Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-03-30 - Orange Coast PilotIUlll TUESDAY. MARCH 30, 1982 Space shuttle scoots home • Landing 'bumpy' in desert WHITE SANDS MISSILE RANGE, N.M . (AP) -Space shuttle Columbia returned home to a calm harbor toda~. diving through Earth atmosphere to a thumping, pinpoint landing on the sparkling desert sand s of Northrup Strip. A day late, but none the worse for wear. "This is really a great flying machine," Jack R. Lousma said as he glided hypersonic over the Pacific coast, en route over three states to this supersecret military base. With Lousma in command and C. Gordon Fullerton beside him, the winged shuttle slapped wheels to sand at 8:05 a.m. PST. The reflyable spaceship had launched to orbit and returned three times in just under a year. Monday, Columbia was blocked from landing here by a fierce sandstorm and began an eighth and effortless day in space. a·y 01111111111 'llllY PUii ORANGE COUNTY . CALIFORNIA 25 CE Nl S .• • own . • . The astronauts didn't know where or when they'd be corning to Earth until 95 minutes before touchdown. At landing, the nose rose a bit and then settled smoothly on the gyps~ floor. The ship seemed not a bit bothered by the breere above Tularosa basin, although Lousma announced, ''a little bumpy at Mach 2," as the ship was traveling twice the speed of sound above Truth or Conse- quences, N .M. MISSION COMPLETED -Space shuttle Columbia touches down safely at Northrup Strip at White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico this morning, ,, ........... bringing astronauts Jack Lousrna and Gordon Fullerton back from more than a week in space. NASA T-38 chase plane monitors the arrival in foreground. Ironically, winds picked up \Vithin 10 minutes as landing crews hustled to "safe" the ship ·-following its third and longest test flight. For landing, the s kies w ere relatively calm -a stiff head· wind, but nothing at all like the desert sandstorm that scotched Monday's scheduled landing. Approach was accompanied by a pair of dull sonic booms. For Lousma and Fullerton it was a perfect ending for Colum- bia's next-to-last test flight. For eight days they had put the craft through ito nost rigorous tests and, except lor nagging technical (See SHUTrLE, Page A2) Pair thwarted in duel bid SANT A ROSA (AP) -Two Santa Rosa men are out on bail after being stopped as they were about to fight an armecrduel in a horse arena, Sonoma County sheriff's deputies say. Robert Gradney, 38, was fa- cing off with his nephew, Farris Joseph Gradney Jr., 32, when they were interrupted by autho- rities who had received a phone call warning of the impending contest. The pair, free on bail, were charged with bra ndishing wea- pons and dueling. Authorities gave no reason for the confront- ation. The older Gradney called the episode "no big deal." Wait-and-see stance taken on teachers Orange County achool admini- strators are adopting a wait-and- see position regarding charges alleging that eight teachers rec- eived salary Increases based on college courses they never took. In one instance, hoY1ever, a district superintendent said he has asked the district attorney not to prosecute one of his tea- chers, who he said has repaid the extra compensation. The eight instructors were named in a grand theft complaint filed m Central Orange County Municipal Court by Deputy Di- strict Attorney Richard Toohey. The teachers will be notified of the charges by mail and will be told to appear at an April 15 <Ar- raignment, a court spokeswoman said. Those charged with misde- meanor grand theft were identi- fied in court documents as Char- les Merrill, Nancy J . Merrill and Kennth N . Owen of the Newport-Mesa Unified School District; Jean Cross of the Hunt- ington Beach Union High School District; David A. Eleceiri, Capi- strano Unified School District; Susan Haren, Saddleback Valley . Unified School District; Marillyn Harmon, Tustin Unified School District, and Hubert Dawson, formerly of the North Orange County Community College Di- strict. Deputy Distric t Attorney Maurice Evans said the probe of Orange County teachers was In- volved with an investigation into (See TEACHER, Page At) Fonda, Kate win Oscars HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Ka- tha tine Hepburn and Henry Fonda, the still-in-love oldsters of ''On Golden Pond," were hailed as best actress and actor of 1981 at the 54th Academy Awards. "Chariots of Fire," the British-made saga of two runners who won gold medals at the 1924 Olympic Games, scored a surprise Monday night as best picture of the year. The picture, starring relative unknowns, won three other awards for score, costu - ming and original script. Warren Beatty, nominated in four categories for the heav ily favored "Reds," won only as best director. His film of American radicalism and the Russian Re- volution also won for supporting actress Maureen Stapleton as the firebrand radical Emma Gold- man and for cinematography by Vittorio Storaro. John Gielgud, the w1secra-:.- king gentleman's gentleman to a millionaire tippler in "Arthur," took his first Oscar, as best sup- porting actor. For Miss Hepburn, 74, it was a record fourth Oscar as best ac- tress. For Fonda, 76, it was the climax of a 48-year film career during which the Oscar eluded him -except for an honorary award last year. Too ill to attend the Music Center festivities, Fonda de- signated daughter Jane to accept the award. She explained to the Los Angeles Music Center and a national television audience that her father first wanted his wife, Shirlee, to claim the Oscar - "but she wanted to be with him tonight, as is her custom." ·-~o BEST OF BUNCH -Henry Fonda and Katharine Hepburn, shown in a scene from "On Golden Pond," earned Oscars for their performances. It was the first award for Fonda and a record-setting fourth for Miss Heoburn. After the ceremony, idrs. Fonda told reporte rs outside their Bel-Air home, "He just burst into tears . H e's so emotional." "This makes me feel very happy," F onda said in a brief interview. Ask e d whether h e had thought he would win, he re- plied: "So many people were telling me that I would, that I started to believe them." Miss Hepburn followed her pattern of 11 prevtolis nomina- lions and did not attend. She was in Washington touring in the play "West Side Waltz," written by Ernest Thompson, author of "On Golden Pond." Thompson also won an Oscar for his "Pond" screenplay," "You're the most extraordi- nary, generous p eople," said "Chariots of Fire" producer Da- vid Puttnam in his acceptance speech. "Not just the Academy, but as a country, for taking what is absolutely a Cinderella picture (See OSCAR, Page At) Rain to stay around coast till weekend By JERRY HERTENSTEIN O(tfle DeltJ ,.... ..... Intermittent rain that has plagued the Orange Coast for two days and was blamed for one traffic fatality Monday in Foun- tain ·valley is expected to conti- nue through the week, despite brief interludes of sunshine. Tonight's forecast calls for a 10 percent chance of showers in- creasing to 30 percent Wednes- day, according to the National Weather Bureau. Cloudiness with scattered showers are due to continue through Friday. Rain Monday and Sunday, combined with that of the last few weeks, has brought the yearly total at or above the ave- rage for March 30, according to Emmett Franklin of the Orange County Flood Control Di.strict. Santa Ana has received .40 of an inch more than the March 30 yearly average of 11.44 dating back to 1909, Franklin said. The county seat got .51 inches of rain from 8 a.m. Monday to 8 a.m. today for a yearly total of 11.84. Last year on this date 8.37 in- ches had fallen on Santa Ana, Franklin said. Huntington Beach received .37 of an inch of rain from 8 a .m . Monday to 8 a.m. today bringing the yearly total to lU.~ •. 02 inches below the total on this date in 1981. Costa Mesa showed .19 of an inch of rain Monday and ear ly today for 11.11 for the year compared to 7.72 as of March 30, (Sec RAIN, Page At) ·~----------------------------------------------------------------~----------------------------------------------------------------------------"':':""'--------------, • I . . WORLD El Salvadorans vote Voters turned out in droves to cast ballot.a in an El Salvador election, despite threats by guerrilla mem- ben to stay away. Page A3. NATION Sbe didn 't sboot J.R. Singer-act.reu Colleen Camp would have been famous had she stayed in the "Dallas" aeries and shot J .R. Page B3! . . : Resignation on economy Some we•roenta of the economy are beinl re- vf81d downward from optimistic to re9ignation. Pap Cf. • STATE UPI sale imminent? ~AN FRANCISCO (AP) -A grouf of California bulinemmen headed by Tom Quinn o Los Angeles bas begun preliminary negotiations to buy United Presa International, the oountry,s aecond largest news ,Lwire aervice, it was reported today. -· Who owns tbe land? The Supreme Court will decide whether the state or federal government owns coastal land in Humboldt Bay.PapA3. COUNTY Alf ordable desiper jeans . Would you believe deiqner jeans for under $4? Believe it at Oranp County'• Goodwill lnduatriee where .. Good.lee" •ll off lhe r-cJm, p._. Bl .. INDEX At Your Service A4 Horoscope B2 Erma Bambeck B2 Ann Landen B2 L.M. Boyd A6 Movies B3 Business C4-6 National News A3 Calif omia A5 Public Notices D2 Cavalcade B2 Sports Cl-3 Classified Dl-6 Dr. Steincrobn B2 Comial B4 Stock Markets C5 en.word B4 Television 85 Ikath Notices D2 Theaters B3 F.ditorial A6 Weather A2 Entertainment B3 World News A3 I SPORTS North Carolina prevails Deen Smith COllChed his firat NeAA buketball • t.in a1 North Carolina defeeted ~ 63-e2. 'Pace Cl. . · ' ... s stories TEACHER CHARGES. • • almilar allegations ln ~ AngeJet County, where 43 teachers have been ch&rled with mitdemeanor grand theft. lnveatigators assert that two colleges -California Lutheran College in Thousand Oaks and Ottawa University of Kansu - were involved in the alleged scheme for improperly acquiring claaa credits. Many IChool districts offer sa- lary increases to teachers who complete addl tional college cour- ses. , District ~dministrators were non-committal regarding jhe charges in all but one case. Richard Welte, superintendent of the Saddlebaok Valley Unified School District, described El Toro High physical education instruc- tor Susan Haren as an "outstanding teacher." Welte said she made restitution on her own and was ••very remorseful" about it. "We looked at it and under the circ umstances gave her a ' reprimand," Welte.said. He also said he has recom- men~ed that the district attorney oot take criminal action against her. Saddleback Valley Unified personnel officials said Ms. Ha- ren paJd back $206.64 on Nov. 18, 1981, to make up for the over- compensation. ln the Newport-Mesa district, assistant superintendent Kevin Wheeler said: "Were taking a 'no comment' position on this and regard it as litigation." He did, however, identify Charles Merrill as a teacher at TeWinkle Middle School; Nancy Merrill (his wife) as a teacher at Klllybrooke Elementary, and Kenneth Oweo at a teacher at Kaller Middle School He 1aid "1ome," but not all three ~hen have paSd money back to the dl1trlct and that "others" la the district alJIO re- turned money. Wheeler refu1ed to identify those who have repaid funds, would not say how much has been repaid and did not say why the ''othen" who reimbuned the district have not been charged along with the three named. Administrators in the Hunt- ington Beach Union High School District, the North Orange County Community College Di- strict and the Tustin Unified School District said they would await disposition of the district attorney's charges before initia- ting any action themsel ves against the teachers. They identified .Jean Crou as a work experience coordinator al Wintersbµr_R HiKh School in Huntington Beach, Marillyn Har- mon as a teacher at Estock !!Je- mentary School in Tustin, and Hubert Dawson as a Fullerton College physical education tea· cher who retired in 1981. Capistrano Unified School Di- strict Superintendent Jerome Thomsley said he wouldn't com- ment until advice is received from legal counsel later this week. He identified David EJe- ceiri as a physical education tea- cher at Capistrano Valley High School. The teachers named in the complaint either declined to dJ- scuss the charges or were una- vailable for comment. SHUTTLE LANDS. . •. problems, it responded beauti- fully. The spaceship settled onto Runway 17, a seven-mile strip laid out in a barren-but-beautiful desert setting. The astronauts had no trouble spotting their target from the air -100 square miles of white gypsum surroun- djng the landing zone. Columbia swung right over a nearby mountain range and settled with a gentle thump. "Welcome home. That was a beautiful job," said car.ule coin- muni~tor Steve Nage . The Mission Control descent team erupted in applause. "That's marvelous," said Pre- side~t Reagan who watched the landing in his White House study. Because of the possibility of continuing high winds, Miaaion Control had maintained an option to order another "wave oU" and direct the ship to an alternate landing on a coocrete runway at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral. Fla At deci1ion time, NASA offi- cials determined that New Me- xieo 1andinC oonditiom were ac- ceptable and Lpusma and J'ul- lerton were giwn the green light to land ~ A second-day crowd of le11 than 10,000 people, closely wat- ched by Army troope, gathered in the de.ert to watch the lhip come in. More • rain .Coastal Partly cloudy tonlgllt. Iner••· •Ing cloud• Wednesday wlJh a chance ol ahowere. Continued cool with hight Weclneeday $7 \o 82. Lowa ton. lghl In the 401. Ctl•nef ot r.in lncreaalng to 30 percent egeln Wedne.d1y. ~. from Point Concep- tion 10 the Mexican bord« anct out 80 mllel: Small Cf&h edvlt«y warning• over 1111 entire area. Winds mo1Uy Ughl and varlable tonlgh1 and WednMday morning, bec:omlng west to eouthweat 12 to 20 knot• Wadnead1y alter· noon. SHI decreHlng tonight with 2 to 4-lool westerly swell. Cloud• lncteulng again on Wecl· ..-day with • Chance of th-... Temperatures Extended oreca$t Scallet"ed ahowere Thuraday. Partly c;loudy Frld1y and Salur-day. Cooler daya Hight In th• coastal ar••• 55 to 85 and mountain rnortl 30 10 45. Lowe In the coattal ., ... 38 to 48 and mountalnt 20 to 30. Albany Albuque Amarlllo Anc:hofege AlheYllle Atlanta Ali.tile Cty BaltlmOfe Blrmlnghm Blsmerc:k BolM Boat on BfOWFllvlle Buffalo Ct18111tn SC Chatlaln WV Chlfltta NC c~ Chic.go Clnclnnatt ('Jevel8l'ld COiumbus C>el·Ft Wth v.s. summary g;v:oin. Oetroft Thund1r11orm1 boomed over Duluth Ille centr .. plaint lllld the M..... EJ Puo 1lppl River valley Ntty today aa Felrbenk1 enow plled up In the mountllnt of • Hlll'llOfd Celllomle and Neveda. • Helena Wind• that gulled up to 105 Honollllu mph late Monday continued lo HOlltton ICl'MCh ec(ON COIOtado, and a lndnaplil few ~ dampened the Pac:i-Jaclltnvlle lie Nor'ttl-1. '""- Tile Florida penlntula got rain Kan• City ltlowiWa todey, one day 1lter ~ LM Vega w.flil stonnt carrying drenchlnQ Uttlt Aoelt rain• and wind• up 10 41 mpfi LO\lltllllle bait_., aouthem Florida. Memphis 0ownpouta drenctled Southern Mleml Cefffomla and I tornado knocll· Mllweuk .. ed out eteclrlcel powtr Mooday M~t.P to I~ of hOnlM and tM.111-Neatlvllle ,..... New Or'-'t CIHr aklH end llghl wind• New Yottc prevailed over the mlddl• and NotfollC north Allantlc C10e1C todey. Olde Ctty Aaln end acettered tflvn-°"'9fla dltlflowei• ... foreceet .... Ill Oflendo HI Lo 51 18 81 « 75 37 33 20 54 19 50 42 45 32 58 25 87 48 48 37 45 31 56 30 83 54 48 21 70 49 lltl 2a 82 29 58 25 eo 28 83 28 57 24 eo 22 82 -45 82 42 81 33 52 22 40 38 72 52 20 4 57 1t 48 32 78 72 ee ae ... 21 72 51 42 20 82 40 541 43 86 at .. 21 SC "° 7t • 51 " 50 38 ea » 97 51 53 J3 &4 26 ... -41 61 u 72 t3 Phlladphla Phoenix ~gh Ptland, Me Ptland, Ore Rapid Ctty Reno Rlclwnond San Lall• Seattle St LOUii SI P·Tempa SI Ste Marte Spolt- Tuceon Waehlngtn Wichita FV teens in crash·; one dead One Fountain Valley youth wu kiUed and another wu crl· tlcally injured after their car a.lammed lnto a block wall durtn, a heavy rainatorm Monday eve- nin&· Driver Steve McElroy, 19, of 18626 Santa Andrea St., was pronounced dead on arrival at Fountain Valley Community Hospital. Passenger Gary Puente, 18, of 18555 Santa Cruz Circle, suffered head and chest injuries, a hoapi- tal spokesman said today. Traffic Sgt. Lee Pepka said McElroy's car was attef!lp\lni to make a lane change on Magnolia Street between Slater and War- ner avenues when it skidded and collided with a pickup truick. It then spun out of control and struck a curb and the block wall, Pepka said. Both men were thrown from the car when it struck the wall, according to Pepka. The accident occurred at about 6:15 p.m. Judge drops 10 counts in child abuse A judge has Q.i.smissed 10 of 42 counts again.st Ron Rongstad, 60, who faces trial next week on charges of wife-beating rape child abuse and molestati~n and burglary. But the Orange County district attor!ley's office predicted the dismissals would have little ef- fect on the case against the La- guna Hills man, a former aero- space technician. Rongstad'• 15 children and their two mothers detailed the alleged abuse after he was ar- rested last Nov. 7 for investiga- tion of burglary. Superior Court Judge Even!tt Dickey dismissed the 10 charges Monday, citing insufficient or vague evidence. Rongstad remained in the county jail ifl lieu of $200,000 bail. 'Unity' pushed WARSAW, Poland (AP) - Warsaw Solidarity union chief Zblgniew Bujak. In Ndlng since martial law was imposed last December, has called for paaive shows ol ... our strength. our pre- sence and our unity" to keep the independent labor movement alive. forecast &4 36 eo 45 82 -47 -45 36 35 20 47 38 70 5t 82 48 -49 35 -48 40 50 3-4 eo .e 58 « 51 43 57 38 eo ,.. 52 43 30 22 17 48 5t ... &4 -42 S4 40 • 49 S4 41 82 38 5-4 41 ... 3t 53 « secramento 50 40 Sallnat 52 38 San B«nardlno 52 42 San Oebflel 40 San Diego 53 51 San Francleco 52 44 San Joee S4 « Santa Ana 81 48 Santa 8art>ata 5e 38 Santa Cruz 58 -44 San11 Marla 80 40 San11 Monica eo 48 Sloctr.ton 57 37 Talloe V1tley 28 21 Thermal 89 67 f'AN AMENCAM Acapulco 88 earbadoa ee Bermud• 83 Boe<>•• ee Curacao 90 Ouadllajara 90 ~ M Havana Kingston Monteoo Bay Maza I Ian Merida Mexloo City Monterrey San Juan Tegoclgalpl Trinidad VerlCNI CANADA Smog 88 ee 82 " 7t 73 85 88 90 79 -46 -42 41 Tiie Air Ouallty Men~t Dletrtot t1rea1ct~· (lobo at throughout tll• South Co11t alt bMln lod~. The POllvtent 8tand11d Index •hould be -42 In •II trH th• AOMD Mid Mondey. I • ... lllf lll!llT liloond TODA y the day from th• Great LakH woea t11e ONo ...,_ v119y end llPI*' f"I I l~pl ,._ ~. Slloftra,.,.,. •xPKted from the Weelllnglon OOMt 1Ct011 the o.ntrel cout of CellfONlle, fM northem lntermountllne end .... gr"t bu~. "-In w• t~ hm ldlflo ttwOUgh ncwfNrft M- llOM """ .... lri ,.. lftOUl'IMllnl. • CIO\ldy ltllea W«e 111jlffted ftOln ... T-into Florida. wlttl I 9eeo11d high 2: 15 p.m. .... .... .... ":. 9:14 p.m. _ -Flnit ~IDAY Mrff/ .... CIW"' mYdl °' .. ,. fl#tlle~ t4toN ... ...,_.Id to M In .... --..... "'°""" Mln-neeo11 enct tfle IO• tro"' 1IM1 .. !Alltl ....... ~. ,...,., .. u,.. ... flM l'ictfto ... ..,. ......... to,.... • • 4 • ' '° tO tO 10 -... .., ....__. .. 1:0I Mft. ...... loW t:oo a..m. a 2 I 2 I ' t I w leoofld .. ':IO Q.lft. s. t W leoorld lolr t.'07 P4 U w ltm Mt• toctey a1 t : 12 p m "'* ,.... .... ' ' • l:q ..,..: .. Moon rlH• Wedneedey It ~ .. UL, -• ti; .. l.M. & ~ ............ .., ~...,,.. 0,,...... .Storms hatter Florida By 'ne A11odated Pl'ea Monaoon-llke 1torm1 that swamPed southern Florida with up to 16 Inches of rain killed at least five people and sent anak.ell .Uthering for high uound. while 105 mph winds bashed windows in Colorado. "Thia is one of the worat storms of the year." Steve So· merville. a Broward County engineer. said of the surprise storm that charged into Florida from the Atlantic'on Sunday night and s tayed to drenc h coastal areas of Palm Beach. Martin and St. Lucie counties until late Monday. More than 300 people were evacuated from low-lying areas of West Palm Beach and moved to temporary shelters. "There's :i or 4 feet of water in the trailer park," said Wilma Cribbs, care taker of the Pent.e· coslal Holiness Church. where evacuees from the nearby Water View Estates trailer park took shelter. ''There's 'gators and snakes all over the place in there." RAINED OUT -Jack Wieland, 11, shows his disappointment after the ope~g game o( the Fountain Valley Little League season was rained out Monday. The gusty winds in Colorado sprayed debris across highways Monday, knocking out headlights of cars o n Colorado 36 near Boulder. A wind-whipped prairie fire scorched 2,000 acres in northeast Colorado near Wray before it was contained. officials said, and 105 mph gusts were reported late Monday at tiny Rawhide, Colo. From Page A1 The Wes t Palm Beach area took the brunt of Florida's RAIN TO CONTINUE. • • storms, which hadn't been fore- cast. Streets and homes were flooded, schools closed, electricity was knocked out and two trailer parks were evacuated. 1981. Santiago Peak, which got a smattering of new snow has r~ived 29.9 inches of prectpita- uon for the year while last year on this date it had received 16 inches. One young man was killed and another critically injured at 6:30 p.m. Monday when the car in which they were riding hit a ce- ment wall on Magnolia Street in Fountain Valley in a mishap po- From Page A1 lice blamed on wet pavement. It was raining heavily at the time. Daily high temperatures the r e mainder of this w eek will range in the 60s for the Orange Coast, according to the weather bureau. Nightly lows will be in the mid-50s. Some areas of the coast can a~ expect 10 to 15 mph wmds with strong gusts at times. A Haitian coastal freighter, the Esperancia, was caught in heavy seas and storms off Highland Beach late Sunday. Two women a board drowned, and a third crewman was hospitalized in guarded condition. The Coast Guard planned-to resume a search today for two other crew members missing and believed dead in the shipwreck. Five othe r crewmen survived the OSCAR WINNERS. capsizing and swam one mile to shore. • • The National Weather Service anP, awarding it this." ~ 'It feels as if 1 had won an Olympic gold medal myself," said Ian Charteson in Edinburgh, Scotland. Charleson, who played Eric Liddell. the Scottish missionary who refuse<! to run on Sunday and took the 400-meter gold me- dal at the Paris Olympics, added he was surprised by the award and had expected "Reds" to win. "Raiders of the Lost Ark," a tongue-in-cheek adventure pat- terned after cliffhanger serials oC the 1940s, had the most Oscars with five: art direction, visual effects, editing and sound, in addition to a special achievement award for sound effects. "Chariots of Fire" had four and "Reds" and "On Golden Pond" had three each. Barbara Stanwyck, glamorous and slim as ever at 74 in a red sequin gown, received the first and most enthusiastic stf.lnding ovation of the evening. Miss Stanwyck thanked the studio workers she has known through her career, and added a special tribute to the late William H?lden, who four years ago stood with her on the same Music Center stage and thanked her for helping to launch his career in "Golden Boy" in 1938. "I love him very much and I said 16 inches of rain fell on the miss him," she said . ..J•He always town of Lantana in 24 hours. wished that 1 would get the Palm Beach Gardens had 10.7 Oscar. And so tonight, my Gold-inches, Stuart and Lake Worth en Boy, you got your wish." had 9.5 inches, Delray Beach had The Hungar ian -made f 8 inches, 7.75 fell at Juno Beach "Mephisto,'' a drama chronicling and 7 .17 feil at Palm Beach the rise of an unscrupulous actor lnternauonal Airport, the wea- in Nazi Germany, won as best ther service said. foreign-language film over com-Two twisters were reported in petition that included the Polish the vicinity of Lake Worth and "Man of Iron," a film about the Boynton Beach , Solidarity labor movement. Four winners came t.o the stage to claim the award for original song: Burt Bacharach, Carole Bayer Sager, Christopher Cross and Peter Allen, who collabora- ted on "Arthur's Theme (Best That You Can Do)" from "Arthur." Albert R. "Cubby" Broccoli was given the Irving Thatberg award for consistent quality in producing. He produced the superhit James Bond films. Gregory Peck presented the Jean Hersholt humanitarian award to comedian Danny Kaye. Cited for his tireless work for the United Nations Children's Fund, symphony orchestras and other causes, Kaye turned serious in his response. "rm so delighted that I fine! myself trembling," he admitted. R eagan criticized by Californians SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - President Reagan's fellow Cal- ifornians have become increasin· gly disenchanted with his per- fo~ce in the nation's highest office, and the majority believe their personal finances will suf- f~r because of his economic poli- c 1 es, a survey released today shows. The California Poll, an inde- oenden t , non-partisan study, showed that 37 percnet of the 1 - 217 residents surveyed in Marc1h rated Reagan's overall job per- formance as "ex:cellent or good," compared with 47 percent in Ja- nuary and 64 percent a year ago. WEDDl#ll REIJEPTIO# FACILITIES AVAILABLE Nlghtclub a Reataurant ,,..._ IHfood 8roHecl OWW M11qulte Wood Ctwcoel Orange COunty'1 Flneet S..tood AN1aur1nt Al Ptr Orenge Coelt Ind Alf C.I ~ L.lw Ent«talnmt<lt • Dining and O.nclr\g 1 Night• 3180 Airway Ave. et Redhll a McConnlok CeltordlreolluM 548-8880 OATH OF OFFICE -New Bangladesh Pre- sident Mohammad Chowdhury, left, takes the oath of his new office from Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, Kamaluddin Hossian, in Dae- ca. Chowdhury was named president by the country's new martial law administrator Lt. Gen. Hassain M. Ershad. ' !High court to decide land case !Does stat~ or feds own 200-acre coast parce l? WASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme Court heard arguments on whether California or the federal government owns a 200-acre stretch of coastal land created after the construction of a jetty exposed ocean bed in California's Humboldt Bay. At issue in the case is whether state or federal law applies in a federal-state dispute over the ownership of land that is created by artificial means rather than natural activity. The court could decide the case on the basis of Monday's argu- ments or could appoint a "special master'' to serve as a fact finder. The land mass in dispute was formed by shifting sands after a jetty was built along Hwnboldt Bay's North Spit in the 1890s. The land is not far from the Eu- reka City Airport. · At the time the dispute arose, the land adjoined the Humboldt Bay Coast Guard station, ~l that Woman • 1n station has since been declared surplus, according to Bruce Flu- shman, deputy Qwfomia attor- ney general. Flushman repre- sented the state before the court and argued that title to the land belo~ to California. He told a reporter the land has 9C8llt value to either the fed~ government or to the state, out the principle involved in the caae could be important. He said, for example, the court ruling could apply to other dis- putes, such as that concer ning ownership of part of Hamilton Air Fonie BMe in California. The state cl.alma ownership to half the land, which allo wat auted by a.rtificial meanl. He also cited a dispute over the ownership ·of land expoeed aa a result of San Frandaco drawing water from Mono Lake. The federal government owns land surrounding the lake and claims ownership of the land exposed by the drop in water level, Flu- shman said. Before the court, he argued that acceptance of the federal 'assertion of ownership would al- ter the balance between the states and the federal govern- ment. Louis F. Claiborne, deputy so- licitor general, argued for the United States that the federal government could be denied ac- cess to the sea for military pur- poees if California's view prevai- led on the ownership of artifi- cially created land. ~ But nushman said the federal government could reclaim acc:eaa to the sea thr9ugh normal pro- c-. of candemnationl ClaibOTne said the federal Subme~ Landa Act "explicitly and plainly" provides that land exposed through artificial means, such as the construction' ol a jet- ty, belongs to the United States if it ls bordered by land owned by the U.S . government. coma nearly 7 years Karen Ann Quinlan's 28th birthday marked by M ass NEWARK, N.J . (AP) -The 28th birthday of Karen Ann Quinlan, of the landmark "right-to-die" case six years ago, was marked Monday with a bedside Mass and the singing of ''Amazing Grace.'' As in past years, the Mass was celebrated by the Rev. Thomas Trapasso, said Julia Quinlan, the young woman's mother. "I generally take a reading from one of Karen's favorite books," Mrs. Quinlan said. "I read something about hope or waiting, which is so timely.' While no special liturgy is Wied for the Mass, "We generally sing some of Karen's favorite songs, such as 'Amazing Grace'," she said. Ms. Quinlan has been in a coma since April 15, 1975, after she attended a party. The cause of her condition never has been fully determined. Her parents soUiht to have her removed from a respirator that had sustained he.r breathing. Doctors had maintained che would n ever recover to a "sapient, cognitive state." A Superior Court judge in Morristown had backed doctors in their refusal to cU.connect the breathing equipment. But on March 31, 1976, the state Supreme Court unanimoua- ly reversed th_ft ruling, declar- ing that. the (luinlans had the right to order the respirator re- moved. The equipment was disconnec- ted in May 1976 Jaycees lose battle to exclude wo:men MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -The U.S. Jaycees have lost another court fight in their effort to ex- clude women from full mem- bership. U.S . District Judge Diana Murphy ruled that Minnesota laws ag$inst sex discrimination were constitutional and were applied properly to the Jaycees. The group had argued the law unconstitutionally deprived the organization of its rifht of free association, speci icall[ to "asaociate for the purpoee o ad- vancing only the interests of young men." ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat Claaain.d edvertlaing 7141142-5171 All other depertmenta 642-4321 Ms. Murphy held that auch a right cannot be used as a foun- d4tion for excluding women. Thomas P. Haley ~---Ct>tel hKllll•• OlltCef • Robert N. Weed ,,_ Thomas A. Murph1ne EcMor ' · L Kay Schultz _,,_ ...i Dnaor ol ()peta•- Ml~hael P. Harvey. ...,....""' Dlreclor • KenAelh N Goddard Jr C:.C-~Of Charles H. Loos ~10110< • ,,. MAIN OFRCE mwett...,St.,COIUINN,CA. ~II...,_: 9o• U.0, C.•IA ~CA.- COl>Y•ltM "'2 OJ-.. CoHl P*IM>lflt C~. Mo -...-.11111t1rou ... ._ e411onol m.n.. w ... .. , .... _.. ,.,."' ....., .. ,.......... ............ _ ... ~ .. ~-. .. The 1-ue dates from the early 1970s, when the Jaycees were challenged on their policy of granting only aasocla te mem- bership• to women and of de· nyin& them rilEbts IUCb at VOtina or holdln1 oflice In the organi- zation. In 1974 and 1976 the Minnea- polis and Sl Paul chapten of the Jaycees admitted w omen. T he national OrpoizaUon tben aareed to allow Cull membership for women in cer1aln chapters on an experimental baaia. But ln 1979, all chapters were directed to ex- pel women. We're Listening ••• What do you like about the Dally Pilot? Whal don't you like? Call tbe number below and your mes1a1e will be recorded, transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor. The 11me 24 -hour an1werin1 aervice may be used to record let· ters to the edifor on any topic. Mailbox contributors mu1t include their name and telephone number for nrtficatJon. No clrculaUoe ull1, p&.ase. Tell us what's on your mind . Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Tueeday, M1rch 30. 1082 8 Al :Guerrillas are losers f Leftists f ail to rally people in Sal vador election > SAN SALVADOR, El Salva- dor (AP} -'lbere were winnen and loeen in El Salvador'• elec· tlona, but the blue.t apparent loaen, the iuerrlDaa, were not even runnb\i. Deaptte prrilla pleu, attacks and cfeath threata Intended to stop the votlni for 1 60-inember con1tltu ept 111embly, voten turned out by the h u nd redl of t hou.aanda Sunday, numben ao •W'Prillnaly tarae that IOme }:lt&-cl.nCta had to aend tor more bal- lots or open other polling stations to handle the crowd.I. It was the second time Salva- dorant had given what appeared to be a wholesale repudiation of a guerrilla appeal for ma11 action. In January 1981, the leftist insurgents called for popular uprisings as they launched a "final offensive" against the U.S.-backed civilian-military junta. The Salvadoran ~ple Wd not heed the guerrillaa call, and the rebels took a severe beating, both milltarily and in loea of face. In terms of military position and tactics, the guerrillas are probably in better shape than. they were a year ago. Although intelligence specialiats say their Sovlets' weaponry analyzed WASHINGT0N (AP) -Many of the Soviet army's weapons are plagued by serious problems which are generally ignored when Pentagon offidals size up the U.S.-Soviet military balance says Rep. Les Aspin, 0-Wia. For example, he said, the tur- ret of the T-62, the most common tank in the Soviet anenal, cannot be opetated until two minutes after ita power system has been turned on. Thia drawback might "crimp the tank's effectiveness in an emergency.'' aocording to A.- pin. ''Everything i.s $eared to make it appear t here ts a huge gap between Soviet an d American weapons, with ours grossly inferior.'' said A.pin Sunday. While U.S . weapons such as the controvenial M-1 tank come unde.r' public 9Cl'U tiny so that ••all foibles become front-page news," Aspin noted, Soviet arms "are publicized by-the Pentagon, which deftly ac.centuates only the poaitive." He contended that this tends to "mislead the American public into thinking we need to spend more on defense than we really do." ~Americans do not · want R eagan back' NEW YORK (AP) -Amer- icans don't want President Rea- gan to seek a second term, ac- cording to the majority of those questioned for a Time magazine poll. Thirty-seven percent of those ('eSponding said they hoped Rea- gan would run again, while 52 percent said they hoped he would not. Diamond la the moat popU1ar gem used In the symbollc ring given on the occasion of a cou· pie's engagement. It seems an appropriate choice because die· mood Is the moat durable natural subetance known. It Is 10 on the Mon's Scale or Hardness ... but that really doesn't tell t~ whole ttory. The Moh's Scale II merely a . · group of mlner•ll arr~ In CK· def of ~...ing hardneu. Scratch hardness can be mea· 1ured with greater praclalon by mMna of an lnatrument known u a Sclerometer. When tHted by Ihle modem ICientlllc Instrument, diamond Ill 16uod to be 140 tlmea herder than corlH\dum (rwblea and ~I which It the nexl hardeaf mlnefal. Know!ng that diamond 11 lhe and moll lmpertlhable of we~ t~ hope Iha t th9rtttotlVllt81 tM gl-v Ing l>f a dlemond would be I equally t*,nble tnd luting. • The merrlege ot llghl and die· mondt It one that nae lnepked • cou: .. fof centuflea. tt It a mar-nege thll1 hOldl • ~ ptqmlae • -th•t the peMlonate fl,. and •adtlnu IPRJe .. ~ • No wonder It II tM ctlOlce of IO~ r°"""*8. The dlamOOd la ~ °" lgtlt lof ltl ~· FOi dl1mo11d'• • ·1••n11 , .................... .. numbe~ have remained at about 6,000 armed and trained fJgbten, they have effectively cut the country in two and are giving 1ovemment forces all they can handle, especially in strongholds in the east. But if the elections are an ex- ample, their sway over public opinion has not increased since the offensive of 1981. The leftists, who were boycot- ting the' election, broadcast ap- pe als over clandestine radio against voting and stopped vehi- cles on highways to ask occu- pants not to vote. They resorted to rougher tac- tics as well, such as burning buses that would take voters to the polls, attacking city halls where electoral records might be kept anp confiscating govern- ment identity cards, the only document required of Salvado- rans wishing to vote. Then on Sunday the guerrillas stepped up attacks in much of the country. Despite this, the turnout was larger than any jn recent me- mory here, Salvadorans said, al- though official f.lguree were not yet available. Thousand.a of vo- ters evm braved nearby fighting to stand in line for hours and elect the auembly, which will write a new constitution and name an interim govenunent. Some people waiting In the l~ queues admitted they were voting only to get the govern- ment atamp on their identity cards, to avoid being labeled "subversive" later. But prelimi- nary returns indicated there were relatively few blank or spoiled ballots -a traditional form of electoral protest in Latin America. Joee Figueres, three-time pre- sident of Costa Rica and a prime figure ln the democratic move- ment iil Latin America in the 1940s and 1950s, said before the polls closed Sunday: "l don't know who won today but I know who W.t. The guerrillas lost." He said outsiders had confused the Salvadoran situation with the 1979 revolution in Nicaragua, where the guerrillas had broad public support. u .... .,.. ... P INT-SJZEPARATROOPE RS -An unidentified American adviser talks with two youngsters who are part of a contin- gent of Honduran paratroopers currently .being trained by U.S. military advisers. The Green Beret training sessions at an airfield near Tegucigalpa in Honduras includes 20 children under 16 years old and three 13-year-olds. @ liEM .WIIE betluty llet In t~ quallty ot ltt . . ··~-- . .. ' . .. •• Ho.w to make out checks to IRS DEAR PAT DUNN: I• payla1 federal taxee, wllat aame 1boald be ••ed for die payee. oa die ~ or moaey onlert Alto, wut l• die peulty for 1Ula1 a retara late? L.T., BadqWD ~ Make all check• and money orders payable to "Internal Revenue Service." They sh ould be attached securely to the return or other document that Identifies the payment. U, for eome reuon, you muat aend in a check or money order without a return or statement, attach a sheet of paper givtng your name, addreea, Social Security number, the kind of tax and the period(•) to which lt applies. Enter the aame lnfonnation on the check iteelf. Internal Reveru.ae Service says there ls a penalty of 5 percent per month or any fraction thereof uf to a maximum of 25 percent of the taxes due 'for late filing o a return. There is also an interest charge. The current interest rate is 20 percent per year, on the unpaid amount. Restaurant can warm up DEAR PAT DUNN: I ban a favorite restaurant in tbil area. Tbe food i1 great and tbe price1 are reaaonablt, bat tbere'a lDlt one problem. I nearly freeze to deatb wbenever I 10 in tllere. "ve a11'ed tbe muager wby it'• 10 cold and be claim• be baa to keep tbe temperahre low becaaae of 0 reatrlctlon1" in heatin1 ID tbe winter or coolln1r in the 1ummer tllat come from the 1ov- enmeat. II thJ1 true., R.G., Co1ta Meu Not any longer. The Department of Energy amended the standb,Y federal emergency energy conservation plan. The follo- wing provisions have been eliminated from the federal plan: odd~en· fuel purchase restrictions; speed limit enforcement and r~uction measures; non-residential building temperature res- trictions and employer initiated commuter and travel measures such as carpools. You may want to tell the restaurant manager that DOE has eliminated these provisions because. according to most of the comments received and the agency's own analysis, they would likely create "social and economic disruptions that would out- weigh any benefits." The federal plan, required by the Emergency Energy Con- servation Act of 1979, still includes public education programs and minimum automobile fuel purchase restrictions. Under limi- ted circumstances specified by the act, the president could impose these measures during an energy emergency. • "Got a problem? Then 'write to Pat Dunn. Pat will 1 cut red tape, getting the answers and action you -.1 need to solve i.nequitiet Inaowrnment and business. Mail your questions to Pat Dunn, At Your Service, ,.., • ' Or•nge Coat D•ily Pilot, P .O. Box 1'60, CO.ta Mesa. CA 92626. As many letters a pasible will be answered, but phooed Inquiries or letters not U>cludlng the rea· der's full name, adclre# and business hours' phone number can- ·not be ~nsidfred." Fei-tili.ty affected by zinc I • Ayn Rand'• e1tate willed to lriend -AIDS COPS -Comedian NEW YORK (AP) -0-.r· &ch Little 11 makina public vattve phlloeopher and no•eU.t Mrvlce announcement. for Ayn Rand &eh an estate eetima· dle HoUlton Pollce Depart· ted at '660,000 to• fr1end, Leo- ment -and eromotlnc hil nard Pelkoff. t new record, ''Ftnt Family," MIH Rand, author of "Th• WASHINOTON (AP)-Small onthelide. J'ountalnhead" and "AtlH llnc defldende1 in men can cau.e 8~ died March 8 after • ~ht lou and depreu 1perm long at age 77. uctlon low enouah to reeult Her will was drawn In No-• lnferWlty, ldentilta report. vember and wa. tiled In Man- Reaearcfters at Wayne State hattan Surrogate'• Court. Unlveralty In Detroit aald Mon-,--_.;.....