HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-05-18 - Orange Coast PilotBy DAVID IUJTZMANN " 0( ... ...., ........
· Three weeks ahy of the Jtme 8
primary. the Orange County
Grand Jury claimed today that
conattuction of tbe Peripheral
Canal ia nee! I ry t.o ~adequate Southern California
water IU~ in the 1990s.
The Jur)'. in a ftpol"t relined
ttdl ~ atroaa!Y tndClnecl the atatewlde ballot initiative
known a Propc*Uon 8 which.
would authoriae COftltruetlaD ol
the cmtrawnal wa• pl!jlct t
In lta report On future ~
County water needt, the srarid
jurytuid creeUon of the Caul. wblch would leed t.o' imponaticm
of Northern CaUfornia river
water t.o me~Utan Southern
. California. )VOUk:I prevent ll?Wl'e
water ahortapl pndlcted by the
mid-1980a.
Southern Califomla'• supply
of ytluable CoJio.raqp River water
ii .:tieduled to be CUtin half by
198• when Arizona begfna· takina delivery of ltl allotment:
Proponentl of the Peripheral
Ca~ contend that the project
would on~aiphon off exces1 NorGlem omla river water
f« late 1n ·arid -and ltil1
bur1eonin1 -Souther~
Callfarnla. ' 8pc*#irwn f« the annd jury
'coulll not be reached for
OIMU•"'t tllit IDQl"ninc. ~ to the report. "any
delay Ja tbi declllon t.o build the
Pwtpheral Omal will add to the
problepi where water
conservation m•Y have to be
enforced and~ of Southern
CallflJmla 1 limited.''
'lbe pane~h lnade tours
of v..;ou. Yt•ter fadlities around
the state, warned that aevere
water 0ortaie1 could eaally
result thr ough drou1ht
condlt1ona 1imllar to thoH
• e~ in the late 1970.. upponenta of the Peripheral
Canal project, however. claim that~ of the .umated
$880 million canal would create
lrreveraible en vlronmen tal . dam• .., the .. Ja.qutn delta
re8foa of Northern Cilifornia, aniund which tbe canal would be
rou1*l.
. APW1t11tn
PREMIERING -First lady Nancy 8-pn joins 10-year-okl
Aileen Quinn, star of the mu.teal "Annie," and her doa,
Sandy, at the movte•a premiere at New York'a lladio City
Music Hall. · · . '-
~.
Celebrities turn out I or premiere
NEW YORK (AP) -Radio
City Music Hall belon1ed to a
frecllle-faced moppet and he~
do;• the celebrities turned out
for the lavllh movie premiere ol
the mUliall .. Annie!'
Pint llid_y ~ B"CI"\ -=a
Anthony QWnn,.tormer bOxma
cham.P Muhammad All ana
act.felt Jecquelme BlsHt we,e
amo.n1 thoN.!n the Umeli11\t
Monday nl1ht for the fllm'•
debut. Nearly the entire wt of the
film '!'a• on haDd, includtn1
I '
Bernadette Peten, Albert
Finney, Carol ):lurnett, Ann
Relnktn1 and Edward
Herrmann. ,..
Acton Chrl1topher Reeve,
Judd Hinch, IUllty McN&cbol
and Jeremy Irona and ballet
dmcel' AleQn!der GudanoY allD
were in the ataf-apan=
auctimce. Hundndl ot llPIC~ ~ -the eelebrtU. Mdwd: 1n JIJDOl•na
Mn. Reepn, 'Wearina a red,
oU-the-lhoUlder aown, arrived
(See 'ANNIE,' ~Al)
~~'1 of --' ap~ tiut M 1a1cl:'\h• three couplet art ......... tiOm "1t_ill to ......
meDeJ wbll• the 1overnment
"hll -...... IUpplJ.~
~ Uo .... wt.a lri =fQI'-~~~ IO llow and unpotMllar .,..U.
.~ II 10 IUpPordve of the
mlllfarj: .
"I tbinll our ~ are maall.
Our own con1re11man, Dan
Luncren, ll a perfect example.
)
BY JERRY HERTENSTEIN °' ... ..., ......... Ralph w. McDoaald, pnl6dent
of Golden 1'.aaJe ln~lf'llt; WM
ordered Manilay to stand trill en
32 chars•• in what 1herUf'1
inve1tl1ator1 have called the
lar1eat fraud ach~ ever wwwwed tn Or-.. ty.
The rullna WH made by
municipal court Jucl1e Blalr
Barnett• after th..., da11 o..f
~ ......... ~ ~ <*&atJ eiw1houM tn:
:&1!:1'111:·-.. ·~:n.:·:an
Taft aftlm. lfa ta DOW ardeNcl to
appeer.tn &q.rtOr Court Mq 28
fOI' arnlpment.
McDonald, who lives ln San Juan~ la cbaraed with
nine oou.nta of lfPd tbelt. one
count of •ttem= pand theft. 10 COUD11 of ~ leeUritt•.~tl of"IDalilriC =11 tntaUcm tn the.ale of a , one count of eomplracy
10 comml• IJ'a!ld theft and one
count of aampncy to cm:nmit tax.
eYlll6on. He hM pleaded lnnocent t.o all
charaea-Ttiree counta -lfand theft,
the aale of an unreciatered
-..witymd~ol
the W. of ' MCW'ity -were
df•' ii clmtna tbe bzerina. ,,_, wer. drc;lpped after two
' wltoHMI, Ro1ie and Laurie
Schaller. tailed to telttfy. Tom
Buck. deputy diatrlct attorney
and proHcutor, would not
0•11•lf'llt on w.:& they f.aOed to ~':.ct~ ,,t:;::::t with
the retA<a of the prelimlnary hiwlaa and that it~ bandJed
ID three ~ -two full days
1mt Wedne9da.y and Tbunday.
and a halt. day tllCb Friday arid ~~drew to a cloa.e wu.r than dDilctied --. ol
an ...,._Qmt l&GDclay betw.-n
Bua alld Paul Mut, defenae
auoroey'" to. auppreu tbrH
pro~l11ory notea 1bowln1
Golden Ea1le bad lnveated
mamy tn re.i ..... ventww.
(S.n.AUD,Pap.U)
He'• a tuper·1upporter of the mWtary ...
"Ma Ntponlible cttben, OM
m\llt OGnllcrer dvtl d1lobedJence
whin ~ are no other opdonl
avililable tn order to brine tbe
l1.N.· talks •
on Falklands
suspended
.Rejects
initial
cutback .
MOSOOW (AP) -President •
Leonid I. Brezhnev welcom~
President Reagan'• offer t.o ~
.\alb on limitiJll ltratellc na~ •
weapon• today, But rejecte4
Reuan'' pre>pcm1 foe • one-third
cut 1n hlfiictlc mmiJe ~· I' u "one-.ided." ---T~ ~ ~he S.ovlet leader aho ~
prop o a e d a f re e ~ e on• ]
modemiJ.ation and deployment ol ~ 1trategic weapons once talka
bepn and Rid no more Soviet· mecllum~rana-mi.lies will .,.:
deployed bl areaa w,here tbe~ .
co\lld htt w .. t Genaany an.cl I otber Weatern European; oountrie9. ~
Io Lux~ SeereWJ oft
State Alexander M. Hall Jr;; I
whlle reject1n1 the Sovlelt
requat for a frefte on nuclMr:
weepom, said aome Soviet .....
control propoaah have·
.. compatibility' with the U .S."
approach • -11e ~ ~ SovillC
view that preW>w arma control
negotiations abouJd be the ...
for new agreements.. He ai.o aid
he welcomed the Soviet view By 1'e AIMdated Pren that ..:urtty needs ol both .._ • _
.Prime Minister Margaret should be tbe bull for future •
Thatcher accuaed Argentina talb. . .
today of Nlllng peace ta.lb and The United Stata poliUm m.J
aUd Britain lhouJd know within been that a weapon• freeze·,
48 bowa lf a dl)llomatic aolution would lock in Soviet IUp?riorttY.1 j:
t.o the J'alkland lalanda conOlct ii in nucleer weepona.
pnl'INe She aid after that "no Brezhnev, 7~ and receutly
mWtary' .:tiol1 can be held up in reported to be amn,. delivered
any way." hi• 38-mlnute apeecb over
In New York, U.N. ~talks national televtaloo ln a atrona
were au.pended aaain today t.o vdce, .but slurred hla worClt IDd
gJve Araentlna more time to stumbled u be. walked bedl to
conaider the lateat Brltiah hla aeat. AD aide.1rabbed hia
condlebia for a tettlement of the arm and helped Him dimb tbe
South Atlantic crjaia. The talks two ate .. to tbit dala.
bad been 1u1pended over the Bretbnev ea announoed that
weekend. the~~ ...... ol the Party Central Secre~~~eneral Javier . C.ommlttee 'WOUid open "in a few
Pa-a de uJd he expected daya" to deal with the natiaft•1 t<> detel'mlne by Thursday food probJenw •
0 wbether we have achieved a The apeech bla flnt public
real pw.-eful aolution." He aaid addrw ln ~ months. opened be expected to reaume hia the lldl national~~ the
Indirect mediation etfortl Kem•• d. the C)wnmimfwt ......... \Yednmday. • I r--.., •
u1 beUeYe that we ahall khow T.:aan tn a 1peecb Ma1 ...
wlthl3 next day or two J>l'ODC*d that the Unhld Sta•
wheth D .aareement ii a the Soviet Uldan Stlodatle. attainable, Mn. ~tcber told reducam ol more thm cme-third
the Houae of ea.,...... <'aee ftlVQ.&Ul, ... AZ>
ANNIE' PREMIERES • • • ~· the movie'• producer, Ray
and waa areeted by Aileen
10, who portrayt Annie. , .JUowiDI kills to her adm1rtn, ~ QuPu\ aald with a liaJe, ~;m jutt really excitecf and I . fR>e eveeybody likes Jhe movie."
~er canine eompanion, Sandy, : T attended.
. The ha.!!1 ~th 5,800 1eata. wu
. aold out 'lldleta COit from ~ to
: $1,000. The John Huston-Raf
Stark production la an •JJ1ation • of the atill-running Broaiiway
Jhow bued loolely on the comic
, ~"Little Orphan Annie."
,, _Jroceeda will benefit the
Public Broedcatlng System.
Tbe two-hour film open•
Friday lo New York, Loa
Ancele1, Dalla• and Toronto betcre--ln110 ~ ...... The lno¥le atan appeanisf to
enjoy ttie evening'• glitter a1
much • the apecMlton. · rtnney, better known for bJa
aerioua dramatic rol", aald he
UluMl .. Annie" becaUll "t.hJa lnny
third mUlkal in a 26-year caner
... I can't alna or dance and
people don't ~ me to, IO tbe
jA llPb'et. ofl.' He 1ald premierea we,re
woftderfuJ becau. "lt'• nice to
haw 1C11D1 of thla ram:nat.az:L"
"NUCLEAR WEkPONS ..•
in tht number of nucJear warh ad• they deploy on
lonc-ran1e ballistic ml111lea, ~~Ung the limit at 5,000,
~pared to the more than 7 ,000
-side can deploy.
The ScMe1ll have oat of their
warbwtl on land-hued mtwlJ•,
which Chey would have to cut by
about ~O percent to reach
Rea1an'1J)topoaed limit. In
adcllUon, Sovtet commeata&on llkl. the ... ,a ....,....i did not
«NW •u. lnimDecf bomben Of crulM mt111\n, two areaa ln
wblda the United Staw • wen ...... al tbe SoYleta. ..
aubnw •Ulaattbe ~ ~tratlon 4\ki not have to cmvtnoe the Soviet Untcn about
the need for aubttantlal
reductlom in l&l'lltesic anm.
•
The foreman of an Oran1e
County S"perlor Court jury
hearing a death pepalty cue WM
removed from the panel Monday . atw he reported to court offJdaJa
that he received a thJ"ltatenlng
phone call.
The foreman, identified aa
ElliQ!t Clark of Garden Grove,
aald be received the call laat
Thurtday night only houn after ~1.:~~e~ defendant
murder for the ahoo~
a police officer two yeara qo.
Orange County Superior Court
Joe Bananas'·
kin arrested
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
Salvatore "Bill" Bonanno and
Joseph Bonanno.Jr., aon1 of
reputed Mafia chief Ja.ph ''Joe
Bananaa" Bonanno, have been
arreated, the Federal Bure.u of
lnve9t:laatron reports.
The ll'BI in Sacramento aald
they and two othera were
arrested Monday durina raidl ln
c.utornia, Arlmna and Utah, in
oonnection wltb a fraud
Involving an hlatorical polWr
honorina the office of Pl'9kllnt
ol the lf nltecl Sta ta AD are °"'*
.(II) bail
'.alva"1re Bollanno, 41. of
Campbell., in C&l.lfom.la '• Santa
Clara County, waa taken Into
custody in TuCIOn. Artz., MOQday
afternoon, said the FBI .-nt ln
charge in Sacramento, Ray
Yelcbak.
Judce Kenneth .E. Lae removed
Clark from the jury Monday
after dl1cu11ln1 ihe call with
defenae and proaecuUon
attomeya ln h1I dWnben. Clark.. waa replaced by an alternate
juror.
Other juron were not told the
reuon f« Catk11 removal. 'nMt
jury bepn heartna new evidmoe
MtGday In the penalty ph8le ol
Mink'• tdaL J!ldae we aid the phooe aan
to Clark contained an "indirect"
threat. Court ofllciala aald the
anonymoua caller told the· foreman, "You.,.re on trial now,"
after Clark buna up onoe. Mink, 34, couJa be tentenCed to
the. Caltf&rnla 1u chamber at
SM Quentin for ldDinc Garden
Gt'OYW police otticel-Donald Reed
outlide a bar ln June, 1980. Be
allo w• amvicted of WCMmct•nc
two other officers and two bymnden. .
Mink teatlfled that he uaed
<inlO IO heavily that he bad no
, recollection of what happened
the nieltt of Reed'• alaytng.
The defeme alao renewed ic.
requeat to abow the jury the
movie .. Taxi Driver." Miu FOlter~ the object of Hlnckley'a
one-aided Jove affaJr, play1 fl teen-aae pn>ltltute 1n the film.
""
POT BREATH Dr. Stanley
Grdel of the UCLA School of
Medicine demonatratea a
"marljµana breathalyzer"
developed at the univer.:!~y to
detect the pi'elence of pot in
those auspected of being
under its influence.
I
A Fountain Valley-hued tnck
club that offered f 1,000 for the
return of it• runaway
prt>motJonal balloon hu called
off the aeerch.
The club believed ita hu1e
helium-filled sphere, which Wal
aet free Sunda)' by an apparent
prankater C\t UCLA'• Drake
Stadiwn, would end up
somewhere east of the Rocky
Mountains., •
Instead, the ruptured nylon
veael wu dt.:overed Monday a
bit cloter to home -in the hills
of West Los A.ncela·
"I guem it just wan't aa tough
a1 we thought," 1aid club
apokesman Steve San FWppo.
But he aaid the Sub-4 Track
Club would make good on ita
promise and pay the $1,000
finder's fee to Manhall Williarnl,
who contacted the group Monday
after hearing rad.lo reports about
the runaway balloon.
Glementean found ·· Af~r U.S. Weather officials
told the club ita property mi&ht
land east of the Rockies, the
group announced its , 1,000
reward offer.
..
.inDocent in NY San Filippo theorized ,
however, that the sun'• heat
caueed the beliwn to expand and
bunt the balloon befor~ it .
.-A San aea.ite man who WM
accused of plou1n1 IDUrdera,
bombmo and .extonlQn aaalmt
fellow 0oau.u._ ~ t.een lound
innocent of the cbaraee in New
York. .
Miro ~lo1ic, 33, wu found
lnnootnt Of a variety of chafl'!I
Jlnldn1 him with •~roatian ~ from Yupll"'-
group. Three other defendant. a&o were foUDd kmoceot.
Slx .other Croatian• were
found l"il'Y ol chm1'll n.nclnc
from ncketeerlna to~.
They remain In jail -wttli-ball
.
~~· tron:i Uoo.~oo to $1
Prmec:uton ln New York told
U.S. Dlatrlct Judge Con.at.nee
Motley the group, a Croatian
independence movement known
roamed very far. !
"It's damaged goods," he
admitted. "But we J)l'Omiled we'd
give the finder $1.000, and we
wtll.''
•• OTPOR, waa a "corrupt M • J h Jd oraanhatlon whose chief emor1a e
occupetioft WM ~.ext.onion, ... SEOUL, Kerea (AP) -At
mu.rdlr and bcJmbtnf. leut 200,000 people attended
The pernmen=~ the memorial ..-!"':ices in Kwangju poup with being f« today on the 9eCOlld anni~rsary
two murden, four ~ul of a bloody uprlaing tn the \ m~ plots. more than 50 acta IOUthem dty ap.lnst martial law.
of exto.rtlcn, three cues of anon. The anny put down the uprising,
four anon plots and Interstate and the oUiciaJ death tnll was traniportation of explc.tves. 189. -~
1
BIGGEST BUDDHA UNVEILED -A grou'p
of people pay respects to a bronze recumbent
image of Buddha during an unveiling
ceremony in the coast cit{ of Tateyama, Japan.
eut of Tokyo. Out o her faith, Kimiko
,., ... ....__
Ichimura. a 63-year-old devout worshipper of
Buddha, spent her own fortune of $1 million to
have a Japanese firm make the 30-ton Buddha,
believed to be the largest of its kind in the
world.
High court to weigh evidence
I
on drunk driver's decision
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
U.S. Supreme Court has agreed
to decide whether a suspected
drunken driver's refusal to take a
sobriety test can be used a s
evidence of guilt.
A decision in the case from
South Dakota accepted for
review ia expected to resolve a
1plit among the stat.es over the
oonatitutlonallty of such evidence
at· a trial.
The South Dakota Supreme
Court said jurors cannot be told
about a driver's Jit!fusal to take a
breathalyzer teat because aucb
evidence would breech the
pr,otection again• t aelf-
lnciimination.
The justices' study Monday
came at a time when st.ates and
the federal g overnment are
under heavy pre11ure to curb
drunken drivers, blamed for
killing more than 25,000 people a
year.
In other action, the Supreme
Court:
-Gave women a new and
potentially powerful anti-bias
weapon , ruling that th e
government can withhold money
from schools that discriminate
against fem.ale employees. By a
6-3 vote, the justices said a 1972
law deelgned to halt aex bi.as in
education applies to school
empJoymint practlaes as well as
treabnentofstudenm. •
-By a 7-2 vote, left in'8ct a
Image-a 'problem_'
for Tory leader
TORONTO (AP) -Joe Clark matter ke pt cropping up In
is fighting to continue as leader corridor conversations.
o f Ca n a d a ' a r ea u r g e n t Clark was forced by the death
~ve Con.lttvative Party, of his father to miss all but the
but fellow Tories think he may closing brunch. He got a warm
not be able to live down his welcome Sunday morning from
diaaltroul brief tenure as prime the 900 delegates, including even
minister. those who want to dump him.
The Col'\Mrvativea have built · After a tearful tribute to hia
up a comfortable 10-point lead in father, he called on his party to
the polls over Prime Minister get ready to take ill proeram to
Pian Elliott Trudeau's Liberals, the country. He said aggreulve
whole ~mment is strua}i.ng CIOINUVaUve tactics ln Parll.ament
with ))igh interest rates , have made Canadians weU aw~
lnflaUon, unemployment and the of the ~rty'a opposition to IMJdrur t.nadlan dollar. "Trudeau• unpopular pollcies, 1l.rt ~ has not been able to . "Now Canadiani want to know
1lt back &Qd enjoy the political •what we stand lor, what changes
proaperlty. Even hia staunch we want to brin1," be aald. a1PFten worry that his image • • We ' re h .-.re to form a
probJem may be irreversible. government."
"I think Clark was a very good Under Clarlt'• leadenhip, the
prime mlnllter, but that'• not the Conaervatlve• defeated the
way he was perceived," said Liberals '1td ousted Trudeau in
Sinclair Stevena, who was a 1979. But the Tories did not win a
member of Clark's cabinet, in an majority in the, Hou1e of
interview. uwe have to get our Commons. Clark,f.alled to provide
leader'• imag4t into more of a strong, assured leadership, and wtnnLnc image. Whether Clark. II hi• aovernment fell after nine
able to do that I don't know." months when it tried to rai8e the
ruling by the Washington state
Supreme Court that a judge can
bar reporters 'from hearings In
open court if they refU1e to sign
an agreement on just what can be
covered. Today's action is
precedent-setting in the state• of
Washington only.
-Refu.ed to let a community
pro hibit the leaving of
advertisements and 10-called
"shoppers" at private homes
without the resident 's
permiaaion. Without comment,
the j udges left intact a
lower-court ruling that 1uch a
prohibition in the Philadelphia
suburb of Doylestown, Pa.,
violated an advertising
publication's free-speech rtghtl.
-Ruled unanimously that
The Washington Post cannot
obtain government lnformatiOft,
which the St.ate Department had ,
said could have jeopardized, lt
published, the safety of two
Iranian officiab.
-Reinstated. at teast for now,
a law enacted by three Ohio cities
-Panna, Lakewood and North
Olmsted -to ban the sale of
.drug P.araphernalla at "head
·shops. ' The justices aet aside a
lower-<X>Urt ruling that the ban ia
unconstitutional.
-Cleared the way for the
Immigration and Naturalization
Service to begin d~portatlon
proceed Inga agaJnat "Romanian
Orthodox Btahop .,Valerian Tri.fa.
an alleged World War Il Nazi
Npporter. Without comment, the
justices let 1ta.nd .a lower-court
ruling that TrUa, now-a raident
of Grau Lake, Mich., had
voluntarily sui:_rendered bi•
rights aa a naturalbed~
The Sou th Dakota case
stemmed from Mason Neville'•
July 19 , 1980 , arrest on
drunken-driving charaea ln
Madison.
The 1tate'1 Supreme Court
refused to let ltate proeecuton'
use Neville's refusal to take a
breathalyzer test as evidence
against hlm aa provided for
under state law.
WAIHINOTQN (AP) -Now and then, he'll 1nap at th•
8oYietl to "butt out" or ~
them ot expandln1 "armtd
~·· And ln the true Cold War
tradlt.lon, be branded them u
..,...Uve d!ctaton even while att.rinl· an olive bnnah ot amw
ccm~.
Aaf.de from the ah.aro ~het.orlc.
thouah. the hard .. la w..rtna
oft Pretldent Re•aan'a forelgn
policy -dnplta lill lut.tence
that he .._ny haln't ~
H1s l>l'OPOMl f« a U.S.·Soviet
tr,at:Y that ml1ht cut back
nuclear anenalJ more than 60
percent LI the obvious ex.ample.
But there are otherl, He ha• invited Soviet
President Leonid I. Bre%hnev to a
1ummit mee~ "to build a new
understanding.'
"I will tell him that hil
government and his people have
nothing to fear from the United
State1," Reagan said in hi•
Mother'• Day declaration at
Eureka College.
He 11 hultatlng on arms
ahipmenta to Taiwan and sent
Vice President George Bush to
aeek the approval of China's
communllt leaden . . He has eued up on trying to
block a pipeline to carry Siberian
natw"al gas to Westefll Europe.
Poland's debts have not been
~. And, strong words not-
withstanding, the adminlatratlon
ls proceeding with new caution in
Jlnny C... lmde them.. ~:
by declarln1 b• would not bt ~' Influenced by .. an tnilldlnate
.. I of CIOIDID&inllln!'
tbtC.artbbMn. 1 But th•r• wa1 Ronal
At hla new1 conference la1t Re•r, P!fthld on • 1too1 1n a
week, R••••n bru1hed off Cblca10 school the other da~
crtUcs.m trom the nah\ thft he 1a : PftWDI ~ Cllpkaai:y. •-and---. He related hoW J•.:::1 .. I haven't cha=ed," he Mid eml1ratton plclled up aft
with a nDe. N reporten Brei.hnev wu quletlr. blf ·
jult a bit, he .uaes they look that blocklnc vlau • lnterfert4
up h1t 1980 campalan statementl with our tryln• to 1et alon1 callin1 for aharp reductions ln better with therD:'I•
nuclear weapons. In dealJnC with dict.atonhi~
But while ln1ltt~e'1 been ••th11 LI what we're practicinC:n ~~i~7ttle w~~ Beepn told the ttudenta. /
1
propoee the new treaty 11a1bJna llee,pn'1 lh1ft toward a mote
1Uperpower anenals. moderate ~ policy may ~
Actually, It took 16 month•. due in ..,i to tlM advice he ..,wi
And the /ropo1al he finally Secretary ol State Alexandet'
unveile had aome of the M. Hail Jr., a P'Cold Wamor" ~
earmarks of the moet ardent arma U.Unct but a subtle. operator by
control advocates. tralnln1, may be taking on the
Ideology inevitably gives way mantle al "fontp policy~·
to prapiatilm in the nuclear age. he IOUlht at the outat.
Bealde1, Reagan'• economic Demorallnn1 feuds with thllf
policy and his record u governor White HOUie have 1Ubllded atnce
of California show considerable Richard f · Allen Nlliped ~
flexibility. preuure In January aa the ae.aan pve up on a belanced pre1ident'• national aecurla
budget by 1984 and dropped hiJ adviler. Allen'• departu
opposition to new taxes. ~ removed an ldeolotrue, • well
may yet force him to accept a Hai& rival. ..;;
laraer defesue cuta and to e.ue up Allen'• 1uccaaor, William P .
on Social Security. Clark, has a limited lmowledae ~
It shouldn't be 1urpri1ing, foreign affain, 1oes hone6a&'
then, that Reagan la willing to riding with the president antli
adju.t his foreign policy, aa well. 1tays out of Raia'• way. Beskles,
lienry Ki11inger enraged they developed a goo~
conservatives b~ promoting relationship last year when Clark
detente with the Soviet Union. w• deputy eecretary of state. ------------------------.. ~!
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DISARMING SCUJ.PTURE - A 500-pound aluminum
eculpture, "Stop World War ID," dwarfs pueenby tn New
York's Dag Hammarskjold P1ua near the United Na.
building. The ICUlpture, spon80ftd by the'-War Beat.en
Leque in cooperation with the city'• Parks and Recreation
Dept., wu unveiled Monday. The artwork; b)' William Kina
of Easthampton, N.Y.1 wu created for dlsplay during the U.?f.
sesaion on diaannament to begin fn June.
• !
Energy ;. . ..
plan ended':> :
. M . ? .. 10 ex1co. l . , ...
• MEXICO CITY (AP) -..!
Burdened with an acute flnanrial;:
aim. Mexico i. corllldertnc • ..
IUlpenllioo of itl atomic eDer1Y'
ptOll'aDl, the most ambttiot.-ln
the dew1optng world. •I • '!be decision will affect the'·
nuclear industries of Canada 1
France. S~,den, the Unit;;J;~
States and WmtGenufty, which
haw ~tched h.m of sta:
cabinet official• and atom!~,
adentisla to lobby for the fint Of~
a aerie.I of contncta worth an':.
estimated $32 billion in CUJ'n!llt~
~dent ;Jc. Lopez Portillo~ •ho9e admlnlstradoo wroW the
energy plan aa part of bf ·
oil-financed push to l.ndwtrialia ,
Mexico .. planned to lip the first
contract before leavtng offl; I
Dec. l , 1982 . It calla f'!!J
oonatruction of two of the 20 :
atomic racton planned for the : ·
year 2000.
But 9000 after the bids weft :
opened Feb. l, the Mexican pem ;
colla.,..cl under the strain of • declbUna ail revenue and a $70 i ·
billion foreign debt. The 40 •
percent devaluation set off a C •
bunt of lnflation and forced an Cl t
percent sluh In aovernment !
Spending. ; •. • Tbe Electricity Commiaio~ t .
UIUl'el bidden ltl 180-rnanber : .
evaluatiori team will meet the t :
Augwt dNdllne for awardlnc .-t
contract. But the pre1iden.t t '
reportedly 11 under preaaure •
froln flnandal aides to let the •
, next admtnt1tration decide I·
whether to man lt. • 1 =~
Tory membera of Parliament gasoline tax Uf centl a pl)on.
an4 other party leaden frorrl Now the Llberw are t.akln1
around the country held a their lumps. A ditmal:eoonomY'1 weekend poncy conference in with 9.8. peicent unemployment
Toronto. The party leadenhip and i.nllat1on over 12 percent. bu
"We hold that evklentlil of an
accused'• refusal to take a blood
test vlolatel the lederal and state
privne1e aaun~t aelf-tn·
crimination and therefore (the
South Dakota law) l•
\UllCOOlltltutlonal," the state court
ruled.
