HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-05-27 - Orange Coast PilotI'
r
Scholarship keeps
son's meqiory alive
8y ROBERT BARKER or ... .,.., ..... ...,
Norma and Robert Mackie
suffered a tragic Joss a year aao
Q;ll what 1hould have been a
~yous family milestone.
Their 10n Craig. 18, had just
•raduated from Ocean View
High School in Huntington
~h. They bought him a round-trip
-1rplane ticket to Hawaii as a
itaduation present. "He was
. .aotng to meet four friends who ~ilready were in the islands. At
the last minute, the senior
MacklC'S dcctdcd U> go to Hawali
toq and departed on the ume
plane wil.h Crai1.
The ensuing tragedy waa
devastating to the tam.Uy.
Craig, a sleepwalker all hla
life, fell from an llth-atory patio
baJcony of the Reef Lanala hot.el.
He was kept alive by
respirators but died two days
later -on July 9 -when his
cause obviously became hopeless .
Norma, a travel agent, and Bob
(See SCHOLARSHIP, Paae AZ)
THI DRlllil COAST 111m1111111
FRIDAY, MAY 27, 1983 Of1ANG E COUN T'( (A l I~ G RNIA 25 CEN r s
Leasing pact 'biggest thing in · ages'
By STEVE MARBLE
Of IM o.1tJ Not It.II
Enthusiasm raged unchecked
today following an announced
end to the long, bitter and costly
leasehold dispute between the
Irvine Co. and residents of
Newport Beach and Irvine.
"It seems to be the biggest
thing to hit town in ages," said
Bar.>ara Amstadter, a resident of
Linda Isle and a leader of the
Committee of 4000. the lease controversy.
Amstadter said the settlement
has drawn a collective sigh of
relief from affected residents,
c1 ty offici;als and real estate
agents who ·have been hurt by
the land fight.
Thomas )llelsen, president of
the Irvine Co .. exprneed equal
elation and suggested the
settlement could 10 far toward
i mproving the development
firm's tarnished image.
Nielsen admitted the Irvine Co.
underestimated the dispute when
it erupted and wu not initially
prepared to deal with It.
"I just feel very, very good,"
said Nt:wpor>t resident Louis
Scott, one of eight people who
filed a class action lawsuit last
year against the Irvine Co. over He credited Donald Bren -
Top chlli
has heat,
no name
By STEVE MITCHELL or-.o...,,......,,
There was Mule Breath Chili
and Tr"!ck Stop ChUl. Jloo
Dinkurp Chill aad ff•lf fast
Chill. Daao Tony•a. Super ~wl
and Blasini Saddle• Chill,
Longhoppers :Jackrabbit Chfli
and Radioactive Chili.
But when the judgina was
over. the winner of the lOtb
annual California State Chill
Championships at the 1 Balboa
Bay Club Thursday nigtit was· a
Sar.ramento woman whoee chill
conooctJon doesn't even bout a
name.
Kathy Hipeldnd, winner of the
Sacramento divillon cookoff lMt
month, was the top chiU chef
from among 64 contestants in the
Balboa Bay Club parking lot.
She'll take her recipe and
cooking pot to tht world October
championahlpe at the Tropico
Gold Mine in Roaamond, Calif.
Second-place honors went to
Bill Kent and his Kents Kamp
Chili. Third-place winner was
Bonnie Major and fourth-place
cook was Bill Swiney.
Jim West, rrHldent of the
Internationa Chfli Society,
figures more than 2.000 cooks,
judges, tasters and guests
attended Thunday's festivities in
Newport Beach.
the firm'• new majority owner -
with brtngtna a pbiloeophy to the
company which helped resolve
the issue. Others close to the
nesotlations uld talks switched
to high gear when Bren took
over.
"I don't think it could have
been done without him," said
Newport realdent Harry Baker,
whose annual lease fee
•yroclteted from $1,600 to $67,-
vid Smith dishes out sample
om Irvine's uRed Hot
And they had Iota of thlnga to
entertain them b etween
mouthfuls of chill.
There wu a Mr. Hot Sauce
(See CHIU. Page AZ>
.., ................... ..,
Was the Gorilla Team's recipe
too bot for Arnold Hampton of
Colton? press.
ounty's jobless rate declining
I
By JEFF ADLER
Of" ... ...., ..... '""' The employment picture in
Orange County is steadily
brightening, leading a st.ate labor
analyst to predict that two-thirds
of all jobs lost during 1982 will be
recovered this year.
The rebound registered in
March continued in April as the
jobless rate declined to ff .:>
percent, down from the 7.3
percent figure posted In March,
according to state unemployment
statistics released Thunday.
The number of joble.. ooun~ residents seeking work In A l
WU 78,300 compared with 89, 00
the previous month.
Unemployment for the year
probably will ave~ out at 7.6
percent. below the 7.9 percent
average recorded durin1 the flnt
three months of 1983, aald Alta
Yetter, a labOr anal)'St with tM
at.ate F.mployment Development
UepartmenL
A • I w OJ' I d n ' t 8 e t re • I
enthUll..ae1J' just yet. but there la
rea) ltnpn>vement," Yetter aaid
'Major Barbara'
Reid Shehon and
Kri11en Lowman head
a Une ca11 in South
Coast Repertory,•
production of ··~tajor
Barbara.,, Stt
•·eekendf'r.
US Festival
tn the April flplw "We won't
pt bllCk thia year to the 1981
lev•b~ but there ha• been a
pretty llaable d~ dwina the Januaey to AlliJ,l jleriod.''
While the c~'• \lnelDployment rate to e.& percent laat mont , Loa Ance1-County'• rate d.topped
(S.. JOBL&U, Pqe .\I)
000 two years ago.
Baker, who estimates he la
$)50,000 behind In lease
payments, praiaed lhe aett.lement
even though it will do little to
help him. He said he hopes to 11ell
his waterfront house and recover
enoygh money to buy a ct)eaper
hou.e in Newport.
T~e leasehold fight, which atirac~ national attention, was
sometimes billed as a rich
person'• rent protest becau.e of
the number of waterfront home.a
Involved.
The battle itself had both a
negative effect on real estate and
the Irvine Co.'s ability to move
forward with development
projects. Obeervers predict.ed the
settlement will help real estate
rebound and put new life into
(See LEASING, Pa1e A!)
Possible toxic
waste storage
~
HB
Hw\tinl'Gft ~.
City fire department
lnvesti,ptor Rick GNnbaum -'id
labels inclkat.ed the barrel•
contained nitric add, C'Ol'TOGvea
and other pouibly toxic
matedalt.
0 r u!n b a u Jn 1 a i d U . S .
Enwironmenial Pro~ctlon ~ nw~ Uidicat.ed
the w8te site jimed moft of •
fire and explo.ion huard to
(See TOXIC WASTE. Pllfe A!)
Child. care center
~
studied in lr:vine
By OLENN SCOTT Of"1"9...., .........
An ambitious plan for a
community child care center nan
by UC Irvine but funded by local
ernployen la under diacua:ion in
Irvine.
The concept, still in Ill early
atqes, has been well received,
said Karen ~ ucra director
of auxlliary services. But she
noted no commitments haw been
made yet on or off the ~f'AS·
Accordlrig to her preliminary
plan large employers -private
ot' public organizations -would
enlist through UCI to pay for
child car e services of their
work en.
The center would alve thoee
coml*liee a way of meeting the
chlld care needs ol their worken
without providing a center of
their own.
Bocard aald she la actively
purauln1 a consortium of
employers who are interested ln
auch a center. She said
·re~tatJves cao contact her at UCI. •
The Idea for the 10-~alled
ftnployer-aponaoted center cornea
from the lrvtne Buainea and
Professional Women, a non-
profit club to which Boca.rd
belongs.
"Since l do weer .veral hat.a,
U just sort of took off from
there," she said..
Members of the organil.ation
have been cont.actJ..na em~yen
about the plan. 'this week,
Bocard met the Irvine City
Council, which exp r r rd intenst
In the Idea.
Child care has been a critical
1.-ue in Irvine, where a hi&ber-
thao-avetage percentage of
mothers work to meet hi1h
mort.sage payments and other
expenses. A ~0-paae report
luued Jut May by the city'a
advbory Child Catt Convnittee
said only one In tour chlldrPn
who need dayUme aupervtaion
are &etting It. .
Bocard said employer-
aponaored centers .,.. rare, and
the few in oP"fador\ are mostly
at hoepitala as a recruitlna device
fcit nunes. She aaJd UCl bm been
worklnc closely wlth the dly
Child Care Comnaittee ln
propolinl the center.
"···
I I
11
Irvine S~L;
robbed of
$3,000
By Gt.EHN SOO'M °' .. ~ .........
•
A man in a eray suit c.-arrylng a
stainlem at.eel handaun robbed an
Irvine aavin1s and loan
association of more than $3.000 Thursday. .
The 2:45 p.m . robbery at
Century Federal Savin1s &
Loan, 14441 Culver Drive, is the
second bank robbery this week In
Irvine and the sixth this year.
The robbery al.so is the 19th
robbery to take place this year
compared to rune through May
last year.
The sudden rise has
investigators baffled. Lt. Bob
Lennert said detectives met
earlier this week to search for
some connections to explam the
surge of robberies but couldn't
find any.
In Thursday's incident, the
robber walked up to two tellers,
delruUlded money and quickly
left, said Lennert. The suspect is
described as a Caucasian, about
45, standing 5-foot -10 with a
slight build.
Morning fog
for holiday
Don't bother getting up early
over Memorial Day weekend to
work on your tan.
National Weather Service
forecasters are predicting the
past week's morning fog and
drizzles will continue along the
Orange Coast over the holiday,
with only partial afternoon
clearing at the beaches.
When the sun does come out, it
will be hazy with high
temper-tures in the low to
mid-70• on Saturday. The
forecast for Sunday and Monday
is pretty much the same,
foreastera said.
Overnight lows alon1 the
beaches will be ln the upper 50a.
Philip Hillman
SCHOLAR. •
From Page A1
Mackie, a steel company
executive, hve with their Jou
each day.
It's hard hr them to believe
their only son -good naiured
and Jovtng -ii gooe.
TheY., talk about him and think
about him and they want others
to do so as well.
Mrs. Mackie, emerging from
her moumifli, will make a public
appearance Wednetday evening.
That's when sHe'll present the
first Craig Mackle f'.1emorJal
Trophy to senior Philip Ht~
in awards ceremonies at the
school theater.
"The schotarshtp will helP.
Craig's memories to continue on, •
said his mother. "People can't
forget him. It makes my husband
and me feel good to do
something.
"We are '° pleaaed that Phil
Hillmll'n is getting the first
scholarship. We wanted a 1ood
student who liked athletics and
who knew how to work hard. We
didn't want someone with a
perfect 4.0 grade."
Hillman was an all-star
infielder on the Ocean View
baseball team and was sports
editor of the school newspaper.
In a thank-you letter to the
Mackies, he said he'll use the
scholarship money at Cal Poly
Pomona. where he planl \o study
jownalisrn.
Cl{ILI CHAMPIONSHIP . • • From page A1
Contest, a Miu Chill Powder
Contest,, a parade, judging of
booths, and st.agt! entertainment
featwina Custer's Last Band.
to Rick Johnson and hla Signal
Hill team, with Maurice Parolt!'s
Gringo Chili booth placing
second. ~place winners In the uge
compeliliOfl were Jim SJemons'
Star Chili team, with Mary
Longpre's Ba-Hum-Bu1 Chili
Team taking ~ place.
First place fOI' beSt booth went
Baer Davis' Busted Chill Teem
was the parade winner with
Slemons' team taking second
place honon and Beer Davia was
named the overall sbowmanahlp
winner.
Huntington Beach
A br-..;,, w• ,_.,,.., Tllut90ey et the
Oek lllew~CAmer.172tl0.9t
The -w• a ~ • oontalnlnf ~ 10 13!> Entry •M apoerCH'llly made by ~
opef'abedl~
VKleO eq~t v-...0 at II, 140 WM r~ ·-'T""'11dey "°"' .... Video Wat-. 41172 W-AIM En1'y w• .,.,.,.,tty rnede by P"flnO °'*' Ille front
dOOt
A ...., 11113 K--1 lftOlorc:ycM _,., a1
$3,000 -teponed ttolen from Iha 1100
blOdi °' San ~ DrlW
Tapet valued et S 100 were reported
ltolan In Iha bt--ln of a ~ parlleel In
a Clr'-'f on the 2700 blOcll of Florid•
3t..C.
Fountain Valley
A compuler coneole. typewrll•rt a"CI
c:atcutat0<t vel\>ed al 13.MO -• ••-from Iha Celltury 21 s.8-reel Ml9'e
oftlce. 10HS Sleter Av.r'
Sorneon. 4;11mb«I up on • "* and ..-• moun1ec1 ..,..,..., lrom the Oold 'Trlengle Leundroma1. I 1755 Eellnga< Ave.
Irvine
~ ~ 10 a ""'1...i aid Cllll IO I
ff-.ey oltr9mP In IAll• Forwl allw a llgl>• ~ 1WO men at IN oltremp t1°'*9M
~' Hazy days
Allenlle City 82 57
~ 87 ea Batllm«• 78 50
~ 87 58 81 58
Coastal BlalNtdc .. 48
8olM " 57
E•t•nllve Ill• night end Botton 71 47
morning IOw ~ wtltl aome 109 ~ 89 72
~ IOc4ll -ty morning ctt&me $3 40
c leerlng 10 ltuy t1.1n11tln• Burlington 64 45
S..d1y eflernoon Lowa t~I Ceaper u «
5& to 115 end lllOf>e SelurcMly lo ClllWIMton,8.C. 90 ee n . Ctwteaton,W.V. 17 31
Elaew1tere from Point Chetlolle,N C. 11 55
Conces>llon to M .. lc:an bontet CtleyellM 75 50
end OUI 80 rnllea -0-outer =.:... eo 41
w1ter1 norllt ot l•n Nlcol11 83 37
ltllncl: Noiltl-1 ..... 10 10 20 ~ 1541 37
~-"~-3101 CcJlumtlle.S C 15 90 ,_ trw::c.. satu(Cley. ~ Columbua &9 :Ml
Uglle. .. ·:::i..::: OellM--Ft WOfttl et 116
Saturday mM~ne. o Deyton 51 31
..... to .... 9to1t .... ln 0..-'3 64 t:.:z-tM eflernOOft wfflt t lo 3 toof Dee~ 71 1541 ..,,., ..--. '°' ........ 1 to o.lroll 55 3e ~ , .... ~ .. e1ou·-OullMI N 42 ·~
wtlfl .. ~ "'°"*" dttalt. El'"-90 57 ....... ,..,..,.. 84 ... Mite ..... =-75 55 ....... ,.,.
&te'aded 7t 43 ....,.,..
°'911, ... '3 ... .....OrtM!tl ...,...d 13 ... New Ycwtl HlllM .. •7 NoftDll = ... 17 Nof1'1 "9tte .. .. Oll.._Oltj ro~H"l:t'cT:~'3.-N1A ......... 13 41 Olllal'9 ............... .. ., Ortendo COASTAL AMAi -, ...... ......... .. ., ~ =' _, lnOf~ low ttouo. ,,.,.._, .. .. f'lhoenllC ::.'°'· ..... ,~ K.-.°"Y n ., ==tw.. ..... ..__. .. .... ,,.... 102 • ........................... ......... t2 a PortteM.Of9, 't':l, It .. ta· I OTHI H OAL.,OIUOA
MOUNTAIN AMAi -NI .. ..... ......... to ...... '--mcJllly ... ..,
. Irvine Co. president details ettlement of bitter leasehold issue
By STEVE MARBLE or .. .,..,,... .....
A 1e-n1e of ''moral
retponalbUlty" led the Irvine Co,
to back off land con~&& that
could have forced hundreds -
perhap1 thowiandl -ot Newport
Beach and Irvine residents to
abandon their expensive home..
ThQm&I Nlellen, president of
the Newport-hued development
firm ~ also cited major
inconstatencies In the l l:t
different types of leases held by
homeowners.
Nielsen, admitted Thursday
the Irvine Co. waa unaware of
the "depth of the p~·· when
the leasehold dlipute 100k QU
JOBLESS ...
From Page A1
from 10.1 ~n:ent to 9.7 percent.
CaliforniJ a rate dropped from
10.6 percent to 9.8.
Unemployment also continues
to inch downward nationally.
The rate dropped one 10th of a
percent.age point in April, from
10.3 percent to 10.2.
The good news in Orange
County -which posted a record
in January when 102,400 people
were without work -is that
employment rose "sharply" last
month. Since mid-March, 4,600
new jobs have been added to
county payrolls.
New retail outleUI opening in
the county and renewed vigor in
the restaurant trade resulted ln
more than 2,000 jobs, while
hiring also picked up in
agriculture and tourist trades,
Yetter said.
However, the county's once-
booming construction indullry
continues to be hard hit, with
another 300 JObs lost in April
Suspect held
in FV rape
A woman ln her late 40. ,-as
raped and IUffered a bl'Oken ,taw
in a eevere beating in Fountain
Valley a few minutes after
midnight today. police reported.
The aU...Ck took place in an
are1 ne•r the Black Angus
RestauNllt at B~t St.Net,
norlh of Talbert A"1\ue. Police Lt. Dave Brokaw said a
27-year-old,Fountain Valley man
Is beina questJohed in connection
with d\e assault.
Brokaw aaid the woman and .
the suspect had been •een
dandna at lhe Black ~prior
to the lncldent.
Otllowt -• callad to lno4ne Hlgt. kl'OOi Thuradey 10 atop a atuCS....t dtlvlflG hit
mol'>rcycl• around lh• cent•• of 1111
~
Newport Beach
Ft'ttl Nila~ 17.4CM..,. 1•.,trorn •
pedloelted tocller on a ptMN pier In l..ldo
V\lleg9.,.
A ...,k coat"'°"'" 12.600 w• "°*'from
1 hO<IM °'' Iha 1ae>0 blOCll Of 8-eet Drive. Pohc• H id 1n• crook• temoved
IOu.,.,ed ~to oein .. tr-
. . . "
"' t 1. 500 gold ,,,_.,, -.w -· "*' 6300 on cooen waa 11.,..., ttom a -on IM 800 l>IOcll OI Hwbot lllencl Orrw
• continue
,. •
hk~ • lltftturm llS months aao
and qult•kl y earned th• dt>velopm~nl l'ompany a small
army of .enemiel.
But Whal beian in the .tall of
1981 u a citiz.en prote9\ over
spiraling lt•ase fees that resldenta
wt•rt• f>U ying the Irvine Co, ended
cm 11 n11tt• of ht.trmony wh,n the
two !.ult•i. unnounced an accord
Thur..clav
'ftw p0
ro1111:..1 'Cf M'tllement now
mwu be upprov1•d by Orange
County Supt>rtt>r Court Judge
Claud.: Owt•ns, who ordered
negotiations lo i;eltlc.· a class
action lawsuit filed by four
Newport l'Ouples .
The 3,49~
leueholders, according to ~nns
of the l~-paae 1ettlement. will be
offere<t discount• of up to 65
percent on the value of land
under their homes. Raidenta c.an
purchase land or continue to
leue and still realize th~ benefita.
A reb,ate program will be
offered to residents who ha'(e
purchased land since 1979.
In the procesa. the Irvine Co.
hopes to improve ita damaged
reputation and profit from what
likely will be a full-scale
movement of l,easeholders
purchaai.n& property.
While the terms of the
settlement are highly complex.
moet Newport residenu -
Deir .... ,..... "' ... 811rtt•
Huntington Beach Fire Marshal Bill Cooper
in1pect1 barrels auapected of containing
·hazardous wa1tes.
TOXIC WASTE CHECKED
From Page A1
neithborang buslnesaes along
• Commerc-e Lane than a health
huahi. I ·
EPA safety workers arrived
Thur.day mo!Vling. They t901J.
readln1s of the m~terlal and
should llnow cont.enb within a
week or so. said Huntington
Beac:h Fire Marshal BHl Cooper.
Cooper s.a1d the barrels
probably will be hauled away to
a dump site In West C.ovina in
two weeks or so.
The former owner ot the pelnt
manuf:>rt••~--""~"' wMt out
...
of busineu abeut eight months
aso. said Grurtbaum, and the
U .S . Small Business
Administration acquired the land
through forecloeure.
Grunbawn said he ordered the
federal agency to remove the
barrels but he said official•
wanted tq find out what was In
the barrel.I before complying.
The barrels were discovered
duri ng a routine annual
inspection by fire department
officials.
rou1hly '15 percent -wiJJ bf
able to purchue home shes foe
le9S than $76.000. ln Irvine. 97
percent of the affected ralden&a
will be able to buy lealed land
for ie.. than $30,000.
There remaln about aeven
waterfron\ homes in Newport
wh ich will be In the $1.5
million-and-over range. Three of
the homes are owned by Irvine
Co. board members -Donald
Bren, J.R. Fluor and Joan Irvine
Smith.
For those who prefer t.o
continue leasing. the terms abo
are attractive. In Irvine, 98
percent of the leueholdera will
pay less than $100 a month ln
leue fees. In Newport Beach, 78
percent will pay le11 than $200.
Generally, leueholden will be
given a 30 to 50 percent reduction
on the value of property. Thoee
that purchase within the next
)'ear will be offered an additiol)al
15 percent diacount.
The Irvine Co. also hes agreed
to provide 30-year JoanS with an
Interest rate of 10 percent for the
first five yean.
"There's no way ~veryone
rould be satisfied but I think thJI
h the fairest settlement,"
commented Louis Scott, one of
the residents who sued the Irvine
Co.
"In fact," he added, "I think
we got a better deal than we
could have throuah the court&"
LEASING. • •
From Page A1
the development firm.
The months of lepl expeNea,
newspaper advertlsina and
round• of mallera coat the
Committee of 4000 more than
$306.000. While lbe fiaure likely
is aimilar for the Irvine Co.. no
dollar amount has been ttleawd.
"I think the Irvine Co. wu
very generous." said real estate
broker Jim Wood, who had been
openly critical of the Committee
of 4000.
"Thia proves the squeaky-
wheel theory," Wood aaid. "But
in this case, I do believe the
Committee of 4000 dJd aomethtna
that workt!d to the benefit ol
everyone."
Barbara Young, Committee of
4poo preaident and 1elf-
proclairned rabb}e-rou.aer, Mid
abe was deligtited w ith the
settlement. addin& "It'• 90 much
nicer to be working together for ·*
a ct\an&e."
''The m09t exciting th.ins of an:· joked Irvine Co. attorney
Robert Currie, "i.a that I can at.art
goiDI lO cocktail patlles in
Newport apin."
Tum your old diamond ring
into a new diamond ring. While you·wait.
Tuesday, May 31st.
Do you have a loose
dlamond1 Worn-4>ut .ettlna?
Out-of-date rina atyle? We11
ma&k• it new, whUe you wait.
NJw yob can chciose from more than 2.000 new mountings dunnJ{
our limited Diamond Remount Show.
See our crafl•men raet your
diamondewbile you wait •
Our experts' workbench wnl be eet
up iiihl In our ate>tt. eo yo\lt gema
ntver lfavt the preml1n.
Our pric' lncludet dttlain. mO\lntin,r. 11lna. final finish and
ultr .. onic cleanln1.
'
When waa the last tinJ
you had your diamond•
appraleed? We'll do It while
you wait.
Since 1~50. a one carat Cine diamond~as Increased Crom $1.600 to $12,000 (acCordintc to
OeBeers Syndicate).
lmalfne what your diamond ia
worth today. Belter yet, know
for5'ltt. Our authoritative ap\>raisal (on
our letterhead) ia essential for
eppropriate insu..-nce and your
own peace or mu'ld. An appoint·
ment it n~ry for thi.w
imP<>rt&nt aervke ,
NATION
Re~gan chides teachers
for opposing merit pay
By Tile A11ocla&ed Pren
WASHINGTON -President Re-agan says the National
,F.ducation Association's opposition to merit Pl!.)' i.I "a major
obstacle to paying our outstanding teachers wbat they
deserve." Reagan, In a letter to NEA Preedent Willard H.
McGuire, chided the union for its stand and expressed aurprlae
that the union had accused him of nWPn& a "disgraceful"
assault on the teaching profession. Reagan drew the wrath of
the 1.6-mlllion-member NEA and the 580,000-member
American F ederation of Teachers for declaring In a
1 oamrne~nt address last Saturday that "we just haven't
been getting our money's worth" from the schools, and that
part of the problem stemmed from unions' resistance to
changing the pay structure. McGuU'e called merit pay "an old
idea that hasn't worked in either the public or private sector."