~--::...__ ___ __. __ -,:,..__,,..-,,'-,..:..o.,,..._....;...~-,;,._--------_..;;------- day that male volunteen put on dleta sll1btly deficient In zinc showed advene effecta previous-ly aMOClated only with more ee- vere defidendes. Prolon1ed, severe zinc defi- cleJlcy previously has been uao- ciated with reduced~. under- active te.stlcles ....... the aource of reproductlve sperm cells, aald Dr. Ananda S. Prasad. "We have shown that even mild zinc deficiency can cause such effects," said Prasad, a pro- fessor of medicine. The study found that men on low-zinc diets for six months suffered a 30 percent to 40 per- cent drop in sperm count and loet about 10 percent in body weight, Including both fat and protein. The men also showed decrea-sed blood levels of testosterone, the male sex hormone produced in the testicles. In a report presented at the national meeting of the American Chemical Society in Las Vegas, Prasad said all effects of the de- ficiency disappeared when sub- jects returned to a normal, higher zinc diet. The mineral deficiency is wi- despread throughout the world, he said, and mild cases seem to be common even in economically developed countries. Zinc is es- sential to many enzymes, pro- teins that promote numerous functions in the body. Prasad said in a telephone interview that the best source of dietary zinc is .rumaI protein, or meat. Red meats provide more of the nutrients than poultry and other lighter varieties. The government recommended daily allowance of zinc is 15 mil- ligrams. Although food plants, espe- cially cereals, have zinc, they also contain other substances. ( \ Drakespur .Antiquities Ltd. of England wishes to announce·that on Sanday, April 18 it will conduct an Auction of I Antiques, Collectables and Oriental ~arpets. Qualified buyers may request application for attendance 1... by phoning Paula, 646-4838, Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m . & Saturday, 9:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Thie auction will in part benefit the Orange County chapter of the Braille ln.atitute. Pilot advertising Is good "The Dally Pilot has been our most effective source of advertising." Nancy Orcha"9, Man~ L•nz of Callfoml11 Fashion Island buSiness for Lanz of California. OUR ~ AlllllVERSARY S4LE 20t h Sale Good Thru 4-30-82 REEi DimlMn & Altll'e Bl6s ........... .. ., CHANDILlll In celebration of our 20th anniversary and In appreciation of our many loyal friends and customers ... we offer our regular stoek of imported and domestic Chandeliers, hanging lamps, wall sconces and table lamps at fabulous reductions. An opportunity to purchase carefully selected · itmes from the most comprehensive collection of truly fine Lighting Fixtures in the Harbor area at reduced prices. U.S. GOV'T LATEST REPORT: King, Menthol or Box 100's: Awhole ~ r ton has less tar ,than as· I .•• KINGS ••• 100'• ' WI I.co~ WI NICOTNE "'O OQ "'O /OQ "'O /OQ "'O /CIQ Kent 12 1 0 Kent 100's 14 Winston Li2hts 11 09 Winston Lights 1oo·s 12 Marlboro 16 1.0 Benson & Hedges 1oo·s 16 Salem 14 1.1 Parliament L!9hls 100's 12 KOOi Miids 11 0 .9 Salem 100's 15 -N~port 16 1.2 Marlboro 100's 16 TAR & NICOTINE NUMBERS A.S REPORTED IN LATEST FTC REPORT Cat1lon ICtnp L.eHttt. o.s 0.1 • C8rtlon Metlltol lee9'-' 0.1 0.1 c..non 1ox 100·1 L.eH ttt. o.s - U.S. Government laboratory tests confirm no cigarette lower in tar than Carlton. Warninf1 The Surgeon Genaral Has Determined That Cigarette SmolUng Is Dangerous to Your Heetth. ' Box1 less thin 0.5 mg. "tat, 0.06 mg. nicotine: Soft Pick. Mtn111al end 100'1 BCllti lm tNrl 0.5 mg. "ta(', . ft.1 mg. nicotine ev. per cignttt. FTC Report Dtc. '81. \ 1.2 0.9 1,1 0.9 1.1 1.1 0.1 I 'S~uss' honored for kids' work ''Dr. Seu aa," Tlaeodor GetHl, la the National Aaoclation of Elementary School Prindpala' tint special award winner for dil- tingulahed 1ervice to children. • "We think he deeerves credit for havinl launched mllliona of youngsten on a lifetime of exploration through books," said uaoc:iation president Elailae Buk1. Giesel, the 77-year-old author and illu- strator of "How the Grinch Stole Christmas," "The Cat in the Hat" and other children's favorites, could not attend the associat ion's convention in Atlanta. The band played "Your Cheatin' Hean" as former Delaware County (Okla.) commis- sioner H.B. Rlcllte shook hands, kissed babies and bugged ladies at an appreciation party - before going to federal prison. "I regret getting caught, but I don't regret a hell of a lot of what I done," Richie told about 250 well-wishers who gathered ·on the bank of Lake Eucha. Richie, 48, is among more than 150 com- missioners, ex-commissioners and salesmen implicated in a federal investigation of county purchasing practices in Oklahoma. Actress Butterfly McQaeen, who por- trayed a slave girl in the movie "Gone With the Wind," has been granted a mistrial in a $300,000 civil suit in Washington against Greyhound Bus Lines and a security firm. Ms. Mc.Queen, 71, complained of chronic back problems and a mistrial motion was the only way to interrupt the/roceedings, said one of her attorneys, Arnol Spevack. Ms. Mc.Queen. now a New York resident, played Scarlett O'Hara's slave girl Prissy ~ the award-winning movie about the Civil War. The award wasn't meant to describe the inhabitants, but the mansion of Gov. Dick Riley and his wife, Tunky, has been de- signated a National Wildlife Habitat of Ex- ceptional Merit. In ceremonies this month, the National ~ Wildlife Federation praised the mansion for its diverse shrubbery and landscaping, which provide food, water and cover for. wildlife. Jay D. Hair, federation executive vice president, said the federation is "especially · ~ proud of the fact that the. governor an~ Mrs. ::;rutey have kept the principles of wildlife ha- bitat development in mind in the landscaping done." Princes• Dlana, who is six months preg- nant. will take a vacation with Prince Claa.rlea at one ot her husband's ialands off the coast of England. British press reporta said. They will leave April 20 for St. Mary's, one of the Scilly Isles owned by Charles' Du- chy of Cornwall, 30 miles from Lands End, the southwesternmost tip of England. the newspapers said. The Sun, a mass-circulation London ta- bloid, said doctors ordered the 20-year-old Diana to take a rest. Reports of the length the vacation varied from one to two weeks. Composer Harry Nll11on hosted a cele- brity cocktail party to help Wallace Albertson, widow of actor Jack Albert1on, launch her campaign for the Democratic nomination for the 45th Assembly District. Mrs. Albertson. 57, president of the Los Angeles Community College Board of Trustees, wants the seat Assemblyman Hencbel RosentUI is leaving to run for state Senate. She faces stiff competition from Bart Mar1oliD, 31, chief of staff for Rep. Hell!')' Waxman. Margolin is backed by Rosenthal and Aaaemblyman Howard Berman. -·--· J~4-J91rM ,,.,, " _.,.,, . ...... ,_.-,.....,, ,_. ,,.._ ._..,.. Wrh: 1IE MSSm-IMITll JDm CAMP P.O. Box 664 Redondo Beach 902n ..... 121J1 Jn.ooa• .. Jt~7t4J ~ rlng-ti~e is Superb 00\\!NEY SAVINU5 AND LOAN has FAST CASH FOR HOI\IB LOANS C\Jp to four unit•) $10,000 to $1,000,000 Purchase money seconds. equity, and swing loans a.B~DIVis (714) 842-7424 D• 1'/\!NEY c.;A \/I NCiS WATCHING -U.S. Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger views communist North Korean posi- tion during a tour of Korea's demilitarized zone. . I Orange Cout DAIL.Y PILOT/TuMday, March 30. 1082 • Convertibles in comeback ~· DETROIT (AP) -In an effort to pump aome excitement -and additional aalea -Into the slugiah U.S. car market, domestic automakers are beiiJuUng to reintroduce convertible:e after a slx- year abeence. Sales of coov~rtlblee in the next year probably will not amount to more than about 75,000 ca.rs - or 1 percent of the domestic industry'• volume - but automakers say it's worth It. "Convertibles wouldn't have been ao attractive when we sold m illions of Impalas and Caprices, year after year," aald Jack Madejchlck, a 1poke- sman for General Moton Corp.'s Chevrolet Divi- sion. "Now the market is fragmented to the point of 250 OOO-to-300,000-car lines. We don't want to miss a 10 000-aale opportunity like a convertible." 1"Ther draw showroom traffic and generate publicity,' said Robert Marcks, manager of special vehicle projects for Chrysler Corp. The No. 3 automaker was the first to bring back the convertibles with the LeBaron and Dodge 400 models. Ford Motor Co. says it will begin marketing a Mustang convertible, and GM plans to introduce a Buick Riviera convertible next month, followed by a Chevrolet Cavalier convertible in 1983. ~co~cc~ooo<JtJoocoocna~J~J ,,,. ,.,,,,.,,.,., ,,.. .. ....... ' •••••• STORa HOURS1 9 A.M. • 2 A.M. LIQUOR ·STORE Pr•• Dellvery Home or Office 646-6878 1922 A Tradition for 60 Years 1982 Sirvlng Nightty Tfl 1 A.M. S'l'A'I' I &TICS: Reservations - Suggested &4s-1on ·We're Open. . We're Ba a Sale. 1/(( ~~- ~,·--.......-~-· ~= A . .. We're in Heritage Plaza at the corner of Culver and Walnut, in Irvi,ne. All the facts you need to come over and join us in our grand opening celebration! Store Ho urs: 9 AM • 1 O PM Monday Through Friday 9 AM•. 8 PM Saturday 9 AM • 6 PM Sunday .· f ~· Or11nge Ooett DAILY PILOT/T~ay, March 30, 1082 INS field raids hurt many, benefit none The flat, Unprotected atraw· berry fields of Ora.nae County att' an Ideal target for the lmmigation and Naturalization Service. Last week, INS u.nlta were out in force, plucking more than 1,000 illegal alie-na off the fields and busing them back to Tijuana. Al. usual, ~S spokesmen said this would release needed jobs for legal residents on the unemploy- ment rolls. For a time, it seemed that might be the case. Scores of would-be strawberry pickers showed up at the fields as word of the raids spread. Many were con- struction workers, caught in the .housing slump and out of unem- ployment benefits. Unfortunately, for all their good intentions, most didn't return the next day. Many didn't last out a single day. Strawberry picking, they soon learned, is a back- breaking task, and the vaunted ibility of making $12 an hour doesn't work for the novice. make that kind of money it is necessary to pick about 2,800 ber- ries an hour, a goal attained by Qnly the most skilled Mexican farm workers. Meanwhile, with lNS raida hitting 40 of the county's 60 strawberry farms in just the fint few days, the highly periahable $40 million crop is gravely threa- tened. One large farm that normally harvests between 3,000 and 5,000 flats a day saw a yield of only 800 flats after the initial raids, u re· placement pickers gave up and went home. The ultimate victim, of course, along with the deported workers and the growers, is the consumer who will be paying higher prices for increasingly scarce fruit . As always, the lesson is clear. For whatever reason , Mexican workers, legal or illegal, seem better able to endure the punish- ment of this sort of farm work. It is past time for the govern- ment to step in and end this an- nual charade by making some temporary provision for Mexicans who need the work and growers who need the workers, instead of playing cat and mouse games that can leave precious food rotting in the ground. Deficit must be cut Presidential counselor F.dwin Meese's indication Friday that "some changes are necessary" in t he deficit-ridden 1983 budget ~roposal was a welcome sign that jhe administration at last is show- ~g'Willingness to compromise n President Reagan's unpopular pending plan. With continuing concern that gh interest rates are bleeding ithe economy, con~ional leaders of both parties have been pres&ng the president for weeks to discuss ways to cut the too-high $91 bil- lion deficit he is proposing for next fiscal year. Many politicians, economists and busin~en are rightly wor- ried ~t swollen federal deficits will keep interest rates up, which would surely strangle any re- covery from the recession, one of the worst slumps since World War n .. Until Meese's statement, the administration had given no overt sign that it was willing to rewrite the proposed budget, which has been giving the private sector jit- ters it does not need now. Thursday, ~tifiably frustra- ted Republican leaders warned Reagan that if he didn't respond positively to compromise solution.S discussed in Co~. they would rewrite his budget on their own. In general, proposals for cut- ting the deficit call for trimming the president's gargantuan mili- tary buildup, holding down cost- of-living raises in transfer pay- ments and new truces. Complicating the budget stale- mate are political conside ratons in this election year. The Demo- crats, who control the House, want Reagan to be the first one to offer potentially unpopular proposals, while the administration is reluc- tant to put forth such ideas unless it is sure the Democrats will be receptive. The nation cannot afford to have political games stifle what could be a budding consensus on cutting the deficits. Good economic news is becoming harder to come by as hopes for a lively recovery later this year are dimming and interest rates are stubbornly re- maining well above historic spreads between money and in- flation rates. Corporations and small busi- nesses are having severe cash flow difficulties, and workers are con- tinuing to lose their jobs. For any progress to be made in lowering interest rates and mi- tigating further economic damage and rebuilding confidence, the deficit must be cut. The Reagan administration must move - quickly -to work with Congress in rewriting the 1983 budget. Time is growing short. Featherbedding fore ver In its heyday the powerful railroad workers' union was re- nowned for its featherbedding skills -like insisting on having a stoker on board to feed a non- existent boiler on electric trains. Today's United Transporta- tion Union still clings to some of those skills, to the extreme irrita- tion of the railroad industrv. One is the method of deter- mining a day's pay by distance traveled rather than hours worked. The distance constituting •day's work rema.iri.s 100 miles, as it did when trains needed a full day to travel that far. Today's trains, of course, routinely cover twice that distance in little more than half a day, but the UTU worker atill collects two days' pay for a 200·mile run. Paying by the hour, uy industry officials, could save upwards of $200 million a year. Similarly unreasonable is the rule that requires extra pay for an entir~ traln crew for "special" Jobs.'1uch u coupling air hoses, even if only one crew member handles the task. The other current target of the railroad operators is the tradi- tional little red caboose, originally tacked onto the end of a train as an eating and sleeping shelter for the crew and later, with an ob- servation cupola attached, used as a lookout post to check conditions up ahead. That's now done elec- tronically, and train crews stay overnight in motels. The union insists that the ca- boose still is needed for the pro- tection of long freight trains. The industry says it could save almost $400 million a year by getting rid of the 13,000 cabooses now on the rails and not having to re place wornout ones with new models costing in excea of $50,000 apiece. These and other issues are being hashed out in current bar- gaining talks. If the railroad workers are not more successful than the auto workers, they may have to yield a little. And the little red caboose could "become a mu- aewn piece. I .-. 1 i<)plnloM ••Pr•ssed In the space abOve ar9 those of the Dally Piiot. Other views ttx-• •press~ on this page are those ot their a1tth0n ancs artists. Reaeser comment.;s invtt· • t,td. AO*ess The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1S60, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone•(t1~) 1'42-4321.1 • • • O JMNGE COAST . Pilat Tllom11 P. Ha~ Publlthef: -T....,_~......_..,- Edltor . a.rMraKtM"°. Edtt~ P.1199 EctJtor . . -----~----------- Government: Laws o r men? WASHINGTON -The United St.ates Senate, as most visitors discover, is usually a disappointment. From the gal- lery, one usually sees empty desks and hears emptier words. But one day last week it seemed for a while grand and historic and brave. Fourteen sen ators, Democrats and Republicans. liberals and conservatives, r ose one after another to speak out against the clear and present danger to the republic. "WE ARE GATHERED today to dis- cuss a whole host of legislation which lS nothing less than a frontal assault on the separation of powers mandated by the Constitution and the protection it gives to the rights of any minority," said Quent.in Burdick of North Dakota. ''The issue may be the single most important item on our n ation's non- economic agenda in the 1980s," said Max Baucus of Montana. "The entire BW of Rights could be up Cor grabs. The enure Bill of Rights could be d e feated by a simple majority of Congress." Those two Democrats and six others - Dale Bumpe rs of Arkansas, Howard Metz.enbaum of Ohio, Patrick Leahy of Vermont. Carl Levin of Michigan. Thomas Eagleton of Missouri and Ho- well Heflin of Alabama -took the floor against more than 20 bills attempting to give Congress the power to exclude se- lected issues and areas from the juris- diction of fede ral courts. So did six Re- pub~, Charles Mathias of Maryland, Barry Goldwater of Arizona, Arlen Specter of Pe nnsylvania, Robert Pack- wood of Oregon, John Chafee of Rhode I.stand and Lowell Weicker of Connecti- cut. The proposed legislation, most of it introduced by Sen. Jesse Helms of North Carolina and his acolytes of the righ- teous right, is designed to prevent fed- eral district courts and the Supreme Court from hearing cases In such areas as school desegregation, abortion, prayer in schools and the drafting of wome n. The theory, open to both debate and challenR•. is that the majonty~; RICHARD RllVIS 1 j • gress at any ume should have the power to decide what the federal courts can and cannot decide. It's a fight as old as the United St.at.es -it's the question of whether this is a government of Laws or of the men who happe n to be in power at the time . Franklin D. Roosevelt tried to use Con- gress to "pack" the Suprem e Court when he did not like decisions restncting the New Deal in the 1930s. The same technique Helms is using was tried after the Civil War and in both the 1950s and 1960s -to strip federal courts, re- spectively. of jurisdiction over puniuve laws directed against the Confederate states, against "subversive" cases and against "one-~. one-vote" litigation "It was wrong in the 1860s, it was wrong in the 1930s, it was wro nl( m the 1950s and it is wrong today.'' said Bum- pers. "It would completely destroy the constitutional fabric that has kept our nation free, our homes secure, our rights protected and our institutions sound for almost 200 years . . . The members of the Senate and House who support these bills d o so in the belief that the s tate courts will be less friendly to the gua- r!l"tees of freedom of religion. freedom from d1i.lnmm;it1on 1n t-<.Jucallonal op- portunil1t·s. fn•edum over one's bodily functions" THAT'S THE IDEA, of course:: st.ates' rights. Thc-se bills. which are opposed by the Conft•rence of Chief Justices of the 50 st.ates. are an attempt to forc·e Ame- rica ba('k to the worst of its past to de fa('tO segregauon and. perhaps, to reli- gious d1sn1minat1on Much of the pro- posed legislation 1s p<ihucaUy popular al the mom<.•nt , but 1t 1s still that rare combination of evil .md foolishness. If He lms and frtl·nds ht1Vl' their way it might bl• possihlt-. d<•pending on state l.'Ourt dcc1s1ons, for women to be drafted m Utah but not m California. Sen Bumpers of Arkansas, l thought, was the· most aruc:ulate of the men who made me proud lo be.• in the Senate last week Perhaps that was because he had to be thl' most courageous. T he week before he had been tht· onJy one of the 22 St.>nators from the states of the old Confederacy to vote against other "stnppmg" leg1slat1on -that was the bill to strip the JuslJC(' Department of the Power to use busmR as a remedy in proven c:ast..'S of Sl'hool dcsegregauon. ''My words here• this morrung will not chang<.' a single VCltl' ... Sen Bumpers said "I r1:-t: to speak on this 1SSue because I do not want P1th<.•r my children or my const1tul'nL~ to think I acquiesced in or only mildly obJc•c·tPd lo what we arc about to do ht·rc. I want them and any person within earshot or whoever may read my words to know that the begin- ning of the end of t·onslltuuonal gua - ranwes m this nation occurred over my strenuous anJ veht>mcnt protest " That, for a ::.c•natur from Arkansas. 1s what someone onl't' <·ailed a "profile m courage· Pentagon s ticks to its musical guns WASHINGTON -The Pentagon brass. evidently desperate for a triumph in these trying times of peace, have found someon e they can push around: the Opera Orchestra of New York. Though a bunch of longhaired mUSl- cians is hardly a match for the Pentagon, peacetime generals, like beggars. can't be choosers. So when officials of the Opera Orchestra recruited the West Point Marchinj{ Ba~nd for a production of Wagner's "Rienzi," the generals reacted as if a common private had sneaked into ~e Flag Officers Mess. REACHING DEEP into its formidable arsenal of regulations, the Pentagon poohbahs found one that restricted military units fro m supporting "commercial ventures." S o the West Point band's scheduled appearance was canceled forthwith. The Opera Orchestra, which had pre- viously used the West Point band and had been promised its services for "Rienzi" as long ago as December 1979. asked Defense Secretary Caspar Wein- berger to reconsider. But Cap stuck to his guns. On Jan. 22, only a m onth before "Riend" was I<> be per!ormeG~ JACI AlllRIDI ..fi/4' Kennedy Certter in Washington, Wein- berger wrote the orchestra group: "Common ownership of the Defense establishment dictates that its resources be committed to support of events and activities of common interest and com- mon benefit and that the Department should not do for one what it cannot do for all." While they were at it, the brass hats Langua ge that d ivid es u s According to a new TV commercial I caught the other day, Elaine Stritch, the American actress, has just learned in London that you can't get an "English muffin" in England. ln the ad, she was yearning for the American brand she had always enjoyed. U Miss Stritch proceeded on to Paris, she would learn that she could not obtain v!lllY HARRIS a 11French roll," "French toast," "French dttming,'' or "French fried potatoes," which are all English or American de-- signations. NOR COULD she (ind a "Danish ~- 1try" in Denmark, a.n "Irish stew" in Ireland~ al\d frtendt who have vtslted theft inform me U..t U la impo-.ible to find • decent delk:atelMD in llraeJ. No Amerbn ban.ender would know wh_!i' IO concoct for a customer who re. quiiited a drink called an "Amerlcano" -which II qul• a popu.1a.r •perldf thro,ucbout Italy. It you order ••chop auey' (not an Mn.bmtlc Chlnele cllah) ln Canton, you'U wind up with roast pork. And. oddly enough, if you request "spaghetti" in a British restaurant, you will get what we Americans call "vermicelli.", . (Incidentally, anyone rash enough to order a "hamburger" in Hamburg will get an order of !IOmething called "flelachpflaenzchen," which Is as un- pronounceable as it may be indigestible.) An act.or friend once told me that du- ring the fi.lm.ing of a restaurant 9Cene in Paris, the hungry exvaa spotted th.ls exotic iterr1 on the luncheon menu: "Petito saucisse de Frankfort bTa/.see dlJns la choucroute a la mode alsacienne." When the food arrived it turned out to be -hot dogs and sauerkraut. When o.c.r Wilde twitted that "England and America are two nations dM<led by a comrooo language,'' he muat have been thinking aboUt food u much u anything el.te. WllA T WE CALL "candy," they call •1aweet1"; what we call "<lOOldel. .. they call "bllcuita"; what we call "corn.'' the call ·~tie": what we -11 "dMler~r, they call "tndt.11 (llwn ln kitchen uten· alb, our "can·opener" ia their •eun-ooener;• our ••pericab turner" Is their 4'9! eooop.." ux1 o-..ar ''ea beater" II thetr ea whWL") • also callC'd off the sc·heduled part1c1pa- t1on of the Navy "Sea Chanters." Opera Orchestra officials were livid. The orchestra 1s a non-profit organiza- tion. with funding from the Nauonal Endowment for the Arts and an honor- ary board of government officials. It is hardly a "commercial venture," they maint&n. Furthermore, o rchestra officials pointed out in MaiJgrams to Weinberger and the White House that the West Point band had performed at a commercial, profit-making event in New York's Wa ldorf-Astoria Hotel last November and December. The U.S. Marine Corps band had also taken part in the politi- cally tmged celebrallon of Gov. Charles Robb's inaugural in Richmond. Va., last Jan. 16-17. "They were quoting the Bible to us and then they had the arrogance t.o tum around and interpret the rules as they saw fit." orchestra official Carl Abraham complained lo my reporter Jeff Nesbit. THE OPERA GROUP a ppealed to Rep. Joseph Addabbo, D-N. Y .. but he couldn't get past the st.age door. ''Once the denial was made, they really stayed firm," an Addabbo aide reported. "They didn't budge an inch." The Opera Orchestra is con templating a lawsuit against the OOD. As for the apparent misuse of the West Point band and the Marine Corps band on the other occasions, Pentagon officials said those responsible for the "mdLc;cretion.s" would be fonnally reprimanqed. Footnote: "Rienzi" was performed on schedule to wild acclaim, with a pickup brass band replacing the West Point ca- dets. And there was, after all, one mili- tary musical group participating: the Coast Guard Academ y's "S lngin& Idlers.'' ln J)e4lcetime, t~ Coast GU&rd reports to the Department of Transpor-- tation, not to the Pentagon. GllllY GUI With \ht big cuta in educatlon f\.lndfnc how long will it be beCore \ffchera stan collecting dJubUlty for "b\lmOut"? 1 SYMPATHETtC ...... , .. ,_.. ___ ..,~ ... -= .... ...,.,""« ........... , ... _' •. , ..... .... ..... .. oe.-, °""· 0.lfy ... ~. • • I llllJPlll TUESDAY, MARCH 20, 1882 CAVALCADE COMICS TELEVISION 8 2 84 8 5 .· riE rma Do mbeck n o longer trashes 'junk' mail. S ee why on Page 8 2. D 0 I . "' Designer jean's for under four bucks? Goodie By JEF.F PARUR or ... _,,......,. Nell Diamond would love it -forever in designer blue jeans,· for under $4. And the Goodwill of Orange County is offerin'g just that. Sin- ce Christmas Goodwill has taken donated designer jeans, put its own label -"Goodies" -on them, and sold them in the 12 Goodwill stores in the county for $3.95. "We'n: making them double designer," sa id spokes woman Wyoma Hamilton. •We're giving people the cha nce to w ear a fancy pair of jeans and still t:ia,ve some money left over to jingle in the pockets." The "Goodies" are not only good news to budget-conscious shoppers, but they're a big factor in the Goodwill's 15 to 20 percent increase in business in the last three months, Mrs. Ha milton said. "Whenever there is a reces- sion, we go through two phases," she said. "The first is an upswing in thrift store sales, which we're seeing now. The second ls a downturn in donations, which we've just started to notice. When dollars are tight, people shop here more, but they also tend to hold onto their diacarda- bles longer." The Goodwill has two full- time employees who do nothing but sew the "Goodies" labels on the jeans. usually just below the existing designer label. The jeans are then sen t in 50-unit lots to the various Goodwill outle ts, suc h as the Costa Mesa stor e, where manager Lori Martin says they're selling "like crazy." "We go through about 50 pair a month," she said. "And w e've got more on orde r right now. At $3.95, who can pass up a pair of Calvins?" The Orange County Good- will got the idea from the Mor- gan Memorial Goodwill, the East Coast c h a pt e r th a t so ld Ci#' . ),\ .. s ·1d·· _ . oc1a r1v1ng can't he stopped THE CR UISER CR UNCH: You may have thought that laws were beginning to emerge that might alleviate our summer and vacation tourist jams along this best of all · possible coasts. Alas, your hopes must be dashed today. • It develops that one of those promising con trol ordi- nances has just been shot to pieces by a California appellate court reversal. The law in question came from the little town , · -• ~ of L os Gatos, up in the · ~ -~~\ Santa Clara Valley, some-Jll MHRPlllf ~ / times know n as Silicon + '>-Valle y, on accou nt of all the cotnputer and space age work done there. Anyway, it's a long distance from our beach cities. The traffic jam . . _problem, however, might well apply. WHAT THE LOS GATOS ordinance did was to outlaw some of the favorite practices of our day-visitors here along the shoreline. Four beach bums ready to cruise in either direction This dictum decreed that it is unlawful to drive around "without immediate destination, at random, bu t on the lookout for possible developments, or for the purposes of sightseeing repeatedly in the same area and while driving with the p urpose of socializing with other motorists or pedestrians." J ust imagine how a law like that would improve life for us coastal residents. THOSE DAY TOURISTS would be outlawed because none of them have an immediate destination, unless they. can find a parking place. And they can't. No longer could they drive around at random, looking for a possible developmen t like picking up a couple of good-looking girls visiting from Pasadena. No longer could they sigh tsee repeatedly in the same area. Like driving up and down Bal boa Island's Marine 'Avenue. Or double-parking on Main Street in Huntington Beach . Or repeatedly circling the block from Forest Avenue to Ocean in Laguna. THESE TIME-TESTED habits of our day tourists could have been made unlawful by adopting a law similar to that one in Los Gatos. Then too, the 80Ciali%ing aspect of the ordinance would have atrong effects here. N o longer could long lines of beach visitors, jammed to a standstill on th e Newport- Balboa Peninsula, be able to sit and talk to each other. Nor could they try to strike up an acquaintance with a pede- ~ey'd just have to sit there in glum silence. WHILE THE PROSPECrS of all this might. brighten· you.r day , your hope• must be dashed because the Los Gatol'law was knocked down by the appellate panel. 'ttle law was designed in the first place not for beach ~. but to prohibit a youth pnctice called '•cruisln&." 'JtUa ia when a group of young hot-rodden, van driven Eien all pt topther and cnu.e the city streets with the of either finding aome action. or creating eome vm. O.tos didn't ll.ke it and puled the anti-cruili.ng law. lbe cOu.rt aid you can't do that. nm, becaua the field of vehJcu1ar behavior ii pre--enpt.ed by the 9'ate ~ tucle code. BBIIDBI, the court Said, you can't resulate the behavior of individual motol1m like that. So 10" ... ;.wt left to ...-that our, own IUIDIMf cndm-1 will be with w forever'. D.itr Not l taft ""°40 GOODIE NEWS -This label means designer jeans at a price you can live with . They're from Goodwill of Orange County ancf: selling like crazy. ...., .......... ~a....­ PEERLESS PERCH -Cindy Sturnot, viaiting from·Wi- soonsln, probably didn't realize her enviable poeition of ha- ving the beach to heraelf. Only gulls were in view -landing near Newport Pier and painted on the Scotty's Fish Fry slgri. I ProbatioD. school _plans open house An open boUle at Greeley Day' School, operated by Oran1e County'• education and probadon de~•nta, will be he ld at 2 p.m. Wednmday. 'The ICbool. located at 401 The City Drtve, e>rance. la opera~ for ward.I of the Juvenile court wbo muat attend cl .... • u a oandiUon of pn>badan. Studen• come from throu1hout the ·county. Moat rely on publlc ~tion to 19' there. ··~ .,,_ ltuden• in thia .cbool llpificantly redumm the llkellbooCI of their 1•tttnc lnN additional trouble wlUch would req,ulre the juvenile court to I oonikllr cammltblllnt '° • ODltlY inatitudonal procram.'' -'d Mf· ' cMe1 ScbUlll9cMr, county chief lll"Obatlon olf:tclr. "Morgies'"'with great succes.9 last year. As the recession deepens, Mrs. H amllton is h o ping that "Goodies" and the other popular Goodwill items -fu r n iture, books, clothing. a pplian ces - will continue to be donated. "The sales are bound to keep going up," s he said. "But we can't sell what we don't have." The G oodwill has stepped up its "Goodies" sales campaign with bumper stickers asking "Do You Have Your Goodies?," cards that proclai~ the holder as a member of the "Goodies Club" and a series of local television ads. With 83 p ercent of t h e Orange County GoodwiU opera- ting budge t generated by sales in the thrift stores, Mrs. Hamilton says that h ow ts a crucia1 time for sales and dona lions. "Naturally. r ecessionary times hit u s ha rd," s he said. "Whe n jobs a r e h ard to get, handicapped people are the last ' to be hired." S he says there's been an in- crease in the numben of handi- capped people coming to the Goodwill \o find employment in the first two months of this year. "We helped 1.543 people ' find work a nd training last year," sh e said. "T hia year it's looking like we'll do even more." Burglars hit NB offices Burglars a ppa rently armed with a pass key. ransacked 43 medical offices in two Newport Beach professional buildings this weekend. making off with $6,177 in cash and goods. The office building burglaries at 1441 and 1401 Avocado Ave. were discovered by janitors who showed up to do routine cleaning. DA won't contest prison death ·ruling .. , ~ t. The Orange County District Attorney's office has no plans to appeal a judge's ruling reducing to second -degree murde r the conviction of an Orange County Jail inmate implicated in the slaying of another prisoner. Judge Leonard McBride deci- ded reasonable doubt existed as to whether Bill Leonard Frisbee, 31, acted with premeditation in the stomping death of Mich ael Bottoms, 25, of Long Beach , in a holding cell last April 20 A j ur y h a d found Frisbee . guilty of first-degree murder. A similar verdict w as re turned \ against Frisbee's co-de~ndand, Arthur Ruffo, 26. De puty District Atto rney Brent Romney said Judge Mc- Bride was acting within his dis- cretion in reducing the degree of the verdict. "I don't agree with what he did, but I understand it," Romney said. F risbee and Ruffo are to be sen tenced April 20 -exactly one year after the slaying occurred. T wo other ja il inmates, La- wrence Poulsen and Philip Sen- teno, face separate trials in con- nection with the Bottol1)5 slaying. J l •ANN LANDERS 1 •ERMA BOMBFA:K •HOROSCOPE Help f oi-drinking problem near as the phone DEAR ANN LANDERS : I am a rruddle-aged woman in the business world. Even though females are supposed to have more equality and freedom these days. I still believe a woman must be twice as good as a man to aet half aa far. Gender discrimination isn't my oncy problem. The pressures and stress that come from competing with men have made it ne- cessary for me to drink more than I should. · • I am terrified that someone in the business will learn of my alcoholic tendencies and I will be out in the cold without even my dig- nity to keep me warm. I have no family or close friends to turn to for advice. My social life is completely wrapped up with the company. You are my only source of help. Please don't fail me, Ann Landers. -DISCRIMINATION IS THE COMPETITION IN BOSTON DEAR D. IN 8 .: Sorry I'm going to sound llke a broken record, but -the most ;. effective help is as close as your phone 'SCARE' FORCE -Behind gas masks, en- listed men stationed at George Air Force Base near Victorville, ret\lrn to a classroom after JOUI HEALTH DA. PETER J . STEINCAOHN T •• ~ ~ .. :------------------- } Retirement: ~Plan ahead DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: I with yoa'd : wan my laa1band that It may be dangerou to ~ Ilea.Ida to retire early. He's only '5 and 11 tlalnt::f of retiring. I don't t lae's readf for it. He hasn't oae ntal•e interest to keep lalm ba1y w1am be llvn •P workiq (1! hoan a day, year In mMf year nt). It It trae that there's danger of sbrivellng on tbe vine daring early retirement? - MRS. T. DEAR MRS. T.: For years I've been tel- ling patients that sudden work stoppage , without considerable preparation in earlier : years can prove devastating. Like suddenly ·• stepping on the brake while speeding on wet pavement. Chronic boredom is slow death. An anti- dote or antitoxin is early preparation for : retirement. Physical, financial, emotional eval"'8tion are t9elltial ingredients for suc- 1 cellful retirement. ' c.J1 it hobbies or what you will. Mrs. T., man/woman must have something to tum to bet.ore reUring from a lifetime of work. When man's boredom becomes perma- nent, tbe bird of death flutters impatiently ou1llde his window. DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: I'm all mhM _ ~Dom wbt kiM of diet tq be oa wt .. aU taa aboat ckolnterol and blood fan A tlaH&la my e••letterol Is aormal, mJ dieter iu waned me aplDlt eettaa btlner, enMI .................... _An ... r.•H?1 1a1 Wllll"JT r. u. Be tells .. '• ~---MR.&. book. And It'• free. I am talktng about Al· collollct Anoaymoas. Wben yor call AA beadquarters, tbey will latorm you of tbe time ud place of tlae next 1et-together. Yoar "sroap' will be tbe one closeat to your laome or bHlDe11. Take your choice. Don't tell me you cu't dOW up a& a meeting because yoa doa't wut uyoae to know yoar "secret." No. 1: Memben don't talk. AA 11 a fellowsbip of compa11loaate, dedic•ted _people wbo share a common problem. (Many have been dry for years and still go to meetings 10 tlaey can help othen.) No. Z: U your social friends are your co-worken, stop kiddin& yourself. They are • aware of your bottle problem. U nothing ha1 been said it's because tbe booze ba1n1t hurt your performance -yet. There is no disgrace lo admitting you have a drinking problem. The disgrace lies in being too cowardly or arrogant to take whatever steps are necessary to conquer it. AP Wlt1911i1U training in chemical warfare defe111e. The an- nual daylong seminar familiarized the airmen with protective equipment. Get 1olD1 and good lack. I will waicb the malls dally for your letter felling me you took my advice. DEAR ANN:·l am writing in regard to the mother whoee. 