HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-04-19 - Orange Coast PilotLiberian gets his seventh
reprieve from deportation
Samuel Willen
wins another reprieve
By S=E MITCHELL or .... ,......,.
A 11 ra1 lmmlaration offJdal
in Lotl Arulele• hu aranied a
three-mondi ttay of cfeportaUon
for Samuel Wlllett -the
teVent..l\ .uch reprieve ah)ce the
27-year..old Liberian came to the
United Statet.
And while Sam'1 adoptive
parentl are pteful for the ltay,
the San Juan Capiltrano coutSe uy Sam will remain in hJ
until they are certain lt 11 f
and won't be revoked before the
July 18 deadline.
Ruth and David Wtllett
learned yeaterday that local
lrnmiRCation and Naturalization
ServtCe Dlreotor Michael Landon
Jr. aranted • •tay of deportaUon
for Sam, who wu to be 1ent ti.ck
to hi.I native Liberia tut Friday.
Sam went Into hldlnaJ lHt
Thunday after earlier effortl by
the family to obtain a reprieve
proved unauoce91ful.
"Dave and I are paranoid, Sam
la paranoid," Willett'• mother
aald today. "It'• foollah, perhape,
but we've been through ao much.
He'• not coming home until we're .
certain the stay la eolid."
The Willetta' attorney la
attempting to schedule a new
deportation hearing before an
Immigration judge today, and
Ruth Willen uld Sam "la not oominl home until they hold a hN.rtna and the judp uys the
1tay la 1inal and won't be revoked
before July 18."
''We've had them (stay•)
revoked In the middle before,
and, boy, I want something awful
aure before we brlnaJ Sam
home," ahe Mid.
The Willette were in the Peace
Corpe in Liberia 11 yeara ago
when they adopted Samuel.
They arbitrarily aet the boy'a age
at 16 at that time -a dedaion
they later came to regret.
U.S. inunigration laws aay Sam
(See STAY, Pase AZ) .
THI ORANGI COAST COUNTY IDITION
TUESDAY, APRIL 19, 1983 ORANGE COUNTY . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
UCI loses its hid
for Nixon library
Dellr l'tlot ~o bJ P99rlc:tl O'DonMll
Keeping an eye on optician Richard Perkins' business while he is
hospitalized are (from left) Rosella Lowry, T.J. Lowry, Dorothy
Jo Swanson and Mort Stf>in.
T'-Bking -ear-e ol business
Friend~ fill in for hospitalized CdM optician
By STEVE MARBLE
o<a.o.trN.eawt
With customers like this, who needs friends.
Thal thought -or 101Detruna very similar
-likely hat cromed the mind ot COn:ha del Mar
optician Richard Perkins as he recovers from
surgery in a hospital intensive care unit in Long
Beach.
When Perkins wound up in the hospital two
weeks ago, his customers decided to go a step
further than the
traditional "get well"
card
They dedded to run Perkins' one-man
optical shop on East Coast Highway. They
started filling orders, answering phones and
helping customers pick out frames.
They even brought in a part-time optician to
do the technical end of the business.
Extraordinary? Not if you know 1-'erkm.s, the
customers say.
"Everyone loves him," says Mort Stein, a
long-time customer of Perkins Optical. "He's an
anachronism in o ur time -an honest
businemman. ·•u my glasses bother me, he'll adjust them
(See P'RIENDS, Pa1e AZ)
By GLENN SCOTI' o<tMo.lyNotla.ft
Disappointed UC Irvine
officials will finish what they
started -they'll submit a
proposal to accept the Richard M.
Nixon Presidential Library on
campus, even though a Nixon
spokesman says "the subject is
closed."
UCI was dropped yesterday,
for the second time, from
consideration as a site for a
library and museum to be
MacAllister
returns as ,
HB n1ayor
Don MacAllister was chosen
last night to serve his serond tour
of duty aa mayor of Huntington
Beach.
The 50-year-<>ld businessman,
who is aerving his fifth year on
the City Council, was elected
unanimously by council
colleagues in annual
reorganization rites. MacAllister
previoualy served as mayor in
1980.
Entertainer-investor Jack
Kelly was selected vice mayor.
Councilman Ron Pattin8on voted
for his boss, John Thomas. for
the post.
His selection apparently didn't
financed by a private foundation
of Nixon supporters. This time, it
appears even the second chance
is gone.
Foundation spokesman John C .
Whitaker told UCI Chancellor
Daniel Aldrich Jr. the campus
will be removed from further
consideration. Whitaker said
proposals aet forth by th.e faculty
were unacceptable.
Ramon Curiel, a UCI vice
chancellor, said this morning
campus officials are disappoirlt.ed
Don MacAllister
catch MacAlliater unaware. He
distributed a position paper
before the proceeding, outlining
his goals and objectives.
His ~hief goals1 he said,
(See MAYOR, Pqe .d)
Panel says route COTO DE
CAZA
:for Foothill freeway
:should miss Irvine
A propoaed freeway through
Orange County's southeastern
• foothilla should avoid homes in
:Irvine, but come within a half-
'mile of Mialion Viejo reaidenoea,
"the Orange County Planning
Commi11ion recommended xestefday.
• The routing the commission
hu propo9ed for the Foothill
Transportation Conidor will be
eomiderec:l May 4 by the Board of
au~ . : Cho09lng among 52 propoeed.
rout. for the first 21-mile leg of
the freeway, planning
commlHlonera apent weeks
~ to oampUcated technical
teatlmony concerning the
freeway routing.
The commissioners have
recommended a route that will
anake north of Rattlesnake
Reaervoir in Irvine, thua avoiding
residential developments,
continue north of El Toro and
through M.iasion Viejo~ aouth of
the Upper Oao Reservoir.
The freeway eventually is
planned to llnk San Clemente to
the Rlveraide Freeway J\eM Weir
Canyon. a distance of 38 miles.
Conatruct.ion on the tint leg of
the new freeway. which wilf be
opened initially aa a four-lane
highway, could begin in five to
10 yean, according to county
tranaportatloo plannera.
IRVINE
LAGUNA HILLS
.,.., .........
Route recommended (Qr Foothill Transportation Corridor is shown in blue.
.____....-ISID.::.-----------------------.
The Pulitzer Prize
Jury li•ee ill lint
fictioo award ••er to
a black woman, Allee
Walker of Be_rkeley •
and laonon "good,
ba1lc reportlag" in
lhe journaU1m
cateaotiM· P-.e A4.
Child care concerns
The fatal 1hootlng of the
S·year-old Stanton child i1
maldn1 wave1 In the area of
child care that are aow bei•
'felt by molben. employen and
eclueaton. ~ap 81.
Tax fighter Howard
Jarvi• .. r• he•n
oppcMe Lot AnaelM
Mayor Tom Bradley••
eall for a tax lnereue.
Pue A5.
that Whitaker, who is Nixon's
chief negotiator on the library,
dropped UCI without conferring
privately.
"We had hoped he'd be more
positive about our effor18," said
Curiel.
Indeed, since UC regents had
lobbied for reconsideration of
UCI aa a library site, faculty and
administrative committes
invested dozens of hours
researching National Archives
(See.NIXON, Pal(e AZ)
FV hospital
• expansion
criticized
By PllD.. SNEIDERMAN
Ofttieo.IJPlotlWt
A request to add 62 medical-
surgical beds to Fountain Valley
Community Hospital, a plan
already denied by a county
review committee, will be
considered tonight by the Orange
County Health Planning Eb.Lnci.l.
The committee meets at 7:30
p.m . in the council conference
room, 202 Fashion Lane, Suite
218, in Tustin. •
The 214-bed Fountain Valley
hospital is seeking permission to
add the 62 medical-surgical beds..
plus aix prenatal beds used by
(See llOSPITAL, Pa1e A!)
Worker gone,
at Valley S&L,
$20,000 too
Fountain Valley police are
looking for an employee of a
savings and loan firm who
allegedly acooped up $20,000 and
diaap~ .
Detective Dan Bean said the
crime occurred Saturday at
Southwest Savings and Loan
A.saociation at 16171 Brookhunt
St.
He said the suspect, whom he
declined to identify, had aoceaa to
the qompany'a vault. There wu
more money available, said Bean.
but the suspect confined him9e1f
to $19,550.
Bean alao declined to aay
where police are concentrating
their .arch.
I
HOSPITAL HEARING . • • ' rnothCl'I Jfivtna blrth.
FoUowTng a day-lo~ hearing Satu~y. the council 1 Health
F'acllltlea Review Committee
recommended approval of the aix
prenatal beda, citing Fountain
Valley's new deslgnaUon as an
Intermediate, intensive-care
center for newborns.
But eouncil spokeswoman Jean
Cormier said the committee advi~ against the additional me~al-surgical beds for the
following reasons:
-The group claimed the
hospital did not provide
sufficient fm.anetal records.
operauna at full patient aal)K'it~.
He deecrtbed Fountain Valley •
charift aa ln the middle r~e or
sU,htly above, compared to other
hospJta.la. But he eald the averaae
revenue-per-patient figur~ has
been distorted becau1e of
Fountain Valley's destanatJon u
a trauma center, treating
seriou•ly lnjurlxi patients who
often run up hlgh bllla.
At Saturday's h earing,
representatives of n eighboring
hospitals in Huntington Beach
and Westminster said they could
absorb any overflow of patients
from Fountain Valley. But Myers
said doctors with many patients
adm.Jtted to Fountain Valley may
not wish to place them el!lewhere
and may delay treatment instead.
...
Fatal accident
-The hospital, she said, has a
history of generating a high
amount of revenue per patient,
and one committee goal as to help
control rising hospital costs m the
county
-In 1Y78, Founlaan Valley
obtained permission to build a $7
million addition to break up its
three-bed rooms and to create
more private and semi-private
rooms. Adding the new beds
would reverse this policy and
create more of the three-bed
MAYOR. • •
included improving flood control
systems in the city and solving
traffic and transportation
problems ..
William J. Worthen , 44, of Irvine was killed when his car wenl oul
of control at 10:40 p.m. yesterday on Turtle Rock Drive n ear
Sycamore Creek .. Paramedics, who found Worthen several feet
fro m his car , couldn't revive him. Police said he was driving
Robert Mandie, the outgoing
mayor, li ste d seve ral
accomplishments during his year
in the spotlight, including the
selection of a site for a police
helicopter base, progress on the
development of a blufftop park
overlooking the ocean, and
remodeling of the senior citizen
center.
alone . H e worked at American Hospital Supply, 2132 Mich elson
Road in Irvine.
.>.., rooms that had been eliminated.
Craig Myers, administrator of
Fountain Valley Community.
said the new beds are needed
because the hospital is frequently
NIXON LIBRARY • • •
STAY. • •
was too old to be considered
adopted and the family has
waged a 16-month battle to have
their son recogruzed as legally
adopted. Despite help from lo ca I
congressmen. thousands of letters
from church groups and a variety
of special bills an Congress, the
family continues to ~k legal
residency status for their son.
He said his stint was kind of
like a marriage. ''There have
been good times and bad times.
For the most part, it's a happy
marriage," he said.
MacAllister and Kelly will
serve in their largely ceremonial
pasitions until November. At that
time, new officers will be elected
to coincide with city council
elections that have been switched
from April to November.
From Page A 1
procedures and debating ethical
issues related to Nixon's papers.
Curiel said extensive news
coverage by another newspaper
hurt UCI's chances to negotiate
the sensitive issue.
"Our proposal has been judged
m the media and not by those
who have t.G.reVlew 1t," he said.
"All that (Whitaker) has been
hearing are items and issues
raised by the media. He hasn't
had the opportunity to review
FRIENDS TAKE CARE OF BUSINESS. • •
at no charl{e and then caU me at home later on to
see how they're doing. I can't believe it. Who
does that anymore?"
The customers say running the shop is the
least they can do for paying back a man they
describe a8 a Uttlt' crusty," very messy and as
warm-hearted apd genuine as anyone could be.
Dance anstructor Dorothy Jo S wanson says
Perkins always sets out candy for her students.
Other customers say he brings in homegrown
vegetables for them and buys toys and gadgets to
entertain the youngsters.
"ll really &Ot lo~ when. 1 heaai be WU in
the hospl\al and doing poorly.·· U)'9 T .J. ~·
a retired p61iceman and regular Perkins
customer "Everyone wants to help "
One customer. who now opens Perkins
Optical every morning and shuttles some of the
work over to hi5 hoepit.a.l room, cl.aims the shop
owner hasn't raised his prices in five years and
refuses to charge for repair work.
''He's an institution," says Stein. "I'll come
in and he'll be putting a golf ball around or
fixing up some little toy for the kids. His desk is
always a mess but he says he knows where
everything Is. I love it."
A Tustin resident, Perkins drives an old
battered truck. His customers say he paints a
new message on it every week, varying from
~tkal 1Joaana like "lhrow ~ ....,.1, °"~" io a
ver.&.
"I'll be back" was hl.S last message.
His customers will take care of things until
then.
A br ... -ln U'wough the aldng glli8I door
ol -,..,,... lounge .. Frwikllrt School. 14422 Hemmon l i ne. rHulted In the
r-~ grebbed • purw lrom the
allOUtcNt OI • HunllnQton 9..c:ft women r••t••d•r •hll• ah• ... In ftont of •
FCM>tllln v..., ~store E~•-· diet '*9 eno a pen.lei oent.i p1e1e -• -
Irvine
unlington Beach
A burgl¥y In an 9')41rtment on Ille ?00
blOClk ot 13111 Str• r-'19d In Ole reponec!
io.. ot • 12·1nch Me1dcen r~ ~ot
worth '500 •• Sony 1....-ion Ml WOf1h l500,
• welclh worlh $500 end $200 In celh. Elltry
WU epperently fNlde by pr/Ing OC*'I 8 0C-
A etrongarm robbery wea reported
~twdey ~rig In the perking IOI ot 1"9
HYntlngton Cenlet ahopplng mall A mele
I~ r9C)Or1eaty anatclled a lhOpper"a
repotteel to. of "'° In -end $3 In cm/I
Fountain Valley
A Cenon motion picture ceme1•. a
p<ojeetor and ~ photogrec>hy ~I ......., et s 1.ne-etoien from a, ___
4n t11e 17000 blodt ol San RelMI Sl The tllell
occurNd Ap<tl 1, ~ to polce report•
A Man told polloe )'Wlwdey Illa _,_ •.
end tot• beg ..,. alo6en S.tur<Miy en.moon
•I the c:tllll coolloll at Bommer Cerr)'On
A wo"'•" llvlng In the P8rkwood
Ap1r1mente raporied butglua atol• a
ate«<>. ~ end vuttar from hw hotnl
yei11er<1ey
A thlll rlpc>ed oll • atweo. llPMk.,.. end
lllC)e9 1rom a amell pick up In.ct< pwl<eel at
Ille 300 bioC:ll of Tooeete, Ille lr\d °""*' Mid rMl•dey
Grab your umbrella
Coastal
ooe lorec:Mt« PIUI wwP,,Y. 111 A•1n ~ Snow EZfil
Hortollt. ve ~. Apt 20 ~·-Faum..c:-::::J In the WMt. lh-• apf'9ed t:.:!
ttlfough the PllCfflc eo.t Into the
Gr11t 8Hln ere• or Uteh and
Neved1 Over the MIH IHlppl
Ve/Wt and the PIMna. alclee -• dew.
what we ultimat~ly came up
with."
Curiel said UCI \till forward
it.s proposal, including a 28-page
faculty report, through the UC
regents to Whitaker even if it is
too late.
The faculty report, which
Aldrich promised to use as a
"framework" In negotiauons,
called for complete access to all of
Nixon's presidential papers, only
a modest exhibit area and
university control of private
funds aolicited for the facility.
Maid bound,
gagged in
HB ro~bery
Huntington Beach police are
searching for' a gunman who
entered a local home, handcuffed
end gagged the maid and fled
with about $700 in jewelry.
Sgt. Ed McErlain said the
robbery occurred at n a .m .
yesterday on Crescent Drive. The
maid, Mui Pham, 63, was struck
once by the intruder but did not
require hospital treatment, he
said.
The owner of both the house
and the jewelry, Ph.i Ou Thao.
38, was not at home when the
holdup took place. police said.
The intn.ader was de9cribed as
an Asian man, about 25 years old,
5-feet-4 inches tall, thin build,
and carrying a small handgun.
Girl found;
dad arrested
MESA, Ari z . (AP) -A
2-year-old girl who disappeared
from Santa Ana with her father
last month has been found here
and the father arrested.
authorities said.
Kevin Michael Reilly, 21. was
arrested tut night when he went
to the home of a girlfriend in
Mesa, said police Lt. Jack
Edmonn. The girl, Melissa Ann
Reilly. waa found unharmed at
the home of a neighbor who was
babysitting the child.
Whitaker said yesterday those
conditio ns were out of the
quest.ion and declared the subject
closed.
Marjorie Caserio, Faculty
Senate president, said today the
Nixon Foundation is damaging ita
credibility by terminating
d iscussions before it even
receives the UCI propo681. She
said the faculty conditions were
devised as saleguards to uphold
the academic standing of the
university.
"I am incredulous, to say the
least, that the Nixon Foundation
would turn off negotiations at
this point because there is no
pr.oposal befqre it as yet," she
88ld.
"They're p o t giving the
campus a chance."
Mesa firm
to sell for
$3() million
An agreement has been
reached for the cash purchase of
a Costa Mtta-based d1vis1on of
ITT for $30 million by an Ea.stem
manufacturer of consumer
products, officials said.
Armatron International lnc.
based in Melrose, Mass., expects
to finalize the purchase o ( the
J .C. Cart.er Division of ITT by
June 30, a company spokesman
said.
The Carter division. which
employs about 500 people locally,
manufactures pumps for energy-
related applications, said Bob
Berrellez, an ITT spokesman.
Armatron is the world's largest
manufacturer of electronic "bug
zappers." The company reported
$36 million in sales last year, sa1d
James J . Hickey, Armatron's Vlce
president of finanCle.
Hickey said ITT is selling off
about 40 of its divisions and
returning to-its main area of
experti.ae.
J C. Carter will function as a
"stand-alone operation," as a
division of Armatron , Hickey
said. He said he does not expect
any major changes in staff or
management.
Center
fees
waived
By JODI CADENHEAD or-..,..,,......,.
Cotta Mesa dty oUldala ap-eed
l.ut nJ&}lt to waive aome build.1ng
f ee1 and finan ce 1treet
Improvement• totaling about
•269,000 for the future Orange
C.Ounty Performing ArW Center.
Offldala for the propoted $60
mllllon mu1lc center -to be , I
built 1n South C.OUt Plaza Town
Cent.er -h.ad reque.ted $656,000
1n financial assistance from the
city.
City Manager Fred Sorsabal
recommended instead the city
pack lip only 40 percent of the tab
since a planned 16-story building
also wall be nefit from the
improvements, he said.
In add1t1on, the city agreed to
contribute $500,000 in federal
revenue s haring funds for
constru,·tion of one mile of
underground ut.tlities in the area
on Sunflower Avenue. The city
of Santa Ana and the county also
are donating $500,000 each
toward th.at project.
So far more than $27 million
has been p l edged toward
construction of the 3,000 and
1,000-seat theaters that will be
built near Bristol Street and the
San Diego Freeway .
Groundbreaking is scheduled in
June
Long-time city hall critic Sid
Soffer lambasted the council for
donating the funds when it told a
group of homeowners that the
city doesn't have $12 million to
.repair aging storm drains in
Costa Mesa.
In IIJ76 the city donated $250,-
000 m cash to the South Coast
Repertory Theater when it was
built
Coast braces
for another
storm tonight
Orange County 1s due for
another soakmg tonight, with
weather watchers forecasting a
half-inch lo an inch of new
rainfall.
Pat Rowe of the National
Weather Sennce said there is a
90 pe~nt chance o( showers and
thundershowe r s ton ight,
~ heltvy at eun-. ,
She saad the chance of rain will
decrease to 40 percent tomorrow
and the s\Onn should clear out of
the area by afternoon.
Sunday's storm brought local
rainfall figures into the 20-inch
range for the first time in ~e&n>
-nearly twice the usual rainfall
by this time of the season.
Tonight's storm as expected to
be accompa.rued by strong winds
in the 25-to-30-mph category.
Temperatures should drop
tomorrow to 65 degrees in the
daytime and 57 at night.
Sign ordinance
action clarified
An article which appeared in
the Dally Pilot last week
incorrectly identified a Costa
Mesa Planning Commission
action as a revamp of the city's
sign on:hnance.
Actually. the city's new
billboard ordinance was
approved at last week's meeting.
The sign ordinance will come
before the oommi.ssion within the
next two months.
The Daily Pilot regrets the
error.
Tonl ghl end tomo11ow
Showers end thunde,.,.o...,.,a
~ hMyY II Umet dutlnQ
IM night and tomorr-morning. e1ect...ino with pertlal olMrlnQ 1_.-ow •l'te<nOOfl 8out1-lt
wlnda 1s fO 30 mpll. lltttnlnQ to
..i tomorrow afternoon LOW9 In
the 60•. Coolef tomorrow with
hlgll8 In the mid~ Chanc;e of
lhowere 90 p.,c.nt IOfllght.
decreulng to 40 perc ent
tomottOW 1tt•noon.
For later lodey end thl•
evening. the Natlonel We•l"-
Ser vice lo•ece1t rein from
Cellfornle 10 the notthe•n
Rocltl•• More 1now wee
Hpecled In the ~. wllh
rein 11ono the North Allentlo
QOeSt Sltlee -• to be dMr In the South, MlelwMI and Pleine.
BUY WHt:Qf TIIB JtWfLLfQ~ BUY!
Ele•'*h•r• f rom Pol-nt Conception 10 th• M••loen 11onMr ene1 out eo mtM -am.u
tr1ft edvleory from Point
Conception to 1111 M••loen border t or rough ee11 end
ln oreHlllO eouth•••t wind• 8outt.-t WlnOt 15 to 30 knot• In
lftOlll -.-CllPf 25 to 40 llnot•
ov., out•• nonh.,n w1ter1.
atlftlng to 1ou111weet to WH\
t omorrow. Combined •••a ~.ny I to 12 , .. , tttroucitt ~ • .,.,.,. end pollllOle
thuftder1llo wer 1 toftfght.
........ tomomW ... ~ __......_ .. .,..,__
Tempereturea etound Ull
netlon et 2 e.m. EST r.,.CS from 1~;:(,~""':!"'~",..~uw~f.'"...!O.:!:""""~··~':;'!..!:.(.~:::;;:;"'::"~::.·.:...• ~~:::--7'.'.":-::-:;-:::;;;:;--;:c.:;-:::::-:;-~ 19 ~ 1n Merqvecw, Mich.. ._
to 71 Clegr-In 8rownsYllle and Ftonta Cold ...,.. Wmm 99 o.i Rio. r-.
------~~-------------------Extended Ceepet ea 27 LOIA::-87 57
Cfl.,._,on,8 c. ~ 50 loullvll 49 34
Ct\erieston,W V. 42 28 Memphll llO 42 forecast ~N.C 44 37 Miami 75 aa
a.,.r-82 '° M....,._ 33 23
~ 37 26 Mp19-lt.P8'11 " 23 SOUTHlAN CALIFORNIA 40 21 ,... Of1Mnl 78 51 COASTAL AMAS -OecrMllotg a...llnd 34 21 ,._ YOftl 4t aa cloud• Thureday becoming Cdumllle,8.C. 51 43 oio.om. Cl1Y .. 44 moetly felr Friday. lnoreH l'!S CdYrnOue 31 27 Omlhe 41 aa ~ 8aNrday """' • oher1C9 ~tWortll 78 51 ONndo 76 ... .,_.._ I.Owl 45 lo !16 encl tMgtw 0.-7:1 St Pl1llidllllPI* .. s:a NtoTI. Dee ..... 44 IO ,.._,.. IO ..
°""'* 13 H ~ .... ,. 14 Temperatures EJ P9o 11 •t 112 40 ,..... 47 ,.. l"ortllnd, Ore ., 11
.. Le F#fO 46 12 ~ ... 11
62 zt :.:~" 46 IO =-.. 6t ao == ... 11 79 26 62 It Mdliormge •2 11 HoftOMli It .. It&..-41 IO n u Alllr8 IO 44 HcMIOfl t2 IO ~T~ .. .. Mlrllo City ... .. ~ .. a .. • 21 IMLIM
llllMMN = :: .............. • .. -~ .. It
~ ~ " 41 ... Delft • .. ... .... ,,..,..., 40 • ~ 62 :a ....., 61 .. ~Oley IO 11 • 10 • ....... 1t ., ...... ..... '-"""" • ,.,.. 14 N '""""' 11 ...
Niia .. • w_...... ... ..
lllf llPlll ...... ll ..
• Tlie• .,....
=:tr. ••'""'· H 'ft ~ ~M .;;.,.. , ti( H • =· . , ... ~~J •• =~ ..... ~ .. .. I ~'n':t=. MI ,...
No need to travel to the
Los Angeles Jewelry Mart!
Our regular prices are up to 75%
iower than other jewelry storesl
SHOP AND COMPAREI
• ....... CUA.MMe
..... Am ...
HAI
,
' •
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tue.day, Aprll 18, 1983 ~3
NATION
High court reverses
nuclear ,plant ruling
Victims sought in Beirut rubble
Blast at U. . Embassy killed 39; st least nine others missing, feared dead
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By ne A1t0elated Pre11
W ASHINOTON -The federal aovernment doea not
have to corulder poealble paychologlcal harm to nearby ~dent.I before allowing a nuclear reactor at Three Mlle Ialand ln Pennaylvan.la to reopen. the Supreme Court ruled
today. The court unanimoualy voted to reverse a federal
appeala court rullna that would have lmpoeed such a burden
on the federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Prison hostage released
PITTSBURGH -One hostage was released today by a
pair Of armed inmate. who took two captives in a bungled
eecape at~"!f: aix days ago at a state maximum aecuritr, prilon, of said. The released hostage was Kostal "Gua •
Mutroe. Negotiatloru were still being conducted for the
ntleue of the other hostaRe. guard Daniel Kohut.
Rooney's suit for profits fails
WASHINGTON-Actor Mickey Rooney failed yesterday
to penuade the Supreme Court to decide whether the motion
picture industry should be forced to share the profits from his
movies daUna back to 1932. Rooney, who began his movte
career as a child, filed suit m 1981 against eight major motion
picture studios, claiming he is entitled to revenue from
cl.latribuUon of his old movies through the new technology of
video caaaett.ee, pay television and cable TV. The Supreme
Court refuaed without comment to hear Rooney's arguments
MX deployment before Congress
WASHINGTON -President 0 Reagan, abandoning his
"dense pack" plan for deploying MX missiles, is embracing
new recommendations for putting 100 missiles in existing
launch ailos holding Minuteman missiles in Wyo~s.!!ff and
Nebraska and developing a new, single-warhead · · e for
deployment in the early 1990s. ConWi'ess has given itaelf 45
daya td judge Reagan's MX basing decisum. having already put
a freei.e on money to produce the 10-warhead weapon pending
approval of a basing plan.
Kennedy rejects Dallas visit
DE:I'ROIT -Sen F.dward Kennedy has declined to speak
at the United Auto Workers convention next month in Dallas
because of traumatic memories about his brother's
asauaination there. UAW President Douglas A. Fraser said the
1enator had not set foot in Dallas since President John F.
Kennedy was alain by Lee Harvey Oswald on Nov. 22, 1963.
STATE
Families return alter acid spill
MODESTO -About 500 families returned to their£:i:o
yesterday after authorities declared that fumes fro a
phosphate acid spill on State Route 132 were no lo r a
threat. A tanker truck overturned about 7 a,m., sending the
hazardous liquid onto the roadway and forcing the closure of
two nearby Catholic schools.
Aid to adoptees measure advances
SACRA.MENTO -Legislation to help adult adoptees
locate their natural parents has won approval of the Assemb.!,y
Tud(cfary CommJttee, but Jt woulcf apply only to luture
adoptions. Most of the testimony yesterday on AB2096 by
AMemblyman Robert Campbell. 0-Richmond, concerned its
ret.rOactive application to existing adoptions. So Campbell
removed that provision under strong pressure from members,
1everal of them adoptees.
Oakland victims 'back from dead'
OAKLAND -An elderly husband and wife thougqt to
be dead when firefighters found them collapsed in their
unok.e-filled retirement apartment were alive and in critical
condition today at an Oakl8.nd hospital. "They were considered
fatalities at first," Oakland Fire Department Chief Don
Matthews said of Robert MOOft, 79, and his wife, Pearl. 70.
WORLD
Amerasian children to leave
BANGKOK, Thailand -More than 160 Amerasian
children and their relatives are to leave Vietnam for the
United States on April 28, a U.S. Embassy official said
yesterday. lt will be the sixth airlift of children of American
fathen and Viet:name8e mothen. So far 180 Arnenmans have
left Vietnam on the airlifts, which began last fall.
Walesa again interrogated
WARSAW, Poland -An exhausted Lech Walesa went to
police headq~n today for the third interrogation in a week
about his contacts with underground leaden of the banned
Solidarity trade Ullion.
Walesa'• spokesman, Adad K i naszewski, said the
S9-year-old labor leader showed up at police headquarters in
hit hometown of Gdanak aa ordered. His wife, Danuta, said
her husband was interrogated for aeven houra yesterday after
being stopped by authorities en route to Wanaw.
El Salvador minister quits
SAN SAL V AOOR, El Salvador -Oen. Joee Guillermo
Oarda bu resigned aa defenae minister, bowing to military
oommanden who aca18ed him of botching the war against
leftist guerrillaa.
Prelident Alvaro Magana accepted Garcia's reslgnation
yesterday and named Carloe &.igen1o Vides Casanova, a career
officer with no battle experience, to replace him.
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -
Reecue 1quadl ~arched throuah
shattered ooncrete and ma.nsled
furniture of the U.S. Embaaay,
today for more victlma of the
terrorlat bomblng that officials
aay killed up to 16 Americana.
Police said the powerful
explosion yeaterday killed at
least 39 people and wounded 120
others, including 22 Americans.
Col. Jamee M. Mead, commander
of the U.S . Marine contingent in
Beirut, said today the dead
-·
East still
locked in
• • icy grip
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Listening •••
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Call the number at left and your mea•ge will be recorded,
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calls. please
Tell ua what's on your mind
OAAHOE COASl
llllJPilat
Included 1even Amerlc&na, with
nine o th er• mlaalng and
pre.urned dead.
U S Ambasaador R o bert
DUlon aaid It wu "very unlikely"
any more 1urvlvon would be
found In the ruins, where
authorities expected to find
another 20 or ao bodies today.
Near the several ton.a of rubble
that crashed from the building, a
U.S . flag flew on a flagpole
undamaged by the blast.
"The embassy Marines put lt
up at 1wui.le," Mt*! aaid.
Witneuea and police uid a
pickup truck jammed with an
estimated 500 pounds ot
expl.Olivee aped lnto the cirou1ar
driveway of the eeuide embaaly
and blew up Monday at 1 e.m. u
lunchUme 1trollen paaeed. The
blaat ahattered the main aection'1
seven-story facade, hurling
bodies Into the Mediterranean
and devastating the ground
floor's visa wing.
Mead told reporters that 10
A Classic Summer begins
with Summer Sunwear from ...
346 7 Via lido -VI• lido Plw -Newport Blach
"'Wt fHJ .. ltlli ,. W NI M11M 11111 ... ,, ..,. l "
l ,
Lebanese employees at the
embaaly were conf lrmed killed
ln the fiery blut and 20 others
were ml11ina and presumed
dead.
In all, according to Dillon,
about 130 people were at the
embaaly when the bomb went
off, the worat attack on a U.S.
fadllty ln Lebanon.
The top half of a man'• body,
clad ln a tan auit, hung from the
sandwiched fifth floor thls
morning.
Wrong turn
An unidentified
skipper put this
35-f oot cabin
cruiser on the sand
at the anta Ana
River mouth
'unday.
Authorities say the
operator thought
he was making a
turn into Newport
Harbor. The boat
was to be removed
today.
Reagan
lobbies for
tax plan
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A• Orange Coa11 DAILY PILOTITuHday, Aprll 19, 1983
Court weighs
race, schools
Wl\SUINUTON (AP) The Supreme Court
THE YOYAQBRI CLU9
AND
SUN LINI CRUlll!I
JNVl1't' YOU TO A SPECIAL
CRUISE NIGHT
/'lJESDA Y, APRIL 26, I 983
7 PM T091'M
hat begun ltM flnul t4Xam1naUon of two Important
CUH Involving tax breaks Cor parcntM u( children m
private 1chool1 and r&l'l&I prtdercnce• in
employnient
The juatkt . ._ heard arguments on both wues
yeet.erday and are expected to announet> decl.efona ln
the separate cues by July, although It could decide
there la no longer a live <.'ontroversy in the
employment case.
AIRP Q.BTER INN, IRVINE Admlaalon Free -S-tlng Llmtt9d r Refreshments -Film -Door Priza
"""'0" T"AVIL Npl. kh. -t71-tl11 AIVP T"AVIL IXCHANQI, TAAV.l CC>UN'nY CW IRVM -M1 ... •
hn c i.-te -~ ANC•NT M.AIUN9" TRAWL, Tuettn -....,_
Dallas photographer James Dickman won a
Pulitzer Prize for this photo of life in an El
Salvador refugee camp.
Bouquets for 'basics'
Mississippi pape r tops Pulitze r Prize list
NEW YORK (AP) -The
Puliuer Prize judges recognized
the value of "good, basic,
everyday reporting" when they
gave the award for public service
to a group of articles on school
reform, a reporter for this year's
winner says.
The Distinguished Public
Service Award went to the
Clarion-Ledger of Jackson, MISS.,
for a 24-day series of news
stories, analyses and editorials in
support of a soocessful legislative
battle for public school reform in
the at.ate.
In oth er categories 1n
yesterday's 67th distribution of
journalism's most covet ed
aw ards, the New York Times
won two Puliuer Prizes for the
second straight year, the
Washington Post also won two,
and Alice Walker became the
first black woman to win in the
fiction cates.ory for her novel,
"The Color Purple."
The Pulitzer Board said the
Clarion-Ledger helped change
the course of education in
Mississippi, where there had
been no major educati on
improvements adopted by the
Legislature in 29 years.
Besides separately wmnmg
one prize apiece, the Post and the
Times shared the international
reporting award for their
accounts of the war in Lebanon.
The Boston Globe won the
national. affairs award for a
56-page Sunday magazine
supplement on the nuclear arms
race, a special report that also
was a finalist in the public
service category The story was
entered m the public affairs
category but was moved by the
Puliuer Board into the nauonal
alfa.i.rs division.
Bill Foley of The Associated
Press received the spot news
photography award for a series
of photos of victims and survivors
of the massacre of Palestmians at
the Sabra camp in Lebanon.
James B. Dickman of the Dallas
Times Herald won the feature
photography award for photos
from El Salvador.
Walker, who won an American
Book Award last week. said from
San Franciaco that when a radio
reporter first told her of her
Pulitzer Prize for fiction, she
"thought it was a joke.
Jn o case that may af!e<:t President Reagan's
proposal to give federal tax breaks to parents of
children ln private schools, the court was urged to
declare a similar state plan in Minnesota
unconstitutional
The two Minnesota taxpayers who filed the
suit claim that tax deductions for actual costs of
tuition, textbooks and transportation violate the
conautullonal requirement or separation of church
and state. The law grants the tax breaks to parents
of both pnvate and public school children
But in practice almost all of the benefits go lo
the private school children, said William I. Kampf
of St. Paul, an attorney who is challenging the law.
"An impermissible danger exists that the state
is aiding religion," Kampf argued
Douglas C Blomgren, a special a.ss1Btant state
attorney general for Minnesota, defended the law
on grounds the benefits are available for all.
The Reagan administration has proposed
federal tax credits for private school education
throughout the nauon. Congress has not acted on
the plan.
The Reagan proposal, while calling for credits
rather than deductions, could gain impetus from a
favorable Supreme Court ruling by suggesting a
method that could pass constitutional muster.
In 1979, the Supreme Court overturned a New
Jersey law that gave taxpayers a $1 ,000 deduction
for each child in a non-public e lementary or
secondary school. ·
China, Vietnam
intensify battle
PEKING (AP) -China said today that its
gunners bombarded Vietnam's frontier forces in a
large-scale artillery attack after the Vietnamese
blew up a primary school. hospital and other
buildings near the embattled border.
"The Vietnamese troops suffered heavy losses,"
the official news agency said, reporting on the
shelling Sunday and yesterday along the border
between Vietnam and the Guangx1 autonomous
region.
Yesterday marked the third stra1ght day of
fighting since China began shelling Vietnamese
defense positions Saturday. It is the first time China
has used arttllery to retaliate against the
Vietnamese since the two nations fought a one-
month border war in February 1979.
Saks Fifth
Avenue is taking
inventory. ..
and so, we'll open
our doors at
12:00 Noon on
Wednesday,
April 20th.
We'll be looking
forward to seeing
you then!
'1111t/1 ( 1 ""' J•l,11" I If I /lt1\/nl \/ff't'I ( IJ\IJ \f('\J
'1lt wasn't an expoee, nothing
too flashy," said Clarion-Ledger
legislative reporter Cliff Treyens.
"But i.he Pulitzer committee
recogru.z.ed there is value m good,
basic, everyday reporting."
"The Color Purple" tells the
story of Celie, a teen-age bnde
w i th a fa mi 1 y in t he r u r a l
American South, and Nettie, her
sister, a rTUSS1onary 10 Afnca The
sisters' letters to each other
recount their dramatic ally
dtfferent lives
Xinhua said the latest Chmese shelling was
meant to punish Vietnamese troops who blew up a 1;.-=.-===~-----------------------=---=-=-"T"-----,
primary school. hospital, bank, gram office and People a ll along I . ·11y P1·1 , 1""' houses m Napo County. where 3,000 commune th 0 C t residents were forced to flee their homes and e range oas rely on the 642-4321
(8C'l.C>fltl9.
