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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-04-26 - Orange Coast Pilot.,.., ................ Cultural leader Anne Thome boosts art auction in Huntington Beach. Can HB clean up its cultural image? BY J\ODERT BARK.ER or-.~,......., Hunu.naton Beech lan't known for It.I cufiural adUevementa. The pter oom111 ln for lot.I ot attention. And there'• a areat deal of Interest ln IUJ"ftn.a -the city 11 known H the 1urfln1 CApital ot ihe nation, l.ota of people ride ho,.., and the city hu one of the nke9t little Frilbee aoll counel around. But concerti, lecture1 and theater are kind of out of place. In Hunt1n1ton Beach, the envir9nment lean1 more lo macho t.han to Mou.rt. Thil IMml to be pretty much the opln1on of the dty11 Cultural leaden, whether they MY It or not. Ann Thorne, a eecretary tor the Hunttnaton Beach A111ed Art1 A11oclate1 -the tund-nUainc ann tor &rt.I and culture -doesn't mince worda. "Our community," 1he aay1, •• hu a IJ-ee\er' 80pbi9tlcation than Identity with our pier . (See CULTURE, Pase A%) THf DRANGf COAST COUNTY IDITION TUESDAY, APRIL 26. 1983 ORANGE COUNTY . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS Newport takes flak on airport stand By STEVE MARBLE or .. .,..,,......,. The Newport Beach City Council, which has spent more than $1 million fighting John Wayne Airport expansion, found itaelt confronted Jut night with cl\.arp9 It bu 80ld out to airport inten!9ta. One anvy homeowner called council members "gutless wonder•" while another Union hit • ID airline failure BY STEVE MARBLE or ... .,.., ......... The president of Golden West Airlinel abarply aitld.zed union leaden yesterday in explaining how the 1tate's largest commuter ' carrier went broke. "They refuaed to believe. we were ln trouble," said airline President John Harper, who u8ed worda like "obstinate" and "unreali1tic" to describe the union repl't!9el'lting many of the company'• 388 workers. Union officiall, however, blamed corporate mis - management for the air carrier'• financial collapee. Golden West, which baa tee1ered on the brink of financial nlln for a year, halted 1ervice late Friday, fired most of ita employees and filed for protection from creditors under (See GOLDEN, Pa1e A%) sugge.ted the city has "shot Itself in the foot." There were two other airport developments: -LegWation to bar airport neighbors from taJcin8 noiae suits to small claims court, where lawyers aren't needed, wa1 a)>proved by an A11embly committee. The bill now comes to a full Assembly vote. The bill was propoeed by ~mblyman Richard Robinson, 0-Santa Ana. -A federal judge upheld the county'• right to phase o~t airlines using noisy jeta at John Wayne Airport. The phue-out waa fought by Continental, Texas International and American Weat airline•. The ruling WU made by U .$. Dlatrict Judge Terry Hatter Jr. in Los Anaeles. Meanwhile, the Newport Beach uproar centered on how many dally jet departures out of John Wayne Airport the city ia wllllna to agree to. Up to now, the city has held firm at the current airport level of 41 daily ru hta. ~ recent weeks, though, the city haa told the county -the operator of the airport -that it ls willing to accept 55 lligh ta in exchange for setting that number as the permanent lmut. This, together with a pending Orange County League of Cities resolution urging a maximum number of fllghy up to 55, was enough to brin~ out dozens of upeet residents. "Thil la a direct violation of city policy, a radical departure," insisted homeowner Clarence Turner. He said by agreeing to consider 55 flights the city ia They'll chalk it up to experience Kerryn Gilbert left a restaurant job for the glamour of working for an airline. But Golden West Alrllnes -the carrier she went to work for juat three weela ago-offered little glamour and, as it turned out, no pay. The young reeervatiom clerk I.oat her job Friday when the airline went belly up. She now must 1tand in line behind other creditors to collect her pay. "The whole thing was right out of the blue," ahe said yesterday. Gilbert said lhe agreed to work over the weekend helping stranded peaeengera on the condition that ahe at least be paid for thaL By midday, though, she still didn't have a check. "I got 1101De good training. That'• about it," she added. For Lauri Picket, her position on the Golden Weal reeervation1 counter at John Wayne Airport wu her first job since Thanklliving. "It seemed like the perfect job," she said. "But here I am. out of work again." Employees of the failed airline milled around the firm's rented C'...oeta Mesa officel yesterday while company president John Harper publicly cane the carrier'• death knell Some were aitical of management and ot.hen critical of union leaden repreaenting 80[ne of the worken. But all were out of work. Pilot Alan Dredge. a l~year Golden West mtployee, said he was bitter and charged "miam.a.nagement" led to the firm'• (See EMPLOYEE, Page AZ) "giving ln" to county aupervi.8ora. ''I th.ink we lhould go to the mat on thia i.ue,•• he added. ''We should fight every inch of the way, bite them if ther, need a pe.nnit to cut the graaa.' C.orona del Mar resident Rich Plaatino charged the city ia being "outmaneuvered and outnegotiated" by the county. "The 1uperviaon are like a {See FLIGHTS, Page A%) Civilian copters barred in HB By ROBERT BARKER Of'hO.., ........ Plana to open the city t o civilian helicopter operations were shot down yesterday by Huntinaton Beach ofticiala. City council members agreed that a new heliport shoufd be built. But they want It to be used exclusively for polioe helicopter fl.igbta. 1'hey 1aid a plan by City Adminlltrator Charles Thompeon to 1hare the heliport with executive and corporate hellco~=n, thereby making the city ble for a large federal grant. la unacceptable. "I can't understand why you are doing this," Councilman John Thomaa said to Thompeon at one point. "There'• no way not to have noise over the neighborhoods. We 1houldn't harass the people." (See COPTERS, Pa1e A%) Patterson asks more flood control aid Passersby help foil heist Laguna Beach shopkeepers chase suspect, loot recovered By STEVE MITCHELL Of'IMDl!lr ......... auapect IOUth on Glenneyre.to an alley behind the library. BY JEFF ADLER Of .. Dllr ....... Rep. Jerry Patterson, D-Santa Ana, l1 hoping he can save Oran1e County taxpayers 90l'MWhere between $120 million and $140 million ln COl'lltruction ~ for the propoeed Santa Ana IUver Flood Control Project. Pattanon called on the federal pem.ment ~ to --.one a 1reater 1hare of the comtructlon coei. for the $1.2 btlllon project now being con1Jdered In both houae1 of ~ The congre11man Hid he believes the federal aovernment should P•Y the full coat of increaaina the height of Prado Dam ln Aiverside Count}' by 30 feet bec9u.e the Army Corps of Engtneen kner,: the dam waa inadequate in 194S, two '1~ alter construction wu completed. ~one, it 9eeml, wanted to get ln on the act during a COtJ' and robben pursuit through the atreeta of Laguna Becich 1Mt night. Police credit the peni1tence of several pa&M!Rby for the arrest of Walter K. Fal.rf.leld, 22, of Hacienda Helahta, who was ln ~ C.ounty Jail today on IWpkion of robbery and uaault wttb • tte.dly weepon. 4"l'bere al80 WM a tut.equellt failure by the Army Corps of J!'.naineers to live notice of the inadequate Oood protection to local 1overnmenta and private parties unUl 1970," he charpd. (See FLOOD, Pqe Al) Rep. Jerry Pattenon seeks U.S. flood aid 1Acuna Sat. Fnd Martino uid the drama beaan 1hortly after ~ p.m. when Fairfield alle&edly grabbed up a half dozen watcha. valued at fM,370, from the counter at Haye1 Jewelry, 246 Fore9t Ave. . Sho~:epen Thomas and Harriet Hayea and ano employee gave chue, fo1lowtnl the Bad deals The •~enae American may be puiq a wone deal in the marbtplaee toclay tlwa 10 yean .,o - at leut .......... , he dabau. '• a1. Comic war Tee.n-.,e 1uperheroe1 w.,e war on drap in a new eomlo book pat oat by I.be Wlalte Houae to CUJ'h .,.. abuM la pacle eelaooa.. r ... AS. NBC aa1 rail IMrdt belala4 CBI, AK _. AWl,llilt tllienilfW ............... ,..., .. n, ...... ........... Mitchell Robert V alenda, a Laguna Beach resident, WH 1tanding in front of the All American Bagel C.o. on Laguna Avenue when Fairfield ran put him, polioe said. Harriet Hayes yelled at Valencia to 1top the fleelna IUlpeCt. and V alencla joined in the chue., catchina up with Fairfield after the pair c:nmed South CoUt Hiahway, llCOOl'd1nl to authorities. "Valencia grabbed him (Fairfield) by the lhoulder, and Fairfield turned and pointed a CUD at him and told him to •eet back'L.. ~said. About that time, Lacunan l'l"OOU Hanlon witneaed the punult, and he too joined the chue. Hanaon oomered the suapect on El Piiie<> (See ROBGERY, Pqe A%) l ~I Or1n0t Coa1t OAILY PILOT /Tuetday, ~prll 28, 1983 ~\ ''' Continued stories CUL TUBE IN iIB. • • Hunttn1ton Beach ha1 arown weary of lt• au.rflna lJnaie. "It la Ume to relleve ounelves of the lmaae of the 'poor lilt.er' of Newport Se.ch," ahe aald. "Right here (the Central 1...0>rvY) we have one of the moet beauUIU.l 1pota ln the entire aree. All It need.I la to develop to meet the greater need• of the oonununity," Thome said. BUl Anderaon. an arta ieacber and pretldent of the Cultural Ana A.oclation. said Huntington Beach does have an Image problem when It comes to the fine arts. "But the Alli ed Arla Aaaoclation believes LO lts ability to reach out into the community for funding and attendance at public art events. "We simply need support ln our efforts to do this," he said. One of those public events, Port.folio '83, is 1ehedUled May 14 at the library at 7111 Talbert Ave. Local artists will donate their works for exhibit and auction and -local boost.era hope to raiae about $7,000. Part of the money is ear- marked for a fund to build a new wing on the library for an GOLDEN ... federal bankruptcy laws. Harper, who h.aa resigned. said it la doubtful the firm will be able to reorganize. He painted a picture of a company ao heavily In debt it i.s doubtful anyone would wlah to pick up the pieces. He said Ute alrlme has been unable to pay workers and recently sold ita Newport Beach headquarters -already mof14pged heavily -to get its hands on IOOle cash. Golden West had been asking employees, Including pilots, to take a l~ percent wage cut to keep the carrier In the air. Employees agreed to a pay cut of 10 percent laat year. Harper said he volunteered to open company books to the Airline Pilots Aasoclation and mechanics. flight attendants and others. He said neither group took up the offer. art 1allery. A ama1J g&llery 1' located unJd booka and card catalop at the facility but art aupportora •Y It i. only the beglnnln1 to their ho pet. Thome and othen -lncludJni Cultural A.rta chainnan Marilynn Tom. claim Huntln,t.on Beach residents are receptive to a cultural re-awakening -It's jwt that nobody has lit the fire. Both hold City Council members partially to blame. They aay the cultural arta budget of $28,000 has been aluhed to $3,000, not leaving much for paid help. "I have to believe that the dty is rich enough to providt mo~ than $3,000 to cultural art.a," &aid Thome. "What we need I.a aomebody to go around and t.ap big companies to underwrite major events," she said. Thome and Tom aay they hope that activities such aa the upcoming auction and exhibit will fan interest. The event will start at 6:30 p.m . May 14 al the library. Admimion Is $12.50 per person. For ticket information, call 842-4481. John Harper assails airline unions a pr ofit since last year. The carrier'• fleet of prop and state- of-the-art turbo prop planes have been secured in Loa Angele9 and Monterey. All guiet on eastern front? o viet cie ntist says ne w Kre mlin chief to move slowly By OL£NN SCOTT Of ... Olllr ,.....,. Zhoret Medvtdev. • aclent!lt who left the Soviet Union a docadt-aao. ~ yesterday durtna a special lecture at UC Irvine that no major Soviet policy cha.nies will occur tn the next few yeara. Th.., white.haired, 07-year-old aclentiat Mid Soviet Chief Yuri Andropov will need eeveral yean lO build up a bue of support amona tht1 polJtlcal rNChlnery he Inherited to make •l1nlflcant ch.naea. Su\ wheh that time COR)H, Official faces trial • ID loan conspiracy Weatmlnater Oty Councilman Gil Hod1ea and four other Orange County reaidenta are scheduled to stand trl.al June 21 on federal charges of conspiring to file fat.e loan applications in the purch.ue of aeven home9 in Huntington Beach. Hodee• and the other defendants entered innocent pleas at an arraignment yesterday in U.S. Diatrict Court in Loa Angeles. Meanwhile. It was announced today that chargH will not be preased against Hodges as the resul t of a separate Orange County investigation. Evidence gathered In a probe of Hodge's residency and alleged misu se of city funds is Insufficient to support criminal charges, aaid Orange Cou nty Deputy District Attorney Wally Wade. Wade said the inquiry showed that Hodges may have Uved in Huntington Beach temporarily. FLIGHTS. • • From Page A1 bunc h of bullies," voiced homeowner Tom Williams. "They'll push you around until you suck up your gull and punch them where It hurts." Council members responded that they are not selling out but attempting to explore a pennanent aolution to the airport problem. Councilman Don Strausa said that ultimately the county can do what.ever It wants at the airport and that it is In the city's interest to secure a legal agreement that would forever limit flights. But there's no evidE'nce he planned to live there permanently, Wade aaid ( Hod6{e1 must reside In Westmlnater ln order to serve on the Westminster City Council.) Wade also said Investigators failed to prove that Hodges collectedmoney for trips that he allegedly didn't take. Hodfes, 39, is accused in federa court of agreeing to verify false i nformation on applications for bank loans. The others also were charged with a total of seven counts or providing false information to federally Insured lending lnatitutlona. They were indicted by a federal grand jury two weeks ago after an investigation by the FBI. Medvedev btllevH th• new Communlat Party chalrman will make aweeptna chl.n.ae9 to owit the a11na cronle1 o1 the late Leonid Brezhnev In tavor of younger, more technoloaically oriented adminlatraton. The new tech nocrat•, •• Medvedev called them, should realize the Soviet Union needa more "democratliatlon " an d aclentlflc collaboration with out.aiders to help create tnduatrlal and economic reform. he said. "When more technocrats get an, they'll probably cau1e a shift," he said. "In the next one or two yean. I anticipate few chanles until (Andropov) gains more Influence.·· Medvedev was speaking at UCI as part of his duties u a prestlgiow Regents' Lecturer in the UC ayatem. He demonstrated aome of the intellectual d11C1pline Russiana a.re of ten cl ted for. During hi.a 90-minute speech, Medvedev stood stiffly behind a table, never changing position, as he addressed about 100 people in a lecture hall. He gestured with his left h and and occasionally reached down to rest some of his weight on the table with his righ t arm. Otherwise, he remained still, concentrating on his views on the succesalon of Soviet leadens. Medvedev never changed his tone, although he dryly inserted a few h~orous thoughts. Fo~ Crash kills scooter rider Zhores Medvedev exa mple , he contra1teci leadership styles of Andropov. the former KGB chief, with the S'iClable Brezhnev, who Medvedev said uM!d a "cult of penK>nallty" to hold power. "Fi.rat of all," he commented, "the KGB head ian't the type of man you want to make friends with." Medvedev aaid Khrushchev could have remained in power longer If he hadn't pushed for 90 many reforms. Lncludlng political ones. He 1uggeated Brezhnev's e ra was characterized b y a relian ce on b ureaucrats a nd 1tabWty ln political machinery. Medv~dev1 twin brother of former di.asiaent historian Roy Medvedev, lives in e x ile In London at the National Institute . for Medical Re9earch. Pilots, however, blamed misman agement for the oompany'a problerm and inlbted they were barga1nlng in good faith with Golden Weat when busine9I halted 1ut Friday. "If you can't keep your airline flying. I don 't know what you can call It except mismanagement..., suggested pilot Jerry Puglisi. .H.atper aald the 1ut company doll.a.rs were literally poured In the planes to refuel them for final runs last Friday. In betltt days, Golden West was a leader in the short-hop commuter business and purchased five $6 million, 50-seat turbo prop Pl.a!t"· The plane9, bought at a floating m terest rate, slowly .drained company finances, however. Council members also noted that supervlaora agr eed to consider up to 73 daily takeoffs, thus throwlna water on any deal with the dty. The council finally agreed to poetpone voting on the resolution that triggered the ruckus. COPTERS ... From Page A 1 T ra ffic officer K . C. Glea son investigates the scene of a fa tal collision be tween a motor scooter ridden by J e ffrey Martin Brote markle, 19, of Santa Ana and a car driven b y Michael Char les Galloway, 25, of Costa Mesa. Brotemarkle died two houn after the cr ash at Adams Avenue and Royal P a lm Drive. According to Harper, Golden West baa liabilities in excem of $56 million and bas not J>09ted EMJlLOYEE REACTION. • • financial pll1ht . He claimed the company tried to blame employees for lta own erron. Dredae aaid he'• now one of 5,000 out-oC-work pilots in the country. Work. he aaid, will be tough to find. "The whole thing's a shame," said pilot Jerry Puglisi. "This is the finest bWlCh of people I've ever worlted with. Not for, but with." Golden West employed about 400 people. Ruth Lewis, a non-union employee working in Golden West's audit section, blamed the union for aome of the problems. "The union ended up controlling our jobl. We had no voice at all," she said. Like others, Lewla was unsure about her future and uncertain when the next job might come along. "You don't know what the FAA (Federal Aviation Administration) is going to make you do if you take their money." Thomas said. The city paid $1.2 million for nearly five acres near Gothard Street and Ellis A venue for a heliport. Thompeon said the city could get as much as $1.7 million in federal granta for acquisition and dvelopment costs by opening the facility to joint use. Consultant .kobert Cralle said about 50 daily civilian fligh ts had been projected. But the majority of council members voted to limit the flights to police wie and to 9eli off the unsued part of the land to help meet expenses. FLOOD. • • From Page A 1 Patterson said this "startling set of facts ," wh ic h he characterir.ed as a "goof," came about when the corpe changed the benchmark by whkh storms and floods were measured In 1943. Prado Dam was built to satisfy the old 1tandard, but would not be sufficient t.o hold back the watena a storm of the new standard might generate. ROBBERY SUSPECT CHASED DOWN. • • "Becau1e of thi s 1et of clrcumatances. we should have the cost formula determined on 100 percent of raising Prado Dam," he aaid during a news conference in Santa An.a. Pattenon said he has written a letter to the chairman of the Houae conunlttee oonaJderlng the bill. He aaka the federal government pick up the entire cost of ralslnj the dam while down.stream Improvements be funded under the 6~ percent federal and 3~ percent local formula originally propc:l8ed. Street near the Hotel LalUJl&. and Fairfield allegedly leveled hi.a gun at hi.a pursuer. saying he'd kill him if he continued the cha.e, police said. Fairfield ran Into the Hotel Laguna through a aide door. and Hanson spotte<l him aa he emerged from the front door of the hotel. police said. H.anaon then grabbed a red bag from the auapect, which allegedly contained both the snub-noaed .S8 revolver and the watches. according to offlcera. Fairfield ran back into the hotel where he was confronted by .everal employees.. police said. ''He just ut down on a bench and waited for offlcena to arrive," Martino aald. ''I gue. he'd had enough." Fairfield was belnl held on $100,000 bail. Loe PlllOe WOUlfl ~ He -bOOltect lnlo OtM09 C0unty .Mii on IUlllldOfl GI bufll*Y et!d gt ... d t1141f! ltOfn pt..,IOue wllftMtt tnve•ll&::.o" Hid "• aleo adMltled ~\,. More I I $ b _,tot --IMfla, -oellar llurglatl9I Md • ~ Amwltlo 17 &S Anotlofmge 54 32 .,,,,...__~up locM¥ on• A.tlheYltle 112 38 Huntington Bea.ch reporl INI a "*' - -loedlr>t • '*Olleft Au.nta er « blO)IOle IMO a tM Voll~ 1M at I.JO Coastal Atlantlc City 66 4f p "" ,...,,,.., .. INtne 9clfloOI Aulltln IO 63 A Mlle ~ lflopllfter -~ l.WUmofe e1 42 c:-z~r:c.,~2 Toclay•a wetmet and avnnlet ~ 112 21 AOllM I09. A .. .. TOOll :i:: 11.200-. ~ ,_.,... _ _.... ltOM Ille :'f:: C-ty TrlllltP0'1•t!Ofl -"* lholllCI gl¥e -.y 10 IN 71 '1 D1MN11 ~Cl et 41M AeflCI ~ A¥e. NIM dd '*"* 1onlgM, wlttl all n 42 111or•••l113'. ohenoo of ro111 ... 64 a4 A,.....,.,. ft# .. IMOO l*lm ft# ~ IOll*'I'-. ~ w ...... eo.ton 11 43 00..""""'9t'told ..... llllltaea..:= A te•eo ''°'""' -~ etoMll Service:~ T~or•hHOt .,_.._... 12 .. OlltlMe ..,.. -""*• Into 14 ~--..... M-2000 eren'I 10 out ~ tfle l4lltllo .. » ... =,_ ............ -...... °'",........, ....... 10• tomorrow • IM ooo .. r lluttlllfton 4S 40 ................ ....,.,... .............. weather 1f1011ld :J:'" drop c...,. IO u mountain -lo to 8000 ~IC • u A 1tft ..... Ill~ ttt 9'11• -~--==----·--.... ~. -• *'>'" .. .,.. ~on,WV IO 17 ~ lltDnM. Cflattolte, NC 4t al ,...,,... ..... ._ .. ,.,. ... Of = yw d•i ~ • ..,., ... Ell .... ,,... o..::ron 10 =~: . .. o-11911 ...... ,... ........... ll 111 ..... _....._. .. 71 . 4t •.ooo. .. . ...... ...., and ouc mlllo -a-..,,., oo.tal wet«•: .... 9cMlth to ~ .... ti 10 CliMllfld UM -=:::,.,~~ ... -12 knMI '°"""" ~...,.. COM11•1C .. . ....... ·-= F ounialn Valley ti to lO llnote ~ ...... COIUl'lllM IO H ...................... Ill to 10 feet • ~Wor(h = 11 -~ .............. . ·---:111 --:.c:: ~Otl 41 ............ ........ =-· Ilic Extended ~ .,. 40 ... ,-...... --.-..-Doe MOlnOe 11 IS ·--~~-..-... ....... llOO °""" :: :: forecast DuMfl &rr:.:.:':.!'.'c:.:: ~I: • A -=-.1 ...... '""' Wiii .......... ll hM •• ~:..--. .. ....... .. ~':.:--"-N v.w. .. 'r..::.. ~ ,. . J•U..... Allt ,....,,.. .. ~ -... ::t.'P!.. .. " ~\}-r:--......... II .... b1una Beach __ _. ....... E : .. .. ~ ...... V.,...._ &::.'" lff .. IM W.MI lnlH ~· Temperaru91 -P. • t • • rain t::=. Loa~ L~ Lllbboolc MernpNa Mteml .......... Ml*-StPllUI Nutwlle NewC>rtMN Hew Yorti Nottolll Nottfl ,.. ... Olallhome Qty Omaha OrlOndO ""9d 11;; hie l'tloOtllk ::=r.Me ~Oro ="Qlly Mile Square plan set for hearing By PHJL SNEJDERMAN f>rttM Deify"°' al-" Fountain Valley planning commissioners are looking for re9ldents' reactions to two plans for building a golf coune and other recreational activities in the northwest corner of Mile Square Park. This undeveloped acreage, bordered by Brookhuqt Street and Edinger Avenue, is part of the county park. But county planners have aaked city officials to study the development propaaala as well. The Fountain Valley Planning CornmiS8ion'• public hearing on these plans begiJu at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the City Council Chambers, 10200 Slater Ave. A proposal backed by county park planners ca l la for construction of a 4~, 18-hole, par-3 golf ooune, restaurant and pro shop. and a group picnic area 72 &2 TO 51 71 So4 .. 41 M H 10 4t Ill 51 12 .0 12 ... . ., 74 .. ... 42 ., 4f f1 44 n 11 f1 .. f4 .. .. 41 :: ~ 11 41 :: : .. .. " ti o perated by a private concessionaire. Oty o({idala, however. favor a 58-acre, 18-hole, par-3 course. restaurant and pro shop -but no group picnic area. Fountain Valley officials believe alcohol consumption in the group picnic area could lead to additional law enfordmle.nt problems. County officials contend the combination of a golf ooune and picnic are. would generate more revenue. (The picnic facility would be rented for company picnics and o t her large gatherinp.) Fountain Valley officials say county planners have overlooked the money that woul d be generated by golf cart rentals on the larier coune. Mile Square Park al.reedy has a regulation-a12 golf course in another area of the park. " .., .. 41 7• • ::1 = :: lllf IEPllT Tl dee I I Orange COHt DAIL'( PILOT /Tue.day, Aprll 28, 19&a 41 • • • NATION Panel warns of cr1s1s 1n education . Reagan may name special env.oy to Central America Tousher school standards demanded to lisht 'risJ11s tide of mediocrity' By 'R• Aaaociased Preti W ASKING TON -Preal.dent ftel&an, preparlrw a major adc:tre. to Canar-tomorrow on hla Cmtnil Aioerkin policy, haa decJded t o name a apeclaJ envoy to the re1fon, edminiavation 80W'Cel uy. The appointment had been IO\llht ) by crttka of h.la etfona to 1ncreue aid to the war·tom aree and wu revealed yesterday u eevera1 ~ were retumJ.na from lnapec:Uona of El Salvador and Nlcalqua. Rep. Ciarmce Lona, D -Md., chairman of a Houae App_r_o prla\lona •ubcommlttee ~ Reaaan'• reque.t for ~ m1lUon ln emerpncy mllltary afd for El Salvador, indicated he wu encourapd about prospecta for appointment of a hish-level · envoy to 1eek a political solution to the civil war ln El Salvador. Shultz, Mubarak agree on Lebanon CAIRO, Egypt -Secretary of State ~ P. Shultt aald he and Ec'ptian Pree.ident HOU\I Mubarak agreed today • there waa an uraent need for all foreign forces to withdraw lrom Lebanon to permit the Lebaneee to run their own country. Shultz said th.at in hit meetiJll with Mubarak there wu "emphaaia on the urgency of arrlviJll at a 10lut.ion (in Lebanon) and the importance of the mnoval of all fore'8Jl foroea if you are really going to have a 10lution ln a manner that la conalatent and honors the neceeaity of a IOVereign Lebanon able to rule ti.elf. The views of the president of E'.gypt and the views of the president of the United States a.re identical on this illue," u.id Shultz. Satellite rescue operation WASHINGTON -NASA engineen have reecu~ a $22 million satellite -launched to heJp rescue aurvtvora of airplane and ahJp acddenta -from aplnn.lng u.el4!91.ly ln apace. And they are preparing to aave an errant communk:ations aatelllte carried aloft by the shuttle Challenger. The environmental monitoring aatell.ite wu finally in pl.ace-after a month of spinning like a propeller -and is ready to eerve aa the first apecebome American eeerch and remcue system. In the aecond rescue operation, NASA engineers are readying attempw to push the world'• biggat and moat expensive oommun1cadcm aatelllte 9,000 .mllee through apace into proper orbit. STATE Feminist faces murder trial LOS ANGELES -After ex.changing pleasantries with a Judie and blo~ a kia:a to her support.era, feminist leader Ginny Foat waa headed for Louisiana today to 1tand trial for an 18-year-old murder. "Ma. Foat, your conduct in my court haa been exemplary and I commend you for it. Good Juck in Louiaiana,'' aaid MUnk:ipal Court Judge MJchael Tynan at the end of a brief extradition bearing yesterday. Foat, 41, and her attorney decided last week to abandon further efforts to fight extradition for a murder in Jeffenon Pariah, La., which she says ahe did not commit. Choke bo_ld ban stays in LA LOS ANGELES -Police axnmimioners have decided to extend a year-<>ld moratorium on pol.Ice choke holds despite a decision by the U.S. Supreme Court bmt week that would have pennitted use of the bolds. The five-member dvillan panel, which ma barred officela from u.an, tbe carotid choke bold except in life-threatening aituationa, aid the high court'• decision was not binding on them. In tbeU 5-4 dedslon. the justices overturned a lower court decision limiting u.ee of the holda to life-threatenina situations. Feinstein anticipates landslide SAN FRANCISCO -Mayor Dlanne Feinstein, buoyed by a record 45,000 abeentee ballots and polb indicating a landslide vote to keep her ln office, entered today's recall election hoping to oonvert the owter attempt lnto an elect.ion-year uaet. ~e late.t surveys. conducted by local new.papen and the mayor'a campe.liJl orpnization, l.nd.icated Ma. Feinstein would claim about 75 pe:roent of the 150,000 balloca expecied to be cut in the dty'a first recall election in 37 years. WASHINGTON (AP) -1lM Unlt.ed Stat. ii thnei.n.d b?' "a rtalnc \ldt of roedlocrtly' tn education that can only be aiopped by tou1her 1tandard1 and • lor\ler achOol day OI' achool year, a blu.t-rlbbon pane! rennrt.t today. ~-nation I.a at rlak," the National Commlulon on Excellence ln Education uid ln a bliaterlna report beina releued to an audience of e(tucaton, ~Uuetana and dvtl leedera at the White Houle. "If an unfrlendlv forelan power had attempteif to lmpoee on America the mediocre education performance that exilta today, we miaht well have viewed it u an act of war," the divert• 18-member paneJ dea1ared tn ita WWUmoul ,..,on. "The ideal of academic excellence u the primary aoa1 of 1ehoollna at•mt to be Cadtn1 acrou t6e board tn American education.'' it chupd. r.duc:aUCn s.cr.tary T.B. Bell, who created the panel 20 rnontha qo, laid in an interview that the report documented "the quite 1hocktn1 collapse ln 1tudeot performance" atnce the late 19eaa. He ~icted the report would have 'an enormoua lmpect upon the coun~ and upon Amerlc&n education.' The panel, chaired by UnJver.lty of Ui.h President llavtd Pief'PQl'lt Gardner, who la Pioneer 10 spacecraft making its way out or the galaxy. Pluto passed Pioneer 10 on endless trip MOUNTAIN VIEW (AP) -The Pioneer 10 spacecraft. the "ultimate time capsule," croaed Pluto'• orbit on an end.lea journey through the Milky Way galaxy yesterday -an event balled by IC'ientiata as a "proud day ln America." The apaoecraft with a "simple, straightforward design" h.aa outluted ita intended 21-month life by nearly a decade and left ldentiata with the m}'Wtic predkticn th.at the craf1.. built hr $20 million and launched March 2. 1972, would outlive the aolar system. "Some five billion yeara from now, our sun will self de11truct," aakl Dr. Joeeph Wampler of the Lick Obeervatory at UC Santa Cnu.. '"Thia apaoec:raft h.aa eecaped the eolar aystem. Calli.ng Pioneer 10 the "ultimate time capsule," Wampler u.id the craft "will live ln lnt.entellar apace 100 bW.ion years. FOi' me, that la an eternity. In that time, our entire univene will evolve lnto ~ quite different." Pluto la normlly the most distant planet. But becauee of ita elliptical orbit, it la now nearer to the Sun than the planet Neptune. It will remain inside Neptune'• orbit for the next 17 yean. aooo to beoome pNl!dent ot the Univerwity of CA111omia aysi.m, urpd that; -School dlttrlcw and tiat.e le1t1laturee "•tronaly conalder ll'V9n-hour echool days, • well u a 200-to-220-day echool yew." U.S. 1ehoob typically have l1x hou.raot~. -All atudenta teekinl a hl8h tchool diploma be_ r~~lNd to take fOW' y..,. of EneJJ.ah; three yean of math; three yean of aclence; thNe years of aoctal atudlea, aod a haU-year of computer acience. For the colleae-bound, it recommended two yean of fomgn ~- -Colleges rai9e their entrJ,nce atandarda acro.-the-board. -TNehen uqn h.Jah echool Historian says Hitler • no writer LONDON (AP) -Adolf Hitler disliked writing and dictated h1a major work, "Meln 1'Atfnpf," aaya an eminent British hlatorian who doubia the authenticity of the purported Hitler diaries unveiled by a West Gennany magazine. Donald· Cameron Watt , profeaor of lntemational history at the University of London, wu quoted lp today'• Times of London aa aayina: "It was a devil of a job to get 'Mein Kampf' out of Hitler." "It wu dictated in two chunks, the first while he waa in jall when he had nothing to do, and the leCOnd two yean later, when as a result of aome diaturbances around hia 1peeche1 he waa forbidden to speak publicly for six months," said Watt. ''His publ.laher dragged him back to a desk and again provided a stenographer who wrote down what he said." Hitler waa impriJloned for 13 months after his abortive attempt to aeiz.e power in Munich in 1923. Watt, 54 , spent six years studying German government and military doc-J.menta. 