HomeMy WebLinkAbout1991-06-12 - Orange Coast Pilot.., .. _ ...
• Hazy afternoon tunihine m:ept only
partial afternoon cleari• near the
beachca. Southwest to west winds to 15
mph this afternoon. Hiaht in the mid·
60s to near 70. LoWs most!f in SOs. for
more information, inclucbng boating,
fishina and surfina. ~ paee AlO.
IN THE NEWSROOM
Penistencc pays off .... More than 3
1/2 ycan after two men walked into 1
Mervrn'• Department store in
HuntlnJton Beach and made off with
$6,700 tn jewelry, doged police work
finally paid off in the arrest of the
tecond suspect .... Richard Neal
McVay, now ~. wu arrested by FBI
gents in Loi Angeles l11t weekend on
an unlawful niaht to avoid prosecution
warrant and turned OYer to HBPD,
police Lt. Ed McErlain said Tuesday ....
lbe cops have been on McVay's trail
since December 1987, when Lavcl&er
Lee Jldlon, now 26, was a..re..cct in
connection with the Se~r robbery.
..• Since then, Jackaon wu tried and
convicted of robbing the store at 9811
dam Ave ... The stolen jewelry was
.,_. recovered .... McVay was
identified as a suspect at the time of
Jackson's arrest, and the case w11
turned over 10 Huntinaton Beach police
detective Tom Gilligan in late 1987 ....
Gilligan cventu1lly traced McVay to
Vir1in1a and notified the FBI that his
suspect had crossed state Imes ....
federal agents cau1ht up with McVay
last week and took him mto custody
ithout incident, McErlain aaid ....
cYay ii now housed at tho
untington Beach City Jail and is beina
Id on suspicion of robbery m lieu of
,000 bail. .
: "/ mipt dttU/1 10 kovt ofter this
t«'OIOn, or ii mifJu be one or two more
an. I olwovs Wflnl~d 10 be o •
bcuinasman; .,,,,. I'm lfll up
finoncilllly 10 I don '1 ha~ to wot*
;~ dtl)' ut my Ii/~.'' .
Masic Johnson, on the
unspeakable -hes possible
retirement from the Los An&ele
takers (81). .
, JUST TltE FACTS
• • What Ac•demy Aw•td·
; winnifll movie wu filmed in the wil·
•. derneu above Coron.t de/ Mar?
·~m•• a,µn UI ,.'IUOJ.:f UJ~IR!c\ ~~1 UO
l~n() UV .. ~M>W llaq 1,0£61 . •
,_ ... ..i.-c. ..... ..._. hoed\ ,_...
~ . ,... ...... ....-. , ..... ,, .. ., ...
•"""'•6f4S7l7
LOTJfRY
INDf N
hi iii controversial intersection
"1 Tanr Dodlro
°"1111 CIMI Dllr ....
NEWPORT BEAOI -Parents wbo
hlM cxpreeeed concern about a bUly
imenecteon near Marinen Sc:hOol uw
their fCln reaHzed Tuetday when 1 7-
year-old boy wu struck by a vehicle,
police aaid.
At approximately 2:20 p.m., the bOy rift
out in front of traffic and w•s struck by a
1986 Jeep Cherokee as he stepped into
the southbound lane of Irvine Avenue at
Mariners Street, Costa Mesa police
Officer Michael Zangcr said. The
Cherokee was traveling 20-25 mph, he
Dog fight
m~y move
into court
By Robert Bar1cer
OllnQt Coalt Olly Plol
HUNTINGTON BEACH -A
ferocious bull terrier "came out of
nowhere" and attacked a docile
golden retriever so rclentlcs ly that it
look four or five men kicking and
screaming and beating on 11 to release
its hold, 1he vic11mizcd caninc's owner
said Tuesday.
That WMS ju I the Sllrl of I
nightmare trip to the downtown that
aw the bull terrier -another
h)l'1tl¥!!r be~ it to be a biOKer -
-iiunch a sea>n<I auadt on Rocky the
retriever after police arrived, witnesses
said.
II also bit Rocky's owner Gary
Mcfarland in the le&. The 25-ycar-old
ays his wound required seven
stitches.
A crowd of about 40 gathered
around the mclcc and business people
came out of their downtown shops to
see the commotion.
Main Street was blocked to through
traffic durin1 the hei&ht of the Cray.
And McFarland wound up bcin1 IO
anpy 11 police, who he claims did •
nothina to pre~ent the second attack,
that he 1s planning 10 uc the city, he
said.
The event unfolded Saturday
afternoon when Mcfarland and his
girlfriOfld, Isabel Asar, tied Rocky to a
fence near Jack's Surfboard Shop
while they went to buy a bathing suit,
he said.
The bull terrier, or boxer, was on
Rocky in 1 fla h.
"He was a Tasmanian Devil, there
was blood Oyina everywhere. He kept
going for Rocky' throat," Mcfarland
said.
He finally wa able to re cue his
dog and, angry because the attacking
beast had no leash, went after its
owner.
"l need your name and address," he
told the unidentified woman. "I'm
going to follow you until you &ct to
your house or car. •
uid.
The Mariners School pupil, who was
not identified because of his aae, was
knocked unconscious and suffered from
head laceration,, contu1ion1 and
abrasions,. Zanger uid. He wu taken to
Western Medical Center and listed in
stable condition.
"He's a lucky little boy.'' Zangger said.
The boy's parents do not apeak English
and were not available for comment.
The driver of the Cherokee, Donna
McCann of Costa Mesa, was not at fault
and was not cited, according to Zangger.
Parents of students at the elementary
school have complained about the Irvine-
Mari ne~s inter~ection in the past,
contending that 1t is unufe for children
crossinf. and Zangier said he received at
least mne phone calls after the accident
occurred Tuesday from parents concerned
about child safety.
"There has been concern for severaJ
years over 1hat particular intersection,"
said Bruce Crockard, principal of
Mariners Sch.ool, who added the
intersection docs not have a croawalk.
"We try to discourage children and
parents from crossing. that intersection."
Children are instructed to walk to the
l .. ~ c.. o.llr ....
corner of Mariners Avenue and l9lli
Street, where there is 1 c:cm.r•
Crockard said. '
Jim de Boom, Newport-Meta u.-..
School District board member,
acknowledged that the intenec:tioa -
indeed an unsafe one, but ite i...-.ct lllll
the district had no jurisdictioa ill ._
matter.
"Parenti seem to thin.It ltrCCI en n '11
par<ll arc a sehool board p1alll1-." •
Boom aaid. The problem sboWd in•nd
by resolved by the City Of c.o.ta ....._ lie
said.
See ACCIDENT ....
Cros
lear•
barriers
By Russ Loar
Oruee COi.Si Oliy ,....
NEWPORT BEACH How nw:tY
1cachc~ m the eYrpon-Mesa school
d' met can speak Urdu? ·
Or Gujarati?
Or any of the more than 30 langua,es
pokct1 by the school district's 3;1.n
Llmited-Engli h-Proficicnt tudents?
Not too many. In fact, the di 1rict is
again applying for an exemption from
talc Jaws that require schools to teach
LEP students in the1r native language
One out of every five Newport-Mesa
1uden1 -3,277 out of a rotal 16,04 -
arc considered limited in their ability to
speak En&li h, according to district
coordinator Aviva Forster. The number of
the district's LEP stud.ents has grown by
1,763 since 1988, de ipitc declining overall
enrollment incc 1988, the percentage of
LEP students an the dtStrict has increased
from 8 to 20 percent.
The di trict does provide native
lanauaae in tructaon 1n Spanish ud
Vaetnamc~ -laniuages pokcn by the
largest numbers of LEP students -bUt
teachers arc forced to improvise for most
other laniuag~.
"We don't have the qualified staff to
provide in (ruction in what v.c caU 'exotic
· languages'. •· Forster said. "We can 1S1C11
the child's Engli h abthty, but we cannot
a e the child's native ability."
The native language exemption • ia
rou1incly requc~ted and ~nted to moec
chool district tn Orange County, which
ranl-s second only to Lo Angeles C.OW.ty
in number of LEP tudcnts statewide,
accordin& to county educatJOn department
offtc1al .
"She pve me a finaer and aaid f·-
you and kept on walkin1." •
S.. DOG FIGHT,._ .... Rocky and Gilry Mcfa1land are recoY«ing from their wounds suffered during a
dog fight m downtown Huntington Beach recently .
"Our number of language naiftoritr'
tudents is arowing fast, and " cbl't
have the resources to keep up," -...
· tclla Ac~ta, an education apedalml
wit h the county Dcpartmcat of
Education. "The numbers ~ more .._.
Reports of 'normal' water
supplies all wet, say officials
By lnaYClllOI
~C....DllJNDl
NEWPORT BEACH -Citizens here.
who only b1rety met their 20-percent
w1ter cutback fipre lat month, were
warned Tuaday that water conHrvation
it still very neceuary and that recent
reporu of 1upptic1 "near normal" were
misleadin1.
The 20·percent water cutbacks
mandated by the Metropolitan Water
District, which •uppHea alt ot Newport
Be.ct.'1 water. will remain in pe.cc.
district ~nan IOti Mwr Ukl.
"There ts no recowndltiott to rMucl ......... hi ............... .
clroulM-W.d•llMWt-.:"
,,. city "' ..... .....
1 .... ed tM ......... f11 ... ..,. J-1 ............. , ....
figure by one acre toot 1n May, <..'lty
Utilicics DU'cctor Bob Dixon said.
In April, residents S\lCCceded in cuttint
water use 23 percent, -.hilo in March,
they cut back 31 percent, which Otxon
attributed 10 the heavy rains.
Weekend reports indicated that MWO,
Yithlch auppUes 1 water to a total o1 27
Southern California uuUt~ CJll*led to
enter t~ summer with near no,...
tupplles, thanks to the heavy March rains
and increased Oowt rrom the Colorado
Aqueduct.
lkat the district is tiJI 700,000 ecre feet
betow llll .,ear's Nppffa. MUir MW
1'Mldl). WWII 2.5 rnillioft 8Cte fftt were
teicl lut ,.,,, the cMl&rict now.,.:r, hu
~.I tmlliOn 1CN feet IO MR. be •
iillrkt ii ........ lot .... ... ltlt man....,,,_ tM
...., WM. Muir Mid .
S.. LANGUAGE .....
Coastal Coiitmission acce
beach encroachment pol·
: •
HE IS--------------
·\ ; I·\ ctr old (\NH Me!>O rc!>1den1 who has been blind since
h111h hut .tlrc.id) "·" achieved more 1han most people will in a
l11l't11nc !"ht• Chicago nntivc grud ualed from Northwestern
L n1\Cl\1t~ 111 llJIO "'ith a mni.1cr's degree in music and later
'rn' tcJ '111g111g 111 I he Cclchrny Lounge at Bally'!> Casino in Lss
\'cca..,
TEACHER, TEACHE.....,__ _______ _
Since gr.1<lua11n~ from wllcge. Kaiser ha'> ta ught tudents
mu'>lc ,111d q11cc k''un' both on the high school and professional
lc"cl I le t.1kc' 1,pccral care in seeing 1hat each of his student
hcwmc' .i heller '111gcr, hu t there have been situations where he
\\,,, hlrceu to 'ug{?e't nnother hobb) or career to his students.
• I here .ire J lot of shark out the.re," he id, referring to
monc) ·IH .ihhtn!! profe,1,1onals who give some of their students a
tal'c \cn'e of hupc about their abilitic • in order to keep their
O'"n pod.ct<. full
ABARIJONr-------------
Ka ic;er, a h.1r11unc, '>Ing' wilh lhe Mesa Verde United
Method1~1 Church Me1,:i Verde hu' helped case the transi1ion of
moving tor Kai'e1 . "ho came 10 Southern California on hi own
bcc.1u,l· of Im curren1 JUb "'ith the Internal Reve nu e Service.
DUKr---------------
__,.. 1 ad1 d,I\. K.1N'r .ind h" dog Duke. trained as a leader dog
!111 K,11,c1. "'Jlk w the h1" 'tup and go to work -together. As a
\\\lf l..1111.! do)!. Dul..c .lll\ a' 1 he eye' for hi ma,1er and stays with
hrrn .ii .di t1111c'
CHICAGO -HIS KIND OF SPORTS TOWN----
.._ iN r h.1, hccn a Cub~ and Bear, fon all of h1 life, attending
111.111' i.:.1111c' throughout the long winters and short ummer in
111111111' I ht• LlllO)mcnt he receive~ from the games goe beyond
hc111c prl'cnt for the final outcome. "I go for the crack of the
h.1t. the ,,1und of the c.rowd," he 'aid. He leave no doubt which
1e:rm he 1, pulling form the NBA Championship -"l'm rooting
lnr I he Uu11,:·
-81 Tom Spd s
Local News Briefs
Cyclist struck, killed by motor8't
IRVINE -A 12 \c,11 1ll<l h1cycll't who wa~ not \\.CMtng a
he lmet wa!> c;truci.. .ind lo.tiled by a van early Tue~dav, police
reported.
Robert ll1fum1 OJo. I:!, was eastbound on Michcl,nn Drive
when he rode 1hrnu~h the intersection at Fluor and Into
"'~toound trnff1 c. pohlc ,,11d
The b1C)Clt't cro"cd 1n front of a van driven b\ Im Chang
Chung, 50. nl 111,trn, "'ho wa., :tpparcntly unable to ,l\oad hitting
the C)chst. '·"d '"inc pohce L Dick Bowman
Chung "'·" not cited, Uo man i.tud. Odo wa~ pronounced dead
at the \CCnc. of the (i·30 <1.m llCC1dent.
CouncH can bin lllltlbolrdlng In .-1111
NJ·WPO R r BE!ACH -The City Council now hn the
,1 uthor1ty to ban ~k:1teboardmg and rollcrsknting from public
p:tfl1n' lots in the city a11 ~ell ns from \trcet • idev.alk and
other public property.
The council lnte Mondny adopted an umcnd mcnt that adds
rublic pt1rk1ng lot lO an C'<i ling law that allQWS the council tO
prohibit 'kuteboanlma and roller kating from certain public
11treeh und sidewalk!!. by imply pa iiing a re\olution.
The council u\cd that law a few yean aao to prohibit
~kn1eboardina on Dalb<>a Pcnm ula nnd, more recently, in the
Mcfadden 'quare area nc r Ncwp<Ht Pier.
AMMAN, Jordan -Kina Huueift, hoipitaHnd with an lrreaular
h-:11rtbca1, assureJ Jordanians from his sickbed Tuesday that he
\\Ould soon be back to work.
The royal palace sitid the SS-year-old monarch, who has a decade·
long history of heart trouble, was in excellent condition after being
hospitulitcd Monday night at the kfn1ck>m'1 army hospital, Huucin
Medical City.
A palace official said he lhight be released by Wednesday. The
official , speakmg on condition of anonymity, 11aid the heart trouble
was c1tu~d by "a result of continuous hard work during the past few
week'>." •
• 111111•...,... ti 1'111111• ..... 1Drc81
BAGHDAD, Iraq -Saddam HulSCin, trying to rebuild his once
fearsome military· machine, is doling our big pay raise and bonuses
to his troops.
Allied officials said Saddam's massive military lo cs in the Gulf
War, as well as the 1)'5tematic destruction of his nuclear,• chemical
weapons and mi ile facilities, means that he no longer has much
offe nsive capability.
Dut by rebuilding his military around the remnants of his
Republican Guard, his best and most reliable troops, ·he.can buurcss
bis regime amid Western efforts to topple him by maintaining trade
sa nctions that are '>lowly strangling Iraq.
The forces that survived the Gulf War were trong enough to
crush po)twnr rebellions by Shiite Muslims in the south and Kurdish
guerrillas in the north.
P•l SU111181tl calmllDll -, -ta Mll'I
WASHI NGTON -A presidential panel advocated on Tuesday
that the United tales develop nucle:tr-powercd rockets to carry out
Pre!-i1dcnt Bu .. h\ goal of c;cnding ao;tronauts to Mars early in the 21st
Ccntul).
The panel submitted fou r propo als to acco mmodate different
priorttic!. and made 14 recommendation for technological
breakthrough to carry them out.
Each propo al calls for a tronauts to land on the moon in 12 to 14
eers and on Mar in the )C.tr 2014 to 2016. The report did not
addres' the co ts of the vanou propo al . Admini tration source
hnve put the price tag for sending eight astronaut to Mars at $400
billion to SSOO billion.
Plllial P•a111lood lan:llll e111111•1
WASHJ NOTON -Planned Parenthood launched its largest .
News of the Weird
Cat freed after 111011tll •ll•d In NOi
OLD TOWl'I. Maine -A fei sty feline hould be ftnc after
.1ppnrcntl} ~pending a month trapped between the ceiling and
roof of a new mobile home that wa hipped from the outh to
New f· ngland.
A veterinarian ay he can't figure out how the cut urvlVed.
The home, manufactured in Tenne~ cc, arrived al Sunrise
Mobile Home Parlo. about three weeks ago.
Someone loot..ing inside the home Sunday heard a cry from
abo"e, and part.. employee di covered that a young, gray cat had
been sealed 1n the 'pace between the ceiling tile and the peaked
roof, 'aid mana~er Peter Thorton.
When the cat couldn't be coaxed from 1t h1dmg place, park
cmplO)ee Perry Enger removed vinyl siding ond cul 1hrough
pl)wood to lure 11 to a trap baited with food.
On Mondfty, Thornton took the cnt to veterinarian Ronald
Lott, who '"id he could not explain how the animal lasted o lotTJ
wuhout food o r \H'ltcr. The cat. apparcnll~ 6 months old, wa in
poor hnpe when 1t was found but i expected to survive.
Thornton !lll1d conden11tion above the ccilin& may have
provided some water.
. Life ~hould be ca ier for the cat now. Thorton says he'll adopt
ti.
A pokc!lmnn for the home's builder, Norri Co., aid ii wa
po 1blc that the cat climbed into the home undetected before
the roof wa~ in~1.11lcd.
Thorton named the kitten Norri ·.
Police Log
Huntington kach
A whrtc ~1uhn1 drngh\ ll~d to 1 1hp 1n the: 4000
hl,,k uf AhuJdrn r>mc rq1or1cdly w11o \lolcn A K1>•
und ho111 Y•I\ 111~cn from the d<xt 1n fmnl of 1 hOmc ·
1n the ttiOOO hlock ,til l'uttfl( CN I H11hwey. • fi11ral.1r~ i;nti:tcd 01 rc,rtknco rn the 7600 bk>dl of \'nl1.t l>mc thrl'lllh .1n open w1ndtM 11nd SlO&c Sl$<1 ~A•li ~nd I b.telpM:k. • fhk\c1 ,.~cdl)' "'>tc llN'UI SIOG ~ from 1 ca1h rcsi&tcr 141 the ~IC thc1tcn un Mam Street. • ScYcral fndfridu11h rcpcwtodly J>'lntcd .,.,,.., Oft die
• tit of lhc ~ ~Mft tlllOl'I al IN Fiw .......... ~-"'" • =ll ...... -hloCtt ~ I hol flf 11 ........ atdt M ,._
ftN ...... "f e ll•Jlfl •
-WASH I NO TON -A c:o11Htion of national education, cMI rflbta
and advocacy groups Tuaday called on Conan. to rejec:I Preaiclent
Bush's plan for national testina of all American school children .
In a letter mailed to each member of Conarcu. the Campaian for
Genuine Accountability in Education said, ·•we cannot limply
mandate new tests and expect positive chanp."
"We already know the results of most tests," aaid Monty Neill of
the National Center for Fair &. Open Te1tina, FairTest, which initial·
cd the letter. ·
"On average, poor inner-city children, particularly African-
Amcrican and L81ino students, score the lowesr. The South, which
remains the nation's poore!lt region, scores lower than other regions.
Upper-income, predominantly white areas score the highest.
"We have known thi~ for a long time, bur our nation has yet to act
on thi!\ knowledge."
J-Cllt Wll'Y .,. It Ml "'
TOK YO -The eruption or a killer volcano in southern Japan is
~using some Japanese to cast a wary eye at Mount Fuji, the majestic
notional symbol that i within volcanic pitting distance of Tokyo.
"A Major Mount fuji Eruption i Considered Common Sense
Among the Expert,,'' 'lhouted one headline in thi week's Sunday
Main1chi magazine.
The article quoted Akira Suwa, a fo rmer researcher at the
Meteorological Agency and a volclltnO expert, as saying "it is
unnatural to think Mount fuj1 will not erupt" in the future.
Japan's tallest mountnin, which is considered a god of the
1ndigcnoul\ Shinto religioo and i'I the focus or n major cult, last blew
its stack in 17071 when it laid a bl8nket of a h over Edo, now Tokyo.
62 miles to the northeast.
Since then, 12,385-foot Mount Fuji ha maintained a serene silence
although it rcmoins classified an ac11ve volcano.
Allln·AllB'lcln llOIUltlin ...... In U.I.
WASHINGTON -Chtnesc, Filipino,, Indian~ and Korean / led
an exploi.1vc growth m the country' Asian-American population
during the pa t decade, the Cen us Bureau aid Tuesday.
America's huge Chinel>e community more than doubled in size
during the decade -to 1.6 million The number of Filipinos grew by
more than 80 percent, to 1.4 m1lhon.
The ~maUer Indian, Korean ond Vietnamese communiti es each
grew more than 125 percent.
N ians and Pacific lslandcr11 "'ere the nation' fas test-growing
racial group in the 1980s, more than doubling their 1980 numbers.
But at 7 3 million, they till make up only 3 percent of the national
population of 248.'7 million.
Most of the growth came from immigrant . And most or those
immigrant cttlcd in California, I lawaii and New York.,
ORANGE COAST "" °''"• CN\I °"'"" P.klc (UPS 144 000) _. p11h11,hid d.1~ for SS 2S pet four·'""
11111!'1!. peffOd by C"M~t 4Uh1Wpll00, S7 pet fout. wttk ~·!Od by ,,, .. ,, hy ~ CoSu MeV
Puh1·"1tnt lnr llO W &.ty St CMI• ~
CA 92617 S«ood-dMs pnR.>~ ~.d at
Co-I• """1, O. POSTM.\STCR ~ a6drti' chanps ltl tlw 0..4', Pilot. P 0 8olr 1 Sf)(),
Cllll.l MrY CA 926,6
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CMf'iltNWt Vic•"'~ P'l.lll~~ll! .,.,.. ChffiWIOll
CnwitftA NI -'«If~ illutttMIOflt. fdt.. IOIWl nwttn Of ~·~ ~n ,.,...,. be r~uet!d .. .ihnut wr t>n pet'm1"""" nJ copynfl¥. OWMt
JIM CtHStllltt Pu~
lllloc Stein, Jr.
CNinNn
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ttrchcndcd by tmllfoftct of Huahc' Martot M 9001 Quficld A\'C, The" -'IOfc m1naacr cold ~ice he IPOI·
tcd Robert JtttCDh Ni' 11llcpill) try to 1cc1I alcc\l9ol
from the 1totc. The min allc,cdly ... u11oct .an •·
'"'""' m1na1c:r 1n •n •ttcmfM to ctcape ·tn. tM &lure. •
A 46-ycat·okl Anaheim clcctrn:11n .. , ari'elled °"
\u,.ptelon ul 1t1c:mp1c:t.1 bufllary June l. 'tr,: c.lrc:d to 17690 11n V1nctn1c uc:c:t for a t>ural.il) 1n pm1r ' 'The IU\Jl('CI WU deta• IC die home. •
MDWMllptf .. ld fl ............. ift ·~--· lM flil 14 ye.,.. I ~ ........... ~~-~ Newport Pro W•r ~fl -an Pldfic C.oui
Hiahwa,, 11111 ....... scut. dMfta and 1&IU
lod&ctiq arouad the Southern Califomia
dc1er11 on hil ~le.
"I wu· .kW of a daredevil then," Duncan &rinnect1~e pina a lot. "But I ne"er rodo a
motONfde on the streets. That was too --Qn--..._--duerous... u"'
1 i , .1 "° "i1'e desert prOYed danaerous, too. Coast
He blntcd O\'Cr a hump in the Anza·Borreto .----... wasteland and craahed on the blind side, his back broken.
• • ..
I t • i
"That w111 my 30th birthday," Duncan recalled. "I gueta I went
over the hill the hard way."
