HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-03-01 - Orange Coast Pilot. . ~ ... _ -~ ...
111111 CIUJ
lUESDAY, MARCH 1, 1983
0
...
Money :rµan declares we're
(nearly) back iri the chips
BY STEVE MARBLE or-..,..,,......,.
lntentt ratee will continue to
tall, th• hou1ln1 market wlll
boom a1.tn, and the United
Stat.ti wUl tf\c.tr lta createet era
of proaperity.
So predlctt noted economJat
Malcolm P'orbea Jr.J. tht
third-pneratlon edJtor of irorbel
mapz1ne wh9 peint«l a hMlthr.,
almoat alowine p&ctu.re, ot what 1
to come ln the lmmediaw y..,.
ahead.
Sptakln1 to nurly 1,000
people 'ln Newport Beach
yetterday, Forb11 1u•1eated
Amerlcanl .... "blinded". to \he
poeltlve alp of an awaken.ins
economy becauae of the twmoll
of the early lNOt.
"We 'r• ln a perlod of
tundamen tal chan1• and
trarutUon, one that rlvala the
dme of the New Dial." Forbel
eald. 1'But tnnlidolll are never
anooth -they're full of ltOpa
and awu and cs.denda. It'• UM a 1torm at ... ,.,
(See FORBES, Pqe Al)
-llllllft llllY NPll
onANGE COUNTY . Cl\LIFOnNtA 25.CENTS
It-· may he t~lw-WOl!·St ever •• • •
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Row, row .. row yoa.r boat gently down 15th Street in Costa. Mesa, just like Charlie Herinan. . -
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OCC ltUdent Patti Ma. bra"Yes rain ..
waiting for bua on C.O..t Highway.
~Torrential rain,
tides, lightning
paralyze Coast
By ~e Dally Pilot Staff
A rampaging storm packed
with thunder.and Ughtnlni and wind gusts up to 60 mph
alammed into ~ Orange Coast
thia morning, causlna a roof to
collapse on a manufacturing
building in Santa Ana and
trtggertna extensive flooding and
1treet clo9u.res.
Huntington· Beach Fire Chief
Ray Picard alao said there were
unconfirmed reports of an
electrocution death at the
Mushroom Farm at Ella Avenue
and Golden Weat Street early
today!
He aaid paramedial were sent
to the ecene shortly after 9 a.m.
No other details were
avaDablie.
~ty oWdala aaid the storm
had the potential of being one of
the worat in county history.
About 2.4 inches of rain had
fallen iince yes~rday. A 70
percent chance of rain remalna
through tomorrow.
Offidall said the roof of the
Cal-Pak divildon of the American
H09pttal Supply Corp. ln Santa
Ana caved in under the weiabt of aocumulated water and heavy
rain th1a morning. No one waa
belleved injured ln the building,
located at 3502 W. Segentrom
Ave.
The rain• brought about
almost immediate clo1ure of
major hi1hwaya alone the
Oranae C41ist. Many resldentlal
and l>u1lne11 streets became IUl'linl riven. residents Mid.
Pacific Cout Highway wa&..
cbed to traffic ln both direcUonl
between Dover Drive in Newport
Beach to Seal Beach -a dista.noe
of more than 10 rnileL
Several streets near Hoag
Memorial Newport Beach aho
were flooded, mak1na emet'l\5lCY
operatklm dl.fficult, dty oftidab
said.
"I have never in my life ~
anyt.hlnc like thia," uJd Wade
Beyeler, Newport's 1eneral
• eervk:a directol'. "'We have jult
one hell of a lot of water."
Laguna Canyon Road wu
cloaed to motorl1t1 in both
·directions from El TOl'O Road to
South Coaat H1A!;ay by mld-mornln& after wai.n
covered the Bia Bend area of ta. t\to-Jane roedway ..
And California Hi1bway
Patrol officera aa1d. the Santa
Ana Freeway WM daeed due to tlooclfnl ~tween Ma1n Street
and Grand Avenue in Santa Ana
in both dlrec1ionl.
Allo. the tranaltlcn rOldl tnJm
the north-and aoutbbound tO~
Freeway to the Lone Beach ~ wen cbed early tbll
•2.4 Inches soak
county in 24
hours
•Coast Highway
closed from
Newport Beach
to Seat Beach
•Lightning
strikes NB
business
•HB flood
control channel
filled to brim
•Roof collapses
on Santa Ana
building
•Cyclonic winds
shake HB City
Hall
•CM police
department
ffooded ,
morning due to high waier1
there.
Sever.U businffie1 on the
Cout Highway near Newport
Boulevard reported floodlna.
Employees at the Spindrift.er
Restaurant u1d there wen four
feet of water ln the parking lot.
The onaolnlr .ertes of storms
claimed -tbe1r Urat Oran1e
County victim yesterday when
Reeinald Garner, who Jumped
into a tt'Bod-swollen 1ru.attn
drainaae channel, dled at
Western Med.lcal Center in Santa
Ana. (See related st«)'.)
In other developments,
fireflghten ln 'Newport aaid a
bolt of Uahtnine ltiudt the roof
of the Rad.lo SbKk. 2700 Paci&
CoMt ffiahway. No damap WU
reported.
Offlclall In Coate Meaa
reported Oood.l.nl in many pu1a
of that dty, lnc[ucUna Southern
Cal1forn1a Oonece. the ':r ment
of the police depar1ment in the
civic cent.t and an apartment
complex at Elden Awnw.
Resideua re~ that can
near Fordham Road and
Princet.on Drive .,... 1u~
up to their windows.
..
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Orang• CoHt OAIL.Y PILOTITuetd•y. Maren 1, '
M*A *S*H m ·ushy
at -Moos aier. ''··N scoTr mUktna~oow. bye o'clock.; r. ZO BENET ho can In and watch tht .. Net.... ahow.'' Shana zi.n.man hll ~ rvtd chiJ)ptd beef on frt.nd. ' ~~,~~ wtth muhed potatoes: 1 The ~lwella, OleHn and · ~ waltrellel wore apedall)I Ztnpna 1t.ood up to wa"'h moet
J>rin\ed T-ahirw and Hot L1p1 of the ow, partly to aee ovol'
• l ~t11, and a bartender even the lar e erQwd and partly ~ Klinger by wean"' • becaWlt t ey teemed too gripped ~. by It.a drama and 1entlrnent W alt It WM ~-A-S.H nlaht at the atJll. --•
Mocnnker in IMM. Kandy wlpAd away tean
It ~~a big loud party. bul during a scene in w hlch the
when UJC last epifode be&an on troubled Hawkeye confronted a
lhe bar'1 big televialon acreen. tragic truth. A Korean refUgee
the room arew ao quiet you could auf1ocaled her child becauae It.a
hMr the aqueak o! a cork sUdin& crylna iibght Up off the enemy.
out of •.wine b<>ttle. (Related The .cene, ahe aaid, wu the most
story Pace 83.) vivid ahe'd 1een on TV.
Goodbye,· farewell, amen and The atmospt>ere we the same
have I drink on me. al many other watering holes
M a r ( y M e y • r o w I t 1 o f .ion, \he Orange Cou(, where
Brooklyn via Huntington Beach bi1t crowds turned out for the
wu the first to lhow up at the party and the poignancy of the
Moon.raker. She left work near last M-A-S-ff epi.!lode.
the John-Wayne Airport at 4:15 At E. Gad.a in Newport Beach,
p.m._.-,ve minutea later, she ~d waitreaaes w~hoapital amocka.
reae_rved ~e table directly lE A tc.w blos:ki at the {:l
front of die acreen.-She had more Ranchlto~ patrons 0 dreaed as -
th•:cs• four-hour wait. She M-A-S-H characters were w~l ha. cryin al .. _._ -ft'd greeted with free ahots of t.e g one, :me _. te!R_ulla. Next door at the Cafe
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·'Tornado' winds
lash CalTifornia
LOS ANOJCLJCS (AP) -~'
atorm billed u the m01t powodw
of the year bUtsed CaUfornla
today wlth "tcmado-Uke" winds,
poundlna 1urt and blowtna rain
that colfapeed • dam. trtamtd
mudalldn, bl9w truckJ aN:f CU'I
around Uke toy1 an<J forced
Quetn Ellubeth to cancel her
coutal cru!M.
seven pjlOple have dled ln lbe
1torm aerie. that beQan over the
weekend and the National
Weather Service aald today'•
atorm wu the fiercest of the
aea.c>n.
Heroic youth
dies trying
to save friend
Fi fleen-year-old Reginald
Gamer die<I yesterday. one day
afwr he Jumped into a flooded
dralnaae ditch to reecue a friend.
Hl1h wlndt ripMd throup
downtown Lot An1elH thl1 morntn1, blowln1 car~ onto
lldewalki, fiipptna two trUdra DO
the buay Harb-or FrHway,
ieanna naat from the pea. Ot
tht Convention Center and 1hatt.ertn1 wlndowa in at .._.,
one downtown hot.el, polb .met.
One hou.e near downtown WM
reported colli,Paedc.!k.! poUce
1poic-nan Lt. Dan II.id he
wu not 1ure of the ~ OI'
exact cau.ae. "Th~re are tornado-like wtnda
all over the place," Cooke uid.
The Loa Anaelea Rlvet
overtlowed onto the Ventura
Freeway near Vlctory Boul*vard
In the Glendale area and torrenta
of rahi flooded the freeway near
Calabaau to the weat. e
Freeways throuthout the Loa
An1elea area were cloaed at
scattered loca tlona by the
California Highway Patrol
becauae of flooding, cauain1
monumental traffic jams for
momtna commuters.
About 26 resident.a of the Loa
Alamo1 Trailer Park were
eyacuated thla morning when an
earthen dam collapaed near
Santa Ynn, 100 milea northwen
of Los Angeles in Sanw &rbua
County, authorltiea u.ld.
aoon after the program began, Lldp, bartender Fred Kroeger
while hero Ha~k.eye W';9 ~tlJl aald customers preferred the
enaooned ln the wacketena. piano player to the bea.lwp at the
In me-back of the bar, at lhe 4077th Moblle Army Surgical
table farthest from the screen, sat Hospital.
four other M-A-S-H lovers. "W ed ff bo t lO Man.dee and Kandy Colwell of e turn . it o a u
Yorba Linda said the program ls o'clodl," he said. "I was glad. ,I
the only commerclaJ series they almost started crymg I couldn t
-oill'(Paol ~ llY CMrteratllfY'
Loree Colon and Brian Bora (in Klingeresque
garb) rm their plates with H OS" at Moonraker's
Hmess hall" at one of many HM-A-S-H" parties·
Stron1 currema ln the ditch
near Moulton Parkway and
Harvard Avenue In Tustin
carried Gai:ner downatr,J!am
before Martnea from the nearby
helicopter baae teamed with iocal
police to pull him out. He lived
on the baae.
Hla 11-year-old friend, who
had slipped lnto the waterway
while trying to pb a basketball
floating put. managed to eacape
the current. Gamer was taken by
helicopter -the ditchbank was
too muddy for an ambulance -
to Western Medical Center in
Santa Ana.
"An earth dam aave way ln
All908 Canyon, and that cal&Nd
aome trouble near Los Alamos,"
Sant.a Barbara County aberiffa
Deputy Larry Udy aald. He
added the Loe Alamoa Trailer
Park was evacuated about 3:30
a .m . when the water jevel
reache<I five feet In placel.
watch. st.and seeing Hawkeye crack up."
"It's OJle of the few shows on Not ·everyone could; not
TV that really treats people as everyone cared.
human beings," said Maurice, Linda Fullerton of c.oata Mesa
who joined othen at the table by ;net a Cnend at the Moonraker
wearing green T-'Shlrts and other They sat at the bar and talked.
military garb. She said she taped the show on
Knud Olesen, visiting from her TV at home. All the hoopla
Denmark, said the program with about a TV program, she said,
Dan.I.ah subtitles is several yeani was ndiculoua. They left about
behind over there. He is a dairy the time Winchester was leadlmr farmer. "He tries to finish his North Korean quintet in a
Mozart melody. When the
program finally ended and all the
heroes managed to head for
home without a final, cruel twist.
most of the patrons made their
own exits A few , like
Meyerowitz hnaPred
For them, the weekly dramas
had meant more than just
entertainment. There were moral
points and decency.
One viewer's private fare well
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN °' tM Delly "lot ..... Nobody likes a long, teary. drawn-out
farewell, but such aentimept can be forgiven
when apeclal Cr1ends are involved
That was how it felt Wt night to o viewer
cutled up at home In a comfortable llvmg room
chair, with some snacks within arm's ~ach. and
the TV tuned to a crisp picture.
Though movie-like m ieflath, the 2 VJ-hour
"M-A-S-H" finale In :I: waa more Wee an
extended 30-minute ep -a very extended
episode. If, because of the extra time, you
expected some flashy deviations from the usual
format (Special effecta? Darth Vader in Kon!'lt!),
you were undoubtedly di&ap~t.ed.
But if the "M-A-S-H ' characters have
become dear friends over the years. you found
plenty of poignant moments as they prepared for
life after Korea.
Klinger was tom betwe,n hia desire to go
home anc1 hia Joye for a Korean native. Father
Mulcahy kept his hearing loss a secret to
conunue helping the local orphans. B.J . .ought
his comrades' approval to leave early through a
bureaucratic error
Margaret had to decide whether to let her
father guide her career. Colonel Potter said
goodbye to hia horae and pcepared to become just
"Mrs. Potter's Mr Potter"
In the program•• beat plot threads,
Winchester's love of musk was spoiled when
Chinese musicians became sorne of the war's
final casualties. And finally, Hawkeye, who had
saved so many livea on the operating table,
battled mental illneaa after inadvertently ~using
the death of a Korean child.
Yes, the fina]\epi..ode w• too long. Yes, the
Uldlvidual farewells took up lots of time Yes, it
was contrived to hove each "M-A -S -H ..
c haracter leave by a different mode of
tramportation.
But if you're a loyal "M-A-S-H" {an and
you didn't find yowwlf a bit misty~ye<I at the
end, you'd better check your chest.
You may have no heartbeat.
Rain, winds continue
:coa8tal
'Calilornia
In llOdltlon, SOu1'*n p eclflc •
main NM41 rout• to Loe A~
-~ to trafftc ~ •
bridge In Newhall -knodl.O
°"'by lurll!Mnl -··· ... ..,
H. Csenar
services held
Private services were .io.ba.,
held today for 40-year Balboa
Island resident Helene Poth
Csenar, who died Saturday in
Newport Beach at age 64 .
Csenar served 10 years on the
old Newport Beach Elementary
School District and was a
chairman of the city's Parks.
Bea c hes and Recreation
Commission.
She was a past president of the
Zonta Club of Newport Harbor.
She ls survived by a daughter,
Victoria Wells of Sant.a Ana, and
two grandson.a. Services were
scheduled at Pacific View
Memorial Park
An autopay was acheduled for
today. Authorities acknowledged
that drowning appeared to be the
ca~ of deadi.
About 50 miles to the eut,
several other mobile homes were
afloat at Paradise Ranch Trailer
Park m the mountaina north of
' Castaic Lake.
SURFER RESCUED. ' • •
From Page A 1 ,. ..
Hoppe wu 1potted about three-quarters of a mile offshore,
floating on hla surfboard, unable to re&.urn to the beach, the
lifeguard aid.
Al~ reaching the surfer, Perry said he gave him "a quick
lesson ln ~aphy, on how to \,.ISe the waves and currenta to
your advantage.
Yesterday'\ l.ncldent was Perry's aeoond dramatic reecue in
less than two weeka. On Feb. 20, he was one of two lifeguards
who leaped from a helicopter to help re.:ue four brothe.n wboee
parent.a' boat capahed off Huntington Beach.
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The widest
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from the four
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Our jewellers wlll
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-_·· - . --r-. ·-
Hlatorie 1atherin9, from left, Gerald Ford,
Jimmy Carter, Adm. Hyman Rickover, and
Richard Nixon.
5001 gather to honor .
• retired Admiral Rickover
By Tiiie AllOdat4Hl Preas
,: WASHINGroN -Richard Nixon threw him a anappy
• llluta . .Jimmy Caner huaed him. Gerald Ford ahook ha hand. NMI ISOO other l*>Ple paid •1.000 apiece laat night to honor
reUnd Adm. Hyman Rickover, the Jewiah em1gre from Poland
who mlde lt blc In the United Stat.et Navy ' Rickover took lt ln ltrlde. "I waa'ln the Navy more than 63
~ 1caa9r than any naval otfioer In our hatory," he aaid.
'Newrthe1-. I do not believe I have done eno~h for my cournry. I did what and wu paid well for my work. '
Commuter strike in New Jersey
NEWARK, N.J . -The flnt statewide rail 1frike in New
Jeney h1ltory beaan today, leavtna 70,000 commuters who
maltly work in New York Cty Lacina packed buses and jammed hJChw~
&~presidential yacht seized
WASHINGroN -'I'M former presidential yacht Sequoia,
returl:Uhed and valued at $1.9 mlllJon, hal been ael.z.ed by U.S.
~ becau.e of an overdue $1,300 dlael ?uel bill.
_R~agaa health plan to Congress
WASHINGroN -President Reagan's propou..l to revamp
the nation'• health lnlurance •yatem, which would raise medical
expenaes for at leut ~7 million people, has been sent to eonar-.
Youth jobs program supported • WASHINGroN -Leplation to establ.lah an American '-
Ccmervation c.orp., remin.llcent of youth joba programs of the
N Deel betided f ukk al bv the House
STATE
Mlld quake rattles Inglewood
INGLEWOOD -A mild Jate-niaht earthquake here,
~ 2.8 on the Richter 1Ca1e, baa trtuered nwneroua
teJepbolMt ca1U but no~. authoritlel aaia~
14tb arson lire hitB hospital
LOS ANGELES -A 14th flre haa been set·at c.edars-SinaJ
Medical C.enter although the man charged with setting four of
the earlier aJ"901la remained ln jail. unable to meet $200,000 bail,
offidala aaid.
Bill would regulate s~erm banks
LOS ANGELES -A bill to ~te all aperm banks that
aim to promote a "muter race kini:i of concept" ha.a been
introduced ln the ltate LeiWatlln! by Democratic A.aemblyman
Stew Peeoe of Chula Vllta.
Scbool lunch challenge rejected '
SACRAMENTO -A federal judge says school children
wlll-ln principle-have to ahow their parent.a' Social Security
numben to get 9Chool bmches -at leeat for the time being.
WORLD
u.s~ leads in im~rt of Scotch
LONDON -Expcll1a of Soot.ch whlaky evned a record
f1.J2 billion for Britain I.Mt year. accord1ng to government tJaua publiahed Monday. 11ie United Statee ~ed the Jara-t market, takini 31 percent of the 830 million bottles
ex.ported lM\ year.
CIJina ferry capsizes; 124 missing
PIZINO -A dwr fflt'r/ with more than 200 pu9en1en ~ m ~ wtndl ad UirrentW ra1m In eoathem China dawn today, but_onlv 78 peopJe Wet'e hauled aahore to
afety, ' laal journalist aid.
Pope's travels termed 'risky'
VATICAN CITY -Pope John Paul ll'a trip to Central
AJmrica With lta leCUrity abd health rlak.I makes lt one of the
moll dU&ult ol h1I vtllta abroad. But the 62·year-old pontiff
hll mlde lt cleu' he hu no Intention of end.ini h1I travels.
Salvador slausbter toll at 7 4
' 8AH SALVADOR, D s.JVlldor -Army aoldien may have
llM.Ptilnd • maftl._ • 74 Indian men women and chUdren durtae• anU..pen1.lla IJW99.~ Samonate provtnce, a member
ol. thl ~t Human JUanta Q:mmtwon u.ld today. He
pw DO detaOI ol Che 1dUlft1L
Oran Collt DAILY ftllOT/Tuald1y, March 1, 1813 Al
Storm wasl,es out quee~ 's tour
BY Ll.ftEN B ILEIN Plana for them to drlve up
•
or...-...... .t... thtouah lht Sanu Ynea
Cuetully laid olan1 for Qu n moun\aina to tht RH1an1'
Ellubeth'1 10-d'ay Wett C:o41t -.eluded fJ8S:.atre ranch were
tout are betfti wuhed away by procwdlna 1-aatn thll mom1nc,
heavy rain• and hlah 1urf a alt.hC)Ulh .Bar\ta 81.tb&rl Cou.niy
1pokt1man for the royal Suporvftor Bob Kallman aald
entour-ao N)"I. e.-rllttr the trip tot lunch at the
The queen and her hu.band, r•nch wu canceled. '
Prince PhJUp, were acheduled to But Kallman •Id lhl1 morn.Ina
continue their crulHi tbe that White Houae 1tafttn t.oli1
1tormy CalJfomll cout y on him that afcer the queen v111ta
the royal yacht Brltann a, tour the locaJ courthouae, "the luncih
1pokeaman Jan Barbieri aald. But wi ll be at the ranch .... hua• 1weU. ruled out th• royal lfowrver, preparatJona are bel"H
party'• achedultd docklnJ a t m•dt tor ltandby location.
Santa Barbara Harbor. Kallman aald ht wa1 not tolcfl.
lnatHd It wu announcied the where.
quMn and Prince Philip would "Th' weather 11 ral1lna."
fly Into Santa Barbara for their Kallman aald. ''The he.viett. part
1l1htaeeln1 tour and mfft the of the 1torm hu puled throua}l.
prealdent and Mra. Reqan for That wlll make the road to the
lunch r11nch pea.able qain."
If ull aooe u planned later In
Royal Navy
hosted by
Westminster
The city of Weatmlnater dfdn't
a~t a vlalt from royalty, but It
may have aott.en the next beisl
thing.
Two hundred Royal Navy
aailora accompanyina Queen
Elizabe th on her visit to
California dropped by the
WestmlnatAtr Mall yesterday for
lunch on their way to an
afternoon at Disneyland.
Councilman Gil Hodges had
lobbied for the queen to visit his
city. a British namesake, on her
Wett Coast tour But, even after
he turned to President Reagan
for help, Buckingham Palace said
the queen just didn't have ume to
visit the Orange County city
So Hodges arranaed for the
sailors to atop at the mall for a
90 -manute program whic h
featured Polynesian dancing and
a drawing for two 1lgned
lithographs by a naval artlat.
FORBES • • •
From Page A 1
Forbea, speaking at Edwards
Cinema In Newport Center, was
the sue1t of ttie Newport and
Laguna Beach aailtantce leajUe.
'"He cautioned there are eeveral
scenarios that could abort his
prediction of good tl.me9. A tax
lncreaae. he saJd. would "bleed"
conawnen and halt an economic
rebound. Any move to limit
trade, hl' warned, also would
throw the f'COnomy back uno a
tailspin.
Forbes saJd he expect.a interest
rata will remain low and the
primr rate, recently drorped to
10 ~ percent at aevera major
lending lnstilutiona, should come
down u low aa 7 ~rcent by the
·the week , the Reaaan1 wUI
ccle.bn1te their 3 lat weddlna
1tnnlveraary with an Intimate
dlnner on bo&rd HMY Britannia
Friday.
Ylhile Reaaan drove lhrouab
treacheroua toa on the 1teep,
wlndJna road which lead.a to h1I
ranch ye1terday. Queen
Ellzabeth toured the Rockwell
Intt'rnatlonal plant In Downey
and delivered her flatt 1peech of
the tour at Loa Angeles City
Hall. ·
ln her remark•. Britain'• .
monarch thanked the United
St.ates for Its 1upi>ort lut year
during the Falkland lalandl war,
when the Brltl1h 1ucce11fully
recaptured the South Atlantlc
1!1.landl trom ArgentJne lnvaden.
Earlier, the royal couple were
shown a lull-1Cale mock -up of
America'• apace shuttle and went
through a !light simulation of the
shuttle's landlna at the .Rockwell
facilities
Several thousand flag-wavtna
'Rockwell employees lined the
queen's path through the plant.
srud Richard Barton, H.ocJ<well'a
manager of public relation.a
As sht' concluded her tour.
Queen Elizabeth was greeted by
Malcolm Forbes
sees prosperity a head
Deir ,.... ,._... ~ .,., .........
Queen Elizabeth views the Apollo 14
command module a s Rockwell
International chairman Robert Anderson
(left ) answers questions.
about 100 e le!Dentary school
1tudent1 from the Downey
Unified School District.
Kathy Gorman, a teacher at
the Gnlfltha Middle School, said ·
her group of 63 Junior high
studenta felt thelr hour-long wait
was well worth It when the
queen walked by them on the
way to her motorcade
Shooting victilll
due to testify
A 14-year-old girl who
survived a ahooting in which her
girlfriend was killed was
expec~ to testify today in the
Orange County murder trial of
Thomas Francia Edwarch
H~t testimony follows a tour
ye1terday by the jury to tht'
Cleveland National Fore1t 11le
where Edwards ii alleged to have
sunned down the two young
girla Sept. 19. 1981.
Edwards ls accu1ed of
flnt-desree murder In the death
of 12-year-old Vane.a Iberri and
attempted murder in t he
wounding of her companion,
Kelly Cartier, 14.
Cartter was expec-ted to take
the stand today .
Superior Court Judge James
Judgt" accompamt'd JW'Ors to the
111t c along w ith c·ourt and
Sht"rl ff's Dt>pnrtment officials
Yt'•lt•rday He •>cc ust>d the
ram-dampened Jurors when their
trip ended shortly alter noon
Edward1, handcuffed and
sitting In the rear seat of 1
SheralC's ~partment vehlclt',
wu present at the Blue Jay
Campl(ro11nd salt• v1,..tt"rday end t>f the year ::~~t:~~,;~~:i~:~=~~~l~j Convicted killer seekS retrial
consumer 11pend1ng Banki;, By STEVE TRIPOLI
becaU!lt' of the auccea of money 01111e O•Hr ltftot ttett The seven-man. five-woman allowed prosecutor Bryan Brown
market ac~~un1ts, have an A request for a new trtnl 11 jury deliberated for two days to introduc e fa c ts about
"unanticlpat<:"U pa e of cash on being planned today by the before retun\ing the verdict. S <:hr e 1ber'11 past -had
their handa" and haFve a revived attomt-y repretenting Cody Leo Jury foreman William Ponder prejudked the· Jury
interest in lending. orbea added. s c h re 1 be r . c 0 n v 1 ct e d of said Schreiber'• guilt was never The Jury had not been told
"The average citizen's balance first-degree murder yesterday in doubt in two ballot$ taken by about Schre1ber's slay In a
sheet ll ln the best shape In 15 forthedecapttatJonalaylngofhll thejury.However,hesaidjuron Montana mental ho1p1tal
yean," he uJd. "The average were 1pllt over whether to following a 1976 murder when It
American baa aaved money and roommate. convict Schreiber of first or waa picked for the trial
paid down debt.a and la lh good Sentencing was eel for March Sf'(..'Ond-deeree murder Despite that back.ground, Ortiz
1hape even though he feels lousy 24 Schreiber. 29. was convac~ of said ht decadt-d not to enter a
about all the belt-tight.enin8." PublJc Defender" Ramon Oruz. t.tompang to death his roommate, plee of not guilty by reason of
Given the chance, Americans who had opened Schft'tbcr'i. tnal 24-year-old Dennis Schy_bcrt, m 1nc;an1t' in thl l ll ~e Ht> said
are ready to start •pending, a month ago by telling Orange the Mls11on VteJO home they Schrt'tber asked him not to do so
Forbes noted. County Superior Court JUrora shared last October. He then beca use he had da.ltked hu lint
While• financial recovery wW they could not eave his client a decapitated Schubert's body stay Ula mental hospital.
eventually provide new Jobi, fair trial, reiterated that before burymi it i.n the yard of Jurors viewed videotapes of
Forbe9 warned that blue-«>llar ~ntiment after the convlctJon the home and t>uryt.ng the head a Schreiber confe11lna to the
workers will continue"° have a He said he would make hl1 quarter of a mile away. alaying, then~ both bi.I rouah t1rnt aettina ahffd 1n "tl'\e motion for a new trial at the Ortiz &a.id a dect.lon by Judae and Schubert'• roles ln It at the .._.. e-o .. e1--•-." I ....... •• '1 ""'""'uut Nntendni Jame1 Frank• I -wh ich ~ 1eene for lnvestigaton. "The daya of dropping out of .-------------------------------high 1chool, gettlna on the
auembly line and earning
$30,000 a year are probably
over:· he uid.
In a flnaJ obaervatlon. he
augaetn!d that the economic plan
developed under the Reagan
Admlnlltratton -commonly
known u Reaganomica -ii a
"near·carbo.n copy" of the
economic plan under the
Kimnedy Admlnlltration
"I 1ue19 aomeone should point
that OU\ \.o Teddy (Kennedy),"
Forbeil obterved.