1tudenta "lar more ~ork than '8 now ~ Cllle.'' -TMdwn pt~ gay and 1 l·mont.h contncta, wbll9 Ullftl "an effecdve tvaluaUol\ aystam that lnclwd• peer review" to weed out or lmprove lnf•rior tMchera. -Otizena provide the ~ support to carry out the refonna. =., ~t. dcnand men ol It attacked the .. ~ .. of hiCh .c:hool electlve1 and likened the "hom~eniaed , diluted and d.lft\.llld" s:hool curricula to • cafeteria • which the appeUJen and de9erta can ..Uy-be mt.taJc8\ for the main COUl'lel.." Ivy Leaguer Princeton Univenity has accepted actress-model Brooke Shields for admission this fall. Like other applicants, she has until May 1 to decide whether to enroll. Eight people rescued after 3 days in cave MOUNT VERNON, Ky. (AP) -Eiabt apelunk.era trapped for three daya on a ledge deep inside a flooded cave were brought out today by a team of 1'1!9C'Uen, in ~ .. oondidon but "pd to be The at.x men and two WOQ)ell appeared tired bu\ in aood splrita aa they emeraed from the narrow mouth o l th e cave in IOUt.heatem Kentucky. The eight members of tbe Greater Cincinnati Grotto, a apelunking club, had entered the cave Saturday morning and were trapped about 1,800 feet lnto the cave when a rainstorm that evening aealed the only exit with water. WORLD Trade policy change pushed In order to escape, the apelunkera had to crawl through a 30-foot-loni corridor that ia only about 2~ lnchee high. Under normal~ water etopa two to three lnchee fJ'OID the oeilJn&, which allows exp)Orera to o.avtgate the .,..ageway while keephlg their head allghtly above water. "All appeered to be in good condition and glad to be frft," aaid a spokswoman for the state DLaaster and ErneraencY Servioe. Socialists win in Portugal LISBON, Portugal -The $ndaU11111 of former Prime Minister Mario Soerea won the most votes in election returns compiled today, but he faced a famO!ar problem -how to govern without a majority in Parliament. Soarea ruled out any coalition involving the Communista and aaid the Social.ta1a would hold a party referendum to .ee what other partia might be asked to help form the new government. Sweden recalls Moscow envoy Reagan's backing of new department 'critically important' WASHINGTON (AP) -The of the Governmental Affairs Seqate champion of a new Committee, whk:h wu echeduled Department of Trade uya to reswne hearlnp today on hit Preeident Rea,an'a bacldn1 <'f b 111 to c re a t e the new the Idea "comes at a critically de~t. important time" for the United 'Our trade ~ pC'OC8I 11 a States. ' c r a z y q u t J t o f 1 p l i t ''Our C\.ln"ellt trade policy -or ret1ponslbilitJs and fragmented rather, the lack of one -a~thori ,••Roth aid ln remarka amounta to tbouaanda of lost job for today'• heaJini. opPQrtunitlee for ,\mertcam," " Umel I think we need a coordinate the coordinating commlttees, .. he uid. ''Today we eee that our trading report card regarding both eXpor111 and tmnon. leaw. much to be dealred,r;-ROth said. "In 1981 our merchandlae trade deficit reached $28 billion on a balance-of-payment• baail. Eltimata for the trade deficit in 1983 ranae aa high a1 $80 billion." Jill v edder. 24. -of Clndnnati, smiled broedly u ahe popped out of the cave about 10:30 a.m. today. Vedder, the Youno-t member o f the party and the least exper ienced with only two previous cave e.xpediUona, aaid the party huddled under blanketa, rationed out 1rnall portionl of canned meat, canned beem and franJdurten. STOCKHOLM, Sweden -Sweden recalled ita amhuudot' from Ma.iow today and ch.arpd that at.x Soviet submarines operated near tJu. neutral Scandinavian nation's loJHeCl"et naval bMe 1aat Qctobei'. "Six foreign aubmarinea, three of which were midget llUbmarlne9 of a hitherto unknown character, may have operated in the Stockholm archipelqo" during October 1982, said a aovemmerit ~port releued today. One of the miniaubmarines, apparently crawlln1 on the aea1loor uaine tread.a, went u far as Stockholm'• harbor, It aaid. Sen. William V. Both Jr., ft.Del. coordinating committee to 1 aid ye 1 t er day after ..--------------------------=--------------- adminiatration offidall encb wed a Cabinet-level aaency to consolidate polJcy-makina on trade and export promotion. Yamani says oil price will bold RIYADH. Saudi Arabia -00 .Mln.ister Shelk Ahmed Zaki Yamani believes OPJ!X: will keep its hue crude oil price at $29 a buTel throuah 1985 "at least." a S.udi rnapzine reported today. Yamuil laid that the previoua price of $S4 per tmrel waa a "political price wbJch waa tmpoeed on ua ... The c:w:rent price, be aaicl, "ii a midcDe-Gf·tbe-roed one." Commerce Secretary Malcolm Baldrige .. id hla department ahould be aboliahed in favor of the new qency, which would c o m b I n e t h e m aJ o r reaponalbllltlea now hel by BaldrJ1e and the U.S . trade re 1 v 1 1::,entaUve, Ambaaaador w Brock.. However, abolition of the Commerce Dej)Ulme.nt WU not propoeed by Roth, the chairman What do you like about the Dally Pilot~ Whal don't YO\t Ilk~! ..... , .......... --~,,......, .. ~ .......... ,,.,,.. .... f011f "" .... .. ...... ................. ..... -,_,... .. ...... ,.Ille,-..... ..... _,........,, .. ..... ' Call lhe number at left and your meaaae wtU be ret'Orded, traNCribed and deUvered to-the appropriate editor. The same 24·hour anH~ertni aervlce may be \11.ed to record let· le rs to the editor on any toplc. M atlbox contributort mutt tneluct. t~lr name and telephon~ number for verification No clrcu.latloe calls. please Tdl ua wbal'• on )"OUr mind. ~:.=::=-" MAIM °"'9Ctl .. ._._. ... C-....._CA ..,_...,._._,.c.. ...... CA_. ~ lllJ 0.,.. c.. ~c..,...y llie M•• .. ., ... , llltltlf•ll•M. •fl•t1la1 111a11t1 •• ..,._ ....... ...., .................. ,..,....... . ..,,,,.... .... r~\ ~ EiEM WISE "mind the ll()(e". I Old mtinage to uipe pert of the lnlormeUon but without th• alld• ~lion 11 IOllM tome Of the Aa U9Ual, the foltowlng ftw daya were devoted to th• continuing education of ttie ~·1membef9. Wea~ gemologlOll tab HHlene . ..,.,..1nar1 end tectur" Oii the lnduttr(I lateet deoletOCI •it.. 8peclal cllnlc1 were tl .. d by lnetrvctora wtth 1Deper1 ........ PtittklulllJ ..., Of ~· had ti\• opportu;.;y~ rn about the Yllr/ ..... cllllcr:P4 .... In ... II"' --1d. I fOWtd It wry ................. l'manh••' 111~ far_.. .. the conclli-. amo ...... ~~'° f11t to know to "*'Y wec ... ful people ''°"' ... ,.rt. ., ... oounlry end c::...-.tlo _.. =·=-in•-== efilllSlfle.W. -..,. leem ............. w In .. ...,,... dlu 1• • ..................... ...,on._.,..._._ ~-•a!! .. , ..... her. --.. IMp' I . Mt • • ..-niy ..-. ............. f I f' .. A4 Or~ Oou' DAILY PILOT/TUMd1y. April II, 1113 Good to the last drop --· Variety show set by church in HB "Hallelujah .ero.dway," a variety llhow, will be pr.ented thit weekend by the Sta. Slmon and Jude pariah, 20444 Maanolla Ave .. Hunu.n,t.on Belch. ~ea& Jolulaoa, produdnl director at SebMUan'1 West Dinner Playhoua, it atqlna the productkln. which involve1 eome 50 pariah memben:-Selectiona from top mUllk:ala of the put will be offered. Perfonn&nee9 will be liven S.turday at 4 and 8 p.m. and Sunday at 3 and 7 p.m. For ticket information. call 8e0-4724. •City Publlc Worka Direct.or Wayae Olbonae will cit.cu. Fountain Valley'• water 1y1tem at the monthly Mayor'• Break.fut, 8Cheduled tomorrow. • Studenta in teacher Carrie Slayback's fourth grade clau at Masuda School in Fountain Valley admire a model water treatment plant they constructed aa part of their study of the city's water ayatem. From left are Oscar Fabela, Hugo Ramos, Ryan Cruclu, Steve Alderton, Mark The meeting will beidn at 8 a.m. ln the Community Center behind City Hall, 10200 'Slater Ave . The event it open to the publlc. Charge for a continental breakfast la $1. Rosene and Julie Whitney. • Dole vows war on WASHINGTON (AP) - Elisabeth Dole, the new tramportation leCl'etary, •YI ihe want• to become peraonally involved in a campeien to cut the number of traffic Cleath• and YOWi to "pull out all the ltopa" to combat drunken driviJla. In an Interview ln her office, ahe al8o promWed "to take a hard look" at the government'• entire auto aafety prosram. whkh hat been under attack in ConiJ'ell from auto eafety advocatea. But Dole, who came to the department 2 ~ month• aso. would not diaavow put auto poUde9 and lndicated that for the time belns . the Reasan admlnistration'a emphalia would remain on convinclng motort.ta to U9e their .at belta and puahing for atronaer actlom by 1tate1 ap1JWt drunken drlvera. Dole Mid one of her ocmcema it the reluctance of most rnotoriata to uae aeatbelta and ahe made clear ahe aupporta air ba,.. in can. But 1he atopped ahort of 1u11.e1tlng the federal iiovernment ahould require air bas• or aea t belt a which automatically wrap around the pamenger. She aaid, however, "we're going to move ln all dlrectlona to try to provide market lncepthie-" to set automaken to offer air ~oting the government plant to pUrCbue ~.ooo cara equipped with air begs for lta seneraI fleet. ahe Mid ahe will try to penuade the Defenae Department and local and state govemmenta to do ll.kewiae. Dole al8o suggested that dhe form of tax Incentive promoting air ~ it "an lnt.ert!stin8 idea" and • aomethlng ... worth drunken driving . Elizabeth Dole exploring" with the Senate Finance Committee, of which her husband Robert la ch.airman. The dl1cu11lon came a day after Prealdent Reagan'• top highway aafety official announced hit l"ftlgnation and preceded today'a Supreme Court hearing of arsumenta on whether the admlniatration wu correct In 1Crappln8 a rule that would have reqUireG puBive aeat belta or air bao in new cars. Dole, who gamed a reputation while at the Federal Trade Commihlon a1 a contumer advocate, called the l~ law that governa motor vehicle aafety 1tandard1 "probably the moat important piece of comumer legWatlon that hu ever been paa.edln~ ... But the Reqan admlnlstration hat been accu8ed of lanorlng that law by rolllna beck a number of auto aafety ttandardt ln the paat two yean. •A panel d.i8cualon on milltar)' arma Umitationa will be held tomorrow evenfna ln Orange u put of a dlnner meetina of the Orange County Chapter of the American Jewitfi Committee. Irvine Mayor Larry Aaru. a prop:ment of a freese oo nuclear weaponafroduction, and Navy u.,ue Cha1rman Job Raa, president o David Induatrtee of Irvine, will be featured 1n the c:iilcUmion. Dr. Morrla Rlckanb will be moderator. The di8cullion and dinner will be8ln at 6:30 p.m. with a wine reception at the Orange County Coo1erenoe Center, 300 S. Flower St. ln Orange. More lnformatioo can be obtained by calllng the committee office in Newpxt Beach at M&-2914. -•The High Hopes Neurological Recovery Group will aponaor a akate-a-thon tomorrow at SkaUnf Plua in Irvine Recreational Park on Mlchel8on Drive. Community aervice sroupa. hilh ICboo1a and Cburchea are .cheduled to compete ln the event, which heClm at 5:46 p.m. Partidpanta can akate for free; akatea will be provided. Pledges aolldted by the akatera will ao towud JJl'Oll'UD8 to aid young adulta with he.d lnjurles. MOl"e information about the event is available by ca1l1ng the High Hopes office at 646-7458 .. • Registration for younpten entering kiDderprten next fall at Cuf verdale Elementary School in Irvtne will take p1llce Thunday from 3 to 5 p.m. at the 8Chool. Parents al8o can regi.ater their children Friday moni1ng from 9 to 11 a.m . Kindergarten teechera Betty Te..._. and Melanie EnaJ.1111 will be available at both .-Iona. Parents should bring their children'• blrth cerU.ticatea and up-to-date immunization recordt. SHUmRS CUSTOM QUAUTY SHUTTERS 'Ibearn · h Designed, Finished Installed - FINEST QUALITY SHUTTERS AVAILABLE ON THE MARKET TODAY ••• AT FACTORY DIREqT PRICDI Call (714) 548-6841 orMl-1717 HlllWHI llA•ACTllY 1177 Placentia Avenue• Costa Meu. CA Wlll1 mo market futerest jtist check with H . avings. Now ~u know why your nelSbbor bu\b•t fE HtJNTINGT0N W SAVINGS ~)Qtl • Super Now Checking Money market interest on every single dollar, as long as your average balance stays at $2,500 or more.• Fully irisurtd. Unlimited check writing. Checking Supreme Funds over$2,000 (backed by Government securities) earn high money market Interest. Funds up to $2_,000 (fully insured) earn 52/•% Interest. Unlimited check writing. Huntington Investment Fund Maintain an average balance of $2,500 or more, and every dollar earns money market interest.• Fully insuml. Limited to six draft . Full cheddna full savinp, full aervlce What ver kind oi checking or aavtngs account you want, whatever ~ of penonaf or butlnne finandal aervlce you need, jusf 1top by and tee one of our uvlnp coun tors. ~ •u your twrap da=rw tal low stacx> dw1na )'OUI monlhW lilMnt Pntod, t "1Ulit6',n rtqYlfW ~ )lltW' ~Mm M the r• b the ..,..W U\M r "I It WtoW A __ , ,___.., • I' Orange Cout DAIL y PILOT /Tueeday. Aprll 2e. 1883 AS Clothes make the defendant Lawyers advise clients lo drea consenalively in court .. LOS ANGELES (AP) -A tbrH-plece 1ult, preferably benker'1 ~ or dark blue, wW do jult Une for the male defendant in a Jury trial. and ht.I ftmai. OOW\terpu't -or hJI wife -. it wlH 'to dre11 equally CON1enradwlv. who comm1llloned a New Ycirk de&lper to pnpan the doU. she'll wear to her b\llband'• cocaine 1mu11Un1 trial ln Au,cuat. Sunda~ ln th• old days," Mid Belll. 'You put on your new lho9 and )'OW' new IUJt and pt Comic book aims to fight drugs That tdvice .. belnl heeded by automaker John De Lorean'• wife, model Cri1tlna Ferrare, The lmpor1.lnCI ot P"OJ*' m- la emphatlaed by lea~ attorneys lncludlna Melvin . "We tell client• and their 1pou1e1 to remember that aotna to trial la like aotna to churCh on youneU a ha.lrcut, have your WASHINGTON (AP) - naUa done~ everythina el8e.'' 1os1c:ree1 Blaml Fooml" 'nle White AppearUM:e can "be a -IOrt of HOUie preeentl a special 11sue of tllent character wltn111 for ''Th• New Team Tftana," a comic defendant• and 1pouH1. An book about auper-heroea who example wa1 MaureeJ\ "Mo" vangullh drua abUM. ne.n, wtu. cll8nltled p,...nce The comJc l>ook, prodlJ()td by durtn1 her hu1band John'• DC ComlCI of New York and appearance ln tht Water1ate M Th b underwritten by the Keebler Co., Energy saving move ·may be disease link heArlna wu utd to have lent argaret ate er wu unveiled y.terday u a new credibffity to hll testbnony. tope Princeu Diana tool to help prevent dru1 ~ De Lorean'• wife had deailner amona fourth sraden. Albert Capraro prepare an Britons diu In 1 cover letter, Nancy 18-plece collec:don with plunadna e Reagan tells the youn11tera: nedd1nea, knee-lenlth hems -ana "Don't let anyone tell you that thefMhionablebroed-ahouldered Thatcher's you can't be. hero ... Declare look. that you will stay <in.lg-free. At Purchued whole.ale, the 009t d J any omt .. And you'll be a hero COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Lowering temper1tura in water heeterl to .. ve energy may have touched off the sudden outbrealu o1 Legtonnairee' dl.leue nearly a decade ABO a reeearcher says. An Ohio State University study concludes that lowerinR the temperature of water heaters in hotela, hospitals and other buildings to cona.,.ve fuel probably cruted a near-perfect environment for the bacteria, Legionella pneumophila. Joseph Plouffe, a11ociate proft90r of medk:al microbiology and lmmunoloc, said that in the 1960. moet bUildinp, including hosplta]a, kept their hot water at a temperature of about 140 . degrees. But in the 1970., energy to be turned down to 110 ranaed from $200 to $1,600 per ress sty e -to your mother and father, de~. item, the San Dleao Union said. family and frienda, but 1no9t of "When they brol.&8ht It down Sild David Sablh, who LONDON (AP) -Prime all, to younelf." to 110 degrees Fahrenheit, they repre.ented Erin Fleming in her Mln1ater Margaret Thatcher la at The comic book is built around provided the ideal temperatures fight aaatnat the Bank of the top of the pol.la again -th1a the heroic exploit.a of the "The toe the growth of the organ.lpn." America over the Groucho Marx time for the way she dreleee. New Teen Titans." A new Ploutte ta.id. estate, "I'm aurpriaed De A survey which asked 3!SO character called "The Protector," The study'• aondumion la bued Lorean'• capable attorneys are British women who they copy for a troubled teen-ager trying to in part on a 1urvey of 1lx going to Jet hll wife dreea that drea put Thatcher way out in atone for hil drug-ridden put, building• in the Ohio State 11 front, with almost twice u many waa created ea=X for thla H 1 we . no..--"""'---University oepitala' comp ex. votes aa c£u~ UMUua. issue entitled " . ' Be ca u 1 e of sf e c i a 1 "Four or flve $200 d.re9e9 will A llttle more than halt the "He died! That's not fair! auffioe. What will that trial take requirements, two o the alx _ a month? Let her wear the women questioned said they try Nobody should die that young!" builings maintained water to model theimelvee on IOl'DeOne criee the character Starfl.re aft.er temperaturel at 135-140 cteareea same dnm a couple of tlme9. You In the public eye and more than a a young b6y overdo.ea. "Theee and showed no bacteri1l don't want the jury to think she quarter of the.e rwned Thatcher earthlings! Don't they realize colonization. The other four had has an unlimited supply of as the trend-setter. what they're doing?" Though the lowered their water temper1ture dJ"ellel -they'll think ahe got The prime minlater, who Titans -seven teenagers who to 110-120 de:greee in the 1970. them from cocaine money." favors two-piece suits and fight evil acroM the unlvene - and their water supplies did tum De Lorean la charged with blouses or dre11ea with big never actually tell youngatera up the bact.e.ria. conaplrlnf to distribute 220 eearvee, got M vot.ea. that drugs are bad, moat In one bulldina, researchers pounds o cocaine worth $24 Jan Leeminl, who readl the eventually see the light after a · killed the Legionella by fluahiJll million in an alleged .cheme to news for Brltiah Broadcutlng great deal of turmoO. the system with water heated to save hil financially ailing car Corp. t.eleviaion, wu aeoond with The comic book ia being Department to an eetimat.ed ~ I ml1l1on fow1h-8faden 11' 16,000 achoola. That amount.I to about 40 percent of the nation'• fourth- aaders. It comes with a color poatar feat urint the comic book characters aaYtna: "We want you to be a hero. . . Stay dnJI tr.I" The laat paae oontalna a P1edae for 1tudent1 to alan: "I declUe thatlamawa.reofthedaftaeroue effecta of druo. I am responsible I for myaeU and will never u.e any unllwf ul dn.aa·" At a brieflnl for report.en, a new survey of elementary lchool 1tudent1 wu releMed. lt ahowed I that youn11tera experience 1 aubatantlal peer pre11ure to experiment with alcohol and dr\.lgJI aa early aa fourth IJ'ade. The survey, conducted by the claaaroom publication Weekly Reader, a1ao showed that molrt 1 fourth graders get infortMtion on alcohol and dn.ap from movies and televlalon and their families -not from their claurooma. Mo.t drug education programs apparently are targeted at older . students. "There'• a lot of pre9SUN to joln ln and fit ln with the crowd and little education" about drugs at the fourth -grade level, according to Terry Borton, editor of the magazine. "If you want to get to kidl where the pl"e9IW'e la leut, you have to get to them early," be said. conservation meuun coupled with rules by the Joint Oxnmtwton on the AocredJtation of Hospltala., cau.ed therrnoR&ta 160 degrees. Plouffe aaJd. company. 34 voie.. Prlnoeea Diana had 28. distributed by the Education .-------------------------------------------------------------------------'------------------------------------ AREA OBITS Ashley D. Hopkins of Costa Mesa dies Funeral 1ervice1 were held In Riverside yesterday for Aahley DouaJ.u Hopkins Sr. of a.ta Me.a, who died last Wedneeday. Mr. Hopkina, a member of the Co.ta Mesa Mooee Lodge, la aurvtved by h1a wife, Florence; aona Aahley D. Hopkins Jr. and Harold E. Hopkins of Costa Meu; Jame9 R. Hopkins of Perria, and Terry E. Hopkins of El Toro, and daughters Diana L. Groce of a.ta Mesa and Sheila A. &onowUi of Perris. Allo syrviving are a brother, five aiatera, 14 grandchildfen and one great-grandchild. Services were held at Riverside National Cemetery under the direct.Jon of Evan.a-Brown Perri.a Mortuary. Clifford E. Love Services have been held foc Clifford E. Love, a 20-year resident of Costa Mesa, who died April 15 at the age of 40. He II IW'Vived by hll wife, I....oui9e, of a.ta Meu; hia pe.rentl, Charley and C..therine Love of Redland1; 1on1 Robert and Mark Love and daughter Marcelline Love, all of Costa Mesa. Al.lo 1W'Vivina are five a.ten: Ann Robtmon of. San Clemente, 'tracey Ruaell of Santee, Dori.I McClure of Yucaipa. Sharon Handgia of Irvtne and Patrida Love of Anaheim. Rosary 1ervice1 we.re held in Redlands, followed by a Ma11 of Cbrlstian Burial at the Sacred Heart C..thollc Chun:h. Maribel B. Preston Private services have been conducted for Maribel Burdon Preston. a nine--year resklent of Balboa, who died April 18. She ia au.rvlved by her husband, C..pt. John Paul Piwtoll USN (ret.); daughters Joan Phillipa and Anne Stefani, and five grandchildren. Mn. Preston WU a member of the Tueeday Club, the Ebell Cub and Sc:rippi College Alumni. Memorial oootributiiom have been requested to the American Cancer Society. J9yce A. MacArthur Funeral lel'Vicee we.re held Saturday for Joyoe A. MacArthur of Costa Mesa, who died last Wedneed•y at the ap of 58. )In. MacArthur WU born in Sunkiat Okla., and ia au.rvlved by one aon. Richard M.llcArthur of TGM. Memorial 1ervlce1 were held at the ~ Chun:h of the Covenant with the Rev. Bruce Kurrie ofticlatlna. Pldtic View Mortuary of. New))Ort Beech wae in charp of ~ta. BEDWEllER LET THEM HAVE A DRY BED he ....... ..,. .,eu -"'" .......... .,.."",... °' .. ......, ...... aft -.... ......,. ,....,... MOii ......... ....,..., M•cellMt le ....... It W-UR9111tl' ...., • • ,,,,...,,....... 111e1 i.t •....,,.. 1r1 .. .....,... ................. .._ Mt_..,.,... ..... . ..... _ .. ...._..,_..,_ .... ~...._ ... . ,. 1---IC'1 M ._. -.... Te.,,. Ir', t..,.,. _, ... _.... ................. . ••• :!:-.'!!!!!f~~ !4:.~.!'!': ••• ~ .._.Iii! "MWte INT'IMA~ LTD. t lltlllfdl .... , ........ Wl .... 7 • ,MllHT,....,.. I • -------------------,-~~----1 Aoa- ... 4 .... • @ Pactt\c."'8\ephone CC>NSUN\ER YEL' OW Pl'O.E..S 1he best llCld book has gotten better. Padficlelephone is llVidi..a the Onlnge County . CoasUl•\WlawPages intOtwo ~~l 1ditectories. We're dividing the Orange County Consumer Yellow Pages into two local directories because your best · prospects told us they wanted it that way. ~..;; They want a book that's closer to home, ~~ and easier to use. Were dividing the Yellow Pages to make each local book a better advertising medium for you. Take Orange C.ounty North, for example. The people who live • there do 85" of their shopping there. And the people who live in Orange County Central do 83% of their ~ping in that area1 So now you can target your Yell<>WPaaes advertltiftl ID your belt prospects: the people who live, shop and spend money in your particular area. Your ad, in our new Yellow Pages, will W~ oonunand more attention. I~ will be seen more and used more. And rt'll bring you , even better resltlts . Get in. Cash in. Pick up the phone and call your Pacific Tele~one Yellow Pages representative. I <11 ) Q72.5519 I • 1982 "Oran1• Cc>uncy SbQPPb1I Huftl Bcudy~ Buaine. to bulineM ldvertiitti plcue note: &Cauae you do your buylal and Mlllna li1 both uaa. we are not c:hanlinl. or dMclnttbe~COunty .._tolklllnete YellaW ~ .41 Orange Coa1t OAILV PILOT ITu•day1 Aprll 28, 1863 Mesa drain study is worth every penny It doesn't take a PhD. in engineerlng to 11ee that Costa Meu'a storm drains don't work as they should. One might be willing to temper opinion about their add/::,c>' under such conditions WI the torrential and seemingly en winter rainstorms that hit in March. But even under the "normal" circumstances like a spring thundershower, ~y o! the city's gutters and intersection.a build up two, three or even more inches of water that just can't get into the drainage system faat enough. Last week the City Council agreed to fund a study of the storm drain system, which, 90me estimates say, may need up to $12 million in repairs. The issue was brought to Council attention by a series o! petitions from residents of the College Park neighborhood whose homes were flooded during the March l storm. The last study of the system was completed in 1974, so a fresh look is well deserved. The city has grown, its population and use of streets has changed. And all that figures into the demands placed on the system. Officials say the city now spends about $1 million a year to maintain old drains and construct new ones. The study must look at that expenditure, and make recommendations on how money should be be spent in the future. Costa Mesa is fast becoming a focal point for area growth, both residential and commercial. City services will have to be planned and maintained in a well-thought out and orderly fashion so that we can keep up with this evolution. A $50,000 study investment is money well spent in serving residents today and preparing for future needs. Qp1n1on-, t•xpr~~,,t·tl ,,, lht 'fl•h • ,U.>ovt~ ~tr• lhu\P 01 UH ..Jd11., P1101 Ol•'t r vww' • ~ pre~Sf-0 on tn1.._ l)dQt ,1r1 thU"-i ut tht-ir ,1utrl•1r •nd drle't... Rt·d<J•·r "ornm1•nl ., "'"' t ed Adtl•~ .. , 111 .. ~·"'''Y Polot p 0 Eio• 1\60 (O\IJ Ml''>O, (A ~It.lb Pilon .. I,.., 64l 4J]' MAllBOX UCI bungle d it To the Editor: By attaching completely outrageous conditions on the Richard M. Nixon PresidentiaJ Ubrary, the UCI Faculty Senate has committed a grave disservi~ to the communHy it serves by depriv ing it of a valuable historical and educational asset. Their actions seem pci.rucularly capricious, hypocritical and arbitrary when looked at in the light of several other recent steps to obtain private facilities on campus. Neither Nelson Laboratories, which plans to 'conduct private proprietary research on campus, nor Healtn West, which will build and operate. in addition to a hospital, three medical office Gobble d ygook To the Editor: Shame on you for publishing the April 14 Jetter by probation officer Michael Schumacher. The letter is a prime example of goverrunent gobbledygook, and by a Ph.D. who should know buildings and a hot.el on .campus were asked to. accept onerous conditions to locate on the UCI campus. On the con trary. the first arrangement appears particularly attractive to Nelson and no doubt gives them a competitive advantage while maintaining ownership of the re9Ult.a of their reseerch, while the le<X>lld cornee in the face of stiff community opposition as being too remote and unresponsive to the mainatream of the community. It seems the faculty remains elitist and insular in their though'8 and motives. RICHARD T ROKS Irvine how to write simple, understandable English and define hia terms. ''Prescription services''? "Propensity for involvement in addltional illegal behavior"? Tommyrot! J.W. REID l .•. Boyd/ Bad odds Only one of the flnt five Presidents of the United Siates h ad"' a aon, and the eternal advantage of birthright prevailed: 1bat one .on turned out to be a President too. World's first typist was blind. She was Countess Carolina Fantoni of Italy. A man named Pellegl'ine Turi built a crude typewriter for her in 1808. Her letters are pre9erved in Reggio Emllia city arehives. You think of a king's throne as an exceedingly special chair. But what made it '° special originally waa the fact that it most probably waa th' only one in the room. In the early days of kings. 1toola and benches were common, but a c h air, any c hair, wa1 an ~piece of fumltun An artistic German ~ntot named Herr Kernel the oU painters greatly when he devbed a fine brush made of 1qulrr el fur. But s uch ls the earelellnem of converudonallsts lbat the invent« WU for;otten, a n d H rr Ke°'el'a bruah ewlltuallY became Q)own u the camel'• hair brush. I n Thailand, marrla1e i1 re1arded H an lnstltutlon wherein the hu.sb..nd ma)' be pretldent. but the wife ~t -.Uy II U'elllW'lr. Women own ·~telf .haU o.t the ,... e.tat.e Chel'e. Did I mendon that 1&"1 Che.,_,.,., of U. ll:?JID who fOi lbt ~ ln ThMland1 f Women who.work on payroll jobs tend to be 1tricter than stay-at-home mothers with scbool-age children. But those go-to-work ladiea are more lenient than the houlebold wives with pre-9Cbool toddlen.. In our Love and War man'• files are numerous reporta of men who have died of heart attack.a during physical romance. Medical researchers studied 34 such cardiac cases to learn that 29 of the stricken men were engaged in extramarital affairs. More than 85 percent. Medical checkup1 ln nudlat colonies show a much lower lncidence of hi&h blood praaure than la found lo the general public Q. Why oouldn't I llW'Vtve on pet food. l! nece9lal'y'! A. Probably could, for awhile. But it lacks vitamin C. and IC'UJVY could be expeded to get you, eventually. The Office of Health Economlc:a in Great Britain ~ Uqoor d.rinken lnto lo'U.t ca~1orlu: 1. Dl11y and dellahtful. 2 . Drunk and dlaord~rly. 3. Oe•d drunk. 4. Deed. Arl1totle tbou1h& lnaectt aprq alive apontaneol.illy fnim am.Id. ,......,,....., ,__ ....... '1:C:',l I ~· ...... ........ .......... ........... Crazy Social · Security logic WASHINGTON Government investigators have given the Senate shocking confirmation that for nearly two years the Socral Securi t y Adm1nlstrat1on has been haphazardly purging thousands of mentally impalreH persons from the disability rolls The Gener al Accounting Office has told the Select Committee on Aging, chaired by Sen. John Heinz, R-Pa., that a btg part of the problem is that many of the bureaucrats who decide whether a claimant is mentally disabled are untrained in psychiatric diagnosis. lnsteaQ. they rely on hsts of symptoms that ar~ frequently unrealistic, the GAO concluded. MY ASSOC I ATE Tony Capacx:io bas ex.anuned many of the Uhpublished cues ln GAO' files that illustrate the crazy logic (.) -Jl-Cl_A_ND-11-1-DN--~ behind the bureaucratic derual of benefits. The cases were 1rut.1ally developed by the National Association of Private Residential Faciliues for the Mentally Retarded Though the facts were uncontested, the individuals were notified that they would no longer get disability benefits. -A 58 -year -old woman diagnosed as schizophrenic in 1968 had been committed to psychiatric hospitals 16 limes, including three times in 1981 alone. She was Lnst1tutionahzed by court order as a danger to herself and others aft.er she was found dancing in traffic. Yet the benefit cutoff notice said: "Though you may be nervow at times, your records show that . ~ you are able to think , communicate and act tn your own interest Based on the medical evidence, you could do unskilled work." -A 22-year-old woman was diagnosed as schizophrenic at 14 and had spent almost au her life since then confined in slate mental institutions. "Very unsoc1a l1Z.ed ," notes her psychiatric evaluation, adding: "One of goals is to make eye contact during five minutes of each group (therapy session)" BUT THE government ruled she was able to support herself. "The medical evidence in file does indicate that she has had a significant history of mental 11ln~." the cutoff notice stated "However. at the present tlll'le, she has no hallucinations or delusions and is oriented to tune, place and person. It ~ felt that Small change thinking Following are some notes I've made that don't amount to much: :.... Cars are smaller but parking places don't seem any easier to find. -They've added an awful lot of dials and ind1cators to the dashboards of new cars. All I really want to know is how fast I'm going. how far I've been and how much gas I have left -It is more likely that the mistake In arithmetic is yours and not the bank's. -Peani are hardly ever ripe. When they are ripe, they're ovenipe. -Tea always seems like a good kiea but I don't really llke it much. -The airport in Atlanta is a trip in Itself even if you don't go anywhere. -IF YOU have to divide the newspaper with someone Sunday morning at breakfast, they always get the part you want -The price of hotel rooms has {~'' -•• n-1a-a1_EY_ ........ ~ gone up more than the price of anything else m the last ten years. -An expensive rug always seems too nice to walk on. I have seen some expensive paintings l wouldn't hesitate to walk on. -There aren't many things in hfe as good as a warm showt-r. -Most Amenca.ns want their Government tO do the right thing in El Salvador but have no idea what the right thing to do 1.5. -Taklng aapirln for a headache uaed to be a lot simpler before television commercials. -Scissors are a clever invention. -They recently announced in Washington that the Consumer Price Index fell for the first time in years. Af1er 1 finish th.a, I'm going out and look for something I have to pay less for. -Jimmy Carter's thinking of running for the presidency again or he wouldn't have gone to Israel and F.gypt. -When r·-m woodworking in my basement. it doesn't bother me to st.and on my feet all day. but ten minutes standing waitJng for something is torture. -CANADIANS resent Americans but they want to be liked by them. -I feel guilty I don't read all the newspaper. -Something usually hurt.a. Tha week. alone, for ex.ample, I got a sliver in my thumb and hit my big toe on the scale when I was corrung out of the bathroom. -No one keeps stati.st.ica on the number of times they've done things in life. I must have shaved 18.000 times. I wonder how many miles I've driven. -The three networks are fighting for first place in morrung show ratings. What we need is a Viewer's Digest. Someone ought to pick just the she can do unskilled work, although she has no job history m the past " A 28-year-old woman , diagnosed as schizophrenic In 1974 and hospitalized six times, was termed "actively psychotic" and "unable to make self- protective decisie#\s, such as whether to eat." She was in a state mental hospital -and pregnant -when her cutoff notice arrived last year. Although acknowledging that 1n the past she had been hospitaliz.ed "When you have not taken your medication," and that she could not take the medication while pregnant, the notice said: "Y o u can return to you r medication for psychiatric help when your baby is born." So the bureaucrats ruled that her disability benefits would be discontinued three months after the baby's birth. best parts from each show and televise them at rught. -Some people have all the luck, both good and bad. Other people don't seem to have much luck one way or the other. -A lot .of people you see on television who have such bad luck seem to have built their houses too close to the river. -1 never get over being fascinated with elastic bands -William Ruckelsbaus 1s taking the same job he had 13 years ago in 1970. How would you like to be where you were m 1970? -IT MAKES me nervous to hear talk about things that won't be finished until the year 2017 or 2027. -You can complain about television but you have to give them credit for not advertising cigarettes. -1 can't sit down for long without crossing my knees OJ' putting my feet up on sometlung. Reverse discrimination here A friend of mine waa making a run for the presidency of a small liberal arts colleae. and wu notified that he had loat out, deaplte hla most impre11lve cndenUala and ie.Umon1ala. t wu not 100 IUtprl.aed mywelf, for deaplte having provided him with a 11Jowln11 reference, I prlvat~ly felt that the 1earch committee would conaider him to ~ "too youn(' for the job. THIS IS said to be a youn1 man'• world, m:MI .lo many ways lt ~yet the poeltiona of ultlmaw authority are 1tlll laraely rMtrved for ace; anyone 40 or younaer who mak.e It to the '1DP 18 •till rqarded .. eomet.hina of • "tJo. ~:· IYlllY 111111 ~ '¥> The ftnt boy wonder I knew was Bob Hutchins, who was selected H president of the Unlveral\y of Chicago at the tender a,e of 29, bavtnc lttVed u det.0 of the Yale Law School at the unprecedented age ol 26. Th.la shocked and affroot-.d much of th ffnlor faculty, and no doubt kleounted ln larse pert for th9 hard time he wu &jven by the faculty eenata durtna hll lq tenure. (They doubt.km felt about him the way Sec:Nwy of the Interior Ickes felt about a rlval New Dealer: "He was an infant prodigy -but he kept on being an infant long after he ceased being. prodJgy''') Be that as It may, lt 8eeOW to me that mere chronolCJlleel age plays too important a part in or estimates and jud1ment1 of people. Their mental and biological a1es are the facton that ihould be dedlive. Some men a.re old at 65, and othen are Nit in thel.rlrlme. Some men, Cndeed, are ol at 30, while others remain infantile until decrepUude. n>e Wn.s we call .. .,.,.. ls not almple, but a c:Dnpound -It II lhe pu1Jc\llar comblnatlon of· 1enH, blood, brain cells and temperament. No two penona an the aame ap, even If they were born on euc:tly lhe .me c.t.y. AJ..xandlr ~ W8I ·•old"' enouah to be ~ of the Tr9lilw'y ln hla IOI. and Vnl ftl ")'OUnl" ~ .., ~ ~~at 80. Keell ~ ........ end OclMhl 1m1 to WI ~-M .-rt1 four ..... lhll ... . 1M11 OllGAM•I hll 1'9 ..-. =-~ -=~==:.:: lta chronological age. Prodigies in playing che111 seem to bloom early and deay fut: paintera, contrariwlae, seem to father atrenath with a1e (l they IW'Vlve) and do t.helr best work late. Young people feel that they ~ being diac:riminated .,.Wt by their .enlora, and the .man feel they are beina pnmaw.reJ.y pushed out by the ywnc. Thfir rivalry will come to an end cnly when and U we bealn )utllal one another by c::apadU., not b1 ch.ronolOI)'. .... I j I DlllJPllll TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 1983 ANN LANDERS / TELEVISION COMICS 82 83 84 Enjoy the world of buaineat Tbe latest promotions, bqnon and achievements are· cltronicled five days a week Jn the Oranse County -Busjness column. Pase BS. I .., D ,I a et~o areas are growing more slowly California most urban state now I!?. ~~tL£· SCHMID WASHINGTON -The lure of cltlea that drew millions of American• away from the countryside aeems to be eaalni. wtth metropolitan areas growing more alowly than the nation aa a whole. The 1980 Census counted 226,- 5 .. 6,000 Americans, up 11 .4 percent from 1970. The number AMERICAN J>HOF IL[ of residents of metropolitan areas b ~-...!'TT was 169,431,000 up only 10.1 percent in the same period. · ''The result.a of the 1980 census have confirmed a remarkable tendency toward population deconcentration," said John F. Long of the bureau's population projection branch. He added that the trends of population dispersal "represent market turnarounds from the basic patterns of population redl.atribution that were taken fot granted in the 1960s." California was the most urban state by 1980; Wyoming was the ie.t. The only area where ~tropolitan growth outpaced total growth was in the South, where the number of people llvlng in metropolitan areas lnt:reaaed 21 .5 percent over the decade , whil e the total population grew 19.9 percent. The biggest jump in big-city population oocurred in the West ....., a 21.9 percent increase from Hl70 to 1980. But the total pqpulation of the region rose n.rly 24 percent. In the North Central states, metropolitan-area population grew 2.7 percent, while the total lncreue was 4 percent. And in the Northeast, the number of people livinlJ in metropolitan areas dropped 1.9 percent from 1970 to 1980, while the over-all population rose by 0.15 percent. How can you tell whether you're one of thoee metropolitan people? According to the Census ..Bureau, you qualify if you live in one of its Sta.Ddard Metropolitan StatisUcal Areas. There are 318 such areas joined by aocial and economic ties generally Women gaining They're getting share of jobs By ROBERT C. COWEN ~le*-..... hmoe For United States women who upire to careers in science or enatneerin&. things are looklni Up. Two recently published surveys show them winning increased entry into what waa largely a male preserve, al- though their aatiafaction with the gain may be tempered by concern over lingeri ng discrimination in salary and promotion. A National Science Foundation (NSF) study reports overall employment for acientiata and ~grew at an annual rate O/. ll percent in 1981, compared to $percent for the period 1976-80. lclentlata' gains, taken •parately, were higher (11 percent) than thoee of engineers (6 percent). The highest gaim were made by women, who reglatered a 15 percent rise, compared with 7 percent for men. The NSF says overall employment growth may have 1lackened last year, although tbae figures are not complete. Nevertheleas, women are moving ahNd. It la interesting, though, io note that they are doing much better in the sciences than In eNPneering. Some 13 percent of all employed scientists and engineers now are women. But that figutt breaks down to 25 ~t of working 9Cientista and Only 2 percent of engineen. So f.ar, eo good. But a National ~h Council (NRC) report on the status of women with doctoral degrees emphulzea a twed for opportunity at a career entry level.a to be matched by equivalent opportunity for ~vancement. Four yean lg«), the NRC, an apncy of the National Academy ~ Sdenoes. found the number of women with profeulonal academic toba to be growing nther alow y. Now It find8 rapid .,awth. Thia matches the growth ~ the number of women with I . doctorates, which mcreased 50 percent in 4 years. The report caJla this "the most atriking change that has taken place since 1977." Yet it notea, "Much ol the focus of affinnative action efforta in the put has been at the entry level. The findings of thla report suggest a need to take that one step further and examine the comparative advancement of those hired as assistant profeDOrs." Stati.tUca In the NRC report demoniBtrate that, compared job for job, the median-u.la.ry sex differential ranges from $200 to $6,200 depending on academic field and rank. Alao, women are more likely than men to be hired for positions that are not on the tenured career-advancement track. Even women who can upire to tenure tend, u a lfOUp, to wait longer to attain it. Of the 1977 pool of aasiatant profe.ora, three-fourths of the men gained higher rank by 1981, while only half of the women advanced. lt is put time for t.hia needlem d.l.tcrirnlnatlon to be eliminated. The ball it in the academJc adminiatraton' court. -Let'• llear lt for fat.lier of soda pop! Historians ol acienoe are this year celebrating the 2~0th anniversary of the birth of Joseph Prlettley, the great 18th-<entury chymist (to uae the antique spell.Ing) who dl.900vered oxygen. But cfid you know be alto invented eoda pop? Priestley. who will appear on a US 20-cent commemorative at.amp next month. mixed up a tan11. nonalcoholic drink by blmd.ing water with the c.arbon- dioxide gas bubbling off beer. He laid it reminded him of mineral water. and published the instructions for making it. The invention was immediately popular. lt 11. perhaps. one of the moat pervasive -and lar1ely unrecoanlted -l•1aciea of 18th<entury ~- Are Wood IS.Vet 1&M!q poll1dn'T 1urroundin8 citie1 of ~o.ooo or more. That allow. for inclusion of both dtJe1 and their suburbs in metropolitan atatiat.l<». There were only 243 SMSA.a In 1970, but the burden has. adjusted its 1tatl1tlcs to compensate for the additions. That means figures for the communities which became SMSA.a during the decade have been added to the 1970 atatlat.lcs to allow for reaso nable compariaon. California i.t the most urban state in the nation with 94.9 percent of it.t resident.t within metropolitan areas. That was a 17.7 percent hike over the decade, while the state's overall population was growing 18.5 percent. Rounding out the five most urban states were Rhode Ialand, New Jersey, New York and Maryland. Here is a state-by-state list showing 1980 percentage of population living in metropolitan areas: 1. California 94 .t percent; 2. Rhode Island 92.2; 3. New Jersey 91.4; 4. New York 90.l ; 5 . Maryland 88.8; 6. Connecticut 88.3; 7 . Florida 87 .9 ; 8 . Masaachuaett.t 85.3; 9. Michigan 82.8; 10. Nevada 82.0; 11. Pennsylvania 81.9; 12 . Illinois 81.0; 13. Colorado 80.9; 14. Washington 80.4; 15. Ohio 80.3; 16. Tex.as 80.0; 17. Hawaii 79.0; 18. Utah 79.0; 19. Arizona 75.1; WHERE MOST AMIRICANI LIVE 1 P9~• ,,_, tQutit mite. 19801 Mt l'.I I 111 1\\l)f ll I I /\'.I I 1111 \\111 II 1. Hew JefMY 98e 2 2 lt"*le IS'-M 891.8 l Me..-chvNtta 7 33 3 • ~nectlcvt 6 37 8 6 M~end •i8 7 07 •8 !I ' 1 3 9 1 Population has increased by more than half over last 30 years with California being the most urban state. 20. Virginia 69.9; 21. Indiana 69.8; 22. Delaware 67.0; 23. Wisconsin 66.8; 24. Misso~ 65.3; 25. Oregon. ~.9; 26. Min.neeota 64.6; 27. LoW81ana 63.4; 28. Tenneaaee 62.8; 29. Alabama 62.0; 30. Georgia 60.0; 31. South Carolina 59.8; 32. Oklahoma 58 .5 ; 33. North Carolina 52.7; 34 . New Hampah.lre 50.7; 35. Kansas 46.8; 36. Kentucky 44.5; 37. Nebruk.a 44.1; 38. A.la.aka 43.4: 39. New Mexico 42.3; 40. Iowa 40.1; 41. Arkansas 39.2; 42. West Virginia 37.l ; 43. North Dakota 35.9; 44 . Ma ine 33.0; 45. Miaalaaippi 27.1; 46. Montana 24.0; 47. Vermont 22.3; 48. Idaho 18.3; 49. South Dakota 15.8; 50. Wyoming 15.3 Supply demand Raw deal at marketplace By KAREN E. KLEIN o<lht o.llJ .......... The average American thinks he'• aettina a wone deal in the marketplace today than he got a decade ago, the latest polla show. And he may be right. "Conlumen think that 'fuality i.t down and price ill up, ' said Dan Rwnelt, a spokesman for the U.S. Office of Consumer Affaln. Rumelt quoted from a Harria Poll, "Con1umerlam In the Eighties." And he agreed with the public'• perception. "Take a look at the auto industry," he laid. "One reaaon that Japene9e can are aeWng eo well la becau.ae American can omt more and weren't made u well. "I think our (domestic) manufacturers are beginning to reallz.e that now• I I Rwnelt aaid the preasure being put on American car maken by conaW:nen Wu.atrat.es perfectly the theme of National Consumer Week, being held this week through Saturday. "We'll even have some mariachi music, to krnd of tie in with Cinco de Mayo," he added. In conjunction with the national observance, the consumer affalra office i n Waahington h.u issued some tips for conswnen: When buying a uaed car, uae the National Highway Trame Safety Administration's toU-free hotline to check recall and safety-related information. In addition, you can get details of the recalls and fuel economy ratings, crash test results and car maintenance figures in the mail. The number ia 1-800-242-9393. If you have problems with mail-order compen.i.es you should obtain a copy of ''Shopping By Mail,'' a free guide put out by the Federal Trade Commission, Washington, D .C. 20580. Generally, if you don't get delivery ol a mail-order item in the time period promised, yoµ can cancel your order and get a complete refund. A female scientist at work at Bermuda research center. The slogan for the week, proclaimed for the second year ln a row by President Reagan, la "Consumen Supply~·" "The week la designed to point out the importance of conswner education for students and adult&, and to make them real.he how lmponant they are in the marketplace, •• Rumelt a.Id. lf you order products over the phone using a credit card number, make 1ure you know the total coat of your purchase and check it against your monthly statement. Have a re- ceipt mailed to you at the time of the tnnaaction. According to Frederick W. I.Jpfert and Jennifer L. Dungan of Brookhav ~n National Laboratory, residents of the United States are buyinj wood l'tOVel and "effldent" fireplaces at an eltlmated rate of a million units a year. Yet, while the alogan "split wood, not atoma" makes a provacatlve bumper sticker, what does all that wood amoke do to the quality of the air? ~ I.Jpfert and D.tnpn note ln a reaearch report ln Science, ''wood 1moke la 1enerally reprded .. ben1gJ\ by th. public, (yet) there la concern about effec111 on unb&ent air quality and health that mtaht reeult from widespread uae of wood." A.a a tint atep in aa ! •ng the problem. they have developed a method for e.-Umatinl how much wood la, in fact, being burned in a if ven local area. "rh9 '~ extenalve data for New England to coNtruct a atatiatical equation that relates firewood use to local-population derulty. Thia was tested ag.ainut aurvey data from 12 other states. Using the equaUon, Llpfert and Dunaan eatlmate that US firewood conaumptlon 11 concentrated in urt.m areu of the NOl'theett and north-central at.at.a. They ai.o conclude that about i to 11 percent of the fuel foe US 11*18 heetlnl la wood. Locally, a consumer exhibit will be held on Friday at South eo..t Plua Shopping Mall, aaJd Augie Molina, the Orange County consumer affalra rept9entatlve. Molina aid about 70 bootha will be eet up, distributing literature and expertlee of interest io conau.men, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Fram 11 a.m. to 1 ,.m.. lnlide the mall in front o Bullock'•, conaumer expert• will be ~r!'::Lt.on varloua topic•, With jobs scarce right now, employment counselors are popping up all over with attractive-sounding, and many times expenelve , offera. Counselors affiliated with community collegea usually offer free or low-coat counaeling. Others charge a fee for their eervk:ea. Ask for client references lf you're paiinl for coumeUna and be wary of unre.llatk: cla1ma or promilea about your job future. If you want to know more, attend the CocNumer l:xbiblt.lon on Friday or write: Consumer Information Catalo1. Pueblo, Colo. 81009. . onsumers complaln . • • • I I . l I I • .. Orange Oout DAILY PILOT lluesd1y, Aprll 20. 1183 llMA IOMllCK AT WIT'S END &v.\ when he'1 clean be ~·t Look lt. He alw~ loob Wut one ot the. ab1r1a they wt you you can take out of the dryer and don't have to iron. You can iell you'w aot one of thOM children early ln Ute. You can't pt a diaper to flt 'em. Some babf. ctn We&I'. di.aper and~ it Look Wte. deetpr UM. Not th.II one. It bal\8ll around the a.. and with a little •ffon YoU can 1ee dayu,ht oom1nC ln from behind the le1. It alway1 loolu wetahted. ~y never pw ln p~ to the 1t.andard a-. Ob aure, maybe thelr liocl;y wW be 2, 4, 6 and 8, but their anm and lep will be 3, 5, 7 and 9. Nothlnc ever fita. Never does thJa child who dre9M to a different drummer become 10 obvioua u when you get the c1-pktureL There will be row upon row of white teeth, combed hair, preaed 1hlrta and creased ~ Then there wW be th1a child who look.a like be wu ju.It NIPencled foe fiahttna. A cowlick will make him look three inches taller than the tallest boy ln the~ For the tint time lo hie life, hla ahin will be tucked ln. Unfortunately,, it la tucked into hl1 underwear which 11 what the waiatband of the panta doesn't quite cover. A lhoestrln8 will extend like a make sunninl it9ell. The buttona on the sweater do not come out even. The ahirt collar I.I half ln and half out. The only thlna you can count on ia be will always be In the froot row. The ud part I.I, the child triee, but faahion eludea him. He juat doe1n't know how to get himaelf together. U there'• a bueball t.eam and everyone wean the Identical uniform, he will get• the one that hu to have a belt to hold the panta up, making_ him look like he's wearing a skirt. A1 for mothers, they never give up trying. Before one of my kJda had hla c1ua picture taken. I lined him up and went through the check list. "You don't look like you're put together," I uld. ''There's aomethlng wrong. Old you shower? (Y•) Did you comb your hair? (Ym) You polished your aboea! (Ym) The acab la off your Up? (Yes) You bn.-hed ~teeth? (Yee) With a brush, not your fin&'er? (Yee) Your aocb match? (Yes) You don't have doti ha1rl on your sweater? (No) You got the filht button ln the right buttonhole? (Yes) And your ahirttail?" (All tucked in.) There waa aomethlns still bugging me, but whatever it waa, lt didn't show. That is, until we got the pictures beck. The ahirttail was tucked ln all right. We could eee it through the open fly as he stood . . . lh the front row. POT SHOTS BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT GOD MAY CLAIM TO HAVE ''t':~ ~ CREATED THE WORLD, BUT CAN ME PA.OOLICE ANY WITNESSES'? .,,,,,, By PHIL INTERLANDI of Laguna8each , ' • I • ' • • • \ Ollelll ... -S--..,. _..._,_ "Edgar, get down here' You 're making a fool of yourself. not to mention trespassing!·· T JOUI HEALTH OR. PETER J . STEINCROHN DEA& DR. ITEINCROHN: My hU1band had a bed cold and it turned lnto pnewnon1a. Our doctor ..,. be may have btouaht u on by drink:lng too much to "cure" hla cold. rve never heard t.hla befoa. What'• wrona ln takina a abot of whiskey to help 1:1wk up a cold? -MRS. J'. DBA.B NBS. 'J'.: How ~·the abot? How often II It Wmn1 II yew bwb&nd a st.eMly drinker? I alk tbeeli ~ becawt heavy drtnldna srecUtpcw to «111 ...,.dam. In eame way, alcobO[ tD~ With tbe .. Jll'otectlve" Immune IY*!m tn the body. That'• why alcobolic1 are often 1ubject to P"""'"'°"' /Ul (WI M4.tJNJ drink ma)' help bNak Up -onttnary eold. What rm ~ that the ttiroa6C ilctohOUc lnvt• com . Pema,. ........... ,.,.. clodor ...i. •Y9n& that your .... ..,. ,._...... may haw a.Im due to too ........... , Hubby to blame for bedroom boredom; DEA.I\ ANN LAHI>J:RS: l am pt\lna lick and Pleaie advt.e ue. -8CAB'¥0 TO D&ATH n.1 Ured o1 ~ let\8rl bun IMll who ~ CA8fD. WYO ': about how 1ouly their wtvt11 are ln bed. I w UU . ' to uk • few Qu.tioN that mlaht put the p6ctunt lnto proper pmlpeCUYe: Wl\eft WM ~ lilt dme you told your wife lhe wu attnctive Ott •:qr and tharshe turned you on? How Jona baa lt bMrl aince rou a,.haved like a lov•, ldmed 6er ~till)' and mede an effort to aet her In the fQoodT Or, It your love·makina (P.I. Let mt bow ti u)'Wq 1ood uppeu.) routine, matier-of-fact, eometlilna you 1•t over with ln a hurry? Have you 1urpri,led your wife with flowers or a gift lately? A lfttle thouahtfulneu can work wonders ln the bedroom. Do you U.cen -really U.ten -when lhe talk.a to you and reapond ln a way that leta her know you are Interested ln her ldea1 and her feell~J•? Conununication la the name of the game. Noth!nl meanlndu.1 can happen between two people unleea they ta1k to one another. I W'p you men out there who think your wivee are dull and hor1J'\I to answer the above questiona honeetJy. Then ao to work to make th1np better. You couldn't invest your time and enero . rmore wtaely. -HOPE MY HUSBAND SEES 'J1ilS DEAR DOPE: So do I. Bow aboat potdq It under Ma clJJLner plate, or better yet. oa Ms pillow? DE.AR ANN LANDERS: When la lt risht for parent• to h\terfere ln the life of a married Cla\Wlter -after her huab&nd killa her or before? We don't know what to do or where to tW'n. Julia'• huaband pta drunk a couple nfahta a week and becolnee lncrulinaly violent. Several time. ln the lut month be h.u threatened to kill her -wtth a gun ln hie hand at the time. Of OOW'M, when he aoben up he ii IO?T)' for the way he behaved and promt.ea never to do It qaln. He will aeek no outalde help and became furious wtth her when lhe tried. What can perenta do? Muat we stand by and wait until he makee good hie threat? We have done everything we can to convince her that she ahould leave th1a man, but when he pleada for forglvene. lhe melta. We feel th1a la a very danieroua .StuaUon and shudder every time the phone rlnp at night. For Mother Reservations 833-2770 with Love Champagne Poolside Buffet Adults $8.95 Children ss.25 Children under 5 _ .. no charge Also In our Airporter Inn Hotel 18700 MacArthur Blvd., Irvine Across from John Wayne ~rport NO WATER IN HELLI WIRllllG! HELL IS WAITING FOR YOU! DE.la CASPBaa Tiie .a,,..._ n. eu .. .. ,..... .... , .... ='=' .......... J.U.. u )'H calf ... ,.UC. &Ill J•, "Be .._,, comm.ln.d a ertm.. nen II ....... we cu ..... lt' roar duO&er wuta t. ttaJ ~ .. ddl ma, ... ~ ... tbt .Pl ......... nedl ......... . tbt IM 11 t. A.A. °"'"8ly, ........ It wlla& trt11en iii maalacaJ btbvlet. U .... ~·t lltl ~' off Ole ... a., I Hpe ... pref tat .... wW fllMI die ! 1tre.nstlt to leave Mm. ~ ! DEAR ANN: Which would you 1ay t. tho · greater labor-uvtn, device, the v9C\1um sweeper or the wuh.lnc machine? -FRITZIE IN ASHLAND. WIS. DEAR FRJTZIE: Net&hr. lt'1 a l11ubud wt~ mODe)'. It'• nor alw•~ wy to~ Jove, specially the nm t1me around. Aoqualnt yoc.uwl/ with tbe llUidl!llne8. &.d Ann~· booldet, "Love or• Sex and How to Ten ~ Dilference." For • copY,, nWl fj() aenc. and • Jona, -11-«Jdrtwed envelope with your requsr to Ann ~. P.O. Box 11995, Chicago, m. 60611. E -z • Ill ... Ill DIS CfttlST (the Sift of God) IECllE till TO BE: A I.MI Of fWJ (ltY. 20:10-15) A PUCE Of TimJfTI (L-*t 16:22-24) A PUCt: M0£ LOST SOllS fDO DE -All> M F1£ IS 11)1 QllJOIJM (IM 9;43.41) A PUCt: Of MUllQ -.... -All> 6MSt111i Of 1&111 (Mitt. 25-30) (llatt. l:lZ) (Matt. 24:51) A PUCt: MD( S1111S All> llE.DflS Diii( Of M -Of ~ WIAlll (llY, 14:10) A fUC( MD( M Mm Of T1D Tmmfr I ~ ,. - STOP! Is Drinking Interfering With _Your Family ... ::) 0 " z E Ill " = > Ill ... 0 ASCOIJ(TH tr fm£ftl All> ED. (lew. 14:11) AU UAR$, MMl.TOOS, FORMCATC.S, SOICOO$, (Eftd\ant• wtth *uo) flllllOOS, All> tl&lFes. A1£ QOIN6 TO SPOI> tlEDfJT It M l.M£ Of fWJ (Rn. 21:8) (In. 22:15) MOST PEOPLE ARE GOltG TO tE.LI (JiM Ulil ..,, (lltl 7:13•11) nm IS NO WAY TO DCAP£ oor Of tlllJ fomERI -All> EW:RI TlD£ IS NO M&ATC.Yl (Raad Lat 16;1'"31) AWAKE! AWAKE! YOU ARE GOING TO tE.ll - -UIUSS.!!LSIGID.Y, Wlll.DIJIM'fQJl Y • I09ff Of YCU SllSI no · "IU.DE ON M u• BUS CllllST" AS JM_ SAVO All> u•t . no . fmEU FW.OW tM · UM -• Clll .. AU M ~YS Of YU lit! .., • -m SMI. Rl. DO onu too -All>§IS M CRY ono PUC( YOU CM 80t .._., · auat .,... m GOOO taKS m GOOO llDALS.. • Mn1R al(. -.L .... SAW nu IJUS •• "YW UT • ... AQAll" {JIM l;l0-1) ,,... lend tor mew. ,,.. fteretuf9 OOfioemtng Ule twllllty of .... -and .-n.I P"""'"'*•' -lftd Ood'1""' for~ lllMUGn. (~I le'1d for bHUtllul IWO•OOIC?f.a. lllultr8ted, 138 page bOOll "800H-COMINO WOflU .. O•W<IMI IVIHT8, Al FOMTOLD IY GOO A&.MtGHTY." AMOlUTI TAUTHll IHk.ICAU ITAR'Tl...01 MJl8IA WILL IOON II OllT .. OYIDI WIL;L: AMllUOA au .. v1vu IOOHOOMtNQ W0M.D AULIN WHO? WHAT HAPNH8 THIHt ~ Hou. IHOULO ~VI TH• IOOKl PNCe only AOO • Cllmd ... -WHO LOVI YOUI ft.O. IOX •r • "'4o1HDc. ANZONA..., .. -z Q ,. z a Q z ,. "' :z: -z Q ~ Life? POil MR. w.! I clM Oftly ,._ at ihe lat.st ••tl'W'4 for• au.ck at~ dJllMe. Pwdwlpa ~--~totbl~Of·~" , .. ,.. •• lnfuli60n ""° • blacked 8'Wy .,.... -al the hMi'l attack. JI ilmDIYll the bload dot .. 111111-di T np to lhe hMt\. lt M tt11J Undefo ............ tbL t------ ' .,... . ~ I J J I nt~= I.JI DITIOTOfl \'QI All(ID flOfl IT _.._ '"~A~ 9NA-TWI ~ * "8outtl PIClillc .. (Plt1 21 ( lt&e) MltD ~ "°""'° 8ruzJ. !~~ = To Coresura .. iMI~ Cooper, Alta Haywot1h. ,,M.MAGAZINE MOYlf t • \; "Lii Vegaa Lldy" (11178) Stel- la 8tMnl. 8tuert WNtmen -~ t t t "Ambtr WaY9a" (1990) OIMll W.....,, Kurt Rl.-ll (8) MLJI MAllLOWI: Pf//IVATE m (I) <Hit A CEl.EBRA T10M AT CAE8AM eMOYE ••• , .. Hear1 Baal ( 1980) Nd Noll•. Sluy SI** -U>-1~~ UI! DETECTOR MOW *** ··s11r Trell II. Thi Wrath 01 KllM .. I 1982) Wllhm Shalne<, Ricer· do Montalben. -t.00- 9 Cll WOW h'A "KilljoY" (111811 Klm ~. llobert~ I P.,.~l~~ AMERICAN PlAYHOIJSE HIJVA MOYIE t t ·~"The Four 51uont•• (1981) "*' Alda. C..ol l!urnett. ())MOYIE t t t "The Slcftt Polleet:\an'1 °"* 9a11·· (1981) John a-.. Gflham~ (%)MOYIE t t "Spolltd Children" ( 11177) Mlchll PICColi. Christine PllCal -9:30- 1~05 •• t \; .. ,. Raisin In Thi Sun" (1961) Sidney POltler. C18udll McHell • w•A•a•H -10:00- 1111-s- t•\; "Ooelor At Stl .. (1956) Dirll Bogerdt, Brigln• e.dot. Reaching out . Frank Lagnella atan in "I, Leonardo: A JoDrDey of the Min~" a chronicle of Leonardo cl.a Vbica'a aeareh lor knowledge, tonight at 8 oo CBS, Channel 2. ft~ OW' I* 0.) LNI ~ -*IO-&..INOIJltNOefT Nl1'WOM L~IO'tUl:ANIW I THI M>TICTOM H1W DAY .. IOIN IDTOlllZAR llupNIWI .9PIMOMI HMNAN. MAllV U~ GOING fOfll LAUOHI: THfU COMa <pl~try Comton" 11t8HOeor· g1na SpeMn, Rllorlcla Jo Pe!ty (I) lOYINO FMHDe AHO PEJftCT OOUf'l!S (%)MOYIE t t "The SWord And Thi Sorclr•" (1982) L .. Honlty, Kathleen 8elltr -11:30-·1 1~ 9 AM; NEWS NIOHTlM YOU A8l<ED F<>f' IT G)MOVIE t t t'~ "Pll Jt»(' (19571 Frank Slnatr&. ~ta Hayworth .., 8AHrofl> ~ llOH e PEMONAl. FINANCE Cl) A NEW DAY .. EDEH -11:40- CJMOVIE • • "Conlessionl from A Holiclly Cl MOVIE • • • ··su.11 MoYie'. 111176) Mii lltoolla. M1t1y Feldman -1:30-0 IB NIC NEWS OYE1IHIOHT CD TOM COTTU: UP CloeE -1:40- <))MOVIE t t t \.; "Mtp/lltlo" (11181) KIM Marla Brendeuer, Kryatyn1 Jenda. -1:45-Came>" (11177) Robin Aakwlth g MOVIE -12:00-t t '.'t "Hean 8"1" (19801 Nlek B :;:: AIHMENT TONIOKT Noll•. Slt.ly Spacek. U "Night OI The LqhltlQ Deed" l!LMOVIEC88~~ATCH (111751 Ray Mlttand. Frankie Howtrd ""'"o Cil IHOEP£HOEHT N£lWOAK NEWS Cl) ~AMENCAHSTYLE * "Evltapeak" (1981) Cllnl Howard, CID""' .. ~ R.G. Alma1rong tU\; "Abtenoe 01 MlllCI" (11181) (O)MOVIE • • 'h "Sunday Too Far Away" PIUI Newman. Sally F1tld ( 1982) Jadl Thom9t0n. CIJMO\llE *** "~ Riek" (11181) Jamee -2:::30-lltoln. C1N¥on Uttla G CBJ NEWS 0 MOYIE Cil tiotaW..E'S NA VY For complete ll1tlng ... TV Log .C"ANNEL LISTINGS -D ICNXT CCBSI tMl KOOC find I C!) ICNSC INBCI 0 On TV 8 ICTL.A Clnd I z l TV 8 KABC CABC1 " H60 0 ICFMB CCBSI c ((uwma•> 0 ICHJ TV (Ind I • CWOAl NY N Y G KCST IABCI 111) CWT BS I • ICHV tlnd I ( CESPNI ID KCOP TV (ln<I I • (Sllow11~) S ICCET CPBSI .., SpothQht ~ KOCE IPBSl • ((~bl• N•w\ N•tworkl We're fivina you a second chance to sec a film you'U want to see apin and apin and qain. 0-fWIJUI ... ........ llil .............. ,, ... "'" Orengt Ooa1t DAIL y PILOT /TuHday. Aprll 2•. 1983 .. Is NBC making its move? Bouom network improvins, but it's got a long" way to so 81 rRED l\OTllENBEl\G .,,. ............. NEW YORK -For a lone Ume, the joUI have been on NBC. Some called tt the fourth-rated network behind CBS, ABC and Atari. Ont producer, who had two •rt. on NBC wt eeuon, referred to It M the NaUonal IM.lcult Company. Sur., NBC would bt No. 1 U the raunca were rMd '41111de down, but th.lop .,.. look1nc better. NBC illll 11 thlrd ln vtewen, ad revenuea and profita -althoufh lta 1982 protita ant up 960 rnilllon ovw 1981 -but the network ii reachlna a different audience, and advertl.ler'I are notidnl. "NBC baa lmtproved it.a dernoaraphica thll year," M)'I Bob Iciel of the NW Aytt advertiaina a1enc_y. "NBC apparently 11 appeallnC to youn,er adulta and male viewen. It mak• them a viable buy. 'llley're atW noron a par with ABC and CBS, but ~ they've inade ltridel." The end of the prtme..time ratinp r.ce Wt week put NBC a diatant third, ~t, 1n comparilon wlth the 1981-82 aeaaon, the network wu the only one whole national audience dld not decllne. NBC a1lo wu the only network to gain viewen ln the flve largeat marketa, and increase lta ah.are of biiher-lncome v1ewen nationwide. Although CBS wu clearly the leader ln overall audiences and ABC wu moet popular with YOUh,i- adult viewers, NBC ahowed prime-time strength with the hard-to-flnd male adulta. In fact, NBC was aeoond to ABC ln malee 18-49. ''We're 1till looklna moetly for women ln prime time," aaya one ad executive requestlnl anonymity, "But I can make a aood cue for buying NBC with my clientl when they have male producta, or they want to reach dual audiences or they want NBC'• cheaper rata. There'• room for different niches, and NBC la carv1.na out lta own little niche." NBC'• award·winn.lng "Hill Street Blues" wu Sheen plays JFK in TV miniseries NEW YORK (AP) -A ~en-hour minilerles on the triwnph and trqediea of the late President Kennedy la now ln production, to be telecast next November -the 20th annlveraary of hia ...