HomeMy WebLinkAbout1991-06-23 - Orange Coast PilotMAV8E'l'OU
COULD600UT
FRONT, SNOON,
AND SEE ••
TME FIRST TMIN6 I
DISCOVERED WAS
SOMEONE LEFT THE
SACK DOOR OPEN ••
. •
JUDGE PARKER
ACTUALLY , I 'M GLAD YOU'RE
HERE, KID / WORRYING ABOUT
WHAT YOU WERE TELLING THE
COPS WAS BEGINNING TO
GET TO ME I
IF I WAS GOING
TO TELL THE COPS
ABOUT YOU ,,, I
WOULD HAVE
ALREADY DONE
IT/
BY HAROLD LEDOUX
THAT'S COOL/ BUT THE STAKES ARE HlGHER NOW/
WHEN VlNNtE HIT THAT OLD MAN LAST NIGHT, we
STOPPED BEIN6
JUST THIEVES/
~
LISTEN,
TURK,,.
. .. •
bY 10M BA1iUK
. ·: .
.. . . .
BIG NATE
SOMEDAY WEtL PNlW5L Y
&E WORKI• AT THIS
MALL INSTEAt> OF JUST HAN~IMG-AIDMP IN IT!
WE ~ wattT AAVE
TIME TO HA~CT OUT OI\
f'LAY MLL ~ AttmtlN<FI
\.£'LL 8E ~INC.. ALL THE TIPtE I--
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OUR rMENTS WILL PRQ9-
A&L 't' "AKE' us!
THEY'LL -~ US TO
SAVE UP ~ COl l f;6E ~ SOt1ETHIMCir ~ i
J
I
i •
• ,.,,,··. ,L , ... .A' .. . . . . -. \
SOME GIRL.5 4fHINK / -rH~ OWM -r'HE BEACU •
. . ...
..
MYIE' r COULi>
LIVE WITM
THAT Crll\L PMT.
. _,,, ..
$0QQY,~ 'fOCJ MAW 1t> MAV
-·~ .. ----~ ,., '1'\C CAA.
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
LUANN
HEEL!
~
l'm .g?rtg
fan&.'
BY GREG IVAHS
LAST POTHOLE
FOR
125MILES
lailyPilat
JUN( 21!J.1991
Best roner coasters:
8 screaming treats
Meet Rocketeer's
unlikely star
:aa v '' o
'Pruit Prl"u' Wlll S1rdtlr, with
a1-1t11r Rllldro at NBC krh
Q The guy who plays Carlton
o" NBC'1 "Frt.Jh Pnnu of &I
Air" loolufam1lior. How come' "°* ~ltMorlh. Mrty Ort
Maybe you saw him moon-
walkmg with Michael Jack-
son ma 1984 Pepsi ad. Alfon-
so Ribeiro. the ongmal Tap
Dance KJd m the '84 Broad-
way show of the same name,
was handpicked by Jackson
for that 1V spot. Or maybe
you caught him on NBC's
S1/wr Spoon.r; he was a rcgubr
from 1984 to 1986. All Ribei-
ro, 19. has m common with
his stuffy Frtlh Princt chancttr
is chat ''we both love the prep-
py sports of golf and tennis "
Q My favoritt comic srnp,
"Calvi" and Hob~s," utmJ to
~'" rtpeats What's going on?
r.i.m McMurray, ~tu
Mischievous little Calvin and
has stuffed tiger, Hobbes, arc
at recess wtule their creator,
Bill Watterson, takes nine
months off. (Reprints began
May S in the 1, 100 ncwspa-
p e rs that carry the strip.)
Calvi" and Hobbts "requires a
great dw of research," Wat-
terson says, "and 1 need to do
more interplanetary explo-
ration and paleontology
work." The cartoonist, who
won't tell his age, says he lives
··~in~ Southwest. ..
Q Last fall, I rt.tJd that Nola"
Ryon had btcomt tM sixth
pillhtr to lkfozt all 26 major-
ltagut ttams. Mo drt tltt odtm?
~Mils, WllM, Kin.
T hey are Doyle Alexander,
Gaylord Perry, Don Sutton,
Mike T orrez and Rick Wisc.
Q ls Prr.sidtfll Carlos Sa/lM.S
dt Gortari of Mtxico a Horwrd
graduatt? l'w Mord a lot abou r
him amul tM Jwvy co11nagt of
the U.S.-Mccic4n trodt toUu,
but not about his education.
Nati Madrid, EJ PlllO
The 43-year-old president
earned a doetonte in political
economjcs and government
at Harvard in 1978. Earlier
--s.li.a, .... ""' wfj. ~"" ,,,, ~ ~·
degrees: a bachelor's in eco-
nomics (1969) and a master's
in political economics and
gDYtnlll1COt (76) &om the Na-
tiona.I Univcrsiry of Mexico.
Q Is Amy GNlf/'1 "'"I "Baby
Baby" obout Iser new 6oby or
llLr luuhdn'll Hos IM
abandonlltl Chrittian musi.c?
,,.. Slldw, cnz. Olb.
The recent No. 1 hit is about
her 18-month-old daugbteT,
Millie. So why docs a man
(an actor) star in the video?
To give it a sexier slant. says
Grant. a five-time Grammy
winner who has been a fix-
ture of Christian pop for a
decade. Even though her new
album, Hta11 in MotU>n, is a
nuinstream success, the 30-
year-old Grant hasn't forsalt-
cn Christian themes: The al-
bum's tnck.s are 1prinklcd
with religious references.
Bade in 'ff7, Gf2Jlt had another
dwt hit, a duct with Peter Ce--
~ called 7ltt Nm lime I Fall.
Q Who is profiting.from
Whilney Houston 's rt£Ording of
IM MtWMI ClllMm? My
hushond beliftla il's .u bting
<kMU!tl U1 clurrlty, but I om
d liult '"°" cynicill.
Scllln .... El ,.,
You shouldn't be. All the
profits are going to the Gulf
Crisis Fund. a division of the
Red Cl'O$S set up to asmt the
families of the USA's Ocxn
Storm warriors. Houston's
Super Bowl venion of Tlrt
SIAr-Spaltfl«I &ruta, Aruta's
fastest-moving record ever,
sold 750,000 copies in the
first eight days of its release.
HJ\f., 1111est1on .ihout 11ro11l1• 111 llw nt-11\' CALL I SOO .?5S LIN£ Sun•l.i1, fl .1 111 I•• 'l ,, 111
QI kwt "Ma£ywr," onABC, a"" I tJMJr itspc "'4t IM hilt
dlaractu doun't u# guru. But l te«ndy ltoinl tlwt homlu let madt"'
oM tpisodt arr bting copiN by ltids. b dth trwl
UINll ~. CllDI. NJ
Some parents tu~ linked their kids' dabbling in bombs ro a
MocCywr that first a.ired in Ncwembet and wu rerun in March.
MacG~r (the rusgcd crime-figbctT apparently h.u no first
name) uses his scientific know-how co devile ocher weapons.
roo. But great care is talcen never to divuJF 1 complctr formula.
says a spolteswotmn for Plnmount Pictu.ra. which produces
the show. Even if kids ~ inspirul by the progmn to make
bombs, they must have found dco.iled illJCJ"Udions elsewhere,
says Bob Thomas, a Maryland deputy 6.tt marshal. He invesn-
gated one of che cases, dut of an 1 t ·YQT-old Baltimore boy who
was hospita1i1cd for eye injuries after bis homemade bottle
bomb suddenly aplodcd. The Baltimore police say ei&flt kids
across the USA have been bun by amaceur bombs since March.
H..,.,y let1hd8y to ...
jmv 2J
June CaJ'tiM' Cub, 62
]urtt 24
Glenn Medeiras, 21
Mic* Fkttwood. 49
MJCbde Ltt. 49
]urtt 2.S
Gcu,. Mkhad, 21
Phyllil Gecqc. 43
Jimmie Walker, 42
Cvty Simon. 46
Jurtt26
Pamela lkllwQod, «>
Chatt. Robb, Sl
}uM21
Julia Duffy, 40
Nonna JWmli, 46
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Bob~64
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Danitnc a. .... 22
JollftC.-.25
Jelr~30 l-r Sduoedlf, lO )OMm...,,31
Mdllluob.65
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Fted Gnndy, 43 c;.,yau.y,47
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0., °""'8ed (COVEil STORl!S) Colltribwdioc Mean: Lee Balcy, Omb Ju,. ..,.._ l.cM,...,, Miry !Din llnal, c..110unmn. lllhy ~WW. ....... c.,tia}o C.. ....,, ........... 8roM\
Cop)'O.W. Tury ~Byrne Cap, Mhor. Torn Lem -A.-.. Art Dlireclorl ,._~S.. ...._~Moir~ i..,..t t ' S...K. 'I W"' t d ~ S1ef' *"'
omo.s..e:ac.Bonc1.v,,.,.,vim Hr 1,, .... 1000Wiliron~~Va.ZZ22MIOl2 N-' 'M~lcdat....... ..._,.WD111111 1 ~~-· 1r• r*
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QANNITT CO., INC •• ._.. ...... -.-..-.--.--. .._...,..._.,.,...
I USA 1'DX!ND • J-:1-». ,,,, ....... ••••1 .... , .......... 0..-
llb•a mn·Fa1· ... n wa c. oa n, 1111 c. oa n1
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~-•••11'9 we'ltnheaff._w11ght. SllTl·PaSt·
With her newest album, 'A Change of Heart,'
Diana Ross charts a new course. It's back-to-basics
Motown, but with a '90s flair. 'I'm excited about
getting back out there. Because I'm good at it.'
A midnight-blue limo pulls over on
Park Avenue. A shapely kg in a shon,
brown cowboy boot emcflP=S. fol-
lowed by an enormous blaclc leather
bag and a size S body in a short, green
polka-dot dress.
Then. 11w Pace. Sculpccd cheek-
bones; enonnous brown eyes; full ,
sensuous lips. The hair, while not as
massive as it once wu, surrounds her
delicate face. It is a face you'd recog-
nize anywhere -c:Ya1 on Michael
Jaclcson. Diana Roa has arrived.
Or has she?
"I feel thttc is sornedUng impor-
Wlt for me still to do," she says, shak-
ing that hair. "I h2ve DO idea what IS
is, but I know it's out there."
A succasion of her employees
has i~ that Roa will not talk
about anything but her new album,
but this two-hour interliew roams
through her past. future and &mily.
You may know more than you
care to about Madonna, but Ross
rarely opem up.
This is not the hell-on-wheels ego-
maniac: who bas been the subject of so
much .,.aip; this is a rc1m:d. middle-
agcd woman who 1111 she's "e\'Olv-
ing." HCT body it IOfter, fuller, matt
womm}y. Her makeup is simpler; her
oudic. funky. AJ she speaks. her ges-
tures are anima&ed, e:xpteasi~ say.
It's been JO years since the skinny
girl &om Dcuoit's ~IClel Projects
sWtCd as one of the Supremes.
Never mjnd the heartless lmaga
engendered by former Supreme Mary
Wilson's tell-411 aud>iograpby,
~ Forget chat younp
singers. lilct Whitney Houston. have
eclipecd her. Ian<>re'the fact that Ross'
last album. t98C1s Worltin' Owrtimt.
was her least 1uccasful in years.
jarrina her fans and telling onJy
150,000 copiea. Just mncmber: It
ain't OYCr till it's OYet, and chat ain't
until MJsa ROIS says IO.
Next month, her 58th album,
ddedA O..,.f{Ht1111t, comes out.
This wecJc, Ra. launches • single and
caka her mdonal ~to Adant:ic
~fiw Deis. managing • . marriage md ~
ing boch eyes on her $75 million net
worth -a fulJ plate by any sandard.
Yet Ross waou more.
She atway. bu. At IF 7, Ross and
her four sisten and brothen were scm
~m Dcttoit 10 BcwttloCT, Ala., to live
with an aunt fer a year while d:icir
mocbcr ruupcratcd &om~
sis. "My aunts bad pic:tW'CI of us and
they wnxe things on the boaarn of
them. I remember on my sister Bar-
bara's they wrocr: 'The ln~Uigcnt
One'; on mine, 'The Arm.ctive One.'
I've never forgotten chat. 0
At 47, The A~ One, the
worn.an who put che "d" in "dM."
still is pushing to prove tbett's more
t0 her than meea the eye.
"I'm excited about getting back out
there," says Ross. a hint of surprise in
her voice. ''Because I'm good at it.
When all me th.inp c:lidc cogabeT. the
band is really on top of it. the lighting
15 perfect, the 90Und is wortcing. the
audience is tbcR to bavr a good time,
and rm abo" -bcrc, she bcsitalel for
the right word. then finds it -.. per_
feet. When all thOllC magical moments
come together, then it rolly works:'
ho cm forget the
fim time they
hcanf Diana Rou
singing~ Did
0'4r ~Co? Her
voice wu unlike
tbOR of otbu female
singers of the day. It wu thin, delicate.
slighdy nasal, lacJcing the r.angc and
power of an Aretha Franklin or
Martha Reeves. but still somehow,
cnchmting, believable.
This sincerity may be her g-reatcst
gift as a styfin. Whether Ross was
singing &tby Low, Comt &t Abour Mt,
S1ttp! In dtt Nomt of Lwt °' any of the
Supremes' ochcT top-10 hits, she
sounded u af she'd felt the love, felt
the pain-she'd been there. How
could anyone abandon a woman who
crooned. "Ohhhhhhh, pkut don't
leaw me all by 1J1Y1CU:" u DWu did
on Whnr Dill Our LIM Col
''l wou1d kM: llO be able to sins tm
Amha or Whitney Housioo. or nen
Patti 1.aBcUe,'° she ays when ~
about fingers she admires. ••aoy, those
girls ~ in~blc vocal oords. I
mean, if they reach for a note, you
know chey'rc going co hit it.•• SM runs
long flJllCl'I through ~hair.
''Whac I think I haft is a commtt-
ciaJ IOUOd, the dear enundaoon.
wtuch is jUSt pan of my opbringina. ..
Roa llyt cbou&bdWJy. °"When J Png I
song. I fr'/ to ab the f'rilll oft
_,__
Fi~-tlmt mom RDu1 with R.ltont/11,
19, ltfi; luuho"4 AIM N11w; and
Cl1u/nq, H, ritltt. 'I It•~ a lot of
support, b111 I raist my lrids.1
because J lilc;c the melodic sound of
the music. a note. an imtnlment. I like
it when it's just about dlt notes, ocx
the dance around tbc noces. I li.Jcr to
hear the fingers on the guiW' strinp.
I think some of the girls overdo
it. sometimes. ..
With a strategy nwt.cnninded by
Mocown founder Berry Gordy-
who recognized the commercial quali-
ty ofRQss' voice and in ic the po~tiaJ
for "blxk .. music to cros.s over to the
larger, more lucrative white audicn~
-the Supremes changed pop music.
When she left the Supremes in t 970,
Ross wcnr on to a aucccssful solo ca-
reer. If she has 0()( a.Jw:ays been on the
top, she tw bttn near it. a pl.tyer, for
the past 25 years.
But the animosity tOW:ll'd Ross
from Mary Wtbon, Marvm Gaye and
ocher early Mocown artists is lq-
cndary. Marry feel dut Roa' enor-
mous ambition, coupled with Gordy's
focus on her. detnetrd &om their
own careers. Roa says. .. It's lwd to
st2Y cooneacd with the people you
grewupwidl.."
The disappointing W""1n' CMrtimt
album in '89 ma~ Rost' return to
Mocown -which she left in '81 wr
cutting a S20 million deal with RCA
ln W°'*in' Chtm1ttt, she shed her
sequins and posed on the cover
in a mocorqc:lc momnu's lcather
jxket and ripped pns. Fans didn't
like her new look. and l'3dio didn't like
her new hi~hop clan« sound.
"I got a Joe o( people wondcnna what
I was doing on the last album,•• she
ldmiu. "I didn't accomplash
this big blockbusticr th"'lo but l think
I opeocd tome cVs."
Sbe•s trying ro mend fences with
&ns and colleagues this summer.
In bu new con.ctn tour, it's back to
basics, ~· No dancen or spe-
cial effects or IOrll jeans, just Dima in
six or eight glamorous oostWneS,
singing and i.ntcraaing with the audi-
c~ ... 11~ to get clrcsxd up, I likr to
have a party. The audience comes,
they spend their dollars to have a good
time, and that's my job."
And inA OtalfltofHmrt, she's back
to buics, MOtOWn~le. "'When I
started doins this album. 1 talked to
Ss:nokey (Robimon) about a '°n& I
calm:I 10 SteYie (Wondt:r), I talked to
all the people from ,ny pan. BeaUJC,
6t1t of all, J know thac they know me
well, they wri~ great SOllgl. and they
alto know what co write for me -the
kinds cX ... ~ .. -dw 1 . wcl1." '"--o" ~ In the afternoon. ROss meets with
Wonder, who has written four sonp
for the new album. indudins TM
Fotu 8tJtind dw Pou.a; a hymn glorify-
ing ~complete wicb a choir
singing in the background. The two
c:mbncc atreaioruldy. Ross CQtCS
Wonder abouc bis love life, oohs and
ahhs over his rrws of compucerizcd
equipment. then sits quietly, patiently,
drinking ooffec and Evian wattt while
be fiddles at the~·
"StC'Vie has never shuc me out." she
says. But "Michael Qackson) -when
he wants to sec me, he secs me; when
he doesn't, he kind of closes the door.
There's no reaching bim, there's no
findina him, there's no anything. He's
jusc this illusi~ love out there. Some-
body you care about. want to protect
in a strange kind of way, feeling moth-
erly ioward him, but at the sazm ~
you can't roch him and don•t know
where he i.a. But SteYic's always been
there fer ~ and really special."
'-iliac's one of the most astute
oblervalioos chat I've ever heard
&om DWu Rots. She ddini~Jy bu
Michael Jxbon pqsed." says
J. Raody Taraborrelli, author o( 1989'1
bcst«Uing, uiuuthoriud biopiphy
c.l1 Htr Miss RDa and the just·
published Midwd jtldutM: 1\t Mtflk
•ntl dtt Mddrta1.
"Diana Roa docs not have a clOIC
relationship with Michael Jacbon
putly due to her inflaced saue of
ceJebricy. . . . She's noc the most
giving person in the world, eiiher. l
think the friendship has been a loc of
hype aver the yea.rs."
h's good. he ~ dw Ro. is uk-
ina old Mccown colic.ua for help.
"I wouJd lcJYe co 1ee Diana Roa come
bade in a big way, but she should not
Juve conaol ovu evcryth.ing. That lw
been her bigcsc down&.11 over the Lut
t 0 years. She needs direction, ...
When W took <M:r' her c:21UT and
started miling 6ml decisions about
music.. you 1ee wh2t happened. 1be
·~ were a bust. The whole thing W3S
a Diam Ross rUgh~ come true."
lthough her carttr
wilted in the '80s,
Ross' personal life
blcmomcd.
She lives at a wcll-
fortificd estate'"
Grce11W1ch, Conn .• with
her ICCOlld husband. milliorwrc
Norwegian sh1pping cycoon A.me
Naess. and their sons, Ross. 3, and
Evan. 2 (born just 14 months apart in
.. an incredible assault on the bod-y').
Cbudney. her 15-year-old daugbttt
by 6rst husband Robert Silbcrsicin.
is ac home. Chudncy's ~
Trxce. 18. and Rhonda_ 19, arc
scudencs at Brown UoMnity in
Rhode Island.
When Roa calla about her
cbildtcn. she dNscs and cdlt locs of
rambling stories of the "I guess you
bad co be there" vanety.
Even with her bccac schedule and
~ employees at home, Ross says.
she's a hands-on parcnc. "I ~vc a lot
of suppon. l need a lot of suppon. but
I raise my Irids." s~ says forcefully.
''I shou.ldn't have tud them 1fl'm
not gonna raise them. I'm on caJJ 24
hours a chy to my children. And af
you're n.ising five children, there's """""'rw t:VCry chy."
She ~tly spent an aft.c.moon
having a seem talk with her daughter's
tugh tehool cbcmisuy teacher.
The topic: When CbudDC'f ful~ to
Nm tn an assisnmcnt aha-bclng
Dent with screp throat. $houJd the
tacher ~ha padc 01 pa
makeup -.nment'
"You mow what my wit wu
about?" Ro. leant forward 1ntcmely,
11nccrcty, u af she is actually in school wlcina wuh the teaehcr. ~1 aid.
'You know, I don't ~ w:ry much
about cherrusuy. 1 ~ about my
daughter's df-atttm. She's aood u
chemisuy, and 1f she dropt in a c:oune
and tries to ccpla.an to you why -
at last cry IO ttik co her about IL'
I JUSl thought they WCft be~ I
laalc drasuc."
With a mortW'e of surpnsc and
admincion. she alb about Rhonda's
auchoon for a pby at Brown U~
C•nt1itwtl o" Pqr 6
The company that introduc.00 the fir& minivan now presents the first m ....... ..
one with a driver's minivan air bag: the 1991 Plymouth Vo~ ~ .-..... ..
So cn:e again, we're leaving the competitioo ~their wheeb. The 1991 \byage' also <&s ~safety
features like 4-wheel anti-lock brakes, all-wheel drive, am standard rear seat shoolder beb.t In additioo, there's a
canplet.ely redesigned interioc, including a new instrommt panel alXI glove box. Pl~ oootm11X1atY stytq oeate.
In fact, 003 of all key parts are new oo the~ Am }".)l1get7 years <r 70,<XX> miles c1 poweabain prdectXn*
So for purchasing er leasing infmnatioo, ~by )'Otlr local Plynx>Uth Dealer <r call l-8>0-PLYMOUlH.
Announcing the New 1991 Plymouth ~er. The /itst minivan with an air bag.
Comit1Uttl fro"' P41t 5
ty. •'Ruby Dee WU puuing OD d>c
pliy, and I know Ruby Dee.. But
Rhonda wouldn't 1elJ her who she
was. My daughcer wmted co get chc
put on lier own merit. Jlet' talenL"
So. did she get. put?
Roa bunts out laughing. "Did she
get t part? She got me lead!"
Mention a wideJy published ad
for The Gap. f~ a bhck-and-
white phociop1ph of her with daugh-
ter Tracee. md Rois beams. .. Doesn't
she look beautiful.just beaucifu.J?
I was really happy dm she winced
to do that."
And her two tlODI will ttwel with
Roa on the wt U>Ur dm runs
from July co Nowanba. Sh£ calJs
them daredevils. Her ~.dd ~ll
stand up°" che oowata md ay, Tm
flyinsf' md jump. They're fatlc&"
It'• nouurp-.. In 1985. the
year Nam nKC llld lllll'ricd Roll.
Naes climbed to cbc tUllWllil of
Moum BWftlt, a blpin!L pl. --We
undenand tbll at cm. poim in our
lives we want C10 do wbll mUa UI.
happy. Ame tpeS IM!l ,an work·
ing co climb a.-.. R..11)'1.
tounding imprcmd .,, the aocom-
plishment. "JU didn't waat eo get to
the 1gC be is DOW anday, 1fl had
only cried.' ..
Wichout • doubc. Diana lbs is
driven. If abc weren't. she'd be in-
stalling fenders -or scanding in an
unemployment line -in Octroit.
She it not only talenced. but anart.
ambitious. ~· Some ay she is
ilio ruthless.
Ross prefers co describe benelf as a
pcnon with hi&b .. Standardt" £or her-
self and othcra. She admowtedga
that she is tough. "1 am a f:amcic. 1 un
a perfecUoniit. I am a detail pcnon, an
idea pcnoo." abe .. shamelessty.
It would be mcrcty ~if it
WC'.T'Ctl't alto xxist and ndsc., dm if
Ro.~ cbc whiie, male bad of a
Portune 500 company diete chanc-
tmsdcs would ti. appb&Mkd. lmcad.
becaute she'• a woman -and a
wxy, uppity. blade one 1t that-diey
are diada1nc:d.
''Someode once slid that I 'immc.-
ed tny1el(' and -rubbed me me
wrong way." Roa uya. "'"Ibat teemS
IO oontriwd, unreal. phony. I doo 't
think who 1 am ia phony at all. You
don't crcatic your life chat Wfff ·You
juat live your life and bep being true
co yourwell I feel lib rm just n'Olv·
iog. becocnfnc> ..
So don't na\ think about Diana
Ra. acopping her loag aearch Cot
more oi'lite'a ~. beau rcwudt.
"] want IO be busy. I Wlllll IO .--
du. 6't up II mDCb 11 J pollilty CMLtt
. What \bu Can Save Each Month
On Our Kid's Plan Can Be
Better Spent Elsewhere~. ~~
• A pair of fancy new tenniea, the kind
that COit as much as yow tint suit
A nice payment to
the orthodontist
for the eventual
perfect t.ceth.
.
A couple af the hoUat
new COflll*t diacl. md
eazplup for you.
A fancy new
bey doll foe '°"' little doll.
Twol-ae . kNded.
One piece tz;-. IDd 17 for
you know Who and
• few friends.
ca .... .,, ',...,, • *"',.,.,., • ...... -'*"'· ,...,, ,.,,,,, ...... ,.. ... at,., ... .., .......
,,.,., .. ,,_,.. -... _,, ..,,. ... "'"""" .. ,..,., ,. ....... ,.,,..di##:
d .. ~-·,,. "*"' r.-c..-,,_ .-,. ,., .,,,.,,.,...,,.,, .......
n. ... ., _ .... ,,.,,, .. ,,,.,..,, ...,.,__ ........ •••If JN'H
,,..., ...... , ~--ltlelllflt *"'" -.... .., ..... ,,, ••.
We Have Plans For Your Kids. Call Your Blue Shield Agent Or 1-800-624-5150.
BlueShleld
dCaltomla
All f 1 •ti•ut .......... 111 '2 I
n----------------------~~~
I fd.._ Shlald wn.: :=-::ttc1o1c.utonaia 0rean: 1-«XM24-'1'°
I • dc.lbnil s.. Allldlco. CA 94120
I a ~ 181.t me. without oblipdon. information ._ Blue Shield'1 Youttie:.e-,.,__ I ,,..... lend me. wkbout oblipdon. tnfonMdoo ._ Blue SbieJd Plw f« funiliee I and indMduaJa under• 65.
I O PblO lend me. without obllpdon. lnfonnedon about Blue Sbield'I Medicare
Suppland P1w. 8il1hdlle -----
: Nae No. of Oilldren ---
1 Ad*ela--~~~~~~--~~~~~__,;;~-
I °" ~ 7.ip...___
I ...-<->-----L.:
Simplt Answtn To Tough Qutstio""
Good Servi:e Is Part Of Our Plan.
o ors!
A. Hmtdy-Duty Power hinter
Great for small & medium areas. Sprays 1 gallon
in 30 minutes 13161
8. Roi .... & .,,.,. Set
lnclud.s 2-9 semi-smooth roller coveB & 1 •h"
angular trim brush. 17779
C. 3/4 HP Alt CompreSSOI'
Portable, tanldeu electric compreuor.
Kit included 1 ~35
0. lfust..Oleum Spnty Pltlnt
Protects against moisture. Asst. cok>rs. 12 02. 11657
E. Rust-Oleum Stops Rust
Long-lasting protection against moistur-.. Assorted
colors. Qt 13059
F. Elmer's Glue-All OI Wood Glue
Glue-All bonds wood, pot*y, doth & more. Wood
Glue dnes fost Sondoble & pointable when dry.
108 11 12625
a. Clulr Wood ,.,.. .. ,., • .,...
Resists warping & rotting. Rep.ts wot.r. 18280
H. MlnwaJc Wood Ffnlalt
Full-tone stains for unfinish.d interior surfoc:es.
Assorted colors. 12 351
'· Sa'9at .,,,,.., No honnful fumes, easy wvteT dean up 17651
11!1
13!l
J. Cleltr or Mtlte ••cone • .....,,
Flexibl. & woterpcoof. Won't croclc or avmble.
10.3 en. 10f0f,1lJ7l
IC.UquldN• ..
U.. inst.Gd ol noila to mob Npatra. 10.5 oz. 12201
L ftol)'8e.,,.•eal M-,.._po• .... .,.,. c..a
Raible & mlldew '1llistant MOI. Whit9. 10.3 oz.
12075
7.., .... &atu
Hoc'8ePelnt
One coot CO¥erage;
l 0 rear durObility; stam
,.fstant. Custom co&ora
h19her. 16321
13!! , .......... ..............
One coot ccwerage, l 0 yea
durabffity; stain ~;
washable. Custom colon
higher. 16512 7..., • .,..,.. ....... ,.,,,,,,
One coot CCMM"age '12 Y90
durability; ICl'Ubbobae. Cust
colon higher. 16557
.... l.&llX ... a ntm ,.,,,,,,
One coat ~; 12 Y'80
dutabilty; stain Nlliatont;
ICl'Ubbable. Custom colors
higher. '646
l'I
Hardware
At;e odds no mercury or lead compounds to any of the point
producta we manufacture and they ore non-toxic when dry.
Sale enda June 30, 1991
Acet•da ..
150E.LMO.
Ct*-... Ace .... ,_.
14110~
E8COfDOO
AlctW'• Ace ........
18!50 E. v...., Palttwey
GM>VERCfTY
...... Ace ... ctw.e
105e Gt9nd Avenue
L080loe
AoeY.._,l ... daaa
20l5 •10lta...
-
......,.0.-Hllldwae
108 w. El Roblar Drive
MEDLEY
lt1111t11 LbrA Ace HdWe
1547 "G" St ....
SAMa.GO
............. Aoe..,..
,~ AMc:N eem.do Rd
80UTMGATE
A8CAoetW"-•
12111 Oartl9td Awnue
Zlltllr'• Ace ........
3841 TWMCIV BoWYard
TlmCULA
-*'•Ace••--·
41770 El'lltlptle Cwde S
~··Ace .......
21142 Ventura 8llld
NOTICE REGARDING AVMNJ/UrY OF MERCHANDISE AND PRICES. Pua.~ .. ..,.,..,•• .. ._.• •1 rb• ~Ate..._ • .,. 001poi._,. a...._--..
........ $ t ................ ~ ... ,....,,.,be....,_, .... ,.., ..... OU.•
~ tba; ............ ,.... .. -t -· ..._.. ............ UNlllll • ...................................... ~J'O'ol',,,,. ............. a..ir-... '*'-..... -...~ .... -.............. -.. 1 ...................... ... nu 1 r ,,..,. .,.... In °'*"9 "*"'-J\!111 • ......,_. eome...,..
• movies
A star is launched?
'Rocketeer' takes his cue this weekend
B ill Campbell hates to
fly. But you won•t be-
lieve that after you sec
him soar in 11tt R«:lttlm.
The movie, which opens this
"Mek.cnd. is a $35 million. spccial-
cffeas-filled adventure, cxpecttd
to tcDd ticht saJes IOaring. too -
and that's what r:nabs stan.. Such
WU the happy ending for Harrison
Ford after St11r W•fl, and for
Christopher Reeve after Supamon.
Campbell is both charming and
believable as 1938 nc:ing pilot Cliff
Secord, who finds and learns to
use a silver rocket backpack. He
jeu about to rescue his bdy love as
well as to outwit a bunch of bad
guys (Nam lndudcd) who want to
get their hands on the pack. Th
R«lttfm is based on the 1982 com-
ic cult hero created by Dave
Stevens, and even Campbell says
be got the leading role because "I
look a lac like the fellow."
Actually. Campbell's life could
be I~ fu>rn the never-ncvcr land
o{ c:omic-book charxlen. Born in
Charloaesville, Va., 31 years ago.
Campbell enjoyed a pnvilcgicd up-
bringing thanb U> his 8J'Qt-grcat-
gn ndfather' s invention of the
Champion spark plug. Education
took a back seat to passions for rupy and art. He cvcn coyed with me idea olbccoming. comic-book
iUuscrator. But his cxpei ience m a
"fmmy~ented improvisational
adventure .. stage 1how was so
"\wodcrful'' that he ~ penuad-
cd to move in 19&4 to that fantuy-
oricnted improvisac:iooal adventure
p~. HolJywood. His best-known
--c .... ,.,,,,, co.1: Ht hod tht
loolt, plus 7 rtt1d tht comic boolt.'
role to date: Luk~ Fuller, Steven
Carrington's lover on Dyno.lty.
Thanks to an mhcnuncc and
Dyruuty residuals, he hu hvcd a
"SU'U88ling aaor•s•• hfc atypical of
most starting actors. "I haven't re-
ally had to go the hard route. One
of the huge bcnefiu, .. he A)'S onus
finanoaJ independence, "is th.at I
~ been able to be somewhat sc--
lecnve. I haven't had to do any-
thing I dido 't want to."
And, at first, he didn•t want to
date his gorgeous leadmg lady in
T7tt Rodtttttr, ~year-old Jennifer
Connelly. But be did, and ro-
mance bloaomcd. "I had rcsicf'V2-
Dons at first. 1 thought thu was'°
typical of actors ••• almost a dtcb~.
But when a fine person comes
along. you can't ignore them be·
cause of what others might think."
~ Dllwtd W M1oe
travel
Summer's top thrills
Hop on! An enthusiast highlights amusement parks' most rollicking roller coasters • • •
EEEEEYAAAAH! Summer is a real
scream at amusement parks, especially
those with hair-raising roller coasters.
"A good coaster should create the
scruauons of sky d1vmg. race-car rid-
ing, or broncobusung," says Randy
~1sler of Amena.n Coaster Enthusi-
asts, a 4,000-membcr group dedicated
to coaster enjoyment. This month, the
group's new book. Guidt to Ridt. is out.
(It's Sl ... 95; for det:uls, wnte to ACE,
P.O. Box 8226, C hicago, DI. 60680.)
"We consider roller coasters hfe-
affirmmg. They keep JUSl a part of you
10 years old," Geisler says. His picks.
L . FASTEST
STEEL PHANTOM
l<lri")'U'O<HI. Wnr Mijflrn, Pa
I his nr:w-for-'9\ coaster, the world's
speediest, goes a reported 80 mph. No
wonder, "since 1t has the longest drop
m hmory" 225 feet Thar's compara-
ble to the height of a 23-story tower,
Geisler s:.iys "h 's down a tulls1de dm
has trees, adding to the sensaoons. Al-
so, you cross at a nght angle through an-
other coaster" Porlr odm1u1or1. Wttlrt11dJ,
116, uwidays, SIJ, Jondu""6,frrr CAwrolod-
mwron (ntkJ ""' 1rt(/11dtd), SJ 411-461--0500
b'. ' SCARIEST
TEXAS GIANT
S1~ fl11zs Owr TtMJ, Arl'"l'°"· Tnms
This wooden wonder, new last year, 1s
"an intense maelstrom: unpred1cuble,
fast and devilishly f nghtemng. A major
masterpiece of mayhem " Porlr odmu-
110" Ad11/tJ, S10 95, cl11/drrr1 1mdtr •B 1r1ch-
t1, 114 95, 1t111or1, 114 95 817-6•0-8900
WE IRD EST
UL TR.A TWISTER
A11r11WorlJ, Houstott
~1sler com1ders all sus~nded coast-
ers strange, but this one tops the list.
The first drop 1s 96 feet -headfirst.
"You su m single an; you go up a
steep hill and drop down. Then 1t
span-rotates you. You do that front-
wards, then at ~ far end you drop to
;mother track and go backwards."
P4rlr 4tltft111iott Adults, St 9 95, clu/Jrrtt
"""'' •8 lr1cltt1, S9 95 71 J 199-11H
10 UM W'UXINO •J-11...JJ '"'
THB CYCJ.ONB
Alt"'4,,J (CMq 1114#1). Nnt1 Yott City
This coaster, built in 1927, is desig-
nated a New Yort historic landmark.
Its first drop is legcnduy: "It's like
some demon reaches up from the
bowels of die Earth. grabs your anlcles
and yanb you down. . . . It's almost
a religious c:xperience. le will ausc you
to question the meaning of life "
Frtt pc1'r "'"'wioft; ""' .,., ,.,..-10"-fO·
11 5<>-SJ. Fo11r-to fiw-ltotJr ~ttt-pritt
hdtr:a ("ttllr.tiltll ritlo), fl 1.99. 711-165-2100
s i r '. r· ~ ::. · 1 : ~
MAGNUMXL2M
Ctt/.r Pobu, s.ttliulty, Oltio
BXCALIBUR
V•lllrf-Jrl, SW.,., 1;1;,.,..
"The Magnum also is actually che
ullesc.. and it has a 60-degree-angle
drop. But so does the Excalibur."
CtUr Poittt: All111b, 111.91; clt"'mt """''
48 i"'lttJ, ftf.91; J •"' Mtflla,jm; KrtlOfJ,
I 11. 1J. 4 t 9-626-0IJO. V•U'lfoitl: AJ11lts,
116.50; cit/I,,. 11tttkr 41 ill<MI, 19.SO, J
•"" 11"*r,far. imion, 19.111611-445-7600.
'.0\G•ST
TH8 BUST
Ki¥ IM-'. ~. Olljf
This _.mile-and.a-half ride IS especWly
popular with coasccr enthusi&sts bc-
caute 1t goes on for four minuca-plus.
"It's just ltke a rumway nin duougb a
forat. (The Beast) offers grat speed. a
"'double helot and a tunnel." Piult -'Mls-
lioft: AJtilu, 121.91; """"" J-6 •"" 1t11iof1,
SJQ,9J, 1 •ttd M•,Jrw.; J1J.J98.jl()(),
M 0 s T (~I \ :. .. . • I ' • ,·,
THB VJPaa
Six Fi.,t M.,,W Mffu.irt, V.,,_., C..lV.