Duncan l~y in the &OOPY sand Cor hours. The lac.I hclicQpter
dnvcr "w4~ ~1ck and C"Cn all-terrain vehicles couldn't set to him.
F1ai.h·fliai6Ctma had turned the desert into a huae pit of quicksand. ·
Duncan doesn't know how long he was there. "It was from
early afternoon until late a t night, maybe eight or nine hours."
He was finally taken to a small local hospital, but it wasn't
equipped to handle his injuries. So he was taken to a trauma
center nenr San Diego.
Dunco n spent seven day in intensive care, was operated on
twice, and that Will> about it. "They gave me some stuff for pain,
and l worked with n phy ical therapist. But there wasn't really
nnything more they could do for me."
So Duncnn bailed himsetr out of the hospital AMA -againi.t
medical ad\lice. "lt didn't mnke much sen e spending 24 hours a
du) in the ho p1tal fo r one hour of therapy."
More important: ''I had gotten over the original shock and r
wo'\ ready to get on with my life. I was determined to make
\omcthing po~11ive out or the "hole me~."
Duncnn old h1 bu. inc and dabbled for a while. He taught at
C1trul> College nod "-Orked a vice president of the Catalina
I land Vi"tor and Con.,ention Bureau.
"In tho c day , disabled people were still in the closet,"
Duncan \:lid. "People looked at you as if there was something
wroni \\tth'you. Well. of cour e there was, but the public had no
idea of what we were cnpable of."
Duncan Milne, for exnmplc. wa\ capable of going ailing.
"I got back into it on a friend\ boat. h was great! I had never
realized what a phyMcul and mental challenge sailing is."
Duncan wa\ not, however, capable of going to the beach. ''I
had spent my life on the bench, and I missed it badly," Duncan
said.
So he spent a couple of yeari. trying to figure out a wheelchair
that could M>mchow cruise through the soft, deep sand that
formed an uncro able moat between Duncan and the ocean.
Durncd 1f he didn't come up with the answer.
Duncan i41 now working to get the necessary (>&tent protection
and ha s a Canadian manufacturer interested in producing hi
hcnch crui er.
"You can't imagine what a thrill it wa to cro the beach and
l\ctually get down there and feel that water. God, it was
"onderful!"
·o wonderful, that Duncan didn't notice that each time the
'urf receded, the wheel on his <:hair plowed deeper and deeper
into the \and. Soon he wa quite stuck.
"Th11t w01' OK." Duncan grinned again. ''Some people pulled
me out now I keep mo\11ng Sure, it take a tremendous
amount of effort to wheel my elf ncro the beach -or the
now. I c.tn probably turn that thing into a bobsled! -but now
1t\ po s1ble. It' not ea y, but 1t" po~ 1blc."
Snturd1ty: Dunc:tn Milne ha llJrted a foundation to make. th~
impo ible po~~1ble.
Fred Martin's column run Monday, Wednesday and aturday.
Court overturns guilty verdict
against Newport yac~t br~ker
By Emily Adams
0ranot CoaSI O,ay PllOC
SANTA ANA -A Newport
Beach yacht broker who was tried,
con.,.1cted and Cf\.Cd jail time on
charge of robbery and attempted
rape aw h1 guilty verdict
overturned la t week by 1hc
1ppellatc court
Ba ed on the contention that
D<iniel Ddlaven' tnal att orney
WO\ incompetent, the U.S. 4th
Districl Court of Appeal \'Oted 2·
l to overturn the jury'i. conviction.
The en c. 1n which DeH11ven
wns accused of robhmg and
attempting to rope a 25-year-old
woman nt knife point in a parking
garage, gained wide attention after
a defcn)e investigntor accu .. cd
Newport Beach police of
tampering w11h evidence.
John Depko, 1nvco;t1ga1or for the
Pu blic Defenders Office,
championed DeHa\len, 65, long
after the trial wa' lo t Oay<i
before OeHa.,cn wa!I. to begin
serving a }Car-Iona jail term la\t
March, Dcpko made public a thick
folder or d()(umcnt J,llleg1n1 that
police had trit'd to incriminatc
DcHu.,.cn Ill lln unrel.11ed rubhcry
dunn{l hio; Mn) 1989 1ri.1l.
r~c paclaa(' WI\ ~ubmttled tO
the D1~tnct Allorney'~ Office,
whi ·h (11.:cidC"d t1t:.11n111 in.,.c,tiga1ina
th m.11tcr due to 1 lack of
concrete C\1t.lence. Dc ll.wen
cvcntt111lly \Ct\Cd bout nine
month'i llf hi\ cntcilce before
lleina n:lc{1,ed
Pro~ccutnr\ hn\C not yet
decided whether they "''II rMry
the l)cl l,\1.cn ,.,c. ,,,id '''~i\l;int
01 u1c:t Attorney John D. Cunlc)' ••
If they Jill, .tnd l)cHa.,cn wa
·~ain con.,.1ctcd, 1t " unkno'An
whether he Ct,uld ~ forced to
'ene :tnother jail <1cntcncc.
Pnrt of their dccmon will be
ba..,ed on the .,icum' "''lhngne\ to
testify :ig4inst DcH:i"en .ig:un,
Conley· 'aid.
The woman ·~ emo11onal
te,timony, in which 'lhc 1dcnt1ficd
DeH,,\cn as the man "ho pulleJ a
knife on her, took St50 Jnd forced
her to parttall) di robe a' he at
in her car, wa' pt\lotal in
DcHnven''I conv1c11on Oefcn,e
ittlorne) called the ca'e one uf
m11.tJkcn idcntit) ,111d d.11mcd
DcHa.,.en \\ft!> tn the nuddlc ol a
buo;mc ~ lunch \\hen the I\ \illllt
1x:cu r red.
It w;1s the dcfcn\e uttorncv\
t.11h1rc to call character w11nc ~c11
thJt pu'>hcd the ,1ppc:ll.itc c:oull to
on·11urn Oclh1,cn'11 con\.1c11on,
wro1c Ju,tice t:tl"•lrtl J Wallin 1n
the mo1onty op1n1on
"Thill w'" a clo:.c co c ~
l)l)l favcn Clfferctl .rn c \trcmel
.;trong nllh1 dcfen .. c," Wallin
\HOtc, noting th.H char&ictcr
witnc~!.e could ha\c r1w.eJ a
rcn\Onablc c.louht nmong jurors.
A forceful di senting opinion.
written b) Ju'lticc Sheila J>.
unen'lhine, called W ,lllin'
.inal)Si erroncoll) If Dclfoven\
luwycr had called char.lelcr
witncs cs to" tcuify to
DcHa,cn's allcgel.I h1:.1ory of non·
nggrc\ ion toward womcn ...... hc
coultl\c opened the door for
pro!leCutor' to impeach the yacht
brokcr'<i character, includina
1 ll egat1o n of a violen t
conrrontntion wuh • female dock
worker.
The Di\trict Attornc) ho\
approium.11cly 90 da) to dcc:ido 1f
they will hr1ng l>cttavcn "' trial
a,g11n. D tf:tvcn WA\ un;w1uh•hle
h•r eomment I uc day. •an·•-••••• BUENA PARK Knou'1 oun/' Knou 1 lpOlletm1n
Berry Farm hut dmtn 11' XK·I Zlnville 111d Tuadly.
Ritht mtc 1 a prceautintt two
hours after the death of 1 "'°"''"
Oft 1n 1dcndcal 11tracti9n at 1n °'"° ........ """' pert. "It'• :lli;~rd pmccdure. Al •
pncautioft lmmWf1tely doeed
On unda) n11ht, • wom1n died
1r1er falhn1 Qfr the fli1tu
Commiander nctc at the Klnp
bland Amuttmcnt Part in K1np
Mllh. Ohio
1•'~'"-"PC-~l'>k.I
In what is turning into a geometric maze, a construction .worker
is framed by a semicircle at the Triangle Square project at New·
port Boule\ard, Harbor Boulevard and 19th Street
Committee to sniff out
city's memorable past
By Ins Yokol in the d t} ). and Kercholf Lab in
Dl'~IQ' Coast Dairy Pilol Comn.1 t.lcl Mar
EWPORT" BEACH A In .1dd1t1on, the city ha
committee that will record the de ignatcd five )ltCS -the Bnlboa
city', historical landmarks and Pnv1laon. the Bnlbo.i Inn, the site
1dcntif> other potential -.11cs for of 1hc former Rcndcnou!I
p1escrvt111on "ill be establi hed by Ualln•om. the former Jolt) Roger
the Cit> Council later thi month. rc,1,111r.1n1 on Bulboa hi.ind and
The committee will be charged the tormer Oank nf Balboa -as
with conducting a i.urvcy that offac1.1I lw.1oricill ktndmark'
include.., the hi torical landmark The flalt1<M Pa\lhon Jnd llank
already rccogmzcd 1n the city a · nl B.ilboa '11c arc recognized 111
"ell .ic; potenlial h1stoncal site . the '·H•on.11 Rc~1,1er ot I l"1onc
fhe council gave it ble ing Plac~'· while the \late ha'> al'o
M()nd.1v to the idea of an official rc~n'n11cct certain 1C" JX.'11 Beach
.. uney of the hi .. 1oncal landmarks. \itec,,
c n ' lwlllll•(Jm
°""9Gllllllflr ...
GJITA NIM -A 9'1pcrior ~rdclMNIWICdT~IO
d-... a lawlul1 fllcd ~ a lfO\IP
of Co1u Meu ruicfenu ct.ellcnsi"I a propoted 20-mHlion· lillon uaderarouhd reservoir.
Mc11 Cun1olid1ted Water
District board memt>cn app"°"cd
the reJC~oir in April in 1~ face
Of Ol'PO'ition from residents who
50)' the dii.tnct didn't do ~uffic1cnt
en.,·ironmcntal \ludy for the
project.
't'o be located on the ground"' of Ltndber~h School ut 23rd Street
11nd Orange Avenue, the rc,,.ervoir
1s expected to take t~o to )here
)Car to bu1ltJ. Opponents 'n)
traffic, noi"'c ;ind du t during the
length> construction period \\Ill
"cnouc.I> degrade their ll\C .
D1~1rict official ay, ho~cver,
that they u1c willing to take an>
mca•urc• ACCCiiNU)' &o
nob;c ana other public
l'OftCcmt from sctcina Did of
A poup of aboul 30 rn•lll.
represented by Cott• M
attorney Mu.;hul DunleYie,
uit in Mi.y, chaJtc ....
d1 rrict' c nv1ro11 .. a
doc;ument.1t1on. 1
The di t rict did iuue • •
document known a a •
cJeclarutwn of cnvironme
1mpxt, wh ch ~tipulata Cllal
impact on the community cu
m1n1m1zed 1tnd that the effcctt
out~cighed b ·1 the upc d
benefit of the new rcseA'Oif .*• DunlC\ 1c nid the pctit'
11\Unt lhc dt'ilrlCt to conduct I ..
en1;ironmcntal impact r~ ..
"I fr.:cl th11t a full report .tiU
ho" that thi re:iervolf should toe
h huih." Dunlevic aid. :1 ... hearing on the uu j 11
~hedulcd for ept. 19. i ·
• Witnesses __. after :
(
rider to•lld by raclnl CIP i . "
NEWPORI BEACH -Police Nc"port Beach Police Trafic
arc a li.ing for 1hc public's help in lmc.,1ig:itor Bruce Burns. He l•t
lociiting a c;1r full of youth 1hat con~cimt ne but eventually ca~
reported!) mO\\ed d~ n a bicycl1"'t to and w:.111.;cd home 10 hi' Pafk
on Back Bay Dme and ped av.ay. 'ewport ilpartment. 1
The 1,1c11m. a 36-ycar·old Hb wile took him lo t.c
Newport Beach re 1dent, 'atfl he hospital for 1rc.11ment of sc.,.ecal
was nding ht) bicycle around 4 cur' on the forehead and l~ft
p.m. June 5 on Back Ba) Drive temple and vanou fas:ial and ~I
Jlbl north or San Joaquin Hill .. 1hrn IOlh, Burn .ud. :
Drive "hen he heard a car coming 1 he \ICtim never w the ... chi~
up behind him and the ~und of nnd could not provide a detailld
)Oung men houtina c,iren·t)pc dc,crip11un ol the ..,u pects, lo
sounds. 1 n\ c'11ga1or are looking f(>r
The C)Cla 1 wa.; hit from behind "llnc,'>es. Ourn' . aid. An)one wlh
and thro"n off the b1C)clc 1n10 anrormation hould call Bum ~i
'iOmc bu he . according w fW.J 'P4f>. j
• • • I I
The cable TV channel number for a children's series titled :
"Come Sign With Me," "J' '""orrcct in Mondn) • Onnge Coast :
Dally Pilot. The crtc'I. dcs1gncd for deaf children and their :
fami hc:>, feature chm1c fail) tale~ .tcted ou1 and told in sign :
language. Half-hour cp1'1odc1t may he cen Monday through
Fnday at 4 p.m. on Coplc., Colon> <.ablc\is1on public •ccess :
Channel 61 . : ,.
L.... Rohcrt and Debbi Elliott ot
parents of a new baby bo). ·not
Orange Coa t Almanac.
•
' e~port Beach re the proud ": ·
n girl '> pnnted m aturday's :
wuh council mcmhers cautionmg ..-----------------------------'--------------
thllt 1 he) wanted to avoid
• threatening propcny nnd b~me
right .
U 1~1or1 ca l prcsenation
'upportcr\ l>lrc' that de-;1gnating a
property a ht toncal site do~n't
m.1111rc that 1hc actual building be
retained forever.
Counc1h.,.oman Evelyn Hart, \\ho
prppo,cd the hi t or1cal
· prclicna11on committee idea. ·aid
'he doesn't want property o"ncr
10 feel threatened ond mistaken!}'
hchcve a h1.,1orical de ignation will
pmh1b1t an) changes to their land.
fhc citv. which 1 the countv\
third oldc· t, 1:> full of old building
.ind "'c' that provide htnt 10 hfc.:
on the Ornnge Co:i4it decade<; ago.
H..rt 'aid
The Nt:"port Beach H1 1oncal
Society, formed in 1Q67. ha'i
.1lre.nl~ rccogniLcd, \\Ith plJquc •
nine h"tonc.11 lnndmar._s that
rcpre,cnt the foundation of 1he
cm the O;ilboa Pa\lhon. 1hc dory
fi,htntt nect. the Balboa I land
ferry, Nc"port Canncnc: (plaque
.11 the Canner) rc\taur.int), South
Co.1'1 Slupyard, tte of 1he 1h1rd
Bov cout J.1mborce. the ewport
l larbor Yucht Cluh (tht fir 1 \acht
cluh 111 the ba}'). NC\\port Hurbur
I l1gh • chool (the f11't h1~h ~chool
HUN flNG I 0 Ul::.AC:H
Police here .irrc,ted une of trio
of nllc cd .-.rmcd rnhher'i Monday
night niter the three "ere cha cd
Imm the mn.,,agc parlor the) 'd
JU't held up. authonue <1n1d
,\tcttrd1ng 10 police. ~ho
rc,runtlcJ to toll ot a robbery in
progrc"' at 1hc Oriental G.uJcn
Spa m uhout Q.~O p.m. officers
.1rm lt JU'it ,,., the three i,andit'
v.crt Occing, ScH:ral people ~ere
~h;.i'iin1 the ullcgct.I rohher' and
lullowcu them into 1a nc~gtihurhuod. policc Lt. Ed
Md rl.11n ,,111J
\ hclli:\ peer "·1' hrought in to
hc:lp 'c trch the .uc.1 um.I olf1cc r~
",,n111ull-. .irrc,IC'u '<1-~c.u-old lfai
l'ii:u\cn, • 1 (i.u"cn (irnw bu-.tx, •
Md rl un ,,,HI
I" 1 ctth r mt'n ,01 ·'""~· Ctcr
one of them dropped ,1 ,Q
1111lhmctcr h1tnJ"un 10 the ma''·' •c
ruuln1\ purk1ng lot. Mcl:rl in ,,.1J
Ne rl 2 000 in cn~h nd
JCWC'll) " s "h'I n from '"~' ~If· 1.•ntplo)Cil m.1, cu c' ,aid 11n
c mplo c~ of the '!\~. 17061
1 C'f\ I nd St , v. '" 1 1 kcJ t\\)t to he: n.1m d
IU)Cn
tf11nttn tnn
booltcd on
ml held tn hcu ''' SS0.000 bail ·~ .. c peeled 10 be arnuancd hm al Wc~t Munec pal Cuun.
COSTA MESA To
increase its visibility, the 81nk of
the West has mowed north.
Amons lhc. 10 largest bank'
in CalifornJ. and a member of
France's Banque Nationale de
Paris Group, lhe world's eighth
largest bankina entity, Bank of
the Wcsl relocated last week
from its low-profile offices in
Newport Center.
You can't miss the new
location: It's the 15-story, newly
named Bank of the West Tower
~ in Costa Mesa's Soath CoHt
• Plaza Tmm Center, where the • .. bank is leasing 27,000 square
• feet of office space.
: "We believe the q:>nsolidation
' or our Orange County offices
: into this landmark building will
.. provide the best possible
" location and service to our
• cu!>tomcrs," said Don McGrath.
~ UanJ.. of the We ·i's president.
• Bank of the West's corpor3le
: han king g ro up has been
prov1d1ng line!> of credit, cash
management, in ternational
banJ..ing and foreign exchange
4 'ie rv1cc' to the mid-s ized
b11\1ne'>~ market in Orange
County tor 10 yeari..
Bank of the Wei,t has more
than 100 branches throughout
the rnttc and ai,i.ets totaling
• nearly $4 b1ll1on. It recently
acq uired 30 branches o f
Imperial Federal Savings.
0 1'lying Solo: Newport Beach-
bascd Loral Acronutronic, a
divii,ion or Loral Corp.. ha!>
become the 'ole contractor on
the $15.7 m1ll1on test phase of
an anti-rnnJ.. weapon for the
Manne'>.
The contract. awarded by the
Naval Surf,1cc \\ .1rfare Center at
Dahlgren. V.1. run-. through
Augu~t 199~ Jnd includes flight
ICSt!. ol protOt\ pc' or the Short
Rnngc An11 t.rn J.. \\capon. which
weighs le" than 20 pound!> but
is de\lgned I<' ddcat the: nc\t·
generation ol tilnJ..' with
d(hancctl ttrmor
fhc ba.,1r contract for the
SRA W w.i' fl\'-Jrdcd in l·cbruary
1989 when Loi al Acronutronic
was .. till part of Ford Acro:-.pacc.
which ~"" l,11er purcha~cd by
Loral Corp.
0 Lendln1t Over Backward:
Despite ~•cad) or dipping home
pricei,. the average Orange
Co unty homcbuyer borrowed
/VI~~! I/UN j.
llatLalie.t,I
J'aH .ft1'4 r !Ire
1~11~1/at
t~tkJ'~
J't11B1 & 11~ r«A
7f&OW1f
Jtfoll. -nae................ 1 °'""
~. -Thun, _., ....... tN·
M -Set. -················lo-6 s..m .... -........................ 12-5 ................ ,.,..,.., ..... ......... ""'... .
27Jl I. Cout 8wy. c ..... M llu
171-llU
Bank of the West's new locale is hard to miss.
St 78,631 to purchase a new
residence during the first four
months . of the year, a 4.6·
percent increase over the same
period of 1990, according to a
new survey.
Ln Jolla-based Da1aquick
Information Systems, which
monitors California real estate
buyinJ and financing. compiled
the report which found Orange
County's mortgage average the
fifth-highest in the state.
"Home prices aren't up, but
for the past half year the entry-
lcvcl portion of the market has
been fairly active. Entry-level
buyers typically borrow a~ much
a they can qualify for to get
into a house," said Michael Ela,
Dataquick vice president.
"That brings loan-to-value
ratios up. Home in the high-
cnd and move-up part of the
market haven't been selling well.
Buyers there typically finance a
lower portion of the sales
amount. ..
0
Jlts and Jots: Newport-Beach
based Confucius, which hopes to
become the Domino' of
Chinese food, took a step in that
direction by signing a 15-storc
franchise agreement with the
former ma ·1e r licensee of
Domino's Pizza in the United
Kingdom. Tu kpride Ltd.'s IS
Confucius stores will be located
in Florida .... When you figure
in the French subsidiary it has
just acquired. Newport Beach
surf-wear maker Qulcklllver
howed increased sales in the
econd quarter ($35.5 million for
the period ended April 30, up 19
percent from last year's $29.8
million). But net sales excluding
Na Pali, S.A. were down 19
percent to $24.1 million and
consolidated net income was
Sl.3 million, down Crom $3.7
million. Quicksilver officials
blamed the recession.
Hyundai Motor America of
Fountain Valley has come up
with a unique rebate by offering
S500 to current Hyundai owners.
''This program will encourage
our owners of older Hyundai
ca rs to take a close look at our
new model~." said Tom Ryan,
vice presi.Jcnt of marketing. ...
At its regular meeting Tuesday,
~'luor Corp.'s board of directors
declared a quarterly cash
dividend of 8 cent · per share on
it common stock.
-By the DaliJ' Pilot
Business Highlights
W• creata trlde ...,...,.
WASHINGTON -The United
State!> posted its fir t quarterly
trade surplus in nearly nine years
during the first three month of
the year. but only becau e of $22.7
billion in foreign payment s for the
Persian Gulf War, the government
said. The rare S 10.2 billion surplus
in the current account 1s the
broadest measure of the country'i,
trading performance.
WIN
AntUTR.Dt
ABOAllD AllTRAK. ••
ARD U A TltAVBL
WlUTBll roa A DAT
Look 1n Thuraday'a
Orange Coat Daily Pilot
for complete detatia and
entJy fonn to an exdtlna
getaway weekend!
Ill ..... Mii Cllllll
WASHINGTON An
add11ional $50 billion to $75 billion
in taxpayer money will be needed
10 continue the avings and loan
bailout next year. That would
bring the coi,t to more than triple
the e\t1mo1e of Prc...,1dcnt Bush
when he took office, Congress was
told.
Blnkl liking It on nose
WASlllNGTON -Regulator
reported declining profit~ and
growing real c1:tatc luan problems
ot commercial bank~ "" Pre ident ou .. h lobbied l,mmal.Ct\ on behalf or h1 b3nk1ng-ovcrhaul package.
The nat ion' 12 ,246 bank
recorded earmngs of SS.7 b1lhon in
the fir t three month of thi~ year.
-By Tht Assod•ttd PrHi
IUFFELL'S
UPllLSRIY llC. ................. 1m-u...n•~•11•
A Message From
Dr. Thibodeau
"The efficiency of the c hiropractor is
determined not by his reli&iously follow-
ma some hard and fast ~t of rules. but
by his ability to stray away from such
• ,..,. "1'1eN Pndlft rule when ncceuary and work out met·
hods best suited to each individual case. A hard 1ftd fMl set
of rules m1y be 1pplied in the m1jonty of caMI, but ..ea the
mediocre can h1ndle the majority. It ia the minority that re-
quires great kill in handlina: that ~ti the prteddoMr to a
test."
C'HIROP"ACT1C IS TH l_,.AION POR JOY, HIAl.;Tlt ANO NAl'flllm POR
Mill IONS WHO ontl!lllWISI WOULD HA ~ OP 1'11111.
House Call
D•ylitht Houn Onl)'
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CoMt W•ttin for a eellbaidDn -
IO honor ~ of lhe 9Weft&
he'!.:e,tike Million Viljo, co ml a suocellful ._., and
the eft41in1 ol a 1uccellful funde
ra~ year for the OuU.. "We
had 600 1thle1es iJwOMd and
1 voluntccn workina on the P. Io duct i o ~. ~ent," said Polhemus. Each ~,!•PPY Ek!1 llthlete and volunteen had a ;J .:.n.llNI couki -.) ch1nce to win the car, but 11 • <:' volunteer Drosman was the hdy ~~" tuna has 1 > one with 1 special reuon for ~ r.~ 1 he ' ~ celebr1tin1.
1 .:a... '(i to. iiifT Cabaret Chapter hoited the
"•1111'5 o~r Mau ~ncas. pany featurina dancina to Tony B
. Meriwether (1 5). Martin Group, hors d'oeuvres and prizes.
