HomeMy WebLinkAbout1991-06-24 - Orange Coast PilotNiJht and mornina low clouds. then
mostly sunny in the afternoon with west
to southwcat winds to 12 mph. Hipa
from the mid to upper 60s near the
beaches to the rnid-70s inland. Lows in
the mid-50s to low 60s. For more
information, includina boatina. fishina
and surfing, see PlSC AB.
IN THE NEWSROOM
You want vanity? ... Try this: A
Fountafo Valley couple, Bill and
Pamela Keel, have five vehicles with
five different yet themed vanity plates
... They arc: STORK MD, OR.
STORK. 24HR DEL. JUS REUC and
WE OUVR ... He's an ~tetrician,
she's a nurse. And together they arc
considered frontrunncn in a national
vanity plate conte1t. The oonte1t seeks
to find the driver with the best, most
creative work-related vanity plate ...
Next to name and initials, work-related
mcssaaes apparently arc the most
popuJar rypes of ~ plttc_.111_cssagcs
goina.
QUOTES OF THE DAY
"I didn 'I 10 through (this) a/QM.
My friends and famfly -they oU Wl'nt
through ii wilh mt. They all suppontd
mt, and twry tinu I was down they
chttml me up, and they all
undtrstood. ..
Ti(la Katz, a young woman fiahting
cancer, who wants to lhare her wish
with friends and family (Al).
"Ptoplt nttd joy quilt as much as
clothing. Somt of thtm nttd II far
f11()rt. ,,
Margaret Collier Graham,
American writer ( 1850-1910).
TODAY'S EVENTS
•The Newport Beach City
Council meets at 7:30 p.m.
• Sinaer Eddie Raven performs at
7 and 10 p.m. at the Crazy Horse
Steak House and Saloon. Tickets are
$23.50; for reservations call S.9·
1512.
JUST TltE FACTS
• What is tbe only natural isl1nd
in /boa Bay?
'£061 u1 qno pu11~1 .<19 ;qi
SI P~lVJodJo:>Uf -pu11s1 .<19 •
LOTTERY
Lotto
I, 10, 18, 27, 49, St
Bonus f\umt,cr -11
Front aturdl,Y, , .... u .........
D•DDO
•Hurta:$ •CJ•: 6
• Diamonds: Ace
·~:.S
Tapper
S.nta Maria
S.n Meceo
Anahtim
INDE )(
~cSllM
ComicalM
Co11Hnu11ity Porum!A7
CrOlllWOnlll6 Enttn.._,M
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IV RldWd 0Wrt
~c:-.&OllJNllt
NEWPORT BEACH -~ ... a
poipant, lift Udlanae. Gunnery . SSL MVR~ WbiltMcr presented Larry
Wanke, Mr. I~ XVI, with a
c:~ mariDe j8cbt -just in
catc the ~ob11 Carroll Uaivenity
quarterback Cbsn't ililke it in the
N~al Football}-~ -after rece~ a blue lOOdNil l'ney rroat
WIUic with a No. I IDd .. lall,.....
embroidered ma ... ...._
The barter • ..-... ..,.,,...-.opc-iate under
the cil'CUlnltDCa s-.., .... a.lbOe
Bay Club, where a toUch al rdeYincy
was added to lrrelcwnt Week.
Wanke, hoaoled tbil week for the
zany diatmctiM at ~ the 334dt lilld
lUI pick ia Ille NFL draft t;J the S.r
Bowl champioa New Yott G .... has
no plans for ncedi .. the military attire.
Whittaker, the peae of hOnOr for the
raudl-anlicipaled arrW of w.ue ead
the opcnin1 nl lnellMat Weck. was
the 6'ch and ....... IO ditc .. rt
fnJID a tr.,..·~ lllndti .. in Yw,
Ari&., and ~ to Marine Coi'pl
rt Beach
Oc.._ W.T. Ada1mt he was the lut
Daert Storm toldier to arrive in the
Unued Statei that day.
Wanko. who arrived on a boat Crom
the North Udo Channel at 4: 15 p.m.,
wu routed by some relevant spcaten
and twampcd by a pkthora of aifU
While his hometown, Ckveland, was
~rbaUy molested Wltb tonauc in cheek
~ Irrelevant Week founder Paul Salata
and Or-ac County Rcpster columrust
Randy Youngman.
"l was just told to be prepared for a
SM WANKE/Illa,_
Wom•
killed in
big surl
Huntington resident
dragged into ocean
By Tony Oodero
Oranoe eo.. Diiiy Pllll
LAGUNA BEACH -Heavy surf hit
the Orange Coast on Sunday taking the
life or a JO.year-old Huntington Beach
woman and keeping hlcguards busy witb
hundreds of rescue , authorities said.
At about 3:15 p.m., Lynn Scollard, 30,
or Hunti.1gton Bcllch, and a male friend
Y.erc walking aJong 1 rocky 1rca of beach
near the private, "(b:rec Arch Bay
community when seve ral waves 1truck her
and knocked her into the water, said Sgt.
Dori Weaver of Laguna Beach police.
"When the waves hit her he couldn't
gain her balance," Weaver said. A lronJ
current then carried ScoDa.rd into the
open ocean, where he disappeared. Her
friend ran for help and evcral
enforcement agenc1e re ponded to the
~nc, Weaver aid.
Scollard was potted approrimately an
hour later ll<lating on the surface and was
pulled from the water by Lagun1 Beach
firemen, whose attempts to revive her
were un ~~ Cul, Wca\cr Slid. She was
pronou~ced dead at the scene.
1 he particular tretch of beach tb1t
Scollard and her companion •ere waltina
on IS bordered by a cliff and lS inhabited
by e"cral large, harp rocks, u1d Mike
Gaughan. poke man for U.S. Ocean
Safety, a pnvatc company that auards the
county beaches. The area is not patroUcd
by hfcauards and the nearest tower is a
quarter of a mile away, he said.
Elsewhere. lifeguards were kept busy
with the laric crowds and bta waves that
re ulted m more than 200 swunmcn being
rescued from the urf.
Approximately 80,000 bcachgoers
Y.Ound up at Newport Beach and at least
I SO of them had to be rescued from tbe
~urr. which ranged from 4-to 6-feet,
hfcguard sa1d.
Over at Bolu Chica State Beach, the
See WAVES,._ ...
Teen's birthday party is a wish come true
1V host Rick Dees attends as special guest
By Tom Speiss °""" Coat Olly fl9ac
NEWPORT. BEACH -Imagine being
given the opportunity to host your own
14th birthday party with over 100 friend
on the Spirit of Newport yacht while
touring the Newport Harbor, and then
mcctin& radio and tclcvi ion pcr50nality
Rlclc Dees al the end of the cvenina.
for Tina Katz, it wu a reality.
Throuah &he Makc·A-Wi h Foundation,
she was able to have her wilde t fan1asy
come true on Saturday niah&_ -without
any co t to her parents or friend . The
foundation arants the favorite wish of a
youna adult or child with a terminal or
lifc-threatcnina illness.
"This i so cool," Katz aid, adding that
it took her about 12 month to decide on
the perfect w· h. "I kept ch.anain1 my
mind about the things 1 wanted I ~as
going to go on a tnp, and then 1 wanted
to go bunaic 1ump1ng. Then, I wanted sky
divina le~Jl!I and scubn divma lesson -
I wanted a ~le bunch or tufr."
Katz, who will attend V1lcnc1a Hi&h
School in Placentia th1 fall , decided on
the yacht party bccau e of her d !.1re to
have friends and ram.Ur ta.kc part in the
celebration of her wish "l didn't So
throu&h (th1 ) alone," she said. "~
friend, and family -they all went
through it with me. They all supponed
me, and every time I was doft<o thel
cheered me up, and they all understood '
Last year's birthday was not so
harmonious honly before she turned 13,
IU&z COIJlpsed in the hallway of Kraemer
Junior Hiah School, also in Placentia. he
S..W1SH,_,.
tz,uk
..
l• ~ .. c... cw,,....
r l~ helm of the pmt of
Comic, trading £ard buffs ~nd a lot to collect at show
-A 1960 Saraent
Fury OM1} book,• "Rocke teer"
faaurinea; A 1954 video caucttc of tho
m<Wic ''Ood1ill " -in JapancM: and
uncut. and a 1986 Mario Lemieux roo~1e
card -.re Ju t eome of the items to be•
en and purch•scd 11 the Oranae
County Comic:. Cud and Collectible
Show, •
The show •-a held Sunday at the Red
I.eon Inn in · ta Mc , and it featured
cumic hook art1 t' MnJ writer,, tradin1
card dca~~. and poster and ft unnc
al peorlc.
"My hu band' a coll ct r. and we tot
married lhrcc ycan 180, tic JOI me into
tt," said Diane terpe. the ro-host of
' oon ountry," a co•n' t -and
11mc bu inc' . "You can't ~•t
('1 llccton), you join 'cm ...
She 1dded that In ju t over a car, he
and her hu h nd have parh•yed • Sl.000
invc tmcnt into a $15,000·•·yoar,
~cckend bu inc . gainin roost or the
m<'ney from h
"All or the mon y v.e make, we JU t
put 1t r' ht bac into the bu in , " ho
id. teprc purthasc her mcrch1nd' rrnm di tri uto"'-and then char a
h htly h1 her rm It the to
c er her own t • well a make some money." med1y we want a tore
in Oranse Countv."
Like tcppc, most of ch arr-t and
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Maurer's
extensive article
about the 30th
annivcntty of John
F. Kennedy's bold
speech chaJJenginJ
Americans to go to
the moon was
published in the
May 6 issue of the
national
publication, Space
News. .. •:un• •ea~nrn-:~----~-
Maurer believes that Kennedy's statement was unifyin• for the
country, and said it challenged the nation's educators, politicians
and engineers. He believes a new commitment is needed for the
country.
"One reason given for the decline of the c::ouatiy's
manufacturing infrastructure is the lack of long-tenn plannlna
and the inability to market properly ideas developed in retearch
and development efforts," he said. "The country must
reinvigorate its research and development efforts and folloW'
through with government support for new technologies."
MEllMTI TO TllE P•lllJIT-. -------~
Maurer's article calls for President George Bush 10 take a bold
step in honor of the anniversary of Kennedy's speech. "Hill
(Bush's) declaration of firm intention to go to Mars, with a
definite schedule for doing so, would awaken and excite the
country's youth. The resulting payoff in technology development
and increase in human capital would repay the seemingly large
budget commitment."
ANOTllR RCIAI. RIVERUllY-. -----
Maurer recently attended a special anniversary celebration in
Washington, D.C. for America's Mercury Seven Astronauts. Alan
Shepard, the first American in space, was honored during that
event on the 30th anniversary of his flight.
-BJ T J. Hutcblasoa
Lecal News Briefs ·
Camaro driver .-i In Injury accident
!RVINE -The driver of a black. Chevy Camsro is being
wught for invec;tigation of relony hit and run in connection with
an accident that left two motorcycle riders injured, a California
Highway Patrol spokeswoman said.
Joshua Blatt. 21. from the Tustin Marine Base, and a
passenger Elizabeth Collins, also 21, were traveling south bound
o n Interstate 5 on a Suzuki motorcycle when the driver of the
Camaro made an unsafe lane change, causing Blatt to lose
control of the cycle, said C HP spokeswoman Janelle Clem.
Blatt and Collins were ejected from the motorcycle, and Collins
c;uffered multiple fractures to both legs, Clem said. She was taken
to Western Medical Center in Santa Ana. Blatt suffered minor
an1unes and was treated at Irvine Medical Center, she said.
The drive r of the Camaro fled the c;ce ne and as being sought by
tt uthoritic c;, Clem said. The car 1<i dec;cribed as a black, new
model Chevy Camaro I ROC' w11h tinted headlights and taillights.
Anvone "1th anformat10n iihout the \chicle or the accident can
cali the (HP at 567-7 1 ~7
cartoonist Ferd Johnson Inks for charity
Corona dcl Mar cartoon"t Ferd Johnc;on wall be one of 20
cclcbnt1c' who "'II be al C'it\llc /\mu,cment Park in Riverside to
do .1 henefll for Stop The Pain In c a charity that hclpc; abused,
ctbandoncu .ind ncglctted children Pl.ayers from the Lo Angeles
Rclm' and C.il1forn1a Angel\ will tJl\u attenu the benefit. Johnson.
who 11, the lrcator of the Monn Mullin~ comi c 'lnp. will draw
cartoon' for the children
Lotto Jaclcpot to grow to $9 mllllon
SACRAME:NTO -No one won the $4.8 million jackpot in
the latc!tt "Lotto 6-53" game, and lotte ry officials said
Wcdnc,dav's prize could reach $9 million
I lc:re arc the wanning numbers picked Saturday night for the
( alifnrn1a Lottery's tw1ce-weckJy "Lotlo 6-53" game: 27. 18, 51,
I. 49. IU. and the bonu'i number, I I.
Becauc;e no ticket had all six numbers. the $4.8 million jack~t
will roll over to Wednesday night's drawing. Lottery officials
expected that the s1x-of-~ix jackpot would reach $9 million.
fwo tickets had five numbers plus the bonus number. Each
won $216,068 from a pme pool of $432,130. The tickets were
purchased 1n San Francisco and Hayward.
There were 84 tickets with five of silt numbers. Ench ticket is
worth $5,144 from a priie pool of $432,125.
There were 5,378 tickets with four of six numbers. Each ticket
is ~rth $73 from a pnze pool of $392,852.
And there were 109.437 tickets with three of sUt numbers.
Sales from Wednesday night to Saturday's drawing were $7.8
million, lottery officials said.
oe111111 depll'bnmll shows an Ill•
SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -1 he Department of Defense
al~ed the news media over the weekend to view the "Star
Wars" Alpha chemical laser, said to be powerful enough to
destroy enemy missiles hortly after liftoff.
Offic1a1J said during the press tour aturday of the TRW
facility the weapon could be deployed around the turn of the cen·
tury and would back up the so-ailed kinetic enerl)' weapons that
destroy mi iles with projectiles
The ln~r. operating from orbit and capable of producing I
million wntt~ of power, concentrates mai sivc heat on It tarsct to
burn a hole and cause it to explode, said Joseph Miller of TRW.
The In er may fir t be used to di~riminatc between real
warhead and decoy , poss1bly'ldeMroying the decoys and hutlng
the warhead to make 1hem ca~icr 1ar1ct\ for the kinetic energy
weapons, s-1d Dan Wildt of the Strntegic Defense Initiative
Organization.
1 he laser eventually may become a fir l line ot defense,
dC\troyinf ml~'itle!I hortly 1tftcr launch \0 that debn fill On the
aggrc'50r ~ tem1ory. Wildt 'iaid.
The t<>ur come as Con rc'is deb tc.s f undang for the 010 Neil
Griff of SDIO c1tlled the liming "coincidental.''
Fro• 0.11, Piiot ,.,, •JHI ,,,,. l'fJJOl'U
J ............... ..
NEWPOllTIMQI .:f.$"°" ~0-----.. ~tL·,-~ ti Marbta." ........ _ ... ..:id nu...,, Aq. .~~..?! .....,... _,..
and WKtlcar ~ i.eo ~ ~ -~IC.=..':;::.
ande..>li•t~
The :j!f'OlralD will be ~ "' s... c::aemom, CllCQlt;v. diredar fl
die !•~AIMrica Sodcty ol Soldlt· ..,. Celifomle.
··~ prosram which bc1ins ., 8:30 a m., wrn l:iC held 11 the Balboa Pavil-
ion at ~ Main St:i. Balboa. The CIOll
is UO per penon ror more inform•· lion, e.tll 6#-t 190.
Concert donation
FOUNTAIN VALLEY -TM Huntington Bc1th-Foun11in Valley ...
JOCiauon or Reallors recently pre· tented Mayor George C. Scou and the
Fou nt1ln Valley City Council a check ror s~ooo ror the sponsorship or the
1991 u>ncerts in the 'Park series.
The program objective is IO provide
the C:Ornn"1nity with I wholesome (am-tly entertainment 1C1Mly 1h11 appeals to all ~cs.
The conccru featured this su mmer
include: The Salldbluten, who J>l•y 1 60s bcKh style, on June 27; ~oward Rcyuolde BUd, which performs songs
from the Bi.t Band era, on July 27 1na;
the A1tdy Rau Band, which plays jazz mus>e, on Aug. 22.
All c:ooccrb arc held 11 ;he Poun· caln Valley Recreation Center 11 16400 Brook.t111nt Ave.
Recipes needed
COS1'A MESA -The Costa Mesa
Scniot Citizens Corpormtlort i• looluna for some F recipes for Its "$harina Our &at cookbOok whkh will bO published in early ~r. Local coob arc asked IO submit three or their favorite reci~ by July 3 for pul>-hcatioft in the c:Ootbc>ok. F'\lllds from the ClOOkbook will benefit the non-profit senior center. The recipes can
be sent to: The c.o.ta NIM Senior Citlrens Corporation, 661 Hamilton Ave., 9262'J.
Art League·sbow
, HUNTINGTON BEAOI -Aft et· b1bition or anworb by ....,.._~
memben ol che Hane._. 8Mcla M League win be fcaturecf'ln dM Nak:6o
pal Art Gallery, June 22·Aaamt 1, at
lhc Huntington Beach Cenlril Lal>r•ry aed Cultural Center, 71 tl Talbcn Ave.
The public: i• invited 10 the preview reception Friday, 7-9 p.m.
The World ... in Four Minutes
MEGIDDO, Israel -Israel freed
89 Palestinians from two prisons
Sunday as a gesture marking a
Muslim holiday, and about 300
inmates started a hunger strike to
protest conditions in a third jail.
Elsewhere. soldiers killed a
Palestinian teen-ager in the occupied
West Bank after he stoned passing
automobiles and injured an Arab girl
passenger, military reports said.
Israeli officials have. said the
prisoner release has nothing to do
with attempts to free Western
hostages or Israeli soldiers missing in
Lebanon , despite speculatior. '--....,_...
triggered last week when the A Palestinian father greets his
government announced plans to free son aher his release from
prisoners. prison.
Those freed were the first of about
300 that Israel said it would let go over the four-day Eid AJ-Adha
holiday, which marks the patriarch Abraham's offer to 1acriflce bis
son for God. It was unclear when the others would be freed.
JERUSALEM -A former Palestine Liberation Organization
fighter announced Sunday he has formed a new Palestinian political
party that advocates nonviolence and bas no connection with the
PLO .
The announcement by 40-year-old Kamal Tabanja follows several
News of the Weird
ALLIANCE, Neb. -It 's
part art, part used-car lot and
even functions as a solar clock.
Nearly 700 people gathered
Saturday to watch a 1962
Cadillac become the heel stone
of Carhenge, sculptor Jim
Reinder's automobile replica of
Stonehenge in southern Eng-
land.
The Cadillac was placed 243
feet from the center of
Carhenge. matching the
location of Slonehenge's heel
stone, which is believed to 'have
heen a key stone in
cstabli bing the calendar for
the ancient Druids.
Like Stonehenge, Carhengc
reveal the ummer solstice -
but in lhis case rays from the
rising un strike the Cadillt'C,
pa~ hetwecn cars nine and 10
and into the center of the
monument, saicJ Paul Phaneuf.
Police Log
Cos~ Mtt•
spokesman for Friends of
Carhenge.
Some world-renowned
experts, as well as folks from
down the road. cemed equally
impressed.
"I'm plefl'l"rl by the good
match of proportions," said
author Evan Hadingham, a
Stonehenge authority from
England. "It says a lot about
our universal ques t to
understand our origin."
Bill Peters, who lives nearby,
said he w. nted to snap
picture<i.
Although Ca rhcnge'c;
completion w.is intcncJed tu be
fun and even began with a
Chri'ltian wor hip \Crv1cc at
unrise Saturday, Phaneuf 'i.tid
he rcccivccJ a cnll from a
woman who accuscc.l ham or
promoting tonic wor hip.
"This is not satanic,"
Phaneuf s id. "Thi i fun,
educational, and cultural."
-B1 th Auod•l«I Ptt11
HuntJnaton Btach
Addlectan
NEWPORT IEAOI .-.. Aa1111ioil
Detkit OilOt'der (ADl>> anec:ea °"' 1 l pcrcc:nl of IM .American popul11· hon. For adulta -.th ADD, ~ occur •I work -with pnori1W..· COft·
ccotra11na. procrhllAA~ On -Mo. day, 7-8:30 J> m., C.OUtltne C.0--MCliftl Center, 1 t51 [)ewe St., Suite 10$ In
Newport Beath will . s~r a f~
lecture c:t llcd, '1The ADO Adult: On the Job Awareness EQualt Succeta."
The free lecture " lor both enaploy· crs and employee for more lnrarma-
hon1 or lo ma~e reservations, call 476-
0991. -
Creativity seminar
COSTA MESA -P.tet R. Ja~. Crcat1YC OircC'IOr ot l!&prit Com· munications aad Che Alnerican Mar·
kcting AsSOClalion, llrriies the ~bllc to an interactive eYCninJ, to bC held
Tuesday at lhe Red Lfon Inn, 30SO
Bristol St. In Cos11 Mesa The 11ro-gram ii encillcd "Unlock Yo_,r Crc· atift Powe~"
mcchn& indudcs a social hour from S·J0-6.lO p.m • with dinner t>ciin-
nina at 6:30 pm. and the protram at
7:30 p.m. CoSt iS S28 for AMA mcm·
bcn, S20 for students, S32 for non-members (all in advance) and l3S ror ~vcryonc :it the door.
Saamer day camp
N£WPORT BEAOf -A _,
run day camp is in tlDfW for~ ..-~12 at the Ellftlhalf ol Uie· ~ and Girls Oub ot dM area JOc.ted et 2555 Vllta Del NCWDOC1 Beach. Caao d .... .,. Inc 14 tfuouah Aupat 23, 1 ea-6 p . Pin of The ptOtram a" mrllD8a, 1he.me d9fl. recreational ~
and roller itet.i..,.
AC"tiona may be picked up at the and Otrti Outi or call M0-
66SO tor "'°" lnlonnadoft. . Youth art proaram
IRVINE -UCI praent1 a Youth Protrtm entitled "Summer Artisia" for
mldalc and blah echoot atudenta ltt
&!•des si. to 12'.' Course t_opic:a incllKte f>ho•oar•phy, d,...in&. painting. mulk,
computer sraphi<:a, mustratioo. druna, dance and more. The prosram will be held Juoe 2A.o
Juty 3 Oft the UCI Campus. Particl-panlS hllV'e the option or taking cllhcr
Or both momma and afternoon tel· sions for rurtficr Information, call UCI F.Jltension at 8S6-S414.
articles in the Hebrew press about the emergence or a new Arab
party at a time when Palestinians a.re rea sessing the direction of
their 42-month-old uprising.