The world's larp1t looping ~outer
~you upside down eeven dmes -
a ride che roller-couter group de-
1cribe1 as "•pin-and-barf." Rave•
Geaaler, .. lt'1 the ae:acc of the ~rt in
iwimd. demented fun." ,..,. al-"riM:
llhtu. 12J; t1t1um. •• 41 '"'"°· lt4; 2.-.-,,jrw;.,.,,, 11'. IOS-VJ-4111.
-~~
TIIEARTOF
FABRIQUE
OrlsDnas dreams come to lift in
a ~ *"'r cf art comndssioned by du
Dm.dors <f tM Prinatoft Ciallay .
• ... ,.,.._ c-.lllJ r-------------------GtU.LIB~ I A Pri1KaoN Q6ry &dmhr
.......... ..,,.., ..,. l"l
Pkllt KUpC my order b CHllSTNAS DU.AM, an 11 t' •
baad·tubloned Pabrlque IC\IJpna~ to be lndivtdually
alfted cxpcalllr _,,,me. I need ..a no IDOlllC7aow.1 wtU
be bmed In bat tDOOttily &nwtlmWlCI ot,_ at'• acb.
Oly Siiia ~-------.... -.... .... ,......,..,....,....._......... m• ..........................
G•nnDtet ~
MM-~"'ad I ·-~. -•••••w 1 'W ,.,_,.._ "-" ... __ ,_,,_,.._..
,.. ........ ~ ....... -~.,,, .... ;' DI 111• .,.~tktw ........ Jiii_,._,.. ........
.............. ,.,, , ........... c
..... -... Gllllj,,... )ff ................. ............... ,..,..0
CotttirtuedfroM P41t to
lit fllll: ., ........... .
~"" "'*""'"'· c:.Jlj.
Splash Mountain, with its Sorw '?{the
South theme -"You'll be whistling
Zip-A-Dtt-Doo-Doh by the time you
finish," O'Brien says -is considered
the world's longest flume ride. Top
speeds hit about .0 mph as you splash
past more than 100 "audio-anim-
nronic" critters. P•rlt tUllffl.uio11: Ad11lu,
S27.50; dllldmf J-11, 122.50; ""*' J,jfr,.
nion (Suntlq-1ltu'*1), $22. 114-999-4$6$.
CHHHl: ltunltw Car1111I
Six F"w' Owr CMpr, l'llM11~
This circa-1908 Philadelphia Tobog-
gan Co. No. t 7 c:arouse1. acop a bill in
a lovely Victorian structure, is the
country's biggcit antique merry-go-
round. It's from Chicago's defunct
Riverview Park -thus its name. P•rlt
admw1011. Adulll, $22; tltildmt J-9, SU; 2
ond 1111dtr, frrt; melon, $12. 404-7 J9'-J+if0.
lllPH CHI: lbtttra
IVtodids A111IUlrMtlft hrlr, E17sh111J, P•.
There arc twO ways to identify a quali-
ty bumper-<:ar operation. "first, you
smell the graphite when you get with-
in 20 feet. Second, the can must be
the classic Lussc Skooccr can restOred
to near-perfect condition. Knoebcls
passes the test." Frtt ~It "'"''"'•":
rides '" 1M'f"4l•'f0#-ftl (10 ttlW for S'*'-tn,
JO mco-f 1.JO for Olltm). 711-672-ZJ72.
STUI TIAll: ltllJHt' h ,r111
o.lly-..1, Ppt1 ,.., TtH
This 110-ton coal-fired tral1l takes vis-
itors on a 5-milc excursion up a
mountain, with a shon stopover to
watch a corruc "gunfaght." -rhc ride
gives you an up-dose glimpse of the
Smoky Mountains. You just might see
the park's co-owner, Dolly Parton. OD
the ride; it's one of her f.avoritcs." p.,11
admwion Mulu, 111, tltildrt" f-11, $1 J;
J ond 11ndtr, frrt; mi Ion . r 16. If '/Of' •rrlllf
afirr J p.m., tiff 1ttJd "'1'1.fm 61.J-'421-9400.
HH llH: Plratu et th Carl~h11
D~ttd. ~""'· C.llf.
Dullff W.,U, l..Mf ~Wftll Viu•, FM.
"This ride is loud and crazy and
shows the often scary life of the pi-
rate." It's nicely paced and cool ( ~
a ally pleasant ., a wiltingty hot day).
Dinuyl•"': Stt "U, Flww." Dwtq Woffll
(M-t" Ki .. M). M.,llJ, IJ-4.IJ; cl11lflmc
J-9, 127 4S; ""*' J,jm.. '401-l24-4J11
IHtllll: l11d lar•t11
T-,.
Not jwt tnnsponation. this monom1
tam 10'1 on a safari tour' o( a 60-aac
"African'' ~nvironment with more
th.an 500 animals. P•"' -~: OOl:
dtlWl'tft 2 .,., t1rt4tr,fiw. ltJ-f1f.UU.
'
89% of kids would like to spend more time
with. their parents.
Thia summer, dads will teach daughters to swim. Mothers will ride roller
coasters with sons. All over North America, families will grow closer when
they go away. And they'll spend their nighti together at Holiday Inn· hoteh.
Our Summer GREAT RATES• start at S.9 per room, per night, at some
hotels~ Reserve now, because rooms are Umited. Ratet are available through
September 6, 1991. Call 1.SOO·HOLIDAY or your travel apnt.
Stay with eom.eone you know: ~ ~1\1\:
....., ............. .-........... t •a...._ ......... a-....................... u.a. ...... c..... .. ... ........... ~ .................. -......... . ... .-.~ ............ -. .......... ....
weekend ~ook ...
Garden grilling
Where there's smoke, there's flavor. Lee Bailey tells how to get summer vegetables sizzling.
I OOCCJOk-
mgiy said
you could
serve up
vtrtually
anythmg
grilled -
including
your shirt -and people
would love 1t. Although I w:u
ladding, there's a germ of
truth here. The subtle, smoky
wt.c that gnlling imparts to
food ts universally appealing.
Many of us, h~r. get
stuck an a rut, cooking the
same foods over 'lllld over.
And rardy do we try vegeu-
blcs (aside from com and
poc:a~} on the grill. A big
m1st2lcc, I behcvc, and one
we'll fix this weekend.
Grillms enhances the nat-
ural 03VOr of so many vegea-
blcs -lin tomatoes, mush-
rooms, squash. pcppcn,
omom, leeks, carrots and, of
course, com and potatoes.
Most vegetables merely
need to be brushed with oil to
prevent sticking to the gnll. A
few denser ones, such as leeks
and carroc:s. should be briefly
steamed or blanched first to
soften them. (Toothpicks
hold leeks~ on the grill.}
Small or fragile vegetables
like cherry tomatoes and
mushrooms can be thrudcd
on skewen or coobd in a
wire grill basket. But mo.tt
vegetables an: fine cooked
right on the grill. Start them
over direct hea~ you an
move them to the side with
t'On8! if they cook tOO fut.
Keep an eye on the food to
prevent overcooking. As IOOD
as C2ch vcpble is just fork-
tcnder, whisk it off the heat.
Grilled vegetables offer
some advmtages to the ~
tr.K1Cd coolc. For one, you
don't tuvc to rush them from
grill to cable. They arc torrific
sc!Wd just warm or even at
room tcmpcnturc. And when
drested in the Italian manner
-With I sprinkllng of olive
oil, a bit of balsamic vinegar
or lemon juice, and finished
with a healthy grind of black
pcppa-you have a dish
that i.s guaranteed to pleue.
(You abo can use the same
grilled vegetables to top bot
spaghetti that ha been toaed
with prllc-infmcd olive oil
or butter and gnted cheese -
boy, is that 1Crumpciousl)
And for other grill dinncn
this sum~r, I've abo includ-
ed a couple of my &voritc
marinades and I grilled fruit
dcstcn that'• a snap to make.
LM a.liq .,,_,, lltl#ldiJr ht USA
WBBKBND. Hu .u.a-" llllfllll ....
U "c./,,.,,. WJM C.,,f11rJ c-tdiw''
(~ ,,._, UO).
Tired of T -bo.nea? Try a
colorful mls of Yeptables.
More reclpu, Pap 17
Mbrllcl Griiled Vepeablea
6 slim tztpl.111, 'lriltdt tltidt
54/t
J mollum /alts, tHSlttJ """
trimmol widt 1 indt cf imn top
12 i.,,, slit.a cf nudtlld, ttll
'Ir i fide tit lilt o" tl&t tl"'tolttll
J mtrlhlfrt J'Wftf ml pcppm,
SttJtJ """ p•ffmJ lawtlrwlM 04ll'C oll, as n«dd
Frulrly trrH1rtd pcppa, to t.utt
&lumk lfiMt"r .................... _
.... .,.lftacd•.._tw)O
....... w ..............
.... Git ................. ...
anwtdtMlll.,...tw .....
..... the "C•ta•h• wtd\
... ,... .... mecHM .... .... ,.. .................... ..
mlt ..... ,...,.,.. Grtl I ...._
~ ......... , llwl
...... Coak .......... .......
MdtJ II~ ..... A.tt.e•···--fortc-c.nder, ......... dMlft to •
plattiw. Cut ~ ..... t-.
wttlt a~el ........
........ s.r...-1 ........
BadJ .. BalMmlc Marta.de
for Grilled Plah
11, n1p Mi.M"'lt lllJttitlr
''• tup "'" oil Pew drop1 ltot pqpcr MllU
'I• Olp m (Nm# fraJt #Jail
S11l1 •nd frultly I"""'' pqptr,
tot.sk
,.,,..: u.. ...... ,.,.,,...,. .....
,...~ ..... ,....,
., Cllt/lllt """"· WN1kt1111tw .... ._., ..
.... het,......--. '*"' ........................ ........................... ..... -. .........
::· 1 1 ii 1'1 I I· I tirr li} Jf i I ~i!lt Ufi it~iJj.i '"~[(ijii •~•~• • , : .,-a.l l 1 I ,g:a f "!ff -~~ ............... I ~~~-I .l............. I~_...__... I ............... I I I , .,,. if -~~ _ _.,__,.··~-• . ~~
~ '
j ·~ • -( "I \ \ \ I I ,, I "\I 1 I I\ \ \ I I "'I I\ \ 'I ' . . . .., ~
r,----------------------------, IlEcFJvE Flln: TRAVEL Blloaruus OF 1bVa CilmCI: I
JUST CJll!CI( l1G! UOOfURE NUMBERS AND SDIDTIIB COWQt 1Q; I
USA WadM> T&Ava. SaMa lNTEREmDTRAVEL~~ I
P.O. Box 34900. DEl"r. Q.52691 CA.LL. ow. MaruNNt AT (712) 71s.2'U4. I
Lou1svo.L.E. KY '40232 I
-• IJoMDc::o ~n... _J....,.. o.a.cva
NAM£ ..
QryfSrATEfl.Jp ______________________________ ~~~~~
0..-IDCND Auat8Tl6. 1991 .
.....,. MJPfl 4-6 W£ED l'[Ja oaNDIY. • CA
L------------~----~-~--------~
I c »I ·~'
AL 'T\Nl'< \ ACA 110!'6
( \ I 11 c I I~' I \
~ Send for your~
~ broc.butt and you'll
-att that everyday
Is "Just another
beautiful day In
San 0tesor
San Dlqo has more
thlnp to do than
most countries,
and one of the best
climates In the world.
f.tpe'OC'ln a Fii Fdllilc Eiaii< "111t OOMDOCO TOU.s
I C'llooot hom ~~Fall Fah&JC •llCIUOM 111 lhc lll~m
L ~ and C.-.Ja r.mp11 from l c.11¥ mrt· ~·~ IO I• ill)
Goldcn A~nlufct \l&rttns at SI~ 00 ptt pc non double
Touri mcludt IM cllSl IM>tcl' rompt"cllcns .. c wsJl11can1-
So. whatever you· re planning to do on
your next vacation, plan 10 do It here!
<lthM mo1orm.c!l l r&"'ll'1'UlllOll ta\ct ollld odm-Clll
I fOf ow flt£[ uw A.111urnn hfndun 1.-~ I m1 Third A-.n"" Sult~ 1124. ~pl N-M.i San OW., CA ll'llOI (519)236-llll
~ 's Ben Fnnk.lln invites )IOU to a
)Ur-big celebnlion of I.he 200t.h annlvenary
of I.he Bill of RilhU . pg~
~int. dlnlna and~
ln twnylvania Dutch Country. tour
the home of PennlyMnial only Presi-
dent, the worid'a lar,ett pretzel bUery
or an antique car nueum. Enjoy fun
parU. quilt rnmeums. steam trains,
antique markets, dinner thettttt and out&et
thopplna.
I.ta thM an hour apart, lea than a
day'• dmie ..,, Phlladetphia and ftnn.
sy""'11a Outdl Country can Res> your
family m~tained far 4-ya. CAii ar
wriae lodl)' for F'R£E b'l¥el 11.ddeL
CAHne Back.
1-800-735-2629
ext 7038 ..,,_.
•WAN EXERCllE vmEIJ
EOl MATmE WOMEN'
CIN' IANNI
IT'S EASYI
Exercise away pounds, Inches and dress sizes wtth the new
ll'NCIN' GRANNIES video. This beginner's workout program is
a k>w Impact aerobic exercise program designed excJuslvely
for the mature woman. Learn how ton~ the arms and tighten the tummy.
A workout with the DANCIN' GRANNIES Is guaranteed fun and easy to foflow.
Whether you can barely touch your toes or you're tit, the CW4CIN' GRANNIES
will make you feel better and stronger. Join the CM\NCIN' GRANNIES 3 days a
week and you w/11 see results I
, ..... ,.... .... ---·-· ............. ,.. ..... ,._ ... ,.
-BMtty QmignWit', 5e,
Fo4l1tW.
DANCIN' GRANNIES
Ellzabelh Kaye9s
"PlnlMI ........ Video Pick tauill..,....,
, .... 21 ........ ......... ., ... , ........ ., .......
-Int,• -Pal Stotw. 61.
AIJch/glln
...... ,. ....... " ': w::=-of the VJeek ... =: .. -Tht ~Guidi .., ........
fO Extt'Cilt Vfdlos llf I 1111 .......
- - - --- - - --(ctlp here and mall today!) --- - - - - - - -
o Check or money order enclosed (chlcb should be made ,,..... ... _....-.
payable to: Elllllla ICIWI C1•11tllll) (Item IW'l49) "-. • n • .c11
Ptease charge my: O V\SA O Mastlrwd ..----~
a.T'OtM. -----~· ON ..... -. ., ..... ....... . .,
~ 19't191MIO .......... UI
MlDIUI .,0. ... ,....1 1'0IM. ..... E..J.: .... -....-~
l1ri 9 ~ ................. ...... ..... ,,,~
DWTWlllM:M ( ..... ,.._
Continual fro"' Ptlft 14
' , cup fruit lattorl. .fad« (-'-t 2 ltMotu)
11, mp fralt O,.'Wf fa/a (1 IMJ( .,.,.~)
11: mp ~~ olJ, ~CAI,..,.
2 or mo" '4f1t dHcl t{ ,.,,k, cnulwJ
1 tsp. hot ~pptf Mitt
I tsp. ult
~ ........ ···-In ....... centnk ""' .... ....,._ Ai1W M ,_..
of chlchll ...,... .,,... ._ cou•ed,
2-)houn ..............
Grilled PimeppJe
With Ram..C ........ Ume Sauce
/ lorgt ri~ p;_,..,,pk, ptit:W, tt>rttl •*"
c11t i11to 12 strlpt Jawt#twbt
Clorifod ufUll/Rd him (m ttt*)
I! <II p finn'1 pMlttd 11/0WW "'l'f
! mp ltavy CrNm
1. mp I iiftt "'"'
'• cupfmli li•juia
N«.: Melt .,. ap .,,,,,.,. SMn ., ..
foam wfdr ..... .,,,... .. dMr' ....
uld jnto. '*"' ............... tlte
pan. s.. J n.. ., ......... ,.,
the .......... ,... ...... .,..,......
Dip the plneapple 11"8" htte the
dartfted ....._. _... .. dwwt Oft bodt
sidee, no,...,. dwt S .,.,'*'....a. •
Mncl111&.dlttla•a.unw • ....,.
and U9M'I ....... w... ......... ..
mebd,,....... ................ ....
andldrlntt. ............... ....
two pl~ .,..,. ..-uch ~te ·:
and "°°" .... __ ..... s... a.;:.~ . .-.,.._I • , . . , .....
Safer~
RBORGE
THE BEST OF BORGE
The Fabulous Clown 'Prince of Music •..
Now on video cassettes for
at-home enjoyment
Victor Borse strikes ap1J1 ! One linen ... double takes ... pntlalls
... ~lous mua.lcal lilllneu. And once ln a wh!Je, the mosl
delisht!UI. lovely little piano IOlol. Now <Mr 80 years old and
sUll totna strong, the be}ooJed ''Great Dane·• ll ICill the mast.er of
puns, nutty jokes, lmpromptu remarb. His aide·aplittln8
explanadons ot classical musk: are renowned the world <Mr.
Born U> a muJ1c:al famlly, he reports "N.y fllher 1>11.Yed viola.
A Jot of people don't know the di&rence betweei1 the violin and
v\ola. Un!ortuna1ely. my father happened to be one of them,·· An accompllahed pianist (and condudor u well), he 1lllnches Into
his speda1 rendiUonl of "Knodr:Jut Tum" by Chopin ... "Clee.r
de Saloon·· by Oebuay . and others too mlnd-bagling to
mention here.
A highllght ot the~ min. Shau Aa Ou is JOPl"l1'0
Marylyn Mulvey, who WrYH u a ·~t man· t>r his
jokes and attempts tD •in8 an aria from the opera "Rtaor Mortil." There's a1lo a ·~Id' peae
turner ... ac:tually Borp'l eon. He ,.ya he hu
tour ft'9l'e children like th.at.
' The go min. Show includes everythina
from the 46 min. Show Act One, plua
an add.ltklnal 46 min. of mUlical
_ -madness (Act 1Wo ). He perb'ms a
duet with concert p1an1st SU\an
Arzrunl. ft8h tln& for his 11\are ol
the keyboard . And he performs an
apera with the wortd 'I craDelt. pk)t,
ms
• ' r I
' I I
I
I
' I , • -""
s1na1na all the part.I t\l.n\9elt. And there'• mon-
But )'OU aimp)y must see it CD believe IL. Thea
are videos )'OU ·u enjoy viewfna aaa1n and ll&ln Oo order )'OW"I U>dq-Laughter is pranteed!
• (VHS onl~.)
.. , .,.,.,,
lotltaJtk
.... pGf'f'ffC.
forlwwiptg ONLY •J.911 C46 mm . .,. '"""",.,. """i. poa-1.bk A 9'd ,,. r dt ""7ft for
ABOUT THE ARTIST
Dorn Into a musical ramJJ.Y
In CopcnJ\laen, Victor
Bortr WU hailed U a pano
pmdllY •l • 8. He t'~
tuall.Y plnc!d Cunt rorcom·
blnlns~ecty with piano
mullc. Bor8l.I hall ~en a
US. relklent al nee t>t>ratt
Wor1d War U, havlntnc.ped £umptt all«
('9U9!11C1n uproerby r1dkuUl\ll tho NaPa. ~
holcb lhe r«'Ofd ror the moet on•Mnan lhows
on Brolldw11 (8'9, In ~).and bu bffn
ltnlthtcd by lhe live Scandlnevlan t'O'!l\U'Wa
.. A NATIONAL 1UABUSB-lllLAalOU&" -8'.ewut tOtln, WNP-TV
.. THB MASTER FtTNHYllAN OP
TBB AGE." -T.1-~. natE MAOA21NE
t1DCJN'TJlMllt llJ88 Biii. D'8
JNOOlllUA8L&." -=-..=
30-DAYMONEY BACK GUARANTEE
ALSO AVAILABLE:
90-nUn. Extravapnza
oNLY•2911
. -.;
Here 'I Haw 1b Order:
Hf0lri"'1 u ~YI/." v .....
Spec:ity 46 min. Victor Borae v~ {11.enl IW 19'7) t>r
•~.96 + a3.96P6HorSM>mln. ExtravapnU(Jtem
IW 198) b' 129. 96 + M. 96 Pa.ff. Send d\ec:t or moner
order (mllde ~able CD EUubeth ~ Collectlol\) UX\I
with 10'.lJ' name, add ...... and zip code CO:
BH•~ S.,e OoUeedoa °""-NY-21 Bos IOOI. CoW ~ llarfMr, NY 11'714--MOI
• New Jeney relldenCI ldd IMs c.x. Credit cardl welcome
-Via OI W..terCard. Include a.rd n&m .. ICOOUl'\t l\Ull\·
bet. and the exptndon dice. Thant'°" b' JQa order
J
t U I N U " t I t-' c,. l \ I\. ~. I U ....
New, improved nostalgic advertising
N~"' llrutl of at/1: RCA 's
/t1dt Russtll ltmtr, 'Nipptr,'
11111h new /111/t mpptr
1141111 lYHH'I Hwtlt Hnrtlt·
,,, ,11y: reml11 , .... I t••t •• ,
Ht••rs reull ft14'J. JM 1118'·
Ii• Is Mck 1t Nt ftr Ir. CtffM;
T HJ Ue Tl&tr •11 I f111kr HW
1ut1Mlrf; 11• ICA'1 ceck-tarH
,..c•. '""" (uuet sitet lttt)
caM nck last fall wtt• 11c• ,.MM
flarry t•1t ICA 11 UYlq 1 etft1st
tt 11•1 kls ttw ll•kJcl 1)1 wit·
'" will ~ 111111cH 11 llp1t.
Waste not so ot~ers might wait 1ot
l11taekr llrntt, th k11•1r·rtlltf tr•11l11t111 '"" 11
Lt1lntllt tat ....... I.I.A. llnat. mrb lb fttrtti ,..r 1tlt
........ I rgf. tMl ...,., It I ,....... tUt Jiit .....,t
ft nar. A nllr la ,.._.. It l.tltaflt'1 lllltwll I• '""'·
... 111 ""' tu• • t1t1t1. 1.u. ..._ .............
llfttt ... tltnn' llfbriwl ti ..... Mb•llL ..,. ......
Ital Cartfl. .... tlm M••tMll tMt't llffl ... tt M .......
t1ra It lllt1 ••lttlllc ..... " ftr ltfermtlM: t.-n2-4a
Healthful nw burgers hold the meat
The newest incarnation of the
burger a meatless mash of
mushrooms, onioru, <»ts, brown
rice, low-fat c heese and other
healthful stuff. T he quartcr-
pound "Gardcnburger," selling
briskl y at Hard Rock Cafes, Mar-
riotts, Sheratons and Univernl
Studios Floncb, has one-third the calorics (1'40) and one-fifth
the fa t (4 grams) of regular meat burgcn. C hef Paul Wenner,
pleased wtth his creation, pressed on wtth a garden sauu.gc -
which might sound like health-conscious baloney to some.
18 USA WllXINO • J-11.JJ, '"'
--
Hitting t~e roa•? Kitc~en-to-go pack t~e comforts of M•
Ovens, refrigerators, coffee makers and other
appliances will hit the road with nationcrs
this sum met. "I call it car-a>oning." says Ma-
bel Yee, founder of lave to Commute, a mail-
order business specializing in car comforts.
She nuy have coined the phrase of the '90s,
given 80 percent of this season's traVelen will
go by car; boomer parents are touting the joys
of the family auto trip; and commutes are get-
ting longer. Most mobile appliances plq into
a 12-volt cigarette lighter. The refrigerator
hold$ up to 12 sodas 111d weighs 6 pounds.
The oven loob like a pLZU wuma; it reheats
fast food or cooks frozen meals. "People want
mini-homes in their can," Yee says. Could
this be the decade of the "coach potato"?
LlllUU1,4MMCU
Tall If I ,........ Us ....,..,..
••••t11a I• ,,tltlq. Itta at rt·
ctlt ............... cartltlla
fr111l1 1tt•'1 ltUar IHI .,. ..
($1,4M). Tiie ... "' """ .........
11 ~ ..... af ... nil S¥tlJ .....
tff~ ..... llrll'• SN 11t-
tt1 ....,_.. T·Mlrt, llM tlt lt-
~ ... _. ll TllST."
Lively eco-books for summer
Shelve your how-to-save-the-planet manuals and take advan-
tage of 1ummer'1 refreshing environmental boolt trend:
Ti.Is.,.. I• M1 .Birdt-', by Mary Jane Stretch and Pbyllia
Hobe (B.P. Dutton, $19.95). Out tbiJ month, chis is a bean.-
wanning fa.nt-pcrson account of Stretch's exploits helping ani-
mals rewm to the wild .
0. dN wi.,,1 .j' • Ntndl WI"', by Mike Furtman (Stlekpole
Boob, SU.95). Punman'1 c:xpbnation of bow pollution and
development encroach upon dudes' habitats i.s due in August.
A G-' Pl•.a u H•rl I• Pl"', by John Heine (Menasha
Ridge Press, $7.95). Heine
is a little-known free-lance
cartoonist from Binning-
tum, Ala. -an ecological
G ary Lar1on who lam-
poons oil 1pill1, defor-
estation, endanaered
•pecies. aarbage and
more in his August book.
&lrftwl1 Wnrl p,_,,, &tm.11 Wtlnl s,u..n and •·
tttad1 Wd"' &a., all by San Lovett ijohn Muir Press, $9.95
each). Theae paperback 81'2-by-11-inch boob, out this month.
dCKribc 21 different frogs. 1plden or bats ii\ 21 bautiful color
phocographs. G~at for the cntin: &mity.
C....ll'OMI
PIHH mall by July 26. 1991.
Franklin Mint Precision Models
Franklin Center, Pennsylvania 19091
Please enter my order for thla official 1 :24 tcale
die-ast replica of the 1953 Cadillac Eldorado.
My imported model will be •nt to me hand-
auembled, h1nd-pollahed and ready fordlapley.
I need send no payment now. I will be billed for
a depoalt of $24.• and, after ahlpment, for the bal-
ance in four equal monthly lnstallmenta of $24~ .,.,.,. ,,,.. ._..,.tu.
SIGNATURE
MR/MRS/MISS
ADDRESS
STAT(Jl),. ·--
... __ ..._. __ _
OMl6el a......_... ....... ,,.,..._ CM*.lM:. llJIOMOO ..... ..
CM*.lAC .......... -IY .......... of 0-.. ..._.. C...0-.... L
Low clouds niabt and momin& hours
bccomina mo1tly aun the .tiernoon
with west to IOU ...... to 15
mph in tho afternoon. Higba in the
upper 60I to low 70s. Lows upper SOs
to low 60a. For more information,
includin1 boatina, fiahin1 and surfiaa,
see page A8.
IN THE NEWSROOM
The Mother of All Oicbes strikes
apin ... The attorney reprcKnting a
Marine recently back from the Persian
Gulf faxed a pre.a releae this week
announclns: '"The Mother of All
Wrongful Terminations" ... And he
miJbt be rlaht. His client, Maf. Stephen
McConnell, wu fired from bis job with
a Newport Beach·bued defeme
c:ontnctor while he wu on duty and
takina put in Opention Delert Storm
... The reuon tor tbc tcrmiftatioo. you
uk? MWtuy duty-· tho Lon!
Corporation bu apparently apoloaized
and offered to aJve McConnell his job
back ... McConneJI and bi& attorney,
Kevin McDermott. agree that's just not
quite good enough.
QUOTES Of THE DAY
"Thost of us who talu tM Blbk
stnowly art not prtpartd to allow
stcular rnVionutJ to dee/art what tht
Bi.bk says u sin, is no ~ sin."
Rev. John Huffman Jr., about
making Christianity palatable to
contemporary mores and trends (Al).
"No one siru by an act ht cam wt
avoid.,,
St. Augustine
TODAY'S EVENTS
• Newport Harbor Art Museum
unveils its newest exhibit, "Different
Stories: Five Views of the
Collection," today. The museum is
open from 10 a.m. to S p.m. Tuesday
through Sunday. Call 7S9· 1122 for
details.
JUST TIE FACTS
• Sant• Ana was named county
seat in 1889 for the newly formed
County of Orange. Wh•t otber city
was the major contender?
·;tuuo JO -<l!:> .,lll. •
I rom !he ..i.re~e clot~ O' N9wpoll 8-~ ,.,..,.
l•...., 11 '°" ...,.. • • .,.,,_ coN 6H .Jl91 °' loo
"'-., ... S117
LOTTERY
Lotto
l, 10, 1~27, 49, Sl
Bonus numt>er -11
Deooo
•Hoaru:' •out.: 6
• Diamoadl: Ace
•Spedoa: $
Le T T e
Topper
Santa Maria
San Mac.a
Anahefm
INDEX
Ho~
Ann Landort/CJ
Sodcty/Cl
~~
Wtatbor{AI
A fireworks display lights up the skies above the Newport Dunes during a past 4th of July celebration. I
Fireworks honor fighting for; es
wll-tlle
IJranlB COIBt "'1
By the Orange Coast Dally Pilot
Orange Coast soldiers returning from
the Persian Gulf may be surprised -
and pleased -by this year's Fourth of
July celcbrallons being planned an their
honor hy Orange Coast c111e
The city of Huntington Beach expects
more than 300,000 people to attend it
87th annual Fourth of July Parade. The
crowd will salute veteran" of all wars
when some 3,000 participants. floats,
band.I and marching units. tab over
Main Street from 6th Street to the
Civic Center at 10:00 a.m.
Pearl Harbor survrvors, Medal of
Honor recipients and Persian Gulf
veterans have been invited to join the
celebration.
In addition. the city is starting the
day off with a pancake breakfast at 8
a.m. at the Seacliff Center. Breakfast
wi ll be followed by an 8-K run.
Lastly. at 7 p.m., the gates of
Huntington Beach High School Stadium
will open for a fireworks extravaganza.
Those wishing to attend the fireworks
show arc advised to purchase their
tickets early, since the 6,000-scat
~tadium is expected' to sell out before
Independence Day. T' u can be.
purchased for S5 at City Hall ..
Fountain VaJley is plannma the
largest fireworks di play in Orange
County to cap off its Fburth ot July
celebration, the Fountain Valley Fiesta
at Mile Square Pant.
In add1hon to the 9 p .m. fireworks
show. Wolfman Jack and his American
Graffiti Review will be playing all day.
The Review features The Couten,
The Shirellcs, Bobby Freeman, La
Bamba with Ernie Va.lens and Popular
Demand. General ad:m'lsion tickets
available from the ~hamber of
Commerce arc now $3 or can be
purchased for $4 at the gate.
There also will be a petting zoo with
See FIREWORKS .........
I ' ~ I
Missing woman's
family_ hopeful
~ Tony Oodtro
()-qi Coal ~ Plot
COST A MESA -With the help ot a
FridJty night televi ion broadcast, miJlion1
of viewers acros the nation learned of
the disappear~
of Denise Anette
Huber.
The story of the
missing Newport
Beach w o man
aired Friday at 8
p .m . (PDT) on
America's Most
Wanted . a
television program
that solicits the
help of the aeneraJ
public to solve
c rime s a nd
mysteries.
'Altoaetber, the show bas been
responsible for IS6 direct captures," aid
Jack Breslin, a spohsman for the
program.
And by Saturday, the show had
received a tow or 22 tip5.' ~ the
Huber case. Breslin 51id. "That is fairly
average for a missin1 penon case."
Breslin would not pecify the nature of
the taps, saying only that the cans came
from the west coast and that the
information had been forwarded to the
Costa Mc a Police Department.
Oct. Jack Archer, who is investigating
the Huber case, said he had not beard
from America's Most Wanted and he did
not expect 10 hear from the show until
Monday
But he applauded the show for
pre cntang the anformataon and hoped
rhat 11 would generate solid leads. Costa
Mesa police have reported at least 100
See MISSINc;,... .....
Centennial just another day for dorymen
Family-like group proud of its heritage
By Tom Spelss
Orlll9I eo... Ody Ploc
NEWPORT BEA C H -The
doryfishermen pushed ofr from their usual
sandp1toh about 4 a.m. Saturday. ready to
search for another day's catch in a
workina doy that could last until 6 p.m.
Bu\ lt ~as not just another day.
The rmcn were celebrating their ' .
By Au" L01r
~C-0.,-
• ~ Tbc man
once ~ ldered a rong candidato for
tho top position in lho Pmbyterlan
Cburch, Rev. John Huffman Jr., believes
thcro Is a eonccntrat~ cf'fort to replace
thO tcachin1 Qf tho Bible with "pop
thcolO&Y·"
Hu man. p stor of the 4,500-mcmber
St. Andrew' Presbyterian Church in
Newport Beach, withdrew hi candidacy
for moderator of the dcn(lim1n1ti n
bccau Of the d te rlOr&llht itioft of
bl dauahter, urferina from Hod In'
di ase.
nut ffuffmnn belie hi c1ndiJ19'
wa uccc ~rut in all ~na him t
campai n •&•inst m c to hbenlifo
church thco lo&Y. A Pre byterian
commiucc wa ~u hin& church te•n
to adOpt a rcrott th t called for
condomna homosexuality and premarital
IOO·year anniversary as a Newport Beach
landmark an their low -key style -which
meant minimal fanfare.
"My family has been involved here for
mnny years," said Lou Marberry. one of
the sales manaaers for the Dory, which IS
located directly 10 the right of the
Newport Pier.
.. My brother Carl started way back in
sex between consentina adults.
Al the annual convention earlier thil
month, the Presbyterian General
Assembly voted S34 to 31 api t the
propoeed reforms.
"Secular revision ts are tlJina to arab
hold ot all lhe lnstitutioo1 of IOclcty and
redefino them," Huft said. 'llfhey•ro
tryfn1 to make Christi palatable to
oontcmporuy mores and trends. TboM
or u1 who take the Bible tcriously are
not prep.ired to allow secular revisionim
to dcd re what the Bi Jo says is in, la
no lon er in."
Huttman, $1, tho author of ciaht
and S,000 of h · printod scnnont
aro malted eac.h week to all 50 tat
and OYCf'IC •
A a htdcnt at Pnncet n Theoaqpail
manary where ho earned a maMer's
c:tecrco In c!Nintty, Huffman ntd as an
a 1 tant to Norman Vtncent Nate,
S.H~-
the late forties, and then his k.ads and my
sisters' kids came aboard," he said.
Because Marberry b so many nephews
and mecu working there, he is called
"Uncle Louie" by all of the fishermen.
About 1.S independent f!Jhcnnen make
up the dorymen. and they each have their
OWT• boat and fish separately of one
another
"I've been fi hing for 14 years." said
Rack Breneman. one of Louie's nephews.
''It's advcnturou . and a lot of hard
~ork.." he said, adding that be goes to
hcd about 8 p m and nsc~ each morning
at about 3 a m.
On 11n average day, a fisherman can
e~ct to snag about 300 pounds of
seafood, Marberry said. The catch, which
come~ from about 25 males offshore,
include<\ c.l trout, whiting, king:fi h, red
SMOORY,._,_
--
.... I f{ \ I f I f ' I \ ~ '' I I I 11 " f I I \, I .......... I I l \ I I I 1: I' ' I' I !\ ' ' I I f l ' H I f.'' I I ' I If , , 'l I I' \ R ' \' l '\ I l ' I ' \ ' I I If\ I ' i I I ,_ ' ) • '
-
r--~---~~-----~---------~--------...--Cllll9~
,,,__ INll by July. ,.,,
FranldJn Mlnt Predalon Models
Franklin Center, PenMVfvanla 19091
Pl .... enter my order for ttlle offk:laJ 1 :24 ecale
die-cut replica of the 1963 Cadillac: Eldorado.
My Imported model wlll be eent to me hanO-
.....,,bled,hand-poll1hedendrMdyfordl8ptrf.
I need Mnd no payment now.twill be blUedfor
• depoeitof $24.lt end, aft« IMpment. foflhe..._
ance In four equal monthly lMtaUmeMaof$24.• .,,,..,,,., .............
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IN THE NEWSROOM
The Mother of AJI Ok:hes atrikes
1pln .... The attorney repraentina a
Marino recently back from the Penian
Gulf fu.cd a pma reJcue this week
iallftOUDCina: 'tlJ'be Mother ol All
Wroa&ful Terminations" ... And be
ml&bt be rishl Hil client. Maj. Stephen
MCConnen. WU fired from bit job with
a N~ Beach-bUed defeme
COfttndor while be WU Oft dutJ ud
takina P!.fl ln 91>ention DMert Storm
... The rei80n tor the tcnallladon. ~
aak? Military ~ --t.oral
C.OrpondOn hM ·~ndJ~ and offered to pe -:oe ~
back .. , McC.ooneU and Ida ~.
Kevin McDermott, 11fce di1t'1 j\ilt not
quite aood cnouah.
QUOTES OF THE DAY
''Tltott of w who tab tM Blbk
urloluly art""' prtpa~d IQ allow
steWar ITVisioniJIJ to dtcliln wltol the
Bi.bk IOp ii M. u no '°"lf:T sin. "
Rev. John HufCman Jr., about
making Christianity palatable to
contemponry mores and trends (Al).