\ M 11ht (1~57) ,, Jean Bartel Marse Culver was chairman of the
\
( lti'l} lttt~f. tPt"thc audience and get tasether.
~·ing afterward with theater Party people also included 'f goers ~nd cast members during 1 Janice and Roger Johnson, Myrna
reception. and Dick Tripp, Cabaret president
I "We are all close friends, and Debbie Novak, Sandi Brown, lrwe came down to see Marshall incoming president Ray Vidal,
(Borden),'' said Bartel ('43). Erika Faust, Craia Jensen and
Botden is Meriwether's husband Judy Chapel.
who played the roll of Brother
Hannibal Jackson.
"Happy End" was underwritten
by Finl Interstate Bank of
California Foundation. (A line is
• the play wa\ ''It's not as bad to
rob a bank as it is to own one"
Ooops!) Representatives of the
underwriters included Jim and
Barbara Phillip and Chris and
Heidi Gaal.
the premiere night performance
~ople also included Pat Cox seen
chatting with ca~t members Tom
Humphrey and Holly Holsinger,
Lee and King Burstein, Hedda and
Steve Marosi, Maggie Murdy,
Olivia and Andy Johnson, E. G.
Chamberlain and John Elliott,
Tom and Emma Jane Riley, Jean
and Bill Wenke , Catherine Thycn
and Dot Clock.
"lt doesn't seem po sible that
this is the last play of the season;•
said artistic director David
Emme . The play will run through
July 13 and the '91-'92 season
begins Sept. 6 with George
Bernard Shaw's "Heartbreak
I louse". • What's that you say! A free cart
Fran Drosman couldn't believe
"'hat he wa hearing. She had
won a Muda Miata. "She thought
it *• a JOkc when I called to tell
her," said Julie Polhemus,
chairman of the recent 1991
Orange County Performing Arts
Ctf'ter triathlon;
The two women were among the 2.5d gathered Friday at the South
• "I'm still waiting for my
orders ... M> find out what my duties
arc," joked advertising exec Tom
Crosson. The second generation
Balboa Bny Clobber was one of
three introduced Saturday evening
as a new governor at the 43rd
nnnual Governon; Ball.
Honor also went to financier
Bill Popejoy, there with wife
Nancy and agribusiness leader Jim
Hronis 1nending with wife Sophia.
All were in the rcuivin' line with
Crosson and his wife Mimi u 200
showed for the summer social
season opener.
After an hour of socializin1 with
cocktails and hors d'oeuvres,
dinner was served in the BBC
ballroom. Mint cucumber iOup,
sea food salad, te nde rloht
medallions and papaya yogurt
dessert in a chocolate shell and
petit fours were consumed before
the crowd got serious about
dancing to the music of the Society
for the Preservation ·of Big Bands
Soc iety.
Head of the board of governors
Bill Lusk and wife Ann, BBC
President Tom Deemer and wife,
Monica, Gov. Pat and Paula
Michaels, Gov. Dorothy Yardley
and Walter Reeves, Ileane and
Gov. Nick Doolin, Gov. Bob Bucci
and Jan Foster, Betty and Gov.
Frederick Grazer and Shirlee and
Gov. Bob Guggenheim (he gets
the dapper jacket award for his
black trimmed white style) were
among the guests.
SCR ~rd prez John Stilw wkt't former Mitl Americas Marian
MctCnJaht, left, and Jean 8Mtet
Pat Cox, centP.r, with actors Tom Humphreys and Holly Holsinger
r:ran Orosman with Julie Polhemus
Sophia and Jim Hronis Bill •md Nancy Popejoy
,...~c.. ......
Actor Marshall Borden, wife lee Meriwether, Olivia JOhmon and~
Phill ips i •
Party chair Ma rge Culver with President Debbie Novak
Do you know what happened
to the girl you used to date?
Just a shot of whiskey 'Today' co-anchor •
just·wa nts to be ..
a 'plain chick'
L>car Ann Landers: This is an
·n letter to all the couch potatoes
ho reel unloved becau c their wives
.uc no longer interc ted in ex.
r ~ ,_
• If \our wife' hfe i anything like
mine· it soc hkc thi : I am up at 6
,1 m. get my elf ready for v.ork, sec
tha t the kii.I\ e11t a good breakfast
,~
·-· anJ get them off to school. My ..,._...
cou\:h potato rct up whenever he .. reel' like II 11nd goc to work. He's
hi me round 5:30 or 6:00, picks up I I dll I
the remote control and heads for the
recliner. l head for the kitchen to fi~ dinner, serve it
rnd the n clean up. l then strai&hten up the house,
•ptnJ ume with the kid , tart 1 load of laundry,
h&1thc the clulcttcn Md put them in bed. Finally, I am
.il•I.: m ''t down. Whik ColJ1na the laundry 1 try to engage my
hu ti.rnd in co1wer auon and all l get back is a 1runt.
Il e dl'C'n't e'l>Cn take hi.ii eyes . off the TV wh~ I
!}tllk to him. ftcr a while, I 11ve up and a<> to bed,
J1 u'tcd. too tired to be •nary.
ith 1 hie like thi , M:~ becomea nothil'I& more than
Me of tht> c chore that i tolerated because I was
hrought up t~ belic'l>c It w11 .my d~ty. I am fte?I 1
CJcmanJina "'Oman . All I ~ant 11 a k•fM! .word. a httle
, nation, me tm1ll 111n ol rcqnataon that I am
hum n and ma)be 1 httl.: help around the houle In
1'hc C\'Cn1n1 . 1 pc "" oo couch potatoes out there -.II tue
th• 1c11cr pcrson1lly. You JU t miaht redifdWcr the
irl ..nu 11,c:d 10 date. ,..--WOrMcl to O..t8' in F1orida
•r tiorwa; v ....... lw • Ill ti "'"' ...., .
Oi ........ ol ................. " ... o..~ ..;t ... ~,, .... ,...
I nn U.ndc"' I 1pee wtt8' uToo Much
Homework in O~nard." My 1 J-year-old has hour
more homework than hi<1 brother and i ter had at h1~
a1e. We lived in another state while h1 two ibhng
were growing up and I'm convinced tha t part of the
problem 1 the wcct deal that teacher ~ct here in
Cahfornja.
My mother taught grade ..chool for 20 )CM~ She
corrected her own cla papen., did playground duty
and lunchroom supcrvh1 n. prep<1red report card,,
attended teacher work~hop and had parent
conference\ after school hOu~.
My son ha cla~'<: for nbout four hour' a d.1y The
rc5t of the time it ' M>mc ~1al or fun acthit)' A
often " three days out of the month there 1 no
school bcc1usc of a ''teacher work hop" or "teacher
prep'' day, etc .• etc. During parent conference , thcrt
is no ~hoot for an entire wc:c:k. Lunchroom and
plaYlround upcrvit.ion j, done b pi.rent \Oluntccn
becau~ the teachers ha\c 11 1n their contract) 1hat
they dOn't h1¥0 to do thi sort of thin,. Parents arc
iyked to \'Olunteer to be cla. "Spclhna Mom" or
"Math OM!'' and correct the pape for t~ clwc .
1r you divided teachen' annu•l Jal.1rie by the number
of ~n IMy 1e1ually ~rk, they 1are mak1na ~· S30
an hour. Noc bad -with thrtc month'' \'ICation.
Kids now Med homt•ork to they can learn wh•t
wu at one tilM tauaht durina Khool Mun. We are
un.W. to afford a private IChooe. but I'm con~idcrin1
teachina o.r '°" 1t home beau I ~cm to be d01n1
it 1n,way. I'm with )'OU. 0.urd.
-Fed Up Mom tn Oun~le
0.. °'9••* I .. _. ct.t "'' .. " le e8't C•H•ral8 ,.Mic HltMI Jlle• te "''"d .. , .. , ..,. WI,_ ne '9t _,. I .. l"lttfWe • ... et
.. ._..., ... eN. Msuwllt, leMll ,_, cMN ...... ,.-................ , .... ..
... t6 ... , ....... -... ,. ............ .. .... ,. ..... .
Not everybody
n "hooker' wit
nnmc fo r a
trniaht \hot
of whi key.
Li kcw1 c o
c :allcd i n
ollu io n to
Union Army
G ene ra l
J os eph
Hooker. He
believed hi
troops houlJ
ct v.hat they
wanted.
0 ran'-'
1cc.1ll\ when
ul1;0 another
LM. ..,..
names come nnd i;o 'l.)arhn&
Fttnn P n Cn~c .. v.ent h wa"
chcw1n1 tob tC o.
Whco Chn11tophcr olumhu-.
huutc:J in the Wt•\t tnd1c\.
111be,men 1n • fm:nd hip
ac,turc ollc rctl him drird
tOOll\.:"CO k ll\Cs tic tu 'Cd them
lW<\) '" '"~SU\I, ·rod.1y thi\t
mi1h1 m;.ikc him ~1mle k1n,1 or ·
hero, l 'uppo c. In fact ,
thou h, tic h.aJ 110 fl(1tion of
v.hiAt the) vocre for.
F~cn :.a .. w1ft 1hm'le onl
~•m 1tl0Ut 1 foot a min ute.
Q. Wh e n d1J the r1r t
elephant 1;how up uvc r here?
Not tuna •ftcr over·here
hitcamc the Unncd • late . On
April ll. 1 . A Bro.dway
8'o•u•un named Jacob
Qwninahicld happtd it an
I
from Bcnaal. India. OC the
boy down at 1he wharf.
historical footnote' 'uggc t,
omc drank more lh<lt night.
'-On1C less.
Write a chcn1 ''\ ou hJH'
no idea ho~ man\ people 1n
Utah woutd ladl) gl\C up
.. tutchood n f a return l\l
lcgali2cd poly am) "
Q. "Pot 1 no1" '' 1hc ln,1
hne of a f:tmou\ fl\'t'm \\ hal
rocm')
• 0 den a'h in 1Qfl
~dd\.:d 1t to th t renowned "''
he v.rotc in 1931 : "C nd} j,
J;ind but liq uor i' quid.er,"
Q. OiJn't Prin c'' Gn1~c
Kell \' rcc\mJ • Nu. I h11 recor~I?
With Bing Cru'h . ht
did. "'fruc Lo'c " ln 1952.
.. ame )Ur he mmcd l\l
Monaco.
Blood pre ur or omc
pcQl)lc tnv1n1hly go ur ~oon
ft\ they walk into dOctnr •
officc.5. 1 he phenomenon ''
ca lled "Wh i t e C o 1
Hypcrtcn\ton. n
Th11 b rd cull d the j.;1w1,
onl) abotll bta " ch• ~en,
la ' a fin c·pound c
Rcmartlhlc! Dt t I mcnuon
tht kiwt h1 no t111I
Land turt le havt h1&h·
dnmod llhclh, water turtle
lw·domcd.
NI W YO Rk. 1'..1 thcnne'"
C"ouric. co-.m<.hor of ~UC'
" fod.\)°' 'hm~. '·'>' ... he he lo ng) 111
1 'nt.111 l°'.and of tclesi,W6
ncw'>~omcn wlw h:i'c "'orkc
hard out in the hclJ anJ c..chc
lnmour. · -• "We're rcalh normal ~ome••
"'th<'UI that -.,o rt of froufrou
gl ;amou r cd e.'' Courie, 3-i , tol~
Olamuur maa:m ne 1n it Jutr,
'''uc. The-former BC Pcntap""
c'mc,ponJent offic1nll replace~
Debor h ONill 2~ month 'IO·
"I've declared the 'C)(A t~
dci:.uk \,f the pl11n U\ick."
When 'O a~kcd her to ara
her 'h ur longer for her new ~
Coum: aid· \he tuld the net~
"I <lun't want to look ~MC
C\Cf'\onc cl e on TV. Thit it
.1nJ ·,,,,, u·, cn,y."'
'' 1 here '' 'till a lbt uf scJCialll tcl~\1\1<'n .ind eve rywhere -
'h "HH.I. "What can you .,,
Unfortu na tely, television ii ....
\\hltC mAIC,, and WC need •
lot more "omen in the ai•••
rank" m1k1na deci ions ~ •
more m1normc . ~~·"" p 1
a.)' to go ..
Counc nd her
Mu n ha n . •n anor
w • h•"f°"· ire
hnt child lhtt '••IL
matemlty lea¥&. o..11
baby will._.
IO Walhhllt• ...... ~
• • • "Born YHltnlef, ..
• '){anm's ._.,,.,
:mora l
.. ·machinatione
polltwa r
Washington, hM
been reborn time
.tnd time again by
JUSt about every
com munity
theater in the
area, and yet
another
reincarna tion
might appear, on
the 'urfoce, to be
tairl) redundant.
Ho"ever, even
th o.,c who know
Theater
Critic
the play by heart (including this
'Writer. who has been involved in
two past productions) must
1.onccde that the Costa Mesa Civic
Pl.tyhou!>e ha\ a certified hit on its
hand' with its current incarnation.
l.)1rcuo1 Marthclla Randall has
taken one of the most familiar
\tom'.' in the theater and injected
1t ""h :111 enormous dose of
1mmcd1.1c\ and vi tality. The
l h,ir.1cteniat1ons of the beauti(ul
.mhead Hillie Dawn and the
nu"de·hraincd menace Ha rry
Bwd ... ire hnl11.intly interpreted in
the ( 11\t,1 \tcsa production, and
the 1">.11.ince of the cast renders
C\CCptlllllJl \upport.
Pepper llamilton 's Billie is an
11111,tnou' portrayal. and one
\\h11.h \\Ill remind audiences just
'' h~ Jud} Holliday earned an
(hear with her !>Crccn performance
mer ~uch form idable competition
as Bette Davi!-in "All About
hi.:. I lam1lton punctuatCll her
1nnJ1c ~cnsuahty with sly, subtle
facial c\rircssion' that convey the
saw) underneath, and her line
delMry .. .....,., ...... . ,,_. ................ ....
ii powerfully ........ "' .. JCollDI ............. ... ..................... ~
llMI ...... ii Ml own. Kollll't ....,.._.. ,.,... ..... timiltt ,,..
bis &oollapkkodll.... ~
the streaatb 1Dd intenilly ID
command th• 1ta11 1ad •
oonlinually ..a hilmelf -IDCI
bis ain rummy 11me with
Hamilton 61 a comic deHaht on
both licles of the table.
Stan Wlalick, who alternates
with Marc Whitmore in the role of
the New Republic writer hired by
Brock to "smarten up" Billie,
deftly underplays his assi1nment.
Wlasick simmers with an inner
strength that bur11t15 effectively to
the surface when hquired in the
play's final scene.
The imbibing attorney who
handles Brock'5 legal dirty work is
~plendidly enacted by Gene Meigs.
a virtual ringer for tho late
Richard Dc1tco n . Gordon
Marhoefer is \Ohd a~ the corrupt
enator, uncomfortable with his
llubscrvient po it1on, while
Lorraine Pa quahni ha a nice
cameo as his proper "'ire. nulitered
by the more down-to-earth Billie.
Damian Papahronis 1s the lone
caricature in the cast as Brock's
cousin and flunky, his racial rwi ts
and costuming straight out of
Damon Runyan.
David Sc.1ghone's Wa hington
hotel suite et is attractive, if not
regal. Lighting effects by Eric
Person arc excellent, particularly
in the scenes of semi-darkness.
You may have seen "Born
Yesterday" a dozen times, but
you'll still relish the outstanding
Bob Kokol lectures ~ Hamilton in "Born Yesterday" now on stage
at the Co~ta Mesa Civic Playhouse
ve rsion at the Costa Mesa Civic
Playhouse, 61 1 Hamilton St., Costa
Me'la. Curtain times are 8 p.m.
1 hursdays through Saturday nod
2 p.m. Sundays until June 30, with
reserva tions taken nt 650·5269.
'Limited play' videos greeted with caution
By SANrORD NAX
'J titch) """'' S; r.; t r RE~NO Watch1nb a rented
movie un '1deotape more 1han
once before returning 11 1' going 10
co\I \1e\\cr\ more under a '\'tern
ahnut to be tc !·marketed 1n 1hc
J-re,no and Sacramento area,.
I he '\\tem u'c' 'o-called
· ltn111cd pl.1y' ca\sctte~. "h1ch arc
equipped with counter' ·and
auto ma tic .i 11 y erase a ( t er 25
viewing~ Now, people who rent
videornpes can watch th em a~
often ll\ they want for no extra
charge, a~ long they <ire returned
on time The tapc'I would rent for
the same price as regular ca\settes,
and each additional v1ew1ng would
1.0\t the s.imc
The tape-; are being tested for
the f1rllt time hy Rank Video
Service' of America, a tape
dupl1c111or Steve Roberto;, ·•
comultant fo r Rank. o;a1d 11 will
1c<,t rn.1rke1 the concept wuh fou r
mo' 1c' 'Almost An Angel,"
l ool.. Who'o; Talking Too."
\1 1,cf)" .ind "Queen' Logic" -
'1.hedulcd fo r relca c in late th1-.
MOvlBllBtlngl
Newport BelCll
IALIOA ONIMA 109 l la'boo llWd 61~ J~1C
ClllHn Kon• 1 9 IS
IDWAllOS NIWPOIT CtHlMA 300 "''*"° • C• ••
•.•• "" 0760 I City Slld1en t•l 2, 4 30. 7 9 30
1 lotlrtlrefl P'GI I 30, • 30, 7 JO. 10 I~
1 Whot Ai..vt leltt ~I lS, l JO < '~ 8 10
lDWAaOS ISLAND CtHIMA '°'h'°" t aov1 ... _
• ·~··· 640 1,1. lwlkh ~ I'S )JO S ·~ 8 IS 10 10
7 TM"-& Levitt l~I 12 1 JO ~ I 30 10
l fll2 1f'G 13)121S 230 ••S 7 91!
1 Ortf, it.. ~t, (II'(, IJ I ·~ • 6 1~ 8 JO
:>JO
~ 0-'t T•ll M..,. ll'G 13 I 3 IS S ·~ 8 10 I~
6 """ .... H.-41 C-1 17 •S 2 •S • •S 6 •S • 0 1035
5-~I ... f'C I )1 I J S 1 IS, 9 X,
UOO CINCMA """*"°" 91.d "' ,_..._, ii~ e 1 J 43SO
n..1 ..... i.-1 .. ,., • 30 7 9 30
month and Jul)' The program will
h\'it l>IX montho; and \lore owner'
can choolle ~hcther to part1e1patc
The plan ,..,.ould give videotape
make1' and retJ1lers ome control
o.,,cr ho" many times ~heir mo111e-.
.ire ,,,1tchcd Out Roberts . aid the
cumpan)'·~ mot1vat1on 1s to mul..e
popul.ir mOVIC'\ more available.
I hat "Ill happen, he beltcvc ...
bccau-.e the limitcd·pla) cas ette~
will be sold to videot1:1pc tore
owners for half the price of
regular cassettes. Roberts aid that
enables the stores to stock more
copies of a movie expected to be
ve ry popular when it 's first
rclea.,ed on videotape. That would
improve the chances of a high·
demand vtdeotape being 1n stod
when c u s tom er\ want 11
Traditional cassette cost retailer.;,
from $20 to $80.
Videotape tore owner\ in
Fresno arc greeting the new
Cal>sett e with curio 1ty and caution .
Their v.anne appear'> to b .1
lcg1t1matc concern. 1f comment of
cu~tomcr' Jt Movie Gallery. a
\ldcotJpc: <;tore in ccntrnl 1-rcsno.
l'OIT THIATll •9r~ I Coa" 11-.~ .. 11> 6/l 6,60
O.tl4y ........ 10 •• -l 9 ' ~
Costa Mesa
IOWAltOS CINI.MA CINTlll 2 10 •o•llo< 91..d I
...i..o "•"" c." .. ,,,,, • .,
I Only the L•,,.ly 11'1'.. l ~ Y 4 ~
1 CltrSlkhu 'G J !>J 6
l City Sll<ktn "'
• o..,•1 Tell Mo"' 0 lS
fOWAIOS CINlMA t>C" ~ ....,, .... t••
l '1
What Aboul l ob 1 a XI
HAHOll TWIN CINlM.AS '° ~J[
••. ~ J
lac Ir draft
• Hudt.., H..-wlo t fl.• ,
MHA CINlMA • ~ B 11 ,... 6•6 ~S
•tlllna Th"nder • ~
TOWN CINTH CINEMAS "' -1$1 ' . O,.ly tht Lo,,. "r
Who1 Abtvl l ob 1
1 Soepdls>I , J 3 ~ $ 1 JO • 3$
I 0-'t felt Mt"' '(• ll '1$ /JO• 4J 1
are an indication.
"The reaM>n you rent a movie is
to ce it more than once," said
Andrea Hester of Fresno.
One man. who declined to give
his name, confessed to watching
the "Hunt for Red October" eight
time and paying for it only once.
Robert s said the idea is for
videotape store to carry ca scttc
of both kinds. When they run out
of the traditional rental movies,
they can turn to Showca c
Cns,ettc. The choice would be left
up to the renter.
~oberts said market studie ·
show that 10 percent of the
customers who enter tape-rental
outlet on Friday and Saturday
night leave empty-handed becau c
th eir fir t choice was not available .
Viewers can rewind up to 20
mmute Of the movie Without
bctn& a c scd an extra charge.
Roberts said that will enable
viewer to review up to one-third
of the movie without paying a
ccond rental f cc
Robert al o aid the S)Stem
won't be u cd on car1oon and
IOUlM COAST l't.A2A 1 ~:... ~,c..,,111
la•lrtlt'eft I 10 J(I . n..i-a L9111t• 5, 7 XI 10
J Clfl' llkllen J ' JO, 7, 9 30
50UTM COAST VIU.AOI "'' ,, o• 8"'!> 5•0
OS••
I ••"..-Y •f M._. ~/I ~ '' II. 10 I~
2 c .... -•• "" • 1 . 10 J ........... CM •I ~Hltlyn " ~. 7 9
!..,!.~m2w ... ..,
.. 1.0170 ...J.: ..... "'9 ...... !1>G Ill S IS 1 JO 9 •S ""',,..........,... ••to · a °"_._,"°1 • o.~ 9~ ..... .....,. .... ?~.I~ 130 10>0
~ n.11ooe a a.-tM S H 7 •~ 'l IS
...... MUNT ... OTON TWIN 43 '-~
~-=--,_ s 1JO 10 1 .....,, .. ._paJJ fl•S 8.IOIS .....
THI UNtVIHm (INlMA •2•S c:-t ~·
!II •
I o..t•t T•ll Mt"' ~ •S I 0 \) 'o-tr .... L_ .. P'Olllt. l tS 10)0
J ~t!'O 11J••S 7 10S • .._...,.._.,PO ll t.20 ll 1030 ,.,..... ·-'° 13) s 7 )0 10
(I "-"'" eft41 L..,h• ~ U 1 •!> 0 \~
W00091110el (INIMAS 8-11"<0 '11 ·-<
()r t.$146.
I CMy ...,lre#t u J 4 0 '1, t
1 ..... ._.., if'U .. UO O!S ,, °" .... .,. ll'O IJ) $ • 8 10 70 ................ , l"°1 ~ 7 u •••
~...,...., ,,.., 1 • •'-• e:io
IOJO
r12111rn ..... ...,,_. v.U..-"'1. """'ll,., IJt
1600
I ..... .. .PS.I 1030 2 _......,..'-'•h ......... IG' ,..,.
.... P)O 10
other videotapes that arc likely to
~ played repeated!~.
Susan Neville, co-owner of two
Video Zone -;tore\ in tlie Frc no-
Clovi~ .trca, 'i'l1d she wffi lC\t tl\e
"Look Who'. Talk Ing Too"
ca-; ette in one tore but will
ignore the other three mov1c11.
She o;,11d videotape tore often
run out of popula r title and
think\ th1 could be . an altcrnauvc.
But, like other~. i.he worries that
CU\tomers will be off ended at
having to pay for each •iew1ng.
"I 1hint.. that you'll hove to m11ke
1t really clear to the cu~1omcr up
rront," she said.
'1 he JUry 1 till out," aid Brad
Maple.,, a MaJOr Video frnnchisc
owner with nine tores, including
one each in Fre no and Clo"i .
Maple -;aid he ha n't decided
whether to take part in the te!>t.
