HomeMy WebLinkAbout1991-06-25 - Orange Coast Pilot......... _ ....
Low cloude in the momma and fair
in tbC afternoon. West to IOUtbwcst
wi_ndl 10 to 1' mph this afternoon.
Hips ranainl from the upper 60s near
the beachea to the mid· 70I inland
areu. Lows toniaht in the mid-SO. to
lower 60s. For more information ind\adina bolting. fishina and 1urfinS:
ICC pap AS.
IN THE NEWSROOM
What hu to be the press relcaac of
the week coma from Fleabuatera, a
loca1Jy bated Oea elimination service .•.
The company, or at least its public
rclatiou a,ent, has mailed out a
five-~ dilpetch called "Famoua Flea
Myths' ... The moat ~ ~
seems to be: Aeu live forever. True or
falle? ... Fae, thankfWly. Flcabuatcn
advilCa that it only "aeema like f1eU
IM forever>'. .. Tbe donaide, thouah, ii
that oac male and oac female Oea can
be r=le for 222 trilliOn adult
fliL. )iii'° JO'I , Del IWes
fou&bly 27• days ... Happy summer.
QUOTES OF THE DAY
"It was not a publ.lc lwonn, -IM
majority of tht mtm~n of this council
fttl insWttd"
•
Newport Beach Mayor Phil
Sant0ne rcactina to newa that he
and colleaaues had not been invited
to apeak durina an airport noise
hearing (Al)
"!Mw.l'C tM fury of• potlml mon"
John Dryden
TODAY'S EVENTS
•"Les Mlacrables" continues on
1ta1e at tbe Oranse County
Performina Arts Center. Tonight's
show ii act for 8 p.m. For additional
showtimcs and tickell call SS6-
ARTS.
• "The Cuttina Edae:
Contemporary American Folk Art
from the Rosenak Colleetion: is on
display at La1una An Museum. The
eJChibit continues throu&h Aus. 18.
Call the museum at •94-6531 for
details.
JlJST Tltf FACTS
• WMt were the ye•rly u/1ries
for the first city clerk Ind city
1ttomey of ~n Bach?
'OOH hwou1 .<11J ~· !~IS ~·w 31.1~1:> .<a!l :MU.•·
LOTTERY
Daaao
•Hearta: Me
•OUbl: Kfri1
• Dluiondl: 9
•Spadel·2
81 elnnl'M
Cl111ll9dlU
INDE )(
0 ....
Ca••HI' f'olwe/A7 ~
~
·e po icy stir~ loud debate . Ir Aull Los -..c..-.... ~RT BEACH -An i!mPendi= natec>naJ aarport nOile' , pOlicy that cou
weaken exiatma etllldanla ... John w~
Airport WU IOU~ ricHculCd Monday at
a conp'ellional field heariq held at
Newport HarbOr Hiah SchoOI.
"FAA'• idea of substantial noite rcUcf
arid the community'• idea ot substantial
noise relief are two different thinp "
Northern California Con1re11wom~n
·Barbara Boxer told FAA representatives
at the hearing.
~xer, 0-Marin County, and Rep.
Oms Q>x, R-Newpon Beech, presided
over the hearin1 conducted under the
auspices of the House Subcommittee on
Government Activities and
Transponation. ·
-Both Boxer and Cox are critical ol what t~ believe i1 a threat to IOi:a1 control of
airport noise and locaJ e•neion of
airport facilitiea.
.The Airpon NoiJe and CapKity Act of
1990 -which promilea iipilcant impact
on communities, airPOJU, airlinca and air
freiaht companies -wu ~tioualy
attached to the federal bucfFt bill Jut
year and was passed uruiotic:Cd by lnOlt
lawmaken.
"We have cstabtilhcd a national noiM
pOlicy and we have dOoc it without the
nOrina1 democratic proceu." Cox said
calling it "truly a oonpUlk)ftal error." '
SM NC>tSUllla ,_
Newpoif oBicals feel slighted
By Iris Y'*°I Activities and Transportation, which
°"IWI C.. D11r"" conducted the f edcral hearina on the
NEWPORT BEACH -Stinaina policy that threatens to weaken
from. what they CiCJ!llidcr a harsh anub, edatin1 noise standard at John WayTJe
off ~ala ol the aty that bolled the Airport. -
nat~ ~ noise policy bearina "h was not a public hearing. The ~ an~ deno':'nt;ed the fact maJOr!tY of the members of this
that ~ wc~n t even mvttcd to speak counaJ feel in ulted. •:
at ,!he ptbcnns. . Sansone, who poke durin1 the
· We we~ n:ot ~mutted to addrea council's Monday afternoon study
this commauaon, ~ewport Beach sc ion, added that he was further
SMayor Phil .Sansone satd of the House d1 mayed that local Con~emnan
ubcomm1ttee on Government See ANGRY~,...
Newport
m•ager
·resi•s
lfJllr,,,, ~/ : ' . ,,,,, ,.. ,, "'""
Bylns y~ °""" c... Olly 1'1111
NEWPORT BEACH -The man who
has led the city for 20 years with a sound
fiic&I mind, mtelqence and wit revealed
Monday that he plans to retire from city
pcrment at the end of the year.
Co~ruction workers sit underneath the newfy-~ilt Fairview ~ to enjoy their lunches. ~~=cl:::
provided the meals to show their appreciation to workers.
City Manager Robert Wynn, whole
tenure is the second lonaest of any
Orange County city manaacr, confirmed
late Monday that he had informed the
City Council during an afternoon cloeed
session mectjn1 he wouJd stay with the
Freeway workers walk
off the job -for lunch
By Ama Cetcota
°"'Ill c.... -"" COST A MESA -They've probably heard just about
every insuJt from irate motorists atuck in traffic. but on
Monday coutruction workers involved in the Costa Mesa
Freeway extension project heard somethina nice instead.
HJ just want to thank you guys, you've done a flflt-dua
job," said Fred Jansson, owner of Newport Party Center and
hailrd member with the Costa Mesa Downtown Merchants
Mlodatioft, whith 1pe>nsored a free lunch for the worken
a.
doina down here •rtant to us,"
association dent Randy Oarell told about 100 workers,
just before lunch was served in the shade of the Fairview
overpa • "So have at it."
And have at It they did.
"This lunch ls a good deal, it's nice to ~now tomeone
appreciates )'0\.1," said Nick Rlcchioti, a San Diego resident
who works for Wasner construction. "It's a heck of a
gesture."
Mick Rowan, another Wagner worker, aJIO thouaht highly
SM LUNCH!llla ,_
City •PPl"Oftl aer fee laika, A3
city only until Dec. 31.
The <>0-year-old Wynn said be decided
to quit imply to try something new after
more than three decades in city
government, although be is not sure yet
.what he will pursue.
"1 don't have another job lined up " he
said Monday night. "l JUSt want t~ do
somcthin& elx ... while rm relatively
youna.
"I ~a¥e no di putcs with any City
Council members, city taff or citizens.
I've been a city mana er now for 35 ye.an
(in the c1t1e of Imperial Beach
Coronado and Newport Beach) ... and l'\I~
een a lot of managers kind of bang on to
the extent they were like robot . I didn't
want to do that.
.. , think a change would be aood for
me and the caty. But i1·s with \'Cry much
mixed emotions.''
Wynn tressed he i b ic.alJy happy wit~ hi~ job and the late of the city,
which 1 · known as one Of the molt
financially healthy in the county because
o ( Wynn' fl)'cally CONCNatiYC policica. s. WYNMllla ...
Cit): bidget ailant leads police on wild tour
p ssed; funds
threatened
lylrtl ... °""" c. -,... NEWPORT BEACH -AJth<>Uah
still uMUrc whether &M 1tate'1 ~·
will plunk the city u much u Sl
million in the red, the Ctty Coundl on
Mond1y niaht went ahead and
adopted • b\tda9t for rt1eal )"Ur 1991·
92 ot w..s· miOion -SIO millk>ft Im
than t1tt year's budpt of M .•
million.
Th .. propoMd bucflet "'*'' a S 1.3-millioll decNMe in ,..,,,. .....
nich was on.ct bf elbninat ... •
politioM •hroueh attrition Md cut-.
tbe number ol ~lal -...,,,., .. .,
--~ -
tizens help monitor crime spree
IJErilt--°""" c.. .,. "" HUNTINGTON BEACH -A 38-year·
old woman who wob to find an intnader
crawlina tcroa her bedroom Roof wu
stabbed in the tea earty Monday,
trWcrin4 1 wild cit}'~wide ... rch f9r a
man c1rMn1 a stolen Dodte van, •
TIM driwr reponedly ... uged ICtOll
the city, apeedina owr a pf coune. cunlna throuah IOfM oil fields .a
•llepdty nearly knodi"I down an ekterty
run • he attempted to tcnWl down the
ven' liclnac number'°' pOlice.
It iftded alrnott t-.o houn later with
the armt of a suepect outlide tM
HtfallCll to an OJIClulM HUintiftl'OI'
H.,_r .. ial*>rhOOd. poltc. Mid.
Oft~ :-..::-Of .. =::~
l1ain DMbit. no WM ll11pl• .,....
..., 11011111•. .... to ... a ...
crawlina alon1 the bedroom Ooor, police
Lt. Ed McErlain said. .
Oenkta tofd polioe she stOod up
abruptly and was stabbed in tho 1el with a
butcher knife. Her attacbt iftu'Dediately
ran out the front door while her huibend
called 91 l, McEtlain said.
The &lle&ed bvralar, who rc"-d to pe pol.cc hi• name, •• C\lentua.lly
capcured with the help of a few aMrp.
Jilhted citiicns.
Potice tel up a perimeter around ttii
ScclUC My area and noticed tlN man.
headi.. llCfOlt tbe Seaditr OINftUJ Cub
iOlf coune and ....... oll ..._
McErtaln Mid. The trail led •nMiht to a
chMa .... ft.cc. ...... '° the l"*tid
IS If IOlalW bed ..... CJllllef "-
Mc&Wllllld. . 'I..,..· ...,.,, WM • .... ....
....... IO I brcMa _. :.-.._... • ...-.i1.-•
'
• :: • • • •
. • • • • . . .. -.. • . -... . . . .. .. . -... ... • ...
··------------~~~~ A 22-year-old psychology major who went from being a high
school dropout to a student leader at Orange Coast College and
winner of a recent $500 Rotary Club scholarship.
• 11E ~11n11t1SS1ti:...------------
Hunter •now spends his off hours talking to high school
freshmen about the perils of dropring out. Two days before his
18th birthday he was kicked out o his home and was living with
friends. After giving most of his attention to work, he was told by
Costa Mesa High School officials he would not graduate. After
more than two years working at a dead-end job, Hu.nter bit the
buUct and returned to the Newport-Mesa school district's
alternative education program to cam bis high sch~I degree.
1UCC011~1mmMyt~~~~~~~~~~~
Last month Hunter won an award from Orange Coast College
for the most outstanding first-year student in student government,
thanks to his work in coordinating Coast Weck on campus. Next
year he will serve as a member of the student board of trustees.
"I'm a~ surprised as anybody else," Hunter said. "Two years ago
I wa' 20 years old without a high ~hool diploma and a lousy job.
It '" never too late to change."
By Russ Loar
Local News Briefs
Two men stlbbed In apparent •• lllil
COS rA Ml::.SA -An apparent feud between family members
aupted in tu '1olcnce late Sunday. with two men being
ho,p1tJh1cd for \tab wounds, police reported Monday.
Ismael Bedolla-Medina, 57, was arre tcd on µspicion of
attempted murder and police believe a second man may have also
been involved in the stabbing, Costa Mc'>a Police Sgt. Ron Smith
\did
The 1wo v1ctim'i, whose names were not availa ble. were
hosp11alized for '>lab wounds and their 1n1unc'i were not described
a'i life threatening. Sm11h 'laid.
At about 10.12 p.m .. police were alerted to the crime al the
1987 M.iple Ave apartment. Smtih o;a1d
Medina and the o;econd man allegedly ent ered the home and
wnfrnnted 1he two v1ct1m'> in rctalmt1on for a pre111ous fight
invol"in~ another famd}' member, Sn111h said.
While the C\.tct relation'> and motives 1n the stabbing were not
clear. Sm11h \iHd 1he v1 ct1m'> and the suspects all knew each other
:ind hJd family connec11on'
\rtcd1nr1 "'a~ <1rrestcd in Sant<t Ana without incident later
\11nJ;n Sm ith \J1d
Newport-Mell school boll'd 11111' lllllllc
testimony on budget -cuttma llfGllOllll
COSTA Ml-.SA -The Newport-Mesa Unified School Dbtrict
w11l hold a public hearing tonight to consider the 1991-92 budget.
Bud~c 1 recommendations include a hiring freeze, an increase in
dd'' '"c .ind a freeze on va riou' 'IChool improvement projects.
D"tmt officials hope to <;ave more than $2 million as they
con,11kr <1 propo'led $86 million budget for the next school year.
1 he nll'cting start1> al 7·10 p.m., al Harper Community Center,
425 I .1,1 I Hth SI , in Co,la Mc'a
~-~··-•a. COST A MESA -For the second time this month, someone
~tole thousands of dollars worth of Indian artifacts and other
11ems from Oldc'n New Antiques on 19th Street, police 1aid .
In the mo!lt recent burgalry on June 21, police found the rront
door o_f the bu~iness pried open and jewelry cases inside looted,
according 10 a Costa Mesa police report .
Among the losses were costume jewelry, Indian jewelry,
p1cturcc;, paintings and a brass vase. The total loss was estimated
at ahout $12,000 ,
On June I. someone stoic merchandise worth about $13,000
from the store in a similar burglary. police aid.
The tore owner told police he noticed a suspicious looking
man, who asked about jewelry in the tore. lurking around before
both burglarie~. 1hc report aa.id.
The possible burglar is describCd as white, about .SCi years old,
with a ~light build. ·
fllDI' Dmdll 1111 twa _. CCllb'ICll ·
JRVJNe -l~mc·bascd f1uor Daniel uid today It will perform
construction management services for .an 810,000.squarc-foot
convention center to be built on a 14-acre parcel in downtown
Charlotte, N.C
The valuo of the contract i1 1pproximftcly $7 million.
Fluor Daniel's Industrial Sector will J'rovide value cnginccrlna,
c timatina. contrac1or pre· and post-qualification, bid review.
rccommcndatton and con truction maria1cment.
Pre-con truction on the project Is under way, and con truction
I scheduled to bcgjn in earl)' 1992. The center I 1lated for
completion In la ta J 994
Alw today, Fluor Daniel announced it will work on 1 $220
million Venciuclan pro,cct (or L.i oven, an arfiliate of Pctrolc<>1
de Vcnciuela, the national od company o( Vcnctucla. ,.,... ,,.,,, ,.,,., ""'_, .. ,,,,,.,..
•
BETHESDA, Md. -1rt1•dlm 8Ulh •
problems arc over ud 19e''I ..._.. 100 pe....a."
The president also ~ Americana IO
and to uercise more.
Bush pronounced bhmtlf phylkally ft1 oa ...,. * tD
Bethesda Naval Hatpi&al, wllcN flt wu tUea CJD lllf 4 '11111• fl
an 1rresul11r hcanbcat. He WM later d~ 11 ~ 1: ~
disorder. ·
"I'm clad we don't have to .. , lhia time:• the ,,.,.., .......
joked as he presided 4t • ribbaDoeutuna cere~ tbt ..,,.,
constructed quarters for milhasy families who VWa ~ -m
patients.
