HomeMy WebLinkAbout1991-06-28 - Orange Coast PilotA
I r .......
"t &as b
Mostly cloudy with local drittlo in
the morning becoming partly cloudy in
the afternoon. Hight in the UJ'I'<< 60I
to mid· ?OI. Mottly doudy tonight with
k>cal drinlc. For more Information,
including boating, fishing and surfing,
see page All.
IN THE NEWSROOM
The JMnc Co. bu offK:ially
transfcncd l,276 acres of untouched
land in Llsuna Canyon to the city of
Laguna Beach, marking the tint step in
one of the l'llOlt remarkable land
agreemenu a1on1 the coast ..• The land,
originally marked for a major
ruidential devek>pment, ii to be set
aside u open space ... Before the deal
is done, thou&h, canyon lovcn need to
come up with S4.S million, 1 chore they
have ooJy four yean to accompli1h ... A
cclcbr1tion markifta the initial land
&DUU.JI tct tcviWht M ·MNo Beach ••.
Bring your -.Ollom.
QUOTES Of THE DAY
"/1'1 killi111 nu. Every little come-I
toudtt:d in rlsis ltoust: ii part of my
life .•
Newport Beach resident Dolores
Wienenga [eacting to the sc:hcduled
demolition or the house she baa
called home for nearly half a cen-
lury. (Al)
My pnct:pl to au who build is, 1ltat
tire owntr 1/tould ~ an omamau to
dte /wu.Jt:, not the houst: to tM OWntr
CM:ero
TODAY'S EVENTS
•"Les Miserables," lhe musical
venion of Vtctor Hugo's classic
novel of~ and rebellion in 19th
century Paris, continues iu run at
the Orange County Pedorming Arts
Center. Tickc11 range from $19 to
$45 . For information call 556-ARTS
or 740-2000.
a Elir.abcth Gc:,praer T. Jefferson
Parker, A.E. Muwell are among the
myslcry writen who will be on hand
to sign copies or their recent novels
from 5 to 8 p.m. at Scribner's
Bookstore in Crystal C.ourt.
• Laguna Mysteries presents a
dinner theater show at 7 p.m., with
downtown Laguna Beach serving as
the sta~. For details, ctll 497-9742.
JUST THE FACTS
•When did the first achooncr
enter Newport Bay
-tcqpu•wwoo 1oqqv ·tdr.> -OL.81 a
LOTTERY
De coo
•Hearu: Seven
•Oubo: p..,.
• DWnondJ: 0-0
•Spadel:""°
INDEk
LeTTe
Bridp/M H...-pe/16
llutinnr/M l.oph/17
Oulffled/M Ann Lucien/Al
Comk:o/Alt ---!o<icl>'.!Al--1
Communlly Foru.,.,A5 Sootu/91 o--dllN "('\/ llttlnp/.U
Entcrtolnment/.U Weather/Al I
GE
Friday, June 28, 1991 25 cents
to hive Its say In
lly Rusi l.Olr
Orwllllt CGlll NJ ....
NEWPORT BEACH -Disgruntled
city ottkial1 and local residents will get
their chance to speak out about airport
noi1e1 in August, but PAA 0£ficial1 Ny
that, by then, the new nati0na1 airport
noise policy will already be in effect.
FAA officials confirmed Thunday that
the July l deadline for implemcnlation of
the Airport Noi5e and Capacity Act of
1990 has' been delayed -but only until
July I, .
.. That is the date that the FAA intends
to publish notice in the Federal
Register," &aid FA:A spokesperson Elly
Brekke. "What that means ii, July IS is
the date that the noise policy will become
c(fcctivc."
Newport Beach city officials were
angered after being cut from the list of
invited 1peaken who tes1ified Monday at
n's hock8y on horl8back
HUNTINGTON BEAOt -It can be called "Hodr.cy on
Horaeback."
The game of polo has been played in the United States
for more than 100 yean, and the Ofiains of the sport can be
traced to Argentina and Mexico.
"It's a team sport," said Kathy Batchelor, manager of the
Play• Grande Polo Club, which holds iu matchct at the
Huntin«ton Beach Equestrian Center.
There are about 3,000 U.S. po&o players, Batchelor said.
She added thal players arc ranked on ability -from the
brand-new "C' catcaory to a "10 goal," which is a polo
master. There is only one American-born "10'' in the world.
The sport, which typically is played four-a·.sidc, is not
solely a rich man's game. "I've got some lawycn, two
stewardesses, a wa:ltreSs, a couple housc~and even a _..
lruckt:r playing here," Balchelor said, adding thal her club
hu 52 members.
a CO"Puional .ubcommit\ec. bearing at
Newport Harbor High School. The
heannp were held by Rep. Cluil Cox, R·
Newport Beach, and Rep. Barbara Boxer,
D-Marin County, to solicit comment on
the FAA'• proposed airport DOite poliq
rc~lalions.
'Alternatively, this hcarln.& will be the
fint in the nation lO focus on the new
regulations," laid Cox of the planned
August hcarinp in Newport Beach ... One
of the focuses of this hearing will be on
changing the law, which will be easier to
do than changing the regulations at this
poinL"
Newport Bel<h Mayor Phil Sansooe
uid although the $CCOftd round of
bearing:& will come after PAA replations
become law, be bclieva the bearinp will
still be significant.
"I think they will be 1ubstantive for this
reUon, the city of Newport Beach is not
the only one in the country that is up in
arms over the proposed PAA ruJe-
mating." Santone said. "Almolt evel')'Olle
tha~• testified belieYeJ tho PAA hu fODe
farther than what Coogrea intended.'
See AIRPORT/Piii lll
Big crowd is
expected tor
bay clean up
lly Iris Yolali °""" Conl o.w Piia
NEWPORT BEACH -More than 300
citizens are expected to be out in
Newport Harbor on Saturday, piddna up
trash and debris during the 11th annual
Ocan Harbor Day.
Sponsored by the Newport Harbor
Arca 0.amber of CDmmerce'• marine
division, Oean Harbor Day was bep.n in
1980 by Joal rutaurateur BUJ Hamilton,
who was bothered by the large amount of
trash Ooa1in1 in the water around his
res.taura.ut, the Cannery.
The event combines cook>o with fun
and compctilion. Following the cleanup.
the Cannery holds 1 barbeque for the
participants and 1 ceremony in which
tc&mS are awarded for team spirit and
such aocomplishmcnts as collecting the
biggest piece of truh or debris.
lnterc&ted volunteers should gather 11 3
a.m. 11 the Cannery Restaurant at 3010
Lafayc11e Ave.. where Ibey will be
assigned 10 cleanup zones along the
shoreline of Balboa Peninsula, Udo Isle,
Mariners Mile. the Back Bay. Balboa
Island and Bayside Drive.
Olhcr voluntcen will be assigned to
boats to ptek up trash in the water and to
co11cct bag5 of trash bap fTom reside.nu
of waterfron1 homes.
,. Hamilton also plans to mobilize the
Water Rake. a trash-collecting vessel he
and local businessman Art Gronslcy
invented, to help remove the floating
debris.
The barbcquc and awards ceremony
will be held at noon.
Besides I he Cannery and the chamber.
other sponson arc Birtcher ConstrUction,
the Newport Beach Firefighters
AsSOC1atK>n, Inc.. Mediterranean Yachts,
Bnmalca Corp and Schock Boats., lnc.
Danger or skin cancer clouds lives or beach lifeguards
P• 11111111 11111111111 cu•
ll'Mll ......, 111 .. 1111
. lly Tony Dodolo °'"' Cod Dlllr ,.. Some people think lifeguards have the
peatest job ln the world.
Oh IW'e, they may have to 11ve a
swimmer or two from the surf now and
then, but basically their life consistl of
101kin1 up lhc summer sun ind watchlna
over the tprawUna crowds alona tho nnd.
Bui 1lon1 with the job comet 1 very
dongeroua hazard -the riJI< ol Min
concer.
"One of our permanent guards was just
forced out of lhe job bocauae of akin
ca.Q(Cr," said Laguna Beach Lifeguard
Tom Trager.
In !act, a bill pendina In the AAembly
would give California Jifepards who
come down with cancer the benefit of the
doubt on whether ii wu rcllted to the
their job.
The bill _,Id pve lilcsuudt the same
presumpt~ cancer benefits parantecd
under provious lc,Ulalion to r&reft&hten
and law en(orcemc.nt otncen who proride
aid "" uds&anoe in wacu arcu al ocean
beaches.
If llate leplaton llf'P""" tho bill.
which la ._..red by oQlte Sen. An
Torres D-Los Angeles, cities and counti~ wou.Jd have to prove lifeguards'
cancen were not caused by job-related
expo1urc to ultravk>lct rays. •
But Trager aaid the city of t..guna
Beach has nothina to fear if he gets
cancer.
"I know if I ~t skin cancer I'm not ~ing to blame 11 on the city," ~ger
said. He noted that the city pn:Mdes
lifeparcb with suntcreen and b11s for
protection against the sun.
Othen, however. were not IO cager to
let locll authotitlcs off lhe hook.
"Skin cancer is 1 very le&itimate
conccre of all or ut lnvotved whh ma rine
safety," said Mike Baumbartner,
Huntington City Beach marine 11fety
offteer. "I'm surpriJed that we're not
already covered because we're cxpoted to
the sun a lot more than fll'C.man or
pohccman.··
Concerns over skin cancer have
inacucd recently, said Blump.rtnct, who
has been • lifeguard for t 1 yean. Aad
although liOrne Huntin,ton 8eecb Of;1
1uards have filed workm1.a•a
compensation cl1tm1 for 11i11plao.
chaflgCS in their akin, there hlve.a'l "-
any big problems with skin cancer, Ille
said.
"The bill ~ be beneficial for II
profcssion1I lifeauarda." Bawapnacr
said. "I think that lt'• fair."'
J11m drips toward dl•.-y and, but •11111''1 CGllllng, Olllcllll llf
.., Tlll!Y -upper le\<el "°"" system off the Northem not lut lor'l IUld ...,. ...., be completely ~ -.., ,,. Coll_f<>mlo Cou~ llld Srou &11<1dn, 1 dear by tho Fourth of July.
AIM -.,11 who..-• up to -Nauonol W111hcr Service QIOl<canlan._ .,,.._...,. ol 1 warmlnt ...s .iry;OI
11reets Thunday momina can CXl*=l ----rhlt system "::t mcaaurable. raift '° trud la e::qiected IO take place later
mort or the ume today, I N1tional t~, San Frandlco Y IRI on Thu~. Salunily ud intO the lalter pan ol the w .. 1her Service 1pOlt..,.an said. If this nc.t waYC ....... I~ ~llht, we -kenCI," ho sold. "Tbroush the middle
The lisht rain that !ell Thunday did lhou~ ~ _,. llght ,pnaP>taliOll '" the ol nut -k we misht llatt to aee a
not lut Ions and area Hlquardt reported "'°"''"" Entrekin 11id. decreAM In the ltlP clooltll."
he -he beochet clurcd u Wltilc It -not be Ibo bctl wcalhcr ~·~ JJtOm.n:,1 1 P fof su'"mer btachaoefl, Enl.Jckin The otndal fonicut caUt for cloudy
The ·-f., Thunday'• clrinle 1a an i><edicted lhlt the ,,_,, -lhould Illes todoy w11h HF• -or rain In
tl>c: -.1n, """ a 10 -"' measurable r1ln. Hltltt ~ ..
._ediobemthe ..,,.. ... ,_
and Lows tonight bom dlo "" • • • LJaht variable ...... -•• .,
1cno1>ou1ofthe-wl1 •••
upected to pict "" 11111 'Illa
.•ult la ._ied IO tn1 ?.• ---......... ""'° bom 3 loot ilcr , .. • • If IOftllh\,
•m~---------------------------
an 85-ycar-old Balboa Island resident, sculptor and poet.
ACllEVBtlJfll----------------------~
He once did a bronze bust of Abraham Lincoln for San
Marino, a tiny republic in Italy that awarded him an honorary
citizenship. He also created the largest sculpture on view at the
1939 World's Fair, and a 25-foot abstract bronze which was
recently donated to a museum owned by James Michener.
ROOTS
He started out barefoot and penniless in Maryl and -unable
to auend high school until an aunt intervened -and ended up
as a well-known sculptor on the East Coast, creating works for
IBM, J.C. Penney, and the finn that built the Empire State
Building. His five children ar e also artists.
EAll.Y M"RElllllG
From his grandfather he learned that his great, great
grandfather had been a sculptor too -until a nude sculpture the
older man created caused a furor at the local church. When he
refused to destroy 11, he was tied to a chair, dunked in a pool and
drowned.
A POET, T001---------------
I hough most of his works are on view in the East, Barger
who is a member of the International Platform Association
keeps busy in the West, writing poetry daily and speaking in
public on occasion (For information, write him at P.O. Box5902,
Balboa Island, Calif. 96662.)
Br tbe D•llY Pilot
Local News Briefs
Two convicted In Newport bolllr I.a ICllll
LOS ANGELES -A fe deral jury Thursday convicted two
men of running a Newport Beach precious metals boiler room
operation, cauc;ing investor<; to loc;e about $10 million.
Harold Lazerman, 58, formerly of Newport Beach, was
convicted of 29 count' of mail fraud and two counts of tax
C\-il!>IOn.
L.azerman's ste pson, Danny Facclla, 32, of Palm Desert, was
found guilty of 13 Ct)unts of mail fraud and two counts of failing
tu hie tax returns.
Lazerman owned Newport Beach-based Investment Metals
International Inc. from 1980 to 1987, which lured investors from
all over the country with false promises, prosecutors said.
Sales staff told people the company would hold their gold and
\1lvc r bars m 1ts vaultc;, that IMI had been in business since 1974
and had a seat on the Chicago commodities exchange and that
cl ient assetc; were protected with futureo; contracts, prosecutors
o;a11.J
In reality, IMI had no precious metals, prosecutors said.
Late rman did trade hcavil) in metals, hut for his own benefit, not
for his clients, they said
Of $18 m11l1on invested with the company from 1983 to 1985,
SI 0 million was lost, accordin~ to prosecutors.
~entencing is set for Aug 26 before U.S. Distn ct Judge
RKhard A. Gadbois.
Llzerman face~ up to 155 years in prison, and Facclla could be
ordered to spend a<; many as 67 years behind bars.
Man IMlllll wonm In •111D8d clllll
SANT A ANA -A man being chased Thursday by highway
patrol officers drove a •Holen J aguar through a fence at the El
Toro Manne base, then abandoned the sed an and took a woman
mo torist hostage before crashing her car in Tustin, authorities
\aid
The woman, who Jumped from her car shortly after beina
lodnarped at gunpoint, was apparently unharmed, said California
Patro Officer Officer Angel Johnson.
The suspect, who was not 1mmed1atety identified, was arrested
afte r the 5econd crash at about 2: 15 p.m., Jo hnson said.
The 45-mmute chase, which went throuah aqd near Irvine,
e nded on Jamboree Road at Interstate 5, John!on said.
CHP officers said investigators were quc tionina the allcaed
kidnapper and had not yet booked him on any charaes.
The pursuit began when CHP officers tried to pull the Jaguar
over on the nonhbound Santa Ana freeway south of Sand
Canyon Avenue in Irvi ne because the driver was alleaedly
speeding.
The driver sped up, raced off the freeway at tho Sand Canyon
ex.it and drove the Jaguar throup a fence at the El Toro Marine
Air c.orps Station, Job100n said.
Ho Jumped from the car, which had been reported atolcn from
La JolJa, and ran acroaa tho road, took the woman captive, stole
her car aJ\d dtoYe back toward tho freeway.
When he htd to lk1w for tralf .c nev the freewty OO·ramp, the
M>man jumped out of lhe car, Jobf\IOO aald.
Tho man p>t onto the freeway end headed north .pja, pllifta
Oii 1t J lloMt, Whcte crilhcd Into anocMr car •
• •
w -................ -.,...
Prtllllidm ... a • .... laa ~I mr ea.t llr ~
_to cxw_f'RJl"at .. I r• ••-JMW1 e 81
tbO court'i .., .... -!.~.1!"'!'!: Within aa .._ of dll :-r;.. ....,......, aurprile llaer :: ,: =-~ ----::.ill,~~ abortion and ~lel tor wntiw liberal cautet wn bani
at work lobbJlaa lot Vlrioul c.adkl1te1.
Bulb wtl be-.-, pn1':9~ muy to name 1 black to rcpllce
Manball, but it ia DCM It all he wiO do thlL
Altboush the politk:a.I conventk>nal wildom ii that Buah would be
fooUah CO be ~ for Ill all-white court a year before facing
re-election, Buib aailht blaJk at praeure to name a blac:t oa the
theory that Manbalr1 teat m&aat be a black "quota" 1eat. Buih
1bbonquotas.
Buah bas named onlj one black to hia Cabinet and dkl not name a
~ when the resipation of Lauro Cavuos u education
aecrewy left the Cabinet without an Hispanic.
The leading candidate for the Supreme Court clearly is Oarencc
1bomu, 43, a blaclc who seJVet on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals
and a former chairman of the Equal Empl~nt Opportunity
Commission. His drawback is that he has been a Judge for little more
than a year. But he is a staunch Republican conservative with many
friends in the Wublngton establishment.
1111111 DI ......... •111-JIZI far IC•llll
TOKYO -Presidents of two Japanese brokerage giants reai&ned
in disgrace Thursday after apoloeizmJ to stockholden for a growing
scandal involving secret refunds to b11 clients and links with organ-
ized crime. .
The resignations came at the annual mcetinp of Nomura
Securities Co., the world's largest investment firm, and Nikko
Securities Co., where is:ritated sbarcholdcrs repeatedly questioned
senior officials about the dubious practices in Japan's securities
business that the scandal has exposed.
The two brokerages were among the 1,240 companies holding
annual meetings in Japan on Thursday. Most Japanese companies
that sell shares to the public try to hold the meetings the same day to
minimize disruption by gangsten called sokayia, who often demand
payoffs to keep quiet at the mcetinp.
Authorities said more than 6,000 police were mobilized 10 prevent
disruptions by about 1,300 sokaiya attendees.
..... llllnlll 1111111111 181' ll'IVll 1PUll11
WASHING TON -White House chief of staff John Sununu said
Thursday be was "not blaminA anybody but mysetr• for his recent ..
I#~
Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marsh.Ill, the only black to
serve on the high court, announced his retirement Thursd~y.
travel troubles and denied he had privately accused pro-lsrael groups
or others of seeking to discredit him.
To do so would be a 0 vcry non-constructive effort .. Sununu said in
a very brief written statement.
President Bush's spokesman, Marlin Fitzwater, earlier labeled u
"insidious" and "not a real issue" published reports that Sununu, a
Lebanese American, had partiaJly blamed his troubles on pro-Israel
groups.
Still, Fitzwater did not deny the reports. saying be didn't know
what Sununu had told others.
Lale Thursday afternoon, Sununu issued a one-sentence statement.