"No one lilLf by on act he cahnot
avoid."
St. Auaustine
TODAY'S EVENTS
• Newport Harbor Art Museum
unveils its newest exhibit, "Different
Stories: Five Views of the
C.Ollection," today. The museum is
open from 10 a.m. to S p.m. Tuesday
throuJh Sunday. Call 7S9·1122 for
details.
JUST T1tE FACTS
• S•nt• An• was n•med county
se•t in 1889 for the newly formed
County of Oran1e. Wh•t otber city
was the m•jor contender?
·atnJo 10 "1J3 "9'll • , _ ... ...."C ................ e..tll """"
~ • yo.. how • --· < .. •H-3191 ., ... .._ ... 44 5711
LOTTERY
Lotto
l, 10, 18, 27, 49, St
Bon\tl numt>cr -U
Dea• •H..._,
.Oub1:6
• DlalliOftdl: Am .,.,...:,
Top111r
Santa Merta
San Mat.a
Anaheim
INDEX
........... 1111.-.
~J991 ,,... .. ,.. ......... ,.,.,.
I
By 1he Orange Coast Dally Pilot
Oranac C.Oast soldiers returning from
the Persian Gulf may be surprised -
and pleased -by this year's Fourth of
July celebrations being planned m their
honor by Orange Coast cities
The city of Huntington Beach expects
more than 300,000 people to attend its
87th annual Fourth of July Parade. The
crowd will salute veteran, of all wan
wtien IOmC 3.000 participants, floats,
band aad marching units &do aver
Main Street from 6th Street to the
Civic Center at 10:00 a.m.
Pearl Harbor survivors, Medal of
Honor recipients and Penian Gulf
veterans have been invited to join the
celebration.
In addition. the city u startin& the
day off with a pancake breakfast at 8
a.m. at the Seaclirf Center. Breakfast
will be followed by an 8-K run.
ustJy, It 7 p.m., the ptCI of
Huntington Beach High School Stadium
will upcn for a fireworks cxtravapnza.
Those wishinJ to attend the fireworks
show are adVlsed to purchase their
tickets early, since the 6,000-seat
stadium is expected' to sell out before
ln~ce Day. y · can "
purdwed for SS at City Ha.II.
Fountain VaJley Is planrun1 the
taraest fireworks dispJa~ iD Oranae
County to cap off its Fourth of July
celebration, the Fountain I Valley fiesta
at Mile Square Park. I
Jn add1ll0n to the 9 p.m. fireworks
how, Wolfman J1ck and )ii American
Graffiti Review will be playina aJI day.
The Review features the Coasters,
The Shirelles, Bobby A-eeman, La
Bamba with Ernie Vakns fand Popular
Demand. General adm' ion tickets
available from the bamber of
Commerce arc now S3 or can be
purchased for S. at the ga e.
There aJso will be a peltina zoo with
See FIREWORKS,._. ..
Missing woman's
family hopeful
By Tony Ooden>
Orlllft c.. Olly ,..
COSTA MESA -With the help of a
Friday night tclevisioa broadcast. miJlions
of viewers acros the nation teamed of
• the disappearance
of Denise Anette
Huber.
The story of the
missing Newport
Beach woman
aired Friday at 8
p .m. (PDT) on
America's Most
Wanted , a
televisaoo procram
that solicits the
help of the scaeral
public to solve
crimes and
mysteries.
"AJtoaetbcr. the show bas been
responsible for 156 direct captures." said
Jack Breslin, 1 spo~csman for the
prop-am.
And by Saturday, the lbow had
rca:rved a total of 22 ti 11CprdiQ1 the
Huber case, Breslin said. "That is fairly
1vcra1e for a missina pcnon cue."
Breslin would not specify the nature of
the trpt. saying only that the calls came
from the west coast and that the
information lad been forwarded to the
~ta Mesa Poltee Department.
Oct. Jack Archer. who lS invcstiptina
the Huber case, s11d he had not beard
from Amenca's MOit Wanted and be did
not expect to hear from the show unttl
Monday
But he applauded the show for
presenting the mlonn1tt0n and hoped
that 1t would generate solid leads. Costa
Mesa poltce have reported at least 100
See MISSING,_ ....
Centennial just another day for dorymen
Family-like group proud of its heritage
l()()..yc3r anniversary as a Newport Beach
landmark m their low-key style -which
meant minimal fan!are.
"My famitr has been involved here for
many years,' said Lou Marberry, one of
the sales manaacrs for the Dory, which Is
located directly to the riaht of the
Newport Pier.
.. My brother Carl stan.cd way back in
sex between conscntina adults.
At the annual corwentioo earlior this
month, the Presbyterian General
Aucmbty voted S34 to 31 .plnat the
propoec4 rdormi.
"Slcular reviaioni ts are t1YiQ1.to srlb
hold ot au the lnatitutkw o( IOCiety ud
redertne them," Huffman aaid. ·~·,.
trylna to malt Chriitlanity pelltable to
contemporary mora and trends. TboM
of us who take the Bible rioutly an
not prepared to alla. accular rcvisionilb
to dcdare •hat the Bible ,.,. ts fl. h
no IOnpr sin!' 1
Huffman, .51, the author ot debt
boob. and $,000 Of bis printed tennona
are maUed each Mek to au ~ tt•tet
and ovcnc .
Aa a h1dent at Pnnec1on ~
Somiury where he earMd a ....n •vec •n di¥il\fty, Hun.. ...-• •
UMtant to Norman Viftcent ,... ... ~ ....
the late forties, and then his kids and my
asters' kids came aboard," ho said.
Because Marberry h so many nephews
and nieces workin.a there, be is called
"Uncle Louie .. by aJl of the fishermen.
About 15 lndcpendCftt fi hermen make
up the dorymen, and t~ each have their
owr1 boat and rash !Cparatel)t of one
another.
"I've been fishin1 for 14 yean," said
Rid Breneman. one of Louie's nephews.
'It's adventurous. and a lot of hard
work," he said. adding that he goes to
hcd about 8 p.m. and me~ each momma
at about 3 a.m.
On an average day, 1 fisherman cao
expect to sna~ about 300 pounds ot
seafood, Marberry said . The catch, which
come" from about 2S m1Jes offshore,
1ndudc~ '<';) trout. "rhattng, kin&ftSh, red
S..DORY,._,_
'. \ I ' I • I I t. ' ·.• I I ' • , I I I I ; • I • I I \ I I. ' I I \ ' ' I ' I I I • \ I\ " I ' ' ' I h' . ' .
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• ...
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'' ': '' " • " ': " •
' " . ' ' " 'I " •I " :I
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•
lllf . A woman dcdicaitcd to squeezing out the very best life has to
offer, while at the same time helping others. A resident of
Newport Beach, she is partiQJlarly dedicated 10 helping edue1tc
future gcncrat.ions and preserving opera.
NEVBl~nnll'I~-~~~~~~~~~
For the pas1 five ycan, Coolin has devoted herself nearly full
time to founding and organi.zin1 the Opera Pacific Guild
Alliance. a fund~r1ising And support group for Opera Pacific.
There arc currcntty 11 guilds operating under the guild allia nce;
plans for this year caJI for adding another nine branches.
Last year, the guilds raised about $245,000 for Opera Pacific.
"I love the work and the opera," she said. "I've had so many fun
expe riences since I got intcrcslcd in opera. ll's rewarding to sec
1\ all done." She plans to continue serving as guild president for
anolher year.
SPECW. HONORS----------
For her efforts, Conlin has received many awards., including the
rnost recent -a nomination for the President's Volunteer Aclion
Award and a note of congratulations from President George
Bush.
She also has received the 1990 Carnallon Community Service
Award given by the Volunteer Center of Grca1cr Orange County,
JCPenney Golden Ruic Award of lhc Volunteer Unter of
Greater Orange County and Opera Pacific's own Ni les Gates
Leadership Award.
TIIWARD 111: RlllllE---------
A fonner teacher, Conlin is always looking for ways lo cducale
youngsters. She founded lhe Opera Pacific High School Vocal
Competition -the first of wh ich was held earli er this year in
conjunction with the company's fifth anniversa ry celebration.
Winners sang in recital at the alliance's annual mcctin& this
month. during which Conlin also cel ebrated her JiOth birthday.
She also arranged 10 have doce n1s explain the story and music
of opera to youth who attend Opera Pacific's Youth Night per·
funnanccs. In a non-opera effort, Conli n donated a collection of
genealogy books to. the Bloomfield Township Public Library in
1ne1nory of her son, William John , who was killed in an accident
in 1973 at age 12 . "I jusl wan! the chance 10 make a difference,"
she said.
POSITIVE DUnOOll.----------
c·anlin said "he is always looking for lhe good in everything. "I
dun't like to dwell on ncga!ive things." She is 11lwa)'!i cager lo
lend .i helping hand anJ has hccn volunteering for various
organ11a11ons for some 25 years.
l:\Cll a~ a youngster in Massachusetts she and several
i!-lrlfric nds organ1Lcd "1-hc Willing Workers" and helped oul
aruunJ the ne1ghhorhood. ··1 try 10 he a good role model," she
\l\ld.
(."onhn ,ir1J her husband, W1llian1, have hecn married for 34
vcar<.. rhcy have a I 5-year-old 'iOn, Patrick, and a married
1.laugh1cr
-By H•ll H•rttll
Local News Briefs
1-iUNTING'fON BEACH -A failed eleclrical translormcr is
helicvcd to have caused a power oulagc that left 1,600
Huntington Beach customers in the dark early today, a utility
official said.
Power winked out at 12 :56 a.m. in the area that bounds Adams
and Indianapolis avenues and Bushard and M1gnoli1 streets in
Huntington Beach, said Sou1hern Californi1 Edi10n Co.
spokesman Bob Goodlow.
Electricity was restored to 1,580 residents by 1:56 a.m.,
Goodlow taid. The remaining 20 customers had lhcir power back
on by 8 a.m., he added.
Guld helps lllld medlcal Cll'lll'I
FOUNTAIN VALLEY -The Fountain Valley Regional
1-iospital Guild donated $28,000 this year in schol111hips to
!'itudents pursuing health caree rs. Based on mcril and need, 28
sludcnl!'i were selected as recipients and awarded scholanhips.
In 1971, the hospital's guild began raising fund• 1nnu1Uy with
proceeds derived rrom gift shop receipts, baby pictures, and
private donations.
Pursuing deareca tn medicine, nursina and other hea.lth•rel1tcd
fields, 1hc students arc enrolled in school• throughout the
country, Their scholarships ranged from SSOO to S2.000. I
Paallll1 .... m1mtt1r llllt 1D 1111111
ANAHEl'M -A pemn w11 fatally shot on an Anaheim street
Saturday, police uid.
The vic1im, identified only u a mile and pot1ibly • &•na
member, wu ahot in the c:heat, la.id Lt. Steve S1in of lhe
Anoheiln Police Department.
Offtcen re1pondin1 to a caJI about Pill memben at a
convenience 11ore found the Yicdm about two blocb aw1y from
the 1U·aip1 1tore., at S.n11 Ana ind BNt ttrceu. be NJd.
Apparently, an arsument erupted between pna membcn and
othen be.rare th• 1hooti.na occurred, Sain u.Jd.
Th• \ictUn wu ~Med dead tround 1:30 1.m. •I Anaheim
Memotial Hoopii•~ tald Sat. 'Iom Lahmon. .
-,,,,_ a.JI/ /"llof IUll u4 .... I ......
WASHINGTON -The United 5111 .. and II& major alliea plan to
pull out of northern Iraq by mid·July but keep troopt in toUtbem
Turkey in case Saddam Huueio 1nacks the Kurds. accordfna to a
broadcast report.
ABC News said that U.S., officials had oot wanted to keep units in
southern Turkey, fe1rin' that u;s. troop& could be drawn into action
without enough force 1{ the Iraqi dictator att.ack.ed his country'•
Kurdish minority.
U.S. OfflCi1ls, however, bowed to prcuure from European 11lic.s to
keep a military presence nearby to dissuade Saddam from moving
aga1ns1 the Kurds, the network aaid. In Saturday's editions, the New
York Times reported that S,000 U.S. and European troops would
remain in Iraq.
New ....... trlVll flllrlcllalll ......
WASHINGTON -The White House on Saturday announced yet
another clamp-down on Chief or Staff John Sunun1.1's 1ravel practices
after he incorrectly reported who paid for • corporate jet he new to
Chicago.
In addi1ion to providing incorrect inronnation to the White House
counsel's office about the p1ymcn1 for the June l I night, Sununu
personally solicited the ride on the private jet in violation or
guidelines establi shed by the counsel, sources said.
A review by the counsel's office found Sununu and his stiff were
unaware that information th.ey provided on paymenl for the flight
was erroneous, o ne source said.
Nevertheless, the latest disclosures forced Sununu 10 issue a
statement Saturday saying he h,d made mislakcs and regretted the
appearance of impropriety.
The new rules issued Friday night require Sununu to make all
arrangements for travel on private jets through the White House
O ffice of Administration, in addition to getting approval from the
office of White House Counsel C. Boyden Gray.
Gray consulted with President Bush on Friday before laying dowri
1he new rules, sources said.
G ray saw a need lo take the matter out of Sununu's domain, one
source said , because he and his staff ''were relying on information
that Sununu's office gave 1hem. The information turned out to be
wrong.
Biker 11'981 Allanll to 1111111r1ce democrlcy
T IRANA. Albania -Masses of exuberant Albanians thronged the
slreets and squares of this capital city Saturday to hail Secretary of
State James A. Baker Ill as the symbol of freedom they had long
News of the Weird
HoriOlldu mayor WIV8I I poisoned pen
HONOLULU -Honolulu's letter-writing mayor hasn't lost his
acid !ouch .
Previous critics of Frank Fasi's policies have been dismissed as
jackasses or told to "go to hell." His honor says the latest target
or his wrath is a fool.
A Kaitua resident, Daniel C unningham, wrote the
administration to complain about the city's plan 10 demolish
Camp Kailua. The state, he sugge5tcd, might be a better landlord
than the city for the recreational camp .
The mayor of the city and county of Honolulu disagreed.
"Rarely do I have an opportunity to respond to 1 fool," Fasi
wrote. "But you cer1ainly qualify as one with your last letter.
"Wcbs1er's defines a fool as 10mcone who meddles or tampers
1hough1lessly or ignorantly," he added, "Your recent letter on
Camp Kailua is an example of absolu te ignorance which makes
no sense nor serves any purpose."
Cunningham took the put·down in ttride.
"Fasi is a master of politics," he said. "It doesn't bother me at
11\1 ,"
Jn 1989. Fasi disagreed with C. Sumner and Frances E.
Hayward of Haleiwa.
"I would rather ac1 like an ass once in 1 while than be a
permanent jackass like !he two of you," he wrole.
-'1'1hAuod&lwl ......
Poli ce Log
•
'" .,..._ -......... -....... .\..................... -..::;'"•• ....... 111111r -Iii I lill • 11111• 11'or erup .. tl lnlo boilWOm ..... _. .. A•tr'a.
America!" °"""· blofclet and ......... -Uned Ibo _ .... -_o.i...., .. -...-..1111 Amorican -•:;sll IO ... illo _ .. "' ... ... ....... w.
-10 villt Ibo lloldocl ..... -k '°9 communilt rule la Decembfr.
Wbiodina. dlocria& aad ....... a.., al)d banHrl, Ibo Albulam
unleulled.., ...,.....ntod.,_~ otjof.
llK U ILll lllFY ti -_._
WASHINCITON -Tbe _.,.,,. oaya it will tejocl ,..._. IO
uM marijuana !or medka' ~ Hke oomb1t.Jna n.-ea, wadtiaa
and wellh• lou in can\:<' and AIDS patienll uni•• they have u!e(I
another remedy fint.
The Public: Health Service. said doctors thou.Id 6rtt treat their
patients with Marino!, a drug contalnifta IOttahydrocannabinol or
TOI, 1he active i.ngredient in macij\lf.na.
"Marijuana impacU not only. on Ute bcl.Jth and clarity o! lbe mlnd.
ol the individual but can reault in harm to ot.hen, through aeoond·
hand smoke, example and intoxlcation-causcd accident•/' the aacacy
said in a statement.
Su~porters or medical uses of marijuana said the. synthetic:
substitute would not offer paticnts the a~e relief IJ'\d complained
that the decision wu based on poU1ical considerations..
!CIB dllld ·ICCall Wtlt If e:tl-re• 1121
MOSCOW -The head of the KOO secret police told 1 doted
session of the lcg'8l1turc that American spies arc sabot•&Jna the
Soviet economy and the West is dictating economic refonna.
according to ll TV broadc::ut Saturday.
Vladimir Kryudlbw mado the stridently anll·Weatem speech
Tuctday, when the Supreme Soviet legislature was considering ifvfna
emergency ~n to Prime Minister Valentin PavlM in an etrort to
prevent r1p1d mova toward 1 marttet-oriented economy.
President Mikhail S. Gorbachev on Friday dereated the attempt to
augment Pavlov's powcn and vigorously defended cftons to n:vamp
the central economy with Western assistance.
A recording of K.ryuthkov's speec:h, contalning the strongest anti·
Wc11em rhetoric by any top Soviet official this year, wu broadcut
on "600 Seconds," 1 ,muckraking show on Leningrad's independent
television channel.
.,_
U.S. Secretary of State James Baker, right, waves to the crowd
during his speech before an estimated 200,000 peopl~ in
Tirana, Albania, on Saturday.
ORANGE COAST
l1llyPllat
Wiil w. a 11c
, __ --t"lwl~~
""*-"' ..... ( ..... Virt'~ ·--""""-.,._
---_.....,. .. .. ._ .... __
•
Th.! CltMI~ Cn.w 0....,. Pilot !UPS 1•4-IOOI
" publ~ d.i•ly frn 15 lS pe1 k>u•·-k ~·IOd by r.-,.~• tubK•>pilon, 17 pet lour-
... ~ pPt-.oc1 t>y !NII ~ '• C~• Meta
Publelwlf. lnr , J)O W &.y st., (Clllll Mew.
CA 92617 Sealnd-cltil ~ plld II
C™' ~. C'.A POSTMASl'tR send Mldtn1 cha¥ IQ I~ 0111¥ Not, P'.0 8oit 1560,
Cow1 MtN CA 926l6.
Coo¥,.t>t Mn -~ ilw111'°"'-edi-torial 1Ntl11 or .kM•tiWfnf'tlll ~n fl'llly b9 ·~ ~ "'""~ ~ al c.npyo.r OWf\f'I"
/Im "'"'"""' ..........
lHiol 1t.i11, J1,
Ollimwin
How to reach us at
the Daily Pi lot
Clrcuh1tion
Orange County 642·4333
Advertising
Clanlt'ied-64 2·567 8
OlSpl~ 6'2-4321
Edit oriel
~ 54()..1224
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8utlnett Office 642 .... 321
Bvsine• fax 6l 1 ·S90:Z
•
--· .._. • ., .. ,!~.II.
Ha --.. lafor••Otta
PAI llw ID ....
10 wuaa1.-. o . ............... ................... ~nt'a crl••
~. R-Oalif., II
Ooi ..... wu..·.~
likbcl .ac111'JI IO a.I
hnaae . •••• Wlltoa
vecated ..... be -..... Callfonlia'• pemor.
Now, ~ facll • aciaib• \l'lcMaabN ......
t0 .... OD IO tUI ....
Hli oppaneDla IO far ... former San Praaclloo
Mayor Dianne Peinltetil
and ltate Controller oray
~ Joaquin Valley Sen. John Seymour
citizcna probably Will be ~ a IOt of SCymcMu and oehe:
senate candidates in the upcomin• monthl. The Valley is
COMidered a pWotaJ point for candidates, because \'Olen here can
often twin& an election.
1 But Seymour spent little of hia time talking politic:I Saturday.
What he wanted wa to bear about wu bow local communities
are dcalift& with crime. He got an eatful when be met with a
group or local law enforcement officials.
Seymour wu told about the abooting in Modeato'a Melli.a Park
Jut weekend. He heard about the sbootinp of two Modesto Hilb
School students 1ut fal~ and bow unknown assailants had fired
randomly at a Modesto police car and fire engie in two recent,
unrelated incidents.
The senator found out that Modesto had no gangs to speak of
prior to 19&4; now there arc more than 2,000 1an1 memben here
and 20 percent of the city'• sworn penonncl deal exclusively with pnp and drup, Modcato Police Chief Gerald McKinsey said.
In the lut tWo to th.rec years, the cities of Oakdale and
Riverbank have aeen png powth, reported their police chiefs.
And more and more pnp are coming to the smaller
cortununities, knowing those cities aren't u able or well-funded
to fi&ht back. said Riverbank Police Olief Jerry McBride.
Seymour then went on a hour-long escorted tour of some of
the county'• most troubled arcu. He wu joined by Sheriff Les
Weidman and 1CYCral elected and appointed officials.
They visited the Sea Breeze motel -lite of numcroua murden
and drua busu over the ycan. They stopped in at the Del Rio
Trailer Park alona the Tuolumne River, an area local law
enforcement bas been tryina to clean up for years.
Seymour also took a look at the troubled apartment complex
on Paradise Road. The complex is home to many poor,
immiarant and minority families. It Ibo serves, however, u a
distribution point for narcotics -including heroin, cocaine,
me~bampbcwnines and marijuana, Weidman wet
Drug dealers will move in, rent an apartment, deal for a while
then move out, McKinacy uplained.
By the tiJae SeymoW .JCfl, Jae had some Ideas. & Mid it makes
tense to ~nd more 1DCmCJ oa education and k>cal enforcement
efforts, to ~t the community behind deaning up neighborhoods.
He said be woWd try to ~rt in the national crime bill some
la.quqc that will pe locaJ authorities more control over the
seizure of dna& dealen' pouessions.
He told the law enforcement officials that he supports the
death penalty for dru1 dealen, and a 10.year minimum prison
sentence for offenders guilty of Ulina weapons in gang activities.
The senator said ho wu saddened by what he saw, yet
enoourqed by the efforts of law enforcement and the community
to clean up neighborhoods.
.
San Clemente woman named
chair of UC Board of Regents
LOS ANGELES -Meredith J.
K.hachiaian, a member of the
Univcnity of California Board of
Regents since 1987, was
unanimously elected chairwoman
of the 26-member governing body.
Presidents Richard M. NlXOn and
Ronald Reagan.
Kbachislan, •s. of San
Oemcnte, was chosen by her
fellow board memben during a
meeting Friday at UCLA
K.hachisian is the wile or Ken
Kh1chi1i1n, a Republican
campaian stratc&)st and former
speech writer for former
She said she plans to make
improvina under,raduate
education a priority o her one-
y ear term as chairwoman.
K.hachigian said she expects to be
a visible and vocal rcprcaentative
of the nine-campus university
system.
"I think we can achieve arcat
thinp in spite of the (budgetary)
obstacles ahead or us, .. she said.
-By the Anochlftl Ptt$1
Former Nixon White House
aide, Alan May, dies at 50 ,
SANTA ANA -Alan M. May,
a former Nila>n Wbito HoUIO aide
who 1ater ec:quired a reputatif:>n u
a Oamboyant and effectiw defense
attorney; hu died at hla San
Francisco homo. Ho was 50.
May, who suffered from an
undiacloaed illness, died
Wednesday njJht, a Southland
newspaper reported Friday.
''Thia wu qutte a guy,'' said
June Bauman, May'• aunt. "He
was a lot of run. He wu a very
dffkrent py, (but) hi WU a
f antattic attorney with certain
Cllel.''
scrutlny durina the Wateraatc
investiption.
In tho early 1980s, May began
practldna law In Oranac County.
Known for his rumpled suits,
rainbow-colored suspeoden and
cowboy boots, May enjoyed uch
antics a wearina British barrister
costumes to court on Hal~cn
and flubina fake KGB and ClA
credential&.
He once clilmcd he saw a &b<>tt
at the hi tork Hotel Del Coronado
in San Dtc'ao and WTOte a book
1bout it.
A decorated Vietnam veteran,
May became a champion Ol
Vletnamue causes in Orange
COunty.
He rcpracnted anti-communiit retuaee Be Tu Van Tnn. whO WU
charaed with aue1np1in1 to
111H1lnate a former South v....... oftlcill Who ....
noriMliutloit of ,......,.. wilb v .......
Amher M11 dient WM Mlilh
Y• U.. a Oil State Nl9ltaa
1a1d•& ICRMd Of U.. I
pralll 1W npnM to NM dll to
~.';.~•••nltt u11•• In _., ......... ,_.
REDDING - A atunt pUot was
kltled and at lcut aix spcctaton
were injured when a plane cruhed
near a crowd of 5,000 during an
alr show on Saturday. police said.
The T-34 smglC-engine military
trainer crashed while flying in a
four-plane formation about 3 p.m.,
said police Lt. Otuck Byard. The
injured spcctaton were hit by
debris, he said.
The cause of the accident was
not immediately known. The
federal Aviation Administration is
investigating, Byard said.
The four-member Brew Angels
stunt team was flying a maneuver
called an end-tail roll at the time
of the crash, aaid team an t.
Ed Mcaskk. Tho stunt n .. lnr
three ol the planes io pe1bm
simultaneous rolb while ~
circular formation ~
1he fourtb ptlOt flies, MaiiCt laid.
The pilot who crithed .. ill
the middle of the roll when M loll
control. Malick said lbe pilot.
whose name has not &eeil
rcleued, did not pc any ndiO
communication before the crallL
The Brew Angels, bated ill
Northr.m California, ·tty T-34'•
aircraft built in the 195& u Air
Force trainers. 'The planes cu
reach speeds or 230 mph.
Kip Cady, city editor of the
County among best in serving
children, but poverty persists
SANTA ANA -Orange
County provides some of the
state's best child health and
welfare programs, but also is home
to an increasing number of
children living in poverty, a
statewide study shows.
The county-by-county report by
the advocacy aroup "Children
Now" depicts Orange County as
burgeoning with children who are
arowi{lg up in extremes of wealth
and poverty.
"There's a lot to be proud or in
Orange County, but lhere arc
areas that need work," Wendy
Lazarus, the report's author, told a
Southland newspaper.
"Since foverty is often a
grecursor o other problems, such
as the high school dropout rate
and teen pregnancies, it probably
is the single most important
measuring stick," Lazarus said.
Oranie County ranks among
nine counties that have progressed
well in caring for their children,
scoring above the state average in
all the repon's 10 areas, which
cover health, safety, education,
ramily life and the teen years.
But the number of children in
Orange County who live in
extreme poverty rose 28 percent
over the last three years, second
only to Imperial County, which
saw a 30 percent increase.
Between 1980 and 1990, the
county'• child population increucd
49 percent. In 1987, S.8 percent of
the county's children were pan of
families receiving welfare. In 1990,
the figure grew to 7.• percent.
Among the report's other
findinp about Orange County:
-More than 80 percent of
poor children who needed dental
care didn't receive it in 1990.
-Nearly 3,000 children
received subsidized child care in
1990. That, however, is only about
a quarter or those thought to need
it.
-Births to unmarried Jirls
between the aces of 15 and 19
rose from 19.3 percent in 1986 to
30 percent in 1989.
The report also found that
Orange County has the third
largest child population among
California's 58 counties, with
almost one in four county
residenta under age 18.
The oounty's children are more
ethnically divenc than the general
population. Fifty-four percent of
Oranae County children are
Anglo, compared to 6" percent in
the population as a whole.
The largest minority group
among children is Hispanic, with
32 percent. Asian children follow
at 12 percent. Only 2 percent of
the county's children are black.
-By Cl~ Nr'lflfS ~
Commuter Network streamlined
• a-cl SMrchligbt ne~ 18 Reddit'I. .... WI~ the act
Wlleft tbe airplane d111pPeared
from ...
Cady uid it wua't immediately
~nt to spectators that die
J1aae .had cruhcd. He aaid there
... no explosion.
••Just all of a ~udden there was
llDOke, but no noile;" Cady said.
•1Then the announcer said
tomctbing like 'Ob my~ ..
Tbien a little bit later he said,
'We've got a grau f11C.' He did not
mention the crash at all.''
Two adult spectator• were
admitted to intensive care units
and three children were treated
• • ...
I'•
Little Inn on the Bay ~
I recognized ·for etrorts : ·
By Tom Sp.-°""" CCllll a.Ir ,..
NEWPORT BEACH -Uttle Inn on tbe Bay, the only hotel
located on waterfnxlt property in Newport Beach. baa been
named the "Company of the Month" for May by Odaine M:
catering.
C\aisine M, located in Irvine for the put 22 years, establiahed
the award to recognize the philanthropy of &ocaJ busiaeues in.
south Orange County.
"Cuisine M saw there were many busineaes which were
donating their time and space to charities and were not beinc
recognized for it," said Cari Roberson, the company
spokcsperd. "We say thanb with a catered lunch and a
plaque."
Little Inn on lhe Bay garnered the award for iu continual
suppon of the Newport Beach Public Ubraty's prosnam with the
Literacy Volunteers of America. Uttle Inn offers its facilities u a
meeting place for local literacy tutors and J!Udenta.
"There are L.1teracy Volunteers ot Amena that are
coordinated to teach our staff to read and speak Eftllis~z'' said
Herrick Hanson, the owner of UttJc Inn. He added mat he
allows his employees to be taught while they are at woit. ,
"Business must talte a more active role m education.,. be said.
"The additional tune and dollan contributed should be
oonsidcred seed money, an investment in the future that will one
day come back to the community."
Young girl attacked by two Rottweilers
LONG BEACH -A .a-year-old
girl Saturday suffered a cut on her
face and other wounds to her back
and head in an att.c:k by ty..()
Rottweiler dogs that pushed
through a back yard gate in Long
Beach, paramedics sai~.
The youn1stct, Catherine
Thibodeaux.suffered a jagcd cut
on her left temple and puncQ.a'e
wounds on her back and bead.
said Loot Beach Fire Department
pokesman Bob Caldon. _., Clq ~Seyb
SANT A ANA -The Orange
County Tra.nsft District's Board of
Directors approved a plan to
reorganize and streamline the
Commuter Network, the district's
ridcsharin& division.
"This new. streamlined process ·------------------------
The reorganization drops the
Commuter Network's annual
budget from $3.7 million to
appro~imately $2 million for the
upcoming year. It also rcd\ICCI
staffing from 37 to 13 full-time
positions. The 636-RlDE phone
number will remain the same.
will improve the quahty of
rideshare services by integrating
this activity into a regional
approach," said Roger Stanton,
the OCTD director. He added that
all of activities formerly associated
W1th ocro·s Commuter network
Department will be incorporated
mtc-1hc operations directorate of
the Orange County Tran portation
Authority It will be combined
W1th crv1cc planning, scheduling
and customer information .
_., Tom s,.ls6
Now! For Singles ••. gounnet encounters
DON'T DINI ALONI •••
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..... ~ loctat °"*" Qub .......... ~~· J.
Af usic in tlie .91.ir
Sunday, June 23, 4:30 pDt
FREE for the whole family
Bftr« your own sealilw to
The inner aJUltat KiuborCeNel'
-Ma. KA. Im.e.
Dear Ms. KA: When I was a little girt my grandma traded at the
local store for the things she needed to ru n her home. She gave the .
Shadow of politics falls on finance talks .
By Madelaine Drohan
lrr'oneo Globe ......
Ukc the economic summit it
f.orcshadows, the meeting of the
Group of Seven finance ministers
in London Sunday will be
dominated by political issues with.
al most, a distant relationship to
the world's real economic
problems.
The reason being given for the
get-together is to clear the macro-
economic decks before the leaders
of the seven industrialized
countries convene in July for their
cc:onomic summit. That used to be
what the annual meeting of the
leaders of Canada. the Uruted
States, Britain, Japan, France,
Germany and Italy was all about.
Now fmance ministers deal with
the most preuing economic
questions beforehand and even do
some preparatory work on
questions that are more political
tban economic. The finance
minilten will discuss the recent
large increase in the value of the
U.S. dollar vis-a-vis the German
mark and Japanese yen and the
effect it could have on inflation
and interest rates in the three
most important countries, Japan,
Germany and the United States.
But the sexier topic will be
whether the rich Western
countries should give financial ajd
to the Soviet Union and, if so, how
much. With Soviet President
Mikhail Gorbachev scheduled to
meet the summit leaders after
thetr fonnaJ meeting July lS-17,
there is mounting pressure to find
common ground.
If the question were being
judged on its economic merits,
there would be very little debate.
As one British economist noted:
"Of all the countries in Eastern
Europe, the Soviet Union ~as
made the least commitment to
economic refonn."
But the issue will be decided on
political considerations: Should the
West be a gracious winner of the
Cold War and off er a helping
financial hand to the loser? Or is
the upheaval and uncertainty in
the Soviet economy so great that
Western leaders would be
throwing money down the drain if
they approved the tens of billions
of dollars· in aid Mr. Gorbachev is
requesting?
Canada's position 1s ambiguous.
In his travels through Germany
last week, Prime Minister Brian
Mulroney sent out mixed signals.
"We'll do what we can with our
al hes," the Prime Minister said at
a joint news conference with
German Chancellor Helmut Kohl.
But he tied the prospect of any aid
to more Soviet reforms.
Kohl, who ii indebted to
Gorbachev for facilitating German
reunification, hu been pu•::f.1;: hardest for a major 1.1d .
Three years ago, in the aame
Deidcshcim hotel whcrt be and
Mulroney met lut weekend, he
and Margaret Thatcher, then
British prime minister, had a
serious discu11lon about tbe
positioning of short-range missiles
In Europe.
"Nobody talkl about that any
more," Kohl aaid through a
translator. "You have to pay
tribute to Mr. Gorbachev for
dramatic changes."
Finance Minister Donald
Maz.ankowskj will be makin1 a
quick foray to London, just in and
out for Sunday's meeting. Canada,
with a stubborn fi1Cal deficit and
mountain of accumulated debt,
would be only a modest
participant in any aid package.
In the United States, the
wisdom or propping up the ptelent
Soviet government has been a
matter of intense debate, even
'within the Bush administration.
Japan hu the means to 1ive
Gorbachev money but no
enthusium for doing 10 until he
agrees to return islands in the
Kurilc chain that the Soviet Union
occupied at the end of tho Sec:on~
World War. It ls not dear wbaJ
effect a massive infusion of
Western funds would have on the
Soviet economy.
"They ought to be very careful
about putting enormous amounu
of money into the Soviet Union
without clear evidence that tbe
Soviet Union is moving stronafy
toward a market-based economy,"
said Nigel Galt, principal
economist with McGraw-Hill
International in London.
Galt said such aid should be
given as a reward. On the question
of the rise in the dollar, Mr. Galt
held out little hope that the seven
countries would set aside domeatic
priorities to work toward IOffte
common goal.
For example, if the German
Bundesbank think.a hi&her intereat
ra..tes are needed to combat
domestic inOation caused by the
increase in the value of the U.S.
dollar, German interest rates will
be increased, despite U.S.
objections about the damaae this
could do to the slugish U.S.
economy.
"The dollar hu come up and it
will be discussed," Galt predicted.
"But unless countries arc willing
to change their monetary policies,
there's not much they can do."
Crucial days at hand for ~ who blal111 Sil S.-.
By E. Scott Reckard
Tiie ~ """'
LOS ANGELES -Charles H.
Keatin1 Jr., blamed for the worst
aavinp and loan fiasco ever, wu
ready for a celebration diMer.
He headed for Jimmy's, a
Beverly Hills retreat favored by
Nancy Reagan, where an older plenty to toast that nfiht earlier Lincoln and Its parent, Phoenix
celebrity crowd aliahts from this month. developer American Continental
Cadillacs and Rolls Royocs for A judge bad JUSt cut in half the Corp.
plates of lobster poached in state's criminal case accusing The 67-year-old Keatina. who
cosnac and blinis with smoked Keatina of deceivina inveaton and blames the collapse on reauJaton,
salmon, avocado, aour cream and regulators about the aafety of junt aat in coun that recent Friday u
caviar. bonds aold at Lincoln brancbea. defense lawyora arauod Lot
The former Lincoln Slvinp The rilty bonds became worthless Anaelea County protecutora
owner and his entouraae had in the $2.6 billion failure of botched the caao in their hute to
1:!!!i!i!ii!i!!!!!!!ii!!iii!i!iii!iiiiifi!fi!fiifiifiiiiiiiii!iiijill be the fant apncy to cbarae 11 Keatina criminally. Supmor Court J~ Lance A.
INTERESTED
IN LAW SCHOOL?
START THIS FALL
Ito toiled out 13 of 3o4 cbaraea,
the third time ho bad rejected
tarp pans of u.e prCMCUtk>n'a
cue.
.. I'm pleuod wkh "" life. I'm
YU)' pleUod With ..,, lawyen."
~said afterward.
Proleaaton. • IO mention
boadhoktcn OUt S250 mllllon, may
feel tM celebntioa It J'-"Y'• Wll
premMun • wd • k J ... 91>riato for K.tat-., no_. Ill ao went
brokalnlML.._..._,
.. ~·. ~··"· c. Neal, 11f1.., ;llOI ~~up tho n s~• Tw•811.._ crlalaal fraud
--11111111 .......... ......,, ..... ••lllU II 1tu1
11,11•11 I '11• ....... .. ....... ,, ....... .. •1. fl 1111 ... =., ..... 11• ....
• __ ......... ., 111!1~~ lrUlll
IMtsl ... _,w 1-
ol ........ Ulcllll ... ••rtaa CllMIMetal. wllllla ............
