields real polit-
ical power.
Rep. Brad Sherman (D-Sherman Oaks),
and she's been a workhorse for his last
two campaigns.
Before her son ever set foot in the
Capitol, he was steeped in Sherman's
enthusiasm for the political process.
Sherman founded the Newport Beach
Democratic Club in 1971 and raised her
children in an activist's household.
•Those were the days before comput-
ers, before sticky labels," she said.
"Everything had to be typed out on car-
bon paper. The kids' manpower was
very helpful!"
1UESQAY, NOVEMBER 21 , 2000
The energetic Newport Beach house-
wife and political activist sits on that
once-obscure political entity, the elec-
•I can understand that some people
don't find it as interesting as I do,• she
said. •But their lives are influenced by
what goes on in the civic realm."
Sheqnan's life is perhaps more influ-
enced by politics than most. Her son is
Brad Sherman repaid his mother for
her work on his 1996 campaign by SEAN HIUER I DAl.Y Pl.OT
Newport Beach resident Lane Sherman 1s a Democrat
SEE ELECTORAL PAGE 4 el ector for the state of California.
Students hang out at Costa Mesa's Westside Boys & Girls Club, where volunteer tutors are needed.
An onen door for
HELPING . S
Jennifer Kho
DAILY PILOT
Just a rear ago, it was one o the county's
poorest Boys & Girls
Club branches.
for volunteers.
PHOTOS BY GllEG FRY I OAll.Y Pit.OT
Growing budget
helps produce
new programs,
but Westside
Boys & Girls Club
but could use
more volunteers
to help students.
Today the Westside
Boys & Girls Club is flour-
ishing, with an increase in
funding helping to create
new programs, although
there is still a great need
•Our kids are doing
better in school and the
feedback from the teach-
ers has been very posi-
tive,• said branch director
David Lewis. •w e want to
set as many different
experiences for the kids to
take advantage of as pos-
sible. We want to use
SEE CLUB PAGE 4
Dorothy Dupont, dlredor of the Westside
Boys & Glrll Club's tutoring program, helps
8-year-old Michael Leos wtth his homework
assignment Monday.
Could redistricting 11¥111 TUlllS
Whet .. rou .... lkful fw'1 weaken local GOP? We w1nt to know what bless--
lngs you'll be counting this
:rhursday. Is It love of family? A
new job 1 A new lffse on life 1
• DemOcratic-conttolled Legislature and Whatever It may be, please let
governor's seat could work against Republican us know by ailllng our Readers
Hotllne at (949) 642-6086 Of sta!Warts in f\iture elections. tending en .maU at dal/1Pilotft
AleaCoallnM Orcanttf
latlmacom. ,...... spelt~
Nlftte Md lndudt ~ ~ OMV Pl.oT While Repiubkanil have ~-~nUmber. been able tlD baU. In tbe 1he Del Not wMI run • ..tee:-
1beY only ~ ftnilhed tiamfOlt of IDcumbincy wl tlon of the .....-1n the ~... advantagel sweepng 1. the adltll end locally, wttb GOP ltAlwmtl ~ldltlcw loldtng up dl8ln at tblB' ~)~-= n; .. for ... ,°""
•••p9'~10tl II --IO drop them off • cm, be time lair ... .,..,.. Cr.: (lt~tlngtal bltwllll .......... 5 p.tA. at
ad D-ne-ntl '° tblDk the P1Dt, DOW. 11r St.. Cmta
8boul .. Did...,,, Sii GOP MGI 4 ......
Young girl
accidentally
strangulated
• Tyanna Parker, 6, becomes
tangled, suffocates on dr~pery
cords while playing alone in
her Costa Mesa home.
Deepa Bharath
DAILY' PILOT
' COSTA tvtESA -A 6-year-old girl died
Sunday night when she accidentally stran-
gled herself with pull cords dangling from
window blinds, police said Monday.
The accident occurred at about 7 p.m.
when Tyanna Parker was playing alone in
her room as her parents ate d.lnner UlSide
their Drake Avenue home, SaJd Costa Mesa
Police Lt. John F1tz.Patnck.
SEE PARKER PAGE 4
Blue Ribbon
potential at
three schools
• Harbor View, Kaiser and Victoria
elementary schools among eight
county nominees for National Blue
Ribbon School awards.
Danette Goulet
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT-MESA -Three Newport-
Mesa schools are in the running for the
country's top educational honor -the
prestigious National Blue Ribbon School
Award.
Principals at Harbor View, Kaiser and
Victoria elementary schools were notified
Monday morning that their schools had
been nominated by the state Department
of Education for the annual nationwide
evaluation to determine the best schools in
all the land.
SEE RIBBON MGE 4
11111
10
s
2
' J
gr
5£
,., I~.,
... .
.. 1JW11~ EDUuTION
District seeks applicants
for budget advisory panel
lhe Newport-Miu unlfled School District ts
seeking -.,Pants for ~on Its 14-member
Otizens Budget AdYfsory Committee.
The acMsofy c:ommlttM was aelted In 1992 to
better educate ~ lnYolYe the community In the
school distrkt's budget process. The two-year com-
rnittee tetm lndudes • minimum of six meetings ,
Nd\ Yffl· Membets atso serw on subcommittees,
whk:h are formed M n«eSMWY·
Applic.ln1s must llw wfthln the boundaries of
the Newport-Mesa Unified School District. Inter·
~ residents should send 1 tett. to Supt.
Robert Barbot at 2985 Bea< St.. Coste Meta 92626.
Letten should Include the eppllc.ent's ~lflc.a
tions .net reasons for seeking the posltJon.
The deadline for applic.atlons Is 4 p.m. Dec. 5.
The school board Is expected to make appoint·
ments Dec. 12.
For more lnfonnatk>n. all Michael Fine, the
district's assistant superintendent of business S«·
vices. at (714) 424-5001.
2 T uesdoy, November 21 , 2000 r· Doily Pilot
Klcls Talk BACK
Thankful on
Thanksgiving
We a&ked 1tudenLB at
Mariners Elementary School
in Newport Beach: What are
you most thankful tor?
I'm thank-
ful for my
family
'cause they
love me.
CAMILLE
JOLLY, 6,
Costa
Mesa
My family,
·cause they
take care of
me when
I'm SlCk.
LAUREN
BARTO UC,
7
Costa
Mesa
I'm thank-
ful for my
family,
well,
because
they help
me with
stuff.
LOTTE
MARTIN, 6,
Newport
Beach
My doggy,
and I'm
getbng
hun ma
few
weeks.
He's hall
black lab
and half
German shepherd and he'll
attack 1f someone tnes to
come 1n.
NICOLAS h\BER, 6
Newport Beach
My great,
great great·
grandma
and grand-
pa. They all
got on the
Mayflower.
BLAKE
BEU. 7
Newport
Beach
-Interviews and photos by
You1t9 Cha1t9
School lunch
llENU
SEAN HILLER I DAILY PK.OT
In preparation for Thanksgiving, students ln Shirley Kwan's fourth-grade class constructed dolls out of cornhusk.s Monday at Kaiser Elemen-
tary School ln Costa Mesa. '
All dolled up for Th~
Danette Goulet
DAILY PILOT
T wo at a time, children care-
fully tied little strings
around damp comhusks as
they began the task of creating
their very own pilgrim dolls.
It seemed a timely project, with
Thanksgiving just days away.
~ But when the dolls are finished,
students in Shirley Kwan's fourth-
grade class al Kaiser Elementary
School will not have created your
typical pilgnm scene.
·Pioneers are not just that
group that came over on the
Mayflower,· Kwan said.
Each student will make their
doll in the likeness of their own
ancestors.
•Mme's gonna be Norwegian,"
Fourth-graders at Kaiser Elementary
create toys that reflect their heritage.
said Taylor Allee, 9. •rm going to
make him a fisherman.•
The idea is to study different
cultures and research why each
group came to this country, Kwan
said .
Nelly Radeva, 10, explained
that the students have a list of
questions to answer in the form of
a short research paper, explained .
Nelly's family is from Bulgaria,
so she will make an outfit for her
doll that resembles Bulgarian
dress for special ceremonies, she
said -red with flowers.
•Because now, they just wear
jeans and T-shirts like we do,· she
explained.
For other students, the project
wasn't as simple as it seemed.
"l don't know which I'm more
of -Mexican or Swedish," .pon-
dered 9-year-old Jordan Wagner.
But it was not a comhusk free-
for-all in Room 20. Students start-
ed making their dolls two at a time
while the other students wrote to
their journal buddies.
"Today we're telling them
about bow our weekend went and
what we did," Nelly said. ·1 wrote
about how I bad a tennis touma-,
• • ____ giving
FYI
• WHO: Fourth-grade students
• WHAT: Creating pilg rim dolls
with cornhusks
• WHERE: Shirley Kwan's class
at Kaiser Elementary School
• LESSON: Social stodies,
cultural diversity
ment for doubles and I got a tro·
phy because we won.·
Students' journal buddles are
the parents of fellow classmates
who write back and forth with stu·
dents each week.
•IN 1l4E QASSltOOM Is a weekly feature
in whk h Dally Pilot education w riter
Danette Goulet visits a campus within the
Newport·tMsa Unified School District and
writes about her experience
TODAY
Munchabte Lunch Salad or turtmiy and gravy
with mashed potetoel, frelb baked roll. peu,
apple aisp, chok:e ol milk
FM>AY •
Holida.y-no tCbool / greens, cbeny tomatoes, crackers and protein
IOW'tm such as cheese, sunflower seeds, fruit
yogurt. honey-roasted peonuts and dresling. ..,...y
. The Newport-Meil Unified School Olstrict offers
menu ~ HCt\ cS-v at etement.wy «"hools. Stu·
cMnts may d'IOOM 1 vegetMlan entree If desired. The
Mledlon Vlfles and may be either I teled, ~
or hot entree. School lunc:hft •• $1.75 HCh; the dls-
trkt does not ec.cept checks for 1eu than s 11 .$0. r
....,. what's being served this \\"Mk:
WEDNESDAY
Holiday -no school .
Mundiable LUncb Salad or grilled cbeesi
MndWk:b. or two min1 cbeeleburgen with
lettuce and plcklet, cboio8 ol fn.dt. cho6ce ol
milk
• lbe Munchable LUncb Salad oontidm tOll8d
No dalld lll dJlcrlm.lnah?d againat becaWe oJ
rooe, 8e'x. color, naUonQJ origin, age or dlmbD·
Jty. U It tr belJeved a child ha.a been dla:rtli11-
nated agalnat. write Immediately to the Secre-
tcuy ol Agrlculture, Wa.sh.fngton, OC 20250 •
.Da~ READERS HQIUtilE
(949) 642-6086
Record your comments •bout
the 0..1y Piiot Of news tips.
VOL 94, NO. 277 ADDRE.55
Our Mtdr• Is 330 W. Bay St.,
THOMAS H.. JOHNION, Costa Mesa. CA 92627.
l'\lblilhef CC>R8ECDON$ TONY DODOO,
Editor It Is the Pffot'1 policy to pr0f'n9t·
U.CAHN, ty correct ell errors of~.
Oty fdrtor Pleale c.tl (949) 574-WJ. , ... -..... m AldltM'lt Oty Editor The Newport~ Me6a •• BtKMNW. Dally flllot (USf'S-144-800) II P'b-
fffn.fet Editor 11111.s Monday~ s.tul'dly.
.,... c.w IOfll. In ~ leeCtl and Com MIU,
5por1I Editor IUblCrlpdonl .,. available only by
IUbtctlllng '° The Tim. Orange MmtONYNCK. County~ 2524141. In .... Hewlf'dltor outsldit of H9wpott IMc:tl and
AWAim•M, Cost.t ~ ...,llAlol• '°fie
,.~ O.lly ,_ ......... Olf/r bV
"""'~ mall for S20 pll' month. Sec.Ond
~felt« m. pcllt.age paid It Colt.a MIU,
MY'lomM. CA (l"rlt9s lndUde alt ........
~DINdOr ... and ..... ,~
TU· Send~ dwljili to The ........ H9wpott IMcM:GU .... Delly ' ,.Off~· ~l'O lo.1MO,CoMMIM. . . -.
CA 92626. ~Ho news 510-
rll$. lllustr.ue>ns, edltoNI men.
or ~hereln<MI be
reproduc.ed without writtln per·
mllllon of~ Ollf'M.
H()W ro BEACH us
CJra.ilM:lon
The Timea Or.nge County
(800) 252-9141
~ 0-'fled (M9) 642·5671
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Sports (M) 574-<U23
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.... OHb (949) 642..U21 •
lutl,,e. F•'tMt) 631-7126 .
~ .. ""'*~~ . ....., .... __ ~ ""--
-~OIM,__
11111 _ .. _ ...... __
. WEATHER IND SURF
TIMPBA1UMS
Balboa
74149
Corona del Mir
74149
Cost.I Meta
74149
Newport Beach
74149
Newport c.o.st
74149
WPOMCAST
KnM-to w.ist-hlgh
w~ whh poor to f•lr
condtdons. Snwlllsh llr1es
bruting dose In.
LOCA1ION llZI
Wedge 2·3'
Newport 2·1'
81edtle\ • 2·)'
"""'J9tty 2·3'
C.dM 2·1'
,
11DU
TODAY
First low
..................................... n/a
First high
6:0la.m ....................... 5.6
Second low
12:29 •.m ..................... 0.9
Second high
6:19 p.m ....................... 4.5
Flnt low
12:131.m .......... _. ........ 0.7
Flnt high
6:401.m ....................... 5.9
Second low
1:13 p.m ....................... O.l
SecondNgh
7:12 p.m ......... ~ .. -...... 4.5
POLICE FILES
COSTA MESA
• AdmM ~: Grand theft wn reported In the
1200 blodc at 11:31 •.m. Sundey.