17-year-old aon was good at repairing things. He had been offered a job by a neighbor who owns an appliance store. "Mama" is concerned about her son being seduced by a widow or divorcee while he is in her home fixing something. What's wrong with her anyway? She, and many others, believe every divorcee and widow is hot for a man. Most divorcees were dumped and are di.sfnchanted -or THEY did the dumping and are not all that eager to get mixed up with another male of any age. As for widows, l can't quite stretch my imagination to the point where I can envi- sion many who would care to take a schoolboy to bed. Tell "Mama" to stop fretting about the older dames and give some thought to those 15-and 16-year-old mantraps. A teen-age \ . Allll WIJflS girl wearing a tight pair of jeans and an adhesive T-shirt poses more danger to Sonny Boy than a divorcee or a widow with a broken refrigerator. -MICHIGAN OB- SERVER DEAR MICHIGAN: My mail tells me you are on target. Thanks for your obser- vation. Is alcoholism ruining your life? Know the danger signals and what to do. Read the booklet, "Alcohblism -Hope and Help," by Ann Landers. Enclose 50 cents with your request and a Jong, stamped, self-addressed envelope to Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11995, Chicago, m. 60611 Mail no longer 'junk' A couple of years ago, advertisers took a good look at th~ir mail campaigns and r~a­ lized most of thelI' correspondence was going from mailbdx to trash without ever leaving the curb. So they personali7.ed it. Did it work? You naive little fool, you. Do you ho- nestly think I could toss a letter that began, "Dear Erma: You and Bill may just have won $100,000 in our annual Carpet Sweepstakes. Why don't you fill out the enclosed card and I will call on you to talk about your carpet needs and the over 100 prizes you may have won? Signed, Bon,nie Sparkle." IT WAS YEARS BEFORE I dared to believe that Bonnie was a two-ton computer programmed to read the phone book. Ma. Madge Heit of Brooten, Minn., also got a lit~e suspicious. She wrote recently that she received a "personal" letter from the publishers of a rather exclusive fashion magazine. It began, "Dear Ma. Heit: Our compli- ments for being one of the best-dressed people in Brooten! For turning your place in- to a home that sizzles with decorating excite- ment. For giving parties that are the talk of the whole state at Minnesota. For getting the fun out of the fashionable living you do." Well, the first thing Ms. Heit did was to flMA IOMlfCI ATWIT'S END check the envelope to see if she had opened someone else's mail by mistake. "Imagine for a moment," she said, "that I live in a town of 600 people (mostly far- mers) and you'll appreciate how thrilled I was to find that I am one of the best-dressed people there. "MY DECORATIN,G THAT 'sizzles with excitement' must mean the roller skates in the living room and the wet beach towels on the organ. "My 'parties' consist of popcorn and punch served to very high-class 15-and 11 -year-olds. These are the 'talk of the whole state of Minnesota'? I had no idea their music was so loud." The kicker is that Ms. Heit is only home on weekends. "I have a useless housekeeper and the kids act like animals all week." she said. "I find the whole thing insulting." I don't know, Madge. With the kind of week I had, I'm ready to be lied to . . . even by a computer. How about forwarding your letter to me? I'll pay postage, deal? Aquarius: Emphasis on • service Wednesday, Marcb 31 ARIES (March 21-April 19): You gain fresh insights concerning property, home, family situation and security. You now are in position to take direct action. Roadblock is temporary; obstacle will become steppings- tone to progress. • TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Em- phasis on meetings with close neighbors, short trips, calls from relatives and a mes- sage which enables you to choose right di- rection. First impressions are apt to be cor- rect -your intuition is on target. GEMINI (May 21 -June 20): Money aspects good; elements of timing and luck ride with you. Popularity increases, social activity accelerates and travel opportunities multiply. Individual who had refused to take you seriously will now express ad- miration. CANCER (June 21 -July 22): Study Gemini message for valuable hint. Lunar cycle high -judgment, timing, intuition are on target. Take initiative, make new starts, welcome fresh contaCt.s. Scorpio, Aquarius, Leo persons play important roles. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You get insight regarding motives, opportunities and reasons for recent happenings. You'll have backs~ tage view -hospital visit could be on agenda. Individual who is temporarily con- f inec;I does have special information to im- part. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept~ 22): Di~~:.acy becomes your grand ally; lunar emp on friends, hopes, wishel and gains through business activitr. Purchue of luxury item ls part. of scenario. Remember special anni- versary involving one cloee to you. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Adversity is overcome -what seemed a sure defeat . POT SHOTS BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT I l'M GL.AD THE'RE' ARE AT LEAST SOME THIN~& SOMEWHERE THAT 'DON'T HAV£ TO DO TOPAY. .. could be transformed into a stunning vic- tory. Moon emphasis on career, prestige. community activity and a unique honor. HOROSCOPE BY SIDNEY OMARA SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Accent on production, iong-range projects, information concerning import-export activities. Creative endeavors relate to spiritual enlightenment and communication. You'll be dealing with persons who are affluent. · SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): You. ' sense pulse of public -you can now strike chord of universal appeal. Personal magne- tism soars, members of opposite sex are at- tracted and you encounter money-making opportunity. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Em- phasis on service, employment, sales and care required by those who depend upon you, including pets. Knowledge gained through unorthodox procedures -you res- olve dilemma and you'll be at right place at crucial moment. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Accent on legal affairs, public relations, encounters with those whose views may be opposite your own. Bieak with past indicated as you .take cold plunge into future. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Display versatility, imprint style, exJ)ress feelings to member of opposite sex. Element of luck rides with you and you could win in contests or games of chance. In matters of specula- tion, stick with m.nnber 3. -s--· GORIN ON BRIDGE BY CHARLES H. GOREN ANO OMAR Stt!ARIF Ea1t·Weat vulnerable. South deals. NORTH • AICJ98 ._,H4 0 J8 •&107 WEST EAST •I • Ql0874 ~ 1(107 s c;:;> J 52 0 ltlOtUZ 0 AQ7U •n +v ... SOUTH •U c:::>AQ8 ov.w +AQJtHU The bidding: S..tll WM N•rtlt Eaet l. , ... l. , ... I• P ... 5 • PUI •• Pue , ....... Opening lead: ThrM of •. f1mlliar theme• come up In different dl11ui1e1. Declarer hu a 1ure-triek line for hit contrict on thla eqm. pie. Can ,Ou •pot ll? Detpft.t the fttl that tky were aadl7 outpnned tn t.r1ftl of ltip car*. Eut· w .. t had an netll•nt vulnerable sacrifi~ al six diamonds because 'fl the posi· lion or the heart honors. But it is not 1urpri1ing that they failed to find it . West led a trump. and when dummy came down, decl&rer was templed to cash 1 he top spades and ruff a spade in the hope or setting up the long spade for a he&rt diacard. However. this line risked defeat If spades were 5-1. The contract can be assured by putting the heart spot cards to full use in com· blnation with a preU.y play in the spade suit. Declarer won the club lead 111ith dummy'• 1eveo and ruf· fed a diamond. He Cl'09Md back to the ten of trumps and rulted another d l,mond. Nut, he cashed the kJnr and ace or spadu. then led a Ilea.rt from the table. He 1lmpl1 covered any card thaL Eut cared '° put up. Weit could win the trick, but be was end pi.yed. A1 the carda 11.. he had to return a red 1ult. A hear\ would be IDCo 4eelarer'1 .. ._, and a dla· lnoad would allow dedarw to ruff in one hand while discard· Ing a heart from the other. Pure luck, you say. Whal if Weal had started with length In spades and could now play a spade? The contract still cannot be defeated. lf Weal leads the queen or •pades. dttlater ruffs, rets back to dummy with a trump and di.c:ardl hls remaining heart loter on the jack of spade•. And If West has a low spade lo lead. dttlarer puts up dummy'a jack. II East. has the queen, declarer ruffs and dummy's apade1 are again establiebed. So the contract la made regardleu or the di.atrib11· lion. Colleen might ·have shot· J.R. NA8HVILLE (AP) -Slna-'~ Colleen CamL~ haw lhot J.R. Ubbv Tucker hitchhiked from Brooklyn to tUe ~by storm. Cau Dlewd Krilt1n In two Hl'ly..,.... o1 UMt CBS teleYWOn lhow "0.U..." She pve up the role to ap.P._ear in the movte "They All La\.Whld." ud MU)' Crolby evenwally WM liven the role of Kriatin -the woman who ahol tl\e or- Dlll'Y .J.R. htna In the highly rated lhow. And her father by surprise. 0 1 have no reareta," Miu Camp UY•· "You can ,.i ltudc in a role u a atereot_ype; it wu inltant •Wdom. but Mary CrClby will probably be~ u the woman who lhot J.R. Mm Camp didn't get Invol- ved 1n the 1980 llllMdrur game, "Who Shot J .R.?'" ___ __ "I've only aeen the two shows I did," ahe aa.td. "I don't watch TV; I don't even own a TV." • In "They All Laughed," CA9 Miu Camp portray• Chriaty Mlller, a hu.~d-hunting country music singer. One of her aongs from the film, 'l()ne Day Since Yesterday," has already made the country muaic charts. Another, "Kentucky Nights," should be re. ieaaed IOOD. She al•o portrays Morgan Fairchild's beat friend in the movie "Seduction." Her other film credit.a include "Apocalypee Now,'1 "Battle for the Planet of the Apes,'' "The Game of Death" and "Cloud Dancer." Miu Camp was originally cast in "They All Lkughed" u a jazz singer, but director Peter Bog- danovich changed her part to that of a country mu1lc singer when he heard her singing in a country tune. "I'm a b1I fan of Tauuny Wynette, but I didn't want a twangy sound," she said. 0 She's an incre- dible slngler with depth and sincerity." She aald she turned down the role to portray Mia Wynette in last year's television movie, "Stand by Your Man," becauae she insisted on doing the singing herself. -0 rve turned down a lot of stuff," Miss Camp said. She admires country music for its simplicity and message. "I like its simplicity and the fact it tells a story. In rock, you miss the story too often. I adore Merle Haggard, Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelaon, F.mmy- Lou Harris and crossovers like Linda Ronstadt and Crystal Gayle. "You feel the intimacy with country music, more ao than rock." "They All Laughed," which stars Audrey Hepburn, Ben Gazzara and John Ritter, is one of the many recent motion pictures with lots of country music. WAL'TU MATTHAU ANN-MAAC:ltET DINAH MANOtl' A HERSEAT ROSS fll.M NEJLSIMON'S IOUCHT 10 llE IN PICT\JltES Dlm10t °' l'tlolagrilf'hy °'VIDM WALSH Mun· by MARVI~ HAMLISCH l'loduc.cl by HERllERT ROSS •nd NEIL SIMON ~hw l"roducw RQCER M ROTil!>TEIN Smt>np4.y by NEJLSIMON Dv«wdby UERllERT MOS!> t~ "•I,. ,'·• ~ _____ -_ .. -__ -__ -_._~_~ __ · ----------.u BASED ON A TRUE STORY. ·--CITY~lllC. liilWJ -.. -~-----1£!!1 HI W4T Ji DRIWI IN .................... ..., -· ,.,.., Mll~\IOIN Ylf JO MAI I ~ --·-- • • missing. Dine at ~ Captains Table Cel*lltl your birtllday er anniversary • tb us. Calf• 11S11Yatilns and we will pr1vid1 the cuke! Celebration hours are from 5:30 p.m. until 9 p.m. 7 r- Airporter Inn Hotel 18700 MacAr1tu BcUtwrd. Mle, ~ At Olwlgt Cculty's JoM w..,,. ASport I llHl\ .. 1,I MAI I b ~ MicNel CAIM DllAntTmAI' (PG) '2:402111 l :H 711110110 Shlt=-c:o, U :U a 1IO 1:10 7110 10101 ,..ter Viti••• In SYIL__.. THS-(flO) '2145 3:00 5 :30 1100 10:11 ~~"°"*9 ~UOl'THE L.OST AllK (flOI I : 00 Js1 I 1 :30 7 :41 1 151 1 .. 1omm W•lter Math•u IOU8KTTO• IM lltCTUMS(l'O) "u• Nine To l'ln(f'G) uoulll• Terror! THEmsAST WITHHUlt) • Deadly 9feulnt (R) c::::i:::====-•C: I Adrienne .. rl>Uu ~ Titlll8 (fiO) T•ke Thlt J•ll And Shoff It (l'O) ......... • •ARQAIN MATIN••s • Monday tllru Saturday All Perform1nct1 before 5:00 PM lhcltlt ..... E ..... Nfltl IN Hllldlyt) ·• u1 ... •1 "'...i• Mlrodo ot 10 .. cron1 LA MIRADA WAll( IN ff•·2400 ''t'OM't'I".---.-. .... - IAl<E WOOD Cl'-''" SOUTH WA ,> •• "!Ya UNDIR TMS _., .._ ,,,.. ___ _ I ·-...--.. ...,.,.,.. ....... ·-----··· ''f'OMY'l".-99o--.-.-.- --"AnMnC CfT'f'' !It --.-. ,.,... __ ''CW lln'IOF,_.. .. --------SOYltl CMll Nlwoy atlModlloy ..... 111• ...... ..,""°"Lift °"""'....,. "" ... "' .... '"'• , ... , -9:15 S• ""° 6:00 Sllows Stlr1 Iii US IM,ORTANT NOTICl! CMILDRUt UMOH 12 fRH! llatMt ""Wt<• ... Tiit• fro 5~ • Sii S. Nt11 6:GO ,. Cllf4! -•'!Giii ... ca. Mm). 'lllUll lf'(Mlll "1 Ill M taa Mlm Wiii --MaSIDllT '°*"*' " -lllllG Ml llllllMlL l•Mi Cllf4! ......... Ml .. ... ~. ··~ •.A ANAHEIM Os:llVE IN ,,_...." at W-ll 179-9llO "A ITRAHCXR .. WATCHING",_ -"o.ATH VALLIY" ... 1."~LIW".-. I 1. "C...ul~" 4111 • s. "'°'"°"11DM ....UTIONr C.·flSOUllO "o.ATH wtSH II",_ -"vtea 90UAD" • C!llt • fl M)\111() fl • ·~ ,. ~ ,. lir',, BIJENA PARK DR"ll IN UNIOlll A .. Well Of ~II°" 121-4070 -I i-oln ,..,. .. ., • Cnoft 121...070 - I ~~ • & , • \'POMY'l"tiit ' -"UP IN IMOKE" 11t .. I .. .. :~ '.'IABMi\Dt;kE DENNIS THE MENACE . . . • •. 3·30 I c --f-~.ft "It's the animal shelter. Old you chase their dogcatcher out of town?" RIQHTC>H, P~USH lf"­ EVISR SINC~ 1923. Hank Ketchum ~ 4-1 • . l f PIANl!TI LUCY, wE\f GOT TO 6ET A R\INHEfl ON !ASf ... I OOH1T SOPfOSE VOO'D LET~6ETMIT OH THE MEAD WITM TME IW.L, WOllD voo? WHY? NANCY, MAVE '>'OU SEEN THAT BIG SPONGE I KEEP IN T._.E KITI:MEN? •a...16.~ 10Mat~ iOlt\C.C 1. I Kt&W ~UA, ~'flO ... ~ eec-Ause ,..H1s SANP 19 SO HO'T", cou 1.-c::> ~ use A CO"Nt!R OF YOUR e>t..ANKe,-~ ~ Chatltl M. Schult 1lttS IS 1HE FIRST TIME l'VE E\U l.OOW PNCTLV INlt> TMf MS " SOMEOHE ~ 15 TOTALLY OUT Of MIS MIND ! ~4.,­ by Jeff MacNelly I'M USING IT FOR A PENCIL HOLDER -,u..-:...... wttn'l ltW»OW THl&i240NI HAWAII fW'l.O •••IWCMT UICS4TANDINCI HUIMNletA~ I·~= N9CHIWI MOVll ••• .. One On One" (1177) Robby leneon. Annette O'TocM9. A boy wtlO eo-to college on a bell!atbal acflolerltllp 11 ~ by the coactl, IOOmed by 1111 tutor and UMd by the ICtloo4 '°' ... -purpoeea. 'PG' .MOVll . **"' .. Frllco Kid .. (1935) --Caoneiy, M8tgat9t ~.A gll1 .._a tough Mlor from betng l:IO~MCK, C'~Twmt CUTa..olaT8 I ·····~ .... MRNIV~ (C)MCWIR ' •• * ''Hontt ~ Horth- .... (1161) C.y Quint, EWI Mana 8elnt. An acMr· lillllO men'1 ... II c:flanged clfMtlullly When ht .. mil- .. tor a CIA agent. 1•1 C81NIWI N9CNIWI HAW'f DAV. AGAIN I MCHIWI YOU AIKID '°" IT Feetuted: Wo'1d'1 F..._. Blka Aide" and "T ... dng ....... • M"A"l"H Hawkeye refu1H to ,...... a wounded l(OfMl'I wented by U.I . Int.._ l?:.:;u> Que1t1: Norman and F1enoel Leer. (A) Q • DO<CAWTT cau.ilt: Jonethen Miiier. (Plr11) Cl) , .... MAMZJNI .._. Werr.n ..._, wtlo "'* loOatl* 1111 .. fOt .. -: • !Mn wtlo .... Mlfood tor the FDA. 9 INTIRTAMimn TONIGHT A oomp.._llM ~of .. Ac8delny AWWdl ~ monlel. .,.....,..,.,. .Ciuelt: Lynde cener. ®~WM "The 1140a" Didi c.-t ----Ille ...,._ ment and IOdel lltlMtlofll dutino • time pertod --fMllY corns of the wor1d WM lnWllwd In -on • mMIMIClllle. (D)THIWAVITWM "1938 WOl1d ....... .... Yortc GIMta ve. ... Yortc v ...... 7:IO. I ON THI TOWN ~1lltllttoe "od­ llctM~r• Ing WI" IPOl-ed by 1111 Loi~ Colectlwe. 1groupofw~ to rid OUt IOClaty of --llm: I dlly .. the Loi ~ Tr1lfllc Cour19: an ~ wilt! Aon 8mlttt. wtlo flfMlll llnd .,.. Olllb- tlly looll.-... •• ,N&VP'IUD I HOUNDED -Bret Maverick Ii hounded by a journalist, madman and mllltant feminists after winning a Chinlle girl in a card game tonight at 8 on KNBC (4). , . • LAYl!Ntl & IHW..IY & OOfllll'NIY • a.CARMCAP IHOW I~ Fetflet~~ 1111 object of I young IU99'1 "'9c1lonl.. I Cl) TIC TAO DOUGH MACIB. I LIH .... "8'0RT I =-AIKB>~IT Featured: ... IZllllN Cap- ture World'• L•rO•ll Snlk•" and .. HcnM Ot Olctoberfe9t ... (II) NM IAIKITIAU. Loi Angllel LMI.,. VI. SMC>lego~ CZ)MOVll **'Al .. Ametlcan Pop"• (11111) Anlmat9d. The ... tory of Amertcen pop muelc, trom v8UdeYllle to rook 'n' roll, II treoed through ..... genere- tlonl of • flmly °' ...... ........ t:oo. Cl) Q.LD. Quentin and 1n auto ....,_ I reoer. comtllne eCrOf1I to c:reet• a rocket· .,_.i eel to .., In • IOO-t'lllle race. e81MfMA~ A lrtendly joumllllt, the '°'* rnadMI and mllltMlt '8mlnlltl hOUnd ~ .,. ht wlnl. ~ glr1 In a c.d geme. (R) .MCMI **'A "Th• Orl11om ca.no .. (1171) Kim Dwby. Tonyw-te. • GI HAW'f DAVI eMCMi ••• "Tiie ...,., ~ Fel" (1 ... ) Humpfwey Bogart, Rod lteteer. • ,.M.MMUINE Aptllc1wendlM .... ...-111 .... frOlll Maldl Wflonow .... Wllfl!Mt; a manwtlO~•....,._ bllr'*'I•· eTHIDMAM •Dwn9 t.._.ood --dtW JoflMy Edge ... ..... 1111 rnemaoe by ... -. enoldllll'ne,....11Nn- o111 _.,,,.. ... trtla to lnhltlt hll ~ In ... "'°"°" picture lndulery. (flirt 2) e Lft ON fARTH '1.1'1 In The T,_,' DIPM Att.nborough looQ .. I varllCy of ~ ~ how they aollled the dlM- oultlel of Mng hlgll up In thebelt.Q • wtNA •• Aolng: Tiie Mattlullllh Syndrome" An examN- llon of 1111 '9IMrdl .,..,. conduc:Wcl on ~ end the 8Qlno proce11 11 preeented. Q ®MOYIE ••'Al ''The lelc* '-1'' (1171) Giiiert floland, Cati Andereon. A t~-eoe ~ ..., ""* contllld wilt! I ._ manta ray In or6# to,--. a velUable ~..-.·PO• Cl)MCMI **'4 ''Thief' (19811 Jatne1 Cun, Tueed1y We6d. A pr alullonll crook --llP hlll lndepelldllloe tor a big ecor• ttl9l ht • tlOC* Wll aecure hll r-. ;=·R' * * *. "Raging "'"" (1H0t ~ De Niro,. Cethy ~. Boalng cNrnplon J91e LI Mot1a'I 1ptltud• for vlolence bmgl """ ..... In the ""' bUt dllNptl hll .,... eonalllfil. .... l:IO. GI J0ANm LOWI CHACttl Joenle .. '°"' '*-llgrllftO I oontract et the hOIM of • hoMhot NOord ptoduoer or MtendlnO I hllge flmly '*"· Q eeMWt A man Md hll grwid-....., ..... _.the ""*""' °' .. .... t:oo. Cl) MCMI • • \4 ''Qideon'I T r\111'1991" (1171) Henry Fonda. Joie F«Nr. An obeour'e Aorldl convict chan1H th• COUtM of AINftDen ..... ~.(A) ea,.-..ecaowo lam CWtll and Aeldlllt CMtyte ~ their 11¥91 dutino .. lrweltlga- tlon °' T)'OM'• .,.. Md Lane learnt that Iha .. ;tin.-. OOtllNMf .... ...,.. • dll'eto attenct Janet'• dance a.a.(..,Q e-.v ..... Gueeta; CMtyl Ledd, ;,=:=- ~ ........ " ua-+' Thttlrle ......... ......... ............... '" .. ,. ......... .................. "°"" ........ ... _. .... Q • LftONIMnlt "l.Me In Tiie T,_" o..ed ,.~ ..... ·· vertMy of .,,...... Md "" . .,... ..... oulllel of ..... lllgh up In ........ Q (C)MCMI **''Out~" (1171) Craig Rila .. 11, Holll1 Mcl.-.n.A~ .... dr 1111 • who moon- llgtlta -.. ..,.,...,. ... of fMIM cetebftt .... ........ ~-· pllilonlc •mtlolllNP .... a IChilopfw•llc ~ ~ en.'R' Ml~MOYIE . ~ ~---------·----------------------- ..... ''Wlr.wdl" (1977) ANINllad. In • WOftd of the -...... --r .. . I.:' ,,.._ .......... try • -.. "'°"'**' ................ &'-· P g I 1 • .... mernlllt ..... ,..... .. ,.,..,Tiie ~ ................ ......... .._...,..... ,,.. ......... DorlM, .. .............. .. q ..... ......... ..... ,.... .... ,. Wlll*9 1'*" "' Loi ~:a. • *. '"'*'Y ..... All In A ...... C•1t) ...,_ Hud-' --~~A ........... ,""· .. ...., ti • M1Y of 111g11 ................. WOftll ........... POloe ...... IDMl'I .. ~ --~ .. CIMIJ'l11d1 LMD~THICCQ. ... A loOll It tlMn .. IN Ian Lull var. a~ ,..,.., nnl, H6lpanlC ... lulOMI -the "moat IClllt· lmd IOIMIUllitr lft IN . U.1." eumac.u. fl\A~ ..Norttlern UOf!tl'' Tiie.,. ~ lmmltl•ltl and "'* ,.,,,... hlrmlng In I 1118 Not1tl Dellota w1mar ......... of John Hanlon Ind lllotl Nlllofl'I """· Q Cl)MOYll *"' "llland Ot 1000 ~ .... ,.. .MOYll * *"' "Somewhere In Tlme''(1MO)~ ,....., Jane Seymour. ~ wlttl the portrllt of • 1tth-oentuly ICtr9la. I fYIOdlm.day Nliw Yortr .-....... ~~ to ~ ba In time and meati.. 'PG' (%)MOYIE * * ''The """' Conflct" (1tl1)1amNell.~ lrl:rd. In .. ttlltct part of ''TM°"*'" trtotY. ~ Danlen, .. embodllNnt of .. A11t1ctwti1t. II -an _,. encl I trUlllled ad-.or to the~ of the U.I . ·w . 11••••<1>•• .. • IATUNlAY-.r Hoet: Cherlel Grodin. au.I: PllA Simon. I l =:.:a•OM IMPON) NllJ 80N • DO<CAWTT Guelt! Jondlan .... ~.:vi. . **~ .. .._ Wcwtdng" (1M1) Jerry 1M &..Ill. ._.°"'*·NW .. droUI ----. • •· .... ao.i trtel 1111 hind • wrtolll ,...... ...... ~-flemal.'PO' ®MCMI **\4i "A--. ... 8ant ln......, ....... ,,.7') ----......... ~ .... 'fllellWll-.:l'ln•• •a ........... edto....,,to• .. of ...... 11:IO. (I) AUCI ......... 1111 ... Ill ,,,..,, .......... Md ....... '° ...... ~. ~ .... ,..,, "· Hott:· Jotwty car ..... <Jueeta: AOf9' Moore, ....... ~. •• MC .... '8fTUNI • AU. .. THl,N&V • LOYI, AMl:ilcM STYLI "t.o.e Md The Odd Cw- .... I "l.o¥9 Md Gamel ~.._.. • ,_UlllATwmt CUT1..C•n1 <DlMCMI CHAtlll. LISTINGS ...,,,. ........ of two treat OOflflk:t 1111 armlm.. 'PG' • ·~ ''Mor9 Tilefl Sia-..... (1MO) LAiia ~ . A~ -·1 hulband Mndl ,_to. ~11111 ....... beglrll to oom- pl1ln ebowt bl1erre ...,....,_. 9 KNXT IC8S) 8 KN8C (N8Cl e KTLA (Incl.) • l(A8C IA8Cl e KFN18 ICBSJ fJ KHJ·TV (Incl.) e KCST (A8C) e KTTV (Ind.) 'e KCOP-TV (Ind.) .e KC~ lPBSl Ii KOCE (P8Sl CD) ~TV CZl Z·TV ®HBO CC> (Clnemax> (J) (WOR) NV.,N.V. dZl (WT8S) <IJ IESPN) Cl) (Showtlme> • Spotlight • (CMlitfltwS Network)-- ..... 9 TOOCl.OIR'°" COWORf S.a'1 true Identity la ~ wMll It II learned that .,..,... ..... ........, Ill 1111 holpltal .... Iha .. bom.(A) <Ill IYBn'THMI GOii Kip AdcloCla hoeta tNI ....... ~ lldlllt OMle --......... c.o4 w.-. .... McCormldt and the UnMo.n ComlC. -MlllGHT- tl:Ol~l,....n A OOl'llllf.._ .... r-..cap of the~ ,._.oar. mon6la. •a 'NffNl'f *MD A bi*M111111att puta 1111 IUt&n onJlle llne Md• ------------------ Family Easter Weekend ' ----------- . TUBE TOPP£RS KNXT (I) 8:00 -•'Q.E.D.'' Qlilnlln and auto ....... r C1"9AW rocket-pow--car to _.., In a nee. KNXT (2) 1:00 -'~ldeon'1 Trumpet." A Florida convict chanaet th• coaane of Anmtmn Jqal hlltory in movie ~ Henry Fonda, Joee Ferrer . Kerr (28) 9:00, KOCK (00) 10:30 - "Northern Lt1ht1." Scand1navtan imml-ar..,u fanntn1 ln 1910 North Dakota winfet are featur.d. KNBC (4) 10:00 -.. Barbara Mandrell and the Mandrell Slaten." Debbie Rey- nolds, Alabama gum. _ .......... .,.,. _.. ...... , .. .MCMI .................. ,.,, ......... ... ~.,..,... .. .... ,. ....... In --.... ..... In ........ .. .-of 1 Oolw Ulla II Mm toaetln . • MOYll ...... "Ando'' (1.., ..... l'1 Mlklflum, ..... , ..... An ovaJ-eaullovl Md IMIOorn ...,.,.. neMy tuml .. Alalo lnvMlltwl in.o ......... • Low......,CAN STYLI "LoWe And Tiwee Tlrnel'' I "tow And Tiie CllnlOll ~ .. l=°"eocmv • • • "One On Ofta'' c11111 Robby eeneon. ~ O'TocM9. A boy who ooee to oolllge on • b .............. .. ..... .., ... ooadl, llOOfMd by hlll Mof Md Ulld by h IClflOOI for ... °""~'PG' tlllll. (I) MOQOUD A _,. -o-nt II left In COINMlld of ... ;nclrlct .................. ~.("> 11:11 CZ> MOYll *** "l.Ollt•" (1HZ) ._......_._L)'On . laead on the *'Y IJir *-dM!lr ~.A 1'116dd19- aoed pr°'9llOf ..... to • ...,.. yGl#lll ... In .. 9'lcW1 to~ happl ..... 11111 e. LATI NllHT'Mn. Di\W) 1.1112 &JM Cklelll: ..,.. Kwtl. 0.... Wlllon. Altdt ICU· !Mn. IF • • * '-' "Two lfllllltl GlrW' (1111) Jl9M"lli•• L.-... IClla .......... In ........... ,.,.. ... w.. ..... .,....111 • ....... .,..... .... . r..::--.. . ••• ""la.,._ Now'' (1'71t Marton ...... .......... OlraleM.., ,.....,...,~Alt ................. ................... .. ""'··-...... to ~INl•a~ AWOL /llffff oflllllr WflO .......... ~ ...................... Ul4S(JI) MOVll ••~ .,,,_... To Kr (1llO) ......... Calfla. ,.. ~ 'olloe .... tor .. ~ ........ ""° .......... . ......... tUll ... 'llf we...,. ..... ...,.., Of The Wind" (1tn) Didi ~ eon. A lilOUl'Mln w ........ ~ .. pupl Md claepty a.... --oomc-•llNP. • MOYll ..... "My Deir a.a. tary'' (1 .... ) Larllne ~. IClrtl Douglll. An llltflot'I ...-.y 111111 ... ha JOHN DARLING " tt'ftf ........ . •......•. ., .. . ~~··-... CZ) ** "TN Anal con. tier• (Wt) lam Hall. ~ .... In .. ltllrd part of "The Osilefl" ........ ~Damian. the "'111 ...... °' .. Antl-dlrtll. II now an adult end • INIMd ~ to the ~of .. U.8.'R' ?•Cl>*•* "TtleWOtWI C1t9M1et Atlllete" (1971) "°"" ,.,.., Jan-Mletlell Vlnoent. A ooedl wflO II ~ • ""' of bed Ila ,.,,..,. to .. root9 In Afri. CI end dllooWrl I 1111* ..... 'G. •• ·~ "tllly ,,.. .. ( 1111) Tom l.allflllln, Dltorw T.,tor. Alt •· .......... hatfbl'Md ohenlploN ... c... Of • fNedom IClflOol for runa- W)'I on en AtlZone lndtan ......lllon. f:IO(C) **\t "Ode To• ,,_,. (117t) "°9)by ...... *"'• ~ O'OoMot. laMclon .. aong~llob- ble Qentry. A .,,.._, tllrMglt'I pall ~ enoee ooc••••• 1111 llr9t 1n1e~·.-a· ®**"4 ''Tlll~ AdwanlwrM Of lllH ,,_.. (1t71) ~ Yertl, Jdlr'I w-.. "' • ~,......., . .................. '°' • ,....... rogue alloard .. . .. (%) * •• NLA!lea'' (1112) ..... Mlaon, lue L)'Oft. ....... "°'Yby*-111'*~. A ..... .................... ..... '°""' .... In *' ~toMMp,111 ..... MO. •• ''Well Of TM Dl'lt4de" 11111) .lolln wewne.~._... CC>•·~· ...... Ot k fiiNan-1" (M4t ,,... 9111 • .,,.. ......... Tise ,....of ....... . I ......... lnol'-.f _ ........... ..... ..,..., ..... '°°",...., ...... .. ., •• wC*IJT .... ' ...,.._ ... "99 ~ A """'9'lt ,,._. ............. Cll*'Y ................. .. ...... ,._, .. , ........ .... .., ..... ~ ... ) . .,.., (I) ••• "TM AljlMtl _,,.,. (telO) ....... .............. ~ 1'111 POloe ......... ..,. lrtlnlflal .... taJllMM'I ... " .... ' ·-· rotbery. ............... M ...,.... ...... (1171) .... ~0...... ...-. "' "'"' ......... ""'~ "'-young ........ ...., -- ""' I ldlool ptcnlc Md beoome loll In .,. bultl . 'PG' 11.eCC>••• . ..,,."' .... Yelftl" (1114) Clllf ~­eon, .,,._ Fonda. ,.,..,, .,..,. .... by "" ~ frtllld arid tr8Wlne to .... Yelftl to vlrll ,_ ..,.._, a - • . ALL BRAND NEW 1981-1982& 1983'5 YOU WILL NEVER GETI A BETIER BUY· YOU WILL NEVER BUY FOR LESS! . . I . . No Wilson Ford is NOT selling the agency ... We are simply SELLING OUT our entire stock. Interest costs and our inventory 'charges are so high that we iust can't afford to maintain a TEN MILLION DOLLAR inventory. Our entire inventory is now on sale at prices which in most cases are hundreds of dollars below manufacturer's dealer -.. in- voice ••• The prices offered during our one week selling out sale are inclusive of all factory REBATES and all dealer discounts and REDUCTIONS. Includes Some Demon- strators. t SELLOUT ENDS APRIL 3 • .BUSINESS ·STOCKS Costa Mesa anil Estancia played to a 4-4 tie in C4 cs Sea View League actiqn. C2: Freshinan proved tfar .. He ~ls Wor~hy Ewing was brilliant, but it was North Carolina's rookie, Jorda n, who got winner .. ~ , . . NEW ORLEANS (AP) -James Worthy won the duel of dunks with Georgetown'• 7-foot freshman Patrick Ewing, and Dean Smith won the only prize millin& from h1a long and storied · career u coach at North Carolina -the NCAA basketball championship. Ewina was the rookie in the spotlight Monday night, but it was Michael Jor- dan, al.lo a freshman, who put the fini- ahlng touches on North Carolina's finest moment. Jordan's 18-foot jumper from the left side with 16 seconds left gave the Tar Heels a 63-62 victory over Georgetown. "rm very grateful to my players," said ·an emotiorially drained Smith. "This is one of the toughest teams we have played all year. We feel fortunate to have won it on the last shot~" Worthy scored a career high 28 points and stole the show from Ewing, who had 23. "Ewina WU IMmlational," Smith Mid. "Thia ls the best rve .en him play." Before the aame. Smith and Georp- town Coach John Tbompaon 1hook handl and exchanaed friendly greetinaa in front of the ICOl'tt'I table. Afterwards, they )\ugged. They have been friends since Smith began recruiting players from St. Anthony'• High School in Washington, D.C., where Thompson coached for six years. "I'm not ashamed, but I'm definitely depressed right now," said Thom peon, who had taken a team into an NCAA championship game for the first time. "I wanted it as bad as anyone 09Uld and the kids tried hard. They did all I could have asked them to do." The victory lifted a weight from the shoulders of Smith, who had taken six previous North Carolina teams to the Final Four without a championah.lp. "I can't even express how I feel," said aenior guard Jimmy Black. "I wanted it 10 bMily for my coech. We went out to get it few him." Worthy clamped the lid on North Carolina's victory when Georgetown'• I told Fred that he had won more games for us than he had lost and he was not to worry. It was one of those human errors. _ ... _ .... c....-~ Fred Brown tmsed him 8n errant pa. with about 10 eeconds left. Worthy was by himself when he took the pass, and when be took off down the court, he was fouled He mi8led both free throws with two aeconda left, but that was academic. North Carolina would not be denied its moment of glory. "Thia la the tou11hest team we've played all year," aaid Worthy. North Carolina'• acbedule included teaml like Virginia, Wake FOl'e9t, Kentucky and all those Atlantic Cout Conference rlvala, but the Tar Heeb almost stumbled in their fir'lt tournament game. North Carolina defeated James Madi- aon 52-M> in its tournament opener, then breezed past Alabama, Villanova and Houston to make it th1I far. "James Madison gave us problems with their dimpline, but Georfetown is a tremendoua defensive team,' Worthy said. . In the end, however, it was a little defenae by Worthy that proved vital. Thompson said Brown's pass into Worthy's hands was to eet up a play for All-American guard Eric ''Slee py" Floyd. Instead, it sailed straight to Wor- thy and the Hoyas were denied a final chance to win. "" ........... WINNERS AND LOSERS -North Carolina Coach Dean Smith embraces Georgetown Coach John Thompson (left) after bis Tar Heels won the NCAA title Monday night. Jimmy Black (center) cuts the net for a souvenir following action which included freshman Pat Ewing (right), who was whistled for goaltending on this one. · · ·Goaltending violations helped Tar Heels · Anytime you block somebody's shot, they remember -Georgetown's Ewing NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Georgetown's Pat Ewing, called for five goaltending violations, says he was only doing his job when he batted away the North Carolina shots. But the first eight points the Tar Heels scored during Monday ,night's NCAA c hampionship game came on toaltending calls against the 7-0 freshman. "I felt it wasn't goaltendlng,'' said Ewing, whose team lost 63-62. "I felt they were judgment ·calls. But anytime you block somebody's shots, they remem- ber. Maybe they'll think the next time they shoot." ~was cbaJlled with goal- tending on North Carolina's first four baskets, two of them credi- ted to James Worthy and one each to Michael Jordan and Sam Perkins. The Tar Heels didn't get an untouched basket on their own until Matt Doherty scored on a driving layup with 11:52 remai- ning in the half. Ewing flnlshed the game with 23 points. 11 rebounds and two blocked shots. The point total equaled Ewing's best effort of the eeaaon and he said he wanted to show the crowd that he also was an offensive player. "I wanted to do my beat," he said. "They think 'I'm just de- fenae. I wanted to show people I can play offense, too.'' Fred Brown, who threw away the ball with about 10 seconds left to seal North Carolina's vic- tory, said he was trying to get the ball to teammate Eric Smith. "I regret that I made that pus. That could have won the game for us," said Brown. "I was trying to throw. the ball to Eric Smith in the comer but Worthy cut in front. If I had had a rubber band on it, I would have brought it back." Brown said he considered cal-' ling a time out before he relealed the pau but thought it would give the T.,-Heell t;iJDe to 11et up a defeme. ''That was just my•jud8Jl)ellt," he said. "That would have given them time to set aomething up against us.'' Ewing's opponent at center, Worthy, complimented the freshman: "For a freehman he'• hla first homer of the •Prina Monday as Los Ari-awe90me. Under c.oach Thomp- Angels shelled; Dodgers roll Fnm AP dlapatcllea TUCSON -Chris Bando and Jack Perconte eech had three bits and two RBI Monday to spark the Cleveland Indiana to an 8-3 exhibition bueball victory over the Anieb. geles defeated Minneeota 7-2 to snap a five-game son his development hu been exhibition losing streak. better. I'd hate to aee him the Jerry Reuaa became the first Dodger to worlc . next year or after that. He'• eeven inn1np. allowing only one run on four hits. awe.ome.'' "I told Fred that he had won more games for me than he bad 101t,' Thompson said, "and he wa1 not to worry. It was one of thoae huma6 errors." ~ The game was the closest for th• NCAA title since 1959, when Callfomi.J beat West Virginia 71-70. ~ "It's just the kind of pme I thought it would be," Floyd laid. "Hard~fought. close and each team having the reapect of the other. It was a tough lou, bui there weren't but two of ua left. One ha4 to win and one had to loee." • "A bright writer in Charlotte once aai4 the-reason I hadn't won a national championship was because of m1 system," Smith said long after the tu- mult had ended and he could collect his thoughts. "Now, I can f.inally say that'• ridiculous. It's not the system that loeea games. You uae the talent that yo\l have.'' Lary Sorerwen became the first Indiana pitcher to 10 eilht innino. The right-hander allowed only four bUa and held the Angela' offeme without a nm. . , Darrell J.cbcn, who pve up five nuw on flw hita Worthy w• banded two pris- in five 1nn1np, took the bl. es -the pua from Brown, then Scioecia, with hi.a third triple of the aprtns. the award a• t be I am e • • ou~p)ayer. UC Irvine gets Tur.ner p.e Anaela ended the shutout bid in the ninth inniDc when Bobby Cl.ark hit • two-run double off Ntiewr' Ed WhitlOn, and Rick 8'.ari.on followed with an RBI linele· =.wter John D' Aquino went the tint two and WM lifted afW fiw bat- tlln. ,...._~to.~.~ one nm of1 tbe rilb&-~. , The w.a. pkbd up two mare nm. ID the , lbirtl off BID Clliro cm an Rm bdlekl out by Joe OiMti ~ .... Bmdd1 tint ..... 'Ibey added two man r\IDI in the fifth at the expeme ol Jeff Mne4dlr ind ltnAtJ a..-on nlll«lallnc ..-bJ a..lo lllil IUcS M cq Ttw lzzC .... _two mon n.-ID tbe .wnth when ... ~. ltole llC.'IODd aDd ICONd on ................ hW'111hted •four-nm bunt in the fourth~· 1'he 'North CJrolina center, 0::1 homered in the etpth of1 reliever Al W -who 1cored a career_-bi1h 28 llama. t marbd anly OuWy'a .aJIMl nm batted in pointa, aealed North Carolina'• of the lllrina. ~ n-.__ _..__ a..-. wbQ will be the Doc:taen' openlnc day er '-"="fP.., ..... u ""'"'" pitcher A&ri 8 llllinst 8an Frand9co, WM maJdnc that errant .,.. with hla flnt appearance llnce conllh8 out of a 1ame ebout 10 •um left. Thunday beeaUM of Irritation ca\Ued by a bone The junior from Gaatonia, chip ID bla Wt toe.' N.C .. wmted to ~ hll ou--.. "'J'be toe f111t fine. no IJl'Ob)em at all," Reu9 dine player awird around md 1epcA1ild ahel' .... pme. "rm Jookinc farwud to diverted talk of movilll on '° the ~=-~day atart. 1 won't let m,..U hurt ~·':Ju~iad we won. I'm The win ~ tbe Dod8n' ahlbNGll re-' 1lad for the team, for Coach cord to lo-8. Tbj Twlal fell to f-13. Smith. r1111w that banal' '° 9!'l ..... ..... the Dodp's' ........ as--. day ballretbal1 ~who ... It, ....... 111t '1fl!ll' but .. mtahed .-~ biwflOl'e w~ .act. &be ,,_ ha Du1llCI a calf ~ --. • • r "r want to talk with ., ea-~... ¢• ".._ ... toe* hll ~ nt rente and Cwh Smith, iiMl I u 'rd.._ ... af hll-.... ......._ • ev.Mt ~ don't bave any lcMa wb.tt thla 1t..,aw£.....,.~~ . pmeoouldwto_,~ .. BY JOHN SEV ANO Of" .............. : Qicqe 'l'Umei', an a11.-11e pref who attended 8add)e.. back eoue.e tbll PMt .-mo hie made • verbal oomnltment to anmd UClmne ln the fall 'l\mwr, M, awnaed IC>.'7. sma• tn lwUna the a...._ to a 20-12 record. 8llddltl.ck .a with RJ~ for the ......... c.onference ~lo' 1•1-12. ·'Tbey pay·~ atyle ....... I Ike the .... " lllkl °l\aw" of bla cf.CWcin. "Pb•, it'1 a 8ICld • .....,. ICbool.'' • Turner .ad he ~lall HhtUaail to 8outlnNit Lciul-' ....... UNLV, P..,...dine and UCl ..,_..Ciba llC-....... • .. I cmne to UCl -...11mew I would haw a aOod ehllllll tD ..... Wlah ........ tour llnlln l knew lt would be • Fad ~~ far .. to PlaJ." • I . Turnir'admlttld that ea.ch BID Mu111pn u.o ...... lm¥l1Y In bll ...... •. 'TW ........... him far a wbllt." ... 'l\lms ....... ... ~ •II*' ...... He doem't,.. you. be ... lt •till." \ • Tigers in dog house, I . NCAA investigating Fnml~&pa&dlel CLEMSON, S.C. -'nle National • Colle1late AthleUc Auoclatlon bu • notlfled Clesmon University, 1ut 1ea- 80n'1 national collep football cham- piom, that an oWdal inquiry ii beina made Into It.a football program, univenity olllciala aald Monday. Clenwon Univenity President Bill L. Atch- illued brief da~t Monday confinn1nar the univenity hu receivea notice of the inquiry but did not elaborate. Head football coach Danny Ford could be reached for comment Monday. The NCAA's interest in Clemson has bf:en repQrted for several months. In February, Ford said an NCAA investigator had POM advised him there wa1 a "thick" file of recruiting complaints against the ' achool. · I • "You don't get investigated until you get turned in by so many j)eople, and your file geta so thick," Ford said at the time. Two months before, two fonner Tenneseee high school foot~ players, James Cofer and: I Ten')' Minor, filed a •12 million lawauit apinst 'Ford; Billy Ware, a former Clemson recruiter; · Knoxville, Tenn., businessman and Clemaon supporter Tom Breaaeale; and the Atlantic Coast c.onterence and its Gxnmissioner, Bob James. . ' • They alleged they were offered "illegal ln- ducementll" on behalf of Clemson. The Tennesseejair were recruited bl Clemson in 1980 an signed ACC lettera-o - intent but later ask,ed for their releaae. CJemaon released the players last June, according to· Atchley, because neither qualified academically. Quote of the day _ "The average adult American is se- dentary, overweight, suffering from by-· · pertension and lower back pain," -Dr. , Rlclaard Kbeler, professor of ehyaiology ' and one of 14 directors of the President's · . Council on Physical !ftneea and Sports. • ~--Meta ... I.My ... 1&-blt ~ ... wtth --~u.... .......... . RBI M the Ptratet ehueill ti New Yorll Meu, 10-&, for their '/:'th H· hibldan b uulJ vtcwy in IO ,..._ ... .., ~ phcbed ..... lbutout lnnlnl9 wl Ga.a ..,,.... belted hill wand homer ol the'--~ a.tm to an 8-0 vtdory OYW o.trait . . . Wiii and ta,., .... com- b6md • aw lhtll!I and tour nam to 1-d d'9 a... cw. to • &-1 Yk:IDrJ O.er.l>aklaad ... Rookie Wall••• .l•~••H collected ......... Mantr-1 .. feated Toronto, 10-2 •.. CUat B•..._.e and Dave Coa· ~each drove in. n.an u Clncinnati ~Houston, 2-0 ... Jeff lr•rr••1•• hit two bomen u the Oakland "B" team whippf'd San. LACY Francisco • . . Toaf Pacio- rek'• bua-IOlded 1inCJe ln the 11th lnn1na aave the QUcaao White SoX a 3-2 viic:t«y over l>lilla- delphia • • • 8&eYe Str..o&er hit a two-run ho- mer to lead Seattle to a '-4 win over San Diego . . . 8-Ko-IFeW and Mtl8 Yout hit home nma and Mark Broaan drove in three runa to lead a 16-hit Milwaukee attack in a 9-8 victory over San Franciaco. RaJdera' trlaJ begins anew Los ANGELES -oakland \DJ Raiders' attorney Joeeph Alioto told a 1 • • federal court jury Monday that pro-~ feaalonal football is bJa busineea and · not jun recreation. · '!be opening argwnenta came at the start of the retrial of the federal antitrust cue in which the Los Angeles_ Coliseum and the Oakland Raiders are cbarginC the National Football Lea- gue with violations of the antitrust law. The original suit last summer ended ln a 8-2 hung jury. This time the two alternates will not vote unlela one of the six original juron cannot continue. · "Entertainment is big buaineu," added Alioto, who claimed that a luxury box the Dallaa Cowboys IOld in Texas Stadium for $50,000 was reeold for $600,000. "Al Davia Oakland's managing general partner and the Raiden loet $1 million, while Georgia Frontiere and the Rams made ln excem of $3 ~ million," Alioto told the 1urv of five women and one man. Chargers get Sefmon In trade Tampa ·Bay linebacker Dewey Selmoe, the Buccaneen' aecond draft pick ever ln • 1976, was traded Monday to the San Diego Chargers for a future undbclo- led draft Choice. Selmon, brother of Tampa's All-Pro defensive end LeRoy Seim•, ia the third Buccaneet to be traded to San Diego in recent week.a ... Bob Nyatrom scored twice within 481aeconda of the aecond pedod to break open a tiaht game and the New York lalanden coasted past the New York Rangers, 7-3, ln Stanford basketball tabs Davis National Hockey League acti~n ... Phoenix T in......a-ho led n...--Col took Utah apart, 113-102 in the only National , . • • • om &IW'f'Dt W UUIJWU • m Basketball Aaociation game behind the 23-point lege to the NCAA basketball touma-aco~ of lllcll Kelley . ment the last two years, is Stanford University'• new coach . Davis, who -'relevlslon, radio had also been pursued by WiBconain, coached Boeton c.otJege to a 1()0-47 record over the past five years, including the recent 22-10 ~. .. The National Aaociation of Basket - ches elected Fre41 "Tu0 Wia ter of Cal State Long Beach u president of. the organization. Wmter aucceeda Dea Smltla of North Carolina . . . Jim Satalla, head coach at St. Bonaventure University the past nine years, was named u new coach at Duquesne University Monday. TV: No eftfttll scheduled. RADIO: Buketball -San Diego at Lakers, 7:20 p .m., KLAC (570). Baseball -Baseball preview with Curt Gowdy, 11:45 p.m., KNX (1070). WEDNl!'3DAY'S RADIO. Baseball -Boston va. Dodgers at Vero Beech, 9:10 a..m., KABC (790); Angela va. Seattle at Tempe, 11:55 a.m., !CMPC (710). U.S.· poloists shine Davis named Card coach HONOLULU -The United States Nafiona1 water polo team defeated Cuba over the weekend 15--6 to capture the CanAmMex tournament ~p. Cuba took eecond in 1..be tour-. n&ment. Auatralia third and Ja- pan founh. Mar High, also accounted for three aoaJa. Ex-University High and UC Irvine star Nick Baba .:end once and former Newport Harbor High star Jamie Bergeeon, now with Stanford. aoond twice. Boyer and Campbell shared high ac:oring booon with le\'en goaJa apiece. -BOSTON (AP) -Tom Davia, who led Boston College to the, NCAA basketball tournament. the last two years, is lea~ to become coach at Stanford Un- ivenity, the coach's father says. Rustlers stay unbeaten Me-sa,-E-stancia-tie,~--Jrvine shells Newport Rain wuhed out Corona del Mar'• Sea View J..