-nation. Martin Sheen atan u John F. Kennedy, and Blair B{own playa Jacqueline Kennedy. The lhow alao feature• E.G . Marahall aa Joe Kennedy, GeraldineFitqerald u Roee Kennedy and John Shea• the late Sen. Robert Kennedy . MCOnd behind "Monday Nl&ht Football" on ABC ln attr~ malt vt.ewert. fn one mcllth, ~1 Ford, M"erced .. , Chevrolet and Volklwaam au advert!Md on "Hill 8\l'Mt." The prc>ll'UD alao Wal moat popular ln homea with cal>lt hookup1, •UU-~ tha~ualJty may ~ one arurw• to the networka d ahare ot tbt audience. And then there I tonlaht'1 "A~· fourth In l>OPUlarity amona male ~•wmw and um ltMOft11 hljheet-rated new 1how. It al.lo wu NBC'1 top. rated prosram. Al~O~Jh "A Team" la coklrfull)' offbeet, lt doeen't chalJen&• the mind lib NBC'• other Tueaday nla)\t aerla, "Rem!.nfton Steele" and "St. EINwhere." In ra~ for th1a aeA10n'1 99 aeriee, "A Teem" waa 13th, Remington Steele" 69th and "St. Ellewhere" nowhere -89th. "It'• • mue audience medium, not PBS," aay1 the ad executive who would not be Identified. "'You're 101n1 to have your 1ucceue9 with 'A Team' and your failure1 with 'St. Elaewhere."' Lut fall, NBC tried "qu.a.llty" on Thundaya with "Fame," "Cheers," ''Taxi" and "Hill Street Bluea," but the heavily promoted "belt night of television on televlalon" didn't draw large audiences. "Who aaya America.na want quality!" ask.a the ad executive. Grant Tinker, NBC'• chairman, lln't convinced that quality programa won't attract 1u'l»tanlial viewers. But, he aaya, "I'm a little dllappolnted by how long lt'• taken for ~ple to flnd them." In a bid for a more varied achedule, NBC introduced "A Team" aa a terie9 ln February. The network.a a1ao broke up the Thunday night lln.eup, improving the ratings of "Cheen" by plad.ng the inane -but more popular -"Gimme a Break" ln front of It. ''Yo\.l can't program an entire achedule of 'Cheers,' 'St. Ebewhere,' 'Hill Street' and 'Fame,"' aaya Brandon Tartlkoff, prealdent of NBC Entertainment. "We're 1n the circu.lation bu.ai.ne81." Tartikoff aavw NBC's criticallv acclaimed new ahowa are not the type that take off immediately, like "A Team" did for NBC, "Dukes of Hazr.ard" did for CBS and "Mork and Mindy" did for ABC. "The hiatory of television proves th.at programs that are well-written and well-acted are not lmmedlate hita," aaya Tartikoff, dting "M-A-S-H," "The Mary Tyler Moore Show" and "All ln the Family." * aARQAIN MATINEES• Monday "'"' Saturday All P11tormancH ~lore S:OO PM (&C.,C Speclll E11 .. f11Mf111 a1141 H**Ytl llJf.llm 10 M9~4.2loo"'"') ~::~:v::~, . l "~.1~~~:.ri -----"MAX DUGAN ..f!I".!'!!.'J:.-i.... LAKEWOOD CENTER WAU< IN "'LAIHDANC•" ----------· lAt<EWOOO CENTER SOUTH WAI•"' AIJ'iA"f ._. ANAHEIM 0111VI IN lo<"'"' 01 Cono,..ooo 211/llt-tHO "MY 1VT<Mr°• -----·- -wzomir ,_ .... 1.-.. ___ ,,_ 179-MIO c.. 11 - ............... 8UtNA PARK ORIVI IN IMc-A .. -OIC..... HM010 ._, I~ • jllf LINCOLN 01./IVf IN u ... -....... 1 .. lnell Ut-4010 ' '• "., FOUNlAIN VAllf\' 0111VI IN .... ~ ....... --ta.1 Ml•IAl1 tA 1111111. fl . '• . "A.Alff OAMC8" 1111 -............. c-111- •¥)Y~I"• "".,.. "" .. --II- ...., "K!Olt" .. ..,...8UOM ....... " 84 Orange C011t DAIL. v PILOT /TUlld•v. Aprll 26, 1W 001100 by Gui Arriola G.\Ht•1'•:1.1• by Jim Davis THIE t 'AMILY CIRCl'S BIG Gt:ORGE by V1rg1I Partch (VIP) ~~~~~~~] by 8 11 Keane 1/-1<.. "Are you finished yet? Con I touch it now?'' "Walt, meet my llttlt brother.'' ' ·~' ..... ~'· • Both vulnerable. North deal• NORTH • K Q?IU i;;>Q o 49U ••4 WEST E48T •498 •U ~10731 ~J U5 o J 104 OK 87 •KQJ •t07U SOUTH • 104 CV AK 94 0 Q52 •.U82 The b1ddln Nor~ Ea•l 1 • Pa11 2 0 Pt N Pa11 Pa11 SHOt: outll Weit 2 • P111 SNT Pan DR.\BBLE f ,_ GOlfN ON lllDGf BY CHARLES H GOREN ANO OMAR SHARIF Openlnr lead. Two of io:>. It I• t1m• lo ralte a 11&11 of Bole llqut1ur and drink a toa1t lo the winners of the 1982 Uol1 Hrlllltnty Pr1ie1. The top award wenl to Jeu &ue of Switurland for hie di1card of Lhe ice of dia monda futured In lhl• column a few month• 110. Second pmr went to Lublo Zalkov of &IKaria for this 1park llng defense from hll country's match against 1;reece In the Balkan Cham p1on1h1ps. In ont' room lhe Bulgarians rtacht'd 11 contract Of four spadu and made 1t. In the other, Greece bid to tht in fer1or contract or thrl'l' no trump on thl' unrevealing auction •hown That ronlract ia noL euy to dtfeal, but Zaikov delended u if he rould see all the urd1. Dedarer won the opening lrad In d11mm7 and led a low •pade rrom the table. Zllkov unhultaUngly new In with lhe jac:k or 1padet, then 1hlHed to the king of diamonds! If declarer won lhe king with dummy'• ace. ht would have had no entry to the 1pade1 once they were utabliahed. ao he wa• forted to hold up. Now. a spade. heart or dla mond conl1nuat1on would have allowed dl'rlarer to get home. but Z11kov did nol falter Ht shirted to a rlub, 1ind dedart'r had no recourse • Wht'ther or not ht won thr t 'OR BETTER OR t 'OR •ORSE '9 \R'9 \Dl'Kt: by Brad Anderson 1 Dt::\:\IS THE '9E:\.\{'E BUr-yoo bUSE 1HAT Hank'Ketchum SHIRT, ELIZABE.Tti ! ALL RIGHI. WHICH SHIR\ , DO Yoo WANT 10 we.AR? "That was my bubble gum!" '900:\ Mt· LLI :\S ,AUDIENCE P/lRTICI PATION ... PU~l'TS WHAT IS IT, EMMA ? I l!l'll!lllm~_ '~ GoAHEA0,04o[7'( .. SQUI~ IT RIGHT IN HIS EYE ~ CbUl.D)bO STOP? rr1s DISCO~CERTIN~. by Ferd & Tom Johnson by Charles M. Schulz- by Tom K. Ryan \ DB.SMOCK :\A:\C',. I JUST TOLD MY PEN PAL ALL ABOUT --YOU YES--I KNOW I SHOULDN'T WRITE ABOUT YOU BEHIND YOUR BACK-- act of d!lbe. the defeodtn wore llll't to rtt at leut two tpadt lrieb, a diamond and lwo dubt. We'll cer11lnl7 drink to that perfornuntel ....... , .. , •• ,. c1 .... *""' ..... die -c.r, ... ~ ..., .... ~ ---. Do ~1 11.Hw 1•1tMe11" dH 'l? Cliarlt1 Ger .. '• "FHr·Otal lrl•s•" wlll (tieli JHtM ............ ~ tacUc• ef lWf fut"*" IC• dOI pat lW ~ tM cure fer ...,...,. ......._ fer a HPJ aad a •••~· .... 11.75 '-"Q.,...f .. Deal," u re ef &lt l• oew1p.per, P.O. S.1 Ht , Nonrtod, N.J. 076'8. Mab ehekt p.yaWe t. New .. pe ,.rt>ooll •. by Jeff MacNelly by Lynn Johnston by Tom B at1uk 0 by George Lemont By Mark Lasky -SO I SAVED YOU A CARBON COPY Baby Benz debut The new four-eylinder 124,000 Mercedes-Benz 201 -the Baby Benz -will be on display at Fashion Island through Sunday u part of the Fuhion Island Mercedes-Benz exhibition. "Baby Benz" won't be officially introduced in the U.S. market until fall, but its fint informal appearance will be at the Fashion Island showing. GTE • continues growth General Telephone oe Cali- fornia pined more than 10,600 new cu•tomer llnea during the tint quarter of 1983 -a 26.8 ")-1 percent increue over the aame period last year. The lncreue give. General a total of 2.5 million customer lines. B~lch heads Wespac President and chief executive officer David Andeuon attributed the Increase to the continuance of an Improving economy that he aald began durl.n,i the lut quarter of 1982 "and carried over into 1983." Bill Balch hu been named president ol We.pee Financial Mark eti ng, Inc . the wholesaling •ubsldlary of Wespec Finandal Corporation which •peclallzea In tax- advantaged lnvestmenta In real ectate and oil exploration and development pl'OfpVD8. 'The marketing division wtll provide support and tra1nlni l~me 12~ broker/dealer fll'!m' which 1ell We1pac's portfolio of lnve1tment pro,ducta ... ""' • RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY, INC . ...................... 1922 HAllOa 81.VO COSTA MESA -S4S-1 IS6 SAVE MONEY ON YOUR INSURANCE A Il .:::NY MONTHLY 'A'fMlHT ......... hit RA881n ICSlltANCE 441 04d H.wp«I llvd. New,,..1 koch Co 631-7140 . ~ ........ ·~·TllmfT n. 1o11ow1no ~ -001t1g ~-OH.\ DENT AL OROUP. D9ll M. "-lmutt•. O.M.D .. • Pr~ Corporation: Martin J Mc:CK...ey. Jr .• O.D.8 .• 'Profeulon•I Corporation; John M. O.Leney. DJ>.8 .• a Pr~~. 1118 H Euclld, Suite 100, ~. CA 92801 EUCUO OEHTAL OROUP. 0.... M. P«tmutter. D.M.O • Manin J. Mc~. Jr., OD.S .• John M OeLeney. 0 0 .8 ., • gen.,•I pertnenttlp, 1111 N. Eudld. Suite 100, AIWlelm. CA 92801 BRISTOL DENTAL OAOVP. Oen M. '9tlmutl«, 0.M D , Mer1ln J. ~. Jr .• D.0.8 .. Jofltl M. OeL•n•y. D.D.8 .. • g•nerel l*'fnenttlp, 2823 8. 8'1910I. Sant• Ana. CA t2704 TI* ~ .. condueted by ., unlnootPOr•l.cl uaocl•llon othe< tNn • p.,'*""lp, Eudd Dentel Gr~. Oen M. ~-,_et al . Martin J. ~· Jr. • general .,.,.,,_ Thie "9*'*'1 WM llled with Ille c-.t:r ~ of Orange County on Mmrdt it. 1N3. ,.,_ 0.-.~~ ....................... ..uo.-.•• ..... ... ,u;.::: ~=--Cout Dally Plot. ~ 12, 11, 2e, Mey 3. 1"3 17 ~ fllC1'T10U9 ......... ...-ITA~ TM to110w1110 ..-.. .,. dolrlV ~-EUCUO DENTAL ~. OWi M. '9ftnMter, O,M.O , ...,.fft J. ~ • .Jf., 0.0.1., Joflll M. Dei.INr, ~0~.1 nM N. luelld, ..... 100-0Atat01 °'" M . ....,,.,..,, O.M.O.,. r. fJJ 'a ... _,.~ 11• ,.,.._,.,_.~CA lll01 Builders name new secretary Donald D. Steffen.ten, eenior vice preG<lent of John D. Lusk & Son in Irvine, hu 900epted the po1itlon of •ecretary of the executive committee of the Ora.nae County Chapter of the Bulldlna Indu.try Aleocl.atton. 1be appointment WU announced by chapter president Karl O. Ber~. ~National MOrtgage Co. llas the program you are looking for: WE SPECIALIZE IN ALL TYPES OF: Residential Loans Industrial Loans Government Loans Apartment Loans Jumbo Residential M•'"" '· woor .. •9Y . .n., DO.I .. a PiCfl 1tanll 00!1*_.., CA, HH N. luotld, Iliffe 100, ~.OA -1 ,,_ M. OM.Mey, 00.1 .. I WITH OUR EXPERTISE AND QUALIFIED STAFF WE CAN HAVE A FINANCIAL PACKAGE t•MHIP ............. ~ H .. .......... 100i~CA -1 ,....__ .......... ~· .,..,.,,.,..,.... .... ., ........ .-. . .:. ~, ........ _, i!N':::i:: ' TO SUI~ YOUR 'rINANCIAL.NEEDSr ~W ........... 4n ....... Ta 4•lllleMlkJ Aa4 a....> GARY ANDERSON A t. V ce Pr •ldent /. ala 11n1 er 400 Norin Tuttln Avenue • Suitt 10~ Slnt1 Ana, Callfornli • tZ105 (714) 141•Jlll Orang• Cout DAILY PILOTITuuday. April 28, 1883 UllllCDUITY IUllNlll------ Sparcraf t GM nanled • • • Doll Wood hu joined the •taff of the new Anaheim Hilton & Towtra, now under CODlltnM:Uon neer Disneyland. He usumes the post of director of Tour and Travel, call1nc on 37 yean experience in the travel lndu.try, including •tlnta with Air France. American Airllnes ana v aria Airllnee. • • • Mlchtl W. ltoont& of Irvine hH been named vice ~t and chief ftnandal officer of Real Eltate Development Corp. of Santa Ana. A native Callfomlan, Koontz formerly 11erved u controller fOt' Bro&dmoor H<>n">e8, controller for the Akln• Co.'• Oranae County regional operation, aenlor accountant for the Irvine Company'• community development diviaion and audit 1upervllor with Cooper8 & Lybrand of Newport Beach. • • • RaadaJ.I Hendrlcllton ii an addition to the aalea staff of Bell & Howell'• Computer Output Microfilm (COM) Dlvialon. Hendrlcbon waa a marketing representative for the Memorex Corporation and previously held aales management poeition1 with Data General and TAB Producta Company. He holsls a Bachelor of Science degree in marketing from Northern Illinois Univendty. • • • Jim Da\lh, prealdent of Huntington National Bank In Huntln,ton Beach, has announced the appointment o Raymond Seda u Ullstant vice president. Dw1na his 13 year8 in the banking Industry, Seda hu held nwnerous man.qement and operationl poeiUona with wen. Farso Bank and most recently merved as loan officer for the Bank of Westminster. OVE1t THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS - MUTUAL 'fUND v •••••• Woetl James P. Dlcbton, chaJ.nnan of the board and president of the Newhall Land and Fa.nn.1.ni Co., hu been elec1ed to the board of directors of the Automobile Club of Southern California. • • • Ste\IU R . ltalln, a profe11lonal legal corporation, hu leHed new offices at 4605 Barranca Parkway i n Irvine. Leulng arrangements were handled through Norris. Beas & Stmpeon of Nevryort Beach, with Jobn Nalioka and Frank Maanocco aa agents. • • • Rlcllard A. Sanon hu been promoted to division vice president and bualneaa development mana2er in the Irvine office of Ba.relays American/Buainem Credit, a diviaion of Barclays Banlc. Alao promoted w &11 Tbomaa C. Morrl1on. named vice president and manager of the Loe Angete. Marketing Center. • • • Manllal.I Jay ltaodeU Public Relatio111 of Huntington Beach hu been retained as public relations coun1el to Huma~a Hospital Wemtmlnater. Kandell already handles P.R. for Humana'• other Orange County hoepitals - Huntington Interoommunity and Humana West Anaheim. ... ,... .... "l!:''F NI~( NwclSY' Form w1a) Am$ojr • u •tnw1 ·=· ... I ( ..... RnUrt> """"'" ~J!. AFPtm frtOWm '"'" pf lmlNotl 1.•llPt " v ... tou i!= •••Im 0 lrwtm<:o M<lot<C L•3t,_.. ,t"t VOP<tlt t "' • ._ Up UO .-.. • '• Up 2' • •• > • "'-Up 10 0 J • ' VP 20 0 1 .. • '-Up 10.0 111 • P . Uo 100• •• • • 1 + ;t \Jp ••• 11._ • )' Up "1 1.. .. VP ,,_. 10 I', Up 1'.1 l"4 • 1 Up U • I • 1 Up t• l U • • 1 Up uo I(µ. I • Up tl 2 ~~ : :: ~: ~~ ~ J 1• ••,,.Up 111 • '"J • 1 Up 11 S 11 • • 1 • Up 11 a 11 1~• UP 11 • S " Up ti 1 S Up 11 1 I.\. • .. Up 11 1 fO; > 1 UP 10 l s•A " Ue>-101 OOWN$ L••I ,., J 101• 1\o s '°"' ... • 1'. . .. , .. ••• .... )1, 10 11 JI .. , .. , .. 1 I 1• U ''> • J 1 (l'lg J 4, l vt .. •• JYt , ... I .. ... .. I l\o ... , Ot• 11 t Oii 100 Ott ... Off ISO Oii ,. t Off ••• Oii •• s Oft .. , Oii •• J Off IU Off tl• Ott IU Off IJJ c, Oft IJ l ,,,, Off 1;.o '"' Off 111 011 12, ,,,., n .. 1 " ,,.,. J h .. ... Ott 12.S Off 11 s Off 11 J Ott ti • Ott 11.l Off 11 I Oii II I Off 11) PvtNm F-UIW• 1'.-'"-C-IS tJ 11 OI Slre ll1'• 11 .• 12 SS c.pil JI 1J NL SCre l G4fl 11 .JD .. L tnc Eo 11 " "11 s-G'1ll t1.7l 11.tl Georg n 111 It 41 Ta• Mga 1•.1:1 It » °"'n IJ OS IA lit T"°' ......... eor-. Te•E•ZJ•D» 0 -D~:»l6 Viste JO 0 n JJ G.-. I.ID • t2 Voveo "tl 30.JS W~ld 11 .• 11.SS 0...-»ti NL Tr"' C. 1114 12.ZJ Aal-215 .. L Tu"-I.. NL :.,a;c~~·~" 14 .. ~~~ ~ ~~ ~ UN~ fqutl 10 • NL lDtll C-."'Y o..-11-" NL G•-1S.l0 NI. IMO 11 n NL S.letl 2• °' NI.. StPevt tn .. 14 Ullre I Jt L.i Cec>ll IJ.•1 I• 11 USG..t o..-IS.01 lt CQ !0002 NL t"'o IO.IO 11." USAA ~. 5"(1 2S SJ l(L Gr-11.0I NL Su'°""" Fw!da' KtYlcl 12.1' NL com SI ii.JO NL ll'ICO ,, 11 NLI.. De.... M.M NL SClll 11 11 H C...0. 14.10 NL hEI\ 11.54 NL lncom 12.ll NL Unified,....,.. Intl Fd JO.• NL A<um 1.. Nl..L MMI 1.M NL o-.. 17 fS N S.Cvrtty ~-Mull 11.• NI.. ._ L40 U2 Unit«! F\.ftSa; Aum t.M lt.G ._ s.tt U 7 I ntGlll 11 • .S It 11 ~flt lt:t4~ - • Orange Coaat DAIL V PILOT /TuHday, April 28, 1813 NY E (:OMPO ITE TRANSACTIONS OUOfl•llON\ '"'(1.1111& lllAOl\011 '"'' ..... VOIH llllOIUH llA(IOI( ..... •OtlON. O•T•on .t.llD (1 .. (lllNUI tYOCW f a(MA.,Ot \ &lfn Wtl'Oll II 0 • t f MI NA\0 ANO'"''""' I ~,.. ,,. .. , ~1.. ..., .,. I f\\J~ ( tou \ n" •• t nD• L •u•• c t•o ~~· 'S .. ~ ;:~:: 1~: ~:;r·~·~ ~ :~· n t:~ :; .,(JI I 10fl)ol ••· • " HOO• '9 'i -It • '-"'J" \ II Ill .. ,. • ... ,I_ I ltit u ' .. \•1n N•t :: llt t ul! :J~, : ::::~;"' t: :o ~~ .. , : : ': I ' hlh ( ltfW' C "t •.11116 j I\ ti '-tleleft( " U )O;,, 1 1,.-, llrn•w-I "'6 )0 ••I fYluo ID t » u... , llOl"nl I ~ 1f ltl JO.. ... ftn"W' ., 14 12 4/ •. '• dYPol\t l tO tt ~ ,. ..... •. Hetft•f' 11 101 U1. • \, llutv•• Ml• ti,.., dvPnlpt Ml I >H•• '• >iom(o .0 ... '' l11nov .0 II ·~ u ' •• ~"1\1 Pl• lO I .,.. 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"' "'• ... 1t \r.t • ~. u·~ \.1 n•r ,,... , .. " , .... u-. ..... 12'· .... .. l •• ~ NalGvP 1 •n • t tO ~ .. io ,, t i I) ·-1100 1100 •JOO IJlO 1) IO'l • u .. -· •)ta• '°'' ,., .. .. ·~ t•I MW .. • 100•·-'-.. l,.. .. no ,,,, • ,, • ..u '~· '• '"°..,. .... •100 ll t '''° ,. f-Ii 1100 ti • ' ...,, ~· .. • 1s, .. rno .. 1• .-.. •UO 17'1•1'1 1100 '°' 110 IOI I_. OJ ti<-..-I. Ito ll • t, UJ JS • " ,, ..,... . , .. IJl Jl4. ;.. 111 ,. M It•-It s .. 1t Ut 2• I)) u to ,. • •• J '° t1 • a 1 •• .0 ll JI .. -I0 11 "' , ..... o .... I•• San Joaquin growers , make the big time By ft• A11oda&ecl Prnt STOCKTON -The Sun-DlaJJlond Grower• cooperative hat made It into the Fortune ISO<> U.t of the nation'• Iaramt 1ndUl1rlal corporat.iona. Tiv Stockton· hued oraanluUon ranked 443rd lut year on alee of $511 million. Sun-Diamond wu formed to hand.le mark.etina for four 1peclalty crop cooperative. -Sun-Maid Growen of Klnpburg, Diamond Walnut Growerw of Stockton, SWllweet Growerw of Yuba City and Valley Fig Growen of Fresno. William Dabney, executive vice president, aaid the Fortune 500 ranking has practical aignificance . "In the valley, people know who we are," he &aid "But when you're .elllng in Geneva or talking Wlth banks ln New York and you aay you're the Fortune 443rd they recognb:e we're on the scoreboard." Bill protects business signs SACRAMENTO -Citie1 and counties would have to relmbune buainet&eS when they order them to remove previously legal signs, under a bill approved yesterday by a state Senate committee. Supporters aaJd the measure would prevent local governmenta from imposing undue costa on small buaineaes. But critics complained that the bill would make lt virtually lmpoeaible for local goverrunenta to clean up sign-littered streets and predicted that it could ultimately COit busineaea more money. Cigarette tax plan !alters SACRAMENTO -A proposal to increaae state cigarette taxes by 5 centa per pack ran into stiff oppoeJUon in a Senate committee yesterday, and lta sponaor postponed a final vote to avoid ita defeat. Sen. Alan Robbins (D-Tarzana) propo1ed earmarking the estimated $125 million that would be ra.i8ed annually by hia propomed cigarette tax inc:reaae to 1ubatltute for proposed fee increases at the University of California, Call.fomia State University, and the community colleges. But the attempt to link the cigarette tax to higher ~ucation triggered a storm of complainta from fellow oemocrata -wllo cha'igeci that R.6515ffis' ilan w~ create chaos in the 1tate budget process ::rJ do nothing for other education needs. Deficit second-highest ever WASHINGTON -The federal government spent $26.04 billion more than it received in March, producing the second-highest monthly deficit m hiatory, the Treasury Department said yesterday. The widening deficit ii a major 10ft spot in the Amel'lcan economy at a time when general business conditions are lmproving. Private and government economiata fear the deficit could stifle an econonuc recovery by reducing the amount of credlt available to the private sector and possibly forcing up interest rat.es. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT WHAT NYSE DID NEW VORI( tAPI Aor n MOft . .. '°'' )ill tOOI IC>' • WHAT AMEX DID NEW VQlll( IAPI Ao• ll METALS Mon 1•• IOI '" ... ,. J ., ,,. '111111111• ..._ lpoc ,_,..,._ ,_.,. ~ ,_ ~ -u ............ _. ... pound, u 8 ......... C...., -77 25 C*lll Pet pou...i NY c-'90' montn e1o.o Mon &AM -21·23 -.ta a pouno. a. -.. -. • pouno, ~ed Tiii -..... 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Pct Up It I VP 109 Up tO I Vp t • UP t S Up tO VD I ) Up I J Up 1 2 Up 10 Up IS VP 11 Up t t UP •• Up St UP SI Vp S• VP St Up St Up S 1 UP •' Up • t \Ip •• Up •• ~. . ; Dally Pliat TUESDAY, APRIL 21, 1813 ClASSlf 110 cs No surprise: Rams pick Dickerson Wide receiver,"linebacker drafted in second round by Rams By JOHN SBV ANO °' .. Dllr .......... The San Diego Charger. of the National Football Conference. That'• the d.iatinction the Rama figure to carry to the field next eeaaon as, ignoring glaring defensive needa, the tff.m went offensive in thi.a morniJll'a NFL draft. Aa ex})ecied, the Rams aelected SMU running back Eric l>ickenon with their fint aelection. the No. 2 pick overall. Stanford quarterback John Elway was the No. 1 pick, drafted by the Baltimore Col ta. With their two pick.a in the second round - nwnbera 32 and 36 overall -the Rama opted for a wide receiver and an outalde linebacker. They selected Fresno State split end Henry Ellard (5-10, 170) and North Carolina linebacker- defenalve end Mike Wilcher (6-3, 230). The aelection of Dlckereon by the Rama was sW'J)liaing only in that the team's necessities were at linebacker and on the line defensively, and at wide receiver and tight end defensively. • Wendell Tyler lJ'aded to 49en, C-.2. • Dan Fouta sign• with Charwen, C-4. "We need defenaive help, but then you can't ignore a gifted offenaive player," Mid Rama Coach John RobiNon. Obviously, a chance at 1etUng a player of Dickenon'a caliber WM too good to pua up. "He ha.a the potential to become one of the really great back.a," Mid Rob!Juon. "We're very pleued about our chokle." Dlckenon la the prototype NFL runpina back at 6-2, 218 pounda. A conaenaua All-American, he finished third ln the Helmnan Trophy voting l.ut season behind Herachel Walker and Elway. The offenalve player of the year ln the Southweat Conference aa a junior and senior, Dlckenon broke Earl Campbell'• career ruahlng record with a four-year total of 4,450 yard.a on 790 carrtee. "He can make people mi. him and he can run El-Way says 'no way' to Baltimore; May play baseball NEW YORK'"'(AP)-~ The Baltimore Colta, who for week.a shopped the rlghta to John Elway, kept the All-American Stanford quarterback for themaelve. today and made him the first pick in the National Football League draft. But Elway wa1 quoted &1 saying ·there was "no way" he would play for Baltimore and would Play baseball instead in the New 'lork Yankees' farm system. Steve Raczynski. the Stanford sports information direct.or, said Elway told him midway through the first round that "there ate still BOme deals I'm llatenlng to." Raczynski said be thouaht ~way still wu hoping for a trade to San Diego or the Lo. Angeles _dera. pafd him a-reported $1'40;000 tut summer to play minor league ball. • ESPN quo. ted El.way's agent, Marvin Demoff, after the Cotta' ~ aa saying El;:b had choeen ball over too . ESPN aaid Elway told Colts Coach Kuah after he was selected; "There is no way I am going to play for Baltimore. I can't believe you didn't take the draft choices. I am going to bueball." Elway could not be reached for comment. but there wu a newa conference scheduled for thia afternoon in San Joee. There was no immediate comment from the Colts, either, but Kush aaid earlier today that Cluba including the Chargers. Elway and not trade him later. Raiden and Dallaa had shopped for additional draft pleb to trade "It's a gamble we have to take." Kush said. to Baltimore foe the right to draft No. 1. Colts General Manager Ernie Elway had let the Cotta know Acconi said ~~ .. 1.'l'littlmed he did not want to play foe them. to trade talks right up to the Lut over people," added &b!Non. "He'a u faat u O.J . (Slmpeon) and 1~ pounds bjger." Dlckenon runs a 4.~ in the 40-yard duh. He had 27 100-yard plua 1amea and scored 48 touchdowna. He flniahed third ln NCAA ruahi.na u a aenior, averagtna 147 yards per p.me. The Rama were able to aelect Dlckermon after trading apota with Houaton laat week (the OUen were ortg1nally No. 2 with the Rama No. 3). . "I feel the Rama made a dynamic dedaion to move up In order to get Dfckeraon," noted Robln.aon. "I became enamored with him after wat.chiJl8 film after film of him run. It waa an opportunity to deal with a great player." Dickerson flgurea to be the Rama' No. 1 halfback, following Wendell Tyler's trade to the San Frand.eco 49en ye.terday. "Wendell haa been a great Ram for a number of yeen," aaid Robinllon, "but tt wouldn't have made senae for ua to keep him. It would have retarded Dlckenon'a development. We juat didn't think we could work It out to get the be9t out of both people. "I think what we're countin& on la the great talent of a particular player." He had the option of signing a minute. We never got the multimillion-dollar basebalt-..,,compenaation we thou1ht the contract with the Yankees, who · pick deeerved." Rams Coach John Robinson u quizzed by reporters this morning during National Football League draft. , Status quo • ID Sea View race El Toro continues a game up on Irvine and Saddleback High following yeaterday'a three-~e salvo of Sea View League bue gamee -each making up previoua!y rained out games. Here'• how lt went: Irvine 11, Cd.M 2 Rodney Poi.Dant wu too much for Corona del Mar'• Sea King• aa he allowed but just two llng1ee ln going the distance. He waa alao touah at the plate, banging out three atnaJ.es in u many ap=&ozovtch awung the blggeat atick. however, banging out a pair of doubles in four at-ham for four RBI. The V aquerora had three doublea in the tint inning aa Mark Webstet, Steve Lipton and Srozovlch took turn• to combine for two runa, and alter the Sea K.lnga tied the game briefly in the top of the third (keyed by singles from Jim Murphy and Dave Arriaa). Irvine acored a linale tally in the bottom of the third to take a 3-2 lead. Saddleback 9, Newport 0 The Roadrunners banaed out three doublee and two triples ln support of Lula Dlu'a one-hit pitching to dominate the Seilon from It.art to finiah. VUlhnu Batooaingh aln&led In the aecond Inning, a bard smash which the Roadrunneni' third bueman couldn't hand.le, to apoU Dill' bid for a no-hitter. OW upped hia peraona1 record to 6 6-1 and now bu an £RA of 1.18. Saddleback exploded foe five runs in the third 1nn1ng wtth RBI doubles by Dante Scott and Mike Baker El Toro 6, Estancia 4 El Toro maintained Im one-game edge over Irvine and Saddlebac.k by virtue of a three-nm 8eCOnd l.nnlng. which led to a 6-1 lead before !Atanda tallied with three ln the &lxth to get it cloee. Right-hander Gary Pifer struck out aeven and walked three. Marshall hot; Dodgers on Blockburger goes 4 7 -21A I homer hinge , ... euy for left-bander Fernanoo -v alenzuela to go the distance on a llx-bitt.er. "He'• just com1q around," Dodaer'I MaDllW TClm LMorda eakl ln n!lp8Cl co Marlball. who ~ five .... aft.er belmed ln the 1euon'1 firat week by Montreal ExPo9 reliever Jeff ~ardon ... t1p until now hla ~ahem Off!' V1Jemaeela, 1-1, ltl\ICk out U. wa!Ud two and jlkbd LamU1 Smtth off tint ~ ln tht am lnn1na to ew6d t:roUbJe. Schmerhorn sharp for Woodbridge I TRACK WheelwJiabt and Steve De La Rou pavine the waLznwait tripled with a 24.3 ln the 200 met.era and a 1&.e and 41.8 In the high• and Iowa, Wlllhlnplo went 8-2 ln the hicb jump, Nowotny won the 800 ln 2:00.0 -fl Scx..m went 50-& ln the ahot. In women'• IC1ion, ec.ta Mw'a Anlie Ot.rda doubMd ln the bilh and ~ Jumlll. Ruth O\uerl tc>Ok the 880 and mile and lUlle "Monia won the 2-mlle wtth en U:M.O. Newpon'a Julie Kvam wan the 110-yard low hurdlel ln l&.8 and Sue DeLaey won the k>'n ('8.0) and 440 (l:Ol.I). Nloole S.Vllf ... a ,triple wt.nnitr tot ....... and Judi XirWn of Woodbiidp w• allo • thrw.Ume wtmm. Coast falls 2~ games out of first WALNUT -Orange Coast College fell 2 'h games off the pace with four games aeparating the Pirates from the top of the South Coast Conference bueball standl.nga followina yesterday'• 5-4 loaa at Mt. San Antonio College. The Bucs blew a 4-1 lead provided by a four-run eecond inning u Mt. San Anton fought back with two in the fourth, a aolo homer by Troy Thomas in the fifth and the winn.ina run ln the eighth. Orange Coast had t.hlnp going right in the third lnnlng when Joe Kwolek led off with a homer to left. . Jeff Gardner made it to fint on an error and Jef Garcia followed with a triple, later to acore on a wild pitch. Mike caroua walked. stole aecond and came around when Sal D' >.lemandro aln&led- lto1er Zottneck, however, stroked a two-out two-nm lbl8le ln the fourth lnnlna co pere the occ leed to •-s, ihen Tbomu aluaed bill homer to f11bt to tie it. Kt. San Antonio'• tint nm ln the~ t.nnUw al8o came via a four-~ by Rob Nellem. hll 12th ln eonterece plQ 1hll year. 'lbe Moundea kMMW the &.. off atarter Robb MWllOft ln tbe bottom of tht etchth b\nlQt and Ft ~ wtnnll\I run ~ cm a ~fl,y. L• 1 -, " . " 1 , • C" : .: r I Cl O,..nge Ooall DAIL V PILOT /Tuetday, Aptll 20, 1883 Skippers make long haul back to Newport B ALMON LOCK.ABEY ............ hlacory ot ~ ewnt. • WU ~ u.ilt.ance f~ \he CoMt Quaid. SDADA -Skippen and c rew1 tn the N•wport to Enm\eda )'ll!Cht nee narted the lonf upWi.Dd haul bldl to \belt home J)Ol1I ~. many ot them ro.ded with trophi• and plaquH they won In theJr Wlnd1 were 1tUl blow&n1 brl1kly at the Uophy r.re1ent.atlon wtth occ&1lonal nterrupt>on1 over the loud 1peakera reporuna bo1t1 d1MJdJw anchol-. WlMlr' ol the Prelldmt of the U.8 . U'ODhy • the top COIT4ICted Ume ~ ln tht Performance Hand.I.cap Rllllf.na l'leet WU the Cw B yacht Nfrvana lkJppered by Carver Wre,ht, Santa Barbara Yacht Club1,._Wlnn•r of the Pl°elldent of Mexioo trophy for tht top handicap winner ln the International Off1hore Rule division wu Blue Jacket 1klppered by Clau11 Kinner, performance ln the nee. · Many oth•n were nunln1 lwl&oven after drown1na their dluppolntment In the lut"t race ever recorded ln the 3&-)"MI' A-total of &DO of the 073 1wun t1nlahed the race. TM only bo•t not tlni1bed wa1 Wayt.arer lkippered by WUllam Berke of Loni Beach who reported that he had ovenhot Jl'.menW by abcM.lt 40 m1lee and oil calls USFL minor league hall From AP dtlpatcbff PITTSBURGH -Corich Chuck Eil Noll of the Ptt1aburah Steelen of the c. • NaUonal Football Leque uya be'• no fan of the new UnitecfStat.ee Football ~ii. ln an Interview with the lndJ.an.. Pa. Gazette, called the USFL "minor lea1ue football.'' "'l have trouble watchina It on TV," Noll aaid. "Anc1 I have trouble undentandlna· it. Obvioualy, the nrtcn for the~ are financial. R~.t • juat miner 1-lue .• Noll allo queationa whether the USFL ahould 10 ahead with ita expanaion plam"'t~T:f°' m#Jf.-ihe American Football Leasue llOLL ocmpetlUve with the National Football J..eaaue," Noll uld. "The ~ had half -many ie.ma and ao they had to man hall .. ~)' players. ExllUld1na II not the way to build quauty football te.DW 11 quality football teama are what you want to build." Quote of the day "Oh. yeah, that'a right. Lefty pitched, eo I have to do aU the talking." -Joe Morau, Philadelphia aecond bueman as a large group of reporters gathered around his locker after he hit a two-run homer to help the Phillies beat the Chicago Cut., 2-0. behind the pitching of Steve "Lefty" Carlton, who does not talk to the media. McMullen lashes Smith HOUSTON -Houaton Aatroa II boud cha1nnan John Mc.Mullen calla former General Manaaer Tal Smith a "deaptcable'' peraon and uya the organi.zation he built wu the wont ln bueball ln 19,9. "' McMullen fired Smith u aeneral manaaer ln 1980 shortly after the Altroe had won the National Le.,ue'• Weatem Dlvtaion tiUe and came within aix outa of advancln1 to the World Seriee. McMullen haa been aenaitive to augestlona that Smith engineered the Astroe' rile to prominence. He reacted strongly following recent criUciama of the laat- place Aatroa, the Houaton Chronicle aaid Sunday. MllllllUD • 1 Ta 1 S m I t h i a a deapic.able human beln1," McMullen told a reporter after Houaton'a 1011 Saturday to Pb11Adelph1a. '1t'a unfair and wrona for people lO keep llvtna him the credit." McMullen declined to elaborate on hia comment Sunday but explained, "I didn't mean for that to came out ln the paper, 1t.olutely not. If I aa1d It, lt'a an unfortunate lhin8." Baseball today 190~ -Chicaao Cube outfielder Jack McCarthy threw out three nmnen trytnc to tag up aod.. ICIOfe from th1ld ~ after a Oy ball. Hla one-of -a:Jdna performance praerved the Cube' 2-1 victory over the Pittsburgh Plratel. 1931 -Lou Gehri& loet a home run when h1a New York Yankee teammate, Lyn Lary, lost liaht of~· drive while round1na aec:ond 1-e and onfy aaw the ball bounce bllCk from behind the fence into the center fielder'• glove. Gehrta wu called out for pustna Lary on the bue9 after Lary ran put third bue and into the duaout. 1961 -Roser Mari.a of the New York Y ankeea be1an h1a auc:a!9dul ... uit on Babe Ruth'• atnale-.