Save $1 on long ~hone cords at
Pacific Telephone ·service Centers.
stop place for all your tele-
phone needs.
At our Full Service
Centers, you'll not only find
cords but also the latest
phones, recording and auto-
matic dialing equipment
available . Plus you can get
special services like Touch-
tone, Call Waiting , Call
Forwarding and so on. And Your pup munching away if you're looking for a
on your phone cord is proba- special gift that people will
bly not the only reason to use, here's where you'll ~et a new one. Maybe yours find Pacific Tele{>hone Gift
1s too short or maybe it's ~ Certificates.
J. ust all tattered and tom. ~ ,, ~ 1' ( J . Whatever the reason, you 1 ~·
can come to a Pacific Tele-~
phone Service Center ~1
durinS our "Stretch-A-,..6=...Y."
Buck sale and save ••1 ~ $1 on selected long · "
cords in various colors~
This ia just our way of
inttoduci~ you to our
Servlce center : your on
Our Service Only Centers
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on ly want to ,.' . return, pick . l~··. ,
up or get egu 1p-'_~~-1 ( -.....
ment repaired. /~ --,(;
Visit your / v
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TeleJ?hone ~ ;j1 Service ~ \ ..
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'-, today. And if
for some
reason you
happen to need
a new cord, or
a new dog (just
kidding), you
can save a
dollar
from now
through April 30, 1983.
•While upptiea lnaL All let final.
•
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A' .\Hl-.1\t 2216 F l.tncuh Avenue
lluuf' \1 I 'I bpm
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l<l80f1 Jt ffrr. 1< .. 1d
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I.OS ANGELI-.~
1149 Cower ~trcct
llnur-. M F 8.30 5pm
1538 N lltghland Avenut'
lluur ... \1 F 9 fipm
5-1 15 N F1~ema "lrei:t
llou1-. \1 f !l 6pm
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lluur; M TH 8.30 Spm f' 10 5pm
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lloul"I M 8 30 5pm/T-F 8.30·6pm/Sat 10·2pm
1221 S ll1•1ver Street
llnur.; M F 10 6pm
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Jlouni M f 8 30·5pm
ORANC,E
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llou~ M F 9 5pm
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69 (JllA 1~ lndu!'tnai;
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SERVICE ONLY CENTERS
BREA
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Hour. M F ll.30·5pm
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llnun. M F 8.~·~
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lJ>SANGRLES
114 t4 w llllhlrt Boul«arcl
H11\l :Ml'UO!ipm
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Bradley tax
bid fought
by Jarvis
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Warning of a city without
llbrarle. or recreation centers,
with potholes ln the atreeta and
skeletal police and fir e
departmenta, Mayor Tom
Bradley hu uked residents to
1upport a huge property tax
lncreue.
But Howard Jarvis, who
authored the property tax-lluhina Proposition 13 in 1978,
lmmecflatefy said he would
oppoee Bradley's aolution to the
dty'a $142 million buda'.et de(ldt.
The mayor went on local radio
and television stations last
evening to aak residents to accept
either the Increase or the effects
of sweeping budget cuts.
"I love this city and I would
not serve you well if I let It
deterlora te for fear I migh l
displease you by asking for a
sacrifice," Bradley said. "l travel
the streets of this city every day.
I see the potholes, I see the
streets getting dirtier and dirtier
... I see our fire department
having to make parts for obsolete
equipment."
The mayor wants a
"temporary'' one-sixth of 1.
percent lncreue In the property
tax rate to get the $142 million.
That would boost the average
homeowner property tax bill by
$90 a year or 15.4 percent from
the current level of $583. He said
the added cost, after savings
realized throURh tax deductions.
•
Mayor Tom Bradley
would be an annual average of
$68.
Proposition 13 requires a two-
thirda vote of the people to ra.lae
the pro~rty tax rate. However,
Bradley s proposal would require
only a simple majority vote by
the 15-member City Council
under a 1982 state Supreme
Court decision allowing property
tax Increases to cover bonded
Indebtedness incurred before
Proposition 13 was passed The
city's $250 million pension fund
debt qualifies under that
decision.
Jarvis said he would take the
city to court if such an increase
passed.
"They can't raise other taxes
except by a vote of the people,"
he Insisted.
Bradley said: "We have the
choice of either reducing the
proposed budget by an additional
$142 million or generating an
equivalent amount of new
revenue to tide us over.
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Hero cited
for blast
rescues
LOS ANGELES (AP) A
20-year-old man wu hailed aa a
hero yeaterday after a car
craahed Into a fa s t -food
n11taurant and cawieq a natural
gaa exploaion, lnjurini 11 people.
One man'• leg wu nearly
aevered, authoritlee aaid.
Onlooker Roland Eeoto helped
paramedics pull the victims from
the amoke and debrla and
administered flrat aid, Fire
Department 1poke1man Jim
Wella said, calling FAoto "one of
the heroes."
"He was basically a very good
helper," Wella aald.
"All l know i1 that a guy
apparently lost his brakes and
ran into a building, breaking the
gas main or a pipe which pumped
gas into the building, and while
everyone was standing a.round
looking at th e wrec k , the
building blew up," said Los
Angeles police off icer Tom
Gamer
Wells said "the car apparently
snapped a natural gas meter
when it crashed into the
restaurant ...
"One guy was about to lose his
leg," he said. "They almost
amputated it at the scene."
Three were taken to Panorama
H06pital, where one person was
in serious condition, another in
guarded condition and a third in
satisfactory condition, said
nursing superviaor Lee Grier.
set on TV
Chamber of Commerce repreaentatlvea
from HunUnilon Beach, Fountain Valley and
Weatminater will participate In a live televiaed
ditcuaaion prosrarn from 7 to 8 p.m . tomorrow
on Channel 1 of Dickinson Pacific
Cableayatema.
ParticlpatiJ11 from the Hunt.inQ'ton Beach
chamber will be president Bob Davl1 and put
prealdent Bob Terry. Fountain Valley
chamber representatives will be executive
director Pat Crockett and president Frank
Navarro.
• The Irvine Breakfast Lions Club will
honor four local citizens when It holds its
annual awards banquet, April 30 at the Santa
Ana Country Club. .
Award winners are: Helen Cameron,
citizenship award; Robert Bellah, community
award; Richard Kerns, achievement award,
and David Allen, Medal of valor.
The banquet is open to the publtc, said
Jobn Inmon, chairman for the event
• The Fountain Valley Branch Library
will obeerve National Library Week with a
free family program Thuraday. The program
begins at 7:30 p.m. at the li,brary, 17565 Loe
Alam06 St.
Children will be entertained at a puppet
show performed by Dr. Clara Peck Scbultz,
portraying "Dr. Fanta Cee." Parents will meet
Kathleen Cbaa editor of Village Circle, an
Orange County magazine.
Refreahmenta will be served by the
Friends of the I..Jbrary.
I
lstheskv
the limit1
You probably think there isn't any-
thing you can do about soaring health
care costs. But then~. is. Now you can join
the FHP health plan where you work.
With most FHP plans, your regular
monthly premiums take care of almost
everything from a routine checkup ta
major surgery. There are no big deduct·
ibles, no sky-high extra expenses to pay
out of your own pocket.•
A recent survey conducted by the
U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services reports that plans like FHP have
saved from 10% to 40% each ye.r on •
f amlly's hfflth care costs when compared
to conwntlonal health Insurance plans.
So ask about joining FHP where you
work to bring your health care cosu *·k
down to earth. ' ~
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Ae Or•ng• Coul DAILY PIL.OT/luaday, Aprll 18, 1913
D
fleachf ront owners
should know rules
1 .Beachfront property owners tn the Thouaand Steps Beach
~a of South Laguna are in another legal hassle.
Thia time they have locked horns with both the state Coastal Commlssion and the county for falling to obtain permits
before startiJlR construction of a sea wall on the aand.
The commission has filed auit against the residents and
obtained a temporary restraining order to halt the construction
and the county is considering joining in the lawsuit.
'fhe properly owners claim they were faced w~th an
~ergency situation. The small beach was damaged in last
month's storms and owners of the hillslde homes contend they
have evidence of an ancient landslide in the area. The waJl, they
.ay, is necessary to protect their homes from damage in future
storms.
However, the Superior Co~rt judge. who .gran~d ~he
restraining order said he could ftnd "no immediate SJtuauon
requiring construction of the sea wall." A hearing on the ~ue is
acheduled for Friday.
By now just about everyone should be aware that it is
Wegal to construct concrete walls on beaches without Coastal
Commission approval and that, additionally, building permits
from local authorities are required for such structures. If a
genuine emergency exists, there are such things as emergency
permits.
But the Thousand Steps folks, who spent years fighting
county attempts to rebuild the crumbling stairway that gave the
beach its name and offered the only public access to the sand,
prefer to do things their way.
They finally lost the Jtairway fight, but they st.aged a
pretty successful maneuver during the recent storms when they
persuaded Congressman Robert Badham to bring in a contingent
df Marines, complete with a bulldozer al:M>a.rd a helicopter, to
build up beach sand that was being washed away. threatening
one home.
After that, it may have seemed superfluous to bother with
permita for a sea wall. But the fact is that such structures can
have a strange effect on beaches and tides and should not be
erected at random without careful study. That's one of the jobs
of Coast Commission engineers.
U th~re's a problem that a sea wall could correct, it probably
would be approved. But the owners should at least have made
the gesture of applying for the permits instead of trying to
circumvent rules that others must abide by.
•
Op1n10t1\ exprt>,,.,d tn the \PdCt' d bo11i, Ml' tho'e of the Oa1ty P11ot Otner v1~w' «•
pre~\ed on tn1~ PdQI-' Ml' lno .... of lht'ir dutnon ln<l art'''~ Re<Hll·r tornm~nt '' '"""
ed Ad<lrl'\\ Tiil' ;)d1ty P1tot p 0 80• ·~ (O\ld M P'MJ. (P. 92b]b Phont '""
1141 •321
MAILBOX
The best investment
Tp the Editor:
I challenge anyone to tell me
what ia more vital to democracy
than public educ;ation; that
invenuon that we all. potentially,
can and 1hould enjoy. 1 know,
clean air and clean water
tran8Cend governments. But in a
democracy thoee two needs have
to be maintained and preeerved
through educated inhabitants.
Public education should
tramcend politics in America. It
+~ be financed and improved ~.regardless of who is in
The fact that funds for public
IChoola in the nation, particularly
ID rich California, are being cut
back Is very ominous. The
implications are that the 80dety
does not care for its children and
ila future; that it i.a caught in a
myopic tailspin that revolves
around greed, short-sightedness.
.-,nd stupidity.
Like It or not, the world we
Uve in la heavily dependent upon
Interrelated systems comprised
of, hopefully, intelligent,
benevolent, capable human
beings. Whether they're our
children or not, we should
educate them to take a
rte1 pons i bl e part in our
democracy, 80 they can get our
name and address correctly on
our Social Security checks, if
nothing else.
Educators have too much work
to do to worry about adequate
funding. One day, through
education, America may be able
to torget about welfare recipients
and war machines. But the need
for P.ducation ia vital to human
llfe, always.
We need to find an alternative
to financing education from the
"taxation pie." We need a "grass
roots" efioct to tum our echool
ayatems into business entitiea
that earn profita and reinvest
them. It's complex, but it's time
to do it.
JOHN DIEDERICH
Alternative school
To the Editor:
The Ragaues' March 16 letttt
1»ppoaing the creation of an
alternative 1ebool in the Laiun.a
»each Unified School District
1ee1n11 to me to be hued on two
linportanl ~
The first of theae ia that an
alternative school wQ(fld be a
ilraln on the district'• ffnances;
my undentanding of the board's
jnstructions to the task force la Ula& the coet of any propoeed
proanm cannot exceed the ...-nt per...iudent cost for the
C:b1ldren It will .erve.
The ..cood 11 the uswnptlcn
lbat an alternative ICbool would
~~ fall to provide the
lfbMlc '' for contribution to and to .. prepare student.a
and the work force.•·
beln1 considered 11
iw'ely not an aJt.tmaUYe to the
ifs lnd of education theae mm1~naa parenta feel la buic:, 1 ut an alt.ernattve achoo! -
nother way of r.achlng the
WW all ebaft,
UnUl onl,y r.mitly, our dlttric:t Md tin u18De1lw lchool at the
econdary leveli and the .,.__ of It that know t.t fi•ve 'J~• on to perform
succeutully in college and the
work force or both. Outside
evaluators over the years found
the school 'a atmosphere
intellectually lively and gave It.a
students high mark• for
responsibility and 1elf-di.cipllne.
Educators asaesalng the high
school'• School Improvement
Program for the state board of
educ a lion singled out the
alternative IChool as having the
qualities they were looklna for.
Wllh this example In the
community'• recent put, there ls
no l"aUOI\ to believe t.hlt the t.uk
force'• proposal wlll be
educationally unsound or that
the trustee•, some of them
educaton Lhmmelves. wW fall to
examine it cloely from the potnt
of view of what bu lone been
the dWtrfct'• main llm: meeUni the lndMdual educaUonal nMdS
of fll/ery child. ~ .tvm the
oomtraintl undeJ' wbicli the talk
fo~ la worldna, there ta no ,...,.. to feer that an alternative
edM>Ol wW dnw away ~
from the oonwndonal prosnm
that ..ne s-rertt8 pref• fOC' t.beir'
own chlldnn.
8ARBABA ME'rl.OEB
WASHING TON -The Mafia
dona must be chuckling with
satisfaction. A jealous feud
between two federal agencies
over bureaucratic turf threatens
to jeopardize the government's
battle agalnat labor racketeering.
Here's the story:
The Justice Department is
detenninedly trying to keep the
Labor Department's apecial
agents from being given the
law-enforcement powers FBI
agents have. These include the
righl to carry firearm•. make
arrests and execute warrants.
JUSTICE DEPARTMENT
offici.ala don't want to give the
impre9Sion that they're engaged
in an unseemly jurisdictional
struggle. So they're arguing,
essentially, that thino have been
working out fine. I1 the Labor
Department crime fighters get in
situations where they need guns
and arrest authority, they say, all
they have le do I.a call the "31 for
help.
My uaociate Indy Badbwar
h.as learned. meanwhile, that the
General Accounting Office will
recommend to Congress that
Labor's agenta be given full
law-enfon:ement powers. But
Jumoe .. baJkln&.
"Proposal• to expand the
Labor Department's existing
criminal investigative
responsibilities," a recent Justice
Senate Republicans have been
attempting a variety ol tricks to
get clearance for Gov .
Deukmejlan to move into the
new governor's mansion, but ao
far nothing haa worked .. It is
even reported in aome drclea that
Deukmejian hlm8eU la lobbyi.J\g
against thoee attempts, because
he doesn't actually want his
family to live ln the ostentatious
palace. If thia really is the caae.
the Duke has reuon to hesitate.
The house is about 20 miles
from the Capitol, whJch may be
just one of the governor's
concerns.
Al80, it sit.I on a crest above the
American River, a atream that
very likely la receiving infusiOlll
of deadly chemicals from
u.ndetlP'OUnd aquifers juat miles
from tbe Carmichael residence.
The American RI ver, a
picture~que waterway with
substantial populations of native
and anadromou.a fish, abo fiowa
near the atate Capitol. Perhapa
now this state's government
leaders will notice this
Uepartment memo states, "may
jeopardize the primary principles
which we think have contributed
significantly to the successful
inve.tlgation and prosecution of
criminal elements in the (labor)
fielda."
To this ringing defense of
"primary principles" the memo
adda: "The FBI is already
performing covert investigations
with considerable auocea."
Senate investigators disagree.
"These are specialized
investigations," aaid a staffer of
the Lal>or and Human Reeources
Committee. ''Frankly, we're not
happy with what the FBI haa
done in this field ... They
average less than seven
investigations a year. They do
not consider thia a high-priority
item. They have too much elae to
do."
An Internal memo from the
Labor Department inspector
general's office to the committee
cites some specific examples of
thia:
-A MAJOR STING operation
in Detroit was aborted last
Augwt becawie Labor couldn't
protect its underoover agents and
111111/
llKl•ll
Increasingly aerious problem of
polluted and poiaoned water ao
much In evldmce throughout
California.
One of Deukmej1an's own
departments, that of Health
Services, has joined with the
attorney general and a regional
water quality board .,in filing suit
against Aerojet General Corp.,
alleging that the company Is
allowing contaminants high in
toxica to aeep lnto the river. The
suit recently waa amended to
include the allegation that
"hazardous, toxic and
carcinogenic chemicals have
entered and are entering the
American Rlver and (nearby)
uaable s;round water."
The current head of the
Department _of Health Services la
• agencies
the FBI had refused to
partici pa le.
-In New York and
Cleveland, Labor agents referred
at least four cases to the FBI
because they lacked the
necessary law-enforcement
powers. The FBI has sat on the
ca.sea.
-In Cleveland, several
potential witnesses refused to
cooperate with Labor
investigators because they could
not offer the informants
protection.
-Last January, Labor agents
had to call off an investigation
because they couldn't get the FBI
to provide protection for a
meeting between an undercover
infonnant and a targeted suapect.
The Justice Department's dog-
ln-lhe-manger attitude toward
Labor's investigators is
surprising in light of a recent
confidential survey it conducted
of its 13 organized-crime strike
forces. Strike force leaders were
asked to evaluate the
t"ffectiveness of the Labor
Department's agents in union
racketeering work . The
responses were overwhelmingly
positive.
''n>e respondent.a were of the ~ opinion--that the (Llbort-
age nu ... were performing
thelr investigations promptly and
effectively," a Justice
Department memo noted, adding:
Dr. Robert ~tephens. a ~idover
from the Brown era who very
likely owes his longevity to the
prickly problem posed by the
Aerojet drama. Aerojet, one may
recall, wu the origin of Rita
Lavelle, a publicist who went to
Washington to adminiater for the
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) 80mething called
the hazardous waste cleanup
superfund. She proved to be an
eventual source of agitation to
her benefactor President Reagan.
and a key player in the ongoing
EPA upheavals before her forced
resignation .
Outing his campaign ,
Deukmejian specified his concern
about environmental protect.ion
and haa taken pains not to alarm
his detractors by bis appointees
to important environmental
posta. By allowing Dr. Stephena
to remain In his directorship
suggests that the governor la
will1ng to go slow in maklna any
decl1ion that could affect
adveraly the progress of toxic
waste cleanup.
":Some· responses commented
favorably on the Increased
motivation . . . and the pre.enoe
of competition as an incentive to
the FBI in labor cues."
The G-men in the street may
weloome the friendly competition
provided by the Labor
Department's knowledgeable
agents; their boeaes behind the
desks in Washington obviously
don't.
DIPLOMATIC DIGEST: Iran's
Ayatollah Khomeini evidently
doesn't have enough on his handi
with dissidence at home and a
war with Iraq. Now he's
suspected of exporting his
particular brand of violent
mischief to Lebanon. Recent
attacks on Israeli and other
troops have been traced to Shiite
Moslems working with Iran.
-Does the heart of a Parria
Island drill instructor beat within
every Marine's breast? The corps'
brass hats seem to think ao. At
any rate, they have tried to
remedy the morale problem of
boring duly in Lebanon by
turning the Marines into Dia for
the sad-sack Lebanese army. My
sources say the resulta of this
casual train1ne have been
11rhlimally-df~. But at' lean •
it has accomplished its main
purpose: to keep bored U.S .
Marines out of the fieshpota of
Beirut.
Jerry Brown~s last twoJears in
office were marke by a
flurry of Jerry-come-lately
activities aimed at motivating the
toxic waste program, and the
first-glance reaction by
Deukmejian could have been a
significant dismantling of his
predecessor's cleanup efforts.
But the governor -
fortunately for his fellow human
beings -appears to recognlu
that toxic waste disposal and
clean. safe water are two issues
that transcend mere politics,
which in fa c t are vital to
survival.
And, importantly, he seenu
willing to allow what appean to
be a worthwhile lawsuit to
proceed unhindered, a lawsuit
that carries with it the mesaage
that California's government,
whether it be controlled by
Republicans. Democrats or
Whooiits, can no lon&er afford to
be tolerant or polluters whose
Interests do not include the
health and safety of their
neighbors.
Nuclear w-ar worild end Marxist dream
Althou1h Marxism llke. to
clus itlell u a "edence," most
diapaasionate observen would
call it a "relllion," and I happen
to agree. It meet.a few tests of
what • 8Clence 1hould be. but
lhare9 many of the .ame features
u a reu,toua t.lth..
In one l'fllpect, thouah. ft ll
aharply different from almost all
the others. Their Paradlle,
whatever it ii named, COl1* in
another world, in a afterJtfe.
Mankind'• real and permanent
deltln,y. ln tbeocwatric relJp>nt.
bel9np to the future, beyond
time and 11*-'9·
IUT TBl!l PARADISE of
Mandlm It atmob. and ~y ~ Ic. llclY~m 11 ~
and 111111~ whm It~
1l wW utber In the c)auleu
IDdety and tht withlrinc ·~ of Ute Mate. To ...,.,..... d\11 r. "°'a U~ *-m-"IM 1D th• 1ky' -an.at • , .. n.uc,
.ccur•fe prediction of m1n'1 uhllMteaDrd .... . ,,. ......... -· .,... ... dlH\IH ind evalw••• lh•
M •ti _, .. ,I' Wire •!l!t
................... q.IM!j
~· m-1n_lliii __ ~,
warheadl now make feufble, It
become• evident that the
M.andatl haV9 more to be than
any other of the '"91t NllaSona.
wb.lcb do not pin tbet.r f.sth Ol\
1ublunary l&lvaUon. Mandan
atone requlrH the e»nllnued
exlatmce of the human lp9dtl IO
ree.1Ja '" redemptive .,.i. Jn tblt bHlc Hnae. both
phllotophlcally and
~. Narxllm llilatlutelJ _,,.,. uw lllllildy pl'Clll" I li'O"I
of &he human rece. wtdl_ all the
111111
t.ecbnlques and induttrta.Usm tnat
make such pC'OIJellion poaible.
An atom.le war, which could
wl pe out the majority of
mankind and quit~ poaalbly
render the earth uninhab!table
for centurie11 lf not forever,
would put an end to th1I Marxist
vl1lon of man'a Ion.• upward
1trwlal• toward •plltariaNam; whJfe lt would not aff«l other
reUatona ln \he eame way, for
they expect 1om• 1ort of.
apocalyptlc event to tnd our re.ten Oft earth.
'
to do hls work, and without
machina we are recr••!d to a
pr lmi ti ve level of aoclal
organization.
I do not 1u11eat that such
conaideratlom wlll Inhibit the
nuclear agremi~ of Mandat
leadenhip. but lt la lntetWtinc to
contemplate the fttet that lt ii tbt 1 only rel1c1on extant in the world
that w ould defeat It• own
avowed _purpoee by blowtnc '--
uJ' to a iiJ'\ldom that can DfM!f'
come toe them. accord1na to the
Oclspel of SL Karl.
.....
~ I
I.
I
I'"
Career choices. • • Computer programmers in now
MILLBRAJC (AP) -Modela and
aU·pro runn1n1 t.ca -traditional arww..-s on the what-you·want·C9-be--
when·you·pow-up que.tJonnalN -
are out and computer procrammen are
in .. kJda aet ''realildc about
"Maybe we're ptt.lna away fJ"om
1tereotype. too," lhe aa1d: "Maybe there'•
1 .. ~ toward the I04lli.d 'nude'," the
ldenoe atk:tonac:b ridJcui.d by their
clamnatee for their thJck 1pec:tadel,
W-tl\Unl clothee and pluUC
pocket·protectera.
the top of the U.t wtt.h 880 vo1*a. But
fani.l• 1till Unpr. and pertonned U1a
only dropped into l800nd place wtt.h 870
votee.
8J'flW put 6-foot·S, and~ one1 that
wanted to be modela never Jost their beby
fat."
. •
their career cho6clt."
Out of nearly 200 profe.tona, from
aooountant to X-ray technldan, computer
Pf'Oll'UtUTI.ln ranked No. 1 ln a IW'WY of
i0,02 San r.lateo County hleh 8Chool
1tudent..
"Kida today are becomlnc more
re&liaUc about their career choklee,'' aid
Sheryl Pomerenk of the county education
office'• occupation prosrarn. "We live in a hleh-tech area, and they're waklna up to
the fact that they haw to have computer
lld.l1a to do well.
. THI 1:1111 AID THI caum
In NC:h of the I.Mt four years, her
department hu polled nearly 11,000 ninth
araden and eleventh aradera in the
county juat 1e>uth of SAn FrandllCO about
their career preferencee. The exerct.t hu
a two-fold beneflt: lt maXe. the 1\Udent.
think 1erioualy about future occupationa
and lt helpe educaton plan tra1nlnC
pl'Oll'llll\I. ' Slnce~ooun '• flrlt =:l' computer ha up
from No. 3 to ouat perform.l.ftl u11 from
DlilyPlat
TUESDAY, APRIL 19, 1983
ANN LANDERS
BUSINESS
COMICS
82
84
86
"We've had a few 1ta.r1 come out of our
IChooll -Merv Griffin, Suzanne 8ornen
and eome memben of Fleetwood Mac -
but there oertalnly aren't 870 open.lnp for
perfonnJns artktl,'' Pomerenk aid.
A.. ltudentl Procn-from freshmen
to junion, their choicel alter. The wrve11
lhowed that whlle modellna and
prolealonal tportl are amona the top 10
career choicee for ninth sraden, they
didn't even rank in the top 20 among
eleventh an.den.
''There'• eome maturity tak1na place,"
Pomerenk ukl. ''A lot oLJddl who
wanted to be profellional athletes never
Th.ta year'• 1urvey for the first time
WU broken down into male and female
resp>~. and mo,. llt'la than bo,YI
uptred to be docton, lawyen and
buainels executives.
But in blue--collar Jobi tndltlonally
thought to be male pre1erves, very few
glrll opted for auto mechanicl or
carpentry. Nor dJd many boy. ex.,,.-an
interest {n becoming a CXlll'netolotsst or a
lt!Cretary. ' Low on the llat amona boy. and llt'la
were jobs u a public admlniltrator,
economlat and new•pa'per reporter.
0 When almighty Nielsen
sends down the official
word today, CBS will have
won the prime-time ratings. B3
~hild ~are undergoing change
Stanton child shooting
prompts mothers to act
By KAREN E. llE.IN Of'ho.ltr ..........
The death of Patrick Muon. the 5-year-oJd who was shot by a
· Stanton police officer last month, haa started to change thingJ in
the field of child care.
Slowly but surely, the boy's death is making waves th.at are
beng felt by mothers, employers and educators.
One penon who felt the waves immediately is Linda Farnell, t¥ wife of Richard Farnell, the Newport Beach attorney who
repreeenta Muon'• mother, Patricia Ridge.
''That day (when Muon was ahot), wu my husband'• birthday, and he came home late,'' Farnell said. She heard about the caae
from her husband, she aid, and was •truck by the dilemma
everyone involved in the shooting had to face.
It wasn't long after that when Farnell and two friends, Betty
Schaefer and Wilma Presley, were litt.lng around talking about the
~· "We were all asking each other why 90mebody didn't do
aomething," Farnell saicf. ''Then we asked ourselves why we didn't
do aomething."
They couldn't find an answer to the aeoond question.
So they started a group called "Child Care Advocates of
America." Their motto is "We insist on child care."
The women figured ()rage County was as good a place as any
so atart a chUd-care 8l'QUP. .. hdact., il .ia ~ veey &JlOd place 1Dr a child
a.re group, they la1er found: Oranae County bu the highest
percentage of workine women in the state.
"We like to call ounelves the Founding Mothers," Farnell S&ld.
~e group'• goals right now, lhe uld, are to provide awareness and
enllghtenmenL (
TIMlR involved in the group feel strongly that child care i.a
t:Y~'• responsibility, Famell laki. Being a working mother and
a teacher, ahe bu long been ooncerned with maJdng sure adequate
ch.Del care la provided -at work. at heme and even in store9 and al¥>1>J>in8 man.. lhe aid.
One of the fiJ'll thiJl8I the group hal done la to 8JT1llllt! a
meeting with Sean, the firm where Muon's mother worked as an
apprelltice auto mechanJc.
"We're negotiating to have them eet up a model for child care (f~r employees) arounCl the nation." Farnell said.
"On the whole," ahe added, "oorporationa can make a
tremendous impact on the child care field, but they're not takinl
tHeir share of the burden."
0 ~
0
Studies done, by the Irvine Industrial League have lhown that
although penonnel department. of many oompanie. are supportive ol child care fadlltie., when the idea sets to the executive level It is
~elched. she aid. .,... .......... .,'-......
, "Unfortunately, many executives are still of a generation that
thinks moms stay home when the children are young and take care
of them," Farnell laid, "but th.at jult im't true anymore."
Child care advocates Linda Farnell, Betty Sharf er and Liz Hammad getting geared up to
Re9earch.ini companies and their effona to provide on-lite or
8CpDe other form of. child care will be one of the group's initial
!dcwles, ahe uld.
1 The 40 members of the group, including repreleDtativa of
cammittees already ~ the 1-ae of. Child care, will aJao lobby
lri the government arena, Farnell aid.
'"nle public and the private have to ao hand-in-hand," ahe Mid.
......
"insist on child care" for working mothers.
"We are the government iand we mUlt provide regulations (for child
care facilities). We need legialation to provide ...UtJ child care -
and that~ affordable, convenient. afe and nurturfna."
Tilat IOuncU like a tall order, but it'I not lmpomible, aooord.lJl8
to Farnell.
1b.e Child Care Advocates ia exploring child care ideu which
Good news at grocery market
Prices drop, but you may not notice
•
averap 1ncreaae of 1.7 percent in 12
montha. ~
A look at the overall number of
item1 in the tUrVey 1howed fewer
~ durina March than durtna
February. Here are the pen:entape of
~and~:
Up
Down
Uncbanaed Unavallible
1'8. Mar.
20.9 21.f
17.8 24.2
52.7 61.l
2.8 3.3
1be day of the week en wblcb the
check ... nude V1lried dependlns Oft
the month. Standard bnndl and .,,_ were uMd when available. U the
requ,e.i.cl else and brand wu no\
available on March 1. 1973, a
~ Mibldtut.e ..... lactad.
I ... ~out of lluCk. OI) ant
of the IUIWY claw ~ oampnd wwe not lncbeded Jn the OYW...aJl fOla1.
TM AP did not try '° compare
ldUa1 sn-from dty to dt1 -to
•Y• ftrr •= tbml ... Ollll IDlft ....... .........,....~
oompeMMw .......... --of ,..,.. • .,o111Mr .,.,.., __ ..,.... ...... t,,. ..... -up 10 rwu•• ea w ata1 wt lpen.-at an ......
,.... ............. W9IWS
E .......... .... ..... .... 19M8.,-t.t;
............. GfllltoA
are alre.cly working ot which have been propoeed.
And they hope they can make a difference -perhaps even
prevent trace<lies like the Me ,,,hich occurred in Stanton.
The group, a DOO-profit foundation, ll fund.Id by donations.
Anyone interested in contributing to or joining Child Care
Advocates of America can call 831-0458 for further lnfonnation.
I
I
Bl Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/TuMday, Aprll 19, 1983
Husband'S retirement works hardship on wife ·
DEAR ANN LAND.IRS: I have been manted
4Q yon to a man who h.u chanaed oomplcwly atnce
he retired 10 mont.ha •• and r need to know wNit
to do.
He •YI he la too YOW'\I for "1enJor dthena"
and too old to take up a hobby, 10 he baa devoted
hlmlelf to makina my life mllerable by ~
owr my neck 24 houn a day. rm ready for the
funny farm.
: The man never bolled water before. Now he ~ he la a p-eat oook. Nothinc I prepare taatee
naht. He hu to JO grocery ahopplna with me and
decide on everythir\8 I put ln the -car. He never
bouiht hia own underwear, and I had to fight with
h1rn to ,et a new auJt and buy ahe>e9. Suddenly he'a an authority on everyth.lng.
· When the phone r!:ft:· he runs to answer (aithough no one ever him) and he stands
around while I talk. When the conversation ls over,
he wanta to know all the detatl.. He never gave a
damn before.
EIMA BOMBECK
ATWIT'S ENO
Liza Minnelli came to our town a couple of
weeka ago.
The place la still buzzing with praise for her
voke, her costumes, her dancing and her all-round
excitement as a performer.
Oh, sure, all that was irnpreaive. But do you
know what I un't get out of my mind? In the
~nd act, ahe waa putting herself together for the
big "Cabaret" number, complete with garters and
top hat, when she sat down on a rl!er and zipped on
a F of black boots to her knees.
: I've never aeen anything like it before. She just
fl4pped thoee suckers over her feet and without
e-.,m looking, zipped them to the knee. It was all
~r ln three eec:onds.
; I have never "alipped into a pair of boota" in mr lite. I put them on like my lep are made out of
V'1cro.
; 'n\ere'a only one pair of boots I ever found that
would fit. Discovered them six years ago In
Minneapolis. The woman took one look at m y
thighs and aaid. "You need a gusset." She brought
out a pair of boota with a little lnaert of elastic.
E:Ven with the insert, I still have to squish
down the tops until they reach the ankle. Then I
inch the zipper up half an inch at a time, being
careful not to pinch my stockinglleg into the zipper.
Finally, I lie on my back and let all the fat go to my
knee while I pull the boot over my thigh.
Takes about l~-20 minutes.
I made the mistake of llttina my skirt to see
what my knees looked like once and I looked like
tw<>-thircb of Three Mile laland.
I have never undenitood the boot industry.
Polyester breathes, knits give, denim stretches.
Would it kW the.-n to manufacture a boot for the
woman with pores? It's one body flaw I never make
excuaee for because I have yet to talk with a woman
who la happy with the fit of her boot.
U the woman has legs that look like they carry
messages, the boot will rub &aainst her leg and
make them look akinnier. U a woman hes large lep, ~ '1aut'" leather makes tbem look litre 1hey"ct-
support a piano.
Aa I watched Liz.a dance in her boots, I nudged
my companion and said, "Did you see the way ahe
just zipped 'em up?"
"Can't you do that?" she asked.
"I carried my babies low," I said. "Besides,
they're probably special boots."
"I got a pair just like them.," she said.
That explains it. They both have cuatom-made
lep.
'11111111
J3Y PHIL INTEALANOI of Laguna.Seach
''Who can enjoy the view? ll looks like my
proflt-loa.s chart."
. •••t•n : knodc• often "'*' ~ I UM r.-utt'"°9ttlng Dillly
• Piiot Clu1ln.d Ad• to • rMCtl the 0t8"gll C09lll
• IMl'Mf. : ,,.,,. 642-5878
RUFFELL'S
UPHOL$TEIY, INC. ................ ..,, .
1922 "A.UOI ll VO
COSTA MfSA -S4a-11S6
g ANN WIDflS
La.at awnmer we had a lovely lawn with flower
beda. He dua up everythlne and planted a
vegetable earden. We had vegetablK coming out of
our ears. Then he got mad becauae I wouldn't
preserve It all.
The l.aat atraw waa thl.s week when the car
insurance came due. He never said a word to ~ -'
juat 10ld my car. For God'a sake, tell me what to do,
Ann. My daughter ia on hla aide. She aayt I am
lucky to have a husband who la in auch good health
Meanwhile, I am -WORN OUT AND WEARY lN
ERIE. PA.
DEAR WEARY: Rotlremeat CID be
depre111D\ ud dl1naptlve ("peclaJJy for wlvea),
but your uabud 1oucl1 a1 If be mJpt laave •
oeurolo1lcal problem. Buell radical cltaa1e1 ID
bebavlor may be or1aalc. A1k yoar ... afJaad'•
doctor to lD1tnc& llJm &o aee a aeuolo&Jtt. If be
cbockt oat OK, I bope you wlll aeek cotlDlellDI for
youraeU. You can't budlt tbl1 problem alone.
You'll crack up.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'll bet a lot ot people
aak you If t.he problems have chan£ed over the put
27 yeen al.nee you've been writing thla column. I am
sure they have. My problem dJd not exllt even five
yeara aeo because the oo.rdlea phone had not yet
been invented.
My Mom la a phonahollc. It waa bad enough
before, but now that ahe can carry a phone
anywhere ln the house ahe la wone than ever. I
need to know how polite It is to talk on the phone
during dinner when others are trying to carry on a
c.-onvel'Utlon. Mom lnaiata on dolni thlll ntaht aft«
nlaht, and It knocka the atufflnaa out of all
commu~Uon bec:au.e our calk.lna lnterfel'ft with
her telephone oonvenaUon. So far I've never llffn
anythlna on thlt aubject. Please comment. -
STRANGLED BY A CORDLFSS PHONE lN N.J
DEAR STRANGLED: Wbea one la dlllln& wit\
otbeu -family or friend• -aay pbone
coaveraaUoa It nade Wlle11, of courae, It 11 aa
emer1eiacy. It ma.kea tbose present feel tht tlley
are coaaldered le11 Important tbaa tbe pany oa U.
otber end of &be Uae. Tbl1 can fold, 1plndle 1.11••
mulil1te family relatlon1bJp1. ' ..
There la a big difference between cold and coot:
Ann Lande/'9 &how• you how to play 11 cool without
freezlng p«Jple out Jn her booJclet, "Teen-age Sex
-Ten Ways to Cool It " Send 50 centa and a Jonj',..
self-addressed, stamped envelope to Ann Lande~.
P.O. Box 11995, Chicago. DJ. 60611. ..
The hole nobody likes ·~:
Critics call new art complex a
"distressing architectural white
e lephant."
