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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1991-06-11 - Orange Coast PilotGood Morning! lllli 1111•111 ...., Low cloud and fog clearing to hazy aflcmoon un~h1nc today Cltccpt only partial clearing near the beaches. West to southwe~t wind~ to 15 mph this afternoon. Highs ranging from the mid- 60s to the 70s. Lows in th e 50s. for more info rmation, including boating, fl hing and surfing, cc page A8. IN THE NEWSROOM With all the ruckus over the Newport Beach Library teeterina on the brink of checki!'f out more than one million titles this fiscal year, you may have missed the name of the book that put the public library ~tern into the record book ... The l millionth book wa "Mrs. Pollifu and the Whirling Dervish," a myitery novel by Dorothy Gilman ... School psychologist Joan Falconer checked out the lucky text Sunday at 1:53 p.m .... Falconer, unaware that the local library wa on o record-setting checkout pace this year, s~ud she wa JUSt looking for "something to read over the weekend" ... Ju t for the record, libr1ry clerk Jodi R1\lera checked out the millionlh book QUOTES Of THE DAY ''/t 'J not gomg to ~ ftm I'd not want 10 ~ trying IJ) gtt tither to tht fairgrounds or tu tlit amph1thtattr 011 any of thost nfghu " Costa Mesa City Manager Allan Roeder reacting to news 1hat Guns- 'N-Ro c will be performing at the Pacific Amphithca1rc during the annual county fair "Whtn ewrything ;,, bad it must be good to know tht ... 'O,,," Franci H. Bradley TODAY'S EVENTS •Orange Coast Colleic' guitar ensemble will eenorm at 8 p.m. in the colJege's Fine Ans Recnal Hall. Quest performer will be guitarist, composer, author and broadcaster John Schneider. Tickets arc $5 at the door. JUST ntE f ACTS •When and why did the chambers of commerce of Newport and Balboa merge to form the Orange County Harbor Arca Chamber of Commerce? 'J<>qJVH llod"':>N :llOWOJd Ol £?61 UJ • ,_ ...... nc.. ··~ 94 ~ --~ """' ~ M -i-. e eel 644 i1t1 ., ... ~-·44 \711 LO TT ERY INOEJC Bndae!IM Oauifled/BJ Comics/Bl Community f·orum/A7 C.O.-Ord/14 • tintcnainmcnt/M t toroscnpcJM Ann undcrs!A.S Sactcty/AS Spona/11 T'V liltln A6 WuthcrM ..... G,.., hMl11t1-.. IRC. ~hi 1991 ,.... • p1n °" ~d ...,., SU or P on 88 only _ e•s P8IR ICliaall 8111 I~ ta I' .. I .... I 111111111 and eliminated 42 peoonncl ~1tion . chool officials say the di 1ric1 cannot suf\livc more than another year of such drastic cuts without treading dlll)gcrously close to bankruptcy. fundin1 ruarantec , the Auembly rejected ·the mea ures. Proposition 98 mandates lhat ~O percent of the state budget must be spent on public education. 9y Run Loar °""" c.c Oetf Pllol Local educators were claimina victory Monday after Proposition 98 funding guarantees survived a threatened dismantlin1 in Sacramento. Still, school district budgets will be cut and school officials say there Is no clear solution to the education funding crisis. "tr you're asking whether any or our TV clients vow to tune out t~x plan By Robert Barker OIWlQI Coast Diiiy PilOI HUNTINGTON BEACH -Ang.ry TV subscribers, firefighters and others teed off on city officials Monday night in a podium-pounding, high-volume protest over plan by city officials to put• a 5 percen1 ta" on monthly cable TV bills. One re idcnt called it "an evil tax." Another likened 1t to lhe lea tall imposed by England that "helped to fan the Re"oluuonary War. ''l'm \.Cry glad that you proposed thi , " aid re 1dent Alvin Oelbaum "It' united the people. "We're not going to put up with these . tal(es any more," he stormed. "A rc~olution " gQina on in thi country." The fireworks 1g1inst the proposed tax came at a normally routine and usually ill-attended budgc1 work session. The council last week approved the first reading of 1he proposed hike. The formal vote of adoption Is slated next Monday. City Administrator Mike Uberuaga, who came in for the brunt of criticism along with City Council members, said the cable TV tax will rai c about $750,000 and enable the police and fire departments to escape budget cuts. But Fire Captain Bruce Spencer, whose firefightcr's a oci1tion i stalemated in contract talks with 1he city, ripped into Uberunga' premi c. "You let public safety department take the rap for taxe , " Spencer aid "You JU t1fy new taxes b)' telling people that public afety will be cut. "The Hun1ington Bench Firefighters Association doc n't like your tactics. It doc<i.n't hkc being the scapegoat. "We're not the reason for the cable TV tax. We're 1hc lea t e~pen!.i"e fire departm ent in the county." See CABLE~,_ layoffs will be reve rsed -the answer is no," said David Hagen, assi 1ant superintendent in the hard-p ressed Huntington Beach Union High School District. "We're going to be deficit pending 3Jain next year. All this will do is reduce the amoun1 of our deficit spending." The high o;chool district !.la hed $2.6 m1lhon from next chool year' budget "To not have Proposition 98 in place would have resulted m le s money two or three years down the road," said Huntington Beach Union Superintendent Larry Kemper. "But ii doesn't help us wi1h our immediate financial difficulties." Although the state Senate passed three bill Sunday that pro1cct Propos1t1on 98 AnlltllBr Cllllornil myth llllltlrtld • i " r.,...or..,.c .... ~ Noi Sharon and Sam Wright tra\leled all the way from Ramsey. New Jersey, in search of C.1hforn1a s fobl sun and instead found ;i typical overcast day in June. "Education i being made the highes& priority at 1his point," said state Sen Marian Bergeson (R-Ncwport Beach). "But educntion i~ still taking a real hit." Bcr&eson estimate1> public education ~pending will be cut by more than $1 billion, but she points out that social welfure programs will suffer the most See SCHOOLS.iWll* ,_ c.ert ..... as streets WI II By Bob van Eyken . OflllQt Coast ~ PllOI COSTA MESA -The mu ical volume Amphitheatre with the scheduling of a continue to e re ccndo at Pacifih third rock concert at 1he ame time a the Orange County Fair, which "111 be going on next door to the arena July 17-28. He•"> metal Gun)·.N'-Rose will perform along with Sk.1d Row on July 25, amph11hca1cr book.mg official ~id City official , re idcnts and Orange Count) Fair organiLC~ all hook 1heir heads at the ne" • which the aid prom1 e to add to a rapidly escalating traffic emergency: "It's not going to be fun," City Manaaer Allan Roeder said. "I'd not ~ant hl ht trying to get cit.Mr to the fairiround or to 1he amphitheater on any of thoie ni ht~ " Concert during lhc fair ha\IC been a ore memory for ctty officials and re 1dent 1ncc a 1987 engagement by the Beach Boys dunng the annual fair caused mas ive traffic tic up,s . · There hadn't been a concert scheduled during the fair ~ince 19 7, under what ome behc\.ed ~ns an unwritten under tanding thal the ~o type of event don't mix '-Cf)' weU on the city's treet But earlier this year, offlc1al at the ~edcrlnnder organ12at1on, which books concert for the amphitheater, broke with the four-year tradiuon by scheduling a concert by Gloria Estefan and tiasni Sound Machine on July 19. 1he first FnJay ni ht of the fair 'leii.t G.lme the boo~ing of cl ic rocker Joe Coc~cr on July :!3. And on Monday Nederlander off1c1als announced the book.mg of Gun ·'N'-Rose and lod Row . Residents to challenge eservolr proJect In court earby rc1,1dents such a Rusty and Lon Lu!ik 3id the boo~ing of concerts . during the fair wa another example of the ca\.aher at11tude the amphitheater' management ta~c: 1oward it!> neighbors. The Lu k and other 1n nearby neighborhood have fought the arena in court for years over concert noi .. e By Bob vtn Eyken Drlfl9I COlst Diiiy Piiot COSTA MESA -Opponents of a proposed 20-million-aallon uodcraround reservoir arc M:hedulcd to appear in Superior Court today to bcain their challenie to the prOJeCt, which they claim will di rupt lif c 1n their Ea t Co ta Mc a neighborhood Mesa Coni.ohdatcd Water District orrici:il hope to begin buildina the d1 trict\ ccond re cn.oir at the former Lindbergh chool 1te at 23rd S1rcet and Orange A"enue next eptcmber. The d1~11r1t1 has only half u day· upply of water 'toragc 1n 1t' cxi tmg re ervoir ne><I to ul\lnct headquortc"' ai 1965 Pia en11a A\.e . . tate water otficrnh recommend 1hat ~.Iler agenc1c\ k.eep SC\lcn da)\0 'upply in re. c~e n a hedge agam\I drnufthl M other emergency. fhc ne" facility "ould Jdd a day to the re ervc upply. nut ome nearby re,idcnts '·'~ the c'pccted ~o-ye01r con tru ct1on pcr1oJ "Ill inundate 1hcir the with nol\e, du"t and tr;affic:. Moreo"er, they ar•uc that the new See RESERVOIR/lie* ..... Out Nederlander poke man Alex Hodge aid the arena has no choice but to try to book major act when the group mak.e wing through Southern California He sud ad\.en.c pubhc1ty over lhe po1ent1al traffic problem had already C3U cd one ma1or production -a rock and rap re t1val featuring Jane' Add1ct1on -to choose Irvine Meadow er Pacific Amphi1heatre. CIRCULATION TOTALS 1.-.- ----.., NEWPORT BF.A.CH PUBLIC LIBRARY . , , . , . , , '· , \ . , . , 1. : 1 , \ 1 1, , "· 1 , 1 · , . · , • , 1 ,, 1 . : , 1 : 1 ·• • 1 , • 1, 1 , 1 1 • : 1. • -A 41-year-old former national champion dart thrower, who actively competes in regular tournament throughout the western United tate . ACROll M BOAmi---------- Among the sport's elite competitor since 1975, his accomplishments include the 1979 national ingle s championship, the 1979 National Cup doubles championship, the 1981 Western United States in glc championship. :md the 19 6 dart pentathlon cro.,.,n, which entitled him to repre. ent the U.S. internationally in tournament in Britain and Scotland. ln a)I, LaRue e timates he has won hundreds of titles during his competitive career. THENATURAL~-------~--- LaRue wa~ an All-Orange County basketball player 11 a senior at Co~ta Mesa's Estancia High in 1968. After picking up a dart at a Britbh pub, he quickly became serious about competing, nnd has since ventured abroad, a!I well as uch stateside locales • is Cincinnati, DaJla . Cleveland, L.1\ Vega , Tue on, Phoenix and various pots along the Ea t Coast, for tournaments. R.IGffT EXPERT----------- He has worked the pa t 15 year as a machine programmer for a Fountain Valley-ba!ied aero pace company, but Mill pends as much as four hour per da}. a many as four days a week, working to control the flight of hi\ darK A longtime Costa Me a re~1den1, he ha lhcd the past 17 year in Huntington Beach with h1~ wife Carol. . FlllJING M llW.SEYE-------- L3Rue said King Arthur's, a British pub 1n We tminster, is a hotbed for :irea competitor . while regular league competition 1s run at v:mou'i Orange County 1te by the L3guna Beach-ba ed Tri-County Dart Conference, and the Pac1f1c Dart A oc1ation. -81 Barry FauliMr Local News Briefs Huntington Beach man stabbed In Hemet lll:MlT A Huntington Beach man who wa vi iting his g1rlfnenc.J 1n 1 lcmet on unda} suffered everal tab wound) aft er allegcdl) mce11ng the '"oman''i c tranged hu band. tkc.1u'e the ,u,pcct 1~ !>till at large and po s1bly ditngerou • Hemet police refu,ed to give the victim') name or location An armed guard " po ted oubtde Jhe \ICl1m' ho p11al room, Hemet police 'a1c.J fhe 31 -y e<tr·old Huntington Beach man was tandin& outside an <tpartment comple'l communal pool with hi gi rlfriend about 10 15 p.m unday when the "'oman's hu band approached the pair, aid police detective Joe Nevarez. Without pro"ocation, and before any "'ord were C"<changed, the ~uspect simply pulled out a hunting knife ond repeatedly stabbed h11, wife ' boyfriend in the chest, obdomcn, arm and leg. Nevarez 'laid A Life Flight helicopter ru hed the v1c11m to an area ho p1t,1I where he wa., reported to be in <;tahlc condition The woman wa unhormcd nnd her c tranged hu<;band has not )'e t been found, Ncvarcl aid. ~ Wltnnl lhootl bank, auto theft IUIPICt . • • . . • • • • • • . • • • • LAGUNA NIGUEL -A man u~pccted of tcaling &in auto from a rental car company and then robbing a bank w.1s hot ond killed Monday by a w1tnc ~ to the bani.. he1 1, • uthortttC\ s:ud About I: 10 p.m .. a gunman wearing a motorcycle helmet tole ·' M\I ub1 ht Mirage from Budget Ren t-A-Ctr, 22251 Marguerite Parkwny, in Mi mn '{tcJO, i.a1d Orange County henff Lt Richard Olson About 15 minute~ later, the man, 'till wearing the helmet. robbed al gunpoint a Bank of Amenca branch at 2-'022 C.1lle de ''' Plata, behind the Laguna Hill' ~fall, Olson '>J1d. A w1tncs to the holdup follow_cd the r,obbcr into the bank parking lot, where the gu nman's stolen car wa~ parked nellt 10 the witne~ ' van, 01,on ~aid. The van owner took a handgun from h1 "chicle and confronted the bank robber. the hcutenant ~aid J he w1tne~ fired at lea t three round • fatally injuring the robber, Olson •n1J An invc11tigat1on wa continuing, but tt wa<1 not immediately known if the bank robber fired .rny ,hot .11 the w11ne • 01\0n ;iid. ~ S1 ••• flllil'll armt to 1111 111'11 111111 • • • f . • 1 • A r A ANA Good new in the form of more than Sl m1llton mined on the herifr, Department from Washinaton n c .. 'em1tor John Se)mour .1nnounccd Monday. The 1.13 .9 8 grant to the Sheriff\ Rca1onal Narcotic uppre!l11iun Pro mm wa' announced " part of SIO,, million packu e of federal fund11 &i~cn 10 com"lt drU& tr1ffick1n& In outhern hforn1a. ''If ~ou'rc in the bu'i1ne' of traffo.;luna in drua.\, hfc'a about to •ct .1 whole lot 1oug.hcr ror you." Seymour 1d The Resmnnl 1ucut1c' Supprc ion Pqram. rompnltd of 26 Or1n1c Cou nt~ law enforcement 1ascnc1a, WH formed in 1986 to pool the arcn·~ resource and coordinate crime fi1tttin1 New tundrn "''" reportedly M used to inc:rcasc tirpllnt. lnftl and prosecution of h11h·l~cl dru1 tr1ffickerJ 1nd mon.,ndlNrt ~ ow cltll 'cnllll •Ill•' w 1111tq11 BEll:tUT, ~banon -The No. 2 man in Britain's Foreign Office, Douglas Hogg. said Monday there were arounds for "careful optimism" about the release of Western hostages believed held by pro-Iranian Shiite extremists. Hogg, who arrived Sunday in Beirut, me.t for 4S minutes with Sunny Mann, wife of Briti'ih hostage Jack Mann. He also planned 10 meet with Shiite Muslim leader and Lebanese officials. The British official met with Mr~. Mann in a room with bulletproof windows at the consular section of the British Embassy in West Beirut's seaside residential district of Rouche. "There's no rca~n to say that we arc aoina to sec an early release and I don't want to give that impression," he said. "On the other hand I'm quite sure that a number of relevant governments arc now recognizing the importance of relea in& all hostages." Hogg said he wouJd strc · to the officials the importance of an early rclea e of all hostages, as it affects Lebanon's economic recovery from its 16 years of civil war. Lebanese officials have said the continued detention of hostages in Lebanon is making it hard to raise aid from Western countries. Your Name Here ... Jason Powers and Kylie Cooptr, hoth Sth graders at Roy 0. Andersen Elementary School in Newport Beach, ha' e recently won special honors. Jason has won the American Legion E ay Conte t, and Kylie the Orange County Pen and Quill Contest. . 0 Three Orange Con t College women recently "'on cholarship from Soroptimist Club lntcrnat1onal. Costa Me a re 1dent AIJison Paine received a $1,750 TAP (Training Award Program) Award; Tammy PrenJlss from Laguna Hill earned a $600 award; and Susan . Burtel&b from Huntington Beach received a $250 scholar hip. 0 Michael Meyer, manag1n1 partner tor Kenneth Leventhal & A sociates of Newport Beach, and the Tre11 urer of the Board of Directors for the Community Foundation of the Jewi h Federation of Orange County has been honored at the Foundation's May 1 Annual Donor Recognition Dinner. Meyer was selected by his board colleagues to receive the prestigious 1991 Endowment Achievement Award, bec;au e he has been in trumental in guiding the growth of the Foundation from a $1 million portfolio to it'~ current $5 million News of the Weird Dlclllllnl ......... 1 ... •••llCt •tber LUFKJN, Texas -Hilda Ru5sell's only trep1da11on about bringing home six abandoned kittens wa her 2-year·old female dachshund, named Sydney. "l tried keeping her away from them, but he JUSt got more curious." M . Russell said. ''She would lay down on her side like she wanted to nurse them." Sure enough, Sydney tarted lactating and ha been nursing the kittens for three week . Ms. Russell even brought home another abandoned litter, giving Sydney 11 kitten to nur'le. "What Sydney has experienced is a fal c pregnancy." aid veterinarian Craig Wood, who aid he had neve r seen a ca e hke it. . Polee chief 111111111111 hlmllll r. """' 1111 PINt:.LLAS PARK, Ha. -Police Chief David Milchan accidentally fired h1'1 h.1ntlgu11 in h1\ office la~t week, o he gave him ·elf the 'amc punl'hmcm he would gl\e any ot her officer - \Uc;penc;1on . Milchan ,1d .. nowlcdgcd the uccident wa lhc re ult of carele )) h:rndhng. 'o he '"'pended him,elf for t~o day without pay and will t:ili.c remcd1JI r1rct1rm\ trainmg Within 30 da~. "It\ a \CT)' c;afe gun 1f )OU u e it properly.'' aid Mitchan, poltce chief tor ,c,cn )C.tr,, • He ')•ml he "'a' ln.1d1ng hi ne\\. ~m11h & We son 9mm on May - .l 1 .ind Ca1leu to u ... c .1 ,afcty th;H 1 upposcd to be engaged No one "'" hurt. --- Pollce Log DETROIT -Aretha Franklin and Stevie Wonder una a_t Monday's funeral of former Temptations sinpr David Ruffin, whole drug death at age SO silenced one of Motown's leading vok:es. "We arc confronted with the most dcv11tatin1 llave owner of all Ume in this day," said Wonder. "More people arc killed by gang violence and drugs than in the War in Vietnam." Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan also pve an eulogy. in which he ur1ed youna black people to look beyond entertainers and sports stars in seeking role models. About 2,SOO people jammed into New Bethel Baptist Olurch and 1hou ands more pushed up against police barricades outaick. Plw IWkllll• lllb:ll 111111 • IPllllc WASHINGTON -A telephone company switching problem crippled a key air traffic control center for more than an hour Monday, dclayina airline traffic in the nation's capital and along much of the East Coast. More than half of radio ground frequencies and other communications channel were knocked out at the Walhington Air Route Traffic Control Center nt Lee burg, Va, the Federal Aviation Administration aid. 0 Ten graduating seniors from Orange County high schools will be presented the econd annual Orange County Centennial Scholarship awards at a 5 p.m. ceremony on May 8 at the Lo Angele Time Bu ilding. Among the 10 recipient arc: Bia~ M. Alban of Marina High School m Huntington Beach, who plan to attend Stanford Universit}. Win ton W. Chan1 of Untver ity High School. attending the University of Southern California; and Mau Gus of Laguna Beach High School, attending Harvard University. 0 Well-known Ncwpon Beach watercolor arti t Ruth Hynds wa recently comm1 ioned by Doug and David Sali~bury, co-owner of Newport Landing Re"itaurant and son of Jolly Roger Re taurant fou nder Arthur Sall bury, to create a painting of their father and the re taurant chain he begun in the 194~. This new acqui ition is an addition to the growing collection of Ruth Hynd originals nnd signed print purcha ed by the brother , four of whic h are currcntl} on dbplay at Newport Lnnding Restaurant .. ORANGE COAST llllJ!!! Editor's Hotline: 642-6086 Your CrKT'rnt'l\b •bnul IM 0.11.ly Pllol 0< n~ l•P' w~I ~ r"ordo-d and ~M'n d>fectly tn ld 10< W1lfwim l~ll IM Wmt' 2•·hour lnt.,..t'f• 1ng ~l' !Ny be uwd in r«t>td ~l~s tn 1ht- rdi10f on 1ny IOf>IC Cooc11bu1<'" to our ltllet• column mU\t 1Mludt tht-r !Wmt' and It~ numbfr ltlt ~" .iroon lht1 I\ ,.nur clltTlmun•ry 1-.p.1~ -w1n1 Vo1Jf 1,,...i1.-n1 Delivery 1uar.intee! If ~ dn notNYW ~r p.tpt'r by (, I ITI , clJI ~ 10 • m 11\d w-. II 1f1 11 to )'<JU by llUrll'I Out Cu<IOCMr S.