He aid the reduced price could
lead to " glut of the mo t popular
11ideotapc , He \.itd tore owncn
al o arc afraid that iC 11ucces ful, It
could cau c manufacturer to stop
d1\l r1bu1 1ng the trad1t1onal
ca~ ettc\.
Tr""""
7:00 7:30
• • •
a..dr ...... •P die ummer, di Dialtll
Soullaem c.Bnil inlnJ: ~ .._.,_. .. wUI,..... Priday ,at '7: at Am11• 1 ...
Onell lpln, aht Broctlell • •mae11rat1 dMlr
proweu 11 roct 'n' roll'•"~ time" bMd ead will~
their aUdience perfonnh• bhafter hit. ·
The Doobie Brothen' new )(bum ii dded .. BrotherhOOd,
becaUM all of the orfl'nal memberi'tllf the band an beck b dais
1pecial &our, includina Ta111 Joh~\~ Simmw, nnn
Porter, John Hartm1n and Michael ~ After beifta eo.tber
for IOft 1oftt. the Ooobie Brothen' llMll .,_ltlaod
lies and ea1ablishe1 • tound that is hard hitti
"Brotherhood reconfirms the eS1Cncc of t ~:.=-p
with the llnmistakable intcrlockin1 pit1rs. ~lid b . ·~
famous Ooobie Brother harmony blend, while asten1na the ~
muscular sound of their career thus far. •
The Doobie Brother1 say that "Brotherhood" ii just a
continuation o( what they've been doing for more than two
decades -it's just funkier. Throuah all the glory, heanache,....J
headache' and even band transformation thty have maintained
and prevailed. Remember: "Listen to the Music," "Black Wa ter,"
"long Train Runnin'," " China OrO\'e" and Minute By Minuae"
and others too numerous to mention.
Special guests, The fabulous Thunderbirds, are just that -
fabulous. For more than J7 yturs, they have been rockin' and
rollin' the blue) ccne all aero~ America.
The Thunderbirds are electrifying as they storm the scene wtth
an all new lineup. They've put together an excitina high energy
show thot is ure to keep the audience charged.
T1ct..c t for Friday's performance are S2.S.8S and may be
purcha ed at TicketMastcr ou tl et . For information call 6J.4.JJOO.
lldlJ to Join CBS' 'Wm1•;
Dena Burke won't Pllil'll
By Deborah Hasting
AP f eltvlslon Wl'llel
LOS ANGELES Actress
Julia Duffy, who la l week quit
ABC's "Baby Talk" series, is in
final negotiation to join the cast
or CBS' hit comedy ''De igning
Women," her agent snid Tuesday.
Duffy is best known to TV
viewer as the whining, yuppie
maid on "Newhart."
"We feel that this is an option
that would bt wonderful for her
career," aid Duffy' agent, Sam
Gore . "I don't sec nny real
stumbling block (to the contract
be.mg signed)."
Op "Baby Tait..:," Duffy played
ccond fiddle to a chattering
1nfont. The AOC \Cne 1 'P.un
from the ~cc. 'iful feature film,
"Look Who' Talking." Duff> had
JOmcd the pro ram la\t )C&r after
Connie Sellecca quit 1n a
contractual d1~putc.
On "Designing Women," Duffy
would become the second cast
addition in less 1han a week.
Comedian Jan Hooks of "Saturday
Night Live" signed on Frtduy wtth
the primc·Ume series.
"Designing Women" co·!itar
Delta Burt..e, who ha feuded with
the cries' c).ecut1vc produce~ for
nearly a yea r. dcf11111cly will not
return for a 'i'<th ea)()n. Co·
e'<ecu11ve producer Linda
Bloodworth-Thoma on c;aid -,he
.ind her husband, Hnrry, rcfu-.ed
to renew Burt..e'' contract.
Another "Oco;1gn1ng Women"
ca ·t member, Jean Sman, ha :ud
'he will not return full·llme in the
upcoming c on bccau c 5hc
wants to pend more time with
child. Thomason said Smart
appear in a limited number
episodes this fall.
Thomason declined commc
however, on whether Duffy
join the series.
Thomason did say that the c
and crew of "Dcsi1nmg Wome
"'ere relieved that Burke
leaving. "Quite frankly, we just
II red of dealing with it "
Thomason aid of the yearlo g
battle that included a lawsuit a d
teary accusations from Burke t
Thoma on threatened to fire
hecause she was ovcrweiaht.
"Never a cro~ or negative w
hn!I cro ed between her and e
about her wcighr or anr,hi a
else," Thomason said. 'A d
C\cryonc at 'Designing Wom
knows it"
A kcd what sparked the pub ic
feud, Thomason replied "I ca 't
answer that. I can only say t
about a year ago, she requcste
meeting to secure star billina a d
more money. That request s
denied. A few weeks later, s e
began her campaign aaainst u ...
Burke's aacn1, Martin Hurwi
u1d no such meeting c
occ urred .
A M>u rce close to the show, w
'pot..e on the condition
anonymity, said Hooks will m
111..cly portray Smut's little is
from Poplar Bluff, Mi sou
Durfy, the source aid, will pla
tufry cou in of the Sugarba
<11 ter .
Burke will be written out of t e
\ho"
1:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 .....
. \
11111111 ..... t. c•••clllnl• .., ...............
By Pete Yost
The Aslocl*d Press
WASHINGTON -A
New York company lhat
hired Pre 1denl Bush's older
brother to arrange ils sale
, said Tuesday il had no
knowledae of reported
connection between the
Japane)e purcha er and
gang!ller .
Pre coll Bu h Jr., 68, was
f a paid consultant who helped
1 , arrange the purcha e of
A)Sel Mnnagement,
I nternntionnl Financing &
Settlement Ltd. of New York
by West Tsu,ho
' The Jnpanelle Kyodo Newll
Agency a1J Friday that
• J~p;inec;c nuthorille comider
J We t T,u,ho to be a family
" businc · of the lnagawa-ka1,
one of Jupan'i. three lnrge t
gangster syndicate There
was no 1nd1cat1on that the
president' brother was 1 'uware of the purported or· 1 gamzcd crime connections.
Bush did not return
) repeated phone calls to his
home in Greenwich, Conn. 1 White Hou e Deputy Pre ~ Secretary Gary foster n1d
he had no comment on the
repor1 .
No one at As se t
Management "had any
knowledge whatsoever of the
' reported conne ction between
t. the .lapane)C investor nnd
'Japanese gangsters,'" the
company aid in a tatemcnt
i sued Monday in New York.
• 1 Tile company rcfu cd to
' ay whether Bu\h till hns
any connection to lhe firm
' The Securities and
Exchange omm1s ion 11d
11 Tuesda) thnl document' on
' lhe comp.iny and lhe
1 transaction were not
' immediately nvn1lahlc
l Dush guaranteed thal $2.5
million of the in\ie tment
l mnde by We o;1 T u ho in the
New York firm would be
re covered w1th1n f1\iC years
or he would mn._c up the
difference, nccord1ng 10
publillhcd rcporh.
The report) quoted the
SEC documcntll a) ~nving:
-We t T11u. ho bought
nearly 40 percent or A ~ct
• Management\ 'iharc for SS
million between July and
-November 19 9.
-Bu h wa" a S250,000·a·
-year con~ultanl to the
Japanc'ic company after lhe
_ A set Mannaemcnt deal wa
wmpleteJ
-Bu'ih got a $250,000
finders' fee for arrdn&ina the
dtal and wa'i proml\ed a
1 h re e ·y ca r con' u It 1 n a
contract nt $250,000 n )C:u.
Kyodo ,,.jct the forrncr ~ of I n.1g.1w,1-luu, Su\unlu
hhit, OJHHIHCtt lloku~ho
S1m&YO, o rcul tmuc firm
that ht1~ We I f u ho a It\
ovcr~aot in~c tmcnt nrm.
Munenobu ShoJI, the
prc~idcnt ol reul utnte
company, bccRmc one of the
c.1ccut1vc• of Auct
M•naacmcnt .after the initial
\tock pur1.:ha c, Kyodo ~•iJ.
Anet Man11cmcnt nid it
ii 1Uin1 We'I T,u,ho. Shoji, SURDc1 Koyan.aai •nd various
afflfiateJ tt'I recover a
IDJ,000 loan •hich ha noc
•••• repaid, and ror t1r•p• from the 1Hcata ...,.IOrc~. ~ company is in the
,,..... or v11o rou1l1
iiliWrM"I 111 remcclfct epinll
ti• TMIM>" Md ochers.
Amit M1n1pmcn1 uid ift .... '"'"'"'·
e
W~ like to introduce you to The Message Center, an exciting
new service from Pacific Bell.
And theres no better Wcrf to do it than to offer you free start-
up (a $7.00 value) if you sign up between today and June 30th.
IT FREES YOU FROM THE
ANSWERING MACHINE.
What's all the excitement about?
Well, The Message Center does just about
everything an answering machine
can do-and a lot more-without any
machine at all.
There's nothing to fumble
with or clutter up your home,
and there are no tapes to buy. If
you have a regular touch tone . .
phone, you have everything
you need.
IT FREES UP
YOUR TIME.
The Message Center answers
your calls in your own voice 24 hours a
day. Then it lets your callers leave
messages up to three minutes long, each
one recorded with the time and date it came in.
And unlike an answering machine, The MesYF Center
wcxlcs when you'tt on the piK>nc, too-not just when you're Dlflf·
So ~ won\ mm a (3)1, and your callm won\ K'( a busy signal
~ ·The Message Center also saves rime by ~ you extra flex-
ibility. When you pick up your messages, Vo'! can listm to all ci
center Wit stiU in its infancy. The
More ,....iaed tlltre for 15 yean.
Bayes is su~d by her
h..-nd Larry ; daupten
EdH Maureen Halpert and
Barbara Pitino; brother Herb
Marpli : and f randtoft Jeffrey
W1H1ams. all o whom live in
Or1nae County.
Sen-ices for Bayea were held
June 2 at Mt. Sinai Memorial Park
in Un Angeles.
-., tlw O.lly Not
a button or two. In ·fact, you can listen to your messages, or
change your recorded greeting, from practically any touch tone
phone anywhere in the world.
IT FREES YOU FROM WORRY.
No answering machine protects your privacy as
well as The Message Center. All its functions are con-
trolled by your own secret ~. You
COOose it yourself, and you can change it
yourself as often as you like.
To achieve the ultimate in confi-
dentiality, you can even set up separate,
private "extension mailboxes"
for each person in your family.
That way, you get your~, they
get their messages, and no one
gets anyone else's ~·
FREE SfAIIT-UP IF
YOU CALL NOW:
1-800-427-mS.
With all its exciting advan-
tages, The Message Umr costs just $4.95
a roonth, plus $2.50 a 100nth for each
extension mailbox. Ana remember, we'll get it
started up free of charge if you sign up between
now and :June 30th, 1991.
To take advantagt ci this offer, simply call us at l..aoo.427-7715
and ask about The Mmage Center.
When you do, you'll make a very interesting d~. It
may not be true thar the best thinp in lift 11t EM. But in this
them, ~ skip duou&h them,
save smne, erue smne, "l>'&t
odm-all wlh the touch rl
The ~ Jmticu1ar inance-b an c:xtft.11dy ssige ' limimf time-the an-up cl-.
IFIC definRly is.
•Here you go, PJ-the
beginner's slope."
by Brad Anderton
"He wanted some personal stationary."
ARLO AND JAIU8
OVERBOARD
• 1 ~'TEREU ALL "10l)R I NDCX)R ~S,100, MR. WILSC»& ~I
by Jerry Scott aoea 18 aoes
IWt-0~~ ~l01"1~K OF~~iMT ~aNe~~
--
by Jimmy Johnson '1J!fKY WDHDtRBBAK
Ot~'f r .,~ ~. 1HE MONroor.s AU.-STA~ cnr1' ~1"HINK <JEAH •
TV AOO~ fSTUiOf ~VE 1C 8€ 1ME cmRSf 1Wtr'5 A ffN.18E
1EAM IN 1J.tE H1510RQ OF J Wff&..e H~ ~ "tQJ'RE ~U. ! J Rl<:M'f'.,,
1----f •
~~O<X:>Od1
~ . .._----....... I
~~J
._""""""' I I E::1!:::liiiliii~~~·a.a::::;:~=:::...::::.:~~
by Tom Batlu
by Lynn Johnaton
........... by,. Ctoupp ........ MC.
........ , Jr., chMIMri
Jim Greu1t111r. pubMlher
Editor/al
v
Napoleon once wa!'I U\kcd by an admirer how he would
extricate .1n .1rmy from .1 h)pothct1cal banle ~enario that
~cmcd to offer ·no way out. The emperor replied, so the
"tory aocs: M) genius lies precisely in not allowing such a
~ituation to nnsc.
Would that Washington had displayed such preventive·
geniu while the ,;ivin .. anu lo:tn indu try was 5inking into
in llvency over · the la'lt 25 ycnr . Jn tcad, tart in& tn the
mid -196(k, ri,in& interc~t rate qucezed the thrifts, but
ta~pa)Cr·fin.rnced dcpo,it in,urance minimized inccnti\'ec; for
manager t9 face up to their predicament.
The mOation of the 1970' .and the recession of tne early
1980\ aggnw.11cd the problem Congrc. s bought time by
mcrc•1. mg dcpo it 1n11ur.1ncc coverage and allowing thrift~ to
br.mch-0111 be)ond home mortgages.
Jn a few sc.rndalou mc;tancc • management fraud nnd
po 1t1c:ll influence tuyed the hand of regulators who were
ready to doe in on hankrupt inst1tut iqns.
Thu • the problem reached cnormou proportionc; before ·
Washington finally oddrc 11cd it in 1989. That year Congress
crentcd ., nightmurishly complicated bureaucracy to take over
more than 600 f,uled thrill , dispo~e of their a et and pay
C'lff dcpo itor'I.
Periodically one of evcral O\cr ight offices complain that
the bailout i proceeding too slowly or too fa t. Co t •
projection continue to ri c, partly becau§e of the soft real
eMatc market in which rcpo .. e \Cd • \ct~ must be sold. Thi
week ln'lpcCtor General Charles Bow her warned of
rnadequatc ac,ounting ctnt.J nt rnal control at the
Rec;olution 'I rlJlt Corpqr.1t on '(k . He ~afd d1c bailout
will Ctht 1hc taicE~'>·cr SlSO billion through 1992.
It ~O\tld ~ ll mi t11ke to exaggerate the hortcomings
Bow,hcr's audit uncovered 11t the RTC. He himself ays he
can't )Ct tell how criou the} arc: and imperfection are
inevitable in un operation of thb staggering ale.
Bailout bureaucrats arc working to improve their
procedure wi th incrco ed training for mana er. nnd an
automated in,·cntory of sci1cd a ct . ·
Above nil. C'ongrc s mu t not use Bow her's report as a
pretext for balking when the RTC seeks additional fun d
later tlu year. Congrc~ ha~ no chv1ce but to authorize the
ncces,.ary money. Stul.lies ha\:c shown agnin nnd again that
delay only dmcc; up the hailout' coc;t.
Having failed to prevent this historic governmental fiasco,
Wn hington '' obligated to pu'h on and pay the bill for
• cleaning up the me\!.
1
1 Today In History
r
> Tooay is Wcdnc\day, lune 12,
the J63rd day o( 1991. There arc
202 da)' left 1n 1hc )'e r
I Tcwta)'• ltlahllah• In Ill IOf)!
On June 12, 19J9, the National
<t'iehall ll.111 of hime and
u'cum w,.., tlcJicated 1n
oopentnwn , N .Y. one
undrcc.l )eur'i 10 the dt1y on \\.h1ch
Ahnct DouhlcJ;1y 'i11ppo\edly
mvcntec.J the 'Port (Mo-.t 'pom
h1,tori.tn' doubt, ho\\.C\Ct. thal
Douhlcd u) truly invented
bll'iCbJll)
Ten ~tars • o: M.ljor leaaue
h.1,ehall pla)cr~ began ,, 49-day
•>trike (n.cr 1he 1 '"e of frcc·:1gen1 .
compcn'la&ion. (The ~ett on.did not
rc:wmc unlll Aug IO).
l odfty• Blrlhda} : B.1nkcr
1>:1v1ll Rock de lier i" 7b Movie
prnduc.:cr IN-in Allen '' 7.'t Ac1rc "
Uta 1 lngen " 72. Prci,;ident George
Bu'h 1'1 67 Singer ic Damone i .. <•.'· Actor \Inger Jim Nall\1r '" 59.
J.1t1 mu 1ci.1n hid. Coren " 50.
••••
SACRAMENTO -A ~ doud seems 10 be howeJiaa
1hc 10Uthcastcrn cor..er of t
!\talc Capitol, the uttc occupacd
Pete Wilson.
Wibon • ., hc>st pcmonlup had
begun on a h1ply acca.a.ed nOtc
of actl\u~m and rcfortn. ii ..s.ring
" sene of personal lad ~J
&etbaclo.. TIN: que lion, Which onl~
11rne c1tn n~wer, is whether th
are trnnMlol) or will permanent!)
cripple Wilson tnJ his ambition •
hath gubernatorial and pc:>litical.
Caltfo1ni •
.,hll-nc~ &O\ernor
1s learning ah.it
solving the ltile'
buJ~ct cri,1s " .1
mu c h ' more
complex C'ICrd'e
1h.1n he once
th ought. lie
envi .. 1oncd -and
publ iclv
1.ruculatcd · -a
1he . other side ol celebration · comprchen-.1,c
pproach 1hat
"'ould eliminate
lh \." 11t:st c ',
chron1 (1'ical
A .family tries to cope with Gulf War death rrnhlcm a it
<k:11t "1th the current, rece5510I·
induced 'honfall and would tk By CIW1otle Gnmes
SI L0111t P09-0t~ll
WASHINGTON -Thtry didn't
come home to the parade~. the
victory cclcbrntionli, the 'lpcci.ll
Desert torm \ctcran ' d1~011nt\
to D1\nC) World:
376 Ameucan iroops dcud in
the Per 1tin Gulf.
144 killed 111 comb.ti.
And one of them belonged to
m~ famil»
Pfc John We Icy Hutto, age 19,
ol Andalu,ia, Al<t .
Killed the day hefore the
cc.1 dire, h) a 120-millimeter 'hell
fired hy .in Ame rican lank into the
rear of hi' BrnJley Figh1ing
Vch1dc.
111c fac t ot hi' ·d) ing are a grim
utlccl ion or b.iulcticld .Ueu.uh. a
t!llc. of war conlu\lllll, horror and
price. 'The rc.ilny 01 his death '1111
come' 10 hi' famil~ in p.1inful
lragmcnt .
l he letter tha1 t..cpt urri\ing
even ~her h1 foncr,11. His
hi' life.
"He cnJU)cJ re 1dang and hked
to \Hiie h1~ letter ." From the
L1,cnho\\.cr Med1cul Center in
Gcorgi.1 \\here he i'> lcarnmii to
walk without hi' lcfl leg. Sgt
Anthonr Wulkcr confirm' &hat
We hudn't changed much. "I u ed
10 remind him ol the tilth.: 1h10glt
"c could do to keep our elves
.11ivc O\cr there."
Foa ":.' · ri,ing (rom the
'uu1hcrn Iraqi de.,crt at 7 1 m. on
Pcb. '1.7 a' a '·"" fom~ of the 24th Mech.tniLcd Infantry and two
11rm11rcd di111 1t111, I 1unched their
.Maull on Jallb:ih llrP'>rt, In 1
I c .u.I B r .ttl I c } ro d c e i g h t
ml.tnll'\m1.:n ot Ch&i rhe Co, 3rd
0.111.1litm, ISth l nfnnll) Amu11g
them. r te. Hutto 1nJ S t, \\alli.cr
Q
"r\ couple ol )C r' e1g<1, I ""''
rcat.hng h1,tuty 11nd no" I'm
m.1!.;1n~ 11 ~.1n )Ou hd1c'c .1 I lullo
tn hl\l<H) ?" Pie:. John Wc.,IC:)
I luttu in .1 lcllcr lo h1\ ,j~tcr,
Uwl lie."
0
WAiler •~ ou1r
h.1ppcnctl nc\l,
\:Omm.1nd1n~ t)fticcr, O\'crhcarin&
&he dc ... pcratc plea~ on the radio.
d1 patched '"' personal command
hcl1ct1ptcr to fetch the ""undcd.
r-.;l, unc l.;n°"' for 'urc 'v.hcther
the dd.1v m1ulc: ;a d1fkrence 10
Wc<r. .inti the 01.hcr 'old1cr "ho
d1el.I th.it day Chaplain Bcd,ole.
who hcl~1 Wes' h.mo in h1' l:ht
m1lmcnt1, of <.1>n<iC1ou,nc .. ~ ma)he
of lite, '•I)' onl), ''01 the 1hrcc or
four .impute~~ 1here. I thought he
'\·I' 1111; one \\ho"d 1111kc 11 out
.3h-.e.':
0
"W hc1hcr am1 nc bche"c' in
dc'-tiny or not,·, h;;\c ~en nd
<1cccptcd m111c."
-Pk . John \\'c'le) Hutto, an a
letter to hi m thcr dt our in
her :.ttemph 10 ct t\lm e'emptcJ
lrom ~otntlat .1 mlc· un1"1ng
nn.
0 Sm«: th 11 di.I\ three months ago,
rm orfr~er' h.1ve told Churlie c., th:it its lo 'c' -uf le~. nd
enacted qu1d:ly. • H1 hopes for a mil ter
bud ct-.ry 'chcme ha ... e &iven w
10 •a scne~ of. piec emeal
itJlrccment' wi1h legi,Ja1ivc teade .
.ind there '" ll serious prospeGt
1h.11 he v.111 cttlc for hort-tcrlh
mca,urc~ tht&t will mere~
po tponc the day o{ reckoning that
lrcmlv has hccn 't.l\Cd off fo~
more than n dccaJc.
Wi"('n' handling of the
unprclcdented bull ct cri,1 w;i' 10
he ha' ticket 10 n.111unal poht1ctl
prominence.
lronu.:ally and tragicall), JU t
W1l;,:on hit 1hc roughc t part of the
budge t proce ~. h1!1 cl c fric.d
.md bnlhant media '>Irate L\I, Ou
l • coll:.p cd dunng a soccer
match 11nd ,tied.
l3' " ' a ma ter ,,{ 1ntc ratin
o\crnmcnt pohl'\, poh1ical 111 ~ •
anJ mcd1.a 1ma Cl) into a gr ml
~mate • itnll he had been ~orkt
h'*rd on elhng W1l-.on and h1
poliC) tnnovauons.
Wil\<>n "''" pc:r,onally ~•rkkcn
h) ao.· dc.11h, and 1t may h:t
• contri buted to an apparent
,,,ftenin& in \\'il,on'l> prev1ou:.
1n\1 ten c on having ·
I c n m r r c h c 11' I \ e • I 0 n ~ -[ e ' m
lmd~e;tltry 1lu1mn .
I llldllV, in nut hcr l'-'i't of 1wn1
1.1te f3i;,· dcnlh came JU'I ' th
1.11c'., mo t prominent pc.llhn~
, q;nn11:111on, 1ht C aliforn1a Poll.
"·' condu\:llnit .i uui:1al tc't <
pu~hc .1111tudc it-out Wilson n
h1' JX1hc1c~
l he rc,ult' ul th.11 polling wcr
rclc11,c1t tin "eek, ind lhc\ v.cr
not g0<ht nc" for \\ 11-.on. •
nh forn1a \Oler' dl1n't 'upport r h1 PH'fl<" 11.. m ''·"h '°''al aft '1 ctlu~;tt1on 'flcnd111g, and the~ don't
11).;c h1 propo":d bo<M in '· le
t c' -1 'harp ,4,cr al Imm pa t
111tudc,, 11 an)t hin~, the
C hforn1.1 Pull re,pondcnt' It~
onh imp<1 mg h1 •her 1,1\C:. 1.>n th
nch, :ln 1pprn.11:h to the h11\l •c1
\Ofl<o;l"I th.ll W1l\On hu' fCJt.'.1.'.'ICJ,
[~-.en OlllfC d.im.li?IO!l., ,KCordtng
to the poll, Californ1.in' Ul'
• t11rntn 'omc"hjl ,our 11n \\<at-.on',
cnttrc nwrnor,h1p. In t t.t'iru.tr\,
&he C 1l1IMni.1 Pnll'" JOh rntmi-:' for
W 11 on were Jh r~r1,;i!l\t C\\:CllCQI,
I rcrccnt f,11r, nd JU't 1'1. JlCr" nt
poor or \Cl') p< r.