PARIS -Few urban renewal projects m
France have aroused as much controversy as Les
Hailes -the crater in the heart of Paris that once
was the clty'a bustling wholesale food marke t and a
place to get an early morning bowl of onion soup.
Nobody liked the 26-acre hole created when
Les Hallea moved to the suburbs in 1971, but now,
after 12 years of indecision, the hole as being
plugged, and aome don't like it any better.
"A monater," wrote art critic Pierre Cabanne in
the lef\i.at newapaper Le Matin about Les Hallea'
newest addition -a vast cultural complex that
opened recently with a major show of worka by the
French sculptor Cesar. ~~
The Pavilion des Art.a. designed by architect
Jean Wilerval, ia "one of the most distressing
architectural white elephants ever imagined,"
Cabanne wrote. "The heart of Paris has been
forever diaflgured and plundered."
The new art complex ia the brainchild of
Mayor J111X1ues Chirac, and It la Intended to bring
cultural activity to the_ area the author Emile Zola
once called "the belly of Paris.''
Cabanne gave high marks to the Cesar
retrospective that features the sculptor's best
worka.
"Cesar gives us a leaaon ln the mastery of forms
and materiala whereas the building ia a bluff and a
fake," Cabanne wote.
The 62-year-old Cesar, one of France's most
popular arti.sta, la best--known for tus ingenious uae
of everyday materiala; such things aa blue jeans.
plastic bottlea, cardboard, and hubcaps are
compretlled and turned into blocks of aculpture. But
the show alao features hia realistic sculpture such as
a finely detailed, 6-foot thumb.
The five new buildings that make up the art
complex are around the Forum des Hailes, the
ultramodern. three-level underaround shopping
mall that opened in 1979.
Defenders of' the new complex of gleaming
SAVE MONEY ON
YOUR INSURANCE
. .Alai.., ~
NOW THROUGH SATURDAY! TI AOM4f
GOWANY
MONlHlY
'AYM(Nl
ff y•v wl.t. Lots of Sportswear -Women & Mens. -Quality brand
names -Blouses -Skirts -Pants -Jackets -
Dresses -Sweaters for ladles -Sportshlrts -Dress
~~D~CiD. J35'~~ :70°1;$
RABBm INStJIANCE
4" 1 Old Newporf llvd
Newport Beo<h, Co
631-77•0
white enameled at.eel and lots of al.ass say its curved·
shape captures the arcl}jtectural flavor of the o.a:
market'a elegant cast 1fon and glass pavilions -
whose destruction caused an earlier outcry.
But Michele ChampenolS, architectural cntic Qf
the newspaper Le Mon.de, says the building lookB
like "a wheat silo ln the American Midwest." •
"The glass 111 overwhelming. and just tak~.
over," wrote Champenois. "It is a poor-man's Pahp
Beach." ,
The cultural complex, funded by the city..
includes a children's lending library to open in
September, a center for artists and artisans, a
poetry center, and a vast music and dance
conservatory
POT SHOTS
BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
BY THE: TIME
YOU'vE FINALLY
ACCE:PTED ME
AS I AM,
141-1212
SINCE 1949 Houn
DEPAftTMENT STOftl!
Doily
9:3G-6100
CloMd
Sundays
1111 NEWPORT BOULEVARD COSTA MESA
STOP! Is Drinking
Interfering With
Your Family
r------------1111 I I . I
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Life?
'!
I
Orange Co ... DAILY Pll..OT/TUMday, Aprll 19, 1983 81
** "'Hiii ~I~ (tN I) L.Wldl llllr,
YNlll4 YM '•llln
l ~~w:~= fl. THI tiWCM OI M111M OI l'Mft ANQILI
(J)=NIC t ~MIM"(1M2) w .. AMm, ***" "Hwlilnd" 11N 11 ,_., ,....ea ..
Tom, Conc:lle1I Ferrel. -1:40-
• OMHQI ~ TOOo\Y Cl) THI Mll8IC OI !NCH ZAHH
-1:11-• (I) MOYit:OO-
• D000ER N GAME~ 0 ~ "The Mlrldl Of Kllhy Miiier"
IY9M l&wONTHl'TJ:-~.Sharon OleH, F11nk
-=~ d~l:.V," 1=~= 9fJ • INOUOH .......,
Mlft0f1#/1Nf'( = ~ = (C) MOYIE HAWAI~ N1!W1 Ht "Eaelllbul" pN l) N1gt1 flf· ** "30 It A DengerCM Aot, ey,,. ~AAIMOH ~ &=lllllmton ~':J1te8) Oudlty Moote, Slay
Cll NIWI MMMI. / LEHMA lllflORT "Lit Joy A11Q11 Supftmt" lNo Dtlt) -12:00-= =Q MAGIC OI AllMAL PAINTltQ -t:aO-I EHTERJAIMNT TOflGHT MQW.1'1 NAVY UE OET!CTOA 8 0 t TO a 0 M LAST WON> YOU AllCB> R>ft IT Cil aiiCWIE fi10Y1l -t:»-0MGHET U lt"TN 8jQC¥nlVll"(l951)1M •o "Bllwlln HIMn And Hiii"
==-&HUY& e (l)OUN~ == ~~Moore l~ HEAL.llt I= A..Tt.W -10:00-.., MOYIE lalT.ELIEWHEM ••• "T .... Of T"-r-· (1"'2) *** "Mit1gt" (1965) Gregcwy De NEWS -,,. "'"" ..
Pa. or.. Biii• MOYIE~ TO HART Cwy °'"''· Jten Arthur INEWI I LIWPY DAYS I~ AMERICAH STYLE =-'THE~Y *** "Stlt Wort A Yellow Aibe>on" **** "Htwta And Mindi" (1874) __,.PVLE *** "Hltdc:Of•' (1979) o.otoe c Oocumentaty Oil9'1ed by Peter MOYI! (1949)JohnWeynt.JoM AQlf Soott.SIMonHublly ~ "~t c.tlt Houle'' • MOYIE (J)~QCASE -.-.-*.. ''TN OM! s.a.. Of Hlrvtlt • ....... -........ (19821AMI Home" (Pitt 21 (1978) Belt•°""" **''TN s-ord And The Solwer" •••.; "Prlv•t• Leeeont" 11oao1 s~
-1:GO-Dlvld Adtr()yd. (l9S2) l• Honley, Kathlten 8elltr vii Ktlatel, Howwd Httlem111
Sllotlrt WlllllNl'I, Jenet LllQll .MOYll t.,. 'll'a Y0411 McM" (1111) !Cl'w.,d
0 ~. Tt1ry.Thomee
(1l MOYll
t t It "llcNlol flit" ( 1M2) Terty·
Tllolnfl. TllMClly Wetll .MOYll U \41 "OOA" (1 ... ) Edo\OM 0'~2.!!* ltlflon 0 UJTUIT AIHMEHT TOMOHT <al MOYIE * t "MIMI. Mid Mowltmllltre"
(1914) Fm Ollglonlnl, M~
Petalll
<%>MOYIE
... i.; "The EndlMt Bummlt"
(I tee) Mllct Hynaon, flobtrl AllOUll
-1:15-
{CJMOW
••t 1~ "l' (19&9) Yvte Monlllld,
JHn-LW. Trlnllgnlnl.
-tao-1 ~NEWS OYEAHIOHT ** "Hiii Nlaht" (1NT) Lindt Bi.If, Vlnc.lnfV111Tatt111
-1:56-
<S>MOYE
t * "P111ners" ( 1912) RVlll O'Ntll,
.MOW!l
U "Houet Of Horrort" (19441 Bill
~"*'1 Lowery.
,. t "MejOt OundM" ( 1865) CNtl
ton Hiiton. Richlrd Hlrrle
-3;15-.MOYIE
•• "I'm Dlncing Aa Fu t Aa I Can''
( 1982) Jiii Cllybulgh, Nlcol Wlllltm-
IOll
-3:30-(C)MOVIE • * t ··H11dcor1" ( 1979) 0.C.ge C
Scot!, Sluon Hublly
~~Atlltlllc Chy" (1980) Burt ~. SuunSlt*1don.
-4:GO-
(I) TOP (Y lltE MOfNHO (BJ BAREFOOT IH lltE PAAI<
-4:30-
John .. urt -t«I-I~
fJ CJ) C88 HEWS llGHTWATa. U 'It "Sparrow· ( 1979) R"1dy Ii«·
Q) ~Tll.E: UP ClOSE men, Don Gordon
(ff) ...,. "" I%) MOYIE * H 'Rich And FlmOUt" ( 1911) t t t 'The GrMll M111" (19S7) AJa-
CandlOt Blroen. JllCqUlltne 8laMI stlif Sim. Jiii Mama
SH complete llttlng In TV Log
CHANNEL LISTINGS
CllNl!WI INOY~tlTS~tAY -10:IO--12'.30-..... CD NEWS DalLATENIOHTWffifOAYIO 0 ICNXT IC.851 IN!KOOC(lndl
tWl'YMYSllJNH -~-lETTEAMAH C!J l<NBC tNBCI 0 On IV AICNl!WIQ *~"Hold Btc* TOfllOITow" (1956) ~· ""'"""" 8COUPLE8 1° z rv ~Nonl\trY CltoMoort.JoMA(jM. INEWI_._ • ...,.,_.,.... (f)TOMCOTTlE:UPCl08E .0 l<TLA llnd I " H"O
INUOKn .,.,_,.,, 1 {C) MOYE ,,_......,.,.., ~ • ~ AM£A1CAH STYLE l<ABC. I ABC I n
IT'S nMI TO nlL CiOOD MiAJN, •
DAVID GRIMES
C LASSICAL
GUITARIST
IN CONC ERT
on I 11(Uru 1\-,..h Ar rh~ La1euru Moulton P~y~
I "' thrn· r<-rlum \oill.:n unh Ma~ 13, 14 &. l5
.asr8Wl.D •• "Clttlt Annie And lllllt NEW~Ylt!DEN (8)..., • .,. ClJ ICFMB tCB')I C lt11wm<1•I :.=~ ~==a:=~-=-· ie .. H'oOl~ .. Qt. NEWS .~~~~~~~~~82)Seul =~~~,r~A~~~1
n:: ~:~=~1Nv NY 1 1
MARYHAATMAN.MMY m ....,.._, fJ.CJJ MCMtUAHaWIFE m 1<1rv11n01 "<E5PN1 ' '
(J)MOYIE ~HARTMAN.MARY -1:GO-Gl l<COPTV(lnd J 15 IShowrimel I Pll'a."<~nd nw _ ••$1000 1or0 1-n.M,tJi13th,8pm I ~~-For Ont" (1N2' Slut ***~ "Atllnllt City" (1980) Burt • llUlllNE8SAEPORT 8 MOVIE G ICCE.T IPBS1 0 Spot11ql11 I 0 ~1 May 14th, 8 pm I
-1 LMICllllr, SuunS.lllldon.. -P88LA...........,. t•1A "All Amerlcln OrMm" (1966) e ((obit' Ni'w\ Nelwork l L-~--Mll'dl--S11lllmlln---·---.a,;;;im-. ____________ ,""""" __ , ______________ _. __ m_1<oc_£_1P_e_s_1 _____________ ~I O "iun May 15rh. 2 pm I
CBS
4th
• • Wl!JS. ratings war
• • consecutive time
By FRED ROTHENBERG AIT......._WW.W
NEW YORK -When almighty Nle1*m aenda
down the offidal word today, CBS, the network
th.at dJdn't have ''The Thom Blrda,'' ''The Winds of
War," the Super Bowl or the World Series, will
have won the prime-time ratinp competiUon for
the fourth coNeCUtive 9eUOn.
Much ot the credit goes to Mike Wallace, J .R.
Ewing, Hawkeye Plerce and Thomas ¥agnum.
"CBS won becauae of the atie°ngth of· their
regular .eriea, combined with the performance of
their mad~for-TV moviee," says Bob lg!el, vice
president for programming 111nd netwo rk
netot.i.ationa at the NW Ayer advertising agency.
Going into the final week of the 29-week
8eUOll. CBS Md the four hlahest-rated wries: "60
-.U*"' "llaUv " "M•A-9.S•.ff" ~ "~ -
P.I." Yet M•A•S~H" wu the only one of CBS:
top-rated entertainment lhowa to win an Emmy
award lut year.
NBC won more Emmys tha either CBS or
ABC. and it baa the most critically acrl•imed new
$50,000 raised for
Belushi schoJarship
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Second City, the
Chicago comedy troupe whkh gave the late John
Beluahl his start, baa rat.eel $50,000 at a weekend
benefit for the John Beluahl Second City
Scbolarahlp Fund.
The fund-ra.t.ing benefit wu held Sunday
niaht at the Hunttncton Hartford Theater. Blocks
of ticketa were bought by movie atudios and
corporate 1pon.10n u well u indlviduala, and
publicist Beverly M.acid u.id the ~.000 proceeds
were guaranteed.
"Second City wu alwaya John'• favorite
1roup," Magid said. "He a lway• atopped by
WbelWYef' be WU in Chicaao to improville and to haba out." 'rbe-fund in Bel\.Whi'a name will award three
9Cl)olanhj .. annually: cranta ot $3,000 ellCh to one
mxlmt at Qiaao'• Acedemy of Perfcrmhle Art.a
and lta c.oueae of DuPap, and a $1 ,000 crant foe a
atudentrAPPftDUce with Secand Oty.
s_,lusb.i, Ital' of '1Jaturday Night Live" and
~ ConwlW like "Animal Hou.e," "1941" and ·~ a... Brothen." dJed 1-1 ~ of • ...,...,,,.
an;& heroin overdoee at Hollywood'• Chatea u
Marmont Hotel
I """'°J ( ho1u· I
---------------------• Deluca Producuona I I fill"'" 11"• <""J'<"' •"" ,,..,, .. ,.h •"'-~"' 1278 Glmnt"yrc Sultf 50 I .,_..., orJcT 11\J • .. 11 .JJrftWJ Hl\t~'f't to '
..... -----------------.. 1 1Pk-.11.,. • J ... "' ,«., .. 11 k .... , Laguru Beach. CA 92651 I "Thoroughly original. Magical!' • .. ,·-·~HI°" .......... _ ., .. ~4L!.9.!!;!.2_ C.--1 1
-NEW YORK TIM~S L-- - - - - - - ------- --- - - --·
LocALHERO
~ • 8ARQAIN MATIN•aa *
Mond•r '""' latuntar
All Pertormencee belOfl 5:00 PM
(~1 ..... 1,...,...... .... ......,.,
"ICRewllALLI".., ------·-... ~
_. ___ _
~ei:.a. ---
"FLAIHDANCE""' I ------IEll:.2»1•~1.•110·)
.. FLAIHDANC~.., ................ _.
"HIGH ROAD
TOa.A",... -----
lAl<lWOOD CfNTIR
SOUTH WAL• ...
a"" "•• ~ ._.,
ANAHEI M OlllVI IN
Ill ............ .
BUENA PARK (IWIVI I~
'• ....
FOUNTAIN >'All!~
l11W1tl '"'
"8AD 80Yt" 1111 -·-.......... OI n. ..._. Altr"' ----
~QA1Wt
~HmLL" --z~ .......... ~
C:.1'1 -...n""'°'" '"TMS ---a. &.ft" -'WCMllM """°" uw Oii.,,. ~.,..... ..
_,,, _ __ .... ........ ,._
lt~MtJ
...
:
------
.. ,., ri c_,. ! . ..
Orange Oout DA1'9V PILOT/Tueedty, ~rll 11, 1113
Thia announoetMnt It neither 1t1 offer to Mii nor 1 eonott1tlon of
1t1 offer to buy any of th ... eecurlu ... Thlt o,,., 11 mid• only by the 1 Offwtng Circular. \
300,000 to 375,00~J'i ARES
SADDLEBACK NATIONAL BANK
(In Organization)
COMMON STOCK
PRICE $10.00 ~ER SHARE
Coples of the Offering Clrcul1r may be obtained from the Bank's
Organizational Office by writing or calling aa Indicated below:
I
Saddleback National Bank
(/ff Or84ffizati<Ht)
P.O. Box 2366
23941 Avenlda de la Carlota
LAGUNA HILLS, CALIFORNIA 92653
TELEPHONE (714) 855-4924
~National Mortgage Co.
H11s the program you are looking for :
Volcker
2nd term
unlikely
W ABHINGTON (AP)
-Pretidenl Reeaan b
leaning aaalnat naming
Paul A. Volcker to a
eecond tenn u chairman
of the Federal Reserve
Board thla summer, but
haa not made • final
declaion yet, an
adminiatratlon aource
h.u aaid.
The source, speaking
only on condition that hia
name not be u.ed, told
The Aaaoclated Press
that the president and
hl1 top White Houae
aides are con1lderlng
about a half dozen
candidates to su cceed
Vok:ker.
The c han ces o f
Volcker being kept for a
second term are small
and diminishing each
day, said the source. who
added that the president
has not made up his
mind firmly although his
top advisers are nearly
unanimous in their belief
that Volcker should be
replaced.
The W ashington
Times, citing "informed
sources in the
admlnlatration," said
Reagan does not intend
to nominate Volcker to
another four-year term
in the powerful post at
the nation's central bank.
11\e newspaper said the
president has decided to
put hit own man in the
key monetary policy job.
Pre si denti al
apokeaman Larr y
Speakes, conunenting on
the report said: "In the
strongest terms, the
president has not made a
deciaion, and when we
have something to
announce, we will
announce it. But t he
president has not made a
WE SPEC de c I a ion on the IALI ZE I N ALL replacement of Volcker
T y P ES Ov -or if he will be replaced. c: There has been n o Residentialf;oans --L'.:+..i:J _ _,,..,._ __ deci.aion on thatpoint."
Industrial Loans
Government Loans
ApartmenTLoans
Jumbo Residential
Retail
sales
decrease
SACRAMENTO (AP)
-Retail la)ea in
California were down in
c:onstant-vaJue dollars in
the fourth quarter of
1982, but not as much as
ln the previous three
quarten, the state Board
of Equalization bas said.
WITH OUR EXPERTISE AND QUALIFIED STAFF
WE CAN HAVE A FINANCIAL PACKAGE
Actual tax.able sales in
the October-December
per iod rose by -$610
million to $41.46 billion,
up 1.2 percent over the
aame period of 1981.
TO SUIT YOUR .FINANCIAL . NEEDS!
(Al>on Prop ... Are !Q)efi To AnllabWty Aad Clwip)
GARY ANDERSON
Asst. \'ice President Sales Manager
400 North Tustin Avenue • Suite 101
Santa Ana, California • 92705 (714) 541-2983
Proposed New Offering On April 20, 1983 of:
s31,100,ooo
Irvine Ranch
But adjusted for
inflation, the volume was
1.6 percent lower than
the final quarter of 1981,
the board aaid.
The inflation rate, as
measu r ed by the
California Consumer
Price In dex, dropped
from 10.5 percent in the
first quarter ol 1982 to
1.6 percent in the final
quart.er, but averaged 6.5
percent for the year.
·Water District Bonds ·
I
\
For Information Call
Tom Schloessman at 644· 1890
Oxowell, ~on• co.
667 san Nicholas Or.
Newpc>rt Beach, Ca .• 92660
OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS
DOWN•
>'Ct
I lH
~ It 11.
1 '
MUTUAL FUND
.:,
t .I '·'
HEWYORl<IAPI ~.r0111 llJl 11~ 110.1 lVJI NI. '8i01> 1111() 9}6,~Sd8~ ,:,~ IH~ HEr• ltl• J::L In-I '·tt pj~
'a,,.tionH• _.....:.1 Au.-rlt..!. Q<11ty IS 19 f,., HI Yid 11 1' NI.. I HO 10 01 10 ll ~.::; °' ~ Nl Pro S.....kft alM 2A:ff NL 1al1l:.\'=~~ e,e!n~~llOl'IJ}J.,1>11 ~r.'nc.5:< rn ~t :§ ~:t.19,0~~r Mul 8en I)~ I•» ~-~!' 1,f, H~ 1°'":.. .!is: H
vf Sec ~· vSec 10 i,. 10 ff Lt """" I JO HI.. I Pr1>11 I lO ) ;; A -1 II fi Hl t. El
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SALES • SERVICE
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~----------------~~~--------~-------------------------, NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
0\IOTATICHfl lH(lUOI UAOl\011 THINIW"'O•• MIO WIU1 "4'1PI( "IW l otTO• OtTIOlf ANO (IN(IHllAltOO(W l.CCHA••tt ANO ll'C>Ulb l 'I' fMI •AlD AllO INU11•11
~ ... .. ..
Orange OoU1 DAILY PILOTITUMday, Aprtl 10, 1M3 m,I
Home construction
declines in March
By Tbe Attoelated Pre.a
A key meuure of home corwt.rucUon ectMty feU
modestly in Matth, but eoonombltt •Y tht! houlil'\8
induttry continues toward a recovery from rec.iemlon.
C.Ommeroe Department otfkiala aa.ld ymterday \Nt
builders began work on 9.2 percent (ewer hou.et In
March t,han the previoua month. But the March figutt
11Ull wu 7~ l percent above the level of March U182
when the ecx>nomy waa mired ln l'fl0e9lion.
The Commerce Department ai.o aaid butldlng
permita for future oonetruction fell 4 percent ln March,
to an annual rate of 1.43 million, aft.er riling for six
ttralght months.
In a more encouraging report, the government
alao said Monday that factory use roee for a fourth
straight month In March, hitting the highest level
since last summer.
Personal income up again
WASHrNGTON -Americans' personal income
roee 0.6 percent last month, the biggest gain since laat
November, while consumer spending increased 0.4
percent, the goverrunent reported today.
The new figures should be at least slightly
encouraging to government officials and private
eoonomiata, who have said repeatedly that consumer
apendmg muat riae faster than it has if the new
recovery is to grow in strength.
In February, income had ri.9en Ju!Jt 0.1 percent
and spending had actually declined slightly.
Oil prices hurt state budget
SACRAMENTO -The decline in the price of oil
is good news for motorists but bad news for the state
~State Lands ~on said yesterday that
the worldwide d ecline in oil prices will drag
California's tidelands oil revenues at leatt $41 million
below the estimates in Gov. George Deukmejian'a
budget.
Crocker has lower earnings
SAN FRANCISCO -Banking deregulation and
the recel!lll!lion have been blamed for a 10.5 percent drop
ln the f:i.nt-qua.rter eamingB of Crocker National Corp.,
parent company of Crocker BanJt. the company says.
The compan{ yesterday reported 1983 fint-
quart.er income o $16.1 million, down 10.5 percent
from the ~ period laat year.
2 ON-TV units to fold
SAN DIEGO -Oak Industries, Inc .• says
operators of ON-TV over-the-air subscription
television in Phoenix, Ariz .. and Dallas-Ft. Worth.
Texas, will have meetings this week to discontinue
their services.
The two operations represent 9 percent of Oak's
more than ~22,000 aubacribers and both systems have
lost mone1\ but Oak spokesmen will not say how
much.
Oak said the tennin.ations, to be approved thus
week by local management committees, will not affect
the •ubscription TV operations in Chicago. Lo11
Angeles or Ft. Lauderdale-Mia.nu.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT
WHAT NYSE DID
NEW YOtlK (API ~ II !et T~ :tar ~·
WHAT AMEX DID
DOW JONES AVERAGES
NlW YdN< (AP) -RNI Dow Jot-. .,._ MoncMy •• ,.
nocn °"""' ....., w. c-°"' .....
JO Tnt IJ Ull .s sa ,,...
TrM Utha u su.
11~.'~ '~'tl: ~.r:~
12S.JI 1i.. .. 124.4J IU . .._ l.M ~.00 til.U CSUI dl.6J• 4.D . . . ... ... .. . .. •.111.• .................. t.1...-. . .. : .. ::::: .. : .. :. ,::=-.:::
AMERICAN LEADERS
-l
I
1'
0HflOI Coast DAIL v PILOT 1Tu11d1y. Aprll 19, 1913
THE
J'A~ILl'
CIRCl'S
by 8 11 Keane
816 <;J;ORf6t:
by Jim Davis
by Virgil Partch (VIP)
~ ,, .. .. ~ ..
I i "I'm sending her to Slam to visit a sick aunt."
' ' "Mommy, will you hold the ramp for me?"
M.\RM.\Dl'Kt; by Brad Anderson
4'19 c.,_,_,.."'** ...
"Can we borrow your TV until
ours is fixed?"
• UNTIL YOU LEARN TO WAU<.'IN 'EM ,!MY&
'1Qll SHOULD HAVE TRAINING ~EELS.
~00:\ Ml'LLl:\S
l P,AU> VACATION IF you'D RE'TI~, You'D
HAVE PLENTY OF TIMc
1'0 Ht;lP ~ P. WITH
COOKING' ~o0SEKEEPIN<5,
SHoPPING -· r-----<
~~~~
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
P.£,\Nl"T8 by Charles M. Schulz
Ml,/lt( ~IS LINUS ...
f TAKE IT 'r'OtJ'VE" COME HE«£ TO l.EMN MOW 10 UP 'IQ.( SlANKET
MV ~ CAH A 8UNO MAN
FOLKS l.£AP A 8LIMC MAN?
MAPf. Iii Will TMEV NOT l50TH
COME FAU. IHTO A PIT?H
DON'T PAV A~
Anam~ TO MEit ...
SI'S JOST MY SISTE((
I'll er
dul1
NORTH •. uu
742
() 2
• aoe so
w•;ST f.A8T
+KQJ ll •8742
~85 vr AJ3
0 Jl0984 O K73
t 92 t AQ7
SOUTH
• lO
'KQlOU
0 AQll5
tKJ8
The bidding
Eut Soutb Wut Norlb
1 NT Obie 2 + Oltle
Pa11 Put 2 ) Pa11
Pa11 Obi• Pan 2 •
Pa11 3 · Pat• 4
Pa11 Paa1 P111
Opening It-ad Kini( of •
Norlh Amt'rtcJ wa~ rt-Prt-
SHO•:
DR. S'IOCK
.
"f'HIS IS
1"HE! FIRS'!
1"1Me l 've eveR seeN 1"HOR.NS IN 1"He e>01"1"0ftA
OF YOUR
Fee-r; MR . e>ORec...1.-1 .'
0
0
0
:\A:\('\'
GOllN ON lllDGI
BY CHARLES .H GOREN ANO OMAA SHARIF
at1nted by a youna LHm In
lhe IV81 World Team Cham
p1(1n1h1p, hrld In Port
C'heal.llr, NY Th1·y •t.artrd
oul u underdOlfl. but endrd
up 11uy winnl'rl of the tflle
flow lhl' y irr11w in malurlt1
11 thl' tournament prorreaa
l!d la v1vldly portraytd In lhe
"111111 World Champlon1hlp1"
IAmerlcao Contract, Bridge
League, paperbark, 265 pp.,
S 12.115. A vallable poat free
from Uridge World, a9 Wut
94th St.. New York, NY
10025.J Most or the excellent
commentary i1 by Eric
Kok11h or Montreal.
This 11 one of the handa
from lht' r1nal1. Aolh leama
rl'ached four hearts, and the
l'ak1~lani declartr ended up
down one John Solodar or
Nrw York ul South for
Norlh Amem~. and he need
1•cl only one ,hghl m11eue by
bE€ l"'A1"°5 Qurf~ ~
RE!>l'~~t&ll.1'1''1 . OAO.. 15
1'"CR€ ~~'ff"'INCt 'loll ·
I.JANI M€.
1'0
~ow'?
a defender t.o romp home.
He won the open1n1 lead lo
dummy and led a elub. Eul
rote with the ace and con
tinued with a apade, and the
df'fender1 did not gel
another chance.
l>cclarer rurfed the apAde
and cashed the ace of
diamonds. Then he ruffed
two diamond• In duramy and
two apadea in hi• own hand.
'l'hia wu the potltlon:
NORTH ·-'\) 1
0 -
• t0654
WEST EAST ·-·-r.::J 85 \?AU
0 J 10 0 -
• +2 +Q7
SOUTH ·-r.::J KQ
1-r's AL.SO ·n·H:~
t..ASI 1"1Me ~'U... ee MAKING Rose w1Ne !
I WISH SLUGGO
WOULD BRIN6 ME
AN ICE
CREAM
CONE
OQ .. ,
Wben 8olodat led Ute kin1
or trumpa. the deletder1
were helpleu. Eut wo1 and
returned a trump, but
declarer had a eounlfl He
tailed with ttt. q or ' dlamondt. E.ut wu J to
ruff, but that WHJ be I
defendera' 1 .. t triek. 1 l
had to lead 1 dub ''°' bJI queen. Oed.arer fln""'9 the
JICk and eathed the kl for t
hit game-rolng Lrid.~. I
a ..... , ........ I .... ...... *"? c .............. .
c.n ., .. w...._Jm I L1141," 11-4 U .8 "
"C ................ .,. .i: IM•........ P.O. lu • '· N.,...-, N.J. f'7I&
~ ,.,.we a. N~• ,.,......... :J
by Jeff Mac~ly
ALDNE ... c.orr\4 ~£
8ANO ... IT OOE.SN'i
MArfER ~ 1 &J !
I 511U... DON'T AAVE -mE MONEQ !
I '
~. ".,, .
l By Mark L~ky
HERE'S THAT
Ll6HT BULB I
OWE YOU, NANCX
Dilly Piiat
TU!8DAY, APRIL 19, 1983 ClASSIFllD
, . ix-CdM star J eff Pries is d oin g
~ouble'-duty with the UCLA Bruins this
year •
• •
" UCLA gets boost
from Pries' bat
~.·.and right arm ,. ' f
'·
By CURT SE.EDEN °' .... .,.., ......
It'• hard to believe, but Jeff Pries hadn't lost a baaeball
game for three yean until he went to the mound at UCLA last
9eMOl'l in hill freshman campeign.
In fact, Pries finiabed the 1982 aeaaon aa a Bruin with a
4-4 record and a 5.67 earned run average. It wasn't exactly like
the numbers h!_P_!'Oduced at Corona del Mar Hi.&h.
For the record, Prle1 rolled up a 20-0 won-loaa
mark during his three years with the Cd.M varsity. He was on
the Sea Kinp' 1981 CIF championship team which beat Santa
Fe, 3-2 at Anaheim Stadium for the 4-A title.
Hia .083 earned run average and 9-0 record capped the
CIF eeuon.
Now, in his aecond colJesiate aeMOn, Pries is collecting the
f.Uhionable numbers once again for UCLA. He'a 4-3 and 1ports
the aecond-best ERA in the Pad.f:ic 10 Conference (2.83).
But what makes thia 1euon ao 1pectacular for the
aophomore right-bander is the added dimension of Pries'
hitting ability. When be'• not pitching, Pries baa been the
Brulna' designated hitter, and he'• batting an impl'eSGve .339
with aeven homers and 21 RBI. Pitchlng-wiae, he's 5-4 with a
-4.03 Mmed run average.
"When I came tO UCLA. I made sure I was going to be
able to pitch and hit," explaina Pries. "I wanted to leave all my
avenues open. U I didn't make It pitchln I could sUll be hitting,
or vice versa.''
IJmgine the pleasure for UCLA c.oech Gary Adams when
Priea started oft the 9eUOll doing no wrong (4-1 In five atart:I),
on the mound at and at the plate.
How valuable of a commodity la Pries to UCLA?
(See UCLA's, Page CZ)
ompetitive fires
eturn for La Velie
'C swimmer 's hia tus laste d one year
LaVelle added 1he wu
determined to 1tay away for
aoOO· LaVelle'a hiatu1, however,
luted only a yeer. Today, lhe la
not only back In the pool, lhe ia
one of the principal reaaon1
OCC'1 women'• .wtm te.m ii the
newly crowed South CoHt
Conference championa.
What cban1edT Actually, a
number of factors. LaVelle'1
attitude beina aoe. 1be fact ahe
wu almo9t an lnltant winner
UpOO her return beina another.
Of coune, havl111 previoualy
trained wtlh Denbe Odenwald,
who Jul& happma to be marrtecl
to 00C 1wim coecb Don Wat8on,
didn't hurt.
T h e main reaaon, thou1h,
a ppea ra to stem from OCC'1
........., ltlllt, which malntalm
tbt Dhllo9ophy that an athl.w'1
Umii Out of a pool la equally 11
crtUiell 11 the amount cl dmt an
eihleteliHnone . .. I think ... p oup IWtmmlrw
II pnctimMd on a myth." noeeCI
Wa110n, "and that'• \Ml nodall
the wo rld revolvH around 1wlnuna.,,,. We d on't do that bin.
"We dcin't ....,.., ~ wbO .. ..... ............. " .•. ••• , .... ,.., •• •114 a::: nAtnaY_._,_..
, .................... "" -"· ·-"'~-·i'!
C5
McNamara at Witt's end
By JORN SEV ANO °' .. .,.., ..........
Confidence. Without lt, lt'• hard to be a
1ucce11 In anythin1. If you lack it In
profe11lonal 1porta, )'ou can count the
number of daya you'll 1urvivie.
1e&10n, wu ~ed wi\h a lam. Thia time
the Oak.land A 1 did the damage with a 5-3
victory over the Angela before 27,780 at
Ana.helm Stadium.
The tom dropped the Angela two games
behind the A'1 in the ~rtcan l...eague'1
We1tern Dlvl1lon cha1e and, more 1 Importantly, drove another nail Into the l
.psyche of Witt.
It started after Aus. 23, 1982, the date of
the rlslht..-h.ander'1 IMt reoorded victory.
Since that time, Witt hu started nine
gamea, lost five and surrendered 61 hill and
35 earned runa in 44 ~ inn1ngl for a 7 .11
ERA.
With baaeball, If you're a hitter, you have
to be confident you're going to get a hit
every time you go to the plate. That doesn't
mean a hitter la always going to get one,
but he haa to at leaat believe he will.
"Yeah, rm worried about him.'' ia how
Ange'ta Manager John McNamara
expreaed hla concern.
Lut night. Witt got aa tar u two batten
In the fourth lnnln1 before McNamara
finally pulled him after he had given up
five runs on aeven hill.
"There'a nothing wrong with him
phy1ically," added McNamara who, along
with pitching ooech Tom Morgan. had a
meeting with Witt after hla 8eO()Nf tom (to
Seattle lut week).
For a pitcher, It '• just the opposite. For
every hitter that 1tepe up to the plate a
pitcher has to have the assurance he can get
that batter out.
"I don't know what'• wrong (with him). I
really don't know. U I had the answer I'd
do aomethi.ng tonight."
It'• the latter th.at Mike Witt has been
atruggllng with lately.
J,.ut night Witt, for the third time thla
Of courae, what ha1 McNamara
perplexed moat 11 the fact that Wltt'a
ineffectiveness didn't just IUddenly occur.
"It'• just In crudA1 ptace. he'• making
mistakes. He'• pitched enough In the major
(See McNAMARA. Paae CZ)
Angel shortstop Tim Foli plants tag o n Oakland's Mike Davis in
unsuccessful first-inning steal attempt last nigh t.
Benoit steals Meyer's thunder
BOSTON (AP) -On a cool
day when Greg Meyer aped to a
Boston Marathon victory in the
thir-d-fa•teat time for the
87-year-old race, Joan Benoit
1tole aome of hl1 thunder by
obliterating the women'• world
record.
"Joanie ia one of the beat
athletes in the world, not juat
among women," said Mayer. "It's
time people reoowUz.ed that."
Benoit aet a bUaterlng pace
yesterday to finiah In two hours,
22 minutes, 42 9e00flda, lh.aving
nearly three minutea off the
women's best of 2:25:29. She led
Tami LaVelle
moat of the way and won by
ainx.t 11eVen minutes.
coune destroy me. W~ planned
for thla race."
not have hurt me."
Meyer h.aa won four of hia
aeven marathons. He also haa
been victorious in his last five
races at varying distances,
.. I don't think it'a hit me yet. It
will probably hit me tomorrow
when I can't get out of bed." aaid
Benoit, who won the 1979 &.tori
Marathon In 2:35:15.
Meyer'• only other Boaton
Marathon waa In 1981, when he
led from the 16th mile to the
19th mile before fading to an
11th-place finl.ah.
Meyer, a Grand Rapids, Mich.,
native now living in Wellesley,
Maaa., and Benoit, a Portland,
Maine, native living In
Watertown, Maaa., didn 't
dlaappolnt the forecutera who
Ron Tabb, of Eugene, Ore.,
finished aecond in 2:09:32,
followed by ~nji Durden, of
Stone Mountain. Ca., in 2:09:57,
Ed Mendoza, of Flaotaft, Ariz.,
'in 2:10:06, and Chriltopher
Bunyan, of Carbondale, m .. in
2:10:54. Ralph Serna, a fonner
Loara High and UC Irvine
runner, was 35th with a 2:16.26
clocking.
"I took the lead juat about
where I lost It two yean ago,"
aaid Meyer, who.e winning tiJne
WU 2:09:00. "In 1981, I think I
made aome mistakes and let the
-had in1talled them H heavy
favorites in a field of 6,515
official entrantl, including 5,814
men and 701 women.
"I felt It a lot thi1 week,''
Meyer aald of the pressure of
being the favorite. "I think I
handled it well I won ao it must
• Sea Kings Will a rematch
CdM tennis team whips def ending champs
Laat _rear in the CIF 4 -A tennl1 finals,
M.iralelte High defeated Corona del Mar, 15-9. But
yesterday it waa a different stocy, u c.o.cb Deve
lieffem'1 Sea Kinp eully handled the Marauders.
21 ~-6~. at the Park Newport Tenn.ta Club.
Conaiatency in alngles play, coupled with
overpowering doublea teama gave Corona del Mar
1111 12th win of the aeuon, agaJnat no defeats.
Scott Brownsberger, CdM'1 No. 2 1ingle1
player, won .eta of 7-6, 6-1, .6--0, 6-1, while No. 1
Brien Sullivan took three aeta, includini a pair of
6...() verdicUI.