,._~~--~--~~~~~~~~~---~~~~~~~~--~~~~--~~~~,
WM not en the agenda, but the soured the public. •
ORANGE COAST D1Dy~Hat MAIN Oflllla! . •w..-fi,C..U~,CA. Mt11 ..,_: .. 1 ... , C-. M9N, CA; ...
DEAR PAT: II It better to tead •• lmportut letter by '· e.rtllW nthr tbD reslttel'M maUT ne. maJa tk1q I aeed It ,nol of delivery.
-N.L., Corou del Mf.r
Certified mail la your best buy if you are eendlnc im~t
letters, Insurance forms, oontracta or bkla for bus1nell oonir.Cta
mailed at the Ftrst·Clua rate. At 75 cents plus the charge for
postage, certified mail ooeta lets than registered mall.
It ahould be used when the eender requ.lres a ~ u proof of~· The coupon receipt la postmarked to ena the date
of delivery. A record of the delivery la a19o kept at the addrelle'a
post office for two years, but no record ia kept at the office from
which you mailed the material. You 3 request a return receipt or .restricted delivery with certi.fled
Certified mall service la provid only for fint--clua or
priority mail containing no intrlnsk value, and insurance la not
; available. Certified mail labels, which can be obtained from your
s local port office, must be completed by the customer for thla type
:t · of mail. -,
;
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Withhold kids' U.S. tax
DEAR PAT: T'11 nmmer wMll acliool lt 09t4 I ptu to uve
my aoa work for me. Do I uve to wt~ tuea fnm Ms wape
die same u .., o&Mr employee?
-G.J .. Ba...,._~
IRS ays that if a 10n or dauahtel' under age 21 la emp)oyed
by a parent, hia or her wages are subject to federal income tax
withholding the aame u other employees. However, hla or her
wages are exempt from Social Security and federal
unemployment tax.
• . "Got a problem? Theo write fD .Ailt Hduwit:z. .Ailt wQJ
cut red taPI', #ttlnil tbe anlWen lind M:don you • 1 . need to fOfve,bj«luJtlei In ~t. and bc.lline9.. MaU .)QIT queirt.ic:n9 to Pat &rowi~ At Your n. Orange Coac Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560,8c;::
. .Mem. CA 9281'6. & many .le"'6's • po8Lble wtll be . ADllWl'ed.
WAIHINOTON (AP) -~......,,who ftr9& 9IDDlrmd
1n actor roHmbU~• RouH fr''* ftcmlit P. 0'1'tW tn a 180 telWlllob oarnpataa ad1 have unveiled an upClatta
venaoa with the Mme O'Neill
)ookalllM -plUI a dMd ~ tor__. .......... Carw.
• A1 Uat 0 1NeUl and Carter
~ looli an. • third idol" ~Yiiwala.,.Nlldla .. i.lt
WW incl c1-tai:mnt" -~ the nation'• economic •O•• to ~blam. ti. one GI two c-:= .a., COlt:lriC a total Of • ,.., &bat
wW nan m the cOq)J.q months
around the mtkiri. GOP leeden
aid Mcnday at a preview ot the
adl for Npartm'I. "
''When the pMt prelldait left
office, Ronald ReaPn inherited
all the Dl"Obleml.'' announcer
1n the Carter-O'NS ec:1 -~ .. ao w , Mand ~ Reoublicanl have
cut tb• 1rowtb ol aovttmment C!!" and broul}lt lntlation
While the O'Neill actor grunts
and chorde9 and the Carter llCtol"
loou on ailently. the "lawyer"
.read1 from the supposed will:
"To the Republkanl in~
we leeve the real problemL
And tbe announcer ends the
SO ·aecond spot 1aytn1 :
"Republican.tare belinntng to
make th.tncll better." .
New York actor Ed Steffe,
who played O'Ne.Ul in a
frequently aired 1980 GOP
commercial· a how ln1 _~
~~ .. outotc ~em~bi·C~ of
Waco, Texu play1 the Carter
role, GOP laden said.
The con1reuional GOP
campalan ctialnnan, !tf · Guy
Vander Jaat, ft..Mlctl.. It WU dedded not to overdo the Certer
part_;-ao ht.a lookalike wasn't liven a apealdna part.·
An earlier venion, ln which
"Carter" read• the wUl, waa
acrapped, Vmder J.,i -at.
0 We think there ii under1Y1na
reapect amona the Amerfcan
~r the office of the
," Vander Jqt aid.
Vander Jaat said the
commercl.U would nm lo~ to
100 markets -with heavy
expoeure planned in CbJcaao,
Heartaches by the number
A hit~ called ''867·5309
-Jenny" put Lorne Baru'
telephone number ln
Brewton, Ala. neer the top of
the record charts, but •he
wam't amuaed and now haa
changed her phone nwnber.
The aona ducrl bes a ·
teen·a1e boy who read1 a
meaaage on a wall ~ aysr
A police ot1Jcer stood ready
wtth a 12.puae ahotcun but the cover wun 't needed u
Earlco Walleada made It
throuah a hiah·wlre walk
and .an~ headltand
over a tiger pit without a
hitch at Columbus. Ohio.
"Everythlnc WU perfect,"
Wallenda laid. "I've done thla
all my lite. Thil ii what my
grandfather tauaht me. You ·
mu1t be reasonably
coordinated and have a lot of
trainin&''
Waflenda, 27, ii the
grandson of the famed Karl
Wallada, who died In a fall
in Puerto IUco ln 1978 .
"For a good time call
867·5309." It's •tined "Jenny."
"When we'd flrat get calla
at 2 or 3 f.D the morning, my
hu1band would anawer the
phone" and think ~ WJ WU
for their son, Jh11my, Mn.
Burn• who had the Hme
number, aid In an interview.
Columnist Art B.clawald
auctioned more than $20,000
In eventl in Botton rangin,
from a sail with Etae
Kene•y and a tennis game
with BW Cosby to a walk-on
part In a Bosto n opera
production.
Proceeds from the auction
10 to the Maaaachuaetta
Society for the Prevention of
Cruelty to Children.
Buchwald, once a fo1ter
child, asked all Reagan
admirers in the audience of
400 to ra1ae their hands. Then
he told them they had to bid
twice as mbch as everyone
ei.e.
u .... ~w , .... 11._
llou10 lugef"ClaJlrau , .... I • .-eaH, D·Okl8. =-~~ ol a t
he••• h~pe ·fer F .. ~;,, .-:~been lllYlnl·oou,..,,_~
Ut1ltu on ·~
lnternaUqnal b•••••• Wathin~toa and lall If ~&Midbe-•nou1h coupon1 for fou
tJcketa to Sui'ope -\kdleu
that JOIW cuncedld wanti be
honond 1n l.IOt of Wt--*'• BnnUf lhutaown.
"You're Jookin& at a fellow
who'• 1oin1 to be an
un1eoured crecUtor in the
8nnlft CMe,'' he IUd.
AIH Bale1 put Jutfure,
Gambia, on the map In hta
beat·tellina novel "Rootl,"
but uy1 die Weat African
vtllue fee1a it w• liwn lhort lhrtti from the wrfter.
Haley .-kl in Ul intervsew
publlth,ed in the Baltlmore
Sun that Juffure -the
vlllaae Haley traced u hil
ancestral home In the novel
apannina hundredl of years
of black history -aot only
one promiae" from hinl: help to builda~ue.
He 'told the paper he
fulfilled that promise by
aendJna $6,000 to Ul engineer
in Juffure to pt the_ IDOIQUe
•tarted.
The paper quoted the chief
of Juffure, 78·year·old
Batary Tul, u aaying that
Haley had prum.ed men.
The dren was black tie.
The host waa Jelaa B .
Coaaally, former U .S .
Trea~ry secretary and pem« of Texas. The guests
came to Houston from t-0
atatea and five nations, by
Invitation only. The event
wu a cattle auction.
It Wat the 1lxth annual
black-'ti• Western Heritaae
Sale that Connally had
arranaed, and 1,200 people
attended.
Cattle wasn't the only
commodity being auctioned.
Included were f 6 American
quarter hones, 26 Santa
Gertrudis bulb and 27 objlal
of conteniponay art.
Auction offidab taid they·
netted about '3.46 m1l1kn..
--, .....
NEW COURBET -Walter
Ba yle11, pre1tden t of
California'• largest chain of
vocational IChoola,. is ahlli1ng
the company's emphuis
away , from OOW'8e9 in real
estate, state · contracton and
Insurance licensing to
computer education.
revenue factor," he aaid.
SPACE EXPER.DIENT -Amy Ku.Ice, 16, of Wit.on Hilb
School. Lona Beech, will have an experiment lhe ~
''The Effect of Exerdle, Diet and Zero Gravity on UJ>C>l)rOtef.n
Profilee," performed in space during the next flight ol SJ>_8Ce
Shuttle d>lumbla. Amy, a ltraight-A ~t, t)eprl her
experiment w~ a ninth grader at Hill Junior HJCb.
. A graduate of the Naval
Academy at Annapolis who holds
a muten degree in bu1iness'
admhUstratioo and a Ph.D. in
human behavior, Bayleaa became
a t.tecber after leaving the Navy.
He enj.,yed t intellectual
Graduating? ...
Changlngs Jobs? ...
Starting a New
ClrHr or Lifestyle?
Assurt'yourself of
a beautiful futuni at
John Robert Powers
Where countless
women of all ages
have found new
personal horizons
to match the chal·
tenges ahead. learn
everything from
Makeup to Modeling and much more.
Call or come In
today for a free per·
sonaJ ana!Ysis and program discussion .
ORANGE COCJNTY
3 Town f, Country, Orange
(714) 547-8228
.
I
You stfll aet United'! famous loyal Hawaiian Service.
:You can savor authentic Polynesian delicacies. Sip ~xotic drinks.
Watch a great first-run movie and relax with stereo-all in
exclusive Royal Hawaiian style. .
You stfll aet Unlted's Advance Check-In.
When you fly ~ted, you oan reserve both your favorite seat and
your round-trip boarding passes-in advance-with just one call.
You still get the most wfdebodfes to choose from.
Every dai United offers 7 convenient 74Ts tG Honolulu, plus
th~ only flight to Hild. Choose from these departure times:
8:00 a.m.~ 9:00 am., 10:00 a.m., 11:15 a.m., 12:00 noont, 1:00 p.m.,
4:30 p.m. (Honolulu) and ~12:00 nO?n (Hilo). ·
:::r.,r:.. ~ be ... ,.,
"I Wll ~ a fllnUY of
five, lncluCfln1 ·myHlf, on a .-.home pay ol ~ w. 0'2 a montb. U jWlt wa1n't
fMllble, and I dldd4ld to ., lnto
real •tate ln TeXM, where my
Wife II from,'' he Mid.
·BeY1-built a ...oo...ful re-1
lltate company 1n the Lone Star
State and later 1old it to a
nat!onal Urm ba1ed In Wuhl~n. D.C. Then, after a
couele of 1Ml'I .. an executive,
he dl'Oppect out.
''My wUe Mary and I took a . f:!r off tn Coronado on the h. In that year, I w_, able to
really set hulde mytelf.
"I think everybody should taa
a year off every five to Hven
year• if you can and evaluate
everythina that you're doini. I
wanted to apend my time iJl UM.
areaa that \Vere primarily
intereatin1 to me, ao I finilhed ,
my manulCrijjt and my doctorate
work," he said.
"I think everyone should find
something that they really like
doing. I think that'• the moat
important thina in life. I think lt
WU EroeJ'lon who aaid, 'Find the
doors that open eaaieat for you.
Make that your life's work and--
you will be Succe18ful.'" I
When an executive leal'Ch firm
called looking for eomeone to run
Anthony Scnool1, Bayless wu
ready. I
"I thought it would be a really ~
great challenge and it seemed to '
tie in with everything I did in the
t," he said. ~ . '
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You idll won't find JD ealler ••Y to ••ke ~dons. ' Call your favorite Thlvel Agent. Or call United anytime, anywhere.
And if your pJans change, just pick µp the phone to get your new
reservations-it's that easy. . ·
Sure, we>mefl. loee 17 to 25 pounde in just 6
wieeQ at the Diet Center, but men lose we;ght
at an even laster rate, ~ enjoying a gs:eater
vaNty °' loodll
~ best o1:-. t!lill eee Hawaii~ the eves of the peot>le who biOW lier belt. .
The people of United. Nobody brin~ the magic and the mystery
of Hawaii right on board the way the frie~ skies can. Your
bads-many of them native Hawaiians-ih&re it all with you
onj'Qµr way to "our little comer of the Wotkl:' •
Be"" sure to act fl8t and take aavan~ Of tkiited's ~t Hawaii
S~ Sile. FIN~~ t0 ttaftl tietWeen ~une 14 aii<I JUly 15. H ~~\:get away then, United has another . 2"iat low fare avatlal>le Jµlj 16.~ $145. Sure~ will 6e'&idied durtDl.CbditiDU HOlidily pertod. So Call your
nivel ,~tor United tocta1 ·
~,Ind Sunday only undl JUiy l; t~JµIJt .
I : I •
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Fitness I ad exception
In an era when ball the
nation appears to be going
fitness-crazy, it'j somewhat
startling to learn that more than
half the youngsten in American
schools aged 6 to 17 are unable to
pass a basic fitness test.
In a random sampling of 7,600
school children, only 4·3 percent
were able to meet fitne-.s
s~ designed to be attaimd
by. the average healthy yow1&*r
in each age and sex group.
The four-part teat
·administered annually to ~ and
girls from first grade through high
school includes specified numben
of sit-upe and puah-upe, plua long
jumps and runs of varying
distances for each age amt sex
group.
In no category were as many
as half the students ~ able to
meet the standards based on
Amate'Ur Athletlc UDion testing
dating back 39 yean.
·'.Additionally, examiners
fo~nd, the performance of
teen-agers showed a marked
decline after age 14, with
12-year-old girls outperforming
17-year-olds and 15-year-old boys
failing to achieve the levels met by
14-year-olda. ' . This waa attributed in part to
the tact that many schools drop -"
compul~ory phytlcal education
after the eighth grade,
upon· reflection, the poor
performance of the youngsters
teated has to be puzzling.
American cbildrefl on the whole
are -well-fed, well-housed and
well-clothed. And, by comparison
with chfldren tn many pan. of the
world they are liven unusually
eoml8tent medical care from the
moment of birth -and Indeed,
before. ·
Many auend schools with
swimming pools, tennis courts and
.well:.equippe$f gyms, and ha~lhe
gu.klance or competent inatructon.
So why in the world are·they
falling behind in basic physical
fitnea? Are they spending too
much time watching televbion
and abaorbing junk food? Do they
have too much mechanJca1 help in
chores that used to require
physical effort? .
The people scoring the testa
offered no explanation. except for
the teen-agers no longer obliged to
attend PE cl•mes.
Perhaps the answer will take
more study. But it should be
found. It is not acceptable for a
nation tba t offers lnfini te
~bilities for fh)'lical fitness to
let the fitness o its young people
slide downhill.
Kind gestures rewarding . .
A pair of· Orange C.ountians celebrate the long-overdue
showed ua last week it'• never to recognition.
late for a kindly gesture to lift the On a lees ceremonial acale, we
spirits of a friend OI' acquaintance. have Floyd Meyer. 71, who spends
In Anaheim, Alton Allen, most of his time viai tln.g and
well remembered a1 a county .cheering the elderly patients at a
aupetvlaor from 1983 to 1971, N.ewp'ort Beach convalescent
thought about' his friend of 50 hc»ptial. . C Laguna Beach ~ Eugen . Last year, Meyer, a part-~in· 19-..a Mai _ ,...i. _-•a time miniater and former bus. -er AneB driver. amwered an ad ee.eklng 15-foot statue of the famed volunteers to help at the hospital.
Polish-born tragedienne M.adalne He' • onl -vwt "-----Helena ModJellka wu unveiled in • 00• Y a a-&W1C1aa, Anaheim with a great flow1ah but ai.o pla)'11 the piano, and th~
Allen was there and it bothered paUenu -he knowl the names of ' , all 94 of Uiem -came to look him ~bat the ac~lptor 1 name forward to bit dally villi.. So
didn t even appear on the many, he •Yt. eeem to have been
mon= YNI' be offered io pay foqotten by tbetr' relatlva
for a p&q... to .clcrn the ltatue Meya: ~ he wouldn't ~
identifying it• creator, now hia vtllta fiJt ~ ·~ a
85-year·old Maier-ltrlea, if where rve ~my nrw-4.'' he
Anaheim would ~ another explain&. •
eeremony. The city aireid and ~ Never. toe> lit8 to bold OUt a
old frlfnd1 were on hand to heJPnl bilil:
WASIUNGTON -The U.S. Supreme
Court baa one thing In common wjth the
Kremlin. Both are overpopulated by
obsolescent curmudgeons, who are
vested with an arrogant and arbitrary
power. They tend to regard the entrea·
ties of the aged and afflicted aa an in-
tolerable affront. '
The "nine old men" of Franklln Boo-
sevelt'a era have been replaced by Snow
White and the eight cod1era. Snow
White is the youngest; Sandra Day
O'Connor is 52. The next in physical a,e,
William Rehnquist, is 67, but in other
ways, he is the oldest of them all The
majority are in their 70s.
YET THEY HA VE shown little com-.
passion for their own generation. My
associates Joseph Spear and Corky
Johnson have carefully isolated 14 Su-
preme Court dedsions that have affected
the elderly since Warren Bureer became
chief justice In 1969. A ~ 12 of t.hoee ntlJ.n&s undennined the ta of
senior citizens; only two atren ened
their basic rights.
The justices live in a privileged world
of their own. isolated from the fears and
hardships that beset most Americana as
they grow older. Unlike the rest of us,
Supreme Court justices need ne'(er
worry about being thrown out of their
jobs or forced to rely on their children or
the welfare agencies to stay alive-.
A member of the hlgh court would
have to try really bard to die broke. An
890Ciate ~tlce can retire at age 65 after
15 years' eervice. or at lifl 70 with only
10 yean• service, and still draw a full
salary for life: $93,000 a year. A chief
justice can do the same and draw $96,800
a year. Whenever justices retire, they
can count on a pension worth at least
•
h&lf of their aalary -more than enough
to put them in the upper cru1t of
American wage earMrs.
So perhaps it's not surpriting that
members of the court find it difficult to
relate to the problems of aalng Ameri-
' G
-JK_l_ll-Rm-1-,.Y)
cans. Five dedsiona alnce 1969 concerned
forced retirement because of age; the
Court ruled against senior dt.lzens in four
of the cases.
Three of four Social Security cases
were decided against the elderly peti-
tioners. In two other cases involving
health issues, the old folks wound up
loeers. And in still three other rulings,
involving pension rights, the elderly
again lost every time.
Here's how the Supreme Court voted
on the 14 test cases:
Chief Justice Warren Burger, 74: For
the elderly, 2; a,ainst, 12.
William J. Brennan. 76: For, 9; against, 5:
Potter Stewart, 67 (retlred): For, ~
against, 12.
Byron "Whizzer" White, 64: For, 2;
against, 12.
Thurgood Marahall, 73: For, 10;
a,ain.st. 3; did not part.id.pate in one case.
Harry A . Blackmun, 73: For, 1;
against, 12; did not participate In one
cue. Lewis'· Powell Jr., 74: For, 3; tlg~
9; did not participate in one case.
Wllllarn ~hnquiat, 57: For, 3; against,
10; wasn't on the court for one case.
John Paul Stevens, 62: For, 5; against,
. .
4; declined to partidpate In three cues,
and wasn't on the court for the other
two. '
Justice O'Connor was not serving on
the court when any of the 14 c.aaes were
consideced. '
MUCH RAS BEEN written about the
"Imperial p?'eSidency," and the f.act that
el~on as cbief executive automatically
guarantees that the man will live like a
millionaire for dle rest of his life. Lea
baa been said about the members of:i.!ehe
Supreme COurt, probably because ·
every move does not make head mes
al'O\.Q'\d the world.
Yt\t in 110me ways, a Supreme Court
justice ia in better shape than a presi-
dent. The job isn't nearly as harrowing;
the hours are a lot better, and the pay
and perquisites are pretty close to a
president'c. They alao don't have to
worry about getting ~; onoe ap-
pointed and approved, ~ flagrant ,
mi5behavior, they serve· untif they de-
cide to quit or until they keel over.
Furthermore, unlike a president,
members of the court are JU\SWe~ to
virtually no one. They are the arbiters of
their own as well as everyone elae't
conduct. '
It's small wonder, then. that tliese
pampered members of a uniquely privi-
leged cl.as5 show so little sympathy for
those in their age group who ~ve not
attained such exalted status. The jultices
simply don't understand what it~
to worry about w.her.e money for the
next meal, the next rent check or the
next medical bill is going to come from.
Footnote: My full analysis of the
Burger Court's decisions on lsaues affec-
ting the elderly wU1 be published in the
May issue of 50 Plus, a magazine for
people over 50.
~late should curb school salaries
Legislators are now anguishing over
finding a way to reduce state apendipg
by more than $2 billion or increasing
state revenues by that JIDOUnt in order
to balance the 1982-83 budget which
begins July 1.
The thought of cutting back spending
chills most of the liberals who believe
their tenure in office depends upon how
much they can give away. Fortunately
for the taxpayers the crunch ~ In an
eiection year, a time when most elected
offidall fear voting for new or tncreued.
taxes.
CAUGHT BET~EEN a rock and a
hard spot the solons are indulging in
Band-aid solutions instead of stepping
back and taking a good look at where
they are and how they got there.
The truth is that slicing $2 billion from
a budget which has exploded from $10
billion tb more than $27 billion 1n a.ix
short years ahouJdn't be a difficult talk.
And in-fact. piqued ~ the contlnued
reports ot waste au.wed. by mllmanage-
ment and fraud in the state's health care
programs, the lawmakers appear to be
makirur progress in trimming the costa
there. Since these programs conawne a
third/ of the state's general fund the .. -r-.
llll IATfRS
elimination of the wute could produce
the •vi.np needed. The question la whe-
ther the reductions that will be made
simply correct the problems or go to the
point of hurting thoee In need. ·
There are any number of other pro-
grams which should be trimmed or dis-
carded completely. Theee are the non-
essential, many of them "do-gooder''
operations which neither were requested
by the public nor wanted. Quite a ~ of
tbele prolrams may teem to be ~Uta
in 90 huge a budget but as the late Sen. ,
Everett Dirklon said. "A billion here and
Animal naines for people
a billion there and pretty 9000 you are
talking about big money."
Indisputably the largest expenditul'el
now made by th& state are for education
·which, between grades K J.:lfl2 and
higher education, amount to <>f the
general fund outlay, 34.2 percent for the
local achoola.
Since state' funding of gradt!a K
~ 12 now repreeenta 80 pera!ftt of
the local school budgets it ia tinfe for the
state to s!!t~n to requ\re uniform staf-
fing and ·es in the same ~ aa
it cfoes for other state agencies, including
the fully state funded state con.,.
It is in this area that a veritable. pd
. mine of savings can be made. For-, per:-= as mtlch as half of the more U\aD f1 :, on plowed Into local 90Jloom b;. the
state falls to find its way into the ~
room,,. Far too high an amount is spent
on administrative .i.rtes. 11'ere _.. 1.-..
000 school distr!cts ln'l:be state e.ch ba-t .
Ying a superintendent.' Many of them_.
paid $00,000 oc mo&1.'. Each baa deputla
and assistants equally exce.ively pald. It
doesn't stop there. A multitude of othetl
such aa counselors, conaultants and
principals and vice principals, none' of
whom ~er eee the lnaide of c1aaaroon:m,
are a1ao on the payroll.
IF YOU ELUllNE the records of the
achool districts ihvariably it will be
found that th.e lowest-paid persona on
the ICbool payroll are ~ in the tren-
ches. the teachers In the clw.tooms,..the
only people really nec:eaary to the ed\.l-
catlonal pn>gram.
It will take great courage for the
laWmakera so-tllCk1e the edUcational hi·
erarchy which bll bWlt an emohe bMed
upon provldina htah-oe.td ~l. rather
than teachll\a.. the Chllaren. But ~
the state I.a .,-f)eogme bilnlr:napt. ft JI tlW
part of the ltate budcet. where radbJ chan&ea must be mede.
the drop In.All $aver1,. y,telda. An All savera
C.r.Wicate purchuec:l tn early October brouabt
tax-free in--ol. 12.81 pment. ln -than two montbl, the DUOff dropped to 8.34 peromt; h"Waa
beck up to 9.)7-~t IW1lna Monday.
All Saven .. attnctive-matnly to taxpeyen In
the SO-percent or bicher brackets, llnal• penom
with taxable lneome above about $!5,000 and
c:ouplel above t25.ooo. Tha.e paytna a lower rate of
tax are better off with taxable Cnviet1nent1. A~ economilt. who aaked not to be'
named, offered thi1 explanation for All Saven'
problerna:
"The program waa wrtue.n to lure the
biih-bracket aaver, but then they put a limit on
how much auch a aaver could lnveat. There just
aren't enouah people in the 30-percent bracbt or hl&her to buy the number of All Saven CertWcaie.
that would be required to make the program a
~."
An lncllvtdual is limited to a one-time
exemption for $1,000 of All Saven interest; a couple &et $2,000. Dependina on the interelt rate at the
time, that llmlta a person'• Investment to about
$8,000 ($18,000 foe a couple).
the Treuury Department predicted All Saven
would cx>lt the ~t $5.2 billion in lost taxes.
That wumed f 120 billion worth would be IOld. The
U.S. Leaaue of Savings A11ociatlon1, which ortatnated the plan. predicted $238 b'1lion of aalea at
a reYm\Mt io. of $4.1 billion. Ttre conare,-alonal Joint Committee on Taxation, in a forecast that appean'cloee to the
mark, laid tale. would not top S65 blWon, for a tax
-of $3.3 bil&n. . , Con,rea approved All Saven principally to
'pl'Op up the aavtnp and loan i.n'duatry, wh1ch waa belili 9C1Ueez.ed by paylna ,.record-high interett to
Arabs de~anding
-acoc~ca apf:>lo·gy
. WASHINGTON (AP) -An Anb-Amertam
orpnizadon bal -demttnckid that °""* C«p. chairman Lee lacocca apolostse . fot a recent
anti-Arab remark.
I James Zopy, executive director of the
AmericQ-Arab Anti-Dilcrimlnatlon Committee,
aald Monday in a letter to llKX>CC8 that bia temark at
a Denver ClODWDdon wu "a chlldJab dlsplay .of
cnade machWno."
The Chirys1er chairman told a ooovention Of
vehicle -fleet exeeutive9 May 3 that the government
abouJd levy a $4 or $6 per barrel RU'fax on Imported
oil aa one atep in an economic recowry JlC'Olf8ID.
.. Kick ~ Arabs while they're down -that'a what
we aboUJd be doing," Iaoocca said.
f: • • _& .. sitteRs ~rilim~-
/!U l'tl:ltu, Oum~r/Dinctor
Educato,. who "con" for
Cltildma • Homn -Pru · EIMrly
'Nllfflf-~-~ ....... ----.
.
JOOll l'LYINd: ClllCKSN -Ohlo $Ai. More than 2,000 tam tu.med out for the 11th
Vatvwillb........, G~ A. Manh alv• • Annual International Chk:ken Flytna Meet at ,~ Wfth a ........ t9 a chJcbn to m0e lt ,Rio Grande. Ohio, where 176 chickena were OJ. OompeUnj tor ClMb prbee for the ch.lc~em entered, The winner, "Apollo Too,'1 flopped 88
ttiat a.w-the-firthest, ownen watched u tljlelr feet. 6 lncbee, tar short of the world record of
enaiel were ftudaed one at a Ume by Ma.rah. 302 feet, 8 inches eet in 1979 by "Lola B ...
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GREAT DISILLUllONMBNTS: Now that Buena
Park Blf!:t, the hairy beut ~tted arowllq ID a
neJihbor dralnlp ditch, hM declar,.t notblQc ..
more than a wandertna hobo, no numeroua c:IU..
are ~ greet dJlappolntment.
You can probably bet that numerou1 6ran1e
Cou.nUam will refwie to believe the official dltclahner.
They don't want Btafoot tb be an ordinary man of the ro.d.
They neecta momter. They want him smelly and eiaht
feet tall and ape-llkei ~ having Just ..aped from a
Buena l>ark cave that bu • r.
been lellled up for a couple · r.\ .
of centuriel. TDM MBRPHINI -~~
PLAIN FACT IS, people like the supem°atural. 'Ibey
want to have the Uvln' beejeebta tcared out of 'em. We've
all been watching too much late television and eating apple
pie a la mode at the same time. "
Buena Park doesn't have a lock on people d1lcovertna ·
and believing in the supernatural. We've had plenty of that
stuff right .here along OW' COMt.Une.