Hooks reinstated in NAACP post
NEW YORK -Supporters of Benjanun L. Hooks, who
was reinstated effective today as execut:ve director of the
NAACP, say they will try to limit the power of the
organization chairman who suspended Hooks last week.
Margaret Bu'1\ Wilson. chairman of the nation's oldest civil
rights organization, who announced the reinstatement
Thursday, never has revealed why she suspended Hooks o••
May 18. Hazel Dukes, head of the New York state chapter of
the National Association for the Advancement of Colored
People and one of Hooks' most outspoken supporters, said 46
members of the 64-member board plan to meet Saturday to
launch a move to limit the chairman's powers.
Shuttle prepared for new mission
CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. -Technicians buckled the
space shuttle Challenger to its seaside launch pad today and
began a series of tests leading to a final countdown for its
second mission beginning June 18. The 100-ton spacecraft is
scheduled for a six-day flight ending right back where it
started.
STATE
School finance bill moving
SACRAMENTO --An $840 million tax increase for
schools, approved by the Assembly with Republican votes,
brings negotiations on school financing vs. taxes a little closer.
The bill which would increase business. cigarette and liquor
taxes. accelerate the collection of increased property taxes on
new or newly sold buildings, and repeal some income tax
breaks for limited partnerships and oil flnns. But changes are
likely in the next few weeks as the Aasembly negotiates with
the Senate, which pa&'led a similar bill last week, and the
Republican governor, who opposes both bills.
Hearst kidnapper released
FRONTERA -Emily Harris, 36, a former member of the
terrorist Symbionese Liberation Army, was released from
prison today after serving eight years for kidnapping
newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst, a priaon spokeswoman said.
She wu sentenced to 11 years to life alter sh~ and her
husband. William Harris. pleaded suilty in 1978 to the
kidnapping of Mias Hearst on Feb. 4, 1974. The Harriaes abo
were sentenced for robbery m the armed commandeering of
two getaway cars Hania, 37. a fonner high tchool teacher and
Berkeley postman, was paroled April 26.
Light quake hits Hemet
HEMET -An earthquake ~wing 3.9 on the Richter
scale sent a mild ah.aking through a mountain and desert area
early today •knocking books off shelves but causing no damage
or injuries. authoritie. said. The quake, centered about 13 mtles
southwest of Hemet in a lightly populated area, set off about
30 seconds of ahakJni about 4:25 a.m.
WORLD
Polls predict Thatcher victory
LONDON (AP) -Three more opinion polls published
today predict a decisive victory for Prime Miniater Margaret
Thatcher's Conservatives in Britain'• June 9 general election.
"It's a massacre," said the Conaervadve-aupportill( Daily
Express above its report of a poll by Market and Oplnion
Research International that showed support for the
Conservatives at 51 percent against 29 for the Labor Party.
Israel forces on the mol'e
TEL A VIV. Israel -Israel rushed more tanks and troops
up to ita front lines with Syria in eastern Lebanon today, and
Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir warned the Syrians not \0
"make a fatal mistake." llraeli armor clogged the main supply
highway from southern Lebanon to the Bekaa Valley.
Lebanese officials said convoys of tanks and armored
pel"90nnel camera had been moving up from northern Israel
for two daya in the wake of the first aerial clash between Israel
and Syria since the war lut s ummer and re~ of an lncreue
in Syrian forces occupying the strategic vallt:y along the
Lebanese-Syrian border.
No-frills flights start small
LONDON -The $149 inaugural flight of the no-frilla
airline People Expre98 headed beck.to the United Statet today
three hours after arriving In London, opening a new chapte11 In
low cart trans-Atlantic travel. Both fli1hta k>et lnOney, but that
was because People Expre111 got British governmt!nt
permiasion only 12 houn ahead of ita ~den voyage and had
limited bookings delibeniiely. The airline beon ita Inaugural
ael"Yice from Newark International Airport TfiUJ'lday carrytna
101 paytna peuengen on the 434-aeat leeeed Boeina 747 jet.
The flight from London's Gatwick Airport left with only 51
~rs aboard, 48 of them in the $149 economy dua.
..
SAN SALVADOR, El
Salvador (AP) -A. communique
purporting to be from the ma.in
leftiat guerrilla faction claimed
reaponalbillty for the first slaying
of a u .s. military adviler m El
Salvador.
The communique said the
killing was In reprial for "the
criminal intervention of Yankee
Imperialism." But there waa no
confirmation of the claim, either
from re"t>el radio stations or other
aources.
The communique, bro.adcast by
two private radio stations
Thursday, cijllmed that urban
Reagan
off to'
\
• • summit
WASHINGTON (AP) -
President Reagan. flying to a
restored 18th century village for
three days of meetings on today's
global economic problems, says
he expects no confrontations at
the seven -nation economic
summit conference.
But Reagan, who la chairman
of the meelingJ for the'first time,
could face di.lputes over the high
U.S. budget deficit, interest rates,
and suggestions of protectioiµst
trade practices.
Before leav:ing f or
Wi11iamsburg . Va ., this
afternoon, the president was
meeting with Prime Minister
Yasuhiro Nakasone of Japan.
Even before the summit began,
• flap aroee over an official (J.S.
news release that described
Japanese trade limitations a•
being svuctured in such a way
that "foreigners cannot eaally
pinpoint where and how the
restrictions are being applied."
The Reagan administration
agreed to remove tbe material.,
after receiving protest.a from
Japanese Amba .. ador Yoshio
Okawara. who was described as
"prelty-upeet."
The s ummit of the major
lJ1du.trlallzed democnd• -lhe
UriJted Stale91 ~a. &i~in.
France. Germany. Italy and
Japan -will be the third
Reagan has attended. and the
ninth such annual me.Ung.
"The theme song of the
s ummit" will be jobs, said
Secretary of State George P .
Shulu.
Treasury Secretary Donald T.
Re11ftn said the summit's
priorttles will be di.cusaion ol
"11u1tained n on -inflationary
growth o f income and
employment, interest rates.
monetary policy. budget deficits,
combating protectionism. Eaat-
'YiPt trade and economic is,,ues.
commando• of the Popular
Liberation Fore" (FPL). the
largest of five rebel bands
fighting the U .S .-backed
sovernment, kllled Navy Lt.
Cmdr. Albert A. Schaufelberger
Ill on Wedne.d~ eventna.
The message clalmed ,uerriUa
commandos "recovered" • pistol,
a submachine gun and a radio
transmitter that belonced to \he
slain American. It also aald
Schaufelberger, 33, Of San Diego,
was "executed" In reprlaal for
American interventJon.
His slater. San Diego Police
Officer Marpret Schaufelber1rer
Grieving
uld. t,n;W'9day. 1•1 c:&n't pr4t -
\0 undentancl all ~ ~
that .in made. My t.t IOUnle ii
my· brother. and1 he felt the
oJ)pot1un1ty to have a pottttve lnflu~nee in thhl~.!'•n\Jtphere,
perh..,_ llmtttnc me epread of
unfriendly 1ovel'IJfnentf ln the
lmmedlate vlclnhy •• was
lm rtant." ( ~e aald •he ~lked to her
brother lees than two 'Weeka qo
a nd said he was encouraaed
about his work. "He felt that u a
result of that, the people he wu
deaUns with most directly, their
attitudes, esprit and morale, wu
Japanese teachers and a mother watch in
horror as bodies of young tidal wave victims
are recovered near Oga. The wave killed
4 7 people and 55 more are missing.
Artifact dealer admits
forging H~tler ~iaries
HAMBURG. West Germany
<AP) -Nazi artifact dealer
Konrad Kujau has admitted
forging the Hitler dlarle., and
f i red Stern reporter Gerd
Heidemann 1-under arrest farina
fraµd t'harre1. the H-.mburg
prosecutor's offlC'e said today.
The newspaper Bild Zeitung
said Kujau had pract.lced for two
years to perfect the old German
script used In the dlanes. and
penned th e confess io n
"Hochachtungsvoll, !hr Adolf
Hitler. alias Konrad Kujau,"
which translates to "Youn truly,
Your Adolf Hitler. alias Konrad
Ku' u ."
ild also reporte d that
Heidemann had fabricated an
1K1COUnt that he received part of
the di in F.ut Germany after
throwln aadca of money Into a
pasalna . The sp kesman for the
prosecutor's fflce, Peter Beck,
declined to confirm or deny the
Bild reS>ort but said:
"Mr . Kujau yesterday
delivered a confession to at.ate
proeecuton in which he admitted
he not only knew that the books
were forgeries but admitted he
himself did the forging."
. ' ,,.,
' .. . . ' imPtovtnl alao. l .. ; '
"He aaJd ~ poU61 l&tua
w .. uncutaln, but he felt t
relaitv-eJy secur• whhin th• i.>
'cap Ital It t e 1 t •, '' M f•t ~u.felberpr ....,,., she w• ;
pre.,.r1.,,. tQ board '• fUaht to l
Atlanta to. join her famlly in ~
South Carolina.
"Perbai-political -...an.den '
la •omethtna tt)at, while he !
cpnaidered it, f!e wH not
primarily conoemea wt\h it. lie r
saw the danaer to himaelf at
bein8 in a military situation, not
a poDUcal one,'' she Nid.
Rather
testifies
at tJ.ial .
'• LOS ANGJ:Ll'B (AP) -CBS ~
Newa ancbormaD Dan Bather, ap-
peartna .. .w-wttnem at the "60
Minute." llander trial, aya be
believed he ba4 evidence that •
doct.oc now IWnC him Wll8 in-
volved In.a phony medal cllnic..
Bather'• arrival QD the witnell
stand drew over6ow crowds to
the tiny courtroom, and MCb time ·' he exited into a hallway, lichta .
fluhed and camera CftW9
stampeded down the hallway. •
Rather ate9dfMtly declined to ;
make comments oUtalde court, -, havtna l8Jd eulJer' he would Jet ....
his t.elU.moQy tpMk ,. it.elf. I J
With WSeotap. Wwtndne bis
te.timoay, Rather COid how be I
and two camera crews went to a 1
clinic awpected of aupplyin(c .,
bol\ll rnecffc:aJ reports for in· I
auranae fraud rineL
On the wall of the clinic be said
he aw a lllp hMrtnc the name of
Dr. Carl Galloway' the plaintiff in l
the cummt lawaut.
Galloway'• name, be said, waa ;
alao on a filing cabinet, and a
receptionist lntervleTted by i
Rather akl Galloway ... not in rtabt then, but worked at the c:l.lrde." • . ' )
"'JM , 1CX11D1m 'm loo ~.;
Wecm-lay and Friday," the,.._
~ w.. beerd -~ on a vtaeoi.Peld le&'N"'t t6aWn to I
juron.
''By the ti.mt we Jett. .. Batta.
..ulled. ·~ ...-'t sq dou&t &n my dUa ... ~.
Carl Oellow • dinlc md fl -] phony from one end to ibe oCber. •
Rather said it ... a.noway,
pW"pOl'1ed aipatwe OD a pbaQJ
medkal ~ that initially Cllll·
vinced bhn and prodwer Stephen
Glauber to lfO aheed with the
aecmmit on automobile m.uance
fraud.
'I never want to see my dad again'
A aeverely bumed 8-year-old had "figured it out" wben he It wu at that point. Bran.um hla ,_. wttb Mra. Rothenberg
boy bu been told his father let asked her about it s.turday. Mld. that the boy expl'!ll!d ~ SatUrday, and the JWJtt,.. dayt
the motel fire that nearly killed The officer, baed on a aubee-desire never to aee hia father wen spemt in a deep dep" 'nri.
the child two months ago, police quent talk with the mother, re-apln. ~punctutated with c:eytac and
said. · CibUnted the convenation u fol-The boy's father wu told of the C$:, But a hospital
"I never want to aee my dad Iowa: child'• nmarka Tbw.fay. vlated David on
apin... little David Rothenber.g "He's in jail, isn't her• David "rm ripped apart. I can't even l8kl, atvfn8 him w• quo1ed u aaytna Th\lrW!ay asked. talk rtebt now. rd ntber not a doll to punch to wnt hil U&er.
by Buena Park police Officer' Ria mother nodded yea. make any statement ~t now. "He-jult be.t the dayliabta out J
Terry Branum. "Why did he do that? Dad I'm really torn apart," of that doll, a , nlmed 1D set it
The boy's father, Charles started the fire at the hotel ... Rotbenbers l8Jd in a JaIDwu-all ouf'of hil ~ .. Branum
Rothenberg. 11 in jail. charged didn't be! Why dSd be do that?.. interview. .sd. . ,.
;1~~3m~;!-:,: ao .. ==~he~~ m~~-~o.~:ai= Heaklthebo)'11 s:IAtouw]
York waiter told police and re-iov. JOU-" BNnum quot.eel the him. •"pretty well ............ lt" and
pol'ten he wanted to k1ll both _motber ___ •_~_:__::...;.. __ __,._...,..,...,~_Brlln_,.,.._wn __ akl _ _;~......_boy __ we_p_t_atter ___ •-:1:-1m_•_d_nannal ___ ~--;:7:""-·~--hbmelf and tu. IGn becau. be ,..
W.. afrald that trouble.with New 1---------~~-~-!~--~----lml!lmll'!----~--., Yodt poUce would prevent him fnlm=vld. Al be b8a pJ.ded Inno-
cent, "-.reportedly uid he ws.ha te» plMd ,wlt)' to
avctd aaU81na David and bia
ex-wife an)' f1)0l'8 tra~ A pral-
ecutor b.e9 eald the boy mtpt
have to te9tlfy in the tdal. shed·
w.dtoNl't~27.
Branum llld David'• modwr,
~~:.~
the f1N blcMm .. thouPt be
..
,.
' ,,i...--
.. Actreu Fay Wray was back in the anJ18 of King
., Kong Thursday at a 50th anniTenary reunioa.
.. .. Kong and. his queen
:. go golden in Hollywood.
• LOS ANGELES (AP) -Actraa Fay Wray and Kfua Koog.
who awred tosether in the 1933 cl.-ic film named after the hup
ape. were reunited 'nlunday night on Hollywood Boulevard.
The event wu the 50th annfvenary re-premiere of the
adence fiction film at the place where it first appeared, Grauman'•
Chine9e theater. .
About 300 movie fans cheered Mila Wray and other celebrtUea
as they arrived for the showing, a benefit for the Motion Picture
and Televiaion Fund. .
Mias Wray, looking younger than her 75 years, pmed with
the huge band of the 14-foot ape, recreated from oriliMl
bluepinta by acenlc artist Jim Danfort.
When photographers asked her to give a terrified look. ahe
smiled and said, "No, we're friends now."
Aaked what ahe remembered about the ft.rat premiere, Mila
Wray replied, "Seeing Kong's big bead, of ooune."
''Looking at a picture for the first time, you're always a bit
critical of what you did and wish you could do it over. I certainly
bad no awarenem that •Kinc Kone' would be ao endwing. ''
..
a~e
·Hiding community property is, fra,µ.3
~upre1ne Cou.-t rules unanirnously
SAN FRANctsco (AP) -
Failure of • ~ to d.-
exiat.ence of a Ctllftmuntty ~
erty ...i ln. dtvoroe la fraud, the
California sur-n-Court rWed Tbunday.
The wwUmoua dedelan by
Chief -JmUot &.e Bird ordered
the Los~ C-ounty Superior
~ to N9I*' the tlnal divorce
decree lnYdlvlne Marilyn Mod-
nlclt and ZeU, ModnlCk ln re-
prda to their property eettlement
and 'PO'•I IUppdrt. The re-
mainder of the dlVol'ce judgment
WQI Upheld. .
l#L&u;t I
Kay Gabl~ with her &uband <lark Cable at a ...
1957 party •.
tember 1974 .tier 22 )'tlU"S of mama.,. 11\e next month Mra.
Madnick filed for divorce.
In • trial Modn!k tmdfled be
bad no benk ~ta other than
a d-=ldM eorount wtth f1. m.
finandal dedaradon rewaJed the
ex:i.tence of no other aocounts and
akl he bad a net monthly tncame
of $1,153.
The couple WU ~ a
divorce on Dec. 21, 1976 and the
court awarded Mn. Madnick
spoual IUpport and divided com-
munity ~. ln ~
with ~t of the pu'tiea.
Clark Gable's widow
Kay, 66, dies in Te~as
HOUSTON (AP) ~ -Kay
Gable, the fifth wife of ICtclr' •
Clarie Gable who became bia
widow ln 1960 and pve birth to
bla ooly 8IXl four months later,
died In a Houston bolpital where
lhe W• underaolnl teata for
heart diMMe. She w• 66.
"She'• bad a lolll history ol
heart problerna,'' '8id &tcene
Landau, a Los Anae1-attorney
who bad relJC...nted the Gable9
for more than 25 YNrL "She'a
had a couple of heart atta:ka In
the last 13 Y-eaJ'S and she WU
there (at the hospital) tryt.nc to
take teats and ~ out what
could be done ... "
The widow of the late matinee
idol died allout 5 p.m. Wedneeday
after a "lenathY lDnelS," a
apokeswoman at Houaton'a
Methodiat Hospital said 'lbun-
itay.
Mn. Gable, a Los Anaela-area
reai<tent, waa adD)ltted to
Methodiat about three ~eeka aao
,_...._ .
Bern Kathleen wou.m.. the
married Gable in 1955 WMn abe
_... 37 and he,.,.. M. lt ._..her
fourth marri-ce and GUle'•
fifth.
She bad two children fnm •
pnMoua marria&e to .... heir
Adolph Spreckela. and a aon by
Gable, born after the ectol"•
death.
Gable died of a beert attack
Nov. US. 1960. Hla widow never
remarried.
Gable probably wu best
known for bia perfonnanat ..
Rhett Butler In the 1939 movie,
•'Gone With 'lbe Wind," Hi wlJft L
an Academy Award• best actor'
for hia role in the 1934 movie, ''It
Happened One Ntcht."
Mn. Gable ia survived by ..i
John Gable, 22, and daulht.er
Joans~ 34-~ 9Dll,
Antholiy Spnckela. died of a
been au.ck in January 1977 at
.,e 29, Landau said.
Scouts give
top honor
to 5 adults
Tbe Boy Soouta of America's
hllbest honor w• awarded to flv. adult volunteers at an awards dinner held at the Holiday Inn in
Oona Mea Tbunday night.
RecopiM for exceptioha1 llel'-
Ylice t.e Y9'1th were: Georp C1' Newport Beech; Charle9 Irvine; Kate Brewer,
lntne; Bob Walker, Newport
8-:h and Chara Wtllon, Santa
Ana.
Ai.o honored were: Joe Hollis, a.ta Me.a, who wu named
M8ooutmaster' of the Year"; Pete
ltUnat , Coata Meaa,
"Webeloa Leeder of the Year";
Simdy KJcbt, C-. Meu. "Den t...der-of the Year"; Bill Koste,
~. "C.on:mmlioner ol the
Y_.,'; and Lamar Hill, Irvine,
~of the Year.''
, • -----...-.
' ., i:xtra efforts recognized • 'i
The scholarship and community service of these nine students were saluted by the Huntington
Beach Chamber of Commeree at a lunche0n Wednesday. Jlae $100 service awards were
The diatrict'a first Good Scout presented to (left to. ri-ht) Leslie A.tan Hall.. Cindy Ann Charleton, Kelly Elaine Waldhauser
!!~~ liven to Don 4lnd Julie Jean Minear. Receiving 1500 echoJanhipe were Suzanne Miller, Kimberly A. Tom~ ~~C:~.s.ch "----Le--ta---L~y·n~d=e='==S=t=ep=lla=·=n=i=e==J=eo==ng====an=a==aS=u= .. =·=n=Sc==h=w=lll'Z.============~====~================~-=::!'.:==-==-==:::..:..::==:.:_~--L . ,
~
l>esper.ate diets
imperil health -
' • Linen·:_ a sensational summer
fabric-is now on sale in the
very fashionable form of
trousers and jackets.
• Designed by Elliott Lauren
with all the right def.ails.
• · Ivory, black, natural or
red for sizes 4 to 14.
• In Sportswear
Collections.
.. ..
•
•
j I
I
I : I
I
•
liailiiig out ~olt7
Raying off later ,
'Y
Teetotaler buys rare
~intage for $45,000
He does collect wine and keepm
a private cellar worth ~.000.
Alked what be would do with hla
latest ~. Mayhue replied,
''P~ it." \I
The day-long aff.air at the
plush Beverly WUthire 'WM
preceded by a Wednmday af1er-
noon wtne-tuttna where J,130
fUelta um-= the offerinp. They llded;
-A 1792 Bual Madeira, a
remnant of.~ vintqe NaPQleon
Bonaparte tOolis for comfcn when EncJand ~hiln to Si, Bei.na.
-An ~18 Broob Ro)'91 Qir ..
onaUon Port"bkh wu Imported
In 1888 to celebrate the openinc of
the BrooldYl' ,Bridie.
-A 1914 Hunorim _..
Btkaver whlth hac1 lain un·
dlaturbed in llill ()b1o indmtrial-Llt'• wine cellar txr 50 y.n.
..
' Face of the 80s ,
WASHlHGTON (AP) -Tbe
....... Jobmao MX therapy
te.m MW denied claJrm t~at
they withheld reaear,cb ~ormauon that could ch.allenae
the l\.&CCea1 rates of their
~=· 8 •na at an international ~...-~Dn. WWlunH. •V..-. .nd Viijlnla E. JohNon
cW9Ddld thetr' won and ~
ft&u.tim md laid criticl were
IDllnlld1nc " dJlt.onina Che facts. ''We have never denied our
failure. and It.and behind our
work." Maaten said in an inter-
view foUowinc a newt conference
heJd durina the 81.xtb World
~of Sexology Thundu.
The ...-rchen. whoee Ma.-
ten & Jchn8on Imthute in St.
Loult bu treated thouaanda of
people with mexual problema,
acknowledpd that IOlDe of the
methods and ~ criteria of
their eerUer wOC'k may have been
imperfect.
When they bepn their work
mare than 25 years ago, they had
to estabUah their own rwearch
gu1delinel and methods becau.e
aex therapy w,,. in Ua infancy,
Mut.en laid.
"We ~·t think our work la
flawed when evaluated in the
context of the i1me ln 19Ml," he
uld. John1on aaid some critlclsro
of their work and of tex therapy
in aenenl la ~ and ''not
helpful to CGnlWMl'L
"I doubt if lt (critidlm) will
haw much effect and. lf tt cloea.
lt will be fleedna." lbe Mid.
"People wiio need help will still
-
' ~
l>f. S.rnle ZUber1eld, a ~-Cdt4~~aDd ........ ....., _;tia
and Jobmae ol ~Che
criteria .., ... to .. ...
~Gl~a.-• IUCh pr«'•• .. bnpotmce mid
the 1ldC of ell .... zuw.-s. luthol" of ....
book that~ cbtdWtyol cou...u.n, ad. .. therapy .,
rw>lve maD.1 prob1enw, told re-
porten at the meedna that uni-
t.be y~ belN \.-1 " known. no ane an De IUN al.
mwurement11 of ruooee
He llid M..-. and Jobnloo
had refUllld to publilb the crtMria
by wlUcb they j\adaed thlU then-
oeutic luoce9e reported In 7'Human 8ftual 1Mdequ8ey'' and
8CICU9ed Malierl of maldnc ltate-
menlll that Indicated hia rea4ta
were questiionable.
Mattera denied~·· ... count of h.18 etatemmta .a a·
meettnc 1Mt ~~ ZUberpld had
what be° WU layina and quoCin8
him out of CGl\Cmrt.
However, ~ admowl·
edled that be and bla ~ baa f.aDed to pUbliah their~
crtteita in· 19'0 became of publi-
cation deadllnea. But be laid he
hu publicly stated th.e criteria
at 100 meeU.O,. aiDCl8 ~
Saddleback prof
heads state unit
-A une Olat.u Olivier 1n
"tonneaux" -equal to oe· cuee.
A 180-paae auction cataque
alone cost ~ in .ctvance ($40 at
the door) and doubled u an
admlwlon ticket to the wine
~
Carrie Miller.\jan 18-ye~d from Fresno, wu
choeen the .S, rep~ti~e ha an inter•
national model 1eu-eb for the pl ~ho look.a like
the face of the deeade. :·
waot lt"
The reeearchers, authors of
Sexual " and "Buman IUCh po~ u "Hwnan
SUual • • .. tpedfblly
Maureen Smith, a11i1tant
profe.or of office ad.rninLltration
for Saddleback College in
Milsion Viejo, halt been elected
pretldent of the California
Butlneel F.ducadon A.oc:iation.
Smith will ooordlnate the state
organization, which 11 the
profe11ional group tor all
buainell educators in California.