Services
onomlcal
lt'1 aJ11 -ud __.qi -to ~ ~ ._ or
~· sPiC ind~ wttll • ...,_1ct11•ns Miwkle prvwldtd by California Miki..,... m on. eou.,.
"'We're a IOCal bUiinai afferlna ~ mid and ~
services," aaid ~ pr.ident n.nu. "We emplOJ
reliable, £nalllh...,uklna. profational" trained, e1191r-mlnded
people who taki pride in thtlr work." •
aittromla Maid Serviees cbarpa by the room, nae bYJ.he hOUr
as mott houlekeepina companies do. The price li S29.95 for tour
rooms, and $3.9S utn.for each addftiOnal room.
"The entire houao does nol have &O bo dHDed iacb vWt -
only 'the more active room• arc deaDed on a _.., bail."
Tisman noted. "The client• do oot have to be at home."
The oompany also will perform apedal cleanin1 work on ovena,
refrigerators or garages, at the client's discretion, for an extra fee
per job. Weekly, bl-weekly or monthly cleanina achedula can be
arranged.
"We do not use a crew;' Tisman uld. "Wo use one
housekeeper who is responsible for doin1 the entire cleanlna to
the client's satisfaction, and the housekeeper Is a11iped to tho
client wec;k after week on a reaular basil. This also helps the
housekeepers to take {>ride in the job they do."
One reason for the farm 's reasonable prices is that the
customer provides his or her own cleanina implementt and
cleansers.
"We realized how unsanitary it was to provide supplie1 and
equipment, so we stopped," Tisman stated. "What we found wu
lhat many of these customers had dop or cats. an.d many of the
homes had fleas. When we vacuumed, we picked up fleas and
transported them to other customers' houses.
"Also, when you use the same mop, brooms, toilet brushes and
dust rap in all your customers' homes, what you re doinl ts
carryma 1erms and diseases from home to home. IO we 1t~d
providing supplies and equipmcnt,except on special occuions.'
California Maid Services cleans homes in Costa Mesa, Newport
Beach, Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley and other areu in
we5tern Oranae County. All housekeepen are licensed. insured
and bonded. For additional information, or to set up a
housecleaning appointment, call 960-0136.
Real estate partnership formed
Noted Southern California real estate Developer Donald 0 .
Zellner of Zellner communities has formed a partnership with
David A. DiRicnzo to form Zellner Realty Manaaement Group
(ZRM-Oroup). The new Costa Mesa-based flnn will provide real
estate asset manaacment services for the financial community.
ZRM-Oroup services will include valuation, construction,
feasibility and mukct analysis; compliance reviews. strateaic
workout plans, Cull construction management services and
ongoing management o! real estate assets. ZRM·Group will
utilize expertise gained from the successful buildina and semn1 of
more than 4,000 homes i.n Southern California.
"We will work directly for financial institutions, regulaton and
credit companies, acting as a development manager for t.hcir real
cstule projects," DiRicnzo noted. "We can be brouaht in at the
project's inception and manage the whole process from
entitlements to sales, or we can enter the project at any point of
development and generate posJtive results.
"Our background in home building, alona with our experienced
managcnicnt team, allows us to minimize the stsrt·uP. time and
take quack, decisive action," he continues. "We'"e built and 10ld
succc~f ully in all market conditions, so turnaround management
1s nothing new for \ls,"
ZRM-Oroup can ns.'iume the planning. organiution, staffing,
d1rect1C1n and control of oil development function . FoUowlna an
1n111 .. 1l unalysis, the: firm will manage construction, nnancial
planning, budgeting, purchasiJl,. cost control, markctina .._,
escrow closings, as welf as resolving homeowner association issues
and aftcMale customer r.crvicc. Oicnt will have a turnkey
progrnm in pince, with cxpener1C'!tt profession•ls at every critical
pos1t1on
Worklna with the ZRM-Group team is an alliance or the
industry's top con ultants. These consultants arc brouaht In on an
as·needed bHis in an alliance with ZRM-Group and Include
lcad1na firms such as Hayes/Martin Associates, Sprint Mountain
Escrow Company, Anhur Anderson & Company and the Meyers
Group.
For additional information about Zellner Realty Manaaement
Oroup and a,complcte listina of client services, contact DiRlenzo
at 556-9600 .• The firm is k>cated at 2910 Red Hiii Ave., Costa
Mesa.
First American Capital shows gain
In the first quarter of 1991, first American Capital Bink bu
improved ltA performal1(o In three major accountina cate.aorfea.
contr. ted with the 11mc period last year, accordlf\I to Je11
Barrera, president and cheer uecutive olftcer.
A ts increased from $32,695,000 to $36,237,000, loans
increased from 117,393,999 10 $21,235,000 and deposits wen
neorly $4.$ million co a record bue of S33,ISl.OOO, compared 10
Sl?.707,000 at the end of Marth lut year.
Barre" cmphuized that the hank• rilk·~ipted capital, •
"co ni.ud mcuurc Of a bank'• toundn wat 9.2 pcrttnt at the
end or March, *Cll •bow tho 7.2' percicnt which ~laton
u1111lly Coniider ~·
" imply 11 • m.tter OI pnadencc n an tc:OftOmk: dimate th11 ~1111 hokli WM ....,...la, our board of cHrecton •thOriled
settina Iii* .. ....., .flinch rrom &he bink'• P'Ofi11 10 the loan
kid rcteM, .. 8intrt llid ... ,.., fOf aur lf9' quenu Wll S.13,000,
• 21 ,. ......... , ... tM 146.GOO .......... '"' .... perind ... ~· Al ...... Of ........... .,., ......
l'aeM ....... .
N11.._.'1 ....,..,. J'lnl A .. ricaa C•pltal 8a~kt
hlMl ...... M II I••• led with a W.-Iii Qww •
Mtr, Ill ldaU~=&decll•ill.,_NtH•IOllJM-
u ......... ..._ ............... ·-
--------
• Tbe mV91ba WM expected to conclude
S.rimllJ~ KnowltoG. 54, who waldaed the cMa. pronipted
the MR:b ~ reportiQI that abe DOW rememben
hit fadler ldllilll· tbrec people, ialaUctiq a
woman whOee. bOdy WM dumped in lDI Anplea
iftd another Who "' bUried at their home.
Police beline IOIDCthiJla lbocki"I Mppeoed to
• ltnowttoa oa Teua Street, although they have
readied no COGC:haakn about whether there ii
any llDk to the Black Dahlia murder victim found
44 ,an qo and 25 miles away.
.. We'n ~ tho trouble to check it out."
Woe1111er II.id. 'We feet raponsibillty to aee it
.. do .,... • aecood vk:tim here ..
:J-411 ........... -.......... -·-··-....... ,....... ........
Aaur-tMllp .. .._.allir ....
9'ort, wllO PM eo HollJ•H• r.. .................. ol .........
bu t bOn • lllllll DMlll W1•111 tM ...... ~ ..........
,\Md to.,.........., • ....., fl .... -••n.; hU ma• lilGiela ._.,_.Md
,..... the day. "•··--.... .... follD•ed to ~ CDCll; ..., ..... _ .... ..
.. ,. p.; boob u.. .,... .mu. ... a mowie ......
ltDOwb'I fadw. ~ A. ltaowleon, WU tiJW ....... m. .... iii 1962. ...... o(.
,_. CIOlaildlon' betWMD Sbon wt her
fatba bepll durinl 1thenpy 1111lam .,_. ber ...,...,., ,.., 1989 dsa"9
KDowboa..,. lbe DOW ... m1mDl'iel Ollaidhlc
isa the 11!111 • bor' father ... 1ibd 1 woman
abe !mew • Auat Betty _. ti.a cur lier body in
half with a pcMet NW. He tbea d1'CM ID lDI
Aftpla-and ~ the body, .......
She UC> Myt her father killed two odaeiat
~ one body at the family hOme in
Watminttet. '
Knowlton connected her memory to the Black
Dahlia murder throuah a variety of
ciraumtaacea.
ShOrt Md in Medford, M ... , It the same
time KnOWlton'a family lMd in Lynn. Ma
She Oe> Points to old DflWl1>IPC1 .,,.. about
boW Short Md' talbd of rnanyina a mu named
Geofae and that a tan tedan wu often parted
near Short'• residence. Knowlton aaid her father
owned a tan LaSalle.
One who doubts KnOwlton'a story ii lDI
Anaela ~lice DetectiYe John P. St.· John, the
veteran mvatiaator known widely u Jipaw
John .
"Our reportina party here. we're convinced
lhe dJd aulrer IOllle typo of traumatic inddcnt
when abe wu 10 years old:' be aaid of
Knowlton. 14While the property ia vacant we feel
..We have a lot of peOple offerina up t.beir
fathen and varioua relati¥a u the Black Dahlia
killer," St. John aaid lut week.
-·,.. ;UJtdUetl,.,...
,,,~
Detective Mike Proctor, left, and Police lieutenant lany W. WcmM!f, right, both ol the Westminster Police
Department, supervise an excavation on a vacant lot fn Weltminster Saturday.
t I
' I Decade later, millionaire sees unustial tuition otTer bear fruit-i
By Rick Hlmplon n.-.... ...
NEW YORK -BDc:tJy one
doQde llOt in the midat Of a
anmdlne paduation apeec:b to a
....,.. d• in East Harlem. Euiene Lana heard blmlclf make thJa offer: Stay in IChool, and I'll
pay your cOUe,e tu.ition.
Oo Monday, Lana and the dua
he adopted return to the achool
for a ll>th reunion at which they
will tout the fint two of lite
oriainaJ atudeota to receive coUep
bachelor'• depees. "It'• aort 'of a aentlmental
'ourney," the 71-year-old
mdUltrialist and multimillionaire
aaid Friday. "My S4 dreamen are
now almolt 10,000 dreamen acroa
the counuy." Lant• un~e form of adoption
hu been inltitutionalized in the I
Ha" a Dream Fouodadon. which
1upport1 aimilar prosrama for
disadvantaaed atudenta fn 41 cltiea.
He bu been myt.bolosized u the
Brando seeks
reduction
of sentence
SANTA MONICA -
Christian Brando'• 10-year
prison aentenoe for killina
his sister's lover ahould be
cut by a year, his lawyer told
ajudp.
Superior Court Judge
Robert W. Thomas was
uked Friday to ruonsidet
the aentenco on pouocb of
ililtlptina circumstances in
tbe ~ of o., Drollet,
26, tho Tabatian boyfriend of
Btando'a litter, Q\cyen.oe.
DrolJet waa slain May 16,
1990, at the lDI An,eles
eatato of tho Brando aibtiftp'
father, actor Marlon Brando.
Chriulan Brando, 33,
plelMtcid juUty to ~untuy
maDlleuPter ln Febnwy.
Ht ca.ilMd he ahot Drollet
lft • ..,,.... <Ml • pa
WbUI ilPlftl ower DfOAet'•
allea•d abuH • of Ml11 ....
TM UM of a pn In the
c:rinM added foU~n to bia .......
DefaMe It Robert
L a.pro said OU ciObrt
llaat ... beHIYa hit diat'• '* of a S-WM MitftaMd bJ ......... belief ..... he -....., .... ,,....... .... , ...
,,.. ,._. .aicl he would ............ ..,,... • .,..., Dilllkt AnonlJ
.... M. ............ 1f111••.., n6usm • •
busineaman who ruccecded where
educaton failed.
.. Anybody else could have done
it," he ahruged in an interview at
the headquarters of Rcfac
Tcchnoloay Development Corp.,
which be heads. "I did it."
Seven of the ~l atudenta in the
clua moved away or otherwise
dropped out of sia,ht. Of the
remainina 54, 4S have obtained
either a high ICbool degree or the
equivalent Thirty-two of them
have aone on to coUeae -19 to
four-year schools, 13 to community
colleaes.
By local atandards, the class's
high achool paduation rate is
extraordinary. But Lana said I
Have a Dream "is not 1 p~
to get kids into colleae. It 1 a
r~ to get them plugged into
P.S. 121 , where Lang, the
atudenta and othen inwlved in tbe
proanm will aather Monday
afternoon, ii tbe ICbool from
which Lana bimlelf paduated 63
yean •· He wu 1peakina there on June 25, 1981, when he realized
hia fine wonts about ltaJiq in
school and aoina to coUeae were
wasted on pupils in a district with
a 60 pe.rccot dropout "te.
So he made hit impromptu
promise, and almost immediately
saw it would not be enoup. The
principal told Lana that, pn the
impoverished netghborhood'1 many
problems, only one or two atudenta
would ever tab him up on his
offer.
"In that case, I realized, I
hadn't made much of an offer," he
said.
Lang, aa::ordingly, manged for
tutorina and cowuelina for the
studenta, and tried to build their
morale and develop their
confidence. Most of all, Lana -.
who had been quotifta Martin
German Home Bakery
Weddlnc cakes "The Old-
Fuhlon W•y"2950 Grace Ln.
C.M. call for Info MO-ODl
Photography by Jeffrey
Package start at $495
Portraits • <:Andidt • Videot
Call 545·6786
HMt>ot It Adami Meta Venie Qr.
cO-lN [[)MJNIO
On The Bay at Newport
EkQant Saturday
~11am·4pm
Coi'ripletc Catcftnl a FtalJ SeMce Ber .
C.IMt ....
ll0-11
Your ad can
be seen~
Call C"11lb
at 642-4311
al. 303
Luther Kina at the moment be
decided to beoome a one--man
acholanhip tund -wanted the
atudenb to bPC a dream of life
beyond tho at:reeta of Harlem.
~ m.iaht not be where be is
today without a benefactor of his
own. ~ a 14-year-old restaurant
employee, be waited on a
Swarthmore College tnaatce wbo !OOk an interest In get~f th_e, boy
mto colleae on a full acbollnlUp.
He went on to found bis own
company de~ted to creatina new
ventures. Lang became chairman
of the board at Swarthmore, u
well as the school's bigeat
benefactor, donating $18 million.
Althou&h it's been estimated
that Lang has lavished close to
Sl00,000 on the P.S. 121 class, be
says, "I don't know how much I've
spent. I never staned to count."
The money, he says, was the
least of it. He helped aet a student
who was convicted of armed
'flock:tm&~
Stills & Video
843-9231
CAKES BY APRIL
All occasions,
reasonable prices
631-6543
robbery released early from prilon, a ftld--eye fliaht from ~ •
and found bim a job. When a wbetc he'd spent a week bdpina ,.
student at Hunter Collep wu to xt up an I HPC t Dream•tyle 1 ·~"
unable tO set iato a feinedial prosram. ~IT
reading COWM, Lua called the colleae president. Wbe.n aa Lana left bis wife at LaGuardia:
unmarried boy dropped ou.t to ~ to collect their bap, and •t.·•
support bis cbiJd. Lua bdped him armed at the campua ~ • tbc ,.,,
&et the job he ltiD bolds; wben a ceremony WU sta.rtiq. lriiQI a " . ~
pl became prepant, be WJCd ticket, be baraed ~ tbe pte .,~
her father not to abun her. and puabed 6.is way tbroqb the · •
.. You can't ajye up on a kid," be crowd. He finally reached Mila .,,:
said. "Would 1 quit on my natural Serranno, kissed her and placed , .,
child?" around bcr neck a lei xnt by the • ·
One day Lana piled five pcmor of Hawaii. · '"
students into his car and drove ... told people, 'I'm 10ny, but ', .~
them upstate to the bucolic that's my kid,"' Lang recalled ... , ,, ,
campus of Bard College. On the have to see her paduate. "'
ride back. they all said they -----------. "'\,
wanted to ao to Bard; one of '' N
them, Zulma Hernandez, actually
did. When she graduated May 2S,
Lang was there.
He also attended Rousanna
Semnno's graduation lut month
from Barnard CoUeac by catcbina
Venetian Gondola Getaway
1rrua•• .~: \,, eL c.ut' • Ott c~~ A ClavAn ,1-:-)°"""'6-;Wo.
---· ~m. .. .....,. ...
C-dll Mlr _11 ,
673-091 0 !Iv:'
"It'• getting to bo lib It man.
They're aellina everything," said
Christy McCampbeU, a state
narcotics -cent in San Joee.
Thoup Mexican "black tar"
dominates the heroin market in
California, agents said China white
is becomin& more prevalent.
Pan of the attraction to snorting
or smoking the more expensive
China white is fear of contracting
AIDS from hypodermic needles by
injecting cheaper, less-powerful
, Mexican tar, authorities said.
"Because of the higher potency,
you can still get a pretty good jolt
from snorting it," said Cornelius
Dougherty, a DEA spokesman in
Washington.
An increasing number of people
are also using heroin to balance
the high they get from cocaine,
one drug official said.
"Stimulants such as cocaine
wear people out. As a result, they
often tum to sedatives like heroin
to calm their nerves and to achieve
a more soothing high," said
Herbert KJeber, deputy director of
the Office of National Drug
Control Policed, in a report to
Congress.
China white is believed to
originate in Burma, Laos and
Cambodia, also known as the
Golden Triangle.
-B1 tb~ Associ•tttl Press
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY lllC. ... , ..... c... ....
tm --~ caTl IUl-Ml-llM
WIN
A FREE TRIP
ABOARD AllT'RAJL ..
AND Bit A TRAVEL
On the aaa:ae day, as the merauy ~ •
past 110 dqrees, anOther anon blGe le
the foothills of Glendale, 90 miles ~
Al. the. ICatO bOad:a mto UOCbOr
•'""""t ol atJ'.a-dry cmdldoaa. s.ata Barbara ofllda1a are conoei'Ded lboUt a
~· A determined anoUt ii bard
to f:tOp, ~ aay.
TIMS Sheriff"& De~ pllilal to 1tep up patrOll in hiah·rilk area, bUt for tho
lnOlt put will Just have to b<?Pe for tho
Californians may be
drinking from the sea
It# .........
·By P• Hectt
~Nlwls.Mce
A VA LON, Santa Catalina
Island -One half-mile from
picturesque clifta where nle1
agents for the Hamilton Cove
resort arc marketing chalky white
villu, palms and txn.pjnvillca,
engineers an~ utility officials arc
extoJlin& a sweet necw from the
salty sea.
"We're goina to calJ it fresh-
squee~cd water," exulted Tim
Wibon, a construction foreman.
This week. u ebullient of£tcials
band out souvenir bottles of
desalted water, the people of thia
parched island off the coast of Los
Angeles arc lil.ely to begin
drink.in& from the sea to avert a
water crisis.
With a ftvc-year drought and
population growth squeezina all of
California's water resourcea, Santa
Catalina bland will cl\riltcn a new
$3.5 million seawater desaltina
plant that will provide 132,000
pUon1 of drinkin1 water a day -
one-third of the island'• supply.
Built and donated by a
developer, The Whitebawk
Partnenhip Inc., to ensure an
adequate water source for Its
luxury Hamilton Cove
condominium complu, the
desalination plant could be the
first or many that will permanently
line the California coast.
Jn a state where the California
Aqueduct iJ the atuff of historic
legend, several cities and reponal
water dist~ arc now turning to
a costly technology -renowned
on the barren shore.a of Saudi
Arabia -to tap into the ocean.
completed next February.
-With lechnolo&Y and political
acceptance of deaaffnation belfta
welshed, Marin County water
officials spent $1.S millioil to test a
pilot model for a plant tbat couJd
be funded by a s's million bond
program. Morro Bay ii apc.ndina
$3. l million for a temporary
600,000 gallon·a-day facility and
Monterey is c:onsiderin& a ~
measure for a plant to provitlo up
to a sixth of its drinkina water.
-In tbe laraat and most
controvenial proposal. the San
F r a n c i s co ·b as c d 8 cc h t el
Corporation, Coastal Corp. of
Houston, two Califomla water
districts and two power utilities
arc 1tudyin1 a Sl.5 bUli\)ft to S2
billion electric power and
desalination plant in Tijuana,
Mexico. The facility would create
100 milUon pllons of drinkina
water daily for nortbem MeDc:o
and Southern California.
Meanwhile, the Metropolitan
Water District. the south state's
laraest water provider, Is lnveating
SS00,000 to locate a lite where a
second 100 million pllon-a-day
desaJlnation plant coufd be built,
harn~ssins excess heat energy Crom
an already existina electric power
plant.
"We're looking everywhere from
Ventura to the Mexicaa1 border,"
said Gary Snyder, the MWD'1
chief engineer.
But to offer perspective, Snyder
emphasized that a 100 million
gallon capacity plant would
provide only a rclatiVe drop in the
3 billion gallon daily water
consumption of the aia"lt utility
that serves 28 municipal•tiea and
water districts in S '>Uthern
California.
WRITER l'OR A DAT
Look ln ThUJ"9day's paper
for complete details and
entry form to an exdttng
getaway weekend!
Jeff Eherbaugh, author of "Gourmet Style Road Cooking," stands in his Char1eston, W.Va. kitchen
with ;i copy of his cookbook . Eberbaugh, a nurse by profession has written a tongue-in-cheek book
with suggestions on cooking road kill animals such as squirrel pot pie and creamed coon casserole.
The bo<J~, fillro with spoofc; and bickw.x d) colbq:Jialisms, is out-selling Kitty Kelley's book on Nancy
Reagan in th<' Charlestun area.
-In Santa B~ rbara, wten this
month approved . a resolution
supportina a permanent
desalination plant, even tbouah
residential water bills would nearly
double. The Ionics Corp. of
Massachusetb ii already buUdin& a
$30 million f acHity that will
provide 6. 7 million pllons of
water a day after the plant is
"It's definitely a viable
alternative," Snyder asid. "But it
can never be more than a small
supply tourcie of water:•
Generally, it eotts abo'1t four
times u much to eroduce fresh
water from desalination.
For jult '20 we'll run your 1 JC21A" 1d In our aut-
mottve MGdon, wtth a P'Cture of your car, for 3 con-
MCUIM llltutdaya. Copy muet be aubmttted by
Wed.
cell ~ HOW at &42·5818 to
~ ~ get In on thla
TM AuDnoave G~ appura .,.,.,~.
. t'.":J:~~ dwlgee Olft
MacArthur award nominators seek out genius
without mailin1 an entry torm, a many years and requires the able to d11CU11 many more.
game show without spinning a doggedness of a detective and the n ey meet ei&ht limes a year,
single wheel. discretion of a diplomat. rev.ewfna and parina down
"It'• the sweetest award oue can The search beajM with about nomlneea until they have 20 to 30
get," said Andrew McGuire, a 125 non\inaton nationwide -wlnnen, who then are appioved by
Mac.Arthur Fellow, ~lass er '85, sometimes dubbed trufOo hound tt.e ~rd of dirccton.
who runs a non·profit traunta for their skill · at 1niffin1 out
center in San Francisco. "I just excellence -submittina Afc is irrelevant. The~
wish I kr.ew who made t.1e candidates' namc.a. Thao talent winrer waa 18, but othen bM
decision. I'd like to thank them." scouts, who serve for one year, been in their IOI. "It'• ltiD for · d t 1 what they m_.,ht achie\-e, not That's unlikely. N°" cclcl>ratlna 1nclu e pro euora, awyon, simply a reward for rart
ifs 10th annivoriary. the joumalltts, muteum curaton, and achkMmcnt,'' Hope said. •
MacArthur program ~ .. &iven out c h u r ch, com"' Un It Y a n d Promiso la .' Jutt _.,.. of the
SIOS.7 million to 350 people environmental actMsti. cA ,....
ranalng uom Buddhlt and "We Mk them to think about formula. Ma nhur prizca -D 'd' ~ · sometimca called aealut lfMla -rav1 1an echolan to "m1turc aqod people and •r pt dliap allo arc pen ror -O•t deemed
and wheelchair dcilpen. It has about them.'' iald lfOps, the important to aodety and to folb
become ono of tho moll prosnm dlredor for whom the money will mieM 1 prcatiaioua prila. It'• alto one of u ....... _ -• l di•ere-. the l1104t mysterious IY•OfC ~ .Nt.. .... •re left w• -
Scorca o( people ha-a ~ ln in tt ann~ .!,:! Ma~thu1r1 .J.'~~ ~~·t ~ '!!,. ~...a!--,!1 telectln1 MICArthur fellowl, but Stanen ....... co ""'"' • l"IVU..... UI ................ ..._. nu
their ldencitiel are "-... :rot. So. •bOut ...... wit .... Ebe" •u kil* lllcolM... ~ .. id.
too, arc the nama o( hundreds of hands. ~ cohcc . of the "It Ii mtuded to bi¥t ID cftet.;t Carididttct ~ · candidlt• ~ Of oa • .....,.., Wbrt. We ._.t •J
Waancn -who receM: from tbe~r ~·~ plll!IJll of ...... M 18111 11 IDJll to "' Ir.at 11'0,000 to SJ?S 000 OYer IMt thear wort. 1)i9J lliD ....., ·Met _. ti••• II....., IS1111Wlt." ,,,.,._ aJc.na with hoetth inturance °"! ,.,.~ _. iaajla _fbel. 1'I ...,. ,..... 11 ... al
-don't knoiw h •Mil 1'"-' -t that We doft t looll "!.JMI tM bllC tbl ,_ D. IW ~ 11'. • f fv .. ~, .~ ~ in ,.. ..... Hope ... ~ ,.,........ • ..
••• 1 call. • ·we led b iM lillM pra1•....: fialt .-••Ill• Oii 'J lldili
the ..,.. c,...,.. the 1H11 wit• ... ta of U.2 Mlleii.
1..-......." MacArt••r, • c••···· I , ................ .., .. • ........ 11•·· S.w
•Hnsw• 11111eln nm '*"' ol • 'IR m Ci. 12 IMI ,.._ ..._, 200 ..... II ml. Tiii • • hr• 1'111.JMAfli= ....._ i1t ,... '•••• •aelt 1•....a. dllir "9 ..... ~-= ~ ........ ...... 11 I 116a .. ,
Miii 11111*'**' • • I ualtJ l•laahe ... .._
...... -... 111 ......... -fiNJ •.
Editorial
Detpite Keowttanta ptc>re. ~ federal pcmment bu a
bard time teep4'1 track of its money.
Or rillber. ou.r mooey. Barliei tbil ,ear we leatncd that of
the $1.8 billion in reacarcb funds the fedl handed aver to
Stanford Univenity in the 1980I, fully one--tbird mi&ht have
been m=nt. Bxpemes ranged ttom antique commode. to
luxury ti.
The commode, In fact, Is a fittin& symbol for the way the
federal pemment spenda our money. Followina the
Stanford revelations. several other univcnitics were cited for
"overbilling'' the government for "indirect costs,'' general
~nsea like building maintenance that support but don't
directly involve research.
The sag• continues. This week it was reported that
similarly creative billing has amicted Supcrfund, a huac pot
of gold th1t Congress set on its doorstep in 1980. The
program's purpose was to clean up toxic waste sites around
the country.
A noble goal, one which the government has moved
toward with customary Oeet-footedness. Of the targeted
1,200 sites, a total of 64 have been cleaned up, at a cost of
$1.5 billion. At this rate, Supcrfund will accomplish its
mission in 180 yem. One of the reuons for the outrqeous expense rec:alls the
indirect-cost billina loophole that univenida love. The
regulatory definition of indirect co.ta wu deh'berately vague,
auppoeedly allowina flexibility in raearch methods. So
flexible was the definition that it eventually induded yachts.
With Supcrfund it was .. program manqement," meanifta
administrative coats. But the Etwironmcntal Protection
Agency, which prctendJ to oversee Supcrfund. never
adequately defined that overhead, IO it baa come to include
such items u business cards and parking fees for contracting
QOITlpaniea. Nearly one·tbird of tho $200 million Supcrfund
spent since 1988 bas gone to proaram man1gement, the
Wuhington Post reporu.
This generosity is a recurrina characteristic of the way
aovemment docs business. At the very least, regulations
should be specified to exclude frivolous billing. The larger
question is whether we're 1sk.ing government to do too many
things, and whether we give it too much money to do them
with.
Toda y in History
Today it Sunday, June 23, the
174th day of 1991. There arc 191
days left in the year.
Todafa Hlalll&pt In HlatorT-
S&xty yean ago, on June 23,
1931, 1viaton Wiley Post and
Harold Gatty toot off from New
York on the fint flight around the
world in a ain&Je-enaine plane; the
trip took 8Vl cfays.
Oii dab date:
In 1683, William Penn siped •
f ricndablp treaty with the Le.nni
Lcnape Indians near prctent-day
PhU1deJphia.
In 1868, Christopher Latham
Sbo1ea reQCived a patent for an
invention he called a "Type-
Writcr.''
Jn 1938, the Civil Acron1utics
Authority wu cst1blished.
Jn 1947, the Sen1te joined the
House of Representatives in
ovcrrlding Prcaident Tnaman'a veto
of tho Taft·HartJey Ac:t. '
In l9S6, Oamal Abdel Nuaer
wu elected pr~nt ol Eopt.
ln 1967, tho U.S. Senate voted
to cen uro Democr1t ThOmas J.
Dodd or Connecticut for utina
campafp money for penonaJ uaea.
In 1)67, President LYndOn 8 .
JOhnton and Soviet Premler A1Qel
~n held the fint of two meetTnp Jn OlaubOn>, NJ.
In 1969. Warren E. Bwpi' waa
sworn in •• dUcf justice ol tho
Write to us!
United States by the man he •u
succeedin&. Bart Warren.
In 1972, President Nixon and
White HoUIC chief of staff H.R.
Haldeman aareed on a plan to use
the C1A to obstruct the FBl'a
Wateraate inve1tl11tion. (Tbe
revelation of the White House
recording of this conven1tion
resulted in Nixon's resfanat.Jon in
1974.)
Jn 1980, Indian Primo Mlnister
Indira G1ndhi'1 son, Sin.Jay, died
in the crash of a li&bt airplane.
In 1985, all 329 people aboard
an Air-India Bocina 747 were
killed when the plane crashed into
the Atlantic Ocean near Ireland,
apparently because or I bomb.
Ten yean aao: The official Iraqi
News Aaency quoted President
Saddam Hussein as 11yina Arabs
must obtain the atom.le bomb to
counter lsraef s nuclear capability
if there was to be pe.ce and
security in tho ~Id.
Tod11'1 lhtll..,a: Advcrtisin.a
executive David O&D\IY ii 80.
Former Secrctaty of S"tato William
P. Roaen ii ,78. Attraa tn:no
Worth ia 7$. Sin,pr June Cuter
Cash Ii 62. Oiymoic Hall~·P1mer
Wilma Rudolph· is '1. Musical
cOriductor Jama Levine ls 48.
Ac:tot Ted Shlickcltord ii ·U. _., .... d'"" ,,,...
-
Bllllr 1agacy i. Ciiiis or · '91
By Craig Bowman
~......., .........
I aJwaya cry at paduations.
1bctO aut:;ecta1 the experts daim, ire not
meaninsful to them.
Every year, durin& that rite of pusaae. I
meditate on what our young people will enjoy.
And endure. If tbcy'te anything like me and my
clUllDltea, they're scared II beck -Ind
dreamina. I hope.
Yet OW' Sractu1tes arc entering the world
unanne'd With anytbiqg even remotely resembling
critical thinking st.ills -or even bask reading
skills.
I contend that the tests reveal an impending
penonal and academic disaster that needn't
happen. So many of our students don't
understand their own cuJtures. one in which,
come next September, they'll be brutally
immersed. Consequently, many will drop out in
despair of ever undentandi.ng what to them will
ever remain a foreian culture: America.
Still, I fear for the Clau of 1991.
It's not the drup. prepancics, suicides or teat
scores that bother me to much, though these
killers of dreams have donned the cap and gown
for at leut the past 20 yean. Higher education's
ever more strinsent academic and economic
demands don't concern me either. More often
than not, our young people overcome such
obstacJes with 1 ma.rvelous resilience.
No, I feel for this class because of what some
of us well-meaning parents and professional
educators have done to handicap them, to tum
their dreams into nightmares.
Then there's the civil rights ctileae, spilling
out from Congress and infecting the country,
including hundteds of camptUCS tpewing PC
{politicaJJy correct) propapnda ..
Their test scores, for instance, are bad and
getting worse. Pick a test, any test. From the
Iowa Tests of Basic Skills to the Scholastic
Achievement Test to the Or1duate Record Exam
-our k.ida .arc falling ~bind the c.ompetition in
the other industrialized nation&
I'm talking about the bill that doesn't have
that awful ().word (quota) in it, even though
most folks still think that's what it's 1bo.rt. It bas
made Americans paranoid. fearful that ICXDe
penon or another may aet ahead, even if by
legitimate means.
It's not the provisions of the bill that bother
me , it's the underlying world view and what it's
doing to ow YPU.Q& people. The bill proposes a
way of life based on unfair ~ntqc, not bard
work and ability. I know many of you have screamed that you're
tired of the media's obsession with test scores,
th1t teats aren't everything -and they're not.
But those statistics do indicate somethina that
cannot be easjty dismissed, namely the intimacy a
student bu -or simply doesn't have -with his
own civilization and culture.
"I can't make it at school -or in life," it says,
"if I don't have some special program, some
special advantage."
Too many parents and educaton seem cager
to leave this legacy with our graduates, and for
years. this is how they "earned" their grades
The professor who gives C's is sexist. Or racist.
Or anti-Semitic. Or she or he has committed
some political crime, such as rcqumng good
scholarship and thorough research.
For instance, when onJy S percent of high
school juniors can undentand 1 college-level
textbook, somethin1'1 tem'bly wrona. Why can't
our students read better? Some "experts" claim
that they can't relale to cb11Jcnaina reading in,
say, the fourth grade. They say the same thing
about perfectly intelligent )'OUQpters in seventh,
ninth and even 12th grades. They can't "get
into" Shakespeare, Mozart. Native American
culture, the Italian Ren1iasance or the
antebellum South.
But heaven forbid that a student of any sex.
race, creed or economic state should have to
learn and cam on his or her own That's not
politically correct.
Some gr1duation gift. en" ao.r.a. u • mlddk «booJ El4Jh• tadta' la~ Colo.
P1'111111ms ii state, Orange county
show 118111 for Ive poldcs
By Ken Le81anc
"When reform comes in this
country, it starts with the muea,
Ref onns do not come from the
brains of scholars." William
Jcnninp Bryan. a Democrat, 11id
that over 80 yean ago.
ln the last 20 years we have
seen this applied to our state on a
regular basis. The most notable;
the tu revolt of Prop. 13, the
protecting of educational funding
m Prop. 98, and most recently in
Prop. 140, tenn lirnltl.
We the voting public are forced
to react because of the inability or
our lepl1ton in dealina with
pro&lcms. Our current example b
what to do about our state bucteet
doflclt. Our legl1lator1 aro
compoundin• this problem in both
politlcal partaa by comlna up watb
lhon·tctm UIWCn to • '°"I term
prObkm.
Oranp County -lbe most
contcrvatJvo county ln Callfomil
-la about to lean about
IOIMthiftl MW. TM ,......... .. wini ol the Daaomtic per1y. rrope.ma In politic:a ..... -. one
whO lookl 1befld "> toeo1row'1
problemt Ind helpt fonMalate
ctwa,a. todaY 10 we Will be able to
h•ndlt aft1'hifta tho future bla fn
tore for ue. AROdMr Word fof
propUIM polilb ii OM who
:::::n.~:.-:u:
time.
Famous ~ ......,
ere ,..... Jerr.noa In wna._
tW CO.huQon. PrUUa IWI•
ROGIMlth ill Mltdlia1 die Ot9et
Dipr111iDQ, Md JolMI P. 1111..,
....... Wk1' cMJ ........ ,,..
men shaped our history, they made
us who we arc as Americans today.
Prosressive polities has not bad a
pllCC in Orange County till now.
Our current budget problems
display our lack of leadenhip for
our future.
Proarcssive Democrats are
calling for a overhaul of our tax
5tructure. We have reasons why
this Is necessary, the recession, the
deficit, the breakdown of todety
throu&b income, and the ladt or
responsa'bility in spendina OW' tu
money. We can no k>nger tolerate
tho laclt of leaders.hip ror our
ruture beina displayed by our
leaisJaton.
Trying to undentand our
current budget crisis can be \'Cry
ditracult. It seems that there ire
many reason on a national and
state level that ba\'e contributed to
our current oc:onomlc crisis. The
California cdsis aoea beyond
current national events into our
pJtt. Let's tan 1lmost 20 years
ago wath tho pulllC ol Prop. 13.
Propeny tu reform w the
people's answer to risina tu
It w weU·f'IMftig at the time.
but many didn't envilion the
ilftl)ld ot Wac nwnbcrt ol peopto
ml1r1tin1 to our tate. -· Thls
cre1ted • larae demand on
•nba. wbetber k>c:al police. fire.
et~ °' ,...... tnfniltnactVe,
1nchldt .. hee•l)S. M the demand
fotlUptNdilt1tohli.clCow
iKfHaiea Mrilcea pew, tt.e
cW•Hll for flUI LI W ~ beret, keeplaa ,.ce. NallJ ..... (• .... ) .......
......, (••Cll&I). Vil .......... .., .,. .. •
turning point. Services today do
not cost the sa me when Prop. 13
took effect. A policeman for
example. does not make the same
money per year, he made back
then On the other hand we have a
homeowner who pays $400 per
year in tncs for a house he
beu&ht m 1968 He sells 1t m 1990
for l240,000 The new homeowner
pa~ S2,600 per year m taxes.