Wlien the historic Newland HOwie of Huntington
Beach stood vacant for numerous yean. the ~ IOt going
IRVINE
Jl'OOTllILL FREEWAY -DMbed ~ fndJcat.ea eeveral of
the 21 routs betna comklered for~ pro~ Foothill
Freeway. Two of tile route ltlll under consideration pus
within 11000 to 1.~ '-of bm>ee In both Mimion Viejo and
LAGUNA HILLS
• Deir ..... -., Tiii ........ Irvine's Northwood aection. The freeway, to be constructed In
the 19908, would be expected tD relieve congesUon on ~
nearby Santa Ana Freewey. A final route alignment ia to be
eelected next year. .... · ·
'~ai:(i, liibor' I or OC. -inmates
'<" ..
Laguna judge finds altern·ate sentencing pays off
1bW' Joob lJ.lre the ...,., al.,,.,_,,,,.., *'7
toad tbat the Dl8C9 w d ndJ -...S. Samii ewn ·
' Claimed to have heard ICI-ID dae Dflbt. But when the hl1tortcal IOClety 1ot around to
refurbishing the Newland pl8ce. ~CoWd dreclle up a
decent apparition. Why, the trwklM ilf old pllf» .._..to
ordinary that when they held a haunted --fund.rat,er
there one year, they didn't even u. the hiclWe. They
pitched a tent outside fol' the horror &bow.
Years ago ln Laguna Beach, writer-adventurer
Richard Haliburton built a glass-fronted bcxJ88 blah on the,
hill, overlooking the ~ It W.81 called the H8liburton .
Hangover Houae. lJ'hen one day Haliburt.on sailed away in an attempt to
cnm the Pacific in a Chineee junk. He vanished f<lftVer.
SBOR'ft. Y TBERE.AFl'ER, people started reporUng
mysterious green and blue Ugbta flickering In the windows
of the Laguna Hangover lfou8e. Wa1 lt Haliburton'• ghoat?
Naw, it was just llghta reflecth\I from highway traffic .
down below. .•
Over the years, mY'ltel'Y ablpe have been very large off
the coast o1 Newport -BeaCh. Gh09tly v~la plaI, in the
darknela off Newport and show flickering lightl" to the I
populace ashore. Almost every time, tbeee flick.era have turned out to be
flares, shot off by the United Staie. Navy during 1ea
exerciaes. .. •
Get a good mystery ship foing and the Navy will foul
you up every time.
., 8'l'BVS MlTCBELL ..............
U yo8 find younelf before
South OnQle Countt Munidpel
Court Judea Dltvki ¢arter for a
minor infr8c:Uon. Y°'4 mtaht end
up OD a l'Olld crew m.t.d of
cooUnc your $.county jail. c.rw, ol Beech, bM
wmt.d out 1ht In bill new
pl'OIJ'am, •hicb llf" repeat on-..-. mnd theme wbo cm't .. to,., dleil' ~ .......
up paper on the'~hilhway•. ~out tin~ at Dobia.y
State &.ell P.rk. ind wmb1nc CIUlty<Wn.
The aoutb couaty judae
lnltlated the procram aeveral
month• aao when be waa
a11laned tbe arrai1nment
ceJend.er at the 1.-,una NlcUel --L.-....._ . ' ~~. \
More than ~100 convicted of.fenden have pated In
the procnm. w CWtel' .,.
aerves a dual purpoelf. "" "For one thina. we~re no Joneer' ftl1lnc up county Jill with
minor offenden, ~d that'• ·a
aavlnp to the taxpayen," be
IUd.
For ~. many offenden
do noi h8w the ~ to JlaY
ftna, and ~ ol1'' their jail time or fine OD the COUQty
r09dl .. a beinefit ,, them.
Now ••'..-not tapdna abcM hard-cion c:rtminUI.
'-tbe lYJ*al IUY I .-P for a .
n.t Cl'9W " i stnc lbrouO the court ayatem fo1 the tlilrd,
fow1h or fifth fime," Carter
UC:!~oonW:ted of~
on the beach, dru.n.t in 11U6llc:
I
..................
BARD LABOR -COunty
Judge David Carter la
1e11tenmtg repeat offenders
to worldng terms.
vi don of small amounts of
marijuana. OI" be'• a ~t who ,,,..,.,.,,.tly mdl up on the
coUrt docket.
Carter'•~ didn't come
without pl'Ofl)elnl.
believed i:naurance for the work
crews would be a problem.
.. After we started the program
we found we were eelf lnaured,
and Caltrana wu on the phone
the day after we started aaylng
they would pick up the hap.''
Carter aald.
To date, road crew have
walked all the major hisbwaya
in South <>ranee COUnty, p6ddng
up _JJePm' fllDd tnati. .
· TbeJ:~ cleaned up tll of .JA&una ~·s shoreline, state \eichle at Doheny and San
Clemente, dug flood control
· ditches at Doheny, waabed
county vddclea and deaned up
the holding celh at the
courthowe.
'"'nM! crews JJicbd up 300 t,.,.
. full of trash along Laguna
Can Road alone " the Judge
aald.°'!dding 200' bas•· were
collected along the Ortega
Highway and another 150 ao far
on Coaat Highway between
Corona del Mar and San
Clemente.
Work crews ahow up at the
courthouse at 8:30 a.m. and are
driven to ro.diDdea by Carter's
deputy manha1, Steve "Scottie''
Scott.
'!hey are imtructed to brine a
.-ck lunch and water, and they
work unUl 5 or 6 p.m., with
'several bn!ab. The_y are allowed
to go home at nlght as long as
they abow up the next morning.
Caltnm inltlally dld not want
to Pell up the bundredl ~ full of~ by the .
by the Wwk crews.
And those who select road
And counf)' official.a initially SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO ia probably the oldest
village in 0\11' region. where the mimlon wa1 establiabed in
1776. Tbere've been some good ~r yama spun out ot entsi tll:l.at lo,• boa .. d the San Juan area, partlcularly around the pkt lfa~ ~ ~ i _4 •~ .a.· ~ .......... ~ and the creek bed. • -~---..~.---:-:;,
The &bolt of an earlyday woman reportedly flr'owll · StGdenta from untl°I::
San Juan Creek, walling in the night C1Vf!t her io.t cbOlt Bllda; Na•pun ~~
Numerous phantorm. IOIDe IUl'rOUDded by glawtnc liaht. ; ::' bM ~-:"'~-::.:
have ~ reported at the cemetery. da~lll' 9cilird Of~
TROUBLE IS, . of cour1e, you do not want to
investigate any of tbeee wondroua talee with too much
diligence or v1gol'.
You oouJd erv;t up tpniliq a FOd st.or)', just like euena '
Park Bigfoot.
.. liar .. lta-11~ ,....
Tbe atudent tl'Ultael will U •
MDI tMil' pcR Jurie l. . ~ ,
They are Matt atnllner a
fre1bman from unt1n1ton
Beacb;JulleBall,afffthman
'
from 'Corona del Mar: Bill ~.
ble. a freebman from Newport
Bwh;. Qq Tucbt, • frahn)ul
flUD Cor'Cl6a del )far, and Marc
vm.r.i, • tr.bman from Santa
Ana.
Three ... re cotle1e athletea.
Hainline rows for the crew team.
Kemble oompetel on the Oranea
CoMt aarftnc i.m, and Tucker ii
a quarterback for the Pirate
foOtball eeun. ••
work over jail time had better bit
working when Carter's deputy
drive.a by .
There have been aom..e
problems. =~· ''One guy took a bottle of wiJ:lll
out with him and we .got a ~
from a dtizen saying he'd ~
out ln the bushes," Scott said.
That pri9oner went straJ&ht ~
jail. ~
But Carter rewards. bard
workers, sometimes knockl'\I • day or two off their .ntence il
they've been flPe'Cially dWeelJt
lnthetrpJdrupwork. ~
Carter is looking lnto
expanding the program t.o
include prisoners washing
aherUf'• can, saving the county
both deputy's tm: and the 009\
of taking the units to a car' wub
every week. ·.
'"The real value, outside of h
benefit to the offender," Cartet
said, .. is the county ia getting a lot
of th1no done it oowa othel-wt.e
not aflord to do." The jud1e
figures salaries alone would
amouni to $1,000 a week. ·
"Some of those roadway•
haven't been cleared of trash in
10 ." ~ter goes off the
arraignment calendar the 6nt of
June. Whether this program will
be continued under a new judge
remains to be seen.
"I hope lt'a conlinued," Cartel"
said. "It's saving the taxpayers a
bundle."
~ . DBll".DON':T Ll&B: I n111l&H two
11"9rldet"9 Dr. Pa81 Goaa.Mr, DUil of . Ban•._ ..... .,. .......... ~. J--:~z.,-:i-._.II ,,.., . ........, ... u.. .• ..... ....~ ...... , ........... .
BBPO di• cemutla1 ••• ••••· ftey ~ aJio .... u •ddal ......... ~to ~*'eat~ta*lame....,.udle utirll ...a. ·me.,.. are aot uppy wttli
.U ·~ te "lmprne., • yov IOob.
Dl!AR ANN LANDERS: What makes
I the mothen of adopted children think their
..,. kids are 1ook.lna for them? I am an adopted
child and my 61ologtcal mother may be a
wonderful penon. but I have no Interest in
findina her. I thank God every night that
ahe pve me up. The parents who railed me
are the world'• best. I conllder m)'8elf lucky.
1 I te*f to much In the papen theee days
about J(lopteee who areJormint clubs in an
effort to force the courts to open sealed \..
record1. I consider this a double-cro11.
Making new laws is one thlna. but to change
a law and trap people who were a11ur~d
their Identity would never be revealed is
pretty lousy. .
I am only 16, bat I know what is right.
-JUSTICE SHOULD BE SERVED IN
WATERTOWN, S.D.
DEAR WATERTOWN: Yoa are 11Dglng
my IODI -ud I tbu.k yoa.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: For many
' years I was a heavy drinker. Then I
developed high blood pl"e81W'e. Along wiUl
uiy medication, the doctor told me no more
~lie beveragee -that ~t wine and
I beer u well as the bOurbon I enjoyed ao
much.
When I co o~t aoclally I turn down
drln.ka aying, "Nothina fOI' me, thank you
. . . doctor'• orders." MOit people tlCiOept that
without queltlon. Thole who aak tor details
are told about my rou1h bout with hlgh .
blood _1>1e11Ul'e. I My, "rm much better now
and if I want to atay well, I can't drink."
'That atilfies them.
It has been 16 years an4 I havt!n't
touched a drop. My polite refuaal on medal
grow1ds worlw just a well now u the first
time I Wied it. -SOBER IN ROY AL OAK
1 DEAR Oil: W'y, ob wllr, do people
wbo doa't waat to drlak fee tbey maat atve aa explaaatloa or HCHe! I am •••
always llave been a teetotaler. Wllea clodt
try to patll drtalt OD me at a party, I simply
uy, "Y0ttr drlnklD1 doea't botller me la tile
least. Wiiy does my NOT drlnlllag botller
. you?" Tlaat settles tlaelr llaab.
Discover how to be date bait without
tamng hook, line and sinker. Ann Landen' <:fuokfet, ''Dating Do'• and Don 'ta," will help
you be more poi6ed and sure of yourself on
dates. Send 50 cents along with a long,
~ped, aell-addreated envelope with your
requeat to Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11995,
Chicago, D1. 60611 .
nucco·ARcaa -M&Donald's Restaurants..
whole tnclemark includes a pair of huge
1olden arches outside moat of its
establlahmenta, made some conoeaiona to city
,, ......
archiiectural codes before it was, allowed to
open a fast-food restaurant in Palm Springs.
The Spanish style building has the company's
name superimposed over ~ lt\¥X'O arci..
Kid h:umor not ·funny
One of the prime conoerns of parents
everywhere is at what age will their
children develop a setlae of humor . . . if
indeed it develops at all. .
A' • I l Some parents, anxious for their children rles . so ves puz·z e -to smile, have recorded little sound.I with · · · their Ups curled upward as early as two
----__ _.... ____ ....,. ___ ... . wee~h'ti:l:e~ r.~gh, of course, but the
WedMtday, May 1t
ARIES (March 21 to April 19)c PunJe
piecea .fall into place -you perceive
meaalngs and make right move at iUht
Ume. Viewa pin wide attention -you lllrt
wfih fame. You'U ltl'lke chord of UDiWl'Al
appeeJ You're gotng to make major impect.
TAURUS (Aprll 20-May 20): You
clarify vlewa and erue caW8 of suapidons;-
feara and bad dreama. New contada, fresh
concepts figure prominently. Member of
oppollte 1ex ia drawn to you -and you'll be
aware of it. Leo, Aquarius persons are 1n
p6cture. .
GEMINI (May 21-Jun; 20): Soine
Mpiratiom. which eeemed out of reach, will
be ~y at hand. Intuition ls on target,
ansi'era become available -1ou emerge
victijrioua by utilizing powers o persuasion.
~tic interlude is part of scenario.
lcANCER (June 21-July 22): Emphasis
on eareer ppportunitles, challenges.
:.l1.=t humor, versatility -and to"experiment. One th position of au~J' ia imprewd, will make room -
but offer cannot be made at this time.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Ti.vel plans
au hject to change; long-dhtanC'e
CDDIDUl\ication nsults in revision of policy. Oon~ractual obligation• requlre review.
Aq~ua. Scorpio and another Leo figure
proininently~ Focus on alJ>irationa, pU~~ and ~ Jmow1eclai.
..
average a,e for a child to aee humor on the
aame level u hia parents ls 34. (Some who
are quite latent will not get a joke until age
53 or 54.)
VP UNTIL THAT TIME a chiid will
find humor only in another person's
on your side -you can afford to play misfortune. Their laughter bu a narrow
waiting game. Be aware of legal rights, hue. and is limited to less than a half-den.en
permissions. Taurus could play significant areas. T
role. · . Biological function, for some reason,
captures the imagination of a child. A naked ..SC~B_flO '{Oct. 23-Noy. 2J_);.J>day_ beby car:rym, his own diaper into a room
works m yo':'r favor; consolidate: locate will send him into convulaiona. A fellow
needed material, improve beaic servwet and ~-~ who wet his pants will make
make nece11ary repaira. Empbasit on him hysterical. Tra1n1ng a fluhltght on a
employment, p~in~iples of survival and a toilet and flushina will mak. e him sick with
new unde~g with those who depend laughter. Our children once smualed a cat
upon your efforts, services. . into the back seat of our car who-thought it
SAGln'.ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Focus · had .gone to that big kitty litter box.~ the
on creativity, change, variety, social and sky.1:he more their father said, That
travel invitations physical attraction and couldn t be the bakery we just passed, could
speculative ven~es. People are drawn io it?'' the harder they laughed. .
you, personal magnetism soars and your
potential is brighter than ort1lnally
anticipated.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Green
light f1ashes for neoeaary repeln, increwd
budget and improved security. Dispute t.
settled and you emerge victoriou.. Ari~
Libra penona figure pr.ominently. YOU gain
. more tolid emotlon.al, finanda1 foothold. ·
EXHAUSTION IN PARENTS ia a real
delight to kids. Nothing amUlel them more
than to 1ee their parents on the brink of a
major breekdown. The more the parents beg
them to knock it. off, the funnier it becomes.
The phrMe, 'IU you don't quiet down up
there rm goiQg to rearrange your lep." ia a
one-linet that Dever faill. Some kid& Jauch
all night in their aleep uver it.
The telephone ia al80 a catalyst. They
'
llMA IOMIKI
AT WIT'S END .
don't even h.&ve to know who's on the other
end. Laughing fits occur from the moment
they say hello until the receiver is ripped out
of their hands. Wf!. once paid $2.10 a minute
to have our aons giggle out of control long
distance to Grandma.
Tom tl'oulerl are a real tum-on. So is
food in their mouth and school closing
brought on by flood, fire, hurricane or
tom.ado. Any tragedy, no matter how m:naU.
will 1et them off. One of the "funnest times"
our kids ever had wu on a camping trip
when a oou.rurelor got caught in the bus door
and they had to get her out with a
blowtorch.
Given a choice, ru take a child who ia
deeremed any .day.
POT SHOTS . . ~
BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANf
-Is:' YOU WANT
TO START
AT THE TOP
OF' YOUR
PROFESSION>
INVEN1
YOUR OWN
PROS:-£SSION.
., '11ROO (Aua. 23-Sept. 22): Unusual
cont,Gntatton indicated with member of .._. .. an. ll!xtwwr of kleM Jendl aplce, ...,,.tkln. Oa1n lixlbted thnM.acb written
..-..L Gemlnl. SalidttArtua and ano1her
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): ldeu
flow; key ii to be telective. Accent on abort
trips, visits, communications from close
neighboo and relativee. New ex>ntaca prove
fruitful -you'll meet cttllltlve, independent,
sensual, stubborn people . , . BY CHARLES H. GOREN AND OMAR SHARlf
Vlqo fla\are prominenlly. • · -.
~: .
J:aRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Emphaia 00
....... lldjultment, aecu.tlty, lePl affaln
cans-ted with home and property. mine la
PISCES (Feb . 19 .. March 20):
Con.olidate recent gains, ..-quisltiona. New
acquaJntanoe could become valuable .ally.
· Firat impre91Jon.1 p.:ove correct, especially
where money ls concerned. Accent on
• · i)aymenta, debts, locating needed material.
..
GOLDEN -Pat and Eloise O'Brien head the
. cast of "On Golden Pond" at Sebastian's West
Dinner Playhouse.
Pinter 'Hothouse'·
play not so ho1
By JAY SBARBUTr
AIDr-.C'*
NEW YORK (AP) -The time is Christmas,'
the place a British mental institution run by a dotty ·
ex-colonel, a pipe-smoking harrumpher given to
lapses of memory and excesses of density and
bureaucracy.
He admires hia predeceaor, for whom "the key
word was order."
None lurks here of coune, this being a Harold
Pinter play, "The Hothou.e," written in 1958 but
-just now bowing on Broadway.
Alu, it now seems dated, boring at times,
-despite Adrian Hall's seamless direction, George
Martin's Classic clod of a colonel, and the occasional
bits of 10lid-gold allly that pop up.
Yes, the inmates are running thia institution,
these particular inmates the IW)d of British officials
parodied even more wild!}' ~ still ln the Pinter
-tradition -by the Monty Python Bani ln the '70a.
Besides the colonelp the official loon.a here
include his No. 2 (Richard Kavanau1h), a prim,
efficient stiff 10 hot to command tlUa "~"
he'd kill fo~ it and does, spectacularly, and the
comely head nurse (Amy Van Nostrand), both the
colonel's mistress and his top aide'• bedmate.
They're trapped in a bureaucratic maz:e, a
lobotomized world of rules, regulatiom, vacuity,
boredom, paranoia, furtive eex, and conspiracies. all
cruilybouncinaoUeachothuinthefunnyfarm
they theoretically tend.
Unfortunately, tne madness, wild by 1958
standards, 9eeml old hat new. We'\oe teen this kind
of thing too,olten on stage, on TV and in real life. '. . Despite Hall's -fint-rate direction, Martin'•
four-star colonel and the solid supporting cast, I iear
"HothOU9e," while indicative of the Pinter greatness
to come, has gotten cooled by time.
Thompeon'1 beautifully relevant eeriocomedy. He
fita smoothly into the chlncter wlth a natural lk:Ul
born of a lifetime on Nae and ecreen. pUnch1na hia
laugh llnet like a vaudeVlD.lan but al~ with the •
context of hia ch.an.cter.
The other O'Bnena are quite effective ln the.
role• of the no-nonae,i1e wife and emotionally
estranged dau,hter, thouah fteither appl'Ollehea the
richn• and depth displayed by the aenJor member
of the trio. There i1, however1 a nice charisma
reflected by the three tamlly members on aiqe.
In the other rolee, Bob Moak mlxel humcr and
pathos akillfully u the &Uabtly dippy mathnan. Joe
Mt'Gufn! la quite p>d u the boy Wdtor (thouih
he's a tad too old few the role) and director Will1Un
Uthgow la ltrong, if a bit affected, u the daugtlter1
suitor.
"On Golden Pond" 1low1 with the sort of
humanity that hun't been poPwular since the old
Frank Capra moviea..and Pat 0 Brien ii the perfect
actor to carry lt oU. The show continua n11htly
except Mondays through June 20 at SebMtian's. 140
Ave. Pico, San Clemerite.
* THE LONE OP.ENING on t!U1 week'• footlight
schedule l1 the Miuion Viejo Playhou1e'1
production of "H•PPY Birthday, Wanda June,"
bowing in Friday at the Forum Theater on the
Festival of Art.a grounds in Laguna Beach.
Allan Stone is directing the offbeat Kurt
Vonnegut comedy, which •tan Dick Nicklin u a
returning1>ig game hunter and Barbara HoW. u llll
wife. Otfieri in the cut are JC*ph Koe1-, Norm
Cobb, Randy Cobb, Wade Kirk, Jonnie Lanon,
Stacy Lewia and directar Stone.
"Wanda June" will be on atage at the Forum
Stars join fight
LOS ANyELES (AP) -After beina briefed
on the potential harm from the cmnblnation of
marijuana and dprette ll'DOkinQ Monday, ectcr'
Timothy· Van Patten of '"nle "'1Vbite Shadow''
televiaion ll!rlea laid he'• oonvtnced.
But then, it didn't take a new acientific
discovery disclosed at the American Lung
Asaociation meettna to oonvince the 22-yar-<>1d
from New Y ork'a Long Ialand about the dangen of
cancer.
· · "'!'tried nw:tJuarii when I wu pretty young,
about 13 I 1ue1S, and shortly after that time, my
mom, who was in the bolpital, died of lun.g ~
from cigarette arnoking," he uid in a telephone
interview with The Amodated Presa.
You •n be '1&4 you camel
-~~-~·
"DRAQON8LA YIR"
(PQ) ..., __ ,...._
' ''PORKY'8" 1•1 1"'9.1::11.•~ •• Ut.-
... YOU COULD 111 WHAT I HIMr' (N)
1:11, ...... 111' '6iO
l Al<fWOOl> C fN 1111
SOUIH w• • '"
Alo.INM Ill 6U ftl1
A.NA>'l lM
ANAHEIM DRIVE·I H
,..._, '1 Of~ SI
.. V1CTC>ft VICTOR~"'"' ... ,...~ ....... -
"WRONG la RIGHT" "" -------"FYOUCOULD ...
WHAT I HRAll"CN1 • tta.UI••---
-----"OIA~{N) _,__
MT ____ ,__
"CROCODILE" (R) ....
"FORCE: FIVE" (R)
179·9llO . Qllf "IOUllO
"#YOU COULD Ill I UtJU~
AT I HeM" -"T'tm ' -I ..,,. 'UIPHANT "10DY HOLLY 8TORY" MAN" IN)
(PG) Clll( H IOUNO • , .... "'WlilllO
Pl\JI ~A '"'A'-'ti
BUENA PARK OlllVI IH
l A. H : •• ~ .. I. ' . ..
.~w~
~~a:i
Ji!~ i;,,,
~ ..
I
~ I
I
I
I
'
"Curds and whey ... blockbird pies ... boy!
They eat some weird stuff in that book!"
"Boy, did I lay an tOOI"
~ARMADl'IKE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MEN"CE Hank Ketchum .
.•'.
"Won't he ever forget about you turning
the hose on him?"
'lDGE PARKER
CHUG!
\
~?!
by Ernie Bushm1ller
---AND Fo'R TKOSE WHO
PREFER A SHOWER
SBOW ROST -Loma Pattenon Jotna BU1
lbby as bolt of variety show, '"The Book
of Lilta," tonight at 8 on KNXT (2).
I
l*lndM; • loolt at llOt rod
-... • IMltdl for ·-beat ~In LOI AnoaM;
l*1 lwO of • ""*' on ThomM NOguc:H. • M•A•e•H .
H ... ll~bya
~~of non-
ttop.....tng.
I (I) TIC TAC DOUGH
MAOm.. I l.IHMft
MPOflT
I :' A8l(ll) "°"ff Featl.Ad: "Ofcul Doea Ila
Trtolls" and "Swimming
POOi For Honlae. ••
(B)THI 8TMNGI! DeATH cw™-DalJWT flOX
Event• '-ding 10 the
OctOber, 1844. de9tfl of
l'lald Mllf'lhal er. Rom-
mel -cecalled lllfough ,_.,.., lootaoe. tllll ptio..
tographl and~ .....
llrnon)' by Rommel·• -Manfred arod biographer
' DeYld lrvlng. l:OO. (I) 900K cw U8T8
Hoel 8111 Bbcby lllld a
r"'9'1og company dlll¥W
~ Ind psform
1ketc11.-and mu•lcal numo.r. b-i on meien.
II ftom IN "Book Of u.e..··
• 8MANX> POlO
Maroo'I ~ Influence
w4lh Kublai Khan ......
• powerful T1belM'I "'°'* wllo ordlrl the young
Venet!MI embulhad. (,,_.,
;. MCME
**** "Petton" (Part 1)
I (1970) George C. Scoct,
K.-1 Malden. Thi oo6orllll
Md OCMltl_.., Oeneral
George 8 . ~ llMnClllaa
llormy mlltw)' C8lllPlllglrw "°"' fWOlle to --AM-ca dlirtl'I Wortd W• 11.
•• HAW\'DAY8
Joenle. lllM9lg to 00 to C°"IP IM _..., to tll
~ .......... How-.
erd II ...-:ting 1W to attend'* a1ma mew. CR)
iMCMI
"Tiie EMcutk>ner" ( 1978)
Sonny Chiba. 8ruci ~
Tlwee profeeliol)al dwl
•• Mllgrled td" stop the
Jape~" M1ll1 from
~ nerc:otic:L
• P.M.. MAGAZINE
...... actreaa Oeldr9 Hal of
"Deya Of OUr u-''; •
man who gaV9 up the bul'-
,_ wor1d 10 ~.
Virgin l1lend1 beKll·
comber.
• MOVIE • * "M•w Killer" (1979)
Uu Cilia Hui. After a kung
fu IChool IUff8fl • bn.r1al
attadl, • MHYNtng ltuden1
-to IMtn II lie can about U'le martlll .,,. and
•~tlle
~UQ
Brtan """ .. pwled to •
bomb d6lll>OMI ~
UMmbled to combat
Ul-p!Oded bOmbe wNc:tl
-111raat-*'Q to INlfalyze
London.(Pen 1)(R)Q
• NOYA
"Clly Spa«:... Human
Plaoaa" WlllM\ H: ~~
CHAE LISTINGS
e XHXt. .(C8S)
9 ICNIW: INICI
9 KTLA (Ind.)
•.JV.IC CABCI
9 KFM8 (CBS) e KHJ·TV (Ind.I e 1<CST (ABC)
9 KTTV (Ind.)
.. KCOP·TV (lfWI,)
•• ICCIET (PBS)
e KOCE CPBS)
--Cl» ..Qn.l'V
<%l Z-TV
CB> H80
a:> (Clnemb)
(I) (WOR) NV .. N.V
OJ IWTBS)
Cll IESPH) '
CJ) (Sllowtlme >
• Spotllgtll
e lc:.tll• News Network)
-.w..._ ... ,... • a r " :ti'·~~= r~~--· ............. ~'=j ........... ~ =-=---.:::: .,.. .................. .................... -------.... ~ .............
lm~-LOllll,,.T
'TMmatO •• !Miii ~t) •wnr•"°'*°' .......,.. ................ ,., ...... ............ ~ ~M .. llllllo Int hit .... tM • ,_., cautt• 911re wt\ef• the
......... .,, Ind~
*-C~......,.,noM
Oueet: v... u.nin..
• '9-lt.4lN ltlA~
"Ollpel~....-· In 1941. °"'*~ ..._. Loi
AlefNe. New MMoo '°'
"" ... of h oompound ....,. ,.. and Gt'-men.
tlete .. oeny °"' .. ~.(Pert2)M Cl)~THOM..,.
A oomedlarl llotC and four
eolyllc contM111n11 Wl!O
compttl agaln11 one
anotMr are~ In tNe
UllOaf~ oornedy OMle
ltlO'lll. ,, •••• (1)98
NIWI
• &\TUN)AY NMIHT
Hom: Ste\11 Martin. Ouelt:
J..--,ltown..
~ • YOU MtCl!D '°"ff Feallnd: "c.ttle Cutting
~·· lltld ''The Doll
/lie MOYie Start."
