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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1991-06-30 - Orange Coast Pilot11LL NEVER SE A5LE TO PLA'f TME PIANO,OR THE ~ARP, OR T~E CELLO, OR iME PICCOLO, o~ ... . ----·~ . . . OH,AND HERE.'S YOUR e>ALLOON M~AAND! llff FIN6ERS! I BKOKEALl NH FIN6ER5! I'll NEVER 8E AeLETO F\AV TME VIOLIN! • • ..... • • •• DENNIS THE MENACE Wh dotit ~haVe fireworks EVCRV week~ SORRY I DUDE / MARK MUST BE DOWN YOU SHOULO'VE IN T~E BASEMENT I STAYED HOME TODAY.I BY HANK KETCHAM CJOO'L.L PR08AB&Jt> W\VE A SHINE~ ,,. BOr l.X)(J'll BE ALL RIGU"r. BIG NATE I GO GE-f SON£ ICE ~ l'f ! ' BETTER OR FOR WORSE ~,Hl:Re:. I ft1, SROSttNG-'4/ HAIR IN 1Ae. WND 1f1e. Wff{ cSHe-DID .... I REMeMei=R ,WHEN l ~A L.rrtu:. GIRL., WAICHlf\JG MY ~~ BfU>SH Het\ HAlR IN Tt-t:. WtND. BY LYNN JOHNSTON l'D 511N> IN-rftsWINDOW kJH!ftil.&E ~'TSPP t4!,WISHI~ I tft> 1-MUKE. MV , ~- LUANN BETTER OR FOR WORSE ~,H6RE:O.I FM,SROSt1NG- fJI./ HAIR IN 1Re. WND 1f1e. IAJff./ &fe.. DID .... I ReMet'lee=R .WHEN l WAS A LrnL&=. 6tR1-, WAT'c.HING-MY M:slHeR Bf'J.>SH Het\ HAlR INT~ WIND. BY LYNN JOHNSTON l'D~IN=OOW ~ .1see t4!,WISI ~ I tfl) HAIRLIKE M'I I ~. LUANN OUTLAND • CELEBRATE WITH US AND SAVE ON PAINT, For 125 years, Sherwin-Wtlliams has been dedicated to the production of guality paint Founders Henry Sherwin and Filwaro Williams called their first product SWP, "The best pre~d paint ever made." Today, Sherwin-Williams carries on the tradition of innovation and product excellence that began more than a century ago. A-Ill' flTERIOR M11N IATF.X HOUSE & TRIM 14.99 13.99 16.99 SlJPEIPA(NT' IN1DIOR smNIAltX WW.PAINT 17,99 I CHECK YOUR YELLOW PAG~ FOR THE STORE NEARE.5T YOU. LOOK UNDER~-RETAii;." ... ._... .. ...,._.... = -···---.--...-.. ...................... _ .... ..,_,._..., ""'°"'9k1 &am upedll-..n d •bell ... c.wmi Clderboots_ 30%:50%1. llldwetfrtJO'Slht="=...,..., FREE! ,~ ............................ ___ ....... IUSIM~· ..... JqwL DIET!IDlla>lm !HAll3 IUlllM~·...., .l.O..\N4 P11A1D> SHMe llJY Oii'. Gll z FREE! ==-----···--'--......... ~ ..... DE~AR. l'G&WI:~ --28.70.,.4' ,.. .......... ----------I' I ' ' 'II I ~ • ' ) I ' I I .. 1.-rCllllltll~..., ........ __.. ...... , ... ........... _ .. ... ~-. =~ -~ . a ::i .......... =-·--...... I (117!.1' 2.49 c.m lAT£I rA1J11 S.'Uw.tny .99 1.'1. fAmf 10.hWlral~ 1.29 11'1. f lOODt:N S1UlADDfl ·~ ...... .......... . ....... 5.99 -- ·-" '' u ..--Slrctn M..rl.Jt C11rq"""' " 199 I G111*"'1 u '-at lltW 11rtUL (j What's Mariah CArry's 1JOCJJI rangt? Also, wluit's htr Mril4gt? SM lw such an intarsting loolt. MlcNll PmOlr, LR:oln, All. The 22--ycar-old ~claims an extremely rare five-octave range. That strikes a sour note with some pop music cnucs, who say her highest notes sound more like squeaking than singjng. Fans apparently disagree: They've made M4riah CArry one of the year's hottest albums. Of her henr.age, Carey says, "My fa- ther's part-black Venezuelan, md my mother is Irish." Q nus Jllntma", '}VruJ oruJ I wcsnl to lfislt IM red group Van Ho.lat's MW mtauronl in MtxW. Nobody ltMW1 wltoT it is or what it's tJJlltd. Do you? ., Alctlelr, w.llld. Mth It's the Cabo Wabo Cantiru m Caho San Lucas, at the tip of Baja California. Besides serving Mexican food, it's a nightclub -try the band's own "Cabo Wabo" label of tequila and rncsc:al. The non- sensical name is taken from the title of a song on Van Halen's 1988 album, OU812. QI Mird #Mt Dmnis Crosby, ol&t of Bing's sons, killed himself Didn't anothn Crwby son also c.ommit ruicide? an.a RubJ, ~ Wdl Sad but true. Two of Cros- by's four sons have Killed themsctves. Dennis, 56, shot himself in the head at home in California last month. Dennis had a long history of alcohol abuse and dcprus)on. In December 1989, younger brochcr Lindsay, 51, also shot himself in the head. Friends -Bl1tl """' DrHU l" tJJJ. Sn c.'1 "'"'" '""' llu ~ ,.,..,,, ,,,,,,., "" ..,.. said Dennis had grown in- creasingly despondent after his brother's suicide. In his 1983 book. Going My Own Way, eldest son Gary de- scribed Bing -who died 14 years ago at age 74 -as a cold, critical disciplinarian. Q b jimmy Smill' rtal tu1mt Vi"'tnt ZanJlt.a? Mnn I.Mii. Abnen, NJ. Nope. It's ... Jimmy Smits. The fonner LA.1.Aw-ycr, 34, ts the son of a Puerw Rican mom and a dad from Suri- name, a former Dutch colony (hence the Dutch "Smits"). Q As I watch Wimbltdon knnis from England this Wttlt, I wontkr. W1lo wot tht )"Oll'tfftSt malt and fmuJ/t pJaym to win IN sing/a thampioruhips dt.m? Nida Jlnld, HdMlle Born Becker did it at 17 ycan, '127 days old in 1985. C harlottt "Lome" Dod was JUSt 15 years, 285 days old when she took the prize an 1887. This year's tourmmcnt runs through next Sunday. Q Christion Slattr's acting in "Ht.t11h.m" rtmindtd ~of Jadt Nidtol.son. Alt thq JMsds? ffl'Y V. Huf!, De Pwt, Wis. N o, but Nicholson was a devil of an mfluence. Slater, 21, admits he saw Nicholson, 54, play Satan in T1tt Wildin of Eostwiclf before starting work on Ht:O/Mn. "I associat- ed the two. I saw my dwx- cer as the devil." Slicer's latest part is in Kevin Costner's Robin Hood: Prinu of Thina. Yn1bR•dlu t • • 1 flf-•-.Uali'*'*""' """"• iwl~"""llfC..-f fa::sal ... • 6 Gadd-Ka*. Q I read tltot tht w.a oflloaor• NN YMl's Ellis lsLond, wl:idi lists immigrants' Mma, Im 6mt """"'widl ~ W1th Utt FOtlrd: of July roming up, wltal do~ lldtltl II lo..., tl:is tHJtrogt? ..., Wnn. l.JMwool. Qlb. Elias lslmd offiaa1s an as ouu'lpd • you are. 1bcy'rc fighung back by cleaning the wall daily, cacing 1 new teal.ant to prt"Vent scratching and pooing ~ Security baa been beefed up - guards ('YU\ force visiun to spit cu lbdr cbew'11°' gum 50 1t woo't end up on the will. as a lot ~it bll. ""The wall is 9S 1 feet long. ma.Icing it hard co patrol. but we chink wt"'ve p it under con- trol." says spolcawoman Peg ZldlD. Wbo'a the enemy? Malicious vandals and chougbdes IOUrilll. Miik tnarken. krys and even fingernails and spilled drinks have marred the wa1st-h1 . memoru.l. Since it rcopcncd lat Scpcember, more dun t mil- lion pcopk tuve coo.red Elm Island. lt openled u the main Eau Coast immigrant-processina c:enter &om 1892 co t 95'4. A second wall is planned for nett yat't c:m11tDnial, All immigrants to ~ USA. whether or not chey arriYCd cbtoulh Ellis Island, ~re chgi- blc for a mention on the new wUI -for a minimum p~ymcnt of$100. To mcludc younelf or an IJ'ICC$t0r, call 212-883-1986. H-m 8lrttMllly to ..• )uMJO M1kt TY">fl, 25 l!!ll.l Pnoccss Ow\&, JO Carl Lnris, JO Dan Aykroyd. )9 ~ jaec Cameco. Tl Ron SilYu, 45 Thwp>d Manhal1, 13 1!!lJJ. Tom Cruilt, 29 Alan /way. )9 Ml! Pata S1wW, 29 GcnldD ltiwa'a. 41 NcilSU-.64 Au ......... 73 Ablflil v. Buren." J!!!zl. H11ey 1.cwiri. 41 ~Hdmoad.57 ~ l'nid Dryer, 45 ~s.loae.45 0.0.-....99 Mcn&m..'6 ......,.aununu,52 (..Nfy 2) A J1j .,,. Ht .... , .. lthjlmJy Of! ",..,,.,., jtt. PlJ8USllD.: Brette Popper• U>rT091 Maida Ballard • DSCV"ITn VICI ..Um8NT1 Chari• Ga~ • VICI PaUID'&M'ni T..., M1 f•• .,..._ W ... Opl.,._. ---Depaty Mitior. Amy Eisman s..lor Au a:' • IWllar. ~ TID1Xr A.111 .... .._.Joha ~ (TMVl.L. KIAL nt, SPOa'TI). Q ~ mr..~ J.o1ri1 ~ (IPITUTA1NM1N1'>. Om Qln-.d (COVU STORllS) ~lilttlillw: Lee IW)ry, °"'9 H.,.. ...... l.alil ,.,..,, M.ry ... llma, Carol c.m., ~ Mita.y ........... o.,fitJeOlirw ....... ,._ Pwnria 8f'Otltl CopJ'ChW: Terry Dmcbon Byrne Copy..._, Tom Lcot -AMl ... tM Dhcwl T,....Jcm S... ...._ ...._, Mo8y R.obc"9 leJwt A * Sw .._I g W .. ,.. ' n ,_..Stepbc."fldl om.. a.ff! ICalr Bond, VlrinyVim " nt,1 •a: 10001Plllon8M..~ V..m.29-4012 Mtd 1.U Dhdwl .. Lea:-Aw.Mia .............. ...... 011wcw: Carol Jtcmrr-Odp ff t, Mam Ml6ortA~ .• NcwYoft. N.Y. IOO'Z2. (21%) 71s-:.l100 ~ (J12)~.Q510 0-. QI)) lSJ-"901-..... QU) ~...... 0 rt (AlS)~ QANNITI CO., INC •• ......,19& ___ ..__...,..., ...,...,..,. • ..- 41 USA WlllllHO • >-... 1#1 Spirited ••• ~ ••• richly aculpturcd in porcelain The enchantment of the glittering carousels of ~ar returns ... the mastmu.l carving, glorious trappinp. and wealth of fantasy that maJce carousel works of art so priad and valued toc:ta, The9e grw:eful steeds are intricately handcrafted in porc.-elain-to the tiniest.. hand-fol aled roee-meticulously painted by hand, and lavished with 24 karat gold. What treasures for your home ... with the magical~ of an elegant age. F.ach imported Lenox9 exclusive is $152, payable in convenient monthly installments. Choose any or all of your favorites now. e lAnox, Inc. l991 r------------------------------, I Pleue Dlail by July 22, 1991. I 1 Pleut enter my raervation lot tht LenoK porcelain carouHl ICUlptura indicated 1 I below I understand I need tend no money now. I wtll be bWed lot ffCh k'ulpturt I 1 ln efght moothly installments ol $19-each. 1 I on. c..o-1 CJwrrtr (627617) a Prlllt of heri:lt (627Wt) OTJlt ~Hant {WM\) I I I I~ I I .,.. •• ,__.,.,......,....,,...._...,._..__ 1.ti_.,._wU1ww.w_.....,.....,....., I ..................... I I : Nunt RiAI Fiu'lf : I AddnM I I I I Oty State lJp I I I l Mall tcx Lene. Col\ections, P.O. 8clc 30'2D. Langhonw. PA 19047-9120 I I L ·E N 0 X. S I N C Ii 1 8 8 9 . 1 L------------------------------~ Thu im't qaJta the way wt: imar- aned the 1990s: nasty debates over quow, vidcoC2ped beatings with ugjy raaal ovcnoncs, urban violence sparbd by animosity between minori~ groups. Somehow, there was a vague hope that as the nation turned the comer into a new decade, it might tum the comer on civil rights, too -that with segregation leg:ally dismantled and a kinder, gentler era launched, racial harmony would just ... happen. Not tO, ay those who responded to USA WEEJ<END's ccclusivc ~· /u µie findinp show, the battle- ground is shifting. but it is no las in- teme. Where once I.wt that ditcrimi- nate were the focus, the issues now arc fa.imess in the job muht and acccas U> education. Where onoc racism was un- mistabble, now it oftm is subde. And where once the question seemed black and white, the growth of the USA's minority population raises diverse questions. The 1990 Census shows that the growth rate of minority groups bas been at last twice that of the white majority. By 2000, 30 per- cent of Amcricam will be mcmbcn of a minority group; coday, 20 permit are. To measure ow nation'• progress, USA WBBKBND eent quadonnaira U> a non-scientific wnpling of the na- tion 't leaden -politidanJ. relJaious and community activists. entcnainen. athletes, eucutives, journalists and judges. Conservatives and li~rals. More than 230 responded. The same survey appeared in our magazine in February, and tS,300 rcaden mailed in their opinions. A few n:spondenca ubd for ~ nymity -including a white Supreme Coun jutcice who wd that he had been the carget of racial dhcrimirwion in the put year and that President Bush is the last cffectiv.c p1<JCb:10f of civil righca. Most. however, wclcomcd the chance to speak on the rtte>rd. AJthou&b the survey, eo-tpOmclftd by c.oreua Scoa King. it not• ldmcif- ic one, it serva u a buometer of public opinion oa racial equality. PindiQp oa che plFI ahead: • 'khlcedom aad &imess in jobs mmc be pria.idll in chit clec:ade. • Dilatmlaadae happens every day to people of all races. Even so pnxniDenc an Americ:m as U.S. Rep. John Lewi11 D-Ga., feel• it in the halls of cbc U.S. Capitol. • M8dia COM • is far too neg- ative, aceordiD1 IO blades, Hispanics and Amcric:an Jod.iam. • Rad•• tHllam will not lcsstn OYa' the nm 10 yan. 11lll <)pinion, sadly, it shared by moa respondents . • MOit .......... protceting Ctvll rigbCI today are ~ such as the ACLU and the NAACP, leaders and readers agree. • IAMt ~ ia the president, aay whica and minorities. Today, the merit of cbe Civil Rights kt of 1991 Im been at the center of a maellCJ'om on ~ Hill. Tuesday nwb the 27dl IDlliftnary o£ the Civ- il Rights Ito, o{ 1964. which bans dtS- criminadon bacd on color, nee. na - rional origin, religion and sex Wi~, cbe Nllional Civil Righ ts M opena II the renovated Lor- rain Mocel ill Memphis. the sue of the 1968 uausinarion of the Rev Manin Ludm KiacJr. Althoup th~re hatt ~en gains ainc:c cbc t9ti0s. the ¥Oiclel of pain and hope in dlll llllrftJ iodkate that the ltrugle ICill " la ia Wmcy. Why is Bush rated the worst? A divided man in the White lf ouse It wu a moment that defined the e Preside.nt Buah, on 1f31e II amptOn Univenity'1 commence- ment du. sprin1 in Varginia. receivinc an bononry doaorace for hit diltin- guisbed record o( wittanc:e co hileori- cally black colleges. He cook no public notice of the hundredl of Hamptlon paduata who refuted co applaud. who imcad held their 61t1 aloft in a procest pltllte &om che Bladt Power en ol the '609. Indeed. Buah remains a puadax on civil rigllta -md I tighming rod 6Jr cricicilln.judgiac by USA WEEKEND'• survey raulta •• Coosit\er. Bush is only cbe third president co ftto major civil rialita legilladon (after Ronald Reagan and Rec:omtruction- era Andrew Jobmon). But he gives half the profita &om hit book l.«limw ~ co che Unii.- ed Negro College fund, the only charity he doa c:ommm:iab for. ID 1968, die Texan risbd his teat in CongreH by voting for the Pair Houain1 Act. M vice president. he 1rn6iJhWy bpt borne and o8ice open co civil riaba leaden. in dildnct coo-tr'llt., cben-praidem Rapt. Bue in 19a he aciceded ., • tlCtic that his own cunpeign mlDIFf, Ia Aiwlta, renounced on bis deMhbed • 10Undiq ndst. BUib juadfied dob-berinc Michul Dubkis with Willie Monon, a black inma~ who robbed and raped while Oil fUtlousfi. • limply ""1he rouah md cumb&e" ol Qlll ........ Then, in 1989, he appointed the &nl bllCk c:t.irmaD of die joiac Oaicfl ol Sea&' and mmcd a bUdt WOIND • hit aenJor nadonal ICCUl'icy Uliltant on Soviet aliin-blrcDy tlDbnl. · Ptrplaiecl? It may help co remem- ber chic Bueh ia dacnW by frimda and fOa • a deotnt man whole com· petirive 1eal powen an instinct to 1trike at tbt political juplar, to do wh-.er it cam co w1n b bit cam. Opponmu clwp t!w, with the CMI Rilfm Bill ol 1991, lkllll ii OQCID ... ,.,... polida with ........ .. public ..... b qUCMll IO &ilbt· en whit8 ~~&om cbc Demo- cnck Piny. BUib ICIUDCh)y dcff ndl hie r'CICIDld oa nee """'-' pmbes hit ,OWfl civil aipca bill and achocatea coa~u.. biecMI by !ppe8•inJ "to me bcacr .,.a. ol their narure." He pointa IO the military'1 1ucoe11 at improvint nee rel.adona without CfUOCll • bia llm: "We mUlt think of oontlws not u colon or numbers, bat .. Americana," he cold padUMa 11 Weat Poiilt thia moach. Yet be'• nmnl .. IO bud with the '4Q ......... modes• Repubtic:am bave dinaacecl themHl•et and 111rdlllld b a ciompromile chat rndda . Bmb's ~with the Demoam'. Tbe --HcGlc ... bem dc&n- IM. Bmb's ofticc ~chat the pra- ident woWd &DIW'Cr quesdonl about USA WJ!!DND't findinp but then ""-i ~ illue," lpOiaeaDIO Mrin Pia ... aid. ~juA '°° tenthiYC ... And eoo uncenain. Wall BUib tem- per bis m.no. at while findinc a way co rdnbce jOIMtilcrimimOolr llws? Or will be cominuc co imajea quocas in dliC 1912 CM[. ·an. • .. widJ rai9ed 1 fillilllpli:ll Vole•• from the S&n9y: Pros encl COM on ..... 1'he president is a very smart man; J thought he'd just plain be smana-Oil tills issue. He has co ltOp looking be- hind him at the croops and lead.•• -Ame.,.., I llGL .... IDlDf, ••• ,.... ............. f//l Ul'litw.,.,. ........... u WJbe president has been a WI)' ncpiw force. While his voice sounds &om a high place, it alto IOunds frighdUlly in harmony wilh wic:cs &om ~ biyou. lib that o( David DuR [an ex-KKK leacleT, now a Louisiana legislator]. While Republicans on the one band disavow Oivid Duke, on the other chey embncc him and are sinsing the same soogs. using the wne tyria, md maybe co a more symphonic cunc." ---~. "' "1 c. II 1191ca a.tr1'w I lfl '\ .. J perceift George Bush as a compu- sionate and sympathetic president co all people. He rccognites problems beyond gender or ntciaJ issues. I tee him as a long-term strategic tbi*r with regard co SC>CW ptOblnns ... -~ ............. ........ ., u' ·us _....._._ . 4,--·· .. Bush ha said a Aot. but the one thing he did W2S veto the [ 1990) civil rigba bill. By action or what he says, be sends out the mbomJ l11Cll3F that~ don't are a bit about civil rights.' " -JoAllll•saaftllsh. ..... Y' .. ~...... ... .. ear... ...... .. "Bush mes code words co inflame ami- minoricy passions. If the civil riahts bill is a •qooca bill,' rm In F.sk:imo." -PR t 1t ......... tlfQ101ll .. D , ........ .. Bvm cholJ&h rrn a bclievu in affir- mari've action, l'rn not 1 bcUeYer in revcne dilcrimination, and I tee the two at bc:ina differtnL I think George Buab hu stood up to aay be'• noc .,. .. ., impatc ncl.al quom." _....., ... llillll;Cll ·1 ID' ' •• ., .. ..._~iu...-..a '"Since lbout t., the praidmt Ind the JUIU Oeperm11att bne &iltd ., do ( mudi) enforamcnt at all. Ewry c...ti~ °" P.-I "The answer ii that "° Offt is doing an effi?ctive job. The cragic chg ii that DO civil rights wau:bdos in die Waid is going to change an entire people. 1b blame the president ol the United SC*S is a joke. I think die people Of Ameiica . haYC to be held ac:countlble for their actions. It's too easy to get a fill FY ml blame Bush." . Official A.nnoun~m~nt of IM Historic HEROES OF DESERT STORM $5 COMMEMORATIVE COIN They ••lout lo co14frott1 a tyf'Olll abrotllL They auru lunM pro"", co'4/IMlll allll riclorloiu. Now, llW stulllf"'6 collt '"'"" '11 dulr laoMr can k '°"" -for just $51 Side by side with lhe lroOpS o( 36 other nauons. America's tonS and dlushtc:n took only 41 days co lift the yote of tyranny from the tiny, ravapd nllion o( Kuwait In rheir astonilhin1 vict<>ty they became lhe beloved Hm>#s oJ DtunStonn Now you can 1e:quire a luun& bibure to their exlnlOl'dinary' couraac: this historic official S.S commemorative coin wilJ be iS&ued onlu/y4, /99/ -the day President Bush has called on all Americana 10 ucelebrarc rhe rebtrth of paniotism"-by the~ public of lhe Marsha.II Islands ... whole IOOI and daushfen proudly marched lhrou&h DeiCft Stonn with our own. The dramaiic cotn ii domin.ared by a fiercely dccermined Ameri· can £aale The five llT'OWI clutched ln iu talons symbolize~ . the olive brand! J>C8CC. This lepl tender S!5 coin or the Republic of lhc MarshaJl Islands is about the ai.zic of a U.S. silver dollar-but ewn 1h1d:er -and painsultan&ly minced in aleamina. brilliant uncimdaled sohd cupronickel. Each coin is procectively encued 1n 111 aurw:tive PracntationJ>at"' complece with a vivid narrative celebradna the Ht'°'s oJ Dt~ Stonn. Mlnled onJy in 1991 and available in limited quantiry, the Hmws of iNNrt Stonn COlff#Wtn<>l'0- 111•1 Coin is offered without any prt1t1ium OYCt' its S!5 Fa:ie Value (add only St .~ per com for 5h1ppin&. ha.ndlina and insurance). To uaure fair distribution, there 11 a llmJt of five coins per order. Order from the Republic of the Manhall lslands Coin Fulfillment Center. One Unicova- CcntCT. Cheyenne, Wyomina 82008-1991. Or call TOLL RD,..........,.., All orden ~subject 10 l1m1111ton and accepllnCe. Your sarilftK1i<>11 i1 JWJrontttd. ------------------------------REPUBLIC OF THE MARSHALL ISLANDS COIN FULFILLMENT CENTER One Unkovu Center · Cheyeaae. Wyomln&lllOl-1991 CJ Tit• H•rtH1 of IH1•rt Slo,.. SS Co•· 11t#Mol"Gli11• Col11(1). S.5.00($1 . .50), Total $6 . .50 each ................ ,,,.,_ ........ ,~ TClfal MIOlllll ol ordlr: s, ___ _ 0 I~ f.U ,_,_-by dllec* or_., Older peyeb6t to C-F..iftU... C- 00-.,. •Y ..... "° 0 A.-£&..-0 VISA a MaAlrCard a ~ a.e 1»5\11 iUWCUE'f '16WWI WWW lfXW OaDD IY TOLL ra.a 1'D.ll'ltON& fTOm .,,...,. !ft die U.S. ..a CIMda 1-800-648-4700 Wflen Cll9ll. .... ,...,.,. .... OOdr. ~, ,_.,,,.,.rrlllw~. ,.._,. wllttir-* ....... •i.11 _....._.,,_,.,,ll(Jlh4. lflfl .• lflll IMI Conli1uHdfto1" P• 1 time there ii "' employmml = 1he Ju.sboe Ocpan mcnt ii on lbe side ot tbe people the cllcrimllunng. .. -MlrrA 111...,.u.l.CJ 7 2 •N...._'*dl, "Not only ii the praideu1 • alina tbe bully pulpit moYe civil righa fcnnrd. b.11 allo be eear11 perfectly p pared to derail diaculsioa lbout lmponuu.Jegislation." -•tr...._.,,.,.,, ...... ._.,, p;t n,wNte, "'Plesidaa Bmb will spat abouc plunlilin and then VO(t ~ ~ aflinnMift ICUoo biJl We need tome type of affir D'\ldve acQoQ. beauae I tee dilcrimimijon CYtfY day in workplace. r reali2IC be't beaa wry bmy whh the war, bu it is still imponant tbal wie matncain thiap here at home." -....... Aw Cll•-•• ., .... o,em.or Tau••• ...... 1•1p1nic, .. The so-ailed civil rights mQftment is misnamed I should be called the c:Ml ..... n'ICMlDtllL The NMC is noc about cm) ri&ba; it't about caking rWrt the ngh of the best-performing people oa die job and in schools." -0MN 0uM. LI mlllMa ..... ...,.I I I a-., wttb. .. A lot of times, you h3Ye c:MI rWwtl PIP' whose busincs ii mainly U> St2y in businea. WC-re rehashing 30-ye~r-ol rhetoric and oot addraring che p.roblcrm we have today, us ing old medicine on new di1e11e1 Tbe poupt haven't k.ep up with the community. A lot ol the doon blYt been locke open. but 1 don't ICIC groupe &erin&people dirough them ." --·· Willfl'IF~ ..,., .... blllc*. 3 "Groups ha~ goaen thameha olf aa a political agcn tlut basically insists that the ~t must provtd people with equality. And C"lla .here rhac is equality in the military, for example-they oomplain about it.'' --·· • 2 • ..-..ttot ,...,,.., ..... , •• , .. aihlte. 5 'The courtl teem co be penuaded b1 ideology rather th values. We're lecing a retreat liOlft the role d -procccnon ·• _...., • ......,Ulll\: ....... -.. .... Ill ,blld. Other vlewa of who'• MOST ef'fectlve "Groups are really the onJy. b c:Ml npu -the inde pendent groupe made up o( Muy and Joe down the ~ who are actually the ones who apericnce cbe dilcrimiruno and poYeny that are the rault ol&ilare co haw civil ngh or equality. lt is really the .,....rooa pap who arc th voitc1 out there. They~ the.-. for change." -....... Zia, I ... .... ... d $ 111 As19n, ~makes the a:t;,:!.:' ii chit they are very ple-oricn~ and peop ,,_ pip1 ru!Ue I •D'UllP is ltilJ ~and tblc ii a big part of me baale." _._.....,,..,,.,, ................... . "The pncac ICrida dw American Indfant arc caking n aR occurriq within 1he ban. "'eo..rea. The Sen.ate Sc lea Committee on Indian Al&in under (Uawaii De Danic.J) Inouye is gMna much~ #M"Pon IO dJC oll.ndiw aero. the COC.W-.f ..... ~pen in che ~ -LM)llfblfC& llo ... M •• IR\1 till~ 1'he best job o( all -beea cloae b7 .. .med bat cremcndoua 1uc:ct11 in nc' .. hSfm& jftlD ~ins cninon des. People c:riddled cbe .... ' -11 lO paceot o( Gulf forta were bbc:k. 1'1W1 he! ma ..,.,. welkact<i -• 0 .......... ,., u.a.c , .... ..,......., I UM WUICINo • J-»Jt. t#I 111:· ... rrJ!up1 ~r. r "lJt•~ •tur llf •'n1•1r11n' ., u p2;'ijlPJif tliJ~iilf ~~1)· ! .~ ir;fln,~J,n1d1!blUJ~lllnh:~1dfJ!,rrtUu1UJ;r dt1hsbb1JJnJn~ iii .t c= ., ... I 'I u ·n·-, . , • Ii • ·1 11 II II ., It t 1a u r' i ll 8fflhl 8 f)1-a s ~ t1111 ~1 i1!!lilsf~ ... sfj1 ~1 s~1~~11 ~~ ( i ~Rsil !~ I! :1 !ii Hll ~nnhihH~.1!llbh1!l!Hd!i l.!Vll f{l(i!IT~ VOICES 1qq1 HoW common is prejudice? Listen to everyday tales, from people of all races Racum on a ptrsonol ltvtl nmoins a 1'4rf of doily lift -wltttlttr }'Oii art a USA WEEKEND rtadtr or a formtr U N . ambauador. Half of rtodtn, and ntarly two-thirds of opinion ludtn, Strf tltty'vt f elt discrimination in t#it past ytar. And a third of minoritw uy thq ft/1 it last wttlt. Only 6% of mirwriJw say tltty'w ntvtr expuitnud racism vs. 29% of wltitcs. Amon1 t#iost wlto rtport prtj 11diu within tht wttlt; Jonntr U.N. ambassador Andrtw Yount (blacJt), writtr Garrison !Villor (wltitt), Rain- bow Coalition foul'ldtr }tsst ]ocluon (blacJt) and Louisiana statt lttislator and tx-KXX ltodtr David V..ltt (wlritt). ••1 had been playing knnis and brokr a dWn on my locket [on a Saturday af- tcmooO J. I aiopped co get it 6xicd oc IO buy a new one, but when I ~t up to the jewelry siorc, they Jocked me door and wouJdn 't let me in. J scood ouaide te UM WllDl'fD • J-»-#, ,.,, _ ................................ A91111,. and waited until some white people came up, and I-went in with them. I didn't mm a big fuss, but when the salesman uked if he could help me, I said 'no' and left." -Mllfr Pia m II.....,, U.a. Coeu• ll lllllll ORCMl...,..., ...... 12 ''I IOmCtimes laugh ardooicaUy when I'm on an elevator and the door opens, and some white woman loob and~ icara -'Should I get on?' They don't sec anything but a black face. When that door opens and the woman jumps to a halt. you know she'• uyinc every bladt man is a J>C*ndal npilt." -Cat ...... ll)A01, 1 llUI -..... "I got on the Capitol Hill elevator with three other members of Congrct1. Two memben W'lnted to go •down•; two WUdld co ID •up.' The two who wanted IO F op WCR black; the ocher two, wruce. The elevator operator said. 'l will take them down 6nt, because tltq arc members of Congress.' It's a race thing. The operator thought that since we were blade. there wu no wiy we could be memben." -.............. T--, D-N.Y"i ........ .. Twice within the put year, people mistook me for the 1ecrecary to the dean, instead of the dean. which I am." --· ..................... . v...s.-.......... , ....... . '"t have employees who don't let me forget I'm black: little commenu, jokes, graffiti on the bathroom wall . But what maka a diffcmf.ce IO me it no employee took it off the wall. Whal maka me fecJ t.ct is chM nobody did anything about it." -tllrr--.fl PUC. ._,. .... c... ...... .. [I feel prejudice} in the readion fro a minority group o( 'You can't under teand us.' h 'a cbe denial of your p cnce in a room, a subdc exclusion j because I hlppen co be white." -118 I • • .....,, dllllDCAiof ..... -c .................. .. l &el like f'fe walbd through life I privilepf pcnon. beQUte rm wh1 uid micfdlKa-. When I take peop 10 the 1.ocal welf.&re department. 1 treated more polittly dwl a poor per t00 or a penon oC color." _.....,lllClJ....., ............. ~~ 'M •• ,KeL,wNW. "I run inco it aJI the time. The per ccpaon ii dw me fYICCnl is work> beaute lwtr ii ua Indian dolng som chine WUi da..t.ile. l(• condcsccnd•ng. Somedmc:s it'• nm more blatant " -A.DllllMYmr.--.. o...at1-.•ft-... 0 ............ .. , wa •'°Pf*I recently on a trip in New Bngtand by a policeman whc queldoacd me. I felt he ju.st stopped me co cbeck me OUL No explanation ... .... • • , ID New Yortc City. l al- WIYI blft pctiam with c:abl. That's just roudnc. Sometimea they sJ~w down IDd chm.,... up •.•. I was ma Seadma .-llld., (wopabHc ft:l> ~~MN lWO ~ wtucc womca la lhlllt 30L Tbly bad co callr °"",_"' M Pll' t JM Danny America's hope for the future proudly brought to life in a hand-painted porcelain collector doll. HIS NAME JS OANNY. .. a ~ live nephew of hit Uncle Sam~ FuH-faoed, heelthy, btisstu1ty 8'eeping. His tiny fea!lnS painted by hand by the award-wtnning artil1s of Frankin l leirtoon1 Dols, to capture the radiance of love that sur- roundl him. His little head kept wmm by a ailp white cap that 1'88 wtth a shfny satin bow. Bunting and Ribbons of Red, White and Blue He's dreaed in a cozy wtlll9 1l111per wttt'I a neat aailor collar and bnght gokjen tnm. ArwJ he's snug and secure in hes cusaom- quilted bunting of glorious red, wtlite and blue. An heir1oom cotlector doU with a proud heritage and a bright Mure. Just $90, payM*t In oonvenient monthly n. ataamenta. Avallab6e orly from F~ Helr1oom Dolls. Yankee Doodle Danny -dreams of the great tNng8 ID come. THIRTY DAY RETURN ASSURANCE POl.ICY " you wish to return any Franklin Heh'k>Of'n Dolli purchase, you may do so within 30 days of yoor receipt of that purchaae for ,.. placement ad Of rwfund. r-----------, I Comm6la6on Authoriza1'on I I ,,..... ,,,., by July 31. t!»f I F,...,..1 ~11 Doll I F,...,.. c... ,,. •• ~ 19<»1 I I .,.._..,. myoonw1l11lon tor Y.,._ Docd9 I I o.nny, .., heiltoom cdKb dol oomp61 .. wlh I hll CllM1 ....... INllrl*ig C1P ...ct~ bur*1g. I I 1m llfdnQ no money now I _. be bmed tar I 1 my~~ doll In & ~monthly 1n-I I ....... ol S1e.• ..::h, wlh ...... P9)'menl M I In lldvw ice ol lf'ilp1...C I .,....,.._ ....... I . _....___..,,,. ....... ....... I I I 8i0No\l'\JM I ----·-I ...,.....,_ I ~ ..... .....-" I AOOM9I I I cm4TATMI' I I • ,.., A4D ,.,. ID001 I ........... Olla~-··--..... " I ............................. ,., ......... I ........................... L-----------.J crunchy flu~fy r Q.o. l p otc>.:to chee.sy me out co dinner • a decent restau- rant. and tbcJ were c:xr:remely tense abom it. Tbcy liiept lnnkina around t0 see if people wae looking ar them. It WI ft1'Y UDOOmb1lble meal . ., -AMa ~ 1 I nt, pll t2 b) ,,.., ... or, Mwc,.Mn°1d ....... lllec*.M .. 1 wu prmy nady dreseed. I bad on a coat and tie. I don't think I loobd ltk.c a pune amcbtr. He w just looklng for a black face., md chere I was." _,,......._,,ofwot, , ••11 ............ 51 [Ahoflt bdltl MU lltu 1pri111 by a poliu oj/ka " • M•,.,,."4 lalplllflY rotau- rattl 11111il M '°"" k looktd at by a UIOIMll Wt\o ""' Mw fObhed.) .. It's a.bmitom_ man. For c:xarnpk, I get on an airplane and go sit in first class. and a lady will walJc up to me and ay, Tm eony, sir -you have to go into the back.' I mean, it's qutte another thing to say, 'May I sec your ticket, pleuer It's an everyday rtahrv ofliving in America. So be it." .. I wu on a bus tine and I told the guy in &ont <X me. ·rm Fins co rn.m ~ phone call. Can you uvc my place'' He aid. 'Sure, 90 ahead.' But when I amc back co my place in the line, rhe othm loolaed • me md objected and aid. -00 U> the badt <X the line. Don't JOU bow beacr? This is America!' lf '°" look liR • Chinne person. they tee you au&omldc:llly Ma foreigner." __ .._ ....... cN!nun. U.S. Ct ' ti F •a.1 ........ Allmn. llO .. As a woman. you are )missed a lot It's lib bumpifts inU> a wall 5C'Veral tima a day and Fa:inc a big bruise Bout chc end of'che day, you can't re- call wlw inddeet camed the bruise We all QpttieDce tome bm of d1s- criminatioo on a rqolar basis -all ea:cpt wdJ~ white males ..• -H rts ...... *9Ct0f, w .......... , ttlt -. ....... 37 "They give )'OU chae nq:ativc looks when you'tt at the pocery store or ~you arc. rm a big girl now. and I could let It bounce off. but I cenainly fed cbll dUap have not im- pnwed siDcc I Wll I chUd." _......, ........... . -fl .,.. ........ 11 "~cauu I'm Upt·•kinned, I gc:t ubd all -time. 'Why do you hang out with Inda.a?' My wife. who is darlt...adnMd, p alilhDld in 1iores. They wlk on all w .White people first while abe ii loolring Cot IOIDeOne co tab her money. It happens to my daughters. too. They do well in school. but cadlen aft ahnys ready to make excuses why they won•t. [This spring.] my daughter wu ac- c:med o( plagiarism. The teacher could not identify where from. but be as- sumed dw became she is Indian dlis good wort could not be hen." -n-Clillte ......... ' l .. llft ................... ,.,_,..._.., ''I've been 'not black enough.• When I became the fine bladt Miss America. chere,... feedblck that I wasn't repre- senwiYe ol black America because I didn"t baYe aue A6ican-Amerian fea- tures -my eya are green. I haYe light.- er skin. I can"t c:banee the way I look." -wnrr u:a 1,.....,.111111111.21 "It doesn"t bother me anymore. It did botheJ me when J WU gJOWing up in San Antonio and I went to a high school dm WU pmb:ninandy white, and I couldn"t be a cheerlnder be- cause my lqp were too dark. rm OY'Cf that because I feel it's dwm, DO( me. It's about eduation. You an"t change attitudes ovemiaht." _ .. 