It said: "As I told the White House senior staff yesterday, I am
not blaming anybody but myself for the nuny of recent events nor
am I cngagina 1t all, in what would be a very non-constructive effort.
to suggest any involvement by anyone o r any groups in what has
taken place or been rcponed. 11 •
-By tM A.uodated Pru.
ORANGE COAST'S ONLY FICTIONAL ORAMA SERIES by
Sheral LeBeau
Mort Grimes flipped on the lights, pulled open I.he freezer
drawer and yanked back the oold white s.hect.
"Bad way to go," Grimes mumbled. "Bad way to go."
Newport Beach Mayor Neil Sturbush glanced down at the corpse,
but only fleetingly. He turned away, nearly bumpina into Officer Biff
Sparks Ill -Newport Beach's newest and blondest homicide
detective.
"Easy, Mayor,'' Sparks reassured. "Maybe you oughta step outside
and let me talk with Mon ."
Sturbush nodded and staggered from the room.
Grimes, working on a peanut butter and jcUy sandwich and a small
bag of Doritos, stared down at Thelma Jean's lifeless body.
"It's a tough one to figure out, Biff. Poor old Thelma had been in
a coma for nearly three months after that killer left her tied up in
the old John Wayne terminal. Best that I can figure i.s that it was
News of the Weird
WIUd-lle ..... lllvll llowerl lllllhl
VISTA. Calif. -A burglar who broke into Olris Henry's
ho use in the middle of the night gave her quite a scare, but he
also gave her a ·bouquet of flowers.
Henry said she awoke at 2 a.m. Tuesday to sec someone walk
pa t her bedroom door.
She screamed and told her husband, Dave, that someone was
in the house.
After calling shcrifrs deputies, Henry inspected her home and
discovered nothing missing. In fact, the intruder had left behind
flowers.
Record .,... wl -Nd Ml' -
LOS ANGELES -No one will accuse the "thrash-punk"
band Slayer of being too s ubtle.
Just in time for a summer tour, Def American Recordings is
shipping Slayer's "Seasons in the Abyss'' 1ingJe July 3 as a special
edition "Blood Pack" CO packaged in a 1qu· hy plastic sac filled
with red nuid.
A dozen little skulls dance around in lhe nuid with every
squeeze.
O nty 20,000 will be manuf acturcd, though,
-llT llN AMoclat«l Ptal
Pollce Log
Costa Mesa
shock -pure shock -that put her in the coma."
Officer Sparks nodded u he jotted down the coroner's comments.
"Anyway, she comes out of the coma all at once. One day she'• all
veged out and the next day ahc's doins ait-ups, leg lifts and so on. So
her doctor discharges her and the last anyone secs of her is when she
jumps on a jct to bead baclc to Texas."
"So?" Sparks let the question just dangJe there.
"Well, last night someone finds her noating face down in lhc
Rhine Canal, just sort of drifting right past the Cannery there.
Diners loved it."
The coroner paused for a moment to anaw at his sandwich. "And
as best I can figure out, she died of -you're going to love this -
shock. My professional opinion is thal she was literally scared to
death."
To be continued ...
ORANGE COAST
lllllyPHll
....... Int. 11t
Editor's Hotline: 642-6086
Ynu< rommt'nl\ 11bou1 rhto Oa•fy r,101 o• rw'"''
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Delivery 2uarantee!
If you do 1111c"n1~t' your p•Pf!' hy 6 • m , < 1111
b(!lo1r 10 • m •nd -·u ~ 11 1n you lJ\I noon
Our C~romer ~"''" Ctntrr 642 4) ll !I Of>'" from 6 • m In 5 pm ~~~. uf\111 10
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'"!1V'•Rhl °""~'
Jtlft ~ffft~ Pub!~
Ullot St.in, Jr.
CN"m.tn
How to reach us at
the Daily Pilot
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• •
I
lllzMIT
ri~ ...:·;..;:=~~:·:: l~fl s".1~1or'~~;;~ l<"
-11 def...,.,. cbamploN. ,., -)!i ·~ Local
10-and._r -·· nalioaal oollball Clutlc, tcbeduled s.?-t:is.30 1a w .. 1 Palm Bea<h, Fla. Sc.;.ie
We're II bore about the neat•leJCndary
AnJCla, baaed San Juan Caplstrl!llO bul 11arrlnq three playon
from PUocJand on their 1uperanauated to1ter. They ire a..c:o
S,.U of CoM1 Mesa. I>"* ......,. of Huntington &ach and .FOd ol' ~ .,_ of eoi-del Mor. Together, their aaa
IOtal 21' or thereabouts, but who's counting?
., ... _ ----"8WPORT Bl!Mlt -..._
Ue dtJvewey of their Im.
A....._ fannbouM. CM Wi1n r•r
-IO b< Ible IO -dlo llicl< Bay. witb onty a lfOWI of
-'n>tllf la~""-·
Pield1 of 1wee1 po1atoe1
llre1chc4 -Irvine A-IO
the -a., It thol u-. -46 ,_.. .... Oolonl ud Tea
' ..,,..,
rabbits IAd thclr four cblldren on the farm al 1711 ltvine Ave.,
wh.Jch wu ckile enoup IO the
Mexican border to allow the family
ooculonal uipt IO TI)lwla 10
checit on the lhoroughbn:dt •bey
raised thc.ro.
Over the years., other homes
began poppins up around the once
dcaolate (armhouse, blocking the
Wienenau' view of the bay •
Today, the old white clapboard
houte with llaht blue trim loob
out of place amona the more
modem, Jowitlu,,a homes in the
Dover Shores neighborhood.
. , I • .
'They're now rocu.pentina ftQm 1 qualifying toumiunent in
Reao, Nev .• where they swept ukte the 1trona;est te&m1 in aU of
Geacrdom to advance to t'he fm-11 in Florida. Did I mention
that they've twice captured the1, n1tional pennant In their age division. and arc now seekin1 to "thrccpeat" -which is a hard
word to say when wca.rins dentu.rea,
Third baseman Brown, wbo batted .619 in the recent round·
robin in Reno {and wasn't even the Angeli' leading hitter), has
been inviting me to witness Saturday morning practice ICPionl at
TeWinktc Park in CO.ta M~a -but 1 can't 1tand all that
exertion. Besides, tbc 1idclinc1 should be kept clear for ihe para·
niedk:s.
And come Monday, construction
crews will begin demolishing the
Wienengas' farmhouse to make
way for a new 14-roorn home.
Doktres Wtenenga, 73, who bu
liYed there all thete yea11, will
move into a 1maU apartment in
Costa Mesa, ending nearly a half·
century of history in Newport
Beach.
. L.-~0..Dllr"""'
Family membel'5 will have a hard tJme saying goodbye to the old farmhouse that was the Wienenp fam ily
home for 46 years. Taking memories with them are, from left, Coeorgiana Tuck, Dolores Weinenga and Ljsa
Weinenga.
• SPEAKING OF CASUALTIES -It should be noted that
three of the Anaels -ooach·infieldcr Art McConneU, Toa.y
Jason and the aforementioned Dick Barker -were combat pilots
In World War Deuce.
Teammates boast that ex.COi. Barker was the ace . They
remember with awe that he shot down si.Jc airplanct -ht.fore
being shi~d overseas. • AND NOW FOR A NICE WORD ABOUT CLEVELAND -
The olfly part of the house that
will be saved by family mcmben
arc a few bricks from the fireplace,
daugh ter Georgiana Tuck, 37, said.
"It's killing me," Wicncnga said.
"Every little comer 1 touched-in
this house is part of my life ."
Dolores. a Cuban native, and
late husband Tom, a Florida
native, moved into the farmhouse,
owned then by Tom's mother, in
194S. The couple had happy times
on the farm, raising animals and
their children, sons ·rom Jr., Micky
and Mario and daughter
Georgiana.
The father was a Costa Mesa
scoutmistcr for many years.
Dolores was active, and remains
so, wilh St. Joachim'• Catholic
Church in Cosla Mesa. Their
children attended loca l elementary
schools and graduated from
Newport Harbor and Corona del
Mar high schools,
After her husband passed away
22 yea~ ago, Dolores inherited the
farm from her mother-in-law. And
while her children moved out on
their own. the matriarch continued
to live there.
Five years ago. though, Dolores
sold the property for financial
reasons and co ntinued to lease the
house from the new owner. This
year, owner Robert One decided
to build a large new home for
himself.
Dolores, who h1 1 11
grandchildren and seven srcat·
grandchildren, ha1 no 1'ard
feelings about the new owner's
plans. But saying goodbye to the
old house hun't been euy.
"Monday they're going to tClr
down my house. I'm not going to
be around."
Dear Pq H••pa, widow of Newport newspaper pioneer Ano
Hupa, is calling· for an end to the Oevcland·bashing here. In an
outburst of candid courage, she confesses that she was raised
there (birthplace was Warren, 0.)
, "During the 20 years we lived in acvcland, it was a very nice
oommunity, with lots of concert halls and very polilc society," she
recalls. "When Wi: moved to LA. back in '46, it was a cultural
shock."
Senate pushes budget deadlock proposal
It still is, Peg. • YUP, GOTTA HELP TIIOSE OLD FOLKS -On Tuesday,
the aforementioned Peg Haapa attended a party honori ng her
mother, Benslct Pcrsandt, who was celebrating her JOOth
birthday.
One of the guests, who was merely 9S, su~estcd to the newly·
arrived centenarian that she might want to sign up for the Meals
on Wheels program, providin' hot stuff for oldsters.
"Well," said the birthday girl, "if you can't get anyone else, I'll
be happy to help." • rrs TIIAT HOVSE OVER TIIERE, THE ONE WITH TIIE
BULGING WAU.S -Eartier this week, we entertained visitors
from Rudin& Pa. It was the fint California experience for niece
M•Nnff JC.rust and her children, Pttc, 13, and Chr1sUe, 10.
So what would they like to sec fint? Dizzyland'? Knott's Berry
Farm? Our glorious beaches? Joan Irvine Smith's vaull7
None of lhe aboYe.
"Can you 1how me," asked wide-eyed Pete, where Arnold
Schnrunqaer livC5? • EXIT LINE -Thursday's papers reported !hat Orange
County Girl Scouts have acquired Rancho dcl Rio, the 213-acre
spre ad that was once the center of local 1rafficting in marijuana.
SACRAMENTO -The state
Senate has a simple solution to
Califorhia's maralhon budget
deadlocks: a constitutional
amendment allowing lawmakers to
pass budgcl bills by simple
majorities rather than two-thirds
votes.
But there's a catch . It takes two-
th irds votes to approve
constitu1lonal amendments.
The Senate was able 10 muster
thal super majority Thursday,
sending the Assembly an
amendment that would remove the
lWo-thirds rcquircmenl.
Twenty-six Democrats and the
Senate's lone independent
provided the bare two·thirds
majority. Eleven Republicans
voted no.
Court won't reconsider ban
on prayers at graduations
SAN FRANCISCO -The state in October.
Supreme Court refused Thursday School ofric1als say graduation
t\) reconsider its ruling banning prayers were use d by a majority of
high school graduation prayers. districts in Ca hforn1a and were
I D L particularly common in small Attorney Genera an ungrcn districts before !he May 6 ruling.
had joined a San Bernardino The court mai·ority, led by County school district in asking
But Democrats aren't close 10
having a rv.·o·thirds majority in the
Assembly and there aren't any
independents there to make up
the difference. As1embly
Republican.,., the biggest obstacle
for this year's budget package, arc
even less likely than their Senate
counterparts to break party ranks.
So the amendment, SCA6 by
Sen. Bill Lockyer, 0-Hayward, will
almost certainly go 10 its death in
the lower house.
Lockyer's proposal also would
need approval from voters if ii
pa55Cd the Ugisla1urc .
Blidgct deadlocks have almost
become a tradition in Sacramento,
where Rcpubltcans and Democrats
frcqucnlty spend weeks trying 10
work out their differences over the
state spending plans.
Last year the Legislature wcnl
28 days into a new fiscal year
before finalty pas..\ing a budget bill
The 1991·92 fiscal year start1
Monday. The main budget bill has
passed. but more than three dozen
companion bill$ needed to
implemen t the spending plan arc
still bottled up.
-B1 lb~ A.uot:Mtd Plft§
Tired or Unevtn C uts? Not Gelling What You Want?
Anal Glands, Ears, Nails Not Being Done ProP"rl)? Waw. l can hardty wait 10 sample their next batch of cookies.
Jury Kobrin'• column will ron Tu~sd•y, Tlrursd•T •nd
S.tunla]'.
the coun to take back its May 6 Juslicc Joyce Kenna rd, sa id
decision that religious invocations prayers at ~raduation ce remonies 615 Goldenrod Ave. Estab. 10 Years
and benedictions at graduation were an improper go\-c rnment L.r1"·'4C'4.,m·Sm1H 01,1p 759 218
Great AmBrlcan Race tams
l/lllttBI' II/I to b& ot llllcldB8
vi
0 ta tcd th c constitution a I f_•"_"°_"",m~c~nt~of~,c~h~~i~o~n·~~'.:_1~~C~o~r~o~n~a~d~cil iM~airiiiiiiiii'i" ir,i,.iiiiiiiiiiiiiii·iliiiii separation or church and state. -RJ tht' As~·oc·iatcd 1'""''
Lung<en and the district urged RUFFELL'S 1he court to leave the issue
The first week of the Orcat
AmcriClln Race was windina down
as more than 100 old cars sped
lhrough Kansas whcatfields
Thunday and finished up at the
foot of the Rocky Mou ntains in
Color1do Sprinp.
Tustin residcn11 Zane and
Valerie Shubert raced in the 100
dearcc heat and won the
O\ampionship Divi1ion Thursday
In their 1935 Buick business
coupe. The husband wife team
were only 17 scconds off the
ac:hcctulcd lime.
Former Grcal Ra ce winner
Elliot Woodward of Seattle and
Marv Schmidt o( Sylma.r learned
together to win lhe pre·1920
World Oau oompetition for the
third time since the race started.
Woodw1rd and Schmidt arc
The D.A.R.E. students
of Newport Beach &
Costa Mesa thank all
those who made the
D.A.R .E. FAIR such a
special celebration.
Among them ...
The Pacific
Ampltheatre
(A Ned<ilandar E-1)
The Arches
Balboa Bay Club
The Cannery
Gino's On The Hill
Ruby's
VlllaNova
•
driving a 1914 Dodge Touring Car .
In the Buick Sportsman Cass,
the father-son team of Roy and
Lawrence Allan of Santa Fe
Springs finished fi~t in a 1931
Graham Sedan.
Thursday'• run marked the
halfway mark in the annual race
with driven c.halldng up 2,370
miles so far. 'By the time the racers
reach Seattle on the Fourth of July
they will have traveled an
additiOnal t,970 miles.
More than 20 Orange County
residenu are taking part in lhi1
year's race, including 1987 Great
Race winner Wayne Slanfidd of
Costa Mesa and Newt Withers of
Fountain Valley.
-Hy th~ 011/ly Pilot
umc!Olvcd until the U.S. Sup<eme UPHOLSTERY INC. Court decided a similar case rrom
Rhode Island. scheduled for .... ,_ .... c.... 11n1
argument in the term that begins 1m-•n~ctSt••11-su.1 1S1
PUBUC NOTICE
IPECIAl
11111111 • 1h Sala
lAE MEN'S
~~I NOW NOW
s191e •2e1e 11
673-4640
Ad required for discount
£xpinl July JO, 1991
CITY OF HUNTINGTON BEACH
NOTICE OF BUDGET ADOPTION
On June 17, 1991 , the City Council edopted the budget for FllC8l Year
1991 /92. The budget appropriates $190,240,362 for all funds. Of this
amount $99,692,054 has been approprlatfil to the General Fund and
$90,548,308 to all other funda. v ·
Budget doc:umenta are available for public Inspection a City Hall, 2000
Main Street, In the City Clerks Office between the hours .of 8 AM & 5 PM
Monday through Friday. Coplea are alao available at the Central Ubrary
located at 7111 Talbert Avenue (Talbert & Goldenwest).
Dat9d 6124191
City of tfUlnldt1o1ngt..,"''°'"'" leach
Connie lrockway, City Clerk
RE 'r1 LED
Rf\J S
f'"""u.d' Pat"it~ L"t Pat"e,
Tle.14' £.,.IQf, J wre-JOtk-9--f/M
Tk Be.r( IV41 I K~~· t4
~fork,"
(!ti ,.~v. ",;.t,.,. ·1-~ tU
Nd IJOO ,,_'fl {r I~. · .r 1-J
2731 E. COAST HWY. -CORONA DB. MM •
• •
·~e-VC bad suicides, and not
only Anthony Elliot." said Ms.
Mellon. who organized a protest
bf more than 40 clderb' investors
outside the state courthouse where
motions to dismiss the rcmammg
a.nta against Keating will be
beard oo Friday.
Fr• b11de tmllld far U.S.,
Mexico; but Qllllnl8 N11m1n
By Eduardo Montes
n. Assocl*d Pmt
SAN DIEGO -A free trade
agreement will benefit both the
:The Paths of Life Meet
at Huntington Terrace
lf ,\'O 'vro 1'C'H 'I 0 '.i rt pc ,.:1' , iJ"c 'g !'OA.d whe•1 you Want. a
rl.11.r:;.;c, wriv :.01 • r•1vr. : j wn :.o H u:~1.1ng;, n Terrace a
,. ' t . u.i Sr!''-'•''r :·• '.rn1· •": ·vr "· ,JJlt,Y & Qualt·y L1!Cf1Wle For
The Young At Heart
•Affordable rates
•Studios, Cottages & Suite:.
..eTasty home cooked meals
•Scheduled transportation
•Housekeeping services
•Daily Act1v1ties
'r ull <",pn. ICP Rt'llrtn!Pnl
"lJving
! Asststtd I 1vlng
•Independent Lt\ 1119
SUMMER SPECIAL
Rent Between
May & September
and
SAVE MONEVI
Call
For Details
THE
HUNTINGTON
TERRACE
RrnREMOO RESIDF.NCE
(714) 848-8811
18800 Florida Stru t
Huntington Buch
St•I• Uc 300606982
SAVE 67o/o
On this large assortment of
All Glove-Tanned Leather,
Genuine Hand-Sewn True Moccasin
Casual Shoes
Many More Patterns than Shown
I FAMOIARE ~ 12~
I PW1HRIUS I I Tk ~Sk£
Sizes 5 to 12, N, M, W, & WW
~-S&pShotlb
#52 The City Sho=n~nter
Orange (714)
United States and Mexico, but
there are atUl obstacles and
misgivina• to be overcome,
agriculture offtclala uid Thursday.
Mc.xic.am doubt their ability to
compete with the United States.
Americana, meanwhile, f car
Mexican commerce will undercut
their busineaa and that free trade
will open the door for an
uncontrollable wave of
immigration from Mexico,
according to officials from both
sjdcs of the border.
"There arc lots of concerns in
Mexico: Can we compete with the
Americans if they have the
technology?" said Jorge Collard of
the Muican Secretariat of
Agriculture and Water Resources.