H9"f' It la Mltcf'I tilrMdy and
time to .cetet>r•t• '°' thoM wfth an Aq~atl,,_ blnl\etOM.
Whlotl prodl.loel Ina green color
ol Emwald. altlo produoee other
ct11recterl1tto1 which dl1tlngullh
11\e oem from ltl 1111er alone.
Aquamarine 11 more abundant In
nature 11\1n &merald end
thetetor. II._. coaUy
Wh•t do you like about the Dally Pilot! What don't you lllle"
Call the number at left and your rneMAI• wW be recorded,
tramcrtbed and delivered to the appropriate editor.
The 11me 24·hour an1wer1nc Mnlte may M Uled to reconl ltt·
tera to the ~tor on any toplc. MaUboa tontiibuton mu1t ln,lude
lh•lr name and telephone numMr for vertncatlan. No clrculaUon
calb. pleue .
Aquamarine mMM ... water
wn1t an apt name '°' thte lo'l'8ly gtMnlah·blue to blul•h·gr""
gem Tiie rlne1t a r•
predominantly bt\le. We hew 1
ring In our atodl with a '*Y fine,
latg9 Aquemltlnt eat In It. One of t'-t meet ~IM I heY9 .wr
9Ml'I It II 14d4Jt10nim emerWd
cut and wetohJ a u2 oarat.1.
Oo4d..-. ~ and M~e
(lhe pln61 m.mbef Of the WY' femtty) .,.. aJeo very loY9ly .....
1 bought • b••utlf~l oval Morgatite welohlna 11.41 Mrlt9 on my IMt trip-to ldet~.
It ... my lnWltlon to Mt ft up In
• rll'lo mout1tll\O. bU1 ... rteve
b•en • o •uay with 011 r cuetomere' tpeOlal ~ Md cutt<Wn Mdanl that I heV9tl't Nd
time for my o.n.
Tell us what '1 on your mlod.
•
EUlly foUnd In lt(ve n...... cry1tal1, It• very appearance prOducH a coollng, eootlllno
affect. Ju1t Ilk• the IH, tha
dMf* IM MON tM clMp.w CM
cokw. Aquarn.tne Mede lo be
falrty 14liat to aimlblt OOOd C06or.
Many ffn• eton•• foday •r• ,_,.t,.ted to..,~ the blue
ootor, and the proot11 I•
~'· AqUll'NriM •• ~of .... mln•rtl beryl Tlla other
Important variety of beryl •• ~d. Chrom!um. lha ........
We "-"" • wtdt MttclJon of ~-up ln ~.
Th•Y are In ''"''· Orl~te••1 pene11nt1 1nct 11rrl"t' MG
.... Ir\ Pflol ""' .... .. '°;'ift .....,, •• , .... W.'1 be -., to 9t1CJ1W .,..,. .. to,.. on = ,. -to Cl\al1ittl H:..,, ,,,,..
I
I
care
meeting topic
• Preferred provider organJzationa, a
new concept ln health care will be the topic
of dtacuulon when the new Irvine
Medical-Dental Society meets for a dinner
meeting next Monday.
Sanford Marcu1, presJdent of the UnJon
of American Physicians and Dentiata; Charin
Plewa of the Orange County Medical
Aaaoclation and Management conaultan\
N.,.. Dayla will conduct a panel di8cualion on
the tubject.
The meeting will begtn at S p.m. at the
Irvine Ranch Water Di.i61ct offices, 18802 ·
Bardeen Ave .. Irvine. The meeting ii open to
all dentiata and physidana laving or pract1dng
in Irvine. Dinner 11 $10 per person.
Reservations can be made by calling the
IOCiety office at 857-6512.
Pyramids lecture subject
• Are the Great Pyramic:b of Egypt, the
TaJ Mahal In India, the Parthenon and the
8linalayu Imbued with special powerful
.... IY IOW'Oel?
Find out during a three-hour lecture
~ at 7 p.m . Friday at Orange Coast
College fu Costa Mesa. Dr. F. Toby Wel11, a
ie.acher at the Holistic Health Center 'l.n Costa
M_., will lead the lecture In the Chemiltry
Building, Room 214. Ac:imiaion is $5 at the
door.
Time to think green
• The St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Church In
Irvine will get a head start on St. Patrick's
Day•feativitiea with a dinner and dance March
11.
·0pen to the publlc, the event will begin at e ~ and end at midnight at the pariah hall.
t ~te Ave .. near the comer of Campua
and Turtle Rock drives.
Admilaion la ~ per pel'llOn.
The dinner will feature corned beef and
cabbage and, of coww, Irlah potatoes. Wine
and green beer wlll be available. For
reaervatlona. call Leo or Adele Vidal,
8~1-0419.
ClaBB aid to women
• How women can Wn&e their llvea ii
the topic of a lecture Friday at Oranp Cout Colleae ln C.O.ta Mesa.
11'fhe Cjnderella Complex: Iuues and
lnjuncdona" ii the title of the claa meettna
fn'lm 7 to 10 p.m. ln the coll9'1 ~
Bulklina. room 113.
'l'kkeu are •~ and will be 90ld at the
8Cbool'1 ticket oUJce and at the door.
' RUFFELL1 S
UftHOLSTHY . ,, ..........
1'21 HAltOI kYD.
COITA MllA-1 ... 1 IN
Attention:
S can .
uate
Here comes
A fresh new taste ex~rience
that outshines menthol.
It ribt only tastes fresher whil~ you ~e.
It even leaves you with a dean, fresh taste ..
I
i
t
~------l
The DUtric:t Attorney•1 Office .._to drop the o"8!Ml~ta ~d endan1•ro;:~d
plM to ;~ ~ aJ~~
Lynn <>Wene. 21, proMC\ltor Hal
Marpn-eakl.
S.nten~ i. 1eheduled for
Apdl 18. Owena waa an'ftted by
Calta Me. police Nov. 12, 1982
•fter alle~edl givlng am.topher a eedative
and then i.ltln the fam1ly'1
ltereo, "televhion aet and Pathways periled 1 ,
.. -----··--•-'"O!!!I•-·. --. I
Coat DAILY PILOT/TUMday, Maron 1, 1913 •
Th• WU• of • conviot•d
Hunu.ncton BMch ~ offender
hM Neet~ a one-y..-~ tenn
for perjwy and other ctuu'1•
aril&DI ,,_ -huablnd'• eete. JacqueUne Gronbaclf'~ a"°rney, Patrick McNeal, uid
hJI client fl911ded M\Ulty &o four
.count• o perjury and two
C0\1ntl of d1Mu&db11 a wttneu
ln Oran1• County Superior
Cow1.
Judie Lui• C•rdenaa
Fares increa1&g
Oranae County Tranllt Diltrict
bua ~ will tncna• to $2 on all expreu routee, up from $1.M,
beginning today.
Mnt.enced het '°. y .... ln 0r.,. County Jail •nd three yeara
pft>beUon, McNeil Mid.
The perjury char1ff aroee
from her t.ettimony d~ the trlal of her hu1band, Robert
Charla GronblCh. Amont other
thln11, 1he te1tlfled ~he w ..
unaware of her hUllbe.nd 1 lltXUa1
abule of ~ daupten.
Th• other chirp came from
an 'apparent attempt by the
Gronbacha to dl11uacte their
dau,ht.en from telUtyt:nc .,.sn.t
their father.
Robert Gronb•ch waa
convicted in DecemWr of 22
counta of sexually abualn& hla
three teen-ag~ daughten. He
wu eentenced to the maximum
23ryear atate prt.on tenn.
photooapha. •
Eliiabeth Hammad aaid ahe
N1W'Ded home to find her aon
~ and the babyaiUer and
belonllnll ....
High tides that have wa1hed over and closed Pacific C.Oa1t Highway
Golden West in Huntington Beach alto have broken up parts of th~
bea~hfront blcycl~ trail, t088ing chunks of the black asphalt on to
the road at upper right.
The ilicr..,., the tint auch
ch~n1e on expre11 route• in
nearly two yean, WM approved
Jan. 17 by OC'l'D di.rectors. It will affect about 200 people.
The COit of a monthly pua on
expre11 routes allo wtU rile, from
One co ndition of Mra .
Gronbach'• probation 11 no
contact with her dauahtera
unlftl It ia previously a~
by the court or her probation officer. All the dau&hten now
live in foster })omes, ?tkNeal said.
Mandated-recall
list available
DEAR READERS : The National
A11ociation of Consumer Age ncy
~clmini1tratora haa eatabliahed a Recall Cleu1nl ~ Servk:e, a monthly updating
of aovernment-mandated recalls of food,
druaa, con.aumer product.a and cara. The
8erikie will oonalst of monthly mailings of current recall data, contact names and
telephone numbers, and other information,
odlQl'-a>ded by aubjeci. For more Information, wrt'9 to Claud.la Sturges of NACAA, 1511 K
St. J{.W., Washington, D.C. 2000~.
' Tax f (!rms at libaries
DEAR PAT: Last year tbe Hbruy bad estra ee,let or cu form• available. Will tbat
Hrtiee C19Une IM1 yeuT
' H.T., Buttagton Beacll
Most ltbnrtee have a aupply of the more ~ requested tax forms and a "package
of reprOductible form• which may be
photocopied. The Internal Revenue Service
note• tbat m11ny libraries also have tu:
pnperadon ..sstance cutettes that take a
~yer line-by-line through the 1040EZ,
lOIOA ad lOtO t.a fonm. 'The enw ai.o
iaclude bwtructiona for oomplettng Schedule
A Ind B. YOW' b:al library can provide more
Intimation about what services are available.
Flss burnins 'proper'
DEAll PAT: We've W a U.S. fllg tMt
we'¥e flen • WWa11 for yean. It neea .. · .. ~ .... rm .... •are of die proper
medlM of ...... of die wona-oat flaJ.
-4 W.R., Ba&tagtoa Buell
The fl•I 1hould be dettroyed In a
·way, preferably by bumirig, and in
wtthbutceremouy, accordlng to Public
9, commonly known u the "Flag
Law." Approved CUltom calls for the cutting
· ol the Urilon from the flag. Then the two ~ which no~ fonn a flag, should be' cnrnated.
· Tai attachment OK • •
O.L.. Lqaa Beadt Yes. However, the 'ttachment mun
OODtllln all tbia requ:lred informa~ follow .... tormat ol the ottida1 ecbedui. and be
atW=hed • thl mum in the .in. aquence ..
Kllllidule. appear on the offidal forma,
~ to the lliWial Revenue Service.
....... eouJd bit att8cbed in alphabeUaal
~In numerbl crdlir. : .. l.-·. _ Got• probmn! Then Write to
•
P•t HOl'Owit.z. P•t will cut~ u~.
pttlng rhe aMwers and acuon yoo
need to splve inequities jn
t •nd bc.wneu. Mall y our qu~tJons
to Pat HOl'Owitz. At Your Service, Orange o.t Dally Pilot, P.O. Box J 560, Costa Mesa ,
~mao. .. ·
--.
the ~$60 to ··-
-i --.-..... 4-~
That's when )'OU can stan drawing
on your Individual Retirement Account•
at Home Federal.
Provided, of course, you have an
IRA in the first place.
At the right place.·Home Federal.
Where an IRA ls the ideal lnvest·
ment In your' own fururc. Helping lO
guarantee your comfon and security In
the yean, to come. And put you f.lr
ahead of anyone who'a trying co get by
on Social Security or pension checks.
TAIADVAllalR811
... M'llJ.
'
Plus, the interest you earn wlth
your IRA is tax..deferrecl1 until you
draw on your account. Ar Home
Federal's high money market rates,
that can help you build a personal
retirement fund' much larger and fuster
than you might Imagine.
-==.?.uo~-
vou can also direct your own LRA
or ICeogh 1nve$ments into mutual
funds, Mln\ildes ol' odler alternative
mw;stments through Home Fed Tru.st ,
an aflllate of Home Federal .
For Information on how to use
these alternative Investments, please
call HO.me Ped Trust in San Diego,
(619) 2'8-724'1.
.......... ,lWIET
.... 111.
Now you can earnia high daily
money market rate1 on an Insured
ln~ment. With the freedom to use
your money -by meanJ of telephone
And since Chextra ls such an
important companion 10 your Insu red
MoneyMarket Plan , it'~ free. Including
200 free peNionalized check.'>
In tum, Chextra b your key to
24.-hour banking convenience at our
growing network of AnylimeTelle~''
machines throughout the state Appl~
for Overdraft Prcxect1un plu.'> our
handy Check Guarantee N, well a.'>
your choice of VISA• account'> o r
MasterCard "" ..
AllWllE YOIM ACCOlllTS ., .....
There's no need to mak~ il special
trip to Home Federal tO Stan your IRA
or lnsured MoneyMarket Plan. You can
arrange your at."Councs right now from
your home or office.
Call toll-free, any hour any day 1..eoo-•2-on•
•
' j
., sp~cial tl-aining ~ids
~ .
· 'l!'~fugees' 'djustrµent
W be n 8outhea1 t Ali an 1urvey of 40 major employera tn
Nf"l"f enter the Job marke• the county. Pt..,.•are more problema to be · In addttJon to pointtn1 out
OWralme than ~ barrlen, cultural dlfferencee that could al~ theee ltillnead the lilt. ctu.e frlC$ion, the traWna 11M110111
C\&hutal dl(ferencee can try to help A1lan workera .-.ine both the newcomera and understand key worda and phruel ~ American ccrworken. they will encounter in their work
'For example, ln Vietnam lt la and te teach American aupervilora
eantldered only polite to let a a few Vietnamese and Laotian
friend 1tep ahead of you lnto a word• that will help 1et their
title. In tbi1 fairneaa-orlented ~ona llC!r<*.
country, such a gesture can At pre9e11t the pilot proaram raJ>kllY infuriate others ln the line. 11 betna watched by .ome 20 other
Tb e pr t vat el y funded compan6ea whJch have indicated ~t and Refuaee Plann1nc lnterest ln helping with oontlnued Center tn Santa Ana la trytna to fundin& if the f lnt aeuion1 are
llDOOth the way for refuaeM, their productive. employeh and their ccrwork.en ln Apa r t f r om prov id 1n1 a new....ct1i of trainlna lelllona short-term food , shelter and -r· · medical aid for newly arrived A 1rant from the Fluor refuaees, the federal government,
Foundation helped eatablllh the whicli authorized thefr entry, has ~ter ln 1981 and 36 employees of done little to aeaiat with their
the Fluor Corp. were the tint to adaptation to the new culture.
pate in one of the day-Iona Churches and ·volunteer groupa
The Aaial1I taking .,.rt are all
l!mployed in Fluor'• reproduction
·~d araphics department, a
l60-penon leCtiorl with about 27
~ eftCOUDt.ered by the
refugea and their co-workers
were pinpointed in the center's
•
haw-helped notably -in finding
them homes and providing
F.ngIW\ leeaom.
The refugee. center' a privately
funded program for thole already
employed in Orange County can
carry that help a much-needed
step further benefittna both the
aponaors and their employees.
Qolnl9"1 expressed In the SJ>Ke above are thoSe of the Dall y Pilot. Other views ex· Pc~on this~ are those of their authors and artists. RHder comment Is lnvlt· '4. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mew, CA 91626. Phone (714) 642-4%1.
· Letters to the editor ,
Shopper no
scanner fan ~ MAILBOX
prefer a place to walk that la not dirty
underfoot and that one ahould not
haw to be knocked down by a ie.p&na
~ LMuna Billa it la required that
all dolt De on a leMh and all penom
wltfi do11 muat carry a :C..cooper" b the pwp.e of eanin.I up after one'• pet. Thia
..U. £or a wry nkle environment. Some people aimplaln. of c:our., but
on the whole most~~
Presldellt
Readins help
To the Editor.
I.a a iilxth cnde teecher I want to
exprem my heartfelt thanka to the
Newport-Mesa Schoola Foundat.Jon
for vidlna funds for a apectal
teM:ber far the upper pades
School. Them Rudenta
who are below ll'ade level are aettina
the Individual attention they Med. 1
now have time tot~ students who
are~ on P'8de level or abow. A
apedal tb8nk you to the people and
corporatiam who donate money to dw
Newpol't .. Mesa SchocU J'oundatioo.
Bellew me, your money la well spent.
MAE GALE
TELEPHONE YOUR
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
See Instructions below
Forgive her!
To \be Editor:
We haw raised a thief and I am eo
Mhuned! Someone ln our area hu been
robbed. 11w l'Yldence la hen, rfCht
befan 1111 .,_.
l~lldL · n. thief la a pretty Utile ~· Bbl4e. dark blue ey-. .i.ncs-Of
limb. Celeste la accepted In our ~•an boMlt bl&nl· She appM"mtly ... bMtld Into ........
--tor lunch and ... dAd tt! 8be 1rabbed half a ball of freab
....,.... me----You ... C.leete 11 OW' yow.a
adoNble Slam. ... cat. Aad wlll ....... -=:.r···· Jarl*w 1-fGr the lunch .. ftlbbid1' -~y J'IRN8TIOM
'Tank ~oad~ funding refused
WASHINGTON -The Rea,an
adminlatration hu made no .ecret o its
earnest hope that the leftist relime in
Nicaragua will somehow dry up and
blow away. Meanwblle, It la t:uml.ng up
the beat by stirring u'§pposition to the
Sandlnlataa and hol joint military ·
maneuvers with Hon uraa near the
NicanlUan border.
But one of the adminlatration's moves
In Hond~aa haa run into an almost
literal roadblock thrown up b y
conadentioua offidala at the Agency for
International Development.
The controversy ls over a $7 .5 million,
150-kllometer road the State
Department wants to help Honduraa
build to the Nicaraguan border, throuah
a rain forest inhabited by Miakito
Indlana. Oatenalbly, the roed would be
built to Jdve the lndlana a means of
aetttna \lieir cropa to market. So the
State Department has asked AID to put
up the money.
BUT AID officials don't _b_U)' the
aaricUltural arsument for the highway.
"It'• a pldamn tank · roed," an '8'8DCY source told my a.xiate Bob SbenDan.
My IOW'Ce9 say the road'a ,.i purpoee
la to make it euier' for the HtiDdUnn
army to move troops and aupPI* to the
'->lated Mlakito landa, which k~
opponenta have been using• a staging
area and sanc tuary for raids on
Sand1nilta outpc»ta acroe the border.
Put almply, A.ID otfidala are tiftld of
uaiJll ecaoomk~funda for larply political ob v particularly
when there are needier ta for
the limited amount of money. AID
Jll:l 11111111
hu thua far refu.ed to build the "*1.
Numerous 1ource1 offer three
~nta apJ.nat the project:
-The road construction would
d.larupt the fragile eooJosy of the virgin
rain fo~.
-The Miskito lnd.lans don't want the
road. They see it aa a means of opening
up the ir an c estral home for
development, which will ultimately le.d
to the theft of their tribal J.anda.
-A wMlthy Honduran buatnemman, ·
who wu once aa:wed of t.ol1w1nl and
m~eral penom. lncludlna a U.S. , standa to make a bundle
from the project. He owna land throua:h which the roed would run.
An AID spokesman aaid the agency
will provide no funda for the
oontroveralal road either th1a year or
next. He aaid AID will not even beoome
involved In preparation of an
environmental-impect statement during
th.la period.
But my aourcea aay the State
Dep&rtmeJlt will continue trying to bully
AID int&-"putttna up the money for the
ro.d. A cable last November from U.S.
Ambauado r John Negroponte ln
Tegucigalpa formally requHted AID
funding.
THE DEBATE over the Honduran
ro.d reflecta a broeder oontroveny that
bu arlaen in the put two yean: the
lncreaal..na polltlci.zaUon of AID funda
under die Rea1an adminlatration.
AID otfidala pnerally arp that their
aaaistance money should be doled out on
the hula of need, not politics.
I repol'ted recently that AID la Pni aJona with a questionable plan to help
Nicaragua'• 90Ulhem netahbor, Coeta Rica; move thouaanda of .. ttlen into
land alon1 the border u a way of
thwarting Sand1n.IN l.ncunkJna.
Tbe c.c.ta Rican project at leMt bu
the flavor of a defen.ive meN"IAtt to
julCi.ty it; tbe Hondurm "t.l:nk med" -not. At any rate, AID offlclala have
evidently dedded to stand and tight on
du. ch
Duke ·holds to • view of environment
Will George Deulane)an be an anti-
environment pemoc?
That la the contention of critics, who
view ha early appointmenta to key
environmental alota aa dlautrow. hia budset cuta for environmental prqp-arm
offensive. The Duke la bet.na compared
by repretentatives of -th"9 @'OUpe to
Pnedent Reapn and Interior Secretary
Jame.9 Wan.
DEU&MEJIAN BAS a more
prapatic 'liew of environmental
protection than b1a predece9or, to be
.u.re, but It la a poe.itton that he haa
ateeclfMlly maintained throughout hla
c.atter. When he took the helm of the
attorney general'• office from Evelle
Y ounpr, one of b1a fint actiooa WU to
ecale beck dramatically the battery of
lawr~ra Younaer ,had aul&ned to a
apec:lal environmental wtion. He did eo
. with COit •Yinp In and, but beUevtnt
all the while that l>Ureeucntic protection
of the environment wu falUna l.n lta
primary objective whlle at the aame time
creeti:na a new layer of government that
did Uttfe but perpetrate ltaelf.
Upon hla•election, Deukmejian wu
met with the tirades ol those
profell1onal environmentalJsta who •w
hb victory aa a defeat for Mother
Nature, the beOnnbMI of an era of battle. =--~tmei\t of GOrdon Van V'8ck • of n90W'a!ll cnly lel"W!d llO fuel
thoae feara. Van Vleck, a former
president of the state chamber of
commerce, hu been predjapoeed ln the
put to crtt.ldze offidaldom'a att.empta to
maintain environmental quality In
California, and rarticularly Jerry
Brown'• methods o doh\l eo.
Deu.kmejian recently add.re-9 thee.
crle9 of anautah by promislna viliJance
IDS' .........
research ataff reduced by half. The
Eneray Comrniaion will endure large
11aff cutt.cka, and prosrama of energy
Joana, street Usht1n1 conversion and
methanol reeerach will be curtailed.. ~
Couta1 Commilllon, which many crttb
contend la little more than a muaiw
program of 90da1 tinkerfnl. will find its
ataff smaller by 42 poaitlona and lta operattnc ~t a1aabed by $2 milllon.
ENVJRO~ENT ALl8T8 should be
conded by Deukmejan'• appointment
of Gordon INffy, a former JetPalator
from Hanlord, u h1a environmental
affaln secretary. Duffy ia an intelligent,
compaaatonate man with proven
credentiala, a moderate voice in this
particular uproar. He contends that \ ~ ot the land la paramount in bla
in the area of envlroomenial protection; objKUws, but that the new alate of
"We are aoin1 to do •verythln1 mvtronmmtal watcbdop will haft .. a
pollllble to _.,.. the people that tMy JDCll"e mind.. than dkl the Brown
wtll be able to drink water that 11 DOt adml:?:atton ln conaldel'ln1 the polluted, to breatblt a1r that ia tie.lthy." oplnlona of bualneu and industrial
He then went on tb defend the cuts in inter.ta. ·
h1a budae& that haw ral8ed the moet It la too eoon to l1am Deu.kmejan for
anger amar\I environmental interests. hit Ktione and aPldntments ln the area
Some of the more controversial of envt.ronmentai ~ part:icularly
ed ti na in Oeukmejian '• 1983-84 In view ot the at.ate'• current money
plan affect the Air Raourca mea.
1 the Eneray and Coastal Time -and not the profnalonal
comm h 1 lo n a, and t be W a 1 t e en~talllta -will be the tnae tat Ma.naaement Board. The ARB wW fJnd ot Geor9 o.u.Jtmejan'a cammitment to
Ila enlorcemmt staff cut by a third. Ill thJa earth. ,
Clergy no longer willing to.'bless' wars
..
I '·
TUl!SOAY, MARCH 1, 1883
ANN LANDERS
ENTEAT AINMENT
TELEVISION
Richard Ouellette, owner of That's Some Body health
club, poses in front of his spa with tales mana1er
Desiree Stinson. Shari Brown (right), health
instructor and aerobics teacher at the club, pub one
of her claseee through the workouts.
82
83
85
.. ..
•
I
A biographer say1 Franklin
Delano Roosevelt was a
mama's boy. Page 82.
$
Spa. • • Get all the facts and figures first
. By KAREN E. llEIN . or .. .,..,,...,...,
Everyone agrees that proper
exercise promotes longevl ty.
And, whether ill jogging,
dancing, aerobics or weight
training, those who exercise
regularly will swear that sweat
and strain enhance the quality of
life.
If you're not a jog,er, and
don't have the dUdpline of skill
to carry out an exercile routine
on yo~r own, you've probably
considered JoininB a health club.
But you might have gotten
stuck in the conskleration sta,ae
when confronted with tbe con.fuain1 array of spas, health
clubs, weight roo~. aeroblca
clules and gyms that all want
your bi astnesa
When Jack LaLanne started
a health center m hia garage
IDOft than 50 years ago, he waa
pretty much a pioneer.
Now, LaLanne'1 European
Health Spas are only one of a
number of private chaina,
family -owned spaa and
non-profit organizatlona that
provide a workout for
overweight, ou t-of-ahape
Americans.
. When looking for a health
club, the first thing to remember
ii dult you don't have to joln one
of theee establillhmenll to 1et
into good physical shape and stay
there.
Anyone can Joi, bicycle, swim
or engage in a sport which
provid es adequate
cardio-vaacular activity. And
there are health and fltneu
aelf·improvement books flooding
the markeL
Jiowever, if you feel you~
afford the luxury of a club
membership and you rank
younelf with the multitudes that
just haven't developed the will
power to go the fitness route
alone, you need to Ule9I your
need.a and venture into a few
spea to -the fadlities. Group fitness comes in varying
levels and at various prices,
according to the number of
facilities desired. It can range
from the no-frilla exerciae and
aerobics cluaes given by local
parks and recreation
d=menll and community
co to the full-ecale heal th
apu which offer everything from
aaunu to racquetball coUrt. to
indoor running tracka.
Of coune, it all dependa on
penonal preference. If you're
considering joinmg a health club,
a good rule of thumb la to
hooestly ask younelf how much
you will u.e the privileges of
membership. Look at your ....
schedule critically and decide .
what ..kind of commitment you
can make: weekenda only, once a
week, f!VerY day?
Memberahip prices vary along
with the extent and the quality
of the club'• staff and facilities.
The better clube usually charge a
one-time er once-a-year initiation
fee plus a monthly uae fee.
An informal survey
showed price range. for annual
membenhlps between $60 and
$250, with monthly fees ranging
from $15 to $35.
At That'• Some Body in
Newport Beach, there la a $99
annual fee plus a monthly fee of
$20 which la paid only If you plan
to attend claaea that month: l1r
other words, you don't ~t stuck
paying for a month when you
don't 80 much u step a foot ln the
mirrored exera.e room .
·Tax reform proposed
Plans .fly thick pnd heavy in capital
dumpect a ahiploed of tee ln Boston Harbor, taxes
have mllde AmerlcaDa t.eny.
A recent 1tudy by the lobbyt.na l">UP OUr.en'a
Choice CQI¥:luded that "most taxpayen feel the
preeent 1yatem .ii unfair." Another 1982 survey
found that one--thlrd of respondent.a felt the tncome
tax WU the maml unfair tax Of ail. '
"I think we•re almost at a cnm in terma of
ople'a wUlln1nea1 to ~1 taxea," claim•
ttve ~t. " people have th1a they',.. riiJm1.nC eome -that other
people are a'YOldinl iu.. ~t not them."
Tax experts •Y· however, that the P'lbllc tendl
to focu. on the wm "tax reform," feellna in ane vacue way that th.la meerw ''lower taDS for me."
Tbele experts •1 the tax-~orm-. ii ....Uy
::i!fi::d of three related probt•m•: tax
llrn Uon. dMtrlbudon of the tax burden. and
otwcbiiiit. ·
That's Some Body offers three
levels of aerobics classes and a
class called Slow Stretch,
designed to increase flexibility
and improve body control. Unlike
some less plush (and leas
expensive) salons. That's Some
Body hires only inatructora with
backgrounds in body dynam1cs
and kineslology and features a
specially destfWed wooden floor
suspended on a flotation system.
The floor helps to prevent the
damage to bones and internal
organs which can occur with
aerobic exercises if they're done
on improper surfaces, said owner
Rich.a.rd O· tellette. .
With the I ncredible
prolllerat.ion of health clul» ln
recent years has come a danger
that is all-too-common these
days. The market for fitnelll as
beginning to be saturated and
more and m or e people are
dec1ding they cannot afford
salons and spu to stay fit.