, ·11orney General
arns a bundle
outside income
WASHINGTON (AP) -William French
th. the millionaire attorney gene{al wh~
na1 finances created a political stonn a ye&r ago,
more than $250.000 in outside income cluring
2. according to his financial di9closure statement.
Smith'• statement wu releued Thursday by
Office of Government Ethic.a. which certified
lier in the week ~t it ~ no conflicts of
On the torm. Smith reported outside income of
tween $251,571.99 and $410,464.99 in Interest.
tributions from partnershlp&. mostly in land
elopment, rent on bit home in San Marino, Calif.
d a f77.496 retirement payment from hit former
firm, Git.on. Dunn & Crutcher of Loa AnaeJ.es.
The exact amount of his outside earnings and
ts cannot be detennlned from the form, which
uire reportiJli within broad dollar ranges.
Smith listed uee1a of at least tUOl,000 and
'bly more than $2,650,000, prlmarlly in cuh, his
use and land development par1nerships prtmarily.
uropean scientific ..
atellite launched ,.
VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE e-1 )-A European Space Agency ldentific satellite ~
suoce1Sfully launched Thunday during a
-RCOlld "window" of time neceaary for tt. to
hieve the proper orbit, offldab raid. •
The $170 million European X-Ray Ot.ervatory
tellite, or Exout, wu launched. on tx>ard a
an-tqe National AeroOMutic.9 and Space .Admln·
lion Delta rocket. It ca.rr1ed lmtrWDenta to ttudy
ray ernisiont from known .o~ in :Earth and
er galaJties.
Air Fonie Master Si\. Jay Brewster raid the
llite wu launched at 8:18 a.m. Had It not been
hed durlni the 60-second Ume frame, a
month delay would have been neceaary,
fidals laid.
Vandenber1 ii located on the rout 150 miles
rthwest of Lot Anaelel. ' ,
Hush Harril, a apokam.an for N.~SA, 18.ld
king nations COJ'flrmed that the Ex018t wu
rklng ra>erlY and wu l.n the pr<>J>eJ' orbl~.
The l!'.uropeal\ 81*9 Agency ~ ~ only
monthl eao on a $26 million arranaetneit for
Exout to be launched at Vandenbfrg h11~ of ·
lta own Ariane launcher after an ArUne
1yatem failure delayed a Nheduled
lui fall.
Brewster Mid the ~t ~...., l,125 pounds. •
The uteWce'.1 eocenUic wU1 brlna It ., •
u 217 m11a io Earth at one point ancl'u far I
y u 124,360 mUel C1Ver the N~ ,._, · J'.aeh
t will Ww four days to CCII)..-. · 1 •1 i
Plana call tor two ean of
NURSERY SPECIALS
A ORFAT DEAL ON TWO TOP PERFORMERS
REG. SALE
3 lbs. Rogers Flower Food 1891 '611
Feed "t<M 1U11S Ml'f 2 weelcs tDf IPCWIW Aoger·1 Gantn
IOClt
2 cu. ft. Roger's Potting
sol mix 1891 '6•
An llCallnt mix tDf .. cootllttn .., srNll Olfdlrll
* 1 GAL COLOR SALE *
1 gal. Gerantums, ~.
Impatiens & 8egon'8 ,211 VliueS to 1371
A Oflll Ylfllty of~ collf1 tef-.,..., pdenl.
4 • Petunias s.11• 79C
large llowlflnO mi.ts .,, b Wlml M gll'det\.
4• Mat'lgolds ' 1111 79C
Orln\jt. ytl!Ow, Nd ~gold vartetlel for llllflY ~
6" House Pfatltl 11()11 'I"
Clloote from PUNe, ~Is. G'8Pe tyy, Dlfftnblclil..ft ' . ,,.... .
6" Mums , 1681 °""'°" OI ~1111 In I v• of eolorl.
2 gal. Roses Patent l99t
In full bloom Non-Patent '7"
addl J I Id crrl ,pf. the latter
book, pubUahed in 1970.
COME TO ROGER'S FOR
. QUAtlTY, SELECTION~ND
BIG SAVINGS ON GREAT
PRODUCTS TO MAKE YOUR
• SUMMER GARDENING FUN
AND SPECTACULAR!
OPEN MEMORIAL DAY 9-6 * FUCHSIAS *
OVER 1000 FUCHSIA CRATES
IN STOCK. REG. •24.95
s2215
PATIO FURNITURE
Brown Jordan Tamlami
42' Ped Table/4 Chairs
48• Leo Tabte/4 Chairs
KAILUA
•2• Ped Table/4 Chairs
Adjustable Chaise w/arms
18" Side Table
Mluna Kea
42• Tabfe/4 Dining Chairs
Adjustable Chafse
1etescope. Beach Chair
REG. SALE
186500 •583"
186100 •570"
18()500 '642"
131400 •255"
•14goo •109" .• .
188500 •589•
139500 •259•
14600 •36"
NEW FROM ROGiRS
Roger's renowned color ~askets are available
In 2 new sizes;
10· s2310 12· s271a
ROGER'S GALLERY
Discover an exciting and ever-changing selec·
tlon of accessories and gtfts to add specfal fffe
to your summer dining and entertaining. The
Gallery is now featuring: English Battersea
Enamel Boxes, Frosted PaStel Glass Vases,
Place Mats. Napkils and Colonial Candles in
Decorator Colors.
ROGER'S FLORIST
I 1
II
I
Gene Dalton at the end of his lon.g road.
Comeback grad
University degree overcomes years of despair
BOSTON (AP) -1''ive years
ago, Gene Dalton was ready to
end it all. He had lost his Job. He
was ln jail aocuaed of killing hia
own son in a fire. He climbed on
a chair in his cell and wrapped a
sheet around his neck.
"The guard stopped me before
I could finish the job," said
Dalton, 31. "Thank God."
His close shave with death
seemed far away on May 15
when Dalton, given a second
chance by Boston University
Pres ident John Silber and
author-attorney George V.
Higgins. received his bachelor of
science de~ ln sociol~.
Shortly after his auictde
attempt. Dalton's brothe r James,
a BU security guard, mentioned
his case while chauffeuring
Silber
Silber persuaded Higgina to
represent Dalton, who was
charged with setting a house fire
and causing the death of his son,
Eddy.
Higgins, whose novels have
been made into tough-guy
movies, took the case from a
public defender, and a month
later won acquittal on the araon-
m u rd er charges in Suffolk
Sugerior Court.
''There never was a murder,''
Higgins said. "lt was a horrible
accident." The jury found Dalton
innocent of arson, but convicted
him of assaulting his common-
la w wife, Higgins said. Dalton
served several week.a in jail.
Higgins explained that Dalton
had gone out with the woman on
Christmas Eve, come home and
the two quarreled. Dalton hit the
woman, then left the house for
his job as a cab driver. While he
was asleep in his cab at a taxi
stand, the house burned and
their eon died.
"I knew Eddy was hurt but I
didn't know how bad until I
turned on the radio in my cell
and that's how I found out he
was dead." Datt.on said. He was
driving a cab after losing his job
as a security guard with the Penn
Central Co.
Higgins said Dalton "never lied
to me. The client trusted me with
his life."
But Higgins said the real hero
is Silber.
"I have never seen anybody
evince such strong beliefs as
applied to a total stranger as
John Silber," the attorney said.
"John Silber put his money on it.
quite a lot of 'it.
"He felt so strongly about the
matter of justice In the case that
he said h~ would pay for the
kld'a defense out of his own
pockeL.And he did."
Silber could not be cont.acted,
but his aaalstant, Sam
McCracken, confirmed details of
the case. He said the university
president simply preferred to ••tet
the facts speak for thenwelves."
Higgins did not aay how much
the defenae cost Silber, but said,
"I will say that I gave him a bill
that ran well into five f!Rures."
.Silber'• g8'eroaity d1dn'1 atop
there.
"When I was releued. Silber
.ent for me," Dalton aaid. '4He
thought I waa qualified to ao to
college. That knocked me on my
backside because nobody in my
f.amily had go~ to college. My
parents did not have the money."
BU gave Dalton a four-year
acholanhip. He worked aa a
volunteer in the Perkins School
for the Blmd and earned pocket
money by helping organii:e a
campus e9COrt service.
Dalton wants to get work
helping prison inmates.
"I'm interested in golng back
to prison ... on my own terma,"
he said. "Being a pollce officer
and being in jail, I know both
sides.
"rd like to help pt people out
of the prteon system and educate
them or else they'll lead the kind
of lives they led before they got
in.''
THE WESTERN INmniTE OF UVING •
UNmD WESTER" MEDICAL CENTERS
Present the last In a series of four free public
seminars for thoughtful Orcnge Courty ocUts on
"HOW TO COPE WITH STRESS"
"Successful Stress Managernenr
Program Chairman
DI. JOHN L SCHWARTZ. M.D.
Psyohk:Jt11sf.fn-Chlet
Unfted Western Medlcal Centers
Dr. John L. Schwartz, M.O., post pre!t-
dent, Western Medlcol Center/Santa
Atta mecftcol staff, has been In prM:Jte
practtoe In Oraage County Mo91974.
He Is 0Olpk)mateof1he American
Boord of ~CWld Nellok>gy
and Is on ttl8 clnk:at faculty of ffle ,
unMntyof Callfomk>WvtM\
THURSDAY. ~NI 2. 7 P.M.
Irvine Hg, School
4321 Wolrut Ave., lrvtne
I
f'ew de\aUi were
available but U.S .
But ~\Mid it WM -q~l "lei' temil of •
con~ ~
He . refuHd t~l!
elabarat.1 8
Mar1nt ~ •• the i"'8 ~ ate Mid four &reek tax claims mo s Soviet women weartnc ~o~~t' J~:! of the Onass is for tun ::
r -... ..t.--1 , .. D) Pri Mt-'-ter worken away from the •• Mar~Tba.-l~hed -W~y •;; a aite Monday. ATHENS, Greece (AP) -A Greek tax ciouk·
fJ.ah-and-chlp ahop In th1a noc1.h En&J.and town. Later, tome worken uaemed Chriatina Onuaa $50 million in inheritance
ttmarked on the reaaonable price, and left without were allowed in to-pkk taxes and U1* on the '69 million est.ate it Mid ta' paym,. up toola. But Apwrican father, ahipplnc mapate Arisc.otle an-u, left l& I I
1t wu another ct.yon the campaign trail for supervbonsaid they did Greece, judldal officiala aaid Tbunday.
Mn. Jl'hat.cher, ~7, and her doggedly unilina not expect work to re-Legal eoiurc. aid Mill OnMaia was expected to i .
1
ttuabahd, Denia, 68. Parliamentary elecSiona are sume unt.Q June 20, appeal the dedaion. ~ t
June 9. when X-ray cbecka for The oowi ~jected her claim that ahe wia Surrounded by dozena of came~n. the flaws ln the support exempt from the tax 'becauae the p:operty belonged
couple t~ into fiah, french fries, tea and allces columns on the chancery to companies repte(ed ln Panama that were ~
of bread and butter costing a modest $7.42 for both. buildln§ ls complete. owned by her father. 22"
540 ·
CUii REBAR
Model WWA83508,
• 3 Wash/SpJn Speed&
• 4 Wash/Rinse Temp.
Combinations
• 6 Cycles Including
Permanent Press
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11fl4
RCA 11" ....
Coler TY
• 100-19 Solld State
• Auto F1ne Tuning
• Automatic Dry Control
• End of Cycle Signal
• Up Front Lint Alter
• \.qa ·~ Cll. ft. capeaty
•6011111.n.. • 10 ,._I.Mil
• ~"fllltOf 1..,
~,
~ ----
·I
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I
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I
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.t.8 Orange eo .. t DAILY PILOT/Friday, May 27, 1983
ilingual e ducation
enefits que stione d
There has been no end of controversy about the usefulness
bilingual education, and there wm undoubtedly be more
ut the report of a task force of educators organized by the
wentie th Century Fund which found that immersion in
glish is far preferable. ''We are not criticizing bilingual
ucation per se," said Diane Ravitch. a member of the panel
d faculty member at Teachers College in New York. "There is
1 kinds of contradictory evidence about whether or not it
orks. But there is plenty of evidence that 1mmers1on does
ork. We believe it is the best way "
Whether or not it is the best wa.y, there's no question that
ifornia's way is not. The state's schools remain l~~ into a
gislative policy that makes it far too easy for. students to be
aced in bilingual programs -even those students less
oficient in their "native" language than in English -and far
difficult for them to get out. In part, the policy is the result
well·intentioned efforts to give students who don't speak
glish well all possible help to progress through school: in part,
e result of the'political clout of strong special·interest groups
bilingual educators and consultants, and, in part. fl
nsequence of the belief among some educators that
eservation of a student's native language and culture is a
ponsibility of the public schools. ·
Against all that there is one obvious fact. As the Twentieth
ntury Fund task force put it, "Schoolchildre n to whom
glish is an alien language are being cheated if it remains
~amiliar to them. They will never swim in the mainstream Fess they are fluent in English." At the very least, that means
ersion for a great many more than are now being immersed.
In the last three or four years, a number of efforts have
E:
en made in the California Legislature to adopt a more
asonable pblicy which, while it preserves bilingual education
r students incapable, pf operating in English, encour~es ~hools to move them into regular English classes. as rapidly as
Fb1e.
A limited reform bill passed the Legislature in 1980, but
use Gov. Brown refused to sign any reform measure which,
effect, was not approved by bilingual educators, a group with
obvious self-interest in a large and growing bilingual
--..W7ram, the bill was hardly adequate. Jerry Brown, however,
gone now, and it's time to change the law.
-From the Sacramento Bee
I • 'Op1n1on~ expre\'>l:'O on the ~p.tc.e ab011e are lho~ of tile Daily P•lol Orner view~•• pres~ on ln1s Pd9e .tre lhO'>e of lheor author~ 4n(I .trlo\h Reaoer comm11nl •~ 1n111t
Addrt''>'> Tht' Daily PtlOI, P.O Bo.t 1)6(), (O'>hl M"~d (A 97670 Pllonf:o 111~1
MJ·021
r: MAILBOX
Thanks I or the vote
the Editor:
The Calilornia State Senate f!nanoe Committee defeated SB
1'18, a bill which would have
Cfanted binding arbitration to
lice officers and firefighters.
bill would have had
trows fiacal impaci. for all
, in that it would have
ed the power over thetie 1'lcal decisions from the hands of
~ otfidala and given It to an =d arbitrator who la not
ble to the taxpayers.
has shown that awarda
#ranted through binding
iitJltration are often higher than ~en handled through the
labOr negotiation process.
California Taxpayers
tion estimated the 009\ to
taxpayen would hMve been
xa. of $60 mill1on the first
~ and doubling the next.
.-'nloee senators voting api.nst
t a bill deserve our thanka:
Senators Beverly, Boatwright,
Foran, Maddy. Marks, Petris,
Presley, Seymour and Stiern,
voted no. Senators Campbell and
Robbins did not vote, whlch has
the same effect as voting no.
Thoee senators who supported
the cities are to be commended
for their OQW'a8lf on th1a laaue.
Senators Alqulat, Dills,
Garamendi and Bill Greene
voted in favor of binding
arbltneion and we are IOrTY their
sympathies were not on the aide
of d\ift a,nd thelr taxpayers. We
can only hope that i1 W. ilSUe
aurfacft a&•in next year, they
will remember that the public
does not want a labor negotiation
system which removed control
from ita elected repn9elltatives.
OON MACALLISTER
Mayor
CHARLES W. THOMPSON
City Adminlatrator
Huntlnaton Beach
I TWJNI< WE CAN ~1MATCXJT.
•
j
~ .. I
...
r,.
Business-v~. defense spending
WASHINGTON -A eecret
debate 1a rq:ing at the highest
levels o1 the 'Rea1an
administration. It points up the
cluaic contradictions 1n recenl
Republican polldea: the desire to
p~omote American bualneJJ
interesta vs. the demand.I of a
Roc k-of-Gibraltar defense
posture.
The debate conoema the sale of
high-technology equipment to
maialand China. Commerce
Secretary Malcolm Baldrtae and
the president's science .avteer,
George Keyworth, favor an
expansion of this trade. Oefeme
Secretary Caspar Welnberaer
and his Under Secretary for
policy, Dr. Fred Dde, don't want
to sell the Chinese any
'4'ChnolOfD' of potential military
value.
The Chinese, o( course, are
seeking u much high-tech stuff
as they can buy, and complain
that the administration lao't
cooperating. Sources kU cne the
Chinese ftave already been
allowed to buy aclentific
technoloey that has enhanced theµ-military capabllity.
UNDER SECRET presidential
directives, the Chine••
commWU.ta cannot buy nuclear
weapona and delivery •7'teml.
-· ............ · ........___G.
•U11•1 ~
• · electl'Onic f.lld anU-aubmar1ne
warfare technology or gt:>Oda that
will help them in intelligence
gathering.
Baldrige and Keyworth, both
of Ythom have just returned from
China, seem determined to let
the Peklng regime buy u much
u it wanta 1n to the. vital areas.
Keyworth just returned from
China. Baldrige will depart for
Peking aoon.
Secret White House documents
£0Yem the preaent Chi.na trade
policy. They are considered
hi1hty 1enattive becau.e of the
peculiar nature of U.S.-Chine.e
relation&, but my &l80Ciate Dale
Van Atta haa obtained the most
important onesi
The "Praidendal Dlrtlotive on
Export Contr'Ol Policy to China,"
issued on June 4,· 1081, focu.ed
on 8CK2lled dual-uae .xp:>rta -
items that are oatenai bly
intended for peaceful purpoeea
but whJch can abo be u9ed by the
military. The directive was
intended to allow the sale of
technology to China "at
significantly hleher technical
levels than previously, albeit
aomewhat below thoee approved
for other friendly non-allied
nations."
THE DIRECl'IVE laid out the
formula to eovern 1uch sales: two
times the level of exporta to the
Soviet Union before lta invasion
of Af&}wWstan. when high-tech
exporta were banned.
But the "two-times" formula
wu regarded by the business
community as not only lnexllc-'~
but too restrictive for the kinda
of high-tech goods their Chineee
customer was clamoring for.
They found a sympathetic
listener in Baldrige.
The result was a secret
•presidential memorandum of
May 6, 1982, signed for the
president of his national security
adviser, William Clark, titled,
"Ex~rt Policy for the People's
Republic of China.''
·~e President expects prompt
and full implementaUon of hta
more liberal export-control
policy, since we do not want to
send mixed ~ to the Chinese
regarding our intent," Clark
wrote. And he conceded that the
two-times rule had been difficult
to apply.
So Clark laid down four rules
to clarify the new· policy:
-High-tech exports abouJd be
"at technical levels aipifQntly
above thoee for the Soviet Union
and Eutem Europe ... (which
would) imply the presumption of
acceptable national security
risk.'
-The two-times formula
should be interpreted to mean
approval for any sale "unlea
circumatanoea apply which entail
major riaka to national security.
i.e. exporta whkb would make a
di re ct and demonstrable
contribution to Chinese
capabilltiea" in the forbidden
mill tary areas.
-If the Pentagon or CIA
recommend denial of an export
license, "lower risk substitutes
will be auggeated, where
feasible"
-The licensing pr'OCl!9I must
be speeded up. Baldriae wasn't aatlafied. He
wartted to be able to OK ea1e of
~ th1np within the forbkSden
areas -and to eet a formula
higher than the twe>-timel rule.
He suggested aa1's of anythlna in
any amount "except where the
export pc-. a major rlak to U.S.
national .ecwity. ''
The Penta1on ls obvioualr,
nervous about the "major risk'
yardstick, and Baldrige hasn't
won out -yet.
T:he high price of de.f ense
ThJn6 I Learned In Rou~ to LookJ.na Up Other ThJ.np: -T'hat. the 10tal coe\ of the
American revolutton to our
government equaled the cost of a
alngle fiahter plane today -
$135 million. -That 100 years a90, 90
percent of the wodd'a all came
from Penn1yJvanla (and oil
aeepa1• waa once sold aa a
"health-enhanclna'' drtJ\k). -Tbat~tDtbe~
Service, 1912 w.. a rciord yeeir
for American counterfeiters. who
produced more than $82 mllliol) in fake bWa. • 40 percent ma:..-
aver the previous year.
-TMt the l.Jquor tndu.try ii
permitted to use hundrech of
addltl'Vea, foam enhancers,
atabllhert, anU-<>xideota. chill·
Mwdeftn oo the a~ ete
about .even yeara llx montu
Youncet' than their vtctiml.
.
~· nun---.-•• -.--,y}
proofln.1 agenta, prnervatlves,
colorlns asents or artificial
flavore -none of which la
required to be disclmed to the
~public.
-That the phrue ''.-1 my
thunder" w•l1teral when it wp
flrat UMd by John Dennta. an
18th~n,W')' playwrtah~ who
Invented a means o1 Produc:inQ
the 80Uftd of thunder bacbtage,
and aUendftd a 1howln1 of
"Macbeth., bich u.ed the same
effects; be stood ~ ln hJa .eat
U\d shouted, "See how those
fUCaJil ltea1 my thwxler'!"
-That although ll'ainlng of
e_oll_ce _in firearm• be1an ln
~ about a decade qo, only
about 10 percent of British
pollcemen are authorhlJd to carry
guns.
-That Canada had 113
bankrupt.des per day Lut yMr.
the hiaheet figure aln~e the
government b e1an1 keeptn1
tecorda In the 1920.. (More than
41,000 cornpuliet and lndividuall
went tMlnluupt durinl the yeer.)
-That for the tint.lime 1n
U.S. legal history, a textbook wu
held liable for penonal clamaps.
when twc,> _ )'~ women were
awarded ~.ooo for bums and
scars reeultlna from an
inadequate w&fDina printed 1n a
coUeae ch~ textbook.
-That althouah he iiuade ·
of them: Joeeph, Francia, Albert,
Madbon and Georp. On Nov. 13,
1942, \heir light cruiser USS
June•u, wu sunk by Japaneee
1 u b m a r l n e I • 2 6 n.e a r Guadal~. The U.S. N,\t)' had
&lven \hem special permlllt,on to
aerve on tbe aame ablp. Mitt
.that, lt didn't s•v• 1uch '* ''w.tora anymore.
It'• Aid.,....,.. mot\ lncUned
to attna peopi. on exceedlnsJ.y
wtndy Clayil.
recordlnp nearly up to bil dMtb
last year, Glenn Gould, the
concert pl.anJat. did not play 1n
public foe ihe !tit 18 yeen of bla
life, and never attended a ccmcert
for the 1Mt l& yean he was alive.
-That 200 years ..,_ whm
our nation waa founded. nearly
50 percent of our dtbem were 1G
yeart or younaw (only half aa
many are in the aee bracket
today).
-That ln the~~
between 1950 and 1880, wblle
the overall death rate for
children aced 1 to 4 fell by o.a
percent, the death rate for motor
vehk:le accldenta In that bl.cbt
remalnml nwcb tbe .....
-That A1Mka .. the c:mly state
left 1n the umcn • ._. i.he ellllle
ianotan~apedll
A worker walks through Glen Helen Regional
Park, preparins for this weekend's three-day US Festival.
Cougar te.ls why he quit fest
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Mu-
Dcian John c.oupr, who dropped
out of thla weekend's
rock-and-rOll US Feltiwl, did 10
became of • dispute aver video rlehta. not becau8l' be wanted a hlaher alary, b.bl pubUdst said
'lbunday.
"He never aaked for more
money," p •bliciat Jody Miller
aid In • telephone interview
from New York. "He ~'t dam& It for the money. John ...
~y into doinc it for the fun of it. the whole festival kind of
th.inc-"
OWdala of UNUSON, the com-
pany apon80l'ilia the four-day
festival, -1d Tu.day that c.ouoz.
w.. dropped from the entertain-
ment lineup af1er be Mked for a h1aher lalary and changed hit
mind about glftla the festlvai
video !Utlw t.o m. performance.
But Mmer said Coupr never
agreed t.o provide video rlchw and
never eoug)lt a higher alar)r.
She said that when Q)ugar
first algned up, '"there wM no talk
of video. Four ....... the
IUbjtct of video came up and John
alone with hit ~t w.
very clear in •ytn,( they could
. honfanny /
tdit ~ Antry p ••
"'"" rNfl, ~ 21.as .: ~IS
+,z,,
-'·'-'
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I UllD ·coNIOLI
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ORGANS
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USED .
CONSOLE
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Otange Cout DAILY PILOT/Fnday. May 27, 1983
Growing RBBpers
mild to hot Tlavor
If you're lookinl for• veptable with flavon
ranstna fftM'n mild and sweet to m.l11na hot and
punpnt, consider peppers.