"More has to be done before we
get to the PQint where we can
compete with Americans."
He said the Mexi c an
gove rnment is teaching qricultural
producers about the changes a
free trade agreement will bring,
that it will change the crop
structure of the nation, that
policies will be changing.
"We need a period of time, not
to be waiting (or the wolves, but to
help them make the transition,"
Collard said.
He added the talk of migration
something the Mexican
government is not encouraging -
has no place in the debate over
free trade.
"We want to provide as many
jobs as we can so people can stay
in Mexico,'' Collard said. "We
don't want to keep them because
ther will give us an edge (over the
United States) -they won't.
Other officials attending the
California-Mexico Agricultural
Trade Conf crence also played
down the negative talk that has
surrounded the proposed North
American Trade Agreement
(NAFT A), concentrating instead
on what they say will be a boon to
the economies of all nations
involved.
"It's in our interest to band
ourselves together .... By becoming
more competitive within the North
American continent we can
become more competitive global-
ly," said Len Condon, a U.S.
agricultural trade representative.
"The interest in NAFTA
reflects the economic, political and
social changes that are sweeping
the world," Condon said. "What
we're seeing is a resurgence of
c.tpitali:.m. Everybody wants to be
a capitalist."
WIN
A nm& 'l'lln-
ABOAltD AllTRAJ[. ••
A1'D D A TllAVBL
WltlTSR PORA DAT
Look tn 'Iburedq• paper
for comp~te deta.tla and
entJy form-to an exdtJn&
get.a'tqy weekend!
New Car
Season
Is Here!
Antr you b11 your bul
c•r deal, call u• ror 1
c1uott on that new ur!
• ,, lt ·--
....... lnMwe """" 631-1740
441 Old f'Mite-wpm-rt IM Al!I...
Newpott.... ~
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"' .... 10 --,.,,__..Stoel [chonge .._ .....,._.....,ol._.l'llOn SI ...._ v... '--°"' Uoooen 419,100 12._ +I"'
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An lndeptndent Newspa per
Jim Cressinger, publtsher
William S. Lobdell, editor & vice president
Steve Marble, managing editor
' Walter 8urrough11 1901-1989, fouriding publlsher
Editor/al
senate going wrong
way on highways
Supportcn of the federal highway bill, which passed the
Senate overwhelmingly last week. called it "revolutionary."
Jn that they were correct. They meant it as a compliment. In
that they were wrong.
The bill passed overwhelmingly, 91-7, because it manages
to spread $123 billion fairly evenly among the states. (The
seven opposed to the bill were convinced their statea were
' shortchanged.) How the money was divvied up seemed far
more important to the senators than the fact that they were
fundamentally altering U.S. transportation policy.
Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, a chief sponsor of the bi ll
and one of the institution's more thoughtful members, tried
to tell his coll eagues !hey had inaugurated "the new spiril of
the public sector in America," but it's unlikely he was heard
above Che lip-smacking.
By permitting more money lo go to mass transit and
shortchanging construction of new highways, the bill fulfills
Sen. Moynihan's vision of American transponation. It is, we
think, a wrong-headed vision, overestimating the managerial
gifts of government planners while cramping the traditional
mobility of the American people.
Nowadays American mobility, C$pecially in Southern
Califorina, U expressed in our fondness for and reliance on
the personal automobile. It has resulted in crowded
highways. Drivers have thus paid hefty gasoline taxes,
earmarked ror new roads to relieve the consequences of their
fondness for cars.
The new bill subverts that sensible arrangement. A na1ive
of Manhattan, Sen. Moynihan doesn'i sec 1hc point of all
these automobilies. He prerers. at least in theory. mass
transit, whose routes arc usually fixed even though our
dwelling and working pattems aren't. The inability of
government planners to keep up with those patterns has
resulted in underused public transit systems all across the
country.
The new bill gives incenti_ves to planners by giving them
more money. But people will vo1e with their steering wheels;
they will continue 10 drive, in ever greater numbers. The new
highway bill merely means that fewer roads will be built, and
that o ld ones will become more congested, and that the laxes
Americans pay will fund at even higher levels a form of
government manipulation they have made clear they don't
want.
m
Best Of the Hotline
Ediror's note: The following arc
samples of OrlJ118C Coast Daily
Pilot rc•dcrs' comments and
criticisms. While Pilot edirors
welcome and read a// comments,
we will only publish rCJponscs
from callers who /cave a name
(please spell it out), city and
phone number (for verir1eat1011).
You can get in~'Olved by cal/ins
the Editor's Hotline st 642-6086.
Thank you!
D
Chief 1111181' 111'1
Just a little note on the Newport
Beach Fire Chief (Jim Recd) may
go to Costa Mesa for the (same)
job. (He did ·indeed take the
position u Costa Mesa's fire
chic£.)
How about Costa Me sa
promoting from within? 1'm sure
there are as many qualified
candidates that have served in the
Costa Mesa Fire Depanmen1 for
many yea rs who deserve a chance
like !his.
I think it would great for morale
and also show that we care about
people who do a good job and
serve the city for a long time.
Letters
ED DEATON
Costa Mesa
Angry merchants
Editor's note: The following
Jetter wa s addressed to the
Newpon Beach City C-Ouncil.
This lcllcr is about your final
decision nol to restore 1hc parking
spaces in fronl of the Newport
Beach City Hall.
radar In History
Today is Friday, June 28. the
179th day of 1991 . There are 186
da15 left in the year.
First, many many thanks to
Council Member John Hedges and
10 Council Member Clarence
headquarters of Iran's ruling Turner fo r their support and
Islamic Republican Party, killing attempts to assist the beleaguered
dozens of people, including Iran's merchants who depended upon
Tod•y's Hlghll&ht In History:
Five hundred years ago, on June
28, 1491 , England's King Henry
VIII was born at Greenwich,
During a nearly 38·year reign,
H e n ry presided over the
eatablishmcnt of the Church of
England, £ought several wan with
Fnncc and married six limes. He
died in 1547.
Ten years •ao:
e•pl odcd al the
A bomb
Tehran
chief judge. this parking ror their customers
Fl P . d and clienls.
we year• ~10: rcsi C~t -The balance of this lcllcr is
Reagan used his wec~ly radio directed to. and is about, Mayor ad~r~ to blas1 sweepi ng trade Sa nsone and Council Members
leg1sla1ton passed by the House, C Pl H n 8 d w 11 · · Id ... d" ox. ummer. a n a . saying 11 wou . Jeopar 1~c .. our As you al l kn o w, the
hard-won economic prospcnly. businessmen and busincs.'>womcn
Ont year 110: Wildfires crackled on )2nd Street and Newport
across Southern Califo rnia arter Boulevard repeatedly reported to
ravaging 3SO homes in the Santa you that this lack of parking for
Barbara area. 1hci1 customers and clicnls was
llyG..,yTl'tlHA
ca\1s1ng severe business losses; lhat
tllcir livelihood wa s being curtailed
by as muc.h as 50 pcrcc nl.
Petitions bearing hundreds of
resident si,naturcs were presented
10 yo u 1n support of their
impassioned plea. And yet ,
unbclicv111bly, you voted agains1
res1oration of parking.
Thi means that I) you didn't
believe lhe merchan1s: or 2) you
didn't care: or 3) both. If your
lncomc1 were lopped off by 25
percent to SO percent due to Ukc
clrcums1anccs, I wonder if your
votes would have been the 11 me
-I think no1.
Inane st11emcn1s were made by
Mayor Sansone a nd council
member!! such as the following: .....
those in oppot11i1ion to the pro;cct
are bcinJ unreuonabtc: ..... the
problem ll greatly e:a.ggcr1tcd; the
oced hu not been es1abli1bcd.
Aftd the-n the coup ft pace by
Council Member i>twnmer. I.e.,
"I'm n:alty aga inst putting parking
out in front or city hall after we
spent 1 bundle (on the new lawn
project). There is plenty of r.artr.lna
on. the s1ree1 for customen. '
These remarks i nd your final
votes ire insult s 10 1he1d
busincumen ind buiinesswomcn.
Shame, shame on youl
However, as with all abomlnablc
situations.. there are option . Ont
II. when bu,inea is nil bcauM
ttlere i1 no par\ins, the merchants
t1n slroll acn>IS the trect, ait on
D
A Viti fir Anllll'llY
I a m calling about t he
replacement for Ed Glasgow (on
the Costa Mesa City Council), the
ideal would be for the people to
vote for a rcplaccmcnl of him.
However, 1f this isn't pouible.
we need at least one person on the
city council who isn't a yes person,
someone who hears and listens to
the people and what we the
citizens of Cos1a Mesa want.
Thal ideal is Orv Amburgey. He
is one who woo'! go with the fl ow
of the city council for his own
political gain.
He's a good, moral and decent
man being a former policeman of
Costa Mesa. he knows the need in
these areas as well.
I vote via Daily Pilot for Orv
Amburgey, he listens, hean and
acts for the citizens.
SHIRLEY ST AUGAARD
Costa Mesa
D
Stop 1111'111 spraying
It will be very in1e resling 10 sec
what will happen to malathion
spraying in California with the
recent decision of the United
the new lawn and admire 1he new
aes11lctic bc aul)' of 1he city hall .
In closing I would like to ~ay.
"Sec you in the unemployment
line -say a day or so ar1cr tile
next election."
LILLIAN RUSSELL
Ne wport Beach
To the Edi1or:
The Cos1a Mesa City Coun cil
has in spilc of a majority vole
compromised itself and ex1cndcd
Ille use and sale of fireworks, w1th
restrictions.
They have elected 10 walk a
tigh1ropc and forc~tall and prolong
the ultimate decision of 101ally
banning fircwork.'i.
The rcs1 ric1ions and gu1dehncs
1ha1 will apply this year seem
simple cnouah. however, will lhc
public 's coope r ation and
cnrorccmcn1 be another matter''
Has the City sci forth a plan 10
inform the public so compliance
will not become a problem?
What amount or funding hy the
tupayen will be nece sary rC"tr 1he
proposed enforcement grou~ 10
patrol the stceets?
The cnfon::ement groups that
are lo monitor the s1rceu may
hive a d\11lenfe 1h1t go beyond
the Counci '1 h o pe s and
imaaination. .
The succt11 and application of
1his plan plac:c_, • responsibility
ind ch11'fcnae on everyone.
partkularl)' on those who tlrongly
advocated the continued sale of
fireworks.
CHARUlS V. KALAOIAN
Cost• Mesa
" 1111'1 lat:9y l'llltll
To the Editor:
For 10me time now, there tw
betn incre.ucd taJk about the
Write to us!
States Supreme Coun .
The case invotvcd the small
rural town of Casey, population
about 500 in Wisconsin. The city
council adopted an ordinance
regulating the use or pesticides.
The city council acting on this
ordinance denied a permit £or
aerial spraying or a certain
insecticide.
The stale argued that the
federal insecticide., fungjcidc and
rodcntic1de act known u FtFRA
pre-empted the local ordinance .
The U.S. Supreme Court,
however, upheld that FIFRA and
state statutes did not pre-empt the
local ordin ance, and the spraying
was stopped.
The way I look al it is, very
simple: if malathion is harmful to
1he paint on your au1omobilc or
truck, if it's harmful 10 the fish 1n
your backyard pond and if ii li'i
hannful to your pets than common
sense dictates that 11 has got to
have some hannCul cffccl on the
fragile and delicate tissues or your
lungs.
Hooray Cor Casey, Wisconsin,
now maybe we can follow through
in C..lifornia and put a stop to
aerial spraying over our popul1tcd
areas of the sune.
GUY CARROZZO
Fountain Valley
importance of family values, and ii
is encouraging to sec the
California Assembly take ac1ton by
approving Assembly Bill 77
(Moore) the Family R1gh1s Act of
1991.
AB n will allow cmplotees to
take up to (our months of unpaid
lcaw in a 24-month period, 10 care
for a scrwu~ly 111 family member
without fear of losing their ]Obs.
The measure would only apply 10
f i rms having !5 o r more
cmplO)·ees
The Orange County Chap1c1 of
the National Multiple Sclcros1o;
Socie ty is pleased 10 JOi n w11h the
Socicry\ seven other Cahfornu1
chapters to support this btll Our
c haplc r serves .over 2,500
individuals with MS and their
families throughout the Orange
County area.
MS is In unpredictble,
potcntiall)' dillblin& disetie of the
central nervous system that
typic1lly stri kct in young
adulthood. F1mily support Is
crucial. It el•ys I vilal role in
helping the individual with MS 10
~ntinuc livin' • run •. productivc,
independent life. Family mcmbe~
should noc be forced to choose
between their jobs and c1ring for
loved ones.
We JUpport AB TI Ind urac the
state Senate 10 pass this imPon•nt
measure. We also cnooura.ge all
who belitve in the fami.ty to write
their t tate Sen11on showing
support for AB 77 10 bca>me 11
law.
HILARY S. LIEGLER, M.P.H.
Lies/er Is the u«utNe Director
of the Oran,e Cbunf)' OMptcr of
th< N11ioflol Mwripie Sckmsis
Soci<ry.
This 11 a communffy _...,.., •nd M 'd Uke to heor from
you. Lellen should be bMI and ire subject to tdill"I-l!l"get
c:o<mpondence will be considered fO< a Communffy Com·
men!My future.
,,,__ ...t>d wbmltslont to the °"'"P Coott Dally Pilot,
130 W. a.y St., c.ost> Mftl, CA 92627 or f1• them to (71 4)
646-4170. PINM Ind.,,,. \'<Ml• name, city and pllone numbe< If
you'd like your lette< to be prl"4ed.
You con alto all our fdllor'• HOCllM •• 642·6086 and d
tate a letter to the tdltor.
'
,,,., .... 211, ,., ""'
•
Wiii I
11111* llrlt ~
SAC RAMl!NTO -Sever•;
)'CUI -ia their lnllnlte -. lttcltn ol the 111tc UP,'-
declded 10 -• cban&< in tlle8' meeting ICbedulel, MYiDI it wouJlJ'
promote efftclcocy, •• •
Like many IUdl orpniutioMt'
chanaes.. it bu had pr~ly the..
opposite of the intended effect.
For yean, the =="
Lcgj1Jature would
begin its
monthlooc
summer recess
about July l. ~
a practical
matter, that
meant lawmaken
would complete
1c1ion on the
state budgcl and
then depart on
their summer
vacations.
If there was a
hangup in the
.. .•. Wllll I ,.
Capitol :
Politics -
budget, not an ...
uncommon event, it ate into their
personal vacattoo times. Added
political and media preuure
r inis h the budget proce
thcrcCore, was pressure f
spouses and family.
The schedule change dc:la
the summer rcocss until mid-J•
on 1he 1heory that after the budge.t i
was completed, lcgislaton couldlt
lhen work on pending legislation
for an additional two wccb, ~
their vacations. and return Uf
Sacramento for one final month of
lawmaking before adjournment.
The practical effect wu to
reduce the familial pressure t~
wind up lhe state budget, and cvc.r
since. delays have become more
common and longer.
The dynamics of the budget are
a little different this year, but tbc
fact that legislators will be in
Sacramento at lea.st until July 19 is
cont ributing to their inability to
come to closure.
The budget bill itself wu scnl to
Gov. Pete Wilson's desk Jut~
but there's a big s.tall on ~
dozen-plus bills needed to make
the budget balance -such pithy
matters as a shih of public-,
rerirement-fund surpJuses.j
eliminati on or suspension of,
auromatic increases in welrarc
gran1s. and. most difficult, 1~.
amount and mix of new taxes th'!i
arc lo be enacted. .;
Passage of the budget bill sced1
to have removed some of &.ti!
psychological pre~re, thut &Mn&i
vanous interest groups and the '
legisla1ivc allies more time in:
which to shape details of the:
spending and revenue mcasuret to:
their liking. :
Liberals remain opposed to!
some of the spending cuts,. which:
Wilson terms "structural reforms,:•:
and conscrvalive& don't like ~:
new laxes In tile meantime.!
1ndu~tr1cs thal would be hit witlt!
new uucs. public-employee untonl,
11nd 01hcr special-interest groupC
ore pulling heal on al\ lcgisla1on. :
rhc public and media pressur~
to finalize the budget. the morel
~pcc1fic pressures from the special .:
interest groups, and 1hc 1ntcmat
dynamics of the Capitol itself -:
Democrat vs Rcpubhcan. liberal
V5 consc r\'at1vc , the Senatc vs. thO
Assembly and fae11 on vs faction -'!
could coalesce into a 'ilalcmatd:
1ha1 could last for weeks, JUSI as 1'
did when then -Gov Georg~
DcukmcJian and 1t>c LLg1sla1utq
faced a much -smaller budget ensue
las1 year. 11 wasn 't resolved un11(
late Juty, and then vccy sloppily. :
The re arc, however. some othc<
fac1ors. One is the sheer size oC
1he deficit Ano1hcr 15 thal Wilsoq
ii' a much more aC1Mst gave~
than Dcultmejian w11, mor4
lntlined to not only particip114
priva1cly bur cha5tise lb,
Legislat\lre publicly. t
A third i.s that ~liticall)', Wit.of
has • lot mon: ridina. in tenn1 ol
his future political career, ~
re90Nin.c the crt1is -1 factor t
some Democrats bclicvc make h ·
more vulnerable to preauro.
fourth -and very import.an=
factor ii 1h11 this year, lhe stat
will nat run oul o( moocy
mid-Juty.
Still another is that lM
tarted Nnnina on the budett
once it dcaftd the l...qil&l1u
Wilton must ilsn or .e10 h by
Wed,,...,.,, and hat lmpUed
iC !ht 01her demenll ol tlM booeittt
..... arc ROI In plow by
he'll .,.to I~ lhcnby tumin& 119 heot on Ibo Lqblature.
In other _. ""'° will
fint?
' •
r
r •
I
· We're all yours. We're smiling because you told us what
you wanted and now we're delivering it. Now you will smile too
because 3 times a week you get: . ·
0 Local News 0 Local Sports 0 Local Society 0 Local Editofi ..
als 0 Local Events 0 Local Activities For Adults 0 Local Ac ..
tivities For Seniors 0 Local Activities For Children
I
esa
0 Local Restaurants 0 Local Cl~ifieds 0 Local Stores
0 Local Sales 0 For Locals Only
We think it's something to smile about~ A newspaper you
helped create that tells you what you want to lmow. Forty.five
thousand copies Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday.
~Thank You-~
F~. June 21, 1911
Whoever aaid )'OU can't IO
home again obviously h1dn't heard
about this bunch. For thole in the
know it wu Back to Bal Ni,ht at
the Balboa Pavilion and they went
back like gang buatcn. The Big
Band sounds evoked bauntina
summer nights full of promise and
easy rhythms.
Tuesday night
about 300 lime
trippers paid an
old fashioned 10
bucks to get back
to where they
once belonged.
Some might have
said the cost was
irrelevant, but
that w as the
w h o l e poin t
anyway.