• 8rtltol ltr..t: A kidnepping WIS repof'ted In the 3300
blodc at 11 :26 1.m. Sund.y.
• lrtleDI Street: A commer~I burgllry WIS reported In
the 3300 blodc 2:56 p.m. ~.
• Ml au lb DI AoMI: A aw WM stolen In the 2800 blodc at
5:41p.m.~.
• .. 1rtor ,.,.._ Vand.lllsm wn reported In the
1700 blodc at 2:50 a.rn. Sundey.
NEWPORT IEAOt
......... Dthe: Annoying phone c.lls w.re l'9pOfted
In the 90 blodc at 12:30 p.m. s.turct-v.
• ... u11-.i ...._ v~ punctured aw tJr11 In the
1IOO block .t ~45 a.m. s.turdlly.
• C'MMll• .... A Fed-b pd.age c~
dlemond jewi1ry vetued .t ebout St,000 Ml .._,
from the ..,...,, of • home In the 500 block .. l:tO
l .M. Md9y.
.1
Doily Pilot .
IN BRIEF
Student alleges
he was struck
by teacher
Newport-Mesa Unified
School District· officials are
investigating allegations that a
teacher struck a 16-year-old
student last week at Newport
Harbor High School.
Jaime Castellanos, New-
port-Mesa's assistant superin-
tendent of secondary educa-
tion, said Monday that district
officials are now addressing a
student's accusation that a
teacher hit him at around 11
a.m. Thursday.
The student made a citi-
zen's arrest through the New-
port Beach Police Department
on Friday, charging that the
teacher hit him and then did
not show up for a scheduled
meeting to discuss the incident
with Newport Harbor Vice
Principal Lee Gaeta.
Castellanos swd the dis-
trict's investigation would like-
ly last a few days.
Senior center raises
$23,000 to kick
off fund-raiser
The Costa Mesa Seruor
Center raised $23,000 at its
annual fund-raising campaign
kickoff-Monday morning.
Thomas McKeman, the
president and chief executive
officer of Automobile Club of
Southern California. presented
a $10,000 donation to the cen-
ter to launch the six-month
campaign.
Top donors also included
the Steele Foundation, wtuch
gave $5,000: Costa Mesa
Seruor Travel, $3,000, Lew and
Rose Pribble. $1,001: and
Surag Singh, $1,000
The cente r will mc:ul letters
next week requesting dona-
tions. The next fund-raising
event will be held from 5 to 9
p.m. Jan. 16 al Ruby's Costa
Mesa, 428 E. 17th St. The
restaurant ha!> pledged to
donate to the center 20% of its
proceeds during that time.
Information: (949) 645-2356.
Costa Mesa group
launches senior
housing program
Project Independence, a
Costa Mesa nonprofit group
for adults with developmental
disabilibes, has tu.reel Michael
Manchester to manage its new
senior housmg program that
will be funded by a $76,000
grant received last month from
the CaWorrua Counctl on
Developmental 01Sdbibbes.
With the funds, Project
Independence will help three
or four seruor olizens at each
of its six homes to share leasing
costs during the yearlong pilot
program, Manchester said.
"We've reallzcd the graying
that is happening all over
America is also happening to
[people with developmental
disabilities],• Manchester said.
"Isolation, poor nutrition and
other problems elderly people
in this country are facing also
apply to older people with
developmental disabilities. We
feel having roommates they
can get along with will help
nip at least isolation in the
bud.•
The group plans to have a
roommate mixer for the project
at 6 p.m. Dec. 5 at its offices,
3505 Cadillac St .. Swte P-101,
Costa Mesa.
Information: (949) 549-3464,
Exl 269.
...
That's what you get for t'f)ing to be a know-it-all
I have always wanted to
be a hero. I guess it is
based on envy for my
fathe r. Long before I came
into this world, he bad
been a cowboy riding herd
on stampeding cattle: a
lumberjack chopping big
trees and riding them
down the river; a barroom
fig htet who went from
town to town to fight the
local champion.
Somewhat belatedly, I
had my chance to be a
hero. But I blew it.
It happened when I was
a police officer in Newport
Beach. One night I was
the a cting desk sergeant
at the old Newport Beach
jail located near the root of
the Newport Pier. A man
came rushing in and told
me someone was trying to
commit suicide on the
pier.
I pushed the button
which activated a red
light on top of a long pole.
This was our rathe r primi-
Robert Gordner
THE VERDICT
live way or calling a
patrolling officer into the
station.
Then l ran out on the
pier, looking into the
water for the suicide. No
body.
A man tapped me on
the s houlder and handed
me a note. It read, "I am
gomg to commit suicide."
I gathered that be was
a deaf mute. I wrote him a
note which read, #You
cannot.tt
He read my note then
handed me another, which
read, "Why not?"
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I wrote, •eecause it's
against the la w."
Not to be outdone, he
wrote back, •What law?"
At first, that stumped
me. Then I rose to the
occasion. I made up a
penal code section . "Sec-
tion 734 of th e pen al
code," I wrote. "That sec-
tion says it's against the
law to com.mil suicide."
The man was unim-
pressed. "Show me the
section," he wrote .
By this time, a small
crowd had gathered. I had
to uphold the dignity of
the law. I arrested him and
took him to jail.
I put him in a cell.
Immediately, he sent me a
note through the slit in the
door by which we commu-
nicated with the prisoners.
"Give me a copy of the
penal code," he wrote. ·
I wrote back, ·we don't
have a copy of the pe nal
code."
He wrote, "What kind
of a crummy police
department is this? Not
even a penal code."
I wrote, "It's the only
one in town.•
We passed notes back
and forth all night. When
the chief of police arrived
the next morning, he sur-
veyed the pile of paper,
asked a couple of embar-
rassing questions, opened
the door to the cell and
wrote a note which I have
always considered a mas-
terpiece of written com-
murucdtion. ·
It read, "Get the hell
out of my 1ail."
End of thnlling story of
a fearless police officer
who rose to great heights,
only to crash in flames
when tus suspect demand-
ed a look at the penal
code to ascertain the
legdlity of his arrest.
• ROBERT GARONER is a Corona
del Mar resident and a former
Judge. His column runs Tuesda~.
Community
Thanksgiving Service
Wednesday, November 16, 2000
7:30pm
at
Newport Cente r UMC
1601 Marguerite, Corona del Mar
Spomored by:
Harbor Christian Church
St. Mark Presbyteria n Church
Community Congregation al Ch urch
St. Michael's and All Saints Episcopal Church
Newport Center United Methodist Church
(949) 644-0745
"Over 50 Years of fine Quality"
All Types of Wmdow Treatments
• Valances & Cornice Boxes • Roman Shades
• Blinds • VerticaJs • Shutters • Bcdspttads
2 0 O/o~th Fabric & Labor 0 F F with thi• ad ti! Nomnbcr 28"'. 2000
, Holictn Deli\ l1r\ Order \m\
I
~1/twJ,~
DESIGN CENTER
Factory&: Showroom 1998 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa
(949)642-8400
~
Welcome to One M~W ~ Mczll~~.~ E \ \' . \ I ~ I ·~ I I < > l ' s I~~
"Your Southem California Mobility Specialists"
• MttllM
Showroom Houn
Mon-Fri 9am-4:30pm
711 W. 17th St. Suite A-5
Costa Mesa
949-642-2010
Toll Flee (IM) "7-90S6
• Representing die full
line of Pride Mobility
Producu
• Service & ~pair
• Wurance Reimbuncmeot
Sp«ialisr
•
The First, The Ori inal, Tht Btsl
This Weeks Specials • Happy Thanksgiving
Tuesday, November 21, 2000 3
4 Tuesday, November 21 , 2000
CLUB
CONTINUED FROM 1
those programs to boost self.
esteem, to give kids incen-
tives for doing better in school
and to make them better peo-
ple."
Lewis began bis job in
December with 8 goal of rais-
ing between SS0,000 and
$70,000 this year. So far, the
club has raised $50,000 and
will continue to seek dona-
tions tow81'd the cO.rrent
school year tor another
RIBBON
CONTINUED FROM 1
"I'm absolutely thrilled,·
said Karen Kendall, principal
dt Harbor View in Corona del
Mar. ·caillomia is so compet-
itive. We are honored and
t.hJilled that we made it. It's so
much work to put that appli·
cation together, so it is really
gratifymg that we passed."
Developed in 1982 by then
Secretary of Education Terrel
Bell, the Blue Ribbon program
recognizes outstanding cam-
puses throughout the country.
Before any school can
claim a Blue Ribbon, it must
first earn the honor of being
named a California Distin-
guish ed School. Once a
school receives the state
award, it is invited to apply for
the national award.
I'm not worried,
my agent is
Craig Brown
Insurance
Call !Oday for aulo & home
owner·~ ln.,urant:e!
month, Lewis said.
The organization is usil'1g
the money for a new science
dub and an enhanced arts
and crafts club, as well as a
new drama and dance pro-
. gram. a dance team, a soccer
league and a media lab
scheduled to begin in Janu-
ary.
Another new activity is the
club's Christmas program.
which began in September.
Students who complete their
homework at the club receive
points, which can be traded
for field trips and are
redeemable for Christmas
Of the four elementary
schools in the Newport-Mesa
Unified School District that
won Distinguished School sta-
tus last year, only Killybrooke
-which lost its principal at
the end of the year -was not
nominated to move on to the
national round.
In fact, the Newport-Mesa
district accounts for nearly
half of the successful applica-
tions in Orange County,
wbere 15 schools applied and
eight advanced for Blue Rib-
bon consideration.
lf it makes the cut as a
national finalist, a school must
then pass a site inspection by
officials from the U.S. Depart-
ment of Education.
The principals of the nomi-
nated schools shared the
news of the preliminary victo-
nes with their teachers, stu-
dents and parents.
"I am so proud of what my
(949) 760-1255
Fashion bland '-3
New >rt Beach • Lie# 0550290 s A F e c o ·
gifts Dec. 16.
• 1•m doing my homework
a lot more because of the
points,• said Jose Hernandez,
a 10-year-old member of the
Westside branch. •And they
help you with the homewotk
if you need it.•
New programs have
attracted new students -
more than the dub can han-
dle, Lewis said. The program's
volunteer base bas not kept
up with its growing finances,
enrollment and nwnber of
programs.
Cwrentl~ six adults -four
staff members and two volun-..
teachers do, the connection
we have witQ our famllles, •
said Daryle Palmer, prindpal
of Kaiser Elementary in Costa
Mesa. "Thii application is QQ,t
about who ls a Blue Ribbon
prindpal, it's about what hap-
pens on the playground, in
the classroom and with the
parents.
"There are amazing things
going on here and it should be
a place that others schools
come lo learn. And when you
become a National Blue Rib-
bon School, you become a
demonstration school. You're
seen as a resource."
So now the waiting begins
a ll over again for anxious
school communities. After
four to five months of agoniz-
mg over the writing of the
extensive Blue Ribbon appli-
cation, principals said the
waiting will be even worse.
School officials can expect
to hear by late January if they
will advance to the final
round.
"The waiting game contin-
ues,• Kendall said. •Tue next
step, if we make it, is the site
visit. We hope to jump over
that hurdle too and keep
jumping until we're a Blue
Ribbon School."
Thanks to the efforts & contributi.ons from· th
following, more than 1,200 people will be
enjoying Thanksgiving dinner this year
2000 CM9oo@~ FOOD DRIVE
DONOR LIST
Stater Brothers Markets
Harbor Center/ICI
Development
CJ Segerstrom & Sons
Golden Truffie
Penjoyan Produce
Hunt Wesson Foods
Smart & Final
Daily Pilot
Theodore Robins Ford
Newport Rib Company
Rob Attridge Frank Fantino
Buddy Bcarbower Jack Faulkner
Scott Bell Ed Fawcett
Ned Bondie Randy Gardl
Gordon Bowley David Grant
Dave Brooks Or. Steven Grant
Dr. Donald Drake Gary Gray
Werner Escher AJan G~ley
Sheppard, Mullin, Richter
& Hampton LLP
South Coast Plaza
Pioneer Packing
Orange County Market Place
Dr. Walter Haverkorst DDS
State Farm Insurance
AT&T Broadband
Skosh Monahan's
Cal's Caddyshack
Del Heintz Tony Petros
William Jacoby Jim Pooler
Tom Johnson Jim Poteet
Manfrcdo Lespier Bob Robins
Ed Lynch
Tom Sargent
Dave Snowden
Bob McDaniel Jeff Teller
Patrick Mufioz Fran Ursini
Scan O'Connor Pete Viouo
CM900
~
\ ..
~ -are tutoring between
140 8nd 160 children daily, he said. .
•Our volunteers have nev-
er been a very strong part of
the program,• Lewis saki. "H
we can knock (down] the
ratio of children to volunteers,
it is going to Tnake the pro-
gram even better. We're pret-
ty good about retaining bur
volunteers, but just getting
them in for the fim time is dif-
ficult. Everyone is busy with
their own lives, but even a
commibnent of one or two
hours a week for five or six
months would really help.•
PARKER
CONTINUED FROM 1
'fyanoa, who suffered from
a developmental disability,
was left unattended for Jess
than 15 minutes, be said.
•When they came back to
her room, they saw her stran-
gulated, II PitzPatrlck said
Investigators have ruled
the inddent as an accident
Police said 'fyanna's par-
ents tried to revive her with
GOP
CONTINUED FROM 1
Beach) cruising to easy victo-
ries, the future may not hold
such easy slam dunks.
The wild card in the next
election, one that could force
both sides to scramble to cre-
ate new bases of support, will
be redistncting.
"That's very much on the
horizon,• Orange County
Republican Party Chainnan
Tom Fuentes said. #Our efforts
to keep Orange County
Republican can be affected by
the redistricting, and jflemoc-
rats) are very able ~ geny-
mandering. •
The only possible response?
Keep the party fires burning.