-.ue b•et»ll pine at El Toro Monday, but theft weren't any damp aplrtta ln other are.u -auch u lrvtrw, Million Viejo and SanU.,O on the prep level and Oold9n Welt CoUep on the community coUeae level. Z.Ch entered u the favorite and in the only IOllU.P of the day, lt ended just ll.ke that -a to.up for Ettancla and Cotta Meu, who were stopped without a winner by the r.m. HeN'a a look at Monday's action: Golden .... 4, .... Loe~ 0 The Ruatlen improved their Southern c.at1fom1a conference record to 11-0 behind the two-hit pitching of Danny DeRoee and some timely hitting, Including two alnglel by Dan ~ who extended ~l h~luing atrealC: to 12 straight glmes. East Loa ,\ Angeles wu unable to get a runner as far as third ' • bue in the rain4hortened five-inning affair. The STANDOUTS '"'-M ' J f Fi winners posted single tallies ln the first four frames , -~ta esa s e t eld (left) to salt it away. Chuck Spiegel had the only extra and F.stanc:ta s J~ff Gardner, were two of the bue hit of the game slugging a 390-foot homer to key principals m Monday s 4-4 Sea View left-<:enter in the thW frame. De&ee, a freshman League standoff. right-hander, ia now 5-0 in conference play. Coete MMe 4, Eat.Mela 4 It wu a pme neither de1erved to loee as the two ' battled in a nip-and-tuck issue and as It turned out, neither did ln the Sea View ~a e struggle .. FAtancia opened up with · e markers ln the first and 9000Dd of! an RBI doub e by Jim Mc:Cahill and RBI alngle by Jeff Gardner, but Mesa struck for two ln the first inning on Jeff Field's two-run homer. Jim Roachelle restored order in the bottom of the aec0nd when he came on in relief and escaped from a no-out. baees-Joeded situation and eventually re- tired 10 in a row before giving way to a pinch-hitter in the 1eYenth. FAtancia aoored twice ln the seventh when Mike Campeau homered to center, then Gardner slng1.ed and stole second and came around on Reuben John8on'1 bue hit. But Coeta Mesa retaliated in the bottom of the r ¥v-:nth when two walks and Steve Anderson's single loaded the bales. A fielder's choice acored one run, Field was intentionally walked, then Kirk Peurrung worked a run-scoring free pass on a 3-2 pitch. Mesa had a chance to win it, but Gardner got the last batter to strike out. The rain started in the top of the eighth and the two were forced to settle for the tie. Jim Hyde struck out nine as Mesa's lone pitcher. Field, Mesa's All-CIF catcher, is now 6-for-10 with 2 homers . Irvine 11, Newport Herbor O Irvine unloaded with an 11-hit attack, helped along by the Sailors. who were guilty of six errors, BASEBALL four. passed balls and two hi~batters. Jim Gasho had a pair of doubles for the winnen, who improved thelr Sea View League record to 2-2, dropping Newport to the cellar (1 -3). Among the big hits for Irvine was a two-run double by Gasho in the first inning, a two-run single by Jay Scott in the third, an RBI baee hit by Gaaho in the fourth, a two-run single by Mike Tierney in the sixth and run-acoring aingles ln the seventh by Mark Webster and Mark Bondi. Tierney struck out four in gaining the victory r ~ no free puaes. Ml .. lon Viejo 7, Leguna 8Mch 3 ~ Beach picked up three runs on four bit.I in the sixth inning, but it came after loo many fireworks by the Dlablos to do much "ood. Damon Berryhill had a two-run single and Sean O'Connor, who was 2-for-2, singled home a rnailker, but Jeff Sauter's solo homer, backed up by a two-run double by Joe Greeley in the fifth inning, had Mission Viejo rolling with a 7-0 lead. Mission Viejo sits atop the South Coast Leegue with a 4-1 record, La~ Beach drops to 0-5. Santl1190 5, Woodbrid ge 0 The Warriors averted a no-hit loss when pinch- hitter Jeff Lite singled to right-center ln the sixth inning. The loss drops Woodbrldge's free.lance rec- .ord to 2-9. Golf tourney Shore( d} up a hit Dinah gets some help in tournament sponsorship Dinah Shore baa been tlie liostesa with the mostest to the LPGA tour for the past 11 yea.n and she has come up with another top attraction at M.isajon Hills Country lub ln Rancho Mirage again this weekend For 10 years, the tournament was the richet1t on the tour with the Colgate Company as spomor. When that group decided to get out of sponaorship for 1982, it looked for awhile like the tournament would not be held this year. But the Nabiaco Branda, Inc. group has stepped into the breech and taken over sponsorship with a pune of $300,000 being offered at the desert event ThW'Bday through Sunday. . Dinah and her tournament have had a lasting effect on the LPGA and r._'oneered such firsts as: the first event for women a golf on television; the first to offer over $100,000 in prize money; the first to host a celebrity pro-am format; and the first to offer over $300,000 in priz.e money. The hottest player on the tour right now, Nancy Lopez-Melton, is the defending champion of the Nabisco-Dinah Shore Invitational as it has been officially named. She has finished third twice and won the J&.B Scotch pro-am ln the last three weeks. Her final round 64 was a course reoord a year ago to give her a two-stroke win over Carolyn Hill. In 10 previous years, there have been nine different winners. Sandra Post won back-to-back victories in 1978 and 1979 and is the only double winner. fil2!:! HOWARD L. HANDY Nolan Cromwell and Preston Dennard are serving as hosts for the 144-man field with each amateur assured of a spot with a pro football player or ex-player. The entry fee is $150 with more information available by calling 635-0900. -. . • -. SINCE THE. TOURNAMENT players of the PGA opted to form Uielr own group and call them- selves the TP A, there bas been friction between the two groups, the PGA encompassing largely the club pros around the country. A complex agreement apparentlv has been reached and the TP A is no longer in existence but back to the fonner PGA title. One of the thino reportedly included in the agreement ia the esta6- lishment of about 10 new second tour tournaments across the country in 1983. U.S. team coach Monte Nit.z-~owski credited the goalteodlng of John Ganaell and the excep- tional two-meter play of Terry Schroder, Greg Boyer and Jody Campbell for the win. "'l'bia is the bnt game the United Si.tes national team haa played since 19~" Nitzkowski said Monday. ''Cuba waa third in the world cbampionshlpa last year, and this la a very big win for us aa we prepare for 1984 (01 pie Games)." "It waa a majoc step forward for ua," continued Nitzkowski. "It's really important to \a• we go Into the qualifying tournunent.'' In the qualifytng tournament will be Brazil, Canada and Me-xico. . "He's made bia decision," Emery Davia told The Capital Times in Madison, Wis. "He's going to Stanford. Tom said it wu the best offer." Davia aho had been considered for the head coaching job at Wl8consln. The elder Davia said hia aon had Informed Boston College Athletic Director Bill Flynn of • the decision. After this week, the LPGA takes a week off before heading for Hilton Head, So. Carolina and the Eut Coast. The t.Jen'a PGA (it has switched back from TPA) will return to the West Coast April 15-17 for the MONY Tournament of Champions at La Costa Country Club. Only tour winners are includ- Something for the 552 Club and sponsors of the Crosby Southern to check into and perhaps bring one of these events to Irvine Coast Country Club if the sponsors fee isn't too high. .. . . BOB FENTON IS THE newly crowned presi- dent's Cup champion for the Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club men's group. ~ world cbampiomh.ipe for 1982 will be played in :Ecuador in July. Nitzkowski was aho pleased with the play of four Orange Coast area athletes. Kevin Robertaon, a product of Newport Harbor High, scored three .... during the three-day · tournament. and Jeff Stlta, the water polo coach at Corona del Foringer, Pemper All-CIF ed ln tfUa field. . • • • Kyler no-hits LA Harbor Woodbridae Hieb'• Martt Fo- rin&er, a 6-11 aopbomore, wu MIDl!d to the .aJDd teml CID the All-CIF basketball teem, • _.. lected by the Fin1 llltentate Bait foundation boercl.. Foringer acored 14.e P"°tt a pme in JeedinC the WM'l'lan to a I~ 10 overall record, and a berth t in the Cll' playofft. You Wll Leam .•. • Also earning a second team THE CYSTIC"Fml\OSIS Foundation and the Freshman Tina Kyler struck out 12 en route to a berth .ia Llberty Christian Hieb'• Loi Angeles Rama have ~ up for a unique day no-hitter as Golden West College's ~omen's aoftball Mike Pemper. The 6-10 senior of golf and watching the barnea races at Loa Ala-team defeated visiting LA Harbor, 4-0, in Southern acorecl at a 22.6 rate for the mfU. on Monday, April 14. California Conference action, shortened to five in- Hunti.Qaton Beach-bued Minu-Partlcipanla will play a round of golf with a nin8J1 becauae of rain. temen on their way to the CIF noon shotgun start at Los Alamitos Golf Course, Kyler had the only extra baae hit of the game, a plaYoffa. then head for the race track for cocktails. dinner run-scoring triple. -Player of the year honon are ..--and __ a_full __ ru_·.;;;.gh_t_o_f_r_aang_·-y;.-· ---------------------------shared by Robin Andrews of CIF chaoaplon Crom'Oedl and Chad-_____ ._ wick llilh'• Roy Ladesma. . REDWOOD 2 X 8 -36" lln. It. 775-1491 18808 S. HARBOR SHumRS CUSTOM QUAun SHUTTERS Designed, Finished Installed 28 Years ExperteriCe Manuflicturlng Quality Shuttin· FINllT QUALITY IHUTTDI AVAii.Mi I ON THB MARKET TODAY ••• AT •A DllmCT Cll('FM)l••n w .. ww •' • ' " 1111 .... LIP 1111 • ~~· ClltorWlll 000 000 a-a I t a.w.lllld tOt OIO 11.1_. 14 0 O'~ c.r."" ........ (4). ..... ... ~--(1). •• "'*"' ~ Md eoo. M, <:!!:""·~(I) and 8enclo. W-• L-0'~ ........ , ....... . , .. ,...,. .... . ~ 000 010 001-t I t Lo9 ~ 000 410 Oh-7 1 s Jaoktoll, Wlllla111e (I) a11111 Wy11 .. .,; ,__, Howe ('ff lllO'llWaOia. ,,,_....,., L_,,.._,, '4"-Loe Angll8I. ~. ........ TillN. DMrolt --~~ 7 2 llcMeoll no 1IO 10.-1 1S 1 Monte. "tu (I). a.ICller 11> and P8metl, '~ 17); <>tNa, ~(I), C1Mt (I) and Ged!Mn. W~ l-Mantt. HA- lklelon1 Hoftmen. .................. , ............... ,,,........ 100 100 llOO 00-2 10 0 Qlklago w 100 000 001 01-4 10 1 carilort. ~(I). .,_.., (9). Wiie (t). F-(t) and ~(I): Doteon, e.. rojM Ill. ~ (9). (11) and Aek. Hiii (.), Foley (10). W-hetllnger. L-F-. HRe-~ o..Jwla. CH-cego. l.eFlcn. ...... ,,..,... , .. , ..... Houlton 000 000 000-0 • 1 Clnclnnetl Oto 000 01x-2 e 1 SUiton, LACor1e (7) and PllJc*; PMtore, Hurne (1). Kem (9) Md T!Mlo. W-P--. L-8u11on. ...... -..... , .. o-61, Pia.) Monlr9lll 220 200 004-10 1& 0 TOf'Oft'o 000 000 020-2 S S Rooen. J-~:-'don 1•> and car-*· ..._ .... (8): • Murray (1). ar.tn (8). Senl9ney (9) and ....,,.... ~ (9). W-Aogere. l -Clancy. HAt-Mon1r••I. Ofb. Toronto, Mullnlc:kl.. ,.,...,., ..... . , ............... . Pltllburoh 210 110 311-10 15 0 New Yoilc (N) 300 000 020-5 11 0 candele11&, 8-'nger1"1 15), Tekui.... (t) and Pena: Jonet Zachry (di. Oetf j'I end liodgH, Boclly (e). w -Cendeler e. L- .ion.. C-.1.A'l1 , ........ Olkllnd ooo 010 ooo-1 5 o ()lbigo (N) GOS 000 20Jl-5 12 1 Kl110m111, J°8:Ji'). Mci..ugtllln (I) and Kerney; Mertz. (7). Hemlndel (I) and Morelend, Devit (7). W-Mertt. l - l<JngfNn. HA-Olldand. S.-C-. ...... 1 ...... . C•T ..... I San D1100 000 (IOI) 121-4 I 0 Se11111 201 s to 00x-1 ,.. a WIN, 8Nll9r (I}. Del-. (7). U-(8) end Kennedy, 0.Yllarl (8); 81oddlrd, ~ (8), Aewtey (8) and E.Nlan. W-8t00datd. l -wi.e. HA-a.nte. 81rougtl1er. ..._. ....... I (•a.CllJ,Altl.) San Frwldeoo Oto 311 200-I 13 2 ....... 023 130 OOx-1 15 s 81ue. Rowllnd (4). 11-*'o (I) and Mey, --(7): CaldMI. Dlfltno 181. ~(I) Jon .. (I) end Slmmont, lollroedet 1•1. W-Cal~I. L-Bkle. HAl-Mllweu!IM. Koenlglftld, Younl .• *:Mm COU: ITAJ•llll •••-11111 ..... 1111111 'Cel 0.fl I ill .w L. Goldlll.... " 0 -LA..... I I~ ... .._.. I 4 I ~ .. 11141 IMILol~ I I I Loe=CO I 1 I LA 2 I 1'6 ..... OC lllWI __.. ..... O-..Willt4.._Lot~OCI~ '*r.ftt~onlca 1. LA Sollth-t O (8 In-'*"',....,, , ..... ..... Gddlll ...... llllo Hondo cww-.. Loe Mollel cc EMILA•LA..,._.. ...... Molllol•LA.wtior c....~r::-.• IEMmldl • 110 000 2-4 • 1 Cotta ..... D 000 2-4 I 1 MoC11111l, Aoec11.ite \:~otinten (7), Garctn. (7) aiid Neoe: HY111 ll'l7d ,Nida. 2B-Mc<:'aillll (E), A~ (CM}. HA-eempew (£), ...... (CM). • .,....,,, ............ 1 lrW'9 30t 20t 2-11 11 0 Newport Hlr'bof 000 000 0-0 s I Tierney end Kiri(; Nuaenl, lanwtt je), .. lftluao:) ;::,:8rtle. W-Tllmey. L-"""'"1-(I). 2; 1<1*111 (NH). ....a.v._1 ............ l.Algl#W 8eadl Cli:IO 003--s 1 s Mlelloll Y11iO OS 1 030-7 I 0 Upeon. Minney (5) and ~: Mactlgll end Seuter. W-M•dlgal. L-Llpton. 28-0'CoMor (l8). Clfetler (MV). Manin (MV); HA-Sauter (MV). ......... 11 ...... I SenUago 110 030 0-11 1 1 Woodbtldga 000 000 0-0 1 1 fllnnlrY, ,,.,.,_ (2). LOQlft (I) and ~ Morelend end Nolen. W-JemH. L- Mortlend. HIGH ICffOOL STANDMQI ... Ylew~L T 09 Cotona dll .,.., 2 1 0 SaddllbaC:.* 2 1 0 ~ 2 1 0 Colla Mita 2 1 1 IMne 220"' B Toro 1 2 0 1 &tanc:ll 1 2 1 1 Newport Herber 1 3 0 1'4 ............. Eltltlda ... Coetl ...... (lte) ln4M 11, Nlwpcwt HlrtlOr 0 Cotor11 dll ..... El Tor:i. tlln ,...,.. .... Newport Hlrbor .. eor-... B Toro II lrW'9 Cotta ...... &ed.,.. ""'-*Y .. &mlclli WI* f .. ca-. Cotone dll Met at EJ Toro -o~ ,-~ti,'~ ... . .. ,.... 1 " ,. •• , .. ., Y-'llll HLJilef I" m I n ~ '''" ,, ~ r,::11 : • ·~ 111• ,:r;: = P.! • ~= •• .•• a ~ •11t1•e· TeNIM-IO 41 1f -M DIWell ·=-u ·-==-DI ....., ......... • ,. • ~"' 111 ,,. .,..,.,....... • • 11 .. = • y tllt 11Me1jtb 11 10 10 111 14 ~ ... Ill ""' •• 1t - -70 w.....,..... IA 41 11 IOI -• ~ ....... ......... .. 11 17 ... 110 10I ~.:.a::.: 41 a 10 = 171 II S7. 11 ... r.o.11ac 11 • 11 • 111 re ~ 11 • 17 ... llO • .... .,,... ................. . 't---~ NV .... ~.;::. :zo11 .. c&':~a ....... ........... WllwlfPll• ........ TClfOMolll8'.L.- ~ . . " ... ...... ,, ~NTYCOLLW ...... ... t,UMllWI lA IWtlor 000 00-0 0 2 .o:..w:. a.nn.: ~ ,:,~ 18-Kylar (GWC). ....ICMOOL IMC:........11.L.-... I SM~ oa oe-11 11 1 • ~... 000 IO-2 .. 14 ._,. and l.odlllert; ...... ...,...,. (SI and LM1glltld. W-tuoolnl. L-8dliilla te-lucclfll (SCI, 811•111el (IC) I (IC). H -AedJn (IC, 1ub (IC), Ctltlet-(8C). r his is your last chance to get 50% off annual dues, while every Holiday Spa Health Club is celebrating the · grand opening <;>four new Ana- heim location. But you have to join now while the offer is good. There's never been a Holiday Spa Health Club like this before. ~·ve set a new standard of excellence. Come experience the benefits of anaerobics-the repro - portioning and firming of the body through the use of weight training devices like Nautilus,• Paramount,• Universal,• and more. Personalized programs available with program directors to show you how. Aerobics-~ cardiCNascular training ~hrough drc_uit trair:iing, ~ tn<:!<><>r run_nmg, swim-a mmg, stationary exerci!ie bikes, and dance exercise ~I' for \IVOmen. ~\" ' _,.-.LTI Mmlill .... .;_ t. NffJ VIMl!a, M:lt t , g-· . ..-.~ .. , ... -t ..... """"' --.o. -,, .... Goeafllr. 40:tl.1 . -t.Mall ........ .. -1 ............ ou. ..... -1 • .a-WlllOn, lllOU. llCMI -1. llMti Harmon. M'11.2. ~:&:.'J-« 14 lll!d """' -1. T-OerNnollOUN, ».U..1. 15-ti -I. 9llen ..,..,,, 1l:al.4, tJ.2t -1, a.....~. tl:ll.O . 8044 -1. WWllrTI ~ itiSl.2. ... -1, ,,_. 0cer-. 11:0t.O. 40-44 -1, Qary 8fnltll, tl:OU. ..__ _ 1. Deva~-. 21:16.1. 80-M -1. Don Kltdlln, 11-U.4. to anct.,., -1. N ~.n:au. WOMU'a....,._TI 14 and under - 1. N•t•ll• Norton, ~·· ,._2t -1. Dllrle Blellanel. 19:SU. • ~ -1. OeDOle Oertldc, 23:27 .... .... -1. Lindi o.t.ono. 21:21.3. 40-44 -1. Mardi Martyn, -.U.7. 45-48 -1. MlfY "°"" 21:09.4 . llCMt -1. Corlly Chepnan, 2.t'.33.1. NaA WHTIM C.OM'llMNCa ...... .,........ W L .._ Q9 ... 23 .571 -,, ... 24 .557 It .. 32 .6"1 • 39 S2 .549 I 311 :IS .500 12~ ti II .225 32 .......Dtwlliell Ian Antonio « 27 =:,, : : ~City 25 ... o.1111 24 47 UIWI 19 53 .820 - .1171 3'111 .6M 4\t .362 11 .311 20 .2M 26\t ~=,_ ..... BOSTON ,t::;: ~ llrlln Den· men, Danny Pettit, Ind Dl¥9 '°"°"""' pl\clllrl, 10 Pwtuoll.. of .... ln1ernetlonll ~AOO WHITE IOX -Sent Bob ~. OUllWder, to iiw ()lbigo c.Aie 10 _,.,....an ...., dell In -.Hdl Ille WNte Sox olltallled ~ ~. pitcher ..... llMld ..... ......,,.,, ~. OAKLAND A't -... teed Miiie HHlh, ~.on IN 1~ dllebllcl .... SEATIU MAAINEM -Wllwed Jlin M- derlon, lnlltldlr. Allllgll9d 8rilft Alllrd, pit· di«. to I.heir minor i.egye camp and wlll pl-him on the dlt1bled llet when Ill• -"""· Opllonld Rich Botdl, pitcher • and Daw l!dlw, llllMldef, to Ille 1111note • Returned Rod Allen, ~, and Men Youno. '*°""• to Ille mlnCn. TOJIONTO BUii! JAYS -'-Optioned P• dro Hernandaz, lnfllkl«, and Metil Elofl- llCW n• and Stew Senteney, pllchefs, to Syr-of ltl9 ~-IAIQUI. 8Mt "'911 w.-. =· 10 ttlelr minor ~ C8f'llP tor I 1111-"- ATLANTA ~ ~1=~v.d lallt Oo-mu, tlloftetop, Llrry Brldlord tnd Rick Meeulaiplldlera. Ct41CAOO cuea -AMleMd Mel Hall, outlleldet, Pit Tilblef and 8cott FtelctMlt, lnlleldert, and Mlgu .. lbelrt, catcher, 10 !Nit minor IMgue complu for reutlgn-"*"· CINCINNATI REDS -Wal'led Mike la· coee. pltctler end Sem Mejtu, ovtfleldet. Aatumed .JoM 8'tto, Jeff UNI. 8rld lMlay and Brien Ryder, pl1cllen. to their minor ~ ccwnpleoc b I 111110 ....-l. ~NTAEAL EXPOS -Pieced John Mii-ner, llnl ~ on Ille 21~ cllllltlled ... tlltOeC:tlwe to Mardi 23. PHllADElPHIA PHILLIES -Aelt1Hd Mike Pr'*J, pl1ctler, and Don MoCormadt. ClllCl'9r • PITTSBURGH PIRATES -W...._, 0ary , ,., .. under, catcher. SOid Ill• con1tec1 ol Mell AleX111det. outtlelder, to the Mexico CICy Tlglre. Al tF'gnoad JoM Deleone, p11- Cher, to tMlr minor lllolll C81'11P· flOOfULL ~,.....u.e­ HAMILTOH TIGER-CATS -Signed Jerry ~ and Alclt Mlloney, cftotrllM tad!-.... ........ ,.....u..- TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS -Treded Dewey Siimon, lnlbec*er. lo the Sen J)leoo Ohargere tor en .. ldltdoled dt14ft ChCICt. • cou.a• DUOUESNE -Nerned Jim Seta 1-4 ~ooad\. Plus recreation and relaxation facilities like steamrooms, rec/v.lood saunas, hot hydro-massage whirlpools, cold plunge, indoor swimming and 3 full"Sized racquetball courts. And thats not all. There'll be a whole weekend of fun and festivities at our Anaheim location. Fri., Sat., Sun., April 2, 3, 4 are the days its all happening. 10 am. to 10 pm. There'll be a special celebrity fashion show featuring the stars of *General Hospital* and *Days of our Lives" modelling Nike-sportsvvear and swimsuits courtesy of The Hermosa General Store. Dance demonstrations by Kat Knapp & Co. and Arthur Murray dancers. Plus special gt/est appearances by KllS radio personalities Liz Fulton and Chux and members of the Dodgers, Angels and Rams. Don't miss out. Come in to any Holiday Spa for a free guest tour today and get it all-now while you can save 50% on your annual dues. Join \ any Holiday Spa Health Club today. Visit our new facility in Ana - heim. But hurry. • This offer is almost over. . ' ·' .. You still have time to open -or add to -• Gibraltar Individual Retirement Account for 1981. if you were not covered by a company retirement plan. You may deduct up to $1500 from last year's income (or $1750 if your spouse was not employed) on both Federal and California State returns. : I I Lock in Gibraltar's high rate for 18 months- or up to 5 years. 11.71'~ ·II.II'=~ The interest we pay you will not be taxed until you withdraw the money after retire· ment when you'll probably be in a lower tax bracket. Come in today and reduce your taxes. • Your IRA Saviop are Insured to SI00,000. .. . , -... -GIBJW:ri\R SAVINGS -AIMtS owr &.'/ billloa doU•n • Offket ltalewide 01"2 c.. ..... s. ...... .,., "°""AM« .. •- P.S. Use your tax refund to start your 1982 IRA. Hete's an easy way to tell just how out of date your company medical ptan can be. If it'I no longer something special to heJp you attract better, more productive employees, it's.not only outdajed but cost-- ing you plenty. . " If your employees compWlri thlt your plan doesn't cover enough or rwqulrw toq large a deductible, It's a frit"ll ~on the fringe of lowering empq. mot.le and IDyetty. FHP solves those problems for yo~. l'hoto co11tt .. y of Tiit httll\enn Ard11¥t .f>lus, the FH ogram includes eye care. W»rewiption drugs. Preventive care. Weight ant! smoking cori*>I programs. M•ntat health on anctt.Muy ccaa{'Sellng. ' Alf" at l;cost about the same-or'°"'~ , tifnes ...,_uch year as Juf'fnlu11nce a~ .. Fo~ more info""~ «Mi ~'s ~U>' dttehe.tthc:a~;am/Ot'yourem~, Jtdtcitll FHP.IJ,(21))~4.'13. Ext. 513 at (714) flf'JS1 .. EJt.. 511 • Md more. Because FHP goes far beyond jlist Insurance. FHP also provides the doctors, dentists and medical specialists to care for your employMS at Its own mec:Ucal centers. EJU~' . lent doctors working in fully ecwi~, ' modern centers throughout the Loi Ange~ O,.nge County area. f 'T • ' very p on Governm~nt appears resigned to continued recession ~JOBNaooarr .;;;-~o11 -It la almo1t ottida1 now: The econamy tm•t Ukel,. to men abeed ttrGrillY ln the MCond ball ot the yeu-. Old hope1 of a lively reeovery are belna abandoned, even by the ~ lldmlniltnUon. ~"will not be •l&nlnl •• a•n·~~ll}' hoped," Nld La-wrence Kudlow, uaoolate direc- tor of the Office of ~t aud BudeeL But, he told reporters, 11thl1 doel not preclude a recovery.'' Neither, be Mid, did lt repre- 1ent "any chanle" in .wnaiee. a 1tatement that can belt be un- derstood by l'9IDelDberina that no economllt of any ltripe~­ ly polltlcal, w... to be ln- oonaiaent. It does, of aoune, repneent a change, from optimtam to re1- ipatJon -at leMt for the abort term. I& ... OOlllClu'tlQ to re.llty, 1imilar to that made 1everal weelu 8ft. by au&oaiaker1 who ad.mlttM.-lleY ltil1 ~·t tell can. It is recdgnltte>n that the the ~lan may heve to be In the financial community, where great sympathy aeems to exist for the broad thru1t of President Reagan'• program, - shrinking government, lowering taxes, deregulating business -they hold budget deficltl res- ponsible. Thoee delJdta, they say, lesaen confidence in the program, and the lowered confidence is e x- pressed by interelt rates, which remain several points higher than hiatoric apread1 between mohey and inflation rates. Man)f ecbnomista in the finan- cial market. are convinced the MUTUAL FUND pt!iiilWmt .,. 1111 no .._ but &o ~~&bl bud- IM.mm&w.lyby --c1ef-. ~ polll- bly by rtdUd.na. tboUlh CerWnly not ellmlnatJl\I. SoU1 Secwity cmt-of-Uvtnc incr1• 11. They are not convtnced that the upccm1nc tax c:ut will Wt the economy out of c-1111=. · · tithat'• a riverboat ornble,'' •ya Jtdward Yar- den1, chief economi1t o.f E.F. Hutton. Several factore can offset lt. he uya. Molt econo-CU.I,, mt.ti seem to agree that any recovery this year wlll almost certainly have to be led by ad- vances In consumer spending. But Yardeni points out that many worken are being asked to take w-ae cuta. Moreover, while-people are Mid to be rebulldiu CM\.':; erv-. dwy ..... fai'lrca in a PQtitlon to buy. Yardenl ~ that •vtnaa t1llled ln ,... bruary, droppma $6.t bW1on to tlOI b61llon in one month. 'J'he drop~'\----~~ out and lp.ftt elU.. In all lihood I.My 11.m.-Weft t.o ~ tu baidlwl or "°" Ev•rrone air"' that lower Intern ratet would h•llh but 1ettlnl them la another mact8' . Tl'UIUry Secretary, Donald Re- pn tecently pleeded with Wall Street.en t.o lower rates, almOlt eccwilna them by inference of a conspiracy to keep ratet h1ah. It was a measure of fnmration. Meanwhile, tho1e ratH are having a devutatinl impact on buaineue1. Major corporatJoJ\I are unu1ually Illiquid. MJny smaller companies are daJl&etou- 1ly IO. Buainea falluret are &O percent h .. her than a year qo, and the combined recelBion-hilh interest ratel are major fac10rl. Ironically, the president -teu than a month ago said 1m~U bul1nem would lead the econonUc recovery. Tinie tradeof f proposed SACRAMENTO (AP) -In another budget-cutting ~!­ fort, the Brown administration plans to o f fer some slate workers time off for less pay in an effort to reduce the pay;rolil without layoffs. The plan, called "V-Time" for Voluntary Time Income Tradeoff, will be tested for 14 months starting this week in the F.mployment Development Department, officials said. Any of the department's 9,400 workers can agree to work fewer h ours a day or fewer days a week for an equal t~ duction in pay. NASO LISTINGS ~ M 1· M l'WclSS mi. JIVo llWlr1n IMW. ....... I IV.IS.16 111 .... lflAi , .......... 11 a11o ~ Miit 17 :::::r' 1-.f ~ ~rs:~ ~11 M\1'115 ~ ..... ~ M ... = ~t..--' 1' """ = Jllllh21 --=1.V.s.ller 'S'. ft ~45 ' •14 • ~· "" "" :e: Wit ',_, 1s..:MJliiiji(;:. ' 111111121 fM ,,.,.,..,,_..,,.. *" 17 JMJI ,:,, ~ .. Z5¥11"4 ... "' """ WdO M "" Milo M " 21 M M'4 ,, 1114 2 2\4 CIOWMS 1 "' "' ..-........ I.Ml Ola ~ ta IJ 1 l'W-Jiit -,_. OH •· t ii= NASDAQ SUMMARY 1 ~_,ir rv: = ,"" g: ;t{ :r: lm ,... voM ch f =·•· «i1ve o..... : = ;"' = :2 g: ;.:~ "" 1M6 ...__. ,_... .... lld ~ NASO. 6 ONltTm 4"'1 -Yt OH lt.O JiS JiS\4 ..,.. W-·11c1 AIMCI ~ 1 "-"m wt 2\lo -\lo Oft IU ""~ :f .... == r = : ... ' e ,_ -\lo Otf u = W MOC ·... 2'0,1'0 ~ 32~ + _. 10 1~ = 1 \lo g:; U JO JOl4I .... ..... 217,IGO a :11\lt + lit 11 ~llllHJ 1Wt -IYt OH I.I ...-. 4M ,..... t. · _.. 2""' 2A + Yt 12 ~ ICM -1 OH 1.7 "' 7"' OWTl'e . ITI.7111 ZM 2314 + '"' Q fMllSIC "" 4 -"' OH U Int • _....., ·.. --~ 5"' -" M IOmlllll Milo -111'1 OH U 414 ~ l.t!T...., ~ 1"'1 8"' + Yt IS lrlNMo Wt -14 Off U IM 17_. Cllmln ••· M7~ 11'4 11"'1 .. ,,, 1' ......... . 1" -\lo OH t* IM 1' ,_.. .. 142.Mll IM Int +"" f7 .... Fr 1" -14 §: > 614 • "'-Olftv N -14 &> ""' ......... ....... ... .. ... .... -" ""*-11 -1 .. , tM' ........ . ... _.............. '2S • _.... "" -~ Off .., '"' , ~ • ... ...... ... •• .. 2,461 " e . , _ ... °" 1.1 IMI n....11 ..... .................... > ... 22 • -\It OH 1,1 .. = ,...,. ......... ... . .. ... . .. 12 5=-' , -14 Off 7.7 tJ11i 14 .... ...................... 41 it tl0t -~ Off 1.S ... ._. 3114 Totel Ml9S .................. • · 2:l,°".600 ZS JV. -14 Off 1, 1 ---- , I ----- NYSE COMPO ITE TRAN ACTIONS ftt!•T-•.UVM t9AOlt• ................... l'ACIPI(, ...... " .. OHMI' ••O ClllfCUf ... fl noes a ., ................. ., T•a ..... MO l•ITl .. T ... , Nel , .... ----------- Cl Gas price said going hack up LOS ANGELFJJ (AP) -Enjoy loY"H a-c>line pdcel trtaertd by tbe lntemaUonal oil slut whlJe you can, uya an Jnduatry expert: They may eoon head beck '4P· Tbat'a becaUle aovemmenta are hW.->' f « new, revenue 1uch u oU import tee• or hl1ner ••aollne exclte taxes would generate, uys oil industry analyat ' Dan Lundberg. He predict.a in this week's "Lundberg Letter" that gu prices could plummet by u much u 19.05 oenta a gallon by the end of a year u conservation pnd a worldwide receuion crimp oil demand. Ford execs boosted DEARBORN, Mich. (AP) -Ford Motor Co. gave top executives railes of as much u 11.8 peroent in 1981 despite posting a $1.06 billion lou for the year, accor- ding to a proxy statement. But top offidala' salaries still were below levela of two and three years earlier, said the report. Ford'• 1.06,000 hourly workers agreed to wage freeus, deferred ccet-of-living allowances and other concessions over the next 21h years in a contract msned March 1 between the automaker and the Un- ited Auto Workers union. School cuts viewed SACRAMENTO (AP) -Two business groups say the state could save billions ot dollars and avoid new taxes by such meuurea as double sessions in kinder- gartens, $50 tuition at community colleges and elimi- nation of a medical program for the "working poor." The proposal by the California Taxpayers Asso- ciation, a nonprofit business-funded lobby, was en- dorsed by the state Chamber of Commerce in its newsletter. Oil leases eyed IMPERIAL (AP) -Over the objections of bird and fish enthusiasts, an adviaory panel to the Bureau of Land Management has recommended that 138,000 acres of Salton Sea shoreline be leased for: oil and gas exploration. The U.S. Geological Survey has estimated there is a 1 percent chance of finding commercial quantities of oil and gas under the 36-mile-long Salton Sea. Most of the drilling sites would be in Imperial County al- though the sea runs into Riverside County. S teel shift posed PITTSBURGH (AP) -United Steelworkers union members are being asked this week to exchange $35 million in deferred benefits for stock in Whee!ing-Pittsbw-gh Steel Corp. The plan, aimed at aveoing further layoffs by the nation's eighth largest steelmaker, was worked out near Wheeling, W.Va., alter a month of negotiations. "Under the proposed agreement our members will, in effect. make a long-term, low-interest invest- ment 9f about $35 million in our future," said Paul Rusen, president of USW District 23. State oil flowing SACRAMENTO (AP) -California's production. of crude oil is averaging about a million barrels per day, close to the state's record output of two decades ago, a top state engineering official has reported. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES HEW YORICCAI") FINI ODooo.,,.,... ~. ~--.. "-'· 2'. I~_..., ,, ... -v. ,..,_ .... ,sy, -114 1: .. :t'n 1~1 irG + fl AMERICAN LEADERS = .:.:·¥, 21Vt ., 2'14 + w. «Ml! + Vt ,~ +1* 31'\ -114 21-.0 --" -.,,, 30'4 -.,,, '~ + 14 PO. Up 26U Up 1l.1 Up 12.S Up IU "" 11.J Up 11.0 Up IU "" 10.1 Up t.J Up ... ~ ':I Up 7.J Up 1.1 Up 1.2 Up 7.1 Up 7.0 Up u !J.11 H ~ §i "·' 1.• ~: "1 tt S.7 S,7 tt u H u ti 4.S m .is ,,..... m.t1 m.sJ + 0.21 10L'5 IOUJ !GI.GO 1Gl.S7 ...... Jtl.lt »A.40 11' .. 22%.9'+ I.JO ......... ....... ... '·-·'°° . ............. .. -.100 .:.:· .. ·::.·::.:·:.·:::-.-.:·: .. =::· WHAT STOCKS DID METALS roaa :MO m m 1 ' C•pper 78-78 cenl1 • pound. U.S. delllnlltloM. &AM 28-32 cent• • pound. Dte 37-40 cent• • pound, ~. Tl.-18.9272 Met1l1 WMll COf'llpoelte lb. Mini!-76-77 cent. a pound, N.Y . ......, $395..00 per ftui. ......._ 13,..00 troy OIL. N.Y. SILVER....., Hendy & Her men. S7 .016 p., troy ounce. GOLD QUOTATIONS ....., ~ lftOfnlng fixing *322.75, ofl $5.00. L--.: afternoon ftldng 132:2.25. ott suo. ...... 1332.67, off IUI, ,~ ISZ3,74, off lt.20. a...~ "*la nt1.oo. off 15,oo bid; muo ••· M9MJ a "•'-' only delly quote 1322.25, °" $5.50. ':l ,....,.. Mitt dally quote SSU.25, °" .llO. ·~· • dally~ fllbftceted N3I • o«•.1•. SYMBOLS . ' • °""91 COMt DAILY PILOTl1'~. MWdt IO, 1112 ouniy almond far-ms bought 1be c..lllomAa Almond Growen Exc:hanp Ml announced ,, hM pwd\Med proolMlna 11qulpme.nt and .._... fedliU.. from Berrenda Mila Fanna ln ~ Modllto and Turlock for 98.76 million ln ~ But the exdw\p .. urect IOlne 300 workers at ..,._nda'1 ~plant ln Fullerton that they will • lolt their Jobi, aald exchanae 1pokeswoman S\.ml\ Valda She sa1d the exchanae, a grower cooperative, acquired the facWtiet and equipment to help handle an expected &O percent lncreue in California al- mond prodUC'Uon by 1990. Last year, the harvett wu va1ued at S450 million ln California, the only 1ectlon of the United States where almonds are produced. .. The exchange'• primary goal ts to increue efficiency and spread overhead and expense to ac- commodate lntnuet ln almond production expected over next decade," said Roger Baccigaluppi, the cooperative'a president. The exchange will lease the Fullerton plant from Berrenda and purchase the others, Ms. Valdes said. Berrenda wUl continue to operate its chain of Berrenda Mesa Farms Country Stores and lls nationwide gift-package business, she said. . Construction to . begin on new bank Construction is under way for a branch ban- king facility for Valencia Bank ln the Penn Mutual Building at Fashion Island, Newport Beach. The 5,500-square feet bank will be complete in late April. C&I Builders, Santa Ana, is the general con- tractor. I CiiAIAP D IAMl IS GOING PLACES .. '12 AMO SO CAN YOU! 0~~ ... ~:~T.:~ -•• FINANCIAL PLANNERS EQUITY CORPORATION FREE Flnenclel end Eatete Plennlng Seminar Santa Barbara Savings & Loan Wtdnesda1. M.lrth 31 Soutll LICVN Bnnch 30804 Pacific ~t Hwy. South Lac11111 7:30 p.m. Thunday. Api~ I San Cletnfnte lllanth 905 H U Canuno Real San Otmtnte 7:30 p.m FoUowlng aubjecta wlH be covered • lit<PM,,...lr•...... • --'°"-•1111-UA • 1to1t1tai1 __ ....., • r _ _._,........,., ,., • ~:-= ::"" ...:-....... • Wils INI bnb A PROMINENT FINANCIAL PLANNER. Daniel M. Quesada registt!fed securities principal. Mr Quesada Is best known tor his public seminars. He established and managed the llnancial planning department tor a major sa· vlngs Tnstitutton and Is a member of the internatl0081 assoc!· ati90 of financial planners A LOCAL WELL KNOWN ATTORNEY Robert K. Sall ls best known tor his public seminars on estate and tax planning for ind1vlduals and corp()(alions. Seatin& wl be limited • for reservations , cal (714) 499-1306 or (714) 492-4020 r.JI:\ COMMf.llPALoiDfT ~TION ':::I 0 •COl'MJIO...~ ......... .10.000....i .............. n1 ... '"' "'.,,.,,, COSTA MESA: 370 E. 17th Street • 645-8700 HUNTINGTON BE"ACH: 16075 Colden West SL • 847-m l MISSION VIEJO: Alicia Town Plua • 770·~1 SANTA ANA : 1224 Eut 17th St. • 547·5871 .. ____________ .. COnstruction ·~ available .at lleri• Bank. COl*8Ct: • .,, .... lllOR SOUlhO II~ 1wmMOIO CRWISE TO ThlE MOST ELEGANT NEW ENGIAND AND CANADA EVER WITI-1 TI-IE FIVE-Sf AR SAGAFJORD. THE VOY AGEnS CLUB and NORWEGIAN AMERICAN CRUISES INVITE YOU TO A SPECIAL CRUISE NIGHT THURSDAY APRIL 1, 1982 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Airporter Inn, Irvine AdmiHion Free ... Seating Limited * Film * Door· Prizes * Refreshments Fielding's Guid e has given a 5-star rating to the luxurious "Sagaford" and calls it the most spacious ship in the world with out- standing 'service and gourmet food offered in only one seating ln the dining room. The Voyagers' Club is pleased to offer you a beautiful Fall Foliage sailing Sept. 24th at greatly reduced rates. Call your nearest Voyager Club representative listed below for details. H arbor Travel Newport Beach-675-1311 Mesa Verde Travel Costa Mesa-556-6311 RSVP Travel Country of Irvine Irvine-551-2929 Ancient Mariner T r avel Tustin-838-9780 ~~ t:::::. :\ .. ~ •. , =~ -~-~ c> : . == . SAVE UP. TO $85 SAVE UP TO 77% On Seleoted North F11ee Products Olecontlnu41d •l>'IM colOll -~ Gooee Down, Pol8rOb.nt 1nd Thlnsullt• • Parkas: Shell J1<:keta; Fleece JICkets; GOON Down Ind PolarGuard. Steeping 81g1; lightweight and Geodellc Tents: Pecka; Ttavet Bags; and MOREi Down a Pol8rGU1rd • Vests Sporttt Stretch Shorts Values to S49.50 NOW $14.50 Reg S29.50 NOW 519.50 Rental Cron-Country Ski Gear Boots NOW SS Skis NOW S f 9.50 Allen A Turtlenecks NOW ONLY$1 High Sierra Chamois Shirts Reg S18 NOW $11.95 Plus llUCH llOREI WEDNESDAY, MARCH 31 • SUNDAY, APRIL 4 3650 S. BRISTOL SANTA ANA, 549-8541 Bristol Town & Country Ouart,,,... llylee end CO!Orl .,. ,.,,.._ No •91111Tt1 0t relundl 75C off tl1' ~to11 Of vour choice. NOW SOFT PACK FILTER. MENTiiOl: 1 mg. "ta(, 0.1 mg. nicotine. NOW SOFT PACK FILTER lOO's. MENTHOL lOO's: 2 mg. "tar". 0.2 mg. nicotine. SALEM ULTRA LIGHTS. ULTRA LIGHTS JOO's, 5 mg. "1ar". 0.4 mg. nicotine, VANTAGE ULTRA LIGHTS, 5 mg. "taf. 0.5 mg. nicotine, CAMEL LIGHTS HARD PACK. MORE LIGHTS 100's FILTEI\ MENTHOL: 8 mg. "11('. 0.7 mg. nicoll08, SALEM LIGHTS. SUM LIGHTS. VANTAGE MENTHOL lOO's: 9 mt. "tar". 0.7 mg. nicome. SALEM LIGHTS IOO's: 10 mg. "taf. 0.8 mg. nicotine, CAMEL ALTERS. SALEM KIN~ 15 mg. "tel".1.1 mg. mcotine. MORE FRTER. MENTHOL 17 mg. "ta(. 1.4 mg. nicotine. rv. pet ciglrllt8 by FTC method: OORAL II FILTER. MENTHOL WINSTON ULTRA LIGHTS: 4 mg. "tar". 0.4 mg. niconne. VANTAGE ULTRA LIGHTS lOO's. WINSTON ULT~ LIGIHS lOO's, 5 mg. "tat", 0.5 mg. nicotine. CAMEL LIGHTS, 8 mg. "tar". 0.7 mg. nicotine. VANTAGE FILTER: 9 mg. "ta(. 0.7 mg. nicoune, WINSTON LIGHTS: 11 mg. "ta(, 0.9 mg. nicotine, CAMEL LIGHTS 100's, WINSTON LIGHTS 100'1, 12 mg. "terH. 0.9 mg. nicotine. WINSTON lOO's: 14 mg. "ta(. to mg.111colille, SALEM 100's. WINSTON KING: 15 mg. "tat".1.1 mg. nicorine. WIN~TON BOX: 16 mg. "tar". ti mg. nicotine. CAMEL REGUlAR: 21 mg. "taf', 1.4 mg. nicome. rv. per cigamte. FTC Repon DEC. '8\. . .................................. 1 STORE couPON 75c 1 I ""09.L 75e Off A canton Of Yolir I = ,..._..._ Choice On 11'ese Brands : I -~ i;.... .... flllt - -..,_. ..... ..,_ I .... 119 CAIM.llllUlMI DrfU111 IOOl NIM( 10h .................... __ ,,,, ... __ .,.. __ ..,... CM&'llW llOlf8TICJl tOO'a 'MTAGlUlTMUllH11 I I ----~Ill .. ,...... II .. ..._."'...-, CIMl. l»ITS IAlBI 111111 \MTMll UlTM UGKl1100a ....... -... _., _., •• ... CNllB.Ull4TS IWIDMCIC ._..ion WllllTOll 11* I I ... II',.,... .... c....., ... .., ... -· ....... ,. _.. ... CM&'*ll lllO• IAl.Blu.ITI WMTClllCM I -.......... ,.... .................. -........ ...-. .. .... .,.. IM8!1.91TS ... _. .. ..... _.,... ,,,,, ... __ .._..,._.....,.,,_...., UI .no. I ............... ,,.,, .. .., ..... .......,......,...., • ...._ ._, ::::: ... ==:.. I .................. __ .......................... ....l'ILJ'M I ...... c-_. ....... ..,,... ........ ,.............. -~ ....... 1.91n WllSTlJljUU11AU91tl I 1 .... u _ ....... -~-......... -........ ~ ... 111 ... '*ll'l.TWI "°" WITMf fl.TWI ... TOii UllMU..TS !901 I .. _ ............. ,... _ c. _VII II. II..--llCllllU91Tt--... Wl!Ml18'111111. I ----..:.:.. ....................... ••U. ·-----.. •9f l'IO I ._. ...... _._.......... ....,l'Nlll..,. I I 75C COUflONIX"..,.. .... o:~-2. TI081" I . ····~···························~ • °'1n11 Coal DAILY PtLOT/TUllday, M~ 30, 1982 • I •• The markeiplace on the Orange Coast .•. 642-5678 N earl11 half o/ Oll Dail~ Pilot ,..,., have ~ the classjfi«J ucHon lo ~ or seJl a product. CLASSIFIED INDEX ,,,.., .... Cll &42-5678 .USF•SAU tcia.i..,i ............. CliMl-.. 1(· cw-....... Ollllll-0... NM , fJ T.. , ,...v .. , :::::.•· . .,. ....... 1(, ...... 1111111. ~Hll­..... V .. )e ::..1::..-=' t:i!"::. ~,.. SHI 8-\ =~ ...... "--Sale 1111 1• ,.., ltll 1: 1• ~'aMoffu: ' .... aA ... Remodeled, 3 bdrm, 3 bath, matr bdnn with ocean view $425,000. Consider trade • West Bay bayfront. Slips for 2 boa", re- modeled 3 bdnn, 3 bath $1,200,000. bocean & jetty views. Marine room, 4 bdnn, 3 bath, 3700 sq.ft. $1,385,000. LIMllU-.S Prime Lido Nord bayfront. 5 bdnn, 5 bath. Lge L.R. 2 boet slips $1,500,000. ........... Golf course vlewl Beaut. landscaped. Park-like setting. Lovely pool, apa & ga- zebo. Gated courtyard with fountain. Marble 'foyer w/glltterlng chandelier. 4 bttrma. den, formal d in rmf4 '~ ba, $950,000 Including land. Large corner site. · 1111 .. -.. ...... Tradt rOW" T.D'a or pro- perty m any atate for Belbol lt lud Property ....... ty.llltr. 675-21,, LOT•PLANS Drive by 30I SapJ>hlre and call for details. Plw for single family ~ aJ>t>roYed and re· llCly to build. Reduced to $329,500. Owner will build to suit for total pac~~~67'r.aioo ATTUCTIVE OUPlU ~a\ltlful street in Olde CdM. Owner's unit w/beam ceilings and fittplace. Lge I 8 R apt w/frplt +a bachelor. Good Income Patao around pool Aseumable loan S.115. 000 IUILDAILE ~OT Sou11i oT hwy an Olde Cdln. R2 level lot, can build dplx or single family. Nr Sherman Garden s T er ms S230.000. 644-7211 SPYGWS Ant ... Offered. Jlis.t ·doors 11way from honws valued in excess ot S2 mallloo, beautifully appointed 5 bdrm Nan· tu cket plan Wilh panoramic O<'ean and nlgbt light views + pool ao<t spa, feltunng xlnt fii>anclng with owner participation Co m · pet1tlvely prired at S1165,000 Call for appt to \iew 644-7211 1044 WOOOlllNI . 4 Br homt Oft cuJ·de·llc wtalr roedl"ordns. 12~ nn.an. oo saao.ooo. 11m1 ~~· ~'.M,f119,500 . Leau/OpUon Woodbridge. colla&e 2 bdtfm. 2 ba. $149,flOO . Ml·~=~==--- PERFICT for ramll~!cbUdren. Qwet street close to park and ~lementary school. 3 bdrm, 2 ba. screened In patio. Mature landscaping Sl.39,000. IULESTATE AMtttl1tS'aJt Apu\•ou ,., s.i. lltatll ,..,.,., :: A real estate ad· 1w vertlsed 1n th is :::: newspaper is subject to 1ll!O I.he Federal Fair Hous- :: ing. Act of 1968 which 1• makes it illegal to ad-,.,. vtrtise "any preference. ~= limitation, or d1s lllll crimination based on :: race. color. religion. 11" sex. or nauonal origin, or an Intention to make aD any such prererence. 111» limitat1on1 or dis :: cnmination.' Remodeled 3 bdnn, 2 bath + large rec. rm. beam ceilings, furnished. $420,000. ....... ...,.111111, u. u •. u 11 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I .... ,...... I 007 • •••••••••••••••••••••• rJD.NIGEL GAIL( y 6,, ASSOCIATES "1n NIGEL Uf.ILEY & ASSOCIATES """-"'--'' c;.-w,. t..b c,,,,... C..ttrt_I&( "-"ty Coildom1.i11111• ~1. o..w ... V..LlS.le . ~lobt llOYM ._ '""""' =-Salt"-'' 11o111i. H""' T'rlr Pr~1 11-o,Dtter1,RHOl1 t..,.c~:.r~ o.tofllalt ~ ... ~rannt,Cr•vn lffl fluttiatllH•t Cl.al tatait Wuled IOITALS llOO JD l?Oo IOI ID .-..