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Park readies for takeoff
4 DON I.EACH I DAILY Pit.OT
• • • DOESN'T LOOK GOOD: Norm Ewers, center, speaks with Ralph Morgan, left. after the announcement that Measure W was losing
early in absentee ballot counts. Ewers is bom Irvine, where antl-alrport sentiment ls strong, and Morgan lives ln Costa Mesa.
•Early retums show anti-Bl Toro ballot measure
winningcountywidesupport.
Paul Clinton
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT-MESA
South County's bid to substi-
tute a Great Parle for an airport
at the El Toro Marine base led
at the polls late Tuesday night
with 54.4% of the vote.
With 726 of the county's
2,094 precincts reporting,
Measure W, the Orange
County Central Park and
Nature Preserve Initiative,
had a lead of 54.4% to 45.6%.
The measure, if it gets final
voter approval, would rezone
the closed El Toro base from
aviation to open space.
At an election-night party
·at Villa Nova in Newport
Beach. airport supporters ner-
vously watched. early returns
showing Measure W leading.
•I'm like the rest of you,•
Supervisor Jim Silva said to
the assembled aowd. •rve
got my fingers aossed. •
Silva, who represents Cos-
ta Mesa and Newport Beach,
bas joined colleagues Cynthia
Coad and Chuck Smith in
puslllng for an airport at the
• base.
The eight-year effort by
the board majority would bit
the skidl l.f Measure W is
sealed with Tuesday's vote.
Initiative supporters said
they were confident their ini-
tiative would pa.a, ushering
For more election coverage
and more Superior Court
judgeship results. see Page 5.
MWUll W IESULIS •
YES 54.4%
10 "45.6%
SUPlllOI COUii
JUlll IESULIS •
OFRCEN0.22
V1c:lde Ann 8rtdgrMn
47.1tMt
Kelly Mac Eachem 34.~
Michelle L Pal~r 11..3%
OFRCENO.J
Kimberly Menninger 54.. 1tMt
Bruce William Dannemeyer
~
Gralnne~
7.6tMt
SEE PARK PAGE 5 NoW: NMport-Mesa r.ldentsln botd
beaded to the community room at
&y'Side Village, where be said be
voted •no• on the initiative.
Crone said he wanted to~
serve the option Of an airport.
·we have bad a God-given
¢.ft given to us in El TOl'O, •
Crone said. •Why should we let
(an airport) go away?•
Measure W rezones~ dciMid
El Thro Marine bue, vladed bf
the Marines in July 1999. from
Clouds will • WU111•• m
----tl'Nlft', end rein-----may fall today.
S..hp2 ..
·WEDNESDAY, MARCH 6, 2002
aJ . :.~ ...... . .
eviction
law gets
city o~
• Costa Mesa leaders
tentatively agree to require
landlords to force out anyone
convic~ed of gang-or
drug-related offenses.
Lolita Harper
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -Counolman Chris
Steel succeeded Monday in gathering
overwhelming support from his col-
leagues for a law that requires land-
lords to evict tenants who have been
convicted of any gang-or drug-related
crime ritheir property
The • ang or.dinance, • as Steel calls
it, has n one of the councilman's
goals for more than a year Steel asked
his colleagues to pass the ordinance to
help the Police Department and the
electorate to fight crime.
•I believe it may work,• Steel said. "It
may not work, but why not gtve it a try?"
The council gave tentative approval
to the ordinance by a 4-t vote. Council-
woman Libby Cowan dissented.
The official vote on the new law is
expected to take place March 18. U
adopted, it is expected to go into effect
SEE EVICTION PAGE 4
Gratton
·to leave
OCCpost
• College president, who has
helped expand campus during
her tenure, will pursue other
interests at school year's end.
Deirdre Newman
DAILY PILOT
OCC CAMPUS -After six years of
adding faculty and establishing new
positions, Orange Coast College Presi-
dent Margaret Gratton will retire at the
end of the school year.
The Laguna Beach resident said she
is leaving to pursue personal interests
and other professional goals. The dis-
trict's board of trustees will soon 5lart
the search for her successor.
"I've thoroughly enjoyed my time at
Orange Coast College. I've never loved
an institution like I love OCC. I won't
forget this place or its people,· GrattOn
said in a press release.
Gratton. 64, is the only woman to hold
the post in the college's 54-year history.
Gratton was accused this sclJo<>l year
of repressing academic freedom based
on her handling of the investigation of
. SEE GRATTON PAGE 4
Keeping tour;nament on a perfect course Inspired by a great journalist
•Country club's superintendent keeps his
eyes on the grass to ensure it hokls up for
the Toshiba Senior Classic this week.
more
NBWPORT BEACH -Ron TOlhlba
Benedict wW stand by ..... week.. ....,,
a J91Q WGrtb 01 la~ CllllllcCIDU'lrllll
Mldtll......,llMlpled aa Wore --JIM ... == .,.,,... .. 300.000 .... -_,of .... _ .............. ,.If&: ..................... ~
"A1tt• .... a d ... ~tdlltD-•
2 'Nednesday, Morch 6, 2002
Dana Lee
For A
GOOD CAUSE I
D ana Lee has always had a
way with people. It helped the
retired nuclear physicist·climb
to UQper management positions dur-
ing his days in the corporate world.
But now, the 64-year-old Corona del
Mar resident spends a few hours every
week volunteering those same skills to
help people resolve their disputes.
Every Tuesday, Lee heads over to
the Harbor Justice Center's Small
Claims Court on behalf of Dispute
Resolution Services, a local nonprofit
organization.
The goal of mediation, Sdys Lee, IS to
help both parties oome to an agreement
without having to fight it out in court.
"When a case goes to court,
there's a winner and a loser m the
end,• he said. "But with mediation,
ALMANAC
DUI ARRESTS
Helping p eople
work it out
both parties walk out of there pretty
happy and satisfied."
In his four years as a volunteer
mediator, Lee bas seen the gamut of
disputes and claims. He bas settled
landlord-te~t fights and calmed
down a customer who said the clean-
ers ruined his clothes.
"The strangest of them all was this
case where someone had hired anoth-
er person to donate an egg for in vitro
fertilization," he said. •And there was
a dispute about payment for the egg.•
Although he declined to go into
details, Lee said that case was ami-
cably resolved. About 75% of cases
that go into mediation have a happy
ending, he said.
•Usually it's up to both parties in
dispute to decide whether they want
• Natalie Hope Singery, 24, La Habra
• Krishna Kumar Tewari, 64, Irvine
• limothy Jon Steiner, 43, Anaheim
• Thomas Gibbons Geib, 33, Lagona Beach
a mediator or not,• Lee explained.
The challenge with mediation is to
maintain ca1m and composw-e in situa-
tions that often get emotional. he said.
"Most people want to get some-
thing off their chest." Lee said. "To
let things settle down, you need to let
them vent but in a controlled way so
they don't offend the other party. It is
a challenge to tread that thin line.•
Once the parties reach a consen-
sus, the mediator writes up the terms
of the agreement, which is then sub-
mitted to the court for approval.
Mediators don't need to have a legal
background but usually take a 25-hour
training program that basically tells
them what they can and cannot do.
"We're not attorneys or judges or
the jury,• he said. "Our job is not to
give legal advice, but to give sugges-
tions that may help resolve the issue.•
-Story by Deepa Bharath,
photo by Greg Fry
NEIGHBORS
~ fol/owing ~e have been arrested recent-
ly on suspicion of driving under the influence of
an lntoxkant They have only been arrested on
wsplcion of a crime and, as with all surpects. are
~innocent until proved guilty.
SATURDAY
• Mary Anastula Kazyak, 39, Tustin
• Robert Lee Ewald, 34, Huntington Beach
• Richard Gayte Brown, 44, Irvine
• Elisha Monique &pi~ lO, Laguna Beach
M aJine Corps PFC
SbaneP.~. son of Gary
Ontlverol of
Costa Mesa
and alumnus
ofEst.ando
High Schoo~
completed
basic training
at Marine
Corps Reauit
Depot in San
COSTA MESA
SUNDAY
FRIDAY
• C&rl James Tharp, 41, Costa Mesa
• Dor• Ninna Corcio, 35, Santa Ana
• Kristopher William Mahler, 25, Orange • Jo<ge Hernandez-Acevedo. 21, Costa Mesa
• Sonja Lee Kepko, 18, Newport Beach
• Jo<ge Luis Pano, 31, Tigard, Ore
FRIDAY
• Scott Steven Amorde, 48, Costa Mesa
• Donald Kevin Lafferty. 41, Costa Mesa
•Ray Byron Mathe<M. 46, Newport Beach
•Tobin Anthony 8oschetti, 31, Orange
• Yuri Vladimir Shabunov, 26, Tustin
REAL ESTATE
TRANSACTIONS
COSTA MESA
906 Powell Court. S212,SOO
1784 Panay Circle, S700,000
3125 Pierce Ave .• S345,000
1127 Charleston St., 342,000
882 MageHan St., S345,000
770 Wesleyan hy. $239,000
THURSDAY
• Robbin Elizabetf\ Arballo, 42, Long Beach
• Brandon Wayne McDonald, 26, Santa Ana
FEB. 27
• George Herman Masey, 54, Irvine
llEWPORT IEACH
MONDAY ,
NEWPORT BEACH
323 62nd St.. ssoo.ooo
217 Via Nice, $839,000
• Michael Frances McDonald, 38, Newport Beach
333 Signal Road. S32S.OOO 10~ Scholz Plaza, $262,000
1scatanla, $1.585 mllllon SUNDAY
•Cathy Ann C&r1v Ila. 31, Yorba Linda
Da¥J!ilot"
VOLti.N0.65
3 Glvemy, $687,500
1 Ocffn Ridge Drtw, S 1 .925 million
... ,. ........
MOhctor
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READERS HOTLINE
(949) 642-6086
Record 'f04X comments ebout the
0.1~ Piiot °' news tips.
AQD8E$S
OUr addtns Is JlO W lay St.. Costa
Mesa. CA 92627 Offlca hours 1re
~ • ,ridly, l.!lO a.m. -5 p.m
COIRIC]]ONS
It Is the Pllot'J polkylO p!Olliptfy
Con'9(t ... ~of~ ,,.._.au (Mt) 57~JJ.
m
The Ntwport ~Mel Delly
,.~1~11~...,.
!ft MIWPOl't '-'t IM OMI ..._
~--...... ~--tettMng to Thi Tam. Of91'11~ ... m .. ,.1.1n.,....,..,
~INdl-~ ... -...... '°-~--.... .................... ...... .......... , .. " --..... ..,IGllUMTIR: Im .......... ...... ••• a. ....... ... _Cllll .... C"A ... ~
Diego. After a Shane P.
shortleave,be <>nttveros
will help out
at the Marine Corps Reauiting
Command in Costa Mesa. He
will then travel to North Car·
olina for training .... Newport
Beach resident HUaly Wynne
made the dean\ list for the
2001 fall semester at Wheaton
College in Norton, Mass. Stu-
dents earn dean's list honors at
Wheaton for maintaining
grade-point averaget of 3.25
or higher. Wynne is a gradu-
ate of Madiem School and 1s
right No MM~ lllurtrltions,
tdltorial IMttw Of~
lwein (In .,. reptoctuc.d ~
written permilllol'I of CIOpyrfght owntr.
HOW to BEACH US
~
The 'r1n'9S 0r-. CoYnty
(IOU> 2524141 "'*··· a.lflld (Ml) 642'*71
DlljllJ e-. MMJ21 ........
Howl ('Ml) IG~
,,.. ('Ml)~ ._,. .. -.no
Spoftl NI .. 94"11 .... , ..•. ==-...... :r.mr
GETIING
INVOLVED-. \
• GETTING IJNVOlVED runs period-
ically In the 01ily Pilot on a r~tatlng
basis. If you'd like Information <>!'
adding ~r organization to this
list call (949) 574-4298.
ACADEMIC YEAR IN AMERICA
Costa Mesa families can host
a German student and earn
up to $1,000 toward a number
of travel abroad programs.
Danielle Carpino, (800) 322-
HOST.
COSTA MESA MS
SEL.f.HELP GROUP
Daily Pilot
School, (949) 515-69801 Whitti-
' er Elementary School, (949)
515-6898~ WJ.lson Elementary
School, (9-49) 515-6995; and
New Shalimar Leaming Cen-
ter, (949) 6'6-0396, need help
in assisting students in read-
ing, writing and Engl.I.sh. Men-
tor sessions may be scheduled
from 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. and
after school. from 3 to 6 pm.
Monday through Fri.day.
SAVE OUR YOllTH
The Orange County chapter
of the national Multiple Scle-
rosis Society has started a
new self-help group in Costa
Mesa for people newly diag-
nosed or with minimal symp-
toms of multiple sclerosis, or
both. Tilf group will meet at
11 a.Ar." the first Tuesday of ·
every month. (949) 650-7659.
The Westside Costa Mesa
youth organization is looking
for volunteers to help create a
positive alternative for people
12 to 23 yea.rs old. Volunteers
are needed to help in areas
such as boxing, sports, health,
fitness, aerobics and academ-
ic tutoring. (949) 548-3255.
SHARE OUR SRVES OJNIC
The clinic, which provides
emergeJ'.}cy services to . the
needy in Orange County. IS
looking. for volunteers to
deliver and pick up food from
local restaurants a,nd grocery
stores, help with medical and
dental staff, data entry, assist
with food sorting and distrib-
ution. to help at the front desk
and some other duties. The
group also needs translators.
(9-49) 515-7316.
LIFELINE LIVING CENTERS
Mentally ill adults rely on the
Newport Beach center for
residential housing. It needs
professional fund-raisers to
support and maintain this
resonrce.
NEWPORT THEATRE
ARTSaNTER
A variety of jobs need to be
tackled, including set con-
struction. ushering, mailings
and assorted technical duties.
Scheduling is flexible, with a
two-to 20-hour commitment
per month. The Newport
Theatre Arts Center is at 2501
Cliff Drive. (949) 631-0288.
ORGANIZATION FOR THE
HUMANE CARE OF ANIMALS
Volunteers are needed to care
for stray and lost animals in
the Newport Beach, Costa
Mesa and Corona del Mar
areas. (949) 722-t 357.
READING BY 9
The mentor reading program
seeks volunteers to read to
students in kindergarten
th{ough third grade. In Costa
Mesa, Pomona Elementary
the daughter of Donald and
Nancy Wynne of Newport
Beach. Wheatbn is a liberal
arts college with 1,500 stu-
dents from 43 states and 35
countries .... Navy Petty Offi-
cer 3rd Class Brandon M.
MarUn.. son of Laurie A. and
Steven R. Labbltt of Costa
Mesa, reported to duty aboard
the guided missile cruiser
Bunker Hill, deployed to
Yokosuka, Japan. Martin
joined the Navy in September
1999. . .. WL Homes' Chief
Executive Larry Webb was
selected to receive one or the
highest achievement awards
in the building industry, the
Max C. Tipton Award. After
20 yea.rs of service in the
industry, Webb is being rec-
ogni.7.ed for his innovative
thinking and service. Under
his supervision and as,a result
of his commitment to rus-
tomer satisfaction, WL Homes
received a ~-place ranking
among Southern California
builders for three consecutive
yea.rs .... Ira Hermun, a
Newport Beach financial rep-
SHERMAN LIBRARY
&GARDENS
You could assist with the gar-
den, work in the gift and tea
shop or become a docent
guide for children and adults
at Corona del Ma.r's botanical
garden and historical
resea.rcl) library. Stefanie
Kristian.sen, (949) 67 3-2261.
SOUTH COAST
REPERTO.RY THEATER
The South Coast Repertory
Theater needs volunteers to
help with ushering (see plays
free) and other functions
(714) 708-5500.
SWEET ADEUNES
OF ORANGE COUNlY
The singing group invites
women who like to sing to join
them Tuesday nights for four-
part, harmony-Barbershop
style singing. (949) 495-5685.
resentative with the North-
western Mutual Fmancial
Network's Waltus general
agency in Newport Beach.
received a sales award for the
company's Western region in
2001. Hennann ranked fourth
among 1,149 financial repre-
sentatives participating in tile
Western region's annual sales
· contest. She is among the
company's 7 ,500 financial rep·
resentatives who provide
guidance on insurance,
invesbnent services and prod-
ucts. retirement and estate
planning, employee benefits.
and education funding. The
company is consistently
ranked one of the best sales
forces in the industry, accord-
ing to Sales and Marketing
Management magazine sw-
veys, and in 2000 was named
the best in the nation of any
industry.
• NllGH90ltS spotlights ecttleve-
ments In the community. !'tease
direct noteworthy Information to
Bryce Alderton via fax .i (949) 646-
4170, or send e-mail to ~~.alder
tonOf~tlmes.com.
SURF AND SUN
Doily Pilot
-A-Fuzzy morning for golfers
•Toshiba Senior Classic
breakfast kickoff features one
of golf's most-loved legends,
Fuzzy Zoeller.
Tony Dodero
DAILY PtlOT
NEWPORT CENTER -The first tee of
the Toshiba Senior Classic was barely on
the m1nd of the groggy~ bllllch at
the Newport Maniott on Tuesday morning.
It -was more like the first coffee, as
golfers and businesspeople rubbed
elbows for the annual Toshiba Commu-~ty Breakfast, traditionally one of the
kickoff ceremonies for the senjor tour-
ney that will hold court at'lhe Newport
Beach Country Club through Sunday.
.. '{)(
r. ~' ;~,
/ ~~ ~· / .·, ' .:::-
' -~
golfing to youth
athletics to barbe-
cue sauce from a
panel that consist-
ed of publishers
Steve Chunn of OC
Metro and Tom TOSHIBA JohnsQJl from the Daily Pilot.
, A winner of the
Masters himself. Zoeller spoke of the
•magic" of donning that green jacket
that is given out to those who win. He
cautioned 1tudents not to leave early for
the allure of professional sports -golf or
otherwise -and shared some secrets
about how to stay married for 26 years.
"I think I have a great life,• he S8ld. "I
never see my mother-in-law.··
In addition to ~er and the good food ,
the crowd at the Marriott was treated to a
few figures about the Toshiba Classic. Featured at the breakfast was profes-
sional golfing legend Fuzzy Z.oeller, who at
the age of 50 is a rookie on the senior tour.