This group was
Clrol Dee
Jonea
Society
celebrating one more facet of that
bizarre and long standing Newport
ritual, Irrelevant Weck. The gist of
which, according to Bill Grundy is
simply. "Doing something ni ce for
oo reason." The evening will profit
the USC Alums Club, but mostly
it's all just for fun (according to
Alumni president Call &.AM.)
This year'• hero wu t.any
Wanke. Choaen 11 Kin• of
Irrelevance, New York Giants'
pick nwnber 334 (chosen on April
22nd) Wanke wu the flllal player
selected in the National Football
Lc~Draft._
Maybe mixing the sublime and
the ridiculous, for good measure
the committee also chose to
recognize Marine Corps Gunnery
Sgt. M.P. Whltt.alcff, Jut soldier to
return home the same day. The
Balboa sun saw to it "Red"
Whittaker lived up to bis name
with a "sunglasses tan." Not in
time to relate fint band to the be-
bop and boogie '40s tunes
(provided by the Big Band
<'.Annection) he was having a areat
time anyway, '1 enjoy anything
where I can understand the words
to the music!" he volunteered.
Committee memben included
Betty Bottorf and Jim Dale, Ulllan
Arbenz and Bill Hamilton, Biii
Lobdell, Jim Warsaw and Jim de
Boom.
CMllO..~C..-...
Sgt. Mike Whittaker (honoree), Patty Whitaker
C~~=l~~Mlm:,~~~~~ ·--·-YU> ,... • Entrccs ,,,..._ '"""'"' • .__$10 0 An Lad I II b t d . I .. ~ .,,....,_, --ear n n ers: rea y a ou women an gir s on husbands and oo jobs, but tbey ·~ lllloCM ~'f) WIWll 440 Hll:Arcpe need to vent my anger and Medicaid who are having three, continue lo have babies that tbe
-"0Go • •• f-Coronlt del Mw frustration about a problem that is four and five children. f b·_... a.:-~ . ...-,....a .1,I09!> -6 hl9• _.,.. 67J n11 rest 0 UI -.iu·WOh.1nl ,.--r--, _....,.. .. ,.. ...-'• .. _,,,_, • -J•s1 •wJUAJi ~ • affecting everyone. I am talking Most of these 1fi0mcn have no must support. I work ua an
• •"<' ~ ·u.-~ -~~-·~~ ·~-~· -·
1
---· ~============~=====================~--~~~~~m~I~~~ ~~·~·~ :.;: .:~,'""' , ".:~.:.:"!.;; ~ =.,. '""" ~~°""'"' day. Yesterday, a 21-year-old c:a1e l;IU(; ..... ;-;U<'W'.o;"";~;"i"'i .... ill!>i1i•w;·;;;;;;;i;iiii~iiil to the hospital, pregnant with No.
Ou R WORLD-~·hat. the perf,,1 -cllmQ r, ... an \'P~"\lf'{',Jn ica.t ,.r r.ncv·' s. She bas had a baby every year
"' I \\ Mh 'II r· d ( Since age 16, never married. hu
.... """''"'' MtlA'Aft ·-·"'8UllA ~ .. •INltAMIA ,..._.Ar' .... ,.... .... ~~ ,..,,...,.,.. _.. ~ ...,,_ e Ni«: Warooce
" 1'4 ~'>tell 1,_na.J ()l'f 917~ !>AOIU.
·-KNTIDOICJEiii""Oi!i!iil" 1--C>_Cl"_W_J
German Home Bakery
Wedding Cakes "The Old-
Fash•on Way•· 2950 Grace Ln
C M Call for info 540-0281
The Wedding Showcase
runs every T hurs,
F-ri, Sat & Sun .
cl)l 1N fJ)MI Nl6
On The Bay at Newport
Elegant Saturday
Rece ptions 11 am -4 pm
Complete Catering &
Full Service Bar
Contact Mark
850-5112 ....................... ,
: Your ad can I
: be seen here I
: Call Candy ~
: at 642-4321 J • ext. 310 '··••tt•..-..·······
l 1,•1<.1 • al'l'. ~ l'fl' }•lU 111 IM'Cplnjl 11('1.'an Vtl,,., and
CLASS CU IS IN E IS Ml.J1tcrranean •m >trlC that; r•qt1i1itcly prcpan..J. ~·w ~:!~c:;:J°~~ ~=~s and bu
-d thl· 54'\'rll' f,,.. tru~ n.-mark1bk Jimn~. lK'k1 ~\.m· al The tragic victims are tbc ENHANCED BY FINE fht· ~4tcrlnint ll1lton in Hunlmi:ton Rcalh,(',\ children. We are now acci.na the
SPARKLING WATER. moo l\l,rj, l·,,.~1 H1i:h..ay .t llunltn.:t1111 Stn.,·I third generation of Medlcaid
Weddine, Photoe;aphy
Stills & Video
843-9231
CAKES BY APRIL
All occasio ns,
reasonable prices
631-6543
(~OOl 822-SI ~I. (71~J 900-SI '1-!F. families. Somethin' must be done
NOW. I know this sounds c:rvel
Venetian Gondola Getaway
Z in••"''."'"''~'~,,."~ L ~ 17' • C h.tmi»p ,.. ·~ Coa•f • c.r1 < .. ''"'" .a1f'\ Ji ;e L ,#!.,. N[W~AT BEACH a·"'nlri~n (714) 675-4704
~ Wf.IJDI" • CIUW1.S
Nil RE<Uf/OV ~
A wuqu:tl1 romatlrlC INI pmontlll!fd
"ddina " cchtt of our tw0
( ., ... .. . .. '\-c
) ) • c (
CIBIO more
but why should hard-worma.
responsible taxpayers have to
s ubsidize the irresponaible,
careless behavior of these three.
four and five-time repcaten7 If a
woman is on Medicaid, hu had
two children, is not married, ii not
attending school and is not seckin.g
employment, she should have her
tubes ried or be put on birth
control and not be rewarded with
more money with each new baby.
Do I sound
bitter? Well, I
am. Please, Ann,
print this letter.
Maybe it will
ma kc a
d i ffere nce. ··
C on c ern e d ,
Upset R.N. In
Michigan
Dear
Concttned: I can ...._ __
undentand your
aqer but this b
America, not
Nul Gnmany.
We don't 1tmllu
-l•ulm I
women. Wbat we need It ~
federal and atate funds to edllcate
tbOM rtptaten and p,.e diem
hope. 1laeJ must uackntand Cbt
the road tbq are travdlaa le8dt
nowt.en. 'fhe7 alto need beak
laatrvdlon on birth control lk....
non-Judameatal 1oclal werbn
wlto .,..k tlltlr lanpqe.
Flowtrs
speak foudrr.
than words ...
• ( 1mq11r flm11/ dtJ rtf •
I
~rn 111, tlit / ftr1hof' Ol!'O
'""" 1950
1'1H l:ml I ?lb llrt'«'I
Crr.ta 1W iw. C4 9Xil1
714 •645 •Hl44
,,,.,, ..
• • • •
• di. 3.~ ~.:; .... tm pr 11i11• la I JAfK'I
COftat Oanlea la 19171 It ......... ..._ar,..._
8rtU. aucn..c.a llld Cltllca.
O..Ubalte1thebllel ~ ~.,.. ...... ~~-....... .....
11ae 'J1anea of I~ called "a
bold atroke." Tbe ~ ol
LODdon called ill .. prelDlere
'Mll"6ccat .... ilDOllJ d ~
DoWeU'1 ~ u director ol the
~ ... tbe l!Oldnll '"' ,..... lad of a lplendoUr that reflecta; in
an entirety oripaal ~.the wealth
of St. Petenbara ..• Dowell i..
with the aid o1 his team and
company, met a &iPntic challcnae
triumphantly."
Works by thrc~ Royal
cborco1raphera comprise tbc
McOed bill; Sir Frederick Albtoo'•
"Sccnea de ballet," ca1lod an
.. uaqualified masterpiece" by The
Ne. Y~ Times; Sir Kenneth
MacMillan 's new "Winter
Dreama," hailed u "a maneloul
diltWation of O>ekhov's play (The
Three Sisten)" by The London
= lcwlMd; wl.,..... ··•iA•••n• I Cafe," ID 111N011tl"'1 ..., ...
pol!dca1IJ ~ C... DI I hll
""" ... ,,.. d t..dcP called ~ ... dl11rtll wt -='• ....__ ...... at CcM•t 0...... for c:Mtr I .tee.de."
Tbe llofll'• enppmeat at The
Caater will be ill °"" ~ iD tbe .....,_ Ualted Slata and
tt.e CODduilOa OI a natioMI tour
tbat WW tab tbe 145-memt>er
ealelllble of dancers and crew to
just three other Ameriean cities:
New Y~ Miami and Austin. It
alto marb the fmt time The
Royal bu performed on the West
Cout lince 1CJ79.
nctets for The Royal Ballet are
$20 to S6S, and will be available at
The Center'• bClll officie, 600 Town
Center Dme in Costa Mesa, or at
any Ticket.Malter outlet, including
May Company, Music Plus and
Tower Records. To purchase
ticketi by phone, call 740-2000.
For morq infonnatiotl. call SS6-
ARTS.
10:30 11:00 11:30
.. ....
!IC' I
.. f
~
J • I .. 1 • ------~------------.....;~.........__...I
l't1 .... June • 119t ..
-------~ ....... ~
I ....................... ~ I I 4$, 1, 4i.JQ. 1, filO
2 ----rot 117, 'a, a; l:JO, 10 _._.Mf ..._M '714119 .... , .. ' .. -... .. ,. .............. ~ .. iJ IS,, ••• I, 10!15 Wllll lllW.__,...._,c;...,
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8J0·6990
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661·0111
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581·5880
EL TORO
581·950 0
-••--T by Ill K1•re ~G~A!;~!!•!•!l!:.D!_ ____ ..,
aacua --ir""T'-.._
"Mirrors are there to remind us
what we look like in case
we forget."
I OOt/T ICNOW WHICH
AHN0'!'5 fAE TMi llOST ..
'10\I AHl1 THAT 5TUPIP
81.ANKE T ...
r-~~~~~~~~~~~-.saos
by Brad Anderson
"It seems to me t've seen that
paw somewhere before."
FRED BASSET
rT'9 THIS
W/l.'f HOME .
\...
I 11-llNIC fT'S
TMI~ WA.Y .
(
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a# ~.r 'MMl.IC/1 ........ •-..-.J
People who WMJY lboUt the rain "'
"" ~ -Ing,_ only looll I~ your gutton.
byJelf MecNelly ~===========: by Hank Ketchum DSIOll9
A~IPe . TBS llSJllACS ..
by Alex Graham
NANCY by Jerry Scott ROSE 18 ROSE . by Pat Brady
ARL O AND JANIS
I AAvt A Cll.'IPLAillT ...
1'H£!£ WAS SO•H~IHb
WAS i'A>ING TO
l ~OU A!<l<!f
* 15,000,000
by Jimmy Johnson FUNKY WIA'DRBEAN
by Brian Basset DRABBLlt
EC:iAt> ! M~ 8X11
~~1),l(EM
()6 B'f All~ ~
~ER OWEHStON ~
A'Sa:OO'lm.! Q
/
by Tom Batluk
by Lynn Johnston
" urrs DEFtETHIO ~-GcXX>~
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June27 July 5 ... ,, ..... .. J) a..ln9e " " 11 .. ,_,... ,. S6 ~ IS " v-.. ..
COW• Heights sex swingers' club isn't a buliness, attorney .._
SANTA ANA -A Cowan
HeiJl'ts "swingers club" wasn't a
bus1neas, but rather, • place where
couples and single women went
"because the members believe in
an alternative lifestyle," an
attorney argued Thunday.
"I expect the evidence will
convince you that this was a club,"
attorney William Kopeny, who
represents Stephen Michael
Cohen, said in opening statements
in Cohen's misdemeanor trial.
"It was exclusive --you couldn't
be just anyone who walked off the
street and paid $'40 (for
admission)," Kopcny said.
SACRAMENTO -An attempt
to limit investotS' and COMultants'
access to tnJstees of the nation's
largest pension fund was under
study Thursday in the Senate,
aimed al blocking one-on-one
influence peddling by well-heeled
special interests.
The proposal, au thored by the
chairman of the Assembly public
emplormcnt committee, would
prohibit real estate consultants,
financial advisers, money managers
and othen from directly wooing
board members of the $63 billion
Public Employees Retirement
System.
Instead, people with investment
proposals or other schemes would
be required to deal only with the
pension fund's executive staff.
Currently, representatives of
companie with business before
board arc not barred from
personally lobbyina board
members. The latest financial
disclosure statements filed by the
13 board members with the Fair
Political Practices Commission,
show extensive 1ift-1ivin1 by
investors, consultants and others,
From A1
The FAA wu soundly criticized
Monday for rcaulations that
require rederal approval for any
restrictions on aircraft at John
Wayne Airport. And county
airport officials fear lack or local
control could make their search
for a eecond county airpc>rt nearly
unpoafble. Local residents f car
FAA resulation could weaken
John Wayne's stringent noise
r trietions.
"Jn ono aense, any hurina ii
positive becaute thia ia an o~ina
thina that isn't aoina to end.' said
Newport Beach Councilwoman
Jean Wan. ••If this is an effort to
appcuo tho aty baaed on what's
happened, lt isn't aoina to do u
any aood to t tify. BUt I wouldn't h•na that kind of politicltina on
blm (Rep. Chrit ~}. I believe he
But Deputy District Attorney
Stephanie George said "The Oub"
was "not 1ust a social enterprise,"
but a business run for Cohen's
profit in an area zoned for homes.
"We believe that when you bear
the testimony of the witnesses, you
will conclude an adult businc
was run by Mr. Cohen, and it was
in a residential area," George said.
Cohen, '44, is charged with
violating county zoning Jaws by
running an adult business within
SOO feet of a residential area.
The Trabuco Canyon resident
never concealed that the house
was a place where couples could
including free trips, food and golf.
The bill by Assemblyman Dave
Elder, D-Long Beach, quietly
emerged from the Assembly
earlier this week on a 74-0 vote. It
had been placed on the so-called
"consent calendar,'' IS part of a
block of noncontroversial billJ
approved en masse. ·
The measure, AB2121, now is in
the Senate Rules Committee,
where it ;awaits assignment to a
policy c.ommittee in the upper
house.
Elder said the "no c.ontact"
arrangement was necessary to limit
pressures on individual board
members to consider investment
schemes. The bill would "prohibit
communications between PERS
board members and influence
peddlers with businc before the
board." Elder said.
He said "investment product
people" have aqressively pitched
proposals at pension fund trustees,
and c.ontcnded that bis bill would
help block unsound investments,
such as "the S2SO million CateUus
stock debacle."
-By the As oclatcd Pres
i' aenuincly concerned.··
Althouah 1hc much-criticued
airport noise regulations may soon
become law, Coir said they can still
be chan1ed.
"Regulations are nc~cr a done-
deal.'' CoJt 1a1d. "They arc always
subject to revision based on
comment and experience. I{ the
regulations prove unsatisfactory to
111 parties. you will have the buis
for swift conare ional action.''
Newport Beach City Councilman
Oarencc Turner, pruidcnt or the
1r roots >Jrport Worklna Group,
said he believes Congress may
amend the national noiJo policy
because o f wldoaproad
clisaat faction .
.. Tho hearings will provide an
opportunity to taltc a reuoncd
look at the l1w under ~ubl c
tcrutiny," Turner said, .. which is
the way it should ha~ been dono
in tho first p&ecc!'
exchange partners for sex, and
both sides agree that the case has
nothing to do with what went on
inside the house at 9881 Brier
Lane in the exclu sive
neighborhood.
What is al issue, attorneys said,
is whether The Oub -as ii was
known to patrons and as Cohen
advertised it in locaJ publications ·
-was a business as defined by
c.ounty ordinances.
George told the nine-woman,
five-man jury that because Cohen
advertised, modified his home,
sent ncwsl~tters and allowed
patrons t o charge their
membership on ma1or credit cards.
The Oub was a business.
Kopeny, while acknowledging
that what happened in the house
was between adults, it was not a
true business, and that Cohen
collected mo ney only for
maintenance and the lease on the
property.
He argued that sheriff's
investigators believed the aexuaJ
activity going on 1n the house WIS
morally wrong, though not illepl,
and then looked for a crinunal
violation they c.ould use to shut
the place dOwn.
"I think you may conclude that
the prosecution witne s have a
bias," Kopcny told the jurors.
Prosecution witnc Gary Jones,
an Orange County sheriff's
investigator, testified he got club
newsletters from Cohen after
Cohen contacted him to find out 1f
detective~ were investigating the
establishment.
Jones said be sent an
undercover tnvestigator to the
Bncr Lane house to 1gn up, and
that afterward, mvcs1igators began
getting monthly new letters at a
post office box.
The newsletters contatned a
telephone number that Jones said
linked the caller to an answerina
machine, which played a tape of
Cohen de3Cnbing The Oub.
Responding to George's
questions, Jones aid investigators
saw advertiscmcnu foT 1be Oub
in the classified sectioa of the
Orange County Reaister last
February and March.
Neither George nor Jones,
however, said under what beading
in the classified section the ads
appeared.
Jones also said investiptors
found ads in a magazine t>r
swingers that de cribed the
organization as a pnvatc club for
adults "on the grounds of a lavish
Oranac County c lite."
COLORING CONTEST
July 17·21 •Cost• Mesa
One w1~ ~each age group will bet~
Af'b Exhtbll~ of the fOi'91'oundt I
• fntna muit be ~lartd by o thtld 1n ~ of the ~ Qf'OUP' l1Pid ~ Name, oddma and age ~ ""'st be ~W ii\.
• Motl fini.Md entries to Orange County foir, ,Speciof Contittti, 88 Foir Dm., CoMa Mwl, CA 92626 fntr MU\I be receM.d by~ pm, My l 8
• Entri.a w1U be jlJdged ot 1 pm, Friday, JutY t 9 in the fine Ml Oeportm.nt Wtnr1ing entr..a WJU bed·~ Ohiw 1uda'
• All judged entr1• moy be J> tie! up ot the Spec10I Contntt o.ponm.nt aft. the Fo", Monday, Jvly 29, from 10 om tO 5pm
~ Gn>uJ> D .s & una. 0 H CJ 9.11
"1*11MF'-,.t I J ullf ...................... ,..~caNlf
.. •
..
' I .
... "' ••• ., ..,.
•I.17th
Coal8 M111, CA
17th and Tustin
(714) 141-1774
Hidden behind the 8 station
For Business
Or Pleasure
* Tour * Cruises * Business
* Pleasure * Air *Hotel
*Auto
'N THINGS •m
Is Your Answer
369 E 17th St. I I HOURS: ~42-4403 M-F 9-5:30 PM Costa Mesa '-· ____ __,_ SAT 10-3:00 PM
SERVING ALL ORANGE COUNTY
G
and Accessories •
THE GREY GOOSE. INC.
