Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout2000-11-07 - Orange Coast Pilot---... ' ' SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA COWAUNfTIES SINCE 1907 ON ntE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM 1UESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2000 Tight race expected to draw vOters FYI • Costa Mesa has 11 council candidates to choose from as well as a host of state and county issues to decide. For details about county elections, call (714) 567-7600 or visit the Orange County Registrar's Web site at www.oc.ca.gov/e/ections . Erickson stressed that it is just as important for Costa Mesa residents to vote in an election with a lot of candi- dates as in one with only a few. He remembers one election in which he and another candidate each won. but were separated by only one vote, he said. Jennifer Kho D AILY Pit.OT didates -inclu9ing two incumbents - are vying for votes, along with state c;an~ didates and a number of county mea- sures and state propositions. "Every vote makes a difference: COSTA MESA -Voters energized by the tightest presidential race in recent memory will have a lot more to think about today than simply chQosing between George W. Bush and Al Gore. Eleven Costa Mesa City Council can- Eileen Padberg, of Eileen Padberg Consulting, said 11 ls a big number of city council candidates, but City Coun- cilman Joe Erickson said the number is "pretty normal in Costa Mesa." Erickson said. "That one vote would have made all the difference if we were in third and fourth place. Voting is a right people have fought and died for and it's important that residents vole every time, regardless of the number of candidates ~g." S~ COSTA ME~A PAGE 6 DON LEACH I OAll.Y PILOT A parking structure near West Udo Cb.annel collapsed Monday, putting these cars in jeopardy. Parking garage collapses • Investigators were at the scene Monday evening to determine what caused the structure near Lldo Village to cave in;· ~o one injured . NEWPORT BEACH -A parking garage near Udo W- lage collapsed and was destroyed Monday evening, causing extensive structural damage to an attached office building, authorities said. The front portion of the two- story parking structw'e snapped off the main office buildhlg in the 2800 block of Lafayette Avenue around 5 p.m. MOnday, drag- ging both buildings toward the West Udo Channel, said U. John Blauer of the Newport Beach Fire and Marine Department No one was in the building when the incident OCCUD'ed. nor was anyone hurt. he said. A few cars wnaining in the broken garage had been thrown from their parked positions and rested against bent steel railings. The structure, its floors cracked and caved in, was left leaning toward the bay when the dust settled. Damages had yet to be l1S9eS8ed for the office building, which was put on the market only six months ago with an asking price of $3.5 million, Blauer said. "It is really fortunate nobody got hurt,• he said. Paul Sumner, the owner of the building, could not be reached for comment Monday evening. The area was secured after nearby office and residential buildings were evacuated, Blauer said. Engineers and building inspectors were on the scene Monday, surveying the damage and trying to deter- mine the cause of the collapse. Curious neighbors who came by to look at the fallen structure said they were &bocked. "I didn't hear anything,• said Pat Woodward, who lives near- by. "It's very scary for us." Mark Jackson, a local real estate agent. said he is con- cerned that several buildings along the bayfront may have similar structural problems. "Some of these buildings are 35 years old," he said. •And if they are not maintained over the years, they're going to become weak.• Sandi Brower, who lives in a neighboring complex, said she wasn't worried about her build- ing caving in. •we just moved in here Feb- ruary and we've bad no prob- lems, • she said. "This is some- thing rare and unusual.• Ingh tmnout may have little effect on Newi)ort Beach ismles Mathis Winkler OMV Ptl.oT NEWPORT BEACH - While the pnmctential race is expected to draw an \DlUSU- ally high voter tumout. elec- tion obseivers say that IDCre bal1ols cast will.. have little effect qi the OldaJme d the dly's campaigns. .The closeness [of the presidential race] might excite people to go to the polls,. said Mark Petracca. chairman of the political science department at UC SEE NEWPORT PAGE 6 Sex offender moves out after protest • Considered a high-risk threat by police, Grayling Lang Mitchell, 41, leaves Newport Senior Village. Deepa Bharath DAILY PILOT COSTA MESA -Alter neighbors protested in front of his apartment complex Sunday, a registered sex offender "voluntarily moved out• of bis home at the Newport Senior Vil- lage, a property manager said Monday. Melanie Lucie, manager of the complex on 21st Str~t and Newport Boulevard, said Grayling. !.ang Mitchell, 41, left with his 70-year-old wife Monday after meeting with property management officials. The couple had moved into the complex in October. •Alter we spoke with him, he volunteered to move out." Lucie said. Residents of the area said they were delighted that a ·potentially dangerous sex Grayling Lang offender" is no longer living Mitchell in their neighborhood. •I'm very happy at the quick response,• said Norma McClary, who organized Sunday's protest. "This is a beautiful neighborhood and we'd like it to stay that way: McClary said she and other residents were ready to stage another demonstration Satur- day morning. "We just want him out of here,· she said. "He lost the right to live in a nice area like this the moment he committed those horrible crimes.• To warn residents about Mitchell, Costa Mesa police circulated fliers last Thursday - an action authorized under Megan's Law, which went into effect three yea.rs ago to bet- ter inform the public about the presence of high-risk sex offenders. Megan's Law requires those who have been convicted of dangerous sex crimes to register with local law enforcement agencies. It also allows their names and photographs to be made public. According to the police flier, Mitchell b.as been convicted of rape by force, sodomy with force and oral copulation with force. Lucie said the property management com- pany did not know about Mitchell's crimin.al record •unw the fliers were tossed out: SEE MITCHELL PAGE 9 . Part of Balb9a Bay Club bulldozed --__ , ____ . • After more than 50 years, the biStoric club ~work on nnaltimillim-dollar reoavatioo IJOject. G n.-11 ---I • ._, I -11 •• .. Estancia High to stage 'Rimers of Eldrich' You won"t want to miss the Estancia High School Orama Department's pro- duction of Lanford Wilson's "The Rimers of Eldrich,• which tells the story of a small Mk;twestem town whose seemingly perfect existence is shattered by an unexpected act of violence .. Performances are at 7:30 p.m. Dec. 1-2 and 8-9. Admission is $7 for tick- 'ets prior to the performances or $8 at the door. Information: (949) 51S.6537. 2 Tuesday, November 7, 2000 Daily Pilot .Kids Talk -ACK A turkey on most every plate The Daily Pilot asked students at Cali/omia Elementary School in Costa Mesa: your favorite food and why? What~ your favorite Thanksgiving food and why? My favorite food is watermelon because it's sweet. My favorite Thanksgiv- ing food is cranberry sauce because it tastes good and it's sweet. AMANDA WILSON, 8 Costa Mesa Turkey. Sweet turkey, because it's good. It's very good. And my mom gives me that for lunch, too. Just reg- ular turkey. JACOB HERNANDEZ, 7 Costa Mesa I think my favorite food is piz- za because that's like our special occasion food, like for birth- days. (For Thanksgiving,) German potato salad, because we have that every Thanksgiving. It's my favorite, CHANTEL O'TOOLE, 10 Costa Mesa Macaroni and cheese, because I really like cheese. (For Thanks- giving,] probably mashed potatoes, because I just like the taste when you put a lot of salt on it. TROY MCCLANAHAN, 9 Costa Mesa Pumpkin pie, because it's good and I like it. [For Thanksgiv- ing,) turkey. I like putting salt on it. SEAN BJELLAND, 6 Costa Mesa __.ntervlews M1d photos by Young O..ng VOLM.N0.265 ntOMAI ti;'°' .... P\lblillw """~· Editor U.CAHM, • City ldlllOr .IM'--Mllttr'll City Editof' •• UICMMW., ,....ldlllof _om._ ...... Mlll•fll .... ........ ........ ,.......,,., _MID._ ,._..., aal'IWS&• .......... '*--&.-••• ..... Dllw• IN THE CLASSROOM. " . . SEAN Htl,l..ER I DAll.Y Pt.OT Alexandra Mazur, 5, counts with her fingers during a classroom exercise at Adams Elementary School in Costa Mesa. en less is more First-graders at Adams Elementary School learn about subtr~ction through traditional and more mod ern methods. Danette Goulet DAILY Plun F urrowing her brow, &-year-old Karla Ruelas counted out eight little fingers with tiny nails pol- ished in pink. . •Tuke away seven,• she said as she began to fold her fingers back down, one by one. •One,• she concluded with a small nod and smile of satisfaction. Karla and her classmates in Michelle Mueller's first-grade class at Adams Elementary School in Cos- ta Mesa were practicing subtraction for an upcoming test. Around the room, there were three activity stations where children each spent about 15 minutes. At each station, Mueller worked with students, giving them various ways to visualize the math problems in their beads -a way to make sub- . traction easier. I plopped down on the carpet and joined a group at their first station, where tliey bad work sheets and tubs of green plastic blocks with numbers on them. The students used the blocks to fill in blank spaces in number sentences. Some were miss- ing the answer, others the first or sec- ond number. A couple of the sheets also dealt with counting by twos, fives and 10s. The fun of it all clearly was dig- ging around in the buckets of plastic number blocks. Next, !'traveled with the group to station two. There, students were given that coarse, horizontal paper with the fat lines and a dotted line down the center. The first-graders wrote their "' • Who: First-grade students in Mkhelle Mueller's class • Where: Adams Elementary School, Costa Mesa • Lesson: Subtraction names and the date at the top. The letters in young Alexandra Mazur's name, I noticed, came to the perfect place on the wide lines -the •A" and the •M• reached the top line and all the others letters just touched the dotted line in the middle. At this station, students ~te a subtraction number sentence by rolling a pair of dice. The reason for this activity, Mueller said, is to help students learn to put the larger number first, then subtract the smaller number from it. It is a concept with which some chil- dren have difficulty, she said. But when the first dice were rolled, 6-year-old Madrice Watkins knew which number came first. •And why are you going to put the eight first, Maurice?• Mueller asked. "Because it's more bigger,• be replied, in a proud, matter-of-fact voice. • At the final station. students used a mathematics computer program that alternated between giving them math problems to answer and play- ing Paddle Ball, a game that, I guess, worked on their coordination and motor skills. In Paddle Ball -a version of Atari's Breakout, the player controls a ball that hits rows of alligators, fish and turtles. Subtraction is a lot more fun than it used to be. • 911 11E a.ASSAOOM is a weekly feature in which Daily Pilot education writer Danette Goulet visits a campus within the Newport-Mesa Unified School District and writes about hef experience. ScHol ...... •• nuggets with sWHt and~ seuce, oven-b-'ced pot.e- toes with catsup, choke of fruit or Juice. choke of AIDAY No Khool -Vettr.ns 0-V READERS HODJNE (949) 642--6086 Record your comments ~ the Dally Piiot or news tips. ADQltE$$ OUr Mldres Is 330 W. 8.y St., COltAt Mesa. CA 92627. CA t2626. Copyright: No news ~ rils, Hlustr1rtlonf. edltorlll matW or ~ltl herein Cllf'I be ~without wnu.n pef• million of COWlght OWi*'. HOW TO 8EAQt us ~ The TlfMI Or~ County (900) 252-1141 Adt•M• a-lfled (941> 142-5671 ( DflSlla, (li9) 142-4321 ......... .... ~ 142-59> Spcwtl (941> 574-4.'W ..... Spor11 .. """ .... 170 l-mel: c*lf)~com MmOlka ... Offlcle (941) 142-4321 .__,_ .. D1-712' ~9r111!19QllM...._ ..... ........ ., .. '-AIWllll ..... _ ........... _... milk WEDNESDAY , Munchlble Lundi 5IUd or FNnch br99d pepperoni p1z. u, o1lp ........... ~ low;fat ......... w6ld bMy juke. ctlokl9 of milt lHUMDAY MuncNbll Lundt s-1.t or chldclr'I tmtldl lllfcton ciom toftll8 ., .... ct.. ............ of fruit.; d'°"9of .. . WEATHEI lllD SUIF ~1\MES hf boa 67153 Corona def Mar 67153 CosU Mesa 67153 Newport 8ffch 67153 Newport to.st 67153 WWAIT I Wlilt· to thouldlr-Ngh WIMI ..t f8lr caldltiol .. Slmt-bumpy ..,,. whh • fM ridNblj lhouldlrL ........ -~ M ' Nl\14loft M ' ........ M ' .... u CdM u 11DIS 100AY First low ................... " ................. nl• First high 6;29•.m ....................... s.o Second low 12:34 p.m ..................... 1.6 SecondNgh 6:17 p.m ....................... 4.5 W8MIDAY First low 12:25 •.m ..................... 0.8 Ffnt high 6:50 •.m ....................... 5'.J Second low 1 :07 p.m ....................... , .o Secondhfgh 1p.m. ............................. . -···--.. • MONDAY Munchlble Lunch Sia.ct or •state F..-com dog with ._, .._.. d'°"9 of fruit or_,.. juk:i. choice of nA • llw MnMlll Wrich Slllld ....... timid ...... dmy ---...., lind ~ Dfta Uh ..... .... ._..,hlt~1D:qac1A1li.,....nf...., No dfM •.......... ., ljNiit ......... ,,,,..... ~ ~°""' ......... ,,.,, ....... . -...................................... ... IDfle~of~MW*lflDnO( .. POUCE FIUS' COSTA MESA • C" •twwt Drtwe: A felony hlt-..nckun ~ reported In the 1700 block at 1:08 a.m. ~ . • c:..-111-...: A~ burgllty w.s ~ In the 700 block at 5 a.m. SUncMy. • ._. ,,... 