11111111 • • ' III• I All II 9t1;•.e ....... u.&. laMrDI, .. rnt. I'' I lie "In polidca. it's 'We need you in the room bec:aute you're the risht color, the right ethnic. But pleale don't ask me for mych1ng.. It'• DO( being mm terioully IS I player." -.... 0•••· ...... 'a.."' V... ... 9J • 4DU II ... II II II Os M11,t1' ..._ • ., llVE ··11 tt•• ••pa YEM• Cl.l'Plm .. ••• m11 .aw••• COlllly clpe 9t the .,.a ulon or• •Fat, qulll, C01nfortllble ..... tor II long-tl1ll-.cl pela doge, C8la, exotic ••••• ..,... ..... tor .. --you ... ·~ tura, lllnQlld, .... Mir met llftbedd9d 1n11 ca What a great way ., keep your dog looking his best ... Barber King Pel,.. ....... makes It easy to do touch-up grooming or a beautiful, head-to-toe haircut. Th6s precision in8b'ument Is an lngen6ous stafnless sleet comb with an ~UI~ blade. Unique .._a-cut featln leta you move blade fotward for a clo8er trim or b9dcw8rd tor just a light trim ... Control the length by siq>ly turning the dial . Wlth just • bit of practioe, you1 eaaMy 1eam to trtm. taper. n style 1ce a pro. wtry spend a amal tomn having your pet groomed? No need to drMa to the wt or kennel and pay aomeone to do N job ... Pets would ... -at home and haw you do. nice. glllele ~~·The e.w King .. "ftllM IF II ao fllll a quilt.• II oon:....,. to ..-. on cm. horl 11.• Wll • dogl. TRIMMER Precision trimmer is so good, tt carries a lifetime manufacturer's warranty. It is non-electric, c:omplelely silent ... no noise or vibration to ~ pets. You can use tt before or after ba1hing your pet, or whenever it's needed. No upkeep requtred ... Just rinse under running water. and change the blades oocasionaly. ~ Barber King P9t 1\tn.,.. wfl pay for itself many times tMN .. Send for yours '>day on money- back guarantee. Easy instructions lnduded. I SATISFACTION GUARANTEED _ . Or Your Money Bid ~-----------------------------------------------01 .... Kaye COllectloft, Dip. Pf-HS ' .. I001. Coed~ ..... t('f 1171M001 YD. n.NTrn sm <""" IWZ31) _.... .. • ~ .,-...., rd .. • 1rJ I out°" "'f dllt (or._.->..,.,--. on ,..,-beds ~ ,.. ...... ~o_o:f..~~~~-~-~~~~- ~-----~~~-~~--~-~ : ~·---~~-~~~---~-~ .. : lJD ! QONN~•t1Ul•a.IO~&IWdlr4t I : QTWO Ttka 1 •••00+k00.._..6_..,. • : o,.... .... ",.,.._><'-~..,.. 1V MZ-11 : ... ....... : ,..__.,..•"¥· O'' CM 0"'8a : ~· J4 ... ,,..._'---: ....................... QChcMl.O..-t_,. ____ _ .......... = ........... ,.Cl ; ..-. ................................. . • : -liiiil·-~--"':"'"-~ What's changed since the '70s[ Political gains, eroding health care and a lack of momentum Opinions split widtly on how far Wf:1~ corru sinct tht thl Civil Riglw Art. Mi- "oritits say tltty'rt still hurting wlurt it cou"ts -on tltt job, at school, in tltt pocltttboolt. Whitts art mort upbtot, and evtn minoritlts stt a-ins in politiatl clout. But without ccuptum, minoritia art much mort lilttly than whitts ~ uy conditions haw wontrttd in cattgoritS ranging from htalth cart to tconomic powtr and housing. Other rudtr ruulls: Htalth cart has gotttn wont; sori41 st4- tus, bttkr; and housing, about thl same. "We don't set dogs on people any- more. We just alienate them from the system by calling them underclass and creating barricn to access to education and jobs .... If you consider the homeless, the decline of rural America and the inner cities -the number of people who arc impacted by institu- tionalized racism -~ arc worse.•• -l..llDDnm......, ,. aria 1t, Al••ilw• fat ...... Oppottul«y, "''.,.............,., "Things arc worse now. Discrimina- tion ts more dangerous now, because n's gone underground. It's more diffi- cult to fight it when it's not out in the open. You sec at m employment: Now they've figured out ways to do it under the table, to discriminate legally by obeying the letter but not the spirit of the uw. They 6nd the white male they want, then they write the job descrip- tion to fit that pcrSOn." -Doml9 ~ •ec:tlM' ol ""*~a•a• • ...... for---. "'~ o11--. ...... 44 "The president/attorney general arc now basically against civil rights lcgjs- ~tion and litigation [a blow to political power]. The federal courts arc also in- creasingly negative re: affirmative ac- tion and minority rights." -J1M1nr c.w. tunw u.a. p1uld1 it, ....... "Black people, especially women. still arc at the boaom of the cconomK: lad- der, and we've been in the wor\ force for hundreds of years. We have a ~ teric of African-American• who arc f4 UMWIDIND·J-~ '"' educated, who have been in the corpo- rate sector for doEem of yean. yet most at some point find themselves stagnated. They don't reach a glass ceiling but a concrete celling. I do sec a lot of African-Americans turning their frustration into encreprencurahip." -._ T.,..,, ....... cHef, Eaa•toem J ... ......_. "There has been a huge N"F ofblacb into the middle cJw. You can really tce it if you liYc in the subwbl. I pew up in Vqinia when it WU~. I went co white tchook. Look ac Var- gjnia DOW and you Cllft lee I pat de- gree of incegradoo. 1(1 not tOtal racial harmony by any means, but there has been a great deal of economic and po- litical success. Look at the many black mayors and [Gov.) Doug Wilder in Vtrgjnia. And I think there is going co be a further explosion of black elected officials in the t 990s." _.,.....__....,, n.. """",.., utla n a t A. ..... • .. Education for bbcb is becoming~ tcr. We are 6naDy oo the dlrcshold of cscablisbing ICpuut facilities to meet the need& of bbc.k children. Sud\ u separate achoob for bla.clt boys ages S-12. caustit moldy by black men." ---••-.-.---.a II 48 •• ••People II die Iowa' end oi ~c eco- nomic: IQ)e find thenudves m dire straits iD bahb cart. Am J prepared lO pq more ma IO the economically de- pri¥od, o(wtw.;M cob. c:aP get ~th are? Ya. Upoopk need che care, give •t co chem; if Ibey .. ooc healthy. they anao&~ ID~·" _,....., .............. Fii. _._ .................... 43 .. It'• hard to mab 1 cue lhat thing1 ba¥cft't .-n --... Tbcre's a lot of oppomaaiiy today, ~ty at the hiper .. ~ OOipolS Amcria-" --..Mrs,...,,,,,., .• J , ,, • n • 4 a.c.. lie .,. " JM 'U 4'I ., Al9J .... Owd11tt PULLY Al.1J1IORIZBD A.ND AUI'HBN11CATBD BYnlB TRUSTBBS OF1HB FRBDBRIC RBMINGl'ON ART MUSBUM. The Frederic Rcmiapn An Mu- IOWD. located in Qadembura. New Yock. pcae.na ita premier work ln an unprecede.nrod coUocdon. Inspired by che immonal bronzes of America's most funout IC\llpcor. 8IONCllO IUS1D. Creaced in 1895, itWll Reminp>n •• .cry fint bcou8. Now chit maacrpioce becoma • ftfte art repmducdoa in miniacure. lndnidaally cnfted i bot.an bfonl,e. The same modium med by Reminp>n a> cieace hit mott endurina works. Authentic: a> the smallest decail. Even Reminpn'alipaueappcan on the bao. ffand..finished co the rich padna c.:hancterisdc of the pat bronzel of the American West. Powedul. Dynamic. A nirrina tribu1e Ill) Reminaton and the indomicable American spirit. llllONQIO IUSTll is priced at $ISO, inductina • bandlome hardwood bue. '1mnDlfl.,,...--."tMiafQUCY :z:. ..... _ .................. ,..., •• . .. .,,.. ....... .,, ........... ,, ........... ·----·--------------------------------------.-• OMwP-! BJl(Nlf() BUSTBR I av ra101 ate aunNOTON I ...__...,A...-u. '"'· ' n.., ........... ; r...u.o.-. Puuu1e w1s""' t ...__., ....... '" ..... I .... "', ............. ,.._..._,. _,.,.."' ........ ..... : ........ ..,_ ... 1 ... M.-.. .. 1 I .,_t1PO.•..._., ....... _.,_. .. _,,. _____ _,.... I OJ ... ......., .I amb • flS-• ..... "-•••lfltJ-. .,.,, .. _ .. ___ I ._..~~-.... I -~ijllll--...... iit:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii---· iii_ ... __ ,. __ _ I __ _, ADCW-1 I QT\'lSf.,.,... ______________ ~---- 1 ·-- Magnificent Full-Color FLORAL LITHOGRAPHS Only #5 -SET OF 4 -NO, This .is Not a Mistake/ Ow Reider, Hert'I a wonderfully frsb, new idel b dec.orltq 101Jf lone or oll5ct. >.a Shoppila ~ of WeSend Shopper, rm '° happy ~ we can oler a new item lib thil -IOtui!drbc thar'I IJ'llUinely beautiful, and vsy WJ on the~~ an ezdulM price tellfmbrmtion ~ wltb a lrm tpeda~ in fine art repodudiora, we are able to oler the ROie o..del'I ~. for a limited time, at a tJUJy am.me low price. F.ICh pellOf\ who l'f.IPOOda to ttm • hebe ~. wldin four weMI born now, CID purchMe up to two ( 2) Seta at the gumnteed price of only'5.00. (PIMle Ncite:,,. price ii not b one or two ~. but b the endrl 4-pieoe Sdl) Now eojoJ the "*' of summer 1111 JW '1ound. In a .a dilplly of fii qAionll beluey. Badl t*--illO pirfllct. 9dl ~IO ftlll In,,,.,., dmiL You can llaat dllltlct the .:ad~ il the *· A botl09t would 111 J'* tb1r '* 1cnl pcltJlb' an ......,., 11CCU1111 and Clllld. IM wm 1m1 ~ II tbe ...... ,.. color, the .. .., i;wldJAt cblrm of tt.e..,.t> ...... P.ICb la an :::::•rr lia, done in rich plltM with a l'Oleiinl owblad . You 1D1J ""*' to pwdw tbe Set aNdy framed -,..... ... ~ added pllldc. IDd pnitedM.aylc...,.. lltildudld.,,.. Set d4, ..... ii....,. for a mae Sl9J5 wbllellipplll llll Md ...... or not. CM monep-ba ·---JO'I of (Qi ....... fui. 1'hele dehm lnNrt .... wll not be Bl by UI in "ff 1tore, at ll1J price. n..11 a lmit d two (2) &a per c:ultomer. Howe¥s, 10'I 11111J Older up ID .. (5) S. II JO'I' Olds II mlled mrty ~ ( wtdlil two_.. tom now). Sine ii;. Odcllda ................. _,, 2 QM, VIM.csam-cw.c._.._.-.,_ .... ....,, ............... ) .. Is .the media's view distorted? t MUJ, 1"11 Ua .,. OW t( 1t11Jhivlty to •lnority CONltrlU, t J"'l'tkut.rly low tfNrlu ltt our 111rwy. Both Mumrurlttn nd rt11dm MY.,_.,, HU,.rdu '"' A...mun 1"4U.tu don'• t fair NW,_,,, M IJtltvUio,., '" tWWSpoptn or in "'4fUIMJ. " UJlllNll, A.IWlu •tr Wlftied to ttt fair co,,,,. /11 tlN •- . "'· WM. ,.,,,., .,,, ...... '°""' ., Net (Ml ""1wrt), "" OJI Jtrllti,,, fan U t#Nt ~ oj •t.clt rwUn Wf IJtq ~ wrly ~ '""19'ft •"" 7~ ~W«k raidaJ Wilw tMI hita lift,,,.,,.,,_ JIOSldtldy. only De'M '°"Cit; reprd co Hispanic people and is eanbquU.a. cing and coups d'mt." _,... _ ........ ,. .. , .... ,.. ...... .., .. .._I II 1..a fll IP $ Pk MDSrtD••• ll1p I !lo. ta Knowing che counay lives whh a deq>«aced ~ ind-IC(, the media blft an oblipion to help remove it. reinforce it. For example. the media never ( ttport] that lacb are only. third ol me mdoa'• poor. So when you ra1k average cia1ena. their view is chat only blacb are poor ... _ ................. 111 ............ , ........ . media UIUllly look for oae ~'°° co be repre- mift of all bid people, lilaeRt\f. Al Stwpron. We n't all dlUI dw way, speak dw way, look dw way. You 'nd ol cringe md ay, -Ob, no -here comes Al .pn.• " -va 1111tm 1.--..._ . ....,. .......... =-.. .......... .......... ............ -.....----•toe·---- AN HISTORIC TRIBUTE TO nm AMERICAN SPlRlT HEROES OF DESERT STORM ARMY · NA VY · AIR R:>RCE · MARINES · COAST GUARD Eyewitnea to HiatorY" Pint Day Coven Only $2 each! O njuly4, 1991 ,ourNadon~llyhcx-i· an America'• brave '°"' and dachtert ~· who confronted ~ tyrant abn>ed ... lifted the yoke ol oppr-6on floln help'-Ku. wait ... md have come home~, Confadent and victorious• The Hma Dacn Scorm. That day ln Wuh"'8ton, 0. , Praident Bush dedlcata a tpeelal, new Ccmmcrnorad\le Poet· aae Scamo ... an ettmal tribute ol ~ oeoole ol our anmul N1rion. flrtt &:fltiom of dUi M• toric ICMl\P wtu be ceniAed wtm chc coveted JW, •. l99ll w~. o.c.. pc>eaNft. 8e.c ol al • theY In mtllble -. if .JOU ordet ~ly -in~ lndMdual tdidone fof the Army1 W.!J, Air FUa, MariMa 9nd C09lt Guard '°' oM $2 eech. Ot in the delU· able ~ ltt ol ftw for jult sa. Ordtr todty for Y'O'llltlf Ot for. da from: FleelflOCI. One Unic:oYW Cenm, OwYeme. Wyomi~ 82008- 0001 . S.W11etkJn~ ··- .------Mraf!Ol'M ------, .......... BCRJ·USOI 0....-. W1 ' a IJOOl-400I ......... , °"'" .......... Dry c...n. c:JbJ~-~ _ Ta~._CS1..c:hl--.. s __ c ,. .. .. 0.-. ..... ,.,.. °" c.-.i S-al A"'9 (SI,_•>-..... S __ TOTALOlQ:ID I __ ............ -' ...... ....... ..., ........ o=:eec.ia.s .Wt~. Q gr.. 1 .J:t ...... m-a., •Y: O~••E.-ooi...a.. cw... .... __ ...... -..:& .. IWl!iil:m!fr.~~ ......... .- ,,,.._--~-----~----~---°" ... ,,.. __ _ ~:::~-------L------------------.J . , : i ; :) '.' t J ! t: E S 1 q ( i 1 Is hiring fair? .. Evat here in San Antonio, where the majority of people are Hispanic. in no area of hir- ing is there a £.air rcpn:scnca- tion of Hispanics. Affimwive action is not enough. All I hear is the minority is no< going to get the job if there is a whi~ Anglo-Suon in the running." _ _,.,,.,., .............. ,.,, -.a I I Multilingual society? Erttlisls rt111•lns tltt l111ttUlt of cltolct, dupltt "" ifljlux of ctdt11ru Mtw11wUk. Opposllioft 14 offeiAI MR of otlttr lutHtts ls folrly stro111: Ntorly two-tltlrds of'"""' •rt oRGirt.st U. •ltd Oflly • sli"' ""jorily of hlodu .,,, Hisr111a •ppro11t. Most It.Un "" 111 /.,,or, llN•flt; """'"I ftildm, Liu 10""1 show lftOJI support. "An C(lnphadc 'no.' In I COUil. ay IO Vast. with such U\ echnio4ocW mix. there bu to be common ground. Nothina will lead to Balbniwion &Mer lhln a blbble of toneS." _,_...........__ ..... , ....... .-..a '"The ttandml I woWd ~ u the •econcla.ry mott·used language in .. the community -Spanish in IOUChetil Tcm Ind Souchem Cali- forni1, and J1p1ne1e in Seattle. We're one ol the few nations lhat are monolingual. With tramporwion and eommurucadoa m.aldng the wadd ....... Amakw ltt f*ll IO haw CO lam new~ --··...... ..... ftlll LR ...... 'DIC th. 8 AGUASOR• Are Your Feet KimngYou? •Aqi••Dltt" patented ahoe lnHrta arw made with eealed-ln pockets of water that elmpty cannot coll~ or breakdown. Aquasort> la bloenglneered for optimum comfort, mauaglng your foot while abeorblng and dlaperalng ach shock waYe throughout the lnaole effortlesaly. It glvee your feet and lege auoh Immediate rwllef, you'll awear you're "'walking on water". CUSHIONS AND llASIAGES YOUR FEET wmt EVERY STEP YOU TAkEI The water In Aquuort> ahapee to the contour of your toot, aupportlng every area juat wheN your foot neecte It. Thia hetpe to relieve praaure on nerve endings and reduc:. pain and dlacx>fn- fort. Aquuorb water-filled lnlOla also help relieve the Pf'USU,.. of corns, t-------+---• bunfone. callu.. and blletera. Their muaage action helps Iner .... blood ~-----­ clrculatlon gMng you the rettef you'w been looking for. Reconwnended by Podt•trtatal V.8. PA TENT '45879n ,,.. ... "' .... ..... ,., ............... "' ............ , ..... ·~· r----------------~ AG«JAIOAI. Dllpl. ~10 II All •• I Aw, IMMeil. NJ 07al EncHIMd le I. fOf palra of AQUMOft> tneoM. O Women .. ._.._. ___ ------O Men .. .,_.._ ________ _ 0 lWO .,..,. ~ ... a -.a t1S.to edd •U'I P&H. 0 OHR .... OfttySTalldd11.IO P&H. 0 ~ _.. ~ &t1 .10 C_,. $1(1t P08TAG£ FAIL .... ,,..., ~ .. -,,..... edd 1 ....... WI. ca.. or o--, Ol'dllr .. enc:loMd. °'*08 mr C V'8A 0 ......, c.'CI Clird •---------Exp. e111-•---........... __ ~-------------~ AIMllle ____________ _ °" • 7 _,_ __ _ ...._ __ ......, ______ ... ________________ ,,,, • • • • ' .1 ', T ,'\ 1•1 I J: t E s 1 ~ lj , What's most important. today? Put educati~n first, then job fairness and health care Ovtrwhdmingly, and ptrlraps not sur- prisingly, schools and jobs are sun as tht luys to furthering civil rights in tht 1990s. Minoritits in particular say fair- ntss in hiring and education should ~ tM top g<Hlls for policymalttrs; whites art only slightly ltss convinced. Tiu issues givtn tht ltast priority wtrt acctss to political powtr, fairness in housing and tht frttdom to practict rrligion. "There arc very few ttlU<.attd poor peo- ple. Everything binges on education. Without it, you can't advocate for proper health care, fur housing. for a civ- 1 I nghts bill dut ensures your rights." -Suun Tmytor, ..._In cNef, Euence ............ 48 "They all arc No. 1. F.ducation is criti- cal to employment. Employment is cnt1cal to both maintaining health and advancement. Health is basic to it all." -Dofethy ....... ,.. .. 111111t. Ndor1lll Could_....., ........... 71 "The quality of 'eduation is the Irey. As we fimsh th1S century, the majority of youngsters in schools in urban sct- a~ will be minorities, and the quality of eduaoon tends to decrease u the number of minorities increases, pri- man ly because of fewer resources av:ul.tblc for urban schools." -JGAM •owco......,. ...,._ vtce pil , ........... ~Corp..blllc*.12 "Companies should let schools know what kind of skills the private sector wi II be loolcing for so the schools [can] tum out people who arc trained for the jobs dut arc going to be out there." _,.........,...,....,,_ NAACP loocMlfttlo o....ta111Ment. ~ 48 "Hisparucs arc the most undereducat- ed minority. Our kids arc the most q- repted population in public IChools." _,.....y .... ,. ..... it. Nllllofllllll Counolt/6La ...... ll111 .. IO ''We arc committing the same crimes [in education] u 20 yean ago: We haven't changed the way we train tcachcn. Texrboob still praent a dia~ -USA WDDND • J-•Jt. Im ,. . • -.• ..omtlS-................... • • • -. .. ., ........ ..,.. -~ --------.tOOIL ............... _ .. __ __ ............. toned view of history and literature. We still discourage girls from ca:clling in nuth and science. We still use stan- cbrdiu:d tau that are biased," -Lelle ................. . c..r---~· 2 ....... 47 "Having the education doesn't mean you get tilt job. Eight ~ ago, I was on welfare, I decided f d newr again be without an education and a job at the same time. I took three classes a semester until I got a bachelor'• de- gree; now rm dole to eamin8 I mu- tcr's. ln the last year, many promotions occurred at tilt auto plant, but not one went to a \VOftWl. • . • l"ft never asked for any special c:onsiderlCion -just an opportunity to show what I can do." _......, ....... A.k•FI II, I II ,......_,_. ..... 0... ....._ ..... ..,, ',• '1 know IO mmy people who can't fCt jobl. If they bad jobl, cbey would be able to pro-ride better educational opportunities for tbdr c:bildren, Par- ents who don't have jobt really have trouble providing rome choices for their c:hildml. In an IF ~ we calk about empowerment, the fint thing you need is a job." · -_,Arr F II I ....,, u.L' I , •Clllll ............ D •1 belieft in cbe Caacffan way o{.,.. ciatiud medicine -care for c+a ,aae. Too many people do not Ft care, and coo many ol chem arc minorities.'' _..,..,, ., .......... . ....... M ........ ..... 11 t!iiHH iJ tt11i 1111 . •s •rf I 11·1 9\\ H '• 't't•~ U11 fii'~ I ll J t I~ !fl Ji I ~ f • I 1 ! ~ Ir~ h OJ ii I . \.:_ tJ -u r ~! 1 r1 I 01 i l h I '1 : ~ -, -, •" ' I i II I , 1 It l -------------. I r •' ~ !H 11 1,~:'.. · .. ~':.;;~f r tl1Jl:l,,&~1t!tlllcJB tr1 I i .. 1 ~ilJ 1111'!,' .... I "'l!-._1 ~ ~tl11Ji.I --.-~·nuu11u~r a-~ 1r1 ill~h .. J•r1 t1.1 , I ~ I 1 EJ.li;.(i,!, I ~tl:c;J I r ~ •1t1 '~ru fJPHP1 I" °" 'or!i~iht ii i1~(Uih JI ~ •llf 1fl!f 1 l1 1 1i'1! ll · ~ tr .. t .. 1ri~ t J f'!l f ~ 5· ~ ~ ~ g C') Ii l • . • ·- L IV 1 L H 1 l~ H T S V 0 IL [ S 1 '1 11 1 Will tomorrow be less tense? Not unless the pie gets bigger and everyone gets smarter Rau. rtlat1on.s won't 1mprovt any ti mt soon and proba- bly u•1ll gtt worst -that is tht glum a.s.stssmtnt of rtadm and opinion ltadm. O vtrall, 70% of ltadtn su rarial ttnsions m<rtasing or holding suady by 2000. J.-V11ite:s are: mort Wuly to stt troublt among minority groups, minoritits art mart liluly to fortstt troublt with whitts. Thtst findings wt across most rattgorits. Only 1vhitt le:adus txptct ltss ttn.sion bttwttn minoritits and u•kllts. Art they 1ruulattd, or j ust optimistic? "If the economy 1s stronger and reflects gre2ter eco- nomic JUSUce. and there 1s strong moral le2dersh1p from the president. then there will be less tension. ff economic mJUSOce cononues, r.hen tensions will in- crease It\ doubtful thmgs will rema.m the same." -...... Jecbon, ....... ...,.,,, •• o..trtct of c.oMnbla. IUck. 49 "When I ~growing up Puerto Rican m New York. 11 w:i..s like Wat Sult Swry Really scntitied -a lot o( confro nuoon. Now it's a very d1ffercm amrude. There .ue sull pro blems, but I think there have been some very profound differences ... -........... Plneto, delMY ,_,.or, .... Yortt City, .... p111k, S8 "I think you Wlll find more people ·m~nstrea.ming,· w1t ho ut forgetting who they are and where they come fro m You lcecp your v:alues and your culture and your roots in place, but you adapt mo re co life's rcalioes And life's re21itics are tlut we live ID a diverse SOCtety. So I sec the year 2000 with a lot nf hope. I luve a pos1ave feeling about It. At lust, I'm gomg to malte 1t happen!" -M8rMI 0.. Tcweno, hMd ot META tnc.. -..t·1N11 .. •11••t con.-ny, ~ 53 'Jnter-mmonty tensions arc growtng, partly between blacks and H1span1cs but also between blacks and Asians. Pan of 1t 1s prejudice based on ignorance. Pa.rt of 1t 1s compconon for ~urces md attention. Part of 11 1s that racism atTectS everybody We have to undersund 1t 1s not a virus that attacks just white An- glo-Saxon Protesunu but a virus that atuclcs Hispan- ics. blades and Asians. It wasn't relevant to talk about black preJ1ul1ce against Asians or Hispanics nil blades had power. Now blacks can really manifest power. It's go t oo be bro ught out into the open. It's been quite l secret. something nobody wants to own up co." -...,. ~. praeldant, ~ Coutd ol La Rua, ... ,Mk. ISO "Minonty r.1c1sm (ag;unn white people] is growing because o f affirmative acnon, forced integration, cnme and th10fP tin dur. Forced busjng ba.s brought a USA 1"!.IXINP • }•"' 1._JO. '"' •71ie tension is It • very hiib leftl ~ and I can•t imagine it getting worse. I think it's sort ofheahby d:w tbere•s m~ black tension against whites, n.ther than the kind of self-destructive, inner-d.i.recced 1mSion of the pat where the black c:onwHI"~ would let ia own community on fire~ ... The black presence is beroMDing dueacening to the wbice power cl& That fear rmy motivate UI CO reach out and help, rather tbanjUlt blam .. " . -F---l:AJWa~p;11tf11tofN l%l ""mo&w4J ....... ···-... ,, ....... up a whole generation of young whites and young blades who arc very angry at each other." -0.W. Duka, .............. ·····~ ...... u "Jn Los Angeles. we haft a huge problem between Asians and Latinos. I think th~ kind of invaded each other's neighborhoods and they don't under- sund C2oCh other's culture. There's oeYCr been any at- tempt to cduate people about different groups." _ ... ,,, ,.,,,, 1ai• ..., .. r.~41 '111u10tt1no WED 1'be tensions will become increasingly open unless we learn co deval~ race u the criu:rion of worth." -C. llto UMolft. ... pcul I ol i ,.., f4 O...IAl••*>.111111111&.• "Whit.es arc getting more brazen about speaking apjnst minorities. They don't just speak to chcir friends anymore; they're confrontational I am very much a part of the Indian community. I don•t gener- ally aocialize with whica. but I bowl in che wne league [in suburban Washington. D.C.J with whit people, and they often say thinp about blacb in &oot of me beaux cbey doa't view me as cbey view bbck people. They feel freer about apressjng them- sclws in front of me about nciaJ mitudcs ... -•ct11-.... ...... r.... .. 7 U.S..,_ol ..... M1111'9.' Ir' ... 1111, ...... .. ''Some minority groupt ICrel.l1\ before they'~ C¥Cll hurt, which irritates the majority. It feels like it's being pushed down your throat (if you're white]. I thought fof I while in the '6Qa and 7Qa WC~ im- proviJ'll -but, boy. hive I tttn us ~ .. _..., ............ .......................... w..---.• "lf the underclass of blades and Hispanics continues to grow, it will increase lhe tensions among all groups. The reaulting uphcavab might make che Watu rioa of long ago seem liR child's play ... ----....... ,, "1 ... "•• "* •111111117 fll C1I •r 8M Uldt:•1•11, llEJ•lllt 4't .. With the populadoo cxp1nding. people UC IOft of bca>m.ing more tribe! and ·~ themtelws in their own ways. It's jua Pn8 to F' war-." -J.-:'tlt I ti, .... le ...... ll ,,. ... , .. .,) ... ~ On September 23, 1990, 14 million Americans ~ a landmark eYerrt in film histay ..• THE CIVIL WAR, from award-~ fibnmaker Ken Bwm. Now you c.an own the epic doaunentary that won critical praise from oocm to coaa- on home video only from TIME-LIFE! COlll.alM ...... ""' .... on m FACh video in nlE CIVIL WAR set~ profes- sionally mastered and beautifully repro-• • • • • • • duced, ~ it a visJai quality impos.gble . I to reproduce with home taping. Ami this 0r l1et an~: D YES! = ~1-1 set ~ compltdelg unabridged-even con-at once-for a 10-day preview and ~ only I ~scenes not shown on Tv. set-and !'llJe 20961 $14.99.• FUture epGc>des arme ,,_'led n &llllo £'~ 1n additio. n. each Experience the story " a nation · · · about '11\»ru other month at the I . =:ett;;)U= will be individually in the collection c1 a lifetime. Ami see I ,.,.W:b; price d $24.99.• I packaQed in a unique ~ slipca<e.. THE CIVIL WAR brought closer than I There's no commitment: to buy and I Di.1played lqletlaer, these cassettes will eYer' to home. I I can cancel at any time. VHS onbt I make a handsome edition to )'OUJ' video Mell thle coupon or c.11 tol "-I Name I library shelf. -1-800-262-6312 I ~ State Zip I Start,_,. co11c11on tor }11111 SI4.9!J•t .,.., I -I Now )QI and you; family can reliYe this SA~ ao96/ Call~ use gour ad I :'~ 'W>~ CIVIL I dramatic ~ in Amaican history card, and get a/19 ~ c:onf)ldl nn. ' whenever )'Oii chooae. B'llln with 1861-Slfl-frx just 1179.82 plus $9.()() ~ I ~~ l•I ' 11IE CAL.SE-~ b just Sl4.9!r and handlln(J, a $45.<XJ dl.tcounlJ · I . ..::::~_. ._... I Cl9901"IMB.a.n 900ICI, INC. 018 Keanlth Lann 8'.rnl. 11IE av1L WAR: A ,.. bJ Ken ...... I CWlll lllilCt tD .,, ..... .... I Prockad bJ PIOlw.idlw ,._ md \ft'm.TY. Dtltat •1 d on home Wleo bJ 'f1Ml.LIP! VIDIO. • - - - - - - - - - - - , : ·: • r ~ 1 , ; f i r '· v ( 1 1 1 1 'i 1 q ti : What can we fix right now? "We ought tO have zero-based unem- ployment. We can put another 10 mil- lion people to work in tJus country and pay them adequate wages. But that means the government has to provide leadership and be an employer of the last resort. The rebuilding of cities needs to be done; the infrastructures need to be built up. We need to have the same intensity that we committed ourselves to in the Persian Gulf. We spent S2 billion a day in the Gulf. but 1NT:0re not willing to spend S2 billion a vcar for employment and housing." -~Lowery, ,, ...... t, hltMm a..wt.n a..diiw-ec. ............ 87 "I would hope we rould bring to bear the 1ncred1ble resources we have to forcefully eradicate these problems. If you mob1bud tO the same degree as in the Gulf -people s.ay. 'Oh, you tnm- p lc on rights,' but nobody's rights were trampled on when the CCC (C1vthan Conservation Corps) tranS- fo rmed parks or the WPA (Works Progress Administration) improved public works. J would argue for iS a.c- uve and susumed an effort as Roose- ve It mustered dunng the Depression." -K91'1 lklrne, f'lmmeker, ....... 37 "I'd like to see the ehmmation of to- bacco ads m black pubhcaoons, rcgub- tion o f alcohol and tobacco advertising on billboards an black communities m d control of alcohol dastribuuon." "Corporauons don't have a oe to the American worker anymore: they go overseas and hare workers. A lot of Amencan-owned companies are sell- ing imported producu. That doesn't do our workers a b1t of good. Wouldn't It be great ro start sending U.S.-made H ondas to Japan?" -,.._.., Den Wmyment, eoc:W W'Oft(er, Concord, N.H., ~. 47 'We need a ciVll nghts act. [Not l one With a lot of rigid quotas an it, but one that helps women and minonnes. Af- fi rmac1ve acuon and equality work from the top down." -...... ""*-'t. "' •• 1W91 ala ..,,.,.., ... , ............... .. "The great and only hope is economic empowament. In our inner cities. I would eliminate the capital ga!ns tlX and cut all other cues -income, real cscace. No capital it bang formed there, so we wouldn't lose revenue. Inner cities face the highest we rat.el in the nation, and~ are driving piospcrity out .. "If all minorities voud, tht'y would outnumber whitr votrrsl" -Dlrwtd 8yme, .... den, ........ "We have co undentand thac. when Michacljacbon mms a billion-dollu deal. that's a yoona black man, and the cho1Ce i.s up to the individual. We haw to take advantage of the opportunjcies we have. Robert Towmcnd's nu.kins movies about black singing groups, '11111 ......... and chat's gn:at. We need more positive i~ '° young black men will feel better about thansdves. •• _...,... .. fleld. ....... --.11 .. Xerox has put in S20 million for a special projea. Prudential tw jun puc $400,000 inCIO an educ:adooal. prenml- care program. There are a lot of pro- grams in Inner cities, among tduc:a- ciooal leaders., i.o dilapida~ Khools . What we've go< to do in Congress luve a national search for p1'D1~ni that v.oort. then replkne chem." ---.,...... ,.,.. IMU.. ...... .. Any time we want to deYOCt mo to health cue, all we need io do · bring over a number of • ecxmomists md let than oudine the grams. They're the molt prqpusive." _ _,_...OJ •. U.S.h'l .......... ''We need a rcall.stic cducacion. Kids get caught dw cbey're expeaed to go to college and come out MBAs. They don't chink there's anything else. I see a need for people willing to 'M>l'k for a standard of living that doesn't mean you get two can and a bV home .. -llllY ..... pltHI,._ --lt•, 0... ....... "AlJ we really need to do is cnforcc the laws that are already on the books. You'll be old and gone before the sherifrs department in Jackson, Miss .. gives you '°ur rights!' -O...Clllllu..,....._!m1 .... 1 tclhata ..... ._.. •• ..._. ..... ,IO "The welfare JY$tem should be re- pbccd by setting a time limit of 12--36 months on aW3l'ds and beoefia and by ralistic completion of . . co aid ruipients in becoming ~t." _...,. , ........ ......_a ''We've only )Ult saatcbed the sur&c:e.. but we•ve begun to see programs whc~ white schools invite raenation Indian schools to cxdwt&c lfUdents for a cobple of dzys. Thm: ~ been some exchanges of teachers, too. There are movements unda way to get American lndbn educ:adon to be Part of South Dakoca's ~n:d currtc- ulum in cacher-educ::adon protnma.•• --..err 11t•1t•••www. ... ~ ........ 4 ....... "({each individual becanc lelf preju- dkled ... if each of the 250 million~ pie o( the United Scaaa Pft IC leut one pcnon a chance. chat's 250 million chances. That in and ~ i-1( would u- rea more people than my h9r'Mim .. -................ , ....... ........ ...,. Sure. tOll a eot'tball. Have a tbree- le11ed race. Take a lona walk. But eventually, tbe action at a picnic centers around the picnic table. Tbere•a always lots ot 8ood tood, but it il»'t alway1 u beaftby u lt can be. There are, however: simple steps you can t~e towar<U better eatina. EAT WELL, STAY WEIL Most people wbo cook or eat (that's nearly everyone) know by now that saturated tat it b9d tor UI. It railes cholesterol level• more than anytb.lna elae we eat. And bilb cboleaterol ls tbe leadlnfu dlet- related rialt factor for heart ~. Tbat•a why tbe Suren General .uraes m to the amount of tat. mpedaUy ~ t~tz. ill our diet. 1W o0a are fat. But the ktDd ~ ftlt tbey omntn • key. Purbn oo.