)69 E"5f 5EvENTUNTH SnEET • COSTA MESA
~642-7803
0,.. -· """" Fr!Mlf, 10,00 lo 6,00 s.i...,, 10,00 .. 5,00
C.llVlf KUii
Ml 11. lUINI
AIJlll MN
MNPll*E
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Lil (lAJl(IN(
SI. )Jiii
AllllNNI YlllADlll
AllllUH MW
, --Ill nncz ntr. ITIU. ; r 1:1 'l
t I I \I \""t I \\I I
' ' ' .. ' l' I • • • • ' I 1 M
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DESIGN CARPET
DESIGNER'S SEl.ECTION OF FLOOR COVERING PRODUCTS
SAVE UP TO
50°/o & MORE
Tl1e
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A full .er.Ice &aclld. aeetauaat
• English Fare • Afternoon Tea •
• Complete Lunch Menu lncludlnJ( soups & salads •
• Sunday Champagne Efrunch •
Come browae around Tea &
Sympathy for that Special
Victorian gift
• Imported English China • Antiques
Large Selection of British Foods & Teas
369 E. 17th Street Coeta Meea :;~·
645-4860 .
CALIFORNIA'S LAROEST SELECTION OF HARD
TO FIND SCOTTISH, IRISH AND WELSH BOOKS
~·masslmo ... I -Food .... _ •c.torint I
Beauty Supply Super Store For ALL
Your Bea·uty Needs 1• • ..... st11$199 1'• c. flt ; _,_., __ I
I -°'"'. ~ • °"""' Plus C:olS More No -""' -• e,,.... 115191 I 1-s2°" I *3°&f I Medium Pina I L>rp pizza
I ""I."· fl:" ..L ""\~,-
, ..... 17th It. . 369 E. 17th St. 642·8910 Costa Mesa
HAIR BY PAULA
&co.
Stylist of Best Quality
For Hair and Nalls
369 E. 17th St. STE. 22
Colfa Meea .CA 92627
~ 118 648-45t6
COUPON
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r ~ 7""91 °""" 7111'11
r.----;:::::::::::::::::::;::;:;;;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=::=:;::---___,1~--VJ;ilV----'
405 F . •
• •
•,, •
17th Street Jack In the Box
.._ ___ ___;;;.,..._Pac_if_1c_Coast_H_wy_--'-______ _u 369 East 17th Street
•
• • ., ' J
Mesa Verde
set for big
doings with
U.S. juniors
Mola Verde CoGnby CUI> la Coota
-wW -tbe Ualied s.a ... Golf -doa u. s. Obit',_
C!wnpiouhlp""""' 2-7, 1993 """""""' to,_ A. W.W., Jr., paonl ..._r
of the dllb.
"We're atremol)'
... ,d IOU.. the
-dlunpionlhip Mre," Wallb uya. "Our _ ..... 1oq
tnlditlooinbootlng
outatandina: profeuional
..eata in the put and
we are very hawy to
baYe thll top junK>r Ill II L amateur event at our 22 coune."
lllHllJ "!,°: ~01':;9 ~w:.,
G If d:;,ned by Billy Bell.
0 Girl junior aolfcrs
who have not ,,Ct
reached their 18th birthday by the day or
the final match and hold USGA
Handicap lndue1 not exceeding 12.4 are
eligible to enter the competition.
This year's event will be played at
Crestview Country Cub ln Wichita. IC.I.,
July 29<-Au1. 3. In 1992 it will be ployed
at Meridian Hills CC in Indianapolis,
Aug. 3-8.
Mesa Verde has produced several
outatandiq junior girls golf en in the ~ "
and the Orange County area has had
several otbcn over the yean.
0 •
Newport Beach Country Oub golf
director Jerry Anderson Is busy this year
as president of the PGA of Southern
California.
One of the latest innovations he has
heloed incorponte is the formation of a Oolf Hall of Fame for Southern
California.
"The main purpose for creating the
Golf11all of Fame of Southern California
is to recognize men and women, amalcun
and profeasionala, who have diltinguishcd
thcmsctvcs either through their playing
ability or their contributions to the game
in Southern California," he says.
A selection committee is in the
development staaes and will include .
amateur aotfen. POA aolf profcuionals
and memben of.tbc>media who haVc }a;
b~nd and arc knowledgeable of
golf 1n the Southland.
For more information, contact the
SCPGA executive orroces It ( 714)
PRO·GOLF.
0
Did you notice what Brian Oaar did
this past weekend at the Anheuser-Busch
Cassie in Williamsburg. VA. 7
Going into the final round, he was tied
for the lead and finished in a tic for fifth
place, picking up a check for $38,000.
This IS$Ul'CI him of his best-ever year on
the PGA Tour with $189,958 already won.
Oaar wu the winner of the Newpon
Ou.sic Pro-Am in 1990 and went on that
year to win $161,356. This year he bu
been among the top SO golfen most of
the time.
0 Congratulations are in order (or Sandy
Galbraith o( Fountain Valley who plays
See HANDY/II
Huntington Beach
surf team romps
to national title
OCEANSIDE -The Huntington
Beach High surfing team captured its
11th straight National Scholastic Surfing
Association Team Season title Monday at
the Oceanside Pier.
The Oilers, led by the brother tandem
of Barry and Jeff Deffenbaugh continued
their dominance over the national high
school surfing. scene
Individual competition wu also held at
the four-day event, w;1h winners to be
announced at toni&bt's 6 p.m. banquet in
Carbbad.
Barry Deffenbaugh, the recently·
graduated team captain, wu a finalist in
the Open Seuon Individual oompetitlon,
u wu Huntlnaton Beach teammate Jay
Larson .
In addition to the De!tfcnbauah
brothen -Jeff will be the team captain
next fall as a tcnk>r -Verdone credited
the. contribuOon1 of Juon Merril, Juon
Ruuo, Joh.n Zimmerman and Oreg
Pacilio, a1 well 11 1irl1 divl1Jon
competitors Sunshine M•hler, April
Hawkins and Maria CerdL Bodyboardcn
Matt Whrer, Adam Leche and Shannon
Henry wcro also piYolal to the team
victoty, occordina to Verdone. Alona whh the indMdual wit1ner1. the
lino! oelectlorts lor the NSSA Nolionol
Teom will be revealed tonlah•· The top 17
surfen ud one bodybouder w;u be
c:hosen from amon1 the 500 who -led in the NSSA N1tionola. The
cbooen lew will rapraent the :.Jnhed
Stat•• In International competition
throuaftollt the nut ,..,.
..., NSSA N1tloMI Teom memben
..... iltahl .. d owraM ....._. .. Tom
=--::~---·nd _,, ... °""'-
•
• __ _. .. , .... I ...
- -. ----------------
Irrelevant Week XVI
111'11111 Pl'lllCI ..... -
llJllM-............
Lury Wook.e did not -.0 the
Prince or Irrelevance by riding a
rnotoreycJe in hia birthday aui~ thouaJ>
legend hu lt that one warm Ohio ni&ht
the quarterback saw no need for a run
uniform. Nor did W.Ue. become the P
ol I by tluowin& go~ bllls 37$ feet,
though be did ihot one day lully clothed.
Lury Wonk•'• thrillioa ~ to
Irrelevancy bepn 1t Onick Noll a high
scbool, Oeveland Benedictine. It took
him to Pitttburgh ind bowl·pme
heroics at the top or college football.
From the top he chose a slide downhill,
returning to ~land and Don Shula'1
alma ntatcr, John Carroll Univenity.
And now, rrvc yean after it all i>egan,
Wlnlle bM -dnfted by the Super
-rlw-ploo New VOit Gionta.
Then _, be noucb money involved
1n W..U'I du1 because when )'OU're
the ... picli la the Notionol F:.::li l.Aque'a dnft, opnta don't roll
wheelburowl of silver dollan to your
doo<. Al tbe 33oltb man taken in the
annual chooling·up-aida, you may act a blsb three-figure bonuo to work N
caftftOll rodiler at summer camp. And
maybe you'll get to eat with the big boys
al the training t1ble. Other than that,
bein& cbolcn lut in the NFL draft gets
you nothing.
Well, not exactly nothing. It does
mike you Prince of lnelevance, u we'll
e1'J>lain shortly.
By the time Wanke wu drafted in the
Larry Wanke and Mickey Mouse were the toast of Disneyland on Thursday.
18th hour, he_, poyioa in.di
attention. Eisbt or nine NFL teams 1'9d
~ blm out ond he expocled • coll
from one, pcot.bty tbe Oianl.I, becaUK
they'd shown tho most interest
throuabout hil last teuon at John
Car.roll.
0, ond by, -d e1me to ESPN that
he'd been drolled by the Gionta. And
'then the tetcpbone rang in Wanke'•
home in ~laad.
The convenation might havl: gone
""""thlna like tltia:
"Mr. Wuke, tbil ii Irrelevant Week
calling rrom Newport Beach, C81if."
"Hub?"
"Every year for 16 yean now we have
had Irrelevant Weck out here and we
honor the very Jut player chosen in the
NFL drift. We think of blm " the
Prince of lrrelevoncc. Tllil ,..,-, )'OU we
our Prince."
"I thouaJ>t the Giutta would be
colliog. Thia 1 job or what?"
"Our founder, Paul Sa&au.. worb
from the motto, •0o eomeUUac nice fot
someone for no reuoo.' He created
Irrelevant Weck becaute it atandl for
nothin1 other than havlaa • good time.
We hope )'OU'U come to Southern
California i.n June and be our guest for
a week of fun and [rolica in the sun. It's
au at our expense, Mr. Wanke.'' ·
"Please, don't be so formal. Just c:all
me Prinoe."
Until that phooe call, Larry Wanke
had never heard of Irrelevant Weck. But
S..PRINC£,9
Irrelevant king
' gets lightheaded
at Disneyland gala
By Howanl L. Handy
OrWl(ll Colsl °"' Plal
ANAHEIM -It might be said that it
was a Mickey Mouse production.
Then again, Larry Wanke might add
that ii was also an irreleYant situation.
Whatever it might be called, Wanke,
Ml. Irrelevant XVI WIS the suest of
honor 11 Disneyland on Thursday -a
day proclaimed Irrelevant Day 11
Disneyland by the (::i.mcd theme park
here.
Wanke, the 33Sth and Jut player
taken in the NationaJ football Leque
draft this year by the World Olompion
New York Giants, was presented to tbc
patrons at Disneyland durina the
afternoon "Celebration U.S.A." parade
down Main Street. He rode on the same
no.t with Mickey Mouse who earlier
had re~pre1ented the Lowsmaa Trophy
to Wa.ntc to make it official. The trophy
is donated by the University Athletic
Oub of Newport Beach.
The parade climaxed a km& day at
Disneyland for Wanke, bis mother
Leah, Sergeant M. P. 'Red' Whittaker
and family and othen aiding with this
year's Jm:lcvant Weck production.
Paul and Bev Sa lata, the seemingly
indefatigable Irrelevant Weck
impresarios, bowed out of the picture
complc1cly on Thursday.
But it was still a Salata production.
Daughter Melanie (Salata) Fitch hos ted
the day of continuous action to keep it
au in 1hc family.
Melanie led the group wearing Tee-
shirts emblazoned with New York
Giants on the front and Wanke 33' on
the back. Irrelevant Weck stick.en were
also prevalent on those not wearing one
or the Tee-shins.
Whittaker's wife Patty and sons
M~acl and James were along IS were
S..WANKEM
Vikings lose some of their muscle -Stormont quits
Too nmtJ holl'S, not Illa 11111111 lllld, Wll Illa ._ llOllll
Byillnyf---....... HUNTINOTON BEACH . -Bonnie
Sformon~ who helped the Morino High
&iris athle.tie Pl'Of'am gain a reputation u
-of the beat ,. Onnp c:...niy durina
her c~t.,.., te"""', hN resianed u the
lehool 1 Pis 11htetk diredOr.
St.._,t, • pli)oibl educotion teacher
the put 22 ,..n 11 Morino, olao c:ooclted
te.nnil for 1$ MllOM. She will remain at
the achoo! ... -ond deportment
c:oonttn1tor of the P. . Dcpanmenl.
'
'
Boya othletic director Lury Doyle will
act u interim Jirb athletic director un1ll a
permanent IUOCU90t can ~ l\llDCd .for
the spriiia ICme<r.
St....-~ on 18-yeor l.qllno Beoch
mident, dted the timl demando of the
potltloo u the prlmoiy re110n for her
stcppina down, and exprcased a deaire to
rem1ln oc:tM In ins the P<Olflm
throup '°""' buqet aua 11rpted ot
athtetica.
"I'm not w1lkln1 IWIJ from a fiaht,"
he explained. "I ¥el)" much enJG1ed
,.
digina in ind flahti., ond l hope I <1n
utc whatever CKpCnt1e I've dcveJQped
..., the ,..._ to -Ill the pr-. In
the yeart to CIOIM. But the hwlrs
demanded by the job reolly beclme too
dilficult.""
Stormont 11td she •woke da.Qy at •:30
a.m. to make the .U..minute drive tb
Huntlnaton Beech, and often didn.'t
retum until 9:l0 p.m. "'011 fn and dtj
ou~ l tried to be there fo< Ill the -a.wt all the 1e1ms. but that didn•t ~aw
moch timo to pt thi.,.. doM ot home,"
she said.
"I"'° -1 hed 1 lot of the ..... I
Kt out to do ond I'm pwd of .a ...
coaches t\te worked whh over.,..,......"
tQnOQO.t continued. 1'htirH -• about suspendlna •tl!lletlca f• -.
(Huntinaton Beodl U-llillo ~
Oiruict, which rellly -., -.. I'll
hopelul ond .... , .... tltOI tllo ...... (<If
Education) ond the P>••• ... lie wll
not totalty e.rtdic:ul alNsda iii -
.district.
Stormont rapi..d .... ...., i. 1•
afte.r Ward '*-• • ... aN A ..... •
nW•CDls ••
··---"'SC--...... -...... •a......a.... ..
4 p.a. -no C''' .......... WOL J ......... ----~ IJ,,..,
! ,... -Olkawo WW. .. .. it""....,..· 'WON. -.. 10 Lm. -CPQA dlt IQ iJ I ... QMllll
I p.a. -P0A. 54. ,_.. a....k. °"""" 1 2:J0p.a._.,,....,......_..., ... "-""N, 6 pa. -'"" a,..,.. Tkbt. ...........
10 a.ia. -N19CA IMadDMJ. ESPN. ...........
• 10 .... -OftWloN l'1dllil free DoCltv,
Ill.(-~-.. J I -... -om.bots l"ld-a from Kw Orlcom(tap<d~ESPN. · --~....... -Wmfal Olea U0. Prime
l:JO p.m. -1991 SCCA Oanipioosbip,
ESPN.
.S p.m. -Draa R1cla1, NHkA
Sprinanrional1, ESPN. ·-11 •A -FfOllll Oeuwliccr, Fla. (taped).
SporuO.annel.
T .....
11:30 a.m. -Wimbledon, u.riJ'·round
OOYer.,e, Ounnel 4 .
.. d ..
Noon -Middkwci&bts: Leonardi w.
Hc1m1, 1989, ESPN. -12:30 p.111. -Spon1 C1lvac1dc,
NASCAR 200, TNN
4:30 p.m. -Wide World oC Sportt,
Channel 7.
6:50 p.m. -U.S. Olympic Gold, U.S. w.
Canada, TBS.
9 p.m. -Rodeo, from Fort Sml1h, Ark..,
ESPN.
11 JO p.m. -Lon& Bc.ach Mar1thon
{taped). Prime Tk:kcl.
In Hodey
1 p.m. -U S Trial1, gold medal pmc:,
Pnmc Ticket. .......
) p.m -PBA, Orcaon Open, Channel 7.
S.1kethall
b pm -WBL, Eric Al Calaary,
.,..._
Rick Fehr lines up a putton the 17th green in Thursday's openign
round of the St. Jude Classic, one of the ....-eekend1s big golf events.
Spo111Ch1nncl
AITA• fl'OOlbti\I
8 pm -Albany 11 Tampa Bay, Prill'IC:
Ticket
RADIO
BaHhliU
4:0S p.m -Dod1cn 11 A1t1n11, KABC
(790)
7:05 p.m. -Tcu1 1t Anaels, KMl'C
(7 10), XTRA (690)
7:0:5 p.m -Sin Diego 11 Sin Fr1ncisco,
KFMB (760).
SUNDAY
TELEVISIOf'I
B•Hhmll
!0 1 m -Philldclph11 It New Yotk
\icts, WOR
11.20 1.m -SI l..001! II Chicago Cubs,
WGN
5 p.m. -OodJCrt II Atlanta, ESPN.
Golt
10 1.m. -l.PGA 0.1mpioatbip, Q1r1nct •• 12:30 p.m. -PGA., St. JIMlcl O..k:,
Channel 2.
2:30 p.m. -Senion, Sou1trwcatem Bell
Oauk:. ESPN. M_._,
10 1.m. -IMSA OTP Ca"" Continental
VIII, ESPN.
11 a.m. -Dcko Voyaaer 2.50. TNN
M19C~0•-
10 a.m. -Rodeo fn:m Tacoma, Wash.
(!aped), Prime Tidtcl.
I p.m. -U.S. Open Table Tennis, PrUnc
Ticket.
4:30 p.m. -Speedw1y Sund1y (taped),
SponlOianncl.
7 p.m. -Je1 Skiin&. from Sacr1men10
(11 ped), Prime Tide!.
'85FORD '8410VOTA
ESCORI COAQl l A
MJIOloC "11QAC ..,,.,, OLtRlCF
l.C6>1C0157 LCNXa>o l.C.llRMl37
$2943 $3979 $3997
8 p.m. -U.S. Olympic Showcuc,
SporuCb1r1nd.
"""" 11 :30 a .m. -NCAA Outdoor
Oiampiom.hipc. Cb&Mcl 2. -· Noon -Wimbledon, e1rly-round1,
Channel 4, -Noon -1'bc Ollo 0111ic, Prime Ticket. ...... ......
1.30 p.m. -Tiie lrilb Derby, ESPN. ........ lhd•&
5 p.m. -From AUJU5la, 01. (Uiped),
Prime Tlckt1.
IW>JO
BaHblll
1:0:5 p.m. -Tezu at Angeli, KMPC
(710), XTRA (690).
4:05 p.m. -Dodacn at A!l1n11, KA8C
(790).
'8510YOTA
PfCK.U' """-"""""'"' $4923
'8310YOTA '8510VOTA '89 VOU<SWAGEN '83VOLVO
CANRf COAQl l A GOLF :llG>l.
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l.Cl1t-f-Gtl3 LC .. LSL11S ...,_,,,,. U::..H.E373
$4983 $5482 $5839 $5997
'8510YOTA '84 NSSAN '8510YOTA '86 OflVSl.ER
CANRf :UIZIC TU'l90 <EICAGT LB!ARON CCffl.
""°-""CASS fED}UTO.T·lt.PS NJIO,AC:u«Ja "11Q1EA11£11
lCa:BT415 LC""*1 l.C.lltM4G u::.. ......