• M•A•t•H
Hot Lipe and Frri CfMll.. .... HerwY• ..,,.. 10
commMd Dy rtCIOf1ing Ule
ec:tMtlea of uw 4077111 to
UwATfffl/~ -~till. . ~ ~· _,_._ hllMloue •ecct1 of "Thlngl
Go Wrong." ' !=.CAVETT * "The Flflh FIOOf" ( 1980)
Bo Hopltlnl. OlellM Hull.
An MM Yol#\ll -11 lnearoarettid In • blun9
IMfttal ~ .... Ille>· .
llllOI Ind dNg 9DuM are
the ordlr of the dey. 'R'
{D)MOYll! ' * * ~ "Thi Story Of O"
(1975) Cortnne Clery, Udo
I<*. A youllg woman 1-la
the lmltl of lo\09 .. "" ellow9 ,_..., to be ~
neted by the men IN
io-.
(l)MOYll!
••~ "Bn.tDekw" (1NO)
Robert Aedtotd, YllPtlet
Kono. A ,..onn--mlnded
W81den llncoYlrl .... ""'*' corNCl(lon ...., he ent8fl 1111 ~ Mllgrled
prison po1lng 11 an '""'*' .... .MOYIE
··~ ·~ 0-" (1M1) 8M1 Groom. '**
9ullua. A -,_.,,.
10. '* 1-*0lllft lO ~
llOaMIW ...... I~
-dellth. 'A'
11:80. (I)' AUC8
88TONIGHT
Host: Jollnny Carson.
Ouwta: w .. Nmon, Tim
Conwey. •GI MCNEWB
NIGHTUNI G KOJAK
Kojall OON6d8fl i.Mna.
the totoe for a lob ..
~or wltll a ._ "'"'· ~THE~
.. ~AND80N
• Ne#llMl WfTH
CUTE~
• CAPTIONED MC
NEWS
(JI) Mee FOA THE
PENNANT
''The Rooklal" He*• Bar·
ry Ton)plllM Md Tim
McCet¥w .... .,, lnalde
look at wNlt " --lo be etQOkla.
11:.41 (I) MOYIE
**~ "U lea Shop"
(1973) Julee e.rio. Claude
Berl\ A booUt-propn.
tltOf llnda in.tint -when ha ltockl '* .....
11111\ment wltll ... """'*'
Md matftal elda. 'R'
-mlOHT-
~
XNXT (3) 1:08 -11Boi:tk of Lllti." BU1 ,
Bixby Jloai• varlet_y t_how 'baHd on
ma~ from the "Book of u.ta." a.. photo, )jft. •
I KNBC <•> 1:00 -''Marco Polo." 1n third part of mmi1erlff, Marco'~ 1ro_wtn1
!nflumm wlth Kublai Khan alienatei a
powerful 'nbetan mOnk.
KABC (7) 9:00 -•-nu-•1 c.ompeny ..
,Luclll• Ball ho1t1 hour-lone 1how;1
funnielt momenta of the DUt five yean .
(
J KCBT °(28) 9:00, KOCE (GO) 10:30 ._. . l "()ppenheQner" J ~ Oppehheimer
father of the ·.~ bomb, eeJect. i.o.;
Alamol. N.M., u the llte to carry out
"9Mrch. Part 2.
cue GS*•tlona during
Wortd Wlil ff In Ille~ ~ow. AAmlCAH •
''Love And The Boom-
anino" Dav. ..... Ille
adlllol Of ,. good friend
Jetf)'. "Lo\OI A.rod The Old
~· Two old '"°""
ltllrl -reunited on a TV ---· • IJOllONHQ
~ ®MOYll
··~ •• ,.,, ~ FOf An Eye" 11M1) Ctludl Norri1 •
Cllrlalopner Lee. ... a..;
Francleoo cop quit. the
IOfOl 10 llWl1ge the murder
of Illa partner by_.,.,.
of • clt'ug ring. 'A'
1l:OI. (I) MCQA)UD
MoCaoud'• aawdl '°' ..., ~ clllll'• ~ landa
111111 In llot ......... a..
Clfford. (RI
1a:ao ea LATI *»fr wmc
DA.YID LCTTIMIAN
GuMt: former H8A p1ayw.
coedl T~ 1-Wnaohn. 1:=-•••14 ....... COmaa Mr.
Jordan" (1941) Robert
Montgomery. Cla11da
Raina. A young man
retume In enolllor man'•
body •11• dying befOf• Ille
time.
1t:aa!= ··~ "Blly Jed( •• 11971) Tom Laugtll.ln, Oetof•
Tay!Or. Anei~ a...
llall..tlraed cllamplonl Ule
~ of • fl"eedom achool
lor NMIWllYI on an Alt.
ione lrldlan ·-••liol1. , •• MOYll
* * * "Tiie Story Of Of.
WUMll" ( 1944) o.wy Coo-
per, Laraine Dey. Oto. Aoy-
don M. w ..... , a twolc
folfW'I """· ~ ~ can '1000I from the _,..,.. ....
• MOYIE * * 14 ''SIMr Cle)"' ( 11161 I v-.. De Cerio, fdlnond
O'Man. A kip "**19 apert ,_ trouble ...
lflq lad)' and • tMll
~ lldrlO true .,..
Ind ll'le8nlng to ....
• JONI MTCHELL ..
OONCl"1'
Popular 1lngar /
~"" Joni Mltellall appear1 wltll Ille Pat
M«ften)' Group end The
Pereuaa1one at the Santa
8artlar1I ~Bowl.
1:10. MOYIE • * ·~ ..• l.lwa" (1g73).
8-\ ~.Dael,.,,_
Jr. ,.,,,., dlacowr°•'CI 1tl9l
"" .. terminally •• •
)'OUllg -end '* lov-., ae1ampl to -d oll
dMlll wl1ll Illa hllp of In
~tll acllntllt. 1:11~= * * "MMM!n At Cen11al
High" (1978) Andrew Ste-
lllf!S, Aobar1 Cerradlna. A
cru1ade for revenn
beglrll allar I Pf"* N
.-'It too fir -pulled on Illa quletar 91Udwii. by a
grou,> of bored lllgr.-
ldlool frtanck. 'R'
(I)MOW ** "Tiie Road To w.,-c193e) Documentw)' .
The rile of lhl FMCllt
ll'IO\l-t -from Ille end
Of Worid War I to 1137 -.. atw Cll llcl9d. ,-......
1:4f®MOYIE
• • .,. "The Haunting Of
Julia" (1977) Mia Farrow.
Keir OUllM. A,.., 1'9COWr·
Ing ffom an ~ en..
lla.•~purcr-a
hcMa lfMll ~ 10 be llaun1ad .• ,.. 2:00• MOYll .............. a.Ing
VOi.i" (1M9) ~ Reio-
"'• JOMPll Colten. A gift
jual out of prlaon and .,,
-tlol 11111)' lll*'t IOtdllt'
flndarww ..... on*'
dUttnU • 10-day romantic lnlarll*. .MOYll * * * "The ADM" ( 1179) Bet1e Mldlw, Alan B1taa. A
df!Wn rod! lingar'I llf9 In
Ille fMt i.. IMdl '* .,.,...
verelbly to dlMl1ar. 'R' l:OI. NIWI '
2::IO CC) MOYIE
••~ ··eown Action" I 1971) David J-
Mlllll" Kennedy. A pr~
1lon1I •PY becomH
Involved In lnttigua and
eeplonage wllen he It
ll1nded a dangerous
Ulignment In Ille Greek
~
(I)MOVIE
**y, "The Fen" (1981)
Lluren Bac111, Jame•
Owner. A popular Nm star
·~by ·~
IOl*•.'A' 2:40. MOYIE
....... ''The Aoee .,. ...
100'' (1968) Alina Maananl.
Bw1 ~. BMed on
the play by.,._ M-
Ii-. A women talta lier
.... hulbend'• f"""'*-befor9 blOOmlng Involved
will! ancMtlW man. ·--2:41 (I) MOYIE
• "Blood Benter'' (1M0)
Tally lavelH, Eddie
Alb9rt A border_.,.,
wtaa to bltllg •ldowt••
wtiotnlfftoln ........ to ......
• .. <B> MCll¥ll *** "&caMlur" (1M1) Noll T~. Nbl4 W9afll,.
-· The ~ of King ...,,,.., bring ~ and
daattl to Ille knlglltl of Illa
Round Table. 'A'
a::ao111PY 1:46 ......
-..OH•Lt
The IMF ~ 11op a lor·
elgn ~· plana to I 11'9 a ldantllt wtlo
,_ deMctad to Ille Welt. ,
4:Gl(C)MOYIE • * * ''81-*bowd Jun.
gta•• (1955) OlaNI F0td,
Anne Fr_., A dedicated
young t-=tler 11ttempt1 to
..-tore order in a l>IO-dt)'
training ICllOOI Wlltre
................. and
~ lllw tlkln root.
(I)MOW *. "King Of The .._ tlln" I llNI 11 H~ Han*i •
JOMPll Bottoma. Three
young l .A bact1elor1
devote 1lltlr enarglal to
the ~ of drag redng.
'PG'
4:11 (I) lOlA fAl.AMA.: THE
F1RIT LADY OF LAI
VE9A8 l°'8 Fllena perforrna "I
' JOHN DARLING
DO 1 HAV6A
RUN IN MY
STOCKING IN -TIE. ~K,CAARLIE~
1t'ftl11••d••'• o.,, •.•••• ., ...
-UORt•to-
1:11 CZ) **It "VOi.i Cen'I
CtlMt An Hqlaet Man'' •
(1931) w.o. FIMda. Edgar
8-gan. A you11g woman
1ltaa lo marry • ~ man ~ IN V*lkl
her fattier la poor. t:OO Cl) .... ......,._ The
Slayer" 11911) Jack
Plllence, John T~. An
..,_.-._ )'OUllO -
.... the aid of • band °' wanlorl to light ,. 1¥11
unde. the -10fd wtMI
kJlled 1111 ,..,. and ..
lloldlng an ~ tot r1n-
IO!ft, ••• *"' "The '""' Season a" ( 1H1) Alan Aida. Carol Bumett. Three
CCJUC)6aa. .. doae. ron..
tlrna ,,.,._ ~
probM dlangaa In ..,..,
ret.liollltllpe .tl8n one °' tll• Marriages dl1ln·
19.._'PO'
7:00 CZ> ••• ''The "'-"
(1979) e.n. Mldlar, Alar!
Bat-.. A *"'-' rode alno-
W'1 ... In Illa ,... lane
teadl lier ~ to
dl...-.'R'
7:80 CC) • • "Tu<* E-1MI·
Ing" ( 1978) Fred K...,,
JOMPll MlcOure. A )'OUllO
girt iMetl "' lmmof1al famly k,_ M the TllClll. ·o·
t:OO (I) • * * \t ··n. Loo-~. L.oon-.'. ~ .. 81.w!)' ,.,,,... •• ( 1N f) ,.,.._
mated. Volcel by Mel
Blanc, June F~. N9w
materilll II blended w1t11
old In 11111 oomplatton of
d--'c: Fritz F'91ang "Loo-
ney T11ne1" leat11rlng
8ugl. Daffy Due*. PMy
Pig. VoHmlte Sam,
Tweetie Pie and othlr'I
from the cartoon ..;....
'G'
t:11 (I)** "The Roed To
W1t"(1938) ~.
The'*ollheF-*t
mo,,.,,.lt -from ._ end
of Wortd War I to 193'7 -II
chCll!k:llad.
t:to•*°""Ulc*yT-"
I 1934) JoM Wll)'M, Gab4')'
H8)'ea. A OOWtlor 1ltaa IO
cl .. r 1111 eldetilck of
ct\IWgaa of armed robbery. CC> * • ''lhe Outlaw'. •
(1843) J-"'-Ill, Walter
Hulton. 8111)' Ille Kid fall
In ._ wl1ll • beml1IM
-wflO llktel '*" from Illa'-.
..... Kiii And Kii
Again" ( 1N 1) J..-Ryan,
AMalne Kt1al. A ~
.,,. eicpert betllal Iba
mlnionl of • ~-.t
ldentllt Infant on 8f1lllll¥.
Ing mankind with • ,_
mind-control dn'IJ. 'PO'
~CID * • ''The Ligand 0t
The Lone Ranger" (1980)
Kllnlon Splllbuty, cnn.to-
pher Uo)'d. The Lone
Ranger and Tonto pura.
tllaW erctMnam)', Butcn
Cawndlltl. .... hM k}d-
~ 1tle pr.idant °' lhaU.S. •PO'
CIJ •** ''TheV l.P ....
(19'3) ~ Tay!Or,
Aldwd Burton. ¥ PM-
eenoerw of • ~ flgllt
..... take-off In Ille .,..
IOunga of e London air·
port, their .,,.. become
cwtoull)' Intertwined.
10'.IG~ * *°" "Tlllafl' (1N1)
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·.The
worst
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ever
·done
is50%
'·--~·.-I ,. -..... ,,., ........ up. c:.!='f:c~'wM·=: Y• m .. 1.e....,.. _ illt lNM. in ttae ~ll'YlM Company-a
•... IMM Home & CJvcr.n Y• m Nil Ill~ lt""f. CentH under con·
AIRPORT WllT ., ..... PARK ' •~tton at Culver and
Ml ,...._ MM' RM ... CJI. Irvine Center dr1va
C811Mr.IMVle711•1400 i.!!1°1!,•n:.~·_:.~
.,.... CHpll'lltlon feet, mid e~ to open ljiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiii!==iiiiii~iiiiiiiiiil~ In October. fi Ana•ll home
tmiwovement atore and
J .B. Bl11•r Furniture
are anctior st.oree tn the
183,000~aquare-foot
complex.
Grand Opening
To celebrate our Grand Opening. Balboa Coln Qallerie1
wilt present o frtt gold· plated coin medallion to our llrst25
customers 6eglnning May 18th. plus a free penonel VIP
Discount Card to everyone who brings In this ad. The
Discount Card entrtJes the bearer to maximum discount
allowences.
N. Balboa Coin Gallenes you II find the flne5t. guaranteed:
• 14K and 18K gold chalha.
neckt.ces, rings. brKeleU.
charms and coin jewelry 1t
discount prices.
• A wide Mlectlon of U.S.
and foreign gold 1nd silver
numismatic coins.
• Krugerrands. Maple Luws
ind the Gold Coins of
Mexico.
It will eventl}ally
lnclude more than
300,000 1quare feet of
1boppln9 , office
bulldlng1, rataurani.
and other leJ'Vices.
The AnNtrona facWty
wlll be lta ninth lo
Southern California and
1econd l n Orange
C.OUOty.
Help Prevent llrth=.r-TheN
Number One
Chldttitallh
Problem.
1Uppot'tl'9
Marohof
a ,,p'l -r. • li..Neilll>11•door-•t•o•W•m-C•oe-stllliMetali..-s•lnt•erna-•h•on•a•t-----· J \...-.Cl..1.-t Open I 0:00 am to ~00 pm
<TP!!n:!!
FOUNDmON
F.acb J1muary, Hanna
Tulvins eelecb a lilt
al undaTmd ailwr
dollan.
In 1981, while bullion,
stocks and real estate
we~t soft. our list srill
managed 503 appre -
ciation.
We've done better.
1978's list appre-
ciated 113%. 1979's, a
remarkable 231% ...
231% in one yw.r.
Even more remark-
ably, 1.978's list is, to
date, up 109-t%.
Compare that to
any other •Hi-year
investment.
The trick 1s finding
the right coins. And
Hannes Tulving is one
of only 18 recognized
experts on Morgan and
Peace silver dollars.
And we're the only
U.S. rare coin firm
that deals txdwiveJy
with.investors.
Every rare g'old or
silver coin we sell
comes with the indus-
try's strongest grade
and buy·back guar·
antec,, our 60-day
moncy·back policy and
the best liquidation
programs available. • ror more on our
. managed pellOnal
rare coin investment
portfolios and rare
coin·baclced pension
or profit sharing plans.
call 800 85-t..6()16.
In California,
(71-t) 851-8202.
· Or return the coupon
for a free information
packet.
And do it soon.
· After all at 1094% over
· ."4}i years, imagine what.
you·~ losinaeach day
you delay . .
• Manage Your
Budget
• Track
Investments
• Games for
The Family
• Learn to
Program
f:'•·• f • ' l. ' "r ,. • • ~""' r•
1 .... , ................ -
.,. -··~ --·~--·
... ----~~
Get down to eer1oua bualneu wlth your own computer, and
use tt tor tun-fllled games In your leisure time! Keyboard, 12-
key data pad, and 16,000-Character memory-ell In one
beautiful desktop untt. Eally expandable to 2-dlsk Business
System. Leam to program with our euy-to-read manual, or
add an optional caaHtte recorder to use a wide variety pf
ready-to-run progratM.
l;f f. I f.J; ,f fJ!I
A DIVISION OF TANOY CORPORATION
SEE ll AT YOUR NEAREST
RADIO SHACK STORE,
COMPUTER CENTER
OR PARTICIPATING DEALER
PRICES MAY VARY .f.T INOIVIOUAL STORES ANO DEALERS ..
~ W. n1-;s11a. CLU, of Santa Ana,
Ml qu•HW fcJro the .-J TNR LU• ........_. cem,MJ V.nauatd Qub. I ..,..,. o........ Ml ~ the _;ubllc
relation• de_J)artment of Tit O.a t B.,c~
Ad•trd .... c..,..,. Newport BMch. She WU
director of communlt)' refatlon1 for Weatern
Pennsylvania Wat.er Co. In Pltubu.rah.
RkUN C. Doyle, former vice pretddel\t. aa1es
and marketlna. for Anaheim Hilla, Inc., tm been
named tenior' staff con.sultant for the Le1ud Oliver
CompuJ, be., an advertl.llna and public relattona
firm.
Edward J. LoUea hu Joined Joa Slwabors •
Ataodate9, Costa Meu adverUsini and public
relatibnl acency. aa account manqer and director of
public relations. He wu \IP ~ at Clay
Publicom. an Irvine advertimng and public relationa
firm.
Omalmed.lcal of Anaheim bu announced the
election of Barry Kanlell Jr., ~founder and
president of Golden West Homel, tO lta board of
dlrecton.
~eu lrvlae of Maarer EWott o. .... pmeat
has been honored by the' SUM & MarUtin1 Council
of the Buildtna Induatry Aatoc:latlon. Ber
outatiandin& sales achievement award wu for
marketing approachM at Coral Pointe ln San
Clemente, a categocy involvtnc bomm priced at
more than $250,000.
MUTUAL FUND
Apotheteeh, 1 Torrance-baaed pharmacy •
computer manufacturer, haa aelected Bawb/
HawklU 9f Irvtne • lta marketing/advertiaina
agency. H/H will begin ita tecond a-odadon whfi
Apothetech by teat m•rkeUna the System ll P~ Canput.er Lr1 California.
Dr. WUBam F. BallUu, preaident of Beckman
lllltnmeatt, 1.De., hu been eelected by the board of
directon of the Scientific Apparatut Makers
Aa8odation to receive the 1982 SAMA Award
leadenhip in the U80dation and contributions to
the high technology instrument and equipment
industries.
BUI Storm hu joined PonderoH Bomea u
manager of planning and development for the
Southern Californta region. He haa been in the
construction and land development buainea moce
than 12 yean. •'l .. u.
, II A. sales adminiatrator for the Irvine divilion of •
Ponderota Romet, Valerie van de Zllver will • 'j)4
aupervile more than 15 aalespenons at Ponderosa , ;
Homes model complexe• and sales centers . !.
throughout Orange, Loe Anseles, Riverside and San u
Benuvd1no counties. She has been with Walker & v
Lee Real Estate.
Jean Meronk haa been named controller at
Broadmoor Homes in Irvine.
1161 " t..U Hl 11.• Nl
... ,,
... ' .. .., •
,.
• •/• .. " ....
... . ,,. ••• .. ....
......
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• ti .. ...
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Newport coin sbop open•
Balboa Coln Gallerte1, Ltd., a Newport Beach
. ahop tDedalb::lna ln nwnilmatic aold and .Uver cam.. Kru~rranda, Maple Leavea and the Gold Colna of
Me , M well M aold jewelry, will bold lta arand"
OJ>enJn1 Tuesday dirouah Saturday at 4000 Birch
Street, S"1t.e 118. • I Manaaer 41 Marian Peanon.
Balboa Cd.n Galleria, next to Weat c.c-i Metall
International. wiD be open 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. ~y.
through Saturday..
'Firm expands in Newpolfl
Continental Rl1k Services, a 1ubaicllary of the
Continental C.orp., New York-.bued lnlurance holding
_company, hu expanded to laratt headquarten ln an
office bUJ1dlnc at 1201 Dove St., Newport Be.Ch.
Dunn firm relocates.
The Charin Dunn Company's Orange County
office announced expamlon and relocation of the
firm'• rec1ona1 offices. The enlarged officel att on the ground floor of
the Continental Plaza at 4141 MacArthur Blvd.,
Newport Be.ch.
Bay Plaza ceremony set
A ground-breaking c.eremooy will be held
Thursday for Bar\ Corporate Plaza, a corporate
community of c..dil:!ac Fairview/California, Inc. and •
Bey Development Corp. It will be located at University
Drive and Inrtne Avenue.
Grace's sales set reco11d
Shareholdel:a of W.R. Grace & Co. were told at
the annual meetlna in New York that sales and
.mlno tellCbed nmrd levels jn 1981.
Salee reached $6.5 blllion, while net income grew
.26 percent to-$361 million Jut year. F.aminp were
.$7.~_per lbare for the year.
nnt quarter ~ were rouah!Y 'Comparable
to 1981:
STOCKS IN TJIE SPOTUCHT DOW JONES AVEUGES
AMERICAN LEADEaS
HEW VOAKIA~I F.,,.. ~ ._.
"" ~.,,,.., 17, -ITOCKS • ..... ~.,~~~ JO Tm B.2' mAl MUI ,....,_ U1 IS utl llS.a 111.53 IU.74 114 ._ t.15 ~ ~·~.~~.~.,.·!:d
UtJll ·:.:::.:::::::·· . :=:: 6$ SC*! • • • .. • • •• • , .....
WHAT STOCKS DID
NEW YORK IAPI -. 11 ........ ,,..,__, T~ ~ Decl!Ncl -"' ~ 411 -TOl.i I-.,.. •• -"""" 2J JS .......... :n "
MUTAMUDIO ,
NEW YORK lAPf ¥., j7-,......,
~ T°"17. ~ 0.Clll'lld .. ,.. u...,... m -TOlel I-HI 1.-........ 14 tO I .... _, 11 " MUALS
C...., 71...a 1 c.nu a pound,• U.8. dalllnetlona. • ...... ~., °"*. llOUftd, -·-·pound,~ "" .... , .... Well! OOhiPOlfta lb. *t 7 I n.77 OIMt a pound, N. Y. ....., 1370.00 par ....
.......... '301.00 ~OIL. N.Y.
SILVER
H•nely a H1rm111, •t.140 p« troy
ouncie.
GOLD QUOTATIONS
~"'°'""""Ult mue. • I0.71. ~ lftlltlOOI" "JdllO aus.H, .. tut.
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Higher InterestJltan Most Money Market Funds
r-rOoAY's R'Ale-1 I EFFECTIVE YIELD I Compare our higher yield with the current 7-day
.1 2 1 1 is· 3 O 1 averageofmostmoneymarketfunds-includingyours!
I I~ 50/* I I I)/ I You'll discover that we pay more! Your daily
t, . 10 I I . 10 I balance over $2;000 is automatically 5wept every day
I e I I e I into our Market Reserve Pl~n and your balance
I Rate applies to balance OYef S2.CXX>. This rate I I Annualized yield IS for comparison only. It I under $2 ,000 earns 5 ~% compounded daily. Why I ~ 11a11y an11 noctuates w1tt1 the money I I assumes 1n1er~1 remains at a constant rate I take a dollar less?
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~I
"I would have had to have a lot of reuon, and
d have uked, "Why noi!' lf I wun'l liked to
•• note.I Riley1 whoee Laken have blitred the
nix S~ ana 8a1' Antonio Spun In the
um etght ~ In their two belt..of-leVel\ ea. •
"I don't want to take any credit but I delerve
job and. want it," Riley continues. "Pve been
th the Lakers fOI' 10 of the last 12 yean. I would ~ to ltay with .theln as long as I can."
Can you .really blam& Riley?
· By ~tdUna the SUM and the 8~ In ellht ltr~h* PIMlt the wken are tht only tMm ln NBA ~ to 1WeeP ~w belt-of~·
aerlt1. 'DMty completed the record...ettlnl eillrt
Saturday Jllaht with a 128-123 daclakln over the
SpW'I In Saft &\tonk>. '
The Laketa are now one 1ame abort of the
all-tlme reeord f~ conaecutive J)la~ft victoriee o1
nine, aet by the Mlnneilota La.ken, who won thelr
final pme In the 1948-49 plaYC>ffl befon win.n1na
etaht in a row ill the. 1949-19SO playoU..
San Antonio Coach Stan Al)>eck bWist.e the
Lakera' 198~·82 1qUad ii one ot Ule great.en t.eaina
ln NBA hiatory.
"That'• putting a lot ot preaaure on ua.'' counten Riley, who aeem. to know how to cop,
with pn!llW'e. "rd say the belt one. were the
Philadelphia 76ert of 1966-67 our Laker team of
1971-72 and one of the New York KnlcJu·
c,hamplonahlp teama -probably the one tn 1969-TO.~• And alread)', there are aome who think the
Caken can pull off another 'our-pme aweep. Speaklna of the 70en ban1Nr a UU.-same
comeblck by the &.ton ~)Ucl, Tt appean that
Coach Billy Cunninaham'• troops will provide the
oppotdUon when tfie NBA cbampionahip eeriel opena.
The 76en whipped the c.eltics 119-94 SUnday
aftemc>on ln .Philadelphia Jnd can wrap 'up the
Eaatem Conference championahip Wednesday
night with a win in.Bolton.
"Jf we win another four atraight, l 1uet1 we'll
have to be remembered for aometlilng," Riley •Y..
Bu11 certafnly will remember hla current
coach, who -urned the duUea lhortly after the
1euon bepn when the Laker owner fired Paul W.-tbeld.
B-. aaya he will talk contract with Riley once
the seaaon concludet.
. The J,.aken, meanwhile, are again enjoying
U10ther lull in the playoff action thanks to their fU1
work apinst the Sµna and Spun. •
' ''I've •orked with Pat for a year, and I feel I
am geuing along with him, which I feel ia
important to me," Busa aaya. "Secondly, I've 8een
that the players respect him. That ii one of the
important factors In being a coach in the NBA. Y°"
have to have the.,confidence of ~our playen."
The championahip aeriea will begin Sunday if
the Ccltica-76en eeries 'goes letll8 than ,even games.
If the Celtic.a take Philadelphia to the Umlt, the
championah.lp aerlea will begin on Thursday, May 2'1. .
Rlley, meanwhile, is graced with a team that
Albeck referred to last week as consisting of "four
All~stara and Supennan." •
. .,. . -r
Angel pitc~ers I ace
iheir bigg~st test
A~ 's top staff to invade hitters' parks
From AP d11patcbe1
The Angels were expected to
contend for the American
League West-championship this
season despite an apparent lack
of pitching talent. They are
currently in first ,place, but
surprisingly, that's mainly
because of their no-~ staff of
hurlers, not in .spite of them.
"We know we're where we are
because of the pitching," aaid
Manager Gene Mauch recently.
"There's no reason why it can't
• continue to be as good as it has
been. And we..know we're going
to get moreoffense." ·
THE ANGEU, with a lineup
comPQS«I mainly of proven big
names. only are batting .261 as a
team with just 26 homers in their
first 37 games. Yet they are
24-13; the 24 victories are th'e
most by any team ln the big
~~club, idle Monday, begins
an dght-pme road \rip tonight,
playing at Milwauke4!, Detroit
and Boston, all hitters' parks
where the P,tching staff might
come down to earth. But then,
• perhaps the often9e will come
alive.
The ace of the staff is•
35-year-old right-hander Ken
Forsch, who was 11-7 with a 2.88
El\A and 10 complete games last
year.
AFTER BLANKlNG the
Cleveland Indians 3-0 on
Sunday, the Angels' fourth
straight victory, Fonch is 3-3 this
year with a 2.92 ERA and five
complete games.
If anything, Forach figured to 1 be better than 3-3 at this stage,
especially considering the
Angels' overall record. His ~
victory over the ~ was his. ·
first triumphs~ ~pril 23. I But pitchers like left-hander
Geof~ Zahn and right-handers
Steve Renko, Mike Witt and
Bruce Kison didn't figure to be a
combined 13-2.
as the Anon Sq , didn't figure • And the bullF. once known
to have ER s like Andy
Haasler's 1.04 or Don Aitse's 2.lL
Aue's ERA would~ bad he not been for
aeven earned runs in one inning
by the Baltimore Orioles
recently. ,
( . ..._,... ....... _, ... ..,... So far, the team's earned run
average is 2.74; best in the AL,
and the club already bas 11
complete games as compared to 27
in 110 gam es during the
strike-shortened' 1981 season.