Of the two t;i.uic kinda. the sweet bell types are
dellcloua ho1lowed out and atuffed with beef,
chicken, lamb or ah.rtmp meat. or eerved 1n rinp
and at.ripe. Hot peppetl lend anap to Me>dcan aalaU.
Indian currlea, African stews, Spantah and
Portugue98 dt.ba.
The vegetables are a little touchy to grow, but
worth the effort. They al80 grow well In containers.
Vincent Rubatsky, ve1etable speciall•t• UC
Cooperative Extension, O..vis offers lnfonnaUon op
growing them.
Both bell and hot peppers requlre the same
care and climate. They need warm days and slightly
cooler nights, and protection from atrong winds. It'•
easiest to buy tranaplants and aet them OU\ when
the weather has established a definitely warm
pattern.
From tree to firewood
Winter storms may have felled a tree on yol.O'
property or possibly you have a tree that ought to
come down. So you're thinking in terms of
firewood. ,
Whether you cut the wood youraelf or hire
others to do it, William Dolt, wood producta
specialist. UC Cooperative Extension, Berkeley,
offers information on getting that tree ready to u.e
egonias blooHJ
UIDHJer to fall
as ,firewood:
After cutting the wood, dry it for at least 6 to 8
months before burning. You can reduce the drying OXNARD (AP) -Hattie Lee Keller, a Another eight opium poppy plants were dua
time by sJjlitting the wood, especially pieces larger 78-year-old garden club founder, thought the up from the backyard of a neighbor, 86-year.old
than 8 inches in diameter. When the wood is green, bright red bloaoms In her yard were "just beautiful Elizabeth Gesten, added Lewis.
it's ea&est to split. Split before stacking the wood. flowers" until police dUf up the 388 opium poppies. Keller *8ld she didn't know how the planta got
Stack the wood properly for aatiafactory "lam a good Chriatia,n pereon and I had no idea into her yard, but said ther, started appearing a few
Just 'a beautilui flower'
Planting begonias is like putting money in the
k -you will have regular dividends in the form
flowers from summer to late fall.
dryL-.a: stack k>oeely 90 that as much as poaible of what the plants were," the retired teacher said. years ago after a group of 'hippie type" men rented
the surface area la expc>M!d to the aJr for rapid ". . . I was shocked to learn the plants were illegal. a home next door.
dryin,t. Keep it off motit around. I had beeo caring for the plant.a since they atarted The men "had staahed eome marijuana pots ln
Protect split dry woocf from harsh weather and bl0880ming many years ago." my flower garden, and when I found them I The perennials are attractive in both foliage
bloom. Although flowers are not huge, there stoNt it outdoors at leut 25 feet from your bowie. Oxnard police Offk.'er Harold Lewis said he returned them and told them never to aet foot ap1n
Odn't store the wood ln your houae or belement. spotted the flowers while driving by the home of on my property," ahe u.ld. enough to compete with annuals.
Begonias come in three sizes. The dwarf grows
' 4 t.o 6 inches in height and I.I excellent as an
· ti> a flower bed. You can even do a double
Most trees harbor wood boring lmects ln dead Keller, who ia founder and put president of the It was then the bright red flowers started
branches or e1-where. Inaide •1ora&e giv~the Anacapa Fuchsia Society. Lewis uid the plant. blomoming.
ln9ecta an open tnyitatlon to attack the wood in your looked like opium poppies, a suspicion be confirmed "I thought the planta were just a beautiful
g~g by planting the second row with blue house. on cloeer examination. flower," Keller aaid. "I had no ldea they were
If you don't have a woodahed, you can place All 388 of the one to five-foot rlants growing illegal I am innocent and 1 am ldck about iL"
Medium-sUed begonias grow 8 to 10 inches and
well planted in containers, massed in flower beds
d as edging. The tallest variety, reaching 12 to 18
es, can be used as background.
~ plywood, aheets of metal roofing or pJaatic on the sides and front of K ellei: • home were Lew'-said opium poppy 9eeda are a:attered
over stacked wood for protection. Keep the area uprooted and taken to the Oxnard Police over a wide area by the wind and he ia confident
clear of weed.a and debris to diacourage rodents and Department for destruction, Lewis said, adding that Keller had no knowJedae of the type of plants
other pests from taking up resaa·~d~ence~~in~th~e~w~ood~.:_~no~charg~!es~. ~w~ould~~be~f~il~ed~in~th~e~lnd~~de~a~t;.. ""."":"::'":=~~~· ~~ln~her~~ard~·::;;:;;;;;;::;;;=-:•c.,;;•
egetable fruit or flower
.... '1 IN
A vegetable may be a fruit or even
flower.
VegeJ,able is the term applied to tant foocb other than grains and
hat we commonly call fruits, says
ichigan State University
horticulturist Jesse Saylor, who adds:
"A lot of completely unrelated
plants are lumped into that broad
ca1e80fl-The pan.a of the plant we
eat vary from plant to plant. And
some of those pJa-nt parts are
technically fruits."
eat Brussels sprouts you are eating the
vegetative buds. Plants grown for
their underground portions fit well
into the vegetable category. Produced
for roots, bulbs, corms or tubers are
carrots, radishes, onions, leeks, earlic,
turnips, beets, Jerusalem artichokes,
rutabagas. parsnips. potatoes. salalfy
and sweet potatoes.
Do you call them herbs or erbs?
The Brooklyn Botanic Garden
Handbook on Culinary Herbc says
that in America one Is often
considered uncultured if pronouncing
the "H"; in England one may be
branded a cockney when dropplf\8 the
"H."
The word was erb until the year
1475, we are told, in apelling and
pronunciation. It came to England
from the Latin herba, through the old
French herbe or erbe. F.arly in the
16th century, the Latin H was
reattached, but it remained mute until
.
VOLUNTEER
support
March of Dim•
Give to
lavelabl•
IEiORllL tWEllEllD SPECIALS
•BARSEC\E lava Rock 3/4"5 gal. 28-30# $2.99
•PETlllAS • Pony Pak Reg. 95c Now 2 for $1.09
1,pr color In Ml eun
•NAfl>INA • Heavenly Bamboo
small, colorful lhru6 • sun or shade
1 gal . $1.79
A fruit, to a botanist, ts the female
portion of Ute flower, swollen and
enlargtd provide a protective
structutt f« the teeds that began to
develop when the flower was
pollina11ed. EaJ>lant.. tomato, 9Quash,
pumpkin, pepper, cucumber and
melons a(e fruits in the botanical
sense, thoulh melons are the only
ones commonly considered fruits in
the trade. The reat generally are
thought of as vegetables.
Seeds and pods abo form as a result
of pollination, but they lack the fleshy cavmna found in fruits. Beans. pees, cqm, okra, dill and many herbs ana
spices are either 9Hda or leed pods.
C<>rn, aJtttough often uaed aa a
v.:getable, is a true grain.
1800. Since then pronunciation of the l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;=111--------
H has come into uae; herb la correct ln RUFFELL'§ ------~~-------------~ England. Americana cling to erb.
!Definitely ln the vegetable camp
are thoee plants whoee edible perta
ate tbelr lefves. Lettuce, apinach, s,.,m chard, endive, collard, muatard, ere.. panley and other leafy herbs,
kale and cabbage are commonly grown for their leaves. ·
Stems of rhubarb and asparagus are
~ edible part. When you eet broccoli
oil cauliflower you're consuming the
p~t'a immature Dowers. When ou
So take your chok:e~ in London, aay UPHOl.STUY, tNC.
herb; ln Chicago erb; in Brooklyn . . . •-e:h..,_ _. .._
1•22 HAllOl ILYD. Two new strawbetry yar,letie•, COSTA MllA _ 541-1156
''Tristar" and "Tribute,'' that can ~r 11---------fruit every six weeks lnatead of once a i-----------1
year, have been developed by U.S .
Department of Agriculture plant
genettciata.
Bred at Bel'"ille, Md., the new
varleth~• are ulled "day length
neutral." meaning tl\Jy do not •toJ>
producing when day length alpala
mart strawberries to l'°P blooming in
summer and fall
Manage your money
more etficienlly
today.
Call 642-4321
·to subscribe ........
--. --'. l;I ';1 . ' .. ,....._..
··i•r••.J' ........ ~·
BEDDING PLANTS
Plllnt Now for
8ummef Color
'
REG. ..
FRIDAY, MAY 27, 1883
ANN LANDERS
YOUR HEALTH
COM~ ..
Just another Jc1n1cy guy
who'• turned oa by women
in rubber raincoatl. See
Ann Landen, B2.
-
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Friday, May 27, 1983
He's kinky for rubber
DEAR ANN LANDERS: The letter from a
rubber fetishist encouraged me to write about my
own experience. For yeara I thouaht I waa
hopelessly abnormal because I found black rubber
raincoau sexually exclUna. It beaan ln my
c!hUdhood.
For me the ultimate ln erotic appeal 11 • woman
weuing a tightly belted ~hooet m.de of shiny
black rubber with matching boot. and hat and
heavy makeup, typical of a booker. Generally molt
rainwear with trenchco&t llYllna and the wet look
(such as vinyij at:>DMla to me, but the feel, IOund
and smell of rubber are the moat excillns.
Fortunately my wife has been very sympathetic
and most cooperative.
Ann. are there many othen who share this
feliah? How about the wives? ~ they wil.Ung to
please their huabands as mine is? I hope 90, because
if they aren't their husbands will seek
Understanding elsewhere. The fetish la that strong.
Because I am a professional person (and weU-
known) I must ask vou not to print my initials or
T JOUI HIAL1H
OR. PETER J . STEINCROHN
DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: I know you've
written several columns about gallbladder disease. I
confess I just skimmed over them. Yo4'e guessed it
-I never paid attention because n~y In our
family had any trouble with digestion. But recently,
I've had an attack of gallbladder colic. X-rays show
that I have stonel, my question at age 71 is this:
Shall I have surgery or medical treatment? My
doctor says. •Let's wait a while before deciding on
operation," -MRS. K.
DEAR MRS. K.: You'll anderuaad hw
wldespreed yow pnblem l1 wben I teU yo1 dlat
one e1dmate ts dlat ti IOIWoa ID tlae United Sta"9
aaffer ttom pU.c.n. Of diese, 15 mllUoa are
women. la Site at.ff yeu IJ'Oap, at lea1t IO perce11t
of womea ucl H-H-6er'ceat of men, accordlq to
Rutell F. Bu1la, M.D. are 1aUbladder padeatl;
80-10 pereeat of plhtoaet con1l1t prtmarlly of
cboleaterot. Tiie Hue? It'• related to poor
aolublllty of clloleaterel lD bUe. Olaly about one ID
foar 1aJl1toae patle1it1 complain of 1ymptom1.
Therefore, clloleeystec!OmY may not be needed.
the name of thu city. I hope my letter will
encouraae more honest commun~ ~ween
apoUIM. Just bein. @le to write '° you hM'been a
grea\ help. I comme~ for the public wrvtc:e
you perfonn. -AN RUBBER LOVER
DEAR R.L.: Yoa Arf aot aloae. 'nousud1 of·
people are lato nabber aiMI laave written over tlte
year• to uk die .. me q11e1ttou.
Fetlslles are q•lrll• la tbe penoaaJlty relafed
to early clalldJaoo4. Tbey pop up amon1 peeple fou
woald leall 111peet. It i1 alway• belt to level aboat
kinky behvlor before marria1e. Muy wives are
wllltn1 to accept an oddttr,. Tllote wlao 1ren't
1Jaould not bave tlle "aarprise ' 1pran1 on tlaem. Tbe
But as In your ca1e, Mn. K., the decl1lon for or
against operation wlll depend !lpoD your doctor'• judgment of your pby1lcal condition and tile type of
stones present.
You've probably lleard of tbe medical
treatment of 1allstones. In many paUeat1, 1tone1
may be dlHolved after a year or two of trutmeat
wltb cbeoedeo1ycllolic acid. But tlle e11tomary
form of treatment la sargery. Operative mortality
ID paUent1 below age 10 11 aboat 1 percent. Bat it
lncreaae1 wltll tbe a1e of tile patient. At lea1t
500,000 1aUbladder patlenta undergo sursery every
year la tile United Statea.
MEDICALETTES (Replies to and from
readers):
DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: I remember a
column you wrote a few years ago ln which a
re.der asked you why you were ao interested in c.ar
accidenu and Ratbelts. She wondered why you
took up space that should be raen.oed for ~
11erioua oondldona IUCh as heart d.Uleue and cancer.
I wish I knew her. I'd tell her that in a recent C4r
cruh, our 5-yeer-old's life was saved becaUle we
inmt our children wear ~ seatbelt. -Mft4. 'J'.
DEAR MRS. F.: Wut more column• oa cucer
UHi Ilea.rt dlMUt? How about readert 'JM l&J I
write abot1 tlane Wien too often? At for die ldy
wllo compla.llltii a few yean aio, I U.lnk 8'e wW be
/
• raincoats on women
neJlt leUtr wlU laL\'fetl yoe.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: A recent a:>lwnn in
w~;_rcou dl1euued rubber fetiahllm left Che
Im on that It ls atrlctly a male aberration. I wu
the ddelt of two lirla in a family where my mot.her
wore rubber, not my father. We were wld 1he wore
it to keep her we&,ht down. Her typlcal "around the
hou.r" outfit was a rubber exerdlt .Wt and bethlna
ahoa.
It ii dear to me MW that the ml teMOn the
wore rubber waa to generace e"tramarllal
excitement wlth casual male vlslton. (Rubber
1arment1 OI\ a woman an a 1lrna1 ot aexual
avallabJlily .) 1 recall v ividly that Mother
entertained many men ftienda, and when we came
home from achoo! they would be litUng around
having coffee. She always had on the rubt>er out.fit.
They u.ndoubtedly enpced in hanky-panky before
we go\, there. Why they 8"Yed unUJ we came home
I will never know.
You may publish thil letter If you like. No one
will be hurt by It. Mother died ~o years ago. The
lnleressed to bow tht a1110 1cclden11 art tbe
leadln1 cau1e of accidental deatla ID youa1
cblldren. In one 1tudy of tboa1ADd1 of ctaJldren, die
avera1e Hmber '-tiled waa about one la l,OH ff»r
teatbelt wearen ud ome la about ZU for tlu>1e
wlao dJd 10t wear Ulem. Be tlaukfal Mn. F., tht
you la1l1t tlaat Y••r cMl4rea are prolected. • • •
For Mr. U.: Here's one example why I have
been writina 10 much about the importance of st.rem
• a factor In ·heart dileue. Even the mo1t careful
diet may not protect people with stre91ful llteatylea
from developing atheroscleroala. Rece nt
experimenta on monkeys Indicated that thoee
monkeys under streu developed atheroeclero.la
without ha~ high serum cholesterol levtla or high blood ure. >..I aay, Jee:rntni how to relax
and live in em atreta, ia one of the molt tmporunt
~ in preventing heart attacks. • • •
Some doctors be1leve that every aue o/ obesity
mould be COMJckred OMJ of potenr:s.J dhber.e., _,,.
Dr. Sreincrolan Jn hJ.I bookJet.. "Watch Your DNt
.Beauiae Fae C.an Klll You.'' For a copy write him at
chill newspaper, enclOtling $0 cents and a •r.rnped,
~11-a~ envelope.
Dr. Scelncrohn -welcome• que1tlon1 from
tWders. He cannot aMWer all indlvldually but wm
include tho.e ol pMral intawi Jn hi.I c;olumn.
,._
PubMlfled OtMfe C0Mt Dally ~ t , tS, 20, 27, 1~-83 -~Fl~IC~Tl~n~IOW~~ .. ~.~.~.~ .. ~--1
"8.JC NOl1C(
reMOn I am writl"I '8 beca• OW' utlwir t.QDk a
bum rap aa a ptn'8l'l who kept hil wtfe in rubber to
aatllfy HIS fett1h. I now know Mother Wat •
nympho-maaochlst who wallowed In Mamy,
1weaty, .exu.1 adven&utts that Y"tte h)'oed by
llvin& ln rubbef' pnnentll. 1 do not th1ftk me w•
unJqu. by anrme•ns. stnce ~r colwnn llJ •
~vehicle for eaucat1on, It lftlcht ~ ~
to print thll lett.er to lAtt people know that feliiNlt
are not t.M property of rnai. only. -AL~TIU FAMILY (STOCKTON, CAJ,.JF.)
DEAR STOCK: Tb•kl for an enll1•te
coatrlllutlon.
An you, or ii «JnJeOM you c.are about ~
around with dJ'U69 -or corulderl116 m ~ .n
drugs '-<I? What about pot -in mocferarJon? Ann
Landers' a11-new booklet, "The Lowdown, on
Dope," •parata the f.ct6 from the fkUon. rw-t»Ch
booJclet ordered, .end 12.00, plu• a 101111, ~11-
M:ld.rNled. awnped envelope (37 cent6 pt»t.111/9) t.o
Ann Lmde11, I'.O. Box llW~. Chicago. m. "'611.
P01SHOD
BV ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
WMY
00' KEEP
COMING
M°"'4E
~VERY TIME
I TRV
TO 'T'RACE
MY TROV&l.ES
TO THEIR
$00RG£'?
~~
Seccombe-Haines
J
!GARt'lt:l.ll
I'M TAKING ~ TO A
GREAT RE!>TAURANT TONIGMT, ARLENE
THE
t'A~llLl'
CIBCt:8
LOOK. GALVANIZE~ HOT ONE. Of T~t.
a4EAP PLA!>TIC.
Pt.ACE!>
BIG GEORGE
by Jim Davis.
by V1rg1I Partch (VIP)
"Mommy, what comes after 'elebenteen'?" "Hot enough for you today?"
Jl.\RJIADl'KE by Brad Anderson
"He's always wanted his very own
drinking fountain.·'
lbl.P IT! JIM
SAVIN(i OUR
SURPLUS FOR
A R.AINY
~'iEMMA ...
DE:'\:'\IS THE ~E'.'\i\CE
~·
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
Pf:RFE;CT ! l..ISTeN ··
"SO~ CHANC~ OF
SHOWERS.' 11
by Charles M. Schulz
I STAYEP AUWCE ALL
PAV~AHDI
WAS STILL POOR
f' ~
I ~ I ....
·~\· •
Nortb·Sout)\ vulnerable.
North dtala. NOITB
•A&U
c:> Al :
OAU
•A&U
WEST EA.BT •nu •ca1n
~•o ~•u
OQIO O&UI
•QIUt •JU
SOUTH
•84
<:?QJIOH
o au~ .,.
The biddh11:
Nri ""Eut S..tli Wut
!NT p.., 4 1:? p..,
, .. p ...
Openinf lead: Four of <:?.
SHO '
BRABBLE
BY CHARLES H. GOAEN ANO OMAR ~IF
Wt cannot .ovtntrtQ "•
lmportanet of eountln1 -
wi.tiw n be PG111u or
Uieb. Ti.at WU Utt k., to
IUCClll OD today'I hand.
Soutb'• jump to four
beam 1bow1 a pod trump
tult and DO dealrt to play IDY
hl1htf contract U1uaDy. It
protnbet a 1lx~ or loapr
1ult. However. Soutb reuon·
ed tbt ~ hand mllht oot
produce a alncle trick at a no
trump cootra.d, eo bt cledd·
ed to taltt bil 1bot at tht 1ull
rame.
We1t led a trump. Since
that almoet 1urely mulled
Eut with the ldnr of trump1,
decllNI' ~Id count 0Dl1
nine tricltl -five In tht plain
1uiu 111d four trump1. One
way to eat.ablilh a tenth trick
WU to hope fot a W diamond
1pUi. 1'blcb would euWe
declarer to .. tabU.b &bt
fori dluaoed la UM cloled
bod. but tut ... cUaU.Detb'
aplut tH odd.. Ju&Md,
dedartr ~ t0 NllJ Oll tM
fad \bat FM& 'pr.Mbl1 MAI
tbe ltlq of heart.. ucl t. try
for five trleb lo the trump
1ult.
Oeda1't won the aee of
beartt, culMcl tht aee--klD1 of
cluti. and nalfed a dub. theo
eroued to the ace of 1pade1
and led another lllub. Since it
would ~ help to ruU, Eut
di1e&rded • 1pade. Dedarer
ruffed, crotted to the It.Ing ol
1padt1 and led another
spade. Thia Ume Eut 1luffed
a diamond, and declartr ruff·
ed with his penultimate
trump w kll .W.'• allt• trkk • o.dattr erOlilicl ..a tl
UM aee of cliuNMI Uil W
Liie &able'• 1ut .... l'Mt
w11 ......... If IM ru~
bjp. tM ...... ., u..,.
would bt"9• declarer' ...
tentb ~rick. If bt did
aQ1tbila tlM, Liie ._... ol
trumpe would eeort a rRtf n.
po11AL E!Uer way, tn
lrkU ..... Uiere.
.... , ....... die. .._ ....... ....,CWIN .
a.....tiudie ........ .
.,., el "" ...... 0,..... Le .. 1," 1ea• 11.H te· ~"..,.el.ta.
..,...,..., P.O. In ...
Nerw ... N.J. '7t41. lbb
dietla ,.,.W. te New ..
....... b
by Jeff MacNelly
·'
~ .
J"OR BETTER OR t'OR •ORNE by Lynn Johnston
~PA!. ~ 091'e.e:1WI!.
l.Jfrr Hft& yoo 11iJO
eee.H~AeOOT'
IN~?
t'l::'\K ,. W l~Kt~RR•:it "\'
1HE ~ ~a tlJOO...
IS ~U.(.,> WILD !
I
' l
I
0
0
0
OR.S~OCK
.......
EVER<X>NE 15 ~NING A~ND IN~ OR
CUT-OFF5 HAVIN& 5GUIRT
GUN AND PAPER QJP F~ ...
·-"" "'
AND IF ~ 1HINK ~I~ 15
50ME"THING, ~ &O,LD
HAVE BEEN HERE~ ~ lfiE S!l.q.HTS LAsT ~. !
0
0
by George Lemont
by Wile
-~
l
'.1
I
' :JM
Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Friday, May 27, 1983 ••
Bof A honors top·students
Canadian beer now
available
BJ STEVE MITCHELL °' ............
A top-aelling Canadian beer
called Labatt'• "Blue" la being
marketed in Orange County by
promoten who aay their intent is
to grab up a significant aha.re of
the Southern CaJifamia import
beer market.
Gary Huggard, pre9ident of
Labatt lmporten, Inc., said
Labatt'• "Blue" and Labbett'a 50
ale went on the ahelvee in Los
Angele. and Orange countie. last
month 1n a promotional effort to
appeal to import beer drinkers.
1be two new imports are
produced by John Labatt Ltd., a
$2.5 billion CanadJan beer, wine
and packaged food conglomerate.
Labatt Import.en. Inc. handlee
the marketing and distribution of
the Canadian beer and ale in 28
stat.ea.
''Oranae County beer drinkers
• ID county
are twice as likely to 1elect an
imported beer and thelr oounter-
parta acro88 the country, oonaum-
i.ng approximately 2 million cues
of imports a year," Huggard &aid.
He said Labatt'a hu oommitted
$350,000 to a highly focuaed,
six-month Southland advertising
campaign which la expected to
reach 78 percent of the area's
total audience.
Moet of the budget will be
concentrated on billboards,
promotions in neighborhood bin,
and chain store displays..
Huaard said Hiineken domi-
natet -tbe Import market in Or-anae County, wtth Doe F.qw. in
the leCIOlld" apoL Mooeehead,
Molson and Beck's rank third,
fourth and fifth, respectively.
LabAtt'• goal la to be aJDOn8 the
market'• top five lmporta by the
end of the yeu-, he said.
Hlah achool hlah-achlevera
were honored 1n BUi'.ll of A.m.rl-
ca'• 1988 Addevementa Awards Prosram Judced lut week att.he
Wtllttn South c.out PW.a Hotel in
Corta Meta.
1be b&n.k awarded $20,250 to
2'1 final.lsCI who had earlier won
8Choo1 and eeml-tinal campet1-
dona in ~ aped& cat.epte9.
The winn1na rnadenta a10Q1 the
Oran.ge Cout were:
• JQleen On.1111.ng of Hunt-
ington ~.
•Shawn Cowla of West:rnimter.
• Paul Floyd of Mt.ion Viejo.
• Lucy AahadJian of Mimion
Viejo.
Accountants
to meet
Thursday
An overview of the economic
conditiona facing Ore.nae County
today will be given at the
Call fomla Society Certified Pub-
lic Accountanta ~ Estate Com-
miuee meeting "lbunday.