MiraHi9te WU pi.ytng without its top player,
Eric Ammd, who la llittlna out the~ with a
broken ankle. But Heffern oontenda that Amend
wouldn't have mattered much any way aplmt hll
lqUad.
"Sullivan, BroWllllberpr and Jeff Ewing (a
doublea player) are all equal or better than
Amend," noted Heffern. ''When you've got all theae
good players. it'• easy to coach ...
Junion John Hostetler and Frank Hinman
handJed their doubles opponents with.-u well,
winning 6-3, 6-0, 6-2, 6-1. The duo had ..-nething to
prove after dropping three .eta to University in
Friday'a Sea View League vict.Clry.
"They (Hoatetler-llinman) didn't play very
well qalnst University, and went out and proved
themllelw. today," aaid Heffem. "Leh player hu a
oombmatiao of finea9e and power, ancf for junion
that'• 119t."
"Ewina and Wuher have played in ao many touch matcnee that they viaibly aet better ..ch time
they play," noted Heffern. "After lmlna the first
let. they aot aotnl and won the final three very
eaily!'
Dodgers like Candlestick
I
I
(;9 Or•ng• Coaat DAILY PILOT /Tueaday, April 19, 1983
_,.----------------------------------------------------------.-----------------------------
Lakers can rest,
'and they need it'
From AP dl1patcbe1
INGLEWOOD -The Loa m ~.:Lelee Lakers, defending National
etball Association champion, get
a week off before beginning the
playoffs.
"They need it," says Coach Pat Riley. "lt'U
be a time for us to Uck our wounds, regroup,
prepare and plot for our opening series," said
Riley, whose club has been feeHng from lllJUries
"I know we're hurting m
some areas, but I really think
we're going to be in the thick
of things," Riley added
"We're going to be a team
that will have to be deal1
with."
The Lakers lost rookie
power forward J a m el
Worthy to a broken leg
...... -.._.-.._.. _ _. recently, and another key
M..EY rewrve, forward-center Bob
McAdoo, is suffering from a toe lnjury.
McAdoo, who ~ the lut ~l games, has
been returned to the active roster, but hia status
tor the playoffs remains uncertain.
ln the meantime, the La.kent have signed
veteran Steve Mix, a former Philadelphia 76ers
forward who was released laat week by the
Milwaukee Bucks.
Rangers stop Islanders
Rookie George McPltee scored in ~ the first period and goalie Ed Mio '
blanked the New York Wanders for
58~ minutes H the New York
Rangers took a 3-1 decision last ntght to even
their Patrick Division final series at two games
apiece . . . Rick Mlcldletoa and linemate Barry
Pederson each BCOred twice for Boston as the
Bruins defeated the Bu{Jalo Sabres 6-2 to even
their series. Play wu stopped 27 times for
penalties during the contest ... Chicago's Rici!
Preston acored midway through sudden-death
overtime to give the Black Hawks a 4-3 victory
over the Minnesota North Stan and a J... l lead in
the aeries. The Black Hawks came back from a
S-0 deficit to tie the game with 2:37 left In
regulation ... Paol Reinbart scored two
power-play goals and the Calgary Flames staved
off elimination from the playoffs with a tense 6-5
win over the F.c:lmonton Oilers
two-hitter
Roa G11l~ry fired • two~hltwr II and Jerr1 .M1mplln)' 1macked a
\WO•l'UJ) triple H tho New York
YW-defeated the Toronto Blue J~ s.o yet~ 1n Amerku ~action h
wu the 1hcth two.hitter in Guidry 1 career, u
the left-hander allowed only 11.nales tn the tint
and ahclh lt'\l\lno , .. In other ~rican Lcot,iut'
game., Doa Sutton eca\t.ered aix hJw ovflr acven
lnnlnp and earned hll 260th
mojor league victory u
Milwaukee poundt..-d uut 22
hlt1 and breezed to a 14-0
d~cl1lon over 801ton. The
Brewers .et a club record
with 10 hltll In the ninth
inning when they 1cored
.even runs ... Rlck Dempsey
drove ln two runs and Jim
Dwyer hit a homer as
OUIOlllY Baltimore defeated
Cleveland, 4-1. Dwyer'a leadoff homer In the
fifth inning snapped a l ·l tie and extended his
consecutive hitting streak to 11 games dating
back to last aeason Scott McGreaor hurled a
seven-hitter . Randy Busb and Mickey
Hatcber drove in two runs apiece to lead the
Minnesota Twins to an 8-~ victory over Seattle.
Bush doubled in a pair of rW\B to give the Twins
a 4-1 lead in the third Inning.
Baseball today
1938 Emmett Mueller of the Ph1llies
and Ernie Koy of the visiting Dodgers each
homered in his first major league at bat as
Brooklyn defeated Philadelphia 12-5 .
1956 -The BrookJyn Dodgers defeated
Philadelphia 5-4 ln 10 innings at Jersey
City's Rooeevelt Stadium in for first major
league game ever played in New Jersey.
1981 -Oakland set a major league
record whJch lasted only one year as the
A'• won their 11th game from the start of
the aeuon, a 6-1 declalon over the Seattle
Mariners in the first game of a
doubleheader. Seattle broke the string by
winning the nightcap, 3-2.
Today's birthdays: Minnesota pitcher
Frank Viola is 23. Boston outfielder Rick
Miller is 35.
Garvey hits second homer
Gene Ricllanh capped a four-run II second · with a two-run single
and St~arvey hit his second
homer of the year to lead the San
Diego Padres to a 10-3 victory over the Atlanta
Braves yesterday in National ~e action. It
was the first win of the year for the Padres over
the Braves, who swept a four-game series over
San Diego in Atlanta last week . . . ln another
National Leque contest, Gary Manbewa hit a
1010 home run and Mike Scltmldt added a.
towering two-run blast in a three-run third
inning that helped power the Philadelphia
Phillies to an 8-2 victory over the Chicago Cubs.
Ron Cey added three hits for the Cubll
UCLA'S PRIES DOES DOUBLE DUTY. • •
From Page C1
Well, the former all-around CdM
athlete wanted to try hLS luck at
switch-hitting this year. but
Adams nixed the idea because of
the threat of being hit on his
pitching arm.
That pitching arm has
produced victories over Santa
Clara, Papperdme, California and
Northwestern this season.
Still, Pries says he still has
trouble with the command of hit
pitches, most notably the curve.
"I really haven't come up with
a good breaking ball. 'That's the
reason I don't have that many
strikeouts," Pries admit.a. "I've
really been relying on my fast~
fall and my changeup, and I've
learned the changeup IS just a
great pitch to throw.
"I've stayed away from the
slider. but I know I'm gomg to
have t o learn to throw 1t
someday." he continues. "When
guys start throwing the slider,
they have a tendency to fall in
love with it." ·
About the only thing Pnes
has fallen in love with these days
1B UCLA baseball. He lives in the
donns on campus but returns to
his parents' Corona del Mar
house about on~ a month. He
e njoys playing at Jackie
Roblnsion Field and he certainly
enjoys the stature of playing ln
the "the toughest baseball
conference in the nation."
Ironically, Pries' choice of
UCLA has teamed him with a
couple of arch-enemies from high
school days , namely Rich
Amaral, out of Estancia High and
Orange Coast C.Ollege, and Bob
LAVELLE RETURNS .. •
From Page C1
two rules: o ne , you treat
everyone decent and, two, one
o'clock means one o'clock "
LaVelle was 10ld.
"When I fint got in the water I
was really bad,'' remembered the
19'-year-old freshman. "But I had
fun doing that, and that was a
change in itaelJ. ' •'TfUs whole seaaon has really
been a complete surprise to me."
LaVelle posae11e1 the beat
times in the state this yHr ln the
SO breast (31.5 seconds), the 100
breut ( 1 :06 .9) and the 200
lndtvidual medley (2:14.9).
At thb week'• conference
champlonahlpa
(Thuraday-Saturday), Watson
plaru.to uae LaVelle In five
lndMdual event.a and two relays.
He allo plans on utilizing her ln
1teven events at the upcoming
SoCal Champlon.hipa (April 28
and 30 at F.aat LA) and another
~ In the state cham=pa CM&r~7atHa.rtneJJ m
the Bay AIH).
lt'• tu kind of demanding
schedule that would have turned
off LaVelle in the past. But not
any longer.
"I'm having a good time and I
enjoy being on the team a lot,"
she says. "A lot of It now 11 I
know what I need to do. I'm
older and have more
experience."
Translated, it means the
competitive fires and de.sire are
back.
"She's very inteMe," analyzed
Wat.son. "She deals with pain
better than anyone rve leen. The
bottom line la she'll puah herself.
Not only does she work out hard,
but when she aeta on the block
she'll spend everything ahe hu."
"Maybe that'• becauae I want
it bad enough." aa1c1 LaVelle of
her revltalb:.ed atUtude. "And I
like to win.
"Still, I don't rept what l did.
If l had to do it all over .,.in, I'd
do It the ume way . . . only th.II
Ume I'd have a better ~ on
my ahoulden."
bar1mer, another Estancia
product
Amaral wasn't exactly on
Pries' hst of favorites during tus
high school days.
"I think I hated their guts,"
he says of his teammates "But
that's always the case when
you're playing against another
team m your league. But you
always wind up liking them once
you gel to know them."
Al. for Larimer: "I played
basketball against him and we
both remember mixing It up
underneath the basket back
then," Pries admi u . (Pries.
incident.ally, averaged 21 points a
game for CdM and was the Sea
View League bas}<etball player
of the year when he was a
senior).
Today, Pries couldn't think
of anyone better to be providing
offensive support when he's
pitching.
Amaral Is batting 385 for
the Bruins and recently
completed a stretch m which he
had the game-winning RBI in
four of five UCLA victories.
Amaral was leading the
conference ln hitting for awhile.
The junior second baseman Is
also second in the conference in
stolen bales.
Lorimer, a lso a junior, 1s
batting .364 while seeing limlted
act.Ion.
Meanwhlle, Pries Is just
happy to be improving, both
physjcally and mentally.
"Il'a about time I started
cornina along," he says. "I w&1
really disappointed with my
freshman year. I 've been
improving both aa a rulter and a
pitcher.
"I think I've retily learned
to have confidence In myself.
When I'm pltchin,g, I just have to
go right at the hitter. You can't
be inlbnldated by anyone," he
adda.
And when Yriftl does have
an oft-day at the plate, he'• got •
few friends ac'OUnd to pl.ck up the
alfick.
Tough day for Kriek
LOS ANOltLES ·Ueno Mayer
caipturud the rain-delayed 1ln1le1
finals ot the Pacific Southw"8t Tonni.
Open with a 7-6, 6· 1 victory yeeterday
ovt"r South Aftlca'1 Johan Kriek
E .
Mayer coUec\ed •36,000 for hll lrlutnph at
the Loe Ana lt'I Tennil Club with Kriek, who
~•t Jimmy Connera In the 1emiflnall, won •18,
000.
1t WM " fru.tratinti day for Kriek.
"I swore in my native tonaue," he said later.
Kriek complain~ on the court about h1a lhoet: "I
have to do aomt>thini about my shoe.. . . . I'm
gettinti paid $100,000 a rear to use certaJn thoet,
and l didn't have any o thoee. I have to buy my
own shoes. 1 was skidding around like It wu a
clay court I wu very uncomfortable. I wu very
nervous playing without the right equipment."
Of Mayer, Kriek said: "He'1 a very
frustrating player .... I played stupid In the
tiebreaker. It's not the easiest thing to play great
Cor two days and then have the rain. That affects
you." ·
Quote of the day
Lou Hoitt, Arkansas football coach, on
recruiting efforts by booster groups: ''What
I want to know Is how these alumni know
who to recruit. A school says it doesn't uae
alumni m recruiting, but isn't it strange
that when they are involved, they always
aeem to be talking to a kid the school
wants."
Steinbrenner fined $50,000
New York Yankees ow.per Ill George Steinbrenner has been hit
with one of the heaviest individual
fines ever levied against a baseball
club owner, bu t umpire union head R lcble
Pbllllp1 feel.I the punishment doesn't fit the
crime. Baseball CommlHloner Bowle Kabn
reportedly fined Steinbrenner $50.000 yesterday
for remarks critical of National League umpires.
Steinbrenner had complalned that NL umpires
gave teams in their league a break·on cloee calls
In games against American League teams.
Phillipa said be was ''sorely disappointed in the
type penalty imposed." He said he had hoped
Steinbrenner would be suspended ... Ex-
F.dison High standout Mike Dot1erer hit a solo
home run in the seventh inning to power
Stanford to a 4-3 college baseball victory over
UCLA yesterday . . . Al Atdes is expected to
resign as coach of the Golden Stat.e·Warrions of
the NBA this week . . . Atlanta Bcaves owner
Ted Taner has 1ent telegram.. to other major
league owners complaining that contracts signed
with NBC and ABC WJ!re not fair.
Television, radio
TV: Baseball -Dodgers at San Francisco,
7:30 p.m ., Channel 11.
RADIO: Baseball -Oakland at Angels, 7:25
p.m., KMPC (710); Dodgen at San Franc1SCO,
7:35 p.m .• KA.BC (790).
Area sailors
win trophies
in Whitn ey
By ALMON LOCI.ABEY ~ .................
S.Uort in LOI Anaele9 Yacht Cub'• at.xth nee ot the Whitney, LA "l'trnet. Lltlle Whitney and
Todd P11eiflc Sorta had a wet and windy ride home
from C.t.allna 'laland Sunday ln the lix\h race of the
cornblned sert•.
It wu • dO\.lble race with the cha.le from Loi
Anaeles Harbor to f{owl.and'• Landtna Saturday
tumins into a slow, light wind affair. several.,.
trophy winners turned up in both races in the
Whitney Series for International Offshore Rule
yachta. Tom Schock'• Marrakesh Expreu from
Newport Harbor Yacht Club placed second in a..
B on the trip to the lala.nd.
ReMi!tl ol ~ V, Whltn.y Set1" IOI IOR y.ehta
0\11:RAll -Apc)QM, Miit lllld Marty Vogel, Long 8Mcl'I 'l'C, 2
Merralleeh Expr-. Yom 84110cik, Hewpot1 Har6ot YC, 3 Flembl;Oyanl,
8aroey end Slav• Flem, L8YC.
CLASS A -1. FIMll>uoyant, 2. c.Mflly, Wllllam Oll«mll ... '. Bahl•
C0<tnthlan VC; 3 Roll« Coute<, OolllM>n Syndlc:ete, LBVC
CLASS 8 -I Apooee 2 MlfrakMtl Expt .... 3 HoOoot, Tom
JOtQena.\, LAYC
L A TimM 8«lee for PHAF
QVERAll -Torch, Alb•rt OHrlnQ. Ceb•lllO S.•ch YC. 2
Ob-'On, WMQ« Syndate. LA YC. 3 lnt8t'IM, Al AoMtlberg, ABVC
CLASS A -I ObtMelon. 2 lntenM , 3 Leep Frog, 0on 81aak,
LAVC
CLASS 8 -1. Spindrift. Dan Feltham, Sant• 8wbara VC, 2. Blue
MH, Brue:• Anderaon, Ceplllreno Bay YC: 3 8unbur•t, George
Rletlardton. C8brltlo 8Mctl YC
CLASS c -I TO<c:h. Albert 0.-rlng. cave. 2. Vol Au Vent, JeTry WUhbum. Uttle Shipe Fleet. 3 Catllllo, HHM/Harll'l'IM, S... 8Mdl
VC
RACE VI IOA OVERALL I c.ffltlty Wllllam Ott .. mtllet, a.hie Corinthian
VC, 2. Vee Ill, Randy Crowtey, Uflle Ships Fleet: 3. Amenia, Mel~.
lido Ill• YC.
CLASS A -1 Celel'lty; 2. Amante, 3 Flambuoyanl.
CLASS 8 -1 V• Ill. 2 Apc)QM; 3 Hottoot. PHRF OVEAAll -
1 Toren; 2 WlndOYer. N.o and 8iM Hoellltne. LA'l'C; 3. eoi-, Jim
Pltrlek and wan Rlctlwde. LAYC.
CLASS A -I Ol>MMlo<\. 2. lnl«>M, 3 Point BlaM. U11 Coblentz. uui. Ships F1Mt
t:LASS 8 -I Ghoet, Al Berg, Wlndjemtn9<8 YC; 2. Blue Mu.
Bruc;e Andet90n, Capo BYC. 3. Nutmeg. Ev.rail Comlnge, C8YC.
CLASS C -I TOlch: 2 Wlndov41<. 3. Con_,eua.
MOAC -I Heebe< CrNPe<. Mike Geo<ge, l(lng Harbot YC; 2
Wr.c:kleu, A.G Kedlno. Capo BYC, 3 O.ta1t1, SllMI Reed, l B'l'C
TOOO PACIFIC I AIOhe II. Glenn Aeeo. South &ho<• UC; 2
Sunllhln., Oenrnl Humph(ey. CBYC. 3 e.nchmark, Mlk• MIAfphy·Aogef Ven Baek, SSYC
OCC women stumble
The Orange Coast College women's softball
team allowed seven unearned runs to the visiting
Fullerton C.OUege Hornets yesterday, and as a result
the Pirates lost the South Coast C.Onferenoe game,
8-5.
The Pirates committed five errors in all as their
conference record dropped to 4-8 (15-10 overall).
Fullerton opened an 8-1 lead going into the
bottom of the sixth inning, but the Pirates came up
with four runs to make it close.
Hornet pitchers allowed three walks and the
Fullerton defense commitwd a pair of errors in
aiding the Pirates
A bbott's field g oals
lift Express, 1 8 -1 3
Mike Witt
TAMPA, F1a. (AP) -Vmce
Abbott kicked three first-half
field goals and Los Angeles used
a aecond-half fumble recovery to
set up John Barnett's 1-yard
touchdown run last night as the
1..ofi,A.ngeles Express held on for
an 18-13 United StatA!s Football
League victory over the Tampa
Bay Bandits.
Abbott's field goals of 35, 36
and 24 yards staked the Express
to a 9 -6 halftime lead and
Barnett'• score gave Los Angeles
a 16-6 advantage with 12:31
McNAMARA AT WITT'S END
From Page C1
leagues now where he should be of the third. But the A's nicked
over those mi.stakes." Witt for another run in the top of
Witt's bi&gel\ error came in the the fourth and the acore stayed
third inning after he had loaded at 5-2 before Reggie Jackson hJt
the baaes wtth none out. With his fourth home run in as many
Mike Davis at the flate, Witt games with one out and no one
quickly got ahead o the count on in the ninth.
0-2 before the right fielder .ent a A.a foe Witt, McNamara said he
broken bat aingJe to the opp<mt.e planned to have another meeting
field in left. The play 8COred two with his young pitcher today to
runs and marked the beginning decide what coune of action to
of the end for the Irvine reaident. take next. Veteran Tommy John
"I can't see anything he'• doing added that only Witt could cure
wrong. In fact, the first two him9tlf of hia woes.
tnninga I thought he threw Just "It'• aomething he's got to
1uper," noted Morgan. "When work out himaeli,'' oflered John.
men get on bue, though. it .eems "You can talk to him and tell him
he'• trying to throw too hard and •thinga. but It's 1till 10met.hing he
the ball sfraishtens out. haa to do.
''He'• just going tbroush a "All he need• 11 one game ~right now. Some1imea you where be gets all the breaks." ao throush the.e thtnp where * .
you throw aomethinl and they AMOl1. MOTU _ ea~ 141 OH. Oflglnally
alway. hit lt. Other Umee )'OU ~on the 1way ~ ... 1>y tM ~. throw the same \bing and they .... ~to oome olf II tOday. 011. can't touch lt." ~. In 1\111 worda, Mid: "I'm 111111 on •
dey.10-de dllebled .... I ~ -ol'I It Doe1 that mean Witt'• .,,,., 111* ~·1 "-"'*' "*.,. ._ .. ~'-• --mental? !a ln•l•til tie 1 .::::i to play. General yavvL~-°"' ~...... ..... .......... "A lot of timell a pt.ch r knows ... 111m lwOw teet ..-w i. oou1ctn·1 what he wan ta to do and It ttwaw the..., to...,.....,~ lllid ........
cN.nae-into tomethlna he bo1* :. ~ ':,. ~ :-..::::: he can do. It'• a confidence tt1e ._,...,.,, "I 11!191" tww.,, ..,..., tor
fKtor It M~ "°""' hnM1 ~of dllYL VOll'I~ 1•He'"' be~ t. He'• ltill -llrld ou1 ...... .. ,....... .,...,,. 'e1o.
&,l ·-· ._.. ... It .. _,_ .... .,.,... on. It. We're not at'1nc up •Ill yeut" ... The An11er1 .,,.,. on blm." ...--=--•• ... • -__,, ~ 111111 """' ... _ .... .,,all ....... .
remaining to play.
Reserve quarterback Jimmy
Jordan brought the Bandits back,
however, and the 4-3 Express
needed a roughing-t~eunter
penalty to help qwu;t.er Mike
Rae exhaust the clock.
Jordan replaa!d John Reaves
late in the fourth quart.er aft.er
the Bamilt.s' starter had thrown
four interceptions and fumbled.JO
set up Barnett's touchdown.
The fonner Florida State star
completed six of seven pames for
60 yards as the Bandits drove 60
yards to close to withln three
points on hia 23-yard scoring pass
to Danny Buggs with 7:21 left.
Tampa marched \0 the Los
Angeles 40-yard line four
mil)utes lat.er, but relinquished
possession on downs and saw
hopes for a comeback fade .
LEASE A
1983
COUIAR
FOR
s199u
PER MONTH* I
Leaslng Isn't right for
everyone, but may b9 the
antwet to your new<*'
needs. L .... a tx'and MW
198S Mercury eoug., tot
$109.25 per month on a
dOMd end IMM. With no
down payment end 345 month free IMlntenenoe &
..,.. Anfe1a (7-8) had a bard """"1."'11111 ' ......... ,., ..,... -llfla~ll l Un» difltnl out o1. a ...o hole. ,. "' a... -'* .. ..,., "" w1111 ~dfQUSI nwt Ft• clmt • 4-2 on two :;.: ~.J° .. ':o:Nt ;,~r.:O Olntno ond eoctttOllt ~"" u--Rm_...;1::...-Bod __ c.rew __ ln_u. __ bottam ___ ,...._. _____ • _____ ,,,, __
, warranty. Come In end helP
UI find the ~ht ..... ~ tot you.
To,lc: ''The #Nxl Blep"
Author of The Aquan.n Oontpfracy
,,.. the~.,.~~.
Edi Day Envnr.n.ntll Filr
-... CMt .... - , ...... a..
., ........... ,,.. ..,. ........... o.tter
~ .... nw. ..... 1...., °"''
JOlll 1HI """ ' ""'
MW.E WATCtM UltCtEON
Whtie walohf~he "¥h8'el p .. rlatit In rront of
your tet>te, en 1 eumtuout 1Nfood Nied -
maybe a h• f pound "•mburger treat -pOtlt~ I IClfOM ~· °"" hM 11• AM tt • Nt
,
OAl<lllf•ll , ....
K.lf>IU L:llr a ... Chleail<> Mno<1'0rn
51411111
9t.lt•n.otfo
~14w•u9'..., c ...... , •. ,d
°'""'' N-Yor~
Botton Tu.otitn
Y••ter ht I on11m 1 • Ano1u -
M~'"""''".,.. t t c
,. """'" w •• ""t ,..__-... N·•W 1Q!~ J • •
M1t1041so1a e
Only v"'""• '""'°' looJIQI I•
0 II lflll•\~ f t I
' 11 • (..: ... .-.4.Jrld t•,, I II'
00) ··-"•(•h. "" KM"I Qry 1
N.-. 'f~ o , .. ..,.,,1
0 I)
Sfl.111"° (N 1 1
I I)
Onty Cl~'"'' -. 11
Oodoen Att.,,le
Clnclrn<I 1 l
Sen Ol-ec>
Sen Fr l'rlCboo
Ho0tton
I'/. UV IOH
•
91 LOUii
P11tsbu'Qll MonlrNI PMedelpl1100
f.il"t Ycnk ChlCAl)O
.,>f l...iu •' ' ' l>1H1l><'!O' •1 .,_,
ChlClll)O "'• •• (RulhVl<l CHI n
Ck'tlnne1I !fl,.., Ntt!<tO U 11 n At11n1~ \I':
(M1mt..,u'\4::n t • i •
Chk'ng" l'Mll'l~pl.1•
MOl~•u lt11Hr
08111'6. U+v.... Ml.
l Mo~~•u 1
M~ttlle ... 'I
AT PRIVATE S.AI•
No AIH$llJ
In lh" Sul'f'rt{lr (. 1
of Celilort110 lu• I • Orlf\Ot! In th& 11.A1111111 <ii
of VERA SfLVll\ t:c •lf
tu
·.
Notice 11 her "l>t 11 v"' undertlgned wlll llf4 81 1
to the h1gt1e1t ~ri•i ''"•t t--~n;~I lO""?'ISloT;'l11 TI"'"
___ ___....._ ..._~_ ...
Sllperlo< Cour1 • '• "'' d-r of Aprll 19113 • 11,.
l/llQ!nla King, I I 12~ ""
Northrld91. CA ti I' ~
Calllorn11 th tt ., 1111 1
lnlllf••I or Hid de '" I time ol <INlh llnd •
and tfltll .. 1 IMI II
decieeaed h•• operation of I•* .,
or In edd111on 10 \11111 dec'eated. It 11141 llm• •I
&od to Ill the cerle.n 1 COi 1-WL..
lltuated tn Countr ?I o '" .,
Of Cefllomla. p&rl1tu1.11 r; l • ' • ,.. Joltowa. 10 wll.
An undlvld&d ""<' " '' trrl"'"'' eub)ect 10 '""' , ...... •ll' , o• .. Ht1te In. • lhe N0<lhea11r•ly I ; ~. Sou1he11tMly I••• ~heNlerty 'r ~I L• 1 6 •
606 ... lhowfl "' "1.1\.'~ : Pl' b1 Mlxetlll*•• .. "11ps r"<
Ore11ge Count t, (; ,,1 on
commooly !crown n •'J
St .• Colle Met• Cll.
Term• of ••I• ""•" 1 • ,,. money of lhil u ....... , '>t8f>!!6
br pert oaall and I "eno• Ii• cl
by note secured i., M<.>1tu11
'Trust Deed on th~ l"liP"''' ,., • 'Ten pet cerit Of IMO ml '• ,,
depollted ... Ith bid
I Sidi Of otf«1' 10 ba IH .. , lti!Q
iWlll be recelv.O at Illa ,.111 " office et eny tlrn" allot th ,...1 ~lion ..... "°' ••Kl be/ .... rt
()f Nile. o.ted tttt.1<tttt<4!>yv_......,..._,.
'H. l/IROINIA KIN • Any. 11 lllW
:11 t25 Yolande /\>rl'
Norttwldge. CA 913,.fl
Atty tor SMrry A, W1t11air
.Adminl•lf 111 t.c •SHERRY A WISVARY :::i~,~~ ~~1
• P.u1>ll1h1d Orang• Cuu
Pfidi, APlll 19. Ill :>~. 1093
I
..
...
,
r
, -;, •4 411> Ul&A(,:IA (I 11• !~11211
2 llO
340
<100
fr um•
3 40
4 20
160 400
' llO 2 40
;> 8U 3 00
• 00 3 20
3 80
Hoy, Bir.go
Lil Abner
s 41)
4 ;/(.I
2 80
•
Orange Coast D~ILY PILOT /TuMdey, Aprll 18, 1N3
UllL .
"AO•IC DMelOtl WLTPct. e:z.... ~~& m
O.lrlenil 3 4 0 09
AtUc.n• :I ' 0 4'11 C.NttlAL OIV*C*
TamjHI hf 6 2 0 '14 Chlcego 4 3 0 671 MIChtgen 3 4 0 4'11
81rmlngham 2 5 0 2M ATLANTIC otVltlON
" "" 1oe 1oe " .. 124 1UJ 124 113
131 1:11
1ee " 118 121 87 10$
PtllllMHllf'lll• • 1 0 957 146 57 B01100 a 2 o 11• 190 130
N.w JOIH'f :I ti 0 280 109 172 Wathlogton 1 8 0 . 143 94 1U
u11 Nlaht'a k0t1 LOI A~ Ill, famp1 Bay 13
••fllfd•f• 0-1.oa A~ 11 Mlchlgen o.n-11 Art1on•
lundlf• OamM
Oilkl11t1d at Ottmlf\Ohlm
&oeton •• Pllll~• r.mpe 8"Y at WNlllnQlon "Moftdat'• c-. New UIM<J al CfllQgo
Loe Angele• 11, Ttmpa Ba~ 13
lcore bJ Quart.,. LOOI A"QM• 3 6 0 9 18 Temp• llAy 3 3 O 7 13 TB fu A11d1u1}'9/lyn 40 ,
I A fG Abbo11 36 TB fO Andrut'(lhyn 29 LA ra Abboll 311 LA rG ADtloll 24
LA Bamatt 1 nm (Abboll kiekl TB Bugga 23 pen lrom Jotden (AndrUtYthyn ldok) ~ s.1 .. y, Jotdan lolCl<led Ill 9fld •nn•
A 32223
lndh11d11al llatletlc• RUSHI""-' Los AnQlla Bod<l11 I 1 59
e.t"4111 II SS, H-p 7-16, HatrlflQ10ll 3· I
Oun1111 1-0, Rae 3-mlnua I Tampa Bat
Plall 21 107 ~ 16, 8uilQ• 1-() • PA~s1N'o -Los An911es Rae
13-26-0·140 Tem!HI Bay. R•v• 7-27oe1 J0<d81'1 8· 10. 1-97
RECEIVINO Lo• Anoeles, Elfl• 6 65 Boddie 2·20, Wltllema 1·18, HelnH 1 11>.
HUllp I 9 Sherrod 1·9, Hefftnglon 1 4
Tempe B•y. Plall 4-16, Bugge 3 82
I 1u11lllfon 3 SO, StepMns 3-34, 01100<1 2-16 MISSED F'IELO GOALS Nooe
=-IA•,_ cos•• I H ....y ....... ...... romoo-_....,YoltletNew ....... 11 l hufldey -.... Jet"'1/M NlwYOtk. 11 ~ ..._Yotll .............. .... _.._.,
A .............
Tonlghl -A~ at 8oMOfl. 11 Fldey -Boelon Ill Alllnll, n
81>11d1y -Allenle at 8olton, M -V ... ,...c~ ,......... ........
Tom0trow -o.n-el,._.," Frld1y -""-'Ill el O.W., n
Sundey -Denver et "lloenl11, n II
n..-y 8Mttle .,., ,..,..... •
Wldl>Mday -PortlenCI at .... UI. n
F11dey -S.1111 al POl'llancl, n
l11ndey -Porttend 11 811111•. If _..,,.
commun!L°!!:r eott
aoutll Cwt c -· (.tC..U ..... CC)
TNm lltof-I. Ot11ng1 eo.t, 3M; 2. Ml.
San AnlOlllO: 396; 3. 81n11 Ana, 397: <I.
Fu""10f'I, 398, 6. Cerrltoe, '°3, 0. eypr-.
412, 7.Gold9nW.a, 417.
72-Speclonl (OCC). 73-Peullon (OCC);
79 Lotenr (OCC). 80-Atmlrti (OCC):
81 Wutel (0CCI: M-Woode (OCC~
~ I t • •
Women'eeaftbell
COlllllllUMfTY COLL.aM
'Yllerton I. 0r-.. C.... I
Fuffer10f'I 022 <tOO 0-8 I 3
Orange eo-001 OCM o-s • a
IA•,O•lk. lo.laena O•"-'"" Oetlgn
WIN. Becht .. (5). WIM (8) end Ot1ino41r, ~ (S). Ottlnget (0): Orey, Anttoliue
(61 end Brlclcner. W-WIH . L-Orey.
2B -Brlckner (OCC>. Si mm (F).
39 -Sellen ... <Fl
116<1 J tj t 00 :.>80
'40
•OO 290 22U
1 ti\/ J 4U
2 40
,. ootii ii ~ Good.
Bo1ton marathon 1'·• I"!' ml!O hn ,,...,, In the 8711\ "'"'""II ,,, 111e 8011on M11111h0n ye9lt1td•Y
I Gregory Mayer. Welles.1ey l\4UI ~
2 o<l 00 2 flon Tebu; l'.ugene, Ote • 2 Oil 31
3 8Mll 0.ud8n, Stone M<Wn1Aifi 011
2 OQ SI
• fd M11ndo111, flag<iftll Am ' 10 06 ~ l t1rltt'lflher f\unyl\n, Carboridefe Ill
? IO ~4
8 O••tcl Cdge l l1tC••••· On!llfO 'l 11 Ol
1 M·<loHI La1rn1n. Spok•n11 Wath
2 11 24 a ~ ..... 1 Sch'M•ng;;< C&ml>t•O!!" Man 1 11 •u 9 .J11ll WO'fls. Eugen-<Xe 2 11 42
10 Riii Roll9111 Sharl orn Mua
2 " ....
WOMIEH
1 Jn•n Renoi1 Botton. 2 21 •2
? te<quel!ne Garfo SI B•onswir.h Du~I"' ? ?9 27 J M••t sn .. Ra1eig1o N c. 113323 • 1<•••11 Dunn, DurhAm N H • 2 33 35
~ !'Jue l(log. Mob•lfl, .-.ia 2 33 52 8 Jan~ Wlpl Logan. Ul&h, 2 37 18
1 K.,,. Cos'labn·lUm VC1r "4 Y . 'l 37 40
8 Mtnl.ly lrlllnd Alpone 2 39 07 q M8f1A T1u11110 Tempe. ,.,,, 2 39 45
10 ><1m Bo•ns F•fl~• Atk 'l •? 10
-'
Ynt9rcley'a lrenucttona ..... AU A-'-'a....pe
CHICAGO WHITE SOX -81gMO Tony
UAulal, meneoet. IO I OM-"9f ~ °' I'll• contrect CLEVELAND INDIANS -Pl~ Toby
Herrah. tllkd bUenoan, on Ill• 15-day
dlHbltO Ht\ RKalled Pel T eblet. lhltd D•••men, from Cherteeton of Ill•
lnlemetlonll LM.Q041 NEW YORK YANKEES -Traded Tuc*w
Athford, third b._,,811, 10 the N4lw Ycwtl M•I• f()f Stl!YI Ray. pltct>er. Atalgnld A.y to
Graenaboro °' the South All81'11lc t.-eue. Suapended Roger E•ICkeon, pl1ch11, for
l•lllng to report lo Columbut of lh•
lnterMtlon., L:!tC;.,
NEW YOR:aMETS ~ned Tllelc« Milford. thltd b-. 10 Tldewl1er of IN
lnllf M lional l.eeQUe.
P\&IC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE P\8.IC NOTIC£
SUP EA I 0 A C 0 U AT 0 f NOTICE TO CAl!OfTOftl OF NEWP09'T--IA UNl'1ID
CALIFORNIA Jlfl£MQ£J) IWLlt TA~!K.1'11.,4---Ci;;HOOLlft.l'IA...llDllllll_l~loiL------l COUNTY OR 0"'4~ Nohe;" IS t111eby given to the L.aQAL NOTICS
C•M No.: A117602 c:••dltn•s ol Un lied Medlca l Notice of .... ,....._,,....,,,
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE Merkt111ng Group Inc . dbe Flr•t NOtlCE IS HEl\EBY GIVEN that
tn the Meller ol the ApphcatlOn ol Hoap11111 Produc:ts Company, the Board of Educ1tlon of the
I HAISTOPHER PHILIP SCHLEGEL. , T111111teror. whOM 1>u1lneat lddrn1 Newporl·M••• Unified Scllool
" min<)( Is 17922 Skyperk Clrcle. P.O Box Olllrlct, of Newport Beed!, Coonty By SM.ARON SCHlEGfl SKERIK, 16336. Ir vine. Orenge Co,unly, of Orenge, Callfornll. le offering fot
1111 Mother. Pellttoner C11111orn11. 92713, th•t a bulk 1 11e (I I one 11152 Crown.
81 1 WllERE.AS. SHAAOlol SCHLEGEL , 1r8fltfer ta et>out to be mt!de IO Flr•l 67·PHHnger teflool bul, !14.od.r
,-SKEBJK pelluoruii.. Ill IUlttil.l _ OITIO'D!Ull Produ~ts. lfl(; .• trt1ntl!:!U!'!!4-~:tl.k·J~l. s.dal No. 32756. epp1lc110t, CHRISTOPHER PHILIP whose bu1lnH addr111 11 17922 Sealed bids for Ihle equipment ..
SCHLEGEL a minor hH flied • Skyperl< <.11cle. lrvlne, Cellfornl• be reeehred In the oltlce ol the
')11Cfl '1'0•1 h•n bffn 1ued petlllon with Iha clent of thl• ce>u<t 92713 Purchulng Otrector. locetect at
...... , ''"'' .S.rld41 .glln•I '°" 10< • deCt .. chenglng IQPileant • Tt>e prope<ty 10 be lrentl•red 11 2985-8 S.1r Street. Coal• loteN. your ti ln11 hHrd unleH n•me trom CHRISTOPHER Pt11LIP localed al 17922 Slcypar1t Clfcle. CA, up to I 1:00 Lm .. on M8)' 2,
wlthl11 t'I <f~J• R"'d SCHLEGEL 10 C HRISTOPHER I P 0 8011 16336. Irvin•. Orange 11183, et which time they wltl be
•'O"' PHILIP SCHLEGEL SKERIK, County. CaMoml• 927 13 publdy opened and r9ed atoucl.