ZAHN, 35, usually starts fast j
but he's outdone himself this ·
ERIOUS BUSINESS -Members of UC Irvine's wopm'a survive. Tbe teaJY1'currently wo~kl out twice a week at UCI
· ater polO team, like goalie Janet Channel. take the sport ·and includes 14 members.
rioualy and are determined to see the AAU-sanctioned club
ater polQ team ·I,as a common goal
-Irvine women pOol their elf orts to provide a 't~am approach' to spor~s
JORN SEVANO
.,.., ,... ..... thle""'-. o say women's a wo.;a LS
attmire compared to thelr male
terpart would be like asking
at sport is Babe Ruth
. ted with?
th are obvious.
an individual basis. women
to become more recogni%ed
on a team level Of co\ine
reason for this is that there
more ·indlvidual than team·
in which women llre a
cipate. '
t's face it, outside of
etball and softball what
r team sports are there?
y, thett are othera. but
point is there aren~t too
y. And, because of thla,
's a tendency for women to ~cme more indfvidualistic than
~ted.
n irrational statement?
-........... ..L .Butit'anottoooutofitne,
to Georie RobelUcn.
ii cunenily devotfnc hll
rte toward coachinl a
become more aerious in her
approech ·is Kaia Hedland who,
at 27, is the dean Of the team.
"I started to get more eertous
about it this year," admits
Hedland, who ta the UCI
women'• swim coach. "I think
the lack of intert~t ii aomething
that bappena a Jot. It P,eOPle don't iMke water polo ~ something el1e their No. 1 coml1)1tment,
then they ~ve -a ten4ency to do
other thino." H!cnancr con~nds that the lack
of a strong "team apJIF08Cb" by
women is something -they're not
uaed·to,
"They've never grown up with
that ao · thetre not sure how
intente they re auppoaed to be."
aays Heclland. "'Ibey nave,n't bad
role modela like the men
probably did at a younger age."
The club team, whic)l was
started last year, ~ l1xth in
the outdoot nationals. The team
ii currenUy practicing tor the
indoor nation8la which will ~
held this weekend. .
Besides Malkoff and H~,
the heart of the te•m also
includes Trish Newland,
daugb~r of the Vet men's water
J:>Olo coach, Kelly Manz. Melanie ffa&opian and Janet ~l.
"I e'n'joy provtding an
opportunity for~tbe-girls,"
Robertson explaihs. "I •feel the
more people expoeed the better.
Water""polo \8 a preuy obsure
sport to bejin ~th."
year with a 5-1 record, a 2.06
ERA and four complete games.
Renko, 36, is 3-1 with a 2.12
ERA; Witt, 21, is 3-0 with a 3.62
ERA and Ki.son, 32, is 2-0 with a
2.62 ERA.
The bullpen, already much
better than expected, received a
· tremendous boost last week with
the acquisition of Doug Corbett
from the Minnesota Twins,
Cocbett, who saved 40 games In
1980-81, already has two in as
mal)y appearances with the
Angels.
That should relieve some of
the pressure on Aase, who has
pitched more innings than
anyone on the team except
Forsch and Zahn,
Short relievens don't usually
get that much work,-and perhaps
overwork was a reason for the
shelling Aase received from the
Or!o~ on May 6.
' l
l •
,•
l're•AP.aiPlatdltl The Rama 11y &hey haw talUd
to quarterback Vtnce l'erraaa_11¥>
aboUt a·job wtth hit fGriner t..n Wt
RalN ofticiali •Y no .,....ment hll <:
been mtde.
Fer.ra1atno played last '"' wlth the Montreal Alouettea. I.a early• llllt rrtc1a1, the
offidal teem line throuah Lea~ the cbW
aide to owner Georala Frontiere, wu that
Ferra1amo would have to
settle with Ca.-adlan
• ownenhtp befor~ he could
beain neaot.lati~ w1ttl the
Raina.
"We've toJa• Vince that
we will talk ta him M IOOl'I u
we get the ~. Only
then can we It.art fteeotla~ with Vince 1Ferra1amo,'
Marshall had·uld.
-PIMAUllO But on Monday, a team
offidal ~tted the Rama had held ta1b ·with
Ferragamo s agent several times in March,·
addina that the)' had not reached an ~nt.
"We had some negotiations with them
several months aao. There waa never an
agreement, orally or written aa to tenna. There
was a aeries of of!ei:s and counterof!en. 'llMire
never was an acceptance or rejection or. an)'tbina
that even approximated a OOl)tract," said Johli
Shaw, the team's aecretary-treallllrer.
"At that point the Rama' posture 'WU that
the legalities of the situation were very clouded.
We did not want to be ln a position where there
was any possibility of contract interference and
we weren't roma to pursue necottationl until he rid bimsel ofltia stature in the Canadian
Football League."
Ferragamo, however, differed from that
account Sunday in a television interview with
Howard Coaell, when the player aaid, "My agent
has negotiated a deel with the Rams." '
Quote of the day
Millie C\Ud)er, wife of fonner beleball .
oommissioner and ex-Kentucky governor
A. B. (Happy) Chandler, at the Kentucky
Derby: "I love_ eyery inch of Kentucky. It's ·
just the mint Julepe I can't stand." .
Long putt llke a home run?
Baseball today . t
0n Ulla date in balleball ln 1988: I
Washington 1lug1er Frank' Howard
belted hit ninth and 10th home runt in hit
last llx _Jamel .. the Senaton beat the
Detroit Tigert, 8-4. ' . Todays blrthdaya: '
Angela aluger Real• Jacklon is 36.
j Texaa catcl\er-Jim Sundbera ii 31.
Hearns,.Hagler bout set for July 15
The world middleweicbt title •
fl&ht between cham_plon Mania
Jla&I• and Tflemu Hearu will be
held July U in Windsor, Ontario
according to Bob Anm, pnll'DOter' ot the fiaht.
The bout was originally echeduled t« May 24
but waa poltpOned. aft.er Hearns injured a ~
in training . , . World welterwelaht bO
champion "Sagar Ray Leeunl quietly ce1ebra
his 26th birthday at home Monday, while
recupetatlng from eye surgery to correct a
detached retina . . . 'The chairman of the 'Loa
Ang.!lea Ol~Orpnizing Canmittft claimod a "major " Monday in .receiving
aasurances that East y and PoUnd wt1l
send teams to the 1984 Summer Olympic G~
. . . Clareace CUJpbell, ~ormer Natlbnal
Hockey Leegue pn!9ldent; and 0.... Bnwm. a
Bahamian busineuman, have dropped their :at of a 1980 conviction for con.piracy ... Amy, the former'jockey who aocueed IOIDe
of thoroughbred racing'• leading joekeya of
fixing races ln the 1970.. invoked the Fifth
Amendment several times during a hearina
before the New York State Ricing and Waprtng
BQard Monday. NEW YORK -Bob Toldd. rated !I one of the top teachen and OC*hes by
the golf pros, describes a long, . Televlslon, radio
s~ful putt in these terms: "A long TV: No events ICbeduled.
putt in ·golf is like a home run in baeebaU. Relief RADIO: Baleball -Angels at Milwaukee, ~:30
and joy become •{>pa.rent only when the ball p.m., KMPC (710); ChicqO a\ Dodpra, 7:30 p.,m.,
disappears from ~t." · KABC (790).
Athletes
honored
The 2 lat annual
athletic awards breakt.Mt
honoring athletes (rom
Corona del Mar •nd
=~r~~ G·wc dominates picks Caminodorft Club from Laguna plans the Newport Harbor
Area Cha~ber of tennis tourney Canmerce, ts ICheduled
foe May 26.
The Oty of IAiuna It beciM at7;30 a.m. at • Beach'• te(j()nd annual th Sh to N t
Golden West College, which confererice mark and a 1.57 ERA. spring junior tennis &te1 ;::; t!'a~'ibi
Gauchos; Kinney is ~layer of the year
dominated the first half of Southern Othitr Gaucho• named to the tournament la aet for UpUnger·,. a· former
Califomia c.onterence baaeball action all-conference team are left-hand Laguna Beach Hlgh player foe the Ba1tf.mote
with a n undefeated slate, alao pitcher George Bonilla (7-2, 2.46 Saturday and Sunday Bullets and a member of "'
dominated the all-conference ERA), shortatot,!k* Lee (.337), tint f0t Y~ in grades the Loi Angeles Olympic selections announced Monday. ba9eman Tom · · (.416, 17 homers), 4 tru:ough 12 with singles Organizing Con)mittee.
Coach Fred Hoover's Rustlers and outfielders Mark Swancoat (.333, and ' doubles categories Reservations are $13
earned six first-team honon and two 22 RBI), Bob Gray (.306) and Dale offered in t b r e e per pe rsan. Further
second~team choices. But the Dl08t Halm (.343, six homers). divisiona. information can b e
valuable player award was shared by Link and Bo.nllla are freshmen Deadline for entries i8 obtained by calling
two non-Rustlers, Kent McBride of while the other five honored Gauchos Wec:tne.iay at 5 p.m. 644-8211. Cypreas and Don Roddy of Rio are aophomora. .------------'-"--------t
Hondo. Ttie Southern Cal Conference'•
Over in the Mission Conference, co-MVPI, McBride and Roddy, were
Saddleback C.Ollege a1ao did well in equally impreaive thia year. McBride the conference wlections., as pitcher batted .440 for the Chargers. while
Brad Kinney earned Player of the Roddy aparkecfRio Hondo with a .327
Year honors, and first-year head mark ...
<;oach Jim Bridew~ earned Coach
of the Year laurels. LindOOrg tourney set
Golden West's all-conference
selections are pitcher Scott Marth The Lin~ Racquet Club i.n
(.7-0, 2.18 ERA), catcher Chris Schulz Hun~ wU1 be the scene ot
(.342), infielder Bob Grandstaff (.331), the aecond annual Lindb.or1 outfielder Curtis Ge rvais (.371), Jnvti.tional for leftioh M-and~
deal j na ted hitter Dan Lau on beg1nnin8 today -and-nanning through
(.386) and ftnt-tfaaemalrChuc'k Sunday. •
Splejel (.360). 'The event ii a $10,000 affair wUh
GWC'a second-team 1electiooa are many of the top playen from men'•
pitcher Rob Meyes-(6-1, 2.42 ERA) and wgmen'• dlvlaloQa from 35
and outfielder Doua Irvtne (.313). tb'°"'8ti '70-and-over dtviliom. Then
Sadd1eback'1 Kinney, a Dam HWa Will be llinglea, doub1ei and mixed
Hll b 1rad u ate, boaa.~t~~d~a=7~·=1 ~cb;=lib&et;==:ai:;~:;•peti~;tion.:;=:;· ==~~;:=.~
\
"New reduced
rates can
save you money if-
you aet now."
-Bob Hope
>
IN GREECE -Members of the USTA's 45-year-old eeniors
team, currently competing in Greece, are from left: Jim
Nelson of Newport Beach; Marina High tennis coach Bqb
Duesler; Hugh Stewart of Carlsbad; and team captain Juon
Morton of Houston. The four-man team is competing for the
coveted Dubler Cup in Athens.
'" ~~ Mceftdl.Clewllend 22 .. I 21 .412 IWrell,Cla¥Mand 32 125 211 47 .37t Coop«.*-*-32 130 11 .. 354
• ~ Murrsy.~ 32 100 14 35 .350 'I • SurlcltMwo. T-21 100 I 14 .MO Wllw>gln,Mlnn. n n 1 2t .331 .,1: ... ~.a-. 12 111 21 ... Ill b• Pecilof9t,Qllcego 12 120 t3 4 ,113
)J
Ir
ILUOlt UAOU. aTAND91G•
==~ W L N. 09
..... 24 11 ..... ~ ,_. 22 11 .647
--.. 20 14 ...
It N
4
l\t
~ 2t> 17 .141
--11 22 .421 T-10 21 .323 11
13'A Mlnlleeota 11 27 .289 LUT1IM ...,..
Bolton n 12 .ea1
Oecro1t 21 12 .m 1
,,....... 11 15 .645-4 .._ YOf11 15 11 .441 1\4 ...,_. 14 11 A24 I
~ 14 f9 A24 I
TClfONo 14 20 .412 l'it
a-.e.W.!r ....
~City 7, .._ YOftl 0
~ ..... ......... T .... ..._
Mei*(""*° &-1) 11119 I ... ~
2-3). n
foronto (SfllD 2~) 111 ~ ~
2·1). n ...._.. (WllMw 24) Ill ....,_. (0.
MwttnerULn
SHiii• ''· aannlater 4·21 at Botton (Edi--4-2). n OeklMCI (Nonie 24) at O.trolt (Morrie W).n r-IMedldl 2-31111Cl*-001~ 1-41. n New York (Renko 1·1) 11 MllweukH
(Colldlloll 2-3). " ~ Yon (Ouldry 5-1) at Ken ... City (froet 4-2). n
==~ W L
23 13
11 15
17 111
111 111
HouMon 11 21
1M Frend9co 15 21
ualUINDMelOM
St. LOW. 22 14
Pfllleclelphie 11 18
N9w YOf11 11 17 ~ 18 17
Plnlbutgll 14 18
Cl*-00 15 2 ......,...__ ""°""" .. ....,. 0 andnNltl 7, .... Yortl 2
Houe1on I . Pll nao•pUe 1
()Ny .....-ldledllfed
tlct. -l3t
5-'5 3'~
472 e 457 ,.,.
.432 1·~ .417 8
111 .543 2\t
.528 3 .485 4 ...
.438 e
.421 '"'
T...-.a-CMceJO IM#U w1 at ......,_ IW9lcll
4-2).n
AllMl.I (~ 1) Ill Monll'eat (Ol*Q
on 2·2). n
Clnolrvwll CS--1~) ti Hew Vcwio (I\. Jonet 4-2). n
Howton (J. Nleltro 3-3) Ill ~ (Ru""'9n 2·$1. n 81. Loull (,onich -.-0) Ill Sen OieOo (Curtla
2·1), n PltttDurgh (Candelaria 0· 1 l et S.n
ffancleoo (U.~ 2·21. n
....CAN LUOU. ...,...,,.,..,._,
New Yortl 000 000 000-4 7 1 ~City 101 001 CMx-7 ,, 0
lricUofl, "-llltey (7), 0-... (II and ~0...end ...... W-0....4-1.L -~.4-4.A--.-, ................
T-100 000 GOS-I 10 1 °*"'° t20 200 azx-e 11 0 ~ ldWNdt (I). ,,.,..,. (I) Md ~ ......... (l)endAlll.tM
II). w-~-4-0. L-~ICM). a
-~ (1). ~ -CNceoo, 1'1111 ~A -12.111. NATIOMALLb_,. .............
Atlllnte , OOll 000 000-4 2 2 ,.,,.,... 000 201 Ofl-4 11 1
.:::-...~~~~~~ A-I0,107, ............ ,
........... oot Ol1 011-t 14 0 't' ........ 000 100 I 000-1 4 l
lllu!IR'wfif Atlta.r: lll"41, MH9a Ill. ._ &wen.,,,_. 1114 a. Dllli. w-,__ 14. L -...... i-1. A-A7k .. , ..... . ClllllMlllll .. ., 002-7 t2 1 .... Yn OtO 000 OOt-2 I a ~=ft,-:O,J•~~~
Ltlltrellft, 1•1, L -, ... Ofl9. S•t, A -14,tlt,
MdlM.~ Qty 14 127 11 42 .331 8odli.,s-t11e 37 127 8 42 .~1 ..._ .....
fhornlon. Cleveland, 10; HrDek. MlnnHota. 10; Roenlcke, lalllmore, II;
Ml,lrphy, Oakllllld, 8: Harr911. ClewlMd, 7;
OglMe, M"-'t-. 7: Dew11111e. Metta. 7:
I\. Jolvleon, ~ 7. .............
Mc"••. Kanne City, 35, Thorn ton.
Cl..,.l•nd, 33, OglMe, MllwaultM, 21,
Hfbell. ~ ... 2t; ...............
t...uzlrWll. ctolalgo, 25: Olla.~ City, ff ........ ,.0........)
Hoyt. Qllcego, f 4'; Guidry, New Yor11. 5-1, z.-. ....... e.t; Bark•. CleYelend. 4.1. Gura.~ City, 4-1; eauc.. a..tt1e, 4-1, o.wtn. T-. 4-1.
MATIOMAL I.RAGUS
CIAallH"9t.
Thompeon,Pltt.eiurgtl 30 111 25 41 ·*
MCINlend.Qllcego 35 131 11 .... 151 a.lor,New YOf11 24 72 10 25 .147
Ralnla,MontNel 31 127 111 41 .3" ~.au.our. 35 143 31 47 .1211 .-, 'onN ten Diego IS 1M 22 43 .U 1 ~.:!>.,~. • 1$4 12 43 .321 ~--_,. 36 153 24 .. .320
1 a p -• a tot 21 .. 3111
....,...,_ Yortl 32 121 17 II .114 ..........
~--Yortl..12;....,_,A ........ 11;J..~ ....... ~Handltck. .. IAutl, t; ..,., MlilMa. •. ............ ~. AlfMla. M; l(Jnamen. New YOf11. 12; "'1cMWlld. Ctllcago, 2t: J. Thompeon.
fllt11bur9ll, 21; Olu, fttllladtlphla, 211:
HtrlCll1c*. k LcMa. 25. • ...... ( . .,.......) BultOfl, Houaton, 8-1; ._.,,._ anowwtt,
4-1; Jonet, New YOftl, 4-1; Pulllo ..... Yortl,
4-2: a.ii.. Alflmll. 4-11 Welc1I,.,..,..... ~ ..... Cl*-00. 5-l; Aoolrl. Mon&.!, W ;V .......... ~~·
~
AntT-...... ,._,.., _..... Maril CL
P-Ettc S.ry. CS Fvllef1on 2.27.,. Jf
P-Jon Fur-. ...,,._dine 2 02w• 6<
P-Glen Godwin. U Sen OieOo2112ara Sr.
P-RanOy Aamnz, LS 6i.te 2112 Sr
C-Mlf1I Pln'uocello. CSF 265 Sr
18-8ot>'9etlle, CSF 328 Jr
28-Ulfry L•. Pepcierdlne 312 Jf
39 ... Tracy JQ!M!91 LoYOle 3111 Jr ss-Joefledllelcl,U~ .335 Jr
OH-Mike Aul>el, CSF 3 Ill Jr OF-Mike Vanderbufg, CSF 38(1 Jr
OF-Tonyt> Laurenzl. LB St•t• 314 Sr
OF-Scott Sloul, Loyole 38.'\ Jill Of'-~ Clertt. USC .341 Jr P layer ot the Year· Jon Furrnan ,,..,.,..,
Coecll o1 me ,_ AllQl9 Garrido (Cll
St•I• F....,on)
fl-Tlm~~-3.17we Jr
P-8oll ~. "9ppwdine 2 14 ar1 Sr
P-St-Frenc:tt, UCSB 3 72w• Jr P-0.W W81111, UCSB 3 Oller• Sr
C-Slftt B«IWd, UCI 3e 1 Ji 18-.-. ~.Pep. 332 Jf ~ ~. CSlA . 327 !If. 38-Jlrn JoMI, l'eppardine 32t Jr
SS-Rene ~. CSLA 341 Sr OH-Troy Ybetra, UCI .341 Sr OF-Doug Follz. l'eppardlne .3511 Sr
OOF-George Page, U. San Diego 404 Jr.
OF-OrAd Wik*. CSf 290 Sr
Ab.·~ ,.,..,_
...... ,...,.,, ...... --ea. P-kott ......... GWC 2 7 .. a ,r
P-Gt9g Swein, Cypra. 1 15era So P-8Nm Corw1or9. Hwbor 2.2.5 8o ~ Sc:lluli. GWC 342 So =~~.\~ W1 t: . Inf~ ~. Rio Hondo .327 ao.
lnf-TOfl)' Arnelo, Harbor .337 8o
OF-Cun19 Gervell, QWC 37 t So
OF-Kant McBnde. ~ .4411 So.
()fl-Jim Mecate, Alo~ .aat So.
0tt-0en 1.rton, owe ·* ao. Ul.-MIM Rindone. !Mt LA .31A So
COofnOl1 VllUable playwa: Kent Mdrlde 1cypr..1. Den Roddy(AIO Hondo~ .__.T_
P-l'lob Mays, GWO
P-Ed Pllllc.-, ttartlOr
fl-fWll CNoo. No Hondo
c-&n.I ~ LASW
18-SIU ..... C~ • lnf-0.-CM&llo, o,,w..
• lnf-Toriy ._...,sMcclWtlor W-Gary Celfto, OF-Oo\11 IMN. owe OF......._ Moeley, 8MCO
Of'-Awity AMllnlO· .......
2.42 ao
112 ao
240 Ff. .2M Ff .313 ,,
.I06 ao. .344 ff ..141 ,,
.313 ,,
.'71 Ff . .371 ao.
'
Catc;llsa: Tom PM!op (hrvlte). ar ... 1121; 81-~ (M•tw Oel). tr , .333.
lnfteldera: Mike 1<.ny (Matar Dal), It .•• 424; Mike Undlten (Mater Dal). tr., .410: Joe ~ (Bllhop Montgomety). Jr ••• W ; Al Lopa (8191109 Amat), "" .325: MaMy ~ = Amel~ Jr , $58; et-....., , ).Jr ... 321. ~lob Oralle (SI Peul). Jr., .512; Dan Honlkel (s.rvlle), ., • 451. Randy
T-(8lehop Anwll). aocif', 350. Rid\ ~ , ...... Del). Jr • 214
Utlllty: Kem H1Qo1r19 (81ehop Amal). ar .. ·*· OH John Ecclee IMetar Del~ tr., 375.
Women , ...... u..c~ °"'"' ...... Stantonl 7, ...,_ 2
UCLA I , MIMll 1 uac 1. 1o111t1 Oer01ne 1 Trinity I, 11811 Dleoo S.. I
HIGH acttooL
•twtne ...... o.n.
(Ill .......... """ 17) NOflTN lllOeTO
Oflel.. "--.W.,., De..tt (Bum1ugtiel. e-o. 115. Dwante Hempcon (Van Nuye), t-1, 175. MIU
ward (Lompoc;). 6-0. 170: Mlllll Andr-(S..
MllMOL 6-3. 211. PGA •tatletta Tac:lliae -Oon Hltl (Blahop Amal). .. 2'Ai.
,,.,_... ..., I) 250; Ir~ Park• (Chatley). e.e, 2t5; Erll ~ AOllln (Colton). a-&. 250.
1. Tom Kite, 70. . 2. Tom w-. 70. 15. duwdt -<ll9ll 11.idwtn (Sari G.,,..,). 3. Curll• llta~31. 4. 8coll HO()h, 8-2, 225. Oen Foote (VwOUgo Hiii). &-0, 70.44. 8. 8oott • 70.51 185.
A ..... DfMil9 ora.. c.n1ar -Ron lltogdon (F~ M . Loe AlilmHoe I. Tateo Olilkl. 274.S. 2. Oeflle WatlOll, 200 .
llOMDA Y'S MM Te 270.2. I. 8Noa OoualMa. 2tt.t. 4. Oen Pcfll. 09 -Hotm Senlllgo (Beidwtn Par11). 8-0,
(,_ ef t\ ....... __...--. _....,) Fuzzy l.oellr, 2te.'-170, Blalle &Nth (U. Alloa). 8-0, 185.
Plllfl uca.. 400 Y9tOI .,,,... ""' ...... ,__, ' R8 -Dene HllalGattiYI. 5-11. 1M, EOdie lllgLAegueDlncw(Adf12SIO 1560 8.20 1CMln~114.2. ... Rllld,.7M.3. Lewle (VanNUYtl.5·7.'185;0.0.MOOfe
MIU Milo (M\1191) 1UO 10 40 Gerla Uttllf, .748. 4. Tom 1(119, .744. 5. 1111 (Ml.*1, .. 1. 206. Or8ngoutang Don {T.-e) 4 40 Aogera. .741.
Aleo reoed: Sc:ramtlling Joe. a..itey ~ .,_ Ill .... 1 ... 0.....
Cold ~. ,_.lgllly '1ell, Hlpplty 1. PftW Jacoe-, .7H. 2. Hal Sutton, Line -J.n llteget (~. Gr...ade
Time; 20.41. .721. a. Jedl Nie* ..... 720. 4. llrwe Uetz. H1118). M , HOr. Ron Brown (llllhop Amat). II l!XACTA (5-8) paid '2t1 80 ke, 718. 5. CM1n l'wWand Jolln ~. M , 202. Eric Hammond l.._i 8-2.
. 714. 240: Onno ZwllMYelcl (Cenoga Pwk). .. 5\t, MCOM> ltACC. 350 yardl ...... Mee,_ ..._. 250. ·
Mighty Marcut (Wardl 5.40 3.80 2.80 1. Ctlllo at.dtar, U .64. 2. Eel Aorl, 28.80. lln9t>9cktra -Fnink 8a1Chllolf (Aeaeda).
Ti. Bud Mao (C..dou) 11.20 4.20 3. Tom Khe. • lrtt1on and Morr1I Hetelclly, 8-5, 24&, Denny Kur-(Alta Loma), .. 2.
Muz 8 Fat1 (Adelr) 3.40 28.14. 215); CharM M811ofy (Cl9Yelend), e.2. 200);
Aleo rac.d OudH = Pride. SH • ..., ___ af ~ ...._ Ctalg Nlcaetto (A.rcedlti). 5-10, 205t. ./ffrM'ty
Zaphyl\ Oenclng Oedtw, to Wiile Up, 1, Tom 1U19. .f3e. 2. C(elO lhedlar, .211. 3. ~(San Fernando). .. 5. 210 weoea win.. o.mlan• Aprll Oenll w~ . .227. 4. Tom w.t8on • .22t. 6ect11 -Robtlle Bert .. 11 (MCM'lrovle). Time: 11.541. ... U.... 5-11, 1IO: Gordon 8uncll (San ~).
1. TOfll Me, m. 2. Cemig 8'edler. 211. I. 8-0, 175, llrwe .. (Antt6ope V_.,, .. 1,
Tt9m MC.. 350 )'Wde Andy a.an,~· 4. Scott Hoch, 111&. 5. ~76: fleul Ndlotlon (Santa ..,_.I. e.2 .
Ohio o.rt (f'fydey) 7 IO 4.40 3.20 CW11a ...... 113. M Mr. ,,._,. (Oelomtle) 1.80 4 to ...... ....., LeM111r9 Coachee -Olcll Whitney (Kenn.cty,
c.I Me ::J"...., UO 1. cr.ag ._..,, an?,716, a. Tom w.on, Orancla HlleL ... w-(~I.
Aleo r · OW-. oi-t. He9 Copr S217,8'L S. T-Kl ... 1111,115, 4. J9ny •
Two, Fun~Too, Jiited Clle'T!plon, Pete, 1165,747. 5. t.Mny WecllllM, 11111,·
Spectm.W • Touta Jet Too, AM Wft. 811. t. aoatt Hodl, 1148.222. 7. Altl/lj lleM,
Time: 18. . 1140..144+•· )ONyyy ...... 1126.211 ... Ed Sneed. I t17 .615. 10. .,., Older. 1111.015 . "°""'" uca. 350 ywdl Mite Wllel e Fllghl C...t ... f'MUlte
fTC-l 2t 40 12.80 7 20 .. CMYCMI CC W0lm!'9 CUla Way Mgel (Hartl 7.80 5.00 ce.. ~
Bold Hancf(Ff)'deyl 4.IO Champion -Merle Orey; NM«-clp -Allo raced: s..... 8atly Love, 8ul>CJeae Dibble HMc. l-Mt wtnns, dwmpooafllp
Jei, Indian Road. Clwrrlotl, He1lw Partns, llgM -Kathy leunwl.
Miaty Ocwtlt. ...... ........
Tlnlel 18A2. ArM -(~) l<:er9fl Wlrt•l>wn. (Net)
II DACTA IS.n peld 1183 40 J .. n Mallory, 8ecoi>d -IG.rOM) SyMa Hortly: (Mel) ... Mar1tn; Md -(an.)