In the early stage of his treatment, Bush avoided strenuous
~~~ . ~
However, on Monday he offered ttii• report of his weekend at
Camp David: ·
"I played three hard sets of tennis. ran two miles, hit some aolf
ball and -so le ·t there be any doubts about the efficiency of naval
medicine -why ... I'm back, 100 percent."
JI-Clr ... 'I _. •111 In Cll' •Cllllll
NORTH HOLLYWOOD -The 39·year·old son of Johnny Carson
has been killed in a one-vehicle traCfic accident at Cayucos, north of
San Lui Obi po, authorities aid today.
Richard Wolcott Carson, a North Hollywood re 1dent, died at the
scene Friday in unincorporated Cayucos, Calif., north of San Luis
Obispo on the Pacific coast, south of the community or Cambria, said
California Highway Patrol Officer Russ Johnson.
He aid Carson's ca tbound 1990, dark gray, four-wheel-drive
Nissan Pathfinder was going JS to 20 mph along Cayucos Drive
about 6:20 p.m. Priday when the driver, who was not wearina his
Fatal crash
,,~
A tow truck pulls the 4-wheel-drive vehicle driven by Richard
Wolcott Carson, son of entertainer Johnny Carson. up an em·
bankment near Pacific Coast Highway in Cayucos, Calif. Carson,
39, died instantly when his Nissan Pathfinder plunged down the
124 foot embankment, authorities said.
News of the Weir d
Horse-powered 11ca111 .nws cowll8JI
TALOGA, Okla. -Mo 1 cowboys reel home on the range
when they're sitting tall in the ~addle. Some prefer horse·
powered wa ter-skiing.
"You live out here, you go1 to find something to do," aid
Jerry Cope. an oilman who provided the 'lkis so ranch workers
John Riley Md Dennis Stidman could trade their boots for water
ski and a ho~e·drawn tow rope for reini,.
The '>po rt 1~ a good 1mprovi a1ion 1n placos where lake arc
'>Omeumc~ .,1:arcc. Its only di agreeable moments arc when kis
tilttd mto \nndh.irc; and ~pill the cowboyi..
"You can get \Ome strawbcrric on you," Stidham aid, rubbing
a hip
"Pretty fun , ain 't 1t?'' Riley houtc~ he and hi p lomino
dragged a rope and ski'> past a ~andbar that had ju t ~pilled hi
\kiing partner
Riley, 30 . .and Stidman, 35, started combining hor emanship
3nd water sk1'1 a few ycar'l ago artcr Stidham 'lftW ii done on a
televi ion sofl -drlnk commercial
Even though we tern Oklahoma' Canadian River often i
more andbar than water, Stidham figured hr could duplicate the
commercial.
"So I had to try her, a1 least," tidham said •
Now, Stidh•m. Riley and a few other ~ki the ri..,cr with ca~
and often
The channel i hallow enough that tho h6r&e\ can get gOod
footin llnd Che cowboy don't hiwe to worry aboUt drownina or
Pollce Log
Newport B~ach ,.
A l.ond<Jrt 1nan lo I a S '· ~ watch IOmCwhCI'\\ 1n the cxcan while urnh nc1r Wctt <>ce•n Front and ~th UCCI, • An clccauc &dlf can ,,., ttolcn from HeWpOrt
BcKh Country Oub, 1600 H. Coal Hfahw.,. • An llhnoa W01mfl'1 t-o lolde of laundry -••'-,
women's ind dlildmr'a dothiftl -"'e I"*-ffCM! IWU d!J!Cft •I I...,.......... a1"'W. lllboa ao.kvlfd and JQth SCrctt for a"ll.800 io.
• • A t.a1una lk!Kll man INliewl h11 ..... ·rtftt atlooed Ufr hill ntlilcr wt.n. M W• at die Mamoft ttOCel, 900 iN~ Ccnttr Dt
(
o •• Mna
,.
TOlYO -A 1Candal over ftMoUI ...... W 1.,_•, ~
Four" brokerage houscs broQabt dowa the presidents ol two ol tbl
world's bigest MSCUririct finna Mpftday and iftCl'MIOd calla tor
industry reform. ne scandal sent a ripple throup ltoCk mallets, wltb ~ f ....
sharply.
At the center or controYeny is the practice of com.,...... IM
firms' wealthiest clients for their I011C1, a ai&hk>n that nalkr
investor don't get.
New' reports have allcaed that the four houses failed to report
millions In taxable transacuons incurrect in the course o( payina the
compensation.
Yoshihisa Tabuchi of Nomura SCCUritlea CO., the world's IUieat
securities firm , and Takuya Iwasaki or Nikko Securities Co. reaiped
l!I presidents of their firms.
News reports also have accused those two companies of maldna
millions or dollars of loans to an underworld figure and pushina up
price of a stock in which he invested.
111'111 llY -... -1111111 -
SHAQLAWA, Iraq -Kurda h leaders said Monday that a key
obstacle to an accord on Kurdish au tonomy is a previously secret
demand by Saddam Hus cin that they cut direct tics with the West
and help him fight 'he Shiites. .
The dbclosurc appeared to cast some doubt on the prospects for
an early agreement. On Sunday, Masoud Barzani, the leader of the
biggest Kurdish group, said an accord was jmminent.
Mahmoud Osman, acneral secretary of the Kurdistan Socialist
Pany, said Monday that representatives of Saddam's government set
out the new conditions in a document submitted to Kurdish
negotiators in early June.
In the document, Osman said, government offtciaJs urged Kurdish
forces to help suppress uprisi.ng.s and ttemonstrations -aiainst the
ruling Baath Pa~.
Pro-Iranian Shiite parties and pro-Syrian groups were mentioned
specifically, said Sami Abd al-Rahman, a top negotiator for the front
and chief of the Popular Democracy Party of Kurdistan.
Acculld lllll llaldl1r 111111111)• lll•c•ce
ST. PAUL, Minn. -A man accused o( maiJina bombs that killed
a federal judge and civil rights lawyer maintained his innocence
Monday under heated cro -examination by a federal prosecutor.
On Friday, Walter Leroy Moody Jr. Moody claimed the Ku KJux
Klan made and mailed the bombs in December 1989.
As 1 tant U.S. Attorney Louis Freeh chaJlcnged Moody's sincerity
by showing o videotape of the defendant clowning at home in Rell.
qa .. while rcadina a Bible ver e out loud. There was laughter on the
v1dcot pc when Moody emphasized unintended sexual connotations
1n the vcr\C.
Moody, 57, is charged in a 71-count federal indictment With the
mail bomb deaths of 11th Circuit Judge Roben Vance of Mountain
Brook, Ala., and civil rights attorney Roben E. Robin,on of
Savannah, Ga .
He al~ i charged with mailin1 a bomb intercepted at the federal
court in Atlanta, m•iling a bomb intercepted at the NAACP offace ln
Atlanta and mailing a 1car-~as bomb that exploded In the Atlanta
office of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored
People.
He became a suspect when investigators allegedly found
imilaritles between a bomb that went off in Moody's house in tm
nnd the 1989 bomb . Moody was convicted of pipe-bomb possession.
Moody claimed under cross--cxamination that he was wrongfully
convicted in the tm case. He has maintained that a man named
Gene Wallace made the bomb and left it at has house.
ORANGE COAST
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the OrM!p Co.ut 0...1) Ptlol IUPS 144-IOC»
it po.bl~ IM•ly "-JS 2S pet four·....-k
pennd by um• s..t>.crrpt.ton, S7 I* four.
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d11""' 10 1he Oa•l-t PJac, P 0 to. 1 HO, Cllltl Mft.t CA 926l6
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_.,......,....... ....
...... *'I • II IS I Ill f ' ...... *'11111 '!le Yllllll a.. ... , ... Mii ... 0-.
Por thla ....... .,.... • t\lnd-iatm far
HWnlillaloft ladHMld Puent H81D U.1.A..
.... .. 1111•bled .... "'-'a: ........
1111a, ._,......Mr. •et• .. • t ... Clf.
.... ANrla.· -r • --linnp ol ..... luminariet who don't mind belaa out...,.nw.
8'1hop, who'1 been pnektina CMr touts Ucc
the i~ntion ol fire, a1..,. ps all-out ror ._lliiiiiiiliiil-
wonhj cau1ca. This ono't a center for the
prevention of child abme. On thil aipt, only ~A-
lbe routce wW be abutcd, and abould be ~la
thorcNply lecenl.cl at evenills'• end. ----· For ticket information, the Parent Help \:.l.S.A!t 714 numbers
arc 840-5929 and 143-LOVE. 00 and enjoy. • SPEAK.ING OF un IN nnc FAST LANE -The
aforementioned Mr. BiabOp wu motoring on car-c1ot4ed
NCWJ>O!t BouleYard the other day, and spotted a pedestrian
ttaacnna •Iona under full ftekl pact. They had thit conversation:
"Would you fike a lilt?"
"No, thankl. I'm in a huny." • SHOULDN'T THERE 8£ A UMJT roa OVER·ACHIEVERS1
-At an aae when molt mortals spend their time listen1n1 to
arteries hardening. veteran editor-columnist But SIMI continues
to shame us f cllow·aeezen.
We've Iona known of his workaholic writing habits -including
awards as the nation's top ski writer -but now the onetime
Newport Ensign editor has embarked on a bright new career.
He's blossoming u a television personality, cpd, appearing on·
camera for Nelson CommunicatlOns and Rou Cortae'1 latest
development at Rossmoor Leisure World.
A!Jk Burt Sims his age, and he'll say he's well over the freeway
speed limit. Ask what he plans to do with all that money, and
he'IJ say his cx-actre wife Adf1nn has a pretty good grip on that
situation.
Just don't ask him to slow down especially if you're in the
path of his onrushing skis. • ARRIVEDERCI. CLEVELAND -Please, at the risk or
seeming redundant, no more Cleveland jokes. I had requested
same. you may recall, upon learning that the current Irrelevant
Weck honoree, wck:omcd here Sunday,· had majored in football
at Cleveland-based John Carroll University.
I was stunned to learn that my longtime soul-brother, author·
em<lCC Vick KaJsltt, ·WU hatched in the Cleveland appendage of
Lakewood. For all these years, he's managed to keep fhat quiet.
When a ked why, he said it just didn't seem relevant. ·
At a confrontation the other day, we had this exchange:
"You really from the Oeveland area?"
"Ah, yes, Oeveland -the mistake on the lake."
It went downhill from there, with Vick telling me more than I
cared to absorb. He was surprised that I'd never been there for
ancestral reasons because Cleveland's county, Cuyahoga, had
been settled by a wandering tribe called the Shmohawks.
Another cx-Oevelander checking in was Bruce Malsnee of
Irvine, who said he vi ited his ol' hometown la t year and was
saddened by its financial plight.
How broke is it?
Malsnee said he went into his old bank to change a twenty,
"nnd the teller had to send out for it."
J~ny Kobrln'1 column mns Sund•!· Tlttld•J' and Frldar.
r~ 11 1.1111m ms woman
lfl""'lltad for 11181111 drug 11181
LAGUNA HILLS A
terminally ill mother of five who
appeaJcd to the public to help pay
for her household expenses said
she was arrested for .,mvestigation
of selling prescription drugs.
Debbie Mangiardi, 38, said she
was arrested for selling
prescription painkillers to
undercover officers in Costa Mesa.
Her arraignment is set for July 1
in Orange County Municipal Coun
in Newpon Beach.
Her husb a nd. John F .
Mangiardi, recently served jail
time on the same charges, the
Orange County Register rcponcd
Wednesday.
Mrs. Mangiardi said she had
agreed to acll prescription pills ror
$250 or $300.
"I didn't think it was that wrona
to do," she said. "I needed the
money.''
The Mangiardis each were
charged with a folony count of
selling hydromorphone, a narcotic
derived from morphine,
prosecutors said. John Mangiardi
pleaded guilty May 9. received a
90-day Jail sentence and wa
released June 11 .
Mrs. Mangiardi had said in an
culier interview that her hu band
had left the family and was living
in New Jersey. On Tuesday,
however, she said her husband is
living with his parents in Garden
Grove.
Asked about the discrepancy,
Mrs. Mangiardi said, "I just didn't
want everyone to know!'
She also said she was arrested
earlier this year for investi&ation
of possession of cocaine but that
the case was thrown out. She said
she didn't known the powder was
cocaine when an acquaintance
aave it to her.
Mrs. Mangiardi, who suffers
from lymphoma, had taken to
soliciting donations at the corner
of Alicia Parkway 11nd Pasco de
Valcnc11.
Given less than two years to
live, he said he was eeking to
make her final time with her
children as enjoyable as po sible.
Mrs. Mangiard1 snid he wants
to find a home for her children.
ages S through 12. Her husband,
he !laid, couldn't handle it.
A Laguna Hill woman who set
up a telephone number and post
office box for donations to Mrs.
Mangiardi said she wouldn't stop
her fund-raising crfort despite
news or the arrest.
"I feel she is real desperate and
she may have got stuck on a drug
thing, but I'm going to help her
because of the kids," pid Laura
Willard.
"I don't want to just let this
cancer e1t me and ravaae me,"
Mn. Manaiardi said earlier. "I
want to get back at it, use it.
That's why I'm doini it. I want the
publicity.'
Mrs. Mangiardi'a doctor, Pedro
Carrillo, a family practitioner, said
11hc probably ha two yurt at m t
lO hve.
-111 th A.ssodattd Pren
County transportation board votes to
raise bus fares, charge for transfers
SANT A ANA • The Oranp COunry Transportation Authonry
voted unanhnously today to ch1rao
county hu riders a nickel for
transfer pa . , an unprecedented
fee that will be impoecd start1na
ne•t Monday.
Oranac County Transit District
p n~n abo ~Ill pay S 1 for the
rcplar fate, bc1Jnn1n1 July t. up
from tho current 90 cents.
The ftewly formed ........
p1nel .,,ptcMf lM ,,..._ ....
after takl,. ,,....._ ,._ W
peuon, 11id ua_llfOllll ...
~eJWO'WI MGM all. SM llid... _.
traMflr •h•fiW • ...... • <'ffllt t8'1 OCTD't .... ,,
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Ashley Carter, left, and her partner Jordan Fredrikscn, two 10-year-ol~ from Costa Mesa, are making
some cool cash this summer in the shaved Ice business. The two young entrepreneurs made S 16 Sun-
day had made SlO by early Monday afternoon. Cones sell for SO cents each.
Northrop settles suit filed by
two whistle-blowing workers
LOS ANGELES -Nonhrop
Corp. agreed to pay $8 million to
settle civil fraud charges brought
by two former workers who
charged the aerospace firm with
faking tests on parts for nuclear-
tippcd cruise missiles, attorneys
said.
The former employees in the
ca e were-repre ented b,.Y an
attorney who won a landmark
liability ca e ngainst Newport
Beach ix year; ago on behalf of a
client who hroke his neck diving
into the waters off Balboa.
tn that case, the city was
ordered to pny Herb Hafirs client
$6 million hccau e it had f ailcd to
warn the public that diving
hcadfin.t Into the ocean could be
hniardou .
In the Northrop case, former
employees ~ocndta Brajas and
Patricia Meyer will receive
between 15 to 25 percent of the
settlement, with the remainder
going to the federal Treasury,
according to their Herbert Hafi(.
The company also agreed to pay
$750,000 directly to the two
wo rkers, who were fired after
complaining internally then
reporting their allegations to
f edcral agents.
"E:.vcn if I wasn't getting
anything. l would do 1t over," aid
Meyer. whose now living in
Florida. "Wh en I heard that
Northrop ... pleaded guilty. I
Marted to cry I was so hnppy. Thc)
got their JUi.I dues."
lJnder the federal Fal e Cla1mi.