• tram tbe maken of Critco' ii an all-vqetable C&DOLa oil ll's loWa' tn lllum.d ,. tban any other type of cooltin1 oil. Jn t~ ~:• 94,., UDMIW'at9d. ·1"Dan ~ lele Mtunted tMn olive or corn oU. U11n1 Puritan OU in a well- beleced cUel it takinl m ~tmt mp ID'Waadl bMlthier ..uq. 11::---11flll::• .............. Here are 101De tJied.ad..true IDecla1 reclpea tbat UH Puritan 00, for happy, healthy IWIUDer plalJct. LEMON BASIL GRJJ,I.ED CIDCKEN 112 cup Purttm 1J4 cup lemon juice 2 tableapoom white wine vlnepr 1 teupooa anted lemon peel 1 tablilpoon dried bull 2 clcmle prllc, minced 112 teupOall ult 1J4 twpooo tnahly IJ'OWld 4 ~., tltinleu chlcken breut balvee (about 1 pound) t. C..M. Puritan OU and next 1 lDsreclJmtl ID tballow bakin1 dish. AM chicken. turnin1 once to coat both Iida a.trtaente tor 30 to .S miDut9I. tunUna once. 2 . ......,. cbarcoa1 for arlllin1, or •t broDer. Grtll or brat[ chicten 4 tncbet from beat, turn1na once, 3 to S ==-~or untif C01Qpletely 4SERVINGS Aa..., =2&4N1. Alway• remove akin from poultry before or after cooldal. It .. where most ot the tat it. 11:: o=.., ...... SUMMERTIME NEW POTATO SALAD 4 cups cooked new potatoes, cut into 112-iacb plecet 112 cup each, cbOoPed red. IJ"Ml1 and yellow belf peppers 114 cup cbopped celery 114 cup chopped red ooioo 114 ~ frub chives 2 ta chopped fresh Oat- leaf =ey r :f~ ~wine vtnepr 1 ~=~~)fresh thyme Salt end rreaJlly IJ"OWld pepper totute Jn l.arp bowl. e«mblM potatoes, bell peppers, celery, red onion, chi••• and par1ley, tossln•. 1ently to mix. ID .man bowl, comllUe oU. vinelar, thyme, ult, pepper. Pour drettlnt over potato mixture, to.atna aently tocomblne.&l've •room tenrperm1re. 12 SERVINGS COCOA BROWNIES 4 es1•bitea 112 cup Purttan Oil 1 twpocm ftDi.Up 1-113 CQpilUpr 112 cup cocoa 1-lH c..,. all-purpoee tlou.r 1Jt twpoon ult l. RMI o.en t0 lSO"F. OU bottom ot td-1.och '*" s.t ..... 2. Piece •II whit .. bl lara• bowl. ••• , •lti IPOOll until 1U1lltl1 troth1. AM PUrttm OU mc1 ...ma. Illa tboroGl.lllJ. Stir in·~ ... cocoa. llt• .. u. lttr in no.ar aad l&lt until b .......... Into pm. 3. Balra at lWP for 22 to 26 mla· utet A..W onrblkjq. CMI com· pa.t.l1 befcn c:UnJne. 1-1/l DOZll:N BROW!flES U\ll!D ft) T&L la.LY~ •1•an C-Of-~ llll#"f ICNlfllrrZ ., .. ,,. __,.SM> l!!!!I ~rMll" 41l ·IOI ~ l!!!I TMI~ 411•117 l!!!!!!l m 417•124 -l!!!!l STUD\'., 411·U8 ~ OAlfN'f CMT'IOlll 41•429 -~IT l!!!!!J ,,. -.. ~ ... 41•oet l!!J ________ ....... ....,_ ... I 0 --................................ , ................................ _ 1 ... i.-i-.-.1_.,...., •• ..,CM .... '--------.J ..... """ ... ,._ ~lm:aidr l I ·~ I ----,.__ ·---1 I~-------------------•--- 1 I atJ -------------'------------ I 0.,.. ..... -...,,.,.. a ... a ... ...,.. ..... .cat_.. a ... C• IDV.fe.M I ,,..._. .. ._...-::~':"""'*"·--.. • ...... c-. .. .....,•NQ~~~ I~ ...... ..,._., --~-----.--.....-. .... .-.. • .-.... :.J ~---~---~---------~------------ ORANGE C 0 AST • .. 17 .. _Wllllll Mootly IUIUIJ Iller some momin& low clouda. A little warmer with 10Uthwc1t to wcst winds to Jj mph. Highs in the upper 60I to upper ?Os. Lows in the mid-$0. to lower 60s. For more information, including boating, fishing and 1urfina, tee page CIO. IN THE NEWSROOM With the Daily Pilot staff gearing up for the paper's changes this week (See StorJ, Al) IOIDe ltaffcn took a walk down memory lane ... A feature oa the history of the 84-year-old Pilot has been written for today's issue ... While IOrting duoup the old photographs, many cmpkJyc:ca enjoyed seeing some of the Pilot veterans in their younger days (and leu fuhionable haircuts) ... Readcn, too, can cn;oy 1tcppin1 back ln tilM and cJCamine tome of'the p~ that .... h poll the cent0n ... The history of The Pilot ii unique, intcrcstina and featured on Cl and Cl. QUOTES OF THE OAY "If we rrally start teaching our kids to corr, tMn thq'rr goins to reach us to Ctlrt." Shelley Spurae<>n, on cleaning up 1hc Newport Harbor (A l). • "DutructMna1 is tM OUICCHM of W'lliwd livu. " Erich Fromm TODAY'S EVENTS •Newport Harbor An Museum 'unveils an assortment of pieces from its permanent collection tn "Different Stories: Five Views o( the Collection". The exhibit, organized into five exhibition segments, continues 1hrouah Sept. 2S and fea1ures a wide variety of artworks. The museum i1 open from 10 a.m. to S p.m. Admission Is SJ for adults and $2 for senior citizens and students. Call 759-1122 for details. JUST 111: FACT1 •What arc "Bolu de Ocnjara" and "Bois• de San Joaquin"? ·uoclaJ ~l.(l JO ~tru ur.>!I:lf'l ~1.(1 ,(q U:llf1 Pu• 1.(S!U•ds :11(1 .(q IS11J ~n II J<>qJIH tJodM:IN J OJ S:IWltU ,(IJla °"\I. e LOTTERY Lotto 13, 17. 19, 36. 44, 49 Bonus number -8 Decco •Hearts: 9 •OUbs: Queen •Diamonds' Jldc •Spod<t: S Topper Canop Park Van Nuys vi.atia INDEX Lepl..O An• i..nc1cn1C $U~lt/C1 5ocie111C1 =~ Wea1her/C1t Pilot's •w era begins Tue l1 started 31 yean ago with a story about• truck driver who stalked and killed a prominent Newport Beach woman he held responsible for tho collapte of his marriage. Below that sorry tale was a news buUetin that Dwight Eisenhower had just canoeled his goodwill trip to Japan because of rtocing in Tokyo by "communist-Jed" mobs. Wedged nearby wu a short note that the high in Newport Beach would be another perfect 70 degrees once the morning haze burned off. And in a nice, neat bo1 on the other side of the front page was a modcat, lhrec-paragraph story that proclaimed: "Herc's your First Daily of Newport Harbor Pilot." June 16, 1960. Sligh1ly more than 31 years later, things are City Council to choose new member By Ama Cekota ~CU~Plol COSTA MESA -Jn 1he two wcekl 1ioce they decided 10 appoint someone to fill Ed Glasgow'• vacant oouncil Mii, councilnM:mbets have been maJtint &Mir candidate lists and checking them 1wicc. Bui come Monday night at the regular council meeting, the councilmcmbers will have to make up their minds as 10 jusl who gets the gift lhat has much of the 1own lalking. "I'm jusl making a list and considerinjj everyone," said Mayor Mary Hornbuckle. While the councilmembcrs reached declined to divulge their top choices. there are obviously no shortages or suggestions, with at least 12 serious ca ndidates reportedty being considered . Some names !hat keep coming up include former council hopeful Karen McGlinn, onelime ma yor Arlene Shafer and several acting members of the Planning Commission and master plan steering committee. "I think 11's becoming less cle ar as time goes on," said Vice Mayor Sandy Genis about her attempts 10 make a decision. "As time goes on, more names arc being forwarded. Each one has !heir strong points." Before making any dccisK>n at the council meeting Monday, Genis said she thinks it mighl be helpful for the councilmembers lo fint agree on some general criteria before sifting through the names. changing qain. Today's edition of the Orange O>ast Daily Pilot marb its fmal printina u a seven-day daily. On Tutaday, the paper will re-emerge u The Newport Beach/Cort• Mcui Pilot. It will be published on Tuesdays, Thursdap and Saturdays and distn'buted to 45,000 households tn the two communities. Readers in HWltinaton Beach and Fountain Valley will find expanded c:ovc:ragc of tbote cities in The Pilot's sister publication -The Huntin&ton Beach/Fountain Valley Independent. The chanae, however, is not one of regression. The Pilot bu already taken stept to increase its local news and sporta c<Wertge, bulk up its area business news, add features, personality profiles., historic notes, youth and senior citazen columns and strengthen its entertainment coverage. In the past few days, The Pilot has already doubled its photography 1taff and added a new business writer. And, or coune, the staff writers, the odi.on ead .. people you have ccme. to know at 1'be Pilot are ldll here. "For those of us at The Pilot and, I beJisva. the community as a wbolc, this ii ~I')' aood MWI. lD dDI case,, leu really does mean more," Publilber Jim Oreuinger observed in an open ~tter to readen Oft Thuflday. "The. Pilot is now and will always be part ol tbe fabric of the community," added Editor Bill Lobdell. "These changes will allow 1be Pilot to be 1 ftnand.aUJ hcallhy -u well u editorially sound -DC'fltpepcr well into the 21st Century." Somt thin,p, of course, haven't chanacd 1t 111 ln thl past 3 t ye an. The prcddcnt is still a Republican. there's still adve.nturesome breakin' news in Newport Beach and the weather gencraJly still hovers around perfect. On Tuesday, a new cha pier begins. Mysterious jolts spark quake fear By Tony Do<lero and Tom Soelu Orqt COlll ~ PllOI NEWPORT BEACH -Insisting tha1 they were 001 earthquakes. authorities remained puzzled about the cause of some mysterious ;o111 that broke out windows and shook up residents from here to the. San Fernando Valley on Saturday, The johs.. which were described u loud, sharp booms, were stron1 enough to caU5C damage to several area business establishments. Witncssca said two sharp booms were felt fint a1 approximately 12:30 p.m. followed by a third jolt about IS minutes la1er. "Fortun.tely the blinds were down and it (the gl•ss) didn't come in," said Sam Wiggins. a hair stylist at Great Lengths For Hair, 2620 E. Coast Highway Corona dcl Mar. 1bc jolts knocked out the front window of the sak>n. "II WIS pretty exciting." Wiggins said. "It M>undcd like aomcbocly was driving into the. front window. It did wake us up." When 1hc glass broke, Wiggins doYc on two cl'lildrcn who were sitting on the couch about two feet from the window, he said. ''1'bcy were scared 10 death. Thank God no one was hurt." Lw ,.,.....o..,.. c-~ .... "Clearly everyone would like to appoinl someone who renec1s their own ideas,'· Genis said. See CHOICE/1'111 A7 Bill Cacace, owner of Great lengths For Hair Salon, surveys dam.1gti to his front window, whK:h was broken during mysteuous jolts on Sdturday The owner or the building will pay fo r lhe replacement store·fronl window, said shop owner Bill Cacace. The cost to the window was estimated See NO QUAKE/1'111 A7 Keeping a safe harbor clean for wildlife Volunteers cruise shoreline for trash By Tom S911s1 °""°' Co.I Dlllr Plat NEWPORT HARBOR -Once •gain, it was a suoceas. About 300 "YOlunteers -including Sea Scouts, Newport 8e1c::h City Cou.ncilmemben, the Newport Ocean- oaraphic:: Department and w1ter ook>risl Ruth Hynds -toot part in 1he 11th annupl "Oean Harbor Day," 1n -evcn1 at1pd Saturday -IO piil:k up trash from the water and shorCRnc of Newpor1 Harbor. "ll's amuin1 how m1ny people are here," aild Mary Paasafiume, a volun1ocr from Brea. "We even hive people here who are In town vtsitina frorft H1w1ii and (rom San Francitc0 who w•nt to pantclf>9te." TM 'IOtunteen were instructed to collect 1tyro!oam JOOCfs, pap<r. plutics and mou. but were 1okt to ieaYe huanlous matcrilb sudl u bltt.00 1nd paint cant 1lono Ind 1ierl the SM~ fl S.. Scoull bri11S In unlood their haul lo< !he day on Sltu1doy -bop ol tr..n OUI al Newport HMl>or. ft. ........... , do ii. aM •ldiet ... .. D1H1l1 ,.. .. _ .... a.a_ ~Diel ...... Waym N .. ID IJICfr ID bell -_. dlll ,_, W.,.. • ·~-.,-1924,....,,. , M . the' C1W ~ na ~ Satwday, bowftW, La ~ ,.... JOI A8dcrioli wt .. pu1Der .nm CbafeO "' •· cartib9d wen dn•ll tbO flMwi• eo wiD it all ia tbe1r 1936 Buidt Sedan. Andenae ...t a.fee, who ~ never before boeD ·pal.red ~~:.,:c.e-.:C~ blob recoidl 1ut week with ·two l.e•dlna·th9 pd In cumulative tc0rina ii Costa Meaa resident Wayne StU&Ja Ud bis partner Alan Travis of Phoenix and fiabt behind tbelll ii BUiti ad Bell. Althouab c:umWatM ICOriDa playa a major put in the nee, the winnen o1 tho OtMt R.D· will bo decide an the final two d.,.. · · Since the nee ~ In Norfolk. there have been S92 car awu and SSt finishes -• 91 percent reliability factor. Ten can hive dropped out ol tho l"ICO bec:aUJe of technical difficulties. Leaving from Colondo Springs, Co. on Saturday, the ncen wiU make the five more stops before the 4.,280 mile trek will finis_b up n~ in Seattle on the Fourth of July. A $276,650 puno awaits the WU\nen. FOUNTAIN VAU..EY -A 5-year-old boy wu serious condition Saturday after a butane li£hter caught his clothes on fire and severely burned the left side of his neck and body, a Fountain Valley fire off'tcial said. Joshua Rand of 11761 Li.lac Way was taken to UCI bwn centor and listed in serious but stable condition with bums over 2-4 percent of bit body, said PauJ Summers, Fountain VaJley battalion chief. "The boy found a ciaarette lighter and started pl1ying with it and it ignited his clothing," Summers said. The fire burned much of the left side of the five-year-old's body, and be suffered first. second and third degree bums, he said. The house was not damqcd by the fire. The accident occurred at approximately 8: 17 a.m., while the boy was at home with his mother and sister. Fountain VaJley Paramedics treated the boy on the scene before sending him to UCl, Summers said. COST A MESA -Three people wound up at College Hospital Saturday night after suffering injuries in a two-car collision on Hamilton Street, Costa Mesa polic.e said. A Dodge Colt traveling northbound on Myers Street apparently ran a stop sign and was broad sided by a Pontiac Firebird that was headed east on Ham ilton Street, said Sgt. John Pherrin. The names of the drivers involved were not immediately available Costa Mesa residents Arlyn Gregorio and Cyndi Richards, both 14. were playing volleyball nearby when they saw the accident occur. "The ball was rolling toward the street," Gregorio said "I \tarted running after the ball and I saw the cars just crash." After the crash, one of the passengers in the Dodge crawled uut of the car window and onto the street, Gregorio said. But ;:mother man in the back ~cat couldn't move at all, she said. "Everyone in that car appeared to be in shock." Richards said. The men in the Colt were dressed in soccer clothes and looked hke they were coming home from a game, she said. An 10vestigat1on into the accident will be conducted, and it is possibly alcohol related, Phcrris said. COST A MESA -As part of the spring series. a Living Room Dialogue will be held today, from 4-8 p.m. at 1785 Hummingbird Lane in Costa Mesa. The meetings are held to share experienc.es, ideas and talk about future plans 10 the oommunity. For those attending. there will be a potluck. Those with names beginning with A-C can bring an appetizer; D-G a dessert; H-M a main dish; N-S a salad and T-Z soft drinks. For more information call 540-4728 'Jal md Bal' llnlrllB• lclllJllHlld The American Cancer Society will hold its sixth annual "Jail and Bail" fund-raiser on July 17 at the Atrium Court in Fashion Island. Individuals and corporate teams of three or more wiJI be served warrants, transported to the Fashion Island "jail'' and a presiding judge will set bail, usually ranging between $300 to $2,500 Prisoners will be allowed to call friends, family and associates to raise bail money. Proceeds will be used for cancer research, education and patient service programs. Volunteers are needed and more tnformation is available by calling 75 1-0441. EL TORO -Orange County sheriffs detectivca arc mvcstigatin~ the death of a man whose body was found Saturday in the parkmg lot of a Baptist church in El Toro. The victim was discovered at 7:54 a.m lying next to a block wall in a parking lot driveway to the rear of the El Toro Baptist Church, 23302 El Toro Road, said sheriffs U . Richard Olson. Paramedics pronounced the man, believed to be in his early 20s, dead at the scene. The cause of death was unknown and • would await the results of an autopsy, Olson said. "Beer cans found at the scene indicate there may have been a drinking patty before the incident," Olson said. The victim's identity was unknown. · TNllll Nim• llllm lftlr 111191~1111 - CAMP PENDLETON -The only U.S. fi&blina force to make an amphibious landing during the Persian Oulf W1r arrived home Saturdey alter a 1evcn•month miesion that included relief work In BangJadah. More than S,000 troopt of the Sth Marine Expcditlonuy Bngade wore transported to Camp Pendleton by helicopter, hovcrcnft and .,.hibioul landina craft flom ahips offshore. uld ~ Sgt. Rene _R_CJ_na, I bue tpOblman. About SwOOO rclatfva and friends p-eeted their IOYed onea, · unona tho Jut troopl to arrive home from the Oult War. The thJp1 a~turday were the USS Vancouver, USS Fredcric:t, USS Ba r County, USS Mt. Vomoo, USS : ~ UM Ta 1ftd tho USS Juneay_ pan ot the $th " MEB ,......,.. Tuk Poree., Marino oftidals aafd; ' Other llifpl that formed die amphibious JrOUP wero expected to docl ....., It tbO 32Dd StrMt Naval StatlOn ln San Dftll> and iii LGIWllllC*. • . . BDrTOR'S HOTB: l'oJb Lot Ind o.c People VO ""' ...a.Ht lot i¥11!1f9rm _,.,, bvt will return, .SO,. rill 0,... . '*,..,. .. Tu ... .,.,/#II*'· ll#l-"- Two stunt planes collide in midair (above) during an air show Saturday, crashing into the ground (below) killing both pilots. Two pilots die in Florida air show crash KEYSTONE HEIGHTS, F1a. -Two air show planes simulating tbe Jap1nese attack on Pearl Harbor collided and crashed Saturday, killing both pilots. At least 1,200 spcctaton witnessed the crash about ISO feet above Keystone Air Park, said Capt. Tim Martin of the Oay County Sheri!rs Offi<:e. The victims were put of the Valiant Air Command, a group of four pilots and planes that fly mostly in Aorida and Georgia, Martin said. The Beechcraft T·34 military training planes, painted with Japanese markinp, were flying four abreast over the airpc;>rt grounds and turning left when the two aircraft on the right side collided, Martin said. There was no fire, and no one on the ground was hurt. Both planes were destroyed and both pilots died instantly. Federal judge Collins convicted of bribery NEW ORLEANS -U.S. District Judge Robert F. Collins was convicted Saturday of scheming to split a $100,000 bribe from a drug smuggler, making him the first federal judge in the 200-year history of the judiciary to be found guilty of takmg a bribe. Collins, who wu caught with $16,500 in FBI-marked money, was the first black federal judge in the modem-day Deep South. He and the alleged bagman, John Ross, a politically connected busines,,man, were found guilty of bribery. conspiracy and obstruction of justice. Both face up to 25 years an prison and $750,000 in fines. Scntenctng was set for Sept. 6. Defense attorneys said appeal! were likely. Julian Murray, Collins' attorney, said the judge was too upset to comment. Soldier with AIDS convicted of sex crimes NEWPORT NEWS, Va. -An AIDS-infected soldier accused of having unprotected sex with fl\IC women was convicted S1turday of disobeying an Army order requiring sexual saf eguarda aod that partners be notified. News of the Weird Stonnin' Normans battle to look like 1eneral LAKE OEOROE, N.Y. -A platoon of pretenden battled Saturday to win 1 Oen. H. Norman Schwarzkopf look-alike con teat. Army veteran Joo McCarthy, who 1erved undeT Schwarzkopf In the Vietnam War~ out 10 other cootenden in the contest held by the Lab Ownber of Commerce. Dresacd in daert fadpel. Mc:Cartby "1.IJ lead a Fourth of July ticker·tapo pande honorina Oulf War vcteran1 In th& Adirondacb rcaort .m.,.. McCarthy alto won a trip to B..Sld, Artz. Brotlltr pts 10 years for robbi111 ND bank STILLWATER. OkJa. -A mu wbo robbed bil ..... 1t knifepmnt of her W..Uy'a PllJ ballk p a J().JUr priloft eeotenca. Hairilon Butene SW.Ct, 31, pleaded pftlJ and n1 eeotcnced Frldly. H• faced up to life ln priton boew ot 11 ptrAous felaiay COIWktlona. Sweet wcat to tho 1panmont of hil P'OWD ,...,, S...... J. MOftreel, an Feb. 5, ••thoritltt aald. He hekt 1 klta~m W. 9o Mr while hla prtfricad carried out tho Jo-po.id ..., ......, they llkt. The piaJ Wk, wbkb contained about MOO, .,.. not rWiCCMnNl • -"1•••• Lr 'ft91 LOS ANGELES -Former President Reapn want.a bit 1980 campaian files searched for documents that miabt abed Uabt on charges that ca.mpaign officials conapiml to delay American boltqes' release from Iran. "Although I firmly believe these charges are aroundlea, J feel we should do 111 we can to clear the air of this unaubstantiatod 11Jegation," Reagan said in the letter, 1 copy of which wu obtained by The Associ1ted Press. In the letter mailed Friday, Reapn asked Ralph Bledloc, director of the RonaJd Reagan Presidential Ubrary, to conduct the 1earch with tho help of an unnamed senior archivist from the N1tional Archives. Congress is considering a formal investigation of aJlegations that campaisn officials might have dealt with Iranians to delay the release of 52 American hostages until after the election in cxch1nge for the promise of arms. Reagan requested that any pertinent documents be made public when the search is complete. Town split over arrest of its police chief REDWOOD FALLS, Minn. -For yean, the goinp-on at the Jackpot Junction casino was the hottest topic in this conserv1tive rarming town. Now it's the £ate of the longtime police chief, an abortkm opponent whose beliefs landed him in a North Dakota jail tut month. Michael Gerrety remains behind ban in Fargo !or ~ to speak 1t his arraignment. Opinion on whether he should be disciplined for breaking the law in the name of con&eieoce is cleJrly divided. "They've been pretty quiet about it, but many of them think bo should have the ax. being the chief of police and stuff," DouaJu Okins, 73, said over coffee at the Hut Cafe. Gerrety, SO, was among 2-4 anti-abortion protcaten who chained themselves together at the Women's Health Organization in North Dakota's only abortion clinic May 31. They were charsed with criminal trespass and preventing arrest. The defendants refused to speak and would not give their name1 at their arraignment. Laws focus on environment, drunken drivin1 TouJh new laws against drunken drivina go into eft'ect in more than a half-dozen states Monday when the start of a new filcal year ushers in new legislation in most llitates around the country. New laws to protect the environment wUJ hit the books in at least rour states, and political ethics laws go into effect ln three. A anb bag of unusual or stranae laws will be opened up as well. But perhaps the most striking aspect of the laws aotna into effect July I is what's missing. There arc aJmost no new drua lawa. There are few new laws against violent criminals. And there is relatiYely httle significant social le1illation. In most leafslatures, budget problems have been an all-consuming Issue, shoving aside lepl1don that doesn't deal in dollan and ccnts. "This has probably been as bad a fl.seal year as 1t1tea have eec:n, certainly within the last el&ht to 10 years," said Rich Jones. director of legislative programs 1or the National Conference of St1te Legislatures. It is perhaps not 1urprisln .. then, that le1i1laton in 1t leut seven states -Iowa, MinncJOta, H1waii, New Mexico, Jd1ho, Tenne.ee and Kansas -ire raisina taxes or u1er fees u of Julv 1. ORANGE COAST mr!M -Br Ute~,.,_. How to reach us at the Daily Pilot Qm;l.tttOft Oranp CouMY Ml ... lll Adwrtl1ln1 C:l.ttillfitd 642·S618 OhP•Y "2--1)21 WMOria4 ~540·1224 $pJtU 642..tHO NN1, tpCWH fax 646"4 I 70 ~OMc. awn..omce Mi~ut ~1Mi6l1·S90l .............. .• 11'611 • Bod of two boys iound, d•~=::. :~ .. ···:...•: ····.=s •"= their grandparents still missing ..... ,..., ............. ., .. . dJt1Mm11 ..................... .... ...... ..,..., locbr locml ... .,....., ,.ton. 1'Wr ..... Malled CMt.,..... OD I worlftlde all, .. toeu11d on the,..... IDd rascala witlala our owe preciacu. W• campa.,_ toll Md ...,. eo..,.. 1 aomapt at, Hall ~ IDd tbe 911JOf wound • • ia11 -........, 1or wtak:b "° ltill tiun't --L--1-astwu ua. oca : .~ _,a. can't beat tua. one maa.azm• in tbe Scene ,_,... IDdulUY caDOd "" WJ'he Weekly That SCOC?PI the Dt.lliea." Aftd now here we I.ft· .plri -yicJdlna the dally baltlqrou. lid ID the Wa* ad pRpUtna •to emba.rt one more cm.. on all· local ICMntura. Unliko my old ~to, wbJcb e\'Cntually coltapeed becaUM of ~-malinatritbl, the fehrienatod Pilot will b6 pUbHabed OI;'. ~ lbundayl and '8tllrdaya. Three tlmea a week. Wbidl IMMI triple the fun of my ftollc ln tho '.50I. Alie> tripllna will bo tho Pilot'• distribution; covcrina about 4',000 boulebOlda in Newport Beach and C.oata Meta lite, u tho llYtDI pa, the momlna dew. £Pd, thls could pve aaturation a pd name. My friend JI• 0.... who bails from Te.us and hu spent moat of bia aduJt life u a newspaper editor -but. to tho best of my ltnowledp, thole ate his only vices -likes to tell about a feisty weekly down there in Overton. Tex. Its front pap slopn wu, '1bc Only Newspaper That Ona a Damn About C>Yerton." Well, our bom-aaain Pilot should proclaim 10methin1 like that -eapeciaUy since there's probably more juicy stuff happenlna in Newpon Beach and Costa Me11 than ever reaaJed the readen of Tho C>Yenon News. No disrclpect intended. Every day or three-a·wcek. thil is our turf. Surely, the county's Bia Dailies -which accm to expend much of their CneflY uyina to knock each other off ("H~, we're No. 1) -shouldn't mind gcttina their news noses rubbed an the sands of WI ol' Nowpon Beach and Costa Mesa. I mean, they'll always have Baghdad, Beirut and Ban&Jadesh. Maybe thcy'U even atop picklng on us. Good grief, I've read so much aJ<>om & doom about The Pilot in the biggies this year that I keep utlna the missus if the paychecks are still arriving. "Medicare payments.'' ahe says, "should be so prompt." The operative word here is "local." As homegrown editor Bill Lobdell 1uge1ts, if you need to know the NHL draft picks or the IOCCCr scores in Peru, by all means scan the agate in the metropolitan dailies; if you want to know how our community teams are faring in equally intense competition, eick up The Pilot. Trust me, you're more likely to find your Jud 's name in tbcac uacr·friendly pages. Another key word is "fun." I don't know why the Big Dailies have to be 10 dreadfully somber. They devote acres of newsprint (how many forests would that be?) to an insurgency in Azerbaijan, but downplay a rebellion brewing among motorists on, say, traffte·bcdeviled Newpon Boulevard. Not that bottle- necks are fun , but you act the general idea. They may know the words of small community coverage but, alas, they seem to overlook the music. And there are lots of sweet IODp being sung out there in PiJotland. Plenty of hard news to be covered, fer sure, but what's so terrible about an occasional community sing-along? Relu and enjoy, enjoy. Kini beaa111 witness ldllad In car crash PASADENA -A man who wiUICSICd the videotaped police bcatina of Rodney King wu killed Saturday alona with another ~naer when their car crashed anto a telephone pole. police said. Freddie Gcorae Helms and Bobbie Dixon dJed sbonly after 12:30 a.m. when their 1970 Pontiac Bonnevile plowed into a telephone pole, lnvcatiptor BiJI Burper said. The 20-ycar-old men, both of Altadena, were pronounced dead at HuntinJton Memorial Hospital. The dnver, 26-ycar-old Roben Gilliam, was arrested for investiption of vehicular homicide and held at Los Anaele County jail in lieu of $10,000 ball, Bwper said. Burper said that Gilliam was drivina '75 mph on a city street, 40 miles over the mutmum speed limit. It also appeared that Gilliam's car wu the only vehicle on tho road at the time of the accident, the imatiptor added. Tests were bcina conducted to determine if the driver was intoxicated or under the influence of drugs at the time of the accident, Burper uid. Helms and another man, Bryant Allen, were passenaen of King on March 3, the fli&ht he wu struck numerous times by club-wieldina palicc officers during a traffic stop m suburban Lake View Terrace. The incident, documented by an amateur cameraman and broadcast repeatedly, sparked national outraac over police brutality. Both men 11id they were ordered to remain on the ground during the incidenL Helms had filed a federal a civil ripts lawsuit claiming he, t~ wu beaten and kicked by police. The lawsuit named the city of Loa Aqeles. Mayor Tom Bradley, Pollce Ollef Daryl F. Oates. officers of the California lfiahway Patrol and city achool district and 21 LAPD police offk:en.. -111 TIN Auodlated rrea OOLBTA -.._ al two boja ..... ............. ., ud ... ..... _,.. •• 5 tbelt .,....... after tkir nail ,_... ~ Wt a ClOll'l"'lcr pluo Ud Pllllised iato the ocean, autboritlel eUd. Searcllcn blad the bodies of Matta... Hec:Ur. 7, IDd Samuel H.cker, 10, of OriDda amid wrec:bie about a balf·milc IOUtb of Ooleta Pier, aaid Santa Barbara County she riff a Deputy Tim ~· The ....,"I ~ntl were identified u l>iMll and Cookie Jones of Santa Barbara. Their tw1n .. n,uio Mitlubiabi tulboprop vanlabed Friday nlJtht after nearly Gov. Wilson averts bus strike in L.A. LOS ANOBLES -Gov. Pete Wilson on Saturday avened a planned strike by Southern California Rapid Transit District bus drive~ aayina P.ublic safety could be threatened 1f the driven walk off their jobs. With nearly 5,000 drivers plannina to begin a strike at 12:01 a.m. today, Wil10n stepped in and appointed a three-member committee to investigate the labor dispute and rcpon b~k to him. A strike is prohibited during the seven-day probe. Wilson intervened under provisions of the Lockyer Bill, which allows the governor to become involved in labor disputes if public safety or health is threatened. tlson said a bus driven' strike would crippl~ the nation's second largest city. "Any disruption in service will dramatically ancreasc the number of automobiles using the Los Angeles area's highway and arterial systems, thus increasina pollution, transP.ortation inefficiency, and the likelihood of gridlock,'' Wilson sajd, Union officials could not immediately be reached for comment. Wilson was asked to step in by RTO offiClals, who said a strike would have caused havoc with the 1.3 million people who ride RTD buses each day. Talks between the RTD and the United Transportation Union broke down and 93 percent of the union bus drivers voted for a strike. "The RTD regrets the union's hasty and unneCCMary withdrawal at a time when funher good faith negotiations could have resulted in agreement on major contract issues," the RTD said an a statement. But Earl Clark, general chairman of the trru, called the RTD's latest offer "totally unacceptable" and said it would erode some existing benefits and allow the district to f ann out bus lines to private contractors. The RTO said its proposaJ offered coat-of-livina adjustments and Increases in general wages of up to 3 percent a year during the three-year contract. Top-eamina union bus driven now make Sl6.48 an hour. -., 1k A.uodat«I l'rea 71-year-old actress finds new role as teacher for the Peace Corps By Alua>u Sldlml ~--.... SACRAMENTO -Shirley O'Key was at the pinnado of her actina career in 1987, the year ahe receMd the preatipous Elly Award u best drama actrca for her role in tho Sacramento production of "Rote Jewel and Harmony." Now tho 71-yc.ar-old woman bu dedded chanp is ncceaary: severat thousand miles and another continent. In No¥embor, ahe will flll ono of 1.SOO Poac:o c.orpa tMChiftl poattJom offered on four continent.a. forCJ·IM natiolu baY9 rc.q\teltcd teachen f0t 1ubjectl tnductioa industrial aru, math. &,liab, mpedaJ education, bultne11 and teacher trainiq. he had not been tOld where abo'll bo aaipcd. O'Kay it a major Rpre In Sacramento local theaw. Sho nt co-founder of the Sectamonto Elperimtntal neater. o•x.y, who bu upcrienco tcachina bu inetl counes at Barclay Col&eac. had to u her ~nco to penuadl thl P ·. COrpl 10 oonlkttr her · -' tion. Initially, bo -. rc"'1ed 1a ifttemew. "I ctidn't thiM: they'd take me rioUllY, but wheft I left there, I wu walk nt on air," 1hc sa'fd. ... no.p lM Mt111 "°"'"'"' ii JI fNl'I old, 10 ,. ... al&Mawptit .. 