11Nee: An...-was NipOAld In the 400 block 8t 3:07 •.m. Sundey. ' .... '-llNel: An MltO 1h9ft Wll ........ In .. !500 blodt 8t l:J& a.m. ~ . ........ _. ....... ~wNPQnlld.-n ..... • bOlt et l:SI a.m. lh.ndl;,. •Ill lllMl~ ...... A-a••lridt8'1fW• wn ........... ...,_from a hoeel CIOlll .. INll ..... fn .. ,. blodl. 2 p.11\, ......,. ............. ~ ...... _,9tl ... ..... 4'11Wd It,,... ...... · Doily Pilot . r .. Airport issue falls into d~pate It wasn't Your average courtroom in those days •Supporters of growth- rontrol measures are divided on how they would affect expansion of John Wayne Airport. Mathis Winkler DAILY PILOT THE VERDICT eye c:bart. ID one comer wu a anall office whidl housed a d•k and two chain. ID that desk WU • boWe of whilkey. That was the office of Prank RinebMt, the dty clerk. Prank explained that the bottle was for public relations. NEWPORT BEACH Widely considered the city's top issue, John Wayne Air- port did not play a large role in the campaigns of the com- peting growth-control mea- sures appearing on today's ballot. However, supporters of each measure are divided on how Measures S and T would affect the city's attempts to halt expansion of the airport. SEAN ..UR f DAILY Pl.OT Planes at John Wayne Airport wait for 7 a.m. to roll aroun"* allowing them to take to the sides above Newport Beach and Costa Mesa. ' T be old Newport Bed. City Hall orlglna1ly WU a two-room schoolhouse. ~converted to a dty hall, one room housed the dty clerk and the city treasurer. 1be Other room, one mght a month, wu . the meetilig place for the City Coundl. It wu a multipurpose room the rest of the time. It wu, among other thing&, my courtroom when I wu the dty judge of Newport BHch. Over to my right when I was on my so-called bench was a machine, a very noisy machin~. which was putting out water bills. Again, the lady operating that noisy machine ignored me. So in my so-called court.room, you could get a driver's license, pay your water bill, complain about your assessment and get a drink of '• whiskey from Frank Rinehart. And ii you wanted to wait around for a couple hours, one night a month you could attend a City Council meeting. A clause in Measure T, which would add parts of the city's traffic phasing ordi- nance to the City Charter, proposes to exempt the so- called airport area from. the changes to the ordinance. "To ensure that this Sec- tion does not impact the ability of the City of New- port Beach to prevent fur- ther expansion of John Wayne Airport or to prevent an increase in commercial jet operations at [the ai.r- port)," the airport area - bounded by Jamboree Road, Bristol Street and Campus Drive -would not be affected by the initiative, the measure reads. Measure T supporters said the exemption would give City Council members a better chance to fight expan- sion of the airport. A 20-year settlement agreement, which limits hours of operation as well as the number of flights at John Wayne, expires in 2005. •Any city council .. . will have their bands full to con- trol the growth of John Wayne Airport," said Clarence Turner, co-chair- man of the Measure T cam- paign. "I would not want to see that area encumbered by anything else." n.trner added that exempting the airport area from the changes would-give council members greater flexibility to work with neighboring cities toward stifling the airport's growth. "If we did not have that exemption in there ... then in order to change anything around the airport, we would have to have a vote of the people-: said Turner. "We'd "Over SO YtRrs of Fine QuRlity" All Types of Window Treatments • Valance1 &: Cornice Boxea • Roman Shades • Blinds • Verticals • Shutters • Bedspmids 2 0 O/o~th Fabric&: labor 0 FF wim chis~ w Nowmber w. 2000 ~~~ DESIGN CENTER Factory & Showroom 1998 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa (949)642-8400 . Celestino's-.- quality MEATS ,. The Finesl Meal and Service Auailable SnW#f <Miii MGI for nw 30 ]Un Celestino'• Old-Fasldooed MEATLOAF MIX 5t1' Grond Strtohl 251' Groucl Veal 251' G"*9cl Peril You Acid Your $ Own Spica Boneless CHUCK POT ROASI' Lan,nnderlJulcy $ ~ Apple Clnnamoo S1\Jn'ID PORK CHOPS Boneless STEW BEEF CELES11NO'S SAUSAGE OFTHE WEIJC: be right back in the box that Measure S is trying to put us in: Measure S proposes to put before a citywide vote any development 'that allows an increase of more than 100 peak-hour car trips or dwelling units or 40,000 square feet over the general plan allowance. Supporters of that initia- tive said rather than helping the city control an airport expansion, Measure T's exemption would encour- age growth at John Wayne Airport. "The dai.m that Measure T will be a bar to the expan- sion of (the airport] is prepos- terous," said Measure S spokesman Phil Arst, adding that new office buildings would bring more traffic to the city. "More travelers mean more demand (for flights]." The •bench" was siJn- ply a desk on a slightly elevated plattonn. It over- looked the long table ar which the City Council met. However, during the . time when it wasn't being used by that group, it was the workplace for some people from the county auditor's office who spent their days poring over big books. They never looked up and seemed impervi- ous to the other activities ·going on. Take me, for instance. I was looking right down on them, but they never looked up: No matter what you're <bng, yoor hometown newspapet' RTS IN ... Daily fib 50% OFF TOPIARIES, FALL WREATHF.S AND CORNUCOPIAS 369 E. 17th Cosca Mesa (Across from Ralphs) (949) 646-6745 Mon-Fri 10-6, Sat 10-5, Sun 10-4 To my left was a repre- sentative from the Depart- ment of Motor Vehicles who was putting out dri- ver's licenses. Directly behind me on tl;le wall was the eye cha,t used by the man giving out dri- ver's licenses. Some odd things hap .. pened as a result of that eye chart. Drunks would come in and when I would ask their names, as often as not, they would stcµt reading letters off the Now, when young judges in the Orange County courthouse com- plain about their accom- modations, I just smile · and tell them about my original judicial accommo- dations. That usually stops the complaining. •Ml ±RI~-ls a Corona del Mar resident and a fonner judge. His ~olumn appears Tuesdays. r t A«g(J)tl', IT'S TIME FOR ... f/..4.t'eq~ i«~ Ml CASA MEXICAN RESTAURANT OUR MEALS ARE A TRIP TO MEXICO ALSO ON OUR MENU: ' .FISH TAcos· TORTlllASOU' CHIU SlZE ' CHILI CHHSE OMEUTit I'm not wor~led, - my agent Is Craig Brown Insurance CaJI today for auto & home owner's Insurance! WE TAkE DINING TO THE NEXT LEVEL! THE RIGHT CHOICE CHALLENGER #1 Connected lobbyist for large developers like The Irvine Company, with a reputation for trusting exposed embezzlers with public money and then recommending them for City Manager. A former City employee who still has FREE membership (no dues) to the Balboa Bay Club. WW he fight for you or against you? TOM THOMSON . CHALLENGER #2 Attorney/developer who now embraces a newly found radical environ- mental a1epda and wants to tell you what to do with your own property. A lll!Jcr who will say or do just about .anything just to get elected. RE-ELECT COUNCILMAN TOM THOMSON Tom reftects the will of the ~pie in deallna with important iaues like Increased growth of our dty, trafllc conpstloa, maintaining our quality of Ufe;, inlprovlns dty sa •kes, Md Prtlenlna our precious open spmce. Tom n.o-... belleYes ' In coaamon aense IOludons to 'IOm Is ........ by: NEWPORT B POUCE NEW.ORT 9,.-:JM'a.._ .. ... w" ........ 7 • t . . • 4 T~ N<Mwnber 7, 2000 . . . Daily Pilot Council ditches c11rrent ·plans for West Side ~After two years of study, revised plans to be used only as a technical resource. Jennlfw Kho DAILY PILOT COSTA MESA -The City Council decided Mon- day to draw up a completely new West Side Specific Plan and use the revised plan - the result of two years of study -only as a technical resource. • 1 think what we need to do is look at the long-term goals of Costa Mesa." said City Councilwoman Linda Dixon, who made the motion. •1 don't think we can piecemeal the West Side. I don't know where Costa Mesa is going as a city, and therefore I'm uncomfortable going any further with this plan.• Residents' applause met \}le motion and the 4-1 vote, With Mayor Gary Monahan dissenting. The council was sched- uled to consider a schedule for the public review process on the newly revised plan and listened to comments from a number of residents before deciding to scrap the plan. Measure S or T? The Airport Area Exception Is as big as 4 Fashion Islands. Measure T supporters-The Irvine Company, Bob Wynn, Marian Bergeson, Bill Ficker, Clarence Turner, Tom Edwards-haven't told you about a clause in Measure T called The Airport Area Exception. It's their secret. The Airport Area ExC4pptlon EXEMPTS the large area on the map from Newport'91'nlfftc Phasing Ordinance. Imagine the traffic. If "T" passes, this clause will allow developers to build about any size high-rise here-an area larger Tom Egan, a Costa Mesa resident, said the revised plan had the same fatal flaws as the original - including that lt is based on an outdated business plan for the city rather than the current general plan. Jose Cabanillas, a mem- ber of the West Side Improvement Assn., said the plan fails to address several key issues, such as pollution if commercial and residen- tial zones are developed close together. "There's a lot of good in the plan, but I think it's time to step back and think about some specific issues," be said. 4 FASHION 18&.ANDS RT INTO MeASUAE T'S AIRPORT AREA EXCEPTION than four Fashion Islands-and this area will be EXEMPT from the traffic improvement requirements (the TPO) in place for the rest of Newport. No General Plan amendments needed. I hope you're as shocked as I am. The Airport Exception creates a "duty free" high-rise zone for The lrvlne Co. & developers, a big reason why they spent *405,000 for your vote. My letter to the Pilot, which they didn't print, darn it. Daily Pilot Leners, Oc1. 29, 2000 ~· Hunt's Irvine Company-promised low-ris- Regarding Measures S & T editorials: mg cake. I dreamed you were going 10 actually say how I dreamed you'd print copies of Irvine Com- much growth in houses, business and traffic pany deed restrictions placed on their Newpon Newport/Mesa should flave, and you'd say, ''If Beach propcn:ies sccunng this promise. we have 10% growth every year, in 10 years I didn't for a minute think Mr. Hunt and The we 'II have twice as many houses, condos, of-Irvine Company promised in bad faith. I did no- fi ce high rises and twice as much traffic. We tice Mr. Hunt didn 't say how high high is. I could become Manhattan West." dreamed you'd ask him, and mention that if I dreamed you'd endorse Measures because Meas.ure T does pass, the Irvine Company you see the same traffic I do, and after all, Gary ~ould build high rises (any stories) withou1 ask- Hunt and The Irvine tnB for amendments, beCausc of Measure T's Company promised in Airport Area Exception. your paper not to EVER It was onJy a dream. As I awakened, into my AGAIN request amend-head came a glorious chorus of high-rise-step- ments for high-rises in ping babes and dudes in vibrant Conexant t-Newpon. shirts dancing down MacArthur Boulevard, Wouldn't other devel-arms linked and singing ... "I'U take Manhattan, the Bronx and Staten Island, too." ns opcrs do the same? No measures. Measure S · would just be icing on1 Disclosure: Costa Mesa & Newport amendments, no ballo1 -Mark Davidson, Costa Mesa T '""' share traffic problems. I did design & For now & the future. ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ I Back !38Y & stopped the PCH fwy ... The~ logo desigl & terry photo work (& lots more) was by Jim Dow (logo used here 'Mth his pemll6Slon) ... Many thanks to the Pilot's ad sta1f-salespeople, lay- out. receptionists and supeMsors-tor theifcxutesy VoteYESonS and ~ good h\.mor dumg this long campaV'I. There is only one ~r ti> tb.rce boad members whose terms are expiripg rhis yea. That chall~ is ILA.JOHNSON The incumbent has been in office Ai.nc ~ It ia dlDC ID ' bring new vision and a fresh paspeaiw ID me NEWPORT-MESA SCHOOL BOARD. 'I'be time for ch••• u NOW. THE ISSUES THAT MATTER • HitJittAwh=k Stndr+ • Suppom "Back to Basics" • Full Implementation of Phonics • Proven Mathematics Instructional Programs • Renewed Focus on English Immersion • ~Arts and Music Programs .. Bill Turplt, a Latino Bu.al:. ness Council board member, said he was surprised by the ded.sion. •As long as it doesn't drop, as long as tbe council insists that staff proceed with the dty vision, sticks with a time frame and moves forward, I think it's not bad,• he said. •But I'm concerned that [the decision) allows some opportunity to just let the West Side sit without' response to the businesses' and residents' requests for improvement.