Our lcp lators u usual arc
looking toward the short tcnn
answer, sale tu.es. I think It is
time to look beyond. Prop. 13
showed that people wanted control
on tuahon. ln that spirit I
propose we look at a restructure
of the tu system, based on the
maJOrity values, the middle cla .
In 1987 the upper tax bracket
tot a reduction from 11 percent to
9.3 percent. Their average income
ii SS08.000 a ye.ar. Thi wa of no
help to our rcvei\ue starved
economy.
Mc.uerro -
,111 t ., rill, :-==s.~ P•J•ical -ar• 1 p~••o•eaa. 1trW,t•1
carefully
con1truct1d
facade• and 1.,m, Mre tM
chuacteu of
thoK~.
That's certainlf
been true of
California's state
budget crisia and
its principal
players, Gov.
Pete Wilton and ------the Lcgjslature.
Wilson came to
the Capitol as a
virtual stranaer. •••--
To thOIC wbo bew bim iD otbcr
roles, Wilton wu a toush politiral
warrior, insistent on hmq bi1 WWf
even in the face ol formW1M11
odds. lu ~. wl lep4"''nl}
in 4ealina with the budlet aWa.
Willon hu played true to form.
Havina a FYCTDO!r Wida ID
a&cnda and the will to IM it
enacted bu been a tOlally MW
experience !or the LesWature,
since the put thtu ~
tended to be puli¥e in ctea"ns
with lawmaken. 'The LcaWamre
wu spoiled, in effect, by that
gubernatorial inattention. It could
do u little or u much u it wished
without having to answer for it.
Wilson came to Sacramento with
the expectation -petbapc a na.iYe
one -that be and the Lelislature
would ad quickly to deaf with a
huge fiscal crisis. He propo1ed a
characteristically moderate
approach, a mixture of spending
cuts and new taxes, and ebaJJcn&ed
its critics to propose 10mCthing
better than could iarner the
necessary votes in the Lcplature.
The Senate, to its credit,
responded positivety, if not u
quickly as Wilson bad wanted.
Under Senate President Pro Tem
David Roberti. the Legislature's
upper bou.se bu in the lat decade
become the better of the two. Tbc
Senate's shabby treatment of
George Deutmejian ud bis
appointees in the early 1980s
poisoned relations between the
governor's office 'and the
Legislature, but Roberti bas
become more politically .ec:ure in
the yean since~ and with that
security has come a shift from
petty politics to public policy. A
big part of that better almolphere
has been the clo e working
relationship between Roberti and
the Senate Republican leader of
recent years, Ken Maddy.
As the Senate was beoommg a
better legislattve body during the
1980s, the Assembly was becoming
worse Speaker Willie Brown's
obvious political talents were
wasted on minutiae, and the
Republi ca ns imploded,
prcoccupyin& themselves with
internal squabbling.
Privatety, Wilson bas expressed
shock at the deterioration of the
Asscmbty from his days of service
2().plus ye.an ago, when politics
took a back seat to reshaping
government for a rapidly changina
state. Now, Wilson has told
confidantes, the Assembly bas
become worse than even the
much-maJiped U.S. CoQaress in
its separation from reality,
pettiness, corruption by special
interests, and narrow ideolosical
causes. He sees Republican leader
Ross Johnson as emuc:u.lated by
internal ppwer strugles, and
Speak.er Brown as undependable.
Wilson's private diapst with the
Assembly, which be c.xpreaea in
very 9tro"I tanauase. has crept
into his public statements u well.
He pral9Cd the Senate for movina
on the budse~ and casti&ated the
Assembty for its inaction before
Friday's succc f\11 budact vote.
The linJerina question ii how
the budaet crisis -111 affect
Wil n'I tonier-term relations with
the Legislature, linco the budaet is
just the be&innlna of an ambitious
1eries of pemment refonna be
wants to enact. Clearly. Wilton
aces a baa turno¥er in the
Le · aturo -produced by tum
limi , re.appontanmcnt, or both -
tM but hoPe for lqW1tiw
renewal. He Will bcpa ~
leaistatM cwlidatea whO lbUe
h pis Md -*'adoa. Ud Will
insist on hlMaa 1110re eo11pdtlve dWtrictl Ill ,........ ..... tlit
year.
BeJBl!WlaMlmlllld tM = atllJ ljd ewa .,.,_ Mlr'w Q a M.
Wlloll .. .... '(: • .... cl'tl 11 • .. tci I ...
lli'W •~·~ 111 u,a
·•• ••011llrh .... -·*:...-:::
.... ,.
REPORI I 1 1111 == .. .. .. :::;: • ., z: SURFING • .. " ,. :r.:.-"It" " JI rr,• n • ..................... 1.0CATICN .. .... .. • • .. ..... °" TOOAY'SSUN ..................... ......, ,._ • n g:•. I n .. ... ...................... II II -FR IMdl ,., ... :=: 12 ., .. " .. .... .... ,.,,.. ....... ~~ , ...... 7t ., ~ .. ., ....... 1.J .. c 30 ,, '2 n ~ ..... .. ,. ~ ·~~·~ ...... Sunrise: 5:49 a.m. .. _...,...., ~..:-9' w .. .. .. .,_ ,, .. Sunset: 8:14 p.m. .. , .. °"1lft. • .. .,..... ,. .. •• Hiii PL
-~ .... , .. ........ " ... ....... ., 7J =· ...................... ...... ,. .. ....... • ,,
J ......... ~ _ _,,...,. ..... Clly l> ,. ........ .. ,,
119 JI 1lbEs ........ ,, .. :: .. -r: ., ..
0 () ... I II " ., • .. ...... .. ., ::= " .. ..... .. " 'fODW ... ..._ .... " " " 71 ~:--.. " ....... ~-~ " .. .,...... ... • " .. • =--..--. .. " ~ " M ...... .. .. ....... 70 .. ....,.,... n n ....... • .. IMMAM 7t .. ,..Ol'tMM " 74 --°" " .. .._....,... ........... 71 41 ,....,.<>r " .. Full Moon Last Qtr. New Moon ... Ow ,J u oew-.Q, ,, ,. ..... .,. " .... " .. June 27 July 5 July 11 IMW.OW.,. " • a.. .. '2 ,..,. 19 .. ......... , . ., -·····1. a n
2 shooting suspects
surrender to police
summer •11 weekend beach 1111'118•
HUNTINGTON BEACH -1Wo suspects in the week-old
shooting death of a Westminster man walked into the Huntington
Beach Police Department late Friday night and surrendered to
authorities, police said.
Thuy Vinh Tran, a 19-year old insurance salesman from
Westminster and Nhat Minh Huynh. 18, of Garden Grove were
booked and arrested on suspicion of murder in connection with
the June lS shooting death of 19-year old Khoung Nguyen in
Central Park, said Sgt. Tony Sollecito.
Nguyen was found shot to death last Saturday morning after
police were called in response to shots fired in the park.
Nguyen, Huynh, Tran and another man apparently aot into a
fight when Tran reportedly pulled out a gun and fired, hitting
Nguyen. Immediately after the slaying, police launched a
manhunt for Tran that expanded into several nearby cities.
It was later discovered that Huynh was also missing and police
announced Monday that he was also being sought.
-B~ lbt D•/11 Piiot
Youths injured by gunshots
COST A MESA -A party at
local motel turned ugly early
Saturday morning as two juveniles
were wounded by gunshots.
A party was taking place at the
All Star Motel, 1441 Geissler,
when some people arrived who
were not invited, said Lt. Sam
Cordeiro Words were exchanged
and shots were fired in the parking
llffMAN
From A1
While pastor of the Ke y
Biscayne Presbyterian Church in
Florida, Huffman ministered to an
influential congregation, which at
times included fonner President
Richard Nixon.
His wife , Anne, is a
psychotherapist and the Huffmans
have three daughters. Suzanne, a
recent Princet on University
1raduatc; Carla, a student at
Stanford University; and Janet,
who attends Newport Harbor Hiah
School.
Although. branded by opponents
u a defender of fundamentalist
orthodoxy, Huffman describes
birmelf as a "newspaper junkie"
who is dcepl7 concerned about
contemporary ISSUCS.
"I have problems with those
who arc doctrinaire without
wrestlina with the ambiguities of
llte,'' Huffman said.
During his college days,
Huffman wrestled with political
•mbition and a spiritual calling.
Suffcrina from physical and
/\ emotional fatigue , Huffman went
"' / to a physician who just happened
i) bo a Presbyterian cider. The
~ian told him, "I think you're ujlna to decide between the
lot of the motel, he said.
Two victims, who were not
identified because of their age,
were rushed to Fountain Valley
Hospital where they were listed in
serious condition.
"No suspects arc in custody but
the investigation is continuing and
arrest is imminent," C.Ordeiro said.
-By lbt D•/11 Pllol
ministry and polittcs "
He advised Huffman to go into
politics, saying the ministry was for
"losers."
"I was quite angered by that,"
Huffman said. "I viewed that as a
kind of challenge to go into the
ministry and be the best I could
possibly be."
During his 13 years at St.
Andrew's, the Newport Beach
church has completed a major
building program, including a
1,400-scat sanctuary. The church
contributes more than Sl.6 million
a year to Presbyterian missions
and programs.
Sitting on about four acres of
land across from Newport Harbor
High School, St. Andrew's
conducts about 500 events each
month. Huffman calls it a "scvcn-
day-a-week church."
Despite the recent wave of
media attention focused on
matters of human sexuality in the
church, Huffman said his primary
concerns arc about mitten of faith
and the incorporation of religious
ideals into everyday life.
· "I omctimcs have slecplcas
nights wondering how effective we
have been," he said.
"The teat for a significant
ministry is Iona-term -the
bottom line is faitbfulnea." -
Oranac C.Out C.Ollcae Stadium.
Oatca open at 7 p.m., and the
entertainment, which includes a
barber shop quartet and llC>k>iat
Kevin Fehrman, la set to besin at
7:4S. The fircwotb •lK>W wiU
bca.in at 9: JS.
1 the Old Olory Boat Parade Ytill
tart the day'• celebration.a for
Newport Beach resident.I. TM
parade, wbieh ii open to the
~blic, will start at I p.m. at
Collin'• JsJc.
ThOM who Wltb 10 pattidl>at•
are ..Ud to contact tho AmCriCan
LCP>ft Y Kht Cub.
AllO, at the Newport Dvna
ruon, vlliton can rent paddle
·bolt• and k.,au. watch a doWft
I ICt It 1 p.m. arid bait.cue UftUJ
at the fire-.orb belin at 9.
>
By Tony Oodero
Oranoe Colll ~ Piiot
Thousands of people flocked to
Orange Cout beacheJ Saturday to
enjoy what local lifeguards called a
"beautiful day," on this fl.tit
weekend of summer.
"It was overcast in the morning
and then it warmed up and we got
a 16od crowd," 11ld Dan Weller,
Huntinaton State Beach lilepard.
Swbnmen there enjoyed waves
from 2-to }-feet, but lifeauards
had to save 12 swimmen from the
urf, Weller said.
By evening, however, the mild
weather made for Jood beach
party conditions, he said.
Over at Newport Chy Beach,
Marine Safety Officer Erie Bauer
estimated that a whopping 80,000
people wound up spending their
Saturday on city beaches.
"People arc really ready for the
beach," Bauer said. "It was really
pretty crowded."
Lifeguards had to pluck
Downpour drenches Great Race
By Tony Dodero
OrlnOt Colll ~ lllot
The Eighth Annual Interstate
Batteries Great American Race
got off to a SOI&)' start Saturday in
Norfolk, Va. as a squall of heavy
thunderstorms drenched the car
drivers seconds after the .race
began.
The downpour forced some of
the 100 antique car drivers to
travel back roads and seek
temporary shelter as hi,hways
flooded from the runoff, racing or-
ganizers said.
Approximately 35,000 people
~re on hand at 11 :30 a.m. EDT
to watch the start of the race,
which later culminated into a 73-
mile·long caravan of antique can,
organizers said.
But, despite the drenching, only
five racers were unable to make
the 230 mile trek from Norfolk to
Raleigh, North Carolina.
Wayne Stanfield of Coll.ft Mesa
and his partner Alan Travis won
1 he Championship Division
Saturday In their 1910 Knox
Raoeabout. Stanfield, who won the
race in 1987, is one of
approximately a dozen Orange
County residents represented in
this year's race.
Stanfield and Travis alJo placed
third in a practice rally held the
day before the TaCc.
Other winners Saturday
included Marv Schmidt of Sylmar
and Elliot Woodward of Seattle
who posted the best score of the
day in their 1914 Dodge Tourina
Car. And the father and son team
of Ernie and John Check of
Sparta, Tenn. took fint place in
the Buick Sportsman Class,
winning their very fint rice in a
lmY
From A1
snapper, shark and sculpln. All of
~he fish so ld at the
doryfhhermcn'a market is
approved by the Food and Drua
Administration.
The fishermen disregard their
independence from each other
when 1ettin1 prices, -worklna
instead u a collective fn tho
, -From A1
calls related lo the Huber caec,
but not one has developed into •
subitantial lead.
At lealt one Other v;cw.r allo
praiMd Friday's A!Mrica's Molt
Wanted thaw.
"I lbouabt tllcy d6d aa ac.tlena
jqb," Mid Du• Huber, 011111·1
fa.Mt. "It tr11 *lrt ~ .oaalll).
but k WM ~ "" ...... I w "'Y pl1•d wlclt IL"
H11ber,D,heitDOI.._ ...
since June S M 2 ..., ..... •
dropped off • ,,... • ....
.ccorftf)9ftied her to ..... OODClltt
,,~
\ California team works on their 1914 Model T Roadster Saturday
while a North Carolina f armcr provides som£' tools.
1929 Allstate Ford.
Today was the first day of a 13
day, 14 state. 44 stop race that will
procc . Rates averaae about S2 a
pound, and the fish come dresaed
-frec-of-charae. "Sometimes
we're here until late in the
afternoon aellina." Mubeny 11id.
Most of the dory fishermen's
bu sf ne11 comes from Chinese
buslne men, Marbeny sald."'each
momlna, local re tauratcura will
look over the day's catch,
purchuina larae ftUHtides of aca
trout. or black cod, to bo prepared
in their cstabli hments later in the
at the ln&Jcwood Forum. Her
abandoned 19 blue Honda
Accord waa lound that nlaht
perked on tho ahoUldCr of lt•
Corona dcl Mar Freeway trith a
Oat tire. ..
Police doP lound and tolldwed
her Kent. •hich appeared bctdcd
toward •n emeraency call boa. m.e acent, hoWever, abruptly flopped
1hon abOUt 100 yardt ~ lriJnt
thi ...
Huber 's p1nnu hive
~ a SI0,000 reward for
any iftformetiolt led• to thtif
d1upaer's whetubOutt. ~
With ittlotnlldaa .a.out Denill
Huber la urlld IO aH Calta Me9a
poHce at 7Sf.S2IO or 7S4·Sl63 •
finish 1n Seattle on lhc Fourth of
July. A grand prize of S27S,6SO
awaits the winoen.
day.
Much ol their other business
comes from walk·up customers.
"When lhe rcatauranu• busine
alows, WC &Ct I little Kltbtck in
our wholesale markets," Breneman
aaJd.
The various WoOCt carvlnp of
fishermen, aea crettures and blft
that adom tho dory market wero
made by Marberry. ''11'eY'tc ~rt
or my creation.'' ho 11id.
"I aoc aomo Ideal from Walt
Disney. I ~ ho doesn't t'nlftd,"
Mubcrry 11id, addina that he hu
apent a aood portion Of his .pare
time creatins the a.eMance ol th•
osubllshment. "It a11dod
10me1hlns." he •Id.
1lte dory marac. while It hu
1tw~ been loCated at the end ol
NC'WpOrt Pier, ... lilrM by the
dty to mow llbcMll ,_, ~an ..,
to lta ~t looatloft, Marberry
Mkl •• ........., ...... d '° put in ..,...
bMlllaaMI, INC Mdld up P"""i
'etn IORWW..,_ ..... " hi ..W.
'nC dty or Nc•port Inda Ml
hel~ lite _,,... 1ttl••IMloulli
owr tho year.. ~ leld.
But, ...... ,,..., a., Hall,
the lnaliMlt .... • ftilltt Oft ...
apprwdmately 20 IWimmcn out of
the 2· to 4-foot surf, Bauer uid.
"We had one neck and back
injury, but he wu fine."
Since summer bu started the
bcachca will now be doled to
surfing between the hours of 12
noon and 4 p.m., which halft't
made aurfen very happy.
9-year-old boy
rescued from
hungry python
LONG BEACH -Lona
Beach Pirc Department
paramed.k:a Saturday racued
1 very friahtened ~ar-dd
boy after tbe famiJy'a 12-foot
Burmese python wrapped
itself around the boy and
tried to eat him.
"When the paramedic::a tot
there the snake had lt'•
mouth around the boy's
fool," said Long Beach Flre
Department spokesman Bob
Caldon. "It was looking for
its next meal."
The bizarre rescue
occurred about 3:20 p.m.
Saturday at 4623 E. Arbor
Road, Caldon said.
The youn11tcr, Alex
Henry, wu home alone when
the pet snake started
wrappina itself around hlm,
Caldon said.
When It became clear the
snake wun't just playina.
Alex started 1creannn1 for
help but could 001 free
himself, Caldon 11id. Luckily,
neighbors heard hia criea and
called for help.
When paramedk:a arrived
they "scared the snake and it
let . go o( his foot," Caldon
said .
Alex suff cred only minor
puncture wounds on his foot,
Caldon said.
A scorpion. two tarantulu,
an iguana and two other
larp snakes were also found
in the home
-"1 C~ N"11 Senb
hands. The Pacific Plahe'}
Management Council, whicn
govema tho f1'hin1 lndustry from
tho stato of Wuhincton to the
Mexican boarder, bas put a
blanket limit on tbe amount ol tea
trout -the dorymen'• best eeller
-that can be caupt uc:b year.
And the filhln1 hKh.wuy bU
elcecdcd It• limit for this ,cu,
meanlna that June 30 hai been
declared tho lut day a fiahOnfta.ft
can catch the 111 trout.
Unforu1n1ttly. t he Iara•
eommerdal n.hennen htM ..._
a larp portioa Of tM bait fOr lhil
~ar, OM dory worbr llld.
• ..,.,. .. .... nu.ct up the
:.;:.:. _. J•iel 18ar, a ....... illiitnt.,,.
effeotlvfi3. t41Hend out llM ... .., ......... .........
theW ....... power, -~·
...... ol ............. , •• ,
•II• 4or1•• • will uad •
'""Ill .... IO tM .... .... , ..... ,, ......... C.ldl
,oo•IHll ff' IO Iii Mid MJ 10.12 .........
.,. ..... .. ,..... ....
WNW llD()M -So ti 11 Wk eo
tbl ... ot WlaMldon, lorouP o1.--. ..... o1 ............ .. all.,, ........... ' Fl' ... urMd ..... of ,..,, Moala
..._ lln' .,.. to um. at all. Ind
...,. ii • tnUcb talk about Anctn
AIMJl'I awl II Borti BeCteh
lelW.
It w11 10 bleak and windy
Saturday at the All Bnsland Lawn
T ... il Club. the place teemed like
Calldleltid: Park With Union Jacb.
It wu January in June.
It wu alto chaoe in pnnt. News
that Seta. No. 1 Iced 1D women's
aiQa1ca. bad witbdrawa had the
BrTtlih preu confused and
disheartened.
Monica wins the fint two lep of
the Grand Slam. the Australian and
French ()pens. and then suddenly
doesn't have a leg to stand on, or
more properly a knee.
"An injury caUICd by a minor
accident • ., wu tho indirCct way ber
apnu explained it. Diet ahe pt hit
by a runaway· blppo?
Wimbledon aot hit with a major
blow. That'• for sure. Never, lioce aeedtrili WCl'e iftltttuted in 1924, bu
the No. 1 player in cit.her the men's
or women's cateaories dropped out.
But there's a fint for everytbina.
and now, with Scles a no show, Steffi
Graf, the 1988 and '89 champion,
hu been elevated to fint from
second.
The put week Agwi has been
elevated to a position of infamy u
he ends a four-year absence and we
find out if he hu a touch of grua.
After losina in the tint round at
Wimbledon u a 17-year-old, A,awi
hu not condescended to compete
here because, dependina on what
)'OU belieYe, he could not bear to be
made to wear white tennis clothing;
he wu a shy youna man who eully arew homeaick; or be knew that if ho
fouaht the lawn, the lawn would win.
No novice to the strawbe"!Y. fields
bu arrived quite u well publiciud.
Tbfoiqbout the put week readen of
the Daily &press hi\'e been ~n
accounts of his life, boring u it
miJht have been.
"How I Beat Drink and Drup."
wu an admission that he and Jack
Daniels were buddies, and that he
once tried marijuana. Call the
sheriff.
Guardian columnist Matthew
Ensel, in a tale headlined,
"Ovcrwcanina, overdue and over
here," pointed out Aawi's shirt is
dcslaned to be longer in the back so
every time he plays a shot the front
flies up, revealina a hairy lower chest
and belly button.
This apparently sends a lot or 12
to 14-year-old &iris into ecstacy and
turns a lot of promoters into
supplicants. They need Andre. And
that ls just as true for Wimbledon,
where Jut year, the men's sinales
wu about as flat u two--Oay beer, as
for the aver11e tour stop.
The tabloids, the demon barbers
or Fleet Street, wiU be nailina
Apui, u weU u defendina women's
champion Martina Navratilova, who
switched companions from Judy
Nelton, the blond, tp Ondy Nel10n,
the akie1__and is bcina lued by Ju<il,.
Alreauy The Sun referTCd to •A
Half-Nelson." But we'll be aettina
our fill of this.
at•-L'-••• ,....,., •Aat -,..... .. =*.t;.=:= ;.: I« ......... .... Mo•.., wUI Ulher in a .... Tf'9l'lilll ....., for lht n11111m. .....,.. ao.raameat at Ncwpon ._. eo.a, a•. ,,_. .,..
......., Olbl will jam ... to =..the '"8t for ....., ,... ..
............. c:lubt iadude NeWport·
Irvin•, Newport-Balboa and
Newport·SunriM Rotary Oubt. At
lut count there were 70 aolfen eel to
fire 1Way in • ahotpn start It noon
foHoWi"I a period at ~Uon and
IUnc:h from 10:45·11:4.5.
Irrelevant Week geta under way
offlCially today with the arriVal of
honoree No. 16, Lury Wanke, and
aue•t celebrity Scrseant M.P. 'Red'
Mill? tv aa 1111 ..... .., om ..
9:31. ~. anW .... IDllJ .. bJ a .eila .... a1nt1r•11 11 4:15 MCI
the await el .... ~ IO Wuu bf 'lnill1111 leeden and
cteaed .... • well • pnerat ~ .... lllata.
1'llM • MondaJ It WW be the ,,.,,.... ~ in tbe Rotary OUb
~ aoutnament at Newport .m C.ntry Oub.
"We hMic dMded ~for die tournament," aays Pete
Foulke ot tho Irvine poup. Othen Iormina the three-man committee in
ch•• mdudo Rich CooUna of the
SuDnll dub and Victor Yack Of the
Blll.o.dU.
"We hope to ll'.llb this an annual
event and fill \lie field next year with 1« aolfert," Foulke continuu.
"W.'11 ha-1e a raflle and an auction
in the ewnina durina the dinner hour
Larry Wanke, a quarterback from JoM
Univcnity in OeveJand, wu tho 334dl
pliyer eelected in the hfOo-dliy 1991
Football Lape draft in New York to Mi: a• r
Prince of Irrelevance. Cbolcn by the Super ....
champion New York Oiuta, Wanke ii tile .......
of celebration for the 16th annual lrretcvul·W•
in Newport Beach today-June 30.
By Hlny A!ldns
N' $tlcltl Wlllr
DETROIT -The An1el1 Mark
Langston and Detroit's Kevin Ritz weft •
both in typical form Saturday night.
Lanpton, who hu won nme of his put
JO decisions, pitched a four-hitter for
seven innings and the Angels beat Ritz
and the Tigen J()..3.
"I had a lot of help from my friends .. '
Angels schedule
llttJe league openlns day festivities at Seavlew little league
field brousJlt together young baseball players from the
Seaview and Ocean View leagues with their physically
disa<Mntaged peers. Pitcher Andy bnkich (above) reaches
for the batted ball during the challenger game after getting
a push from his coach, Michael Seiler. The challenger game
was for Nndiapped children following the opening day
ceremonies. Each player had a cor"5ponding ~ to help
them in the field . During opening ceremonies (below), Brad
Fish (lek in left photo), the coach for Evan Moffett (right),
and f>tM.llp Baumfeld (middle), umpire and ~dent of
Ocean View Little league, recite the Little league pledge.
Coach Travis Purcell (left in right photo) and Neal Cecconi
watch the flag during the national anthem.
said Langston (J0-2). who now bas •
matched bis 1990 win totaJ "Those runs '
rully picked me up and the guys made -
some great defensive plays behind me." ...
Luis Polonia had four hits. includin1 at
three·run double. and Dave Parker hit his
fifth homer for California
The Angels scored three runs in the , ,
fi rst inning on three singles and two walks
by Ritz (0-3), who has walked 18 batters
in nine innings since his recall May 31
from Toledo
"I can feel for Ritz.," Langston said.
''I've heard good things about him. He's
supposed to have 1ood stuff. It's probably •
JUSt a little mentaJ thing. He's aot to pitch I
has way throuah 1t. 1 know very well it's ' -
touah to pitch when you don't have the -
oonfidenc:e." ,
ln four of hi five outings, Ratz has :
fat.led to survive two uminp and bis •
earned run aver-.f' has climbed to an '
even 18.00. He pitched one-plus innina
against the Aniels, givin1 up four runs on ·:
five hits and three walks.
"We knew .the guy is under a lot of
pressure," Polonia said. "We only had to '-·
attack him early. We saw how the papen ""
attacked him. We figured if we JOt to him
early, we could get him out of there. ;
Tbat's what we did "
Langston struck out SC\ICn and walkeJ ,
four in seven innings, and Mark EKhhom '
finished for the Angels Only one of the .,
run off Lanpton was earned.
Tettleton hit hi 10th homer in the '
c11hth, snappin& Eichhorn's strina or 63
inninp without altowina a homer, datin1 '
back to July 8, 1990. t
COSTA MESA COUNTRY CLUB Good advice makes Morgan great LICll--
1111111 llPlll
111111111111 .
"I wasn't thlnkiftl about a one·
hitter, .. he aakl afttr he pw up a
total of threo hall in the Dodacn'
4· I victory <Mr the Pirae "I
don't th nk about OM--hltten or
two-hmc11 or three·hlta.n or "°"
bitten I think abdut winni"I
aa ..
Motaan (I·') won fOf the th rd
time 1n four 11art1 and eUMd hil nrsr-career vktoty ...... the
Pira1 .. an dcc:WoM. Ht llhlcl
out three and walked ftOM la
Dodgers schedute 1
\
--
Television -Radio
• Michipn 400, Channel 2, 10 a.m.
• Mcta-Bravea, WOR, TBS, 11 a.m.
• Anaets. Tiacn, ESPN, s p.m.
n.L.SVlllON M.._.,.....
6 30 a.m. -2A Houn ot le Mana oooch&ilon, ESPN
10 Liil. -~ Mkb.1pn 400 from Brooltlya. Mich.,
Owlncl 2.
11:30 a.m. -Grand Prill du Mardi Oras from New Orlu111,
Channel 4.
I p.m. -CART 200 from ~Dd. 2SPN. ......
10 a.m -Nabonal OiallcQIC from Reno, Nev (tape). ESPN
Golf
11 a.m -Seniors tOUl'llUMOl from Cllanouc, NC. ESPN
I p.m. -POA toumament from WilUu:nsbura. Va .. Channel •. ....._II
11 a m New York Mets at Atlanta, WOR. TBS
I p m -Chicas<> Cubl 11t San Francilco, WGN
5 p m -Anael1 11 Detroit, ESPN.
M..eella-• S,.,U
1 p m -Sports Sund•r Coup de Hoop bwctb•ll finals from
Lu VcgR1 (tape). Channc 2.
E41MICNa
I pm Shell Cup Derby (tape). SporuChanncl
Bu:taa
2 "\O pm James Buddy" Mc01rt "' Tyrone Moore,
wcltcrwe1glm. from Charle"on, S.C. (tape), Pnmc Tickc1
Powerboat Rec:lttt
~ lO pm Offshore compct111on from Decatur, Ill (lapel
Spons\hannd
Wl"fftllnc 5 "\O p m World Team freesrylc mats from Phlladclph1a
{la~). Pnmc 11cke1
VollcylMlll
7 30 pm Pro beach competition from Cocoa Beach. Fla
(taf>cl 'ipnm( hanncl
Pnp BaMbllll
10 pm UF Southern Section champ10nsh1p 11me from
Anaheim Stadium (tape), Spnn10la11ncl
RADIO
Baffbell
11 15 ~ m Silll Otes<> at St Lou11, KFMB (760)
I pm P1t1•burgh at DodacC$. KA8C (790)
5 pm An1els 11 Dctrott, KMPC (710), XTRA (690), KFMB
(7601
........ -llldlr&fA.., ..... IO ~ ................... ..
A!lfjw wllO .. • .... •rt Siii M • pnlf1•la1al ....... .... .. Piii Wf·
._. ~ laloWI ........ ••••• II •«rd. WNStlon llM lleew ~ ......, Jrith
more cWhled mUICUIM.
Tbc lcoDomicj "' ........ alro bar -..cl fn>m • ~ depon~ Oil areu rbows IO P91-
per-vte.w· '1V •vents, videotape HI•• and
marltctina of wratJen for variOua IC)Ja and .ctk>n '1&Ura.
The World Wreatlina P•deraUon, wbidl
cmplo)'t motl of the wresdcsn who have beetl
subpoenaed, has reacted as if it It caqht in tM
dreaded fiaure·foUr lejJodr.
INGLEWOOD -The Lot An,eles ---
Kinp, without a fint-round draft piclt •·
this year, acquired another former .• '-:-
Edmonton Oiler in a trade and made ---
center Guy Leveque the 42nd selection of tho
NHL draft Saturday.
The KJngs traded veteran center Todd Ellk to
the Minnesota North Stan for defenseman
Charlie Huddy, center Randy Gilhen and ript
wing Jim Thomson. AJI three players were
selected by Minnesota in the cXJ>anslon draft.
In the deal with the North Stars, the Kings also
acquired a No. 4 draft pick.
Elik, 25, had 21 aoaJs and 37 assists for 57
points last season.
Huddy joins former Edmonton teammates
Wayne Gretzky and Jari K.urri as a member of the
Kings. The 32-year-old free agent played on all
five of Edmonton's Stanley Cup championship
teams. He had five goals and 22 assists last season
with the Oilers.
Gilhen scored 15 goals with Pittsburgh last
season; Thomson had one s<>al in ei~ht games
with the Kings.
Taken in the second round, Leveque was tbe
Kings' first pick overall. Their first -round pick
went to Edmonton as part of the deal that
brought Gretzky to Los Angeles in 1988.
Leveque, 18, scored 41 goats and..12 assists for
93 points In 66 games with the ConfWill Royals of
the Ontario Hockey League last season. The S·
fOOt·ll, 1J6·pound center is I native of Kingston,
Ontario.
Kings general manager Rogie Vachon said
Leveque should have gone sooner in the draft.
"Central scouting had him ranked 21st overall,"
he said. "Our scouting staff was very excited that
he was still avai lable."
With two fourth-round selections, the Kings
took left wing Keith Redmond out of Bowling
Green with the 79th pick and defenseman Alexei
Zh1tn1k of the Sokol Kiev club in the Soviet Union
with the 8lst pick.
<» .........
audr ...... .....
~.°"' >$ ........ . ,,, ...
la1urda7'1 eWtJetlit-4 llllr4 ........,.w.
........... •• t•: • .._ Uttte. wbo hu won JUll OllOI ..._
1'8t ea. a ._........., 67 IO talre a~
lead IMo the ftn.a1 round GI the ~ LPGA
McDGnald'a ChuipiOftlhip It Wilmlllloa. Del.
• Mike Hill shoe a 2·under-p8r 10 to hold a
one-tho& lead over three pla~n aftar &he rain·
delayed MCOnd round of the l'aineWobber
Invitational POA Senion aolf toilmament at
Charlott.:, N.C .. ....................
Coat a Mesa's Ooua Dubach ~ ~
wrapped up the 1991 Suporcrou aeriol ~
Saturday at Loi Anplc1 by iakina ftfth ---
place in the rmal ovcnt, while Jean.
Michel Bayle of France let a Supercroa record
with bil •lahtb Win of tM aeuon.
In other !J?Ortl news: l-
• Matt Biondi swam the $0 freestyle ln 23.34
aeconds to edge Steve Crocker by 23 hundredths
of a tce0nd at the Mission Viejo SWim Meet of
O\ampions. Melvin Stewart ,won the 200 butterfly
!2:02.18), Eric Wunderlich the 200 bre11t1troke
2:21.45) and Artur Wodjat the 400 freestyle
3:57.76).
Ill the women's competition, Cristie Ahmann·
Lclahton won the 100 butterfly (1:01.69) and the
50 frceatyle (27.05), Kriatine Quance ·the 100
brcutatrolce (1 :12.04), Costa Rica's Sylvia Poll the
200 bacbtroke (2:18.~) and Kari Lydenen the
400 freeatyle (4:18.15).
· • Ooran lvanisevic beat defending champion
and top seed Pete Sampras 6-4, 6-4 to win the
Manchester Open grass-court tournament.
• Dave Mader Ill took the lead durina a
caution period and gained his ftrst stock car
victory minutes later when the Michigan ARCA
200 was red-flagged by rain after S9 laps.
-B¥ Tiie ~M>datftl PrT#
Quote ol the day
J~ny Tarbalu, UNLV bukctball coach,
on the NCAA. Tarkanlan and LSU coach
Dale Brown lambasted the NCAA before the
House subcommittee on Comiverce,
Consumer Protection and Competitiveness on
the NCAA: ''Everybody (in college co1chln&)
is petrified. It's a reian of terror."
For the record
. . .....
...... ,, . ..... ~ ................ ~-=-'r:"-=-~~...-=:: ---· ...... ·-·----.. ..., .... _, .........
·r:~·----·---·~..-un=•......_,, ..... ,
4 •
··-··-"W• • ...........
die ,.. .............. . 11111,..,. ~........ 111-::=:: 2. 5, I. II, 14 W 11, .............. 1 ,... e ....
10 catch lhelr lftltla bieu: •• ... ilmei .... • In
Wbicb a IOlfw hli 45 __. IO ltlt 1111 -*'t incl~ hit thne la ...... IO 1111 bal liafina &he
fal~.
Here'• a aamole of the Olher ~ dtnl:C
that will be contro.ited '9; the -" 09 die
hOlc1:
•No. 1 -The Mii _,.ill tlie ,.._ tlnie.
• No. 3 -......a .... ~ will be
required to lhoot 1 b11ketball ttwoup t11i1 h:09P thli
year instead of a Pf bill to omnpletl tbe be*:
•No. 4 -Loaielt driw hole. A 4CMO ~ bar
certified by Jole-Cinteco ud due on tbe inUbt thia
summer, will be preaen*9 to eadl ~·
•No. 6 -No clubl bole. ~ ~ tluolr or
kick the baU until they reada the pen. thee tbej
must eitMr kick it in th• hole or UM • POC!I aM lO
auide it in.
• No. 7 -Left-handed bOle. Thia ls a pu~ hole
where playert must tee-off left.banded. TwO
mulliaan• aro allowed on tbia bolo only.
• No. 9 -Heddina hole. PS.yen will be hec:lled
on tt-e f ai.rway and will fltO a ban"a,e of water
baJloona on tho areen. .
•No. 10 -Sand Trap hole. A tbot ln th. And
trap will aive p1ayen a chance at a hole·in-one.
There ls no penalty for tbrowin1 the ball from tho
tr1p on this or any other ho1c on the couno Tuetday.
The throw doesn't count as a shot.
• No. 12 -Playert will be required to uc.-otf
with their putter. then must putt left·handed on tht
green. This is a rewa.rd for thole who are left-banded
be<:auae they also set to play from that side.
•No. 13 -Oosest to the pin hole of 10mC 220
yards.
•No. 15 One-handed hole with a la.kc down
the right aide of the fairway. Playen may ute only
one hand to hit the ball on all ahou.
•No. 16 -Off-balance bolo. Playen will tee-off
with one foot elevated on a platform.
•No. 18 -Eight-iron bole. Playen ""Y uao only
the 8·iron On this hole but I ball in the trap ,eta a
Ire~ throw without penalty or adding a stroke to the
score.
The ninth or heckJina hole will be a demonstration
hole as well.
If fun on the salt counc is what you are aeelcins,
there arc still openinp on Tuesday at $45 per
penon, which includes lunch in the clubhoUH at
noon.
Thoso who mlaht want to play should call
Bernardy on Monday at 241-3158.
...