Recently, some health clube,
like other businesaes, have gone
out of business or declared
bankruptcy . Aa In any
bankruptcy, the creditors -
members who had paid for one-
or two-year use of the c:luba'
facilities -were left hoping to
recoup all or part of their money.
Another danger is the
poasibillty of doing too much
strenououa activity too aoon.
Qualified lnat.ructon should pace
your exerdaes accordina to your
age and abWty. If you overdo the
tint few timel you can end up
with aching mu1cle1 or even
seriously injure younelf.
Checking with your phyaiclan
before you take on any exerciJle
routine isn't a bed Ide.. And it's a
must if you have any hiatory of
health problems or are pregnant.
Shari Brown makes exercise look easy., but it's
not when you are If newcomer who's out of
shape.
How much Income tax revenue
Uncle Sam loses on:
'
1113
(bllllona)
126.1 127.t
.,... 121.1
ltU
116.1
l
I
·--"
• . I
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/TUllday, Maroh ,, 1 13
Scoliosis .. ~est imp.or.tant:
.
DEAR ANN LANDUS: l am lylna •t home
ln •body brat"e tor \he eecond t1me ln four r-n. =~ t;: sw-pry that lhould.never ~~~
1 ha\le "ICOl.k*a. • ou.rvature of the •pine th.al
Wll ~ detecMcl and treated Hrly mouch· $o, at
.,. 14 I have • eplne wttb lt fuMd vene~.
two Jar>& 1ieel rodJ, clamp.. ma"· bol" and wire
lNI lt tofltber. I.am W\lble to 1lh my
-old eon. .
Her. ii • ~ to all parwnta of ldolacent
d\l).dren: One out of 10 of tbO!lt kkb will develop
8COllolla, ~ from mild to MY tt. It Lau.
only 30 ~ to conduct • liml>le t.ettt to
.• ,,.
WH~Alt WILL I <i&r
MORr POTENTIAL 1
By PHlL INTERLANOI of LaOUna.S.ach
~
ff I/JI
I
"You come down from tha\ internal sunroof
while I'm talkl to ••
• determine whJch child 1hould t>. Men by a ·pC'Of-1~ tot fW'ther evaluadon. The11e SO
aecondl inveeted tn ohlldrtn between th• .,. of
10 and 14 could •v• a lifet.lmo of aaony, dllabWt)'
and cruahlni docior bW., U ecollolta ta not treeted whlle a child ii •till
JJ:Owirli, abolili one ln five~ will WOZ'MJ'\ into
idulthOod, u rnJ.ne cU<L The lunat become compr....ci and the ti-.n enlar8dd from rib
rotatkln. Sw-aery to correct 1uch a condition it not
only ptinful 'hut coatly. U detected early enouah,
the weartna of.a brace ln many lnltanoes m.y •
make 1u.raery un.nectlllrY· Here are a few th1nCJI to look fQr ln your
teen-aaer: Ia one ahouldet hiaher than the ·other?
Ia one aboulder blade pcotrud1ni'f Ia one hJp blgh~
Ol' ~ prominent?
It would be wonderful 1f we could pt all
achooll to have an l.01\ual acreenfna program from
gnde five throuah nine. My parent Qr i.e.cher who ii interested' in leamlna more abOut this
aubject ahould write to me for· a free brochure. I
am 'Kenneth Love, vice pretldent of the National
Sc:olioala Foundation, 48 S~ Rd., Belmont.
Maa 02178. Thank.a for your help, Ann -BEEN THERE ~
" DEAR KENNETH LOVE: I bope )'Oa laa•e u
eaer,etlc 1taff. 'Yoa're 1ota1 to need It. nukl
·lor •lnl me tlte oppomudty to belp mJIUou of
c'11 ren. · · -
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am an unmarried
male who la totally and completely atrai&}lt. A
co-worker ·who II gay hu a mad cruah on me and
is ma1dnl my life mllerable. He followe me ·
atound, tella me he lovee me and la alwa)'I teytng
to touch me. .
I have told blm repeatedly that I am not
interested, but he doesn't teem to get the mesage.
He keeps telling me I am wonderful and how
much he mjoya looking at me. Sometimes I get ao
~ rd like to pute him one ln the mouth, but he ii ao ..Wtive I'm sure he would become
unglued for life. Alao, he'• a nice guy and I would like to keep him as a friend.
Plea.ae tell me how to deal with this pathetic,
love-Ack fellow. -HANDS OFF IN HOUSTON
DEAR BANDS OFP: Get toaglt wldl dlJ1
elpi-lauded ezplorer at once. No more Mr. Nice
1 G-.,. Tell ll1m la plaia lanpa1e tbat yoar
friadab.lp wW come to a acreeddag b.11 If Ile
doesa't .1top pe1t.erta1 yoa. U lie cont1Dae1 to
make a aalsuce of ldm1eU, live ktm tbe
permueat freete. No oae •'oald llave to pat ap
will 1ucll bra11ment.
What'• the st.ory on pot, c:oaine.:1LSD1 PCP,
downers, apeed? c.an you hMJdle them if you'rt!
careful? Send for Ann Landers' sill-new booklet,
''The Lowdown on Dope." For each booklet
~ at!nd 12. plua a lof16, 6elf-addreeed,
.wnped en~Jope (31 amt.a ~e) t.o Ann I.Anders, P.O. Box J 199,, Ch.lcAgo. ID. 6061J.
March Dress Sale
•
Hilgren
Square
Sidewalk
Sale!
Coming
3/11 & 3/12 •
Don't
Miss It!
Something Special
f eminin~ f aihions
250 E. I 7th. ~I• fe.,. • lt lSSi 11 " . .,,.. .... "' ,....... ... ~ -· "'"" ,_. I thr• Ill
,
Harry Truman,
)'.ndon Jobnton_
and Dou1lu
MacArthur, from
left, are called
mama 'a boys by
a blosropher.
Tliey're . called .mama's boys -
• NEW YORK (AP) -What did Lyndon
JohNOn, Doualu MacArtluu, Franklin Delano
&c.evelt, Harry Truman and Frank Lloyd
Wrtaht have ln common, t.ldee fame and alOf)'1 •
They were all mama'• boyt, acco.rdina to
an article by bloSJ'a~hu Devtd McCullouah tn
the March i.ue of PtychoJ.oty Todly
~te the term'• neptlve connotatioN, M£ullouah uid bel"I •mama'• boy la not
necelNrily.1 btwl ~· Freud noied that '• man who bu been the
lndllputab)e favorite of hia mother ke,pa for
Ufe the feel.lni of• conquerer, that confidence
ot aucce91 that often lnducee real IUCCeel."
Rooeevelt, McCullo\Aah uid, "appean to
have been the ~t pampered little darl!J11 of
all, with solden cUtla kept NCl'OlanCt long put
babyhood." The mothera of Wriaht, MacArthur
and Johnaon alto let thetr eona' curla grow.
Wright'• mother decided, even before he
was born, tJiat he would be an architect,
McCullough said.
EIMA 80M8fCK
AT WIT'S END
There was an ad ln a paper the other day for a
MacDo nald 'a which now accept a Vl1a or
Mastercharge with a $3 m1nimum purc:haae.
That saya somethfn1 about our economy,
doesn't it?
It allo 1&)'1 llClmethtna about how far plutic
money has COfMlf I wouldn't dream of taking my
kida anywhere to eat without the leCUl'ity of a gold
American Exprea card Rfvlno me unlimited funda.
Before they could aay-;rtoi tot'' or "poo poo"
they knew wordl like Chateaubriand and eecargot.
I u.eed to aee other couples ln restauranta with their
children and they'd tcm the baby a crust of bread or
a cracker and they'd sit there and slobber happily
for the next two houn. ·
Our kids acarfed away everrhif\i bat the
check. I wu 3~ yean old be.fore knew what a
doay bq WU.
· --While visitfug with my kida ln L .A. 1ut rnooth..
Aft.er hia birth. Mc:Cullouah uid, "She •W
that her ch1ld had alt)dftda of CX>lor9d • cardboud lhep19 to play with and lll'DOOih
mal>M blockl with whJch to build, 'the.-of
whlchf W~t wrote, 'never afterward leevee
the flnpn'.
When MacArthur entered the U.S .
MWta.ry Academy at West Point, hi.a mother
moved lnto a hotel off campue.. When &c.evelt
entered Harvard, htl mother moved to Botton
Aa prmldent, Truman usually called hi.a
mother at home lo M1-ourt teV!eral tiOlea a w6e~ especlallf i.fter he had weathered a
crt.\I.
The p.t men appe&r to have been happy
to have had dominant monw. While ln tint
8J'ade, 1or lnltance, Johnaon delivered a~
he wrote endtled, "rd Rather Be Mama 1 JoY·"
McCullouf.h, who la working on a bOok ·
about Truman 1 Ufe and times, won the 1982
American Book Award for "Morninp on
Honeback," an account of the early life of
Theodore Rooeevelt.
..
I I ..
..-~ .
t
I invited two ot them out to eat. It wu a perfect!)' ~ ~
safe move. My da~hter was on a diet. She told me '
to. She had wrtnen ua how her atomach had ahn.ank
ao lhe could barely force down a little oomomme ·•
with a few &reena at lunch and for dinner it WU '
juat aomething broiled and spartan. Besides, the
wu a vegetarian now and that ruled out steeb.
My aon worked rur::1; and alwaya had a late
breakfut 90 I knew he ouldn't want anythjng
heavy. He said he was cutting back and trying
to la.e a few inches.
Two days ago, my huaband waa going through
our charges when he came aero. the one from the
L.A Or~. (I hate paying for anything I can't sweat.
in or cant mnember.) '
"What'• the bill from Ch~ Eddie'1?" asked my
huaband.
"lt'a a restaurant. We had dinner there."
" 'We' meaning the Waahlngton Redakina?"
"We meaning your two children."
"Couldn't you have arranled fl.nandng'?"
"Look. I feel as louay about it as you· do. It's the
flrat time I didn't dare awa.llow all the food until
they called ln to verify the account." •
Aa mv hUlbend wrote the check he qhed and
uid, 0 1 aw;e hope the amblance WU worth It."
l penonally thqht It WU aalty, but the kida
ate ewty bit of It!
4
. Four productions wil~ open
.along Coast this week
By TOM mus Dohn Shaw ia d1rect1na the ahow, which +vill ~--Dellf ,.... .... be staaed Fridays and Saturda>'-at 8:30 through "' Four more productiona joln the ranka of llvinl April fat.the theater. 7272 Maple St., Westminster. ~ter alona the Oranae Cout this week. lncludfna Call 994-4113 foe ticket infonndon.
the third In a .rtes of world premieres at South Ai.a openlna Friday la Robert Bolt'a hiatorica1
CoMt Reptrtory. drama "A Man for All Seuons" at the Gem
"ClO.ely Relat~," a fir~~ play by Bruce Theeter. Mat Reitz la directiJw. and Dan Cartmell.
MacDonald. opem tomocroW at SCR'a Second Staae Kurt Rhotlda, Gary Bell and Thomu Francia head under the dlnction of Lee Shallat. The drama the c.aat
fOC\.ld Oft crt.ee within a family. · · Ai.a bou.1 .. ., ln thia week are .. See How They Performances wUl be 1lven Wedneadaya ....... throuah Saturdaya at 8 p.m. and Sundaya at 7:30 at Run" at the San Clemente Community Theater, the Gem, 12862 Main St., Garden Grove. "Inherit the Wind" at the We.tminlter <:ommuntty Raervationa 636-7213. Theater and "A Man for. All Seuona" at the Gem Completln1 ita run thla weekend ta the
Theater in Garden Grove. Showcue Productiona drama "ti.Wes of the Field" S~hen Keej> and Penel~_ Wlndust hfttd the at the Westminater Auditorium, '7~71 West:minater
cut of 'Cloeely ~ted" at sea. Lyda Naff and Ave. Flnal performancea are Friday and Saturday
Brad ·eowcm are their teen-• childre=th at 8:80 an4 Sunday at 2 p.m. Call 894-6786 for Laura Campbell and Ku GANI com~ c.aat. l'e9el'Vationl.
Perfonnancee will be ~ Tuelda19
Saturdays at 8:30. ~ at 8 C aiMt -..keid Al80 °" ~ aJons the OOMt are "Betrayal" at
maUneel at 3 p.m. at the 8CR tet,"'85& Town ,$outh CoMt ·~ (967-4033), "Private u~· Center Drive, c.o.ta M-. 8-ervadonl 957-40'3. at che Newport Theater Arla Center (&t2-8119),
Robert ~ ia atqlna the Brttllh farce "The Marrfa1• Go Round" at the Huntinaton
"See How They Run .. with Ber6ara HoIUa and Olrl Beach Playhouae (847-4485), "Annie Get \'our
BenMtt c.aat In the lelldJ.na rm.. Othen ln the a.how Gun" at Sebaatlan'a Weat Dtnner Pla~bouae
are Davtd Morin. Joyc. lfuwon, Cbarlea Ashbaugh. (492-9950) and "An "1molt Perfect Peraon' at the
Erin Lu.ate, Richard Tudor, Joel Boucher and Hariequ1n Dinner Play~ (9'19-61511). '
David Merz. and~~~ieor.~5d:"= 'Voices' auditiom tonight Playboute, 202 Ave. CabrUlo, San Clemente.
Raervatblll U2-0480. ...... · Audlticn for U. S\mn Grlff.ln'a -1-~''V°"*''
"Inherit the Wind" at the WeatmJntter will be held tantaht an1S 1"\al'lday at 8: p.m. In
O:mmunJty TbMter ltan Art Wlntlow (repeedni two loc:atiom.
hla role of Henry Drummond from an Irvine ~"II will be held in the Oranae
production lut year) and Cb.arlea Taylor u the C.o111t ~ roam tnd 'nlu.ndaY'a at tM
.courtroom anta&'Oftltti ln a benle '1V« the teec-Nq Hunti.ftCklll ~. 18f00 J1orida St.,
of evolution. Mitchell Nunn, Wayne Mayberry, Hun~ 'Belch.
Diana Grog and BU1 Malldn ai.o play majcl' role. J\ttther lnformatio~ be obtained b~
1n the drama. caWq Na..._ &rbr at 7. . .=....=.;:;...=.;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~---~~~
2 ACNSIY AWMID ~.,.,,,,
"'Frances' is aTriu r
LOJESKX .............. .., Mfl-. ..........
"'THI INTITY"... . ............ .. ,,..,-. ......
"DON'T MISS 'TABlE FOA FIVE'.
V*'ft MlrWtOul Por1Nlt Turne · THli 'Tlbtt' Into A , ....... _..,,.,,..,,.,.,..,
UI Ar I m.
Jon\t>ight .,
;&t~
Im
1)1 '
I ,-.1 •I' •ol I II
~
~
I
•
-.Lyricists influenced /Jy Ham11Jerstein_
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Lyrtctatl Alan and
Marilyn Berpnan. wtih Uuw a-r nam&nadona.
MY Che .,_Wit lnfl~ in their ..... c:an'tt from Oiicir H.amment.et.n -wtth·• ucu. help frcim
the Statue of Liberty.
TMy taJd when they met Hanunef'Ntn Mtl)'
in t.Mt.r CArMn he eho'nd th..i a p~pb of
the ltatue ot lJ~ taken trom 1 M~. It
lhowed &he ~ attention to weey lock of hair and the ct.caUa an the top ol t.M heed.
"When that 1tatue w11madenearly100 yeon c I A.UIUI• , .... ,... ' ,.. ............... a.. ......... lllW ~
6J.4 ZSJ ~~r S
Yew-.. ....... =-~·········· ....._ ...... ,.,
* 8ARQAIN MATIN••••
MoM8Y t•ru l•ttml•Y
All Perlonn~•• before 1:00 PM
·~·,_..c. ........... .......,.,
•tt!IB loM;;2:oo•On•J
"""'"°"' A TMC9" • :l_'l,l!flit: Ql -----
"THI INTITY" ... -----
~ iTllMI•"-------
I AktWUOlt < f N llll
!>OU1H N••• "
ANAHEIM l•IJ 'VI IN
·~ "lpPMIS'I CttOtCI" ----
a,o, th.-ICWp~ aouJd hardly have known that any
•>W other tJuin W-of blrdt woUJd ewt" • that de&aU," Hammerlwtn told them~ •"fhe eculJtor
aJ)llnMChed hla Job the way wery youna IOl'\IWriter ahOuJd. knowtnc that ll the JDb .. done rifht Tt ., ... IQC>d.'''
The Ber1rplan1 won Academy Award
nomlnaUom for the~ 11t MUrht Be You,'' from ''Too11de''~ 11How Do You X..O tJie M\.UllC Playtna,"
from "Belt J'riendl": and "ll We WeN ln f.ovi,"
from "Yt, Glorpr"
• , I
• f
ri· ••
; I
•
IM C>Janoe Colet DAil. y PILOT ITutlday, Mii
._Allt'lt:l~D
THERE ff(JST BE AN ~AW/IWTO
EAT
THE
t'i\MIL''
CIBCL'8
by 811 Keape
· I taught PJ how to go potty by himself He 1ust
needs you to get him out. ..
.
MARMr\DlKt: by Brad Anderson
"Jogging time Is alx o'clock. not toor!"
SHORT OftOllt
by Jim Davis
BURP. .. I ~HOUt.P
HAVE lMOUc;.HT OF
THAT LONCJ AGO
"All rtght, chlld,..n, first wt HY greet."
DE;\'\IS THE '9E~.\Ct: Hank Ketchum
I DOt(r~ow ..
I HEVEl TM()OQ(T
A&OUT IT ...
11
I
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
AHVOHE MEfCE l(HOllJ
WMAT A CCW01E
LOOKS UKE ?
Both vulnerable. North
dl'al•.
NORTH
•Q ~ c;I AQJtU I
o AU
•KU
WEST EAIT
+U •AUi
IV J(l054 c;/f
o .llt o.Q7t4
t lOSO t AQU
80\ITR ...... ,.
~u
0 1'10& •JT
The bidd1nx:
N~ £pt 8Mth Weet
I r; OW. 1 + r ..
Z ~ Pue t + Pue a NT Pa• 4. , ...
Pu1 Dtl&e Pua PUI
Pue
Opening Ind: Four or '='
In w1n1Nr. Wett Palm
Beat'h be(OmH a mini New
York. Many of the Big
Appl!!"s leading bridge
SHOE
DR.\BBLE
t'M wott\EO, ~N.
If l ~~\\. °™'~ E~M,
I'M IN 61(, '1~\..f.~
r..Q~ ·.
QOAEN ANO OMAR SHARtr:
player• have condotnlnlunll
U1trt. and tht eoefal t11bbtt
btld1• 1amH olt.n have th•
aamt cull u tboet of New
York'• brld1t clubt. On tbla
hand, our uaoclatt Lee
H1111 btld tb1 North card•
aod hi• wife, Sylvia. wca In
ehtr1t ol tht Soutb holdin1.
Pur11tt mlpt Cklle111•
f-lon~·· dtd1lo1 to Jump to
three ao trump. Oth1N
ml1ht r .. 1 tbat 8outb •hould
ll'J four htaci. rather thta
lour 1pad1e. But Sylv11
Ha•a uptd.t4 to find two
1.,.dt1 In dummy. and 1be
wu atr&fd that ~tr band
ml1ht oot prpduce m1ny
Ltlili at a heart contract. '°
wt •rmptl•lse with her
dtdaloo.
Ap.lntt four •ptd11 W .. ,
Mletttd lht unwlM lead of a
ht1rl -the auction 1u1·
1efted a mloor·•ull alUck.
Mrt. Haun took the flne11e
and waa relieved to 1ee it
win. Erttrle1 to her hand
were a problem There were
Olll, ~tH. ~. IJENQ-4 ...
1'~'!> NO NUO ~ '400
10 WOAA~IU 1.'M
~o~
two eeruln trump loutt. aad
1h1 had lo avoid loelnr more
than one trlck,.ln the minor
1ult1.
Declarer tolvtd her nrat
problem by l11din1 the
quten of trurnpe from dum
my and, when Eut play•d
low, 1h1 overtook In her hand
with tht lllnjl Now 1ht could
continut with the ten or
trumpe. !Ht won the jack
but ht Wt few eholct• of 111lt
eard•. U ht played a dla
mond, deelarer would avoid a
loetr la thl& tuJt by playln1
for apllt diamond honora. If
Et1t c:hoee lo wh the aot of
trumpt and ult with a
trump. decl.tnr would Mt up
tht heart 1ull via 1 HCOnd
finHM and would bt home
frff.
So Eut elect.ed to Jive up
a d ub trick by leading the
a(e of clubt folio~ by the
queen. Declarer won in dum
my. returned to her hand
with a club rull and led thl'
nine or trumps, East took Lht
FOB BETTE• OR t•oa ttOalE
I [)ONT ~HTlt> FP.CE 1R~
THoUGHI CJF MQVit«; ~.
Bl)t I OON'r FIT IH'Tb Tt1E
scs,...e:.H~.
"I ELLY ~·
~yoo~~R
~"1rTHR~CF
SANe.,NORMAL, OP3:>1NA~'(
t1JSIC~
~o
..
ace of 1ptdet. but •u facitd
wit~ the um• pNdlumtat
u 1trller. No matter wbat he
clld, declarer would be ablt to
draw tbt lut trump. "'*' tht heart flneHe and pt rid
ol tht diamond IOHr on tht
let or heart.I. Dtclartr loll
only two trump trlcb ind
tbt ace of clubt.
l•~~•r ~rl41• cl•~•
~, ... ~ ... .......................
Dt ... , ....... tddllc 1"
4ea '&7 Chrlu o., ... ,
"'Hr·De&J lrltl1•" wlU
tMCti, ..... ..,........ ...
.... .. t.Wa ........... ... ... ,...~ ......... ...
cu• r. ~ ,,.._._
y.,. a e9PJ U4I a .........
...d 11.15 t. "Gena-F ...
Dul," care ti d1l1
... .,.,.,. P.O. lea tff,
Norw.M, N.J. 07148. Mab
dMcke peJ&blt t.. JI•••
peperb.olt1.
i .
\ by Jeff MacNelly
by Kevin Fagan
by Lynn Johnston
SIS!-1H~s ~o :
SOcH 1HING-!
by Tom Bat1uk
by George Lemont
, .
. ...;
·~ ~:
,, ..
)
....
:·
~·
., .•
I l
r
. ___ _,., __ .. a I •
John Sehneider •nd Ana Aiicia (left) portray former I oven, and
Joeeph Haeker Ill and Catherine Hieb play a recently dl\'orced
"'uple 1D tonisht'• CBS movie, "Happy Endinp," at 9100 on
<llauel 2 . ·
'
'Nappy Endings' suirVives
Case "of·chronic cui'eness
. By PUD ROTHENBERG ,,, .............
NEW YORK -Lovera on the rebound are amonc llfe'1 moat vulnerable characters. That
~ eome of the bizarre behavior exhibited ln
"Happy~.·· a CBS l'J)OYte tontght (oh KNXT,
ChaftM1 2 at 9:00) that haa jwt ~h clevenww
and charm to overoomt a cue of chronic cuteness.·
Nick Callohan (John Schnelder) hu been
ditched by h1a strlfrlend. Liu Sage (Catherine
Hicka) II pln1na for her ex·hu.band. It's not hard to
fore.ee lhat tbe. reluctant IOlltaire players will be
willi~ before the 11 o'clock news.
all, t.bil ii network television, and the
film la Wled "Happy Endinp." But their tiroin4'
alwaya teerm to be off. When he's ready, she's not,
and vic&-veru. When he'• headed in the door, she's
on her way out.
But IOIDe •trance th1no hac on the way to
their HollYwood IUDlet. Clke fl.rat meeting,
when Nick 1pn)'I ~ foam all over
Lisa by .m.tab. lln11 um ihe way you met your 1pOU1et Or ~ first outing toeether, when Nick
imadra Llaa wlth a banana cream ple on purpose.
· Nkk la a ltnJ&8linl novelist, whole creative
Jukw have been sapped by wlatful recollections of \'enmtca (Ana Alldal.). He's a bit of a Bow and a
fulltlme chlld. Veronica left Nick for a deeper and
wealthier r.latlonthlp. "I am not 1llb," Nick
proi.ta later to Uaa. "rm just aupertlcial, and I'm aood at It."
Liu la a would-be ~ who brokt off her marrlaae becaUle Jamee (JOM~ Hacker m) WU a
worse h\/1band than lover. Cotuumed by her =rhlg lonatnp for J&rQll, Liu blurta out to
"I bate him.''
"I bate him, too," Nick Neponda supportively.
''You don't even know him.''
"I trust your Jud4pnent."
Thia kind of dlaloaue aivea promlae to a
aophlaticated romantic comedy, and "Happy
l!hdlnga" 11 ICCMda on eome levela. It'• a aurprislng
movie. Whenever the plot la headed for a
conventional twlat, the film bounce• off In a
diffenmt dir9ction.
What the relationahip between Nick and Liu
lacka in believability. It makee up ln playfulnela
and UabWty.
Hieb deeerves much of the cndit. The star of
the busied lm'ie9 ''Tucker'• Witch" and pttvloualy,
an Emmy-award nominee for her portrayal of
'Mtrilyn'Monroe, lfJcka la bouncy and expresidve,
dlaplaytnc a keen Comedy eeme.
Schnelder, the ~turned atar from "The Dukes
of Hazzard," ll'OW. on you, even tbouah he overacta like craiy. .
CBS aaya tbla la the first TV movie from
Motown Productions, the orpnlzatlon known best
for its m\.Wc. "!Uppy EndlnsJ" ta a credible star\.
CHANNEL LISTINGS
9 k"IXT ICB51
D l(NBC (NBCI
• I( TLA (Ind I
.KABC IABCI
e KFMB IC8S1
fJ KHJ TV (Ind I e KC S T (A8C1
eKTTV tlnd I
• KCOP TV I Ind I
• ICCET I PBSI
• D KOCE IPBSI
IMlltOOCl!ftCll
co· 0n Tv
Ill l TV
H, HBO
'C CCtntim<ul
,,, IWORI NV , NV
31' IWlB!">I
I (ESPNI
:tJ IShoMlmcl
• Sc>otllQflt
• ((.4 blt' Nfow~ Nt'lworll)
1983 ..
IF=-iltWHWLM ..,. -........
SBNIQHfwnH~VD
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11..:C
• (I) MCMJNf & WR
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-11:30-(i)MOVIE 10--3:30-
TONIGHT i=21) MC NEWS NIGHTUHE
l!EMOHA1. ANAHC(
-3:50-
(CJ MOVIE 100cu.e -•:OO-ANEWDAY .. EDEH (!) TOP O' THE MOAflMG -11:66--4:06-(C)MOVIE ®MOVIE -~ -4:30-,--Tl)llMllfT ~18PY zrv:rLMTwo,m 8'1UWHCL£
LOYE, AM9llCAN STYL£ (I)MOVIE
PHOTO GROWTH
CHARTBONm
with e•ch 9St deposit
on • color portr•lt pKk•ge.
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·Boots remind Alda of ·'M* A*S*H' )
WATCH'IOUR
CHILO GROW,
INCH
BY
IHCH
SMJl£ BY SMJLE.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -More than
anytbinc, the combat boota he wore when
nartraytng "Hawkeye" nim1nd Alan Alda of rv•A•s•lt," the hit TV eertes that concluded its
1 l-1"J' nan wlt.b a tpedal preeentatSon lalt nlaht.
"I took the bootab.mne with me and I look at
them and I get touclied." There's IOIDelhini that ru mm about that character." aaid Alda.
"When I finiabed ahooq, I .ieally was very
churned up," be aald. '"'n\at'• partly why It'• been
hard f« me to find Ume to talk about It, becauae I
really do'n't want to talk about IL·• I "M-A •s•H" t!'XK'\.&t1ve producer Burt 1 Mealfe aa.l.d HawkAry. "spoke for the insanity of·
· wm:, the 'horrible cobtnidiction of patching up
young men in order to let them to out ana kill
.,aln.''
I AJda d.1saarees. I .. I don't~ be aymboli.Jed anythlna. I
mlaht eeem =uoua aaylng thla. but l do believe it.~ , we waritecf to humani1.e the
experlent'e of war ... l think that had an effect
on the audience."
Alda aaya be won't ,et involwd ln another
eeries except u a creative conau.ltant. But already
in the works is a aertea hued on "The Four
l Seuona," the 1981 movie Alda wrote, directed
and 9'&rred ln.
· Alda la aupervlllng the .erlea about mid-life
cries in the liwa of four ccupla. He bu more
I moviell to make, too. But foe the dine being, )le
aaya be feel.a completely tulftlled.