•
Kelly Whitten, a volunteer,
confinned that the program
needs more help.
•Moll! tutors would pro-
vide a broader perspective.•
she said. •we are spread kind
of thin."
Vellnda Cervantes. a 10-
year-old student. said she
would welcome Interaction
with more volunteers.
"They help us when we
have questions and tell us
how to work out problems.
But sometimes when you
have a question, you have to
wait a long time for someone
to help,• said Vellnda, who
CPR and took her to Hoag
Hospital, where she was pro-
nounced dead.
On Monday, the grieving
parents made funeral
anangements. iyanna's
father, Dane Parker, said hls
daughter was a •beautiful lit-
tle girl wbo loved others with
amazing purity.''
·she was loved and cher-
ished," he satd. ·she will be
&orely missed by all those
who knew her.''
Accidental deaths by ~gulation witb the cords
"We'll prepare as best we
can,• Fuentes said. ·one
needs to kind of see where the
lines are before you can devel-
op a final strategy.·
On the othei hand, Jeanne
Costales. chairwoman of the
Orange County Democrats, is
looking forward to what hap-
pens when new districts are
drawn. With Democrats control-
ling the state Legislature and
the goveJ\l'°r's seat she thinks
there's reason to suspect the
lines aught tum• Uus area into
friendlier terrain for the donkey.
·Absolutely,· sa.Jd Costales,
who said it's possible the
Democrats could gain at least
one Assembly seat and make
gains in Rohrdbacher's 45th
Congressional Otstrict when
redistricting is completed.
Fuentes, meanwhile, was still
Live Entertainment Nightly at 9.pm
Rich Fauno D J
Sunday-Wednesday J' ;J J J:I
~~ ',~ Misbehavin '
"Best restaurant of the year !"
-LA. Times
rr>u[<e,!f+ L1'1°L
F~o-" R~etz~t
Santa Claus has arrived
at Fourchette !
Now during the holidays,
Chef Denis will give you a ...
COMPLIMENTARY
BOTTLE OF
FRENCH WINE
With The ~Of A Dinner For Two.
103 Palm Street, Balboa Penfnaula
Newport Beach (949) 673--3263
(on tne bNch 8lc» of Bal>oa Bfvd,
~ ltlpl to thi Bal>oe Pter)
ServlrlQ dinner 7 nlghta a wMk, 6pm to 10:30pm.
Daily Pilot
signed up this year because Of
the club's new pmgrlllDs.
"They could also take us on
more field trips, get more
games going and help us fig·
ure out more of the tb.ings we
need to know for our futures.
"The programs are good
because they are experiences
that give us new ideas. It's a
pretty new ldea for me to
think about what I might
want to do in the future. Now
I think I might want to work
Ln a hospital. I would voltm-
teer at one if I were old
enough."
ot window blindl are com-
mOI). About ooe cbOd dies
this way every month,
acoording to the U.S. Con-
sumer Produd Safety Com-
mission in Wuhlngtoo. D.C.
Since 1991, 130 ltrangula-
tion cases involving drapery
pull cords have been report-
ed to the commilslon.
#It's unfortunate," Pitz·
Patrick &aid. •Hopetully, this
lnddent wW aeate Mi aware-
~ in the oommunity and
prevent other such tragedies.''
interested in poring over voting
returns-and hashing out strat-
egy for the next time around.
•Tue Democrats made no
progress in any partisan office
in the Orange County commu-
nity." he said. ·we wish the
results were different in places
like Los Angeles and San
Francisco, and then maybe
we'd have a chance to cany
the state."
Costales was less thnllPd
with how things turned out.
In her view, tbe Democrabc
candidates who ran in some of
Newport-Mesa's conservabve
districts -~·people like Ted
Crisell iQ t!le 45th Congres-
sional District and 47th Distnct
candidate John Graham -are
still in the infancy of theu
efforts to build party support
dJld name recognition.
And so long as they ldC'k
grass-roots support, she Sdld,
the party must be very selec-
tive about where it dedicates
its efforts.
•As much as it gives a hard
bone to the dJ.stncts that are
not competitive, absolutely
we're not going to change the
funding." Cost.ales said.
What will be impossible.
both parties say, is for candi·
dates to win without large net·
works of supporters who are
passionately committed to get·
ting their name out in the com·
munity. ·we call them para·
chute candidates,• Costales
said -candidates who think
they can float down into an
easy victory without going
through the grunt work of
building support.
ELECTORAL
CONTINUED FROM 1
appointing her to the electoral
college. Each congressional
candldate can appoint one
elector.
However, only the electors of
the party that wms the state -
Democrats in California's case
-will vote for tbe pn!Sident
and vice president on Dec. 18.
The job, Sherman said, has
not turned out to be very glam-
orous.
For the work of going to
Sacramento In December' and
casting her electoral ballot, she
can expect $10 and a reim-
bursement of five cents per
mile of travel.
But if electoral college
wages won't pay the bW.s (or
even buy lunch), Sherman still
thinks the institution ls worth
her attention.
And she's found that a Jot of
other people -from her
friends and neighbors, to CNN Journalists -are giving it their
attention this yee.r, a well.
•They con undentand it
more now Ulan they coWd four
yean ago,• she A.id.
Sherman admlta, however,
that ber role u an e'9ctor does·
n't gtve ber any petUcuiar
lrWgbt into whet the llOlution
should be for the voting deba-
cle In Florida.
"J have cou.bll ln Boca Raton.. she Mid. ·n..y bed
t.b8 butterfly ballot. wtik:b ii
the IOW'tle ot CIODlro¥eny OWi
voting enor. •llMiy were very
contused by il.
Her lenM of what to do
ebout the situation II JUJt
ebout u mur~ u that ot the
a~e,voter. · .• ,.,.... .. iomettUnO ,wrq
there,• aha Mid. •Wbat lboldd
happen? I dcn't know. Thi
Supreme COult wll ...... ID
make a J•"'1Q111mt and we'D have to Itri Wtlb tt .•
COMMUNITY "Makes you wonder how
they got it here and put up
all those decorations."
How To
GIT PmllSllED
'The Daily Piiot welcomes letten on Issues
conc~Jng Newpon Beach and CosU Mesa.
There are four ways to send In your com-
ments:
Doily Pilot
Gay Geiser-Sandoval
EDUCATIONALLY SPEAKING
Holiday brings
opponunity
to learn and
give thanks
T he good news for Newport-
Mesa students and teachers
is that there is no school for
the next five days, beginning
Wednesday. The modification to
this year's calendar has extended
the Thanksgiving break one extra
day.
Because elementary and sec-
ondary students just got their first
set of grades, Thanksgiving break
might be a good time for some stu-
dents to catch up. At one local
lugh school, parents receive
grades by physically going to the
school and picking up a report
card, then standing m line to visit
with teachers.
The quarter ended a couple of
weeks ago, so the students already
know what grades they received by
aslang the teacher. However, many
srudents have decided not to share
this infonnation with their parents.
Apparently, it is better to hold off as
long as possible so that the ground-
ing will start at a later date.
Because many students will be
Vlsiting with relatives over
Thanksgiving. it is unlikely they
would go out with their friends
anyway. By the time the weekend
rolls around six days later, maybe
their parents will have forgotten.
The tragedy, of course, is that bad
grades hurt the student, not the
parent.
The Thanksgiving holiday is a
great way for recent immigrants to
learn about the social and cultural
a~ of American society. The
o~~ idea was for the Pilgrims
-who were then immigrants -to
come together with the American
Indians who were in this country
previously and thank them for
their help and the earth for its
bounty. Recent interpretations say
a lot about families and the meld-
ing of American traditions with
ethnic and cultural norms.
The first thing kids talk about
on the playground when dls-
cussing Thanksgiving is whose
house they will be at. Some kids
may be flying by themselves
across the United States to have
the holiday with a parent they
don't often see. Others will be cel-
ebrating their first Thank.sgiVing
with their immediate family. after
leaving all of their relatives behind
to come to a new land.
Negotiation and compromise
skills get used during the holiday.
Finl, there is the issue of where .
the family will go. Then. the con-
Oict of what food should be served
Md how it will be made comes ,
into play. Many family squabbles
begin over who gets to bring the
rolls and who has to make the
mashed. potatoes.
Parents of college freshmen are
probably most thaillcful for a
dwlce to see their kids again. It
seems like forever. ln some ways.
sloce we left my daughter at the
college 1tep1. In another senae, it
doesn't seem poulble that more
than two months have passed
since we saw her. It feels like sbe
11 coming here for a vilit, gtven the
abort stint of her stay, u op~
to thJnking of ber com1ng home.
Many frelhmen have a.lrea~ • mailed a tequest for the I they
have been aaving that they Just
can't get ln the d1n1ng commons.
Our family tradition 11 to have
two 'JbanklgMng dinnen, one oo
ThanklgtV'lng and one during the
· weekend. That way, everybody
bapJ1Y.
So, whatever happens this
Thanklgtving, be tbankful. Bven It
It 11 • diNlter. be thankful that you
have an tntenetlng ttory to t.u et
ichool Of the oftke.
... • FUllD .... lltColta .................... "'"'~ hmnbeNICNdllJMMll•
OGf 4l1Dlmm.
-Chino Hills resident EILEEN YORDY
on Fashion Island Christmas Tl'ee,
the nation's tallest at 115 feet.
• lETl8tS -Matl to the Daily Ptlot., 330 W.
Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627
• MADIJtS NOruHE -C.all (949) ~~
• FAX -Send to (949) 646-4170
• E-MAIL -Send to dal/ypllot0fatlm6.com
All correspondence must include your full
name. hometown and phone number (for
verific.atlon purposes only).
Tuesday, November 21, 2000 5
By discussing the Westside, plan is success
8yTom Egan
W as the money wasted on
the specific plan for
Westsid e Costa Mesa?
Some have been asking this.
Since a non-negligible amount
of city revenue has been spent on
COMMUNITY :~~~':U:e
COMMENTARY money and
time were
well-spent even though the origi-
nal goal was not achieved . Rather,
a better g oal has been achieved.
Granted, if government is
viewed as a gurnball machine.
then the draft plan was a bust.
The only product to fall into the
tray was a 127-page pocument
that will not become part of
the city's general pla.n and will
only be used as a resource for
planning.
But there's another way to look
at what has gone on. If we take a
community-building point of view,
we 'need only ask, if the communi-
ty better off now than it was
before the plan was started.
The answer lS a resounding
yes I
Some evidence:
Before the planning effort,
Westside Costa Mesa was "the
other side of the tracks."
Citizens were dispirited, if not
depressed, about their chances of
ever having a nice neighborhood.
Then the City Council stepped in
and hired a consultant -much as
corporations do when they face
mtractable problems -to develop
a turnaround plan. This sparked a
lot of interest by all the stakehold-
ers -businesses, landlords, ten-
ants, homeowners, social services,
etc. -and many participated in
workshops.
However, the initial result
earned only mixed reviews. Those
who didn't like it began to grwn-
ble and form grass-roots organiza-
tions to try to reorient the conSul-
tant's clirecl.Jon.
Now there are several groups
of involved stakeholders, and they
are on all sides of the issues. ln a
word, the Westside is n ow ener-
gized. Additionally, the council
has deoded to halt the specific
plan process. nus gives the stake-
holders some space to work
together to take charge of their
own community.
lmdgine that! People coming
together to work out their own
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
community problems. nus is the
kind of participatory democracy
that is at the· root of the great
American experiment begun by
the colonists in the 1700s. And Uus
is why I am excited about the next
stage of Westside revita.llzabon;
it's not often one gets to partici-
pate in tJus lond of effort.
It's too soon to tell t.f all the
stakeholders can get together and
hammer out a new Westside.
Indeed. if everyone's stated
positions are frozen. then the odds
are against it. But who knows
what will happen when people sit
down and talk directly with each
other instead of indirectly through
consultants and city offic1als?
The colonists had long odds,
tQO.
• TOM EGAN 1s a resident of Costa Mesa.
Does parking ticket problem still needs fixing?
I read with great interest the
Daily Pilot article Oct. 31
regarding Noellne Frederik-
sen's plight with her parking cita-
tion fo.r parking at a blue meter
an<f subsequent tCne of $36.
According to the article, finally,
City Manager Homer Bludau took
it upon himseU to get involved,
admitting "She was right and we
were wrong," ~adding that the city
would send Frederiksen a lette r of
apology, rescinding the fine.
While I applaud Bludau's
efforts in th.is matter, J thought he
stopped short of compensating
Frederiksen for all the time she
had to spend pursuing her inno-
cence in this matter.
Rescinding a fine that should
not have been levied in the first
place is no compensation. Then. it
took her from Aug. 15 until the
end of October to get Bludau's
attention, even losing time from
work to pursue her innocence.
It seems to me the city should
have offered her (and her hus-
band) annual passes at no charge
to compensate her for an injustice
done. •
After all, she and her husband
are merchants who collect sales
tax (a portion of) which ends up in
the city coffers to pay the salaries
of the very folks who unjustly
fined her.
What do you think?
MARGARET WHITNEY GREO FRY I OAll.Y PlOT
Newport Beach Noellne Frederiksen stands next to the blue parking meter.
Miil COISOLIDARD wam DISTllCT
1965 Pl.acenba Ave .•
Costa Mesa. CA 92621; (949) 631-
1200
BOenl: JilD Atkinson, Fred Bnckinili.,
Dana Haynes. Mike Healey and
1hady Ob)lg-Hall
corramu lllmlll llSTllCT
Greenlight election ·
aftershocks still going
•At Issue: Passage of
slow-9rowth measure
generated heated
campaign that has left
some wounds.
I don't care bow people
voted on S or T. Everyone
bas the right to choose
llOllS which side they
.ISPOuD believe in and
" want to support.