~ suo ...... ~........... JM =~=~-:. = ~ ....... u.r K1$ ~=:i-::· = °""""" hn »II This newspaper will not knowln,ly acc~pl any advertising tor rea I estate which is 1n viola tionoflhe law. EUOIS: AdYffti1en .._...check thlr ads daily C9lcl ,.,ort e,.. ron a-clohly. The DAILY PILOT 01111•1 lalMlty for the fint i•correct l11sertl011 -,. o.,i. •• u., -= i':f:t. = 1--------·i =••orllnr JlllO 11-· "'"'" = Ho.es for Sale :=-:.::: ::le ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..UIWllYFIHT Lagoon view from 6 bdrm, 5 bath, play- room, dark nn, den. $1,350,000! llYlllE llYE Spectacular bayfront view 4 bdnn, 4 bath, 2 boat slips $1.900,000. TIES YISTIS-llSllll YIHI New French Normandy 4 bdrm, 4 bath, guest house, pool. $795,000. OlllUll UH Coronado Wd cust. bayfront lot. 85! boat dock. Plans avail. M25,000 w/terms .. BILL GRUNDY. REALTOR J.: 1 fl<.y,·d• D• •. •, h ri7'J 0101 ''PAYMENTS" UNDER SI ,000 A sP,ectacular 4 Bdrm 2 bath family home . Large family area, fireplace, enclosed patio, pool and spa. You must see this one. Only $139 000. Ca u 546-2313 tildtl1 $120,000 for thas lovely 4 Bdrm home. It's a bargain at this price. Call now 1 979-5370. ALLSTATE REALTORS .,.~ ...... , •• t1 .. e75·SSf 1:. _ NEWPORT HGTS Lo•tfy Mpt H'h 3 .._ i-.... Frelllty rtd•coroted, 11 e w roof md MW pfftt. Offerred ot $172.000. COLE CW NEWPORT MALTORI 2SUL~"•r· C.......MI..., 8111·5511 ~.'::. ~~~ :f: :Gwrai I 002 RM.ab to Sb.ate• 4JflO •••••••••••••••• • • • • •• 1 ~' .~~~~~~=~~~~~~~~~ &"A:;.=r..•·· :: PRESTIGIOUS MESA YEIDE i ~TENTIAL PLUS I WILL EXCHANGE =:.r::i."'.. !: UDO f SLE 411 & POOL/SPA Wei maintained 3 Br f:.~: 1''uitd !: PriceJ at on y S3l9,soo Outstanding vafue in house on la~ge lot. Easy 11 .... ..,.. -• This charming home this tri-level home on access. Prune corner DWN View -bay and ocean - Newport Heishts estate. Excellent view. great IUSllESS, INVEST-I won't last Jon&. Located cul de.sac Oversized location wtth future I bh & lo t , fami ly roo m commerda! potenll.al MOO, ANANC£ I ~~~ rn t~~~idstte~( '! w 1frplc. 0111•ner will as-Owner w 111 as s •. s t financing. Price only --------1 $429,000. Call to see, LOVELY =~z = galaxy of brilliant sisl with financing. A wlflnancing. Full pnce -•o.-t1 :.11> homes Ex ce lle nt great buy at $239,000. EPlt.+· famllk home, spa,f.atio. f !j!{Jflq ~r~~n~B~~: oc:Ni1~ '"'-""'•td ,,.. financing available Call 751-3191 :=\:,';::. :: fordeta1Is.S46·7l7l llortt•1n ,T0'1 >Im ANNOUNCEMENTS, PEISlllAlS & LOST & FOUND SUYICES s.n ... o._, OIPlOYMEIH & PIEPAHTION SrilooMll-J•Wutoot• "°""" .... 11 • r MDCHANDISE SIOO THE REAL ESTATE RS 1uo Eager buyers read the : Class1faed ads ever) ~ day. If you ha\•e -sorret.hing ror sale, re- -ach them fast and inex- -ie'2$ 11dl IOIO mi 9030 ---Wiii al - tllt tlJO tlJO 91111 tUO tllll t11' . ..., - ive call 642 5478. . ··-·~ 00. • • • ...... ,_.t land. $329,000. COMI & GET IT! lJ,_.IOOf t1VMH A super Sharp 38drm TRIPUX horre with wet bar. mar-Realtors, 675-600Cl EASTSIDECM ble rrpJc and muc h ---lliliallliliilaiailial-1 PRIME E/SJDE L~ATION! It's a bargain! Ali 2 more. Anxious owner --------•I Bdnns, 112 baths. ex-looking for anxious Personality and be1uty are found an this 3 Bdrm 2 balb. home . Assume this g1eat 121• '?i loon and seller wiJI carry a 2nd TD with low down payment Full price cellent prid e of buyer Only $129,500 ownership. Close to Call9'79-S370 shopping. great Income A GNclo,la U•JacJ 1s yours 1n this im- ma c u 1 a t e ly kept Spyglass home 3 bedrooms. 2 baths . formal itining room & fami ly room. Breathtak- ing mountain 111d city lignts view. Excellent financing Is available Price just reduced to on-j 11~.000. I and terms. Sl91,000. Call LLSTATE l!fttj oc:.:.~;, 1:1 Call '" ..... , •. U'"MS-1 AVaJ~~SSome distress s ituations . 700.9678 A Like new duplex-3 & 2 RJll OCEAN VIEW I Bdrm 2 Ba eath unit-on 2 Bdrm Jba condo II lhe sand,willtakeamall S179 ,000. Ass ume downortradea.ndcarry S12S.0001oanat 12'<. the entire balance RCTaylorCo R.E Professionals S7SO.~best deal on the 963-137 w~~COISIEALTY '.l( ''100 SELL Idle items with a PIOPllTY MGI in Daily Pilot Class1hed '7§,.6173 COMMEICIAL =~:...:.:..:""" .o.=='-'=""'-..-Ad.--=----·-------•I 2 stores. 1 bloc i to llWl~llTMW Newly decorated 2 bedroom, 2 bath co-op. Gorgeous Catalina and turning basin view. Assumable Loan. Seller will assist In financing. Boat slip available $285,000. WATERFRONT HOMES, INC. REAL ESTATE ~. ~ Proi-n~ ,...,,.......,. 2436 W Cout Hwy JIH\tnnt Avt NNIJOt'I ~.ch &!boa Island Hl-1400 67J.6to0 1 ,~1E1Tr Ii I I L u F 0 R I ! s I I' I I .... ~ TheM de ya al>Ollt 1 he only . . • • • way you cen atr'ttch 1 dollar 11 to UM It to malll --. I A " E A " I I -, -, ...... ,-, ........... , ....... ,-. ~ :-,.,. "::V ~ '-· -'-· __.__...__.__.__. '°" 4-lop '-IMP Ne. 3 bolo. • ~:.~~s r r r r r r r r 1 • ~fwt~1 f~1 I I I • I I I I sca•w.urs ._"'" • amlflc.tlllaSJOO COLDWeu BANl(C!RC WTILUFF Sito ooo Terrific I.us~ noor plan that features 3 BR. Family rm. w !fireplace, sunny patio, & conve-nience to schoofs & shop· ping Best price a. r10ancing in the area. 644-9060 ocean. 25'1-down. Owner will carry balance . $265,000! a.oo loy Prop. ........ •675-7060. ILIFR 1•11111 UEllllLT SITNI Gated Entry -Decorated To Perfection -Two Bedrooms + Oen -Two Baths + Powder Room -Custom Carpeting - Drapes -Van Lult Papers -Air Condi- t ioned -Storage Galore -Shown By Appointment. $255,000. A "Joy Of Newport" Listing. (!) ·--, .......... , SlllC& 759-9100 UC.,.... ... ,._ ... ..,..c .... IOUTIIWOTA CSISAYDTl IANIUDLSAC AllSWOllOJZkAZCROkS lAHDllflUAFIDlOEZYSI AJE•TOllDSEllSRAElC NlfCAlA~llfAlllTJVAll IRALMHRXDAMDIYliRUH ~ ; ~ : : ~ ~ : ~ : ~ 1.: i 61 i1~ JLPIHOLHtSLCILAOlfVt AOMPOLNPAIZLlUYtlR1 •WRASORETALASITSIOS ENOtlAHAkSRtZR•VltA EACPHPtSROHY1AlCllC TNASAtNPDElCllllllR ICORllPAHlOUMO•EMIS ........ ~ ............... ............................... ! ;:;;. = =-=·~ .............. = ...... .::..· ':..'=' ,,.__...., Octm,...... Costa Mesa Luxury lower duplex. 4 ------••••••••••• •••• ••••• •• , 1024 bdrm. Gar, Sl400. Bob Sell! Sell! Sell• And lel --------1 :;:1 da, 152-9«2 eve. ~lfi~!P 642.5678 C.0. .. Mor I 022 ••••••••••••••••••••••• DUPLEX-BY OWNER MUST SELL! .... C4i .. Offff 675-3063/679-9667 - USE THE DAILY PILOT "FAST RESULT" SERVICE how D~~~~! Class· DIRECTORY ifit!d ads display their Fo r Result nusages with legibilHy . Service Call and impa1.1 ? Our ads, we are proud to say. re 642·5678 SHARP fASTSIDE 6PLEX OHL Y 15% DOWN "523 C "-I '"'£ lllld owner will rinanc·e "' AJ4M»a~ RV .. to quahf1cd buyer Well 1 _:_ .. -::........ Io•• located, good looking 6 --r----uruts t 4 rar garage t ••••••••••••••••••••••• ll!Tlple parking Below 11 A Lot limes gross For A Uttte Coll Today 644-7211 I acre + t>Jag stte. gent ly sloping parcel short distance from tennis & beach. Ownr has 1n eluded plans for custom villa Sl25.000. Sper-tacular views! rJD.NIGEL GAILEY & ASSU(IATES 642-5678. ------- ally get result! Phone ht. 322 I Mls.510N REALTY 494-0731 ' 024 Cotto Mesa I 024 MESA YUDl ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Bdrm hollle, 2 baths. FANTASTIC HOME 180 deg ocean views 3000+ and cu(tom . Gourmet k1ti\et1 · massive living rm . for ma I dinh1g. cozy fireplaces. J>OOl. spa. Lg rec area $589.000. lllTl IUl IWUI Great Investment - 2 units -both Identical. 2-story, 3 BR, family dining, step-down LR w/ beautlful fplc. Close to beach 218 A & B Palmer. $250,000. Natalie Ben- jamin 752-1414 (F52) dbl garage. all m A l 1:ondit1on SI 29 .SOO S19.500 down. Owner v. all assist in fmant>1ng Roy McCarch, Rltr. 541.7729 LocJ-Ym.g.R.E BUY OR LEASE 49l0 1Z61 OPTION NEW CUSTOM with Otx· 4Br, 2Ba, lg yd & patio. 1ble terms will listen to lg assumable loan al lov. all o(fers . trade . buy percentage owe 2nd al down-L O! I New 4 Br 12~ ~1~.000 979 3048 Jba. J car gar. family Beautiful park like ~et rm S476.000 ling, Loft Condo Lov. LOIJIM Yilogt 1.£. dov.n Near S C Plaza 497 17' I $7S,000 Lo v. interest " high assuma bll' loan AT THE IEACH 646-_~ Priceless loc! <Jenn OllTST AHDIHG IUY! ''""'' 2 bdrm. 1 ba at Silenfil'l'. Bv Owner Main Beach. Walk to ..... ,. ..... ,. ..... ,. ................ ._ 1.cuar so·. :JO ~r loan village. s hops . etc. _ a\atl at 2 pb under 4 494-9378; (702)732·9840 --~-=:::ap---==::::i.11::::.,,.--~ br 2 b r r ~. 1~ ---r . a. am m. spa. mJ , AIJJ ~AJ. lmmaC $142K.979 ll38 ~HicjiMI 1052 7'/~W/~ ~, IAMKRUPTCY ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'l/J High assumable l~l. low \; interest 1n a main- inl Lov. dn s l' Pila tenance frtt 3 Br 2• 2 Ba Park Bn ~tol r ondo condo Frplc both rn Quit of Rowiis Easiest Ever! mstr Br & laving rm. $90.000 2 Rr 111 ba Close to country club. 646-~ golf. tennas & swam· * OHLY S9K DH. * nung Walk to shops & Assume BJ• \'A ln 3 Br. banks. Ownr Agt. frplc.$114.000 Princon-770 ·23 17 . 495-3202 . I,>· _543 7023 Rkr 495~ ..... OR leach I 040 Lae Forest I 055 .....•............•..........•...•••..•••••••• YOU'LL LOVE th1~ 3 Bdrm v.1th charm galore Best area best buy . $1 29.900 Rkr 11:48--0709 PARICPLACE tilt.!\t 21745<1 Ft. ()\er :KXXI \Q fl. exec II\ BE'lTElt'tHAN mg S Br + den Pm•ed MODEL belO\\ mkt at SJ79.900 HA5 EVERYTHING OWC. Agl \'1rg1n1a . Cul-de-s~eslreet. 821-8400 Sun &Sa1\ IJ Club -20 mrn to Newport SI 251 YA 12% LR. Center Sharp 2400 sq fl 4 Bdrm $210,000 with $160.000 oncul·de·sac $179.900 at 1212 fixed rate & fully R E Professionals amortized. ~UH11l No pomts or qua.lirying 770-0347 FORMER MODEL OwnertAgent This lr11 3 Bdrm 2 Ba --------rondo hai. a great H B localion Onl) 6 yrs old Peatures include comm pool & clubhouse. A C, and 2 car garage As-sume 912'; loan and OWC Full prrcr $129.000 631·7370 TRADITIO~\L REr\LTY • For Ad Actiln Call a Oily Pillt AD-VISOR 642-5678 ~Oii Results-that's what you ..__. I 042 aetu!'.!th classified. ·····••eeeeeeeeeeeeeeee ~-1UIO -=;.:.:;..:.=....._ WATERFRONT Huge custom waterfront honr. frtt & clear. wall trade for Indus .. comm'I or apts Price $895,000 Chance of a hfelime' Ask for Phil or Lou. 841). 'l2l17. 846-0884 . ••••••••••••••• PLUS need rast cash sale on lowest 'Priced waterfront home on Trinidad Island. Owner desperate & will deal ' cau PM, a.0.2201 WRAP 11110 surphce soltntSl for $p0ftl pltties Sew the 111 OI dtnllef ftfMOn of this effortlessl) my dms No w11st seam no hi 11111 pioblems. llO llppef Pllllttd P1ttein 9495 ~ ------Sues 10~. 12~. Wt. J6~. .;, i....: · 18~. 20~. Silt mt (bust J7) •O v.v. sell or rent-use a lalles l prds 60 iotb ltb11c ~ cost cla~ified ad . .. $US ..... """" -......... ,..... .. r-.--, = :.n.--~ 9k Wh1t it mtJl1lS I ;::;r;...o. 442 hr 1/)Ur ad fD 2U -.1. Sl. ... YM, IY be ",.J,.,.,.,:r;,J,, l•U. Mlt -· ~ Ul01lllltU ZIP,4Ul .. S1TU -l _, ~ • ...,1 fll'd lltt llltlltn 111 t111 NEW SPRI,.. Sl.IMM£11 ~TI(Rll CAfAlOO; ~~:~ 100 ltlit C.C... SI SO &L*T-.. IUI .. llHWllC... : ll1•11tt1t £ JllH .... y ..... ..-v:,:·~~ ..... . ,......... . organized -· '. . . • , ;1 I I ~ ...... ...!!-...~-·· =-~.:: ..... ~ .. t 11""2Ws ~~r.~~ ~---:i-. ..... of.,· :w~~~ . :::. It --......... ....... llP e( ··-Mid 8peoltl loMI .. Oteolor9 ,. """ ..... ...... 1N1 '8: Wt W Oleertol llu lllliendtd tl'9 t ..... .,._, ot hollOfl t ot Pl'tod for PllOlo ,.._ end ~ ~IC lf'w.) to._, IMnl Oft ....... Drift ...,..._ ,_..., ""'*" "'"" "°"' .... "t.,..., to 9onow . Tiie ...o-1HI to~ 11; 1MJ, The llW· ..._ .._ lltrrow ~....,. pole of IMe Ortft II .. le to .V• = .::.::,y ~"J::::. ::-.:;..-==;-.. -==: .......... ........... lbllon encl~ of ..... "I. AddM60ll of • ,,., a.otiOfl 11 ....,MllW '19'tml '°' ~ of ~ IC ("-v.) to --. dOffttttlc Ind lrrtoatlOn water to "11. Muiutl C•Plltl 0 "1111-the propoeecl Wl\ftlng "9nGtl.,.. t--------~-,......J _.... The ...adtl!IWI ~ ...,. ll•lopment H approved by Ill• .nc. w.,,.,.,... Nii" i .. ,_.,.,,, I I l ff ·=· ,..,..__, .. .... , .............. , ........ .. ........... ____ ~ ...._._.,_.,_IU,L.TD.• .... ..._. .......... ~ ..--.~--, ... flCUl ... 1 hll•H ..... ===.,..,.-.... "' c.-... LOUtllANA Pa110 ooc•••· lllC .. •~ci: ......... 1 L.aMMrt llr .. tt..._'!_· le ill, L.eae ...... c.llllMM-""' ....... _ ....._~. ....... _._ ... It/ u.ilt&MA • ... leOCMIOCb, INC.. • CIMw'llle <-.. .,:._.M.~ ......... mututl o.pital 0411'\lfloa1M 1Wr· 0Nnae COUftt1 lowd of~ '-... t1mf ...e to !flt NIM Md···~ -.. Tit OeMrll ~ Am1111~--nt T ...... ,._. ---of 111e eo.nt. luOfaol eo "'°" l'\llel 11-1 Nto INUled 11'1 en .,,.. 0 _. mi!£ Md ,.....ttoM, tl'9 bott4 of di-of ~ "*"' °' oolleatlno. ~ ~= :':~: .. rectore of th• uaoclttton 11 au-,,..tine and dltPOtlno ot w111.. ..... o.11 ot "'* WIL.L NU. A ~ C .... ...,.. ll'loftlild wlltloUt ltle Ori« IPP'O\IW waw =ltd b1 11119 d9Vliop· tLIC AUOTIOH TO THI NIGHUT 110-Ille":."..=.~~:-:::--.: of IN rnambert of the ~IOn m•t. Ill lnttf'~~l3· 1tt•) f".~~~~l~Ua1t .. '"""lt•"' ..... , ... ~ .,...., It__. ti ...... "',:...,, end by reeotutlon Of rMOl\ttton• encl ""lmat9 <• I) .....,.. -...... __ , ... " -~........, ....... fl'Ofll lllna '° ttme lldopMd b)' ttie 1111•• ere llddr...eci, et wett •• tW'll. ... nl .,.,_ _......, te w · n. 111 ..._ .. board of dlrwolort encl tCIPfo\led lacilltlH neo.tury for on-alt• ;:" = r:=......,-=.:, Tw Ill ....::::. -;-::" • ., =d, to ptovlde In euo-watw and Hwar ttrvlce. The T W1UJMi1 f NC>ftTOH .. ., AAYMOMO W. ltilmt, 1~ ...,_.. MCtiOM '*"'°for"" 2,743tcreWNUftoAanotl 11 IOoeJad _... _,, -.................. ~ of mutual o.pllal wtlfl. In the Unincorporated arH of erNff'ICIAAY; Ill. ITITTl encl r . The IMMleft Ill c.llfrotl'lll tf t11e....., oetaa encl to fl.II and at•• the vo-O~ounty Jutt ••II of th• tTI~==-wi:.,--:, iJ:r .""::. ::= = e=r:o, "::".:.: ting powwt, deelgnetlOne, prtf• C Natlollal For•t. No. 70JO 111 boott tHto, p ... f.4t ol ~ ...-~ ............... -~ ......__ reno1t end ,...,1119. pert~ lnter•tad ptrlOftt end ~ Ofllclel Alootdt 1n "" Oflloe Of .. .._. -------.--oP4lonal or Other IPedal ttgMa ~ ""'ln""9d to~ UM Ofeft EIA Orel .. Of Oranoe c;;n·:z Mid deed Of w..i t1r1MIMMded~ ..... the oarttflcet• and the qua1tt1oe-Md to 11\Mtt eomrnent1 IMrton. .,_ ~ ._ ' ~ 1t11w.,,i:::...,. flMI • -• ._ • Ilona. 1tmlt111ont and ,..trlctlone Wrftttn oomrnentl Iii.ct with Ille ~*:~•_.In,.~• .. Tiie -W:::.:. '::.. °' thaNon. 8ecretwy ol the Ol$tric:t on or ti. Of°'.,..._,~ -.;;1~ .,. IMeMed .,.,,..._-: "Membert ol th• HtOC:ltllon fOfe Aprtl 19, 1992 wtll "oonal-PARCll 1: Uftlt.,, .. llhOwn en tllel THlOOOl'll Q. Ol'IAW,0'110 •nd lhll not ii. entitled to pr-ptlW dared b1the8o41rd of Oltectora of ~..,. ConclomlnluM....,. -d90'" llAl'ltAllA J. llllOOI, I01 M. leclt«CI riatltw with reec>«:t to the IMutnoe th• Olatrfct. Copl•• ol the Draft bOOll 122tt P-ee 111a o111e1e1 ,_.Oil •net. I.I "*' CWbftlt ... , of mutual C-i>ltal certlflcelH, nor EIR .,, On file Ind avallabla for OrMOI eooMtt C.. Tl\et tM ptOjlttty PttUMftt '*"°le lhall lloldert of M!Ch certlfloa.IM publlo n1pectlon II th• Ol1trlct PAllCll 2: ~ undMdeo I/Miii 1n.. dMCrtbeCI In 19""•' N l IANOWIOH ii. tntltled 10 pr-ptl..,. rr:t• Offlc.. 11ao2 Batdefl A.,.,_, Ir-,... 111-to 1ot t Of trMt tOa • ..,_, lffOP -11 ~ 11t no ..,.....,.. I C d on I NIP -ded In 9oOll -,.._ e "'8ae. ~ teeCll, ~ .......... ....... ... 'J . -·· 'jf ~ ................... ~ ...................... ....................... ......... . ..................... . :.til! ......... ~~ ~ 11 ~~.~ ..... ~!: .... ~... .._ .. ?.~ -=(!f:U!.1. ;::·•::r~·A·;.·. ~~~~.... ·~=~ I .~ •f•· ll16Wteavitwt -..;1ro11 Park. lllat U U.1 .,... 0.Mr 11t1H 7 dan MW ,.eorator rrp 1 • Otttli.W.1•nioe llvd e=oed 'Tlb~bl wide, fta. ~ •.ooo. 11 OP't! famib I d,,., IHMrJ ~•·119 . 1111 CllUft A\f. ftt llOa Ill K!L.:-!~ petlo, Ill', IDEAL' .. Jard.~· --1175 m-msor .. ·JW . IUI02 U'(. 2 ba.. w-. Amite """'4 M! rt1r I •kit. ~ lot Q IAas;..... ·---Saata lybet m.ooo. 8111 Orudy ....._ JHt ---ITE fl>flfl. ....................... 1NILUCIYlllW Elcet3 .. ..:..~8r.cua~ho.JMt· ~-lOdO '1twood idtal for ..... DI w-111-C-oita -11.1a·1 ..... :.•It -'· •UI nr1111. rttlrt1111nl. fftmet, Ca. " NEWEST l•Ud 20 ~'>"1:=':t~r .JllM: SUit mo. lac. 1•cl utll Townhome VILLAGE p·:.t I llak• ~ rtputatlon on Carport ' tncl p_aho DlBI' COMMUNITY. 2' a Br . ..-..::e:.:..· __ ,.;:...o.; __ ti.. FACT U..l thla I• tbe fum ' ctn ll500 Ylrm • ~ 1 c 't"""' .. r e •1•• :i. u e 2~ Ba. llDO-~ tq, ft of BEST BUY ia Ntwport ~ • pure lllX\UY. G1ra1t1. --·w•s Btarh. If you are 1 -AU.BROOK RA CH, hydro·tubt In muter _.._ • lttillmai. buytr·CALL eo.cll tGrt Lk•> 12' X 80' a ~. Lovely hoint 1uJteLdlnln1 rooma. ltHONOLULU la DIRECTLY and you t 2 r m c a b • n a . with 4500 •l + tennis wood uum&.a llreplaces, •WH9t YOU LIAS I will be ln.i.Pnued. hbulous cond New ~,pool,ridlnrtrai11, mlcro.wue ovtna, 1NSCHAIM .... ;GREAT BUY~ OCEAN Un>etina throu1hou1. Ide for smaller home Drivatepatiol • yarda. 29;.-;-1..._Bi-·liome VU. LRG4 IDR. PROF. r"" fum. Must move. In Oranie Co Fl.Ill prke Oardnet provided. Futures: 91 /W ot. DICORATED. to0l.1pa oraPR!call$3H()H. ltt5,000 Weekend a ~aat Uvlna ooly 1$ ratbtdtral cellln11 • 6 Hu au all Jor onl)' Cr rcW 80·5000, ext 110 or mlftuta from P11llion rrple ruie·oven. 13'7UOO. A trade will be "•* 1 LOO ~141·JJ 13 w u k d 1 Y • llland. 7 mlnutea to S.C. dahwsbr. patio, pool. <'Onlldtred. You won't "F • -· ...... or&f4·Vl3. Piasa or O.C.Alrport. ~ 1 la 1 btlle\'t It untHyou •«it ........... ••••••••••••• Just east of Newport daya ':·spa~~ a~i1i* l~ C • 11 P A T R I C K Corona del Mar 2 story Blvd. fr IO. ol Sao Dieao Waikiki Condo rrom TENORE Dlrertly commerrial. Prlud Frwy.St1rtlng1tl8001 Apr 1 913 0c 983 8Jlol2H or 780·8702 bek>w mkt for quirk ule 2100 month. 83H439. 2473 Airfi.ie~ r~ "l.o~ber at 1150,000. Owner"••••••• .. •••••••••••• Or1n1e Ave • Costa ftntndnl at 101 *'".; 3 Yl"I WANTED: House on Lido M eolltl resp ol leasee. Ill w/1130.000 dn, No nef. Isle for Income proper· esa. Hamilton. uah flow. Own/Al . tx.Pr1nonlyf42·03Ql Eutaide 3 Br. 2 Ba.-------- f3l·l<IM Maul ro ndo , best S700/mo .. lat. ~asl & ser. 3 BR twnhme, 2~ ba, 2 •L ~DOmN' C•d•••l~ow•· Kapalua location S90K deposit. Call 648·4388 fpk'a. new. Formal din, ..,, • ...... .a...... I 700 tqlity. Trade ror O.C alt. 5 bll(e back r d. 841-1725 Vena1 ltt It o Pen· """" property Call Don Agt St25 mo 28 IB tboule rondo. Take O\'er ••••••••••••••••••••••• W-Ull dba. 845 vfcton:.' 1°s0 liSlSIOI hi~ usumable loan at C...S-CW.t ~9124 Neat 1 -b rm. reder. ll *~;.. O.-ner will ron· A .SM.229'f-' T .... IO Acrtt refrig, aar1 patio. !'io sider late model rur as ~r. In Blarrc Hills or So Nire rlean 2 Br I Ba pets or chilaren $495 'in· down P•>·m ·t. Art . Dakot.aforCoastproper· rnclsd.garage. yard, rlgardener. rut!!! Only •• 900. Ca 11 I IOO ty. m. 7283 new paint & carpet. No 642-9820 ~~gt. 179·537o or ...... C.•DM•••=::;•••••• Trade rondo m Avalon. ~s ol~~:e~5~~~itt MESA VERDE 4 Br II I R&IM~ with reapect to lnY eddltlOn ""' v ne, •·· au at the fOllowtng II· -1 of Mee , • _ """'111 w. ollloe TM ~ -1.-d rw Ille Mid • u.. 0 f mu I u •I c. p It I I bfatlea: Of .. ~ ,__ Oil Mid~... .......... .. Mid loo9tloll .. OUOCA'a. cartttlcai.t... City or N-port Beach Matl· ,.t ..... •1111 •II l"IPt0-1• • ...._ T1* -1111111.,..... .. aoMnded ..... 3. Rtnumb«lng ol the pr-I ner1 Branch. 2005 Oo11er Drf~. ~ .,,.,._ Condon*llllMft Unlti ~ • .. Olllloe ot. ~ Section 11 of Chaner K (Rev.) en-N9wport a..ah, CA; CltY ol lrvlne 1 ~ 14 ~ IOOMecl "*-IENCOUNTVll, IHC. 11'UO ~ ...., · --.,...._ Catalina ror rondo 1n ~·~·---lar1e.ramllyhome.9':l'et 'IY THE SEA IY OWNEI Palm Sprinl(. on ~olr . area. many amenities Two 2 bdrm units. so. or rourse 675 728S or IASTSIDJ 67s..t912 Bkr IUYTHESIA PCH. <'Orner lot. 67~ 2 Br -h<iUse with den. 38;~ Watt't & For safe or traire 141 sin(lle/atory. dh·ided b~· --· gareBe. w/~ hook ups gardener inrl 1795. no Unda Isle. Loratt'd on garaaes. assumable 10 7 ... 329 University Or. See .-. 644 2778 t111ed "Amendment of Charter" to Unlver11ty Park, 4512 Sandburg boePtlnQ irOll'l a porllon Oil Mid IOI II ¥Inf, Hun4'"9I011 llaedl, Oellbnla t2M7 W I-" C& Cf'Ude ol, petf01eun10-, tw'M. ~ on OI .... Apft 11, fllZ. be ranumbar«I u Section 12 and ey, • ••nt, "· end •II .indr.o ... 11.,.,.c .. •nd ot...., TM Cola hnllw It.....,.• Callomle • &mlftdad to ttete, Bttty J. Wheel« "**• IMldlr Md 111 Mid llnd _.....,,. Unltof1ft c--00* fecllorl t IOt. "12. AIMnclment of Cherter • s.cr.lery rlfll!I to ... ~1 ot1 Ille..-. Of TM --Meir.-Of Ille~ \'fl)' tip ol \Jland. Bl'st Isl TD or 1100.000. owner manager at s 548 0648 ~ ----- !oration and ,·iew on t'n· ll111 usist finanl·t. ftt. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Eves I BR. lots or wood & lirt harbor. Will tukt' 1mmur. $290.000. S21 rw.itMd 2~9Rl-Ba--duplax. n6~, wallpaper. real nice. lll'O !ll' Ylll'bls. Sllim up Curnatlon A\·e. l'dM ••••••••••••••••••••••• paint & rpls. :ar ~7, 63 BS 1 •• .!'!' Ask for 8111 . No Mlendment, 1ddltlon, 1ltera-Irvine R1ncll Water DI· 11>e lwlO lot Ol*llMoN. ~ °' llritll wtto• ot.,.,.. -r "9 lllM I• H · tlon, ch:::Jn •• or r•P••I ol thll ltrict tl'*rylng ol.. l!lclucJlne llut no4 Cl'IOW !NCOUNTll'IS, INC .. 17320 .... ~ '-__ ....._ P 1>11 ....., 0 C t O·'~ 9JCCIUliw of Oii .... -01 ..__.__ llMdl ~. ~ '-"· C.. ..,,_,., ..... ...,., except u u •·-range <>a1 .. ,,...,, lllllllllO. operitk;;:"'tooelll«~ llorNli '*'· w 11t..,. _...,.,,. may ii. olh-IH authorized by Piiot, March 30, t982 1472-8 IN ... of Mid......_ IOt 1111....., _., -rw eny cndltOI -11e APtll ''-bar. ~ame room. Wtnl' CuJI 673-0241. !i?S·S 142 .... l.t.d ] I 06 .. uuu "0 lla r . ""nt.·1.•t1·.. pets SS25 + dep 1948 ---· " .. -r .. ... " •••••••••••• •••• •• • •••• Mh M9"'3484 BR Newport ·s finl•sl l'tlh•r· ""°"" Pl'Opffty 2000 3 Br 2bu. rurniMhl'Ci. Short n-er. --•.• · I with st~ve. covered tainmt'n.t homt• hutlt for ••••••••••••••••••••••• term S90tl + pt>r mo 2 Br. enrl y11rd. pets 'kids ~1"'cfi< Ch~~ s~ J ma II tha Boerd. unleM IUCltl propoaal le 1-------------' tunnelt, mining .. c1vet1on1 Of lhlltl ~ ':.. .....,,_~ 1119 meda b1 the board of dlrec1ora of PllUC •nt( proo;lded, '-«. tlll --no4 lie Dllted Matdl 17 ::;:""' !ht UIOCletlOn, 111bmltt .... to~ .. ·------------OONINed to--~..._°'_..... • "" •ov ,-otl\lr~~~lln0..=.1,.;:;; ~O.Cnwlon:I approved by th• Boerd, and W1Y ny .itect.,,. ...._._Of..., ..,..... J. erta. a mO\'ll' 8l ;1r Mu~t ~ pl,•x l'ot'ta M l':Cll ~._675'4000 oil Avail now. 2223 l' SJ&..79'79 mo thWHlttr Mtbmllted to and •P-flUelJC NOTICE ...,., -..illCfl Clo --Mid llnd... tnMndld T....._ prowd b1 the membert at 1 lagtl NOTICS Of' l'Mf'AMllOM paint .... INn 500 ._to Mid..-..• UCllOW ac:ouwrat, llC. ~'~~~rl!r"1,~·~,.~~~~ ~~J:~rt;oos£s,\"'~~ ~~. w.oo r.-.. 3107 ~na . $SSO mo ~~-little home Lg lot. mMllng. Any tmendmant, addl· .......,. .,....,, ... D-1 ,__, 11y Aci. M .._ lft ~ --"91.._........, tlon, altartllOn, change. or ,..,... NOTfCE IS HEREBY GIVEN thtt d.cl In Book 4195 P99' M Olflc191 "" II ......... Ca. ma 1:.... .-~ • Ill')! rtnt'JPit ,, on ~ •("'lo' •N,.'l">NT Easts1de qwt't 2 Br 1n to d ....-" rnu1d qrtrs & :-1'µ John!U6·766UAa;t "'·'' " • h cf • 1 gar en1ng USO mo mi: t'fllirt' Nt'll ""rt R.i \ r• · I · I •••••••••••••• • • • • ••••• 1 r0001 for RV or home eo acted upon and approved 111e11 Negative 0tct11atlon 82·1 11 cur-_..,.. ...._ ... __,. ti. aflec1hra, II filed wtth and •P· rently under preparation for th• 1°'5 W-d i.-c-. ~ CA Publlelled Orono• C01ot 01111. Piiot. j(1K'SI q11l'll. l'un 1·1os1• :lbr hmuw, anul for oust t'\ l' upm1· nt. c.tll962·8840 rust. i':a~~ 11•rm:. l'rtt·i•d ,IUNITS Apnl. Ma>" Jun1• llttl >ard. 11aru11 l'. pool. --· proved by th• Board. 11 of the following: t:M211 ' Mllfdl 30• 1* 41o.e2 dtlt ol the llnal 1pprov1I, 0<, H ProJtet: Operating FacllltlM "(If' ettMI lddt-°' -0. to !It'll far lldo" mu da•I Ni"' port lkh f\•i• luiul I'd· S57S mo 67~ 11il2 udult.s. no pet11 S57S• mo WOW ' look ttl this 2 Hkr 71"1-i2!12 t:xn•llt't\I lll'pn•datmn u-__ •&....&.-• ... -~ M11na1tl'r 2A~ H OrJnl!l' br. appl. t'USlstde $260 thl1wr bkr955·"'.~ r-.~-Av1• QC R~NTALS 7S0.331<1 Jl't ••••••••••••••••••••••• I ""-'-'~ W tiarlllOOn II "-ICIOft, no -.nty It -Ill' --fixed by, the membtfl, or thl O< ._,.,,.. ell No. 5 gfv•n u to It• colftplete11ue or I ,..,.. .. ,~ botl1f of dlrecton In the c:.. of LocetlOn: 3598 Clldlllec A.,._ _)... 1~0~_ ... o;:::::ac:= .... --~-·----• .,..;.. $20,000 atpplementery MCtlont to Section nue. Coat• Meea. Celltomla Tl•• t>enellctery under N ICI 0..0 ot 1"o pndl' 1f o"n •r hiv 11 of the ct1et1er. prOlftded, ,_ Proponent: M ... ConlOffd .. TNlll, by,_~•.,,_°'.,_,,."' "OTIC.CMJ H USTaa'S&&u Price R.d.ctiot1 I Ir ' • :. 3222 llOMfo:FOR Rfo:~T Fo..tairtYClley 3234 4 hdrm S1SU I' t"nt•t .. " ••••••••••••••••••••••• that holdere of al ~....i led Wster Dletrlct. 1985 ~Ila '"' ~ _,,. t~. '*-'~ T.t.-..... lmmarulal<~ Yl\r :! llJ In II l:\l's ror. ~alt· 1!~ YW, mutu _.tel for•.-utedlllCl~tolMun-OllA!lri1 2."'l.ett:Ue.m.TtT\.E l'l11.s~ ltl ''l','t"h 111•. Oil. th r ~ . .tli & 7t..> ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ Hl .. OCI\ TO 11 t:i\l'll 3 llr 2 Ra rµ . .:ur i\\ull now ~s t~2 ~:!l~I yard & 1:;ira111· Kids & HOME FOR RENT certlllcatH m1y b• granted In Avenu.e.~I! MtH, Callfornla ~•wrttten0.0.lllloft0f09'9Ull se.-vica INC.,•*"'...,....., • u • lfamtll Ill t M o auppie!Mntery MCtlonl to Section 92627. T~ia. (714) 931-1200 -°"'*"' '°'a.... encl...-.......~ Trust• Ul!Clllr _.. ---• ........... Of down $14!1 000 J\~t·111 11 h' ·1 "111'" lll'lll welt'Omt' S4S :.!INlll J Bdrm 1725. Fenced Ai:.ent. nort'l•. yard & 11ara1ote Kids & l'ltL~h Wr. 2• ,fla ('undo. 2 petS welrome S4S·2000 11 ............. _.. ...... .... h ,.,,.,..,_of the Initial Study '""-.......... -,._ ...... Ur l'lark ,,.:, ...... , \\' t• II r' n .. "l' t' "'u-..,_,., ..... .., t lo vot• .......,._ -on ol brMCll Ind of eleottofl too-1119 Trvlt ,_.,. Odolier n , t•. ea. '" · "" "'"'" 71itl 117l4or1;;11.4-1112 t(il•n on amendfllal1tl, addltlone, 1111..... flit and •11all&bl4t for lneptctlon II ""°':::*' to ... Mid ~ 10 ..,. lftlt. No. M1n. In 1111o11 ,_,, ..._. 1m tJont. ClhtnOM. "' ~ of 11111 the ofb of the proponent. ~-=:!:,"~~ ~ of Offk:.., "-•Ill .. office of Ille T~ ootiolt or Jat•k I Charter In tn; of UM 1n1tenoe1 MC OuHtlone and/or commenll --·--"' ...-... C:-ty ~ " Of'Mee County, Ulll d O-ll n ~ J!\ r~-l; a~ 21iR 3111\ 1110 d1•11 llJy & tll.·1·an \'tl'll Gourml'I ktlt'. 11anh•1wr 111d1I ~Ulm• 12131 S45 14341 t•ar i:ur . .ircal lot· A&_ent,nortt ~0111 i<pu S7Sll mo ~-•odl 3240 forth In Section 543.7-4(1) (2) (vii) lhould ti. dlt~ to UM propo--•etecdon1o be"'-dedo.o-bw C•llforni. WILL SELL AT PUtLIC 1mmablt' Xlnl h•rms MEW SPANISH (b)ltlfough (I)." nent on"' before April 28, 1982. ~·~~ ..... Ho.0:~430t, AUCTION TO HIGHEST tlDOU S2 t 0 ,0110 tiH U4!1ti ST.Tll 4PUX 641 ~I l'\~ ·-..... . . ....•............•.•.. 4. No O(Mf ~. Contac1 Jeff Renna, Oietrlc1 Engl-Seid "'• wilt lie M•d•. but wllllout "01t CASH, CASHtE•'S CHECK Olt I\~ •32SK·5SI\ ON 17', OorothyK. Potter -.•Ql4lf31-1l00. -OI ... .....,,..,,,..°'~· CEIHll'IED CHECK, INY•IM• •• C~'llt'r Ii• •IOYK Ol•fo:l>ATfo: -. Walk tu lll·h. 211H Iha. t:.ist.,1dt• ba1·h puti. I rµk. CUTE lbr t•ottagc on stow. rdni:. No µl'I~ beiil'h. fol·d. appl S300 S«:retery Dated: Mitch 29, 1982 ,.,.,'ding Utt•. POIM .. lon, or enouM· 11-of .... In lewfvl _.,Oil Ille .._.IE•CH CO ... DO •Fin . !J•: 11•, OWt' PACIFIC FEDERAL Kart Keiflp tit-. to !NY 11\e .....,Alnlng ptlnOlpel U11lltd SU.I.• Ille tront lfllrMC1 to .....-1 5;A " r 1• µ I t' • tf " h 1o1· s h r . m11·ruw\. pulio. \'l'r~· ul tral'lt\l' $11511 mo 71~1 !14112 ~rn1.~-ti4)ll(1 OC·Rt:NTALS 7S0.33141 3 bdrm, 2 ba qualtl\ llOMESFOR iU~NT SAVINGS ANO 0-al Manager tum ol 1111 noi.(t) -by Mid Deed IM old Of' .. Couftty Court.__, 119 OqO •Jl)r 21 ~Im llll tll'l"S 111111 LOAN ASSOCIATION MESA CONSOLIDATED of Tru11, •1111 lnt.,Ht •• tn "Id note leUted Oii s..te AN tt...i., ""-Lot·atl·cf -ll fth1n a lu\ • lh•muind1•r :!hr ~ha hollll.• M Hn•nt 1o101111 3 & 4 Rdrms S67S·S750 W .. TE" OtST""'T provided. edYMCel, If •ny. unci.t ,,,. S'l'C-. St. & lr--Y. s.m. Me, llrtOllS.' "lt"rd1•1I l'tllll •N1•wµi1rt llt•;u•h ....... , Publlthed Orange Cout Dally ,. n ""' ......,. Of ..id Deed Oil TNtt. ..... Cfltrv-Ce11'9nllll, lfl rlllM. tt .. .,... 1Merftt .. ~ Piiot, Mer. 30, Ap#. 11, 1982. Publlehed Orang• Cout [)ally Md....,.._ Oil 1t1e T,_ -ot1 h QlftffyM to...,_ Mid ..... It....,. muml). Call un) t1n11· t';1ll l':1tru·k. a~l 3224 llkJ Wtll :o.dl nu m.111t•\ Ft•nt•ed \ u rd ~ & do'tll\, tradt' ror 'fj), l!JI ;Jj!l!i. Kidi. & pt•h 1475-&2 Piiot, Mii. 30 ••. II, 13, 1112 . .,_ -by Mid°""' of Tl\llll .... 0.--TNll '" t,;· flnlllMrty Mullan Rt'alt) !MU ;e11;.1 !rTl !O•I iw; ~~ .. 1471-82 89ICI .... ,.. "'l\l6d °" W .. ••Clll), altuot•d tn ••ICI county •nd Stet• i\.~k for 1.ort ••••••••••••••••••••••• m1torhollll.•or·• "t•l1·11mr S4S 20011 1~6-1171111 At:_ent, no r tt APt1121. tt12 • 2:00 ...... "t11e ,....,,.,.,_ ~............... 11 b 11 ....., .... H••10R HIGH A CMo _ _.. -· ,_ 11 II)'. st• ur rt•nl 11~1· a ..__ -~.~~l~l~H--l-l.-TI--C-:E--l-------------J :t:::d1:":~::"c':.:,.,, Ac... i..ot ,, i11 ••oc• 11 of sect1CH1 ,, '"" n"' ··h1s~1r11·11 .•cl J Br :i 11;, c:un1i-1wr. If u lll'W hou~t· "'" i·:iM· °'Wlll'o CA. venu. .... .._,.,.,..,"'IN City Of NewPOf1 .. 0 ltErll' OF stl·Sti7ll Wlll1•r µa11I V7S mu your spnnl! h •H'I'. turn "'"" .. •IN 1n11111 ~of llff<I\, c..untv °' <WM99. sc-• "'uoongr;i'~ 1:141;1!131. 111.~15s I 1oda~<1r1l'<I. 642·SCi7K ... ._.... IMtOMl-OlllW..,..... Cellferftla, et per map r..-111 (l<.'.Rfo:NTA LS l·Sbr's $2110 to $20011 7Stl 3314 7 da), --Oil H......,..-... 11y.,,. ... , 1, "" 1S Of Mlacett-ua anti you J(l'i 4 rm 11111~ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • tbol'9 ~ deed °' tn.wt -.... -.~. '" u. efflu et '"' C:-llty 3 t' ll r "u r a" l'. "a) . MAll8BALL .................... ....._ .. ~-.... ~. " .. u irervtcee will be held on Wed-115.111.N . To.....,.1111Mu.open1n9 Trouter ., recor• •w111r : ~~~h'1\·1~bn~~d ~ol~~rllui<r. • 8-DAY WEEK SPECIAL • ~dTHRYN L. MARSHALL, needay, March 31, 1982 al *o.:'.:.i~11,~m.-... ~_!'.•ENCE EICHWALD.,• Sll'lfle ~ • re.1 ent of Co1ta M eH, C1. l l :OOA M at Harbo r Lawn T.O.~OOMPAHY _, otller umemlws. Owna • P--;ct away on March 27, 1982. Memorial Park. Servioel under •Mid TNlllM. Tl\• •trHt '""" H41 otfler :::iy~.!;,;:~bw1.!'olrrl~1er1.k at I • 8 Davi • 3 l ines • 8 Dollars : She 11 1urvlved by 1 daughteq the dittctlon of HArbor Lawn-ey Qld'f .___, ~=":'.::!~:C~i::.Oen!ii.O:. '':: • • 7 Ptmlla Appleman of Colt• Mount Olive Mortuary of a.ia ~~ -~-kt•: 221 .-119y A-. • M 0 • • c •.. • n d 2 Mesa. 540-S5$4. Qrenee. CA tit. ..,.._ ,...., ..., c.1""""9. It s easy to plac e o r 8-0a Week Cla f d b I d 1 granddaughten. MemorW 1er-WRIGHT C714193M:all Tr.,.. .. .,..-"""'" •• ..._ Y u Y SS• 1e y ma1 an 1 • • vices will be held on Tueeciay, DAVID LEE WRIGHT tftl. Publlliled °'rf: c-t 01111 Pltot • .,.., ·~..,..., ~wrectMM" e costs 1ust $8 -thats only a dollar a day' To Qualify for this •' March lO, !982 at l0:30AM at dent of Hunllneu>n Beach C.. w.rdllO.Aprtt. J . 1912 144M2 ::,:::.n,~.=--:::..~ • Spectal Offer . YOU must be a non-commercial user offering • Newport Harbor Lu.theren Pawd •way on March 28, i982: I ------S.ld .... wUI ........... tM wltlliWt • merchandise for sale up to SBOO per ad. and the price mus t • Oiurch. Final burial will be at Survived by h1a mother JudJth . Pia.IC 1111(" cov•n111t .,. ••ttwity, ,11,....1 .. -. Pierce Brothen Beu Broed-A w 1 h t h 0 td 1 ~ lrnptled, ._.,,. t1t1e ..,......,., • be in your ad The cost stays the same whether yo ur ad w Mortuary direct.on. nn "I' 1· al er ona ;; ; >1. < •ncumllrenc.,, to ,.Y tlle ""•••• • •Y · ULLUM Wright. Memorial services will llO'TICSOP.,,...,...uu ... ,.._of.,. -•«WM...-.... IY OWNER needs eight days selling time or 1ust one e GILBERT CARLroN KEL-~~~ ~~ s= * ~: ="' ~::,,~ ~Ul~lt~ ·:.~i:.,s:: 6 bcfim. 4 b11. 3SOO sq ft. • • LUM,eraidentof ~Me91 lla,Huntlngton'Beach,Ca.at TIU.H8COMTl8MC&,INC.a..., .... Meff.H My.-.. t-•Of o n Nwpt Rt•h Golf . Use one word 1n each box About 4 words make one and ~ County 11111Ce 1929. 7:lOPM on Wedn--'-y, MA-h llHOilteCI ~~-~~·.••A~ .~!...~.,• ~T·Nlf-.... ci.._en., ~ Course. S2&s.OllO Tukr • p~ away on ... __ ... 29 1'"'2 .,,..... ~~ ~ -"' -----......... -. .... .... over 160K. SilK down. • classified line of type M1n1mum ad IS 3 lines Please prtnl He wu a ham radio operator ' lllX>f" FOl'I CAIH _.....•..,.Of TM lllNtlclery -ukl Deed., ----_a · 7pm .. ,.aan;n • "°·'JO 1982. 'U8llCAUCTIONTOTHfNIGHHT trvsb,u...,19dbyMMIO.OOfTr .. t. S4S-8108 n • plainly • andworkedfortheEIToroCivil .. lrltewM~GfllieU....lllllml Trust l\er•tofore eHcuted •no Owner must liqu1dalt' Services II• aupervbor for 29 f9JC Illa e1~-.n1.....,___,..,._. c11tttwrH•11t-i.n..-.-11tHt NOW!! Low down. lrl( • • yean. Survived by his wif~ Do-:::" ~ ~ !:'..:.: rn. ~ Dc(l.,etkln ot1 Oef9U1t -DemMC assumable louns llert> r -----------------------------., rothy, eons Worley D. Alexander Cl'P.tiMI TAu•TOR: Pf.Tll'I G. WHITM.AN, • for S.••. •Ml • wrlttMI Netk:• " ts """'r <'hanl·r to takr • I • f •--'-ai-,,.,_ and llOTIC.CMJTa USTl'.U' IALI'. ---0.fHll Md l'.lectl111 t• Sell. TIM 1~ • o ~ ..... J~ K. °" ~ 1, 1111191 ll:• •.m. l'l•ST RNE~ltY: ALL.tTAT£ IAVINGe ""*••I~ cav-••Id Holk • Of over 3 Bdrm view home • I • Alexander of Dllnoia. sister Hal-AMEltlCAN TITLE INSU•ANCE NfO l.OAH AUOCIATIOtt . ClllDr* 0.f•ull -Elect'-! to Sell to lie w/pool ' spa in mint lie Copeland of Morro Bay, c.a. COMPANY,•CallfomlecOf'POretlorl .. oo.poneun. "' .. ~Y...,.. Ille,..., rond. Contact ownr/ul!l • I • and 9 iranckhlldren. S lumber Tru11 .. ! or Suc:uuor TruatM Of' ........., Me!dl 11, tM1 •"""·No. pr~y lt IOc.atlel. TOO y. ~-6636 Room vialtatlon will be held on "*9111"'" Trust .. , of tlwt <er1thl ::.::: ~ !::.!· :'r. ~ ~.... • I • Tueaday, March 30, 1982 •-OeM Of T,.... •111<1Md "' 1t1c11e..-N. OrWftOI Coufltr. Mid o...r ot i...-ct. CHCICl LOCATION I S I 00 uvm se. T"°"'" -DI-se. TNfftel, D1bel .. '°'°'*'II~ • I . • lO:OOAM '° 5:00PM. Gravet!de llu•Nftd end wlf9, ...o ,_,. A. l.ot 14 _. • 1,.._ .,.,.._ 111 -• UDO ISl.E ------------t s111or. en """""'"' women, •114 '"°" 1n .,.. 1o Lot 1 Oil T,.. Mo.'*• 111 ; ~ 11 "" 3 Br. 3 rar gu. ll11de st. 10 aft • recorded,., 11, "" .. ""'""'*" 1MC1ty01C-,,._,Coul'ltyot10..... .....,0r..;.. c:o..t Delly ,.,..,., Grutpotenlial. S399.SOO • I .vv .... Cl laOnBS SMITHS' MOITUARY 627 Main Sl Huntington Beach ~ 'ACIAC Y•w MINORIAl ,ARK Cemetery Mortuary Chapel-Crematory 3500 Pec1flc View Onve Newpbrt Beach 644-2700 McCoawta MOITUAR•S Lagune Beach 494-9415 Laguna Hills 76&-0933 San Juan Capistrano 4gs..1ns HAllOtl LAW~MT. OUY~ Mortuaty • CAmatery CrenwtOty 1625 Gisler Ave . Cost• Mesa 540-SM4 ..... Cl •OYHHS .a.•OAOWAY MOafUAIY 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 642·9150 No. 12125, 111 lllOoll t4052, ..._.-.of 9-0ll~•perlftlll--.Jln Mercll16,t1,a ,11111 llUC 67trl771 • f • Offlclel Ille-Of or.,.. Coul'l(y, bOC* 111,~40•42.,......,_. ------------! -13 20 C•llfornl•, •nd pUrsuent 10 .,,., C.U.Mou• M1p1, 1n '"' omce 01111e _.., -11111!91••• .. l!IPJl e 1 • • certeln Holk • Of Oefoutt encl Elect..., CountY A9oorclllr Of llld ~. ~ ••~ 1 to s.n _ __, rKOf'dtcl N--T~Ol!THEl'I WITH 11011-uclutlve I 15 80 •.,..,•~No. w . 111 ---non•C111..,.ttaNot1war ,.icnw...,11ae • • e llooll. t4304, p..,. S4t, of Ofll<l•I -· lllldlr lfld ""'°" l.Ot 1 llOI ~ ..,.... ITATeMSJn' I l'IKonbOfuldOuurlty,wtll --°'....._.,,._...,..,_,~ Tll• f1ll••l11t "r..,. t1 Hl111 • I "dd $2 l!Ut. f h d • pUr-• .. 1e1c1 o.o °'Trust ...... =:.=.:4-.~ lltnl-•: ._ ____ "' ___ ._vv __ o_r_e_a_c __ •_d_"-'-°"-•_l_ll_n_•_f_o_r_a_tl_m_e_• ____ J e Mlk _,,.., tor c-. tewf\11 ,_., •'"' accoutr-tt 111ere10, -•· COAST OOHCltlETIE COMPANY, ltj!IJ~~!!!!!!!~~~~~ • I of Ille Unll9CI SCMK .. Americe," !fie ...... -· ....... -.... Md "7¥1 l"olN9ttla, c.-.. IMr, ea.,. tMl11 Mltr8'1C» •,.Im Amerlc., Tl11e -r:rwn.• tlllNtO, w tor IUGfl AlOf 92'2S • I • '"•u•allCe Company loceltd 91 114 _,__...,...,.aoedli1•lllof1 Ji m" JKotl Lock•, Jr., M7~ Q.IFFHAYEH I p bl. h d f 8 d · EHtl'lfttlstrwt,l11tll9clty Ofs...te ••or...._lllrld; ... _Oll ~aettl8,eor-de1Mer,ca.ttt.zs -ooo b' R21 38 • u IS mya or aysstarting • AM, Calltonlla, •II ... t rltM ...... _ .....,_.. loCa Oil Mid trect '°'roof -Tl\ls ---I• ~'" Illy M 9"o>. • ,, ot. r. ,,,..,. .. c_,..to.,,.._,.11111y1t ................. , ......... 1-i"''-'· wlthpef&groovenoors. e Class1'f1'cat1'on • 11tl4er H id DeaCI of Trust 111 t11e °'~c--Lllt4.•NO 1 • J-J.L«tlll,Jr. Great inanclng. Must """""' ...... Ill s.ICI COUl'ltY .,,.. .... ~. ,_ Mid unCll~ Tiiis ~ ft... ltll ... $ ~ 11 1 M a k e 0 r r e r • s-*tcr111ae1 .. , ~==~=::-::~111~ c-tr cter11 °' ~;:,,.. c!mv"' Own1A .642·11666. · e Name Lot n Trect DSl, u Plr m911 _....,..,_Oil.._-· IA'ldw.,.. Merci\ I. 1tll. --------------------------• recordedlnloaUJ, ,.,,.... • ....,,.., .-nllldLot 1tllr~Ot...._ ,.._. IMMIDIATI • Add Mlteetl-M91N, 111 .. offke Of Etftd ..... ttlevlelon oeb!M, PublllNd °' ..... Collt Delly ...... '2SSISSlO... • ress • t.,.c-tv•KOr'WrotMldc.u..ty. ,.._.OOllCIMMtor~. Mer.t ,16,n ,•.1• 111s. " Thlwwc~sorottwf'c-.,.._...,.,,_ 10~ own. payments Ci'ty zi·p Phone • dHton•tt°" or Hid pr-rty: 11 tr""°"t•. lll«•to, eild for IMICll roof Sl500/mo. It ts possible • Plff'pot"lecl '°be:"" Sicily, Colte -------08dli•••ot1• I PIU Illa to I I 5bd 2 ~:.c:.~~i." m.O. Wlllleut =-~:-i ... "'T=.-::-..:~ -story~N~B~ YBackrBiy • Check or M.O. enclosed 0 • .c•11•n•11t cw werrenty, ... .,..,or .,..,...._..In MNI l.G4 t; 8ftCI •· "tCTlnwtlMltt"lll& area. SZ:S0.000. ~1991 . • • 1m,11.e ... to lltle, ........ , ... ., =::'~':.. .. ~-:{'-= llWITATWMH T 'Evac11J:61t.7215. Charge my ad to: encumllreoKn to tetl.,., Ille unpelCI •IOtOMllwlwi-.Oflallleor 11111'1!'1 Tll• followlnt perMtl Is Mint • • btl•nu Clue 4111 llM ftOt• or nOIH '°'Ti.....,,IM '*""'Oil.......,..'°"' of -llllllMUa: ~ IK\lr'ed "' Mlcl Deed Of Trvat, • wit: ·-I.I,.~ PlllOfltLI'. SYITl!MS, 1S1tl OH THI WA Tll 0 # E p • ~~~":::.':c:U:e= .J::4 TlcOftderotA. Colte "'-·CA ~ryv~'t:!a~'-:;,.t Ql.iet community with • ' X · tim. or n. l111t1e1~..,-'11111 .,.. • .._...._°'_.._. """-YDr .. ••••••.CA-. privatedocb and extra • • • N.cJulfS..t1mu 1. ......, 11..,.. ...... "°....._it T1111 ........ •• ~ " • botl/RV par1tin1. Enjoy • 0 * E • l'l •ST AMEltlCAN TITLE 91¥9'1 M to tt1M1°'::'l:i~'-tr IMl\O...... auan:y J>&Uo Oii the bay, 1f Xp. 11t1tu•AHC•~ANv •• ea1lfwl'll• ••-IM4"n.. ...... M9fyM.v..........., 1 r111 ----~"'!'L~. t-· =.ot1111=i.:~-:".~ c:.:::., ~ ~~ ~ =ft\~·~~e: 1}~~'!: • L------------------------------• .._...: _._,"~' -,.....,. 9114 ....... to.. --~. -.... _ .. A_ • o.no.......... ... ....... ~°", ..... .,~ Mlnll•..... ~~1 . .,.!!,!~"'· ssso.ooo • r········· WE'LL PAY THE POSTAG E --------------, ~ ... Offlcw .... Mill °"""" .. .... ... ...... ..,,..., Ill\: -ADU. 1MEALll,lfWISt...i ....... ...._ ............. _ ......... Or ..... C-..Dllly ....... I 64•1200 • I •• :-"1• -.rt'!'•=~ Tiii• ,=,::•=-r, "4t1t r--------------------UNITED STATES "' ~:S:'C:~ ~~,;};ijft.,~ :-"::;;. 7~'] ' , : ii 111111 ~:~li~!,E ! : ......... ....,..,...,.........-,.--= "'CTlnGUSllUlnt.. : • IN TH£ ~ .. :: •• 111111. ........... :•• ::.a ......... : IALTI .... o.. i:-ti:::~:if.-:-; L.AIUW YOUNG IHUTTH,.. BUSINESS REPL y LABEL • SMITH a 'MM&.&. -.,.._ .._, ...._,. ... ,c.. .._ SlliMMa I OIO • "' ~ Mde"""CNAP& t:f'.:"-:.."'::.~°':f'-L4ln'Y AtMll Y-., *' O,_ -"•••••••••••••••••• • n 1 "•ST CLASU•t•MtTliO tJ,COST AMUA,OLl,OltNIA •;:-• •'Z7 E t7th St. '"""'_,.,._....--="'er •• .._,......,..._,.,ca...... • "-teM-• DM •----.... Tiii• ..._ 11 ~111'1' • _,. .,._ s:w-=.: .. =--~ ............ • ! 'OSYAOEWU8(PAIOIYA0CWSS£E 8 • • ~9371 ...,.. .... _ i..nvA..v-. , 18".DOWM ~ Or1n91Co11tD1llyPllot 1 • ... ~:::==.===::::=~lF::~;::~==~~~'.'71 ~:.3.-so:o-;.; =::.:;::: ::..:-..:::. : =.1~:.~~ ~i • .. lliJJ Pilat • ----.•=-=• 1.,.. ,_ to. All&ial•.eoo. CaU • ~ ......... --.. -.......ar-..ee.......,...... .... • a • ......... .,......... ............. ... A~'fm= · Uee the Datly Piiot ·• I loa 1MO I •• -!i~~011MC•110. .. ,._ ..U1t•· , .... , .. , • 330 W. lay II. \. 1 clredOrJ. Your-·"' ·• Co1t1 MHa. CA talH i e ..mce&s... .• • • :='.:'~m.m •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Real Estate-the Complete Orange Coast Market Place ' "A.M.wColtc•Dt" f\Jll servil'e/cusrom oHice & desk space Nr 0 C A1rport ''Sttto Appreciate~ .. 759-8978 642e5678 ext 311 • GoodEmuilp • 5'1P1rTrp • (irtaf Prf• • -------.. --------.......... -. ' --- ~'-----------.------~------------..--- ..... .. THIUIMST ofl~low m1l111t Cadlllact In IN.htm Cafifomla 1 MAIRS ~~d. COST It MESA 540-1860 ,.SevllJ~-A Beauty Nly loaded, muat see toM!Pf'tCiate. l8200. Lie. J!RA. 556-2620 or COMMEll CHEVROLET ......... .j '• • r-; ' \t ~ !;46-1 200 Or.,.e COut DAILY PILOTIT ..... Mw~ SO, 1N2 ... THEO• . mlNS FORD Will NOT . BE UNDERSOLD! ! NEW 1981 GRANADA $100~~·~.y _ INVOICE _ ___...._.._...._incl ret>are Plu$ dealer added options. Ser ~~~:S..!~14394. Stk 0118 NEW 1980 MUST ANG CONVERTIBLE s2000 ~~~~··· undef actual dealer cost Ser 129512 Ser 524579 Stk 0851 NEW 1981 MUST ANG saoo~~~RY INVOICE 1nc1 ret>are Plus dealer added op11ons Ser 120223. s1k 0677 INTRODUCING THE ALL-NEW 1983 RANGER . . Liii PRla '8446 ROB•I DllCOUllT $t68t $ 2 4 MONTH 2 4 MO. FREI EXTEll>ED Flll MAINTENANCE SEJtVICE SERVICE ·-----------------------1--------~!!!~!! c!tl\:.!!!!!~, re11t • ..._tff•I Forti 5 ~! ~~EtlEIJllwLEilSll IHort for ••IT .•• '"° -·-or0et 0 3 dlly ................ CU51 ...... P9Y5 for (IHI ~ ~· H<:NI' Oller eJpor" 3/31/82 we TAKE APP04NTMENTS ----------------------------------------~·~~~ !