'Tm a very fucky man. rvw aot everyth1.na I
• want, ~ I pcmibly oouJd want. Now that
I don't haVe to a1>0Cit 12 hows a day, I have time
to really t.lance my life. to do the recuJ.ar,
mundane t.bmD people do " -
While·"WA•S"H'' ended 1ut niaht for Alda,
the show WM over long ago for four acton who
pla~ 111)' ram a.loQa ~ way:
Wqrre Bopn. who left.the role of Trapper
John beeau.e hie wanted more cr.tive
respcmalbWty; McLean Stevenaon, who shed the
part of Henry Blake to pursue other challmps:
"I'm a very lucky man. I've 1ot
everytbins I want, everthin& I
po88ibly could want. Now that I
don't .have to shoot 12 houn a clay,
I have time to really balance my
life, to do the regular, mundane
thinp people do."
Larry Unvtlle. who oeued pla)'ina Fruit Bumi -
becau.e ol the cbarader'a llmited .cope, and Gary Burlhoff. who pve up the part o( Radar ()'Redly
foe • wider ranae of actinl-Roten hu had upa and dOWN .tnc. mvtnc
the aenes ln 19'77. On the m.lnua aide w• "Oty of A.reels.'' a ~lived NBC eerlel in the ~
Chandler mold. &cen blamed the faDUtt en poor
preparation and story qaulity.
But that WM followed CBS' .. Hou. •
Calls." Al~ lt w• canceled, Rosen coosiden
It hJa finest achlevemmt -ewn topplna
1'M•A•S•H."
Linville baa been worklna ateadJ.ly over the
yam and, in addition. the adcr who once
kidnapped Radar O'Reilly'• teddy be.ar ls now makJni the fluffy toya in hie lpu'e time foe bia
aister-in-law*1 atore in Tornmce. .
"It atarted out 11 a joke and now rm up to
my butt ln cloth, stuffin8 and bean," he laughed.
"My wUe dared me to make a beu and, after atx
or aeven dJaaaten. I came up wt a
deoent·lookin& bem.''
He aaya the work ls "aoorMh
between actlna roiee."
Buriihoff left ''M• A• .. ln 1980 and haa
de'llOted lurme1f almost uatvely to •tate work.
lnclud=i. ln '-rhe l and the PulSycat." " ~ It Sem'' and the current ''A Cloeer
LoOlc: It IC.em.''
"When I le1t the aert-. I very much wanted
to cultivate an -=Una care.r,'' •YI Burshoff. "I
.wanted the lmrneotlat. audience rapome. the
tpoDtane&ty ol ttqe work and of heering the
lauchts." .
Steventon. wbo plaY*t Col. Henry Blake
from 1972-76, bu Ma the most TV exposure since
he left ·•M•A•s•a"
Nett.bet' "Hello. Larry" nor ''The McLean
Steve.on Show.'' another lltuatlon comedy, were
~K>C! I I I but hil lai.t effoc1. ABC'• '' la a ~ ratinp.
THESE DAYS ONL YI
• WED. MAR. 2nd
• THUR. MAR. 3rd
1 • FRI. MAR. 4th
SAT. MAR. 5th
• SUN. MAR. 8th
DAILY 10 .AM-.8 PM
'SUNDAY 10 AM-5 PM
BEACH BOULEVARD
WEITMINfTEA
HARBOR BOULEVARD
COSTA MEIA .
MAGNOLIA STREET
HUNTINGTON BEACH
CAMINO DE ESTRELLA
IAH CLEMENTE
-·-----------------------· I .... I
ORANGE COAST COLLEGE I
"Save Our Teachers" Rally I
Learn About The Issues That
Threaten Orange Coast and Golden West Colleges
•w faculty and Student Speakers
.·OPEN FORUM FOR
. CITIZENS -BANDS
I I
I
I
I
I I .
I
\
l l
I
' -Orange Coat DAILV ,-ILOTITueeday, Maroh 1, 1013
-WHO ELSE WANTS TO LOOK YOUNGER WITHOlJT GC>ING TO A DOCTOR?
Amazing New Fo1;1nula1 From Beverly I fills
l "Lets You Take Up To.10 y~·otr
1 · Your Face Without The ·
· And · Of .Plastic Surgery
-I
H•'e you ever thought
"11011t having a I ace lift?·
If so, perhaps you should
.. wait. Sur1ery, as you know,
ls 'ery expensive, and many
people feel it should only be
used as a last resort. Not
only that, there is now a new
product on the market that
lets you take up to 10 years
ofl' your . face without the
expense and trouble of goin\
to a doctor.
This product was devel-
oped by Mrs. Ernest Borg-
nlae and many of the top
Ital's in Hollywood abso-
lutely swear by it. In fact,
Jessica Walters, Brenda
Yaccaro, Coani~ Stevens,
·Maureen Dean, Jed Allen,
Debbie Reynolds, Tommy
~;and Jo Lasorda and Jayne
1 Meadows are just a few of 1'the Important celebrides who
1 use and entbusiasdcally en-
. done this product.
I
... · And what about Ernest
Ill• =Borpine? Did you see him a
.few weeks ago flgbtin1 with
fascinating. It is a mysteri-
ous formula that comes from
~he roots of a very rare cac-
tus plant thJtt was first dis-
covered by the Aztec Indians
hundreds of years ago. And,
until now, this remarkable
look-young treatment was
only avail~ble in certain very
remote sections of Mexico.
.
This formula is certainly
not cheap but the stars who
·use it say it works like
magic. The entire process
takes only half an hour and
insiders say there is nothing
like it for anybody who
wants to look years younger
than their actual calendar
age.
"/ have not had a facelift. The only reason I look younger today
It is easy to use. All you do
is apply the formula to your
than I did JO years ago is because of what my wife has discovered."
\ -Ernest Borgnine . ' .
face and wait. "The cream is ply go ahead and order Mrs.
pink when you apply it, and · Borgnlne's· f ormwa by mail
gradually turns white," says or telephone. Then, as soon
ToYa. After it turns white it as it arriv~, try it Qut in the
should be removed. One of privacy of your home, and
the great things about it is take a close look at the
that there is no guess work. amazing change you will see
It 'knows' what to do by in your mirror! After that, if
itself!" you are not 100% satisfied,
money b11t yo11 can lose years
off your appearance I
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~mpfyse~b~ktbeem~y
It is easy to order. hnt fill
out the coupon below and
send it to Mrs. Borgnine with
your payment. Or, if you
wish to order by Visa or
Master Card, you can dial
1-(800) 453-1214. Either
way, your order will be sent
promptly by return mail.
Thank you.
! '' ••• Actually, he looks so ·good many
of his co-stars have accused him of ..
) . . having a/ace lift! ... ''
'Tom Selleck on Magnum,
·P.I.? If you did see him you
tprobably noticed · that be
ltoob youn1er now than be
did 10 yean ago. Actually,
~be looks so 1ood """'>' o/ lai1
~ co-1t•r1 uve oecuetl lrbn of :uug "I •ce lift I
• . •
f liat Ernie awean It la not
•
1
ftnte and, at a recent press
COllfereace, be stated ·that tbe , ..ay reuoa be looks lou1er
... , .... lie did • ,..,.
qo II •1ca111e of wlaat ill .., ........... .
"But the best thing of all,"
says Mn. Borpine, ''is the
way it makes you look yean
and yean younger with just
one applicadon. In fact," she
says, ''this is what I call a 'no
excuse' product that Is
backed up , 100% by my-
penonal guarantee."
product container and Mrs.
Borgnine will see to it that
you get a complete refund
with no questions asked •
•
Remember I You can't lose
Copyrlglll • TOVA Corporation 1983 NO·fUH OftDlft COUf'ON
----· • -------,,...._ "'' '" 8"° ma111ocsay1 ------------------.,
TO: MRS. ERNEST BOAGNtNE I
c/o TOVA-9 Corporation vtTALNOTll Credtt card or-. can be Mndted 341 Huntley Or., Dept. T• by p11one 0ta1 , ''°°' 4SS-1~1•
Loa Angelea, CA. 90048 MM ....... ll•TOUnu
Dear Mrs. Borgnlne:
Yea. I want to try the formula you ha~,. dlecovered. I am encloalng $39.00 plus
$2.75 postage and handling (Total $41 .75) and I understand I muat be 1ocw,
aatlafled or that after 3()..daya I return the empty product container and receive
a complete refund with no queetlona aaked.
NOTa: Check hw• 11 you wtllh to orcMt by cr.dlt card. 0 VIM 0 MuWcard 0 Amerlclln ExpNM
Card Number --------Exptratlon Oat• -----
Print Name ---------~-.. ,-•• -.'!W~~.u--CNiiilfli~1~----
~~'"' ~-------------------~
City ----------Stat•----Zip ---
u
"'
....
r
I
An Advertiaina Supplcmcn io the Daily Pilot .
Financial .plan: road to a richer life
~ I
Carefiil savings, ilivestment strategy can multiply retirement resources
BJ GLENNA JOHNSON FOSTER ........ C.114 ,, 1
L-\~In today'1 economy, a family of four would
1M1VW to earn $60,000 per ~ to maintain the
standard of llvinl enjoyed by a family of four earninl an annual lncome ol $26,000 in 1970.
But don't despair. JeffreY. P. Morand of
In .. ted ~uity PlnandaJ PluUUnc. Newport Beech, uya it la pomible -throuch careful finandal plannlng -for the
family with a $26,000 annual &na>rpe today to
retire with a tqher 1tandard of Uvfna than a
$60,0QCMncome lamily without a financial plan.
"Flnandal independence ii not bued entirely
on w..-or aalaries," Mid Morand, "It involvea
the best pomlble u.e of inoome, uatng tax lhelten
to protect the income and aound inveatmenta to
~that bx:dne.''
"A f1nanda1 planner can help to eetabliah klna-tenn ftnandll goa1a u well u abort-term
flnanct•) pin8.
"A man or woman in their 20s and 309 would
have different altemativea than 90IDeOOe who bectna finandal Plannina in their 509," aaid
Mcnnd. '"The younaer pelWJll. can ooncmtrate on
.emeei"4( an estate while the older ~ must
ecncentrate on preventina the eroaiklll ol tua
e.tate."
Good finandal Plannini oomista of a tinandal ..in which includea a banker, tax attorney,
lJ-.arance aaent and an investment broker. An
·individual who wanta to establiah a finandal plan
an bJa own must keep in mind, however, that ..._
ellCb member of that flnandal ~ baa h1a ·or her
own blM, warned Morand.
"A profe-'cnal ~planner can
intecrate thaee b&uea for ttSe benefit ol the
client.''
Tax• are the 1arpst outlay of lncome for 99
percent of the cllenta who come to him for help,
lbl Monnd. The tint objective of a financial
plan lhOuld be to protect the Income tbrouch legal
tax deductkim and tax-defening lnvestmenta.
"We mUlt then detennlne where the client
WIDta to IO with bJa bli-term plann1na.
Fifty-four percent of the retirM9 in t.h1a country
have to rely on ::s from family, friend.I or
charity to live," Morand. "The government
baa determined that it ii better to partially
subordinate now with tax break.a, which
~the people to plan for retirement. than
to subordinate them completely later on."
Individuals with few work-related deductions
might c:onaider lhelten that offer immediate reductiona in their tax bills. Thoee who are in
bus1.ne9I tor themlelves have certain tax
advantqea aire.dy. They might chooee to
concentrate on future tax sheltered income.
Making thoee dedaiona can be easier with the
·Consumer Price Index
• Base Period
300·· 1967 = 100
help of a financial planner.
"Most peoP.le are aware of the advantqes of
the IRA plans, ' said Morand, "but there are many
other investmentl that can produce tax-free or
tax-~ucing lncome. Few people understand the
advantages offered br tax-free truata, bonda and
limited partnenhlpe.'
Morand bellevee investment ln a home la still
the most aound investment deapite the le.aer rate
of in.flallon ln housing.
Social as well as economic factors detennine
future financial planning. ".How many
Prime Lending Rate
1 S".
Inflation, as measured
by the Consumer Price
Index (chart at left),
and in'teregt rates,
which affect your cost
in making major
purcliases (chart at
right) are two
important factors that
must he considered in
any financial plan.
: JIAISIOINIDIJIFI
~ 1982 83
bua1ne-.nen would lnvat ln a ~~ ihat had a 3 out of ~ chance of fall.lng?" Morand.
"Yet man1ap la a partnenhip that hll a
ataUatical chance of faiJ.inc 3 out of ~ timea. 11iat
ia even a more perfect reMOl'l for aound f1nandal
and estate planning."
"The 19809 have been called the 'decade of
physical fitnem.' The We expectancy ot the
Americ.an family baa increued dramatically in the
laat two decades. Flnancial fitnw hu beoov•
l.ncreaslngly more emential lf we are to enjoy 'the
golden years,' " Morand concluded.
An l ·RA can he .
a good first step t}
One of the most important fil'lt stepe in
financial plannlne for the averap penon am be
the establishment of an Individual Retirement
Account, or IRA.
IRAs were formerly llmited to thoee not
covered by company pension or retirement plans,
but under proviliona ot the 1981 tax act &n)'Qne
who worka ia now eli8ible. Workinc indlviduala
can put 100 percent. ol their eaminp -up t.o a
maximum of $2,000 -into an IRA e.ch year. And
a per90n with a non-workinc apex.we can put ln a
total pf $2,250.
For the average lndivldual there ii almolt oo
better investment than an IRA -empedaJ)y lince
a large percentage of the monry you ·depollt would
have gone for taxes anyway. U you are in the 40
percent tax bracket for exainple, the $2,000 IRA
investment will uve you '800 in federal tax. and
a smaller amount on California income taxes.
In addition. the tax-deferred stal\18 oi IBA eamin8I greatly multipllee the potential retuc"n-
. (S.. IRA. Pqe CS)
NOW P-E RF 0 RM ING .
ES SENSE
WE OFFER LOWER RATES.
At Nabe,. LAelino Comp.ny. lied directly to tM pr1rne lend-
• otter many adventagea 10 ing rate _.. llw pttme ,. ..
·the .... Ing customer 11.ze • .....,. out of lie douda
atability, axpenan<ll Bu1 p.r-In,_..,. ..-a, our,... hea
heps most important -cost drotlP9d too-a pomt lower
Al. Naber• Lei.Sing you deal flan in. 1pec1al ,..,,ng pro-
dlrec:t -no middleman or h11 grams off9red by the manu-
•Jttra profits lo pay Al'td unkke lac:turerw Al'td our ,,.._ low
-on arry make or model• Wtltl
our IOwer rate now 11 the par-
IK1 lime 10 lea• lttat new
car you'W been W11lt1ng for
uMhtf All •••• & lfoHls.
o1her lease prngrama. our 11 rale appl1• acroa the boerd Codi .._.
a.iilileEA OF WliTIJit YEHeCl.E LEA8IHO A880CIA TlOH
Thi• ia neither en off• nor e 1oticitetion of en otter
to buy thue .-curltin. The off• is made
only by the offering cwculer.
200,000 to 230,000 SHARES
rnfss1oD ~ Bar..Jk. N.A.
.. ~TIONt
CO ... ONSTOCK ...... v .... ,
PRICE: 110 PER SHARE
Copimd .. '*""' C>c:Ulr ~-···from: M&ION VALIJY M, NA'nONAt AIK>CIATION
I
fJ.,~NION FOSTER
\YIU.OU& a wW, Lhe certalncy of ct.th and
tax. GM\ f»ITY ln l" wake • mwUlude of \IDDINlatl&
l "-i uncenaJ~ -and the corwequencm of Mt ~ a will a Pl"OI*' t9tat.e plan -can
be "'int.aw by tin.I • lawyw wno
apritff .. tn •tatell, tax• and buslnw. aid
• -
a
remarriqo lnvo1ved, ln thll evenl, It i. 4'V.n moro
lmponant·to have a will."
A dJvorced pereon, or ont• who hu •W'Viv«t
tho dMth of a 1powio. may only have eomnu.mhy
property afi.r rtmarri.ap. All of the community
property would IO to the pre19nt •W'Vivtna tpc>Wll
In \hO event of till or h r dctath. "Children from
th• flnt marrl.,. would be left out," M1d Avey.
Ono of th moat Important advantepe of 1 wl't f« paren" of minor ahlld.ren ta the abWty to
choc.e f~lp for thOM Chllch'en ln the
event o the cfeeth of both ~nta. Without that
provtlton, the court would illtsn ,uard.l&Nhip.
I ,J • LI a ct.vtco \hat protec.u bath dlo urvtvtnc
relaUv• and any debcort, tncludlnl the
aov rnment." ,. .
The &*!NI of Pn>pol!tlon1 6 and e 1n Junia
1982 eliminated e.autorm.•a •t.h tax-. but the
fod rel government can 1Wl lab lta tax _,.t.e,
The federal law• eovemlna deeth tQ.-have
alao chan.-d ln r«.lent yet.n The Unitted r.tate
and Oltt Tax Cttdlt and the !'.conomJc Recovery
Tax Act allow i · )U£her amount cd'alletl to be
pauod on to beneflDtari• befdre they ue cax.d.
~' Anornq V1ctoril C. Avey of the law firm Howllr~ Gettner and Brown. N•wport Belch. ~are 1*ded by N\YOM wile> wania to deCieftnlM the c:ll9trtbut.lon of thelr property and
..... to the ~ of their choa and Who
wanta to ellmlnate th• coa& of probate and death
~"aaytA.vey.
Jn the ablence of a wW, th• Calllornia In~ Law would cen&rol the cllltributioll oS
~Mil comm•ty property to swviviDC
One of lhe mo l important r ·
advantqet or. will lor parents ••
the bility to ehooee guardiana lor
the children.
Knowled1e of the chanaee ln state -"'
federal law• that aov•m death taxel, aift tau&,
Uvtni t.ruata and joint te~ Lt one ol the l'DD!lt
lmponant reuont for contUlun, an •ttomey Who
, 1peciallzet ln estate and tax pl.aftnh\a, Mid AVfl'/.
"We c:an take full advantap, tnrouah
lndtvtdually delianed estate DlU». ol. thi CWTent I
law1 and avoid mott of tM dJMdvantq•!'
AD examDle of how that law would dJltrtbute
pl'Opwll'lllPrWl .. ~,.,Y.~ involve a marrWd penon with one
child wbO owned .eparate property before the ~ Upon ht. or her death. the ln~
Law woWd provide one-ball of the property to.
the IUl'Yivinl tpc>UM and one-ball to the naturtl cbOd. J1 &be decealed had more tmft OM child, the~ would receive one-th.I.rd of the estate and thelNnal.ning two-third. would be di91ded
f!Cluall.Y · ~ the chUdreft. .. Many famillea have more complex~
today," tald Avey. "Often there it a divorce and
r
Two .j(uardlana would be appointed, one who woUld provtde ph)'llcal gu&idiamhip and the
Mcond to ovenee the mana.,.ment of property
and expendlture ot. the money lnherited by the
children.
A wUl can h@lp to avokt protiate proceedinp.
. "Probate WM not meant to be horrible," aaJd
Avey. "It WU tltabliabed IO that the court could
supe!"Yfa the collection of both Uleta and debtl of
the deceaeed NMI ensure the proper diab'UKation. It
SPECIAL
•1500
OFF
MING'S
MIRROR
FINISH ·
---------------
ll011C8 TO CMDCTOM fWIUUC~ ( .... '1014197 U.C.C.)
Notice la hereby glve1rto
credltore of the within nain•d tr~ "* a ll<illt .,.,..., Ill
about to b• made on "''onal P'ot*1Y....,.., dwriW.
The --~ eddl'.-of the Intended treneletore .,-=
SHl .. LEY OA!OOAY, 41ba
OAEOOAY STATIONEM. 19032
Brooldlural. Huntlnglon e.cti. CA
9194t. The locdol'I In Callof'nla of &fie "*" euwtlve office °' pnndpel I bual~• ofll~ of 111e Intended
tranlllnW la: a--•bcMa. ,. "" oth« bu11n... n-• _,,d • addr ..... uNd by Ille ln1.nded • • tr_,_°' within th,.. year1 !alt
' paat 10 fer •• known to th•
,Int.,. tranafef• -~ The nem. and bl"*-eddl'-ot th• Intended 1r1n1ftft' ... lll't~ Jacki• Vukadtnovlch, 19032
lfoOllllunl 81.. Huntington leecfl.
CA H64t: Laura L•!hoO, 19032 B<oollJlunt St .. Huntington ~.
CA9214e. That the property pert1nen1
l'terWIO It deaa'lbed In generW •.
M9tlOMry llore and Ill local*' at.
10032 BRlc*hurWI St. Hun~
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
At December 31:
A~ -
For The Year:
Net~p
(A) Unaodltea -
1982 (A)
S85 ,2.39 .000
S76,222,000
S48. 461.000
s 6.936.00>
s 430.000 -
1981 ~o Change
Sbn.694.lXX> 27.8~n
SS8,272.000 30.8%
$42.722.000 IJ.44}.
S t>.47h.lX>O 7. I 0 ;.
s 53'i.0CX) (20. I"~) --CommerceBank
HEAIX>l \RTF.RS OFFK t
COM 'AERCEOANK
BlJILOING
1201 Omc St
N""'porr 8e~ch C A •Hb/l4l
1714111~1·~1
MEMBER FDIC '"
BUENA PARI\
REGIONAL OF'H C I
t.111 Knott A"° .
KM tt Iii Sani. An .. I "'~ 1
Bu"n. Pnll. CA 9Cll111
17141 7)9 2711
1lll1 ft9H)\\t
~OUTH COAST
Rf..OIONAL OFFICE
'2\Q Plark C"n1er DrlYC
!Off Anion Bl•d.I
('0\18 Meu. CA Q262tl
171417~2
faKh dc~t(Or insured lO $100,000
8eech,CA82MI l~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiJiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiitl The ~ name to.ad by the aald tnnllerora at Mid IOeatlon II: ' OAEOOAYSTAT~EAS f...-~~~~~--=;..:._~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~..;._~~~--1
That u td bulk tran1ler 11
tnlendad to be conllllNMted at the
oMce ot. Oregoty S~ UI032
erookJluret. Hunlln91on ll••cll. ~ 112&'8 on °' .,,_ MIW'dl
1, 1MI. TNI bl* tr-ter le 111b,lect to
Callloml1 Uniform Commercl1I
Code 1eo11o11 • ioe The neme and addr... of Ille
,.,.... With wflOm ClellN ~ be
Wed II Shirley Gregory, 100'2 ~ St., HwYtlnQ1on 8-:11, 'CA tat48. and the tut data few ..
... ...,. by 91'1 c:ndltO( lhall Ila
MarcJI 10, 1911. wlltcll 11 the
bu•I"••• dl'I' balor a 1111 con111mmallon data 1peclflad
0 abOV9. o..ad Feb. 23, 1913.
Jdle VulladlnoYlch ~·~ tntandad T,.,_., .. ~ullllslled Otano-COUt Delly
.: PllOt. • IMrcfl 1. 11183 t01843
t
There ahat.M be lhrM copiee of eech ~·· will, advllee Avey. One oopy lhoWd be kept by
the law fl.rm In a fire proOf ate. The clleot lhou1d
have ty.'O oopi•. One of the cllent'1 coplet ahouJd
be kepl ln a fire-we place, such u a clepollt box,
and another 1hould be-bpt for euy ~ for
conatant revlewtnt inc.-there la 0 a clmnae of
heart" or a change ln the drcumstanoel ot lhe
client.
All wUll (especially thme willa made befcn
September 1982) 1hould be reviewed per1ocUcally,
Avey recommends, becau.e of chana• in the law.
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economic outlook I .
For '83 improves
LOS ANGELES -The
ticceJ.nticn ln tM powth of the
l1.S. mor)ey 1upply durlna the
fourth quarter ot 1082 will mean
• ltronC9J' ~ ln the level
)f economic activity du.rfna 1983
lhan wu prevtoualy expected,
aiccord1NI to the lateet forecut by t'tnt Intentate Bank'• chief
tcOaOID1lt. Dr. A. Jamel Meip, lmior vice
pn.admt, made that sndJcUon
in the f1nt update of the bank '1
l983 fc:incMt. ortcf.nally lllued ln
November of wt year. Melp
aaid monetary authorltlea
Utrlbute much of the money
atPPlY explollon to the ah.lftlnQ
>f-lund1 lnio the new banfC
inoney-market accounta and to
the maturtna of All-Savera
:m1ifbta.
"We believe, however, that a
policy lhlft toward expansion
and a return to lntoreat-rate
taraettng are more important,"
Melp aaJd.
He alao predicted the more
rapid recovery 1n U.S. 1pendf.na
and output wlll contribute to
expanalon in other lnduatrlal
natlona and in the developlna
countrieia as well.
Meip think.a that ln the first
year (1983) the new economic
expanson 11 unlikely to be
accompanied by a rise of inflation
rates ln industrial countries. The
long lag between money 1upply
changes and price changu,
combined with the recent fall in
world oW prlce1, will provide
world economic authorl\iea with
a tempotary cuahlon. Thia could
disappear aa early aa 1984
however if Inflationary
expectations rise.
lRA A GOOD START ...
;,\n ordinary tax.able investment
bf $2,000 per year at 12 pereent,
for e-xample, would yield
'2&4,364 over 30 yean. In IRA,
on· the other hand, w ould
produce tMQ,!W under the eame
caoditicna -and that'• quite a
difference.
You wW eventually have to
pay taxe. on the money. your
DlA euna.. of coune, but under
bOnDal clra.umtanoes that won't
happen until you retire, when
you'll probably be in a
IUbstantially lower'tax bracket.
In addition, the rules
1oven:Una IRAI over a areat
deal of lnve.tment flexiblllty.
You can chooae a very
~live investment, such u
an eccount at a bulk or aavtnas
Mid loan; you Call go foe a hiaher
Eltum ln a mutual fund with
y a little more r1ak; or you ean
e extremely adventurous,
nveatlna directly In 1tocks,
Dn'l~i.m metals or other veh1cles
reel estate.
What about inflation, you may
1k. lnflaUon wlll almost
certainly be wlth us for years to
come, but not investing becauae
of inflation just doesn't make
sense. In fact, inflation almost
force• a person to make wiae
lnveatments for a 1ecure
retirement . Al10, should
hyperinflation return, there is a
good chance Congress might
·allow you to compensate by
raising the limit on maximum
contrlbutiona to your IRA, thua
increasing your Cuture
purchasing power.
One of the best advantages of
an IRA is that it is still not too
late to open one for the 1982 tax
year. Federal law allows you to
open an account anytime up
until you file your 1982 federal
income tax return, which could
be as late as April 15, 1983 (or
later If you are granted an
extension).
An IRA may not make you
rich as 10rDe of the ads seem to
promise, but the numbers
certAinly add up in favor of a
much more comfortable
retirement.
MONEY MARKET
TreasuryPassbook8x Rate
Guaranteed Thru March 31
10.253 10.94%
Annual percenra11e rate Effectavt' annu.il v1t'ld
l'.cleuU:y luurecl
·~
Check white pa1e~ for office nearest you.
~National
Mortgage Co.
Has the program you are looking for:
WE SPECIALIZE IN ALL
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. Industrial Loans
Government Loans
Apartment Loans
Jumbo Residential
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Tueaday, March 1, 1983 C'I
' Warmington Homes defied the 1982 housing slump with construction projects
like this devt"lopment in the Woodbridge area of Irvine.
Building houses • Ill hard
Irvine's planned communities weathered sales recession well
The planned c.·ommumty has sur \ 1\'1·d
what everyone hopes is the worst and ~'(J!Ot'
out strong
That's according to the la.tlst f1gurl's
Irvine Company off1c1als hav1 come up
with relating to sales dunng re<.-ess1onary
1982
Donald E. Moe, the company'11 marketing
dlrector for the Community Development
Division, aaid that last year, 323 homes
were sold in Woodbradgt>, the firm's
1, 700-acre residt>n Ual area
That's an average of almost om.• a da)
Not bad. Moe S<tld, an a market wh<'rt' manv
builders were having a wugh tlmL· '>f•l11ng
one a month.
The positive sales re<.'Ord hw. reanturt'L'<.l
the company's confadencc an its planned
community concept.
"Thl· strong performance of Woodbndge
during 1982 undt'rhnes what we have
al1.1. ays thought to be one of the greatest
strengths of community planning," Moe
said "When the economy gets rough,
people who purchase homes prefer to buy
an planned developments "
ln the early 1970s, when Woodbridge
was developed. planners used market
l>tudaes and consumer surveys to determine
what people wanted ln a home. What they
came up with was a total concept of homes
,md apartmt•nts. greenbelts and bike trails,
parks, swimming pools and tennis courts.