_,,
~=:~.,.., .. ............... ... ...... us,...,_ ...... ...._ • ........................... ......................... ............ ~ *""-...... ....._. .. ................... -..... c...,,, .. ,_ ... ~ .... .r.r:~ ....... ··--·-...~ WM-=~-"r--••..,.,_. . ••••
OCBANSIDB Newpott
Beach's Rlchlo Colllaa and
Huntinaton Beac•'• Jeff Dene-.. aed ~ LM•n .... ...,.. • ar..., ea..e,
Marlen IO .. Ml'IJ _... ftlJUlld
.... '" ...... .wet of tbt
PtofetlloUI = AllD l'ildaft of Anterica'• -..., eftll .. ,. . ...,,
With blue lldll. ~ 10 4-tlooe turf
-... --.i-. ...
•
•
•
•
• • ----------
Tueac:tey Nl~t Owl June 21, 1191 June28, 1991
12:00 12:30 1:00 1:00 3:30 •:00
• • •
,
.....
1:30 2:00
Saturd•y Prime nme
•
•
•
•
• • --
-----
June 29, 1991
~ .. .,..,,.... .... ,.. ...., .... 0 .................... ....... ....... _ .. ~ .......... ......
-"·-~ ............ ...._ .......... .,,.. ............... ~ ............. -... • ....... 1wa p -·-
.... ......... ... ... .... .,,,,,.,,
Abigail McKern appears as Liz PrOtiert, Rumpoae1s "Mystery!'' serre, v encores Thursday nights at 9
assistant barrister in three episodes of "Rumpole d on PBS, Channel 28, starting this week. It continues
the Bailey'' with her father, Leo. The Mobil-funded th rough Aug. 1
Center claims TV programs,
cartooni are way too liberal ·
By Noel Holston
Mmaaoah·Sl ,_ Star T.W.
Fairne and Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR) is
forever fuming about the right-wing bias of ABC's
"Ntghtline" and other news proirams.
Folks at the (self-described) conservative Media
Research Center (MRC) snort back that the news
imbalance -as umlns one exists -is more than
offset by the ovcrwhelmlna liberal bent of most TV
entertainment.
nlc MRC ju,t came out with a list of what its
analy ts considered the 10 most liberally biased 1'V
shows of the 1990-91 season. Among them were such
not oriously subvenive shows as "MacGyver" and "A
Different World."
Thia I not a joke. It is an Illustration of the old
· ,aw about truth and the eye of the beholder.
I've always thouaht "Mac(}yver" was kind of
refreshing becau.sc the title character, played by
Richard Dean Anderaon, it a wmpaulonate IUY
who uses scicntlfic lnaenulty, rather than the pnt
f avorcd by most action herou, to aavc the day.
But MRC Chairman L Brent BOuU Ill M11 the
iong·runnlng ABC 1erica it pure libeial propipft<IL
"Everything M~r does rew>lwl around the
left'• agenda on the environment, pa coa1rol and
foreian attain.'' M writes. ··~, the thoW'•
creators f rcqucnttY tum to IM Hbttal Center to
Prevent Handaun Violence for ConMikltton.••
To Bolell, .. A Different World," NBC'a lltcOm
aboUt a predoniinently black c:alep, ii "•'*'YI
promodna a left-win1 apftda. OM epilock attldced
U.S. potky on the Chatt Wat, whl,. anocMr touted
the 1eparatilt, white·hatina 8lact Muetimt; another
.. , claimed there 1ro 4 miDion homeletl in America
-a flpre thtit uqpratea, llftft• or •iatllfokt, tho
estlma1c yielded b7 ntiontl ltudM.''
I don't au~ at would cut much slack With
BouU tn not• that "A Difflrent Wmld'' ii lbOut •
DON'T BE A SINKER
militant as milk and cookies compared with any of
Spike Lee's films -not when Bozell dlamiuea
concern for America's homeless on the grounds that
there arc only half a million of them. •
Other shows za~ped by the MRC were CBS' "The •
Trial of Rosie 0 Neill" ("almost every epiaode bas •
some liberal statement to make on feminism");
NBC'1 "L.A. Law" ("made 1entative 1tep1 toward
establishing a lesbian relationship between two
rcsular charactcn")i CBS' "Murphy Brown" (,.this
season's targets included Oliver Nonh"); and the
ABC Altcrechool Spcciall, installments of which
dealt with birth-control information for teens and
whether Firat Amendment prot¥tiona abould extend
to su11estive aon1 lyrics. ,
Far and aw.y tho moat lnsidloua offender ln tho ,
MRC'a view w11 ••captain Planet and tho
Planctecra," TBS' animated 10riea about a. band of
tun~ed crime nptcra who butt poltutcn. .
Whtie oraanlutlon• such 11 Action for ChUdren'a
Tclcvi ion worry about kJds belna bombarded with 1 commercial for war toys and unhealthful tooda, the
MRC'1 Bozell frets lhat ''Captain Planet" wtU ,
"indoctrinate children and Karo them Into left.lit
polieie1I activi m, Episodu have featured leftlat ,
slants to di proved thcoriea such as overpopulation t
and Kid rain 11 well u Ted Twncr's di1toned, @. 1 webbed view on unilateral d111rmament. Ironically, liven tho Soviet Union's hoffifyfna nuclear safety
I rccc>rcJ, a So\iict 1outh I ckpkted the most
cerebral Planc1ccr in the c:Artoon.''
What wa It they used to lly In the McCarthy era?
Better dead than Ted?
The MRC hasn't released a Ii t of the 1990-91
pr. oaram it found motl laudable, but IOIMthin& telll
me It would include "Wall Street Wee~" 0 COPS," •
Oen. Norman Sc.hwankoPf'1 p're.u briefinp and ,\
1nyihina In which Whitney Ho.atton na the •
national anttilm.
tL!M'l I
:mallON OIUI& DAYs
• DL&YAJfft-AllW cml mn1 ,.. • ,_ • ............
Oflkla ...... ,._ ..............
helpiq ..........
promote tod11'1
lrnlnM• WMk lddroff
•• tbe Balboa .. ,
Cub.
De Boom DOCed that
tlaia year'• honoree,
quarterback Lur1
Waau, attained hi• •iiiiiiiiiilliiil-footb&ll eminence at
Ocvelud~ John earro11 u•rury. A• Scene
today'• pre••-----•
conference, he said, it miaht be fuD ii
tomeone ..Ud a question that ClOUld
make a humorou1 reference to
Oeveland.
Well, I appealed to my funny
conatituentt lot _.lance, and this wu
tbe ~ pf tho litter:
-From John Kuznainak.i of Irvine: .. I
wu bom and niled in Cleveland.
P~ make fun Of Cleveland b«ausc
the river aometimea catcbea on fire. But
at leut we'd aet our fash already
cooted." • SEPUATE CHECKING, PLEASE -
A burich of the boyl Wu% pbbina about
the Irvine Co. settlement the other day,
whereby beaucoup millions plus cbanp
were depolNct into the bank accounts
of Jon lritM S.ltll and her mother,
A$alle a.irk.
"What would you do," asked one
peuant. "if the bank calJed and said
that much money had been transf ened
to your pcnonal account?"
''l'd be taced with 1 moral dilemma,"
said the p.nt beln& questioned. Whether
or not to tell my Wife ... •
AS LONG AS WIU STOCUNG UP roa YJIUQU, .J.&T'S;.NOTJO&GIT
TID TllAmC JAM -S.. S,1flf11a
of Cor0a1 del Mar. who ldentfflie
himtclf u a card-carryina curmudpon,
wanta to tend 1 membenhip cbeCk to
Ha17 ...._ of Newport Beach. founder
of the touriat-deterrins orpniution
known 11 Keep the Baallrda Out.
In Tuuday'1 column, you'll
remember, I wrote about the KBO'a tole
pl; n1mely, to ditc0uraae hordca of
auslandcn from invading our shores.
Burke w1nta us to write or/.hono out·
of ·town relatives ind fricn 1, wamin&
them of rnovin1 euth, visible air and
other perils.
The laat time I heard from Spadafor1
wu seven yurs ago, when he
complained that he sucked in a
mouthful of brown air, and chipped a
tooth -1 line that hu since 1ust1ined
comics.
What trigen ht• latest outraae is
that, beC1U1C of all the visltina beach
nuts, he e1n't find 1 parklna 1p1ee
within four blocb of his home in
Coron~ del Mu. "In the summertime,
especially.'' he pousa, "tbb town is
metal· to-metal."
While simpatico with K.BO's anti·
tourist c1mpai1n, Sp1dlfor1 can't
undentand why Burke didn't include
our cver-woncnlns tr1ffic mess in hiJ
litlny or 11e1 anmenta. I supeated that
he put the question directly to Henry
Burke -lt ho can find him. I can't. and
neither can my bird.clop. Maybe tho
poor toul is stuck tome~here in tr1mc. • NltXT QUESTION, PLEASE -
Fruk llobtato11, a retired enaincer
dwcllin1 In Weatclllf, Inquires:
"If tho S12 million extension or the
Costa Men ('') Freeway is uppoaed to
ease traffic conaestlon, why does
Caltran1 keep adv{slna us to u c aide
1trut1?11 ..
I dunno, Fr1nt. you're tho ono with
the cftllneenna dearee. As 1 J1ym1n,
thoup, I SU• lt'1 because of the
Interminable CONtNCtion. Or m1ybo it'•
1 mcwement aponaored by tho idc
Street Merchanta Mlod1tlon.
All f bow la thlf: If CaJtrana had
b.en -'IMd to bUlld Tho YtUow Brick
ROid, we'd acm be in ltaMu With
.Doroth; ud Toto . • 1WI MOYINO nNGD -From real
111ate .....,_, M ...... anotMr
itallclDrtolle:
.. WI .. .,rtl OD 1V, dW JOU 9\'ef
ilod&'ll lilow 1 .... .._._,.t, wtn raile a ,.., ...... w. ..... 11NutMer
OillT Wll. J 1111 ., on a pert at 55 ,, .. ., .... _....._ ..... .......
............ al ........ ..
..... Oii ........ -witla OM ,..., ...... a.,. ..... ~ ... ·• tt ••Oii., • Dlea't -• .., .,.. 10 -. ........... -~ ....... '° .. .......................
,_. Siii • ., 11em1 w ••• ni ,, ... ,.....
...... ....., ... a... ..
CoroMdllMerlt• ......... ,...
with .... .,. Md lloWen ~a cky
block. •• .. llW wkh
color, fra1rHce and
in1ripina pblnt1.
... ,.. • place When
you are nevct
dupondint or blue,"
commented Anni
Pistole. a 12-ycu
member or the prdens'
Volunteer Anociation •
now crv1n1 a
pre idcnl.
The pace will pick up
at 1hi'I mngnificent oa11n.
July 18 1hrou1h July 27
.. -SOcletY
as the facility celebrates ~-..••••
its fim 2S years.
Durina an inviuuional open house on
the fint day, a bronLe plaque honorin1
founder Arnold 0 . H1 kell (1895-1977)
can be een under the Sl-year:-01d
California pepper lree which has a 65·
root spread. The plaque will be unveiled
shonly before guesta 1rrive at 5 p.m.
"This was his favorite tree," said Wade
Roberts, director, who ha been at the
garden for 2.5 yc1n.
The tree stands in front of a little
odobc house built. in the mid '40s t~t
now sertcs as 1he library exhibit room.
(Lots such •~ the one 1he house ii. located
on -wld for H little as $300 with a $30
down payment at that lime).
t... ~ c-o.11!1,... C'ln e to ~00 arc expected at the July 21
picnic on the garden green being planned
by lhc Volunteer A~'iociation for
members. of the Friend'> of Shcrmnn
Librory and Garden~ and their friend .
Wade ROberts, director of Sherman Libr.iry and Gardens, chats wtlh Anna Pistole, center, incoming prMident of the volunteer's
as.;,ociation. and Jo Anne Rogers, outgoing president. •
"We arc planning Iha) with a Great
Got,hy theme," l1n1d Jo Anne Roacrs,
outgoing pre idcnt and co-chtur wilh
Pistole "We will have Dixieland mu i~ by
Andcrson'i. Misbchuvin' Jazz band, and
picnic food will include hot dog , popcorn
und lemonade," she added Tue day at the
volunteer aroup's 19th banhday luncheon
celebration
The Volunteers, who last year donated
1200 hours of time to the garden and its
i.ctlvitic , will have in place for the picnic
its lilt of a sea otter sculpture by Lou
Rankin.
On the evening of July 27 there will be
a full moon and underneath that moon
and the cars will be a bl1ck tie dinner.
The celebration finale will beain at 6:30
p.m. with 1 reception in the pepper tree
and fountain areas with a Hjgh Society
combo playing.
later the guests will be eated m lhe
garden for Rococo-catered dinner, and
the 14-piece High Society Orchestra will
11la)' for dnncmg
Co1rwd1cln Jett Mathews keep'!> lhOS<' gathcrC'<I .u Tht' Ma1cs11c comcdv club 1n
Huntingion Beach in ~titchcs. .,
New comedy club seeks
its time in the spotlight
You don't have 10 tay up lute or c11tch
the red-eye to w Vcaa~ to 'cc any of
the hottest rom1c, 1n the nation tod11)
Hidin& in one of the hundred or mm1-
mall 'hopping center
.1lonJ Beach Boulevard
1>1 nn up and comina
comedy club which ha'
been drawina top·nnme
comi~ from the 111nd-
up circuit.
Located in Huntinaton
Beach, The Majc,ttc
o pened about thrC?e Ill
month\ nao 11nd offers
comedy on Wcdnc~tay .......
nntl Thu~day night . U -----there·~ cnouah or 1 Features
c rowd 11nd they're
interested, danc~1~ Editor
orfcrcd after the.~ -----• Accordina to Dianne • haller, m011nagcr
nnd talent c:oord1111tor for 1he cluh. The
M jc•uic i, on or tho I r&c.'lt comedy
clu in S<lulh rn California -1nd "cry
few people know bOut ti.
George larlin. He wall perform on
Wednc,da). July 3 Blair wa
"d1. covered' on the comedy c1rcu1t by
l{odncy Danacrfield, v. ho made· him his
prntc't Ht' came up "'''h the idea and
co·wrote Dan1erf1ehJ', film "Easy
Money,'' ·" well :a\ \Ong-; on h" album
• R.ippin' Rodney."
Blair '•'>" when he 1rowo; up he "wants
10 he rock star bul open for my.,clf a., a
comcd1 rn JU\t \0 I cnn hcnr the audience
'.cream. 'Get off the ~•age' We wiant you!'
"The garden wall be decorated in
green and,white for the dinner, and white
twinkle ligh111 will be 1n the treeo;.'' c;11d
Johann Jonas, cha1""'oman. who al'IO
chairs the 1dv1\0ry board of the libraf}
and garden. "One of the gue ts c:icpcctcd
to attend is Don t lao;kell, nephew of the
founder."
Attendance to th1~ S 125 per per,<.m
event 1s limited to WO and pcr\On
w1shin& more mformat10n can call 642-
1626.
Ounng the celebration 1he facility will
he open to the public during regular daily
hours of 10.30 a.m. to 4 p.m. for a
nominal odm1 ion fee . The exhibit room
will feature the 25-year history 1n
pho1ograph , and a 20·mmute v1deo
prc~ntauon will be on goina. explainin&
that the facility is more than ju~& a pretty
place. The library has accumulated large
amounts of hi torkal material devoted to
the tudy of the Pacific Southwc t wlth
emphui~ on 1he spe ctac ular
transformation of this re11on dunng the
past 100 )cars.
Take precautions or you
may be 'stucco' with woes
Thn JJCCUtl t.eflc) will 1~troduce )t>U to
omc of the pitfalls of remodeling ancJ
offer pos.,1ble solutioM One note before
you Mart. rcmodelm1 1s 11 !>enous
undcrta~ms
Stucco people arc a different type of
folk. Actually, they arc
concrete worker who
work 'itand1ng up
S1ucco1ng 1s a
proccdu re basically
divided into tv.o main
phai,c ... the attaching of
lhe tar papcr/v.arc
undef\hcet1ng and the
actual <lppl1cataon of the
concrete 1n three
scparntc "'eP'·
• P1tfoll no 17 The
fir,, pha\C I\ or great Remodeling importance ~incc the
appl"Ying of the tar 'A'1re
paper " the barrier that prc"cn1~ the
mot,turc from 'ccp1ng onto vour '""de
dryw,111\ lncred1tlly, bcc.1uc,c th11, proce"
'" time con~uman11 11 m.rn)' time' a\ g1,-:n
to lov. paid la~lrer'
The mO\I import.int procedure of thl·
fiN ph<l'C I\ to m 1l.c \Ure; th.H OOttnm
cdac ol the top 1.1r p.1pcr sheet
completely overlap\ the top edge of .1
lov.er ~heet '1milar to feather' on a duck.
Any hole' or 1a~ in thc\c 'hcets c.1n
cau~ potential v.ater damage.
Let me g"c )llU an actual eumplc of
how coi') it " to ha1.-e lopp) workman hip
on )our pro1cct E"crything started out
well the l1N day the \lucco people
appeared on tht Job It took mo t of that
JJ)' lo 'ct "'1ffoldtn& <And nail up ilbout a
third or the "''re paper \heels
Howc,er. the ~cond day was different
as onl) one "-Orkcr (who was obviously a
day IJrorcr) WJ\ 1iven brief, but forceful
in~truct1on' "nd then left by himself to
rnmplcte the job. The re t of the crew
took off for another job.
Keep 1n mind that the 'tucco contractor
"'·" hired b~ the general contractor. I was
,, hit nc"ou'. but v.hcn J called the
general about lack of (,upcrvis1on the
,,n,v..er g1\'en to me wa · that they tru tcd
their .. uth and could not check on them
Cl.Cf) d.1~
Actu.1lh . 11 worked out that the
i.:lncr.il\ 1oh manager could only be
~ountcd on 'hov..1ng up when a check wa
due from u' B) lhc way. we had three
JC~ manager' an three month , so re-read
the contract\ part of 1has article once
.1~ain
• Sngsc,tion no. 11 Back to our 'tucco
Jilh I watched the l.1horer very closely
and '"w &•P' and holec; in the heets he
See STUCCO/Cl
..... .,. ·-· ...... --1-. ..... .... ....... ..... n. ............... .,...,... ... ..
... Mae' JIU lflhW ........ ... .............................
1M 111_, ..... SM .. ,_., •llllll-S• r'' a I ..an,. ......... ., .. -•ca
.... J .... " .......... C89,. .... . 11• ........... ., .................. ..... ::.:;r •. a' 1 .. ..... -,.. , ... ..,....a.e ...,ce.
-La.
Dar L R.: Qildren dellre • peat deal ol
attendoft. They will do whatever wodt1 to ~t attention. 'Chddreli leirD both desirable and ____ _,
undelirable ~ in tbo same way. They will
try different bebavion, IOIDO &ood and some
bad, to get atteatiol\. Whatever behavior the -----• parent rewa~ the cbUd will tend to repeat it.
Children prefer potitiYC attution or rewards Ii.kc: hugs, smiles.
praise, candy, &iftJ, etc., However, if they don't get enough
poeitiv. strokea, they will try other ways to get noticed: temper
tantrum.a, callina you names. )'y{na, defiance, etc.
Becau.1e parents are ao busy aod tired, what often happens ii
that parents ipore their children when they are being good. They
don't take the time to live that smile or praise which is so
important to motivate chifdren to continue appropriate behavior.
Parents forget to communlcate when things are going well.
Instead, parents sometimes unconsciou11ly get cau,ht up in a
negative cycle of giving attention frowns, sareasttc remarks,
nagging and saying "no" which later turns to 0 ycs" after being
worn down by the acceleration of bad behavior. Inadvertently, the
parents gave attention to their child's undc irable behavior.
Thereby increasing the chances the bad behavior will be repeated
by the child.
To break the cycle of battles, you have to keep yourself
mentally aJert to bow important your reaction is to your child's
behavior. Consciously look for things, even little things, that your
daughter does right and give her attention for those behaviors.
Children your daughter's age like to play "grown up." Sec if
you can get her to play mommy nnd help you set the table, cook
dinner, make popcorn to watch TV together. You arc expanding
ways to give her hugs and praise.
Unless a child is about to cause harm to himself or another, try
to ignore a child's undesirable behavior. In time a child will stop
behaviors that arc followed by no reward or an unpleasant
consequence. In the meantime, if a child 's behavior warrants a
punishment, try not to over react. Have the punishment fit the
situation. For a 5·year-old, a 15 minute time-out consistently
enforced without your yelling or negotiating with her, is a good
option. Use a neutral place, like sitting at the kitchen table,
where the child docs not have TV or toys for the time-out.
For example, jumping on the furniture should not be tolerated
because your child could hurt herself and cause damage to the
furniture. In a firm but not yelling tone of voice, clearly tell your
dauihtcr the appropriate behavior: "furniture 1s for sitting on not
1umping on." And ask her to stop. If she does, take the time to
go over and give he~ a hug and 'lay thank you for li'itening to her
mother. If she does not stop, calmly but firmly tell her to go to
the kitchen for a rime-out. If need be, walk her to the kitchen.
Your ca lm. firm and consistent behavior is going to ha ve much
more influence on your daughter than 1f you arc yelling and
emotional.
Don't get discouraged. The very fact that you arc seeking
suggestions on how to improve your interaction with your
daughter is a big step I commend you for your effort.
THX • -CW. [HQA(MM(Hl _c-__ ,_
,_CWIWWt --~·) ~c.....--·,_ OH > tetlllHS .. :O.::.P .. t.~~Cf...h>O~.: ':,'"
(ll 001 JOO100 I 11
u• • IOCOOdl J ,.,,, U 1 $ t~ t )0
~DUO fftO 1P9U)(J 1~1 1 JO
-~ pUS') Ut 7 It 1211
INFOR~ATION LISTED IS FOR DATE OF PU8llCAT tON ONLY
·r,!l
·~
A lrlol ,.,.,. 1.9 ....... -...... " ... , ... o.wa ..-.~ ... lanUI." ..... ..,...,... ... ~
mt ..,.. t1lrM • littll IOUI'. I )Ill • ..... ,...rn. ....
tmow. 0-. man, llkb_tl ,.. '° ~IMr8ClltMttbe.._ w who biota lk wortcra recon1
far •t-well carila would now Hite
to brOak another woitd't record -
dUa time fOr ~ the lllOlt
buslndl cards. 1'hla mu ii one of
dozens of atn.aent. hlah~
AmericaM who are fuina · and
Chain·letterin& their rriCnck oa
behalf of Crail'• "new~" In
tho chain letter, Craia'• namo II
misspelled, his aae ii pen u 7,
wtjen actually he Is 11, and thO
address is incorrect. These erron
set off the alarm ail"ala in my
head.
l WoUld alio like to point out
tbat your buiiMll card. Wtrich
mOI& likely If 1t1 your ']' DllOne
number and addral, c:oUtCt fall
into tho wrona hands and bilCOme ran Of the mother of all il\aHinl
i,sll. Sharp.eyed 1cam
perpctraton. always on the alen
for suckers. may nau"' if you'd ran
for this. you'd faJI for anythin1.
Wed ding ~-----------·Desmarais steers LagtJna Art
Laurie and James Walker
SEWELL-WALKER
Laurie Ann Scwll and James
Lee Walker, Jr., both of Newport
Beach. exchanged maniaae vows
May 11 at St. Andrew's
Presbyterian Church in Newport
Beach.
For her wedding day, Laurie
wore a Cull length, fitted gown of
silk·satin designed by Scassi. Its
train was trimmed with lace and
pearls
fhc bride was attended by Page
Ewing. Bridesmaids were Judy
Steele, Kim Hayden, Edie Barvin,
Cissy Chandler, Barbata Reynolds,
Shaya Kirkpatrick, Carol Matthews
and Judy Pastore. Jennifer Bowie
was u Junior bridesmaid.
Sharing the honor of best man
were Chm Ball and James
Walker. Sr. Ushers were Tony
JJaia. Jeff Sewell, Chris Mann,
Kevin Hayden, Rich Hagy, 8ob
Pastore and Michael Jellclich.
Jamie Bowie was junior usher.
A reception for the 4SO relatives
and friends attending the nuptials
was held at the Four Seasons
Hotel in Newport Beach after the
ce remony.
The newlyweds honeymooned in
Phukct, Bangkok and Hong Kong.
They have made their first home
in Manhattan Beach.
The bndc 1~ the daughter of
Richard and Sandy Sewell of
Newport Beach . She is an
industrial real estate broker for
Cushman and Wakefield in Los
Angclc!i.
The bridegroom is the son of
Eleanor Brown of Emc~ld Bay
and James Walker, Sr. of Bel Air.
He is employed by Olobal
Strapping and Equipment.
Counter point to this soft
environment is the aalon interior,
which brinas the
"decon1tructivi1m" theme back
into the -'tructurc. Tho very clever
poaf tion of Flora's pc non.al hair
tylina chair, where sho can tee
and bo teen. provides a wonclfrfuJ
t~ntltion between the lower Ooor
and tho aalon. Very important to
the salon'• interior, it tho drcutar
From C1
was applyina. Alto, the bottom of
the top abeet did not ahr11Y1
~erlap the top :>f tho bottom
ahccL Becauae th~ city lntpector
was on our job lnr.pectin1 electrical
in tallationa that first day. tho
stucco boss ukCd him If thej
would be apprOYed on the paper/
Wf ro job. Since tho rmt third of
the job looked ,oOd, thi ift!pidor
~ed ii I •arced. Knowina thil.,
tho atuc:a> peorJc pulled up In
front of our h6use .,arty lhC tMrd
day *1th concre 1'lllW' ~
at mllcd a batch • ClODCftllt
thit Wll aoina to tits ~ ... • lie nm 11..:0 coet,
WWn thi fuU crw of tilr
WOften _. ftM in tM ~ I ... tMdJ for tJtem. I IOld Ill
Museum toward new horizon
"Every lime IOn\OOM Walka fn
the door or the Laguna Art
Museum, l want them to be
surprised,'' 11ys
Charles
Desmarais,
director of this
venc.rable
lnstitution which
also prides iuelf
as Orange
County's oldest
c ultural
establishment.
AJ Desmarais
and the museum
constituency look
forward to
LAM's year-long
" ....
. . ' • ~· ......
Ml mllatl&I
Arts
Scene
celebration of its -----7Sth annivcnary beglnnin1 in
1993, a key element of surprise
that does stand out thelo days 1t
the Laguna Art Museum ii a new
riaor of quality and excellence ln
exhibitions, education prop1U1\I
and recent acqui~itioos to the
permanent collection. Since hls
hitina as director nearly threo
years ago, Desmarais bu put into
place 1 hiahly profeuionaJ staff
whose talents and creativity
underscore his plan to prcse1H
exemplary ohibitlons of a
chaUenaing nature, such as "The
Cutting Edge: Contemporary
American Folk Art" exhibit which
opened June 1'4. LAM is also
presently going throu1h the
museum accreditation process, that
final stamp of approval which will
certify its profcs~ionallsm and
stature among lcadin1 museums in
California.
"We're latchJn1 up a notch in
every category," says Deamar3is,
"in terms of the q11ality or what we
arc doing, the design of the
exhibitions, corp:>ratc funding to
underwrite major exhibitions which
travel to other parts of the
country, solid scholarship in the
cataloaucs we publish, and
cxpailded adult education programs.~· 1 see the museum very
much like a university in that h
has research responsibilities to
give IOmethinJ to the field of art
as welt as givtng education to the
community."
Beginning this fall, Education
Director M.A. G.--:cnstcin (who
holds a Ph.D. in education) wiJI be
runnin& three 10.wcek art history
cylinder adjacent to her atatJon,
which contahu the .lllon'a beauty
supplies and work area. You
would think the waxed natural
concrete surface, unpainted ttucco
surfaces, black 1inkt and mirron
would be out of step for a blah·
end shop, but it works perfectly u
a aalon and especially 11 1
sur.ce 4'ul counter·polnt to the
"lacy" boutique. The use of
skyli&hll to allow natural light Into
the Interior it alao a welcome
surprise.
Flora, who I believe is a
1. hi~ of breathlcla (oar, that l
didn't liko tbn job don• by tbo
laburor and pointed out tho
defedt. It toot only a fc:w accondl,
COIDbined •Ith a IOok from the
owner"°" that cOukl have cut tJuoup seeel, to reaUzo that I WM
lri deep trouble.
After ~ I rcw aUoUtel of
verbal t>am&e in half Spanllb·balf
EltCJllh, I quietly (bec:auao I WU
deatMy afRJd) 1ugoated to tbe
owner that m.ybe we lhould h8"
_, friend, the city IMf**, mau
the itedlioft of who WM comet
concernln1 lht dffforonco of
opnion
Wkta that, ind a hard t1ar1 tQ
OM of the ~Cl he>ldfnl up the
tcaflDldina. Off the tmJre c,...
tra•ped, pick••• tap 1 ht
efl'I~ theJ Md )ult Carried la. n. owner must hM hid MOOflll
classes -"Introduction to
Modern Art," "Contemporary
Art" and the "Hbtory of Art In
California." These wOI be seriout
courses tauaht by university
professors at a nominal cost
compared to course fees at
coUeaes. Museum docents will be
required to take theao classes to
enhance their trainina and become
an even better resource to the
community.
When l interviewed Desmarala
earlier this week. he bad just
returned from Oeveland where he
and Greenstein had attended a
week·IOnJ conference of the
A11oci1t1on of Art Museum
Directort, an annual sympolium
which includes the leaden of the
nation's 160 largest muaeuma. And
apparently, the financiaJ trend for
museums actoa the country it a
dismal one. Deamaraia rec:ounted
that in one con~eren<:lO session,
when uked to ~ hands on
Which museums had experienced a
recent lay-off of employees, be wu
one of the only ones who didn't
~iao his hand.
"We ended last year with a
surplus of $97,000, whlch was the
fint time in a arcat while that the
museum was on an ~ keel
flllanc.ially. Of counc, that money
goes to ~n1 put billa, but it is
an obvious goal to IOmeday end up
that way and enjoy the fruitt of
our labor by usina the money to
adv:inco the museum. W• arc a
little ways Ctt>m endina this year in
the black, but we still have 1
couple of months to go and I am
optlmlatie."
A Utlle more than a year ago,
the Laguna Art MUKum opted to
structure itself without 1 chief
curator, and Instead hired Bonnie
Hall as associate director In charge
of 1dmini1tration freeing
Desmarais 10 also auume
curatorial duties along with
Assistant CUrator Susan Anderson.
Say1 Desmarais, "I'm not real
bot on hiring guest curators
because when you have your own
acholan in house, then 10'& have
people who have commitment to
the orpni.iatton, unified control of
the project, and a greater &Jory
fallina to the museum In the lon1
run."
As director/curator be fa
presently WOfting on h.ll mo&t
R~rnaissance woman, designed
both the interior and exterior of
the shop, selects the articles for
the boutique and at the same time,
has her own clicntcle, which If you
are lucky enou&h to hive an
apPOlntment with her, puts you
right into the center of the •bop,
providlna an excellent opponu1dty
to ICC all or tho action, fn
addition, thil upper lcwl area with
aJau 1epar1tin1 the two usea.
providea an CICICllcnt arena tor
f aahlon 1bow1 and apeclal
presentatioM. You really walk into
1t.ou,t\u becau be came beck
and an tt'UC1ed one of hit crew to
redo the job to my aat11f1ction,
then took tho rest of tho crew
IWI)'.
• Pitfall oo. 11: When )'OU open
your houJe to worken, you l:'e
OXJ>Olina cve,ythin1 '°"' own tn tM bouae to -.n.
I will COYCr JOme Of tho checb
and Mlanca to this problem 1,.
tha "Uvin1 In -or lnoW\1 ou1'' tedion, bill here iplft ( MW II
actual eq>e.ricl\CO to are Whh
you.
We had aub-contr.cted with a
~·=~to IMCaJl our MW --··~·~' Ind 10 9KM tome v 'Pfpt\I IO II
tMll! ftr.tunL
... did jDod WOrk. Mt llCend
hlply """" .. pc,.....,., ...
job WM 10 llM thrte -t Vt
Charles Desmarais
siplficant LAM exhibit to date.
Scheduled for the end of 1992 and
funded by the Fellows of
Conteporary Art, the alu'bitioo
deals with the croa-influencet of
photosraphy with other media In
Loe Angeles art of the 19609 and
'70s.
Other big new is that the
centerpiece exhibition to be
originated by the mmcum for tbe
7Sth anniversary celeb~tion In
1993 will be a John Mclaughlin
retrospective which has already
received interest from the
Hinhhom Museum in Wuhington
D.C.. the BaJtimore Museum of
An, Detroit Museum or Art and
the Albright-Knox. Mcl.au&h-lln an
abstract painter who attained
prominent recognition nationally,
spent a great, de.I of time (n
Laguna Beach and Dan Point
durina the 'SOI.
"The Laguna Art Museum's
interests and programs are much
broader now than just the
immediate Laguna Beach
environment, or just Oranac
County for that matter," 11)'1
Desmarais. "The chaft&es have
been rapid and dUficult for tome
people. However. our interactfon
with daily viaiton., the increue In
muacum contributions and the
enthusiasm in tho preu tells me
that the change has been ~ed
and embraced eothuaiutically. • ARTSPEAK -On June 29 at 3
p.m .. Charles Desmarais will pie a
talk entitled "Making 1 Museum"
at Five Feet Too Restaurant in
Nawport Beach in conjunctJon
with the Worb GaUory.
an exciting apace, when you enter
the front door, which only pl"OYa
that &ood tute, I keen CyO (Or
clcverne11 and a clear
underatandinf of interior apacea
can commeraally be successful.
I 11y hooray lo the courqe of
the Ao~ Hill's, the JacqueUno
Olm1tead1, the ffvo Crown
Restaurant, Beverly Hilb Savina .t
Loan and Maril Schell'• .(just to
mcnlion a few). That's really what
CdM is aJI about.
Slrnrt w.-.,,,, .4lA, ,. •
Nftp«t ~ arCMw1.
..... _. ubt1011blp. Wit•• Iris
---_..., letl c:.11 -'-' AP. MY ~ "°"'7'• Is dlo -or 1111 -Carl ......, l*IJ Is Indy ....--ID .. rid or'--TUlao ... Arti.111 ...... IO pt I I apia in l..uc:M' CU', Doan ...a
.,_ - - -priOoa IO I-pule.,._ IN WU. fall. ...,, _ .. -··fl·~ Wbllo --,,.,., '""" llollof Md -dodde IO -1bdoaln1I palo, K1llllHn i1
..ch Oohet -·Adam ii plc .. d CfOOftift& I --IO C... IO bl I port of Ibo leocMlloo aoUI ii.I ?Hit WORLD TURNS:
lie '"""-lie bu not ..., 110od Whco <;II bo..,.no the fact thtll
Erica up but 1 diem • weU. ·Lyla dc>ean't wan& hbn in bu lite,
Adllll tblo -oo Bria's l..iicinJa 11)'1 lhe'U bo only tao "°'* IO ............... ltld nlu blppy to tol<t Lyt.'1 Place. Mirao
ill Oil Erica IDd CM.rile, 11'1 warns Lyla about Lucinda 1nd """°"' Briel consldtn CharUe 1 Cal'• nowlound friendship and
''boy toy'" wbUe Charlie-ls real? in Lyla realii.cs 1be does hive ~ Owlio pilu IO win 1lnca'1 reelinp rru C.I. Althou&h he fcel1
-..n br .,uitinc her off to New their relationship has btouonied
Yorlt Oty. ~ lclmt lrorn Dr. tao quickly, Bob tclb Frannie 1nd
O*r that Emily Ann'• prean1ncy Darryl he will not stand in their
appcan to be tubal 1nd wilt hive way. Admi1tlng she re.illy cares for
to be aborted. Janet want1 him, Jessica warns Dunc.al) that an
Natalie's Ute1tyle -and her man. intcrraci1I romance could bring on
Jack telli' Brooke ju1t bein& I variety or problems. Holden
"friend!" isn'I cnou~ for him.. holda fut when KJrk pressures him
ANOTHER WGIU..O: Fe1rin1 10 JO alon1 wi1h his plan. Holden
T•)'k>r may still be alive, John and lclls Lucinda she has charla1an1
Shirlene worry about Gregory's working for her. At the
aafety. Ana,ry with C.ss because he •tock.holders meetina, Connor
hu chokn K.ath~en over Frankie., announces that she is the bola.
John fires Cm as his lawyer then Kim and Bob diJcuu divorce.
learn• bis catc ii going before the T ff .£ B O L D & T H E
srand jvfY. Forced to be. dote wilh B!AtJTIFUL: Julie tells Oarke if
Jake, Paulina is given loll of Oak he wants to continue their atf'alr
by the Cprys. Loma gets Jake a he must dtvoroe Sally. Oaimlni, to
job at O&M Productions. Iris tells have Crt;ative block, Oarke tells
Amaoda it . would be worthwhile Sally he needs to get away for a
(or her to have a private detective (cw days. Rcadina lhe manUKript
ch«k Mark out or she may be that was dropped off in her 'Office,
stuck (n another no·aood Sally realizes the main characler
JlldfllHP
lllRPll I lllcll
tAi90i\~1'0t I ....... M. 67$.JS70 ..... , .• ,1.•
..,..,. NIMOIT W 300 ..._.
C-0.... .. •.0760
I, .... ..._, !P'G-1Jl II lO, 2.IS, S 15. 8 1S
:l. -t1 J 11 .. 1 lf'Ol 11·•S. "l. •·XI, 1, ,_lO :a. Of ..._ ,-0.IJ) .12. "l JO. 5, f JO.