-:m home--run record at 'Iller Stadium with the firlt of h1a 61 homen, ln the fifth tnn1na apinat Detroit rtabt-hander Paul FO}'t.9ck. ~oday'a birthdays: kanua dty outfielder Aa:ro. Otia la 36. Houaton pitcher Mike Scott I.a 28. • HunUniton Harbour Yacht Club. Bob lianel'-•kipper of the reoord ... ttinc catamaran Doubt. Bullet, won the Newport Ocean Saillna ~"9tlon trophy for the Unt yacht to flnl1h on elapHd time and the Allee Purcell Memorial trophy fOI' th• flnt c:aiamaran Oil COITeCted Ume. Winner of the Porwr St.ncl&lr trophy for the ftnt ainale hull )'•cht to flnlah waa l>ennta Choat'• new 88-foot aloop Saaa aalled by a Lona Beach Y acllt Rick Leach Club ~te beaded by Cboet. Chrl1tlne,Oary Tln••tad, San l>l.tao YllCht Club wen the a.dando YC. Jeff Deaver perpetual for tht Mnk:an 8ec:s-.tary Oil l4artDa yacht club wlnnln1 the mo1t trophy (lOR·C): 1. Otio.t, Al trophle1 with a record of 10. Bera. Wind~ YC. Voyaaen Yacht Club wu aecond tf.8. Co11t Guard trophy, with •llbt, Lona Beach Yacht (Ancient Marlnen ClaJ1): l. Club wu third with aeven and Ranier .. l!ddl• Welnber •• IWboe and Cabrtl.lo Yacht clube Wood • n H u 11 0 w n • r • ded with five e11Ch. ~ Aaaodadon. * U.S. Secretary of State ENSENADA RESULTS (PHRJ'-A): 1. Sa.a, Dennla Secretary of Exterior RelaUona Choat. ~ BMch YC. M e x i c o , ( I 0 R • A ) : 1 . U.S. Secnwy of Navy trophy (PHRF-[): 1. l"lytna Cloud. ~ Davia, Santa Barbara YC. Art Wahl Governor of Baja California trophy (PHRF-0): l. Revelatloo, Bill FordlanJ, V~era YC. Governor of om1a trophy, (PHRF-J): 1. Second Half, Pet.er Johnltone, Balboa YC. City of Newport ne.ch trophy (PHRF-H): 1. Guato, Georae Neill, ANlcapa YC. City of Enaenada trophy (PHRF-F): 1. .Apymba. Nancy Hutchlruon, Newport Harbor YC. Enaenada Chamber of C.Ommerce tropy (PHRF-E): 1. Vandal, Lex Gordon, Little Shipe Fleet. Emlgh Family trophy, (PHRF-D): 1. Hetaira, Roark Ludwig, San Diego YC. Converse Wurdeman trophy (PHRF-C): 1. Bolder, Petel"IOn and Yoblln, Pacific C.Orinthian YC. Anteaters lose out; Artists breeze again Cliff Chapman trophy, (SORO); 1. Gampler, Dlck Seward, Utile Shipe Fleet. Preaident of NOSA trophy (ORCA corrected time): 1. Avenger, John Comer, Anacapa YC. Trimaran A.Modation trophy: 1. Cro.fire, Ntmnan ero., San Dlego YC. It waa limply a day when they ahouldn't have aotten out of bed. Tired and boaed down with injuries. UC lrvUle'a tenniaJnm_ lost a·?q one~ -a ~-4 decbion to the Golden Bean of California In a match which could be th, determ1nlna factor for poat-aeaaon play lor the Ant.eat.era. In a ma~ch whlch would •..Ppear to live aome 1"a:llht on ~ West c.c.t'a No. 6 team, No. 11 Calltomia IJtWl8 the No. 10 An tea ten, 5t 1 1n atnclea, then torfeited the three doublea matchel with the victory ~}' secured in a apedal match at~· "We were In trouble rlaht before th• match," aald UCI Coach Greg Patton. ''Our No. 1 player, Jim Snyder, hurt bia foot a couple ·of daya -.o and playing a team like Cal without your No. Man Sona Hing, an ankle lnjury New York Yacht Club trophy: ~~~n~~d • back 1. flrat monohull divided rig, The NCAA ~~--=~!!~~__:harlea -~__!_:_ tolnvttefivefromtheWest~ Lah.ain.a Y~ht Club trophy, -which would prob.ably be Unt PHRF boat elapeed time: USC, UCLA, Pepperdine, Saga. Stanford and C41. ~na tro h tint acbooner: "We attll have to wln our P y, · n1 " p "and be Ranger. co erenoe, aaya •tton, ,. Callery trophy, firat PHRF lucky, too, to get an Invitation. ketch· Revelation On the prep level, Coach Art NoSA aped.al 'trophy for the Wahl's Laguna Beach OJJ.~l,l. laat boat to flnlah, L' Anlma: improved ita overall record tO"'"'" Stephanie Arnold, Channel 14-2 with a 22~-6~ victory over Wanda YC. El Toro The Artiat.a, who ahared the team tiUe at Ojai with Mirale.w and La Jolla, got aome aolid play from freahman Ian ~worth and sophomore 'l'.Pdd Brumfield In diapostna of El Toro. Did wing bend down 'the Ai1:i.1a aot it done without their No. 1 1ing1et star -0}8.i ? champion Rick Leach. Leach On race Car~ Guidry sharp for Yanks ~1:.: ahoo1inC a sun with no lf~-,~~Iio~a~~•IJiri]Jp~k~~•ftt~rfiee~--~[ii~jiiiij'~---;\ttfie-S"-quiit!!~~!IChitn]~~~~~t-~-:zr1ic-1~~~S-:~~·1 only hitter and Dan WbllleW doubled and winn« -and he did it In a tQ acottd one run and tripled borne the A USFL franchbe la expected lO II way, aunnin1 down Pac-Hi other u the New York Yankeee b9 awarded to San Dieao ln the next champion Randy Nixon, M, 6-4, took the day off alter ta.king the title at Ojai with a 6-0, 6-4 victory over Cralg.Johnaon of Mlraleste in -the 19-and-under singles. RIVERSIDE (AP) -Aa preparat1ona were being made to return the body of race driver Rolf Stommelen to hia native Gennany, there waa canjec:ture on what cauaed h1a car to c:raah in Sunday'• race at Rlveraide International R.ceway. edged Mlnne9ota 2-1 i.t ntaht. Guidry, 2·1, wbo few days ... Al AnleS, who talbd 6-3. Nlxoo I.a ranked ln the top 10 threw a two-hJt 3-0 ahutout at the Toronto Blue of leaving the National Baaketball natioN1ly. Jays a week ago, struck out three and walked A.a9octatlon coaching rank.a aeveral times in Amona the Anteatera' woea one ln h1a sharp route--JEOtna performance on a recent years, took that step y~y. but will Included an elbow lnjury to cool drizzly night at Yankee "Si.dium in the only remain aa the Golden State Warrion' general Quade, an ankle Injury to Bruce American Le.gue game acheduled.. Winfield got m a n a g e r . H e h a d 1 5 5 7 -~ 1 8 N B A Alao doing well at Ojai ~~ Laguna'• doubles team of ate Schantz and Wade Perry, who won three matchet1 before fa.lllna ln the quarterfinals. the Yank.eel ltarted with h1a two-out double ln record ... Mlcuel J. Sta1k .. hammered a the fint off Fruk Viola. 0-2.. and came home record-aetting 342-yard golf abot to win the West momenta later on Doll Baylor'• llngle. c.out Natiooal Lona Drive championahip at La Coata Country Club. The Golden State Generals Corral ( ed) , 17 -14 University aeoond-year law ltUdent originally haila frcm Los Altol and will compete in the CHICAGO -Frank Corral Eil national champiooahipe at the Riviera Country kicked a 27-yard field pl with 2:47 ••• Qub in Los AnaeJ.e1 Aug. 1 ... A final day -Rams trade Tyler to San Francisco From AP cl.llpatdea remaining ln overtime last niaht to crowd of 31,433 at Santa Anita DW one bettor givetheCbJcagoBlitu17-14wtnover collect $213,701 on the $2 Pick Six. The the New Jersey Generali in United State• oc:mblnatlon waa 10-3-5-1-8-8. Footl)all J..ealue action. Thevlctory before 32,182 fana railed QUcaao'a reoord to ~3 and dropped New Jeney lO 2-6. Television, radio The Raml traded nmnin8 beck Wendell Tyler to San Frandaco ' ,..terday for y~a»a· .econd- round and fourtli-roftnd pick. New Jeney'a Henchel Walker pined 138 yards tn 38 c:arriel to tab the league ie.d ln rushJna with 851 yarda. Be needed 111 yarda to overtake ~pbla'a Kelvtn Bryant, wbo had 110 yarda ..-irwt 1bt.cm on SWlday. TV: C.Ollege bueball -Pepperdine at Cal State Fullerton. 7 p.m., Channel 56. RADIO: Bueba1l -Dodgen at St. Louis, 5:~ p.m.., KA.BC (790); Buketball -Portland at Liken, 8 p.m., KL.AC (~70). In return for the veteran running t.ck. the Raml reoetved the Hth selection overall ln today'a draft. They Ibo aot a fourth-round pick from San Franclaco thai the 49en had Vikes at FV in showdown "We knew ... it would come down to dm." aaya Marina Coech Dave Pickford. ''We're ;.t ltar't:ln8 to re1t and the tlmea ahould &e awfully faat," aaya Founta!n Valley llWllomlQ8 coecb Bay Bray. The two unbeaten Sunaet t.e.cue powers oolUde IGmoi IOW at I at Fountain Valley with the wtnner 8IWD the lmlde tndt to the -... tide at oat week'• tmall. A.1DOQ1 the Jlountain Valley ~uad are Sieve BenU.,, Jeff ........ .._,Mo. Nomura aDd 11.a.rk Wan. Marina'• Vlk.lno ~ with a.. Smith. Jett ~;:::: ~endtna J.._ue champion., appear to haW betw depth Tree fined $5,000 by NBA NEW YORK (AP) -Adanta cent.er Wayne 'Tree'' Rolllm baa been fined $5,000 and suspended without pay for the firat five games of the 1983-84 National Baaketball Auociation aeuon and Boston guard Danny Ainae hM been fined $1,000 for their parta In a bench..dMJ'lna brawl chlrlQI SundaT• playoff pme. 'nie flnea and aacperwlon were announced yelterdQ b:r Scotty Stirllna, ·the NBA • vice J;!!!!d•nt of operationa. ...,,..,..,. Lury O'Brien alao warned a1aln1t further aUrmduct du.rtnc the playoffl and .ud be.,.. mw.tiptinl the rolH pla)'ed by otbera in &andayr• Incident. ft II ..um.Wd the aomtuadon of the fine and the ~ would COil Rollbw about '80,000. And both fines are ln addition to ahowed from ceveral dltferent the automatic $250 fine aw 11 e d ang1ea that Rolll.nl predpitated for being ejected from the pme. the Lnddent by Rild.na Alnce in Haw~· Mike Glen alao the face with hi.a left elbow. WU e from the proe, but '"Ibia WU without a question I Stlrl ng aaid a revlew o( vido\a elbow thrown by a pla~ videotape of the incident showed who baa a hlatory of elbowing he did not play a primary role vtolationa," aid Stirlln8, noting and, u a ~t, any fine wW be that R0Uln1 wu fined three withheld pendlna the campleUon tlme9 for IUCh violatlam during of the tull lnwstiptkJn. the 1981-82 aeuon, lnclucltng The brawl took place at Balton once ln the playoffs. eerly ln the dedlfve third pme Ainae, 4-4, retaliated by of the l'.Mtem ~ mlnl-teckltDI the 7-1 Roll1.nl. Playen. aeriel. 'l1w Oeltlm went on to win from bOth teama. lncludlnc t.&o.e the aame and move on lO the •on the two bench• Jotned In. Eut.m Conference aemifinal Du.rln8 the ta1Utn. battle, the round acatnat the Milwaukee ·NBA tta111.Dent ..sd. RoWm blt Bucb. the middle fl.Qaer on Alna•'• TM ac:dcD by Stlrlina came rltht band, aclmlal1terln1 a followtn1 • review of the wOund which Dr.~ Silva, vlct.ot.apea of Sunday'• aame, the C.ltlct' t.am physician, which the NBA aald clearly cS.c:ribed •"'a cwwd 1licel'atica (;:isn~r.os' homer leads OCC, 2-!l of approxlmat•ly three ceQU........." 11>e woUnd toOk p ftYW llUU&IW '° cic.. RaWm hiil dimlid be blt ;AUWt. obtained from Denver. The Rama already had t:he aecond and 32nd plcka ln the draft. and drafted SMU running back Frie Dickeraon today with the No. 2 pick that they recently acquired from Hautton. They alao had three fourth-round .elec:tiom. In addition to Tyler, the 49en received the Rama' third-round draft pick th.ii year and defemlve lineman Cody Jops. The Janel trade wu aDnoUnced over the weekend. but it waa contingent on h1a malrina the ,.9en' aquad. Ye9tef'day'a trade elhninatel that contlnaenCY. Tylir, 21, a former UCLA atar, ran for 3,260 C in bill alx yea.ra wttb the . Jone9 ptayed llx years with the Rama. includina atJnta at both defenaive end and defen1lve t.dde. . Saa\ Frandaco bu bad only one 1,000-yard ..... frclln • bllCk in the lMt 2S_ ~ Delvin WUliaJnl ran foe l,203 yarda tn 1976. 3 qualify for CIF Edllon Hilb'• Orel Meyer and MlU Bulb and alari.o&'• Ted DUeml qu•ltfled for U. CD' pl ,..,.,..... at Dal Pndo Cowitry Cub in Chino lkY· Sl foUowtnc &heir efforta at 'J(Jmlon Viejo CGlntry Q\lb ~· ~ .... et with an 80-86-le& tar wbll• Banka and Daleu followed with 14·82·1'8 and 81*188. "Nolhin8 baa been confirmed. but It aeema to be the conaemua of eye witlloe99el that acmething hapr,ened to the wint on the car,' aald Bob Ru110, public relat1ona direclOr of the track. ''The winl aeemed to bend down at a 4~ degree lftlle on the left =:e~.~prelllon that Stommelen, 39, from Weat Germany, waa a three-time winner of the Daytona 24-bour race and here wu bandlini • Porche Turbo 9", • twin to the car that eventually won thia Grand Prix of Endurance. LEASE A 1913 COUIAR FOR s19925 PER MONTH* Leasing lan't right for h9ryOM, but may be the anawer to your new cer needs. L .... • bnnd new 1983 M9rcur)' Co.IQW' for $199.25 per month on • dOMd end ...... With no , down paYfM"t end le month ,,.. melntenlnee • WarrMty. Come In and help ua find the rtght i.... ~ for you~ I llAolOf' LIAQUI IT ANbMOI ~~ W L ...._ -~Olly • & .,. '-Al ~ 11 1 '" OMlend I I Ht 114 T-t I Ut 114 CtllOliOO 1 I ~7 ·~ ~ 110~•3 ... ,lie • ,. 300 • MllmOn ltoMon Dwotl Mlweul! .. New Yori! Toromo ~ IMT DIYlllOM • 7 M3 1 1 m 1 1 m • 7 ~ • • eoo 7 • 4e7 1 t •» .,.....,.,._.. New York 2, MIMMoll 1 °'1ly Qeftle ~ TeNtflt'• 0-.. MlnnMOlt (C .. 11110 1·01 al Cleveland (Sot.-~) C~ CHO>" 1-31 al Mllwauk• jH-., °"'antH City (Oure 3·0) al H•w YOik (Rlolle«I S-01 f0tonto (811111> .. 11 al Teaae (8mnlll0fl 2-0) 11111more (Palmer O·OI at Oakland (Cod1rol4 1· 11 8oetOll (lltown 1-1) at 8Mttle (,..,ry 1·2) °'1ly 0-tcheduled Nettonel LMGIM ftlTDMelON W L flet. Gii 12 ' eoo 12 4 . 790 8 • 828 7 10 .412 • 12 2t4 I 13 271 UIT DMllON • 4 .Mi i.. 4 • • t \41 • 4 M1 •• • 5 "43 14 • 7 492 3 • • $OI • 4 11 H7 • y....,.. .... Loe NlglMe I, It Loull 0 °'11yg91M........., T..,..0-~ c-oo ().. 11 .. 8' l out. (lkupet 1-0) -~ • .....,.,_ '(M11epper e-~t el ~ (Oulldleon 1-11 .... Oleoo (Monltlfueoo 1-1) " Chic400 (~0-S) SM f rencleCO (llr9lnlnQ 2• 11 11 PlmWOfl (Mc:WWMne 1-2) New York C4Hv•r 1·01 11 Clnclnnlll ~1·11 PMeclelpNe (Cfvle-0-1) 11 Atlente (,..,._M) NATIONAL LUQU. Dodaere I. CerdlNltl 0 lOI AMG!haa ST. LC>Ufl llltrllM llltrhM 8u, 2b 6 o o 0 l Smllll, K 4 0 2 0 LAndrx. of s u 0 ""'"""'· p 0 00 0 .... " 4 1 1 2 0 . emttll, • 4 0 1 0 TilonlM,. , 0 0 0 Hemanda, lb3 0 1 0 <Nerrero, lb a 2 1 1 Hendrtcit. rt 4 o 1 o "**· 1b • 2 2 2 Or.-i, cf 4 0 0 0 ~.rt 31220barlcfel.lb 3000 Aoenlc*a. rt 2 000 P-. c 3 0 I 0 "'*"'·. 3000 ~-2b 40 '0 Yaegw. c 30 I I Andu)el', p 2000 v~ p a o o o l.ahH. p o o o o Landn.tm. " , 0 0 0 Tot.ie Mt 108 Tot• 32 070 .... .., ...... lot~ 000 021 041-8 SL Louie 000 000 ~ G.,_.Wlnnlnll 1'181 -M.,..,... (1). E -8u. ~. ,_..... OP -Lot NlglMe I Loe -Lot ~ 7 81 l -I 211 -llroctc Ill -Harnendu. Y•eoer Landr9aoc. HA -MenNll C 1). a.-rwo (I~ llM• (3). 811 -LMdr..ai (31. o 8rnlth en Guanwo (3). L 8"'1111 (4). 8 -v--..... Yaegw. ~~ • " "°' .. '° v•:r;;.;~11 8 7 0 0 2 • Ndl)il{L,2-2) 7 • 5 5 2 • L.Mll 1 222 12 ""'"'-121 1 11 Andujar pllChaCI 10 2 bll,.,.. In -1111 HW -Po<W (by V..._....,. T-2 36 A-33.291. Amertoen U.Oue Y..._l.TwtM1 ~ 000 100 000-1 3 0 Nllw York 100 010 OOll-2 e 0 VIOie. L,_..,., m _, 1..-.dner; ~ end Car-. W--Gulclty, 2·1 L.-Vlola. 04. HR-M...._.., Wllld(3), A-11,M3 Top 10 ~--~ .. = AmNCAM OAaAH...._ Iii 91 1& 24 .471 • a2 t 15 44111 IS 64 10 21 4113 10 3' I 11 _... ,, 21 • 11 ·* 13 32 7 12 376 12 43 • 19 372 • 27 • 10 370 15 IO I %2 317 15 IO 12 %2 367 ............ c:..no. Mh .. -. 5: """" ~ " ..,._,, ToninlO. 4; er.tt. ~City, 4. o.c:--. .......... Kittle, ~-4, ,..........;-.:.-.. .................. No9. ~ 4. WWleid, .._ Yorll. 4 ............ .. ic.-Clly, 18' C.-, ........ "' l(tttle, CMc41oo, f4, Lynn, Anoe". 414, ""°"*"· ~. M"; Hemdon. 0.0ll. U 1 lllWUn, ~City. 11;-., eo..on ta ...... :::: ~ ~ ic!.-Qcy, M; ,._,, °"'"*• ~ ~. N9w Yori!. ~:,:~11.111. NIW •orti. •-o: ,., .. .,, , l-1: lhlell, T-o. a-1. a.Aton. MlwM*• a-1. MATIOMM. LaA*ll .... "" ..... 11 at I 19 444 12 .. 1 , ... , 17 ., 1 24 .Ill 14 SI 2 It .an 13 43 • ,. .172 19 44 I ,. ... 11 15 13 n .114 11 ... 17 ..... 13 61 • 11 .363 8H 3 1a441 .......... O•errera, 1 ::::;r!1 11 Olvl1, ten Pl'WldllOO. t; ~ • IJI. i.o.AI, aii .__. ~ I: ....... ~..,.,.. ; ...... ~ .. °"""· Motttt-. ... o.-. ............. .......... l•~#'·-==-~~~ ...,._, 11: ..... CIMilNill. 1t: ~ --~1i:~ .......... 11: °""9M. ~ 11i ...._.,., A--. tt. .... ;::~-=-.J..,. ~ ........ , ........ i-t .... ..,.... tV":,...,· OlllfO. 1-1,.. lot. :o~,:;;,r';ilo. .• .;J. . -.•. --·~ re:. :.t .l. .,. ....... ... .. LaiwtJ 09wtllM .. Olw. • 1 • ~ IOJ OOi> 0-4 I 1 UMrty OMellell 004 ffO a-1 4 I ~ MCI ~ .,_.. lllCI Ulem te-tmlttl Cl.O>. Olrpent• (OCl. MIOH IOHOOL IT ANDIMOI 8ouilt c ... , L...- • L -1 I 6 t 114 0 ' • e 3 a a I I 1 IJ .... ' • I fllledftd Ofand Pltll ToutMl'Mftt it'..'=~ Hentlll IUlldllfOlft (8;;;J;i' def. "*lro ~ cci.1. M . 2.-. 1-1: 9er111o o.... lSp•ln) def. Ctlfl•tOPltar llog«-V&Mllln ,,_). W , ~7, ~: PllllO Nrflf& (ll'erlll °" JeilM Fllol (Chell). ......... Pewl lloJll !Cwhoalo•alllal ott. ldlllfdO b9i'a llClelnl. t-6. &-2: w~CW. °""*'YI def. Ille Nefi ... ( W , M; H- 81mon .. on (Sweden) d • J&lro Veluoo (Colomblel ........ W ; Albarto T-(loeln) def . .low Lopt11 (Spellll.1-e, M , .. 2; .._ Otldemelelar (Chlla) d91. llemwd '°'*"' (llalglum), 7 ... 4..e. &-2. Women'• toumement (elAllMflll ,.,.. ............. lllckll Halton (U.S.) Oaf, W~Wlllll (~all&). ..... 6-2; ~ Jordan .II.) def ~ llanjamtn (U 9.1. W , W : Lo.. PWI• 1u.s.1 del. Sherr)' ~ 1u.a. ..o. M . 6-0; AM l(lyomowe (UA.) a.I ... OeYlt tu s 1. &-2. "'2: 1C1m sMlnnMCI cu.a.> °"' Sall! Norton (U.S ). 1·1, 1·1: HHlllar Ludloal (U.8.) dal. Kim S...... (U.S.), 7 .... 6-2, Anna Whit• (U 8.) def. Cl'lri9 o· ..... (U.8 1. 1-e. • 1: Al)ICle Mol.ttton • u.s 1 °"' AmMOe Toblrl (U.S,). M , 2-e, 6-2 ~~ ....... Ou•d• (I) del.~"r.:-"-S·t , •·•· •·'• Woolclr\clgl CCI. o.f, MM 8onO ~ •1. ....... 41 llMttl ~-2,...aJ;­SdWIOP CC) dal ~on.~. W ; ew.. (Cl def lllM>ot. 6-0, .... 8ommrAll !Cl .. ~.7-6.W-._ ~ . Aemo e-Ouade (I) d•I. Woodrldte· ~ 11y def*"1: Man 8onO HWIO· AnltllOtl (I) Clef. Hecll1.adlo09 by defwh: H•lton-Per"• II) def. Nlxon-lltona by default HIOM ICHOOL ue-...... ·"'·., ,_ '"' ~ Parry ILB) dal. ZMllo. &-1: IMtf, L4, &-I; I08t by daleull 10 Tran: dal. Mukert. •·I; Sollantz(LB)won e-2. 6-1. e.1, 6-0; ~ (L8) won &-0, 6-0, 6-0, 6-1; llNmflald (L81 won 6-2, .. 2. e.1. &-0 . 17 ll.oilenO&-llrtlldl (Ul) IMtl. Wallln-Mlc:Naia, &-1. 8-1; lflll wttll f'1IMl-Muallar. M . M ; OlcUAor>-W.._ (L8l won .. 1. 6-00 ._ 1 ... Q..I ~ > . -·=~· ~~-~ ......... 1 .. ) ~ -NlglMe 111. P0<11and 17 Tonight'• Oama -Porllend •I I.A. I o'dOc:k. • Fnoay'e 0--I.A 11 POf'llallO, I 30 pm ~· 0--LA at Por1lencl, 12-'0 pm T.-clty, Mey 3 -POf'lland 11 LA. 11 _.,. 1'30 p.m Friday, Mey 6 -l A al Porlland , II _.,,1:30 p m. Sundey, May I -Porllend II l A, If _.,, 12;30 p.m 0-.. .............. Tonight'• Gem• -Denver el Ian Antonio. Wadn..oey'e Gema -o.n¥tr •t San MIOtllo. Friday'• 0--San An1onlo 11 0.-M ond•y' e O•m• -Sen An1on10 •1 Ollwer". W.On•edey • ..-ey 4 -°'""" at 8111 Mlonl0,11~. F~. Mey I -Sen Antonio at 0.-. ti _.,. SuncMy, May I -0.-M San Anlonlo. 11_, ~~ ::::5--·--(PL .......... ~ Aprf 24 -~ 111 .... ·-102 Wad...eday'• Oam• -New Yor-•I l'Madelptlla. ~· 0--PhleOJllpl ........ Yon -......e Gwcw -"' •• , ~ lie .. ,_ YOl1L 111-tday. Mey 3 -N•w York 11 Ptwle ...... ,....., frtd-.'. M.., • -~ladalpflla ...... York.•-V· Su"d•!· Mey I -H•• Yor-11 PTillldJl~'lla, II_.,, ___ "_ ....... Waditaadey'a Gama -Mllweu-.. 11 eo.ton "'1dey"• 0--Mlnultee ., eoMol\. .......... 0--8oaten ......... ... Mond.,.-e 0--8oat0t0 e1 M ..... ... W•dnatday, May 4 -Mllwaukff 11 9oeloll." ~. Fildey, Mey • -loaton •t Mhu-. 11 ~ ~.Mey I -MllwM .. al lloeton." ~ e.nta Anita Y'HTWIDAY'I ....._,.. 2.IO (\Mt .......................... , PIMT ~ I" lutlonCll on U'f. ~(Toro) ft to a.to 3.IO Enola Gay ("9dtoul 3.00 2.40 TNtll U. 1oe-.1 8 80 Alto raced To Tiie Point, Mama Tia, f'roety Top, PrlnCMI SMI. G-Mor'rL Time ' 14 l/5 MCOMD MCa. I 1111 mlaL TllrM 1111• (Mee.non> 11.40 1.20 e.40 P1&la ,.,,,_ C PadrouJ 9.40 4 IO lnc:ur1IOn (~ 4 40 Aleo rec•d Jollennenerg, Akkad. Kllatldon 0090, Clllvay, 8er1•r Gold. ._.. Time 1.a ve 13 DAILY OOU9U Cl-10) .,-.S 1114 40 nt9IO uca. 1 14 -on M1. Due: L4 Due~ 7 .40 •.OO 2.IO 1WMt MM ( 5.-0 I IO ~~I 2..10 f.itto reoed: 'M>O'• Ool A Nldl81. ~ Ot ~ ~.'tr"· Ptr• MM. f'OU9tTit UCL e tunonaa. ~ forgott4111 (Torol 1a.ao 4.80 2.80 Cealle'• PYwpeal (~) , 80 uo c.... lllehop (~Otl) 2.40 Aleo reoed: Aun for T.W.. Tweed, Abov9 ,.,,. l'lnM, Nldly'. Sll1ar TllM: 1. 1 I t i & ..,... MC.. 1 141 m1et on 1ut1 Twln'a T'ornedo \MoCml t .00 4.AO $.-40 Ml! Me (8floemMet) 5.80 4.40 GOIOeft AM (~I 12.80 Aleo recad: Noallno, Lllll•n. Saronle. Jimbo'• 1-. Ptiltru. ~. Tab The ~ Tlrnr 2 00 215 • UACTA (1-6) .,-.S t13UO 11Xn91ACL1 1111 ,..-.. OelM)' """°' (Toro> 10.-0 5 80 uo Wl\al " Piii)' (~ 10 00 e.oo O..W•C~ 180 ,.., ,....,. a.io .. 8"'G. Allibedo, Nzallo. fllr IWd. U..., "" ... ~ nm. , 46 4/& a.ftNTM ...ca. • ""'°"" ~ t()d (~ ,, "° t.00 4 00 h'e A Oood ON (~on) 6 IO 4 00 hrtlor ..,._ <"-'-> 3 80 Alto r~: Hoel O'Ofo, fllolll Tllrltl, Cump1Nno.:::1cen, 80ll Of A Dodo. 8oltll. Ovt o-1. "°919'• ...... """" 1. 10 411 • DACTA !Ml p-.t 1122.00. • f'IC• Ill 110-a-s-1 .... 1 pe1e1 121~. 702.20 to 1 lk11119' (llJc ~k ta l"IGk SIX ooMOlallo'1 p.id ll1t.4CI wllll 11 llC*at• (IM~). llOHTM l'AC8. ' "" """ °" 1Urf. M-. <~> e.oo uo uo ~ One (l'leroel 4.00 2.40 NloarMI ~onl 2. to Aleo reoed: O.ello. l&11vJI08, Cell Me ~. TlrM< t .00 2/6. • UACTA (M) .,-.S 131 IO l9ft'M MO& , 14 '""' on ""'· ._.. U(u,Nnll 11..JO 7.IO 1.00 Yl1ill ,_ (Torol • IO a.eo ... ..,. (MGCerror\) J .00 Q11111rre•nt•, llilll11ana, Qlemonda, --1""" 1.IOalt. • IDACTA (4-1) ,_ .... IO • ~-11..-. -·~ . , ."'-...J ....... , . -........... , !l;:J~ili1 -wt ......... .. ~-C~!:t • 100 -1~1111•11 COM), fO.•jAI 8IOClllWfli' I 10-4: I OtM1 ~ w .I UO -I 11110 (OM),~.t; e .._.,,....c.:·1:1.lrw U.t 44CI -I, ~ Q .11 t . ~). .. .t:l.AMllftl .. ., -.cl -I ~! ), t:04. t ....,._. COM>. t .OI, I . OMtl9 "'4). t. •o. ... -I. 0.... ( H}, 4.44.1) I. WllWI (NH). 4:.41.71 I. Good (OM~ 4:N.8, ........ -1. Wlll1-(NH), 10110.41 I . Ho•aon (OM). 10:11 •: I .... 1119 (OMI. IO:M.O. 1IOHH -1 lru. (NHI. 11.1; t . .,_ (NH) 11. 1: I . .__., (OM), 11.t. UOLH -1, lruu (NH), 41.01 I . '"°"*" (CM). 41.4, I. JoflMon (NH). 41.1. 44CI,...,, -1. ~ ~ia4J,t, Mll9 ...... -I, Oo9'1 ..._,-.a. HJ -1. Merrit (NH~ .. 10l I GoM (NH~ 1-10; it, no INrd. w -1. llOGll!lllrJll(JNH)~l1•114, a Grant (OMI. tt-11: I Wtt CNH tt-t\41 TJ -1.~(NHj,41• 141;1 W_. (NHI. •10j .•· ~ tCM>. IM. plV -1. -~· ft-4; I , ...... (NH). 12-0IJ . ........,( 11>4 •• ., -1. ·-( H). 11·1; I, ~ (NH). 4'1..t; I. W.,_ (CMI. ...a'A. O't -1. W.ni•r CCM), IU·4, 2 no ~orl'*1S. • ct tr ·~ ....... 41 100 -1. ---~), 1U; I • ......,,_ (I ). 10.3; a.~ ( 11.0. 220 -1 ...,( ).N.1,2.~(S). at.4: J. no l'IWll. 44CI -1. 0...1•1. M.I; 2. Henvnond lf l. M.t: J. o..Ml1 Cll. II I. MO -1. Ao0el'9 II). 2.07 7; t. OMttw1 C8>. a: 10.-; a. 11we c11. 1: 10.e Mii -1 ..... (I). 4:tU; 2. ll't11e jf). 4:67 2; 3. "'-lido (81. 4: ... t. 2·Mlle -I ..... (I). IO:M.0: 2. 0.. (t). 10:)1A: I. P111a (I), 10:111.1. 120 HH -I. l!mmont (8). 1U, 2. 8- (!}, IU; a. lolornon C81. 11-1, HO LH -1. Slmmone (~H.4, 2. Mlculllfl (I), 40.4; t. Hammond 4 I 1 440 reler -1, S.ddlabadl, • . Mlle reley -1. S~ 4:0U. SP -1. J. Ouetdedo ~), 44-a\6; 2. 1M 1e Q.10: 3 eume.c1 1s ~T -1. CHtnHkl ( ), 1'0·141: 2. S. Ouardldo (8), 1"'-0: 3. J . o.-daelo (SI, 1~ HJ -I. Wtael {I), &-10; 2 . .....,,_ Clll. 6-10; 3. McMMt1 (!). M . PV -1. IMl1Wlll l8). 12 .. : 2. lk*lrnofl (II. 1~ l. M. lplee I), 11-0 . W-1.~C 1.21...-:2.~181. ~: 3. W... (I), 1M14. T J - 1. McAlllter (I). 42-4; 2 Jonae (8). 41-e; I TOl'IWll)' (81. 41.i'A. ............ , .... .. , ........................ ) 100 -1 Wood (W). 11.4; I . ~ (El. , 1.4; a. ..,__ (W). , u . zoo -1. ll#ftwllll 111. tu: 2 Oolll'I 1n 24.4; •• e.lllNrl (W). t4.7. • 400 -1 . ........, <n M.o. 2 ~en 56.4; S. 0. La =iMO 800 -1. NowoWIY 2-<IO.O: 2 """"-" .!'Ill. i:ot.Q; a, ~ 2:08..0 uoo -1. Morton •:31. 2 Coe ~- 4:41; 3. z-(f). 4: 3,200 -I. Mor1on (W). 10'.22, 2 Coe (I). 10:24: 3, 2--* (!). ,~ 11. H°"H -I. ZIMnWell (I), 15 t. 2 0.-..,, ·n "·" a. w....,,.,,..,, 11.0. $001.H .-I.~ (I). 41.1. 2 WWI• (!). 41.t; a. Qonton (W). 4U 440 re1er -1. W..,..._, 46.1 .... ,...,. -1. li!dlloft, "'· HJ -1. WHlllnglon (I), 1 ·2, 2 'f'.IMIM"r_'l4 (I). ~ a. o...y (E). M . LJ -• ~ 18-1014: 2. Koni. (W), 1M: 3. Rc1¥W 18-2. TJ -I. HllCnglon (!)~: 2 wto1at•11f.'1iu4CM:1. Ro¥w r . n ... P'V -• l<Ontee (W), 12..f: t. (W). 12-0: 3. Dutw 11>. 12-0. ap -I . .,..._ (I), IC>-6: 2. HICIC> CE), 41-t; a. Kaipe Ill. ~. OT -I ..... (I). 126-2: 2 Oertlar (W). 11a-2: 3. ec.-(I), 10..10. •..• ,,..11.~ .... 100 -1. ~ 10.1; 2. c.n- (U4). 10.llc I.~ 10.t 220 -1. ~ (U41. ft.t: I. llrooll8 (W). 24.I ; 3 W.-.. (W). 2• 7 440 -I adlel"*"<lm (W). 4t I : 2 Roedl (LH). 41.I; 3 NTNtr~(W). &3.3 MO -1. SClt•"*"°'" 2-ol.3, 2 TONI (W). 2 10.7. 3. Ol*I (W). 11.3 Mii• - 1 Middleton (W). 4.48 ~l 2 ~ (W). 4:IO 0: 3 Golden (W). 4 Mo 2·Mlle -1. Golden (W). 10.47 I , 2 MlddlelO" (W), 10·41 S; 3 Wtlaoft (W). 10-.47.S. -120 HH -1 ""'---(U4). 15 I , 2 A,nn (W). 1e. I: I. ...,,.,,. (W). 16 I. HO LH -1 AoHli (LH), H 2: t ~ (W). 4U: I.~ (W). 417 44C1 ,...,. -I. U.-f-. 4U. .... ,_,. -1. WoocSbrtdlle. 3 31.1 • -I. K.llM (W). 44-.,_,}. ~ (U4). 42-N: J. T\lrQIOfl (lH). .... OT -: 1. Pruton CLHI, 1U·t. 2 T~k" (W), 121414: ~. Keefe (W), ,~,~-. HJ -1.~(LHl.W.2 ~(W). M; I. K...-(U4). M . LJ -1. Sollar"*'llorn <"'!~ lt-'AI: t . ...,._,. (W). tt-0; 3. l<8weda (Ln~ 11-11 PV -t . Ollol'I CL.HI. 11..-; 2. A,nn (W). 11..(); 3. Gordon (U4). 11-0. TJ -I.~ (W). ,._"" 2 ~ (W). 37-6'4. I. Onlud CU4l. M-1141. WOMB ....,.,. ....... c.. ...... 100 -,. ~ CNH). 11.7; 2 hnlen (CM). 12.0; l.~(NH). tU. 220 -1 . ...,_ 111; 2. H-.y (CM), 21.•.:a. e-.e 440 -I. (NH). 1:0U: 2 H-.y (CM). 1:04.3~ (NtO, 1:04.6. llO - 1. (CM). HU. 2 ~ (NH). 2:2U: a. ford (Ctof). t:a I .I ... - 1. ~ {CM~:25 I, 2 ford (CM). 1: ... 4; 3. ~ t :IO,O 2..W ... -1 Monie I M), 11 54 0, 2 ~ablllll (NH), 12.01 0, I LHO (NH), 12:.141.1. 110"'4-1f'olww(HH),1l.t ;2 A~ INtil. 11.10: I CM.'CI& (CM). 11 1 UO LH - 1. OeLaoy CNH), 41 0, I ~ (CM). IU; a Oreoa (NH). MA 440 ,,_ - 1 . ....._, ~. A.2. .... ,..,,, _ , Newpor1 Hettlor. 4:20.J. HJ -1. Oar'Cll& (CM). 8-0; I. ~(NH). 4-10. a. eo.i <-> .... 10. 14-1'4: 3 Dt..- (NH)., .... II' -1. Plalfool CNH), U · 114; 2 McKlbbef> (CM). tMlt. I COlllM (NH). 21-3. OT -1. ~ lOM). ~7; 2 CollN (NH)....-: 1. ~ Ht!), 7._.. ,,,, ......... . 100 -1. v ..... 181. , 1.1, 2 ... (91. IU:l.~(l).12A. t10 -1. v ...... (8>. 2u: a. ~ 1•1. 2'1.t; .. ~ (llt tl.O. 440 -I. ~ (t), 1:01.'1; 2. '*-' (I.), t:Ot.3; I. WlltlOft (I). 1110.L NO -1. e.w.ee (E), ~.I; 2. OfWW!I (I). llO ~ L °""*' (I). llO llrN. ..... -1 . ._.,..,.II>. •:au: t. "*-lll. t: 11.0; I. Vlf'(lll Cl), l:lO 8. 2.Mn• -1. ''"''' (II. 1a.oo.01 a. ThOrNe (I), IJ: 14.tl: J. OlletW (8). 14:C».O. 110 U4 - 1. ~·). 11.l; •. ""'*"' I 1f.t : a.~ 1'.t-11\ao LH -1, e 91 (~ 11.4: t Tl*"ll40ll II~ M.t: I . 0.... 'if ..... 440,..,,, -1. :J:. •. . .. ... ,.... -1. 4:41.t. u -1.,.... !tQ. 1U; .. ~ {8), 14-t: ....... (9). 1-.10 • ~§~(10.&-t1;2. .. (9),+10: OT-1. ~ 10N:I ..... •t-1;.. U-1 <\: -1. l.Mle l, 1; .. -..-cu •1;L ..... •n. . ,. ,. WI , .. IOt ~= ID 19* 114 ~= 71 , .. !ti 1• 117 ,. 117 1 .. IN 112 112 lh lot ,,. ChlceOo 17, New JerM• 1• .... ",..,..... ..__...., o 1 o a o-u 0-..0 . 0 1 0 7 3-11 NJ -Wall<at l run (~IC* laliad) CHI -Wiiie & -ffom Llllldry fCotrll klc:I<) HJ -Joyce 13 tun wlln blocl<ad punt (Hick• -ff om lloiac111el CHI -l ong 1 run !Correl lllClll CHI -FO Corral 2) A -12,112 .,,..,..,.. twtlaltoe ~U8H INO -New J eruy, W•llo.•r M-131-1, Cat1non 7 -33, Scott 2-2. 9u111,,.,, 2·1. lloltlute 6·30, Hick• l·mlnue S c 111oaoo, Spencer 18-62. Long 14·'8·1. Landry '. 7. Oennlaon '.Q, PA981HG -New Jarwy, Scott &-7-43, loleture 4 · 11-51 Chicago. Lanory 22-$5-241 ' AICEIVIHG -New Jarwy, Brodaley 3-30. ~ 2-30. Fneda 2·20, Wlllcer 2-4. Clllcago. JOllnaon 8·t7, Long &-26, Wittie l-48, 8ugg• 3·30. Oennleon 3-21. Soencet 1· 10. Rlolc• 1-e. MISSED FIELD OOAlS -Haw JarNy. Jaco4M, 42 ~.Correl 34, 36. S2211.041 IN,713 ltl.170 IM.7~ 144,873 142,220 134,135 129,431 115,136 115,0lt 111,711 109,0M lot,764 108,048 102 ... 100,341 IM,M7 93,139 13,102 11,100 64,480 81.745 71,"3 71.205 73 47& CommunltJ ootleQe ...,.._cwt ew ...... ,....., , a ot (M UibwMd CC) T•"" ecor ... I Santa Ana, Mt. San Antonio, 378, 3. Orange Coaet, 37t; 4 . f\lllet1on. Me; 5 Can1toe. 390: e Cypr-. 403; 7 Golder> Weec, 410 74-Lor9nl (0CCl COCCI. , Waetal (OCC). 71-Wood• P1t11leon (OCCl. 7t-Waaver (OCC\; 11-~ (OCC) ~~ftNALI <• ..... ~CC.• ..... , ' ~ (l~~.80-l5-11$; 2. 8anlul (fdl'°"). 1442· 1M; 3. Dal-' (Mar1na), b-16-111: 4. 8.al (~View! (If-II· I Ml _, PoNllo ,,_.., y~ ....... , ... L.anu (ldleon). to .. 1.111: 7. Amc>arano v. .. lmlt1allt). IM7·112 and Tal!MNM ounte ln Yallay). 19·12· 172: I .,._.moelan (We111111"etar), .... 1-174; 10 Petareon (Mertn~, H -to-178; II. ~ <'-IMI v 11...o.1n: 12. H--(W~). ·180. Nol .. T09 llw.e ~for Cll" lndMdu9t AealoNll f-' .. Del PrtlOo Country cMi (Olllnol on M.,. a 1 ~ . ' . " Rod Carew Landniark set for All-Stars NEW YORK (AP) -Bueball e xpecu to receive l\a 100 millionth tan vote for t.h1a year'• 50th anniversary ediUon of the All a Star fame, the commiuioner • offlce aald yst.erday. 1n the early years of balloting and alnce 1970, when the fan vote wu reimtat.ed. there have been 94,946,702 fan t.llot. cut for the All-Star Game. The cla.ic will be held th1a yeer at Comiakey Park ln Chlcaao in July 6, 50 years to the day after the tint cont.flit. Balloting, at ballparu and certain retail outlet. ~ May 20 and rum t.hrouah June 26. Fan ballota are ipponaible for -chotlng all atar'\ing J)layer:I except for thec=n, who like reeervea, are by the All- Star managerla and the 1-gue offices. Harvey Kuenn of the Milwaukee Brewen will manage the American Leacue atara, and Whitey Henos of the St. Louia Card.in.a.la la the National League man.ager. The oommiMioner'a offloe alao announced that of the 144 players on the 1983 ballot, 19 appear for the finrt time and fou.r -Rod Carew, Reuie J8Cbon, Pete Roee and CarlY utnemaki -have appeared on each ballot since 1970 Carew, the Angell' ti rat ba.aeman, I.I the all-time vote· getter with 29,482,350 and will be a candidate for his 14th CONeCUtive 1taning job. Quart ere at Los Al get ready The 33rd Loa Alamitos 1ummer aeaaon, featuring quart.er h<ne raClni, ia .:heduled to begin Monday with a pune diatribution of more than $9 million In the offering. The 92an.taht summer ach@dule includea le st.akee eventa, with nine of thMe major r-.cea total.Ing over $100,000 ln pu.r. money. The centerpiece of the stakes achedule will be the Loa A.lamitm Triple Crown for two- ~ea.r-olch, which lncludea the $700,000 Kinderprten OD Jwie 18, the $1 millioo DMh For Cub Futurity OD July UJ and the $1.2 million Faberae Speclal Effort Futurity on Aua. 13. The Duh For Cuh and Special Effort are the two richest reices held ln Callfomia. The atabe pl'OIJ"am will Rf!l off to a quick start Monday with the n.mnlng of the $36,000 added Mlaa Prince., for fllliea and Mans. Amona the ouutandlng ru.nnen p.repadne for the Loi Alamltm aeuon Is the 1982 world champlon Set· Pepper Feature, a winner of men than pe(),000 In hla career. Set. J;pper Feature ia betna sdnted ioward the •100.000 00 M.an Go Handlcal en Juoe 4 and the $150,000 01 Alamlto1 Champlon.at!:f on Aua. 1&. A vktary in would mUe the llldinl tbt fourth m1Wana1re In quartel' hcrw binary. Rlld.na wW t.. cand\aded f1Wll"1 Monday throuih Saturday ftl&ht wltb • "'7:4.& ant sat. Uni women top Mesa, 8-2 .... I I • C4 Orlf\09 Cout DAILY PILOTITUMday, Aprll a • 1"3 Fouts. signs pact/ with C ACC coaches more changes •) rencet ~a rules, with t clock and oal the mo1t GREENSBORO, N.C . (AP) Atlantic Cout Conference coaches yesterday took the tint ltep toward aetting a 45-8e00nd lhot clock, to be fumed off the final four minutee, for the 1983--84 bMketball 8eMOft, Duke Coach Mike Knyzewakl, chalrman of the ACC ba1ketball coaches, preaented the coachea' recommendation• to the league'• athletic directors and faculty repr-.entativee meeting here. They will be placed on the agenda for the 1eque meetinp May 12-18 ln Myrtle BMch. s.c. If approved there, the league will then apply to the National Collegiate Athletic Amodation for permilDorl to UH lbe rulea, with tne NCAA'• dedliCln to be annOunced Sept. 16. Lut year, 14 con variety of experlme the ACC'a 30-MCOnd short 3-point field radical. For next app•rent move to uniformity, the NC experimentation. \."