""" MCC. 170 retda. Toni ~(Ne!) AM Ha1cleln; ~ -Sir Dencellot ~I 7.80 4.40 3.20 (Gtoea) Batt>wa OeFranc« ( ... I) EIMnof
8lr'blP ~ 10.00 4.80 1..-therby; ,,.,,, -(Gr-) ---McQoy. ao.-o (Tt_..) 1.40 (Net) Carol •••1: 81klh -(Orou) Ann
Mao reoed: o.lient Bird, Joeego, Wlfto. MerT1tt; (MIQ "-' Yarlfwf.
Ti.-45.11. •WOfiT lmACM womJf'S CLU9
.......... -50 Oii* Chi,,, 1t1S -'"" M-. 3 yards A Fllght -(OroH) Juanll• Stafford, Rebs Ultle Lulu IHwll 5.20 3.80 3.00 runner·u=uge Gibb•~) Hannah Anon.,., In-men• ..._._ (Tr-..) 11.40 5.80 ..---. B -(Or-) P9rrallt,
LH11e1>11oen.-(CrMOW) 4,40 "'"""-llP OowM; (Nee) a.tu Sellnar. C
Alao raced: Pae Em Sl•Hlter. SlrHI Fight .... (~) Jtln Olbba.~~Mery w..i; '*" Altdlle Piper. 0 -~) Smar1. Bay Boy BoD. SlnnicM, Super Hemp Shlele 8111CMf1, JUflMr·UP Hnor ood; Tirna< 11 .86. , ..... , ... ~ a UACTA (5-7} paid 154 40 Low .... T°""*'*'ta: A ""*" -HllMah ,........ 50: .... Hele, 51 •• Flight -Olletta MVbl'11t MCL 400 yardt Perrault, 41, ,.II Strolcll, 50. C Fl1-.t -Rell &ay Jet T-7 "'"' (Hart) 13 00 8.20 3 90 lfWW AllnqMlll, 4 ; Jen 0tDoa. 48. D l'lallt. MIN 8QI 8ody -wey l1lroneoft, IO; Mly Cedwlliw, 82. A Fllg"' -Kannetl Petere. «: Vennie ICreeverl 1 I 40 t .40 81urgla. 4'. I FJat1t _ Ollette ...,,..._ 41;
Preferred Poley (Bard} 9.40 Alllll,...... •t: c RlgM Jo.. Jolt Pope. 41: AlaO r.-: Radar ""'-"· Autumn i... Jen Olblla. 41. o F1gflt _ ..,.._ s.deta. M• CHcke Poley, &ay Hiii, Ripe and 50: Mef1o11 "'"9. la.
l\Mdy, leaAll Cllep, 0o &ay Udy A l'lgtlt -Lou l.Mtn, 47; Hannall ........ ™* 20. 111. 47. ~ f1lgtlC -!Cay "'-'· 45; Edie 0-.. II IXACTA (WI paid 111>4 80 50. C Alilht -~Piper, 42: Jen G1bbe.
ltOHTH Met. 400 yarda. 41. 0 'lfoM -SMiie tanoert. 42; Sytvla Pflll1Y ~ fT,_,,..\ 8.oo a.oo 2.40 , ... ...,_. s1.
OerMlle SUitlon (Paullnel 2.80 2.40 LAeuNA a.ACM ..... C&.U9
Good FMt-(c.rda&a) 3.20 .._ .... T_,_tl
Alto ,.-. Plot, Gallent Top, Trudlllng :rE ..._ ~ ... C..)
Outchn•. Hurry on "ow, Champ• A _,..lmlll~~ ~ ~ -~ri.... 8oedl8n. IS-11-70 encl a.tea ~::;l (7~) paid l20 40 Crow, IS· 11-70. I "loht-1. !U041ne a PM* aa f7·~7) p-.s *37, 107•40 8re11d, H · 17-11, 2. llllchard W-ere.
"""one wll"*1Q lldacl (II• hora.l. u Pick t .. 16-71. C ~lll-1. 0-99 Wllllrar,
8111 coneoteUon paid 1537 eo will\ 23 • N-tt-71: 2 (tie Ken Smlttl, N-1t-74 ............. ~,_hot-.) Md II.Ma IM!lg, 11-74. 0 Algllt -1. ---.. •--Harow Oti.1oflJ 14·14-70; 2. ~tnelcl ...,... uca. 400 rwdl P..utdge, 104-2-71. E "°"' -1. EINI SC*• Ola Pundl (Ward) l .IO UO 2.10 AlllreMw, M-21-ti; t. Ndwd ~
OIQ N "'-' (CNeoerl 4.00 UO t06-2t -11.
Tip Yow Hal {Tonktl 2.10
Aleo r.-: Vldori, Jelly .ieouar. HIO'l8J Or~ °2:.':r. Peyd9Y. M19'tty l c.n.
• DACTA (e.!) pe1c1 sauo. An.nctenoe -7,0U
Women'1 eoftbetl ._. «:MOQIL
(...._ V'9w '-Ille T-) Ph!T-C-Sua Veldlar, E.ltande
P-Uu Mantn, INlla
P-Selly Ctwtcltnan. &tenc:ia
If-Lyn Callharl. B Toro
IF-Flloka l.oc:M. lr'f1ne IF-Julia HOflmaot. &t
tf'·-P•tty O'Connor, Estanda
IF-Coty c.te, Un"'9r9lty
OF-Kat.-i Strcq>, El Toro
OF-Vll*y ~. Cotta Me8e
OF-kllMI Jonee. UMet9lt)' ..__,T_
Jr So
Jr Sr Sr
So Sr.
So.
Jr.
Sr ..
Sr.
408 12..()
1C)..4
408 .375
.396 4 111
358
.211 . 327
.3811
C-Mary Tritt. El Toro Jf. .2117
P-Pilggy c.n.Nn, El Toro So. 11-3 IF-.lamle McAleer. Coat8 W... Sr. 3eo'
IF -l<tte1!n l..Mlplllar. Univ. Jr. .145 IF-VMen Tllllb, 8addlebec::k .k. .220
IF-Mwy K-v Holman, Newpor1 It 3ao
OF-Wende Centdo. Estancia So .155
Of-8111 ~. UrWer1ilty Sr .317
OF-Donne ~. !Nina Sr 242 U-"-Lua. Coale W.. So .480
U-MarW ~ Unlver9lty So 400 .,..::•I Value Pleyer -ll .. Merlln.
• •• ••• ... .. --_.._ -· -T
Tula Untvenlty awept the
doublH matchH Monday ~ to hand UC lrvtM • &·3 defeat in the National
lnvt&adonal T.W. ~
at Monroe, IA.
· UCJ, which 11 now 28-U
follo\lrlnl the ct.feat; will ~ the Univenity of W.U-,ta tor
thtrd place today. The
ch•m=s.hlp mMtc:h will pit Lona h Stale apiNt Tulia. "fi WM jult exqtllent tennia
today," noted UCl COICh Oree Patton . .,Lona Beach had to p
down to the r...t doublel match,
and the tena1on WM hiah durlnt our doublel matches. too.''
The Anteatera atarted off
strong enough, with alnglea
standouts Jim Snyder and Eric
Quade puI11na off viciortes. ~ • .
·TENNIS
a1 expected, UCl'a Ruben
Perczek waa a winnet over
Tulaa'a Jim Connor.
• But C.onnor and h1a brother I
Pat,.teamed up to defeat UCI'a
FA McPhenon and Perczak 11'
one doubles match, 6-4, 6-4, while
UCI's Rob Nelaon and Mark
Ramos were handed the
clinching defeat by Tulsa'• St.eve
Healy anct. Neil Smith, 6·2, 5. 7,
S.2.
El.lewbere ln oo~te tennis,
John Van Nostrand won h.ia No. 3
singles match l.n three aeta, and
then teamed with Bill Baxter to
win No. 1 doubles. giving
Pepperdine a 5.3 upeet victory
over Southern Methodist and its
fi~t appearance l.n the NCAA
tennis championahiP.'.
The Waves, playtrig in.Athens,
Ga., will face UCL.A, the No. l
seed. The Bruins downed
Georgia. 5-4.
Pepperdine and UCLA were
scheduled to battle for the NCAA
championship this afternoon, and
the Bruins will be out to collect
their 14th NCAA tit.le.
Individual championships.
begin Wednesday with doubfes
championships on Sunday .
Vaqueros'
Martin tops
All-Sea View
Lisa Martin who threw five
no·hltters-durina the regular
aeasan, was selected aa Sea View
League most valuable player for
women's aoftball this week by
vote of circuit coaches.
Martin added a sixth perfecto
in an opening round CIF 3-A
playoU game after posting a 12.0
record during league play.
Martin was one of two Irvine
players picked for the first team.
Flicka Locke was picked as an
infielder and had a .375 batting
average.
Est.ancia's F.agles placed four
players on the first unit and
another on the second aquad.
Sally Christman, a junior
pitcher with a 10-4 league record,
was picked along with Martin for
the first unit. She bad one
no·hitter during the regular
leUOn and two shutouts.
Sophomore Patty O'Conne.r, a
senior second ba8eman, hit .419
while first baseman aophomore
Julie Hoffman hit .395. The first
team cafrller was Sue Vatcher, a
junior, who hit .408.
Oh the second team trom
'£stancia was sophomore
outfielder-Wanda catrido who
hit .355.
Univenity'a Trojans had Cory
Cate, a sophomore who hit ,358
and Karyn Jones, a aenior with a
.356 average on the first unit.
Costa Mesa placed aenlor
outfielder V1cky Lamer on the
first unit alOQ8 with 'infielder
Jamie McAleer (Sr., .364) and
pitcher Nance Lux, a aophomore,
u a utWty player on tlw 9flCOnd
unit.. Lux ai.o bad a no-hitter
during the regular ----and hit ,460.
Univenlty had three. •yen
on the aecond unit imcludinJ
Kristin Lamphier, a Junior
Infielder who htt .846; Sue
KofetJian, a tenlor outfielder
who hlt .317; and pitcher~
Fu, a ~. who hit .400.
I ·'
'1WE (THE PADRES) have the low9il pla)et
..ia_ry structure ln the leque, and we •till need to
Clraw 1.8 million peop&e thia llUOft to bnak .ven.
We're projectln& a lcM ot $4 million on • 11 m1llion
pcm Income.
0 Most ownen have enouch money to make up ,
the deficUa. Before this they ~ere not lolina much.
Now dollar la.et are aettine eo btl . · ·
"Wlth the bla difference ln money 1tl'UetW'el
between tq clube and small clube, eithet' dw ana1l
dube will go broke or there will be a tremendous
tumoYel" ln clut., which would be m.d."
·Smith uid the answer to the widmina PP
betw1len bueba.ll'a money-mak.lng clubs and thoee
loling money la to .~ revenue amona all the
tearoa, aimi.1ar ·to the methods of the National
Football League.
''The number one fiaht in bueball II over
revenue--sharinr,' said Smlth, who ia eervi.ng on a
committee stuaylng the iaaue. "Sometime next
month the committee will report to the clubs."
SMITH SAID BE believes the cure lies in
aharing television revenue u the NFL now does.
BuebAll'a 26 clube do split income from national TV
contnleta but the revenue is not that substantial. A
team'• primary eource of television 1ncome ia from
local TV, andt-in the future, quite probably from
pay television.
"The problem is TV dollara,'' Smith Mid, "and
that's baaed on two thinp -ratings and the
number of people in the market. The problem that
San Diego and other small markets have ia that
even if we win, the ratinglt would not increase
tremendously.
"Now viliting teaml get 25 percent of pay TV
revenue, but get nothing from local television. The bis marb1s are not interested in revenue sharing,
and there's going to be a big fight."
Smith said that ln addftion to the question of
revenue-sharing other areas of the game's
organizational structure must be addremed.
AMONG THOSE ARE whether to retain Bowie
Kuhn as oommlasione.f. and what will come out of
the owners' committee on restructuring bueball's
hierarchy -a committee of which Smith abo is a
member.
Smith. who bad wanted· Kuhn dropped. haa
changed bis position. He blames ba~ball's
organizational structure, whlcb greatl)'" limita
Kuhn's po~. for the lack of central authori1y.
"'The two league presidents do not have to
report to Kuhn, and the labor relations committee
prior to and during last summer'• strike did not
report to Kuhn," said Smith, "I've chan1~ rny
mind about tbe commtW:!Oner. Nobody could eerW-
,ffectively with ~structure now."
'8Cnnoua .., .....
NAm llTAT'lmllff
Tiie followlng pereon It doing ~-"'o STAFI. 113 Promontory = :=o Newport iw.cfl. ~
Jecob Allblno¥ld\. 17871 leek·
wood Lane, ln4rle. ~ 92715
,,. bUllMee .. oonduc1ed by "" lnclMdu9I. •
JecoO Aeblnovlc:tl
• 11lle :••t -llled wl1h the CF L f h eouney of ar.,. County on ranc 1ses Meyll.1982. ,_
• PuOllhed Orenoe COMt CW1Y Pl-co D tin u e legal flap klt,M.yt1.1ll.2S.~1·::l-n
Ml.IC NOTICE
MONTREAL (AP) -The new Canadian MCmCE IMV'ITING ..,.
Football League franchise in Montreal ia a team The County s.,..1t•tlon 0te11tc11 ot
D • ...... -e r.celve •••i.d t>loe un111 June a. without Q:and, pendino a ... ,u.,.., on a motion Orange County, Celllornt•. will
filed in Superior Court on Monday, one tH2 •t , 1.00 Lm. 8ldt muet t>e
without legal right to its players. receive d •t th• Dletrlcu ·
In an effort to clear up the confused situation, ~~iw.,::.:= ~ 1::,~·~~
the CFL offered Monday to provide a guarantee to wl'ttch t1m• ttiey will 1>e put111cty
tanner Alouene. owner Sam Berger for money he :::' ~~~ ~":=.
ii owed by Nebon Skalbania. in exc~ for Fountain Vrlltfrt, Cllifornle. tor the releue of players' contracts frozen, by a Writ of fol~: HYDROGEN PEROXIDE aei%ure. FOR PLANT 2 ODOR CONTROL
Skalbanla'1 lawyer, Louis Belanger, who SP~~1': :b!ttf.!· on 1ne
succemfully argued Wt Week that a Writ of .eizu.re' form eupplled by Ille °'9trlet1 In
on the team's franchiae in ~ CFL be quashed. a1ao ::°'.::;:..:_ .. PfOYlllonl ot
ts oonteating a stmilar aeizure against the players' Sl)eClficetloo•. bid *tlk• end
-.. ..... ...1--..1-.. and •-'--'-'-__ ,..,.. lurthw lnfonnatlon rnwt be obtelned con .. --. \CIM.lt:IU&I-~UNUU ....... ..-.. et the tlbov• edclrwe. tetec>llOne
1"1be league will fum1ah the, sum cla1med by 1112.2,.,, or 540-2110.
Mr. Beqer in hll action as a guarantee in exchange J. w•vne S~ter
for the releue of . . . the players' contncta," Ba.id :=:n. ~=ore
CFL lawyer Allan Hilton, in an interview after Pul>"9Mcl Orange CoHt Delly
oourt adjourned. , Piiat, M.., IS, 1982
PAaflllC Y•W
IWtCHlaA.l 'Ml
Cenwtetv MorttHllY ChaPel-CtematCHY,
3500 Pacific VlflW Oftve
Newport Beach
644-2700
.....
..
. ' Kilb pcbool ~laaee ...
............... bollll& th • lr 'l 'k l ll 1 • ll d
knowled1• of tclean •1 T80llAI D. BIJAI
m a y • n r o 11 l n • For yww. CallfomSw haw winced:,~ ftv.-w..k P'O&Nl'D . ..... Mud the lMt line of moet teleYWon eummer at UC lMDt. • b IWW (WI: "Mllelp ..um.tea will be dltt.nftt ln
lrht UCI Summer c.11fomla."
8cilence JmUwte 1rill b9 Tht •tate'• unique 1mo1 1tandard1 cauted ht1d Aus. 2 to 8tot. 4 wmt1 ,.. mn.,. arid w..Ur performance ~ and wlll-focul on 'be* drlven aot ln the other 49 ltltfl, ·with th•
Kimm concepta .. w.11 ~ called the '4C&l.ltornla ~ penalty."
11 rt Hare h ~ And the llnOI ttan.danJI, whlcli ectually bu\ lndUde bMlo ... modtll from Cal1fornla ahowrooma, became •
and ohY*:I M well M whJpplnc boy u car dealen looked for explanatlonl
CS.vefopm•ntal blolOIY,· of poor Nlel performance. Another artpi wu that
blocbemlttry, pnetfet, the 1tate controlt a~ded a1 much u '250 to car
computen, eneray, pric:ea.
m e d l c l n e • n d Thoee complaint.I are no longer valid. Some
f.nlec:tiddea. m)'th~•troytna etatlstics releued by the etate'•
Coordinator of the aritf-1mo1 a1ency, the Alr Reaourcea Board,
lnatltute le Dr. Mare demanlltrate that new ~omia can are almost on
T-..,epera. UCI lecturer a par with othera.
ln chemlltry. l'uUy 98 percent of the modela eold ellewhere
Fer more lnformation.1 are available ln Ca1ltomia. Eleven carmaken charp
call 833-6140. noth1na for Callfornla equipment and the averqe
' clw1le l>y other manufacturera LI $85. 1l .• 'lWO-thlrda of the can told here prov10e the Reahy ume or be\&er' fuel economy than similar modei.
course.
at QCC
·Ullflllil flelll
10ld e1-ewhere. Becauae Callfomlana tend to drive
smaller can than other Americana, the 1tate'1 total
"Real Estate for the new-car fleet actually geta 2.~ percent better
Con.ewner " a j.hree-hodr mtleap overall than new cara nationwide.
aemlnar ihat preeenll Performance baa allo lmpro\led, with more car lntonnation on bow' to bulldera u1ln1 fuel-injection 1y1tem1 and
buy aeU and finance l'M1 · front-wheel drive. estate will be offered at All Ulla, and the atate'a new cars produce le.
Orqe Cout College ln oxldea of nltro1en, hydrocarbon• and other
Costa Mesa pollutants than any ever 90ld. •
The a~ 11 i 0 n I 1 1 For the Reasan administration's proposed
scheduled Ma 27 from 7 CJean AJr Act mnenclmenta, \Vhich aim to turn the
to 10 .rn ln ~. Fine llDOl-camrol clock beck to 1980, have moved out of
Arta itD·u9. Ad.miaDon the one conareatonal 1ubcommittee where they
Is $5 faced any real challenge. S~minar lecturer la '!be amendments will have a far eaaier time on Richai'd Hart, a apeci•list the HOUie floor and in the Senate than iJf the Houae
in busine11 saf~ and 1ubcommittee on ~ealth and
investments with Walker environment, where they were
& Lee Reel FAtate Co. challenged by U.S. Rep. Henry
For information Waxman, a Loa Angeles
phone 556-5880 ' Democrat. · The Reagan-backed
Economic
talk set
propoaal. authored by two
Democrata from car-producing
dlatricta ln Michigan and Ohio,
will not immediately end the
eeparate Callfornia smog-«>ntrol program. WAJllMN
But they will increue the preuure on the
California program. For myths oftAm. die hard. And
the new ARB 1tatistlca will not take that last, sad
line out of the television ~· What'• more, a
49-atate amog-control rollback like Reagan now
meeb might make most of the old trullma true once
aaam. ·' U new-car aalee remain low iJl California, the
ume dealer 1obby that pushed hard last year for an
end to the aeparate California standard• will be
banging on the door again.
'l1le only ttaaoo it didn't succeed last time WU
that ~ton knew Gov. Brown would veto any move against the anti-smog program.
But none of the current crop of gubernatorial
hopefula ia as certain to prevent a state smog-control
rollback. So as optimistic as today's new car figures may
be, they could turn out to be the all-time biah water
mark for smog-control in California, witn dirtier
days ahead. 1
(ElW is a columnist baaed in Santa Monica)
Broker to · teach
syndication class
Coutline Community College will offer an
ei8)lt .. week CIOW'le ln basic real estate ayndication at
Roblnwood Learning Center, 5172 McFJdden
Avenue. Huntington Beach. on Thundaya from 6:30
to 9:30 p.m. beglnnina June 24.
Robert Walllni. a broker with a private
pnctlce in Newport Beach, will instruct atudents ln establllhiJll a fta1 estate synd:ia~.
The Department of Real Estate a= the coww-for contbtufng educatiora aedit II no
tuition f.ee.
For information call 963-082.f.
Book helps too
TIME COMING? -
Gary Hart will be
president 1omeday,
predicted Evelyn
Lincoln, who waa
private secretary to
President Kennedy,
at an addreu to
Denver Dembcrata.
Trio set
for board
Two Newport Beach
residents and a Laguna
Niguel man have l>een
picked to aerve on the
board of directora of the
232-member Hospi~J
Council o f Southern
California.
Michael Stephent,
administrator of Hoa1
Memorial Hospital. and
Richard Grundy,
associate director of
Mission Community
Hospital, were aelected
to serve on the board.
Both are N e•w port
residents.
James Ray, executive
director of Saddleback
Community Hoapital,
also will serve Qn the
board.
Dunning
arts head
N e wp ort Beach
resident James E .
Dunning has been
elected president of the
Orange County Arts
Alliance, which
re presents Orange
County artists and
cultural organizations.
Patti-Gene Sampeon. a
Newport Beach resi~t,
was e l ecte d v.jce
president of internal
affairs while Huntington
Beach resident Walter
Johnson waa elected
pttSideni of constituency
aervks.
Georgia Connolly, a
Laguna Beach resident,
is secretary and iegal
adviaor.
4 students
• win grants
Four Orange Coaet
College dance 1tudentl
have been awarded ~
1Cbo1arahipa. ..,-I
Student• receiving
ICbolanhipa are Robert
Moeea Jr. of Westmlnl1er
and Shari Brown.
Allyson~ and
Shylo-Jordan Gray, all
of Costa Mesa.
Moee9~MilaAo..-.-..:~~
plan to attend Cal State
Loni Beach.
Add the right clothes
•
BJ JOYCE L KENNEDY
Dear Joyce: I received my
bachelor'• dearee and for eeveral
thantbt have been eubmlUinl n.un.
to MlwrtJ.alnC acenctes to no avail.
Can )'O'I refer me to~? ...:-V.W.H., ,.-...,..,,., N.Y.
Blumenfeld believes the fint-time
job aeeker can 1et by with two
Interview outfltl, auuestma tbeae
ca~
·l
1 I
1 I
i
I l I -
I
...__ .... SICICI c ....... )\.II IAtalHeto<n ~ IMl•P'°"IMI Slll ~·· ~ 1one1a..i.• -Traffl• -SHYICES
........ O.rotl..,, -DtP\OYMEMT &
Pl£PAIA TIOtl ~·--J ... _. M> ...... -.... , 1141
MDC•ANllSE =::.. -...
~ au = ......... -~· .. ·~---= -°"" -....... v .. llU .......... -a....w. ---...... a--~ -91) .. _, -.. __ -.. --"····"" ... ......... l..,.nollkota -()If ... "'"' • ~, -Pela ..,
=~~e:. -lll9J =~c:=::.-• ., --~"r..tio.HIPI Storto --IOATS & MU1NE
EOIHPMEMT
11110 ---------tut .,. ••• fl• .,. .... •n• ti• -11111 -----... --
C:.'-,1 1!<. -f"' PH< JPI ,, · ,, •,
Whal it
means fur
ymtr ad . to be· "clflssifWd,,
2400 W. Cout Hwy.
Newpon 8-cll
U1-1400
l T T E D G C H I I A E A 0 D H E P A
C 0 l P J E " I A l P M A H C S t W S
Eu w QM v T K HR AT l s'c H 0 H H
HAHCU$ATHMAAABDLTTE
Z M P l A I T W E S X l A 0 l S " D l A C H E l A H I J Z A G A A P E L l l
A E M H H X M A T G 0 E W k C H Y 0 I
0 A T 0 N E M A U M 1 0 Z S V U H 0 V
M Y E A A R Y Y Y l E X E A I E I R T
H T A V R H A W L T T A P L U C L E U
P I A Y 0 C A E T H C E A H L A E C A
I~YEEACEVEANMAJLLAH
L 0 0 H T A Y H 0 T C E A G 1 U C Y I
A z E H z A E ol o t l ~ b A i'. f Sf s u C S E H P C C A Y G Y X Q C Q
•~: HNlllft _.. ......... ,._.., .... I
..... ""· ._., ~. Find ..ti.,. Ilea h lft. c... ClleMll er-; ·T.... .... '-'0.... iJ Omtte c.y.,.. ~ • ..., Odell ~
l'tvtltt UIMlfte W....
TOlllOl'low: Shrvlae
TR,_\DI TIOUL
RLlLn
JASIJll: CREEK
Thia beautiful 3 bedroom UiJe
story end unit liW.ted on= greenbelt location haa been
uPlf&ded wiih mirror'I. , akyJJchm and al.lo haa a $200,000
auumable loan at only U,.
lntere1t. Call now for further
detana. '427,&00
11: Macnab· Irvine,
~·HERITAGE
REALTORS
URIEST
IOHL
In VIiiage Ill. Thia Yale
Model • tt ... 4 bdnns, 2~ ba., formal din. rm. f*aa redecol'•ted kitchen (NEW: tile· paint -~ lo.ded with Ito-
rage apace. Loceted on
major greenbelt. a1tt.
900.
...... _
llStll' .. Lii Panoramic: View on
Ntiwport Bay and
Pacific: Ocean. Prime
lcx911on. Owr te00.000
111--11ae &.ndnc-lktt avala.ble lot on
lllclp. tl.3'0.000 .
(714) 7'0-1900
~.!!?tmr .. !.o?ff
El MORRO BEACH for
IWIV for .... 1500~ mobll• home, No. l •
gune. <>ce.i ..
3 BR, upgrlMMd w/7
eq.ft .. dedl. 780-29'0
tr """'
110 to 3000 tq rt
"No Ftll" Prices
Willem Cote, &kt ••
11•11 .. 1•
I I
f
"'
~ .............. .
Dft:a U£A:I,. LM .r-'ilt::L
llU.8TATI ,AYINCI ····1~ ~ .... tl1
·~~·~ LID -.1120
~!!?¥ ............ . ...............
I yr *•· Anernoon•, '-"· .... 7241.,.,
._., h R'M/ .. ~ •..•......•.
MANNl ... VtCU
....... ~wimlltl. T~MM7'1
DOLLAR DAY DOUGH SAVERS
Seti yqur no-longer-needed ltema for cash.
If It doesn't 9111, we'll run It another ~
days FREE. One Item per ad, must be priced.
Sorry, no real eetate or commerclal ads.
can today for tull details.
bn .... nM)
INES~
For CC....... Ad
ACTION
Cal •
Olllly Piiot
AO-VISOR
042-5878
OLLA RS 3 ~nAvs
CLASSIFIEDS642•5678
:. 1 , • [ 1r r 'll 1 r,
. ,· . .
-'·' •• #t' •
' .
LI,_~ JMmberlhlp
In Jotln Wayne Tennie
Club, 11500 cuh.
731;2110 ......
Bf1IM. '40. en.1m
lluJal ,.,,, .. ,, ,., ......................
Spenlltl CMtM, lfke MW flOldlno w..,. Orta co.t 1150. ... 175. 17s:.oot2
t
1
'•
'14 CMvy PU, "' ton w/ '*""'!It::. w ..... INtla. or, ,.,.._
tor. r nut ..., )lllMI ,,...
He. 11515/ bat ofr,
541-1142
CONNEL L
:HEVR01.f' .. .
" \'
S«t..1200
f'9.rl. ........... !?(f
1t7A Capri ·2100 Vt, 4
lod, AM/FM ceet, NM xlnt. ONet mpg. 11500 tnn. a1-aoee.
A Ji
jl I
6 cyl.~ lnatrumeit group, lnMMll ~ ...... ftoor
mounted 1hlft, sunroof, automa; : TRX 1Utp9ntlon,
elumlnum .,..., Ult whelt. PoWllf --1ng, light ~. •P"d control, powet doot looks, elec. ,.., wfndow
defro.t•. .. condNon. AM/FM ....,, Interior luxury
group. PoWllf declt lld ........ PoWllf wtndows, tlflted gAw.
(St#1209) (ma#~1023).
WLION f 0RD EXCLUllYE
1982 EXP~GfF
2 RAT IPORT.Y COUPE
. "
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tinted glaal. front aw daim,' ~· tall. ,.. ....,. louw-. (#1518l (#124851)
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$2982 $7.982
'11,.. lllT• 2 dr •• cut1. Int., 8 eyl .. -.uto .. pwr at. &
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.$6382
'11 llllT
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4 cyt,, 4 ep., 2 dr., stereo. (891WYK) V8, auto., air, AM/FM/8 trk.\ 4x4.