• Cindy Brenneman, a Cos- ta Mesa resident, said she agrees with the council's decision. •we need to look at the entire dty and bow the plan works with the entire city,• she said. ·u the council doesn't have a clear vision of where we're going to be in two years how can they vote pn somethlng for just one lit- tle pocket of the city?" In other news, the council voted to annex the Santa Ana Country Club and tw~ other unincorporated county islands. The islands include a piece of land between the club and Bristol Street and another parcel at the comer of Bristol Street and Santa Ana Avenue. The city has been attempting to negotiate an agreement to annex the country club, at 20382 New- port Blvd., since March 1997. According to the report, the club has remained •adamantly opposed to becoming part of Costa Mesa," but no one spoke against the annexation or submitted a letter of protest at the meeting. The city will receive 60% of the property tax share revenues for Bristol Street if the Local Agency Formation Commission approves the annexation. If other areas are annexed, that tax share will increase to 70%. · Suspected drunk driver drives car into ravine A · Newport Beach man who drove into a ravine west of 17th Street in Costa Mesa on Sunday evening was not hurt but arrested on suspicion of drunken driving, police said Monday. Robert Haw~ 49, who is accused of evading police, drove into ij\e oil fields at the western end of 17th Street, plunging about 20 feet into a ravine. Patrol officers followed Hawkins after receiving an anonymous tip that be was possibly an out-of-control drunk driver, authorities said. He Jed police on a brief chase before steering bis car off the road. Hawkins was taken to Hoag Hospital for examina- tion. but was uninjured. police said. He is awaiting arraignment and is being held in Orange County Jail with bail set at $10,000. -Deepa Bharath Measure S campaign donations exceed $90,000 A Newport Beach-based environmental group bas spent $14,014 in support of Measure S, according to a late expenditure report filed with the city Saturday. Measure S supporters have raised $90,395, just over one- fifth the amount raised }?y their opponents. The second- largest contribution came from Stop the Dunes Hotel, a group opposing the proposed hotel and convention center at the Newport Dunes Resort. The group gave $10,271 in. postage, printing costs and fli- er designs. · As of Monday, Measure S supporters had spent $65,163. Measure S proposes to put before a citywide vote any development that allows an increase of more than 100 peak-hour car trips or dwelling · units or 40,000 square feet over the city's general plan allowance. Measure T supporters have collected $405,061, with $147,000 coming from the Irvine Co. Other contributions came from the California Assn. of Realtors, which gave $52,000, and the Building Industry of Southern Califor- nia, which gave $24,500. Measure T would add parts of the city's traffic phas- ing ordinance to the City Charter and nullify Measure S, should voters approve both measures. -MMhis Winkler Better Schools-lower Crime-Higher Properly Volt1P<, * Stronger Code Enforcement · Crime Control • Public Safety * Cleon up the West Side. Our Seniors and Children must be Safe. * Eliminate Council's "Magnet" policies that hove overcrowded our schools, ~rks and rentals witn non-citizens and transients. * Affnrclcihlr· Horne owner .-,h1 for 0ur St>n 1, H, * Require U.S. Citizenship to receive city permitted services. * Councilmanic districis.-like ~ewport Beach -so you will have a'n accountable nearby Council member. *Stop John Wayne Expansion. Support Alternative Airport * Who is Chris Steel? 7/11· ( ''11'c/c ,,., ,, ) · l1/I'(/ { ., wl1ul" /It/''' flit-,\.. JI '(I', I I r ' l ,~ \'..;..it ' r'' :,. ' l r' l COSTA ~ESA HOME RESIDENl ~8 yea{S Orange Avenue Small S ma.n. -Investments. P1tts0urgh PA nati~ ' . Ohio. ,esw: Consultant -Nebraska College oun ng Service • Costa Mesa · COMMUNITY INVOLVEMENT: Member Catholic Chu osta ~soJgycee ofththe Yeqr, 1976. Eataf)Cio.Hiah · · fund · ra1~City You Coqc;h · Pomona School Treaau,.., 'f4 Em ~t Service (Y_.E.S.). ~CA Cqmj, Goun..br riMNimftl't Meaa 191YCommittet.-c nberoteom •. • CommittM ~Harbor !'99 ~~ Mela Grange. Chan. Member -Costa ~ Republican . ELECT~1~o~g;:.n_'Q~=~i=trol Committee f76, '82) PrinciP,le BEFORE P.arty • Personality • Program .. t some ''S'l.EEI!' in th • I I I r I I Mea_sure S Supporters OPPOSED Hoag Masterplan for New Women's Center, Cancer Center, Cardiac Tr~atment and Improved Care for Premature Infants H_oag Hospital sits squarely in the bull's-eye of Measure S. Hoag proposed a Masterplan for a new Women's Center, state-of-the-art cancer and cardiac treatment facilities and expanded care for prematurely born infants. The sup_poriers ofMea&ure S irizorously (~ht tq delay or It.QR this Master Plan. Here's just one sentence from an eighteen-page letter they sent attacking Hoag's Master Plan: 'above all, no development should be granted for so vague a proposition." -Letter from Measure S Supporters Now Measure S SUllJ!orterS have a new tactic to stqp Ho116's 6aureplans. It is called Measure S. Measure S would delay any new medical treatment facilities at Hoag Hospital beyond the current plans for up to two years. It would subject these proposals to an expensive and divisive citywide vote. Hoag Hospital has a Masterplan to expand its Womens Center and provide improved cancer and cardiac care to the community. The support- ers of Measure S OPPOSED this plan. Is this a good idea? We don't think so. While Hoag has not taken a formal position on Measure S, here's what Hoag said about Measure Sin a recent letter: Hoa& Memorial Hmpital Presb.yteriao Letter. October 6. 2000 "Future building projects, of course are more prob- lematic ... mqreover, the Measure S requirement for a city-wide election would most probably be triggered, adding expense and time (albeit broader voter input) to the process already in place." Citywide Elections Over MINOR Renovations and Improvements . Is it a &ood idea to reQuire citywide elections over proposals to improve hospitals. build museums. expand churches and private schools or renovate restaurants and homes? We don't think so Measure S requires ALL of the above -and lots more. Under Measure S we could have had up to 55 citywide elections over mostly "MINOR" amendments to the general plan over the past ten years. These elections would have cost taxpayers millions. Measure S is a flawed proposal that will force dozens of expensive and 'divisive political campaigns in Newport Beach over "MINOR" neighborhood improvements and renovations. The real "targets" of Measure S are churches, private schools, museums, restaurants and hospitals ~ the pillars of our community. , Measure S OPPOSED by Community Leaders Measure S is opposed by a broad coalitiod' of community leaders who care about Newport's future. Police and fire officials oppose Measure S because it divertS funds needed for public safety. The Chamber of Commerce opposes Measure S because it requires citywide elections for small renovations to existing businesses. Former Mayors Heather, Dehay, Marshall and Edwards oppoee it because it abaodOns Repramtative Government in ~ Beach. Senior citizen advocateS such as Walt Howald, long-dine .chool board member Jtni DeBoOm and chairman for Citizeril for· a Better Newport Bill Fidcer strcJGl1y oppose Measure S. Please, join U1 in 'fodng NO on MeMUtt S. lt'1 a 88wed propoial that taqets the wroq ....... Hoag wants to double · its care facilities for prematurely born infants. The group behind Measure S OPPOSED these plans and now Measure S would delay future plans like these for years. .. ' 6 Tueiday, NcMmber 7, 2000 • P.O~ Box 53561, Irvine. 92619. (714) 633-6550. Wlb lltr. www.greens.CJIPI. r.alifomialo@ngttl • UIERTARIAN M«TY Of OltANGE CouH1Y P.O. Bo~ 27871, Santa Ana, 92799. (714) 54().5053. Web lltr. www.lpoc.org • REPUIUCAN PARTY Of ORANGE COUNTY 245 risdler Ave .• Costa Mesa. 92626. (714) 556-8555. Web lltle: www.ocgop.org COSTA MESA CONTINUED FROM 1 The crowded City Coun- cil field includes Ronald J. Channell. Michael D. Clif- ford, Libby Cowan, Joel Paris, William Perkins, Karen L. Robinson, Rick Rodgers, Heather K. Somers, Chris Steel, Thomas L. Sutro and Dan Worthington. Voters olso will have to decide on Measure 0, which would raise ,the city's hotel tax from 6% to 8%. The extra funds would be used for the purchase and devel- opment of new parks. A two- thirds majority is needed for approval. The Orange County Reg- istrar of Voters has not esti- mated the expected voter ' NEWPORT CONTINUED FROM 1 Irvine. ~But that's not what's happening: • While California Secre- tary of State Bill Jon.es has pre~cted the state's highest turnout 1D Orange County, wt lfidbe19 qid •be apects the tight presiden- tial race to •energize the Democratic and Republican bases• and bring in more YOten than UJual. •The City Council races will have little to do with voter turnout,• 1he said. •More people will be voting in this election than in most because of the close presi- dential election, and so there will be more people voting for the· City Council.• Tom Puentes, chairman of the Republican Party of. Orange .county, and Jeanne Costales, chairwoman of the Democratic Party of Orange C~ty. each said their par- ties have .been invigorated by the presidential race. Fuentes said the GOP has the •most motivated and voter turnout in two decades, with more than 75% of California's regis- tered voters going to the polls, Petracca said nation- wide numbers probably would only surpass the 1996 elections by a few points. Tumout then was less than 50%, Petracca said. energized volunteer rank• we bave seen slnce RoDald Reegan, • with more than 7 ,500 volunteers signed up for this voting cycle. The current election is especially important because it could mark a •major watershed abift• in American foreign and· domestic policy, Fuentes said. • 1 think we will see a very · strong voter turnout here," he said. "The troops are motivated and· the people are energized, Orange County has long been a philosophically grounded, conservative community and George W. Bush's value- centered message bas res- onated strongly with this county.• Costales said the' county bas seen a surge in Democ- Newport Beach's two growth-control measures on today's ballot -Measures S and T -each have a good chance of passing, Petracca said. "I'd be willing that more people are probably sup- portive of slowing .down growth," he said. Daily Pilot retie ~tion, with more tban -'25,000 r~red Oemocrata. Orange County has more registered Republicans than Democrat.I -about 1.5 tot -but the county is not as strongly Republican u it once wu, sbe aald. •Orange County la the third-largest Democratic block in the state and we need to vote to inake sure George W. Bush c;toesn't get Callf ornla, • she said, adding that Orange County Democ- rats could play a huge role in . state and national elections, even if they lose the county vote. "This race involves all of the Democratic Party's bread-and-butter issues - Social Security, Medicare, education, and leveling the playing field." Measure S proposes to put before a citywide vote any development that allows an increase of more than 100 peak-hour car trips or dwelling units or 40,000 square feet over the general plan allowance. . Meuure T would add parts of the city's traffic phasing ordinance to the City Charter and nullify Measure. S, should voters approve both measures. Initiatives Uiat propose to shift decision-making power from elected officials to the people have generally suc- ceeded in the past, Petracca said. "All we have to do is look at what happened with Measure F, • he said of the anti-El Toro airport initiative passed last March. •No one expected that to pass.· It's very hard to get two-thirds of the people to pass some- thing. ·ordinarily, California voters have preferred citi- zen empowerment over empowerment of legisla- tors,• Petracca said. •But I'm not so convinced that that's the issue that's come across." He added that passage of Measure S should alert council members. •Even if (SJ passes and doesn't get as many votes as T, it says, 'We.don't trust the City Council,'• Petracca said. "In a different world, (council members) might consider falling on their swords. They might consid- er stepping down from office: Others in the city said'tbe outcome would likely depend on the senior vote. ·we're the biggest voting block in the city,• said H. Ross Miller, 81, who sits on the board of The Friends of Oasis and has lived in New- port Beach for 30 years. With most of the city's 20,000 seniors registered to vote, Miller said the group represents a large chunk of Newport Beach's 50,377 registered voters. While Miller bas encoun- tered some seniors who oppose Measure S, a major- ity favored the initiative, be said. •The No. 1 concern seems to be traffic; he said, adding that more develop- ment and a distrust in elect-r ed offidals also ranked high on the Usl Apart from the two mea- sures, voters will also deter- mine who assumes three seats on the City Council. In District 2, computer sales consultant Dennis Lahey, 5&, bUJinessman and lawyer Gary L. Proctor, 55 as well u real estate broker Steven Rotansky, 40, are competing for the seat vacated by Councilwoman Jan Debay. •In Diltrtct 5, retired retail manager Patricia M. Beek, 52, mediator Ste¥8 Bromberg, 56, and retiied engineer Robert Schoon· meker, ... all bope to replace Marc-.~ JOlaD 1 . "°"' .... __ .. 'I' Ill Dllllld 7, Ilic' Pint CCNftdeMt ...... ... ....._,,_,.. ... II trying to ... .... agalUt dM11mi1n =~.~~",;=·~~:2=1: ....... I.. -----·~ ' ' . . . . . . . . . , . -. Daily Pilot \ "The wording of the measure is too complex. It leav.es open the possibility that not just major developments will face voter approval, but even something as routine a~ the creation of a four unit, two family residential building." -Editorial, October 26, 2000 T H ''A small businessman or.homeowner who wants to expand a property in one of the built-out zones might have to submit the plan to a citywide election - and fund a potentially costly campaign to appeal to the city's voters." -Editorial, October 24, 2000 llo.a Angeles 6rimes "One of the problems in putting complex land use problems on the ballot is that too often the decision is based mainly on raw emotion, not sound planning principles. A NO vdte on Measure S would be in the best interest of Newport Beach ... " · -October 29th, 2000 Editorial These community lea4ers als9 urge you to vote NO ~n S .. ."