~~·!~~ -:.~ TOTALPRIQ$19'' _... , ..... ., -..ey.1 • .._ a1a.1u Al DllCRIBID ·--------------------------------------------------------------------------HISE '80 FOllD '79 FOllD '78 FOllD '78 DOD¥, '79 CHEVY '80 CHIVY , ... ............. ~ r.110•~ CALL a...chere GT •w••••• x4 Camaro Chewelfe Gorgeous Mint White Ready to Go! Air Super clean & loa-Pretty maroon & FINANCING This Berlinetta is loa-Real sharp 4 dr. with w I air cond .• pwr. cond., au to. trans .• dedl Cruise control. white w /bucket ded. only 23 ,800 all the goodies. auto. steering & only 22. low miles, ideal for NOW tilt wheel, auto trans .. seats, pwr. steering, AVAILABLE miles. must sacrifice trans .. low down, low 346miles! (597ZAV). construction! Save pwr . steering, air AM-FM stereo, mags for inventory reduc-pmts.. (766YTE) Fi· Financing Available. Now! (1 RGl816). Fi-cond. & new paint. & w id e tire s . lion. (577WYD). nancing Available. nancinQ Available. (1 M55708l . ( 1CGV859l. CALL llOW CALL llOW CALL llOW '72 FOllD F '10 .... '74 MIRCURY '76 LlllCOUI LOW ........ ••••••• c. ............. Comet c-... _ ....... FINE Grande, 2 dr .. Rallye Real Clean! 4 cyl. Loaded Inc. tilt, crui-Nice family car! 4 dr., Loaded inc. white w I Orange, 351 . auto., economy , .auto . se. pwr. seat, padded auto. trans .. power red lea t her int ., am I fm stereo. vinyl trans., power stee-top, AM-FM cassette • s t e e r i n g . r'a d I o . moonroof & all the . CARS PAYIEITS top, ( 1 CGX761) . Fi· ring, air cond, Su_rer & only 17,000 miles. (866KBE) . Financing toy s! (825702). nanclng Avallable. Sharp! (712NZ ) . (712ZBX). Financing Available. Financing Available. Financing Available. Avallable. CALL MOW CALI.MOW CALL llOW .. ' ~anning ' • campa1gi;i snowballs Br STEVE MARBLE 1 Of tM Deir Plot ..... Three Newport Beach activist groups that have united behind a referendum drive aim ed at scuttling the ~ Ranch de- velopment project claim their effort is "snowbal ling" and bound for success. Refere ndurp leaders, appea- ring together at an afternoon press con'ference Monday, took turns criticizing c ity council members as favoring developers over city residents. "We have to stop this project before it's too late," said Mike Johnson, a member of the West New.port Legislative Alliance and a referendum leader. ;-11111111 llllY NPll.· . TUE SOA Y MAHCtf JU IYH:.> ORANGE COUN 1 Y C A LIFORNIA 25 CEN TS It was formally announced at the conference that the alliance, consisting of members from sev- eral West Newport homeowner groups, has been joined by two veteran referendum g roups - SPON (Stop Polluting Our Newport) and RAP (Residents Action Plan). The two groups spearheaded a referendum crusade against the Irvine Company's N ew p ort Center expansion project last year. MISSION COMPLETED -Space shuttle Columbia touches down safely at Northrup Strip at White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico this morning, .,..,.,,.... bringing astronauts Jack Lousma and-Gordon Fullerton back from more than a week in space. NASA T-38 chase plane monitors the arrival in foreground. The $124 million expansion plan was r epealed by council Shuttle craft back safe _)a day late • members this year, at the request of the Irvine Company, before the matter wou1d n ave gone to voters. The three groups, hopeful the 75-acre Banning Ranch plan will be put to an election test, have just two weeks to collect about ~.200 signatur~. (See NEWPORT, Page AZ) Week of rain forecast for coast By JERRY HERTENSTEIN O(tM Delly Piiot • ..,, · Intermittent rain that has plagued the Orange Coast for two days and was blamed for one traffic fatality Monday in Foun- tain Valley is expected to conti- nue through the week, despite brief interludes of sunshine. Tonight's forecast calls for a 10 percent ch ance of showers in- creasing to 30 percent Wednes- day, according to the National Weather Bureau. Cloudiness with scattered showers are due to continue through Friday. Rain Monday and Sunday, combined with that of the last f e w weeks, has brought the yearly total at or above the ave- rage for March 30, according to Errunett Franklin of. the Orange County Flood Control District. Santa Ana has received .40 of an inch more than the March 30 yearly average of 11.44 d ating back to 1909, Franklin said. The county seat got .51 inches of rain from 8 a.m. Monday to 8 a.m. today for a yearly total of 11.84. Last year on this date 8.37 in- ches had fallen on Santa Ana, Franklin said. Huntington Beach received .37 of an inch of rain from 8 a.m. Monday to 8 a.m. today bringing the yearly total to 1U.5t>, .02 inches below the total on this date in 1981. Costa Mesa showed .19 of an inch of rain Monday and early today for 11 .11 for the year compared to 7. 72 as of March 30, . 1981. WORLD White Sands Ap Messite Range LANDING -Map locates White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico where the space shuttle Columbia landed to- day. Arraignment set for star David Crosby A white powder found ln a car rented by rock singer David Crosby, arrested In Costa Mesa on drug charges Sunday, will not be analyzed for five days, Orange County Sheriff investigators re- port. Crosby, a veteran of the rock trio Crosby. Stills and Nash, was arrested after he a llegedly plowed his r ented Ford into a center divider on the San Diego Freeway near the Harbor Boule- vard offramp. Crosby, a 40-year-old resident of Mill Valley, was reportedJy on his way to an anti-nuclear rally at Dohen y State Beach where he was expected to be reunited with forme r singing partners StepheQ Stills and Graham Nash. California Highway Patrol of- ficers arrested Crosby on suspi- cion o f driving unde r the in- fluence of a con trolled substance. They didn't identify that sub- stance. 1 Officers also said they found a film canister filled with a white powder believed to be drugs, possibly cocaine. · Avalanches kill 2 skiers SION, Switzerland (J\.P) -Two young Swiss skiers were killed in a snowslide and three others es- caped unhurt aa a warm spell sharply increaaed the danger of avalanches in the Valais Alps, police said. NATION She didn 't shoot J.R. Singer-actress Colleen Ca.mp would have been famous bad she stayed in the "Dallas" aeries and ahot J.R. Page B3. . Resignation on economy Some Ulel8menta of the economy are being re- viled downward from optimistic to re9i.gnation. ~ C4. WHITE SANDS MISSILE RANGE. N.M. (AP) -Space shuttle Columbia returned home to a calm harbor today, diving through Earth a tmosphere to a thumping, pinpoint landing on the s parkling desert sands o f Northrup Strip. A day late, but none the worse for wear. "This is really a great flying machine," Jack R. Lousma said as he glided hypersonic over the Pacific coast, en route over three states to this supersecret military base. With Lousma in command and C. Gordon Fullerton beside him, the winged shuttle slapped wheels to sand at 8:05 a.m. PST. T he reflyable spaceship had · launched to orbit and returned three times in just under a year, proving its s tamina and advan- cing a major step toward cargo- carrying flights later this year. Northrup was originally a contingency site, designated No. 1 when the primary runways in California were flooded with rainwater. F.quipment to service the vehicle was brought by the trainload from California. Monday, Columbia was block- ed from landing' here by a fierce sandstorm and began an elghth and effortless day in space. The pilots fielded a call from President Reagan and Lousma told him: "We just came booming over your ranch at about Mach 13." Reagan asked about one of Fonda, Kate • win HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Ka- tharine Hepburn and Henry Fonda, the still-in-love oldsters of "On Golden P ond," were hailed a8 best actress and actor of 1981 at the 54th Academy Awards. "C ha r iots o f Fire," the British-made saga of two runners who won gold medals at the 1924 Olympic Games, scored a surprise Monday night as best picture of the year. The picture, starring relatl\/e unknowns, won three other awards for score, costu- ming and original script. Warren Beatty, nominated in four categories for the heavily favored "Reds," won only as best director. His film of American radicalism and the Russian Re- volution also won for supporting actress Maureen Stapleton as the firebrand radical Emma Gold- man and for cinematography by Vittorio Storaro. his horses and Lousma said, "Well, sir, we saw a few running around the pasture." Reagan told the pilots: "I can't tell you how thrilled I'm sure everyone in this country as about what has h a ppe ned ... our thoughts and prayers have been with you every second that you've been up there." The president watched the landing in his study at the White House and said "That's marve- lous" whe n Columbia touch ed down. The astron auts didn't know where or when they'd be coming to Earth until 95 minutes before touchdown. Until that time, Mission Control kept K ennedy Space Center as an optio11. Oscars .,.,..~. At landing, the nose rose a bit: and then settled smoothly on the gypsum floor. The ship seemed. not a bit bothered by the breeu! above TuJarosa basin, although Lousma a nno!rlnced , "a little bumpy at Mach 2," as the ship was traveling twice the speed of sound above Truth o r Conse- quences, N.M. Thirty-n ine minutes after touchdown, the astronauts de- parted from Columbia. Both walked a little stiffly but were smiling and chatting amiably with technicians as they made a waJkaround inspection of their spaceship. They were driven to a medical facility for a brief exa- mination and then were headed back to Houston. . Valley youth killed in wet car crash One Fountain Valley youth was killed and another was cri- tically injured after their car slammed into a block wall during a heavy rainstorm Monday eve- ning. Driver Steve McElroy, 19, of 18526 Santa Andrea St., was pronounced dead1on arrival at Fo untain Valley Community Hospital. Passenger Gary Puente, 18, of 18555 Santa Cruz Circle, suffered head and chest injuries, a hospi- tal spokesman said today. Traffic Sgt. Lee P epka said McElroy's car was &tlef!lptlng to make a lane change on Magnolia Street between Slater and War- ner avenues when it skidded and collided With a pickup truck. John Gielgud, the w isecrac- king gentleman's gentleman to a millionaire tippler in "Arthur," took his first Oscar, as best sup- porting actor. For "Miss Hepburn, 74, it was a record fourth Oscar as best ac- tress. For Fonda, 76, it was the climax of a 48-year film career during which the Oscar eluded BEST OF BUNCH -Henry Fonda and Katharine Hepburn, shown in a scene from "On Golden Pond," earned Oscars for their performances. It was the first award for Fonda and a record-setting fourth for ~ Heoburn. It tl\en spun out of control and struck a curb and the block wall, Pepka said. Both men were thrown from the car when it struck the wall, according to Pepka. STATE him -except for an honorary award last year. Too ill to attend the Music UPI sale imminent? SAN FRANCISOO (AP) -A grouf of California businemnen b~ded by Tom Quinn o Los. Angeles has begun preliminary negotiations to buy United Press International, the coun~'s eeoond largest news I~ ~ce. it was reported today. Corona retrial costs mount YUBA CITY (AP) -The mass murder retrial of Juan Corona has oost $3.3 million from the time it was ordered nearly four years ago, an auditor told the Sutter County superviaon. COUNTY Allordable desi6JJer jeans WoUld you believe deligner jeans for under $4? Bellew lt at Orange County'• Goodwill lnduttriee where ''Goodiet" lell off the r.cka. P.,.. Bl. Center festivities, F onda de - signated daUJ{hter Jane to accept (See OSCAR, Page A!) The accident occurred at about 6:15 p.m . INDEX At Your ::>ervice A4 Horoscope B2 Erma .Bombeck B2 Ann Landers B2 L.M. Boyd A6 Movies B3 Busin~ Ol-6 National News A3 California A5 Public Notices D2 Cavalcade B2 Sports Cl-3 Classified 01-8 Dr. Steincrohn B2 Comics B4 Stock Markets C5 Crossword B4 Television B5 Doath Notices 02 Theaters B3 F.c:li torial A6 Weather A2' Entertainment B3 World News A3 I SPORTS North Carolina prevails Dean Smith COAChed hi. flnt MCAA bukeu.ll teem u North Carolina defeated Georaetown. a.a. Pap Cl. , • Campaign statement NEWPORT REFERENDUM. . upheld :The BAnn1na Ranch, now dot.- fed with lhru6e and Gt) c~ la lacat.ct on the Wand llcit of Pa· clftc Co .. t Ht1hway, weat of Sul*iol' Avenue. Jean Watt, the leader of SPON, Mid her IJ'OUP 1' job\lng the referendum push becauee UM9 c:iouncil la veering away from the olty'• general plan. She charged that the council rules by a ''double atandard" that favors developera. "The result of thls double at a n d a.r d c an b e s e e n everywhere," she said. "The moet blatant and offenalve ex· ample is tlie way ln which aome- oouncU members uae their coun· ell aeats to demean citi7.ens and deniirate the democratic refe·. rendwn proceea." Johnson said he la "damn mad" at haWig to take his time to lead the referendum drive. "The last thing I need to do is to take time to stop this project," he said. "But I have no choice. We can't talle die brickS down· oni:e the}"ve bee-Ji. put up." Jonnson reruted c1a1ms tnat the referendum effort is lacking ln brolld ~ and auffert.nc from di • But he admlu.d that two of the 13 Wea' Newport communl· t1a -West Newport and Udo Sande -appear to oppoee the referendum. Rumon that \he referendum waa faltertn1 only day• after belna launched were aparked when ·Udo Sanda reaident David Goff, a leader of the alllance, resigned, aaYlna he couldn't IU~ port • referenawn. Referendum leaden were V&J{Ue Monday When asked to de. tail how many penon• are in· volved ln collecting sicnatures and how many aicnaturea have been collected. Johnt0n did aay there are 40 people charged with overseeing name collecting ln various teetiona of Newport. Johnson also diamiAed quea· tions that his group iB Plannin8 to start a recall effort a1ainat Councilwoman Ruthelyn Plum- mer, who represents West New- port. She favored the Banning I Ranch project. He aaid there is "talk" about a recall, but no firm plan. OSCAR WINNERS ... the award. She explained to the Los Angeles Music Center and a national television audience that her father first wanted his wife, Shirlee, to claim the Oscar - ''but she wanted to be with him tonitlht. as is her custom." AUer the cer emony, Mrs. Fonda told reporters outside their Bel-Air home, "He just b urs t into t ears . He's so emotional.'' "This makes me feel very happy," Fonda said in a brief interview. A s ked wh ether h e had thoug ht he would win, he re- plied: "So many people were telling me that I would, that I started to believe them." Miss Hepburn followed her pattern of 11 previous nomina- tions and did not attend. She was in Was hington touring in the play "West Side Waltz," written by Ernest Thompson, author of "On Golden Pond." Thompson also won an Oscar for his "Pond" • screenplay." ' "You're the most extraordi- nary I senerous peopl' I" said "Chariots of Fite'' producer.. Da· vid PuUnam ii) his acceptance speech. "Not just the Academy, but as a country, for taking what is absolutely a Cinderella picture and awarding it this." "It feela as if I had won an Olympic gold medal myself," said Ian Charleson in Edinburgh~ Soolland. Charleson, who played Eric Liddell, the Soottish missionary who refused to run on Sunday and took the 400-meter gold me. dal at the Paris Olympics, added he was surprised by the award· and had expected "Reds" to win. "Raiders of the Lost Ark," a tongue-in.cheek adventure pat- terned after cliffhanger serials of the 1940s, had the most Oscars with five: art direction, visual effects, editing and sound, in addition to a special achievement award for sound e ff ec ts . ''Chariots of Fire" had four and "Reds" and "On Golden Pond" had three each. Barbara Stanwyck, glamorous and slim as ever at 74 in a red sequin gown, received tbe first and most enthusiastic standing ovation of the evening. Miss Stanwyck thanked the studio workers ahe haa known e h her career, and added a s ' tribute to the late William olden, who four years ago stood with h er on the same Muaic Center stage ancf than.lted her for helping to launch his career in "Golden Boy" in 1938. "I love him very much and 1 miss him," she said. "He always wished that I would get the ·Oscar. And so tonight, my Gold- en Boy, you got your wish." By DAVID &UTDIANN . ............... Santa Ana lawyer Dan Owlel Dut.chet will not be required to dtien «mute a aharply·worded candidate'• ttatement be dlreded aoinlt hia principal opponent ln die June primary, incumbent Weet Oranae ~ty Municipal c.ourt Juda Joene llarroJd. Key \0 the alle1atlona i• the que.tion of whether Juqe Jhr. rold la a Newport Be.aich n.ident or a voter ln IUvenkle County. Voters were~ of pttina Dutcher'• une ted views of Judge Harrold onday after Orange County Superior Court Judge F.dward J . Wallin rejected attempts to have the campaign statement blocked. Wallin, who handled a aimilar <:hallenge two years ago, said the court could not tamper with the content of candidates' statements and that voters themaelves would have to decide wbo they believe. "That's what it's all about," th!_)udge said. The statement in question, in which Dutcher alleges that Har- rold does not-live in Orange County, will be sent to voters with ~eir um~~ ballots. Judge Harrold, who says she maintains dual residences in Ri· verside County and Newport Beach but regards Orange County as her home, denied Dutcher's allegations. Judge "rops 10 counts in child abuse · A judge has dismissed 10 of 42 counts against Ron Rongstad, 60, who faces trial next week on charges of wife-beating, rape, child abute and molestation and burglary. BUt the Orange County district attorney's office predicted the dismissals would have little ef- fect on the caae against the La- guna Hills man, a former aero. space technician. Rongatad's 15 children and their two mothers detailed the alleged abuse after h e was ar- rested last Nov. 7 for investiga- tion of burglary. Superior Court Judge Everett Dickey dismissed the 10 charges Monday, citing insufficient or vague evidence. ' Rongstad r emained in the county jail in lieu of $200,000 bail. More rain forecast . Partly cloudy tonlgh1. lneree- tlng eloud1 W'ednetday with a ehenee of 8hower1. Continued cool with hlglle W~ey 57 to 82. Lowe tonlgl'lt In the •01. cti•nc• o1 re.In IACreatlng 10 30 l*'Olflt ~ w.clneldly. Arter a bf1ef dty IC)tlll, a cNnCle or rllln II 1°'**' tor w~. Natlorlal Wlil1Mr 8eMce l'*-0- rologllt Ocin Lull lllld, but ldded tha1 NortMtn .,a Central Celt- lomla lhoutcl get l!'I09t of It. "A !tough ol ao6d air tight aloflO eoett 11 favorable for 1tormt moving out ol the Paclllo Nonh- wHt and onto u1." Lu1t nld, "Untl that oNngee _.,.In ... ltlo_.y ~ttwr pattem lypk;tll of Mardi and Apttl." Overnight travel advl1orl11 were posted for high wind and anow In mountain• above •.000 leet and for wind• blowing sand1t0<ma In delerta. 1 .. * Meantime. more then 2,000 ~ Cet4 w ... Southern Callfornla Edl1on ~ -=-= El ...... ~ from Poln1 ~ tlon to 1tie Mexleen border and· out eo mlle9: Stnlll cr11t ~ warning• over 1he en11re are1. Wind• irio1tly llQht and var11ble tonight and Wed"ri.day momlnO. becoming weal lo aoulhw"I f2 to 20 knot1 Wadnetday after- noon. Saa1 deeraulng 1onlght with 2 to •-root westerly 1wall. Cloud8 lncreallng egaln on Wed- n.ctey wttn a cnence of ~. antomen In Alhambra. Sin a.. ~ s. .... A .. , o ......... bflel aN1 ~ ...... without ~IWWI==-=·=·=================~~ elee1rlclty 1oday .. utlllty er-- replaced and rwtrvno pdae tom looM by • twla1• about 8:30 p.m. Edl1on spokesman Dave 9.,,. ron Mid Ille bladl-out lnltlelly af- leeted 3,800 ~ Extended orecast The .28 of an Ind\ that fell on downtown Loi Angatel brought the ... '°" total to 8.8• lnetHK. eomp1red with 8.•5 Inch .. thl1 time l11t ye•r and tha normal 12.51~. SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA COASTAL ANO MOUNTAIN AREAS -se1ttered 1how•r1 ·T'em.peratu•e• Thurlday. Partly cloudy Frld1y i 1 • ' • ' a and Selvfday. Cooler days. High• In thl c:outll .,.. 55 to 85 and mountain r.arta 30 to •5. Lowe Aloany In the C0111al areee 38 lo 48 and l Albuque mountalna 20 tO 30. I Amartlto ~ o.s: sum mary'· ~~ -BlrmlnOflm Tllundarptorm• t>Oomed over 8lanWdl ttle oantnil pla!na Ind the ~ 8olll 11pp1 AMr Y"-1 todey • anow aoaton Dllld up In IN mountalnl of c.-Br~ ltomle 11\d .......... lufWo Wind• that eu-ted up to 105 Ch#11tn SC mph late Monday continued to CMttltn wv ICfetdl acroea Colorlldo. and • Charttt• NC •f!IW .,_.. darnpenad the Pad-Cheyenne fie ,:r1= priwula got rain ~ llhOWSI todlly, one ct-v .._.. ~ ~ werful .. ~ c:erTylnQ dftndllna COIUmbua rein• and wind• up to • 1 mpli OW-A Wttl beMr9d ~ ~ OtnYW CIH r 1kl11 end llght wind• o. ~ p11valled over the mlddlt and o.trolt no'1h Allantle coeat.. DUiuth Rain and 1catter•d thun-~ ..,. toreceat trom .. ~ .... ·-•ttieONo A1ww wlltlf and U1191r Ml11l11.,i Nwarwllr. IMWltl ..,. ...,.cted from• ""w~ oo..a aoroae IM' oemrel ooest of C.IKornla, the' nor1Mfn ~end fhe greet batln. Rein WM forac11t ""'ldallO ~~Mo ........ in ... ---. f elftp1t1turH .. ,,, tod•r· ,.,.... "°"' 20 "' ~ , .... N.Y .. to 71 In Kil¥ w.t, "'- 'ctilif omia ~ ............... to .... ~ ........... __. .... =a.-=::r.=:.:-.:::: :.:.=..---x = .... .. Lo ll'ql 51 22 81 :M 75 43 5-4 40 50 48 "5 37 58 2t 87 &4 ... 37 .06 "6 t3 ·°' ae 11 a ,. ... 30 .. 66 ee ... 12 •7 58 21 IO 50 .03 13 &4 57 40 eo "6 .01 a 12 .oa 82 ., 81 • .07 52 S2 ~ 31 .13 e Paeo 12 43 .n Hartf0<d 51 27 Helena ... 23 Honolulu 79 72 .03 Houlton 88 M .CM lndnae>lle M 48. Jtc*9IWte 72 68 .OS Kant City 82 50 1.24 Lii Vega 59 48 'Uttle Rodt 86 58 L..oullvl1le 84 52 Mernphla 86 58 Miami 79 72 .03 Mllwauk.. 50 38 Mpll>-81.P . 50 •5 .07 CAU'OtllNIA Bakantlakl eo 45 .02 BlytM 70 Eureka 48 41 .85 Freano 4e 40 .18 L.anc:aa1er l50 38 . 18 Loe Mgllea &e 4e .2$ Marywvfle 51 Momar9y 52 NMdlla 67 Oeldend M 48 Piao Aoblll 52 39 .43 Aid lllUff ... • 1 .23 AedwOOd City 83 4e .23 Sea amtnlQ 50 43 .71 8ellW 83 • 1 .38 Ian Diego 83 5e .08 Ian Franolloo 62 ._. .78 ....... .... l5e 41 .41 a.t.a ....,,. eo Stodlton 61 Tller'lftll • Uklll'I ... lan40W 12 .. ., ---36 20 .17 Catalna 82 ... .20 • t.ong 8eecfl MonrOYla MtWllOn N9wpOrt 8Mct'I Ontario Palm Springe Paaedena Sen Bemerdlno Sen Joee ~··Me San•• Cruz TahM Valley 80 .... ~ 57 38 .22 30 22 .87 58 48 .04 5-4 40 118 •II 54 421 52 ' 54 44 81 4e 66 44 28 21 CANADA 'Smog "6 21 •2 1 •1 31 43 21 38 32 4S 28 ... H •2 31 TODAY I leooncl lllgfl t:11 p.m. 8tOOncl tow t:.14 p.M .. 1 lllAY Arlt ...... t:OI a.II\. ...... -t:OO a.m • ~...... 4:IO ,..... •• ' --N7 """ 1.7 ......... t~ I t I : ti ''"'" ,... ......... 1: ... ...... MM11 ''"' #e1111 .. 11ey 11 -&a.·-· tl:tllUI\ FEATHERED F RIEND -Officer Byrd, a 7-year--old blue and gold macaw who aerves aa · the California State Safety Mascot, pedals a bicycle during a safety program at Oka Ele· mentary School in Huntington Beach. Lear· Delly "'°' ....... ..., Lee ...... ning safety tips are, from left, Los Angeles police officer Mike Simonsen, students Tuan Hoang, 7, and Kortney Nielsen, 8, and Hunt· ington ~h police officer Steve Mack. 8 teachers face charges Complaint says instructors took pay hike, not courses Or.mge County school admini- strators are adopting a wait-and- see position regarding charges alleging that eight teachers rec- eived salary increases based on college courses they never took. In one instance, however , a district superintende nt said he has asked the d istrict attorney not to prosecute one of his tea- chers. who he said has repaid the extra compensation . The eight ins tructors were named in a grand the ft complaint filed in Central Orange County Municipal Court by Deputy Di- strict Attorney Richard Toohey. The teachers will be notified of the charges by mail and will be told to appear at an ApriJ 15 ar- raigrunent, a court spokeswoman said. Those charged with m isde- meanor grand theft were identi- fied in court documents as Char- les Merrill, Nancy J. Merrill and Kennth N . Owen of the Newport-Mesa Unified School District; J ean Cross of the Hunt- ington Beach Union High School District ; David A. Eleceirl,Capi- strano Unified School District: College in Thousand Oaks and Ottawa University of Kansas - were involved in the alleged scheme for improperly ~uiring class credits. Many school districts offer sa- lary increases to teachers wbo complete additional college cour- ses. District administrators y.1ere non-committal regarding the charges in au but one case. Richard Welte, superintendent of the Saddleback Valley Unified School District, described El Toro High physical ~ucation instruc- t o r S u san H aren as an ''outstanding teacher." We lte said she made restitution on her own and was "very remorseful" about it. "We looked at it and under the c irc ums t a nces gave her a reprimand," Welte said. He also said he has recom- mended that the district attorney not take criminal action against her. Saddleback Valley Unified personnel officials said Ms. Ha- ren paid back $206.64 on Nov. 18, 1981, to make up for the over- 'compensation. In the Newport-Mesa district, assistant. superintendent Kevin Wheeler said: "Were taking a 'no comment' position on this and regard it as litigation." He did, however. identify Charles Merrill as a teachei; at TeWinkle Middle School; Nancy Merrill (his wife) as a teacher at Killybrooke Elementary, and Kenneth Owen as a teache r at Kaiser Middle School. He said "some," but not all three teachers have paid money back to the distric t and that "others" in the d istrict also re- turned money. Wheeler re fused to identify those who have repaid funds, would not say how much has been repaid and did not say why the "others" who reimbursed the district have not been charged along with the three named. Administrators in the Hunt- ington Beach Union High School District., the No r th Orange County Community College Di- strict and i he Tustin Unified School District said they would await d isposition of the district attorney's charges before initia- t ing a ny act ion themselves against the teachers. Susan Haren, Saddleback Valley Unified School District; Marillyn Harmon , Tustin Unified School District, and Hube r t Daws')n , formerly of the North Orange County community College Di- strict. Deputy District Attorney Maurice Evans said the probe of Orange County teachers was in- volved with an investigation into similar allegations in Lai Angeles County, where 43 teachers have been charged with misdemeanor grand theft. Seal Beach voting for council seats Investigators assert that two colleges -California Luthera~ New courses set for OCC students Registration ends Thursday for more than 200 different nine- week courses being offered at Orange Coast College beginning April 12. Four courses on first aid are among thoee offered at the Costa Mesa campus. Registration is being accepted in the college ad- missions building. For more in- fonnation call 556-5772. ,.---------------------------- A s tead y voter turnout was reported at some precincts early today as Seal Beach voters went to the polls to elect three new city council members. None of the three incumbents is see~ re-election . About 60 people had voted at McGaugh School two hours after the polls opened at 7 a.m. About half that number cast ballots at Zoeter School. "The vote isn't heavy but it is steady. If it continues this way, it will be a good turnout," said Margaret Ordway, an election official. The polls close at 8 p.m. A total of 18,945 voters are registered to cast ballots in the election that selects council members by geographical d i- stricts. Candidates in District 1 are: Stephen Quale, Steve Friedman, James Funk and Victor Grgas; in District 3, Mitch Grayson, Russell Post and Joyce Risner; and Oscar Brownell is running unopposed for the District 5 seat. A candidate must rece ive a majority of the votes-: In case no one gets a majoritx. a runoff e lection will be held May 11 between t he two highest vote- getters. The new council members will take office May 18. Vacancies exist in the three districts because the three in- cumbents -Ronald "Chi" Kre~ dell. Ken Seiu and George Sup- ple -did not seek re-election. WEDD/1111 REOEPT/011. FACILITIES AVAILABLE ' r F._111/ S011rmet 1Jalerifl6 Berrio• 111 £., ~,t.,. IC ,. I I · Nlghtclub a RMtaurant . ,,..... I Hfaad • lrol 1d OMI' M11 .. Wood Chenlo.I Orenge COunfY'• Fltleet s.eiooc:t FMteuren1 A9 Per Or.nge C09lt end AM Cal ~ l.lw ln~t e OIMlg Ind Olnclng 1 Nighll 3180 Al":l..:e. ........ .. c.-........... .. 541-1880 .' I TUESDAY, MARCH $0, 1182 1 BUSINESS C4 Costa Mesa attd Estancia played to a 4-4 tie in ·STOCKS CS Sea View League actiqn. C2: Fresh:riian proved Tar Heels Worthy Ewing was brilliant, but it was North Carolina's rookie, Jordan, who got winner • NEW ORLEANS (AP) -James Worthy won the duel of dunks with Georgetown's 7-foot freshman Patrick Ewing, and Dean Smith won the only prir.e miasing from his long and storied catter as coach at North Carolina -the NCAA basketball championship. Ewing was the rookie in the spotlight Monday night, but it was Michael Jor- dan, also a freshman, who put the fini- shing touches on North Carolina's finest moment. Jordan's 18-foot jumper from the left side with 15 seconds left gave the Tar H eels a 63-62 victory over Georgetown. · "I'm very grateful to my players," said ·an emotionally drained Smith. "This ia one of the toughest teams we have played all year. We feel fortunate to have won it on the last shot." Worthy scored a career high 28 points and stole the show from Ewing, who had 23. "Ewing was aenaational," Smith said. "This ls the best rve aeen him play." Before the game, Smith and George- town Coach John Thompson shook hands and exchanged friendly greetings in front of the scorer's table. Afterwards. they hugged. They have been friends since Smith began recruiting players from St. Anthony's High School in Washington, D.C., where Thompson coached for six years. "I'm not ashamed, but I'm definitely depressed right now," said Thompson, who had taken a team into an NCAA championship game for the first time. "l wanted it as bad as anyone could and the kids tried hard. They did all I could have asked them to do." The victory lilted a weight from the shoulders of Smith, who had taken six previous North Carolina teams to the Final Four without a championship. "I can't even express how I feel," said aenior guard Jinuny Black. "I wanted it 80 badly for my coach. We went out to get it for him." Worthy clamped the lid on North Carolina's victory when Georgetown's I told Fred that he had won more games for us than he had lost and he was not to worry. It was one of those human errors. -0...,...•neoecll.....,~ Fred Brown tossed him an eJTant pass with about 10 seconds left. Worthy was by himseU when he took the pass, and when he took of( down the court, he was fouled. He missed both free throws with two seconds left, but that was academic. North Carolina would not be denied its moment of glory. "Thia la the touaheat team we've played all year," said Worthy. North Carolina's schedule Included teams like Virginia, Wake Forest, Kentucky and all those Atlantic Coast Conference rivals, but the Tar Heels almost stumbled in their first tournament game. North Carolina defeated James Madi- son 52-50 in its tournament opener, then breezed past Alabama, Villanova and Houston to make it this far. "James Madison gave us problems with their discipline, but Geor~etown is a tremendous defensive team: Worthy said. In the end, however, it was a little defense by Worthy that proved vital. Thompson said Brown's pass into Worthy's hands was to set up a play for All-American guard Eric "Sleepy" Floyd. Instead, it sailed straight to Wor- thy and the Hoyas were denied a final chance to win. WINNERS AND LOSERS -North Carolina Coach Dean Smith embraces Georgetown Coach John Thompson (left) after his Tar Heels won the NCAA title Monday night. Jimmy Al Wlr9'1fi;otoe Black (center) cuts the net for a souvenir following action which included freshman Pat Ewing (right), who was whistled for goaltending on this one. Goaltending violations helped Tar Heels I Anytime you block somebody's shot, they remember -Georgetown's Ewing NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Georgetown's Pat Ewing, called for five goaltending violations, says he was only doing his job when he batted away the North Carolina shots. ,But the first eight points the Tar Heels scored during Monday night's NCAA championship game came on toaltending calls against the 7-0 freshman. "I felt it wasn't goaltending," said Ewing, whose team lost 63-62. "I felt they were judgment ·calls. But anytime you block somebody's shots, they remem- ber. Maybe they'll think the next time they shoot." Ewing was charged with goaJ- tending on North Carolina's first four baskets, two of them credi- ted to James Worthy and one each to Michael Jordan and Sam Perkins. The Tar Heels didn't get an untouched basket on their own until Matt Doherty scored on a driving layup with 11:52 remai- ning in the half. Ewing finished the game .with 23 points, 11 rebounds and two blocked shots. The point total equaled Ewing's best effort of the season and be said he wanted to show the crowd that he also was an offensive player. "I wanted to do my beat," he said. "They think I'm just de- fense. I wanted to show people I can play offense, too." Fred Brown, who threw away the ball with about 10 seconds left to seal North Carolina's vic- tory, said he was trying to get the Angels shelled; Dodgers roll From AP dlapatdet TUCSON -Chris Bando and Jack Peroonte each had three hita and two RBI Monday to spark the Cleveland Indians to an 8-3 exhibition baaeball victory over the Angels. his first homer of the spring Monday as Loe An- geles defeated Minnesota 7-2 to SQaP a fl~game exhibition losing streak. ball to teammate Eric Smith. "I regret that I made that pass. That could have won the game for us," said Brown. "I was trying to throw the ball to Eric Smith in the comer but Worthy cut in front. If I had had a rubber band on it, I would have brought it back." Brown said he considered cal- ling a time out before he released the pass but thought it would give the Tar Heels time to aet up a defense. "That was just my judgment," he said. ''That would have given them time to set something up against us." Ewing's opponent at center, Worthy, complimented the freshman: "For a freshman he's awesome. Under Coach Thomp- son his development has been better . I'd hate to see him the next year or after that. He's 8We9C>Ole.'' "I told Fred that he had won more games for me than he had lost," Thompson said, "and h e was not to worry. It was one of those humao errors." The game was the closest for the NCAA title since 19~9. when California beat West Virginia 71-70. "It's just the kind of game I thought it would be," Floyd said. "Hard-fougM, close and each team having the respect of the other. It was a tough loss, but there weren't but two of us left. One had to win and one had to lose." ·"A bright writer in Charlotte once said the reason I hadn't won a nationaj c hampionship was because of my system," Smith said long after the tu- mult had ended and he could collect hia thoughts. "Now, I can finally say that's ridiculous. It's not the system that loses games. You use the talent that you have." Lary Sorenten became the first Indians pitcher to go eight inninp. 'The right-hander allowed only four hits and held the Angela' offeNe without ~ run. .. Jerry Reu. became the first Dodger to work aeven tnninp. allowing only one run on four hits. , Darrell Jacbon, who gave up five rum on five hits in five innlnp, f.ook the lam. Scioecia, with hil third triple of the aprinJ, highlighted a four-run bUnt in the fourth lnn1ng. Garvey homered in the eighth oU reliever Al Wi1- Uarna. It marked only Garvey'• leOOnd nm batted in of the sprina. Worthy waa banded two ~­ es -the pasa from Brown, then the award aa the 1ame'1 outatanding player. UC Irvine gets Turner . The Angela ended the shutout bid in the ninth inninC when Bobby Clark hit a two-nm double off reliever F.c:l Whit80n, and Rick Burleeon followed with an RBI single. =ltarter John D' Aqu1lto went the first two and WM 1ift.ed after five ba~ 'ten. lnd1ana manaaed co ~Y one nm oU the rlah~bander. , · The lndianl picked up two more rww tn the third att Bill c.tro on an RBI jnfleJd out by Joe °'8rtxlmau Md Bado'• fint llnele· They added two more rww in the fifth at the expen19 of Jeff Schnetder Md Andy Hamler' on nm«Ol'lnc ~ by Sando md Rick Mannine- . 'Jiw lndi.9nl l'Jt two IDOft NDI tn the ..ventb when Ja,ndo llnaJ.ed, atole aecond and ecored on Pwoac\,'111inCJe. Re\m, who will be the Dodaen' openina day pitcher April 8 91nst Sm Frand8co, Wal makinl hia flnt acrance since comina out of a game Thul'llday UM of lrritaUon cawied by a bone chip tn hla left coe. . '"The toe felt fine, no problem at all," a.. reported after the pme. "fm looklnl forward to my flnt ooenimr clay start. I won't get m}'lelf hurt thla Ume!r ---- Tbe win lmp'CM!d the Dodawa' exhibition re- cord to,10-9. The Twina fell co f..18. ftM.-WM the Dodfen' ICMdu19ci openlnc day ltar1ilr 1-t ,.... but ... ICl'atcMd the day before the ~ whim be pWled a calf ..._.. durtac a ~ l'wlmldo ~.-...... .. hit pa.. met ""'eehed ta. a. ol hil .a.ht lbutoutl. • ~bit 2-0 t~ ..--zlloi .. ....-: ·--7 ~' Ulkln. The North Carolina ce'nter, vyho acored a career-hl1h 28 pointa, aealed North Carolina'• vtctor~er Geor1etown when he gra that enant i-with about 10 9eCOIMll left. The junior from Gaatonla, N.C., wanted to~ hit outatan- din& player award around and diverted talk of movinC on to the pros next year. "I'm juat glad we won. I'm &lad for the team: for Coach Smith. ru 11ve that nonar to ~ buketball player who wan,t. it, • Wonhy MJd . 1•r want to talk •ltb my ,._ I renta and Coech Smith, anCI I don't have any idea what thi• pme could l1*Jl co my ~·· v By JORN SEV ANO or111e n.11r,... .... : George 'l'Umei', an all-state guard who attended Saddle- bllCk c.o1leae th1a put ..-on. bu made a verbal oommitment to attend UClrvlne ln the fall. Turner, 6-f, ·~ 20.7 polnta to leadina the Gauchoa co a 20-12 record. Saddliback.tied with Rlvenkfe for the M""'kJn c.onterence champiooahlp in 1981-82. '-rhey play my atyle of ball and I like. the area." laid 'turner of bit cieCbkin. 'Tiu.a, it'•. f.OOd ac.demic 8Chool." Turner aaid he narrowecfb.ia eelecUom co Southwest Loul- liana, UNLV Pepperdine and UCI before choolil'I the latllr. "I came to tier*-'* I knew I would have a aOod cbame '° atart. Wlth than laUc four ll!nlon I knew it wOWd be a FOd I opl)Ol1Uhl~ for IDe to play. 11 1 Tumier"admittecl that Coach Bill Mul.Uaan al.lo wel&hed bea.tly In h.la dldllon. "rve been around him for a while," laid 'l\amer. "He'• a FOCI coech. a aood penon. ff& doem't jve you. he teUa lt like lt te." 1 I Tigers in dog house, NCAA investigating From AP •11patcMI CLEMSON, S.C. -Th~ National Collegiate Athletic Association has notWed Cletn10n University, last aea- eon'a national college football cham- pions, that an offlclal inquiry la being made into ha football program, university officials said Monday. Clemson University President Bill L. Atch- i.Mued a brief statement Monday confirming the university has receive<l notice of the inquiry but did not elaborate. Head football coach Danny Ford could be reached for comment Monday. The NCAA's interest in Clemson has been reported for several months. In February, Ford said an NCAA investigator had PON> advised him there was a "thick" file of recruiting complaints against the school. "You don't get investigated until you get turned in by so many °People, and your file gets so thick," Ford said at the time. Two months before, two former Tennessee high school football flayers, James Cofer and. Terry Minor, filed a 12 million lawsuit against Ford; Billy Ware, a former Clemson recruiter; Knoxville, T enn., businessman and Clemson supporter Tom Breaseale; and the Atlantic Coast Conference and its commissioner, Bob James. They alleged they were offered "illegal in- ducements" on behalf of Clemson. The Tennessee pair were r ecruited bl Clemson In 1980 and signed ACC letters-o - intent but later asked for their release. Clemson released the players last June, according to Atchley, because neither qualified academically. Quote of the day "The average adult American is se- dentary, overweight, suffering from hy- pertension and lower back pain," -Dr. Richard Kbeeler, professor of physiology and one of 14 directors of the President's Council on Physical Fitness and Sports. Stanford basketball tabs Davis . Pltt1bUrgh lacM Meta Lee lMJ led• l~·blt Pittlburah attack wtth three bltll. three ltOlen t.. and an • RBl u the Plrates chued the New York Mett, 10-~. for their 14th ex- hibition buebe1l victory in 20 pmM ... Beltby OJ• pitched MVen ahutout innings and Olea BolflDU belted hil eecond homer of the sorlna to 1.:1 Bost.on to an 8..0 victory over Detroit .