I he nc" p 111 ~1\-c., W 1l'<m th
me r un ' on the upJlCr end, l:tut
lhcrc w11 a d \"1d(" t 'hill from "no
opinion" to •poor or \Cf) poor.''
I he l;tlh.·r d ubled 1 ' ~4 r-crtcnt.
nd era II, \\ 11 n'" pc1pul n1 1.,.
ru ch1nJ 1h11 ll(
~·~ hlr throv&h
Hd lhund•y
••npt putly
clo114y 411rlfll
1fterl'OOfl •"' tweflht• ho11ts·
1st. Otr.
June 19
: .~.,.._.. It .. . . ...., ........ .,.,.
10DAY'I ...
Sunrtle: 5:50 a.m.
Sunset: 8:0S p.m.
0
Full Moon Lall OW.
June 27 July 5
.
1 ~1dt:IOllll
................... .......... " ....... .. Miii -.. ...... ........... , ....
,,,~
~ladys Andrea, 21 , who is working her way through medical school as a walking, talking slice of
pizza, catches people's eyes as she wa lks near the convention center in Anaheim. She works for a
supplier of pizza ingredients. Her job is to promote the popularity of pizza among young children.
23rd Anniversary
PARTY •. WEDNESDAY, -
• JUHi 12th
1991
ZES O'llPE.EH'S (~ ~~~\'S~am
~CU-Wllll&~
VOTED NVMIER ONE
IN IOTB IEER • IAR
CATEGORIES IN O.C.
IY THE L.A. TIMES
CRITICS • READERS POLL
JANUARY, 1991
'11here are bars and then there are BARS! However, Goat Hill 'ravern
ls still in a class all by itself. Should you ever venture "COSTA AMAZ-
ING" wa:y, trea t yourself to a Visit to Goat Hill Tavern. ~etter yet,
plan an entire vacation around lt" I
• 48 IMPORT BEERS • 24 MICROIREWS • ZEI O'lllENS IRISH ALE
• SATELLITE SPORTS • 10 TV SETS • PINIALL-VIDIO QAMES
• POOL TABLES • POOSIALL • SBUFFLEIOAID • DART BOARDS
*MEET IN PllSON ·RED STAI G1111.I 1:.1
DTRA GOLD GllLS '::n' * FINNISH ~ ClllLS to ~r:.
~~~ ..?...,_ ~ ~-:;;.~~ DBAWDl"G& JDILD ... •o ~~ 8:00, 9:00 & 10100 •••• ~ ~ ~·-~ . ~ ~ To Honor Our Loyal Customers, we w111 1
be drawing for 23 glft cert1f1cates
worth S 23 each toward
dinner at these local restaurants:
(KINDLY TIP FOR THE TOTAL AMOUNT}
IAllf STIADOVSI
2300 Harbor Blvd
Costa Mesa
641 ·9777
PASTA Ill&
212E 17th St.
Costa Mesa
642-7488
...... .
1130 NEWPORT ILVD. •COSTA MBIA. 841-1421
iii ...... ......... ....... ....... Dir ....... ... a .... .......
~-..........
... Ow
.. l ....... ........ ..... ....... .,...
From At
tripled ... 1980!' •
Or-. County public tchooll
reported ~M7 LEP students ia
1980. Al OI Api'g 1990, there were
a total 77,415 LEP 1tudent1 in the
county, repraentifta 21.S percent
of the county"• 360,3SO students.
The number of county LEP
1tudent1 ii up 21 percent from the
previous year, compared to a 16-
percent incfeue statewide.
In the Newport-Mesa diitrict
LEP 1Ndent1 who speak "exotic
l1n1ua1e1" are often "totally
immened" in En1lish-l1n1uage
claucs. And school officials are
often unable to determine those
students' academic levels,
aocordin& to Fonter.
Teachen have been trained to
use visual aids to instruct non·
EnsJish spe.king students. And
teachen also seek out older
students who speak similar
langu11es and even family
members who may have a better
command of English to help out.
The district also operates a
Newcomer Center and slower·
paced "sheltered" classes for
seventh· through 12th·arade LEP
students.
Last month, Nevport-Mesa was
one of onlr 20 districts in the
nation to wtn a three-ytar federal
a.rant for a Family Enalish Uteracy
Protram, according to Fonter.
The proaram will offer educational
proarams for atudenu and their
parents, in conjunction with the
Costa Mesa Ubrary.
"The fMl is to help the kids
succeed 1n school," Font er said.
"We're working very hard to
educate the parenu so they in turn
can become teachers for their
students."
From A1
By now, one of the bystanden
callM 911 and police arrived.
"A lady officer said there was
nothin¥, she could do," Mcfarland
said. ' Dammit, who the' hell are
you going to call?"
Several bystanders, includin1
Costa Mesa resid1'nt Herbert
Wilson and his wife, convinced
police -by now three or four
black and white can had arrived
-that it wu more than just a
routine dos fiaht.
The officer then reportedly tent
1 1qu1d car after the woman and
the attack doa for more
questionina. They returned to the
scene walkif'.'I alona.ide the ~ice
I
PU:Y 'rom A1
With the ataae ·~ la ttae•r pocket, c:ity .e.cten will not be
able to hold fair h11rinp, -l'rom A1
In fact, the dty dkl conduct •
lt.ady of .... ............ .... ............................
... llii. n.allf., iijii ..,.
pWd prdl"t•• ...... •DI I. ··-· .h ..... 1111 If .. <•.,, ........... ~ .........
Wdlfl'l ....... ~"·-.............. ..., ....... .. ...... ~ ......... . .................... ., .... .. .,., ......... -•cWin•--•lhlll.•IDOil 111d.
" ., ; 1!. ... ,, .. sq:. .. .. -· • • ......... " . ......
II • ...... n • ,...... a ., ....... " ,, :i.:..= II .,
II M ~ .... .. .,
-u u " ....... •• --~ II It ...... Dir . .. a.w-.o, " a . ., a.-. ft•t ~ O' • 11 ,._.4 I
• u . .. =to...
• • • " .. • • ., • ., • " • •• " " .. ., • " a • u .. , . ,, • 71 .. ,, • .. II n ,. ..
11 ..
17 ., ,, ,. • IJ .. ..
" S4 .
... . ... =-Qt ls'tt '--Mii
•• II .,,,,.,,.•
. .. • n . " • • . ..
I I •• ., . " .. " ..
.........
.. ... .,., lllmlllln
SANTA ANA -The Onnae
County Grand Jury Tuesday
recommended that county school
districts model their bilingual
education prop-11111 on those in
Guden Grove and Santa Ana.
"Education is the key to
opportunity and muat form a basis
for bilingual proarama," the Grand
Jury's report concluded. "The
ri1bt for all childrtn to receive an
appropriate education must be
upheld by our schools and in
public understanding.•·
The Grand Jury studied the
bilingual programs in the Santa
Ana and Garden Grove unified
school district, whjch have the
county's highest level of limited·
English-speaking students.
Jn the Garden Grove Unified
School District, 32 percent of the
students -who speak a collective
72 langua,es -have problems
with EnsJ1sh, according to the
report.
In the S•nta Ana Unified
School District, where students
speak 36 languages and 85 percent
of the enrollment is Hispanic,
nearly two·thirds of the students
are limited·English·proficient,
oCficials said.
In addition, SAUSD gets more
than 3,000 new limited0 English
students each year.
The report commends the two
districts for developing diverse
programs to address the need of
students who are literate in their
native language but not in English,
and for thole unable to read and
write proficiently in any language.
Moreover, the Grand Jury said,
car.
When the do& &<>t within about
40 yards of McFarland and Rocky,
he reportedly made a beeline for
Rocky and attacked apin. It was
then that Mcfarland was bitten on
the lea.
Wilson, the bystander, and four
or five other men jumped into the
pile trying to dislod1e the
attacking dog. A policeman fin.Uy
broke it loose by hittin& it on the
head with 1 ni&htstick, Wilson
said.
Wilson said the dog was
knockina everythin& out of the way
to get to the pden retriever.
"l wu concerned that a httle
girl mipt be out w1lkin1 her
puppy and ,et in the way." Wilton
said. "A child could have been
particularly sinc.c any chan,es to
the policy would require retumina
to the state commillion for review.
"I can't JM that IM .,OHcy can
have an unbl11ed hHr1na," Hectaea 11id.
The huridNdl ol privlte wall1,
patlOI, apu anct other home
tmpr<Mmcnta lllluilt 11 .... ly onto
the beach ower the ,..,. have
been the aourc• of major
conununhJ .-te.
~ • I ODmllillioa ataff d-..e IO "dlu •" dM dty't ~111, die ..... • October
••••••• • ....., ......... allow ......,.. 11araadl••'ll fftMll 7 II
2 ID IS 1111 Ill IM..._"" -;..-..::.::r:·. ,_, ................ .,.. ........ ,. • .., .... ... ... -•ilff'•
Z l!iMMt .... lllfll~TIA• t. .. _ ................... ......
1Millldlll111tl•'1 ... ..
1111nll1d t\e ...... fl illl ...,.,
Garden Grove and Santa Ana
educators should be ''commended
for their enthusiasm and patient,
lovina altitudes when dealing with
children who are suffering lrom
cultural shock and (are) in need of
a warm, positive environment in
which to learn."
The Grand Jury noted that
many of the elementary schools in
Santa Ana have switched to year·
round schedule s due to
overcrowdina. The result hu been
that limited-English-speaking
students improve at a faster rate in
ycar0 round schools because there
arc no long summer breaks.
Other districts should follow
Santa Ana's example, according to
the repon.
The Santa and Garden 0ro¥e
districts have proirams to teach
EnJlish to adults and parents,
which the Grand Jury also
recommended that other districts
con ider.
The rcpon suggested that the
Orange County Depa rtment of
Education encourage school
districts to "develop a course
designed to help parents become
better participants in their
children's education."
Since mo t d istricts have fewer
dollars to spend these days, the
O rand Jury suggested private
ector partnerships aimed at
finding Hispanic and Asian role
models. And the panel sugested
that the districts devel~ job·
training programs for bilingual
tudents.
-B1 Cit¥ Nnrs &nkt
mauled."
He believes police made a
serious mistake in falling to
remove the woman and her d<>& in
a police car. He also said the
woman officer was "obstinate,
defi~nt and arrogant" with people
at the scene.
Police Lt. Ed McErlain said no
report has been filed and was
unable to comment.
Mcfarland said he intends to
file a complaint with the city, a
fint step in a lawsuit.
"All that needed to be ck>nc was
for the police to take the doa away
from the .Udy, or least put it on
the leash," the Garden Grove
resident said. "There is a leash
law. It's illepl to take a dot in a
public area without a leash."
coa tline.
The city and cornmi11ion
eventually aareed private home
structuru should be allowed to
eictend u far 11 15 feet on the
beach from S2nd Street to the
S.anta Ana Pier, to JO feet from
36th to $2nd Street and to 7 l/2
feet in th• Balboa Pier
neiahttorhood.
In uc1tan1e, tlM cfty h11
pleclled IS percent bl the annual
permit ,....... to construct curbs.
puers, ..._.... Md ,.nma
~ II ... ol the 33 ltre.t
.-bltw11• M SllMt 11d ,,_
..... All .... . ,,. .... -....... --to-..U
I ~-· ,......, It OrlR .. *-• ...-. ........... CllltO
tM ... I tllDrt ..... for
'd11ldl•• • .. .. '° ....
'9aclt. N•• .... ,,.:.uu::••a ............ ! ..
~ ............. ....... .... ....
Al ...... ,.. ........ .... ... ,, ... _ ....... ..
................... o11111,.. ... .......... ii. .......... ...,.,, ooedl end
,.,.. ID reaU. their efforts tbrouah
tbl ,..,.
Thi boys ,._.. champioUhipl
are lleld It the Southorn Cilffonlill
Junior Boys 08llic "°"'June 22-25.
TMN are three • P°'IP' with each p1ar11i1 &hetr toumarnenta 1t different ·-The 14 A Unden ue &hOle
aimolodM lilbth aradc and ,ounacr.
Thel6.'A 1'.a.n i for ~res
and ~•'· while the 18 A Unden is for hill\ school senion (achaaJty a
19-year-old senior can compete but
not an 18-year-old collep freshman).
This reaK>nal
toum1ment is a
peat one· as you
have the best talent
playin1 topther. It
• allo 1 showcase
for the collep
recruiten to see the
non-siped senion
and the juniors for
ne11t year's
recruiting cla~. _
While the boys
-----ue at the regional,
most of tho girls
club teams arc in
-----Davis, Calif. for the Volleyball Festival. This year's
FestiVll h11 S3S teams (168 18 &
Unders, ~23 16 & Undcrs, 140 14 &
Unden, and, for the first year, 17 12
cl Unden). It is the laraest women's
athletic event in the world.
The UC Davis campus is the main
site. The toum1ment is played 111
over the Davis and Sacramento area
at different gyms.
The format consists of pool play
with teams from other regions, more
pool play dependent on first pool
results, and playoffs at your level.
After ptayina t.hrouah the fi"t four
da)'I, every team seeks its own level of
competition which .make the finftl day
very competitive and exciting for ttll
teams.
The events surrounding the actual
play are out tanding. The theme meal
to open rhe tournament feeds over
S,000 and tics inro rhe Opening
Ceremony where all contestants
march in. This year, the Opcnint
Ceremonies arc in the football
sladium.
To break up the lournamcnl, there
are quite a few special activities. On
Wednesday, June 26, rhcrc is a
parents conference to discuss rhc
many facets of the whole system such
as club organiiation, college
recruitment and parent involvcmcnr.
There is also a Coaches Gr1
Volleyball Tournament and a Festival
SM BRANDEJWI
A season
to remember
in baseball
I can'l resist Here's what's really
makina 1991 sueh 1 memorable baseball
season:
Now rhat Edison Hiah has reached the
CIF final at the Bi& A, ind the Angels
continued to contend In the AL West,
there's this e11tra special passion I
experience when a former te1mm1te acrs
the bi1 call lo the varsity.
Every year there
ace ms to be 1 f amitilr
name th1t man1ae1 to
reach rhe major lequa.
but tha1 ~ar produced
two.
Pitcher Pat Rice, my
sometimes ro1d-roomy
and buUpen mate at
Slit Lake Oty in 1916,
coma out Of rhe pen
now for the Seattle
MariMn; It iltoc:bd me
when I heard the news. -8-1-1-_...-... 11-
lnfteldlr Rich vucu
Amaral, a third
b1111M11forOraa81
CoMt ~-In 1111 and a llOOnd ......... loi tM SOUth All-Stan and our
Metro Lt ....... Ill 19'0, McllM
Saldi .. .,,.,, ... ,.., befon Fi ..
Git ........ bled .... . Rici ....... .,.,, ,... ArbMM. He
w••IJ.-.outofow ......
lllUillll II llll Lab. I -.r ......
..... lllDIM ....
..... jlll9m Ill Amntt • ..., .... ...,, ... , .,, ... -· .. ............
°" ............... L ...... .,
... DUNMI
' I . I ' I
A two-sport performer, he
was an All-Sunset League
safety in football , and
contributed to the Oilers'
league champion volleyball
team. He led the league
with five interceptions. He
also rushed for 377 yards
on 56 carries and added
1 ~ 6 receiving yards as a
fullback, leading the team
in scoring with seven TOs.
He has a GPA of 3.4.
.... .. ....... ~a 1IJlllllll,.. *"'s ::::s; 1s ••••• tar NA,._ • 1 1dillr•a1~1•tll'llll• aelillnrn• ........... ···::.F ""· ----.. , . ·--....,. ....... r_JG!I_ -... W ..... ID plliJ,"" ~ ~If ,..·re.. ........ Of .-.: • ..... ,., •'-Plliladl ia, "U cely, ra do wllll'• baa for-. Jot •s :r:"....., in Game r.,.d
Id whal'• bell for IM LaUn or tlll heel. • ..-.. Md 15 rebounds u the
NBA. If I thcJuPI in m, IMlan ta.t • i... &us the 76en and won the
h..S no lqilillllle chance to win, I'd llC daa•ploa1hip despite vi injury to
...Ore iMlifted JO~... ltM9lill AbdDl-Jabbar. ·
nl' :~LA~~ho ~ won f~ '"Thil II a tlmDar situation, but l don't ~dif; · JohlllOn'• arrival 1n know what's pna to happen and how I .
1 ~p no encourapna news on \be ,....., "9Y in the pne," John1011 said. "I
infury front ~. cn•t ao inro a pme saying. 'I'm ju11
CoKh Mib ~. who aaid he aoina to shoot ronipr.' You can't plan
wasn't countin& Oii iftiured starten Jama thinp that way. I fi1ve to see how the
Worthy and a,ron Scou, xrimmaaed with pme goes."
rhe team because he ~ Johnson to Asked if he would play t.he entire pme,
rell, too. That left nme pllyen on the Johnson replied, "I don't think I'll f.lay 48
noor. minurcs, but h will be cto.e to that. t
"I made a few buket.s, but our bench Worthy, who sprained his left ankle two
has SUYI Wllo an better than me," said weeks aao in the Liken-Portland series,
~. 37, Who retired u an acrlvc and Scou, who hu • bNised riibt
Higfl School Athletes of the Year
A four-sport performer, she
owns 1 O varsity letters,
despite missing much of
junior year with a serious
knee injury.· She earned
two Sunset League shot
put titles, and one in the
discus . A two-time
all-leaguer in soccer, she
played goalie and in the
field. She played two years
of varsity softball, and also
two seasons of volleyball. .
.
A three-sport star, he
played three "arsity
seasons in football and
baseball, adding one full
year on the varsity
basketball team . He was
Daily Pilot Offensive Player
of Year in Sunset football,
and was All-CIF as a
pitcher/first baseman in
baseball. Bound for Ole'
Miss, he was league's
athlete of the year.
,,_ tap BrlWBrB, 4-8, llllilld L..,,_
ANAHEIM -Ron
Tingley had a two-run
double, and scored the
winning run .o n
lumpin~ Luis Polonia'
single in support of
Mark Lang Ion as the
California Angel beat
the rechna Milwaukee Brewen, 4·3,
Tue day night at Anaheim tedium.
Lanpton (8·2) won for the ~vcnth
tame an eight dec1s10n • al10'ftoin1 a walk
and )even hat\ -including homers by
Dante Btehene and Paul Molitor -O\'er
7'1 inninp while .atnk1n1 out a Kl n·
hi&h nine. Bryan Harvey worked the final
J \1 innings for hill 15th save,
Dick Schofield had has first thrcc-h11
gomc thi eason for Cahfomi1, wh.ic.h
handed Milwaukee ir eighth loss in nine
games.
Milwaukee reliever Kevin Brown (2-3)
allowed a one-out walk to Tia~ley in the
ixth inning, Schofield's third sansle from
rhe No. 9 pot an the order ind Poloftil'a
hnc single to right that broltc an 0-for-!3
droughr.
Mohror's fourrh homer tied the acore 3-
3 with one out in the fifth. Bichctte's
homer was his 1 J th this seuon, and fint
1aains1 hi former teammates since the
March 14 trade that 1ent delipated
hitter Dave Parker to the Anaclt.
After f allin• behind 2-0 on Robin
Younr' firs1-1nnan1 RBI $in1le and
Bichcttc's second-1nninJ homer, the
Anael took the le1d with a three-run
fourrh again t Don Auiust.
Tingley, st1rt1n1 his fourth trai&ht
game behind the plare with Llncc Parri h
nursina an injury 10 hit teft arm, tied the
score wirh a onc,out double after Auaust
opened the innina with 1 pair of walks.
Schofield rhen inped for the ao--ah~d
run, knodina out AUplt.
The Antcl' clo"e out 1 ninc·aamc
home tand with an afternoon a•mc
•saanst the Brewen today. Fernando
Valenzuela (0-l) will make has ~cond
\lart for the An,cl1 and Will tie -opposed
by Ted tlagucra (0·2) at I o'ctack.
_.,. n. 4 rrr a11 ... ~ ,,,,_.
.... , ............... ..,
0reca It fontlfCI a8d ,.arJ T ....
paid.
.. Nei&Mr ........... ....
.,, OCMlld I!! wuow," tnilllc
Vitti a.id. .. we 1-e • ...._
work. No ..... Mil be ......
ol them until pme time. We're ,_.,..
them around tM clock. I '*"-" .... up.~·
"The real teat will be •niml -ftoor, doina l9IM cuatina _.
spontaneous movement." Worthy
"I'm not rulina anythina out.
Pid. "I'm keepina hope a1M
play. ll wouldn'l help the team if I I :'
there injured. I was told by the
thal it take 1 week or rwo for this ..
But we're trying 10 speed up the b(i ..
process."
The Lakers 11$0 need a quiet fix •
their a.itina offcnac. They are = 89-3 points on 43.3 percent
while rhe Bulls have scored an 1Wf1i11 ol
99.8 points on 52.S percent shootina.
She was a four-time
All-Sunset League softball
player for Coach Sarah
Oakley, and played her first
season of varsity tennis
last fall. Boasting a 3.8
GPA, she is bound for
Northwestern University.
She played a variety of
positions in softball ,
inclu ding pitcher and
shortstop and won five
national ASA titles.
\ 111 R.-ndt>lph hurdl W;alty ~·
Polonia tries to shrug off boos as he awaits road t .
8y Alctwd °"" °""" c.... Deir "" ANAHEIM -He was toUndly bOocd
Monday nif't for hit defensive lapec1, but
Luis Polonaa ha played in New York IO
he's used to 1t.
With hit hart Mt Oft maltina the
Amcr~n uape All-star team. hoDina
0.k.laftd M ...... r "'-' LaR-. · wtll
•lilct him• a,...,.., ·l'olonia cen'I wait ..
for tltil current 1MJM11t• to 1Rd '° he
CU ID beck IO Mu ... •"'· Aller th1I .,..,.,... pme aplMt
MllWauUe. Ille ~II Wt the fOld b U .... • row...:
.. ...... of A..••• ....... ... ro1'°'"'41 OR ..... , WMa .... ..
·••-•twoftfllllleMtllelDlt•dll
..... .. I.ft :llN. 'l1IM -.. ...... _ ....... "'° ...._ ahtlw ....
lcaaue·ludina 22.
"Tho-.e guyi (,.ho booed) ~Id be in
New York; th~ 1DUnd like NeW Yott
fans," said Pok>n,a, whole 306 aw,.. it
the lowest it's been since April 12 (.J67).
"That kept me aoina and if it happena
apin, I'll u""'" it •in .
"What bothen • 11 that it .,.. _.
pene. They don't,...-., how ....
meant to tM team IMI ,.... (.:IM) _.
th' year. But l ~ ill Nft Yen _. I
kncM how to handle it. (A.111111"> 11 ..,.
...,, a quaner of what 1t•1 ... ht New
York."
Polonia'• hitth• ......... ill 11• .. ......
Paloitta ccMdn't hive pkllii I ...
-. to break oat of an Mlllr-U .... ........... ~ ......... ...
.......... IOp.i the t\ftlllla~ liMd •
Polonia' ionae t stretch WitltcMat 1 hat in
hit career is l 4 at-beta.
"I hit <Mf .3~ (.3SJ) Mn llllt ,.ar, IO
I don't Chink at's the bd pUl." Polonia
said. ,.But the IMI IWO hcm•a• I
haven't hit here, It'• -.., IO .. IMt
beca'* I'm Im ......... but I ., °" tbe
rOld 8M hit .320. 10 I cbl'l bow wMft
......,. ... bere.
::,,. . .,.beet (to cw .......... bettlftc
dtle). 1-188' I -....... 310 (to
bejll) s.ptanbcr -I ....... Mnifta .ill6. We're only la J ... _._.we're
........ roecl. ft
., llupi• .. ,,._ .. =,.••~1 -1M AL
IMden and~• .. ,,_.
Ollrl11d'1 IYdllJ 1111 J ..........
'-•1,11t•1M.. PI I • ...... .. .,. .. Lall-.