Along with the planned look of the
community came a strong homeowners
association with a reputation for ensuring
the community LS mamt.amed according to
set gu1del.mea •
Thoee rnamt.enance rules, or "condluons,
covenants and restr1ct1ons'' (CC&R's)
ensure uruformaty in the rommuruty
Because of CC&R's, which are common
in Irvine neighborhoods but gospel in
Woodbridge, residents can't paint their
houses pink or park campers on their front
lawns
The m.Hkt>tang director said has
company's bt>hef in the strength of the
planned commuruty has been subetanuat.ed
by consumer attitude studies that show
homebuyers rate "planned community" at
the top of thelr lists when asked why they
buy in Irvine.
'lbearn · h
mo~y market ll!terest
Just check with
H · avings.
I ' •
•
( ,J
I
1
'
I
I
Orange Coal1 DAILY PILOT /Tuead1y, Match 1. 1ta
ow _Jones project
-could mean faster
.;a
l reports on market
lnv•1tor1 anJ bu11n~11men
oouJd "' their datly report.a of
1 -.ioca INU'ket acUon and tln.and.al ~WI even fut.er lf a new jolrit
project between Dow Jones &
C.o. and a CWver City flnn worka
out~t~y.
Dow Jonu, the nation'•
t .. dlna publlaher of financial
·Staff doubled
by computer
firm in Irvine
An Irvine computer printer
manufacturer hu doubled Its
manufacturing ataff for Ii( dot
matrix impact line printer from
12 to 24 employee&.
Trllog, Inc., located at 17391
.Murphy Ave., said the increase
in employees has allowed it to
achieve twice the volume
orlgtn.ally forecast for the second
quarter of production.
Trilog's TIP line printers
feature proven dot matrix impact
printing technoJogy. bJdi.rectional
paper drive, dual-microproce.or
design and five standard print
tnodes.
Ray Mellsaa. Trilog president,
aald company plans call for the
empl oy m e nt o f m ore
manufacturing personnel in the
future.
lnformation, hu aareed to work
with lnfonnaUon lntemaUonal,
Inc., ot Culver City to develop
direct electronic computer·
to -plate production of
The Wall Street Journal and
Barron'•·
The proce11 .. aoal of th•
publllhlna ln~try tor yeara,
would areatly •P••d up production of the two f1Mndal
newspapers by ellmlnatiq all
oompoling room functlonL t.ah
pqe of the papers would be
alzed, designed, edited and have
h eadlines written and photos
l.naerted on a computer ecreen.
When the pap WU complete, It
would be tran.mtltted directly to
a machine ~t . produces plat.ea
for uae on pre1ae1, thut
ellminatina all typeeeltlfll and
manual PM'eUP requirement..
A.L . Fenau,hty, president of
Information International, taid
the two finna hope to eventually
develop a na~onwlde production
s ystem linking Dow Jones'
exiatlng opera ti on with 111'1
Newspaper Pagination System.
The contract bet\veen m and
Dow Jones providee an option for
purchue of additional aysterm lf
the inJtial project la auoceeaful.
The Dow Jone• ayatem la
designed to produce pagM at the
rate of one per minute.
Them newspaper pq:tnatt~
ayatem la already in u.e at the
Pasadena Star-News.
Balanping work, home
Women top men at .Ceoplna •Be aware of tho need to keep maintalna the b&lence.
w ork and lo v • at pat ate, work and lovo MAifate. 8tinalq perwonal probi.n. to acoord1na to a paychtatrlft who la • Pay attenuon \o the way you work, ne -added, probably will
known for hla work with balance the two dem.andl not 10lve them and may cnaw
workaholJcl. • Flnd a pel"IOn.al formula that new onea on the job. Jay 8. Rohrllch aaya In the
current taeue of Today'• On1ce d ~~!\=~~:==~ Artist's agent expan s
enry Brouuard
heada branch off ice
act betwHn home and oUlce better than men. M a r I a P ! • c o p o , C o a t a
It'a becauae women don't alip M e •a -b a• e d a r t I 1 t a n d
into the trap of 11lerle1 and photographer's repreaent.atJve,
atatUI u eully u men, he Mid. haa added two new tlrml to her
They aeem more capable of roeter of am.ti, dealgnen and
enjoylnaJ the teellna they are photographers. They are: ~a contribution. -Segerblo m -Warren of Laguna Niguel, 1pectalt1t1 In "That'• more 1rat1fyln8 to po~ait and people phototiJ'aphy;
them than to a man who la _Metz Air Art of Anahelm, a
C I
'
look.lJll · · · for wa)'ll to meuure p h o t o r e t o u c h I n g a n d • • tuoee1e," he Mid. a I orn1a Rohrlich Mid the iMue COme9 enhancement oompany.
down to matntainina 8 ba.la.nce An author and guest lecturer Fl. rst na-mes between Ntitfactloru obtained on the subject of marke ting from a pel"IOnal and profeealonal creativity, Placopo teaches at Orange Cout College. She has
NB life. alao been selected to appear in m&D&ger People ahouldn't aeek from Who'a Who in California and h.u
love what work pro~es, he Mid, '-~n nomtna·-.. by the Or~ Henry Brou11ard hu been and th houldn' tL d UC"C' .-.. named man,1er of California ey a t pect to n County Chapter of Women n Ftnt 8-nk'a Harbor View office, in work what they ~joy In a Management for the "Woman of
1666 San Mlauel, in Newport pel'llOn.al relationahlp. . th e \'ear" award l n the • He st.re98el the. thina-: "entrepreneur" category. Maria Pi1eopo
Beach. r.;;;;:;;;;;=::::::~==~~~;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~rr=::::::~====:::===================, B r o u 11 a rd , 3 9 , j o I n e d II
California Ftnt in 1981 u a loan
officer in the Bellflower office.
He wu formerly asaodated with
California Canadian Bank.
A native of Houaton,
Brouaaard and hia wife, Patricia,
now live in eo.ta Mesa. He ia a
put preaident of the Newport
Harbor Kiwanis Club.
California First ii the state'•
eeventh lar,est bank in t.enna of
depoalta. t has 112 offices
throughout California and five
THINGS
TODO No matter
what you're
doing, your
hometown
newspaper
The .,Piil
Its In.
OVerteU, 11-~.._ ________________ ~~~~~~--t
Howard
Tangier's
Column
"If you don't avoid paying taxes, you
are unpatriotic."
Star ling in ~ri~ some of yo_u may be charged
· . tor Directory Assistance.
Sounds llke the rantings of some
wlld-eyed radical. let's take a thoughtful
look at that statement and see If there Is,
Indeed, wisdom In It.
First of all , notice that I said ''avoid"
paying taxes, not "evade". Congreaa has
provided several deductions, exclusions,
and credits that allow us to legally "avoid"
paying taxes. To "evade", on the other
hand, Is a term that describes an Illegal
hon-payment of taxes.
(
•
Over the years, Pacific Te.leobone baa never directly chanred you ~ Directory Aasistanoe calla. Instead, eorne of the coet of ~ 411 calls waa abeorbed throuah general phone ratet.
Which meant that customera who haMlf used Dnc::tory Aafiat·
anc:e were payirv as much as thole who trequentlCJiu TodaY. tile vOlume of 411 calla hu increUed y. So drama6cally, in~ the California PubUc Utilities Q:mmlUion
bas~ Plcific~hone the authori~ to ltart cbnina direaly for Directory Aililtance. AJ.tl!:t all. it only eeeml 1li that
customm who uae 4ll the most, abould pay the malt for it. Beiinnina tbit Aoril. thole of nlakina more thin tweity 411 calll withiii a nmlh will be~ 15C tor eldl CID~ ~twentieth. <DiR4«Y Allistance calla outlide Yoo.r: ara a:>de Will not be included.) N~ly, pmooa with~ die·
abllitiea who ca.o.not uae a~. WW not be aflfded. Ncr wW
4
'
\
~~~
•
.. . r
\.
With all the talk about deficits and tax
Increases, let 's take a look at why
Congress would allow us to reduce the
amount of taxes we legally pay. AJI of the
provisions of the Internal Revenue Code
Y(ere enacted to accofn9lllh certain
objectives. The tax deduction for IRA
accounts, for example, waa given In order
to encourage us to take a more active role
In providing for our own retirement and
fake some of the pressure off the Social
Security System. Opening your own IRA
account reduces your taxes and helps the
government accompll1h Its goals.
Capltal Gains tax Is another example
of reducing your tS?<ea and working In the
beat Interests of your country. If a taxpayer
makes an Investment and hold9 It for more
·than a year, 60% of the profit 11 not taxed.
Thia attractive feature of the tax law
encourages people td save their money for
Investment purposes. The lnveatment1 they
make In housing. bualnesaea, and atocka
create Jobs which bring In other tax
revenues and build a more productive
society. Reducing your taxes through
Capltal Gain• taxea may be the ultimate In
patriotism.
If you reduce your taxes with a aound
Investment program, combined wtth other
program•. such ae an IRA account, you are
also carrl'!ng out your patriotic duty by
reducing your dependency on the
government In the future. Many of our
cllent1 have found that they can retire
yeare earlier than they ever thought
poaslble. And they don't have to worry
about whether Social Security wlll atlll be
there when they need It. Bealdea, when you
retire early, you help provide a Job for
1omeone el1e without lncreaalng the
unemployment rate.
At Ron1on, we are dedicated to
hetplng people carry out their patrtotlo duty
to reduce their tax.. and provide for a
brighter future than they ever dreamed
poaalble. We can ahow you how to get
1tart9d today. Perhape the ftr.t 1tep lhould
be to open an IRA account, If you haven't
already done 10. If you have an IRA
aooount, you may 1tlll want to talk to &.m
about how to get a higher return on 'toytf
tundl, without Uortftolng eafetV. .
' . Irvine Co. names director .
llltMel L. MaHtiaa of Irvine hH been P"'!~ to dlrector Qf comm\lnJty relationa for·
The lntM Campany. Manahan. who joined \he
NCC11_»p111_..l.l In 1888, nu been l'lW\IP!' of community
relaaoM; lhdUded in h.la new reaponslbWUes are
the ~O.Jllp~Dy•1 relatlon1 with community ~ it• conttlbutlonl pl'OIJ'anl, 1.-denh.lp
awlldi Jll'OCl'am1 ·~ \>Ureau and relation.a with "O"'DManlty -.odadonl. Prior to joining The ~~.Manahan WU president of h1a own lniUimice fiim in the Newport Harbor area.
BUI 8eah of ~ewport Beach has been ~ • 119Dda .. vSoe pr.ldent with Coldwell 1flDUr ~Ual Reel Patate Servicel. Be beon
hie carew Wltb the firm 1n 1972. Senta holdi a
llfetimo mem.beratilp ln the Million Dollar Club and h.M been la tM o:dullve Pnllident'a Club for the PMt ftw yeare.
oau. Ha.11 of lrvlne, vice president of lnveetor
rektlohl of ~eJd Secwitle. in Brea. haa been Damed the n.r.t woman prnldenf of the Real
l'.-tate tm.w• .. t A.odation ot Orange County. A
board *"""'-fcJr more than three yeara, Hay. waa
allDOlmed lftllldent by the nine-member board of dU9c:ton. Tbe cqanllation has 1,700 memben.
development mana1er for Batol1y1 Bank of
Callfomla. HJa prtmaty ~ponaiblUUet wt1l fnelude
~ dewlopnent of all -typel of commerdal Jt:nellna.
8everl1 Brion. of lrvtM, ltaff aoooun\an~ Denn.ta Klarin A.c:oownania. Inc., ol Mft'pclr1 ,
hu received her CPA certUflca~. Brton Joined the 8CCOW\Una fin:n nearly ~ yean aeo and hat
ee.med expanded dutiee. Ir> addition to tax Ntum
preparation. 1he la fnvotved in a 1upervtaory
capacity with office procedure.
Alicia A. 8•1 of Huntmaton Beech hall been
appointed audlt1n1 mana1er for the Southern
Califomla reaiOO of Farmen lnaur~ Group of
companies. Sfie became .-octat.d with l'annera in
1978 •a CMh ncelpt clerk at resioM1 headquarters
in Santa Ana, later trandening to the accountinc
depu1ment u a folio clerk. She nu been a rqional
audlttnc speclal!at for the plllt yMr.
CllerJI A. M•Jer of Glendora ha• been
appointed uailtant vice ~t and oommercial
Joan officer for Valencia Benk'1 Orance offic.
a_,, E. Atlunore of Anaheim bu joined
Amerbn State Bank of Newport Beech u vice
pc..,..at Ind ~ of the ba:nk'a main office at &00 c.n .. r Qrtve. A1bmore hH 14 yean of
c anwc•dal buk:ina expertence and most recently
wa1 vice pre.1ldent and corporate bu1lneH
..-~~~~~~~~~-r~~~~~~~~~~-,...~~~~~~~~~---
T~ills
·mixed
W-ASHINGTQN (AP)
-Yil:Jda are mixed ot\
1bort·term Treasury
eecudUel tbla week, with
interett rate1 up on
thr"·month bills and down dt1btly on
lbt..mont.b ~
At ~·1 •uc:tion. the 1overnment 1old
ab011t te.2 billion tn uu..~-.th ~eaury
blUI •• •• averaae tik:ouat rate ot 7.944
pe~bt, up from the
7 .881 P.ercent o1 laat
week. That WH the h1ll*t rate atnce 8.256
percent r.b. 1_4.
About fe.2 billion
worth of P,.montb bin.
wen mid '' an avwaae rate of T.948 pe.-.cent.
GOaJIWl'l'QI • NATHAN OOREWITCH,
I •a fOnner resident of 0ranp
~-Be s-d away QI) F*"-7 27, li83. Survtved
by blil aan Sun Gordon ol Looi Be.:h. C.a. GraYelllde
MrY1cea will be held on
~y. March 1, 1983 at
l :OOPM at the Home of
P-. lf.mxria1 Park. Lake
............ C.a. ServldM under
the direction of Harbor
Lawn -Mount O li ve
Mortuary of Coat.a Mesa.
040-SSM.
BAYBANCADBll KJ:SHVAR RAYHAN· CAD&H, ruldent o f
Huntln,ton Beach, Ca. P-.:1 eway CID J'ebruary
.. 1111. She .. Mvf"9d by
her am 8~ Bayhan, M.D.
of HWl~ 8each, Ca. Sarvlcea were held on
Sunday, at the Harbor
Lawn-Mount Olive
• Memorial Chapel. Services
under tba direction of
Harbol' Lawn-Mount OUve
Morlufl'Y Qf Cotta Meu. ~
--
GTD...-... ....... -..
YOU Ml :''ft"""'~ ..... A
HID OP TitU T ~~ NOVIMH•J.!,.....!,.... 8• YOUTMIA~TO YOUlt NO,HTY, n MAY H ~ AT A flW&JC IA&.& • YOU ..., ,,,. ~now°' '"' MAW Ol 1NI liROCUllllll
AeAIMIT YOUW= INOULD OOMTACTALA OUAAOIAN T"U8T OEl!O SIRVICU, a ~ OOtPOtatlon =.t_*'• Tl\llltle uncllt lhe I lliM a rtbed .... ot VUlt WllL Al "-*JC AUCTIO"'
TO THI HIG..UT llOOI" '0" 0Mt4 or • g. ..,_ Jn a..-. ::-.:.:...~-'°~ ....... Dr • ~ llld OMd "'
'""' lift tM ~ ~cle9oilbtct: T"UITO" "'CHA"O E. NICHO&.I ANO JIAAll "· NICHCX.I, ~ and wife, M ~ ........... lfNE,.CIA .. Y: AL&U'T f .
Bi.ANOLI. JA. al\d OA,.Mft. .0, IAAHOU. tluabend anci ..... a
,.,,.1111 al t~ all undlvld•' " ..,..,_. A&.aERT I. IMHOU. II NCO UHOA L IAAHOU, hulMftd :=.:.1 I::::-*• to M
~CON)IO ....... 11. , .. u ln1lrum9nt No. HM?: lootl
1HH. '•a• ll?? of Olltclal "•oord1 In 1111 office of 1111 ~-al °""-' County. a.Id O••d ol Tru1t, dHCrlbH t11•
klllowtng Pf'opalty.
-
' Realtors gain promotio~s
J. Clark Booth hu been named hvk'il ~t, and Jll'Qll P. er.w "' .....,., vioe pr.mdent
for c.aktw.U ~ C.oinmlrci&l
Real r.taie Serv1oet' Newport
S..Ch aff.IOI.
BocXh, Nltdent manqer for
the 41·member off~1 jo1ned c.oldw•U Binker 1n lvo2 aa an otftoe-~ and~
P:o"rti•• 11lea and 1H1lns. •pecMJ'tt.
He ~ U\1 N~-..Ch office u r"ldent maMJ•r' tn
lMI. .
Crew bet~n bl• u1oof1tlon
with CoJ4WeU 8anbs' Jn 1976 lo
the company'• l'oriland, Ore.
of&e u • ooane-1 l&1et met ~~
He w11 th• third rtr\k_ln1
al.nan in the PwUaad Olf.ICe '" 19&1 and became .-manaaer
for the Newport otflcl -. year.
New bu•lne.
seminar topic
"Ide .. , ~e ancl
money" Will be
cliteuNe4 It, Pilar
Wayne at a eemlilar
tonllht on 1tartln1
your own buain.,_, The
event, leaturlng the
wile of the late aetor
John Wa1ne ancl other
women In butiileu, ·
beglnt at 7130 at ·
Community Church by
the Bay, 148 E. 22nd
St;. C.O.ta Meea.
Reparation ia llO.
Mopeds get
new valves
. ~ l
New mopedl for 1983 ftom ,
Irvtne-bued Derbi Motor Cotp.
of America wl11 include * new
three -r e ed valve which
orlglnaton clalm . add1 both
power and smoothness to the
Span!Jlh-built blke1.
New modela thia year include a
Scott Derbl, whlct, carne1 a
1uage.ted retail price of $995; the
RD-50 Diablo, at $699; and the
SL, at $499.
Continued from lu1 year are
the Laguna. with a cafe road
racer look and the SLE.
The new models att availab~
for viewing at trade ahowa or at
the DMCA offlcu at 1852
Langley Ave. ln Irvine.
~1 Off .... Off JU Off 11.4 Off ••• Off ••• Off 111.0 Oft ••• °" ,. 7 Off •••• Ott IU Off 1LI Off 11.2 Ott 17 t °" 17.4 ()ft 17.• Ott 17.A
Off "1 Oft 14.7 Oft 14.S Off .. s
Oft ~ Ott , .. , Off ... , Off U .. 7 Off ISJ
NY E COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
'
'""'''°"' llfC'-Utl , ........ , .. , ••• •Ott• ................ , .... tOUOlf OIHOIT .... Cllt(llilUlfl noc• .. , ............. -.. ...... , .. , ............ ,. .. '
Due to lett tranemluton toqay'• lltttng wlll not appear In the Dally Piiot,
..
Gold stabilizes,
I
more banks cut prime
By fte Aatociased PNtt
Gold pr1cea atabillsed in intemaUonal martwt.
today after a WMkJ.ona tr.-fall that reduced bullion'•
value by 20 percent.
Bulllon'• coU.p1e and a round of cuw ln the prime
lendina rat.el at leadina bAn.k.t were 1iaJw that &M
eftect.a of a au.tained drop ln lnflaUon att rlpplina
throuah the tconomy.
'the price of aold dropped $42.50 an ounce
ynterday, repreaentlna one·tenth of le. value, u
lnvea\ora reacted to continued mpderatlon ln t~•
Inflation rate. Gold cloaed on the Commodity Exchanae ln New York at $400.W an ounce, down
$105.20 llnce Feb. 18 .
• But ln early European tradlna today. rold'• al.Ide
WU interrupted. Bullion rooe to ... 13.W a troy ounce
ln Zurich alter pll4fTll'Detin8 $59 to cloee at $405 late
yeet.erday.
Sever91 banb cut their prime rate tut Friday to a
four.year low of 10.5 percent, and the re.t of w bank
lnduatey followed 1ult ye.terdAy. Vint National Bank
of Chicaao, one of the lint banka to act, aald It waa reecttna In put to the improved chances thaf'a pickup
ln the eoonomy will not Ind to a renewed bunt of
Inflation
Bank 'business as usual'
LOS ANGELES -Except for new names and
new locka on the doon, It looked like buaine99 aa UIUal
at American City Bank, de1plte a declaration of
lNolvency that made It the eecond large.t bank failure
ln state hiltory. Ironically. lt wu a failure that could
have been avoided, the Loe An&elee Time9 said ln It.
edidona today. Harold D. Doyle, actina st.ate banking
superintendent, aald American Aman Danit of San
Frand8CO hu taken over American Oty'a Torrance \
branch; Bank of San Pedro hu taken. <YYer the Long
Beach office; Central Bank haa taken over two otfioM
ln Loe Angelee and one ln C.O.ta "Mesa; Valley State
Bank of Loe Angeles haa taken over the Encino office,
and Bank.of Loe Angeles haa taken' over the Beverly
H1llt of floe.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT
HEW YOM (AP) -..... Mon. pttoe 111\d
""' CllW9 ol Ille ~ ""* -.... .... York &took !11clla11oa IHua1, 1taellt10 ~--"*''' ~' l1J1·
tt'\':':.fJ ~:
DMMM I '"· ttec1~ m. ~· ....... ..-nu L'fft 654 ... =tr• U1, .. •"... MO.roo ...,... ......
WHAT NYSE DI>
•IW Y~lt (API ,._ •
T1i ... ,.,.
15'
7
-~ -JW a Tt11
-" U VII -.. ., ltll -114 ...... ~ i7.: _,.,, ., ltll _,,_
-IV. +I~
-"' -.. _,.,.
1111.» If._. 1 lfS.Ja 11 IJ ,'2-4.» fllLA -.11 a.te ftt . .._ t.» 1a..s. 115.6& 1D.1 S I ISM+ t.D
0941 Ma.JS dtd dt~ ,...,..,.
1,su.-"·'"'•
WHAT AMEX DID UPS AND DOWNS
lflW Y()fllt IAPI Fft 19 ........
I~
METALS
.. J. ,.,
111 IG 11 I
NlW YOAK (AP) -Spot 110111.,10111
...... Pftc. lodlly c...--~ -• pound. us ~
.,
...... -21·2' -• poo...o
DM -40 -a llCM'CI • ....._..,_ ""' -•• , ........ w.... ~
'I I -71-111~ N Y ...._, -1326.00 per .......
,...__..,.~00....U.t~
-.MY
SILVER
...., ... .......-. sbioc> per 11oy --· °"".., .-
GOLD QUOTATIONS
..
I
. • •
llllJPllat
TU!80A\', MARCH 1, 1883 .
ClASBIFl.ID 0 3
.. Vanguards await famili8r foe
an. ye.,-aao. ·Soutbem California
Copec. buketbell coech BW Reynolda
told hia team h would '•k• 1
.. near-perfect" effort to defeat Biota
vanauaro-have ln mind when the two
teams equare off at Crawford Hall on the
UC Irvine campua at 7:30.
game." .
In Reynolds' tint aeuon at sec, hia
Van1uard1 were blown out by the Ea&Ja. Last year, sec dropped a &t-61
dedllon ln ita own gym. Thi.a year, Blola
held on for a :i8-66 decllion In the
Eaales' l)'m.
we,.. 18-10 overall and 9-4 in conference play. .
~Y-r. with the 'vaquarc1a aet to
meet Bola 'lbW"lday nlaht ln the fint
l"OW\d of NA.IA I>latrict m playoff.a,
Reynolda prlcUcta only "• real 1ood
f.~' would be requlred to top the ·
~ther word.a, Southern C.al Col.leae f~ lt'a time to turn the tablet on tfie
"We feel Blola 11 a team we can
compete wtth -lf we play our Kame,"
Reynold• 11y1. ·•our 1ame,' i1 a
fut-peced, end-to-end offenee which LI
in direct contraat to the 1lowdown
method lnatalled by Blola.
''Oh, the 1tylea are contra.a.~lng,"
Re)'nolda admita. ''They're very paUent
with th'ir shot Mlectlon. 1 would uaume
that trying to slow us down la a key pa.rt
of their philoaophy coming Into thi1
SCC, which flnuhed aecond In the
NAIA Dlatrict m Southern Division, la
the No. 3 1eed In the tournament.
Westmont (U-4) la aeeded tint and Polnt
Loma (19-12) la .eeded aecond.
The Vanguard• are 'Firked by
forwards Mike Roberta and Hint.
Roberta wu named to the Al -NAIA
Dl1trlct III t.eam thi1 week. He'1 the
team'• top 1COrer (16.0 ~verac~> and la
No. 3 ln the dlatrlct ln reboUndln8.
Hint, a 6-8 junior from Huntln1ton
Beach. averages ~O polnta per game.
ntuftlOAY't "-AYOl'P acHIDUl.9 (1d0) c.i Luth«ln (t-11) I I WMlmont (15--4)
Fr-PIOlflo (10-11) 11 Polrl1 Lom1 (18-12)
s-kY Eaal• That'• what Reynold• and the
Dl9f Net ....... .., c....... ''-"
Bob Nieman (above), and fencers Dean
' Glenesk and Blair Drigp train for ·
the modern pentathlop.
"Thia la the tint time we've ~uallfled
for a horoe ait,e In the playoffa, ' uy1 a
pleaaed Reynolda, whose Vanguards
BIOl1 (14-11) 1tl'olllherll Ce! C<llltQe (11-10), 11 UC
lfVloe UC San Diego ( 13· 12) 11 AzvM.Peciflc: ( 14-111)
County to host pentathlon
Junior World Championships set at Coto de Caza
They say that Gen. O.Orge S. Patton was
one of the first prominent U.S. pentathletes.
And it really doesn't come as much of a
surprille.
For thoee unfamiliar with the pentathlon.
it should be noted that the 1984 Olympic
pentathlon will be held ln Orange County. To
be exact, it will be staged at Coto de Cam.
· Now for the essentials: The modern
pentathlon conaiata of five grueling events
that take place o':'er a period of four
consecutive days.
The events include riding a horse over a
pre-set obstacle course, swimming 300 yards,
fencing (agamst all other competitors, no Jess),
shooting a .22 caliber pistol over a ~-meter
course, and running over a four-kilometer
cl'06S country courae.
Robert Nieman, the 1979 modern
pentathlon world champion, and Mike Burley.
a three-time national champion, are members
of a group which ia Uying to raiae funds for
the upcoming Modern .Pentathlon Junior
World Champion.ships to be held at Coto de
Caza on Oct. 15.
On Saturday, Nieman, Burley and other
pentahlon participants were at Coto de Caz.a to
put on an exhibition featuring eeveral of the
events.
''Our goal is to raile $35,000 ao we can put
a first-class world championship event at C.Oto
de Cam," says Wally Gayner, a co-chairman
for the Olympic event.
Nieman became the first American to win
a world championship in the modern
pentathlon. Previously, he had participated as
a member of the 1976 U .S . Olympic
pentathlon team, and was alao on the U.S .
fencing team that competed In the 1978 world
champion.ships.
Burley is currently a first lieutenant ln
the Texas National Guard and a1ao plana to
compete for the U .S. In 1983 and 1984.
Tall order_ for CdM
Sea King women await Palmdale tonight
Coach Dave Heffern'• C.orona
del Mar High women'•
bMketball team la one step away
from the CIF 3-A champlomhip
came, but the Sea Kinga will
have to pt pM1 a tall PaJmd.ele
uad toolght (7:30) at Unive1"Si4Y
eemifina)s.
• the No. 2 team from
the Golden Lea1ue behind
Burroucbl of ru~ carriel a 17-8 record into tonl1ht'1
contelt. The Falcons' •tarting five
includes on, freshman , two
110phomons and a junior.
But It ia ~-9 aenior Regina
Juniel who pack.a the acorinii
punch, averaging 18 polnta per
pme foe Coach George CorUJia'
~-Juniel, at 5-9, joins 5-10
sophomore Rae Spean in the
front oourt; the guard duties are
handled by freahm•n Linda
.Cabo San Lucas
e1;1.try list grows
'
John P . Scrtppa 79-foot ketch
Miramar from San Dle,o. Abo
on the ltartina line wW be the
88-foot MerUn under charter to a
San Dteao qndJcat.e. Merlin la
conaldered to be one 'of the
futeat boeta for her slaa ever
deltped. She waa ~ and built by Bill Lee of s.n-. Cruz.
CIF semis
open· tonight
Mike Roberts
Vanguard
players .
all-league
Southern California College'•
Mike Roberta is quite a valuable
uset in the mind of Vanguards
Coach Bill Reynolds.
"l don't know what rn do in
life after Roberta," Reynolds
admits. "He just does ao may
things well."
It is one of the re880l'll Roberta,
a 6-3 aenior, wu named to both
the All-NAIA Diatrlct m and
NAIA District m All-Southern
Division teams this weeks.