""k 11 • ecvi 11 01 IT IS ORDERFD lhllt all persons The prop•rty 11 deecrlbed In Appointments to lnepect the
: , s melter, you 1n1er11ted In Iha ebove melter ~el es All l\irnltllre, lvmilhloga. et>ow equipment may be meOI by
.i 1 •• .., 1i...1 )OU• 1 appHr In Deoertment 3 of th la li•lure1. equipment, el\d good wlll calll.ng Oiclt Plcllent, Tranepor1atlori
II MY r ·~ b,, Court. loellled al 700 CIVIC Center of th81 b\lllne'll lcnown .. untied o.c>t. •• (71<1) $5e-34M OllWI West. Santa Ant, Galllomll. Modical Merlcetlng Group, Inc, db• Bid• lor Ihle bu• mull be
" 1 l.J • t a d h • • I do on Mey t6 1983, 11 10 A M • or H first Ho•pllal Product• Compan'i' submitted In 1 •Hied envelope nu:t111'0 1 ,,,.,un•I p-ue11•r soon 1hereal1er ., the man..-may and located "' 17922 Skyp1r1c merked "SURPLUS PROPERTY. ,. , ro111t~ lid 1111 •1Jdlencl1 • be lle8rd, and ahow ceusfl, II 11ny, Ctrcla. P.O 8011 16336, lrvlne, 810 NO. 19-83. Al ....... flllltl.
, q•,. Uri rMpond• deritro wtiyth•petllloo forch•.ngeolnnme Oreng11Coun1y.Calllornl192713. Bi dder should lnepec t the J••• 1 .. ,, 111 lntounKlon qua &hould not t>e gr11nted The bulk 111n1l1r will be equipment belor• bidding. The
IT IS l'UAfH!A OAl>Eftt!D tnat • con111tnm11led on May 4, 1963 Ill District dOH not guerentH or
" ...... •nliL t er el copy ol thlt O<der 10 thow Cl\IM be the Lew Olllcts of Weyne I/. R. werranty any equipment 119aln1t
• ' I nt O\lftdU en ••le publlth&d '" Th• Or•nofl Co••l Smith, lflC . 1926 TIC8 V•llay Blvd., defecte.
• t "' 11 .,,.,,., 10 u111y Pll01, • ntwS?tPlf of g-.et W alnut Creek , Cont ra Coste Suc<leeeM bidder muat ,_
'" ..,,. m•flera cltculatlon printed In Orange County, Cll1f0<nl• 945115 property at hla own expen••·
1 ft 11 nay Moun11 County Calllornte once • ~ for S o f • r a • k n own t o t h • AemoYlll mu9t be made during lhl
, da" ,...,,po 1ou1 auccnatve ...-ie prior 10 the Trans!..-... all buslnM9 ~Ind normal buelneu day encl be
fF"NDANT 11, CMll dale set '°' n..rtng on lhl pelltkl(l addreuea uNd by Treneleror lor completed within one week ot
.... ' '"" hy the OATEO Mllleh 28. t983 . lhtt thfee yeara lltt put, If dlffer41nl ec:ceptlng the bid.
1 ) II you ... 1w. to FRANK OOMENICltlNI ..-om l b0"9 are NONE. Peyment muet be mecte at the
•• 1.) 11 mu.1, '"'"'" Judge of the Qualified ctelms of the creelltora PurchHlng Office before the 11111 1urnn10111 1s &iperlor Coun of T1ensf .. or mey be flied In WTIUng equipment can be remo¥ed from
I ""'"' lh!S Ct>Urt II MARVIN o. MAYElll. 180. wilh lhe Law OHlcee of Wayne V. R. Ille Otstrlct. Pereonal checkl ... be
• 1 I"" rumple.Int A PtolHelorlal Corpot•tlOtl Smith, Inc .. 11128 Tice Valley Blvd., eccepted. Cellfomte S.... TIX of
, , Y""' u11f11u1t ... 111 ;2212 Dupont Ortv., tulle I Welnut Cfeell, Callfornla 94595 up 8% wit! be collected.
"1 • " ~• p11c,.1101• of the lrvtne, CA 12715 10 4:00 p .m on Mey 4, 1983 A-d will be made In the beat
, , ,., •i 11 , .. "' n•"Y f'<1ter " Tai.: (714) 752-t515 pursuant 10 S4101lon 6106(8) of lhe lnter .. t of the Otltrtct, "-· lhl
1 • •"•\ t 11 tQf '"" rl"llef Al10tMJ for P•lltlonar Cellfornle Commerclal Code. hlghett bidder wlll receive
"' 1 111<' com111101 wto1Ch Published Orenge CoHt Delly However. c11tm1n11 ahould note preference In the 8Wlld of lhl bkL ••I •II 11 ~~rr111t11nen1 ol Piiot AprU 12 t9, ,6, May 3, 1983 lh•I no cesh wlll be p eld to Minimum ecc.ptable offer of 11.
• ta• SI 1 mot14rf f)t P•Of'"''Y 1111~ T•ansleror 1n this eecrow or outllde ooo. '"" u .. 1 1oq111~1111I Ill th• this MCfOW The Boatd of Education -....;.;.:-.;i..-.,._....;;....,... Dl!1l'd AP<ll 19, 11183 tile right to retec1 any« al bide and PUBUC NOTICE CR F Slfttth ti, 10 walve eny lrreoularlty or
Preeldenl tnfC)r'INlltty In the blddlnO-
FlCTITIOUS aUatNIH Fl<lt HolC)llll ~ of lhl adloOI dlMrtc:\
NA• IT A nfllEMT Produell , Inc are lr14lllglble to bid by dtrec1IOn of
The loltowlng pertonl .,. doing Published Oreng• COHI Delly the Boerd of fducetlon.
~ 11 Piiot. ~rM 10, 1983 N E W P 0 A T • M E S A
EUCLID DENTAL GROUP Oen t64M3 UNIAED
M P•tlmvtter, 0 M D., Me1tln J. 1-------------SCHOOL DISTRICT
McGrH vey. Jr . Q.D.S • John M. PUBUC NOTICE of Orenge County. CA
O.Leney. D.D s . 11911 N Euclid, J u p E " I 0 " c 0 u .. T 0 F 8y Dofothy H. Flllw. Suite too. Anaheim, CA 9290 I CALWONllA C.P.M.
O.n M. Perlmutter. D MD., • COUNTY Ott~ PutOtlaalne onctor
pfOftlllonal co1por1tlon.CA. 1188 CAN NO A111'0I (71•1 &M-U17
-
----------1 ~-Eouc, lid. Sult• too. Anaheim. C.A -----TO •• CAU.. DATED:~ 11. ,. "'" .,...,." Publlahed OrMge Coeet Dell\'
Merlin J · M cGreevey, J1 , llS1nAtheMAMR•IEtterTIToUStt11e1APP11CatJon of PllOt. ~ 11.11. 1113 ---------------1 0 D S I pt'of-'00111 CorpOfllton-• minor 1-..e3 CA. 1°188 N euclld, $ul1• 100. By LINDA JOYCE WILLIAMS her
Anaheim CA 92801 mother, Petition.
John M Qel.aney. o..o.s... WHEREAS. LINDA JOYCE
ptolenion•I c:orporatlon .. CA. 1181 WILLIAMS,, petitioner, .. perent of N Euclld, Surte 100. Ao'lhelm, CA applicant. LISA MAAIE TITUS. a HChllOUI lllll•H
91901 mlnOr, llM llled • petlllon""" the ..,._ ITA~
Thie 1>11*-It ~tad by a cleik of thl• court lor • llecrM The lallcMll'I ...,.... .. ...,.
QeMfel ~~rMYeY. Jr . =~r:R1~f:~1~ ~:~~ ~.~l DINTAL •M>u ...
a prohnlonll corporation WILl.IA11i9.:,,... o.i M • ...........,, D.M.D., ..... Preekllnt IT 18 ~ftEO INI ... pereont J, Mo0 •••ti' "1., D.O.a., ...... M.
lhl• •tatement wea flted wtlh the lnlerHted In th• above matter OILeney, D. ·~ I . ......._
Counly Clel'tt of Ofange Covnty on •PPHr In Department 3 ol thll lenta Ana. CA.._..,_.
M··-n 1"""• Court. loOeled at 100 CMo c.n. 0... M, ,_,, .... M ....... -"'' ' ... ..,_. D11ve W.t. IMta AM, CIMornla. .. y Or!W, CONM ... Mer, OA
,._.. 4. 0...., ' on Mer ,., 1Mi at 10 A.M., or• _.
..... • ....... ...... ...... IOOll ......... ,......, ,,.., .. .,. "· .... .,., "·· 44 aettt c• • 1a,.... be'*"'· _, ..._ --. • ..,, MMoM. ~ ~"l" .._.. .... CA -_,,..~tor.,_...,,... JoM ~ "'&iiJM .......
PulltleMd 0tllfl98 Colll = ~ r~IMD-e -;:-::.:.. f •if 11r e
Ptl04. ~ 11, "·""· -~,: ... ClllPr Cl(""' Ofdlr ............... ---pv ....... It\ TN Or.,... Ceeet _..I. 111111-•llll•t •1 .. 01 JI. ~ ....... , .......... _.. Ii""""' alreutaUOll pr1i-tff lft Of.... '-- -....
c.urie,. o• • ... • -.., eia-r °""" OlllllW • .... 1 use .... , .... _... __ .. . ....... ....
~~ -~--..
I
Orange Ooa1t DAILY Pll.OT/Tuetd1y, Aprll 19. 1983
Don't get pushy
Oakland shortstop Tony Phillips argues with umpire Greg Kosc
last night, claiming Angels' Bobby Grich interfered with him on a
third-inning double play ball.
Rams play for worthy cause
Saul, others join tourney to benefit Childhelp USA
Golf tournaments for <'harity <'Orne
along on a regular basis. And most. 1f not
all, are for a very worthy cause GOLF
celebrities including both Otsens and
Saul, Charlie Jones, Sam Cunningham,
Jeff Rutledge, Pat Studstill, Jack
Youngblood, Bob Brudzinski, Dwight
Stones, David Ray. Bill Bain. Bob
Donner, Don Fedderson, Brad Budde,
George Andrews, Jim Youngblood, Jeff
Kemp and Vince Ferragamo.
Next month (May 23) at lrvlne Coast
Country Club, the Newport Beach
chapter of Childh-elp USA will be
staging its first such venture and takt'
the word of former Ram center Rich
Saul and defensive lineman Phil Olsen
for the worthtneM of the charity.
HOWARD L.
HANDY
in the living room before being put in an
ambulance in bad condition, she asked
her mother. 'If 1 die, will you love me
then?'
The tournament is being underwritten
by the Catch Restaurant and Siu-Fed
Mortgage Corporation. They will pay all
expenses with 100 percent of the
proceeds g!)ing t.o Children's Village Ln
Beaumont -a child abuse center.
"I got interested m the child abuse
program when my wife (Ellt.>en) read me
an article about a llttle three-year-old
girl," Rich says.
"When the pohce arrived at this
house. the woman had her little girl
strapped io the botwm of a bed and Wa£
beating and abusing her The woman
was taken away from the little girl ;:ind
then the girl was unstrapped from the
bed.
"The little girl died on the way to the
hospital hoping that her mother would
love her after she was gone.
"ThlS is only one oC the c.ases m which
child abuse takes place but 1t really
brought the story home to me "
"When she was taken past her mothPr
Merlin Olsen, Phil's brother. will be
the host for the celebnty affru.r with a
number oC football players and sports
The stories of child abuse are too
numerous to tell all at one time
Unfortunately, in today's society, it goes
on and the group in which Eileen Saul,
Connie Olsen and all the others involved
is seeking a way to prevent such
happenings.
DllTH!!°'CIS Luxury boxes get OK
EDWARD D KING, age
57, a resident of Hunungton
Harbour, passed away on
April 16, 1983 He was the
IOTI of Dr. Edward D King.
Sr. and Genevieve Race
King. He wua born January 10, 1926 Ill Cincinnati, Ohio
and attended Lotspeich
School. Ashville and Yale
He graduated from the
University of California. Los
~Jes after serving ln the
U.S. Navy during World
War ll. He is survived by hlS
wife Jodie King. son Dr
Tom King, daughters, Mane
Takeshita , Terry
King.Connie Rowland, 2
grandchildren and his
brothers Stuart King of
Long Beach, Ca. and Robert
King of Sherman Oaks Services will be held at St
Anne's Catholic Church.
Seal Beach . Ca on
Wednewday, Apnl 20, 1983 al
2:00PM. 'nle farruly 1uggest.1
ln lieu of flowers
-wntri.butlons be .ent IO Hope
Rouse for Multlpl P
:Zandlcapped Children 4215
Peck Road, El Monte, Ca
91732 or the American c.anc-er Sociemy
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Raiders have
dec1ded to proceed with construction of 174 luxury
boxes on the rim of the Los Angeles Coliseum, with
completion due in time for the 1984 Olympic Games
and professional football season.
The club estimated the cost to be about $12
million, and the rental of each 12-seat suite to be
between $40,000 and $50,000 per year.
The issue of the boxes was a main point in the
antitrust suit in which the Raiders and the
Coliseum have been awarded multimillion-dollar
damages from the National Football League.
Raiders' Managing General Partner Al Davis
had until Monday to make his decision whether to
construct the luxury boxes prior to the Olympic
Games. If the decision was not made by that
deadline, the Los Angeles Olrropic Organizing
Committee would have the right to prohibit their
construction until after the games.
The question of the boxes delayed
announcement of specific tick.et sales procedures by
the LAOOC. The group's preaid~nt, Peter V.
Ueberroth, said yesterday that the procedures were
expected in three weeks.
The Raiders said in a prepared statement: "As
part of the overall refurbishment of the Coliseum, a
new press box will be built. Another major result of
the Raiden decision to build the luxury suites is the
addition of approximately 400 new seats located in
prime locations of the Coliaeurn."
Some other seats will be ellminated, however.
Under the agreement reached with the
Coliaeum Comrniasion in 1982 -before the !Wders
moved from Oakland -the club will construct and
have control of the boxes. ln a separate pact with
the LAOOC. the Olympic group will take over the
control during the Games and pay the Raiders $3
million.
Baseball's
top 10
Top 10
(a-d Oft 15 .. beta)
AllfNCAN LEAOUI!'
It's a waiting game
for Indiana Pacers
Q A8 fl H ~t.
Eng ... Mln...c>la 6 15 2 1 4417
------------. 01oaa. Oallland 10 23 3 10 435
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -The
season may be over, but the
waiting ii just beginning for the
lndiana Pacers.
with Houston, ihe West's laat-
place finisher. The winner
almost certainly will get
Virginia's 7-4 Ralph Sampeon.
NcCoaMfCll MOITUAllllS
Laguna Beach
494-9415
Laguna Hills
768·0933
San Juan Cap1s1rane>
495-1776
MA..,,_ LAWM-MT. OllVI
Mortuary• C.emo1ery
Crenwlory
162S Gisler Av•
Costa Mesa
SC0!>5~
.-CIMOTimS
m&.•O.t.aW.t.Y ~AAT
110 8t .. dWl'f
Costa Mn• 642·1160
Bretl, K-City 9 35 15 10 429
Ha._,,, CleY91and 6 19 2 8 .421
Shelby. Balllmot• 8 111 e e 4:t1
Wllltl. Toronto 1 17 4 7 406 E.Mu"~· Baltlmote to 37 8 t6 .406
K Olt>eon. Oetrol1 5 t6 3 6 400
Wynegw, ...._York 7 20 2 6 .400
F0rd. llaitin-e 8 33 e 13 394 ...... .__
c.tlno. M~ 4, Kltlla, ChlcaQo, 4, Phelpe, a.ewe. 4; -. ,_.-. ......, ~
Wlntleld, N9w Y~. 4, 1 -Ued wlftl 3 .............
Kittle, ~-14; Thornton. Oewland. 12;
OlllllMf, Mllweull ... 11, Lrnn, Angele, 11;
E MIMTllY. e.itlmore, 10; Hrt>ell. M'"'-ola.
10, 7 -tied with • ........ (IDnhhie)
12 •• '*'with l 000
The aeaaon finale Sunday
rught at Market Square Arena -
a lacklu.ater 112-0g loa to the
New Jeney Neta -could mean
the end of an era in Indiana.
Thi. at a ti.me when the Pacen
have the Pf09pec\ of the No. 1
pick ln the colle,e draft. Their
last place finlah ln the National
BesUtb&ll Amodatlon F.ut givee
the Pecera the rtaht \0 filp a cotn
Olympics
ticket plan
LOS ANO&L&S (AP) -
Pr.klent Peter V. Ueba1oth of
the Loe An1•IH Olympic
Or1anl1ln1 Commltle• Hid ~ um a ~ fGI' ddl.et CSlltrtbudon woulcf.bl ,announoad ln Uni w.lca. •
Alier an .cldnm lo the Wom.n "'....,_...__.._....,,
-... t0 thi llM 0.-ln LG1 ~wm-.r .... ~ t..-=~==-~ ........ ..: .. •• --.i.: =r
The waiting ia for owners Sam
Naaai and l"'"rank Mariani to
decide In Loa An1elea which
offer they'll accept to buy the
team. One la from Herb and Mel
Simon of lndlanapolia; U\Other
comes from New York lnsurance
man Fred Rappeport, the third la
from a 1roup from Anaheim,
headed by the Ancela' Reale
Jacbon.
If either the SI moo or
Rappeport ofter la e.ocept.ed, the
PM:en wW remain hen, where
they haw been for 18 ytera. u
the Anaheim (f"OUP aeu tbe
fJ"a.ncbi8e, lt'• bye--byw Pian.
Bob Sllywa, the dub'• ,....i ~.·~he Ul*'I to F to
i.o.. ~-Tbunclay. "We'll evaluate all the offen lhl• WMI&.. .. be .act. "I doubt lf M1
(tnaJe cMdllon wW be m.de &hie wwkepd, bow...,. •••
Sunday'• .... -.uct Uw .nd :ol. Uw want. Ilea\ "' She ........
h:r&..lnd'-fl..w..cl 2MI :=r~~= ,. ...... '° ,..,~~· MIMa& &l"9 .....,.. whlalt naUlt MV9._.IT••k" ,.,.. ...... '"" ol l,l u .... !.!!l!'.!_W ..... ~ ~--Mllllill.
1 .... 1111'1.iiJ = aft!1 ::I•
An Olympic apurt that hasn't received the
attention of tome of the other event.I, racewalking,
will be ln the limelight Sunday at Grltrlth Park ln
Lot Angeles.
The makers of Metamucil product.a and The
Walkers Club of Lot Angeles are co-aponaoring a
free healthwalk whic h will feature a clinic-
demonatration, one-mile exercise walk and two-
mlle compet.itive walk.
Olympic coach and chamflon racewalker
H oward ''Jake" Jacobson wil be on hand to
instruct and demonstrate techniques for turning a
walk lnto an enjoyable workout. Also on hand w1U
be the 1984 Olympic hopeful, Dan O'Connor, and
Paula Kash, the 1979 national champion.
Healthwalkmg is a fast-paced walk usmg
vigoroua arm motions and provides better body
circulauon than running or JOgging.
• • •
PREMIER MILER and American record-
holder Steve &'OU, who attended UC lrvme, wilJ be
holding a free clinic Friday at 7 p.m . at Mt. San
Antonio College.
The clinic wiU take place in the Technology
Center Auditorium and will provide runners with
valuable information about the sport. Scott will be
joined by Dr. Thomas Wessinghase, a West German
runner who ranked fifth in the world last year in
the l ,500-meter run, ;ind Tanzanian Sukleiman
Nyambui, the 1980 Olympic Games 10,000-meter
silver medalist.
The three will present a series of lectures.
discussions and question and answer sessions for all
lnterested athletes and coaches.
Another free clinic will take place on
Wednesday at 3 p.m. in the Mt. SAC stadium and
will be conducted by one of the world's top pole
vault coaches, Andrezej Krzenski. The lormer
Pollsh coach is probably best known for developing
the world record-holder and 1980 Olympic pole
vault champion, Wladyslaw Kozakiewicz.
Further mformallon may be obtained by
phoning 594-5611 . extension 876.
• • •
"UHMIHO ICHD>Ul.E tATUN>AY n.e a-OnotN "unnlfta Club a enc1 • ...._ enc1 to-rard ,._,
-Al Camp Pend .. ton. The 5ti beglna at 8 a.m. and 1he MCOrld reoa at
8 30 OMalone at• for boy9 and glrta t4 and under 10 men and women
58 and older R~l11rallon 11 S'4 and Sii with T-ahlrl Fo1 more
Information,~ (610) 725-7534
""" Fot ......, I Md 1Clll -8eglne 8 a m ., Utt 8cnool In
Tuelln Entry f .. la $11 #Ith $2 i.ta reglatrallon tee There wtM be a
handicapped dlvlalon and team competition. In addition to lndlvlduli•
Pr~ wlll go 10 the Tuetln Community Hoapltel'a alc:ohol r!ICOY«y
alumni INOClaUon 10 !>(omo1a lree lrNtmenl for alcOhol and drug
abuM For more lnf0tmatlon, ~ 838-lleOO (ext •26)
IPA· TAC Dlatttct 1Sll -Begin• 8 a.m. at Griffith Pat!\ F .. 1. din,
loop courH Fee 11 $7 wllh t -•hlrt and $4 without f"or more Information.~'"" Cellf0tnla Road Runnete Club at (213) 888-6628
Fontana D•re ...,,...., .. .._ and Sil -Check-In begin• at 8 a m
11 Mitter Park. Fontana Runners buMd to a1wtlng locltlona. 8oth
rec.a downhllf on pe~t Very tut Fee la $9 wf1h T -lhlr1 and '6
wtthoul wtth S2 late fee Ille day of 1"41 r-For more Information.
phone 1he Fontana Petite Ind Rec:relOon Department at 823-341 I (•Kl
37> IUMDAY
Mardi of ~ 5 Md 10. -8oth 11art al II 30 a m 11 Harbor
Cour1 on Jambor ... off the San Olego Fr-•y Flat laa1 courM
lllrougll {fie NftPOt1 Ind rNlne areas ~ .. II $8 Wl!1I T -lhln Ind S3
wtthoul wtth $ t la1• I• the day of the r-For more Information.
~&31-6700or5~1
.._..,_ 1Clll and 1..-. """ !<Of C""*--Beotn• 8 30 a m
(10lc) and S a.rn (l·Mllel a1 Golden Grove In EJ Dorado bat Reglonll
Parit Scantc. loop courae Fee" sa wtth T..,..,, and s. #lthout ror 10tc.
$41 Wiii\ T·lhlr1 and $3 wlthoul lor 1-Mli. Fa< more lnlorma11on, phone
541>-63()() Mt. a-..,,IOftio ......, a..-IOk -Seglna 9 a m at Ml San
Antonio College~ Rugged, eoanlC courw Fee la S 10 with T-ahlrl
and $4 wl1houl For more tnlormatlon. phone Jim Crumpton a1
5~-5e11
Cooney explains
year's absence
YOU..,. .. DUA~T UNDCA A
DllD 0, TflUIT DATID 11 .. TIMH" U. 1tl0. UN&All
YOU TAJCI ACTION TO "'°"CT
YOUfl '"O'l"TY, IT MAY 91 IOU> AT A "*-JC I~• YOU NHO AN IJCl'\.ANATION Of THm
NATUfll 0, THI .. .-ocHOtNO
AQAINIT YOU, YOU IHOULD
CONTACT A L.AWVDL
NOTK:I °' TlllUITU'I IA.Li
T.l .Nia.J,_
NOTICE 1$ HEREBY OIVEH. ttl.i
on TUMOay Af!M 26, 1983. at tO 00
o'CIOCk • m o Mid dey In the room
Ml elide IOt condl.lc11ng T ruet ....
Sa .. 1. wtthln 1he offlcel ol REAL
EST A TE SECURITIES SERVICE.
localed at 2020 N &-oeo.ey, Sul1e :.>06 In Iha City ol Santa Ana,
Coun1y ol Orange. Stal• ol
Ceill0tnla, SAN MARINO SAVINGS
ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION. I
Calllornla corporation, •• duly
appoln1ad T1u1lae• under and
pu11uan1 10 Iha power ol aale
conle1ra<1 In that e«taln Deed of Trull uacutad by MARVIN 8 .
KAPELUS and AUUREY KAPELU8,
hu1band and wife. recorded
October 17, 1980. In B<><* 13794 of
Olflcial Record• of Mid County, et
P•O• 723, R.corder·a lnatru~t No. 27170, by reuon of a b<eeeh or
default In payment or perlonnenoe
ol 1he obllgatlone MC:U<ed thweby,
Including that breech or defeult,
N011ce of WhlCl'I WM recorded June
25, 1981, In 8ooll 14 I t5 of Olfldel
Reco1d1 of Mid County, at pege
1007, RecOfder"e lnetrumen1 No.
38077, WILL SELL AT PUBLIC
AUCTION TO THE H IGHEST
BIOOER FOR CASH. lewful mone,
or lhe United Statea. or • c:Mhlar'•
check drawn on a •tat• or neUonel
bank, a 11ata or federal credl1
union. Ot a state or federal M\llnoa
and loan aaaodaUon domlc:lled ln
1hlt 1ta1a. all P8Y9bla at the time ol
..... al4 "Oflt. 1111• and lnt-1 held
by 11. •• Tru1tea. In thet real
ptoperty el1uate In Mid County and
State. dea«lbed aa tOllOwa.
PARCEL I UNIT NO t lnclualve
aa 1hown and dHcrlbed In the
condominium plan recorded on
September t4. tll78 1n 8ooll 12941,
Page9 929 IO 9116 lnc;lualW ol offtcial
record• of Mid County aa ~
by amendment to condominium
plan recorded on November 10,
1978 In Book 12916, pegee t802
and t 803 of Otflolal Recor"d1 of Mid
County
PARCEL 2 An undivided one
1hlt1y-lounh ( 1/34th) Int_. aa a
1anant In common In the f• ln1••t
In and 10 the common arN of loll 2,
3, and 5 ol Traci 9858 aa per M11p
fll•d In Book 438. P•OH 1 to 7
lncll.lalva. ol Ml~l•neou• Mapa,
Record• ol .. Id County, .. auc:h
1erm 11 defined In the at1lc:le ..,titled
Oel1n1t1or111"' of the Oedat111on ol
Covenanll. Condition• and
RHlrk:11ona· . recorded Aprll 21,
1978 In Book 1764•. pega 1151 ol
Ollfcl el Record•. fT"•
Oaclerallon · 1. end any
1upplement1 and amendmanl1
1hefeto
PARCEL 3 E.a_.....,1• u audl
~t• .,. pet1lculllty ... for1tl
1n the artlde entitled ··i:-u··
ol the Oeclarallon Ut>Oer the MCtlon
headlnO• 1n 9'ICfl ert1c1e ... uued-• fOlowl "'Rigflt• end !Mlea Vtlltlw
and Cable Televlaloo"" "'Suppo<l.
Salllament and Enc:roechmenl".
··1ngr .... Eor-end Aec:reetk)nal
Rlghll .. , and "EJlelualW Aeatrtcted
Common Area e-i··
PARCEL .C i:-ta M auc:h
_.,,.,II are penJc;uler1y Mt lor1tl
In 1ne artlc:le entl11ed "E-'*'"
or the Oeclaratlon of Covenant•.
Condition• and Reetrlctlone
recorded July 25. 1977 In 800ll
12305, page 746 and ~eoorded
September e. t977 In BOOie 12371.
PaQI 327 ol Ottlclel Rec:onta and
NEW YORK (AP) -Rappaport, who with any aopplement• and -ldn'IWl\t
Gerry Cooney, who last Mike Jones manages ~=~t!!~~:.CSC:::i:;;?
fought and lost for a Cooney. and traine r anlc:le ant111ed aa follows: "Algflta
reported $8 million Victor Valle both said ;~~:'r .. ~~=-~~
purse. said yesterday he that Cooney w hi 1 e and Encroechmenr·. ""Community
UOM:" trauung or Ou11~ was Over Communlly Fecllltiea"". was a'--nt from bo~· · · f H •--Fac1t111ee e.a-r and "OrelnfOa
for a year because " plaqued by more injuries Th• •l•Ht addran or other didn't wanl to come back than just the tom left-common dHlgnatloo of tr.. reel
f th h uld l hi h property hefalnlbo'le deecrlbed .. or e wrong reason -s o er muse e, w c purpoted to be 86 Hett>or Rldoe Dr .•
just io make a payday " forced the bout to be Newport BMdl. CA
Th ts o n ee -beaten postponed from March to Th• unda111gnad her eby
heavywel.ght will return J dl1clalm1 all ltablllty for eny une. 1ncorrec:1,_ In Mid atreet aoor.ea
to action against Philip •-----------or other oommon dealQnetlOn.
Bro f · P\11.lC N()TlC( SaM! Nie wtll be mede wtthOUt wn, a onner sparing I-----------warranty, expren or Implied. partner. at Las Vegas. NOTICll TO CMDITOAS regarding 1111•. poaHHlon. 0< Nev., June 18, a year and CW 8UL.K ~ encumbrancH, to 11tlafy th•
k h (a-. lt01-4Wl' u.c .C.) p11nclpel balenc. of the Not• or one wee since e was Notice 11 hereby given to o1h9' ob11Q111<>n MCured by MMI stopped in the 13th c:redllon of the within named Deed of fruet, with lnt-t and und b t ft~• H Unes trtnafe<O<(a) that • bulk tr.,,.,_ la 01her Mimi u provided th« .. n; ro Y .._.•I 0 • about 10 be made on per1ona1 pll.I• advanoea. If any, IHldef tM t h e W o r 1 d Bo x i n g property heralnah« ~ term• 1~ and tnt.-.t on IUd't
Council heavyweight The name and~ edd,.. adv-. and p1ue •-. ~ ham i of IM Intended tran9feror(I) -and ·~ of 1M TN9Wa and of c p on. IZZY'S RESTAURANT .• the lrvetl -ted by Mid Deed of "I'm glad to be back. General Pat1neratllp, 257• Newpof1 T1u1t Th• total am®nt ol Mid and I'm excited to be BMS .• eoa1a ~. Cellfomla 92827 obligation. lncludlflG reaaonetlly
(ih .. ;,.,.0 ~~•n," --•d the The locetlon In Celtfomle ol the Htlm11ed leH. o'hergH encs -oe .. .,... chief exec:uUve omc:e or prlnc1$>11 ••PllNM ol the Tnie1 ... It the*'-2 -year-ol Cooney, who bualnH• olfloe of lh• Intended of lnltlll publloetlOn of tNa ~II
won all 25 of his 11 .. hta, trtlMferor 11. SAME. '3541, 125.43. ue All other bu1lnH1 nam .. and Oetad: Mardi )1, IN), 22 by knockout, before addre•-uMd by Ille Intended SAN MARINO SAVINGS AND being beaten by Holmes. 11-fetor within three yMrl , .. , LOAN M&OC .• Cellf. COrp.
B 0 t h D ... n n 1 1 peat 10 far u known to tlla 11 Truetee.
" Intended tr_..__. NOHE. REAL ESTATE SECUAfTIE8
:Bonnett has
NASCAR lead
DAYTONA BEACH,
Fla . (AP) -Nell
Bonnett hN n\atntained l\ll teed in the NA.SCAR
Wln1ton Cup Grand
Natklnal P04nt t1a.nd.ln&I f« cM thlrd week, wtih
800 polnta to Bobby
Al.Uaon'• 847. Th• 13-polnt
ldvan111t la &he 1araelt ~lt hes Mid .rnoe
h• took th• lead lollowlnl the e.om..coaa
600 et Atl•nta
lna.rnatJonal BaCeway
March 17. Harry <lent .. &hi.rd In
tM a&andlftCI afMI ll•
MnMon °'P ewn• U\11 --wam 14? ~ta. ff•'• followed by am llUou, IN Po4n&ti Joe auuman. Ill; Dltk ar .. ,;eltl ai.::rt ~ ~-l.."'· .. ..... . .,.1
Th• nema(a) and bYalneH IEAVIO!. a OllM. ootil·
eddt••• ol the lnunded 111~ t,..,,...,..., -: 0.J. . PYw.
SANO PYO°"· 111702 NlotlOIM 2020 H. , laot A....,.. Oerrttoa. Cellfornle 9010 I Santa Me. CA t 70e
JUNG 800H OH , lt702 (714)963-M10
NIOhOIH Avenue. C1n1to1, ,ubllati.lt Orenot Cout U~
~ 90101 f'llot."""' 6. 12, 11, 1• Tllet th• property oert1ne111 1Mf.C ~ ladl9Gllb«l In..,.,.. .... i------------~
t100ll In ...... ~ ~
IQUIPftl•nt. trede '""'' and QOOCSwtll of e oanlln ,_.,urant iii*'-Md .. IOoli.d •t: "'7 4 Hewoorl alvd", Ootll MeH, ~t2Sl'I.
1lle ~ NIM ~ Dr lM
Mid ~·)"' .. loodol\ la: aure MaTA.tJAAHT.
Ttlet Hid '"'" 1renaf1r 11 .,.,.,... .., .. __,,.,...... .....
ortloe ot: •Ulll"OW llOlllOW COMllANY, 1111 I . l,11100111 A--.Or-...~ ...... °"°' ......... ~ TNl ...... ~ .. _,..lo ClllfOfnl• UnUOfllfl Ooflllff'Olal
()Ml llelln t10I.
, .. MMe ... .-. .... .... ""°" .. .....,. ..... ""1 ..
1111• •• au,.111ow ••c"ow OOM .. ANY, 1tH I . Lf11 .. 111 ~:-::-==-= ., . lfl, _...., ........ 1"f ........... .._. .......... ~"'" •... .,==r·':t. :a.
Doing Bueineaa
UnderA ,.
Flctltloue
Neme?
... .............. u. Ii ....................... ................... c..tr ... ,,.. ..... , ""°' .......... ..... ........ 1 ..... ..
••••••• , •• tf 3:: ............ ......... , ..
l•r11111111n•--.. .•. _.
"
NOTICla OP DIUTB OF
!.!w!.A R D P IC T It I\ '""'"-Tl AKA l!:DWAJU> P, NlCKBITI AND OP
PETITION TO AOMIN·
IT E R BIT ATE ·N 0 . AU'71J.
To all heln, bmeflcl&rt-.
c redllol'I and oonttnaent
credlto.ra of J:dwud Poter
Nlckerta and penoN w ho
1n11y be otherwlae lnw.IA!d
In the wW and/or •tate.
A Det.ltlon hu been tucid
by M'arlan L. NlckeN ln the
S uperior Court of Oran1 e
County reque1t1n1 Marian
L. NlckeN be appointed u
perwonal representative to
•dmlnl1ter the eet ate of
Edward P eter N lcker t1t
(under the Indep endent
Admln lltratlon of Estate•
Act). The petition la Mil for
hfflina ln Dept. No. 3 at 700
CJvk: Center Drive, Weet, In
t h e C ity o f Santa A n a,
Calltornia on May 4. l 983 at
9:30 a.m .
11' YOU OBJECT to the
grantJnc of the pelJt.lon, you
ahould either appear at the
h ear ing and stale your
o bl:tlons or file written
ob lions with the court
be or e the h earing. Your
ap~ may be an pen10n
or by your attorney.
IF YOU A R E A
CREDITOR or a con tingent
creditor of the deceued, you
must file your claim with the
court or pre1ent It to the
p ersona l represen tative
appoin ted by the court
within four months from the
date o f flrat l u u an ce o f
letters u provided In .ection
700 of the California Probate
Code. The time for filing
clalrna will not expire prior
to four months from the date
of the hearing noticed above.
Y OU MAY E XAMINE
the tile kept by the court. U
you are a person interested
in the estate, you may 1erve
upon the execut or o r
administrator, or upon the
attorney for the executor or
administrator , and file with
t he cour t with proof of
ser vice, a w ritten r eque1t
stating that you desire
special nouce' of the filing of
a n Invento r y a n d
appnliaement of eetate Ulell
o r o f the p etit ion• or
account• m entioned an
aectione of 1200 and 1200.5
o f the Califor nia Probat e
Code. • James L . Rabel, Jr.,
• Attoraey at Law, S4U Via
rto, Newport Beacll, CA
llS : 17S ·417Z .
ubllahed Orange Cout Daily Pilot, April 12, 13, 19,
1983
1830-83 .
P\8.IC f«>TICE
NOTIC• OP TIWtTH'I tAli
~Mo. OI0797-Z/UO T.t. Mo.. f.-aT
UNIT COO. f
SOUTHERN CA LIFORNIA
FUNDING, L TO .. duly llPPC>lnt-
ed tr~ undw •"-~aow•no ~bed deed ol trvsl WILL SELL
AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE
HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH ANO/OR THE CASHIERS OR
CERTIFIED CHECKS SPECIFIED IN
CIVIL CODE SECTION 2924h .peyable 81 the tim. of Nie WI lr#1ul money of lhe Unllecl StstH) ell
r1ght, lltte end Int••• ~ 10
end -held by It IHldet Mid Deed of Truet In !he P'operty ,_..,...ttw
~. TRUSTOR. YALLAPRAGAOA S
RAO end SHAILAJA Y RAO BENEFICIARY SOUTHERN
CALIFORNIA FUNDING, L TO.