\ a1on, in an e1aln aome la ll11Jltln1 At Its meeting A&ril 5 -7 ln Albuquerque, N .M., the NCAA Rulee Cotnmittee adopted five option.t from which c:onferencee could chooer to wie experimentally next 8eUOR. In addition to the 45-eecond ahot clock, turned off the final four minutes, and the caechea box, op1ionl Included a ·U·aecond shot clock throughout the pme, a ~polnt field goal from beyond 21 feet or a rear- 6oundary arc near mid-court to minimiJle atall attempt&. The NCAA aald that, except for the coacbee box, eech rule could only be u1ed by two conferencea and no confBence could UR both a abot clock "Elway'• the aokl nuasei.. one that CIOmll alone ..... ry 20 yean." Mid John Trump. head of &he ..,_, ecout&na ckputment, but "our Meda are defenM." The No. 6 chc*e WU ~ulred ln the deal that t defmlSVt end J'Nd Dien to 8an J'ranct.oo co \be 1981 18UOO. The 20th plclt came from S.y in exchanp for all-Pro wide recetver Jetfenon. LMt week. 8an DleF ave up two -round dM>Mw for Ban J'rand8co'i tint round on, the 22nd pk!k, lt marked the tint time in l1x yean that an L club had thnte lint.round 11electlon1. The u Beno.la had a trio of cl\Oioes ln 1977. WI.lion Whitley, Eddie Edwardl and Mike Dan Fouu Stejskal whiffs 14 in 8-4 win Cory Stejlkal went the dlltance, allowing three hitl and ltrildng out 14 yeaterday to pace Liberty Chrlatlan HJgh to an 8-4 non-leaaue baaeball victory over Wltina Claremont HJah (Anaheim). He had help In the fonn of aeven Claremont errora, which led to llx unearned runa for the wlnnera. lJberty Christian tied the aame at 4 with a four-run burst In the third Inning u Brian Glllam hit a run-coring 1lngle and three other markera came acnm on a puled ball. an error, and another error on a rundown which allowed the tytna run to score. Add1tiom11y, the le.gue will 11eek perm1.-1on to 1.11e a coaches box, a marked area neer the bench to l91rict coachee' movements during game1. While the NCAA ham't defined the me or exact location of the box, a siep out lt could re1ult ln t two-1hot technical foul ap1nst the offender. and 3-potnr tte-lct-goat-rule:--Any-j~~m~~~~ conference can U1e the coaches box. The Pdinutemen added two more ln the fourth with a pair of unearned runa, -ffien-tn the fifth they put it away when Dan Smith doubled to key the two-run inning. !zA111mm DAVll!:S after a 3.5 year .-odation. JOHN HYWEL DAVIES. He and bla wlfe Hulda IWlldent ol Palm De1ert and retired to Palm Deaert. Ca. Newport Belch. C... P1119eC1 He fl aurvived by hil ....Ue a.-..y en April 23, 1983. He Hulda, eona John, Jr. and Beach SC led by Maynard bad been a reaident of G re or y and !! N.wport Be.ch, Ca. f« 22 al8o aurvived Arden Maynard led a y ea r • to 11 ow I n I b I a his brother ~ Davie.a. succesaful Beach Swim retirement from Hunt J'ooda, emorial 1ervlcee will be Club at the McDonalds- HAltlOlt LAW,._MT OLIYl Mortuarv • Cemt>tNv Crerna torv 1625 Gisler Ave Costa Me-.d 540 5554 rlUCE UOTHEIS HUUOADWAY MOITUAa'f held at l :OOPM on Sequoias Swim Club Wedne.aday,AprU 27. l9S3at Spring Invitational St. Andrew'• Presbtyerian U ~ fi Church, Newport Belch, Ca. recen y. co ve In lieu of Dowen the family firsta and a ln a reqwm donationa be m8de meet ln which the area to the Amltance League of club of 38 swimmers Newport Beech. Children'• collected 223 individual Dental Health Center, ~5 ribbons, including flnt 32nd St., Newport Beach, place in six of the relays. Ca. 92843. MURPHY Among the Beach Throws a shutout The Dodgers' Fernando Valenzuela grimaces as he throws to St. Louis' George Hendrick last night. Valenzuela scattered seven hits as the Dodgers won, 8-0. The victory gives 1Jbel1)' Christian • 4-9 overall record . Claremont la 0-4. Nevada Reno signs Mollica Orange Cout College'• Kalhy Mollica has ai.gned a letter of intent t o attend and~lay v o 1leyba11 \a_., the University of 'N vada (Reno). Mollica. a ec.ta Mesa Wah graduate, pl.Ayed two years at OCC. She waa a volleyball and gymnutica standout at Colta Meea. 110 Broadway Costa MPsa 642·91 50 BULLITll BOARD MARTIN J MURPHY Swim Club's ~ were aie .u, ruld.ent of seai Tim Abbott, Jaaon Be.:h, Ca. Pueed away on B e l a n f e r , S c o t t April 22, uaa. He la Cornao d, Briaham to-----------------------_ ..... _____ ..._ _________ _ aurvlved by hi• wife Joraenaen , Sarah Mar1aret, aona martin J. Jo r g e nae n , S t e v e Murphy, Jr. and WDllmn J. Mo 1 be r , M e la n I e Murpey, ctauchter Janet II. M.o9ber, Kathy Nlcholl, Murphy, mother A,tlae Matt N1cho1a and RJchle IALn I HIGHOM SMITH & TUTHILL WISTCLlff CHAl"ll 427 E 17tn St Costa Mesa 646-9371 f>AClftC VllW MIMOllAL f'AllC Cemeterv Mortuarv Chapel-C<ematory 3500 Pac•l•c View Drive Newoort Beach 6«·2700 MtCObelal MOITUAllH l <JQuna Beacn 494-9415 laQuna Holl 768·0933 San Juan Capistrano 495·1776 c Murphy, brothen William NlichoJa. and John Murphy, Aunt Blanche A.IUa. VllltaUon wW The meet, w h I ch be on 'I\..tay, from 7:00PM lncluded Sl tean», found to 9:00PM, Wedne1day, 8-ch Swim Cub taking 2:00PM to 4:00PM and the teain high point 7:00PM to 9:00PM. Rmary •-h •'-hi h lnt wfll be recited at Dilday -.. r y, wie I po Brothers Chapel on aae,:roup trophy for Wectn-day, at 7:30PM. Mam glrla 13-14 and the team of Christian Burial wtll be lphit trophy. held on Tburaday, at Beach Swim Club la ~=~~~W"~ open to new membera.' Ca. Interment at Good 1bme tnt.elted lhould Shepherd Cemetery, call Kathy Jorgremen at Hunan.rtan &e.cb. Dtrected 631·2292. by D fl d a y B rot her a -::======::::::::~==::::::::-Mortuary, Beach and C.11142-5171. Talbert, Hun1iJlctiaa Belch. Put a few word• Ca. 142.-rnl. to work tor ou. IF CREMATION IS YOUR PREFERENCE Call TJ-IE NEPTUNE SOCIETY The '.'lcptune Society brouaht cremation to Orange County 1n 1974. Today we provide mo re sc:rvi'1Cs to Oranac County families than any other orpniz.ation. We 'offer cremation with burial at sea. in the mountains, or in the desert and our complete service costs about one-fifth as much as a conventional around burial. The rctponsc to our service has been extraordinary! We have 27 .000 memben in Oranac County, and in our nine year history we have served over 7 .000 ram ma. have any qucstion.s rcaar<lin1 cremation. please call us 1t: 646-7431 .I' Mall to: TH!. 'Enu I SOCIETY 2«10 W. C•• H~t nponlllA,CAf*J ATIOHWIDI Fl .. re sk•tl•• Scott Hamllton, who rec:«ttly won hla third llrWgtlt world champlonahlp, will be Mtured wtien the World Figure Skating Tour makea lta atop at the Forum In lnglew<>Od, Thuraday, May 12. The Forum llPPfflWlOa i. the only Southern Cellfornle appeerance of the tw wor1d figure Patlng talent• thla v-r. Tlctleta are priced at I 12.50, I 10 and S8 wl1h 12 dlacounta fOf junlorl, t4-YMr~d and uncMr on the top two priced tlcltata. They at• evallabte at the Forum box office and all Tlc).etron and mutual llgenCIN. For further Information °' to charge tlcketa. phOne (213) 874-4700. • 8eeeer (Slllle er.,) Tht 1111 W. CUp It ... ahem~ '°"'' ........ be --.. ::-th"' Yllllla. Th• Miik Cup det•rml"•• • etet• 1:1""*" In two dM.lone of ............... oufl 8ooo. A.aeoollillon ~ -bOWlt • under 12 .......... under 14. In ""rr::...,.., 14 ~p It noon, the HllON L I e fue the Oo::t, Yalf:.t..::ll• In ... ~ ti .. , PalOt Verdel ......,, _. tN ••a dllk> Ala Uf"'9d ..,._ .. ,... ... ,,,.. MOLL 'fWOOD PAMC -Thoroughbr•d reclng mMtln9 beflM WtdnHda1 and oontinu. tftrCIUlll -•• """ p09t .. 2 p.m., Wedneedty ttwouoft" ~end 1:30 p.m. ~~and~~°'*' et 11 a.m • Adm:l•iai• .. '2.11 '°' .,...Id, .. tor ~and a more tor,_.,~ .. ,, (la tor ,. ... ,llCI). v ... l*tdnG .... Dally Ooubl•. euota and ta flllok Silt ....,tnQ. LOI AUMITOI (QWWMnM) -A H·nlght qutrt•rhorH lftMtlno begin• ,..., """ ""' ~ .. 1:41 p.m. ....... -Mondey ~" ~ ,,.,.. ..... andPlllllllK• ....... Mitch ell headed for 'CCU in I all ' """"*" ...... llAmeTA~ Tiie foflowlng pereon 1e dolno ~-THl HUDDLI. 141 laker StrMI, Coate MH•. Oalllornl• ta2t R•ndolpll-laller lno., a Cellfornla COfJ)Orlltlon. 74t .... Coela ..... callfomla flt2t Thie """'-.. oondllo'9d by • oorpof8lton. "-ldo!PI .... "'°· Teel R. Softe Prel6denl nw. ~ -flled wlltl tlle c-ty a.ti of e>renoe County on Merdl a1. tta. """" Publl.n.d Orenr. COH\ Deify ~. A(K. 2t . .._ • 10. 11, 1Ma 1132..a3 K.-nz PtC'TITIOU9 au ... 11 NAml'TAffa.NT The tollowlng per90n la doing bual_ ... KK TOURS INTERNATIONAL. t20e2 Vf/Mley View. Ho 127, G81den GroYe, CA 02645 Kimi Kejlk-•. 12e&e o.otge R•yburri Rd .• Gttd•n Grov•, CA 92645 Thia bu*"-la conducted by 1111 lndMduel. Kimi ~ Tllla•ttm-1 -llled With IN County Cler1< Of Or111191 County on M8tc:tl 10, 1983 1'21191 Publl1he<I Orang• CoHt Oelly Piiot, ""'11 12. 19, 28, M-v 3.J 1813 1108-83 Nil.IC "°'flC( ACTmOUI ....... ..... aTAT'DmNT p1• loflowlftil per90n la doing ~-VNIVERStTY ASSOCIATES. 2 1202 Kroll Lan•, Huntington • .-V2g.{f --- Jemea o. Homan, 13 vi.nto. trvlne. CA 92714 Thll bull,_ la oonduc1ed by en Individual J-0.Homen Thia Ital-I -Ned wttll ti.. County C*1I Of °'"""' County nu• PubU1hecl Orang• CoHI Dally Ptlol. Aprll 12, 19, 28, May 3. 1983 1572-83 KCM9:1 flCTITIOUa -II NAmaTAftmNT Tiit lolloMng l*1IOf1I In doing ~-PENTRIOGE COVE. II. 21150 Airway Avenue, Sult• 0-9. Co1ta ..._, California 1282& M 0. J-Cotr\peny. Inc .• e Callfomie corporetlon. 2950 Airway Av•nu•. Sult• 0-9, Co•t• MHa. C.Ulomi• 92828 Tl* ~ II conducted by a corl>°'•tion J.D JanM Co . Inc Mlc:llMI D J.,_, Preeldent Thia lle1-I WU filed '#111'1 the Coullty Cler1c Of Or"'G' County on Apt• 5. 1983 . nU521 Pubttahe<I Oreng• CoH t Dally Ptlol. """ 12, 19, 28. Mey 3. 11183 UM~ P\lllJC NOTICE .,..._COURT CW CA&JFONtlA COUNTY CW~ CAUNO.A1t7M ~TO IHOW CAUM In tlle mstter Of the~ Of U SA OANNETTE G ONZALEZ. Petltloner. F0t CNnge Of N- W HEAEAS, LISA DANNETTE GONZALES • .,.Utlontr. ,_ 111ec1 • pelJtlon with the Clerk of 1hla COW\ lor • decr'M ~ petlllontr'• riem• lrom LISA OANNETTE GONZALES to LISA DANNETTE Fl.EMIHG; IT IS OROERED !Mt .. 1*90rW tnt•r•ated tn th• ebov• matter eppeer In Department 3 ol 11111 cour1. ioc.i.c et 700 CMc Center Clrtw, Senta Ana. C1111om1e.. on Mey 8th, 1983 •1 10 '·"'·· Ot .. -''*""" H the me1111 may be '-d, and lllOw -II 1111y, why the petition !or change ol neme ~ not be grerited. IT IS FURTHER OAOERED tha1 e copy of ttlil cwo.r to .,.,_ _,.. be publl•ll•d In "" Delly Piiot • • • I IA• Of,.,_.. lrculetlon printed In Oreng• County,~ -...... for tour • : Cl Ulue --*' Pf'°' lo the det• e.t lor '-irlQ on the pethlon. DATED: Man:fl 3l>. 1N3 FRANK DOMENICHINI .Ndge °'the &c>ti10r Court u.. ......... ...._..CLII'l .... ......... Law MPf'l,........._ .... c ~c-·•­Pub1~~ Cout Delly Piiot, Apftl 12. 11. "· Mey 3, tM3 Of ~-~· -..:-.:-.:..i.11 ,..... -dotno NIW,OIU OOUNllLINQ 6 ~001 AMOOIATU. 1111 Dow • ., .... •••· no. New~ llMCll\, OA l*tlo Anll\OnyT. lk!W1!4.I ., MPOO, = .. Or., VOf Unda, OA ,...,_. o. ~.A., woe. = leoe Or., Y Linda. OA "°"'1 0. MoOnlth, Mld . .1. 11~ t Oow.!h. lte HO.~~. CAliWU. lN. ~ .. OOlldwlMd by • DelWel Plll'\Ml'aNp Anthony T. 100«. M.a ., .. '°° "* ·~ -Ned with the County ~ of Or1nge County on Apt-111, 1"3. ,.,...,, Pvbtl9~ Ofan~ Co.II Dally Nol Aiwl 12, 1t. H , May 3, 1~ t7t~ "8.tC NOTIC( PICTmOUe M*Nlll MAim ITATDmWT Thi following iarton It doing ~aa; HARIOOR WOODWORKING, HIU2 Tiburon Pl., Hunllnoton IMch. CA 112949 lranl Andrew Llndttrom, tH32 Tllburon Pl . Huntington IMdl,CAt*8 Thie ~ II c:ondUCllCI by an lndMdual Br91'1t A. lln01trom Thia 1111-1 WU fllld With Iha County Claf'll of Orlll"IQI County on Af>'ll e. 1ea3 rn-. Publlthld Orang• Coatt Dally Pltot, Aprtl 12. HI, 29, May 3, 1Ge3 1948-83 lltCTrnOUe ....... ~ITA,......,. Thi followlno l*toft 11 doing ~-PACIPIC PRODUCTS, 14252 Cl.tMr, No. A-278, 1Mne, Callfomll 9271• T-Wlllatd Sc>eM, 21M 8 . Balboa Pla1a, Anahalm, c.lbnla Htoa Tl'lll ~ Ill ooncluc:led by an lndMduat. TaminoaW.SpeM TNI llatamant -Iliad with the County CMr1I of"--,.~ ....... on Marctl za, 1913. ---~ .. , f'tUn1 Pv1>11111ed Otenoa Cout O.Hy "'°'· •. "· Mey s. 10, 17, 1* 111&-a ~Co.MT CW CALWOMllA COUNTY CW ORA.NOa 1'0 CMc CaMlf Drtft W11t -p,CJ:"9o3(-ar - lant1A11a,CA~ PLAINTIFF: BRYAN LAMBORN, t Mlf>or, by RICHARD LAMBORN, Illa Ouardllin ad Utam DEFENDANT: BENTO N G BROWN. R09ERTA BROWN. and DOES I through X, lndualvtl llWlllONa c_...,_ NOTICIJI YOll lleM .._ Med. The _, _, dlctda ~,.. ....... ,_ ..... "-'If ..... ,.. ,...... .... .,.... ...... ... ~ ...... . " )'OU wlltl 10 .. the lldvlc:I of an 111ornay In thl1 m11t1r, you ~ do IO ptl)f'llPtly to lhlt ycMK -111an •eepc>l'IM, II My, may bl Ned on llml AVl80 1 U111d tl a alda IM1111ndede. RI lrlttunal itU•d• ~-tr• Ud. ...... ...,... _.,.Ud.,..... ..... ...... LM .. ...,_l1n.- "ri' Uatad O•••• 1ollcllar 11 c:on.1110 de un •t>oa•do an Hll aaunto . d1b1rr1 hac:erlo lnnw<llat-te, 0. 111a manera. IU rwpueela aacrtta, II hay llguna, P'*'e -reg1$trada a llemPO. 1. TO TH£ DEF£NDANT· A cMI eomplalnt hat been fll9d by thl ptalnllff 11Q11n11 .,ou. H )'OU wlall to deflnCI tllla '-"'· you ~. within IO d•'f• allar thtl 1ummon1 11 l«V9CI on you file wtth thll c:oun • Wflttan raepon11 to 1he oomplalnt. UnlaM )'OU do to, Yol" deflUll ... be entered on eppltc:allon of the ptalntlft. and 1N1 oourt may enter a judgment agalaet you !or the ,..., delMIKMd fn "" ~. 1lilhld1 could raeuH In oarnlthmant of wtlgle. taking of ~ Of' ptop«ty or other r1f11r raquHlld In Iha oomplalnt o.ted: AuolJlt 8. 11182 LEI:' A. BRANCH, a.II Harma 8oalk:k, OenW ... ~ • .._., -............... tao UlllMl ... T_ °""91,CA- Tat (114) -.U'.19 Publl1h9d Orano• Co111 Dally PRol, Af)t1I 12, 19. 2$, May 3, 1983 182743 , fllOTmOUe .u.1m1 ~ ITAT'IMmn Tha fcllowlrlo .-aone -OOlng bu91neaa ae: ftAHI 00., HH Ooeanor .. t Or., Huntlnalon Seaofl, ca 1"4t I 1) ftalil, (2) ft«Mlnl, (3) "-min and I•> M.._ ~ Na 0-.W•t Or .. Hun on ~. c:.. t264e Homa Alla hyarl, t1ea TM followlno C*ton 11 dolno ~ .. t Or., Hunt..._on IMdl ~-0. t2Me ~.... ' OAPT~N JOHN'S ICE CREAM Thie~ le oonduo'9d by a GALLEY, 14450 CYMr OrM, IMne, general l*tnenhlp. Cellotnle '2114 ...... M1rgtii.YM11 Arthur J. G1rr1011 , 19541 Thie .uit-t -flled ""'h Ille ~ ~ Hunttnoton a..cn. County a.tc Of Oranoa 00uney on Thie ~ II oonduoted by an Aprtl io, teM. n"'7W lndMdual. Publlehao Oranga 00111 Oalty Arthur J. Gerrie* Piiot Af>t ae. Mays. to, 11, 1"3 Thie ~1 -Ned with IN 1937-93 County an of Orange County on ,,,,,. 20, ttl3 PIMte1 Publlahld Orange Coot Dally Piiot, l\tK. 29, May 3, 10, 17, 1993 1941·13 AC'TmOUe.,_U NAm flATDmNT Tha ~ per90nl -doing ~­COM-Tee COMMUNICA TIOHa TECHNOLOGY ... ., Hlnoh•m ~ Huntington fMadl, Celltofnla PAYUM CORPORATION, 1 Calllornla c:orporatlon, 2ss1e D1von1hlra, El Toro, Callfornla ~ Thia ~ la conOuc:ted by • OOl'J)Olalk>fL Payum COtp. 8MMb Vakil Vloa Prelklent • Thia etatemant -Ned wltt1 the County Q9fll of Ofanga County on .,,,. fl, 1883. "214440 Publl9hed Ofano• Cou t Deity Piiot, l\tK. 29, May 3, 10. 17, 1883 1~ NIUC NOTICE ~--aA UfW1aO acHOOl o..-l'NCT LIGAL NOTICe I ......... ...., ........ f'roperty HOTa IS HEREISY GIVEH lhal th• Board of Educ:atlon of th• N1wport-M111 Unlllad Schoo Dltltrle1. of Newpor1 BMoh, County of Orange. Celltomt., .. oflwlng fOf' 1111 (I) on• 11152 Crown 97·P&IMnQlf achool bu•. MOOll A~8!·~· s.tal No 32755 bide for INI aqulpnent Wiii bl raoa1vao In th• olllca of th• Purchatlng Director. locatao 11 2985-B Bear Strwt. Coate ...... CA, up to 11'.00 a.m , on May 2 11183, 11 Wtllctl time they will bl publdy Ol*lld and r..o ~ Appolntm1nt1 lo 1n1p1ct th• aOoYI equipment may be mecll by c:alllng Otc:k f'icl(an1, Tranaportallon Dept at (714) 6&41-3'98 8 tda for Ihle bu1 muet b• 1ubml1t1d In • 1111.0 1nv1lop1 metkld "SURPLUS PROPEATY 810 Ho 19-83 A• Niia -llnll 81ddar thould ln•p1c1 the 1qulpm1n1 bafora blddlno The Dletrlct do11 nol gu1rant11 or warranty 1ny equipment agalntl Ollec:ll. SuccaMNI blddl< mutt '""°"" property at hit own 111p1n11 Removal muet be maoa dutlno the norm1t bu1ln111 day ancl b• complltld within on• w11k ol acoapt1ng IN blO P1yman1 muat bl made II Iha Purchatlng Ofllca batora I ha aqulpmanl can bl rlrllOY9CI from Iha Dllttk:t. Panooal ~ wlll be accaptad. CalttOt'nla Salee Ta. of "' ... be cofllc:ted . A-d ... bl made In Ula blat lnter981 cf IN Dllrtt1c:t, 1-. the hlgh111 blddar wlll rac:1lv1 pr...,._ In the IWWd of the bkl MlnlMUm accec>llbl• offer of SI, 000. Thi Boero of EcluGlllon ,_.,.. •hi rtght to rejac:t llf'f or all bid• ano to walva any lrt1g11l1rlly 01 lnf°"'*'I)' In ttle btddlng Emp10,... of IN ~ Ola1r'k;t .,. IMllgltlll to bid by dlr9etlon of the Boerd of Education. NEWPORT-MESA UNIFIED acHOOl. DISTRICT of 0..,. County, CA By Dorothy H. ~ C.P.M. PUll:tlMlnQ °"9ct0f (714) 556-3217 DATED. Apfl 18, 11183 Publl1hld Ofanoe Co11t Dall}I Plot, Apr 19, 29, 11193 1163-&3 Ml.JC NOTIC( ..... aWDIOllCOURT Ol'C~ COUNTY CW OllMtClm l'W CMI C..... °""" W..e ... ..... AM,C...,. lllAllNACllll OP ~IOHER: JaGql.Mlllnl E. King RE4POHOENT: AMdell I(. l<lng :A=-=·~~ MOTICll y ................ ,.. ... .., .................. ~ re•r ... ~aer4 •11leH Jell ...................... ......... 11 ........ . ,... ..................... • aHefWef e.. lW. ••9:.:i JM ........ ~-,_ ::::::: . " ..,, ..., -......... AV'80! ........................ ............... --.IM. ............. -... u.. ,....... .................... .... I ........ 81 Uate4 4•••• 1ellelter el ··-·---~-.... ••••t•, ..... r • ll•••rl• ...... ..._ ......... _ - , ' .. • .... • .. 4 .. ..., ........ ,,..._,.._., .... ~THE RE.aPOHOEHT: Tha l*ttlonef .... flllld • PlltlllOn ClOl-mng your merr\ege. " )'OU ,... to ftla a N1POM1 within 30 day9 of Iha data that thl• 1ummon1 11 _.,,., on you, '104" o.t&llt may bl amw.d and lfla court mey --• ~t oontelnlng lnjun(Jtt¥9 or octw Otderl OOllOal ilil IO dl'tltlllcwl of pr()j)tlfty, IPOUHI 1upport, ohlld cu1tody, chlld eupport, attorn.y .... --. and llUCh o4IMr ,..... .. mey bl granted by the court. Tha ~ment Of ~. laiilr!g of ~ or proparty, or av. _, llllthotu.c:t Pf00Mdlng9 may '* ~ Dated: FebN~"3. LEE A. • a.ti 9'f' ERIN RIOIY. Publllh~•nr cou 1 DlllfY Piiot /ltK. H , Mey . 10. 17l ,ttt3 MCM3 Ml.JC NOlU ~llOTIC9 NOTICa OI' "*"C ltSAMIQ NOTICE IS HEM.BY OM!H the1 IN Ptelwlll~1llalk>n Of the City of~ wllhdcl•~ h••rtng on G1n1ral l•n ,.,,.,,..,.. ,, 82· 1 and Loolll ~ Program Amandmenl No. 3. u ~ HORTH FORD: Lomted In IN arM bounded bL:'9on A_,_, Jemtior. Aoed, Dl9go er.es. end th• e11ter1~ City b04.lndary batwMn San 0 900 CrMll and 91aon A--. a ,..,_. to::. !he I.end UM. AlllldenlMI • Racraatlon and Open Sp•o:t ~ and Nolle e.m..ta Ille ~ leedl 0-W ,.,.,, and th• Land UH Plan of th• Newport leach Local CoHtat ProgrWft; pr.,_i by the Olly of ~~ERE8Y FURTHER GIVEN lllat an Envlronmant•I ln.-ct ~ .. ~ .,,..,.,. In OChlaOOon with !he aboW ~· tt II the Intention ol tM C ty 10 Ille En,_.. Ohrnent.al lmp9Ct 1MH3 I U J' I 9' I 0 9' C 0 U R"T 0 ~ o~ COW'T"IOll~ CA• NO. AU,_ ~TO 8"0W CAVM lfl IN Malter cf IN AllObllon of USA MARIE TITUI. a ~ ly UHOA JOYCE WIWAMS har molhar. ""*'ltolw WHfftEAI, LtNOA JOYCE WILl~. pelltlOMr, • l*'9flt of ap~. LllA MARii TITUl1~ a """°'· hM ,..., a ~IUOn with - ol9t\ ot lhta oou11 tor • "°'" on9"0l119 appl10ant'1 natM trcwn USA MAM tlTUt to UIA MAM WIWAMI. ,,. .. ON>PS> ...... ,....,. lntot .. tof tn th• abo¥9 metter •PPM' I" O.,artfft9flt I ol lhl• Court. loolMd at 700 ~ c.r. OrM w.t ....... Alva. o.tlfotnle. on Mir 11. 1IG • 10 A.M., or • _.....,. ... ,.....""'1 be ,.._.,, INI .,.,. .._, Ill _.,,, ... Ille --tot °""'ft of IWtll "'°"*' ·=:: IT II OM>IM.O ._I oowef ~.,..__.. ... !MIMI= In TIM 0ra"91 0..C Olly ..... ., • ., ........ alroulatlOft ftlnt.-In CJren,. c-.e,, ~..-.... lot lour I 1111• .... IWtof to ... .... .. .., "-WI"' ............. Di\TID: .... '""4 , ... ,....~··"*" ., ._.._ -==-~ ----- Orange CoHl DAJLY PILOT/Tuud1y, April 28, 1913 I ClASSlfllD '/'lie morlfd pl'1c<' m1 the <>rcmge Coast CLASSIFIED INDEX I'"'" ... ..., I'"'" ... .... 1--...... --------1 ......... .... =====-;=;; let•l tMl ,_hMf_1_1 ____ 1&0llilol&.._..,..-...~lmn! ..... ltlt SIOlf ClfFS NNport fWGPll, ' "· • ::~u::.~·~~l~:~t~~"'~ Liii& llLI IAYPIHT r:INd· oc.en, =~'1~fte To Plact Yu Ad, Ctl 642-5678 1:.0 p.m. tho Pf'9VICM.la P'lneet main channel v!ew from mqnlfkient 8 ~UIWnO .. r tleet, ci.taoMd dll>I day. ,or lunday •nd Bt, ea. pool home. ~uc.d $U6"0,000. 111 ~ ,.._ ~a,-.. ltt99~_.. REAL nun (tt, .... , Atwtwlr,. lhlt. i.-11-1.i.nt.1 Mi.,;,jl.• f\t tUNIUJ• ("~U•Ot• tfll -.t1 'ut11tw tk·I Mu , ......... _ u ...... ,.,., » f••u ••11Utt .... lt\ \•lk \ U uul111;t•ot1 U11 • h U 1,Hl llMlf•l'Ui lf\llM I ltCUll·• lir.-"' 1 ...... 1.1,.,.. Utllt ...... ~.OWi N&Mt.k I 1 .. 1ri, tvrnt ""-'"'""'I h1 "'••"' tt...-h ..,, .... ( 'h ••• nh "\..u Ju .. n \ •l-1'"",.'"' '"\..ml_. Ao .. ~-· , ....... "1o1H1 l-.K\.lt._. ~uu ... 1 b. .. •• lh '"' "• "'""'""h ,, ...... tt ... ,~ ,,,.,.ill t\1.,.lflll~ II .. ·~ .. 11 .,, ....... \ l\;1~1.-. l't ·1·' '1t11e h I\ l•1h \ ...... , .......... h I 111>1 WIOll1UH~ lho·'• u I"''"-lfoj<l..,.111 tt• '" M .. -..Ht "'° .. I"" t'IHIJI ti\ lr~h1-H14l t't1111h '''"' ... , '-k M4•hl~ IC••'"' i'•••' Mu,;nw .n I '-rr 1 c ..... ntf\ ' •• \ "-'' .it l 0 .. wnl '"'' ul St.M1t lt..n•ll•' ••tftM ~Propony Twno 81\at\nc RE~ RE. Wanw-d RENTALS U1.u... t w-n1.n~ th......,'\ Unhttn .. hnl tt • .ww._ furnu.n.,t "" l nh.1r1u .. h•" ~ •otJ.1 t urn t ,.nc;.. Uni 1 .... ,,hl,,.,,... hun l••wnhuw1n Uni IN t>l1 .,,.. f .. urn l,._,1>t. "''"Uni ""*'llf••n\& 'um"hftd A•rlml"t'\.._ tfnf Ap<o t\,rn ,,, lint .......... tt. ... .wn "' 1\.n.t 11~..-.a.. M • ..._ .. t lut"lll ... """ .. ~un,m. r K•11t.a. v ... 11otn K1 nu\w • l\1 f1t..IA u, Sturt •ttjnt..b1W~ ,, • .,~-,,., Rm1 1 H'h,, ii.-nl.tt .. ttu..,..... K. nwl• \ ,.n_,,.,. 1-knwt. l1Mlu•I ttrnwl ~, . ., .. ~ M1111 k1n~ .. b ""'' 1""4 llllJll 100! 11111 w;,i: IOJ4 111'4 IUJl IWI 1"40 1011 IOU l04" 1uvt IU'I IU)) l«'n" IUO<I 1u1• to'K 11111<1 IHrU 1•11111 "'" I""'' Monday publlcallona• •--v II Modana. ,-- 12:00 noon kturday. IAYllll PUOI llYPlllT Gerf)' & Owtlt.a l1M.OOO . .....ao41 11.U .. SpecWcUlar bayfront dpl.Jt 2 hr, 2 ba up; 2 br, •11-ne1 7~1387 e. 2 ba dn. 2 boAl lpec& Reduced-.J,60(),000. I l.f .... J liiiiii~~iiiiiiiii w ..... ~oorr--'--· -PlllUIU ••I IOUIFIOIT ~ bY 417 Detllla, only ..., -.u ..,_ .,.., _ ......... _, ..,..._ 3 1319.000 3 • dlnlno. 2 3 "' 2 IA, "Linda" be INld9 untl 1'30 p,m . Ot."Mn & jetty v'9w.. Marine room. 4 ..,.....,, ,. hoiM 2 8' 2~ le M~ • ......._.._ 1,..,..., In tot the,.., ct.Y• pubtl-bath, 3700 eq fl •1.38&,000 Oc:anf1'0nt ~ un11.'ey ..,C,., tll• 11u"'iir, N•;port :.;o;u=rio~ Ull llU ............ ,,.,. IMdl. ~ oondt- 12:00 noon 8eturday. Remodeled 3 bdnn 2 bath+ 1-tge rec. nn., ,. Ill-MM tJon OHLY 11eso::, Pl• ... ull for a "klll ._ ___ -'""-tu.rni.hect ,...tloe. u 20 000 1+r--o-.,-,.,..,./""8-U-N-1--•,,---,....., ,,.,_..., number" Wft9" Cane.I• .-.u --~..-. ' r-..,. ' """ " ....., ..-•v 11nc1 your ad. FlllUllll UIOI llUTff .. 1:i.,: ee:o ~r..:;.1~~<~7 t~4>~•~u~N1~2~~ DUii New 4 br, 4 ~ bll, custom French Normandy )a., tam rm.~ on liaT •IJllT fW CtleClc your ad dally and Elute 1.2 prime acre hilltop $1.2~.ooo. ::'x ~ =~~~ 2 Bt 1be. 1129,000. Pro- ,.,,, 9'\'oro lmmecltat• OOllUIG OAYI UYFIOIT '"495,ooo. 780-9133. By 1*tY Mlll1 640-8019 tlrat lncorr90t lnNrtlon dock Pl&tu avail. Now •370,000 w/t.enns. ---· Ill••• 11001< to 13111<. Bay- --front Sbf. 2ba. 46' •· z~~ ?i~~IYit~I~~; ~ Coronado J.land CUit. bllyfront lot. 85' boat lappt. Forecloaura: R•duc•d 2 · Pllll UDO 00110 LM"r I S,1111• ns-1464 2 BR 2'A ba condo --11-1-.. -~---"*"I~~~~~~~~~ 11ou1: 3 br, 2 ba, frplc, immaculate condo. On greenbelt. Comm. pool. $125,QOO. 1&00 iaq.ft. podalda .-r~ Prlood to.... UL.Ill nWllU ..,~ 3 uni\• end .. good ~ , ............ , i1;0 tr tu• :~1.~ ..... i112 :j~ FlllLHI VIEW BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR :;·. PLll YILIE : :~. lnaplrln9 view ot Baell I.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1 11 • eay a Olly lloht• from thll 1••• lwwrtoua 4 Bdrm axec:u- 11!) ttw home cornptet9 with 111 h''Y"d' (11,,. •; El bl~ i>lbl !;"... 1124 2 Br. Condo In Tha I Monllcelloa, only HO, 500. 110,000 down. jW.tlb Realty, 831·2170 COIN produowa: 38", 2BR and lo-BecMeof. Vwy h.ard to find. T09 locaUon and tho prtol la good at W6,000 • Ilea good ..,,.,... to.\, :~ lhlmlMring pool. H11g9 I,~\ meeter IUll• wltn prMtO n'\41 aundeck, 3 car garaga a 1m "o" own tho land! Al 1* 1624.too you'll 8tgf'e9 It'• im • bargain. B•tt•r call :~ now1 646-7171 '""' HOI 1411 l)Jt :)~) l.\Jt J)JI ll>Oll 2700 -1tOO 1901 ~ ~ ~ 19UI tflOll ,_ """ ... .. 1'111 THE REAL ESTATERS • Tll IUIT .. .... .., ................ Live In 8 bdnn, 2 beth UJ>991' apt. Commwclal lhop, ofOoe M retell on IOW9r lev .. plUI 4 cer g:~lng. Prl09 al 1315, associated llllOt<EllS RIAlTOllS ;u1 -w l o1b"'• •'' J~•l ~I~~~~~~~~~ 1ll1l 1lll3 llUI VIEW PAllT, 1&¥1 llWPll11 Lowell prtoe 1158,too. 3 Bdrm ~ ba1111. large tamllj room, flr•place. large bade yard. A ...... Cell now1 646-2313 THE REAL ESTATERS TllTUIMI AM Of 486-1&40 e-. _,_ P&,._IUUll ,..._ IJM111 Locotod In Turtlarock iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij Ridge thla J.M. Poler• WI{ 3 Br 2 Ba home la atunnlng. EXtonalw UN of plantation 1hutt•r•, d90ofat« _,. ~ and grMt canyon w.w hlghflght tllla lov•IY hOIM. Full prla. 1289, 000. 831·7STO, 557..e7M Cuatom IMJlt 3 BR, 2 Ba, S23 OOO Under ~ nr.paoe, ltlake roof, RV 2 bd' 2 .._ ..__._ aoooe.. Owner wtll c:any ""· -. ... _, 1at 1oen 11&7,ISOO. balcony. AHumabl• .., •.•• ti ..... io.n. &l)oy the a.. """ • and cool s.. br~. 141-ll Salee price l1H,OOO . Auguat Capllll . a 4 Br nom..~ '5,000 a t 6 • 1 o 1 1 • E v • • saa,111 dwn, fully aaaumable oe2-6019 Talle adVWltlg9 of own--to.w, agt. 780-1886 -flU.--.. --UI--,.---.-TJUDI T 10\,\L RL\l.T \ ..... dllanvna on ttlla onel lut. llld lMt NO'WPOf1 Cr•t Plan 4. H9'a tfaN1f911ad ·MUST ,-.--. .... _.-....__....,...,.I 380, vtlCant. '209,000 SELU Fantaetlc locatlon 11111 -ca u 111 -• 1 3 a 0 r ,,..,. So. Cou1 Plaza. Hll __.. __ ......_"'-~--------..., EMy walk to bc:h, 4 Br, 3 1144-4201 10"· /,04lr ~ ~ ttti. FIXER~ corn•r I Ba, IPACIOU9 llvlng rm,•·e-111-n.-...,eo.---ldo..,---G..,.-,,..Ptan--4 ~i\. &:r~50~~1d!; ecroaafrom pwtc foronty famlly rm, lausd~~· Bt. sea, ,.Wcaplltlnga 752·7373. 1 145,000 ta• land. ~ :r balcony. 1 ' · appllc, Wg8 pdo, tU-bdrm a ..., hom9 with 1711 r9ntty IMMd • .val J.h. •Hl w-1rrm:.n .~ .;_, • LOT• OF POTENTIAL! 1108,950. Nelda TLC. Top location, end unit, ~ .~ by 3700 Paiit Lano Mak• art offer. QfNnR*t, ~from RealEltafe ~Balboa Blvd. at seth 2131630-6118aft8PM pod at 400 vi.ta Aora.. .,___ -•NH...L.. tJI. FREE equity 38r 3ba ~~·=·~ _._ii; -twnhm nr downtne. 7eo-o1&7 llft IPM o./lt a Ai>PMflno lamlly hom9 Pymta S2050mo. Sua · • wtth lal'ge badlyatd f« 891-6558 6 Br. e.tt>Ur. huoa lot. chlldr9" & peta. 8•Uer 1266,000. LMM Hold. AHHOUNCEKNTS 11M,HOI Newport'• nn.11 w-. to tne~fromtra_. plmnflad 2 ldrm 2 beth condo wtth a frl•ndly flr'll)lllCe !NI adda oozy wvmth. lnolud9a many -vtlea. YCN can't b9at "* fOt ,..., vaiu.. s.. ., ~.&46-7111 wm Nip nnane. thla 3 + 1111 + ts 18.&00 fH. Ao•nl IE•• YEUE bdrm 2 b9th home with Oeep9rat• owner mu1t 844-1742 « 846-1044 -dining a famlly rma. Mii thla .UP« • bdrm • - _ • "'"'"oun..fft'W"n\li , ... ,"" ~·!Unfi .. ,,,..,,,.,, l't "-"'-'~··\kl ..._.,,.,h /ti 10.m.~_1 .. "" (f.t\ll BUSlNESS' FlNANCIAL '"'*"'"~--f1• '-k •"'-'f•,.. l~NI,...... fit!\U'M ... W•t'\t•~ ;,',~:..?~~l~!:;.:ttUN\~ •'-t1lfW"\ to.> Lt•n • MvfWY "•nlrd ,...,.,,,. ... lif" ,. " £Wl0YMENT lt1 11· \.\•llh•I •J1.f• ~ .. fllMI .. KRCHAll>ISl ,,.,.fU" :\1 111~~ \\• , ... , t"'1tc Mo111h•w~ t otMo , .. " ·~\llpnirT•• \ 11thpuh'" t ''"' , .. y,14., t w111Hwt1 .......... ~~ ...... .,,, ... c ·•••h ''""'It\ \1 .... ,.,, '•tl•tJl.etMtilWt ,..., .... w .. _. .. ,, f ~~;: ·~ ~~~::~"·~· t-"-"HSWN'ftl t',•t~• & 0.--C•"-"'r-•unc C nh f'"\ ~. ,~..., .... BOATS 4 h •th. Rt-nl '~'"' t'uwtr ~11 !'\s.-J~k M .. nr. ~U•J M•1n1 ~f'\K• !'\1111111 At J)._k. ~"""'t<' ~wpvh1 , CNitrUI '~"' .......... ,, .. TRANSl'OftT A TIOH ""''•'• '"' "'" \ .. lttflll" Muhff Bt•u-. .,..,...,"',.. ..... Ioli( ... ,._.., Mue.tt u.~, H\ • l1 .. tl•" Tr. , ' T1 •It" t.;111 I AUTOMOTIVE A11ht L....-.r\ti l\Ykt f,. N_._ t•.n.. , ...... w-"'••• "P•" tt ... K ... 1, I V..kii•I u, ... ,,. r '""'-• \ 111• '"lk,. .... t 1 ...... , AUTOS M'ORTCD \11 ......... Aw.tt ""'""'" nM\o\ t"1tr•111 1l f~\aoun 1\ l.1uf'1 "'" •.. """ .... , .~ ..... ··"'" J- J-<1 t--.ldMll1n• ,....,, .... l,11t\.M .... , ... M..,._,,.,, ,......,._.....,,..~ M1...,._1 Mt. llp..i l-'•nkt• t=: -11 .. ""''" ""--....... ...,..... T•"'".._ n ...... _. vi.1i.. .. _.., v..i .. ...... 1ca·J IOOI WI? lOll 1(11~ l(llil 'tl'tl \HI) 1101n 11112 llOl4 I01t, 1111• «llO """ 111114 ...... 11\llU -'" ""'b' ...,, lllJJ<l 1•00 11040 llOU ,,In) .-1n: ¥111" •111 •114 ... , ~llV vm llLI ••n !Ill! •l?t llll lllD ···~ t m 1141 llU tlO •1n .... 1111 •1~ 81'3 YI" .... ... I .... tlN '"' •1r: ti I :H: tin THE REAL ESTATERS • .,, llPLDJ Get on 'I°" ~ and do Ju at a llttle nxln ... Two 2 bdrm unlla. 0000 INCOME! Only 1120,000. Cell now 011M370. \ f >I I. I 111:. If ' •.. '' •••• ·.•! '4 ' CALL POR • MIU.ION DOLLAM f'RONRTIH Wm Cow. Bier : YI -1 995. NOWI MM• any otter. .-_. Owner wantl out of...... WATI HI HON1 8611. MS-470•l' ~ rOITiOCWad 3 Br, 2 t>eeutltul 3 Bdrm 2 bath HOML~ tee. lut ..,.... IMI Ba on pool 11111 lie fl lot. 0home. It'• •harp and REAL ESTATE • $606,000. pp 813-1311 OWfl9I' ....... with 12% 831·1400 " --... llU lll'Fmf VA loan. Price only 48', 38a '-·boat ga1•. Dock, x.lnt tocatlon. By 1127,800. Call now, 200 ~to pvt bdl, ~ Owner. Low down pey. 546-2313 • -t price In Hatbouc. ment. Y De1pora1a $285,000 . 813-7873 Wlth '35,000 dwn. Woo't --------- i.t. 846-141• MAKE AN OFFER lnt.M lM4 I tt ..... ,,_ 1111 ftlll ... ,.. .... a.rt •116,000'°1129,800 THE REAL ESTATERS Gf'Mt f~ homa. Four Open Sat & Sunday °""°'9 arudoul ad now apactou1 bedroom•. Nml W1J. 38r, 2'M>L Holy, ....,.. J Manitlall Ac1t &42·N08 Large yard with pool, Finance In Broadmoor. ~~~ In HCrow on .. lllll, ...-r IT epa. llrep/t and half bu-Owner wlll carry $250, • ....,_, ea lletball court. JUST RE· 000 """ 12% lnteraet, no Propwty Mat1 &40-901g Lovely 3 Br 2 w.t-... am home w/Jdnt ftr ptan, OUCEO 124,000. NOW potnta. 5 ~ nr comm. .. ,,.... flHlbl• llnancln\. 8y '226,000. ~I. 4 Bdrm, 3 ba. tao,000 equity In 2200 Owner. 841-0 7 4 ' lll.llMT ,ooo. aq. fl In Woodt>ttdgo Ir-557-2732 .., 111111 U""fl~~I: 11{)~§ YIM raakte!IOI tor otherliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ••Hn •• 1•1.... AMltots,81~ So. Oranoe Co. reald -• 1 :;11sa1.!!;; .. ;;;...,.;~~~~~-~~~~[=1 •nc• with mutlmum -•• -.. ~~··of '700. ---·-..... ti Ill.I. H2·1t36 da. afl•r 8, 1111.W I W 111 I I I I IT sn~t Col)' 2 ~ 28A-& P111M> COLDWeu. BANl(eRO 111tm w/bright kltc:Mn I ..,. .1..... ptaoe. ~ ........ CW!om Tudor home wtttl • .,... to pool. Conwn19"t to n1oa ~ vtewa. 4 i. ~t1wru~Tded 3 bW:fl a~· A~ drooma, 3~ Ba. pen.ead ........ .....-tdge of --UTA"-· Omc./cHn, llug9 family deoofetad In ..nl\t le\lll unit. lcJt9 .,,.. room ov•r enllr• Srd Freeflfy painted & Cati Mary Lou .-anon. ... YllW 9J.I floor. Spa. MUM. BBQ P8C*'9d. ~ too pllllo M4-l200. MH• and potting .,... NI In 9nd unit Mxt to euc:e 86g ooean/b9y vw plua aedudad wooday petlo. ~ gr0\f9. ~ tO¥ety ~ 3 BR A 8olld oak woodwork 10.5% flnanclngl C al f9ll'lly rm. c:ootiamc>o•wy throughout, planked 7~ 1!501 °' 752·1S7S. -.U NW home on 11ug9 lot. Pr1-flooring, bullt-ln cabl-121 .. m v1M pool a pllllo. "'-· neta. ........ Gourmet ~Macnab -lrvme In the ,_, of the ...,.~ I bl• fl n ancln a or wll I kitchen wttn OC1iL't eettng WALJ<ER & LEE • ..._... ~-• ... -t-""-.. ~ .,.._ Ml.ial .. to~ n--t .,,. Of1 •r.-.aacludad40 ft ;;;;;;~~ ... ~-elate tM utrul ... t7, ftC411.mlllde 1o1 .,.. 2-..°'Y 2 Bdrml~~~~·~·~·~re~~~~~ 100. Aa11 for H1111. Ac--~ with fam4ly room and eun Stroc*. ..u-1020 pordl PLus a ~· -a-..... aa man r:::'t'T. attlst'a ltudlo In I lov9I)' _.,_ ~. :i=-:.::~r;t:; ........... WMll!luf t•l~~~~~~~~I ...._n11 ~h• braath1aklng LUii/..,.. PIUllSE m11m1 OuUtandtno klcatla'I on ~ Point. "L" 8l. 2 Bdrm. 1 bath, gar. ....... TLC. Jullt ..... '° Ole ooeen. Try and ~ IHI at '220,000. 0... ........ .. ........ .,. IJM1• ~Nl[,ll IJAIL[Y fio ASSOCll\T[S a OOMl'I *-o1 oed a.,. Cod 200 ft '""" thl1 =lgloua Ca~ CNanMt. eoet moorlntl. llOm • open ~ VW P..tlon 4 bdrm. 2 deytlme, and IM V9fY gat, 11800 p9, mo. '* alaglnt & "°"*"'° ~ Option mon•y. Agt t----------t ~1\:'!.!:f.•~r~ 14G-1138 .._aft• a. In your CNif'I bee* ~ -tumbllng watwtall, Kol po nd with Japan•H i~;;;;;~;;a brldg•, and your own l'.,.111 .- private SPA. Upgrad9d -... • -· rla B•rcovl 1 or 8111 161 Krog« f« mor• lnfor· L:J--1: lltf :::::s meiton. 7M-t100 ~ OEOAOE ELKINS CO ,.., ..... A INiy unlqu9 ott.rtno wtttt Noh buclo-t deec>-ratlng. 3 Bdrm, i Ba. onnl •• fonMI dining, MPar•t• famlty rm. A rnuet ... at ~ t 1&1, eoo. 111..s111 tCIHalfl9d Adi •r• th• .,......, to • IUOCleafu1 garega "'yVd ..... ft'•. Mttef WWI to tall moN peoplal JANOIO I' I I C U £ l D I I I' I' It II U C T I PETE BARRETI . REALTY thnlUghoul. 