"He 's just a valuable
contribution. not only a• an
athlete, but as a student leader,"
says Reynolds.
Roberts Is averaging 15.9
points per game for the
Vanguards, who open the NAIA
District ill playoff• Thunday
night again1t Biola (at UC
Irvine's Crawford Hall, 7:30).
varsity aa well, averagin1 20
points per game u a llOpbomore.
Another Vanguard, guard
Andre Smith. was named to the
NAIA's All-Southern Division
team. Smith, a 6-3 junloc from
Buena Park High and Fullerton
College, averages 15.4 points per
game this eeuon.
"Andre'• an excel.lent abooter
and we try to recruit abooten,"
admits Reynold1 . ••He'• a
legitimate Divt.ion I player."
ALL-MAIA OlaTMCT • 1WAll '"""c... Tim T~ .... 7 Sr , WMtlftOftl; Don
Bldtett .... 7 Sr., Polnl L.onw; Jeff ~.
... 1 Jr., Azwe.PICltlc; PIUI Olben, ... St ..
Blol1; Todd Sedaleck, 1-4 Sr:.t Co1ie91 of Notre Deme; Mike Roberta. 8-3 ~ .. Sollthlrn
Cellfomll ~ ., ....0-' o.,,. Schulla. 8-1 Jr .• Weetmont; &ob
Ooodm•n. 8-0 Sr • UC Sin Otego; P1ul
Wood•rd. 1·1 Sr • FrHno P1olflc: Peul
W••· ~11 St .. PWlt i.-
ALL~ MnKT • eouT.-~ ~e-t
Jeff Aoblneon, 1-7, Jr .. A:.A111U•M1>-fl'l .. llCl'*llllllc:ic; ftaft
Hieb. 8-3 Jr::. _UC 811'1 DllDo; Jem9 Nllr. 1-5 Ji.. Ce1 D9Ptllt: Elon~. M Fr ..
Potnt Lome: Don Bk*tlt1. 1-7 ~ .. ,_.. l.clma:
Mlk• Roberti, 1-3 Sr • 8oufNrn Cellfomll
Collgl. ....C-1
Bot> Ooodmen, U St .. UC San Olego; P9UI
Wiii•, &-11 Sr .. Point Loma: Mch Smfth.
I-Jr., 8outllern Cdtornle College: ~
Hood, 8-3 Sr .. P<*ll Loma.
Goltz says
he was set
• to retire
L
~~eling. like a ~~okie
Wi: Hadl!e says San Diego has 'tre111 endous potential'.
uul. repocwd to.o million (.'Of\lnc\ ov r .
five Yffn to land lhe free .,ent tlret
bueman. -
GN'Wy ii not alone In the belt f ttt.t
he ean atve the Ptdree o •lt0n8 return on
thelr hefty tnvettment.
• "Of any free aaent that ctme alon1. no
one fha the Meda of a ballclub Uke he
fltt ow..,•• aafd Kurt Bevat.""qua, tha club'•
36·year-old utlllty player and teadlna
pinch hitter.
Garvey brlnaa lwo bodly needed
elementt to tho Padret -conalatency
and leedershlp.
"I want to help thia team realize It can
wln a championship. The COUlheet thlfla
ii doir\i It the first time," wd Garvey,
Koch coatJs at Doral
who h•lJ>•d the Dod•er• wln four
NatJ()ft)l} Leap Ulla i»\wHn lln4 and
1981 .
Ho llk• what he lffll from the rebuilt
Padree, a yowi, blollomtna ifOUP· "Th.la teaQ\ baa a t.remendoua amount
of$ntlal," aid Garvey. • compare, be uld, the 1973 and
1974 II ' ~. "'.that wJ tho at.art ot
that U,tltt.a that wted etahtlean. Thill
team haa a very 1ood lnflel ," he uJd,
referrlna io two-time All-Star 1hort1top
Garry Templeton and aeoQnd baaeman
Juan Bonilla.
"There'• &ood catchina here (Terry
Kennedy) and aome quality pltchlna. nu. team probablY haa a ~ood a balance
betw n relief pltchJ.M .net 1W'tt'rl u
lhOM Dods•r ~a.mt. 1'he DOdaen had
more power and thla '-•m hu more
contact ~ltUtra," he .-td. .
C.onalateney and dunblUty have bean
Gartey'• 1tron1 1ult. A UfethM .301
hitter, Garvey hat plaYed In every pme
for the peat ltVon ~' llvlna hlm
the fourth lo~est IU1.ni of c:on.ecuUve
pmea ln hlatory (1.107).
He l1 10 1ame1 ahy of tytna Billy
Wllllame' all·tlme NL mark. whleh could
occur when the Padrel meet the Ooda•l:f.,,
ln a t.hree-pme llerlel Ai>ril l~ 17. ~
Garvey survived rlbblns from
Bevacqua, the team'• tulltlme jok.ester
and parttlme flnt bueman yesterday. Steve Garvey
U CI golfers sharp
• I
MIAMI -Gary Koch slammed l!I the door on any potential c4alle~re
with a two-under-par 70 and <.'O<ed
io a five~airoke viclory yeeterday In
They settle I or second in part:q.ers tourney
the rain-delayed windup of the Doral-F.utem
Open 09lt Tournament.
It wu, aid Ed Fiori, wbo fin11hed second, llimP!t' no contat thil aunny. windy ~y.
''Gary jult outplayed us out. He only rnltled
A tlp of the hat to the UC lrvlne aolf team llnd
two members who flnilhed aeoond ln the Collegiate
Partner Better Ball Championship at Pomona
National Go11 Course recently.
A faster clocking ....
one shot and I wu seven or elabt ahota down by then and
tt didn't {Nltter," Flori said.
"We w ere n ever In
contention."
Brian Light and"Gary Nicholl fired rounds of
68-65--133 to finish one 1hot back while the UCI
team finished third to UCLA and Long Beach
s~~ • • •
Remember when you had only lO go lO the
Mesa Verde Country Club in C.O.ta Mesa to watch
the LPGA women's golf tour ln action? When the iou~nt was moved to Hawaii by the sponaoring
Kemper Insurange Group, it left only one LPGA
tourney ln the Loll An&e)ea-Oranae County area.
HOWARD L. HANDY
and the tourney dates in March will go begging this
for .miler Coghlan?
From AP ditN~ .
NEW ?ORK -lhmonnfll Collhlan. the f1nt nmner io btMk the
3:50 barTler for \he indoor mile, ..id
yesterday he could have run fut.tr
than hi.a world indoor t.t of 3:49.78. .
.. I feel if Steve Scott, Ra1 Flynn or Joete
At.a:.l of Spain h8d challenae<S me over the last
lap or two, f think I could have run even fut.er
than the outdoor tecord," the 30-year-old Cotlhlan aaid at a luncheon of
the Metropolltali Tra~k
Wrltef'I' A.modation. ''I stlll
believe It ts pqmlble to run
faster lndoon than ouidoora."
The world outdoor
record la 3:47 .Sa, aet by
Sebutian C.oe of Britain Aug.
28, 1981 at Trume1s. Bebziwn.
Coahlan1 after bo1ting
K och eatabli1hed a
four«roke1ead ln Saturday'•
third round, then had to watt
through a day's ralnout
bef<>ft attempting to defend
that lead. ICOCtt
He defended it well. No
one got cl08e over the final 18 holes. His margin
was as high u teveq ahota at one time and he
coasted home. Extremely windy weather
pr'9hibited anyone from ma.king a major moYe.
"It's been a long time," said Koch, who, u
late aa lall October, faced the possibility of losing
his tour playing rights.
Dodgers rip Welch
Bob Welclll wu ripped for four II
runs and five hlta In two innJnp,
Including a three-run home run by
rookie finrt baleman Fra.ak.Ua Shlbbt,
ln a Loa Angeles Dodgen tntruquad game
yesterday . . . Ctndnnatl Rede pitcher Olarlle
Lelbrand& was bitten bf a White German
shepherd yeslerday. The dog bit Leibrandt on
the upper left thigh as he was running lape at
the end of a raln~ahortened practice 8e8Slon In
Tampa.
Now that one ls gone. The Olympic Brewing
Company dropped spoNOrahlp of the event. Tree
Top briefly moved into the picture then backed out
Shenandoah
selected
By ALMON LOCK.ABEY
~ .............. rtW
Bill Palmer's Ron Holland-deelened 40-foot
sloop Shenandoah haa been telected aa one of the
three U.S . boats which will represent the U.S . ln
!!le prestigious Admiral'• Cup yacht racing series in
England next summer.
Shenandoah la a widely-<:arnpaigned yacht out
of Newport Harbor Yacht Oub which 8COred high
in last summer'• Clipper Cup in Hawaii, the West
C.oast'a answer to the Admiral's Cup.
year. ,
"The only appearance of the LPGA in
C&lifomla will be at the Dinah Shore tournament in
Palm Springs March 31-Aprll 3," says Stan Wood,
publicist for the event. • • • Ever wonder how the hole-m-one prize of a
new automobUe or the equivalent ls made available
io tournament spoNOrB wllhout fear of paying full
price for the gift?
Dennie Chase. founder of the Orange County
Golfer'• Asaociation hlt on an idea when he d1rected
the UC Irvine tournament several yean aao.
"We had an automobile worth $10,000 as a
prize for a hole-in-one on a certain hole and asked
Lloyd'• of London what it would coet to underwrite
the car. They wanted 10 percent ('$1,000) and 1 felt
that was too ateep. I put up the money to back the
contest and when nobody aced the hole, 1 got the
Idea to back. them myself." Chase says
He formed Sports Achievements Associa-
tion in 1980 and since that time, h u been
working with Mi.Milon Insurance Company of Los A:neeles ln becking tournament aces. Last year he
insured 800 events, not all of them related to golf,
and says premlunu were almost $500,000. The
payoff was around $240,000 which leaves a tidy
profit for both Chue and the insurance carrier.
• l· • I
I
I
I
into the lead with about 4 W
COCIMLM lape remaining in the 10-lap
race Sunday over the excepUooally fast Byrne M~landa Anna track ln .r...t Rutherford,
N.J., ltMdily 1ncreued hi.a advantap the rest of
\he •A)' and WOil handily. nynn came ~ fast to
tab 8ICQnd in 3:~1 .20, and w• followed by Scott
In 3:$2~ and AbMcal ln 3:62.M.
But ln the c1ollina si.a-. lt waa all Coghlan.
and hfl determined bid to bf'Mk bis world indoor belt° ol 3!~.e enabllahed two yean -ao at San
Dleao.
UCl's Thornton honored
UC lrvlne center Bob Tllonaton •
and Cal State Fullerton forward Tony
Neal have been named lO share the
This year's Admiral's Cup will have a distinct
west coast Oavor as the other two selectiona have
key Southland sailors on board.
Scarlett O'Hara, winner of the just completed
Southern Ocean RaCUll Conference in Flonda ls
alao on the team. Scarlett was navigated by Skip
Allan who grew up ln Southland yachting at
Newport Harbor Yacht Club.
"We backed a million dollar pn.z.e for an event •
in Oklahoma last year," Chase adds "Another was '
for a tagged fish that., if caught, would have paid
the lucky angler $50,000 a year for 10 years.
Neither of these prizes was won, however."
.
Quote of the day
am1 Cunblpam, Ph.U.cle.lphla 76en
held coach; "I want Julius !!rvinc to ~t me
know when M retlftll 90 I can ao out with
him.''
Pacific Coaat Athletic Auoc&atlon The other team boat I.a Locura which had Ben
Mitchell of California Yacht Club aboard u
navigator m the SORC. Scarlett and Locura fought
a boat for battle for top SORC honors. Basketball scores
c:r
Or-oon 81 108, AttzON SI t3 ~
boutll C..~ 78. Florid• St. 78
LCJUlevtlle 86. Murrmy Sl 58 Mc.._ SI 44 ...,._ SL
3t MernpNa St 64. Clnclrwwll n
New Orleenl 13. MtCldle Tenri •
bas)u!tball player of the week honors. Thornton
hit 14 of 16 ahota from the field and scored 34
points in the Anteaters' 120· 106 victory over Lofll
Beach State . . Baltlmore Oraolea owner
Edward Beane« Williama has asked Lloyds of
London to provide rain maurance for the entire
major Ieque baeball .chedule. Williams figures
to collect about three-quarten of the revenue lost
R h • p· .. _L. h on any pe.rtlcular po9tpone~nt . San Dlego . angers w lp Jtl!Ulurg Clippen center BUJ WaltOD will be lidelined
Other Southern California yachts which !COred
tugh In thls year's SORC were Jun K.J.lroy's 81-foot
Holland-d esigned maxi-yacht Kialoa from
California Yacht Club which won Clasa A. and Ben
Garrett'• Morgan-36 lnsleht, Newport Harbor
Yacht Club, which finished tee0nd in Class F
Anal~,..,,..
OV£1VJ.l 1 ~I O"Hllf&. 2 Locuta 3 Mia ~
H9Wtlll se. Ak Foroa 55
Coloredo St 10. San 0Mc>o St
56 ...........
M .-ume Aoctl IM, North Teua
87 1 •
\I ...0-blll 71. Georgie 70 •
FunNn 85. VMI &4
8l 8'
two aatata lut night and the Ranaen , . 'nte pcmibllity of dropplng at lea.st five teams
MO;e aoien had two p1a and ~--tempoiirlly because of fluld In hla nght ankle ..
acored five Ume. 00 wer p1a aa from the National Basketball Association was
CLASS A -1 Kllloe, Jim IOroy. c.Pfotnll YC; 2 ~Cl
Pa1ug1. 8111 -Johnaon. Atl•nl•. 0• . 3 Boom•rang, George
Coutnenlat~. Aulllr8111
Olclehofn9 City eo, St Louie 55
T-MM N , Te11u 58
Pan Amertc.n 81 N low• eo
SE Loul1lan1 118 T •u•-S•n
W•t Cerollna 82. er.tdeon 7•
LOUlllena St 81. Rottde 87
S Ml~ T.,,., 81 81 ' '
New Yor1t ~tered ~ th1nf ~l ''explored atgnificantly" yesterday at a tneetin8
one...aded home Vktory, a 0..3 National Hockey of a •pedal committee on problem franchises, the
Leque declaion ovw the Pit11burab ~· league said.
'nM! PaeWna have now at 17 In a row on the
road . • . Blek MhW&tM and Mae O'C..ell deb 9COted twtc. and ~ ..... .,... ~
three P,!)'Jfet-play ao-11 to ddM& the Toronto
Maple Lu& 8--3 ... Goalie IUd Wam1leJ of
Montftai posted a 3--0 mark and a 1.87 toa1s
al(afuat aver .. • lO ed1ie netminder Marni
Mattsea of the Loe Ancel• Kinea for NHL
Televisioa.,radio
TV: Ba.sketball -Laken at Chicago, 6:30
p.m., Channel 9 (taped delay) Hockey -Kings
at St. Louia, 10 p.m., Channel 9 (taped delay).
Player of the Week honon..
RADIO: Hockey -Klnp at St. Louia, ~:50
p.m .• KPRZ ( l 150). BuketbaU -Lalcere at Cbic:aao. 6:30 p.m .. KLAC (670)
Hess is
coaches'
" selection
Ml.Ire Hem of Coram
del Mar Kiah letlda the
All-Sea Vlew Leaaue
buketball lelectlou u
choten by tbt coechee •
th• circuit'• Moll Valuablit~.
ii A Uftt-yea.r 1tarter
for 1be S. Kino. U-
led CGtana ~.Mar to •
portlon of the leaf\I•
the
What BrOnX Zoo?
Ba7lor, Kemp co¥ortable with Yanks
Lyle wrote that "Martin'•
trouble 11 h la temper, Reagle
wanta to be Idolized and owner
Stdnbrenner 11 a tyrant.''
''nle9P atones never both~
me,'' 1ald Baylor, a 6 -1
210-pound lona-bell hitter who
slaned aa a free a1ent lo
December af~r fallJha to reach
agreement. with the Angela.
"Ever l1nce t was a kid I have
wanted &o be a Yankee. I think
that'• true wlth moat klda
t.cauaot the &eam'a 111icew and
tndlUon."
Dons outlast MSAC
1.~s 8 -1 Carll, lllef'Of Fona, 2. La Cera!, Rolf Guel•'-'· 3 l•o. KobeyHhllM9CQ()Wen v Cl.ASS C -1 Jolvt Ambfoee: 2. 8ecr9'1 Love. Br9d Hennen: 3
Evwore«i. Oortlllel Ot-1 Cl.ASS 0 1 LOCU4'1, Oe Guardiola. 2 Scarlett O'Mera, Montoe
Wlnga1e. 3 Mle Culpe. 0-1~
Cl.ASS E -1 SMn9tldoet\. 8141 PlllllNt, NMVC. 2 Evolutlon, WHll11m
n--11, 3 Flirt ol Peget. Fote9'I T~
Cl.ASS F -1 Mlolzl. H.M .... eN!le. 2. lnllght. Ben Owrett, NHVC,
3 ~ Edhlon. ffwry Hlrl'll
Pt1C191e Who need P~
That'• wn•1 the DAILY PILOT
SERVICE DIRECTORY
" .,, at>outl
Antonio 4& ... ,
Sien• 82. Coto••• 60 Pr~ 7~. Pitt S8
St. 9or1e_,,..... N Au1g9r1 86
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loultt
Campt)ell ff.~ SI 57
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lllyPllat
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IEv-\'llle 83. o.trolt 81 (OT)
D<•lnt 78: ...._ MeM:o St. 13
Loyola. llr 83. 8utlllt 72
E l~IOOll.80. llllnoM T9Ctt 112
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ltOOMD AACL Ona mile. Houbw• IT,...,.ble)'I e.20 3.40 2.80
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Fol() Marilanlay (NlcNa) 2.20
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Tim« 2:03 3/5. ,..,.. M C:a. Ona mill.
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lwlY~.M IOO M*• OulllVen. C·'°° ,Aid Oouplae. :: OIMn......_M, -~~.tooo Palw OoalllfllUll16o'4,l60 Mike Qovt, $6,
ClarlnM Rola, '4,860
Allan Miiiet, M ,l60 Bob Boyd, 14.MO .. 0..,. ..... 13,240 Curti. Strenge. 13.240
Wayne LIM, &3,240 Ken Ofewl. 13,240 -JICtl Seltz•. '2. 19S
Glb'!E', I~. 1t4 8111 • ta.1t4 ~ 11,U ,11M ~2.tt4 8NOe ' 12, 1t4
Lanny WedklN, 12. 19"4
George C.Ole. '2, HM -• L• Elder, 11.ee&
Ronnie BlllClc. It .896
Mee O'Grady, 11.805
217 Oenla Waleon, $1,382
LI'" Lott, S 1.312
Scott HOCll, Sl,3112 F0tr•I FIZler. s1.3A2 T1~ ci...t. I t.382 OeYICI .• 11.182 -Jim Oenl, 11,0!IO
Nie* F8klo, lt.000
0oug r ....... a1.050 • Rod N\,tdcOle. I 1.050
eot>by WfldklM, 11,060
.... 17 ..... 70
... 1a •• 1.11
H ·t7·70.?I
....... ,Mo
71 ....... 70
71 .... 71.el
ff·M-70.7'
10·704 .. 71
11 .. 1.10-11
7o-H-71·1t
8t·11·7t·70 12.U.10.11 73·TM7·7'2
7o-et-70-7•
70-73-71 ... .... 12·70-11 e&-11-13-14 To-t7·71·111
1o-t6-13·16 11..-.e.74
72-69-72-71
11-71..et-73
73.7o.e.12 87·7~·72·73
71·11•11·72 H-11·73-72
70-7CH3-7t 74-l'Q.70-71
72·11·71·71 7t..U-75-71 16-71-70.71 11..ea.12.74
7$-71.fi.73 73-61-72·73
71·70.70·75
71-70-73-73 70-73-70-74
71-17·72·77 70.72-7 .. 71 89-73-7 .. 71 71· 73-73-70
ee-11.73.75 7().70·73-75
•·74-t0-7& 71·72·72·73 89-76-12-72
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
I
8
D
A
I
L
y
p
I
L
0
T
c
L
A
s s
I
F
I
E
D
.. 6 .
4
2
CLASSIFIEh.
INDEX
lo Place Yow Ad. Cd
642 -5678
REAL ESTATE
It ...... t
An.tw1m lllllo
tt.lt•• t.&u.nd
11-ll-• tl'•nu-.aul..i t .• ,... .. u.,,.., 8"vh
( ·u,~lofW U.t Maf , .• ,...,. M.....,
lN.h• l"otnl .., .• r.,,.,
• •••;nhuu V alt. '
Uu,hU11ti1~1h n • ..,. Ii u.,.111 u.,t.iv.,,
hvrn,
IAj(Ul)t ~h
l_..l(Uh• ffllh1
I t ... .cuo-. Nttelu I t.-•u h1t••t t..i,_, ... ,. \•-.,. .,,.,, .. ._..,, "' ... ,;
~ .. 11 l IJll"'""'-
........ Ju .. n t "'tHtol••'w'
s.-11\.J A-o• ~Ii.: lt1t-.1.h
""''~h ,.....,.,fl.
Su11a.1 ht-•h
TU11tu1
\\,·"'111HUUI
M+>t•1t. ti··~•
.\•tlott(t
A...,.IUhH•'"-
ltt .-.h t'h11•"'
h1n11t1-P111p1,
t '"'t.h'' S to\A
t tM1t111I l't111• ti\
I •uo1hN111•111111••
l•>lll 1004
11.lllt
11)(17
1111~
1011
l•t1i
111ie wn
IO.U
l~O
11111 1no .....
IU"'.I
IO\'l
Ill)~
10&~
ll~tl
.~, 0
10 .•
IUllO
1v•• 1oer1
IORH
IWO I•""' ll•oO
I IJ
11'\(I Ill.,
""' IJJ)
11~
ay. March 1, 1883 DI
642 -5678
IHI!! la h!! lkt"' In kit h•tt•l IOU ltmtl _
In• la lalt ••1mr11 aon
PHlillUU 11011
Oc."C11tn & ,_,tty viowe Marine room, 4 l>dnn, 3
bath, 3700 aq.h $1.386.000 Octea.nfront
Liii& llLI IAYfllDIT
Laaoon view from ll bdnn, 4 bath. tam. rm.
Boet 1llp for 3 boala. Now •99&,000.
UYllDE PUOE
Spectacular bayfront dplx 2 br, 2 ba up; 2 br,
2 ba dn. 2 boat spaces. f\eduoed-$1 .~.ooo.
.......
~mer model. I Bf 2 ea
w/centr 111. flrepl1Ge,
epaolout mHt•r tulle.
luth f 'Mt'lr>ellt a pool Only 169,000. 781·1191
•SE\.KT
PACllERTIES
N1'HI PllllOT
Linda mocHll In BIU!ft. Alf
n-knetien & oati>ettng
Corner lot on grett
grMnbeff·ar•. S 188,600
L H. Carolyn Muo" LIDO llLI e«-1020
Remodeled 3 bdrm. 2 bath + !arJe rec. nn .. • U• IUL DTITI
beam celling.a. fumilhed, patiot $420,000. ..-TAI.
lllWUll fllRlllll IAIOH Charming Big Canyon
New 4 br, 4 \/lJ ba, cu.tom French Normandy Monaco plan 3 Br 2'/t Ba .,._ 1 2 -'-~ hill •1 2•" 000 Reduc:ed. !\OW 1795,000
-iate . P·;; .. ~;uo ~,;~ ~. . 1~,J.='1
Coronado I.land cuat. bay!ront lot. 8&' boat --------
dock. Plana avail. Now $370,000 w/te~. anm.m ..
BILL GRUNDY, RE AlTOR
. I fluy\•d• CJ,.,, ' b ' 1)16'
--lli\11•h u .. l hjt~
H111.tW1' V• , ... M .. , ....
tf\u.ofl1o1 Vr-•ii.-,.I~
hot.iutoin•l l1rop1 ..
Lut.t li.r "'!-.. lo
:t': I
11i !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
EnlOY th• breathtaking
hllbO< & OCMf\ llleW of
thl• prHtlqloua Cape·
horn horM, open leafing
daytime, and th• vary
elegant & romentlc view
at night Great price.
good llnanclng. Calf Ma-
r I a Bercovltz or Biii
Kroger for more tnlor-
matlon. 769-9100 Mub111 Hi'",.. p..,.._.
Muu,nl.-u\ l>wwn
th..,n41 t"v
'Jul Hf COYnl)
1.luf r,t ~ ... Lt.
t<•n. ht' t •rn ..
"-"' l'ropon y nm. Sl\annc
R I. br,,.,,..
Rr. Wan...i
RENTALS
H• !UM-. • urn1,hnl
HlN"*"' l'11h.on1"'""'
.,, .. ,,.,.,.,., .. \Hn~l"•I •it
l'nfuni"f\r<l.1
l 111 .. t .. UtH
l'onJ.t, lnl l 11wnt\l iu.""S furn
,-.... n~LnJ
l >i.Jpl• '" J urn lllupt••C"" Lnt
Ap..1 \ITW'f'l\A f'urnla),.-d
Ap,,.1\n ... ni.. Vnf
Ap~ t um ~;;1 Unf
"''""' Kc•Jfn .\. ff.wriJ
Uotrh M+ .. •la
• lu.W'\\ ... ..,.,.
s~n~thf"f R. 11t..-l
\..-.. ,1•·r1 K-nw• ..
•tt1nt..I.. ti; ~n..r..
•M1 nwb "-'•nl~t
lf..r•.c.-. ft.,-K1·n1
t>tJ11,. k...n\.ilh
ft<J\IHI,_. lt..nt..U
I , "''"! fi.t.nLab lndu .. 1 Krnt..b
~·•·fllllt'
M+i. tt··ni.h
IJ'oi
I 1n•
1'41~
1 •1~
liX:
1'>00
1)2)
l~°M' ".,,~ I* '* 1000 l~l)
.:.M1'
.!40v
.:Ht
l~l•
1)1~
2).l<>
2'3)
?000
?100
'""" 7ll00
lW? ~
N03
NO&
§1'
W14
11116
1918
i.92(1
i9Jl
lll?~
ANHOUHCEMEMTS
Anl\o-Vt""'·nt1o·nLI
l,jj•\ /il f1Nnd
hf"'Ool..lfWl.-ll'n~·"•' ._,.."""
..._ .... "' & ln.iiuuc t"""" Tr~"' I
lO\' 1004
IOI?
IUl4
Jiii&
'4.HA
• muat move. Have large
111,000 -~i'llll-lltllll "II 400 IOWI" Great Gr.andparenta
8Hutllul condo, drHtl· E·alde home In Newport
calfy reduced. Vacant. Harbor High area. 4 Br,
clMn and frethfy paint· 3~ Ba. big lam rm. din
ed. Poof, tpa. Call tor rm & poot wm exona.nge
GEORGE ELKINS CO
more detallt. ~2313 (no pool) lor 1 llOfY E· Trad• 43' Ol•MI Sport
aide. WHICllll, Harbor Fltherman &/or House
H lghlande. Newport Traller In Lido Park u
Helghlo. emallar home. part down for Houae or
$150K·$300K range. Duplex '200,000 10
THE REAL
ESTATERS
Would contldar n ice $400,000 near water In II TIE IWT home In R-2 or R-3 zon-Newport. 754-0344.
If IL.I •--IT Ing. Owners & R.E. peo-1--~---..----
15"'"• pie, we are mptlva1ed to lalHa .. .w .. ot • 0.-·1 dell p~•--a1
Uve In 3 bdrm. 2 bath
0
W11d Mngt. Co sa1a11 1
upper tpl. Comrnercl•I 642·2000 BY OWNER
1007
enop, office or retell on 631-5055 548-1347 1913 Court St. near
lower level plus • car liiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Nwpl Pier. Fee. 2 Br,
parking. Price at S395. _llUtU Niil R-1. S185K Open Sun
l"S 1·3 . 730·5688 or ····· associated
&llOKEllS-flEAL TORS
1011 W l olboa •"Hid
U&llOIEI
11~4,1001
Bike to beach from thle
huge 4 Bdrm 2 bath
star1er homel New car·
pe1 and paint plu1 aa·
eumable llnanclng &
owner may carryl Act
lutl 846-7171
THE REAL
ESTATERS
FH PRffOTltlllTI 646-7958
Sunny. bright and neat j'i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
at a pin. Speclout 2 or 3
bdrm home wllh lanal.
Secluded 2nd lloor
m11ter wile and over ..
lze 2 car gar Free of
loan• 1<> owner wlfl co· operate with llnenclng.
