End to race brings relief to some, but not all
Paul Clinton
SOUTH COAST PLAZA -- Wednesday’s end to the five-week presidential
election didn’t give Marta Dangerfield any solace.
The 66-year-old Irvine resident wandered down the labyrinthine
corridors of the South Coast Plaza on Wednesday trying to forget the
morning’s headlines.
Texas Gov. George W. Bush was headed to the White House, following
Tuesday’s U.S. Supreme Court ruling that denied Vice President Al Gore’s
bid for further ballot recounts in Florida.
“I got up just sick to my stomach when I heard [about the court’s
decision] this morning,” she said angrily. “I’m just passing the time
right now because I’m frustrated.”
But many others were thankful the election -- the closest since the
1876 face-off between Samuel J. Tilden and Rutherford B. Hayes -- was
over.
Victor Bianchi, 75, spent Wednesday at the shopping plaza with his
wife. Bianchi, who said he was happy with the result, added that the
brewing election crisis had diverted his attention from the Christmas
shopping rush.
“I’ve done a lot of thinking about it,” the Fountain Valley resident
said. “I think everything will work out fine.”
Still others were less interested in history and more in the
country’s, and their own, financial future.
“I’m just happy it’s over,” said Mark Papac, 33, of Long Beach. “I
just want it to end so the stock market could go back to normal.”
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