$6484 $667J $6686 $6845
'BBNISSAN '87VOU<SWAGEN 'lflNSSAN '85HONDA
SENmAWAGON JETTA VAN XE PRBIJDESI
"""-"" NC,UHXJ' "11D,AC NJIQUHXJ'
l.C~ll ""'"""" """"""' l'CcaFft
$6988 $7719 $7923 $7966
'86 Ya.VO '86BlltN
744GLE '25•
MJ10,UHXJ' IUO<-..V
LC.fl"°'7 l.£'mu911
$9857 $10,488
-111111 HARIOR ILVD. COSTA MEJA• (714) 722·2HI
NBW -I.all Abdo. tM -~~-_,..flodafl•wl.•lda ~ .....,... .. ____ .., ~ ·----..,.._ ......... ---c:orLMb•Clk la die NPL .... year.
"!._ llOll ... -I -Ind not _......,. worb." Alado said in an Interview on NBCI
"Finl ...,_ wflh Maria SluMr," whicb will air
Saturday .
In the lntoMew, be IUd that wbu he wu
playina. 7~ -t of tlle playell ill tlle 1e.,... iook aleroidl or IOIJMI, fotm ar performance
enhanccinenL He also told Shriver that be took
11el0ids almoat all of hil 14 J<Oll la tlle 1e.,...
with the Denver Bronc:ol, Oeveland Brown& and
Loo Angeles Raiden.
"And it aot me where 1 wanted, but it allO got
me very sick." the 42-ycar-old Aludo 11id. He
laid that in an ctron to try to make the Raiden
tcam last year, ~1 used a ccrtlin steroid that
caused me lo ruin my immune system."
Aludo wu diagnosed with a rare form of brain
lymphoma last April. His treatment includes
radiation, oral cortisone and chemotherapy.
"My dreams arc different now than they once
were," Alzado said. "You know, before I wanted
to go to the Super Bowl. ... It's not those things
anymore. It's different lt'a just a workingman's
dream. To work, to have 1 nice car, a nice house.
You know, to live decently. To treat people
dcccntfy,"
"To £ivc," Shriver said.
Televlsion -Radlo
lr•lll ,111' tu I Ill
• Cudinalt-Cubs, WON, 11:20 p.m.
• Dod&cr.-Brwe1, TBS, Otanncl ti, 2:05 p.m.
• Wimbledon, HBO. S p.m.
•While Sm·Twins.. WON, S p.m.
• R1n1en·An1el1, SpofUQi.annel, 7:30 p.m.
TUmSION -· IZ.:20 p.•. -Sc. l.ollil tt Olic:IF Oat.._ WON.
2:0::5 p.•, -Dodfien 11 Adaa11 (doabkheadcr). TBS (ChulM!I
II joinl ill propcu 11 4 p.Jn.).
4.:JO p.111. -Major Leap: blMbl!I, ESPN.
S p.111. -Ok.aco Wllhc .SC. 11 M.inMtoca, WON.
7:l0 p.m. -Majot Lc~pe buebll, ESPN,
7:JO p.111. -Tcus 11 Anjot~ SpomOiannc.1.
10:)0 p .... -1971 Al £uc phlJOft': New Yort Y1nkca 11
Bai.IOI! (1apc}. l"rilnc TicU1.
Goll
I p.m. -Soetilon tour111111C111 from Kanus Oty, ESPN. y,,,.
S p.111. -Wimblcdoft cow.rap (dt.layed). HBO. ,,., ........
j p.111 -Nnt J~rvy Nonti ...s. Soutti paw. from Eut
R11tkrford. f'l.J .. WOR.
v.~u
8 p.111 -Pro beach competilion frocn Cape C-od, M.._ (~).
Prime Tlc:tct.
IO:lO p.111. -Pro beach rompcution from ~1,....11cr, Aa.
(!ape). SpoNCh1n11cl.
W.t1r 5kffac
11 p.111. -World Tou r oompclillon (l•pt), ESPf'I. -!2:l0 •.111. -H1-...d (h•d.> Soellkir Ope• (tape). ESPN.
RADIO ._ ..
2 p.m -Oodacn •I Allantt (6nubleheadt.f). KABC (190).
1 p.m. -San Frl.l'ldloo 11 Saa DieF. ICFMB (760).
7:30 p.111. -Tuu II Anpl1, KMPC {710), XTRA (690).
' MIAMI -Kevin Mackey ,figured --.,,..-
his coaching days were over when ><.
Ocveland State fired h~ l~t sum.me~ ~--
for abusing alcohol and cocaine.
That's why he'• happy to join a troubled
franchise in pro bukctball's mi.nor leagues.
On Thunday, Mackey was named head coacb
of the Miami Tropics of the United States
Basketball League.
"I'm surprised," the 44-ycar~ld Mackey 11id. "I
just couldn't believe it wu going to happen this
rast for me."
Mackey has been trying to rebuild hit life aincc
last July 13, when be wu ancstcd in Ocveland
shortly after leavin1 a suspected drug hOUte. He
admitted he had abused drup and aJoohol for
years and was fired by Ocvcland State, where he
had led a team to the final 16 of the NCAA
tournament in 1986.
Five days before his arre1t, Mackey signed a
rwo-year, $300,000 contract.
Al-Star 1111118 ...
NEW YORX -American League ~
veteran Joe Brinkman will be the
home plate umpire at the All-Star •
Game in Toronto on July 9.
Brinkman will be making his second All-Star
appearance. Also in the umpire crew for the All·
Star Game will be Ken Kaiser and Larry Young of
the American League and John McSherry, Jim
Quick and Greg Bonin or the National Lcaue.
It will be the first All·Star appearance for
Kaiser, YQung and Bonin. McSheny and Quick
have worktd rwo previous AU-Star Games.
-By Tiie Auodattd Pren
Quote ol the day
"This is the lon&est match I've played. I
b1ven't eaten a/roper lunch now for four
days, .. top-secdc Stefan Edberg after a win
over Marc Rasset, over a span of 73 hours at
Wimbledon.
WIN Ty son, Ruddock duel tonight
A l'KEETRJP
ABOARD AllTRAK. ••
AND Bit A TRAVEL
WRlTltJl FOR. A DAT
Look In Thund11y's paper
for complete details and
entry form lo an exclllng
getaway weekend!
LAS VEGAS -Strategy to
Mike T'ylon ii u simple as a
punch in the nose.
"I plan to knock him out," the
ronncr bca~ight champion nid
in discussina his tactic& for
tonight's rematch with Donovan
"Razor" Ruddock..
"Knock ... him ... out. There is
no elaboration. I beat him before
and I'll beat him again."
Tyson, who has scored 31 or his
the
COST~,fJIESA ROTARY
,
1 Co-S,,onsored by
• <t,, __ • ----Qalloft ,., , 1 "'" • ..., ""'
Thlll'ldar, Julr 4th , 1991 @ 7:00 p.m.
Orlnge Coast Le Bird College Stadium
.... .,.. II 7:GG •·•· • bt9!U ln1ll btl II 7:45 •·•·
1'1111111: ta.• fw llillllll, Cllll•• 11 • ....,, fllEI ... .. .....
.... CCMOl llMTl.D WATP ------.. _.. .. _ ............... --""""" ........ ....,
__ ...._...._ -·· COMTTNJPJ II I* ... -..
I'll •••• 0/1 w...Tt Le ..... lllAwll .. Olm .-. ...... --.. .... -.......
36 knockouts inside five rounds,
stopped Ruddock in the seventh
round March 18 at The Miracc,
1Jso the site or the 12-round
rematch.
Ruddock was knocked down in
the second and third rounds, but
was on his feet when referee
Richard Steele stos>ped the fl&hl
with 38 liCCOnds Jeri 1n the scw:nth
round.
Steele was roundly criticized for
stopping the match too IOOO, and
his oon1rovcni1l action dictated
the rem1tch ror which each f!Jhter
is guaranteed SS million. l)'lon
also will get a pcrcent1ge of pay-
pcr·view television revenues.
Mills Lane, a Nevada District
Court judse [rom Reno, will be
the referee this time. Lane
officiated 'J'yton's championship
victories O\ler Trevor Bcrbick,
Jame& "Bonccrusher" Smith and
Ton)' Tucker.
The first fight might have ended
in oontf"O't'Cny, but while ii wu in
progreu Tyson waa dominant. He
led by six points after six round!
on the cards of all lhrec judacs.
One of them wu Chuck Oiampa ot Lu Vesu, who wlU be a judae
for the rematch. Tho other judpa
arc Oalb)' Shirley and Art Lurie,
both of Las Veaas.
Alked If a different Ruddock
could be expected in the rln&
Friday n1$bt, Ruddoc;k n:p!locl:
"We'd better tee a different Razor
Ruddoct."
At least there'll be a heavier
Ruddoc;k,
Ruddock welah•d In at 238
pounds -10 pounds hcavJer thin
he WU for the fint Opt. Tyton
weighed 216 pounds, one ie.. than
hit welaht when he boat Ruddoek.
.,l'vt. 111fncd wry hard/' Mid
RuddOClt, a 27-year-old n11M of
Jamaica who llYes In Clnada. "I
have a pd dMI. I Mnted lo
come in at my natural .,...faht. I
•hlnk I ..... In a HO• IOO litbt lhe
1 ... 0 .... •
The ..,,. wcJahl maclo ...,. -... 11--.1 a lacitof dcdlcat!oo on RIMldocl't port.
-· nt.AJ01 t1rrl l'rw
I
I-I I . ' , --_.,at 1111 I...,,.. ' f
' • I 111'--,,,f .........
WIMBLEDON, En1land -
....._ \be •hlnp Andn Aplll
did not do, beaidcs win or k>le, In
hit wrclched relum to Wimbledon
WM lhow up in 1 white wetsuit
aod nlppen.
Th1t ltlirc wrouJd have been
tnore appropriate, certainly
fluhier, than the pronic white
dlHb he wore, even wilh tho lhigh-
lenJth, lkln·ti&hl undcr1hort1.
Not much hu p>ne ri&ht for
Apui 1ince hlt b111yhooed arrival
tq • tournament he Jpumed IO
loll&-Tradilion1 Sluff it. By now,
A.pal mutt be wondering why he
bothered to 1how up at 11~ much
lea &Ive up hit neon ,nen pro.
Even ·me k>rds of Wimbledon
are thlnkina about throwing out
lndillon at lhla point.
· l!uoperaled by the in-an1
monsoon ind the backlog of 140
matchea, offidalt i re c:onaiderint
whelhe.r to schedule play on the
middle Sund1y of I.he fortnight for
the fmt time in Wimbledon'• 114·
year history.
They've already trimmed down
men's doubles to be11 or three sets
ln1tcad or five up to the
quarterfinals, i nd moved the
junk>r 1in&lcs to another club.
Despite the rotten weather all
week, nearly 28,000 fans tumed
out Thursday, many of them cager
to sec A.gassi's fint Wimbledon
appearance since his opening·
round lcm in 1987.
He had stayed away because he
Celt uncomfortable on grass,
prcrerrcd to train instead for the
hard court tournaments in the
United States, and didn't much
care for Wimbledon 's
"predominantly white" rulca.
Now, he bowed to tradition, al-
beit in while denim with Lycra
cycling shons underneath, and
bowed to the Duke and Duchess
of Kent in the Royal Box at
Ccn1re Court before wanning up
in an all-white suit.
When lhe 2l·ycar-old Agwi,
long-maned idol of 1he teen set,
stripped off his pants lo reveal his
shorts and tanned legs, fans
whistled and applauded. Tbe
Ouchw or Kent smiled but did
not cheer.
Agassi looked surprised at the
noise, bowed to the crowd, and
shrugged to the umpire, as if lo
say, "It's not my fauh."
But this WU not to be hit JftOl1.
pkuaat hour U. 1canl:t.
Rained out tho fint lhrco dl)'I.
delayed 1pin Thunday, Apui
tiptoed e,recarioully on the lfick
grua •htlc loting his openina set
~ to Can1d1'1 Orant CoMeU.
Agast~ runner.up fn the French
Open !Wice and U.S. Open lul
year, 1bould have known he wu in
ror problems when lhe Cyclops
electronic eye that watchea aervea
beeped prem1turely u he 1osaed
bit fir1t tervc in the air. He
whacked the ball awkwardly into
the net, but the umpire caned a let
and Agu&i lricd again.
Nervout, constricted in hit
motion, he doubleraulted twice In
the fint game before holding
seive.
When the sun briefly broke
through thC clouds later in the aet,
it blinded Agaui on hit serve but
didn't bother the left-handed
Conricll, who tossed the ball in the
oppoaite direction.
Agassi fin1lly round his footina
in the second set, winning 6' 1
while Connell stumbled and
sprayed 1hot1 wildly. Bu1 Agassi's
rhythm was soon broken by
another downpour that forced
them from the court with Connell
to serve at l·l in the third.
It was a miserable day for nearly
everyone 11 Wimbledon, as rain
swept fitfully over the sodden
lawns. Matches started, slopped,
started and stopped again.
Even Stefan Edberg. that mos1
imperturbable Swede, 1howcd
signs of frayed ne1'\lcS as he
completed a 73-bour, 6-4, 6-4, 6'4
victory over Marc Rossett.
Easton wins 11118
Will James of Euton, Md.,
finished u the overall champion
Wednesday in the three-day, nine-
racc Balboa National Prim
Championships for junior sailon
15·and·undcr at the Balboa Yach1
Oub.
Brian Wynne from New Orleans
and Mark Ivey of Huntington
Beach were second and third,
respec tive ly, ·while sai l ing
conditions were excellent with
winds ranging between 5 and' 10
k.no1s for the l6·participan1 field.
Dan Meade (New Orleans) and
Mike Uinis (Grosse Point, Mich.)
round out the top five, taking
fourth and fihh, rcspcctNely.
.._on Beach club rips
voleyball compettUon up In
JllllOr Olympic 18-and-unders
By Jon Ferguson
Orw1" Cod ~ Piii
DOMINGUEZ HJU.S -This summer, the Hun1in~ton Beach
Volleyball Cub's 18-and·under 1cam, Sunkist/Rip 11 Up, ts hoping to
1car 1part the Junlor Olympics competition in the land of oranges.
A year ago, a team comprised of many of the same m~mbcn did
not fare as well as hoped, finishing seventh. But Coach Brian Boone,
an Editon Hifb product who begins his senior year 11 UCLA in the
fall, thinks this year's squad has the right mix or people to go after
1hc 1itle in Tampa, Fla., during early July. . ..
"last year we didn't play as well together as this year, Boone
said. "They'r~ working as a complele uni1, whereas last year there
were 1 couple of personality conflicls 1hat aren't !here any more. I'm
really pleased with the way il's coming around."
On Tuesday, HBVC won the four-day 1991 So.uthcrn California
Volleyblll Association Beach Promo1ions Oass1c al Cal State
Dominguez Hills.
The club leaves Saturdar for Tampa along wilh 2J other SCV A
tcam1 for the 64-team Junior Olympics n11)on1ll 11 the Tam!M. Bay
Convention Center. The nattonals will be contested July t-6.w1.th •.wo
days of pool-play qualifying and four days of the double ehm1natt0n
championship round.
HDVC dOwned L'abri in the finals of the SCVA event, 14-16, lS-7,
t'-10, on Tuesd1y evening, capping 1 12-0 Nn through the
toumament while loeing only lour games .. ~I m11cbcl ~ere best ~
of·threc with the point-per-play system uuh1cd In the third game.
••"fhey htvc really been workinJ hard," Boone uid. "I would have
been happy If 1hey had finllhed tn the top rtve.. becaute they would
have been 1 fint seed in the n1tk>n1I tournament. But t WQ really
happy they went all the way." . , ,
Of the nine te1m memben, four were seniors for Marin• H11h s
CIF ,_A quarterfinalltt ceam during the 1prina. Setter Oreg Or1t1e11u.
outalde hitter Dennis Winnen, ind middle block.en John Mull and
Brant Shelor form the nucleua.
The 111nln1 llaeup alto iacludcs outside hitter Matt Taylor out of
Huntlnston Buch High 1nd opposite-side hitter Todd Beebe o~t ol
Woodbridac H;,h. Taylor, the top senk>r prospect out of Orange
County, 11 in his third ~ar with lhc club, while the rem1lnder of the
lineup ls In Its aec:ond. The rest of the HBVC 18·&nd·under roster features Llguna Beach
HiJh lflduate ChrU Scale, backup middle blocker Dive 01rd1 of
Mission Viejo and 16-yea.r-old back\Jp setter Tom Soderlina of Los
A11mitQL HllVC defeated S1raiah• Down by a 15-13, 15·6 score In 1he
winner~• brteket rtnal, which ... ined tome measure o( rcvcnae for the
fOnn<t Marina Hiall playe~·-SIT>iglll Down wu """'l"ised orinwUY o( San ~ H J>l•Y'"' San Ma.-knoc:ted off Minna In 111o ap '-A quart• ala in Ml)'.
Tiie 1eam hu been procUcln1 sine< lhe .. ., of lhe hi&b aehool
tcuon In mid-May and ~Ind two other onMiaJ tou.marncn in the
1na fn early June before winning fn Domfngue1.
Boone la confident of thtl te1m'1 chances 1t n1tk>n11t Ir& bc1tcf
than lut yur. '"Thc1 lt1ve the mo&t talent," Boone uid. "lt't juat 1 matter o(
comlna topther 11 the riaht tlrne. They need to 1ta_y tocu.cd. ·
"I lhlftlr. '"'' "'°""' 1 .,.., of the pme la '"'' pa11tna oon1ri1>111ed
by Todd, Man and Donni.. Tllll enables Or•1 10 Ml •p lhe on -
We side 001 •I will prell)' much."
,,.,, 11 w...... Jolin Clm>ll -c-1> T""l' OeCar1o ud wllo
RilL 'Tho 11Choo1'1 rioo ..,..w.m.
Dou& Bootwalter-and bil wife
Canf, wen abo In Ibo avwd. 'l1lo
Booballen nlom -IOlloy
while lhe DeCarloa will nlUla Ill
bll••m Calilonlla b -
week beCoR be.-1'•1 ._ '°
bqln lh• 1991 --.. Jofia Conell, -Lony w-.
The day al~ -when tho .,.,.p ol approoWnatelJ-
l!li met at the front pte 1t JO a.m.
and proceeded down Main Street
to the cuOe for • telaialon taping
1Cene with Wanke.
Sergeant Whittaker 11li1Kd
Disneyland'• deadline date of June
16 for hol'M>rina thole retumlna
lrom lhe Penlan Ou~ &Jld WU
honored but denied 1 ride in the
parade. '
Next jt was tho Tea Cup1 with
Wanke rclaxin1 u Jim and
Barbara Do8oom'• dauahtcrs
Stacy and Jodi propolled their cup
in a cin:lc to the dcU&ht of the 1V
crews from NBC and Disneyland.
When it came time to ride 1hc
Maucrhom, Urry was in front
with the Whlnater boys and lhcir
mother al.lo along. Mother Patty
couldn't wait to get out of the car
when it came to a stop the first
time around and declined a &ee0nd
ride with the othen [or the benefit
of the cameras.