However, Pale tinians have expressed skepticism about the new
group, a.nd it ha been given no oovera1e by Arabic newspapers. It
was nol clear how many backers Taban1a had gathered for his new
faction.
WASHINGTON -Pre idenl Bush on SuncJay indicated he will
keep his embattled chief of staff, John Sununu, in the face of
widespread Republican dismay over Sununu's travel indiscretions .
Returning to the White Hou e .. Bush gave a thumbs up and said,
"Ye ," when reponers asked him, "Will you keep Sununu?" and
"Will Sununu stay?"
But the president, walking from his helicopter as he returned from
a weekcf!d at the presidential retreat in C•mp ~vid, Md., did not
linger lo discuss the mut~r.
Despite Bush's resohc thus far to stand by bis aide, many
Republicans arc aghast at Sununu's failure to squelch the travel
controversy that they say is hurting the president.
Gofidall 1111 lralll ........ 11119' ......
MIDDLETOWN, Ohio -An empty gondola on an amusement
park ride fell from a cable as pa~ngen in other carriages watched,
a park owner aid. No injuries were reported.
The Skyride gondola fell 25 feet to the ground Saturday cvenina.
moments after the ride began to move, said Guy Sutton, a part-owner
Qf Americana Amusement Park.
ORANGE COAST
llllyPllll
...... 171
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How to reach us at
the. Daily Pilot
Circulation
Oran8' County 642·4 Hl
Ad~rti ing
c1.w.1f1ed 642-5678
01spl11y 642 "432 1
Edilorl.al
Nt'W\ S40-l 224
5port\ 642·4 l JO
~ • pot~ fo'4 6·H•·4170
Main Ofnce
Ou Inti Offic, 642·4321
Bus1nen f~ 61l·~!102 •
Pc;;la Los llcma were not avallablt for Costa Mua. Durat•n rcpor!c:dly~ lulc • nne and • Ulch from a 1c,ldcna in the 2CXJOO blfXk of C•tamaran I.an ,
Fountain Valley
..., .. ,. bmte Into tht ,....,., Mm al Pouftt•ln Val~= S<tiooi and ltole a Qlft dr8Wer with ep-~lc sin tn It. No bad Htry ... io...s. lo
1t II ,. ted thll a ltt'J WM -.ct '° cntet ttlt llC>R. • A wuman callc.d oola alld NP.Ofted lhal .ti. tt• ceMd a ~ call lrOftl 1 IMD Wlilo told her he wat
"hony •ltd 'ftftted ;o ao '° bed With Iller." The woman aaJd the ..,. IOnded the Jame .. I IMI
who had c~ let•NIC i" ""'"'• a condo f"'9I het cattier ln Ille dt'J. • 1.~ur2l1ra tmuhtd out • ~ndow of • m parked in
tr ... 16400 ltlod ot AM.tdene lftcf tole S275 '" prropo erty
,
• ~ r po11I dly imlo c1,,..rc1tcs fl!Otth $l.f(~
form Ralphs upcrmar\ct on Roch 1lcvard • Mcs1<fcn1a Cl'mpla1ntd hiout a louJ pul}' •t th•
Ilea h ~Ith rc-,,cl I'll r'" "'' ~>ud radio 1nJ lhoclllflJ orf firCUo\ kcf\ • Ifft on' h\J(' I &1tl'~ 1>' k: II lrbJ rart
Newport Beach
A brida mnt111n1ng I JUn, S1.350 cah .,., s~
W<>rth nf 10IJ Getman J>Cultch tftllrb, u wt!I at
tnmC 119pcn, •" tc!lcn hm a 19'0 Mtrccdd Bena perllrd in 1 k1' 1n the: '800 bloct of Bilth Ind
• •
~=r·" I* Pl I
Qi J.. 2. 1124, Cir On .... , ........ to .. ........... ...,....,'° ..., ...... ............, .. ,
........ pmk aw.. Md '°
any tltl OM mower theJ
laacf fro• oae pan to
...... toCUllM ......
Wil on uq s b __ _ firefighting e dead, one injured
i boarding house fire ,,. .... odm hileoric
.............. MdhlllOld
~ boob a., aty am c.Gnnie Brockway. Here .,. IOIDe Of the ='= ..,"C!;: u
•June 7, 1909 -Oty
<'AuGCil lpprCMI oi'diaailce
acceptia1 1300 worth of
library materiall from the~
Huntanaton Beach Library
Allociation.
•June 2, 1919 -Street
superintendent announced
tbat public campiq pound
(inland of Pacific Coast
Hiabway in the downtown)
wiiJ be ready for Saturday
openina.
•June 7, 1919 -Council
sets Sl rentaJ fee per week
at the camparo\lnd. (On July
7, offacials refund the money
and make the campground
free to public.)
•June 27, 1927 -Truck
companies ordered to avoid
tome streets around Orange
Avenue between 11 a.m. and
noon on Sundays at request
of the Ladies Aid and
Baptist Church. . .
•June 20, 1932 -City
contributes $50 for food for
needy families in the grip of
the Great Depreaion.
•June 1, 1935
Neiahbors complain that
church at 11th and M-anolia
streets is creating
disturbances late at night,
reportedly causing tenants to
move away because of a loss
of sleep.
•June 2, 1944
Superintendent of 311
department was instructed to
install four ps meters and
four two-burner hot plates
under the pier for
convenience of the people.
•June 20, 1955
Offtcials 1end telegram to
Gov. J. Goodwin Knight
urgina him to sign SBl 729
providin1 funds for
acquisition of Bolsa Chica
Beach.
Health
SACltAMBNTO -ao. ..... WU.. .. ,., ClllbDiani to be
......, far .... • ........ ..,.. of ...
fire ....... ........ aud9oriudoa
of S2J.7 in elllefllncy ipend0. for
extra tlrefiptin1 1Uorta.
Millions of acres of dry
wptation produCed "1 the fM..
year droupt h~ created a
"formula for c:otnbutlion." Willon
said Saturday in his 'weekly radio
speech to the st.11te.
The drouaht hu killed 10
million trees, 10 times the usual
total for a comparable period and
most of it in the foresu of the
Sierra Nevada, Department of
F°"*'Y oGlcWI aid. Ult ,.., CllifDraia ... a
record ......, of .... and
other buHclln• to ftft. ~
"We are IOc*llll at an atremcly
serious potential for wild-land fires
-for bis. f•·movina Ouhj
fires," aaid Department of
Forestry spokeswoman Karen
Terrill.
1'be 10Uthlm Sierra ii probably
the hardelt Wt by the drought kill,
and the futhCt IOUth you go, the
drier it ls," llM said.
The stat• spent about S270
million in dinct aftd indirect COIU
for fire auppresaion, iracludina S70
T11ou.-.11•d .
Gay Pride .Panle .
Gay, ~sbian police ol1icers
staff recroitment bOotb at fair
WEST HOLL YWOOO -
More than 100,000 people
turned out for the annual gay
pride parade Sunday, topping a
weekend festival marked for the
fmt time by a police recruitment
booth staffed by gay and lesbian
officers.
The procc ion of floats, drill
teams and equestrian units were
led down Santa Monica
Boulevard by a dvil rights bill as
the symbolic "1rand marshal."
A banner of Slllte Assembly
Bill 101, a measure aimed at
extending s tate F ai r
Employment and Housing Act
protectjons to homosexuals, wu
taged on to the lead car.
Amona the 280 parade entries
were members of the Gay and
Lesbian Arab Society of Los
Angeles who joined hands with
Israelis as they marched the
parade's route.
Some of the Ooats were aimed
at raising money for AIDS
treatment and research while
others made political statements.
The parade ran smoothly
except for a brief encounter
between a lfOUp Of religious
fundamentalists spoutin&
passaaes from the Bible and
members or the AIDS activist
iroup, ACT UP LA.
"There WIS o Jot of yellinf,
but no physical action. •
OdenthaJ said.
One man was arrested for
alJegedly piekpocketina parade
goers, sheriffs Lt. Richard
Odenthal said. Hector Luiz
Rivera, 40, was being held in
lieu of SS0,000 bail.
In an event City Councilman
Joel Wachs hailed as "a historic
and monumental oa:asion,'' Los
Angeles police offac:en "Ore
uniforms despite Chief Daryl f .
Oates' misgivings.
CiviJ and p rights activists
said the booth ·at the 22nd
annual Los Angeles Oay and
Lesbian Pride Celebration was a
first for the 8,400~fficer
department. The I.APO has long
been cri ticized by civil Ubenics
million from the state's eme,.ency
reserve I.and, Terrill uid.
Emerp~ reserve expenditures
were about twice their normal amounu.
Wilson said his emeraency
appropriations bill would finance
600 extra temporary firefiptcn
and buy extra equipment,
includin1 five attack airplanes.
The bill has been passed by the
Auembly and is pendina in the
Setfttte.
"We should also keep in mind
all the Smokey the Bear advice we
learned IS kids," Wilson said.
-llT Ute~ ,,,.
LOS ANOELES -A blaze at a boarding lloulC killed OM
man and another wu revived by fir~fighten fl'Olft a ltaUon
tarpted for part-time clcnure due to city budget woes. authoritiel
said.
The 2 a.m. blaze Sunday was apparently i&nited by carelal .-ma in a second-floor unit of the tw0-tory, piU-aad1bite
lb'UCtUrc tbat houlcs about a dozen people in South Centnal Lot
Anactel. Oty Fire Department spokesman Jim WcUs iaid.
Alt unidentified S9-year-old man who suffered bums over 90
penicnt of his body died m the fire, sajd Battalion Chief William
Bimattre.
,.,~
Participants in the annual Gay and lesbian Pride Parade a.rry a c.olorlul array of balloons in Ws
HollywOod.
activists as beina intolerant of
homosc1rual .
Six openly gay officers in
uniform made an impre sion for
some at the We t Hollywood
event -one of the nalion's
large t promoting community
pride among homosexuals.
"I think ifs 1he best thing
they've ever done," said Rodolfo
Hernandez, 25. who picked up
some employment brochure . "It
looks like the I.APO is making
aomc change . "
Shenfrs deputies e timated
that 125,000 people attended
Sunday's Chnstophcr Street
West Gay Pride Parade, which
was the high point of the two-
day f e tival.
One of the parade cntrie
featured s parsely c lad
participants painted blue and
portin& a variety of tattoos.
Sherry OcVagas of Lons
Beach said he loved the
extravagant costumes.
"The be t part of the parade
is the display of everyone's altcr-
ego," aid Ms. DeVa111,
rcferrina to the participants
wearina flamboyant costume$.
But one man carryina a bible
aid he attended the festival to
try and top the "Oaunting of a
inful in titution "
.. There is no pride in
homo uuality." Ruben I rael
~houlcd throuah a bullhorn.
-BJ tbr S«iatftl Prus
.... £91111 T.J. A I , I I IE .141421, • -
s.netines, learnlng how to Ill mn of love ·can save r•r _ lllity
Amy says she
loves Dick
anyway, in spite
of the pain he
causes her.
•.um .. ,.. i' a
No matter that
he saY, he loves
her one minute
and disappears
the next. No
matter that she is
absolutely 1ure
she &iv'cJ more to the relationthip
than she ever ,eta from trim. No
matter that since he's been in her
life, .she feels anxious almOtt all
the time. And that the dolcr the
tries to ,et to him the mC>N he
pulls away.
Amy says the IO¥Cs Dick llf'/WIY·
Poor Amy. She'• on a self·
destructive, ·1n1iety·producin1.
emotional roller-coast!_r. She
thinks about nothina but Dick. If
he'U call tonipt. lf he'll like her
new dress. If there is really
another woman in his life (her
wont fear of aJI). And of coune, if
he's with whoever-she-is at any
&iven moment.
Poor, poor Amy. She's aot love
mixed up with obsession.
Her friends arc aettint sick of
he.a.rin1 her complain and "not do
anythint" about what 1he
describes u her "fatal attraction."
Her job it in jeopardy becaUM she
has · been unable to concentrate
about much else othet than Dick.
Her Obscs aon has taken over
her life. Little by httle she has
ne1tectcd her own needs, with
increuins desperation. She'd tell
you that she has too much
invested in the relationship to be
able to just JIVO up.
Like a compulsive 1ambler
trying to recoup Josses, she's
stayed in this love-game for much
too Iona. The very thoupt of
"losing" Dick feels too much like
"losin1" herself.
Am y is sufferina from an
obsessive love-addiction. If p'vc
also been hansinJ on in a love·
relationship which you know
iihould end. (People who are ln
love·rclationshlps wh~b abOWd
end know it, deep-down.) Or even
if you're ju t tuck in a mode of
thinkina too much abOut a
relationship which ended loq •F·
lhen this 11 for you too: The
&perts' O\lide to f atlifta O.t of
EJlcc ivo l.oYe:
• Look In a mirror and face up
to the fact that there i little hope
that this relation hip will ever
chanae. Ho or he • i either
unwillina or unable to love you in
the ri&ht ways
•Truly romantic \tones arc
about people who love each other.
Remind yourself that there i
nothina romantic at all about
lovina meone who won't or
doc n 't know how to love )Ou
back.
• Don't be too by to _ call for
"rcinfon:ement " If )OU're lucky
enouah to have kept your friends,
a k one (or tM>) to remind you
con tantly about how many tjmes
you've been hun or let down by
your da.sappointine lOYer. Make a
pacl •1th younelt to call him or
her whenever you feel like callina
"him" or "her."
• Keep a diary of your teetinp.
Include '" at I Iona ··oar Dick"
letter (which you will never nd).
Tell ham of all the wa be b
betrayed )OU and let )OU doWn .
Read at O\lcr to you~lf for now.
(Some day, )'l'U may want to bum
ii.)
• De i nate one hC'ur a day as
"thinktn about ham" tame Think
about ham ron tantly for the whole
hour whether )OU want tn or not.
(P cholo ,,.., call th1" technique,
"Ooodan ") Do tha enough and
you'll bcrome fin1lly Nlrcd with
the whole U:il-'•·
• iake up n new pro1cct V1•11t a
health pa fot a weekend of
~mpcnna. plurge on a new . ilk
dr or on a ncv. bicycle Joan a
hak.ina club or i n up for kay
le n or a r· rcnch cl• . Pa
cloic attention 10 your own ener&Y
and to the ener&Y of tho1;c around
you.
•When er you thmk you're
IOsing your rctol\'e and he be 1n
to look .. not that bad'' ... clole your
eyes and meditate. Concentrate for
a moment on what )Q&r life -ould
be five years from today if it
included him... Focua on the
rcahtae of the same old problems
anJ the \ame old patterns ...
Concentrate, hard, on what it
~ uld feel like to tall be livin in
thi'I 41Cenano, in 1996!
• Now,"'lw1 1ch channels."
Chan e lour I 996 fantasy to an
image o yourself involved in a
happy, 10\l lftl relation hip with
~mcbcxly e/~"· Pa attention to
the f cehn you have bctn with a
man you I vc, who lo\.-c you bac
•"Replay .. tha second positiw
enano every ni ht before you go
to lecp.
t>r. UM#a A.41ren I a ,..~
and fll•lly Mt• lor "'lb ollltel
I• C.,,._. *I Mar.
~· Forgotten medicine works wonders is impro.ving memory
James was 7' yiean old. •ad.
liketolNftyhia ... wulna
major mental decline. Hit fantily
wa1 streaed by bis ~· witbdrawal rrom tlM family .... , ..
and they wanted him bllc:k.
He was put on a low·fat diet,
c.erdle. and vitamm ,..._.. tlNit = IOIM, but it WMll't uadt
rpM ..... an.ct ... 1 ... •
imprcWetMnt WM .......... He -.. "'°" animlttd in f..U,
......... had a tlNdl bluer. ----• .aw.n-. .... ~. •nd .,... .......... If
With "'°"' cuncem for hit penonal ~nee.. = la ~ .... ... widlly llMd
pi far '"""" ........ , -......
•
f unclion f'Cq\llrCI interact.on oC 1he ind~idual
-ncM: celh and by 1ncrPt1na dendrite connect.ions,
munoty and leamina re ""PfO'YCd.
H)dcraine alto secma to enhance bra " cell
metaboham, pmcec:u the brain from ftce·radkal
dama dunna dcCTeawd or 1ncreaeed oxyaen
supply, and inhlbitt free·rlMlical activity, tctina "
an antialiduu. In all of lbt "udia on tfydtf11nc.
nn slpificllnt toxicity hn been foUftd .
Almoat unbtlic¥abty, it lfflftl to PfOWi* benefit
w.thOUt nu . It is not \llld 1n 111e4idnc neartj a
much aa it CCNkt be, it ii lanp In& In .. tomato
prilcin.'' In Medidne, tM "tomato cftea" r.fen to
the terideflCY ol docton ao JC\lfn a thet'PY u
wonMUI ncn thoU&h the thcr has bffn prcwen .,,....,
-... ..,.,.. w firM inttoduc:ed. " "'
thou ht to e:itcrt benefit hy incf a braia bloOd now. In the t ral tudia demoelttated
that the dNt did n t inaeuo brain blood ftow, tO
the drua fell 1n di repute, ctpedalty '" lofty
academic card (•ho Item to need it the mottl),
This occurred despite the pubti<:ldoa OI man rlAM
'°double blind, plac:cbO-a>nltolled trials .....
that Hyacf'aine uhttantialty impnwed IMlllOrJ UMI
behavior. )
Dr. """"' ........... ,.,.. ..... 1 .... w •••
lwtdft#t M Nt •P*"" ...._
. .
..
... bKiloaHfeii• ot IDOlt 25..,..,_
OWIYH, the 1ilver 11111•• ot tbe Sawdaatt FeatMI ... _.. Beac:la h• its boUd of •-"•clcUljutt that.
lbe festival's traditionaJ . ..._ ta mind -to provide the J-.c ID opponunity to enjoy and ...,.a.to an and culture -the
baud tot off on ~ journey to
1trea1then' its mission . by
,.plementing highliahting
......._ The result: change and I,,.. commitment.
.. Tbil year's show will have a
•rent look and feel for many
...,..: an increase in ft.nt time
llbibiton; new demonstration and
iducational exhibit displays;
~..... in the layout of the
around•; and an increase in
\Uitina artists, including several
from Russia.
But, unfortunately, changes
often have a dark side. So have
&hese: $900 is this year's fee for an
oxbibitor's booth, which is $600
more than in former yean. The
main reason for this immense
ttlarkup is a requirement by the
Orange County Health
Department for construction of all
\lie festival's restaurant facilities.
So that's $400 for .health
improvements, but there ii still a•
$200 increase lefL That $200 is set
~side for strengthenln1 the
......... I PIH .. .. . ., .........
....... Oii ol I,. 52 ... .. deddlcl ID.._ a .._. ol ... tn•
"(But) ......... ...
deal," announced Derrene
Brobw, aemral ........, of the
Sawdust Festival, ·unctentaidina
the exhibitor's an1cr. ..The
(exhibitor's) were 1iven the
opponunity to talte a leave for one
year but come back next year,"
when it's going to be less
expensive, she said.
In any event, board President
Chris Krach is pretty optimistic,
that "these cbanaes will keep us
on the road. to success and on a
direct course towarda our mission.
The Sawdust Festival was founded
on strong principles. Local artists
wanted to celebrate and share
their skills. We still believe in
this."
Another change, which involves
all summer exhibitors, presents all
Sawdust artists demonstrating at
least six hours a week for the
entire show. One new demo area
will feature printmakina and other
related techniques. In addition,
exhibito r s will deaisn an
educational display in their booths
to illustrate their particular
workmanship and media.
A total of 27 new artists will be
showcasing their art this sea.son,
marking the largest group of
newcomers to the show in many
116 u
~---•~r•lil ~=Mt ... first time," Knda 11111. ......-
members who are famllar ......
show's history will i' be tllll:lllia
groups around our pouldl. 'l1li
tours will encourage the p.blk to
understand and enjoy the
uniqueness of the Sawdust and all
the cxciling activities on our
grounds.
"Its all a part of continual
changes we arc planning at the
Sawdust Festival," she added,
"After 25 years of operation,
change is inevitable and a·
necessary part of healthy
progrc s."
The 1991 season will run July 6
through Sept. 1 at 935 Laguna
Canyon Road. Houn arc 10 a.m.
to 10 p.m. Sunday through
Thursday and until 11 p.m. Friday
and Saturday. General admission
is $41 seniors are $3 and children
12 and under arc admitted free
when accompanied by and adult.
A special 25 cent admiuion will be
offered Thursday, July 25, and
Sunday, Aug. 25, from 6 to 10 p.m.
in celebration of the festival's
anniversary.
for more information call 494-
3030.
Workers build one of the booths to be featured at this year's Sawdust Festival in Laguna Beach.
"" .. 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11 :00 11 :30
Act:ordin$C to the
urgeon J<eneral, moking
by a pregnant woman may
result in a d1ild' pmnltUR
birth, low birth weight and
ft·tal in1ury. If that~ not
c:hikt abu . then what is?
••
TenllOnl fin amcJftl (hn ..., Rollo Stemaman, Gary Wm •nd Lisa KlubnHcen in the mystery drama
''Laur•" It G>lden W... Co11e9e. ·
Mystery, music till stages
at theaters this summer
Summer theater at the
colleges gets into full
weekend u the
mysterr, drama
"Laura ' arrives
at Golden West
Co ll cf c and
S add eback
College launches
it trio of
pro fessionally
mounted summer
stock musicals
with "Blame It
on the Movies." -----
Veteran owe Theater
drama instructor Critic
Charles Mitchell -----is directing "Laura," which opens
Thursday at the college's outdoor
Patio Theater and will run in
repertory with Agatha Christie's
"The Spider's Web" through July
19. Performances are on
designated Thursdays through
Sundays at 8:30 and ticket
information is· available at 895·
8378.
"Blame (t on the Movies" is a
musical revue featuring songs Crom
four decades of American and
foreign film cJasaica. Beth Hansen
is directing the show with Susan
Cable choreographing.
Performances will be aiven
Thursdays through S11turdays at 8
p.m. and Sundays at 3 p.m. until
Aug. I J in Saddleback's Studio
Theater on the Mission Viejo
campus. Call 582-4656 for ticket
informatio n.
Another summer college show,
"You're a Good Man, Charlie
· Brown," winds up its brief two--
weekend engagement this weekend
as the 36th annual summer
musical at Oranae Coast College.