(026334)
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'71 FHI Pim
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MID
2 Dr •• liuto. trana .• w cond., 4 cyt .. ~
ltr .• rlldlo. Uc. 271VZS
s3 5s2
1982
BRONCO
. 1982 ESCORT •
. .. 1982 ESCORT '
2 DOOR
GT HATCHBJlCK
Medium blue metallic, doth and Ylnyt trim, bl** ekte wall
llr•, AM rlldlo, two-tone paint. t
IY ROBUT hRIBR °' .......... A 8"1 Beach re1ldent ralMd
the lpeCter of dvtl dllobedi.not
tod1y ,H a final reaort In th•
battle a1ain1t po11lble nuclear
w.pc:n at the s.I :&e.ch Nav,.i
We.pen Station.
Robert Brophy 11ld
' dilobeilence II a ~ble option Hauk drew beavlly on the
after •au.it aimed at fordna the o_plnlon1 of the U.S. Su.P_reme
Navy to make environmental Court in an .rliet Cale in Haawail
1tudtu on tbe Impact of that the prwta or ablence of
conventional and nuclear nl.ICleu' we.pons WM a mWtary
weapon 1 w u d h ml ue d in 1eeret, eccord1nl to court IOW'Cla.
AnpJt:s.' the Supreme Court put the lllUe
0 btYGftd ·~ ICNUn: •• Ke •tel the plalntlfg· 1bould
Wee theU' CM1 to ~ or to
the .-:Utive branch biaUM ~
Supreme Court removea the
COW1 from the UU,.don.
Brophy, an ln1ll1b and
reU1lou1 1tudlH pro.feaaor at
Lona Beach State Univer1t_ty,
Mid the 11.x rtltdenta are nweuna
today 10 c:ona1det' mow..
He didn 't rule out the
poulblllty of an appeal but he
uld the three couplea are
exhauated from trying to ra!H
Freeze on nuclear w~apons
~oney whll• ·the 1overnment .1hM an unlipll~ wpply."
Brophy ., .. drawbldm In
~~-10 ~ for J.etlalation, <Ua1lnlnC that approech would be
tp .tow aAd unpopular ''becaUM cona:r-ii IO 1Upportir9 ol the military.
''I think OW' chancee are emaD.
Our own consre11m1n, Dan
Lun1ren, i1 a perfect eumple.
He'• a 1uper-1upporter of the
military."
"AJ a retponalble cl then, one
muat conal<ler dvil diaobedlencie
when there are no other ,opdona more haurdou• bec:aute of It• avaUable in order to brina the 1 o ca t l o n n •a r t h e
ileue to public notice W miktna Newport.Inci.wood ~
the pemment confront lt. fault and beeau. of ltl ProxJmlty
"We've run Into a hard, hard to 1eYeral ~·
1treet. The military baa been Mn. ~Y wM 8Jicted frcm
IJven carte blanche.'' the courtroom by Kauk when
T attorney Leonard WelnflaH he Brophy• and the other ottered 400 elanaturea rom plaintiff• -Georae and Janice 1 d b h Laine and Jim and rr .. n peop e concerne a out t e
Goodwin _ claim \hat residenta atorqe of nuclear weapom. •
are Imperiled by the loading and ·'}f~ (Hauk) llid he didn't care
unloadina of weapons in what the aroup thouaht and I
Anaheim Bay near residences. paped and he threw me out of
\ court," 1he laid. She wu later
• They aay the baae i1 made .. r.admitted. ·
Bre·zll'Rev Welcomes , S.ALT bid
. ..... ............. TO TRIAL -Ralph W.
McDonald faces trial on 32
counts in Orange County'•
"large9t fraud scheme." ·
Bradley asks
j~int action
on oil suit
Los Angele• Mayor Tom
Bradley has asked his City
Council to join three Orange
C-ounty cities and \he state In a
lawsuit to stop the leasing of
offshore oil tracts.
C.alifomia officlala filed a 1uit
laat week against the U .S .
Department of the lnteridr to
block ln1erior Secretary Jamea
Watt'1_plan1 to lease tracts jn
Santa Monica Bay, off Laguna
and Newport Beach, and along
the co.t of Lone Beach.
Ott.bore 00 and Natural Gu
LeMe #68 11 planned for June 11
at the Loa Angelea Convention
Center.
~e-lnterior Department
lntend1 to leaae 164 off1hore
tracts OtN~56,000 acres. Mayor, was supported
M~nday by t e mayors of
Newport Beach, Laauna Beach
and San Clemente, who plan to
join the state In ita lawsuit.
La1una Beach Mayor...Sally
Bellerue aaid ahe would be
"delighted l1 Loe Angeles joined
UI In the laWIUft.'' 1 Laguna Beech councH
(Se4! OPPSBOIU!!, Pqe Al)
WORLD
·'Biggest
fraud'
trial set
By JBRRY HERTENSTEIN o< .. Dlllp........ .
Ralph W. McDonald, president
of Golden F.aale Investment. wa
ordettd Monday 10 si.nc:t trial on
32 charges in what sheriff'•
investlgatora have called the
largest fraud 1cheme ever
uncovered in Orange County.
The rullna w-u made by
municipal court Judge Blair
Barnette after three days of
llftlim1nary hearing at the South
Oranae county courthouae in ~anwted durfu.
a l'eb. 10 aberiff'a raid • bla ~ TCll'O olflce. He ii DOW ordend to
appeer In Superior Court May 2e
for arraignment.
McDonald, who lives in San
Juan Capistrano, la dlll"pd with
nine counta of grand theft, one
count of attem= pand theft. 10 counts of unregiltered
securities, 10 COWltl of making
mlsrepreeentation in the aale of a
aecurity, one count of oonaplracy
to commit grand theft and one
count of conspiracy to commit tax
evasion.
He has pleaded innocent to all
charges.
Three counts -grand theft,
the sale of an unregistered
aecurity and misrepreeentation of
the aale of a aecurity -were
(See FRAUD. Pqe A.I)
CM~s Hertzog
• to run again
Costa Meta Councllwom~ Norma Hertzog announce
Monday that the haa chanfe
her mfnaand w ill run o
re-eJec:tlon after all.
Laat year, the former may
uld 1he wouldn't 1eek & third .
term th1a November.
M1. Hertzog aaid that 1he
decided to run after bein1
encouraged by colleague1 and
citizens and after receiving a
Clean bill of health from her·
doc:t.on. Lut year lbe underwent
a mutectomy and WU the first woman In Oranae eowiiy 10 have
reoonstructlve IUlpty.
Volcano erupts .,.hi
•
POT BREATH -Dr.
Stanley Groee of the UCLA
School of Me4lclne
demonstrates a ·~tjuana
breatbalyzer" developed at
the univeralty to detect the
presence of pot in tho1e
suspected of being under its
in.ffuence.
~ounty backs
wood shingle
roofing ban
The Orange County Board of
Supervilora ten~tively approved
a ban on 'placinR combu1tible wood" •hin.le roofl atop new
bulldlnp in all unincorpol'ated
areaa of the county today.
On a 4-0 vote, with board
chainnan Bruce Nestande abmlt.
1upervi1ora save tentative
approval to a new law which ~kl tO preftnt dlaastroua fires
auch 11 the blaze which 1w.ept
through central Anaheim latt
month.
That fire destroyed $50 million
in. property and feft more than
1,000 people homele-.
OC Jury ..
backing
canal
By DA VlD &UTZM.ANN o<-.o.-, .........
niree weeka thy of the 'June 8
primary, the Orange County
Grand Jury· claimed today that
con1truction of the Peripheral
Canal ta necellaf'/ to guarantee
adequate Southern California
water aupplie1 ln the 19909.
The jury, ln a report releued
this mo~, ~Y eodoned
the 1tatewlde ba1lot initiative
known u Propoe4,tion 9 which
would authorize ~trucdon of
the controYenial .at.er ~Ject..
IQ ·itll report on future Ohnp C-ounty water needs', the arand
jury _Mold creation of th• canal,
which would lad 10 bu1119'ftllun
9f Northern California tver
water'° metropolitan Southern
California, would prewnt eewre
water ~ pftdict.t by the
mid-1980a.
Sou\hem Califomia111upply
of valuable Cdorado River water
ii acbeduled to be cut In half by
• 1986 when 'Arizona begin•
1aking delivery of Ua allotment.
Proponents of the Peripheral
Canal contend that the project
would only 1lphon off exceas
Northern California river water
for uae in aeml-arid -and still burgeonirl~-S o uthern
California.
Spokesrher\ for the grand jury
could not be r'eached for
comanent thil mom1ng.
Aooording to the report, "any
delay ln the dec:i.lion to build the
Peripheral Canal will add to the
problem where water
conservation oiay have to be
enforced and arowth of SoQthem
California aeverely limited.''
Irvine candidates
to meet tonight
'fhe 1potll1ht will ahine once
apin toniaht on cancHdatea vytnc
in the ftt!!,e, 8 election for two
The board directed the
Environmental Manaaement
ARtmcy today to prepare an. ordlnance for adoption in two
week1. That ordinance would
amend aectlon1 of the county•• bu!J.d1na codes. -
The new roofing regulation
would apply not only to new
conetrUatlon, but at.o 10 exlltin(
1tru$urea for which repair•,
alteradonl or addldona an made.
1t,on~~°Lm~
aponaor a candidat~1 ntiht
be1lnnln1 at 7:30 p .m. at the
lniine City Council Chambers.
The 90-mlnute event wU1 be
televiaed Uve over Community
CablevWon Chann'el 3.
,
RECEPTIVE! -Soviet
President Leonid Brezhnev
hat welcomed President
Reagan's offer to open talks
on limiting n4C}ear weapons.
.
U.N. talks
on Falklands
suspended
By ne A11oclated Presa
Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher accused Argentina
today of stalling peace ta1kS and
said Britain should know within
48 houri U a diplomatic l()lution
to the Falkland Islands conflict ia
poaible. She said after that "no
military action can be held up in
any way."
In New York, U.N. peace tal.kl
wve 1uapended again today to
give Argentina more time to
consider the latest British
conditionl for a settlement of the
South Atlantic crisis. The talks
had been 1u1pended over the
weekend-
Secretary-Gene-ral Javier
Perez de Cuellar said he expected
to determine by Thuraday
"whether we have achieved a
real peaceful aolution." He uld
he expected to resume hit
indirect mediation efforts
W~v.
••1 belieVe that we 1hall know
whhll\ the ne,xt day or two
whl!ther a~ agreement ls
aStalnable," Mn. Thatcher told
the HOUie of C.ommons.
Rejects
'initial
•
cutback
MOSCOW (AP) -President
Leonid I. Brezhnev welcomed
President Reagan'• offer to open
ta1b on limiting 1trategk nuclear
weapons today, but rejected
Reagan's proposal for a one-third
cut in balliatlc missile warhead.I
as "one-llded."
The Soviet leader also
proposed a fr ~e ze on
modemiiation and deployment of
strategic weapon• once talk• :~
begin and uld no more Soviet .;4 ... ~ medium-range mlulles will be •·•
deployed in areu where they
could hit West Germany and
other We1tern Buropean .:
countriel. l:;
In Luxembourg, Secretary of .~
State Alexander M. Haia Jr ..
while rejecting the Soviet
requeat for a freeze on nuclear
weapons, said aome Soviet arms
control propoaah have
"compatibllity" with the U.S.
ap~ refeding to the Soviet \ •
view that previous anm control
negotiations should be the buia
for new agreements. He al80 said
he welcomed the Soviet view
that security needs of both sldes
should be the basis for future
talks.
The United States position haa
been that a weapons freeze
would lock In Soviet 91.1periority
in nuclear weapons.
Brezhnev, 75 and recently
reported io be ailing, delivered
I ·'
"· .• hia 38-minute speech over
national television in a strong. :•
voice, but alurred his words and
stumbled u he walked back to
hl1 seat. An aide Rrabbed hi1 arm and helped him climb the
CSee NUCLEAR. Pase A!)
Bandit holds up ---""l HB finance firm
Police aft' -.rchlng for a lone
gunman who rob.,bed a
Huntin,ton Beach 11vinp and
loan of 1,800 Monday a.ft.emoon.
The holdup waa reported at
Marina Federal Savinp, 18582
Beach Blvd. The robber waa . ~
deacrlbed aa a Cauculan man, ~
• 30·35, 6 feet, 3 inchel tall, 160 .,
poynds, wearing a red bueball
~.
. i.:
Low cloudln•M to cl .. r 01111•
II llOOfl wttll lluy •un•lllne.
tocMy 86 IO 73. Lat. night
Mr1)' mornln9 low cloud• ·~Md wedliw19y. :c r.;:r:;=~Tto 71.
~~~n11on-Hewport area ..._,..,..from a i. of
IO to a lllgfl of 81. , Eltawller•. from ~olnt ecepllo11 to tll• ,..exlc.n fer and «M IO mlM: Wlndt ovtet watara today 1140 ..... '° 11 tMt........, &tAr, with aouthweat to Wfft ..... 10 to 11 trnota tNa ~
~ 1 kl s tMt. W..-fy
of2103tlet,
"•t•a not that we ~ !fpcad to
all offshore· oil drtlllnc.' Bradley
said ... We are juat trying to
protect the environmentally
lenlitive areM.''
Cl tlzena in coastal cf Uea
launched a letter writing
campaicn to Watt'• office, and to
PrSdent Reagan 1ut month in
an effort to have cracta off tbme
dtiee deleted from the leure ale.
But Watt'• office annaunced
earlier thia mcmth itl intention to
hold the lease aale with only
~~ tracta off Santa Barbara
Airline denies
Braniff charges
GRAND PRAIRIE, Texas
(AP) -American Airlines
off iclab have denied auertiona
that a compu~rized re9ef'1ation
aystem it owna and operateiJ wu
manlpUJated to~ bankrupt
Bran{ff Intema~onal Corp.
Amerl(an spokesmen &a.id the
re•ervaUon ayatem, called
SABRE and uaed by other
. airlines and trm<rel agencie., ~ed Braniff in a preferred ~aition to other com~
They aaid Branltf paid
to get the position.
Warmer Wednesday
.61 .OI
.12
J'WMral M1"Ykiel will be MW Wedaelday for Olna Therua
CrhaeUa. 20Jt.r11Uer of Fa!MeW State ti1 cUftldlOr
DI". Francia Crmel a, who wu
ldUed in.'*" accident S.turday. A 1pok11woman for tile i&tt.
hospital ln Cotta M ... aakt Miia
Crtnella wu on her way home
from Notre Dame Unlveralty,
where ahe was • aophomor!1 when the car the w• in went on the road on Ht1hway 40 OHr
Bent.ow at 4:30 a.m. •
She died 9eYeral houn later. ~
c1-nate Kathleen Roche, 20, Ol
Elcondldo wu killed lnatantly.
Another clallmate, Alita Anne
Buhman. 20, Huntinaton Berdt.
remains in critical condition at
Loma Lindi Un!ventty Medical Cent.er.
Miu Crfnella graduated from
Mater Del High School in l!!~J where ahe wu on the vanity IJOll
team . She waa atudylna
paycholoay at the Indiana
univ~raity.
.., ......
PREMIERING -Firtt lady Nancy Reagan joins 10-year-Qld
Aileen Quinn, star of the musical "Annie," and her dog,
Sandy, at the movie's premiere at New York's Radio City Music Hall. ·
Memorial Masa of Christian
burial will be celebrated
We4nead1y at 11 a .m . at S\.
Vincent Ve Paul CathoJic
'Churct\, 35 Liberty St.,
Petalwna.'
NY loves Annie
Celebrities turn out for premiere
NEW YORK (AP) -Radio
City Music Hall belonged to a
freckle-faced moppet and her
dog as the celebrities turned out
for the laviah movie premiere of
the mualcal "Ann.le."
First lady Nancy Reagan. actor
Anthony Quinn, former boxing
champ Muhammad Ali and
actreas Jacqueline Blaaet were
among those in the limelight
Monday niaht for the film'•
debut.
Nearly the entire caat of the
film was on hand, including
Bernadette Peters, Albert
Va~ley mulls
bus shelters
The Fountain Valley City
Council will seek public
comments tonight on a plan to
build 40 bus shelters at city
intenectiona, with revmue from
advert.iaiJli posten going to the
Fountain Valley Chamber of
Commerce.
The council meet.a at 8 p.m. In
City Hall, 10200 Slater Ave.
The plan calla for the lighted
facilities to be built and
mainta'ined by American Bua
Shelter Co. The proposal ,haa
drawn some criticism because
bids from companies haven't
been solicited,
Finney, Carol Burnett, Ann
Reinki ng and Edward
Herrmann. 1
Actors Christopher Reeve,
Judd Hirsch, ltriaty McNichol
and Jere my Irons and balle\ ,
dancer Alexander Gudonov al80
Wt.)'e in the atar-apanl{led
audience. Hundreds of spectators
cheered aa the celebrities arrived
In Umousines.
Mrs. Reagan, wearing a red,
off-the-shoulder gown, arrived
with the movie's producer, Ray
Stark, and was greeted by Aileen
Quinn, 10, who port.rays Annie.
Blowing kislea to her admiren,
Mias Quinn said with a giggle,
"I'm just really excited and I
hope everybody likes the 11¥>Vie.''
Her canine companion, Sandy.
abo attended.
'l'be ball. with S,800 aeata, was
aold out. Tickets oost from $50 to
$1 ,000. The John Huston-Ray
Stark production la an adaptation
of the still-running Broadway
ahow baaed loolely on the comic
strip "Little Orphan Annie."
Proceed• will benefit the
Public Broadcaat:h>i System.
The two-hour film opens
Friday tn·New York, Los
Angeles, Dallas and Toronto
before going Into general release.
The movie stars appeared to
enjoy the evening's glitter as
much u the spectators.
The family lived In Petaluma
before moving to Costa Mesa.~
memorial service In Costa Mesa
will be acheduled later.
Survivon include her father,
Francia and mother Terr1ie,
sistera, Ramona and Cbrlatina
and brothers, Peter and Andrew,
all of Costa Mes.
Other aurvlvora include a
grandmother and grandfather,
Mr. anG Mn. M..-irio Crine1la of
Santa Roaa and Mr. and Mra.
Adam Lynd of Nile, Mich.ipn.
The family aaka that
contribuUom be made in Miu
Crinella'a name to: Scholanhip
Fund, Notre Dame Club of
Oranae County, Chip CJ.itheroe,
i505 E. 17th St., Suite 120, Santa
Ana.
Clemente man
'not guilty'
A San Clemente man who was
accused of plotting murdera,
bombings and extonlon against
fellow Croatians, baa been found
innocent of the cbarpa in New
Yock.
Miro Bioaic, 33, waa found
Innocent of a variety of dwps
linking him with a Croatian
Independence from Yllgocl.avia
group. Three other defendants
abo were found Innocent.
Six other Croatiarh were
found guilty of charges ranging
from racketeertns to oonapiracy.
They remain in tail with bail
ranging from $300,000 to $1
million.
Proeecutora in New York told
U.S. District Judge Constance
Motley the group, a Croatian
independence movement known
as OTPOR, waa a "corrupt
organizatJQn."
NEVER BUY A PRECIOUS GEM
ONGOODtC>OKSALONE
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•WIMS '·~ ~-'-KA .Jiii t <MS 11~ '-I! •P 4SUV. •... IMP IW.0.-lit « .n a • .,,.._ "' ...... .e11111a 17 • v.
$l9lle. s JO " • ~ v. ~ .. t S" ..... _. .. 1 t•M+ 1-M
UDP"'4a -"' .J6. ,, 16 -"' U t S 6 11\'t ..... SPeul t.» .. 1' Wt+ lot st~ t.)f • 117 as-.+ Ill w.11 A S PS 1\11 + Ill , ... s m 1-.-.... .
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..
WASHINGTON (~ -Yliilda on lhort·i.nn ~ .ctaritlM ftll dy for u.. iloaDd .-as ln
a row ID the la• iUdlOnl. hlCUnl &he~ Jewl in 2M moatM. Olftdal8 ~· • Abqut $4.9 billion tn alX·IQOnth T·blll• were
auctioned at an av•ra1• dlecount race of 12.187 ~t. down bom ~ 12.ue J*'Clftt ot i.t ..-. The aovernment a1lo told about ... 9 billion in
thNe-month bUll at an aver.,. race of 12.189 percent,
down ffoai 12.248 pm'eftl.
lrvlile firm tells loss
Western Dtcf&al C«P of lrYtne announced t.hlrd
quarter result• and 1tep1 h bH taken to prune
overhead and tncreaee balance aheet reaervH In
l'aponle to a wideapre9d trldustry downturn.
Net revenue for the third quarter totaled
'8,114,000, and a loa of $8,349,000. Net revenue
lncreued 38.4 percent from the 1981 third quaner
whkh had • loia of $780,000.
F.._arninaa per abate for the quarter decUned from a
• of ~ oenta in 1981 to a Jo. of 24 oenta currentlv.
Avco chairman named
Avco Community Developers Inc. announced ~t
Franda X. Suozzi, 41, hu been named cha1rman of the
board a1'ji chief executive officer of the company.
The chalrm~·, ~ltlon hu been vacant since
Rem M. Hett resigned in September 1981. Suozzi,. a vice president of Avco Corp., the parent
compeny of ACD, Joined Avco in 1966 In What later
became ita tinanclal aervices aublidlary.
Portfolio sales set
Beverly Hills Savinp and Loan Auoclation of
Million Viejo announced tha't it reached agreement in
principle to sell $795 mllllon of iU loan aervtcln1
portfolio to Sbearionl American Expreaa Mortg,a1e
C.orp. for approximately $12.5 milUon.
Thia sale and related tranwtionl will lncreale the
UD:iation'a net worth from approximately $15 million
to $24.4 million.
Profits take downturn
Telefile Computer Corp. of Irvine reporte d
unaudited, CoDIOlidated worldwide revenuea were
$2,058,106 fo.r the quarter ended Dec. 31 .
1be revenue figuret were depresaed slightly from
the quarter lut·year of $2,152,514.
The company had a profit from continuing
opera. tiona of f.43,840 compared to a io. of $192,296 for
the period last year. The profit repn!9ented 2 centa per
ahak'e in the current quarter and a io. of 8 centa In the year-earlier quarter. ~
Discount rentals offered
AirCal announced that cuatomen buying the
afrllne'• ZDneAir Savingll pa11e1 wW be gtven ooupom
l ood for car rental dJ.acounu up to 30 percent off
udget Rent-A-Car'• atandard unJJmited milease
raie..
The offer wW be valid bqinning June 1 throu1h
Sept.15.
AirCal a1IO ~ a one-month extenaon of
its free Budget Rent-A-Car otter to customen flying
roundtrlp at full fare between th e
Burbalik-Glendale-Puadena Airport and San Joee,
Oak.land or Sacramento.
AirCal ~ offering the travel incentive April..
25.4\be day it lna\QZW'lted aervice from Burbank. 1be offer is valid th.rough June 30.
Valley firm honored
CUstomweave Carpets. Inc,. Fountain Valley, won
in the Retail Floorcovering INUtute's Top 10 Mill
Awards competition ln the categorl.ea of quality and
style.
STOCIS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADEIS
I
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Higher Intifestlbaii-MOSt Money Market Funds
# r-=rooAY's R'AT'E-1 I EFFECrlvE YIELD I Compare our higher yield wlth the current 7-day
I .. I I 1 averageofmostmoneymarketfunds-includingyours!
I I~ 25010• I 1 IS 31010 1 You 'll discover that we pay more! Your dai~y I /( I I /( I balance over $2 ,000 is automatically swept every day
I e I I e I into our Market Reserve Plan and yolK balance
I Rate.iestobalanceoverS2.cm. This.rate I I Annualized yield Is for comparison only. It I under $2,000 earns 5 ~% compounded daily. Why I :ms dally ni fluctuates with the rooney I / I assumes •ntei:est remains at a constant rate. I take a dollar less?
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r: and Loan Insurance~~ bli.nce over 12.000 is note savings account or ~t and is not
insured by the FSLIC. Thll baJ8nce ii l8CUf8d by notes °" obligations of the U.S. Government • or Government t04tncles.
ASk for details.**,
..
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• 12
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1'-)f'
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4 dr., auto., pwr. ttr., 2·1ona plllnt, V8, auto., pwr. str., pwr. br., air, tight v~ well cat9d for. Wiit t>e a Qaelicl AM/FM radio, 2,563 mllM. (1CMF620) blue beauty. (576UOV) (1 0057)
$5982 s37 2 MUST
.SEE
'11 LTI ... Fiii" 'II ILlllllllLE
STITill WllOI % Tll Lllll. llEU
V8. auto., pwr. st .. pwr. br .. air cond. Ye, 4 ap., air, only 7,327 mllae, a yellow 4 cyl., auto., air cond., amlfm radio.
(279XVG) bMuty. (1Y180M) (Mf', # 128845)
$.3882 6
'11 PLYllm '11 IEM•Y
IHIZll C4'11S IS
4' dr .. 4 apd., radio, air cond. Lie. 2 ctr., 4 cyl .• pwr bk., stereo, " spd.,
11,094 miles. Uc. 1CHH273
Au1o., pwr. st., air., pwr. w., stereo. (Uc.
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s35 a2 $
'11 CllYSLEI '11 FIU '11 Fiii
LE 11101 ESCHT u•a• A Graat Buyt (570XZO) Slatlon Wagon. CB, casMtta, 4 apd., Auto. trans.. air cond., AM/FM, VS, 13,516 ml._ #127700 pwr. steer. Uc. 1W73582
$3482
1982 FUTURA 2 o·ooR
COUPE \
6 cyl .• Instrument g<oup, Interval wlnd9hle6d wlpan, floor
mounted shift, sunroof, automatic, TRX suspen1lon,
aluminum wheel•, tilt wheel, power ateetlng, Mght group,
speed control. power door locks, elac:. rear window
defroster. air condition, AM/FM stereo, Interior luxury
group, power dectt lld reteue, power windows, tinted gl8N.
(St# 12091(mte.#121023)
WILSON FORD YOU SAVE
LIST PRICE YO~~CE $2025
1982
MUSTANG
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AM/FM stereo radio, alumtnum whaall. tracilon loett. tinted
glass, fog iamp.. (#1558)(#18"903)
·YOUR PRICE
,
1982 .LTD
STATION
WAGON .
Dani br~. tinted glass. speed control, spilt ~ -..
taumlnated entry system, whit• lldewallt, quwtz cioe*, tltt
wheef, power ... t. detuxa luggage ractt, rear window
defroetar, air condition, AM/FM stereo. right-hand remote
mirror, heevy duty bettary. vent windows, wire wMel eov«s, power brake rel ..... convenlcna group, light
group.1#,1485) (#151746)
WILSON FORD YOU SAVE
USTPRICE
vO:::lcE $2011
WILSON FORD EXCLUSIVE
1982 I EXP-GT
2 SEAT SPORTY COUPE
Two-tone paint, IMthar ... ,,, sunroof, lamti. WOOi trim,
ciOM ratio 4 IPead trans axle, power sieartng, speed
control, air condttlon, AM/FM stereo cateett., rtght-hand
remote 'mirror, heavy duty battery. TAX handllnt
suepenaion, metttc wide radlalS, premium aound t>ooeter,
tinted gl.... front air dam, ......... tall. ,.., window
louvr• (#1516)(#124858)
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ENGINE
'11 us, ll1Ull ... ,. ........
4 cylinder, 4 IOMCS, am/fm radio. S.. loadadll Only 12,845 mNaa. (PN75GN) this one. (9971/0R) Wholaaala Bluebook 18275.
$
'1••• F1m1 '71 llTSll 111
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• cyllnd«, 4' 8')ead, eunroof, a graat
aconomlcal earl (18LE39$) 4 cylinder, 4 apaad, stereo tape. S..
this onal (04'8T0X) $2 ""
'11 llTQI
o,. fastltaok
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$3 582 ,$
'11 lllZll
121
'71 , ••
Pim
Coupe, auto. tra'n1 .. air cond. Lie.
1CAW152. •
4 cyl. Stk. UC. se6WRO
, u
SEE
.
1982 If.TD
CR.OWN . . ...
VICTORIA .