10 1S
toWAttD• llUIM C"IHllM ,...., .......
"""""'-' C..-...0 I 2 11
L ........ ~IJO.l tS.7.9•5
J • .,..,.... ~ ~ 1"1, 2.JO. s., JO. 10
J. wtwt Mtow1 ._., !'GI ll lO. 1 lO, J JO.
S4S,I , 10
4 • .,... y_.., !RI I )(), 4, 6 lO. f
S ...... T• ..... P'G-IJI 11 JO, I JO, J 4$,
6.8'15. IO:JO
............. ~ l"l JO. l . s lO ••• 10 1J
HAHOe fWIN ctNIM.U ,....... ..,.JI.. wa-
S... 6Jl .JSOI
1 ....-~11 4S,1l0,S IS,8.IO:JO
1 ~Y-.(1111.J0.2.•J0,1.9)()
MUACINUM ......... -....Jll'lhJ.i 646~5
,....._ & ~ It) 11 4$, 4. I IS n. 1 (l'G.
131 1,6.IS, 10-lO
TOWN CINT8 cwtMAI ...... c-..... 151 ....
L l.W..M9M ,.c;ll)11 IS.1,~ t
2 ,,. .... a ...... (1111 JO. 7, 4 JO, 7, t 45
J, S.:~ !f'G·llf 1 l SIS, 1 JO. 9 JS
't ..... T ....... ftl !.JJ0.6.IJO 10·45 . "
IOUft4 COAIT Jl'\AZA ~ .S-6 1111
1 hdl .... i~ll •S.~lOSIS.I IOlO
1 "'9 hell-fl'O) 11, 1 JO, S, I JO, 9 •S
J 0tr llWll-. i"G· !JI 11 lO. 1. ' XI, 1. 9 lO
IOUTH COAlf \1UAOI """"-"' "' llnoiol S•O
"" 1 ............. , fl'Oi 11 lO. 1 lO.] JO.
5 45,1.1015
1 ~--rci 11.130. 5,, )(I, 10
., I •.~,-O t:Jfl ,J J,7·1S.t -20 • J AW.-U.... ... ....._.~ 1 4.1 .
"
•
UDO aHIMA "'-'°" Ill-cl ot ~ V-... ,,, 1350
---~l'G·llll .4,1,10
'°"' nMW 190$ t C-~ 673 .. 1.0
rMM ........ "ltJO, • 45. 7, •IS
1:1111 Mia
...... C-.. CIMfR "1101 ~ 11.d I
MMeV...C...,f1'·•1•1 I n. Polll •S,"l,•J0.1,f JO
2 0., ....... ,0.. l l) I 2.JO. l , J JO, I.
"" J atr ....... '°·Ill II JO. 1, 4 ». 1, f ·JO
'· 1ht IMlf lei fl'Ol l2:JO, l , 5.30. 8, 10-15
IDWMIN C9ttMA HM. N .J ............... S<ol6·
"" ...... ~ l"O·IJI 10 4$, \,JO, 4.>0, 7.JO.
10.15
CLASSIFIEO INDEX 642-5678
~...!'!!:.!'!!:!' 1111 --,.... l •l-0170
I o,tr,., ....... ~12.1'l0.$.1JO 10
1 a., lllclr9fl "°1Jl i1.JO. J. $.JO, e .• ,.,
l Qly Mctr..s 1,-c.1 31 1t •5. 115, ••$,
115 t •S
• .,....,_,111:11 >0. 6~.9 s h ........... (1:)11 .J0.2.•J0.1,llO
.. AtDI HUHTIHOfON fWlft llS•l -SI •••·0011 I ......... ,._!l.)11,2.JO,S.!·"¥>.lO
1 n..-.aw.oi...(1)1 1 •s.1 1.JO,J,,JO
noM MOl\.TM OMM01 CO.
ntOM '°"'" OflANQI co. --
= ...... , 0 =-::..:-
-R's
... __ _ ............. -............... ---·--·-
•
:~~ ... Oata w, •brw llOpt rcadi•I Ille -.,-......
CO•I• -·· S1cpb11rio io111 Collwlj ...... the ...........
FU11 Mir. Mf&ch apw &o -a..-bul ... ~ .. Ito ii ...
altoad ..tth his plttM ., -
-cllc.M...u.a11o1t le
liar ,_,,, Mltcll -.......
cllildrcn 11• doittt fbio. ToJlor
tum• down Ridl•'• lnarrfatt
propoul b<cl-Iba -bo's
only doina It oo ...... llanut
lln>okc. Toylor Pet lllUo 1 key
to her ag::-L Bill MtUrea
Mara<> he 't want • dhorcc.
DAYS or OUR uvu. Sblwn
and Caroline are ploMCd when
tlley tum Kimberly wu only
prc1cndin1 to care fOr Lawrence.
Kimberly then 1nnounces her
plans to stay cklee to Lawrence
because lhe needt to find out
more about · hinl. Kimberly bean
Lawrence admit he raped Jennifer.
Tarrington stop1 Kimberly from
takin& the witness 1tand at
Llwrenc:e'a ripe trialJ. Realizing
Emmy lied about Bo and Carly
being Jovera. Victor has Emmy
kidnapped. Carly feels she's
gcttint dolcr to a cure for Bo's
virus. Bo 1u1pcct1 Victor poisoned
him. The foraer .of Bo .and Carly's
letters blackmails Victor. Jack and
Jennifer are leery of Eve's decision
to go to Africa with Frankie.
Although Eve Is willing to go, she
doesn't plan to leave without a
secret stash of e1sh. With Eve and
Jack's diyorcc underway, Jack and
Jcanlfcr think 1bout m1rriagc.
GENERAL HOSPITAL: Anna
does.~'t want a , big wedding, but
Rc)inn and Robert dream of an
a(fair with something old.
11'11111
1'HI UHfWISfn' ClfNMA 4245 c-0.-
9!•·1111
1 Dr"'9Y"""l lltl llJ0,3.S·l0.1.10 70 ) °""" Y--.i [I) 1 I JO. 2. • JO, ! , 9 JO
3 ,........ ra 1J1 11 JO. 1 '°· •JO. •JO. llO,IOlO '._..._ft!' JO.•l0. 715, 10
5 ~ ,_ f'G.13111 1 JO. S. 1 XI, 10
6 n..loM _.. 1-liM !II 1115. 1 •S. 5 15,
7•$,1015
WOOH .. DGI CtNIMAJ ~-,,,..._,., c..i-o.-5)1.065S
I at,Mldo-l"G-l:Jll.J>O.&,IJ0,10J5
2 ,,.....,_f'Gl11 •S J 1S,S •5.l!S. ,..,
l h llMll'cfwi ll'Ol 11. 2 JO S. 1.JO, 9 •S . ............ '° 1l) ,_, f.10
5 ....... .._.ro.l:Jl II 15, 1. 5.1
\0 JO
.,...... ......
fOUfifTMN v.w::n-1""' ~...._
''""" 1 a.dl...,11)!1 •5,1.JO 5 15.8 IOJO
, ........... (1'0.1J11,•.1.10
•NlllM.T '°"' atofllM 17161 ............... SI H.l """ 1 Qr ...... -.!lf ll •S,2.•lO.l .fJO
1 °'f ...... _ ~ t 15. 3 JO, S •S. I 10 IS
J ..... ,,.,_ fff? !"GI t1 •S. I JO. 3 JO.
5l0,1J0,9l0
• .,.,....,._,.11!1 J IS.SJO.ltS.10
., •• lllth
IDWAAOf IOV?N COAlf &AOUtU. tl6 S
c-1~••1,111
1 ...... ....._ l,-C..1 Jl 1120.1. ••S. 1.JO,
10 I)
1 °" Ukll-. "° 1Jl 11. 1 15. •JO. 1 .• JO
............ ~ ... .... " ..... .... ~ ..... -.... .. ... aa111t.-...t111tcm1•• ... ......... ,_ . llo....., -11• ... ..... aobert woniM .... rtrr•1
.,.._ aNltl -II ....., __ .,,.... ___ _
Ind Doainlp W Mllil ....
love for e1eb ......_,, kl
Leopold'• ho&d a. o ·r1 11
con11nuc1 to thwM .. .,...
Cl'OllCd to.en. ,.,.,,, ...... ...
irrc1pon1ible one, _, .....,
deeply touched' by 1111 -·· dCllb, tclb BIH he -ID lib
on -ome. • family r=••·
and enroll at lhe vn . Bill.
reaUzit11 Lucy wanu to Ft doll '°
him in order to Jive Nancy
information, hires u.c:y • b&
secretary.
GUIDING LIGIJT: Morco'1
arrivaJ in Springfield iatemapts
Francesca and Mallet'• time
loðer. france1C1 pank:I when
1he tees Mallet dining with Marco
and la further troubled tMt ftoler
may divulge Mallet's identity to
Man;o. EJcni'1 desire to be wilh
Frtnk is literally smashed when
the crashes his classic car. Alan·
Michael usures Harley he will
c:lcar her name from being
considered 1he person who leaked
confidenti1I information. Maureen
is bitter llibout her inability to
become pregnant. Aloxandra and
AJan·Michael come to realir.e the
w1y to get to Roger LI to get Davll
to tell the truth. Nadine
accidenlally tel15 H.B. and Vaness.a
that Billy plans to take over Lewis
Oil. Hart wondcn why Roger
continues to 'try and talk him out
ol tr' 'q' ... -.
LCMI0 ....... 8dT.-.. ... .......... Cllr ..
To• .. Y· Al11to•1ll at.• Ila• ~ Clofo "I I '"' riac. _.,-.. -·a..-
........ --Allr!I ...... llial. Awa't irrit.lllioll __. • ahe
I lplc.tt P1uJ ...,,. dae pnMI he
....,. with the -· Wiien Oay
tell Carly ho wuts -to °'"?'
II IDOG U pta II.It, lbe feats JI
-be •Pit ... An'1 aooo•io-
bl Dllplilb. ~ COUiltt hit pie thief, Lollie feela _.,. for tbe
bomeleN teenaaer. but Malt
doeao't trust Louie and runa off.
Abril informs the police. ahe
apoaod Oay at Monty"s the ..... t
Mooty Wit murdered. Rocky and
Rio now undcrltan'd they" mutt
trust etch aootber if their
marri•ac is png to -it. Tiiey
agree that neither of them could
have kmcd Monty.
ON!! UFE TO LIVE: Arrcltcd
for OuAnn'a murder, Renee fean
ahe will be found guilty. Mu and
Lee Ann 1eet comfort from one
'1notfier as they try to deal with
DuAnn's death ind Renec'i
am:sl Renee ts released on bail
but is warned by Rafe not. to leave
tow n . M a x a nd Asa arc
beleaguered when they learn 1hey
a re not falher and son.
Determined to find the real killer
and clear Renee's name, Tina and
Cord start their own investigation.
Carlo's private deteawe observes
Kevin and Stephanie "getting to
know one another" ln the park.
Kevin learns Stephanie is Carlo's
niece and asks Joey to keep his
friendlhip with Stephanie a sccret
from the family. Upset that Ale•
lied to Cassie about the true
.... ., -"' h .. .. .. " • -ailll 1 ""*-~ Mlfl'A u••At 0.. ._ __ ....,Ilk_ ...
-.it• lodPtltt-;1111•
die ...... Dia::-.. --"'-. -___ ......... _
llOI ....... h' I 1• b Mll't
clia6. OU 'b I u11 &Ma 1111
_to ... ia•--"' 1ce1 tll1 d1rt·betr1d airl, +'Sutt•••,.. paillda&. er.. ....
OD lM Weality o£ M••• ..
learns from Dieter die ' '11 ..
vrivlr& -IDtl <:.-.. a
fiabl fn pullli< '° oo -d
• ..,... ...., Ire llill -cc Is bcpnoiJll IO feel .._ IO Sopltll.
Altholtlb l'Rtcndial .. ..... for
Cassie, -ii -., ICotrinl.
Crail -to ..... I ytll fll<
Julia. Kelly's try 1t 1 famijy
rcconclli.tloa faill, but ahe tel&
Sophia the will COfttinue ber
effor11 to brina her famJJ)' baci:
toge I her.
THE YOUNG AND TBE
RESTLESS: Uneaty with Flo's
presence in Gene>& Oty, Nina
finally aareea to see. her when little
Phill i p wants to see b it
grandmother. Jill ii 1hocked. when
she learns Flo is Nina's mother.
Nina is stunned when Silva tells
her she has to pay for David's
funeral e1:pen1e1. Olivia is
u.ndr:rstandin& when the still·
rccuperatin& Nathan caa.not
consummate lheir marriage. Not
wantin& Victoria to know she hM a
drinking problem, Nikki doca: not
, a~r dau&}lter to move bKk to
th.nch. Traci ii lMd when abe
spots Brad givio& Ashley a
comforting embrace.
rr.H;;o=s=:=t =;:F;=am=::il:=ie=s rr-;:=:R=etf=111=n=ae=n:;::.t=I.M==ng======:::::::::::;
Needed Now! for Acdw Seniors
KMma bm
Sweden ii one
o1_,.
lntcmolioool
seudonra who
a.dlaClfin&
holtf..,;Jy ............
,... lnreturn
rcw f'OOm tnd bolfd, Kaaina waru
llD lharc ha' cuh&are, ha' warm
penonalily Md her muere1t1.
-· ................ will be .n ex.cilin& e~pedence b ~ .n.
ramily. Dilcover lftOcher C\lltur•
wilhout lu¥iftc homo. T\lm daily
ramify -=Uvitiel inlo inknatiGMI
adv~ And 1ain a llplCial rrimd ror lir •.
For deiail• pleae caU nor.
0< 1oll-fJcc 1-800~SHARE
EF EF Ed-.calM.al
Foundation for
Foundation Fortian Sludy
a rtlHt.·/Hofi1 01"1tJ1ti:a1io11
. Our Sunday Brunch is
"The Talk of the Town!'' Give
it a try, the tab is on us .
Call . for reservations.
Soulh COi5I Seniar
-------lndude5 CUC.I
IW'uMe u :
•Ml.Id and Ur.en -eOally AcMlel
•Soctal Excursiono
eC!laull0tnd
r ranaportatton
•European cuisine
<Fully equipped
Klt~....... sa~ ...... ,.., ....
·VILLAS· -·· (7te) 646-6300
2283 FGlrYlew Rd., Costa Mesa
From North Orange CCMAnty
From South !"ange CCMAnty
540-1220
496-6800
642-5678
l , ' t I r .1. 1 1 l.' J
I
l'OOl llOlll
18A 28A + pool ........
a11 Aaoert "--
Oo not d'lturb
T•l'l•rrta.C•lt ror "''°"""; c..,w..i
•t4141
llWl'T llTI MIU
"flt'tor ... 11-.c>ul: • BY 0WNM. _. , ..... Ctfftt Twn..c>own··. Oln rm, Mlflnl\ • .._,,.
... ..... ........ hofM '" .... Migtto _,. 1~ "° GOm-borttd ,,..,. ~
_. ,, • • ••10.000. p..,. ""'olOerr •• a hi 000 MltMr \"•... .. ~. .., ... -. •e s1a1•r). sa•a.ooo. ... Open HouM SM/lun ( "" .. n...n. ,... 11"~41 c.,,n. --·-. 1Mwtar--.Olll Clfd9 ...... 905'
.... fM'r -· n• WALK TO 9Clll Hr T ... O#ntf!!lll. 1~ .. + lg chn. OWC
OPEN Houk 8AT/ ~ ~~
SUN , .. , lltl '
Al.DU' .••• ~~
r9'potnl Twntn a M.
1-.. BA. ......... Aat.!iii-==::~=::--............. 5 """'IOCllll
lll1 .. 11•ttttl7.-CU••••• 4"' ~ •l:'SIOE ENO ufriTfr .....,., tlOt"9 ~ 2 .. 1ry. a matr llf', "'"'· ~ ..., '""-.i-...... -·--· 131-HOI..... .... •••• .,., ••• t
... IUlfl I • M .... ~OOIUI --;A~ L-'llRf~---11 ftOW .,.... ........ ..., """
• • prtoe thlll ,...,_ NIJEDIC 1 IRI
bullfff'• c1oal9-0utl llil Tli·t-Hr Na. daslprw ((Mf"tl ........... ~~ ... ,
...... ~a...
.. ML.AndWln!
....... 1'111
I ... Ind our hid-
de• claaalfl•d ads
......_. In our c:lwi-
W ledlan. Cut and
.,-. thl .. on the .n·
tty blank Ind mad.
2. AD .ntria mUlt .-rive by Thursday Noon.
3. WlnMr Will be chosen by random drawing and wlnnen name will appear in
tM folloWtn9 d8ys paper. One winner per week.
4. Contest wil run 5124191 -7/12/91.
I 'I H\ IU.ANh
Name .~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Paste Ads Here Aildrae ____________________ ~
Phone~~~~~~~--------~~~ Paste Ads Here
M..a to: Dlliiilr fof 2 Contelt, t/o Delly Pllot MO W. Bey St., Costa M ... CA. 92627
•Spa •Pool •View •.WaterfTont
***W...,,,ont and Poot
,,_.,Give Add,_. at Guard Gate
HOMES
FOR SALE
2 BR plu1 FAM RM or DEN
.,...., RIM MllfMlllM, Big Cyn, NB
842-6200 $535,500 Sat/Sun 1-5
**2804 yfayett• AV9, N B.
873--3777 11,395.000 ~t 6 Sun. Hi
**57 Belboa COYM (S.lboe Cove.a) N.B.
975-8181 1915,000 Sat/Sun 1·5
•.,..17 e>c.an vteta. Sea l1lend
&M-4200 1737 ,600
821 Ina, Corona def Mar
721-0343 S351,000
Sun 1-5
Sat/Sun 1·5
3 BEDROOMS
**2HS E. Oc...mont, N.B.
&73-3n7 $1,250,000 Sat/Sun 1·5
208 Cryai.I ( + 1 BR hH) Balboa 11
875-4000 '840,000 Sun 1-4
,... • ••229 Em.,ald Bay, Laguna Beac::h
75&-9100 11,385,000 S.VSun 12·5
• 507 J St, Penln. Point, N-port Beach
75g...9100 15215,0000 Sat/Sun 1·5
19871 E1tuery Huntington Beech
868-9333 S216.900 Sun 1-5
3349 Lupine. Costa Meae
fl88.9333 $293,900 Sun 1-4 30
3424 Sent• Clare, Coate M• ..
868-9333 $259.900 Sun 1-4
469 Westmln1t.-r, N.8 .
842-0eeS S385,000 Sun 1·5
3 BR plu1 FAM RM or DEN
• •.,..347 Emereld Bay. Laguna S..cl'I
494-5792 Sun 1·8
1aoe Hanow Pl, WHtcllff, NB
642-5200 $599.000
2101 va1i.v Rd, Coata M• ..
842.eed4 $359,900
•
Sunday 1·5
llVllL Y HILLS ITIALS!
3414 s .. bfMU Ln, Corona def Mar
721-1200 M14,800 Sat/Sun 1-e
3414 Seabreeze Ln, Corona def Mar
721-1200 1614,800 Sat/Sun 1·5
111 Via Udo Nord, Udo, ...
675-8191 $925,000 Sat/Sun 1.S
, • 26 vi.nna, Harbor Ridge er..t, Npt Beach
640-939e $879,500 Sat/Sun 1-6
.,...39 B .. cl'lcomb9r, JumlM Creek
844-e200 $549,000 Sun 1·5
.,..103 0cNn Vl111a, Newport Beach
720-0811 5869,000 Sunday 12-4
.,..2471 Manno, Baye~
844-45200 11....0.000 a.t 1-4, Sun 2·5
• 227 Evening Cyn, Sl'lot'ectfs, CdM 844-9090 11,795,000 Sat/Sun 1·5
•304~,CdM
644-e200 ' $949,000
1 7 341 Canne Ctrct., Huntington BMch
Sun 1·5
848-9054 $293,000 Sat/Sun 12-15
304 Onyx, Balboa laland
975--4822 $919,000 Sat/Sun 1-e
3281 Michigan Av• .. M ... V•rde, Co•i. M•N
241-7208 1279,000 Sat/Sun 12·5
4BEDROOMI
....... • 5 RIM Fontaine, Big Cyn, NB
721·1200 $1 ,199,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
17938 San Rafael St., Fountain Valt.y
ee&-1333 $389,000 Sun 1•5
2215 HHth., Ln, N.B.
ee&-9333 $595,000 Sun 1.e
4 BR plu1 FAM RM or DEN
•""'*1173 Klng8ton, Wlmbledon, CM 97~800 1415,000 Sunday 1.e
• 2227 Albutu1 St., l!utbluff, N.B
759-9100 1599,500 Sun 1-S
••2279 Twn, C.M.
891-9333 $375,000 Sat/Sun 1-5
1327 81~, C.M.
l44-90IO 1238.ooo aun 1 ..
1112 Port w~. Hett>or View Hma, N.8. au eoeo ,.eoo ...,..., 1 .. .
3816 ClltarnerM, H.,. View .... , OdM
844-90eO '831.000 Sun 1 ..
IBEDROOMI
404 lr1a, + Unit, Olde Cofone def Mar
807-4808 1759,000 Sun 1-e
MM Nlahtinaale. Fountain Valt.y ~-1284,900 Sat/Sun 2-1
5 BR pin FAM RM or DEN
•1411 KlnQa Rd, N.9.
831-1400 11,795,000 Sat/Sun 1-6
I BR plu1 FAM RM or DEN
TOWN HOMES
CONDOS FOR SALE
1 IEDROOM
.. 2BEDROOMI
..... *MO ~ #108, Vl1ta Balboa, N9
84&-8T70 1257,800 Sun 1-4
• .,....220 Nice #308, VIiia Belboa, NB
84&4770 1355.800 Sunc:ley 1-4
•• ,...280 CegMy #HM, N.B.
722-4380 &221 ,000
••""'1NSO Cagney #208, N.B.
122..aeo 1211,000
Sun 1-4
9un 1-4
••40 SMblrd Ct. N.-pott Terrac., N.B.
sa&-1681 1118,800 Sun 1-e
••733 Wingate Bey, SC Mwo WM. CM
......... lt81,lo0 Sun 1-e
••""'1l19 Haoilerftekt, ISayrldge, N.8. , ..,....... au.ooo 1un 1-s
••2330 V~101 , Nwpt t.nd. CM M2-UOO UM.000 ...,.._, 1-e
8llt/IUn , ....... by p/plllty.
•Ingle fhel. View home In ....... No
••• ,...101ScholZPIU11a, V ........ , N9
7$9-1877 1289,800 8und8y 1-4
33 Ima Loa Court, N9WpOrt e.ach '
840-7000 $251,000 Sun 1:30-4:'°
2 BR plus FAM RM or DIN
••""'290 Cegney Ln #120, VHla a.lboa, Na
721·1200 $299,000 &et/Sun 1.e
••302 lntr-s>ld St, Nwpt c,.at, NB
842-0342 S2S7,500 Sundey 1-e
•• ,... • 270 Cegney-307, vn Bal NB
842-6200 $435,000 Sat/Sun 1-e
3BEDROOMI
•410 Goldenrod, Con>na def Mar
873-84 ... $&15,000
•• ,... • 95 e>c.an vtata, ... taland, NB
721-1200 1719,000 8un 1 ..
* • .,... ... CWtY0n laland, Big Cyn, NB
721·1 IOO $489,000 eunctay 1 ..
DUPLEXES
FOR SALE
I BR plua 2 IR
TOWN HOii ES
CONDOS FOR RENT
•• •114t Ylata Entrada, 91ufta, N.8, 722-8ff4 la1N • • ...,._, , .. ,,
...-. .,.,.., .'"1Miiieiii•ii1i1•il"iaiiMiii•i1eir
l4lw MO, pOolil, ..,._ ,. ., .... din • ,.,.,
rm. 11,IOO/tnO. ~
21M315-111f 9St ~: LOCATIOllll w/Wtlnd 21W..1IOI
2llr l9a oondo, 2 011t Le.,•I• •••••eitle gw, oomm PGOU9Pe. ..._. I min from
Vacan1, 1181 ;IOO. ocean, 440 OahlJa • --.:it::t... ~~:!Y ¥;,:
I I • • ' I
, .
11200/mo . ln.etM wtcnd; • .,...... w!cdy
Nl!W 311f, fl'pt, d/W, W/d
hWp,~YleWI ·~--'0= ~ m:s/mo. 211.:::: ~ltl0.000 Good 47'70, 11 ..... , ......
... 87 ...... Aft NICE 38' 28&. trptc,
OO&iitii INWS-~ lleft>et c:.rpet,
TO A a a ft l!C I AL I _!l1!!10G1mo~~cetle~M~·!l•!!ala!r~--~·~ LMMd 2 ..... 0..
teched 3ldrm/18a OU>e COM. MR IM. ptue. Loea fllf lllfMN. yllld, gar. W/O, ..._,
.... lt1t,MO Mah. grdnr Ind. Yr ..... "°' detale, cllll Annie t17IO/mo. 944-1187 •t•tnt·t... lharJ) a dMrl tMtm.
1 \Ya, frplo, paUO,
MW OWJ*9, W/d. lt(lt
9401•tt1471mo o••• 1/f.-yb1Ntc11
90~~'*-.,, ~ hOUH W un .... lite & f1try 1M, den "*"· 13+ ..... and 1 ......... 7u.o711 Nm. 40 mllM .... of •
P011911hd, 1 hOur ftom ..,..,, In ..,. ooun.
try. Po11lble .ubdM-eton. •1•.000. low
..... (toi) ..... ,.01
( ' t ' ~ , I ~ I 1
•3M 2~ .. twnh9e on 8klft nr bc:tt 1480 elf.
dbl gar, fnod yet, ..,.
11221/WftO .......
....._ Vercl9 twnhouM
BM.BOA PALM9. I bd, 29r 18a. W/O ~
.,...,, ber ., oc ~ • := -=~ ~
'"'° NE'Ml'Ofn 8HON!a • ~ .... llONU9. LIV
tmo aCl' Iii 1 I bd & :t8r ... condo. pool, den -11900 paillo, gar. ,... ,.,..,.
8HO .. ICLIFFS • helm. 11190 • .....,..
ONnNna a bet twn -•UiOiOUI 1M laloo N '*-8 • fMlllO. lfMNI! Tl!M. • 3 bd El9c ...... lllnt Npt ....
"-· ~-·. loc. MOQ(mo, nlptlt.
EXCWSIVI! 8AYFRNT 79CM)1•, ltl HSI
1'M> bd ept ..... --... &-·· -dub ~ ... l9A t.allA end unit wl
--__. • poot. ...,. oerP9l a _,.,,, -· apa. gym paint. a cer gw "9-a prtv~roo beaott. cam. "ntmo. · ...,
~ -. .... 797
RENTALS AVAILAal.a -..._. tn ..-11
•Id• neighborhood. w .. ..-°"' HoMM tno. Qanige. ~ a 9"IOI
"'-""'• beOICyWd. ..... -UM400, TeO-MOO ReeM .. t•e MOO mo.et• 110.
RAal9tOC C.M. • 2 tity, 3 ... a M din rm, I • ao home, la pe1o a car ' ..,, ~ ...-. '**1cct . -.OOQ/mo. y.rd oil1IO ... ...,,.. " . o...., ~ ,..'ttlOO.' ...... , .. ...... BAL90A ~M.Ma • 2 _..JM. .,..,, a CW gar,
bd, '*'°· -. 1 00 lndry htcup, Oukte-~. ltlilO aec. ll'•lnttew ... 9'er. ~ ~H • 11aoo ow.. 141.1114
~ S bd &4MIMMe..._.det cten·-11800 Mw. ....,. ..........
8HO .. •CL.,f'8 • new pnt ""°"'-It.a. ~bd hm • .......,...,.,,111•••
~ TIIM I M ••iliiUI .. ,_, .... ..,_ -..;... ..... ,.. ..... to .... ' llbdt> • ... ........... d/W,
DQ UlfYI MVf'Nff P*" ltlOO. -·-1We~ -·~ .......... 1~ ......... , ......... 14'0ry ......... . --.~ .................. , ..... . 6 ,rtvete bHOtr. ......... t"OClf .. ,. ,.... ,p 11UW1M11ia
IW•IMFMJlf8' -. ei& 4"8 'W
...rM.e MWI MU cs;;; 5,."' ..... . ,_. .......... " ~ .. ~,..,: ··~·
•
,_, -" you ... .,.. ....... • AM9 "'°"' ~ ..,_ .,... ~·· ...... I-9WM, II. ••• 1IO, ...... ,,., ........................... ~
.... 11' I .... ... ...... ~. da9n, ..._,.,..... ........................ .. .... --..... .. "' .. ...,...,, ...,, ftllth fft "°"9· W ttelght, H-39, ro-
you'l'e ... """'........ ........ ~ ........ ll, »al, -.,... ettlp •nd "'or• • ................... •"•· ...... 1 ........, ....................... .._. _____ __ ...................... _
,.... 41179. .......... 9 -
D~lE{INE
A -•f(t .. "'-C_...,,.,
liljliii ..
NALS
USE THIS FORM TO PLAC E YOU R FREE PERSONAL AD GUIDELINE S
PRINT CLEARLY: (first three words are bo6dtoce> 25 wOf'd maxrrn.n
•
FREE ADS ARE MAIL-INS ONLY
All Coll-Ins Wiii Be Charged Regular Rate.
_) r J F : ( 1 t r J T I ,\ , . r. ' -i. ~ ' ,\ r • •
I
~ ---------------------------------
CfTY: SW'E: ZP: ---'NI~-·· ......................... yow .................. .... .... ... .. .. ,., ..... "' ... .,....,.. .......................... .... .........,.,. ....................... '¥ ... a ,.u-... -.. Y• wil ...... . ................ ,, .................................... ......
... "'" 111 ...... .., ,......
l
R A 0 E U IC
I I I I 11
U N RU P T·
11'1'1 I
T H R I H E
I' I I I r
I ,.a:I O Complete th. ch~ qw..d
by filling In .._. mllllng wOidt
_ you d .... elap from INp Ne>. 3 beloW.
I
1· r r 1
I I I I I l I I
.ll JO S3t:ln.LD/cl
kl/ t:l 3/t
.L/1Vt:l3H
Nt:1n.1.dn
3t:1ndtv1
t:l3>WOO
Ol.ld3S
Sl.3?·WVl:JOS
01 SUMSNY
!TODAY'S SUNDAY PUZZLE!
ACROH
.. ,
, Opreh.
swoductlon
c:omp9ny
6 I.mo. -. amat
10 "Ain't That
?'
16 Fio-part
2 1 LOYe affalf
22 CO llcl reaort
23 a.man prtsoo
camp
24 IA villege
25 Eaatwoocl role
27 CWefrM
29 ''-a aong
go OUI
30 Nothlno more
than
3 1 Cloeel lnMCt
32C...room
33 -de Frence
34 Pro
35 -· pal
36 Bteufaet
ChOIC8
36 'Roeie the
40 UNd to ti.
4 1 Tree trunk
42 l.nlmat penc
44 the
remparta
45 On>g u-
48 Cu tle fHture
49 Br•ndl
51 lnvuion1
55 Not con11nec:1
56 Hea
57 Plt11burgh
team
59 Fil of anoer
60 Chilli and
'-61 Cireie of
light
62 Wint..-111"""11
83 Den
65 f.uto ee M wble
87 NonMnMI
88 Grit'
89 1992 Olympte •11• 71 Heg
73 Yard fraction
7 4 Soviet ,_,
8g9t>Cy
75 Stored
~temellcally
76 Freedom from cat•
77 Shine
2 3 s
78 Gaep
79 Money supply
90 Conl\IM
82 Look for
83 Felrway cry
84 M ath courM
87 "Pellca.n
State
89 • Lo...es
Mambo
90 Out of the
storm
91 Ignited
92 HIH builder
93 Story
IM Two-*""'9<
95 loemUI
98 Lion aound
97 -obliged
99 Tell
101 Boas!
102 State(•
prloe)
103 Diff..-enl
105 -double
106 -hamm..-
107 toe-<:rnm
trNt
108 M al Cle
110 Youno man
111 VIC11m
112 Humor
113Extreme
117 Ogled
119 Sing Ilka Ella
121 Unhappy
t 24 Metrle uml
125 Falaehoods
t27 Sult to
128 Upon
129 Nastese of
tenn11
130 DaY1tme 1oap
133 MeglC words
135 IL C•ty
136 Vent
137 Donna or Ru
138 Alma
t39 Perc~ve
t40 W1the>ul
rastroet1ons
14 t Monlreal
pl eyer
142 Slockholm
nellve
DOWN
t rve
2 A m1s1 l1 a1
good .. --
3 Com!><>Mf Ned
4 Gr~ ttrolla
5 l<•CI of tau
6 --oarele
7 -Gibbs
("Florence I
8 Bl'eezy
9 StaJtone 1
nlelmeme
10 On lend
11 Condition
12 U~temattc
13 High mountain
14 Buet>all s
Wlllle
15 Actress
Samantha
16 Idle talk
17 Fltghllus
t>lrd
18 lmplieel
19 Foot-leg
Conn«:ttOn
20 cake
26 Ltl1
28 Mixture
31 Thew
35 Walk back end
forth
36 Wheedle
37 Londa CA
39 HISIOrl(
perlOda
•O -up become
a .... era
41 Sonny
43 Live longer
than
45 Gentle 15
46 Motherless
call
•7 Type of r()()e-
JUmpmg
48 Dairy product
49 Maka angry
50 Roebu<:ll I
partn9r
52 Truman Capote
book
53 Actreu l<aaton
54 Valuable
YIOllf1
~ Tarzan • mate
57 Sultl
58 Commend to 1
Clog
6 1 Actor Cronyn
82 Scatacrow 1
enemy
84Haven
87 Moll
contemptible
88 Seized
89 CufM
70 Toe the -
72 Artie!
Selvedor -
11 12 13 ,.
73 -market
7 4 Scarlett 1
homa
77 MlllllfY
Olli<*
78 Vattcan heed
79 Run away
80 San l.ntonlo
lendmark
81 Popular
putry
lnlorm11
82 Dinner course
83 Counter1eot
84 Slee>t lllle --
85 Lariat
86 a poem
lovely u - -·
88 Author Fleming
89 Sympathy
90 There ought&
be ..
9• us national
b<rel
95 Brawl
98 Smalleltol ,,,. "" ...
98 Half pref
100 Iranian COin
10 t Ran. 11 colors
102 Gove up a f<>b
104 Lie d°"'n
106 l.ctress Summer
107 1955 Kentucky
Derby winner
t09 WNlhet word
111 A11rac11ve
t 13 Expraues
anger
114 As
genafally
t t 5 Condascenel
t 18 • -mutton
118 Merman or
Watere
119 Cllffllkt
120 Modern apl
1;? 1 Blackbo¥CI r.
kin
122 P0<nted (a
weapon)
123 Tractor name
126 01spar901ng
remark
128 Summt1
129 Tha LUI
Time
Parll"
131 I.way pref
132 Follower euff
133 Mine output
134 German river
17 11 11 20
••-.• n Get~ to-ctuM by o.tttng "Olel+Word''
at 1 • • -Ind entering ecceee ooc:te numb« 511; Mt infnute; Touch-Tone Of rotary phonM. . --
Good jobs, reliable Mrvlces,
intereatlng th Inga to buy -It'• all
there every day In cla11lfted.
'fonrt1n, June 2J
rl'd. l>itnsr>n Astro-Pronlt: 1 cd
()Jn" r ( .iprirorn (Dec. 29, 19.C7)
1.: k' '"'in 'l•f, •~ "1u1 rounded" by P""~r Capr1c:orn (Saturn),
1111mh, r 14 htrthp.ith. m.1stcr number
11 ~C\11olc. With tbc 11 kc)'nOlc, II
w.i' 111 he c \fX:etcd rh" popular 1crvr
woultl hJVC ;u1 unorthoJcH
ch1ldhooJ There were 11 lor of Hopi
.ind N,1\,110 lnd1.111\ 111 my hfc when I
lhl\ .1 kid my f.ither wa~ head of a
mu,cum 111 l la~,1o1rr, /\r1z.' Dan'IOn
g11c\ 11n to \:1y, 'It was n;ally an
idyll1.-~r11" 1ng-up." Ted Danson
m.ikc' "h111 news" In Ocrobcr, lxllh
rrofc\\t(lll.111~ .and pcr\Clnllily
>\Rlt.~ (March 21-Aprtl IQ) Ynur
ncgoti.111ng po)111on" t) ~trong
lndt\lduttl\ "who t;Ounc'' rc•hzc you
h1wc '(1111Clhmg IO 'llY and tlt'ph1y.