Final performances of the musicaJ
based on the famed comic strip
"Peanuts'' will be Thursday at
10:30 a.m., Friday at 7 p.m.,
Saturday at 3 and 7, and Sunday
at 3 p.m. in the Drama Lab
Theater at OCC. Reservations are
taken at 432-5880.
This weekend will be the finale
for "Born Yesterday," the Costa
Mesa Civic Playhouse's sparkling
revival of Garson JCanin's well·
known comedy. Closing perform·
ances arc Thursday through
Saturday at 8 p.m,, and Sunday at
2 p.m. ''-the playhouse, 611
Hamilton St., Costa Mesa. Call
6.S0..5269 for reservatiom.
Also windina up this weekend ii
"Strictly a Formality," a drama
producec1 by the Cucucuevez
multi-cultural theater at Rancho
Santiago College. Curtain times
are 8 p.m. Thursday through
Saturday, 2 p .m. and Sunday in
the college's Phillips Hall, Bristol
and 17th streets, Santa Ana.
Reservations 564-566~.
South Coast Repertory is
aeplying a comic pin to the
BCrtolt Brecht-Kurt Weill musical
"Happy End," now through July
13 on the Costa Mesa theater's
main stage. Pcrformanc~s arc
Tuesdays through Fridays at 8
p.m., Saturdays at 2:30 and 8,
Sundays at 2:30 and 7:30, with
tickets available at 957-4033.
"The Merchant of Venice" is
the first entry in this year's Grove
Shakespeare Festival, playing
Thursdays through Sundays at 8:30
until July 20 at the Festival
Amphitheater, 12852 Main SL,
Garden Grove. Reservations arc
beina taken at 636-7213.
Ex -Miss America now chicken queen
LEXINGTON, Ky. -She was •national beauty
queen in 1971. Twenty years later, Phyllis George is
introduced her By George chicken at grocery store•
in Kentucky four years ago after concocting recipes
in her kitchen. the queen of chicken.
"Jn a million years, I never
though t I'd be in the chicken
business," George said. "I still have
to pinch myself - 'What business
arc you in?'
"I've always made the comment
that I'd be in perfume, jewelry,
clothin&-But chicken?''
George, former Miss America,
former Kentucky first lady and
fo rm e r C BS b r oadc ast e r , .,,,, ..... .
111""8'1 Ila
U&.aOA ~ 109 E 1e1boe ...... 67S ~70 .__,,,
IDWMIOS NIWf'OltT CINIMA 300 .......,_. c.-
0.... 644 016:>
1 hMn ""4 rG 13) I I 30, 2 IS S IS, I IS ' n.. he...._ ('GI 11 •S. 2, • 30, 7, 'JO l 0, tfldt-IPC 13) 12, l 30, S. 7 30. 10 IS
IDWMIOS IMAHD QNIMA '-'-' ~ ~ ...... "'°'"'' I ......... c-i 1 lU. 4 IS. 7, 9 0
1 "'-"-" &..-. ~" , 30, s. 7 JO. 10
J ..._. Altewt kit' ll'GI 11 JO, I 30, 3 lO.
S •S I 10
4 o,tfle Y-e (al I 30, 4, 6 30, '
S D4No'I T ... -.W (PO 13) 11 30. I 30. 3 4S, 6,
8 lS. 10 '10
6 0,-. Y--e 12 30 l. S 30 I. 10 IS , ....,.....'° •3) 1.J.s 1 u.no
uoo CINllM ........,.. ....... ........,.. v.looe 673
llSO ....... ..__, '° 13) 1, 4, 7, 10
POe"f 'INIAm ms t c-~ '134260 , .... ......._7,9 1S
Clltl ...
..... w CINT1a 2701 ...... ""' ...._v_.c ..... •n.4141
I n. I • le (Ki) II ~S. 2, 4 30, 1, 9 30 2 atr .... ,0,13)1230.l ,UO.l , 1030
J 0, .... rc).l3) II 30, 2, 4 JO., 1, '30
4 "'9 11 I 10 l'GI 12 30. l . S 30, I, 10 IS
...... cw.MA , ___ II.di ............ 546
3107
....... ..._ l'O·lll I04S, 130, 430, 130.
10 IS
MMeoe NM ~ ....._ ....-11 ~
SO-... '31.:JSOI
I ......... 11111 4S, l JO, S IS I, 10 )() • , .,.... '""9 ..i 11 30. 2, 4 30, 7, f 30
..... ~ .......... llflll SI 6•640?S ,........ a ~Ill> II •S. 4, I IS IX I ,0 IJI
2 6 IS, IOJO
'°"" C9tfl9 CINIMAt Sov!lt C..11 ,.._ 751 •
4114
I ......... l'O IJI 11 IS t S. I
2 """'-lo...... II ()(), 7, 4 )(), 7, f •J a ....,..'° 1a '·' .$ IS.7 30 tu • .,..._\'... 1,3:30 6 IJO 100
• 1,$
..,,.. ... ~ .. ~J46 ,,, •
1 •11UW11
" II d.)JO S 16, I IOJO
:2 "9 I t ... , fl"Ol 1' UO I 1 10 • 4) ) ., ..... f"G IJ} 11 IO, :I, 00 7, f.30
............. ~-..... $40 ... , ....... ...,
IOU
' ..... -. rQ" u o 1 no ~o
!) ..................... •.•7 10
The company was purchased in 1988 by Geo. A.
Hormel cl c.o .. which has expanded the Ry Oeorae
line on a national basis to include turkey and soon
pork and beef.
"P~e seen this little idea batch and just grow and
grow and grow," said Oeo.rge. ''It's been exciting to
me. It really is a dream come true."
George, who will be 42 on Tuesday, is married to
former Gov. John Y. Brown, who made a fortune
with Kentucky Fried Chicken.
-~ Th Al1oclatal Pren
Onon Wefts' datlk: "Citizen Kane'' i' currently pl.iylng .i South Coast
Vlllaae cinemas. The film marks Its SOth anniversary this year.
• ........... 11)1:30 •,UO,t
' ............ 11a,2.•>0,7,•ll0
• •I ,_,.,,.. ,_ IHQ Mello SI
"'°"' 1 ,........_ u:a o 1,130 10
7 "-'-".....,. 11111 11 •s. '· 4:J0, 1, no f t&J I 111111
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._y ... --,,,,, ........... ,. ..... I 7 ~
I ....... flt 11 4S t 00, 7 f ,JO
t c:r.. ..... 11111 I IS. HO, I •t '1, 10 It
1 • t'::"" .... fPOt 11 • I JD. a .JO
4 ........... .-i l,J 1$, »0 :1 41 IO
Women design hit
for Art Institute
It was ccnainly no accident
that Thur ~day night's
champ:ipe reception fo r the An
Instjtutc of Southern California
went off
without a hitch.
Designina
Women were
behind it.
Hosted by
Jldc and Dorf
d eKrulf, the
evenina's
happen inas ........,. ...._
were held at .,..... .,..
t h e c I i f f Jllll
clinging Llguna -----
Beach home of Society \Nancy and __ _._
~~.
founded an 1973 IS I SUf?port
aroup for the An Institute,
Desiping Women hu raised
more than Sl,000,t'OO. The
aroup had dcsians on
underwriting for their upcomina
aala, Le Cirque du Sensational,
aet for Sept. 1 at the Ritz
Carlton.
What will make thi year's
went 10 sensational? President
Susan Mcfadden aaid,
"Everyone knows our panies are
the rnott sensational ln tho
county!"
OaJa chairwoman Christine
........ appeared undaunted by
the a~arently awe.ome fail
1ccomph. "l'his sroup of ladies
ij IO IU~M -it makes tho
job a Jot eatier."
The support was evident. It
took the form of S 12,500 from
the ewnina'• ad¥enture.
If the dramatic aeu1n1 for the
recepd0n was any indication,
this P"I will mako aood on
&heir promises. Oucm watched
tM tun bed dOwn In the tea
from a petitaded tcrrec:c. They
iaibbled intemationally thelMd
appetfaen from Nef ct Net like
Susan McFadden, left, and Dori
deKruif
ske~c;cd se,ame chicken and
onion tan carre. The Black Iris
contributed to the almost
Aegeu theme with callas and
orchids and white Reuben.lilies.
Well known local artist Antonio
Arellanes (currently featured at
Diane Nelson's Laguna Beach
Gallery) wa.s on hand lO talk
about his late t works.
Special guest for the evenina
was the Art Institute'• newly
elected eresident, John lottes,
there With wife, N•n. Loues
plans on channehna the enefJY
of tht institute more toward the
community, servina a broader
spectrum of the people.
"What's unique about 'the
institute," he explained, "is that
it offers underaraduatc dcpees
in Visual and studio an, liberal
ans and art history. We dOn't
just tudy art. we make an."
seems he'll get lhe word outl
Some of those attcndina were
Suun and lob Beech ner,
Doretta and Jim f ntlp, Carol
•nd Jim HaMllton, 5UHn and
MkhMI Mcfadden, Marie and
Fr.nk fteuto, J.cqueAM and
Robeft Schur, Nanc:Y and kent
Sny«Mr and John llki.
llil 1111 ' I t •
HORnt PLATTE. Neb. -Actor AIU Cbrd..,. he'a tMna out a bcJ1hood futuy tt, takbM pen in thil Jtar'1 Nebntk118Dd o.wL
Cord. 1 star ot the fonntr CBS aelnWoil •rill 0Alr.oii.'"-~ .,.., a~ '°"9d hOnla. He "98 pMyed on 1 CllebritJ polo tellft.
He'1 bad the chance to take ~n in tum rOplns cunpetition 11 the
, ...... 01l1tine, .......
"I Wll newr 1 full·tlme rodeo ~ but they were alw111 my
,,.,.._" Cont Mid.
Col'd .,.., thne on a rench in W)'Olllltj u a ,outh ind later took
tpldel tralntfta to become an open honemu.
-~ n. ..,...,.., ,.,._
..... ,_
~-:•·u·• ='-ar. ...... .,.
dolet.
00 w.c
WM die flablalt
directiali IOr die
f riday country
• v e c t a c'u I 1 r '-!------1ta1 a d u a
benefit for OIM •••--Crest. CIOIC IO
800 heard the Call and hurried off
to the Ootd Ruth Camp party area
of the farm in boob and 10-
aallona, leather, feathers and
denim touched with metal and
1parklic1.
Farm airl Ginny (kftott) lender
arranaed the event for the
treatment centers for abused
children and wek:oined the paying
guesu ($75 Adi) in a brightly
beaded {}'OU couldn't miss it)
jacket :<Nhile husband, Paul lender,
wore 1 denim duster featuring art
work on the back.
A lot of the aO<>d guys and gals
were in bladt indvdina WoH Stem
(with Ann), George and
Adrtew lrennen, Mimi and
Tom Cronon, Dianne Fueu
(leather with sitver trim), Tina
Schafnltz (with Matt). Mvgaret
llk hardson, Patty fdwud1 {with
Jim) and Tajah Siemon• (with
Jim), who topped off her outfit
with a coyote Jacket _and gold lame
trimmed boots.
On the brighter side oolor wise
Diane McDon1td was in beige
pants with chartreuse trim and
tanny wrap, Barbara Harris (with
Ben) wore an all-over painted
denim outfit, Nori Hester (with
Charley) wore 1 buttery soft red
leather fringed jacket over her
Arizona togs, Zee Allred wore a
rust-colored Italian made Western
ensemb, Nyli Trider was in all
white.
Shertt Mesker i.n beige ~
seen by all since she was on the
tage at one point to ling.
The old west probably never aaw
such a chuck w.,on tprUCI -
fried chicken, beef kabobe, 'pea
nJad and boysenberry pie. Tbe
crowd took 1 brief break &om
danciq to partake, but with the
band playina foot-1tomJ>in1 IDUlic
the hnc to chow hoese WM
swaying.
Others there to have a IO(>CI
time and at the same lime to help
Olive Crest wer.c national
spokespenon actor Perry Kins,
LoiJ and Donild Vetieur (Oliw ActOf Perry King and Virginia and Paul Bender
Crest founden 1973), ..,.,.,.. and
Bill Yingtlng (he is president of
Lucky stores and OC foundation
chairman), actress s.ndri Gollld
(Bewitched) with Dr. Tom ladler,
Marlon Knott ~, Miity
Lou and Scott Homsa,y, Mary Ann
and Lon Wells, Olga Ellh, Barbara
Aune, Robert and Peggy 01y,
Mimi and Hat Birnkrn, · Gary
Burrill and JUI Lindsay, Elaine and ·
Bob Basmaji•n, Susan lartow and
Jim Shaw and CC and Judge
Oaude Whitney ( 1 natural in
Western clothes as is bis look·•·
like Dennis Weaver.)
Some danced the eve away and
others strolled over for summer
Snoopy actitivies.
Proceed$ from the party were
c timated at $40,000 by lewrfy
Nestande, communication director
for OC.
Wife's a11xiety should be treated, not cheated on .
Dear Ann Landers: I was very
much interested in the letter from
t.le man who
signed himself,
··0o,,•t Want To
Be Another
Statistic in Falls
S hurch." His
wife's anxiety
attac:ks were
exhausting his
patience, and he
was considering .....,_ ......
an affair. I saw ,..
~r:::!nttii:~2~ I 13dB I
l read what he
had written.
I have suff crcd for the past 29
of my 49 years with arudety attacks
and depression. It is like beina in
hell. I've been takina medication
for so 10111 that I am terrified of
what will happen one day when
the medicine no longer works.
rearing. When children leave uffered with it for several years. Frc no: I boiled wht'n I read the
home, a strange and frightening He n~~ds lo read everything he letter from the man whose wife '
gap remains. That woman should can lay his hands on about hi was mentally ill. Whatever
be encouraged to build 1 new life wife's sickness. so he can help her happened to "in sickness and in
become involved with get well. He also should find a health, 'hi death "do us part"?
community work and civic groups. support group, such a Recovery, What a 1crk.
And she should get some Inc. Please tell him again. and Dallas: My mother has been
c:ounselina to help her find what again, and again. , clinically depressed and phobic for
resources she has and how they Kansas City: After our first child 12 years. She i on some '
can bc~t be used to find new wa born, my wife suffered from wonderful new medication that is
intercm. Any woman who can postpartum dcprc ion It would working a miracle and her bfe is ra~c five children who turned out never have occurred to me to find 100 percent better. So i my dad's.
wonderfully well must have fun elsewhere Scvcn )Clrs later, I He never once cheated. He ba
1ntel11gence, creativity and had a serious heart attack That been 1 model for his tons to
trength. i dear woman pulled me through by follow. What 1 111nt he is in the
New Castle, Pa.: So "falls hcer detcnnination and round-eyes of b. c.hiJdren. Such integrity :
Ch•1rch" 1s toying with the idea of the-clock encouragement Thi is and ientJeness arc rare. How luc:ky ~
havinr an affair because his wife, what love 1 all about. we arc to have him.
who ., as recently discharged from .----------------------------·
1 ps}c'\iatric hospital, is no longer
"chee1 fut and fun-toving." Well,
isr. 't that JU t peachy? He should
be toltl lilat nobody chQoscs to be
mentally ill. I know what 'mental
illness is about becau c I have
RUFFELL'S
UPlll.STEIY llC. .................. 1m _ aa. _-.,.:.•111t
Your single source
for comprehensive
medical services.
I live with • wonderful man who
is some kind of saint fot piJtting
up with me. The man who wrc te
to complain said he loves his w f e
but she i no fun anymore and te
is tempted to have an aff.tir to : ce
if he is still alive. I pray.be cloesi't l.:=======:;::=::===:::1
go that route. Chcatin& is ncve I ew Ca r
Tbe Medical Plaza Aaodation, located nest to
Fub.ioa laland in Newport Bea~ pro•ldes tJae IDOlt
compreJ»emive aroup of pbyaiciam, dental spedal-
llta and outpatient medlcal lel'Vicel in SoutberD
Callfonala. ID one convenient location! solution. Invariably it leach t~
more problems. -Islip, N.Y. e8S00
0ur 1aup: n..k ,.. ror a Is Here
letter that co.Id laate beta wrtt'tn
onl7 b) Haeo .. wlilo bad
aswr1etttttt tk ,,....... a.a ety
b1•1 I Hen 111tll c:.m,.s .... ate
Hd .,_,.tJMtJe .... U t'aat
wt.kh re •lted from tMt col•111•.
lltad Oft!
From Somerville, Ma .: The
woman who had panic attacb in
Fall Church, Va., wu a wonderful
wifo and mother durina their 26
yo1rs of marriap. accordina to her
hulband. She hM five chiJdn:n
which tugesta thtt her life ~
been pretty ll'Ndl de¥0ted to cbJJd.
Af'ttr >"°" hi )'Mf but
ur dHI, call u tor a
quott on that ...,.. car! .........
Rlbbftt 111 ... ce .,,RCJ
631-1740 .. , ow .......... ,. ... , • .,.. AllL.
Ncwpon.... ~
(Nw Hoec> -·-.. -
I I '··' .'\
Cllnd ...... ,, 760-0111
BA YSIDB CBNTBR
Nearly 100 bultb care profealonala are available
to meet JOU!' lndividual bealtb care oeedl. Pia,.
lciaDI aDd dentllts are available in eacb of tJae
followtna tpeeialties; =..aw_,
'* ,, "r ........ ,..,._
•••i•1t10 t f1f1 •• e ....... ,.., (GI)
Dr ••tt e..na•Pllll)~ 8-191....,
l)MC I e =.:-a ....
............ , •• 1 .......
"• r a ..__,.., ..... ... ,,., .. ..
.., ............. £11. a .... --··· , ....... ,, 4 ..
756-9000
·'
G-•--M ... 0..-..... -errhese dandelions need a shaver•
llARllADUKlt by Brad Anderton
·-·-----.-
"Oh well, we didn't want to skateboard
today anyway, did we?"
RAKCY
ARLO AKI> JAMS
OVERBOARD
\H , S€m~~. ~m, CAA~~
~AA1 Ai.E Vw.ii> OW Of
~t>U G~~S f>.. RGTitV OUT
\Jf 10 7 Sf&T lit 1l\f
\\utl •STMRS
JUDOSP.AllUR
rw=aN MARK
ooe&N'T RETURN
"fi'OM CH•CKIN<9 OUT THE WN'te • ...0U99, VIKI . oo•• .-.~.-MIM
I ... NO 01s.-.eU .. 1!9 t • TM• H,..TCMl!T'S \..0.-.oeo C.-.R / I
~MG ! IUIUM6 ! JtlCIH6!~! , "" ' --6o· i!
So wt'~ SEE~ JUIP1KG
\JP t\ltt> ~N t1411 R~~L
~AA9lt1\1'610 M~~
nE W~T'R GUSM ~
• •
" How do I love
thee?" he said.
~~~1'r)gset.
"let me COllnt
the '!ltJYS."
Today wa tut.a a ~ittg
little local Chanlonnay f"'rn
East Vl~s srowtng wine 1ndustry.
16Flw. tin. fifteen. tweJtW ... "
by Jerry Scott ROSE 18 ROSE
'WIMGIMG { CUNIM6 ! OMNQ ~ ~Me ! ~IN61~G ! C~ -----..~N~ ..
. .. . .
by Jimmy Johnson
ll4£Y~D·~yo 1~=
• •
by Pat Brady
~t SW.01 ~~
by Tom Batluk
l'U.. BE ABLE 10
Df6 OOf IN~ 1lE 11ME .
by Lynn Johnston
NO ·1k>81!!. OOTI'ii'S!r
Pubhshed by P~~ Croup Publishing; Inc.
fUiol Stein, Jr., chairman
Jim Cratlnpr, publi~r
Will~m S. Lobdell, editor & vice president
SIM Marble, mclniging editor
W aller lufrousht, 1901·1989, founding publisher
-
Editorial
'
A Buperlund OP I
Superboondoggle?·
De pite accountant galore, the federal government has a hard
time keeping track of its· mon~y.
Or rather, our money. E.ar'1ier this year we learned that of the
$1.8 billion in research funds the feds handed over to Stanford
University in the 1980s, fully one-third might have been misspent.
Expense ranged from antique commodes to luxury yachts.
the commode, in fact, is a fitting symbol for the way the
federal. government spends our money. following the Stanford
revelation , several other universities were cited for "overbilling"
the government for "ind irect costs," general expen cs like
building maintenance that support but don't directly involve
research. ~
The saga continues. This week it was reponed that similarly
creative billing has afflicted S\lperfund, a .huge pot of gold that
Congress set on its doorstep in 1980. The program's purpose was
to clean up toxic waste site around the country.
. A noble g<?al, one which the government has moved toward
with customary fleet-footedness. Of the targeted 1,200 itcs, a
total of 64 have been cleaned up, at a cost of $7.5 billion. At this
rate, Supcrfund will accomplish its mi ion in 180 years.
One of the reasons for the outrageous expense recalls the
indirect-cost billing loophole that universities love. The rcgul3tory
definition of indirect co ts wa deliberately vague, supposedly
allowing Ocxibality m re!>carch methods. So flexible was the
definition that it C\Cntually included yachts.
With Supcrfund it was "pro$fam management," meaning
admini 1ra11vc co ts. But I.he EnVlronmcntal Protection Agency,
which prctcn~ to oversee Superfund. never adequately defined
that overhead, so it ha come to include uch items a busmc
cards anJ parking fee for contracting companies. Nearly one·
third of the $200 million Superfund spent since 1988 has gone to
rirogram mana ement, the Wa hington Post rcpons.
Th1) generosity is a recurring characteristic of tbe way
government docs bu inc ~ At the very least, regulations hould
be peeaficd to exclude frivolou!> billing. The larger quc tion is
whether we 're a~kina government to do too many thing , and
whether we give it too much money to do them with.
Today In History
Today i Monday, June 24, the
17Sth day of .l.991. There arc 190
day left in the year.
Today's Hl&hJlcht ln History:
On June 24, 1948, Communa t
forces cut off all land and water
routes between We t Germany
and We I Berlin. prompting the
United States to organize a
ma ive airlift of ~upplics into the
city' western cctor to counter the
blockade
On this date:
In 1314, the forces of Scotland'
King Robert I defeated the
E nglis h in the Battle of
Bannockburn
ln 1497, the first recorded
di covcry of North America b> n
European took place a explorer
John Cabot, on voyaae for En~
land, sighted land. rirobably m
pre cnH.lay Canada.
In 1509, Henry VIII wh
cro\\ ncd king of England.
In 164:'7, Margaret Brent, a niece
of Lord Baltimore. wa ejected
from the Maryland Assembly after
demanding a place and vote an
that governing body.
In 1793, the first republican
const1tut1on an France was
adopted.