~K.t' C.ntl"f 60·0Jl. k Opt"n rrom 6" m. to s pm WHl.d.tyt unttl 10 • m on -~•ods. 10 • .,. .. you woth your c•r• cut.tlon nttds. To make a corredion II Ii tlw Or.11nac CNst °"''Y Pilot t polt<y to pmmptt-, r011«1 111 trroo ol w°""nor To ,., port 1n tNOt rw ci.t11loe11000. pie• ulf 642· 4321 •nd "" IN the <•ty dnlt ......sww, c •nheiof\ (),lw(p o..14._... , ... ~.~1ioil lu..llC'llpl ......_Ml,.... tlw l..wWll .... ,. .. ~ f-.,.-'t ... 1 ".,.._..,, ,,...,..~~ OM•~ Tiw <>•op Ccwti ~·ly Ptlot CUPS 144·800! at puhl·~ d.lily l0t S5 25 pt"r lour v.ttk ~ind by (I m.-i •ublct1pt100 P per four• Wfflt pttood by ~I ti.v· P•~ Co.ii Mew Pul>l1.l\•n1 IM . J JO W ~y 5t Cn-11 .o.~ CA 92627 Stc:ond ~ s»ld 11 Coll• ~. CA POSTMl\STCll: ~nd Mldrftto cN"Sft 10 the ~·•r P.lot P o am 1 .w. Coqa ,,,... CA 92626 WPviiat>t No nf'W) ~"'· ht11t1li0n1o, rd1 1t:wl,l ri\lllt'f ttf ~ti1~nb ~n ,,..., bf r~~ w•lhcxlt ""~ollt'n ptr~ <ii ~rcownf• Ii"' ertt'1npr P\lbt..Mf tnt0t St~"· Jr Ch.I·•""" How to reach us at the Daily Pilot Circulation Orange County 642-'4333 Advertlsin1 Class1ned 642-5678 01~pl.iy 642-4321 Editorial ews 540-1224 Sporu 642-4330 Nf'W), poru ra~ 646-4170 Main Office 8u~10f''> orrrce 642-4J2 ~1 ~-~= 8u~1ne» fax 63 1-5902 Newport Beach urc 1ny1hln& ..., .. , t~lu:n, but nccdl.:• were llm>""n "111 ll\Ct," ~)ic \illtl, rcJ"1r1t u .11 9 I~ pm A run rcf'l\lf1 v.u no1 ,,11h11'11c M11nd1y A 1h1d ~mtt.hcd 1 window 11 PcdAI 1111\hCr I IS 2'r~ St . and took 1wu b"Y'k• worth 11 IOlill $•.llOO. 1nclud1n1 an 1u1hen1tc 1951 Schwinn Black Panther Cru1 er valued 11 Sl.060 • (~ IO $6,000 WOrth of !C""~lry WU I flllcn ff\lfn lift apulmtnl 1n 11\t 1800 blue\ of l61h trcct lf\11 may have been ldt wieh a hd1nl ''"' dclOf unklcllcd A~ tclc~ ·fYllnt wn "ok" frum •n cq111p-mcn1 roo.n •I •299 MacAttltur ll¥d , CMHtftt • lttHI• noa· phuM~ 10 11» clold • Two Jct Skf wa1fftnft .,.,. ICOIM oft 1 ""'°" • ~~od UI llft ............ itNduN Gii JM ltleM • H•atlnaton leach .. • l~u m~n rcf'l\•ttCJI)'. duked 11 out rn lhc p~rlun& k>t .it Mttrl!y P111k MlcYWrna an nr1umcn1 tl\'Cr • batllct· 1>11llpmt • A rc.'!lid nt ur th1rbour Breeze •P,arlmen11, 4'MI lktl AVI: , r.atd ll(""cone 11vc hia •1fc a ruun1crk1l SlO tun 11 1hc Ooldcn Wc.l CcJltc,c tw1p tnt'C1 • A btoftdc airl •bout 16 rc0Qr1edlv walked '" front ot p c.n at F.i:A""'tle ind PcafU' ~1rcc1 lftl ~ aft ~tllCM llMI the m11ht ~ lu «WMril • • • • A air 1n the 1400 l>kldc Uf H•ktt '" ct w11' hmtrcn tnto tic1wccn 9 p"' Tttctdv and 1 W • m Wodnet· d.1y 1 he l'llt', 1crcu, "alucd 111 00, w•" "nlcn • •·ountain Valley /I. bur•l•r "'"' Karcd off •1thilJ\ll ht k11Ut lul Tue • 11" •ft"rnoun "'hen the homcuwn"r returned 'fhc bttr lar VI• n the PfOt'CH ol 11CJ1111,1 propeny OUI• kk the home 11 17.3 P~er St wlte11 1M lk.."M· 1M't1 r r lurtted 11141 red tum otf • Som one •tole ahoul 16 600 worth ul p~m ''°"' • home on the 17770 bled ol S.n Cuflo Sucet o. the "'°'"'"'of J11ne • Eauy llt•o the hofM .. , .... tltroutf\ 1111 111tloctcd ~ :......._ door • A bvrat11 utecl a ~~·ta ttl ""':s.1 tM l7a bloct ;..... rfff·oa IM 1 .. '-AMI 9" 1 pQfi1'J .. ..... .. ................ ~· ...... old ...,.. CIDllell ............ I? ..... ,..., ..... ol~ ...... ''-' '1t to work in 1111r. 1181'°"9. All t~ have to do ii to be there to hand over the money whenever A ...... r el ··~ Hiii ..... Mao1 .,.......,. now dwelllll In ~ c:.., • -··· 10 ..... II ... IM 9!fl If r-. Al ....... Wt¥111 -.. ..... lap111 Dil1ld L ... a robber appeen (acnerally __ Local __ _ another c.oU•ae man.) (dall ol "50), OM. WUHtm L ...,.,.. 111C1 tillard J. O'Neill (both '41) 111d ,__, ~ Raben E. ladhana ('47.) A loc ol &hem weal bMI, thouah, and - desperai. IO m.U a IMftl -wounCI up bi the movie ........ I think everybody ouj!tt to have Scene a fine educ1tion, even 1f you c1n't •••••• make a livina 1t it. It's aood' to know th•• you know mon than the people that you have 10 ask ror jobs from. • IS THAT ON A MAP! -Adveni1in1 tycoon These inJP.irina words have been relayed here by Oordy Wcvlll of Bllboa Peninsul1, a member of the aradu1tin1 d1t1. Tfie cl1q was June of 1937 and the mesuae Eleuterio Benito Padilla of Newport BCICh w.a'I 100 imprHscd when he read that I'd vac1tioned recently at an upst1te outp05t called Los& Hills. Ir I really wanted to Ft lost. he said, I'd visit a property he JUlt acqu1red in San Luis Obispo COun1y. near Pi~mo Beach. He's building in 1 Tyson H llmich, 10, of C~ta Mesc'.I, and Andrew Lockerbie, 5, of Huntington Beach are both winners in the Youth E.-<po '91 Hellmich received gold medal honor~ for his 4-H 1unior. floriciulture exhibit and . Lockcrbic won his chool projects division for his pro1ect relating lo the youth fair's theme, "Butterflies. Rc<.'S ilnd Centipedes." Drug dealer sentenced to 30 years LOS ANGELES -A former Laguna Beach man wn en1enced Monday to 30 years in prison -a year for each of the 30 Jons of man1uana he was convicted of di11trabuting during a four-yenr pcrtod. Danie l Jame' Fowlie. Wh con~1c1cJ in federal court on April J9 of one counl of operating a continuing criminal enterprise, eight.. count of pos cs ion of m11r11ua.na with intent to di1,tribu1e, one coun1 or con.,pirncy to po ess munJu.Ana and unother count ot con,p1racy to defrnuJ lt\e United Sta IC\. f O\\.hC ul1,o 'Ml\ found guilty Of four ch.1rgc\ ol 1r.i n,por11ng (.urrcncy ou1 of the lln11cd Stale '"1thou1 f1hng required report'> Accord1n~ to pro ccuto r , rm\ he pad.;igcd. \IOrcJ Jnd old lhc mttraJuana from his ccluded 213-ncre ranch off Ortega H 1ghway in R1 .. cr,ide Counl). and from a ~cnci. of w:1rchou c 111 Orange Counly. ~·- pound of manJuana from his ranch before 1t wa raided b)' Ornngc C'ounl) hcnfr, deputie' on March I. 1985. During 1he sc.uch, dcpu11e found ~ 30·foot long undcr~mund compartment used 10 ~tore man111anu, \Cale-., nn clccl ron1c money counter ao ULi :"~null nlle .rnll bulle1proor vc ts. Arl~n aid. In 1983, ~~ seitcd a truck contnining SI million worth of m.nijunna from a warehou c r·owlic rented u\ing another name. I O"-llC fled ag.11n folio" mg the Fowlie lcfl for Holland after 1hc nml. th" 11mc to Mc'\:ico, nnJ \Ctzurc and set up an 011 trading con11nucJ to reap hundred of company u mg mone) ~athered in 1l11m,,1nd.., or dollu~vilLC.lrug profil\ h1 illegal drug bu 1nc'i , ,aid .ind commi"ion' generated ti\ i\tnn1 U.S Attorney Elnntt S in1roduc1 ng hio; fo rmer cu,tomcr... Ari oo. . 10 h1o; Mc\lc.m mnri1uana uppl1er, Fo\\he returned lu.:.1he United Ari on :>u1d. IJlecl and sold another t0.(100 • -8) Cit_r ."ffl tni<'t Legislature passes first piece of budget package 14-month-old boy drowns In lamlly pool A C RAMf:.NTO The Lcgi ... l.iture ha cnt Gov. Pelc Wil~on thi: fir t piece .of 1he tate budget punlc n hlll to ave $295 million I')) re lructunng c:ounty -courtc; "Thnt 1s the rir t piece of lcg1~lnt1on 1ha1 ha~ p.1,~cd both hou)t relating to the '91-'<>2 budget," ' cmhl) pcoker Willie Uwwn, 0 ~.an I r.1n~1 co, ,,ud M ond.1y. "C'onttratul,1uon' 'ou have 1;iken the f1N 1cp o" lei\ 1.1kc the cconJ," I he trial court bill, 01297 by A o;cmhl mnn Phil I enherg. """' 'cn1 to thl' go,crnor\ llC\k hy .1 57.t( A''cmbly \otc ll wu" appru' cd h\ 1 he cnatc J t ·I 'unday. I he bill mnkes m.1Jt'r ch:m •cs in 1hc court 'Y"lcm, t.irlmg with 1 ' 5rulh1 11 I t rnn,rcr of f undina rC'IJ)(ms1hilitH!' lrom counttc'I to 1hc 'tu1e 1 he 'h1ft "-OUIJ begin wi th a jump fron1 the current ncarl~ J7 pcrrcnt rundm to ~O r,crccn1 by July I. Over 1hc nc11t ft\iC ye r the s1111c·, "'" uc "'''ulJ n c to 70 rx:rccnt . Tu cr.•M: duplk11t1Cln, upcnor 1md munic1p.•I cnurls would be rcq111rcJ to prepare rnordu~111on plan' lo trcamhnc 1hcu 11Ct1,,111c" nd JaYC ~ rrctnl tn 1992·93, an addiuonal ~r ent 1n 1993·94 and an Mk11ttonal 7 percent 1n 199'·~. Judie: WU\tld be abl m hur ft'°"J taSC\ from llrl lo nnt h, ln1tcad of 11ehln1 them from one rourt 10 another •P mK1· proce In terms of fine • the bill would impose a uniform county pcn111tv n' c.i.smc n1 of S7 for each S 10 of " cnmmnl fine and allow counties to keep that amount for !heir co h The 1n1c penalty D\\C\\mcnt "ould chmb fro m S7 10 S IO for Cl1Ch SIO. Traffic violators who ure chg1blc and opl for traffic 'chuol -which kcc~ dnvma record clean - \\Ould ha\c to pJ) their full fine. c'11m:itcd 10 rul\e 86 million in I IJ') 1 ·IJ2. To boo 1 revenue, coun11e "ould be required to improve • collcct1o n o f unpaid fine,, ~n.1hico.; and bail furfci1urc<1 t..cnb..:rg. D .1crnmc nto, \aid the bill, c'um.11cd to sa\c S29.5 million 1n 1991 ·9: wn ,1 'omphc.1tcd compromio;c reached uhcr ' n long .ind h.ud ruocc,,, .. "We put· in 11 lot of reforms," ,,nd "''cmhly"o""'" Corol lknllc\, R-S.111 Ok~o ••w e're re.illy gorng to he .. blc to ,trcaml1nc the court '}'lcm, 'I h ·re 1rul) nre 'omc long·1crm .. 1rncturul rcltHlll'" Bui /\'i cmhl)nl•lll John Buntin, J).S,1n for.111d,,t,, 'aid the pcn. ltv .1 "C'"lnl'nl' .ire b<1n_R 1m·1ca' '' lt'!lt mul!h "It' lin,t ul it In incrc.1,c 011 the "hCflp;• he ' itl I\ ~inbt m. n I om McC ltnlo~l. R· I hou .tml 0 tu 1a1d IM b II ~-uuld ~ monC) for n fc-. ye n. thtn 't rt ~of111n1 the 1t11e up to S ()I nl!llK>n U )'CAI. ·'1llc late can '"' lii"'lft Mfold h(1rMcrm fi•e Whld COM• dcva lat1n1 conNC1UCMU.. M 1d (1ARDI N GROVl -A 14·month·uld ho) dro"ncJ 1n a b.id)Md pool here M onday after he nd h1 '· yc.lf·oltl brother managed 10 get th mu~h a mAC·\h1h lcncc into 1he pool area .. crgio V.1lcncia and hi' older brother h~Hl been ,1ut o( the hnu'c for .1~1u1 10 minutc'i when 1hc1r m<1thcr hcoard 1hc ulckr lxt) c.111 out, .ud rqhcc l 1. Chuck C11hh' \he r.1n oul\1Je onl\ to hnd 1hc 1oddkr llo.111ntt t. "" do" n 1n the fnm11\ flllC.'I. When roltcc rri\Cd. lhC) h und 1hc 1 ,,Idler ,!fetched out on 1 l.1tchen counter . uncun' iou' Ci1b1'' ' 1J. I he h.1hv \\," 1u,hcll 10 G.tr,lcn c..r\~c ho,r.11.il \\h1.•rc d, tof' worked h\t 'c; minule<1 lf) in• un~ut.:'c"'(ulh ht re' i .. c the .. tx1 Ser •au \ 411.:ni:-1.1 d1c\I 111\I h1; lc'rc 4 I~ ('I n&. 1 he hh' h11lc bo~' "" HIOP~> hl!!i been M:"Mdtdld for 1odrt~ l'he pohee lnvcn1gatinn u ............... -"' ·~ l'MllJ "'"" Thoupc I.hat Fount ) -You could\te boeUd • • awr with 1 h1th·ptt sure hem the <*r di)' .-a • ...,,,. lifa arrived from Bobbie and Oerry ·1 .... al fOUMaia VNley. It WU A ~r ..... l'fld ( 16 X 20 ID ) Colot pbolGpaph, hanchomely mounted of the lount1in pacU.1 the c11cr10r of 1ht to~11·a Cit) Hall. t And k was 1nM:rtbed ·The Jerry Kobrm I -If ~.,. ..... hOte•• ..... •lltllil about it! Mcmoraal fountfun." i HOiy water now. what'1t tht'I bll bout1! ' Aa CIW~ llCliwitl ... ... ubcl I phllantlwopk. Newport •1eh woman for her finuc:ill IUpport. A11 Mr . Samo' gu hc:J: ''Thi 1 belated f r~nitton n( >our tcusing Cl>lumn years a,o, I which in~p1m.J J·ountam ~allC:) 10 de ign and build I u fir<il Corm.ii founluin.'' i SIM Mid -•. was bU1J at the moment, but pve blm lier fu number. Send me a memo, ihe said, On ..... this is alt abaUt. Ne11 day he faxed her the •·memo" from hi office in 1 iocal educational in51itution. It covered :U pa1c • ingle·spaced. Aw mutk•., ma'm, It wa JUSt JOmethinl that '1 ccmcd funny 11 the time. lf anyone Should be honored. il' 1he pioneer v.ho di~O\ered your city's I man) well -a bubbling dude named Art Esaan. And "h.1t\ 1h1 al) 1urf ul\out a mcmonal 1 Ead of a~··· End u( dt1Clasmg f ;e, number to trangers. • • fo untain? I'm a "~'paper-reading junkie, bul mu~("e m1 eJ m) ob1tU:U). • WEU:OME TO I HE JlT SET (Or, ll'1 the Jerry Kobrin 'S' rol11mn run Tu~Jd.,, Tb11rl4ar and 'undaJ. t Rep. Dornan won't make ru~ • for Cranston's seat in Sena.te -By Cathenne Habel Cttt HeW5 StMit HOLL YWOOO -A veteran con'iervat1ve Orange County congrc~ man Monday bowed out of the race for 1he U S Senate cat being vaca ted by Democrat Alan Crao,ton and endorsed fcllo" Repu blican Bruce Her: chen\ohn Rep Robert K Dornan, R· Garden Gro,c, said he had decided no1 10 eek Cranston's scat because he has more work lO do a c1 member of the House's A1mcd Service Committee, the Select Committee on Intelligence and the Select Committee on Narcotics Abuse and Control. "Thi!. l!I not my )car."' he aid. "Thi is Bruce Herschen~hn ' )Car. I wa not be1n1 disingenuou over the last 1x month "hen I aid I was !lenously con idenng entering the Senate ra ce my elf." Doman sa1d he had "Ualked long and hard, for hours, with my cic· ploratory com mi nee," a group made up of hi friend and famil). Uhunatcl)._ he aid, "I truly did t . ' not want 10 1.1banllon· my work'· 1i.J the I IOU\e," t "fh1 is a dream trium\'iratc 'f a,~ignmcnh. · he added, "and nt1t 'omcthtne r c.ould ca •ly set :t\idd. I admit th.it m) .tmb1t1on doe n end 10 the 'Year of Bruq: lkr1,chcn~ohn · ,1hat I am lookint al '94 and otht'r thing) d~n th~ 1 • • me.:. ~ Dornan prai .. cd Ht'r" hen,.uhn, J1 m o d e r et t c con -. c rv a 1 h e a n ti tclc.,,i ion and radio commcntiAIOr. for h1~ "deep 1ntellcct and ea .. oncd ma1uri1v.'' Father and son robbed, threatened by gang l HUN.11 NG1 0 BEACH -A The robbers demanded 10 know father and son were robbed of where the family valuable' were. gold, Jewelry and ca h Monday When Ung refu cd to an wcr, the after a gang of young men broke -men began ransacking the hou e into their ~ylcr Ci rcle home and on the 8200 block of 1')'1cr Circle, threatened the son with death. McEr1ain aid It "'as JU t before 2 p.m. when As the gang of 1hug were rifling wmeonc knocked on coffee hop through Ung' belonging,, hi-; 21· manager Heng Ung· front door. year-old ~n. Suong Ung. walked Ung. 46, .1nswercd the door and in 1he front door. One intruder three or four Oriental men in 1heir grabbed Heng Un1. held a l.nifc lo earl)' 20 hur l in with weapons his throat, and ~Jd he'd kill Ung' drawn, 'iaid police LL Ed son unle 1hey were told where McErluin. the famLly's gold, jev.elry and ca h • was kept, McErla1n said • Heng Ung directed the robbers to 1he ,,,111oble-. :\n undctcrmincti amount of gold and 1ewelry were tolen, in add1t1on to two earner , a· .38 caliber m1th and We p re .. olver .utd Suong Ung'!I white 19 Mud;, RX'", ~cErlain 4'aid. • The th1c,cs "'ere la t ccn !.pccding a"a} ca t on Tyler in the Mazda, liceno;e numi')tr 2HL02o9, and a black -;chicle, McErlain au.S -Bt-th~ Oa1h Pil41 • • l ;:!OLENDALE. Calif. -It WU a snug home on a suect lined with palms, ju1t a half-hour from Clown1own Los Anacles at rush bour. The area was safe, the ~hools good. Evening breezes off ii(Jie Verdugo Mountains helped *make up for no air conditioning. Retirees Bo b and Mary Chapman had few regrets, though, · Jn leavina the 63-year-old tan stucco house with the big back yard and kitchen redone in solid cherry. They bought it for $40,000 in 1973, two real estate booms back. It fetched $368,000 in 1989 when the Chapmans cashed out of California and moved to Austin, Texas, near their two sons. ...... Ii~ ....... Chapmw' ~ :: Susan Ale••dlif-7-tar an 1,l~ .... In Aupat 1911. ~ --'die labor th•••tv.I. ...., If••• SJ0,000 ~I _... ............. and bath. They ........... ,.. of the hOull 11 ~ a., ..a Md lancbcapCd the outlidl They sold it last Sept.lllber for $370,000 and mcMNI -10 Tau. like the Chapmarw. Their new 3,200-squarc-foot house in a Ho usto n suburb i1 under construction. The $200,000 purchase price includes a country club ini1ia1ion fee. "We've got ii made. Or al least we think so," says AJcxander, 32, a First Interstate loan officer. ~ ................ '° the Clt•p•••' ...... Oii WMleraAwa•.W........., front brown .... t. "" "'4-A fallen 1laut1er •••011d a qu.dra• Of Wn2 .. Caliw p.laL Ala Armenian baaafsnM ,_.., bouah• lbe 1.200-....,..foae ..... for $323,000 aboul .... dim the <;:blpmarw told the"' .... • the boom bepn to So bust. Uftlble 10 ~ up peyments well over 12.000 per montll or to tell the houlc at an ecceptable price, they P\le it back to tbe bank lut month. Such repossessions are still rare, but many apcculaton were badly burned. Ken Leib was getting rich in pricey West Los Anaeles. He'd buy old houacs, rebuild them at twice their size and resell them, pocketin1 SS0,000 or more. -i ..... . ... la ,., .. E: ,~ 1#0 tlllh .. c-.r 41 ....., ,,.. • 41 ·•I!. ~ ,... .. ,. .. -..... #Mii JO 141 ti.. Ut ...... 111 111-.. ... c.... :it's:: :1 = =-.. =.,I~ ..... ,. 10111' -· • oii.c "36 'I= -= --Mii I 111GI ti .. IJlllt = • = II :t 11:: "•"·••aae • • •O Ml ltli-• ....... • llOI lilt• it 'NIM•"._ 111 llltll IN• It 1 HI -.._.U4 ... , .._It T1l• ............ "'"' ..... 7 .. 1 M4t-" "'-" II ,.,_ It • ._ --1• '"'" ....... c.... ,.._ • IO. Je • i. C-. ..... '° ............ ~ ,,, "15,. ... It .... ,. 11 ...... i- ,._.,1~ IJ*2 -.. " c...e. II• /lC,ffA IJIO I.,.,, __ ,,. ~I· .. 240 ,,., -c.... ltO ~ '1 10 IJ4H 14 -" C.S. ..,.... .>6 U •JO n.-_. C.C. HO ....... 1>0 14401• -~ .-...c;., ~ •lint 17" " c-Ii. Z:.1 112 IS :. 1~-7" = I Al&I 131 U1116 a61'-It C..Cii """""' uo 11 nn ~-. " ,,,... 20 ,,,_. _.. lS t77S 11to " " ~no 144>1 "~-.,, ~ .. • 1$1~ ••· it """°' ,, es., .... , .. .., 14 • " i..D• in •l ,, ii.. ., ... " ..... It .,, ~16-.. nu SI··• ..... 10 2'71Ut> ,._. 1111 u 20t2,. 1 • 16 "°""'1 IJO 11"' .O!t-1 11 >I• n-. "'-' lO It l>I lt1'• it '°' •1• u-.. "' ~ n '"• i. lf)I .. S4., HMWUO t ~ ~lit• t " 'OS ~-.. """""" "' 11 "' » • 911111 l61l• 111 ..._ IJ$ Ul04l 41'41• .. ~ 319 1~~ -·-· -7' 39-. ., tO ,. '001 11"-.. • • ~ ., '° 10 ,. "' nm• lh· ~ me. 1.n 12020 ,, ..... NII 144 101 .. ~ C,.S... ,.,_ 11 IW llil-41 -t-D • ....._, I 16 le al 2~-i. ..~ JO ll 170 ,, •• >t ,_..._ I l•Jdl 4&" • - Ai•t1 CC• S. 7' t -It ""M>o 10 I~ Oil 7N- ,,,.....,_ 9 119 M•· t """"• Ste $". "' ""'"""" 110 13 2.0 11~-" "-'to I to 1 11$4 1t14-4' Aol'OI I I 0 I 13' 311• • It a.\ I 1 '2 9 Jt9 ~' • ,.,,.... f0'3 '"' • -OOf I •4 II IJS 2~i>. • ITW n 10 lO?S 65"' • ~I 60 1S •II ll'•· t\ IM(M I JS.:110 ,..._ 011eGo. ~11 161•. IA Cl ~ .,_ •• 211 lllh 1111 o.,tld I •• IS I~ 1•~-• l'llCO I 9 111 » • 0.... > It IS•O sor,, 1111 ....... l.J7 IS UOI 4"•·'"' ~110 134 13 • 14 Wi$ Iii .oe 11111-141 Dlll4 I 11 t 1t4 ~ """" U IS 4 • !41 Oo.1C, I .0 11 11• 3S•\ ... 4.. 11 ttU 10'1-• .. ~ ~ ..__ .. ..., .... 240 " ,., ,._._ 111 Their new home, custom- designed, twice as big, brand-new, with central air and automatic sprinklers front and back, co t $199,000. They banked the profit. In moving to Texas, the Chapmans and Alexanden took advantage of some of the most de pres. ed home prices in a na1ional downtu rn in real estate values. Mt .. ~ HO 11 lOl4 121-. • 4' Then the market went dead in · ~ ... :J)O 1~· .. 1989 ,_... •v 1• 11 I,.. . Leib was stuck with four '"'v..<o •• 11 , 37'41-,, 0.., 10 711ln 11616• I .,.,. , .. U21C2 71"' 141 o.,...a, lo 11 llOS 46'A• " ... IM 10 4)9 21"· ._ Do... IO 11 JIS 4111-,. -1-1 - homes, which he wound up selling z:::: :,,2 1~4•1m ~:"_ , .. 11t big loaes. Now he's broke, ,._ 1 .o. 111s.1 •o•-"' struggling to rebuild the ~ '°' 11 ••h2l'----·-· - °""""' ~60 193131 ~· "' ,.,, 101111 ··~-" °"'"'°' 16 11 •OS 1"'· Ill "'*"' :19 1S9 11._., '-0-1 bO 19seo ''""· 111 ._ '° .,,.n 1~-.. " .,,.,, I 68 I• 061 44"'· -. s.;...,. 1 tO n llllf .. ,, ~.1 .. llllS2 ,,,.,... ~ l?t 11 ~·-· "Our biggest problem here is to keep the deer from eating our plant!>," says Chapman, a former oil cout for Atlantic Richfield Co. ''And we don't have earthquake an urance to buy." The fortunes of million of Californians arc renected in the Chapmans' experience. With development prawling into inland valleys and de ·erts 60 miles from urban centers, home doubled in price during a five -year boom in Bui California' market hit the skids, too. ale were slowing even as 1hc Glendale families left . If not so dramatically as in Texas or New England, prices till fell, and have yet to fully recover:. Tho e who bought early and sold at the peak wound up with windfalls. Tho e who bough! al the height of the frenzy often got burned. acc;>untin& practice he had w'"" 46 1l2t1l 2.-.. "' bd d W,MI .,. ... a an one . ...c.t 2 ro 1am ,.,,. • Leib says he knows many larger ~: ~; ~ := ~~: ~ developers who are in wor e ~ 1 ;io uw ,."'