As the crowd in the room noshed on
scrambled eggs, sausage, potatoes and
poppy ~eed muffins and sipped on glass-
es of thick, fresh-squeezed orange juice,
Zoeller employed his best jokes and gre-
garious wit for his rapt audience.
DON UACH I DAl.Y Pl.OT
Fuzzy Zoeller at the Toshiba Classic.
During the last four years, the tourney
has raised $3.7 million for charitable
causes, mainly Hoag Hospital, and is on
track Uus year to make dose to another
million. ent personcµities. •
When asked about his favorite cours-
es, golf not breakfast, he politely dished
out a cqmpliment to the locals, pointing
out that the Newport Beach Country
Club was a pretty good golfing venue
and a "very enjoyable course to play."
Zoeller, of course, is well-known for
his not-so-politically correct statements,
especially the one he made after Tiger
Woods won the Masters at Augusta.
In fact, the senior classic is the top
charitable producer on the seruor tour,
said Chairman Hank Adler, of Deloitte
and Touche.
Customarily, the winner of the Mas-
ters gets to choose the dinner for the fol-
lowing year's tournament.
Also, the crowd lea.med of the 2002
Toshiba ·Senior Classic Scholarship
recipients, four of whom are from local
Newport-Mesa high schools.
Still, he always has a zinger or two,
calling Pebble Beach, •overrated."
With Woods being the ~er, Zoeller
made reference to a stereoti£Pical African
American meal that left many offended.
As for Zoeller, he was noncommittal
on.Just who he thought would win this
year's tourney.
"Golf courses are like women, er,
people," he said. "They all have differ-
"I'm still learning from that mistake,•
he said at breakfast Tuesday. "Yo1J just never know who's going to
get hot,· he said. Zoeller was grilled on everything from
BEHIND THE SCENES
Gordon
Hanscom
Hes keeping track
of all the free stuff
NAME: Gordon Hanscom
HOME: Costa Mesa
J08 nn.E: Course services
chairman
HE IS
Getting the goodies where
they need lo go
DAILY DUTIES
When you see a Tosluba
visor, a Cadillac cap or a golfer
enjoying a quick snack out on
the course, you're seeing the
work of Gordon Hanscom. As
chairman over about 50 volun·
teers in the course services
division, Hanscom oversees
the tournament's entire opera-
tion for distributing merchan-
dise on the course.
On Tuesday, this meant
receiving 15 cases of caps for
event sponsor Cadillac. The
hats don't need to be distnb·
uted until later in the week,
so Hanscom and his fellow
volunteers will hold on to
them until it's time for them to
cart them across the course to
Cadillac's tent.
But sponsors' promotional
items are just part of the par-
cel distribution that Hanscom
oversees. Ensuring there are
refreshments available for
players and VIP spectators is
SABATINO'S
Lunch • Dinner • Suitday Brunch
251 Shlpyard Way • Newport Beach
PleiSe call fOf hours. dtrectlOOS & reservations.
: (949) 723-0621 :
WHY STAY HOME
Sunset Dinners
·<Rjstorante 9damma qina
Monday·Friday: 4:30-6:15
Ra! Prime Rib or File&
M.ipoa
(with t0up or ul•cl)
JUST $13.90
!
Marine Corps for 10 years,
has been an active volunteer
10 the local commuruty, espe-
cially for Hoag Hospital, a
major beneficiary of the char-
ity tournament. In past years.
he also volunteered for the
Toshiba Senior Classic.
though this is his flfst year m
course services -a stint lhdt
started with distributing
1,000 potted plants and trees
all over the course.
"l can't take too much
credit for the backbreaking
work on that,· he said. "We
had a lot of help.·
also a top priority. Expo tents,
sky boxes and hospitality
tents all must be stocked with
cold drinks and snacks.
Notably, student golfers of
Corona del Mar High School
came out to lend a hapd dls·
tributing the plants all o~r
the COW'Se.
"It's really f~tastic out here
-beautiful,• Hanscom said.
"The course looks great.· Hanscom took a week off
work to chip m 12-and 13-
hour days as a volunteer
throughout the tournament.
DID YOU KNOW
Snickers bars are a favonle
among golfers on the tourna-
ment. Along with the candy
bars, granola bars, apples and
bananas are in plentiful sup-
ply for the golfers. Sodas are
plentiful, too, but bottled
water, Hanscom said, is the
"I love goU, and Uus is bet-
ter than bemg in an office,•
said Hanscom, partner of
mortgage firm Norcapital
Funding Corp. "It's great to
get out here and watch the
pros do thelf thing.•
Hanscom, a pilot for the beverage of choice. ·
WE DOTHIMGS RIGHT!
OUR MEALS ARE A TRIP TO MEXICO.
Ml CASA
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
WE:rAkE
DINING TO THE
NEXT LEVEL!
WE SPECIALIZE
IN LARGE
TOGO ORDERS
PHONE AHEAD!
296 E. 17TH ST. COSTA MESA · 949·64S·7626
Please join
CONGREGATION
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for
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at the
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Thur. day, Maf'C'h 28, 200J
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'!Aabbi ~ichard .. Jlein~rg
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Adults: UB.00
Children~ $20.00
~ ~rvid161t .t
~ ~ by.Jlad20'6-
@i,.J.r.PA '°
'"" '"'') ~~-l!BJ9 ext. 244
Wed~. Morch 6, 2002 3.
Pilot's Cahn, Meier
promoted to new spots ·
• (;hanges bring a
more traditional
management structure
back to the paper.
edgeable member of the
news team here, and this
move will solidity th t, •
Dodero said.
Cahn, a graduate of the
Missoun School of Journal-
ism, also will be managing
COSTA MESA editor of the Pilot's sister
Returning the newsroom to paper, the Huntington
a more tradJtional manage-Beach Independent. He
ment structure, Daily Pilot worked as a reporter in the'
Editor Tony Dodero on St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Tuesday announced two Washington Bureau and as
promotions dt the pdper a copy editor at the Kansas
Seruor City EdJtor S.J. City Star before joining
Cahn was named manag-Tunes Corrununity News in
mg editor, and Assistant August 1998.
City Editor James Meier Meier joined the Pilot a
will lake over day-to-day year ago and unmectiately
superv1S1on of the reporting helped expand its Commu-
staff as oty editor ruty Forum pages. He pre-
As mdndgang editor, · viously worked at the
Cahn wtll oversee the Tustin Weekly and as a
reporting, features ~nd commuruty news reporter
photo desks at the paper. for the Los Angeles limes.
He JOmed the pdper d S city He was a reporter at the
edJtor nearly three years Gurnee Sun m Illinois
ago, weeks before a man before jo1JUJ1g the Pilot.
drove onto a Co~ta Mesa . • Jan;ies has been a great
playground, k1Jhng two addition to our aty desk
children. The Ptlot won a over the past year.· Dodero
statewide dWard for 1ls cov-said. ·
e rage of the tragedy. Meier is a graduate of
"S.J. hds proven himself Cal State Fullerton's com-
to be a vdluable dnd knowJ. municalion program.
BRIEFLY IN THE NEWS
4 students earn
scholarships
Four Newport-Mesa
Unified School D1stnct high
school students scored a
hole-m-one Tuesday in the
Toshiba Senior Classic
Scholarship Fund, ea.rung
a check for $2,500 and a
Toshiba lapttlp computer.
The scholarships were
awarded to a senior from
each high school in the
Newport-Mesa Unified,
Irvine Unified, Saddleback
Valley ; Unihed and the
Huntington Beach Unified
school districts.
To be eligible, seniors
had to be m the upper half
of their graduating class,
receive two recommenda-
tions from school represen-
tatives and demonstrate
leadership, involvement in
extracumcular activities or
commuruty seMce.
The scholarship fund is a
joint effort by the tourna-
ment sponsor, Tostuba
America Information Sys-
tems and the operator.
Hoag Hospital Foundation.
District winners include
019 y...., ......... Ftc-Ow Sdw6t'
SPIRIT RUN 2002
Ho~by
Leleh •nd Lucy
Steinberg
PRESENTED 5Y
Melissa Blair of Corona
del Mar High School,
Socrates Cruz of Costa
Mesa High School, Hani
Charezaie of Estancia
High School -and Caroline
Geehr of Newport Aarbor
High School.
Deadline arrives
to hear Campbell
Today is the last day 'to
reserve a spot to see and
hear Assemblyman John
Campbell talk about the
just-completed primary
election and what will hap-
pen in the November elec-
tions.
The Newport Harbor
Republican Women will
host a social hour and lun-
cheon beginning at 11:30
a.m. Friday at the Bahia
Corinthian Yacht Club,
1601 Bayside Drive, Corona
del Mar.
To resei;ve a space, send
a check for $25 made out to ·NHRw· to Dolores Otting,
19 Hillsborough. Newport
Beach, CA 92660.
Information: (949) 759-
3086.
81ue Croee of
California 5K
10K RUN/WALK
YOUTH RACES
OC Family
Toddler Trot.
FREE
KIDS'
EXPO
7 •.m. io 11 •.m.
• ~ ... , .... ... . ..... -· 11:•• . ·~·· ···
llNIPICIMUl8 -o.••nn.I ..... View.
I
"'
•
•
Road safezy t~es a front seat in Ne~ort
• The dty is looking at ways to make Newport
Coast Drive near Sage Hill School less dangerous
for drivers, students and faculty.
JuneC.Uf"•n4•
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT COAST
Road improveivents under
consideration for Newpprt
Coast Drive could ease a dan·
gerous driving situation for
students, parents and staff of
Sage Hill School.
·we feel like there's a
safety issue there that needs
to be resolved.~ Caty Mdilag·
er Homer Bludau said. "The
!ugh speeds and less than
ideal v1S1bwty caused by the
uneven ground there, we
feel, poses a safety situation
that could be Lmproved."
The oty hi s hired d traffic
consulting firm to look at
ways lo make It Safer lO enter
and ex.it the school's parking
lot. A report could be
EVICTION
CONTINUED FROM 1
·m days dfter thdt vote.
Steel promoted cJ similar
ldW m May but fa1led to gain
mdjonty approval because 1l
rt>quired eviction for drres~.
but not necessanly convic-
tions. The earlier propoSdl -
modeled dfter dn ordindflce an
Buena Park -dlso included
gang-related cnmes. which
sparked concern dmong some
council memb<>rs
In a report, Co.,ta Mesd
Police Lt. Tom Curt.ls sldted the
new law was designed lo pre-
vent and combdt rnme d.Ild
"hold land.lords moie dccount-
able for the actions of thetr ten·
ants." Curbs revised the previ-
ous ordindnce to require a con-
viction and dropped any refer-
ence to gang-related crimes.
A handful of residents
complained dbout alleged
gang activity in their neigh·
borhoods and encouraged the
council to include convicted
gdng members.
"You are ignonng the fact
that there are gdngs here.·
resident Jamee DaVJdson said.
Cu.rt.ls said Buena Park has
enforced 1ls cnnundl ev1cllon
program 150 times Only one
involved a gang-related
crime, he sc11d.
Eviction mdy be lPss Likely
for gdng-related cnmes
because many of the offenses
-which include dnve-bys.
burgldnes and CcHJdClungs -
do not occur where gdng
members live.
LINES
CONTINUED FROM 1
me. He had, after all,
scratched and poked around
every nook and cranny of the
place dunng his emulative
newspaper career. It was in
the dank and dark halls
there where he found the
hidden news nugqets that
propelled hun to his stature
-m my book. al least -as
the fme<,l invesllgative
reporter ever lo prowl a
newsroom m Orange County.
Gary Granville set foot an
my We m the ~pring of 1979.
That's when I transfe.r;red -
following a brief and miser·
able episode of premedical
studies at UC lrvi.ne -to Cal
State Fullerton to study the
rereived in abo\lt a m6nth,
but it's likely that the changes
won't take place until the
next school year, Bludau said.
Though the dty iS waiting
on recommendations from
the consultants. Bludau spec-
ified a number of alternatives
that could take fonn in front
of the school.
Adding traffic signals
might be one option. Widen-
mg the road near the school
cpuld also help by creating an
extra lane to give drivers time
to build 'Up enough speed to
merge safely with the fa.st-
moving Newport Coast Drive
drivers. The city also might
opt •o build better entrances
to the school's parking lot or
even add tum lanes on the
street.
"Everything is on the table
"Gang members usually
don't do drive-by shootings al
their own home,• Curtis said.
Drugs, on the other. hand,
are frequently sold out of the
home, he said. Curtis said 63
cases of drug sales, posses·
s1on, manufacturing and cul-
tivation were reported in
2000. Of those, 21 offenders
could be evicted if the new
law required an arrest only,
Curtis said. Thal ownber is
cut m half if a conviction is
required -from 21 to 10.
Councilman Gary ·Mona-
han pushed to require only an
arrest instead of a conviction,
saying it would be a stronger
tool for police.
Mayor l..:inda Dixon, who
hds cons1StenUy opposed an
arrest-based eviction ordi·
nance, refused to advocate
eviction unless there is a con-
viction.
"What this says lo me is
that instead of people being
innocent until proven guilty,
these people will be guilty
until proven innocent," Dixon
said in May.
David Stiller, an ·audience
member at the council meet-
ing. took it a step further, ask·
ing what would happen in the
event of an appeal. He said it
was inappropriate to penalize
alleged criminals outside the
1uc::ticial process .
•You have to have a case
heard to an end,· Stiller said.
"You can't penahze before
then."
• LOLITA HARPER covers Costa
Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at lolita.harp-
erO/atimes.com.
craft and trade of journalism.
By then, Granville had
already earned icon stature
ill the Orange County jour·
nalism community for his
tenacious but fair (always
fair) investigative reporting of
gomgs-on and shenanigans
in the county as a newsman
for the Fullerton News n;.
bune and the Daily Pilot.
As the advisor to the uni·
versity's newspaper, the Daily
Titan, Granville that semester
welcomed an eager but tree·
green news wanna~ with a
few weighty truisms of jour-
nalism. that set the cut of my
jib from that day on. He
instructed that journalists are
guardians of the public trust.
With that, be counseled, they
have a sacred obligation to
report on and write about
fact and truth. But with the
ci.t thJs ~int for the consultant
to consider what will be the
safest end what the costs of
the improvements will be,•
Bludau said.
The private high school on
Newport Coast Drive, a wide-
open stretch of road known
for attracting speeders,
moved oUida.Uy wit.bin city
borders.. when Newport Coast
was annexed Jan. l'.
Soon alter, the Police·
Department launc~d an
aggressive anti-speeding
campaign there, pulling over
drivers to w~ them that
some of the things they could
get away with under the
county's jurisdiction won't Oy
with Newport Beach. Exces·
sive speeders, including one
motorcyclist who exceeded
120 mph, have been pun-
ished.
Road improv~ents at the
school are yet another step to
improving safety there. Blu-
dau said the improvements
COURSE
CONTINUED FROM ·1
much of his course as possible.
"It is not pretty when they
leave," said Benedict, the
course superintendent for the
last 12 years.
But it sure is pretty before.
Benedict and tournament
officials worked months to
ensure proper grass height,
green speed, bunker firmness
and hole location, s&d Bruce
Sudderth, a tournament
director for the Senior PGA
Tour. The past week was
spent fine-tuning the course.
The rough is higher this
week -now 3 inches -and
the 50-year-old fairway is
faster and more firm to allow
for a competitive tournament,
Sudderth said. Holes were
moved so the area surround-
ing them was relatively level
but still challenging. Many
were also put in comers or
behind bunkers to make sure
a lot of skill is required to get
the ball dose.
Sudderth also made sure
there were an even number
of holes placed on the left and
right, so the course does not
favor someone who draws or
fades the ball, he said.
The course was ready for
tournament play Sunday, but
the toughest challenge lies
ahead in maintaining that
exact condition for the next
five days, Benedict said.
Benedict arrives before sun·
rise to water and cul the grass
and stays on hand to monitor
facts and truth not always
evident, solid journalists can
never cut comers or assume
or guess. They must relent-
lessly dig and probe and ask
and confirm.
By themselves, Granville's
edicts braced me as the cold
and sterile canons of hard-
nose joumallsm but oddly
unrelated to the kind, warm
and mild-mannered man
who insisted on their practice
and who had assembled a
five-star clip book by reli-
gio~ly adhering to them
himself. And then be warned
me never to lose my aware-
ness of humanity. Always, he
said, be cognizant that the
words you push together in a
news story can have a pow-
erful effect on human lives.
I haven't always succeed·
ed to that end.
I loved Granville's pres-
ence and his style. It was
rugged. btue-0>llar journal-
ism. In lectures, he'd bum
through a half pack of Marl·
boro Ughts without pause,
regaling us with stories of bis
reporting ~loits. He'd hud-
dle over my eopy, mark it up,
ta1c1ng the time to sharpen my
news Judgment and always
needling et me in the kindest
way when I buried tnY lead.
He would settle upon a word
and say: "You can do better
bore. Mdke the~ sing.•
Granville didn't just make
bis mln1<*1S better writen, he
made tblim Mvvf reporters.
His Allfgrun nts wOWd dis·
petch us to the h411I of coun-
ty government, where we
IM1"tMKI U\8 art ol combing
through and d8c:lpherina
property deeds. ·death -
recordJ and court cues. He
pre•ed UI lo ilk quMtiom
the WUnltieted woWd MWI
ponder. And .... ...................... . ,..,,,, ......... .
M c:dar bU1 ............ Of
under consideration have not
been prompted by any racent
complaints or proble.ma.
ln.stead, be said the city wants
to correct a dangerous 11tua-
tion before a problem occurs.
'Had the school grounds
been in the dty before lt was
built, we.would have wanted
things to be done dlilerenUy, •
he said.
· The city's efforts have
been noticed.
"We, have definitely
noticed the police presence
after Jan. 1 and are glad
about it,• said Suzanne
McLaughlin, Sage Hill
School's director of develop·
merit. •we're very pleased
and are supportive of their
efforts to improve the safety
for the surro~ding commu·
nity, as well as for stOdents
and faculty here, and we're
looking forward to bearing
the outcomes of the report
and the recommendations
that they are going to make.•
~ -TOSHIBA
guests and golfers, ensuring
they do not disturb the
course. He watches anyone
who steps foot on his course,
be it for a gallery . roping or
setting up a portable toilet.