In 1842, a utho r-journalist
Ambrose Bierce was born in Mcig
County, Ohio.
In 1908, the 22nd and 24th
president of the United States.
G rover Cleveland, died in
Princeton, N.J., at the age of 71.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Al
Molinaro i 72. Comedian Jack
Carter i 68. Movie director
Claude Chabrol 1 61
.. , ...., ,, .....
WASHINGTON -A .ew nwe
of bashinc which bu ace. an
elhaustcd and bitter John S-u
provides a case study of llow
Washiniton operates Md wlmc
George Bu h is vulnerable.
h would seem ludicrous in
imperial Washin1ton that an
unglamorous limousine ride to
New York City would brin& the
White House chief of stiff to a
point where a close political
associate privately refers to him u
an "albatross" around President
Bu h's neck. The reason lie in
Sununu's style and ideology.
WlllDll steals Brown's thunder
But Sununu's day off would not
have produced week-Jong front
page tones in the nation's great
new papers had it not been for
Bush's ambiguity. Although no
other subordinate is so critical to
the adm1nistntion's domestic
progr:un. the pre idcnt could not
bring himself to give Sunuou a
totally clean bill of health but
iMtcad mused about the need to
keep up "appearances,."
By W1llialn Endicott
MtClllctly News s.w:.
Ether Assembly Speaker Willie
Brown's memory is playing tricks
on him, or he's trying to rewrite
history.
Brown attacked Pete Wilson the
other day by saying the governor
weigh~ all his moves against a
future presidential bid and thus is
much harder to deal with than his
predecessor, George Dcukmejian.
"Pete Wtl on 1 different from
the previou governor because he
\tall has a future in his own mind,"
\aad Hrown. "He literally believes
that one day he could possibly be
pre 1dcnt "
Dcukmc11an "had d1fficult1cs
changing to accomm odate the
con en\us" but wa de\Old of such
ambition, i.aid Brown. " ... I'm
telling you. J admired hi
touihness."
It') funn> enough for the
peaker to be )uggesting that
Wil on 1~ the fi~t politician ever
to come down the pike who was
m o tiv a ted by p o litical
t.-onsiderat1on .
The tory gets even more
laughable when one recalls that
the worst budget stalemates in
state hi tory occurred under
Dcukmej1an nnd that he gave new
me aning to the phrase "immovable
ObJCCt." La"make r fumed for
eight year'l over hi'i st ubbornness
and 1ntractab1hty
13ut here''i where Brown 's
memo!') really !Items to dim. It
"' n't too man)' )Car; ago that
Bro..-.n and other Democrats were
accu'img Oeukme1mn of trying to
parla>-h1 handling of )'el another
hudget Cn'-1~ mto a national
pohllcal repu1111on
1 h.u charge becnmc a dominant
L1ttar1
Enforce 1111 code
fo th e Editor.
Although J don't agree with
Councilman Robitaille's "1000
percent backing of Redevelopment
Downtown," I do agree with ha
recent statement that code
enforcement is lacking wathm
Huntmgton Beach.
To go even further, the real
rca on our do"ntown started to
decay 1~ hccau~e certain civic
le dcM and taff didn't have the
guts (as Councilman Robitaille put
11) to enforce the law already on
the boo . Our downtown ..-.ould
h&\ie been cleaned up faster nd
without d1pp1ng Lnto the public
trough iC only our code were
enforced.
The \itrne applic today: We arc
being ddlcd with more fee to
P"Y for the thing~ nur tue ~hould
be 11luns cure ol right now Why
doclln't the cit imply end out
their enforcc.-mcnt people and
write up the Cl'lle und luw
hreakcr.J-
Thank )OU l)undlman for
ytna what needed to he id, but
let' nut lca\c 1t at that -let'
target me re no..-. before the
red \cl rmcn1 c~ ~nd more
of our mone necJI lyl
808 8100 -
Huntin t n &each
I llt 111'1 ...... , ••••
1 o ah Ed1hn:
NflOll tkach offtcial ha
C'Ot'nptl~d ll I t of five hitl rical
at • ~t or .. hic:h have been
•
theme in Democratic a11acks on
the Republican governor. A Brown
ally then an th~ A scmbly, Maxine
Waters of Lo Angele , at one
point urged her colleagues to use
the budget to "dismantle"
Dcukmcji3n's "dreams of being
pre ident."
Maybe absence really docs make
the heart grow fonder. But I
sus pect that what 's really
bothering Willie Brown is not Pete
Wilson's political ambition but the
fact the ego-driven speaker has
been upstaged by the governor.
Brown has been lo ing hi grip
for some tame, as reflected in the
As embl>'s dismal performance
ove r the past sev~ral years. He's
more talk than sub tancc. With
the inOex1ble Dcukmcjian in the
governor' office. however, he was
able to fill a ncgot11ting vacuum.
It' different with the proactive
Wilson, who ha cizcd control of
the bargaining proce and shaken
at to 1t root«. He works at at -
colle c tively, o nc ·on-onc or
however ii takes -and Brown has
ecn hi role ~harply dimini hed
The speaker al o tried to
persuade reporters la t week that
Dcuk.mcjian wa a real master at
shaking votes out of the nay nying
conservatives in the As embly
Republican Caucus.
''He didn't fea r calling an)'
member of the Republican caucu~
whom he wa recommended to
call," Brown said "He didn't fear
being accused or tnterfen ng with
the caucu or any of that stuff. He
didn't have an) fear about that
Man> governor do have fear
about that"
Agam, that' a httlc rewriting of
h1 •.tory. The fact 1 that
Dc11~mc11an never really put the
deMehshcd or altered beyond
recogn111on. Th e ame officials
have now wi ely informed the
pubhc that: "As these sites show,
h1'itorical preservation doc n't
require the actual building to be
retained . preservation can be
acrompli hed amply by ident 1f}1ng
the .. 11e on an official h'lt of
h1"itonc relOOurcc~ " Not only 1
that r emark profc,"onally
1n.1ccuratc. it is ploin. downnght
\tUp1J
Ne~ port Be ch official ~cm lo
thank thJt idcntaf>ma lhc locataan
uf ·• l:lndmark 1 the same at,
havan~ the landmark. It 1 n't,
e .. pcc11lly so when the itc h
hccn rc ·bo11t with tructure not
related to the ongin1I
Pcrh11P' the t payc" h uld
tlc.,i nate that '°me of their
money o toward buylna the
Ncwpon Uc ch Cit)'. Council anJ
11 taf{ a dictionary. It i painful!
obv1ou f mm the inane c mmcnt
quoted an M . Yoko1'1 article II\ t
the do n t havo one. According
ta the Odord American
Dtctaonary: pre·'leNC I. to keep
~fe, tu keep 10 an un han cd
conthtion.
t•ff. take a hi t ry I n. You
can compile a h t, or u can
prc'«:rvc a landmark. But a h l of
location i not, repeat not,
pre Nation. hamc on you. •
o the l!4.l1tor:
JOFY l PARKl.R
U ff lM n
J-luntan t n h
1'hc Ota CtlUnl Parent and
A!>i.cmbly con ervatives to a
critical test. They were cut from
the same 1dc.ological cloth. It wa
Wilson who personally pried nine
GOP votes lcxxc for the budget
three day-; a8o, 1ust as Brown had
challenged him to do.
ff anything. Wil on's future
political aspiratio n have been an
incentive as he moves ldwty but
deliberately towa rd a solution to
the budget cri i . Unlc s he i able
to re tore the state to fiscal health,
he can forget about the White
Hou c.
He is paying some short-term
price for the tax increases he lS
proposing, A Cahforn11 Poll
released ,l<\St week showed his
negative JOb ratmgs have doubled
ance the on ct of the budget mess.
"It's the old law," said poll
director Mervin Field. "When you
drc a gO\·crnor, C\cry day you ha\e
the chance to make people
unhapp) Wilw n was left thi huge
def1c11 anJ bad econo mic
condition . When tame are tou.gh,
people have 10 blame someone.
nnd t he go\crnor 1s well
po itioned."
But there's plenty of time for
the current cri 1 to become only a
f am t blip on the political radar by
1996, whe n George Bus h
presumably will be fmi hing hi
'iccond term and Republicans will
be looking around for a uccc r.
In 1967, another California
go\cmor presided over what was
then the biggc t tu hike m stale
history, blaming it on an 1nhentcd
'11tuauon. Like Wilson, he was an
ha fir t term m office. It didn't
seem to low him down. Hi name
was Ronald Reagan.
Willl•m Endicott I • columal t
for M cCl•tcby ·~ &f"\·itt.
Actuall y , co n ce rn fo r
appearances shaped Sununu's
late t mode of travel. During the
prcviou transportation furor,
a ides say Bush was most
concerned by the chief of taff s
u e of military aircraft lo attend
polit ical event . It was decided·
that like many congre men, he
would use corporate jets for such
event -including a pending
Republican fund-raiser in ~cw
Jersey.
Sununu, an inveterate hobbyist
who unlike other Washington
po..-.er bro«crs is not consumed by
aff am of state, told the president
that ex-Delaware Gov. Pete
duPont's rare German Zeppelin
stamp were being old in
ManhattAn and that he was
tempted to drop by before the
Jersey event. Bu h urced Sununu
to take the day off.
It was then Sununu made two
m1 takes, based on hubris and sell·
confidence. First, he turned down
a colleague's advice to ride the
Amtrak Mctrolincr to Manhattan,
with news .media filming his
departure. "That would be a
l"Oncc ion J hould not make," he
aid He took a White House limo
1n~tcad, in i ting he should have
24-hour secure communications
ccc to the president. Second,
after New~cek reported the trip,
ununu wt.nt on ABCs David
Bnnkley pro&ram.
Even after Sam Donaldson's
bh tenng. Sununu did nol envision
the fire torm. Nor did Republican
poh11cal wise man Charley Black,
who was called on for advlcc. Why
m (act the tamp-buying trip
deva tatcd Sununu tS more
mtcrut1ng than the trivial incident
1t elf
The deluge oonfmned Sununu's
VlC" that the Wa hmgton Post is
t.ut to ge t him for no n-
Fnend'i of Lc'b1an' .ind Gay cooperatton. What makes him so
would hkc tfl clc.H up some discouraged, he tells friends, 11
m1,conccpt1on,, regarding the that he feel the rest of the news
trona page \tot). dated May 3 t. media follows the leader. White
hr.t of all. ahhoup,h 1 wa' quoted House aides most supportive of
tw your rcponcr. Ru-.s Loar, I did him !ICC a media vendetta cck.ina
make 11 clear that our organization to get even for both Sununu's
could not p<wi1bh be involved contemptuou-; treatment and h
because a' pre 1dcnt of th~adeology
chapter .• ind al o 1nvol\cd with the There 1 no que t1on Sununu's
'Peaker" bureau. l had no right·w1ng view ha"e built a
kno" ledge th.u thi' event wa coalition against him never arrayed
taking place again t Jame Baker, HowJrd
. . . Ba .. cr. Kenneth Duber tein or Our chapter polll'')' '' that all <'H'n Donald Reg~n. He ha
peaking cnga cment go through ant on1zcd the civil riahts,
our "pea l.er' bureau co cn\aronmenwl and ~hool l ie .
coordinator... Mul lgoc and Art Pcrhap m t important, u picion
II.. rp, and nenher w cont cecd th. 1 thi econd·aeneration p~t0r to 1h1 seminar .. Thc~c were Lcbane~·Amcncan is not fuJty
1dd111onal maccurac1e~ in th1~ • anklt'. 1ncc t>ur -.puker5 bureau uppon1~c f I rael s demands on
wa-. prohibitcJ from pealing 10 the United State may ~la•n
h J s c d 1 M att:ic rrom uroes that might be t e stu ent at orona .c ar cq>ecteJ an Sununu' comer.
ll1 h chool. we ha\.c ah1dcd bv n 1 ""' I doc t l · h d • uu 1.., .. 0 ogy no exp aan
t I\ or er oil. Sununu has tromped on so
~h. Deni. e Penn i indeed 1 many toe the pa t two and one·
member o( our chapter, but he i ha\f years t hat any petty
1n no way in charac ,of our il'l'1 i retion i widely welcomed.
or 1n1u11on a poke pc~n or He can count on vcnacCul
pcakcr bureau coordinator a to di lo detail~ of a
unlc < end ncd h our bo rd of day off in Manhattan. F.ven
director... Oran c County Parent con~ rva1111 who ouaht to he in
t· O aoc n record that 'IJIC h' chcettnt CbOn arc muted.
were nc"er mvol cd One colleague who ~r bu c: hanscd an unp4ea nt word
Oo n >t he: ii.t 10 (Ont 1,;t mt if
u \hauld ha\e an qu 11,m to
the~ fact . Thank u for ur
1.on id r1ti n in und nandtftl
why accuracy c ucmcly
impotl'nt with th1 uc
H·
rucnt
\
A LAYLAND
Pr ident
of Lt n A
G
with ununu is Gearac Bu.th. But
what tran formed the latest
inc1desu tntn a eris the
ptrccpdon of •~te .MlppOtt rro... 1-.c ~ •ho dedlired
• nobod)' likes the .....-GI anpropriety.~• NM1inl'1, iM ...,.
med11 reponecl du. .-...,..
dawn p1eticliMial oa 111tt M
"I hack W.. Ip • " Mil c1t1D .,. .. fili••" .
c..w: l•• ti••'• ·---............... wh• ..... , ce .. , , .. , .. ,.. T--,.
w.M:
l ate 11l11tt
tllrHah 111114-
"'o'd"I low
clollfl throup
Twctd41y. Qthe,.
.... fair.
Mou.miM:
Mo1tly dNr
IMlt '°' _, low doudl ...... TODAY'S SUN
. lower coaetal
1lop., durl111
early "'on1t111 houn today _,
Tunday.
Su:nise: 5·49 a.m.
Sunset: 8:14 p.m.
0 ()
Full Moon Last Otr. New Moon
June 27 July 5 July 11
SHOW
From A1
said. "It has JUSt snowballed."
Bowman has been approached
by foreign poster salespeople at
shows, and has workr.d out an
arrangement where he trades
A me ri ca n movie posters for
French. German and
Czc:choslovakian interpretations,
gaintng "Danse Avec Les Loups"
and "Der M1t Dem Wolf Tanzt"
film posters in exchange for the
American "Dances With Wolves"
version of the Kevi n Costner
blockbuster.
.. People come over from
ovcr-.eas and they find me, I don't
have to look for them," he said.
He attends these shows as a
hobby, and brings his adult
children with him. Cheryl, his
daughter, shares her father's
passion for poster art. ''I'm a
Charlton Heston and Errol Flynn
maniac." she said. "My problem is
that l get the posters and never
want to let loose of th em."
While movie posters and comic
book\ are not considered classic
forms of an, the creators of these
art formi. comider them to be
worthy of a gallery in their own
i.eme.
"This took me a whole day 10
draw," sa id Craig Stormon. the
crca1nr and art1'>t for "Varmints,"
as he pointed to one of his 8 It
2'"X 14" black and white drawings.
''(Comic art) 1' pretty hard If you
don't lo"e 1t. 1t'i nor wnnh 11." he
<.aid
OCEAN REPORT
SURFING
Stnrmnn -;uggested that the \\ay
to become a good artist 1s to
a1tcnd Jrt 'chool "It\ the way to
go." he 'aid l ... P....,...,'Qt .... eo.tl Ot.IY Noc
Robert Morg;in nf Costa Mesa collects comic relc1tC'd toys including this
lo'it In Space lunchbox on sale for $500
SP• ~
• ................
Ill • Ill ~ m e 0 2l a ~ ~ , ..... " .... .... • ..,, ,r.cao..9l' ca..--•• I ......... • II :-:· .'! .. ., °"""" n .... n ,. ., u ........... n c..lllllM .., -~ .. • ,. .. ....... , .. ,_ II II " . , =to.. . ,.
~ ,. .. ~· ,., •• " 74 .. ,. 0 """" 17 ri tt :• u .. Clllc:IMMI 7t ., ...... • .. ... a-e-1 n .. ~°"' ,.
°'*"' .,, o.a...t-.. " ., ........ ,. :::-:r.g ,., u 0-.... .. Jf ...... n '° SJ o..a • 17 J7 T ..... ,. .._... " .. , ........ II " s.a--,. n Ct--4 ..... 76 .,
S4ll .. S1 ............ ,, 7l ,_..__ ... IJ SI ......... .. 1)
S..Dlfp ., .. 111.-. ..... ll 6) Sell frMChco M JI r-..Oty 7) .. ........ n s...,... ., " ~ .. .. ....... .,
s...c.~ 14 SI " 71 .......... .. SIMI..,..• 10 47 MW!ll ..... .. 77 l ...... u
s..e. °"" 74 J) ~ " ,, JIWrtill " ,..,_OWtflel " u ............. .. .. Mtok.O., 7T
SMti !MM • .. 47 ......Offit_ ,, 1' '" ..
~ 74 S2 ,..rllf\Clly 7) "
._ ..
loMeV~ ,, J7 ~°"' ., "
,...,. 71
HINin llimN •Y hn drug
ring, but -·t stop supply
SAN FRANCISCO -The seizure o half a
ton of "China white" heroin may have
devastated the Asian drug ring that smuglcd it
but won't stop the Oood of heroin comin1 into
the United States, one official said.
"This i just the tip of the iccbcrs,'' said lbny
Crittenden, a U.S. Department 'bf Justice expert
on Asian gangs.
"We 're eeing more heroin out there than ever
before," he said in Sunday's editions of the San
Francisco Examiner.
A raid on a Hayward warehouse on Thursday
netted more than 1,000 pounds of high-grade
heroin with an estimated street value at lea t $3
billion. It was the biggest scizure ever of the
drug in the United State , according to federal
off~ia~
£·our suspected members of a drug mu&&hng
ring were arrested Thursday.
A fifth suspect, Mike Jiumin~ Chen, was
arrested early Saturday in a hotel m the Boston
suburb of Woburn, said Rollin Kling, a U.S.
Customs Service special agent in San Francisco.
Chen was stayin& in the hotel with hi lQ..year·
old son, but Kling declined to discuss what Chen
wa doing in the Boston area or how agents
captured him. The boy was placed in protective
cu tody.
Four o( the u pccts are Taiwanese resident
aliens, and one is from Bangkok.
Despite the big bust, experts believe other
gangs a~ poised to take their hare of America's .
S 150 billion-a-year heroin market.
"The Hong Kong gangs have cornered the
(U.S.) market and they're here to stay," aid
Crittenden, who has pent 1 J years monitoring
Asian Gang activity.
Heroin production in the so-e.tllcd Golden
Triangle -the region where the borders of
Burma, Thailand and Laos meet -has been
doubling over the pau few years, making up for
a cutback in Turkey, Pakistan and Afghamstan,
Crittenden said.
A State Department report last year c timated
that 3,050 metric tons were exported from the
Golden Triangle. The region upplies more than
half the: heroin that comes into the U.S., uperts
ay.
The glut of '11.roin has resulted in lower street
price) and higher purity levels, as high as 98
percent.
"It' the purest form of heroin that we've seen
in many years, and as a result it's very
dangerous," Crittenden said. "Most American
addicts out there arc used to 'black tar' heroin
from Mexico, and when they act their hands on
some China white it is often fatal.''
fhe heroin was found in mid-May during a
routine U.S. C\Jstoms inspection or a ship from
Taiwan at the Port of Oakland.
Among a shipment of 1,350 boxes of plastic
grocery bags, inspectors found 59 boxes
containing heroin compressed into wheels.
Agents confiscated all bul 10 pounds and let the
delivery proceed to the warehouse, which they
then watched.
Court records show that the investigation was
nearly blown when a suspect spotted a federal
agent sitting in a urveillancc van.
But the quick-thinking agent pretended to be
asleep, then "awoke" with a start. He had a
friendly chnt with the suspect, who fell for the
act and told him he could sleep in the parking
lot of the Hayward warehouse agents would soon
raid . -By th&! ~1«l•ld l'ru$
•• u n u ,. .. .. ..
92 u •
n n ..
J4 ..
J9
SJ
" (6
Stnrmon hcgan drawing as a
lour yc.u old .• ind C\Cn now -36
\'ear' later -hJ'> '1111 has not lost h" e n1hu\1a\m for drawing
mon,ter'i and \C1·f1 creaturei..
"Mo<>t of them .ire adu h\ ·•
The \ho"' wa' created by Done
Right Produuum~. which is based
in Hunt1n1t 1o n Beach . ''I
rccogn11cd the growth potential of
th" hu"ne"'·" \atd Don Wright,
the owner nf Done Right.
Final day of air show dedicated to pilot in crash
·I he retail business 1n Orange
Count) ha' grown 500 percent in
the l.1\t five years," he said . "To
me. com ics offer a little different
of ,in opportunity for people being
thJt 11 doe'i help promote literacy,
:ind 1' definitely considered an art
form."
WISH
From A1
i.pen t the next few weeks 1n a
hospital bed, where she was
diagnor;cd w11h lymphatic cancer. .. "I guess this 1s a better
birthday," she lla id.
It was Kat7' night to shine and
Make-A· Wish. •taffed entirely by
volunlccrs, made it po ible.
WAVES
From A1
lifeguuds were also kept bu y with
47 rescues, said Jay Miller,
lifeauard supervisor. All J 2
liJeguard towers at Bolsa Chica
'aw action, he said.
"I called every tower to get their
totals and there wasn't one that
didn't have a rescue," Miiier said
ffe crcdi1ed a 3-to s-root south
well for kecpin1 bis lireguard
bu!Jy Sunday.
, "It really hat," he said ot the
swell. "By mid-day, we looked out
and boom there were
Rf.ODIN(, fhe city's annual
air \how went on as scheduled
Sun day, one d.1~ after a stunt pilot
wa!> killed when ht~ plane failed to
pull out <'f a maneuver and
cra'i hcd in ,1 h.111 of name
Meanwhile. another stunt plane
crnshed Sund,1y .1ftcr an air show
had JU't ended in Davenport,
low,\, k1lltn): the 40-year·old pilot
The plane v.,1, one of fou r small
airc r.ift do111j.! 'tunt'i several
hundred feet above the ground.
Bc.,ide~ granting wishes, the
foundation al~o hopes to provide
lhc family with special memories,
and not JU\t image of hosp1tal11.
doctors and medical equipment.
"We pride ourselve' in that 90
percent of all of our CO'lts go
toward the granting of wi,hcs,"
said Linda Waters, the
'Poke'<pcr~on for the Oranae
County Chapter of Make·A-Wi h.
She added that the foundation was
able to grant this particular wi'h
through fundina rrom the Annnr
All Products Corporation, and
regularly 'olicit corporate
sponsors for the wi he .