_ .., shape, in foreclosure after buving 1o-.u. 2 s.i • 1141 l6" • .. J ..._., I U II 261 ·~· 141 land and building houses they ._.... · 4 ., • lo\ II ...._ 74 llt•S• 32 -141 cannot se . ....,. H 2 tll5'3 .. ._. ~ AH that seems far away now for e.& , ,. 141'CS mt 1he Chapmans in their new Texas :;• 160 12 ;~ ~~: ~ home -2,800 square feet and two ltlf\Si!I 40 1~• m W•-'' ._..... u ll'QS I~· • o.-t• 1eoo 71141• ~ -... eo n ·~s 31'• -·-· --tt-• -l...C 2• 211S II • i. 11;-I,. 13 sin ., ..... l-• I 40 10 !C1 1.-._. U3 ~ le.Mo> 1 20 •ISi 42'' • tC.S.. I 01 14 I.. Sl't -'- 1-no 111914 5t1'1-h c...a 1 n •• '" 211-.. I""°" IO 16 402 13 .,_ " l4l"lll I U 10 1041 13"t• l'I UCO IS "6 4.,__ i. ,_. lte I) 11 19 • f""l(I I 3' 11 IW 41lt• ....... 211 10 f90 '6 1-2•S 11 Sil ~\t• .. ~IS2 ,, sn ., ·-( ....... G 20 t90 ,,_ ,....c; 1'6 111~ 94 • • 1......_ 1 » '071St 21"'-• ,..,.. I 40 It 13' Sh- l... '° IS •S6:1 ~-' t.,.. 111089 1111o-111 £.-261 11tSe2 SI • ' -L·L - -,_, -I.AC. ., m• '°" ' FM( 10 416 4l't• 141 Vt( t 71 1'40 1 •• " The misfortunes or the latter groop we re underlined this month slories compared with J,535 square ei.w 40 n o2010 15 ••• feet and one storv in California. -~ •.s. 2c •50 ~· "' IP\ C.. 140 I) 110 JO • 1 l$1" ,. 3'l ·-Al -!-.M 195 •• •Tv .Utt I - 'J ll!u<•f • 71 IOt» N 1""1 48 a 141 10 -, ~ 71 IH1'6 11 -~\ Last plague vaccine maker to Quit Ar' l-'W""'l(fl By James 0. Clifford The Associated Press BERKELEY, Calif. -Citing lack of business rather than residents' fears of "Black Death," the nation's only maker of anti-plague vaccine plans to quit production as $Oon as possible, a company spokesman said Monday. "We wanled to do it long before this happened," said R. J. "Bud" Modersbach of Miles/Cutter Biological, under fire from activists who arc upset becau c the lab where the vaccine is made hou cs the virus responsible for bubonic plague. The vaccine represents le s than I percent of the busine s of the privately-held company, said Modersbach. The biotech company has a $1.7 million contract with the Defense Department for 2.6 million doses of plague vaccine a year. "We told the Defense Department in Augusl or I 989 that we would like to halt production in three years and thcr, should look for a new source, ' said Modersbach. The department is the main purchaser of the vaccine . but anyone going overseas where there is a danger of plague can obtain it by prescription, said Moderbach. RJ Modersbach displays a bottle of bubonic plague vaccine at the GOmpany's BNkeley plant Monday M iles/Cutter Biological is the Oetcnse Department's only supplier of the vaccine. "I'd say this vaccine has saved hundreds, probably thousands, of lives since we started production 25 years ago," he said. "If I had a 'Plague Busters' shirt, I'd wear it." - Business Highlights NEW YORK -In one of tho e curio Illes thnt seems {>ecultar to the oil business, motori ts seem 10. be paying more and more for gasoline each week, even though omc dealer are paying le . Some wholesale gasoline price have gone down by as much as 10 cen1 a gallon since March. At 1hc New York Mercantile Exchange on Monday, unleaded ga oline for next-month delivery settled nt 63.50 cent a gallon, the lowest since the day after the ground war with Iraq began in February. Critics ay the major oil companies arc once again exploiting con umer bccau e summer driving en~on 1 here. Tho'>e in the industry say pnce~ arc set by upply and demand on a local ba i .. • NICOSIA, Cypru -Iraq's oil outpu1 has jumped 10 700,000 barrels a day and il expects repair to 11 war-dumllgcd indu 1ry to boQst produc1ion to I m1llton barrcl::J by year' end. according to the Middle East Economic Survey. Only a week ago. lrnqi officiab had 1ud the counlry wa producing 450,000 barrel. o day. • N ·w YORK l-cdcr,11 \ccut1t1c!i rcgulutor ha .. c CCU\Cd {I Ph1ltp Morri' co... cmplO)CC ttnd t\\() stockbroker' of u ing advance informa11on ·•lx>ut the ~ompanv'i. IQ 8 t.1lCO\Cr h1cl for Kr~ft Inc. 10 m.1ke 300,006 in illegal profit' • The civil (Omplaint Mond.1) alleged that Anlhony 1. Morelli, director ol hcadqu.1rtcrs .11 Phtltp Morm ofltcc11 in New York. learned 11bout 1he planned offer while conduclln 'iecurity check' of a Philip Morri oo;irdroom. • 1 \ A HI (.il ON Rep. John D 01ngcll, 'ch.1irman ol 1hc: Hou ·nergy and Commerce Committee , i" trying to derail the Bu~h admini tr.111on · .. pr po'itd b•mkina yMem O\lcrh1ul from rhe lcg1 t,1ti\.c fa,t 1r.1ck. Hou.,c S,,eakcr f hom.11 . Foley, D-Wa11h .. want' tu move n comprehen ive banking bill through 1he Hou~e before Congre rcce~e in early Augu t. A'suming 1he Hou e Banking Committee acts by early July a planned, that would leave Dingell'~ panel \\1th only a few weeki. to review the legislation ~ • WA HINGTON -The Internal Re\lenuc Service could collect nn additional $1 billion a year tn la'<e from corporation by u ing a program that has been ~ucccssful in deterring cheating by ind1v1dual , go,ernment auditor~ aid fh,11 c:ould be done at nn annual cos1 of $70 mrlhon. Rtt:hard L. l·ogcl of the General Accoun11ng Office, 10IJ a Hou c Governmenl Operation 'ubcomm1tJcc Mo11day . • NOIU OLK, Vu An elcctroni bus1nc5\ • nd the: couple th.It operate it have been charJcd with 'c:lltng coun1ertei1 parh thi.tt wen! to nucleur·po~ercd Navy war hips llnd commcrci1I nuclear rcacior A (cder1tl grand ju')' Monday accu\cd Stokley Entcrpri-.e, Inc. of Norfolk, William M. S1oklcy. 3Q, and hi4' wife, JAnct M. Stokley, 34, of hipping o .. anet ol 1:ounterfc1t electroni<" part\, suc h g circu11 brc.1kcr\, 1rnn'iformcrl! and sh1pb0ard cuntruller . • CINCINNA'l I -Leg1l fees are approachina $90 rn1llton 1n the 17 montha since Federated Department Store\ Inc. and Allied Stores Corp, filed for Ch11pter 11 bankruptcy pro1cction, a coun truttce \:Sid. "We've tned 10 control the fee ," Slid t>ankrupccy cm•rt trustee Conrad Moracnttem, expll\nina th11 the larac t retail bankruptcy fn U.S. hitrOry ha 1n .. of\ed numerous hours of work by anomeJS. 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"' 19 u 11.ll We1• ft I ... !t'l"H 19 J) ~ :J 11 N~ 17 )0 Ir 7t ~ ~ 4 •!llt " povl!d ~"" t !l4lft c '°'"' ~""°" "" l l ( • _., 1~ un i-'OO ,_. POuftd '"' u ll'G,....... w ... ,.,... "'...,.., OoW ,,,, '° 11-t,' "-...... ~ .- GMI •J1J 70 llVf., NY C-_,,.."'"' ,,.... MM..... UX>CO ••uoo -•• ~ ..... ... "'--' ,..._ ~ClralDll-.. Olll'll ....... At Ralic:llO de Diol. Anhur and om-8'rteh.r'1 ~ n Juan Capiatrano ranch. IUllb arc well cand for. The pectins 'mi cau ea 1u cua• really means IOIMlhiq there. It w11 certainly . the case Saturday as the SOuth Coast Community Clinic's Aulliliary hosted Baja la Luna Capillrano (Under the Capistrano Moon) at the gracious estate. The event benefited South Coast Community Clinic established in 1982 10 provide primary health services 10 persons unable to afford private care. It now serves over 10,000 Orange County residents yearly. Party goers were areeted with the sounds of mariachi music and the dazzling sight of swirling skirted folk dancers. Those donating $1.SOO t:xperienccd culture shock as they sterped through the leaded doors o the Birtcher's very French residence, Chateau Tranquille, for a special appreciation party. But then 1t was hack 10 the languorou musical garden for the Latin themed C\.ening Cuanto cl gu 10! Mucho! You couldn't help having lot of fun There was plenty of room for the 400 10 roam, enjoying the romantic ~urroundings and the friendly folks. Even the ~table wa open for m pection. Clearly, the pampered ponie enjoyed their surroundings. Robed in winners' ribbons, not even the t.ick room wns-rncky. Co-chairwomen Pamcln Turner and Ncllcnc Teubncr were th rilled with the suc:ccuful event. "Wt'I probably be able 10 contrlbalt ower SI0.000 to the clinic from 11111 ~.. pshed Tcubncr. bcncOtina a iood cauae, what makes this (St!O) ~nt a succm year after year? Said Prciidetlt Susan Matthews, "The warm1h al the valley atttacts the people, thlll aft$1 thc community spirit." Maybe' this year it w11 something else, too. La comcda? Bueno! The problem was deciding whal to cat. Cuisine/Cuisine, a major underwriter for the cvcnin1. provided a mind-bog1lln1 assortment of fiesta (arc. Fint came empanadas and taquitas and Portuguese crab cakes. Next there was a boat load (literally) or oysters, shucked and limed and tipsy in tequila. Buffets of cervichc and tortos shared plate5 with entrccs like tacos, duck tamalitos and peppe;r relished Sonoma style chateaubriand. Then, dauling the night, flame lit panniers or pastries, hoisted high by samba dancing servers made certain nobody mi ed the nine des~crts' debut. A live auction featuring a week long stay in a villa in Cancun and a lavi h topaz and gold ring rounded out the evening and the re tival finished to the laughter of the dancing guest including Betty and Robert Bond, Cindy and Bob Boragno, Nanette and Dennis Buccula, Linda and Kent Falk, Margaret and Kevin McMullen, Ruth and James Rothwell, Betty and Leon Sarian, JoAnn and Craig Thomas, Karen and Michael Vo s and Cynthia and Jame Williams. Kurt and Goldie hold off on wedding plans I.,OS ANGELES -Kurt Rus ell and Goldie Hawn arc once burned, twice hy when it come to marriage, but the subject docs come up, particularly in regard to their son. ''He doc n't under tand the concept of our not being married/' Ru ell aid of 4· yea r-old Wyatt. The couple has l1Ved together for year~ with three children in their homes in Colorado, Malibu nnd Pacific Pali~ade . "If Wyi11t were to have some ort of problem with it, that would be a rea~n for us to go down to the eounhou c and '">'· 'Marry u .'" Ru ell aid in un E:.n1crta1nmcnt Weekly inter iew puhh hcd th1 week . Ru ell Si!id the couple i "disinterc tcd" in marriage. although he call M1 Hawn "one of the most unique '-'Omen in the ~orld." The tldniiration 1 mutual. "I just love Ku rt so much. The guy doc n't have an ounce or (garbage) in him. And he's juo;t about the be t father Ood ever created," aid Mis Hawn, who got together with Russell after they tarred together in the movie "Swing Shirt." Still, their relationship "1lln't a fairyland," Ru ell said. "We get angry at each other, we trugglc over the kid . We arc very rpu ch like mo t ramilics," he aid. -BJ tbt Assocl•ttd Prr s Mindy Nelson and Liisa Lippincott Jo<' and Sheila Bu~h and Bob and Cind\ R<Jrilgno Reader blasts Ann for 'dangerous' advice Dear Ann Landers: Have you completely lo. t your mind? Your re pon c to ·•Matte r Over M 1 n d 1 n Ma sachu ett " was wronrr. wrong, WRONG! He couldn't stop thinking of hi. girlfriend's All • •••••• previous lovers, and you told him he houldn't be a:.king her about them in the first place. In lhill day and age of AIDS. anyone who 1s not a~king pro pcctive partner nbout previou liaisons is playing Ru ian roulette. Moreover, if the next gi rlfriend say~ it '' a "nunnv}crbilniL·lype que tl<ln," he hould not be 1rusted enough 10 become the next girlf ricnd. AIDS a idc, lasting relation hip require trust, hared value , opcnne and under tanding. Why ~ould you encourage people to withhold information and or lie about i sue that arc fundamental to determining compatibility? Had these two people never discu scd their previou sex live and gone blis fully on to marriage and family, they might have been happy. for a while, but I bet 11 ~ouldn't have la ted very long. Finally, "Matter Over Mind" says the problem with his ~irlfricnd i his fault and that he 1 all too willing to reinforce hi low self·e teem with accu a1ions of juvenile behavior. Isn't it po 1blc that "Molly" is a manipulat1"e witch who is working this guy over for her own purpose ? Couldn't 1t be that "Matter's" feeling of jcal· ou y arc really his intuition at work, trying to tell him something? Your lack of empathy for me n ha been obviou for many year . Wh en 11 merely result in man· bashing, that' one thing. Bui when it cloud your Judgment to the point of po ibly cndangcnng people's hve • pcrhap it' time to pack it in. -No Ann Fan in Virginia Dur No fan In Vlfllala: I hope by the time this ~ttu appears in print you will llate wfptd tile foam off your mouth and rqaint'd your composutt. ,. I have atwa)s bdknd and lla'e never htsitattd to say that •hta couples become serious they should tell one 1nocllu tile truth about pa I rtlatk>nship . BUT - and this I 1 bla one -chey should noc ghc the name and numbers of the prtvlou pll)Cr'S. There· I no good rt1_,on for a man or ~oman to ldtntlf) past lovtr . It lnuriabl) lud~ 10 trained rtlation and tot no u dul purpo t . fhl~ ha hc.-tn my po.sllion for man) )tar and I land b) it. Dear Ann Landers: h hu,l'ia nd 1 61 )Car' old and '-Cf) gpod· lool..1ng Harl) ha ... been b;iltl 'incc he "as 40 but hi baldnc'" ha'n •t hurt his look) a bit and he ""a never stlf-conscious about 1t. AbOut t~o months ago, Ha~ said, "Don't think I'm cru-.. but I'm gr~1ng hair " I looked. and urc enough. there were several little prout . There arc now many more sprouts and hi hair 1 indeed growing bacl. in. Friend are begging him for ht secret. He keep telling them that he i n't doing anything, but the) don't believe him. What" the explanation for the new growth? We can't figure it out. -Dayton Our Dayton: Dud hair lofliclft cannot M brouaht back 10 urc, but apparrntly, Hany's wertn't dtad. fhty ·were Just "rutina. •• \ccording to Dr. Paul Laur. at the • ational Dtrmatolo_, Foundation, this is 1 ran~ O<'curttntt, bu1 ~enl cau ha,-t bttn rtcordtd and It Is relattd to hormonal chan~ . So aow hb name nt . Letterman being sent to the minors? Males snore the most Male snorer outnumher female norcr hy W to one So 'J}'' a Dr. Aaro n Sher . He ', 1dent1fied a1; an "otolaryngoh t." You can figure out that one trom Q. \\ h,.t\ the mo t CC'lmmon 'urgic.al procedure in the nucd GREl::.NVILLE, S.C. David Letterman claim~ he can pitch a hulout inning for a profe1;sional ba eball team. Joke or not, the Greenville Brave want to give him the chance. barhcr this year, Letterman challenged any major league team to let him prove he could pitch The Brave , a minor league club, have orrcred Letterman a uniform, a field and a game for twfrl 10 pro'e h1 boa t, although they're till waiting for their parent cluh, the AtlJnU'I Bra\ie . to appro\.c Generul Manager Steve DcSal"o \tud the team mailed a proposal to Letterman' office in March. It even cnclmcd 1l Letterman· tylc top 10 liM 10 entice him, including No. I, ''NuboJy come out to cc thRt dilmn bm1 on)'morc, an)'ho~:· Letterman ha n't dcc1llccJ ho~ 10 rc,pond to the offer, said Ro,cm1ry Kccnun, •• spokeswoman for hi' how. • Nf~W YORK Kevin Costner hu goh of monc) and heaps of 11ccla1m followin& the pccu1c:ulu 'uccc of h1 film "Dance with Wolves.'' But how dtlcs he hke bcina a Bi1 Star? ••Are you k1ddln1?" Co.Iner replied. "l ~1~.1radc ll •II for 1nonyn11ty 11a1n. The actor said he couldn't think of any bcRcf111 lo me1a· Wdom. '1llole llunp dof'l't help you act up ht the mornina. .. Cottner said in Sunday' New York Times Mapiine. "Fame doein'l David Lcttcrm.ln help clear your mind. Fame doesn't tell )OU when )'OU'rc right or wrun~. I can't think of anything good that come' out of II " Then he added: "Let', mod1fv that. fherc·, not anything thal come' out nf 11 that I re.ill) need." C05tncr ,,,.d that the uccc ' of "Oancc" with Wotve •• .. did catch me hy urpme, the leap. the kind of quantum leap that occurred w11h the /."bli<'. Thing hll\C ch1n1c • and c:han1cd 1n wa t1'1t were d1ffl(ult to 1n1iclp'11e:• Cmtncr won the .,_.. • .., 0Jcu for 1'D1nc11 Wltll WoNt ,".1n wMdl M .. t.urcd. The film "'on even Acadcm) Award . including be t picture. Hi late t movie, "Robin Hood: Prince of Thieve .'' i being rclea cd b Warner Bro .... on Frida • NEWPORT, N.H. -Author M ichnel Dorm.. who won literaf) and medical uccla1m for hi novel "The Broken Cord," about how fetal Alct)hol yndrome affected h1' adopted Indian son, '·'> )Oung wntct need to be per.1,tcnt. "Get c'(penencc. ieep a notebook, and don't t kc rejection notice too '>CrH.lu,ly.'' he aid. Dorri'>, 4S. ~ '' honored · ttlUrday ~ith the Sarah Jo,epha Huie uward. g1"en to a New l.nal.ind writer for an entire body t1f work . It w nitmcd after the writer nd "'omen\ r1&hh .1ctM t who pcm1adcd President Lincoln to procloim a national 1 hank,givina Day in 1863 The· awiml, fir t ghcn to Robert l·ro\t, i' prc,ented h) the Oakcr Free Library in C"l'O"· Hale'~ homet~n. Dorris, who h\CS in the town of Corn1 h, wa\ rai~d on an Indian rc~ervati o n . He cullabouu.:d with h11> ~ 1fe. LllU11C &drich. th1 year 10 wr110 "The Crown of Columbus," 1 novel co••iuio•cd 10 mark ea ... -. •• clilaM.y ol the New World bf c111C1a111 ie from ,he ,..._.,_.,1aetw M ...... diner. Dnm encouraged a~pinng wnters to l.ccp trying. . "lt t.ikes yea~ and luck. Lou1~ and I were both out there in the lush pile for a long time," he 01d. • BRINKLEY. Ark -He' tcpped away from poht1c , and fo rmer Rep Tommy Robin~n 'J)' he'~ working h rdcr than e"cr. He ha callousc to prove 11 Robin\on, 49, now farms 7,000 acre in Monroe Counh, Q la k he U) rcqutre~ more dedication than any he' ever tMkcn on. "l' ... e nc,cr committed m) elf \O anything hkc this farming opcnillon," he uid. "l am "cry happy. I'm ha\'ina a good time and 1:m workin& harder than l'vo ever worked, but 1t' not aoin1 to hurt me ... AncJ ho doc n't mind a few c.allouse . ''It's worth it to me ~cautc l know in 2.S yc1n when thi farm i completely paid for, my • kid and 1randk~ arc aoina to have ome equity 1n 'Omcthin1." he said . Robint0n has planted 500 acre of rice and has plans for ~.800 acre or ~am . He har"e ted the last or 640 acre of wheat la t week ind id tii 300 acre of m1lo •-as thn ... 1ng RobinKln Krvtd i year '" Con1rc before m1k1R1 n \lnaucce ,ful run for the Repuhlt a.n 1uhcrnator11tl nom nation ln 1990 -•• tw totl•IH l9rT the "laf)n " part. L M. "'hat ? "'91 Undoubted!}. he ------- lnow \\-hat he\ talking 1\b\lut It '~ an hi,toric.11 la(t that General Robert . l cc had a pct hen he laid an egg unJcr h1o,; cot C\;cry d:iy. He lo,ctl that hc:n Liked C , 100 Th. I''-h(lV. II \\Ork You .. now how 'AC tend to drnp Je tte" off end of ~ord' 1n o\1r talk? '"\othin'." ''Oream1n'." "L1~ten1n'" There' n n.,mc for that practice: "Ar.ext pc." l'hat v.inc called h1anti traditionally contain both red •nd v.h1te. Valdo\ta State Collcae·~ annual, "The Pine Cone," had not alwa ~ ~IJ wcll So one year, 'tudcnt \tJte ? . Circumc1-.1on. In dcfinmg '"'°ml:, medico' no't\ dra"' .1 fin e di'lll t1on· If ~ou c~m 't go to .. 1cep, b v. 1 h you et1uld. th.11'' '"'om n1a II \OU cnn't go ((.) kcp. hul don'1 care, it\ !'0l in'>(lmnia. If \'OU look Jec pl) enough inh' the h1 t«mc11I record,, H>u can figure out JU t ho" Jame Shield in the mid· I (l(h came to be a cnator fir 1 trom lllinoic;, ncii.t from M1nnco,01a. then frnm ~11 '(luri. Fa't on hi' teet, that h1cld, H1,toni:al f<'t11notc'i sav 0 r Wilde on h1 death bed kx>lo.ed round the room nd 'aid. "Ei ther that "·'llJ'I per goes or I do " The ~allrapcr '>tuck. 1.1.•ording to tho..c "'ho treat hearing 1mpa1rment, 11' mNc important 10 talkin to a de t ptr\on to 'Jlelik lowly than loudl>- Q. What' "pH" "tanJ t<u? • "Potential Cir Hydrogen ·• editoD put v.hat WH left of their r:===========::::: budget into SI O and $20 bill . and in\Crtcd one or more o( same into the new book,, Quickly, around point or purcha • httlc kfl\lt'i of 'tudenr became h1g knot o( 'ltu~nt'i, It •• a sellout 1n houri, almo.t mmut . WIN FoUc>wta, the un1nttclp11ed succeu ol choir ''Threepenn1 Opera" in 1928, J...... .,,,,,.... '"Happ, EDd"° c-n~-· 75 ........ it .., ... -f--..Illcr.tolLll~ laod Kurt Weill !were urged into hUrriedly wri.ting M>ther musical, and financially, it twas an offer they Ralp• Funlcello'1 CRiii•• d1-lllllllL.lt ldul far mt111ima11t. or-e ltOr)'1 ... o.