300tOldu. Joe Therrien, manaier of the Peace Corp' San Francuco are.a oflicc, ii hop1n& to attract teachers ready for a chango, includina aomc of the more than 8~800 Call!omla tCKhen notified in Match that their jobs could be cut because of budget problems. "Ovcneu. loam.ins isn't a fact of lilo but a hl&hJy prized am:· said Thenien. "It is understood lbat lea min& Is tho key to a better life." Josephia. Watts. a 43-year-old Sac:nmento resident who tcachci third &ndo at ~ouido Elementary, requested Alrica or tho Caribbean. Sbo hope& not only for an of culture Uld ideu but a chanco "to work with pcoplo from m, ancestral rootJ" Uko many "Olu.nteers, tho 23-year teacher her i-o-ycar tour that be&ins ln September u bencftctal both for her and tbo iiost country, "Not onJy can I ofrer my upert' , but I t allO be k&min& from them, and ~ wilt life more." uJd Wat Weftdell tOOU. an ·\IOl\lnt.cr who now teachla at Bcmtey Miah ScbOol. tou.Dd tho corpt. "It had • profound eff t on mo • IMaman bdftl, • a ttKhcr and on the baCqr1Nnd ot i.ionnatioa I had to teach rrom -not ,_.. AMericail h tory hUt Afrlcan bi tory allo," AW ltooti. collidia~. ~Oil pl-, met • A Cout O\iard cuu.r ud helicopter conducted the le8fda. ,, A ·Stywut crew ~ the near-coflialon after landJna at Santa Barbara airport, 11id Federal Aviation Adrnln.iltradoo ~an Elly Brekke. uw .-cement ~nel remcwe the body d • )Q'"I ~ ~: wttlW ~in a plane which aalhed Into the Pdic Ocmn ~ CcJletl. • I Both planea had been lnfioi"med that another airctatt wu ln the vicinity, she said. But tbe Miuublsbl MU28-36A WU not under direction of air tr1I& controllers. ~. Utah. The pilot n idoatHled ~ Separately, a Cessna 182 Leann Kaller, 50, ot Yarbl J...ladt craalled near tho Scape condor and tbc paueqer • f'rudlcO aanctu1ry in Ventura County Olfcia, 39 ol YOIW J..iac1a. I ~ two people, said Federal In 0o1eia. eyewi~ reooned . Avaation Admlnlatratlon scein1 the Mitaubitbi airCnlt droli· ~ BIJy Brekke. The into the water near tbe pier. &:.M Cama, flying from Fullerton to thought they 18W ID ~ MOnte~. was found SatUrday, after it hit. There was no immed f1 tc comment from Skywest. Requata for information were left at the airline's headquarters in St. aaJd ahCrlfra Lt. Oary Markley. -llT n. .A:r uuf I ~ Sin ~111lght llotlllook PC Bullt·ln Soll••• SaveS&n $1 ......... •Ta~ 1500 HO • &40K ••-Hour Battery Ute •Weighs Just Under 8 lbe. 125-3&09 llllb-.7/f7/t1 JULY . 4™' .SALE Tape July 4th Sp1cl1!1 On Dis VHS ll·fl Stlleo VCR • Enioy the Great Stereo Sound 'fbu've Been Missing Save s150 ,, ... .,7 .... blll 7 ""1 P•...a ,,.... 4 x 4 IC 1nlCk Save 29995 .. 2915 •100 Low M 111 "91. Off Alt· n .ts .... lllonetl. .. .. "80-4067. 27 .,,.., 121-2114 F1 , F •IBM Pnnt• Emulation • 0trt lngin un c1.,utCll•1 tr • 3911 Off -. ..... mtlt7 • Push-Button Controle ......... ·2'1 Nlnf 1t -. 7"Blcb• Flrecradmr Cut~ 11!~ • Have "Safe" Fun • Reuee Owr and °""' • I -1¥'7' ...... ... ......... L..._ ........ _. .... ._ >sa s 1 oMss'""' llWI II • Ill ..... , Mllnu · .Aalr i1' ti• -bll la • ...., II '• ..................... CMr IWO ...... U.. a-. ....... OJ: II• wblOd it 31·20 oe Pridltiy. b pnMda tbo Federal Oepollt 1MU1UCC ~ wttb U'OUnd S70 billioG In ..... •upl)'U· ....,.eeed bonowi .. authority. Whh more thao 1.000 banb bavin& failed over tM prcvioua ab ycan, the luuraoc:e fund hu Mak IO the lowest poiot in ita ~. Anc>tbcr 400 but failura are expected tbJI Jal and Dell. FDIC Oaimwa L WUliam Seidman wamod thit week the aacncy would need additional borrowina authority ., aooo ., late this year. 8anb would be cbuaod biaher iuurance premhum to repay u muc!J u $23 bi1lioa jud&ed aocded to covcr loaea in failed ba.o.b. Alleta inherited from the failed bai:lb would be 1e>ld to retire thereat of the borrowiq. "Thi&J'rovision of the bW Al a 6.nt step down tbe roa to a taxpayer bailout,•• warned Rep. Gerald D. Kleczta, 0-Wia. Twetvc Dcmocrata, IOVCQ Republicans and one Socialist opposed the bill, which alJo sweeps away a seriea of reatrictiom on banb dating back to the Depression and earlier. It wu supported by 19 Democrats and 12 Republicans. Full interstate b~ would be permitted in three years, endina 1tatea' ability to control which banks conducted business within their borders. Banlca would be able to affiliate with securities firms under a common holding company effectively repealing the Glass-Steagall Act of 1933. The long-standing separation of banking and commerce would be toppled. Virtually any kind of company, including auto manufacturers and department store chains, couJd own banks for the first time. The Federal Reserve would regulate the holding companies and p<?lice lega l restrictions called "firewalls," which arc intended to eliminate conflicts of interests within the new financial conglomerates. The chairman of the banking committee, Rep. Henry B. Gonzalez, D· Texas, said he was .......................... C&w:• ..,. ... • +w:rt I~ Nr: ii fw I balltUt D$0 M I J11 -JGllllD.~1,Dll•,wlllli .... ,t HMe •••Nr U. die l9JOI. w • pr'n Fu II ...... of Olul-llNpll. Hli • ... ... Cc---..rc. Oo.nmittoo bU Judi ....... ..... l8dJoGI ol tho bill . Tbe Senato Bankiq on.ua... ••"81, ... bpCCtCd to ~ i1I wniaD Of the ieplatioa In ~uly. Oppoacfttl aro warnlq th9 Bulb plU could lead to unprecedented concentntloa ol ftnudal power, dryin1 up CfOdft to ...U htiiin11n1, farmen and others wbo do Dot lM in urban areas. 1be administntioo uped that outdated lawt have prevented banb from ~ to changes in the financial tyltem. P'Or instance, banks have lost some of their bat corporate loan customen to securities finnl. who underwrite commercial paper for CIOrpontioril. Elimination of interstate binkina restrictions could save banks billiont of dollars a year, the . administration says. Banb operatJna tn many regions wou!d be more stable and better able to compete against laqe foreign banb, it saya. Commercial owncnhip ol ban.Q could inject much needed capital Into the financial system, it says. Gonzalez, Kleczka and othcra criticized the committee's unwillinpcll to do more to reform the deposit insurance aystcm and limit taxpayers' liability. After heavy lobbyina by banb of alt sizcl, the panel voted 29-20 Friday to retain current rulea that permit a family of four to insure up to Sl.4 million at a sinaJe bank throuah various combinations of sin&le. joint and trust accounts. The administration had sought to limit depositors to no more than $200,000 insurance per bank -half for retirement accounts and half for other types of accowrta. The panel did adopt provisions aimed at reducing the frequency of so-calJed too-big-to-fail bailouts in which even uninsured depositors arc protected. Starting in 1995, the FDIC would be barred from reimbursing uninsmed depositori. But, if a bank failure were judged dangerous to the entire financial system, either the Federal Reserve or the Treasury secretary couJd spend taxpayers' dollars to protect big deposit account.a. \Church builds business empire I ' PHOENIX -The Mormon :church, which docs not disclose its finances. collects at least $4.J .billion a year from its members •and another $400 million from its • many enterprises, a newspaper •reported. , Nearly all that $4. 7 billion is 'spent funhcnng religious goali.. .but the Utah-based church also •invests several hu ndred million .dollars a year in real estate and ,securities, and in expanding its .businesses and investments, The Arizona Republic reported m Sunday's editions. The newspaper said the figures ,were conservative estimates based on an eight-month invcsti~ation. Accurately assessing the church's finances from the outside is impossible, however, because Mormon leaders in 1959 stopped releasing financial reports even to their own members. Instead of a financial report, church officials assure member' .that their contributions are managed "prayerfully and with :i n s pir atio n ." Worldwide membership is 7 7 million, including more than I million in Utah The diversified corporate organization built by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter·day Saints 1s apparently free of financial fraud or personal wealth building among top officials, the newspaper said. Compared with sales of publicly traded companies, the church's $4 7 billion woul d place it about I 10th on the Fortune 500 hst of industrial corporations. The ch urch 's business c;ubsidiancc; generate an additional $4 billion a yea r in sa les, which, if counted in the total, would make the Mormon Church an $8 billion· a·ycar corporation. comparable with Union Carbide and Borden Products, the Republic said. The Republic said 11 was unlikely 11 had identified all the church'c; companies, business names or affiliated holdings. Financial data also arc incomplete, partially ou tdated and sometimes contradictory But the newspaper said it was able to conclude that the Mormon Church: -Cont rols at least JOO companies or busincssec; that generate ahout $400 million a year through direct contributions, dividends. trusts or investment income. -Never borrows money to finance its acquisition-; It pays cash. using a portion of its members· contributions, called tithing, and its business income. -Has become one the nation's largest private landowner'> with holdings in all .50 states. -Has a stocks and bonds investment ponfolio in excess of SI billion. communications, t o urism, insurance and education operations. Many of the ch urch's companies were created to meet the needs of pioneers who arrived in the Great Salt Lake Valley beginning in 1847. Some, such as the ZCMI department store chain and Beneficial Life Insurance Co., have grown into multimillion- dollar operations. The church's media empire is a $300 million-a-year conglomerate based primarily on broadcasting. The broadcast subsidiary, Bonneville International, operates television stations in Salt Lake City and Seattle, along with 16 radio stations . The church in March paid $12 million cash for KMEO-AM·FM in Phoenix. By investing some of its income every year in land, the church has steadily amassed farm, ranch and other real-estate holdings that exceed SI biJlion. Its holdings include 315,000 acres valued at $250 million near Orlando, Fla. Mormons are required by religious doctrine to tithe IO percent of gross income. About a third of Mormon families are thought to tithe the full 10 percent. In contrast, surveys estimate Roman Catholics give only about 1 percent of their incomes to the church. Overall, that would be only about a third as much u the avera-e Mormon pays, a Republic e.xammation of Mormon finances has concluded. Victor L. Brown, a former presiding bishop, said the Mormon Church "isn't an organization that's trying to become wealthy -Appoints spmtual leadcf1 who and to have Fon Knox as a can double as business leaden to · backup." o v e r s e e r c a I c s t a t e . -llr dHt ~'-'PIT# INTERESTED IN LAW SCHOOL? START THIS· FALL WAIHIHO'i'Ott -Tiie ...... C:::.tiul • 111,t r ~· ... ......,.,,, PlallC ....... • .. • ... ..-1111111rrr1 ..w a..u1111d ............. , ..... AllD ,...,, .. )Ju••lilD•ll told Vir91161 .. : ........ ClOUlt ID ,...., ... -.. *"'-II bJ people ,==.--comt allo lit ttand np I ltopped $pokarie, Wllll., ftmi Wine money nlled In binao pmes lpOlllOrod by the Americu ~ational Red Qoa. Use of alin1 nuclear plints may be extended WASHINGTON The Nucleaf Reaulatory Commissk>n unanlmo•aly approved the frimewotk fot extending the lives '1 qina nuclear power e•ants beyond the ~ation or their 40- year Ucensa. Renewina ~ lioe~s of old reacton bQ ·been a top priority of the nuclear iadustry as it b«omes lncteasingly apparent that no new commercial reactors will be built anytime IOOl'I. But critics of atomic power argue the old plants pose a safety risk. Under the NRC rcliccnsina rules approved Friday, some plantl would be allowed to operate for up to an additional 20 years. New trial ordered in racketeering case NEW YORK -A federal appeals court overturned racketeering convictions in an important Wall Street fraud case, a blow to the use of organized crime laws against some white· collar defendants. The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Friday ordered a new tnal on whether the six defendants in the Princeton-Newport Partners LP fraud case arranged bogus stock deals to create tax losses. The appeals court, however, upheld a conspiracy conviction against all the defendant.a, five officials of the defunct investment firm and a former Drexel Burnham Lambert Inc. trader, and securities fraud charges against two of them . Keating loses try for case dismissal LOS ANGELES -Former Lincoln Savings operator Charles H. Keating Jr. lost a bid for dismissal of his securities fraud case, the first prosecution stemming from the biggest thrift collapse in history. Supenor Court Judge Lance A. Ito on Friday ordered Keating and two top officers of his companies back to coun on Aug 2 Keating, 67, blames regulators for the $2.6 billion collapse of Lincoln. He faces nearly 10 years in prison if convicted on six or more of the counts. Delta would like to take part of Pan Am NEW YORK -Delta Air Lines said that after ta.king a long took at Pan American World Airways, 1t wants parts of the troubled carrier but not the whole thing. Pan Arn had said f reviowly it did not want to sci any more assets, but it immediately abandoned that position and asked Delta to make an offer. Delta's announcement on Friday eliminated one hope that Pan Am had been holding onto in efforu to find a merger partner or a buyer to extricate itaclf f rorn Chapter 11. Wang plans to lay off up to 4,000 workers BOSTON -Wang Laboratories Inc., which had trouble selling its own machlnea and now wiJI soil computers made by IBM, plans to eliminate up to .C,000 jobl.. or nearly a que.ner of tho company'• work force. Wana'• annoU.ncement Friday came • week after the atrusaUna computer maker laid It would llnk up with I ntcmational Buti.nou M.achlna Corp. Under tho deal, Wa111 will receive an Injection of up to $100 million and ln turn will sell IBM oomputcn. -llT lfN .Mn i:Mtrd l'lw WIN AlmTmP dOAllD AllllWL •• MD• A TllAWSL Wkii&aJGaADAY Look in 'l'bundeJ'a paper for canplete cMt•Oe 8bd eiltJY ..... to an aicsttnt _....,we r•encll Gourmet Lollipop takes a lickin', keeps on tlckln' For frelblJ IMdc candy and ewrYdlial &om ..... to dKxdate tunlea, stop by OoUnnct · touiPop ol ~ Beac:b. Owner Franca TNjillo hu been in the candy ~ for many years, fmt u a aalc1 rep and then u the owner, alooa with her husband. ol i...r lhop in HuntJnatoo Beacb. Trujillo make1 all Of tho loUipopl freab. ud boMtl IDON dm 48 Oavora, includl.n& chocolate, banana, margarita, amaretto, blueberry, Irish cream ud peach. BUt lolHpopi are just one of her 1tore'1 ~altiel. TNjillo and her husband alto make their own tuttJet. peanut brittle, white chocolate cbipa aDd a 1pcclal treat t,hcy call "apple cinnamon bark.'' t-• 4.- l -. ~'\ ' ~ ·~ .. . . .. .. r Gourmet Lollipop also carries many of tho bard·to-find old (ubloned favorites such u candy cipreuea, wu bo.tdes. string licorice, IOW' balls and rDOlt ocher candles that you haven't Frances T 'lllo popped into your mouth since you were a kid. fUJ TrujillO uys that the store not only eaten to walk-in traffic bt•t also prcMdes candies to fund-raisers, hospJtals and other Rtail stores. Sbe most recently sent lollipops to the Empire State Building !m New York. Tnajillo also notes that their producu accm to be a bia n:qucst at '50s and '60s parties and birthday parties. ••0ur candies are like nostalgia for many people and remind them of the five and dimo candy stores when they were youna.'' Along with candies. Gourmet Lollipop al.to creates custom- made gift baskets, chocolate molds and bard candy. The store also carries balloons and ~ialty candy lifts. Gourmet Lollipop, whtcb is open from 1 a.m. to S p.m. Monday through Friday and from 8 a.m. to S p.m. on Saturday, is located at 73Sl Heil Ave. in Huntington Beach, at the comer of Gothard and Heil. For additional information, call 841-2000. Margaritaville in Newport has a new look and style For tho'>c of ynu who have tried Margaritav1llc over the years .rnd decided th1H II wai.n't your kind of place, you may want to give the restaurant another chance. Under new ownership since November, Margaritaville is being redone hoth in look and )t)'le . Along with a new logo and color '\heme 1he rc,t;iur.int once ag<11n ha' 11 fun and comfortable at mo,pher.: Owner Al Voltni, who has heen 1n the restaurant business for 2~ \car'. allributc' the new succe!t~ of her pince to the quality fnod C\Cdlent service nnd 1\0 employeei. She commento;,"Wc h;1vc \Cf}' little turnover, whu.:h 1s narc for our indu!>try We try to m.1kc t 111, .in cnJo' a hie place tn he. for both the patron'I and cmplo~ Cl'' ·· When vou walk into M;irgaritav1llc, you will notice that it has .111 npt 11. 'paciou' tee I !'here " a circular bar where you can 1•r1kr \\h,1t ''known .ll> the hc't margarit;i rn Orange County. The 111.irc.1r11," .ire m.ule ~11h lrc'h lemon and lime 1u1ee nnd arc 'cnul 1111 th~ nxk' 111 IHUCl1 I 11\\.Hd th' h;itk " .rn open kitchen art'<i. where the chefll rri:paa· lht• tood nnd hand II Ill the 'erven •. The menu Ill M.11~.1111I\1111.: '' 1111t l.1rgc. htmcvcr. the food I\ fresh and plt..11111111 'l •lll l'.111 11nk 1 comh1n.111un dinner' of tacO\. enchilada!> and 11th r 1r.1d11uinal 1.1,oritc' or 'Pl'Ci.il dinner' 'uch as chicken 1;1llllH·1," \\.1th the meal, homemade 'lill!>a and clupl! arc served .rntl f111 'nmcth1ng d1ftcrcnt with y0ur chips try the famous "tuna dip:· 1 t " a very interc,ting combination of tuna, cilantro and othl'I 'PICC' and I\ ,1 \Utpme ucl1ght Margantav1 1le has hvc entertainment seven days a week an the 'ummer On Sundny you can hear Rc&8ac. Monday blues, and from T11e-.day through Saturday enJOY good old rock and roll. I here also ll> n hig -.creen TV for sporting events and several -;maller 'creen' nround the har area. M;ir~aritav1llc al-.o ho,1-; a happy hour Monday through Friday frt,m I '0 tn (l '.\O pm There .ire complimentary appetizers and reduced prices on \\-Cll dnnks. Along with that ii. "Taco Tucsdny" where you cnn get a taco for the price of $1. A\ a te,lament to the new !>UCCells of the restaurant. Volini cummcn1' that Margaritnv1llc as getting a lot of repeat customers •tnd rt'guh1r-. She '"Y' thnl \he get'> u lot of po 1t1vc comments on the furn.I. 'cn1cc ::ind very rcac;onahlc pnceo;. Mar~11111.w1llc " open \Cven dny' '' week from 11·30 a.m. to 2 30 .i m nnd food 1' <ierved until 12·~0 a.m. The restaurant Is lo1:.1h:d .11 ~H2 W C'm1'1 H1ghwuy in Newport Beach For i1cldi1tnn;1I information c.111 6'1 ~no Coastherapy founder an Olympian Kuthy Coakley, founder illld director of Constherapy 1n I lunt1n~llln Bc:u.:h. hit\ 'pent mony yea" directing three n1lhopctl1l· rchuh1ltt.111on clrnic' .ind hoth men ·~ and women's 'IXlrh protvam:. un the lugh "hool , college and profci.s1onal level. D11ri n1i1 the I ~84 Olympic game,, \he wu11 selected to be the coordinator of athletic trninina for both the road and track cychna 1eam"i. Co1klcy hn traveled U\ 1 personal and team trainer for the U.S. water . kiina. C)'chna nnd h::idminton teams and the U.S pro und junior ~?lleyhnll tcums Md . pl ayers. She olao ha.s tauaht llport med1c1ne at lhe university and state level and hu conducted numerous '*<>rk1hop1. Coakley tatted cyc:lina in 1981 dtet 11rina of marathon running. In 1984 i.he Wll aiven the honor or coordinator or cychna ond rode for the Rainbow Cycllna Club in Riverside. • Since .then, from the lo· An.aclcs Games to tho World Chamr1onshlps in Colorudo prin~. he has taken care ot the "an:ais" or q clina -Orea Lamond, te~o Hcq. Mark Oonkl, Ken and Ccmnac Carpenter, Rebecca 1\rtiu, Nelson Viki and Eric Headen, to name a few. Her hi~cM di appointment came in 1988 when ho wa1 hit by a ~nr while cyclina on l'•cilk Coa t Hi&hway, chlpp ns 1 bone in her ('me and herniA tina her di • Ju t before this a«ldcnt. he h. d fin lly quahfird for the lronmrin triRthlon comptlition in lbw:i1i Co ldcy'~ time now llJl!.cn up wtlh runn na her b'"'" I comin11ntt) orth<_'flCdic .rnll ~~HI MClhdnc radUty in Huntin1ton lti.'fn h. Sh" 1111 rides nntl n1n.1, bul for recreation and r. rd1ov.t~c:ul1u mpmvcmc.n1 now. nnd 1~ Jornlna Il l p~y golr. Co: ~•hcrn1.y 1 toe 11ctJ at O Hum1l1on Si. in tluruinston n n h Cn.1kh:)' cnn I renc:hcd for more 1nform11ion 11 961-7712. t . +++ Newport Beach And llita Mesa. . 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 Editorials 0 Local Events 0 Lo- ci! Activities For Adults 0 Local Activities.For Seniors 0 Local Activities For Children 0 Local Restaurants 0 Local Cla&Ciifteck 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 hat ViOU \Y'dfit to know. FQrty-five thcxsmd copies Tuesday, Thtnlay and Saturday. I . ).'()\] . • • 'I Published by P1ae Croup PubHshina, Inc. Elliot Stetn, Jr., chairman Jim GN11lnger, publisher Wllltam S. Lobdell, editor & vice president Steve Marble, managing editor Walter lunought, 1901·1989, foundlns publisher . Editorial 'a-'daslldbl be a ligupe or IP8ICh l.omlllll llWIDidP • ··-Sununu or later, the word is going to pop into everyday English. A sununu; to sununu. Its preasc meanina ii ltiJl being shaped by the behavior -and misbehavior -of a certain fonner New Hampshire governor who collccts stamps, lives in Washington, D.C., and bas his teeth deaned in Boston. In fact, if John Sununu survives the storm over his means of travel, to sununu could come to mean "to bang on by the skin of one's teeth." If he does not, it might mean "to fly in the face of insurmountable odds -and crash." A tidal (basin) wave of criticism could be called a sununu, not to be confused with a tsunami. A person worthy of opprobrium might no longer be a bozo, but a sununu. A junket? Call it a sununu. Or, if we focus on the White House chief of staffs persistence, it might be said, "If at first you don't sununu, sununu again." In J.S.'s defense, President Bush might say, "Let he who is without sununu cast the first slogan " The verb to sununu might find a home in the dictionary as "to hitchhike, esp. on corporate jets." As an oxymoron (with o r without the oxy-), sununu might come to designate smart people who do dumb things. Or, it might simply stand as a synonym for arrogance. Or political maladroitness. Or, plain not listening Headline writers have already had a field day with "Air Sununu" and "Err Sununu.'' If he's rehabilitated, "Nu Sununu" may be irresistible. Whatever the linguistic consequences, we suspect the sununu will come up tomorrow. But unless he engages in sununu thinking, it may be in New Hampshire. Today In History Today 1s Sunday, June 30, the 18 lsl day of 199 J. There arc 184 days left in the year. Today's Hlpllpt In History: Twenty years ago, on June 30, the 26th Amendment to the Constitution, lowering the manimum voting age to 18, wu ratified as Ohio bccamc the 38th state to approve it. On this date: In 1834, the Indian Territory was created by Congress. In 1859, French acrobat Emile Blondin crossed Niagara Falls on a tightrope as 5,000 spectators watched. In 1870, Ada H. Kepley of Effingham, Ill., became America's first female law school graduate. In 1906, the Pure Food and Drug Act and the Meat Inspection Act became law. In 1934, Adolf Hitler began his ''blood purge" of political and military leaders tn Germany Among those lulled was Ernst Roehm, leader of the Nazi stormtroopers and Hitler's one- time ally. In 1936, the novel "Gone with the Wind" by Margaret Mitchell was published in New York. In 19,2, ''The Guiding Light,'' a popular radio proaram, made iu debut as a television aoap opera on CBS. In 1963, Pope Paul VI wu crowned the 262nd head of the Roman Catholic Church in an outdoor ceremony at St. Peter's Square. In 1971, 20 yean ago, a Soviet apace mlulon ended in tragedy when three cosmonauta aboard Write to us! "Soyuz Eleven" were found dead inside their spacecraft after it returned to Earth. In 1977, President Jimmy Carter announced be bad decided against production of the B-1 bomber, saying it was too costly. (However, the B-1 was later revived by President Ronald Reagan.) ln 1982, the time limit for the propos ed Equal Rights Amendment to the U .S. Constitution expired, with proponents falling short of the three additional states needed to ratify it. In 1984, John Turner was sworn tn as Canada's 17th prime mantstcr, succeeding Pierre Elhott Trudeau. In 1985, 39 American hostages from a hiJackcd TWA jetliner were freed in Beirut after being held 17 days. The hostages were taken by the Red Cross to Damascus, Syria. Ten years ago: China's CommuntSt Party condemned the late Mao Tse-lung's policies during the Cultural Revolution, but concluded that his contributions far outweighed his mistakes. Five years ago: In a 5-4 decision, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that statca oould outlaw homosexual acts between oonscntmg adults. One year ago: African National Congress leader Nelson Mandela VlSited Oak.land, Cahf , a day after receiving a star-studded wcloome in Los Anaclcs. Today'1 Blrt1Hlay1: Actor David Wayne is 7S. Singer Lena Horne. ii 74 Actress Nancy Duaaault la SS. -By the .4nocl•t«l Prr.u Thll 11 a community ~. and we'd lllce to hear from you. Letters should be brief and are subject to editi"J L9nfer COf 1etpe>ndence will be considered lot • Community Com· mentary future. · Pleate lend tubmltlk:>ns to the· Onftp Coat Diiiy ptlot, 130 W. Bay St., C.oD Mesi, CA 92627 or fax them to (7U) 6-46-4170. Pie-Include ~r n1rnt, city and phone number If you'd Ill• ~ letlet to be printed. You Clft a&io can our Mhor'1 Hodfne It 6 .. 2-6086 and die· tlt9 I ...., to the editor. Thank you lot youf l~nt In the Or1n19 Coast ~ munlty. hlvoc for c By ....., Smllh Mca.ct¥ ..... 8tMct The Louisiana Lc1i1lature'1 enactment of a statute outlawing most abortions in that state could have a major impact on elcctiom all over the nation next year. In California, the moat interesting and important effect may be ln the Republican primuica in the state's two U.S. Senate ra-0e1. The two races arc turning into confrontations between moderates and conservatives over the tuture direction of the state party. Depending on ,vhich GOP campaign consultant you talk to, the bitterly divisive abortion issue could simplify or confuse the contest. The new Louisiana law faces immediate legal tests and could lead an increasingly conservative U.S. Supreme Court to overturn the 1973 Roe vs. Wade decision that made most abortion1 lc~al throughout the oountry. If the high court took action quietly, abortion oould ~me the focus of next year's political debates. The way California's two GOP Senate pnmarics arc now shaping up, voters will be offered clear choices between pro-choice moderates and anti·abortion conservatives. Most polla, which mdicatc strong public opposition to stringent restriction• on abortion, suggest that the more abortion becomes a political iuue, the more that pro-choice modcrat~ arc helped. Public opinion. surveya s~ strong support m both ma1or parties for liberal abortion lawa. This month, Mervin Field's California Poll found se¥eD out of 10 of the state's voten dlsaarecing with the recent decision by the high court to prohibit abortion counseling in federally funded c l1ni c1. Democrats arc ovcrwhclrnin&IY oppoeed -81 percent to f 6~ percent -to the prohibition; Republieull, by a smaller but 1tiU 1Ubltantial margin of 59 percent to 35 percent. allo disagree with the oourt naJ1q. In one Senate race, pro-choice iDcumbent John $eymouf Ratti u a heavy fM»rito over hk anll· abOltioo ~nt. Rep. WWiam DuDemeyw ot Fullerton. Soymout h.. occupied the scat only llace the fint of the year, bavfnl been appointed by Gov. Pete Wilton to fill the vacancy created when the aovcrnor resigned from the Senate to become California'• chief executive. Deapite Seymour's brief time in the Senate, bit 11atua u an incumbent and Wilton's support pc him a big initial advantage, particularly in fund-raisin&- Thc OOP primary for the other Senate seat, the one from which Democratic incumbent Alan Cranston will retire after 1erving four terms, is a much different story. It's shaping up now to be a more evenly matched -and hiah spcndiq -oonteat between Palo Alto Rep. Tom Campbell, who is pro-choice, and Los Angeles broadc11t commentator Bruce Hcnchcnsobn, who is pro-life. It's in this race, particularly, where a major primary campaign debate over the iuue is seen by some u pvina a potentially decisive advantage to the congrc11man. Republican campaign consultant Ray McNaJly of Sacramento declared: "It helps Tom Campbell II it becomes a big-1iulc iuuc. AJI the polling I've aeen is that more and more Redbl~n1 are be<:omin1 more an more moderate. Thia drives people on the far fi&ht null. The smaller they become, the louder they shout. The abortion l11ue will bring out the reaJ crazies, and the reaJ crazies scare people." There is another possible effect, however, that i1 much leu chcerina to Campbell backcn. It'• off cred by a conservative Republican campaian con1ultant. Wayne Johnson, alao of Sacramento, who doesn't ace the conareaman plnfna the support of a majority of Republican votea by streuing bis pro-choice pocition. lmtead, Jobmon thlnb that, re1ardle11 of the pollina nwnben, the complex dynamics of a GOP primary could cauae the abortioa i.Nue to bactfire on Campbell if the coqreasman ta1b a lot about it. .. You have to uk. at what commitment level doCI lt strike?" Jobmon said. "To people who have only maraiJlal mterest, the i11ue Im Uttle impact." Indeed, Johnson thinlta CampbcU'a support for abortion ri&hta may even hurt bis candidacy in the GOP primary by confulina the marginally informed voters. These voten spend little time 1tudyin1 issues and examinina candidates' views ana backgrounds. Instead, they look for quick sJanala that give clues to the candidates' overall po1itiona. A Republican candidate who, in a primaty contest, says he's pro. choice or for pn control or apilut offshore oil drilli.na may send the wrong signal to many votcn about his stand on other issues. "Those arc taken as Democratic 1ignaJ1," Johnson said. "They mean liberal, they mean Democrat. A Republican candidate can act into trouble with them in a Republican primary. There's a reaJ danger in send.ins the wroq signals." This goes to the heart of Campbell'• problem In the primary. In today's political 1bortband, be ii regarded u a modente, but that'• an inadequate delCtfptlon of hil overall poaition1. C.ampbcU takea a more complCJt view of the world than bit con1ervatlve opponent for the nomination . The 1ignal1 Hcnchenaobn 1enda out are unlikely to contuse anyone. The fact that hc11 well to the ri&ht on any one issue ii a soocS duo where he atanda on just about alt blues. Campbcl11 on the other hand. hu to work nuder to explain tO tho marginally informed that whUe be of'tcn ta.ku a liberal stand on social i11ue1, hla freo·martet economic belitft arc tboM of the 1tauncbest comervative. Maida S.D II IM polltaJ tdltor ... McCl•td.1 N"" Srf#a. How ta w ,_ •1111Dr1 GOVDHOlb ~· OOUMrY IOAD or W"80U ... ,.._, (R), Staie Caphol, s.cr-co. ""~ (9l6)4U- 2141 Hall ot ~to one~,..._ 11a1a AM. mot ...,..._ 1• DMt. (Pouatlla v...,, ~ U.S. IDIATOU 41111 Cr--. (D). tS7S7 W. C.COtWJ BMl, hie. SI!, Loi ........ 