"I worry abOut (my ..., .. ) a
maybe, but I don't want k IO •
bcc:aUM I Wlftt '° ID • .. --· Oemc," Poaonia said. "We .._
left, to there'• I loc I c.. ....
"No maaer wbet I -. '••
pt ..,.... \IOMI ID ... ... hatlOpk:klM ..... _
1 hit . .)«). rm • .... • ._ •.•
tcaner)." ..........
o1 ............... ..............
(IM). .. 111 -did lir: ____ _ .... ... ... ,..-...... ._ ..... ..,,,_. ....
·"
RJDOBTOWN. Ontario -Oollln 7 hive been known to "'°'9 two ~ in-one on the .... J*.~ bole, but __ _
Pete Brown Ml done t'9 ~
impouible -llCOrinS two .. oa me .... par '
within five d1ya.
Brown, ~. Iced the 252-fard. 12th hole Oii
c::onsecutive rounds earlier this month at tbe
Ridptown Golf ind Country. Club. .
Golf Di1est m11uine, Which bas been NJHUftl
1 hole-in-one reJistry since 1952, said the oddl for
1n ac:c on any sinaJe hole in an J 8-bole round are
11,000-to-1.
But assistant editor Lois Hanes said aces on par
fours arc so rare, it's almost impossible to
calculate the odds.
"Maybe no one has aced a par four twice in a
row," Hanes said.
The hole Brown got his hole-in-one on bends
slightly left from the tee with a grove of trees
blocking the view from tee to green.
"I u ed my driver, which I usually don't do, and
hit my tee shot over the trees to the left edge of
one of che sR nd traps," Brown said of his first ace
on June l.
He thought the ball was lost out-of-bounds
surrounding the green and dropped ~nother ball
It wasn't until his playin& partners, hts father Lee
and his son Peter Jr., looked in the hole and
found the ball.
When he came to the 12th tee on his next
round five days later, Brown said he ''wasn't even
thinking about the first hole-in-one because the
chances of that happening aren't. very~·" .
He hit into a strong left-to-nght wtnd and his
drive carried around the trees onto the green.
"They said that one of the golfers was lining up
a pull and my ball went between. his putter and
legs right into the hole," Brown said.
"I still can't believe it."
Brown now has six aces in his career.
Rams slgll veter• Mmvll
ANAHEIM -The Rams said ---
Tuesday they have signed veteran free ~
agent Vernon Maxwell, a linebacker ~
who has been with five teams during ----
his six seasons in the NFL.
Terms of the contract were not disclosed.
Maxwe ll 29, has r.ot played since the 1989
season, wh'en he appeared in nin e games with the
Seattle Scahnwks and had 19 tackles. In 1990, he
'itgned with the Phoenix Cardinals but was
released during training camp.
· The 6·foot-2, 230-pound Maxwell, who attended
high school in Los Angeles, was a second-round
draft elec11on of the Baltimore Colts out of
AnLon.i 5tate in 1983. He led the team in
quaracrbad, sacks as a rooki e with 11 and was
'ccond on the club with eight in 1984.
Jn 1985. Maxwell was traded to the San Diego
Charger11 but wa11 re lca cd in training camp.
The Detroit Lions picked him up midway
through the season and he played in the last nine
gamc'i. Jn 1986, Maxwell recorded a career-high
I07 1acklcs, incl uding 87 unassisted, and two
quarterback ack'\. The next sca~on. he appeared
in 12 games and had 16 tackle~.
After the Lions released him during 1988
training camp. he sa t ou t the season before
hooking up with the Seahawks.
Television-Radio
• G1.1nt~·Cub . WGN, 11 :20 am
•Dodgers· Pirate~. ESPN. 4·30 pm
• Bulls·L.ikers, Channel 4, 6 p.m
TEUM ION
BaHball
11 20 ~ m -San Franc1KO 11 Chicaito Cubs. WGN
4 "I() pm -t>odFr1 11 P11uburJh. ~P'll
Wattr Skll111
4 p m -Pro compehhon from Dallas (••re). Prune T1ckc1
Olytnplt Spon1
4 'tl pm -Wnmcn·s gymnn~I•<", JApJn vs US In World
lt~auc vollc)hlll (lapc). SpomCh.inncl
Pro Buk~lball
l'J pm -NBA f tnJll C'luca110 11 I akcf'. Channel 4
Surllna
7 pm -Pro eompe111ion rrom Imperial Ocach (1apc), Prime:
I 1ckc:1
8:)() p m -Pro cc>mpct11ion lrnm Sunset Buch, H1wt11i
(11pc). Prime Tdc1
llor~~ Ruln1
8·30 r m -Hollywood Park replays. Channel S6 (Prime
Ticket, 1 m)
Motor pons 1no Im -NASCAR 200 rrom Sonoma (llpe), ESPN
RADIO
Ba1«b1ll
I p m -M1....,~ukcc 11 Anac:li. KMPC (710), XT1lA (690).
4 lO pm -Dod&cn 11 P11UbllraJI, KABC (790)
7 p m -SI Louil •• Sin Dicao. KFMB (760) ,,.. h•lldtlell
6 pm -NBA r1n11' Chaao 11 ukc:n. Kt.AC (S10)
'• ..
... ~'·. ~ ..
NEW YORK -Dar.,t Strawberry ~
of the Dodpn mewed pMt San
Francisco'• Kevin Mitchell to take the •
lead amona N1tioaal Leaaue
outfielden in the latest ballotiaa for the AU-Star
Game.
Strawberry, who trailed Mitchell lut week. i1
ahead by almost 40,000 votes, llCCOnfins to fiprea
released Tuesday by the NL Andre D1wson of
the Chlcaao Cubl la third in the votins for
outfielders.
The top NL vote-setter is Cubs second buemlll
Ryne Sandbera (758,341), who lealll Defino
DeShields of Montreal by over 500,000 votea.
The Giants also have a-o playen unona the
leaders, with Will Oark leadina San Dieao's Fred
McOriff at first bue by just under 70,000 votea.
The other position leaden were unchanaed
from last week: San Dieao'• Benito Santiqo at
catcher; St. Louis' Ozzie Smith at ahonltop; and
Cincinnati's Chris Sabo at third bac. All three
were starters in last year's game at WrialcY Yield.
Promoter Dan Duva, with a pune _._ __
bid of $51 ,101,000, won the right to .,..._
promote the Evandcr Holyfield-Mike ~
Tyson heavyweight championship fight. ---
Duva's Main Events topped six other promoten
in purse bids held Tuesday by the International
Boxing Federation fQr Holyficld's mandatory
defense.
Don King, Tyson's promoter, did not submit a
bid and said Mond~ that Tyson no tonaer
considers the IBF a player in the boxing world
because it recognizes South African fighters.
In other sports 11cws Tuesday:
•The San Antonio Spurs have given coach
Larry Brown permission to talk ... with South
Carolina officials, and Brown saijl he may decide
to interview for the college job. Spurs owner Red
McCombs gave Brown permission for the
interview. Brown has two years remaining on his
$3.5 milli on contract with the NBA team.
• Dave Valle of the Seattle Mariners drew a
three-game suspension for charging Texas Rangers
manager Bobby Valen tine after being hit by a
pitch in a June 1 game. Valle, hit twice by pitches
an the series between the two teams, appealed the
suspension imposed by American League
president Bobby Brown and will continue to play
pending a hearing.
• Le s than 24 hours after being suspended by
the Montreal Expos for refusing to report to the
club's farm team, catcher Nelson Santovenia has
indicated he'll accept the demotion.
• Blood samples arc likely to be used in testing
athletes for drugs at future Olympics, the Games'
to~ anti·doping official says.
• Michael Chang won his second-round match
at the Queens Club tennis tournament in London,
making up a 0-3 deficit and beating Britain's
Danny Sap ford, 6-3, 6·3. Sweden's Mats
Wilandcr oontinucd his slide, losing, 6-4, 6-4, in
the opening round to Germany's Patrik Kuhnen.
Wilandcr also uff cred a knee injury.
•A federal appeals court in Cincinnati ordered
a U.S. District Court to dismiss Olympic 40()..
meter world record-holder Butch Reynolds'
lawsuit against the national governing body of
track and field .
-From The Associated Pru.
Quote of the day
Vladc Olv1c of the Lakers, companna
crowds in the United Stac and Europe:
"The crowd in Europe are crazier than here.
They throw evcrythina on the floor there,
even chair . Winning on the road is easier
here, even in Chicago."
BRAME J8 & Under match will be
televised on Prime Ticket. From 81
Picnic for everybody.
Si nJin Smith will appear
WedncJday niaht and play against
many of the team in this
exhibition.
Behind the scene , there is a
leadership conference for those
who arc fn tho e positions. The
colle'e coaches (and they arc all
there) arc invited to a recruitina
work hop which the Fe cival staff
hold\. Thi is coupled with a '
complete li'.\t with all pertinent
information of all the rccruitable
athletes for all of these college
coaches.
Friday ni1h1 when most of the
team• ire finished pl1yin1 (only
the &Op 16 pl.y on Saturday), the
Fc1ti¥al CafltMI Will be a new
..,.. II Wiii ltatur. m-w
....,. itJU.oriented pmea.
On S1turd1y, rhc championship
0
The Junior Olympics combine
the girls and boy in one
tournament on the following week
(July 1-6). This year, the J.O.'s are
in Tampa Bay, Fla. In Che new
convention center, there will be 24
volleyball courts laid down under
one roof. The whole tournament
will be held at one site.
While lhc regionals and Davi1
11rc srcat becau~ they are playeC:I
where meny parenr can ancnd
and watch, the travel to different
areu of the Umted Slata dm the
Junior Oe,.npb ~ II~
elldtlna IDd e,c-open"lelw
alw111 feh tblt OM ol bell
p1111 of trtveltat ii_.... ......
0
The ...._ 81J Yalattll a.It
will •iMI 12 -.. 1ijt11b -le\len to Junior Olympica. We h.w
. ·~-FllP The ar. ... c .... D .. '1 ...... ii one of lho
1pomon for the upcomina Oransc Cou"sy
Racina Fair 11 Los AlamilOI RKC Counc.
The race mectina rca1urc1 the only
thon>u&hbrcd nl1h1 racina ineot6q In So.them
California. Conducted by lhe 321td District
Aaricullu111l A55oclation (Oranae Count PaJr),
the meet runs July 29 •hrouah All• 17 on •
Monday·throu&h·Salltrday CVCftifta IChedule.
F1nt pc»t each nipl i, 7:30.
The Dally Pli.t will of'fcr a SI dilcount
'fuesdaya throuah Sa1urday to rcadcn who cllp
the coupon idcntlfyina the oner from the
pepcr. The coupon will be published several
limes durina the monlh of July. e More infonnation Oft pmarama bcina
offered by the 111cin1 fair may be obtained by
calhna (714) 75 1·l2A7.
Mii • 11m 11m11t
Tho ci&hth annual Wcsl Coast Marlin
Benefit Tournament will be held Aua. 23-26.
The 111·1nd·retc1sc event draws anglcn from
all over Southern California with net proceeds
pna to the American Cancer SodetyfOranac
County unit.
Started in 1984 by Wanda Kipper, president
of Costa Mcsa·bascd Padrtea Yacht • the
1hool-<>ut style tournament is open. to boats
more th•n 26 feet in lcn11h that arc ponsored
by a m:inuf.1c:lurcr-dc:atcr team.
The fishing takes ptac~ on Friday and
Saturday within a 90-milc radius of Avalon on
C.tahna ·hi and. Points arc awarded based on
the 11n1e required 10 brina in a marlin once the
hookup Is called in 10 tournament control.
Pri:r.cs and nwards will be announced at tho
tournament banquet Sunday night II the
Newport Beach Marrioll Hotel. Prizes include
fishlna aur, &ifl ocrtlflcatcs and more. e Interested pcnons should contact Wanda
Kipper at (71•) 645·5510.
major league future.
Ull lllCIF lchlll
TM Ttlaft ~r School, for boyt and Fla ·
aF• S·l6. will he held Aua. 19-23 fl'Oftt 5-1
• p.m. at Balerlc Park (at 1he corner of Adama A
Meu Verde West) In Co.ta Mcu.
11lc OOll ror lhe ICIM>ol is S7S before Jut,IS
and S9S aflor that date with • .. SIO dlacount for
1tcond or third child in the sainc family.
The edlool, under the dircclion of Cal Star.
Fullerton he1d coech Al Mislri, offcn a varied
cu"iculum ~cd lo cchcate youna pc:oplc
in the fundamentals of aocccr.
Each camper .-ill rccci¥e hitlhcr own llOCCCr
ball, a camp T-shirt, bumper 11icltcr, Tilaa
soccer waler bolllc ud ccrtifica1c of
completion.
• For more information, phone AJ Miltri ••
(714) n3-CAMP or Cathy Plock II (714) S4S·
9129.
1:11111 cl IL'I
The Callrornla Anaels and Iona distance
telephone company MCI will be conductlna
five cliftlcl charlna the next three months in
local Hi1p1nlc communities. Each dlnlc will be
held in both EnaJlsh and Spanish.
A total of flw instructiontl lelliona will be
covered lncludlna b111in1, ficldina and
lhrowlna. Somo 400 ch11dTcn, aacs 8 throu&h
IS, will p1r1idp1te, with the hollina school or
city handllna all prc·rep1n1lon.
Outfielder Luis Polonia, inricldcr uus Sojo
ind coaches Bruce Hines and Rick Turner will
sem: as 1nstruc1on
The clinics will be held 11 the ro1towing dates
11nd 11rs
June 13-Thomas Edison School, Anaheim
School Ohl net from 9:)()..11 :30 a.m.
June 27-Buchheim Field, San Juan
Cllpistr11no School, noon-2 p.m.
July 17-Davit Field, City or Costa Mesa, lO
a.m.-noon.
July 22-Arovista Park, Oty of Brel, 10
a.m.·noon.
Aua. 29-John Oalvln Park, City of Onttrlo,
11 a.m.-1 p.m. -
• For more Information, contact the Anaell
Community RelatiOnJ Department 11 (714)
937-7264.
-From 8 1
major league players 1s learning
how to play part-time. Some
playen can't adjust.
He needs to talk to Brent
Mayne, whose career opened up
by camng sianals.
after the Dodgers left him
unprotected.
0 Fact that was reiterated at
They're sood enough to get
there, but they're unhappy with
limited playing time and they don't
produce. They should teach it
more in the minors.
0
Somcthinf el c overlooked:
Relief pitching, and the neces ity
of having your best stuff right
away. ••You don't have time to
loosen up and work into it,"
Anpll pt\Cher Floyd Bannister
said Tuesday. "Reliever have to
come in and be effective right
away." Or you get shelled.
0 Doua DeCinces ind Rod Carew,
Anpls teammates in the 1980s,
are c:oachina a Connie Mack team
called the Newport Beach Cubs
this summer. Home sames arc at
UCI. Wonder if any of the playen
arc avid bucb11l card and
mcmor1bilia fan1tic:s?
0 . Slx current pla,en in the maJOr
leapes are Or1np Coast
products; more thmt any Other
colli• in Onnp County: Ama[1I
(Seattle). Dimon lonyhill
(Ch~ Cubl). Bnnt M1yne
(Kmml C19), DOtlnie Hill
(A_..). Kavin Romine (Boston)
1ndlemn Rebner (Ttxas).
Cl ...... Hilh •&cher Paul
MdPUllll. wfto more than 111;U9J;I In 1"1 le1rned how to
beoai1'9 I...,.,, is I ltMI for I
.......... ,..,. W1'olwr ....
.. ~ ..... llft.....nded hlu&.t ............
I lallll,.,...thaa
-.toOaldn
tlld -... dldll"t ~-._. ... .... _,_,_._.._ ..... .
'11r.lli~*;i.;;ntl Ii 111111. . ..., .... .......
0 I was stunned when Fountain
Valley High's Derek Fahs, an
excellent pitcher with pinpoint
oontrol, didn't act drafted.
Fahs is small (S-foot-11, 160
pounds), but ha1 two bia-lcague
breakina pitches and
above-average m[!Jr league heat.
The AJl-Star G1me and the
Fourth of July are traditional
benchmarks for evaluatina teams.
but to st1rt earlier In mid-June, it
lookl like the Dodaen hive a lock
in lhe NL Weat ind the A's in the
AL West. Pitttburah will be
pushed by the Meta, but ahould
hold on in the NL Eut and I'm
still pickina Boston to win the AL
Eut.
0
Who's surpiiled that Walf1
Joyner, in his free aaent year, II
havins a HalJ of Fune MUon?
0 Rex Peten, ftnt bMllltan for
Bakenfield (Docfsen' ea.A
teana a. the CalifDrnia ~).
said 1 •aJOr ...... All-SIU team
could be ~ with cumnt
double-A pa.,. who MWr pt a
chance at the iMw. "C:::.C ... In .. o~ ....,.,..,..,no
room (IO mow..,)." 1111 Mid.
.. l..oc* at (DMl•l'I) Mta Huff,
......... uttaA(wltla .-0.,..,., ............. . .......................
I •n111 ............ .,. •••• u ..
Tuesday's sports writers luncheon
at the Villa Nova restaurant:
Angels play-by-play broadcaster Al
Conin's real name is AJlan
Alcon in.
Before he wu hired in 19M, the
club made him change his name.
In the medi1 guide, he's listed u
AJl1n l. Conin.
0
MVP for Edison was junior
pitcher Shawn Allbee. The
Cbaraen never would have
reached the OF 5-A titJc same In
Anaheim If it hadn't been for hil
command on lhe mound
throushout &he playoffs. He had
no fear.
0
C)prea Collete, a third pl1ee
team in the Or1np Empire
Confere.nce which went on to wfn
the state JC championship,
became the fint Oranp County
tchoiol IO wfn • state lltle since
Or1nae Coast in 1980. Hm ind
Romine were memben ot &hat
OCCteam.
....... UlllM ..... .,
INOUWOOD -VW. OhK. dlt.U. Allflll ......... ..,,,.. • .,
-· may be the ml..aioll IO llllii' .............
11le NBA FiA• ~ .... 1
stftl•le for the Lalten -Jemes
Worthy with his petaful •kle, ·Byron Scou and Sam
Pertdns with thear lhbtl. ud Ma1ic Johnson w11h
Chicaao'1 defcndcn.
Fact of the d.,: Wanke led the Joha Carroll
Univenity Blue Slreakl to an 8-2 rwcord iii 1990
and set IChool records with 173 pa11 completions
and 13 touchdowns. Wanke transferred 10 John
Carroll (where Miami Dolphins Coach Don Shula
played in the early 19SOI) from the Uni\<enity of
The Bulls can win the NBA title in ton1gh1'\ fifth
pme de1p1tc 0Nac'1 eftont. Ju~t rwo year~ remo11cd
from his native Yu-IYla, he has been the Lalo.er'' mo~l con~istcnt performer an the Finals. ...
''Oden avety, I rUlly play now much better than
two ycan a.,. l play al50 more ph) ical," he aid.
"On offeni;c more 1 don't Jlay in one pace and ~au
for the ball. I ~e around, make &ood po uion."
After •~era11na 11.2 point in 1hc regular eason
the 7·fool· l center leads the laker in the first fou;
games. of the final Vtith a 20 ·point a\erage. He•s
fin1 wnh 37 rebound , oane block • e1gh1 teal~ and a
.614 shoouna percentage He made all 13 of his foul
shots
AmertcanL...-
~4,'"'-nl
•"·-OM.Ira Aflll ....... .. ..... •ti t,_. ,,,,
JOit .,_It 4111 • o • • ........ a••• •• ,, lll'W• ••••
'flt..... I tit .. ,. ~-,, .. lltl .... Cl Jtll
U OI '-re 111 1 l f l t Sclil*• JOJI
) ...
I t t t b J t J T..... It ct c ..... '9 ........ -..... HO 010 c........ 000 ...... . l Pl •·...._, .... _
'CAii ••• , ..... r: .. -• k-.1111 •· .... ~ ........... "' ..
Ji) S J J 4 I
JU J I I I I I J I I t I I 11 •• 0 ••
Tr.•••••••
---· IAW'f"I &.OClllJI 1"-t ...... 1 -
) -....... ;JI ......... ~..,..,,_ ... ,, __ , __ , __
lll'WPOllT IM99tlt0 -• -, ........
--ll ltlllJI'\ ,....,.,, •• 1 .......... , ___
Pittsbur&h in 1989.
NCAA executlvll director may
lie tal'llllt ot o• organization
SAN 0 ll.:. 0 0 NC A A Found:u'aon. 1 he committee will
e:~ecut1\iC darec1or Dack , hultl, repor1 it~ findings to the NCAA.
" ho co u I d co me u n de r tr the mve tigation reache the 1nvc~t1gatiqn by h1• O\\n NCAA, Schult1 said he would not
organwuion. -,aid Tuc.,day he '"-' be 1n\Olvcd in conductina it
"cmbarra cd" tha1 rule v1olat1on bccau c 1mc taaator report to the
may ha .. c occu1 red ~hile he wa Infraction Committee, not him.
itthlcllc director nt Virginia He aid he wall be inter.-iewcd "if
Virginia i in\C\t1ant1ng whether they want me to be."
it athletic fund-rai ing rm Vugin1a athlctfc director Jam
1lleanlly m1utc loan\ to tudcnt· Copcltnd aid la t month that
athlete from 19M2·90. Schultz wa mo41t uf the 36 )Qan~ in question
lllhlctiC director there fh>m 19 l· v.ent IU mcmbcn of the football,
7, . men' ba kctball, wrc1tlin1 and
411 auc;.11 the only thing I v.ant aolf team~. He aid aomo involved
clearly under tood 1s that I h;uJ graduate a'si<1tant coachc' and nh~olutely no knuv.lctl c of any four or five tudent who did not
"'"jor N AA rule' viol.Hion1 while play '-J'IOfl ,
l w.-lhcrc," chult.r 'lid ut a The iutcre 1-frce loans r•naed
new' conference rrior to makin5 a from $40 lo Sl,700 and averaaed
pccch at the National As OC1llllon about $.)SO. Copeland aid. Mott
uf c,,11c g1atc Director of ha~ been aid off, he nid. Athletic' ' nnual cun.,.cntiun. ,_, ___ _.~-----lllllillllllilll-4
•• 1\n)Chin1 I ny has the ahllity
to be masintcrprctccJ by either id
V1r1ima might think I'm taluna a
hot llt ahem and \Omcbody cl
mtJht ay I'm cry101 to ~ h1tewuh
Che 11u1tion.'' Schultz a1cJ. "1
think the be I thing tn do i Wllit
for them tu complete thctr
mvciiticut1 n ncJ sec where 1h11
gt 1 ...
:,: ...
u 1u• UOJM s•12•1
. He 5lilrted JUSt f1 .. e games and averaged 19.6
minute~ as a rookie. Thi eason, he tarted 81
aames and averaged 28.2 minutes. In the Finals he's
averaging 42.8 minute per game. ' "" t• SllllH
llUOll l ltUll ., .......
··~-115.Ull
~Cter being drafted by the Lakers in the first
rou¥ in 19 9, he . a1d, he would have been happy to
play ' to 10 minute per game.
"Now I'm playing 40 to 45, and play for the
Laker , play for the championship, play well in the r inal ," 0111ac 'ii!ll.I "Jt' really unbelievable."
1141 ,,. mun llUMI
111USI
"'' 111 ltOJJO Others al o arc 'tunned. ltOUG2 .... ......
•111 sum •1111 1119"
·~ •911
"He dcfan1tcly urpri cd us," Chicago forward
Horace Grant aid. "We felt that he was a good
pla)cr but \\C didn't realize that h1'i hand v.erc o
strong and h1 \COnng ability around the po t" v..is so
, .. ...-...... ......... ,.,.. ..............
*'° .. ,.,
117010
~~ 114tc • ... ,,,
IUlll
lllJU --SJt •• m-. nUf7
SS.lit
S5'IWI ,,. .. m• SU110 m• um
t-S.. ,__ • i..r• --• l l f ll 'l '-~--..... ,1 ...... a... .............. .,_.,.. 1•cr w _....., __
# 1 .. --._ •tM -·-""""'·. S.• l-......... -•'--•C-_,_ ... _, .. , .... _.....,._ .......
=:-,~· .!.!! ·~~·~ ~ ~
• '-*~ .__ ... •• '' sn ..... .,_, ____ ... ,...,. ______ ..,.....,.,.