•. Buap WW1 and Larry Bowa com- bmed few five lln.lla and-.four runa to lNd th. ChScqo Cubl to a 5-1 victory over Oakland ... Rookie Wallaee JollHoa collected three lin&let u Montreal de- f ea ted 'roronto, 10-2 ... Cllat Rudie and Dave Coa· cepcloa each drove in a run u Cincinnati atopped Hou.ton, 2-0 ... Jeff Barroa1ll1 hit two homers u the Oakland "B" team whipped San LACY Francisco . . . Tom Paclo· rek'1 hues-loaded single in the 11th l.nn.lng gave the Chicago Whit.e Sox a 3-2 victory over '"Phila- delphia . . . Steve Stroullter hit a two-run ho- mer to lead Seattle to a lf-4 win over San Diego ... RowK.oeaJ11feld and Robbt Yout hit home runs and Mark Broalaard drove in three runs to lead a 16-hit Milwaukee attack in a 9-8 victory over San Francisco. Raiders' trial begins anew LOS ANGELES -Oakland .• Raiders' attorney Joeeph Alioto told a • c • federal court jury Monday that pro-•, feeslonal football is big business and · not just recreation. The opening arguments came at the start of the retrial of the federal antitrust case in which the Los Angeles Coliseum and the Oakland Raiders are charging the National Football Lea- gue with violations of the antitrust law. The original suit last summer ended in a 8-2 hung jury. This time the two alternates will not vote unlea one of the six original jurors cannot continue. "Entertainment is big business," added Alioto, who claimed that a luxury box the Dallas Cowboys sold in Texas Stadium for $50,000 was resold for $600,000. "Al Davis Oakland's managing general partner and the Raiders lost $1 million, while Georgia Frontiere and the Rams made in excess of $3 ~ million," Alioto told the jurv of five women and one man. Chargers get Selmon In trade Tampa Bay linebacker Dewey Selmon, the Buccaneers' second draft pick ever in • 1976, was traded Monday to the San Diego Chargers for a future undi.aclo- sed draft choice. Selmon, brother ol Tampa's Arll-Pro defensive end LeRoy Selmoa. ls the third Buccaneer !o be traded to San Diego in recent weeks ... Bqb Nyatrom scored twice within 48 aeconds of the second period to break open a tight game and the New York Islanders coasted past the New York Rangers, 7-3, in National Hocke.v League actiqn ... Phoenix took Utah apart, 113-102 in the onJy National Tom Davis, who led Boston Col-m Basketball As9ociation game behind the 23-point lege to the NCAA basketball tourna-scorlnlt of Rich Kelley . ment the last two years, is Star)f ord University's new coach . Davi~, wh? -· Television radio bad .also been pursued by W1SConsin, coached ' Boston College to a 100-47 record over the~ TV: No eventa scheduled. five years, including the recent 22-10 campaign . RADIO: Basketball -San Diego at Lakers, .. The National Association of Basketball Coa-7:20 p.m ., KLAC (570). Baseball -Baseball ches elected Fred "Tex" Winter of Cal State preview with Curt Gowdy, 11:45 p.m., KNX Long Beach as president of the organization. (1070). Winter succeeds Dean Smith of North Carolina . WEDNESDAY'S RADIO . .. Jim SatallD, head coach at St. Bonaventure Baseball -Boston vs. Dodgers at Vero University the past nine years, was named as Beach, 9:10 a.m .. KABC (790); Angels vs. Seattle new coach at Duquesne University Monday. at Tempe, 11:55 a.m .. KMPC (710). U.S. poloists shine ACC approves shot clock HONOLULU -The United States National water polo team defeated Cuba over the weekend 15-6 to capture the CanAmMex coumament championship. Cube took second in the tour- nament, Australia third and Ja- pan fourth. U.S . team coach Monte Nitz- kowski credited the goaltending of John Gansell and the excep- tional two-meter play of Terry Schroder, Greg Boye.rand Jody Campbell for the win. "'l'his is the best game the United States national team has played since 1980," Nitzkowski said Monday. "'Cuba was third in the world championships last year, and this is a very big win for us as we prepare for 1984 (Olympic Games).'' The world <championships for 1982 will be played in F.cuador in July. I Nitzkowski was also pleased with the play of four Orange Coast area athletes. Mar High, also accounted for three goals.' NEW ORLEANS (AP) -At- Ex-Universlty High and UC lantic Coast Conference basket- Irvine star Nick Baba aOOred once ball coaches have approved a and former Newport Harbor recommendatJon calling for the High star Jamie Berget10n, now league to adopt a shot clock for with Stanford, acored twice. ACC games beginning next sea- Boyer and Campbell shared ·son. high acortng honors with seven ' goals apiece. "It was a major step forward for us," continued Nitzkowski. "It's re!llly important to us aa we go into the qualifying tournainent." In the qualifying tournament will be Brazil, Canada and Me- xico. Bill Foster of Clemson said the coaches probably would ask the athletic directors of ACC llChools to approve a 45-second clock, which would be in effect except for the last four minuta of play. ACC directors will consider the plan at their annual meeting in May. Foringer, Pemper AII-CIF Woodbridge Higb'a Mark Fo- ringer, a 5-11 sophomore, was named to the 8eOOOd team m the All-CIF basketball team, u se-- lected by the First lnter1tate Bank foundation board. Also earning a second team berth ia Liberty Christian High'• Mike Pe~per. The 6-10 senior scored at a 22.6 rate for the Huntington Beach-hued Mhiu- temen on their way to the CIF playoffs. Player of the year honors are shared by Robin Andrews of CIF i Rustlers stay unbeaten Mesa, Estancia tie; Irvine shells Newport Rain waahed out Corona del Mar's Sea View League bueball pine at.El Toro Monday, but the.re weren't any damp apirlta ln other areaa -such as Irvine, M.imion Viejo and Santiago on the prep level and Golden We.t C.ollege on the community college level. Each entered as the favorite and in the only tmsup of the day, it ended Hit like that -a tol&UR for Estancia and Costa Mesa, who were stopped without a winner by the rain. Here's a look at Monday's action: Ooklen WMt -, E .. t Loe Angele• 0 The Rustlers Improved Utelr Southern California conference record to 11-0 behind the two-hit pitching of Danny DeRose and eome timely hitting, including two singles by Dan Lanon, who extended r his hitting streal< to 12 straight games. East Los .\ Angeles was unable to get a runner as far as third. 1 base in the rain~shortened five-~g affair. The STANDOUTS -Costa Mesa's Jeff Field (left) winners posted single t4llles in the fll'St four frames d . , to salt it away. Chuck Spiegel had the only extra an F.s~nc:1a s J~ff Gardner' were two of . the base hit of the game, slugging a 390-foot homer to key principals m Mondays 4-4 Sea View left-center in the third frame. DeRose, a freshman League standoff. right-hander, is now 5-0 in conference play. Co.ta M..-41 Eatancl• 4 It was a game neither deserved to lose as the two battled in a nip-and-tuck issue and as it turned out, neither did in the Sea View Leasue struggle. Estancia opened up with singJe markers in the first and second off an RBI double by Jim McCahill and RBI single by Jeff Gardner, but Mesa struck for two in the first inning on Jeff Field's two-run homer. Jim Roachelle restored order in the bottom of the second when he came on in relief and escaped from a no-out. bales-loaded situation and eventually re- tired 10 in a row before giving way to a pinch-hitter in the seventh. FAtancia scored twice in the seventh when Mike Campeau homered to center, then Gardner singled and stole second and came around on Reuben Johnson 's base hit. But Costa Mesa retaliated in the bottom of the spventh when two walks and Steve Anderson 's Single loaded the bases. A fielder's choice scored one run, Field was intentionally walked, then Kirk Peurrung worked a run-scoring free pass on a 3-2 pitch. Mesa had a chance to win it, but Gardner got the last batter to strike out. The rain started in the top of the eighth and the two were forced to settle for the tie. Jim Hyde struck out nine as Mesa's lone pitcher. Field, Mesa's All-CIF catcher, is now 6-for-10 with 2 homers. lrvlne 11, Newport Harbor O Irvine unloaded with an 11-hit attack, helped .along by the Sailors, who were guilty of six errors, BASEBALL four passed balls and two hit-batters. Jim Gasho had a pair of doubles for the winners, who improved their Sea View League record to 2-2, dropping Newport to the cellar (l-3). Among the big hit.s for Irvine was a two-run double by Gasho in the first inning, a two-run single by Jay Scott in the third, an RBI base hit by Gasho in the fourth, a two-run single by Mike Tierney in the sixth and run-scoring singles in the seventh by Mark Webster and Mark Bondi. Tierney struck out four in gaining the victory, issuing no free passes. MIHlon VleJo 7, t.gun• Be.ch 3 Laguna Beach picked up three runs on four ruts in the sixth inning, but it came after too many fireworks by the Diablos to do much ~ood. Damon Berryhill had a two-run single and Sean O'Connor, who was 2-for-2, singled home a marker, but Jeff Sauter's solo homer, backed up by a two-run double by Joe Greeley in the fifth inning, had Mission Viejo rolling with a 7-0 lead. Mission Viejo sits atop the South Coast League with a 4-1 record, Laguna Beach drops to 0·5. Sentlago 5, Woodbridge 0 The Warriors averted a no-hit loss when pinch- hitter Jeff Lite singled to right--0enter in the sixth inning. The 1068 drops Woodbridge's free-lance rec- ord to 2-9. Golf tourney Shore( d) up a hit Dinah gets .some help in tournament sponsorship Dinah Shore has been tfie hostess with the moot.est to the LPGA tour for the past 11 years and she has come up with a nother top attraction at Mission Hills Country lub in Rancho Mirage again this weekend. For 10 years, the tournament was the richest on the tour with the Colgate Company as sponsor. When that group decided to get out of sponsorship for 1982, it 1001\ed for awhile like the Coumament would not be heJd this year. But the Nabisco Brands, Inc. group has stepped into the breech and taken over sponsorship with a purse of $300,000 being offered at the desert event. Thursday through Sunday. Dinah and her tournament have had a lasting effect on the LPGA and pioneered such firsts as: the first event for women's golf on television; the first to offer over $100,000 in prize money; the first to host a celebrity pro-am format; and the first to offer over $300,000 in prize money. . The hottest playe r on the tour right now, Nancy Lopez-Melton, is the defending champion of the Nabiaco-Dinah Shore Invitational as it has been officially named. She has finished third twice and won the J&B Scotch pro-am in the last three weeks. Her final round 64 was a course record a year ago to give her a two-stroke win over Carolyn Hill In 10 previous years, there have been nine different winners. Sandra Post won back-to-back victories in 1978 and 1979 and is the only double winner. After this week, the LPGA takes a week off before heading for Hilton Head, So. Carolina and the Fast Coast. The Men's PGA (it has switched back from TPA) will return to the West Coast April 15-17 for the MONY Tournament of Champions at La Costa Country Club. Only tour winners are includ- ed ln this field. • • • THE CYS11C-'FmROSIS Foundation and the ' Los Angeles Rams have teamed up for a unique day of goU and watching the harness races at Los Ala- mitoe on Monday, April 14. Participanls will play a round of goU with a noon shotgun start at Loi Alamitos Goll Course, then head for the race track for cocktails, dinner and a full night of racing. GOLF HOWARD L. HANDY Nolan Cromwell and Preston Dennard are serving as hosts for the 144-man field with each amateur assured of a spot with a pro football player or ex-player. The entry fee is $150 with more information available by calling 635-0900. • • • • SINCE THE TOURNAMENT players of the PGA opted to form their own group and call them- selves the TPA., there has been frictlon betweeri the two groups, the PGA encompassing largely the club pros around the country. A complex agreement apparentlv has been reached and the TPA is no longer in existence but back to the former PGA title. One of the thingl! reportedly included in the agreement is the estab- lishment pf about 10 new second tour tournaments across the country in 1983. SomethJng for the 552 Club and sponsors of the Crosby Southern to check into and perhaps bring one of these events to Irvine Coast Country Club if the sponsors fee isn't too high. • • • BOB FENTON IS THE newly crowned presi· dent's Cup champion for the Costa Mesa Goll and Country Club men's group. Kyler no-hits LA Harbor Freshman Tina Kyler struck out 12 en route t.o a no-hitter as Golden West College's women's softball team defeated visiting LA Harbor, 4-0, in Southern California Conference action, shortened to five in- nings because of rain. Kyler had the only extra base hit of the game. a run-scoling triple. Kevin Robertaon, a product of Newport Harbor High, scored three p.ls during '\he three-day tournament, and Jeff Stites, the water polo coach at Corona del Foringer ecored 14.6 points a game in 1eeding the Warriors to a 13-10 overall record and a berth in the CIF playoffa. champion Cro.roada and Chad-_______ ...._ wick HJgb'• Roy Ladesma. REDWOOD Saturday Seminar FAt:lll TIE llllU UFE II TllA ril WOILI Dlt. l'RANK FRIED 8:JO AM -4 :JO ftM . You Wll Learn ... • How to ........,., yovr ~ .. Md fe•ll9 • How to undenUnd ...... ,.,,.,.. .......... ~ . • How to form he~ ,..... ..... • How to ........ dellrUdlW ,_.,.,,. • How to dftetop • polltfve ...,_..,... 2 X 8 -36' lln. ft. l775-l 49 I 16808 S . HARBOR DECKING Photos with ·Eas•B1111y Iring yovt child to Huntington C.• for o "-fun vlttt with the , !Olter lunny. PhotOI only s2.• on,....,, Oolty 'tR !mter . . .. SHU 11 ERS CUSTOM QUAU'n SHUTTERS 28 Years Experience Manufacturing Quality Shutters FINEST QUALITY SHU I I ERS AVAIL.ABLE ON TH! MARKET TODAY ••• AT l'ACTORY DIR•CI' PIUCDI Cill (714) 541 U41 or 141-1117 t \ ~ • I . . . .. R._.......LMIHlrM ........ ~. , .. .,......., Celltofnle 000 000 003-& • 2 ~ 102 020 21•-• 14 0 O'AcP910, C.Wo (3). &cllnllder (41. ._.. • c11. 8encMz m. a. er°" <•> _, ~ M , 81.nop (I); &or.llMn, Wlllt~ (I) and e.ndo. W-8ofeneerl. L-O'~o. ~7·=· M6nnetota 000 010 001-2 6 2 Loe~ 000 410 02x-7 7 3 Jac:k1on, Wllllam1 (II and Wyn•oar: Reual, Howe (W)'and'~ 'W-ReUM. L-Jac:lleon. HR-Loa ~ Olltwy ......... ,........ (WIMar .--. ..... , Detroit 000 000 000-0 7 2 &o.ton 220 120 10._. 13 1 Monte. Ujdur (8). huclar (I) end PllNW\, l'anay (7); Ojeda. BurgmMt (I). CIMr (I I Ind 0.CSmen. W-Ojeda. L-Morrl&. HR- loeton. Hoff!Mn. ......... ,. ....... 2 , ............... , ~ 100 100 000 00-2 10 0 Clllc:aQo (Al 100 000 001 01-3 10 1 Carfton. Monge (8). en-tw (I). w.u. (t). Farmer (I) and Diaz, Vl<gll (8); Dol9on, 8a- rojN18). Hoy1 (t). ~ (11) Ind Rik, Hiii (8). Fol•y ( 10). W-'&llatllng•r L-Farmer HR1-Phlllldalphla, o.JaMjs, Chi· -cio.L~ .... 2. ..... . , .. , .... , Houl1on 000 000 000-0 8 1 Clnc:IMall 010 000 Ob-2 8 1 Sutton, ~ (7) Ind Pu)ola; P .. IOfA, Hutna (7). Kem (t ) and Tr.wto. W-PM10ta. L-Sunon •xpoe 10, -...,. 2 ( .. ~,..., Montreal 220 200 004-10 15 0 T0tonto 000 000 020-2 3 3 R~•. J-(8). RNrdon (8) and Cw- ter, 9lackwelt (8k Ctanc:y. Murray ~:.iarvtn (8). Sarltenay (t) and Mlrllnel, (ti. W-Rog•ta. L-Ct•ncy. HRs-MontrMI. Olllca. T0ton10, MuMnlc:lts. "' .... " ..... . , ... t. .......... ,, PlttsbUfVh 210 110 311-10 15 0 ,.....,, YCIR !NI 300 000 020-II 11 0 Candelaria, Baumgarten (51. Takulv• (t i and Pena: Jone1, Zac:hry Ill, Gatf (t) and HodgH, Bochy (8). W-Candelaria L- Jon-. c ........ 1 , ........ , Oakland ooo 010 000-1 a o Chicago (N) 003 000 20s-5 12 1 Kingman, Jonee (8). Mclaughlin (8) and l(erMy: Martz. Smldl (7). HerTlal ldtll (I) end Moreland. Oavl• (7). W-Martz. L - Klngrnan. HR-Oakland, Sp41ncar. ........ 7 ...... , , .. , .... , Sari Oiaeo 000 000 121-4 8 0 S..ltle 201 310 OOx-7 14 3 Wlae, SNfter (~I. C>aUOlt (7). L.ucae (8) end Kennedy. Gr.tllan (8); Stoddlrd. Ander..-. (8). Rawley (I I and Ealan. W-Stodoard. L-WIM. HR-S..ttle, Straughter. "-91,CMMtal ( .. hft catJ,MLI San Franci9c0 010 311 200_. 13 2 MtlweukM 023 130 00.-t 18 3 Blue, Rowland (4). Br*"4ng (6> and May, Ransom {7); CAidweii. OIPlnO (8). Angera (8) JonH (ti and Simmon•. Scllroed"er Ill. W-Caldwell. L-Blue. HRs-MllwaukM, Koenlglteld. Yount c ............ -............... u. OO*ll w.e 111 10-.t • 0 lMl 1M ,,,_... 000 00-0 I t .,.,.... ............. ....... HA-...... ICIWC~ 7 - CGl•IWFY COU. ITANDINM ,,......,.. c• cuhnw WL• 11 0 -I I I~ I 4 I I I Ii. • • • 2 7 • 2 • ti. 2 t ti. 1MM11,....,._. ...... · lrWla 302 202 2-11 11 0 Nawpot1 Hert>or 000 000 0-0 3 8 Tierney and IUral: Nugent, Barnell (8). Pantu10 (7) and Parka. W-Tl.,ney. L-Nugent 2&-Gaaho (I). 2; KClllM (NH). ........ v._1.u..-...... 1 Laguna 8-:tl 000 003-3 1 3 MIMlon Vi.to 031 030-7 t 0 Upeon, Minney (6) and 9arryhll; Medlgel and Saut•r. W-Madl9al. L-Llp1on • 28-0'eon.-(LB). Otwl9y (MV). Marian (MY); HR-Sauler (MV). .................. Santi.go 110 030 O-\ 7 I WoodbttdOa 000 000 0-0 1 1 Allnnety, -'-(2). Logan (5) and '"-: Moreland and Nolan. W-JamH. L- Moreland. HtQH ICHOOL 8TANDtNG8 ... YleWLM\u.l. T Ga Corona dtll Mar 2 1. 0 Saddlel>ac* 2 1 0 UnlWralty 2 1 0 Coal• .... 2 1 1 lr..tne 2 2 0 'At e T0to 1 •2 o 1 Ellancle 1 2 1 1 Nawpot1 Hllfl>Ot 1 3 0 1 i. ......,.. ....... &1anda 4, Coata ..... 4 (ltll) lt"1ne 11, Nawpot1 Hert>or 0 Corona dtll MW 8t El T0to, l>Pd .. rMI ,..,.. a-. (ati) Nawpot1 Hert>or at Corona dtll Mar B Toro 11 lrWla Coata ..... at SaddleOedl IJnlYet9"y at EllMC!a .......... o- COtona o.I Mar II B T0to , ' ........ COIMNTY COLL.HS o.... ...... u ...... LA Hwtlot 000 00-0 0 2 ~w• 002 ts-4 a o Polatte and Sarinu; I(~ and McElr ... SB-K~ (OWC). NICMtacHOOL a.a.......11.~ ... 2 Sin Clamanta 053 Ol-18 11 , ~ Hiii 000 IC>-2 4 14 a-and Lodllwt; 8dlllfta, ~ (3) Ind LAngltelcl. W~. L-8ohUlba. 2&-Bucclnl (SCI. Samuel (SCI 2 (SC). 3B-Radln (SC, 1abb (SC). Clltlatanaon (SC). Or11nge Coalt DAJLY PILOT/Tu.day, March 30, 1982 H/F Cl ..nM u ca. One m1a ~· Soomg OrM (Bleytodl) 6.80 4.20 2.110 Spatttatroea ~I 3.80 2.11() a...nt O'SNe IKutblat) 3.80 AlaO r.ced: I I.In It N, ~Belier, Flying eo-. EnerQ9llC Kkl, 1.M Wire. l'ln* 1:0t-V8. .. DAC'TA (2_.I paid $20.80 TIJfTM RAC&. ON mla ~. A L Wealle (Maclland)33.20 14.80 14.20 Tr-.n Hurltar (Slwm) 12.00 13.00 9uly F0t YfN (Gnlnd)') 5..20 AlaO f'.-1: a.. """'-• Sllan.r Paln1er. Mich .... TIO«. Star Appeal, El T0tento. Nwtof• Melino. Tin. 2:08. • DACTA (5-1) paid 1318.00. IUWJfTH RACa. One rnlla l*»- T r1buta N cr odd) 31.80 1 uo a.eo Olmantt ...,_ co.om..1 uo 3.20 Clew NIQllt ~I uo AlaO rioad: ...,,_ HofldO. JM T.rk. Ill-* Banner. Kiwi Berry. ~ ..,__ nr-2~1. Alt_,_ -3,223. a.-.:.-.,:-- 14 a11d 11ndtr -1. Albert OHHlt. 41:M .I . 1e.11 -1. "°"" ~ t1.·ou. tt-tt -t ...... O'DollMI, 83~ 1, ~-1 l.........,.._,11:2Ut-al __.,. 1&411 -1, Jolwl Lo.oll/IOtn, 83111.1. 4CM4 -1 Oe¥t ~ 37:07.2. 46-41-1. ,,.. .....,, 11:10.GI. ICMt -1. Wfllt'/ E....U, 11:11.1. IO end --t Et1llt 1.yone, U:IU. I ....... ...uLTa 14and UIMiar -1. Amy Valalka, 11:68.1. 15-11 -1 .... )' l(toglul, 80:01.3. ''"" -1 . ._ "'*"· 42:42.0. »-14 -1. PM! Goeclw, 40:13.7. 3648-1. AtllN 8alndow, 41:0.t. ~ -1 KA1r Stoel. M'03.0. 41-41 -1. "'-Wateon, 62:0U. 50-51 -1. 8hett Hwmon, 51:1 U . ~=c'.,.w 14 an~nder -1 Tom 0.,llngllOUM, 20:63.8. 15-18 -1 Sean Smith, 18:28.4. 11-tt -t. I'-L..ueegwd. 11:28.0. 20-34 -1 Wlllam Sumner. te:N 2. 35-31 -1 .-.. Ocara. 17:0t.O. 40-44 -1. Gwy Smith, 18:oe.&. 41-48 -1. o. ... ~9f109 -. 21·15.1. 50-51 -1 Oon Kllc:Nn. 11:32.4 80 and --1 Al o.wwn. 23.21 7 WOMRN'I M~Ta 14 end under -I Natalla Norton, 22:42.5. 19-21 -1 ~ Bjeljand. 11:38 2 30-34 -1. Debbie G4lttlc:I<. 23:27 4. 36-3t -1, Unda Oalong. 25:28.3. 40-44 -1 Marcia Martyn. 20:52 1 4~9 -I Maty Nomi, 21:09.4 ~II -I. Cottly Chapman, 21.33 1. NBA WHTEMf CONRMNCE ~.,....... Ubn Seattle Golden Slate Phoenix Ponland W L~t.G9 48 23 .e76 San Olago 48 24 657 '" 39 32 154t 9 311 32 .1549 9 36 35 .500 12'h 18 55 .225 32 Mlctweet DWi.lon San Antonio 44 27 o.n-40 30 Houelon 40 32 ~City 25 46 Oeltaa 24 47 Utah 1t 53 .820 -.571 3'.t 654 4•it 352 1t 338 20 .264 25"" 1.UnNI COHRllDtCE Altafttk OMalon 55 16 4t 21 38 34 38 36 30 41 CM!lral DIY!e6on 775 -700 5'it 514 18'h 500 "'" 423 25 x-MllwaullM 48 23 .1176 - Atlanta 35 35 500 t 2'it a.troll 34 37 47t 14 lndl-32 311 .451 16 Chicago 211 41 .414 lll'h Claveland 15 Sii 214 32Y. •-dnched dMllon 111\e y-dlnc:tled playott IPC>lf Monda1'• acor. Plloenlx 113, Utah 102 T.....,n.o.n- san Olago at LallMe lndlane et New y °"' a.troll at WUl\lnglon PllffadelPhl• •I MINr8uitM Golden State at San Antonio Atlanta at Chicago OellM at HouMon Saettle •t 0..-KanMI City at Portland ~~ ._...,.~ BOSTON REO S6°X -Sent 8flan ~ man. Oanny p.,u, and Oave Schoppee, pit~•. to PaW1uckel of the ln1etnatlonal ~CAGO WHITE SOX -Sant Bob MoNnato, outfteldar. to the Chicago Cuba to ~· an _.., deal In wNcfl the White Soll oCll'**' LyM MoOlothan, pllehar Re-. IMatd Pat• Mac:Unln. lnlllldar. OAKl.ANO A'• -Placed Mii<• Heath. cacc:nar. on tn. 15-dey diaablad llal. SEAnLE MARINERS -WalYed Jim An- d«eon, lnlleldar. Melgnad Brian Allatd. p11. c11e<, to their mlnOI league camp and wlll place him on the dleabled llat wll•n the _, at1r11. Oplloned Rich Bofdl. pllehet. and Oev• Edler. Infielder, to tile mlnora. Returned Rod Allen, outlleld«, end Matt "(oung, plldlar, 10 the mlnotl . TOJIONTO BLUE JAYS -~lloned Pe- dro H.,nandet, lnlleld.,, and M•rll Eich· horn• end St•v-S•ntaney, pltch•ra. to Syr-of the lnt-t!Onal Laagua. Sent Matl Wiiiame. ~cnar. to !heir -.... camp tor • •a ..m.rt. ATLANTA~ ~lved Lull Go-met, 1hort11op, Larry Bradlord and Rick Ma!ula. plldlars CHICAGO CUBS -Aaaloned Mel Hall, o.itllald.,, Pat Tablet and Seo11 Fle1cher, lnflald•ra, and Mlgu•I Ibarra, catcher. to their minor league complex for r .. u lgn- menl CINCINNATI REOS -Waived Mika LA-co ... pitcher and Sam Mellu, outfielder. Re1U<nad Joea 81110, .left Lahti. Brad Laaley and Brian Rydar. pltchet•, to their minor ~ compleJt IOI ru111g '"*'' MONTREAL EXPOS -Placed John Mii- net, "'91 ~. on Ille 21-day diaal>led 1111 retroecu... to Maten 23. PHILAOELPHIA PHILLIES -Reteued Mike Protty. plteher, and Oon Mc:Corrnadl. c:etehet . PITTSBURGH PIRATES -Waived Gaty Alexander. catch.,. Sold the conlracl ol Mall AleJIMlde<, outfleldt<. 10 the Mexico Cit)' Tlgan. ~ JoM Oeleone. p11. Char. to their m4nOr .... camp. FOOTaAU ~, ..... u.e- HAMILTOH TIGER-CATS -Signed Jeny KUIMer end Rlc:ll Maloney. olfen8M lac:k· lea. ....._..,.....L...- TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS -Traded Dewey s.wr-. llnebadter, 10 Ille~ Charget9 tor .,. "'~ draft COUEQll OUOUESNE -Named Jim Salaltn 1-.:1 bulta!bllll coed! MbnfdlW ~ oor MW kx'.aDOn. 93BS Moni. lr'isr. •f I-HJ it fM Morlfdw fll~t ~ (1'4} 615'24 I I ,...,,,,. 4410~ (•t Miid/son), (114J 611·1315 Sell llt;Nilftf6t0 J1'Notfh H St •t 3rd (O(JpOSlte C«ttrM Ocy MllJ. m•J 188-1161 ( .. l • ' I '* .. S..Jft H•t S.lft H•I ,. I. -,.... C"t Ill' I "°' f'-C"O .... ·-1·"' • -• -I • M ~. :I • .' ... " ,, ' .• ,.: -~ 'I .. 1i I= -~ ·1 ; + ~ .. 1: l 'tt~ ' .. ~ ", ·: ·~ ~·'~ ~ ., " : ii lZ -a -~ f1 ••.• 7 4 ~ d ;i .. ::~ r~ a:;." ~i , I ~~" , .. .s : ib:f ~ \\ •• , "~'" ft ii 1J i" ~li •'ft B mt:~ 1= s E'h: • . 'J .. fl -; : = t : mt+· .. 1.-. 'l ~-~ .. "° '"'"" l: " " , • r:" . . t .t IS 11 :r':: ~ 1 1 ::·u Of "" :: v ~·1\lo Ill I '"' 2tod:J +~ """"" •1111 ~ ..• n,. u • , ~ 1111¥!11 • • 2 111~. •• • • T!l!Jl!!:! I • 2 a.,; ·: >:! a:" &. ill : ~ lr.tf = t; J 1 ·~· :: : : 'l'ollil lll'Uli .. 2 1514. .... t • 4 11 >t'41t .. Tolfid Pft.JI ., S ,-... Yt ., .......... "'~Mt• if~-.. =.: ;J I~ j ~! Yo 'tOICli i ., .,.._ ~ ,.._ 1lAO s • t ~ TGIM9 ... 1 I ~-Yt ~ •• 7 , 12 -Yo ~ : .» ~ ~! .,.,..: ~ = 1.r: : S4 ~··~ •••• ,, 1' -.. ,_..... 1.M 1 1UI ~Yo Twc:p u ... ,....,. Yo =·r 1.15 • • 6 " ... • TW wt " "'+ Yt UD 1 2311 iO'M+ \lo i " 2 • . 2 U -\lo 1Ww111 s I02 1114..... "' uo . . t7 11~... . AD11r fl/I 1.1' .. J UYt• .. pl U6 .. 11 ~ ..... _,., ... I .l6 I VS 14 + '--l.<iO 6 -1'V• + Yt "*'IC» 11 J'5 tNt+ ~ Trn~ 2.12 .. l n ... -..r ·'° s I 11 + Yo Tr-,. ' 140 ,,.,.. Ill lbw .• 10 S!I 11 •... Tmac pfU7 .. 2 4111tt lit ..... .OI s a 1114...... r.-.CRI • 10 S'At .... . ~ p12... .. J )4 -lit TrGP pf Ui .. l70 11~ .. .. AC Ola 1,0C t ., 111/t-14 Tr<)f' pl UO • 2 11 ... . AIM O 1-* 12 2'2 llV. • V. TrNICltl S ~ • Yt ,_.,,.,,. I M 11 14 :II + V. T AA1tY 10 1J 711t = I S IS> 1~ 14 ,,_., I.ID : 6 221/t • Vt I.JO JO 10 14\lo-l't Tl'8Vln 1• CM ~ + '-~ , .. 7 ,, •• ~ Tl10an l.17e . 231 IRt+ .. -'""" -Tl1Sol11 • 10 )I,<,.-Vt SCA ... 1 16' ~-+ \lo ll1ellld .«> 22 '1 IN + .... SOA 2 5 10 Dl6 + l't TNIPlc I 10 2 I~ VN 1.0I 6 • """· . • • Tliallr .41r I 11 1 • \Ii SPSTt< .n • J ~+ 111 Tl1c:o • 16 I » 11~-.. Slllilfw .«> 11 ,, ~. llt """"' .JO 4 " 10\4 • '" $llld9I t .J2 12 23 1411>-1;. l'\QEP Ul t ioD 21"'-.... ~ • -~ lWflOI 1.to s 15 l~Yt $JllllS wt • • 490 d ,._, T'lal. I .10 5 0 ~ Ill $lllW:I' UO 7 m 2f'Ao.-V. ~ AO t 6' ltYt .•. ~ .M 7 .., z:AI,.-"" ~ .. t11 ~ .... . SQ""" l~ .~ I~ 1~ +·~ UAL -~-m i.-... . 91AIGP 2.M S 42 2Sv. + \lo UGI pl 2.75 . • lAO It .... . Slllril .. > 1'-+ Yt UMC .Ill 5 t3 7l\lo ... . S0.0. UI 6 WI I,_._ V. IJMET Ollt 6' U 2"-. ·. ~ -• -10 -Yo ~ 11 J) ,.,..._ "" ~ IUlt . . 2 ....... .. UNA J 12 4'"· ... ~ ... 14 2 .,... .... USl'G uo • 111 U°'l'l• ,,.. SIW!Rt U I I 4 I.WO. • .. • UQn-c> J 7 11 47~ 11't SFellld I 1 S 442 I~+ Yo \.hCMtl 1.C> 5 .. 0 -~ ~I I.JD 1 S 2S1h + .... ~ .JO 10 16 14 I\ saAllE .Jiit . . 1' ~ . .. . IHallC .1'1 I 14 •"'-\4 SW£1P I• 7 IS '°""+ V. 1.t!Olc 1.52 6 -11 ••.. SIM11 • • W ~ l't 1.t!EI pfM • • 3' 26 ......... s..4n pf UI • . 4 10'4-1,4 l.tlEI pl 2.n . s ?IM-1 -~ s..an .Clle 11 "' s • Vt IJEI olH • .. I , -SchrAo lAI t -,,__ .. UOllCll I 11,.. 2'¥o. • • 50llllJ Jl1e •• 1111 14\lt-V. 1.t!Ak I ID t C ~1 _ ~ Sdlln'lb I .ID 10 l10 C2Y>-lo'J ~ S Ill) -SdAll .12 11 1401 ,..._ " ~ pl 1t .. z:no • -14 $cm 1 .W t 11 1111>-V. UllltO n S 1t 111/t-Yo Saalu.d s s --,,.. l.tlllrlld .«> 4S • 91/t-v. SaalFtot 1.ID 7 12 • + ~ Ullrd llll I.II • • 6 ~ I.It er. I 6 1GI 11\\11+ lo'J UQllVn .M II :II 21V.+1!,f, .n t 10 1~. •. • U"l&w'g U2 4 IJll >t • ti! SQM I 1.U .. U ""· •. .. UllVn U2 S JS 21 • ~ 1t 23 41 12 . .. Ulllv pf l.t1 • ) it Yo 5cud pf t.07e • • 12 ulO'lo+ ~ UlllU fl/I t.JO • 000 14 ..... 51eCJ fl/I 1.4' . . I 9 -Iii Ullkl pf 4 .. 6 2514 + Vt ;:r 2.10 .. 10 IM+ .... l.tlltllld lb 11 2S • • .... A S J) 21*>-\lo W...a 1 12 4 1 12 -14 I 44 S IS 24V.-'4 ~ . . I S .. ~ I.ID S W 50\lo+ V. UAIMI U 46 2~ 'l'l s.Gi11 t Ill a +I USF115 S.07e • • 10 1"4 .... SMl'Nr ,40 12 12 1'11\+ '" USAlr .12 S 414 14~ .•••. SlllllPw I... 1 11 .,. • ~ UISG'fps J.AO 1 " 3111 .... 5-1.c; .52 11 m >lf'o. •. .. uso,· pf 1.11> • 1 ~11~ ~ ~ 1.a , .m. ,. • "" USHDm " zs n -~ Sic,,_ UD S :12 SJ\lo-l't UISllld .1' . . 11 ML. . 5ildt» ,.. S 21:1 1'14 + 14 U$ Rty .Jiit ., 17 I~ Yo ~ • Ill 6 J lJ\l't. .. . U5lliflD I l,J6 S llS 211 + 11\ ~ ·'; ! r: :=+·i4 =,_.:JI~~~ =~ .«> ~ J 17~ ~ ~I,.edlpf t: .' li: :--.'." "911() I.ID 6 1123 Mll+-lllt U"llT91 IAI i 1tc !Iii>-14 9'111T I... ' I 21"+ ~ \.Wtrd •• 2:5 1J 19 2:WI ••••• Slw!Glo ,JD 5 II 11'l'o+ ~ u.i• ... 5 J6 IW. .... . SflllG tlf J . . I 41 -lit l.tll\'Fd .• 1 11 1.-. .... . 9"1111 I 1 tD ~ .. \HM ..... 7 • ~ "" ~ 14' I 40 111it+ Yo ~ t.• I ISS d'!'t ... . S9w1 ... 7 1Y1 20 -'-FE .. S'321 .... . SIW'lldl 2 to ., ., -\lo plUS ' . 10 tl'N-"" ~· •• • " 12 . .. .. Ulll91 1 .. J I~ ~ si..... ..s6 M 44 7:\4+ 141 ~ U O I t1 ... ~ vw $lfllitr .tOt I Jll 1--141 lAl'l. fl/I LID .. 2 IN + Ill $lrlir ,,, Ull . . 2 ti + "' IA.Pl. pf u o .. ' llMo ••••• 5illl4N A • DO U . •• . • lAPI. llll U. , I ~ 14 smeit11 AD S '1 2' -14 lAPI. pf UM • • 2 I,_.., ... Sn*.9 2.12 11 Dt ....... 14 ---= 1 : J ill =··~ ~ '-: ! ~ ~ ~ Slllilt • 1.to ' SJ UY>-\lo \llllloyl11 .«> s ., ........ ~ 5anwQI .Ut 11.,.. IJllt+ Ill Wrw n .12 S SS 11 -\It SaaUri t.4119 s • • -.. ~ .st 22 J1 ,, • • . • SalftCU0 .. 1122 ..... ~ Alt:M...,+Yt 5rcQI llf2.AI .. t 17 • . • • • \llllclo .» 12 IQS 12 -.. 50'£() I .t2 7 53' 16 + ,,.. ..... • . • Jiii .... . lo.JwJll 2.11 • 2 ~Yo .....,. 1.a •. 1 ........ . Solla I S ti.-+ 14 ~a .2:5 17 16 ~ .... Sall"5 U JI I t 11 • • . • 1-EPw I.JO 1 l3:5 I~ .... ~&I Ut 'al06 JI~+ Ill 1-EP ,,,... • . l200 • + llit • 1.61 7 17S7 IN... . .,_EP pft.1S .. 1100 U -\It 2,0I 1 5 22 -V. ~£P pf2.to • • ~ , 19'\. .• • 4..56 • 11 ~" i;.9 "'1.» .. 1100 ™··· .. uo s ... 32Y.--" ~ .Jiit • s ,.__ .... 5alllt'f 4-3' 1 '° .. . . . . ......., . • I-141 Solt\' pl uo . . 4 22 .. "" IMcillC • t2 • I ~. '" SllUO 1.5' 5 SJ I,.._ ~ ~ 2M 1 M 4'\11• -... $111Allld 1." 1 111 2No + .,,. -..... -5oAa¥ .OI 14 t0 -. ..... WICD't 1.M 1 11 11\4 ..... 5uri1I .Olt 4 JO ~ 141 .,.,.. t.lf • 315 ,,.__ .. . 5ilfltl pf 1 .. I ..__ •••• = .... ' J I,..., .. ,.,_., t .J2 11 J) ~ 141 ,M •. 'ID ~+ "° ~ 11.» • • 251Wo+ "' ... "' .. • \'I 5WAa M I 1.S 1M-.. W1M1 f1f .. t 17 .... , WFCn ,40 11 a t2 • •• • • -I 1 t ~I ......... . $lollOll t.16 ' " .... •. • • ft.JI • • • t~+ Yo ~ 11 .J2 t 22 1M .. ,l.' A6 t0 7 ~ Iii 911lPI I.JO I ta Uflo+ " M\111'1 I • • SS m.+ Vt .to 4 » '°"'+ '6 MllJ pl I •• IAD 1 •.. ,.. '1 I 11 -141 -.J pfUO .. 5 "'4+ " U2 6 ... ~-MfNC I.a> 5 t ~ ..... ,.. 5 J Dh+ .. ~ ' u 1151 15 -14 1 ... 6 JO it~ Yo ~I.AO ltlBI 22 -141 5'iM I.» M 112 3IM-14 'Mlf.a. U4 t JO ,.._+ \lo ,..,.. •• s 10 "'· •• • • 'MHtll 1.-s • ...__ 141 ...,, .ID • 111 , l™"-r "' Wlolff pft.90 .. ' .._ + " ...... ... ' lll :mi.+ Ill \Wl'M 2.40 s " 17'\ .••.• E . ·" , .• 11~+ \It --•• «> 16 7'1 ~ 14 10 1.«> • 111t JOlll>-lo'I W1111111 .41 13 21 ~ + 14 NI tM 611M ~-~ .D • 7 ...._141 911X111 1AI 4 411 ~ -¥Mlle> IS ... •+ ~ 9t"'-O Jt tO au M+ Vt ~ 1.M t 3 .,.._ 141 ,..,.... .9> • I ,,.._ 14 -ISF 1.t2 4 14' 22'111+ V. i ,7' I • l~t 141 9" .11 ID 7211 1~+ I\ 1 1 1 J1141...... .n • 11 JJ + 14 1.JDm •• fl -.... wtPI t 1.IO 6 U 21~ 141 I.JI 6 56 ,.,._ .. 'IMctT 91.01 • 7 11~ 141 ·~ ~ : f;+·!i =~ t :: ':; J::+ ~ I 12 12"0 :i.w.+ .., $1' .M $ ZM 11~ 14 I.. .. 12 IM+ ~ I 4 22 S4 + 1 • ,_.. 10 ' n -'-.. ,.., 10 ,, -. ••••. IA I t ~ 14 'M)I -'1.1' . . U Mio+ 14 AO 6 l IS'At+ Yt =srt.» .. 2 iw.-14 UI 4 I tl'l6-'Ill 1.111 J 2t1 ZJllt-Yt ._ .n lUt! := :! .,.,. __ mni it J: ~.~ !llr1dltil 1.M I 11 UV..-~ ~ pf 2.ID .. 1' JS"-+ '4 so.w9I .JD 5 10 P\. .. . . ..,.. , 4.JO .. ,,, C2\lo + Vt ~ Ulll> S It 25\lo. .. •• ~ I.ID 1 4' ll . . Ml* • .JI 101 * 11141+ ~ ..... ,,, , 'i 1 J2 ..... ~ " ' 1 " 1714..... lllliwl"' 16 1711.-"' I A 6 IS tt .... · ._.... IAO 1 1Q2 ~+ 14 i:'ii .• I~ JI~~ =-::: ' .1 ~·v; flf US .. 5 6S ... · • WC-. .S2r 5 S10 WI ..... 1.a • • ~. \II Wll!Wn •.• s -,.,._ llt , • 6' .-,_ 141 W!lr!E 11 6 sa IS -lo'J " 10 ~... .. 'IMlftO ... 25 14.S • + " t A 10 » IM~•1• ~ 1.1' I 21 m4t ..... I .1111014" 2714-1111 ~ 2t at ~Vt ~ .40 5 " ,......... • "'*-J .111 .. I :M ... .. si-·~ a , -~ ...,. ue 1 "' -. .... . ,,..... I T JO lJ\11+ WI ... Ill 7 1' • 1111 5"h+ I lltlrwl, 1-411 1 , -· ~ WllCI'(. t.,. j I,, 21'WI .•..• ~'"1AO .. ~.1 E , .. , • 21M•" ,.....,. t 10 tlM _.+ '-I.ID S t ZW, ..... SW-I .41 II S1 ~+ 141 I .41 6 1141 I~ \lo TECO in '7" °ii 1t'h-'-= .: ~ ~ fet t ~ TM 1 tO I» lM+ 14 ....... 1.a 1 11• I ~ Yt T1'W 2A 1 J21 """"" "' wrialy ,..... • ., Ill t "' r~•= • ,, 22\1\+ "' W.t*ir ., • ' ..... TWt ·" • 101 lit + \lo ~ ·'° S7 ~ "" Toli.y . . II ~ l't w,ty 11 _J "'· .. 1,r ' ij ,,: .!'"~·;; Tl.; • -• 11 "' I"'+ " ~*'-... 14 53 tN+ "' . .a • ' ~· ~ :n ' a 11 ..... . n • aot 1111o-" .-1 JO --.. v. I 11 53 av.+ ~ •• " 111 11 + ,. y...,, . . 17 M ..... ! _. t 1" 12 + '- ,_,.. ' .... ll~W. .. 1• • ,. -· 141 ,.. • 1Ai • -141 ; H /F Cl Air 1rvtne plant tef"VlLW..to Loe ~ lnt.ema- U:o.n.al Aitpon. &om John Wayne A1tpon, subject to Clvil Aeronautia ~approval. 'li\e eervice, designed particularly for executJvea who have to make oOOnectfona at LAX, II to be avai- lable on request eeven day• a week. One-way fare la $36. I I . Air Irvine is located ln the Genera Av atton Terminal at 19~31 Airport Way South. Bank op ening set Huntington National Bank (ln organJzat!on), a newly formed community bank in Huntington Beach, ls acheduled to have its grand opening on Wednelday . The bank is located at 6531 Bolaa Chica St. Azon e pac t reveale d Nelson Research & Development Co., Irvine, has announced it entered into agreements with three companies for the dev. elopment and formulation of products containing azone, a penetrant which pro- motes the delivery of drugs into and through the akin. The agreements cover specific prod~t formula- tions of azone with pharmaceutically acuve agents. The three announced are with Smith Kline .Beckman Corp., for two products; Bristol Myers Co., also for two products; and a United K.ingdom-baseO-com~y. the Pharmaceutical Division o( Imperial Chemical Pro- ducts, Ltd. (ICI), for one product. Brewer y d eal eyed DETROIT (AP) -The Jos. Schlitz Brewing ~· of Milwaukee, which lost $20.6 million last year, 11 considering a proposal that would allow the Stroh Brewery Co. to purchase a majority of Schlitz stock, the two companies said. The Detroit-based Stroh said M<?11daY it offer:e<i ~ buy 67 per cen t interest in Schlitz, the nation s third-largest brewery. Stroh is the seventh-la~g~st U.S. brewing company, based on sales of 9.2 million barrels a year. Sh ak eup at Wick es SAN DIEGO (AP) -Nearly half the directors at Wickes Companies have resigned a fter a series of major divestitures and personnel changes announced by th~ San Diego retailing and building·supply giant during the last month. . The executives who resigned Sunday after a board of directors meeting included E.L . McNeely, 63, longtime chairman and chief executive officer, and J ohn V. Drum, who was named president of the company less than two weeks ago. The company announced Monday that. effective immediately, Sanford C. Sigoloff, 51, who has a re- putation for saving struggling companies, would take over as Wickes chairman, executive officer and presi- dent. Foundation ponders sal e PHOENIX (AP) -Lack of a dividend on DeJ E. Webb Corp. stock may lead the Del E. Webb Foun- dation to sell the corporation stock it holds, corporation President Robert K. Swanson said. The independent charitable foundation is requi- red by law to distribute to charities an amount equal ~ 5 percent of its assets each year, Swanson said. He saJd Webb stock makes up virtually all of the foundation's assets. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES NEW YOftK(API RMI ~ e¥9S-, HEW YORIC. (AP) -Sal ... MOlldey P<ic. tar ,.,,.,,,..,, Mar. 1' end ne1 ~IN IHI_, -ectlw -11QCXS , Yotll S1oe11 -. Vedltlo -. 0.. .._ ~ CMM Oii ..., .. more -. JD 11111 a.. .. m.n 11111 maz + uo 5arfl' birJ-. 6tUllO IM -Yo 1D Tm JJUS JM ... DU1 U2.D+ Ul ~ jtl 100 ,m.. -\It 15 VII 1GL6' IOU' !OLOO 101.5'7 ...... llM m 'to0 ,.... + .,. ., sat 121.11124.40 m.a m•+ 1.>0 "'*"" CD UT,lllD 45'11 -IV. ·~ ••. ........ ......... »•·= ea.. ' ~-11\4 .. ::~ = ... ::·:::::::::::::::: =-= ~ ·= ~ +I ., -....................... •.fCll,500 ' Vs =-= =~I~ =..irao = ii! ::!~ WHAT STOCKS DID 1D1411a 1!f,?00 II -~ H£W YOftK (AP! ""8r. Tt -o.r.to ,n, 1110 l0\4 -..., Q1rC5o lo'<lttt tn,21111 1~ + 14 ~ T°":~ .... v • ....;, '21 •SJ 1.,6 AMERICAN LEADERS GOLD COINS Hrw YC>fllt< (Al') -Mlle ... Mol*Y of told C44M, OOtnpered wttll l'ridar'a twtae. "'""'" .... t ttoy c&, IMO.ti, 1111 .... . .. ..... ..... 1 troy oa... ""i:.."" ...... ...._IO,.._._..,...,.... 11. ··=-,oo .......... ...., ...... -····"·'°· OacltNd nz =-:=n :, ::: :::: ~ WH.al -[.l!OIC) HEW~ tAPI "'-' tt METALS...., 17 22 ~ 74'61-77 «*'Ill 1 pound, U.S. deltlnlllone. Leed lW2 '*'" • pound. Zlltc 87-40 cent.• pound, deltllered. Ttft H .5478 Met1l1 Week COfl'lpoalt1 lb. .._._ 1e-n oent1 I PQUl'd. H.Y ....,_, '395.00 I* flllk. ....._ $319.00 trov oz., H.Y. SILVER·...., Ht!ld)' & H1rm1n. 1 7.080 per troy ounc». .... ,.,.. ............ ,.., .... Ullllle ...... -. ---... _ ...... .._ ..... ......, ··•••fl ............. .....,.,...,. .-.. .. ..-.... .....-....... ...... !ft ................ _ ..-.---·~--­...._.. .•.... ...-. 0..-.. ,... ·~ ,.....lf't 11 ...... ~-... ---......... .. ~ .. ,.. ....... -. ....... .. ...... -..................... ...... . --...... -........... -......... _ ...... _,_____ .................... .,_ ...... -.......... =--... ................ ~-££:&.:-... ............. .... -"' .. ----·-·-:;:J:_..._ ............ _ ·==.-............. .. ==:==-"'--==-- Banning • cympa1~n snowballs Br STEVE MARBLE Ofehe IWtr Piiot IWI Three Newport Beach activist groups that have united behind a referendum drive aimed at ecuttling the Banning Ranch de- velopment project claim their effort is "sn owballing" and bound for success. Referendum leaders, appea- ring together at an afternoon press conference Monday. took turns criticizing city council members as favoring developers over city residents. "We have to stop this project ~fore it's too late," said Mike Johnson, a member of the West Newport Legislative Alliance and a referendum leader. TUE SOA Y MAHC ti JO 1 l)8~' ORANGE COUN 1 Y . CAI IFORNIA 25 CENTS It was formally announced at the conference that the alliance, consisting of members from sev- eral West Newport homeowner groups, has been joined by two veteran refere ndum groups - SPON (St o p Polluting Our Newport) an.d RAP (Reside nts Action Plan). The two groups spearheaded a referendum crusade against the Irvine Company's Ne wport Center expansion project last year. MISSION COMPLETED -Space shuttle Columbia touches down safely at Northrup Strip at White Sands M~ile Range in New Mexico this morning, ,., ........... bringing astronauts Jack Lousma and-Gordon Fullerton back from more than a week in space. NASA T-38 chase plane monitors the .arrival in foreground. The $124 million expansion plan was repealed by coun cil members this year, at the request of the Irvine Compan y, before the matter wou)d h ave gone to voters. The three groups, hopeful the 75-acre Banning Ranch plan will be put to an election test, have jUst two weeks to collect about ~.200 signatures. (See NEWPORT, Page A2) Week of rain forecast for coast By JERRY HERTENSTEIN 0( !tie Del!J Piiot lteff · Intermitte nt rain that has plagued the Orange Coast for two days and was blamed for on e traffic fatality Monday in Foun- tain Valley is expected to conti- nue through the week , despite brief interludes of sunshine. Tonight's forecast calls for a 10 percent chance of showe rs in - creasing to 30 percent Wednes- day, according to the National Weathe r Bureau. Cloudiness with scattered showers are due to continue through Friday. Rain Monday and Sunday, combined with that of the last few weeks, has brought the yearly total at or above the ave- rage for March 30, according to Emmett Franklin of the Orange C.Ounty Flood C.Ontrol District. Santa Ana has received .40 of an inch more than the March 30 yearly average of 11.44 dating back to 1909, Franklin said. The county seat got .51 inches of rain from 8 a.m. Monday to 8 a.m. today for a yearly total of 11.84. Last year on th¥i date 8.37 in- ches had falle n on Santa Ana, Franklin said. Shuttle craft hack safe \ Edwards Air Force \ Columbia Landing Base LANDING -Map locates White Sands M~ile Range in New Mexico where the space shuttle Columbia landed to- day. Arraignment set for star David Crosby A white powder found in a car rented by rock s inge r David Crosby. arrested in Costa Mesa on drug charges Sunday. will not be analyzed for five days, Orange County Sheriff investigators re- port. Crosby, a veteran of the rock trio Crosby. Stills and Nash, was arrested after he allegedly plowed his rented Ford into a center divider on the San Diego Freeway near the Harbor Boule- vard offramp. Crosby, a 40-year-old resident of Mill Valley, was re portedly on his way to an anti-nuclear rally at Doheny State Beach where he w~ expected to be re united with former singing partners StepheQ Stills and Graham Nash. WHITE SANDS MISSILE RANGE, N .M . (AP) -Space shuttle C.Olumbia returned home to a calm harbor today. diving through Earth atmosphere to a thumping, pinpoint landing on the sparkling desert sands o f Northrup Strip. A day late, but none the worse for wear. "This is really a great flying machine," Jack R. Lousma said as he glided hypersonic over the Pacific C088t, en route over three states to this supersecret military base. With Lousma in command and C. Gordon Fullerton beside him, the winged shuttle slapped wheels to sand at 8:05 a.m . PST. The reflyable spaceship had · launched to orbit and returned three times in just under a year. proving its stamina and advan - cing a major step toward cargo- carrying fllghb later this year. Northrup was originally a contingency site, designated No. 1 when the primary runways in California we re floode d with rainwater . F.quipment to service the vehicle was brought by the trainload from California. Monday, C.Olumbia was block- ed from landing here by a fierce sandstorm and began an eighth and effortless day in space. The pilots fielded a call from President Reagan and Lousma told him: ''We just came booming over your ranch at about Mach 13." Reagan asked about one of Fonda, Kate • w1n HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Ka- tharine He pburn and H e nry Fonda, the still-in-love oldsters of "On Golden P o nd," were hailed as best actress and actor of 1981 at the 5 4th Academy Awards. "Chariots o f Fire," the British-made saga of two runners who won gold medals at the 1924 Olympic Games, scored a surprise Monday night ~ best picture of the year. The picture, starring relative unknovfns, won three other awards f.or score, costu- ming and original script. Warren Beatty. nominated in four categories for the h eavily favored "Reds," won only as best director. His film of American radicalism and the Russian Re- volution al.so won for supporting actress Maureen Stapleton ~ the firebrand radical Emma Gold-. man and for cinematography by Vittorio Storaro. a day late h is h orses and Lousma said , "Well, sir, we saw a few running around the pasture." Reagan told the pilots: "I can't te ll you how thrilled I'm sur e everyone in this country is about what has happe n e d ... our thoughts and prayers have been with vou every second that ·you've been up there." The president watched the landing in his study at the White House and said "That's marve- lous" when Columbia touch ed down. The astronauts didn't know where or when they'd be corning to Earth until 95 minutes before touchdown. Until that time . Mission C.Ontrol kept Kennedy Space Center as an option Oscars At landing, the nose rose a bit and then settled smoothly on the gypsum floor. The ship seemed not a bit bothered by the breeze above Tularosa basin, although Lo usma announced, "a little bumpy at Mach 2," ~ the ship was traveling twice the speed of sound above Truth o r Conse- quences, N.M. • Thirty-nine minutes a fter touchdown. the astronauts de- parted from Columbia. Both walked a li ttle stiffly but were s miling and chatting amiably with technicians as they made a walkaround inspection of their spaceship. They were driven to a medical facility for a brief exa- mination and then were headed back to Houston. V a.lley youth killed in wet car crash One F o untain Valley youth was killed and another was cri- tically injure d after their ca r slammed into a block wall during a heavy rainstorm Monday eve- ning. Driver Steve McElroy, 19, of 18526 Santa Andrea St., was pronounced dead on arrival at Fountain Valley Community Hospital. Passenger Gary Puente, 18, of 18555 Santa Cruz Circle, suffered head and chest injuries, a hospi- tal spokesman said today. Huntington Beach received .37 of an inch of rain from 8 a.m . Monday to 8 a.m. today bringing the yearly total to 10.