9004$, (113) lJJ-2116. ,.._ ..,__ (1l),ll30 Town CQn. "'*-, Slote 205, A.W..u.a, tm06. 3&S-1700. ltlM1 ..,, .-.. ilddl 11 i 90 US .s.--. W~ D.C lMIO. U.1.BOVll OW IUl'URHTA11Vll a.ti C. (It). 40da Dfitt., 40IJO ~ur BM.. !Mt Toww, ~ ..... 9lMO. 7J6.22M. (~.,..,. tJI c.o.c. w... ,,.....,.,,,. 8-da, 1..tiD.M e..a and H•depMI luda.) 0.. I 1 hn h th• (Jt) 42ad Diie., 21.U Pldftc Cwt ....,...,, "'* .. Tomece. '°505, (213) ~. (Jt.,._.. ,. .. tJI Ha~._., Md f'ollllt.a. V.O.,.) ft'Aft llMATI .......... I (Jt), S'Nl Dk 140 ....,.,.. C... DIM. .... t». ~ ..... ~ '40-11J7. (1l "-· .... "' •••trs....,~._....-... , a.. Joflil a. ....,.. (It). SS. Dtll.. IM w. Orms :oM. • °'811111 fW. ..... (lte ..... ,.,. ti Calta Nia) ft'Aft•---.y G9lft ... (&).,. Oii&., ., MlcMlilr ....... 301, ....... ..... 9*0, .,,....,, {Jt• I I ·; ,.. ~ ~ ................... ,, ...... "' I 0 (a), ... Diie.. 11195 """'• ...... 301, ,_.. v..,, ,,,.. tesm (lte,. , 11 ,.. "' ,...... v.a.,, b'Me. ~ ....._ th1d115111 ....._, r-..... (1l). -Dk. dlO .. ,_. C'e1i111 ......... .._ "' .... .... ... (2.U) -.SS14. (Ila; -· ,.. ., 11 -·,. .... , ...... M. ...,_29111 I*. (Hlia ..... ._.) .,.,,JJO ,.._.. f . -. Jdl Dile. (a.a ~ N...,on led. Sam Au ~a.JMM. Ltpaa a.di) 06-3"0 COUMTY IMMllD or IDOCA110lf 200 llblinm DIM. ea.. ..... , o ... to50, f'llm.tmO, .. 40IXI. ,_.... Ac:Wo. vb ,,_.nt/)ert. nwc.. Alu 1 (l'ountala v.a.,) ... ...,.... ....-bu, ,....__ Art.a 2 (FowW. van.,. Huoclllp>n .._.) "l , ............... ,.....An•'(O.. ...... ................ Lapu ..... ) an OOftllMtilDfT c... .... CltJ ..... 71 ,.., °""' 7'4-$22>. ...., lb ............. o..M. .. ...-: ......... ,., " ,,,.,..... a - ... t .... Olftllll,J_ ... -.. ......... a.... ..... ---=--,...., ....,,..-.: lAilir-. Ololr.,... ~ °" Olilnillj.... 't•. D dqJi .... a., ..... -...... ~11,...,., .... a.-; ............... Diii ... ~, .... ,, Orw Mitt \ UMI t11a1 "111--. ,_ ltallf, '*' ft1U • ........ """"' ... °" ..... -....,.,. ................. ... ......._ ........... a...,...,, Mii c...,..,. *"" Mii ...,_.., A e \a n 11, J.-w.. _. DML ---!RllCll __ I_ .... n.re .. • .... bit "' ... UM' .............. ~ ONr .... .., ... CICMf pollliD9I = .................. . ~.part di ... p1dh• tDr loW --.....,. .... polld+• and the politiall .,... ... ~. No we IO fllCIMtld .... """ teandal, palp, ,..,,.,. ..... ~. fwld raJ1iaa Ind 30 11 coed iouiad bltcll that ... .... ..... .... really OODCllftl pec:iple aDd ... contribute to public-cynJclam lftd apathy? Some of °'1 cOlleapel ~ that 1 f1lr au.mber of readers and TV vlowen incrc11in1t1 aee poUdcl treated by tho ..... a aport for a relatM bandtuJ of polltlcaJ lnllden. "There la no ~ COIUMic:don between their CODCerDI in tbett daily Uva and what they blear talked about and te0 reported bf the press in most political campal1n11" 11y1 veteran Wubinlton Pait political writer David Broder. I ~ don't feel WO haw been tbat derelict. And I worry that If wo conoentrato only on what people really say conc:mna them, wo may wind up witb a lot of ttoriea on pot bola and pJt>qe pick·up and aolay nefabbon. But there ii no quation it ia time for people to demand an apnda from botb poUddam and the press that bean aome relatiomhfp to tho 11\u they lead day ln and day ouL Thus the cballenac of polltkal report.en ii to qvit acceptlna the pap of campaiana u 1ubltanoc and push candidatea to addraa ln specific: tenm ialuea that affect all of ua ln so many ways -t.c:.Jth care, tho homelcsa, im.Jnilndon, the envi.roo.ment, education, crime. The Hat ii endlea. The ultimate qucation everybody wants answered is pretty abnplo: "What doea it mean to me?" Why allow pollticiana to frame the debate on crime around the death penalty, for instance, when mOlt people face far more danpr from petty llreet mugcn than they do from flr1t-de1ree murdercn? Broder says we need to devote a oontcientious reporting effon to determine what the voters' ooncern1 are -and then let that agenda drive our coverage. "Obviously, we can't ipM>rc what the candJdatea choole to do and say," he says. "But when they're talkina about thlnp that arc inclevant to the voten' concerns, we don't have to pvc it the same coYer.,e we do when they are add.raslna what we know to be very much on voters' minds." The conventional wildom bu been that low voter turnout rcOecu tbe fact that Americana no toaaer can about politicl and are too tolf-ablort>ed In their own liva to take put. But a new study by the Kettorioa Foundation cl.am that la a myth. People do can about poltlkl; according to the study. but feel politically lmpotenL 'Ibey believe poUtb hu unclolpo a .. hostile taao.er .. by lp9da1 lntot11tl. and they aro frwtnted with neptiYo campat1nin1, uncontrolled campat1n costs and broken promilll. IA 1bon. lbcy are tired of the president blaming Co~1reu, eon,r.. blamlna the Pfeiklent, tho 1overnor blamlns_ tho t.cplatuto and tbe Lc,....ture blandnJ tJllo pemor. Tb.y want rtilultl, and tliey are not lntorested In tbi ~ pmea. TbeJ al8o want tbe prcu to do a botter job -to beat, u Broder suaeata. what they hlYO to..,. to ,.... wt llluel. to aM thole ..... OOGtal in DOWS 1cportl and to hold cudldatel ~. Sovw'IJ newaptpen took I major atop toward lmprovtn~ Uatlr OIMI .. Ja11 ,ear bJ lllC'lfte c:1Mkta•' ads for ma:=; , .... ~ .... ~for.. eftllll lped oelJ 10 ~ he DOWS lpeC!t ud publbld~-­ tbat I~ 10 -llOOd ol lb. •lee&Orate. Now we aeed 10 Wra ..U.., put ltep .,, ............ Wtdl oa•al1-lllld 1 •••: ..................... ~ , ........ --.. ,...a1111 ,.... mnatnu Md emn' Ina -lilf a1 ';111 la awloWtl,..liild~.,,111 tnidlll"OfJa•ln If .... ldlllllfW. M. tu ..,., ......... onlJ ..... .. die,... .... ,.. .... _ ..... :SIClto ... lwlllM .. tM ~-.- T• .......... 111111U11~=c--· !fl-II• .... , .... ud......... . AllaM .................. __ ~llldtlm'l ..... 181••1•1• lia" . Al'Mld ... ...... ol dnl .,.... ....... wl two ~ a.-.................. &91¥ ................ tM IOUl'CI "' ............ hid•~, be.WO u tM joltl ,,.,. '°* booml. ti..; did llOt come ftom El Toro Marine Bue, a .,.....n then sakL . ''The &Id II doled rlaht DOW and ooJy • couple of OW' planes haw taken olf todaf • eo it wun't any of our planes,' Corp. Kerry Achlill Kid. furthermore, a spokesman at a radar monitorlna facility in Hawthorne said he had not detected any supereonJc aircraft in the area Saturday. profeitloilal .,.... removers =· ....... llld Sbellcy a •••ber ol ._ "Oean HaJbor o.r· o-m•uee. "If the boeten loca .. anyth1na that'• ~ ~ ue not to pick it-;p;.'~~ .aid. "They are to mark if ua· cOme back and let U1 know. PJedomfnateJy, people brina back the· really cnatty stuff that doan't lint and really looks terrible, .. abe aald. Commerce. She showed • the studenu llidel of the hllbor, exampJv ot truh in the harbor and asked them to become environmentally conaciom. "If we really start teacbifta out kids to care, then t~tre &Oinl to teach us to care,' she said. Spuraeon added that previoul generations are only now leamlna about the dettr1ldioa thej have cauxd to the environment, and muat now make a difference. Saturday'• clean-up foculed on lower Newport Harbor, due to tbo nestin& seuon of endanaCred species like the California Blact "There are six endanaercd specie• nestina there,', said Alflt/ Litton. an UJ>eer Newport Bay volunteer. "Ript now, we baYe nest.ins of the California Leaat Tern and Ugbt-Footed Oapper Rail. that we wou.lclp't wut to diltutb," abe aaid. Sb9 added that the Upper Newport 81)' '°"1oteers coordJnate Canoeifta. K.ayakins. Bird Watchina and wildlife tow1 of the Newport Harbor irea. The Newport Harbor is a natural estuary -a place where salt water and fresh water mix. Approximately 85 percent of the California wetlands have diaa=red ... to ., .... at. lftd like ··a.a llaita ~ wi1J help UYO tbe wetblad 11'CU not abady deaolate, Aid l.ittoa. Tbe bay ii alao important becaUIO it ii --9 • 'PM' ol. the Pacific Dy-way ... .... 8Udl have a certain roate tbeJ :Li~ year to mip'ate. aad tbc stop is ODO of the few klfl places wbele birds can *" .,. diminiabiaa.'• aaid Jeanifer Herren. allo a volunteer with Upper Newport Bay. Wfbat we ha.e m cndu&cred • ol birda ii pretty amazinc, •• ~ But Oen1a said ahe also thinks community involvement and experience with crucial issues facin& the dty aro essential. Councilmember Olup have a riabt to expect continued repruentation of their viewpoinu tbrouah<>ut the balance of his term," said John M.W. Moorlach at the lut council meetina. readina from a resolution paucd by the Costa Mesa Republican Assembly. Spuraeon. Ilona with voluntcen from the Upper Newport Bay Reak>naJ Part. wu in dwae of coordinatinJ the elementary IChool effon in tho Newport-Mesa School District to participate in the clean- up, which wu 1pont0red by the Newport Harbor Area Clamber of Rail and Boldina's Savannah r-=====================~ Sparrow in the upper portion of "Ono of the tbinp l'm aoma lo be lootin& for i1 participation in the p:neral plan proceu in the past, lhe said. ''If eomeone is concerned enough to want to be on the dty council, they should have participated in that process." Others have publicly called for the council to appoint aomeone with similar cooseiva.tive IOcial and filcal valuca like those held by Olup. "The voters who elected the Harbor, around the Newport Dunea Reson. That clean-up, called "&tuuy Day," will take place on September 21st. Citina concerns about the cost and delay that would come with a special election in November, the r -:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::-1 eouncu voted 3.1 on June 11 to Now! For Singles ... gourmet encounters appoint Olugow's replacement. DON'f DINI AL~ ••• Genis was the lone holdout for • Dl9e 11 .-....., • tt1e i-... ...,. TM Stdel CM tt1et ,,...... .. ,.,.. .., special election. "' ..,. -• .... 11 ...., ._ ..._ ii °'-c..r'• Mlt ,...... llrrilc City Manager AJlsn Roeder has ,.... • ...._. * C..W •--. ..._... ""'11 a.er t• •,.... II said he will have paperwork ready ~"=--..._ Tiit lleMlt. CIMl•• it• ....... TM,...,.. ........ _. _.... for a special elcdion at the o.wa .., ........., 6*1llldll ....-. *" Or-. c:..r' _. _,... ._.. =~~~o i:..::. !h~.p1~~ •• '· -... -.... --• • e . Rdlrement I.Mng ~-=-c ... t11e ......... JUt. for AdWe Seniors NOTICE DUE TO AN UNPRECEDENTED DEMAND FOR CEILING FANS, THE HUGGER..sTYLE CEILING FAN IN THIS WEEK'S TARGET CIRCULAR MAY NOT BE IN STOCK IN SOME STORES. RAIN CHECKS Will BE ISSUED. We regret any lnconven6ence this may cauM. ® TARGET COLORING CONTEST Our Sunday Brunch is "The Talk of the Town!" Give it a try, the tab is on us. Call for reservations. (114) 646-6300 2283 FolrYtew Rd. Costa Mesa -- Includes cue. 1 luYurlel\ as: •Maid •nd LJr-,en S.Jrvtce •Dally Activities •Social Excuralona eChauffeuree 1 ransportatlon •European culsl.,e •Fully equipped Kitchenettes •24 hour Sta1flng •CIJlllQlm ........ rwt~A111a .... ...,,,,., Dllldly. J1ly 4111, 1111 0 7:00 p.11. Dr1111 CIMt LI a..d Cll .... llMl1m 11111 ... llNI,.-. ••ta11t 1llllllltillh9, ... ,.._. ..... ,.,, nsw•n111.11•11111r.,.1 ... .. ...... " ___ ...,, __ O....•• ODl9'1'1' I I M ........ ~·IM IF m.wm ..... -....... p~ J•ly 17·21 •Costa••• hing rentarkable has .. occurred since we last ob- J served Independence Day. Many Americans have . beconte more profoundly aware of our freedom and the privileges it brings. This year, as we cele- brate this heritage, we also celebrate the men and the women who courageously reminded us of its inestimable value. We will be closed on July fourth to share the day with our families and friends. •• I ' . 'l-1&~l'1'i l?IU!filj lJJ~=i-l,f-11 ittrHi'~~,:~11 fflflifil a~!i'i~lilili~~ r "II• •1··1"f'l-ciI-·--:1f-Y:I. I. ..... I•· -'·•~· _ .. rl-! (3 er .. ;.gf -g I _t ~r ~ 8.r ft t.I it:;· -.I!. • - • ~ Jf ft g§'ll ~' f _.tr tft _I ' ' -. 1- I-I_. ·-:1-11 !-r---!l·· 1: l'c:-~s er ... ~li 11 .-j-.fs-' w~ tfi [l~I ii!~ i Ill' •!la rs:~~ .. B't, Ji'Q. ~· ~--~1~····~-U ... ~·-·g.1ig:1aw .-' --[ l = . . 5. !;-3 :I -fi u 8 • i !. !i • I' I ...... ~ in the 1970. by European and ~ Mdolia ·"IMM barred South African athletes 6alia compedn, internationally, includina in tho 'Ql;mpk GaiDca.; Foreign athletes competing in loUtla Africil were suspended by their national t.deratJona. T elevision-Radlo •Wimbledon, Cllaonel 4, noon. • Dodaei.-Bnvea, ESPN, S p.m. ~ ....... 10 a.m. -Plllllade.lphia at New York Mets, WOR 11:20 a.m. -St. Louil 1t Oliaiao Cllb&, WON. S p.a. -Dodpn at Atlanta, ESPN. Gelf 10 a.m. -LPOA Olampionlblp, Olannel 4 12:30 p.m. -POA., St. )udea Ouaic, Olanncl 2. 2:JO p.a. -Se.uon, Sout.bwellcn 8dl Claalc, ESPN ........... 10 La. -IMSA OTP Ca!Dcl Condnental VIII, ESPN. 11 La. -DeJoo VflfllU 2SO, TNN ~ ··-· 10 LID. -Rodeo &om T-., Wllb. (taped). Pnme Tdct I pm -U.S. Open Table Tcnnia, Prime 1lc:tct. 4:30 p m -Speedway Sunday (l.llped). SporU(llanncl 7 pm -Jct Skiin&, from s.:i-nto (lipid), Pnmt Ticket 8 p m -U.S. Olympic .,.,,_, SporuCllannd. Tndl I I .JO a m -NCAA Outdoor OlampiomlUpl. Olanncl 2. Tmalt Noon Wunblcdon. early-rounds. Olanncl 4 ~· Noon -The Oaks OUllC. Prime Tldct H.wlbd91 I 10 p m -The Irish Derby, ESPN .. --..bd .. 5 p m -From Aupta, O~~). Prune Ticket ..... u I 05 pm. -Texas •I Anacls, KMPC (710), XTRA (690). • ()j p.m -Doc1scn at Atlanta, KA.BC (790) '85RR> ecan- N.JTO,AC l.Cllt.0:057 $2943 "8310YOTA '8510YOTA CANRf COROllA N.JTO,AC N.JTO,AC 1£.,..m13 1£11UUll $4983 $5482 11510YOTA 1MNSSAN CANRf 3UZX1\JRBO MJTO.Jt/C. CMS fU>N'IO,T·lCJIS u::a::BT415 1£JrHM1 $6484 $6673 111NSSAN 'f1I va.J<SWAGEN SENTMWAGCJ.I JETTA NJTQAC AC,IURD= l£.l':Hftt11 l.Clt~ $6988 $7n9 INOLBWOOD -Robyn Dancer ---posted his third straight victory ~ ......... Saturday, 1COring by 8~ lengths in the _.., $107,700 Triple Bend Handicap at --=--- Hol~ Park. Ridden by Laffit Pincay Jr., the 4-year-old colt went seven furlonp i.n 1 :21. -BT ne Auodat«I Pre# Quote or the day Dodgers television announcer Vin Scully, describing a jumping and waving Alfredo Griffin while approaching third base umpire Randy Marsh after the latter ruled against the Dodgen on a game-tying play against Atlanta Saturday night: "look at Alfredo, he's run out of English." aelll>A NJ10,IURD= fU),9Wf' 1£.ftRMIS7 LCG'l9111D $3997 $49'l3 '88YOU<SWACEN "83YOLVO GOLF Xl>I.. VHIE.9'M> Miro.AC l.C.GW.atO LCll.u::m $5839 $5997 '8510YOTA 1160fiYSl..ER CSCAGT LEBARONCDN. ~ NJTQl..ERK:R lC.t!MMO l.CltPVJGD $6686 $6845 WNSSAN VAN XE AIAO,AC ~· $7923 Fountain Valley's Carol Strausbul'R ... From 81 The Hall of Fame list involves the coaches who dwelled in the Sun.set League -aocountina for the absence of several Newport Harbor coaches who made their marks after the Sailors left the Sunset. My first by-li.ne in the Orange Cout Daily Pilot WU in Marcb of 196", involving a HuntJnaton Beach baseball game. Since then the sights and t0unda or the Sunset League have always been one of the major politiva here. Thanks for the memories. CAllm From 81 Suntet Leaaue, u well as Golden West CoUeae, on a weekly buis (Thundaya), with Barry Faulkner aranted the envious duty of capturina the Oavor of tho Sunset. Yo-yoe have a habit of retumiq to the top, ~. Ind the up1ido of the situation ii that for Newport Beach and c.o.ta Mou, well, it'• Pnl to be btd to tbe 60a from ih1a department, but only better, because In addJtioft to what we bad in the 60I., we're aOina to ke~ all of thO &oOd fttnaa that have ~ over 0.. pat two or IO docadct. Newport Harbor ... CorOna del Mar ... Eatanda ... ea.t. Meu ... Mater Doi ... Or•• Coeat Collep .... bOld Oft ~Oo\10'!° ball. We'r9 aoln& to' bio coa\ina1at 10'l Ju1t tbioe iltMa a wee¥ llatl fil, and ..... takJn& ow bell lboCI each tltM out. We'D Wk lbout that ... ma ~ when ..... , ..... die Nftport .INc:lal a.a ..... "* Mte30, 1991 Monday Prime Time ,., 1, 1n1 • • • • • • --- ---- lund8y Nllht OWi June 30, 1991 Monday Nllht OWi Juty 1, 1Hl Tuesday Prime Time July 2, 1991 8:00 1:30 7:00 7;30 1:00 8:30 t:OO t:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 ..... ~ .... "" ...... ,.,. ...._.o -t1lllo0'.-...1I-....................... (1~1 ol ..... Sllr.alo ... 0 ,..........,.,ID,_1 2) :c S... "*-! :::-: A.... • W .......... tlCIOld pn-c::.-=-on .. ......,,, ol Sidi-, Sl'*IOrl' • -111*11 • aiuplt hOlll9I ,.,... Ctn a.not 0 (117) • .., --• Chciling ~IRll'-~O • Newto *"""O f* I A MWC.., ...... ..,,. c-Gori Con-............... I.a 6 Cl!-. (~IF• .....0 T .. jlll ,., ..... lllloq\ l'IOClll 91"' ......._ ol ~ Gille. llOlll~ M ~ Sllr.alO ftlnO ... llln ID OlllllO I pllo-pit -cllcr9llr ........ .,. lllU!llll'lll me DICOINt • ~-·~al 1~1 I +din • CIJl'llC*Jll ;.::1: wllldl ~h-allmoGll :: s:::v· ...,,., lllOllDh ... ol lftl lmllC'I (R) llil Slhol D b _ __..IRIO • °*"'" 0...11 ........... ., ..... ... ti'!.,...... z-· ""°' OMI Ctnldlile Teo""°' A lllwlQ a-. • a.,.o a.,.o -~ ...., . .,, ... bcu'tfy iu. lrom lie luVI....,... ID lllr-* ~ ~ Olis 11-.o HoeN IA! m Ill -111111 I CUi-llla1n> -(I 20t IVCAI ...... ,,,,.. • ..... IQl;"""O ..... e.... ._.,_.. ....... ........ ...,.._ ... __..A Law..,__.,..._ ..... Scr..u.o .. ...1 The !!Dy 8ldl """' ........ prlllll 111 -ID~ • ~ '"'°9 IO ---Kiii lllHln IRi Boys !RI ~ .. -~-Jallpllne .. ~111&»-• ""91'Ulo,t sw.oto !In SWto!O -·~~~lllOllDlll'"1-Sllr1 ~(A)O Al_.a ~.., ~ (R) (In Sino) j"-13 ol 310 • • cas111w1 11n ..... ~ MWC.,, "'9cw ti I IRI tin Slereol 0 ..... ttl, .......... II .. °"8" (I• Orlml! (1'"1 I al ..... SllltOIO T ...... O 21.lldwl $moll Aob9rl Waaw (ilS..0)0(137) • ...... .._ II'•• !Mot LawC-· ....... ..... ..... ..... ...., .. • c-11111 ltodl ... ... 11~ h!Umy 0 • -uc ..... o ..... ::; .... e.... ...... c.t .... ,h 1=--(RI ~ ............. ' .._.., tlll lln SWWOl ll'ln 3 --ill!O ... 1 iAl 0 Sllrtol 0 10 -,...,Tiii ~,... ...., i..e-....... I.DI Mg*J Oocl9lr1 • San °"90 ,..,... Fl'Ql!I San I°""" -.... ,.._...., -Flllnt ....... Ollgo/JD ~ ~ l\.r4t a.. .... Smells 0 -... T'* Tiie 11111 ~ c..., ... ....,LOii ..,. ••l'I .....,. • a..· The """ on SlwlDca "°""' .... M-.11111 -llell ~al E..r (In s..ot O The 8irtl 0 "''--Pl*' "'C .... Or WICIOll -... hi~ 91"' ~Silnoto ------•lwe>OllClllftw.i••ll'Clfll -::= Mldllll\Alowr......_O .. ~ .._ The HI009f\ C<ly 1RI r,. ..,...,. IR1 (In Slltr.ol IP"1 ,ov 0 ...... ,.. -(llllln 1 al SIO !tic---...... lllldlle""" DI .... b ~ ,... ,.. Deillll 1~ ....... =--1 ...... lllldll9-... • ..... ,___ ..... ......... 0 ...... ,..~Alllir ...._. floe C-Gori !~I lil hllllltl ......... I.ft 6 Ol9 E~ I Fl ..... --.o 1111Sllrtol0 PrflrllOntdMla llllO '°'111 Bnlllll tAI 0 ---lllciCWMll ._ .. ......... l.M .... , ,_ ... llV Nm o..• ....... ... 1 ........ • =~ ~= ~----0 .... ......... llr\Slltwot "-ic811 .......... ,,.... • ...., flit !:IC:--0 """ ff111 uo, al ... ~ us ~s.r-_......., '*'"'-" 0 • -~ ...... , .. ...... ...... ...._"II T-......... fl999! Su proltlcJn •• -1*1 ,..., -,,,.. got "° """"° IOdol QUllllll INlarlo 11 ·421 ...... • -°*'~ .......... =-=--The 8llCl All Cid v .. °'1'• 1111 1 ... " . c..... Mtlulll ...... ....., ...... l.M ,...,,.... - Tuesday Night Owl July 2, 1991 Wedneadey Nllht Owl July 3, 1111 11:30 12:00 12!30 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30 4:00 4:30 5:00 ..... '"l ........ M C... r.;::=-:-:-::-±:':::-;;i::;;;'."=1~=:.-;:;;t'1:::':::::---+.;~:7:'"'l~::-::":"::~iJ::::::rt:"T.~ ... July 4, 1991 Friday Prime Time • • • • • • • • • • • • --------------- Thur9d•J Nlpt OWi July 4, 1991 Friday Nl&Jtt Owl 3:30 4:00 4:IO 5:00 -.... _ ,, •• ···~ Saturday Prime Tlme • • 8:00 8:30 ........... DMll Ill>-,.,_ ...... -!RI ..... !Ill/In I'll -0 1:30 l:OO 9:30 ,.... ............. ...... ,, . ....... ,._ -- Saturday Nlllht Owl 11:30 1:00 1:30 2:30 3:00 3:30 4:00 "".., .... ••"l 'UW,. ...... (1111 0.-)lOM ~ e.-""'-0 IOOlt 1 ll 0... 1 .. "".., WM! °"""' IOI Air! ....... ffl)/IPI,... ""'"""""" .... ... •••l'I , i .. " - July 6, 1991 0 ._.. ... "._.. .... " ..... .... ~-.................. ..... -··-tu!' .......... _..._ ............ ,.. ......... _ ...... ,................ ........ -... -. TV programmers gear up lor holldlJ celebrants at home By llllg p .... krWI ---..... 5-Vlct It'• a downright shame that Independence Day, a holiday that should bring all or America together, ii going 10 crutc such divUivencu in the country. But let's face it, when half the country gets a four-day weekend and the other haJf hu to dng itself back to work Friday, there's bound to be deep resentment, ill will and -perhaps -indelibk: loathing. Which brings us to television, and the fact that millloftl of people arc going to be home Thursday and maybe Friday, bumin& buraen and watching television, which actually supplanted' b11cball 11 the American Pastime somewhere around 19.54. As might be expected, America'• leading network, NBC, will apend much of the four-day weekend in London, televisina the Wimbledon tennis tournament. However I a number or other networks will offer Fourth or Juty specials in efforts to prove they arc patriotic corporate citiu:ns and should not have their licenses revoked by the FCC. For those looking for a laugh, cable'• Comedy Central will offer a 2A·hour marathon or stand-up comedy on the Fourth and HBO'• adull comedy seriu "Dream On" begins iu second seuon with a one-hour episode at 10 p.m. Sunday. And ror viewen who feel they don't have enou&h aeledioo on cable, the Courtroom Television Network. which takes vfcwen inside America'• courtrooms, make& ita nationlil debut on aome cable l)'ltcms at 9 a.m. Monday. Other hlahligbta for tbe week: Monday: "K-9000," 8 p.m., Pox Broodcutlna. A llreet-wlle cop jolna force1 with a female tdentiat whoec latut czperiment -1 c1ninc with 1 computer chip Implant -bu been kidnapped by c:roob. '"1"V Land Births;' 8 p.m., Nick· clodeon. Nick at Nite celebraiet lta sixth birthd1y with ca.te, candlea and bounclni babies from fat1r familiar 1V 1ilcom famUiCI . "Conlgher, .. 8 p.m., 1NT. Sam Elliott and Katherine Rou 1tar in a Louis L'Amour western m1de for TNT. "American Muten," 9 p.m., PBS. 'The sixth seaaon opem with "Helen Hayes: Fint Lady of the American Theater." "Crisis In the Arts: Politics, Censonhip and Money," 10 p.m., PBS. Susan Stamberg of N1tional Public Radio moderates with a panel that includes Pulitzer Prize. winning playwfi&ht Edward Albee. Tuesday: "OeolJ< Wubington," 8 p.m., Family °'•nnel. Barry Boltwick stan in the title role of a drama tracing the life of the fint U.S. president from chUdhood through hit military command durin& the American Revolution. Patty Duke co-stan. Flnt of lour pana. Rerun. "Windmilll of the Goda," 9 p.m., CBS. J11clyn Smith, Robert Wagner. A female ambuudor ii targeted for usauination in this two-part miniseries from 1988. "Desert Stonn: Strlle&Y and Tactics," 10 p.m., Artt ind Entertainment. &pcru on militl')' 1tr1teo and we1ron1 Jhoe tbetr penpcctive on the victory of the ooalition. Wednesday: "Moyers: Oren Lyons the Faithkeeper," 9 p.m., PBS. Profile of Native American environmentalist Oren Lyons. Thursday: ••Pops Ooet the Fourth," 7:30 p.m., AJ1a and Bntertainment. 'The Bolton Pops performs American cllllka ln celebration of ~pendence Doy. "Disney'• Great American Celebfation," 8 p.m., CBS. Pmm Dl1neyl1nd and Wilt Disney World: Blll>ara Man<lt<ll, Sheena Butoo, Rnben Guillaume and the Kentucky Headbunten ill a Fourth of July celebration. "capitol Fourth/' 8 p.m., PBS. l!.O. Manhall boota a .,.,_,.. that fe11urc1 Tony Bennett, C.b C.llow1y, Joel Orey and the National Symphony Ord>eltra. "Bob Simon: Back to Bqbdad," 10 p.m., CBS. ·ces correlpOl>dent Bob Simon, who ipent molt of the Penian Ou1f war u a prilOncr, retunu to Bqhd1d. "Koppel Report, .. 10 p.m., ABC. "Drup. Crime cl Doi Time" is ID irwestiptioo of the ~ew Yort City criminal justice 1y1tcm. Friday: "Verdict.'' 8 p.m., CBS. "F1orida vs. Jamu Kallok" Xf'OCI in on the trial of a Florida man held responsible for his IOD'I use Of bit pn to aboot a friend. "Bellea of Blecc:t.er Stre4~" 9 p.m., ABC. COmedy pilot. Two tecn·aae Jiri1 tneak out ~ the bowe to attend a celebrity porty. •• American Playhoulo... 9 .m., PBS. In "Hyde In ~" morie -and director Julian Hyde (R9bett Joy) l>ec:omo1 ob1c11eil with v1nqutshln1 a c:onupt .-IP columnist. "Slher fOK, • 10 p.m., ABC. Actlon·1dventurc pilot JameJ Cobunl llln u a U.S. lntclllpnee apnt attanptina to unnvel a web of intematk>nal crime. Sunday: "C. Everett ~~ M.D.," 1 p.m.. NBC. In "A Time lor CllaOF." the former ouraeoa seneral matea a propt00il for the luture of medidno and preclba what ii needed to bflnl about better health care . "All In the Family,'' 8 p.m., CBS. Al<hio triea to pment a bl..t lamlly from ll!O\'lna Into the nel&hborhood. Rerun. "Bvenina at Popa." 8 p.m., PBS • The 22nd IMIOl'I Ol)C.ftl with I tributo '° the theater musk: of tho l~to Leonard Bematcin. ~he deadUat battle ever foulf\t on 111e North American conlinonL Emmys truly belong '" daytime By--.................. Daytime went ortme dmo, but k 11W had no time l!or su.an Luocl. For a rooord ... ttlfta 12th limo, olHIOCAlnated -1111 5- Loocl --from ""' doyti-&unys wltllout --a ludllty .... equaled °"" by the Oifco&o Oiba and tho Irish tnWlary. Only thlt tlote, .... tba tint .......... .... t th"""" tba _.....,.. -In prioM time, ao CBI """"' the ...... -Iota Ill •IPttlatetiMup. l!Lucd-r1D1a-IO lhW the A<~ tllo Amn~ -at -""· w .. not for the w'"·ll1 S.. .,......,howwaWd .... ... llllldt k dwG ..... II b~ ...... -..... _, We" tllttitlllfl••nllOrill-.-,._. tloO ...... -"'" ... more tun watc:hma the ti.mo cycle. Addllttcdly, J'm not very famlll1t wit.b tbcl lllOfted )'OUftt and -i.. but not1Wic I -mademothlntl __ ,,. lllJl1lllll-And 1 bet rm not the only -wllo opeot the better pon o( tba ....... uldq, "Wlio .... _ _..,.. Slill, -of the _.. .. --llbllollBobBoibr-.. ,. 1111 welcome 1b1a tbe~ nnr-. II CBS wu ln .. nt oa ... ,,,.. l1mo, ...., -'t k _.., ..... ,. ....... I..., ........... IOO ... _ ...... ....,. 00 illltu1lj .. daat c::" -" bin -off .. 'l1lanlltllllly, ... did .... -....... ........ up tllo ,,.-. .... ---...... ...._ Alld ,..,.. ba..-IO lid Alnar "" .. llloj • ... • prc1entcr1 wero wcarina red ribllo.. II a J11ow of IUppclfl for oooolc with AIDS, thereby~ npariJw .. the .....,,._ felt by .i..;.,. ol Ibo Tony Awanlt tM., who had to spend their -.ilnc lllClllna. Odoerwlaa, tho only luo pale of thl ...,,Ina -..-;.,, whether the r: --•ter -bar -Sbo did. 61CBS--whh .-k-udao ... u • a doylhM spodat? In tba allanoooot, It bad a -lal, ..... ..,, ....... tbat _..lod la -.,..... __ ,,_ ..... """"1, It 11-ed a lot of dlpa, lllld h clid1s, lake flaolt 100 w.io..,.. Plotao, CBS, plll the -...... -. ...... Oii! Md -JOO'n II 11, ..... -LucduEmn!J.-... Otllt wilt -and din. ey Tom 8illclno ,,,_.... (}>i ATLANTA /fit1 -Tommy~/ I/JI Luord1 wu ' smilina after the Los Angele• /' I Ood1er1 beat Atlanta 2-1 in 11 innlnp. He wasn't smUing two inninp earlier. The Dodgers overcame a controveniaJ call that pve Allanaa the tyinf.a': in the ninth iMin& and Sot rda ejected. The Dodgers, however, won it without a hit in the 11th when Atlanta second 'buellWl/ Mart Lemke'• thtowin1 enw anowed Lenny Harris to acoro from 1CCOnd base. Harris opened the innina with a walk from reliever Juan Berenguer (0-3). Kent Merclter replaced Berenguer and Alfredo Griffi11 sacrificed Harris to second. Mercker then struck out Chris Gwynn and walked Brett Butler. Juan Samuel pounded to Lemke, who made a dMn& stop but made • tride thfvw to first ~. Mike Htlrtley (2·0) got the victory with 1 ~ innings of scoreleas relief. Kevin Gross picked up the save, his flnt of the year and second in his nine-year career. The Braves tied it the ninth on a close call. Teny Pendleton led off with a double and moved to third on a Oy baU to right by Lonnie Smith. Pinch-hitter Mike Heath then popped out agaln1t John Candelaria. who replaced Tim Belcher with two outa ln the ~· CreWI relieved ind walked Orea Olton, and Dennis C.ook came on to face Lemb. Lemke bit a low liner to aborUtop Griffin, who appeared to catch the ball, but the umpirea ruled it bad hit the ground first u Pendleton scored to make it 1-1. The Dodaen usuect for ae¥eraJ minutes and Luorda -on hit iCCOnd lime out -wu ejected by third.base umpire Randy Marsh, l'ho made the inftfal caD. TV reolays abowed Griffin causht the ball. "Fint of aU," said Luorda, "if Griffin doesn't catch tho ball, all be has to do is throw the ball to second for the fon:eout. The &UY (Manh) was 8-10 feet away. He called the guy safe so he must have been sure, but the ball wu six inches off the ground. Hts explanation was that it hit the ground. ''That's a crime," said Lasorda. "The aame is over. We win. The guy catches the ball. We could have very easily lost that same." Lasorda said he Y'ent back out to argue the second time after "• TV guy told me it was a catch. That's when I got thrown ouL The first time I was not cussing, just screamina that it was cauaht. "Randy Marsh i1 an outatandina guy. He didn't deliberately call it that way. He's an boneat, sincere and dedicated umpire. He just mUsed the call," he said. Griffin was asked iI he caught tho baU. "Yes. I did. It WU simple. It WU about 1ix inches off the ground. My glove hit the ground and he Dodgers schedule probably thousht I tripped it," be said. Manb did not have a doubt. "I made the ca.11 immediately," Manh said. "He trapped the ball. I saw aome funny ~nt -it looked like ho wu wnotherina the balJ. "We know this was a big game for both clubs and we want to get it right. So I went to the crew to see if I missed it," said Marsh. The other three umpires all said they did not see it clearly enouah to make a ruling. Starting AtJanta pitcher Tom Glavinc, watchina the pme on televilion in the clubhouse, thouaht it was a ~tc.h. "It probably was c:lear to everybody watchin& lV .... If there wu instant replay like in football, it may have been reversed," be said. Bekhcr gave up four hits in rn inninp. Gary Carter extended hi• hittina streak to ei&ht p.mes with a double to score K.aJ Deiels, who had sina)ed, to Jive the Dodgen a 1-0 lead in the fifth. Olavine pve up four hits, struck out seven and walked none in eight innings. Angels schedule " --= For the record -1MIL1..-........ ._1 -----Al'l\MfA ...... .. .... 4 fl --•••• ... ...... .. .. c II -· II II ....... , .... ,,, ..,. .. .. ... =· ... n: ,.., :•i ct 1 l.lllel l I ,,, .... , . )ti lllllli t I J •• ..., • : ttt _,_ I tit ~-4 I Ill .... t I I t I '*'tlill I I ...... I I .... , t • lllld I I ,...... • •• , ,...... • 1 ............. '-............ -.,_. ..... --., --· (--14 .......... 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",.._ .. .:,..,. __ , •""1-N n.ne-1'1 ~-'11 ~"' •1MIP-'11 .. ,.._HI -..n-na """"'-"· ....,..,,. ~1Mt-IM ~n -rM '""-"-N ,,.,...,, • 114 ..,..n.rw """"11•1M LeMond starting to stir, Tour· of France nearing By~ZlnCI ................ PARIS -He dropped out of the Tour of lllty and a few olher r.ce.s tbi apri"I· In tho races he did complete, ho wasn't amona the leaden. Still. Orea LcMond Is probably tho f~te ao4aa into tho Tour de Franc:c. Wby? for him, it'• tho only raoo tbat counts. The Tour WU Its 18th ciKUi1 around the country Ju.ly 6 witb a ahon pro6opc lD l.