Drive by 433 "M" St and
calf lor detalla. A lalr
prlee of $298.000 lee
lllFFI lllT ....
lovely upgra'dad end
unite In superb !amity
llM 'fltlth all rect'Mtlonel
M TIE NmT
Excellent rental. delight·
ful home ,DUPLEX. large
living room with llre-
place. large bdrm end
beth, 2 car gar-oe plu•
unit. Own« wlll carry 1st
and 2nd TD at 10.5% and
13'.< .. Call to ....
142-1200
A PETE BARRE TI
... _REALTY
BUSllUS &
FINANCIAL
lllCl!ltlea. Both .,. loc9t· 1~~~~~~~~~~ ed on wide greenbelt.1:
... 1., llWM JHI ... , Ae•fbte seuera, can for Cerna Ml llar 1022 ., .... ..._~ '"' ..,..~ -eh<>wlng appt on theee 3 ;::= w~;,'uruu.. ::• DON'T PAINT -9rlgh1en BDRM, 2V1BA HOMES IAT10 ,,,
·1n ..... .._. C)p1, ...... n .. _ MH: up rour exterior wall•. at: Near Carnation Park. 2 1"'""""'"' "'•""" •on j ro5> & driveway w/01,1r 21111 VIiia LMtdO $230, family property, 3 bdrm,
'M""', '" L-~n 40)1 hjgh pra11ure moblle ooo 2 bath, dining rm home.
• ..,,,.,,., w.n...i '°'~ 1 ~ wash syt Call few 559 Vista Flora 1219,000 new 2 bdrm. 2V. bath
r
'' •••·E~~~fll:fH_ , .. i··1 free Th ••l•1 -WATERFRO ~ unit, onty SJa9,
11<1~".,.••d ''<'l' ....... tiOMES a.c. ..... 4t1 •11 ......
J .... """""1 >10) ~5 REAL ESTATE Ill-NM
ANIMLS I 631-1400 ~;;,;. ~~ lllL~ TIHll IUlll _.., =;~~~~'°'
....._ , MJO 111.IGGI · -In~ or ueer. u-k M:IO GrHt VAfFHAtef'rrr9 Attractlw four bedroom. Owner/agt 875-8370 1~ ~~ avallable on thl• tupar ~ioH= ~=Cetta lleu 1124
MERCHAfl>ISE co~. 2 Bdrm~ cott-g• Property conv1nfent1y1:miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiia '"""l.,... .,.,11 Don t mlea ttllt one · call located tor ~ andl' 1-_
APl•h_,.. 0011 t~64$-717t thOpe. 1267,500. ~ 1 l§r:·~-· ~!lifll uuE;aan =:..~ .. =-~:
I Jum .. ,. ll0'2! (; • ...,. ...... 9104 Hou.If'~ lA.•U. 8ZI. fllmaJ
J~IW.-lt\ 821• llPl.D
I ~:,~;:;,;..... ~:; Greet IUmmer & winter
M•• w.,,,4"d d2:tw entaJ s: to ~ .. ft M ..... 11,...m,......,... ell• r · • .._..,. ou.~ hmotur• Ao large 4 rm & 3 Bdrm
I i;,u•pmrnl 0?2i unh• ·~ 3 car oar· .,,.,_Ao Orf•no WI 809. ~ wlll trede IOI'
Sp.<U"41 I.Nod. 02.lC oondO. 1279.000. i,;;;;;;;;.;;;;;,;;;;,;;;,;;,;;;,;;;;;.;.=;;,;:;:;; I t V fUM.h1 ~,,..,....,, 62.>J 1L1ff1
I BOATS tJ llllllOOI: fi()Ml:S 11..,_ PD
~
2 BR 1 Ba w/mother-ln·
law unit plua extraa. ~
aumable $80,000 loan.
St50,000. Ownflagt r-.,.,,., ll•m 7tt111 l~~Reel~it~on~,~e~7~s-eoo0~~~1 Rare t 1tory PIUla Pten. '""""'" ' !~:~ f' 3 BA, Fwr\ Arn i,oine 'fltlth l~r 'OI' the fargMt prtvale lfltry ---.-.. ----"---S~ Sl.t lOI& & !>** petlo on~ _.,.'115 M.,,r~ fAl•"P 701e belt. Flrec>laC. In Jiving • llf ft
631-5061
IM••n• 9"Yw• !.~1 rm & --., 8R. Eitoel-,,11.,.., °"'... v• .. _, Ct1Mrl 1,1I and bright 3 ir~ ... ·-·-;:: lent v..~· ~~~lr~~ ==~ CALL Fott nlnClnO end onty S105,
AIF\'Afl
Rot-\ .... ~ Mo~"' B:i... •M0t°""Y<t-.~'f'(iwn
M111.1w H~
llV• r ..... k-n. l"rew-1
1"1'-...-n UUhl\'
AUTOMOTM
Au10 .._.,.
Auco~f'•l)O
/\uh• w~..., s"""".11.-lll4lda ·-·°"-Tl\ll1lt v ....
AnU.,""° ti-
AUTOS "1PORTtD
All•ll<..-AUdl
t •UON 000, Call 97t-6310.
DOU.AM "°""'91
Wm. Qxe, Bkr.
PllYITE
IPI
2 b<lrm, 2 ba. Pier! 3 In
Orang• Trea Patlo
HomH. Profetalon1lly
dec«ated. PIUlh cat~.
cuatom 1t1utten. ExCel·
lent amenltle9. $126,900.
\ f . ·/I I // F If
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I 'It li!il ...
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CHILD OAM~Jow, .... ,_,_ O~·ltJI: IPflrliller r• H01.ttM .. •nl"9i r-ll•bl• .... 1'11 l'Al~TIM NUO Hlw U • tatl ~~ ~~ T:;:. ~M~1... ...... O.M. AMt4kf~. ea 1~2~a 'Nt81, llOd ' ~ ,.,,. °""' .,.,.,. .... lod. lptlfltltw and IOd WOAKI 30 )ff .. , Intl ~-Mnllble rat.. F ·-·· ·-'"232 ,... .... lff nt•il. l'r•• "'· 1.0~ YOl..A'HDA 142.o..ot 11'1t11t1llon. Our wotll 1xt Aoou1t10 o.tl no•· OOMm'I: 8~ In ,..._, r• •t ,,_ --
C.lllnat.' Cerpentry uc·o CHIU> <MAI J1!1(!na .... =· Otltll l'IO·•H• .......... -Ol'llV lOOkl •1Cp1n1IYI Uo. Mf7IO. p,.. .... 11111 ;_qr' tll'llOd • TO. I tmlll '°" & r~tl ~ •••• haotl ' ...... II M1k11: tprlno•. .....,_., OIMn,..-~·o.... ~=our ~~Of· O.Yle PMIUJ'lil .. 2-7 .. 'TI r TOP HAT e3e.2o3o 1.:.::;:T_l_~-,N-8T_A_u.l_O __
I ,.,.. Mtllnl._ &46-2003 ""· •~S<M. 142~7" l\lnolt. new°'*""· • 1'11;!1 nlnw "& '*' 10' Oodll Call ·.,.._1H1 MY• ....... ~. reQlll(, remodel. All kinda. Gull'-"'""· "===== TOOOl.I" l'UNl, 1.unoll, Lo, ...... Tom 157.... ,,...,. ·~t··-. IJa.M ' ....... 28 ...... I.JO 40H41. In•. l'tH HI. reHon•bl•. Re11. John N3-6417 ... !!!!!!!!!! eneck1, IOllVIO•. Falr1 l.ee/ll'Mll1 m.itlt. -....,., ~· ~ ,.,. ,._,~ ......__ ... • Atmod.!Aeplh. Lora• Fltlr'YIH. OM. '7f1·2342 wo.ntno. Na-H03 ll«v «hot~ ,... ,. I boncUd. llW9. ....,..... Ix· Uo'd. """'' .... 1.11,.1 TU I ... , Dick•. pa1101, t•no••· . -.. m •------. Dloend•bfe a.,., . ., .nc 1 • pert. ~11 fkt*d .ATLAS PLUMBtNo a ,.. ~ .... 631·2$tCI
Fr• Ml. lwv. 752·t5M CIM•ly ltglttt Ill ===p 14MOM fll..Nl2A~OftK: lmill IO't· INT/iXT. CAU. JIM. ...,_tlnQ, epeoltllllng In
AEMOOELS,,ACE LIFTS OIMnlna Ofc. Alld'I qual T(lppedlremov«I. C*in llft.I IMltl, Home I omoa CllMnlnt Nwpott, Coela ~· ... 1111 raplllri. Mll-lMe frll ........
Cu11om wood patio•· wrk . 1'tf1 bondblt. up, new ltwM. 1ll·M 7e !Jlp'd Ir! 111 '*"' r•elre. Uo'd, bondedJ_ln•'d !MM. ,..._ t7W 76 I.OW OOITll 2• HRS ITllllTl llD ~ l fencle. all Qef'I 831·2131 • 1314521 Lendtc4iplng·Yd Clrlupe C<>mm'll.... ""4011 Xlnt rft. H7.1 I~ In MMOnry ,....., PUIW Aepelr•AlolP9-Remode4 S4H'llloel txP'd997•11t1
00 IT N"""' '"" rtpelr. Fr•• eet. ,. __ ,.... ...... T,.. lrlm/NmOY·M81nt -=~Ml AIPAIA ~.fl.Ill Of Qt/ llo/tlondid. L.ow.J.to• HIGHUT OUAUTY Oflllnl. Lio. 650-t030 •
"'"' ~ 041-0022 _.I~,__ llTIQetton Jim 8&1~111' time, 2t Y"I-_,. I'm the wtnlilr pt'totl. 179"°"97 12 Yl'I In 0C IH-111M reel ltmff/ It U !n!at ltniff
&ti! fw ...... Atpeit..,t.1ttr1tlon1 RlmodtllAIPtlrl. oomm. tll MUI ... mtlt )Obi eM blltl Mt.at~ lftlQ!MOAK P&llT Y• IU1\I 4 JI I · TYPING SERVICE
Your Delly Piiot Ooof9..wlndOWl-Cabinet• a r•ld. Llo'd. l>Ondld. u.wn ....... ehrub lnttlll MMol. Ktltll ........ 11 8mlllf/loe Jc>bl, rep-'t1. FREE UT. INT/fXT, UllWAll llLL'I Fut-Aclouret•Prof .
.. :: .... !!Ml ~~•J Ptne4-petloe-~. lnl. ~ llt, 116a·l142 T~ ttlmlfWftovll 20 v•are ·~· OtP!tlrV ~~~ LOOfll tJf•. 145-1112 REFS. LIC. 320881 l!icptrlenced & profH· MM074 9Y99/Wknd1
-1 .. wa• -~Q,3 -..... ............ Lewn ITMllnl/Rototllllna tleo, ptmb • !WrY1hlng Kitty 1,...170 ~..onty &p,olallat, bt1dc, Tt:O. 714/871-d<M7 llonal. Very reuooabl• Typing/Word Pro<)Mtlng ~~!!!~~~~~ 1 nev• got a cain Aemod. Add'n11Rtmod. ~!ant & Free •tlma1e Ht-I068 RN9 ,...., lt~. ••• blook, ••one. concrete, Prof. Interior Petnuno I :r' For •Xl*1 MtVloa -Ou& .... Y relllalon•
Hfltltu/ ...... i ::~~i::~:~~~ or ~~~e~~~~·, ~ ~810 JACK cw AU. TAAOY § .·~ .a.~ Lio. 430137, -~~-:. ~1::'~"'7a . (11') 411-1111 Reaonable 851-1041 l(IT()H~NS/BATHAOOMS Clnt• hrritt No fob too ig. or ln'lllt: ~ o.,C: .=. ~1.. (Ive,...., .... ,. m111 ' 842-4300 24 11n. 120 ~· eicp. Pool .. rv. r• ., .... CleuifL * MENOH DOORS * - -fremlng, decke, co11· Heullnopa/~ --MM. Cl.Ji.AN M ~..._ 831.3141 Ouetom painting, ext, Int. I mofdlng. Early compl•· WE WASH WINOOWS Slncl 1$47, Lio. 1...e370. No 8tMm/No 8h1111'1poo creta, .. 0. Aft 25 yre Fi 'ft" la.U.. Ml.kll It g1-fft: l'lome, quattty wOf'll It reduced llon, melnl. & repair, Fut · Profeulonll ~ ciontr. 548-1~7 Stein SJ>eclelllt. Fut exp. Fre• Ht. Rend~ ,.. 111· 842-9907 apt, otc. "-fe . ...,..224'0 ...... wlnt•r retet. Fr•• Ht, Fr• •t. 24 hr t«V. Lie Oulllly w0<k guarlf'teed
dry. Fr .. Mt. 839-1682 842-2277 Mowing ·~Ing & o•n DUM=098 o·~"ty H~ -•• 0•~ 873-2031 283eo0. llo4'5·6280 I Free •tlmlt• 646-7301
•--""·' ~~· ' & a-& 8ma11 Jobi -·A8C ... OVINO. --· W• Care C'1)1 Clelnef• C.amactt...cW-u ......... . f 't Cd MIK! ,., with e PWIOMI T Qulolc, Clref\11 hnlloe. ....... bffa!UD1 Seager'• Window Wut\-8t.-m Clffn & Uphol. ::IM---· ''9 11 · HI/I~ a.ti UC T138048 552-0410 - --Ing, qlty work, IO prlell. ~ Ptttclng Lot Truck Mount UnH. OUN. ROOOH ~ FIH18HINO 750-M03 or 0~54 HAUllNG·aiudent w/lg H ~ · Ferttllno lntttlol' Oaelgn J .D. Hom Reflnlthlng I 548-0803, 64S-310 9&~ s..icoat~ Reta. rat•. e.45-S'YUI Cieen-Up Incl. Wlndowl. Ttel tnmm~ upe lfUOk. 111M lo,., ... Jon ~HC141tnlng: · *"'' ..... HANGING/STRIPPING Antlqua. kit. ceblneta, ~ ~1-4180 CARPET INSTALI.A.TlON Detail win. 867-0et1 ~Sprtnldw 759-1t78 Thlnll ~ ~~,~~:::!~ ~ llelt=I , 25 'It exp. VfM..MC Scott 846-9326 fine painting. &o45-0M4 • &~~H ... t:_v~lno & REPAIRS. 30 yrs exp. Dlnall Aeipelt Chuck 646-6697 HAUL·MOV.l·RIMOVI '°4 ,,__T 11 421Y98 t~~353 i!XP9rt wellcoverlng In· ....... .....,tta...,.1 ______ 1 TltMehet all ~tr!_.~_!!-
... COfMI 64&-9031 (bef 8. •ft 4) · -Relph Cebellero a -...... Fumltw-, tr..i,, Treee .._ • • _.. ttlllatton. Reae. Conaut. -~· -.-. '""' Uc. 397 ' -2-172< DRYWALL TA~ 0 I I -r-"3-5418 NORM 8TAnvtNO COLLEGE Wit Aulgnmt. 681·8590 Huber Roofing-Ill type1. .per10<m wo<ll av« $200 All Tutwee a Aooueno 0mf. · rna nt, comm/ laftl!ll IY. ,..,... New-recovw-deckl Including labor end !Urt!tl!t C..eat/ Ctacrtlt Fr••· KMt &73-1503 ,_IA,... .::"mtno ~,... I tl i;:;;t1:1dru ~ ·~~1~~~ Bleckweld•r PIJ)erh•ng· UC. t• 11ao2. 544--973-4 mater1a11 mu11 be II·
Blbvtlttlno, Ill hOur' Cemant-Muonry-eio6t LMl1M9 ::7~·~g~4:ao~ .. y Homt/otnct tppta. • ~: ... 1-M27 Ing .. Removal. Qi.tel. ROOFING REPAIRS ceneed. Unlk:enMd con·
Neer \llct~nt ref1. Wll~ult. work. UC. MYWAUJ -~· 2• llr a y> 141-1111 e.31 ... 871. WATCH ua GROWi work only. 49 ... 3614 Small Job• OK. Fret lfllCtO<I llhould IO ltete
Coet1 Meta. 642-6482 #381067 Rob 547-2683 Vwy ~ 1 JA8!._~~~~MG~RO£~~ Fu~·Wlttr hMt "··-·a· M-11,. •7 .... ,.:J....__ $10 PER·ROLL I nl1meta1. Cell Tom or In their a.dvartlllng. Con.-__. ........ nt, ..,_,. ....... · .,.., .,... " -!!!!!!!!!! Quallty worllm1t1ahlp, Chu<*, 542~92. ' trector• and coneomert,
.. II.I.. Concrete • ama11 °' i.rge DMtrical Ing, trlmmlflo. ,:,.. ett. I 9:::1: 20'4 off • .,...,. .. Wiil ,. __ fr" •t. Juattn 15<M)..o11• contect Mery Gfondle et Jobi. R•move old, re· e4-0812 842-404' ... ~· travel. M1~. r-•-· UY'I INI• (714) SSa...-086 with 111) B.iioon Promotlon1 Uni~ piece with MW. 646-8512 ELECTRICl~N . PrloeO GARDENING & MAINT HANDY ANDY la BACK TAXES: pickup a dtllv9t) ~herd Sinor. Lie. Plattn/ ltpli All TVPes .• Free •t. queetlon1. Contract0<'t
tnlted: bright, beeut FREE EST'S for Cement r:ht, fr~~=I• on Reeldloomm/lnd Yard Ca(l't take retirement • It )IOUt home ()( of1lcl . ,. )ff of happy PLASTER PATCHING '659-9389 St.•t• LIOenM Board, 26 :=.~•· Same dey block & brick work. uc~:8e21. 873-0389 ollen-up, tree tr1m. Ill tlorne repelf1 or r• Out of at~te '& mlllt~I') ~.;:'~1~10 RHtuocoe. Int/ext. 30 AH Roofing Repairs ~~~~ ~9~~t;:ni.'~!:
EuropHn crelt1man ...._.t-47 6"0-1816 model•. Al always,,.,, tie<>. Appl. 832-eel1 ' yra. NNI. Peul 545-29n Hot tar wood comp u1e CA 92701.
80&-0684 LIC'O ELECTRICIAN JESSIE'S GARDENING & rtfl. 548-NH la . t LOWUT RATES! Prompt, Fr• eet. 5'~232 ' -=====~=~
Qual. wortt-Aw. re• ett.\-1,... tr1m 1 l!IUll n•et profH1lon111. U llL ~ -~Ind Bkkpg Ctraak Tilt Tom 831-&>72/073-76.441....int·.=o, 540-80GS ..... CleuiH LOW RATES: bualnell. yn exp. 636-7149 rv.s ltcrttarial Semen
lndl~p/C«p. -... _ 911 • IWI RESto/COMM'L/INO. •--•--...... R081N'8 (;LEANING home • IUIO & tft W..., dMllQe epectallat _ • ~'!""'-.,.. Secfetartlll eervlcel: typ.. Mo.' Q\t1y Statemtntt •tHS ... ·-20 yrt. Do my own wont. ------8ervtoe . a~ Thi FactOfY lntur~ 20 yrs,,., Int • --Ing, copy, etc. Fut MfV. Nonnan Menz 557.7300 S.tprlctl. 963-3283 Uc. 27a<M1. Al 646-8126 aaa.5035 ._, "°"*· · ~ t46-80SO m.4421 836-&TOt. aG&-5528 • ! 475-4458, 1eo-e3se
G.i GREEN CUh
for WHITE elephant•
with • Cl-lfled Ad
Call 642-5678
Slot 1!11 Wpt .. -
I •
Slot •• ...... 1100 1111 ......
HOUSE~R. 4 tit• P« PAii Tm week, $5.00 hr. Mu1t
read Eng. HB. 962-3267
aft 4
.. ~,
RU/WllHM
Malle extre II helplng youth carrier• promote
their own eatabll1had
routH. Mature, OYtgo· Ing, attr~tlve par4tfltal
type peraon. 1>4-eall
2·6PM. M·F. 646-7021.
•
-~--:---:~'=""""""l""""'----.=--'----...... ...--..... -------~----.... -------------,,,....---------------~---
'
O~ DAILY Pl'-OTITUMd
·TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 Plteh
-P<*41f
IJGrNt -
114 POllah rlvef
IS Comfort
1f Fr*'d. Mell 11 Erudition
11Metody
11 MonQollan
2() Floater 2t Contlnuou11y
241, .. ten
2( Baromtter
27 Chain part
2~ Adtectlve
ending
30 CenNr. Abbr
33 Loan aecurl-
ly> 2 words
31Lo.tvfm ~lnddenl
39Mlnn '1
• l)elghbof ............
41 Hlbetnlan
42 IMed ltema
2worda
44 Bank abbr
45Chou En--
46 Ptant part
47 -Cruz
49 TrO\I~
53 Swinging like ·--57 Thr ... card
51 Habituate
59 Ca"*• p•rt
81 WIHgod
H Mutlelan
83 Stow lrelght
~ Marlleted
86 Worrlea
Ge Bad air
87 Wool sourc"
DOWN
1 Some loal1
2E\teem
3 Glacial block
4 Qu111er1ng
6 Water body
6Weed
7 Utilizing
9 Nhlle
2 worda
g Most recent
10Comp11e
11 Outfits
12 Equal Fr
13 Vllrioltc earth
21 Fabric
23 Lovers' -
MONDAV•t
PUZZLI IOl VIO
'71 BLC HATCHBACK
Am/Im c.M .• '760.
546-IMO
'71 C1mp.,, .1tlnt cond.
15800 C1ll An•-Ad 717, 142-4300. 24 11<1.
111 l1100 TAa<U
·77 A.AMIT, ndl pelnt.
L.«na MM&&e
CONNELL
CMfVROlET ._,, .
,. \4 •
S4t>-I ZOO
f
,•
..
! I fl I ! ..
IUJICI CUil
TUESDAY, MARCH 1, 1983
'" .
I'
Many local streets closed
Publlc ~ode.a oftk:lala l.n many. Oranae Cout
clttta reported road clo1UrH and flooded
t.ntanec\IOPI thtouahout thelr &owna.
A pert1a1 lilt of "*' and 1.n\er'llC1.ionl that
were clOeed to traffic durtna \he momt.na lncludee:
COSTA MESA -Harbor Boulevard from
Wlllon stoei to Newport Boulevard: and 19th
Street, from Placentia to Harbor. ,
NEWPORT BEACH -All of PactClc Cout
ffiahway from Corona del Mar to the RJver Jetty;
Balboa Boulevard; San Joaquin Hllla Road;
Jamboree ao.d, ~Arthur Boulevard. LAGUNA BEACH -LaiUna Canyon Road In
L both dlrectJON from El Toro &.d to South Cout
H!ahway
HUNTINGTON BEACH -a'ali-rt Avenue,
from Beach Boulevard to Gothard Stnet; Ell1I
Avenue, from Gothard to Delaware Street.
Sprlncdale Street from Hell Avenue to Warner
Avenue; l.nt.er8eC'tiona at Brookhunt and Gartield
Avenue, Ma1nolla Street and Adams Avenue,
MqnoUa and ~ Avenue.
FOUNTAIN VALLEY -Garfield Avenue
between Brookh4r1t and M~j!!lla~ Harbor
Boulevard '-tween Edl.nger and avenuee.
•
Ylll lllOlll llllY NPll
ORANGE COUNTY . CALIFORNIA 25 .. CENTS
It 01ay b~ the worst ever • . ~ .
Charlie Herman took to his own means of
trans~rtation in today's stonri by rowing
his bOat "gently" down 15th Street in
Costa Mesa, above. Nicholas Diaz, below,
left, and some of his friends, one standing
on the trunk of fhe car' try to push his
vehicle out of water on Bay Street near
Parsons Street in Costa Mesa. Stacy
Howard, inset right, cuts branches off tree
that high winds uprooted in her yard at
355 E. 19th St., Costa Mesa at 10 a.m.
today.
,
The wateY wu very deep on Cotta Mesa'•"'
Falniew Road near the~ Diego
Freeway where a stranded motorist tries to
get hl. car mo~ing again. .,.., ,.. ,.... .,, u. ...,_
Due to the 1tonn
condhioat, there will.-
be DO late ltoek
report.I ln ioclay '•
~P'':·
Coast now cut off;
second storni set to
slani county today
., ,.,.. Deir ..... aUft
Newport Beach became a
virtual ialand today as every
major road in the city except
Newport Boulevard was cloeed
after more than three inches of
rain fell in three hours.
It was the worst flooding in
the city's recent history. City
officiala said \he rainfall was the
equivalent of a 100-year storm.
The rampaging storm -
packing thunder, lightning and
60 mph gusta -alammed into
\he Orange Coast thia morning,
caualng a roof to collapR on a
manufacturing bµilding in Santa
Ana and triggering extensive
floodinf and evacuations in
severa coastal cities. An
elec:trocution death was reported
1n HWltington Beach.
Schools were cloeed in areaa of
Huntington Beach and police in
C.O.ta Mesa had to· uae rubber
boata to get to some atranded
residenta. Portions of Newport
Beach -mostly along the
three-mile Balboa Peninsula -
were under water with cara
tompletely submerged.
Pacific Coast Highway from
Corona del Mar to Seal Beach
waa cloeed and waa expected to
remain closed through the
duration of the storm.
Huntington Beach Fire Chief
Ray Picard said there were
reporta of an electrocution at the
Mushroom Farm at Elli•
Avenue and Golden West Street today. .
He aaid paramedics were .ent
to the acene shortly before 9 a.m.
Further details were not
available.
In Qista Mesa. residenta were
being evacuated to C.O.ta Meaa HJah School and a aeoond achool,
&land.A High School, was being
readied for pomible UR.
Huntington Beach city officiala
declared a state of local
emergency at 10:30 a.m. when
every flood control channel ln
the city overflowed lta banka.
Ev.cuation centers were aet up
at HuntingtQo Beach and Marina
Hich Schools and at Meadowlark
Country Club. "
Re1ldent1 were evacuwted
from low-lyihg areu south of
lndlanapolia Avenue. Other
re1ident1 living aouth of
IndJ.anapolla and between Be.ch
Boulevard ancUBrook.hunt Street
were advt.ed \hey may have to
lee\l'e their homes.
Puplla at Eader School in
Huntlnaton Beach alao were
evacuated when water
overflowed the flOod control
channel.
The atorm, county officials
ald, t. the poteptial of bell'&
\he wont m county b.Sator'y. The
rain la not expected to let up
before midday tomonow.
Good seed ·
)
ln Santa Ana, \he roof of the
CAI-Pak division of the American
Hospital Supply Corp. caved in
under \he weight of water and
heavy rain thia momlna. No one
waa believed injurea in the
building, located at 3502 W.
Seseratrom Ave. About 300 studenta at
Wintenburg Continuation High
School In Huntington Beach
were sent home at 10 a .m.
·becauae of storm problems and
EdilOn High School waa being
evacuated late thia morning . . Roughly 40 pre-chool children
were evacuated from Wardlow
School in Huntington Beach
becauae of flood hazarda from a
nearby drainage channel. Tbe
youngatera were bu.ed to the
Fountain Valley Recreation
Center at Mlle Square Park.
Newport City Mana1er Bob
Wynn aaid there la ooncem about
land failure9 in the beach city
becaute of the saturated 90il and
predictlon1 of continued rain.
He uid the dty WU hardest
hit when an unexpected &.8-foot
tide hit at about 10:30 a,m.
Becau.e of the hlCh Ud-. $ocl
1ate1 were cloeed, trlgertna
aome floodln1 because o1
poundJnc rain.
(See WORST, Pqe AJ)
1
' ·t Al * Qr1nge Cout OAILY PIL.OTITueaday, March { 1983 . , c
,. M*A *S*H mushy 'Tori:ia<lo'. W:inds
lash California
..
..
at. Moonraker • •
By ot:BNN SCOTr
U4 LOllENZO BENET Of ........... teft
~1 eerved cl\IRl)ed •r on mufflrw wtth mMhtd potatoMi
cocktail waiti'fl91d WOl'e ·~ princ.d T•Jhlrta •nd Hot Lipe
wt11, and a bartender even
rnimk:Dd ~lnaer by weartna a
dre91. It w .. M-A-S-H night at Lhe
Moonr.iter In Irvine.
It w• a big loud party. but
when the last epi9ode began on
the bar'1 bll te'levtaion .creen,
the room ,,ew so quiet you could
heu the equeak of a cork sliding
out of a wine bottle. (Related
•tol'y Pale 85.)
Goodbye. farewell. amen and
have a di1nk on me.
M arcy Meyerowitz of
Brooklyn via Huntington Beach
was the first to show up al the
Moonraker. She left work near
the John Wayne Airport at i:l~
p.m . Five minutes lat.er, she had
reserved the table directly· In
front of the tcreen. She had more
than a four ·hour wait. She
waited.