-IMk -IO fardt:al -unturned lft ~ cffort1 to --~ her audiellCIM llup ntber t* 1hink. Olli)' In !he overlolla .... by "Hallelujah ' Lii'' doc1 1ho - Slow IO I crawl -a deldeMJ more attributable to Brecht and Weill than to lhe splendid voice of P1tricia Ben Petanon. who plmys the Salvation Army cruuder. ' I I f I uldn't refuse. When the •resuh, "Happy End," was Theater Critic sCorncd by both playgoers and critics, Brecht vi rtually disowned the piece. Yet "l-lappy End " - following locally on 1he heels of a disap poin ting "Threepenny Opera" at another theater certainly is the more enjoyable of the two shows. The fact that "Happy End" is given a professional productio n Al Sou th Coast Repertory certainly mngnirics its effect, for the story itself is not one 19r the ages,-nor is its music particularly memorable, But director .Barbara Damashek has pulled ofit all the physical stops to give SCR audiences an outrageously hilarious Carce to wrap up the company's 19<>0·91 season. 0.rislopher Allport en1e11 the notorious g1ng le1der, and the object of her affection, with an intense snarl that seems 10 cancel out his physical appeal. But you'd snarl too if you were being upstaged by sucl'I a mol ley crew of social degenerates as those comprising his band of baddies. "Happy End" bea rs some resemblance to "Guys and Dolls" in its depiction of a romance between a thug and a Salvation Army lassie -until you realize that Demo n Runya n·s story inspiring thal mu sical wa~n·1 written unlil seve ral yea r~ afte rward (perhaps he stoic from Brec ht ). And in th is show, it's the soul save r who pursues the reticen1 gangster, not the ot her The most outrageous of the lot is Robert Machray, a portly comic who later dresses in drag (or a caper and convulses the audience with hi s grotesque affectations. David A. Pehnalc, Hal Landon Jr. and Jerome Buller all contribute energetically to the seedy atmos· phcre, but it is Ron Boussom - playing the type of menacing .Japanese character popular in America after 1941 -who leaves the biggest impression. Fran Bennett as their mysterious leader, "The Fly," nits in and out with ominous grace. Palricla Ben PeteMn in "Happy End " at South Coast Repertory support. Don Took's Keystonish cop is another hoot, vic1imizcd by the wealher outside in a broad running gag. Damashek can do with a ve hicle of questionable quality. · Eve n among these scene ry chewe rs, however, Marshall Bo rd en 's weak·stomach ed Salvation Army drummer is a •H andout. In relatively litt le stage time, Borden renders superb comic Don't try to ascert ain whBt it 's all about, at least not while watching the wacky shenanigans that comprise this outlandish exercise. This a classic example of what a cre ative director like "Happy End '' continues Tuesdays through ; Fridays at 8 p.m,, Saturdays at 2:30 and 8, Sundays at 2:30 and 7:30 until July 13 on · the main stage of South Coast Repertory, 655 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. Call 957·4033 for ticket information . Aussie TV series tries for success in America By Paul Alexander Tllr: Associltecl Press SYDNEY, Australia -Arc America ns so fed up with the bizarre plots and ovef"'·rought ac ling of trendy soap operas that rhcy·re ready for the more mundane problems of "Neighbors'"? Two U.S. televison statio ns arc ban king on it . The most successful se ries in Australian 1elcvisioo hi story. ''Neighbors" was Mild to stations KCOP·l ·v in Los Angeles and \VWO R-TV in Ne" York a~ a test run to sec 1f it can succeed in America. It alrcadv is seen hv an c~tin1 a1cd 46 million people cJ:uiy in 28 cOu ntric ... ltli ardent fans include Lady Diana and the Queen Mother. "ho arranged for 11 Ro)al Command Perform· .u1 cc hy the ca!>! in England 1n 1988. ··certainly. 1\mc rica does not have a series l1kl' 1 h1~ on the air." sa id Pc1cr Pinne. senior v1cr.: pre,1dcn1 of 1he "Neighbors·· production, con1pan) Grundy Worldwide 'fclevis1on. "'rhl· Arne ncan soap operas are heavily dra n1;111c. ·Neighbors' i!> more reali ty·based,'' Pinnc sa rd. "If s about ordinary middle·class families tha1 people can relate to better." ·rhe half·hour series, now in its seven1h yea r in Australia, has filmed 1.500 shows. Like U.S. daytime soa ps, it's seen five days a week, wi 1h fans tuning in for the daily trials and tribulations of three suburban families. ··11 ·s 1he small thin2s that matter," Pinne said. "They happen to Cveryone." He pointed to a typ ical story line or young next·door neighbors falling in love despile the animosity between their reuding parenl s. "That sort of thing happens everywhere," Pinnc said. He added "tha1 a l ittle light comedy is anothe r key ingredient "No other serial drama uses as many humClrous siluations as ~·e do, and we feel that punctuating the dramatic connicts with character comedy works very well," Pinne said. Reg Wa1son, the series· crealor. executive producer it nd writer, also cited the show's approach 1oward ils you thful cas t m.ernl)ers. "I believe the secrcl o ( our ucccss with 'Neighbors' is th:11 we write tec.n·ager· as aduhs and we allow then1 to communicate wilh adults on a mature le ve l.'' Watson s.aid . The series pre1niered in Los Angel!i on June 3. It will have a second premiere in New York on June 17. WWOR also has signei:L . up for co· production of 13 episodes of another Grundy effort, "Dangerous Women," a new one· hour series about six women wh o've jus1 been released from prison. The show also will appear in 13 other U.S. 1narkets. In ils U.S. 1est run, "Neighbors" slarls with il5 Cirst·ever episode. Assuming the series lasts in America, viewers will get to watch two you ng actors, Kylie ~1inogue and Jason Donovan, grow up as the show continues. 1'he two . stars used "Neighbors" as a launching pad Tor lhriving pop·music careers in Australia. The diminuti"e Minogue spawned a pixie·likc "Kylie" look , and female rans nocked to sec her during a recent concert tour. ' Pinnc s:1id Los Angeles and New York arc being used as test marke1 s, mu ch as Grundy launched the series "Prisoner: Cell Block H" scverrtl yea rs ago. . II "'On't hurt 1hat a progra1n frQm Australia · will be perceived as "a little bi1 or exotica'· "'ilhou l 'S ubtitles, Pinnc said. 1'he prograrn "'a~ 1cst·marketed in bot h c1tic~. with viewcr11 as ked wh eth er they ~·ould prefer 10 sec the original Au~lralian ver!>ion or the !lan1c plots with American ac1ors. ''All of the m chose the Australian progr:11n ove r the U.S. \'Crsion," Pin ne said. 'fhe adaptability of "Neighbors" is denmnstratcd by its far·Oung su pport It has spawned seven novels and consistently ranks in the top four programs in England. It also airs in Canada. France, Spain, liong Ko ng. Germany, It aly and 20 oth e r counlrics. Grundy, witl'I 15 production companies around the world, 1urns out about 50 hours of television programming each week. Luther Vandross shows his strength in his newest album, 'Power of Love ' TVll- • 7:00 7:30 ...... .....,.0 -· By Erle Snider St PntrlbllfV rnn POWER OF LOVE, Luthtr Vandross. Epic. Love songs tend to get short shri(t from critics. Most scribes 3re wowed by 1rcnchant social commentary, the grand p oe tic statcmen1, clever co upl e l s. But Luther Vandross is Vandross hArd to slough of(. During his IP0·1lJ.• 1••& 2 r ' • dccade·long ca reer, the silky· voiced si nger· haJl raistd the straightrorwa'l"d love song 10 a highe r art form. Judy Collin11 "looked at love from bo1h sides now;" Vandross ha s gone over it with a microscope. In an era when "Do Mc Baby" is passed off as a love ditt y, Vandross' unabashed romanticism brings some welcome war,mth 10 pop music. He plays 1he . desperate loser, the doormat, 1hc Dlissfu l suitor, the s1ead.f'as1 compiinion. Telk or sex is vei led in gentle metaphor. If Vandross' new albu1n has a unifying theme, it's hi s unshakable faith in love as an instit ution. And somet ime~ the relationships in Vandros ' songs are secondary to 1hat inslitution : '' 'Ca use sometimes lo'e 1s wonderful I But son1ctimes 11's only love.'' (~lull ii over for a n1on1cn1, ant! the lines ring true.) Qr C:OU f!IC, all of lhC~ viC'ft\ from the love i.copc "·ouldn"t :1moun1 10 a ~l hed rose if not for VandrQ.s~· 1"ran!>lucc n1ly wul(ul ~inging. At turns breathy, belting and 'mooth i... \\iilh a du1,ky. multi· hued 1c:..1urc -Vaoclro~s •~ one of pop's prc1nicrc vocal stylists. fECllCI ... AUil. •I lH ...... Alt you OW'ltloolctnl rftlldrnum .. COl.l'ltl ...,. your IMuNnc:t? The ,.,.... "*""* Ofoup ol Como perWlie hM • PfOCl'.m tor vou: • ""'¥ dll 0 ... tor ...... ..,..... ,.,...., ... . ·--·--.-...-1111 ····~==~·-• 5521 ti 2 IS ftlll 11 ., •. ,,. 441 Old ... lliwwmpas•I Bml ..1111.. No•i*•lld ~ CM----- • • • • • • • • • • ...... ....... '-.... --.......... ,udlbi .... ••"10ll~:ra. IJ1t1 we llllU la !he 10 David IAt-'1 11111 .. lote-alfhl TV, ... .,.....,.....,..,.lilll in our lives. So add lhoM 10 Ibo 1111 ol 11111. Whal do the critics like? Eleclronic Medi1 mapzine polls TV edilors and columni111 acf'Oll the nation a couple of times each year about which shows they like and which they despite. For the third straight poll, th~ 82 critics (myself included) . rated "Murphy Brown" (CBS) their fa\lorilc series. The rest of 1he Top 10: 2. "The SimpKtns" (Fo11:). 3. "L.A. Law" (NBC). 4. "Northern Exposure" (CBS). 5. "C~eers" (NBC). 6. "1hir1ysOmetl'ling" (ABC). 7. "The Wonder Years" (ABC) .. 8. "Law and Order" (20). 9. "Shannon's Deal" (NBC). 10. "Designing Wo n1en " (CBS). The critics' five worst shows in the Elec1ronic Media survey: MIWIBll- 1111111111'1 1111c11 · . MUOA CtNIMA 109 f 9'"""°'" 11...i1 67~-l$7D Cltb.., K-1. 9•1S IDWUOI NIWPOln CtNIMA 300 Ne..,.., ''""'' °"""6-<l•-0760 .. °"" .......... ""2. •JO. 7, •>O ' hcticl .... f"G) I 30. • 30. J,30, 10 IS l -...~m.M?!Rjl IS,l.lO. $•5,1, IO IOWAllOI IStAHD CWfl MA ''""'°" lo'-1, ,..__.. c-.. 0.111 1 I ....... (Rll 15,J J0,5 •S.8 1S,10l0 , no.i....' """"~ 12., JO, 5., JO, 10 3 PX 2 ll'O 13112:15, 1 JO.• •S. 1,' 15 • O..tr ... ~ (l'O \l) I •S, a, 6 lli, llO. "JO S 0...'t Tefl Mem {P'0.13) I, J1IS. S •5, I , 10 15 • Hue!-H.-.11 ~ 11 •5. 1 •S. • •S. • 4S, I •S. 10 JS 1 S..~Wo l"Q.13) 1, J $. 1 IS 9 20 UOO CINI.MA Nt_.i II.cl "' ~ Volov-673 mo ,,..,_'~!ill • .lO, 1. 9l0 '*OIT THIAftl 1905 f Coo•~ 673 6160 Oadclf He•taltlkl l"V'J 1. 9 IS Coltl Mal IDWAIOS CINI.MA CIHTll 110! 1W11ot &l.d _v.,.c-•tt•1•1 I Ont, the l-tr tl'O 131SIS,1'30. • 45 ' en, Sikh"" !PO tl) ~ lO. a. 10 JO 'J en, Slkt. ... (f'G llJ ,_'JO • o-'1 Tel Mem (PG IJI 6 IS, I XI. 10" IOW.UOI CtNIMA t1elloot N J ........ "'9 S•6· "" Whal"""' ... , i'G! 5 lO, •• 1010 HMIOI TWtH CINIMAI ~ ..... /( W...... S.-.4)1.JSOI I ......... (RIS.IS,l, IOlO 1 fMIHf'I ........ !ti s. , • ' . MUA CINI.MA ~ IMl/1 .... ~ 646·S01S ........ ,,,_.... IH/IJ ,, ' TOWN CINTll CfNIMAJ ~ C-"'°"" 15!. •11• I o..tf',._l-'YIP'G IJll,JIS,5 •5.8.101$ ' ..._. Altwt ._.,, r'GI I •5, 4, 6 IS, 1.30, "" 3 ......... r'GIJ)l.),$15,,,J0,,35 • hft"t Tell._, ll'G·l31 11IS.1 JO.• •S. 1. 9.1!> IOUTH COAST Pl.AU.~"'" ,111 '" ___ ...__,. ..... I. "lllllJ Tilt" fA!C). 1 "Ootld Orlet' ,<~~ ...!di "Top al '"!cl!:'~). 4. ~.T.H . Force" (CBS). $. ''Am•ric1'1 Funnies• People'" (ABC). Hore arc TV's "most-biued" lhowlt ICCOfdin& to the Medi1 Ro1e1rch Center in A lexan dria. V1 . The MRC's "moat·biued" shows this pul 1e110n ire: 1. "C.p11in Pl1ne1 ind 1hc Plane1een" (TBS), cited for "promotina fiction as fact, seeking to indoctrinale children ind scare· lhem into leftist polit~I 1ctMun." 2. "A Difrcrent World" (NBC), "CO\ICred a \l&ricty of political issues ... always promo1ing a left.win& agenda." 3. "L.A. Law" (NBC and Lifetime), "take1 its plotS from the headlines and applie·! a liberal spin.'' 4. "Absolute Stranger5" (n:iade·ror·CBS movie), about a husband seeking an abortion to save his comatose wife's Ure, "whitewashed" political tics to the pro·abortion mO\lement while "pro-lifers were dcpic1cd as cold·hearted zealots." 1 ......... (1.1.5:1.5,1.10-lO 2.n.....a ...-..~s.1.JO.IO :t. °'t" ..._,. IP'G·IJ) 4 JO, 1, 9 30 JOUTM CO.UT VM.lACM ~ .. Mttol 5~ 059• . I ......, ........ fNllll S •5.8. 10 15 1 OllMfo 11-. ll'GI s. ,130. 10 l ......... CMM.......,.."S.1.f lw.ll ... B11c11 IOWMOI OUinP C'"'9I 7112 w-//we 1•1-0710 I o..t, TM l-'Y (l'G 1315 IS, 7.JO, 9 •S 1 ......... "-61 113•.1.10 l 0, ........ rc;.IJJ •JO. 1, t lO ' ----... , IPQj 6 lS.llO. 10)(1 ~ ~ • l-"-!'JS IS. 145. 10 IS IOWAl'OS HUNTINOTOH TMH ll.54J -St ... .,.. 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I. 10 2 C.., llkil.,.. IPG IJ]' •S. 7 t lO ----.j ... .. Pubffilwd by Page Croup Publishin&, Inc. Bliat Stein, Jr., <:hairman Jim Gre11lnpr, publisher WllltaM S. lobdell, editOt & vice president Stew Marble, rNnaging editor W1flu ..,...., 1901-1989, founding publisher Editorial C.'t • iba r8C8111an fli• IOP ol Capltol • Sure, there' a recession, but if you think things are rough all over, you haven't been to Capitol Hill lately, where the era of high income, growth and full employment never ends. Never mind that the rcce sion has·lastcd longer, and been more severe, than many analysts predicted. Never mind that for 11 straight months American businesses have lost more JOhs than they have created. Congre ' live in a bubble. ln their little world congrcs\men arc happily removed from the unplea ant realitie of reces ion. The crowning Irony is that they are largely re. pon 1blc for the downlurn, thanks to ruinously high ta.~at1on, profligate spending, and inept tinkering with the productive energ1e of the people they arc meant to serve. Con idcr it few fact .' In I 960, Congres employed 6, 791 support taffer -cooks, mail carrieN>. travel agents. Last year, the figure was 19,371. This includes committee staff, which has more than tripled m the l<t~t 30 years. All told, Congress' 535 member. employ 37,38H staff members, 14,000 more than 10 years ago. But that, apparently, isn't enough. Congressmen like to create perso!J&l fiefdoms, until they are surrounded like pharaoh wtth coat-holders and door-openers. This year, Sen. Claiborne Pell. chairman of the Foreign Relation Committee, tncrca ed h1 commiuce' spending 17 percent ~ he could hire eight new taffers in addition to the 59 hi commlltee already employs. Funding incrca c '"ere sought from committee to committee: 34 percent more for the Senate Banking Committee, 37 percent for the Indian Affai" committee, and so on. ln the Hou e, report the Heritage Foundation, the only committee that didn't enjoy mcrea ed funding were Eth1~ and lntelhgence -too bad, since Capitol Hill 1s experiencing a hortagc of both. Thec.c huge rnm. further their bo~e,· political careers by writing pccch~ , handling constituent complaints ~ind indirectly tashio ning re-election <.itratcgies. They can be well-paid; 1l'' not uncommon fo r a senator'c; pcech writer to make $60,000 a year. A the above c;uggcsts, Congrcc;s' bubble is a lu h, vcrdttnt idyll. We recommend that it be defoliated as o..oon ,1, possible, Toiay In History foJay i~ fue\Jay, June 11 . the 162nd d.t) of 19<)1. There arc ~03 da)l1i left in the )Car. Toda)' Hlghllght In Ill tor): On June 11. 1770, Caplain Jame Cool>., commander of the Brill h hip cndC;t\OUr, dl'ICO\Cfed the Great Bamcr Reef off u\traha b) running onto 11 On this datt: In 1 ~09. l:.ngland' King Henry VJll morned Catherine of Aragon In 1776, the Continental Congrc formed a committee to draft a l)eclnr1.111on nf Independence Crom Bntni n ln 1859, n pro-ipcctor laid claim to a 1lvcr tlcpo ... it an Six Mile Can)On m Nevada, a claim that later turned out to be the mult1mallion-dollar Comll tock Lode. ln 197 , Jo cph hecman Jr. tiecamc the first blnclo. to be ord;uned a pnc-;t in the Church of Jcsu Chmt of Latter-Dav • .11nts Today's Birthday : Broadca\t JOurnnh\l Lawrence p1vnk I\ t}l. Manne h1olog1)t Jacque C'ou te.iu " , I. Opcr.1 mgcr Ri c Stevens ic; 78. Author Wilham Styron " 66 ctor Gene Wilder 1<, 57. Actor Ch.i d f\crett 1~ 54. Former ll\\to rJccr Jackie i)tcwart i~ 52. Actrcs' Adrienne Barbeau " 46. J-oothall qunrtcrbi.lck Joe Montana 1 35 _ .. ,,,,.~ .• Bay Sclutl: A private organization By C.R. Roberts Mcc.llr .... SeMct To earn his Bobcat Badge -the fir t 1n a cries of several honors available to a Cub Scout - a boy must fulfill the seven requirements or the Bobcat Trail. Along the trail he will learn unity, patriou m, loyalty and obedience. Let me suggest another requirement. File it under the heading of elf-righteous hyp<>en\y. An aspiring Bobcat must learn the Cub Scout salute, the hand hake, the motto and the Cub Scout sign. He must tell what the ecret cout·word "Wcbelo " means and he must know the Law of the Pack. He must learn and say the Cub Scout Promise. Let me suggest that every Bobcat learn also how to spell and define the words "religious bigotry.'' Perhaps you saw the 9-year-old Randall twin , Willia1n and Michael , in tear , on tcle\is1on. A court of appeal ha~ ruled th at .they mny be barred from member hip in Cub Scout Pack .519, in Anaheim Hill . Willi.-im and Michael Randall aren't \urc 1f they heheve in God. The) rcfu ed. a\ a matter of .:on!tticncc, to recite the Cub Scout Prom1 e It goc hke th1 : "I prom1 e to do my best to do my dut) to God and my country, to help other people, and to obc) the Law of the Pack." So I will imagine that the Cub Scout God i very plel\ ed to know that Hi omnipotence remain un ulhed by the threat of children who will not acknowledge H1 pre encc The God of my heart, I think, would have sho"'n the ·e bo)' ome tolerance. But the Cub Scout God dem1nd nn oath of allegiance. "The Cub Scout Promi e 1 central to Cub Scouting," say Blake Lcv.1~. the national spol-.e man for the Boy Scouts of America. "(The Randall twin ) "'ould not say that they had a belief and a duty to God. It 's un all-or-nothing proposition. "We have alwa)'S believed thnt a\ a private· membership organiunion, "'c ha\.e the right to mainuun standard for member hip." The Randall twins 1mpl) do not meet 1ho c stand· ard ... The) ha\le the effrontery -or the wi dom - to admit at age 9 that they aren't quite urc about the exi,tencc or God Show1n~ d1 re pect -of perhap courage 1hev ha"c challenged an American ln'lt1tu11on .tt 11 mo t ba,ac foundation "A~ )OUng people ore grov. ing up,'' Lewis ll) • "lhC) arc loolo.ing for \3luec;. couung 1 a v.onderful opportunity 10 prn\1de a certain c,ct of value,. 'I he Pmm1 .. c define\ \\hnt the organ11ation "all Jbout," l oolo.ing tor a loophole 1n 1h1' dcfinat1on, I a kcd I c"'" about llmdu., Alc1n2 the \\ olf frail, which follow the Bobcat Trail, a Cub Scout may earn the emblem of his religion. A Cithohc m•> earn the Pavuh De1 award, a Jew may earn the Aleph, a Protestant may earn the God and Mc. A Hindu may earn the Dharma. • But Hindu ha\.c man) god So how can a Hindu Cub Scout promi e a duty to God" The Boy Scout of America do not define or interpret God,' Lewis \d)'>. 'We're \/CF)', \Cl) broad in the uc,e of the word 'God · "We a<ik a reverent commitment to J religion and a God. For us to interpret God "'ould be 1nappropm11e. H1ndu1sm ha 11\ ov.:n unique com1>9ncnts. We're concerned about the belief components ... I have tried recently 10 remember baclo. lo my own d R)' as a Cub Scout. I have tried lo recall my own behef component'>, when I wa 9. And ult hough l may have had all the right an\wcr,, n.1ck then, I'm not \Ure that I h..id a!>lt.Cd the . nsht que,tions. The que\tiun'i, for me. came later Only tlic n could I begin to understand word~ hlt.c lruth, hnnor. bchcf, and dutv. Oddly enough. I \land with the po'it1nn of the Boy Scout of America .1ga1n t the Rand.ill,. The Boy coul\ of Amcnca 1s a private organiLat1un, and th1 l'I America, and pn'llatc organiw11on' ha'c the nght to he a bigoted a' me.an, and a\ clo,cd .., the~ pica c I mil} not choose to upport them -through united \Va). for in\tance -but I v.ould defend their right 10 CXI l, Such an organitation might, v.ath 1t' Ja undice and hale . chooo;c to bar member~ who were blind, or Bapt1 t. or left-handed. ~uch a group m1 hl choose to protect Itself agatn!>l Latino , ~cpubhcan . or Luthcr•tns. To be free, we mU'1t rc\ef'\.c the right to be 'itupid. To en ure liberty for all , the pnvatc few must be able to remain captive of h)'f><.