Act, 1ndn1duab can '>UC
contractor~ on behalf or the
go,crnment •ind hare m any
award\.
Northrop 1gned the settlement
agreement ·1 hursday Justice
DcpJrtment atlorneys arc
expected to 'l1gn 1l in the nc'<l fcv.
wed.s, Hafif aid.
The Department of Justice
joined the civil ca e against
Northrop and filed criminal
charges against the ~company and
three of its officials. The cnmjnal
case was settled last year when
Northrop pleaded guilty to 34
counts of fraud and paid fines of
Sl 7 million.
Northrop also has agreed to
~pend about $10 million to correct
the nawcd guidance systems.
Hafif said he will seek attorneys
fees of about $700,000 from
Northrop, which would bring the
total tab for the case to bout $36
million
Northrop dtlorney Joseph
Costello 'ltud the S million
payment 10 cttle the lawsuit by
Meyer nnd OraJas was ngrecd
upon after a . cttlement conference
in December, although full detail
"'ere not v.orkc<l out until later.
-B)' th~ As oc/atttl P~
" '"' YallDI .... cm•""
NEWPORT BEACH -
Ccne Jiiiy I, raid1Bll .. ,_,
more thin double the 7• ceau
they now pay JQODthly for die city
to reqdc their truh .
Wnb a U1Cr lee hikc the Ocy
Council adopted Monday nipl.
the monthly rccyclina rec of 7'
cents, which &he tjty cb.,.ea per
household Cor trub to be teat to a
recycling facility, will jump to St.~
per household,
Meanwhile, other user fee
increase approved by the council
will mean a two-person paramedic
unit called out to an emcracncy
wiU cost $125 per hour, up from
$100 hourly, and busincu owncn
wiJI see use permit f ccs jwnp from
$920 to $970.
Most of the increases, like thole
for use permib and paramedics,
are simply the re ult of the annu&J
incre e in the consumer price
indeJC, according Lo City Manapr
Robcn Wynn.
But increases in landfall and
recycling center fees contnbuted
to the more than 100-pc~nt hike
in the recycling fee, Wynn said.
CRT, Inc., the Stanton recyclin&
facility used by the city, will raise
1t processing fee from $31.10 per
ton 10 $34.85 on July l and up
again to $35.9S per ton on Auaust
I. according to a report from city
General Scmces Director David
Nc1dcrhaus.
Originally, city taff was goina to
recommend even larger user fee
increases afler doing an
asses ment of the city's actual
cost\ to provide the various
permit and services.
Over the past decade, the city
h1s only increased the fees
annually according to the
consumer price .index, but in light
of \be economically tough times,
staff this year reviewed actual
costs and determined some fees
sbou Id be increased 100 to 200
percent, Wynn s..d.
The city's budget committee,
however, decided Lo mcreuc the
rec gradually, over a three or
four-year period, 1Mtcad of all at
once, Wynn said.
usmce it's tough for everyone.
they decided it's not a good time
to catch up (on the co ts) now,"
he sa id.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------~
Lifeguards stay
on alert as high
waves continue
By A~ Cekola
Onnot Coasl ~ PllOI
Sunny skies and hi~h waves
kept Orange Coast hfeguard
busy Monday. although they
had a brief respite from a
fa t·paced weekend marred
by the drowning death of a
30.ycar-old woman in Laguna
Beach.
"It\ lowed down a bit
~mcc the weekend," said
Newport Beach Marine
afcty Officer Eric Oaucr.
S11ll, about 48,000 people
hit Newport beaches and
lifeguards rescued 50
!1W1mmcrs Monday, many or
whom got cuught 1n rip
currents. TI1e rescue were
down from lSO on unday,
Bauer ndded.
It was ~mewhat quieter in
Huntington Beach, where
llfeguardl estimated 35,000
people came out to enjoy the
sand and urf. Marine Safety
Officer Mike Baumaartner
said
Lifeguards cven.tually
rescued about 2S 1mmcrs
during the day, although
there were no reports of
seriou~ 1njuric
The opening ummcr
weekend was marked by
tragedy in Laguna Beach,
~here a Huntinaton Beach
woman drowned after bc1na
wept orf ea~ldc rue.It" by
hiah wave~. authont e\ 1d.
IUFFELL'S
IPllLSTEIY llC. ................... ·---.-----1••
COSTA MESA -••1•11e1 111111 nthrrt a
new iawltment bant1n1 firm wllb •trona till ID
roteip ftnanctal IOUrce&, hu opened 111 oftlool
in the Great We.stem Baitk Tower in ._..
CMlt ..._ Towa Cater.
Founded by four respected financial aad
management executives, the finn will provide
debt and equity capital, as well a merger and
acquisition expertise, to a wide range or
manufacturing, distribution and con umer goods
compnnies, according to Steve Alexander,
president.
"Our experience within finance and mergers
and acquisitions underscored the need for an
~ investment banking finn that caters to the needs
of non-hi tech companies with annual sales In
the $15 million to $100 million range,"
Alexander said.
"While there are plenty of investment banking
and venture capital sources for high-tech finns
and larger companies with sales in excess of $50
million, the mid-sized companies that make
industrial and consumer products have basically
been ignored . We believe this is the perfect time
to establish a company like ours."
He said Regency International will be advising
clients interested in entering the international
marketplace or increasing sales within foreign
markets, through joint ventures, strategic
alliances or distribution. Regency International
has affiliations with companies in Japan, Hong
Ko ng, Taiwan, Korea, Europe (including Eastern
Europe) and South America.
0
Managing Nicely: Laykln t i Cit, an
internationally known exclusive jeweler normally
found in high-end department stores, has
brought in a seasoned pro to ensure success at
its Soulh Cdllst Plaza shop, the jeweler's first
free-standing store
Manager Jacque' Tabak1an i'I n tenth-
generation craftsm.1n with 22 years of experience
m the Jewelry field He studied 12 years in
Switzerland and Canada lo perfect ht!i skill as a
ma~ter craftsman. A certified gemologist,
I .1bak1an studied watc h and Jewclf) store
management and rep.11r tn Laus anne:,
w1tzcrland.
Out Tahak1an doc\ not work alone Hts wife of
16 year'>. Ani, work<, side-by-side with him.
0
G round Brtakers: Newport Beach-based
Elliott Corp. is buildtnJ? a new $2.2-million Home
'89 BMW 3251
5-apeed eon~. toke OY9f leoM °'
buy White w/blk top plnstl1plng, 2~ n .. a.
rully •oaded. C:Of p~. upgraded wheel,,
rear ct.c:k apoller. $576/mo. 18GM. Call
859-,679
$23,500
Depot Wuehoute in ·Hawthorne. The 103.SIS-
square·fool facility for the do-il·younelf retailer
will be loCated al l4S29 Ocean Oatc BIYd., wbidl
wu previously occupied by Mattel.
Conatnacaion Is ICheduled to be completed ID
Augu1t. The tilt-up building with' a panelized
roof system was designed by Greenbura Farrow
Aichite'cts or Tustin.
Meanwhile, Hedley 8ullden lac. or Newport
Beach has broken ground on the $6 million first
phase of the Aliso Viejo Business Center at
Aliso Creek Road and Journey in Aliso Viejo.
Designed by Howard r. Thompson &
Anodata of Newport Beach for The Swede Cal
Partnership 11, the 128,500-square-root, mixed-
use business center consists or five buildingJ,
incl\lding two-story corporate offices, two retail
centers and multi-tenant office/industrial
facilities. It is scheduled to be completed by
January of next year.
0 CultJ•atlD1 CUtnU: Newport Beach-based
Arltl Wtst Public RdatJons lac. has signed
agreements with Aquametrics Inc. and Unified
Medical Group Association to provide public
re lation and ma rketing services for the
organizations.
In addition, the public relations agency has
been retained by California Primary Physicians
Med ical Group to provide employee and patient
communications services.
Aquametrics of San Diego manufactures and
insta lls a computerized, moi1ture-1enslng
irrigation control system designed to reduce
water u age. UMGA, headquartered in Seal
Beach, is a non-profit coalition or medical groups
throughout California, Oregon and Washington.
California Primary Physicians operates five
medical clinics in the greater Los Angeles area.
Meanwhile, Hiiary Kaye & A.lsoclata or
Newport Beach recently comeleted public
relations and advertising assignments for
Na1ional Home Services of Mission Viejo; Easy
Orother!) Video Productions and Guild for Infant
Survival. both of Irvine; and UCl's Executive
MUA Program.
JIK&A designed and wrote copy for a three-
cnlor direct mail piece for National Home
Services. a residential remodeling firm. Both
E-J,y Brothers Video Productions and the Guild
tor Infant Survival signed with HK&.A to handle
local and national media publicity.
-By tlH D•llT Piiot
Business
Highlights
TOKYO -The presidents of
two of the wo rld's biggest
securities firms re igned amid a
growing scandal over dubious
dealings by Japan's "Big Four"
brokerage houses.
For just $20 we'll run your 1x2W' ad In our aut-
motlve section, with a picture of your car, for 3 con-
secutive Saturdays. Copy muat be aubmltted by
Wed.
Yoshihisa Tabuchi of Nomura
Securities Co., the world's largest
securities firm, and Takuya
Iwasaki of Nikko Securities Co.
resigned Monday as presidents of
their firms.
Tlllatlftl
get rawdy
Call Candy NOW at 642-5678 to
place your ad and get In on this
Introductory offerl
The Automotive Gulde appeara
every Saturday.
• Piie• for prtvr.1• partlH no changes can IJe made on original copy.
LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla.
A Teamsters convention got off to
a raucous start, with the boos or
delegates drowning out a video
talk by President Bus h and
remarks by outgoing \Inion
pre 1dent William McCanhy.
The son of the late Teamster
bo ·s Jimmy Hoffa de(used a
potential conflict over the
con titution of lhe nation's largest
union by throwing his suppon to
one of the top candidatea for
brotherhood president. -•1 the AuodatMI ,,..
INTERESTED
IN LAW SCHOOL?
START THIS FALL
• Pull-dine and put-time progranw • eon..-t c ... Khedu~,nentnp, and weekends
• Accelerated fuU·time 2 '12 yeer program
• Combmed JD/MBA degree with O\lpman College
• Scholanhlpe and flnandaJ a6d avalllble
F11ll-timt tind Ptirl-timt Cltisses Begin AMp•t 29, J."1.
C1all tod11y. F111lnton (714) 738-1000 or lnniu (714) 753-3200
.,.a.ll'RN ST.~.a·,... . ""'~.,,,.. • ',..., ........... c • • ,W Dt;J & 111 A & D • wn,.,,,,,,.. 1'11 C""""1Ma'•,,,,,_,_,.,,,,_,
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• • •
Who designed
California
ranchhouse?
'. ' -' . • • . .
' '
• excr
WeH like to introduce you to The Message Center, an exciting
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e
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That atyle of
residential
architecture
called "California
Ranchboute" WU
created by an
imaginative
fellow named
Cliff May .
Without the
degree and
license to call
himself an
architect, he
L M. everything an answering machine
trolled by your own secret password. You
choose it yourself, and you can change it
yourself as often as you like.
_'11' .... _1 can do-and a lot more-without any To achieve the ultimate in confi ..
dentiality, you can even set up separate, settled for "designer." Builders
paid him fees. From just one of his
designs, they put up I 8,000 houses.
Opossums also cat copperheads.
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cue "I" -that's "eye" -in too
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Q. Who was the first scientist?
A. A Greek named Thales is
sometimes so credited. He waa the
ftnt person of record to predict a
solar eclipse.
Those who work on upper floon
of skyscnpen are more likely -
more likely than those who work
at ground level -to have
extramarital affairs. That turned
up in a computer run on
databanks of sex scholan. Odd,
what? Or maybe not. One theory
is some people who ride elevators
together repeatedly eventually
become acquaintances. Some of
those become friends. Some of
those become lover .
If you expect to work another 50
years, gather up Sl,000 and find
someplace to invest it at 10
percent. It'll be SJ 17,390 when you
retire? Never mind. By then, could
be worth SSOO.
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but not Thal. You go out for
Italian food, but not EtblopiH.
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,... ......... .. . ............... ,.... ............ ,., ......................... ~-.. 1nillta_,._.,_.. O• r.. M. i\ ,_. ,....,....
J
c.opl .......
over tM plMe
Sltuidiy •vr ..
at SoUth CoMi
Repertory
Theatre With a
mystery .... ill
place and a
sctti.fta that aid
ChiCl&O 192.0a.
Spectacular
classic cars
(Packards) were
parked outside
the emrance, and
-Soelety
just inside chairman Jim Henwood
was opening the small door and
asking "Who sent you'' or
demanding a password.
Once inside around the fountain
area it was back to the present
and strictly Orange County for the
"End of Season" event. Fourteen
restaurants set up stands and were
dishing out food for the crowd of
400.
"We have top restaurants here
ronight... all donating the food,"
said Catherine Thyen, the
committee member who had the
responsibility of lining up the
participants. "They have been very
cooperative... to send out their
people on a Saturday which must
be their busiest night."
The buffet providers included
Alfredo's, Antonello Ristorante,
Back Bay Rowing & Running
Club, Barbacoa. Birrapo rctti's,
Bistro 201, Calie nte, Gandhi,
Golden Truffle, John Dominis,
Kachina. Piret's, Zuni Gnll and
Thymes Catering. To go with all
the food was coffee by Coffee
Gallery (what a run o n
ca ppuccino) and wine by
Rutherford H ill, Thomas-Jaegar
Winery and Trader Joe's.
Seen trying this and that and
comparing notes were Janice and
Roger Johnson, Martin Benson,
John and Elizabeth Stahr, Pat Cox,
Kathleen and Michael Deighton,
David Emmes, Jerry Harrington,
.., l8d lill Meizb • Cll.a
Wllb•! Aa•• N•tt, Terry
G1Wfav9, Terrr lAie, ..... r=._ac1n..e..1Dd_..,.
The ........ ..,. .. food.
There •• the lileDI lucdoa wkh
200 ........ ilnd the ip8teed IM
auc:rion (26 items) .pnlkled CMr bY pro IUCtionetr M91 ~ Md
his ene~tic heJpen; (A ~
bidder picked up a 1nembenhip
and three-moathl due• at The Spa
at The Center for Sl250).
The really lucky penon or in
this ease lucky orgen1zation at the
End of Season benefit was Ballet
Pacifica which won the brand new
Mazda Navajo. Artistic director
Molly Lynch, attending with mom
and dad ~rfyn and Frank lynch,
was on stage tu 1.laim the prize ...
she will use it to hauJ around
costumes and props.
"We were here from 9 to 5
setting up for this," said TMta
Sherwood, committee member in
charge of production -lbc decor,
entertainment, etc. Other
committee members WCl'C Melanie
Day, Mary Ann Finley, OIMa
Johnson, Jo~e Justice, Catherine
Mclarand, Mich e l e Meyer,
Barbara Murray, Carol OglMe,
Dick Way (co-chair of finance
doubling as a Keystone cop) and
Noddle Weltner.
The last act of the event was
much like the first -more eating
-desserts and coffee.
The guesstimate on proceeds is
close to $70,000. • BY THE WAY: Summer is only
four days old and here comes a
Save-A -Date note Junior
League's Christmas Company will
open with a gala party Oct. 21.
Forty specialty stores across the
US will be offering unique gifts to
earl> bird holiday shoppers from
Oct 22 throuRh Oct. 25. h all
takes place at the O range County
Fairground!>.