~. Tho real ndDa ptl undef W1J thl nat dly With an ltdMdual aac iD tho inomina and a team time trial an \M aftemoo11. TbO rac:c contlnuca for 2l st.,a in a couakrdock.Wiae direcdon throup tltc ~Ma llnd the Alpt, c.nd1na In Paris an July 2 after 2.4621Dilea. LeMOnd haa won in 1916. 19" and 1990. The Li.It two wen come-from-behind victona on lbt ftul weetc8d. ~ ia no reuon I cao't win ttai year;• LeMUM aid. .. ftft lf t n't Win t year, I Winrt I M¥I Uni or bar Fad llUOM left~" tt. Ml a)_ways ..-ta1Mct that the ant; nee ............... hiia • tM ToW • ,,.... ,..... -.., d the MMr o•• d9y ctrnht, min....,. I I I ,.. I I I I ' I I I I I • women candidates WAl89IOJON -......... ... ... ,,...., ... Wit qalc:kly ............. MW penaa -:SC: II of rw ~ Ju= TM& a•~ tho court'• 8111 .... ~ tact. ''I doo't think tMN'• • , quota 111tem Oft the cmsta," ....,. dedatod. Ill -'d he would "wciab all the ... and '° for tie belt-quellled candidate" rather than foCuliq only on mcmben of mbiority pupa. "Wo want to 10 far aa=He~ and I want to keep in mind representation of all Americana," Bush told reporters aboard Air Force One headed for Kennebunkport, Maine. Marshall, meanwhile, told a packed farewell news conference one day after announcina bis retirement that while he also favored a~intment of the belt penon available, race should not be ruled out. He added, "I don't think that should be a ploy and used as an excute for doina wrong, for pickina the wrong Nearo." Bush said he is examining "a handful of names" and may select a nominee within a few days. The president wants to have a new Justice confirmed by the Senate before the court begins its 1991-92 tenn in October, said spokesman Marlin Fitzwater. Marshall's retirement Jetter said he would stay until conf ll'Dlation of a successor by the Democratic- controlled Senate. But he denied reports he is trying to pressure Bush into pickin'-someone acceptable to Senate hberals. "I'm not trying to run the country," Marshall said. "Let the country run itself." Black, Hispanic and female 1udgcs likely will receive strong consideration from a White House team of advisers led by counsel C. Boyden Gray. ,......,._ Federal Appellate Judge Edith Jones d the Sth Orcult is Shown in this undated ~le photo. Jones has been mentioned u a potential Supreme Court nominee to replace retiring justice ThUrgood Marshall. Among the possible frontrunners are aarenoe Thomas, a conservative federal appeals court judge in Washington who once chaired the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission; Ricardo Hinojosa, a federal trial judge in Tens, and Ferdinand Fernandez, a federal appeals court judge in Los Angeles. Amalya Kearse, a black federal appeals court judge in New York City, also has been mentioned. But she is a moderate likely to be o pposed stro ngly by Bush's conservative supporters. Bush said one reason he wanted to make his choice quickly was to avoid "a lot of needless lobbying and pressure .... We've narrowed it down, so that we're not looking for 20 new suggestions." "The process didn't have to start from scratch, square one," Bush said, noting there 1s a short White Home list of pOtentiaJ nomJneet from last year's wort in pic:kiaa a replacement for Justice wwwn-J. Brennan, Manhall't fellow liberal and close friend. Bush a year •JO picked David H. Souter, a then little-known federal judge from New Hampshire to replace the retirina Brennan. That appointment buttressed conservative control of the high court. With Marshall's departure, the court's only remaining liberals are Justices Harry A. Blackmon and John Paul Stevens. Whomever Bush selec:ta, the choice certainly will be more conservative than Manball. For 2A years on the court, he was a· staunch defender of individual and minority rights, an unyielding opponent of the death penalty and a supporter of women's ri&flt to abortion. -By 1J¥ ~l•t«l Pren Judge orders cross urner to read Anne Frank's diary SEA TILE -Instead of being sent to jail, a teen-ager was sent to the library to read the grim Holocaust talc, "The Diary of Anne Frank," for his part in a cross burning on a black family's lawn. Matthew Ryan Tole, 18, was sentenced Friday to read the famous story by a young Jewish girl of her family's failed attempt to escape Nazi persecution during World War 11. King County Superior Court Judge Anthony Wartnik said Tole received a light sentence because he was not o ne of the leaders in the April 16 cross burning in Bothell, a suburb north of Seattle. "The Anne Frank book is great for someone to get a picture of the most extreme thing that can happen if people aren't willing to step forward and say this is wrong,'' Wartnik said. "I'm hoping it will make him more sensitive." Wartnik told him to write a book report on "The Diary of Anne Frank" within three months. Tole f leaded guilty to rendering crimina assistance in the cross burning, which involved at least a dozen Bothell High School students. The cross wu built during a party at Tole's home. Tole did not help build or light the cross, but some or the materials belonged to him. He also helped hide a second cross that was never burned. The judge also ordered Tole to pay about $200 in fines and court fees, perform 240 hours of community service, and stay away from the targets of the cross burning. -B1 Th Auodated Pren ties, lawmakers loln forces tO save doomed mllltary bases ., ..... ,.....,,... WASHINOTON -The Al..,._ SWAT team twUD& lnto act,on. lta minion: Save Anaiiton'1 Fort McClellan. Ill IQembeu: two aenatora, a ~n and utoned local oftldall. "We're not aolna to leave any atone un~·· said Rep. Olerr Browder, a Democrat whose diltrict includea Fon McOellan. an Army facility that trains toldicn in chemical warfare. Browder and hil colleaaucs. inchadin& Democratic Sen1. Richard Shelby and Howell Heflin, roamed the halls outside a ~ Marina room Friday where the Defent8 Bue Closure and Realipment Commission heJd its final deliberations. For the AJabamjans -and score• of other lobbyist.I and elected officials -it was nail- biting time. "I've done everythina I can," Shelby 11id. "We've worked them." After months of hearings, meetings, discussions and trips, the IFVCn-member panel was to vote SWlday on the final list of military inltallalion1 taraeted for closure. The pa.net must present ill list to Pretident Bush by July 1. Bush will have until July 15 to approve or reject the commission's final list. If Bush approves, the closures will become final unless Congress rejects the entire list within 4S days. The Defense Department recommended shutting down 43 installldoat to 1ave aboUt St bilUOn CMlt fM years; ttio puol added 17 altematiYa. Coaunuiddea In which militu;J inltillatioft aro located are hntie to ~ the facilitlea for ecoaoaaiC reaom. Colina a buo croata joble11ne11 and removes the pernment't pretence in tho JocaJ economy. The dty or Lona Beach hired Watbinstoo Jobbylst Laurence Taub and mobilized Republican Rep. Dana Rohrabacber to try to Pve It.I naval station. "We've made this a top priority in our office," Rohrabacber said, addina that he intended to keep the pressure on "until the tut moment." 0 1bere will be a $750 million impact on the Fort Worth area," Ed McLaughlin said about the Pentaaon'a pla.nl to close Carswell Air Force Bue in Fort Worth. "All things belna equal, it wiU push unemployment about 2S percent." Mclaughlin, part of a Fort Worth task force aet up to save the bue, haa worked full time since March to try to spare CanwcU. "It'• hurry up and wait," he said as he 5moked another ciprette. Mike Reich, an employee of a rural electric cooperative in Meridian, Miu., hu spent aeveraJ weekl in Wuhington buttonholing commiuionen and staff in the hope of savina Meridian Naval Air Station. "It's been a costly and time- consuming affair," 11id Reich, who got saddled with the task because ho beadt the Navy Leque. But the chutzpah award pa to the AJabamlana. When Oen. H. Norma• Schwarzkopf, CXMMlHder of aJUed b'Ca In the Pcnian Gulf War appeared before the HOUie and Sonato Armed Servicu Committees, Browder Uld Sbclby quizzed him about c:lolina Pon McCleJJan at a time cbemk:aJ weapons pose a threat. The general dodaed the soecific question about F'"'ort Mc<lellan, but agreed that trainin& in chemical weapons w11 very important. On Friday, Browder banded out Xerox coplea of Scbwarztopf1 June 12 testimony. Jf McCleUan closes, the city'• unemployment will jump 10 percent and the anemic economy will suffer even more, Browder said. Jim Courter, bead of the commission decidina wbK:h buea to close, seemed'" awayed by Schwankopl'1 1rpment.1. "We're lMng is a dreamland If we dink we eaa wfpe chemk:al ~ oft the face of the earth," be .aw. Fonner Army Secretuy Bo Callaway, another eommiaalon member, said It wu silly to "mothball training facilltiel." The commission hu been under intense pressure. Commiuloo 1taffen joked the p.nel decided to put off the touah \'Ota until today when lawmabn will be out of town for the Fourth of July rec:eaa. Savvy remote users know more than how to switch channels By ScoU Wlllml ~ T9Mlcll Wltlr pattera COllda-throap moet •bowl, llf 1cWIJ tlM ~ --, lib ..... NEW YORK -Ah, the zapper. ...=========--===============================================1 That little TV remote control you chcc:kina the competition, because other kinds of shows will not be at break. "You're aoina to set editorial on pretty much the rett of the diaJ," Deutsch notes. 'PJ'bat'• where you\lo ao• thaJ real ~ time, to Jela\arely So throush 30 ttadou," Dcutleb llid. "It's no lonpr an atduoua or tlme- conaUllllnl tblq; EVOA If JOU onJy spend a iecioftd" on each c:bannel. that'• a whole minute rfcbt there." Be A Part of the County Fair Excitement y Advertising in Our range County Fair Edition. The Pilot and the Huntington Beach/Fountain \tllley Independent will publish a Special Tabk>ld Section on Thursday, July 11th featuring the events of the Orooge County Fair as well as oo addltonal 10,(XX) Copes to be dlstt1buted during the 12 days of fair excitement. ~~~~-0----~---- Let thousalds ot tree-tpendlng far-goers see you odvertling message 1n 1tis ccbtU tcttlkj 1stng tdt octMttes. ceremones cm entertcirrnent ... cm, ef'Pf the f oct that m<7'ftf Orcr.ge Coast residents save this speda tcXllold to help ~ thtW fak tttneray. ~ Deadlines: Space 8c Copy •July 2nd t $17 per cot ln.-both papers Col OU' Display Advertising Dept. TodQvl .... (714)642-4321 ext.250 ~WlhUI. hold in your hand It a powetful tool for freedom from the tyranny of commereiaJ1 -but oa!y tf you know bow to bow lo U1e iL You've eot to know how to puc. "Grazina," u it's called by wet- palmed Madilon Avenue typa and w h i t e -1 i p p e d n e t w o r t proarammen, it tho USO Of the zapper to nick rapidly from channel to channel. On multichannel cable TV systema. it's almost irreaiatible. "It's 1 danaerous weapon. It should be UJed carefully and, I think. with dilcretion," 11id Donny Deut.ICh, creative director for Deuuch rnc., a smaller, hipper New York City ad aaency. He ll kiddina. "It aivet the viewer more chok:a, forcina advertUcn and TV ahowt to rDake cvtry aocond count," Deaucb 11id. "Somo people, reaann-of ..,.t you put on, watdl 'tV tbat .ay.'' Dcuttch'1 •ftCY created the "Your mother wean Nike" commerdall foi Bridlb Kitfabt aneaktn Hd otbor offboat, attentJon •"Ina adt. He o«en tho follcJnll llpa '° ....., 10U qp: • StlOW IT ARTBRS (Tho Three-Ca••ra Sitcom Rulo): Alwajl ...... wida half.tMM tltcoms ... ~ .. Wtaldl .... you a e.n.t lilllu '6•m beAn d9i opnt111··a1 ... ,,,,_ ,_ .. whattit.._11...._,..._.. three I 1111 -.... cndlla. two b u IHI Ir -.., .. whai'•••--•narll. • IHOW ftOWIU (1'M "tWi1)9n • • ..... •el Ill II); Tiie oae.oflow •n•• •reUI for ta I 1111111 .. a •' "6 plll tbl hDiir, hsl ........ 40 I IHI• ................... .... -~- • nm TBS SHIFT: Cable TV'1 Turner Broadc11tfb1 System network ia the only ode that ttarta and ends ill 1howl at S minutes put the hour and half-hour -a key time advantaae ror people either watchina TBS or chectiaa h out. "I think they wanted to aomebo'# to aeparate tbcmletvea rrom the pack and pe people who are roam.in& a chance to cbeck them out," DeutlC.h tald ... I think It'• been a belpt\JJ format for them." -THB BVBRY OTHER BREAK RULB: Tllit tint .... • .cw .......... .. ....., ..... 2 ......... .... SSC01ND "'-" .....,. la ..._ ...... .. ..... ,,... ............ • THE SPORTS BRBAK: Doutsch aaya NBC tabl the lonpat bftab durina • football pme.. followed by ABC a.Dd theft CBS. Alto. Deutxb t1ya, ESPN roUt ill scores at 28 mlnutea put tho hour and l mlnutea before the hour. Know tho •lot tlmd or your k>cal sport.I reports: "lo a lot of the ooand-o (network owned and open~ 1tatioa) marbt1, moet aporu come on in the last or eecond·to-laat newt ood .. ' Deutlch taJd. "MOit New YOtk or LA aporu are eot up that way, wbethor by acddent or da(&n." Oo flpre. Before the computer age arrived, The Dalty PilOt WIS put together the old fashioned way -with hot type and lead blocks In wooden frames. This is a view of the c:ompos- • ing room tn March 1971. 1rs DA IL r PllO T I ears For a complete histofy of the Daily Pilot. see the story on page C2. Celebrating the arrival of the Dally Pilot's new press in 1979 are Paul Ward, left, composing room Tlfrs machine made the metal plates, used on the old letterpresses to foreman, and Robert Weed, publisher. print the ~per. ·' 7lJo loOowln6 ;. •a a:erpt /tom tho Piiot'• found/a pubJJlbor w.ir.r IJunoulbl' r.SeuclllJ.lht" columa. It orl,utaJly appevod Feb. 28, 19a. I t I I I I I I J -....... .. .............. 1111111•~111 .... • • •• ,.... - GI ... -to •n•d ' .. 1 sa ... -i::; .. ~ = • ... .., Mick; ... -~ tMDk ...... a .~.,..... OD tM --." ... Cleclered. ........ ~ ....... .Utbe aJs! Md eo tor tie bait· = candidate'• rather than on.ty on memben of ilnlllcwlty poupa. ''Wo want to ao far m:iellence, and I want to keep ia mind repreaentatlon of all Amcricam,~· Bulb told reporten aboilrd Air Force One beaded for ' ICcnnebunkport, Maine. Marshall, meanwhile, told a packed farewell news conference one day after announcing bis retirement that while be also favored a~intment of the beat penon available, race abould not be ruled out. He added, "I don't think that should be a ploy and used u an excuse for doma wrong, for pic:kina the wrona Nearo." B\llb said he is examining "a handful of names" and may select a nominee within a few days. The president wants to have a new JUstice confirmed tJr the Senate before the court begins its 1991-92 term in October, said spokesman Marlin Fitzwater. Manhall's retirement letter said he would stay until confirmation of a successor by the Democratic- controlled Senate. But he denied reports he is trying to pressure Bush into pid:inJ. someone acccetable to Senate liberals. "I m not trying to run the country," Marshall said. "Let the country run itself." Black. Hispanic and fem ale judges likely will receive strong consideration from a White House team of advisers led by counsel C. Boyden Gray. .......... Federal Appellate Judge Edith Jones of the 5th Circuit Is ltMMn In tfMs undated flle photo. Jones has been mentioned as I potential Supreme Court nominee to replace retiring j~ Thurgood Marshall. Among the possible frontrunncn arc aarence Thomu. a conservative federal appeals court judge in Wuhington who onc e chaired the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission; Ricardo Hinojosa, a federal trial judge in Te.xu, and Ferdinand Fernandez., a federal appeals court judge In Los Angeles. Amalya Kearse, a black federal appeals court judge in New York Qty, also has been mentioned. But she is a moderate likely to be opposed strongly by Bush's conservative supporters. Bush said one reason he wanted to make his choice quickly was to avoid "a lot of needless lobbying and pressure .... We've narrowed it down, so that we 're not looking for 20 new suggestions." "The process didn't have to start from scratch, square one," Bush said, noting there is a short White HOUIC list of potential ~ from Jut year'• work in pickiU a replacement for Jusdc:e Willianl' J. Brennan, Manhall's fclloW liberal and close biend. Bush a year ago picked David H. Souter, a then little-known federal judse from New Hampshire to replace the retirina Brennan. That appointment buttressed conservati\te control of the high court. With Marshall's depanure, the court's only remainin3 liberals are Justices Harry A. Blackmun and John Paul Stevena. Whomever Bush selects, the choice certainly will be more conservative than Manhall. For 24 years on the court, he wu a staunch defender of individual and minority rights, an unyielding opponent of the death penalty and a supporter of women's fiaht to abortion. -B~ 1)' Alfe:chUd Pru. Judge orders cross liurner to read Anne Frank's diary SEA ITLE -Instead of being sent to jail, a teen-ager was sent to the library to read the grim Holocaust tale, "The Diary of Anne Frank," for bis part in a cross burning on a black family's lawn . Matthew Ryan Tole, 18, was sentenced Friday to read the famous story by a young Jewish girl of her family's failed attempt to escape Nazi persecution during World War II. Kmg County Superior Court Judge Anthony Wartnilc said Tole received a light sentence because he was not one of the leaders in the April 16 cross burning in Bothell, a suburb north of Seattle. "The Anne Frank book is great for someone to get a picture of the most extreme thing that can happen if people aren't willing to step forward and say this is wrong," Wartnik said. "I'm hoping it will make him more sensitive." Wartnik told him to write a book report on "The Diary of Anne Frank" within three months. Tole (leaded guilty to rendering crimina assistance in the cross burning, which involved at least a Be A Part of the dozen Bothell High School students. The cross was built during a party at Tole's home. Tole did not help build or light the cross, but some of the materials belonged to him. He also helped hide a second cross that was never burned. The judge also ordered Tole to pay about $200 in fines and court fees, perform 2 .. 0 hours of community service, and stay away from the targets of the cross burning. -B~ TM Auod•Ud Preu County Fair Excitement Advertising in Our range County Fair Edition. The Pilot and the Huntington Beach/Fountain \blley Independent will publish a Special Tabk>ld Section on Thursday, Juty 11th featuring the events of the Orooge County Fair as wefl as oo additonal 10,(XX) Copes to be distributed during the 12 days of fair excitement. --~~---0--------- Let thousmds a tree-spending far-goefS see yru odvertting "*IOg8 In ftis colorfU tctllad lstng fm ociMfies, cer~ a'ld entertannent ... Cl'ld, enJov the fact that m<ZtY Orooge Coast residents save tre speckj tcilk>ld to help plal thei fat ttileray. • Deadlines: Space & Copy •Jutv 2nd S 17 per cot n.-ooth papers Col OW Display Adv9ltllll ag Dept. Tcdavl 01~~1 tDd2iO , lawmak rs loln forces save doomed.mllltary bases lf .. -111i ••• 21 ..... WASHINGTON -The A..._ SWAT tam 11WU.Ot into actioA. lu miuion: Save Aftailt0n'1 Fon McOCUan. lta members: two senators, a OOllll'l•IMA and UIOrted local oftkiala. '"We're not Jr.>ina to leave any atone untumed, .. aaJd Rep. Oleu Browder, a Democrat whose district includes Port McOellan, an Anny facility that trains soldien in chemical warfare. Browder and bis coUeaauca. includln1 · Democratic Sena. Ridwd Shelby and Howell HeOin, roamed the b1l11 outside a consreaional bearins room Friday where the Defeftle Base OoluJe and ReaJipment c.ommission held its final deliberations. For the AlabamJans -and seorea of other lobbyists and elected officials -it was nail· biting time. "I've done everything 1 can," Shelby aaid. "We've worked them." After months of hearings, meetings, discusaions and tripa, the ifVCn-member panel was to vote S"uaday on the final list of military installations targeted for closvre. The panel must present its list to Ptelident Bush by July 1. Bush will have until July 15 to approve or reject the commission's final list. U Bush approves, the closures will become final unless Congress rejects the entire list within 45 days. The Defense Department recommended shuttina down 43 lnitalladOna to 1ew: about St bilUon CMf fM )'Mn; the puet added 17 allenaadvel. ColriiDuiitiel In wbicb miUtarJ lnltaDatloft are located are fraDtic to bet> the facilities for ecoaomlC re..,., Oomaa a bMe creates jobleuneas and remo¥es tbe acwemment'• ~nee in the Joc:al economy. nM dty of ~ Beacb hired WubJnaton lobbyist Laurence Taub alld mobilized Republlcan Rep. Dua Rohrabacber to try to save lta naval station. "We~ made this a top priority in our office,'' Rohrabacber said, addins that he intended to keep the pressure on "until the last moment.'' ''There will be a $750 million impact on the Fort Worth area,'' Ed McLaughlin said about the Pentagon's plans to close Canwell Afr Force Bue in Fort Worth. "All thinp beina equa~ it will push unemployment about 25 percent." McLaughlin, part of a Fort Worth wk force set up to save the base, bas worked full time since March to try to spare CanwclJ. "lt'a hurry up and wajt," he said as he smoked another c:iprettc. Mike Reich, an employee of a rural electric cooperative in Meridian, Miss., has spent several weeks in Wubiniton buttonholing commisaionen and staff in the hope of saving Meridian Naval Air Station. "It's been a costly and time- consuming affair," said Reich, who got saddled with the task because he heads the Navy t.eaaue. But the chutzpah award pt to the Alabamians. When Gen. H. Norm•• Schwarzkopf, commandot of allied fOrCea in the Persian Gulf Wu appetftd before the Houle ud Senate Armed Services Committoea, Browder and Sbelby quizzed him about dolina Port McOellan at a time chemical weapons J><>1C a threat The general dodpd tho~ question about Fort Milan: but agreed that training In chemical weapons was very important. On Friday, Browder handed out Xerox copies of Scbwarzkopf'a June U teatimony. If McClellan closes, the city's unemployment will jump 10 percent and the anemic economy will suffer even more, Browder said. Jim Courter, bead of the commiaion dec::idina which buea to close, seemeo swayed by Scbwarzkopf1 upmenta. "W.•re lMna 1r a dreamland if we dllnk we ca wipo cbemical ~ off the face of the earth,"' be Mid. Former Army Secretary Bo Callaway, another commi11lon member, said it wu lilly to "mothball training t.cilitiet. •• The commission bu been under Intense pressure. Commiulon statfen joked the panel decided to put off the touab votea until today when lawmakcn will be out of town for tho Fourth of July receaa. Savvy remote users know more than how to switch channels checking the compe.tltion, becaute other kinds of ahows will not be at break. "You're goin1 to set editorial on pretty much the reat o( the dial," Deutsch notes. • TI1E TBS SHIFT: Cable 1V's Turner Broadc11tin1 System network is the onJy one that starts and endl ita abowa at S minutes put the hour and half-hour - a key time advantage for people either watcbi.na TBS or cbeddng ft OUL .. , think they wanted to somehow to 1eparate tbemlelvel from the pact and pie people who are romnlna a chance to cbedt them out," boutlcb •id. "I tblnk lt'a been a heJpful tormat for them." -THB EVBRY OTHBR BREAK RULB: T•e tint Clt9• 1ntal "'-Ir • • ._ II ... ., .... , .......... ... S&CONDlnM__., .. .... twice • ..... TMt lhl ....... patten COll&lil.. .......... .... ....., ....... .., tbe .... ow, lib ...... "'That's where you·~ 11>t that real srW.ftl limo, to ldaurely IO throush JO IQriou," Deutleh said. "It'• no Jonaer an arduous or time- conaumiac tblJa&; EW1l if JO" <mly spend a ieCoacl" on each channel. that'• a whole inlnute rflbt there." • THE SPORTS BRBAK: Deutsch says NBC tu. the lcmpat breab dW'tna a footbUI pme. followed bj· Ale liid then CBS. AllO, l>Cutleh' ..,._ mPN rolls fU tcorel It 28 mUridea put tho hour and 2 minutes before tbe hour. Know the slot times of your local sporu roporU: ••rn a Jot of the o-and-o (network owned and operated ltatioe) marbta, IDOlt lpOftl come on ill the a.et or aecood-to-Jut news DOd.'• Deutach sald. ..Moat New Yolk or LA aporu are aet uJ:.~ Wf11, whether by accident or .0 Oo fiau.re. Before the computer age armed, The Dally PilOt was put together the old fashioned way -with hot type and lead blocks In wooden frames. This is a view of the compos- i ng room in March 1971 . DA IL r PILOT 1rs Cetebratlng the arrivaJ of the ()ajly Pilot's new press In 1979 are Paul Ward, left, composing room forerNn, and Robert Weed, publisher. Tho folJmrhv ;, .,, accrpt from tbe Pilot'• foWHIJu pablisber Wlher ~· r;SurdJJWbt" columa. It oritJnally appured Feb. 28, 198& ears This machine made the metal plates, used on the old letterpresses to print the paper. For a complete his1ory of the Daily Pilot. 918 the story on page C2. ·~-...... --CllMI ... -... • .., ..... .. ... ,.. ••• M.H. ,... .. ..,. a. ~ from the gtf GI Ncwpwt ._. 10 pubUlb ,... ..... pairt News. AllllouP it 61 W P*°'P?• the .......... r ........ -RSI'' N..,.,..,.. ............. n1 ,.._. "°'*' owner, Lewis A. D..._... ~while llYilil • ~ IM ,... llM and bled~to ... dlJ ...._ IO buy a MO..,.,_, 1••t ira w:b edition. Kl•lrpMrtck .-e<t tho Newa on to Mi. wl Mn.. Cbadea Wbea&on. wbo Im 1~ IOld it to veteran Ar-.. ~nnan Samuel A. ~r MeyeO eiq>ert attention. the s-pet ftouriabcd and split into The ·Me.port News.. The Balboa Timea aod The Costa Mesa Herald. In October 1934 Len Martin, who came to the area from AtchilllOn, Kan., founded the Costa Mesa Globe -naming the new paper after the one he had worked at for three decades, the Atchinson Globe. On June 1, 1936, he bought Meyer's Costa Mesa Herald and rechristened the paper the Costa Mesa Globe Herald. He and his partner, Frank H. Fowler, owner of the Tustin News, equipped a print shop at 108 Broadway in Costa Mesa so they could publish their own paper. Poor health forced Martin to .. Illa ..... GI .. t:a 1'1'1• ID Foidlr, ............. ... ri:'d nd ... ,.... 1'41, M.N ...... o.c . AlldOJIOll, ... .,.... ol .... Olobo Klnld liMli tbil ,.,... to R~ N. "'Pop• l.*91, no Md beea a lbol> ......... ud ..,.,.,.. operalOt. Luci bNd the LUdi Publiablna omp111 Wkh aata IODI Oonand~Jr. After World War II, &M two major local papen ~ tbe area were Moyer'• now-combl•ed Ncwa·Tlmea and tbo Pre111 published by Ben Reddick. W.T. Jeffenon, a C.O.ta MCA deYeloper, brought Walter B\lrioulha to the area. Walter Laughlin Burroughs, since bis first job as a copy boy on the Tacoma Daily News_ had a lifetime love of neW1paperinJ. On Jan. 1, 1948, Burrouiris and a buddy from his days in the Army, David Ring, acquired the Costa Mesa Olobe Herald -then a weekly with less than SOO paid subscribers. Seven months later, they opened a new plant juat down the block at 124 Broadway. At the same time, Sam Porter bought the Newport-Balboa News- Times from Meyer. To compete with the growing Globe-Herald, be expanded his publishing sclleduJe to five days per week and went bankrupt. Reddick bou~t the paper and combined it wtth his to become the Newport Harbor News,Presa. Meanwhile, Burroughs began BEAUTIFUL, RICH, INTELLIGENT, SWF. 27, Blonde. blue eyed, with a love for travel, theatre, foreign films, and romantic walks on the beach, seeks Mr. Right to live happily ever after. Find out how to meet someone like this or place a FREE ad of your own in DATELINE See details in today's classified section. I H I ' I I \ 1 l I ' I Daily Pilat ''\' :... .... ..... ............ . ... _ ............. ... ol., .. ._. ... 1111. n.otJ'•111n111,... • .._ ........ ,... ......... -~·-·~· ... •••ell fro• A alral J.R. M«snsa7. a.aw r~ - f0Mf 1Nlll-- Ii J•-z.•m. ~ ...... ,...._.. • Nwjkil!t a... ....... of ... ow. Heiald. HI llDd lall ct 'med ..... ,, Honea ................ ...,. PoPUlar .. ~ ......... " · hat .... ,.ar, lleddick, publilber ol dlle <Jlabo.Henld'a ttroDgeat competftioa, w11 appointed to tbe ~ Cou.aty Board Of ...... Aa bi1 interest In county pemment pew, hil Interest in the newspaper waned. Bunoup.. who continued to ace his paper pow, aoon became a prominent force in the powth of Orange County. Hia newapapen campaigned against off ..ahorc drilling, for the incorporation of Costa Mcaa, for the formation of OraQP Cout Colkp and api.nat developen encroaching on Et Toro Marine Corpe Bue. He was also imt.rumentaJ in establishing University of California at lrvine -and wu given a plaque to recoanize bis efforta. In 1960, Burroughs' papers became five-day pubHcations, and a year later he consolidated the Globe-Herald and the Ne*J>Ort Harbor Pilot into the Orange Coast Daily Pilot. In 1962, illness forced Burroughs into selling the Pilot lo the Times-Mirror Corporation - although he remained as publisher until his retirement two years later. Ben Reddick eventually sold his News,Press to Herman Ridder of the Long Beach Ridder papers. In less than four months, Burroughs and Times,Mirror were able to buy the NeW!-Press from Ridder and in October it became an emtion of the Daily Pilot. R obe rt Weed succeeded Burroughs as publisher. He and Times-Mirror began to expand the paper -both in coverage and '= ..... • ti IL,..:! :t; • itGIJI ID n..-n1 .. 11w ......... ..,i,..._ ............ -........ ~ 1972. ,...., .... ., , . ......_ luhl•711 a ... ,..._.-,,_ ............... to ... ai1llmll -.111 11 ... 0...,1111 • • rm. 1'11 ~ ID .._ .... ffantl M-t• ........ lililt•ll6d in ... ., •• ,... teconc1 ~ -a nmer U.