>CTIS) anJ prCJUdicc. Blake Lcw1o; tells me about the ideab behind a Cub cout'~ pledge to God He cxpl.iin5 the prom1 e lO mertca made by the 5 malhun people aligned w11h coutmg toda) To allow the them Rand<ill t"'Hl a place m Pack 51 Q v.ould be. he a>'· "a dl\\C"1ce 10 tho~e "'ho ha'c m.lde a commitment to the'e ideal'" ''I hO\C ctrC the thing' S~outing )!land' for," he 'a>'· Ir )OU \hare them, then v.:c in\lllc )OU to get 10\0hcd If not. that\ o" It .. our pQ\lt1on th31 that'' what mal-.es our count" 'o dl\cr'e f hat"• whnt mnlt.e\ Amcrii:a whal 11 " hxi t1r H1' Amcnc.i. pcrh.1p' · Hut not mine. hlttor\ 11ott.· /he fol/1ming .uc ' 1mpfc., o/ C)r;JnRf Co"'' On/I) l'llot n:.1Ja' · c11mmc11" .wd l rit" ""'' \\ /11/c l'tlot c<lttol\ 11 ckllml' om/ fl'11c/ .ill t.'ommc:nt' "-l' 11 1/1 unh puh/t'ih 1c:,pome~ /111m 1:allf" ''he' IC'.in· ,) nJmc (plC'.1!!<.' 'f>dl it ''"' J. cm "nd plm11c numl,t•r ( 11>1 1<'flfic.1t1t111) l ct'' !!Cl him hl'1..'~ 11n the d t) council. [. onlv '""h t 'null! \\lie for him 'J hank 't'Ull Dangerous road \ e,. I \\O\lld hlt.c hl "~" wmc !>.ind ol .1 \\,If n1n~ ... ,ucd l\l the \'otl ,·,in i:l'f /II\()/\ t,•,/ /l,1 {'.llltng the F..clitor\ H11tl1nt.' ut f!J1 fi{)\fl 1 h.111A. wu: 0 All lliOUt Orv In 1k'fc1 , 111 Or' \mt-urge "'ouhl hke to .... ,\ th.it no one h," ,1,,ne more 'l~ tor Cc1,t.1 Mc' th, ll \\h,11 01' h ' llUn\. Gt:.ORul' I ORPf-\'ll I F. l\'c\\ port l3c I\ h 'lJ In rcg.ird' tu the •• and th1' " in quote , "l.ilc"t .Hl\cnturc' l>r Or\lll C 1\mbur .c\.' II '' my op11rn.m th.at am tine. lrom the 0 .11lv Pilot ''r cit\ ~o-.crnmcnt n"c' n • form of .1pcllol.!'f to t\mburgc~. In t.1~t . 0f'1lk ,.\mhur > O\\C., ,1n •'l"llO V to the tit Ill n' ol Clhl,1 Mc .1 for "'Hin• on .1n l'"uc in '"" w \ rr,\m ~hu;h he: h.lll lrcnd· g:u"ncJ hn.mc1.1ll~. ,\ to \\hO'C 'hould .. 1" II 'h<'l11tl lull un. 11 'hould I 111 thrc tlv on Mr t\mhu1 C}·, 'h11ul"~•' ''" th.it "~" ,,amc rc.1,011, i he m.1J1H1l\ ol HHCf' "hn tk1:1lkd l'IJ!.llll!>t him J1J lllll h,1._ tlw11 ti •1:1!llOn' 1111 1nnucn1h,~s .ind m1,·!>l.i1cm ·n1' rclutcd "' th•' p.irtKul.1r c:1 , ( an"oh 1ng C"onk~ Colon\ 11hk) ·1 hev \Ot~ 11, 1 f cl. ,1 •.11n't him h ~.111~c he nc\\; r m\; t ,,, '·'"' ,, nltlJ\lf hu1Jd1n rHIJC l th .II he d 1ln'1 hkc. 1\11,1, lllO\I ,,, \IS HC tuc1I t'f the m 1jtlr cw" th tr (John) ~hcrHiu,, keep up lhc ' J v.ork '' ur c rtt 1"!> tlfc 111 c t and to the point, and the 1hou1h1 of Mr Amhurgc cttin Mr. Ola.,-• "Vacated ~l*t 'tnd!'I huncn thmu h uur entire h1m1I~ We need IOIMbod)' wlkt hn the roncenu di the cu11en~ of C\.ist;\ Mc ••he..,.l1per ~ lltOMl'SO • HAlt.STON wta Mc dll\er' an thl ""'"'fXlfl lf'llll llCJ uhoul the h 111ah ~11 the nc\\.I\ ,;pcncd on r<alllf' from l nl\:Cl,lt): ~cuni; "'c'I -"hen \\lll mal..c u lch turn un111 ~1.ll \nhur 0 11 r.1111~. then di1cctl) ''"th\: .,, tr~C\\ 1-. I here·, '' n therl' thllt \\.tfn' the Omer" to lo\., tn 15 mph, hut <'\I J lfl'I tl'~Jh rt.lhl( V. h.ll In extreme!) light · ·turn ~1,11 mu't m.1i.c hl 't•" 111 \1111r O\\ n lane und ~t;i~ out nl the " \ ell the un\;um111g 1 n111~ com1n~ l'" Moct\nhur. !ricnd nf nunc v..h on lh.11 fur the hr'l tune hxl I\ tnJ •,11 lfl 1n ,,l 1dcnt a.ml puliec ,,1 11~ '' \\ho .m t\CiJ ' ad thnt "' ai J uh < urrcncc nt that me 'f?CH ind 11' n \ery poorh engine red m J ,11\d "h•I" the' ~c1 c 1hcrc 1.1lkin to m\ fncn<l . anl,thcr nc~1dcnl ( CllffCU ,1t the C\ Id ,an!(' '()Ill, rou It Ii SACRAMENTO -0.. -the Qipitol's many apt.ori1m ii IMi the state Legislature cu'I ¥DM om the budget until the IC rarun in Sacramento reaches 100 degree . Well , the mercury hit the ccntur) mark Sunday. and the Leg1~laturc began \Oting on the budget, or at lea't on piece of a complex, still· developing package ;11med at bridging a $14 blllion·plus gap between .. ••111 Capitol Politics projected income and expenditure for the fiscal year that ts to begin July 1. As expected, things went moothly 1n the state Senate on a chool-financing package that Gov. Pete Wilson had workeq out "'ith legi lative leaders. Not· so in the Asscmblv, where the ideological range is wider and true belie\cr dri\e policies of both panic . The air wa ~ hot m 1dc the Ac;sembl)' chambers Sunday as out!>1de: liberals and con~rvat111c fou nd rea on to di!.like the education-financing rl'\C3 ure\, and the) were rejected b) wide margins. "I'm encouraged by the progrc\ in the Senate,'' Wal on \aid curtly afte r the vole11 'Td like to "ee·1he A'lc,emhly be .,1m1larly re,pon"hle ,rnd get hot, Mart mo' 1nK We re lo,1n2 monc) e\ery da> that the> deh)" \\11 on, \\hO h3d earlier called for mo re than S:? billion m chool .,pending reduction • relented and agreed to gi''C 'chool d1 tnct\ at lca't a much as they "ere entitled to rccei'e under Proposition 9 , enacted hy \Oter in 19 The hatllc m the embl re,umed Monday. and the internal poht1eal conflict remained heated a the v.eathcr. The man on the holle t <,Cat i\ Republican le 1dcr R Johnson, who e hold on hi\ po atmn i '>hak) at bc\t, John~on ha attcmpteil to placate anti-ta~ risht-wingcr wathm hi\ c~ucu'i \\athout breaking "Ith \\al~. w.ho hno; angered con c~<1t1\C by propo!>in ne. rly 7 h1lliun an nc-w ta\e' It\ a ..tchc.ttc bal.1ncing act for Johnt;{m, \\ho'e ov.n \Out .lie' with the con\el'\'ati\.c\ It' fa hiunable in the Capitol lo la) blame tor dc:la) mg the tiu tgc1 ' o I d o n t h c t\ ' e m h I) Rcpuhhcan,, "'hll can cuntrnl the out~omc bcc<1u'c ul the l~'n't1tut1~1nal requirement lor tt IWO·lhard\ \Ole 1 he "tuat1on. ho"' e'er. " a bit more complc\ than th.11. 1 o Capitol in 1dcr . the m t important thing '' v.hether a hudget 1 pa\SCd by cert am d. te . Aml clearly. the governor and the . Lcg1 l.1ture ha\e J legal, a "'ell :t' moro;il, obligation to move » rap1dlv .. , they can But the Ct)ntent of that budget al o i' important lt'!I c pecially 1mporlilnt that th1' budget not be another cut-.ind pa;,tc JOb, that 11 addre''· .ind, 11 po'"ble, rc~l\C the ha~IC ;inomJht' in C.i hfornhl fi cal J)\lhC) \\ 11,on hcg.tn the f'lrOCe'<i U\ I~ ::ul\\X,llc t'f <\UCh ~rmancnC), tif hnnginlil ha~chnc ·rc,enuc" nd b.hehnc c\pcnd1ture., into b.ll. n'c \O that he and the Le 1 I 1tu1e don't face -.1m1lar cn1." c ch 'car. • ,\1; nc ot1at ions h,n e 'trcti:hcJ into month .... oowe,cr. 11 seem" ;,, 11 me u( w.1 ... ,,n· ,1,1rch1nc" ha' d1's1patcd H1\ 1btlut•face un educational finance, h1" ~1lhngnc t<' tllf' an to puhla pen'• n fund' \0 fman,c the extra ~h ll moncv, and h1' coldang of the A" emhly for del1w. 1mph: thll ending the fHUCC\ u bcco mina m o re 1mpor1iint tu \\111 .. nn, and th Ian I product le'' 1mponant. ,\~ l1re,omc a' their b1,kenn1 ~ ma be tn W1l\on, 1he media nd the· lurgc.•r puhlic, the Rcpublice con!'CtV'.tt1\c' and the Ocmocrtt hhcrnl" ore 1mpl)108 tllat tht '' uc at \t:t~c 1n this budget llC more 1mporti.nt than rchn1n impatience. Cc. mpronu 1 a fine pohticil principle, 1t 1t mean~ coming t gr I» Wr1th ltfom1a's undcrty1 h I conn1e1 . It', tcmble 1( rruducc another upedic 0'hud1ct" band on crea• bookkeepena and robbi"f'Peter r• ·Paul financina. Thal a ... So' into th IMll. • ( Cl tt f1 d ( C• II g s n ii ii [ ti c y I t New Moon June 12 lftt.Md: Mo1tly fair !Mtt huy with hl1hl In the ttpper 10• to low 'JOI. lows itl 1M low to "'Id· SOI. Movntaint· 'utly doudy ~' the $0Ulh· trn rangu Jn the afternoon and evening today. 1st. Otr. June 19 ........ .... ...... .... ··~ =-= ., .. ...... w .......... ,. TOOAY'SSUN Sunrise: 5:50 a.m. Sunset: 8:05 p.m. 0 () Full Moon June 27 Last Otr. July 5 OCEANR BOATING &Afll ............. .... .......... , ... , ....... ,. ... _ .. ...._. ... .... J ..... FISHING Glelt ,.... -........ "' ~ ............. _..... .... ................. TIDES Courts may rehear boating accident case By Cathy Franklin City News SeMCe LOS ANGELES -The U.S. Navy could win a reversal of a judge's order that it pay $2 million to the heirs and survivors of a Huntington Harbour boating accident in which r. .. e people died, a lawyer said Monday. The 91h U.S. Ci rcuit Court of Appeals last week quesiioned a judge's finding that the Navy was partially responsible for the Oct. 27, 1984, crash in which the pleasure boat Whiskey Runner hit an unligh ted buoy in a channel at the U.S. Naval Weapons Siution in Seal Beach. Five people died 1n lhe crash and four others urvived. including Virl Earles, who was piloting the craft and who:>.e blood alcohol level was found that night to be .11 -slighily above the legal limil at the time of .10 In 1he 19 8 decision. U.S. Dil>trict Judge James ldcman found Earles and the federal government equally negligent and ordered the government to pay $2 2 million in damage-;, including $148,770 10 Earles to compen• .. tte him for his mJuries. A key argumcnl an the case wa that the Navy failed Ill maintain lightl> 011 the harbor buoys and had aoandoned .1 program 10 educate recreational boaters about th e ob\tacle'> in the 1.1.ater, said attorney Mark . Wenzel , who represented Marlene and Richard Sulton, the parents or one of those kiUed in the crnsh. In the ruling last Thursday, a majority of the JU tices questioned whether ldeman was correct in refusing to grant the federal government immunity from pro ecution under the "discretionary !unction excepuon" to the codes relating to maritime claims. "On remand, the district court must resolve the quei;iion whether the Navy could properly rely on' the Coast Guard's decision to illuminate or otherwise mark only 27 of the 1,436 mooring buoys in Southern California ... and whether that decision was a discretionary act based on policy considerations that would preclude recovery." Ju~iice Harry Prcgerson dissented, writing that "the government ha failed 10 show that it failure to light the mooring buoy was a 'decision' al all." Wenzel !>Rid that Earle's damage award would be wiped out if the judge finds in favor of the govern ment. Wenzel did not know when Jdeman will consider the i sue. Earles, who recently lost an appeal on his man laughter convic tion , has served eight months on a three·year prison sentence. 23rd Anniversary PARTY. WEDNESDAY, ~ • JUNE 12th "" 1991 VOTED NUMBER ONE IN BOTH BEER 8t BAR CATEGORIES IN 0 .C . BY THE L.A. TIMES CRITICS 8c READERS POLL JANUARY,, 1991 I hei·c ar·e bars and .then there are BARBI However, Goat HUJ Tavern .s ,-;r 111 ln a class all by ltself. Should you ever venture "COSTA AMAZ- ! N' ; " way, treat yourself to a Visit to Goat Hill Tavern. Better yet, plan u.n entire vacat.1on around ltl~ I • 48 IMPORT BEERS • 24 MICROBREWS • ZEB O'IREENS IRISH ALE •SATELLITE SPORTS• 10 TV SETS• PINBALL-VIDEO GAMES • POOL TABLES • FOOSBALL • SBUFtLEBOllD • DART BOARDS *MEET IN PERSON· RID STAR GIRLS 5 ~°m' * EXTRA GOLD GIRLS 1 ~m' * FINNISH p~ .GIRLS '° ~r:., ~ ~, ~....,~ ~ . 0#"~~<6~ -..~ ~-··~·~~ .. ~\'; DRAWINGS HJILD •o~' '9G\>'11l;p-~"<t 8 :001 9:00 & 10100 P.M. ~ ~~" ""'..-~ ~ To Honor Our Loyal Custotners, we wtll 1 be drawing for 23 gift cert1f1cat.es worth $23 each toward dinner at these local restaurants: (KlNDLY TIP FOR THE TOTAL AMOUNT) BARN STEAKHOUSE G 1JO Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa 641-9777 PASTA MESA 212 E 17th St. Costa Mesa 642-7488 SCAMPI 1576 Newport Blvd. Costa Mesa 645·8560 1830 NEWPORT BLVD.• COSTA MESA. 141-1421 CPD •• ft • • • • .. ---·· .... j i .8. IP JI. J2. 9 'I.!. "Q. Q 1&11111· ....... 7) Jt AMMr-. ........ tt:a .. ........ n.:-78 4J ..... ,, " g:r: ,_. ,. " ~ " Jt c ........... 7J " .,...f, """" ~ ,, ,. 0..-. . o.w-i 11 SJ Oft-Olllltte 17 SJ ,~ .. ,..,..... 97 7) """"""" ........ " H ........ ==°" 7' s• ~· .. SJ IC<M\Ut Clly ............. tOl '7 l.tt\I~· Wlut 67 50 llfttt ""' .... ..._... 9J SS M•"'"'l' S..Dl9p '1 '° ,...... Yef\ °'J'.,, .... ,,__. 72 so O.LIMM•C ........ IS S7 o.....i.~ ...... Ma n '° ~ s-... " •• ........ ta ......... ., '2 l'lwti-t.O.. .,....."'Y .. u .... C'tly . 6S .., t) .. .. .. 70 .. • u .. st .. " 7J SJ " 6J .. ., .. " " 71 ll " ll n 1oi 10 77 " .. .. " " '1 ,, " H ... " .,, " I) " . " S) ......... ........... ......, ..... l°"41M M .. 14 MftlcoClly ..... .._ T..,. • • u H 71 " IJ 15 M H 46 " .. ,, ., 14 .. 9J ., .. u ., 7J II 71 IJ S7 .. S4 14 SS II SS .. « u n 77 71 BaliJ boomars ain't b8blas no more By Tim Bovee l!" Auoclltld firm WASHINGTON In the past decade, baby boomers began to take command of the country - moving into the front offices, political post and leadership positions vacated by their retiring parents. The torch was being passed once again to a new generation, just· as surely in the 1990s as when President Kennedy used the phrn ·e in his 1961 inaugural addre". But this generation is huge. An AP <rnalysis of 1990 cen<;U data found tha1 b:iby boomers - tho·c born between 1946 and 1965 -nnw make up nearly one·third of Amcnc3' 248.7 million people. The baby boom ha often been de cnbed :l a pig moving 1hrough .1 snake, an enormou bulge in the popu lation. Simply bccau, c of it i.1ze,· the generation has had phcnomcftftl impact on American ociety. It' al'lo one or the mo t studied, analyzed, self·conscious and watched-over generations in h1Mory. The marketplace is looking now to sec what boomers will want as they ugc -the youngest of them became adults in the 1980 and the oldc'it !\rr now middle-aged. "Busine\ses for yea rs have been focu ing <m young adults," said Oleryl Rusell, author of "100 Pred1c11on for 1he Baby Boom." SCHOOLS From A1 dramauc funding cul<,. fhc survival of Propo'>lllon Q 1s a v1ctnr) for the 15,000 Orange County 1e11chcr.. l>tuden1 and purenl:>. who rnllicd '" dcfen~ or 1he propo 111on at Orange Coast College Inst month. Political ob'lervcn ay the governor dropped tm fight to CABLE From A1 Spencer 111a1d 11 major problem with dc1eraora11ng city finances i., th:it genernl fund {daily opcrnt1on ) money -to the tune of SS7 million. he 5aid -has been diverted 10 the redevelopment agency. "Believe it or not, there's no plan, no chedule to pay back the From A.1 Penan .. ula r e 1dent and bus1neupeople. "We're 1n a drou1h1 and they want a lawn in frunt or City Half." "I'm aoina to remember them when 11 comet time for re· election," uid Charle Rus~ll. owner of Chuck's Barber Shop. The City Hall lot was torn out and replaced with lawn '' part of the Newport Boulevard widcnlna pro;ect ·ro replace the 46 parking 'pace removed from the front lot. the city created 34 additional public space on 32n~ Street and Villa Way and freed up 12 employee parluna tpac:c1 on 1hc sidi of Caty Hall. But mcrthant1 on 32nd Street claim the plan hin ruined bu1inc . Mocorith "•th lona·tcrm parluna permits m•ny ot them employee of nearby tni inc tell - "They think young adults spend the most money. They're wrong. The middle-aged spend the molit money." Lot of baby. boomers 11rc now having cluldren of their O\\ n -the number of kids under age 5 was 14 percent higher in 1990 than a decade earlier. And thn1, 100. i having 11n impact. "With so many parenls oul there, it will have an eff ec1 on about everything we do," Ru l>ell suid "I think thnl'~ why the nation has become so con ervntive la1ely -anti-drug, anti-drunken-driving. All the e people arc concerned for the health and safety of their children.'' That' also likely to change national pending palterns, Ru ell says Fane dining with a big t:ib will be out, relaxed, inexpen ive ea1ing at placc'i 1hat serve kid~ will he in, \\Omen''! clothing 'tore will be le~ rrofitable, kids clothing siore wil take: oft. The entry of the baby boom into ndulthood meant n large group of Americans left the year of lcnrning and began working. "Before, they were takers. Now, they're givers," uid Martha f;imsworth Riche, a <>ociolog1st with the Population Reference Bureau, a Washington re cnrch group. "We hould be entering a IO·to 20-year highly productive period ror our economy." Several experts think the baby 'u~pcnd Propo 1t1on 9 SaturdJy 10 get tailed budge! nego1ia11on' b.ick o n trac k . Wii son Administration officials e timatc that for every dJy the Lcg1 lature fail~ to approve J budget. 1he \late lo ·cl> S 11 m1ll1on. The !>urv1val of Prop<> 1t1on funding guarantees will have almo t no eHect on the Newport· Me!.3 Unified School Di trict budget, occording to di tra ct official . Bccau e of the orca" money.'' he ~rnid . C11y ·tnffers u1d the typical cu:>.tomcr of .Paraaon Cable, which serves 43,000 customers 1n the city, will pay nn average $ J.45 extra each month 1( the tax •~ approved. They aid that the local ba 1c rate chmbcd 92 percent 'lince deregulation m 1984 The monthly bill climbed from S 12 50 to $23 95 an that time. who u'cd 10 par._ Ill !he C11y Htll front lot c1re now lca ... ing their cars on 32nd trcct :ill day, leavina no room for potential customcrli. The lack u( parking hu driven cu tomer away from the barber ~hop .. , nuil hop lind clothina hop' on 32nd Street, cuttina bu~1nc.,,. 11 much a~ SO percent, mcrchc1nt~ complained. In rc11ponse 10 merchant · pica~. the council •arced to con ider rcpltlcina the front lot. Out on Monday. coun cil member trounctd the idea. "I'm re•llY 1111n't punina parking out in front of C 1ty Hall. after we ~pent a hunctle (on rht new lnwn proJCCl)," u1d Cuunc1lwnmpn Ruthcl)n Plummer. "There '' picot of P.arkina un the <ttctt for cui-1omcr1. · HeJae,, thouah. nottd· "A' for the "Prfararv:c of City Hall, I thtnk ll d he wore to tee 1 row of bhghted h1mnc' "'·" boomer will harden the conservative ca t or American politics Neil Howe, coauthor of the book, "Generations," believes boomcrs will add a moralistic tone 10 public life becau e they came of age during a. time of vivid social change highlighted by the civil rights movement and the Vietnam War. "They'll be less compromislna on the i ues of good v.s. evil," said Howe, a boomer himself. "We're going to be insufferable.'' But Riche l>aid 1he generation may ha ve tended toward con.servati m all_ along. "The Wood tock, nowerchild and hippies people "'ere a very small minority," Riche 11d. "Anybody that want\ to reach thc\e people a'i a group ha~ to under land 1ha1." I he \llC of 1he aging boomc:r generation pushed the median age upward by three )enrs 1n a decade, to 33. ln 1970, 28 "as the med111n age. meaning h;ilf the population was 28 or older· Boomers may be the biggest, but the fllstc t·growing generation was retiring in the 1980s -the number of people aged 65 and over grew by 22 percent. The boomer ' impact in mid-life i~ likely to be exaggerated by the mall numbers of generation that followed, the o-called baby bust generation high propcrt)' taxes, Newport·Me.;a rece1vel> mo t of it funding from county propen) Htx re\.enue not slate government. "The effect on our di trict 1 llll>1gn1f1can1," 'aid Ncwport-Me!Ml A<;<,1\tnnt Superintendent Thoma Godley "Thi 1 not going to ol .. e the prohlcm., of funding education in thi s1.11e. It'!