01;•·----............. ,l .... .-~.-~,._ ... ...... -....... ----'-tl ... , ..... ~ ---.. IW9 ..,_H••
Den ver deals
top scorer
to Bullets
DC. vr R -The rebuilding·
minded Denver Nugget dealt
le.1ding 'corer Michael Adam 10
the Wa;,hangton Bullet~ o n
1 uc~day for a first-round draft
piclo., gl\/ing the NOA's worst team
two of the top eight picks in the
NBA draft
The Nugget\ ent Adam'!i. along
w11h t hear No 19 pick an the ftr t
round of the draft and future draft
con 1derat1on , to Wa hington for
the Bullet ' o 1 p1d., the eighth
choice overnll
The deal ga"c the Nugget 1he
rourth and the eighth choices in
the first round -the h1ghc t two
choice~ Oen\er ha'i e\ic.:r haa in th
ha~tory o other team m the June
26 draft ha' tv.o lotlery pack
ror Adam , it mean~ a return to
the Bullet , \\here he played for
one \e3\0n ( 19 6· 7) before being
dealt to the Nuiutet' Adams wa~ a
throw 1n" 1n a tracJe that al o
-.cn1 Ja~ Vincent to Oen1.er in
C\Ch.m1tc hu (Jarrell Wttlkcr and
Marlo. Abric.
In four i,c.1.,nn., , .. uh Denver. the
5 root· I 0 Ad.am hcc.amc one of
the gnmc\ bc.,t po1n1 guardlt and a
dan}tcrou~ 3-poant 'hooter Thi
pa,1 'ea on, he led the Nugget in
coring (:!6 5), a\!>1 l'I ( 10 5) and
minute' pla)Cd (35.5)
'\\tc npprcc1ate all the
con1nbut1on Michael Adam$ ha
made to thi\ franch1 c. and "e
w1'h him all the be t," Den,er
general manager Bernie
Bickcr\tafl 'aid. "ll'lt al"a}S
difficult "hen )OU g11.e up qualat).
But 'ou h;&\iC to gi"c up methmg
to get omethang good
"We arc in the prt>ccs of
rchu1ld1na the team, and 1h1' gl\e
u' t\\o early fir l round pick~."
-fl.f Tltt l HO<'ibtNJ PN'
. .. ...
S.tP"d c~ ... °'* .._ °'
bUy, WNtie _. top pNMpll .. Hit "'-·
~ !ooded. car phone, USll'll•• 11 -... rear dKk epolef. $1711Mo ...... COii
Ht-3'7' S23,IOO
For )uet S20 we'I run ~ 1x2\t" lld tn OUt eut·
mioCM ..ctton. whh • pk:ture Of Y'O"' C.-, fof 3 CGn'"
MCuttY'e s.t\H'd•Y9· Copy muat be iUbmMed by
Wed.
C.U Candy NOW " 942-M11 to
p1.ce Y'O'lf act and get In on ttW
~of'lerl
The~ Gulde lppWa
ewery Selurdey. • ~.....=~~ ehMOM ~
•
]
l • l
i -• '6 .... -· • a £
~ :a -• • ~ •
Lak en to 1*r j P•rls
INGLEWOOD -The L09 ~la I.Men
will 10in thtec·timc European CUp champioll
Pop 84 Split of Yuplavia and two odler
European teams in the 1991 Md>oaald't Open
tn Pans on Oct. 11·19. .
Pop 84, which won the Yupllvian Leapc
champion1hip for the fourth consecutive year,
will appear in the McDonald 's Ope.a for the
third time in the fifth year of the intemationaJ
tuurnamenl.
The other two European teams will be
Spani h Leapc champion Juventus Barcelona
and French team Lilh<>&e .
The NBA reprcsentati\ie ha not lost a P'!'e
in the e .. ent, which has been won previously by
the Milwaukee Bue~. Boston {:chics. Denver
Nugget~ and New York Kn1cks. But the same~
ha11e become increa ingl) clo e, ll'>ith the K.nicks
v.innina, 119-J J 5, O\Cr ca1.olini Pe aro in
01.crtime la t )Cir.
good .
The heardcd Oivac has a plca~ant manner, an easy
snule. a willingnc!> to learn and an improving
.1cquaintancc with the Engli!th language.
"J ha"e to work on the v.caghts for muscles, make
pawcr," he .. aid. "In NBA, play is very physical, and
1f l \\ant to play phy 1cal, I have to work out in
weight mom "
"In the two years. he'. really progre~sed into
omethi~g that can be very pecial in this league,"
Scott said. "He ha a ¥.reat attitude. l think the only
thing that we would like for him to do as probably
work harder in practice "
Diva~ is filling the pol once held by the greatest
scorer 1n NBA ha tOr), Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. 01vac
played fi\ie pro eason in Yugo lavia.
131.-U
• 171h at Inl:De Aft. • N
CLASSIFIED INDEX 6'2-5678
FROM NORTH ORANGE CO.
FROll IOUTH OAANOE CO.
.... 1. . ....
THE DALY ,._OT
~ ~"°""' r....,.._a......
Mon-l"ri a.-s '°""' ..._eoum.
M-FI 00-5 00pm
~· ~ICATIOH OEADt.-.
"-"" '"1;a .... Tll9dlly Mon I • PM • weoowtey T"l* I'» N
T""'8INly Wed uo ....
FtlM)r Thin l:MI PM Saturdey Fri ,,., ....
Sunder Fri 1:30 ....
CHECIC Youtt AD THE FIRIT DAY
f he Datly P•lol 1111-IOt lllfleienCY end ICCUf'8C)'
HO-Yef oc;~_.ity eHOtl dO oceur ...... lleteft ..,,,en you• ad 11 ••lid l>ecll end Chllell 'fO'M ed dllllr
lleJ>Ott etr0t1 tml'l'edtatety 10 642-5&71 Tiie 0..., P11oc
accepta no ~•t>lhty lo• any eu0t In en ldYllf'tiMmenl lot
whl(h ,, m•y be .. llPOl\Ml>le ••c.c>I IOt Ille coat of Ille
space 1ct111Hy occupoect t>y t,,. "'Ot Credit~ Ottfly be
•llowed t0< the hnt '" ... ''°" ·
Any amount not p1td wtlh1n 30 daya •• •~lli<ed will be
... l>,.Ct 10 l>ul not ltmtled 10 tin.nu Cf!Mgft ~
II 1' 1% ot the unpltd 1>1lenc. P9f month Ill collecllOn
coSlt 111<1 any •••ton•l>le 111on1ey'1 ....
.. ... .
~ .. I..,
.... ' 41
.. ·. ··:' ~)
. ' ..• ~
. , -·~ ·. x
........ I
• ',Aft 1.•
GPnf•rrtl 1002
IMKREPOI
...... • .,. r.1 ~
I 11.• ~
• • I J
-...
· ... -
' .
., ...... -:' ... ' 1.•
:. '•
WEIUY
REAL ESTATE
BKAll81158
fl:11I' 1 ,, t •
hiclf l• ! '\JI ,i,
Know About B•nk
Aepo1 right after th•
tru1tee 1.Uel For frH
Information call
833-0722. CHARMING WHC end --------1 28r 28•. lrg gr ...
BUILDERS
LOTS .... OF OPT10N9.
2 CONTIGUOUS VI
LOTS A2 , C t .
AGENTS PAM AND
BAAB 875-5511
yard • pldlo, perl.ct
fOf r.mal Of remodel.
QH,000. EZ to •how.
131-0211or845-81M
( ' I I • •, •,.1 , O~-·
R6fM*R
. ~ :. . . . .
.. uvao• C~M•RI
Pror decorated,
lmmac 3Br 2Ba home
with 2 rrplc, plant
1huttera. hardWd nra
& many JCtraat Open l •t/'Sun 1a-a, 3291
Mlct\lgan Ave. Pric.c:t
to lell It 1279,000.
OWner/Bkr 241·7208
H 11nt11111!1 "·
8t"<Hl1 1 ().)(}
B.111 •
l<,l,1·1 ' ( 11,
('I I •I I
<1 f 'I ~,,'I 1' • ' , , l
Find our hidden Classi-
fied Ads ... And Wini
Co•tat R•lar
1. Simply find our hld-
d e n classlfl1d ads
somewhere In our claJSI·
fitd Hctlon. Cut and
paste the ads on the en-
try blank and mall. 2. All entrln must anive by Thursday Noon.
3. Winner wlU be chOMn by random drawing and winners name will appear In 1
th• foUowlng ct.ys peper. One wlnn.,-per Wftk
4. Contat wlD run 5124191 • 7/12191 . ·
I ~IH\ Bl \'\h
N•me---------~------------------Adctre. ________ .;...__ _ __... ...........
Phone ________ .._ __ ......... ..._ ____ __;~-
* .. : oe..-'-I Cofttwt, tlo o.lfv Noc 330 W •
( .,... Adi Hen
I ,..Mi ....
.... C.. .... CA.91117
642-5678
p ' I I
\.' 111, '.
540-1220
ff6·6IOO
f" I'' '
H1 'I 1 ' !Iii
•Call 1·900-844 0100
• Enter 4-digit code appearing in ad
• Listen to greeting
• Leave message (you can change it
if not satisfied)
When leaving a message
• Leave your first name
• Mention your interests
• Tell your age
.• Describe your appearance
• Specify your preferences
• Include what you liked about the
person you are re ponding to
You may leav·e a 30 econd me age .
You will be automatically billed 98¢
for each minute.
A
. ~,r, rr ·Es ' ·~ • l J ~
PRINT CLEARLY: (fnt three wofdl en bOk:looe) 25 word tnOldnUTl
FREE ADS ARE MAIL-INS ONLY
All COii-ins Wll Be ChQrged Regular Rate.
\ r f ~ l I t " • 'f ,.\ \ .. • • a~ a J
ACOAE•·------------------------------
CftV: SW'E: .. -------... , 5 .... , .................... ,..... ......... ,,.. .......... ,,, ..... a...---.c. ........ ···-....... ._..__. .. ,.......,-.,,"'a .................. .. ........ ,.. ..... _ ...... _ ......... _. ,.. __ ... ,......
t
' • • p
• i
lrv111t· , ,
2BR 1 BA neer UCI. W/O relr1g, pool, ....,..._,
cerport. No P•t•.
S9SO mo 6t0.IM58
u.c.1.
Wtthln weltllng di•· tanc• 1 lilR •r11ng t
$700 Move·ln Bonua 1100
or 3 Day M•1clco Crutae Underground
parking. refrlg, apa, pool. Pvt bak:onlH. Apta ahown week·
.,... "' N& ..... 1iiiiNILoi~ .................. ~.,
9f9rY ......... "°" 1r•lft· u ,ue •• ..... .... , .... ... ........ ~
Ina a m111._,... ¥li9d .,. ~ '"' .... ..,,....... ..... IOQI 177..,.1,
---· lllech9n .......... . ,..,. ne~11••'Y· ,rr. o...... Mvenllle·· a ... 122.
days. ovenlngs & Sat· ---------• urdays. Call PAT
=::r,:· ~~~bin-Oener810ftloe WWWAl JOi• ~. no oe ... Gr; llLI' ITAi , ..
... ,,.._ ....._ Oe1Jy 1atwy aoo tor • ••IDID•
ir°' Oooct Pavtno Jobe buytnt f't9")NndtM. JS300ole00.,., """"
714/884-1838
If you·,. lull lllftlng your
own businell, clualfled le
I grMt place to llnd
office equipment. ......
By CHARLES GOREN
with OMAR SHARIF
and TANN AH HIRSCH
Both vulnerable. ort deal&.
NORTH
•4
•KQ8
t QJ984
+AQ97
WEST EAST
•A K 10 8 • Q J 6 6 3
• 6 4 •A J 10
• 7 6 3 • 10 ~ 2
•K1082 +J4
SOUTH
•9 7 2
•9 7 ~ 3 2
t A K
• 6 ~ !\
The b1ddtn1t:
North East South West
1 PaH l PHs
2 + Pua 2 Pan
2 Pus 3 Pua
4 Pa.u PJLU Paa
OpentnR lead King of •
When 1t looks as 1f declarer in
tends ruffinR losen1 on tht' board. 11
1s oft.en a sound tact it ll• lead
trumps However, thl're are t1me1>
when 11 1s obvmu that en attempt
to llmll dummy's ruffinit po"'l'r
would be en elt'm~ m futilit\ In
that event, you might ~ obie to
forcl' a fatal weakne11i. b} making
dummy ruff
North South bid aggre swely to
reach a fair gamf' North's auctmn
showed extra value' and South
judged that. ~ince therf' were no
wasted value~ m ~pades. game would
ATJINTIOI Need l xtra CHh? 0-. too htQM Wa
., help. call 1 /IOO-P"'"-.~""P-!!!' ne.t71'1. ..... ........... " ....... ~Upa:~a-AllllOUlt ~1=r. DIP•llDT
L ... IL9' Alm.,., v .........
be • reuonable ahot if per\ner held
good tnunpe. Henc., South'• thNe
hellrt8 with only aavaa bish-card
points, and North'• accep&ance or
Lhe invitation. •
West led the kiq of..,..._ Had
that defender penicked OD ... inc
dummy and shifted to a t.rwnp, de·
clare_r would have had an aaay path. , l O H y W l I South would have bed no trouble li~~~~i I~ to two lNmpe and a too-. -,~1-•1•2-1--1--1-,..
West reasoned that declarer Md __________ _.
to have at leaat a red ace and the ---------..
king of diamonds for hia two bida. Ir I T U M A G 11 , so. the most the defenders coWd 1 1 j 1 I'
hope for was ooe diamond trick and,
dubs. The settiilg t ricks, if any, bed
.... u••
with the finesse working, nothins in J
dummy's diamonds would take care • Corporate president to to come from the trump suit, since I K I R 8 N ~
or declarer'• side·suit losers. I 5 I I I 7 underlings. .. 0on·t pay
A forcing game WH clearly the • • • • • • attention tO what your crftics
right tactic, so Wen continued with Ther ~..111 be a
the ace of spades. Declarer ruffed in I say. e ..... never
dummy and led the king o( hearts, H I R E E F I statue erected ----."
but the defenders were on their toea. I C I I ' I I • Complete the cfluckle QVoNd F,ast grabbed the ace and continued by fllllnt In the ""8liftg worde
wllh another pade, and declarer you d.retop from lfep No. 3" ~. ~as a dead duck. lf South did not
ruff with dummy's queen, the de-
fenders would get two ..,ade trieb
and two trump . And if declarer did
choose to ruff, the defendera would
gl't three trump trkb along with
the . pade already in the benk. Down
one, although South could have
landed the game by taking fuU ad·
\antage uf the favorable Ii• of Lhe
card".
PRINT NUM&EREO LETTERS
IN THESf SQUARES
UNSCRAM&l.E LETTERS
FOR ANSWER
SCl•M.a.m AN1W111
=-= co••HUTIOll ....... .................
~ ...... ...,
DIUllLITY
MIDICM. UUIP
C11Ttf1411•
FIND
1400-71H2•5'USimlll No ••P MC CaH IAM· ,,IAM-t2 Noon Anl he Opemon 11 PM, Mon.-eun at
Wfftlenda only, ~ 7141 llO-M11. CAI.La
oua shift• avail Muat DATA PROClllOR JACK
type. Wiii ar-'n. II/hr. FIT, full CGmPMV Mn-Mt::a:,:;.c.M .
Co-. MeH. 5'0-1777 dta. Call Bett»wa fot' ..... t. T ... ln ARTllTI 111111 app1. eeo.2001 •
In ..,.. and eurround-DILIVERY Gewll Ollae Ing ., ... to do peed Smatl but buay NB p0rtralt1 from photoe .,.. office. LOOklnQI
for IOCal cti9ma High T H U R 8 DAYS for FIT h91p With ••P
Hrnlnct' wortclno 11n ONLY. Nawapaper on WS $.5 Order own 1tudl0. Phanotn· routaa available In entry a.11p h .. 1>ful.
anal bu•lnff• Llrnlt9d C•••• •••• •fttl S.nd rHume to P 0.
po11Uon1. Call for N••••rt ••••la Boll 12441 ... ei:zee3. FREI! USE of Info. a·oo A M to 10·00 Attn Laur .. .
Video , 1·304-428· AM. Up to seooo per
4031. day Car and Insur·
ATTaNTIOll LOY& lh4' enc• required. Call
aun? O,..t aummar 842-4:)33.
job• for beach t>uma.1---------
studenta, a 11th1ete•. DISTRICT
No phon9 ...... PIT/ MAM&QER
ave 1200 .. 400/WI(. ...--
Call 845-HMM.
AiiTO MICMMIC
FIT, 11lnt b•naflta. Apply CM'llron, PCH
& MacArthur, CdM.
l1rtendlr Trllnfft
Naadad. Call. ·
1-800.344·~11 •Kt. 1
Try the dossifieds. What's junk
to you is o treasure to someone
else. For only $ 13.44 you get
4 lines for 7 days. Call today.
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
.. 'W3Hl ~.::t P8a:>8J8 enivas
e eq J&Aeu ll!M ~l ·An ~W:> Jno.( &84M oi UOJIU8U•
Aed i.uoa .. 's6u11Jepun oi iu8Pf88Jd •••JOCl.IOO
W3Hl ~Q,:j -J8if8H ->fUfJS -inwvo -.<tf04M 642-5678
AC AO SS
1 Merrie.
5 Suppressed 10 Complain 14 Grand
15 Ammon111
compound
16 Immense
17 Sty Ioctl 18 Seeps
20 Resign
22 Malden·named 23 Enlarged map 24 Nalls
26 Part ol a
tourney
27 Some crlmlnlll
30 Summwlel
34 Brunch dlstl 35 Infant
36 Go qulekly 37 Simple
38 Pa11 or lire
40 Whip mark
41 Mature
42 Froat 43 Tenant
45 T alkl Idly
47 Collec:ta 48MMt
49 Loat COior
50 ScflmS>ad
53 Golt'• SnMd
5" Crowbw. a.o
58 Sctloot chum• 81 Spllt
82 Stage eward
2 3 4
14
17
20
63 Pudgy
64 Noled esuy111
65 MltllM lnto
leelhfw
66 nol wanl
no1
67 Valley
DOWN
I StMI jOlnt
2 Sword
3 Per daily
4 Write poorly
5 Fool
8 Modi!• 7 Auto parts
8 Prevtoully
• A«*lt pref
10 Coln•
11 OrOOllea
12 Out of llna
13 ~cr•m
19 Fa11hlUI
21 famlly -
25 Music: or painting 26 Canedlan
polltlco 27 Director
Polanalll 211 or..-lelter
29 Head cover 30 Horse parent
31 Disrepute
32 floor l•Y9'
33 Forecaster•
35 Pub'• kin 39 -Pllmu
e 1
40 Wai unaura 42 Coln..tou
cttll
44 USSR city
41STrMt .... 47 Mott brave 49 Cractt•
tptMd• 50 UK native
51 Spanllf1 ~·
•
\.\edne d1y, June 12 LIBRA (Sept 23·0Ct. 22): l.A'n&· WedMSday, J.nt ll
Vocal Wonder. It wu historic -11 r.ingc pro\pcct~ come into clear CAPRICORS (Dec 22-J•n 20)
....,., Jul), 1990, the nigh• selecred for focu$ F.mphasia on 1r1vcl, Over the nc~r few d•>"' ur o, v.h1k
th•~ tenor bl11ilmcg "-ll\ to be " Full '"ommunicatiun, 1b1hty to attract atum, your ruler, i oppt>'>Cd by
Moon n1&ht, The moon hone: do"n "ulc 11udicncc, Aurc rvc Arie\ Vcnu,, cons1dcr1bly murc wtll ~
on the 1nc1cn1 Baths of Carac.ill.1 1n '''uc' ch,1llcn1c Y~'ll meet ti 11nd achlc\cd through ~crct ncgoc1111ora, 2Ji~~··· Rome. f amed T1uru\ conductor cmc1gc vicroriou• private dc1h and pcr~on•I ~~~~~• Zub1n Mehl• wa' t1J the helm. Thr"c ~CORPIO (Oct 23-Nov. 21 ): rctommcndauon rather th.in by
~....-'+"'-~1 of the greate~t living tenor' h\cd up Whllt .ippurcd IO\I will be fotcma a \!lowdown -Vihcthcr or
'"'""+,-t-t-=-ii to their reputation~. They were J1••C rccovcrcJ Recently you ml\\Cd not )OU c~n now prO\ic that )OU ha\c
.-.... ......... ~..,, C1urcr11S, r11c1do Dum1ngu uppor1un11v 11nd now )'OU set ~cond t-ccn tricked or l.tken for I ndc.
(Aqu1r1u•) and Luc1ono P111111ro1t1 chance l 11l.c 1ntti11111c in ac1ting 10
52~1ad
63 w .. t ln<1 .. 1
.ilnd
65 LoethtorM
M Wicked
67 Actuel
69 Cut
llO Undarlland
11 12 13
(L1brt1) The voice• were recorded hc.irt nf mJrte" New love could be AQUARIUS (Jan. 21-Fcb. 19).
for pChtCrily II wa) I ull Moan, .. w.1111ng L co " featured Otln'I p;inic or lose your temper if
cmu11onal, ~r1m11tic: ilnd, '' one AC:l1TARIU (Nuv. 22-Dcc 21) p;1rtncn or clcl'lc companion~ oow
crhlc put ii, "wondrou'" A1tcn1ion rc~olve~ .uound pubhc appe.1t to rcncic on thctr promii.c<
.ippc1m 1n"· family tclallonship~. or rcfu\C 10 coope rate over long· ARJE (March :?l·Apnl 19) New term plan' or anangcmenli Your
M · · d h r. I \l!lUrtlV, n111rr111a • Money ub1111ned oon po~1t1on co1nc1 cs wit 11na , fl • mind 1, opcrn11no on 1 much hi"hcr .• · I · R I 1rC1m c urt u111i.1rcd tv.o monrh• 11111 • .,, ucc1\lon re lll1na 10 JOurne) c <1tl.,,c S level 11 the roomcn1 and ""U should
k L I ~n'c of tlircction, purnnv-re torcd p· m1 cs maJOr concc s1on mouona '''.. 1nu1n<.:tl\cly know how t" handle 1oll\.tllon' v burden 1~ removed II) rc~uh cmollonill or pr:ict1cal prohlcm Celebration will be 1n order Gcm1n1 l A.PRI OR~ (1'1:' 22-Jsn 19)
ploa)'I role D111crnf) 1cc:cnt hulftor 1nd PIS t'.S (Fch 20·March 20): Keep
1ntcllcctu1I cur 011ty: 1n\U1v11y you wm 1bou1 you and make aurc
TA RU ( prll W·May 20) 'llcv. concc m1n1 b<xJy 1m•sc "''SC to 1h.11 .,h 11 " t11k1n1 plate behind the
Moun rcluu to h uh uart. rnrc(ron t, Confidence re,torcd scene• t•r ~hind closed doon cannot
enthu,11 m. ~n)C of fitnc' · You·11 ton11h1 amid ,hower or c.umphmcnts. undermine your po~11ton or authouty
be: on more \Ohd cmo11on1I, (1n1nc111I \1imirian pli1y key role. pcrsonelly or profcu1onall1.
gro und A1tcn11on abo rc\ol\cs AQ ARI s (Jan 20-fcb. 18): H09o vcr, 1 ,h rt, harp rebuke
around personal J)O) IOnJ, manuil Rc"'-"'atc, remodel. rc:vm:, d1a111butc. •hould do the tt1ck and there 11 no
illtu\. Strc practicahry tn connection with muon to So on the rampage.