But I do ca.re when erroneous
ada are placed in the 04ily
Pilot that imply Hoag Hospi-
tal supported one side or the
other. l'm referring to the ads
nm by •Citizens for 1\-affic
Solutions, No on S, Yes on T. ~
l have served on lh• Hoag
HOlpltal foundation board
for 10 yean and I know lbat
out ol reiped and conc:em for
lta patients, donon, volun-
teen and staff, tbe Hoeg
board clMIM to av neutral
on the S and T IDUSMlvw.
1 el9o know that hllllber ol
tl'8M --wdl 6d Hoag'i ability to buQd \be mw MV•
•4'ol'f Womm'I Pallan
.. ..,..dltltfwt .....
tuee. 1be,..... .......... ---·*• .. u-.. t n * ..... 4 p.-r' ,. ...... .,.. al
foul play 1s Just wby voters
distrust pol.Jtlcians.
SANDY SEWELL
Costa Mesa
The polls are m: The
Irvine Co. may reign above
the bluffs, but its towers
won't! Sixty-four percent vot-
ed no on the Irvine Co.'s ini-
tiative T. wh.tle 62% voted
yes on s. the people's choJcel
Let the company oveTde-
velop lrvine, wber the ri 1-
d ents are begging for moTe
houses. traffic, pollution and
d evelopment sou to block
a safe airport plan for El
Toro.
Thanks to whomever~
Vided fWl·J>89• ads ln oppo.
llUon to MMIUJ'e S for Ult·
tng the name. of former
maron. coundlmeo and~
., vtsltile people In Newpaft
Beech.
1bll hlaped to I ' d -
tbat tbme ............ .... ....,,....., __
lfllll .............. ... *"°' ............ . .....
...
_.,,
j
Producing a good community newspaper isn't child's play. But the Daily Pilot,
with its local news, prep sports and updates on the Westside -makes it look easy.
It's the newspaper I've grown up with, and I'm staying with. No kidding .
~ .
Got. the Pilot?
Cal 1 (800) LATIMES to IUblabt • Cell (949) 842-4321 to advertlM
•
• •
\
Quot• oi --~tel ml 'We've got CUS, hi is~ (~iship rilg)?'
ltoplfulr, ... ~. 11 lie able to ;we film Cit ---·.
Kyle Bun, Newport Harbor water polo
Doily Pilot Sports Editor Roger Corfson • 949..5744223 • Sports Fax: 949-650.0170 •Tuesday, November 21, 2000 7 CdM rolls to Div. IV title ................ .
•Top-seeded Sea Kings snap
Calabasas winning streak, 13-5.
ltkhltd Dunn
DALY PM.or
CLAREMONT -Following Coro-
na del Mar High's CIP Southern Sec-
tion Division IV girls tennis champi-
onship Monday, there was more talk
about who the Sea Kings didn't play
than who they defeated (Calabasas)
in the title match at the Claremont
Club.
No title can be tainted when you
play who you're assigned. but the Sea
Kings, after beating Calabasas, 13-5,
for the Division IV cbarnp1onship,
couldn't help but think about long-
time Division I rival Peninsula.
•1 think we'd have a really good
shot at Peninsula with the way our
team is now,• said sophomore sensa-
tion Anne Yelsey, referring to the
addition of singles players Bnttany
Reitz and Kim Singer, who did not
'
GIRLS TENNIS
play against Peninsula when the host
Panthe rs defeated CdM, 15-3, on
Sept. 19. .
Moreover, CdM c'oach Andy
Stewart feels bis doubles teams have
improved tremendously the past two
months.
But Monday's Division IV oppo-
nent, which hadn't lost all season.
simply did not have the weapons to
compete against top-seeded CdM.
Calabasas (21-1), the second seed,
went down fast, like the rest of CdM's
playoff foes in a format changed this
year by the CIF Southern Section,
prohibiting teams from moving up.
CIF officials said Monday the ruJe
might be overturned next year.
"We couldn't play them straight
up,· said Calabasas Coach Bill Bellat-
ty. who moved two singles players to
load up his doubles lineup, which
proved mildly effective as the Coy-
otes won four doubles sets, more than
the Sea Kings' previous three playoff
opponents combined.
"I scouted them,• added Bellatty,
who didn't want to lose, 18-0, like
Chaminade, CdM's semifinal victim.
"I knew they'd. be real good. I knew
what we were up against and didn't
want to take a chance, so I stacked
our doubles. We knew what was
going on. Ever since they got that
new girl (Re~tz. who became eligible
Oct. 16), I'm sure they're undefeat-
ed.·
They are.
But the Sea Kings lose only two
seniors and return the bullt of their
lineup next year, including all three
singles players. Bellatty did not want
to comment for the record what he
thought about CdM returning to DJvi-
sioo IV in 2001 with the exact same
lineup.
For the Sea Kings. it's their first CJF
SEE COM PAGE 8
.... '''IUI IOYS WATER POLO C ... PIOIS
DON llACH I 0M.Y 'lOT
~ Hartlor Hlgb's Sea View League water polo ..... ....,__ TM s.aon. n••••-r llrllli Kn1dzlwllp ud BW Bunett. ue tJae
No. 1 IMd aild a CIP Dlvlllon I ftnaU.t Weclnelday at leliiloDl l'lillU. ....... .._ 11111 .Kyle. Beu. JlrlaD Pmtz. BnDdOD Mcl.aln:,
8e.'9 ............ Sb&wn JobmOD. Ryan Cook and Jo,ey ~ KJr1dh11lrom ... 0... -........ Caine Uttrell llACI Peter Beldea.
Tars fall in CIF Division m final, 12-6
• Newport Harbor falls to
the top-seeded Aztecs in the
Division m final, but it was
much closer than it appears.
RJd\ard Dunn
DAILY PILoT
CLAREMONT -Don't be
deceived by the final score. It was a
riveting championship match for
top-seeded Polm Desert High in the
CIP Southern Section Division ru
girls tennis final Monday with New·
port Harbor at the Claremont Club.
•we've been on top of the CIF
rankings all year, but we haven't
played anybody in our division
(unW the playoff1)," said Palm
Desert Coach Saul Lopez, whose
undefeated aquad defeated Coach
Fletcher Ollon'1 Sailon, 12-6.
•All these Orange County\
teams, they get to ploy all the tough
matches every single them, this was as much
match. Or closest match ,, I felt Newport pressure as they've felt all
this year was 12-6 year."
(against Woodbridge in Harbor had Third-seeded Newport
nonleague)." the advantage Harbor (18-7), which
Despite Palm Desert's played in the CIF Division
lofty record (24-0), the because of I championship match in
Aztecs went virtually the ii.JI! 1993, '96 and last year
unchallenged in 2000 (losing all three times),
with several highly compeUUOn upset second-seeded
ranked players. (It) plays all Mater Del in the semifi-
"This was a different nals, 10-81 to advance to
situation here in the year loiag ... ,, the Division m final.
finals, where every set Siiul • ......_ Palm Desert captured
counts. I felt Newport him o:;t COldt • Its fourth CIF champi-
Harbor bad the advan-onship in seven years and
tage because of the stiff -------its second in Division m.
competition (it) plays all 1be Aztecl, however,
year long ... this was definitely a were never tested on their way to a
challenge. Dese(t Valley League title and did-
•0ur tournament girls are u'8d n't play a grueling nonleague
to playing tough, competitive schedule like Newport Harbor.
matches. They're out there every •we cb4nged our lineup against
weekend doing it. But for a lot of Mater Dei and pulled ijunior)
llllSTE•IS
Megan Hawkins into doubles. but
this team just had too much depth
in singles and doubles, so I put
Megan back in singles,• said Olson,
whose team lost every set at No. 1
and No. 2 singles and doubles,
while sweeping against Palm
Desert's third singles and doubles.
•This (Harbor) team definitely
earned its way here to the finals. It's
tough, because we have four fresh-
men (singles player Vanessa Dun-
lap and doubles players Diana
Khoury, A.J . Olson and Bonnie
Adams), and they really don't
understand what ClF is. But it'll
toughen them up for the future.
They're just like the Pab Five (of
'96):
five fabulous freshmen, or so
SEE NEWPORT PAGE I
•II ... fOlla"I ...... ml-flll, I _IOI ..
ISllllCll EAILES ... -. JON DAVID ANDY
ROMO
CESAR
ROMERO VANDERSLOOT . SPRENGER
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Oc•111Cliu-
Bean stalks
opponents at
two Illeters
•Newport Harbor High senior
takes a football mentality into
the pool for CIF Division I final.
D efending two meters IS the
black hole of high school
wa!er polo. Few places m the
athletic arena are better swted to
biding out than slapping torsos and
tangling arms and legs with the
opposing team's marquee talent.
The dosest most hole guards come
to the ball is when it whizzes by
their ear toward the goal cage.
But Newport Harbor High senior
Kyle Bean doesn't play water polo to
read his name in the paper. He plays
for the linebacker-like JOY of
knocking the beck out of people.
And for those who might suggest
the football field would be a better
venue to vent such hostility, Bean
might reply: 'Been
there, done that.•
After growing
up as an aqua
jock. Bean traded
bis polo cap for a
football helmet bis
sophomore year.
He wound up
starting at
defensive end for
the Sailors' junior
varsity, but a lack
of football
experience, a
concussion, as
well as the
Barry Fuulkner
PREPS
surprising allure of the pool an~ his
former polo teammates. drew him
back into bis Speedo the last two
falls.
Football, however, left its mark on
the 6-foot, 180-pound water wamor,
whom Harbor co.-coach Bnan
Kreutzkamp credits for anchonng
the Sea View League champions'
defense. With Bean eggbeatering
into whoever will set the Foothill
offense, the top-seeded Sailors (28-5)
will go for their first CIF Southern
Section title since 1984 in
Wednesday's Division I final at 7 .30
p.m. at Belmont Plaza Olympic Pool.
"He's happy to do the dirty
work,• Kreutzkamp sak1 of Bean.
who bench presses 250 pounds and
is fast enough to flirt with the CIP
qualifying standard 1n the SO-yard
freestyle.
•He's definltely the strongest guy
on our team and we can match him
with any two-meter man and Kyle
will tire him oul •
Peter Belden. an All-CIP veteran
and balf of the Sailors' one-two
scoring punch that also includes
Ryan Cook.fully appreaates Bean's
low-profile cootrlbutioo.
•(Bean) doesn't get any statistics,
SEE PREPS MGE I
8 Tuesda); November 21, 2000
PREPS
CONTINUED FROM 7
or much credit,• Belden said.
"But he deserves a lot ot the
credit for our success.•
Bean grew tired of water
polo after yea.rs 1n the
age-group program. But after
two years away from the sport,
he's happy to be back.
•Football was a great
experience,• he said. "I liked it
a lot and l had a lot of tun.
When I came back to water
polo, I found I had a whole
different mentality. I bad been
timid before, but football
taught me to be physical. l
decided to go after guys, no
matter how big they were.•
Bean also said bis football
experience turned him on to
the benefits of weight
_____ .... __ _
..
Daily Pilot
training, which has helped him
bridge the gap with even the
beefiest two-meter foes. •
"You don't need a lot of
finesse to play my position,
which is good. because my
teammates tell me I don't have
any,• Bean said. "But you do
need strength. stamina and
determination. We all have our
roles and mine is playing
defense.·
CW.V Ill.OT PHOTOS 8V MMC CAMPOS
Newport Hartlon ~ Nel9oD (lefQ, the Kboary ....... Dlaa (rlglitl Del c.... md Megan Hawkins
(rtgld) tD* tbelr....,.. ~ • CIP daamplombtp Monday, but tell abort la a 12-6 ded91oa to Palm Detert.
No. 2 singles player, freshman Jen.
nifer Joy, won 6-2, 6-1, 6-0. Jay is
•When you're No. 1, you have "This team does not have a Jot of
CONTINUED FROM 7 ~~. 2Sth in the Southern Califor-
nowhere else to go. Newport Harbor . tournament · players, only three oc
'had nothing tQ lose, so we really had four out of 10, and it:I a lot' more
to JJO out and prove ourselves." rewarding to get here to tbe finals
In 1994, Palm Desert beat Brent-with that kind or team," Pletcher •
wOOd for the CIP DMsion IV title, Olson said. "They've come a long .
knocked off Dana Hills for the Divi-way and I'm real happy with their
sion U aown in 196 and.topped~-progress." Bean said he is not
envious of missing out on last
year's CIF Division VI
football title (while the Tars
were upsetjn the Division I
water polo semifinals by
Baker and two Palm Desert dou·
they were billed, toed the Harbor bles teams are still alive in the CJF
courts that fall and lost to Peninsula individual cbamplonshiJ>' Nov. 30· m the Di'\'ision I tWe match, after Dec. 1 at tbe Claremont Club in tbe
knocking off tbe Pantben earlier and Round of 16. \'Ud· Westlake in '91 for tlte Division m dwilpionshlp, The school's \eMiS
program ii only 14 years old.
snapptnq their 120-match winning In Monday's opening~. Dun-
streak. .lap. won at No. 3 1inglel and the
El Toro). But he is eager to
neutralize the good-natured
ribbing his former football
mates deliver at every
opportunity.
Last year, Newport Harbor lost to Sailors' third doubles team of Ollon-
Peninsul4, 10-8, hf the CIP Division I Adams posted a win u the Aztecs
finals. · assumed a .t-2 lead. But that wun't
For the Sailors, No. 1 aingles play~
er Kelly Nelson and No. 2 player
Hawkins each won a set, while the
Newport Harbor No. 1 doubles teem
of junior Cannan Khowy and fresh-
man Diana Khoury, and the No. 2
tandem of Krista Mcintosh and Erika
Buder, won one set.