> going 10 tnkc o real crcaHve .snd dramatic lut1on to Mllvc tPlem nnd not h nkrupt other stntc ~crvicc ... " Mayor Peter Green queried 1f Paragon isn'1 "an unre&uluted monopoly." "Is 11 po1>!11ble 10 attract others 10 break thi' monopoly?" he ,,,ked. Staff mcmbero; Ci11d thot competition h unlikely bccau\c of the taggerinll inve tmcn1 • Pungon currently pay u S 1l\!rcc111 franch1 e fee to the city. REIBIVOll From A1 rc)c.:rvo1r 1 not needed Bert Ohh&. a local bu Inc " cxccuuve who ha led the fight na;111n'll the re\crvo1r, \atd hi\ computer analys1-. of anforma11on upplic<I in the Wlttcr di,u1ct' mnstcr pl.rn ind101c' thiilt tho exi 11ng re ervoir, plu water \fulut>lc from the Metropolitan W;itcr O"trict, more th•n c.:ompcn'"tc§ for Any 'cason1I daily 'uppl)' •nd demand imbalance. Oi!Urtct official counter that their upen an1ly1cd the ume d111 and determined 1 lona·tcrm need fnr the ~oject, But today " eoun challenae i baMd on the residents' contention that the district hu not' done dcqu11tc trMMIHMntal study to determine and COfllPlnute for the cnvnonmcntal effects of the project'• con1truc11on. Thou&h Haantinaton Beach Hip senior att T~lor dominated the Oranae ty prep andoor vOlleyball KCne ttiia ring, both he and his jump &erve long r lhe sreat outdoors. Taylor, who recently commiucd to ontinuc: hi5 indoor career at UCLA, now11 the indoor game mu!lt be his focus " a collegian. But hi dream i to \lentu1tlly pla) on the pro beach tour. "l'\le always been more comfortable on the beach," said Taylor, who has "irtually hvcd <•n the sand each of the past three iummer , and will likely match that commitment the next few months. "I don't think I ever came home my freshman and sophomore summers," aylor explained. "Normally I'm (at the each) from 10 a.l)l. to 4 p.m. every day. he outdoor game demands well-rounded kills and my work outdoors is what I ltributc all my indoor success to." There was plenty of ~ucccss to explain uring Taylor' four-year varsity career, ~h1ch he capped as a senior by earning All-CIF 5-A honors, Sunset League Most Valuable Player, MVP at the Orange County Championships, and MVP of the Orange County All-Star match. The Oiler rode Taylor's powerful urm swing and JS-inch vcrticol leap to the county's No. I ranking and a Sun ct League title. But Coach Rocky Ciarelli'i. quad met a disappointing end in the ccond round of the pla)Off 'I to fini sh 17-2. Despite the bttter ending, howc ... er, Taylor 1 content with hi) en1or \ea\on. one he hopt!d would era e the memory or an injury-plagued junior campaign. Taylor, who ma ed mo t of the league 'ca\On with a hernia and never fully regained hi trcngth, committed him ctr to n healthy and productive enior year. ''I put a lot or cmphasi into thi year," the 6-foor-4 tandout explained. "I quit oa,ketball, which ~•' a "cry tough dcci ion I JU t wanted to put everything into vollc)b,lll t1nd I'm happy with how 11 worked out." f avlor. a valuable recruit, p1c~cd l 'CLA o"cr U C, reigning national champion Long Beach State and Cal 1.11c Northridgc. and 1c; looking rorw<1rd to 111!1.ang h1!t be t hot at the 1lw, )''>·talented Bruin ' tarting lineup. "f ~ant to go in and make an impact 1ght away;• he said. "I'll have to earn ny pluying time J get, bccau e they don·~ rom1. e )OU anything. And that' the way hould be" T .tylor alw hopes to earn a higher nkang on the beach, where he i rrcntly at the AA level (the AAA and ro le"el remain). Already the owner of vcral beach tournament titles, Taylor 111 "cnturc along the California coast to nd competition this summer, putting the 3JOrity of his practicing in the beach llC)ball hotbed of Manhattan Beach. "Smee the co~truction on the pier :aan, the competition level ha dropped ((a& Huntington," he aid. Before he hit the be01ch. however, •>lor ho some unfani hcd indoor u inc s ot the club level where hi unt1ngton Rcnch-ba ed Rip It Up team .i contender for the Nat1on:il Junio r lympic title. "Wc\c AO t the f0t1r Mann:i gun (G reg See FAULKNER/II Newland will coach in '91 IRVINE -UCI athletic director Tom f·ord Rnnounccd Monday that 25·ycar hcud co ch l'cd Newland has agr~ed to '''n a contract to coach the Witter polo IC m In 1991 hud alw indicated that all scholarship commitments to the returning playe~ will he honored and that Nc~land ha igned three pla)Cr 10 nataonal letter of intcn1: Ch d Aroncn fr m Poway High, J.P. 1.uhot from El Toro High: and had Wkkcr fr>m Unt\Cr It U1ah in l~me I he chcdule 1 Kl tor 1991 , with the A111e11u:~ opening the \cu on m the L()ng lk 1ch Slate 1 ournamcnt pt. 7, 'I he lJCI I ourn 1mcnt will be pl ycd nt C 11ron;a Jcl Mur 111 h Sept. l ·I~. I he 'chool j, commitlclt tn the progr 101 \\tth the aid ot communtl) u rrw11 . I\; urd lllJt lo l·nrd. "Our 1turt11011 1 1m1har to the ":.atc:r pokl pro rnm t l.A," hud ""d. "C ommun1l) surr<~rt as c: c:n11nt 10 m 11ntMm1111 the r,mgriam, w11h a tarsetcd h1n1lrn1 .. m1 aconl of $74,<XXl l'hc lJ I w1tcr f"'lo P")lram ha~ curncd three nattonal champion htpi ind proouced 4S Alt·Amcncan • a .ell 1 li\e Olympians ewland hn ~lff 1 :S()1.1 3.J record 1n 2' UOM u UCI' head coach . • I ~ , • I ., ...... _ ......... INOLEWOOD lajurfet to James Worthy ud 8)'ron Scou have &urned the Loi Anples Liken' bleak si tu'ltion i nto a desperate one. The takers, who trail the Chacqo Bulls 3-1, a deficit no te.m has ever <Wercome in the Finals, mipt have ro play 01me S on Wednesday Without Wonhy or Scott, or both, becau.e of injuries. Worthy agravated the injuty to the left 11nkle he sprained two weeks aao. and Scott ha\;' bruised right shoulder. . "I have until Wednesday to make a decision on playing. I can't put a percentage on my chances," Worthy said on Monday. "We have to ha"e hope, like we have all season. If we can get one win , things might turn around." "It Jook very bad with James oul and mysel(, I don't know," Scott said. "We'd hke to go Into ~ach sencs completely . a . ........, aad we dida"a. w,·,. ..... •..cl wc'N not playana well. The •u. are ~ advaA&aec ol "·" LIUn trainer 0~ Vitti uicl he MJUld cblnll:lerizc Sco11'1 ... ., 11 lllOft 1erioua "if be had to run oe his anns." But Worthy h11 to run on die bed ankle, an injury hi uid keeps him from beifta "mobile and lpOftlaneout. Some of my moves brina back the pain." Magic JohnlOn said the Laken wttl play hard on Wednesday niaht, reprdles"a of who pl8Y•. but he took a realistic viewpoi111. "When you're playiJ\g a team. that's playing well and you're minus two PY'· it's going to be a tough task,'' John~n said. "I mean, you can be real about this." Johnson said he could tell that Worthy was in pain even before he left Sunday's game late in the third period. "Even if James plays, he probably shouldn't be playing," Johnson said. "He's tryiog, but when he sees a lane open, he can't get there. He also can't defend, and ' .... ......... ~~ .. ihatud UMdulllOUteir ........ CllletriD Wd Gii Llkn to ,a.I percent .._.... ia ._..,,, 97·82 wictory, and Lot Ml•• le avcfllina jaa1t 89.3 points per .... in rt. Ftnals. l.a8*1 Coech Mike Dunlu~ said the key IO ICIOri•g poinu 1p1n1t the Bull ' praeure dcfen1e i "to make some outside hots to loosen them up in ide. We've done a pretty good job of finding gOod shoes, but we get out of position too often. When ~c pread th~ offcnic, ~c've been OK" "We've been attacking them the nght way, we just ha\iC to make the -.hot ." John on n1d. "You ne"cr expect Sam Perkins lo go I for 15. He was getting hi i.hots." Perkins, the hero or Game I, aid he wa m1 ing "little simple layups. They just didn't fall . They collaJXed on me, which made 1t even harder But the hOl!I JU t didn't fall. I don't understand why." Scott ha made only 5 of 18 hots an the serie . allowing the . Bull to concentrate Community college Athletes of the Yat' I , . I ,· 'I lluBtltlrl . Bltl Ill cllll A sophomore point guard on the women's basketball team , Sirchia led the Rustlers to back-to-back state championships . Sirchia was a Kodak All-American and All-State selection, in addition to earning State Tournament A sophomore goalie from Costa Mesa High and the key behind GWC's state championship -water polo team , Taylor was a two-time All -American , All -Southern California and All-South Coast Cont erence selection . In his two-year MVP and Orange Empire GWC career, the Rustlers Conference MVP laurels as . posted records of 31-4 Golden West completed and 29-4 while winning the season at 37-1 . back-to-back state titles. Eberhart, a sophomore outside hitter f ram Mater Dei High, was a first team All-American . by Volleyball Monthly as Golden West won its fourth state championship . Etierhart was named All-State. State - T o urn am e nt MVP and Orange Empire Conference MVP. The Rustlers went 16-5 and 25-3 in her two years at the school . , • i... ~ I -...· ' ' ' ' ' oa the Uken' poll'"1'p pmc that wu tffectiYc rn their only ~ in die ..._ opener. "They htve the ub1lity to trap aM *"' recover," Ou•le•VY. said. "P1r1 ,llf .. ii qu1clc.ne11 and •bthty, b\Jt a kl' fl( it Is heart. J'~e been very impressed _,.h thetr defcnst\C talent. Michael Jordan and Sconie Pippen arc in the top five 1n the league." "They tay on Byron and then double· team from the blind -idc so we don't MC it coming," Worthy aid Bull guard John Paxson, II respon jble for taying with Seott~t Chicago double-team the ball, said he knows how Scon is feeling. "B)ron killed Portland and Golden State m the pl3)0ff\ with hi~ clutch jw~ \hootm&.'' Paxson aid. "I'm a jump hooter and I know that 1r you don't get a lot or attempt • )OU can lo<c )Our rh)thm. We'"e taken away their outside game. I'm not feeling full of myself about it. f'vc hl'd a lot of 1-for-7 and l·for-8 game .·• . Angels stopped bJ Milwaukee ANAHclM -Chri'I Boco10 ended a fou r- game wanle-. streak With C\.en inning.-. Of '1x-h1t ball and 1hc Brc"cr' cap11uli Lcd on hoddv dcfcn,e b\ the American League·~ top fielding team 10 beat the Cahforn1a Angel . 7-2.. at Anaheim S1.1d1um. ending M1lwaukcc'-. !>e\lcn-gamc 11l.;1d. Bo 10 (5·6) truck crnr three, walked t\\.o Jnd ~'1\.c.-up hi\ onl\. run on a fou rth· inning RBI ""l!IC h' Jack ·. Hn"ell en route tu h1' ftr,t "an 1nc..e \.t.1 ... 15. It f"'e the nght -hun~kr one more "In • then he had ;,II ol I. ~1 )C 1r( "'hen he drnp(l('d h1' la't .,c,en dcc1,1on' .and lllJ<•'Ctf the rin.11 l"O month' Ill the Cll\On Jltcr .. urger. un h1' right !\nee. Chuck C. nm and O.in Pk,ac fin1 .. hed A t" o·bJ'e thro"mg error b\ \\all) JO)IH!I ~in 0111 Sp1e~· 'acnf1ce led 10 Mtl"'aukc~"· three run th1ril lnnin~ pier-; follov.;cd inglc.. hy ex-Angel DMte Bichcrtc • nJ Jim Gantner ""h a bunt between the mound nd fir t ha e. Bichette ~ored ~hen Jo\ ncr' hurried had:h;ind 01p put 'econd ba,eman Howell rolled into the fiN bac:.e photo v.:ell. Paul Mol11or added a run--.cor1ng groundout and 8 J urhoff capped the rally ~1th an RBI 'it ngle The Bre~cr added another p:ur in the fourth "'th the help of a triple by Greg Vaughn thJt ldt fielder Lui-. Polonia lo\t m the hght' Another run came an "'hen An cl rooll.1c catcher Ron Ttnl?ley dropped 1t throw "hale tr'\'ing to rng Moh1or on a dela'tcd JouMe te I an the firth - Robin ) ount led oft the fourth "tth a ''"£le anJ 1: 1me home "hen Polonia charged Vaughn', -.1n lmg line Jrne before ha .. ing the ball txiuncc; p:i-.1 him B1chcttc madc IL ~.()With a ~acrir1cc n\. · The ddeat ended " tour-game v. inning \Ire.'"' for t..u"' \kC a't.111 (6-o). "'m alltl\\Cd ,c,cn hit' .ind lour earned run.,, In the ltlth. ~h,lttnr tnplcd flJ\t &he d'"'"& 1tttempt (.If Polonia ll' knod out \1c.Ca\kill Harris' slam powsr1 8-rs to 18-5 ro11111 ovsr Culls CHICAGO Oun1I QO Strawberry wa hl.\C~ tA ~/1/77-thc Lo Angeles hneup Monday night, but the Dodgen re ally didn't / ' ' need him I cnny Ht1rm highlighted ax run fourth inning with ,, grand lam the Dod~er routed the Chica o Cube;, 13-5, et Wrigley held. ''We'"c been winning without Darryl ·1r11wbcrry,'' Harm "a1(1. "I think he 'hocked cliel)holly by coming bad.. \O oon. But th.u \ the type of guy he i . He wantect to come h.1ck. Thit' the: kind of ballclub \\-C: halic. vcryboJ)' wants ·to pMtlCIJ" tc."' Strawhcrry hod been sidelined with a ore shoulder ns a re ult of running into the nght-f1clJ fence at Dodger Stadium. "My 'houlJer feel\ pretty good," said Strnwl'lcr""· "'ho went 2 for 4. "The time l\c h.ld an opportunity to rest has rcall helped me, c'pcci.ally the treatment I've rccc1"cd h'' n1cc to be bacll. m the lineup though nnd 11 fcc:1' real gooJ." fhc Dodjter!t had 16 hit , including Ju.in Samuel\ hr\t-tnning homer to c,1cnd '"' h1111na •.ircnk to 11 game . lhtng\ go1 \O bnd for the Cub · hcle:.1gucrcd pitching \taff that outfielder Dt\U~ D~~cnw tch\:\ICd 1n the c1 hth. [),1,1.:cnLo "·'' the bc\t Ch1caao had. too. p11~hmg h\tl h1tlc'" 1nn1ng "I ,\,1,n't l btt nel'l)U ," Da cn10 \atd. 'I h~ mo't I c'.'n , '' •~o 1nnin1 ... but I "•" needed to g1"c our hullpcn n little rcltel 1\f1cr all. ~c h.i.,c annthtr g3me h>mmrm\, l\c 1hro\1tn •' klt tlft the mound in 1'1.1ttmg prnttitc. II\ nlllhin~ " ll.11 for me, ~ut. no, rm t\tn' to tht bullpen I m .in outlaelder .md that'' "hnt I pl.in l\n ~in~:· l dd1c \htrr.1\ dwvc in four run' v.11h .i pau of 1nglc<1, one off lo er M1~e 81cled1 (7~) during a ft\lc-run thud .md two more in the fourth off reliever Chuc~ McElroy. The f11'\t•placc DoJacn too~ three \lf four SJmc 1n the c;er1es. and ha\e won 17 of 22 at Wrigley Field 1ncc 19 6. Ramt'n Martinez (10-2) v.on C 1 the eventh time an hi la t eight s11 rt~ He aa.,c up tour run and 10 hat\, 1hrcc by M ark Grnc:e. m '" inntn!!' \1ilo.c tfartlcy fina hcd tor h" f1n.1 'a\e, allov.an four htt B1eleck1 entered the game with a I 50 ER 10 h1 ht'it C\en ''"rt', ,!!<ltn' ~-I He In ted 2~ 1nn1n • gi,ing. up 1\ run' on nine hit Rync anJberg hit ht' ninth homer in the fir t tnning to tic the 'core I· I. But Alfredo Gr1mn· lcaJofl douhlc 1n the third. a \I ngle b M n ine? and BrC'lt Butler's RBI angle tarted the on-.laught. The OoJ en ._cnt on to c;auc tour more timeli in the annin • two run\ comm 1n on Munav' fir t an le .ind t\\O on Oantcl'' 'ixth ·homer. Mar11nu v.:altcd in the S1'th, 1lh1w1n foe bit . Estancia places second . at state golf champiollships I AN JUAN ( APIS rRANO -rhe E\tancia H1sh golf team fani\hcd cond for the 11ccond \tnu ht )'Ur at the "If·· CGA t1tc Golt Champion!.hipi •t Marhella C untry Cluh The If uthern Scc:tkln champion Haalc,, who have rehcd l>n balance all ~• ln, were ltd by •en1<>r Brlld Mal~r who carded a 2·ovrr·par 72 1n h1tt fint· ever J'O't"Hon rompcuuon. "Brad qu1hfied a our •••th m•n 1n a OO·holt tourn•mcnt. •nd he' workt"d rtalty h1trd tM P" ' three wed. to prcp1uc," I 'tan 1a ro roach rt P r ~id ''He pa icd up *'" his MnllOf .amtic tu waft on hn pmc. and he had t'iud1c\ h\J v. h ~ 1he ftr,t time 1\ll c 1r he "u\ low man. ind 11 was \Cl'.) grallf)tn .1\ 1 C\l tC:h to cc him do well " ' Perl'), "h11 l\;he the team ak,ng \\ath "w1h r Chu k Perry, aid hi team riln d.I v.dl hut Pillm pranp pl•~eJ h tm. t.1~1n the tum cro-n by eight 'lltl~C\ r. Im Spnng . ""hit h E tanc1A dcfcatcJ in 1 ht,mc-11m.l·home du•I match tht~ ;ic "on. fin1,hcd With a 318 whilt p 11\0 j,\ (J%) Wll •hk: tO hofd off Dan tlillli lor Jnd by une trokc. "It ... n't one of our be t outin bUt the oou~ wa pt• na very tough tod~ , AM Petty uid In dd1t1on to the tum oompet111on. anl11.,il.h1•I hnnor\ were on the line. lh tanc1a 1un1N Paul Hinkle qualtf1eJ 10th \\.llh a 74 duttng the tum P'1rt1on, lhcn CMdcd 71 1n tht 1nd1v1dual tuurn mcn1 to tit for fifth with Oan1el Wen of J ,,rre Pinc.. Ht h inti 1atl l mid ol ~cdv.~lOJ. lt)(l\I w•' .1W,\HlcJ filth fo1 ('(~tin I lu'4cr \Cmc mer h1 ltnal nine htilc • leaving tl1nklc n,d Wen in a ''th·pl \C dcaJlud. RounJ1n out the f.,t1nc1A effort ~.,., ~nior Rvan On\' ( t). Junior hn BC:cl ( ), Junior A~ Rothman ( ~) and n1or rim Ptepct ( ), .. , cmth Palm Spriftp. wttidt gt)(XI 1c.un 1h 11 ~M~cJ rc.11 h 1td, • Art Perr\ "a"' "But thin ' could h. "C turnc\I nn n \~uuplc h1 I!\ on roupl h 1lc \\c "ere little off. but thiat '" olf \ l re n1•t oan • t > be on e "' da't." Oa1.1 \: 1c" Hash\ ,,Ileen 1c ugh hrcd 1 i7 to tac lut c1 hth place 1n the 1rl' 1nd1\.1du. I 1uurn11mcnt We tern tl1Jh trc,hman 1&cr Wood wa the bo ' 1nd1\1Jual winner. 1unn1n1 awll) from the heltJ with t )f»hole tocal of 13 • 10 tmll.u better th•n b1 doee t challcnttr , Dan B~ner of Dana Htlh and Joe ro ta of RtdwoOd. __ ... ....,,.,,,, ( ( NBW YORK -0.IW'lr end Miami all but clinched a place ill the National Le11ue when the expansion committee • recommended Monday that they join the leapc in 1993. The cities and ownen 5lill must be approved by the eight-man major league ownership committee and by both lei.pie . Approval i~ expected to be routine, although probably not this week. . "They obviously were rhe ~wo most •.nracuve choic~." comm issioner Fay Vincent said 1n Santi Monica, where owners arc ~hcdulcd to meet Wcdncsda)' and Thursday. "That peak for II elf." . Miami will be the f1 r;t major league team in Florida and Denver "'ill be the fir t in the Mountain time zone. The cities beat out four other finali t : Buffalo, N.Y.; Orlando, Fla.; St Peter'lburg. Fla., and Washington. . \ ''We're obviou ly rejoicing," M1am1 mayor Xavier Sua rez ~aid. "It kind of gives a stamp of cert ification as a major city in th e United States." The Miam i tenm would play in Joe Robbie Stadium, which is midway between Miami and Fort Lauderdale and recently was renovated for bai.cball. Denver would play in Mile High S~adium during its fi rst two seasons and move into a pla nned 43,000-seat Coors Field in 1995. The additions will give the N~ 14 teams. • G1anh-Cubs. WGN, 11 :20 a.m • Dudgcr~·P1ra1c • Channel 11, 4:30 pm. • Bra .. cs·Mc1s, WOR, TBS. 4:35 p.m • Wh11c o~-R.1ngcrs. WGN, S:30 p.m • Brcwc~·Angcls. Spon~aianncl, 7.30 p.m. TEU."\1 10'-' Ban ball 11 20 a m -Sin Frnncl5Co at Ch1c1go Cuhi, WON •·10 pm -Dodgers a1 P1mburgh, Channel 11 4 1() pm -C1ncmna1l 11 Mon1rcal. ESPN 4 JS p m -tlanta a1 Ne"' York Mcu. 1 BS. WOR ~ pm -New Yori. Yi nkeo:s .. 1 Minn ... q,11, ~PIX S JO pm -Ch1caio Wh11c So\ ~• 1 cu• WGN 7 JO p m -Oc1ro11 al Ol'lkland, CSPN 7 JO pm -Milwaukee 11 Angels. SJ1C1n'Ch3nnc:I Box Ina ci r m -Dwi1h1 Oa'"'• "s J1mcs S;ilcrno. cru1~Nc11hu, from M1am1 (del•>cd). USA (repeal~ 11 I a m) RC>Cko 11 'l(I p m -Profc,,t0n1I rompc1tl10T1 from T 1<tm1ll Wa•h tt•rcl. Prime fickc1 Bowlin& 12 lO am -LPBT 1oum.amcn1 from Fou1'1t11n \ 1llcv \tap.:) ESPN 4 '<Ip m 1.lOpm norm RADIO Baubell Ood~~" lll P1ll\b1urh. KABC (790) I Louis II S..n Diec<>. KP.18 (760) -\11t-.aukcc al Anscls, KMPC (710), XTRA (690) - . . "''' · . '·. .... ~ Head women's basketball eoach A Colleen Matsuhara an nounced · • Monday the hiring of Annette Smith· ' Greene and Fred Williams 11 assistant -'----- coaches with the UCI prosrJlm. Smith-Greene comes to UCI after servina u an assistant coach under Linda Sharp at Southwest Texas University last year. Williame joins UCI after serving as an assistant at USC since 1983. In other sports news Monday: •The American Arbitration A5\0Ciation tcm· porarily lifted a suspension against sprinter Butch Reynofds and declared him eligible for the U.