22 entertainers selected
to get H ollywood stars
LOS ANGELES -Actor George Kennedy, the late rock star
Jim1 Hendrix, and television's Ma ry Tyler Moore arc amo ng the
22 entertainers selected for stars next year o n the Hollywood
Walk of Fame.
"I am thrilled with the 22 who were chosen as they represent
an excellent cross section of Hollywood's brightest stars,
representing our classic as well as contemporary performers,"
said Johnny G rant, chairman of the Hollywood C hamber of
Commerce
The star rec1p1ents were chosen June 18 from about 200
nominees by the five-member Walk of Fame Committee. After an
honoree 1<> selected. a sponc;or pays the $4,800 cost of the star.
Getting star\ for their motion picture work arc Kennedy, the
late Bruce Lee. l rank1e Avalon, Lou1 Gosl!ett Jr , Tom Hanks,
Dean i;;tockwcll ani.1 the late Dr Clarence Muse.
l·or telev1s1on. 'tar rcc1p1ents include Miss Moore, Debbie
Allc:n Peter f-alk. Jc,tcr Ha1r ... ton, Nichelle Nichols i"d Edward
J dmc' Olmos.
Recording art1~t' receiving !>tars a re Hendrix, Tex Beneke, the
)?rnup Chicago. Dizzy Gille~p1c and Donna Summer.
Brock Pete r' and John Raitt will get stars for live theater, and
'Pnrhu1~tLr Jim Healy and traffic reporter Bill Keene will get ''Jr' for rai.110
-By Lh~ Assoc.l•led Pres•
rr "'"""
Debbie South and Felicia Lemus. Cop Dick Way 'arrests' Teresa Chafey for being on
the fringe.
Molly Lynch, who claimed the Mazda, checks out
the 1931 Packard.
'Designing' creator wins showdown
Exit Delta Burke -enter Julia Duffy
By Robert Blanco
Scnpps Ho#llll News Selvlce
Lately it's been as hard to find
"Designing Women" creato r/
producer Linda Bloodworth·
TI1omason as it's been to avoid
Delta Burke.
While Burke has spent the past
few mo nths crying about her
mis treatment by Bloodwo rth·
Thomason -going so far in "TV
Guide" as to compare her pl ight
to "a holocaust," a narcissistic
statement tasteless even by
Hollywood's lax standards -the
no rmally gregarious Bloodworth·
Thomason has been living under a
self-imposed gag order.
Even her typewriter was
silenced: An illness similar to
lupus ha kept her from writing ror
"Women" and "Evening Shade"
since January.
She returned to the public ear
with a vengeance a week ago,
w inn i ng a she-gocs-or-l-go
s howdown with Burke over
"Women's" future. Exit Burke,
enter Julia Duffy and a happier
Bloodworth-Thomason.
"I think 1t'<; going to be terrific,"
'he says. "I think it's going to be
the exact same thing that
happened on 'Cheers' when Kirstie
Alley came."
. The trans1t1on did not go
<;moothly. After consulting with
"Women's" ca!lt, she and her
husband, co-producer Harry
Thomason, decided to drop Burke.
Imagine her surprise, she says,
when she read in Variety that
Columbia had bowed to Burke:
The Thomasons and Pam Norris
would be replaced hy "Anything
Out Love's" Janis Hirsch.
Bloodworth· Thoma on told CBS
she would not do "Evening Shade"
if she could not do "Designing
Women." CBS, which has a
develo pment deal with the
Thomasons, and which was no
doubt wary of the signal a star
coup would end, backed its
writer/producer.
Ultimately, The pen proved
mightier than the actress.
So we get a redesigned
"W omen," with Duffy and
''Saturday Night Live's" Jan Hooks
added. Hooks replaces Jean Smart,
who is leaving to concentrate on
her family but will make
occa ional guest appearances.
("She can come back whenever
she wants.")
After five years, it was time for a
change.
"If the person playing her had
been ca ier to get along with, then
1 probably never would have h1td
her leave. But the truth is the
character was getting a little stale
to write for. It just felt a little old,
the beauty queen stuff and the
tiara jokes."
With her health improved, and
Burke g o ne, Bloodworth·
Tho mason sounds excited again
about "Women." Good thing, too;
the show suffered in her absence.
'Tm writing the opening
epiM>dc th1 season, for Julia and
Jan. We have this dream cast. Jan
Hook' wa this real coup, because
everybody wa" trying to get her.
And Julia, I'd been trying for a
year to get Juha Duffy on the
'how ..
The 'how opens with Suzanne
moving to Japan and Duffy
amvmg a Alli on Sugarbakcr, a
cou~in who buy Su1annc'~ share
of the busine-s' and moves into her
how~c.
"She repre~nts the New South.
She "'cnt to Welle Icy, and she's
quite taken with herself .... She's
one of these people that nothing
has ever wo rked out for, but he
docsn 't ack:nowl~ge it."
Julia Duffy -will she be easier to
work with?
dtdn 't realize what a find she was.
"She 'c; from Georgia in real life.
She has a fabulous accent. 1 went
crazy when we had our meeting.
We were both s mall-town
cheerleaders, and she has that
cheerleader voice down pat: 'Y'all
yell.' ..
Bloodworth-Thomason is no
lo nger a small-town cheerleader.
But neither, she says, is she the
woman you've read about in the
tabloid : the producer shrew.
7:00 7:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 Bloodworth-Thomason feels
sorry for Hirsch, who graciously
removed her elf from the fray. She
docs not feel sorry tor Burke,
Hooks will play Charlene's
(Smart's) younger sister, Karlene,
who step into the business when
Charlene move to England.
"(( there' a nybody out there
who could po ibly still care about
th1'I, nothing bad wa ever done to
thi!i woman at 'De igning Women'
-nothing. I had never said a
negative word about her weight.
There had been no cross words
between us. It ha~ truly been a
bwsrre incident in Al bizarre
indU\try,"
"This is a moral thing. You can
not behave this way and do these
things to people and expect no
con,equences."
Viewers may m1 Suzanne;
Bloodworth-Thoma o n won't. ..........
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Bcf ore he met Hooks, she
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!030
Editorial
'.There's a confusing mixture of news on the AIDS front
thae days.
On the briaht side, a new vaccine raises hope that the
diacae can be alleviated in some victims -and, perhaps
C¥Cntually, even halted. The new product may signify a major
ld¥inee, and a ~rticularly surprising one, too. Vaccines,
&tter au, are normally liven to prevent infection.
And yet in the meantime, partially offsettfog heightened
optimism about biomedical advances' against AIDS
(~ally from acne-splicing technology) comes some sOberina news u well: A second wave of the epidemic may
t)e buildina among younger homosexuals.
First the hope: A new vaccine against the AIDS virus
made by MicroGeneSys of West Haven, COnn., may boost
the body's defenses and block a deadly decline in the
immune cells that fight infections. Of course, it is these
opportunistic infections that eventually kill most victims of
the epidemic.
A recent report in The New England Journal or Medicine
describes how 30 people with the virus received a series of
either three or six shots. Nineteen patients showed an
increase in antibodies fighting the virus, and an increa e in
the white blood cell that battle other infections.
Thirty ~ople, it is true. do not usually comprise a
conclusive test group in medicine, but the results were
certainly heartening enough to draw praise from many
temperamentally cautious AIDS experts.
And beside being impressed by the findings just cited,
they were alto surprised that no one in the survey seems to
have suffered an IOricMll aide-effects from the vaccine.
'"The-most tmpc:>rtant thing is tha·t we document the
feasibiUty of using a vaccine to modify the body's immune
system in a chronic disease," noted the survey's leader, Dr.
Robert Redfield of Walter Recd Army Medical Hospital in
Washington. Indeed, this appears to be such a breakthrough
that this area of inquiry is, commendably, being widened
with a special uracncy: A much larger trial (308 people) of
the MicroOcne-Sys product is planned for this summer,
when a somewhat similar gene.spliced vaccine, made by
Gencntcch, wlll also be tested.
So, all in all, faster-than-expected progress continue to be
made in the medical war against AIDS.
The behavioral battle, however, seems to be quite another
matter. Studies in San Francisco and elsewhere raise the
friahtenina possibiliry of a resurgence of AIDS, thi one
among younger homosexuals. Re earchcrs in San Francisco
surveyed men 17 to 25 years old about their sexual practice ,
and te ted them for AJDS. The most disturbing finding was
that the youngest (17·19) showed the highest incidence or
infection -at 14.3 percent, compared with 10.4 percent for
men 2J..25. And more than 40 percent of the younger men
said that they engaged in sex without a condom, compared
with 25 percent to 30 percent of men 20 to 25 years old.
AH of this uggc ts that many younger gay men seem to be
ignorant of the grim lessons learned by older homo cxual .
Public health officials hould heed this warning bell and
redouble their educational efforts. This is e pccially
important now that the tentative good news about vaccines
and other advances could persuade potential victims, already
lulled by denial, to continue risky sexual practice .
., ••. ,, ..•.•
0
0
Jimmy Carter
.
AD ex-president but not an ex-idealist
By Rhonda Chriss lokeman
The Klnsas City Star
A friend, employed at a Kansas
City bank, told me about a
wonderful and fulfilling experience
last yea r as a volunteer for Habitat
for Humanity. I asked him to tell
me when he would do it again. He
called la t week to tell me that
another group of volunteers,
skilled and unskilled, would soon
be going to work on more area
hom e
Yes, I'm till interested, I told
him It wa JU t a matter of finding
time for Habitat in a life e\len
more hectic since new motherhood
earlier thi year. I promised to call
back
I hadn't yet called when a story
mo.,,ed out of Miami. Someone
hot at Habitat volunteer in
M1am1, where former Pre ident
Jimmy Carter was a. isting in the
co n,trucuon of 14 low-income
homes nnd a child-care center.
Carter wa~ among about 500
volunteers in the Habitat project
in Liberty City, n predominantly
black !.CCt1on of Miami. He wa a
block away when the drive-by
shooung occurred while volunteers
lunched under a tent.
Former New Yorker Pat Mom ,
34, wa' slow to duck 'o'hcn bullet'\
fired He hiu a hole in his billed
cap. le.-. hair and quite a headache
a "<>U\lenir of the harrowing
experience
It had not Ileen determined that
Carter was the target of the
pe rson or person~ who fi red from
the blue car described by
w1tncs\e\ If ~o. the gu nman
goofed. Carter, under Secret
Sen ice protection, and wife
Ro,olyp weren't even under the
tent Perhap ~omc sociopath
merely w1~hed to expre anger at
needy people or resentment
toward dc\lelopments which house
them Who know~? The blue car
didn't tick around long enough
ror <ln)'onc to find out
Ca rt e r . in typical tyle .
downpla)'ed the incident at the
1991 Jimmy Ce rter Work Project,
as the Liberty City effort ~ billed.
"Sometimes when omeone
famou come to an area, some
people try to attract attention by
creating a di turbance," he told
repone~. "I'm glad no one wa
scrioU1ly hurt."
He then returned to work on
tha project which, like mo t
Habitat efforu, will provide low·
t, intcrc t•frec houses for need)'
f amilic• who agree, amon other
thing , to prO\lide 400 h<>ur of
their time It Habitat itc•.
Con truction material for Habitat •re aftcn donated.
It'' intercstins that Carter,
who o pn-~t·prcMdcntial perioJ
include international ma 10 to
pmmotc re e and democracy in
h ttlc·!larrcd nat ioM of Central
America and Africa, had uch a
clc~ call in '°\Ith Flond1.
But Cuter, forever the
d1pk>m1t. t the st•re fr<Wn
Mi.mt and l.Jberty Oty. ~ne of
riotlf\I in the 1980J. "'I don't l.h nk
IMre -.. any peniaalar tarae1. 1
.... " ,.. }Utt QM ol thole
,........ Kt of ~ that ,.,, •• -iMi'1 ii Milam I tNt "!'1, "!"9'1M ....._ .. lie said
~"" ....... IDf anet POWI • • ••r• Hhnc1 h :==-== ., lb ..... ...., lftd ••r1r• for,..,.,..
'
fonunate or oppressed. He'll roll
up his lecvcs and go to work on a
problem, rather than groan about
what others aren't doing to solve
it. Carter graduated with honors
from the John F. Kennedy school
of thought: Ask not what your
country can do for you, but what
yo u can do for your country.
(( that means hammering away
in a Mi1111i neighborhood plagued
by violence and despair or
rebuilding other cities' urban cores
then so be it.
Carter is quite the pre 1dential
anomaly.
While fo rmer Pre 1dcnt Ronald
Reagan and wife Nancy were
accepting $2 million in 1989 to
speak in Japan for nine days,
Jimmy Ca rter was somewhere
building "sweat equity" in low-
Kemp's HOPE program, which
promi os ownership of housing
authority units to tenan~ who
deserve better places to live,
Carter and Habitat voTuntccrs arc
truly helping low-income people
realize th e dr eam o f
homeownership.
"Am e r ican s hould ask
themselves what arc the deeper
meanings of ... these unple word
-liberty and equality -on which
our ideaJ arc based," said Carter,
when honored last July Wlth a
Philadelphia Liberty Medal. He
suggc ted we redefine those 'Nord
as "freedom from deprivation and
hopcles ne " and "equal
opportunity to a job. to health care
and decent hou ing,"
To "ignore the inaniculate and
poor, to as~ by the homelc " was
·'
,,.
to abrid e their right to 'hare in
"the harmony Of freedom, JU~tiCC
and compa ion," aner added.
One pre idcnt tood up for our
principles abroad, took thi
country to war, want to \'Clo a
civil riahts b11l and lack a
domestic •nda to pc tN
meanifts to liberty and equali'J.
Another pre ident, <.:artcr,
tands .ap for our priaciplct
abroed Md at hc'.Mae, CYCft ·w h
IMMS IOitills ill IM Miami IU
Wit9' dM..:l":=· "'~: i11dt ...... _, ~
hir' H•IM ...._ OM of , ..... u,.,n.-.-. ...
..... Cliflll Le ..... ..
ddJtonal .... ., 1M «.-. .,,
r
I am caJJiJll to CO'" MDI a. lbe
late.St Supreme c.oart ,..... for
maa searches. I think it ii an
outrage.
I think these rulinp all basicalty
stem from the war oa iUepl drup
and somehow the pernmeat ii
tryina to get people eocne way to
protect themrcJves from
themselves.
I think the drug war must end
now and with it the premise that
the aovcmmcnt has the right to
de<:ide what is good for each
individual.
The notion that aomeooe can
decide how a pcnon cboolcs to
~ithcr denroy hunself or motivate
himself is against all reuon. The
litmus test seems to be if you
mi&ht harm society in even a
remote way yow behavior must be
altered.
I think it is time with this ruling
to scriousty consider a C&ll for a
constitution convention before it is
too late.
Our jail arc full of people -
mnocent people -who just
choose one drua over another.
Alcohol and cicarettcs, as l'DOJt
people know, kill more people
than all the illegal drugs put
together.
The Supreme Court has way too
much power, and I think our
country is drowning in a sea of
litigation about i ucs that don't
conoem the government such u
abortion and helmet laws and
thinp like that.
Thank you for lcning me speak
my picoe and maybe in a few years
this right will also be taken away
·nee I could teU you somethin&
the gO\'ernmcnt f ecls is not in the
best interest of society.
CLEM DOMINGUEZ
Newport Beach
How the heck can anyone talk
about tu increases when they
keep gJVing these ci ty managers
more money? My God, these guys
make half of what the Pre ident of
the United States makes.