Recofded OctOC. 29, 1980, .. lnatr. No. «!SM In Boole 131111,
pllg9 904 ol Ofllc:iel R«lord• In the office of the Reco<der 01 °'ange
County; Mid deed of INS1 o.ctlbee
Ille followtng: Lot 23 of T rec1 No. H OO, City ol
INine, County of ar.og., Stet• of Celllornle, H t hown on • map recorded ln Book 3H, Paen 27
and 28 of Mlt cellaneoue Mepa,
record• or Orange County,
CellfomlL YOU ARE IN OEFAUL T UNDER A
DEED OF fRUST. UNLESS YOU
TAKE A~ TO PROTECT YOUR
PROPERTY. rT MAY BE S<XO AT A PU8UC SALE.. IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE
OF THE PROCEEDING AGAINST
YOO, YOO SHOUU> CONT ACT A
LAWYER. . 33 Bunker Hiii, lrvlne, CA t 2714. No wau enly It given
•• t o Ill complel•n ••• or
oorrec1W. The bel iefldw y under Mid Deed of Trvet. by ,_ of a
tit-" or defeuft In the otllg9IJona ••cur ed thereby, here tofore
executed end dellvared 10 the
U11der"9oecl • Wfltten Oac:Watlon
of o.feutt end DMlend lat Sale. end ..nu.. notice of btwctl end of
.ieetlon 10 ~ tt>e uno.r.lgned
to ... Mid Property 10 aatlsfy Mid obllgetlone, and lhereellar Ille
Utidali\lloecl oeu.d Mid noCloe of
br aacll and of election to be r~ December 13, 18112, ..
1n1tf. Ho. H ·438207 of Offlclel
Record• In Iha ofllca of Illa
AecOfder of °'llllO' County Said 8•1• wlll b• made, but wltllout covenent or w1rr1n1y, ..,,,.._ or lmf>lled, '909'dlno 1111e
poeuuton. 0t encumbrenoae, to ~ tne rerNlnlnQ Ottncloll IUm of tlle ~ 8'CUNCf" by Mid deed of
TNlt. with im.... • In Mid note
prcMdecl. ed~ If eny, under
Ille I.,_ Of Mid Pted Of TNl1, .... on.. *'° ..,.... Of l1M
f"*'9 Md °'""' "'*' ~ by .... Deed of fNIC. llld ....... be
,..., Oft! W..lelday, Apl1I n. t"3,
• 1:00 p.m. lit tfl8 ~ A\08 •fttreftce to 111• Clvfo Canter
~. IOO ll. ChllOf'lltn AV't., <>r...-.CA.. ~• Ill• time ot Iha 1n111 e1
Pl ua .. a 1 • .. naa., .. ~
.....C of .. w.-.s ....._°' ... ...... Ion --.i bV .... 1tiov.
d•aorU1•d deed of truet 1nd
.......... -9tL ~ encl
...._ 11 •1n.02.. TN tocet ~ ..... .., .............. °" ...... .=, ....... ......, ::J-...... .:t..--.:::•1
Dml: .... It, tla.
IOUTHl .. N CAL"O "NIA ...... LTD. .... , ...... '.A. ..wa OOtl#AH'r, ...,.. V....J.~--· u ::=;::.. c..t DaHf ......... , ........ ,., ..
U.•h'•,,.... •• ,_ ....... Mf\'Nf ...... " . ...... i. • ...... ,
M .... llt.
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
D
A
I
L
y
p
I
L
0
T
c
L
A
s s
I
F
I
E
D
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
.8
Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT /Tunda~. Aptll 19, 1883 <!•
ClASSlfllD 642-56 78
74' o/ people buying real t'lltate hovt
rf'od rlu .... s1/wd ad., 111 the past wel'k. a
11ot1mUJI :H udy mdicntea
CLASSIFIED
INDEX
'"'" ftr lal• ';a_ .. _._ .. ;;...;.;,._,..;; • .;;.al-.•~~l!H•tt ,,, •••• • ..... ,., lal1 ...... ltr lal1 ...... ''"'''HM 1:'='=•'="='•='='--•r·-.-•• -.,---100---21 1uera1 aooa e,ne• ,, ... , 1012 a .... .,.,. 1040 1..,.rt ""'· '"' uux ..raw
SHORECL'FFS AN UIT\9 good In, on .,. IOUlflllf If ... ~ 1,.::: =--.:. IUIUIU
l'or Tut•d•y through
8aturdey publloallon1·
5·30 p m tht pr•vlout
day. "or Sunday and
Mondey pub1tce11on1
t2:00 noon 8 aturdey.
Liiii llLI UYPllOIT lraot 3 IA 2 81, nice 3 bdtm & den, A-2. Wiii 790. =,000 '* •·
To Place Yow Ad, Cal ~t main channel vt~w from rn.IJ[nltk-ent e
Br. e Be pool home. ftco<tUC('d Jl,65-0,000
Juel H1t9d, -n. .,.. Lo dn OWC io. 2nd Ired• for C.M unlt1. Own.. ltl 04JJ
c.nyon ~r:~~nlng !.°i.&~~J0,&00. Ownr ~~:~~Jl.~3 h i· ... p!dtl Pm!rlDI
642-5678
REAi fSTAT£
tofhl•U
Ari•h• m1 U111.
t\.rillu1 ht•111I
14-U•-.i ••t 1•·•~111•
l-il'fllliti&twtl\t..,f1
1'1111,., ... 1..i M••
I ll•lw A;h~
l~o .. p,,,.,.1
ti l••ft
t•t.oJH\ltlH \, 4lh·\
llun11n.ct•"1 I'-• I
lhmt tt .. ,1 • .-_11
l•'-••tt
I .flllun ... U,_h
I ......... ~ Uolt.
t ·•&•10-i N11(iot I l .. a. ,,,,.,.,
M1.,....-n '"I
'·"'1•'4'' ~--·
''"' .. "'" Ull ""'•' ,.,., '•l-4-1 .... ,,, '"'"" ,.,._ I\. .. 1.
'° If ''' • ,. 'It·-·~ tu•ht1
".·~It• ft••· • , ....... tt ....
\;f• ., ..
\1w1l11• nh1
I\,.. 11 •. ., 1•, •
I'·• ,,.1 )'1 I
'. ""' ,, , .. l ••
' I 11111.I •• ,,'I• I
\ IWI• H•lll!Utli
1,.,,1, "" I 1111
llo•u• lt1 t• -'1" i•I
lo1 t•t1M f•n 1• ''' fu1lu~t1t .• I l't 'I''"
1
.............. 1.
Mufuk l41•11ot l' .. •tl•
M1-t1ut .. 10 J1it .... 11
tk 111~· ("
l )ut .. f (.'u•hllt'
()\.ft Hi ~\..th
H.-hi h, ..... ~-.. 1111
-Proprl1y 'l'u ... ~
Rf.~ RE w.,....i
RENTALS
II·-...., ~-ur11 .. t ... 1
u,~ lnlv••m'w--.1
"""'"'~ t 1.;ttll,h<"ll •.
t·,,,~,,.. ....... ,,
1 •-not-tuu1
\.vtldo l nl
l••'*f\"""-"'. '"''" r1,,,..nht~ l,,,
INpM~n rurn l>ur.J• ,, .... l nl
Arwr\nwn\I. f\M'nuht'\1
J\,p.,-t.rnrnU l 'hi
A~ fum of l"nf
K.•"f ..
H.. ~ofl a. s ... r .. J thtil• M1,,,,1 .. '"'""'' ... ., ... '·•111J"1t.t h'uwi ..
\ .... 1 .. -n K1 nl.I&.
•ft, u .... ~ t. ~twr•
• K• ui.t, Y..•nhJ
( • ..., .. ,c-h"' H.1t1I
t>f'l•1 H..-M•h
tt ...... n.-. fttfll•h
l'"""' k1nl..ll' lnJ1ul }t.·nt..h
~l;"l:AR\
M 1.r kJnt..ih
111·
h•
llil-t
I I •
111
.
II
II
'
'· IP ,, ....
UYllH PUOl llYPRllT
lllLI UI Speclac'l.ller bayfront dplx 2 br, 2 bl up; 2 br,
OHU011IU 2 ba dn 2 boat •P8'-· RC'duoed-$1,SOO,OOO.
Kiii• and a0<reotlon1 mey PElllllU 11011! OOUIPllDIT
t>t made unUI 5:30 p m Ocean & jetty vicw1. Ma.rt.nu room, 4 hl.lrrn, 3
tor the nexl dey'• IXlbll· beth. 3700 11q.ft. $1,38~.000 Ckctnfront cetlon FOi 8unde}I end
Mond ey publloettona, LllO llU
12.00 noon S11urdey Remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath + WM~ rt.'C. n r1,
PlaaH Hk tor • "klll 111~~ f · hcd ti *420 000 number" when cencel-beam ce ..,._, umui •pa OI. • • ·
Hng your •d FAllll&llS RllOI lllll TOP
Hltll New 4 br. 4 ~ ba, custom Frt'nch NormAndy
Check your 14 dally tt1dj ~taw 1.2 prime acre hilltop Jl,250,000.
report .,,or, 1mmedl•1• OlllOlllO OIYI llYFllOIT
1y The DAILY PILOT ea-Co d '-la ...... f L 8"' • boa 1ume1 1t1blllly ror the rona o uo nd cwt .-y ront ol " t
t1r11 Incorrect 1n11rllon dock Plana avail Now '370,000 w/~rms
811111 fer Salt
Gtaeral 1002
10%
llnREITI
Owner m1y carry a 111
TD et 10% with 20%
down on 1 beaulllul 3
Bdrm 2 bath home
Herdwood noor1 11 hu •
ro .. garden, numerout
llowert. lreea end th·
rube. $125,500 Cell lo
-· 548·2313
THE REAL
ESTATERS
ti Tiil IEdT
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
J41 Boy~Hli· Q,,..,,. N 8 bl'l blbl
111.200
Take adventege of own·
1H'1 dilemma on 11111 onel
He's trantferred -MUST
SELL! Fan1astlc locallon
near So. Coast Plaza. His
ILIFFI
Ell llrT
Popular G plen, 3 Bdrm1,
d•n. 3 balh1, epeclou•
feel. $250,000
111n1 tingle 1tory Towne Realtor1 675-6000
IOH, your gain on lhl•1 l Jl'llllCJIJt liCJ~S
Home dellght Call ~~~~~·~~~~ 759-160 I or 752-7373. =
WALKER&LEE
Real Estate
~.
REllOEI TO SELL
SELLER ltllMT
llOTIH
If ILi lllWPtlT
lts14HM I Ot••'I
• •• Uve In 3 bdrm, 2 belh
upper ap1. Commerclal
~ 111 ehop, office or retell on l\j' lower level plu• 4 cer parking Price at $3115,
000.
STOP
TRUClll
Hllfe'• value plus lermat VA 0< FHA terms allow
Hiiie 0< no down peymenl
tor thl• cozy, ready to
move Into 3 Bdrm home
Enjoy the security ol
owning your own home
In Cotta Mase. a great
velue at only $108,900
Call tor showing
646-7t71
Custom Tudor home with
nlOe coutel views. 4 Be-
d r 00m1. 3'"' Ba. plut
paneled office/den, huge
femlly room over er'lllre
3rd floor Spe, uuna,
BBQ and potting •re•
eel In secluded woodl)'
patio. Solld oek wood·
work throughout, plank-
ed floo<lng, bUllt·ln cabl·
nell. dresser•. Gourmet
kitchen with cozy eating
area Must eee to appre-
c11te the extrnt 1417,
500. Ask lor Helll•
Strock 644· 7020
...... , .... .. ... .. ..
.~ .... ......
.!'•lr· :-n" :·1 II
associated
!lROKfllS REALTORS
101\ W lolboe •I l JU I
FIUlll
FllElll
THE REAL
ESTATERS
THE VERSAILLES
UllO HAL ESTATE
•rum11
Tiil twt Llltt •-1 IOH ~ He!Ohtt, 3 8t t •• llU/Wll Gerry e. CMtt• n•••t Ba. hou11, new paint, leaf Ohm. WS'/ OOll9
1173-7781 7S0.13117 hh 10" OWi new roof , r•flnlt htd M 2000 & z•oo Lf
e11n otlH ~h:,~~~~~~= ~~:d~ d'=:1i:;C::. ...... ,a1.1111·
Relu, anjoyl Pool, •Pl· 2 ge. End unit Viult•d car garage, large yard.
big o•ragM, l • gtemo-h 52 t El Modene. Atlll:R • • rov1 2 br, 2 be eYndeck-celling. Loll of llgnt.
ed unit Vou muat"' 111 Owner uklng $140,000 :184,000 648·5041 a
OtrtH 4,1 • ., ,,.,, 840·1538 Ev•• Agt j_! ______ _ji~=~~;;:".:::;:;1~t'ii:•i
a11-a414 lab. Pan lest hJI lllfH !lm!IAe, """
OPEN SAT /SUN 1-5
1230 SANO KEY DR
Her bot View HUit -481,
Open Set & Sundey B2(1R~~AIN .~!>4''· fam~, •1£11UY I.I.
3Br, 2~ba Hey, Miier• " .,. · w ...... grten...... Pelm D•Hrt ,airway. alrHdy In ucrow on All MW VOU .OWN THE Large 2 bdrm. Pin 200.
enolhtHI LANO. Wiii i.ue opllon Below mkt., lo ••P· 2B•, rim rm Beaulltul, Property Mart 640-GOtG 1225,000. Bllr, 844-0134 Bteutlful. 875·0106,
lutll. very lg lot. end ot 0< S45-e388 8111/34&-eOM Ow/Afl. cul-d•·HC 2 pafloa, Univ Park Cardlll mdl 2
llghted Bedmlllon court. Br 2 Ba. tkyllte. lrplc, """m llW LL lxtU!tt IHI
tire pll By owntH Prln eulo garage, AIC, Imme· •
only plHH. 14115.000 cullte I 132,goo Bkr 3 BR, 2 BA. "Linde" 4 812~be. pool, Npl lch.
760·9133 By eppt 11528-2018 Mod•I. tingle 11ory, In (W•lclltf) hOme tot t.op the Blulle, Newport E C.M O< Npt lot! ln-
$1 .. cew IWY PRIVATE Beech Excellent condl-come proper l y wlttl
Low dn or excheno• 3 lion. ownet'• unit ground fir
Br, 2 B•. 2 car o•r Wiii SPI ONLY $185,0001 Ownef 842-3481
conalder exchange for 2 bdrm. 2 ba. Plen 3 In I Call Agent/Own« ,.o CASH
lend, TD't or etc Prlncl· 0 range Tree p •ti o 1~~~7~14~84~4..e38~~2~~ 3 unit• Bal le, .a.a S unlta
pal only 754-6505 or Homn. Profeutonelly 1: N.B for TD'S, land ~.
2<>11·822-2844 decora1ed. Plueh cerpel, IWllH 11111 LIT M c N • • h R • a I t Y
11111 ... s
PlltUllto YIEW
On fee lend, a ahort
walking dlatance to the
beech A neat 5 bdrm,
3'h be home w/lge femlly
room and 2 trplca owe
pa~ or trade for lelMf
Income producing pro-
perty. The bell view for
the money et only $485,
cuatom ahu1tiw1. Excel· }Q<I DOWN 842-1334 , 115 l ·HH
lenl emenltles. $126,900 IO -·
Prima ocean end herbof GEMSTONES
vlewl from lhl1 8811158 ft tor belicl'I WM t1on'81 Of
r811dentlal lot In pr•ll· OC. Income. 873-7311
gloue ••cure Herbor Avocado grove xlnl tax
Aldga. 15115,000. Cell ehelter. Prof. inomt. 20
875-23 11 d a y• or ece ~Int 1140000 Lo
675-3311 ev•lwkndl dn .. 10% l~t. 557.'.:J2ea.
IEIT llWNlT NIOI TRADE 2•1. ac:r" (3 aepa-
2 Br 1ba. 1129,000. Pro-rate paroela) on llland of
-~ llllfVW perty Mart 540-8019 Hawaii, Incl 2Br 1'h8a 000
l 11¥99 home for t to 1'A 8Cf9 •44-211 lOSO laa Claatalt 1071 In So. Orange County. ;~~.! 1.., .. a am. 1aoe1 986-e757. .r ,_... " ... H LAsr cHANcE LL ...... 1121 __ .:~ID 3BR. 1V•BA. AIC. to buy thl1 beeutllul 3 WIU. fm tm
OL. a.I LGE ASSUM $127K. yHr Old, 4 unit eparl·
77043737 83-4-9101 ment holJM In Sen Cle-P&Ymll1
.,., blk 10 t>eaeh. 3 Br 3 Ba mente with oc.an-hUl1 & 3 or 4 Bdrme, beac:ll
& den. Owner ncrlllce 1..,.r1 te.clt lMt golf cour .. view• It a e rea. Af1 8 pm c all tor lot velue $325.000 -tretMndou1 Hvlng1 di· 84e-1430, meg ~238 c 1 n d y Sh• w , 1 gt Foreclosure: Reduced rec1 lrom the owner ~
631-1288 $100K to $385K. Bay-lore being llt tad with ---------
rront 3br, 2be. 45' tllp. br<*era. Act NOW call ltatala
873-1454 owner et (714)842~138. -...... ---,-uabW-----
.lnalH OrH• Ot•4• Tulia lttl 1 •---L 2111 Airy 2 br & den. AAA _..,.., ___ _. ____ _
Cetta .... lOi.4 cond. 3 yrs old. Great OIUllM "On the water"
1oc1llon. Pool. tenn11. ••-lllll Belboa Cove• Exec . EllTSllE lllTI eecurlty guard. Price to -Home 2 lk l Den, C*· ••II $310,000. 644-742'. 3 BR. lerge aolld Oek llelly furnished, open• Designer condo type Bllr femlly room with II' eolld 1 d , __ ..
unit• 3J.r' new 20% ---------O•k bar, waln1cott, nto gar en, ov.,..,.,..1
d P ti .... " LtW lmlEST w•t•r. epa. frptc:'1, ou wn o ve c ....... ow herdwood floora, huge fir• ring. 11g951mo. atttH ,.... $525.000 FLmlLI TllllS country kitchen with nre-,._ 1 27111. J 0 p ....-..
Super lerge ramlly home,
4 Bdrm 2 beth. large
tamlly room with stone
tlreplace. F'0<mal dining.
• ....,....,CEMENTS country kitchen Needs """"""' aome fixing. bUI what a
Lu11urlou1 llvlng. One
bedroom condos. lntlde
p1rkfng Included Club-
house, pool and spa.
Security gu1rded gate.
1115,000 .
Oellghllul 4 Bdm 3 Ba
with aunny kitchen,
famlly rm, huge Mair
sulle located In e com·
munlty wflh 3 twlmmlng
pools and acres o f
greenbelts. Ready ror
you to move In now Full
price only $176,900
751-3191
3.3 Br 2 Ba unlll. 8 yrs
old Pride or owner!lhlp.
20•;. dwn could prOYlde
plus cuh llow. Only
12311,000. Della Delgado
631-1268
Pl.c.. Teetelull" deco-" -• · · r...,.. •7 Top aeourlly, waterfront ' Mgmt hi-rise, lrg luKury Condo. reted. Enormou1 lot. ---·-----..,...-
The ultimate In Newport Quiet cut de 16C. BMutl-2 Bt 2be ooeen view, lur·
Beach living. Asking fully lend1cap•d with nl1hed, 3 t o 8 mos.
S800.000. owner will fin-fruit treu . 12 15,000. 11850. (114) 875-7205
ance. BKR 6 73-664 7. Shown by appt. Call -· Mon ft!N Thura.
AUl\IJU,.. 1"0'W'f'U; ,..,.1 Al ..... Oii
t>•r'W•"·''' I '1 , .. •fbtl .... ~ \ ' .....
..... h •·I· "''""'• '" '' lr.1\•I
BUSINCSS &
FINANCIAL
f~.1.--~nt~-. ,, ...........
·~.,.,,.. Upp orlun11,....
•ht '"'"• n1 I l\Ji••'l~1n•IH"t>
"'''•Uno,, "'•"'''' • ,,..... .. l ...... " . ,, """ "'"'"' .... . \1. !(~--· 1 ,,
Cwt 0 Y ME Nl
11 •• , ""'•""'' l0<111t \\•nlf•I
AflMAl.S ...
MERCHA.ll>ISE
\n~'
\5•1•l1•fW._
\ •• •·fh
Q• • ., '1•1t I• 11'11
I -.ro•f•'I A,. t4u1i.mitt11
l•Wfl\•llfltt'I . "" ... \ "' t ·if'11lun
ttH•f(• ~ .....
't1tu ..... ~tl1i (j.. •1'
Jt ... ir .. M#,,,,...,,
M1• f'tl•nt'"'"
M1• Y..-"11-d M ..... .-1 lntttMmn~
•H'liu •unuto11 ,\,
f>~·~nl ••t.f,.. .. & Ora•n
~~lf'lll"tlf .. ~ .. h
T\ k.~··hu '°''-' ,....,
BOATS
.. ,, .... ,.
::.; bargeln al only I 1211.SOO
.. 1• Call to -· 5'16-2313
'ill•
'''" , .. , .. THE REAL
ESTATERS
UYFlllT
'"' TIT&LLY wmFIL :·::! FentHllC "wide BAV·
".. FRONT VIEWS" from
"'·-lhl$ tolelty coordlneted 1"·' aru1 hunlshed cornec 7 ,_ Decor ti~ 'IN"
end ownef wtll NII fur-
nl•lledl Two-atory 3
DILEIOUT
HY I 10011
RULn 131-7300
................. ••••fl. -~·
bdrm• end owner wlll IAYSHIH Sf40,000
I help finance • latge U• >iu sumable loen Reduced ClaHIC C1pe Cod wllll
0 gorgeous garden pauo. to 1 850,00 fee Formel dining room. 87~ llrepl-In ma.stet aul1e UH llll plus 4 addlllonal BRS NEW LISTING Unique Peg & groove ttoon. up.
remlly home on preall-graded end newly tiled
gloua Lido Ille °'•mallc kltchenll
entry, prof-lonally ct.-144-IOIO
' I C«lled In n«lltel d«Of 1~==~~~~=::1 ~:", end 3000 eq ft 10< IP•· ~j
,., 1 c:loua IMng Two-story. 4
••. ,.. bdrm. 4 beth• & den
•••• Couldn't be bulll again
;,:. today with current lot
.,1,., re1trlcllon1 A reell1llc
..:i price at 1595,000
.... 831-1400
hHf'I
•II• -WI\ 11 IH RO"' r '"'' llOMI .., Ill)<·
•lH ~ REAL ESTA'tE
•JJ• 831·1400 "J.!fi1---------IEWPOllT IUOH •• , WI
tt.i!, ..
1121,1001
Spacious 3 Bdrm 2~
UCIUY
llaf l•tlt Estate
Heve horNS on the pro-
perly -and enJoy mint
condition 3 Bdrm, plu&
ramlty room home -cor-
r a I -barn and tack
roomll RV storage too.
Offered at $169,500.
540-1151 •Near BrtstOI &
Spn.1oe)
-· ~ -HERITAGE ~ . RE~LTORS .
C::SELECT
_,..PROPERTIES
WATOM TIIE IOATS
IO IY
Enjoy the Harbor Ill aun-Nice 2 Br Condo In The
set, atld lhe ll!ihls of the Monticello•. only 1811,
Pevlllon 11 night lrom 500 $lo 000 down
this lradittonal Sou1h Bey Webb Reaity. 83 t -2170
..ELont homa.. Balboa AM or 498-7849 ev81 Island's 11nes1 llvlng 3 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Bdrma, 3 Be, den, 2
S<Jnny pell<MI, lhared plat
and allp. plut a Hndy
beach Owner wlll lln·
ance II below mttkll
rates lor a quallfled buy· er Cell Mery Jenk lor
delaill.. 759-11100
OEOAOE ELKINS CO
NtLl•E
Cuttom built 3 BR. 2 Ba.
firaplec.. tllak• root, RV
llCQtlS Owl'4lf wlll cerry
111 loan $1511,SOO
l•J lleOar•te, Rltr. Mt-nn
Need 2 BR 2 Be. ground
level condo nr E 17th, IU llUll CM I 125,000 Agt M.J.
Overloo•llng the 5th fair· _83_l_-&_4_911_. _54_s-_G_18_1 __
way. lmmaculll• 2 NEW 3 BR, 3 BA bdrm., 2 beth oondo ve· TRl·LEVEL CONDOS
cenl end evallabl• tor Elegant. 1paclou1 &
immedlete occupency bright
High vaulted celling• $33K Under Appr1laal
Nice view Priced right at 536-115211 Open Wlmdl
$26S,000. 12·5
772•9370 Frank Veuleo, 759-1501 lauet luclt 2111
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii WALKER&LEE 2 Bt, see51mo. New c:rpt Ill tTlll n--1 .,..,_ & paint, ger, 1tep1 to "IHITI PW" ac-.. ....._. 11nd. 18458 24th St.
Original Bluffs, secluded ••--""-213-592-2725 location on wide green-~
belt Upgraded, lmmacu-1~~~~~~~~~~~! ...... !!!!!!;-U!!!afvabW!!~~!::: l•te. move-In condition i., ~~·cJo g~c~:!.~-•WJ• ..... 1111 leural on
men 6«--6200. •Ill IPll.. •Y t Br condo, on the~.
117•000 reduction . NEW Full aecurlty. By mo.
Mobile Home now 142, ontof.
llOO Including all char· 4 8r rtmblng hcMIM on QM. beet park locetlon Bal 111. By mo. ontof.
enywtler• -ooeen front, ,,.... llM.n
South Laguna. Op•n PUf 1'1'1 Mil tcUI llEml 0111y. Agen1 4911-4242. aTMna
plulhty decorated oon<1o 1..::E:,::VM=._;:,548-=.:,2139:.::.:::..· ----IA:;;;;:iA::r.=~>i~;& with flrapleee eneched "---• ._ 1•11a 8eyelde Colle. 2 Bdrm l gar•o• end 'extre lg• --n!l!l!J ..,. den with Bay view. mHteJ suite. Good ...,. B•eutlful locellon .
eumable flltenclnQ. Only l11100/mo.
$1211,600. Calf now. TownllouH: 3 bdrm
1179-5370. evall. Mo to mo. F'um, txcel. loc. I tOOO.
.......... WATERFRONT HOMES llMITll&L INC. 831· 1490 .\(>Ill tl/~·11
l•t•,••' ~t.I 'JJ!f~~,,
llftl1llllT ...... h1aM Ill Tl.HI, "9rT IT Propert ... ExcluelYMy
1714167J-4400
IJ IJI Ul·UH
HARBOR
Lovely 3Br, 288 Wetldlff a.a.a ... 10 BAYFRONT, 2 Br, 2 Ba.
h I I II I _..,... S 1 3 9 6 I m o . Herb UITSllE ome w x nt r pan.I~~~~~~~~~ 213·478·'"5771..123 E. flulble flnenclng. BY1~ ~ Quiet cul-de-11c '''"' 0 w n 8 , . 8 4 1 _ o 5 1 4 . ,......, __. -e Beytront, Utt1e provldel prlvecy & Mfety 557·2732 •• , .. --.-..,._. ---------
for th• entlr• f1mlly In ---------• Approx. 1 ecte fronting "·-· ... ... -thl• ldHI rHldentl•I UH &Ill UIFlllT Brlatol at 2342 & 2382 --
arM 3 bdrm•. 3 befha & end doclC. xlnt locatlon Brletol. 75~ 11 Oceen vtew, ~ ,..
huge bllCkyatd ldeel 10< Lot value, by owne ..__,__ J Val 13.. modeltd 3 Br. llorne. 3 your own prlvele IWlm-873-7813 "•p&:All h Be. S ell o r Rent.
bath condo. Latge IMng l:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil .,. with oory llrap!-.. ~
and cathedral aelllng1 • 111111111 lalMI bl&d 1-.
ming pool Better Ith a -wntlT -·· BY OWNER .. Duplex, 1111" J1~:ag1~1:7 0 . c a 11 lookl 7511 -1501 or --tque.lleltty new,Meh 3
Excellent ftnendng -u-S1artar or retirement LWl/tf11111 752-7373 Top floor (3rd) 2Br &. Br. 2'h Ba. frpla. 5121·0kl--Cd-M_d_r_amatlc ___ 3_8CI_
den. 2 t>atha, all bulltlna, Bolsa. Neiwpoft Helohte. 2\4 ea home. 1uo a.f.
180 deg. unparell•l•d Ouldl tale. 85C).740i. 11200/pr mo lnOI.. WIO.
ocean view. Eleval0<, 2 311_. 111 & i.t & l300 _,.,,,
cer underground park-laceat fn1!!1J l -~ WlllU, 83t·12'M,
eume low lnt•ral1 loan conoo 1 Bdrm. patio. spa Old Cept Cod 200 ft from
with 10% down and and pool Beeutlful Chennel. 9oet mooring wraw U"rl'D&LEE
OM*' wlH ~ belencel ground•. dOM to Senta View PevtlllOn 4 bdrm. 2 ~
Thie one won't lest Call Ane!Tultln bofder. Truly 11600 pell' mo $20K n--t mltlfe
Ing Excel MCUrlty. Ex-.... ··-·· aigt. now1846-7171 •lovely ., .. $69,900 ~·lion monay Agl ~~ TRANSPORTAT'°" with excellent tlnanclog 640-1538...,.. etter 8 ., __ ,_..
:'"'. 142-1200 + PHIATI +
cell«lt auumable loan. ~,.....,..~~..,,....~~-=---Pnoed aJ $245,000 htfa ......... BAYSIDE PLACE BAY·
llll fWll XLNT FlN. 759-1452 ~~..: ~ "..,,
.ttl "'" ....... t ..... ,.
•~;toon \ W.. '"'-n'''"' t • .-,,, U•trnn
II\ • ,,,.,.,., Tr.t\• I
, , .... " l 'td1~
~UTOMOTIVE
Awt1tl..-.. +ric
Au,., ~k-l1M\A
~•ih• w .... ., ....
.; .... "" R,..,. ,., ....
I Wtw.1 ril>1u~
r,... "" \ .. ,., ""'•·1•• .... t . ...._..,
AUTOS M'ORTED
l\lf I ..... , ... ,
"""'' l\•-..l•n
t<M"' . ., .....
l~l•m
llil t ... , .. "
hn.u
~ ...
·~...i. t .. &JIU
) ........ _.,
L..mbwch1ftl . ........
1•14U. M.a.t.. M.....,...-.u
M•tu .... ftt·fU ...................
M(;
~ .,.,. ...... .......... """'~ .......... "4illl"""'• """-...... ......,..
T...,..i.o r,.. • ...,.. v ........ .....,
v~ ...
Na
:::: 2 hltt-Uttlt hlM4
""'" owe •o• 111. Gra•1 ::"' Hew tO<MlhlnO you went locatton. Asking 1430,
""" lo Mii? Claaalfled Ida do 000 Prln only. CASH
""'' i-r:"=--==S4=2·:6e=7ll===~~~~~~~~~~!'I TALKSI 845-9922. M I Jecque1, Agt. N••• •••rt• •4 .... ,,. ... , f
You don't nMd • gun to "drew tH1" when you
place en ed In the Dally
Piiot Went Adal Call now
I S42·5e711.
......
......... 1007
IOUIFIUIT
Gl!lj.
Plllll UITllM
4 bdrm, 2 beth, ramo-
d •I• d Lltt•d balow mark••· Priced et Only
1149.000
144-1211
~Nl[,[L
!'\Alli. &
l\5~Ulll\llS By own•r, t o o,ooo . Older duplex ptlot d It ...;.;.;.;;;;,,;..;,_ _____ _
lot v1lu•. 848·7g110 or Ul&Till Llt&Tm
5511-4221 In exclu1lv1 locale on
Bay St. a.ullfUI pnv.te
home wlttl maintenance
ywd -..ove In oondttlOn .
Ptlolld for fatt .., at only
PlflUll IULTll EASTSIOE TRl-PLEX tty, Anr, 17M111.
llM1H &:d 1~· 1 1115K. 3btt2ba. IOI cw•·· ln-IEWPllT By Owner 1-384e dry tlk-uc>. h50. AV911. VIEW Eaatllde eo.te MMa ou.. now. 84~11aa aoe
pt•x. ell new ln1lde, 5 c.ta '4Jl.DOO min from oceen. Rneno-t--.-.... ,.. ... ___ .;;;i~
MUST SACf\rACE this 4 Ing • 15% down. 1828 3 bdnn, 1._. ba., xlnt--.
B d, m e EA u Ty w / Full•rton Ave . (b1wn bMutlful Y9f'd
PANORAMIC VfEWS, Orange & Nwpt Blvd). 7S1 ... l156
pool & apa, Prloed wey 842·5552. 28f •""'-· 1~ ~
b•low mark•t . Selltr 2223 Peolflc. M60 "'°'
forc.ed to liquidate. CALL WDT aWNlf ht, IHt + aeo. C•ll ~,~t~ RH Rodgtrt IQI• ..... t3t-I*
.. bdrm~; 2 bdrm ci_,•~.~~=--....,:--.._--=-,-.. -...... --
duplex. 2 doore from rrplo tnet patlO'-lnory =-~~ 1nldnr!n:!i tlook·up. U40 "'o.
41'•' Mll'1 ........
\flt' ~Ill •1•
~u•
•Ill
Wll•
CAU fe>R
• M1l.UON
DOUAM
UUllYllW-.U
Prloed below matittt for
qu~ Hie, 3 Br, 2 Ba
Houle. Fee land ........ ftn. U 37,500. Aobert1 AMI ~te. 403-4202 0t
1119,llet. _;;==---=-~-"""'."I IV~OOO 1~'7~6-4~,~·-~~"'"'.""'~ 8:.':~~: LM llALn 8~~~.~
""' fll·
fl.no For C\-'tltd Ad ::~ ACTION
11J1 a.u
11n A OA .. Y "LOT ::~ AD-molt
.PRONR11H
tlO ''====...i.M=="==== tlO Ii
::: .......... ~l-ol---lr ::t: ' ......,., •• ,.t,\.~ ,.,, ~ .... ~~ .... '~~ "" u'' llU '' .. .. tltT
11• 1111
lllJ .,,.
•in
83t.aal3 Uk for Cindy
Tiie faat .. t draw Jn the w .. t .a 01111 Piiot
a..lfled AO. call Toda)'
-842-6e78
...... n11
~rnr.r
11All ! I /,,
l\<.,'i(,( IA I f'i
appl. llrg• patio, cur· 111-t• ldtatl & tnod 1111.
rent!)' -..ct . .,.a. Jvtt. ,.._... 1tO ~
T09 locatlon aCf'Oet fl'OM .... your ~ -~ ,._ _,.. ....,
poOI et 400 Vtit9 FlcwL llr tlY '*'9 ttlt Ollly Pt-,.......,... ..... l'M! 8eortb a1ta,ooo. L..H. 1o1 Ci••lfled Ada. ...,..,'°WT ... ...
Pt'lvtrtt Perty. Mr OiMr'I :===:;;::~~:;;=.J~=;~~~;:::._=;;;=~
71CM119'? aft ...... cMly. _ _, ~"'~ "' -i, .... Mnm'f,_ ..,."' ~'" ~~ .. 4 8r I k wee t111r IO' ~" .,., .. -
ctoclk. T~ 'oon-·= ':f ... tr~ ~ .--=--... troli.ct wine tOOft'I ttvl ._ .. ...,.. ..,.. _.. ......
,_. .,,,.. TLC. Aelldng -------. :!::iooo. ea1-1110. , , u a t a " I
•t . I I I' I r .
L r If P H
•
HOIOSCOPI
BY SIDNEY OMARA
I
I
""-'•All.~ pay
for a to""~l4
DAlY
Pl.OT
SERVICE
DIECTORY
L~ITNOWI ...........