Duane Paul, vice preetdent and
aenior ~ tor Bank of
America, will be the su-t
speaker at the 8 a.m. meeting, to
be held at the South c.o.t Plaza
Hotel.
The meettna will qualify b
one hour of continuinc education
~t. For 19e!'Vationa, call
851-2000.
Call 142-5171.
Put a few word a
toworlc tor you.
Thrrl'\ "KO<XI rt-.nun for
1h1\ f.irmt•f) lo.now\ lh•I
1"4·,e tfr"''" h•nd 10 Ix•
,.>(o.r .ind morr c .irl'ful on
1hc.-h11(hw•v.
You're lht.' c.l#ivC!'t\ wh<1
hJve fewN arndt-nt\
T h•1 '~ why f4rm&.'f~ ne.tt<"d
our }()/60 p¥k.igl' .11.110
poltt)' If you qu•l1ty. you
rnufd \dve wb\1.1011.il"
on your prl'fTlJU,.,....
r .irll'l('f\ lrNJr.in<c Group
"worlun11 con1.c.>n1ly10 l..N'p
1hl-'°"''of 1murJO(t>
down .• md tht• .imount of
prole'<i•on up And 1hr.
J0160 p.>c k.ii.t<' .auto pul1c y
I\ t)(l(' v. .i" wt-do 11 Why no1
c.>11 me•'
R=Ale~Y
831-7740
Cwte A,enc:y
North Costa Mesa
751-4110
Woodard-Mather AttneJ
Newport Beach Airport
754-0711
Bob Wolfe A1ency
South Costa Mesa
942-1741
'1CTIT10U9 .,.. ..
NAmlTA~
The follOWlng perton 11 doing
bvl"*6U
SOUTHWEST INFOl\MATIOH
SERVICES. 2633 Orange St.. Colta
M .... CA9262t
Angelo Lembluo, HM Orange
St C~I Mesa. CA 92eH Tn+s butlMN la ~ted by an
lndl...tdual
Angelo Lembluo
Thia I tal-I -lll9d With Iha County CleB of Ofwioe Cownty on
May 24 1983
•••
Ooon Dt11rthU.aa Co. hM announced the
appointment of. Lula Dias 11 office ~· Dfaa,
with the corapeny s1nce 1977, wtll let"Y9 11
coordinator between depanmenta.
• •• cauotTo. DIAZ
Barela)'• Suk of Callfonia baa announced
the appointment ol David £. >.Menea,/:i"'6ent
and chief executive officer of QepnJ .itf••• Co. of Callfonla, to the Barclays board of d1rectora.
Andenon alao la a member' of the C.allfomJa
Roundtable and 8et"Vee QI\ the boards of the Lo9 Anaeles Area Ownber of c.ommerce, Santa
Monica Ha1pital Medical C'cter, California Staie
Univenity and Collecea P'oundaUoa. Independent
Col.lega of Southern Callfomia and United Way.
hand canttola for vtdeo PJ!9 and a aamplete car
care 80ftware ~ with edded IDl!IDOl'1·
•••
W.R. Daam Ir Staff'• Orange County office
announcee the inve.tment tale of a fully leued
23,000-aquar&-foot office bu.ilc:Una In Newport
Beech to Qll.al1 Street Putaen, with Stepliea J.
Maller u rna.nqtna aeneral partneT. 'nle-
two-st.ory, frame and stucco building is located at
1100 Quall St. It la occupied primarily by aervioe
and prote.alonal firms and will ee.rve .. hetd-
quarten f« TM MUler Compuy. The tnn1.1ict1on,
~ by Daum agenta Davi• Se•wettaer and
MJCU.el Collla1, was valued at $2.~ rn1Won.
•••
Loi Anaelea and Oran1e County
Cla.ry1ler-Plym~ and Doqe dealers haw
· launched a new computer-qe promotion cam-
palan. The dellen are 8iv1nl away a free Aquartua
·home computer system from Mahe! Eledroldn
with the purchue of each Dodge OWlenaer «
Plymouth Sapporo between now and June 30.
Included in the l.ncent1ve packaae tor buyers are a
keyboard, printer. mJni•xpender, data recorder,
OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS
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NYSE COMPOSl'tl'E TRANS~UflONS
OUOT ATIOltl l~LUOI t•aouo• '* ............... ,. PACIPIC, •••• •ono-....... , ••• Clllt(l#WATI tTOC• t•CMAltOHAJllD ••'°•TIO., TMl•AIDANOllUTUllY
Atari gains rights
to founder's sames
BJ fte A.IHdaced Presa
SUNNYVALE -Video 1amea with three·
dlrn.naional hoJoaraphlc effect. are bel.n8 developed
by video 1ame pioneer Nolan Bu.hn60, who bu
alped an a1reement wUh Atari Inc. gMn1 It the
home-m,rk.et rilhta to the coln..c>ptr•led mach.lnell.
Under •n aareemft\t annou~d Thurlday.
Bushnell enda a legal dilpU\lt wilh Atari. the com~y
he fowxled 10 yeara Alo wh:h the pme "Pong' and
sold three yean later for $28 million 10 start Pbza
Time Theatre, a restaurant chain.
Atari, now owned by Wanwr c.ommun1catJona.
wUl sell the home vttSiona of prnea developed by
Bushnell. Joaeph Keenan, Pbza Time Theetre J'.nc. and
Sente Technolasjee Inc.
Bushnell la chaJnnan ol Piua Time, Keenan 1a
president and Sente ii ita wholly owned video pme
development arm.
Dollar rises to record
LONDON -The U.S. dollar tC* 10 new hdghta
again.at the French franc and Spaniah peeeta and
continued 10 gain ground on other major CWftnCies
except the aoarina British pound In early trading
today.
The aatna for the dollar and sterling came on the
eve of the Wllllamaburg, Va., economic summit, a
eeven-nation meet.1.na in which currency values are a
key bone of contention.
The dollar's gains undercut gold. which fell ln
Hong Kong and htrope in advance of a three-day
holiday weekend in the Uni\ed States and 'Britain.
Lower oil use predicted
Oil conawnption In the Uni\ed Stat.es will drop in
1983 for the fifth CONeCUtive year despite a rebound
in economic activity. an oil lnduatry group pn!dicta.
A (orecaatina panel of the Independent Petroleum
Aaodation of America, meeting In Seattle, Mid the
increaaed oil needed to fuel an economic recovery will
be more than offset by conservation and the
substitution of other fuels.
The projected drop of 0.6 percent in oil u. for
1983 compares with a 5 percent decline Wt year. The
decline in U.S. oO consumpUon haa c:onlribu\ed co a
glutted market, which earlier this year forced oil
exporten 10 cut pricea.
The decline in oU ·prices, in tum, baa gjwn the
U.S. economy an added boost.
Ford motor recall urged
WASHINGTON -Federal invntigators are
urging the Ford Motor Co. to recall 431,000
1979-model Ford Mustanp and Mercury Capris for
repairs followiJ'\I more than 100 reporta of rear break
lock-ups tlult have thrown the can into a spin .•
Officials of the NaUonal Highway Traffic Safety
Admini.slration diackleed today that the &&ency .ent a
letter 10 Ford in March uqii.ng the recall becauae the
cars are believed to be "prone to rear brake lock-up."
Ford, in a reply May 13. said it oonaiden a recall ~· ~t claima ~ qency .,._ not prvved •
9i'0blem th*\~ an ''UJ\r'eUonable rillt" ol tbcident
or in~nt~.urQ.eue. an aaency apokesmpn. Mid
ay it''"Kl(f ·'11f6rm9d Potld that the a•eney ''•
confident a problem exist&. But he added th.al ''It la too
early 10 tell for sure we wW be able co forct a recall."
•Tm u Ull 65 YI ..... ~= ts ..
1111.U tm ... 1115.1' 1m..4'-s.Ja Bl.fl 9UM U1.J1 SM.C-~ ..... Ul ... \Jt,G 1-... e.J1 41&.lS Cl.ti U. IJ .._... 1A .. ·: : ·:. ·: .... :. . . . t=::
.............. ' I, .... • • . • • • • ll,lt.l,JOI
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FRIDAY, MAV 27, 1e83
Art Wahl
~odgers
not loved
~: l)y Laskey
'I
1.LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
Dodgers and Giants have been
gaing at it for years, but
50flehow San Francisco nght-
hander Bill Laskey never knew
anything about it when he was
o~ pitching in the Kansas City
or1~zation.
~ot until last year, when he
de.cisioned Los Angeles left-
hander Fernando Valenzuela, did
he; get wind of the intense rivalry
, ~een the two clubs.
'When I beat Fernando, and
saw how our guys. and how the
fans reacted, well, that's whe n I
really got into the rivalry,"
Laskey said Thursday night after
beating the Dodgers again, this
time 5-3. to put a hall to a four-
game Los Angeles winning
streak.
Now. Laskey is reaJJr, into it.
• *I hate the Dodgers, ' he said.
"I'm not saying why I hate them.
I just do. So does this entire team.
And we're coming after them,
too."
With the win. the 15th in the
hut 20 games for the surging
Giants, they moved to within 7 Y.i
games of the first-place Dodgers
in the National League West.
And the Dodgen, with the
possible exception of Rick
Monday, aren't particularly fond
of Laskey.
The 37-year-old Monday
cracked two home runs, his first
two homers of 1983, for him, a
large relief. ~t." he said, "it takes a lot
away l~g the ~ame." The Dodgers p1tchmg staff
hail allowed only one run the
previous 37 innings before
Thursday night. But Jeff
~nard, a former Dodger,
hed Monday's output with twb homtts of his own, and Jack
dark clouted a third home run.
Bob McAdoo's elbow finds the chin of
Philadelphia's Julius Erving Thursday.
Defense saves ·sixerS
Lakers down 2-0 after 103-93 setback
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -A sticky deft>nse
that shut off the Los Angeles Lakers for most of the
fourth quarter saved the Philadelphia 76en when
Moses Malone, who had saved them many times
before, was not around to do the job.
"But I've played him before, and I knew my
best bet would be to try and get in front of him and
deny him th.e ball."
The 76en beat the Lakers 103-93 Thur&day
night, rolling to a 2-0 advantase in the best-of-
seve n National Basketball Association
championship aeries.
"We tried to make them beat us from the
outaide," added Shlers guard Maurice Cheeks. "We
got aome steals, and good weakaide help."
Malone led all ICOren with 2it points and
hauled down 12 rebounds. Cheeks and Andrew
Toney added 19 points apiece for Ph.iladelphLa and
Julius Erving and Bobby Jones had 14 each. Philadelphia held the Laken to 12 points in
the flnt 11 minutes of the fourth quarter, breaking
open a cloee game to take a 103-90 lead with 23
seconds left.
Jamaal Wilkes scored 17 points for the Laken
while Michael Cooper and F..arvin "~" Johns:>n
With Malone on the bench with five touls, 7-2
Laken center Kareem Abdul-Jabbar acored 10 of
those 12 points and finished with a team-high 23.
added 12 apiece. •
"We knew they would go to Kareem
(Abdul-Jabbar) rnott, because it definitely was a
mismatch with me giving up five inches," said Earl
Cureton, the 76en' 6-9 reserve center who was
called to fill in for Malone.
The Laken held a 55-51 lead at halftime after
outrebounding Philadelphia 26-17. In the first
quarter, Lo. Angeles got 9eYen rebounds on ita own
end while the 76era got just one.
"They were in the right place at the right
time," said Cheeks. .
"In the second half, we stopped them from
(See LAKERS, Pa1e CZ)
Referees' walkout
averted by NBA
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -
Rkhie Phillips. general coumel
for Nat.Iona} Basketball
Auoclation referees, aald
Thuraday that a 5 1h -hour meetin8 with NBA Commilsioner
Larry O'Brien on Wednesday
averted a possible playoff strike
by the union.
"There waa a aerioua chance
that lf O'Brien bad not 11epped
in, the.re would have been a work
1toppa1e for the rest of the
playoff.a." Phillips said.
Phillips, head of the National
Association of Basketball
Referees, said O'Brien managed
to rec:ondle a number of unlon-rnanaaement differences.
uwe are lookJna forward to
total accord this swnmer after
our contract with the league
expires at "the end of the
playoffs," he added.
Phllllpa aald that before
Wedneeday'a meeting the union
had filed unfair labor practice
charges with the National Labor
Relations ~ in Philadel~hia.
Ke saMJ F.arl Strom, 3 referee
who did not take part In a 1977
union strike, waa assigned to
work Sunday's NBA playoff
g~ between Philadelphia and
Los Angeles as a second
alternate, in violation of the
collective bargaining a,reement
between the league and the
referees.
Phillips said the union objected
to thls "unilateral changing of
the number of referees." On
Wednetday O'Brien asnied that
lf another alternate referee la
assigned for the rest of the
playott., It will be done on an
altemat.lni buls, the referees'
COUMel said.
Al Unser Sr.
Unsers
more than
B .aylor's return reminder to DeCinces row apart
Don Baylor's return to Anaheim
Stadium this week was like looking in a
mirror for Doug DeCinces.
In seeing the New York Yankees'
designated hitter. DeCincea couldn't help
but think about his current contractual
situation, and how it paralleled Baylor's
cin:umstance last year.
DeClnces, like Baylor. is playing out
the final year of his conlrllC't with no
auarantees for a future. At least not a
future with the ~la.
IMtead, the organization, as is it.a
1 policy. baa decided to wait until the end
SPORTS CQL;UMNIST
JOHN
SEVANO
of the season before negotiating with lta
third baseman.
It's a predicament DeClnces does not
share alone -as Rod Carew, Brian
Downing and Bob Boone face a similar
dilemma. But it's still one Oeelncea tried
to avoid.
He campaigned all winier In an
attempt to ,et a contract extension. But
the Angela balked. And now, he's trying
to make them pay for It the only way he
knows how -on the field.
Goin& into tonl1ht'1 aame with
Cleveland, DeCinces leads the club In
home runs (11) and RBI (28), and apona
a .304 average u well.
"DeCinces tbow,ed what he wu worth
last year," •Id Baylor. "But I guea
they're goina to take hlm down to the
wire, too."
It's an obvM>ua prnble on the Anpla'.
part, ~nowtna if DeClncea has a ~
year hi.a price taa la going to ao up. But
it's a chance they 1eem willi~ to take.
"Yeah. lt'a been on my mind,"
DeCincea admitted. ''But. quite frankly,
this la what I tried to guard ap.1nat tn
aakina for a contract before aprlna
t.ralnln&.
''Obviously, they feh they dJdn't need
Don Baylor thla year. and ~ou can't help
but think that's what they re Pl'\I to dO
with me, too, no matter whai r do for the
club.
11I>oee It bother me? Yeah, it
( ... BAYLOK, Pap C.>
I
\
l
I
I i
, ,.
I • •• (
l
t
••
njunetion prohibits
Albeck from moving
From AP d.lapa&dn
SAN ANTONIO, Texas -A m
state district Judse Thurad•Y
tanporar:ily prohfbited San A,aton.lo
Spurs Coacb Stan Albec k from
signing a contract with another team and the
New Jersey Nets from ~tiaUng with Afbeck.
Judge Fred Biery sranted a Spurs' request
(or a temporary injunction until a June 3 hearing
to conakler a motion for a permanent injunction.
The San Antonio Express
had reported that Albeck
would sign a contr?ct this
week with the Nets, but a
spokesman for that team said
Albeck has not been offered
the job.
"The Spurs have no
adequate remed y at law,"'
said the petition filed by
Spurs attorney Larry
~etc Maconof San Antonio.
.. The immediate loss of Albeck's services
could have a disastrous effect upon the Spurs'
position in the upcoming NBA draft a nd
negotiations with free agenta."
Beiry issued the injunction Thursday
afternoon against Meadowlands Uasketball
Associates., which owns the Nets, and Xtazee Inc.
of which Albeck i.s president.
Quote of the day
E4war4 Beaaett Wllllams, Baltimore
Orioles owner, on speculation that Bowie
Kuhn's help in neac>tiatina bueball'a new
$1 billion network TV contract might ave
Kuhn'a job u comm.ialioner: "~t'a aafe to
aasume that a billion dollars buya a lot of
good will"
Taylor to undergo surgery
INGLEWOOD -Los Angeles ~ Kings' right winger Dave Taylor will ,
undergo surgery Saturday to repair a
broken bone in his wrist, the National
Hockey League club announced Thursday.
Taylor originally broke the bone in his right
wrist in a game last October against the
llimonton Oilers and had to miss 33 games.
He apparently reinjured the wrist while
playing for Team Canada in the World Ice
Hockey Championships last month. The break
was not diacovered until earlier this month.
Buckner's blow leads Cubs
Bill Buckaer hH a two-run II
double and Jay JobastoDe alugged a
homer as the Chicago Cube whipped
Atlanta Thunday night, 5-1, behind
the combined pltdllng·•f PHI Mo•kau and BlU
Campbell. Buckner'• double came after
consecutive two-out ainglea by Rfae
Sandber8' and Larry Bowa in the aevenih inninS
. . Mlte Euler• aacriflce f1y put .Pfttaburgh
ahead. and 1his two-run homer provided the
winning margin as the Pirate• knocked off
Ciminnati. 6-4 . . . Geor1e Headrick'• three·
run double highlighted a four.run ~irat in~
that triggered St. Louis to a 5-3 triumph ov
Houston . . . The game between Montreal
Philadelphia was postponed because of rain and
will be made up as part of a twl-night double-
header on June 28 in Philadelphia.
Yaz's first homer lifts Sox
Carl Yaunematl hit his first II
homer of the season and 443rd of his
career Thursday night and Dwight
Evans and Jim Rice also homered.
powering Boston to a 7-2 victory over Toronto.
With the win, the Red Sox assume a one-game
lead over the Blue Jays In the American L.eague
East . . . In other AL action, Rick Honeycutt
che<:ked Chjcago on two hits over eight innings
and Larry Parrish singled home one run and
scored another to lead Texas past the Chicago
White Sox, 3-1. The victory halted the Rangers'
lour-game losing streak . . . Frank White
crashed a three-run homer to cap a four-run
third i.nning and Kansas Caty went on to defeat
slumping Baltimore, 8-2, handing the Orioles
their seventh straight setback. Kansas City's
Steve Renko, 4-3, survived a shaky start and
scattered six hits ~h seven innln~ before
giving way to Mike Armstrong.
U.S. wins Walker Cup .
BOYLAKE, England -The !I United Stat.es, sparked b 20-ea.r--old
Rkk Fehr. won the Walker t up goU
competition for the 26th time
Thunday. defeating a Britain-Ireland team
13 \1\-10\1\ at the Royal Liverpool Club.
A l ~-foot putt on the 17th green by Fehr. or
Seattle, assured the Americans or not losing the
trophy. The home team's hopes of a tie ended
minutes later when another 20-year-old, Daviq
Tentis. from White Bear Lake. Minn .. halved his
singles match against Scotland's Lindsay Mann.
Crensf:iaw, Wadkins on top
Ben Crea1blw, on the wa_y back •
from a long slump, and LIDDY
Wadkins, on the way to the beat
season of his career, matc hed
5-under-par 67s and tied for the flnt·round 1eed
Thur11day Jn the Memorial Golt Tournament in
Dublin, Obto. Jack NlcklUI. oo.i. 1ponaor &nd
coune designer, IU'Ualed to a 78, lnc.hidina • 40 on the bac.k nine, .nc1 n\\< hnprove lt t-.. ll to
qual)fy for the final twO rounds Saturday· and
Sunday . . • lta"y Jllte, whole only victory tn
81..t years on the LPGA tour came al the 1981
tourpament here, bUtud the CornJis1. N.Y.
course a.1aln with a 4-under-par 68 to lead the
(lt?ld after one round. Clustered lWO shota btlek at
70 were veterans Patty SkeebD, Cindy Hill and J,t'ltyn Britz and tour S91>homore a..11rea Howe. .
.11Baseball today
1937-Carl Hubbell of the New York
Glanla pitched two lnnin8I of no-hit relief
in a 3-2 victory over the Oncinnad Reda and
recorded h1a 24th conNCUUve triumph over
two seaona.
1968-Montttal and San Dleao were
awarded National League franchltet aa the
league expanded for the first time in seven
years.
Today's birthday: :SO.ton pitcher Mark
Clear la 27. ~
Stewart to head U.S. team
University of Missouri coach •
Norm Stewart will h~ad the 1983
U.S .A. World University Games men's
basketball team. The American
delegation. defending cham,pion from the 1981
games in Bucharest, Romania, will travel to this
year's games Jul)' 1-10 in llimonton, Alberta
. . . The Loi Angeles Express of the United
Staie. Fooiball Lea&ue has obtained l.inebaclter
Jolla Barefield of Denver in a trade that aent
wkie nk'eJver geYill Willlams to the Gold . . . aar-ce llanMa, a. ve1eran nmnlng back with
the Wuhlnlton ~akin.a, end ltt Forte, a
formet" ~ player, have been lndlcted by a
Texarkana l"8nd jury on cha.rsel of =ion of
cocalne ..• Gerry Cooney, the ~eight
who la scheduled to return to action June 18, was
told by a doCtor t,hat the swelling of the middle
knuckle ot hls left. hand waa nothing serious and
that he'll be able to fight . . . Geoff Bodiae
and Rid.rd Peaty led 16 qualifiers boosting the
field for Su.nday'a World 600 NASCAR event in
Han1abw'g, N.C. to 30 .. , ·Reno oddsmaken list
Rick Mean and Al Unser.as 5-2 favorites for the
Indy ~. Next are Tom Sllev1 at ~l. Gordon
Jobceck at. 4-1 and A.J. Foyt, Mario AHretti
and Mille MMltf ~t. 6-1.
.....
T.elevision, radio
TV: No ~ta .cbeduled.
RADIO: Bueball -Anae1.a at Cleveland,
4:30 P:m ., KMPC (710); Dodgera•at Sin
l'rkndilOO, 7:36 p.m .• KABC (790).
W ee~end sports on TV, radio
TELEVISION
' 10:15 a.m. (4) -BASEBALL -Pittsburgh at
Cincl.onati.
1 p.m. (4) -BASBBALL -Texas at Chicago
White Sox. (7) -DRAG RACING -The 14th
annual Gatomationala NHRA event at Gainesville.
Fla. (taped).
3:30 p.m. (2) -GOii -Third round coverage
of the Memorial Tournament in Dublin, Ohio
(taped). (7) -P80 BOWLING -Coverage of the
Denver Open (taped). "l
4:30 p..m. (5) -BASEBALL -Angela at
Cleveland.
5 p.m. (7) -WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS -
Trevor Berbick (22-2-1, 17 KO.) vs. S.T . Gordon
(23-5, 21 KO.) in a heavyweight bout at Liie Vegas
(taped).
3 p.m. (9) -HORSE RACING -Coverage of
the Kansu Futurity, the tint jewel ln quarterhone l'ldrtC• triple crown a& Ruidoeo, N.M. (taped). RADIO
Baseball -San Francisco at Dodgers, 1:05
p.m., KABC (790); Angela at Cleveland, 4:30 p.m.,
KMPC (710).
4:30 p.m. (4) -SPORTSWORLD :-Coverace
of the Bruce Jenner"l'rack and Field Classic at San
Joee (taped).
§aallay
TELEVISION
• ..,.m. (7) -AU'fO RACING -Coverage of
.l runnina of the Indlanapolla ~(taped).
10 a.m. (2) -GOLF -Final round coverage of
the Memorial Tournament in Dublin. Ohio. RADIO
NBA ChampAomhip -Philadelphia at Laken 10:30 a .m . (7) -USFL FOOTB.~LL -
Philadelphia at Boston. (pme three). lt:aO p.m .. KL.AC (070). J
Bueball -Ana•b at Cleveland, 11 a .m,,
KMPC (710); San FnncUco at Dodpn, 1:05 p.m.,
K.ABC (790). N~ ~P -Philadelphia
1t Labn. 12!30 p-Ol., KLAC (070). USJl'L Football
-LA~ at Oakland, l p.m., KNX (1070) ....
11 a.m . (~) -BASEBALL -Angela at
Cleveland.
12:30 p.m . (2) -NBA CHAMPIONSHIP -
Philadelphia at Lak.era (game three).
LAKERS DOWN 2-0 • • •
From Page C1
and we stopped getting the
offensive rego unds. their
transition game."
The 76ers also held an
advantage at the foul line, where
,they connected on 23 of 32 shots
while the Lakers made only
three of five.
Cureton, who became Malone's
backup when regular reserve
ce nt er Clemon Johnson
developed an infection earlier m
the week, said he was thralled
ju.st to get the playing tune He
only BCOred two point.a. but they
came on a hook shot over
Abdul-Jabbar with -1:36 lt'ft lo
gjve lh• 76ers a 91-8:5 lead.