I mean their job isn't that
fantastic .
Why do the politicians always
seem to get raises rcgardle of
what or how it takes plaoe. I
mean, it sounds to me like
something is really wrong here.
H.R. niOMPSON
Newport Beach .., ............
... 1111111 llT
It is nice lO know that our city
offtcials in Huntington Beach care
so much about what the citizens
that elected them want.
It was obvio"-' by their vote on
Monday 10 make cable 1V a
taxable item under the utility tu
eve n though cable is not a utility
and that the citizens do not want
the tax.
It is intere ting how we have
some city official who actu.lty
believe you don't run government
hkc you would a b\ISioe .
In other words, they say, we'll
pcnJ ) ur tax dollars ow way
whether it i more efficient or not.
Thi was supported even more
by the late.st budget/roposal our
Clty manaacr propose .
He propoeed seven different
t Ci or lee incrc that he
claim are revenue cnhancemen •
plu they ere aoena to h~ • new
tud)' to see if more fees can be
increased. •
Wbat M ttaJty need ii a study
loo1tin1 Into priVltiutioa of
cenain seMC Hu the county lS
doina -cuuina 1<>me ot .u.e po.t
out of the t>uctaet arid attract
hu inc to our ci'J.
With the tncreaM iD COi
pfrvatization ii the onty optiaa
ma•ntatn eertain 11rric9 at lhi&
level they lhould be.
The~ you ¥Ot.e lhoilkt be fOr the .,. b9cl•• of .._,
Mayor (Petlf) Of-., .... -,.... _ _..,, .. ...
~-kU;tr
\*ou . .-.a lie•*' O •I ,..... .... ,.. __ _
cundl = 1D ,.., lob~ .........
, ........ ~-· AM r-.G iu1111£ ~ , .... •• ,.. I,
bwlllJllM.
TODAY'S SUN
0 ()
Full Moon
June 27
REPO T
~~C-~Nal
City Counc ilm<'mbN Evelyn Hart, left, and Jackie Heather, both former mayors of Newport Beach, listen to
the dl'>C.U'i\IOn
ANGRY
From A1
Chri!>tophcr Cox ( R-Ncwport
Beach) wa' nne of the member" of
the ~uhcomm1tec. yet "tolera•cd
th1 ... "
A ccord 1ng 10 Councilman
Clarence Turner. as recently as
la-.t Wcdnc.,da). l.lt} offic1al'i had
been on the Im of invited 'ipcakers
for the hearing at Newport Harbor
High School But Turner said
Frida} afternoon, he was infonned
by subcomm111ce members that the
city had hccn chm1nated from the
list, but wa!> not given a specific
reason why
l The city, whu.:h hashed out the
1985 settlement agreement with
From A1
"I will be working with my
colleagues in Congrcs-. to see 1f we
can fix thi!i law," Cox aid.
Most of the nearly 300 local
eaidents who attended the four-
our hearing Monday fear that
federal noi e regulations -to be
Jmplemented July I -will ride
rouahJhod over tougher local noise
•tandards.
C.Ounty Supervisor Tom Riley
u sub1ected to repeated catcalls
rom the audience when he
ribed the airport's record on
'" abatement a a "succc
tory." But he defended the
airport's right to negotiate
cements locally without federal
ntervention.
"Our succc here has been
hicvcd through old·f ashioned
arW work and negotiation
tween the local entities who arc
.~OM~t to the i ucs and who have
he power to resolve them:• Riley
aid, readins from a prepared
tatement, "not throuah the
ntorvcntion of a geographically
nd politically (ti tant federal
•aency."
Newport Beach re ident Jocelyn
tlbCrt said .tho ~u impreacd
ith the tc timcny of Lot Anaele•
aty Councilwoman .Ruth
alantcr. Tho councilwoman ac·
d the 'PM of "blackmail" bj
tenina to withhold federal
...... If Loe ~ta continued
plan to ph out noisy ......... _ 11" 11rcra(t.
John Wayne Airpon to establish
the facility's stringent noise rules,
should have been one of the key
participants, agreed Turner, one of
the city's main airport activists.
Turner referred to the
settlement agreement as "cutting
edg~." although not perfect, and
said it "became a beacon for
everyone else to shoot for."
"We arc being being penalized
for our own succe ," he 11tid.
Co ngressman Cox,
Congresswoman Barbara Boxer
( 0-Marin County) and other
members of the subcommittee
could not be reached for comment
late Monday. A C.Ox aide said he
did not know how the
subcommitt~c e tablished the list
of invited speakers.
"I don't think we're adequately
represented," Gilbert said. "The
people that represent Orange
County don't reflect the
intelligence of the people in
Orange C.Ounty. ''
Becau c John Wayne Airport Is
limited to the quieter "St11e Ill"
aircraft, the new law 11 it now
stands would require federal
approval or agreements made by
local agencies. "The people out
here arc alive and kickin1," said
attorney Tom Edwards,
representing the Airport Working
Group. "We want to 10lve our own
local problem . "
John Wayne Airport Manager
Jan M1ttermeicr testified that the
impendina federal reaulallons
could h1m1trin1 the county's
attempts to open another airport.
Mhtermcier said It would be hard
Rep. B•rbar.t
meeting.
•
The aide added that anyone can
still submit written comments on
the noise policy for the next two
weeks and be considered part of
the official record.
And even without the city's oral
testimony, there were still plenty
of harsh criticisms levied on the
federal policy at the Monday
hearing by Cox, Boxer,
repre entativcs of the Airpon
Working Group and other
Southern California officials who
all sec the jlicy as a threat to
local contro over airport noise
and expansion.
Newport city officials, however,
weren't appeased, saying if
anything, they expected an
invitation as a matter of courtesy.
to win the approval of any
community for a second county
airport if the county could not
guarantee environmental
protections.
FAA regional administrator Ciirl
Schellenberg insisted that ''ftrial
decisions have not been made"
and hinted that the July 1 deeif1lai
dale for implementation may bO
cxtend~d.
"The racl that the propoecd
regulation de>« not pleuc all the
parties ... may well be an
mdication that we have balanced
the needs of all the participetina
parties," Schcllenbera said. But
when pr~~d by Rep. Boler to
name a Stn&lc supporter ot the
new rcaulations, Schellenber1
answered, "It would bt fair to MY
no one supports the propoeal in
toto."
•
By AllN Cllllll
OIMllC.. ..
COSTA MllA -A 11!"9 of neipbon Mt tbeJ "'11 .11111' •
Plannina C...illio• dedllon M~ ftilht that Will allow the
converiion of an ...., alcohol·
l'CCCMl'Y caoer.-·illto a 15-bed
mental,......__,,
"They're _.. a ltle toe far
1or a mideidaf ...-;•• said Nefl
Haskins, a properll owner In the
Plumer Street M~ wllere
the mental heal; ~nter permit
WIS approved.
just don't feel a fecility of this
type abould be alkiwcd in a
From A1
But the straiahtforward. t8llj
accessible Wynn, who maiataim a
wide-open-door policy. allo
1cknowledpd the demaadl on Ml
time can be tryina. "I'm not
complainina about the job, but it's
very hectic at times," he llJd. "(
haven't been on vacation for •
lona time."
The devout Mormon ud fatMt
or five said he may venture Into
teaching aovemment, whidl be bu
d o n c p art ·t i me at Io ca I
univenities, or consultin1o but be
doesn't plan to look 1erioutly for a
new job until the tall. ••eome
1.111:11
From A1
o( the contents of his lunch box
put toaether by Merlino'• Cafe on
17th Street, retumir\& for tee0nch
and thirds before his break Wll
up.
"We didn't CC' this bulk from
one belplna," Rtcxhiod jobd.
Throuahout the conatNc:tion,
the visible workcn haYe oft••
been the subject of lnsatta fl'Cldl
motori1ts stuck in the trafftc meu
that has been auoclatcd with the
freeway extension, C1ltr1n1
officials said.
''We pick up a tremendous
amount of verbal abule." Ml4
Kyrk Reidt area ,......., IDt
freeway contractor. B.L Y~.
"We cu't ~ blMIC .._ II
moec caw. It II a &•••
experience to wait In line to ••
throuah town ... but you kiftd ot ..
~A1
atolen over the weekend in
Torrance, McBrlain said.
The Mil due came fllOIB a man
on Claappa{ll Lane, who lpOlted a
brown .aa puked nMrbJ witla Ill
rear window broken out.
== r .. • ". .. tt a n . .. • ,. . • ,, .. • •• .......... • .. u = ,. . .. : :: .. fA?oua ..
n M • :; • n §: "1ft
11 • •• .. . • • ...... .. . ., tt " I:"' • . .. • n • .. u .. ,. ....... " •u !f '=' I • 11 --a..-n
n • ,. .. .... 11 .... -.o... • n .... •
" If :;:--~ a • ........ .. ,, .. ta 11 ... ,, a.. .. .., ..............
Nlldeatial area, 11 .aiJ Randall
Kolecti, a Center Street resident.
followina a sometimct heated
public hearin1 on the issue, the
c:onunisaion voted unanimouaty to
approve a permit that sets
conditions for the mental health
center, citin& a need for such
services in the city.
Before makina the dedlion,
commiuion mcmben were uaured
by mental health facility
representative Michael Raike that
patients who will we the center
are not violent and are aeekina
helP. voluntarily.
'It's deafaned Uke lbc alcohol-
October or November, I'll kind of
look around and see what's out
tMrc." he said.
Aad tho Corona d~I Mar
reitde•t aaJd he pl1n1 to continue
IMna in Newport Beach •nd
hetpin& the city on issues
whenever needed.
Wynn came lo lead lhe city in
August 1971, after three years 11
city manager of Coronado and 11
years as auistant city manager in
Imperial Beach. Known for his
hands-off manaaement style, Wynn
promptly reor11nized the City Hall
staff structure, elimlnatina a
community development
department and middle
man~,ement and Instead
get thick 'kinncd.'
White the freeway construction
project has also been roush on
downtown businesses -some
contend busineaa hu been off by
u much u SO percent -the
merchHU appreciate that the
..orb hu so far been completed
ahead ot achtdulc, Garell said.
"I think it's Important for
people to talk to each other, to
con.municate with each other,"
Oarell said, who ls president of
The Grant . 8oya on Newport
Bou.levard. 0 We want them to
keep wortina u fut as they can."
O.rell said the merchants are ateo anxious to let people know
diet downtown bu1i1M1M1 are
(feft dur1fta tlie construcdon and ~ an •'YI to set to the area.
:hi* Mil MJ ol the merdaenta for
.... -ud toed condition, hO
ldded.
S.asplcions arouMd, he called
pOMce.
A thOrt time &leer, an eldcrty
mu saw a ahnllar van near 14th
Street and Padftc Coat Hipway.
tu h& mow9d to write cloWn the
1ic8Me nwiiber, hawever, the vtn
...,... tonnl .... -.. .....,
tryl•t to na over the
reco¥ery coac:ept for iDdMdula
who need to pt pidance Ind
coumellina... Ralb said. ..We
CJq)Cd the ~ aren't ,otna to
loot much different lbu the
people you've seen there for the
past 1 '4 yean."
In making their ·decisions,
several commiuionen tried to
debunk myths about those scekina
mental health care, tryina to
usure the midents that aucb a
facility 1hould po1e no danpr to
children and senior cltizena.
"l think they should be pn a
chance," said Commissioner Joe
Erickson.
appointio1 12 department heads to
run their own staffs.
Around City Hall, he'• known u
m.ach for hit quiet wit and JcM of
~ell &Pd apprta (staff momben
often pass him scores of football
and buketball gamca be'• miliina
while at Monday niabt council
meetings), u for hi.l orpninti6nal
fioesae.
Council members said they were
stunned by Wynn's announcement
and they bemoaned the tutu.re loa
to the city. "He exudes
confidence... I don't even know
how we're going to repla<lC him.'1
C.Ouncilwoman Evelyn Hart, a 12·
year council veteran, said sadly.
Besides the workers. Costa
Mesa Mayor Mary Hornbuckle,
City Manager Allan Roeder and
several Caltrans offlCials showed
up for the lunch. the fltlt event of
iu~.
Smee forming about two months
ago, more than 30 downtown
businesses have joined the
usoclation, pledgina money and
support for an advertbins
campai&n to let people know that
the rnerchants are still "alive and
kickina." The merchant• also
worked with city officials to cue
promotional banner restrictions in
the area.
"Even it wo never f&a our
problems, we can take comfort
that wc'Ve all bcon in thi•
totethcr," 11ld Resin• Culbertton,
association board member and
owner of The Feed Barn on
Newport Boulevard. "That'• what
community is all about. 11
Newport Haroor ID1b
prOduct concludes her
brilliant run for UCI
IRVUG -N•: Hart.Gr HIP
product ~ Ra itt: who recently
complec.d Iller,...., ...... of •...-Uty at tJCI, llilil W. awd OTB Aademic
All-America by the College Sports
lnfarmatioa Directon of America.
IWlbltt was a ftve·time All-American in
aa. country and track at UCI. Sh.o won
the Bia West Conference crou country
title twice and won four Jeague track
Challlpionahips in her career.
Rabbitt pllced fourth at the NCAA
Cro11 Country Championships in
Knoxville, Tenn. ~t fall, the hiahest ever
finish for a UCI female runner.
She finished 10th in the 3,000 meters at
the NCAA Track and Field
Championships in Eugene, Ore. lut
month.
Rabbitt set a school record in the 3,000
meters with a time of 9:11.99 at the TAC
championships in New York June 15.
That time qualified her ft>r the World
Uni'Yenity Games in En&)and in July and
for the U.S. Olympic Trials next year.
A graduate of Harbor, Rabbitt has a
3.•3 arade point average in pcychology
and comparative literature at UCI.
RabbiU ;s tbc fin& Anteater atbJete to
cam 01'2 Academic All-America honon
since bueball player Adam Ging was
honored in 1985. _.,. dte Dall¥ l'IJot
Fmlilln ,.,.,
: GlllNllll Ii 18111
.....
In .. .. -· By Hund L Hlndr °""" c...e Oll!r ....
NEWPORT
BEACH -Today's
feature of lndewent
Week XVI wtth Lar1J
Wanke wnt take place
at the Newport Beach
Golf Course. with the
second a nnual
Runnin'•Ounnin' Shot
tournament.
This Is truly an irrelevant event -
more 10 than any other during the
week-long festivities that honor the lut
player taken In the National Football
League draft. Wanke wu selected by
dte World Champion New York Giants
11 the 33'th and fanal player and ii in
town to be honored and cajoled by Paul
and Bev Salata and their hard-work.ins
volunteer crew.
This evenina it will be Back to Bal
night at the Balboa Pavilion with Wanke
and his mother alons with Scraeant M.
P. 'Red' WhiltakCT o( the u. s. Marine
Corps, his wife Patty and their two sons,
Michael and James. being honored.
One of the major hiahliahts of
Irrelevant Week will take place
WcdncJday night when tbe 8alloe ~
Oub Hall of Fame banquet is held. fwO
outstanding sports pcfl0nalitie1 will be
inducted thi.s year. Dennis Conner of
America's Cup yachting fame and Russ
Francis, a fom1er San Francisco •9er
tight end.
Franci is retired from the team Paul
Salata helped make famous as an NFL
franchise back In the late 40's. Sal'ta
was also an end but Francis upstaacd
him at every turn and became the dean
.............................. ...... .... -.... ... ·-till• aa•1r ...... • • ....................... lllO
No.2 ..... ..., ....... o1-. ., . ............ ,..... .. ,. ..... . ,..., ""' --.... ,.... .. ,... ,.... .................. ..
die c.p after a .,.... *** pun bereJY miitiCa Pi lft lor a birdie.