-.... ptaicemcaL '1\e move from tbe traditiaul ti1111D111t locatioa to tbe loCODd teory wu due to tt.e l&Dd'a 1"lla water table. Tho followin1 year, Weed bec1111e pteaident ol or..,. CoMa P»Nilhlna Company ud ,...... Haley became •PQblflbiir. Weed redted in 1982 alter 18 ;Mn wttll the Pilot. That aame year, 1\ma-Mitr'or IOld the Dally Pilot to l.iiprlOIJ Publications Company of Connectiaat. Al part of the InsenoU chain, the Daily Pilot wu on& of 40 newspapers In 11 1t1tea - inchadln1 the Burbank Dally Review and Glen4ale Free Pn:a. In May 1983, H.L Schwartz Ill became tbc Pilot's publiaber. Schwartz, ppbliabcr of the Delaware County Daily Times in suburban PbiJadelphia, a1lo spent 12 years with the Auociated Praa. It was that year that the Daily Pilot entered the computer age - video · display tenninals replaced the clackety-dack of typewriten in the newsroom, classified and retail advertising department&. With more than 3S,OOO subscribers, the Pilot covered the communi\ies of Newport Beach, Costa Mesa, Irvine, Huntington Beach, Laauna Beach and Fountaln Valley. In 1987, the Daily Pilot was awarded first,place in the state for general excellence by the California Ncwipaper Publisher's Association -one of the most prized journalism awards in California. The following year, the newspaper was sold to Adams Communications Corp., which then owned a group of television and radio stations, several outdoor June 16, 1960. That was the day the Pilot became a dally newspaper. On the front page d the ~rst daily paper were articles about the murder of a Newport Beach woman and President Eisenhower carn:elllng his trip to Japan. billboard plants and a handful of ncwspapera. It wu durina Adams' ownership that the Daily PiJot -a lonatime aftemoon fmure along the Ora.nae Coast -switched to a momina publication schedule. On Sept. 17, 1989, Walter Burroughs -the Pilot's founding publisher -died at the age of 88. His passing drew national note, and he was remembered throughout Orange County as one of the area brightest leaden and innovators. In December of that year, the Oajly Pilot was sold to a group of buyen led by New York investor Elliot Stein Jr. and former Chicago Sun Times publisher Robert E. Page. The group also purchased the Glendale News Press, a pair of Beverly Hills area maguincs and Tu Mundo, a Spanish language entertainment wcctly. Last mont~ veteran community newspaper publisher Jim Oress1nger replaced Paae 11 publisher of the Daily Pilot and the Glendale News PRss. On Thursday, Greaainaer informed the newspaper'• reader that the paper would swltch to a three-times-a-week publication schedule, concentrate ita efforts on Newport Beach and Coeta Mca. increase local community COVCflF, 1tron1thon lta local bu1ioe11 ICCtion and double its photography staff. "Our invcston are bullish on our new plans and are ful!y committed to the Pilot's auccea," Oressinger wrote in bis open Jetter to readen. On 1\aeaday, a new chapter begins ... Widow seeks eternal peace with spouse By Ann Landers Dear Ann Landers: I've heard of people who wish to be cremated and have their ashes kept in an um on the mantle, which seems odd to me. I am also aware of WI HAVI A NIW MINU Wll'lll1*nl uncwt10 440Hll•.,.. COft!Mo.t*t 671-"1' individuals who wish to donate away several months a30. It is my Lamb Funtnl Homa. 11lb u 1 their remajns to a medical school, wish that when I die, his casket be what tbeJ uld: a noble gesture to be sure, but I brought up from the grave and Burial replations vary f.rom could never bring myself to do opened, his body turned on its side state to state. Most funeral homes that. and my body placed in his arms so arc quite Oexi'bJc and do their best I am 79 years old. As time goes we could lie in loving embrace to accommodate their clients. by, I become more and more until eternity. I am a very private Cemeteries are another story. convinced that people should do person and do not wish to discuss Catholic and Jewish cemeteries as they please and not concern this with anyone. Is my request will not allow c:ukcu to be taken themselves with what others say. legally possible? Thanks for your out of the around ao that two This is where I need your counsel. help. -C)omcwherc in MJchigan bodies can be buried toaether. My dear departed husband was a Dear Somewbnr. My omce They may, however, permit a beautiful person. We were married spob wttb Ju~• Furth of hrtb A casket to be brought up so that a for 60 wonderful years. He ssed Co. and ROH lAmb ot Blab-scoond casket can be placed next ---________ .l_ ___________ _.._ ______ ..:._ __ __._ ______________ , to it, provided there is ample German Home Bakery Wedding Cakes "The Old- Fash ion Way" 2950 Grace Ln C M Call for info 540-0281 The Wedding Showcase . runs every Thurs. Fri, Sat & Sun. cOiN m_)MINl6 On The Bay at Newport Elegant Saturday Receptions 11 am , 4 pm Complete Catering & Full Service Bar Colltact Mull 850-5112 r .................. ., Your ad can 1 : be seen here I ~ Call Candy_ 1. I at 642-4321 . • ext. 310 &. •.•• 7 •••••••• WeddJn& Photof/aphy Stills & Video 843-9231 CAKES BY A PRIL All occasions. reasonable prices 631-6543 Romantic Weddin1s at Se• • I u~ury Mclt«ll V .lthu •lld S..•l.n1' V-9 ' • Our Profewc>NI Cooid•NIOt\ Pt'O'Adf Tn11I l'tt.nning ~gMd IO frt Ve>ur 8~ 71 675-4704 .... space in the plot. I suggeat that you contact the funeral home that took charae of your husband's burial and ask for guidance. Dear Ann Landers: I am writing m respoDK to your reply to "Lost in a Ooud of Smoke' concerning marijuana amokina. I wu swpriscd that the medical expert you quoted w11 the American Bar Auociation. According to studies conducted at UCLA, marijuana would be beneficial to 80 per<:ent of aathma, tics and 90 percent of Americans suffering from glaucoma. Marijuana also is reported to be ''the best aaent for controllin1 nausea in cancer chemotherapy." Studies et the Medical College of Virginia found that instead of pouible immunicological problems with 1moltin1 marijuana, peal tumor reduction successes were recorded. Of course, 1mokina anythlna for a healthy person is not advisable. Unfonunately for hemp, it Ktma that the bad aapecu, true or fa.lie. are what people dwell on, when ' tbe benefits, if lcgallzed and properly rcaulated, would help us all. -M.T ., Loom~ Wuh. Dear Loo•l1: I at.a" I ... .. PfOl1ed ta. ... of .WU-• .... )I ••lllclaal ~·•• It .... ._.... ,...... Mlflll tit Nttmsdcl. •, Wiii u caw 8M alaun .. , ,.t1nu. MarUaa•• en ••• ....... M ... Pll3'81 .. "!? s lw .._ pw;1111 .. .............. ...,Ne. ....... .... • ., ............... w .... ............................ , ..• =· ........ ¥--.... .. .., ..................... . Wedding Susan and Pierre Potet I BRANDON·PO'l'ET Su5'n Lynn Brandon of Costa Mesa and Pierre-Philippe Potet of Paris, France, ~ maniage vows May 2S in a Maa officiated by Monsignor John Campbell at The Cathedral Chapel of St. Francis by the Sea in Laguna Beach. For her wedding. the bride wore 1 fitted gown with drop pearls at the waistline and pearls and sequins on the lace bodice. It featured a satin t.rain that flared out at the knee and satin capped The weak numbcn senerated by "Dying Young" aren't the only summer shocker. The once lightly reprded dude ranch comedy "City Slieken" has been the second-most popular movie for two weeks in a row and has made s.47.3 million. Starring Billy Crystal in a story of mid-life crisis on the Plains, "City Slicken" last weekend outgroaed not only "Dying Young'' but also the heavily promoted Disney thriller .. The Racketeer," which finished in fourth. Cuffs at the shoulder over pearled ace fingertip sleeves. The lace headpiece of her veU was accented with pearls that matched those on t;::::;;::=====:;:::====:==:;::=;:=:;::::;:==;=;:::::;1 her gown. Tbe bride's sister Donna Bnanelle was matron of honor. Bridesmaid wu Stephanie Eagle of Tustin. Her nieces Ellen and Megan Brunelle shared the duties of flower Jirl. Ringer bearer wu the bride's nephew Matthew Brunelle. Servin& as best man was Pat.rice Lallemand of Paris. Groomsman wu John Frqrell of Dana Point. The bridegroom'a sister Ve~ue Potct of Paris assisted with the pest book. After the ceremony, a reception was held in tho garde of Lapna Vill.,e Ans and Flowers. Forty· fivo relatives and f rienm of the pair attended. Guitarists Joo POlbat of Lquna Beach provided a muaical interlude. The bride ii the dauahter of Pb)'Uia Brandon of Lapna Beach and Bill Brandon of Newport Beach. She is a 1986 paduate of Newport Harbor Hiab School and 1990 pchiate of University of Califomia at Irvine. In September ahc will pursue a tcachlna career. Tho bridearoom, •on of MOiilquo Mallet of MoatmorDloo, f ranee. a.rid Michel Potet of ltcllil, Frpco. reeentl)' moved to the area. WhU• In France, he wu an clectrtdan for the Paris Fi~ Depu:tment. He Is employed by SoOth C.OUt Electric. =rirityWeds poatponed tbear to entertain \tititina ~ have mado their fint tii co.ta Mesa. _......, ___ ~ _,_ __ J_ F _...._tllllll••-··-·-·" ·····--·--·U-·----·-------.... ~--·-··--·--··· ....... _,_ ... __ _ Parenting 101 . Jtaadle t.Jtl1 Dear Mom: "When you know the answer, it is better not to ask the question. .• Otherwise you ptOYOke the child into defensive lying." says Dr. Ginott in his book "Between Parent and Olild!' When you arc "sure" that your child stoJe something. it is best not to uk her but to tell her about it. "You took a bathing suit from the store and you will have to give it back." Calmly and firmly state what was stolen. For example: "The gum in your purse belongs to the store." If your child denies having the gum. don't argue with her or RUFFELL'S UPllLSTEIY llC. ......... c... .... Im-.... CllTl--SU.llM I( '•'' ' THE ISLAND . ' . -' ... . . . ...... . 640-1218 LIDO 67 J -0350 EOWAllOC\ ORIGINAL 546 J102 -- CINEMA CfMT(R tl79· ·It .i 1 .... "(Tt4~d19d ..... ~ttet111AtaU ..... rGq129~sa1.»n "iul:== MES A' ._[1.4'. b·l h .u •· ·, SOUTH COAST PWA . . ' . ' .. 546-2711 HUnON CENTRE ••• t \• •••• ..... 662·2266 --fG.131~~~u -Mfa~tlt1t1n cmUIBI IPG-m (It~ Hts.en u 1111a•n IG-~ l'Utll mt1t1U WUlllUTU TOWN CENTER ' ? ••• . '• • ' ~ A ' ' I '1 ' ' ' .. :, .1,,, ,., •. ' .... , 751-4184 1; ll': '!'' \'' ... ' BRISTOL .. .. 540-7444 ---~uon .,Tll. fG-131 tit.II •• t3t ....... ft (Tl'45 ~ 5.15 ltD U ., .... "~•s.oe~t1 ... &Im "fTtlUtlt ti 19 M ;,1l'•1o4 C'OAS' •'ill:.£ '•~ti U ~1'J4 • ~S''ll IUA•f"P.J :£ 669-1826 ---f'G-q 1129 tit 5:31 ttl II ___ ,. ~ 1U~t1t1t111 .... '61(!145?:!d19 tJI .,.,.. "' (1t45 l:t5) s.• t15 n --fG-q ~~ ~ 7'll t15 WOODBRIDGE 551 ·0655 ..... fGHU1151 ~1:15 U ..... ~ (t21UJU• ~t45 --~~~Ctlnllto --~q 111~muo• WIKllWfttt UNIVERSITV 8S4·8811 --Af011q~l11U .,.,. (Tl~~ tJJ,. t3I -M 121211 dldtlU •-•n ~!dt.l~str~o ....... "(129 ~ 59 r.a .. --·~ ,. (12:1 NII 5.>& 1:45" MUNT'NGT':'N TW IN 048·0l88 FOUNTA11't w.HlfY 839-1500 wrrm ~l\L•TW :'C•A~· .&~.'.'-.& .i ~n, .,, CHARTEP :E .. ·~E 841-0770 VILLAGE CTR. ~... . .. '• 891-0567 .,.,. ~111~~tl79t» --fG.O (tt51~ 4~ r:»U . .... ~(UllU~UIU cmamm ~C4 ~ 3f.'l 5ll HOU -~~1114S~US7~t6 --fG.Ol 111~m~1:1 LAltMSATll~ WESTMINSTER TWIN ... ' . ... ,. ·.·. ...... . . 895·5333 cmaaas '6-1:4 !U ~ s• ti u --~[H~d 7llt'6 WESTMINSTER MALL 1' ' I .·.. . '· ','. 893·0546 •••lff ft ~tSJt»~n .,.,. R ~:al tlU:GO tJI ti •-•n ~1Rt12ll•t11111 .... ~ tn• tt11 tin• t1 CINEMA VIEJO 830-6990 \ IEJO ... ,(. J f,4 (,220 CROW~ ~ A .. 1..E • J t>4·0120 FRANCISCAN PLAZA 661 -0111 SADDLE BACK .. k • 581·5880 MC I A (It.I ~ti 13 ti mr•• ~13l llti l:'5t s.1 • n ... Lim 1R1 Id ttq t» rtt t9 .,._ 1A1Id2t1t d rttt9 ----~ rrt1S Hit tltl ti .. ... _ ft(U•d•a EL TORO .. . 581 ·9500 ., I I I I ' I I I I I .. .. ~ .. ' °""""' -of • locall)o -..... ~"""·""*•-of tho ...... of jau comprise tb• llollday -•nd me•u of n.ow == Oooi. The. Irvine Valley Collop'1 TbM1er(aire Cot CbUdrea opon1 ''The Further Adventvre1 of H1rriet ,_ 11111 Handlcman," the Intermission llqUe.I 10 writer· direi;tor Orea ------Alkinl' original children'• play presented by JVC last 1ummcr. And the 0ranao Coun1y Black Actors Theater will bow in Tw:aday with ''Lady Day at the Emerson's Bar and Grill," a bio- graphical musical bucd on the life and music ol. Billie Holliday, on the Second Stage of South C.Out Repertory. Atkins assured IVC audiences llial; ..... If ..., -1 -... llnl of Illa ...... .,,,. _,..., """"'"""' Of lbniet -··· Super Ooaius," lhey'U 11111 tojo)o dio new -· "Part of the dlum ol lhll play it dio opeda1 ·------reel~ tlloeo IO rocket-powered jot pacb, • be noted. The prodUctlon Niii Fridays ud Saturdays at 2 ud 1 p.m. througl> July 13, at 2 ud 6 p.m. July 19 ud 20, with Tbundl)' r;atineea: at 10 1.m. and 2 p.m. July 11 and 18 iD dio Forum Theater on the IVC campus. C&ll 559-3333 for ticket illfonnatioo. "Lady Day," starrins Debbi Evert u the famed jao linger, derives much of it.I IClipt from the autobiography ol Billle Holliday. "This no-bolda-barred story chronM:lca the U(>I and dcr#nl of her life and mu11c,," a)'I Adlcanc Hun1cr," OCBAT artistic director. The show will run throuaJ> July 21 at the Costa Mesa \he•ter. 655 Town Center Drive. Call 957-4033 for ticket infonnation. . I . , .. I , , w..,.,... "P 111 -..... 11flll A rat at tlaa Oraap County ........... Ana c.tor Ii dot tovrina proclt1e.tloa of ''Le• Mlionblel. • 'l1le 1D1111co1 -coodo-Tlloodor tluouP Friday at f p.m. todoJ, SatunlaY IUld nell Suoday at 2 and 8 at dio AIU C..ter, 600 Town Center DrM, Costa Men. fleleivationl ~ -at 556-2787. Bl1owhere along the local theater circuit. thclo ahovtt are contiouin1 their rcspectiv.e eftlllementa: • "Happy End" on the main stage ol South Coast RepertOI)', 6SS Town Center Drive, C.O.ta MeH (957-4033), Tuesdays tbroush Fridays at 8 p.m., Saturdays ·at 2:30 and 8, Sundaia at 2:30 and 7:30 until July 13. • "The Spider'• Web" and "Laun" run.rung in repertory in I.be Patio Theater of Golden West College (89S-8378), Thursdays through Sund•)& II 8:30 until July 21. IJT•Tilll ___ ... Thero .,. l'#O ••JI or ~OU~;== OWtie Brown.'* You can be .,... and cbvmiaa. ot -II )'Oii - tbe C8lt to Mndle it -'°" .. opt lo< a wild ud wadly renditloL °""'" ()out Collep bu .. cut to handle it. arid dindor John Fcrzocca pul.lt ..,, all tho llOpl tnd adda a few of hit qn ill lhll 36lh aruiual OCC .. .._ muai<al. lt'1 a ahow that will dolilht tho l:lda -and double the growRUpi owr with laupter. Tbb "Charlie Brown" b • particularly buly allow, with 10 much happening in ao m•ny comen of the borse1boe atagc that one viewlog isn't adequate IO tab it aU in. On cop of tl\at, Peracca . hu added two extra cbaracten to the original sextet -~reaentina Snoopy's avl111 friend Woodstoclt and -Charlie's aecret heartthrob, the "little redheaded girl" -who do multiple duty as characten, U'ecl and even Oiarlie'1 lucklcat kite. · Keep an eye on laborers Fcrzacca. with ample support from musical director Ro1e Farquhar and cboreoarapher Maria de la Palme, has orchestrated a cheerful and eneraetic romp over David Scaafione's Rubik's Cube-like sen.in&. Ensemble excelleocc is abundant, althoufh several individual charactcru.at.iocu are panicularly memorable. This special serier will introduce you ro some of the pitlalh of remodeling and offer possible solutions. One note before you stan, remodeling is a seriou$ undeniling. Many people will tell you that they packed up and moved out of the ir house before the rem odel in g began . T heir reasoning is that there was no way rhey co uld cope Gear11 Prlllll Remodeling with the com motion. Jack of privacy, stacks or rubble and still maintain their norm al saniry. I read ily agree that after reading 1he story of ou r remodeling project I too would have moved to the nearest "Mo1el 60." However, you will a..IJo learn by our case history that unless your gencraJ contractor is a cla&e friend or a friendly relative, you are playing ostrich on a mule farm. You will be dangerously exposcd. Most of your workers will be young and a bit laid-back. This is the nature of the people in this field of work. They arc usuaJly carefree, outgoing and very communicative. A few cold Cokes or hot coffee with an occasional donut and aoon you have gained a confidante. The slorics I heard fr om these young men concerning the companies they worked for helped me head ofr some real and potential problems. • Pitfall no. 19: Moonlighting. A fact of life with these worken is that frequently, in order to cam extra and profitahle moni~. they will c:a.U in sick and then spend the day working on moonJi&hting jobs. How do I know? I bad aome of them come back later to do odd jobs for me on one of their "sick days." • Sugcstion No: 19. Knowina tbia, we always ukcd our workcn lf they had a b\lsineu·card jwt in case we wanted to use them later. ln almost every cue they eagerly pulled out a bent or dirty card from somewhere in their tIUck.. Now we bad them! You ace, if a worker didn't show up for work and was "sick" the general contractor was not liable for any delays due to his sickness. I realize that it will be hard for you to believe, but in moat cases when this happened to us we would call the worker at home and he would be back to work the next day. Next w~k: Summary. Tony Matthews fill splendidly into the hapleu Oiarlie Brown c:hancter, his wide~ naivete beautifully conveyed m his inept attempts to win a baseball same. fly a kite or receive even one Valentine. His singing votcc ii pleasing enough to carry his characterization, and his subtle facial mannerism• are just ~ght for OCC's intimate Drama Lab Tbeater. The standout of the cut, however, is Bric Anderson's hyperactive Snoopy, who battles the Red Baron and sinas a Jotaonesque aria to his supper dish. Anderson is a superb pb)'lical comic with an outstandin& 642-5678 's' cast wacky Oran\!" Coast Colielll!'• "Peonuts" 81"8 Jn "You're 1 Good Mori, Charlie Brown," lncfudeo ,(from Jell), Jeni Cool<, Tom O'Toole, Eric Andenon, Marie Downie, Diane Walsh and Tony Maahe.., (Jn """"· sense of ahowmanabip and be has hit. Cllline manneritm1 down pal In lhort, he'• a real bowl. Diane WNsh turns io a winnina performance u the crabby, self. oentered t..cy, whole knowledp ot such thinp u royally 1nd biolO&Y ii virtually nil, but who peneveres confidently nonet.be1eu. Tom O'Toole also i1 quite endearing u her little brother Linus. who dings fervently to h.ls blanket ind 1pou11 Greek philooophy. Tbe most melodic voice in the cut is that of Jeni Cook as the rope-skipping Patty, while Mark Downie does some splendid &IO"# burn• as the piano-playing Schroeder who't taraet.od r; Lucy'• affection1. Ansel Neugebauer fill in well aa the. like "li11lc redheaded &tr1" other charaCtcriz•tlons, b" Jennlfer AndortOll 'vlttually - tbe thow as the yellow-d1 Woodstoclt and a bolt ol otloe cbaracterizatioa·a, Jncludla Olarlie Brown'• kite. Aa "!:~·=~ acx:omplitbed dancer, An CE1Clt at mime and movement an it a kw to watch. "YOu·re a Oood Man. a Brown" ia tlcteled lor onlr. weekend stint in OCX:s Lab "Theater on the Cotta ~ campus. with 1 remaining perform· .... today at 3 p.m. can 432·5880 for tlcket information. Columns to appear next week Vida Dean's rcsular Sunday feature will appear ill 'l\ieaday'1 edition of 'Ille Piiot. Beth Cobb's MBoptmarb" and Lauri Mcndeohall's "Art Scene" will now be featured ill our Thunday '"Weekend" section. Quit smoking g_•,AmencanHearl ' • ""' A.ssoc iollon J ·----------------- From North Or8ng1! County From South Orange County 540-1220 496-6800 G1•1 1('f,]I 1()0~' (,r)·,1.1 M•",,t lll,'·i {,{) !.1 r,J, • 1 I I.') CLASSIFIED INDEX 642-5678 FROM NOfllTH OfllANGf CO. !W0-1220 FROM SOUTH OlllANGE CO. .. llDD THE DAil Y ~OT Cl ... SS.rlED DJ"FICE >lOUllS 9,, ....... Coutt• .. .... ,oo .... ~001>"' Ol40l. ... _., '-·~ W--•· '""'"°"' .. _ S•!u<Oey ...... ., Fn5JO Plrtl lrilon ')0 PM luM~JO ­ -)lO Plil r-.~JO PW Fn SJO """ Fn,JOf'M CMf:Cll YOUJI AD THE fltllT DAY ,,.... 11~<0, l'•IOI S"""~ l()o ""!(:>en(, 1..0 KC....9Cy ,.,,_""' 'lf~"~'O<"•"• ~•O<S (I() OCCU< 1>19•M ....... ... '" '""' "' • "'a<! o..:• ilt\CI cr>ec• 'fCN' M 1111!1\r ,.,.P<H P "' •<1•\ "nm..O•••el1 10 6<11 ~78 ll>S 0...., Ptlo! "'"ll'' "0 hi>!>•''''''" ""•9'•0< on.,..,,...,,,_ 10t .. ~.,.. ·• ..... , "°' •ttl>OI'••""' e•~ept '°"tr. cost of t"'9 'I'·" .. "···~"· o>{CUO•l'd ... , .... "''°' C•.O•• ,.,. ontio "" .......... ,''"th .. ""'""~'""' ""• ~n1<>1ml •<QI Cll•ll ,..,.,,..,')()!I..,. h •-M -De ,.,1>,..,-1 '" t•u• .,01 '"'"'"0 10 '"••nee cl'l.,~eotl'lCIUtea "' • •. n• ,..., """'"' o.,.,,.;., '*'" month . .., ~•- ,..,.,,""" ................. ""' lllQf....., •!Ms "• .. ' ~ " " " ··:' t) . . ... . " -~ . ,. ' . • • • •• ..... ·~ . ... ..-. • • I I I -.... : .. n ltt •· r.--s.11 y.., ,,.,.,.,- Cal o...HW. t-5671 ~ ...... . __ .. ,, .. .... ,.,.... .... tf .... . When Only con•lder 1rllldelftno. ~ .t:»-1N7 Corona de/ Mar --· •• ~~-• ot ~CH . I ... , .... 000 Will Do-.. ,. __ --au....,._ '!l1iiiiii'i'i ... i"i'11iiiiiiiiiiir11 ·-.-• OWHld lllMDJI ...,...ICA ..................... . 8potle11, contemporary 2BR c... • M. • w.; • condo, ....... Jow ...... Jocl<-up =· ~;,oo;:r,1,'S -~ .. I qav.t, loada of extru. only • ,.., •Mrt Oo,. ...,,., btoOk9 to ._ ...._ Tenanta.C•ll ror .. 000 ---... UllM 11111111 -""• N-38R 2llA ~ ~ C..,W.. wnhome --· ...... 3 .,.. At-1141 -· ,.._ Decks, patio, 2 ~ .. more. 41o-leoLDllllOO _._, ..• , ... ....... ()ne.of+ldncl, hWd to ftnd du- plex, d""9 by 116 IN la coll UC to lnlptclJ light. bttght .. !WfllY -...... '&v-"".Alot. .... ~67J-Bm llllL.-.... -..... ••••• t LOI' "':.as:..-:.,• II::-5 oao~..., HOm4ITULI ............ 3llA ... ........ Md unit.'* of """' • mew. "*' 1500 9/f + .nectled I oar g•rage. Oreat val"• for only 11~. Ctil Ame ~'31·1191 lmALTYWGIU •1U&AllOC. l'MIDTll • l!lCCl!LUNT Find our hidden Cloul- flad Ads ... And Wini • eo.-.... , I. Simply flncl our hid· den cl111lffed 1d1 IOm.whet. In ou.r datol- fled Mellon. Cut und pule the oda on tho 1n- 2. All entriot must anMI by Thurodoy Noon. b\I blank and moll. 3. Win-wJA ho c"-n by random drowtng ond wtnnm ,,..,,. will - the followlng dallO -· One wfniw per --. 4. Conlal will Nn 5/2N91 • 7/12/91 , I " I II\ II I \'I, h Nem•---- Addrae~~~~~~~~~ Phone~~~~~~~~~~~ **'1DR** The ....... beet ..., ..... "'I0'9 ~ btt view. 1~0ty. aa,., orig ownr. a.an. but reedy. In the S350,000'a. ~ ...... IAYFllOllT ........ Deoll. 2M, glel1t oftloe, IBA. 4 ~ ..., ~ roof deck. New bulldlng with air--. "*'*· .... .......... : tNcylghta. aub•ero refrlg, vaulted celllnga. 11.391.000. .. .... ........ Cannery w. ..,. f!y. eTa-a'rTI IDTW·IWll I' .... •t. '8Mf'I. ..... ve.wtaM + den townhm . ... .ooo. Prtnc. only. Af#. MC>OIOO, or 1"I0-1 IOS ---llTAm awe up eo ~ of commt ... one wtyour own "llUYER'S IAO- KEA". Cal for detah. AMAor ..,.,. 1 t'n. 940o41a •• _ ...... Rftra WI COD NOMI ............ "lllR· HA, 2-atofy home. H81dWOOd ftoota, eun- ~lng deo". Muat ........ 000. ~~My CllDIWUll mATll Setler tranaferred • m•"• offer. Oated comm, 48R I .AA, ~ 3,300 eq. ft ., ••eluded poolf9pa. 8qky dMn contM'lp dec:ot.AEDUCeD ..... IOO CM.LI G.l,.._ID •Spa •Pool •View **Waterfront ***WWN'ftont and Pool ,,...Give Addreu at OUMS Gate 2 BR plua FAii 1111 or DIN **57 8lllboe CCWM (98lboa CCW'M) N.8 . 87M111 1811S,000 Sat/Sun 1-6. 3BEDROOMS ..,..2542 Vlata Dr, a.~. NB M2.a200 $575,000 LH Sundey 1-5 208 ~ ( + 18A Me) Balboa ... 875-4000 M40.000 8un 1-4 217 Via OM9to. Udo laland 875-422 1618.000 8un 1-5 e3424 Santa C--. C.M • · 1818333 S2S8,SOO Sun 1-4 ....,.,.a • 507 J at. Penln. Potne. Newpoft 8Md\ 7a.e100 $525,0000 Sun , .. 187 Oet M# Ave. ~. C.M. 494-1171 tate.500 Sat/Bun 12-4 ~,C.M. ... 1214,IOO 3 BR plue FAii RM or DD . •114 ....... ()ed Cairone ..... 7M401'0 11.-e,ooo ...,..,,. tN .. ao:ll:I .._..... °'· OdM. 119-a111 ...... ooo 1IOl llOft ...... Wul:Jlff ... MaUOO --.ooo 1IOI..,,.. .... W1 u•, .. ........ .... llll/9Mlft 1 .. ~· MwW> Or., INyahcM'• IU l200 11 ,480,000 ..-2511 "'-Or., ~­SU l200 1748,800 • 227 ~ Cyn, 8hotectlffa, CdM •• • eoeo 11. 7M,000qs.t9un 1-a SUnHS Sun 1:30-5 ••n McM..oo~ Ridge IU l200 ,000 291"2 9oboll*, ~ So .• u.g..,. ....,.. ?&M100 1314,IOO Sun 1-5 . Sat/Sun 1·5 4BIDROOllS •• ., • 6 Aue pr--..n., Big Cyn. N8 121-1200 11.1•.ooo ~ 1-a SUn 1-6 **. 2115 8ayltde Or., Corona .. M4w 794M100 a .000.000 aun 1:30-4 -Mft for Information & surprlslngty tow coat. BUY tNouP els dffed 2215......,,., Ln. N.8. .. 8333 1591,000 4 BR plua FAii RM or DEN + 11141 Notwood Twr, T~ ~ INflne 721-1200 te7S,OOO s.t1Sun 1-5 2710 GllinMt Dr, MMe Verde, CM ·~!508I 1315,000 Sat/Sun 1-6 e5.20 De A.nu Dr., COM IOC).221-21n sea.ooo Sun 1-6 ••1221 KM4 Dr., H8rtM>r V'9w Hiie, N.8 • 944-GOO 1779.800 Sun 1-8 • •20571 P9ltiley ln, Humington 9eect\ 759-9100 1469,000 ~ 12--30-4:30 ••2779 Tern. C.M. 88&-9333 1379.000 2103 v..., Ad. Coeta M-. 642..... 1359,500 * PllCE tEDUCID * New Pnstne Cleal RetWement t.nts; f\.*f rented wtwotrY;J llSt. haS 14 1-t.d Section 8 ad 19 reugt.Aa Te- f'a)1S. Ht.d aftOmOtlc traeose bo- sed u:x:>n SMSA fa Oalge In· Cfedble on pemcses rnonogef. o CQ.pOOC~. Cllz PATRICK I W• 711·1- OWlllR llUIT ••• PLUIH RITAIL • DQ .... ALL orr•111 Present ~ IS 0 ~ fllr1· ue st-oMOan. Aopet1y ts s rnn- u1es fJOm "8 co.rtlOule c:rd ts 80!!/IV oorMJrted to ~ legal t:UI· Cl'"O HcNe rt&N CQ'.)OiSOI. lood ~ $328.CXX>--M::Jv Olt,' k:nl or adn'09 .. ~~' J.1~ " 322 ......... CdM. 8754111 17915,000 Sun 1-5 5 BR plus FAii RM or DEN ., Bodega Bey,~. CdM ~ $1,MS,000 Sun 1 .. ...... 10Hmlbor .......... eM-1800 1:1.100.000 .,,.., 1-5 e e..,z127 Yec:ttt Redlent, l1s .. w eu 1200 1838.ooo Sun 1-e I BR plu8 FAii Rll or Diii · TOWNHOlllS CONDOS FOR SALE 2 BEDROOlll .. 733 Wlngmle Bey, C .M 499-64«5 119.SOO ......... 1-e 2 BR plua FAii RM or DEii ••.....UO Cegn9y Ln #120. VIia ~ .. 121·1200 1291.000 ...,..,, 1~ 3BEDROOlll •410 Ooeder'.rod. Corona cs.. Mw 173-e4.. M15.000 Sundey , .. ......... Oceer1~ ... 1-.nd, .. 72Mtoo sne.ooo ...,.,,, 1-e • • ....... cenvon a.lllnd. lllg eyn. .. 721-1200 Mle.000 ~ , .. ••101~~C.M • 110-0l11 11-.000 a IR plus FAii .. or DD DUPLIXll FORULE 4111 ..... t• ... ., ............ q. .,..., 11'91 -•M HOW TO RESPOND TO DhlE{INE • Call 1-900-844-0100 • E!lter 4-digit c~e appearing in ad • Listen to greeting • Leave message (you can change it if not satisfied) When leaving a message • Leave your first name • Mention your interests . • Tel I your age • Describe your appearance ~ Specify your preferences • Include what you liked about the person you arc responding to You may leave a 30 second message. You will be automatically billed 98¢ for each minute. NALS USE THI S FORM TO PLACE YOUR FREE PERSONAL AD G U I D E L I r J E ·~ PRINT CLEARLY: (First three words ore boldface> 25 word moxmum FREE ADS ARE MAIL-INS ONLY All Coll--lns Wiii Be Charged Regular Rate . • --------STATE: ZIP:, __ _ TNe i-M1n..i1rt le ooi ••• ..... -. ..,,.. _..,. pur ,...... ......... a. ,.. ........... ,...,..,_,1r1 .. .,....,. .................. 11'1•·--,.,,.,...,.., ............... ,..,.,...., ....... ,_ _..., .... ,., ........ . .......... ,.. .......... 8"_ ....... _ ......... ..... fO"' ""'IFJI ....,. .., ,..,,..., I " L A I E I' I I I r Newpott 9-Mft •"" , __ ....., ____ ...,. ___ , condo, ... to belh. Am W/Otw I~· 18 IM, 'ult prlv. O •t •d CALL: ~---====::::::::::::::::=::::::::::::~~~~~___:_;_~~:-:......:.----__:.___1 842-587 ANSWllS TO ~ ... -• Doe't r.,.a: A CanceT-bora reader writa to say, "Don't fotFt llC, plcuel Name IOll'le celebrities and mab eomc predictlona. plcuel'' Cancer 111cnu (put aod pmcnt) not to be fcqotten: Jaclt l>emJ*Y, Mlks Tyeoe, Bart>an Sluwyct, Ginacr Rctcn. J1me1 Capey, Neil Simon, Dia AJbord and Lena Home. Maay n11Na duritia 1991 wlJJ mab 1erioul domestic ldjastmcnla 1hat could lnctudo ICt1aal cbaap of residence and marital 1tat1a1. Ourina July, DM Cucer lndMdvab couJd fall ~ la loft. WU (Mardl ll·April 19): Thia will be OM ot ,our lmlicst Sondmyl in 1 month ol Sundays! Spotlilht on popularity, IOC:ilJ actMty, 1bihty to WIJ1 friends and lnllucnce uhiah and the mlahty." Emphasize cnterllinmeal. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Key provided IO that ~u caa .. unlodt myatftY.'' Foaat on .cbJevcmcnt, ambilJOo, pride. reassurance from one ,au adore, "You are tbc bat and 1he only onel" Seorplo, another Taunaa arc fn pk:turc. GEMINI (May 21.Junc 20): Your kind of day! Movement, Ideas, 1rips, vi1111, comical ailuatlons. Lona- disi.nce c:ommun~tion relates to combin11ion of busincu. plcuurc G11n indQled u ruull or wnucn •ord. CANCER (June 21-July 22)· Pel'IOn1I cnvironmcnl involves home. IU.tUry Item, mus~I lostn1mcn1. art obJCCt. F~ member coofldes, "I don'1 know ii I did the fi&ht 1hina!" Be concerned, bul steer dear of domcatJc dispute. LIO (July 2J.Aua. 22) A.Mwcn arc found behind ICCnes. Empbas1J on pannuship, c:oopcraliYe ctrons. YM:tory in Jepl battle You11 learn whit actually is expected from you K.nolr when to dnw lmc Puces inYOtv.d. VIRGO (Au&-23·Scpt 22)· Focus oo deadhne, Insurance, rupons1b1hty. intce1e rclatlonshlp. News rcccived concanlna basic isaua. dependents. cmplaynwnt. Older family member late. ,au ln10 confidence. You'll le1t11J ly CHAM.IS GOftN with OMM SHMtf' .nd T ANNAH HntSCH Bot.h vulnerable. South dea1a. NOaTH •K l '7 4 •K Oi ... , •A Q 10 W&81' EAIT •o •Q 11 •• • •Q J 10 8 3 t A.K Q.1 8'70 t VoJd s ••• Nortla lut ~cb1 LIUA (Sept. 23-Qct. 22): You'll .. decipher" meuina of lo¥e. Focus on apiriluaJity, pbyaicaJ 1uracdon, completion of major uslpmcnt. Lona-distance call relates to journey. Publishing oould be involved. Aries fea1urcd. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You'll wlkc up and 1lna! Sp0Wgf11 on fresh Slul, new direction, independence, freedom or thou&)lt and aclion. Love rcl1tionahlp rci&n11ed. You'll lcam property is YrOrth more than anlicipalcd. SACnTilHJS (Nov. 22-Dcc 21)· Reunion with family member blends ~th added respoosibility, aood food, brlahtcr financi1I prospc1:ts lndMdual recently returned from lnp !alb much. says liulc. You'll undentand! CAPRJCORN (Dec 22-Jin. 19)- Moner. comes your WIY 1f you d1VCnify, display ~Batility and mike 1nquincs. Means don't st.and still - tnsisr 1h11 question) ire IJU'*Crcd, not evaded. Surprise party Wiii lop cvcn1nc fare. AQUARJUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. 18): Some will say, "When they made you they broke 1he mold!" HiahJi&)ll individuality. originallly, cfarlna. willingncs' to take risb. lndividu1I who kepi you 11 distance mighl say, .. Let me hold you!" PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Per.,nal invcstiption necessary if you arc 10 aniYc 1t tnitb. Sccrc1 meeting, ~Id recently, could have in~cd you in canard. Put thouahls oo paper. let others know you arc aware. Gemini knows! IF JUNE JI IS YOUR BIRTHDAY: Current cycle emph111zcs public 1ppcarances, pou1b1lity of paruc1palina 1n business cn1crpnx. Cycle 1JJ0 spo1liah1s sheller, sccur11y, mlntal s111us, poaiblc addllk>n 10 family Ourina July you comple1c miss.ion, pln addc:d rccosnilioo and will be nd of burden )'OU &bould noc have carried 1n fin1 place. You learned plenty In June, survived crisis ind repined oonftdcncc. You'll make fresh start 1n new direction in Auaust and ICM: will nol be 1 stranacr. W•t at.arted with three top die· monda. declarer Nfftna the third. 'J'Mn WU DO-~ t.o -"Oid to.int a bee{t trick. 10 the fat.a of the hand hlniW in r..ndinc t.he queen ttumpi.. A firm beUever in bnd,p muim.t, declarer banpd out th• ace and li:ina or trumpe to ao down one trick. Much u we b.U.Ve in aoin1 Wlth the odda.. if eYer there wu a hand on which to l&n<>re the • P,.ion percent- ...., \hit wu iL Af\el' rumn1 the third diamond. dedanr ahould lead a wmp to the kine. Once Wm followa. nin• of thal defender'• carda are li:nown-eiahl diamonda and the tnun_p-leavlnt only four cardt unknown. Howevtr, only (Our or &al'• carda are known-the thrM dl.carda on the diamonda and one lNmp. Therefore, Eut bu nine unknown carda, t0 E.ut la more than t-'ce .. IW..y to hold the queen ot ..,... .. w-. 8tMd on &Nit.. ct.darer thould continue with a w..p from I.hi t.11 • ble Md ltMM&. When w.-fa.Ila t.o folow, the COMnU la botM. KllOlriftl the llUN Oddi lia all ..U Ind jood: k..-•hen'° ..... M1' ....... wlda lailc 1a what IMUi die di .... bet -· .,... OM Ro pa.,. bJ roM and 91111 IOM wlao uoclt.....,.. UM ,._ of ....... . .....,,, .. 