· · Former Mayors Heather, Dehay, Marshall and Edwards oppose it because it abandons Representative.GOvemment in Newport Beach. Senior 9tiZen advocates such as Walt Howald, long-tillle school board member, Jim DeBoom, and chairman for Citizens for a Better Newport, Bill Ficker,.sttongly oppose Measure S. ' \ ' I 8 Tuesday, November 7, 2000 • Send MOUND TOWN items to the Daily Piiot. 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627; by fax to (949) 646-4170; or by calllr\g (949) 574-4268. lndude ~· tlrM, date and location of the event. as well as a contact phone number. A cQmplete list ing Is available at http:Jlwww.dallypllotcom. TODAY The Newport-Mesa Unlfled School . District will present The Parent Project, a parent- ing skills series for the par- ents of non-compliant or destructive adolescents, from 7 to 9 p.m Tuesday evenings through Dec:. 12 at the District Education Center. Building C, 2985 Bear St., Costa Mesa. The free six-week session will be facilitated by Lynne Bloomberg and Bill Seery. Leave a voice mail message to register. (714) 424 -7560. WEDNESDAY Fairview Developmental Center will host its ninth annual Ho Ho Ho-liday Bou- tique from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the Fairview auditorium, 2501 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. More than 40 crafters will sell their homemade crafts, gifts and holiday items. All proceeds will be used to support special programs at Fairview. (714) 957-5188. Mother's Market and Kitchen will present a free seminar on amino acids and their influ- ence on memory and depres- sion at 6:30 p.m. in the Patio Cafe. 225 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. (949) 631-4741. The Orange County Sierra Singles' Newcomers meeting will be held at 7 p.m. at the Costa Mesa Neighborhood Community Center. 1845 Park Ave., Costa Mesa. Free. (714) 427-0457. Cmdr. Louis Nockold wlll be the guest speaker at the Cos- ta Mesa Histoncal Society's meeting at 7 p.m. at 1870 Anaheim St. Nockold served in World War II. in the Asian Pacific, Korea dnd Vietnam. (949) 646-1274. The first mee ting of a new book dub offered by the Newport Beach Public IUTllT Fashion designer Peggy Sagers wtll teach four workshops at Orange Coast College's 30th annual Fall Needle Arts Fair, which will be held from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Friday and 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Nov. 11 on campus, 2701 Falrview Road, Costa Mesa. About 120 workshops and seminars focusing on fashion design, sewing, quilting, needle arts and image consulting wtll be offered. (714) 432-5880, Ext. 1. Libraries will be held at 7 p.m. at the Mariners Branch Library, 2005 Dover Drive, Newport Beach. The group will discuss Sid Fleischman's •Bandit's Moon.• Children in the fourth through sixth grades, and their parents are welcome. (949) 717-3801. THURSDAY The Volunteer Assn. of the Sherman library & Gardens in Corona del Mar will hold a Home for the Holidays gift shop from 10:30 am. to 4 p.m. at 2647 E. Coast Highway, Coro- na del Mar. (949) 673-2261. The 11th annual Holiday Boutique will be held from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. at the Bahia Corinthian Yacbt Club, 1601 Bayside Drive, Corona del Mar. Sponsored by Las Com- modoras, the women's auxil- iary of the Yacht Club, the boutique will offer holiday gifts and lunch on the bay. (949) 644-95JO. Steve Plochodd, chJef execu- bve of Insight Health Services Corp., will present M Acquisi- tions are Hard --lntegration is Harder" at the meeting of the Orange County chapte~ of the Assn. of Corporate Growth at 5 p.m. at the Sut- ton Place Hotel, 4500 MacArthur Blvd., Newport Beach. $40, or free for mem- bers. The charge can be Santa Monica Seafood, 15' E. applied to membership. (949) 17th St., Costa Mesa. (888) 862-9644. 762-3663. ChllclUme wl11 bold a parent- ing class presented by Beth Bolsinger from S to 7 p.m. at 1691 San Miguel, Newport Beach. Free. (949) 640-8820. Tbe Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce's annual business expo, Con- nections 2000, will be held from S to 8 p.m. at the New- port Dunes Waterfront Resort's Special Event Tent, .1131 Back Bay Drive, New- port Beach. Presented by the Daily Pilot, the event will fea- ture more than 90 booths, with about 700 visitors expected. (949) 729-4400. Mothers Market and Kitchen will present a cooking class focusing on holiday meals at 6:30 p.m. in the Patio Cafe, 225 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. $10. (949) 631-4741. Pulitzer prtzewtnn.tng biogra- pher A. Scott Berg will offer a public lecture titled "Und- bergh: The Man and the Myth• at 7 p.m. at Orange -Coast College's Robert B. Moore Theatre, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Free. (714) 432-5725. "Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain,• a free program at the Newport Beach Central Library's Friends Meeting Room, will be held at 7 p.m. at 1000 Avocado Ave., New- port Beach. (949) 717-3801. FRIDAY Orange Coast College will hold its 30th annual Fail Nee- dle Arts Fair from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. today and 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday on campus. 2701 Fairview Road. About 120 workshops and seminars focusing on fashion design, sewing, quilting, needle arts and image consulting will be offered. (714) 432-5880. Ext. 1. Evie Hansen, who stresses that Americans should eat seafood at least twice a week. will conduct cooking classes and autograph copies of her book at noon and 5 p.m. at A travel documentary that tells •Mystery Tales of EW'Ope" will be screened at 7 p.m. at Orange Coast Col- lege's Robert B. Moore The- atre 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. $9, or $7 in advance. Seniors are eligible for a $1 discount. (714) 432- 5880. Steve Butler, founder of Utah- based Superior Threads Inc., will present a 60-minute workshop on specialty deco- rative threads at Orange Coast College's 30th annual Needle Arts Festival and Fall Fair at 2 p.m . today and Sat- urday. OCC is at 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. (714) 432-5880. SATURDAY The Naturalists and Friends of Newport Bay will give their first tour of the season of the Upper Newport Bay Ecologi- cal Reserve starting at 9 a.m., with a tour group leaving every 15 minutes from the comer of East Bluff Drive and Back Bay Road. This begins the 32nd season of the monthly free tours. (949) 786- 8878. "Varnishing Made Easy,.. a four-hour workshop offered· by Orange Coast College's School of Sailing and Sea- manship, will be held from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at 1801 W. Coast Highway, Newport Beach. · $25 per person, $40 per couple. The session will focus on such areas as teak restoration, and oiling versus vamishmg. (949) 645-9412. Hair West Salon & Boutique will hold an open house from 3 to 6 p.m., featuring a live band and catering by Promelis Market, at 2817 W- la Way, Newport Beach. (949) 673-4186. The C.S. Lewis Foundation of Redlands will present a Fac- ulty Forum Dinner at 5 p.m. at the Costa Mesa Hilton Hotel, 3050 ~ .... Bristol St., Costa Mesa. The theme of the evening is "The Christian Doily Pilot Scholar in the World of Ideas.• $35 per penon. or $60 per couple before Tuesday. Prices after Tuesday will be $40 per person, $65 per cou- ple. Graduate student prices are $30 per person, $45 per ) couple. Reservations a.re required. (909) 793-0949. Comedy at the JCitcben. a prime rib dinner and perlor- mance by stand-up comedian Jeff Jenna, will be held at 5 and 8 p.m . at the Someone Cares soup Kitchen, 720 w. 19th St., Costa Mesa. $65, or $50 in advance. (949) 548- 8861. 110¥. 12 Salon Gregortes will hold a cut-a-thon to fight Lou Gehrig's Disease from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m . at 2000 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach. The salon requests a $35 donation for a wash, cut and style service that usually starts at $55 or more. (949) 644-6671. A seminar on fakes and forg- eries designed to ann con- swriers from fraudulent sales practices will be held at 11 :30 a.m. at Glabman Furniture & Interior Design. 3089 Bristol St., Costa Mesa. (800) 298- 9055. NOV. 13 friends of the Orange Coast Interfaith Shelter will hold its ninth annual • FOCIS on DlNING" gourmet dinner series starting today and run- ning through April 9, 2001 The first dinner will be held at 6:30 p .m. at Gustav Anders, 3851 S. Bear St .. Cos- ta Mesa. An underwriter sub- scription including dining at the restaurants in the series IS $700 per person. Individual dining events are $100 per person. (949) 645-5055. "The View," A Jewish Feder- ation Women's Division Edu- cation and Outreach program based on the format of the popular morning te levision program, will be held from 9:30 to 11 :30 a.m. at the Jew- ish Federation campus, 250 E. Baker St., Costa Mesa. Free. (714) 755-5555, Ext. 222. .. A PROVEN LEADER Re-Elect Martha Fluor Newport-Mesa Unified School District Trustee Area 3 f I . ... •. ~ n-• OilolP Ellms • Yoc:Ai • s-nt CLA91S • ""-• T- • T Al 0t • STIAM ~ • MAS'SACI • WOl)l(J' WAltHlll • 1'11.An:s • EXrorr P11ao1w.. S11Ur • Mtm::AW' ~ IWc:llM.s . ~ HIMni cu.. OtU> c.r.. WESTCLIFF PLAZA . Irvine Ave & 17th St. Newport Beach ~L ~~.1. CORONA DEL MAR -'S4Jt~ ffe 2101 E. PICiflc Colll Hwy, FITNESS CENTER PCH & Avocado Ave ... .com 949 7a.9335 'Welcome to One Me&..J ~ M2~~~ E "You.r Southern Galifomia Mobility Specialisu" • Reprcienting the full line of Pride Mobility Producu • Service 8c Repair • Imunnce Reimbunemmt Doily Pilot AROUNDToWN . . ... Tuesday, November 7, 2000 9 David Gabbe, author of two • Mother'1 Market and Kitchen books on vegetarian nutrition will present a tree seminar on and .cooking, .will !each a reversing disease with aloe cooking. class ti,!led Adven-vera at 6:30 p.m. in the Patio tures Wlth Tofu from 6 to 9 Cafe, 225 E. 17th St., Costa p.m . a t the Costa Mesa Mesa. 1949) 6;31-4741 . Neighborhood Community Center, 1845 Park Ave. $30, plus a $10 materials fee. (714) 327-7525. llOV. 14 The Costa Mesa Senior Cen- ter will host a Health Expo from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Costa Mesa Senior Center, 695 W. 19th St. Participants can receive service including pneumonia shots, health screenings and speak with ,• HMO representatives. Gen- eral participation is free and donations are welcome. (949) 645-2456. The 2000 Gingerbread W - lage to benefit Toys for Tots will be unveiled at 5:30 p.m. at the Four Seasons Hotel, 690 Newport Center Drive. Visitors are welcome to bring a new, unwrapped toy in support of Toys for Tots. (949) 760-4951. MITCHELL CONTINUED FROM 1 -He was obviously able to live in our property because of his wife,• she said. New- port Senior Village, an affordable housing complex, accommodates only those 62 years and older, and their families. Lucie added that her com- pany did not threaten to evict Mitchell. •According to state law, we can't evict someone with- out proper cause,· she said. -we can't throw them out because of a prior criminal· record. They could take us to court for that: The North Face retail store will present a slide show and lecture w\th Aaron Barnes of Peruvian Adven- tures as he shares informa- tion about the Andes Moun- tains of South America, includlng summit ascents and following the loci\ Trail. The event will take place at 7:30 p.m. at 1870-A Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. Free. (949) 646-0909. NOV. 15 "Uvtng Wreaths," a work- shop where participants can create a custom cactus and holiday wreath, will be held at 9:30 a.m. at Sherman Library & Gardens, 2647 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. Registration is $95. All materials are supplied. (949) 673-2261. FYI To receive information through Megan's Law, call (714) 754-5039 to make an appointment with a Costa Mesa police officer. On Tuesdays and Thursdays the department allows citizens to view sex offender information. Searches can be made by zip codes or by last names. The data is stored on a disk that is updat· ed every month by the Califor· nia Department of Justice. time offenders whose offense may or may not involve vio- lence; and others, who may have been arrested for pos- A semlnar OD ftnandal plan· ning for surviving spouses will be held at 6 p .m. at PaineWebber, 888 San Clemente Drive, Suite 300, Newport Beach. Free. (949) 717-3915. Mother'• Market and Kitchen will present a tree seminar on breathing techniques for healing and stress relief at 6:30 p .m. in the Patio Cafe, 225 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. (949) 631-4741. llOV. 16 The Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce will bold a 90- minule Breakfast Boost from 7:15 to 8:45 a .m. at the Costa Mesa Country Club, 1701 Golf Course Drive, Costa Mesa. $17, or $12 in advance. (714) 885-9090. The Luncheon Program of the Orange County Chapter of Round Table West will be held at noon at the Balboa Bay Club, 1221 W.' Coast Highway, Newport Beach. session of pornography or indecent exposure. Police can distribute inf or· mation about high-risk offenders to any citizen, but information about senous offenders can be released only to those in the imrnedi· ate area, Smith said. Information about those falling under the "other" cat- egory 1s not available to the public, he said. About 160 registered sex offenders live in Costa Mesa. Hall of them are serious offenders, authorities said. ~ Mitchell is not the first high-risk sex offender to draw protests from Costa Mesa residents. 1\vo years ago, Chris Decker, who was convicted or rape in 1977, was given an eviction notice by his landlord afte r police circulated fliers to residents in his building. Mattress Outlet Stor Decker filed a lawsuit against the property owner, demanding $1 million in damages. But a Superior Court judge upheld the evic- tion. Costa Mesa Police Lt. Ron Smith said Megan's Law sep· arates sex offenders into three categories: high-risk, who are repeat offenders involved in violent crimes; serious, who may be one- BRAND NEW · COSMET1CAL.LY IMPERFECT Get the Best tor Less! ~; m._ ..... CJ • • . .