"I ~ I W )IOU • that one, Haward,. he cio.ftdid Wben )'OUn truly
made a putt to de. It was two holes
later at No. 6 where lie out-ICORd bis three~ .
When a te~ showed up
W.~C-~Nllt
Irrelevant Week king Lany Wanke gets some of the spoils of his position. He's set for a few more kisses today ~ in golf.
of NFL startina tight cncli ~ his
cal'elr.
"R.uss comes here to he is
in Sou them California, .. President Tom
Deemer of the BBC says. 0 Rjpt now
he is in business in Stcvenavillc,
Montana where he owna the Lonesome
Dove, a bar and roomina venture. He's
an out.standing penon as weU u a sifted
individual."
Francis wu born in Wubiftatoa but
grew up in Hawaii when be attended
Kailua High near Honohllu before
translcrrms to Pleasant Hill Hip in
O.rep. He was a IDur • .,.i stat
(football, basketball. wrestlln& and
track) durin1 his high tchool career. He
set a national high school record by
throwing the javelin 259 feet, 9 inches as
a school boy.
He attended Oregon University but
had bad luck at least half of his career.
He wns inJurcd most of his sophomore
season and did not play during his
senior year. He was named All-Pac
Eight and was honorable mention AJI-
America as a junior. Ourina that season
he cauaht 31 ~ !or 49.5 )'&rds and
ranked third in the conference.
He was a first-round selection by New
England in 1975 and pJarcd six years for
the PatnolS before ·~tinng' in 1981. He
returned in 19 2 when he was tndcd to
San Francisco.
Ha career with lhc 4'9crs started in
1982 when he caught 23 pa cs
includina eight in one pme aaainst
Kansas City.
SM WANKE.Im
PEBBLE BEACH -Sandy
Galbraith of Fountain Valley fired a
boteY·free, 2-undcr-par 70 to take
the lead after the first round of
qualifyins Monday at the California
Golf Auociation's Amateur
Championship. Kent's big moments for mom and dad just on the horizon
Galbraith, •s. birdied the 1•th and
18th holes on the Spy&Jua Kill Golf
Course, and was the only player In
the field of 102 aollen to break par.
Oalb(alth wu the runner-up in
thi1 tournament 20 years aJO.
Six 1trokc1 off the pace 11 Newport
Buch'• Alan Drobka, who 1bot a
37-39-76 over the SPYSIW course.
Hair of the field played OYer the
6,810-yard, par-72 SP.YSl•u Hill
course on Monday. while the other
S.OAUI~
By Rlchald Dunn
OrlllQt Coat Olly ...
Technically, Jeff Kent has already
sampled the major leagues. a 1prin1
training safari he'll never forget. For now,
though, he's thrilled just havin, his
parents watch him plmy profcaionaJ
baseball.
Kent, a second baseman in the Toronto
Blue Jays farm system, will f anaJty act an
opportunity to lm~il his &alents in front ot his Huntinaton Beach parents. Alan
and Sherry. This time there will be no
video tape.
"My dad•s a traffac lieutenant for the
Costa Mesa Police Department and my
pan:nts will be in Memphis (Tenn.) for
the annual World Police and Fire
Games," said Kent, who plays at Double-
A KnomUe in the Southern Lupe.
"Thia will be tbe fint time they set a
chance to see me ~ profcuionaJ
balcball. Tbey\ie 1een me m coUeae (UC
Berke~). bUt never in pro ball
"My dad r1ICll mocorqdca and they
just Sot to Mcmpbia (oa Mond.ty). 1bey'1J
be there through the first week of July,
but we're ~ust lucky because the games
that 1 play tn Memphis fall on the days of
the Olympics."
Kent, an Edison High product, is
cnjoyina another consistent minor league
season, but at this point it's SC<lOndary
compared to the delight of having his
parents survey the live environment.
"They watched me play on video tape
lut year in the Florida State l.eapc All·
Star Game," Kent said. "They miaht go
to Birminaham, as well, after our
Memphi seric . "
Meanwhile, Kent received his big
league baptism th p t prin trainmg.
playing ii'.' a ~cw game with fellow minor
leaguers whale me memben of the
Toronto Blue Ja~ took a couple da)-s off.
"It was awesome," be said. "There'
nothina compared to playin1 baseball
against guys like Alan Trammell, (Rob)
Deer and (Mickey) Tettlcton. The first
time l played, we played 1g11n t the
Ttgers' v.hole starting lineup and that was
SM KENT•
Winfield (5-for-5) paces .,,,,,,., _.,.,,.,,.,, VILLA NOVA , Halos with the cycle, 9-4 ,._.
By C,. Hcnt
~--... KANSAS
CITY, Mo. -
Certain aamca
will always 1tand
out In a 17-year
career. Dave
Wlftfteld knows
he Md • special
OM MondlY nlaht when he hit tor
the qdo for tJie first time "' hia caner.
WlnftSld wu 5·for·5 With two
....._ a double; a triple and llll
l4ti liamilr ot the MllOft at the
~ AliliJI biat the ICaMM
Citr ..... M. .. ~ )Illa ptealld. You MV9
..... cJl)ll Ud tMI Ii OM ot
..._," iaid WW'lekt, a iDijOr· ...,_ ._ 1m. "You-..
J!IRI• ........... . _, .. r ..... .-.ou,.~
.. •• .... Noe ...., ..,,.,. ... .......... ...................... .... _ .............
Angels schedule
depleted staff.
hCota tOok ewer Wtaeft Tom
Oordon'1 he1nont.oMI ~
acted up. Tiie ftnt bitter '9ccMa
faced WU Winfteld, WM ... a
bell otf the r.c:e la ,.... .... .
... told ....... ·r. ... '° ... a
triple."' Wlafteld Mid. "I bew I
WU P"I IO •t a u1ple. It ..
... ..., tM ........... '° ..
but r>'l can do It ia dril ~ I
laid 1o ...,..., 'WMmW 1e 11. r • .... ._,_....lo .... I
ilw lt la ~ . ., ..a • °""' .. ................. " ..... ... .. ...... -....... ,.. ............ ...
.,. ....,. -., pnhhr • 1
~~T::·..._......_ .......
o111111111-..•11ht• . .,.. ..... , .............. ... ........ , ....... _ .........
.......
Television-Radio
~ -
ANAHEIM -Guard Ow.a l.Dve, ~-
who has spent all hia six NFL IOMOnl ~
with the Rams, hu signed a new ~
contract with the team. ---
Love, 28 and a product of Fountain V.tley
High, started I 6 aamcs last season, all but one of
them at ri&ht guard. He started at fiaht tackle in
the season opener, falling in for the injwed Jackie
Slater. .
A 10th-round draft choice in 1985, the 6-foot-3,
282-pound Love has flayed in 78 pines for Los
Anp&es, Jlartina 36 o them.
Terms of his new contract were not lftnounccd.
Abo Monday, the Rams signed former Stanford
plac:c.-kicker John Hopkins as a free aacnl
Hopkins. 22, is the· university's all-time leadiga
scorer, with 2S4 points.
Elewhere in spons on Monday:
• Cubs-Pir1tcs, WGN, 4:30 p.m.
•in New York, fonner major league picter
Dave Dravecky wu dischuged from MemoriaJ
Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, s~ days after hit
left arm and ahoulder were amputated. • Expos-Me1i, WOR, 4:30 p.m.
•Wimbledon, HBO, S p.m.
•Angels-Royals, Channel S, S:JO p.m.
• Bravcs-Astros, TBS, S:30 p.m.
• G iantJ-DodgeB, SportsChannel, 7:30 p.m.
•Boxing from Rcsed1, Channel 13, 8 p.m
TD..EVISION
Dr. Murray Brennan, chairman of the boloital'1
Depanment of Surgery, who performed the
operation, described Dravecky's l'CCOYC'r, u,
"superb, both phayicalty and psychologicalJy.' The
surgeon said Dravecky'1 lonr-tenn prognosis
continues to be elll:cetlent.
-B1 Th Assoc#AW rta. ludlen
4 )() p m -Ma)Of Ltasuc ti.Kball, ESPN
4 JO pm -Cbicaao Cllbl 11 P1tubvrp , WGN.
4 30 pm -Montreal at New YOfk Meu. WOR.
S.30 p.m. -Anacb 11 Kansas City, Channel S.
7 30 pm -MaJ(lr Lcaauc basc:baU, ESPN. Quote of the day
7 30 p m -San Francl5CXI 11 Dodaers. Sporueha1111cl
THAii
S p.m -Wimbledon roveraae (delayed), HBO.
12.30 • m -Women's tournament hnal from Eastbourne,
England (tape), ESPN ....
8 p.m Fca1urcd Gabriel Ruel&I ""· Ed\iardo Fill Mont~;
Rafael Ruelu vs N1rcizo V1lcnwel1, rrom Rueda Country
O ub, Channel 13
9 pm -Michael Moorer YS Levi Blllupa. tiuvy..e11h•~. from
Auburn lhlli. Mich (delayed), USA (repc:au 11 1 a m)
RADIO
BudMIU
4 JO pm -San D1eao al Canc1nna1i. KFM8 (760)
S "\Cl p nt -Anacls 11 Kan1a1 City. KMPC (710).
7 30 pm -San Fr.nc1soo al Dodacrs, KABC (790)
"I hate to think of Chad not going to
Edison, because I think so much of Dave
White as a football coactl. It woukl have been
a great opportunity for Chad. I tried
everything I could to find a job -even in
the surrounding area -but a teaching
position just didn't exist," -Bob Dnts, the
father of super quarterback Chad Davis. who
wi ll attend Mira Mesa High in San Diego in
his senior season.
WANKE
From 81
In 1983 he had four touchdown
catches and came on strong in the
playoffs with eight catches and a
15 4 yard average.
In 1984 he had 20 catches 1n his
fir'il eight games prior to a neck
1n1ury that placed him on the
ln1u rcd Reserve list for s1~ weeks.
He returned to start the final
regular season game and all post
~eason contests. He caught five
pa!>SC~ for 60 yards in Super Bowl
XIX as the 49ers became World
Champions
In 1985 he totaled 478 yards on
a career-high 44 receptions. He
had five catches in each of four
ga mes and sco r e d th r ee
touchdowns 1n his final stx games
of the year.
Proving that age is no de triment,
he ca me back with an outstanding
year in 1986. He tied his second
highest single-season reception
total with 41 and had 85 for the
two years, 1985 -86. His yardage
total (505) was a persona] best as
a 49er and marked the fifth time
in his career that he had elll:ceeded
IRRB.EVANT
From 81
However, his fellow-honoree,
Sergeant M. P. 'Red' Whittaker
won the award for trying the
hardest with a score of 135 and
was presented with tennis balls to
encourage him to try another
sport.
Asked how come he was the last
one off the plane in Yuma on
April 22, ho replied: "I was
checldna the airplane to see that
nothlna had been left on board.
When I wilted down the
&ana>lank, I w 1topped and
asked for my name. I handed him
the manifae but aJI ho wanted was
my name. I found out why later. It
w11 to come here to Newport
8cad9. I'm glad now that it
happened that way.
"Of courte, m)' boss saya I was
a lccp *' the real ·reason I wu la t
: off tho pMM."
1 Waab ncwr once howcd any
' bad or lt01tlle tcmperamont
: ...... ol .,,... lbOCI. preferri"'.
IO htWe a toc>d dllte and laup oft
~ ..-... a. mpl haw made.
500 yards.
Bruised ribs kept him out of the
~tarting lineup at New Orleans but
he came in late in the game to
cat ch a 52-yarder (longest of his
49cr career) against the Saints.
Rams fan s still remember a one-
handed grab he made in the
regul ar season fin ale to score a
touchdown and help the 49ers to a
24-14 victory.
While he wa~ wit h the 49ers, he
live d in Live rmo re (east of
Oakland in the bay area). He
commuted to the 49ers training
1;1te at San Carlos across San
Francisco Bay in a single-engine
open cockpit Stearman plane. On
the ground, his usual fonn of
transportation was a motorcycle.
He became a profess ional
wrestler and took part in
wrestlemania II' in 1986 and
'Malice in the Palace.'
He lives in Hawaii, Montana
and sometimes Vennont and visits
the Balboa Bay Oub when in
Southern California. Another
highlight of the evening will be the
Lowsman Trophy presentation to
Wanke. The trophy depicts a
football player in full uniform with
When he missed a shot and the
ball traveled only IS feet, he was
asked if he needed another ball.
"No, I'll just use that one and take
a mulligan. It isn't much of a walk
to the first one to bring it back
and hit it a pin."
On another hole, he took a bi&
divot and hurriedly repltced it.
"I'm glad the manhall wun't
around to see that Qne," he said.
Larry Wanke should bhe a
productive career In football if his
temperament remains ~Im and
cool like It wu on the &<>If coune
Monday. He hu taken ~cytbin1
in stride to dlte durina tho early
part of Irrelevant Week and is,
look.in& fOfWaid '° the balance of
his week lJ\ the Newport Beach
area. ' In hi1h tdtoc>f, he wll an
ouu1andin1 lhoitltop and pitcher
on the 8cnedfc1ino Hi;h bneball
team.
") really tlllu beleball ... '!'Y
belt tpOl1." ........... ., Dlld
wanted • IO JP. IO .IClaoOI led I had I ........... l"9
thouah , .. , Brewers •er•
intetllied In ilPN • GUI fll
his head turned and the ball
dropping to the ground throu&h
his open hands.
"Thi~ is a tribute to the final
pick in the National Football
Leag ue college draft. The
treasured Lowsman Trophy is
presented to Mr. Irrelevant with
all the hoopla and media hype
befitting a man of his station,"
Salata says.
"College football may have its
Heisman Trophy but we have the
Lowsman Trophy for our honoree
each year."
The Hall of Fame banquet has
been sold out for several months
acoordina to Deemer.
Preceding the Hall of Fame
banquet, Wanke and Whittaker
will be ta.ken Lo Hollywood Park
for a day at the hone races before
returning for the evening
festivities.
Whittaker and family will &O to
Knott's Berry Farm today and will
join Wanke at Disneyland on
Thursday, a visit to downtown Los
Angeles and an Angel a1me in the
evening on Friday and a Caralina
I land crube on Saturday.
From 81
awelOlftC. lben 1 tot a chance to
play apinst the Phillies.
''It's juac somethin1 that I want
to bad now that l'Ye got a taste. I
also played against Kansas City
and l got a chance to participate
in a aame against the Cardinals. I
had a good year last year and it
was late in spring training. so they
wanted to give the starting guys
some rest now and then and
myself and a couple of other
minor leaguers got a chance to
play."
Kent, 23, sinaJed home the
winning run in the exhibition game
against the Tigers, adding more
emotional fuel to the flame.
"Against the Taaers, we played
to the 13th tnning," Kent said.
"One of the minor le.,uc players
doubled to open the Inning.
another minor &eaguer moved bim
over, then I came up and sa>red
him. It was areat playina apiMt
those auys, but I think I wu more
relaxed. In the 13th inning, you
don't want to walk anybody and
the pitchers want to throw
strikes."
An AJl-CJF shorutop at Edison
as a junior in l98S, Kent only
played part of his senior season.
States Kent: "Because my senior
year was ba!iically for the books. It
was a season that I don't want to
remember and I'll leave it at that."