"Once was coough for me,"
Pattv Whittaker said. "I bailed
out.''
Leah Wanke revealed that she
had been to Disneyland before
and said that Larry was there 100 .
"When my husband and I were
here before, 1 was pregnant with
Larry so he doesn't remember."
Whether Melanie Fitch is fol-
lowing the same pattern will not
be known for at least another 20
yeari. However, she is scheduled
to present Paul and Bev with their
first grandchild in November. She
wouldn't comment on whether the
child would be a footbaJI player or
not if it is a boy.
Wanke was busily engaged with
photographers until his ride down
Main Street in the parade. Then
he planned to try Space Mountain,
Splash Mountain and several other
attractions before leaving. He had
taken the River Boat ride and had
been on Thunder Mountain before
the parade and didn't seem to
mind the waiting in lines at most
rides ahhough he was given special
concession on some.
With the Super Stars compe·
tition al Newport Dunes today
canceled because of lack of
entries, Wanke will take the day
for himself before allending the
Angel baseball game in !he
evening.
"I plan on getting in a little
conditi oning today," he said. "I'll
get up early and run a mile or 1wo,
then do some sprint work at 100,
50 and 40 yards. I'll also do some
weight lifting and laler in 1hc day
will get in some agility work before
going lo the game."
The Whittakers will be going 10
Catalina Island today and will tout
the Newport Harbor on Saturday
with members or 1he American
Legion Post here. Wanke and his
mother will go to Catalina on
Salurday with the group bidding
farewell to Newport Beach and
Irrelevant Weck on Sunday,
HANDY
From 81
out of ScaCli(f Country Club in
Hunt1ng1on Beach for winning
medalist honors in the 801h
Calirornia Golf Association
Amateur Championship at Pebble
Beach early this week. He finished
the two medal rounds with a score
or 145. Galbraith, now 45, was
runner·up ror the state title in
1971 at age 25.
Match play concludes today with
36 holes on the agenda at Pebble
Beach for the two survivors o r the
wcek·lo ng competition that stancd
match play Wednesday.
Fricley, -• 1•1 -
for the rec ord
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PlllD
From 81
1ha1's OK because Irrelevant Weck
had never heard of Larry Wanke.
He 's one o f on l y 13
quarterbacks drafted this year.
He's 1 big, cocky, flamboyant,
strong-anned, nimble·footcd blond
who loves to hum lhe hog. to
borrow a phrase from lhe Jim
McMah o n lexicon of
quarterbacking. It wall the chanc.c
to throw a 101 th at caused him to
rush off from high school to Pin
and back Mike Gottfried. At the
1ime, !he cxciled talk was about
Air Wanke .
way downhill. (John Carroll is a
wonderful school ,nd memorial to
its namesake, a Catholic bishop
who was George Washington's
buddy and whose family footed
most of the Revolutionary War
bills. Bui if we 're talk.ing football,
John Carroll is to Pitt as a canoe
i.s to an aircraft carrier.)
he'll a funny guy, a riot really. On
the field, though, he's 111 cool,
calm and collected. He believes he
can win at anything. if it's chcckcn
or football. He has tremendous
confidence in his arm . And, hey,
he 1alb the talk. but he wa.lka lhc
walk."
'"The na1ion's lop high school
quarterback prospects were Jeff
George first and Larry second,"
said John Carroll's quarterback
coach, Greg Debeljak. "Larry
visited Ohio St~tc and he still has
a picture in his_ hving room of him
and Jimmy · John50n down at
Miami. He's a legend in high
school roo1ball around here."
But o ne ro tten day, Mike
Gottfried decided he liked option
quarterbacks after and gave the
Pill job to a sldtlcf) Jitterbuggt:r.
That didn't set well wi th Wanke ,
who'd had a taste of glory and
liked it. He'd come off the bench
for Phi 1n the Bluebonnet Bowl 10
throw 1hrec touchdowns in a 33-28
loss to Tcxn. More of 1ha1, not
less. was Larry Wanke's Idea of
Larry Wanke.
So when Gottfried nailed him to
the bench in his third sea.son al
Pitt, Wanke bailed. He went home
to Cleveland and walked five
minutes down 1he s1ree1 10 bct·ome
a John Carroll Blue Streak. In five
minutes, a guy can go a very long
lhzneJ earns
bid to Pan-Am
Games In CUba
However eJ((rcme !he step was,
Wanke took it 10 avoid the
NCAA-mandated sca1on of
ineligibility slapped on any player
who transfers from a big-timer to a
big -1imer . Able to play
immediately al the Division Ill
level -we're 11 lking no
ICholanhips and skinny tackles -
Wanke Jed John Carroll co 9-1 and
8-2 records. He completed 330 of
613 p8.Ue$ for 3,980 yards and 25
touchdowns. He set 16 school
records. The school sladium, 3,500
bleacher scats on one side only.
y.--asn ·~ big enough, Another 2.SOO
folk.J sat on the U'ack 10 sec
Wanke wing'em.
Said quarterbac k coach
De.bcljak, '"l..any's got great ann
strength. He can throw it 70-75
yards, but thafs not the bes!
indicator of bow good hls arm ts.
What he docs best is throw the
ball on 1 line from the hash mark
to the out of bounds line, 1S·20
yards downlicld. He has good feet
io the pocket and great vision of
the 6eld. lie re:.ll}· knows lhe
game, too.''
As for the nck.kid motorcyc;le
stunt o( Wanke legend, Dc:beljak
said, "I dunno 1bout !hat. t'lut
Larry li.kc.s to have fun . Wouldn'1
pu1 ii past him ."
'"Never heard Iha I one," 1a1d
wide rccc.iver I-tank Durica. "But
Irrelevant Weck ls relevant 001
only in Soulhcm California bu1
around the world. Frenchmen
strolling the boulevards o( Paris:
ask, "What great warrior hu
become this ycar"s Prince of
Irrelevance?" Tibc1an monks at
their prayer ,..heels say, "We have
Mt. Evcresl in our view, but in
America they have lhc sweet
Prince of l rrelevan·ec. Alas."
By the third day or Irrelevant
Weck in Newport Beach, the
singular Lany Wanke wanted to
call 1imeout. DcfensNe linemen
snoning fi re never wore him out
this way Paul Salata and hiJ
lrre \c:,anc1c s kept W a nke
scrambling out or the pock.cl all
week
"I keep asking them for a day
off."' Wanke' said, breathing on a
golf course. "'It 's absolu1cly crazy,
how much fun I'm havtng. We're
playing golf nght now. But instead
of hit1ing the ball all the time,
today we 're throwing ii some
ttmcs. On a 125·yard, par-three. I
1tucw the ball 10 wi1hih rwo feet or
1he hole for a b1rd1c ."
W11s 11, dear Prince, a nice
spiral:'
'"Wo bbled a little," Larry
Wan ke said, laughing.
D•~ IUndrtd h • natloaal(r
known spons )ouro•ll1t. most
rrttnt/J' wltb lb~ now d~po#d The
National.
She's on USA
Two Deem View softball squad
ltlridolltl COllllllt as a catcher
Former M1rin1 HiJh 50ftball
'89 BMW 3251
S4P"d Conwf,.,.., totle O'ltl9f leOM at
buy. Whlt9 wlbll _., plNMplnv, JM: nlN.
tuly !oeld9d, ear PhOnl. 1.fPO!CHMd whMk.
l'9Clf' er.ck ~· tl7lr(l"r!O HIOM. Col
to I ... s1andou1 SUl)' Orai.ncy 11 one of JS Cl 1111 r pl1yen .. 1ec1ed for, Tum USA.
whidt-will corttpeto In tfiel'in
American Game.a. Aua. 2· 18. 1n · Ocean View Hi&h ba1eb1ll
s11ndouts Kevin Bill and Malt
MuJHlmann have committed to
continue their academic and
athlclic car,cn at colleau.
Bill, 1 two-)"Car 1tartiq catcbcr,
will walk on at Cal S11te Fullertoa,
while Mu1selm1nn. 1 fir1t
btKman, i• bound (or CaUfoml1
Blplilt. an NAlA llChool bNe.d in
RM:'1ido.
Bill hll .2.Cl in Sunset Lu.aue
plly 10 eam 1econd·tcam 1U·
lf:aguc honon. Muue.lmana who
mi d cfa.ht pma--wfth an hQury,
pined honor1blc mention •II ·
l•aaue. The two ae nion helped the
Sc1h1wks to 1 1h•rc ol the unsee
ch ampionsh ip with Fountain
Valley, 11 lhe te1m won 14
11r1i1h1 10 close the rc1ul1r
ae1son. _,,, ,.. °"'" ,.,,..
Havana. Cuba.
Bruney. a Cal Poly Pomona
gr1duate livina ln F\JIJerton, ts a
veteran of Pin Am compcti1ion, a1
well as several Olympic Fcst~·als.
She WU Kle4;tcd as I catcher. She
hu bun named to the Amateur
Sottb1ll A1soci1t ion '1 All·
AmcriCI• team MYCral times for
her pla7 wilh lhe narional Major
Divi1ion powerhouse Or1n1e
Counly M,.jclticl.
The lqllad WU choKn ftom 5S
pllyen wbo tniw~d IO lrfOUlt
oondu«ed by lhe Amal•ur Softboll
A11ocl1tlon, J\lne 14·21, In
Colorado Sorinp.
Oranp Coun1y Majclllcs c-1>
hlrley Topley will man.,. lhe
team, whUCi Fm.no tate Coach
Marp WriiJ>I will be an -llnL
-lb' ,,.. ""~ -
........ $23,500
For tuet UO ft'll run )'Out tx2"'°" ad In our•~·
motive MCtkK\, wtth a ~ of your car , fof 3 con-
Meuttve Saturdltya. Copy mutt be aubmltt9d by
Wod.
Cal Cendy NOW •I 642.are 10
pfKe yout Id and geol In on thtl '
lnlroduclO<y ollwl
TlleAulomollYeO.-_.
....., Sol\Kdoy.
• Pl~ fot prtvt.~ . .,...,,... no c,._,... c.tJ bl mtde on OttglNI copy
•
CIAlllFIED INDEX Ml·M11
............. co. .. .... '°"'"---co. -2
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.eo.ptl NI ~y IOo ...y W!DI' 11'1 WI ----M !of ~ II. !My IM ••llQOlltlble •KQ9f!I lo< "" G09I ol ltlf -.>K• Klually 0«.VQ'«I b\l IM error Cfedll Gal'I Oflly IM ~ '°' , ... hrt1 ...... 1-•
""".......,, nol p-"""""' 30 dep .......... .,. ..... 110, llUI nol llmtled IO. ~Clwf" ~led
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POOl.llllm :1aA aeA + pool
at1=...000 .....
.IU8T SOL.Dt .. .29" 2BA corn•r lot, ..,.,..,.
409 .. , ...... Do--Ten•nt•-C•ll tor ""°"""'' ~ ...... at.aa
f o1 S111 ... dC'I i\.1,11 lll.'...'
.....,.. Ol'Ell IAT/IUll t .. uncs.r AppratMt• 8710 GAllMWT Dll General 1002
llANKREPOI
Know About Bank
Repo9 right attltf the
trust" 1alal FOt' frM
lnfo<matlon ~II
833-0722.
Vwy apack>us ct.191om 48R, lg tam nn, 9g
2·•tory 4BR home com.I .,.,_ .. II• rlM'd.
wtth ext-"'9 UH of Good condl °"'-' rtg-Redwood both ext. hbrhd , 1385,000.
r1or & lnterb', Lwge I Ownf/Bkr •ft ...
bacicy..-d wtth priv•te OPEN HOUSE SAT/
apa and cs.eking. Alao S U N 1 -6 , 21 t I
private beKt1 ~ ALDER. ~ LAiu-
wtth 1-ueoclatlon ,.ipa1nt Tliomhm 2 BA.
t ... t Priced •t only 2"' BA. 1182,llOO. Agt,
$929,000. Bette Scott, 842,.....24
/.Jn N l(,f~
lll\ll I ~ i..
A'!it;,U( 111 11"
DUPLEX
N-pof'I Beach • ~r
garage. $389,900. 2
blka to th• bHch. 2
BR, 2 BA Owner/Ag'!.
557""'373. N-1>9lnt.
RUL R8TATW:
8YTM••RA
(800) 221·2177
H 1J'it1111,' ,
Repo11a11ad Homee N-condo, oceanside 8f'.lll' 'il l ()
~from Iha Gov'I from of PCH . 2 BR ,
ly 51.00 ~ repU/ $515,000. Agt. 723-
eit From Your 8328, 474-3155
Araal Alao Super
8uy9 on Tax Pro~
fapaJr11. Amazing R•
cordtld Mag R-al1
o.taH1t (408)"4-1387
Santa Marg.artta
TIJERAS
CREEK VILLAS
Condominium
Home•
1 ·2 Bedroom•
From $108,890
343 Unl11 ... Gotf
·Courie Neighbor·
""°" 714/589-3883
The San Juari Group
B ;ill)(Ll
tslanc! 1006
CHARMING Wfft ltf1d
2Br 2Ba, lrg gru•
r.ard 6 patio, p..-tect
or 1'9fllal Ot' remodel.
5595,000. EZ to 1now.
831-021 1 Ot' 845-e 1 &e
OPEN SUN 1-4
209/209'.0 Cryst.I
LITTLE ISLAND
3BR, 2BA _. 1 BR, 1
BA., a11:cetlan1 income
$640,000.
AEGIR PROP.
875-4000
Corona
<i cl Mar 1022
Cultom 48r 5Bs , 5 fr.
pie•. guaoel rm, lg 1(11,
partlsl view. $1 JM.
Con•lde• trade/Tine.
Prtnca only 832·1957
C<JSf;l M t>S.1 1024
2 All entnes musl arrive by Thursday Noon.
3. Winner wlll be chosen by random drawing and
tht? following days peper. One winner per week.
4 Contest 1vill run 5124/91 . 7/12/91.
IN IH\. Ill ·\N k
WIN
DINNER FOR
TWO
AT
Find our hidden Classl·
Oed Ads ... And Win!
Coat .. t R•lu:
I. Simply Ond our hid·
den classified ads
somewhere In our dassl·
fled section. Cut and
paste the ads on the en·
ITy blank end moll.
winners nome wlll appear In
Name~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Put" Ads Here
AddrUS ~~~~~~~~~~~-
Phone.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Pute Ads Here
642-5678
u ... v .... 4 llfll, 1 ... BA 11100/mo ro,
l••H Inc wet., A
grdnt. Aw.I now. _,..,
El
328R 1BA ~age ,,,,., 1111ta ...,.
0 ...... 1995• MC
dttp. Avt 7/1.
~· .... Ut4241
~ "'1111h o11
l\l'all I ,
lllT VALlllll
38drm, 2BA, 3 .,,,
)'OUl'tCI, StGIO mo.
c:.ntWM NtGU
IAIT llO PRiii
S.. MA 28A "'
OCMn Yt9w • 00(
br••E•. tl81. N•
Pet•. 2111 P•clfl•
Aw. a1-e101 or ue -$110 Off llCJVl.IMI
lparllllng cleat
21ktnn 1 'Alla, pdo • __ ... -...
1771. aon,. no pea., ,....... ...,.,.
PAINTING-WALLPAPER
ANO REPAIRS
l..ocll ,.,.. bf*' Wiii
,.rMeet,..,..1478
P t'I Sf'IVH t''> JHIO
HOLIDAY RELIEF
T1.C for pet• • pl.alrt• oc name OWMI' 1 :tyr11
Xlnl ~. 711-8356
Pl.i· !•,
R1·p1,r ,fiHO
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.... ,_,.
If ,... -Don ...,.. anon.. ...... WtOW
Vtalorte'• ...... .... "'* en mr ... IWM. ...... ..-.-. -....... "-........
l'OI, ..,.. "-'· "° ,...... lft people. If ,., ....... thin. ...... . ...... -.... . ._.no .... ••·Whv ....... ' "'*' •.•
.... M tiW9 out for ,.... ......
FREE
HandMma, ••cure, profeaalonal SISM,
40+, .... ~ 8f' for romance & ...,..._..,...,
..... Olla not • flictof. "•t»IY euarantead. ~ ...... ·-IUCll ,Uft ~ OUdd* ............ ClftnO, anuapanaur-trp• .... ......., ........
iM, maeure. ~· oua, "'•c'l6ol .... : moo nogaftlou1. aftJ•Y• muelO, dfnner,,._. Ing, •UnHt. .....,.
"'9d1 •11-.
DYil
111&111111 14~5171
.....
...... W, C''"·----.~alD ....... ...... --. .......
8M' .......... ,., ••••••· c.,., .. .,..
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OWM, • .... 171.. • traouva, 9'aatll'ly, ........... "*'· TOfftl»Oy ....... for
tuft .... ....... ... ~ tic .....,
cnMe. 111 •
111c••
__ ......... ................ ,
HOW TO RESPOND
•Call 1-900-844-0100
• Enter 4-digit code appearing in ad
• Listen to greeting
• Leave mes~age (you can change 11
1f not sat1 fied)
When lea,·ing a mes4'age
•Leave your l1r~t name
• \.1cnt1on your interest'
•Tell your age
• Dc'crlbc }Our appearance
• SpcL1I~ }Our preferences
• lndudc "hJt \-OU liked about the
pcNm )OU arc rc,pondmg lO
SWM, a, 1'1°"'", 141
!be., ~. .... 8'M" .,... "*' ~ and K"OQ mualo. 41tenetne llftd ...,
=r.'1;~ ':: l"ou lllJ) kJ\C a ~O 'ccond me~~age
••"'• tor dat.. ) nu ''all be Jutoma11cally billed 98'
#1791. tor cat h m mute
Ira&. •••a•• ml•KllC awu. a. ""' , .•. .,
weO proportlonact.
1111•• aporte (voi.
~ ...... ~ l!llAY-
•no •'**'. mc>lltae, ..... 1111111,.. ... . ,,..,....... ...... .
t"a" tor saaultl .. ,..._ ........ nos.o
DATE{ I NE
NALS
USE THIS FORM TO PLACE YOUR FREE PERSONAL AD GUIDE Lit JE S
PRINT CLEARLY: (First three words ore boldface> 25 word maxtmlm
FREE ADS ARE MAIL-INS ONLY
All CalHns Wiii Be Charged Regular Rate.
CONF IDENTIAL INfO Rt111ATIO N
NAME:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
PHONE:~--------------------------------
AOORESS: -----------------------------------
----------------STATE:-------ZIP:---
.....
By CHARLES GOREN
w ith OMAR SHARIF
and TANN AH HIRSCH
North-South vulnerable. South
deal a NORTH
• K 10 8 8 4 2
97 5 2
•AQ
+K 7 WEST EAST
•3 •5
• Q 6 • 10 9 8 4 3
t J 10 9 5 3 t K 6
•QJ1084 +A6532
SOUTH
+A Q J 9 7
9 A K J
t 8 7 4 2
•9
The b1ddmg-
South Weet
1 + 2 NT
P .. P ..
p ... P ...