- 3 165 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa One ISlodl South of -08 rwy (714) 545-7168 The Irvine Company and Measure T have spent over '405,000 fighting Measure S. They've spent more thousands to support candidates who~ Measure S. Their ...,. for 1.mllmlted development and lnci'UMCI tr•tnc C0141atlon wlll be fUlftlled if they can defeat Measure S. We need Measure S to give voters an equal playing field with the developers and their campaign money and lobbyists. We need ............ who .,. Independent of the big developers' bUcks and free of the inOuence of highly paid consuJtan~ using devious Ind initleadina uictics. Pt•••• Join .. In "°"'91 for PM Beek, John .....,,,_ MCI DeNlli • s.,.,. Eich of these candidateA support Measure S. f.ach of dlillle candklllel is in c:bqe of their own campeian and bas held ...._._..,die ~ ICMdmdl of ethics In die campaign. .,_, WW be ..,._!lent and fair in their votes. Featured guests will include author Maralys Wills and Orange County Sheriff Michael S. Carona, who co- wrote -save My Son: (323) 256-7977. NOV. 17 The Orange County chapter of the Single Gourmet, an international fine clining c?lub for singles, invites you to dine with them at 6:30 p.m . at the Antoine Dining Room, 4500 MacArthur Blvd., New- port Beach. $69. (949) 854· 6552. HOV. 18 ... Ne wcomers to cy6erspace are invited to "Tools & Tucks: Internet 101· at 10 a.m. in the Newport Beach Central Library's Friends Meeting Room, lOOOAvoc~oAve. Top- ics will include how to use search engines and book marked sites for effective Inter- net navigation. (949) 717-3801. Morgan Rogerio, creator of the Total Liff" Empowerment lee- Only one -Mitchell -was listed as a high·ri!>k offender. Smith sa id the police department •prefers to err on the side of giving out ture series, will gite a free seminar on health, wellness. stress management issues and nutrition at 3 p.m . at Bor· ders Books, Music & Cafe at South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa. (714) 432- 7854. AduJl Day Services of Orange County will p'resent its 20th anniversary black-tie cele- bration and fund-raiser at 6:30 p .m. at the Village Crean, 2300 Mesa Dnve, Newport Beach. $100. Pro- ceeds will beneht the day services group, which helps county families care for loved ones who have Alzheimer's disease or related disorders. (714) 593-1842. HOV. 19 Authors Curt Yoder, a 25-year veteran of the Costa Mesa Fire Department, and his wife, Karen. will discuss and sign their book •Heart Behind the Hero" at 2 p.m. at Borders Books, Music and Cafe at South Coast Pla'za, information than withhold· tng tl." "We passed out the fliers so people could use the information to protect them· 3333 Bear St .• C05la Mesa. (71 4) 556-1185 NOV. 21 Betty Porter wtll speak on -How to Make Money and Have Fun in the Import Busi- ness• at 1 p.m. at Borders Books, Music & Cate's meet- ing of the Millionaire's Club, 3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa. Porter, a wnter who worked at the Wlute House during the Kennedy and Johnson admin- istrations, has also worked· as a newspaper columnist and soaety writer in Wasblngton, D.C., and Orange County. (714) 558-1165. NOV. 24 Nancy Cartwright, the voice of the animated 1V character Bart Sunpson, will sign her new book. "My Life as a 10· Year-Old Boy,· at 2 p.m. at Borders Books, Music & Cafe, 3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa. The book is a behind-th'e- scenes look at "The Simp- sons" dllunated TV show. (714) 556-1 185. selves dnd their children,• be said. "We felt it was best to put it out the re instead of keep 1t to ourselves till some- body became a victim.· LA JOLLA VILLAGE TOWERS ------A CLASSIC IESIOfNCf IY ------ ~ T • Senior lMag and Continuing Care with tM Hyatt Toudl. For La Jolla Village Towers residents Maige Burggraf, Kay Musick, Florence Leigh and Manha Moore, services delivered with the Hyatt Touch-mean more time ro tee off, bid for a birdie or hope for a holc-in~onc. After a round, make a splash in our heated indoor swimming pool, kick back with friends in our bridge room or savor ~ prepared by Hyatt-trained chefs. It's all at La Jolla Village Towers. Of course. One-Bedrool1as starting et $495,000 Hurry oriy a few epertments remeiliilgl C.dll f o r out r RLT rv1 ovc In G u rdc (858) 646 -774 5 ~~--------------· & .................. ---...-----• .. !! I ... ..a..· '3 o ... , ·-·· ....... ,. [JP I af me. ~=·' ... _,. .. , ..... oc..o..-... a 1~• ...... ....&Mil ..... .... ---· . . . ... . . . t • t ft t I t ' • I 0 Tuesday, Nowtnb« 7, 2000 I Meet the newsroom Tonyl>odlro Slc.hl1 ............ Rogerc.tlon Jelwilfwlt...._. AmhonyP9dl '-........ St9wMcO•ilr Editor City editor Aulstant dty editor Sports editor Features editor News Editor Lead designer Photo Editor • Oversees dally • Assigns and edits • Edits news stories • Edits daily sports • Edits and designs • Edits stories. • Designs pages • Handles photo news operations ·news stories, and and 54.lpervises section datebook and faith proofs pages and graphics aulgnments and and edits handles corrections reportets (949) 574-4223 sections and (949) 5744295 (949) 5744124 photographer community forum (949) 574-4233 (949) 764-4324 ,.r.carlsonO handles special anthoriy.p«kO }ose.santosO schedules page steven.cahnO jasmlne.IHO /at/mes.com f projects lat/mes.com /at/mes.com (949) 764-4358 (949) 574-4258 la times.com lat/mes.com (949) 574-4282 tcn.photoO tony.dcxktoO ) jenn~mahalO lat/mes.com lat/mes.com la ti mes.com Deeplllhwllth Jennlfw Kho Mlrthll Winka.r DMettle Goulet Alexc:oolmM Young0.. ~Flynn Don &.-ch. Reporter Reporter Reporter Reporter Reporter Reporter I news Executive assistant Oilef Photographer • Covers aime • Covers Costa • Covers Newport •Covers Newport-• Coven politics, assistant • handles •Oversees Dally and courts Mesa Issues Beach and NIA • Mesa schools environmental • Writes feature administrative Pilot photo staff (949) 574-4226 (949) 5744275 issues (949) 5744221 and harbor Issues stories and handles matters (949) 7644265 deepa.bharathO jerinlfer.khoO (949) 574-4232 clanette.gouletO (949) 764-4330 calendars (949) 574-4268 lat/mes.com latimes.com ma this. wlnklerO /at/mes.com alex.coolmanO (949) 574-4268 kerry.flynnO latlmes.com lat/mes.com young.changO latimes.com latirnes.com ltlchwdDunn ~Feullcner Tony Altobelli $tlewVlrgen ·ar.g.Fry . SunHlller. AmwaAgula. GIMAleundw Assistant Sports Assistant Sports Sports Writer Sports Writer Photographer Photographer Designer Designer Editor Editor (949) 574-4222 (949) 7644325 (949) 7644321 (949) 7644321 (949) 764-4292 (949) 7644294 (949) 574-4225 (949) 5744227 tony.altobelllO steve. vfrgenO amara.aguilarO gJ,,..aleunderO rlchard.dunnO barry. faulknerO lat/mes.com la ti mes.com la ti mes.com .. la times.com la times.com latlmes.com Over $1,000 in door 1rizes1 presents ................ 2 0 0 .0 It's time for THE Business Expo of N~wport Beach! The general public is invited to come out and meet with local businesses at Connections 2000, an event featuring businesses of all types and sizes. You could even walk away with any of hugdreds of prizes, simply for attending! No reservations are ,necessary. Th1rsd11, l1v1••r 9, 2111 5:11·1••• llWDlft 11•1 ... rlrl• R111n 1111 ll•ll&UJJf .... ' ~ llllllMf•••zMIJl ... 222 3 ......... 'zEhJW,_11..,aJ • • ' • • • • Daily Pilot ;;an •. ALS ISSl~t.. 011111 coum C•IPTI• The Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Assn., also known as Lou .. Gehrig disease, needs volunteers. For Infor- mation. call the chapter office at (714) 375-1922. ALZHllMll'S ASSN. 'Of OUIGI cou1n Support group leaden, Vis- iting Volunteers, t~y resource consultants and office volunteers are need- ed. Volunteers can work on one-time projects or ongo- ing programs. 'Itaining ses- sions are available. For more information, call (800) 660-1993. AMERICAN . CANCER SOCIEH The Ora.nge County Region of the American Casicer Society seeks office volunteers. The society is also seeking volunteers to answer calls for the unit's Helpline InfoCenter. For more i.nf ormation, call (949) 261r9446. AMERICAN CANCER soc11n DISCOVERY SHOP The American Cancer Society Discovery Shop needs volunteers from 10 a.m. to 5 p.ltl. Monday through Saturday at 2600 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. For more informa- tion, call (949) 640-4777. AMERICAN HEARi ASSN. The American Heart Assn. is looking for volunteers to perform various general office duties in the main office and implement edu- cational and fund-raising events through Orange County. No experience necessary, training will be provided. For more infor- mation, call (949) 856-3555. • I f you're still undecided • on voting today, let us remind you why you should. The future. First, there is the future leadership of the country at stake. The race for the presidency EDITORW between George W. Bush and Al Gore is the closest one in recent memory. It appears it will go down to the wire and, for once, be decided here on the West Coast. Then there is the future of Congress. Will the House of Representatives and the Senate continue to be controlled by the GOP? Or will they be tak- en over by the Democrats? The direct opposite applies to the future of the state Legislature, where Republicans would like to take over both the Assem- bly and state Senate. And there is the future of California's public schools to think about. Propo~ition 38 would allow $4,000 vouchers to be issued to parents for private school tuition, and Proposition 39 would low- Good to see local •writers published What a wonderful oppor- tunity for students to write in about their books. Bravo, · Newport Beach Public · Ubra.ry and young adult librarians! Thank you to the Daily Pilot for publishing students' comments. . As a teacher at Newport : Harbor High School, I was particularly gratified to see er the two-thirds majority requirement to pass school-related bonds. But the most important debates -those that will directly shape our future -will take place right here at home. Measure S, the so- called Greenligbt Initia- tive, could have dramatic effects on future develop- ment in Newport Beach. If it passes, every large - and maybe every small development -will be put before a vote of the people before it proceeds. It's a draconian albeit clever message, one so hot that it is being watched closely statewide by slow-growth and development forces alike. And if that hasn't grabbed your attention yet, don't forget that the future of local govern- ment hangs in the bal- ance today -specifically, how 'the city councils in Newport Beach and Cos- ta Mesa will shape up, as well as the Newport- Mesa school board and the Coast Community College District board of trustees. two of my favorite writers, Jennifer Pulford and Nick Sacco, published in the paper. AMY CAULAELD Newport Beach South Coast Plaza isn't an airport In response to a reader's critictsm of the new bridge that links both sides of South Coast Plaza, and the ' . ' How TO . . .. -GET Pml1'llED MWho would want thi8 guy around? The Dally Pilot wekomes letters on ._con- c.erning Newport Beach ~ Costa Mesa. Thefe are foul' ways to send in your comments: We sure don't. We want this to be a nice place to live. • • LITTEllS -Ma.ii to the Daffy Pilot. 310 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa 92627 -Norma M<Clary, a Costa Mesa resident who organl.zed a protest Sunday against registered sex offender Gra)'.ling Lang Mitchell, 41 . On Monday, Mitchell voluntarily moved out of the Newport Senior Village. where he lived with his 70-year-old wife. • llEADlllS HOTUNE -C..11 (949) 642~ • MX -Send to (949) 646-4170 • E-MAIL -Send to c»ilypllotelatimacom All correspondence must lndude your futt name, hometown and phone number (fOf' Yerifi. cation purposes only). Tuesday, Nowmber 7, 2000 JJ rt~Mesa: Get out and votel DON UACH I DAl.V Pf.OT Trent Zimmermann. 