Nevertheless, Kent was good
enough to play three years at
Berkeley on n scholarship before
Toronto selected him in the June,
1989 draft. He batted .SOO (36 for
·n) his junior year at Ediso.n, but
what's more important to Kent
was playing on the 1984 junior
var s ity Sunset League
championship team that finished
the year 22-2.
Currently, Kent is hitting .264
(57 ror 216) with five homen. 27
RBI, 19 doubles and eight stolen
bases. Last year at Class-A
11:1
From 81
school's all-time It.ill leader with
1,003 and also holds 10 other ucr
records.
Former UCI breutstroker Brian'
Pajer, an NCAA AJl-American in
1989 and J990, h11 qualified for
the U.S. awim tc.m, and Mike
Morales, a two-time All-American
In the hammer throw, is a member
of the U.S. track and faeld team. _., • 0.1'1 I'll« .........
From 81
half played the 6,79l7:..d, _iar-72 Pebble 8uc:b Oolf P1ayen
will IWitcb COUIMt tor 1\aeaday'•
final qu11itylna round,
The 32 IOw j>lfen alter two
rounds adunce into tbe
IOUmatnent'a ma~ fonuL
Jim Myen of Oee1illide, and
~n Pemberton wen tW to;
teCOAd u nea-p11 n. MJen
played Pebble hKll, while
......,.,_ pla;ed Sftl'ia ' HJll.
1FIH ~lfers, illCIMtq 1912 cham and 19'0 ,...,..,
01iJ •* at Plr sr -. ... ....... bu1Ja ....... 7J.
D1h1dl .. ' •JIM Cwt WI ., •. , .. Oilll,-.,....
'* 7S oa """'' -. _. -IWlltlM. Mi1llt ,.., ,..._ W1 llss._ .... ~ .............. .. ... ~ ... .. .,... ..,.. . ....
1 r rll
I
Dunedin, he batted .277 with 16
homers, 60 RBI, 32 doubles an6:!
17 stolen bues.
••1 played in 140 pmes lut
season and thb year I plan to do
the aame," he said. "I play every
day and I tty to stay consistent in
all areas of the game -base hits,
home runs, RBI and fieldina. I just
want to pl1y every day and stay
injury-free. It's easier to play the
game knowin& you're aoing to play
every day rather than not knowing.
h 's hard for utility playcn who do
that.
"I don't think I have one
It ...... 11 ,,,,.
ll 14 0 0 " IO 10311
11 J 0 ' ' t 4 a • • II 4 1 t 11 au 1111 15 1 0 • •
2 2 0 0 ' 27 13111 • 15 t 4.
2 ' 0 0 0 57 1t t • ..,
a • ' •• .. '1 111 • 15 2 • t1 u 10 1 0 ti • 5 1 ,.
S1 4 0 2 tt 2t 5 1 I 11
I 1 I 0 4
• 12 ' ' .. It • 0 4 14
53 12 0 10. 111 11 1 11 a
40 4411t
strength that's going to act me (to
the big leagues). My best bet ia to
be strong in all areas. I have the
ahility to hit ror an average and
get RBI, but I'm an extra-bate
type hitter, not a home run hitter.
But home runs come. In 1989 I
was second in the league i.n home
runs."
In his inauaur1l pro duty, Kent
walloped 13 homen for Oiiia-A
St. Catharines ln the ahon-eeeaon
New Yodel Penn Leapc. He
apparentJy has a little more power
than he cam to admit, bUl that'•
just fine with the Blue Jaya.
ChMI Dlvl8 111• ~
Ill's hlldld for 911 111111
8y91nYFIUllnlr °"""' Cod 0.-. Nut
Quarterback 1en11tion Chad DIMI Will not attend Ediloa Kiah
ne~ fall, the blue-chip prospect's father confirmed Mond~ain a
telephone interview from hia Torrey Pinet horrii.
Chad D_. a ~2Y.a, 187-pound quarterbli::k WbO 1
detire to anend Ed'9on when it becllie cleir be wo.ld not to
Torrey Pinet, will attend Mira Mesa Hip in San Dteto County.
"It'• about three milcl doWn the rOad," iiid BOb Davit, WllO ...
the head COICh at Torrey Pinee, befOre hit tUdJA,. pGl6ticill tMIW
---a \'ictim ol diitrict bucltet cuta. .. We'll hlft to llMM WD IM
Mira Mell attendance area, but I've foUnd a t•adaiq job U*I ll'9r
cxhauatbti .U other oppor:tunitia."
The ·ekfet Davia. a friend of Ectiion Athleaic Dinctor Ud llUHt
football Ooleh Lyman Clower. •id he repeu bil IGft will not IM *
cbaacc to thoot tor Todd Marinovich'1 natioaal Wsll ICbOol ClllWf PltNna yardlfe record in Hw.U..SC. leM:h. He II 2,229,.,. 111J al Man~·, four-year tolll .o£ 9.IG ,-. at Mater om Ud
~rano V8bey.
' I hate 10 think of Qad :Do( :labia to S..... -..... I llilm ii
mYCh of DI* White II I foOcbah ' co.eta."' loti Dlt¥k ..,..fatd ~
would ._. beea 1 .,..t ~unity fOr CMil I tried 9'4f!!~!al
coUld IO W 11 .iolt -ftell hi elk ~ ua -1Ne a ie.llfrll
polillon Jute dkil't .......
FtalnU
QualiM• roundl of the Oldsmobile Scramble on 1uJ1 lb and tbc annual Firecracker Scramble for
couplet on July 4.
Recea& IWal'ds at Se.Cliff for ladies went to Pat ec..tio, the Most ltnproYed Golfer of the Year
w'-c handicap dropped from 35 to 26, and
Emma Pierce, winner of the Low Net
Tournament. Pam Recd {Most Birdies or the
Year) ud Audrie Lee (Most Chip-Ins of the
Year) alto received bonors.
0 Finally, WC have a winner or the Memorial Cup.
the aMual tournament put on by the men's club
at the Newport Beach Golf Course. Don Farmen
bad a winnana score of tS4.2 while Hank
LcFebvre (162.4) was second. Hal Oreen was
third with 163.
In lut Saturday'• men's club action, Bob Potts
abot a 64 low grou wbile Tony DeFnnza (49) and
Richard McKinney (Sl) finiahcd ftr1t and second,
r~, for low net honors.
0 Tbe annual President's Cup at Big Canyon
Country Cub in NC!'}>On Beach begins )uly 6 and
should be completed by mid·Auguat. Dr. Michael
Dnacker is the defendina champion of the
matcb·play, elimination toumament, besting Bill
Whitina lut summer in the final.
IUcMrd °""" 16 aa OnH.,e Coat Da1Jr Pllol s,.n. Wrllft' rio.te c/d fO/f colu1110 •wan
n.,., ,,... .. ~.
... ~OMWCO. ... ICMIT'H OMMQI co .
... n
... , . . ....
.......
._.Ln1l1n _,. 1\MIA. 1¥ room,
flm room, I trplt, ........ "°°"'· oomm. ...,....,...
OOU"9, """' yw.a, ......... , ..... tt. ti auttetfly. 113e,eoo. Great
ftamlly Ne~hbo,.. hoOd. c.I MJIW:,....,
~'~
642-5678
--····· __,~_, ..... ...... •--.11--.1--.111111 ... 'm ~~ ............ -, ....... , ... 111 ....... ... -----, ...... _., ... ............ ____ , ___ , ....... ", ..... , __
llFlllFI
· an1 .. LA Ill II& Al
Tk Wood Randi Golf Oub of Los Aoftlea
will be boetina lbe Gre1ter Lee Aqclca Gott
lrwiUtioMI, benefitint I.be N1doul Jewt.11
Cc11tn for lmmunolo&Y and Rupir1tory
Medicine in Dcover, the world'• only medical
center e1clu1ively devoted to reae1rdt,
educatioa and patient care for raplra&ory,
•fkrsic and launune l)'ltcin dileuea.
Entry fea are S500 per aolfer; 12..SOO for 1
tourn1meat 1ponaor; and U ,000 for 1
COIJIOrale underwriter for lbe July t cwat.
A 10 a.m. continental bruk:fut. practice aod
putlin& contcat is ICbeduled, then an 11:30 a.m.
lunch is {olJowed by 1 ·~start at
11 :30. R~ptioe and dianerlawardl c:cr....,
follows It apprmU.m.atelJ S p.m.
• Additional infonudoa can be obWM.d
by contldina Tobi Toaoian (llS..905-1300) It
lhc National Jewish Los Aatelee rep.al
otria:.
From North er-. County
From South er-. County
~ J ' . .
I~• • • f
I°' 1 1. \ I.I \'\.h
01WIN0R
TWO
And our hidden a....
fted Ads .. .And Wln! c ...... •.a.:
l . Simply find our Md·
den claulflcd ads\
~ In our datli·
fled Ndk>n. Cut end
PM" ttM eds on the tn·
try blanl\ end mall.
N.me-------------------------Ml Ill ....................... ___________ _
I iYl1 Y1 I
1~, -.-1-H l_R ...-1 s __ r--t!J
I 11 E E C H d On Ii drive ttviiugh the ... -., .. 5--...,-,--1'~~! =t~f ~~~nt~~
· - - - - -hound so I saw lamb chops.
,--------... My friend is a clothes horse I H I R S L E I so she saw ----. ~,-... 1-""'l,..._ ...... ,-... , .. ,-,,..._-t G Complete the chuckle quoted
by fillinv in the missing words ...___.,_....__..___,,_...._--J you develop from step No. 3 below.
8 Pl11NT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES
• UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS I
FOR ANSWER •
2 l s
1111111 1
·stt3.l V3MS M8S 848 OS 9SJ~ S~ 8 S! pueµJ Aw
·sdolp QW81 Mes I OS pu~ pooi 8 W,t ·dee49 JO >POii
e peJeaunooue eM AJaunoo 8t4i 46noJ4l &Aµp e uo
Stf3.l V3MS -4S!l8l::t -80U8H -i.it4S -,<eMee1
AIMSNY W1 wn~
You'W hook your -el lft. ....... ....,... ...... yeu
..-. In 1M d111ll1• ._ ... rMMwon't.....,.,....,...,
YOU CAN FIND IT IN lHE CLASSIFIED! ...... , •
Neither vulnenble. South deels.
NORTH
•AQ7
Q Q 10 8 OK7 .
• 10 8' 81
BAST
•Kt 4 Q 7
0 Q 10 • ' 0 J ' 8 & 2 •• •AQJ8 SOUTH •.rs <:>AKJ9&4 OAS •K7& The~ Soalla ...
I Q P ..
S Q P ..
P .. p ..
Nortla Eut
2• P ..
4 <1 P ..
()peninc lead: Nine or •
U you_ were to take a vote for t.he
beet briclp player of the poet.· World
War IJ era, the name of Benito Gu-
am> would be a or near the top. It
Waa edn*iJlatJ.QC teduaique IUCb aa
be demoUuated on thia hand that brousht him t.o the attention of Carl
Alberto Ptnou1, caP'ain of Italy'e
lepodary Blue Team. Garouo'a
pertnenhip with Pietro Forquet be·
came the cornentone or ua unbro-
ken 1trinc or Blue Team triwnpbe in
world c~ play.
and the Ullpf'OWIMDt in the
ltreQsth of the bud becau.. or the
club fit. When Noftb c:oWd do DO
more than rai1e to pme, Garoao
wu quite happy to .-e-the PGMD·
tiaJ or the South hand bed alreect:y
been dilcloetd and any funMr ID0¥9 waa up to North.
Everyone at the tab&e knew that
Weat'a lad or the nine ol clubl waa a
.m,leton. &at roee with the ac. and
returned the queen. Mott declarers
we Jmow,would baY9 covered with
the kina'hfWllivtly, and that would
' have apeUed defeat. Weat would rutr
and twitch t.o • llNlde and. in the
fullneu or time, declarer would haw
to aurrender a epede and another
club for down one.
. --
Get te t•e .. •le Alie'•
Allit". hawment~ and closet
lhen get some cash.
642-5678
UPTO •aoo
PER MONTH· * NO COWCTIOllS *
Early morning motor routes
available. Must have
dependable transportation
and liability insurance
CA~l: 642-4333
Garoao found the winninc pa.,
without a moment'• tboucht. AJ. tbouch the kine or clube wu atmo.t
IW9ly doomed, it etiU bed • vital
role to pa., in ctienipdns ~ oppo-
MDta' commwdcationa. Declarer
withheld the IDOMl'Ch. aDowins
Eat'a queen t.o win the eecond trick.
A ao. club continuation permitted
Weet t.o Ntr and ahiJ\ t.o a apede, but
declarer wu in cha.rp. HUNTINGTON BEACH, ~A UR a South roee with dum.my'e ace of "'~'· ~
epadee and Ntr.d a club hicJi, Mt· NEWPORT BEACH, roUNT. IV v. y y ~, tine up a _Ions club OD the table. Aln AWt I
.................
1nttkCM .•. ........
..~
--11•., ...... 411'-' I. 1 n. 9'. C.M. •••a. •1W1•1111
FOR LeAH: Appf'Oll
1000 ... ft MNl. -Ptac:enua, Unit 4,
C09lla ...... nl-4la
MVf'l'l.EA a.tOI'. ......
port l!lch, E... ID
yn. lndudee .. ~
10ry + 28t 38a 1 IDO
eq ft home. 0--..
finance. HI0,000.
Phn or FAX ea.no..
Bob Broe*•, "9ellOr TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE South'• thne·heartjump ahowed
both the ~ of the heart .Wt
After cSnwtnt t.Nmpe, declarer wu IRVINE & T •GUNA 8.., •Cff able to cti8caJd the jack of epadee on wn ~
the sood club, and the pme roUed 1,200 eq. ft • ..,.,,_.
11---------~--------1111111!11--------.-.111 office A ~. roikaD
ACR088 57 Aec:lpjent
1 Wild party 58 Tube e Euyt• 69 Tout aprUd
10 Humane Ofg 90 Lo... giver
14 Embelllan e 1 Jeanne Ind
15 Anecdote Anne: abbr
18 $yppor1 82 Charity
17 Can-Am 83 WMr-ay
defenM force DOWN 18 WWI tong
20 Splftt 1 Ruination 21Male 2~ 22 Allude 3 lbMn 23 Twofotd charecter 25 Nobtewoman 4 Important 27Not~ 5~ ....
30 Favonta IC)Ot e s.t In restaurant 7 81119 ltlade 31 v.ioea e=:Zo 32 Bectrlcal 9 to unit 10 AHim 33 Numbef IUtfl.11 11 Choice 36 Diamond VIP9 12 Centers 37 Ora IOUrC. 13 Copyc.ta 38 leg., .. 19T~ 39 Miid oath 21 Water body '40 GrNMd 24 Ufta 41 Perl Of 25 -over: colUmnb ... atudled 42 WMIPOflS 2e SJgnfflcwlt '4'4Sew perloda 45 Mooring rope 27 Comlortabte
47 -""" 28 F""' '48 Fat 211.Jndergo 49 Dec:llne 30 Wallllng aids 50 Not tar 8W9Y 32 Cleft!. 54 unimportant 34~ardler l*90fl
2 3 4 5
14
7
35 Taite noteot
37 Length unit
38 Famou.
diamond
40 Frequently
41 Ute • needle
43 Map btowuo9
'4'4 -a... or ten
45 Small lak•
441 Up and -
8 9
47 Ring,_,...
49 °'** 51 lnvolwct With
52 Turned rtgM
53 In WI ,,._,. 55---se ,._, to Mo.
57 Preelder1del
lntt ....