"I'd practked that st)ot a lot. 1
just felt comfort.able taking it."'
he said.
"'lt was i;ort or tronic that when M~s got his fifth foul. they
opened up the game." Lakers
Coach Pat Riley said.
''It wasn't a matter of who we
were aolng to In th• four\h
quart«. You have '° stv• them credit for being aggressive."
"We're aoi~ h~ now," the
t.ker coach added.' .. We htve to
resroup. And ru IU&J'antet you
this: They won't take our title
from ua the way they did
tont1h~" 1. Loe An1elea. whl~h beat
Philadelphia in \he finAJI in 1980
;
and last vear. wants to become
the first NBA team to repeat as
champion in 14 years.
And the 76era. who haven't
won a championship since l967,
know ~title is l'lOl theirs yet.
"I know we have to go out to
L os Angeles like we're two
games down.'" Curt>lon said.
'"We'll have to come out playing
harder than we did before "
Ron9uillo
quits at LB
Joe Ronquillo bu resiped at
Laguna Beach after sulding the
Artlata' buebel1 team for the put
three )'Mn on a V1alk..on bula.
"Wl1h the fadlltiel IUCh •they
are It'• vt.rtually lmpomible to eet
up a procnm; Ronquillo l&id..
''It's a matter of ltarti.na all ovw ~ yeer with Just one fieki for three teams. ••
~ a product of l'.IWl· :S~b=ty~~ ..U-1 a\~ tor two,_..
beton ~ tht Job at ~~.-
•
r
APPRECIATION FOR aNAKIR ••• E.ne Ike
(right) of Earle Ike Import• In Coat• M•N
congratulate1 Richard sawavt (left), MtMger of
Corporate Planning for Atfantlc Riehfleld Co.
(ARCO). after Sawaya add1'91Md the members
of the Motor Car Oealera AHoolatlon of
Southern Callfornla at their recent Sprln9
Business ConfeNnce In lndlan Wella. Ike it ..._
1st Vice President of thle Southland dealer
Aaeoctatlon.
INDIAN WELLS ••• 8ua'neaa la better -It
may take quite awhile before lt'a u ~ .. It
once wu -but the auto business ta deftnltety
picking up.
This mood of guarded optimism prevailed
among new car dealers at the recently concluded
1983 Spring Business Contertnce of the Motor
Car Dealers Association of Southern Caltfomta,
held In tndlan Wells.
The faCt that 1983 Is a year of recovery frqm
America•• tong and severe recession was
atte1ted to by the record number of Conference
attendeee -more than 1000 -as weu as by
the three principal speakers.
Gene Conatser, Vice PrHldent of Retell
Planning for Bank of America, noted In his
addreu that In 1982, new car dealers acroaa
America were able to sell only 7 .9 m1n1on ~
the lowest number In 20 years. Conatser
predicted that the number of new care 8°'d In
1983 wtll exceed the 1982 total, and that the
1984 total should be even better.
However, looking ahead over the next two
decadee, Conatser thought It doubtful that the
auto induatry wlll hit the new car aales record of
11.4 mllllon, reached In 1973 and 1978.
The reHon, he explained, la that huge
federal budget deficits will keep interest rat•
high, thus making It too expensive for many
Americana to borrow money for a new car.
Manager of Corporate Planning for the
Atlantic Rlchfleld Co. (ARCO), Richard Sawaya.
aounded a slmllar theme In his address to the
dealer asaembly.
Sawaya predicted that car sales wtll lncreue
over the next few years, he4>ed by a plaitlful
suppfy of guollne and a stabie price per gallon,
but 1hat new oar saJes wtll leY8I off In the 1990'• u a reeult of several trends.
One trend, explained Sawaya, Is that·
Am«lcana are keeping their cars for a longer
period of time. A second trend I• that the
gentratk>n of "babyboomers," those born In the
1850'• and '80's, wlll be spending leu of their
dlepoeabl• Income on cars. and more Of).
personal computers and video equipment.
"I'm not saying that America's love affair
with th• automoblle Is ending," concluded
Saw~a. .. It'• simply changing, and auto dealers
need to be een8'tlve to that change."
Changing technology, and the need for
dealera to ,..apond to thla change, wae the
rMUage of the third Conference speaker, Dr.
Heartalff Wllaon, a management apecfallat who
numb«• IBM, General Motors, and Rockwell
among hla dlents.
Wiison noted that work la underway to
computerize the car buying proceH. In the
dealerehlp of the not too dletant future, he
explained, a hoateaa wtll usher cuetomera to
computer ternilnals equipped with televlalon
ecreena, on which plcturff, apeclflcatlons,
or.ttone, and prices of desired C$t models cai be
d 1Played. ·
The computer will also be able to atructure
payment plans, and at the customet"s r-equeet,
produce 111 contract ready for sJgntng.
"Change In the way we lfVe and WOt1t -
more dramatic than the hUman rlle9 ha ~
eeen -Is coming within our llfetlme. Thia
change can be very good, If we ourMtvea ate
wllllng to change."
1937
Jimmy lnyder
130..a
1919
Aene'fhomee
104.785
1914*
AeneThomel
M.53
• F 1rst year the one-lap speed
was determined.
··Record.
1971
TomlM• --
· A lumni tooi,,,,11 i l e"et8
Ticket• for th• HOond annuel Newport
Harbor VI. Corona d9' Mat alumni football
genie, with monlea ~ fUMeted through
the Newport Hwt>ot lldt or the prOOMcJ1 • .,,
•vtllabte at the tollowl11g lltee;
The Cannery RMtaur:r•· Newport BMch The 8torelc .. per, W• Clltr Plau
Tr9<!1 and Tt\rMda. 11th St,, Coeta M ..
Neat Thing• -Balboa Penlnaul1
Old Vou Say Red, White and Blue, Lido
Vltleoe
Ticket• ar1 $4 at the gate, S3 at 1ny atte
prior to the g1me. which 11 echldul9d for June
10, 7 p.m., at Newpon Harb« High.
BaN"elba ll f!amp
The Fountain Valley-Pacer Belketball Camp
at Fountain Valley High, School 11 ICheduled
for June 20 to July a ~ entering gradle 5 through 8 ~ ·
Time• lor the c1mp ere 1-3:30 p.m ..
Monday through Frld1y.
Among tho11 1t the camp wlll be Chapman
College Co1ch Walt HIZUl'd, UCLA U1l1t1nt
coach Cr1lg lmpleman, Stanford a1111tant
coach Cory Ru11ell. E1t1ncle High Coach
Larry Sundermen, Fountain Valley High Coech
Dave Brown, Ocean V,lew High Co1ch Jim
Harri• and new UC Irvin• player Johnny
Roger•. 1 transfer lrom Stanford.
Further lnform1t1on c1n be Obtained by
calling 731-5385.
' LA 8TIDNG8 Ho. 8CHE>UU
TuHday, July 12 -San 0119.0 Frlare;
Wedneaday, July 13 -Arizona RKquet•:
Saturday, July 17 -Dallu Stare;
Wedn11day, July 20 -Newport Beach
Orangea; Tueaday, J4Jly 2t -lndlana l.o¥el;
Wednndey, Juty 27 -Houston Mtro-KnoU;
Friday, July 29 -Chtcaoo fYre.
All matcm. will be held at the Forum In
Inglewood. All matcnaa begin at 7:30 p.m.
A~cot racl•6
The annual "Salute to Indy'' Is llat9d this
wae«end 1t A9cot Pn In Gerdena with eprint
cera taking the epotllght.
The 1prlntar1 will vi• In two complete
progral'N on S1turde.y and 8und1y, following
their uau1t time trl1l1, aurvlval heata and
Mml-mllna with 1 50-lap r.ature 81turday
night and a 40-lappar Sunday.
The Hodgdon-Clrb NASCAA Winston
Haclng Sarin klckl off the program with I
l?Ortlftl•n ttock ~ rece tontgtrt.
For ticket lnfotmatlon, phone (213)
321-1100 0( (213) 323-1142.
r '
Rookies ushering • ID a ·new era at Indy OCC wins
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -In the
1970s, 47 rookies made it into the
Indianapolis 500. In the 1980s -only
four years -35 have made it.
But this new generation is not JUSt
new faces. It's a new breed -faster,
better educated and, some say, less
skillful.
Certainly, they've traveled a different
road to the 2 1h-mile Indianapolis Motor
Speedway.
PCAA adds
baske tball
official
From AP dl1patclaff
The Pacific Coast Athletic
Aaociation has approved three-
man officiating crews for its
basketball games next season,
PCAA Commiasioner Lewis
Cryer announced Thursday.
The decllion to add an official
was made at the league's annual
spring council meetings held at
Utah State.
The PCAA also decided to
limit ii. basketball tournament to
eight teams, thus eliminating the
conference'• bottom two teams in
the standings from competing in
the pc»t-.euon event.
Aleo during its meetings. the
PCAA Co4ncil sanctioned a new
championship in soccer
beginniJ18 this .fall.
The conference will be divided
mto two divisions in the sport,
with Fresno State, University of
the Pacific and San Joee State
competing in the northern
section and Cal State Fullerton,
Long Beach State, UC Santa
&rbara and Nevada-Las Vegaa
making up the southern section.
Six rookies have qualified for
Sunday's 67th Indy 500. Al Unser Jr ..
the son of a three-time Indy 500 winner,
is the youngest at 21 and Pat Bedard, a
veteran racing journalist, is the oldest at
41.
Of the six, Chris Kniefel wants to play
professional basketball, while foreign
drivers Derek Daly and Teo Fabl arrived
as experienced road racers. Only
38-year-old Steve Chassey took the
traditional ~th through sprint and
midget car races.
Nineteen of th~ 33 drivers in this
year's field weren't here as recently as
four yean ago. Four are from la.st year's
group of nine rookie qualifiers and six
are left over from the 10-rookie crop in
1981.
Johncock, Mario Andretti and, Johnny
Rutherford -the men who dominated
the sport until Rick Mears joined them
in 1978.
The newcomers hope to bec:ome the
men who will replace the likes of Bobby
Unser, Al Unser, A.J . Foyt, Gordon
Those seven drivers have won every
Indy since 1967, with the exception of
1972 when the late Mark Donohue made
the coveted trip to Victory Lane. Bobby
Unser is retired and Rutherford spent
more time in the hospi~l this month
than he did on the track.
Hagler, Scypion vie
in Unsanctioned bout
PROVIDENCE. R.l. (AP) -
Marvelous Marvin Hagler will
defend the world middleweight
utJe tonight, at least ln the eyes
of boxing fans and the United
States Boxing Associaiion·
international.
But because of a dispute over
the appointment of officials,
Hagler's scheduled 15-round
bout against Wilford Scypion, the
World Boxing Council's top-
ranked contender, ~pparently
will not be sanctioned by the
WBC and the World Boxing
Aleociation.
Cappucino of New Jersey and
Joe Cortez -are not members of
the WBC. Judges Dr. Stu
Kirchenbaun} of Michigan and
Larry Hazzard of New Jerwy.
who a18o iii a well-known referee,
do belong. Cappucino ls expected
to be the referee, with Cortez the
third judge.
"We can onJy sanction a fight
where our rules arc obeyed."
Sulaiman said Wedne:iday.
But even though the fight
doosn't have WBC and WBA
sanction. lt doesn't appear Hagler
would be stripped of title
recognition by thoee two groups
if he wins.. Should Scypion upset
Hagler. it ii possible he wouldn't
receive championship
recognition, bui Sulalman
Implied he personally would
favor~h!m.
supremacy
a ward
For the fifth atraigl}t year,
Orange Coast College haa
captured the South Coast
Conference Sporu Supremacy
Award, emblematic of the top
overall athletic program in the
conference.
Oranee Coast won a total of
eight conference championships
this year, twice aa many u any
other llChool in the conference.
OCC won titles in men'• .-ocr:er. c:roes country (meet champs), IOlf
and tennis (tournament champa).
The Bucs aho won women'•
volleyball, crcu country (meet
champs). swimming (dual
champa) and tennia.
OCC also grabbed a 1>9ir of
state championahipa thia yeu, ln
women'• volleyball and women's
croea country. The Piratel have
captured 10 state crowns over the
past four years.
Orange Coast won this year's
award with 206 polnts. Fullenon
College was second for the fifth
straight year with 187, followed
by Golden West (l 74), Mt. San
Antonio (171). Cerritos (162),
Santa Ana ( 130), Cypre9 (92 ~)
and Compton (18 ~ ).
The Pirates won the men'•
division with 114 points and the
women's with 92.
Fullerton and Golden West
won four conference
champion.ships each &hia year'
with Mt. SAC and Cerritos
taking three and Santa Ana one.
"I don't care to listen to that
right now," Hagler said of the
sanctioning dispute. "I'm just
t.hinkina about Wilford Scypion.''
The WBA had agreed to let the
WBC run the fight because
Scyplon ls the WBC'1 leading
contender. At first, the WBC had
threatened not to sanction the
fight unless it was held at ita new
title Umit of 12 rounds. Student nig~t at Fairgrounds·
I
The other members of the
PCAA are UC Irvine and Utah
State. with New Mexico State to
bec:ome the conference's 10th
member on Jan. 1. New Mexico
State will compete for PCAA
championships.
Concentration
After Hagler refused to fiaht
12 tounds. the WBC and WliA
wu told the fight.en had aareed
to let the USBA-I appoint the
fight officials. The Rhode Wand
Commiaaion on Horse Racing and
Athletics approved
It will bie student nlaht at the Oranae County Fairgrounda thJa
evening at the weekly
motorcycle program.
Southern California junior
hi&h and high 1ehool students
with Identification will re<:eive $1
off the rqu.l,ar admlaion price.
speedway riders. They wW bef
competlf\I on ~ oc rnotorc:yci.i
whtch are half the nae of the .i
regt.tlar clauea. and u in aJJ 1 ~peedway r--. have no braka. ~
Tennis ace John McEnroe fire! backhand
return Thursday during French Open.
Now. Joee Sulaiman, president
of the WBC, says he will nol give
the fight titie sanction bL>cauae
two of the officials -Frank
Tonia flt'• proaram wUl
welcome the return of the jUnJor
\
The action ,eta under way al 8 f
at the Fairgroundl wtth the ptesl OR9nln1 at 6:90. Parking and
PfOQrUN are free.
Schlichter's debt repo;tedly $600,0001-------~-i
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) -
Suspended Belt.imore Colt.' quarterback
Art Schlichter rema.ina about $600,000 in
debt even after ~ping the $1~0.000
ow~ to hia bookiea In the Baltimore
area, his lawyer said Thursiay.
"My understanding la there wu a debt
of $750,000 or more," lawyer John
Chesler aaJd.
"But the money owed to those
lndivlduala (the bookies) la not an
entorceable debt. It'• my underst.andlna
he 1tlll owed them about •no.oocr.
They're barred from U">'lna to collect
1Mt debt."
Harold Broolca Jr., Samuel ALuda and
.bepb 8e1o. all of BaJUmon, plMded
llMQty Monday to one federal count Heb oUntentaa. travel to promote pmbllna,
In Coonectioft with the Sohlk:bt« cue.
Me;ertbeJem. the former OhJo State
Unlventty football •tar who now la
hospitalized f« comoulllve aambUna. etllf owet •tJ0,000 tori htt B&himck•
cOrklomthlum and nearly f!00,000 tn
1•mbHna·related debt• to other Credlton;
tn &he curHnt t11ue of Sporu
D.luitra1-d ........... ~ la ~ ~-· d8bl ..... terribl.,
~,.,IM..,,. of~ wblre ~don't
*8Dl to ~ up lft i.1111 ~ tiiemu. ~ knOiir ,.....,.. 6iiilllCI wt.at the .....
0¥8' ~ iAM dlM fl whllt
people to " •
Chester u.id ThW'lday that Schlich~
told him he bad tbouiht. of luidd~lut
winter durina his worst days in
Baltimore, but \bat, to hi& knowledge,
the player never actually Uied to take
his own life.
''Schlichter said to me that the
thouaht had c:roaed his mind, but that's
cn:med \he.rninda of a lot of people. But.
by the time he aot to U4. he -Naa pretty
well straightened out.." Clester aid.
La the Sporu Illustrated Interview,
Chea\er described Schlichter aa "a
frenzied betcor. It dld~'l Mike any
diff~ what hew., pmblJnc on. H•
had no .naiU.Vity to that. He jult needed
to pmble ... "
Johnston • Murphy
~ f.. . ..
I
'
C4 Orange Coe.at OAU.V PtLOT/Friday, May 21, 1988
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• DACTA C._2J paid IM 60
At'-'d-17, 100
Oarsnien selected
for national tryout
A pair of Oranae Cout C.OUege
oarsmen hav' been selected to
participate in the 1983 Pre-Elite
Sweep Program. sponJOred by
the United Stat.es Olympic Men's
Rowina C.Ommittee.
Fred Adam and Scott Smith,
both sophomores and members of
OCC'1 JV eight crew that leaves
Saturday to ®mpete in the Slit
annual National Intercollegiate
Rowing Champion1hlp1 in
Syracuse, are two of 32
candidat.es from the oat.ion who
have been 9elect.ed to take part in
the program.
Adam prepped a\ Santa
Barban High and Smith went to
Univenity High in Irvine. Both
were JUah echool football players.
Adam la a 6-1, 190-pc:>\ll'lder', and
Smith is 6-4, 190 pounds.
Ad¥0 and Smith will take part
in the Sports Festival in C.Olorado
Springs in June. The top 16-24
oarsmen t.rom that event will be
choeen to take part in the Pre-
EUte selection and ti"alnina camp
at Harvard Univenity in July.
The 1quad will then be pared
to the top eight to compete in the
Pan American Gamee in Caracas,
Venezuela, Aus. 14-28.
OnJ&:~ht West Coast oartinen have tabbed to the 32-man
aquad. Three are from UC
Berkeley, two each from
Wuhlngton and OCC and one
from Stanford. The 1quad will be
coached by Ted Waahburn. head
freehman coach at Harvard.
A.dam and Smith helped je.t
OCC's JV eight to a lM .reccrd
thia aeaaon and the Western
Sprints title.
The two ~ aooompuUed
the Pirates to Bos1on last fall to
compete ln the Head of the
Charles ~ta.
OCC eight to row
Syracuse regatta • ID
Orange Coast C.Ollege'a junjor
varsity eight crew will leave
Saturday morning to compete in
the Slat National lntercolleQiate
Rowt.ng Championships (IRA) at
Onondaga·wke in Syracuse, N.Y.
The regatta is slated to run
June 2-4.
OCC's JV eight has enjpy~ a
successful campaign in 19S3.
rolling up a 19-4 9eal0n mark and
winning the Western Sprints
Utle tor the sixth straight year.
"This year's JV eight is one of
the fa.st.est crews we've ever had
at OCC," says Pirate C.OOCh Larry
Moore. "The crew broke our old
course record on North Lido
Channel twice this year.
"We're hopine .. to bring home
our first-ever JV eiaht IRA
championship trophy \hla year. I
think we stand an excellent
chance of accompllablng that
goal."
The Plrates set their COW'M
record ln the aeaaon opener •a•ln•t UCLA. covering the
2,000-meter North Lido couree i.n
~:4tU2 '°beet the Bruins by four
lent'ha. ~e Pirates aaain broke the
old record eeveral weelcs later,
beatin1 California at the
Newport. ~tta in ~:47.70.
Thia yeu • trip to Syr~
marks the eighth Ume the Pirates
have competed in the IRA. 00:'1
most succesaful trip occurred In
19SU when lhe Pirates won the
frosh eight title, and with lt
grabbed the natJonal
championship.
OCC's JV eight will be
competing this year tn the
Kenned y Challenge Bowl
Division. which is open to JV
eights and certalll vanity boats
that have not won major events
this year.
OCC's JV eight owns victories
thls year over such powerbowle
as the University of Washington.
California and UCLA. This year's
crew w one of the biggest in the
tchool's history, averaging 6-3,
1S9 pounds per man.
Preliminary heata of the IRA
will be held Thunday with boats
winning ln the preliminary
automatlc.Uy advancfn& to the
Saturday, June 4 final.a. Opening
day loeen will row in repechage
heats Friday (June 3) with the
first and second-place boats in
the repechages advancing to the
finals.
The OCC shell i.s stroked bJ
Tim Ya.lr, a 6-1, 175-pounder and
the only frahm6n in the boaL
Other oarsmeh Include Scott
Smith (6-4, 190). Rua Forbes
(6-2, 190), Fred Adam (6-1, 190),
Eric Moe (6-6, 200), John Ma.ride
(6·5, 195), Matt Hainline (6-4,
1115) and Shelddll Kirkpatrick
(6·2. 195).
OCC'1 couwaln ls Rich CamJ
(~-4. 118).
BJ\ YLOR A REMINDER. • •
From Page C1
bothen me." • '
n1miieu. there's got t°' be a
teuon for thla."
Bavuf wouldn't commit
himlelt, but lt aeenw like Golta
has maybe another cha.nee« two
to prove himself. And lf he
doesn't, Well ...
Goin& Into tonlfht'• 1t.:me, Oolts la 0-2 with a .81 ERA In
his last 2~ lnnlno, th• f'lCht·
hander bu~ a..rwa
on aeven hit.I. • • •
I
J
'
·----------------· -
DUBLDf, on -A~ •Uh NBC an CB , •illcb a eource Mid 11 the ~ in the blltory of thi Prot1wana1 o.u-.
AlloolaUon Tour, haa ~~upon, tbe
N.aate1ied Prem le9med 111~.
.. The packa1e will etiaurt the financial
atablllty of the Tour ~ 1988," a hi&hlY-~ PGA Tour aou.rce
told the AP. He uked
iha1 be not be idenUfied
at thJa time.
.. It 11 the bi11eat
pecb1e in the Tou.T'•
btitcry,'' he uld.
n!~~J'~
1~e11ed around •eo ml11km, you wouldn't be
far 1n0na." the aource
said.
'!be NBC CIOlltnct runs
for three years. lOM.-88,
u¥I the~ PllCkaae for five years. 1984-88.-)
Ne1ottat1ona, which
have covered several
mantha, were conducted
separately with each
netwcn.
NBC ia expected to
aJVWmce ita portion of
the eoiltnct thJa week.
Some detaila, ooncerniD8
the teleWinc of .... fie
tournaments, remain to
be wmbd out wtqi cm,
aid the 9JIUJ'Oe, Who WU
eio. '° the negotlatiom.. The financial
arnneemmta have been ~·tded. bowewl-. nder the contract,
the 10Uroe said, NBC will
televla• ae~en Tour
:"' one ie. than the --wwk .. cowrtna th.la
yW, end CBS wt1I add
two tournament•,
~ that ~wodt'a aollidule to 18 events,
not includin1 the Muten. The Masten'
iel••fa.lon con tract ia htndJecf by the A.,....ca
JC. ..... J Coif Cub and
la not part of the PGA
Tow -=hedule.
Covera1e of the
Gi.ter Hartford 0Pen
will 10 from NBC" to
CBS, the source said.
CBS alao will add
national televialoa
cOvUaee of the Byron
JCellan Olllllic In nan... :ma next year. The tournament bu
not been teleYtaed for the
~two 1!11~•
The Canadian Open,
tbe IOUrCe aaid, clropm ol1 ibe CBS achedule, but
b bly will be
In Cenede by
CBS wtD add one
otbK tournament, which
baa not )'et been
klllltltied.
111·111m
SILVA
MAR.JORIE P. SILVA,
• ~. rt'96dmt of Newport a.ch. Ca. ~.away on May 25. 1913. She 11
1MrVlved by h~r bu.bend faw c. Silva, her mother
autb Palmer, 2 1on1
Hamilton and Kennet h
Smith, aDd dau1ht er
Barb a ra Sml&h , 5
CJ'llndchlldren and l sr-t-~-Al8o llUIViwd by 6-lilt.en Jean ~ apd
Pat Hamon. Private tef'Ylca
were held. In lieu of OoW'en
eontribudool rm7 be made
to the American Cancer Society. Pacific Vlew lllortuary dlrecton
..
Looking f\or help
The Lakers' Kareem Abdul-Jabbar looks for a
teammate to. pus to as Philadelphia's Moses
Malone defends during Thursday night's
second game of the NBA championship series
in Philadelphia. The 76ers won to take a 2-0
lead.
Warning s.ign needed.
badly for Billy Martin
•
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IOU tor tt,. Mlllt~jUll-
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•O:M 12:00 noon 8awrday .