"They tell me 'We've got
ours, where is yours
(championship ring)?' •
But Palm Desert would be too . so ordinary for Palni Desert •1t was
much to overcome, as ,sophomore the closest we've been in the first
Robyn BJker, . ranked 12th in the round all year," said Lopez, whose
Southern California 16s, swept the tl!am led, 5-f1 after the first round
Tam, 6-0, 6-0, 6-1, while the Azteci' when it defeated. Woodbridge. • Bean said. "Hopefully, after
Wednesday, I'll be able to give
them an answer.•
Newport has bad the
answer for Foothill in two
previous meetings·this year,
winning, 10-8, in the
third-place game of the South
Coast Tournament Sept. 23,
then earning an 11-8
nonleague triumph Oct. 20.
•we match up with them
really well,• Belden said.
Additionally, Bean said
when this year's seniors were
in the eighth ade, th
Harbor juni te
squad of ture Foo
players t win a bi
toum nt in Lo g Beach.
Bill Barnett, who shares
coaching duties with
Kreutzkamp at Harbor, is
guiding a team in the CIF
finals for the 19th time in his
remarkable career. He has
expe~nced all 10 boys titles
from the bench ~ also
coached the girls team to the
CJF crown in 1999. ~ Kreutzkamp, by the way, is
no stranger to Belmont. He
played for Costa Mesa in the
1990 2-A final loss, was a
Mustang assistant with the
1992 Division ID winners, as
well as the '93 Division m
runners-up. He also
represented Golden West
College, which won a state
crown in '92 at Belmont, and
was Mesa's head coach when
it won Division Il in 1995. He
was also at Barnett's side for
the girls' triumph in '99.
Corona del Mar lllgh's
Sea Kings, with singles
standouts Kim Singer
(top left) and Brittany Reitz
(top right), as well as
doubles stan Katie
TenereW (left) and Laura
Outer tn the mix. claimed
the CIF Dlvtslon IV girls
tennis championship
Monday with a 13..S victory
over previously undefeated
Calabasas. .
DAILY PILOT PHOTOS BV MARC CAMPOS
COM
CONTINUED FROM 7
title since 1997, when the 1im Mang-coached squad
captur£,.d a national championship, according to
USA 'mday. They lost in the section quarterfinals in
1998 and semifinals last year (to Peninsula).
#That's what we want to do next year, beat
Peninsula and win that National High School Invita-
tional (hosted by CdM) -two things we didn't do
this year,• Stewart said. .
Yelsey, the Pacific Coast League singles champi-
on who won 36 of 38 games in the CIF semifinals
and finals, and Reitz were nearly perfect· against
Calabasas. Singer won two of three sets at No. 3·sin-
gles at love.
In doubles, the PCL-champion tandem of junior
Leslie Damion and freshman Brittany Holland swept
against the Coyotes, 6-3, 6-4, 6-1. Their win over
.Erin Everly and Hilary LeeWJong in the second
round clinched the match for the Sea Kings, who
jumped out to a 5· 1 lead.
Damion and Holland closed out the season at
35·0, while CdM's No. 2 doubles team of juniors
Laura Claster and Katie Tenerelli won two of tRree
sets. Brittany Minna and Juliette Mutzke played
third doubles for CdM.
#We knew if we played well we could do it," said
Yelsey, who was s1ill seething Monday after default-
ing Saturday in tbe CIF individual championships to
lroy's Aya Sakoda in the Round of 32.
Yelsey said she had an event to attend Saturday
after winning earlier in the day, and returned later to
play Sakoda. But Sakoda bad already left when
Yelsey arrived and the CtlM standout was forced to
default.
•1 was really ticked off, actually. I think I could've
won ClF this year,• Yelsey said. ·1 feel like I've real-
ly improved my game the last few weeks to a month.
#But I'll play CIF next year. I just have to wait
another year.•
There's no waiting, however, for a CIF team
championship. It is the sQiool's sixth section title in
girls tennis, and first in a small division.
CF DIVISION IV FINALS
COllONA DB. MAR 13, CAl..uUAS 5
Slnales • Yelsey (CdM) def. Schnitman, 6-0, def. Wiesner,
6-1, def. Kagan, 6-0; Reitz (CdM) won, 6-0, 6-1, 6-0; Singer
(CdM) won, 6-0. lost. o-6, won, 6-0.
Doubles -Holland-Damion (CdM) def. Durkin-Yano, 6-3
def: A. Leewrong-Solomon, 6-4, det Everly-H. Leewrong 6-1·
Claster-Tenerelli (CdM) lost 2-6, won, 6-4, 6-2; Minna-Mutzxe'
(CdM) lost. 1-6, 2-6, 4-6.
Coasters on a mission @l~~~fR~
• Pirates will try to concen.trate
on fewer mistakes for the edge.
Steve Virgen
DAILY PILOT
COSTA tvfESA -No more No. 2
ranking in the state. No more superstar
athletes. But, the Orange Coast College
women's basketball team views the
2000-01 season as a chance to get better
tn each game and hopefully surprise
some people.
Faur games into the season, the
Pirates have improved, mostly in their
60-55 victory over m Camino Friday.
With three key returners and five fresh-
men, tbe Pirates (2-2) played their best
game of the season against El Camino.
Those key returners a.re guards~
.Fierst, Megan Masuda and forward Kris·
ten Urban, a product of Newport Harbor
High.
"Karyn Pient bas got to be one of our
go-to players,• OCC Coach Mike lbom·
ton said. •we have to get 13·20 points a
game from her.•
Thornton alto Mid the Pirate1 Will
bave to dec:reue their turnovers this ....
son tn order to ,haw a chance to win.
"We don't haw • Jot of room foe enor, • continued the OCC coecb.
..
·we're not the kind of team that can go
out and make a lot of mistakes and still
win. For us to beat decent teams, we
have to make far fewer mistakes than
we're making right now and
JC women's hoops
OUTLOOK 111$\
THIPIURS ..., we have to take advantage of scoring
opportunities. We're just going to have
to saap all season long. It's going to be a
struggle. We're not going. to out·athletic
anyone. We have to putwork them and
play smart."
The scrappy play will most likely
come from sophomore forward Nadia ·
Mojica, whom Thornton deemed the
team's best rebounder.
"She's only S·foot-9, but she's really
aggressive,• Thornton said. •J-Jer quick-
ness makes it difficult to block her out"
The Pirates will look to refrain from
inconsistent outside shooting and rely on
their deleme to win games. OCC's
defenM continues to improve.
• Defen.tvely, I've been pretty satis-
fied,• Thornton Mid. •for the moet po.rt.
tbat"141 been our strong point. We ma
up our zone cmd our man. We didn't
~ (agalnlt Bl Camino) u much at we
uaually do."
OCC't 25·, 26-and 21·Win 1ee10D1
the Jut three YMR· respecti*f, coµJ.d
be tough to a~ lhll teUOD. Tbom·
,
ton Mid. lbe Pfratel were 27·6 lalt year.
But, he believes the team will improve before the eonterenm MUOn begtnl.
•we've beell ranked No. 2 ln the atete
for a good period ~ that Ume (three
years),• h• aeJd. •sut, we're not at that
level now. We just want to be the belt
IMm that we can be by the end of tbe
aeuon and that's our goal." .
TOl)AY'S MATCHUPS
~ange Coast College hoS!S Rio Hondo in SCHEDULE mens soccer today at 2 p.m. m the Southern
California Regional semifinals, The Coasters
(11-3-4) made it past the,second round with a 1-0 victory at
Santa Barbara College Saturday and own a 5·2 decision over
Rio Hondo in earlier action.
Elsewhere today:
• Corona del Mar H.'igh's guls volleyball team is in the first
round of the Southern Regionals of the state tourn4Dlent
tonight at University Hi~b of San Diego in Division m circles.
• Orange Coast College .s women's basketball team is at South.
western in a nonconference matchup at 6.
• In high school golf, Co~ del Ma.r's Thylor McConnlck and
Alllson Shauppner, and Newport Harbor's Kelly Hunt, are 1n
the CIP individual fl.nab at Mialon Lakes Golf Course in
Desert Hot Springs, starting at 7:30 a .m.
Cobb, Jacobs named to All-GSAC team
COSTA MESA -Two Vanguard ~ty SOCCll women's IOCCer" players were cboMn to tb8 AD· ·
Golden State AUU.tic Conferenai wem. Senior
Ganeea Cot>b and Junior Annie Jacobi were two Uons -*"·
ed by tbe GSAC coacbet on the 22·pleyw tqUad.
Cobb, a ftrat-Ume AU..osAC 1el1l1lon. J.s the Uon1 with
nine pk and four aaeilta. In her 88 .....-. Cobb tallied 25
goeb and 21 ~ u a W mklflelds. Jecobl, a tine-time
all-coaf•ence .. 1ectton, IC.'Ol'id ftft ~ and reotded two
Ultstatbtayear •
SPORTS Tuesday. NoYember 21, 2000 9
GILES COACH OF YEAR
,, HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL
GrBJJmJTJ:Jmflce?n
Rustlers retain state title with
13-3 win over Pirates; OCC's
Giles earns top honor.
Tony Altobelli
OM.Y PllOT
COMMUNITY COLLEGE WOMEN'S WATER POLO
honor for Giles. The announcement fol-
lowed the Pirates' 13-3 loss to Golden
West in the state finals.
l.AsT WllllI'S RICH SCHOOL fOOD.UL PLAn
OP 30 Y.UDS OR MOU
• 68 -CbrU Mandertno (Newport Harbor) touchdown run.
• 46 -Jon-Luke Del Pante (Corona del Mar) field goal
• 40 -Andy Romo (Estancia) pass from Kenny Valbuena.
• 38 -Jon Vandersloot (Newport) pass from Morgan Craig.
• 36 -ayan Ortega (Newport Harbor) run.
WALNUT -By taking hls squad
from nin~ place in state last year to the
state championship game this year,
Orange Coast College women's wate~
polo coach Mike Giles was named the
California Community College Coach or
the Year.
Six of OCC's eight losses came at the
hands of the Rustlers (35-1), with the
other two losses coming by way of four-
year schools, UC Irvine and Loyola
Marymount.
"With Golden West, we either lost by
a little or a lot,• Giles said. ·we played
them tough last week in the SoCal
Regionals so they made adjustments and
took it to us at the state finals.•
In the semifinals on Saturday, the
Pirates used a five-goal first quarter and
third quarter to defeat the Palomar
Comets, 12-5.
Daylene Coberly scored four goals to
pace OCC's attack, while Hoagland
added three goals. Erin Kennedy, a
s9phomore and a product of Newport
Harbor High, ~e up with 10 saves
while Erica Anderson added one save in
relief.
• 36 -David Stoddard (Es1ancia) ID pass from Kenny Valbuena.
• 30 -Matt Moore (Corona del Mar) punt retwn.
...
l..AsT WEB'S BIG DEFENSIVE PLAYS
•rm extremely flattered for thls hon-
or,• Giles said. ·1 love it. It's been a real
great year and I'm very proud or what
these girls accomplished.· Devon Wright had two goals, while
Neisha Hoagland added a single tally for
occ (29-8-1).
·we knew Palomar was for real,
because they knocked off the Northern
California top seed (Sierra) to get to us,•
Giles said. "That was a great, great
game for us.•
• NEWPORT HARBOR -Strong safety David Sprenger
intercepted two passes, returning one 17 yards .. Cornerback
Brian Gaeta retwned an intercepllon 18 yards for a
touchdown ... End Garrett Troncale had two sacks on two
different quarterbacks and deflected a pass ... Tdckle Nlck
MC>iJhaddam and end Ian Banlgan each had sacks ...
Barugan also had a tackle for a 4-yard loss ... Bryce Sawyer
provided the game's biggest hit, leveling a receiver after a
6-yard pass ... noseguard CJ. Collins assisted on one sack
It was the first-ever Coach of the Year
MIJES DAWKINS
. ,,. ':·,~
I • ,. ~ ~ .,11111l11111
F1ctltlout Bu1lnesa
Nllme St.et9fMnt
Thi lolowtng pertonS
.,. doing ~ u :
GAYLOffD ASSOCIATES, 931 Gar· dllM Wey. Corona def Mir, CA 92e25
Carolyn S. Geylofd.
931 Gerdlf1il Wey, Co-rorw del Mar, CA 92625
Jon D. Geylofd, 931
Gerdenle Wey, Corona
dtl Mar, CA 92625
Thi• bualnell la con-
dUCCed by. hulband and
wilt
Have you started
doing butir.-ye!? No
Caioly!l s G8ytord Thta ttatement WU
tiled With the Coun1y Cleftc of Orwige Colny on t012412000
2000llU843 ~ 31, Noll. 7, 14, 21, 2900 T258
Fictitious Bu11ne ..
Name State!Mnt
n~ following persons
are doing bueln.11 aa·
Al FISCHER ELEC·
TRONICS. 2202·A Pe·
cfflc Ave., Colta Meta,
CA 112827
AHrtd L F11ehe .
2202·A Pacffic Ave ,
Colla Mau. CA 92627 Thie bulinMI .. coo-~ by • .,, lndMdual
Have you atarted
doing buelne" yet? v ... 8-00
Allnld L F19Ch« Thie ltltM!ent WU filed with the County
Cleft! °' Qfange Courlly on t0127f2000
2000l8450M Oct. 31, Nov. 7, 14, 21,
2000 T257
Flctttlous Buslneu
Name Statement .,.Thlti~ ~ U , 197
Tiie Ma.mra Circle. Colla Meu.. CA 82027 SuNn Gabrial, 197
The Mattera Circle,
COIUi Meal. CA 92827 Thie bu9lneM Is 000-dudred by: .,, lndMdl.lal
Have you 11arted doing 00.ln .. a yet?
Yae, 2/2000
Suean Gat>tlet Thie etalament ...