When a wish is requc tcd, the
Make·A-Wish volu nteers meet
with the 1nd1v1dual to d15COVcr the
dct111I or the propositi n. Purthcr
dctuil~ -like the bc-;1 time for the
w1 h to take ph,ce -are then
~cure<l. Once the paperwork I
completed, 1he wi h coordin tor~
go into action to m kc the w1'h a
reahty
But the wi,hcs arc no1 ironttcf
ovcrnlJhl.
"Thi w1~h took ahout a month
a nd a half of nctwork1na.
ncgotla1 1n 1e nd makin g
A 'ipccta1or '>a id a wing
app.1rentl) 'hcr1red off JUSl before
the rl.tne went down
In Northern Californ1u, the two-
d.t) Redding /\tr Show concluded
~und.1v "''th the performance
dcd11.Jtcd to Gordy Dry dale, 43,
of Stockt on. Calif.
l·cdcral 1nvestigaton. Sunday
tncd to determine what caused the
Saturday afternoon crash that
killed Dry dale and injured nine
spectators.
arrangements to happen," said
Sharon Seivert, one ot It
coordinotor, Sievert became
involved with ~ foundation after
hearing a promot1on11l message by
Martina Navratilova on the radio.
"1 here' a lot of rewud that
comc'i 1n ~prinkling magic du t for
kid that have life-thrcatenln&
illnc ," Seivert said, adding that
aturday night' ""' h wa, the firat
one he ha\ helped lo pre ent
"I'm nervou•," she said.
eivert wd Ju t one of many
individuals who (ch c pec1ally
committed 10 make thi night the
grcutcsl yet In Tinn Klitz' life.
Rick Dec wa~ another.
He had been pcr"sonally
rcque•ned hy K:ui to he a part or
1he wi'lh. There were no other
individual he wanted to meet
more, und 'he did not hl\iC a
ccond choice if Dees wa unable
tu attend
"I'm ab olulcly .-mez.cd and
honored," Dec aid. "I wouldn't
mi ' it for the worl<l. It probably
feel better for me than at doe ror
Tina, bccauM: there's notbin1 like
fcchna pccial to aomcbody," he
said.
~pectators shielded children
from nymg debris; others in the
crowd of 8,500 bolted from lawn
ch.ms. Heat from the explosion
could he felt hundreds of feet
away, w1tne 'iC'i aid.
"When 1t hit, it ju t exploded
like 11 fireball," said Gary German
o( Andcri.on, Calif.
Nine people were injured, two
criously.
A 34-ycnr-old man hit in the
back by dcbri was reported in fair
but guarded condition at Redding
Medical C'cntc:r on Sunday. A
woman, 30, wu reported in
'iC rtOU'I condition with several
fracture a1 Mercy Medical Center
in Redding.
"We do n't know why it
happened," aid Doyle Ruff,
From A1
fun week," '!did Wunkc, who led
John Carroll (Ohio) 10 an S.2
record la't ~ n and set achool
record with 17'.\ flA 'I completion
and J 3 touchdown . "When an
ent ire aroup donate a week to
)'OU, )'OU ju t JO wilh the flow and
have" nice time."
Wanke (pronounced Wonke), of
Oerman·lri h hcritaae. took tho
r1hb1n1 tn ,trldc. but adm1ned his
claim to fame wa1n't football. "I've
been known to OCX'atk>nally moon
wmcbody. hut that' all behind
me," said Wanke, c~h1b1t1ng h'
own M:nsc of humor.
Amon4 the pccial gue t1 were
C'ahforn11 State en. Marion
BergcM>n, Rep. hn Ct,. and
former cnngrcuman Robert
manager of Redding Municipal
Airport, where the how wru. held.
Dry dale was the tail piJot of the
four-member Brew Anaels
acrobatic team, which was
performing a tunt called an end·
tail roll.
The Brew Angels, based in
Northern California, fly rebuilt Air
Force T -34 trainers and do
maneuvers similar to those
performed by the Navy's Blue
Angel .
They have no connection 10 the
military flying group.
Three of the planes, including
Dry dale's, were about 300 feet off
the ground travcllna about 140
mph when they lifled upward and
went into the stunt, said team
leader Ed MC)'lick. Dr)'ldale's
Oauham, all of v.-hom opted for
politic.I irrelevancy at the podium
Sunday.
"All of thl1 ha brouatit a lot of
fun and congeniality to a town that
need it," Bergeson said. "lhcrc'$
a ceruun tradition with it, but I
have yet to sec what will happen
to poli11c1an1 If they don't make
the fint draft."
Perhaps foro1gn h> some, John
C'artoll Is no stranter to Newrort
Rca(h M•yor Phil Sansone, 1
Univcrsicf of Maryland araduatc.
"At the University of Maryl1nd,
yuu mu~t take Maryland hi tory,
and Carroll wa all over
Maryl•nd," .. an50ne id.
• "You're No. 33<4, but you did
make the cut," Co• t<>ld Wanke.
"That 1ound• ju t like
Repubhcan1. You f.' 1 chance to
•how Ufl ind watch . '
plJne cra'ihed during the
manuc.,,cr
Me ick aid the team had
performed the < tunt s many as SO
time t n1r 'ihow-, over the pa t
fl\,C )'Carll .
Jnve tigntor from the Federal
Aviation Admini tratlon attended
the ~how Sunday and examined
the wrcckngc to determine the
cause of the era h.
In Iowa, f AA lnvc tigators were
t Davenport Municipal Airpon
trying to determine the cause of
the era h there, police said.
Witnc cs said the show was
ending and cf'OW'ds "'ere atreamina
out the airport gates when the
plane piloted by Rick Leonard, of
.. illsdale, NJ., went down.
-By tit• Ml«Mlttl Pra1
In ndd11i0n to a cozy welcome, a
key to the city and • a press
conference conducted by On•
Coaat D•Hy PUot Editor William
Lobdell, Wanke wa!I forced to coax
an c•tra room out of Balboa Bay
Cluh Pre idcnt Tom Deemer.
"(Wanke) wanted to brin1 h
airlfriend here, but we don't
believe in cohabitation, to he
brought hi mother," Deemer aaid.
,,.J'hal'~ 100\I for U5; WC rented lWO
rootn •••
Some of the &ift• for W1nkc
included a Gianu helmet
telephone Caivcn by the ctub), a
aolJ watch (1ivcn by NFL
com'"' eoner Paut 111li1bUe), 1
piece of the Berlin Will (which
read 'Adolph 10\'C• l!v1') and a
srccn tater Brot. ~ boy apron
1n C'llC ht f1X>fh11l career doesn't
work out
C Hall of Fame-wil dd Conner
W#tj four llltD Settled
...,,, top 1'JiJe plaftrs,
IOok J1 raltJ1 lmprortd
Byltlonm01odl ..................
WIMBLEDON. Enaland -
Submilaive tor six yeara, U.S. men
are plannlna an assault on the
staid arus courts of Wimbledon
when the world's most famous
teMi• tournament opens MOl)day.
Youna Americans such u 1991
'Ftench Open winner Jim Courier
(20 years old), 1990 U.S. Open
winner Pete Sampras (19}, 1989
French champ Michael Chang
(19}, three-time Grand Slam
finalist Andre Agassi (21} and
fast-rising David Wheaton (22} will
tJ)' to aive the U.S. its first singles
champ since John McEnroe in
1984.
All but Wheaton arc seeded
among the top nine.
"We're probably loaded with the
best talent we've ever had," said
renowned coach Nick Bollcttieri,
who coaches Agassi and used to
work with Courier.
Goins into last year's U.S.
Open, only one of the previous 23
Grand Slam events had been won
by an American -that going to
Chang. Critics ripped U.S. tennis
for its intematiorusl failure. But
those working with rhe young
Americans cautioned for patience
as an impressive crop developed.
Since the last Wimbledon, two
of three Slams have been won by
Americans. The French and U.S.
opens even featured all-American
finals with Courier·Agassi and
Sampras-Aaa si.
This doesn't necessarily tran late
into Wimbledon succe . Courier's
best surf ace is not grass. He also
must now deal with the challenge
of focusing on another major so
soon after the greatest victory of
hi career. Indeed, when a ked
about Wimbledon after the French
final, he said, "Don't spoil my
day."
See WIMBLEDON,9
Graham, Leach
eye Wimbledon
. WIMBLEDON, England -
Fountain Valley resident
Debbie Oraham. who won a
pair of matches at the French
Open recently, opens play on
the grass courts at Wimbledon
today with a first round match
against Marianne Werdel of
Bakersfield.
While rain is forecast
through Thursday, Oraham
hopes to make her first
appearance in the women's
1nglcs competition here.
After hefping Stanford to a
sixth consecutive NCAA
women's tennis championship
in May, Graham made her
See GRAHAMJWI
lr ....... L~ a.. c. DllJ,,.
NBWPORT BEACH -The Balboa
Bey Oab Hall ol Fame has beea In
akteace a lot aon,er than Irrelevant
Week Md the list or sports celebritie1
aJreacty inducted into the 1hrine reads lib
a Who'• Who of sporu.
While the Hall of Fame has been
incorporated into the festivi ties
surrounding lrrcle\lant Weck 6ince 1976,
it is also »nc of the few mostly relevant
situation' that takes place.
Larry Wanke, Mr. Irrelevant XVI, is in
town and will rarticipate in Wednesday
night's Hall o Fame program at the
Balboa Bay Club. He will rccei"e the
Low man Trophy, emblematic of hi
position in the NFL draft where he was
$Clccted 334th and last among thi year's
picks.
The Hall of Fame will induct two very
eligible sportsmen on Wednesday night.
Dennis Conner, the well-known
yachtsman who won back the America's
Cup in 1987, will be one inductee.
-p ....... farmer dllat eod wilh
&M Su Frudlcx> 49eft. Ii the Olbcr
honoree, acmrdills to BBC Preaideat
T• J>eomer. Frudl" prowea will be
roatunct ill ~· <>r..., c.... .,...,. ...._ a ~ ot lrrcle\lant Week. uw.· .. hllPDY to U\le these two joining
our HhlilriciUs"filt ol past honorees in our
Hel of Fame, .. Deemer says. "I've known
Dennis a Iona time and feel he ii a very
wo rthy candidate. Russ has also
diltinpished himself in the world of
football, and we welcome him to the fold
uwell." ~·s Ust of credentials an the
s1ilin1 world ·is almost unbelievable.
Here's a biographical list of his
acxompllshments, beginning with hi birth
and personal vital stati tics
He was born September 16, 1942 in San
Diego. Hts father was a commercial
ft hcrman and taught his son to love the
sea. Dennis is married to wife Judy and
the couple ha two daughters, Juhe, 21,
and Shanna, J9.
Conner joined the San Diego Yacht
Oub at the. age of eleven and, with a
commitment and dedicalioa u......, ta
one '° 1®"lo bepn hil riM IO the ~ of the sailtN world.
Durina hil career, he has-. two Slit
Clau World Championahips, two
Congre 1ional Cups and had four
Southern Ocean Raci111 Conference
"icto.rie . In Kiel, Wat Gennaoy, ia tm,
he established a Star 0.. record, which
hu never beeil eqUaDed. when he ICOrCd
five straipt fllltl apialt 89 boata. He
regards this u one of his greatest sailing
ac:complishment1. ~
ln the 1976 Olympic Oame1, Dennis
won a bronze medal for the U.S. in the
Tempe t Oau. He bu twice been a
member of the U.S. Admiral's Cup team
and participated in the hi toric 1979
Fastnet Race which met with di a tcr in
fierce storm
He ha won many ocean racmg events,
including the Acapulco Race, the
Maozanillo Race and the Honolulu Race.
In addition, he ~on the 1987 World M:ud
championship.
SMIRRELEVANT,9
•
...,..~ ... c-
Over 1,600 children on 96 American Youth Soccer
Organization teams from four states gathered at area
schools in Huntington Beach over the weekend (or the 10th
annual Sun and Surf Tournament. The Huntington Beach
Breakers (including a team member in black shorts above)
from Regio n 1 1 7 earned the boys Division 5
(9· 1 O-year-0lds) title Sunday at Marina High School with a
2·0 win over the Ontario Montclair Strikers from Region
66 Shawn Haney and Matt Wendt had goals in the
championship game. Also, the Huntington Beach Breakers
<Region 11 7) won the girts Division 5 title with a 3-2 victOf')'
ovN the Arcadia Stars behind goals by Kendra Brissey and
Tmha C rady. The Wcstminster·Hunt1ngton Beach
...,nn1h1lators (Regt0n 143, Oivi ion 4, 11 -1 2 -.ear olds) and
Huntington Beach Breakaway <Region 11 ... 01v1sion 2,
I S· 16-year·olds) each accomplished runnt.>r·up finis hes
Belcher shuts · down Pirates; Dodgers win, 2-0
Los Angeles takes three of four games in battle of division leaders Om.leers schedule
By Bill Shllkln
~,,,_~ If)\
LOS ANGELES -/'<.J!
If this was a playoff ~If/I
preview, then the Lo
Anaclcs Dodaers can
go ahead and start 1. I ·
printing World Serie
tickets.
With Tim Belcher 1n charfc or
Sunday's f cstivitle1, the Dodaer btd "so
long" to the P1mbur1h Pirate without
giving them a ch1mcc to unpack their bats.
Belcher t ed eight hutout inntn and
picked up a couple of hit in Sunday' 2-0
v1c1ory, ending the Pirate'! home after a
rour·game bowdown '" which the
Dod en won three ttmc .
Playofr preview? The Dodgers lead the
National Lcaeue West by ix gam~ -
their 42·26 record ts the be t in baseball
-and the Puatcs lead the East by 41 /2
games. If these two team meet qain in
October, perhaps the Pirates will be 10
kind a to bring their off ensc alooa.
The Pirate scored one run in the I t
18 inniiip of the series and managed 2A
hits in the four aamcs. Through it all,
though, the Dodgen maintained a strai&ht
face. No one's ~ hing a World Seri
check quite yet.
"You wouldn't be human if you didn't
think about it," Dclchcr said, "but 1t'1 still
way too early."
It wa,n't too early, however, for catcher
Oary Carter to na h a warnm1 i n. The
la 1 time the Dod er. appeared in the·
World eric ., Why, 1988, when Carter
S.. OODGE:RSr'll
Miami· official fakes forms, ·bills students· to liind cocaine
LAUDhROALH LAKES, Fla. -A
fired Uni\lenity of Miami ofnaal says he
•· f•ked hundred of fin1nc1al ·a1d form to
help need)' tudents for mor than a
decade, but only began chargin1 luckbacks
in the pa t two years to recd • cocaine
ha bu.
Former -hue aaidcm1c c rdinator
Tony Ru sell 1d aturday he ch1r1ed
S8S to M11m1 tudcnt•, rnoatly football
player , to falaity financial aid
applicationt »0 he c uld uppqrt hi-
1dd1Ction , I
l 'hc 43•yur-uld Ru ell, under
1rwcst1PtlCln by the FBI, made the
tdmttMonl en a I ntthy interview at ht\
.
home with a lectcd mup o( rep<_>rter •
"The fOI' got my tatcmcnt,' he said.
"'fhcy know I'm au1l1y. f dC\Cr'\IC it for
what I did (or the 13 I two yea , rherC'\
.no que hon in my mind."
He w at Miami for two year before
bcina fired in. May, hut he ~•id he
f 11 ificd a mAny 60 a pp Ii ati n a year
ror 1t lea t 12 year • meaning 700 or more
\tudent from around the nation m11ht
have aottcn money for wh h they houlJ
not have uahf icd.
"I don't know how they're g..~1n1 to find
them.'' Ru II id. "A lot of the 1tta1e1c
MC aon . Some lrG In the PfO'·"
Sam Ji.nltmdch, Miami' 11hlct1c
director f n)m IQ ' until lcaVln I t
lkccmber to bcc.01ne the New En land
Patr.ob' chief operating officer, I ued a
tatcmcnt on Sl\lurd )i that said: ''h's
harJ f r me to heve th' kind o thing
Ct~UkJ h J'(>Cn 1"1 n the 'ilNCture Of the
rinandnl 11d " · t m."
H fore comma to U t, Ru 11 w with
1hc athletic dep nmcnt\ at We t Vir11n1a
t1u~ and Kentucky tate, and bei re that
"-I' a prep coach known for help ng
tudcnl aJvan e to c llqe, He aid only
at Kentucky State wa he not inYOlwd in
financial 1d apphution
Ru II 111d he: uted the fc~ralty
funJcJ Pell Grant, de• ned to help
needy tudcnt , to ct the studen
tiie.l•cen SlSO to $2,4'00 per year.
H iJ he al""a acted alone. And he
aid he glad he w ' caught becau hi
life ha been psral1ng Jownni'd nee he
aot hookeJ on cocaine in the 1prina of
1987, while heaJ i tball roach at neari1y
Pompano Bcach·Ely Ht h SdtocM.
Ru II saKJ he kept h" dealin IOCf t
from hi uperion at UM. And ho said no
one, 1nclud1 h1 tx'5 Dr. Anna Price.
a • i.nt athl ttc d1r or for ICIC.kmics
•nd 11.tdcnt .Vice , ever a kcd ham why
he wa do1nJ fina~ I aid work •hen he
worked 1n the ~adcm dtrartment. _.,. ne ~,.,..,,
Dennis Conner
Deer lilts
Tigers past'
Angels, ~3
By Harry Atkins
AP Soorts W""'
DETROIT -Rob
Deer never lost
confidence in hunsclf,
e'en when olhcri had.
Deer, batting .189
and leading the
American League with
89 strikeouts, hit a
ba cs-loaded inglc in the 10th innin&
Sunday night to cap a two-run rally and
Angels scfledule
....... 191911nentL-.U. 2•-• KlrlSll \AJ, 5 35
..... ~-· K.INls ~. 5 3! .Mt 21-• l(nat ~. 5 35 .u. 27 -ldle
.U.21-Tma 73.S ,_,,.,.. ~
fll ,..... • IUIC 111111t, nt11
lift the Detroit Tigers to a 4-3 vtctory over
the Angel .
It ga .. c the Tigers a split of the four·
game "eckend scne .
'I v.anted to "in 1t," Deer said. "I
wanted to be up there. When I was
waiting in Lhc on-dcclc rucle, I was saying,
'I hope I get a chance.'
"When l went up to the plate, I tried
to SI) to myself, 'Herc's a chance to win
the ballgame.· 1 put all the other at-bats
out of my mind.''
Paul Gibson (3-4), the third Tiger
pitcher, won 11 with two-thirds of an
1Mmg of work m the top of the 10th. Jeff
Robinson (0-2), the fifth of seven An&el
pitchers, took the I
The Tigers trailed 3·2 when John
Shelby tancd the 10th with a single off
Scott Bailes. Bailes ttuck out Lloyd
MO$Cby and Robinson came on to )'lcld a
pinch-hit inglc to Dave Bergman. Milt
Cuyler then ran for Berpnan.
Tony Ph1lh~ mglcd to right lo dnvc m
Shelby with the l\1ng run. Floyd Bannister
relieved Robinson and walked Lou
Whitaker 10 load the bases. Joe Grahe
relieved Bann1 <:>ter and ~vc up Deer'
See ANGEL.St9 ,__,,,..
~ tltlB
In I ,. ~.· .... , I ;
OCEAN lDE -l;Aauna Beach''
Jcfr Booth. rated ci&)\th on the
world tour, out urf cd vcral other
highl rc11rdcd Pt m the (our-men
final heat to capture the Profc ional
urfang iau ,n of America'
()('can 1de Open title before an
c~timatcd crowd of 10,000 at the
cam-..de Pu:r unday.
In dynam~ 6 f t urf, wnh
occa 1onal ·foot set • th caught
h1'I b1 c t and bc't ~• of the day
1n lht final heat 10 ou t n
Clemente· Omo Andino. Manhattcn
llC h'" Chn f·roht>ff and Newport Bea~h· R1ch1e ollin • v.ho fint hed
conJ. third and founh re tM:J •
Other Or n C<ll t area urfera
-.ho f rc:d •ell v.'Crc Hunt1aaton
Beach' 8ohby L ckh•rt and
founuun Valley' Bryan Poctacr.
who hared ac:vcnth place, and
H11n11n1ton Beach 's Jeff
Ddfenbaqh, whO wa eliminated •n
the quancrfinah.
l·our-ttmc U . • bod1board
ch mrlon Mike t~an. Who is
current ranked ftnt in the PSAA
• clauncd hit 1Wtd dde· _.,..,....,,.,.,,,,,
...
'
p • •
• •
• • • •
• ..
• .. ..
·-
'
INDIANAPOUS -lt't wu Lany't ~
Game, but thia time Lar:ry Bird wu •
limked to si1tin1 on the tiencb. '
Bird, who underwent bact turacry ----
on June 7, was one of tbe coechet in hit annual
ICholanhip benefit game oa Sunday. His team
included Charles Barkley, Dee Brown, Regie
Miller, Chuck Person and Kevin Duckworth.
The opposing roster had names like Dominique
Wilkin , Ron Anderson, Chris Mullin, Shawn
Kemp and Soott Skiles.
i:t'e outcome meant nothing except for the
Indiana studcnls who will receive scholarships
from the proceeds.
Bird, who led lndiana Stale to the No. 1
nalional ranking and lhc runner-up spol in the
NCAA 1oumament before going on to his
succe sful career with the Boston Celtics, was
hosting the game for the fourth consecutive year.
The past three years it has produced 282
scholarships and $300,000 for students.
Bird could only sit and wonder if he'd ever be
P!aying wit~ or against the players participating in
his game lh1s year. "1 have no idea if 1'11 play again. I know I want
to play but we're just going to have to sec how my
back reacts," he said. "I know I'm not going to go
lhrough another year like last year."
Bird, who missed 22 games during the 1990-91
Television-Radio
Broltarbaul' ....
• Wimbledon. HBO. S p.m.
•Manners· White Sox, WGN, S p m.
•Angel~· Royals. ( 'hanncl S. 5:30 p.m.
T£LEVI ION
W•tn-IUl111
\ pm -World Tour compcllllon from t...kc•'OOd. Colo.