~yt roof, IPlt ~ ... t. conY91'1tlonal spare tire, Uh
wheef, crulM control, conwnlance group, power ... t. air
condition. stereo CUMtte, right-hand r.-note mirror, hM¥y
duty bat1ary, pow. side windows, automatic par1()ng brake
,...._, tlnMd glala, NgM group, power lodt group.(# 1503)
(#153961)
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YOU SAVE
1982 ESCORT
GT
Tinted glael, cngltal dodc, speed control, reer window
wiper, tunroof, doee ratto tpOft trans axle power staar'lng,
racffnlng budlet ... ts. poww br.ic., air 0And1t1on, AM/FM
lt«eo with cauette, ptemlum aound bc¥>aW. front vent wtncsow., a1um1rium wMais, lght group. (I 1g.q) (# 126261)
1982
BRONCO •
Blactt custom paint, sport Instrumentation, akld plat-.
automatic, swing away spere tire carrier, tll1 wtlaal. speed
control. handUng pactcage, air, super cooling radiator. 38 gal. full tank, nip-fold ,.., ... ,, tinted gtass, pttwcy glale,
1ce chest COMC>le, custom lntenor, QOkl OMt• wheals with
ralaed white lettered MUD SNOW TIRES. (#1484)(#4031
WLBON FORD YOU SA VE
UST PRICE vC:~~ $318 114,031
1982 ESCORT
2 .DOOR
HATCHBACK
Medium ~ metallic. doth and ~ trim, btO aide welf
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142 • .r5°W/Wtnds Mt__.,, I• 1111
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IY ROBERT BARXBR OflltDlllf .........
A 8Hl Beach retident ratted
the 1pecier of dvU d1lobedJence
tqday H a f lnal reaort in the
battle aaalnlt poalble nuclear
w .. pohl at the Seel Belch Naval
Weapona Sc.don. • ·
Robert Brophy 1ald
dilobedJence la a pcmlble option
aftltr a ault aimed at fordn8 the
Navy to make enviroomental
1tudle1 on the impact of
conventional and nuclear
weapons was dlsmi11ed in
Federal Court Monday In Los
Anplea. ,,.
Jud1• A. Andrew Hauk'•
decl1lon Monday relltvtd the
Navy of an1wert.na the qutatioh
of whether nuclear weepona are
1tored at the baae. Thrff Seal
Beach courl• claimed the bate po1e1 a hr eat to nearb.y
fesldentl.
' }lauk drew h.avUy on the
opinion• of the U.S. Supr•me
Court in an •lier cue in Hawaii
that the preeence or at:.enc. of
nuclear weapons wu a mWtary
aecret, accorc:un, to court sources.
Hauk aald several tlmee that
the SupreJne Court put the laue
"~ond ~ ICNt.iny 11
Ke Mia the plaintiff•. 1hould
i.U theU' _.. to Coner-or to
the execudve branch becaUM the
Supreme Court remove1 the
cowt from the lidpUon.
Brophy, an En1ll1h and
reli1tou1 1tudle1 profe11or at
Lona Beach State Unlveratty,
Ml~ the lix residenta are meeUna
today to conaider movea.
He didn't rule out the
poalblllty of an appeal but he
eaid the three couplet are
•xhau1ted from tryln1 to ralae
Freeze on. nuclear weapons
money while th• aovernment
11hM an unllmlted aupply ."
Brophy UC> .,.. drawbeckl in &olnC .fh Coqrell for lejialaUon,
cla1minC that approech would be
eo l1ow and unpopular "beaau.e
Coqreil la 10 tupport.ive of the
mWw-y. .
.. !*think OW' chancel are amall.
Our own con1re11man, Dan
Luniren, 11 a perfect example.
He'• a 1uper-1upporter of the
military."
"Al a re1ponaible citizen, one
muat consider civil dt.obedience
when there are no other optionl
avaUablt In order to brlna the
lalue to publlc notice and mOina
the aowmment confront It.
"We've Nn into a hard, hard
atreet. The military hH been
given carte blanche.''
The Brophy• and the other
plaintiff• -George and Janice
Latne and Jlm and Fran
Goodwin -cla1m that resident&
are imperiled by the loading and
unloadina of weapons in
Anaheim Bay near resldencet.
They say the base la made
more hazardous becaute of lea
location near the
Newport-Inclewood earthquake
fault and becau.e ot ill proXimJty
to teYeral alrpona.
Mra. Brophy Wiii ejected from
the courtroom by Kauk when·
attorney Leonard Welnflaea
offered 400 1l1nature1 rom
people concerned about the atoraae of nuclear weepon1.
"He (Hauk) aid he didn't ca.re
what the aroup thou1ht and I
auped ancr he threw me out of
court," 1he uid. She wu later
re-admitted.
Brezhnev welcomes SALT hid
• DllJ ..............
TO TRIA.L -Ralph W .
McDonald faces trial on 32
counts in Orange County's
"largest fraud scheme."
Bradley asks
• • • 101nt action
on oil suit
'Biggest
fraud'
trial set • By JERRY HERTENSTEIN OfhDllJ .........
Ralph W. McDonald, president
of Golden Eagle Investanent, was
ordered Monday to ltand trial on
32 charges in what sheriff's
inveatigators have called the
laraeat fraud acherpe ever
uncovered ln Orange County.
The ruling wa1 made by
municipal court Judae Blair
Barnette after three day1 of
prellmlnary beuina at the South
Oran1e COunty courthouse In Laauna Niguel. McDonald WU~ durina
a Feb. 10 1herltf'1 raid at hia El
Toro office. He is now ordered to
appe,ar in SuperiOI' Court May 26
for arraiCJunent.
McDonald, who lives in San
Juan Capiltrano, ii charged with
nine counts of grand theft, one
c:ount of attemp~ snnd theft.
10 counta of seillnl unrelfstered
1ecuritles, 10 counts of making
miarepre.entation in the tale of a aecurity, one count of conspiracy
to commit grand theft and one
count of conspiracy to commit tax
Loa Angeles Mayor Tom evuton.
Bradley has asked his City He has pleadeci"lnnooent to all
Council to join three Orange charges.
COunty dties and the state in a Three counta.-arand theft,
lawsuit to stop the leasing of the 1ale of an unregistered
offaaw>re oil tracta. leCW'ity and ml,areptet1entation ot
C.alifornia offldala Wed a suit , tbe sale of a 1ecurity -were
laet week against the U.S . (See FRAUD, Page AZ)
Department of the Interior to
block Interior Secretary James
Watt'• plans to lease t~acts in
Santa Monica Bay, off uaguna
and Newport Beach, and along
' the cout of Lona Beach.
Offlhore Oil and Natural Gas
i...e #68 la planned for June 11
at tbe l..oe Angeles Convention
Cenier.
The Interior Department
intend• to lease 164 offshore
tnlctl cove~56,000 acres. Mayoc WU supported
•Monday by .t e mayors of
Newport Beach, Lasuna Beach
arid Sen Clemente, who plan to Join the state in it» lawsuit.
La,una Beach Mayor Sally
Bellerue said 1he would be
"delllhted 11 Loa Angeie. joined
U9 In the laWIUit ...
La1una Beach council
(See Ol'J'SJIORE, Pace AZ)
WORLD
NATION
C]Jf~s Hertzog . . to run agam
Co1ta Mesa Councilwoman
Norma Hertzoa announced
Monday that she hH chanfed
her mind and will run or
re-election after all.
Lut year, the former mayor
1aid ahe wouldn't teek a third
term thla November.
M1. Hertzog Hid that abe
decided to run after being
encouraged by colleaaue1 and
chizen1 and after receivlna a
clean bill of health from her·
docton. Last year she underwent
a rnutectomy and w11 the flnt
~oman in Orange County to have
reoon.tructtve au.raery.
POT BRB~TB -Dr.
Stanley Gl'OIB ol the UCLA
School of Medicine
demonstrates a "marijuana
breathalyzer" developed at
the wlivenity to detect the
pre1ence of pot in those
suspected of being under ita
tnffuence.
County backs
wood shingle
roofing ban
The Orange County Board of
Supervbon tencatlvely approved
a ban on placina combu1tlble wood shingle roofs atop new
buildinp In all unincorporated
areu of the county today.
On a 4-0 vote, wtd1 board
chairman Bruce Nestande ablent,
1upervt1ors gave tentative
approval to a new law wbJch
teeka to prevent diMstroul firee
such aa the blaze which 1wept
through centr-al AnaheimJut month. .
That fire delltroyed $50 mU11on
in property and left more than
1,000 people homelell.
The board directed the
Environmental Manaaement
A.rency today .to prepare an
ordinance for adoption ln two
week1. That ordln'ance would
amend 1eetlona of the county's
buildJ.na coda
The new rooflnl re1ulat1on
would apply not only to new
constr,\ICUon. but aieo to exilt1ng
atructurn for which repatu,
• al•Uonl or addltiOlll are made.
OC Jury
backing ·
canal
By DAVID ltUTZMANN or ... ~ ........
Three w~ aby of the June 8
primary, the Oran1e County
Grand Jury claimed today that
con1truction of the Periplleral
Canal ls ne<'A'988"'J to jUlfantee
adequate Southern California
water supplies in the 19909.
The jury, in a report releued
thil momlnc. atronclY endol'led the statewide ballot lnltlatlve
known u Propo9lt1on 9 which
wouict authorize~ of
the mntrownlal water project.
In Ha tepan. on future or.nee
County water ntedl, tb' lfand jury Mid creaUon of the canal,
which would lead to lmportaUcn
of Northern California river
water to metropol'tan Southern
California. would prevent eevere
water ahorta&a predicted by the mld-1980I.
Southern California'• supply
of valuable Colorado River water
ls acheduled to be cut in half by
1985 when Ari1ona beaina
tak.lng delivery of its allotment.
Proponents of the Peripheral
Canal contend that the project
would only siphon off exce11
Northern California river water
for U9e in semi-arid -and still
burgeoning -Southern
Callf omla.
Spokesmen for the crand jury
could not be reached for comment tlUa morning. ~
Aa:ord1ng to the report. ••any
delay 1n the ~ to build the
Peripheral Canal will add to the
problem where water
conservation may have to be
enforced and growth of Southern
California aeverely limited."
Irvine candidates
to meet tonight
The 1potli1ht will shine once
apln tonfabt on candidate. vying
in the June 8 election for two
eeeta on the Irvine Oty Coundl.
The ln1ne vm.ce Forum will
1pon1or a candlda1e1 night
beglnnin1 at 7:30 p .m . at the
Irvine City Council Chambera.
.,The 90·mlnute event will be
televlled Uve CJYtr Community
CablevWon Ow\nel 3.
a•RPTIVE? -Soviet
l"rftldent Leonid Brezhnev
ha• welcomed President
Reaoh~• offer to open talks
on lfmidng nuclear weapons.
U.N. talks
on Falklands
suspended
By ne AllOdated Pm•
Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher accused Argentina
today of at.ailing peace talk.a and
said Britain should know within
48 hours if a diplomatic 10lution
to the talkland Islands conflict ls
pcmlble. She said after that "no
military action can be held up in
any way." .
In New York. U.N. peace talks were su1pended again today to
give Argentina more time to
consider the latest British
condition.I foe a .ettlement of the
South Atlantic crtala. The talks
had been 1u1pended over the
weekend.
Secretary-G!'neral Javier
Perez de Cuellar said be expected
to determine by Thursday
.. whether we have achieved a
real peaceful 1alutlon." He llid
be expected to resume bis
indirect mediation efforts
Wednadav.
"I beUeYe that we ahall know
within the ne'xt day or two
whether an· aareement la
attainable," Mn. Thatcher told
the HOUie of Commom.
Rejects
initial
cutback
MOSCOW (AP) -Prelident
Leonid I. Brezhnev welcomed
President Reapn'a offer to open
talka on limiting strategic nuclear
weapons today, but rejected
Reagan's proposal for a.one-third
· cut in ball1stic milaile warheads
as "one-alded."
The Soviet leader aho
proposed a freeze on
modernization and deployment of
atrateaic weapons once talks
befin and aaid no more $ovtet
medium-ran1e miullee wUJ be
deployed in areu waere they
could hit Weit Germany and
other Western European
countries. tn Luxembourg, Secretary of
State Alexander M . HaJa Jr.,
while rejetting the Soviet
request for a freeze on nuclear
weapons, aald tome Soviet arms
control propoaala have
"compatibility' with the U.S .
approach. lie wu referring to the Soviet
view that previous anns control
negotiatlona aboWd be the basis
for new agreements. He 11-> aaid
be welcomed the Soviet view
that 9eCWity needs of both sides
should be the basis for Juture
talk.a.
The Unit.ed S\ates polition has •
been that a weapons freeze
would lock in Soviet superiority
in nuclear weapons.
Brezhnev, 75 and recently
reported to be aillnt. delivered
his 38-minute speech over
national television in a 11tona
voice, but alurred hil wordl and
stumbled u he walked back to
his seat. An aide Rrabbed his arm and helped him climb the
(See NUCLEAR, Pase A%)
Bandit holds up
HB finance firm
Police are eeeich1nc for a lone
gunman who robbed a
Huntington Beach aavm,. and
loan of f l,800 Mmda~ afternoon.
The holdup wu reported at
Marina Federal Savlnp, 18582
Beach Blvd. The rob"Qer waa
described •• a Caucuiah man, aae 30-35, e feet. 3 inche9 tall. 180
pounds. wearin1 a red buebell
cap.
• • •
Mr. Taylor founded La1una
BMch RMdy Mix Company in
the ..... lMOI. At tM time, it Wll
only the eecond IUch bulineM.
He died at Hoa1 Memorlal
Hoellital a(t.er • abort mm.. . : 'a.fr. Taylor w• bom 1n Sedan.
k•9-•·• and went to 1chool in Bllddoot, Idaho, before movlna
with hJI family. to Lacuna :e.cfi
in 19~.
Hll brothers, Lynn and Earl
Taylor, were in the CONtruction
bU1lnet1 in Laguna Beach. The
three brother1 built many of ~··homel, Re met hie wife, Dorie, at
Laauna Beach Hi1h School,
pkklna her up at ectiool one day ·~ during the hearing. Evtdetp Wll pthered by the and drlvf.na to Lu Vept where
'nley were dropped after two sheriff'• office to obt.aln search the coupkt were wed.
wltne11es, Rosie and Laurie warranta after deputies beaan The Taylors moved to Cotta Schall~r, failed to testify. Tom receivfQa calla early t!Us year by Mesa tn 1942, and opened the
BUck, deputy dletrlct attorney eome people who had been Laruna Beach Ready Mix
•'nd prosecutor, would not approached by Golden Ea1le Company in Laauna Canyon in
comment on why they failed to salesmen with an offer they the late 1940&.
appear on the witne91 etand. believed too 1ood to be true, Mr. Taylor operated the .~The notes had been seized in Buck said. Friends of U... who bualneH with a partner until .. the raid al<lng with <>&)>er reconla. had inWl&ed UC> m11ed dlputla 1961 when he retired to h.t. C.O.ta ~9,890 in cub and weapons. Evidence seized with one of Mesa home.
• Buck bad argued in open court five ..rm warrantl Wll denied He served ln the trenches of
that McDonald and h.t. salesmen Monday by Barnette. A J-auar Europe during World War I,
bad made misrepre1entatlona and ·~ car, -1ven by McDonald to bavtna Joined the Army at th~ evidence of three loam to real salesman nrepry Etter, WU • of 18.
e!lltate developers was not enough confl9Cated becauae authottUee He ta survived by bit wife,
to make all interest payment• believe ft contained a madiine· Dorla, of the family home;
promiled. • g\ln and two shotguns in the daughters Evelyn Johnson of
Investors had testified they trunk. Cotta Mesa and Vicki bbell, of
paid McDonald, always In cash, Barnette, in denyln1 the San Dlqo.
tHtcauae they were lured by a warrant for the Ja1uar, aald He la allO survived by his aon.
9 romlae of up to 20 percent there·wu not enough of a John Taylor of Costa Mesa; a
li\terelt per month and that often presentation to show whether ailter, Dorothy Bradley of
.,cqualntancea had convinced the one weapon Wll a machine Anaheim, and a brother, Ted
tpem they believed In what he gun or 1em1 ... utcimatic. ?&dUne Taylor of ~ta Cna.
WU doing. gunl U'e illepl.
OFFSHORE LEASES. • . Airline denies
~n voted to joln the state in
jtl au.it earlier tbia month.
, "The more that are involved,
the better, and of course, a big
city like Loa Angeles would carry
a lot of weight," Mn. Bellerue
said.
All thr~e coastal ma~
expresaecl fean about the e
offshore drill.ins would have on
the eamomlea of their towns.
Following pleu by the COMtal
mayors, the Loa Angeles City
Council voted to meet with dty
planning commiaaioners to
4*Ul9 Mayor Bradley'• ~
"It'• not that we are,,~ to Braniff charges
all offshore oil drt1linc, Bridley GRAND PRAIRIE, Texas
said. "We are juat ttyinc to (AP) -American Airlines
protect the environmentally off have denied userUons
llenlltlve areu." t a computerized retervatton
Citizen• in coastal citlet........-1NllMl'l It owm and operatee wu
launched a letter -wrltl ted todarmee bankrupt
campaign to Watt'• office, International C«p.
Prem.dent ~ lllt moQsb in ADMrtcan •~n llld the
an effori to IMIW 1l'Ktl ol1 tbme· reservation ay1tem, callfd
dtiee deleted from the ie.-.ale. SABRE and used by other
But Watt'• office announced alrlinH and travel agencies,
earlier UU. month its intention to displayed Bran1ff in a preferred
hold the lease aale with only po1ltlon to other competitors.
eight tracta ofJ Santa Barbara They llid Braniff paid American
deleted. to pt the plliUon.
Warmer Wednesday
I
Coastal
L-cloudln"• to c'"r thla •tternoon with huy auna~\'!!i HION tOdlY 95 to 73. Late rwgm end Mtly morning low cloud• tOftliM end WedMedey. ~
--llfl«'noon. OWnlldlt II' 501. High W9di 11•9)' A to 71.
H~ngton·N•wport area
-..,.. ,.,.. ll'an • low of
to '° • """ of ... Ett••ll•ra. rrom Point conception to th• w .. 1oan 1Mnar and out IO mlM: Winett ov..-outer ••••• today 11-ao ....... '° 11 twt.Mady clear, wttll eo11tllwaat to •••t
.. 10 '° ,. Mota tllla ~
Wlrlil --1 to 3 .... w...ty _.t/IUoa .....
...........
PREMIERING -First lady Nancy Reapn joins 10-year..old
Alleen Quinn, atar of the musical "Annie," ~nd h-:r d'?g,
Sandy, at the movie's premiere at New Yorks Radio City.
Music Hall.
·NV loves Annie
Celebrities turn out tor premiere
NF;W YORK (AP) -Radio
City 'Music Hall belonged to a
freckle-faced moppe,t and her
dog as the celebrities turned out
for the lavish movie premiere of
the musical "Annie."
• First lady Nancy Reagan. actor
Anthony Quinn, former boxing
champ Muhammad All and
actreu Jacqueline Bl11et were
among those in the limelight
Monday night for the film'•
debut. '
Nearly the entire cut of the ·
film was on hand, including
Bernadette Peters, Albert
Finney, Carol Burnett, Ann
Reinking and Edward
Herrmann.
Actors Christopher Reeve,
Judd Hinch, K.riaty McNichol
and Jeremy Irons and ballet
dancer Alexander Gudonov alao
were in the star-spanRled
audience. Hundreds of specta~
cheered u the celebrities arrived
in limousines.
Mrs. Reagan, wearing a red,
off-the-shoulder gown, arrived
wit~the movie's producer, Ray
Stark, an'a was greeted by Ail~n
Funeral eemc.t will be betd
Wedneiday for Olaa TberMa
Crlnella, 20, dauahter of l'a1rvlew State lfMlltil ...,._
Dr. Francia Crinella, who wu
killed tn • CIU' aoddent SMurclily,
A tpok"woman for tu-11aie
hOlpf tal ln Colt.a Meta Mid ~
Crlnella wu on her way home
from Notre Dame Unlvenlty,
where she waa a sophomore,
when the car lhe w11 in went Off
the road on Hlahway 40 nffl'
Barstow at 4:30 a.m.
She died leWra1 how'9 ta_.. A
clalllnate Kathleen Roche, 20, ol
!'.lcondido wu killed inatantly.
Another clanmate, Alita Anne
Buhman, 20, Hunttnaton Beech,
remains in critical condition at
Loma Linda Unlvttlity Medical
Center. '
Ml• Crlnella graduated from
Mater De1 High School in 1979,
Where 1he WU on the Vanity IOlf
team . She wa1 ttudyfng
psychology at the Indiana
university.
Memorial Mau of Christian
burial will be celebrated
Wednesday at 11 a .m. at St.
Vincent De Paul Catholic
Church, 35 Liberty St ..
Petaluma.
The family lived ln Petalwna
before moving to C.O.ta Mesa. A
memorial service in Costa Mesa
will be acheduled later.
Survivors include her father,
Francia and mother Terryie, •
1isten, Ramona and Christina
and brothers, Peter and ~.
all of Colta Mesa.
Other 1urvivon include a
grandmother and rrandfather,
Mr. and l\J('a. Marino CrineJ.la of
Santa Rosa and Mr. and Mra.
Adam Lynd of NUe, Mlchfpn.
The family aeka that
contributions be made in Mias
Crinella's name to: Scholarship
Fund, Notre Dame Club of
Orange County, Chip Clltheroe,
1505 E. 17th St., Sulte 120, Santa
Ana. ~
,
Clemente man
'not gtiilty' Quinn, 10, who portrays ~e.
Blowing lc:l.-ea to he.r admirers, A San Clemente man who was
Miu Quinn said with a giggle, accused of plotting murders, Valley mulls
bus shelters
"I'm juat really excited and I bombm,. and extortion against
hope everybody likes the movie.'' fellow Croatians. has been lOUJ1i.Cf
Her canine cornpani~ Sandy, innocent of the ~haifes i!l.,New
,. ai.o attended. York. •
The hall, with 5,800 seata, was Miro Bio11c, 33, was found
The Fountain Valley City 90ld ouL Tickets cost from ~ to innocent of a variety of Charges
Council will eeek public $1,000. The John Huston-Ray linking him with a Croatian
commenta toniaht on a plan to Stark production is an adaptation independence from Yugoslavia
build 40 bua shelters at city · of the still·running Broadway group. Three other defendants
tn. ·---ons, with revenue from show hued Joc.ely on the comk: a1»0 were found innocent.
\C& ...... w 'Li ... ' Orp'---•--:-" Six other Croatians were advertising post.en going to the strip • \~e •MW 1Vuuc. found guilty of charges ranging
Fountain Valley Chamber of Pr.oceeds will ~nefit the from raclceieering to cons~. ~ meeta at 8 p.m. ~ Public Broadcuttng"System. They remain in J.ail wit bail
aty Hall, 10200 Slater Ave. The iwo!hour film opena ranging from $300,000 to $1
The plan calla for the lighted Frid a y in New yo r k ' Los rnilli~ton ln New y ork told
facilities to be built and Anfeles, Dallas and Toronto U.S. District Judge Constance
maintained by American Bua before going into general release. Motley the group, a Croatian
Shelter Co. The propoaal has The movie stars appeared to lnd31ndenoe movement known
drawn some critloiam because · the evening's glitter aa as TPOR, was a "corrupt bid• from companies haven't enJOY
been 90lidted. ---~-:---:-:--m:..._:_uch __ u_the_apecta..:.__to_n_. -~--..:..o..:..r.:!::g..:..a_n_1_i_a_tl_o_n_.,~"~7
I
1 l
I
WASHINGTON (AP) -Yield• on 1~rMt'rm
Treuu.ry MCW1tiel fell llightly tor the teCOnd week ln
a row in the latelt auc:tlonl, hitttna the lowRt level ln
2 '-" montha, offldall reported.
About $4.9 bllllon tn ahc·month T-blll.s were
auctioned at an average dlacount rate of U .187
pe~t, down from the 12.236 percel\t of laat ftek.
The aovemment alao 10ld about $4.9 billion in
thrff..m0nth bUls at an average rate of 12.189 percent.
down from 12.248 percent.
Irvine firm tells loss ,
Western Digital Corp of 1rv1ne announced third
quarter re1ult1 and 1tep1 it has taken to prune
overhead and Increase balance sheet reserves in reaponalle lO a widespread industry downturn.
Net revenue for the third quaNer totaled
$8,114,000, and a loss of $3,349,000. Net revenue
lncreaaed 36.4 percent from the 1981 third quarter
which. had a km of $780,000.
F.amlfllJ per share for the quat1« dE:clined from a
lCMa of lS centa in 1981 lO a loss of 24 cents currentlv
Avco chairman named
Avco Community Developers Inc. announced that
Francia X. Suozzi, 41, has been named chairman of the
board and chief executive officer of the oompany.
The chairman. '·ss ~ ltlon has been vacant since
Rom M. Hett resiiJ1f!d in September 1981.
Suozzi., a vice president of A voo Corp., the parent
company of ACD, joined Avco in 1966 in what later
became its financial servites subsidiary.
Discount rentals offered
AirCal announced that customers buying the
airline's ZoneAir Savings passes will be given coupons
good for car rental discounts up to 30 percent off
Budget Rent-A-Car '• standard unhmited mileage mes.
The offer will be valid beginning June 1 through
Sept.15.
A.LrC.a1 also announced a one-month e><1en&ion of
lts free Budget Rent-A-Car off.er lO customers flying
roundtrip at full fare between the
Burbank-Glendale-Pasadena Airport and San Jose,
Oakland or Sacramento.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
MOr \'Oftlt !AP)-SMM. J ..,.._ prlelt tM 1!1't <'*"9 of IN 11'--llCllW ,,..,, ~ ~-......... ·-· "1r'll IWlloNH" -~ ._~ U~L 11C .000 I Cltlcerp mAOO ~ '-
°'9jt Mlffl -.>.oao -,._ .,.. Nrl1n .,..., 17 ... o.r.c. ~ 21-. "" ,,.,._Elmer 07.tllO """ "' Sonr Carll ::.= ,. ....
W.rfWOlm ' .. -.... Tn«0lnc :IS7,7CD ...._ -~
Seftta~lnd . &.tOO ,~ "' lllM JSUOO ~ .... s...-...... JS.l,HlO ~ . .; ~"'' lSl,JllO .. Gen Mllor'l ...... ~ 1 •
Squitlll Corp >at.DI lS "
AMERICAN LEADERS
NlEW VCN!ft< ~I· w., l P m one•
-Ml~ h .... nvol «11"9 ...,_.tun ·. ~ IUMft, :=_i.,,~· -~-u.. w.,.. 111.000 ,..... -"' o.~ ~ "' -"· .=: II .IOD no. ;.a ...... 11"' _,..
Gta.t ....,. ~ ~ = = ~-~
AnlMdlM J1,l'IO ~ • 'Wt 0.l--' J7.JOO 11"' ---
NE~l((API ,._.,,..Dow·--'°' Mey " STOQ(S
111 ,,..., ~11 ~. ~ £1; ,?J
10 '"' 1IO 7' "'01 ,.. 11 ,.. 0 ...
IS Utl IU JI llS Sl llJ 7• 114 Oil IU
tS Stk lJ1 .. lJtOSJ3:JOSDoK-....
'"""' 4.111..JllO
'"'" 1.M..!llO Ulil• l,W,IQO u Stlc 1.a,JllO
WHAT STOCKS DID
l'IEW VOflK IAPI llM¥ II -,_,, .s:;, A#Ya<tted 370
Oot<linM IOC , ..
~ 421 .,
TOia! I-..,. ., . _....,. n lS --JI IS
~1 ,....E•OID
NEW YORI( IAPI Ml'f II -,. .... , ~ Acholltl<.«I 111
OiKllnM WI ,..
¥:...'*:. ,. ,., , .. '"' .... ~ .. IO
-19M II ,,
METALS c...-7~81 '*'" • pound, u 8
Clelt.ln•tlon• Leed 26-27 Cini. • pound. Z1ftc 35 O«lll • PQUnd. de!Mlred
1'111 M &982 ~ W.-~ lb • 0M•Mllflll 78-n ~ e pound, NY
..,_, 1370.~ ftMlt ,....._ '301 00 t1or ~ .• N. Y
SILVER
Hendy a Hermen. H .H5 per 1roy
OUN!"·
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........ er Interes~.Th3n Most Money Market Funds
' . . . r-:rooAY's R'AT'E-1 r efFiCTIVE YIELD 1 Compare our higher yield with the current 7-day
1 2 1 1 IS 3 O 1 ave·rageofmostmoneymarketfunds-includingyours!
I I~ 501* I 1 • [)/ I You'll discover that we pay more! Your daily I /0 I I · /O v I balance over"$2,000 is automatically swept every day
I e I I e I into our Market Reserve Ptan and your ~lance
I RateappllestobalanoeoverS2<XX> Th1srate I I Annualiied yield Is f()f comparison only. It I under $2 ,000 earns 5~% compounded daily. Why I ~ dally n nuctuat~ Wrtti the nmey I I aMUmes Interest remains at a constant rate. I take a dollar less? -..., ____________ _, '-----------..1 ~.,....~ .... ~~~
Heat Chee
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I