5, waits for hls mother, Usa, to fill out her ballot at Sl Joachim Church In Costa Mesa In March.. The point is, the com- munity needs your vote. Pardon the cliches, but for democracy to flourish, for our nation to prosper, we need the involvement of ·MAILBAG question why there aren't South Coast Plaza has not •people movers on the only added another dimen- bridge, like at airports,• sion to its "walking environ- that's precisely one of the ment, • but another piece of reasons we didn't elect to architectur~endor. put one in. NEA ESCHER Public opinion studies Costa Mesa revealed that too many associate motorized walk-EDITOR'S NOTE: Werner Escher ways with airports and a Is employed by South Coast Plaza. long walk. It takes a 1.5- minute walk on a short Architectural bridge to walk South Coast Plaz.a's new Bridge of Gar-vision lost locally dens. And, I might add, The recent announce- our citizens. The more we participate, the better our government will be. ment that Renzo Piano is the choice of architect for a New York Times sky- scraper reminds us of our lost chance to achieve national importance. It is remembered that Piano was the choice of the Newport Harbor Art Museum -now the Orange County Art Muse- um -for the ill-fated pro- ject never built at MacArthur Boulevard and Remember, nothing less than our future depends on it. Coast Highway. He is known, of coune, for many museums, includ- ing the Beyeler Museum in Basel, Switzerland, and the DeMenil Museum in Houston. He also did the huge, new Osaka airport in Japan. The building in New York will' be 45 stories and include a theater and museum. . LEON LYON Newport Beach THE AIRPORT DEBATE ERIC · HUTCHISON What if El Toro wasn't an option? I have a suggestion and a · ·challenge for all parties that may help resolve the Bl Toro debate once and for all. Let's imagine for a moment that the Marines never left Bl Toro. Let's say it is •till a fully operational Marine Corps air base and will continue to operate as such for the next 100 yean. The caps at John Wayne Airport, however, will sWl ' uplre In 2005. Given this scenario, what would the people of Newport Beach and Costa Mesa propose u an alternativef Another site in Orange Countyf A remote location, like March • Air Poree Buef Would they punue an extension of the capt at John Wayne Airport or clOM John Wayne and tell everyone to UM Ontariof What is the best alternative if El Toro is taken out the equatto.n? The issue of futwe air transportation affects all of us. Our county Board of Supervisors has deliberate- ly tried the •divide and conquer" strategy to keep the airport dties and South County from working together to seek a truly workable solution. Sadly, we hav~ all fallen for this rtise. Therefore, I challenge the bnt and brightest mind• in Newport Beach and South County to aplore the optklm avail- able to all of m U El Toro were ltW a Marine Corps baM. What would Newport Beach residents be dotng right DOW to protect their futuref ,. J2 Tue$day, N<Mtmber 7, 2000 • Spom Editor Roger Carlson • 949~744223 • Sports Fax: 949~170 A loss ·worth celebrating •There's no crying in field hockey, at least not for the TofC runner-up Sailors. W:atever their future may old, the girls wearing the pleated plaid of the Newport Harbor High field hockey team have already smiled in the face of sudden death. In an age when defeat often reduces grown men to sobbing zombies, a phenomenon magnified by the presence of television cameras seemingly capable of zooming into a fallen hero's smallest facial pore, the aforementioned Sailors displayed rare perspective after a 1-0 sudden-death overtime loss to Marina in Saturday's Tournament of Champions final. Stunned, crestfallen, disappointed, spent? You bet. But, as far as I could tell, the aftermath of the game's only goal, not quite three minutes into the extra session that followed two scoreless 30-minute halves, left only one Harbor player in tears. And even she was laughing in no time, as she posed with teemmates for postgame pictures to com- memorate the best team in school history. The Sailors ft.nished 19-4-1, including 17 shutouts, as w~ as the only Sunset League title anyone could recall. This is not to suggest they took def~t lightly. Anyone who witnessed this team compete, had to be impressed by its relentless hustle, determination, even dismissal of personal well-being in pursuit of victory. CIF SOUTHERN SECTION PLAYOFFS C oronadel MarHigh's Brittany Reitz and the Sea Kings are seeded No. l 1n the CIF Division IV girls tennls playoffs. Reitz and Sea View League singles champion Anne Yelsey form a solid 1-2 punch In singles for the Sea Kings, who also have Sea View League doubles champions Leslie Damtonud Brittany Holland. GREG AW I OAllY PILOT ' Senior defender Sarah Green somehow managed to survive a semifinal and final in which her body became a willing, though reckless, tool for the c(l.use. Though play was stopped twice as coaches and teemmates tended to her injuries, and she alternately applied an ice bag to her forehead and left knee during halftime, she spent precious little time on the sideline. But Green's was only the most dramatic display of devotion, as a seemingly endless stream of substitutions failed to diminish Harbor's intenSity. Yet, unlike so many of their peers, the termination of their title dream did not overwhelm their pride in a SEE PREPS PAGE 13 ' . la& Daily Pilot CdM is No. 1 seed in . CIF Division IV; Tars No. 3 in Division Ill • Peninsula no longer stands in the way of a championship march. the~~sin lo !~~ GIRLS TENNIS sons, the girls tennis teams from Corona del Mar and Newport Har- bor high schools face a CIF Southern Section playoff path without familiar roadblock Penin- sula. Under a new playoff format that Tequires schools to play exclusively against those with similar enrollment, CdM opens as the No. 1 seed in Division IV, while Newport Harbor is seeded No. 3 in Division lli. Peninsula, winner of eight Division I titles since opening in 1991 (CdM beat the Panthers in the finals in '97), ls the top seed in Division I. The Pacific Coast League champion Sea Kings (17-2) received the division's lone first- round bye and will open in the second round Saturday against either Ocean View or Pacifica. The Sailors (12-6), runners-up In the Sea View League, host Savanna in the first round, Thursday at 3:15 p.m. CdM is led by sophomore Anne Yelsey, a sophomore who defeated teammate Brittany . Reitz for PCL singles crown. The Sea Kings also boast PCL doubles champions Leslie Damion and Brittany Holland (22-0). Newport junior doubles partners Kelly Nel- son and Megan Hawkins were third at the Sea View League Finals. TOP . GUNS LOADED FOR BEAR Sea Kings, Tars enter ·cIF Playoffs with No. 1 labels. CERRITOS -For the first time in their illustrious water polo history, Back Bay boys high school teams from Corona del Mar and Newport Harbor share something besides the same neighborhood. Both are No. 1 seeds in tbe CIF Southem Sec- tion playoffs, beginning Thursday and Friday. CdM (18-5), opens defense of its ClF Divi- sion ll championship Friday against visiting Katella at 3:15 p .in. Newport Harbor (23-5), which lost in the Division I semifinals last season as the No. 2 seed, hosts Millikan Thursday at 3:15. The Sea Kings, who defeated Servite, 8-6, in last year's championship match, eamed. their second straight Pad.fie Coast League title this fall. Led by U.S. men's national team coach John Vargas, CdM is keyed by senior HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL PLAYERS OF THE WOK (COACHES' SEUCTIONS) BOYS WATER POLO first-team All-CIF returner Garrett Bowlus, as well as sophomore Artie Dorr. Victory in the first round will put Corona del Mar into the second round against the Edison-Buena Park first-round winner. The Sailors, co-coached by BW Barnett and Brian Kreutzkamp, won the Sea View League for the fourth straight sea.son. They are paced by seniors Peter Belden and Ryan Cook, first-and second-team All-CIF picks, respectively, last year. A Tars' win on Thursday sends Newport into the second round against the winner of the Loyola-Canyon first-round matchup. Pour-time defending Division I champion Long Beach Wilson ~ the No. 2 seed in Divi- sion L Foothill is No. 3 and Wla Park No. -'· Los Alamitos is the No. 2 seed in Division Il, followed. by No. 3 University and No. 4 Santa Margarita. NEWPORT HARBOR SAILORS MITCH ~ DAVID GRAY 9 SPRENG.ER COSTA MESI MUSTANGS JEREMY ~. I COOPER I~ JASON HURLEY lAsT WEEK'S lllGH SOIOOL POOnAU.. Pl.Al'S OP 30 YARDS OR MORE • 80 -Andy Romo (Estancia) touchdown run. • 77 • Dmd Sprenger (Newport Harbor) interception return. • 65 • Matt Moore (Corona del Mar) TD pass from Joe Barber, • 50 • Louil Day (Costa Mesa) pass from Patrick Hulllger. • 44 -Andy llomo (Estancia) run. • 34 • Blake Hacker (Corona del Mar) run. T heS-foot-11, 165-pound 1enlor receiv- er caught three passes for 29 yards, Including 1 4-yard sec- ond-quarter ~~- A 6-foot-2, 1 7 2 - pound junior strong safety, he returned an Intercep- tion n yards, recovered a fumble, and saved a TD with • shoestring .tackle. ~~5, senior made his starting debut at offens ive tackle and hetd his own. ~~-;;.,-offense. . • 33 -Blake Hacker (Corona del Mar) run. • 32 • Pabad Jabld (Estancia) run. • 32 -Jolh Strtddud (Costa Mesa) kickoff return. US'r ~s 8IG Dl!JIBNllVll PLUS •ESTANCIA-E.rid Dnld 10c1i'1gaa bad a 1-yard Met, one quarterback prelSUre and shared a tackle for DO gain with end Jw c..-.. ... Sefety ......, ........ . ----------------------------------------intereepted ln the end zone to end one CdM ctme ... Imlde UDebecks 8c11tbJ Arroy0 nKutned an lnla• ~ 8 yards ESTANCIA UGLIS KENNY VAlBUENA T he 6-foot·S. 2 2 0 • ~ ...... quarterback Mhld 1J --fot 11 ~= _..,,..,,, .... ,... DAVID RODRIGUEZ COIOlll DEL MY SU KINGS MATT ·EVAN MARSTiON BURDEN A" 5-foot· 10, /""\.1 6 0 • ~ .... corneruck, hi ... ,... In Nn t=:''· ---n:r:1:.. ............. OUtlidit 'backer Dmy v.111• •• fon51d ....... and ... R.odrigUez recoveted .•• COrnerbadt......, "*"bad • near-Interception ... Rodriguei boomed a 57.,_ punL • NBWPOU JIAUOR-Strong Mfety Dnld ..,_.%_• · made. touchdown18Vlng lboelb~ bdJe ... ~ ayma Spnala and free Nfety .,_ ... ~up tD flOp a nm f« a 2-yard loill ... ·Spnlth ad out.de~ "lllllJ 8 =H:m CCJlllbiMd OD a t.ckJ8·fGr a lbiolt-... BIMl 0lln'9 n..-trlDDed up .. Mang'**--· ...... punt ... llndlialn•1naDdt8dmN1&11••1ts• 19ilda .... taddll fGr DO:s::•· Middle...._.. __ _ forcld. f\it4IM ad NCCMNd ... ~:-~ :tc-==rr~=-· ... klllll'wpbl OD tM ....... ... ... • IPM • l ~· .. _ ...... ,,., -.... . . ... . ,., SPORTS .. Tuetday, No-.iember 7, 2000 ) 3 GAM ESTOPPERS GIRlS GOLF PREPS CREW CONTINUED FROM 12 CONTINUED FROM 12 slammed up the middle for a 7-yard quarterback sack ... ~baddam and noseguard C.J. Colltm met at the quarterback ·and brought him down for a 5-yard sack. CdM takes seventh at the CIF regional Sea Kings miss state meet by eight strokes. CHINO - Seniors Taylor McCormick and Allison Schauppner each shot 11-over-par 83 to lead the Corona del Mar High girls golf team to seventh place in the South Team Divi- sion regional tournament Monday at the El Prado Golf Course. season of rare accomplishment.. Nor did it faze their fondnps tor teammates, many of whom walked off the field arm in ann. Pirates sparkle •CORONA DEL MAR -End Justtn Wald forced a fumble and outside linebacker Matt Boyce recovered ... Matt Moore partially blocked a punt to set up a touchdown ... Outside linebacker Nick Prosser stuffed a sweep for a 1-yard loss ... Middle linebacker 'Jaumata Grey halted a counter for a 1-yard loss ... Grey and oomerback Evan Burden combined on a stop for a 3-yard loss ... Comerback Charlie Alabuler nabbed his sixth interception to end the first half ... End Scott Biggs was in on a tackle for no gain, then shared a sack with end Steve Shipman on the next snap ... Outside Wlebacker Jason Savopolos pressured the QB on an incompletion. As parents and peers stood silently on the sideline, senior Sbirin Oskooi sprinted from the Harbor huddle toward the center of the field. She then plummeted into the splits, prompting appreciative laughter from her fellow players. •San J:?iego Fall Classic. SAN DIEGO -Orange Coast CoUege men's crew went 1-2-4 in freshman eights Sunday at the San Diego Fd.ll Classic. • On this final day of their ultimate season, the Sailo?S didn't let a technicality like the final score spoil their fun. Sisters Jackie (92) and Kristin McCoy (93) helped the Sea Kings compile a team score of 258, behind Universi- ty (232). Santa Margarita (237), Villa Park (238), Aliso Niguel (250), Los AJamitos (250) and Esperanza (255). The fun ls Just beglnnlng for Back Bay boys water polo powers Newport Harbor and Corona del Mar. Also with strong efforts were the Pirates' varsity eights, which were third and fourth in the varsity category. • COSTA MESA -End Daniel Hunter was the first to grab Uni running back behind the line of scrimmage for a 4-yard loss .. . Both open CIF Southern Section playoff acbon later this week as their respective division's No. 1 seed. The *A· varsity, wb.lch was third in a field of rune to the University of San Diego and UC San Diego, consisted or Leo Shook, Mike McGuiness. Dan Toth, Alan Twigg. Gints Salaks, Brian Scheele, Lucas Ridinger, Ryan DaVldson and coxswain Sam Yoest. lltckle Danny Mardlldan made several stops for short gains .. . Pree ~ety Michael McGuire batted down a pass. The top five teams Both are also in search of their 11th section crown, after CdM tied the Tars in that department by winning Di,vision a last fail. APRILLYNOI c advance to the CIF state tournament Nov. 28. Univer- sity was awarded a ClF title for its performance Monday. McConnick and Shauppn- er continue their postseason at the CIF individual champi- onships, Nov. 21 in Desert Hot Springs. Harbor, which got past the quarterfinals for the first time in sev~ postseason appearances last season, losing in overtime in the Division I semifinals, has not won a CIF title since 1984. HELP WANTED Costa Mesa High needs tennis coach COSTA MESA -Costa Mesa High is in need of a qualified boys varsity tennis coach on a walk-on basis. Though lt's not yet off:ldal, the Newport Harbor High football team is a virtual lock to advance lo the postseason. A worst-case scenario (a loss to AJiso Niguel Friday combined with a Woodbridge loss) would create a three-way tie for second and l.eave the Sailors at the whim of a successful com flip to obtain one of the league's final two guaranteed berths. But, even with such misfortune, as the only at-large candidate with seven wins, the Tars would be assured the school's 21st trip to the postseason. •Tue two San Diego col- leges used their local k.now- eledge of the course to theu advantage,• said OCC crew coach Dave Grant. ·But I believe we rowed much bet- ter. It's going to be an exc1bng season.· Coast's freshmen, who left the rest of the held in their wake, were led by their "A" entry, wh1ch won with a com- bination of Mike Krenger. Matt Sutton, Chrls Bonndnd Steve Wukaw1tz, Josh Howenstem, Andre t Gorosh Chris Pope, Brian Sweet dnd coxswain Raylan Willis. Those interested should contact Athletic Director Kirk Bauermeister at (714) 424-.. 