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1.i;• BrokW 812•1700 I 1•1• • t ··~) ..... ............... J :~~ Tl .._. -........ -One ot•a kind o..n ~ :~~ A Dr'-'..,.. home. a vlew trl level office l>ld1 -I
1)1: Bcfrm "" bath. New elevcttoredeluxe -ht floor parking AND • :: ~~ ~T' ot':!: Two pethou9e reDdenUal condo'• from I
:: Short~ to baedt. beck street ea. wflarae double garage.
11......,. l'urn..n...i llUCJ
Pr109 ~ a11uoo. Cell Must eee to apprec:iate. Investor terms. I
5*-231 Price; $1,100,000 «best offer by 8-1-83. j
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AUTOS WOITED
THE 'REAL
ESTATERS
''. 1111U"HI
THE REAL
E STATERS
Mr. Clark 84~9930.
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ocean. a 1&.000. owe. JS0.000 2nd. 871-4717 .,.., 11 em.
.........
~ wood and ldMI CNttol'D bull\ ._ In IAC\ma Bllch. Beu. i. llUpe!' ~. wW tnde,
&any blCk Of' """' Oii bill herd lo mab • deal. I BldrooD\, I~ bath. (Cl IU)
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1'\t F1XEO RAT!
RVM ~
30Y'EAM
With ..... ~.· LIW ... .. ,,. ,.,99 2 ldrm + Uquldatton a It model den, 2\t belftl. IMllfv9 pWteci home. 120,000 flr~taoe, maonlfl~nt -. Jneftlet. 1318,IOO. maaer .,._ wftfl window 118,500 dWn. Call P ..
... and *-'*IO_.. ttlok Taoora. aet
eel wlndoW, wetber, Mtty
4 llft.
OPEN HOUSE FRl/IAT /SUN/MON
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2eet !L.MH, CM
848 4513; ll't9 n5-ea09
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144.000 DN. CclM, brMd Wllll llT MW41Ae...O--I, O.......-outof""9
000 eq.ft. lt._a from ~!!!'4 lk{IOfnlt ~ 1urt end .. nd. Tim _ .. , ~ F4
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home with lerge entry
patio and POOL Aleo, or-.. of Bad! -and,Mhlon~.
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' BARRETr RlALTY
~-
Houle ,rV8et/8wl/
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(t 100.000 Hlumeb,.
11\.li" GAML) 12171
Deen ''· Nor1tl .... of
for Ad Action
Cll a
Daly Plot
AD·VIS(I
fl.UlllWI 1 & 2 •• Condae ~ o...-... ""'i:·:-':--
\
$1.14 Pl' diy
lllll'a ALL ,o.t S1t11 '°' • • ttl.,_ ..
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Pl.OT som
DIECTmtY
Room for rent, welk to
lldt, *276 mo. , .. & ..... 146-4119
Non lf'llkr, Mat, mile/
female, kite"•" prlYf-
lagea. S260 mo. ~ ud.
t'79-eo453
Rm, ... 9d\. poa1. ma mo. Wom.i onty, 16 up.
AWll "'-"' 16. 146 2llO
BALBOA ISLAND. Fur-
nlahld BA & batb oft o•r•o•. n-amkr, no c ooklno. t225/mo. t4t -121t or--------
21~
Almllfled room In prtwlle
l»oMe, femet• pref.
t200/mo. 64t·t847,
~
a.lboe ........... PfMde
...... No coddnt Of
••oiling. U00/1110.
175-8391
142-6171
Ca Otange CoMt DAILY PtLOT!f"rtday, May 27, 1983
llOIOKOll
BY SIDNEY OMAR
SatwNQ. May II
ABU:8 (March 21-April 19): You niceive news
which boo.ta confidence, enablea you to accept
added nsp:ulbUlty and to ~te in polltkal or
community Jll'OJlct. PMt bWdena are removed, path
ill cleared fat procr-ln MW direc:tlon. Leo figurea
promlnentlY.
TAURIJ8 (April 20-May 20): 11nt im.pre18iona
prove c.'IOf1'eCt. Sui-Yey ~ iD It* mtirety. Focua
on travel plane. education. i.w. sPlrttual values.
You'll br..k from Vld1ti'on,_you1l bellelit from takina chance on your own llaWU.. Aquarian plays key role. ·
GEMINI (May 21-Ju.ne 20): Seme of humor
aida in raolvtnc crisla. Ernbarraalini ltatemmlt by
am>date provee W-timed, can temporarily revene ~Money lituation requires fw1her study. No~ at thfa time. Another Gemini aida
your cauae.
CANCER (June 21-JuJy 22): Check details,
outline routine, atlck to basic issues. Locate
necessary documents, accent public relations,
welcome vi.lit from one who aided you in n!Cent
put. YOU could receive invitation to aurpriae party.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Opportunity exista to
improve aecwity, to take leseona in games whkh
chall~ intellect -including bridge, me.. Be
ready for change, travel, variety and excitins
confrontation with member of opposite aex. Virgo
plays key role.
VIRGO (Aug. 28-Sept. 22): You'll have
opportunity to acquire art objects, items which
beautify surroundings. Open linea of
communication, be ready for surprise invitation
which could include travel. Taurus, Libra, Scorpio
penona filure in aoenarlo.
UBRA (SepL 23-0ct, ~2): De~ tl!.m» .. avoid
aelf-deception, lie versatile without 8C8tterlng your
forces. Techniques can be perfected, put errors can
be rectified. \'ou'U have opportunity to obtain
information prev'lously cluaified. Pisces figures
~~io (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Emphasis on
achievement, responsibility, dealinga With one in
position of authority. Init1al aubmialton may be
rejected -you are on right tnck and auperion will
be duly impr..-ed. Me.uge received from relative
in tranllit. .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): What
previoualy drained budaet, proved expensive wW
now do abou~face mid beoorue valuable~ Focus
on paymenta, collectiom, valid opportunity to
inctew income potential. You'll re.ch more people,
value of product wW be enhanced. CA~CORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Highlight
Uiitiative, eX)ll'em wtJ.lmane-to pioneer a projeet,
PfOCeed with ClOllfidenoe. 'I'lmmc. judgment are on
tlrget. Make peraonal appearances, atreaa
lndividualii5exude confidence,· wear bright colon. Aquarian key role. .
AQU S (Jah. 20-Feb. 18): Look behind
acenea tor. answers. Confidential files are available
if you ask right people. Family member makee
valuable augeation. You could receive invitation to
clandestine conference. Cancer native figures in
unusual aoenario.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Accent on social
ac1ivity, romantic lnteresta, wishes that come true.
Popularity increues. valuable contacts are matfe,
me.ages Or-mail provides atimulaUon. Travel plana
are part of -=enar1o. Gem.int, Sagittarius aatives
figure prominently.
.. .. "' .......
T~ llaht typing,
llQht nung. Mln. 1 YMI offtoe exp. SS/how. FIA/
ACROSS
1 lpeo -
e~
c:otna
10 RlchcMe
14 Jec:ob •• 90I'\
15 " ... to~no
18 Army
delinquent
11 lmmatUNty
19 Dhoti'• kin
20 Bank wortl•
21 Sl6ctt4W'1
S4 V•tment
57 8'esta
59 Get wind of
81~
64 Looked hard
87 Cole and
othen ee Skat•
competlt!W-
ly: 3 wct..
70 Re'IO ...... ' c.u
71 Coll. IUbj.
72 Fortification
73 Rupture
74 M°'8tUfel 23 Roman god•
25 State: abbr.
26 Aslanfete
27 Weekday.
75 Down-.at-hMI J;.fi~-OOWN
abbr.
29 Genesis bOy
31 TU1e
33 Fabrication
34 Iraq money
36 Saying
40 Otherwt9e
42 Hardened « Trotley
45 Dlsaullde
47 Puzzle
49 Exist
. 50 T radl circuit
52 Spanish
artist
53 Motel
2
1 Detum
~us net ll09 a Moet frigid
4 "I cannot -
-lie"
5Commanded
8 The: Sp.
7 Repeet a Genuine
9 Deeigns
10~
11 Expect
12 Supported
13c.r..n1ng
18~1
22 Sc:Mty
24 Oetec11ng
N9wpoft Hrtlr at' l'ftOOf'-
lng, ~ dmWllll "' a.y ....... 1tOo07ll
T11•!11dltl!!
device
27 Scr.,n!Md
28 PrOYOke
30 PurpoMI
32 P<*er atake
35 Insurgent
37 AMTRAK or
VIA trip:
2wds.
38 Lofty loch
39Warnlno
41 Fish
43 Coercion
48 Talk wildly
480ynemo
': rjNNfl~
'.'lE'll':'L:'
', 4,. I £ 1J
'*1• 51 Coupled
S4Mr.
Doubleday
55Goawwt
56-Rouge
58 Cof)cord
60 Rallh'• mate
82 Ac:customed
(to)
83 Cargo vessel
85 Modified
plant
86 Aefu9e ' 69 Local trains
111 1.v~l:\'.11.· * * f ,", 1\ ..
0 I C ~. M 11 i I f1
M»1 t t)w'> ..
~· 't.'>A'C:.: !,.&~: ~. ~ ',, I I
:.t..1', .,,_. 't ' . r I
blll.la ......
WIEBE
Tll PllCI IS
ILL-WIYl lllm
MEMORIAL
SAL:E
OPEN IAM-ePM
'71.CAPAI lt770 ATi. pa, MtMzo
71 vw 9UG ltl10 UC.111COT ..,, CAPfl 11770
A11,pa.•1MZO '/o~p "TT~l ttno
Auto. *• PL 01l't'ND •• MSA~LD•• .... w ... cu .....
......... ...., •--c--ecr.-....,..
verr low MHM, ot11. owner. Eetlte Hie •
... 090 .... -.......... OofMI\. ........ tlOOO.
f .
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-------------------------------.......... ----ul• ... -----~----=
'Maj<f?r: Barbara' is
his change ef :pace
By KAREN E. KLEIN
Of the Daily PUot 8talf
-.... (
•
Big Doings
i ~.Kristen Lowman.
~ .
2 FromPage 1
-m time In Rockport.•• .~ Lowman does not come from a ~ ahow bWlinaa family. Her mother
..... w-. a bit of a hoofer M a young atrl. I but when World War ll came ~
I
ahe joined the WAVES (women a
Navy) to 1ee the world. It WM durlrtg
her tour of duty with the Navy that
lhe met Quincy Lowman. a band8ome
I Marine, who was one of Col. Carl8on'a
eJi1e raiders. ~ to Lowman. her parenta
didn't hit it off together when they
first met.
"It w.-IOl'1 like one of thme old
1940a movies." she recalled. "They
met in Washington D.C. She wu at an
officer's club with a plfrlend, when
the.e two gentlemen asked them to
join them. My mom immediately la1d no, but her friend said, •come on, _
~ •• please.' So mom finally said Kristen LoWman b Sllrah.
"~y father'• name la Quincy
Lowman, but for eome reuon. my
mother thought bia name wae
Lowman Quincy ... I guat it. w.
the old 8el"Viice pme of lat name f1rat
•.• IO all night lhe kept referrinl to
him .. Lowman.
"He WU IO offended. n.ey didn't
get on at all at tint, tM.at they fSnally
bad a ~ of the mlndl. and rm
glad ..;;y-ciid'· ••• ..
Lowman bad always want.eel to act.,
but ahe dkl not )amp into it wtib -heart all aflutter. Nor wu •he draiaed Into ft kickinc and antcbinc ~ her will. It was IOl'1 of an on-
-Sain, off-aaatn romance with the
~I wu in htah chool I w~ IO
shy,'' she recalled, "to my dad aua-tect I ·join the drama club or
take a dnma daa When I prot.eated.
he llAid. 'all rt,ht, do what you want.'
However, I WM ID emt.rra.ed q
uhamed of ~ a coward I went
abMd .ad took a ci-. I loled #. I
w.m't..-.t.· .. far~tt ... but I
b8d. bill; ~ I went to 1be UnMnn1!.of
Thlll • • ICdoloa mQlr, Mll;I.~ ~·aatna the drama aepartaaent.
nnatly, cmce I W11 flld up wbla the
lon1tn1 and the curio•ltY and wondertna. I switched my rnajar' to
clnlJm. ~~You llM to be ...-av• • • youh1ater io get noticed in that
cleplr1mmt.'' Lowman aid. ·~It . wm
I
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I 1J C9e~ 'l't .<.w '~8PfJ:f/JePU9)1MM ~Id "9 (l
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The Cl:issic-:
ONE YEAR FREE!
OFFERING:
• OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
• co-ED AEROBICS
• CHILD CARE AT All LOCATIONS
• INDOOR POOLS AT TUSTIN & ORANGE
• JACUZZI
•SAUNA
• STEAM ROOM AT TUSTIN
• EUCALYPTUS
• FREE WEIGtffS
• NAUTILUS
• RACQUETBALL COURTS
• BODY FAT TESTING
• BLOOO PRESSURE •
• DIET & NUTRITIONAL COUNSatNG • EXERCfSE PRESCRIPTION
------------
-C ... urf•ntly Screening
llAD 90Y8: ~Md R. S..... P9rwl ("TllC>9," "F..t nm.. at
Ridgmont High") gtwe a meting pertonnanca u a~
" ... ' punk who IMml about penonaj ~In a grim )wenlle detention cenw. Alt extremely 1n1 .... violent ftlm
dltecled by R6clc Aoaenthal ("Hallo •en U").
MAX DUGAN UTURMI: Rated PG. An emu.Ing but
polntlela comedy fl'om the prollftc typMwt1ar of Nell Simon.
Martha Muon at.,. ... down-on-Mr~ 9Chool t-.cher
and mother who oe«• 1n uneicpected vtllt from her iono-io.t
fatt._ (Juon Robwdl). who hM • IUltcaM ful of ca1tt to
IC)8nd.
HIGH ltOAD TO Cl9M: ~ed PG. Tom Selleck and 8eea
Annatrong make .,, ~ Hllng tMtn of ~,.,. In tt"8
entoYable but forgett.ole "R8ider•" ripoff. Too lttle eftentlon
II gtwn to the rClt'MllCe. too mud\ to the predlctable plot and
some violent 1klrmlahe1. Great photography of vintage
l>iptaMI.
THE OUTllDaRI: Rated PG. Director Francie Ford
eoppota bnngl ~-E. Hinton's d-* teen nowt fo llMd ....
The 9tytlnd. oft9n UMMtllttc -.oeoh m-not ~ to
IOtM older movlegoer1, but It should prove a htt amoog
...,_. fen1. Good pertormancaa from a young cast that
lndudea C. Thomas Howell. Matt Diiion and Ralph MaccHo.
U9 11&.Aete ITALUON MTUNll: ~led PG. ~ to
the pooular hit about a bMutlful bladl l'loraa and N9 young
rider. In thla outing, the Blactc le stolen and N9 owner. played
again by Kelly Reno. t~•wfa to the Middle &It to r.acue the
l'lorM.
LONR WOLP MCQUAD•: Rated PG. Martlal art1
..,.,._.,. Ctiuc:k Norrie and Devtd Carradine lqUW9 off In thla
actlon-edventure tllm. Non18 play9 a rnodwn TUM R8nger
hunting fof Carradine.
DP0UD: A-.cl R. Beeutlful Neat..... l<lnlkl ('1" .... "
"Cat People") CM't aatYllga tN9 lnteltectually pm~ ftlm
from writer-director .Jam" Toback. The ab1urd atory
IOfMhow mtue a collaga gilrt'a aaerdl tor~ In New YOfil
City. the world of hl{jh fashion modetlng afWf a vtolant
ln1ematJonll tarrortat gang. Danes Rudoff ~ ~
TOOTie ..._, N . ~ Huft'l1w1 J*1W at out otwart
actor wtlO donl women'• clotNng, and wlrw a I09P °'*9 fda.
F!.naet fflrn of the yeal". and lt'1 ~ toudllftg. too. Jeaek:a.
LAnge, Tan Gwr and Biii Murrey are ~ In *'IPPOrtlG8
rolea.
E.T. 11tR IEXTM-TIMEITMAL: ~ed PG, atw'I Henry•
Thomu. Dee WaUaca, Robert Macnaughton and Drew
Batrymore. TNI NgNy acc:lelrned ecteno.fantesy flm daatl
with • young bOy wM bafl ... a llttle '°" allan from °"*
tpaee. TN9 farnlty Jllm h• bean toUted • ona of the '*" 1n
yeal""I.
GANDta A.eed PG, .... 8«'I Klngaley • India's non-vtoliant ~ ....... pat1ormMoe .,... ..... ponrlM of
• ...,., • lof'9 • " la, oontlnualty lntt1gulng.
..... 1111--~ R. Roy= *"' In -ttwaig but U1•1111""'*9 fllm ebout a ~on 1M ::r ... :..a..: ~·-~~hofaa.~.:::. a.cllefn (''Setwday ,.,.,..) .
DA.MiWTs~R.OanA~of"9old~ 1
Nlghl Ltv." ptaya a meek cotteoe prottNOr conMO Into ...mg 1M ldanlll)' of a ....... moe.e.r. A~ tlM a ... ~~~he CM'I 8lllWliOI thil weak OCllllady.
5
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tao a ¥ .. '!~~ft . .,,_(c;e\;:zte_c:;r,_ AJ!,ti .. 't"'\Q!l. ?fi+cf' .. ..,..w~r.41 ·•-Y-· ;sr, .... .,.~.~-·--:--w F-.,...,,, ·v--;-r ----· •J -·
Piiot Weekender/Friday, May 27, 1983 ~
t -------~--
If you're 18 or older, you can volunieei to
hand.le the anticipet.ed 90ld-«1t crowds. You'll even
get a seat to enjoy the ahows.
''Man of La Mancha'' will be atqed Jw.e 23
throu1h .July 10, while "Mtater lloberta" is
scheduled to run July 21 throuah A;;.. 7. The
aboW'I nm nightly except Mondaya at 8 pm. with
matinees on Sawday at 2 p.m. and Sunday at 3 p.m.
Prospective ushers should contact Susan
Gordon at 831-4650 for further det.alla.
• • •
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8
I • -,..:
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iri' 2
~ "O "C &L ' ~ i 1 J: -0 it
HOLIDAY MATH•EE
-------------------'.-' l .. ' I l : 1 -,-) f.. ,-• ·~ • -.• •. 'c. _ '' ~t-' . 11'-J -------------------------· ------------
PLAYS
•Af!M. ..,., ..... WOf1d Pl~• °' 8n origllW pley.
wit open w.._., on ltle 8eoond a.,. Of 8oulh Coell
Aepertofy, MC5 T~ Center DfM, Coeta M.-(157~).
PWib11..,_. .. be .. T___. througtl ~ .a
~..._.lit I p.m.. Ind welklnd ,... .. • 3 p.m. llAill
June 11.
-.AR I tmlDI." a drwna ~ nwte8I urnet. Cl*" ton!Ght tot the AM MQ lfl . a ~ et the AnlMllft CUMurW
Art• C•nter, 911 N. Broadway, Aftal*M (111·41U).
P...tor"** wM be gtwn F~ and ~ at l:IO
through June ... ....-V -.,• 8 ,..,..... Molfiapl'f, COl.eliiW M .. ~ ~ ~·.,. UiguMC....,n Aoed. L9CIUM a..tl (484-0743). ..... IP""-T....,.._ ttwouoh ~Md~~ untl June 11. .. 4IOOOllYa CMAMJI," a oot'ftedJ about a playboy
trelltfonMd In .... '° • WOINl'I, .. Oft ttl08 .. the ... Clemente Community ThMter, 202 Ave. Cabrlllo, 'len
~ (412-G4e&).. PerfonMnOee .,. glwn Fncs.y. Md
~ •-•~m. bough June 4 . .. IJO, $DO. ... lftUllcel .. "':IL.,,..,.. contlfw .. ... ......... °""* fllli!lttD -8. HlftMw llfd., .... Ant (9.,...11). Curtliln ... Wl!rJ ~.....,. McMldlly u.ou.h.......... '
"I.ADY• nm DAM."• .....,.tnl.lllclll, °'*" ~ • .. Co.ta Mw CMG Pl.,e.CM .. , on tt'9 Altlngton 8tle9t t ot ttte Orante County Fairground•, potta M••• .............. be ahiM ~ ttvough l :IO . unll JUM lf:
• .. • • ... ...... • OOllllW .
"BYOC2tlvc and funny. Ro.5ann2 Arquc!lC
ls f2sdnating -thb role puts her 10 the first
l'2llk of A.merk:an actrcsscs to watdl. Vinccru
Spano mall'CS Sheik the most memorable and
elegant lOKr since Jay Gatsby."
-LOS ANGUiS mas
...
• 4 } .. ···"-. ~ --
---------------~ ____ . ..___._ -------Wh ~t ' s H appe ning
~. FromP1918
llOleOM CO......,.., CR"1'WR, 21877 t14agnolla 8t.,
Huntington a.ch. Chineea bNlh pelnter Po Hong Uu .. be
the guest 8t the ltu11t111gtot1 8Mcf't Art laegun IM8tlftg June
1 at 7:30 s_>.m.
MUSIC
"BEHIND THE
SCENES"
,,ath BNIMl•fC. .......
fWtUllnt Acoount ~ .. • !"" ...
------------------
...
UC W. Fine Aha '*'°9 Studio 128. A ........ ory/ ~ worDhop .. be ........ Mey 31~Jul'91
et 7:.IO p.m. AdnJUI0111•t1 •the doOr. lrltcMft.-00 ... 17.
LA -ADA CIVIC ntlATM, 14800 U Mlrede BtwS., La
Mlreda. The CMo ..... of 8ouetlem CelfGrnla ... PNMnt
"G.IMl'9" on May' aa at I P.tn1 Tlc*ett ere .. ~erel
8dmlilllorl. lllfor "~ M2· 1a& Of •1-6106.
I 9
JZ 0 -i 'i ..... ~ &: ~
~ ~
N _....,
.... 40 ~
. .
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"-· Piiot Weekender/Friday, May 27, 1983 8
·~ -.. ·:1~ (I~ I ~Ii &fi~I" ... .. 1} §g olill ills ft f i i
I. ~i !!u~ I P!I hf rt i i.1~ Ill glo ·1~~ • ~· 1rl ~ !i ~ tf ~J ~i
!If! !Jf iJ i iis 11! :(. . ·-~f 1 tirti Ji,~ I~:
.. !ll.jll=1, 1i!f bi;! . ~I: ,tijli' 1!11 !11:
t ill .s,.,, -.1~ llti s Ii ~~ ~ Jll f.t~l
-a1d~l!f hf~ih!il~ ls1!&~111~1i1il~1 .• 11
II Sa )i ~· f ,. 1rl;;JfJa1i;~lll 1ll '
1!9 I I '!~J l(i !!11 1lf il!li1=J :11 ~1i~ !!~1 11 tr!r ·,% 'I t J9 . ! I •.
1111 l;!tf, i!rl •I!
; I li!.tll if '1 l!t ~I! lrrf :~.1a ~.
llb.Iiit ~ 'ill!~li
,! f "~·'. hl.~$.ft ,-ig IJ .
II Jt rslt . ,~, s & •ti· I § F~ .;!~ :i11 r11 !.i it'I ~,, 1'}1 i''l' i!l I -·i! .-ii ... 11 ii !j. IJ~ 11 . ~II, ,1 1_.
•t& ,,a. 1· , ' 'I ti{ 1r'' l t r <S;~ ~111 II t:~ 18
l
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Currently Hanging
• • •
"West Coaat Realiam," an
exhibition scheduled to pr.mere June
3 through July 24 at the Laguna
Beach Museum of Art. featura the
work of 22 artists.
Functioning aa a critical survey of
reamt paintinp done on the Weat
Coast from the mid-60a toJhe preeent,
the exhibit contains wodca that hig.bly
detail obeervationa ol nature.
Reali.au on the Weat Cout ahare
common themes and methods with
painters throughout the .country, and
the exhibition ia part of the na~
revival of realiam .
An 80-pege ca~ accompanies the
exhibit, with a lull-page color
illustration for e8Ch artist, an emay by
curator Lynri Gamwell and a
biblio8raphy ~ re61illn exbibiUom.
In con~ with 'tWeat Cout
Reallam, • the mW1ewn'1 F.ducation
Department will boat a panel
d.l8cul8ion JUly 14 at 8 p.m. Tlcketa ar~ t2.5() for members, $3.50 for
non-members.
The mu.um, loc;ated at"307 Cliff
Drive, ta open dally except MondQ8
fran 11:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Adm'9i<"\
is free.
~
u
g
CID --...: .N
li 2
t ~ &&.. ..... I ! -R it
II
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A. T. U!OS
C.RIOl'nla cuisine. Freeh Seafoods.,
pMtas, meet & poultry. Eteo*!tty ~ln·--·t~Dlmlr _.Orr'5 p.m. 1 .... ~ ..... Wedding recepllorw d pertteiL 3901 E Coai
Hwy., Corona'de&Mw . ...168-111M.