~ lN COWi by 6 o'clock IO
h• Qan COfM ln and watch the
IMW," Mid Shana Ztncman, hla
f~. The Colwella, Oltatn and
Z1nlman stood up to watch moet
ot the 1how, partly to I*' over
the larae crowd and partly
because they seemed too arfpped
by It.I drama and senUment to aJt
•tlll.
Kandy wiped away teara
durlna a scene in which the
troubled Hawkeye conlronced a
t.raaic truth. A Korean refuaee
auf1ocated her child becaUM lta
cry1na might llJ> off the enemy.
The aoene, she aaid, was the moat
vivid abe'd teen on TV.
The atmolphere wu the aa.me '
at man)' other waterlna holes
alq the Orange Cout, where
big crowm turned out for th'e
party and the poignancy of the
last M·A-S-H epiaode.
At E. Gads in Newport Beach,
wai~ wore hoepltal lm<>Ckll. '
A few blocks away at the El
Ranchlto, patrons who d.reMed as
• LOS ANGl:Ll!:S (AP) -A
atorm b!Ucd u the ITI(Jlt pow1trful
of the year blltied Callfurola
today with "tomado-llke" winda,
pound.Ina 1W'f and blowlna rain
that coU.peecl • dam, t.rlgered
mudllldet, blew truckl and cars
arpund like toya and forced
QUl!«'n Elizabeth to cancel her
<.'OUtal crulae.
Seven people have died In the
•torm series that began over the
weekend and the National
Weather Service aald today'•
1torm was the fiercest of the
H eroic youth
dies try ing
I
to shve friend
Htth wlnda ripped throu1h ·
downtown L.u1 An1elH thi1
mornlna. blowtna cara onto
aid walb. fllpptna two ln..lc:K. on .
the bu1y Harbor Freeway, .i.
teartna tt.p from the poles of
the Convention Center and
1hattering wlndow1 in at leut
one downtown hotel, police aid. .
One hou.se near downtown wu ~
reported collapted, but police .• ,
spokesman Lt Dan Cooke Mid he . ~
wu not aure of the damaae or • ~
exact caWK'.
"There are tornado-like windl i
all over the place," Cool<A! said. !
The L oa Angelea River '
overflowed onto the Ventura
Freeway near V tctory Boulevard
in the Glendale area and torrenta
of rain flooded the freeway near
Calabasas to the west
_ Freeways throughout the Los
Angeles area we re cloaed at
scattered locations by the >
Cal1fornta Highway Patrol i
'1ttt:en:year-old Reginald because of flooding, causing ·I,
Garner died yesterday, one day monumental traffic Jams for
aft.er he jumped Ulto a flooded morning commuters
drainage ditch to rescue a fnend About 25 residents of the Los li
Strong currents in the aitch Alamos Trailer Park were
near Moulton Parkway and evacuated this morrung when an
Harvard Avenue 1n Tustin earthen dam collapsed near
c:arried Garner downstream Santa Yn~. 100 miles northwest
·before Marines from the nearby of Los Angeles In Sant.a Barbara
helicopter base teamed with locaJ County, authorities said.
"I hate crying alone," she aa.ld
soon aft.er the program began,
while hero ·Hawkeye was 1till
enaconed ln the "wacketeria."
In the beck of the bar. at the
table farthest from the screen, sat four other M-A-$-H lovers.
MaruJce and Kandy Colwell of
Yorba Lind.a said the program Is
the only commercial series they
watch.
M ·A·S-H charact&::-a were
greeted with free shots of
teqlilla. Next door at the Cafe
Lido, bartender Fred Kroeger
aald cu1tomers preferred the
piano player to the beakup of the
4077th Mobile Army Surgical
Hospital.
"We turned it off about 10
o'clock," he said. "I was glad I
almost started crying I couldn't
stand seeing Hawkeye crack up "
DIMJ lll'llot ,...._bf CtMldM llan
Loree Colo n a nd Brian Bora (in Klingeresque
garb) fill their plates with usOS" at M'Oonraker's
umess h a ll" at one o f many HM-A-S-H" parties.
police to puU him out. He lived "An earth dam gave way in
on the base. Ali.so6 Canyon, and that caused His 11-year-old friend, who some trouble near Los Alamos,"
had slipped into the waterway Santa Barbara County shepff's whil~ trying to grab a basketblUJ Deputy Larry Udy said He
floaun.g past, managed to eecape added the Los Alamos Trailer
the. ~ent. s;amer .was taken by ~,Park was evacuated about 3:30
helicopter -the d1tchbank was a m when the water level "It's one of Lhe few shows on
TV that really treats people M
human beings," said Maurice,
who joined others at the table by
wearing green 1' -shirts and other
military garb.
No t everyone could. not
everyone cared.
Mozart melod~. When rhe
program fmally ended and all the
heroes managed to head for
home without a final, cruel twist,
most of the patrons made their
own exits . A few. like
Meyerowitz linaerf'd. Koud Olt!sen, visiting from
Denma.t'k, aaid the program with
Danish subtitles ill several years
behind over there. He is a dairy
farmer. "He tries to finish
Landa Fullerton of Costa Mesa
met a friend at the Moonraker.
They sat at the bar and talked.
She said she taped the show on
hC>r TV at home. All the hoopla
about a TV program. she said.
was ridiculous. They left about
the time Winchester was leadln2
hlS North Korean quintet m a
For them, the weekly dramas
had meant more than just
entertainment There were moral
points and decency.
One viewer's private fare well
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of1N ~Not 9Uill
Nobody likes a long, teary, drawn.out
farewell, but such sentiment can be forgiven
when special friends are involved.
That was how it felt last night to a viewer
curled up at home in a comfortable Uvtng room
chair, With 80fnlfl Snacks within arm's reach. and
the TV tuned to a crisp picture
Though movie-like in length. the 2 1h-hour
"M-A-S-tl" finale in 8COpe was more like an
extended 30-minute ep1aode -a very ext.ended
episode. If, because of the extra time, you
expected 90r1le flaahy·deviations from the usual
fonnat (Special effects? Datth Vader in Korea?),
you were undoubtedly d.isapr,olnled.
But if the "M-A-S-H ' characters have
become dear friends over the years, you found
plenty of poignant momenta as they prepared for
life after Korea.
Klinger was tom between his desire to go
home ancl his love for a Korean native. Father
Mulcahy kept his hearing loss a secret to
conunue helpmg the local orphans. B.J &0ught
hls romrades' approval to leave early through a
bureaucratic error.
Margaret had to decide whether to let her
father guide her career. Colonel Potter said
goodbye to has horse and prepared to become just
"Mrs. Potter's Mr. Pott.er."
In the program's best plot threads,
Winchester's love of music was spoiled when
Chinese mus1c1ans became some of the war's
final casualtJes And fi!uilly, Hawkeye, who had
saved so many hves on the operating table,
battled mental illness after-inadvertently causing
the death of a Korean child.
Yes, the final episode was too long. Yes, the
indivir.tual farewells took up lot.a of time. Yes, it
was contrived to have each "M -A-S-H"
character leave by a different mode of
traneporta ti on.
But if you're a loyal "M-A-S-H" fan and
you d.Adn't find yourself a bit misty-eyed at the
end, xou'd better check your chest
You may have no heartbeat
Rain., winds continue
·coastal
Pwtoda or i.vy .,_. 8nd
gu1ty wlncll ton19111 and
t~ow Lowa tonight Ill Iha low
50e and ~ t_.-ow se lo &3 ~ of r..., oecreetMIQ to 10
peroenl tomorrow
Eh••h•r•. l roin Polnl
Concepllon to th• Mexican bot'dar lfld out eo mlll9: Wlnda
lfllftlng eouth to IOUlt-' 25 to
311 llnott tonlghl, COflllnulnf
tomonow with combl~ HH
lllCteming .. 20 .... -out• _..,. M to lnaeMlnQ _,arty
...... 0-INw -·-Heny -1 0'1 .... lac:lng ~ ...,,,
.,,....,. • 10 12 .. !Odey ~
occa1lonal ••II 10 1e faa1 ~ locelly ~. conUn.q
ltwvught_.,.ow
California
In llddlllon, Souln«n Pecillc 1
main lnllllK! '°"" IO La. ~ -Clo.d to 1,.l!le beeeuM •
br!Qge lo Newnell -knc>Qed OU1 tJy IUfb<llenl ..... • ,... Mid
Tempera lures
.. 116
83 47
611 54
118 ~ ea ea 82 53
82 M
&& ... '3 M NM .•• 17 ee 83 u ga a 111
87 58 et 111 ... u II at ..... •et NH .....
.. II . ., ..... .... a u .... •u • 11 Si
' H. (:senar
services h e ld
P rlvAte services were to be
held tOday for 40-year Balboa
Island resident Helene Poth
Csenar. who died Saturday in
Newport Beach at age 64.
Csenar served l 0 years on the
old Newport Beach Elementary
School District and was a
chairman of the city's Parks,
Bea ches and Re creation
Commwaon.
She was a pest president of the
Zonta Club of Newport H~bor.
Sne is s~rvived by a da1:1ght.er, ,
Victoria Wells of Santa Aria, and
two grahdsons. Services were
scheduled at Pacific View
Memonal Park.
too muddy for an ambulance . -reached five feet in places. to West.em Medical Center in
Santa Ana.
An autopsy was scheduled for
today. Authorities acknowledged
that drown.ing appeared to be the
cause of death.
About 50 miles to the east,
several other mobile homes were
afloat at Paradise Ranch Trailer
Park in the mountains north of
Castaic Lake.
SURFER RESCUED .. •
From Page A 1
Hoppe was spotted about thn-e-quart.ers of a mlle offshore,
floating on his surfboard, unable to return to the beach, Lhe
lifeguard said.
After reaching the surfer, Perry said he gave hlm "a quick
lesson m oceanography, on how to use the waves and currents to
your advantage."
Yesterday's Incident was Perry's second dramatic rescue In
less than two weeks. On Feb. 20. he was one of two lifeguards
who leaped from a heucopt.er to help rescue four brothers whoae
parents' boat capsized off Huntington Beach.
Everyone's • • eo111paring . • •
Our prices RE All Y are up to 7 5%
lower than other Jewelry stores.
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8 Ct Dlamooda ... woe
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The widest
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•
Storm washes Out. queen's tr1ur
By ltAABN E KLEIN Plan• tot th•~ to drive up ~ / «•...,,... .W. throu1h cJ\f Santa Ynes
Catet\&lly lakl/.lana for Queen mountain• to the RH1ar\I'
J:ll&abeth'• 10-ay WHt Cout 1.eJudtd 888-acr• Tanch were
tout are btf.na wuhed away by proceedlna .,a.1n thil 1IKlll'i\.lna.
heavy rain• and hlth 1\jrf a alt.houch &ri\a Bert.a CoUncy 1poke1rnan for tht a'oyaf 8uporvlaor Bob Kallmara .. ld entow.,. 9'>'1-earlier th• &rtp for lunch at UM
The queen and her huaband, ranch wu ~1*:1.
Prince PhWJ> were achod&.&led to BUt Kallman Mid th1I morn1na continue th~lr crulH up tht that Whtie HoUM 1ta_tfen tola
1tonny ~fornla cout today on hlm that after the queen vtaita ~ rt ~la the local courthoLUle, "tM lunch
1pokeemut an Bubfen tiid.llu\'Wttt 1ir1rt fhe fl~":".--
hup awelll ruled out the l'9Yal However, preparaU~ an be~
party'• 1cheduled dooklng at made for 1tandby l~tlon. Hlltorfo 1atherin1, from lelt, Gerald Ford,
Jimmy Cartet, Adm. Hyman Rickover, and
Ric~ard Nixon.
500 gather to honor
retired Admiral Rickover
87 fte Astodated Presa
WASHINGTON -Richard Nixon threw )Urn a snappy
aalute. Jtmmy Carter huaged hl.m. Gerald Ford shook his hand.
And GOO other people paid $1,000 apiece last night to honor
retired Adm. Hyman Rickover, the Jewlah emigre from Poland
who made 1' ~ 1n the United S~tee Navy .
JUckoV~ti'Rle.''n'fa1n tlle-Wavy '"iiX>re thin UT
~ lonaer than any naval off!L'er ln our hiltory," he saw.
'Neverthelem, I do not believe I have done eno~ for my
country. I did what and waa paid well for my work.'
Commuter strike in New Jersey
NEWARK. N.J . --The flnt statewide rail strike in New
\Jeney hlltory belaJ\ today, leaving 70,000 commuters who
f mostly work In New York City facing packed buaes and jammed
hlchway1.
Ex-presidential yacht sei~ed ·
WASHING TON -The former presidential yacht Sequoia.
refurbiahed and valued at ll.9 milllon, haa been se1z.ed by U.S.
marshals becau.e of an overd~ $1,300 die.el fuel bill.
Reasan health plan to Congress
WASHINGTON -Presic:fent Reagan's proposal to ~vamP.
the nation'• health insurance system, which would raise medic&1
expemea for at lea1t 57 million people, has been sent to Congrea. .
Santa Barbara Harbor. Kallman uld he wu 'bot told
1Ntead it wu announced the where.
queen and Prince PhWp wo~ "Th• weather 11 r~lalna,''
Oy lnto Santa Barbara for their Kallman uJd. "The heaviest part
slghi.eetns tour and meet the of the •tonn h.u ~ t.hroulh.
preeident and Mn. Reasan for That will make the toed to the
lunch. ranch p1111ble aaain."
It .u aoee .. planned i.ter ln
the week, the Reaaan1 will
celebrate thelr 3ht weddlna
anniveraary :with an intimate
dinner on board HMY Britannia
Royal Navy
hosted by
Westminster
The city of Watml.nster didn't
get a vialt from royalty, but it
may have gotten the next belt
thing.
Two hundred Royal Navy
sallora accompanying Queen
Elizabeth on her visit to
California dropped by the
Westminster Mall yesterday for
lunch on their way to an
afternoon at Di.aneyland.
Councilman Gil Hodges had
lobbied for the queen to visit tu.a
city, a Britiah namesake, on her
West Coast tour. But, even after
he turned to President Reagan
for help, Buckingham Palace said
the queen just didn't have time to
visit the Orange County city.
So Hodges arranged for the
sailors to stop at the mall for a
90-minute program which
featured Polynesian dancing and
a drawing for two signed
lithographs by a naval artist.
Friday.
While Reaaan drove throuJth
ireacheroua tog on the 1teoilp, wlndtna toad wh.lch leada to }:Ua
-ral\cb ye1ter-day, Qu~
Elizabeth toured the Rockwell
International plant in Downey
and delivered her lint speech of
the tour at Los Ansefe1 City Hall ..
In her remarks, Britain's
monarch thanked the United
States tor Its support last year
during the Falkland lal.andll war,
when the British 1uccessfully
recaptured the South Atlantic
islands from Argentine invaders.
&u-ller, the royal couple were
shown a full-scale mock-up of
America'• space shuttle and went
through a fll(lht simulation of the
shuttle'• landing at the Rockwell
facilities.
Several thousand flag-waving
Rockwell employees lined the
queen'• path through the plant,
said Richard Barton, Rockwell's
manager of public relations.
As she concluded her tour,
Queen Elizabeth was greeted by
0.-, .......... "" ca., .......
Queen Elizabeth views the Apollo 14
command module as Rockwell
International chairman Robert Anderson
(left ) answers questions.
about 100 elementary 1chool
students from the Downey
Urufied School District.
Kathy Gorman, a teacher at
the Griffiths Middle School, said
her group of 63 junior high
students felt their hour-long wait
was well worth it when the
queen walked by them on the
way to her motorcade. Youth jobs program supported
WASHINGTON -.Legillation to establiah an American
Comervatioll Corpe. reminllcent of youth jobs prosrams of the
N Deel. 'I the House. .
STATE
Mild quake rattles Inglewood
WORST STORM? • • • ' Shooting victiin
due to testify
From Page A1
Dozens of homes on the 8a1boa
Peninsula were flooded and city
crews were being stretched too
thin to help all residenta, offlclals
said. Much of the tity's
emergency effort wa1 dlrected at
Hoag Memorial Hoepltal. where
water reportedly wu pouring
into the hoepital'• electric.al room.
Lighlhouae Lane f.adlity.
Major flooding on the UC
Irvine campus has forced closure
of all acce111 roads into the
university, according to Helen
Johnson, director of public
infonnation. INGLEWOOD -A mild late-night earthquake here,
~ 2.8 on the Richter aaale, baa triggered numeroua
I telephone calla but no ~. authorities ..ia:
14th arson fire hits hospital
LOS ANGELFS -A 14th fire has been set at Cedars-Sinai
Medical <:enter alt.bQugb the man charged with aeUing four of
the earlier anonsJemained in jail. unable to meet $200,000 bail,
ofticlall said.
Bill would regulate sperm banks
LOS ANGELES -A bill to regulate all sperm banka that
aim to promote a "muter race kind of concept" has been
Introduced 1n the state Legialature by Democratic Aaeemblyman
Steve Pace of Chula V1S1a.
School lunch challenge rejected
SACRAMENTO -A federal juclae aaya .chool children
will--In principle-have to abow their parentl' Soci.aJ Security
n\DDhen to 19t 9Cbool luncbes -at leMt foe the time being.
WORLD
U.S. leads in import of.Scotch
LONDON -Expcrta of Scotch wh.isky earned a teCOl'd
$1.32 billion for Britain lut year; according to government
flguea publlshed Monday. The United States ~ the lara-t m&rkec. taldng 31 percent of the 830 millioo bottles
exported last yemr.
'China ferry capsizes; 124 missins
PJi:KJNG -A river ferry with IDOft than 200 ·~
c:allliaed in *"Onl winds and torTential ralnt in aouthem China
belcn cMWD' Cloday, but only 76 people were hauled ashore to at.ty, • kD&. p.amau.t laid'.
Pope's travels termed 'rislcy'
VATICAN CITY -Pope John Paul Ira trip to C.entral
Ammca with lta aecwity and beelth riaka makel It ooe of the mc.t dWicult at hia 'Otllta abroad. But the 62-yea.r-old pontiff
bll ftMidl It clear be b.u no intention of end.i.na h1a travela.
Salndor slaupler toll at 74
SAM SALVADOR. II Salwdor -Army aoldien may have
............ • ~-• 74 Indian men women and children dUl:f.itl an and-auimwa """J> of Samanate province, a member Of the eowmmmt Human ~ta CommJ.ioo 18.ld today. He
..,... DO de1a1Ja of the k:IIllJ19I:
In c.o.ia Mesa, water wuhed
into homes and businemes along
Pomona, Fairview, 19th,
Placentia, 21st, Santa Ana.
Victoria and Wilson streets.
Fire ~ws also were working
in Costa Mesa to pump water
from the basement of the city
Police Department.
Electrical l.i.ne9 fell at 19th and
Raymond streell after a
wind-tom tree collapeed on the
lines. Officers used inflatable
rafts to reach storm victims m the
area
One Costa Mesa woman
suffered a heart attack in the
midst of the storm and was
re1cued by pqllce in the life
boats.
At least 15 flood control
channela in the county had
flooded by 11 a .m., a county
public information officer
~id prison Inmates and
membera of the California
Con1ervatloo Corp• were
recruited to help shore up
flooded facilities.
Meanwhile, studenta who live
in the flooded aectlon of
Hunt1n1ton Beach norih of
Adam• A venue, 11outh of
Garfield Avenue and eut of
Ma1nolla Street, were being
reloCated to the evacuation center
at Hunttnaton Beac h Hiah
School
Othen were aent home.
Students at Talbert School,
abo in Huntfneton Beach, were
evacuated to the Fountain Valley
Rec.Teation Center. Studenta at
Ob School in Huntington Beach
were evacuated to tbe former
Fountain Valley School °Dlltr1ct
beadquartera on Li1htbou1e
Lane ln Fountain Valley.
Siudenta at Areva1oa School ln
~unt!nJton Beach al10 were
expectecl to be relocated to the
What do .rou like about the Dally Pilot' What doft't you Hitt?
Call the nu~r at left and your~ wJlf be recorded,
tftmcribed and deliwred to the ·~te ed1aor. •
Tht ••me :M-hour answerin• Mrvlce ~·r be Uaed to record I t·
ten to the editor on any topic. Mailbox eontrlbut.on muat lneh.•de
thtllr ftarM and teltpbone number for nriflt'atlon. No c:lrcuhrt&on
c-~11•. please. ·
Ttll UI what's on your ml
Studenta and ataff on campus
this mom1ng were asked co leave
about 11:30 a.m., u the bridge
which croaea the San J09quin
Marsh at Campu1 Drive was
expected to be flooded out, she
said. AU classes and activity at
the university were cancelled.
Southern Cal1fom.ia Edi8on Co.
spokesman Ken Bellla said 79,000
customers throughout Orange
County s uffered power
interruptions by 11 a.m . today.
A 14 -year-old girl who
survived a shooting in which her
girlfriend was killed was
expected to testify today in the
Orange County murder trial of
Thornu Fra.nd.s Edward.a.
Her testimony folloWI a tour
yesterday by the jury to the
Cleveland National Forest site
where F.dwarda is alleged to have
gunned down the two young
girla Sept. 19, 1981.
Edwards fa accused of
first-degree murder in the death
of 12-year-old Vanessa lberri and
attempted murder in the
wounding of her companion,
Kelly Cartier, 14.
Cartier was expected to take
the stand today
Superior Court Judge James
Judge accompanied jurors to the
al te along with <.'ourt and
Sherlff's Department officlalt
yesterday. He exc used the
rain-dampened jurors when their
trip ended shortly after noon.
Edwards, handcuffed and
sitting in the rear seat of a
Sheriff's Department vehicle,
was present at the Blue Jay
Campground site yesterday.
Convicted killer seeks retrial
By STEVE TRIPOLI
Ofho.IJ"9tlt.ff
A request for a new trial 1s
being planned today by the
attorney repraentlng Cody I.1o
Schreiber, convicted of
first-degree murder yesterday
for the decapitation alaylng of his
roonunate.
Sentencing wa1 set for March
24.
Public Defender Ramon Ortiz,
who had opeixd Schreiber's trial
a month ago by telling Orange
County Superior Court jurors
they could not 81ve hla client a
fair trial, reiterated that
sentiment after tht! conviction.
He laid he would make his
motion for a new trlal ~t the aentenctna.
The ~ven-man, five-woman
JUry deliber'lted for two days
before returning th~ verdict.
Jury foreman William Ponder
said Sch.reiber's guilt was never
in doubt ln two ballots taken by
the jury. However. he said juron
were 1pllt over whether to
convict Schreiber of first or
second-degree murdek'.
Schreiber, 29, wu convicted of
stomplna to death his roommate,
24-year-old OenniS' Schubert, In
the Mission Viejo home they
shared laat October. He then
decapitated Schubert'• body
before burying It in the yard of
the home and burying the head a
quarter of a mile away.
Orth 18.ld a decl.lion by Judge
Jame1 Frank• II -which
@
EiEMWllE
allowed prosecutor Bryan Brown
to introduce facts about
Schreiber'.s past -had
prejudiced the jury. •
The jury had not been told
about Schreiber's stay in a
Montana mental hospital
following a 1976 murder when it
was picked for the trial.
Despite that background, Orth
said he decided not to enter a
plea of not guilty by reason of
insamty in the case. He said
Schreiber asked him not to do ao
because he had disliked hla f1rst
stay in a mental hospital.
Jurors viewed videotapes of
Schreiber confe111in1 to t h e
alaylng, then re-enacting both h1a
and Schubert's roles ln it at the
crime 9CeOe for investigators.
Orange OOHt DAILY PILOTITu.d1y, MarOh 1, 1tU
I•
•
Money man says
prosperity ahead
I
By STEVE MARBLE or-.o..,,......,.
lnterttt rat411 will continue to
fall, the houaln(I market wlll
boom aaatn, and the United
Statet wW enter ltl patat era
of pro1perity.
So predlctl noted economltt
M alcolm Forbu Jr ., the
thitd·1eneratton editor of Forbes
mqulne who peinted a healthy,
almost 1Iowln& picture, of what'•
to come In the Immediate years
ahead. ~
' Speakln& to nearly l,:rno
people In Ne wport Beach
yeaterday, Forbes 1u~1eated
Americana are "blinded' to the
po&itlve 1lgns of an awakening
economy becauae of the turmoil
of the early 1980..
''We're in a ptriod of
fundamental change and
transition, one that rivals the tlmf: of the New Deal," Forbes
laid. "But transitions are never
smooth -they're full of it.ope
and starts and aeadenda. It's like
a 1tonn at sea."
Forbes, 1peaklng at Edwards
Cinema In Newport Center, was
the guest of ttie Newport and
U-guna Beach assistance league.
He cautJOned there are several
sceaarios that could abort his
Wa • t • • t t prediction Qf good times. A tax I Ing I OU increase. he said, would "bleed"
consumers and halt an economic P a tti Moss waits for a l>us on Coast rebound. Any move to limit
Highway (left) a nd Cy ndy Grafton trade, he warned, also would throw the economy back into a wa tc hes water rise over Silverado Canyon tailspin.
prime rate, recently dtoDPed 10
10 \.i percent af MvnaJ "major
lendln1 ll\lti tu dona, ahou.ld earl»
down u low u 7 percent by the
end of the year.
AUracUve ln~rnt ratee, he
aaJd, will pick up the llumptnc
houlln1 market and apur
conaumer apendln1. Ba111'11
becaw.e of the IUOCel8 of money
market account1, have an
"unanticipated pile of cub on
their handl" and have a revived
Interest in lendlna, Forbee added.
"The average citizen'• belance
1heet la in the beet lhape in 16
yean," he uld. "The averaae
American hal saved money and
paid down debta and la ln aood
shape even though he feell louay
about all the belt·Ughtening."
Given the chance, Americana
are ready to start •pending,
Forbes noted.
While a financial recovery will
eventually provide new jobe,
Forbes warned that blue-collar
worken will oon1inue to have a
rough time getting ahead in "the
new era of electronics."
"The daya of dropping out of
high school, getting on the
assembly line and ear ning
$30,000 a year are probably
over," he said. •
Road . Com plete storm details on Page A I. Forbes said he expects interest ._----------------------------------------------------~ rates wtll remain low aQ.d the
In a final ob1ervatlon, he
suggested that the economic plan
developed under the Reag an
Administration -commonly
known as Reaganomica -ii a
"near-carbon copy" of t he
economic p'lan under the
Kennedy Admirustration .
dinne r s lated
• Tickets are still available for the San
Juan Capistrano Fiesta Association's El
Presidente dinner-dance ball, scheduled
March 10 at the El Adobe restaurant.
The dinner marks the beginning of a
week of celebration of the return of the
swallows to the old mission town.
No-host eocktail hour begms at 6:30 p.m.,
followed by a prime rib chnner at 8 p .m. and
dAndng.
Only 300 uckets are avaalable and are
being eold by the city's Chamber of C.Ommel:'Ce
for $15 per peraon. For more information, call
the chamber at 493-4700.
Tennis classes set
• The Laguna Beach recrea t1on
department is offering a new round of tennis
claues designed for players of all abll.lties.
Classes meet twice a week for 45 minutes
each for two weeks. Cost i1 $10 . For
Information, call 497-3311
Oasis gets bonor
• Friends of Oasis, a support group Cor
the Corona del Mar senior citizen center, has
been honored by the California PaJ:ks iiAd
Recreation Society.
The support group was cited for its
volunteer contributions to the center. Grut
Boward , president of the friends group,
aooep~ the award at a recent ceremony in
Anaheun.
SP'!ech coach named
• Kevin J oaes, a communicau ons
profeaor at Southern California College in
Coa1a Mesa, has been named 1982 Forensics
, Coach of the Year by officials at the
Governor's Cup Speech Tournament In
Sacramento.
Jopes organized a forens1cs team last yeµ
at the college. The 9Chool earned a aecond
place 1weepstakes award recently in the
four-year collep/univendty division.
M esans in military
• Several Costa Mesa residents have
recently ~ported for miltary service. They
lnclude:•
-Spec. 4 ADtolllo E . Suru, 10n of Ana
and Atltonio Suarez has arrived for duty at
Fort Stewart, Ga., following an uaignment ln
West GennulY· -Pfc. FraU G. Keaket, .on.of Unula
K...US, bas completed basic trainlna at Fort Knox. K.y.
-Alrmu ltevba L. Motby, eon of Gail
Ward a nd 1tep1on of Roaec Ward, h ..
,lnduat.ed from Air Force buic t.rainlna at
wbw:klal--nd Air Force Bue, Texu.
,_
Here comes
A fresh . new taste experience
that outshines menthol. ·
It not only tastes fresher while you smoke.
It even .leaves you with a dean, fresh taste.·
•