Iliad wfth the County
a.ti °' Orange on 11 IO'i/2000
2000M4HM ~ P1loC New. 7 ~· ~·2000 ~1
SUMMONS
(CtTACtoN
JUDtCIAL)
NOTICE TO OEFEN·
aid ollk:e (listed in lhe
phone boo!<)
Oeapuea de que le
enlreguen etta cllacion
tudcat usted litnt un
plazo de 30 DIAS
CALENDARIOS pare
~r une respuMll
escn11 a maqulnl en
esta cone
Uni carta o una
Mamada letofona no It olrecera pro1ecc1on, su
respuosta escn11 1 ma·
quina 11erw1 que eoo1plir con las lormalldedell I•
gales 1prop11d11 11
usted quie1a que ta cone
escuehe su caso
St usted no presenll
su rnpuesla 1 ltefTI90
PUede pt<def .. CUC>, y
le puedtn qu111r au
salano. SU dintro y Ottu
OOlll de SU propoedad
aln IVISO l<lte:loool po<
part• "' .. ()()(It E1111ftn otrot requ11t·
tos legale1 Pu.de que
usted QUltft ti.me1 a
"" abog&do 1nmedlatament• SI no
conooe a un ebogado.
putde U1m1r e un
MrViOlo de refer~ de
abog1do1 o a una
oflclna de 1yud1 legal (vea el dfrtcto110 tele-
fonic:o)
CASE HUMBER:
~ del Calo)
BC2218ot
The name and ad·
drea of tilt coun 11 I El
nombr• y dlrecaon de II
cone") Supeno< Coun of Call·
lornla. Loa Ang1le1,
Centre! 04stricl. 1 t 1 N
HIH Streat Los Angeles.
CA 90012
The name, 1ddre11,
and ttlts>hon• number
of plalntifr• 1nomey, Of
plafnllff ""rthout en at·
tomey .. (El nombr•. ..
dirlcaon 'I .. numt!O de ~ dtl lbogado dtl
demandlllte. o del de-
mandanl• qua no tiene :=· "~trharoonl,
&q. 11705411,
Chtrlet H Gardner,
&q. 1102690
LAW OFFICES OF
MICHAEL
MIRHAAOONI & AS·
SOCIA TES. 9454
Wltahlre Blvd •
Penthouae. Beverly
Hilla. CA 902 t 2
(310). 271·5400 OATE· APR 25, 2000 JOHN A. CLARKE, a.ERK. by H. Hl«AQA.
~shed Newport
B11ch·Co1t1 MHa
Delly Pilot November t 4,
21, 28. DtcMlber 5.
2000
171811 T2§3 DANT: (Avlao I
Acuaedo) PATRICK NOTICE TO TENOAE, JR.. lndlvld-Ulllt Ind 11 ~ of CONTRACTORS
PMT SYNDICATE, CALUNO FOR llOS u..c. •• Calbnll lmllld School DletrlCt ~~c.~~~
DAYLENE COBEriLY WATER POLO SUMMARIES by Troncale and Matt Casserly recovered a fumble.
above. and shell be
opened end pobOcly
read aloud II Ille above.
slated dale, lime and
place In Iha lnlonnallon '°' Boddets cal lo< pt• quatmca11on of bidders
Ptl'-nt lO Public Con·
lract Code Secuon
20111 5, ody lhose bids
rectived from pre·
quallfieO bidders st\IN be
opened and publicly
read aloud al Ille abov&-
stated time and place.
Prequ11111ca11on pack· ages arv avallable from
lhe District Purch11lng
Department by calling
(714) 964·3339 txl
4350
Plans and speclh· cabonS are on file at the adcha llsted above be-gmntng November 15. 2000 One set of docu-
ments may be obtll'19d '°' • refundable depoel1 ol $200 per eel. Spec&el handling, such u
overnight dahvery, wm
be available at bidder'•
expense Oeposrt wlll be
rtf\.nded IO the Conttao-tOfS upon return ol lht
document• to lht
Purchasing Oa9artmenl
Ill good condition wltl1lfl
live (S) dlCi alter lhe bid
~~Wlthlht
provisions of C1lotcxni1
8ueoness Ind
Prolus1ona Code
Sec1'0n 7028 1 S and
Pubhc Contr1C1 Coda
Secllon 3300, lhe OW!*
reqwe1 lhet lht bidder
po1sess the cl111I·
flcatlon of conlractO(s
lielnle noted above at lhe time lhe bid 11
submitted. Purauan1 lo
Bullr-. and
Protu11ona Code
Section 7028 15. no
payment ahll be made tor wor1I « material un-
der the contract unllll
Ind until the Atgiltrw at
Contractorw vtrtlits 10
lhe DIAla lhll lht con-
tractor w11 property
lctnHd II lhe time the
bid was Slbnittad. Al'f
contractor not ao licensed le aubjtct to
pentltiH under lhe llw
Ind lht oontraC1 will be
considered void. H Ille
llcenae cll .. illcatlon
apaclfled hertlnafler la 1NI of I .. apeddy 000-
tractot" u defined In Sadlon 7058 ot the ~
lomi• Buslneat and Profeatlona Code. tht
apaclally contrector tWwded the conlr8cl for Ihle WOile .,.. IClllf con-
anuc:t a majority °' tilt woitc. In llOCOfdance wlttl
the ~ of Cllllor-nlt Bualntea and
Profaealona Code
Section 7059. Time la of lhe e•
llflOI, Al WOile ll'Ult be oomp19ted Wilhln 714
conaecutlve calendar
dlyt flom 1M dllte epec>
lfltd on the NoCloe to
c WOMEN'S STATE WATER POLO TOURNAMENT
Semifinals
• CORONA DEL MAR -Outside linebacker Nick Prosser
chased quarterback for a 9-yard Sdck Comerback Charlie
Alshuler stretched high 111 the air for dn mtercepbon ...
Strong 5afety Erle Snell blitzed to stop a run for a yard loss ...
Snell and Prosser made stops for no gam back-lo-back plays
OllANGt CoAsT 12, PM.OMNI 5
Palomar 0 2 0 3 • 5
Orange Coast 5 0 5 2 -12
Palomer -Eisner 2, Homan 1, Mora 1, Onweller 1. . .. Outside linebacker Matt Boyce slammed 111to the backfield Saves -Moody 4.
Onnge Coast -Coberly 4, Hoagland 3, Montalvo 2,
Dolan 1, Wright 1, Miloslavic 1.
to nail a back for a 2-yard loss ... AlshuJer mtercepted in tus
own end zone to stop a drive ... Jason Kldush1m had a sack
for a 9-yard loss ... Prosser put a big hit on a back for a 3-yard
loss ... Taumata Grey and Sean Cobb teamed on a tackle for
a 2-yard loss ... Prosser came up another 9-yard sack.
Saves -Kennedy 10, Anderson 1.
Final
GoullN Wlsl 13, ~ CoAsT J
Golden West 3 4 2 4 -13 • ESTANCIA -End David Rodriguez and rruddle linebacker
Ivan Garcia comb med to stop a run for a 2-yMd loss ...
Comerback Andy Romo made two touchdown-saving tackles
from behind on long pass plays ... End Jesse Cardlna.s stuffed
a run for a yard loss . Linebacker Fahad JahJd made a big
hit on back for a short gam ... End Cesar Romero made a
6-yard sack ... Freddy Rodriguez had an mtercepbon
Orange Coast 0 2 1 0 -3
Golden West -Steele 4, Garrison 4, Kordova 2. Finucane 2,
Nolan 1.
Saves -Lombardo 9
Onnge Coast Wright 2, Hoagland 1.
Saves • Kennedy 3.
Proceed lasued by the
Dl11rlc1. Notice to
Proceed ahta no1 be is·
sued pnor to live (5)
days •Iler •Wllld °' the con111ct. and lhlll not
require that WOftl be
commenced lesl thin
(5) daya from dale of i.-
suance ol aald Noclct. Feilure lo complete the
woril wlltin the lime aet
forth hereir1 will reMlll In
the lmpoeltton of liqui·
oated damages tor each
dey ot delay, in the
amount ot $1200 per
day
Eich bidder shall
aubm1t. on the form
lumllhed With lhe con-
~ documeB•. a list °' the pf'09C)Hd tubcon-
lractorw on thll proieet
11 required by the
SublaUJng and Subcoo-
tracting Fair Practicff
Act, -Public Conlrae1
Code Section 4 100 et
Hq
In accordance With
Education Code 17078 11, the Dlstrld
hat I partlciplltlon goal
of at leasl 3 paroent of
the OYefd "°"' amounl expended each year tor
dlaabted veteran butl-
n e 11 enterpriaes
(OVBE)
Uch bid 91\111 be ~
compenltd by I certitled
or cuhie(a ctJldl °' bid bond In .,, amouot noc
ltu thlnLltn percent
(10"!9) ol ma total bid pr1ea, payable to Iha
DISTRICT u 1 guaran-
tee !hat the bldde<, II Its
proposal 11 accepted,
•h•ll promptty txtCvt• the ~ fumlth I
111iefectoty Fallhlul Ptr·
lormanca Bond In an
amount not leaa thin
one hundred percent
(' cmt) °' tilt total bid price, tumah a Payment
8ond In an amount noc lau than one huodred
perc.nt ( 1 OO'JI.) ot IM II> Ill bid price, and tumah
certlflcatae evidencing
lhlt the requited lntut·
lnOI le In tlfed In the
amounta Ml b1tl In the
general condition•. In
the evtnt of lellvf• 'to
tneer Into the contract
end execute the re-
qull9d documents. u:h bid ..aMlty wll be tor-
t.lttd The Fadhlul Ptr· folmencl Bond .,.. ,..
miln In fUll torce Ind ...
--~ .. ~ ... period .. ~ In
W8gN In the localtty In
whfch thll woril la to be pel1ormad Coplea of
these rate delermlna· tione, are on file at the
DISTRICT, and coplte
may be ~lntd upon
requell. The contract« .nan poc1 a copy of
U-ratN at Md\ Job
tlte Thi connaor and any IUboonlrlletOf under
II lhall pt'( no4 laaa than
the apecllled prevailing
ratea of .... agea 10 an
worltera employed by
them In the execution of
the contnict
No bidder may withdraw any bid tor a
period of llJC1y (60) day.
alter ltlt dlt• M1 b lht
Of*llno °' blda Pureuant to Section
22300 of the Pubic ~
tr8d Code. the ~ wi" contain prCMllone
permitting the auc·
CHllUI bidder lo
subatltut• securltlaa for any moneya wlttNld by
the Dlalrici to tn14.119
perlormanee under the
comract or permitting
peymen1 or retentlona
earned directly Into
eacrow.
BY: Oovemlng Board
Signed:
191 6wl Md.Mw,
Director • Procu,...
ment/Enern Con-
MNltlon Published Newport
Beach·Co1ta Mtea
Olly P1loC NoY9rriber 14,
21, 2000
T2§7
STATE OF
WISCONSIN
CIACUrT COURT FAMILY COURT
BRANCH
KENOSHA COUNTY
In Re tilt Mlrrtllot at
LARRY A. RUFFALO,
2800 -24th Avenue l<enoehl. WI 53140 Petitioner.
and DOAOTliY D
RUFFALO. Snua Halbor
Trailer P~ 1~ New-
port Btvd., Site 7, Colla
Mau. CA 92627
Rt1pondent. • SU..oNI IY
PUBLICATION c... ,.,. OOfA.-s
C>Mlroel 40101 IARIARA A. KLUKA. ~~lrWldli FlLED OCT 04 aoao
GAL GENTZ.
wntten demand fOf a
oopy °' the petition. Thi demand mull be Mrll Of
delivered to Iha court,
whoea lddreu le: °""' of Circuit Court,
Keno.ha County OfCUi1
Court. 912 -56ltl Streec.
KtnOlha, WI 53140 and
to ltlt Petitioner, whoea
address is· 2800 • 24th
Avenue. Kenoshtl, WI 531 40
You mey hive an at·
lomey help cx reprteenl
you. H you do nol demand I copy of the petition
within forty ( 40) day.,
the court may grant
juClgmtnt agaifllt you IOf
lht awaro of mon.y «
othlf leoal actiOn r• queated In the petition,
and you may toee 'f04JI right to object to any·
lt*1g that .. Of may be
lncooect In tht petition
A judgamenl may be enbced .. pnwtded by
law. A .MlgmerlC award-
ing money may beooma
a lien egM\81 any '"' estate you own now cx In
tilt Mute, and may elao
be enforced by gar-
nishment °' aeizure ol property.
You -lul1hef hereby ~ ol lht avaltabitlly °' inlormabon "' forth In Sac. 767 081. Stata,
from the FamHy Courl
Commlaslonar.
Oeted: 2·20-2000
/SI LARRY A. RUF-
FALO P9tltlonar
Publlahed Newport
Btach·COltl Mt ea Dally Pilot November 14,
21, 28. 2000 T266
NOTICE TO
CREDITORS OF 8UlK SALE
(SECS. 1104
i105 U.C.C.)
Eectow No. Ol2l63
Nodoe .. hefwby glWfl
t!O credlkn °' the WlltW\ l'lll"9d .... hit • ~ ...... aboul to be mede °' the ..... dMcrtled ~low.
The namae end bu• ,,... addraaMI of the
M11tr at« MIMI OH, 555
WEST 19TH ST .•
COSTA MESA, CA.
92828
Thi loc8liorl In CIW«· nla of .. ct*" u.c:uM olllce of the .... la: SAME AS ABIOV£
M llllld by ltlt .....
all other bualneu
nullified by a penalty .
u : LEASEHOLD
IMPROVEMENTS,
FIXTURES. EQUIP·
MENT. FURNITURE, GOODWILL. TRADE
NAME, CONVENANT
NOT TO COMPETE, and lie loceled at: 555
WEST 19TH ST •
COSTA MESA. CA
92628
The buslnese name
UMd by the seller at 111at
location 11: SURF CITY
SQUEEZE
The entlci!>ated date ol
the bulk lale Is Oeoern·
ber 11, 2000 at the office
of IVY ESCROW CO ..