~. Track and F'icld Championships in New York th11 wee k. Reynolds wa suspcndc~. from all international track and field co mpetll1ton for two year , dating from Aug. 12, 1990, by The Athletics Congrcs . He had tested positive for steroids in an event in Monte Carlo, Monaco. on that date, the Congrcs aid. • Michael Jordan of the Chicago Bulls and Magic John on of the Lo Angeles Lakers, cu rre ntly dueling in the NBA Finals, head the league All-Star team. Jordan, the league's most valuable player who led the NBA in corina for the fifth coo'>ecntive season, and Johnson, who became the league's all-time leader in assists, ~ere joined on the team by forwards Karl Malone of UtJh and Charles Barkley of Philadelphia and ce nt er David Robinson of San Antonio. -From Tbt Assod•tftl PrTu Quote ol ttle day Wade Ta}lor, Yankees rookie pitcher, who i 2-0 after New York gave him 17 ru n in tv.o starts· "I picked good days to pitc h on." Club goH Bal/Joa tourney at Big Canyon this w•k By Richard Dunn Onnoe Cou1 Oauy P110t Finally. the wa11 i'i over for Big Canyon Country Club gol f fa natics. The Balboa Tournament, the biggest event of the year, bcgino; this week. "Th1<; 1ournamen t fill, up the first day entries come out, .. Big Canyon a'lsi tant pro Dave De Heras 'laid "There'<; a long waiting hst, so whoever gets their mail late that dav (tongue in check) doe n't get an They all know how quickly 11 fill . o they ru h do"'n and hnng them in " The 2"t annual Balboa Tournament. an inv11at1onal eve nt an which member invite a gue.,t anQ play as a two ome , begin at 7:30 a.m. on Thursday with the champion hip round <lated for Satu rday The thrce·da)., 54-hole tournament ha the large t winning pur c of any Bag Canyon tou rnament throughou t the year. . Member Warren Caves of Newport Beach and hi partner Sandy Galbra11h of Seachff in 1 luntington Ucach are the defending low gross champion while membe r Bob Hinrichs and hii. gue'>t. Gordon Kc,'ller (Newport Beach Country Club ), arc the defending low net winner . Preceding the tournament will be u cocktail dinner • on Wedn~sday night in the Lakeview Room Ill Big Can)on beginning at 7 o'clock. Th~ tournament fields 90 two-man teams. The leading two ome on Saturday will tee off last. 0 Previously the Greater Long Beach Golf A~1ation Tournament, the Meadowlark Golf Cour c an Huntington Beach has picked up where the former left off. Thanks to club general manager Jack Henry, seniors (50 and over) still have an opportunity to compete in th eir own golf tournament. The ccond annu al Seniors Golf Tournament June 17-18 at the Meadowlark Golf Course will have five nights of low gross and low net winners, about 22 percent of the field being paid an ce rt ificate or prite money, according to Henry. The inaugural event la t year drew 88 players, with an 1ncrea e of 23 expected for this year, according to club as i 1ant pro Ron Cowan, a former champion of the Greater Long Bench Golf Association Tournament. The olde t player e~pected lo compete this year i H\.lntington Beach' Don Darling, who's 82. Meadowlark Golf Cour c hopes American Golf will par11c1pa1e in the next year'c; third 11nnual tournament. Total pur c money th1 year is expected to reach S2.500 The Greater Long Bench Golf Asi.ociation. which had nine cour e affil iation:,, was unable to fund il!1clf before Meadowlark stepped in and aved the cnior~ to ur. 0 La t Friday was a momentous day at the Meadowlark Golf C.our e as the Hunt ington Harbour Charity Cancer Day, labeled a Day of Gol f, ra1 ed clo e to $8,000 for the American Cancer Society. RJch•rd Dunn 11 an Onap C911st 0.1/y Piiot Spo111 Wrlttr wbole club ,olf rolumn •P~•rl tt-tq T'u~•d•J'· Four recruits sign with SCC basketball team C0~1 A Mt.SA Southern Californi a College men 's basketball conch Bill Rcynold<i announced the igning of four recrui t,, including two junior collcac player , one high school player and ,, 6·foot-9 player from the club leagues in Sydney, Au trnlia. Saddlcbock College guArd Edmond John on, Fullerton WIN AntaTIUP AllOAllD AllTltA&. •• MID D A Tlt&VSL W1tlTSll WOil A DAY Look In 1"undliy'• <>ranc• C..t DadY Piiot for complete detada and entry farm to an actUnC . ~--bndt I College guard Pat O'Currnn, El Camino High guard Jeff Rce .. cs and the inexperienced Jame Tidey co mplete SCC\ 1gning cla of six player . Reynold earl ier 11ncd 1un1or college fo rwnrd-; Mike Jone (Mc a, Am., College) nnd Kei th Randolph (MiraCosta Co llege). John on led Sen 01c10 County in ~co11nf ht ~cn1or ye.u at E.1 Camino •igh in Ocean 1dc but developed more of 11 point gu1trd mentality At S.iddleback, ~cynold\ 'i1lld. 1 he s-root·X guard i quick. can penetrate \\ICll and avc raacd 11 point, and ~i' 1tu 1sl!l while urn1na honorable mention All ·Oran1c f!mpuc Conrcrcncc honon l•lll ~a~n. Rec\e 1 11 6·foot off 1uarJ who led ~n Otc:'o County 1n 'cnrin1 ~llh 21 6 po1n1 per 1amc for El C1m1no I• t 1e1ton en roYtt to f 1ot-tcam 1ll·coun1y hc>non O'Curr~n. 1 IYWO·yeu 11ar1er 11 Fullerton College, ave rage" 9.7 potnl and 6.2 as i I per game . Tidey ha'I JUSt been playing' b.t kctball for 2VJ )'CM: bu\. ho~' potcn11al to mature in10 1 fin e pla)'cr,. Reynold nid. He ha~ never ployed college or high ~hool ball in 1he lJ.S., but has played club ball in Au \tral111 Reynold 01d he hopes to red· h1rt Tidey next 'eason. -., , .. O.lli ,,,,, From 11 Grattcau, Dennis Winnen. John Mull and Brant Shelor) ud Todd Beebe from Woodbtidp, IO 1'111 upcctina us to win It," Mid T.,tor of the national toumameM In Ju'1 Al Tamp1 Bay. ..,.,, ,,,_ ,, -°' 6 c... ,,.., ,..,, ....... "*"' ...... ,,,., c.ar-.,, .. ,. ,.., .,.,. •. ,: ., ...... ---laclM .. ,., If! ~• to nor••l•r. ,._.,._ .. ..-... bwm11 Ra .... II lllilli• a bid to llw a•• die MWAth IOriner =:r IO~ ~·::s =II · ,....., •llli• the a.ti at 1n ........ nn._t ... ~= away from Ml OllMlni" last ~ar at Vero ladi w9" tryma 10 hnpr•n the Dodaers ~iutioft with power • •Lli& year, beina • firs• blllMH, I kAtW they wanted auya with power in their orpniadon, 10 I tried hitting more home ruM," said Peters, who batted .267 with nine homen, 19 doubles and 72 RBI lut eeaton at the Dodgers' middle Oau·A affiliate in the Florida State Leque. 111 uc:riliced (my swing) to hit more home runa, but this year I decided to ao more to the type of hitter I wu -back to concentntina on line drives, which ii more my style." A awitch·hitter, Peters is currently leading the Ca lifornia I.ape with a .331 average at Bakenfacld, the Dodgers' high Clul-A team. Peton, 25, was a late pick by the Doctaen (27th round) in the June, 1989 free agent draf't out of Cal State Fullerton, where he helped lead the Titans to the Colleae World Series in '88. His presence with the Dodgers, however, was felt immcdia1ely .. "The biggest thing was learning ,to play everyday and having to prove yourself everyday," Peters "aid of his • first prof cssional season 11 low Class-A Salem in the Northwest League, where he hit .313 with five homers and 40 RBI. "You For the reco rd also had to learn to adjust to the wood bats, but being a line drive hitter, it didn't affect me too much, not like it would 1 power hitter." Peters ha JO doubles and 39 RBI thi s season with no homers. The Dodgers are stacked with talented, power· hitting first basemen in the organization and this 1 Peters' protection year. or 1h1rd season, w11h the cl ub. "There are a lot of auys in front of me, and maybe J can get picked up in the mitfor league draft or the expansion draft and play with somebody who may not have as much talent at fint base," he said. "My future with the Dodgers as a first baseman is really competitive, so it might be better for me in the long run to get picked up by someone cite." At Orange Coast, Peten batted .3M in 1987 and helped lead the Pirates to an Oranae Empire Conference title in '86. Six former OCC players are currently in the maJor leagues: Rich Amaral (Sea1tle)1 Brent Mayne (Kansas City), Kevin Ro mine (8 0"011), Kevin Reimer (Texas), Donnie Hill (California) and Damon Berryhill (Chicago Cubs). Pelcrs, who lives in Fountain Valley io the· ofr-season, has a twin brother, Reed, who plays the outfield at Triple-A Edmonton in the Angels' organization. He originally went to UN L V because of his brother. ..... 1.111111 lrretevant Week XVI AIMrtoen Le ..... fOfonlO IOf!On OtwOll ,._Yon ........ CIMltnO Ulmort ............. w L Pct. o• JS n ,,. - 32 14 S71 2' » 75 Sii ' JO 2t S36 4'" ti 21 S19 s..., 2t 2S SIO I 24 30 444 •·.+ ........... w l , ... o. 31 21 $44 - 19 21 527 ' 27 2t 412 3~ 2S 27 481 3'.t ,. 31 4ll • 21 S3 3'9 •• .., 20 34 370 ·~ __, ....... _,...,...., -.... ~, O... l !tot t Ill --.U c.~u °"""'• .......... , Olt--~.-­_.__.il ......... ~,71 ·~.:.:Qr ic--' • ._ ..... ·~..:::.~ , ... , ·~--lM-•• ·-:... ... .,..... , ,, • ..,... f..-, z,_Hl •l-lllrt'I )• ,. .......... h NetloNllLe ..... ~-~.c-.• Loe-... ~ .... _. ...... •111 "'"""' tll l •1r1 s-,a 1 111 •111 ...... 1111 41 ,. .-.:. " •• l • 1111 VU.• '°'' J l J 1 .._d I I I • "'' .... , r '' • •lt•a.-• 1111 1011 ~II Jiit ..,. _,_ .... '"' C'llllli#a .,,1 t lll O.-• , ••• I 00 1 ~. IOOt ~~ J II 1 -... , .. . ..... . .. . 1111.Qy, •••• ~-J011 T..... ..UltU T..... '1 lU t ..... .. ......... L.e....... , ... , --·· ....... , .... ··-. llf'-Clklel l lDe-UI ..,.... t ~ 1: N -5-11 (191 ._ (11 . .._ (1)1 CW-lfl-'-ln.11111.-ttl. ~111 ._, cs_._,,.,.,.... 1t •••eo ~~ ... """""' ) . .:::::J: I U I t t I t lokf llJJIOJI ~ 1 • I I I I L.--I··:~: 12lllrl11111 ·-Fact of the day: Wanke will be feted at a varie ty or events during Irrelevant Weck, founded in 1976 by Paul Salata and his wife Beverly. The Salatas created this event "to do something nice for someone for no reason." The Irrelevant Weck celebration, which is in its 16th year, i sc heduled for June 23-30 in Newport Beach. ~.,.,, I ~-·Y---.-.-.-"""""-------••T"""1-u•1·.------• "'u:;_~ Oiit) r.,. _, i-.,. I' ,,. "'"'~ , .. I I I ' • ' ~ • • • • 1 : • I • .... I .. ttlil("'9 f tilt hfllO I UI A·Jl290 ..... "'Ml ~LUOW "'"4e- • l&iJ'\ "':G-t °""" ,..,. °" > COii ,_ ~ l174QI J • .., .,._, ........ lft.ffl •• °"" "'ttoov'' ,... ...... "'~ ,. -.o-·-IAti• I CO.,. ho ca.. c.., na• r ''""-,_ ci..,.. 111•1 t -~-1-1''41 ........ I -....,. -1..-4f1 IQ t .... '9 llr• ..... IOl '1• J -r·-I-Ill Ml • .. "~caw 111ne ! -....-"'"-" 11t~ & .. .._ ._ llUtl I Cbuc•~ ~ ,.,,.. • u .. -- 0.M .. MI n.we-111• too:\ '-. UI... 1 • .., ..,.., 1 1•u1t > ,,.. ...,..., ..,.. 1rtm 4, 0.,, 9-1, ......... tU,lla. l L-• o.... nen • ,.. ~· c.-... '11.U , ..., ,....... ---.. ,, .,, • II.- SK .. C-~r Ul't4 ........ I C$ ....... I...-llt I 0\-a.-~"1' llUIJ t -I• I-m Ut • 'Wll ...... o.tof UH• t ,._ I•.-~ IJ.11• I #oft I.-'-"" t•OI• r ... ._ --. .,,. t. w. •-C4;.\\4\l •• 'f • I.... ~ lel!lt Mll!I l """""""' """'OlllW.*111&.IM_ .... Jll l'I) I -C-0-0.. ailUl I ...., ,._ ....... "° ... ""c.. ,_ ntM I 0.... ..... ,_ IMM I .... """,_ •M •1 t --1-•U701 ti, ................... , tlLnl. 11 l'n A.. C..... IWlit U ......... Ith• tlf IM 14' If. -._, ...,. •t1•11 ,. --'-'-""' , _ .... ~--", .......... .._. ... c....... 1 .. A-~-NtC-~llll -·••••u s ~~..,... ....... •-111~ ,._ illl-•u• ·-,,, __ .,....,._1-...1- .... , ... -l'llM!lll ~..-· .. -n.,... ioi .--•--..... n ... ·-n~,..._....,_,.._ .1 ... Mll11--t. ~10 ,., m > r~ ~ Olli..,. l\lnt ......... , ,_ , .. IJO' .... ----------------------, -....... lll .. 1,'-~-.......... ,. ....... --:, ,, .. .,. ... -... "" '"" 111111•11 ......... ~ • ' I • I • HB softball team Wins three SAUOUS -The Huntinaton Beach Outlaws 16-and·under 1irl1 aoftball tea.m won lhrce of fQ\,lr. sames over the weekend at the ASA State qu1lif)'in1 tournament hosted by the Southom California Shilos team at Sau1u1 High. Hununaton Beach Hl1h'1 StcfHi• Nofflinaer went 5 for 12 (.•17) In the four 11me1. St.. hft a tolo home run and threw 1 thrte·hit 1butou1 in a 1·0 victory ewer the Cr1cker Jacks 16-•nd· under team. The Outl1ws 111<> ddeated the Citino LOOncys. 11.0, and the Cradler Jacks U ·and· under team, 7.0, but Iott to the Shilol in the tetnlftnalt. ~2. on S.nday. Nolhlnaer tOolt IM loll lfttr aMftl Up three unearned NM. 11't prnc . waa 1 matChup al All·Clf S·A plachm NOtftinpr and laura RicbanMon. Marina Hip'.t leclEy TICUn wtftl 4 1Dr 9 (.4") for the 0. ... IM htpd I pair of llll lttps in 1bl wen ""' the ~ __ .,..,,.., • • ~ I -.. . . • .. . ~ .......... . . ... ,\ : ,. . :. ' ,,., ' ,...... . ( •111 I ( I'• h 1h f'J1•;.i11 >I: D•·.I( 11 ·' I I ~ ..... •tow., frig, gar, N._ paint "& ctMn CfpC "'"'"'° ISO() dep 811 .... 7 •EAiTSIDE • 2 BA, t BA, 9nC ge. r11Q9 Ho "'' 1875f mo. 8'().1021 •D luJr 29A 2BA. clean, cMee. Mof age, o rw. •rve ctosets, V8'll09• $850 No pet 840-2495 *...,... MR 28a. 1 •Do yow nMd lg clNn .. .......... .... lty, frptc, MW kttCMn, 2bt 1ba? Garage, MW .... ?ftT • w/d .-i11up, 2 PMlos, cpt, orw. etorage, •Nwpl Hgl e 28r pool 11550. 648-0814 1750 No Pet ~2495 1 ,,..a lnttH-type, •0CUIH'RONT-28A •IAITll»I• SNlllO· No pillll9 191 E 1 BA, decic 1 car g.at. 181tl Pl ..... ""'''"N 182& Wont IHt at St450 S200 OFP • N pt Hgt a 2 8 R mo Blu 142-3850 L a r g e 2 8 R 1 '"' 1 ........ pted comm, 28r 28a Condo qu'-t townh.M, ,rpfc, 0/W, FP, petlo, Hkupa No loc f/p pool 8'>a en garage, patio, tndry p.ee. 1145 Tuettn D ger' .~gate' no Pet• rm 1825fmo .• ,~~!=.o twnh .. 112°95/mo 954.2&41 · 2~1.JN~:C=~EG~vre. w/d Ncupe, patio, 2 3 BR 3BA twnhm Frplc, &42·22N car gar. S1095/mo pool, ipa, patio, lovty ••&•fllH• 314& College Ave area. S1250/mo. Call IUt4' •28A 1 'hB• tnhl• Linde. 714-244-7397 1Bdrm J650/mo Incl type, hkup1, ger, no Baycrelt Ct 2 BA. gaf , -ter I g.atage. pell. 3013 Coolldga condo. Att ger, a/c, 11 Net pet1 2323 Etden, •C ......... '810/mo p. poot, Jae Avt 7/1. 1----S4_e-_18_s.-__ _ •Pets OKI 28r 1'-'\Ba S1600/mo. 251·8832 ••a•TllDE• 1wnhH-4ypa, hkupa, _., gar 3003 Fiiimore •C BLUFFS TwnhH, 38r 2BR 18a dwnatr1 Apt, ...... • S8101mo 2'1\Ba, fp, lndry rm. an 1man encl yard S7•5 gar, 2 patios, gr..,,blt No pate 122.e294 •38A 2 V,8a lwr\h .. on ...;..S_H;;.;S50;..;.;../mo...;.._· 7_59-.;._._9089_;..... Bl\.I" nr bch 1450 • f C•H to ... , Bach-1 IDRM APT, SUI dbl gar. fncd yd, ape elora. 1. 2 & 3BR. Pool & laundry room. t ... le~ 2Br 28e, Sl225'mo. 85Ch1092 From $585/mo yearly 546-9081 tr ...... w 'd , d "-, 2 ...v 1---------remaJ1. C•......., Rent· 1 BR Ea1t1·-,..,_.,_, I .;;;: ,...:W pnt,-Avt &1~ *~•• v.,cse twnhou.. ••• Inc -1:e·oo-2•1-pnvata ld';;i rc;;-.in- [ : i . . • .' IO llCUmTY DIP! 2tlr 1 ... .. belCony ~ QM. no s>.e• 1700 13421 -C Cl'leltem 2404717, M1-3208 H .... ' b· I I • 'l>·H Balt>Oa laland 29" t BA apt Sleeps 8 Avt ~1y ~wk. 17!>-0291. 2BR 28" cozy Newport Bch condo ll'em non amkr. r•ep Nr beach $395/mo &46-2538 All full 111tchen9, Studios 40 ~ outgoing empl'd & 2 Room Suit•• All prof N/S Fem ahr my Utlta Pd, WHkly tromj deluxe A.JC tum •M 1155 727 Yorktown backbay twnhm Poot/ Ava 880-3780 apa/lenne1'HCunfV/ SURPAISEI garagel haw 8 '-' Win 2 F 0 $1150. ut1I. 850-8553. '" inners CDll. IO. OF PCM. SpackM ti, ' p . atorllge • 2BA tBA,,.., UCt w o oar999 avail 7~' ... refrlg, pool, tenn11.' Chriallan Fem ... k1 carpor t. No pets aame to •hf •Br hm, 1950 mo. 8.t0-IM59 apa A.C E·..oe CM. $1180 • ut1I . ~ 7291 U.C.I • 11295/mo. 87S.Ne3 28r I Ba, Wt D hook-up em Ot 875-4808 gle adult New catpel, OC ... ....,...IT Pool, garage .. 1paca • .-rwvw et t CARNATION 1899 Pet 01< 722-8011 EXEC HM S2400/mo Lg mini bl1nd1 & paint, Mova In cond •BR Huge 18R 18• upper .......... In •BR, 311\BA. Fam rm, $575 mo. 548-4902 W1th1n walking dut• i.nce 1 BR 1tar11ng 1 $700 Fem non.l1mkr shr 38R 2BA w Hm•, l'r So Co Plza S325 751-0272 M M2-1823 38A quaJ'*" ~ti-' • q\Mlt E/ MP bonu9 nn, patio/ t 8R, no -1. encloMd • .. F vacant 1 950/mo. aide neighborhood ovhng Nlcaly Ind· .,... front home 3 CIW g91.. ReMax 842•9797 Garage Pvt 6 encl ac..,. MC>-1 327 garaga. elec r9nge. Move-In Bonus 1100 or 3 Day Mexico ---------Cru1H Und•rgrovnd l'W1IAl.S fem. IOe lt,575,000. backyard, ldHI for,,....,,...-...""'-------ref, patio, SS50 dep Ctlftt Mo•H, c .... Naect 80IM ...,. monef? roommatH 1825/ mo. LO lux 2bf 2be 1100 Jf 842·S96& parl<lng refrig, spa, ROOllllATa pool, Pvt ba1con1e1. N o n ·• m o Ii • r to Aptl ahown week· 1 ahare 3 BR, 2 BA day1, ev.nlno• & Sat· condo nr S.Cout urdaya, Call ~A'T' Plaza Gated, pool, n9fY YWl•I• ..... *-• ........ -Me-4908 2 pvt matr aut1 ... 2 1 BR Bach, al)1.. dtn 7 n 1 ~In~ dec:k1. nr We .. " No table & retrig Ou••t. .· Pet S;•rv1rps JA 70 HOLIDAY RELIEF TLC for pet1 lo planll OC home owner 12v11 Xlnt refs 751-8355 Pl,mts( a pP :rn1a Pl,1stc1 H1 ·p.w lA8 Plumbing 3890 P<>yc 1111 ·, l'Hl.' Matlculou1 Morton • MOD••• Scrfff\ Sanric. tllobOdy bai\11 Mor• ton'e pflCH Nobodyl I OVt prlcal ere 10 IOW you half• lo Ioele up to ... th• oouom (11 4) ... 2 .. &h 320 C..t• Mo .. •• pal S950 laa. M0-9408 S595/mo Incl ulll 2BR 18a, pv1 yard, 1....:...;....;.;..~..;..;..~...;...;.....;..;;. 714,,.....163• )aeuul • parking, no pets 1290/mo vacant $895/mo LIDO 18L• Urgen1• 1_no_nJ_a_m_1c_r_M_8-4_2_53 __ fJA2·9797 Ra/Max Mu1t tsal 3bf, 2ba hm 1 BR, fireplace ce~a Welk to bch 6 tennl1 pool, patio, garage 3BR 2BA houaa, Eut-No peta. $2700/mo N t 3"""" W B side. Frplc, w/d hkup. Avl !\OW Bkr ,.99.3400 ° pa • .... ay patio, garage. s 12001,.----------1 __ S6_7_5_1m_o_8_50-6 __ 3_57 __ N(•\•..,;1r r' .. ~ utll Avail 6,, S 714f24 t .9759 8 (•;1r. 11 ,'f,fiq mo. &45·9127 9V•I NEWPORT NO. Tw!\hm 2•R 1aA COTTAOe MALE 23-35 to ,,,.,. St•SO. 28R 2BA. frplc , wa1her'Oryer hkup •Udo I .... Remod "f" 2BR 28A Hum Baach 3eR, 1 BA, PM hm patio, 2 car attch gar patio & carport S795 •tra. 28A 2BA. 1 p , eot, m•I• from baach Obi• gar, lg yard. W/D hk up, comm ipa No?!'• 722.e21M micro. d/W, St350 rno Poo1 S••2 50 Catt S895. No pell. 1928 pool avl l/1. IMC>.eS47 _ __._.________ IM 720-M85 Jon 982.,.917 Maple St 5'8-8680 2BR 18A, ••no•• ga-, _ ___. _______ Nwpt Shra 38r 2Ba, rage 363 E 18th St. •llDRll S7S0. N8 E 8luf1 POOl.SIOE AVL IMM•DI •Br 38a lrplc yrly Avt now 2 $750 mo • daposl1. •11DRll $100* E>CEC HOME MS1r 8A, 1800 elf, Int decor cat gar, w d hkup No pell. MS-.8273 frple, etec gar opnr ~no::p:°':!·c s~s:: Pool $1400. 780-8508 38R 2BA '/ti"'e fr... ~ .. N:•;;:~ S~S700 721..o400 Loren IJ'I 54s-7soe On the W9ter , 2·atory. Encl patlO. carport Nr •Eaatbluff 28r 28a. Nwpt 3br, 2'1\ba, '9 3BR 2•1.BA. Condo •n OCC No peta $115, frplc pool cOfn ., d 2 condo ~ F PO<>', Jae, CONDO, 2Br 28a. 2 gated comm Sljp f0t S300 dep 241-0780 ~ .... ..:..... :..,. at-.;_ i.nn•• $1150 mo • MC gar, poo"apL Aval 35· boat, 12.0001no .. -,......-· "' ...... __ Avt 645-5040 lmrned 782 Wealey: a . utit Scott••. 8QI Bach•~ Umt nr OCC 1895 No Pet 722-8011 HAP Bay 11000 957·2131 Meir ~,... 875-4000 SpaclOUI , Cle.,,, COY· 28A tBA. f p, Qllf, d.al\. ROOM to rent W/fuP E'SIOE 28 ered parking, vaclll\I wahr, walk to bch nou .. prl'll neat 8ac6' r, new pnt URLY Studl0-118R. $1150 ~0-1161 Agt 3,.1 .. St •• 1200 mo Bay, NB M I" • ..,_.., b'lnda, gar, lndry, xi Nr beach SS7W1700 v " • ..,_ cond 132 Uu Lane vma R..,..._ 87i-4912 IACK UY 2131433-4905 S500 mo &42-eet 1 t'PWO'mo 8'0-2429 CUte & cozy 18R w ANCHORAGE APTI Stu NW~T c"••T •· 81de ~. 38R tMly w indow 1725 No • twl'lhlle 3B t 2'ABa 2'"8A, f.p, 2 car gar peta 15$3 Meaa Or. On the In 1enn11, poot apa yd, w/d hkup, 11100 8'M2e2.145-0S43 2 Bdrm 2~ BA -11 ~ $700 Tom ..... 1 ... mo 318 a. S9nta 1 ... •LM 219 20th St uppar a•eNe a• 1.. m 1 BA '925 bal. 7141N2-8235 2Br 1ea Apl Com-itra, tndry, oar new Da•I g..5 548-1501 llr&ITllDI pletely redacorated. pn1, No pet1 11251 Charming , 2BR, f p , tg -S87S/mo Parking & mo+ dep 550-829'4 1111 , $900 .. util non COSTA MESA 20!c%7 'f r1r l(lf' ,' · l,> 28R den hOuH In utlla Incl •T>-1201 E Side am 1 ·BA duplex imkra Avf 7/1 STORAGE AREA 220 country a• tt '" g for 1mall« 1 BR unit, Frplc, lndry tac, patio, 722-8170 CMltteta Alf ~· Hrdwd ""· 2 car gat, c•ll •73..:ltft. no pet 1 pera only L ARGE 28R. 29.A Outt• ., .. !Me-3#- 1925/rno 329 Unlver· 28R IBA .,.., blk from $595 • aac e.tS-723' Frptc: nu decor 2 car· Nr Hoag Hospital. ilty Dr tlP 642•2818 bay. alngl• garage • ports: pool HSO mo 20d0 • ..-.ctoMd. "' EHllld• newly refur· Yearly S925/mo Incl •'SID • "' Nwpt 760-8087 or &<M-et30 h1gh S130/mo &-. blahed 2Br tBa houae u111 723-1497 Htrte 2br. tba. fndry, 3tM -"" tipm w iatteched 1 car gar. On The Water, Bayfront carport 1700 mo No Mcl.-'IN ENTERPRISES pvt yard, HOO mo. apt An ut1I lnc 18R pat1. 269 & 271 11th FEATURES 845-9583 or 951·5177 1eA. se1s. p..,, doel! i. Place 544"°"52 9VH EXCLUSIVE Au~1'1f'<,<.. (iH,r • M•H Verd• 48' 28a. prkg avt, 723-4587 II/SID• seoo, ... , BEACH ' COUNTRY fenced b.ck yd. new OK 2BKtBA garage, CLUB COMMUNITIES ()! njH): , '1,lj crp1, •Int loc. $1850 patJO. !'ear IChOOll B $40 720, 1008 .,. 317 Cabnllo &31-4038 1• 2 I :) edtoom 111' We·•~t.", NB -.' mo. s.c: & credit .,, AP1• w trplc, wet bat 1 ..... 295' Sarang Pt 5411-5023 EAST~e 1BA 18.A, micro, w d hkup1, Agl 5'1·5032 NllW~ORT M•IOMTS v, OF!" 1 ST MONTH I palt0 gaa & watar cantral a11 I g.araoe &00 al st\ld•o ofc. Mat 28r 1B• dUpfeJI Patio. Sp~ 2BR '~BA fnc:I. Walk-in c:loHI .... el!1ra 1101ao• All St Huntington 8-ch carport No pell. sa.25 twnhme S950 mo $595 mo fJAS-5853 maintenance met 2nd fir. Pvt •dtcMn & Avail now ...... aw 900 Saa Ln &4'·2811 EASTSIO~ 2BR ,.,..,BA Sorry no pell baltl $SOO M0-3971 refng, g.a1 & water FROM St.295 mo NEWPORT HEIQMTI Ltta. airy, lg, 2bt. 2ba • 1ncl. ,rptc, carport n.E~T MARI: ~TALINA VIEW Sharp .. •P•CIOll• dan Frplc, 2 blkl to $825 mo &415-5853 reo.oe1t Hl-R•s• Ofnc•17ttl & 2BA t •.