When: prcv10U\ly there wa' no
'P·•CC 111•" other• bid for V\•ur
\Cn.IC'C\ t<1lcnt'
TAL RliS (/\prtl :?O·Mt1v 20) l 1ght
•'PfHOilCh rc~ulb 111 "gn1f1c:irnt It·""
F o c u ' u n ho m c. ti 1 p h1 m .tc: y.
rarcncr\h1p, mJrtlJI )talu' ki1<1I
VIClllf) You lHC HSurcd or
J<ld11tun11I ru111J1ng \1111thcr I 1·iru'
pl.1y' m.1,1or role
CF.MINI (Mil)' 21·Junc 20) \.\.h,11
h.1d hccn 'hogged 1.h1wn" \uddcnly
'11rf.1cc• I h1\ rcwlc' in mnrc
.111lhOrtl\ rnr lr(\U, fC\UmJllt11n of
r.1, .. un.i 1, rclJ I ll•n,htp 'lcw'
,,,.:1vctl c11nccrn11111 ha"c "'"''·
'r11pl11\mcn1 li1c1dv1
< \'\( rR (June :it-Jul\ .2.1
'\p,·1l1,h1 1 11 m:i111r tl•c ,11111,,
I c 'l'lln•1h1l11v. nCW\ ClltlCC rn1111
d· .11tl111c Chnk p11~mcn1,, inc:lucltn£
11'11r 1nu .ind morl11"1?e .. w1om11h1lc
1 .i dntr1.-1t) Older 111d1\1d1111l
' 11 .c1nc.:rn1ng li:g.11 righl'
11 0 (Julv :>l-Aug 2~) l~1na·
111.l1 ng n"1gnmcn1 l·tll he
"mpklcd He~ull prove\ hc11cf1\.1¥I,
\11u l111olc1 become "proper!\ ciwncr "
I •'H rrl.1l1lll1\h1p nuumhc' de,r1h.·
"'" •e.r .1ph1l8I d1Sl1111C• /\rtl'\ f1JUIT\
>rt •11lll1Clllly
\ ll<C.O (Aug 2_, !)cpl :!2) Strc"
11.1r1111:, 1111glr111ht). 11wcn11vcncu.
l<l l.llt\l " voluble. 1c,llc", 10 need
111 rd 1~.il1on You'll he a'kcd lu
p.11l1\11"ik 111 pru1c<:I rc4u1nni ~hurt
lr1p 1'r.1llC'I your 111tcrt'I'
LIKRA ( cpl. 2J-Oc:t. 22): ln1u111vc
intellect "uvc\ lhc day." Inner
fcehnJ!> pro,·c accur;ale Former
advi .. cr 1111111 scanJ by de)pllc
~pre1tdm& or can11rd Money will he
rclcim:ll, you'll he vind1calcd
Aqu.m;an tn\'Of\'Cd
SCORPIO <Oct H-Nuv 21)
Check rcfcrcnrn, 11cc1;n1 rcM:arch
<1nd 111vc,11ga11on T1m1ng on lt1rge1.
vie"' 'c:r1f1.:J /\cc:cpl sucrnl
111'11u11t111 -~11u'll "'''' rcacurcd ruk Kc\ " hunwr. dl"cr,1h~.111un,
1r.111)por1.111on
l\A<>l ITARIL'i 1'J11\ 22-lkt: 1 1)'
Rcfl.ttr work s•'t' done curlv
r.m11tht Ir 1111rc' 1ntnsm·. gl.in1<1ur
nccc'"'" h•r d1'l:rc11or1 Y11u'll loe;111;
nm,1ng. ~C\' punk Jlll'Cl"' f 111 1n1t1
pl.Ill I .1uru,, Scorpio 111 picture
CAJ'IUCOR1' (l>n :!2-J,1n 19)
\l.1nv 1.Jc~m.) lulhlktl 11s rc,ulr of
"rtllcn "ort.l · Sc<:n.mll fcJlurc
1r1p\, ""'"· n1r1a11on lhllt could
hccomc · -..:rwu\," Porul.ml\ ra11ng
rontmuc' upwnrd Gem1111 f1&urcs
prom111cntl)
"Qllt\Rll \ (}1111 20.Fcb. IS).
L1vmii qu.Hccr' "l•1t1k thfkrcnt •
F,mph""' 11n dumt:\lrc .tdJu,1mcn1,
J c\lgn. ~olor, flower Jrrangcmcnc.
( nnr1J~ nee rc~rorcd ., fin.111c1.1I
picture hr1ghtcn • L1bru pl.iys
11ul\t.indmc role.
PISct.S (t:cb 19-Murdi 20) You
h.tvc 11lm\r.I everything your own way
-you'll prove worthy Define lcrm,,
l'Crfcc1 1cchn1quc,, streamline
procct.lur c,. Lona distance
communic.iu~m relate~ to cducatmn,
pon1hlc cwcr~c11~ .1oumcy.
t•• J UNE lJ I S Y OU R
BIRTllOA'\': You MC dynamic,
c:rc111tv" rC\llc' • 01rtat10ll , c3r-ablc
11f g.untnA .i• result or wrnin& 11lcn1
Gemini. Virgo. S•&11tar1u~ pcr~ona
pl.1y 1mport11111 role• rn your life
DurinJ luly yuu ore pulled m l\\O
dircct111n, -d1kn1f1'J rclarc' tu
family. l"''""'c i.u,111e~ venture
Alntmt •II ""' m1nu1c 11n\wcr ClllnC'&
J\ rc,ult of d1ancc cnwuntcr. Saci11l
·•lt1"tl1n ••c~clcr11tl' 111 Augu I
}<t>u'll hi: "cn~11111c concerntn& tlcxly
1mt1gc 'uu'll trii,cl 1n CXtobcr.
mcml>\:r or Opf>ChllC 'n lltltll ma~c
"tlccl.ir.11m11 uf IU\·c."
When looking for a full-time iob, 1t
tokes practically no time to check the
opportunities in clouified.
Try the classifieds. What's iunk
to you is o treasure to someone
else. For only $8.52 you get
4 lines for 3 days. Call t~.
642-5678
--------
-~ ""1"89 .. , , , ..
WiiffliilD
11 IO Ofll' lllCMMNI ···~-· ,. ~
9ony.No~
1 hdroomi -101-... ...
• ...
.. • ••
= !
I
d
• 90
I • ft
••
I
" '·
-[
r
I
)
INCRIAll
ftlUR RIACH
TllROUGll
OUllllW
\ •I '
Cl· I' ''I "•i l
l . " I I I I
ToitP•Cl"'•"'ove Lawne, .,,...'°""I> 751-3471 . '. ·, IMF.llOVID • ,,.,.. ,..,. ..........
LOWiR RATll ~ s;,:.,~ ~WIG TUMllQ by tr·
A pr• • SeacJ/8od V9r'9 Resident. ~ //Orlnw•v•-t»•tlo • P•Mcae-GATae. Since 1973 (473114) enc.e A~. Call
. ' '' , ..
( .. r '" .>~
peths e>tc. No tclb IOO ............ ....._., Bob 141 ezee Aldc a•-.Ont. NNll. ...... u.. .... Olds ......... CM,te.
S Mlcby 538-0553 Jlm Whyte 142-7208 A-TEAM OAAMHI 2.IO ptl' ..., ORTIZ CONSTAUCTION ~::;a•:~:-&:
That'a AU. ~ PtlY M~ P• s.tv. 142-3921 for t~. Pllint.
• .._, »dlr "**'-"' ~ -. 549 3088 *** RlllODIUllO ausv ••• a...-.a
In .. OUAUTY CONCRETE Cuetom wortt. Elec.· Uc/bonded. Match
SERVICE Orlwwa~atioe .ec Carpentry·,,..Plumb.· any ed'orerUMd "'-·
All typM. tlS yrs exp.· Fences. 1<1111899-31 ti Speclal r .... on Yard/ DIRECTORY John 7&4-0183 ........... PAIR• .. .....,, ~~the
HOLIDAY RELIEF
TLC for ~ a plant•
OC home owner t 2Yfe Xlnt ,.,.. 751.a56
P l.1"11'r
RPp,m JHRO For ~ lnformedon R..,... PAOPER'Tl£S --------CALL TOOAYll Palnt.carpentry4'c.· DROUGHT R"lstant lnWxt. patc:h ptatertng
AIK FOR Drywall Glfy845-5277 Matnt., 6 tun ser.ttc:.. eu..tom texturing, quality • Fac•·Uft. lrrlg•tlon, ~ Protllems-No ~ CANDY .&ACK K-tnmY TILE •HANDYMAN• cotor. quality care • i.m.1 132W4. 554-7831
Your 6 MARBLE. INSTALL Bio & llN ,.,.,.._.. 91* ll'lordl>bll. Qwtl 530-3213
SeMce ow.ctory + AEPAIA. All typee C.. INoe 141'.o1IO . Duat(I LllWft llalftt.
RepfaHmdve of Pa.,.,.. Wuhtng • 1 CALL DOii IT ALL Monthly/Wkly or 1 842-4321 5".llng. 4 t 7 -6MS Oen. contractor •t time. Ffel 9ll 24 f.t tMO
R"..& 310 THE ORIGINAL h•ndym•n prices. Landec8pe Remodeling lliiAI -H• .... _ TILE 1i1a11 Small & lrg repalra of Speclan•t•
.,_ ..,. -fencee. patloe, pfumf>. R .... 8ndacape w/color
IHky ehow•ra·Acld Ing, elec., ptqter, dry· An pha•ff Landacape PUlllJC llOT1CI wuh A r-orout. N-wall. lntl•>Ct painting, Crea1Mt 0..lgn ~ Ceftf. PubtlC Utm. & Repair Bethroom• kitchen. btlth remodel l'l••lble w llhln
"-Commleeton, Al!· Shower doore Kite· & additions. Li e:. weur ..... ti
QUIRES tt.t .. UMd, Aoore-Plumblng Uc. '8tt17, Aa8 8SM900 &45-7505; C27-35395e
houeehold good• 25y,. O C 9 73-*>95 All ~lei a comm'I R01t'8 GARDllltlMQ
mover•, pr1nt their Tiie & Mert>te ln•tall A '99&"9 a "*1t . ......_ Oualtty yard caretr ...
P.U.C. C... T nurntMr, repair Prompt Mr· ..._ & ,..,......... r•t ... 12 yr eicp NB/ ltmo'a a c:NIUff9ur'• vie•, rr .. ••t. No Job Ref9 8¥91 ..:t2-M27 Cd ::" "* T.C.P. ~ too 1ma11. Frank • M only. 831•1872
In .. -.,.,.._ Turner, M7·1963. ::!.. ~~ THI OREO ICENI "**" If you ,_...,. a Tll.E I taned/Repal ed Apt ......... Wa cen UM!-T~ qu11I011 ~ lhe ... na,.. ___ .~ . h__......_ ___ ...._ .....__ ....... kier 1n8taR11t1on ~of a rnov.r, llrno ~ ....__ ~ _,.... -•J'w•w"' _...,., .,....,
or ch•utfeur, c . Fr .. flt. I Aefel•icea of a meJot ~. Tr .. Tr1rnmlng/R-al
Pubtlo U11ftJM Com-Jotltl & SNlby MMt79 Ne~ BMCh • LMlri....,.,. I ~
mte.ion. 71'"6M-4111 Co9ta MeM ·Hunting-Aot~ •432-8804*
.'\;
\.)I ' 1. 0t1
ton Beech ArMa. Call 81. Uo. ••990t8
CENTAlM awHmWa CMILDCM•. In home 1a1• r.1 ) •l'r \ .rn:'ti =•~Wt~ lft. Complete M81nt/Repalt R•MODaL ......... •-7•12 ... ~ Plum~lec -carpentry MAe'Ottftt-BAICK & ~ ' palm. Rem.I IH'9tt BLOCK WORK. Bondi Al....._ end Modlla (..,,.)Hunt. &wh. our apeclatty &4M717 UC'd. •te 48M
OoutaoUI 91tY -.o511 UCINIE DAYCARI DAll'8 Hom9/Bualneu
,, '.. , ...... ..
I021.a ...,_ ... C.M. HH 2 Openlng1 lmprOY9ment. Orywatt,
I\ ' ' l , i I
' • ' I
Coeta M .. e 722"320 Cerpentry 6 Painting.
Nannt.e, & houMtl.-P-Bond4HS. 845-7122
are av.U. l'rof, exp. FIX UP YOUR HOUSE.
Uve In or out. From I do •• ....... . MO/Wk. 171 .. ,... .... ~ ... .
Call Jay 9IOo300I
( 11 If I :
,, I • 1 !ti
•A-1 llOVI,_. 1ao.1m CU!AN & EXftERT
Fot • ~ w ... Donel ~ o.c. tor 11 Y"I
UC. T·11tl.142
I' 1 • '• ; HhH
............
• Repelra. l.tc.nM •
lneur. 25 yra 91CP• F,...
Est. Ftn avt. l7S-6085.
H· !" I) ~pt '""it I
t..... ,\ 11..: I~ 'I ) I ' ""' ~ • 1 ~
VIManl Construction Co Room addtttone. ,.
modellng, qu•llty wortt. 4'480917. Frank
tle-7107.
~( I "f'P1
~ll I .'I I I•<., I.' ()
(~ t l • 'L. • ,
'l t ; l I I • t
BUY
BAVEA
GWCESALE
2-5&78
OLDll C4ll D apl ••• approx 4000 aq ft.
13200 mo Income.
.... mo41'w.e.d. 8'D-
mft .. on.re. Aaldng sao.ooo. 11Wt•
r.1 ....
t· I · . •' ;
tt Rlvw8ide trtpbl. Out of
town owner can't
m•n•g•. S 129,900.
...... 724, .. 2"°'13
-----[ ).. . . . ..
UPTO •eoo
PER MONTH
* 110 COUECTIOIS *
Early morning motor routes
available. Must have
dependable transportation
and liability insurance
CALL 642-4333
HUNTINQTOM BEACH. carTA MISA.
NEWPOn BIAC11, l'OUNTAIM V AIUY,
DMMI I LAGUNA BIAQI
DELIVERY ..,._.MT...,
TM UR 8 DAY 8 t1111t11&. .,,..,_only.
O•LY. Ne wep•pe r Qr9. ptep ooob, -.
rout•• av•llable In -. Cel ... wo for c..ta .... .,.. June or.._, •••tt•rl ••••h ,. . · 1:00 A..M. to tO. ~ 1. ,.,..,..
A..M. Up to te0.00 ,_Of my. e. anc1 lneur· -.a ...... anc• '9quff9d. Call _,._.. &&2~. Ol WAITIR'P
DllKC&.DK
........ !J!p. ,..q. a..
Latte Motel, 2274
BMI, C.M .
714-124-1111
ULIUIAROTlllQ
Ar• you motl\leted'?
Want to be ycM.-own
t>ou? Need Frr Prr 1n
our new office. C.H
873-11 !M Oa"'""pm
FIND
work th.rouvh c'ees'fled
PUIUC lfOTICE
IEClllTARIEI
Any of the following
needed for temp Job•:
• Mlct'oeoft WO'd
• Meclntotlh
• E.xc911
• WordPerfect
~ .... ,.._,
~I
/\.1 I i ' I
PUBLIC NOTICE MUC NOTICI PUIUC NOTICI PUii.iC NOTICI "'l&.IC NOTICE
-·~::r•
_.. .. $ -·
CRmlR .... 1 .......... ....... ....... ,. ......... ........... , .........
UN171
........ 1po11 .... ._.
Conve,tlbl•. Aut• mate. AU. 0fl'T10Na, 24t< Ortg. ..,.... u.o
•lrd ... ~ ... ,.ged. ,.,of, m•l~
tain.d ..........
A MU8T •••1 ...... 91740IO
c.-..1we.,1 ...
LOeded, l!..1.~00. Phone 1~7VM Of
f?H!OZ?s Cedllac ncov
&cellent Condition,
t1t00 080. COM. !2Mllfm •
F'"OAO 'MLTD
MOVING OUT 0,
COUHTRV. A&*>, f'/8 P/8 A/C, crulM, ...
melnteln•d 11100.
HH?ll miM!lmll "°"° ........ ~==========~! CR. ....... AMlf'M c ........ po.-..... D1DUn 1971 noz
2 + 2 . lmmeoul•t•.
loeded. A.200.
131~ SELL
power Mildowe. ,..,. f.oe ... tinted ..,..
dO'MI, ~,.....
31,000 mlM. -111,IOO,
Cell 714 .. U·1'711 eftetri.
NOTtC• Edward 0 . Rou . 8551 The regl1tran1(1) com-with the County Ca.rt! of .......,,.. "9tnll• .......... wtlh the County a.ti of cM:ted by: a ~ pert. IWtl, Cllf. -1
PLEASE TAKE NOTICE Oakgrow Cit . Huntington mer1C*I 10 tranuc:t ~ Orwige ~on J\.w'9 7, .... Ill -.............. ............... OrWlgl Cowlty on"""-7, nenHp "''' bW!nMI .. ~ lhal on June 24, 1911 at S..Ch, C.llf 92647 nMI undet the Ac:tttloul 1"1 8111r11Mlltt .......... ............ ,., The rqlatrant(I) tom. cMlled br, tn lndMdlllil
7 00 p.m . Of u eoon Thi• bu1lnH 1 11 con-Bu*""' Nam•(•) lilted ,...._. The fOIOMng penone .. The followlng pereon. .,, The t~ PlftOnl •• 1'499441 menoecf lo lrar.ec:t bUt6-The r19l1trant(1) com-
thefeafler u the IMtt9r ducted by an lndMdual 1boYI on· N/A PubNahed Orange Cout doing bumlMeit •: doing bullr'9el aa: doing butlnee1 u : PublW'9d Orlngl CoeM MM undtr the l'k:Woue fnlnON lo ....... ~
may be hellfd, al 3300 The regl1tr1nt(1) com-~ ... ~t~o.n1 wu .,_.Dally Piiot June t8, 23, 30, BRAD,,OAD ENTER-(IJnHtTI MT (b)J, LANQ. COASTAL PROPERTY Deify Nol N'l 11 23 ao ~ Ntme(1) llM9d "'91 lollCllr lhl ~ Newpor1 BouleYwd , ~ IMnCed 10 transec:t bull-'"' ... • ...... ~ 7 11t1 PRISES. ll09&\t Redondo llftlDOE. 1054 Newpoft MAIHTENANCE. 203 I 29lh .My 7 ,.1 I • • ~on: Jl.wl9 .. ,., llullMe9 NarM(I} lllllCt
port 8"eh, c.Jlfomla, the ""' undet the F1etlllou9 with the County Clertl of ' e .. w Clrdl, ~ 8Md\, C1111er Drive, Newport St., Newpof1 ISMctl, <Aid • 91>w ~ ,...._ 9bOW on: OC1t llPtl"cllltl
Newpott e..cn City CotJn. l!Ju11nea1 Name(1) lilted Orange County on June 7, -c.llf.112t47 9-ch, Calf. 82110 12883 ...., T1'lll ......,..,,. W Mid SC08 Aotlllieon
cM WIM hold • public hear· abow on May 20, 1991 1991 8'8dford l!Jlelck, IMU2 Cllft. John D. L.anabfldoa. 219 Thomaa M1ttheW Ha•. 203 ....... -With the CounCy a.tt of Thie ••1no1n1 ... ....,
Ing lo consider, and poe-Edward 0 . Roll F4 .... 2 PUIUC -TICE llde Dr., Huntington Blectt, S.DOhlf•. lteJboa -llland. a 291h St., News>ort Beech. r--' "'9 Orenge County on N'I .,, .._ .,. Courlly a.ti °'
•ibly approve,. Reeolutlon Thi• statement WU ftled Publl.ned Orange Cout1----------c.Mf.12148 Cell# 92tS2 c.lf. 92913 .......... ,.., OrMgl Counly on..., J1, I~'-chlrgee fOf wtth the County Ca.rt! of Dally Pllol June l8. 23. 30. ........... Thia butlnea1 11 con-Thia bu1lne11. 11 ~ M~ Shewn a.neon. .. In .._ P•M•H 1•1
procelllng permit ~ Orange County on May 2• Jvty 7. 1"1 ......._ ..__ ducl9d by: an~ duc1ed by: M lndMdual 203 I 29th St., Newpott _...,.. Pubbhld Orenoe ()out ....-,49
1ton1, preparing 1tuc:1iea, 1981 Su-217 •tat•••nt Th• reglttr&l'lt(•) com-Tiie r1gl1tra111(1) com-l!Je9cll, Calif 928113 .... 11111..e Delly PlloC June HJ 23 30 Publahld 0rw9 ()out
l\andllng appeal9. and per· '4962154 Thi fotloWfnn ,__ • .,. manced to nnuct tMlll-manc:ed lo lrMMd ~ Thi• bu1ln111 11 con-The folowlng l*'80nl .. .Alty 7 1111 ' · ' Diiiy Plot June e, ,. a.
l0tmlng •ervicM The pr~ Publl1hld Orange Cou 1 ........ --.,... under the l'lctlttou9 Mii under the ~ dUC1ld by: c~ dOlna ~ u : ' " ' ~ :::=:" ~·: 0111y P11oc June 2. 9, 18, PUIUC NOTICE ~~UTI'Ts :~oo co .. 8u8'nffl Name(•~ "-d ButllMll Name<•> ll9t.cs Th• reot1tt1nt(1) com-PR(Vl!NTtVE HEALTH-Su-214 30• 1 , ""81
t._ .. ·-=-.-..... -~ 23 1991 ---.._..-...__--_---tll20 Park .,_ Sult• above on: May 11, •1 I.bow on: May 21, l llt menc«! 1o lnnllld "'*-CARE PAATNEAS, LTD., •ov ~ .,.._ "~ ~u•-···-..-.. lrldfonl llelc:tc John D. l.llngbrtdge 11111 under the Acftltoua S40I Sauullto DIM. ~ PUIUC llOTICI
sage ..i.bl ment regul• Su-247 ..... N 208. Newpott 8Mch, c.llf This .,.._,. wu Med Thi• et.ternent wa1 ftted 1u11ne11 Nam1(1) titted rone dll Mar, c.m. t2t2S ---------.... .,,,. -mlCI
Ilona, bullnne emergency ,.... ..,.. 92tt0 with the County a.11 ot Wit!\ the County C"'1l of abcw9 on· Mey 24, 1991 Dr. Anne Maria Ballin, Plet"91ue r--
pl1n1, para me dic r• PUBLIC NOTICI! ltatewt Richard St,.u11, 1820 Ot9ngl County on June 1, Orange County on May 24, T Matthew Hall 3408 SauMlfto Dr , Cerone •ttllirtUI ._ ---,.-.-.-1-.. ---1pon1e, recycling 1ll p The following J*9C)nl •• Peril Newpott • Newport 1•1 1•1 -...... .. _. u~ ,....., ..--.... -doing bulinM911' Belch, Cat1f 92t80 ,,_ statement WU llled ._. -• .,_, •-~· I ii ... Ill --~=·A·~~.!."': ---~lous.. At TROPICAL FISH. 11815 Jerry Maf1y, 1820 Pn ,...... fl4H248 with the County Clet1I ot Sonja L O.W..1, '31 The folowlrlo '*"°"'.,. ...... ... __ ..... ..... B Atlantic A H ........ N ····h Publllhed OrMgl COllllt Put>lllhed Orange Co.-~ County on May 24, Morning Cenyon, Cofone Ck*lg ~ .. : --............. ~.::r:=. ~ ·== atatMMrtt BMch, c.ttt.~26.a""~"''on ~2860 ewpor1 .._. ' Dally Piiot June 18, 23, 30. O.lly Piiot June 2, 9, 18, 1"1 dl4 M•, Calif. 92925 AY THlHKA YOU Ul<A· ~ c:
fl'M of charge, al the Ofllcl The following Plf90'\I .,. Yongyut F119all1ud, 21189 Thi• bu1ln111 ,, con-~ 7 ''" 23 11191 P<tell•1 Thi• bUtfnHI 1• c~ IMPORT'I, 32 Dreka, ..... .... ..............
of thl City Clerk of the City doing bullMU H ' ~ Ave L0ng BMCh. ducted by: a gener8I part. • Su-271 • Su-251 Publl8l'9d Orlnge Coamt ~p by a llmlled 1*1• ~t~o::.3 U SYSTEMS. IAS lldltly
or Newpol1 l!JMch The PACIFIC PARK. 2082 8ut4-90810 ~p Delly Plo4 June 2, •• 11, Th• regl1tra111(1) com-D~ak•, Newport leech. Dr., Huntlnfton IMCh, public 11 lnvfted 10 attend ""' c.nt• Or . Suite 200, Pltama FU981i1ud , 29159 The regl1tr1nt(1) com-....... Mft'W'M'I 23, 1991 menoed lo nneec:c butt-c.llf . ....., Calif. M4e
and comment. orally or In 1rv1,,., Calif. 111115 Eur. Aw . Long BM<:h. menced to tranuct ~ PUii.iC MOTICI r"'""" ""'"' au.,250 .,... ..,,. the P'1ctitlow Thie builn"' 11 c~ NMc:y a.llgado, 1511 lldf·
writing. on thO propo1ed Pin American ProP9rltel. CaH. 90810 ne11 under the Flctttloul •-.lius au.I,,... Name(•~ lilted clUCMd !loo-: .,, lndMdual ll'y Or., ~ lleac:h, '" tncreu H 2082 BuslnM• c.n1., Or . Tht1 bu11nn1 t1 con-Bu11n111 N1m1(1) !lated ~· -_..__ May -...,. celf t2lt4I
Pvbllehed ~ co111 sun• 200 Irvine. c 11t1 ducted by· hull>lnd Ind above on. N/A 8uell•• Nw PUIUC NOT1CI ............ on Maria H , 111 The reol•trant(•) co-Thie 1>u .. ne11 11 con-
0."" P1I ... J·-1 t • 15. 11171 5 Wit. Richard -·-· ltet1111ent Dr. Nwte 8alln menc:ed lo lrwwt ~ .... .-..... -. .. ........, --. .. , "' ~ -.;>u •-Plutttl1• Thl9 ltl""*11 wee llled neae under IN Flcftolla .........., ..., -........ ~ 16 11, 18. 19, 20. 21. 22. RML. tnc . C.ltlorNa, 15 The regt11r1nt(1) com-Thie etatement wa ftled The=~.,. Thi~ Plf9Qnlu· a11 llulln••....... Wfttt the County Clet1I of lullnen Name(•) hted .tor
23 1 ~1 th327 ~°JS.'~~':"~~·u~a9~~~ :.cs uric:~ ·~:"t11ct= O',~~=·~ c::. ~ ~ GAAoe:·oeaiGN, ='i'N"C:-~ PERRIS ........... ~ Coun1y on June 7• -.:;:,:~~ ~·t··~::
EH t Vitti Point Ortve. Or· Bu.Inell Nam1(1) lilted 11191 17818 Jordlln AY'I. Ste. DISPOSAL COMPANY, RfV. The~ l*'IOnl •• , ..... 1 lNI ....-,. Wiii ~ ,,... under the Adltloul
__ P_U_l_L_IC_NO_TI_C_E __ ~·~~~1~:7
11 co~ 1Th:;:::t•""•onlaFt~wu ft' .... Publiehed 0rar::-4c:! 1~~·c:::.7,1~11e ~ .. ==~c~ ~~~s. 8151 PubltNd Orang. eo.t ~County Clltti °'==.=me(•) ._,
---------ducted by 1n unlnc0tpo-......... _, Jorden Ave. Ste 12A, Ir· ENV1AONMENTAL. I 1292 Wll'Mt Ave. 41158. Hlh Dally Piiot June 18, 23, 30, ,.1.,,.. County on M.y 24• Nwicy ~ '1ctHlou9 rlled 111ocl1llon other wtlh thl County Clertl of Dally Piiot June 11• 23• 30• vine, Calif. 92715 W11tern Ave., Stanton llngton 8Mch1 c.lf. 9347 Jv/fV 7, 1111 --·uo fhlt 1t1t1fMnt -llleCI
•u•I,...• N•m• than 1 partne,.htp Orange County on "'-7, July 7, t99t e ... 270 Thie bu1ln111 11 con-Cellf. I08IO Nlleon, N11a Chrl1tlan, Su-271 ,..., ..-.,..__. wfltl tM County Qetti of Statement Ttle regl1tr1nt(1) com-1991 .-. dueled by· an lndWldullf OR&A Inc., Caltomla 15141 YOfbhlrl Lani, Hun-ll'Ubll'*1 ..... .,. ~ Ortlnge COUPlty on Mey J1
The following l*'SOt\S a11 1T141nced to trenl&ci bu.i-NM449 ..... 1.-__,.. Th• r19l1tr1nt(1) com-Thi• bu11n111 11 con-tlngton IMch, Clllf. 12647 o.lly Plot June 2. t. 11, 19111 '
doing t>uSlnus 11 ,,... under 1he Flc11li0Ue Pubhhld Orange Cout __ r_u.e.n. _____ •~--menoect lo trwlCt bul6-ducted by: I ~•lion Carole L Neel 1801 laf· llUIL.IC llOTICI 23, 1911, HMTft
GLOBA L COMPUTE R Bu1lne11 Name(1) Nl1ed Dally PNOC June HS. 23. 30. Platttt.... ~,,.under11 N!!!'..,,Flct) ~ ~1gl0111~."J!L ~~ ~!.2.508• Wendt, Callf -WWi Su-a3 Putl4llMd Orlngl COllllt CLEAN ING COMPANY, above on May 1, 1991 99 u.... _._, ... ,..., ,,_..,... v--· .,._... ~,., ~--
8551 Oa~grove Circle, Hun-Richard J Hoegtet, Pr91 July 7• 1 1 8ueln1•...... aboYe on· May 31 19111 nNe Wider the ~ Thie buafneu 11 con-.. 1111'1M -. Diiiy Plot June t , 11. U ,
unnion Belch, Calif 926.t7 RJH Inc Su-28I a..........e Kr1ltl L SeiWr ' lutlnet• Name(a) lfttd dUdld by' a general pllt· .. 1 _. PUIUC 110T1C1 30, ttl1
:.:...: -----Thi• .ai.men1 wu ftled Thi foAowtna P9f'90nl.,.. lNI .,.....,.,. wu Mid abovl on· ""I 21. 1", nerlh4p Thi falowlioig '*'°"'are ..._ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii wtm 11\e County Clertl of PUIUC NOTIC! dolna bu11n1e111: With tt1e County a.11 of Plllrtdl Leyee Tiie reol1trant(1) com-dOlna ~ •: """"•• Or1nge County on M1y 24, J.A.J. TECHNICAL MA· Orange County on June 7, Thie llatement wae tlled menced lo tr9'IMct ~ INTfUJQ!NT LAH SOW-IUllrtlM ....
f'ACIFIC VIEW
MEllOftlAL PAftt<
Cemetery • Monuery
Chapel • Crematory
3500 PICthC V-OnYe
~port BelCl'I
M4-2700
PlllOIUmHS
KLLUHtwlY
Mortuary * Chapel
Crem11ton
110 Broedway
Cost• Mal
IU·tlll
11191 Plotttloue C HINING COMPANY, 1991 Wfttt the Coi.l'lty Clertl of neu under the Flctltloul TIONS1 J1• Ntwwy, ._ at I "" "'9LIC ll011CI
'4H270 94l91A•• ......_ 15'97 Ch«nlc# Ln., Hun-P•MUt OrlnQll Coun1y on Mey 31. lullnM9 NIMe(1) lltfed J , Cotlla ...... ca1f 92t2t The fo1ooMnO P9""0"' are ........
Publt•hed Orange Coailt •tat.,..... ~ 8Mctl, Callf. 92949 Publlt'9d OrMoe CoeM 1111 abo¥9 on: Mty 22. 1111 o.an "-"· 1117 ll'oft = ~ M! • ..., , .. -.
Deity Piiot ~ 2. t . 18. The lolloWlng P«'IOnl are 1J .. ~~5n .a ery ''"Ji:~ Dally Plldt June 11, 23 30 HMl'll ~· C. ""*"' ...... ~Newport leach. Sl'O«!r 297 New-M•h•illl 23 1991 doing bulln1S1 u : ~ HunUngton • .._.. a. ... 1 1111 ' • Publllhed Orln(le eo..t '"'' ..-ment wu .,_, ._._... DOl't c.nt.r ur., Newport . Su-241 eo·s BUTCHER SHOP U'I. Sp 222. Huntington ~, . Dally Piiot June • ,. 23 with thl County Clerll of Thi• buttMll I• c~ leech, Celt. '2tlO The ~ .......
9120 Edinger, Fountain vei. ~h. ~,,::4711 ~ lu-2" 30, 1•1 • • • ~County on May 24• ~r=lr.,::r:,dulll COffto =na.~' = ~ ~~ a.a, --,-U-l_U_C_NO_TIC_E __ iey, ca1t1 e21oe ducted by: an lrtdMCMll Su-2tt P4••aa mencad lo lrenMCl ~ Calf.12'12 INO CENT£R. MOO,,,... Of
· ~ ECI ~i~~ The regl1tr1nt(1) com-MUC NOT1CI ..,_UC -TICI PubhNd Or.noe coeec neu ..,,. "9 "tcmioul Thie bu1ln111 11 con-Th• Arte, 81111• 0414,
Flotttloue ' r • ... menced lo trenuct bull• -.. rv• -0 ....., PlloC June 2 9 t 8 BUllMM Name(•) 119*1 dueled by: en lndMd\lal COIU ~· tmt ll8'M BHch, Call!. 92648 neee under the l'ICllOUI rlelFt• _, • ' ' abo¥1 on; NIA The teglatranl(I) corn. lruoe M. Sot00
..,....._ Brent Warner, 9921 Moote lu1lne11 NUM(I ) llllld •u•lfl••.... ,......,.. 23. 1"1 DefllM ~ "*"'" lo ttwect ~ A"9. Of Thi "* The ~~.,.. ~ ~lngton l51acfl, •bove on N/A 8181 •11'11 ..... ••..... ~$2 Thie llcll '*"' *tlll tied nw under the Acmtoul = C.. MeM. Cell ~-""" John Qary P .. ..on The~ S*'90nl.,. 1 .. 11• IM wftt'I "' C4ul'lly Cleft! of 1u11ne11 Name(•) lllted d~1E'As""::r:8 ASSOC!-Tiii• bu1ln111 11 con-Thia lllai.ment wee flled doing bullnlU M: The followlrlo pertOl'll .,. PUIUC MOTICI Orange Cour1'y on """-1 •boY'I on· NIA Thi• bualneM II con-ducted by· 1 genlflf pe11. wtth the County ~ Of PACl,ICA IMPORT/l!X. doing buelrlli9l M: 111t ' M1t1C1 Merdany dUCtld by an lndMduef Ac~~! ~UTH130' ~ ... ~ net9hlp Orange County on June 7. l'ORT, 17'7 ~ Dr .. UNl'TED HOMI ""'NISH-......... .. .... IO Thie ~ ... med ni. r1Ql1tr•n1(1) COfOto ,:~ti' c.141 .a;.-·..-Th• r1gls1r1nt(1) co~ '"' =Ort IHCl'I. Callf. INOI .. ~ Unit ..... ... ...... Pl.lblllhM Or-. ()out wltl thl Couneit a.11 """'*' la nnMd ....
o.nn11 o Midden. 522 ::::-° unc!! ';:~ '•M•IT lob Purtc Jr & Kai ~ cOll. MeM. · m ...... '' Dally"°' JIN 11. n . 30, Oninfl eowcy on "'-Y 24• C,... ~,..::/~:=
22nd St • Huntington au11n111 Nam•(•l lltted Pvbtl•hed Orange CoeM ~ 'l:r., E: 1tttl flt ~ D. EVenl, tm The tollowlnO Pll"90nl.,. .Nty 1 , .. , 1ttt abovl • NIA I)
Beach, Cdf. t.2t4t abcw9 on: June 8. 19111 0 .. fy Piiot "'-1t.. 13, 30, ecm. M9M, calf. taa7 '' ~ ~O, CotU M .... =ro~:•POAT ,.,_ ' lu-272 P...U48 1Nc1 C:. Doi41'111 ~~~·:•~on-~-i.:~· Ned~ 7• 1111 a.~.-Thie bUlfnMI II con-Thie butlnett II con-TION INTERNATIONAL, ~ ::io; t 1I Thie tlllllfl•ll ._ .... u• ..... wu _..,,. duclM by:...,..,... dUCted by: an lndMduel 2030 E 4th It, .,._ 113, .. _ ..,._ -n--~, . . • wtlh the County a.ti al i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~reo~~~~~~~~~,~~~~m ~~ ~~ ~~~-~. manoed lo nnaece ~ menoed lo tr'lfllllCt ~ MIAI ntdu 1nt1rM1oM1 ........ 1•1
::!!'~N tn.Sf'lcft, ~ ,.. under the ~ ~ '· -""-~ .,... ,n: ..... 1 .. -. ,..,.. STARTlllG I llEW BUSllESS?7
The Legal Oepertmen1 et tl'le Dally
Piiot It pteeMd to announoe • new
Mt'llioe rtOW 8Ythble lo new bulf.
~
We Wiii now 81!.ARCH tl'le rwM tor
~ et ne utra cherge, and MYe ycMI m. time #lid u. trip to m. Court
~ In Sent• Ana Tl'len, of oourw,
lfW h ~ It complttect we Wiii
fie '/04lf ftCWOul buet,_ NWM ....
"""' wftft thf COunty Cln. publah once a..-tor fOur .-. • l'aquWad
.., ... #lid °"" ... 'fOAll proof °'
publcttk>n wfth County Cleft(
Pteaa atop by to rue 'fOAll netmoue
~ ltaiement at tha ~ PloC
Legal o.p.tment. 330 w... ....
eo.ta ....... Calbn6a. " you Oln not etop by, pl.-Ollll UI at (714,
842-4321, &t.won 315 Of 311 and
Ml wll "*• arraoo•m•nta kW "'°" to handle tHa prOOldUrt ~ mal.
"you "'°'*' ha-.. any"""-.-.
t!OM • .,..... call U1 and wt .. ba
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