(1apc). l:SPN
Tn>nla
~ pm Wombkdon co,,uagc (dcl•ycd). HBO
Bawbell
~ p m 'kanlc 11 Clucaio White So"-WGN
\JO pm -An~t'I• at Kansas C11y, Channel S
Volleyball
6 pm -Pro he ... h oompc1111on lrom Boulder. Colo (tape),
ESPN
Boalna
8 p m H1ghlogh1• from prc•Kius bouu from the Forum,
Pnmc Ticket
MotM Sports
9.30 pm. -IM'iA Supreme Scncs oompc1111on from New
Orlcan\ 1tapd. F.SP"1
RADIO
Bud>ell
~ :IO pm -Anitcl\ al Kansu City, KMPC (710)
~ ~ pm San Oicto •I SI Lou11, KFMB (760)
...,. ... .,.... .. lllN ....... .......
said hil ... .,..,,, • ......., a.-.. .... -..~
ina about -t1Yen mtlel a day, ·
"11acy let .... ""' • 8ttle .. but ..... r.!:!
tirins. all that ........ around." lie laid. h't
going to be a k>n1 JUIDIMI', I wilh it wa Odoblr
now because I'm tired of tittina atound."
Bird had uturcs rcmo¥Cd from his beck on
Tuesday by team phyaician Dr. Arnold Scheller
and plans to remain in his home state for another
two to three week~ before retumin1 to Boston for
another examination.
"I'm nol going lo say I'm ready to retire,
becau c I want to play," said Bird, who will be in
the last year of hi current contract next cason.
"I jusl have 10 cc how my back Is. h's very
important for me to have a healthy back for the
re l of my life."
He has no 1imetablc.
·•1 don't know what it's going to feel to oome
back, to start playing," he said."But it's got to feel
a lot better than it fell last eason."
He ays it wasn't lhc playing lhat bothered him
during 1hc season and playoff before Boston was
eliminated in the second round by Detroit.
"The one thing lhat bolhcred me the most was
tbe therapy every day, an hour and a half," he
said.
Mike Hulbcrl parred lhc first ----
playoff hole Sunday night to defeat
Kenny Knox for lhe Anheuser-Busch
Golf Cassie 1itle at Williamsburg, Va. ----
The playoff became necessary when both men
bogeyed lhc 72nd hole as darkness approached on
Kingsmill Golf Club.
The round was held up by a 2-hour, 20-minute
rain dclav. and Knox, playing in the final group,
did nol finish the 18th hole until 8 p.m. EDT.
In Olher tournaments:
•Beth Daniel ove rcame a two·slroke deficit
with a final-round 3·undcr-r.ar 68 to win lhc
LPGA's $750,000 McDonald s Championship at
Wilmington, Del.. h) four hots over Pal Bradley
and Sally Liulc.
Daniel's 72-holc 11 -undcr·par tolal of 273
ena bled her to pa s Betsy King and Nancy Lopez
into 5ccond place behind Bradley on the all-time
LPGA money winning list. Bradley has earned
$3,707,690, while Danile is al $3,245,930.
•O rville Moody made a clu1ch bogey putt after
hitting in to an 18th-hole water haz.ard, salvaging a
2·under·par 70 and a onc·slroke victory in 1hc
$450,000 PaincWcbbcr Invitational seniors golf
tournament at Charlotte, N.C.
1880 HARBOR BLW. COSTA MESA • (714) 722-2088
For the scoond year in a row, ----
Michael Andrcui dominated the ~ /:!';)
oompetition in the Ponland (Ore.) t'?("'1'
200, cruising to a 4.S·sccond victory to
become the first two-time winner on the Indy-car
circuit this year.
Andrcui, using his backup car, qualified fourth
but used a daring move at the start 10 shoot in
between the two front-row drivers, Emerson
Fiuipaldi and Rick Mears, into first jusl seconds
into the race.
Andreui's Chevrolet-powered Lola barely
slipped ahead of Fittipaldi as they entered the
chicane at the end of the main 5traiahtaway.
Andretti led all but two of the UM laps, a race
record, dropping out of fint only durina pit stops.
The 28-ycar-old Andretti, who altO won this
year at Milwaukee, averaaccf 1 lS.208 mph.
Fittipaldi was second and Bobby Rahal third.
In 01her races:
•A Mazda became the fint Japanese car to
win the Le Mans 24 boun race, overtaking a
Mercedes in the last three houn at Le Mans,
France. Bertrand Gachot of Belgium, Johnny
Herbert of Brilain and Volker Weidler of
Gcnnany were the winning drivers of the rotary-
powercd Mazda. Jaguars were second, third and
fourth, with Mazdas sixth and eighth.
•There was no conlrovcrsy this time as Davey
Allison wa!kcd all over the field on the way to a
rccor~·scltang NASCAR vic1ory in the Miller
Genuine Draft 400 at Michigan International
Speedway in Brooklyn, Mich.
=:.=r.~ ,....... . s ......................... .,.
indMclull .... i ........ 21.16 •111 ....
beat ........... .
In' --::s~::-~-::.----1.. .......... lcNcW Iii I Alll ...,_ (1-.sz)
and fonMr ua ,_ n•~
Bric Nawik wall 1111 • l8ilttW ....
(2:04.80) and Carltoa lhw ...,... tM U9
freestyle (15:36.19) in other-~•.-....
In other women's C'lenta, U.. J.cob _,.. ...
200 f~le by 46 bundtedthl Ol a .ecoM, JUI
J<'l\nlOn took the 200 hreattttrob (2:38.31) anct
Claudia Poll captured the l,'°° fr~
(17:07.62). '
In other aporta news:
• Sinjin Smith and Randy Stotlot claimed tbdr
10th victory ot the seuon on the Allociation of
Volleyball Profellionala tour by ddcatina John
Hanley and Mike Whitmanh, lS·l l, in the
championship game of the Cape Cod, Mass., tour
stop.
Smilh and S1oklos, both of Pacific Palisades,
have each earned over $128,000 in prize money
this season and remain the leaders in the Grand
Prix Bonus Pool, which will be decided in the final
event of 1hc sea.son at Hermosa Beach.
Returning for the first time thi.s season, former
Olympic gold medalist Karch J(jraty, who once
again teamed with Kent Steffes (Pacific
Palisades), took home a djsappointing fifth place.
Hanley (Pacific Palisades) and Whitmarsh
(Manha1t10 Beach) enjoyed their best finish fhis
season. Te11ming for the first time this season,
Tim Hovland (Playa dcl Rey) and Brent Frohoff
(Hermosa Beach) took home third place, losing to
Hanley and Whitmmh in the losers bracket final,
15-12.
Irvine's Craig Moothan and Laguna Beach's
Rudy Dvorak earned an equal sevenlh place.
• Daniel Martinez took the lead at about the
halfway point of the San FranciSClO Marathon aiuJ
won by almost a full minute over veteran Bill
Donakowski, while Lesley Lehane won the
women's title by an even bigger margin Sunday.
_., T1w Al«ldatrd Pre#
Quote or the day
Lou Piniclla. m:inager of the Cincinnati
Reds, on Josi: Rijo breaking his ankle
Thursday while t;')'ang h> s1eal seoond base:
"'!"c'rc trying lo "in it. In th1 league, the
pitchers are athletes. They have sliding
prac1ice in spring !raining."
Streaking comes back into vogue
for '90s -at least in big leagues
By Gregg Stein
Assoclalecl Pms Wrter
They say streaking went out of
style wilh the 70 . Now it's back,
at least on the baseball field.
Every team is getting caught in
the acl -picking up wins or
piling up losses, il's the latest
craze.
"h 's just been a slreaky year,"
Seattle manager Jim Lefebvre said.
He should know. The Mariners
opened the season with six
consecutive losses, won their next
eight and then lost five in a row.
They've also h•d a pair of six·
game winning s1rings, pluR a seven·
game slide.
More recenlly, the Minnesota
T"'ins won IS s111ight, lost one,
then won four mo1c in a row
before lo ing Sunday. They're 19·2
an June. That c:ime just after they
ended Texas' 14-gamc run. Both
streaks were the longest in lhe
ma1or leagues in J4 years.
So far, there hove been 16
'trcak'i of at least six wins, and 17
skids of at lea I six losses, topped
by the Chicago Cubs, who lost
their ninth straight on Sunday.
Why so many? There are abou1
.111 many theories as there arc
s1itche<1 on a baseball.
"h''l JU!tl un attitude,'' Rangers
first baseman Rafael Palmeiro
said. "You come 10 1he park
confident you're going 10 win.
When you're on a losing trcak,
you drcod comina to lhc park."
But confidence alone is no
guaranlce or succe . Long road
trips. injuries, and tough teams can
all con pirc 10 keep a club reeling,
while homestand , health and ea!ly
opponent& can keep a team rolling.
"We had our (eight·aame)
I 1ng \treak >Nhen we had three
~tnrlantt pitchers on lhe di~bled
list," Rangcri. reliever Goo~e
By Joe l<ly
A1 Sootta ....,
'91 diamond streaks
..........
T-llllgltt
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.....£..-. 0.....-.-S r-l'llllQlr1
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.... 1-1.
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N!t IHO Apit lM7
Nlt 1M7
LOSDS • CNc..-C... .-1,...... • Oft'lll llllrs .._ 10-11
~.._, M1Y 4-14
'-~ ., Mll MO
=~ ..... ....... ~
....,,...... . ..,.,,;:,, ..... .... ~ Apit 1J.a
Molnl&pot Apit20-!7
SNlll ....... t.lty21·ft
Sir! f1ft!Ke Clltl9 ...., 17-24
Go~'lagc aid. "You can point to
thin~s like thal whtn you're going
bad."
Thirteen of the ·Twins' 15 wins
cnmc again t sub·.500 clubs in lhe
Americnn League East. In facl,
nearly all of the prolonged winning
1rcak!> lhis year have come from
lhe American League We t. As
Sparky Anderson cc it, that's no
coincidence.
"Look at 1he record. The We 1
ha five learns 501idly O\ler .500,
while the Ea 1 has two," the
Tiger: monagcr said. "They have
toll~I upremacy on the Ea t."
1111, at' not H•Y to win IS in a
row. You need luck too.
''Sometimes when you're not
playlna real &ood, a bad break
hurts," Twins reliever Rick
Aauilera said. "When you're
playin1 good ball, you tend lO act
the breaks. I don't know really
how that work . "
The Rangers won four tames in
extra innings during their surge.
The Mariners won 10 games by
two runs or less during lheir 12· l
!llrelch la t month.
Some1imes a string of bad luck
c•m wear down a 1eam's morale.
"It seems we just sit back and
wait for something bad to happen,
instead of being aggressive,"
Cleveland's Greg Swindell sa id.
The Indians recenlly lo t 11 of
12 -lhat included two 1·0
def cats. lwo 2· 1 games and a 2-0
loss.
"When a team s1an s doing this,
11·., bad," Swindell said. "We're
just laying back and !cuing teams
roll over us."
OK, but why have so many
teams gone from winning to losing
so quickly? In addition to the
Mariner • identity crisis in April,
Texas lost 11 of 12 immediately
after tak:in1 14 in a row.
"Pressure builds durina a
streak," Lefebvre said. "You have
to guard against a letdown when
the streak end ."
In a tatisticaJ sense, tho~,
even up-and-down patterns hkc
Seattle's can be reduced to pc:rcc:n•agcs.
If you flipped a coin 2,106 times,
or one for every game in a
ba eball season, you would havo
long run of both heads and tails.
Sometime , they would even follow
each other.
In this llaht, ma)'bc winnin1
streaks have as much to do with
random chance as an)'lhina else.
Then aaain, maybe not.
"I've known auys who try to
fiaure out this aame, .. OoMaic
qid. ''They're always tryina to
faaure out why thlnp happen.
11'0se are the IU)'I who don't
seem to lut too Iona."
reliever Randy Myers lumed his moOd toUr.
CIN INNA fl Cincinnati Redl mantpr Lou
Piniclla. lost patience Sunday wftb hit playen,
sugc ting in an profanity-tilled tlrado that they atop
worryina about themselves and 1tan tblnkina more
abOut the team.
Mycn ~id lhi weekend that he doesn't think tho
Red' will keep him H a setup man for Rob Dtbblc,
now ttlc No. 1 cloter. and he predicted he'll bo
trftdcd back 10 the New York Met . Myers aot the
victory Sunday by pitc:h1n1 out of a l~th·innina
threat,
Pin1ella CNpted durina a aroup intcmcw with
reporter• foll0'#1n1 an 8-4. ~lctory over Montreal that left~ Cincinnati be gAmcs behind the Oodaen in the
National l..caauc We t.
It marked the end of a touab week for tho Reda.
who lost hir1in1 pttchers Norm Charlton and Joec
Rijo to Injury. Plnlclla was In a li&ht·hcaned mood
1mm diately after the game, but a qu tion abOut
"l·or a IU)' that traded hlmtclf to tho Mets two
d1ys •an. tie did a aood jQb," P1n1ctla said.
Momcn11 later, finictla wa yellin1. '
"You C.1n talk abOut trade and 'I'm aoina here or
here.' Fant of all, )'OU don't even \now II the
nrJ1niutt0n you want to ., to want1 ,.,..,..~· Pini••
aid. ''So ltt't quit wtth atl .lhlt lhena.....,. 11Mt jllll
play beleball.
Oodeen third baseman Lenny Harris slides past Pi·
rata atlCher Mike Lavalliere In fourth inning to
,., .... ,._,
score from second base on s;;t;,:l DOdgers pitch·
er Tim Belcher. Los Anseles Pittsburgh, 2-0. -From 81
pla~ for she New York Mets.
• We beat the Dodaers 11 of 12
in the reaular season, and they
ended up beating us in the
playoffs." Carter said. "If we end
up playina them {th'e Pirates). in
the playoffs, it's all for naught. '
But this is food for thouaht The
Dodgers took three of four games
thiJ weekend without much of an
offense of their own. The injured
Darryl Strawberry didn't play. Kai
Daniel! went 2 for 17. Eddie
Murray went 2 for lS. The
Dodgers scored au or 10 runs in
the four games.
"\Vc've been winning ballgames
by scratching," Carter said. "We
haven't won 'cm with doubles and
three-run homers. If you get
strong pitching and good, timely
hitting, you're aoing to win."
The Dodgers got both Sunday.
1111.fVAllT
From 81
However, he is perhaps be t
known to the general public for his
involvement in racin~ for the
America's Cup, yachting's most
prcst11ious international trophy.
In 197•, he was tactician on the
successful defender, Courageous.
In 1980, he again successfully
defended the Cup for the United
States at \ha helm of Freedom. In
1983, he put up a vaUant baule
aaainst the radical winged-keel 12·
meter Australia, losing by a score
of 4-3.
In 1987, be achieved what nany
thouJht would be impossible -he
went lo Australia and challenge
along with 10 other boats from·
nations, for the America's Cup.
Sailing Stars &t Stripes, he won the
ChaWeogc Eliminations and then
defeated the Au tralian defender's
Kookaburra Ill, to return the
America's C\Jp to the U.S.
In 1988, Dennis was asked to
dcfehd the Amenca's Cup against
the .. sneak attack" by New
Zealand, which he succe fully
defended by the score of 2..0.
Conner is also wcU-cstabh hed in
bu iness. He became a partner in
D carpet and drapery busine and
sold hi share to finance hi
participation in the 197• America'
Cup.
He now is involved tn two well·
established rirms -( Dennis
Conner Interiors, Inc., and Dennis
Conner ports, Inc. The fonner is
a drapery businc and the latter is
a sports marketing firm.
He has written three books: No
Excuse to l..o$c:, Comeback.: My
Race for the America's Cup and
The Art of Winnint. He ha also
published two books on the history
of the America '1 Cup races, The
Official Record of Sr.rs & Stripes
I and II.
Conner share hi love of sailing
And competition with young tcrs
thtouj.h h1~ involvement tn junior
ailina pr°'ram . Denni~ Conner's
~ --
His best ™>Wins at Wimbledon
was a third·round IOM la t year.
Hk aroundttrokes, 10 effective on
clay, wilt be ouunoded 11ainst tho
¥Olleys dictated by .,... In his
fivo -aet victory_ over Aaull,
Courier won only r"'° of his t•S
points on vollcya.
Bel.chcr and Tim Crews
provided the pitchina. tcamina on
a six-hitter. Belcher (7.,..) lowered
his earned Nn aventgc to 2.40,
fifth in the league, and Crews tied
a cprccr high with his fifth save.
Betcher .held the Pirates hitless
through the first four innings.
Over the next four, he stranded
seven base runners, including at
least one in scorin& position in
every inning. After Betcher threw
lJl of seven balls to tart the ninth,
Crews replaced him and recorded
the final three outs 10 preserve the
shutout.
"It was probably the right
move," said Belcher, who said he
wanted the complete game. "No, it
was obviously the right move... I
was making too many pitchc~.
When my pitch count goes up, my
arm goe south."
Belcher made 116 pitches.
He al o drove in his own
insurance run. In the fourth
inning, BelChcr's two-out inglc
scored Lenny Harris with the
Dodgers' second run.
In the fint inning, Brett Butler
boosted the Ooda rs to a speedy
1-0 lead by doina what he does
best: being a pest. .
On a 2..0 pitch from Pittsburgh
starter Zane Smith (7-6), Butler
dropped a bunt single. Juan
Samuel then singled .Butler to
third.
Stan Javier grounded back to
Smith, who glanced at Butler
before throwing to shortstop Jay
Bell to force Samuel at second
base. Trouble wa , Smith didn't
freeze Butler long enough and. as
soon a Smith threw to econd,
Butler pranced home with the run.
"I don't think we have to end a
me age to anybody," Butler said.
"We let our bats and gloves and
arms peak for thcmsclvc~."
Lack of teams brings about
cancellation of Super Stars
NEWPORT BEACH -The
best laid plans of mice and men
sometimes go awry and when it
comes to Irrelevant Weck in
this city, that is the rule rather
than the exception.
P1ans are started a year ln
advance to set up the next
extravaganza. Date for various
and sundry events arc set and
the public is informed.
Arly changes that a:c made
alona the way are totally
irrelevant. But they do occu1.
Take for in tancc Friday's
scheduled Super Star
compct1t1on at Newport Dunc .
When Paul alata set the
date, he figured to have another
20·25 •teams in competition.
Instead only six or eight igned
for the Friday fun -filled event.
That brought about a
cance llation and a revised
sc hedule. Irrelevant Weck
honoree Larry Wanke, his
mother Lea and guc I honorees
Sgt. M.P. 'Red' Whittaker and
family will go to Catalina Island
accomplishments in bu inc s and
ailing pnng from his will of self·
motivntion -"rommitmtnt to the
commitment." He h a fierce
compeutrve pirit and the drive 10
see a project through to uccc ful
completion.
Over the }'car , he ha gathered
loy11I, hkc·mindcd people around
him, while till keeping his hand
on the helm nd paying close
attention to the tine t detail
"I want to win," he ys. "And
to win, you must work very hard.
It' urpri ina what you can make
happen when you really io for it."
That's one of the men who will
be honored by induction into the
Balboa Bay Oub Hall of Fame
Wcdncaday night durina Irrelevant
ln1uries coming tn exhibition
match -and ho w u.psct in
the ~cond round or the Queen
Club tuneup. Sampra wa al o
beaten In traJght sell by Goran
lvani cvlc in th• flnah at
Manchester aturday.
instead to cap the wecklong
celebration.
The schedule for the baJance
of the week include :
Monday Rotary
International Golf Tournament
at Newport Beach Country
Oub, 11 a.m.
Tue day -Runnin'·Gunnin'
Shot Clock golf roumament at
Newport Beach Golt Course. 9
a.m .. I p.m.; Back to Bal N1gh1
at the Balboa Pavilion, 7 p.m.
Wednesday A day at
Hollywood Park; Hall of Fame
dinner al the Balboa Bay Club
honoring Denni Conner and
Ru Francis, 6 p m.
Thur day A day at
Disneyland.
Friday -A lnp to Catalina
I land
Saturday -Get acquainted
with and cnJOY a day in
Newport Beach.
Sunday Departure for
Cleveland a nd on to the New
York Giants training camp.
Weck
The occasion has been sold out
for ~vcral month according to
Deemer.
Me anwhile, Wanke wall be on
hand for the Rotary Club
sponllored golf tournament at
Newport Beach Country Club
roda~ and the Ru.lnin'·Gunnin'
Golf extravaganta on Tue di\)' at
Newport Bench Golf Cour~e. He
will ali.o participate in Back to Bal
n1gh1 t 1hc Sal~ Pa"Vihon on
Tue day night and 10 tc
Hollywood Park on Wednesday
before rc1urn1ng ror the Hall of
Fame hunquet nnct prcscntatwn ot
the Low man Troph~, one or the
hiahligh1 of h1 week an Nc~-pon
Beach ......
From 81
Orand him ingl debut in Paci
earlier th1 month. She ousted
Beatc Rein tader o( Au tria and
Sybilc 1u~·Chateau ol France in
the f1N tw round hcforo tallina
to Japan' N1okc.' Sawama"u in
three 'l<:IS Ctcr winning tho fi~l.
The La Quinta H'h araduate
f1n11heJ the coHgi1tc 'Caton
_ .. -· :::
lllcOll .. iW..< .... ,, -· .... -· -· ~a... --,_, _,,. ..... ,....,.
He ihO bu lilloey ~ ~· hhft. pjori •rs Iii •• •u the lut man to win tho
All in all, there is littl• reason
to believe tOP'" ecdcd Stefan
Edbcra or wedcn and tecoftd·
$Ceded Bori Beckor ot Germ.~
Ml.P't tlt\'C I temalda la tbe ft.a..
y have won n.e tklet blc...n
them and met In the last three
championthip matches
ranked ~'ond &n lhe nateon. r--;=======::::::::::::::==:::;'"'1
French Open and Wunbtedoft in
tM AN )'e•r.
ApUi hu not plll)"Cd her. since
1981 · when he lost in the first
round and has -ortcd very tittle
on an thes 1U'. He altO muM
owcrcotM hh ehollina ~ -he
Ml a. m hli three Oraftd Slam
finals
SuRpnt a ClOMkltrecl NIMrb'i
bat ........ f6i' lhe """" 8'1t 111 ,_ ,_. llijtlttd MUClt OI Ille .-....... us.Oph-•lt•
Even to, an American semifinal
a~1rancc 1n it If would mart
•1'11r.cant progr • Senc:e 1987,
ontY two American -Jimmy
Connon and McEnroe -havo
even reached the tem . The la t
American tn a final wu McEnmc
when he won in 19M, dclca1ln1
Connon.