V041t Ollly Piiot 8ervlca Director;
Repreeentettw
141-1111,utHI
Orange Cout OAtLY PILOT/Tuaday, Aprtl 18, 18.83 C'1
lb ler · 11111 llr1111111r
Cwtt/ C...!!!t I ••m "'' lfHk lufg•11 l11H11 Inn ll!fiu ""'" ,. .... ., 1.:.T.:::.U.;.... ___ _
ITAPLIY OONSTR. Oonore,e; 1m11t Of to• 8PRtNaS.HIN0.18·NIW I!~ yllld oleen·UP & HAUL·MOVl!·R!MOVt! lmm1out11e, r .. ponelble ·A8C MOVING· 14 llr D VI iii=llll Tiie & Muonty. new & re New a rtmOd, llnletl Oil' tobe. Remove old ti· ~-All r.petre. rnatntenence ..,Vloee Furniture, Traeh. Tr-bualneH woman. Long Ouicll, Oerwful 8ervlo.. WATfR HEii.TEA 8peclll pelr. All ty~. au.illy
p;m· door henglng. Piece wlntr11. '4Mi12 lmer~ wv. Loweet Jim 64&-tffl 1111. epm ~U5 NORM llml looel reelelerll With Uc. T13to40 552-0410 Poof hwltr•*furneoee ,., .. ••·Uc. eat-2:M&
" 3t 131·1311 Mlli• c••u c r&l•ll 11 vr• In O.M. JAl'ANUI QAROINER ref. A.Vall June lhru 8epl
P ... 1.0.1 . "--•tr.-. -... _.,. IU0164 Tom 611 ... 480 M•tnl, 01e1n-up. Fr•• HAULING or Ool. 573-0712 Pal•tl•1 lnetatl-Aepipe......,.,r TILE INSTALLED ... ....... .... CIMnUj)I, yatdllrea IYC. ,, .. eat Aeelonable All kind•. Guatanteed
Gen. oontrMJt019, oom,,, Lovtno a ~ble Garage Door o.,.,1tor1, •t. ete.1513 alf. epm, RANDY, 642-7047 ..... , Tax -PlllTlll Uc'd. Jotin &31-1151 Ref1. JOhn 883--0487
• -'Cl. ~ .. aw....oi....... Fr .. WM!! •. Fenoecl yd 1prlng1, hardwire. For •RO T '"RO 8"RV Cl! blJ:IChltd Sinor LIO ·-...._ -·-0 .. ••1 ••2• .....,....,. d "--~-~ r N , y.. r: I '"'aulln~, -•-·n·up & lr.. F.-.~at_,. T•w "'~"~ ' f .__. __ Oualltr orl.•nted. Cell ""'' "" • ..., " '""'7" emonetatlon. -· " ..,.. ...,... ... ... ....... ..,. 2 1• yra of h•nnu fttl •.-..-...1·-/ •-...1. fM ..-..--306 2..., Newport Blvd c M Mowlnll' •dolni: olH · trlmm ng, S 10 min. Home/ottic. ac>Pt•. local · ........ , -..--=u:=• 1.;.::-...;;;-...;=.----~. ,':s~~·· C!!treettra, ltlltral &42-S•to. · · · nup, s1 tmo.113 tee1 51!7-t271 Bob 031..,..911 . Th=~~ff3...4rn UllWlll llU.'I Tr" Trha/a. .. ,al
--------Aemodll/D~•11. oomm H••••g •••-aa D ' c I ---" & f Stump orlnd. 8ave 3CW.. ,._ ..... _ •-L.1-,__. · UW ..... •...-w --lt•t lttalfl 1ve'1: Mott 110·175 0t ,,.1.-p•-• .. xper ,,....., pro H · ,,.. •I Jim 8511 5910 --tt .,...., & reald. llo'd, bonded, 839--50311 -2()% ott lut yeer'1. Wiii w11 ...... _ lk>nll. l/ery rMIOnlb.. · •
•New cabinet•, oablnel Int. Fet Mt, 552-9142 8Pring. hd~. ELEC. Painting . Car~try travel 041..0929 Prompt, n11t prof111· rat• let 4111 of~, poof T ....... GAtE8 Bob• 840-38Cl7 Mowing, edging, gen'I Tiie . Aemodef. Bonded. · · lonalello ret• 83&-7149 nHda. For HP•rt Hr·1.;;.;;•;;;1WD=••••-----
faolng, bare & formloa 1 . .1. ltffllH I h• olean-up. Very depend· LIO. 8Cl2·1•32/e.44-•798 La••1111la1 vl09, call awning• 5 p.m. Pvt Tutoring/ Remedlal
;:::· e.4
2
-0etll LloA~i ~=· Gar•••IAt F~!· 111. Brian 550-18t4 Car~try·MU-041ry flll UTIIUTU '~Ne ~~~I~ }.°~f'1k~ no~an~, ~::1~9:!~~9~•ulla
--8-40-0586 645-4~ 11111 Ac»llng-Plumblng Sod. apt'lnkler end 1hrub REFS. LIC. 320481 (t1•) ••• •t I
Alf,)llr-Alt.,1t1on1 Topped/removed. Cleln Baa4rau °'YWlll""8tuoco-Tll• 1n1t1llat1on. Our work TEO. 7141871-9047 • -•1 fulat ltnice
Ooort-wlndowe-c:ablnet• Dipall up,,_ 11wn1. 751-347e ***'"'O••E REP•1R & more. JB 840-9990 only look• expenllv• INT/EXT. CALL JIM. 20 yre ••P· Poot -v. r• Typing/Word Proceaatno
Pant1-p1tloe-fencea. DRYWALL TAPING n ... " a .... Cltalll•t Check our prlc:ea belOft 1•"' 1111 molding. Early comple-Quloll IUy revision• .lefTy 540-+41~ All TeKturff & Acouatlc Landec•plng-Yd Clnupa Elec·Plumb--Catpentty you buyl Lio. 2041516. --uon, mllnt. & repair. Reuonat>i. 851_1041 Rm lddnt-Patlo co*' Free est. Kevin 873_1503 Tr .. trlm/remov-Malnt Patio cover1-Feno11 ROBIN'S CLEANING CALL 640-1013. Cuitom P.intlng: Int/ext. Free "1. 24 hr MN. Uc.•---------•~ • ..r-al ,. ..... 11:.. Oeob-Fenoea lm""ovml lrrlo•tlon Jim 851..0129 Remod. Keith llA&-48721 Servlol ·a thoroughly LltJ4'I lu•H .... , Qutllt". Spring 8....,..1•1 283600. 045-6280 Nancy'• Typing Service ______ ,..,,..,. __ --.ua __ =•••-...1 & Repa.lra. Clltt al6.7552 DRYWALL/ACOUSTICAL Tll 11111 iODf JACK OF ALL TRADES clean houee. 540-0857 Free .It. Dave 87'3:io31 Serving all bualnetne
Nftl a R•pray. Rernod ALL PHASES Lawn-tr ....... rub ln•l•ll Call Jack anytime. I H'"h Quality HoullWork •• ,........ a.u.u~... 8-42-7190. 557-9150 =try. lie. 1414881. Remodeling, 11n1111 oar· BUD (714) 5152-9582 ... .., OllTll Pllmll Bldra 730-1 pentry. door hlnglno. n trl al Tr .. trlm/1Wmov11 Day or night .. 675-3014, Rafa. I Im the beatl GARCIA'S MA.INT -Bldg/ J.D. H0tn Reflnlahlng Wl-..t Cl ·-.... lntlng, roofl~, elec:trl H C L1wn malnl/Roto~lllln REASONABLE RATES 873·1012 1tt. 8pm trlr pk, It 0&rpenlry, elec, 25 yrt. Lie. 403941. Im., Antique., klt. ceblnett, _.. Ih a.I
-.-..... 1-1--1-... --.. -tl--1 ..-F I bl 497 8831 bonded. Reta. Col0t •x· fine painting 645-0864 WE WAS WINDOWS -t •1 ca.I. 11C. 631-83 1 Mike ELECTRICIAN. PrlceO ree eatlmate 6" 15 All typH of work-ret/ llllEOLWI• p um ng. -pert. 963-0911 Rlcherd . Fut_ ~rofeulonal Add'na·n-"'~Remod. R--lr/am Jobe. Fenoee right, free eellmate on Ctean-upa/Landeoaplng comml. Big & '"'Jobe. e~~221 afternoon• .... ., IMllAt --..~ -..-lat ..... ~ sm-'l Joba Hauling _ Tr .. Trim Dev or night 548--2174 Palntt~nr 18 vr1-llc. ==-..-------1 Quality work guerantHd Top quatlty. Low prloe. •h•IVH. partition•-Le .. ~ -.. . , ''lr"'~ " H ber Roofl all..,.__ F I MS 7391 F,.. 111. Lie. 831·234f rat ... Steve 752-9558 Uc. 396821. 873-0359 Free ea1. 642-9907 Home repairs. Sml jobe Margl1'1 Office & Home BRICKWORK: Smell )oba. 24 I I Pl, 111-1111 u ng-.,,,_. '" eet mate • Cleaning. Truatworthy, Newport, Coata M.... New-recover-decile "Let tile Sunahlne In" Aa .. t Cute• Stmn LIC'D ELECTRICIAN Ralph Caballero & Sona OK. p1lntl~, •to. xlnt ref•. 969-1294 Irvine. Reta. 675-31715 Local pllnter need• work Lie:. #411802. 5-48-9734 SUNSHINE WINDOW c=::: _ Qual. work-Reu. ratee Comp!. malnt, comm/ Gary 04 -5277 PTL Quality work. economy II fl Ill t•lt CLEANING 642_1549 Drtvew•y-Parklng Lot Shampoo & ateam cteen. Tom 631-5072/973-754-4 rM. Tr .. trimming & r• Home repairs, Clf~try, 81ohelora. cleaning & Muonry & Stucco: n-& ratff. Free nL 953-8721 IJI rH Q • •
Alpalrt-SMlc:oatlng Color brighteners. wflt RESID/COMM'LJINO moval, clean-upa. Free oablneta, electrlcal, laundry. Retl1ble. Karen repair. AU typea. Quallty. p l j Free eet. De. #381042 John'• Window Cleaning S&.8 Aaptllt 831-4199Uo crpla 10 min bleach eat 646-485<4 att 4·30 I bl f t D 540-2618, bef 9, •It 4 Lowest price. 631-2345 ltlr a free est. 12 yre exp. -.· · 20 yrs. Do my own w0tk. • · · · P um ng. enc ng. on Farthln Inter!~ =n S,lritaal Cna1tlia1 . l)M Hallberg Grading Hllll, llv/dln. rme$l5; 1~ Uc. 2780-41. Al 646-8126 COMPLETE GARDENING 966-0149 QUALITY CLEANING BRICKWORK: Small OI g ~ --640-106l
& PIVI Co AM/comm room 17.50; OOUOh 110-. SERVICE II with 1 personal touel't large jobe & repalra. HANGING/STRIPPI G •ANGELA SPIRITUAL•
1..,. 39~· 642•11 chr $5. Guar. ellm. pet Eleotrlcl.n: MW & repalf. : ca Jeny'a TFW USI Roofing. paint. BETH 650-0933 Locel rete. 645-8512 Vin-MC Scott 8-45-9325 Conau1t1ntl CounNllngl---------....., odOI'. Crpt repair. 15 yn All typea. Low prlcee Lawn Servkle. 831-4395 carpentry, gardening, In 111 mattera of Ille Ihde Ln 11.11111 llhslttillt Hp. Do work myaelf. Llc'd. Fr .. eat. 831-2345 Gardening, clean-upe carpet eteam Olean. etc. 81a1t llttiat Cuatom Brick-Stone Blackwelder Paperhang· 675-2495 Of 673-9784 That all contraclOfs wtto ., __ ...,.,.._,..... _____ , Rete. 554..0l23 trimming, cement WOl'k. · Rea. Starr 5<48-4471 Block.Concrete-Stucco Ing & Removal. Qual.1---------perform wOfk over $200
My J:~Y~~~~ nr We Care Crpt Cleanerl bttrtalallat 545-1804 642-2985 CIHn-up. llgl'tt hauling. HouN alttlng deelred by Rafa Free 181. 549-9492 wetk only. 494-3816 In :~:i~:td:::!':;.age, lncludlng labor and
Victoria 042-0482 Stearn Clean & Uphol. For your wedding. the gardening. Free eat. young. rHponlllbl• pro-••mt Pa&tt .. ratlt """ problem•. etc. materlela must be II·
Tf\IQlc Mount Unit. Ouar. acouttk:al beauty of vol-LAlllGAPI IUJIT. Philen 547-1708 feufonal for summer ---8 3 1. 9 4 7 o o 1 an• oented. UnlloenMd con-lalletaa Reaa. ratM. 6415-3710 ce & guitar. 873-M98 Cln-upa. Rat. 536-1810 month a beginning In STARVING COLLEGE ........... falllf 63l·89&4 trectors ahould IO sttte __ ,;.._ _____ laallat May. I wOI care IOI peta STUDENTS MOVING ColOfiBi~. 875--46181---------In their ld11ertlslng. Con-
Belloon Promotion• Unll· CARPET INSTALLATION FnclAt Gardening wanted, mow-and pay uttlltlee. Cell CO. Lie. T124-'436 S riaJtJ trect0t1 .nd OOl19Umert,
mlted: bright bouqueta! & REPAIRS. 30 vr• eicp. C&H FENCING/CONST Ing, edging, reklno. DUMP JOBS 87M478 alter 8 pm. lnaured. 041-8427 PJ11ttr/ It@ 1;;.11==11=1----·I contac1 Mary Grondle al
Same day. 4~7550 &45-9031(bet8, aft 4) FtltlOM built Of' repaired IWHP~ l ree eetl-& Small Moving Jobf • WATCH US GROWi ED'S PLASTERING AAA Sprlnklerllandecape (714) 558-4086 with any
l.uitn Competitive pnc... . matet. 7541 Cell MIKE 048-1391 FREE, honeet & retlable. Quality patcl'tel/textures ~f..:~: •. ~/~~873· 3~:t:11~~!;.0i~:;~~~: -.. .... -.-.._ ____ -1Ctatat/ Ctacrltl Free •t. 875-5818 IOIWUTZ UllSOAPI COiiege Student with terge Reh av all. Call Peul *1·1 •tVIH* Int/ext. Neat. 645-8258 Civic Center Pina.
MSID. & COMM'l Cement-Muonry-Blod< The f11test draw In the Specfal -oomm/ruld truck, I owe at ra te . Butler Ms-4840 X802. Beet quality. 25 yr exp. PLASTER PATCHING Tile luteet draw In the Room 890, Santa Ana.
New-Almodel-Oealgn Wlli..cu.t. WC>fk. Uc. Weet ... a Dally Piiot lndacp/ melnt Nrv. 13 prompt. n1ank you. Claeslfled Ada. your one-Competitive rat... Reetuocoa. Int/Ht. 30 Weat. · ·1 Dally Piiot CA 92701.
Low rat•. 1164-394<: 1381057 Rob 5-47-2883 CIUSlfled Ad. 642-5878. yra. Fr• 111. 631-749" Court. 7159-1970 stop ahopplng center. Uc T-118,428 730-1353 yra. Neat. Paul 545-2977 Claselfled Ad-642-5678.
C8 Oran e Coaa1 DAILY PILOT /TuMda A rll 18, 1883
\ """..... .. =·....... ...... ..... ''"'' ...... . ......... Oouple WllhH lo gur· 111i ....... ... IHI ,....., llH •ntltl nu
aheu LA Tl MO ll LAMI QllO'TtOH CW All! 8bollt • .. • nlt11 ~O~::::a::~. NIWlilMWll :.:,: ~ .. ·.~~·. ~~~r.= TODA Y'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 Flnl1hed
5 Glrl's nem•
10 Plate
1'4 Slnlul
15 More eged
HS ln1trument
17 Humene
19 Ferm tool
20 Followed
21 Runaways
23 Card
26 Verse
27 Tape -
30 Balloting
34 Afllrm
35 Length unil
37 Damage -
38 Performed
39 Cutters
41 Food fish
42 A11eng1ng
del1y
43 Stands up
44 Dither
45 Brand new
47 And others
50 Copy
5 1 Milk source
52 Marine peril
56 Branched
80 V•lch
61 ltt·<1~11
64 ContTnent
650ue~
unlve<1lty
66 Babylonian
god
67 !;ye part
68 Muaty
69 Food tar•
DOWN
1 Obllgatlon
2 Preposition
3 1492 ship
4 Poll goer
5 Gadget
6 Unwell
7 Citrus drink
MONOAV'I
PUZZLI 80L YID
MHTAl.I• • • lhru our puroh•N end ~~~ ..,.,....._
'rOM ltH/'#11. AN line \,M IUM ... ' ..... ~· 21H Mewoof1 II. VOLUMI IAlU -••Ill M0-1IOO &!AV!Oa I l.f.AllHO •llft
8All OR TRADE Aunt M70 N. CMrry Ave 1301 Quell ltrMt um
good. MH-oont. Come 6 LONO HACH N!W'°"' HACH
C:OMHh l
r HfVRl)t l I
' . ' ..
get It '*°· ma ,.,,. (No. Chw-~-eo111 aaa... Ollm
wey Or CM. ~l14) JM '11111 Hiii .. YKllWllD '11 Cemero ZH, mini
!If'• UH , ....... w--· --· ~.. F ~:.:::, YW •••••• ., ...... ,. ••
')46--1100
•10 818' CrHt Dodge. Colweniemly looeted ' •ng. A1lllng 1 10,100. °' Wl.L llT new tlrff, 14100/obo. duel tire•. AC, et1t10 l Competltlwly Prloed l60..f74e II _M_2-eeee ______ _
t"P9. water '-'"'· I tO .A 1179 uo 8l Ml, Miian '71 eor..11•. 81Mt AM. a In If I IO r . O 11 In brown l lll, bfown INth V~ ..... llt\llol I , 700 ml 1tored, mint. 84~57~~~::~. ofr . 8 Llallng Int., wire wt11111, quick 11711 ~. S1 ~,IOO/olr . (211) ~ r A 0\ n:::o1 Nie. 71<t.17M200 Huntington 9Mdl 692 2048 -~~ ~.Vou C,1'A, '71 2400, red, tin Int, (114\al•l•IOID '7t 0111\aro. UI. T-b.,.
"-'U..:1 l"llU'~i.; D1v1n 1nrf, 0111, 85,000 ml, ~ roof, 8/o, •II eleo. xtnt
o.o _,., "'~ c1H11• I 1 o • Io O I b •I o Ir •17 Bug, rebft enci. DOOd runnJng oond. A good IMPORTANT NOTICE ..-..... .... ...., •l''"loG..., 141-8893 con cf. MUST 8tLL. buy NOOO. 842'"'311
TO READERS AND DabU ti It ·79 MEACEOE8 2400 11700 ot>o. ~~ '80 Monie. 4 epd, iclnt
ADVERTISERS 4 epcl, 9UNoof, wtVt8 w/ ,63 Raglop, reblt lnQ. ,_ con d . ve ry c 11 In .
Aatt•ttln
8 Hawa11a n bird "-'""-""-''-
~..:lee 0~':;'cs!! '14 111 W1CM 11111 Int, S77.000 ml 110, Int/lop. 100111 I rune 12200/080. 84Ml11
ere In lhebyvehlcle cluel· AM/FM, uoelllnt c:ond. 900. 497-1441 nloe. 11176. 841-4737 '11 Citation, met. m
9 Museum Ian
2wds
lO Young one
11 Comp~lent
12 Not good
13 Makes robes
18 Deviate
22 Fragrances
24 Some !railers
25 Constructed
27 Sonar skin
28 Avoid of old
29 Yie lded
31 NH
compound
32 Lowes t point
33 Ms Garbo
36 She ll
39 Ski area
40 Rugby
passes
44 Puzzleo
46 -corpus
48 Coterie
49 Of a ume fled ~llllng eolumne 11150 OBO. 492-3742. ·10 2808L, 1uto. tltop, ·ee 8q Bk, rt>lt w/recpte. dy. 4 epcl, 8/c, new
dOll not Include 8/1y ep-H1·5a57 c11111c deep bfue. nu tnt, en/rf, t2V. '2150. I warr•nty. '310 · 52 Pnnt lace pllc1ble IHH, llc:.nN, ·79 810 Wgn, red, 47.000 :~t.500. 840-7M9 &4&-7842 _7_5_2_·6_120 _____ _
abbr tr•naler feea. lln1nc1. ml. 1 a.ner, FM 1t.-.o, •13 300CD lllvet w/blue •14 Sup., Beetle, mint '11 Vette. T top, elec. 53 Container ch•rg11, ,_ lor 81r pol-AC, pwr, roof rd, new 1 • / f 11 d 1 11 N mlrrore l wlndow1, gd 5 T 0 S lutlon control device ti I t cond '4100 ••lh•r. in r . a oy1, con . run ore• ew cond 118 500 842-9193 4 he Id od certlflc•tlone or dHI., 6~;~5~ d s..e..5193 1tereo c:aa1. lo ml. very p1lnt, 13100/0BO. · • ·
55 Insect documentary prep.,•--ye, lh81J1. 542-65M 5 4 0 • 7 I 2 3 d • y I , '87 El Camino w/ahell,
57 All prefix llon chergH unleu · ·75 4508EL. mag•. Ml-176-8l30 -· rune grHI, rablt ang.
58 Purpose otharWIH ·~lll•d by '71 510 2-dr 4-apd cheltn u ..... AM/FM ,,. '71 CONVERTIBLE Si()()/obo. 176-9208
59 Egress the edvertlaer. run~/:lls. ·eo. enrf, 112.SOO/olr. Ch1mp•gne Ed. Plum ·11 c imero B8'lln•tt•.
62 US power gp A t • _ __. / 173-1351. Sun •ll•r-w/wht top I Int. orig mint oond. lo ml. saeoo • t -.Tictl ·11 240Z. 50K ml, red, gd noon a 825-9&08 or owner. '6300. 86M964 obo.
63 Ad1ec11ve Pub HU body & lntt rune great. wtldyl MM321 daya; 71o.M30 evee. 155-91111 ext 210
ending SAVE UP TO 50%1 Prol S2t0o/obo. Cell Brian •ft OUlllt ~I 21111 '79 Conv VW. Xln1 oond '77 Imp, 4 dr. hi ml, dr!Yel I ~......--...-. .................... 1 pa.Int l llUtO body. H.B 3 pm, 876-t20S Convertlble 8/C. red w/ S&500. Call av1nlng1 1111 e nu Io Ide d . B111942~100, eee-1221 ·90 2oosx Rad. Toi:: blue top. llereo ' S.2-4e03 118000bo. 844-5798
~~-+--t--< NQP9 for ea», iclnt cond.. cond. AM/FM, wtra wnt1. 1111,750. 848--0291 pip ·71 vw Bug. nu paint, ·eo C«vw l4dert'f owner
c:oet 11200, 1111 '800 or A1llln1 IS&OO t obo. wall.,n whle. r•dlale. Ill '90alpta, etoctl. s1200
oftw. 848-23117 832-52 7 .. 11 -Lt-LI 1147 good cond. I 17 50. obo. 4~75 W .. 9020 '80 280ZX, S epd, loedad, 111111 1...... M2-545e • Aat" aat lmm•c CQSld Spoke Teet Drive & Price '89 VW ... _. 1,000 ml on es CORVAIR CORSA
i---+--t--+-·11 WE PAY whl1 , re-t'f ~h•dow. .,. .. 111111 raeond~g. body •Int. ~~~~ER:e:o'!to~1~~
'9800/ofr. 831-31112 Turbo Starlon n-p•lnt. 1 1500. Call 842-773o TOP IOWR rtat tlU Cordia & Tredla Ron 557-3e7e evee. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii TUl'bo OM8I P.U. • v 8 k 0 d -I • FM llD GUI ·13 ~t 121~2e1eoondl-~ ~ "''~·b.:!c;, ~.. '14 mn -·-
AUi 111111 uon. •900· • --~ • · · sets. 5484135 I.Mal I /I . NINl/llUll ..... HU ~ '72 vw Bug, part paint. •Y 41-...
2480 H.-tlor BIYd. ·eo ~9'ude. red. AMIFV body, Int, 11areo. n-TMt'• rlghtl Only •1.eoo
C06TA MESA CHI, 1nrt, nu tlrH, Ur-.12160. M1-31182 ~!1:!~~! r;;~:::r !~I: M._.. Ml-1Ul br•llu. xlnl cond . 2 33 · 'ti YW •WOT 4-bltr81 engine. Loaded
'52001080. &42-1714 B 1141 0 ,_. greduatlon 1 with all th• axtrul All WI llY '82 CYCC 4-<lr, ldnl oond ... 711 MGB 20 000 ml Blul SlMt/black ':J~1nt power lncludlng win· OLUI OA.11 ~· AM/FM CHI., wtltl tan 1n't.nor. ~ lllnt cond. 1700c)o;'~rf.r'. dowa. Limited edition.
UI 111111 · e7w 729 lent condition. Rune _84_5-_2_se __ 1 ____ ~~:,.~·1=:
'71 Hond•. Lo ml. cvcc grMI. 133()(). '72 vw CONVERT bucht ..... with "-CONNELL
CHEVROLET
~0ll1"'•r I'
I I ..... l ' ,, ~ "' •,
S46-1200
Wagon. Hond1m•llc. 176-1078 Clullc. MW pa.Int. lo ml ou1tom covert. New
AM/FM, S1150/obo, ·ea MO Midget, nu pelnt. onMWeng.'4200. brak•. ,_ o.tco bal-
649-2107 top, tranaatc. Xlnt mac:h. 842-5512 daya II()'. IUethM 1hoc:ka l
'7t Accord, 5 epd, •Ir, cond. Muet ull nowl '72 BUG, good cond, 4 ~;!'500pm'=id~ 1m/fm eterao. lmm•c. '20001080. 497-«>02 epd, am/Im CU8, 11200. •n-v...., -·· ss97s . 831-2981 '57 MOA. xlnt cond. A 494-e875 :7~Y weallendi.
WI 11J '74 Civic Claen, rune rHtorad ct111lcl Mu1t -.,-1-RAB--B-rT_C_ON_V_ERT __ ·~~~~~~~~I
USED CARS & TRUCKS good, •Ir. S 1200/obo, .... '4500. _,. ~7S; Auto. 1Jr, 1m/fm Cati, ~Chevy, lllnt body l lnl.
COMEIN OACAUFOR MUST SELll Dyl -842-7171 28K ml, Brull brn. nMde eng work, beet FID llfl&ll&l. S.8-9314, IV 64S-Me3 ·n MGB. Red/Blllc:k, new I 71111 S . S 3 4 -1 2 e 1 . offer. e3l-3n1 COfmtar-OeUllo Mk tor~ top and In.. T11p9, low 131-6908 ...an '78 Hond• Civic. Rbl1 an-""'-· *3500 oeo. tr9de -.1-e-vw--B-UO-.-Need.,--...,.1-an--
18211 BEACH BLVD. gne. carburetor. S 1995 for VW or? 173-n11 gin• & u body work. _DM_e ______ _
llbctlluena . 1211 ft/Wlt/lttntlUI l .... /ftl 711' HUNTINGTON BEACH B0. 846-8643 '78 MIDGET. New top. Orig owner. 00,000 ml, ·75 Colt wgnl ltlc*, - -141 .... l, 141-1111 laaaa t12'1 Low mllu. alw1y1 St200 firm. 546-5425 ex11 oond. •1300. UYI UI' .S Bl';AUTIFUL 2S" RCA 19' Sleallcr•ft Jet Sklbolt, m•lntalnad. AM /FM .80 Rabbit o.i. AIC, IUnrf, ~7
30 Hlllum 9a11oona del Color TV. 2 yr wrnty. Chev eng, wet 11acll1. Hlghwt cuh lmmad. lor CMI. 31 mpg. Cell Soot1J amlfm ca., 4 ctr.1412s,
Mytlme Fun for Sec'y s 148. Fr.. de 1 Ivar y xlnt '5300. SS3-11133. your Y8hlc:la, dorr-llc or 131-2242 c:a11 (213) 335-3024 -.r.n;:;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil
Wk 4124-3<>117~111 Open Sun &7S-1277 for81gn. 551-8285 .___.. tlSt l'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ •
• POOL TABLE TV John'• 54~1788 lbriu lt!ir. 7111 Trub H3S ..--11 ·12 vw Buo. MUST
4'117' elate cuetom wood Ml•c Pro recording 19· galv8ntzed bolt trail-Truell for hint: rental, ..a lr~TER SELLI N-P•lnt, new
dellgrl cOrn.. w/blll8rd equipment S•t 23 '' •.nu ula, ~ l or wlll do •m•ll lobe Khl llrw. /Fm, body and an-ltoht ,·well unit w/~ 15111 So. Or•nd. SA. tlr•. '500 4~71 or 845-1741 (Gary) .,..IOIE/1111 glne In good condition. V81ued .t '2000; M111ng 10AM. som ,... 11450 090 eGl-8237 tor $500 firm. Ml-8237 ns-3704 Vety dMn '64 OMC l>ick· 13831 Har1>or 8'Yd.
NEW M .. TT .. .,.,., SETS INb Hobl• 18 m•ln & fib. up v.T. lot• of extrH, O Oerdln Grove ,70 vw "·-7 ,..._,,... ~ nm.a white, NW S276. l129S ~ C am ... ltn-1..tH"a AM/FM ~!~'z7:: =:ms.~m'.CUrftr/leat 7111 Hoblel4 Mil.wtilte,MW '81FordF100.8cyl.22K. lllD J14-IJl-2111 grt cond . 12000. R•bblt look-I-Ilka '7&
Andy 750-6832 Charter• yld'tt for proms, 1225. 57~ 81Tl/fm aler cue. 3 epd FOfmerly Jim Manno '78 911 SC. inrf. parf &32-2137 Fl11te, very lfow•rful.
CARS S1001 wedding•, & buelneu lllp I Deeb ttU w/od, ovrn tlrn w/ I.au cond, nu pa.int, rubber, S2500. 78G-0624
TRUCKS 17SI mllitlnQ9. Chefteryecht• eo.t a11p1 avallable. New-m•g•. more. 112SO, "WI Will 111' trim, apt ...... minors. Ytl" 1115 '74 Mu1tang 2, wttt, nu
AVllll It local gov't ...... lntemt'l. 173-1016. port Beectl. 2S'-3S'-40'. •$4-2069 ev. II 11111 ... " alr, etulM, etc. 39.000 '80 Ol. 4 dr. em/Im c:ae. 1r1ne. nffd1 •no talc Call (retundabl•I (312) p •112 Call 642-4344 '72 Ford R•nch•ro OT Volumes ..... kW» ml. I 1!.i_IOO. 831.,..721. 1r1/rl. arto, lllr, utt oond. cond. S.crlflc• hoo 1131-5337 Ext. 2239& for 9Wtr • pickup w/Stockland lAMlnQ 842-61rr or &41-1030 11985. M3-1197 o«>o. ~ eeo-1101
'fCA1' dnctory on how to CIHalc 18' Lapetralla Balbo• Co~ docil ~~f INll, SllOO. 53&-4221 117~8elch Stwl. ·77~ 924, bl•ck, xlnt 1MI --pwch811. CenMy bey boet. 4 cyt, boet to 35 . '200 mo ... 5 Huntington 8Mch ttn -· ......, ,.... °'~· S3500. e1s-e111. lono. eso-1190. ·~~·.J-o~•·-(114)141-2000 :CSs1':i~,..~ ~ In • -Nawpor1 GoM ~1$2.400.
TEAK. 4 x 4 wtlh g11e182ftlUXUrymotoryectl11n B=~ :11~ ~or..:·~~ M#MIOen. 7~ J Tina w 98&-301111 . 8-:tl'a ,..._. eetecilon -------,--
top. Kenmore Wlllhlr, 5 Long Belch. Fully maln,t-Ed gaw• te r . I 4 50. ·n LUV, 17,000 on motor, Ila.II llzt 831-3849 aft e. of prevlouely owned 78 Muet. M8dl 1• 8/c, "·
yre old. Aleo moving alned. I SOOK, I or ~ S57-3218 iclnt oond., '2500 080. ·e7 &; M81t! lll-340, '72 914 Por. Mag wttl1. PorechH Audi• 1nd ~1~~ mini!
bo .... t116-n81 partnerehlp. Flulbl• ~142 Enoli.h Import 4 door Xlnt cond. 14350, v1ii-'
Wentad: Jazz & populll' l8"Men:,~~ IWt tit 2l:f.::1 y H41 r•d. rad IHthar Int & 494-6729 ~ '79 Flatt•. good cond.
v 0 c. I L p • I Ir 0 m ~ . $223/mo. &75-Ron ... leek wood. 18500/080. '71 Porecne II 11SC IUnrl 2481 ~ Bl., CM
1950-111&0, top dollar Side Tie for 2e' lallboel. '65 CHEVY VAN 9113-1818. OM gm/OOftl, xtni oond'. 1895
peld. 54&-7708 enyttme W...,lft H Newport Belch. 17.15 ft. '550 641-1278 •et MK9, looM Niie Rolla. 1111,500. 5S7-0642 dyL ~ca..~ '74 ford Pinto, good
Moving, ~ ae11 lmmadl $9Qr1 Bridge $49,000 c.11 641-1908 ~ $2450/off. 1132~7211 -· 9?3-0900 oond, brown, MW front
Portable Sp• P•ld A1118on Manna BOAT SUPS up to 40 ft. ctauk. tf4S 845-te28 ·13 914. 1.7, .,.Vbllt. exit , ~:iiosllot~/OBO.
S4500. wlll Hcrlflca MS-80tS Avall•ble. Huntington lJl cond, lo ml, ortg owrw. 72 Oet 2AOZ. ""t:S· --------1 S1500 compl•t• w/ 'St 18' Al>wgtUI Run• Harbour.~ M• ...... 2. J..... • MUii .... 0400. = ~wonc. . '7&0RAH TORINO
redwood aldlng1. Anti. bout w/trlr, no motor nna. Jim 84M171 ·73 JlnHrt Healy, fbrVll 876-71110 S850. 842-11'1
qui ... unit, built In_. I 4 7 5 . 8 3. -3 4 e 5 . ve. 3 9'1d, rv. ' loc*• top roll bet Jdnl oond. • '&4 VOLVO 122 518 Wgrt. '70 T-Blrd Jdnt oond. bar w/rafrlga, p•lcf 846-7719 locel M.D. WWltl to rwil good. ell orig. S2000 seoQo/obo. '42-7730 72 t11T Twge. nu ang, '800. M0-87'32 tr
8 1 , 'mu 1 I 11 exl I j •1000. ucnflce S1800. 40' .._, In IXchllnga for ot>o. 842~100, ~1221 .,.,,., brtla' ttr.. s10., _________ ,
17• Elec:trlc Side Back 24' SlllpJeck 1973 open CMh. 752-6N8 lanuaa Ala tU2 000 ot>o. 981-2094 a.tee Dtmlltie 12300/obo. 7&0-1122
Motor Bo•t. H•ll 9 , model.~~~· S9000. Wan1ed: 611p • ...,. lie or '16 GNa. xlnl oond New 'II 111M Tllll , aw1-0llne--------1
11700. Cell 4"4-6l69. lhor'a moor1ng '°' 13W '14 mn mm.LI lnUpelnt. 1135oc. i2eoo. Whit• w/tan lllltler, Im-lllC --'11 .. RllTI
,.._I Ulld coc>l«'a. MUlt 32ft Chrl• Cr•fl. llv• Boeton WM* Pref9r S. um& I /I 646-2&83 mec., IMrm eystam, new .71 Metador.4 dr, e3K ml, 0000 COHO. AM/FM. Hll et my coil • wlll •board~· MUST SELL Baytronl l~tlon. C1ll ., 41.-aDS ,,.,.....,, 32,000 ml. 125. c:nMa oontrot, PW, emJ $2200. 17M&Ot ~ •' • n t • •. P . P . 18.ooo. a.1ee1 Crl9 ~ "4-0&84. -That' rlghtl OnlY 41 eoo lbw tltl ooo. 840-2497 Im cue. alo. Qt98t c:ond. ·1e Onned&. Aune oooci.
•7033 17' w/86 hp Johneon out·
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J
Liberian gets his seventh
reprieve from deportation
Samuel Willett
win& another reprieve
BY STEVE MITCHELL or .. D.-,,......,.
A Federal lmmlar•tlon offldal
In Loe An1elet hat 1ranted a
three-month stay of deportation
tor Samuel W illett -the
1eventh NCh reprieve a1nce the
27-year-old Libert.an came to the
United Si.tee.
And while Sam'• adoptive
parenta are arateful for the 1tay.
the San Juan C.platrano couple
NY Sam will remain In hiding
until they are certain It la final
and won't be revoked before the
July 18 deadline.
Ruth and David W illett
learned yeste rday that local
lmmiRratlon and Naturalization
Serviot Olrector Michael Landon
Jr. sranted a stay of deportation
for Sam, who wu to be tent bllCk
to hla native Liberia wt Friday.
Sam went Into hldlns last
Thunday after earlier effort. by
the family to obtain a reprieve
proved unaucce91ful.
"Dave and I are paranoid, Sam
11 paranoid," Wlllett'• mother
Mid today. "It'• fool.iah, perhape,
but we've been through ao much.
He'• not coming home until we're
certain the 1tay ls aolid."
The Willetta' attorney la
attempting to achedule a new
deportation hearing before an
Immigration judge today, and
Ruth WUlett aald Sam "la not
comlna home until they hold a
hearlna and the Judi• •ya the
1tay la 1lnal and won't be revoked
before July 18."
"We've had them (1tay1)
revoked In the middle before,
and, boy, I want aornelhinl awful
1ure before we bring Sam
home," 1he laid.
The Willetta were In the Peace
Corpe In Liberia 11 yeare ago
when they adopted Samuel.
They arbitrarily eet the boy'• age
at 16 at that time -a declalon
they later came to regret.
U.S. Immigration laws aay Sam
(See STAY, Pa1e A%)
THI ORANGE COAST COAST EDITION
TUESDAY, APRIL 19, 1983 ORANGE COUN TY C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
UCI loses its bid ..
for Nixon library
By Q!.ENN SCOTl' oftM DeltJ ...... ..,,
Disappointed UC Irvine
officials will finish what they
started -they'll submit a
proposal to accept the Richard M.
Nixon Presidential Library on
campus, even though a Nixon
spokesman says "the subject i.a
closed."
UCI was dropped yesterday,
for the second time, from
consideration as a site for a
library and museum to be
•
financed by a private foundation
of Nixon supporters. This time, it
appean even the second chance
i.a gone.
Foundation spokesman John C.
Whitaker told UCI Chancellor
Daniel Aldrich Jr. the campus
will be removed from further
consideration. Whitaker said
proposals set forth by the faculty
were unacceptable.
Ramon Curiel, a UCI vice
chancellor, said this morning
campus officials are disappointed
Keeping an eye on optician Richard Perkins' business while he is
hospitalized are (from left) Rosella Lowry, T.J. Lowry, Dorothy
Jo Swanson and Mort StPin.
CM to waive fees
Taking care of business
for new arts center
Friends fill in for hospitalized CdM optician
By STEVE MARBLE or .. D.-,,.......,
With customen like t.hia, who needs friends.
1bat ~t -oc IOIDething very similar
-likely has croeeed the mind of Corona del Mar
optician Richard Perklnl u he recoven from
surgery in a hospital intensive care unit in Long
Beach.
When Perkins wound up in the hospital two
weeks ago. hia customen decided to go a step
further than the traditional "get well" card
They decided to run Perkins' one-man
o ptical sh op on Ea1t Coaat Highway. They
started f1lhng orden, answering phones and
helping customers pick out frames.
They even brouaht ln a part-time optician to
do the technical end of the business.
Extraordinary? Not if you know .Perklns, the
customers say.
"Everyone loves him," says Mort Stein, a
long-time customer of Perkins Optical. "He's an
anachronism i n our time -an h onest
businessman.
"U my glas3es bother me, he'll adjust them
(See FRIENDS, Page AZ>
By JODI CADENHEAD or.,.°"",.... ...,.
Coata Mesa city official.a agreed
last night to waive 1ame building
fees and finance st reet
improvements to~ling about
$269,000 for the future Orange
County Performing Arts Cent.er.
Offidals for the propoeed $60
million music center -to be
built in South Coast Plaza Town
C.ent.er -had requested $6~.ooo
In financial assistance from the
city.