·we have to meet and
escort people, show them
where they can drive,• Bene-
dict said. "They keep us on
our toes all week long.•
Benedict must also orches-
trate the set up of bleachers,
hospitality tents, televisions
and concession stands.
•They've got more than
1,000 4-foot stakes they need
to drive, and I have to show
them where they can put
them.# Benedict said.
While the various tents
and stands are an integral
part of tournament play, they
only add to Benedict's job
when it is all over. Benedict's
grass is trapped under the
various structures, deprived
of light and water and will be
m bad shape when the last
television stand is packed up.
"I bring it all back to We as
quickly as possible because
the members would like to
get their golf course back,•
Benedict said.
• LOUTA HARPER covers Costa
Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at lolita.harp-
erOlatlmes.com.
our own biases. He led us -
my colleagues and me -in
a-wonderful exploration of
journalism.
He lived by the words he
instructed us with and
backed them with his own
integrity. He once advised
us, as we pasted up copy late
in the day, that an editorial
cartoon we bad dummied to
nm wasn't appropriate and
instructed us to pull it.
Granville then left for the
night. And we ran the car-
toon nonetheless. When he
saw the paper the next day,
he resigned as the newspa·
pet's advisor. And because I
was the editorial page editor
at the time, he was particu·
larly disappointed in me.
He reminded me then of
what he had told me out of
the gate, of journalism's pur-
pose and the cognizance of
humanity you must hold on
to while practicing the pro-
fession. Tu this day, I regret
that I disappointed him so.
But the bigger story here
is that Granville's talent for
the news business and his
devotion to the integrity and
principles of journalism
sbopai some of the best in
the busin from my aass.
Tbe Loi Angeles Tunes'
Chris Dufresne, Keith TbUB·
by a.od Roy Rlvenb!Jfg,, for
tnsusnce. Arid at the Orange
County Register, Tony
Saavedra, a GranVille-
tralned naws hound ll ever
tharewuone. so 111 mill Gary
GlulvDkt. tbe gentUnn4n ~ 811l l'U elways
......,. him. And In 80
~. n.., to ao hftt«.
PUBLIC SAFETY
POLICE FILES ..
COSTA MESA
• ADAMf'A\IEHUE: A ~icle
burglary was reported in the
1200 block at 2:49 p.m. Mon-
day. .
• AJRWAY AVENUE: A com·
merclal burglary was reported
In the 3000 block at 8:'2 a.m.
Monday.
• WEST BAKER STR££r. An
· assault was reported In the
1100 block at 8:24 a.m. Mon·
day.
• 11AR STREET ANO WAKE·
HAM PLACE: An auto theft
was reported at 10:28 a.m.
Monday.
• llUSTOl ~Vandalism
was reported in the 2900 block
at 6:27 a.m. Monday.
•ME.SA VERDE ORM: All.
auto theft was reported in the
1500 block at 8:07 a.m. Mon,
day.
• flOMONA AVENUE: A home
burglary was reported in the
GRATTON .
CONTINUED FROM 1
political science professor
Ken Hearlson after he was
accused of harassment by
four Muslim students.
lnstead of going through
the department, Gratton put
the controversial professor on
admmistrative leave and
ordered dn mdependent
invesbgation by the county
omce of education. The
investigation eventually
cleared Hearlson of the bulk
of charges.
The debate over academic
freedom rages on as the
teachers uruon is sWI negoti·
aling parameters of accept-
able classroom behavior for
its new contract.
Gratton leaves a rich lega-
cy, inducting the hiring of 100
~w faculty members and
establishing 20 new full-time
faculty positions.
"She'll be very definitely
missed,· said Walt Howald,
board president. "She has
been a positive force for the
college and has expended a
. great deal of energy. especial-
ly to maintain OCC's tradi·
tionally high faculty quality."
Dunng her presidency,
2000 bk>ck at 8:32 a.m. Monday
• WIST 1tTff 5TMEn A home
burglafY ~s report~ In the
900 block at 11:21 am Mon-
day.
NEWPORT BEACH
• EAST IAl..90A llOUt.IVARO:
An outboard motor was report-
edly stolen from a boat in the
600 block at 2 p.m. Monday.
• BAMIOO STREEr. The face
· plate of a radio was reportedly
stolen from a parked car 11'1 the
2600 block at 10:44 a.m. Sun-
day.
• NEWPORT aNTER DRIVE: A
camera was reportedly stolen
from a car In the 300 block at
10 p.m. Sunday .
• WEST OCEAN FRONT AND
2lRD STREn A wallet was
reportedly stolen at 9:04 p.m.
Sunday.
•PARK N~ Vandals
reportedly keyed a vehicle
parked in a carport in the 4200
block at 1 :20 p.m Sunday
Margaret Gratton
enrollment increased b~
almost 3,000 students. So cl1cl
the number of transfer~
last year the college becam•·
the state's leader in transfe1 -
ring students to Cal StdlP
campuses.
Last fall, Gratton rece1vPd
the 2001 Outstanding Presi-
dent Award from the Cdllfo1-
nia Community College>
Counul for staff and orgdnt·
zational development.
• DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers edu
cation She may be reached at (949)
574-4.221 or by e-mail at
de1rdre newmanOlatun~.com
:-LOVE •:
Shirley Dorla Love
October 23, 1920
to
March 2, 2002
Shir1ey (nee Comgan) was bom in S)Qley, Austraia. An avid Otti>or
lowr, she was adive in many spoc1s. Riucing f19ld hockay, tennis and
golf and she par1lclpated ~in swin•••ig and ltYlng. Alt« h9l school she WOf1<ed in her lather's real estate oftioa in fla helltt of
downtown Sydney and in the early years ol Wol1d Wat U 8he was a
cM1ian In the National Emergency SeMc:e. In June of 1942 she
voluntarily enlisted in lhe Women's Auxiliary Australln Air Force ~ and after technical trailing she olrdally became a fader
operator with the rank of Corporal. In mid 1944 she MfWd on an
Australian Chain overseas radar station near the east ooast tili'/ of
Swansea. NSW, where she met her future husband, a vistting Ac:1tal Canacian Nr Force officer, Fi!;;lt Lleutenant Allan ~
Their weddng was delayed l.fltil after tie war ended and it b:lk place
on February 23rd at ST. Stephen's Church in the SyQiey Slb.lrb of
Bellevue Hil. In June 1948 Shirtey and her family left Austraaa bound tor Canada so &lat her husband could resume graduata studlee In
physics at the University of Toronto. After he obtained his Ph.D.
degree In 1~1 he took a job in geophysics with NeoMnont EJcpb1i1iof1
Ltd In Jerome Arizona and lhe family moved to the 4Wfby town of
Ctai1cdale. Six happy years followed, but 'Ml8n the OOl1"'Y IT'°""8d ti ~ lhey d-.ose lo stay In the Souhwest mcwtng to Phoefix
In 1957, ~tier lpOUSe entered h field of~ a ig11...mg,
In 1962 Ile tamty moved to Califomia and~. home In COrilna
del Mar wnere Stlf1ey spent 1he rest °' her 1te. Hn. n bec8l'ne
active In many fl10dal and chantable organlzatione the PTA. the
llUlday Mor7*lg Otb, UC1 Town ancj Gown, the~ of Ill ~ ~ ~valious erMroM•ltal ~She'• dllllea In poeay and pMtllng, ~her taYorite ~....., wbec#nl
Ill evld bird walcher. Above ea. lhe was a bJlng Ind dlllOeld wife endmohr.
She le~ by Alan.'* tuband of 56 ~ by hif ~.
Knn 8aiWI of S81em, Oregor\ Petet love of se,,.. BllbMa~Md ~ A1't1rtlehlw of Monteniy and by hM gr111d1Hlhn., ~ low, n Scott and Sara A11ie11lbic:tlllt A DI~ '° ~~"::Y ~be held at 2:00 PM on~~ 9,
--·-• 518 Roddord fltlce, COrtrw dal Ms. ti ..., of l!Mn, cb-*n -bt rr\adt '° M.MV'> ... Olli* ... Holpilllof P'W91Cou1y .. _, ~. -
/
·. ..
Daily Pilot Wednesday, f.itorch 6, 2002 5
... , -
Write-in can dates
pull off. an upset
• At least one chaUenger of besieged Judge
Ronald Kline appears headed for a runoff.
Lolita H•rper
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -TWo
high-profile write-in candi-
dates celebrated Tuesday
night as a late -and high-
ly unlikely -campaign to
unseat a besieged Orange
County Superior Court
judge seemed headed for
victory.
With 726 of 2,094 of the
county's precincts report-
ing, a group of 11 write-in
candidates had 57 .4 o/o of
the vote. Incumbent Judge
Ronald Kline, who is under
house arrest relating to
child pornography and
molestation charges, gar-
nered only 42.6%. His per-
centage steadily declined
as the night wore on, lead-
ing his challengers to
rejoice.
Former Daily Pilot
columnist Gay Sandoval,
who prosecuted child
molesters and others while
she was a deputy district
attorney, was the flr'St to
challenge Kline. She
opened lhe door for 10 oth-
er write-in candidates,
mcluding Costa Mesa
Coun cl.lwoman Karen
Robinson.
At press time, the
Orange County registrar
of voters had not released
tallies for the md1vidual
candidates. Kline's defeat
was ofh ci9l because he
did not gain 50% of the
vote.
"It was all worth 1t, and
I'm glad I didn't get dis-
couraged by all the people
who told me it couldn't be
done,· Sandoval srud.
Robinson satd she was
happy the Orange Courtly
voters educated them-
selves about the facts and
turned out votes for a race
that ts largely neglected.
"I am just so happy that
Orange County paid atten-
tion and that the 11 write-in
candidates brought 1t to the
forefront so the people could
do something about it. An.d
so far, it looks like they are,•
POLLS
CONTINUED FROM 1
aVJation to open space.
With 31 % of precincts
reporting late Tuesday night,
the measure was passing,
54 % to 46%. With the Orange
County Board of Supervisors
putting a tentative approval
in place for the extension of
the flight restrictions at John
Wayne Airport last week,
some airport boosters feared
voters wouldn't show at the
polls.
But many of those who did
come out to vote said they felt
strongly about wanting an
Karen
Robinson
Gay
Sandoval
said Robin-
son, who in
a telephone
interview
was barely
audible
over the
celebration
going on in
the back-
ground.
Political
analysts
consistent-
ly said the
write -in
campaign
was nearly
impossible
to win. In
addition to
unsealing
an incum-
bent -an uphill battle in
itself -write-in candi-
dates must count on voters
to remember and write in DON LEACH I DAILY N.OT
their names and then Proponents watch as a Web site projection of earl y returns for Measure W show a tough battle ahead. Included is
purtch the corre5ponding Connie Silva, in tfte Dag vest, and Dave Ellis, right, who ls the spokesman for the Airport Working Group.
chad. -~~ -~,.,....~._,..,(i..,..L,~J1'-C-·,•.p"''\,,_.~{-.C ~lr'T~q;-r:°~I'\ ~ ... ~ --C~ ... ,.,, -.,. '-r-T• -~ i. ,.. ...,_
Sandoval said she was ·
glad to let those naysayers PARK
eat a little crow.
·1 just want to call up all CONTINUED FROM 1
SUPERIOR COURT
JUDGE RESULTS·
those people who said
there was no chance, that it
was impossible, that we
would neve r be able to
educate the voters," San-
doval said. ·1 knew we
could do it.·
It appears the two top
vote-getters will compete
in a runoff in November,
except for the highly
wilikely chance that one
wnte-in candidate gained
more than 50% of the over·
all votes.
While the Kline judge-
stu p race was the most
publicized in the county, a
handful of other Newport-
Mesa residents ran for
seats in other offices.
Vickie Ann Bridgman of
Newport Heights kept a
solid lead in the race for
Office No. 22, with 4 7 .1 %
of the votes.
Corona del Mar resident
Glenda Sanders led in
Office No. 27 with 46.8%
of the vote.
airport at the base.
Jerry Hornbuckle, who is
married to former Costa Mesa
Mayor Mary Hornbuckle,
said he wasn't comforted by
the extension of the restric-
tions until 2015.
Hornbuckle said an airport
at El Toro would solve future
air demand and protect com-
munities most affected by
planes from John Wayne.
Hornbuckle also said he
wasn't swayed by South
County's pitch that the base
should be converted into a
Great Park.
in a new era in the county.
"South Courtty has always felt that
we don't need two airports in Orange
County,• said South County spokes-
woman Meg Waters: "We've got more
important things to do in Orange Coun-
ty than to go forward With something
divisive.•
However, airport boosters are vowing
to fight on. Airport Working Group
executive d1rector and attorney Barbara
Ltchman prorrused to challenge Mea-
sure W.
"Very soon," Lichman said, when
asked when she would file a court chal-
le nge. "We've already prepared the lan-
guage.·
Airport boosters would challenge the
initiative on the same grounds they used
to successfully overturn Measure F The
initiative pronuses a park it can't deliver,
Lichrnan said.
At Villa Nova, when the first results
flashed across television monitors, mem-
bers of the Arrport Working Group
worked to boost morale.
Absentee ballots showed the measure
leading by a 56% to 44% margin. ·u that's the best they can do, we've
got a real shot l}ere tonight,• said
Richard Taylor, a workl.ng group boa.rd
OFFICE NO. 8
Lance Jensen
Karen L Taillon
OFFICE NO. 21
61.1 o/o
38.9%
Write-in candidate(s) 57.4%
Ronald C. Kline 42.6%
Includes attorney and former Pilot
columnist Gay Sandoval and Cos-
ta Mesa City Councilwoman Karen
Robinson
OFFICE NO. 27
Glenda Sanders
David Brent
Mart< E. Farrar
46.8%
42.5%
10.7%
Note: Newport-Mesa residents in bold
• With 726 of 2,094
precinctl reporting
me mber. "You should stick around for
one of the biggest upsets in this county."
Election returns didn't match Taylor's
optimlstic attitude as the final preancts
'!Vere being counted.
In other races .. Newport-Mesa incum-
bents led handily. With 121 of the 483
preancts in hl.s district reporting, Silva
had secured 97 6% of the vole. A wnte·in
buckle said. ·1 haven't
believed the information
corning out of South County.
IA Great Park) is a pipe
dream,"
selves and openly wondered
about the apparent low
turnout for th.ts primary elec-
tion. The general election will
be held m November.
However, that view wasn't
universal in Newport-Mesa.
Costa Mesa resident Paul
James said he abandoned the
airport plan several months
ago. James also said he grew
tired of the arguments in the
long-running debate.
As of Tuesday afternoon,
an inspector at the polling
place at Christ Lutheran
Church in Costa Mesa said he
had checked off less than
20% of his voters' roster
·People will come out for
the general, but not the pri·
mary, • Gaines said. "Maybe
they don't have the time.•
candidate had marldged 2.4 u;,, of the vote.
Rep. Chris Cox, m the race for the
newly constituted 48th D1stnct seat, led
two Republican challengers Wllh 107 of
the 590 precincts reporting Cox hdCl
secured 89.2%, while bustness manager
David Cobert had 7 .2~' .. dnd teleVlS1on
producer Dave Forman had collected
3.7'X, of the vote.
Cox is set to face Democrdl John Gra·
ham, who was unchallenged, in the
November general elecuon Ltbertanan
Joe Michael Cobb will also be on the
ballot.
ln the 46lh District race, incumbent
Republican Rep. Daria Rohrabacher will
also head to November to face Democrat
Geme Sdupske and Libertanan Keath
Gann. None of the three was chal-
lenged.
The two state assemblymen who will
represent Newport-Mesa also moved on
without challengers. Ken Maddox will
face Democrat AJ Snook and Libertarian
Douglas Scribner m the race for the 68lh
DLStnct seat. The wumer of that race will
represent Costa Mesa.
Assemblyman John Campbell, who
represents Newport Beach, was also
unchallenged. Campbell will face
Democrat John Kane and Ltbertanan
John Studier in November
• MlA. OJN10N COl/ef'S the enwonmem and
John Wayne Airport. He may be reached at (949)
764-4330 0< by ~ii at paul.dintonOlatime..com.
"It's inevitable that if we
don't have an airport there,
John Wayne will grow
beyond its capacity,· Hom-
·u looks like that's going
to happen anyway,• James
said about the park plan.
•[Airport supporters I are
fighting a losing battle.·
For much of election day.
workers at some polling loca-
tions chatted among them-
• PAUL aJNTON covers the envi-
ronment and John Wayne Airport.
He may be reached at (949) 764-
4330 or by ~mail at paul.clln-
tonOfati~s.com.
DON LEACH I DAlY Pl.Ol
Richard Taylor, right. dlrector of the Airport Working
Group, talks wttb Supervisor Jim Sliva. left. after thanking
all who volunteered tlme and effort with Measure W.
RUFFLES UPHOLSTER
Where Your Dollar Covers Morel
WE'VE MOVED 1 BLOCK NORTH .
SOfa $1 oow OFF
Club Chair $50w .OFF
-with a purchase of Fabric & Labor tH 3/13/02 •
1-HAMOR -.VO., coe-.. MESA (941) 64&-11M
•
...
•
•
.QUOTE Of M DAY
•r said thhf would be a team that
would have to manUfacrureiiins and
we already have three homers in three
games. I guea I didn't know what ~di 11 honcne •
DAREN MCGAVREN • I was talking about ... •
Klrtt ....... , ...... Costa Mesa H"igtl basebiU coach
6 w.dMsdoy, Mord\ 6, 2002
HIGH SOIOOl. IASEULL
Mustangs
efficient
• WIIlilers
Carrasco's two homers, five
RBis propel Mustangs into
Saturday's division title
contest with a 6-3 triumph
over Laguna Beach.