G tlM (Ma 21.June 20) Nev. 1"\. nuny, 1ccaunt1nt New Muon ARI <M•rd1 ll·Apnl 20): Arte1
Moc.in '" your •1&n accents in111111vc, 'Potll1ht crca11v1ty, scn1111ltly. m1y be: unc. of the m<Xl forceful end
sex •ppeel, p11r1ic1pac1on tn Out1n1 \hort mp yuu encounter 1nlJcpcndcn1 signs of lhc Zochac, but
ptonccnna pru1cct. Popul.mty rating 1nd1\'1du•I who buoys 'P•f1ll there come• a 1nomcn1 when Mn
7(\C)ffi\ upw•rd . Member or oppo~alc Piii (f·eb. 19·Mlf h 20) Wh11 v u h.ivc to let up Ind contcrYC ~f tc• rnnl1tfe\ "J rmd )VU trre 1 11bk!" 11pp.,arell to be dc9Crtlon or bcuayal cnu11c) I hcucforc, uy to aYOid any
C''\' l:.R (June 21-July 22): Liaht wo 1c:111ally cue of MtoaiJ further et1nn1 it or ronfror11at1on1 -
\hc:d on area' prcviou ly censored, •pr«untmcnt, m11taken 1dcn111y F11th even 1r )1111 arc decpij concerned
cl;u,1f1ed, prohibited craou• t~ r~\lorcd, yw brnthe ,.h t'r relier ahout your lona·•crm 1ec11r11y,
cons1dcrat1on 1111en to po "blc Art1cul11c fcehnp. ttl idea on pt1\1llon and ptmpcus
ch.inac of re 1dc:ncc. Attention 11\o p•pcr. TA Rll (April 21·May 21)
revolve• around marital 11tn1u1. It J UN [ I J I \ OU R f herc 1uc certain periods 1n lM ~.,
TouruJ 1n-w1tvcd BIRTlfDAV: You arc conM:iou ot \\lhcn the pl1nc:t• ..ccm to nd l\ut
LtO (July 2'·Aua 22): I unu fitnc~ wc11hr, 1ppoarancc, body Jt\ffnct aniJ dd'"11c mtsM,e1 -and
p<l\1tion hl&hlt&hts ab1hty tu win 1m1,c Your -cnte of humor " the unct you arc currc:n&ly rettmna
ft1cnd •nd innucn'"c people SOn\c conl•I'°'-'' ,.. '°"'re Qpablc 4>( oupt to make )'•U 1• .. rc that IOme
md1Yidu•I Kem cumpcllcd to rcwal m1k1•1 ochers J1up Ouoqh tcan kind ot • ~JWn or conhOtttatlon 1ccrc~1t 10 you Be dt!oCrcct r~a1rdt111 You ere \'Cnat1l1:. ratln,, dynamic """ flnanc:-es 11 uaaYOlclable J1111
d ande111ne •n•nacmcntt Pitcu 11 1n 1nd tend to tcancr ~· forcu. ensure 1h11 fO'I arc not apectlftt •
picture Ocmtni, ~•alttatt• PltlOM ~ dividtnd on an cmohonal ""-"""'
vtaGO (Au1 2l·SCpt 22f. Focus 1 an•flcllnt r01a In pDUf life Otmnc GIMI I (May 2J.Junc 'll)
on lcJdenhlp, pteetlle, co.m"9\lty (1tle tcn•tl ,.t1M""fp, ._.MU An)'OM wtM1 1dl l....,_ JIOll , ..
projett C.11t'cll de~ lri¥offi111 cntcrpmo, 1Rarrl11c Pot11blc be talked doW1I or tdred Olll of
vulou pay•enu, 111111nnca, additlOft IO '-''1 _.Id .._ phly m•••na «rt• ~ _.,
telephone, autOMalbihl. RolatiOnlh p m.n. .aa. JllM, ,.,......,., and m 1allca In fllct, -.... )llQU an
hllUH, •ltiMalllJ rHtrdilll ~ trill ... --.Adf1'1 ldf JO" ftOW 11'1 ~ loft df Ill NllWIAf C.prieom ,...._...,. • a. atta. facu w lftlonMtidft, ,_ ca ..,. t-----..---.-...-...----------------i tho laWet bft I Wo ........... d1.,.a, lfldhctcc:t nr \MINlhfvl
Get aNWet9 to ce.... by~ ··ow..wn···
., , ..... Md entering 9c:ceM code number "': I
t&e per '""""9; Touch· Tone or rotary pftofta
CANCD (J11nc 22·1•~ 23) Don't
anow r:"k eo Kt in or lftakc 1 IV-.
Mf! °! '°"' ..... laid pleM ft(JW ...
to eo ""1 bct'llM re
groon.cd fur b1&1cr and better th1np.
hr>t, hOwcvcr, u mu 1 be totnllv
rc1h,l1(' 11nd objcwvc about one
cmouon•I uc and cMure that our
fcchn&\ really arc ba t:d un true
11ffcchnn
Lf.0 (July ~4·Au1 23) II c.1nno1
~ memd 100 1rongty that chi
pcn,;J or the )cir, "'h<:n lhe un 11
p '"' lhrouah th llnll)'hClll "'n or
(1emtn1, mu,1 be used to ~P'"'c
foci trom f•nt11\)' Th" " p.erucularly
trot 1( )'VU 1uc ftow involved m ~me
kind of emtitiunal IUgo()f·W.tr ot
'cpautcd Oum the one you cue
Jh<lul nwi.r
VIRCiO (Aiau 24· cpt 2J) Career
or prufcu1on11I m11tcn '"II accm to
be up 111 the 11r, tmd h will take 1111
your renowned unntne ~ to r1uhom
ou t whvl II rc.alty aoina on. But. one
v.11y or another, your day•to.J•)'
rou11nc 1 ~uod to be ahercd by
what tran1ptrc throushout the
rcm.\tndcr or th~ v.cck
UlllA (Sept 24-<At 23) Your
day·10-d1y u1,tcn c really doc) noc
hl\c tu be :a b•1tlcf1cld -1Umeth1na
ro be endured or m• rcrctl ,.. no
m1111cr how m11ny dream• h1wc
turned to du 1 rcc"ntly. In fact,
offcrt or lit.11\lancc r cc1vcJ mer 1hc
nett few da \h(1ulJ m;ike )OU
rulttc 111 I ho"' 1dm11cd and
r ~tcJ ~ rc11lly arc
COaPIO (O~t. 24·Nov. 22)·
ltn1na ca't yuur Joe v.11h cert••n
cotleapca or buitn l\MICIACCJ '"
am:n ¥llUf word, yuu 1mrly cannot
op& O\lt or cop out In f~ci. 1 cw.
Moon 1n Ccm1n1 rcquu ' th•C }'.Ott
come up wnh th<: ao<ld C¥Cn 1f 1
M~m.nt
TROUILE-llAKER
3.~,~~t·
ASTIC lndlV to run OI· fie••· 7 14/85to6872
No EJ1p Nac•aury. eam '300 Caati dally. buytng marcha.ndlH
Call SAM· 1 1 PM Mon-Sun at 714"°"8811,
GmCEAllT
Ptr, 714f87&-2137.
'fT CARI GIVIR For the ald.,tv.
Sat• Tu ... &40-4 t 02
PfT POllTIOMI
Train for mgmnt No
exp req l!arn 1400-
700 wl( For lnt•rvi.w
call 714-132·1147
PUTT• Part time po_...on at
loeal ~•paper, ...
a1anno In Cf'90lt omc.
Var .. fY of duti.t, II••·
Ible hOure. 24 "'' par ••el(. PerM•R•ftt poahlon Soma gen.
9' .. ofk• .. petl9ne•
helpful P..... call
Donna at 942'4321,
e.111122
number nf lu na,11nd1na ... -------..
•rr•fttc:mcnu l\avo 10 be c:.ncclcd.
SAGlnAAIU (Nov 2.M>ec. ll).
You may ~11cvc th•t partMR arid
cloic eotnpanlatb d<1 no« de1ervc a 1111~-...
aymp9fhctic hear na H~cwr, If )'09
tolallf ignore their opm1on1 °'
,....... then th "" wiu only p frt'tll bed to wot1e, Therefore. tallt a
.., lwtath and PfCM }Utt hair ....._
m!Mtd IN ....... llNM poll c.a bt.
If YOlll ~y II ON
WIDfflllMV. A Niw Moon Oii ,.., ..... ,.., ,........ '°" ..... ,.. .............. .,.. ......... , ....... ,... ... ..
,...... Thtnfoft, OMlt • ...,,. ...,..
or-....1 ~·-11afdoMl ·~w1 ... .,.11 °"' ....... °', ... ,..r ... .... •••rnn ...
CALL 142 4111
•; -·~,
STIRTll& I IEW BUSllESS?7
The l.-oel °"*1ment • .,. ~
ftlOt le pteeeed to MnCUnOt e MW ...a now evlllabll to MW bUll-,...._
w. • now 8EAACH the ,,.,.. tor
~ 11 no eictr• cNrge. and 19¥9 ~
.. ... Md .. tl'tp to .,. Court
~ In 8ente Ant. Then. °' oour..
lfllr.,. IMl"Ctl le coirisilatad w • .. ,..tlc:Mtoua ~nemt ....
,,... ...,.. .. County on .......
onot•welkforfourweakl•,......
.,, lew and """ .. yow "'°°' "' ~·....,_County a.f1t.
...... atop by to .. yow ..... bu._ at111 neoc 11 .. ~ ftlOt
lAglt Dlipef1J1•1t, 330 w.c '-·
coem ....., c.lfornla. " ~ .. '*
llop ... ... eel "' .. (714)
142-4321, EJceella6oi1 S 11 OI 111 and -.. ,,.. .,, ........ -~ '° handle tNa ptOOldyr9 by tMI.
"~ Jhould,...,,,-... ...... *"" ... eel "' and -..... more"*' glMI to ...... ~.
Goodi.dlln~ ,_...,_.,
F th , c;·ft · SPECIAL SALE~ a er s Day I Section: Thru SATURDAY, June 15
Quick start plCture system, 17 key
lnfra·red remote control. auto ftne
tuning. power°"· a*>r c:ontrol, Ind 110 cfiaMet frlQuenev. Walnut grain
cabinet. #ECR1550 s1a9
-GI• Fllllllon
Memory Dest PllOM
12 number memol 'f. #2·92«>
-Gl•Dtlmre
••moryPllOM
21·numblr memory. #2·916619167
Your CllOlce 2999
TIMEX•
A1Tllnu9
Wltcllel In stock
AssotteO men's lr"2 women's nvtes. c=.25 3
OFF
creat Cifts for a Grand cuyl
VCR Plus"' VCR & cable
Instant Programmer
One step VCR programming to set
your VCR to record all broadcast ano cable channels. LOOI< for program
numt>en In your TV llsttng. 5999
Kodak
BlankT·120 :Grade
cassette
Extra high grade.
Provides up to
The Rolodexe 4-1•1
Directory Alllltant
Credit Cll'd size with raised Nbber keyS.
5k memory holds 1 so names. numbers.
and memos. ,.99
6 hOurs Of ptaytngt
recorolngttme. A.L.S. storage cabinets #XHOT·120
7 WOOdgraln ftntsh. YOW CllOICe J 9 •S·Drawereomoect 99 ~~~7 ·2-Drawer VHS--OOIOs
24tapes. #VS-412
2-PackTDK®
High Blas Blank
Audio cassettes
J99
~W~c~99
#SAX100U2 -..
Wlrlllll All/PM lteNO
Hll ..... bdlO
.t·ft. tong. #MO 2••
Special Dad's Day savings!
J999
1777
a 1 .. •1• 11a• a
AlltO wan. .....
OMs~••4*Mln. --,.99 ..........
LOW Prolle COllllllll :=5ss
All luld1• .... LIM
COllllllll =--w9
........ ti"' ............ .... ,~ ...... ..,
'-' ........... .. llldtGllC ,.._ t1Dr'9,
......... CDMral. 2997
-
, • • SPECIAL SALE' Father s Day C1ft Section : rhru sAruRoAv . JUNE 1s
·Engllsh Leather«>
Cologne
a ounces.
-Chaps Cologne
1 Bounces.
Your 849 Choice
stetson® By Coty. ~~1 ounce. YOW' CJIOICe =~Loaon 499 1.Sounces. $8.00 VAlUEI
<oloane Splash-3.5 ounces.
$16.00 VALUE I
<oloane SsnY--2 .25 ounces.
$15.00VALUEI YOWCJIOICe
-After Shave~
2ounces.PLUS 7 99 FREE BELT!
$15.00 VALUE!
-After Shave
oRuor lellef Aftw Shave a.Im
2.sounces.
J::.1450
, -Cologne 2.5 ounces. 1aso
<olOQne $0f9Y-2.5 ounces. 19so
Jovan• Musk for Men
Afterstane/COlogM
2-ounce AftershaVe/Cologne
Witt\ FREE "'·ounce Jovane
Must fof Women 5 99 Cologne Spray!
Adidas•
-COiogne
•After ShlYe
-AftwSMW
wtthAloe
3 40Unats.
Your CJIOICe
a -99
¥I-ounce each: COiogne
and After ShaYe Balm.
plus 1-ounce Soap.
699
• • •
A message trom you could make Ills day.
This Father's Day. find a W'
message to flt your special dad -1Li IJO A&& n,.. ' In our HaHmart< department. --rr----~
c:enm1c· Golf -.5oep•ncl WOOCIT ...
COntalns 3-ounce
pack of 5 -ball soaps pfUS WOOd tees.
599
By FaDergee. 3.5-ounce Splash-On Lotion,
2 .5-ounce AntJ-Persplrant
Stlek. and 2.5-ounce Shave Cream.
.99
lrut 55• Splaltl·On Lotion
By FaberVe9. 5.5 ounces.
J::.229
Alty
PNfernd stock
COlolMor Afl.W ...
In stock
25%
OFF
Ortalrlll scent. 4.2S ounces PIUS
1.42 ounces f:HEI
!"9
.... .•
DllllMI" .......... ,...... """'*= ..-cma a 1.souras. .__ .. _ :r.=;:.ounca
GUnCll. ........ uounca
10%
OFll
RUllellstovere
AllOrtecl
Clloeolates
Assorted varieties. 1-pound
box.
Kingsford
Charcoal Brlquets
10-pound bag.
529
Detlnte"' Antl·Penplrant
I Deodorant
-Aera.al 4 ounces PIUS
1.2 ounces flRlll .,._1. 75 ounces
Oil.IS o.sJ ounces flftlt ...,.on-1.5 ounces DIU! o.45 ounces l'ttllt
AllOrWcl ICllflb. =-199
SOnr Walkman*
AM/FM stereo cassette Player
AM/FM stereo radio, automatk
ShUt·off, locaVdfmnt$Wlteh,
ultra·ltght MOR headphones. uses 2 AA batter1es (not lncU.llWM·F2015
s2a
FrltOS® com Chips
Assorted varieties 11.s to 12 oz bags
Each tape proyldes UO to
6 noun ot l*Vtnotrecordlng time. 799
24·HOUR PHARMACY
mVICI YaUCAll counom MnlMI OF DAY Ol NIGHT
Pepsi, Slice or
Mountain Dew
&pk.1 12-ounce cans.
1119
+CIN PACK
11 CONVENllNT
24·HOUR PHARMACY
LOCATIONS:
Keystone
Beer •Regular •llont
12-PI< 112-0unce cans
Heavy Duty Hammock
-MUttl·Posttlon Lounve-aCJJ~S
to 36 POSrtlons Vln'(l tubing and padded headrest 72-X 22"
Steel frame with ~er/cotton
sling. PlllOw lnduded. #06415 2299 •17436 799
Molded Resin
Stack Chair
Stacks for easv storage
29-X 23" 121693 699
2-speed
7" Cllp-On Fan
Chrome-plated gr111e.
•
high Impact ptastlc bodV. adjustabte ven1cal settings, ano easv-to-open high
tenSk>n dip White
UL llsted.ILP·7 899
Aristocrat
Web Chair
King -size mime. POSt leg
construction. deluxe
wood arms. and deluxe
POtVPropylene wet>t>lng. 11301
Hllh·Back
VlnYI strap
Foldlng Chair
Heavy-duty steel mime
with plastic arm rests.
241h"W x 55WH. #13559 1999 1499
48" Park Bench
With Dlack cast Iron mime and 8 apur WOOd slats
15 on back. 5 on seatl. #13557 2499
COlemanjW)
FllP-ToP COOier
10 Qt. cooler features textured
Interior. flip hd 'trav and odor·
resistant liner Holds twelve. 12·
ounce cans. No. 5210-Af 708
Folding
sanct Lounoe
AdjuStaOle fold1no neavv dutv
Textra lounge W\th wooden arms
NO 593N 1199 2999
Wizard
Charcoal
Lighter
32oz. metal container.
159
Tabletop crlll
Portable rectangular model features chrome grlll, top & side vents and top & Side "·1·12··
I-Piek
Insulated Nylon
TUbeCOOler J99 Relnfofced handle, nyton rtooer. FOids fot tnvet Ind storage, 19205
Lnkol·S= 20" Wind Khlne
MIOe of nigh=' =~not dint or rust. Ul 1St9Cl. IS521
21aa
...
·WaterprOOf 5"" llOdr c~
3 ~ounces. SPF 15 -st. 1'\'opel 5Df'W o.-wtth sweet
almond Oft.(; ounces. SPF 0 or 4
•WatwlMOOf trwne V .. Pade-3 ~ounces wttn Fltlf
1 ·ounce suneess ~SPF 30 -ClaUIQUe Oranae • 3~ounces.~15
.99
Fruit of tlle
lwtll nl COOi llue
lurnRellef
~Gel ~v ... Spray
Anesthetic formu&a.
I ounces.
Your CftOIC9
579
OSCO uttn sun
llOc:lr Lotton
.uttra sun 11oe1t ~
SPf25 -SUn scr..r--SPF 8 -sun llock-sPF 15
For SUft·sentkMt Skin.
-cNldrlft'I tun lloelt-SPF 50 4ounces.
Your CllOlcl
t99
....,.~7to12.
oUCIM'-SWS 5 to 10 AsSOtt9d COIOrS.
Yow a.Ice
"99
Johnson's 5uncl0wn• sunblock Lotion
4 ounces. SPF 20. 25. « 50
499
'::C.:nt =-water SllOOter
699
American
Garden seeds
Assorted vartetv flower & vegetat:>le seecs packets.
Hyponex
Potting SOii
All PUrPOSe SOii in 8 Qt t:>ag
The
Lawn
Shower
72" size. No. 21814
Mr.SCott's Pest control oo It yourself pest control In 1.ga11on
reaelv·to-use spray t:>ottle.
.... -a 5"
.,_ ... ··-
ggc
Aqua Chem
Muriatic Acid
pH oecreaser In oack
of two 1-gallon Juos
No.4002
Cood thrU Sat •• June 15, 1991
Men's or Women's
SlfnglaaeS In stocll
setectld stvtes .,., eok>t's, With
metal or g&asttc frames
Youra.olcl
•2~~ IOW Ot'Ce Wlttl this~
Must De $10 alWJ "1·
~drugs
LA AOWUICNO 19•JUlll( U 1991 PA(;E J
KOClacOlor COid 200
35mm Color Print Fiim
1GB135·36 exposures.
4s9
PACE 4 AOWffU IO 19 JUHf 12 1991 LA
Odltk supnllfe"'
Alullne .. tterles
-AA or AAA-2 pad<.
<or~2pactc.
-9-VOlt-1 pad<. =-179 lnctuOes: one. 50"W WSheet (6Yl SQ. ft.>.
bow, and gift tab. Assonecl destgns. 129
oe M ITV"
safari
Travel Kit
Leatner·llke v1nv1 kit features dout>le zipper
and waterproof llnlno. Glass gtoc>e wtttl metal base.
No 01309-009 Assort ea cotors. 11" tall.
1299ii99
Al Alnttye
llen'ILeltller
Wallets In Stock
50%
OFF
PKt of 100 COf ID Offed· retease tabt9t$.
·:."'9·••9
·::,.me. 699
Questions About Allergies,
Arthritis, Diabetes ... ?
Ask our Pharmacist.
Introducing our
FREE video tape
lending llbrarv.
Now vou can learn more about common health conditions In
the comfort of vour own home.
Just ask our pharmacist for
details.
REMEMBER ••• lt's FREEi
Count on people who care.
Unisoln. _...., ..
:~....., •
~==-5ss Sleep Aid
16 t.abletS.
1•·· ~o.t.nent T111J11tt-;>aek of 15. • -eum--oacJc of 24 PWS
24,.111
Your 699 ctlOlce
..,.,. Aspirin
<aolMS •Tll*CS 525mg19Ch. 100 PWS
FlllE travet pack of 121
=.J99
SAVI!
•Nlospotl
4lnt Aid oei--wcu-.-...-
<t'elm o.sounc:e. -POt",..,.,....n•
Metamucil
I
O·tlps®
cotton SwabS
Pack Of 300 PLUS 75 FREEi
Loving care~
Hair Color Lotion
ev Clalroc Assorted shades
SAU 1949 PRICE ;/I
$1SO • tSO
IHATt ---
AFTHl MFR t 99 REBATE
OftllllS lfl stor~
SWlss Formula
Head & SlloUlderS
Dandruff ShamPoO
•Tut>e-5.S-ounce tube.
·BotUe assorted formulas. 11 ounces
Your 269 CllOlce
Noxzema®
Medicated
Shave cream
Assorted formulas.
11 ounces PLUS
2 2 ·ounce travel ~zeon pack!
169
Bottom of 16-ounc:e spray oome unscrews.
Assorted eok>f's.
199
Andrea®
Gentle
Facial Hair ~~
PrOducts
.a..~
Regular«
Extra Strength. 1.s-ounce bleaeh
and 1-ounce
actlVatOf.
'"*Remover 2-ounce remover
and o.s-ounce creme.
No Nonsensee
Regular
Pantyttose
saes PIM. M/f. and Queen. Tan °' nuoe sNOes.
Shampoo & conditioner 2 .-9 combination Pack ..
av St. Ives·. Assort ea formulas two 16·ou nce oottles
YOW' CftOICe 99e
Con~
Haircare
fOrMen -croomng c;e._
4 75 ounces.
oMon·Aerosot Hair
Spray"' Sprtb-
assorted formutas a ounces -Aerosot HW Spray-
assort.ed formulas
13 ounces Your
-stytng MOulM-Choice a ounces.
-PfO..Ptus $1WnpOO-
assorted formulas
11.SounaK.
PACE 10 AOWHKNO 1<1 JUNE 12 1991 LA
ShoW to SllOwer DeOclorant
9ocly Powder
ASsorted scents. 8 ounces
199
=2s3
Item OFF
In Stock
Clan MacGregor scotch Jim Beam BOW'bOn or E&J Brandy or seagram•s 7 Whiskey
1.75 liters. 1.75 Liters.
12!!!1
Ancient Age
BourbOnor
smlmOff VOClka
1.75 liters.
11 9.!'
scoresby scotch or
Bacardi Rum
1.75 liters.
---14~
E&J Kendall
Reserve Jackson
Cellars Wines Wine
Assorted. 1.s liters. Chardonnav. 750 Ml
4~ 7••
Ctllvas Regal scotch or Jottnnle walker
Black Label scotch
7SOML
POpov
Vodka
1 75 liters.
I&~!' ass
Black velvet Whisky or Early Times Whisky
1.75liters.112•
EACH
Baileys Irish Cream
Liqueur or seaaram•s
crown Royal
Whisky 1so Ml
seagram•s v .o. Whisky or
Canadian Club Wlllstv
1.7Slltm 17~·
Gallo
ClaSllC Wines
Assorted. 3 liters..
49.!'
SChaefer
Beer
•ReQutar •Light
12·Pk./12-ounce
cans
-~~ +CIV
-
-
..
-
-
-
,.
Tide oscoarand Laundry Paper Towels
Detergent Assorted. Single roll pack.
•Regular •With Bleach Pa~ 136 oz. family size box.
7'!!1 ToWels 57c
American Andes caprlSUn Licorice Assorted candles Natural Fruit Drinks
•licorice Vines •Red Vines ASsorted variety chocolate wafers Assorted flavors 10.pouch pack
5 s oz rrav oac1< 4 67 oz box
!S1 99~x
Act II®
Microwave Popcorn
•Natural •Butter •Natural Lite •Butter lite
3 to 3 s oz packs
Planters® Nuts
•MIXed Nuts-regular or
llghtty satteo. 12 ounces.
•Honey Roasted MIXed Nutt-12 ounces.
·Honey Roasted Peanut &
CasheW MIX-11.S ounces.
!99C i 29
11!!1
Petrler•
111nera1 water
23 OZ. bOttte.
··~
Ragu
Spaghetti sauces
Assorted varieties 28 to 30 75 oz Jars.
11!!1
aerMteln's
salad Dressing
Assorted varieties
16 oz bottles