4 bdrm, 2.... -ba. 3 a. oenoe. Plan 3 Thie 3 Bdrm bay ..,._ tn Tur1llt 1211.000. hom• muat b• told NOW111 Pr1oed 1'74,000 und., 1112 ..,.,,..._,, ~ty 651-TI77 For an 8PPC*lt!Mnt to .., ae11 '40-11e 1 • HERITAGE R[l\Lfl)H..., I I· I Orange Oo .. t DAILY PILOTIT\*day, Apt1118. 1813 4 Untta ecroee trom bMdl 011 Belbo• Penlneula. epprelNd el 1325,000 by lender. Prtoed to ... NOW et 12tt,HO. Ae-eu~ et 1S~ 21S/t67-MM laceat '1•f!!!J UH 23 UNITS, TX ;roee. In-come S 100t<, Tuetln. Ao1 M.J. &4M1t1 Avocado grow, idnt tax lhetter. Prof. mgmt .• 20 eca. 'A Int. t140,QOO. Lo dn. 10% Int. 5a7-3218. • TRAINEE PHOTOGRAPHERS Up to $100 I day part/M time male/female No ex· penence or sellrlg requlfed Photo- ~rllellflO firm expanding in your area Management p()SlllOOS Qpen Write Uf'f' eox oo.e W:sl CMla CA 91793 t n I ' Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Tu.day, AprU 2e. 1983 $1.14 per day ........_ lw Cw ffi'pr ' Iii ....... ____ _ iiilO: & OOMti''L ~& ...._.... ~ ...._,...., ...V~ ~ .. ......... .. WNr ..... IUl ........... IU.•U.a'llll.l~t..Tlll-INl-T-Al.UD-- t ... ""'"°~ ,,. w.lt. ~ ~ ,,. • "°4Cut», ... Malnt, •l••n-up. '' ._..,.. _... ttw\ab uo. •llfi4:f:Jt1 ~ltnoed a prof... NA_..., OU..,,,_ n..t't ALL )'O&' ~ '°'. '°.,.*:.,. .. Low,...., C.M. 111.-.-. 141 tCM: .,_. n1-t111 .... •1111 lft. tpm. lntt•lt•Uon. 011r Wotll ....... y_., ~ ...... ~ *"6417 ~.1\1.0.1. eon.tr. co. Lovtno oN1c1 o-. "" '"" •alll!ftw ...,_ •m 1 1, H~~ 1 .,,.. only 1ooai1 ••P•ri••w.. '-'/r ... p~ ,.... .. 11 °' y04ll Po01 c.r.... n. 111 eo.t o.n. OCM1W..,.._ oomm ec.. Mete--."""'· ---=: = ~ • iOii 1, t10 "*" Otiei<* 04ll Pf'* ~ IH U' ., .. ,, neMe. '°' e..,.n ..,. wllnl&lll. wen.-' Nlld. btdcl .,.,,... provtded. •1·1tll I · ~1 8ob )'O&' ~ Uo.104111. OMO 'fl0.1018 *9. o11.-.. I p.m. George MMIOI Me DAlY Pl.OT SERVICE DltECT'IY Quality orlenl•d. Call C.. llMal ~NA,....,.. ~~-e--• CALL. ..._101a. =.:Je'"" " no .,...,, ..e~,~~ _I! .... --.;;;,., ':U''3:Vtn~ ~ -=-O•=~~:;r. ......... Afn'IPAINTI iU1"" fm""'9 ~·· 1:1" ~bonded; 1430111 Tom 117-4480 o 111uvaltno. 1er l1111ne: prompt. Thank you. =~..:,zr 0 14 1 · TrM Trlll/l1•nll ~ ' It!-IM. '°" .... sia.i1•a Gateoe Door ()per81<n, ..... 7 OOurt. 70.1111 IRICKWOlllK: """)OM. LOCAL ,AINTI" do .. IO Yl'W ... Poot .-v. ,. ·~·....,. ~ ..... o.blnen. oebm.t t eprlng•, 11Atdwat9. ,~ JoMeon a Ion: Do .... ltMln ~ eo.ea ....._ ~ "'°" • eooMmY l'llOldlfte. l!arty oompi. ,,.. • Jim N&-N to feotng, .,.,. I formioa LI. •P R .. demonltatlon. haooaM w0tlc. 11 yr1 malnt. W1M. ,_._ t7W171 rat ... Ouallty wed. =·.:.·~~'tit':.~ b"'IM OCIWMnopa..142.ol81 Uo.==-i~' =NewportatYd.O.M. i.~ig. 754-1... ~~~~. MMOnfY&IWooo:w& ,,_..._OMID4721 llMOO.l•Uno Pv1 Tut0ttng/ "-rM<tlaJ C!rmtn 148 llSM 141 4144 -MIQ. Jim'•~' Malnt. Uo. M2·7.WMM7te ,..,..,. Al typea. Qualty. ... Ui&lll lnMtuotlon. Xlnt IWAt9 . ..... <>Alt .. tlonl .......... a.wt .. ... ~ & "8llabte ...,. Cl!plM loweet prtoe. 131-2$48' & INTI! ......... ral"· ~ K-1. (213)M2..S704 ~ MHonty, plumbl~~. GA~~·=-~7 ~.~ A081N'80L!AHINO IRICKWOAK~ll or ,.... ••• ...,. .. ,....,., ~~ rm. ........ Jeny 54&-441S ="'~' oarp9ntry. alee,~ ~ _ !!!!!!! 8ervloe • •thor'ouaNY t:.=. 1 eea12 Pam!M f!Mpalntlng. 146 ON4 Tw>lna/Wcwd Pmrrr'r19 • ~ ..W.. ~ CU..om bw mirror.. WI• delil'l l'loule. ~7 ,.._._ • ....__..w l'artNng lnlef1cw Dellaf\ I -OI**, Mllf ~ Res>alr/em tobe. Fanoea, 25 Y'9 up.14M786 11111 droba doora lub & • ..-..... .. _ _.._ ~~..::':!... HAH01Ho.18TAIPP!JlG ~ 861·1041 1hel,,.1, partition•. Lo A:-:" lhowet en~I. Qiu• r•· --.._.._,. ----....... u,. .. _.. Huber~ t)pel. ~~~~~~~~ m•. St-752-986e ~ Topped.I~ Qa11'1 ~ 520-0201 VllO I aipplaa lnduded fWa. fNt aet ~ ,,_._... _..,., M~5 ,.._ -...c.. Nancy't Typtng 8.,vl~ REMOOELS/FACE UFT8 DRYWALL TAPINO up, MW i.na. 7114419 . IOtfY M 1-4llrO lle.<*Welder Papemang-Uc 14111902 948-11714 a.Mng all bulll\MM9 . ........ C.W.-Cullom wood pat101, Al Tlllltlna & Aooultlo Lancl~Yd cinupe laefptt QUALITY CL.EAHINO !rl!t Ing & Removal. Oual. · · 142-71801 567.f150 N9w & AaaoreY. Aemod, dedll & fenoea. AJI gen. Ff99 aet. K~ T,.. ltlln/~ ***HOME REPAIR wtUI a oer'ICNI touch -ABC MOVINO-WOftl Ofltt. 4114-3e18 ..,. .................... C@u1al oarpantry. Llc.-1414et1. home,...,..,. Ffee •t. DRYWALL/~ trrtgatton Jim 111.0129 Elae>-PIUln~ 8E1'H eacM>833 °'** c..NI a.Moe. ........... FNe 9ii. Lici. 1381042, __ - _A119ty __ Bldn ___ r» __ 1_900_ RANbY 641~ Al~ & ....,..,. Tm --Plltlo ~feoo• eaoh•lora, clHnlng •· Uo. na.o.. 542-o4lO,w~!. I I ........ w~!.~:::=8 Wltieu/ .... tl CUSTOM CARPENTRY auo 552-11642 L.Mln-V.-ttw\lb IMtal Aamod. ~ ~72 i.undfY. Aallable, Kann *'"' ...... ..... • a.a...tal W\lloaa' Quallty WOf1I guaranteed Add'M-Oeelgl "-'IOd Al typaa. 20 yra. Lio. a..trita1 TNe trtm/Aamowel GAACIA'8 MAINT . 8'dgJ 540-2'18, bef II, aft 4 e.t que1ity.H yr eiq>. Color/8& · e75-4f11 lnG. , eec. F•t:. F,.. eMlmet• 846-7391 Top quality. L;;# onoe. Palombo M2-1314 Lawn malnt/Aotolllna tnr ~" Clf1)antty, ... Few • 1111* dMl'I houee. ~,..... ....... , ...... ..t..= 7llO-t358 ...... the fkinahlM In" ,.... ... Uc. 83i-234S Cup! ltnitt ELECTRICIAN. Priced ,,.. 8lflrMte ~ plumbing. 487-MS1 call Chrla,~ ,.... uo T-118,421 7»1353 -p· ""ER-PATCHI...... 8' .u•HINE WINDOW right, frH .. umate on ... 1 ... ~ ..,,... , ._ v ..... All'alt I 1etge Of llTlllll )OM. ~LauOacaplng Horne repalt9. 8ml fobl anoaa.""' .,,. ~. 8TARVINO COLLEGE RHtuccot. Int/ext. 30 CL.£\NINO 142·1649 _ ISMmpoo & at.-n c1aen. Uc. 3tee21. 873-0359 Haullng . T,.. Trtm OK, painting, etc. ..... llnlM STUDENT& MOVING rre. Nest. Pu 646-2ln m'f Wll'll John'• WlndoW ci.ning Oftl-.11'/.Pwt.lng Lot Color bright..-., wtlt Fr• eat. 642-tt07 0-V 645-6277 PTl. CO. Uc. T124-431 Tm I ~ Free ..t 12 Y'9 up ... ..a Ille Mtlna crptt • 10 mJn. btMch. UC'O ELECTRtaAH R9lpfl Cabelilr & 8ont Homa ,..,..,.. owpentty =-CH" ~10~ A~ faot °'th le~ ..0.1oet . room tr 60: ooucti •10: Tom t31..W72/t13-75'4 om . ma nt, comm • • -·-.. PlASlDIC ,~ IO 3 ...,_--.,.. --------8&8 Alslf* IS1-411181Je Hell, Iv/din. rma •15: avg Ouel. WOf'll·AaM.,.... c f,t 1 ° / cabinet a electrlca1' Houaa ........., daalfed b)' ""' ""'""' v m'I .-.. ~tit'-:- Dan Halberg Ot9dlng chr ta. Ou~. etlm. pei RESIDICOMM'L/INO. ,.... ,.. tt1mmlrlg & ,. ~~· ~. Don r.:fon~:'m:!; Pala -......., up 2 to a • .. .. LMr 11,1lr• ~~· ":'2~ odor. 0CrP' repelfk · 15 Yl'W11 20 yra. Do my own wont. =::48 =-~;.::0" .. ~, M month• beginning In ,. P111191 1111"' ......_ 'f04I snaant r8'M In the That • oontr.:tora wtio =. 0 wor myH · Uc. 279041. AJ ...._.,H · · · ---· ry-uonry MIY I Wiii owe fot peta ~~hard 81nor. Lie. ....._ ='ca::': ~Mi~ '*1om'I WOttt ~ 1200 hh!lttl!t 5&4-0123 Electr1ciWt· new & NP* I ''N'Ull IAllY. ~~~ and· pay utlUU ... Call . 14 yre of hllCIPY thle?lf n04 & If you would lnoludlng ·tabor and 8ABY8ITTINO CARPET INSTALLATION All typet. Low ptlCM: ~Ala ™-1810 'more. JB 148-"80 87~78 after. pm. IOOlll ouMomf'S. Pl1•NM •• lnlonnetlon Of'I toW matarl•I• mu1t b• II· My eo.a Mete t1afne nt & AEPAIA8. 30 YI"~· Uc'd Ffee ..t 131·2'46 o.darllna WWlted Thanll )'OU, ea-111• ._. ._. M •-f-.nergy, cell Don Inman oanaed. Unllo•ieed coo- Vlctofta M2-8412 146-9031(bet8, alt 4) ~~ Int. ecfgln • rak"i:"°. ws!..,~ ALLI Roofing; law Tu tllLJ11 Hll1IU •wATtlUt~TEr--at tnctora "'°'*' eo .tat• Lowing Gin In my home. IC--t/ Cwrtlt Od ,.._ r.... eat. Uo. ••HP~ ,rH ••tt denlng,' ~1:-nP,:. ,....,.,..., Tu 8ervloe Prompt, neat prof.... Poot.....,..~ (714) .. , ... , :.O."':.-:t:'~ 0.-ontt, 1 '/WI end up. Cement-~ 418448 Wayne 131·7UO "*'8. 7541 ,..._ 8tA1rr 54&-4471 Home/offtoa appCa. loMltllo rataa a.7148 Otalna olHrad from ta. oont8Ct Mary Olorde .. ~na W....cuat. wonc. Uo. ELECTRIC&AN -llTI I._.,. la.U.. 831-41171. INT/EXT. CALL JIM, ....... from 1111 . ....,. hdUl!n (7l4l 56MOll wit! any llllll!I #Slto67 Rob 547-HIS Lie. 233101. 8mal~ Spaolal·oomm/tHld Oew'a: Moat 11~5 cw ... 1111 guar. Ev~ wne I . MA 8Pl1nklaf/lendacape 3:'~.::J~: •-IA.I I-Concr•t•: 1mall or lg• lo«». l'9P9lr'L 541 HO! lnd9cp/ main. t MtV. ta & ==-=Jot. 20% off lalt yw'L Wll --M&M ::~· llo 1282813. Civic Center Plau • .,. ~-•.:...::::=" dal fobt. Aemov• old, r .... ......._, yra. fNtaat.131•7414 Clll MIKE 144r-1se1 tn¥al. 641-49211· -·-"-•-llt...,.fl42-t033 '· 142-eG07 Room 890. Santa Ana. -._., _,. , • pleoe w/naw. ~12 &!:w---....___...,. & C II d A th 26 Y"-UO. 40Sl4l. lne. "'·""'~ "'· ,.. _ _._ .n... ,.,. ,...701 anyttm.. fun for Sec Y For your wedding, the "';~..;,.;--.,.;;;.. HAUL-MOW·AEMOVE Ian 1• di are • bonded. ...... Color•· __,,._to__...._... ,... """' · WI!, 4/~25187s.+t111 u------=I .,;;-• ~t ec:Ol .. loal .._ ... of._ .._I" l"I .... -Fumtture, Tr•, T-1111-r to I 1ucceHlul pert. eta-0911 Nahard ~the fad .,. .... _,,,,.,., ,~ .. _. & ~ _,, -----... ...,.... ·-gar1g1 or y11d .... , It'•• Roll 'em off the market Tie & M.aonry: new & ,. 8elootl Promotlont Una-to 11111 Cl ad9 do ce guitar. H ~~....... __.17 M$-6415 NORM better way to tetl more PllnUng-OC=8 . With a Ol..ifted M Otllt. All typae. Quellty. Claaalfted Ada. yovr one-mn.ct: bright .bouQuetal It wall I Cell NOW. . ave ..,.,,...,,"'11 to -· --.i..1 ..... PL 1• c.11Nowt142-64978 .,,.. .... Uo. 131-2345 ltop lhopplng oanter. a.ne o.y . ....,7550 842-587.1. Seit 1c11e 1tenw M2·&e78 Cl...itl9d ade do 1t ..... Cluslflad ad. 142-5878 ............ •• HOIOSCOPI BY SIDNEY OMARA WedJletday, April n ARIES (March 21-April 19): What a~ to be a eett.ck will rebound in your favor. Dig deep for information, dilplay meme of responaibility, deal with dedicated indMduala. Money que9tion will be reeolved and you'll be beneficiary. Capricorn plays key role. - TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Remain with project until it ii completed. Contractual oblil•tiona should be taken .erlously. Someone feela he waa alighted or imulted by you -th<JR feeliJl811 are probably without foundation. N~em. keep guard up against pcmible retaliation. GEMINl (May 21-June 20): Check detaila, look beyond the Im mediate, open line• of communication. You'll make valuable, new contact. You'll receive aid ln connection with a pioneert.na project. Member of opposite aex helps you get to heart of mauen. • CANCER (June 2l·July 22): Good lunar aspect highlight» warm relationahip, •peculation, children, aocial activity uid travel &rT&ngementa. Follow through on tint tmpremons. One who taught you in put la ap1n available for comu.ltation. Another Cancer plays key role. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Benefica acc:nJe from paat efforta. You'll have greater freedom of thought, action -now is time to diversify. You'll be dealing with active, energetic, controversial individuals who want you to aucceed. Prepare wrl~ report. VIRGO (Aug. 23-~t. 22): It may be neoesaary to rebuild on a more 90lid bue. ~hort trip involve. relative, ideas and confirmation of travel plane. Leo. Aquarius and another Virgo figure prominently. Suggestiona submitted to superior approximately one month ago will bear fruit. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Additional lnformation enable• you to move ahead with confidence. Focua on finances. added income, ability to wark with material at band. Member of opposite ~~ key role, provides lnaplration. Virgo la ln SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Take initiative in maJc:lng dm:nestk adjustment. Focua on beautifytna llWTOWMiinp. remodeling and gatUtt ol condlation where family member la corw:emed. Cycle rema1na bJgh, drcwmtancee will favor your efforts. Tawua plays key role. SAGl1TARJUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Be discreet 1n ooanection with aec:ret that is revealed by cla.e aaoclace. Faa. on •pedal groups. iNtitutions and a Poaible hospital vialt. Answers will be found behind eoenes -you'll be provided with ~ material. CAPllICORN (Dec. 22...Jan. 19): You'll have more r9p0Dldbtllty, chance for lncreued income, opportunity for major promotion. Individual vou relied upon tnj)Ul will reguest fpecial favor. Focua on frimdl, hopes, wt.his ancf profitable career maneuver. AQUARl1JS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): You'll finiah project that recently wu nealected or delayed. Performance ratin1 la hlab -poadble oommmdaUan la OD \be W~. Ke)' DOW la to ecoept reaponalbillty and to rulli.e that member of oppollte .s II eertcM. Pl8CZI (l'eb. l~Mar. 20): Be r.dy for new •tart. fl'fth coocepu" and chance to teat your ab611 .... Laac ~ cammunlcaUon ,.... .. In ~ u,tlt ... pit ~ • diNct, iodependmt. ~. lnnavallw. ' •part lime •Must be at least 16 •No experience nec:essary •Pieaaant peraonallty •Reliable •Good earning potential 142·1111, Ext. 312, 1ft. 1:10 TIL-l-CIRC HAS IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR PART· TIME PERSONS IN TELEPHONE SALES DEPARTMENT OF LAROE ORANGE COAST NEWSPAPER •Evenings and Saturday mornln~ • Commlaalon/Guarantee •Must be ambitious, pleasant and reliable •Experience helpful, but wtlllng to train *This Is not temporary SIM llll llWrle'• Poodlaa $260 & 14>. T • cup, toy' mr.i.-ture 948-2848 AKC l o1ton Terrle ra, male, 12 ..... $250 754-1033, M pm Al<C 0o0aa. 8 wkt, champ aired. $200. 951-lNI Pit lkAI puwy. lhott. no papert. S50. 642-3882 ' TODA Y'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ~ ACROSS 1 Ending for mod or pop ~ Attire 9 Junior 14 Bread 15 Alway• 16 Soap p1an1 17 Support 18 Jacob's son 19 Wash hgl'ltly 20 Terminated 22 Aakod tor 24_ Staggered .l6 1ns1rumen1s 27 Deposited 29 Poetic contract1on 30 Wheel par1 33 Delays 37 Venture 38 Lehrs 39 Kitchen item 40 Wild party • 1 Spleen 42 Steeds ot 010 44 Le11er 45 Resin 46 OK 47 Integument 49 Wealthier 2 3 '3 Dividing S 7 Pur lolrlftd 68 Ottc:olored 59 Auditory 61 Vocal &2 Cnoice 63 Olrt's nam• 64 Polyn chestnut 6S Tree 66 Hurry away 87 Weaver's reed DOWN 1 Superior 2 Mr Greene 3 Pos111w pol• 4 Hateful S Jelhly 6 Provt! 7 Have tun 8 H•bach1 tut>I 9 Lurch 10 Wrong t 1 Desist' 12 instead 13 -olf Mao 21 Loved ones 23 Ameronos 25 Poorly 11t 28 Portrayals NONDAV'I PUULI IOLYID I! s "u S I! N "0 T 30 Al'I Andersen 3 t Propel 32 Insects 33 Vault 34 Wrong '.!S Toppled 36 Eur nation 37 l\Ao111e VIPs 40 Mr Karloff 42 Go hungry J3 Ben - 45 Oemagog 47 Corny 48 Trtcll 50 01 hours 51 Gladden 52 Kino ot race 53 Entreat~ 54 Brook 55 Art OI Lo"e author 56 Actress Lotlobrig•da 60 House pet 7 8 9 10 11 12 ' II • .,.., ,... Ptlel• itr CtMrtoo lten Work he11in1 on muhi-million dollar hotel complex on 1 7 acres along ocean in La"'1na Niguel. Huge hotel building on Niguel coast By STEVE MITCHELL ortt1e.,._,,......., lt'1 called Monarch ln Lquna Be.ch, and when it'• cornpfeted next year at thil time, the re.ort hotel will boe9' nearly 400 room1 on 17 acre1 overlooki1na the oee&n tn Lquna Niauel. The tour-1tory, multi-rnilllon dollar complex will al.lo feature two reatauranta, 19,000 aquare feet of meetlJl8, conference and banquet apace, a 1ix-1tore 1hoppina arcade, tour tennis courtl, parking for 800 vtalton, and four cocktail louraaee. Conatructlon of {he hotel began on the blutt. above Salt Creek Beach Park about 1lx weeka aao. aay. WWJ.am A. Hall. aenerat manqer for the luxury project. 'I'he blutftop parcel wa• pur c ha1ed from Avco Community Developers by W. B. Johnaon, an Atlanta company with llx hot.ei. CUrTently under construction ln tour states. Hall uid Johnaon alto operatAlll <See NIGUEL, Pa1e A!) THI DRANGI COASl COAST I DITIDN TUESDAY. APRIL 26. 1983 ORANGECOUNTY. CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS Newport takes· flak on airport stand By STEVE MARBLE OflMDelJ ......... The Newport Beach City Council, which has 1pent more than $1 million fighting Jo.hn Wayne Airport expansion, found itself confronted last night with charges it haa eold out to airport interest& One ~ .homeowner called council members "gutless wonders" while another Union hit -in ail-line failure By· STEVE MARBLE or.,. Deir,......., The president of Golden West Airlines sharply criticiz.ed union leaders yesterday in explaining how the state's largest commuter carrier went broke. "They refused to believe we were in trouble," said airline President John Harper, who uaed words like "obstinate" and "unreall1tlc" to describe the union re~ting many of the company a 388 wor~ Union officials, however, blamed corporate mis - management for the air carrier'• financial collapee. Golden West, which haa teetered on the brink of f1nandal ruin for a year, halted serVtce late Friday, fired most of ita employees and filed for protection from crediton under (See GOLDEN, Pqe A%) suggested the city has "shot itself in the foot." There were two other airport developments: -Legialation to bar airport neighbon from taking noile suits to small claims court, where lawyers aren't needed, was approved by an Aaaembly committee. The bill now comes to a full Assembly vote. The bi1J · was proposed by Assemblyman Richard Robinson, D-Santa Ana. -A federal judge upheld the county's right to phase out airlines using noiay jets at John Wayne Airport. The phase-out was fought by Continental. Texas International and American Weat airlines. The ruling w~ made by U.S. DI.strict Judge Terry Hatter Jr. in Loa ~nwhile, the_ Newport Beach uproar centered on how many daily jet departures out of John Wayne Airport the city is willing to agree to. Up to now, the city has held firm at the current airport level of 41 daily flights. In recent weeks, though, the city has told the county -the operator of the airport -that it is wi.lling to accept 55 flights in exchange for setting that number as the pennanent llmit. Thi.s, together with a pending Orange County League of Cities resolution ~rging a maximum number of flights up to 55, waa enough to bring out dozens of upeet residents. ''Thia la a direct violation Qf city policy, a radical departure," insisted homeowner Clarence Turner. He said by agreeing to consider 55 flighta the city is They'll chalk ii up to experience Kerryn Gilbert left a restaurant job for the glamour of working for an airline. But Golden West Airlinee -the carrier she went to work for just three weeka ago-ottered little glamour and, as it turned out, no pay. The young n!!9ervationa clerk lost her job Friday when the airline went belly up. She now must stand in line behind other crediton to collect her pay. "The whole thing wu right out of the blue," she said yesterday. Gilbert said she agreed to work over the weekend helping stranded pasaengen on the condition that she at least be paid for that. By midday, though, ahe still didn't have a check. "I got 101De good training. That'• about it," she added. For Lauri Picket, her position on the Golden West reservations counter at John Wayne Airport was her first job since Thanksgiving. "It seemed like the perfect job," she said. "But here I am, out of work again." Employees of the failed airline milled around the firm's rented Costa Mesa offices yesterday while company president John Harper publicly rang the carrter'a death knell Some were critic.al of management and othen critical of union leaden repreeenting some of the worken. But all were out of work. Pilot Alan Dredge, a 15-year Golden West employee, said he was bitter and charged "mismanagement" led to the flnn's (See EMPLOYEE, Page A!) "giving in" to county superviaon. "I think we should go to the mat on th.la issue," he added. "We should fight every inch of the way, bite them lf they need a permit to cut the graaa." Corona del Mar resident Rich Plastino charged the city Ls being "o utman euvered and outnegotiated" by the county. "The supervisors are like a (See FLIGHTS, Page A%) Mesa records fewer fires The number of fires in Costa Mesa dropped 26 percent last year to 534 -the lowest figure since 1976, according to fire offidala. Total fire damage In 1982 was $726,800, down 62 percent, according to a recently released annual report. . Of the 151 structure fires last year, 22 were related to anon; 31 to careless smoking; seven to children playing; seven t'o build.Ing deficiency; nine Jo combustibles near heat; eight to faulty wiring , ana 67 miacellaneous. Firefighters received 4,626 calla: 3,221 for medical assistance; 534 for fires; 272 for hazardous ons; 186 for good intent; service calla; 171 for false 58 for other alarms, Officials credited the drop to an Increase ln public education and Inspection of businesses. Patterson asks more flood control aid Passersby help foil heist Laguna Beach shopkeepers chase suspect, loot recovered By STEVE MITCHELL Of°IM Delly ......... suspect BOuth on Glenneyre to an alley behind the library. BY JEFF ADLER or .. Deir ........ Rep. JfflTY Pattenon, D-Santa Ana, ia hoping he can aave Orange County taxpayera ...-where between $120 million aQd $140 million In construction 4'0918 l.or the propoeed Santa Ana iu. Flood Control Project. Pattenon called on the federal pernment yesterday to aaume a 1reater share of the conatructlon cOlta for the $1.2 billion project now being considered in bot!\ bou1e1 of Oanpe-. The congreaaman said he believes the federal government should pay the full coat of increaaina the heiaht of Prado Dam In Rivendde County by 30 feet becau.e the Army Corps o~ • Engtneen knew the dam was inadequate in 1943, two years alter construction WM completed. "There al80 WU a aut.equent failure by the Army Corps of Engineen to live notice ot the Inadequate flood protection to local 1ovemmenta and private pU'tles until 1970,'' he charpd. (See FLOOD, Pqe A!) Rep. Jerry Patterson seeks U.S. flood aid Everyone, lt seems. wanted to get In on the act during a co.» and robben pursuit th.rough the streets of Laguna Beach last nighL Pollce credit the persistence of aeveral p&Menby for the arrest of Walter K . Fairfield. 22, of Hacienda Heights, who wu In Orange County Jail today on 1uapidon of robbery and ... uit with a deadly weapon. Laguna Sgt. Fred Martino uid the drama began 1hortly after 5 p.m . when Fairfield allegedly ~abbed up a half dozen watches, valued at '34,370, from the count.er at Haye. Jewelry, 246 Forest Ave. Sbopkeepen Thomaa and Harriet Hayes and another employee gave chue, followinl the Mit.cbell Robert Valencia, a Laguna Beach resident, '!'I.! _1tanding in front of the All American~ Co. on Laguna Avenue when Fairfield ran put him, police said. Harriet Hayes yelled at Valencia to stop the fleelna suspect, and V alenda joined in the chase, catcbtng up with Fairfield after the pair croaied South CoUt Hiahway. accordiDa to authorities. "Valencia grabbed him (t'"airfleld) by the shoulder, and Fairfield turned and pointed a gun at him and told him to 'get back','' Martino said. About that time, Lagunan Brooka Hamon witneaed the punult, and he too joined the ch.ue. Hamon cornered the IUlpect OD El Paaeo (See ROBBERY, Pase Al) ---·INSIDE------------------------.. Bad deals Cqmic war Teen·aae 1uperheroe1 wage war on clrup in a aew comic book-'put out j,y ahe White Houe to curb drut abate la ....-de · ICllOQa. P• AS. I Columnist Sydney . Harrie AJI re.erse • dAlerhnlaatloa la , • .._~,in tlae lehoa..tie world, when boy woaden are'""'* upon. ~A6. "I • Orang• Oout OAILV PILOT 1Tue1day, Aprll 28, 1983 All quiet on eastern front?' Soviet cientist says new Kremlin chief to move lowly By GLENN SCOTT °' .. .,...,... ..... Zhorte Medvtdev, a IClftltlat who left tht Soviet Union a decade qo, predicted y•t.erday durlna a special lecture at UC lrvlne that no major Soviet poUcy changes will occur in the next few yean. The white-haired, ~7-year-old scientilt Mid Soviet Chief Yuri Andropov will need several yean to build up a bale of support amona the political machinery he lnhMlted to make significant ctt.ngee. liut when that time comes, Medvedev belleve1 the new Communiat Party chairman will make 1weeplna changes to oust the aglng cronle1 of the late Leonld Brezhnev In favor of younger, more technoloatcally oriented llldmlnistrators. The new technocratl, a1 Medvedev called them, 1hould realize the Soviet Uruon needs more "democr111tization'' and scientlqc collaboration wlth outlidena to help creat.e lndualri&l and econom1c reform, he M.ld. "When more technocrat.a 1et. ln, they'll probably cauH a ahlft" ho Mid. "ln the next oaw or two yeara, I anticlp11t.e few chani• until (Andropov) p1na more lnnuence. '' Medvedev waa 1p .. kln11 at UCI u part of hla dutiet u a p1e11Ugioua Regent.a' Lecturer in the UC 1yatem. He demonetrat.ed tome of the intellectual d.J.9Clpllne Ru.lana are oft.en cited for. During hia 90-minute speech, M@dvedev stood stitfiy behind a table, never ctianglnc J)08illon, as he addreeaed about 10<> people in 111 lecture hall. He gmtured with his left h111nd and occulonally reach@d down to rest some of his weight on the table wlth his right arm. Otherwise, he remained still, concentralifl8 on his views on the succesaion of Soviet leaders. Medvedev never chanaed hia tone, although he dryly lrulert.ed a few h~morous thoughts. Fo~ ~\ .,,, Continued stories GOLDEN ... federal bankruptcy laws. Harper, who ha.a reaign@d, said it is doubtful the firm will be able to reorganize. He painted a picture of a company ao heavily in debt it is doubtful anyone would wish to pick up the pieces. He said the air.lme nu been unable to pay workers and recently 90ld its Newport Beach headquarters -alre111dy mortaaaed heavily -to get Its hands on aome cash. Golden West had been asking employees, Including pilot.a, to take a 15 percent wage cut to keep the carrier In the air. Employees agreed to a pay cut of 10 percent last year. Harper said he volunteered to OJ?en compan y books to the Airline Pilots Association and mechanics. flight attendants and others. He aaid neither group took up the offer. John H a r per assails airline un ions •x•mp••· h• conua1t•a l aderahlp 1t~1" of Andropov, the former KOB chl9t, wlth the 100Jabl• Breahnev, who Medvedev M4:I Wied a "cult of ptrtOMllty" to hold poW91'. "Flrlt of all," h• commented, "th KOB head lan't the type of man vou want t.o m'.ake friend.I wlth.'t Medvedev uld Khru1hchev could have remalned in power longer It he hadn't puahed tor IO many reforms, lncludina political one1. He 1uggea\ed Brnhnev'a era wu characterized by a rellaqce on bureaucrat• and stability ln political machinery. Medvedev1 twin brother of former dl.Niaent hlatorian Roy Medvedev, Uvet ln exile ln London. Zhores Med vedev eyes Soviet future Cop stops to help, arre·sts theft suspects Imagine a couple of suspected c rooks trying to make their getaw111y on a motorcycle packed wlth frozen meat. They argue, pull off the side of the road and an officer comes along to see if he can help. That was the aoene yesterday when Costa Mesa police officer Frank Rudialll spotted two men near a ouwned motorcycle along Bristol Street and Newport Boulevard at 111bout 4:45 a .m. The motorcycle was bulging with $800 worth of meat, FLIGHTS. • • From Page A1 bunch of bullies," voiced homeowner Tom Willi111ms. "They'll push you aroWld until you suck up your guta and punch them where it hurt.a." Council members responded that they 111re not selling ou· but attempting to explcre a pennanent aolution to the airport problem. Councilman Don Strauss said that ultimately the county can do whatever it wants at the airport and that it is ln the city's interest to secure a legal agreement that would forever limit fl.lghta. wa.itera' jackets and liquor, police said. The11e ltema turned out to be miBSing from a nearby French restaurant under construction, authorities said. Frank De Troy, 18, of Perris, and Wayne Sanchez, 20, a transient, were arrested on suspicion of commercial burglary. A bottle of $30 brandy waa the only item not recovered, police aaid. Civilian copters barred in HB; police use OK'd By ROBERT BARUR OftMDelfr ........ Plana to open the city t o clvlllan helicopter operation• were shot down yetterday by Hun~n Beach offidala. City council members aueed that 111 new heliport shoufd be buJlt. But they want It to be u.ed exclusively for police helicopter fUghta. They Hld a plan by City Admlniluator Charles ThomP90n to 1hare the heliport with executive and co rpo rate helkopt.ena, thereby making the clty eligible for 111 large federal grant, ls unacceptable. "l can't understand why you are doing this," Councilman John Thomas said to Thompson at one point. "There's no way not to have noise over the neighborhoods. We shouldn't harass the people." ''You don't know what the FAA (Federal Aviation Administration) is going to make you do lf you take their money," Thomas said. The city paid $1.2 million for nearly five acres near Gothard Street and Ellis Avenue for a heliport. Thompson said the city could aet u mucb .. f 1.7 million in fedinl cranw for acqulsitlon and devel o p ment cosu by opentna the t.dllty to joint wie. Comultant Robert Cralle Mid about 60 dally dvi.JJan rui}lw had been projected. "Other cities are flfhtlng airport exp111n1lon,' s111id Councllwoman Ruth Bailey. ''We 111lready h111ve one general aviation airport (Meadowlark). To add 111nother would be uueNiUve to the people." Newport ups wate r r ates Ci lng rising costs, the Newport Beach City Council unanimously agreed to increue city water rates last night for the aeoond straight year. For the average homeowner, • the hike will mean an extra $2.38 a month, bringing the typical water bill up to $15.69 a month. Water bW. ln Newport Beach are malled out every other month. The city buy• all its water from the Metropolitan Water District. Pilots, however, blamed miam111nagement for the company's problems and lnsiated they were bareainlng in good faith with Golden West when a profit since last year. The carrier's fleet of prop and stat.e- of-the-art turbo prop planes have been secured in Loe Angeles and Monterey. Council members abo noted that supervison agreed to consider up to 73 daily takeoffs, thus throwing water on any deal with the,dty. Crash kills scoote r rider .. -businea halted last Friday. "U you can't keep your airline flying, [ don't know what you c.:an call it except mismanagement,'' suggested pilot Jerry Puglisi. Harper said the J.aat company dollara were literally poured ln the planes to refuel them for final n.IJU last Friday. In better days, Golden West was a leader in the short-hop c ommuter busines1 and purcbued five $6 million, 50-aeat turbo prop planes. The planes, bought at a floating interest r111te, slowly drained company finances, however. The coundl finally agreed tO postpone vot.Ina on the re90lution that triggered the ruckus. NIGUEL ... From Page A1 T r a ffic o fficer K . C. Gleason investigates the scene of a fatal collision between a ipotor scoot er ridden by J effrey Martin Brotemar kle, 19, of Santa Ana and a car driven by Mich ael Ch a rles Galloway, 25, of Costa Mesa. Brotemarkle died two hours a fter the crash at Adams Avenue and Royal Palm Drive. According to Hlllrper, Golden West h.u liabilities ln ex.cetB of $56 million and has not posted , E_MPLOYEE REACTION. • • financial plight. He claimed the company tried to bl111me employees for lt.a own erron. Dredge said he'• now one of 5,000 out-of-work pilots in the country. Work. heUid, will be tough to find. ''The whol~ thlna'• a shame," said pilot Jerry Puglisi. "Thia ill the finest bunch of people rve ever worked with. Not for, but with." Golden West employed about 400 people. Ruth Lewi.I, a non-unlon employee working in Golden West's audit eectian. blamed the union for eome of the problems. "The union ended up controlling our jobs. We had no voice at all," she Mid. Like others, Lewi• was unsure about her future and uncertain when the next job might come along. eight Marriott Hotel franch.i8es, 16 Holiday Inns, and a 68-store Waffle House chain ln the South. The general m111nager said Monareh on Llllguna Beach ''will be a luxury deluxe re90rt hotel -the first complete reeort hotel on the West Coaat in 3~ yean." ln addl tion to tennb courta, swlmmlng poola, fltneea centent. and Jacuuia, Hall said viaitors will have uee of a aemi-private 18-hole golf courae to be construcied 111djacent to the hotel for future resident.a of Laguna Niguel. Hall said the public will have acceaa to a coastal blufftop pathway leading to the beach, as well as the shops, lounges and restaurants . FLOOD ... From Page A1 Patterson said this "stattllng set of facts," which he characteriz.ed as a "goof," came about when the corps changed the benchmark by which a1onns and floods were measured in 1943. Prado Dam waa built to Htlsfy the old standard, but would not be sufficient to bold back the waten a storm of the new standard might generate. ROBBERY SUSPECT CHASED DOWN ... ''Because of thi1 set of circumatances, we should have the cost formula determined on 100 percent of raising Pr111do Darn," he said during a news con.lerence ln Santa Ana. Pattenon said he hu written a letter to the chairman of the Hou.e committee considering the bill. He asks the feden I aovemment plck up the entire con of ralalng the dam while downstreatn lmprovement.a be funded under the 6~ percent federal and 3~ percent local formula ori&inallY ~ Street near the Hotel Laguna. and Fairfield allegedly leveled his gun at his punuer, aa~ he'd kill him lf he oontinu@d the chue, police aaid. .L-.. -L Fairfield ran into the Hotel Lagw\a ~ a aide door, and Hanson spotted him u ~e emerged from the front door of the hotel, police said. Hamon then grabbed a red bag from the swapect, which allegedly contain@d both the snub-nosed .38 revolver and the watches, according to officers. Fairfield ran back into the hotel where he was confronted by several employees, police said. "He ju.at 1at down on a bench and waited for officers to arrive," Marti.no said. "I gue. he'd had enough.'' Fairfield wu beinl held on $100,000 bail. II. -cl'il wllll • tom wino -lakM b'I' ~~ More en1111el control olllc:e" lo the Leovne ~ "*'-,-.rday ·Newporl Beach v~ • .....