12860 BEACH BlVD.,
IJ, ST ANTON. CA 90880 ..
Thie bulk .. .. llJt>.
ltd to Callomla Unilorrn Commeraal Code
Section 6106.2. tt IO ~ the name
and addr-°' the per· eon with whom daima
may be filed is IVY
ESCROW CO., 12860
BEACH BLVD. •J.
STANTON CA 90680
and the la11 date lor n11no c1a1ma shalt be De-cell'ibtr 8, 2000 whlcti is
the bt.ir-day babe
the Ala date apeaffed
above. Dettd: 11/Hlf.2000
191 SUNG JA LEE
Publi1hed Newport
BHCh·Coat• Me ea
Ody Pl1ol November 21,
2000
170472 !269
Flctltloua Buslneu
Name Smtement
Th• follow\~ persona
"' doing bulinlls as: Golden State NotlfY,
389 San Mlgutl. Suitt
310, Newpoft BMct1. CA
92660
Robert A. Conrad. 3611 San Miguel, Suitt 310,
Newport e.ach. CA
92660 Thia ~ la con-
ducted by: an lncl¥kMI Have you at1rttd
~~eo.:JNo
Thia ltatemant waa
flied with the County
Cltttl of ~ CountY on 11/07!2000 2000M4I047
Daly Plot No¥. 21, 28, Dtc. 5. 12. 2000 1273
FIND
an apel1ment
ttvougti dassified
Fictitious BuslneH
Name Smtement
The fottowtng paraons
Ble doing buslneSI II
Al Co6ta Mau
M11sub1sh1.
B) Huntington Beach
Mttsublsh•. 2860 Hart>Of
Blvd • Costa Mesa CA
92626
MMIP Dealer Corp II. A Cahlom1a Corporation
6400 Katella Avenue.
Cypress, CA 90630
This business is oon-
ducted by a corporation
Have you slarle'd
doing bustntss yet?
Yes, 8195
MMIP Dealer Corp II
R1ehard D Rac1no
Treasurer
This Slatement was filed wtlh the County
Cieri! of Orenge C°"'1ly on 11108120QO
20009848140
Delly Pilot NOY 21 28.
Dec S, 12, 20QQ T271
Flctltlous BuslneH
Name Statement
The lottowlng persons
are doing busmen u
COAST TO COAST IN
FORMATION SERV·
ICES 128 30th St •
Newport Beech CA
92663 Ian Gabnel W1nlt1
bOlham. 126 381h St
Newport Beach CA
92663
This business is con· ducted by. .,, 1n<lrv>dual
Have you s11n1d
doing busneSs yet? No
Ian Wlntert>otham
Th• s1atemen1 w1s
filed with Illa Counly
Cieri! ol Orange Coonty
on 10/27/2000
20006845081 Dall~tt'lol Nov 7 14 21, I 2000 rm
w llnl&t
ActltJou1 BuslneH
Name Statement
The following person5
are domg bu&lness as
Logos Cale. 3000 W
MacArthur Bllld Santi
Ana. Ca!ifomle 927CM
Randall c Hunt. 3705
St1 C~tt. San1a Ana
Cal!fomia 92704
Olga Hunl 3705 Sea
Cl1!1 Santa Ana Calofor·
Na 92704
This business IS con·
ducied by husband an<I
wit•
Have vou slarled
doing business yet?
Yes 11/10/00
Randall Hunt
ThlS statement was
hied w.tti Ille County
Clti1< ol Orange County
on 1111 O '2000 2000U483H
Dally Plloe Nov. 14 21
28.l?tc 5, 2000 T265
PIERCE IROTHERS
BELL BROADWAY
Mortuary * Chapel
Cremation
110 Broadway Costa Mesa
642-9150
ean·t '-n to o•t to all tho.-repair joba
around the hou .. ?
Let the Cta•slfled
8-vtc. Dfrac:1CHY
hefp you ftnd retlable~p.
Discount Casket
( f ~Ill I [II !I I I tld I 1111 I.ii 'l 1 >" t
Ginnt St-rvltt •Ni QfufufJ C..Sk(fJ for las
Direct Cremation .• $495
Immediate Burial .• $995
(/nr/..Jn Gultnl
Prearrangement Prognnu Avail:a.blc for
l'uncral Services, Crcrn;atioiu .llld Cukcu
'()\11'\l<I .,,,,.._\\I
I .·.; .', .'. ' I c \ .... ,, I I
b gen9!1ll wdloi ...
The DISTRICT re-
CUM Off CtRCUrr COUfWT n£ sTATE a: WIS-
CONSIN
l\lmM llld addf ..... 1 ..... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~--~----------~~~~....,
:;'9or ~~to :1
welv• llT'I 1"9gUlaritlee °' lnformtllltlte In any 1>11'9 Of In the bidding. 1~~ii.= Llbor Code. the onaot
of .. Depel1rnelW of In-~ Rlllttlol'8 °' ..
Sta• °' Ca.lltOfM hu dMel'mll ilCI lie oeneraJ prevalllng ratH of
TO THE PERSON NAMED ABIOV£ AS RE·
SPONDENT:
You ara htreby no4lfled 1hat lht Paff. ~ named lbcJo'9 ,.,..
filed I Pttltlon tOf ~.,..you. Wti'I lofty (40) c:l9ys
afW Oot •• 20o0. you
mwl raepond wlll1 a
1.-.d by ...... """*'
ttltM yeara betoft the dDI 9'ICf\ ... WU Mnl
Of dllMr9CI '° the buylf .,.; NONE
The namet end bull· ,,... liddrMMI of the
bu)'9f pe: SUNG JA LEE. 555 WEST 1fTH ST., COSTA MESA. CA.
9282&
Thi -'° be told ....... 1np..i
STARTING
Celloll'lll tmAed lllOmly ~lain Oocuinenll
oomp_eny, OREO end 8ld Due 11. Hunl-HOOYNA, an lndMdull: 1ng1on Beach Union --~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~..---~~--~--~--..... and DOE8 1 TO HIO, ~ H1of1 SchoOI Diltrld.
ANEW
BUSINESS?. ~ ARE BEING 1~51 YOl1ctown AVI ,
MD BY PLAINTlfF: =· =· 38~ (A Ud le .. demln-9294e,-(714) 884-3338
dando). CNWEN RAO: m <&360 ~~J; Dua i'~,'ttcley,
ftAAEL. INC., 1 Cllfor-~ IS HEREIY
nla 001po1.-0.1 GIVlH 1M1 IM Hunt· You h9¥e 10 CAlEH-k90t\ a..ott Union
DAR DAVI afllr .. ttgh ldlOCll Dlllltd, Or• --. II ~ on ..,. eour.y Callornla.
.., -.. • ... .... .... "' ;'ii "'°""' .. .......... OOUlt ~ .......... A ._ Cll .,.._ ....,,_ to •
'/(11111 •• DelTNCT" ... l'I09MI
~ up ID, W llGt llllr '*' ,.... lie Ill ...., lalllll IN "'°"' 1ta41d .,_, ._,.. • ,_. _. h .....-.,._ lot IN
_.. ID ,_ .r. Giie. ...... o1 OOf'ftClll b .:.::..· .. ..: ~ .. ,.~ . ....... ~ -w .. 1111neter .... h ~ ..... ~ ...... ~ _...,..::.lie..,,.. .... Ult M W..: ... _ =·~"..:•· ... ,,.... .......... w ........... , 0 .... .. ........ ,. ......... .,.. ........... ,_ ........ .. • ... • ..... ... ~1.•••••t•I• ... -· a=,-. • ,.. fl ... u.-_...
"'Ern.j>Wytt. ••
"E"'l'kada .• , •
0Arbeit~lu-Mr..,
"E~."
-'.1.1:.tir'; .. -r. ,,.:' ==
........... 9' ~... L..-------------------
•
• • • • • • • • • • •
Polley
Hult'.b u11cl dt'udlinc W't sultjf'Ct lo
change "'ithout 1ao1ke. Tht publisher
rf'S('rvrs the right to c·rnsor, redussify,
rc\1se> or rrjcrt uuy rlas!tifird
mlvrrtis.~11t·nt. Plca.,c n:·1x1rt un~· cnor
iluu may 114' in your du.., ifird ucl
i111111c·clii11rl). Tlw Duily Pilot uc·c·c·pb
110 liuhilir~ for tinr em>r in au
adn•11i!>Clllt'lll for 1\'l1irh il mur be
ll''f)()IU1ible txcepl for thf' c:o:.t of the
-.p111·r am1ull~ <l<'c·upird hy 1hr 1•rror.
By Fax
(949) 631-6594
(Plrast. ioclude your 11amr 1m<l phont numlJt'r
nuJ .-e·n c·all ,.uu l1ark •·i1h o 11ric't quote.)
ByPhone
(949) 642-5678
Hours
• ii
By Malllin Penoo:
330 West Bav lrcet
°Costa Me a. c·A 92027
\1 \1·•1lOC1 Bhd. ~ Bm St.
--Deadllnes --
Monday ........... · .... Friday S:OOpm
Tuesday ............. Monday 5:00pm
Wednesday ........ Tuesday 5:00pm
Thursday ...... Wednesday 5:00pm
Friday ............. Thursday 5:00pm
( n•cli1 rnn 1111lr bt• allo\\'f'd for thr
fir-.i i11-..·rtion. Telephone 8:30am-5:00pm
Monday-Friday
Walk-In 8:30am-5:00pm
Monday-F1iday Saturday .............. Friday 5:00pm
I 1
t--. --''--
I .as· 420
--·~7 -
' ' ' .
430·"8 .. --. IOI· 216
r1J ..... -
~ EOUAl HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
All real es131e ld'Ntlslng * VETERANS * In thl'i newspaper ts wt>tect &.95% lntlfMt Rate
10 the Fede11I Fair Housing Up To $250,000 Acl of t 968 as amended Call 24 Hours
which makes 11 Illegal lo Vllilnln Rttl Ellltt
advenise ·any preference. 1·800·723·6857 llmlta11on or dlsu1mlnalton .__ _____ _.
~std on race. cotor, r•llO· ion. sex. llandlup, tamll~I
slalus Of nationll origln, or
an m1enUon 10 1111ke 1ny
SU(;h preterence. Hmiletlon or dhcrtmlnation. •
This newspaper wlll no1 knowingly 1cc1p1 any adverrisemenl for reel eswe wllich Is In violallon
of rile law Our readetl we hereby informtd lllll ell
dWllllnos ldWrtlMd 111 this newspaper .. ~bit Oii
Ill tql.QI= oi:lllly blsls. To corn n of Obcriml·
llitJon HUD tol-free al
1-800-424-3590
•V.A,.
SO DOlll ·SO MOM
FRU COUNSELING
FREE UST OF IOIES
HUONAREPOS
7f4-134-UOO
Largt Lot 00 cU de ll0-
2093 If home, 4Br 2.581. room w/F1'911Ch doorl,
room, 2 Fpe, AorlWl
IUb mas1et. cenhl A/C,
$479,900 Petrick Tenore.
!QI. 94~856-9705
Large Lot on cU de sec-209S If home, 48r 2.581, room w/F1'911Ch doorl, room, 2 Fpe, AorlWl
IUb rnai., «*'llrW A/C, $4 79,900 Pltrtck Tenore,
IQ!. IMH56-9705
a.,,.. Condo. &celd
locltion 28r 281 B Plan,
ss12.ooo ea• Peggy et 310·5 t 0·2980.
Al>•olute h•I Vetu.I Oiled Mldtr 38t 2.581
home rw bey Wl4cor'l'm PoOt & .. Off/ $448,900. Plllldt f4t85!.9705 Mil
OPEN SUN'S 1-4
1101 Mlwpoft HIAI Of
WMt. Herbor View
Homet 4bt .... 4bl Ntwport ,,_.., tern
neigh. S1,045,IOO ly
OWner MM40-17M
AZ'S BEST 8ARGAIN
40 acres· $17,900. ~
ranch In Williamtlf1agslatf
-. petlect 8, 100' cimate.
Spectacular mountein
views, bordell Slate land,
allordable financing, Cal
AZl.R 1.W.505-3869. (CAL•SCANI
: '
> I , .,, .. ,.
~ ·--~
. .,.... ...... .................... ...... y.-•• .................. ......
Index
-·.~-a·
'
.
' . ....
* Bluftt 3Br 2.5B1 oo
lovely gieenbelt, upgraded,
2c ~. $2500IMO. ~ 949-21~2414 P!ud Ca
NEWPORT HEIGHTS
38r 2.581. Frpk:, yard, epa.
$2500/Mo. Pell pou Ownr/Afl. 94~722-8353
.. , ....
690. 617
Profettlonll female
lffloog 1Br. sllldio, or room end beth in
dMn home II beech
(Newport prelened)
Wi• pey up 10 S575/
month, long term
Please cal
94~574--i245 IV l1lS9
Reach 80,000 Homes Each Week
For Only $28 per week (4 wk, min.)
Call Lowtll• at 642·1671 d4
.1LivH0METM
Ekkr cart comes homt.
WORK FOR THE BEST
Gerontology Aide I Caregivers I Companions
FOR PRIVATE DUTY
• S350 Sign on bonus for Llve-ln carcgivtrs th21 drive with own ar .
•Minimum 2 years cx~ncc with Alzheimer, 0cml'nria or Gt'r.t·Psych
• Live-lo I LiVl'-Out I 4 hr / 6 hr I 8 hr / 12 hr Shift Avaibhk .
•Wt' offer cxcdknt benefits I Training I Top ~y 1401 K Plan
Join the LlvHQME Te•rnl
Lo•Aneetes c.J1 MtU-0 1.JJ 933 S88(}
OraneeCounty CJ/ v.,.«u, t949J ~ 9.ro
Cam...tlto
W Allw,, (Bll~J JIU 9488
Al9 You Connectld?