-\Ba twnhm• beh I 1.tQO mo yrty. U,tltltAY An111 lrvin-.CM From $5001 wfth w o. pv1 paUO, 310\~ lrt• 876-2238 EASTStOe 2BR 1 BA "O "° CAHYON mo (F s G) "'" pool, carpott & tndry Upgraded tBR, hrdwd 1"" ""· rafrig ca•pct'1, ~ oaraga parktng-Cla11 A lac $0tfY, No Pets nr1, tile kl ba. deck, gal & watar Incl New StudPO A"t I p , Ao~ COtUat!1·7141 sees CUf1 II 71()..5000 carport, W/D hltup • s750 mo 145-~ •· 122 1900 kltchen•tt•, ekyhght,1 _______ __._ OP•N MOUS• Nwpt $925 mo 733-1821 Q000 LOCATION! ulll pd great arH F .. h1on 11 L1.111ury Hla 3Br 2~ba tondo $200 0'1 Sil95 mo 6.tt.e 179 t .000 1f ground hoor. Call for hf1/adre11 L•rg• 28R 1 ttBA Step• 10 •and' Clea" wet bar, pm1ale patlO lt23S/ mo 722·1t77 townhou1e, lndry Studio Own1tn1 1n lf1· 12 C0tporate Plaza THI QALLDIA MATURI L •VIRI room, patio, all bit-In• Pl••· no pet1 g mo N 8 Alan 720-0lOt c.... ... ...,.....,. Sff 28A 2BA w/~n S795 mo IH 1825 mo '47·2822 Up11a1ra on1cH tor r~t 213 Bdrm. 2"' Bath, view I cool ~· 2078 THURIN on B11lb<I• l•l•nO Avf baautlful lownl'OMH S995 NO Pat• 2151 M2·2288 Autumn ---tow lo IOoll Jun• I 5th $400.S4SO In •arena gatd~ aet· Pactfle Ave S31·8t01 • ,0011119.,,..... -bolt hlll9•rM•?eo.n.on. mo Cati 722·9081 Ung T erracaa, fir• 1wm°'iii.i";.;.;S-Oe4--S----i.::J::::.::nat::.;ai1t::01::;"';:10:;l*=--,;;w.tt;;;;i_'°_ ... _•"'liel•n••ll·ill..,~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-, plac... fut! ..cunty, w/d hOOku~ COV9'9d gar~•· t mite to bffeh ~ t nn St 1hopptng •nd fr ... way. 8•1t•t•fttl•I ................... w 1·yr i.a.. ....... 12 f) 1· 1.' ''. ,, • . '. 'h WALK TO ICM MTI Lg 1 Bf', 1 BA condo, Poot. ape, lnclty, '1f10 No .,... Me-0914 . ' . . f · · • ·I .,... ........ ,.. ..-............ . ......... ....... ,.4 2. All entries must amve by Thursd Noon 3 . WmMr will bt chosen by random dr '4'ing nd the following days paper. One wtnMf per wnk 4. Con• t wUl run 5124191 • 7/12/91 WIN DINNER FOR TWO AT Find our hidden C1»1!· fl d Ad .. And Win! Colitut8 .... : 1 Simply find our hid· den c louiflcd ads h re In our I· Hchon Cut and t the ads on th n· try blank nd moll w nn nam Will appear n Name ...... -.....-..---.------------~---­ Addreu -----------------Phone_......_. ______ ......._ ____ _... __ _.. __ ..._ .... •: '*"" ... c...a. Cle .... 'W • r " .. .. ~tot'°::..:s:i •" Of JNll". ,...,... bu9'nMe, MCV9 loca- tlona AboYe ~ Income. ~940 .. ., ......, debt .... ...... LOCAL VENDING tlon. Up to aoK ... . AOUTE. f'OR SALE 1~ 1 CHEAP. 1.aoo.a14-Cah loens "°"' l5K to ,,.,. HOOK. Penon81 or "::-::-.r:..~ I =-·-= c:: -~OK~. ~1/'I00-6::~~5.3~~=~~· _ uet•, eompen•atlon ptan are exeehnt & •••Dttt "" Ac· timed to capU"• lnt'I c:et*d· Why welt? 0.. expan.ion. en-.714 out of debt l'OWt Pers bu9 a debt con•oltda- .._ ~ _....,~ tton IOan• Nm• day. 1911ngmorad!MWllYttlM S3K·S100K. Open 7 a.t!Cllllel? 911" wlttl Daya. Uc/bonded a ....... ad. '~110 -my CHAltLES GOftN wtth OMAR SHAJftf ~ TANNAH HfftSCH Eut-Weet deals. wlnerable. WEST NORTH ., •A 7 3 • K 7 & •AKJ732 EAST North •Q 9 7 4 I ., 10. ., 8' s •9 • K 10 & S •e2 tAQ96 •Q88 SOUTH •A8 8 •K Q 9 8 5 t lO 2 •10 & • The biddiJll; North But t• p .. 2• p ... s• P ... p.. P .. South l• 2 • •• WtlR p ... p .. P .. Opening lud: Four of • The eecret of winnini at rubber bridp ia to make aure of your con· tract., even at the e09t of an over· trick or two. That. ia a lusury not available in a duplicate cont.est. and declaren muat learn bow amall in· vestment& can pay huge retuma. Since a reverae bid in the modem atyle ii a one-round force, North elected to temporize with two dia· monda rather than augeat a one- auited hand by jumpini to three clubs. When South rebid hearta, TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACftOU 1 Fllea hlgtl e None deity 10 Worn out 14 Wat• body 15 Aun 9gllnl1 111 W•dothed In 17 L.aeao 11 1ncen .. 111 "A .. -- "appte" 208~ 22 An.moon Mowl 24 ,....... c:cMn 211 AlfpUne MCtlon 27~ 31 Ooet-oourM .,.. _J_ 32 From lllWOlid 33Smel ..... 35 8Nndl ·-318'91n 39 Towe "'° voecano output 41 "TN.....,., .. .,.. 42 -.... 43 ..,.. .... 44 Toutllt'I Meet 45 HMMIM 47 a.1led 51 Metftwd\ 52 Trtipped 54~• N SfMll group 2 3 14 17 20 59 Grid I°"' 81 lndWt noe. 82 Addict 83 Eye part 54 LabhMt .. MP.a~ ee irrttattne one 81 Radio part1 DOWN 1~··· trtlea 2 "8tep --I" 3 WlnGlll• .. Wene bedt 5POl!t e NurneriCal 1~ IVaet...,.,_ ._....,. 10 Nller In a 11 =-dub 12=:~ 13 8tfMned 21 IJlect a bench 23 Coolll 25 AaePt• 27 Ta duet• "Potpourri 2t Gotthelf 30"_~and 34 £ntr•1 35 Coftw' alang 31 Oedar• 37 HumerOUI ... 9.,..,. IO -into: probe AF--~ .. ~coin .. fvt IOW'Oe 17 llltlllelng: ...,, IO,,..,. 11 12 13 lllnclay, Jut 11 UllllA (Sept 23-0ct 22) Lona· T....,, Jnc n S. 11My ay: O awcal Gemini distance c:ommun1c1tlon brinas CAPRICORN (Dec. 2l·J1n. 20)· n1trvc could sell proYCrbi•I iccbo.l to desired re,ults . Focus on Don'1ac1111 s1e1mcd up 1f putncrs, 1n Eskimo . Vcrenn Tiurus re poM1b1hry, pre urc of deadline. collc:agucs or bu inc 1sscx1a1cs now spo r11wri1e r put forrh th is LO\IC will overcome d1s11ncc, refuse to cndone ccru1n JChem~. dcclararron: "Only suckers beef!" l1n&U1ac barrier Emphasize pl•n~ or proJcets. For, they •rpcu to S.a1ttu11n philosopher put forth this correspondence, p ub lish1na, hive taken Cllpcrl CH le&• adv1c:c 1phonsm: "An uvcsdropper nC"YCr 11dvcr11 •n& which confirm their bchcC that the heirs 111ythln1 aood 1boul himself!" CORPIO (Oct 23·Nov. 21): time IS not yet naht 10 IO the whole A Virao 1uthor instructed· "Never Pcrcciw potcnual Rei ch beyond ho& pl1y cards with 1nyonc n1mcd Doc!" previous llm11111ons You'll learn AQUARIUS (Jan. 21-Fcb. 19) A Cancer aourmand implored· mure about lnvcntory, 1ccoun11na. Both Wednesday's New Moon in "Never c11 11 1 rcst1ur1nt called "~crct 1nve tment." Ctcdal 1h11 had Gemini i nd Mars close to Jup11cr on Mom's!" A u o bon viwnl 1dviscd: hccn withheld will be provided. Aries frid1y s1gn1fy th1l you ire now 1n a "Don't act Involved with 1nyone involved. qu1nd1ry over 1n cmotlon1I tic or whose problems arc grc11er than SAGl1TAJUUS (Nov. 22-0cc 21 )· a111chmcnt. However, don't wutc your own I" Throw oH k u , doubts, suspicions. any more time consldcrin& various ARIES (M1rch 21·Apr1I 19): M11ny E!"~hamc independence, d1tina. 11tcrnativcs or options because the who fell they could predict your w1lhnancu to pioneer project. moment has come 10 mike 1 firm rhouahu, 1ctlons will be do1na Mari11l s111us could dominllc and fin1I commilmenc. "doublc ·takc " Foc:u on surpnsc , Kcnano You'll feel more vital, PISCES (Feb. 20-Much 20): ttmlna. btu kina Crom tr11d111on dyn1m1c, enthu 11Stlc. .. Emotlon1l up eta or fnamatlna Shon trip involves rctr1cv1n1 lo" CAPllJCOllN (Dec 22-Jan. 19): condluona on lhc wort front have arudc. Pubhc:•I)'' Focu on publicity, reunion with prob1bly left lhcir mule Oft your TAURUS (April 20-M:.iy 20) loved 011e. Lost article will be phf>.teal wcllbelng, therefore thlt it 01vcr\1fy, cxpcrimcnr with d1ffcrcnt returned, you'll feel mClfe secure the perfect time to beain a new modct of tr ;inspor1111on . ldc11, •here fin1nce1 art COMCmed Work he1lth regunt AboYc all try 10 recently rCJCCtcd, now 1111n~ full methods will ba milcd Cln«r accept the fact thll collcq~ct or co- .icccpt11Ke 1nd tmn&~ )'UU royal!). nltl\'e rll\lfCI pt'OnllOCfttly. wutken will never IJ"e tO certain Emph1111 on 1t11hty 10 11\i:re.1\C AQUARIUS (Jin 20-Fcb. IS): chanacs or new an1nacmcnt1 1ncvmc potcnw1I Populanty on t11C, social act~11tct ARJt:.$ (M1tch ll·Apr11 20)· Take GEMINI (l'.fay 21-Junc 20) lru 1 1ccclc ratc. Spotl1aht 1110 on stock and then be ptep1rcd to fiaht yvur uwn Judamcnt -folkw. throush crca11v11y. \tylc, ~1tiety, phytic1I tOOlh <11nd nail for what you know to on hunch Wur \h3dc' ur \ll\cr, a1tr11c11on You'll encounter be "'ht ind just pcuon1lly, arccn itnd yellow Oppor1un11y rn''' 1nd1v1du1I dcat1ncd 10 pl1y major role profc ionelly and t1nanc111ly A New to rebuild on murc 1u111hle 111uc1urc in vour hfe Moon on Wcdnc'fday " tbnut 10 a~ Toluru~. Scorpio pcrMm• ph1y roles Pl 'CE (Feb 19-Much 20)· yo u rhc perfect opportunity 10 CANC•.R (June 21 ·July 22); flm phl\t on durable aoods, confront s itulllons head-on ln~Ut111tC, d1\CCrn l'l'IOtivC\, put g111r,1nteC\, cl11t1ficat1on Of where Y\)11 C\pc,11lly thuiC which h!IVC made forth quc•tlOns 10 one wtw mc1n1 \l;ind In connccuun w11h unique you feel dcvirahred d1\plrncd or muc;h to you. H fr1nk. rw'll a111n ret.111on,h1p 'mv" to he on more di~llualoned ' are11c:r awucnua o current ccurc cmu11,>n•l·financ11I around TAURUS (Apnl 21•Mll)' 21). SiftCc: ai1u11ion. Truth truly will act you S<:orp1uf J11yt m11or role. guilt " r~lly noth1nt more thaft 1 free. Virao lnvolYcct. I r· t · N f. I I I v, 0 R kind of rcvcnc pride,·~, f1n1 tl\k u:o (July 2l·Aua 22): Almoat ~IRTllOAY1. In July )OU II be llOW nwtt be'° act riJ:of tho belief every atplt111on c1n b4 fulrllled urwund..:J by money i nd luvc. that you ire rcspon-.bte fO'f all tho Focu on h•mtemy 11 home, ,,e1tcr (1111.:cr. C.rrl<'Ofn , A••r111• penot11 currtt1t family or dorilatte dtlmll. f1n1nc .. 1 bcncf11a, 11ft rcprpen11n1 pl.iy important role• ae 'YO"' Ult. Then, and ot1ly theft, wUI ~ token of "true lo¥e." You 'll C urre nt scenu10 fta1uu IMCtttethoelJ knOw bow to haftdlc '"' IUCCCHfully Ut1hze powcra Of tndcpcndcnc; , frccd&"9', partte•M>tl fridcy flMllCW .......... pcrtulltOft. Charm• ~n pt0n.~cr1n1 PfOfCCI YCN reccatly GIMINI 0hy 22·J•H 21): '11IOO (Aua 2.J.Sept. 22). focu• let a<> of bvrdcn )'CM! llMNN ftOt VelMll, Man 1M1 J•piter NlllfMt ht on my11cry, it1trlaue. 1t11nour. "-~ been c1~ m ftne ~ Leo tad eo _. ,o. ,....... or 1nen1lon rnoN na ~fi*M tyt Yo• are ••••h ve, • Hlural '* ......., a JU ... • ,.., .. 1 malrtup " Sccnlfio alto fettun• ,..cholcJtlli -4 ........ r.IHMd !1fP1s or ...,,.. ..._ la -. eMa a. career, promo11on, prod•~ttoa, bf IM .-tic lftl did ......, la wry ~ 1 dml lo ..,.... ,.. prc1u1e Oandut1nc rtlauoftlllip A ..... JOW'I ......... ~ 1ftd '-11111 _, tlCM 90 u::.r"• !rc!!!•!i1rc~;Wd!!!hc!!J:!!' ~..11!!&!11"---.~··=~ ... ._=,.~...,.=~=::i:~°'!!'°"~·:.....j~ • IM ,... ....,. ,... ID lir+-"'4~+----1 ..... -1 0 t1: =·pl I llUP ll"f OI ......... find the equipment ind '':f plles .~: .. ?.,'. .1!:."M.!!·'~1b.~k ...... ., o.e .......... ..,. 'r _.....,,.... •. word" .. '• •1t -~~ In clas-i'le "'•" ...... ,.,.. a.-,.,. • ..., ~'-•• ...... •---lfteft.......,....,=....,IOO--..·l.iil!!c-.&.s..;,.,~"-1"-''~•;.1.-•.•-...·'-:"'::-:.,::r-r::::!!~...,:===::.J.--___ you n~ au • bot" • recit"'" -"'*" ...!.!.'! <#-I c.11 •• ..., .. Ml.au r ..l.. 1 I u .. • I ~ ~ ;\, I , ; , , • I : .... : ; \ t I • • .. ·HOW TO RESPOND TO D~IE ·LIN E •Call 1-900-844-0100 • Enter 4-digit code 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 per on you are re ponding to You may leave a 30 econd me age. You will be automatically billed 98~ for each minute. USE TH IS F 0Rr"'1 T 0 PL A C E Y 0 UR FR E E PE RS ( '" ~ A L A D PRINT Cl.EARLY: (First three words ore bokfoce) 25 WOid moxinun FREE ADS ARE MAIL-INS ONLY . All COit-ins Wll Be Charged R8Q(*.:Jr Rate. ADORESS·----------------------------- art: SW'E: lJP: ----.. ... .. •• , ., ......... Wfl'C. ..................... ::.-: :: .:....:. ~ ~ 17..: :.~._:::1:::: ..... _,.. I (II ... _._ ........ _ ........ _ ,.. _.., .. ,....... Olang9 CoCllt ~ fllal II o~ kl *911 to "'9111. Ab &al Awa CR ......... ~to INlcc* Oii ld&f poaf••ice ar ..._:&."'°'Odil ~CGMIO.. .,ag9 =........ ,,. ."' .............. *=al ~_.,_.,.He stall .. CoCllt~fllat Ill_.. .. ..,, Olf//ad ·-·.,,.a •••cm.: rrot ............... , lh•arftb¥ c:=• 11wecm9'_ar...,.NDGlll.e publlMd • ll 41 SI I ID • W.-Id ag9. ... Compult'r" fiO 1 H A~"-• llC w/external 5·'1'• dri ve Mono- chrome monitor S300. &42-0178 ewclry Fur•, LINCOLN '71 Very r•re 1815 eurf CONTINl!:NTAL. 490 boerde (Dtff Ouna), 1 eng runs good St lSO & Art liO:'S 3 A·Frm display eaale $10 ea. 2 O.Erlk1on drawnga, oak frame 24x31 S25 ti 875-15852 reel, 1 betu. $3500 YAMA'tA t 90 •LIT• Muat aMI &42..QM7 bOth. 142"°413 MM724 ............ ,, one MITSUBISHI '88 Baccarat Crystal, exquisite vases, bowls. pllchera elc. Wholeule & below Check s1ore prices then call Robert 675-0817. Great June owner, 1850 mllHge, PRECSIS 5 door ruttY helmet, cover. loot· loaded sS200. • mma. untt for books, 979-3e:13 etc. (locked) S 1750. i-::..:..:....;;;:::~----- 142-0178 Olde 1978 Regency Good Condition, S2500. Call after 5PM. 963-6837 Wedding G1t11 AOCKWIELL L ltho "Fl,.t Love." Ap· praiaal value or bell o ffer 548-4848 Pets & nimals 6049 • Labr•dor Pupa •, All Yellow, AKC Field Champs Pedigree $450 71 4 646-9984 Kitten• need good home Tortoise 1hell 2 beby dwart white Bunni•• 650-7128 YOUNG Female spayed Tabby cat needs good home Very sweet 548·9436 0 557·5722 --1H\NGS 1 0 oo -- 3 Power Boilts 701 .' * 'n OWNERSHIP• Aotta Royce 11M19 Silver •AVAILABLE• Shtldow tvory w·block IN 33' EGGHAABOR. leath.,, 121•500· Absolutely perfect. 551-eeeo Newport slip. S 15,000 down. S600/mo No credit check. 768-2090 1952 "Woodle" Chris Cratl 18' Sportsman R u n a b o u t ·t r a 1 I e r $9.000 551-6860 Sail Boats 7014 M1·.1 l"''( 1 .. ' ~}090 GMC 1879 Step Van 21' 9/t, new engine July 1990. S2~ 662·1838. uto lmportPd '.l 100 \-"1 tlf 13' Cap11 Sall Boat'with · d tne 1111• trailer Excellenl sail Acura 1987 Legend l fU away condJtlon S695 Coupe A diamond, l. •a\tr ~ _ Jaren 7 14 '536·7882 Loaded, all HlrH. low ""llllr-even or 714 863·1181 mlleage, new tires. •· ttad ext 239 weekdays t • I e P h o n • • P P • ~ S15.900 725-9691. !>. -17' CAT AMARAN FIERRAfU 4001 '85 7 NACRA 5 2 w acces· white w/palomlno Int•· · sor1ea $1 ,200 (PU· rlor, cream putt condl- ·Jllltl ""' ·- '-"" and landlcaping .... thin lulfl? °'** the .-vice d•reclOty In oa.tlecl YOU CAN FIND IT IN THE CLASSIFIEDS ....... 842-5878 CATCH ·THE SAVINGS --- You II hool( your hm1t of in tereated buyers with ads you place in the clas11f1eds And our rates won t swamp your profits• U'\I. Not ready for a home of tom own? We have rentals ••• Whether it's a cozy cottage for two or a big family house - clieck our · Classifieds. lor llllp \ 6. The llll . TRAILER Pride ol ownership, &. 96561 650·8428 tlon. Appt, &40-0722 ;.......;;~~~---iiiiiiiiiliiiiii~~HUNT f through cJerffecl' in•ex•pen · 1 f •slve* I~ Let ·U1 Help Y 01 Sell Your Property! for information 0 R A GE lllilJ Ml-H11 ........ WNrl you .... clMalflecl ad, Include .. tM fec:te - and get ... ,... you went PUILIC NOTICE *(i,.; ik spen' siv) not high In price; reasonable; classified advertising PUBLIC NOTICE PUil.iC NOTICI PU1UC NOTICI r r Flotltteua ITATUmtl'T OP NOTIC• OP 111e•1•1 8u11ne .. N.me ---.. • vr _. ... ._ •••-----•-L ...... TIOll TO lluellleM ....... ltatelfteftt USIE OP ncTITIOUI lllU ALCOMOUC .... , .. , ... The following persona .,. The lollowlng persons ... auau .. 11 MAMm aavmuo•• The = ~ .,. doong bUllnnt H ' dOtng business u The ~ persons ~t/9t ~IC TOUCH AUTO (•)SANDPIPER COM-OUALITV VCR. 10757 El have,.,. the UM of To Whorn h May Con. CARE 1t717 Beech Blvd MERCIAl CLEANING (sb~5A Garra Cr Fountain Valley, th• FlcllliOUI ltu11ne11 urn .. N Sutt• •53 Huntington A.NOPIP£ftPOOL AND C.hl 92708 ~me·BIRCH CENTER EX· BARBARA ANO ltnlA Be c.itf t:zt.47 SERVICE, 19132 Magnolte Robert B Cyng11er 10757 ECUTIVE SUITE, 3350 Eat BECKER ere •ppln.e: 0~· ~h Ramey 2tl4 B3, Huntington IHch, Et Oona Ctf , Fountain Val-Birch StrHt. SUl1e 200, the De!*1ment CMyon Or Unit Q, 'Colla Calif 92&41 ~ Calll 92708 Brea Cakl 92621 holtc lkYefage Control to """ Caltf 92127 J1m11 /'1hbro~ ~ull, Th11 bu11ne11 11 con-The' F1ctlllou1 1tu11ne11 •el 11coholl 0 c ~-(~ ~ This' bua1ne11 11 con-19132 ~~.. • un-ducted by an lnd•Yldual Name referred to aboY9 11 ~air r 11• ran ducted by" an lndtvldUal "r~ton b8-:;:~,<;-~~ ~ The reglstr1nt(1) com-was filed In Orange ~ ~~~ COC::~a S:--8"r c: The registrant(•) com-" s u menced 10 trans.ct bu11-on August •. ,988 .-lie ..,, rnence<I to transact ~ ducted by: an lndfY1dual ne11 under the F1cti1iou1 No f3159412 cenM nou under the fletltioU9 The regl1trant(1) t ~':.: 8u11ne11 Name(I ) hsted Suun C Emery, 345 Av~ Publl~hed Ju0r11;y• 1~•t ltusJne11 Nam1(1) fisted menced to traM~ICtltlOUt abOY• on May 30. 1991 cado #101.C. Colla MGM, Dally !lot ne • t-2te abo\oe on· Mey 8, 1tee ne11 under the Robert Cyng1ser Cahl 92827 David Keltti Aamey Busmen N1me(1) fisted This 1ta1oment was llled Thi• business w11 con-aa•I LIC -TICI This 1tatemen1 wH flied abOYe on N A with the County Clerlt of ducietS by an lndiV1du1.I r'V nv whh the County Ctertc of J1rne1 A TuK flied Orange County 011 June 4. Thia etatement wu filed ,......._ Orange County on May 28, Thia st1tement ~~ t 1991 with the County Clertl of au.-........ 191t with the County M 2~ F48903e Orange County on May 28, ,_.171 Orange County on •Y ' Pubhlh•d Orange Coast 1991 at.e.......e Publi9hed Or•--Cout 1991 .2S PubNahe<I Orange Cou t The lollOwlrlG per90M .,, ·...,.... P49A71 Onlly Pllbt June 1.t, 18, . Oally Pilot Juna 4, 11, 11. doing buelneu Al Delly PloC June 4, 11, ti, Pubh•h•d Orange Co11t JUiy 2, l99I 25 1t9t JMO 01'.SIGNS, tttt Ayon 25, 1911 D"oly Pilot June 4. 11, 19, T·21t ' T·ili Cirele, Costa Meea, C#lf T·H7 25 Ifft T-?•t PUil.iC NOTIC! PUl&JC M011CI ~=-MIChMI °-= MUC IOTICI MOTICI OP..._. 1911 Ayon Clrde. Plotm.u. ta t1er9by atven ...... Cattf Na. T9* COSTA MHA ZON· w:.-..,..._ .. ................ .c, ........... 8uahMH ...... ~ lo Met'Ona ~71 ~~ ~~:-::..,::u.:~ INO AOMINllTRA TOA ltllt.,.....t 9nd 3072 <>' the CMt Code The reglltrantC•I com-Wk.l MNDER A 0£CI· The loltowtl'IQ persona are °' the 11..e of California meoeed lo "anwt .._,. StON ON '9•0A~E doing buslneu as the~.,._,, TOW· under the ~ 21, '"' 0.. Al AS RAVZAS, 20351 Irvine tNO ...... Ill publlC ale> :"11net1 "*"8(a) ._.. ~Slf8LE TH!MAFTIR Av•' St• CA, Santa Ant 11on: .. 1on t . CHllT· allOWe on NJA ON TH( ,OLLOWINO ~~~~Cal~.:!70~&5 E•· ~ '='~ANA~ I~ .lltNI .::.:=-wn Mad ~~ ACTION ZA· eter, ltlllne, Cahl 92715 '"' the followlnO de-J:.1 tM County Qefti o1 tMI llOR W. " HAYNES Thi• bu11nt11 ii c:on-acttMd ll'Ol*tY, to _..: ,..__County on Me,•· AHO COWANY-1..-AUTHO-dUcted by. an lndlVldual t HI ,.OlfO •. Ltcen11 -...,..... flZIO A08fT P'U'PI "A14tl.J The reg1etranl(1) c:om-..,,,_., .... NH. Wf No t f14M17t cw· DIVll°""EHT ;::.oc9!:, t='1!,.:: -=~~ ~ Pit•••• Orenge OWi .,.t u:a~~8:t heineea Name(I) ...... lllW o1 ....... , ... ti Deir~ JuN '· 11, ti, 1ttM10 DIWIWAY ANO ~on Mtiy 15, 1991 .. ....,...,.. ....... a t•t • ACCIU IN CONJUNC· AeyrllOtlel Halat ....... anc1 ...... ti-T~t llON WfTH A IU8MfTT!O Thll ~ wn fllM .... Wilt\ 0011a of..,. TINTATM "Mell ~ c:!'n,.;.ne~?on 1:;: :' enc1 _....,... ot W IOTICI ~ ~-=:"t~ 1tt1 DlleO wa 8"" dlW ol ITAi I 11•1 .. &-TEDAT -MD HtU P4HHI May, 1tlt. •2111111111 rt• AftNUI It A Ct ZONI. Publllhed Orange Coast ..... llOUTMW -.. MTm•• IMlllllOJJUINTAL otTtf'> Detty P!lol June 4 11 19 Pu~ ~ COllt ....... _ MINATION• ""IVIOUS is 1911 ' ' ' ~ 'lol ... n. tll'I ,,_..-~ ,.._ NI OATIVI ILA"ATION, ' T.,.. Tw. ..,_:;_N..eel ~ ACTION ,,,._ ::.:1c=,,.:r= IP 'HI AIOVI AC. QAl.llRY. Stl7 I. C.... ... &~ ~Ceroni...... ~ The 'lctlttoul •• .... TO vii • Heme ,...,,... .. .... iii=' m ::: ~-~ 1'0 ""'°" ~~~....... ..• =- .......... Clll. ~I ·-· ""' ....... -.... w ,.,.,. ....... 11 I AJu,.. n.11 1111 •• -&.. ., . R001lll .. ~""'---.... c:=: ..... .=tr. n ~,..i!-.. ,., . -- ~--­-·-""'9.-• ·1 didn't hurt your bear when I hit him -he's still smilin't• VOU HA~E 10 E UAL QUIET WHEN YOU TAKE 1NE LID OFF TME COOKI& JM ... ...----------------------.. SBOB by Brad Anderson LI C ENS~ FEES "Clear up something for me. Who's getting a license for whom?" KAKCY ARLO AND JAIUS MQ MAV't YOU ~VE:R lJ40tXiHT ~or AOOIOO A PO()(.! J'REDBA88ET by Jerry Scott ~ ~t'Tr L-l_..u::....__.-._~ by Jimmy Johnson •• •:1 = r;I ::::- : :; ... R081t 18 ROSE P~~ G ~"- ~~IM , ,, ••1111.c 1 1 .. __ .,_.W/Sc/Al..DlltlCH An-· to IM....._. cllbl: Al .... oounl, ............. , .... ht In .... couchee ofAmertoa. by Jeff MacNell'y .,... __ ....., _________ """ by Hank Ketchum D&JUllll TD llSJllAClt ~~ I t "rM ~ TeACHlr--IG JoEv~TO fl6HT. l'M 1EACMING H lM t0#.1 To DUCK !,, .) by Pat Brady by Tom Batluk OVERBO AIU> by Chip Dunham POR •T'ISR OR POR WOR81t by Lynn Johnston l~T~A~ AW J'l#i GLAD 1 flHAlL1 CONVINCE17 10U -0.Al I WAS JUSi ~R~6WING \T. 'iEA". AHnw~ E.ftCflNG A Wit> \l 'S GOOV ro GEf ntE.SE ~~flM1KE.GftENSMlf, Sill~ MISUHPE.RSfAM~IMGS "~ Cbi 11t£ CAstl-~~ Tli CLEAUQ lf so WE~~ _llC~ARE ~6\) wrm1\E. SWff. ~T BACK 10 AN '( A1ftoseMERE bf TRUST. ~EALL1 . "' ~ 10See. -Y-HlS !