I
clJolarshiP' keeps
on 's memory alive
y bought him a round-trip
lane ticket to Hawaii as a
aduation present. "He was tO meet four friends who
91J"-.:llY were in the islands. At
J
the last minute, the aenior
Mackles decided to eo to HawaU
too and departed on lhe ume
plane wllh Craig.
The ensuing tragedy wu
devastating to the family.
Craig. a sleepwalker all hla
life, fell from an 11th-story patio
balcony of the Reef Lanais hotel.
He was kept alive by
respirators but died two days
later -on July 9 -when his
cause obviously became ho.P«:less.
Nonna. a travel agent, and Bob
<See SCHOLA~HIP, Pa1e A!) Cra~ Mackie
• THI DRlllil COAST
, .
CDllJ 1111111
ORANGE: COUNTY C ALlf-OA NIA i ·: l E:.NT !:>
-Leasing pact 'biggest thing • Ill ages'
By STEVE MARBLE or .. .., Not • ...,
Enthusiasm raged unchecked
today following an announced
ehd to lhe long, bitter and costly
leuthold dispute between the
lrvine Co. and residents o f
Newport Beach and Irvine.
"It seems to be the biggest
thing to hit town an ages," said
Barbara Amstadter, a resident of
Linda Isle and a leader of the
Committee of 4000. the lease controversy.
Amstadter said the settlement
has drawn a collective sigh of
relief from affected residents,
city officials and real estate
agents who have been hurt by
the land fight.
"I just feel very, very good,"
said Newport resident Louis
Scott, one of eight people who
filed a class action lawsuit last
year against the lrvine Co. over
Thomas Nielsen, presid~t of
the Irvine Co., expressed equal
elation a nd suggested the
settlement could go far toward
improving the development
firm's tarnished image.
Nielsen admitted the Irvine Co.
underestimated the dispute when
it erupted and was not initiall)I
prepared to deal with it.
He credited Donald Bren -
Top chlli
has heat,
no name
By STEVE MITCHELL Of ttle Oeltf ~ • ..., .
There was Mule Breath Chili
and Truck Stop ChlH. Roo Dinkum Chlli a)'id Half Fast ,
Chili. Dago Tony's Super Bowl (
and Blazing Saddle. Chill.
Longhoppers Jackrabbit Chili
and Radioactive Chili.
But when the judging was
over. the winne r of the 10th
annual California State Chili
Championahip,a at the Balboa
Bay Club Thunday night was a
Sacramento woman wboee chW
concoc:Uon doesn't evft\ boat a
name.
Kathy Hipttkind, winner of the
Sacramento division cookoff last
month, was the top chill chef
from ~g 64 cont.estanta ln the
Balboa Bay Club parking lot.
She'll t•ke her recipe and
cooking pot to the world October
championships at the Tropico
Gold Mlne in Roearnond, Calif.
Second-place honon went to
Bill Kent and his Kenta Kamp
Chili. Third-place winner was
Bonnie Major and fourth-place
cook was Bill Swiney.
Jim West, president of the
International Chili Society,
figures more than 2.000 cooks,
judges, tasters and guests
anended Thunday's festivities in
Newport Beach.
the firm's new majority owner -
with bringing a philo&ophy to the
company which helped resolve
the issue. Others close to the
negotiations said talks swltched
to high gear when Bren took
over.
"I don't think it could have
been done without him," said
Newport resident Harry Baker,
whose annual lease fe e
skyrocketed from $1,600 to $67,-
Oilvid Smith dishes out sample
( m Irvine's "Red Hot
And they had loll of things to
entertain them between
mouthfuls of chill.
There was a Mr. Hot Sauce
(See CHILI. Page A!)
.,.., ............ .., ~...,.,
Wu the Gorilla Team"& recipe
too hot for Arnold Hampton of
Colton? E
. \
ounty's jobless rate declining
BY JEFF ADLER °' ... .,.., ......... The employment picture In
Orange County is steadily
brightenina=I ing a state labor analyst to that two-thirm
,of all Jobe t during 1982 will be
recovered this year. ·
The rebound registered in
March continued ln April as the
jobless rate decline d to ti .:>
percent, down from the 7 .3
percent figure posted in March,
according to state unemployment
statistics releued Thursday,
The number of jobJeas cdunty
residenta eeeking work tn April
was 78,300 compared with 89,200
the previous month.
Unemployment for the year
probably will average out at 7 .ti
percent, below the 7.9 pen:ent
average recorded durina the flnt
three months of 1983, said Alta
Yetter, a labor, anaJ)'at with the
awte Employment Development
Uepartrnent.
"I wouldn't 1et real
enthuslutic jult yet, but there a.
real Improvement," Yetter tald
'Major Barbara' 1
Reid Shelton and
Kristen Lowman head
a rine cast in South
COut Repertory'•
proclueaion of ••Major
Barbara.'' See
Weekender.
US Festival ~
tn the A~l lilW'ft. "We won't
1et back ttllj year to the 1981
levela. but there has been a
pretty alzable drop durinc the
January to April eftioct."
While the coEAnt '1 unemployment rate to
6 .& percent lHt mor\\ , Loa
~lee County's rate dJ',opped
the JOBLESS, Pa1e Al)
000 two yea111 ago.
Baker, who estimates he is
$150,000 behind in lease
payments, praised the settlement
even though it will do little to
help him. He said he hopes to sell
his waterfront house and recover
enough money to buy a cheaper
house in Newport.
The leasehold fight. which
attracted national attention, was
sometimes billed as a rich
penon'1 rent protest because of
the number of waterfront homes
involved.
The battle tcaelf h.t both a
negative effect on teal estate and
the Irvine Co.'• ability to move
forward with development
projects. Obeerven predicted the
settlement will help real estate
rebound and put new life into
<See LEASING, P•1e AZ)
Mesa girl, 6,
kidnapped,
·raped in HB
By KAREN E. KLEIN °' .. .,.., ...........
A ti-year-o ld girl was
kidnapped 1n Costa Mesa and
raped Thursday night. then
dropped oU at a medical complex
in Huntington Beach by her
assailant, police said.
The girl. who was not
Identified, wu :taken 1orcibly
from the front yard of her aunt's
home near Bay Street and
Fullt>rton Avenue at about 5: 15
p.m., O>eta Mesa Police Lt. Gary
Wet»ter said.
The girl told officers she was
driven to the carport of an
apartment complex, which police
believe may be located near
Warner Avenue and Edwards
Street ln Huntington Beach. The
suspect, a 25-to-35-year-old
Hispanic male, sexually assaulted
her in the' parked car, she told
police.
During the assault, the girl
said, a man walked up to the car
and asked if anything was
wrong. The suspect chased him
away and poaibly assaulted him,
Webster said.
The suspect then drove the ,Ori
to tM Prevention MedJcal C.eftttt
at Boba Avenue and Edwards
Street in Huntington Beech and
dropped her in the parkmg lot.
Wet»ter said.
Belinda ChurchvUle, 18, a
receptionist at the office. aid &be
heard cryina out&ide and the
sound of a car'a d.19 8Cl'eeChing
at~t 6 p.l'ft.-Whentbe-weit to
the door, she lakt. the chfld bunt
i.na.lde and waa crying.
"She was acared," Churchville
said. "He (the suspect) had told
her to look in the phone book to
find her aunt's phone number,
but she didn't know what city
Mr aunt lived ln." .
C.O.ta Mesa police ue looking
for the suspect. wham the cbila
described u ~ feet, 10 inches tall
with short, darl hair and a
mustache.
The man had a large tattoo on
hia right shoulder and was
wearing blue panta and no ahlrt.
Webster aald hla department
also is seeking help from the man
who poaibly wiine.ed the crime
in the Hun~ Be.ch carpcx1..
Anyone with information
should call 7:M-53S4.
HB plant probed
for waste ·hazai:d
Safety investigators wearins
breathlns equiprpent and acid-
proof suits che~ked out an
abandoned paint manufacturing
l>ualneu ln Huntioston Beach
Tbunday for poesible hazardous
waste materiala.
About 2 000 J¥tal and plutic
barrel• of varytna atze• were
stored on a luae vacant lot
~nt ..to the former Standard
Palrtt & Ch,emlcaJ Company, ln
the tndUltrial lleetion of weat.em
Huntin,ton Beach.
City fire department
lnvettlg.ator Rick Grunbaum Mid
labela indicated the barrel•
contained ruUic add, colTOlive.
and other poaaJbly toxic
material.a.
Grunbaum aald U .S .
Environmental Protection
A,ency lnveeUpton lndlcaleet
Wutf! lite~ more of I
re an4 exploaion h•nrd to
( TODCWAIT&. PqeAI) ..
'
I
I I I
I ~ !
l
' 1
l
......
Start
of Ar,ts
t Genter
~ slated
By STE\'£ MARBLE °' ... ...., .........
A ••n•e of "mor•I
retPQnlAblllty" led the Irvine c.o.
to h8ck off land contncta th•t
could h8ve fom9d hundreds -
perhtlpa thousand.a -of Newport
Bea.ch.and lrvjne reatdents to
abandon theirl expensive homes.
,,
Groundbreaking ceremonies
for the fl.rat of two theatera in the
Orange County Performing Arts
Cent.er have been acheduled to
take place July 7, off1clals foe the
$65 million facility announced
k>day.
The 3,000-seat theate r is
scheduled to open In October
1986 and will cost $57 .3 million,
said James Bentley, president of
the center's board of direct.ors.
The seco nd ph ase o f
construction, which will include
building a 1,000-seat theater at a
cost o f $8 .2 million , will
commence at .. n undetermined
date.
The center's board vote d
Thursday to approve
construction of the larger theater
based upon the funds raised to
date and the guaranteed
maximum construction coats for
the projec t whic h were
submitted by C .L . P eck
Contract.ors, Bentley said.
So far, $32.3 million has been
raised toward construction, said
Henry Segerstrom, chairman of
the trustees.
Offila1s also hope to raise $20
million for a Center Endowment
Fund, and will continue seeking
deferred gifts to eruore future
operating fund s f o r the
performing arts comple x ,
Segerstrom said . To d ate, $4.6
million h as been committed to
the endowment fund.
"l am de lighted with t h e
direc tors' dec1s1on to break
ground In July," S ege rstrom
said. "With two and a half years
of fund raising behind ua, I know
that every volunteer and every
do~or is eagerly awaiting that
exciting moment when shovel is
put to earth."
-KAREN E. KLEIN
Philip Hillman
SCHOLAR. e
Fro~ Page A1
M ackie , a s t eel company
executive, live w ith their toss
eaeb day.
It's hard h r them Lo believe
their only son -good natw-ed
and loving -is gone.
They talk about him anli think
a bout him and they want others
to do so as well
Mrs Mackie, emerging from
her moumJng, will make a public
appearance Wednesday evening.
That's when she'll present the
first Craig Mackie Memorial
Trophy to senior Philip Hillman
in aw a rds cer e monies .at the
school theater.
"-rhe scholarship will help
Craig's memories to continue on,''
said his mother. "People can't
forget him. It makes my husband
a nd me fe e l g ood t o d o
something.
"We are so pleased that Phil
.tlillman is getting the first
scholarship. We wanted a good
student who liked athletics and
w ho knew how to work hard. We
didn't want someon e with a
perfect 4.0 grade."
Hallm a n w a s a n a ll -s tar
infie lde r on t he Ocean V iew
baseball team and was sports
editor of the school newspaper
In a t hank-you letter to the
Mackies, he said he'll use the
scholarship money at Cal Poly
Pomona, where be plans \o study
journalism.
CHILI CHAMPIONSHIP . • •
From Page A1
Contest. a Miss C hili P o wder
ContHt, a parade, Judging of
booths. and stage entertainment
featuring Custer's Last Band
First-place winners in the sage
~mpetitlon were Jim $lemons'
Star Ch i la team, wa th Mary
Longpre's Ba-Hum-Bug Chill
Team taking second place.
First place for best booth went
Huntington Beach
A br-·ln WM r9C)Otlecl Thurldll)' •t the
0 111< Vw C~lty Oant•. 1728t 0.-St
The 10a w• • calh bo• -.t9lnlng '30 to S35 Entry was llj)palonlly rneoe b)' P<yinQ
-• badl window
Vld.o equ~t •Muecl et M . 140 was repo<tlld 1'°'9n TIWreday from the Vld.o w.,et>ouM. 4972 W•ner A... Entry WU
llPl*.,,lly rneoe by p<ylnQ -the front OOor
A red 1983 K__.1 motorcycle.,......, •t
13.000 -r9l)Ot1.0 11011en trom the a 100
l>IOdl of s... AllQlllO OrM
to Rick Johnson and his Signal
Hill team. with Maurice Parol~'s
G ringo Chili booth placing
second.
Baer DavlS' Bust.ed Chili Team
was t he pa rade w inner with
S lemons' team taking second
place honors and Baer Davis was
named the overall showmanship
w inner.
.,,
A ll•eo r90IO worth SIO w• r9P0'1ed t911.., Ourin9 the OUrgl.,., of e w!Mle UMl7
V'*'-11Q9'1 "Bug'' parlclld In • r-IOI on
tl\e 18800 block OI V-Clrele
T•P•• velueo el I 100 were repo•t•O
1101en on the btMll-tn of • vefliCle 1>91klld In
• Otl•ewrt on the 2700 t>locic ol F'lofld•
StrMI
Laguna Beach
A t019' of 1750 In cMh wu ttolen lrom • houae In Ill• 100 bloc• ol Clltt Ori•• Tl'lurad•y. the OWnet reported.
P~ -Clled the 500 blOC• of Ct11alln• SttWI ~lly 11181 nigltl for a prowlef
.. .., 1n a rH IOent·1 yerd. E•tr• petrol
~·-··~eel
A IMn·eQe boy WU llC>P'ehendecl on a
t!Olen ht._ moped on Cliff Oflve The .eNcte was returned to Ill ~
Irvine
Polee r~ to • ll)Utuel 9iCI c9ll lO I lrWWltY oflremp In L.91<• Foreet llller a flgtl•
--men at the Ollrwnp etoollgl'll
Thomu Nlelaen, p.resldent of
the Newport-hued development
firm~ also cited major
inconltstencles in the 112
different types of leuea held by
homeowners.
Nielsen, admitted Thursday
the Irvine Co. WQ u04ware of
the "depth of the problem" when
the leasehold diapute too" off
JOBLESS .. e
From Page A1 .
from 10.1 percent to 9.7 ~nt.
California a rate dropped from
10.G percent to 9.8.
Unemployment also continues
to inch downward nationally.
The rate dropped one 10th of a
percentage point in April, from
10.3 percent to 10.2.
The good news in Orange
County -which post.ed a record
In January when 102,400 people
were without work -is that
employment rose "sharply" last
month. Sinc.-e mid-March, 4,600
n ew jobs have been added to
county payrolls.
New retail outlets opening in
the cowity and renewed vigor in
the restaurant trade resulted in
mo re than 2,000 jobs, while
hari ng also pic ked up in
agriculture and tourtst trades,
Yetter said.
However. the county's once-
boommg construction industry
continues to be hard hit, with
another 300 jobs lost in April.
Mornipg fog
for holiday
Don't bother gettins up early
over Memorial Day weekend to
work on your tan.
National Weather Service
forecast.era are predicting the
past week's morning fog and
drizzles will <.'Ontinue along the
Orange Coast over the holiday,
with only partial 1&fternoon
clearing at the beaches
When the sun does come out, it
w ill b e hazy with h i gh
tem per o tures in the low to
m id-70s o n Saturday. ThP.
forecast for Sunday and Monday ·
is pre tty muc h the same,
forecasten said.
Officer• -· c:allecl 10 lnlM High Sc:tlOOI ThuraO•y 10 etop • tludenl Ort•ing 1111 rl\nlorcycte arouno th• ce nter of 1111
caMCl\ll
Newport Beach
Five Mill worth 17.404 -• tek., lf'Offt •
!>•OloCl<.0 locller on a poMlte pW In Udo
VIH.etN
A mtn• -t WOfll'I H.500 w• 8IGlen lrOll'I
I hOUN Oii t• 1200 blOCll ol a-Ml
Ori•• Pohce t•ld 11'1• crooll• ,...,o••O k>u-ed w1n<1-. to g9'n ..,,,_,
A 11 500 gold money Cjjp and .._. "-'
l300 In CNh wu elolen from • r...--on
the 800 blOclt ol HliltlOr lllencl 0.-
Hazy days continue
Atlant~ City 62 57 s.udly MIY 21 IDT ....... ...111
Coastal
Eat•nelve lat• night and
morning low doud9 wt11'1 -fog encl IOC8I Mfly mom•no drlD:le c learing lo l\aly eunellln• Setutdey •nernoon. Lowe tonlOht
55 to 65 end ltlgM S.turdey Sf to n .
l!leewl\•r• from Poi nt
Concet>llon to Mexican l>Ol'der
llfld out IO ...... -Over CMter
••t•r• norlll of San NlcolH lelanel: ~ ...... 10 ID aD
ltnote wlltl OOfl'lblneCI ._ S IO 5
.... tlVough .. tu!Wy EaewMre: UtM. varfeole ...,. .,...,. end
Saturday mornlflt, IMc-1"9 ............. " ..... "' ,._. ettMnoon wtlfl 1 to a loot WM!-., 9ou0i.Hll .... t IO
a,_,~._ •• ._
..... ~ Mar'*'O drtml.
AUl11n 87 88 ' .... t
Beltlmof• 78 60 B1Jling1 87 SS
IMnnlngham 8 1 SS
819mwclt 84 48 BolM 89 57
Boeton 71 47
8'owntV!le 89 72 eune1o 63 40
Burt1ngt0fl 84 48 c..,... 84 44
Ch«1eeton.S.C 80 M
•
Chetieeton.W.V. 87 31
Chlt1olte,N C 81 54
CMyellM 78 50
CNceoo 80 4• ClnelnMtl 93 37 ~ M It ~S C 85 80 CCllUfnbue 89 341
~t Wonh 119 15
o.yton SS 31
0...-l:l iw • oe ~ O.,,.._ 71M~ •
0.4* S6 M l~ °'*""-61 42 'MempNI El,_ 90 57 MWnl ,......... .. .ae ~
::Et ~ =-=~ • a 41 NtlwOrteetia ::::" =~~ ........ .. f7 North .-C.tt• ...._ IS II OlcWloma ~
".' ,. 13 41 Omaha ~Mia .. 11 OtlendO
PllP 11 Mllil .. 11 "'111ecMlphll ~Qty ~ ~ PllolMl
u. v... 1oa • ::=:1'Mt IAlll ~ 12 83 Pon...,.,.CM.
like a ftrfl1orm 1& mont~ aao
and qviekly euned th~
dewlo~nt company a llMll
anny ol-lheml•.
But what bepn ln t))e t.aU of
1981 a1 a citizen protHt over
spiraling leue fea that resldenu
were paying the Irvine Co. ended
ori a note of harmony when the
two sides announced an accord
Thunday.
The promised settlement now
must be approved by Orange
County Superior Court Judge
Claude Owens, who ordered
ne gotiations to settle a class
action lawsuit filed by four
Newport couples.
Th e .3 ,400 a{f e cted
• 188Ue
leueholders, .a:ordlnl to terms
of the 10-pap settlement, will~
offered dlscounta of up to 63
percent on the value of land
under their homes. ~nta can
purchaJe land or continue to
leue and still realize the ~neflta.
A rebate proaram wlll be
offered to rnidenta who have
pure~ land lince 1979.
In the proceaa, the Irvine Co.
hopes to Improve It.I dam•aed
reputation and profit from what
likely will be a full -scale
movement of leaseholders
purchasing property.
While the terms o f the
settlefnent are highly complex,
rnoet Newport resldenta -
rou1nlY 75 rrceni -will be
able to purchUe home sit.es fot
1-than t75,000. In Irvine, 97
percent of the affected residenta
will be able to buy leued land
for I• than $30,000.
There remain about seven
waterfront bomet ln Newport
which will be ln the $1 .5
milllon-and-over range. Three of
the hornet are owned by Irvine
. Co. board members -Donald
Bren, J .R. F1uor and Joan Irvine
Smith.
For those who pre fe r to contln~ leasing, the tenns also
are •tt~ctive. In Irvine, 98
percent of the leueholden; will
pay lea than $100 a month in
leaae fees. In Newport Beach, 78
percent will pay lem than $200.
Generally, leaseholders will be
afven a 30 to 50 percent reduction
on the value of property. Those
that purchue within the next
year will~ offered an additional
15 percent dim>ur\t.
The Irvine Co. also has agreed
to provide 30-lear loans with an
interest rate o 10 percent for the
first five years.
"There's no way everyone
could be satiafied but I think this
Is the fairest settlement,"
commented Lou.la Scott, one of
the residenta who sued the lrvme
Co.
"In fact," he added, "I think
w e sot a better deal than we
could have through tbe courts."
LEASING.
From Page A 1 ·
the development firm.
• •
.,,..., .......... "' ... ..,_.,
Huntington Beach Fire Marshal Bill Cooper
inspects barrels suspected or containing
The months of legal expenses.
newspaper advertis ing and
rounds o f mailers cost the
Committee of 4000 more than
$300,000. While the figure likely
is similar for the Irvine Co., no
dollar amount has been released.
"I think the Irvine Co. was
very generous," said real estate
broker Jim Wood, who had been
openly critical of the Committee
of 4000.
hazardous wastes.
TOXIC WASTE CHECKED "This proves the squeaky-
wheel theory," Wood said. "But
In this case, I d o believe the
Committee of 4000 did aomething
that worhd to the benefit of
everyone."
From Pagtt A 1
neighboring businesses along Comme~ Lane than a health
hazard.
EPA safety workers arrived
Thursday morning. The y took
readings ofl the material and
should know contenta within a
week o r so. said Huntington
Bea<:h Fire Marshal Biil Cooper.
Coop e r s aid the barre ls
probably will be hauled away to
a dump sil.e in West Covina in
two weeks or so.
The former owner of the pamt
manUflW'ftlfi f\O rnnr.>rn W~nt OUt
of business about eight months
ago, said Grunbaum, and the
U .S . Small Business
Administration acquired the land
through foreclosure.
Grunbaurn sald he orde red the
federal agency to remove the
barrels but he said o fficials
wanted to find out what was in
the barrels before complying.
The barrels were discovered
during a r o utine annual
inspection by fire department
officio .
Turn your old diamond ring
Barbara Young, Committee of
4000 preside nt and self-
procl.1limed rabble-rouser. said
she was d e lighted with the
settlement, adding "it's so much
nicer to be working toge ther for
a change."
"The most exciting thing of
all,'' joked Irvine Co. attorney
Robert Currie, "is that I cm start
go in& to cocktail parties in
Newport aaain."
into a new diamond ring. While you wait.
Tuesday, May 31st.
Do you have a looee
diamond? Worn-out eettlnll1
Out-ot•t• rinl 1tyle? We'll
mak• lt new, while you wait.
Now you can choose from more
than 2,000 new mountina• during
our limited Diamond Remount
Show.
When was the la•t time
you had your dlamonda
appralHd? We'll do it while
)'OU Walt.
Since 1950, a one carat fine
diamond has increased from
$1,500 to $12.000 (according to
DeBeen Syndicate). •
lmagin«: what yovr diamond Is worth today. Better yet, know
for au~.
Our-authoritative apenisal (on our letterhead) i1 tuentJal for
appropriate lns\,ltlnce and your
own peace of mind. An appoint·
mcnt is nec:esaary for th'-important a«vice. •
RIVERSIDE -Fleetwood Enterprises Inc.
reported Wedneeday a 300 percent increue in earnings
during lta 1983 fl8cal year.
The recreational vehicle and travel trailer
manufacturer said net income for the year ending
April 15 wu $29,740,000 or $1.33 per share compared
to $9,153,000 or 41 centa a share for fi.:al 1982.
8'.las for fi9cal Ultla were up 411 percent to $858. -
025,000 compared to $581,432,000 for the previous
year, the company said.
METALS
Nl!W VO"IC (A'°I -Spol "°"'.,'°"' .-..pnc.e~
c...., ~ ... '*"'-• pound. u 8 d ........... c...-. 11 I& ce"ll per pou"d· NY
C-IPOI -"'"' Clll..:I n...
U.. 20-23 --• _.. a. .a --• '*"'°· ......, 1'11t ... 1IO..__W-.~1b ,,....._,._..~.HY __, aoo CJ0.'320_oo -1111> --. ....., v°"' ,.._,.._ '4H.00-$4H 00 d-11~
~ lroy --·HY
q