Barry '-'ulkner
DAILY PILOT
COSTA MESA -.-------
Co'>ld Mesd High
t)d'iebctlJ COdCh Kirk
8d uerme1i.ter is
either l.Jvmg nght, or
he does, in fdct. have
d prc·tty fdlrledrn th!!>
'>pnnq SCOlllOAID
Ev1denc e of both ~~ ee~ 3
Wd'> off Prc>d up ~ 6
Tut-'>ddy in the
Mu'>ldng•> 6-3 win
CJV('r Vl'>ltmg LdgUild Beach tn the cosdi
Mf~ Olvl.!>1on charnp10nstup senuhnals
of thf' Newport El.ks Tournament.
"Ui.Udlly it's the sign of a pretty good
t1•dm when you pldy poorly and still
win.· 8duerme1ster Sdtd, after three
Mt"'>d pitchers strdllded 11 base runners
an the hrst five tnnmgs. dunng which
llmro the Mustdngc, dho swv1ved two
f•rrors
Mednwh1le Mustang hJtters used
thrr>e extrd·l>&.e tut!> to sweep the bai.es
dedn for lheu i.ix RBb
Senior catcher Mike Carrasco
nPeded JU.'>l lwo i.wmgi. to produce hve
of thoi.E> runs, blar,t1ng a three-run
homer m the first dnd d two-run shot m
the fifth to help propel the hosts into
Sdturday's 10 d.m. d1Vl<,1on ltUe game
dlJdlIISl PdciJICd, dn 11-~l winner over
Sdnld And m the other serrulinal.
Senior Cf'nter fielder Michael
Mc-Guue WdS 2 for 3 with dn RBI tnple,
d stolen bd'>e dnd d run, whtle seruor
leadofl mdll Nick Cdb1co walked lWlce,
'><ored two run~ and stole a base
The Mustdnq'> hdd dlJ but one of
thf•tr hit'> an the three innings they
'>COr<•d
ThP Art1'>b 12· 1 J used d groundout
dncJ d waJd pile h lo pldte two of its three
third-mnmg runs, but WdS frustrated
the rC?<>t of th<• gdmf'
Junior <A>orge Vdfgds pitched three
no·hll innmgs of S<oreless relief to earn
lhe '>dVf', o;tnkmg out four Just six of tus
28 pile her, wf'fc• out of thE> stnke zone,
111 '>tdfk c ontrd'>t lo the other Mesa
mound men, who d1spenced eight
Wdlks
C'tJrrdsc-o's lir'>t round-tnpper came
rnurtc'>y of d 3-0 fdi.tball.
Aftt·r McGuire's one-out triple in
thP third put Me!>d back on top, 4-3.
< 0drTdSC-O worked a 3-0 count Wlth two
out'> dnd McG1ure on second in the
filth The Art1'>ls served him another
hc11tmg-pract.Jce fastball and the result
Wd'> another jog around the bases.
( ·c1rrd5Co dlso threw out two base
rurmers, one trymg to steal second and
dnother on a pickoff at fU'St t>ase. Mesa
pitcher Derek Garoa, who earned the
vtctory m reltef. also pkk.ed a runner off
fin.I base
"I Sd1d ttu.s would be a team that
would have lo manufacture runs and
we dlready have three homers in three
gdmes, • Bauenneister said. "I guess I
d1dn't know what I was taUdng about.·
A .J. Perkins, who scored a run,
Nathan Hunter, Dan Bitler and Steve
Doerr also had singles for the winners.
Sea Kings Jiang on, 7-6
CORONA DEL MAR -
SenJor DUiy Eagle's
fourth~lnnlng grand llam
helped hbst Corona deJ
MarHlgh take a 7-1 lead
and tt turned out to be just
enough to clatm a 7-6 baseball win
ov r FoOthlll ln a round-robin game of
the Newjjort Elk.I 10Unwnenl'• Foothill
DM•lon.
5P.M19 w.r ROgerCorfs.on. 9.49-574-4223. Spom Fox: 9.49-6500170 Doily Pilot
. SiAN HUER I DAl.Y P!lOT
Bruce Flelsher practices his swing on Tuesday at Newport Beach Country Club as the Toshiba Senior Classic nears Its start on Friday.
• ays a11d Green
No speed limit here at 55; and Hubert Green would like
to change his place in Toshiba history with a victory.
enter the c;o-called drop-off penod
for age on the Senior PGA Tour,
where most of the winner.. are 55
and younger. Richard Dunn
DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT
BEACH -Hubert
Green would like
to make an
appointment ldle
Sunday afternoon
m the media
center.
-TOSHIBA
"I'll see ya tn your office ldtN thJS
week." a smiling Green sajd as he
walked away alter dn mterv1ew.
•But I have to play good goU Lo get
there, don't I?"
"To me. it's JUSt unbelievable that
I'm even playmg goU di 55 years of
age and that l'vt> never had a real
JOb in my hlt>, not that I'm look.mg
for one." Grt>E>n said "I'm very
happy bemg unemployable •
Green, who won two ~nior Tour
ttUes m 2000 dnd tedmed w1th GaJ
Morgdn for the 1-Jberty Mutual
Legend., or Gou crown in 1999.
defeated IJ"Wln by one stroke to
cldlJTl h1'> hf'>t Senior Tour tiUe at the
1998 Bruno's Memonal Classic
Indeed, members of the Senior
PGA Tour, wtio play m the Toshiba
Seruor Classic this week at Newport
Beach Country Club, must contend
or lead the goU tournament to get an
invite to the medla center's
conlerence room, where there are
lights, cameras and reporters Wlth
notebooks eagerly awa1ltng to
question their subject
Hubert Green
But, dS Green prepdres for the
eighth annudl Toshiba Senior
Classic this weekend and his sixth
strdight appearance in the Newport
Beach event, he can't escape tus
pldce tn Toi.hibd lore
Green, who has played in every
Toshiba event since he became
eligible in 1991 and ls 12th on the
tournament's all-time money ltst.
battled Hale Irwin In a wild Sunday
linisb al Newport Beach in 1998
the Famous Bunker Rake at No. 17,
wtuch stopped Irwin's tee shot from
rolling m the waler and allowed him
to get up and down for par in one of
the most dramatic moments in
Tosh.Iba Classic history.
You might remember h1rn leading
the tournament by one stroke
heading to the par-3 17. where he
left an uphill par putt short and took
a bogey. lrwm lied turn at 17 and
b1rd1ed 18 to wm the tournament,
whtle settmg a course record
Green, however, finished second
as Irwin shot a course-record 62 in
the final round and benefitec' from
"But two weeks later. I beat ll"Wln
in Bummgharn (Ala., at the Bruno's
Memorial Classic)," Green said. "He
won here, but I beat him there, and I
ctidn't have shots bounce off any
rakes. But Hale's a great player and
great players get great breaks Lile
goes on.·
"It was almost there,· Green said
of his putt from about hve feet
Dunng his PGA Tour career,
Green posted 19 v1ctones, mciudmg
the 1977 U.S. Open Championship
dnd 1985 PGA Champ1onstup. He
was voted the 1971 PGA Tour
Rookie of the Year
SEAN HlUR I DAl.Y Pit.OT
Hubert Green on the
practice range Tuesday. At 55, Green is beginning to
Hot on the t;rail
It might be a tall order for Archer
to win Toshiba again, but, at this
rate, don't count him out.
RkhardOunn
0Al1.Y PILoT
long as George Archer keeps bnnglng
bome paychecks from ll\e goU course at
ge 62, his wife, Donna, Will keep
sending him out the front door. •
. ' "l keep amazJ.og my.ell,· Archer 141d
Tuesday during a quiet practk:e day for the
Toshiba Senior ClamC at Newport Beech
Country Club. '
Archer, 1 l!Qlllar on the Super Seniors drcUlt
for players over 60, apparently lm't fin.l.shed
m4klng his mark on the Senior PGA Tout.
Rem!Dded of the fact that he won the
inaugural Tolhlbe Cla•ic ln 1995 at Mesa
Vetde Country Ch~b. Archer qujpped: •J'U
alwlft be No. l ln thJI touma""'nt. •
Village, Nev., is off to one of his hottest "I hit the ball real well last week.
starts in years. I keep surprising myseU, • Archer said.
Archer opened the Senior PGA Tour "Eve tim I think •
season with a smooth 70-74-72-216 at the goll ~d ~t T ttml m through with
MasterCard Championship in Hawall som . 1 5 e to go fishing,
where he tied for 24th, then shot 67-' TOSHIBA can f~ ~·ppens and I wonder, 'How ,
72-139 In the Royal CaJibbean Classic In "So a ,
Key Biscayne, Aa., outside of Miami and after four toum this ye:s been a reai .pteaswe
linlshed at 5-under and tied for 17th know h .• amen ... my Wife will let me
"I had a good week In Miami. J tut the ball I ctop ;a::;, its time l2 stop playing goU, ~hen
real well there,• said Arch r, who won the Archer Y, money.
two-day Super Seniors event at Key BiscaY!l• schedule to~oe~~ ~limit his playing
and finished second wt week in the almost SlOO e year, has fWlled
60-and..over fieJd ln the SBC Senior ~ t at on the mo ·~ tour In 200l and ls l8th
Valeod4 Country Club. amon ney -second only to Jun Dent
Archer, who also c.arded a 66 ln the M'COnd ~ As g ~layers ov~ 60.
round of ttie ACE Group CLUslc tn Naplet, 1-abou:en tr;?~e ~otmal arthritis and toTe
Fla., posted his belt finlah of the young 2002 He bas ' · er 81 been ln good bielth.
seatoo last week when he Shot 75·11-72-218 ot • career undergone seven maj01 •wvmes ln hll
Valencia, which rated as th• toughelt goU At ihe tbn of Att'hAI"'*
coune on the 5enlot Tour ance the 1991 e Tothlbe n"""
Bagle went 2 for·3 and junior
teammate Keith I.orig went 2 for 3 with
a dOUble and an RBI to lead a lO·hit
CdM attack th.It alto ~nefiled from
~ PoolhW enm. Josh 'Bradbury al.lo
...., .• ~--..c ~two blta tor the Sea King• (2·1).
Blau Cont.ant earned the pitching
ri:toty, but not Wttllout 10me help from
junJot NIC'k llhodet.
But Archer, who at 6-foOt-6 lt the wi.t man
ever to wtn tbe Masten (1969), doetn't need
h1ltOry or n0ttalgla to •peak for h1I golf game.
AJnetttecli S8ri10i QPljn at Kemper !Akel Golf ~=by• llMl·n>und Mt. bl bid
Club in Long Grove, m. d~auft hlP B at••oa'tenil ..... Clf a
Tom Kite'•~ ecore o14·Wid8r at mind. aDcl ta._..h .:,-: '~Mi
Valencia WU tbe l)lg~ wtnnmo KON In.. NPL Golt OMDC ~ .... ""llli .. ~!Ml!ll•1••
Rhodes, an AIJ·Newport·M•ta
• Dtttrld MJel:tion a.t 1prlng, came ln
-... 4.&J.,... •
ID fact. entering the elgbth annual 10lbibe
Clullc, in wbk:h Archer It one of the 14tW to
play lit 9"fY one. the gentlesnen from lndtne-
M·bole semarTow .....e-.. die 1918 St. aup.~ llMI ...... " .... ,.
" Luke'.9 C1-1c. wt.. IMrY z..ga. won et In 2()(n .-,.
2·uad!i'· two<rl'1 .n::.~!t~ ID beQae ...
SPORTS . Wedne I Morch 6, 2002 7
ars ·ready fOr big challenge-· Feasting early
I> With extreme PCL
Sea View League favorite
Newport Harbor faces a
tough postseason road in a
loaded CIF Division II field .
Barry Faulkner •
0 AllY Pilot
NEWPORT BEACH -The Newport
Harbor High boys volleybaWtedm is
healtbf, hungry, experienced and talented.
In addition, a quirk of fate has also set up
a CCF Southern Section Division II held
worthy of Coach Dan Glenn's respect.
In other words, Glenn has his Sailors
right where he wants them as they prepare
for tonight's nonleague opener agdinst
visiting Fountain Valley.
•Even though we made it to the (CIF
Division Ill) semifinals last year (before
losing in five to Mater Del to hrush 13-8).
we .really didn't play anybody (in the
playoffs),· Glenn said.
•nus year. I think of the 10 best teams
in CIP, eight of them are in our division. To
me, that's the best thing dbout our situabon
this year.·
The Sailors' situation has plenty of other
positives, including thP return of 6-foot-J
senior outside hitter Bnan Gaeta. who
missed all of last season after surgery to
correct tendon problerru. in both knees
Greg Perrine, a 6-1 senior outside hitter.
also came through oHseason surgery to
reconstruct a tom ACL m time to lead the
basketball team to its first outnght league
championship since 1985.
"Corning off their injuries, I think both
of them appreciate playing much more."
Glenn said of h15 dangerous hitting duo,
which, he belleves is as good a pair of
outside h1tters as he has had m this. hls
17th season at the Sailors helm.
"I tell people I have two AJJ-CIF oul!.1de
tutters, even though Gaeta was AJJ-CIF in
footbaU and Perrine (is expected to be
recognized) in basketball,· Glenn said
"Brian did not play a sport after football,
so he has had lime to get his touch back.
The best thing dbout ham IS thal he's such
a competitor. And they didn't operate on
tMt."
0
HIGH SCHOOL BOYS
VOLLEYBALL PRMEW
THE SAILORS
Nick Glassic
2 Brian Gaeta
3 Nick Kelly
4 Matt Casserly
S Redge Bendhelm
6 Dane Louvier
7 PaulToman
8 Michael Toole
9 Mike McDonald
11 Greg Perrine
12 Erik Peterson
13 Loyd Wright
15 Jaime Diefenbach
17 Paul Liebermann
25 Jim Rothwell
eo.d1: Dan Glenn
6-3 Jr.
6-3 Sr.
5-10 Jr.
6-0 Sr.
5-10 Sr.
6-0 Sr.
6-3 Jr.
6-0 Jr.
6-0 Jr.
6-1 Sr.
6-3 Sr.
6-2 Sr.
6-8 So.
6-2 Sr.
5-10 Sr.
other guys. You need some expenence m
tbat position and he bangs that to the
court for us.
challenge, Mesa aims
to be at-large eligible.
Bany Faulkner
DAILY PILOT
•rm also very excited to have ldlked
(former All-CIF Sailor setter) Russell Gan,
into helping work with Loyd. Loyd is
already responding very well to Russell. COSTA MESA -With more
Plus, I'm usuaUy very hard on my setters, defectors than returners from
so it's good to have a lluffer there.• last year's 2-12 team. Costa
Wright was first-team aU-league dnd Mesa High boys coach Dave
All-Newport-Mesa District as a jWIJOr. Sorrells may be i~tified m l.lning
Jaime Diefenbach, a 6-8 sophomore, is UP, a preleague schedule stocked
back and will start in the rruddJe, while 6_ w ith the soft underbelly of
3 jtlnior middle blocker Paul Toman will Orange County volleyball And faced with the tnevildbll-round out the starting lineup that will be aty of ·nren·o 't 9.. t p f I n yd ulnS dCl IC asked lo step up after the gradudtaon of Coast Ledgu e powers
Newport-Mesa District Player of the Year Northwood, Corona dPl Mdl dlld
and Sea View League Co-MVP Blake Lagund Beach, dS well dS a
Tippett. University squdd that swept the
•Last year was a real leammg year for Mustangs last spnng, Sorrells'
Jaime," Glenn said "Since he mdJnly plan to produce at ledst a fronl-
. HIGH SCHOOL
BOYS VOWYBAll
PREVIEW
THE MusrANGS
2 Mtk.eHi.iang
5 Jeff Collett
7 Jason Hardy
8 Andrew Stnckland
13 Ed MO<eno
17 Eh Solls
24 CMlos Jaime
29 Jo<dan Feldman
~84 Tony Valle
6-0 k .
~SI.
5-11 Jr
5-10 SI.
S-11 SI.
5-9 St.
6-0 SI.
6-0 Sr.
5-11 SI.
eo.d\ Dave Sorrel~
focuses on basketball, he'll conlmue to lodded .500 record could iw the
learn the game this year, too. It will take other returners. . Mustangs' only ticket to the C'IF Jaime, db-fool outside hitter some time. but I expect him lo be playing s th s ,..,, 1 fl ou em e .. uon P ayo " Just out I rom th0 basketball good volJeyball toward the end of the A 500 d d t " · recor IS requm• 0 team. has led the Mustangs with
season. earn an at-large playoff berth 20 and 16 kills, respectively. in Nick Glassic, a 6-J i·unior. wall add dlld M 2 o ft I esa. • a er sweep'> 0 their ra,,t two wans depth in the middle dnd can .dl'io play Calvdry C hapel and Lor ~ Soh.,, a '>Orcer star. had nine outside. accordmg to Glenn. Amigo< appears w"U on ·t w y "' ..! 1 " d Jump-..,ervc• dCes agdlJlSt Calvary Nick Kelly, d 5-10 1un1or. will provide And wh·'e Sorrell• dCknowl " ..., • C"h~1wl dnd provides an depth at setter, whtlc '>even other!. round edges d 500 record wdr on h1 · , ~ acld111one1 h11tu1g weapon. tl he Pemne was second-team All-Sea View out the deepest rostN G lenn ha'> had at mind when he contracted Cdn uver'comP som<> soreness m
League in volleyball as a junior. Harbor. prospectJVe opponents, hi' i-.n't hi'> rotator cull.