8763. Meanwhile in Division IX, Costa Mesa could still salvage an at-large bid. A Mesa win over last-place Northwood Thursday. combined with a 1h>y victory over Buena Park and a Baldwin Park win over Bonita (both Thursday), would leave the Mustangs as the division's only at-large candidate with six wins. r7 ,.,, \-· ...... -. . -) . ' ' . , ,.. .... J..._I -- Fl ......... us Buslnesa eubm1tted. Pursuant to 1equest. The contract()( der the oontract uni.a NOTICE OF MARC H. RICHARDS BSC 10021 "uuv Boslnesa and 111111 po1t a oopy of end unlll the Realltrlr of PETITION TO ~YNE J. CASEY NOTICE OF Name St.ttement Prolesslon1 Code 11*M1 rtlet at NC11 job Contraetora veilllee to ADMINSTER CASEY & RICHARDS PETITION The lollowl~ Section 7028. ts. no Iii• The oonttaetor and Iha Dlltrlcl lhal the con-ESTATE OF: 810 NEWPORT TO ADMINISTER 11te doing but as: peymen1 1t1A11 blt mede ""f 1uboo11bedor IRllf treelor w11 p1operty BARBARA STARR CENTER ORM. 1850 ESTATE OF: Chenge Mede E.Z.. 197 1or· work or melerial un-rt ahal pey not .._ then lloetwed at 1t1t lime the AKA BARBARA L NEWPORT BEACH CA The M11tere Circle, der 1t1t contract un1es9 the speeihed prevliling bid was IUOmitted. Any STARR 92680 IRWIN KWEITKO Cotta ~. CA 92627 end Ufllll the ~trar of retes of wagu to an contractor not ao CASE NO. A204737 11I08IOO. 111071'00. CASE NO. A201351 Susen Glbriel, 197 Contraet<>fl verifies to wOfkMS employed by lleensed 11 IUbJect to To al hln. 11113/00 To eH helrt, beneft-The Maatert Clrele, the District that Ill eon-them in the execution of peneltlM undef the law -~ credilorl. CNS-,_ CllrlN, a edltora cont· Cotta M-. CA 92627 tractor WH property the contrad end the connet wl be eo1.i.iga1t a.dikn, aid -------lnglnt eredltora, Ind Thie buslneu ii eon-llcenled at Iha time the No bidder may considered void, tt the PlflGftl wtlo l'lllY Fk:thlou1 Bulfneaa peraons who may Olher· ducted by: en ~ btd was IUbmltted. Any Wllhdraw 9fr'f btd !Of 1 license eteaalfieallon ofllrwlll be lnteresled Heme Statement wiM be interested 1n lhe Have you started contractor not 110 period of llicty (60) daY9 epecifled hereinafter 11 In 111 wil or llUlll, or The following persons will ()( estate, or bottl. of: doing bu1lneaa yet? licensed la twbjtct to after the dale Mt tor tfle !Nd of a · epeelllly con- td! al BARBARA ~bualnela IRWIN KWEITKO YN, 2/2000 penalties under the law operwig of bldl tractor" u defined In STARR N<A BARBARA ate u : A PETITION FOR S-Gabriel and the cont111e1 Will be Purau.anl to Section Section 7058 cl Iha Cal- L STARR. A~ F ~ & PROBATE hH been This ltaterneol WIS coosidefed void. II t"8 22300 of lht PuOie eon. lomla Bu1ln111 Ind A PETITION FOR :oeiate~.eone As· filed bv JUDY SINGLE· flied wiltl the C<lunty license cl111illcatlon tract Code, the contract Ptolessiona Cod•. the PROBATE hll bMn fled Cl zd. 261 37 San Remo TON ln Iha Supenor Cleft of 0renge County apeellled herefna.fter la will contain provisions 1peci1lly contractor 11\1 GREGORY .~ p ice. Mlsaion Viejo, Court of Celllornla, on 11J02/2000 lhal cl a 'apedalty coo-permitting th• sue· 1W8/ded the c:ontract tor ~ """ CaJdotnla 92692 Colnv °' ORANGE. 20008MSM4 traelor" .. defined In eHaful bidder to flll WOfll 1tw1 11!181 ~ GREGORY ~YNE zlpc:ollec1 com. Inc., THE'. PETITION FOR Del~ Pilot Nov. 7. 14, Section 7058 of Iha (;el. aut>stitute aecuntles f()( 1WC1 1 m11jor11y of the PAESTON in the (CA), 26l37 San Remo PROBATE *1U8111 lhet 21.~ 2000 !261 tomla Bullness end atrf ITIOfl8Y9 w!ltlhetd bV wort<. in aoconllfa wilt! ~ Court ot l>lace. Mission Viejo, JUDY SINGLETON be ProfMllona Code, the ~ P\li!let. to 8"1Ufl 1111 ~ Of c.lib· ORAHGi Cowlty ot ~:m~6!21a eon-~~~:i:T~~T~ECIAl '1=~::=a ::;YO. ::.ci,: =:.::nc: ~~ ~essionl ~ 1HE PETTTlON FOR duded by: a a>tporllbon WITH GENERAL POW· The following l*SOfW ~ wottc ltlll itM1 coo-payment cl ret1111tton. Section 7059. PROBATE ~ INI Have you allrted ERS to •dmlnlater the ere doll:lll ~ u: atruet a mljorlly ot the Hmed d1rectly Into Time It of the n-GREGORY W. i ? estate of the deoed9nl. DANA ELJ:CTR1C, l508 wort, In aoccwdl!IC8 wfth eicrow. MnOe. Al work must be ll'ftESTON ~ doing bus neH yet THE PETITION re-W ~ Sen1a Ana the Pf011i11on9 cl Ca111ot-BY: Gowet111!19 8cwd oompleted within 120 GREGORY WAYNE v-;i:i~~m. Inc.. qUHts the decedenr1 ~ 92703 ' n1a busirl8le and Signed: consecutive e1lend1r PRESTON bl ~ Frri J Falcone, Presi-Wiii end oodcill, II any, o.wit Erle MIM. 1608 profasione Code fll Sm! lilcl.Me, Dtreo-dlyt from .. date apeo- • per'IOnal d t be admitted lo protleN. w. ~ Senla Atta. Section 70!i8. tor -''"""'""" llled on the Notice to ·=~ lo 'ms atatem.nl WU The Will end any oodleill Calbria 112703 Time is of the .. fnetgy Col_..,MJon ProcHd illued b'f the ldnl Ill .,.. d flied wllh the Collnty are •nillble for ax· Tiiie bulklMa le oon-Mn08. Al work must be Publilhed Newpolt Ol1lrlct. Notice to h dtcedlnt. Cieri¢ of Orange County emlnellon In the fill kepi duCtld by. an lndlvldull completed within 30 Beaeh·Co1t1 ~111 Prooeed ftll not be i.. n.e PETITlON ,__.. on l0r'06l2000 b'f the oourt Hive you 1tattad consecutive ea.lender DaMy Piiot October 31, IUed prior to five (5) .. deeedlnl'I will and 2000U42t3S THE PETITION r• doing bull-. yet? No dlye from the date tpe0-NoYember 7. 2000 dlyt aft8f aWMS of the COllcll. l ,,,,, bl o.11u Pilot NOY 4, 11. quell• •uthonty to ad· ~ Ertc Mw tiled on the Notioe lo T251! oontrac:t. I/Id shall not ~to llftll*a. The ·i 2000 51439 minlltw the eetall undlt Thia -.tement was Procnd lsaued by the require lhat work be .. encl llPf codldll.,. 18• 25· the Independent Mmln-filed wtth the CQunty Dl1trte1 Notice to commenced lea than ~ '°' ~ Flctltlou. Buelnese lltrallon of E1tataa Ad. Cleft of Orange County Proceed wu not be 11· NOTICE TO (5) days from cllte of !t- ·"-"...a I~.,.,.. I I 111 QIMTUANES I these me detennlna· lions, are on file at lht DISTRICT, and copies may be obtained upon requMI The contrector shall poll • copy of ltlMe ratM at each job lite. The oontrador and 8IYf eubcontractor undef ii lhal Pl~ not less than Che lpedflecl prevailing rates of ~ to all WOlltMS em()loyed b'f them In lht exeoJlion of the contract. DECH EV STRAZZULLA No bidder may Wllhdfaw atrf bid for • period of llldy (80) d9ya lftet the dlta 181 tor tfll opening of bids. Purauent to Section 22300 of "' Public eon. Inlet Code. "' OOl'll1aCI Wiii conlaln p<O'tlilionl Gena Dechev. age 69 of ~ Beech. died Sunctty It the JefMy Shor9 Medical Cent« I Neptune. She w11 born In Bulgaria, and c.me to the United Statu In 1955. She lived In Flulhlng, NY before moving to Bradley Beach 30 y11ra 190. Mrs. DecheV WH I home- maker. Her family think• of hef n "The moat freedom loving mothet In the world who did everything hwnanly possible tor hef hutOlncl, children, grwidchlldren, Ind hu- mtn kind." SuMvtng It her hu. bend, Jordan; 1 son. perl!IUtlng t~ llt'-ceufu I bidder to IUbltilute NCUritlM for 9f'ff ~ wfttn.ld b'f the Dlatriet to enaure petformanoe undet the contract or permitting Jofdln Jr., Neptune; payment ol retention• three d1u1gt-1tteer1, earned directly Into GI or It u If y, escrow ~NY, BY: Gowr!Mlig 8wd ....._~ -Meed Signed· .......,_ • /Sf Suei McUne, ~ Newport a.eh, CA, tor • Procur9mentl end Jolle Dechev, New fMf9Y Con-mion Y• NY; thret broth- Pubhhed Newport "" thrte ....... Ill al Beaeh·Co.111 Meta Bulgatla, and Mvtn Cely Plot November 7, gnmddllkhn. Friends 14, 2000 T260 and famlly will 91ther Jeenne Mary Struzullt, f'.eb. 7, 1922 • Oct 24, 2000. A dftot9d Wife and 1 ~reet mom, J11nne olned her family In etven on October 28ttl 2000. Jeenne was 1 Pfoud lamlly woman who's legacy Includes hutb.tnd Ru11ell of V1lencla, CA~ daugh· ter Ann of Ventura, CA., ton's Rlc:Mrd and Jtmet of Santi Cltntl, CA., ind Fr1ncl1 of Chicago, Ill. Jeanne's grandchildren Include twins Elin• 1nd M1rl1n1 of Rlcherd end Marie. Nicholls ol JtmH, Thom11 11\d J11on of .,.Frenclt Jeennt also left 5 greet grendch lldrtn . Jeanne's final rHtlng place 11 San Femlndo Mission Cemetety. San Fernando. CA. (LOI Angeles). Can't seem to get to all those '9palrj0bs around the houM? ---at the Ely Fonerel HolM, 3318 Rt 33, Neptune on Wldnee- dty, November a at 1:45 AM, rolklwed bY e in Ill tie ltapt 11\1 1111 N.me Smtement (Thia Authority wlll alow on 10l1312000 tued prior to five (5) CONTRACTORS auence of uld Notice. court. the SPECIAL ADMINIS-2000IM3t15 dayl after award of the caWNO FOR BfDS Failln to ~ lht THE PETTTlON l9QUllU The folloWlng per-.on. TRATOR WITH GEN· ~-... Oct. 17 24 ......,....,.. and shall not .. wortl wftl*1 the lime NI ,_......,""'!"'ll~~~-. ~ to .,...... ere doing ~ es. ERAI. POWEflS to 111te ~-' ' ..... m ......... , wort< be School Oilt.rlet: lor1h herlln wll mull In fills;4Jlllllli .. 1 .. ..... under Ille GAYLORD ~ 1ct1ona without _L_. 7· 2000 T'2'48 ::,:~ 1eu than ~ ~ IJM)n the ~!~. of llqul- Let the Cl .... fted ~ Dfrectot"Y tMtp you find reliable help =.., ot e...... ~:.~or1.. °:i e.tore = ~ NOTICE TO ~ :-:.:~!: Obtain Document• :: ;";f;;, 1% ~ Aa. ('Tilll IUllClftty wil Mat. CA ""'Y lmporlanl ldlonl, CONTRACTORS Falure to oomplete Che and Blcl Due at Hunt· lmOUnt of 11000 per lbw Ill l*tanll Cerolyn S Gaylord, hoWever, the SPECIAL CAWNG FOR BIDS wort within Ill time aet l"!Jlon Beech Union day ltlilwe kl ... 931 Gardenia Way, Co-ADMINISTRATOR School Olltrlet tOl1h herein w11 rMU11 in High School Olttnc:t, Each bidder shell -*Ona willlDlll rone clel Mat, CA 92625 WITH GENERAL POW· Hun1ington Beach Union the '"'f: of tiqut· 10251 Y()(tctown Ave., eubmlt, on the fOl"ll'I CCMt ~II. Jon D. Gaylord, 931 ERS w11 be required lo HI!;! SctlOOI 011tr1et dlted tor NCfl Purohaslng, Room 361, lumlshed with the con- ltb'I ~ ~ G1~ Wey. Corona ~ no4lce to lnlereated Obteln Document• day of 1y, In the Huntington BNet\, CA trld ~ • lilt of "9fY ~ adlDnl. clel Mar. CA 92825 peraona unleH they I/Id Bid Due et Hunt· emount of 11200 per 112648, (714) 1164-33311 the propoMd subeon· ,_._, 1111 ~ Thll businMa 11 oon-hew walv9d nota or l"!Jlon e.een Union day. ext 4350 ...... _ .. _ trador'I on this protect ••wwwllllll.. Wil -dueled by. hulbend and conHnted to the Hioh School Olttrlel, Eeeh bidder shall Due Dete· • .. v.-y, 11 required by the l9QWlcl to 9N9 nollat to wife propoMd action.) The 1®111 YOl1ctown Ave.. IUbmlt, or1 the form Oecembal' 14. 2000 11t Sublettlng and Subcon-~ Plf'IOlll Hive you atarted Independent 1dm1n1.. Purdlulng. Room 361, lumlttled with the eon· 2:00 JI"' trac:tlno Felr PrectlcM W-. ~ IW¥I wlMd doing ~ yet? No trllllon authority wltl be Hunllngton BMcti, CA tr.a ctocumen11, a Ill of NOTICE IS HERESY Act. l>ubtlc Contract ftCllol OI CDr..-r to Calolyn S. Gaylord 11'9nted unlau an In· ~ (714) 11&4-33311 the Pfopoaec1 atbcon-GIVEN INI the Hunt· Code Section 4100 et lie lftOOlld ~T This statemenl wu ..,__, '*'°" lilel an ...... 4360 trac:tOl'I on 1t11s project lng10fl e .. c:n Union "::; accofdanca wfttl =.,,· ... ~ ~ :''Ci:;. = ~ !:ctS:: ao::' ~!~m.:~ ~*~lr:'!s ~~ ~ ~1~ Education Code .. be ..... lllllttt Ill on t0/24'2000 ~ the courf ltlOUld not 1000 11t 10:00 mn trac:tlna Fllf Practloea ~ "!'.,.~ "'• 17076.11, the Dlattld ......... penan ... 2000llU8U gr1W'll fl8 alAhol1ly NOTICE IS t!ERESY Act, l»ubtlc Contrecl _,....,,.,,"' ....ettl, her hM a ~ .._.... m Ill ..-.i Od. 31, Nov. 7. 14, 2t, A HEARING on the GIVEN that the Hunt-Code s.ct1of1 4100 et lnaftef 191etred to U cl at laMl 3 d ,.. .,_. OOOd C1UM 2000 !258 l>8Clllort wll be hlk:I on l"!Jlor1 S.•c:h Union .... ·DISTRICT'. • l'9CM'8 the CMrlll anlOU'll ..., .. couli tllOl*I nae NOVEMBER UI, 2000 at uw.. Sdlool ,__ Or-......... up to. but not ·~ flan ~ Md\ raer lat --..!'?~°" ...._ F1ctftloue Buelnee• 1:45 p.m. In Dtot. L73 ~ eouncy1C'di0mla. ~::: ~ the aboYe-etated time, dlaabled vat«an bull--A ._.,._ ,.,. Name Statement looMld • 3'1 The Oly '*'CJ bV lf1Q lhrouah Ill 01 ~ ehedl OI bid IHled bid• for the neu anterprleH ........ be 111111 °" The fo1ow1na ~ Dflve Scdl, Orange. GcMfnng BoMS. n... bond In 1111 amcan not •Wild of c:ontrlda for (DVBE). l1'3MO • 1'4'flM In are doing~• CA 112988. lnaft8f Nterred to u 1Na than t.n P1fC*1t Ill tolowlna ~· &ch bid ltlll bl 111> °"" ln ~. J4l COAST lO COAST IN-IF YOU OBJECT to .. DISTRICr', • ~ (10%) of the total bid '"'feet: lNd '853 • OCAllS*lled by • ~ THI CITY ORM FORMATION SERV· the "IWlllna ot the pd-up lo, but not "'* """ once. oeylble to the Power llld Dela Up-Ot C8lhle(s d** OI bid IOUm, ORANGE. CA ICES. 128 301t1 St.. tlOn. you allUd llPPUI' the tbove111ted time, DISTRICT .. a QU1nn-gradel II Huntington bond In an amount nae r,!., 08JECT to 1111 Newport S.ach, CA at iMi ~ and _.. aaaled bldl for the tee 1191 1111 blddtr, 1 11 S.ech High School, lael than hln peroenl .....!: ol .. ~ 112943 ~ ~ Ot Ille 1werd cl oontr8* for PfoPOU1 ta eccepted. Mandatory_ Job Wille: (10%) d the '*I bid •-'::.,'!...,. -It N Ian GabMI Winter· ~ ~II with Ill ~ ~ ihe'I pnnpay e~I ll:OO am. TI'IUIWY.· No¥-oriel. P8Y9b6a to the -.......--boltlam 128 38ltl St., the ooun before the "°fact: llld "52 . 111 ~ Unllt\ • en111« 18, 2000 et ..,,... DIS'mlCT' .. • ~ ..., --..= Ne~ e.ech, CA hHrlng. Your •P-WHtmln1ter _. til,1111 ~ Flllhlul Per· = BHeh Hl&h 1!18 lhll the bidder. I .. :,. .... OOlll1 112843 peeninca mey be In per-SchooC lnterlm Ho1.111t1Q fonnance 8ond 1n 1n • 1905 Main • ~C-:~ -c:= RYNESS M1H or Chrlttl1n 8urill It the CtlurUI of George A. Rynea, JR.. the Ate9Mlon, Bl"lld- raldent of Newport 1ey BMct1. 1nM1et win Beech, peaMd away be at the Hlmltton NoYembtr 3rd. HI w Cemetery, Neptune. t rtGrec1 home buldlr Vlaltlna 'hours n It and lcw9d to golf. HI the funeral home, wtn be mlued by hll Tueedly, 2 to 4 and 7 ..,. .1eyne.. eon Gtty, .;.:to;....;:1-..· -----~ .... Frlfttl. -----..... .... ...,. lkPhle, and 1 plddlllfl•i. C.11 1~•1•41·5611 , ... , ....... . .. .,.,. ,., ... . PIBCE_,.... El.llGADWAY Mortuary * Chapel Cremation 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 2•9150 A "*"°"81 wvice w11 be hlkt • our Lldy OuMn or Anti•• C9ltlollc Ctudl, Oft ~No ...... l)is<:ount c :a,kt.