City Manager Fred Sonabal
recommended Instead the city
pick up only 40 percent of the tab
since a planned 16-atory building
also will b e n efit from the
~provementa, he said.
The city agreed to spend $95,-
000 to realign Town Center
Drive; $95,900 to upgrade
Sunflower Avenue, Avenue of
the Arts and Park Center. $68,-
000 in waive d building and
engineering fees and $10,000 in
bonds.
In addition, the city agreed to
contribute $500,000 in federal
revenue sharing funds for
construction of one mile of
underground utilities in the area
on Sunflower Avenue. The city
of Santa Ana and the county also
are donating $500,000 each
toward that project.
So f.ar more than $27 million
hu been pledged toward
(See FEES, Pa1e AZ)
Panel says route
"
COTO OE
CAZ.A
for Foothill freeway
should miss Irvine
A propoeed freeway through
Orange County's aoutheaatem
foothiDa ahould avoid homea In
, Irvine. but come with.in a half-
• mile o1 Mlmion Viejo residence9,
the Orange County Planning
Commiuion recommended
~y.
The routina the commiulon baa propcMled for t he Foothlll
~don Corridor will be May 4 by the Board of
fupervtlon.
~ freeway routing.
The commissioners have
recommended a route that will
anake north of Rattleanake
Re.ervoir In Irvine, thus avoiding
reaidentlal developments,
continue north of El Toro and
through Miasion Viejo, aouth of
the Upper 0.0 Raervoir.
The freeway eventually i1
planned to link San Clemente to
the RJvenide Freeway near Weir
Canyon. a dl.atance of 38 miles.
,
,~ , _ . ....,. ,
ltArFUMAK• ---~ MMIMMIJ ,, ' )
TUSTIN ._, •••• ,.-/,' \ __ , _ .... , \
91\-.... --... ,.... i _, ,.__,. --,,,,.. .,-·
II-'
IRVINE
LAGUNA HILLS
D.-, .......
Choolllna amol1g 52 propo.ed
routes tar the first 21-mile leg of
the freeway , planning
~~~ulonen apent week•
JllleDU'I.----to cm:npUmted technical teatlmony concerning the
c.on.truction on the fl.nt )~ of
the new freeway, which wjll be
!>~ned initially aa a four-lane.
highway, could begin in five to
10 yean, according to county
transportation plannen. Route recommended for Foothill Tranaportation Corridor is shown in blue.
,
The Pulitzer Prize
jury Ii•• ill lint
f ietion •w&rcl e.er to
• bl•ek wom.•• Allee
Walker of Berkeley.
aad liOoort ••JOCMI,
buJe reportbaf" lo
the jouraaUam
ea~ortet. P•• A4.
Child care concerns
The fatal 1hootln1 of•
S·yeal'*old St•nton ehild i1
m•kJD1 ••• .. in the area of
ehild care tbat are now beint
f eh by mothert, employen and
edueaton. Pap 81.
Tax f i&Jiter Howard
Jan-fl .. ,, he'll
oppote Loe Anaeles
M•yor Tom Bradley'•
eall lor a tax lncreue.
P ... As.
•
that Whitaker, who i.a Nixon's
cruef negotiator on the library,
dropped UCI without conferring
privately
"We had hoped he'd be more
positive about our efforts," said
Curiel.
Indeed, sinoe UC regents had
lobbied for reconsideration of
UCI as a library site, faculty and
administrative committes
invested do%ens of hours
researching National Archives
(See NIXON, Paie AZ)
Bill Singer
making his pitch
Ex-Dodger
pitches for
NB kids
By STEVE MARBLE or .. o.11r "'-' ...,.
It'• been a long t ime aince
former big league bueba.ll player
Bill Singer has had to pick his
pitches carefully.
But t ontiht,_ the former
~ and Angel burler baa to
deliver one to Newport-Meaa
IChool trustees, who will decide
whether to let a Little League
group install dugouts ana a
batting cage at a Newport Beech
grade achool.
Singer, a Newport resident, la
a director of the new Newport
National Little Leatue, which
has been playing and pndidna
at EnQn Elementary School. He
baa a l~-year-old in the prqp-am
and a eecond eon who 1'e -aaya
doMn •t like bMeball.
The one-time 20-pme winner
(8" SJNQD. Pqe Al)
SINGER MAKES PITCH .. •
HY• the Little Lea11ue hu received reatatance from the
well·••tabltahed Harbor Area
Bueball proaram, which haa
been the only pme l.n town for
38 yeara and haa a loc k on
playtna flelda in the beaich dty. l\artner, si.n,er hu uked two
Newport-Mesa Unified School
Dlatrict truateee to at.ta.in from
voUns toniaht. He clalma both
have a confilct of interest.
One of the trustees is Rod
MacMilllan, a paid commiaaioner
of the Harbor Area Baseball
~Wian di.aagrees that he
has a conflict even though he
earns $15,000-a-year from the
bueball program and ls critical of
the competitive nature of Little
League.
pennialon to u.e the achool and
probably will be allowed to make
the lmprovementa."
Slnaer aaya he'• alao Hked
Truat.ee Todd Hflla not to vote
becau.ae he alao hu exereaed
oppoaltion to the Little League
program.
Little League puta an
emphasis on competition with
plAyoff gamM and champlonahlp
matches. By contrast. the Harbor
Area program plays down
com petition, awards and
championship garnee.
Park officials 1n Newport
Beach, meanwhile, say there
likely will be more room for
Little 1-ceague next year after a
new park near Spyglass Hill is
developed. Truck went out of control, flipped "fve been a trustee for nearly
20 years and always have been
h onest and fair ," says
MacMlllian. "l don't like closing
achoola either but I've voted to do
ft."
MacMillian, in fact, says he's
inclined to support Singer and
the Little League unless there is
objection from residents who live
near the elementary achool.
Coast braces
for another
storm tonight
Rudolph Karel~ 16, of Costa Mesa is in critical condition at
Fountain Valley Community Hospital with head and neck injuries
following this 4:30 p.m. accident yesterday along Placentia
Avenue south of Swan Drive in Costa Mesa. Two unidentified
passengers riding with him in the cab escaped with minor
injuries, authorities said.
"I don't know whl ao much is
being made out o this," the
trustee said. "They have ·
Orange County is due for
another soaking tonight, with
weather watchers forecasting a
half-inch to an inch of new
rain.fall.
NIXON LIBRARY AT UCI NIXED. • •
STAY. • •
waa too old to be considered
adopted and the family haa
waged a 16-month· battle to have
their aon recognized as legally
adopted.
Despite help from local
congresanen, thousands of let1ers
from church groups and a variety
of apedal bills in Congress. the
family continues to seek legal
residency atatus for their aon.
Pat R owe of the National
Weather Service said there ia a
90 percent chance of showeni and
thundershowers tonight,
becoming heavy at times.
She said the chance of rain will
decreue to 40 percent tomorrow
and the stonn should clear out of
the area by afternoon.
Sundats storm brQught local
rainfall figures into the 20-inch
range for the first time in yean
-nearly twice the usual rain.fall
by _this time of the season.
From Page A1
procedures and debating ethical
issues relAted to Nixon's papers.
Curiel said extensive news
coverage by another newspaper
hurt ucrs chances to negotiate
the sensitive issue.
"Our proposal has been judged
in the media and not by those
who have to review it," he said.
"All that (Whitaker) has been
hearing are items and issues
raised by the media. He hasn't
had the opportunity to review
FRIENDS TAKE CARE OF BUSINESS. • •
at no charge and then call me at home later on to
aee how tbey're doing. I can't believe it. Who
does that anymore?''
The cu.st.omen say running the shop is the
least they can do for paying back a man they
de9cribe as a little crusty, very messy and as
warm-hearted and genuine as anyone could be.
Dance instructor Dorothy Jo Swanson says
Perkina always aeta out candy for her students.
Other customers say he brings in homegrown
vegetables for them and buys toys and gadgets to
entertain the youngsters.
"It really got to me when I heard he was in
the hoapital'and doing poorly," says T.J. Lowry,
a retired policeman and regular Perkins
custoroer. "Everyone wanta to help."
One customer, who now opens Perkins
Optical every morning and shuttles soine of the
work over to his hOBpital room, claims the shop
owner hasn't rai8ed his prices in five years and
refuses to charge for repair work.
"He0s an institution," says Stein. "l'U come
in and he'll be putting a golf ball around or
fixing up aome little toy for the kids His desk is
always a mess but he says he knows where
everything ia. I love it."
A Twatin resident, Perkins drives an old
battered truck. His customers say he paints a
new me.age on it every week, varying from
political slogans like "throw the rascals out" to a
Bible verae.
0 ru be back'' was bis last message.
Hia customers will take care of things until
then.
medleel If-men• al tn. -.. el>d •u
Ulten IO Hoeg ~ Hoee>ttai
Yetldella --11.400 demeOe to • BMW eulomobll• perlr..O In NeWl)Ort C•nt.,
yee1•dey by .....,q IM wlndeNeld end
denting end ectelc:lllng IM c:er
Thl•vaa ran1eckad Production or
lnlO<rNUon S~ elong !he 1800 lllOcll of Whittler !eking 10011 end demegl"g •
~ mecHne. " -reporled yeel•day
Laguna Beach
For tr1e b.Wttl llme In two a.ye. u. ._on
• per11ec1 "' on 11111 S1r .. 1 -WHt.
Oceell Front-• tl!UMd. Demaee -....,.._, .. ITOO
Costa Mesa
~ lw«*• Into a c:er In !fie 100 1Moc:k
ol 8etrecud• )'911erdey. teklng a ater4t0 ,,...,.., ... 1700
Grab your u01hrella
-~. Patl Murptty, In ~'VL In the W•t, en_. IC>fMd lfW°'9I the Peclflc Coeet Into the OrMt Buln .,.. of Uteh and
Nevada. 0v94' Ille Wlu lHlppl v~ and the Ptmlne. ._-.
dew.
what we ultimately came up
with."
Curiel said UCI will forward
its proposal, lncluding a 28-page
faculty report, through the UC
regents to Whitaker even if it is
too late.
Greenbelt
leaders due
picnic honor
A family-stlle picnic to honor
two former aguna Greenbelt
leaders ia acheduled SWlday -
appropriately e nough, in
Sycamore Hills.
Jon Brand, current president
of the Laguna Beach group, said
the picnic will honor Greenbelt
founder Jim Dilley and fonner
vice president Betty Heckel.
The picnic, scheduled from 11
a.m. to 3 p.m., will feature sky
divers, balloon rides,. suided
hikes, boating trips and fishing in
the seldom-seen Laguna lake and
family games..
Exhibits will in c lude
development plans for the
Baywood area and the route of
the proposed San Joaquin Hills
Transportation Corridor
Pim.icken should plan to bring
their own food, but beer and
wine will be on sale.
Entrance to Sycamo~ Hills is
fre e, and those requiring
tranaportation should call
497-4573.
Girl found;
dad arrested
MESA, Ariz. (AP) -A
2-year-old girl who disappeared
from Santa Ana with her father
last month has been found here
and the father arrested,
authorities said.
Kevin Michael Reilly, 21, waa
arrested last night when he went
to the home of a girlfriend in
Mesa, said police Lt. Jack
F.dn10nn. The girl, Melissa Ann
Reilly, was found unhanned at
the home of a neighbor who was
babysitting the child.
The faculty report, which
Aldrich promised to use aa a
"framework" in negotiations,
called for complete access to all of
Nixon's presidential papers, only
a modest exhibit area and
university control of private
funds solicited for the facility.
Whitaker said yesterday those
conditions were out of the
question and declared the subject
closed.
Marjorie Caserio; Faculty
Senate president, said today the
Nixon Foundation is damaging its
credibility by terminating
discussions before it even
receives the UCI proposal. She
said the faculty conditions were
devised as safeguards to uphold
the academic standing of the
university.
Mesa firm
to sell for
$30 million ,.,
An agreement has been
reached for the cash purchase of
a Costa Mesa-based division of
ITI for $30 million by an F.astem
manufacturer o f consum er
products, officials said.
Annatron International Inc ..
based in Melroee, Mese., expecw
to finalize the purchase of the
J C. Carter Division of l'IT by
June 30, a company spokesman
aaid.
The Carter division, which
employs about 500 people locally,
manufactures pumps for energy-
related applications, said Bob
Berrellez, an ITr spokesman.
Annatron ls the world's largest
manufacturer of electronic "bug
zappers." The company reported
$36 million in sales last year, said
James J . Hickey, Annatron's vice
president of finance.
Hickey said ITr is selling off .
about 40 of its divisions and
returning to its main area of
expertise.
J .C. Carter will {unction as a
"stand-alone operation," as a
d ivision of Armatron, Hickey
said. He said he does not expect
any major changes in staff or
management
LB fire
• station
pinched
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of'h o.llr ""' '4afl An end-of-the-f11cal-year
budset crunch forced Laauna
Beach to clote !ta Top of the
World Ure station on two
ooculoN Wl week.
And Fire Chief Ron Adama
uid the station rnl&ht be cloeed
asaln Intermittently over the
next two and a half months,
leavini the hil1aide community
and adjacent Arch Beach
Heights, without irfunediate fire
protection.
The problem 1s a lac k of
manpower. brought about by
injuries, an Increase of 300
a1anns over last year, and several
big fires that alJ combmed to eat
away at the overtime budget for
the departgient
Agreeing the occasional
cl06ures of the three-man station
is a bit like Rus&an roulette, the
fire chae{ s.a1dc.the city ha.a no
other option.
The 27-man department has
already used up its $77,354 in
overtime costs for the fiscal year,
and the City Council will be
asked tonight to appropriate an
additional $10,000 to see the
department through June 30.
But even that expenditure
might not be enough, Adams
said, and the Top of the World
station might still be cloeed on
90fDe days.
Adams said the main flre
headquarters on Forest Avenue
and the Agate Street station
respond to 93 percent of
Laguna's emergency calls.
"We're faced with an economic
crunch just like everyone elae,
and we have to look to what we
can cut with the least danger,"
he said.
But he agr ees closing the
station is a risk, saying, "How can
you tell when someone is Jtoing to
have a problem up thereT'
Nevertheless. even with the
additional $10,000 in overllme,
City Manager Ken Frank said it
is possible that some staff
reduction s may be required
should the caty suffer severe
fires, stonns or further workers'
compensation injuries
.FEES. • •
From Page A 1
construction of the J,UUO and
1.000-seat theaters that will be
built near Bnstol Strttt and the
San Diego Freeway .•
Groundbreaking is scheduled in
June.
Long-tune city hall critic Sid
Soffer lambaated the council for
donating the funds when it told a
group of homeowners that the
city doesn't have $12 million to
repair aging sto rm drains in
Costa Mesa.
In 1976 the city donated $250.-
000 in cash to the South c.oast
Repertory Theater when it was
built.
Sign ordinance
action clarified
An article which appeared m
the Daily Pilot last week
incorrectly identified a Costa
Mesa Planning Commission
action as a revamp of the city's
sign ordinance.
Actually. the c1 ty's new
billboard ordinance was .
approved at last week's meeting. ·
The sign ordinance will come .
before the commission within the
next two months. •
The Daily Pilot regrets the ;
error.
Tonight and tomorrow:
e~1 end tlluncMr~. becomlnG ~ .. tJmel duttng
ltle """'' and tC>mOn'OW morning, declrM811og wlttl pwtlel ctaenno
IOIMltOW ---· ScM'-1 ..,. 111 to ao mpfl, INftlnv to
.... !-'OW "*"°°'"· LOwt In the eoa. Cooter tO!Mfrow wltll
lllgM In die mlcMOa.. Ctw'ioe t:A allowat1 t o p9fcant tonight,
d•or•••lng to •o percent ICMnOITOW .,..,,.__
For later today and thl•
--*'g, Ille Net'-91 WMlher
Service foracaet rain from
Calltornla to Illa northern
Aookl•• Mora enow w••
~ In the~. wttn
rein along the Nor111 Atlenllc
0098l. 8llitla .,.. to be a.. In
IN 8°'lltl, ~ and Pt1i1na.
TemperaturH around tll•
neeioft • 2 Liii. ES'T rwiged frvm ,. -.-In Marquette. Mich .• to7t ..._.,,&__..end
Del Alo, f eqa.
BUY WHlQf THl Jt:Wt:LLfQS BUY!'
No need to travel to the
Elaewh•r• from Poklt
Conoepllon to th• Me111oen ...., aNI out IO mlel -8l'llel
orau adwl1ory fro"' ,otnt
Cono•ptlon to Ill• Mexican border tor rough HH and
111010 .. 1119 ooutbeoll wlnd1. ~..,. 11 '° '° IMolo In ......... llllOllPC" to 40 knotll
ovor outer northerl'I w1tora,
•hint to eou111 ... 1 lo -• 10111orrow .• Cotn1>111ed H•• --~ I to 11 feet dlfouoll ....,., ....... allcl.,....,.
tllund•r•h•••r• to11l9ht, .................. ,,.,... ............. ~
•
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MOM US 0.-00 O' c;,,,.......,, ••
Fronts: Cold.,. Warm ..,.
Extended CMPO' ea 27
CMrleeton,8.C. .. 90
forecast Ctwtellto•;,w v. 42 2t
CNwtoao. c '4 37
=~· '2 30
IOUTHU•N OAlll"OANIA ,, 26
COAST A&. AA!Aa -0.0 ..... IO ClnclnnetJ ~ 21
c1011d1 Thunda)' beoomt111 ~ H 21
mostly lotr l"r~ tncrMah~ COIUlftblo.I C 111 4S
--a..dey ·~ Coallftllue 38 27
--.. i.-41 to sa enc1 lllQM Dtlea-Ft WOt1tl 11 111 ••fl.. °"'"' 72 ,,
Doi Molriea 44 20
Temperatures Oler'Oll SS zt .,., 11 41 ,..,.,.,.. 47 " .. a. , ... '5 12 =-... 11 10 == u It
19 ti 12 ..
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Los Angeles Jewelry Mart!
Our regular prices are up to 75%
lower than other jewelry storesl
SHOP AND COMPAREI
•AH JA•AU
•WATOM •All . ....., ...
'
/. ' • a • : • • •
NATION
High court reverses
nuclear plant ruling
I By fte A1nelated Pre11
WASHINGTON -The federal government doee not
have to conatder .poalble paycholoslc:al harm to nearby
r.tdenta before allowl.ns a nuclear reactor at Three MUe 1lland ln PenNylvania to reopen, the Supreme Court ruled
~The court i.manimoualy voted to reverse a federal
a court rulina that would have lmpoeed such a burden
on the federal Nucfea.r ReflUl.atory Cornmllaion.
Prison hostage released
PITI'SBURGH -One hostage waa releaaed today by a
pair of armed lnmatee who took two captives ln a bungled
eecape attempt six days aao at a state maximum aecurttr,
DriJon, ofticlala said. The releMed hostage was Koataa "Gus'
Maatros. Negotiations were still being conducted for the
releaae of the other boat.age, guard Daniel Kohut.
Rooney's suit for profits fails
WASHINGTON-Actor Mickey Rooney failed yesterday
to persuade the Supreme Court to decide whether the motion
pJctu.re industry should be forced to share the profits from his
movies dating back to 1932. Roohey, who began his movie
career as a child, filed suit in 1981 again.at eight major motion
picture studios, claiming he i1 entitled to revenue from
dJstrtbution of his old movies through the new technology of
video cassettes, pay televilion and cable TV. The Supreme
Court refused without comment to hear Rooney's arguments.
MX deployment before Congress
WASHINGTON -President Reagan, abandoning his
"denae pack" plan for deploying. MX missiles, la em~
new recommendations for putting 100 missiles in eX11tfng
launch siloe holding Minuteman missiles ln Wyoming and
Nebraska and devefupi.ng a new, single-warhead missile for deplo~t in the early 1990s. Congress has given itaelt 45
days to judge Reagan's MX basing deciaion, having already put
a freeze on money to produce the 10-warhead weapon pending
approval of a baaing plan.
Kennedy rejects Dallas· visit
DETROIT -Sen. Edward Kennedy has declined to speak
at the United Auto Worken convention next month in Dallas
because of traumatic memories about hls brothe r 's
•ea•nation there. UAW President Douglas A. Fraaer said the
tenator had not set foot in Dal1aa since President John F.
Kennedy was slain by Lee Harvey Oswald on Nov. 22, 1963.
STATE 0
Families return alter acid spill
MODESTO -About 500 families returned to their homes
yesterday after authorities d~lared that fumes from a
pbmphate acid spill on State Route 132 were no longer a
threat. A tanker truck overturned about 1 a.m., sending the
hazardous liquid onto the roadway and forcing the closure of
two nearby Catholic achoola. .
Aid to adoptees measure advances
SACRAMENTO -Legislation to help adult adoptees
locate their nawral parents has won approval of the AMf!mhly
Judiciary Committee, but lt would apply only to future
adoptions. Most of the testimony yesterday on AB2096 \by
Aaaemblyman Robert Campbell. D-Richmortd, concerned ts
retroactive applicatipn to existing adoptions. So Campbell
removed that provision under strong pressure from members,
teveral of them adop1ees.
Oakland victims 'back from dead'
OAKLAND -An elderly huaband and wife thought to
be dead when firetightera found them collapsed in their
emoke-filled ntiiement-apar1ment were alive and 1n critical
oandition today at an OllkJAnd hospital. "They were capaidered
fatalities at firat," Oakland Fire Department Chief Don Matthew.J aid of Robert Moore, 79, and hia wife, Pearl, 70.
WORLD
Amerasian children to leave
BANGKOK, Thailand -More than 160 Amerasian
fhildren and their relatives are to leave Vietnam for the
United Statea on -April 28, a U.S . Embassy official aaid
y~y. It will be the sixth airlift of children of Amerlcari
f'atbent and Vietnamese mothers. So far 180 Amerasians have
left Vietnam on the airlift.a, which began last fall.
Walesa again interrogated
WARSAW, Poland -An exhausted Lech Walesa went to
police headquarten today fo.-the third lnterroption ln a week
about his contacts with underground leaden of the banned
Solidarity trade union.
Walesa's spokesman, Adad Klnaazewski, said the
89-year-old labor leader showed up at police headquarters in
hla hometown of Gdansk as ordered. &. wife, Danuta. said
her bu.band wu interrogated for leYeJl houri yesterday after bemi stopped by authorities en route to Warsaw.
El Salvador minister quits
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador -Gen. Joae Guillermo
Garcia baa resUEned u deteme minister, bowing to military
commanden who aca.wed him of botching the war against
lefdst perrtllaa.
Prelkient Alvaro Magana accepted Gerda'• l'ellignation
,..terday and named Cafb ~ Videl Casanova, a career
otf:lcier with DO battle experience, lo replace him.
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Tueeday, Aprll 18, 1983 * ~I
Victims sought in Beirut rUblJle
·Blast st U.S. Embassy killed 39; at least nine others missins, teared dead
BEJRUT, Lebanon (AP) -
~ 1qu.ada eeardled thJ'ouah
lhattered concrete and manaled
furntture of the U.S. lllmbaey,
today for more victim• of the
terr~~ bomblna that officials
aay up to 18 Americana.
Police uld the powerful
explo1ion ye1terday kllled at
leaat S9 people and wounded 120
others, includina 22 Americana.
Col. James M. Mead, commander
of the U.S . Marine contingent in
Beirut, said today the dead
..
,.
East still
locked in
• • icy grip
By The Aaaocla&ed Pre11
The winter that wouldn't go
away sent temperatures skidding
to record lows in dozens of cities
from Minnesota to Miami, while
a spring snowstorm that .cloaked
parts of Virginia with an elght-
inch blanket ,blew toward New
York today. ·
"It's February in April," Paul
Murphy, a National Weather
Service forecaster in Norfolk,
Va., said last night as wet, heavy
snow tapered off after piling up
in southeast Virginia, making
roads hazardous and dropping
branches acroes ~wer lines.
Snow six to eight inches deep,
a record for this Tate in Ule year,
fell in southwest Virginia. The
storm then swept into the
Tidewater area, depositing as
much as 6 '12 inc hes before
heading out to sea where it
became rain, forecasters said.
The storm was expected to
awing inland today and collide
with cold a\r to the north,
produclna four to six inches of
mow ln the New York Oty area,
taid Nolan Duke, a forecaster
with the National Weather
Service's .evere storms center in
K.anaaa Oty, Mo.
"It doesn't look good at all,"
Duke said.
The mercury hit record Iowa
for the date Monday ln 34 dties
from Duluth, Minn., to Miami.
Duke said. "Look for that list to
be about as long today," be said.
Included 1even Americanl, wlth
nine other• miuina and
pre1umed dead. -
U.S . Ambauad or Robert
DWon l&id it was "very unlikely"
any more 1urvivora would be
found in the ruin s , where
authorities expecte d to f ind
another 20 or so bodies today.
Near the several tona of rubble
that craahed from the building, a
U .S. tlag flew on a flagpole
undall)aged by the blaat.
''The embaaay Marines put It
UP. at 1uru1N," Mead aaid.
Witne11e1 and police Mid a
pickup truck Jammed with an
eatimated 600 pound• of
expto.lves aped into t.he drcular
driveway of the lealide embeay ·
and blew up Monday at 1 p.m. u •
.1unchUme ltrollen paued. The
blaat •battered the main IOCtion'•
aeven-atory facade, hurltng
bodle1 Into the Mediterranean
and devastating the ground
floor's visa wtnc.
Mead told re porters that 10
t
Lebane1e employees at the
· embul1_ were conflnned killed
ln the fiery blut and 20 othen
were mt•Hll8 and pre1umed
de9d.
In all.1. accordlna to Dillon,
about J;,O people were ft the
embuay when the bomb went
off, the wont attack on a U.S.
facility ln Lebanon.
The· top half of a man'• body.
clJld ln a tan luit, hwii frQm the
Hndwiched fifth floor this
morning.
Wrong tum
An unidentified
skipper put this
35-f oot cabin
cruiser on the sand
at the Santa Ana
River mouth
Sunday.
Authorities say the
operator thought
he was making a
turn into Newport
Harbor. The boat
was to be removed
today.
Reagan
lobbies for
tax plan
WASHINGTON (AP)
President Reagan was using the
telephone to round up support as
the Senate neared a test vote
today on repealing his plan for
withholding taxes from interest
and dividends.
Sen. Bob Kasten, R-Wis., who
is leading the fight for repeal,
claimed the 60 votes necessary to
limit debate and set up an early
decision on the issue. Kasten
seeks to a ttach his repe al
amendment to an unrelated trade
bill. Others , including
Republican Leader }:ioward
Baker and Democratic Leader
Robert C. Byrd. were not so sure.
At stake was one of the biggest
money-raisers in the tax bill
passed by Congress in 1982 to cut
the federal deficit b y $100.4
billion ove r thre e years.
Withholding 10 percent of most
interest and dividends beginning
July 1 would bring the
government more than $3 billion
a year, the Treasury Department
says.
Due ln part to a heavy anti-
witbholding mail campaign
promoted by the banking
industry, moat senators and
representatives have signed bills
to repeal withholding. Reagan
bas vowed to veto repeal.
Sen. Robert J . Dole, R-Kan ..
said the president i s so
determined to maintain the new
law that he is 1pending a
Worker gone, ' ~;~~ ~ ~ :m:
D1i1J ,... ....... bf CN1tM et.,. senators.
at Valley S&L, Uplifting experience th~~t!1~te~~=~=
$20, 000 too Paul Marshall, 8, of Costa Mesa took to uve withholding by propollng that part of the money-it wouhl
advantage of the wind yesterday in nu.e be Wied to finance health
Fountain Valley police are TeWinkle Park. benefits for unemployed workers looking for an employee of a and their families. 1aving1 and loan fltm who ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
allegedly 8COOped up $20,000 and
disappeared.
Detective Dan Bean said the
crime occurred Saturday at
Southweat Savings and Loan
Allodation at 16171 Brookhunt
St.
He said the suspect, whom he
declined to identify, had acces to
the company'• vault. There wu
more money available, aal.d Been.
but ~ suspect confined h1mlelt
to $19,SDO.
Bean alao declined to aay
where police are concentratina
their eearch .
. What do you Uh about the Dally Pt.lot! What don't you like? Ot.11 the number at lef\ and your memap wlll be remnted,
t:raOICribed and deliven!d to the ·~ editor. The aarne U ·hour antwerina Ntvlce mn be ~ to record let·
ttr• to ~ edltot on any topic. Mall• Hftlributon must lnchade
their n1me and telephone number '°' vtrillcaUon. No tittulaUOl'I
ullt,pleue. .
Tril UI what 'a on your mind.
Bradley tax
bid fought
by Jarvis
LOS ANGELES (AP)
Warnln1 of a city without
Ubrartea or recreation centers,
with potholea in the streeta and
akeletal police and flre
department1, Mayor Tom
Bradley hu uked resldentl to
aupport a huge property tax
lncreue.
But Howard Jarvla, who
authored the property tax-
alashing Propoaltlon 13 in 1978,
immediately aald he would
oppoee Bradley'• llO!ution to the
dty'a $142 million buc:IRet deficit.
The mayor went on local radio
and television station• laat
evening to uk residents to aocept
either the increase or the effects
of sweeping budget cuts.
"I love this city and I wauld
not serve you well if I le t it
deteriorate for fear I might
displease you by asking for a
sacrifice," Br~ey said. "I travel
the streets of this city every day.
I see the potholes, I see the
streets getting dirtier and dir'Jer
. . . I see our fire department
having to make parts for obeolete
equipment."
The maror want s a
"temporary' one-sixth of 1
percent increase in the property
tax rate to get the $142 million.
1bat would boost the average
homeowner property tax bill by
$90 a year or 15.4 ~nt from
the current level of $583. He said
the added cost, after savings
realized thro~h tax deductions.
would be an annual average of
$68.
Propoaitlon 13 requires a two-
thirda vote of the people to raiae
the pro~rty tax rate. However,
Bradley s proposal would require
only a simple majorit;y vote by
the 15-member City Council
under a 1982 state Supreme
Court decision allowing property
tax increases to cover bonded
indebtedness incurred before
Pro~tlon 13 wd passed. The
city s $250 million pension fund
debt qualifies under that
decision.
Jarvis said he would take the
city to court if such an increa11e
passed.
"They can't raise other taxes
except by a vote of the people,"
he insisted.
Bradlel said: "We have the
choice o either reducing the
l>ropoaed budget by an additional
$142 million or generating an
equivalent amount of new
revenue to tide us over.
~· Thi Sur.-Glntt1I Hu 01tennined
Tl* C'911• ~ 11 o.,..,_ IO Your Helllh,
,. •• •
•
Hero cited
for blast
rescues
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A
20-year-old man waa hailed aa a
hero yHterday after a car
cruhed into a faat -food
restaurant and cauted a natural
pa explosion, inJurinl 11 people.
One man'• le1 waa nearly
IOVenid, authorities aald.
Onlooker Roland l!'.aoto helped
paramedics pull the victima from
the 1moke and debria ·and
adminlatered firat aid, Fire
Department 1pokeama,n. Jim
Wel.la said, call1ng Eaoto "one of
the he.roee."
"He wu basically a very good
helper," Wella said.
"All I know Is that .a guy
apparently lost his brakes and
ran into a buildlng, breaking the
gas main or a pipe which pumped
gas into the building, and while
everyone was stanaing around
looking at the wreck, the
building blew up," said Los
Angeles police officer Tom
Garner.
Wells said "the car apparently
snapped a natural gas meter
when it c ras h ed in to the
restaurant . . .
"One guy was about to lose his
leg," he said . "They almost
amputated it at the scene."
Three were taken to Panorama
Hospital, where one peraon w~
in serious condition, another m
guarded condi Uon and a third ~
satisfactory condition, said
nursing supervisor Lee Grier.
...
------------------....-~
Europe trip
lecture set
Coastline College wiU preeent "Getting
the Moel Out of Your European Travels.'' a
two-part lecture serie1, on Tue1day1,
beginning tonight, at the Unitarian
Univenallat Chureh, 1259 Victoria St., Coeta
Meu. The lectures are acheduled from 7 to
9:30 p.m.
Lecturer Joaepb Calwell has designed the
work.shop for thoee planning a trip to Europe.
Topics will include baggage, clothing,
currency, where to stay and understanding
European culture.
A $15 registration fee will be charged.
For infomatlon, call the Coastline Community
Services office, 963-0811 , ext. 256.
• The Newport Harbor High School PT A
will accept applications through ~Y from
senior students for a $600 scholarship.
One or more scholarship awards will be
made to students judged on committment to
school and the community. Applications are
avllable from the school counseling office or
by calling 673-6839.
• Laguna Beach High School's annual
Open House is scheduled tomorrow from 7 to
9 p.m. in the boys' gymnasium.
Activities include visits with teachers,
counselors and administrators, as well as
classroom demonstrations, ex hi bi ta and
refreshments.
•
ls the
the limit.
* "'
You probably think there isn't any-
thing you can do about soaring heal~h.
care costs. But ther@ is. Now you can JOln
the FHP health plan where you work.
With most FHP plans, your regular
monthly premiums take care of almost
everything from a routine checkup to
major surgery. There are no big deduct-
ibles, no sky·hlgh eictra expenses to pay
out of your own pocket.•
A recent survey conducted by the
U.S. Department of He.Ith and Human
ServiceJ reports tNt plans like FHP Nve
saved from 10% to 40'6 each year on a
family's hNlth care c.osts when cdmpared
to conventional health Insurance plans.
So ask about joining FHP where you
work to bring your health care costs back
down to Nrth.
J
I
..... "', .... c1o ..
NY E COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
OUOT A ftC*• lllCl.UOI T•AOI t 0111 THI lllW YOH., MIOWIU, 1'&(11'1(, l'e•, "°''Olol, OIUOlf &• 0 (IH(lllllfAfl UOClf UCMAJIOU .uiO 111.-0•HO I T Tiii 10•0 AND lliUlllfT
..... .. '"" .. . ._
" :~ : ·~
~·~~
·~
Orang• 00.lt DAILY PILOT/TUMdey, Aprif 18, 1193 H8 81
Dow Jones Final
DOWN 8.70
CL081NQ 1,174.54
Home construction
declines in March t
By Tbe A11oclated Pre11
A key meaaure of home conatructlon activity feU
m,odestly ln March, but eoonomista say the houalng
lnduatry continues toward a recovery from recession.
Commerce Department officiala said yesterday that
builders began work on 9.2 percent fewer houses in
March tHan the previous month. But the March figure
still was 75.1 percent above the level of March 1982
when the economy waa mired in recession.
The Commerce Department also said building
permit.a for future construction fell 4 percent in March,
to an annual rate of l.43 million, a fter rising for six straight montha.
In a more encouraging report, the gov.emment
also said Monday that factory use rose for a fourth
straight month in March, hitting the highest level
since la.st summer.
Personal income up again
WASHINGTON -Americans' penJOnal income
rose 0.6 percent last month, the biggest gain since Last
November, while conawner spen-ding increased 0.4
percent, the govenunent reported today.
The new Cigures should be at least slightly
encouraging to government officials and private
economists, who have said repeatedly that consumer
spending must rise faster than it has if the new
recovery is to grow in strength.
In February, income had risen just 0.1 percent
and spending had actually declined slightly.
Oil prices hurt state budget
SACRAMENTO -The decline in the price of oll
iB good news for motorists but bad news for the state
budget. ·
The State Lands Commiaion said yesterday that
the worldwide decline in oil prices will drag
California's tidelands oil revenues at least $41 million
below the estimates in Gov. George Deukmejian's
budget.
Crocker has lower earnings
SAN FRANCISOO -Banking deregulation and
the recession have been blamed for a 10.5 percent drop
in the first-quart.er earnings of Crocker National Corp.,
parent company of Crocker Bank, the company says.
The company yesterday reported 1983 first-
quarter income of $16.1 million, down 10.5 percent
from the same period last year.
2 ON-TV units to fold
SAN DIEGO -Oak Industries, Inc., says
operators of ON-TV over-the-air subscript ion
television in Phoenix, Ariz., and Dallas-Ft. Worth,
Tex.as, will have meetings thU week to discontinue
their services.
The two operations rep~\ 9 percent of Oak's
more than 522,000 subacribers and both systems have
lost money, but Oak spokesmen will not say how
much.
Oak said the terminations, to be approved this
week by local management committees, will not affect
the subscription TV operationa in Chicago, Los
Angeles or Ft. Labd'erdale-Miami.
AMERICAN LEADERS
UPS ANO DOWNS
SYMIOlS
tt~K (APJ -Spot nonleuoua
lnelel ptic. T~y e.,.., -'°""82 '*' .. a pounes, u s O..llnatlon•
e...., -14 llO oenta pw l>OUNI. "" eom.. epo1 monm dOMd Mon
LAM -2t-13 c:.nta a pound.
ZMc -~ c:.nt• • PCM!d. oee-..i
Tiii -188133 ~Week~
----78~ a pound, NY ....._, -*320 00-'335.00 per 71 to .....
.......... -'406.00 oam.llc ~ troy~.N.Y
GOLD QUOTATIONS
., TM \11u'lt11f "'-
9-ct4ICI wotlCI OOld ~ IOCMly
l.4lftdoft fftOt'lllnO llaJnQ 1441.50, off 11 50 LenHn •11.,noOfl flxlno $439 Ml. 011 $3.50.
hrta eflemoon llXll1o $442.09. on s114
''91111dW'! """"° 144 f02. oft $2.18
--.... -"-fixing $440.50 bid. oft '2.00. "41.50 _ _,
M•11•r a "•'"'"'"' (oflly Clelly quote) ..,. 50, oft as eo
as~ IOl!lr ci-, CIWWI ..,_ 40, off
~ l~eCI (onty ~ _,., .... , .... ofll311
NY Ce"'a• QOICI epol mofltll Mofl 1446.00, otl U .IO.
SILVER
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