-.a,1n •am• 10 • ... 11 f ll ·-,..,..., pourtflO ...... .............. n.--..-.. ... .... -'*Ill........, 0.... OrM. ~ -·Cll9~ ebOoll loud l!IUllC .. -Loe end~ Street prol'llpled pollc:e 10 order Ille ~ of • ho<IM 10 tum down the """*- CoSta Mesa A t 4·Y••r-old wo111an It In Orlllcal OONllllOft M ~ Vf!/lltl'I HolplWI n ..___,._ NllOl'led In ...... ~ ........ ~ oollleloll .. ~ ~ ... Ftlfr Dltftln c.e ..... ..,, w.--. .;:a_=.:.·· Of 0#9en OrM .. "' u.41~=~ ...... ~ .... Meclloll ~ -• .,,,, n. ,, .....,, i.:l. ....... ,. eo.ia .............. ..... ~ ..... ... ""-'-"" • •11140'W ,,_ ttMI ...... Ulh0fl~1'0 ............... ............. ,...,... ..... Irvine ....... .,,.... ......... ~. . .._.. __ ._i':S EE~--... .... -::= S£.:...i-J:r.L.-='= ""'** 11 Anclhor999 54 ~ 92 t\tlenta 17 Coastal All8ntlc ()ty M ~ IO ~ 111 Today•e W9trn« end IUllftler u wwtn.r "'°'*9 p.a ..., to IM 11 -Old --tOf!IOM, """ .,.. n lnoreeeln.f.. ohe noe ol ra in ... 54 tomorrow. H4lltONll ...,_ ec.Oft S7 llarvlo• •• ,. ~aratur•• .. _.,,.. la .,.,,,.t ~ 90 out Of IN ..,,,. ... IOt tomoffO• tM OOOler £.., 4S watther ehoulc:.:J:I" 41rop IO mounttln "'" to toOO • .... ....,,~., ........ ~ '° Ofetorme. ... Ille••• ,.. '*:'I:•• to =~· • ...................... 11 -~ M et ooettel .. late: OindlwlMI • '°""' '° ............ 1t to ~ .. n ... .,... ION9flt. lout'*1y..,. CollurftlMe, IO = 1t to ao knott .,_,ow, ... • ~ to tO,... o..AWontl = = Extended " °" Mollllt n = II forecast .,.. v.-.~ , ..... ~:::r. ... g ~-=r-:. ... ~ .... Temper•lulft =::.... Di • rain Official faces trial in loan conspiracy Westminster City Councilman Gil Hodges and four other Orange County residents are schedul@d to stand trial June 21 on federal cllarg8 of conspiring to me falae loan applications in the purch.ue of seven homes in Huntington Beach. Hodge• and the other defendants entered innocent pleas at an arraignment yesterday In U.S . Dl.strict Court ln Loe Angeles. Meanwblle. it was announced today that charges will not be pressed against Hodges u the result of a 1eparate Orange County investigation. Evidence pthered ln a probe of Hodge'~ residency and alleged misuse of city funds Is in.suf!icient to 8\.lpport criminal chuges, aaid Oranee County Deputy District Attorney Wally Wade. Wade said the inquiry showed th111t Hodges may have lived in Huntington Beach temporarily. But there's no evidence he pl111nned to live there permanently, Wade said. {Hod~es mu1t reside in Westminster ln order to 11erve on the We.tminater Qty Council.) W111de alao said investigators failed to prove that Hodges collected money for tripe that he allegedly didn't take. Hodf'es, 39, is accused in federa court. of agreeing to verify falae Information on 111pplications for bank loans. The others also were charged with a total of seven counts or providins false information to federally insured lending lnati tu lions. They were indicted by 111 federal grand jury two weeks F4ll.after an investigation by the A4 * Or1nge Cout DAILY PILOT /TuMday, Aptll ae. 1883 Good to the last drop Students in teacher Carrie Slayback's fourth grade class at Masuda School in Fountain Valley admire a model water treatment plant they constructed as part of their study of the city's water system. From left are Oscar Fabela, Hugo Ramos, Ryan Crucki, Steve Alderton, Mark Rosene and Julie Whitney. Dole vows war on WASHINGTON (AP) - Elhabetb Dole, the new transportation~. saya She wanu to become peraonally involved in a campaign to cut the number or-traffic death• and vows to "pull out all the stopa" to combat drunk.en driving. In an interl-iew in her otfl.ce, ahe alao proml.aed "to take a hard look" at the government's entire auto safety program, which has been under attack in Congress from auto safety advocatea. But Dole, who came to the department 2 ~ months ago, would not disavow put auto polldee and indicated that for the time being, the Reagan admlniatration'a emphalis would remain on convincing motorlata to W1e their seat belts and pushing for 1tronger action.a by states against drunk.en driven. Dole aaid one of her conoema la the relllC'\anee of most motoria1a to uae aeatbelta and she made clear she supporta air bag1 in cars. But she stopped 1hort of suggesting the federal government should require air bags or seat belts which automatically wrap around the pusenger. She said, however, "we're going to move in all directions to try to provide market incentives" to get automakers to offer air bags. Noting the government plans to purchase 5,000 cars equipped with air bags for ita general fleet, she said she will try to persuade the Defense Department and local and state govemrnenta to do likewise. Dole also suggested that some form of tax Incentive promoting air ~ is "an interesting idea" and • something ... worth drunken driving Elizabeth Dole exploring" with the Senate Finance Committee, of which her husband Robert is chairman. The discussion came a day after President Reagan's top highway safety official announced his resignation and pnceded today's Supreme Court he1trlng of arguments on whether the administration was correct in scrapping a rule that would have required passive seat belta or air bags in new can. Dole, who gained a reputation while at the Federal Trade Commission as a consumer advocate, called the 1966 law that governs motor vehicle safety standards "probably the moat Important piece of consumer legislation that haa ever been pasaed in Congress." But the Reagan administration has been accuaed of ignoring that law by rolling back a number of auto saf~ty standards in the past two years. Parents, teens discussion set How parents and ieenaaen can talk about eex will be dl.8cw9ed in a workahop at 6:SO p.m. tomorrow at c.c.ia M.a'a Flnt United Method.lat Church, 420 W. 19th St. The seminar that wlll meet aaaln May 4=• bein aponaored by Coalition Concerned with Adole9cmt and Planned Parenthood of Or~e County. Colt la 10 per family. For more information call 972-48~9. • The Newport Harbor Exch.anp Club hAa donated •1. 500 to Aaesament and Treatment S4'rvtoee Center, a Sanla Ana non-profit organization that provides coun.aellna for children with family or achool problems. The Exchange Club, a bualneumen'a group, support. youth-oriented programs. •Long-time Lagunan Harry Lawrence haa been honored by the chamber of commerce for h1a quarter century of .ervice with the organization. Lawrence, who owns Warren Imports lnterlora on South Coast Highway, has served aa president, director and a member of several committees over the put 2~ yean on the chamber. • The public Is invited to a free talent lhow at 7 o'clock tonight at C.O.ta Mesa's Paularlno Elementary School, 1060 Paularlno Ave. The show staged by atudenta includes a magic demonstration. •The public ia invited to attend ea.ta Me.a High School's open house tonight from 7 to 9 on the campus. Students involved in dra.ina, band and gymnutica will be performing during the annual event. •The High Hopes Neurological Recovery Group will sponsor a skate-a-thon tomorrow at Skating Plua in ltv1ne Recreational Park on Mlchet.on Drive. Community service groupa, high .choola and chW"Chee are scheduled to compete in the event, which begi.na at 5:4~ p.m. Participanta can skate for free; akatee will be provided. Pledges 10lidted by the akaten will go toward P'OfP'am9 to aid young adults with head injuries. More information about the event is available by calling the High Hopee office a\ 646-7458. • Registration for youngJten en~ kindef'gar1en next fall at Cufverdale Elementary School in Irvine wUf take place Thunday from 3 to 5 p.m. at the achool. Parents a1ao can· register their children Friday mom1ng from 9 to 11 a.m. --· .... SHUmRS CUSTOM QUAUTY SHUTTERS Designed, Finished ~ Installed - I 'lbeai'n · h money market futerest just check with I 30 Years Experience Manufacturing Quality Shutters flNEST QUALITY SHUTTERS AVAILABLE ON THE MARKET TODAY ... 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Wrour t«ounl at WloWl1 ' .. 1 :7'~~T1 MAaB. I LIHNll ~ MAGIC OI AIWAL PAIHTINQ UI DITICTO.- YOU AIKID l'o.. IT -1:00-• ()) ~ L.EOHAAOO-A JOURHiY OIMMIHD ·~A-ffAM ••• "Soutll Pleille" (Pill 2) I ma1 Mlllt Oaynot, Rouano 81wt ·~DAYS t •'A "Thty Camt To Cold1Ka" 16~ Cooc>er, Rll1 Hayworth P.M.MAGAZJHE MOVIE * * '°' "l .. Vegu Ledy" ( 1976)'Sll4- 11 Stt\'tlll, Stllll1 Whllmen fD NOVA ~)~ • • • Amber Wives I 19801 Oennit WNvtt, Kurt Ruuell H PHILIP MARLOW£: PRIVATE EYE SI CHER: A Cfl.EBRA TlOH AT CA£SAAS QMOVIE t *'' Ht"1 Bell 11980) N~~ Nolle S111y Scec:ek -1:30- G ~ l.AVVIHE & SHIRLEY CHARLIE'S ANOELS G)UEDUECTOA lQ)MOVll! * * * "Siii Trek II The Wr11h Ot Kllln" ( 19321 Wlllllm Snainef. RlCat- do Montllbtfl -t.00-IJ (J) MOVIE • • •.; "KMljoy" (198 lJ Kim Basloget. Robert Culp B 8 REMIHQf~ 8Tt£l£ QJJ THREE'S COMPANY G)M'A'8'H 811 AMERICAH PU YHOUSE di) NOVA Oil MOVIE •••·~"The Four Seuons" (1981) Alen Aide, Carol Burne\t CSHMME • • • The Secret Pol1cem111's Ollllt Bell 119811 JO!w1 CIMM. Grlllllm Chapm*1 2 MOVIE • • Spoiled Children 119771 Mien.I PICCOlt Cht1Stine Pascal ..a -9:30-~ ~~05 t t t •; A R11$jt! In The Sun I 196 I) 5'dney Pomer Clludia McNeil G)M'A'S'H -10:00- 1 CJ! HBC YMTE PAPER GGJm>ltEWS G 9 HART TO HAA'T -~ (C)MOW u •;, "Doctor Al See" (1956) M Boglrde. Bngltte Bit dot Frank Langella stan in "I, Leonardo: A Journey of the Mind," a chronicle of Leonardo da Vinci's search for knowledge, tonight at 8 on CBS, Channel 2. P. ~ Dell (No Otltl LOI.Ill Jouldan -10-a-., llCV6IOIH'T NITWOflK Nlwt • llWMAll IO'tl" A NIW 't'OMAlmlT ~THl~OM J N!W DAY IN EDlM 'IOTOI~ -tt:OO-l e&a~=NfWI INllAACHOI .. THI JUfllMOH8 MA11Y HAATMAH. MAllY ~ I =-~ TOOOLUI I ~ FOfl LAUGHS: THREE YOUNG COMICS IOIMOVIE • • "Country Comton • {1981) O.CW· Qllll Spelvln. Rhonda Jo Petty < Sl LOVIHO FMHOS AHO PEAFtCT COUPl£8 1ZIMOV1E • * 'Tilt S'trtOrO Alld The Solcert1 I 1982) l" Horsley, KatlllNn Belter -11:30-l)iOUIHCY I 9 ~ NIOHTUNE I YOU ASKED f()A IT .., flM)VI£ ttt11 Pal ~ 11957) Frank Slnltra Rita Heyworth Cl> SANfOflO AHO SON fD PERSONAL FINANCE S A NEW DAY~ EDEN -11.40- C MOVIE • • ConfessiOllS From A Holiday * • t ~ ' Atllll\IC City ' UMOI lutt LW&alef lllMll lltendon -1HO-~ NIGHT WfTMOAVIO ' =V'OLOll LOYI. AMlNCAH ITYU MOYm H "lM Al F1tt18i(jlll (1t171 Datt AY'rOyd M11y Anne McOonlid \ -11:40-IJ ll ) MCMlll.AH. Wlfl -1;00-9 MOVll I * * t "O~lly Or IMOClllt Tilt ~ S11t991rd Murdlf C&N" ( 1975) ;o'~'ll*d. WUllam WlndOm t t t "Tn, Steret lite Of An Amttl· ctn Wiit" ( 1968) Wtlttf Matthlu, Anllt Jtcborl (!)MOVIE • "BHuty Alld Tile Bandit" ( 1949) G~· ber1 ROiand, R1tn1ty ArnM Cl» MOVIE t t •.; "Tile BICillelor PW1y" 11957) DOil Muu rt. E 0 M11ahlll ®' EHTERTAIHMENT TONIGHT Z MOVIE t • • 1\ Allant~ City· ( 19801 Bun laneester Su111n Satl/IOotl -1:10- C MOVIE • • • Silent 1.AoV!t 11976) Mii Brooks Miity Feldmen -1:30-CJ <B H8C NEWS OV£.RHIGHT .., TOM comE: UP CLOSE -1:40- S MOVIE t * • '> Mej)h1110 11981) Klaus M1t1a Brl/ldauet Krys1y111 Jenda -1:45-Came>" I 1977) ROOM AsllW1th g MOVIE -12:00-t t ''I "Heart Beef' ( 1980) Nlcil B ENTERTAINMENT TOHIGHT Nolt•. Slsty SplCA!ll t • ~1 01 Tile Laughing Dead" f) <I) C8S N'JT.OOHlWATCH ( 1975) Ray MIHlllld, Frankie H~d ID NEWS Cf) INOEPEHOEHT NElW~ 1 H MOVIE NEWS «I)~~ AMERICAN STYl£ * "EvllS911k" (19811 Cllnl Howard. (ff)""'""' R G Armstrong. ••••.;"Absence Of Mab ' (1981) lOl MOVIE • t •.; "Sunday Too Fer Away" Paul Newman, Sa.My FICMO I 1982) Jec;k Thompson $)MOVIE t t t Hign Risk \1961) Jamel -2:30- Broltn, Ctelvon Ll111t U Q! ltEWS 0 MOVIE MCHALF8 NAVY For complete Hating ... 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Some called It the fourth-rited network behind CBS, ABC and Atari. One producer, who had two .. 11. on NBC lut MUOn, referred to It u the National Bi.cutt Company. Sure, NBC would be No. 1 lf the raunp were read upe.lde down, but thlJ\111 are look.l.na better. NBC 1till 11 third In vlewen, ad revenuea and profit.a . althoujh lta 1982 profit.a are up '60 milllon over 1981 -but the network la reaching a different audience, and advertlMn are notidna. "NBC hu lmrproved lta demoaraphlcs thl1 year," uya Bob Iaiel of the NW Ayer advertiaing agenc_r. "NBC apparently 11 appeallni to YOW\ler adult.a and male viewera. lt makee them a viable buy. They're 1Ull not on a par with ABC and CBS, but ~ they've made atrldea." The end of the prime-time ratingll race laat week put NBC a dlatant third, but, ln comparuon with the 1981-82 aeaaon, the network wu the only one whoee na.tlonal audience did not decline. NBC alao wu the only network to gain viewera ln the five largeet marketa, and Increase its share of higher-Income viewers nationwide. Although CBS wu clearly the leader ln overall audiences and ABC wu moat popular with young· adult viewen, NBC 1howed prime-time strength with the hard-to-find male adults. In fact, NBC was second to ABC ln malee 18-49. "We're still looking moetly for women in prime time," says one ad executive requea1ing anonymity, "But I can make a good cue for buying NBC with my clients when they have male producta, or they want to reach dual audlenoe9 or they want NBC's cheaper rates. There's room for different niches, and NBC la carving out Ill own little niche." NBC'• award-winning "Hill Street Blues" was Sheen plays JFK in TV miniseries NEW YORK (AP) -A seven-hour miniaeries on the triumph and tragediee of the late President Kennedy is now ln production, to be telecast next November -the 20th annlvenary of his assuaination. Martin Sheen stars u John F. Kennedy, and Blair Brown playw Jacqueline Kennedy. The show also features E.G . Manhall as Joe Kennedy, GeraldineFitzgerald as Roee Kennedy and John Shea u the late Sen. Robert Kennedy. t lr..,.~­ ~-l .. Ill ftM&ltlC ........ __ ... ... Ill, ..... MCOnd behind "Monday Ni,ht ltoolball" on ABC ln attrectina male viewen. t.n one month, Ouyaler, Ford, M"en:ed•, Chevrolet and VoUuw-aen .U advert.lied on "H.Ul 8tnei." n.. prqp'WJn ai.o waa moat popular ln homet wHh cable hookupe, sua•~ Uuit quality may be coe answe:r to the networka dwtndUrur ah.are of tht vtawtn. aud1ence. And then then11 tonJaht'• "A-ffllain:' fourth in popularity amona male vt.wen and th1a MUOn'• hlaheet-rated new 1how. h a.t.o w .. NBC'• top· rated program. Altl\ouih "A Team" ii colorfully offbeat, It doesn't challenae Uw mind like NBC'1 other Tueeday ntaht •rte., "Remf.nlton Steele" and "St. E.laewhere." In ra~ for thJa te&10n'1 99 •rte., "A Team" waa 13th, 'Remlnaton Steele" 69th and "St. E.laewhere" nowhere -89th. "It'• a mu. audience medium, not PBS," uy1 the ad elecutlve who would not be Identified. "'You're goinj to have your auccet9H with 'A Team' and your failure. with 'St. Ebewhere."' Laat fall, NBC tried "quality" on Thundaya with "Fanle," "Cheers," "Taxi" and "HW S~t Blue.," but the heavily promoted "be.t night of television on televl1lon" didn't draw large audiences. "Who say1 Amerlcam want quality?" aslui the ad executive. Grant Tinker, NB<"• chairman, lan't convinced that quality progra.rn. won't attract 1umtantial viewers. But. he aaya, "I'm a little diaappolnted by how long it's taken for people to find them." In a bid for a more varied achedule, NBC introduced "A Team" as a aerie. in February. The networlu alao broke up the Thunday night lineup, improving the ratings of "Cheers" by placing the inane -but more popular -"Gimme a Brealt" in front of it. "You can't program an entire schedule of 'Cheers,' 'St. Elsewhere,' 'HW Street' and 'Fame,"' says Brandon Tartlkoff, president of NBC Entertainment. "We're ln the clrculation business.". Tartikoff aava NBC'• crlticallv aoc1aimed new shows are not the tYJ)fl that take oft immediately, like "A Team" did for NBC, "Duk.ea of H.uzMd". did for CBS and "Mork and Mindy" did for ABC. "The history of television prove. that programs that are well-written and well-acted are not immediate hita," saya TartikoU, dtlng "M-A-S-H," "The Mary Tyler Moore Show" and "All ln the Family." •BARGAIN llATINl!l!S • Mond1y tllru S1turd1y All Pefformenc:H before 5:00 PM I~ S,edll Ell11,._..t1 aM "*'Pl "THI MAN fftOM 8"0WY NVR .... CNI I ___ ,,.,_ LAKEWOOD CENTER WALi( IN "fLAIHDANCll!" -_____ ........ lAl<lWOOO CENTER SOUTH WAI• ... llloOUADr' ,.., ----·- ....... "1 .... ANAHEIM OQIV( IN ·-"-~" 119-fflO ---...,......~ .. -•M OfftC8 UID .. ~ .. _ .. _ 8 ••• ~ .... BUENA PARK lllllYI IN ~---·~ UM070 ,. I·• ... ' A .. I LINCOLN Ul11Vf IN . '· . •, fOUNlAIN \IAllEY OQIVf IN .. ft o;-..1...., ....... -( .. ) .... ,.., 1 A It Ahl. f, • ., --• .,~..,N:t- ~="'..c.. --- focutty ot Cancuewooa 21J/531'9UO -"Zo.ir' ........ .__. C.fll- "'ntm OUT91D1Jla" --'1tAD 80YI".,. "nA8HDANCa"1111 -......... "toll °"""- DlllJPllat TUESDAY, APRIL ae, 1883 * ClASSIFIED C5 No surprise: Rams pick Dickerson Wide receiver, linebacker drafted in second round by Rams By JOHN SEV ANO of'ltleO.-,Notawt over people," added Kobi..n.lon. "He's u fut u O.J (Simpton) and 15 pound.I bigger." The San Diego Chargers of the National Football Conference. • Wendell Tyler traded 10 49en, C-2. • Dan Foull 1ign1 with Chargen, C-4. Dickereon runa a 4.5 In the 40-yard daah. He had 27 100-yard plus games and scored 48 touchdowna. He fUU.hed third ln NCAA ruahing as a senior, ave,..ging 147 y&ro. per game. That's the distinction the Rams figure to carry to the field next season as, ignoring glaring defensive needs, the team went offensive In this morning's NFL draft. "We need deferwve help, but then you can't ignore a gifted offensive player," said Rama Coach John Roblnaon. The Rama were able to select Dickenon after trading spots with Houston last week (the Oilers were origlnally No. 2 with the Rams No. 3). N expected, the Rams selected SMU running back Eric Dickenon with their first selection. the No. 2 pick overall. Stanford quarterback John Elway was the No. 1 pick, drafted by the Baltimore Colts. Obviously, a chance at getting a player of Dickenon's caliber waa too good to pass up. "He has the potential to become one of the really great baclu," said Robinson. "We're very pleued about our choice." "I feel the Rams made a dynamic declaion to move up in order to get Dickerson," noted Robinson. "I beame enamored with him after watching fllm after film of hlm run. It was an opportunity to deal with a great player." With their two picks in the second round - numbers 32 and 36 overall -the Rams opted for a wide receiver and an outside linebacker. Dickerson la the prototype NFL running back at 6-2, 218 pounds. A conaenBua All-American, he fl.nlahed third In the Heisman Trophy voting last seuon behind Hen1ehel Walker and Elway. Dickerson figures to be the Rams' No 1 halfback, following Wendell Tyler's trade to the San Francl8co 49ers yesterday. They selected Fresno State split end Henry Ellard (5-10, 175) and North Carolina linebacker- defensive end Mike Wilcher (6-3, 230). The offensive player of the year In the Southwest Conference as a junior and senior, Dickel'IOn broke F.arl Campbell's career rushing record with a four-year total of 4,450 yards on 790 carries. "Wendell has been a great Ram for a number of years," said Roblnlon, "but it wouldn't have made sense for ua to keep him. It would have retarded Dickerson's development. We just didn't think we could work it out to get the best out of both people. The selection of Dickeraon by the Rams waa surprising only In that the team's necessities were at linebacker and on the line defe0S1vely, and at wide receiver and ti~ht end offensively. "He can make peopla..qUaa him and he can run "I think what we're counting on iB the great talent of a particular player." Elway says 'no way' to BaltiHJore; May play baseball NEW YORK (AP) -The Baltimore Colts, who for weeks shopped the rights to John Elway, kept the All-American Stanford quarterback for themselves today and made him the first pick in the National Football League draft. But Elway was quoted as saying there was "no way" he would play for Baltimore and would play baseball instead in the New York Yankees' farm system. SteveRa:zynski,theStanford sports information director, said Elway told him midway through the first round that "there are still aome dea.b I'm listening to." Raczynski said he thought i!lway still was hoping for a trade to San Diego or the Los Angeles Ralden. Clubs including the Chargers, Ralders and Dallas had shopped for additional draft picks to trade to Baltimore for the right to draft No. 1. Elway had let the Colts know he did not want to play for them. He had the option of signing a multimiJlion-dollar baseball contract with the Yankees, who pa.id him a reported $14-0,000 last summer to play minor league ball. ESPN quoted Elway's agent, Marvin Demoff, after the Colts' pick as saying El~ had choeen baseball over foo . ESPN said Elway told Colts Coach Kush after he was selected: ''There la no way I am going to play for Baltimore. I can't believ,e you didn't take the draft choices. I am going to baseball." Elway could not be reached for comment, but there was a newa conference scheduled for this afternoon In San Joee. There was no immediate comment from the Colts, either. but Kush said earlier today that the team intended to try to sign Elway and not trade him later. "It's a gamble we have to take," Kush said. Colts General Manager Ernie A.ooorsi u.ld Baltimort" "llatened to trade talb right up to the last minute . We never got the compensation we thought the pick deserved." Rams· Coac\ John Robinson is quizzed by reporters this morning during National Football League draft. Status quo • ID Sea View race El Toro continues a game up on lrvlne and Saddleback High following yesterday's three-~e salvo of Sea View League base games -each making up previously ralned out games. Here's how it went: Irvine 11, CdM 2 Rodney Polsaant waa too much fot Corona del Mar's Sea Kings aa he allowed but just two singles In going the di.stance. He waa also tough at the plate, banging out three atnaJes In as many appearances. Doug Brozovich 1wung the biggest stick. however. banging out a pair of doubles In four at-bats for tour RBI. The Vaquerors had three doubles In the first Inning u Mark Webster. Steve Lipton and 9rozovich took turns to combine for two runs. and after the Sea Ktnp tied the game briefly In the top of the third (keyed by aingles from Jim Murphy and Dave Anisl), Irvine scored a ainBJe tally in the bottom of the third to take a 3-2 lead. Saddleback 9, Newport 0 The Roadrunners banged out three doublet and two triples In support of Luis Dlaz'a one-hit pitching to dominate the Sailors from start to finiah. Vishnu Batoosingh singled in the second inning, a hard smash which the Roadrunners' thlrd bueman couldn't handle, to spoil Diu' bid for a no-hitter. Diaz upped hla pel"80nal record to 6 6-1 and now has an ERA of 1.18. Saddleback exploded for five runs in the third inning with RBI doubles by Dante Scott and Mike Baker El Toro 6, Estancia 4 El Toro maJntained its one-game edge over Irvine and Saddleback by virtue of a three-run leCOnd lnnlng. which led to a 6-1 lead before Estancia rallied with three In the aixth to get it cl09e. Right-hander Gary Pifer struck out aeven and walked three. Marshall hot; Dodgers on homer binge Blockhurger goes 4 7 -21A .... Schmerhorn sharp for Woodbridge Newport Harbor ffiah's Sheldon Blockburger continued h11 aaaault in the triple jump - lmprovini on his 46-10 ~ mark on Saturday at the Beach Citi• Meet with a 47-2 \4 leap at Cos1a Meu High yesterday in Sea View League tndt and field action. TRACK Wheelwright and Steve De La ROia paving the way. ST LOUIS (AP) -Mike Maraball, battling back from an early teMOD beanln8, picked a formidable ballpu-k to prove he'• hia old lelf apln. "It'• Just nice to hit a ball bard," 1aid the L09 Angelea Dodpn outfielder followin1 a home run In 1paclou1 Buacb StadlUJJl that keyed an 8-0 vlctor)' last nlcbt over t!Mt St. Lou'8 ~ "I bawn't been ~ pM! contact. I ~ the Oddi ..,.. wtth me." Jilanhall'I blast WM followed by home runa off the beta of ........ Pedro 0'*"9fO and IMly ... to tir.k ~ the ...... ... ~c;:::':: ........ ,...." ............. -'f'aina,..u #19 lllt .._I .................... ......... J ... lf. u wm ............ , " . . ,.,.. ...... ,,.~lllllllllllf-lllllill. ...... t I euy for left-hander Fernanco Valenzuela to go the distance on • s:lx-hitter. "He'a jult comtna around," Dodaen Manapl' TOm Luol'da aa1d In re8peC't to Manball. who mimed five pm. after bMned in the aeuon'• fint week by Montreal Expoa reliever Jeff Reardon. "Up untll now hi• timina'• been ott ... Valensuela, )-1, struck out llx, walked two and pkbd Lannie Smith ~ f1nt '-in the f1nt ~ to avad trouble. Mafthall'• home nm. a two. run bJMt ln the fltt.h ~. WW ~ tint of Iha IMIOft. GuiirNo •• 1amlobolmr,t"9Uth ot .. • ••• Ill the Uth ~ ................... th!ld, • ............... U\. It. Loull' ~n Anjduju, s.a. ..... v.....,. ..... Ir, 19\~I"' ·Mwa 11 .,.., .......... .. • full llUA• .. ... The Sallon' aeruor allo had an effort of 48·10 In hia terts u Newport Harbor put C.O.ta Meu away on the ie.m level, 80-42. t\mona Cos1a Meta'I marka WM a permnal best of 10.2 in die 100-yard daah by Lan Nsuyen, who al.lo took the 220 ln 23.6. Newport Harbor junior Steve Bruu WM. triple winner, takiJW the burdlee in lG. 7 and 41.0 and ~ 61-2 ln ihe lhot put. JCl.8ewhete In the S-Vin' l.alue Eltanda WM no match for s.ddlebllck. The i.uer rolled to • 04·41 victory wlth 6·& Mnlor Troy McAlll1\er te.clina the way wtth 21-tM and •2_. etforta ln che lOl\I and triplit )amp. BUI BMr1 cwntd ln a nim double f« llltlnda, wtnnll\I the mile (4:M.I) and 2-mOe (10:18.0). J:rie lchm.-hcm, Woodbridli HJ&h'a IWMlou\ Jun*, .,.. a vtple winner for the Wamon tn South c.o.& t...,.. IW:dar\ at ~ KWa when the w.mon br 11 ml, 11-48. khmithom took u. ..a --"' ... I Ind 2;ot.J. ln addhlon to a It.OM..., In IN lanl Jump . ~n,...w • ...-1nthit=h~pC*t veul' Md tnplt -IOr Wr1a . "' ........ ==11§ ....... U:.."'';'1: w II I I i!'i """D"· ., .... .-1 Zumwalt tripled with a 24.3 In the 200 meters and a 16.6 and 41.8 ln the hi1h1 and lows, Waahinlton went &-2 In the hiah Jump, Nowotny won the 800 ln 2:00.0 and Sorenlon went 50-6 In the shot. In women'• llCUon, C.O.ta M-'• ~e Oard.a doubled in the h1Cb anc1 1o1w JwnJJ1. Ruth ~ took the 880 and mile and :lUU. 'Mania won the 2·mlle with an ll:M.0. Ne~'• Julie l:vana won the 110-yard low hu.rdlea ln U.O and Sue I>el.Acy won the loW9 (48.0) and 4'0 (1:01.a). Mmle Sav.p waa • trtple winner f« r..tanda and Jama. KJrwo of Woodbrldp WM al8o a W..dme winner. Coast falls 2~ games out of first WALNUT -Orange Coast College fell 2 ~ games off the pace with four games separating the Pirates from the top of the South Coast Conference baaeball standings following yesterday's 5-4 loss at Mt. San Antonio College. The Bucs blew a 4-1 lead provided by a four-run aea>nd inning as Mt. San Anton fought back with two In the fourth, a solo homer by Troy Thomas In the fifth and the winning run In the eighth. Orange Coast had things going right In the third inning when Joe Kwolek led off with a homer to left. Jeff Gardner made it to first on an error and Jef Garcia followed with a triple, later to score on a wild pitch. Mike Carozza walked, stole second and c ame around when Sal D' Ale8881\dro atnsled. Roger Zottneck, however, stroked a two-out two-run l1nale In the fourth lnnlna to pare ihe OCC lead to 4-3, then Thomu aluued bil homer to ri&bt to tie it. Mt. San Antonio'• fint run In the aecond lnnina a190 came via a four-bagel' by &b Nellon, hia 12th ln cont~ play th1I ,_r. The Mountlea loeded the ._ off IW'ter Robb MW\IOft ln the bottom of the elC)\th lnNnl and ,ot the wtnn1nc nan acnm on a ~fly. ._... c...9t C1nt1r•- w .. -" ' -'* ., .. ,. . .. ~ ·i = :1~ ...... ri--;:... ' .. Dow Jones Final Record High UP 22.25 CLOSE 1,20IA8 San Joaquin growers make the big time By Tbe A11oclated Presa STOCKTON -The Sun-Diamond Growera cooperative haa made It lnto the Fortune 500 Uat of the nation'• largest industrial corporadona. The Stockton- based organization ranked 44:ird laat year on sales of $511 million. Sun-Diamond waa fom\ed to handle marketing for four specially crop cooperatives -S un -Maid Growers of Kingsburg, Diamond Walnut Growers of Stockton, Sunsweet Growers of Yuba Oty and Valley Fig Growers of Fresno. William Dabne1 .. executive vice presiden t, said the Fortune 500 ranking hat pract1cal signif~ .. "ln the valley, people know who we are he ~d. "But when you're selling in Geneva or ~ with banks in New York and you say you're the Fortune 443rd they recognize we're on the acoreboard." Bill protects business signs SACRAMENTO -Cities and counties would have to reimbW'tle businesses when they order them to remove previously legal signs, under a bill approved yesterday by a state Senate committee. Supporters said the measure would prevent local govemmenta from imposing undue coeta on small businesses. But critics complained that the bill would make It virtually impossible for l<>dll governments to rlPAI'\ uo slRn-littettd streets and predicted that it could ultimately cost businesses more money. Utility asks I or rate cuts SAN DIEGO -Q ting a worldwide retreat In oil prices San Diego Gu & Electric Co. urged state appro~al of rate adjustmenta that. would cut the average residential gaa and electric bill by 64 cents a month. "'"""""' u f The utility, which had been purc._."6 ~ or a.s much as $40 a barrel, is now able to buy oil on the world spot market for $26, said Alan Strachan, rates manager for SDG&.E. . An SDG&.E spokesman said customers with ~ electnc homes could reafue even greater decreaaes t.n their monthly billa -as much as $22 a month. AMERICAN LEADERS P<I Up II S Up 17 t UP U• Up IJ t Up IJ • Up 111 Up 10 I UP IO I Up •1 Up ti Up II UP ll Up I I Up I~ Up 11 UP •' UP ti UD •I Up t I Up •I UP • 3 Up t 1 Up ., Up •) UP •1 METALS c...., -12~'A -• pound.us o...a..oo.. C...., -77 25 cen1t pet l)OUn(I. NY c-epol """''" do..o Mon . ....... -21-23 -• pound n.. -31 _,., • pound. cMl¥W..o 1111 -M.9836 ,,..... w .... oompoe1te 11> ~ -71 -• poynd, N.Y ......,. -1320 ~ 00 per 71 lb "-=...--... 15.00 ~ mweflanl ltOy-.N Y GOLD QUOTATIONS SILVER STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT • J .. -J't ... . .. . "' ... . .. • 4tt ... . '"'