Erik Peterson. a 6-J senior, is another S~niors Matt C'dsserly and Rcdgc> willing to concede d top-three l?d M<HP no, a 5-1 1 '>e mor
returning starter. though Glenn plans to Bendhe1m arc varsity returner.,, while> PCL fin.ish for his hdrd-workmq relumPr and Jordc1.n Feldman. a
move him from middle "locker to the nght !>eruors D~e.LouVJer dnd Jam Rothwell.' a'> mne-player tejlm . 1 h-O .,emor n<>wromer, will share
·~r..,.1l"2t~-~-:.::T}J >~1'1.~~~~W~!i..._l\11S;'t?L~IP M-.!.k C..: "We' e not pla_.Y'n g a real setlm<J dullc•'> an Sorre\b' 6-2
He begdn practice ldst we~er 15>:1.~ .. l\ltlurLm£t!:. ~111 ~lil%!~:.;=~~~~~~-~-....... ...
helping the basketball team reach the bdtUe for ~laying t1m~ ~hile hPlpmy to we'IJ have a chc1.ncP to grow dnd ThP middle will be mdrured
second round of the CIF DiVJsion II-AA keep prac~aces compelltive develop without gPll1ng hy h-4 sPnaor newcomer Jeff
1 ff The Sailors dfe favored to return to thl' crushed.· Sorrell'> '>dad "I'm CollPtt wl11ll' 5-11 iuruor Jason
p a:ds.finall Lo d W . h t top of the Sea View Ledgue They hmshinq expecting to wm thP maionty of Hdrdy, thc• other returner, has
• y. seruor . Y . ng 1 re urns second ldst spnng to Irvine dfter wmninq our nonleague mdt< he.,, then mad<• hm1s(•l1 d valuable part of
to tn.gger the attack , his thlfd season as a or sharing the Sed View crown th(• c,ce what hdppeni, m teaquc tht:! tedm with has passing,
varsity setter. previous four '>eason'>. "We> need our l wo '>ell Pr!> to Sorrell<, Sdld
"People aren't really talking about Another rugged schedule, which improve and our two m1cldll• f rP<;hmdn M1ke Hudng, ab·
Loyd, but he was MVP of the Orange include!> a 8drk Bdy showdown wllh blockers to gl•t better. but thNl•'s O middle blockC'r. as well as
County Championships (which the Sailors Corona del MM May J, dl!.o includes d much more dl'>Ciplinl' with lht'> .. emor newcomers Tony Valle
won) last year: Glenn said. "He hdS been mc1rquee week an which the Tar-, Vl'>ll tedm thdn thNe Wd'> la.,t .,car and .Andn>w Stnrkland, both
start.mg since he was a sophomore ·and . reigning CIF DaVJsion 111 champion Sanld These guys dre working hctrd football pldyers, will also need to
he's one of those kids who 1s 1ust a Marganta (March 19). then host reigning Seniors Carlos JaLme and Eh rontnbute if ~le5d 11-9111 ledgue
volleyball guy. That has alJowed him to \lF Division II champion Mara ('ostd Soils. two rrturnanq stc1rter'> last ycdf) IS to make the playoffs
play a lot more volleyball than some ol our (March 22). provide thl' l ounddtion lor d "My whole locus JS gomg to
roster that 1ncludPs only two \IF." Sorrells said
PACIFIC OCEAN
0 LOT ts
1•n•ral
pub lie
parldn1 at
th• Dunes
Advance-Purchase Tickets
(
Week-Long Badges begin at
•
•
For tickets log on to www.ToshibaSeniorClassic .com
or call 949/660-1001.
Tickets are also available at
WWW.TICKETMASTD.COH
TOSHIBA
8 E N 0 A CLASSIC
March 4 -10, 2002
Newport Beach Countr r Club
1600 E. P.acfflc Co.at Hlshwar
..
J
• •
8 w.dnetdoy, Morch 6, 2002
• CONTINUED FROM 1
w1th one out lo the sixth and the
tytng run on third. He tnduced a popup,
then f&Med the Knlghts' leadotf man to
end tbe threat. Rhodes then ftnlsbed up
to record biJ first save.
CdM visits Sonora Thursday for the
right to play ln Saturday's division title
game. llWPOl1 US IMMIEllI
fOCl4Nll DtllWllft
C.oM1M oa MM 7, Focntu I
Foott'tlll 1000320·6 7 5
CofON del Mar 002 500 It· 7 10 3
Hughes. Chambless (S) and Hastlng5. Caston (5);
eont.nt, N. Rhodes (6) and ICMpe. W • Cont.ant, 1~. L. Hughes. 5v • N. Rhodes (1). 28 • Sadk (F),
Long (CdM). HR • E.gle (CdM).
Eagles, Lobos tie, 9-9
COSTA MESA
Darkness intervened
before host Estancia
High and Los Amigos
could setUe a 9-9 tie m an
eight-inning Costa Mesa
Division consolation baseball game in
the Newport Elks Tournament Tuesday.
Los Amigos was deemed the winner
on total bases for purposes of the
tournament bracket, but It will count as
a tie for both teams.
The Eagles (0-2-1) led, 2-1and9-8,
but helped the Lobos come back by
committing six errors, lour of which
came in the Lobos' five-run fifth.
Senior Paul Flory had a three-run
double to cap a four-run sixth for the
hosts, who then saw Los Amigos force
extra innings with a single run in the
seventh. •
J.B. Goff (2 for 4 with clJl' RBI), Justin
Lund (2 for 4 with two doubles), Casey
Gates (2 for 3 with two runs) and Flory
(2 for 5) were hitting stars for the Eagles.
Estancia sophomore J ose Jaregi
drove in two runs \vith a single in his
first varsity at-bat and Enc Scheafer
added an RBI single ror the Eagles,
who outhit the Lobos, 11-10.
Estancia closes out the tournament
Saturda y against the loser of Tuesday's
Rancho Alam.itos-Cerri\os game.
NEWPO!J llJS IOUINAMOfI eo.u MeM DtvWon ~
Los AM9GOS 9, EsTANOA 9
SClOft by lnntngt
~ Amtgm 100 250 10 . 9 10 2
Estancia 020 124 00 • 9 11 6
cardoza, catrlllo (4), lsals (5) and Bruno;
Flory, ~ (S), Gates <n end Lund.
28 • Romldc (LA), Hardin CW. Lund (E) 2,
Floty (E). 38 . Douglass (LA).
Lancers best Sailors
NEWPORT BEACH -
Adam Cherry singled in a. run to account for one of
few highlights for the
Newport Harbor Hig h
baseball team, which
dropped a 10· 1 verdict to visiting
Orange Lutheran m the fifth-place
semifinals of the Newport Elks
Tournament's Costa Mesa Division
Tuesday.
Cherry's single was one of three
straight hits for the Satlors, who cut
their deficit to 2-1 with the rally. Shane
Glenn and Ryan Heenan had the other
Harbor hits.
But the Lancers (2· 1 ). yie lded no
more hits to send the Tars (1-2) to a
home consolation game Saturday at 2
p.m. against the loser of Tuesday's
Garden Grove-Brentwood clash.
MlWPOII £US TOUIMAMINJ
Costa Meu DMllon ~ ..wtln8I
OMHG1 L&mlawt 10. NEWl'Olrf HAmo11 1
Orange Lutheran 101 242 0 • 10 12 3
Newport Harbor t 001 000 0 • 1 3 3
Shopshlng, n.rne rv• (6) end CKll, Torrey,
Cherry (5), Forsythe en and Pemsteln.
W • Shopshlng L • Torrey, 0-1 28 • Woolridge
(OlJ. Okon (OlJ
YOUTH BASKmALl
All-Net team takes two
The Newport-Mesa sixth-grade
boys All-Net basketball team picked
up wins over Rancho Cucamonga,
58-46, and Yorba Linda 2 by a score
of 54-39.
Leading the team offensively were
Jamie McGee with 27 points In both
games, followed by Ertk Rask (23),
Travis Kuhns (20), Robbie Boyer (15),
AU Meshldn (14), Joe Eberhard (10),
WUI Kelly (2) and John Swift (1).
DEEP SEA
I\ISMJ'S aMm
................. 1 bollt.11~
13 u11co ti.. n rockfl!tl. 1 cabtton.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
........ H• ;pa,, Haf1)ot .... ...... _. .....
'SPORTS
TOSHllA sailOR QASSIC
Strong field r.ating 'still ·intact Jor Toshiba
Marsh withdraws, but
his ranking last year
(32nd) doesn't affect
Toshiba status.
Richard Dunn
.0AJl.Y PILOT
NEWPORT
BEACH -Graham
Ma.rsb dropped out of
the Toshiba Senior
Classic field Tuesday TOSHIBA for personal reasons,
but it will not affect
the tournament's rating as one of
the strongest fields on the Senior
PGA Tour because Marsh d1d not
finish among the top 31 money
Leaders last year.
Marsh was 32nd.
First alternate Bobby Walz~
replaced Marsh in the Toshiba field,
which has attracted 30 of the top 31
money leaders for the second
straight year.
An analy!!is directed by the
Senior PGA Tour to determine the
different tournament fields
throughout 2001 concluded that
the Toshiba Classic had the ·
second-best field last year and
ranked No. 1 among non-ma1ors.
Of last year's top 31 money
leaders, Bruce Lietzke is the only
one not playing this week at
NeWJ)Qrt Beach Country Club. Bob
SEAIQ HUER I DAILY I'll.OT
Jim Thorpe eyes a shot to the
green at Newport Beach CC.
Murphy was the only player not to
make it last year.
Chi Chi Rodriguez was the ., biggest name at the gqlf course
Tuesday during a quiet players'
practice round.
Only a handful of players,
including the top two money
leaders from last year, Allen Doyle
and Bruce Fleisher, found their way
BRIEFLY
Today begtm tb• Ont ol the
offtdal two-day Toshlba Senior
Classic Pro-Ams. It is mandatory for
the players to play at least one
round ln the pro-ams to be eligible
for the weekend competition.
PRO.AM 1IE ASSIGNMEN1S w.y. 7 a.m.....,..., start
1·A ·Isa<> Aoki; 1B -Ben Crenshaw;
2. Hubert Green; lfl .: Bob Charles;.
38 -Stewart GIM; 4A • Larry Ziegler;
48 • Morris Hatalsky; 5. John Jacobs;
6A • Al Geibergef; 6B -Dan O'Neill;
7. Harold Henning; 8A • Howard l\Nitty;
88 • Dick Mast 9. Rodger Davis;
10A ·J.C. Snead; 10b ·David Graham;
11. Jim Ahem; 12. Charles Coody;
13B -George Archer; 13B -Michael Zinni;
14. John Schroeder. 15A ·Terry Dill;
158 . Butch Sheehan; 16A -Jim Albus;
168 ·Jack Sptadfin; 17. Jerry McGee;
18A ·Wayne Levi; 188 -Artdy North.
billy's , 2:JO p.m. shotgun start
1A ·Tom Watson; 1B -Tom Kite;
2. Bobby Wadkins; 3A • John Mahaffey;
3B • Mike Smith; 4A • John Bland;
48 -Hugh Balocchl; 5. Christy O'Connor.
6A • Dave Stodctoo; 68 • Walter Morgan;
7. Joe Inman; 8A ·Gibby Glibert;
88 • Don Poole.y; 9. Bob Eastwood;
10A ·Ray Floyd; 108 ·Fuzzy Zoeller;
11. Jim Dent; 12. Dale Douglass;
13A • Gary McCord; 138 • Bobby Walzel;
14. Steve Verlato; 15A ·Jay Sigel;
158 -Mark McCumber;
16A . Tom Wargo; 168 ·Terry Mauney;
17. Rocky Thompson; 18a ·Dave
Eichelberger; 1BB ·Tom Purtzer.
Anteaters stop USC, 5-3
UC Irvine's baseball ~
team struck for four runs t01 in the fifth inning and ' '
went on to a 5·3 victory
over visiting USC at Anteater Ballp~k
Tuesday night in a nonconference aue1.
Glenn Swanson (4-t) started and
went 5213 innings for UCl, allowing
three runs, while striking out five and
walking five to get the victory.
Alberto Concepcion of USC had the
only extra base hit, a solo home run.
Among UCl's leading hitters were
Matt Anderson and Effren Trejo, both
2 for 3, and Jordan Szabo, who was 2
for 4. The victory pushed UCl's record
to 12-10. USC fell to 6-8.
llOIKOllDDKI
UC llNM S. USC 3
SCXlftby""*9
USC 000111000·3 6 0
UC l!Vfne 000 140 OOJI • S 11 0
Rummonds, Butler (5), Olson (5) end 8oncMd\
Swanson, Rauhnalth (6), Al5tot (9) and Miller.
W -Swanson, 4-1. L • But*, 1-1. SV • Alrtot ( 1)
HR • Concepcion (USQ. .
UCI belts USC in four
Jarett Jensen had 14
kills and six aces, and I ~ I
teammate Erick Helen.hi '<@
had 14 kills to lead the
No. ·IO-ranked UC Irvine men's
volleyball team to a 28-30, 30-21, 31-29.
30-23 Mountain Pacifi c Sports
Federation victory Tuesday at USC.
The Anteaters improved to 10·9
overall and 5-8 in the MPSF. USC
dropped its fifth straight to fall to 5-15,
2-13.
Mesa nips Century, 3-2
senior Tess Lmdsay ,\ f Costa Mesa High [TI]
pitched a complete-game { y
three-hitter And got just
enough help from her defense and her
offense to earn a 3·2 nonleague wtn at
Century Tuesday
Kelly Topps went 2 for 2 with a run
and an RBI to pace the six·hit att.i..c.k for
the Mustangs (3-0).
Leading, 2·1, ln the sixth Ann Marie
Topps singled, stole second and came
all the way home when the throw to
second goi away for a much-needed
insurance run.
Century scored ln the slxtb to close
the gap and had ~e bases loaded. But
sophomore second baseman Jane-B
Yamamoto, who homered earlier, made
a running catch of a looper tow a.rd the
foul line to end the threat. ....
cm. MlllA J. c:.iMf 2 • ,_.., .......
co.. Meu 010 011 0 • ) 6 )
~ 010 001 0 • 2 J 2
UndYy end OeMlllo; CMtnca end .....
W • ~ J.O. L • c.inu. 21 ·Nicole (Q. H9'-~(CM)
Moore fires no-hitter
Newport Harbor High OIJ
junior Kim Moore spun a ) (
no-hit shutout Tuesday as ..}
the visiting Sailors swept
to their third straight victory without
defeat in a 1-0 nonleague softball
victory at Northwood High.
Moore struck out six and allowed
just two walks, one in the second.inning
and one in the third frame.
The Sailors, meanwhile, got all the
runs Moore would need in the fifth
inning when Athena Vasquez walked,
was sacrificed to second and moved to
third on a single by Shelby Crisp.
Catcher Amanda Campbell 1ollowed
with a single up the middle to score
Vasquez.
The Sailors are on the road again on
Thursday when they travel to Back Bay
rt~ Corona del Mar for a 3:30 start.
The rivals are also booked up m
tournament play at Te Winkle Park on
Saturday.
llONUAGUI
NEWl'Olrf HAMolt 1, NOlmMOOO 0
SCXJftbyll'Wngs
Newport H¥bot 000 010 ~ · T 3 3
Northwood 000 000 0 . 0 °' 0
Moore and Campbell; Lewis •nd Ota. '
W • Moore, 2-0. L • Lewis.
Vanguard· wins, 8-5
Vangua<d Unive<Sity I e I was an 8-5 winner in
Santa Clarita Tuesday as
the Uons' baseball team
used a 15-hit attack to dispose of
Golden State Athletic Conference foe
The Master's College.
The Lions. now 7-1 in the GSAC,
had five players with.at least two hits,
including three doubles, and a home
run from Chad Chop, who also had
one of the doubles.
Sean Moglia. Jason Searle and Andy
Riddell were all 3 for 5, Michael Bair
was 2 for 5 and Chop was 2 for 4 to
pave the way for the Lions, who are
now 10·9 overall.
The Masters had a 5-4 lead entering
the ninth inning. but Vanguard scored
four times ln the ninth to pull it out.
Vanguard ls at Azusa Pacific for a
GSAC doubleheader on Saturday at 1
p.m. The Masters fell to 10-8, 4-4.
GOLDQI STAB A1!tllD( COllfQDICI
VNllGllWD .. THI MAstm'I 5 ... .., ......
v.nguerd 001 OlO 014 •• 15 3
The Masten 210 200 000 • 5 I \
Harrll, CMNtwt (5) Ind Gamer. Spencer,
H«tcworth (6), ~Of (9), OunoM 00 Ind
w.g.. W -Qlmehln. L ·Conrow. 21 • Blir M . 010$1 M. s.wt. M. Ounorn (M), WnlS M . ~CM). JI 11ltw CM). Hfl Chop M.
Mesa sweeps again
Th Costa Mesa High ~ boy1 volleyball team
earned lu thild straight
nonleague sweep, dl5·
potchlng host Sage Hill. 1>5, 15·9, t.S-
5, 1\Jetday.
Senior outiide bitter Carlos Jalmo
had 17 klll• and teomroote Jordan
Peldman added 1bt ace serv for th
wtnners (3-0),
Sage Hill f U to 1·1.
The Ugbtnlng was led hy Knln
Joycie and Miaun Prederk:k. who both
had eight killl. JuMaD Sriltth·N4IWIMll
badl4elliltl
The Ughtning host• Ouord
Academy Pndey in It• Academy
~=--... ~ ..., .. ,, ..
Lasers upset Pirates
The O<ange Coast I ~ I College baseball team
suffered a surpnsmg 5-4
Orange Empire Confer·
e nce loss to visiting Irvine Valley
Tuesday.
The Pirates (13-4, 2·2 in the OEC)
fell apart as they committed four errors
and failed to take advantage of bases
loaded situations in the eighth and
nintb innings.
OCC returns to conference action
Thursday at 2 p.m .. at Riverside.
OIMGl ..,., <Ollll8ICl
11NM YN..UV 5, 0..... CoMr 4
Irvine Valley 020 000 030 • 5 S 1
Onlnge Coast 002 000 011 . 4 9 4
Mattivi, Elhtton (8), 0.,. (9) end Mc:Spemn;
Oanton. Williams (8) and Heoson. W • MattM.
L • Williams. 28 • Murphy (OCO, MofTlson (OCQ.
OCC women win, 8-1
Orange Coast College [](]
was an 8-1 winner in
women's tennis Tuesday,
as visiting Riverside was
no match for the Pirates.
Coast improved to 4·2, 1 ·0 in the
Orange Empire Conference. Riverside
fell to 5-3, l • 1.
OWIG( {MH <OllQDKI
OuNGI CoAsT .. RMtam 1
5lngles ·Brown (R) def. Sommer, 7-6, 6-1;
O\ang (OCQ def. Pott«, S-0, 6-2; Nelton (OCQ
def. Dias. ~. 6-J; Lawson (OCQ def. PHI, 6-3, 6-
1; Vals:io COCO def. Jankowsk~ 6-1, 6-1; Gudv
eogen (OCO def. Roedef, 6-2, 6-1.