North Eut • • 5.
5 • P ...
Opening lead: Queen of +
We are not enamored of the Un-
usual No Trump oven:all. If you do
want to use 1t. we auggeat you limit
it.a application either to very w.U
huda, where you an looklDJ for a
11acrifice. or very strong hands.
where you intend to buy the con-
tract or double the opponent.a With
intermedia!A! handa, 1t 1s better to
try to bid both of your suit.a rather
than employ the convention
Given our thoughu on the Un-
usual No Trump. you will have gath-
ered that., at this vulnerability, we
do not mind West'• overcall. It sue·
ceeded in puahin s North-South to
the five-level and, 1lnce the ftve·
level belonp to the opponen\a, But
decided to let North-South at.Juate.
Wnt led the queen o( cluba., COY·
ered by the kins and won by the ace.
Declarer ruffed the club continua·
lion and drew trumpa in one round.
and it miaht aeem that the contnct
hinged on either a fineue for the
queen of beam or the lrinc of dia·
monda lucceeding. Judcinl from the·
auction. both figured to be riJht;
however. a glance at the diqram
aufficea to a.bow that, had deelanr
looked no deeper into the pottltion,
the cont ract would have been
defeated.
Fortunately, declarer apotted that
the heart finesae waa an illualon-
the contract could be iuaranteed u
long 81 West held no more than two
heart.a, almost a aun bet in light. of
the bidding and the fact that Wnt
had produced a trump.
Declarer cashed the ace and king
of heart.a. As it happened, the queen
dropped and the contract couted
home. Had it not appeared.. declarer
would have continued hear\a, aur·
rendenng a trick to EuL Th.t de-
fender would have been endplayed
into either yielding a ruff-aluff or
elae leading a diamond into dum
my'a ace·qu~n tenace. Either way,
declarer would not have lost more
than a heart and a club.
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
I Mvahrooms
eg
6 Pewn
10 Fate
14 Indian
15 Snorlly
6 Worlt pref
17 Bleckmall
16 Cr&ci<POI
.?J UnMl)Py
21 Bone pre!
:?3 Blolted ovl
,4 Top.nigh!
,5 Dart
i6 B0<der river
lO Harea!I
14 Appretlend
J~ Speed
17 O.onlter s
symp1om
111 GemSI~
~q Bflll UP aulO
1 1 P11<sonal
htStoroes
J2 Fea•!ed
l>f"h~
43 Oellf!y or
galleon
44 Aoyet Mat
411 1 .e p1nnac1e
•8 L.Sllef\5
'>O Millay
'>2 Fat
'J HM~h r,s Walk 1n water
<,/ T •f!fl
60 Musical wonis
82 Rhythm
64 Well-tlepl
e5 BeYerege
dlspen-•
6e Perlect
87 Coegvt.t• 88 What 8 I
89 Trite
DOWN
1 Watch poctc.ia
2 USC's rl11al
3 Reqvlalte
4 Depert Scot
S Out of Iha _,hat
6 Rvah
7 For,,_iy
8 He&r1
9 Bend Iha leOS
10 Atgue
11 AnglO-Suon
money
12 01 ... the eye
13 Fuhk>n
19 ll\9Cribe
22 Seize
24 To one aide
25 ActtieWrMnt
28 lnd6an
prlneee
27 Arwyy
28 o.cr ..
29 Swathe
31 So lonQf
32 Hall unlt
33 Liit••
55 -cutlel
51 Olalre
57 us dt.
st Bridge pan
M Banc:tlfied '1 Numerlc8I prefllC
93 Tokyo, once
'::~~~' SCQ~l\1A-"£~s· WOii
tA•I
-------IW~ .. , CLAY I . PC>L&.AN -------
•Rearrange letters of the
four scrambled words be-
low to form four *"'Pie words
I~ --j-01-J ...... r--, -.jl
~_R_I_C_P __ H ___ l~·
0
1 "I've never had a personal
I I I' I _I secretary," the lady informed her new employee. • That's
...-----------.great," the secretary laughed,
I N E F o O F I "you'll think I'm ----!" ""-... ,--1-.. 1--1-.. 1•5--t t) Complete the chuckle quoted
_ _ _ . _ by ftlhng In the missing words ...___,, ___ ............. ...._.-__ you develop from step No. 3 ~low.
8 PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
A UNSOAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
V TO GET ANSWE R
SCIAIMITS ANSWERS
Friday, Jue 2'
Ezc:h11l.-e: Reporu Crom the Soviet
Union renal that astroloalcal
rciearch is "bot-and-heavy" in Mlruk
ind Leninsrad. A major Soviet
utroloaical conference toot place
Lh11 put September 1n lhe "clry of
bells," named for 1pcc11l set or bells
that once rana in the ciry of
Zvcnia<>rod. Randall Cunnin&flam.
Aries football atar who quanerbacb
for the Philadelphia EliaJcs. may be
"movina sway," accordina to bis
ulroloaical chart. Cunnmgh1m 11
likely to break records during
D«embcr.
ARJES (March 21·Apnl 19): News
tccetvcd concemina "new deal."
Emphuls on career, prestlae.
YCrilication of beliefs. Frcsb 1t1r1
UIOCiatcd with special enterprise.
Imprint style. wumc leadcnhip role.
Leo iln'Ofvcd.
TA VRUS (Apnl 20-May 20):
Divenlfy. aocent d1s1nbution, aa.les
1bility Humor proves v1luable lllCt
Some commenl, "I never knew you
could lau&fl 11 youracln" Travel
arran1cmcn11 part of scenario.
Cancer native UM>lvcd
GEMINI (May 21-Juno 20):
Intellectual curiollry actlnlcd. By
makina loqulrics you reaoln
financial dilemma. You'll learn more
about accounting. tu and llc4010
tcqulremcnu. You11 atar at eodal
affair ton&&ht.
CANCIR (Juno ll-Julf 22):
Octallt unrnel In conncdloo trith
adYtru ina or publidtJ campe p.
Mechanical procedures clann~.
l unar position coritln co ec:c:cnt
per1ncnhip, mama Scorpio pl111
OUIJtandll\I roJo
LIO (July 23-Auf. 22): Credit
reccmd tbtt had bu• wtthhtld.
FOQll OD 1t.lf-aprul6oo, ddc:icMry,
vttiety, p111 Yla written word. Whll
~&Jnt U 11\CN n 1-"-l10a could
become "aerioua." Oc (; vi,., ID
picture
VIRGO (Aua. 13-Scpt. 22).
Surround Ina• "look dlJfcrent."
Apptl any to bOiiii, Wflkh b
ti..autlncd. Focu.a Ot1 mu.sic, art,
~ drafftl You'U be fn .. romantic
mood" tonigbt. Taurut, Libra
pcnona flau,. in 1C1Cnatlo.
lJBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 22): Define
1enn1, read betweeo lloca, acpenle
rcaliry from m1r1ae. Your opinion
sought concerning property. major
sales or purchases. ~ relationship
requires serious consider1tioo. Piacea
involved.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Focus on commercial entc.rprisc,
intense rclat1onsh1p, ability to deal
"alngcrly" with ciders. Relative
Involved in 1hor1 trip talks about
spccsal mission Cancer natiYc riptcs
prominently.
SAGJ1TAJUUS (Nov. 21-Dcc. 21):
Lona·standmg sipuncnt CllJ bo
oompletcd Spotlight on dbtaoc.,
languaac. activities rcl1tlo1 to
lmport·nport cnterprlset. You'll
encounter t0ph11ticaccd Aries nalivc
who la bllinpal.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 21-Jan. 19):
Streu Independence, darlaa ,
recognition that "new lovo" i• on
horizon. Judameot, latuhloo
continues llCC\lratc. l111print ~.
1ubmh fC)O'Tlat that brcab from
tradit1on Aquarian I~.
AQUA.llltJS (Jan. ZO.Fcb. 18):
Focus on ram11y. home, apcda1
recipe, Cltdlln1 dinlna aperience.
1.nronn1110ft ~ kt.pt eacn1
triU be rC\'Wed. Family ~
&alb •bout "IOC>d b11.1 neaa dell ...
Capricorn pltyl role.
PISCU (Feb 19-Mardl 10): OOod
rulOO to celebrat• tonf&bt -major
uflntion fuJfilledl Entpbttlt oo rr tnda. deahu. po•cn or
pcnuuion You'll be of 6auncmc
help to lndiYf(tual cnwlJ)q rrom
ptcr. SaaJttarlu ~
If J UNI .U II YOUa
lllTHDAY: You ar• d)'ftamlc,
crNti.e, 1111bbom, orifiul, ramafltlc.
You ara Tl to family, arc. KIWIM
and Cll'IObCIM~ IMftf daR '°"
~ Ulr*1al0fy ~. i.-. Aquan.a~ .. .,_. .. ,_.
You flulty •111 be re11¥M ti
cmotionaJ bw'dcn -~ wen ~
allru I but It tW'Dld "' ti..
"otf'lcr Pint' tuot JOU b pa.a.cl.
011rln1 J uly Jou will pcrf~cc
ltc.hnlquca an pcrulft ov•ran
situation in ruJ _tk t. Auptt wto
be your moat prOduct , m.monblo
mont1' ilf 1991.
DILIVIRY
TllUW8•AY8
Otn.Y. a:;;sew• rout•• -"' .......... •••••rt ••••" 1:00 A.M. IO 10:00 A.M. U0 to ll0.00 per
day. Ow ~ ......
enc. r.qut~. Celt
842.q33.
,.., _______ ..,~ ~ Ne.1--------1
:.0.,'Z.~ IXICUTIVllUGALl--~~!!--
I' .
I ' .
ffOUND .... Vic. of
Harbor Vle•/Knoll
Alea on Apfl 15. e.u..
4294.
own franeportatlon. llCTY rwt.Mnnt Cal••• ... :::-.:-: ::e.. I AHORA I
A.,g lhN Oct. 'IT• T.-noe .... pen M~. 1:30-0:30 In UVAPLATOI • !:i:.-To;:::tino COClllDOI •
~-.. 1195 LIMPIAMllAI ULll
BE AT n.E BEACH PllllH CAMDDIU f'evor PNll,,..,_
llY NOOHI S*'9CM••1191 ....
131.a11s ·
A Deity 8at.ry l300 for
buying mercl'iendlM.
No up nee. c.n eAM·
11 PM, Mon-Sun et
714/ MCMa11.
........ ..... ... AAll'""" own~ to rvw. Job, tor lnet:llM1tlan of 8791 Adame Ave. -
wood wlndowa. oeroac» ~ ~~,., tGc*iNow1
0...... OfftOe • We .,...,. OI* .... tor IBllTMIDI .... ._ ••DID* I cooa.9Jtrn• /'300-SIOO per W.-1 ,._._.,In plr90n.
/IAM-12 Noon POLLY'S Piii
CAU.I 11'11 Adame Ave. -.IACK ,.,..,~
Mt~tT~,_C.M. A.-...nt DOllllA ..... t., ~ nlllD °'
Looking to sel
that eztra
stacking up
the garage?
WAITMll
Oii WAITIM
/IAM-12 Noon /*"°°'"1800 per .....
c.11 Dtane In ~ •
.... t ... Or Nerte
In C.M .. Mt.0174
Rfft&UrWfta
Ceeb .........
l.andmerll Charlie BJown'•..........,. ..
Try the cl assifieds. What's junk ~~'Yo:~
able. ~ I to 4, to you is o treasure to someone Aat1 tcw ttte cMt. 1I1 P eolflo Coe•t else. For only $8.52 you get 1....,.. ........ _N11_. __ _
4 lines for 3 days. Coll today. P~~~ ....
fot~---642-56 78 '"C:. n.....,.v:::r
SALES
ADWIRT1lllG U&ll
Otapt9y M 9C¥*iell08 a + ' Hunt. Bdl/f'.V.
martcet• whh m.-or ~ potentlliL A
21 + year weelllly new1p..-. Dnlw + oomm...,DI.., ~
-~.2poo INona .... • Ne. c.11
(!t4) M2•1 ... 0.-.
llCUllTY OA'ICIRI
needed now. Up to
•1 0 .37/hr. , ... E
pleo I IMtlt P'iRU poo Uff eoad•my type
training " you ~· Call now, cl•••••
begll'\ J\Jly 1. ~-~to~.
(213) '21-1»3
BUNT
throu9b clamfied
-
.. ..
t ... ... ... ..
> ..
I . •
•
--~ ~--
PACJF.C \llEW
MEMOfliAl ~A'°K
Ceme!ery • Mortu•ry
Chapel • Ctem•IO<)'
Monuary * Chapel
Crem•tK>n
110 Bro•dway
Co•ta Mesa
142-1111
STARTllG A IEW BUSINESS??
TM Leo-' 09plrtment llt tl'MI Deity
Piiot It pleaaed 10 announ09 • new
NrvU now ev••tM to rww blAI--· W• will now SEARCH ll'tt MtM fof
)IQ.I •I no ••Ire ctl.-ge, end MW you
tl'MI tim. and tl'MI trip to tn. Caul"!
HOUM In S.Ota AN. Ttlrln, of QCMKM, •rt• the -en .. campteted ... ...,.
hie your flctltlOue ~ nllrl"l9 9UI ... "*" wtth the CcNnty a.ti, publletl
onoe • W9ek for tour week•• ,....9d
by .... and tt.n fie your proof of
publlcetlon With County CWtt.
I
P'-MOil br to Ne your-~
buelfWM ......,..,. M the Olly Ptlol
Leg9ll °"*"'••It, 330 w... ...
Coeta MIN. Celtfomla. tf you CM not
9'oS1 by, ... Oii U1 at (714)
642-432t, EmrWon 318 or 111 Incl
... "",.... ~ fot you 10
Nw'lcll tN9 prOC*kn br tMI.
Good 11.idl In )IOlol' ---
PUIUC NOTIC! PUILIC NOTIC! _l'lll;..:.:;:;;u;;;cc.::llOT1="=-1-'""="U""C""NO""TI"C"-'l'--
NOTICE INVlTING BIDS
CC-728
Notice lo ---Oho Cly~ ol ... Cly ol ,..,,.ogton .,_,., Colfamla will ,.
ce1Ye ..-cl bide for lht wtderMg of 8Mch 8oulevenl 8"d Edinger Avenue betAW Sid Av-
enue Md 405 F.,....y In ht Qty ot Huilllligton Buch, Cllbnll in ICCOfdlncl with tht sMrlll
onc1-end--onfllo"lho_ol.,.Dnc1orol--Document8 w11 be .rrhblt on 0. 24th Of June, 1•1. A ctwvt ot l20, not ref'undabMi, wfl be
required for MCh Ml ot -and 90C0mp.nying drawilga. ENGINEERING ESTIMATE
w~-Quanlly
01. Mob11Ut1on U1~ ... c-... grubbing Lump"'llicl··-03. Tl'lll'flo Oontrol -~ ... --' ~· 06. Aapt\9ft concrete Type B 3,.)45 TON
oe . ._ PCC -ond -=.a} 2,075 LF 07. ~ PCC curb and gun.r I !YPe AZ) 230 lF
Oii. tMnch PCC curb and gultlr" Type 82) 10 LF ~._PCC-~81) ~LF
10. PCC «09t guaeir 1,020 SF
11 . 4-lnCh PCC aldewalk 11,MO Sf
12. PCC drtWwliy 3, 111 SF
13. PCC W'hMlchalr ramp 850 Sf
14. CUrb drlM Lump SumEA
15. Adfult ..... valve 1 1e. Concrete block wall t ,DIO IF
17. Rttocm Wldll' rMt., I EA
11. Re1oc1t* fn hydrant I EA
19. Pwttwey alfwfl clMnout 3 EA
20. P#tnlnty OliYett S • 2' 10 LF
21 . Ptwtcway culwft S • 3' I " • LF
22. ~ box altY9r1 21 LF 23.T ___ _
8..ch i!foutw9rd Md Edlngtt AV'lf'IUI Lump Sum
24. Traffic~~ Iii Beech Md 9tll1c A\lllM
... -lndSblplng
29. DttOIA' lmpt'owmentl
27. Tr1lfftC oantrol H.--21. LM~ lnckdng II .-mped COf'IO ... ,
·-.... --.. -l.Ynw>-kl ICOOidlla wM theproAJk;e ot...., 1773 Of lht \Abar" Codt, 9" .... ol ~, .. °"'°'°' o11he Oepertmwtt ot.,. caw Rs' r • lftll d1tu11t•• ...... ...,.. Wllll!t,... ..... ~ .. on file 11 tt. oMoe al • CJ1J a.tc Ind the oMol ol ._ Olr'ldor of ·Publo Wotlcl
of 1he Clly ot ""'"'•· ........ c ...... ,.... .t ~toe•._.-,.e:,.., torm\• bl ot•flCI ••°"'°'of lht °'"' _., __ Cll\'_ ..... _-.c.-
No bid Wll be rMllved ...... I II .... on a ...... trwfn """"*' bf tM Dhcllof ol Pullllc Worb.. The eptolll &.allot1 Ill ......,...,.. ~II o.led la .. JWDI ... 1"Jl•1•-. .. tof1h.,.. ...... , •• , ... flDr .......... ....
Thi tibove ~ ............ Otlly, bllnQ .... • I ... flDr h .......,..., d
bkll.lndthletyolHw•e• ,.._..._nat..,...orbfir1n • ......... .,..
1Ull "'*'"' ot wort .. 00i+t1PNICI ... ,,.-bue 11111'11'91 lie•• tl•1111 or w 1111 ..
amolft ot M!f .. Of poflorl ol .. wort,•,.., M •11t .. I IDlllF }'Of ...... bf .. _ .. __
M bl*• ... DO""Ltd on ....... °' .. ·~· •s•u-. ol ...• I olwofktD ... -•ti•• ... •111 .... ._ .................. c:m,i ....... ~,,. ..... ...
piiiiii ........ lb ....... ~,, ..... c ............. ~ ...... ..... ..,. .................... """ ..... ''''•11• ... .,•ra 1 .,,... -.,.,-=--... --.. ::"i,':':':--c .... -... -..., ... .., .. a.tr• .. OMo o..-. ....., Mt • k' a o 11 a ht.-=• ,.,Hw:•:llrn c ........ rn.-..w~ .. tll.,~lllf • ...-lie
Oflll'lllll'ir••sza100liJa11fel .. a.wOC*. .. Clr~•.,, .. ra 11 .,,... ................... ,.II .......................... 1$1tM ...
.-cl ... "r .. Cir CO&.id Of 11211 Clf II tta•c• I .... M llilr ..... riltl .. •le ..., • .. ,. et-.., 1•t, • ... ._.el 1.o ~ '9 ... a., OMUIS Cteu•a M .. "'*' c.w ...... Cir ol """·~ ....... ""..°L".=:t~·=-:..-.;~:, -:.: .. _.,•.::rr.-::-• • • l . ..., ol .. Clw' COUMI 11 .. Olf' fl .... I .:.... C Te:• M Niese .. I.
ATIUT: c.....•....., Cl!yQlrtl
• 1
•