~S7Mlr PT/FT www.homtolfic-rM<.com
CoolclCtfe Httper P!Wett
Raquel Club, 111m-7pm ~.:,:.;;:;_Sin
Daily Pilot -... T~, NO't'ember.21, 2000 11 1~1 [ ~11·~1 Bl'ldge
....... T~ llMCla Hl·Fuhlon 10 "** & dlWI Yenclnt CADUAC Eldonclo '14 By CHAl;U.ES GOREN
-Q;ri '/:: ::' n...i '° M9dllMe °" 1oca11011 in ve lh No1fww un. with OMAR SHARIF
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
Store Sales 11111te11ng °' 0: ':: ~ & ~ 1e1'4744j 's1s818 and TANNAH HIRSCH
Dlamoncfs I wfll INc:h n~ MAIERS •·•oclates lea•thold At•' E11•t• j (!14154H100
"" 94M7a-0557 412 CREm I c.... ...,. 17
Cotta ~~ .. h llftYICEI Low ~. 11n 11w,1111 of -"""Tn --I "' 9LOYBT l . 1840984) $21 •• -~~ tnvlCEI 50% Off Sttlera Ratit 11~A~~~oo LlJCK V OR GOOD1
F-. _ STEVE OBRADOVICH --i.:~=-==---iL ~lllll-West vulncnlble. Nonh deals.
IOOiDd ~ _.. 14H'3-8118 FOftO EXPU>RER • NOR111
lllclll ,.._ bt ...,. INI Bllllllt Lend T1tll Co. l TO law m111. ""*· • t I 5
... to .. •+ ,_. tllt llttlnge In ""' A ~~ c:oocEHTEX 184=>°' end m'.988 0 A Q .. 3 .Vf//td ...... lloll\tt ~ 1111y ttqllire Co. NABERS 0 5 .. .,. ~ii'! ~I ~= I I (714)540.9100 WEST • AJ 7 4 2EAST ~ .f:'°1 11 mo ._. • • ctwge '* 692 -=: FORD mo XL 11 • ~ J 10 6 2 • K 4 J
;;;J;"'or 4~ ~ minute. . . $11,500. Auto, NC, long-r:J J 9 6 2 o 10 7
Coita Mtlll Fax .._....._ ____ _, bed. lhta. 24k mi, 30f7 O 10 o J 9 6 J
tse-450-8323 or t-m111 1o •BOAT SUPt Babb St, CM 71+54~2565 • 10 8 • Q 9 5 3 .....w.att com nttdtd lor 1111 DUFFY, SOlTTH
•........--: !UM. crt11lve erran91111tnt1 FOAO WINOSTAR W •A 7
EOE ~lcleftd ............. 144 7 ptSMnger, low miltl. ~I 5
belgt. •~etlltnt conc#bon! o A K Q 8 7 4 2
SALEI AllOCIATt CWPORTUNfTifS HICKORY FARMS hH
$eltl Alaodale Posabonl IVeleble In trea malls.
easy !reining programs.
eompttlllvt ulary.
bolalltl. ~ tmploytt cllcolft. 1.IOC).22&-8229
EOE (CAl'ICAH)
THE GAU.UP POU
NOW tWtO FT/Jff Plld
• lrlll*lg, tltic echtdlM, no
llltl. tam lrom $&-12nlr.
ohont SUC'YfYI, lrom our IMll Cenlar. Atcrula:
cbl cl!!l!O 800-71 ~2595
,.._ bt wtty of OUI
of .,.. companit&.
Qlldl wfttl lht ioc:.i
Bttttr Buelntes Bu·
rteu btlort you Mnd
any -Y or "'8 lor MfVlctt. Rttd
llld 11ndlntand any
contrlcta btlort you elgn.
M&M lilARS
$3,GOOIMO. lrNllltlc) 20 Vending lltn,
no comptCl1lon. e hrlhno suoo CHh rtqWtd
1 ... 2IM601 (24/lrwl
Udo Sidi Tit !or sailboat (A233t9) $7,988 • K 6
'Cl to 6511 and beam t2ft °' NABERS l#1der lldl Wince. lltcV _ __.,(7...:,.14.:.1;!540==..:,,•1:,:;00:___
Wllel lllcld 94U73-76n LMld "-Dlilc:owty ... soum WEST
10 .... J O ,_
IVAHSISUVS 949·881-4549
60 Pus I
Red wltan lttthef int, 3911 &95 CARSIT'AUCt(S I mi, many extru. $28,900.
· MAZDA MXI 't1 lllYtfitlla Opening lead: Queeo of •
1111, good cond, moon-root,
11 auto. Mldng S325<Weoo
cal Owl 94g;76().4;()92
BMW 73SI '118 ta11. d power, allVtm cd stereo,
13lk ml •Int body cond
needs a;c compressor
65()(). ODO 949-72().3711 MlfOtdll 180E 2-3 '88
Ol1c bb'!JY 1111, snrl, Ill, pw.
CADILLAC CATERA '97 Sl8r80, caa, na aw, 14$!
Bl1ek, moonroo4, attoy1 nv $4900 obo 94g;5411-3900
(938431) $16,MI .. .,..,..,,_5 ..,. SL .. NABERS _,,~ _,
(71 4)540-9100 Orgln owner, blltgundy/ burgundy, convt, 11hr,
Cadillac Devllle •86 chrome, 1021( S18,000
white good condi11on low _ __,_7.:,;:14""·M4-=..:5:::.:32:::.8 __
mileage $1.990 Oldamoblle Cullttl w
949·660-1567 Only 26lt. wtwle. no-tmk
(334952) $9,988
NABERS (114)540-9100
When this deal cropped up m the
I 'NT European Olampionslup. only
one declarer brought home this slam.
You decide whether South adopled
the~ line.
By any standard Nonh has an
opening bid. The hand contains two
and a half defensive tricks. a distribu·
rion&I count of 13 and is suiW>le for
play in three suits. After South
described a powerful hand With a
sclf-suffkicol diamond swt, North
auempted 10 wriggle into three no
trump by bidding three spades. Since
WI deniod I s1)lde ltOppCf (North
wouJd tine bid ilnc 00 In.mp With I hilh C8rd in lhe suil), Sotnh efec1ed to tKe I lhoC al I dmnOnd small slam,
chootina not to uweatigaie a l,Tllld slam because of North's matt.eel dia-
mond t.hortncu.
The openina lead was "'on 111 the
closed llaod and two top tl\lmpa
revealed dial ~ WIS I trump loleJ.
For the al.am to succeed. South would
have to dispose or the 1pade loser and
avoid losing a hean trick. Fioesscs in
bod! heans and clubs beclloncd.
Wlucb 6hould South take?
Seven dcc~rs drew a third
trump, cashed the lun_g of clubs and
then finessed the Jl'Ck. Down two!
Tiie successful declarer reuoncd
that. even if the club finesse won.
East might ruff the ace of clu~ a,, the
losing spade was discarded, forcing
declarer to lake the hcan finesse as
well. But if thc hean finesse was des-
tioed 10 succeed, the club fmeuc wu
superfluous -linlc more than a 4-2 splir would deliver the slam.
·Suiting the deed 10 the thou~
Soulh cubed the remaining high
aump and the tina and ace or clubs,
then ruffed 1 club. When West dis-
carded a heart, declarer successfully fines~ the queen of hearts, ruffed
another club to JCI up the 13th card in
the suit, then rerumcd tO dwrvny watb
thc ICC of beans and discarded the
sl*ie IOSCT on the long club. The defenders collected only one trump
trick.
Well plllyed!
ON THE
MOVE?
Oldamobllt Cua.a 'ti
low mo. v-e & tnoft,
(339542) $13.988
NABERS
(714)540-9100
Oldal!IObllt SlhauMtl '00 Dull dr, ,_ air, co YOlYO MJ '80
PUf AFEW
WORDS TO
WORK FOR OldelllObllt Cullttl '99 Whl low ml pr-.. rtnWl
(3391 96) St2,988 NABERS (714)540=9100
(211055) 111.•
NABERS (714 )540:!100
SELL
5 ep, 4 dr, NM l loob
ll"flll Htwty llllOggtd,
rtllabl•, ..... ff275 MM2Mt09
13
M!.pjlot
Sell your extra
household Hems in
CLASSIFIED!
(949) 642-5678
OldlmoOlt Intrigue ...
GlS low !Ilk "'· llhr. co 1389522) $14,988
NABERS
(714)540-9100
your home through c:luaH~
llllllbtf rtdl fof TOJ* T100 ahort-otd l200 ot>o
1MM31-3100.
YOU
(949 642-5678 STUMPED? Callfor~e T.._..._.,_,_
•IS< I* -1~IMllOO eXL COdt 500
I • ---1 ..... J 260 __ c_ERAM1C_r_1_LE_.J L-.
2
_
7
_
2
1co_CONmUCTION_NT_R•_c_ro_Rs__.
~ :m ~':: CUSTOM CREATIVE TU Ctn Ill or build tnythlngl
nld sat ~ Bu11roe18 tnstdallOllS ~te. ceramic. Deslgnl8u11d, 28YtS Exp PW.. Cll P!M37-2009 matbll. SIOne Esllb 1975 Free Est• Rts/Comm. prob-
lt12044 Jafl 714-612-991 I tem solw!g 1I4-227-3057.
1-. •• ::J
FIND
-ClEAIMG lllAINTENANCE
~·Elp'd
Wldy'Bl-wkly!MonrtilylWttk nil Grell ,...., lmlldW
949-246-6504 9;548-4285
ON 11ll!
JIOVB?
Sdlyoarmra
~
lmlhl
aAm1EDI
("9) "2-'671
LEWIS CONSTRUCTION
Remodlllng • Handyman
Lie• 104m Locet Aesldenl
714-557-5925
WrmtoEFT DRYWALL Al~ Jobi
ClEAHJ 20yls. ...... -lMICI030 n ...,..1..,
HOLIDAY·ILOWOUT
Wt'll bta1 any wnlltn
quote Commtrc:ial &
Resldtnllal lnsllllltlon
miiltilt Dlpl.r'lll lor
referrals 16-293-4112
114M44-6112
1r REPAIRS 1r PAINT * Homt lmplOV9llllntl Ind
more Smell jctJI ok. 20vlw exp. Gllrt 114~
A kl Z Ho1M ~-Rtp11lrs. Eltctrleel Ind
Plumbing. Uc•850524.
Call T14·2tt-7115 or ... 24f.8018.
W•tt.r .,,,. HMtdyman
Master Carptnltr 25 y..,.. e,.,i ~
No jab ID0-111111.
Pllollt 9*51o-s:ie5
Pager 714-298-6400
SELL
your home
through cl•••lfted
·¥
ORY . tar fl your needs ••.
... =.JI*
eo.ui Pllnllng 20yr'I I=. pras • "*"°' . Ext
Plll'tl. LOCll Reltfencll NS
-Ron 949-t45-2417.
1r TOP OUAUlY • Vl!'f~ ~~·'::: ~~ ;i:1io. ' -o4 rNdng U848228 J!y * 949-e45-e211 * aNTERIOA I EXTERIOR PA INTI NO
I -!!!P.• I CAU MM3M111 . ••-. LICENSE t7359711
21 v .... Exp °""* -a em llOVERS StMclng on lht lob lnllriofl&ttrior.
al dllal in.net. 111t. Atta C4ll Gerlt fWl'I
CICM*M & c:nU! • MNM-G512 •
All IHUWS IN:LOGCED
• mla~llllll1 ·..i••-• Lal itl&---... "'_ . .._
{114) ... 1147
HONEST l REASONA8LE
Pt.UMBER No chrl deM-'"!I lt506588 T oiltli_..,
.,_ !!!! 714-DHtSO
PRECISE PLUM81HG
Rll>lr1 & Awnodall FREE ESTIMATES
ll687398 714-96t-1090
1-IOC).2'-004lfST ~;;;;:;:;;~...:.a _ ... _;-:-a-~-, ;:-1 • ~ I ~-:.==.:..:=-=--
UthCI AM ............. , ...,,_ ... .........
No11 c e
The Calif. Publlc>
Utllllles Com·
milslon REQUIRES
lhal al used hoUl&-
hold goods movers
print lhelr P.U.C.
Cll T IU11ber; limos
end chauft«I print
lhelr T.c.p. runber
lnll~
If )'OU hive I qull-bl abcM the legal-
lly d I ITICMr, ft
Of chUfw, ail:
PU8LIC UTIUTIES COMMISION
7f4-558 ... 151
~.:1~
~-.~··. . ' ' ~-~
SELL
FAlmMl lffENORI
~. AlmlNll ,=::~
1ME illW U IN
S11til TP Ill -,:,.,. ~ti ......
..
,g
Q..
~ ~'
§
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I
••
ugweu=, •SINKS .
• COUNTERS --J
• PORCELAIN SHOWERS
: ~~~RGI.ASS (949) 645• 7723
DUNCAN ELECTRIC
SMALL JOB ExPEIUt
LocAl....QUICK ~NSE
•Rntod.li •Light Fmvn&
•Upgradu •Oldkt.s
(M9)650·7042 i.m.,.,
--
--- ---·------·--------------------~--------------------------
ALL AROUND THE HO USE
----------------------·----------------------------·--------
\
Loot for these experts-daily in the service Directory;:'~
AW:§~Waodows/Doon • ' l\:r Ooon/Scnms/Grillcs
-. PaOo Scrttn/Glatsinc
.............. • ... .._.,· FUiat Qualiiy --WE SCREEN Ar YOUR Pl.ACE
1-888-96-SCREEN
~
The
Rooflna · E=-Speclallsts ... -~ •J'lN N._. S.,• hAU-• ............. ,_lit.. Al'rfpeiFar
PlafnptS.-.1 Solnt ....
• Jf Z:lff :mt • ... _. ......
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