~ • Sommef-0\eng (OCO def. 8rCIYlo'n-
Jankowskl, 6-3, 6-0; Uwfon.Gudy¥1gen (OCQ
def. Pott«·Olas. 6-3, 6-3; Ve~z (OCO
def. PHI-Truong. 6-2, 6-1.
Sheridan medalist
Bryce Sheridan shot ~
par-35 to grab medalist
honors and lead the Costa •
Mesa High boys golf team
to a 219-259 nonleague nine-hole lead
over Pairmottt at Costa Mesa Goll and
Country Club's Mesa Linda course
Tuesday.
Billy Lund (45), Brian Beach (-46)
and Mlke Gardiner (48) also
contributed for the Mustangs (3-1),
who return to action today at 2 p.m.
agalrtst Orangewood, again at Mesa
Unda.
CdM drops 3-1 decision
Corona del Mar 1-figh's [IQ]
softball team dropped a
3· 1 nonleague deosion at
Notte Dame Academy in
Culver City Tuesday as the hosl.4 used
an 11-bJt attack to drop CdM to 2·2
overall. •
lbe&cl Kings hM! one extra base
bit; 9 ftnt·innlng, ODP--OUt tnple by A.Iriy %n. bUt &he was left ttranded oo the
polh.s.
Corona del Man only 1Core came tn
th tilth innlng when Meaghan Cu.y
walked, Sarah Stem got aboe.J'd on a
68Jd4't'1 choice, Cuey 8unney ~led
and Heather Lohnna.n CbaMd Stem
home With 1 run.acottng beM hit.
Au.a Zoelle atruck out three and
walked Urie for C4M.
Owona del Mar h6lli Ba Bey dYal
~rt Hait>or °" 1bund4rf, 1Wting
el3:30p.m.
Doily Pilot
JC WOMEN'S HOOPS-~
Melville .
keys OCC
triUmph·
Pirates one win away from
advancing to state's fiiial
four in Stockton after
getting Palomar, 58-53.
Steve Virgen
DAILY Pit.OT
COSTA MESA -
When the Orange
Coast College Pinltes
were primed for
doom and upset ln
this month of mad-
ness. they looked to SCOlllOllD
their team captain,
Kyra Melville, ln the ::..'::'
second round of the
Southern California
53
SB
Regional women's basketball playoffs
Tuesday night.
Melville, a sophomore forward,
scored 11 of OCC's final t 7 points and
finished with a game-high 19 to lead the
Pirates to a 58-53 win over visiting
Palomar. After missing her first three
shots in the second half, Melville went
on to make four of her next five field-
goal attempts down the stretch.
"Shots weren't falling. This one was
all about heart,· said Melville, who
shot 7 of 15 from the field (47%).
including one three-pointer. • (OCC
assistant coach) Jamie Shine talked to
me at halftime and told me that I'm the
Leader out there. (My tea.mm.ates) want
me to have the ball, and I should want
to have the ball. I should be proud and
have the confidence.•
The Pirates (25-8) will play at Los
Angeles Valley in Van Nuys Fnday
night at 7, and the WUU\er will advance
to the state's final four in Stockton. L.A.
Valley (29·5)
d e f e a t e d "I think they
Chaffey, 63·56.
• 1 think
they enjoy
seeing my hair
grow gray,"
Coach Mike
Thornton said
of his OCC
squad. •we
shot 27% in
the first half
and (-44 % total.
17 of 37). It
was a gut win.
There were a
lot of opportu·
nities we bad
enjoy seeing
my hair grow
gray••• H
Mike Thornton
Orange Coast
College women's
basketball coach,·
following his team's
58-53 victory over
Palomar.
to give it up. Give Palomar credit. Every
time we went up by six or eight, they
came back. We can't have anymore
subpar wins. We need to play better
and shoot the ball better.•
The Pirates gave Thornton win No.
263, and his first in as many games
over Palomar.
OCC outscored the Comets, 13-8,
in the final 5:45. With the score tied
(45-45) for the sixth time, the Pirates
pulled away, ignited by a lhree·poinler
from freshman guard Lindsey Galasso
(10 points), who nailed the trey after a
pass from freshman point guard Nancy
Hat.sushi (nine).
Melville later made the front end of
a one-and-one for a 49-45 lead. Then,
Hatsusbi recorded her fifth and final
steal and OCC celled a timeout.
Hatsushi found Melville down low for
a bucket and a 51-45 lead. The duo
booked up again with 1 :54 left and
Melville's deuce produced a 53-48
edge. Melville scored her last two points
after a turnaround shot from five feet out
with 32 seconds left, giving OCC a 55-
51 advantage.
The Comets (16-15) faced a 56·53
deficit after Galasso made one of two
free throws with 16 seconds left.
Hatsushi-epplied pressure on Palomar's
best player, Christina Preciado, who
scored a team-high 18 points. OCC
freshman foJWard U2. Mendoza, who
came off the benc:tt to score 11 points,
stole Preclado's entry pass to her
teammate, Malia Altieri, to seal the win
with two seconds left. Mendoza wu
fouled and hit both free throws just
before time expired.
Coast grabbed a 27·21 ba1ft1me lead
after an 11·2 run lo the final• :30 of tho
finsl half. The Cometa answered in the
second ball with a 13-4 run, which
tnduded two three-potn!ers by Palomar
fresh.m4n Allison StraUM (15 points),
The Comeu held a 44·3' rebounding
advantage led by center Cynthia
SOrrell, wbo grabbed a game-high 17
rebounds.
Palomar, like OCC, started four
fresb.men.
Uy Pilot SPORTS .· WodnMdoy. March 6, 2002 9
__ e ffifference WllDMl
Colle9e-·UC ltvine
at' CdM boys volleyball sqtiad's theme as it
empts to reach sixth straight CIF title match. HIGH SCHOOL
BOYS VOl.LEYIAll
PRMEW
practice, he hadn't touched 11
volleyball since the summer. It
takes awhile to get the cobwebs
off.·
Senior Charhe Stafford
rounds out a 13-member r~r
stocked with seven juruors and
two freshmen
at 819 w.Kt Tourrwimen~ first round.
8t ANhelm ~Ion CentM, \IS.
UC RMrnidt, 2 lO pm.
YOWDAll faulkMr
1.Y Pll.oT
CORONA DEL MAR -Smee
endng the birth of tus first
in November, Corona del
High boys volleyball coach
ve Conti d eals daily with
~.Toa much
er degree, the seventhAyear
ad man faces a similar
allenge with this year's Sea
, who have just three senior
ers (and another up from
junior varsity) from a team
t played in the program's fifth
nsecutive CIF Southern
·on title match last spMg.
John Grod, a 5-foot-11 senior
te, ts the only returning
er from a team that.shared
e Pacific Coast League crown
'th Northwood, which returns
eryone and is the league
vorite this season.
CdM was eventually swept
Santa Ynez in the Division
title match and finished 15-7.
l;rod, who played outside
'tter last season, when h~ con-
'butlons were pnmanly w1th
control, should, once again,
e a stabilizing force with
assing and defense. But,
ps, his biggest asset will be
leadenbip.
"Leadership plays i UCh a
vital rol e,• said Conti, who
named Grod and senior setter
Spencer Miller this year's co·
captains. •1 think it's more
important than any skill,
because it's not just something
that affects one player. It affects
th~ entire team."
Miller, a backup last year to
PCL MVP Evan Burden, one of
four starters who graduated with
All-CIP honors, will run the
show
•He played a lot in the back
row and he did set some
matches for us,• Conti said. ·He
has had to wail his tum, just like
Evan did. and I think he's ready
to seize the opportunity.''
Ryan Inman, d 6-4 middle
blocker, also received some
playing time last season. He'll
step m for graduated Forrest
Mack, after recovering from tom
ankle ligaments which sidelined
him lor all but three games of tus
senior basketball season.
2 8rian Brinkerhoff 6-4 Jr
3 Eric Jones 6-6 Jr.
4 Blandon Sherrick-Odom 6-3 Jr
5 Gt~ Gabriel S-11"
6 Spene.er Miller 6-0 Jr.
7 Gunnar McClellan 6-2 Jr
8 OIMlle Stafford 6.() Sr
11 Ryan Inman "4 Sr.
12 Bart Welch 6-2 Jr.
13 John Grod 5-11 Sr
20 Torn Welch 5-t I Fr.
22 Miles Yoorman 6-2 Jr.
24 Ke111n Welch 6-1 Fr
c:o.ctt. Stew Conti '
coming off a solid Junior season,
in which he got plenty of action
when Mack missed ti.me with
in Juries.
Bart Wekh, a 6-0 juruor who
has played out.bide and opposite
. and could also set, provides
some experience. versatility and
a familiar theme with this year's
group: athletiosm.
"We have a lot of depth at
outside hitter. but if 1 hdd to pick
a starting lineup today. (Welch)
would be ln there, because he's
expenenced and he competes
real hard throughout practice,"
Conti said.
Miles Yourman, d versaWe
6-2 junior, i<; among those
battling lor playmg ume.
Bridn Brinkerhoff, a 6-4
junior, 1s in the mix in the
rruddle, while Greg Gabriel, a
5-1 1 jumor, will provide valuable
depth di setter
Eric Jones d b-6, 210-pound
junior, could provide an
imposing presence m the
nudclle, while 6-21uruor Gunndf
McCleUdl\ is among those Conti
be!Jeves ldck only experience
•1t•s an athletic group, but it's
the youngest I've ever hdd,"
Conti s&d ·we have no ~up·
erstar.i, but lt's one of the deepest
teams I've had, top to bottom.•
Conb said not bemg the tedffi
to beat in the PCL, a dlsUnct1on
1t has had since joining the
rucwt before J,he 2000 season,
could also be a plus '
·1 think we can dpproach this
season the way Sardh Hughelt
approached th e Olympic~."
Conti Sdid. ·she wasn't expected
to WLO, so she went in want.mg to
work bdfd, have tun and see
what happens. So, what hap·
pened?'She nailed 11."
It may take Conll awhile to
nail down his rotation
"lt'i. so competitiVP right now,
it's going to take a few mdtC'hes
for me to figure out wtuch qroup
of guys IS best togethPr." he '>did
"You cdn see some lhrngs in
practice, but it's the matches
where you redlly SN! who Ltke"
to compete and who ccm exPCUtt<
and do the things you need lo bf•
i.uccessful."
Community tollege met\. Or~
c.o.st at Santi S.lbar• CC. 1 p.m
High school boys • Fount.lin Valley
illt Newport Hatbor, 6 IS pm.,
Saddlebillck •t CosU MeY. 3 15 p.m.
Orange et Est.enci.l, 3:30 pm
SWIMIMG
High Khool boys ilnd girk • NeWpori
H¥bot .n Northwood, l p m ..
Tustin, 5ege Hill at Costa ~. 3 pm.,
SantklgO at ESUnc1<1, l 30 p.m
TUQ( AMO flllD
High Khoo! boys and 91rl~ M.11r1na,
Newport Harbol at Coron. def Mar,
3p.m
mom
High school boys con. ~
at Coronil del Mar, 3 pm
IASEIAU
High 1ehool Whitney at Saqe Hiii,
3pm
somm
Communtly tollege '>ant.l AN
at Oranqe Co.Mt 3 pm
GOU
Community colle<Je men Ora~
C.oan. R1-wde ~olden Wen at Santa
Ana CC. 10 am
IADMINTON
..
·He's still !united in some
things we're doing m practice,·
Conti sajd last week. ul 'd say
he'~ dbout 90%, but he's still
m(!ntally conung off tht! LnJury. •
Conti said Inman is also
•{Inman) was great for ui. at
the eod or last year," Conti said
"He started for us when we
swept Northwood and Laguna
Beach in league He has paid
his dues, but, before our first
Brandon Sherrick-Odom, a
6-2 junior who alc;o played
bdsketball, 1S dl1other of Conll's
athletes, while freshmen twms
Kevin and Torn Wf'lch hdve
ulready shown they clearly
belong on the Vdrs1ty, Conti !>d.ld.
Thdt process bPgms Fnddy.
when the Sed Kmg<> bey111 pldy
In the Francis Pdfker Tour·
ndrnent m San Dieqo.
Communtly college Ot •1'19'" C.OclSt
at San Otego CC. 3.30 p m
1..1*1 Ho. tum Am' Ordlr de11 on WEDNESDAY, THE UNIVERSITY OF estate asselll or of any lump Sum Base Bid, ex-Ho. 15117 AP . ..,,_ m. FEBRUARY Tl, 2002. CALIFORNIA petition or acoounl as eluding alternates, shaH J&.238"*8alT~S* and wUI be Issued a · February 2002 provided in Probate accompany eactl Bid
'-'*OeedcfTll.lltYounln DESIGN & Published Newport Code s~1on 1250 A The Surety Issuing the
Dita.A "* o.i cl TNll. CONSTRUCTION Beach-Coste Mesa Request I No· Std Bond shall be, on the
Dllld-Uy1, t"711demyou SERVICES Dally Pilol Februai27· tlce lorm available Bid Deadltne an
tab don IO prmc:t Jour ca=::'.t\!a March 6. 2002 416 ~~ for =loner: 1a:n~%::~ty..:s~'.