11 CAPalCOIN (Dec. 22-Jan. 20): Because there are 10 m1ny cx1raordln1ry planetary 11pect1 durtna the flnt two wccb of JuJy, for once you m1y decide to coolound putncn, loved onu, c lose comp1nlon1 and collcaaues by admiuina rather 1h1n denylna and liitcnlna rather than talklna. and In lhc pr0«11 replace fear with faith, hopelessness with wbok-nesa and despair w11ll 'PY· For, what woll place in June has mack you realize 1h1t capcricocc is a hard !cacher. She ai¥cs I~ tcs1 fint and the lcuons aflerwud . Whal has brouaJlt 1bou1 1h1s chanac 1n attiluck and ot.uloot" IC you honcsllv 11111 don'I lcnow than 1us1 wa11 1nd sec wh11 1r1nspircs on 1hc 41h. 81h. 10th and lllh AQUARIUS (Jan. 21·fcb. 19) Focu• on !he mcu1ge ind not 1hc meucn1cr this week F1od 1hc aram of tn1rh In cntkism, chew II and '!Wiilow It. or course, this docs not mean 1b.1 you should forukc your principle\ or bchcfs Bui from your solar chart at lhc moment 11 would \Ccm 1ha1 1r ccr111n pcnonal p1rtncr1h1p1 o r pro fcss1onal usoc:l1tions arc 10 continue then simple solulions will work best for complic11cd people. Therefore, no m111cr wh11 ch1n1cs arc liking place or how agncvcd you feel, m1lcc 11 simple, keep 11 simple 1nd when you d1tcuu a char1c1cr 01w in 1no1hcr -learn from 11 1bou1 younelf. PISCES (Feb 20-Mll'ch 20). No m111cr whll you do, rcaliry IS here 10 stay, and 11 mc1n1 to be en.JOYCd The Sun 1n !he scns111vc s1an of Cancer, oppos111ons 10 lhc revolutionary plane! Ur1nus ind Ncplunc. your nikr. • 1parkhna rom1nce between the Sun and Plu10 ind fin1lly, a solar ccltp5e, all S'IJ'llf)' it's lime 10 gel down 10 brus licks Miking a dc:cmon tin't ever as painful as no1 mak1na one. The JCcond half or 1991 promises 10 much -JUSI ensure 1h11 when happiness e1lli you arc not 100 busy 10 answer Recovery -any form or recovery -is I civil war, bul it is a war thal can be .won AJUES (March 21-April 20) II has been said 1h11 most of us would r1ther be ruined by praise 1h1n saved by cr111c11m Now, however, 1f you learn to ac~cpt 1h1t an error 1raccfully acllnowledacd tS • victory >A'On, 1he fulurc will hold no fear for you What is currcn1ly t1kina place, both 11 home and at wort. isn't euc:tly whit ,au ~ed. ordered or desired, but what would life be 1f cvefY'hlna a""'eys went accord1na 10 plan" SomelimC$ In the middle of chaos, confusion Of a cnsis Is to be found ,.,hat JOU hevc 1pen1 1 hfct1me sc1rchina for. TAURUS (Apnl 21-Miy 21)'. An oppoajllon between the Sun 1n Cancer and the f'C'OlutJonary planet Uranu1 in Capricom on Thunday ts nothina more th1n a timely reminder !hat u far u one particular lie or auod1tion is concerned. there have been too many hiah 10Uodin1 worch ind too lcw aalons lhat Clln'C$pond with them In OCber words. wort will 'llrin -wlsl\lna woe't. In fact, moat of the major planocary actmry OYCr 1he nc1t coup&e ot weeks rcl1t•t to tclf· uprculon and communication. Above II~ howner, It UIJCI )'OU not to altk1ic, condemn or 1:hallcnac unlc )'OU 11'9 alto wtlliftt to be part of I hcJ IOIU I ic:MI CE.Ml I (M1y 22-Junc 21) Tbc rfuclKC of the rC"WOhltlon1ry planet Unnu• ind Ncp1u in Capricorn doon't e11c1ly fill you with Cl>llfidtMc or mah ii u fot J">ll to b llncc 1 bc"iclt, lt~r. ha1 1nl.~' ~ '".:r !he nc'l f w WI l•f tn ~ th, wl111 cd11)'C lift July t11h mu .. r hrina 10 hahl rices or nf••nn '"'n •htth en Mc ""' to put ur I !Od '•ht nJ l kl\O • re~ luortu>lu. In fact , pen~ully. rfllf "''""' anJ finanttall• M> nt1Kh •h h hD .,_. .. 11c:rcd ten "'°l'W be a,athch.'d nd a h d Mme ,., pur amund 1hC 11mo of t ,. _r r h "" t I Ith 11 m ltl ur fot :.II th l\lllLU M "' fmtu or I ,." It month 'J • ' " (J1t u,Ju~ ) The 1 '!."!\' :Tlfktnanl &tuna 1.-r mcm ..!. 642-5678 tbis week II that be<:auie lhe Sun is now paulna through your own birth slan you aired. To be confident is an act of fai1h. And this Is certainly not 1 time for 1e1tlina lor ICCOOd best, havina a low opinion of )'O'lnelf or accepting lcft-oYCn. The nan-up lo the sol1r eclipse on the 11th mey be hectic, dramatic or even 1numatic, but just keep aoina -everythina you need to know will be revealed. LEO (July 24-Aua. 23): A couple of tricky upccts to the Sun, your ruler, on lbc 4th 1nd 8th may well put you on lhc spot and force you to rn"Cal more than you care 10 dM&Jte 11 the moment. However, In 1bh ins11ncc 5lratahl 11lk 11 1he rcsull of '1ra1gh1 1h1nking -and you ccnainly have nothina to fear now by layina C\crythina on 1hc hnc. Colleapcs, rivalJ or oompc111on h1Ve an u 10 gnnd bul must not be 1llowed to ao <J\.-cr the lop or aim•· You may have made your mistakes, mislimcd thinp or made moun11ins out of molehills bul, as 1lwl:yJ. you are full of good intentions Ind only w1nt what It best or all concerned. VIRGO (Aua. 24-Scpt. 23): The first len days of July may not be 1ny1hina to wri1c home about because when the Sun ln Cancer takes 1 swipe 11 Uranus on lhe 41h and Neptune on lhe 81h, you In tum llilJ Pill SCRAM-LETS CON\.'OY MENIAL REFUSE WINTER LENGTH VOICED CLOTHES *> VOTE Tt.. Oranae Coast Daily Pilot 330 W. Bay Street Costa tt.sa. California 92627 Attn: Cla••ified Adverti•i~ Manaaer RI : My Classified Ad 28 March 1991 Thi• lett..r i• t.o cancel llY current ad about •Y refricerator for sale. But thi• i• a cood thine Tod•Y. ••• the first day of publication for mY ad and llY refriaerator sold only four hours after the paper was delivered I had thr .. call• on it thi• 11<>rninc l.ast Nove•ber. l had advertised a Garace Sale on Friday and Satu.Z'daF. You would have thoucht I had the only circu.s in years that ca• to t.o•n at •Y house I .. de about 1450 and I •ol~ out by ooon ' I want to thank you and your paper and the readerehip at the co..aunitie fine•t nevapaper ··~-·~ ~~ A. Ch1ldo<o. Subec<1bo< 120A LiH Ln. Coata tt.sa 1rcl~ly~~~dwc~ermakc1 :;;;:::::::::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:1 nnn comm1rmen1 or buzz off. Bui ' how can you aive your word personally, cmo11on11ly or professionally when IO much more now seems to be pouible ind 11tamablc'? Planetary actrvity on July 10.h and 11th is lhc kind whteh really can 1her lhc course or d1rcctt0n of your life and, deep down, you 1lrcady know 11 1s not only a qucsuon of now or never bul also nothing ventured, noth1na gained LIBRA (Sep! 24-0cl 23) Allhough you arc aboul 10 be the flavor of the monlh -even callpuhcd inlo 01t>11 on the work front around 1he Umc of the IOlar cchps<' on July 11th -you aho h1tc a ccn11n responsibility lo fire othen' 1maa1n1llon. Therefore, mike 50l'llconC elsc'I day, cncouraae, pay compliments where compliments are due, and do your ulmost to ensure yoo ac1 che ri&Jll cumplc Then when the lime comes for '°" to ao for brok"c over career or profctaiooal mitten you won'I, u is your wont. be 1hinklna what shadowl we .,. aod whit shadows we punuc. But. 1ns1cad. ... 11 be 11 ,our lllOSt forcd1al, fonhri&hl and 1elf-auurcd. SCOIU'IO (Oc1 24-No¥. 22). U you take your mtnd back to whir occurred around the time ol the 10lar cchrsc in Capncorn on J1n\:llJ IStll vou w1D hltt 1 pretty FO'i l.le:I whit lo expect lhlS July. For, tbe second >0l1r cchpK ol 1991 takes place in that pen of your IOlar chan rcl11cd to trnc! plaes and aD tom. of commun1C1tion. Added eo wtl~ Plulo 1n your CJWll birth sip is QCJIW mairuriccnlly upcct~d by t.he Sue '°• ror one reuon or another. some k.iad of 1 ma,or uphc1val or aJtentJon 1a your lifcacyle is un~lo. SAGnTAJUUS (NO¥. lJ.Dcc.. 21): When all ii 111d and doM you mutt reel that you a,.. on mudl 1atcr around now •hen dcallna witJt not only penoo1I moMY m11t1n but .i.o joint arnnaomcnu. bustnen 1ntcruta, property or other lnvc tmutJ. Of eourte, ctrtala in"1Mduals will 11UI try to queer ,oar pitch or dclly a ecltkmcnt. But &n.r what you b.l"9 10 .., around thcJ 4U. and Ith in, l.IM:y W\JI tnow the bani. nnalty <Mr and ti..1 tba tide ul fonuoc t•,... .._ & Sopu the ' tlfad forivd to tonM kind OI a °' of p>d '°'18M ofc ~red YOU CAN FIND IT IN THE CLASSIFIED ! 642-5678 , let U1 Help Y 11 Sell Your Propert,! C111 C1a11ili1d, 642-5678 INCREASE YOUR REACH THROUGH OUR NEW IMPROVED LOWER RATES ~ffi $2.eo per d•J That'a ALL you P•Y tor Carpentry 3510 [IC'C:r ,, .ii H11 (l o ... RepaW-Mnllonl DEIOUJll ILIC'fRIC Cabinets-Panel-Locks _.410779 StaQ-Otywll-P9bo1-e!e 35 yrs up .wry 642-0567 eor.-tlatcll Medi I •REMODEL •REPAIR 145-1350 Now eon.trvotton ELECTRICIAN Unique/unusual work UC 41597"4 Alterations. Com/RH (71 4) 848-4230 26yra .... lie. 968-3564 •--"---'------FREEMAN ELECTRIC Ouallty Job. Low Pf1Ce H .H1l11 :q 3 7~'0 DUllPMINS·NllK Fumfture, tl'Mh, trM brllnchM, eppllancM. Mika 1 cty? CMe-1381 DUMP TRUCK for AMI Comm. Lg/amt joba . Junk-Haut-Conat. P.U. Cln-upa •e. 94s-8580 FrH H1 24hr.L1512117 We'd love to take care Carpet Cleaning 3514 Repair Pro 15 Yra Po-r Rastratchlng Install New & Uaad Fasl/541-1972/Sarvlce •(714) 744-5048• of your hOma. exc.I. HARMAN ELECTRIC rel. 714/731-1811 Of Uc.#547429 744-128e Lv Meaaage. Residential Speclallat •WE DO IT RIGHT• •THE FIRST TIME• (71 4) 751-2329 L .tnchc .lpP ,'\. L~1wr' C.11(· .mos 4 llnM. 30 day mlntmum tn !M SERVICE DIRECTORY Cement Concrete J52n FcncPs •TREES• . roppeo!Remove Law111 we Giii SM Hing Togellel • ;Orlvowaya-patlo• apm~lra cinup 751•3476 Total lm.tlor AemOO- peth• etc. No fob too etlng Sorv. Advloe To & Decks :i615 For more Information CALL TOOAYll small ....._ Lio. hM F. NC ll a .0 AT. a * Verd ReJuvenetton Tiie Crazy. 833-7' 72 Mick.., 53&-0553 N " 1 • Cleanup • TrH Trfrn. ASK FOR CANDY -1 ew ope' Redwood.I ming • Sprldr/Ughtlng ORTIZCONSTRUCTIONI CedarPost~CM/N8 Rpra • Seed/Sod P1.1• · •. V(• ·' l • . i 1 n Your S.rvlca Directory Repra_,tatlve I Maaonry-Concreta Pa· Jim Whyte 842•7208 Since 1973 (473194) tloa-Ortvewaya. Paint. Bob' CMe-9288. Llndcape ... 546-3096 I PAT'S WOOD FENCES A· TEAM GARDENING/ PIANO TIMlllO by lr- OUALITY CONCRETE ••"4-IOIOt• MAINT. 18 yra axpar. =-~.:::..A~ 842-4321 Ext 310 Drlv-aya-Patios etc. I Julian • Yolanda Gar-Rick ua.o?ea All types. 15 yrs exp danlng s.rv. 942-3921 • John 754-0183 •usv ••• a.r.tc.. Ouallty concret•block ***REMODELING Uc/bonded. Match PUBLIC NOTICE & brick work. reaaon-Custom work Elac -any advartla.d nitaa. The Callf Publlc Vtlll· able pricaa, tr.. eat Carpentry· Tiie-Piumb • Spacial rates on Yard/ ti•• Commission, RE· Call 751-8535 Fences. Keith 89&-31 t8 Hou.aclaan Oona the QUIRES that all used, ...-...-R•PAIRa tfefne/ lrlah way. 843-9020 hounhold goods Rental PROPERTIES DuslJ'I Lawn Malnt. movers. print their Palnt-Carpantry.tc.-Monthly/Wkly or 1 PUC Cal T number. DrywaU Oetye4S-52n time. Frelnl 241·1&40 llmo 'a & chauffeur'• .IACK KaNNaDY TILE print their T C P num-& MARBLE. INSTALL •HANDYMAN• Landt1eape Ramodallng ber In all advanl... + REPAIR. All type• 8'Q & .,,.,, ~._,... Spaelallata manta. If you have a of Pavarw Washing & Cd 8tVC» 141~ R•landacape w/color quaatlon about the l•I Sallllng 497•5665 All phuaa Landscape gallty of a mover. llmo 1 CALL DOES IT ALL CrHtlv• Daalgn or chauffeur, Call·1 THE ORIGINAL Gan. contractor at l'loxlblo within HOUOAY REUEF T1.C few peta .. pf.ant8 oc homo OWY* 12yra >Ont ,.,._ 7514'55 Pl ~· •, · RPp I ' \•1H() Publlc VtlltlH Com-1 DEAN the TILE UN handyman prlcH. ~ut' bud .. tl mlHlon. 714-56tM161 Small a trg repan of 845-7505; C27-35395e 24HrlDDtHl1112 leaky ahowara-Acld fences, patloa, plumb-0ti• wash & regrout. N-• Lanchoapo HEATING t PUM8IHG & Repair. Ba1hrooma-Ing, alee .• plutar, dry· lnatal. a Malnt. Rea./ Apr11.111r, c.. Shower dOOt"a. Kite-wall. lnV•JCt paint.Ing, Com. Eatab./rellable. Uc 541'7l ~ Floora·Plumblng uc. kltcti.n, bath remodel local rel a. Lie & --,-L-.---.-----SP1 v11 ,. J.126 Ir:~ 25yra O C 873-8065 & addition•. Lie. Bonded. 285-0819. v..tlnl 499197 -· 839--49001 • Al fobl. Low,..., 40 glf NA Mak• and MOO.ls Tiie & Marble Install & RON a GARDl!NINQ war ,__ 5 'I' lnllll. RIO. Couftaoue s.rv 554MIStS repair Prompt aar-All raaldantlel & comm'l I Quality yard cera/rHa. s--d a Co 841 ... 203 302t·B Harbor Bl c M vice, frff eat. No job rapalrw a malnt. ,..... rates. 12 yr exp. NB/ too small. Frank able & reeeenebte. CdM onty 831-1872 A~~·~~,f ~~~IR Turner, 957-1963 Ret. avalt. 432"8827 THI GREEN ICElll w/ad. S~athca In ~ TILE lnatall41d/Rapafrad OT. llAltfTUUleC• ~r~ bfanda. duality ~ Ptomc>t ~ ~ Owier 1•.,.. •KP· In Sprtnldef tnataftafion a.at pnce 831-13&8 Fr" Est & R•.,IOM ,..._ ........ We can TrH Trimming/Removal John a Shalby.944M11e handle anytNng ahol1 ~ w.inc. a eteanupe AllllTOl lllllOVAL RaakMnUall Comm'I c.tt"9d 541 6088 Al •' I 01 I II' , 'l 1·1·12 R, ·' ', • 1, l ,'( )' Ct1ilrl C.1r 0 h.36 of a ~ owm.ut. ~ •432-8804• ~ 9oac:h . .. • ..._ ·--Coeta ...... ~ • -· .. ..__ UCINIE DAYCARE ton a..ch Ateaa c.11 Has 2 Openings CEHTAUA MAl'fT'EHAHC( Costa M9aa.. 722-e320 --~M~aa.tllll~~!!_ ___ I I t q. I' "' I •. t • l(< , :.> Nannies. & houNk .. p-Com.,._.e MalnVR..,_., A nOIHHrY CrlmJna.I .,. avafl. Prof, aiq>. Plumb-ele<:.-catpontry defenea, drunlt dmlng Uve In Of out. From paint. Refttel ~ (DUI) warrllnUkketa '80/Wk. 571-6184. our lp!Olltl!y ~57t7 Can ,0, conauttatlon et CIP,tllltlq DAN'• Hom./BualnoN no cherga. 77Wl62 Im~. DfywaA Cerpemry & PWtttng. Bonded. M&-79Z2 ~, •. ,\I ( I .. ' I ' lH ~ELIAILI Houaec~ FIX UP YOUR HOUSI!. Ing by the day. Local I • .a '"""9e. ,.,... J(Jnt ............ i.w .......... Cell Yolanda e31-He7 ....!:C:!aM~J!.;ay~l&0--~3008~~- ::-~V:U, ~ HANDY ANDY from eop to bOttOm. Elec•Plumb-11111.int. LI. M2-713a Of 948-7934 cetpntry. etc U1-4043 RllPAIR • Drywall E.lectrtcal • Maaonry • 'hcturoe lnetall•d. Gifted Crafteman. Mllfk .... 1790 ~T HAUl..WO llfMCI ..... ,,. ......... M MNtn DICK'I HAUUNQ """" to ....... .-n-.,.. t1aut1no, Lergo Wok ........ ...,.. -~----- r.,,, ·", · 1 ... · 1 Roofir , ; 1' 11 u ................ & Repallw, Ucenee • ,,_,,_ 21 Y"'8 emcp. ",.. Est. Fin IM. 87l-45085. R··r· " ( .... {\ j : • • •• ' Wl.nl~Co Room edd!Uona. ,.... modollng, quallty work. ll'<MOl17. ,'9ftk eee-1101. ltl r' r i ' I ) JOU'll find A NEWWORL.D ! OF ADVENTURE! WE GET RESULTS! in the· CALL 642-43 1 .... TM.IVR, , .... , .. , ......... .... Co lvorl 11,Gel tt0.000 P« mo p .......... """ ~ .... Time. Licon•• ~ roq'd..no 10111 Ground ftooft .. ftMrtctc ?e.1"8 .. ~ MIMll '"""8 to • new 1oe:at1on t AMcdl ltlemGWlndlilllled .• • 0 ) 0 ., FOR YOUR SALES REPRI l!MTATIVE . ·' '· . l • .. ' .. ~· 0-.... IJ ,, Ii I I L • . t . ~ t .., .. ... <Cl ... " • .,. .. '" , . .., ~ ... ": .. . I'• I I . ~· ' . , ... c •• . , 't •• ••• "'·' .... ,,, .. r .... . " . ... 1 • r" .... .. .. . . . aa....--.. ••• , 9UIQ( m... Le8altre Eetate Wllg0ft,M80.. ••vw-xa...,. eoe. C*9 run..._ 72:11111 STIRTilli I llEW BUSllESS'l'I The LAgml ~-·· .. the Olly Ptot II ___, to announce • '*' ..w. now ..,...,,.,.. to .,.. bult--,_, W. .. now SeAACH "'9,,.,..,. for )QI tit no .,,. c:flefge. and .._. )QI ...... Ind ... trtp to the Co.wt ...... In ....... Alta. Then. of~ llfter ttte _,,,, " oompl••d w _. ·~ tldlllol.tt~,,.,.. ... "*" ..... County can. cM:lllh onoeeWlilllltorb.-..a•~ ~ ... .., ..... '°"' proof " pr.M 1 I I .. 0owncy Qlrtl. ~ ltop by to • Y'O'lr lcllbll ~ ~ -the Olly Not LAgml °"*"••It. 330 Welt ..,, Colla ...... Olltomla. • '°" ~ not 9tQP by. S--. Cll ue • (714) tq-43,21, ~ J1S 0t S11 ... .......... ,. ...... tor '°" .., Nfdl"' procedln br .... ")QI~,_..,__._ ... tlona. "'-' Cll .......... .. mor.. "*' -to ...... )QA. Oood Mc* In YoJT '*'~" • ! . • ' ._ --tt 1£1.!!t ~ ......... ............ __ ... ---..... ---•• , • lltll• ---· ............ -----... ---.... ........ , Full Moon June 27 -~= .. ,. Wat9ff .., .. "'•'• • ... , •• lk ---'" , .... . '-.... ... ·--,,,_ "" -.. ............. ........ ,..,, ... TODAY'S SUN Sunrise: 5:49 a.m. Sunset: 8:14 p.m. Last Otr. July 5 OCEAN REPORT BOATING ...,. ___ .. _.._. • .......,11Wt1 ...... ,...,.._ .... ..... _ ... .....,.. .... ........ ,..... . . FISHING c-.~-,........ --...................... ... _ TIDES 100AY ......... ::.:;c. _..,. SURFING --...... t.J . ,... ...... ...... , ..... .... ... I ........ ,._.111112, 2;JO, 5, 7:.JO, 10 2 . ......_ & ....... Ill 11;4$. 2, 4:.J0, 7, '1XI .... • • • --.. , ... , .... -~ -------... -.... 11 =-----...... _ ... ----..... _ -- • • • ID c::i -, ..... ,...... ••1111 " .. , , ,, .. •• i' " .. -· .. • .. .. g.::: " .. " .. " .. ........,_ .. .. -.. .. -.. .. ...... .. .. =tr' " .. a .. -.. .. -" .. .. ..... " .. _.,. " .. = .. .. " .. --N ,al -" n -" .. == " " " u _.,. :; = :=-re'' . " ......... .. " = M M'k .. " -"' " ·~ ., n ... """atr " .. -"" -.. .. "n n" .... .. " " .. .. " " .. .. " " .. " " .. " .. " " " " " -:!:I.--_.,. ---,..,. • i1 • .. " " .. ! • • .. .. .. i • " " " " t • .. .. " • ' J i ....... ••••rt Inell ~ y.-C*IMU IWticw .... Jl. W"- sio... 63 I -JSO I I ......... J'l I 1,45, J:lO, 5:15, I, 10:30 , ...... .,..,. !RI 11 .30, 2, •:lO, 7, 9:30 11'11111 7* ~ ~ 4245 C-,.... DIM .U..-Mll l Brooke and Jackson start d ..... UiUIOl'I' ~ 300 ~ c... Ort.. '44-0760 I. ............ (l'G-13) 11 :30, l \S, S.IS, I lS 2. 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'· 1:15 PX ti ll'G- 1311, 6•15, 10·JO TOWN CINT9 ~ '°"" C-,._, 751- 4116 1 ........... lf'G·l3111:15, 2.5.1 • 2 "-............ not fl'0-13) 12·•.S. J, $, l, J ...,..,ll'G-13)1,J,$:1$,7:J0,9:JS ' ...... Y-. IRI I, 3:30, 6, 1:30, 10.4$ '" aovtM cour "'-UA ~ $46-2111 I 0 I I ;di lllJ 11 45, 2:.10, 5:15, •• lO·JO 2 n.. ....... ~ 12, J:lO, $, l:lO, 9 •.S l CIJf' ....... l"G·13J11:lO,l ,•l0,7,9JO tount COAll' W1UM1 ~ ., 1t1o1o1 s.o. .... • ~--•'-4-·~,. ~ tNJ111 'r •.S. 2, •.JO, 1, "" 2 a...."-f"Gl 12, 2:JO, $, 1 JO, 10 l n..--..rA~ ....... ~I, J 15, 5 45, I , IO:IS !:'..!.e.. ~ 1122 wo_. A-. 141 0710 ! ...,.,..,_,.(lt)l2,2l0,5,!JO,IO 2 arr..._.. (l'G IJ) 12 30, J, .SJO. I, "' "' J n.. ,..., .... ._ l\'I (Kf \J) 12 15, 1 1.S, • •O. 6<l0. 1 30. 10 JO 4 ...... y._., (IQ I JO, 4, 6 JO, 9 5 n.. ..... _II,) 1 \JO,},• lO, 7. II JO IDW.uiot ~TON l'llnN 1 1~•3 -S. 1•1·03N L .,...V....ll:J 12:to, I. 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MY CIUUlltEN: Having ended her engagement to Tom, since they both realire lhc marriage would be loveless Brooke staru dating Jacbon'. Erica is furious, and stuMed. when her ally turns out to be Adam. Adam wants to date Erica but she considen his 1u8'-estion absurd. Adam retorts if she doesn't start datlng him. he'll tell the tabk>ids she and Olarlie arc an item, Emily Ann doesn't believe Joey's claim that 1hc.'1 suffering from a hysterical pregnancy. Feeliris her timins is perfect, Janet kisses Trevor. He tells her to never do that again. Terrence gets a job at the health club, Derck, still upset at having a rcmaJc partner, is unhappy when he and Mimi arc assigned to do a stakeout. Brooke enjoys the rappon between herself, Jack and Jamie, Following Trevor's rejection, Janet is more 'Peaks' fans to get a movie determined to have everything her sitter hu. AN0111ER WORU>: Although shaken by the car accident, neither Dean nor Jenna is injured. Dean, By Noel Holston ...,,..,.,.St PU 5Cal' Tlb.N Rest easy, "Twin Peaks" freaks. The multiple cliffhangen with which the ABC series oondudcd its year on TV -including the demonic possession of clean-cut FBI agent Dale Cooper -will not go unrcaotvcd. Production of a ''Twin Peaks" theatrical film will begin in August, according to co-executive producer Mark Frost. Frost said the "Peab" movie financed through foreig~ syndication of the series, will have a bia:ger budget than the weekly epiaodu and will shoot more in t6c Pacific NorthwC5l, 1hough the exilting interior sets in Van Nuys Calif., aJso will be used. ' ycan, if thal's what we want to limited series might have been a fearing Jenna will be grounded, do," Frost sa1'd, The res! of ''we" be takes the blame ror the accident ttcr way to go -one that ended d is David Lynch, the film d•'r--or h uni an Lucas tells him he can never ....... w en the m er of bomecomin& I · I with whom Fros1 developed ·~·"n p 1 ace enna agatn. enna oonftdcs to '""' queen Laura a mer wu tolved. M b -L. Peaks" and his partner in Lynch/ But economics of network TV att t at 11o11c wu the one drivina Frost Productions. Lucas' car. When Lucas learns the precluded that nnuibiJii, he 11id, t h bo h · 'd h While Lynch and "Pc·•-" hc•d · r~ rut a ut t e 1nc1 ent, e ~ noting that the studto. t at control 1· Ca I' wri1er Bob Engels have been rca tzes r s men tampered with most TV production are mo~ h' b -• Carl I · working up the movie scrip• Frost . 11 r ... cs. pans an eJIPk>StYC h be .., interested in the long-term profit J I 'th J b · Le · as en 1n New Orleans directing u Y .. cc c ration. ammg potential of a series. p k' · his first theatrical feature ran 1c 11 pregnant, Kathleen "Storyvillc, •· a political drama thai "lbc nctworkl are the aame pcndcn what to do with the takes its name from the city's turn· way. They want to buUd • 1oyal information. Despite Ryan's of·lhe-ccntury red-light district. audience followina that "Will misgivings, Frankie decides to Meanwhile, Frost and Lynch guarantee them numbcn and 1earch for Carl's source. Donna have 8 six·episodc commitment dollan over the long haul -vows that Stacey will never again from ABC for "On the Air " a unless they're creatina an event practice law. Heading for sitcom about an early·l950s 'live· like a miniseries." Switzerland to help Jamie and TV show, which will go into Yet, even in a minilcries, Ff'Olt Marley, Vick:y is concerned that production in early fall. said, the networks htve grown Ryan and Frankie getting too ReOecting on the experience of more cautious, 90 they're more ck)ee, John is suspended from the making "Twin Peaks," which Jost likely to bankroll 1 OanfelJe Steele hospital while he waits for the not only its dramatic momentum romance novel, cue with tMa-name grand jul}"s decision. but also half ill audience midway actors, than a hothoulo item like AS THE WORLD TURNS: through its run, Frost suggested a ''Twin Peaks," Lucinda is stunned when she ----------------=----:_:_~~'.::::.::.::..:._..:..::.:::..:..:=::_--------. realize• Walsh Enterpritel bu been wrested away Crom her by "If the movie works, I suppose there's an opportunity to do Hice a 'Star Trek' movie every couple of The best place to find asp • The UC1 ~*Ian llefeml Senlce. r... 1 lat of .... l'UIOllL .I' 0. 11".1lt1-; \ in attractive. new 01racenlly remodeled UCl specialists team "'1Yslcians how 10 settings. be SPl!Cialists. .I' 0. WJ ICC 11 - ,1' 0. , ..... ---WI/re cloW than IOU 11t11*. w111t -11 all UCl physicians must meet slringenl lhrOughoul Orange~ lncludlng two requirements -. appointment IO lhe majOr cenllfs in Orange Ind iMn1. medical stall. .I' ... ' .,, ......... " lfll -- IQ Medlcll Ca1llr Ind its alfillaled - al SPl!Cialists alffJI lhe lalesl leC'"1ology When IOU need a speclalltt, 1111 our ~ releml aeMce. n.nno belier wai< And u.,,. .. no belllr l!ll(Jllllll (800) ~38 -5560 ' Evan and Connor. Rcaliz.in1 Lucinda must be vanquished by thil, John and Cal offer iupport. Lucinda, however, wan ta to fi&ht this on her own. While Kirk and Connor feel financially 1e1, emotionally they are distrauaht because the ones they tovc mo.t have turned 1way from ltlem. BJlic beain• to ace that the man ahe married la devious. Tom tell• Andy his connection with Julie It a<MI to dcatroy Andy't life. Tea. about to 1J11duate ,_ hip llChool, .... a JdJo flOm Paul. Paul II upoet wben he tpOll Barbera and 0.-An kiuina. Gavin dcauo,s a letter Baltlara .,rote to Hal. llaWt& .,,.. Into labor, Julie roan AMI Ii _ _.with tha ----· child. An6y ia ,,,_ -bo bean Counncy talbd ID Fraaale about Julio. -.. -d about ha'• rela11oaahip 'O'ith Jobn. TH& I O LD A Tll& IEAl/IUVLi 5aJl)o .. -to read MIT ..,.. cf the -.IMCripl Bill 1to1 P.• bor ....,._ Iha llllla dwK!er --Clarb -tJwo oloo ..,_ ID Mlnil. Oarb II not too ~:.Ci'' about th• rclatla ., • -wltll Bill. Julia -Oarb Jll-bo ..,..., ,,_,. her tato 1l11plna witli Min wtllle Ibey vat:atloa In " Hawali. Sally II eager to surprilo Oarkc with the news that he won a pre1tigiou1 design award. Stephanie a11ure1 Blake she doeln'I need any bel?. In rewlnning Bric'a affectiona. Ridge imiata to Taylor that hit marriqe propol&l bad nothina to do with Brooke. Eric ii thrilled, and Brooltc ii disappoinled, about Ridge and T11Jor'1 enaagemenL Ruthann'• children, Juon and Y~tce, are impressed with the lifestyle she livu with the Forresters. But the child~e:n are stunned by the Dvina cond1llons Ruthann dealt with while ahc wu on the atrcets. DAYS OF OUR UVES: Carly heads ror Bo'a 1nn1 after her 1uspicion abouc the switched IOYC notes is confirmed, Bo, knowina he's ab<nat to die, pushes carty away imisting he can't return the same sentimcntt, Victor is floored when Carly walks out on him after claiming she can't live with a dishonest man, After Victor admits he did indeed switch the nolea, Bo heads off to find the missing Emmy, Lcamina from Kayla that Bo it suffering from the ISA vitul, Kimberly realizet ahe will have lo follow up with her inveatigation of Lawrence . Following an araument with Jennifer, Jack is locked up by the rnanaaer of a wild west show who hu mistaken Jack for one of the show's performen, Frankie tells Eve it will be a Iona time before thef commit to 101DCthin1 u serious as marriage. Eve i• determined to make sure Jack doesn 't wind up wi1h her inheritance. GENERAL HOSPITAL: At Robert and Anna's weddina day approachca, Monica offers to hold the ceremony at the Quartermalne family'• country ealate, Anna's friends toss a wedding shower ror her and Robert's buddica enjoy a very hi&h apirited bachelor party with tile huaband-to-be. Anna. ever the wonywart, is pleuantly surprited when ahe and Robert finally 11y "l do." Dominique'• continued bedsin& &bout her lire with Leopold anpn Mac. em ii thrilled by the notion that hil pal problems will not a((cct hia present. and he liket the Idea or no. havint money. Bobbi and Tony dete.nnine that hidina Luc:u' parenta .. ohould not datroy their ch1nce1 for future hap= totethor. BJ .. Tony, and start plannin&: a life u a family. GUIDING UGllTI Al Daniel tell• Ed hll put II crystal clear, S1mantha beoomet diaturbed when •he IWll bellevln1 Daniel llUIY bllYO been held reapooaible for a ptticnt'• death. Daniel ii taken aback when Samantha u.es him a 1urprioe ~rlJ· He politely tello her ho doun t want her he.Ip -· cwt. Hamp h _, whoa bo _..., Gilly ii lllilll hill .. putatioo .. a former foolbaU playor to belp bor In a 11ua1 ... deal. Hart -to bellc¥e -· -*cf R<ieer'• -mont wllll Iha llWlndJlni cf lbe farm. W1&dllna A .. •aodn -...,. blttar, f'le.--her he -n·t not 11.opr'a -ID -,.., al o( her IOOd..... M""" . -Aloi ~ .,,. aotl ._ ..... --n. At CroM CnU, llillJ doddoo h'• -to -to ... Ml-Ml life. Alu.-Intl Mallet ara pleMM tlley - IOIWI Harley <NI o( tM piewn . LOVING1 Mu bwtt .. Pav! ID a ' mcctina, d1imin1 be'a Pns tf let him out of hil deallnp witli \iiO mob. At the wan:houM,~ Stevie handcuffs Mu and ~nge on Paul u 1be tetl a bomb. Mu ii able to p t hJI on a pn and be and Stevie each ~r. When Paul wounded Stevie puUo the llwitdo on the bomb. Paul It trapped ~r the debris rrom the ~'°'l ln the warehouse. Findin& tho injfjcd Paul, Ava rushes him to tbe hospital u Paul cllnp to Carly stuns her family JJ announcina her ek>pement .Wtb Oay. Trilha i;<u.... Oay - hive murdered Monty. Clay 111ure1 Carly lhat he bad abaolulcly nothl111 to do ;.i11i Monty'a murder .. ONE LIPE TO LIVE: AlthoUp Viki and Olnt ""' unde~ about Kevin'• attraction' to Stephanie, Carlo ii detennlne4 to keep the two youn1 people 1pert. Andy is pleased when Tony lnvft.ea her on a date. Lee ,\no, detennined to proYIO Rcncc k!lJed her mother, comet to the trial With a note from DuAnn that ..,,, •u anythina h1ppen1 to me, Re.nee la behind it." While Lee AIUI and Max yearn to be toaetbe.r, circunutancca of the trial' keep them •pan. Suapiciolll of Cltlo and Juha's auddcn friendabip. nuy want& to fmd out what ~re hiding. Dorian tells Ala tbe ny to keep Bo and Caaic apart Is to tell Cuaie that Alex is pre.put bJ Bo. Asa •&•in reauuru Mu: itbat- he will alwayti CIOnlider him hil aon. When Mu wants to atYO up all hc'1 been p..n by Ala. Q1ri1 tella him no one thou&bt he WM:, lrylng to rwlndlc the Buchanano, l SANTA llAJl.IAKA1 C!Ul realitcs the mluilcs are Finl to be used to destroy nellhbOrim: countriea. Pctenon, (earina crui knows too much, baa Cruz attacked, !hon takca him off &he case, Dieter orden Hll\I w~~·~ en.. up, but Cral1 am.a, ·; en.. and overpowen Hana. electrocute• Dieter but not ~to;,~ be activata the warhead. man-to deacllvato IL Allet1h adventure, Crv.z ls 1ti1ben he tieet "Suzanne.. on the bcKb. Flame 11 .. , r... roe ..., pan In Dlete(o death. Olna llllallt Muoo and CC.'a apeno. Spa11af a poup of men ~ to niif a youn1 -· Duh ....,. ~ help bu, but hu a llaabboclr. ::i bi reallzu bo did indeed npc JUiia. Amado contlnuea to punue katrfnL a THI YOUNG AND:-.l~· llU1'Ll8Sl When Scon q .. Lauren about the reuon wanted to -him. t..uren k -nol imponaaL Whea IOU. Sholla tlto bo-tidnopped La.Ina'• baby, A;iiial IOU. her -to ID David la byalorlcal -... bend .... «MM off -~*":'...!%:it:!.. ;Ji Dwrid to I 0 7 )1 ..... --""' --~---ID rell0p1M Ma. hlJ ruAUtlid ,,_WI Lfl• •ckimf, II ..... tlD •I lie Ml --ID OIMo. ... .._.. ID...., tbat perhpc Ryu, a • ......,.. II Jabot, will Victori1'1 1111n1loa f a _...,... Aollloy """ _,...,., Vlctorll nllll ID Ryan . ~~·Flex is back. So Ifu back to Flex!" OOME BACK 10 FLEX• SHAMPOO ANDOONDmONER AND SAVE 75C NOWl ... ~- 12.98*GaL I SAVE 19.oo.;.r::.. I WeatherAl11 Satinu•n • Giwe Enerior a Rich. Satin Phliah • Reli8tl W..tbet Yea Round • Reeistl Mildew • ffiab-Hidin, COYWq9 • RMllY·mmd oo&on 6 whJte eu.Om oo&on llllbd.1 ~ 1..111 1 800 9? .' OOf, ~ liliiliiiiliili (1·111·142·7112) 129J8--... a, ..... .... t:e. ._ ... •m• ··--..... , .. ••••• c ••• , •• TtMt•lnef provtdM ........ 2995 ........... , . HARDWARE -1114-llL DJ h a... ----..-Cit· t*iltlll\tDcu,_lnd cua...t -,, •• ,, Miff w: Checa In The Mal P.o n--llwllldlif. CA 81708 •• uua ,-. QICkS M.SOAVMJaf NEW1 llUSIBS ~ For I frll bfodM1 C.-• ...!..-4!!' ................. .. ....................... 2 SUMrvIBR CLEARANCE. )VJ.;.,, ,,,, /J..AaaL ..... 1#-.,., .. , .......... A,.,, ..... .... ........ _...,,. 4 79.99 Sale Flahe,..Prtce 3-ln-1 ll'llYel ~r Is a portable aleep'play/ changing area with foam mattress. Folds quickly and compact- ly for t111V91. Portacrlb sheet and carrying bag included. W:)RID SAVINGS. 12.99 Sakt Proctor..sAP 12-c:up cof'9em11ker has slim, sp8C&-98Vilg dnlgl, lcMp-hoC plate and dn~ free carafe. In whnt ~ Mt111 6 co 98 78'' helldr1lll lllld 78>c&4'' .J7• Mlf'cold --reg. 79.88 ... Oft II Kinch tlbM wr*-1 '** A4I zttble ~ ~--ooklra. H111l lll1: .~· ..... 14.tt•78" ..... 22At •104'~ .... .... -...: •42>114", 22At. K.24. 711c84", 17Al&44.11•104iac84", 11.Al&lt.ll .,.., ................... ac:r ..... 7.AI ? .•108", ..... .,.. ......... -. ......... .,,..., .. f1,..Aw..-t~ ,~ ...... ·, Home. 71Je part~· world wh6e pl!Ople '"'1w whm.)fJU're .Act miss you when you die and low you whmyou IJve ll.99 Each Igloo 8-qt. Barrel of Fun beY- _,. dlspet ... r has a swing- up handle.~ food tray. lglooS.eelde~ coolet' holds 18 12-oz. cans and has 8 remoY8b6e food tray. 14.99 Igloo 2&-qt. Picntc Balc9t cooler has Ultratherm Insula- tion and l'9mCMl.bte food tr8y. Large size to handle most family outfngs. Igloo Mfnl ... (not shown), .... 5.99 Igloo Uttle ~(not shown), .... 7.99 "5 Pldc =-....... , ......... .... ._M.lflc.~Dor$t*. ·---- I I .99 Each New at Targett Frito Lay canister snacks. Frttos, Doritos, more. Frito l.8y'a bagged chips, .89 each 2.99 Each, reg. 4.99 Insulated cooler. Holds 6 cans. Great for p1enics and summer fun 12-can cooler, reg 699, .. i. 4.99 ~-~~~.....,. 12.99100 ASA 5-pk. Kodak 135 24-exp. fltm. 5-pk. 200 ASA. 24-exp .. 14.99 Sook. 400 ASA. 24cp., 11.99 ~---9111~~-- 64-oz. OcMn Spniv. Cranberry, R9her Nute: 16-oz. dry roasted or cran-raspberry. cranapple or 12-oz. party peanuts, more. Cran-strawberry. 3-t>k. Orvtlae Redenb8cher microwave popping oom. 1inRsrY FOR SAVINGS? 3.29 Crystal Light in 12-qt. mix. Choose pink grapefruit, lemonade, lemon-lime or Iced tea. 24.99 Reg. 34.99 Coleman 54-qt ..... , coo6ef has steel behld 8'del, lid loddng l8ICh. 2 way handes, tood tray end drain. 2.99 e.g 1o-tb. Klngstont ctwcoM. It's what the proe U98. Slow bumfng for I grNt betbec:ue. .99 37\AJ-eq. ft.~ Wnlp ~ duty aluminum .