"I would think Edbcra and
Beeker can't be count d out, 0 said
8nlleu5en •
Another Oranp Coa 1 Arca
athlete who i a 1nOre f 1m1h1r
i&ht 11 Wimbledon a. t..aaun•
BcKh'• Rick Leacl\, who won both
the men ' doUbla -W1th hloa
Verda' Jim Puah -and m._ed
doubt -with Hautton' Zina
Oam"m -t tbc AJl.Enpnd
Lawn Tcnni Oub a 19ar IF·
I.each and Pllp ldll en the
final af the P1tnch ()pea eartier
thts month befoto cliftcMae I
quarterfinal OM Olp ""°'J. _., . .._,..,
......... .. .,..Cl ~ taM owis .... or
buy. ~ ...... top plrlftflptng, -• """ ruitv k)Oded, CClf ~. US! gNdl Cl ..,....,
... d9c.k lpOlef. $11""'° ....... Cal
U~7' .13,800
for ;.t '20 we·n run your 1~" Id In our eut•
moehe ~ wtttt • p1cUe o1 ~ c.r, tor a~ ~~Copy mult be...,.,~ by
Wed.
Cell Cindy MOW .. Mt.ae?t to
~~-"'°"-..
J
•
A ................ ,,.~
~ ........... $511111-flom
t ..... 1:l0 P.• b ....... 1-15.
Charlie ~ ........ ol ... .....
Calilomia Colleti .............. .....
tile calnp It the ........ SS .. Drtw,
a.ta Mqa. Tbe re. ii St• .. ,._. e For more i ............... (714) j$6-
36l0, ext. 208.
The Los Anaelca Oippen ~U partidpat• l.n
the annual NBA Draft w..-...., ud fw
are invited to attend a free Draft Party at the
Loi Angelc:l Sports Arena.
The O ippers currently ·hold lbe nptl to
select four of the tint 38 pi.yen cholea iD tbc
draft, induding ninth and 22lld picb i.o the
fint round. The club will announce lta
selections to the crowd In attendance prior to
the official announcement made from tbc NBA
Draft in New York.
Sports Arena doors open It 4 p.m. ror the
event and live television coveraac or the draft
commences at 4:30 p.m.
·Motorcycle IWlll Nit
The Inland Empire's lu aest indoor
motorcycle swap meet will be held Friday at
the San Bernardino Nation1I O ranae
Showgrounds
More than 100 vendors with all types of new
and used motorcycle parts, accessories, apparel
and "ready to restore" motorcycles wiU fill
24.000 square fcec or the Citrus Building at the
National Orange Showgrounda in San
Bernardino.
ft' To reserve a vendor booth or for more
show mfonnat1on, contact Inter-Shows office at
(714) 364-0515 Monday through Friday from 9
a.m ·5 p m. For 24-hour recorded motorcycle
swap meet information. phone (714) 364-2542
The 15th annual World Bodysurfina
Champ1onsh1ps will bring the spon '1 best to
the Oceanside Pie r on Aug. 16-18.
A SI 5 registration fee secs competitors for
chc compc11t1on and 1 Luau on Sacurday
D1vi5ions for men range from juniors divisions
for boys, ages 12-14, to the SS-and-over clan
for men. Women's divmons arc 12-17 . .18·29
ind J0.1nd-0ver.
For more information, cont1ct Ray Duncan,
the Aquatics Director for the Oceanside Parks
and Recr'Cltion Dcpartmcnl. 11 (619) 966-4S3S
or Bill Missctt of the Oceanside Blade-Citizen
at (619) 433· 7333.
•
::11;'!.,---
... O t ultlt ......... .. ,...., ............ Ell-.... , ..... ..
C.-, ...._ ..._. 'II" at .. -
O«ellM ..... " .... 0 '$ •••
T-elairl. 8ctul W ma.ft .... -f a,
ahooti• con....., •latl;t ..._ .. .....
A ~l awards ca~ m .... 11
1ehed11led tor iM IMI dtrj.
Scilioft NO. 1 ia July lS.19. .......... .
days hoiD 8:30 1.lft.•DOOa ...... ,.. 11 .. .
Seuion No. 2 is fralll Jlllp 2f.A111-I.
meetina for full days from 8:30 1.a.,..JO p.u11.
The fee is S95
The fee for both sestloes ii S140. R.._.
rates are available for second manben ol dlle
sam1 family. The camp is bcld at Eata8dl
Hi,h School, 2323 PlacentMI A~ .• Colla Mesa.
tt For more information, phone (714) 760-
3375 or (714) 733·2180.
Southern California be1ches will come alive
with grunion, small fish which come ashore to
spawn during the summer, scver1I times oYCr
the next couple of months. The question ii
which beaches.
A valid California fishina li<:cnte Is required
for all age 16 and over.
Times given for each date rdlecl the
probable two-hour interval durina which 1
spawnin& run may occur, beafnniq at lhc
approximate lime of the niabtly hi&b tide 1t the
lm Anacles Harbor entrance. Times vary
1Jong the coast. The second hour and the
second and third nights of each run are usually
better.
Grunion may be taken by hand only. No nets
or other applia nces may be used. and no boles
may be du& in the belch to entrap them.
o,..s--
""·'-· -lf>l!, .. -112.1, ... ....-1'-I~"'"' -IUJ t• '-o..-Jl-lllO•• -11'•• _,....., -11.10 •• -lll•• Sot,;;) -lltl! ,_. -HI:!••
ha. 14 --..... -l ...
-· IJ -IUO•-"' -UO•• l'lle.,J"'116 -2•• _ ....
-..,...,. -I04'•• -1140 •• __ ,,.,19 -llll,_. -I lla.a
l'oe W,Jl-llJJ,a -IUaa
-_loft JI -1140 aa -240t a
S-.A .. 11-IO»p• -IUJ a-.
-.A .. 11 ll•!p1t1 -ICS.• T ... ,.,.. n 11 » • • -i n • ..
ll>H ....... IC I»• a -11J 'a
no. Alia.11 -119'"• -·~·'" ...,.._ a -II CS, a -I <! • • ,... • "'-1' -1140 •• -HO••
S.. A .. lO -l • • -' • •
The Newport Harbor Lawn Bowling Club
wilJ hold its 1nnu1I President's Cup Open P1irs
Tournament on Tuesday, July 16.
Both 1989 champions Gail Hodgson and
Glenna Weber and 1990 champions Weber and
El11ne Hught-' will be compctina.
Competition will bcsin at 10 1.m. and run
through the afternoon.
The event is open for spectator vicwina .
Dl•llJ ....... ,
Tbe second anftll1I Adult Dly Health Care
Center Charity Oolf TOilmament wiU be held
1t the new Coto de Cua Golf • R1cquet
Oub.
The toum1morit, to be held July IS, will be
pll)'cd on Coto's top-rated private 18·bole
course deaiancd by Robert Trent Jones Jr.
Proceeds from the toum1ment wlU benefit
the Adult Day Health Care Facility in Sin
Oemcnte
9 For more Information on the tournament,
phone Mart P10lucci 11 (714) 858·2626.
aa 1l1n e1111111
The 15th annual Vlctorl1 Pro-Am Sklmboard
C.Onteat is Aua. 16-18 at Aliso Beach 111 South
U,Una.
The contest orren men's aac l'°"P' of 8-
111d-under, 9-ll, 13-IS, 16-19, 20-24, 25.30, JO.
1nd·up, pro division and a women's division.
To enter the pro division, 1 competitor must
have won either ftrst, second or third In 1n
• am~teur division or some other contest.
The contest 11tract top stimboarden from
Haw11i and the East and West coasu. II'• the
oldest i nd lo ngest runnina contest of Its type.
For more inform11lon, call Victori1
Skimbolrds at 494-00S9.
Also, 1 series of small skimbou d contests
arc offered every four to six weeks 11 Aliso
Beach, be&innin1 Slturdl)'.
11'1 1 local event with divisions for bepnocn,
in1ermcdiatca, 1dvanc:cd and 1 small· pro
dMsion 11 1n entry cost of SS. The series
started in the fill, but 1nyone can enter at any
time.
For more lnform1tlon, e11l Victoria
Skimboarda 1t 494-00.."i9.
..
• •CIU A butetball lbootlaa and ball-hM;dtina ...
clinic will be bcld II the Harbor Ana ..,,. ....
Girls Oilb 1n Newport Beacb Slturday, J.., 11.
from 9 1.m.-noqn.
The clinic ii open to afrll and boys .... 6
throuah 12 and Is desiped to belp ...........
develop and unp~ their lbootina ud bd·
b1ndlin1 akilJJ. e For further information, pbooe (714)
64'-5026.
I• I llllldtll
The 16th annul Oty ol Lapaa Beacb ~-
3 bukelball tournament.a are tct for all
awnmer weekends II tbc Maia BeKb Cow1I at
the intersection or Broadway and I.be Pacific
Coast Hf&bway.
Weekends include June 8-9 and lj.16, Jl&ly
6-7 and 13-14, and Aupst 10.11 and 17-11.
Play 1t1ru on Saturday 1t 8:30 Liil. and
concludes on Sunday afternoon. Out-of·COWD
1e1ms ire welcome. Deadline for entry is the
preccdina Friday by 3:30 p.m. and l.bc fee Iii
148 per team. Lato entries are SS8 per teui.
For more information. call tbc Oty or
Laaun• Beach Recreation Department 1t 497·
0716.
The City ot U,Uaa Beaeb it bo1tJas a
California Beach Volloyb1ll AnoclatJoe~
sanctioned men's AAA·nted tW0'1111D
~ll tournament J11ne 29-30 at 8 a.m.. oe
I.be Mm Beadl cowts.
The event replaca what uaed to be lbc
uaun• Open, the lonae•t-numina beach
YOlleybaD C¥eat In tbc world whicti could no
lonacr draw pro tour evnts bccaute of their
aponsonhlp by tneweriea.
Top-rated players, lncludills IC¥Clal area
beach 'f'OIJeybaJI standout&. will ptrtldpote ID
tbc 32-team cvcot. For moR lnfonnadoa,
contact the City of Laaun1 Beach Recreation
p epartmcnl it 497..0716.
From North Orange County
From South 0r.,. County
540-1220
496-6800 I 642-5678 ( :e• J
CLASSIFIED INDEX 642-5678
Ff'OM NORTH ORANOI CO. 540-1220
FROM SOUTH ORANOI CO. 4M-llOO
THE DAil Y Pl~OT
CLASSIFIED
Of''ICE HOURS
T.......,,..~
~ .. a..n.& 3()pm ...,._c:oun, ..
M-FI 00.....·S OOom
.,..Dl. ...
PU6LICATION OEADLIHt
Mondey '" uo ~ T.-cley Mon !UO l'M
W.,._,., T.-1 30 l'M T....,_., Wed :UO "'4
Frleley Thun 5:30 ~
S•turdey ,,, I~ l'M Svncley ,,. s-ao PM
CHECK YOUfl AD THI 'IRST DAY
fhe Deily Piiot Slr••fl IO< •fhclency end eccu<ecy
Howevet oc;c.'4on•lly e<r0<1 do oecur Plea• hlten
wMn yOUr 8<I 11 read b.ctl llllc:I Cl'l«:ll YoUf ed dlilly
Aet>orf ert()(I 1mtned1•1efy lo 642·5'71 the Deify Pllol
ecceott l'O 11et111t1y 10< .,,, • .,0< in en eov.t'->l IOr
whel'I ot !Ny be t "90f\ltble •JICllPI IO< IM coal of I lie ~eel.,..., ocwe>ted by,..,..,,°' Ctedtt c.n only t>e
ellowed '°' , .... '"" '"-''°"
"""" _,., nC)l paod Wtll\+n 30 Cl~ .. ·~.o Wtll be tuOfK' 10 bul "°' IMntlecl 10 lonenc;e Cf\etgetl c.c>mpvlecl
et t'~ of tile unpeocl belence per INlnll• ell eolleelOOfl
«Jell er>(! eny t~ etlOIAey I ,_ ....... ..... . . tt
~ou1e1 ~
J ..,, "··· 1;•
(~r·111>1,tf 'I . -.,. ~ ...
( . . .'. . . ' . l r J . : .
.. M:ll'IC "'"'* H· I ' •
•-llOllUI• IDT WI IULI PlllCI RIDUCDI F~ .,.,, ocelln,
• llOTIVATID ...,_ ._, a .. +
Pun:haH the home of 111.LDll den towntW'ft. f'ONdo-
your choice wtth onfy .. A ... A ..._,_ to ... ~ ~W.-J:,IC· 5% down. No ci.....i.... • ...... ......., ... e ... "~· • ' -"' bNchl l ,4'00 aq ft. or 1IOI
C09tl needed. Thl9 .. GREAT fl"INANC1NOll ... --~ vu I.-not a VA. FHA or eq.. LOW DOWN ...,,.., • ..,..._,,
utty •here. You ,... flAVMe.NTll '485, . f'or .... by
Calve 100'6. ownerahlp --......... ,... owner. 110I vtlila
& 100% tax MMflta. --;101.aue Oonldo. I U 4844. Muat have ctMn credit ___ .......
•nd 1tabfe lncom.. y .... IWI ..,,... -••••r
Call Co-Equity, Aet or tzo.--:C ;;....,. :::,,.,.:10:. ':"~
own "9U'VE''I lft0-28A Condo. '°"'Iowa. t<EA". a.I tar ...... ~-.-a. ,.,. ........ 1t11. .,.... '° purchaM. .....t.
7151.nei, ft'/ Ma-W1 •••• • .. ....
8Y OWllM ..... ---In N.11:, 4M, IM. rff!4
poot, .. -hel-,men l ll'l,000.
.. ... ' ~ -
(I' 111 I I • I, CUTE2 Hr ~ ~· '*-~ Home, 38A '*-W D4ll11tt I.::.~ ...... ~_. -C9r ger, rr-n _..,, -. 1 bit to ~. I rrpec, 1 cer a-. lnidry __ ., '
EASTSIDE C.M. • 2 .ey, trplc, rr doora. Yrty cer 99f, din rm, no rm, 11100 Ho ....... No ~
• BO hOme, lg. petlo .... 1.ao/mo-..o111 pe'9. UM8. TI0-1118. LM,.. 641-eoll .... l 111Gi mo . a backyafd • l2000/ ' IA4000, I U I HI mo. yrty '"· OrMtl,_ ............................... .-........ lllllllllllllll ...... lllllllillllllllllllllllll!li
fwnAy .,..I
Vl:ASAluES • 1 bd
condo • llf50
NWP TOMAS • 2 bd, beyYlew-11460
WXUAY waterfront 1
bd a.pt, -~dub
eemoaphere. View,
poof, ..,., gym, ~
rlty a beach. Yrty • f 100 ... 110-3100
IUMMl!A/WtNT'EA Al!NTALI AVAn..MN.a
Waterll'ont Home. lno. .. Mlto,. .,., .... 190-M00
011'1.NoR
TWO
AT
Flnd our hidden Clulf.
Red Ada ... And Win! c .......... ,
1. ~ ftnd our hkl·
den claulfled ad1
eomewhere In our c:&.l·
Red lldlon. Cut MCI
Pllfll the ecll on the tn·
by '*nk and mall.
2. Al tntria mutt anM w ~ ~.
3. Winner wl be choten bl/ '9fMlom dr.....q and Winnen name wW lfJtl •• m
tht folfOwlni ~ _,...... OM winner s-WMk.
4. e0nmt w11""' 5'A91 • 1n2l91.
I
OITHI
IUCM
l'un lovtng cuctdfef
..... h<JMst. C*tng,
ant r • P• neu r·type
.......... Who'• 80-.... ~.~· -. -.Cdon••. ~ n•e•moua, an)oya mueto. dtnMl'/datM>
l1tg,_ 'aunaet. Inter-_..., 411741.
-.. .... OWM.-. r. ,,.,,
Ir acthre, "••It tty • .............. '°"''"" ....... ""' ............. -~ de ......
CfUl9e. #1
1111am•
USE TH IS FORM TO PLA CE YOUR FREE PERSONAL AD
PRINT Cl.EARLY: Cfrst three words are boldface> 25 word maximum
FREE ADS ARE MAIL-INS ONLY
All Coll-Ins WIN Be Charged Regular Rate.
NAME:--------------------------------------
PHONE:-------------------------------------
~ --------------------------------cnv: srAJt: ZIP; ---
,.... ll~llbii '9 ......... W. ~ ....... ~ piw90fW 9d ...... l. ....
....... .. • ,., ........ ~OIMM. lach ................. ....
,...._ • .............. ,..,...-., ..... a 111111111.,.-.w. Yew .. IN ... •
... _., ....... _...,Ml 11111 • lft ..... ..._ ... w .. IN._.. '9 ___.
_..,Pl I J 1 ............... .
• Call 1-900-844..0100
• Enter 4-digit code appearing in ad
• Listen 10 greeting
• Leave mcs~age (you can change it
if not satisfied)
When leaving a message
• Leave your fir t name
• Mention your interests
•Tell your age
• Describe your appearance
~Specify your preferences
• Include whar you liked about the
person you ar'e responding to
D~f E{IN E
~ -·cf•a...,.c-~,...
GUIDEL ifJES
Q.2-Aa South, vulne~le, you
hold:
•108'3 •e +K.14 •K88G2
The bidding haa proceeded:
North Eut South West
1 t P.. 1 + P ..
3 NT Pa. 1
What action do you take?
A.-Don't let your ain,Jeton heart
panic you into retrutins to four
cluba or four diamonda-both thoee
actiona would be alam triea. Paaa.
and be prepared to rack up another
rubber.
Q.3-Both vulnerable, as South
you hold:
•6 •K109G tKJ9 •KJ7G2
The bidding bas proceeded.
North Eut South We.l
1 • 2 • ?
What action do you take?
A.-Ea1t'1 interference baa made
your lot eaaier. The hand could be a
miafit and, deapiu bully high-card
stren«t.h. you might not be able to
make game. Now you have a rea-
sonable alt.emat1ve-double. We
would be moat aurpriaed if it didn't
net at leut.500 pointa. 1f a double
by you would be negative (for take·
out). pau and await developmenta
Q.CS--A• South, vulne~ae. you
hold: •
+AQ8'7 9KQ9 •'72 •.Uta
The biddin1 ha.I ~ooeeded:
Nortll Eut th W•
1 t Pa. 1 • P ..
1 NT Pa. 1
What do you bid now?
A.-Partner ha.I a balanced hand
of no more than 16 point.a, while
you have a balanced 16. There is no
particular fit anywhere, and wt
can't '" the combined boldins
atretcbing to 12 t.riclta. Bid three no
trump and rive partner an euy
hand to play.
Q.6-Neitber vulnerable. u South
you hold:
•K72 •Void tAQ6 ..i109G43i
The bid!iing has proceeded:
South Weet North Eut
1 + P... 1 • 2 t
?
What action do you take?
A.-A poor openina bu been made
worse by the auction. Your Ions auit
i1 tople11 and you're void in part·
ner'a ault. Three cluba could be the
winnin1 action if partner were to
raite or pua. but a heart rebid or a
apade bid ia more likely to be forth·
coming. Paaa.
............ Mum ...... .... . ,.. ... , ....
1111-.,,..,,.tnt
8r:,'":c":mb~~.:: ~
low to fotM four •mple words. i--·
I rt r,: , I
I' i YI yr I J
I F E T I B '~.! People who w011< diligently
_ 1 I I f 5 ~ :,r:: :e ":!~:a~~
their taxes in one --. I VAGERN I .... __ I _l'_l_l_I .. ,~ e Complete the chuckle quoted
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ by f111in9 In the mllting worda
y04J develop from atep No. 3 below.
• ~l~~E~~~~~~~E~fTTERS r r r r r r r 1
• g~r:~~~E, LETTUS 10 I I I I I I I I
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ICIAM LITS ANSWIU '·l'f
'.1..N3WAYd euo u1 S&XVl J~ .<8d ueo A84l Aep ewos a~ ~e
Aeuow J!8tA Mes pug ,<uue&.nP >IX>M 04M etdoed
lN3WAVd -U8A8Jg -mee -M,wd -ewn&ra
ACR081
1 SteQe tare
5 Hemingway to lrlend1
9 Chelr piece
14 Fruit
15 St ... beem
16 H9Q
17 Platoon
pethlPI
16 Nucleus
19 Weiher Cycle
20 Gr .. t pret
2 1 Monsoon .,. ..
23 RICh chocolate
cake
25 Awey lrom the
wind
26 Co<p abbf'
27 -bond
29 Rudiment•
32 Pllcnea a
teot
35 Bellefy pert
Je lndlen city
37 RoM'• love 38 a.fl 101Jnd1
39 Muttc symbol
40 Blend
4 1 Count (on)
42 Shorthand
expert
43 l.Mgedwr
44 Flank
45 Ln. atory
46 Gretlfy
completf/t;
48 Trlel
pertlelpent
2 3 4
14
17
20
52 Auoclate 56 Permit to
57 SI.ctr.en
58 Light log
59 Exllt eo Jebb.cl
81 Speck
82 Attenuon-
oetter 63 ~Ofecuters
64 French rMlr
65 Baked good•
DOWN
1 Delve Into
2 Ship
3 T empl<:o pel
4~ s Outing
6 Home
7 Equal. Pfef
8 Acr-oe
II Andent bOOll
tO Tiit>
11 Lindbergh I
nldlneme t2 Handle
13 -·tlQ«
21 s l()t)0¥9'
plecee
22 F•t-a
24 Helped with
the dllhel
27 Quebec beauty
28 PertMt
30 -nett•
31 Noted Roman
32 TurMd up
33 Seth'• kin
34 HerrnleN
reptlle
35 College woman
36 Bu~na· ltrMm
38 Attempted
42L~
44 HorMI
4 s Vltrlollc
47 Fo41owing
48 RefuM
e 1 e
49 A Root eo Reno number
& 1 H<*t9 bed!
&2 8"' letterl
13 IMttulnent
54 8ftow-.tlU ~
55 Ahwa: Sp.
5t P"'1 of Nfld.
10 11 12 1S
Monday, Junt 14
Ince Vo11 Al~: Pmc1lla Pre Icy.