PfOl*IY, • 1111)' be told ., I 3500 8eftcJey Place Flctltlout Bueln•.. CHARLES c. McKEE, ornia Code ol CIVIi ::.=-a1'.:-' ,..Z::;: lrvtne. CA Name Stetement Eeq. Procedure Section
pnaedng _.. ~ you 92697·2450 The following persons 2122 N. BROADWAY 995 120) ~ CIOnlll:S a...,.,_ Nallce (949) 824-6630 are doing busl08$$ as SANT A ANA. CA 92706 The successtul Bidder
11 '*'°' fM'I, flll on Hot Une: Soteno Co . 3645 s Publfshed Newport and us Subconlractors ~-11 l":M Nit al Mid (M9) 12W117 Bear 11<, Santa Ana. CA Beach·Cosll Mesa Wiii be required to follow
.,._, v • ..,. Ctlecks tor • non-r. 92704 Dally Piiot March 6, 12. the nondtscnmtnallOn r&-:'1;.!1 ~~':.~ fundable ~ wtlt be r!; Faye TSJadode, 3645 13. 2002 WT•
22
qutremeots set forth m
Pl--* QC c.. .ot~ll quired Ill u,. wnount "' s Bear t K, Santa Ana. .. the B1ddmg Documents '25.00 per HI of Bid· CA 92704 alld to pay pre•&Jling E. ~ M. ,.._. ding Documents This business IS con· ADVERTISEMENT wage rat" at "'1 loca-CA, ""' ~ ~ ~A D-to be made i FOR BIOS t"'• ....... w ..... ,._ a......._.. --• "'--v dueled by. an ndMcaJal '"" "' ""' "'~ _, -·--.--· ""'Yable to .. The Re-H d Subject lo conditions The successful Bidder "'"' _....... TA-,_._ ,... ave you start•
-1 --·-,._ oentaomot
1
.alhe.tt lHwerslty ol doing ~ yef? No !>'escribed by tile under· Wiii be required 1o have n Pl.l1Ua1 IO fll ~al C.111< Faye Tajadode signed. sealed bids fof a rhe follOwlng State ol ~~In~~ SMled Bids wll no1 be This statement was Lump Sum Contract are California Contrador's L;;; "'--=._-.;:' A accepted after: 2:00 filed wilh the County invited tor ttle following license e11rrenl 81 the ,.-.....:~---... P·I!:.:... TUESDAY, Cl8fll ot Orange County Wor11· time of SubmiSSIOll of the .....,.,_ ...... .,..._ ...... ._ MA~ 19, 2002. on 0212212()()2 REPLACE HIGH Bid on 11Nl001, In lloc* Na al Bid Security In the 2oo2Ht3242 VOLTAGE SYSTEM, Etectrlcal ContrllCIOI'
Olall Rlcordl d ~ amount of 10% of the o..iv Pilot Feb 27, Mar UTILITY TUNNE1. (Ucense Classlflcalton) ~ I&~-NI. fle..No. Lurl1> Sum Bue Bid. ex· 6. 13~2002.11656wqo PROJECT C· 1 O -• ........... eluding alternates, shall NO. IN035 (Uoense Code) ZOOI~ bf ...on al a accompany eech Bid UNIVERSITY OF Other Protect Specl·
br1Kt1 or dllUI In Pll""ft or The Surety issuong the NOTICE OF CAUFORNIA, flee: ~ ~ ~~ Bid Bond shall be. on the PETITION IRVINE Blddef Quallnc.tlona --·-• ·-Bid Deadlfne, en DESCRIPTION OF called for to be Ind • dlfa.I. 111*11 cl admitted surety insurer TO ADMINISTER WORK: Woric lncluoas. eubmltted et time of
tHdl -.xrdld <as defined in trie ea.. ESTATE OF: but la not lin'Wted lo, the bid lndude. but ere not
11nl'.2Q01 • RlcorOlr'I lomla Code of Clvll PAUL JOHN lolbiwing. ~ Oltrty ~ lhnlt.d to: nwnn No. Z00108t000&. Procedure Section LOYETERE (30) obtolete Oii high 1 The Contractor 111811
In Bodi Na,• Plgl Na,• 995 120) CASE NO. A212150 =switches and ai>-tia11e been In business ... ., ll'dc lldllll ID .. A mandatoty Pre·Bld To all heirs, benefi.. prox1malely 39.000 ·under ttle same name ,__. bldrllr lllr <*ft, ......, Conference and man· Cl•"-· cndilora, cont· llnMI r..t of detenOnlled end Cahtom1a Contrac·
tr#"f d IN !Hid SllMI, detoty Pr.aid Job Wall. lnnenl creditors. end electricalBIDDEc.t>leR . QUALi· to(s Uc:ense for ' min· ..,,.. bl' a ~ win be cooducted on· ~ wtlo may olll8I FICATIONS: Prime lmum of 5 continuous aid .._, on 11 ... or THURSDAY, MARCH 7, wile be lmer"'8d In h B'~ ...... ---do ..-years prior lo the bid Nlllonlllbri,crllll...., 2002,1 b,!lglnnAlng wlM or estate, or boCh, ol. ....... ... ,.., ""' opervng date for tl'K8
1W1C11 *-ton "'1 oe. premply at .:00 .M. PAUL JOHN LOVE· r,:-tu,.lhe~~ Pro1ect The license twdlf .,.._ ll*lild In Par1iclpants lhall meet TERE uHd lo satJSfy this re-~ StQ2 cl lw Clllornle al A PETITION FOR ment• may not be qulrement shall be of ltl8 ~Code, dlaltnd IO Pr"klenl'a Confe1ence PROBATE has been ~l~le Bl:.:.rs ••,i:::.j :,~requll9d by
dD ~ In IN S.. d Room, Unlver$ity of llled by ANITA l . eubmlt their Quall· 2 The Cont~ shall ~ ti P11111i11 II h Calilomla, Irvine TIMBOE In Iha Suc*tof ncattone on the form prO'llde a mslllTIUrn cl 3
tntat•ll...,.,•nl =~~sl. Courl ol California. provided by the Uni-references IOf projects
.,...11111111¥••TMlll,lll 3000 Irvine County ol ORANGE. vtnlty H en eltKh· 9lmllar In~ and elze M,.. ~ _..., 111 • · TI-lE PETITION FOR 1Mfrt to Iha Bid Form. Mid ,._-., nt a., ci. Calilornla 92697. PROBATE ~ 1t'8l COHS"'"'..-.nu to this Pr eel, which -~1 (949) 82~ • """ •"""' have been suocesatulty ICltlldalalo-=lNZSl,1111 ATTENDANCE AT ANITA L TI BOE be COST ESTIMATE: completed dUnng the
1, net ':7 == '41, THE PRE-BID CON· appointed as personal 11.325,000.00 put 3 yeatW
PllllSal ,,. FERENCE ANO JOB repr-'4llve to admln-Bidding Documents THE REGENTS Of Thi llltll ..._or alltt WALK 18 MAN· l$JM the ... ,. of Iha-Wilt be aVlllable to BIG-THE UNIVERSITY Of COl'l'lllOll-..d .. ,.. cedenl .... WEDNESDAY C LIFORN • = ~ .... DATORY FOR • ALL THE P""TITION ,.. -rs on • A 1,. ----_. PRIME CONTRAC " MARCH I , 2002, and Man::n 2002 .. ~IO._ 1-• quests tl'le decedent's ...... be ...... .-... -~ • ....._ -..:,: TORS. THE MEmNG WlA Ind oodk:is, 1 '"""• ... ~ .. -. Published Newport --''""' r--..... I ......... E AT t ·05 _., ~ B1ach·Co11a ~SI ........ 8-11 CA • The "-.., .. .,~ • be admmed IO probete. CONSTRUCTION
lftlnlrlwd .... .. ~~s A:Rl~c:r~~ The wm and 811Y codlQls SERVICES = Pilot Ma1d1 ~33 .._, b "'1 ''°*'• In TElt THIS TIME ~L are available tor 111· Unlvwetty of
.., ... --or .., NOT IE E1JGl8U TO amNllon In the Ne kept Cllllfornle, lrvlne Flc:tJtloua Buelneu COIMIO'ldlll\JWllGll.Slld• PARnctPATE IN THE by Iha court 3500 88ftdey l'tlllC8 N•me St8tement •Ill"'* ...... ...ny. 8tO PROCESS Al A THE PETITION re-lrvlne, tA The following ~s ~ ~ ....._ PRIME COHTAACTOR. quests authority to ed· t21t7·2450 ~·-· ~-.:..,,-: ~ ~ ~ J>1: ~:.::=-~ (M.tl2~ -ti::'~. Gour:!1. tnlllld a111g11a111..-bf ;a-"'C01ferenoe and the lstratiol'I ot Eatatee Act. (Ml) uw117 1420C Beker. Costa
.. r-1dlll.tl.11111.,.. Job Walk In their fi:8 ~ r:.::: Checb lor • ,,_ ~n~ ~~g. 45 •lllllClllS.,..•,..._ ~. w4ll be alow9d ebve IO lake many 11>-~ :! ~ ~ Preuie Felcon, Aliso ,__ IM ~~ '° bid on the Project .. tione wtthollt obtal.nlng 125.00 ,_, eec o1 Viet<> CA 92656 ...,. ... Pf1lne conltaeton FOf ·--~1 Bet«• .-This boalnesa 1a con-,.... Ind 1*9 .... Juntl8r lnlormelioli, oon-"""'' ••t•t•m-. Bidding Documentl _. .. h uc ,..~ ...... laking C8r1aln V8fY Im-Checite are to be <ll<:led by an ~
Annie Cheng
This statement was
filed with the County
c~ o1 Orange County on 03/0112002
200261194230
Dally P11o1 Mar 6 13
20, V 2002 W426
DEFERMENT
OF BIOS
Sut>iect to cond111ons
prescnbed by lhO under·
signed. sealed bids tor a
l~ Sum Con1tlld ere
Invited lor the lollowlng
Wor11·
REPLACE OUTSIDE
WALIONG DECICI
ROOF, MAIN UBRARY
PROJECT NO. 991238
UNIVERSITY OF
CALIFOONIA. IRVtNE
IRVINE,
CALIFORNIA 92697
Ongioally scheduled toc 2:00 P.M., lliURSDAY,
FEBRUARY 21, 2002
has been clelerred to
2:00 P.M.. F"IDAY,
MARQi 29, 2002
PROJECT
DESCRIPTION: Worll
includel. but II nol hm-
ited to, the lolowing Re-
move approximately
11,000 aq fl surlace on
the Main l.lbolry 5th
floor Replace wllh
QUany tile paver. setting
beds, pnmary end sec·
ondary wa1erprooling
eccenorles and
aealers .
ESTIMATED CON·
STRUCTION COST:
1220,000.00
Nou: Prime Bidder• who do not IMet the
queflflcaUone In the Contrect Document•
mey not be eOgllM fol' •••rd. Bidding Documents
were 111allable 10 Bia· ders on WEDNESDAY,
A:BRUARY 13, 2002. and ..,.,.. issued at
DESIGN &
CONSTRUCTION
SERVICES
Unlll9f'Sity of
Callfomia. Irvine
3500 8el1dey Place
IMM. CA 92697·2450
(949) B24-e630
Hot Line:
(Ml) 82W117
Checb lot a -f\lndeble ... will be ,...
quired In the tmOUl1I of
$25.00 per set of Btd-
d 1 ng Document•
Checb -IO be mede payable 10 '"The R•
g8l'ltl of the Unlll9rwily at
Calilomll ·•
SeaMld Bide wll not be
accepted after: 2:00 P.M,. FRIDAY, MARCH
21, .t002. Bk1 8«:uftty In Iha
amount ol 10•.;. ol the
Lump Sum Base 84d ex ctudtng attemates shalt
accompany eacll Bid
The Surety 1&su1ng the.
Std Bond shall be on the
Bid Deadline an
admitted surety insurer
(as dehned 1n lhe Cah·
lornia Code ol Crv1I
Procedure Section
995 120)
A mandatory Pre-Bid
Conte1ence and man
datory Pr•Btd Job Walle
was conducted on THURSDAY, FEBRU·
ARY 21 ,' 2002, be
ginning ~ly al t:OO A.M. ParuapanlS me1 al
MAIN LIBRA.RV.
Un!vefstty ol Califomea Irvine
Botldtng # I 02.
Room 570
IMne, CallfOfl\IB
92697·8100
(949) 824-6630 A second mendatory
Pre-Bid Conference and
man0a1ory Pre·Btd Job Walk win be conducted
on: FRIDAY, MARCH
15, 2002, 1>eg1nnlng
p<omptfy at t :OO All.
Participants shall meet at·
MAIN LIBRARY
Urwersrty ol
Cahlomia, Irvine Butldlng • t 02.
Room 570. IMn8
Califomta 92697-8100
(949) 824-fi630
NOrt: "thoM Contrac-ton who attMlded the
flret Pr•Bld Con·
ference for thle Protect. hekl on Th~ my, Februery 21, 2002,
do oot need" to llttend
the eecond Pre·81d Con~ echeduled
fOJ Fridrt. March 15,
2002. A Contrec10J le
rwqulred to lllt8nd only
one of the pr9-bld con-t.rences. but not both.
ATTENDANCE AT
ONE Of THE PRE-810
CONFERENCES AND
JOB WALKS IS MAN·
DATORY FOR Al l
PRIME CONTRAC·
TORS. THE MEETINGS
WfU CLOSE AT t :05
A.Iii. ANY CONTRAC· TORS ARRIVING AF·
TEA nus TIME wtl.l NOT 8E EUGl8lE TO
PARTICIPATE IN lliE
BIO PROCESS AS A PRIME CONTRACTOR. Orlf bidders who pal•
1idpete in one at the Pre· Bid Conlen1nc• end the
Job Welks 1n th11r
entnty, ... be alloMd
IO bid on the Projec1 N
ll(ime contractors FOf lul'lwr Wofmellon. con--tact UCI Contrad$ De-
partment w1th1n DellgO
& ConslNCtlon $eM08$
Brenda R Hockenhull al
t949> B24-4ns The Sua:8$Slul Bidder
and its Subcontractors
.. 111 be required 10 lollaw
Ille nondlscnmtnallOO r• quiremenrs set forth 1n
the B1dd1ng Documents
and to pay prevarhng
wage rates at l"8 loca
lion ol the W9"1
The successful Bldde1
Wiii be req.,.red to have
the tolkrtw1ng Stale ol
Cahfort11a Contractor's
ltcense ClJrrent 'er Ille
bme ol $0bm!S$IOl'I of the
Bid
LICENSE
CLASSIFICATION
LICENSE COOE
Roofvlg Contractor C-39
OT General BIJ>ldlng
Contractor B
Other Protect Spec:l-
flce: · Bidder Quall· fleatlon• called tor to
be eubmltted et time ol
bid lnc:tude, but -no! ,_.,;1y Hmtt.d to:
1 The Contractor snail
have been 1n bu5lness
under ttle same name
and Cahfom1a Contra.c·
ror' s License tor a mln·
imum of 5 contmoous
years pnor to the bid
opening date for this
Project The license
used IO satisfy !hos r•
~ement shall be ol the same type required by
the contract
2 The Conlnldor Shal
prov1de a ll'llfWntn1 ol 3
references for pr0j8Cls SMTli&ar in scope and Sill
to thll Proteet wtuch
have been auccesstully
completed dunng the ~~~NTS Of
TI£ UNfVffiSITY Of
CALIFORNIA
Febnaly 2002
Published Newport
Baach·Cost• Meu Daily Piia( March 6. 13. 2002 W424
cm
~
TODAY AND
GET THE I our
TOMOllOW!
(949) 642-5678 = ';; T:: .... ::rtmen: ~.:iaccto..i; portent ~ how· made payable lo '"The Have you started
c:i.-. bUIN o.i al f• & ConlN::illon SeMoea· ever. the --~ ~R~of c:.o:::_.unlver· doing ~ yet? No Tiie 11111 ...,., cf -.S 8nwlda R. HocMMull 81 MIUM ~ !rt------------------------~------., ~~ ..... -J:: (~ :.2~~ 8lddet :::~w:= bid Cotl~c: ~:;; s· 11:4.R~Z~G ~tt llmt ~ and Ila SubconCradon Of COM«lted lO the =t~ ~ -i: =..~ 00:='".: ;! :.~'°.on~ i::=.ni;coonJni~ lollows; =~.::-~ ~ ::-:=:o ~: tratlon auth<>ttty "111 be ::-fM~T~~RSDAY.
Mtm.1-CAC1'0> and to pey ~ == ==-:; ~1~ ~:. ::1''::1-~rJ ="of':'..:,.... ftt IOCa-otJjecdott IO Ile pldllofl IMne, P°r9Cldent'e Con-~ ... -....w The •ICCllBM 8ldder = :::-ociJ*.tm:t'*: ~~...!!
l1Wl.!2.!!'1m77.MO tt: '!~S:ta~ Qfll'll ftt dlcftcy Rd . $U1M 3000. IMne. ~lo.--,.--,;"~aotor'I A HEARING on lhe Califomla 92997 . .......,.,_ ~ .,. be hatcl on ~~ • ADVEATISl!MENT **-' Q#fenl •I lhe APRIL 4, 2002 • 1:30 No. 2::
FOR 11:18 lime ol ~ of Ile p 111. In Deot. L7' loo t M TUESDAY, ~to QcModllloOI Bid· UCINH o.ted al 341 The City MARCH 1t1 2002 at
Pl...,_ by fie lftlw. Cl.ASIW'tCATIOH: OllVe South. Ofanve, \JfWtl1llty at Ce11tom1a. ligntd. _.., bide for a ~ ~ CA 112891 WM. ,,.,...,.,.,.., Cort-
i.Ump &In Cri9Ct ate UCIHM COOi• 11r YOU 08.JECT to tnnce Room. ._.. Of.
lrWlllcl for Ill folloWlt19 c1 o ' h ~ lhe peio t1o1 ~. 4004 Meat w19~ M1G1H Ohr flrottct .,_ ~'-1rtg w": ~ =· INN,
YOl.T ... a'tS1'IM • ftn: 'fOlil ~ or file (t48) ;l2"4113G MML~Y c::::W ~ ::-n~-=-:: n.:n:::=:·~ ~ -I ..... hW • dlM at t111rlng. Your •r>-rmauc• AND fM• -TM90R W ~ ...... not ptallnOl lftly be In ,_. -.109 WMQ •
ANEW
• • • • • • • • • • •
._. THIA,_ 11 IJll ~ IMIM IO: ton« IW Vol". ~. MAJfOATOllY FOR ··.,,_.CT t n. COrnlD IMI IF YOO ARE A QE>. ALl PMlll COft· F1ot1aoU9 lu1lnMI ....... ~ 9'"' '*"' Ill bu91MM llOR Of ....... cndoo TltACTOltl. THI
....... l lWI it UNIYE"lfl'Y Of ..-,~co:: llofdllt•• 11d,J'* W i&t• Q09 AT
The :o:J..::,._. ~ lfMN! =: u..e tor a "*'-:-' ~-=---= t:tl A.IL AIN· COM-.. -• • --~ I ooion -TMCT0M MSW -• ' ~ _, -'"' _, ,_ cqip IO "8,.._.11!P' Al'fttt ,,_ W
Alft ~.....J?!t NCMICT DBCW-,_. ............. !'! ~ IW ... A ..... Dr W\LL "OT •I ~t 1-. ..---.... Wo9tc .......... ~ -..,. .--flt ... ........ W •• I '° ftMTDo .... ~."" ,,r,, •....... -"= :;:s:;; .::. :::-: ~ "::.::. "='-= ~ -W'ifl; ........ 1UI =r=.":lir;_.. ....... "'tlN ............. .... ~ Dr~ Tllllft. CA .,.._. IN ....... llr _. ~ ,_... ttoa. -.. ,... v ....... II_.. 10•.. !C l • .... 'Tilt_lar ... .._ ..... , ••.
._. llr. lft......... _...fl I ::, :..:r:..-: ~NJ...=--'· ~.&..~ -a: ..... .. ...... .. ~ . °"""°' ~m.. • r.: .-=-*'.= 3..., ~= f!l--.. ~: ~~ tn;t~----::i:. I ~I: ....... .. .. -:t•.: Sti .2N~ ----··-------·-.-~~~~~ ... °' ....... ,_ ==~~ ... n;. =
)
.. -
..
"Q
EOUAl HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
All real estate adver11slng
In this newspaper Is subject to the Federal Fair Hooslno
Act or 1968 ~s amendtd
which makes it Illegal to
1dver11se ·any preference,
hmilallon or dlscnm1natlc!(I
based oo race. color. re110· Ion. S8J(. handicap, lamil~ status or national origin, or
an Intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination •
· This newspaper will not
knowingly accept any advertisement for real
estate whteh Is m VIOiation of the law Our readers are hereby mlormtd that all
owell•nos adllertJSed In lhiS newspaper are available on an equal 09l)Ortuni1y basis
To comotaln ol dlscrimi·
nation. call HUD toll·free at 1·~24-3590
SELL
your home
through classified
llOIBOF
TIE ..
-UHi
fla•H ,.. .... .... ........ .........
.. , .. , Adi
llllt ... ........ r....IPM
~
o,in .....
~Avl
DI ...... .......
IPll . ...,._ ......... .......
LOCAL .......... ......
Cll .... If
USA
RIVERA
MN14452 AIB
WILLEY '
MM14-4141
HOME.flair ~~~
&dmtb ~"1 OE.QI TU MM7MOIS,
Reglaze/ReTurb1sfl 714@:162! l l4113-203I
POICClain • FibefKlas~ I I Sinks • Showeis • CUN91Q
Counters ~
949-645-7723
*HOUSE~• I• CAiZ ENTRY I :nt ~· = ... _____ __._ 849-~195127§=5e49
' ~ • I . I I I A '•I';(;
r
1203 N. BAYFAONT
REDUCED S175,000 4Br 381, lg din rm/arta.
Frplc'a In liv & din rm, Wilk·
In doleta. There "' lllll1Y flUI n. lining !hi ~
2 car .a.di a:.:300,000 ~242-6854 ollice
eel 818-9~5136
a.I Pwt "' CdM 281 2Be hou9e + Loll. 3 Fp's. WIO, llJ;j, 1 Cll gar t Clipor1
433 112 Begonll. lll2tK
By Owner MM9W357 °'*' b f..f. 8-Jflfulty Designed front condo 3br
.bf, Cl.SfOOI lil1iSh«i lhouohtoutl gourmm kllehen $85§.000. co..tllM RNlly
Hf.15H17T
38r Ulla Classic CUiiom
COlldo Marblt, granhe,
1m9mie T Oil Clf the Irie
~. endoeed patio.
A Must Seel Offered 11
$999,000. eo.ttlne RMl1y
14t-75H1n
'/, .
