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Contestant Choked in the Last Quarter

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I mentioned a while back that Richard Lefevre won an early round of the Nathan’s Famous hot dog-eating competition in Hollywood.

Alas, he ate less successfully in the finals, placing fourth.

Lefevre wolfed down 27 3/4 hot dogs in 12 minutes, about half what winner Takeru Kobayashi consumed. What bothers me about Lefevre’s performance is not the defeat, but that three-quarters of a hot dog.

Didn’t anyone ever teach him to finish everything on his plate?

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No lie: Panhandlers, like others trying to make money, keep an eye on trends. I’ve received reports (and snapshots) from around Southern California of various characters holding up signs reading, “Why Lie

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It’s evidently a laugh-provoker that brings in donations. I even saw a reference to a Washington, D.C., moocher using the identical slogan.

So I wasn’t surprised when I came upon the phrase again the other day at a Long Beach mall. But I noticed that the supplicant had added a punch line (see photo). The absence of a question mark on his second sign left me wondering whether he was saying he was already well supplied with Prozac.

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What’s going on in Van Nuys? On Tuesday I talked about a thermometer at Van Nuys High that’s been giving off crazy readings (116 degrees at 8:52 a.m., for instance). Now, Alan Nino of Alhambra has chanced upon a chilling triple-digit warning (see photo).

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Dangerous driving (cont.): A. Miller of Whittier points out that the directions for finding one store seem to involve ignoring some basic rules of the road (see accompanying).

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Weighty proposition: Joe Gold, the physical fitness guru, died this week at the age of 82. Radio show host Brooks Melchior recalled that Gold, though wheelchair-bound, “was, until recently, personally overseeing the World Gym in Marina del Rey where I worked out regularly.”

On his www.sportsbybrooks.com website, Melchior wrote: “The best indication of his still-spry condition was last year, when he wheeled himself over to me as I sweated over free weights on the floor.

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“The mastermind behind Arnold Schwarzenegger’s bodybuilding career, inventor of the modern workout facility and creator of the Gold’s Gym empire had sought me out with serious business in mind: Was my membership paid up?”

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You can’t be too careful: James Warren, a Riverside Superior Court judge, ordered a beer at San Diego’s Petco Park and was told by the counter worker: “I need to see your ID.” Warren didn’t enter an objection, though he’s 63 years old.

Press-Enterprise columnist Dan Bernstein asked Warren why he thought he was carded.

“I was wearing a floppy orange Padres hat on my head,” the judge responded. Also, “I don’t have a lot of lines on my face, but my neck is pretty bad.”

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Anchorpoet: My item the other day on broadcaster sign-offs included longtime anchor George Putnam’s “And that’s the up-to-the-minute news, up to the minute, that’s all the news.”

“Great timing,” wrote Kymberleigh Richards, “as it happens to be his 90th birthday.” She added: “Back in the 1960s when KTTV Channel 11 did both a 15-minute newscast at 6 and a 30-minute edition at 10, George would add, after the ‘up to the minute, that’s all the news,’ a rhyming tag: ‘Back at 10, see you then!’ ”

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And that’s all the column. Back on Page B4, tomorrow and not before.

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miscelLAny: How big a controversy is the breakup of the two Laker stars? ESPN’s John Ireland revealed that travelers arriving at LAX are now asked to declare, “Are you a Shaq fan or a Kobe fan?”

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Steve Harvey can be reached at (800) LATimes, Ext. 77083, by mail at Metro, L.A. Times, 202 W. 1st St., L.A. 90012, and by e-mail at steve.harvey@latimes.com.

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