·t Tell Us About YOUR GARAGE SALE! . In CWSIFIEDS ( ' I• ti 1 1 ,I' ill ' " I ' c..r;,,, Stnlltt •"' Qw.4/11] Cuktu for l..ts1 Diftct Cremation .. $495 lmmcdWe Burial •• $995 (/t1tt..U1 ~) Prearrangement Prognms Available fnr Futwral 5"' ias. Cmnarion• -and I 'l •'.ll'\1:1 ,,,,! .... \\' I . ''. " ' ·, " I I ........ Yw ~~~ -::d?GlA~ ~~14 Wdt ~~IMa~ ~~~"e.c.~~•ch .. ~'Mftlltl1 JU •• "-M In HaYa you ata.,,ed ITOR 0t eo1•1Q11• ~ lt"OO .m, Wednledayi (too-JI.) o1 111 tOaa1 bid ...._ .,_. be *1IMd • 1ti:.:by F~ Pw-=.. °' ., yf# dc*IO bullriett WC? No .,,°'"' -·~~ w~ e. 2000 • pnae, 1um1tt11n _ L~not ~~. P!: ~ ~not~"'~ -----------------~-------=----, •-'fOu Ml A 1an Wini~ muet ... ~ ,_..,, -· 11tmtn1ter _ HIJh lond -· •• .._.. ........... .,,_,. ,,_, ~ ~ ., 1 Thie •llmlnl WM the oourt end melt • Ulool. t4328 ~ 111e1 111n one hundred opened and publicly one llllnclrld .,.._. osaew ~at N f1lad _.., the c;:ounty = llO "8 SPECIAL W... Sl.~ W .... 119111, r::: (tOO'W.) ot h ~ l'l8lt 8'oud 9' Ill .,. (100'W.~ .. "*' ..._. ---. ,_ ,_. .. Qeltl d OrMDI OounlY wm:N=~APOW ~--...... bit....._. ~ '!.'!'.......~ ==:..::. =In tfl :...::-: .,.__we .. CIOllR on 10R7nooti • -.,_ WWW WWWWICWlll otllolw .. on .. • .. lilel '*' one ........ ... 11111 1 _, • N Jt011141... EM =!lad ~ Ill In h P*'t ......... ... l'8 ....... 1ne11r-..._ ...... ..,_. be-,....,. (l()O'I.) d .... ,...... ...... I ~ Pl:gNov. 1r2:i = .. dllle "": == ~ -:'., ":..; :.:. :..1= ~ :: gtnnq November I; '91 b6d ..... 1ft1t ... =-:. ,_':. = -...,_.,. ol ...,. • ,_. mad• ....... ......, °" •ao.. In IOOO. 'Ona IM d -.,. .-c1 .. 1 1Mlllllrif .. ._ fll lnl...... • II ~ In ~ __, -.. lllM _. h .,... ti ...,,. '° :':.:.:.. ~ ::. ':::::: i :':"'''"'=I~ '1allllt• rllll•I ~.::::. i.= .,,.. ':" :=.-::i: = :: ::*: ol 1100 per Ill tpecllll .......... "'91 Ill .. ... ,,. ...... The '°'°""'8 ......... "°' ... Mbe tour ...._ .......... 119" ........ ,.. ... Ulll =· MOtl It c-= -· a. 111'1 = ........ .,. dDlllll ...... -...... """.. ...... ....... No•--· '· ... ~ ............ ---......-i:i-.~ 1 --"".!.'! " ... ~ ............. N-\fllCHI.. llUO-... ..... .... -J"OM .. d ~ ...... ,. ~ ,.,. .... ----- ....... 41111 ..... TRONK:I. 11C1N tt. VOU IMY ~ ..... -................ lflll .. === :C-0::.:r. --=-.: .: -. c*IAw .. Oaili--. ........ ., ~tore----~ ..... 11'11111,._wlf. __ ....,.., .. ~ ... ~ ..... YOUIMYDM9tl• CA11811 ,,_",,.._..,_ dl?lporlll .............. ~ --· t .............. .... ..... ., ...... W Allred L. Fltdler, ................. -: =--==J'~ ..... ~In =::=-04°1,.... =-lllilllllllll• =-=·'-=-:A .... ~=·::.~-: ... llllMlllllL• • .. ~.';._ ...... ~ .. WI,! ............. ... .. -~.. '11111 ....... " ..... --~ 090 ..... DeOll .......... ,. ., .... ia!tl--: -... .....-51!.: .. ....., 11¥: "' ~ ,.., " ................... 0.-. ~ti ..... ., • .. .... ~ • ... Ha.e,ouctaltM............................. _.,, ... =.,~ .. ~ .,.._ ti• ~~r-...._. wect § 114:'s;"~i ==D!zt~ :.... "..~_, ,._._ --.. ---= -=. ... .., L. ,..._ Ila .. ....... ... a:; ~----*•• --.. ;• I 11111 •• ·~ • '* ~ .:L!!!.1-~ ... ~--·' =-~"0:: :-• &:i ""'0::..&a ....... ... .... -...._...__,c-,..., ... sJ;~t-•I • ....... F ... G • ....;;;;K.-::::ir. QIL81,llW.T, » IF ~ __ .,. .. STARTING ANEW BUSINESSf • • • • • • • • • • • ~ ' I -f . --· . ...,. ____ ~' ' Rates and dea<llints art subject to rlumre ~diout notice. Tiie ru~isher.resen·~ uws nglu to ceN<>r, recl8.ssif y. tevtSC or reiect · any rlas iified advertisemenr. Please repon 1111y error diut may he in your da. ified ad iminediuteJy. TI1e Daily Pilot 11cuvr.; no Uabilitv for am• error in an advertJseuicnt for •·hicl1 ii mity be !bpon ible rxcept for the rost of the Spa<l' actually <MX'upieJ by the error. Credit c~1 only be aJlowet.I for tJw first ini.ert ioo. Gl EOUAL HOUalllO OPPOATUtllTY Al 1'111 estalt IOvll1lslnQ In this~ Is IUbftd ID tM f'tdlr1I Fair Housing Act of 1 Ml n arnendtcl which rnlkt1 11 illegal to ==~1== based on race. caor. ltllO· Ion, SIX. ~. lllmlllal l&ltld or nationll origin, or 1n Intention to mike lflY sud! Pf'ftrtnce, limitlbon or cllla1minlllon. • This newspaoer wtll not knowlngly accept any advtrtl1eme11t lor rtll eatate wtilch Is In violation of the law. Ollf readefa •• l1erllly lnlormtd that all dwlllngs llCMrtlted In this MWIPIPtf .,. avatlablt on an equal= QC:nlly 1111111. To com 11 of illtcrlml· lllllon. HUO toll-free al 1-800-424-85~. •V.A.' f II I• II II IOI• 216 AZ'S BEST BARGAIN o40 IQ' ... $17 ,800. BleutN ranch In WtlllalTlllFllgstall .,... ptr19c:1 e. 100' c:1mne. Sp1c11cul1r mountain ~ bordln 11at1 land, Ntwtr Aamodllect ser allofdablt llnanclno. Cal 29alh, get, 11/2 bloc:b lo AZlA 1.aae-SOW869. btlidl, ~. S2200t' .:IC~AL::..;'SC=AN""'l ___ mo. Cll ~7591 ~ ----.,...-------.. ... ·~~ -I ByPlle•e (949) 642-5678 t'J 400·412 By MaMll Pa.m 330 West &v tlt'f1 Costa }1esa, CA 9'2627 At ~ Bh-d. & ill}' b1. . -- ' • , . C~NS~G.NM'.NTS ! l I ''"' ' ' . . . . . ,. .-....... ..._}j . '•,, .,, ... . . '· l·&.·--~ ~;··--... l "". . . ' 1_._ -' llears 'IHephorte 8:30am-5:00pm ~lonita)-f Mn Wall-In 8::JOam-.):00pm ~bde,..f'nda\ . . - ' ,. I ' -~ 470·471 Monday ................. Friday. 5:00pm -. Tuesday .............. Monday ~:OOpm Wednesday ......... Tuesday S:OOpm Thursday ....... Wednesday 5:00pm Friday ............... Thursday 5:00pm . Saturday ............... Friday 5:00pm ALL POSITIONS UP TO. $12/HOUR INTERVIEWS BEING HELD DAILY BETWEEN 9:00AM TO 6:00PM RECEPTIONIST WANTED List! typing !MH7s-6095. 3300 BRISTOL U., COSTA MESA, CA *PRIOR RESTAURANT EXPERIENCE PREFERRED RECEPTIONIST PT Tuee lllfll Fri, 1 P111-1c1m. Minor office · dut.ltt. Cell !!!clp! Mt IU UGO Aatall TEUSCHER CHOCOLATES l CAFE WM loc*frlg lor up'd ..... · Plcc>lt lor our new 1tort opening eoon • Faetlon IL Wt _,. fl.II ' enttglllc · ptOplt lof FIPT Ring Ill ....... 72,.,., to Ill~,__ AellaUfllnt TEUSCHER CHOCOLATES a CAFE WM looktlg tor exp'd Cclllt "*"' lor fM ntw 1tor1 opening 10011 at Fathlon. We want 11#1' ~ ptOplt tor F/FT. Ring Ill al !Mt-72 f.1901 to ... up im.Mewa ------------, 0 'fllt IBL llY CM Run your Id In the NewPort Beam. . Costa Mesa Dally Piiot and the HOOtlfW Beech- FowUln *!eY Independent to reach <MK 100,000 homel. Fax UI thlt fonn wtct'I 'PX Cf9dlt card I Of rnell With I lctMICk~ Run fora_.,,,. ~-doeinat ....... "" • for "'°"* ... M for jult tSO'. c cwcnnuc a,. D•• t.li.. lilii ,....lllelllf .. .. ____ , __ _ .• ~ ; , • Tuesday, Ncwember 7, 2000 15 -_.,., 6•...J Bridge By CHARLES GOREN wi1tl OMAR SHARIF and TANNAH HIRSCH TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE . --~ .. ..., -·~ ......... .wyofout .. ... COlllplnln. 0-* .. the loc8I lelWlkllinllah-,..,--.roii~ ""'~Of .... t« Ml'VlcM. AMd ... ~_,,_~ __ befol_._;,_" ... I• -== 11 ·~I M a II lllAAS Udo Side Tie tor S1i1boe1 S3.000IMO. (ltllllllc) up IO 8611 and beem 1.rc1er 20 Vending altH, no 1311, aide tntranc., tleci/ competition, e hrl/mo, inc:ld $1,800 utll required _..., 94~78n 1.eoo.2SMe01 (24hn l 11 UTIUTY DEREGULA· noH. Top Ripa. Mm up 10 S3e()I( I Y811 Gu, e I e c I cellular PT/FT N.8. Sllp Avelllble Up 10 30fl. pvt btac:I\, avail ~ 423 E. Edgewater Avt 147&mo 94~ !If UM*lng to rtnl Side Tie tor 20lt aallbotl, MWport btldl .,.._ MW71-11M 2811 BOAT DOCK $250/Mo. illc:ludes utllllHtl 4002 River. Ntwpol1 Beech 714·639·3923 CAOCt..LAC CATEAA .. iowm1.~.co (004752) '21, .. NABERS (714 l540:!100 CAOIU.AC CATtRA 't7 8llCll, low ml, prletlntl (14MCM) ., .... NABERS (714)540.t100 CAOUAC O£V1U.E '00 la. 18k m. Siver. lelllel (224746) $32,988 NABERS (714)$40:1100 c.dlllec Sedln °""" 'f1 GOOD JO&. RELIABLE S¥RVICES. --·-wM1, idnl cond. $17.500 I • ,. .. ___ Ill I 46.SOOI( mi. tvlly equipl. ~ANS/SUV~ .._!M-=-9-6«-~=1oao=---- rflNG THINGS ro BUY. lfSAU BMW 525 'tO Gold auto. .. pwr. I SOit mi loeded. malnt r1C01ds. prem wnll $8,000 obo 949-642-3788 BMW 7 40ll 'M Navy wfT an. Ml coodl1ion. extended Wlrl811ty, 59k mt, phOnt, co player, ltllde package. tam chrome wheel$ Btst y0\111 find' $34 .500 949-574-2670 Ctdlllec Eldorldo ·as power SIN nng bllklS doof locb, W!lldows. ..,, tic. 86k~ rrlles. lookl . runs OOOdl $1700! 949-581-4190 CAD ELDORADO 11 cadllllc Stvlllt STS 'f1 1911 ml, white plll1, mint (821431) S25.• NABERS (714)540:9100 Chtvy Altro Cargo Van '91 Whitt, AT. pa a . 11b A/C, am-Im, 120ll "'· $4200 949· 722-1170 CORVETTE 1984 22k Miies, Llk1 New, All Optlon1 $7,750 HMS0-7180 CORVETTE 1995 S apd, 7311 Ml, $17,750 949-650-7160 FON> ECPlDMR .. lTD, loWmlea1 ...,_, ITIOOMlOI -rnat.i (1149841) 114,9111 NABERS cm)540.!100 FON> MUSTANG 'II VI. low 1111,5 w lllv C*M4) .• 15 .... NABERS (714)640:!100 FORD WINDSTAll .. 7 peaMnger. low rnilte, beige, Hcea.nt condition! (~19) $8,988 NABERS '714)5:4G:t100 LAND ROVER DISCOVERY 'M 83K ml, $1,500. Mt-tS0-7180 Ln1a IOO Coupe '12 53k ml, always gerllgtd. e/IOwroom new, many ex· lrU $18,500 71~1·9089 MAZDA MXI 't1 11¥1flbllJI Int, good cond, moon-rool. ell IUIO, ISlc#lg $37!iQ(obo. clll Chld ~~ *"** 190E 2 3 '86 Olk Wgry Int. snrl, Ilk, pw, lter9o, CUI, nice car, 14$( "' $5300 obo 949-548=3900 Mtrctdll MO SL 'II Otrk charc:oal, lhowroom, 2 Iopa, 11.UC FfMWIY 119, $115,995 obo 949-71~2311 RED FOR DANGER Both vulncrab&e. South deals. NOR111 •OJ 109 o it OU o AIC5J •4 EAST •5 ~ 10 9 6 5 "89842 ... 96 Opemna lead: Three of • Nocth·South bid well to reach the grand ~lam in spade~. Declarer's technique wa~ almost equal to !he wk of sconng up the l1lO'it ex.citing contnrict in bridge Nonh\ jump to four clubs wa.~ a &plinter bid. showmg ~SS in the ~uit. After South cue-bid beans, Nonh launched mto Key-Card Bt.ckwood. •here 1hc ~ ol 1Nn1" counts u 111 llCIC. Soulh • te1pQC110 showed four key catda and Nonh needed no flllth« information IO CM- tr9CI for all the trickL There wa-e only 11 fut lrick.s, but two more could be developed with nifTs. Since the bi"1 mimps oo Ibo !able suues:.ed • dummy rcvcnal. declarer won the openina trumP lead on the table, culled the IOC and king of diamonds and ruffed a diamond lugh u West disc.uded a hean. Dr.clan:r returned to lhe boa:rd by leading the seven or spade$ tp the ten, fut dixardina a dlamood. and ruffed the ~ diamond u West parted with .anodler hean. Since declarer could not afford to ruff 1 club u a dummy entry, the only way back to draw the oWtar:1dula trumP' wu with a heart. Unfonunalely West ruffed -down one. When you plan a dwnmy reversal, the key Is to ~ the side-suit entries to dummy early to complete the 1Ulf· ing process in hand. Loolt how easy the hand bec001C$ tf. afler rufJin& the first duunond lugh, declarer retwns IO the table with a heart to ruff the last diamond high. Now d«IGl'Cr can ams to dwnmy with a IJllmp, draw the ouL~g uwnps and claim the n:st of the triw. 1-~11-~11•cim=1 M3 W TOYOTA ~ '11 4«, llplne ~ 4114. MllO, *« cond. 121k (1£111190) $32,915 ml. w+iite. ~ owntf, STERLING BMW $71195/0bo. 949-548-3836 MM4S..5900 3211 w Oldamobat cun.. 'M 2~. ~ llltrc.dat 580 Sl '88 Whl, low ml, non·amoker (IT34~ '2t,115 I I ~2 ::·le~~ (355812) NABERS $10.988 S .. ~:::' -,~ local $14,950 714-751-2464 (714)540:9100 5211 .. -- 95 MITSUBISlt 3000 GT RANGE ROVER • ., 4-doof, Alpine WhllllSlnd PNrl wtilta, ""' lthr, H11 everything, fully (IW41525) 137 M5 lumber rack for Toyoll 222HP, AT, IUlll'ool, ,_ lotd9d IMldt llld out. STEAUHG BMW T100 "'°'1.tltd S200 obo HERE EVERYDAY IN CWSIFED! (949) 641-5678 Xlnt condition, s1a,ooo CORVETTE 1995 o.y. 714-444-1323 6 apd, 7311 Ml, $17,750 E,_ MM44-5"5 94H50-7180 1T' AMwa c1womt rime I $5!00!obo f4t.17S..1300 Mt-M$-5100 t4M31-3100. "~;_:!r,.~n:'n-l ___ ~_-=_L-_L-__ ......,._C>_...., __ -__ <= __ -_-___ j STUMPED? _.. .. __ ._ _ 1 "8 c::= .__""""' E3i ~ I F"" I E: C:> _ can for AnswetS e TOI.di-_ er AGllry l'loalw e 95c pol ...... 1..90Q.37G-ell00 ext code 500 ~Hori£, fDLTH N1J Busies ~ POLICY In ... elbt 10 °'* "' belt Mlvlot polllble 10 cu ,..,. "' and ~. wt Wll require ~ who ~ In lht Stlvtoe Olrdlly 10 lncble "'" Conltaclora Llcenu numblf In 1htlr lldvtf11M. ~::.r~..!y:.12!~r!!!!lld!!..__· t 210 =::= I 1--==1 . ' 1 800-'.>SQ-7181 ____ ,.,... . ,, ........ ..... =.-... .. M lJff!Mll f ·";'1f'.""'"'~ • . \ • ~~~; -• f ' AtoZHome l~ I ....., ......... ..._.._........... Rtpalfl, Electrical Ind ~-... """"' ..,...,...., Plumbing LICfS50524 Ho~ IOC>-. Al~ Cell 714·21t-7115 or RepM-, ..modll, fllll. IPI. M•24M011. ---···~- ORY tot al,. needs ... . ..... "'_, ......... ... LOCAJINO ILICftONC AM LIM l~~~·~~:~:;~t;;._.· .. •"!". •Ir-.,.., --·-=--1 s.a,,_.,. ____ ._. ......... -0 Nl"O'l~­ c""-f/f4HI ""' (9'6';'t:r.$6'111 ''E~.'· ''ArbeitM/amQ. '9 ''Employ£" • CllOllX • ·--• •-· omll~ i.-•-r~ MIWll'Ol-- 714-895-6677 · 18 Tu..&y, NoWmber 7, 2000 .. . . . . . Daily Pilot - • ,. I 1 1 \ I ' ( I ' \ • I ) I ....., \. " l I ) I \. \ ' l I ! i ( l ' ' ' . I i I ' I I ~ . . . N OT SO MUCH PRE-OWNE.D AS PREVIOUSLY ADORED. Aftrr r~vi ewing 21 pre-owned vehicle programs, lntelliChoice® named Jaguar Select Edition the country"'s Best Certified Pre-0\vned Program and Best Pre-Owned Warranty.~ • 6-year/100,000-mile warranty • 120-point cosmetic & mechanical inspecti?n • 24-hour roadside assistance • Financing and leasing option • Available at authorized Jaguar ~ dealers only _ ~ JAGUAR SELECT EDITION PRE -OWNED AUTOMOBILES I . Bauer Jaguar 1455 South Auto Mall Drive Santa Ana • SS Freeway at Edinger 714-953·4800 • www.bau~rjaguar.com Coverage includa remajning new-car warranty plus the Sdcct Edition premium warranty, Which provida cqycnp for an .adltional 2 ~ S0,000 miJa on eligible 1996 model ~ vehicles or newer. Coverage for 1995 model year vehicles will differ. See your dealer for deWJs on dUi llinited CCMI ... Not 'ail can ro tie mid u Selec:r f.dition. •JntdliChoicc Inc., www.intcllichoice.com, 5epicmber 1999 review of21 manufaauru p~ ftpar ded for&.. pla. For more information. dlll 't-800 4 JAGUAR or vi1it www.jaguar.com/w. 02000 Jaguar Can. l