II ... -iii ..
iii
1·=.w
28f 281 houM 3 frplc'a. wld,~r. +ca 433 1 No pell,
Yitr S639. ~ Ownet 949-496-7
I 10HOC~
COSTA IESA
Elqui11111 <181 3.581 famiy
home. CompletJon $piing 2002 Great Eutside loca· lion. Olfered 11 $769,000
COMtllne Reelty
M9-75H1n
OHLY 4 LEFT
CUSTOM HOMES
38R 2.58A FROM S4U,lJOO
SAT/SUN 12-6
2450 Eldin Pleet
949-725-0800
OHLY 4 LEFT
CUSTOM HOMES
38R 2.58A
FROM S411,000 SAT/SUN 12-6
:WO Eldin Pllce
Mt-725-0800
l 11 ~I
mtl fC Dlrll Ylate °' Outstanding opply ocean
-Total remod 3bl 2 Sb• condo. $395.000
949-322-o932
1 12 ~1 NEWPORT 8EACtC
OCEANFRONT
FIXER
Not For The Flint
of Heer1
eat. Mt-723-8120
~=-·t:i.:\1'1 ~' lcllh 111111~··"' Alldllm. lk#6SOS24
714.Ht.7111
C.ustomer -Latisfoction
All~of ~home
... ~too
WATERFRONT 2·9TOAY
SUPER LOW PRICE
AQT. M•72M120
PRIME ESTATES
Lota & Ocean Vlewll
agt. Pertck Tenore
MMS&-9705
WWW.p!trictlenot'9.COl'll
Newport View Bargain!
Model ptr1ect 38r f.581
houle w/prtvall l'llf yard
. 9yM"ta.._
3.'JO 1'tst ~y SUM
Co.ta Mr.a, CA 9'U>27
41 '"1-t M • llnbl. ••• ·~ 8:30010-S:OOpru \!,....,-_,......,
Walk-In 8:30am-5:00pm >1ta,-tridl>
ARIZONA LANO BARGAIN Prime 40 ecre
j)aroels in IOenlc rM1W9lt
ArizOfll. Ask about our
down peymem meldl pio-~lfll S2!iO lou.' lncentiw. Mountaln Vl1t1
Hl66-3CXHANO
(CAL'SCAN)
-----o..lllnfM------..
Mooday ............ friday 5:00pm Friday_ ........ Thunday S:OOpm
~y ......... Monday S:OOpm Saturday ........... Friday 3:00pm
Wednaday ..... ~y 5:00pm Sunday ............. friday 5:00pm
Thuniday .. Wednesday 5:00pm
w/comm pool & ape. lgt .-------. P Tenore, agt 949-858-9105
PRIVATE IAYIHOflO
Gl1I guild 38r, 1 •.e... Fp,
glr, wall IO JM l!Ctl ~ I st & 1111 Ml470-3011. •-.p11rlckteno1"11.com
Oppy ·Knodta. ldl Clott
Tumlley lux, 8P1C IWnhat,
approx 2000 sf wu 4br
rt(JMf :lbt, 2.5C>a, lg 2 c lltlCh gar, $409,000 Eliel KrlWltz 0Remu~1
www.elhelkrawltz.com
NEW UST1NO °'*' SI.my 1-6 llomrwy Plrw Or.
SANTA LOOA PAJJ.ZZ.O largest P1an Sbr, 4 5bl
$1,625,000
Stefllnte Meurer $2,050,000
949-715·3158
Momldlo Plln 1
OPEN SUH 1~
4600sf Sbr 5 5be 3 car
garege, OC»111 views. up-
~o= 85'1.i':: Meurer S2,050,000
949-715-3156
REAL FSl'ATE
~.}lon ~Young
For All Y""'•
R"aJ &IOI-N#dlf
714-432-7873
OCEAN VIEW 11A
Bright & QUrtt, di to
beedl, Fp, MW carpet
paint. No pell, yur
lie, redlad S1395/mo
Mt-22W151
E'Slde 81 cldlly audio l
I 8dnlll ~ gMld,
pool, gareges 1¥111, ••
no pN. 7t4-64MllO
MOVIN·MAN Ctnful·~
&Ct-.p
Aanoe·An~
FrM W.dtobee
frM &tlmatl9
948-376-7825
PUBLIC
NOTICE
The Calif. Publlo-
Utllllltt Com· n..ion REQUIRES
1111 ti &.-1 ~ hold goodl lllMll !>Mt Mr P.UC CalT~lmot and~ pew
thtlr T.C.P. ~ lnll~ltl. lfyouhM•~ Monllllolllllt~
lly ol • lllMf. "'°. or c:hdlr, • PUIUC UT1UT1e9
COMMl9fON
714-661-4151
'J!J.t """' ~. ~Professional
Painting
Ue.~
latedm/lltcdor
J>ecahePlilillC CalarlllttMaC
Rob Isbell • OWnel
Co&ta Mela, Ca
(949) &46-3008
Cell 948-887-1480
PAlmON fOft PAINT
...... .,., .........
... LOCAJING
~uM
~ ......
675-9304
~u D~ ~1'1s 1J~1Cl omo
lnc/lllt,..,.,.., ..w. ...... ,__
C"n=.r:' ·-••-----... --·-·-
•
3lk 1S. on H~ S1650lmo. -iit.
MM00-132
38r 2111 • Totlly Atdone
2c OlflOI on QUiet
cukle-SIC. $2,205mo. !C!l. S)'!Ny P'IM00-1320
Hr Tr-. eq ,__....,
1bf 1111 duplex, p ,
bedryd, ·~l-!!.~ mil 4-1 ~
SELL
your home
through classified
•.. , .. ... ...,,.&lmt
u..l a ..... tn"6161 Cllll----· ,,...,_.,,
MM Lido ~ 3llr 281. l4ll* end blow dlclt.
2car PllQ. '*· WK>. aecur· ty sys. .t. ... bo9I
Sip, l250Mno Avl 2/1 BkJ
Sherry 8-1 • c.w.ry va. laoe SllM 1=§8H69-9667
E'Blulf 38r 2aa 1111110C1Nd,
RV ecc:ess. S3000fmo. !C!l S't!NY 941M00-132Q
E.llt llull 3lr .. 2 C9
gang., "" Clrplll • Pllnl. T--.. lfylt
ps5Gt!!o. ... m-4a0
Studloe I lllr, clOll or Oii
tfM aand, IOIM wfttl
~ froM lllO WI 11, 175
MH7S-7IOO
Whit
happenl If
you don't
advertise?
50' To &11&/J
Nn11 o,,,,,,,,.J,;p!
GwntJ Rl-~mK
llAt# Special
Mn-'Ihr U5.
W-"Jt'Kidn AHiL
118 1 Ith Screet
Ht&Dtiogton Bcacb
'114 .... 41711
llotitl
MANAGERS
• SPECIALI
$20 OFF WITH AD
(Muel pl'tl8llt 1Na Ad) 236 11111 & ldldleneas.
Slludd on bMIAJfully
land9clped ground$ FEAT\JRES: 24·Hour
Lobby/Olrect dial
phones/Frea HBO, ESPN & Oiac/Pool &
Jacuzzi, Guest laun-
(ty Clo&e lo 406 & 55
Fwys. Min'1 from O.C. Flli'glOI. co4lege and
bclla. w .. 1ng cfis. tanct to shops and
l'tll&Urants.
COSTA MESA
MOTOA INN rm 1t1rt1ar Blvd
PflOlll •• •• tt•o
~---... .... ......
LOOKING kit JACK l JIU
PT. Days 10llm-3prn Jlldt &
Jil are team pliyn and 118 tun to Worll with, ltley 8l8o
get lickets ro ooocens & win boouMa. They left. Is that
You? Pecille Sympftony
Teltfundlng CllmPllan 11a1ta 11-21 Ew 6 !1'lta.
lrl 71.....,..2311
SHORES INTERIORS
FLOOR SAMPLE
LIQUIDATION ~ALEll
ALL PRICES SLASHED!!
Upholstery, Lampa, .cceaorln • .t
2640 AVON STREET
NEWPORT BEACH
off Riverside & Pacific Coast Hwy
949-642·2255
Sold OM dining room tallle
w/6 chal's. Expandable wl2
leals, 111Ce a>ndltJon. '850.
949-722-6514 leaVI msg, 1·11~1 •
LOST OR STOLEN
Lat...., Dec. 14, comer of
wtlson and Newport Blvd.
LARGE
REWARD t:"" ." • ' '\ ' .' . I ' .
( ... ,~,·:--.... , ... ,
• '1'· ,. ' ' '
1....a '·' "" ·"'!-
MINE TIIE R1GHT MINOR
Boch vulnerabte. Nonh deals.
WEST •Jt87 o 9H
NOR11t
•KU
<::) 7 2
<> KJ911
•AQ96
0 0'51 . •1'4 SOU'f.H •A~3 o A 3
<> 10 3
• JJ08S
EAST
• 1054
c;i KJ 1086
<> A4
•K3l
~~(AST SOtrrH I<>. l\J JNT ,_ ....
Opening lead: Four of \J
East's ovcrcall gor East-West off to
their best ai.t. Unfonunatcly. it also
lhould hsve pointed declarer in the
riahl dim:tion "1broe oo trump would have been
ieacbed whether or not Ea.\1 inter-
fered in the auction. Without the overcall, lhere is no telling wllich suil
West would have anacked at the
openina &un. c.enainly, the heart lead
gained a tempo for the defense.
f!aSI ln!lelted the king of heartll on
Ilic opening lead, losing to decl.arcr's
ace. Since a suc:celiSful club f anel.Se
would deliver the needed tricks,
dcclllm' ~ the jack of clubs at Irick
lwo. F.a!lt won wilb the king ll1ld led
high hearts to fom: out lhe queen wEien decllll'Cr held up once. When
lbe defender regained lhe lead Wtlh
lhe ace or diamonds. jullt enough
lricks could be ca.shed in bcarts for a
OOC·trick SCI.
Pedulps the MlllUlda Act should
apply to bridge plllyeni, because ""Y·
lhing they say 111 the table might be
used in evidence against lhem. Herc.
the overcall should have been enough
for declarer IO find an alternative.
Since East certainly holds the ace
of diamonds for the vulnerable over-
c,,'llll. declarer should have run the Len
of diwnonds at trick two. If lhat loses
to the queen, declarer can still fall
back on the club finesse for nine
tricks. When the tCfl IOliCS IO the ace •
however. lhe club finesse is no longer
na-essary -declarer simply repeats
the dinl1\0nd r~. twice If neces-
sary. to assure the game.
What if East hlld originally won the diamond with the ace from a
holding !hat includes thc queen of
diamonds as well. but no king of
clubs? Coogratulllte the sneaky devil
and get on to the nc.11.t hand.
1~~11-~11-~1
COVE MOTORING Volb'ng Hew 8Mt 00 NilMn 200 SX SE.ft 'ti
11FT • 20fl ELEC'TillC BMW 323I '00
BOATS, Sl500 Ind up. Bllllblk ..... 995 v-1
Sllver/gnly $15,995 V62'7 Showroom. 36k ml, auto. loaded, L TO, $8950
Dodi AYlll. lift Elee-_.., • ....,
trlenfl Pontoon 113,000 BMW 325lc:a ,01 Ctwtle MH7S-7200 G...vtln 138.1115 V1370
'95 oUfty 18ft
Teal, Immaculate conddon. BMW 328cl ·oo
111,500 obo 94&-723-0J29 BlecUlll S3t,"5 Vt1020
BMW 32811 'It
Acur11 Cl= 'ti BlecllJtln $21,995 V'"71
Fully BMW 32811 '00 {ll7lll62~ J~S.MO.) Sll-/gr8y $32,995 V1312
Ml·S7'-7777 BMW 328la '99
949-850-5915 714-751-24'4
Pontiac Fll9blrd Clvy* Concord LXI' 91 Coml. '01 : =~: ~::":~ ~~~~ ~ ~raged, non sm~r. beau· i:;.Al!ERS CADILUC
tifij origillll cond, $8995 Blu (714)540.9100 949-586-1888 _ __..,..;,.;,,i;:o.:.:.;::.o=:-..-
Fonl EJploter $90f1 utlllty Pontiac Gland AM SE '01
2dr '97 V6, ctt greeo :/::!. 4 C'fl, PW, pdl. aDt, cd
ttlm. 1~. 2wd. • (~RS CAOILll~"5
eonroof, new tires/battery (714'""'1Lil100 $10,900 ollo 94WS.2683 -~~=~~--
GMC Trudi 77 Auto, VI, flatbed, · «gin °"""' WOlt lrudl, S2500 71 '4-ffl-4427
Pontiac Sunflrw '01
4C'fl,ac,aDt,......,-.
cd, low ml
(1135767) $10,995 Audi .AS 'H 29k m1, 8lulltM $28,"5 17318
Tiptronic, Sitver/grey tthr.
CO. Hke new, $22,995 BMW 32llc: "17 Infinity 045 't8 481( mt, lull
V36197'4 Bkt 949-586-1888 Bllcillblk 126,195 VM340 lactory warranty. gold
oatmeal tthr, CO. 111pe11>
NASERS CAOILUC
(714)5'0:1100
Ponehe 911 S 74 Greal loolOng/running, wMe, lb nu, tan Int, AIC, very 0!9, no
rusl $7,250 714-751·2464
8lntlly 8l'Ookllndl "17
A Pelfect. Uoo.mus Sedan wtch only 18k mil Factory wananty, Local can
Oriy $74,9l!O. (IS5953) = ... ~
BMW M3 ConY 'W 3311 m1,
Iulo, sk, bit l!lv, blk: top,
a&llQld. norVsmb, like MW
full -laC1 warr, $29,995
\14116675 Bkr 949-686-1888
BMW 11 llc '97
ConYtftlble, Bleell w/
Bllct lntldor, Loe.I c.I
(t17496~ Auto$19,9«J
949.574.7m
BMW 32llc: "17 cond, Ylnt759661 $19,995 Blll9'lln $24,995 f7199 finn Blu ..... 1 ....
BMW 3301 '01
$38,115 '8340
BMW mil '01
Gr...illn $31,995 Vf7'903
Jaguer XJR '16 60k m1,
Brfiiah racing green. SMb 900 Turbo CO Sedln Ollmeal lthr, CO, superb '92 9(lll m~ 11!110, wtutelgrey
orig cond. $23,996 v781914 It.hr. fully loaded, beiullful
8ki Mt-611-1M originel cond. SS.995
v.497812 Btu 949-566-t 888
BllW 5211 'II Jaguar XJS COIMrt.lble
Blac:UJlll $21,1115 V'"31 '90 BmzAan llhr, local car, Vollllivrlgln Goll '16 Very
ll0fll80US, .. OOllone. lk llU, cllien. black. &rwf. s-.c> . .,,.
BllW 5281 'II fo ml, J?'95() 114-751-2464 cart original owner. Priced ~ 127,195 Vl2515 fol quick sale! $S<IOO'obo
BMW 5211 "17
Whltlllln 124,1115 Vt4351
BMW 5211 'ti llfiA* m.-Vt1931
lllllW 52911 '00
~131.tl5V15"
BMW 52811 'ti
Glwlltlll $21,115 Vte1'112
BMW 52811 'W my.Mc sa,115 v.-1
--XJS ... 6cyl. COrN, 949-650-3305 6()1( ml, !Ml blue. oatmeal
llhr. b4k lop, co. cllrome Volklw-P-t TOI wheals, beau1 cond, .,......
$17,995 Yint457291 Bkr '97 d~. 6911 mi, ~94"""9-""586-o:..,:,;1888=:...___ = Halli to tincit tier,~
JAGUAR XJIL '97 Red, v'421662 Siu' 949-58&1888
lthr. CO, chrome wheels.
low ml. WARREMTY, dean $22.9Wobo. 714-658-9482
..... XJS Sedlll '90 Law l'lllell Just s.Mcldl
(117410= Sl.980. Auto
.... 1'-7177
VOl.VO WlgOl'I 't5
AC, llllr, all pwr, 3nf ..i with turbo, $12,800
714-96M427
Volvo 940 Wegon 'M
Wht w/lltlr Int, 82k m, auto,
perf cone!, AJC, $11,900
949-857·1663 714813-2996
llllW 52811 .., BMW 140IL 'ti 83k ml, Grw.1'tlln 124,915 VlllO books. l900ldll, Or. owned,
--XJ6 't4 V.f> Champagne/tan lea tiler, vvl Volklwegon Cabriollt
beeutilul 011g1nal cond, Conv '78 Profl restored,
$10,995 firm vinl682751 Will. pert Nu ~
Bkr. Ml-58&-lm lie. $k950 714-151;2464 silYel. :\:llhr, llltf loldld, beaut oand, '13.995 v387S81 ~1888
BMW 1211 '00
........... VW3 Jaguar XJe 'ti '49k mi,
8llW MOI 'ti bc>oQ, records, blad!. tan
8lrAlll ... Vl2272 llhr, co. clwome wills, liQ new condition. $19.995
~75121 Sb ..... 1. ==I
Weclneldcry, 'INJrch 6, 2d02 11 .
:fODAV'~
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
------------., D YES, SELL MY CAR
I Nlll1I
Run your ad in the I -~-----------
Newport Beam-I ------------
Costa Mesa Dally I Cit
Pilot an(! the 1 1.1p------------
Huntlng Beach-1 ------------
Fountain valley I c Independent to I I o..c... owe o YISA o *•
reach over 100,000 1 ~~c..t~-~=======~fs~OM~==::::! homes. Fax us this Plmla.t,.,,_.._ form with your credit 1 ..,.__ ... ...,. ____ Moclll---
card # or mail with I 8:.-~ =. 8=.o~ Pllm ---
a check today! R:;,:-tl' §=::--lS ...... o...-. .... -.-
Runforaweekllf 0 ·-0 --0 --• ., • .,.. a::._, g::::. a=== :::..-:: your car does not ..... a.,Jlllatamw ..,.._0.-....._CA .. r sell, we'll run It for L __ ~~~~·".:::' ~""'---__
another week FREii IMU•I~~ ~ ......... ,, .. .
All tor Just $16'. ~~!.11\/t INDEPENDENT
mhe Newport Beach/COsta Mesa.
Balboa Island, Corona del Mar
Daily Pilot presents you with a ~t opportunity to
. ,Promote ant!ques & co~ Perfect for~
dealers, auctions, booUellers. decorators. teftallllrerl,
art galleries -develpp your bulaeea wlda uar
' .
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