Gcm1n1 11ctrc' 11nd widow of Elv1 ,
will be trovelln1 lhis year, will tcm·
pnrinlJI be In potli&hl cnou1h to to
be: iupcr-tcn lllYC conccm1n1 talent
and body 1macc Her 6 keynote (Mt1y
24. 1945) verifies 1cn5C of drama,
u11hu1ion of voice, tendency to be
Klf·inc.lul1ent lO point of hav111g
IWCCI IOOlh Pn1oe1lh1 obviou I)' ·~
aware or 1h1~ and a rcauh i~ 11c1lve
In kecpln& flt in a vnnety of
ae11v111c.•, lnclud1nc d .. nc1ns, kar.11c
and dMna She will bcromc $CflOu,lv
"involved" tn October, could murry
ARJES (Much 21·Apr1I IQ) You
could be 1emporat1ly ''llw.1y from
home •· Wh .. 1 luid been merely OAn
1dul could become ve ry rc;1I
l\11cnlion revolve~ 11111unct domn ltl
1dJU'tmc111 , unique rcl111 11111\h1p
T11unic f1curc, prom111cn1ly
TAURUS (April 20·Mll)' 2CI) I 11\11'
nn murual ctatu~. v11hd inrom1,111on
rclo111n1 10 lcanl nghh. pcrm1"ion'
Keep IUilrd up. )lrcr d c11r or JCt•
LIBRA (Scpl 2l-Oct 22) rocu.
on triJX, Vl\11\, 1c.lca~ which require
for1her dc\ICl11pmen1 KC) " to
drvcr"fv . 111 m11kc 1nqu1t1c,., to
d"l"I 1y 1n1dlcuu .. 1 c:ur111 11y
Popul.1r11y rJling znom\ upw.ird
Ccm1111 r.:p1cwn1cJ.
'\( Ol<PIO (Oc r ~3·Nt1v 21)
lnc11m, pi11.:1111.1I mvc11 c~ ArtK:IC
1h.11 h.1J f,,·c n I<'''· m1"tnl or tolcn
will h•· ILlurncJ F.1m1ly member
tul k' nh11111 "'·hnn,1na rcMdcncc: "
'I 1111 •L "'kell 10 ~ "rckr .. e," l 11uru
'' 111 fltl lurc '"(;lrfARI • (Nov. 22-fK.:. :m
l11d1vncn1, 1nlui1ton on target 1'11kc:
1111111111vc, gc1 lo hc:nrt of m.tllcr,,
rd11\c 10 pliiy 'cwnd fiddle You'll
~ cn111sed 1n ~r111ng c:1"'11y that
could 1ncluc.lc 1dvcr1i~in1 '°PY·
--+--+--t-"'""1--tl flch·qu1t k \(;hemes You'll learn
more ubou1 fm1nc11I 1t1tu\ o( P1"1Cc1,
CAPRICORN (Dec, 22-Jirn 19).
f-11mily mc:mll\.r \ily., "I Wil\ wrona
t>Ut rh:..t~ don't rub ti in" BC
d1plum11tic. r·~cl .. lly 1n connection
with f1n1nc111I n1At1Crll. Domc .. tlc
1t.!Ju~1mcn1 rc~lorc h..irmony Ubra
will hare secret~
AQUA RI u. (Jan 20-r eb 11)
C MINI (Mo1y 21-Junc 20),
l mphnm 011 dcat.lline, sheller,
ul'YIVul Mnrit11I •ttllu~ tommand
morc·th11n·u u11I ..illcnllon Fint1nc1al
dilemma will he rcM>hicd by 4 p m
Ju\tK.c prev1ul\, you emerge "the
winner '
......... _....,_., CA Cl-.R (June 21 ·July 22):
P11111lly effort' bear fr1111
1 pir1111on • 1mh11111n tulf1llcd J.ucus
on pcculalK>n, rupul.mly. JIO)\ib1hty
of promo11u11. Pcr~c1v1: ~cople,
11u1111ons In rc:1h tic haht v.,au
mvolvet.I
Pl (l'cb, '"·Murch 20)
Oh111n hint from Aqua11u me \a c.
ucnllon revolve' around c11rcer,
ltu"nc , pflldue1mn, ot1t111111n1. Niter
"'"Phy for ll1knh, fHll\IUl h l..c~i:
rcl111111nih1p '""na. hah1l7 11orm It
\U"1"'\;~I
All e n11on revolves around
employment, be.le lttucs, unique
commun1callon from one wl\o relics
upon your judanicn1. l.Dna-rana
pro~pcc1a become crystal clear.
I ravel plan hould bo made -now.
l.£0 (July 23-Aua. 22)· Eacl11na I P J U NM 1., I s Vo U ll
acenulo rcW>lvca around pcnonahty, 81Rl HOAV: You h!M: unu u11I vo cc.
\Cn u1llty, ucahvt cnJcavon, $U ~en t•f dt rnll, •Pf"''' 1c hc1u1 , 1ppct1I. New love could t>e on lu,ury, m1m\'.. I 1111u11, l.1hr;i, orp10
horizon. En1ph1 ll!C freedom of jXNJll\ rt·•Y 11n1r1~11n1 roli.:11 in ~,, .._....__~_,1 llmu&Jlt, 1c1lon Aquulus, another llfc. Curti:nl qtlc ac~nh dl:ana~
U:o play role" tr hi, vaocry, marital 1tatu1, pot1lblc
Vl•GO (Aua. 2'· cpl. 22): al.ld1IK•n tu f1m ty. Your 1n1rn1ot1eal
Spothahr on prupcrry, durahf s<JCllh. P•llcrn re\'t11I• ~ •ft tap1blc of
rcp•1t\ Check detlll , read ttc1woc:n 1m .. n1n1 It rortutte. Major dotnc1tlc
hn '• be&ll' rcbu1ld1n1 proaram ad1uit1nc111 t11kc1 pfKe It! October.
Review m ar1111cc J'19ymtnt khcdUIC. Ynur moat mcnlonble, produttf¥tc,
foan11ly mcmflcr 1Ucn1pt1 Iii draw you rrofi11Mc month of 1991 11 ftkcly to
..... ;,., G9t • ..,... to°"* by clltNng "OIM+WOf'd" into conlrOY\11'17. be l>rt-rmbcr.
It 1 -•• ----.. lg 900eM code numOer 511; .._,,. , ...... ,., • " .......... .
.....
ROOlll IATS
Non•moker to lha"9 3 BA, 2 IA
condo nr. S.Collt
Piiia. Giiied, pool,
)llcuzzl + p.rldng. no peta 1290/mo
+Yi utll Awl t/15
7141241475t
I
I ' , . . , ,
•COOK• ••11 loen tood .....,.. enoe nMUllf'Y. P/f,
E.ngleh ....... "'°· °'"OIQefy, ~7•
CM "°' 1 pef'tort '" ... '*"'* hour-.. Good pay/lurroundlnge. .......
DILIVIRY ... ,,..,.,.,.. ,..,... ......... lmff•••'Y .,, eo.c. ..... 9"d
HunUneton l•••h. lam up to MOO P9r month. Ho con .. tton•. Ce" Dan or lrron bafo,. e:oo
A. ......... ,..
DILIVIRY
TllUllaDAY8 O•LY. New•pa_.er routet eWlll...._ In .............
•••~•rt ••••" 1:00 ~M. to tO:OO
A.M. ~--.oo.~· ·o. 9"d ........ .,... ....... C#t .......
II W
0 .............. -,, ..... ·---·~ .,..,."""'
15t per minute; Toueft. Tone~ roc.y phol.: · ~cf4111111,.. ... ••-•• .... new1,., ,_. ~~~~~---------........ ~--------..------....... --------..... ....-..... .-....-...... .....__ -_,,--...... ....-.u.;;.;.;...;~.;.;;.;....;,;,;...;;.;~~,L,;~o;.;,...;;;;.;....-;,;;..t.;.;.;.;..~.;.;;..::.;..;.;.;;.;;.;.~------_..."-..c:::::::::::;;;::.:;::::ii..:.:::::::-
INCRIAll UAl•R .............. ~ •VV ........ PAOP!RTIES lllAClf //Orlv.waye-patlo• Patnt..carpentry .... c.-~ R9modelhl
THm.Ai lftU SMlthe 9'c. No Job too DtyMI. ~'77 Spec:lall ... nvvvn tlllllt. ....._ U.. ..., ---'-~.;..;._;;.L;;;.;,;;..;;,,;;;.;.;..,1 R...a.ncteeape w/r:rotM
OUR NIW Mtckey 538.Q553 :.~!!!-· AA g=::_ ~ape
IMFllOVID o:!.1~~: c..i._ .. 7.:;: "'••'"'• w11"'" LOWIR RATll "°9-0tMwaya. Paint.. 1 CALL DOii IT AU M&-=:~~eee
e31 ~ ... a.te-3099 Oen. contractor at
QUALITY CONCRETE handyman prlcee. CMl'e &..t•aa~a
Oft,, ... ,....,..UO. etc. Smd & lrg ,.pan of IMtal. & M.W. R .. J Al~· 15 yn exp. fenc:.., ,,.UC.. plUmb-f:1 ~~J~ $2.IO pll' dlJ 7~1., ~-~.~~ ~Bonded~,,...,.· .,..w.,.. ... oe,,..1_1_. _
Thlrt'a AU you P9Y kltc:n.n. btrth ~ RON'a GAllHlllMQ
Pl -LI The r ....... ,.. _.. • II Ill.... l'MnOed ilo ....... _.. •eta 111 nw ..,,...... ._ ., .. , •
The ......... ,...,.. ....... ,.. -..C• ..... .............. : on:.U.4.fl91 THf" IMAOf'IU!, 11131 Mte k• A a lld ltlWMl Cf, .. H, !Nttw, Thie II 11 MRI W ... CA l:n14 wtlh .. c.ny C1i11t1 ftl
Qmry .... ...,,. 1111 ar.,.. CoUf'fy Oft ...... ._;
.... AN No, tlo,-0.. 1•1
...... c.A~ ....... ~ Menx 1.. Thi• IM*,,... .. ~ ~ ~ COMt dY*d lilJ: .. ...,.di.., ~ ---.. _ ••e•llent ehape. TM ,..._.reM(e) ..,.,._ ...,._,. r.-__,. 10, 11, M,
13,250. 1411402 0t nlllNlld lo ............. .Uy 1, 1M1
831-0S17 ... ...... .. 'lc*loue "411
VW 1MO ~ ...... NefMC•) llelCI .. ~:::::::;;;;::--completely reetot.d ..,... on: .. 11t1 ••IC •Tl-
M ,000. ... lt02 oi ?:: ~ ~ -
831.()317, ... .. ~-= " •1 di ~ .......... •••111-
40 n 1111p '" Newpon Dateun ,.,.. aoz ==';.,:,-.~ 2 + 2 . tmmeculate,
7000, 21:Ml1-3168 io.ded. l2,200. 831-3318.
1.e1-( 11' 81 I art ,...,... ~ ·~-: . .:: =--..
Publlhed Or-. C... . ALTON IQUME a..M-
Dlllly ...,. ~ 17, 24, JAltt Pl, -MDft ... I. ... 1, .. ,., *-·Calf . ..,,.
M-231 91<: ~ anc.. c .. : hlll, -_____ . -1~ -LA. .......
''jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii=--------i ~ c.11. -I -""9i;;m;i;;:";;;;;;:;:;;-"1 ™• .._.,.... le ~ "*JC IOTlCI dudld b¥: ............ UPTO
P1·' ',, • rt", ~H/'U
HOUOAY RELIEF
TLC for S*• & pCant9
OC hofne owner 12Yr'a
>Ont ma. 751 «155
•eoo
PER MONTH * NO COllECTIONS *
" ..... ~~i:-=<•>-. =
h1ll 111-. MM ........... '1• a
••1•1..e .... 1 .... ~· ..... The fallowlno penorte lb°"9 ~ 1111¥ 11. t•1 dofnO .,.,.... M : Clf'9I ic.m., ,., I I• • JO WAMltl.ER EHT£A-Thie .... 111ient w ...
PAIHS, 229 ~ Aw. __, .. Cowtly a.ti _, ~ D, Coeca ...... C1i1t °'MV9 CoUf"Y on .U. "· •2121 1M1
J .. on DIYtd ~-· r1111• 2251 ,ldflc A.,. . D, ""*"'-' ~ C... ~ e.~· 11 con. Diiiy ,_ ~ 10. 11, ....
duc1.S by. Ill llidtl#dllll .My 1• 1•1
The r99111rem(1) co~ llMll1
tnenCICI '° tr'll'IMd ...... ---i;i;;;;;;--=--~N~.ir=: __ Pml.IC_....,._IO_Tl_IC8 __ _
lb°"9 on: Mey •· 1191 "' R JMon W... • rtn I .... Thie Jtlll ••II ... llM • I I wll\ .. Ceurlly QM! qi I
for & addition•. Lie. Qudty ywd care/rMe.
....... ..,.....,,. 499197 M8 139-4900 r ..... 12 yr exp. NB/....,...._ P*tl p•awt11g
lllllt .MCK KlllHlllUt Ttt..E Alt reatcMntlel a comm't CdM only. 831-1172 Cullom eatuMo. ~
Early morning motor routes
available. Must have
dependable transportation
and liability insurance
Orqt Ceurlly on~ 31, :.-.:: :--.. 1 •1 t: J/lflalf't, m E.
Publllhed ~·le:. 11'fl ..... #12. ~ SERVICE .. MARBLE. INSTALL ,..,.,,. .. "*"'· ..... THI GRID IClll ::!; ~~
DIRECTORY + R!l"AtR. AA type9 .... & ............ ~~...._ ---...... Cllr . ..., o.lly Plcc ~ 10, 11, a.. "...,.... ~.
.Aly 1, 1M1 110Q ~ ....... ot l"even. Waehlng & R9fe ..,.._ 432·M27 ..,.. • ..._ .. ,._...,., '°' mot9 lnfonnllllon !!a!!np. 487.eees iii'T. WWWILl&Ji TTw TMlfnlnQlft.,,.,.,..
CALL TOOAVll THI ORIGIUL Oww 18,.. .... "' lawn Meint. I Cleenupt AIK FOR DIM -TU 11&11 ........... W• Clln Aototllllng •432-eeo.4• -... handle anything •heft ........ , ..... CANDY IHky ehowere-Acld of • mepr owrhM. r.1 1·.1 1111 , .. ',, 'H Your
a.Moe Otlectoty
~
WMh & regrout. New Newpott hec:h •
& R•pelr. 8ettvoom• eo.te M .... Hunting-RmMOD•LAllllltttet• Shower . door9. Klt~ ton BMeh Ar .... c.it llAaCMlllY-BRIC &
142-4321
Ed310
f'k>ore.Plumbfng Uc. C£NT~ MAINT£HANC( BLOCK WORK. ~/
25yra o.c. 17s.aoe5 _...... Uc'd . e4e 48M
TMe & Mwble lnetell I Compi.te Matnt/Repair
repelr. Prom~t ••r· Plumb•Jee.-c:arpentry ...to.,"" •• ,. No job paint ......... ~ PUIUC IOTICI too em all. Franlc Ol.K •s>eef-'!Y 54N717
The Cellf. Pubt1c UtMf. Tum.-, 957·1953. DAM'S Home/BU91Mu
tlM Commlaelon, RE· TILE Ina~ lmproYemen1. Otywell.
OUIAES th*' all UMd, ~ Cow1tCU lMtet c.rpentry & P91nttnig.
houuhold good• ,,.. fa I Aefu•,... Bonded. 845-7122
movere, print their JoM I ~.84M171 FIX UP YOUR HOUSE. P.U.C. cal T number, I ._ .. .,....._
llmo'• • chauff9ur'• Lew ~ PfinC ..,_., T.C.P. num-,.._ .. ,_ ... ..,,......,,..
•A-1 MOVINh
7»1353
CLEAN & EXPERT
F« • Job Well Donel
SeMng o.c b 111 yn
Uc T·1511.9'2
ber In .. ~ CMtLDCMS. In home ..,._ -Y ...............
"**-11 you h8Y9 • wfth pool. ~ • HANDY ANDY ~·~!...._La quedon about the ... ........ ...... ....... ........;-M".rided gatlty of a rnov.r, limo Age 7·t2, Ma4410 Ei.o-Plumb-l"etnt. lJ. CUaDMn. ~ 51ra
or cheuffeur, Cell· (9\19) Hunt. hec:h. carpntry, etc 831-4043 ~""'1645-3209
l"ubk U-.. Com-REPAIR • DRYWALL "*8ton. 714-NMUn NanntM, "' houNkMp-Etectncat • MUCHWy PAINTING PLUI .,.. .....U. Prof, exp. Concme-Tll...,llC1urH Ou...,. I atl1I
Pl.,r' 11 • ; 't''I)
14llr••Ml1111
tf.4TWG t PUIR«i
Uc541'71._....... CALL 642-4333
HUNTINGTON BEACH. COOl'A NJ.SA,
NEWPORT BEACH, FOUNTAIN VALLEY,
--~~--.;;;M.s.;;.;.;1•:;,~ =-.c:-.. ~
cllucl9d W. en lrlllt •••
PmUC llOTICI ~ret·~ = ,... . ,_..,,...... .......
91Jlk" 111 -. 91JtlneM NM.e(8> lllld
ftlt t m I... lb°"9 on: M1¥ 29, 1191
The....,.P9'90nl .. ~~r'•raglll c!O!nQbul!I.... •. Tlllt UlllMl'll ... .. AOa1'1'I ALT£MTIONS, _. .. ~ QM o1 .a E. COMt ttwv.. Co: Orwioe Cour!ty on June •· rONI del Mer Cellf. t2il2S 1M1
Alne SrdOMICI, 1 & P 111111 .__ ....... IRVINE & LAGUNA BEACH :;;:" *-· !MN. c.1r ~ o.-. c..
& ~. Uc9"M & Thll butlMtt It C(» Diiiy ""°' JMM 10, 11, M, tneur. 25 yn up. F,..
1
._ ________________________ .. ducted-:.,, lndMdUlt J4Jllo/ 1, 1M1
Eat. Fin 1iVt 175-&095. 1• =r -"'422
f~ I ' I °' 1 , ~ • I 1 ' ~
I-. 1\ I J, ~ ~ , ., 1 I , I 1
..,...,,.,. CoMtruCtton Co
Room eddttlons, ,._
modeling, quellty
worlc. ••IOIS17. ff'8M .... .,,01.
Sc 11 • r·
~I ' 0 I\ I''..,, ~ , J
~ -·--
.....CIOTICI
flf AILI ..... ··-•• s ml
The '°"°"*" ,....,. .. ~ llUllr.-..:
MEIA MU~. 2tT7
Hwbor, c... ...... c.11..
l2C7
John DMlaft. a31t I.
A:, l.lw In « out. From tnatalled. Qlftetl -~.,~-~~"'~!!!•!!'!!'!•..!S~4!:8-:!S~711!!_1 MQ,lwk. 571"5114. Creftaw Me-1790 ~Morton'•
Mobh Sc:feen SeMoe
Nobody beate Mor·
ton'• pricee Nobody1
Our prk: ..... 90 low
you h8Y9 to kK* up to
... tMbottom.
.... Orw-. c.11. -TNe bualneea .. OOfto ~ b¥: an lrrt1f., The regl1trMtt(•) OOM-( .... . , '
'ff ' . , . ,..... T'
I\ I ' . l ii I
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J, 11 !'llj
I • j ' : l ~
PAUMAN •L•CTilllC °'*"Y job. Low pttc9 ,,.. e.t 14hr.Lllltt11
•(?t4)7...-.e•
PAtNTINO.WALLPAPER
.. DO nunMIWGJ AND REPAIRS
Mechanical, eleetrk:al, ~ ,..,, Expttt worti
palntng, boat detallng. FrM .... 144-1411
hy Boat SYc. t7'-5tn Palntlng/Peperhanglng
H ,ttilrrrq \ ,','()
.-'\.. T HAUUNO IEAVICI
Oll'lge l'fd ~
Jon MW112
Old c:ountJy prof.
Cuatom lntJext.
Uc. 220902. 914-a12.
MMllOWC ...... llalM.
Pllnlng. ~ HoUIW
(71 •) 842.e516
C,p11•>h ,, "
Ho•tJ I', I '
~ Que!,. jot> , ....... DICK'S HAULING st. lcl~183&:1758 SPAINKL!AS are my Junk 10 dump a gen. _.._.....,..;.;.; __ ;..;..; ___ .;..;..1 only ~ .. llmen,
eral hauling. Large W.P. YOUllQQUllT veNM. drtP eyateme.
trudc with lift ga... ,. .... Corncllor ~ 1neuiaatton .. Aepelr,
So40-37M Pllntfna by "'°..... 722·'7124 Chattea.
DUMP ""'98 . NMK UctJI02oll. lneured. rrurneture, treah, .,.... ffr .. •t. 14~
bnlnchM, apphncee.
Mltc• 7 cty! .... 1381 J.C. 1'11111
DUMP TRUCK for ,_, Wf CW. ltld Hq T..... .::41c. ~-Ouallty
Comm. LG/eml Jobe • Totel lntemr Aemo6: --------~ Jun""Haut-CoMt. 11'.U. ..Ing 8etv. ,.,..._ To On N mo¥1 lfld ,.., I ~ .-C. 148 IMO The Crazy. 833-7172 p61ca .. .._,......,,
t I , · '' ; , , .\)
• TOf1fl•f"'11111w1. L1wn1
~" ~ 711-3419
•Yenli•iiw••• ~ • T'" Trtm-mlng • lpt1dr/UGMna
"pre • l••cJl9oi 8lnOe 1113 (413tM) htll ......
a.....--If you·re lootltn1 for a car.
clauHled ha•"~' for you.
Getto
the basic
A.BC's
Attic,
basement,
and closet
en get
h.
YOU CAN FIND IT IN THE CLASSIFIEDI
l'MnOed lo ...... ....... ,_ ............ '10 •
...,,.. NM.e<•l .... lbOWon:~n. 1• John Dodllol\ Tlllt ... , ......... ... .. ~a.-Orwioe~on.u.• . 1M1
Plllllt ~ a... c...
~ ""°'June 10. 11, ... JAltt 1, 1191
"' -·-···-• 1 •• nw...,....,..... .. ..,........__
llXl'UT'I luttOl"UH 01.Vr•t0 llfMCI. t 1M w.--.. ....... c...
tl7'01 ---~1tMW, 16ena, .._ AM. CA ll701
TI\19 ........ Clefto -...w. ....... .. The ,......,.,,.(•) ... ................. ,_......, .. "•n • .................... ....,. en: .,.,,.,
........ I ... n. 11 ....... .. .. 0.., CSM _, ~ 0...., .. JllM 11, 1191 •nnw
•'thMI ~ 0....
~Nat.U..11,k.Mr ,, .. ,.., ..... ......... , . ., ..
t ~ ..
STIRTilli I IEW BUSllEIS11
The lAlglll 0..--.... °"" ll'lallt~IO-•____ ........ _ ...... -w. .. _NA~ ... -IOr
,e.. • "° --~ .,. -,.., ........ .W ...... IO ... e-1
*'-"' .......... "-... -.,. .. _. .. _......_ .. ..... ~--------,....,.. ..... ~OWll.~ _ ...... .., .... __ ,...... ., .................... ..
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..,.., .......... 11111 .... ... _._.,... ...... ..... ......... ,... _ .........