Tuesdliy, June topl
A"'dlca: Award-winnina actress UBM (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): By late T.....,, J .. 2J
Anjelica HUJCOa lM.s up to her afternoon you'll be on roore eolid CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 20)·
C.nccr Sun sipi. number 8 lrcynote emotional-financial around. Take the bull by the boms aod tum
and 4 birthpatb (July S. 1951). Confidence is restored, you'll the tables Oft riYaJs or (ktf'ICton.
Individuals with this birthpath (4) CONidcr rcbwldina prosratn. Key is The atmoepberc &MY wcD become
arc usually separated Crom one or to diversify, to ton uide atatua quo. expbM around the lime of the FuU
both parents 11 relatively early 1,e. SCORPIO (Oct. 2l·Nov. 21): Moon oe Thursday -~r. rou
AnJClica's parents were cstnngcd Scenario h11hll1hls diacovery h~ paid your dues, played fair a11d
when she WU 10 years old. The advcnlurc. challenae, phy11cai now lt'a iliac co put paid to othcn'
daugh1er of famed director John allrK'llon. You•ll blend money and pma-pleyiaa.
Hus1on. Anjelica reOccts, "I neftr love. Chance exlus to arab AQUA.RIUS (Jan. 2l·Fcb. 19):
asked my father anythina bccaUie I Comucop;a of Plenty. What had Reality lt not always pleuant -fn
was afraid' he would tell me the been loll will be recovered. fact, It cao be quJte paJn!ul.
answer." Toward end or September, SAGITfAJUUS (Nov. 22.·Dec. 21): ~owcver, new planetary aapecll or AnJ~llca will be consldcrina What you aeclt will bo found al 1nnucnces abo\lld now malte yov
marriage. home. Reconciliation with loved one realize that lutJna happinc• can
ARIES (March 21-April 19): pr0¥idcs inspiration. Music wlll be In only be found by rcjcclina the
Travel plans subject to delay. your life tonl1h1. Oin repreaenta second-rate or sham. This appllea u
Element of dcccplion could impinac aenuine token of affection. Ubra much to your current 1ituation on
on relationship. Find out exactly llM>IYcd. the work front as affairs of lhe heart.
whal Is expeclcd from you -and CAPRICORN (Der.. 22-Jan. 19): PISCES (Feb. lO-March 2.0): An
what you can CX'pcct in return. Pisces S<:.cnarlo inw>lvc:s scCTccy. ditcrclion, emotional tic or •.ttacllmcnt now
plays role. rcqvat to keep infomiatloil "olf the appears to be &O'nc throu&ft • TAUR~S (April 20·May 20): record." Don'I bccomo cn11nalc:d in pccvliar phuc and "°" may well feel
Check tune IChcdutc., deadlines. nefarious Jdlcmc lhal could cause that your very pcrlOflal tifc hu aonc
announce ••llinaness 10 accept cmbarra mcnt Communicate with haywire. How~r. not un1U around ~--1 -1 -.-,2 ....... .-13-challenac. Reward followa aucccaful unt tcmporanly confined. 1hc llrnc of the !Olar edipte °" July
endca\'Of Older individual declares, AQUARJU (Jan. 2().fcb. 18): I l1h ""ill the dirCdlOft you mu t ......,""--'-"'--1 "J knew you were the ri&ht pcrsool" Relatiunsh1p rcw1rd1n1 but atormy. follow be clcatly scnpostcd.
H1tmbl You act what you want but AllJU (March 2l·April 20)· Any
OIUUNI (May 21-June 20): unatmoftt of llmc, cncro, money Aries 1ndnoidual •ho 1J determined
Partncrahlp, apcdal relationship 11M>f¥cd. It will all PfO\'t WOrth 11. to •~cd la now likely to be Mil
~-+-~.__-+_......___ indudin1 mamap, wall be tested. Utihlc l)O'ln:T1 of pc"""''°"· Othert served by chance. Thcrc!Ofe, pull CNt
Burden as Idled, you11 be free to dc~rc to help. all the llOpt. 1'h¢ financatl rewarda ~-+--1-_.......;;.._ ..... 111rt¥CI. cJr:p&rtmcnt. Sutch for "IOW PISCE (f.'cb. 19·March 20): or benctltt !NJ noc bO IMtanlNtOOUt
mete" DOC really a futuy. You'U You'll charm your way lntn • ._inner'• but theto *>uld certainly be mudl
Hdcntandl circle." Emph .. 11 on unlversal lcu frictlUft •nd confticc oe the
CANCla (June 2J ·July 22): appc•I, ICM relational\ip, abllity to homc·froctl after the Fun Mooe oe
l!atploymcat picture aubjcct 10 cwcrcome ~ rules, rc1trfctlont. lhe 27th
lbntpc ~· Strea independence, µansuaa• llpre• pf'l.)fNncnlly. Aritt TAUAUS (April ll·MI)' 21): ~'""-.....,.-""" oritln•lltJ, darana. •Uliftpeae to 1tnd¥cd. Remember .-hat h• been ldlMMDd
mb "-" alert. lmprlnt JO'tf ow. IP JUN I 2 I 11 VO u a throuah jolnt cfforta and e~ ""-+-~-.._._.,. l&Ylo, keep ruofutiOft• CIOftCCm"'t BlmtOA\'1 You aro "in)'lterk>ut," and life will .um mudt lai al •
-dMt, •trtdon. ptJChic, h.-. 1blffty to project uphill atr1111I•. In fact, wut
LIO (July 23·Aua. ll): ...... -~ ... ~In tra"9J)lred °"'the .... few ......
Rcletlonabtp, c•cltJna 1t tint could ••'"'•loa, illoUoa 91kt11r11 Hd *"<Nld make ,ou ....,.. lhait .._ ..
b'ccome blurrc. Be aware of l9oePkal d nl I lildua. Yo. .ott of ttwlfta Ilea not hi ..._. .. bvt a.
lllnttationl. ct.edr rcfereace mea.NJ, •en ••ttl•4 act••• ud a•I• ~ ..ie11 ,.,,..._,
.. ,.. 11ftCWthodoa procedure. Yo.'I co .. tnctl•• r•••lta throuai. GIMINI (MaJ n.J .. 21): tc.e
INm thro.p fl"O"ll or .. odl... ••«1-.. ......., Vlrmo pe"°"' k11M1 ~ ..,.,.,loll or ..,_ ot ..
AqNnan ~d. plef _,... ,.. 19,.., life. o.n.a .,.,. 1UJ ~ ....., to ..., iM •
.............. -+--f--11 Vt800 (A411. 23-Sepc. 22): TtJ tMa JllMf .,.... lillh .,._tc add to JOW _.... ...... -ii 0 differnt" ... GI .... '....... • I ... .... ..... ...... ..... ........,. Ila ••• ,.. .., • lr1~T.-..r-t--t~Acc.iii;•;.• .;e.,lothy, ardetic ...... ol ,....... • .. rital ... -. 90e4 eo .... dlle llliilllit -9D .._._ IO _.... ......._ Yo. 11 ... 1 II• ... Nu Maber w11 bl ..,,,,... .. Wllll .... h II I Im _..,..o....i~-+;......;~ ...... .....r'°' __,.ti Ncthia flll11 .. ,.., w •••arlllk _.... al tM ""'-,...... of'-"' •
.-a; ......... ..,., ...... • .. '"'· ............ w ..... ... -----------------------...i ........ _., .. II .... _........,...._~................ CANCa ,,.... ..,. 21): Liii .... ,.. .... ,.. ............
........... 1 "'" L .. Jfl It I IM•• pc 'ta 11-.11 .... .. _ .......... .
door. J7911mo. m
Tennlnel Wftt/, C.M.
D!p54M3U
AIDY 011111
NllTlm Nat'I manufecturer ................... vlo• INtOK .. ta, MILKY WAY ,
.......... oom-P•ny •etabllah•d ,.,.. 110,000 ..... ,.
--. C. _.PIT
........ C.-1· ......... ~lt1111
-·-........... .,. ............... ............... ----· ., --..::. ...... .. ._ ...... .. ................... ··~ ..... , ..
•Call 1·900-844-8100
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PRINT CLEAALY: (first three words ore bok:loce> 25 WOfd maxtnun
FREE ADS ARE MAIL-INS ONLY
All CalHns Wll Be Charged Regular Rate.
art: SWt; ZIP: ---..... r :•••• ................ "",...,... .. ....._.a.,._ ........... ,, ............... ~ .............. .... ..-...... ._ ......... .., ................. .,., .......... . ............. . .. _ ..................... .... ,_ ................
l
.. . A, , · · :
Bnr •k I-.•" , )t 1, J , •1 ~ Cabl~PaMl-L.ocu
INCREASE ~--0587 YOUR I •REMODEL •REPAIR .... C...truotleft REACH Unlqll9/unuaual WOf'k
THROUGH :;:'!::ic. = OUR NEW
Ill PROVED
LOWER RATEi
~ffij
$2.IOperdlJ
That'• AU. yoo pay
tor
( 'l': ,, '
(: 1. I j I ; \ ) ~ l
Res>* Pro t5 Yra
Pow.r Reetretehlng
lnatanN9Wau .. d
FUt/541·1972/Servlce
C1 ·n·. '
C1111, I•'· ,-•• 'h
4 linee, 30 dly INnlmum / /Drlvewaya-patlo•
SERVl'"lhl CE P«th• *· No job '°° tmaft. RaM. Uo. leM
:.: DIRECTORY -0R-TI--~-~--!Y~~--uc=T--10N~
:. F« more Information MUON)'·Concrete P• -' I
' I I
CAU. TOOAYll tk>.Orlv9Waya. Paint. ASK FOR l.ancbf>'· Mill• 54&-3096 CANDY 'QUALITY CONCRETE
Your Drlveway•·Patlo9 etc.
.,_ .. ,.9 01___.,.,., All type•. 15 Yr9 exp. ~ ... ,... • .... ,_. • John 754-0183 Repreaentatlve
842-4321
Ext 310
A ppl11ncr"
SP.rv1c0 i 1. '1,
~. ·:IT~ .,.
All MalcM and Modeila
Courteout Serv 558-0615
3021·9 H..t>or 81. C.M.
Ccr .1111ir
Tile'., i'.128
(,I '( j ( 11 t' 1 :-, l{)
Codn.i fllble, bMllld
glaaa, 30"• eO", wrought Iron .,_.,
antq gold ~ ...,.
cond, tt&O. eo Wt
Dining rm Mt . ..,_
bile. Wal unit. ..-oro.
Beet oft9r'8. m AGO Eld a11 or_., ...
FAl!RMAN ELECTAIO
au.My fob. Low pt1o9
Frw Mt. 24hr.Ul&2117 •(714)7~•
HARMAN ELECTAIC Toppee1Re1110.. L•wn1,
Uc.#547429 ~. 7St-3478
AMldanttal Spaetaii.t * Vllnl ................ •WE 00 IT RIOHT• C ... nup e TrM Trtm-*THE FlRST TIME*
(714) 751-2329
r .,,,( .. "
~ lJ l r h ~ 't , ' r,
., ... caa.oAT••· .......... Atdwoodl c...,..,.. Atpleice. CMIN8. !"=~~~~--=--Jim Whyte 942·7208 8U9Y ... 8enhH
H;incly r·.1.in l; 1 (J
.,,....WaPAH'S ...... 1 Refttel PROPERTIES
Palnt.Carpentry...cc .•
Drywall.~7
•HANDYllAN*
Uc:lbonded. MMdt
any edWf11Md rataa.
Spedal ...... on Yard/ Hou....,,. Oona .,,.
1119t'I • M3-40aO
DR MT R .... t.nt
Malrlt.. • futl MNtce.
fl'ac•-41ft. lrrteaUon, ootor. quallty .,. •
lllg .. ""' ~ .-.......... ()1111 ..U13
C:.. 11Nct .. 7~7IO Dultr'I "-llllllt. *** REMODILINQ Monthly/Wlcty or 1 Cu•tom wortc. Elec.-time. FM 1111.141·1840
Carpentry-Tii.Plumb.-l.end9Cape Aemodellng
Fencae. l<lllh 899-3119 Spedall ...
1 CALL DOii iT ALL :r~=
CrelltlYe o..lan Pl••lltte wllhln ~--atl 645-7505; C27-35395e
oet•a LAMM11oa11•
lnstal. a Malm. R ... /
. .
'. \t ,"\
: . · , . ·. · \' . :rn ;·o
HOUOAY RELIEF
TLC for s>et• a planta OC home owner 12yra
)(Int rer.. 751.e356
Oen. contractor at
handyman prlca1.
Small a 1rg rapalra of
fencea, pdo9, plumb-Jno, atK., pl .. t.,, dry·
wait. Int/ext pa&ntlng,
lcltCl'Mn, beltl ramodal a addltlona. Lie
491197. Alla 13M900
Com. Eatab./retlable. J4 Hr .... HU
Local reta. Lie. A HEATNI f flU.-.G Bonded. 2e&-Oe19.
All raldentlal & comm'I RON'a CIARDllNINQ ~ 541171. ...... r~alra a maJnt. ...... Quality yard c:are/ra ... --------.... & ......... 1111... , ..... 12 V' •l(J). NB/ PLU.llQ 1--....... ...,,,... ...... ,.,..... __ _
Rm avail. 432·9827 CdM only. 831-1872 M Jobi. Low..-, «1911.
l#T llAHf1'DMIC• -._ hMllr I 'Jf ....._ llllO. ~ 1a.,.. ... 1n THE GREEM SCENE Seaward a eo M1-4203
A,tt. llalnt. We c.,-. "-T~
handle anything ahof1 ~ 1Mt11i.t1on ot a maj~ owmaul. TrM Trlmmlng/AernoYel
Newport Beech • Lawn Miine. A~
Coata Mesa · Hunting-~ •43~
ton Beach Are ... Call 8l. U.. •••••• CEHTAUR MAINTEHAHCE
MS-2111
q,, . ' ..
' APPLIANCE REPAIR CHll.DCARW. In home
10% OFF Servtoe Cha wtth pool. Lunoh ..._
w/ad. Speoleltz.a In ai .eu•a• with .......... .. bn1nda. Quality worrc. Age ~-12, 84a..a-t101---------
• '
Baat pnce. 831-1388 (eve) Hunt. Beach.
H .
' •' f I
Nanni.a, a housekHp-.,. 9V11M. Prof, np.
Live In or out. From •---"'------1 ____ ~~~~-MO/Wtt. 571-51 ...
., ...... "··-..............
.... ... 114
.......
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TM ~ Diii a"\1*" • ._ Diii>/
Not ....... to --.... ..w. ,_au n er to,.. ...._ -.
..... .-llMQ4 .. """' '°' ,.. .... ..,. .... -.... lQ.t
........... to .. c-. .... "' .... AM.,.... .. -. .......... _,,,, .... .. ,.. .. , ... --....
..... .. .. 0...., °""' ..... ..................... ............ ,.._.....
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• lQ.t lf:oulld .... '"'.,.., .... ..... .............. ... ..... ....... -~
Good --"',.. .. -.i. 7
"Don't lose your cool over just
a jammed can opener!"
RA1'CY
. ,.,_._.,._... .. .. ......_ ____ ~
AltLO ARD JAMS by Jimmy Johnton
~~(W,K ~a:i:,
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.... ~~~ ~~,b~ ~~ •.• ) HAVING BOUJE~ ~MEINA ~-......--J..------i ! ~D Of SAND f
0
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• W .. et-a l eAOW UP 1M ~ tM LD8 Of.
Kll>S .. ~CAUSE 'QfD !EA GREAT~!.
,,. .. .._, •