~ •. 02 inches below the total on this date in 1981. Costa Mesa showed .19 of an lhch of rain Monday and early today for 11.11 for the year compared to 7.72 ~of March 30, 1981. California Highway Patrol of- ficers arrested Crosby on suspi- cion of driving under the in- fluence of a controlled substance. They didn't identify that sub- stance. John Gielgud, the wisecrac- king gentleman's gentleman to a millionaire tippler in "Arthur," took his first Oscar, as best sup- porting actor. For Mm Hepburn. 74, it was a record fourth Oscar as best ac- tress. For Fonda, 76, it was the climax of a 48-year film career during which the Oscar eluded A~ Wlreptloto BEST OF BUNCH -Henry Fonda and Katharine He pburn, shown in a scene from ''On Golden Pond," earned Oscars for their performances. It was the first award for Fonda and a record-setting fourth for M~ Heoburn. Traffic Sgt. Lee Pepka said McElroy's car was attempting to make a lane change on Magnolia Street between S later and War- ner avenues when it skidded and collided with a pickup truck. It ti en spun out of control and struck a curb and the block wall, Pepka said. Both men were thrown from the car when it struck the wall, according to Pepka. Officers also said they found a film canister filled with a white powder believed to be drugs, ~ibly cocaine. him -except for an honorary award last year. Too ill to attend the Music Center f estivities, Fonda de - signated daUl{hter Jane to accept (See OSCAR, Page AZ) The accident occurred at about 6:15 p.m. ,.-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------..., WORLD STATE I t -Avalanches kill 2 skiers UPI sale imminent? . SION, Switzerland(~~ -Two young Swiss SAN FRANCI. sco (AP) -A grouf of California skiers were killed in a snowslide and three others es-J:usinemnen headed by Tom Quinn 0 Los Angeles caped unhurt as a w~ spell sJ:iarply incre81ed. the has begun preliminary negotiations to bu. y United danger of avalanches m the Valais Alps, police 881d. Press International, the country's second largt!9t news .~ aervice, it was reported today. NATION She didn't .shoot J.R. Slnger·actresa Colleen Camp would have been famous. had she stayed in the ''Dallas" eerles and shot J .R. Page 83 . . ·: Resisnation on economy Some we111nentt of the ~nomy are beina ·re- Wed downward from optim.iatic to re.tcnatlon. Pqie C4. I Corona retrial costs mount YUBA CITY (AP) -The mus murder retrial of Juan c.orona bas cost $3.3 million from the time it was ordered nearly four yeal'B ago, an auditor told the Suuer County .upervi.lon. COUNTY Allordable desisJJer jeans WoUld you believe dellper JMrw for under '4? Believe lt at Oran1e County'• Goodwill lndU1triee where ''GoodA." .U off lbe rlicka. Paae in. · INDEX At Your Service A4 Horoscope 82 Erma Bombeck B2 Ann Landers B2 L .M. Boyd A6 Movies 83 Business C4-6 National News A3 California A5 Public Notices D2 Cavalcade 82 Sports Cl-3 Classitied Dl-6 Dr. Steincrohn 82 Comics B4 Stock Markets C5 Croaword B4 Televisi9n B5 ~th Notlcel D2 Theaters 83 F.ditorial A6 Weather A2' Entertainment B3 World News A3 SPORTS Nortli Carolina prevails ~ Dean Smith coached hi.a flrat NCAA buketball . tMln • North Carolina defeated Georgetown. A-t2. Place Cl. ·'Seuss' honored for kids' work .. Dr. Seu11," Tlt eodor Gellel, 11 the National Auoclatlon of Elementary School Prindpala' flnt apecial award winner for d1a- t.lngu1ahed 1ervice to children. "We think he deeerves credit for havtna launched mlWons of youngsters on a lifetime of exploration through books," said amodation president ElalDe Bub. Giesel, the 77-year-old author and illu- strator of "How the Grinch Stole Chriatmu,'' "The Cat In the Hat" and other children'• favorites, could not attend the association's 1 convention in Atlanta. The band played "Your Cheatin' Heart" aa former Delaware County (Okla.) commia- sioner H.B. Rlcble shook hands, kissed babies and hugged ladies at an appreciation party - before going to federal prison. "I regret getting caught, but I don't regret a hell of a lot of what I done," Richie told about 250 well-wishers who gathered on the ,bank of Lake Eucha. ,Richie, 48, is among more than 150 com- missioners, ex-commissioners and salesmen implicated in a federal investigation of county purchasing practices in Oklahoma. Actress Butterfly McQaeen, who por- trayed a slave girl in the movie "Gone With the Wind," has been granted a mistrial in a $300,000 civil suit in Washington against Greyhound Bus Lines and a security firm. Ms. McQueen, 71 , complained of chronic back problems and a mistrial motion was the only way to interrupt the proceedings, said one of her attorneys, Arnold Spevack. Ms. McQueen, now a New York resident, played Scarlett O'Hara's slave girl Prissy in the award-winning movie about the Civil War. The award wasn't meant to describe the inhabitants, but the mansion of Gov. Dick Riley and his wife, Tunky, has been de- signated a National Wildlife Habitat of Ex- ceptional Merit. In ceremonies this month, the National Wildlife Federation praised the mansion for its diverse shrubbery and landscaping, which' provide food, water and cover for wildlife. Jay D. Hair, federation executive vice president, said the federation is "especially 'proud of the fact that the governor and Mrs. Riley have kept the principles of wildlife ha- bitat development in mind in the landscaping done." Priacets Diana, who is six months preg- nant, will take a vacation w.ith Prince Cbarlea. at one of her husband's islands off the coast of England, British press reports said. They will leave April 20 for St. Mary's, one of the Scilly Isles owned by Charles' Du- chy of Cornwall, 30 miles from Lands End, the southwesternmost tip of England, the newspapers said. The Sun, a mass-circulation London ta- bloid, said doctors ordered the 20-year-old Diana to take a rest. Reports of the length the vacation varied from one to two weeks. Composer Barry Nilsson hosted a cele- brity cocktail party to help Wallace Albertson, widow of actor Jack Albertson, launch her campaign for the Democratic nomination for the 45th Assembly District. 'Mrs. Albertson, 57, president of the Los Angeles Community College Board of Trustees, wants the seat Assemblyman Hencbel Roaentbal is leaving to run for state Senate. She faces stiff competition from Bart Margolin, 31, chief of staff for Rep. Henry Waxman. Margolin is backed by Rosenthal and Asaemblyman Boward Berman. ,.,.~ ...... ,.,"--=· ..... ,_.,.....,, l'w ..... hdwe Wrh: TIE MSSOT.-ill TDMS CAMr P.O. Box 864 Redondo Beach 90277 .. C4 lJ1Jt Jn.ooH .. JtJ.7to ng-time is Superb DOWNEY SAVINGS AND LQ\N has FAST CASH FOR HO:ME LOANS (Up to four .unlcs) $10,000 to $1,000,000 Purchase money seconds. equity. and swing loans c.o Nancy 8MJer (714) 730-1045 fH 'VVNF'Y ~;A\/lt-J< iS I WATCHING -U .S. Defense Secretary Caepar Weinberger v iews communist North Korean posi- tion during a tour of Korea'• demilltarh:ed tlOlle. ""' ,..,,.,..,, ,,..,. . -........ ...... STOit• HOURS: 9 A.M. -2 A.M. LIQUOR ·STORE ,, •• Delivery Hom• or Office 646-6878 Orange Coat DAILY PILOTITUMday, March 30, 1882 Al '"" A Tradition for 60 Years 1982 Serving Nlghtty Tll 1 A.M. Convertibles in comeb8ck DETROIT (AP) -In an effort to pump 10me excitement -and addltlonal aalef -into the llualah U.S. car market, domestic automakers are beglnning to reintroduce convertibles after a aix- year at.nee. Sala of convertiblee in the next year probably will not amount to more than about 75,000 can - or 1 percent of the domestic industry'• volume - but automaken aay it's worth It. 11Convertiblea wouldn't have been IO attractive when we JOld millions of Impala• and Caprices, year after year," said Jack Madejchlck, a apoke- aman for General Moton Corp.'a Chevrolet Divi- sion. "Now the market II fragmented to the point of 250 OOO-to-300,000-car lines. We don't want to miss a 10,000-sale opportunity like a convertible." "Ther draw showroom traffic and generate publicity,' said Robert Marcks, manager of special vehicle projects for Chrysler C.orp. The No. 3 automaker was the first to bring back the convertibles with the LeBaron and Dodge 400 models. Ford Motor Co. says it will begin marketing a Mustang cpnvertible, and GM plans to introduce a Buick Riviera convertible next month, followed by a Chevrolet Cavalier convertible in 1983. Reservations Suggested 645-70n I TH a: VI'l'JlI. STA'l'ISTICS: We're -Open. We're H8: a Sale. We're in Heri~e Plaza at th& corner of Culver and Walnut, in Irvine. All the facts you need to come over and join us in our grand opening celebratio n! Store Hours: 9 AM -10 PM Monday Through Friday 9 AM - 8 PM Saturday 9 AM • 6 PM Sunday ,, .. •• Banning • campaign snow-balls By STEVE MARBLE orttie D1111J Not • ..,, · Three Newport Beach activist groups that have united behind a referendum drive aimed at scuttling the Banning Rand\ de- velopment project claim their effort is "snowballing" and bound for success. Referendum leaders, appea- ring together at an afternoon press conference Monday, took turns criticizing city council members as favoring developers over city residents. "We have to stop this project before it's too late," said Mike Johnson, a member of the West Newport Legislative Alliance and a referendum leader. It was formally announced at the conference that the alliance, consisting of members from sev- eral West Newport homeowner groups, has been joined by two veteran referendum groups - I f Ut Sl>A Y MAIK ~t 10 1'1H/ ORANGE COUNTY CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS · SPON (Stop Polluting Our Newport) and RAP (Residents Action Plan). The two groups spearheaded a referendum crusade against the Irvine Company's Newpo rt Center expansion project last year. MISSION COMPLETED -Space shuttle Columbia touches down safely at Northrup Strip at White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico this morning, ,,, .......... bringing astronauts Jack Lousma and-Gordon Fullerton back from more than a week in space. NASA T-38 chase plane monitors the arrival in foreground. The $124 million expansion plan was repealed by coun cil members this year, at the request of the Irvine Company, before the matter wou1d have gone to voters. Shuttle craft back safe a day late The three groups, hopeful the 75-acre Banning Ranch plan will be put to an election test, have just two weeks to collect about 4,200 signatures. (See NEWPORT, Page A2) Week of rain forecast for coast By JERRY HERTENSTEIN Oftti. 0961J l'tlot Steff · Intermittent rain that has plagued the Orange Coast for two days and was blamed for one traffic fatality Monday in Foun· tain Valley is expected to conti- nue through the week, despite brief interludes of sunshine. Tonight's forecast calls for a 10 percent chance o f showers in- creasing to 30 percent Wednes- day, according to the National Weather Bureau. Cloudiness with 9Cattered showers are due to continue through Friday. Rain Monday and Sunday. combined with that of the last few weeks, has brought the yearly total at or above the ave- rage for March 30, according to Emmett Franklin of the Orange County Flood Control District. Santa Ana has received .40 of an inch more than the March 30 yearly average of 11.44 dating back to 1909. Franklin said. The county seat got .51 inches of rain from 8 a.m. Monday to 8 a.rn. today for a yearly total of 11.84. Last year on this date 8.37 in- ches had fallen on Santa Ana, Franklin said. Huntington Beach received .37 of an inch of rain from 8 a .m . Monday to 8 a.m. today bringing the yearly total to 1U.5ti, .02 inches below the total on this date in 1981. . Costa Mesa showed .19 of an inch of rain Monday and early today for 11.11 for the year compared to 7. 72 as of March 30, 1981. ( Edwards Air FOfce Base \ Columbia landing White Sands AP MISSiie Range LANDING -Map locates White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico where the space shuttle Columbia landed to- day. Arraignment set for star David Crosby A white powder found in a car r e nted by rock singer David Crosby. arrested in Costa Mesa on drug charges Sunday, will not be analyzed for five days. Orange County Sheriff investigators re- port. Crosby, a veteran of the rock trio Crosby, Stills and Nash, was arrested after he allegedly plowed his rented Ford into a center divider on the San Diego Freeway near the Harbor Boule- vard offramp. Crosby, a 40-year-old resident of Mill Valley, was reportedly on his way to an anti-nuclear rally at Doheny State Beach where he was expected to be reunited with former singing partners Stepheo Stills and Graham Nash. California Highway Patrol of- ficers arrested Crosby on suspi- cion of driving under the in- fluence of a controlled substance. They didn't identify that sub- stance. Officers also said they found a film canister filled with a white powder believed to be drugs, posmbly cocaine. WHITE SANDS MISSILE RANGE, N.M. (AP) -Space shuttle Columbia returned home to a calm harbor today, diving through Earth atmosphere to a thumping, pinpoint landing on the sparkling desert sands of Northrup Strip. A day late, but none the worse for wear. "This is really a great flying machine," Jack R. Lousma said as he glided hypel'liOnic over the Pacific coast, en route over three states to this supersecret military base. With Lousma in conunand and C. Gordon Fullerton beside him, the winged shuttle slapped wheels to sand at 8:05 a.m. PST. The reflyable spaceship had' launched to orbit and returned three times in just under a year. proving its stamina and advan- cing a major step toward cargo- carrying flights later this year. Northrup was originally a contingency site, designated No. l when the primary runways in California were flooded with rainwater. F.quipment to service the vehicle was brought by the trainload from California. Monday, Columbia was block- ed from landing here by a fieree sandstorm and began an eighth and effort.I~ day in space. The pUots fielded a call from President Reagan and Lousma told him: "We just came booming over your ranch at about Mach 13." Reagan asked about one of his horses and Lousma said. ''Well, sir, we saw a few running around the pasture." Reagan told the pilots: "I can't tell you how thrilled I'm sure everyone in this country is about what has happe ned ... our thoughts and prayers have been with you every second that you've been up there." The president watched the landini in his study at the White House and said "That's marve- lous" when Columbia touched down. The astronauts didn't kno.w where or when they'd be coming to F.arth until 95 minutes before touchdown. Until that time, Mission Control kept Kennedy Space Center as an option. Fonda, Kate • w1n Oscars HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Ka- tharine Hepburn and He nry Fonda, the still-in-love oldsters of "On Golden Pond," were hailed as best actress and actor of 1981 at the 54th A cademy Awards. "Chariots of Fire," the British-made saga of two runners who won gold medals at the 1924 Olympic Games, scored a surprise Monday night as best picture of the year. The picture, starring relative unknowns. won three other awards for score, costu- ming and original script. Warren Beatty, nominated in four categories for the heavily favored "Reds," won only as best director. His film of American radicalism and the Russian Re- volution also won for supporting actress Maureen Stapleton as the firebrand radical Emma Gold-. man and for cinematography by Vittorio Storaro. John Gielgud, the wisecrac- king gentleman's gentleman to a millionaire tippler in "Arthur," took his first Oscar, as best sup- .porting actor. For M~ Hepburn, 74, it was a record fourth Oscar as best ac- tress. For Fonda, 76, it was the climax o( a 48-year film career during which the Oscar eluded ,., Whpfloto BEST OF BUNCH -Henry Fonda and Katharine Hepburn, shown in a scene from "On Golden Pond," earned Oscars for their performances. It was the first award for Fonda and a record-setting fourth for Miss Heobum. him -except for 1an honorary award last year. Too ill to attend the Music Center festivities, Fonda de- signated dau~hter Jane to accept (See OSCAR, Page AZ) At Landing. the nose rose a bit and then settled smoothly on the gypsum floor. The ship seemed not a bit bothered by the breeze above Tularosa basin, although Lousma announced, "a little bumpy at Mach 2," as the ship was traveling twice the speed of sound above Truth or Conse- quen~. N.M. Thirty-nine minutes after touchdown, the astronau ts de- parted from Columbia. Both walked a little stiffly but were smiling and chatting amiably with technicians as they made a walkaround inspection of their spaceship. They were driven to a medical facility for a brief exa- mination and then were headed back to Houston. ' ' Valley youth killed in wet car crash One Fountain Valley youth was killed and another was cri- tica 11 y injured after their car slammed into a block wall during a heavy rainstorm Monday eve- ning. Driver Steve McElroy, 19, of 18526 Santa Andrea St., was pronounced dead on arrival at Fountain Valley Community Hospital. Passenger Gary Puente, 18, of 18555 Santa Cruz Circle, suffered head and chest injuries, a hospi- tal spokesman ~d today. Traffic Sgt. Lee Pepka said McElroy's car waa attempting to make a lane change on Magnolia Street between Slater and War- ner avenues when it skidded and collided with a pickup truck. It ti.en spun out of control and struck a curb and the block wall, Pepka said. Both men were thrown from the car when it struck the wall. acoording to Pepka. The accident occurred at about 6:15 p.m . ·.------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~------------------------------~------------------------. WORLD -A va1anches kill 2 skiers SION, Switzerland (.&\P) -Two young Swiss skiers were .killed in a snowslide and three others es- caped unhurt as a warm spell sharply inc:reued the danger of avalanches in the V a1aiB Alps, police said. NATION She didn't shoot J.R. Stnaer-actreu Colleen camp would have been ~ 6ad she stayed in the 0 Dallas" eeries and ahot J.R. Page B3. Resignation on economy Some w1•menta of the economy are beiD( re- viled downward from optimbtlc to retignation. Pale C4. STATE UPI sale imminent? SAN FRANCISOO (AP) -A grouf of California businelmnen headed by Tom Quinn o Los Angeles 1 has begun preliminary ne~otiations to buy United Press International, the country's second largest news .. ~service, it was reported today. ' Corona retrial costs mount YUBA CITY (AP) -The mass murder retrial of Juan Corona hu cost $3.3 million'trom the time lt wu ordered nearly four yean ago, an auditor told the Sutt.er County .upervi80n. COUNTY Affordable designer jeans woUid you believe demper jeans for under $4? Believe it at Orange County•• Goodwill InduiUiet where ·~" lell off the ndta. Pace Bl. I INDEX At Your Ser.vice A4 Horo900pe 8 2 Erma Bambeck B2 Arm Landers B2 L.M. Boyd A6 Movies B3 Business C4-6 National News A3 Calif omia A5 Public Notices 02 Caval~e B2 Sports Cl-3 Classified Dl-6 Dr. Steincrohn B2 Comics B4 Stofk Markets C6 Croaword B4 Television & Dea~otlces 02 Theaters B3 F.di . A6 Weather A:J.' Entertainment B3 World News A3 SP ORTS Nortla Carolina pre,vails ' Dean Smith coached hUI fint NCAA biibttiall • t.wn • Nonh Carolina defeated Gt«•toWn. 11-12. P.-. Cl. .. ·'Seuss' honored for kid's' work "Dr. Seuaa," Tlaeodor Gel1el, la the National Aaociatlon of Elementary School Prindpala' fim special award winner for dil--tfnau.iahed RrVice to children. ''We think he dnerves credit for having launched millions of youngsters on a lifetime of exploration through boob," said a&llOCiatlon · president ElalDe Banke. Giesel, the 77-year-old author and illu- strator of "How the Grinch Stole Christmas," "The Cat in the Hat" and other children's favorites, could not attend the association's convention in Atlanta. The band played "Your Cheatln' Heart" aa former Delaware County (Okla.) commis- sioner H.B. Riehle shook hands, kissed babies and hugged ladies at an. appreciation party - before going to federal prison. "I regret getting caught, but I don't regret a hell of a lot of what I done," Richie U>ld about 250 well-wishers who gathered on the ·bank of Lake Eucha. Richie, 48, is among more than 150 com- missioners, ex-commissioners and salesmen implicated in a federal investigation of county purchasing practices in Oklahoma. Actress Butterfly McQueeo, who por- trayed a slave girl in the movie "Gone With the Wind," has been granted a mistrial in a $300,000 civil suit in Washington against Greyhound Bus Lines and a security firm. Ms. McQueen, 71, complained of chronic back problems an,d a mistrial motion was the only way to interrupt the/roceedings, said one of her attorneys, Arnol Spevack. Ms. McQueen, now a New York resident, played Scarlett O'Hara's ~lave girl Priss>: ~ the award-winning movie about the Civil War. The award wasn't meant to describe the inhabitants, but the mansion of Gov. Dick Riley and his wife, Taoky, has been de- .. signated a National Wildlife Habitat of Ex- ceptional Merit. In ceremonies this montn, the National Wildlife Federation praised the mansion for its diverse shrubbery and landscaping, which provide food, water and cover for wildlife. Jay D. Hair, federation executive vice president, said the federation is "especially pro. ud of the fact that !he. governor. an~ Mrs. Riley have kept the pnnciples of wildlife ~­ bitat development in mind in the landscaping done." Princess Diana, )\'ho is six months preg- nant, will take a vacation with Prince Cbarlee at one of her husband's i.alands off the coast of England, British press reports aaid. · They will leave April 20 for St. Mary's, one of the Scilly Isles owned by Charles' Du- chy of Cornwall, 30 miles from Lands End, the southwesternmost tip of England, the newspapers said. The Sun, a mass-circulation London ta- bloid, said doctors ordered the 20-year-old Diana to take a rest. Reports of the length the vacation varied from one to two weeks. Composer Harry Ni11100 hosted a cele- brity cocktail party to help Wallace Albertson, widow of actor Jack Albertson, launch her ~~~\WlmirMion for the 45th Assembly District. . Mrs. Albertson, 57, president of the Los Angeles Community College Board of Trustees, wants the seat Assemblyman Henchel Ro1entltal is leaving to run for state Senate. She faces stiff competition from Bart Maf'lolln, 31, chief of staff for Rep. Henry Waxman. Margolin is backed by Rosenthal and Asiiemblyman Howard Berman. WATCHING -U.S. Defenae Secretary Ca1par Weinberaer vlew1 communht North Korean po1i- tion durf.na a tour of Korea'• demilitarized mne. ,,. ... 'NJMr)' ~ •PD•• ..... STORR HOURSa 9 A.M. -l A.M. LIQUOR· ·STORE l ~ I Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT /Tueeday, March 30, 1982 c .41 Free Dellvery Home or Onie• 646-6878 A Tradition for 60 Years 198? Sirvlng Nightly Tll 1 A.M. Convertibles in comeback DETROIT (AP) -In an effort to pump eome excitement -and additional aalea -Into the aluggiah U.S. car market, domestic automakers are beginning to reintroduce convertible. after a 1lx- yu.r abeence. Salet of convertibles in the next year probably will not amoant to more than about 76,000 cara - or 1 percent of the domestic industry's volume - but automakers say it's worth it. "Convertibles wouldn't have been IO attractive when we sold millions of Impalas and Caprices, year after year," said Jack Madejchick, a spoke- sman for General Moton Corp.'s Chevrolet Divi- sion. "Now the market ls fragmented to the point of 250,000-to-300,000~ lines. We don't want.~ miss a 10 000-aale opportunity like a convertible. '"Ther draw showroom traffic and generate publicity,' said Robert Marcks, manager of special vehicle projects for Chryaler Corp. The No. 3 automaker was the first to bring back the convertibles with the LeBaron and Dodge 400 models. Ford Motor Co. says it will begin marketing a Mustang convertible, and GM plans to introduce a Buick Riviera convertible next month, followed by a Chevrolet Cavalier convertible in 1983. Reservations Suggested &4s-1on VI1••AI· S'l'A'l''.l'.STICS: .. we're in Heri~e Plaza at the corner· of Cul. r and Walnut, in Irvine. 1\tf 'th·e faCts you need to come over and join us SAWN• ... •M...uu~~t-..-.nti.-..,.. ....... °'_ in bur grand opening celebration! equity, af!d S\\ing loans CaU your Nqt\borhood Branch Mll\llil=f (714) 642-7422 o nw~J EY SAV l ~J<;'.; ANO LOAN ASSOOATlON 360 £, 17ch Scree., c.o.. Meta, Store Hours: 9 AM • 1 O PM M1onday Through Friday 9 AM - 8 PM Saturday 9 AM -6 PM Sunday Banning • campaign snowballs BY STEVE MARBLE or .. .,..,,......,, Three Nt;wport Beach activis{ ' groupa that have united behind a referendum drive aimed at ICUttling the Ba.ri.ning Ranch de- velopment project claim their effort is "snowballing" and bound for Succefl8. Referendum leaders, appea- ring together at an afternoon press conference Monday, took turns criticizing city council members as favoring developers over city residents. "We have to stop this/roject before it's too late," sai Mike Johnson, a member of the West Newport Legislative Alliance and a referendum leader. JUE SOA Y MMH. H HJ 1'1!1.! OHAN Gf COUNTY C A l IF OR NIA 25 CENTS It was formally announced at the conference that the alliance, consisting of members from sev- eral West Newport homeowner groups, has been joined by two veteran referendum groups - SPON (Stop Polluting Our Newport) and RAP (Residents Action Plan). The two groups spearheaded a referendum crusade against the ' Irvine Company's Newport Center expansion project last year. MISSION COMPLETED -Space shuttle Columbia touches down safely at Northrup Strip at White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico this morning, ,,, ... 4 .... bringing astronauts Jack LoUSJna and-Gordon Fullerton back from more than a week in space. NASA T-38 chase plane monitors the arrival in foreground. ·The $124 million expansion plan was repealed by council members this year, at the request of the Irvine Company, before the matter wou1d have gone to voters. Shuttle craft hack safe a day late The three groups, hopeful the 75-acre Banning Ranch plan will be put to an election test, have just two weeks to collect about ~.200 signatures. (See NEWPORT, Page A%) Week of rain forecast for coast By JERRY HERTENSTEIN OftM Deltr Not Sblft · Intermittent rain that has plagued the Orange Coast for two days and was blamed for one traffic fatality Monday in Foun- tain Valley is expected to conti- nue through the week, despite brief interludes of sunshine. Tonight's forecast calls for a 10 percent chance of showers in- creasing to 30 percent Wednes- day, according to the National Weather Bureau. Cloudiness with scattered showers are due to continue through Friday. Rain Monday and Sunday, combined with that of the last few weeks, has brought the yearly total at or above the ave- rage for March 30, according to Emmett Franklin of the Orange County Flood Control District. Santa Ana has received .40 of an inch more than the March 30 yearly average of 11 .44 dating back to 1909, Franklin said. The county seat got .51 inches of rain from 8 am. Monday to 8 a.m . today for a yearly total of •11.84. Last year on this date 8.37 in- ches had fallen on Santa Ana, Franklin said. Huntington Beach received .37 of an inch of rain from 8 a.m. Monday to 8 a.m. today bringing the yearly total to 10.:>tS, .02 inches below the total on this date in 1981. Costa Mesa showed .19 of an inch of rain Monday and early today for l l.11 for the year compared to 7.72 as of March 30, 1981. WORLD ( Edwards Atr Force Base \ Columbia landing LANDING -Map locates White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico where the space shuttle Columbia landed to- day. Arraignment set for star David Crosby A white powder found in a car rented by rock singer David Crosby, arrested in Costa Mesa on drug charges Sunday, will not be analyzed for five days, Orange County Sheriff investigators re- port. Crosby, a veteM\" of the rock trio Crosby, Stills and Nash, was arrested after he allegedly plowed his rented Ford into a center divider on the San Diego Freeway near the Harbor Boule- vard offramp. Crosby, a 40-year-otd resident of Mill Valley, was reportedly on his way to an anti-nuclear rally at Doheny State Beach where he was expected to be reunited with former singing partners StepheQ Stills and Graham Nash. California Highway Patrol of- ficers arrested. Crosby on suspi- cion of driving under the in- fluence of a controlled subrtanoe. They didn't identify that sub- stance. Officers also said they found a film canister filled with a white, powder believed to be drugs, possibly cocaine. -Avalanches kill 2 skiers SION, Switzerland (4P) -Two young Swiaa skiers were killed in a snowsllde and three othen es- caped unhurt u a warm spell sharply 1ncreued the danger of avalanches in the Vala.is Alps, police said. NATION She didn't shoot J.R. .. Slqer-~ Colleen eansi:ould havt been · famoua liad she stayed in the " " leries and ahot J.R. PageB3 . . Re1ignation on economy Some U.111nM!nt8 of the economy are belna re- v'8ed downward from optinu.tlc to rellgnadon. P.,e ,C4. . WHITE SANDS MISSILE RANGE, N.M. (AP) -Framed by purple mountains and a bril- liant blue sky America's shuttle sliced through desert breezes to- day to crown its longest, toughest and most ambitious test flight. Three down, one to go and Columbia flies for hire. Weight on wheels came at 8:05 a.m. PST, on an unfamiliar run- way, 22 hours past due. The land.Ing ended an eight-day mis- sion that demonatrated Colum- bia'• versatility and stamina in space. The weather was as kind to astronauts Jack R. Lousma and C. Gordon Fullerton as it was inhospitable the day before. Skies were relatively calm -a stiff h eadwind instead of the cantankerous sandstorm that made Monday's return impoui- ble. "Everybody in America started breathing again when you made that landing," President Reagan told the pilots in a telephone call. "Our thoughts and prayers have been with you every second that you've been up there." After a ceremony here, the astronauts were headed bldt to Houston. The as\ronauta and their ship bad been in space 8 days, 4 mi- nutes and 49 9eOODds since launch from the Kennedy Space C.enter in Florida on March 22. Had the weather proved unacceptable Tuesday, Columbia would have Fonda, Kate • Win HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Ka- tharine Hepburn and Henry Fonda, the still-in-love oldsters of "On Golden Pond," were hailed as best actress and actor of 1981 at the 54th Academy Awards. "Chariots of Fire ," the British-made saga of two runners who won gold medals at the 1924 Olympic Games, scored a 1urpriae Monday night as best pictUre of the year. The picture, starring relative unknowns, won three other awards for score, costu- ming and original script. Warren Beatty, nominated in four categories for the heavily favored "Reds," won only as best director. His film of American radicalism and the Russian Re- volution also won for supporting actress Maureen Stapleton as the Cirebrand radical Emma Gold-. man and for cinematography by Vittorio Storaro. been directed to Kennedy's con · crete runway. But test landings. by John Young of the first shuttle flight, showed Northrup to be OK and the astronauts got the word to return on schedule. The fickle winds picked up as landing crews hustled to "safe" the ship. Columbia was n~t. su_epoeed to have come here originally; it was to make a third landing at F.d- warda Air Force Bue ln Califor· nia. But the Rogers dry lakebed wasn't dry enough and the back-up site became No. 1. . The unique spaceship -a rocket on launcbln«, a satellite in orbit and an alrplane on de.cent -had been in apace and retur- ned three times in just under a Oscars ,,,..,.,..... year. After one more flight, ex- pected late June, the shuttle will be declared operational and be- gin routine missions hauling car- go• space for military and commercial customers. · Flight 3 was flush with suc- cess: the rigorous fli1ht plan proved the value of Columbia aa a spacebome science platform; it showed the ship could deposit satellites in space and retrieve them. And it flaunted ille ship's flexibility -landing at a make- shift spaceport and staying aloft beyond its allotted time. Parroting the four men who had flown the shuttle before them, Lousma radioed: "Thia is really a beautiful flying machine.'' Valley youth killed in wet car crash I One Fountain Valley youth was killed and another was cri- tically injured after their car slammed into a bk>ck wall during a heavy rainstorm Monday eve- ning. Driver Steve Mcl!lroy, 19, of 18526 Santa Andrea St., was pronounced dead on arrival at Fountain Valley Community Hospital. Passenger Gary Puente, 18, of 18555 Santa Cruz Circle, suffered head and chest injuries, a hospi- tal spokesman said today. Traffic Sgt. Lee Pepka said McElroy's car wu attempting to make a lane ch.an.re on Magnolia Street between Slater and War- ner avenues when it skidded and collided with a pickup truck. John Gielgud, the wisecrac- king gentleman's gentleman to a m.ililonaire tippler in "Arthur," took his first Oscar, as best sup- porting actx>r. For Miss Hepburn, 74, it was a record fourth Oscar as best ac- tress. For Fonda, 76, it was the climax of a 48-year film career during which the Oscar eluded BEST OF BUNCH -Henry Fonda and Katharine Hepburn, shown in a scene from "On Golden Pond," earned Oscars for their performances. It was the first award for Fonda and a record-setting fourth for Miss Heobum. It ti.en spun out of control and struck a curb and the block wall. Pepka said. Both men were thrown from the car when it struck the wall, according to Pepka. STATE him -except for an honorary award last year. Too ill to attend the Music UPI sale imminent? SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A group of California bulinemnen headed by Tom Quinn of Loi Angelee has begun preliminary negotiaUona to buy United Prem International. the country's eeoond largelt news ~ .ervice, it WM reported today. Corona retrial costs mount YUBA CITY (AP) -The mua murder retrial of Juan Corona ha cost $3.3 million from the time it WM 1 ordered neatly four yean aao, an auditor told the Sutw County~ • ' COUNTY Affordable de1iper jeans woUki you believe deeiper-. tor under $4? Believe it at Orance County'• Goodwill Induatriea when •tQoodim" lell off the rw=lla. Piie Bl. Center festivities, F onda de- signated da~hter Jane to accept (See OSCAR, Pa1e ;Ai> · The accident oocurred at about 6:15 p.m. INDEX At Your Service Erma Bombeck L.M. Boyd Buainea Calilomia Cavalcade Clulified Comics en.word DMth Notices Editorial, •~t I SPORTS A4 B2 A6 C4-6 A5 B2 Dl-6 B4 84 D'l A6 B3 Horoecope Ann Landers Movies National News Public Notices Sports Dr.Steincrohn Stock Marketa Television 1beaten W•UM!r World News B2 B2 B3 A3 D'l Cl-3 82 C5 m BS A2 ' AJ , ·~. .. Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tuetday, March 30, 1982 N Al Participants silent on dooinsday game NEW YORI (AP) _:.The White Houae an4 the participants remain publicly silent about a five-day game of worldwide nu- clear war that reportedly Invol- ved more than 1,000 civilian and military personnel earlier thi1 month. Partlcip~ts signed an agreement not to dlscuH the game, which included lnfonnati- on claaaif1ed ,a.a top-8eCl"et, aa:or- dlng to one ~lpant who spoke to The ted Preas on condition be not be identified. The Wall Street Journal, quoting officials who requested anony- mity, reported details of the game, code-named "Ivy League," on Friday. It was the first time in 25 years that the command structure. and communications 1 systems that would be used in all-out nuclear war were given a institutions may pay up to 13.493 percent interest on six-month money market certificates, com- p,red to the previous 12.923 percent. The rate Is baaed on Monday's auction of abort-term Treasury bills, during which about $4 .7 billion in six-month bills were sold at an average discount rate of 13.243 percent. The rate was 12.673 percent last week. The government alao 10ld about $4.7 billion in three-month bills at an average rate of 13.399 percent. It was 12.553 percent of last week. WASHINGTON (AP) -A government barometer of future national economic health fell for the 10th straight month in Fe- bruary, but the 0.3 percent de- cline was far below the blg drops of the previous two months, the Commerce Department reported today. The decline in Commerce's Index of Leading Indicators ap- pea red to be a sign that the national recession is not over. However, analysta were likely to be encouraged by the small size o f the drop. The index is d<>· signed to forecast trends of the economy several months in ad- vance. FONDA FANS -Members of Henry Fonda's family group together to show oU his Oscar for "On Golden Pond." From left are Tom Hay- den, Jane Fonda, Troy Garrity, Brigette FOJ'.l· Mnlllhlite complete exerciae. da, Amy Fonda and· Yanesaa Fonda. Jane WASHINGTON (AP) -The Food and Drug Administration today announced approval of the first drug to help sufferers cope with genital herpes, the painful and incurable venereal disease that afflicts up to 20 million Americans. The FDA said the new drug. acyclovir ointment, will shorten episodes of the dis- ease, but not cure it. WASHINGTON tAP) -John W. Hinckley Jr. and actress Jodie Foster appeared in the same courtroom for the second time in 24 hours today as Miss Foster gave a deposition requested by lawyers for President Reagan's accused assailant, sources told ~ The Associaed Press. The sources said Hinckley was brought from his ce1l at the nearby Ford Meade, Md .. stockade for the cl06ed session before U.S. District Judge Barrington D. Parker. On Friday, Parker granted a request by Hinckley's attome~s to take · the deposition from MISS Foster, who will reportedly be out of the .country for several months. wrnrnarn Fonda accepted the award for her ailing fa- ther who oroke into tears upon seeing the award on television. Salvador offered unity slate Rightists invite Christian Democrats to share power SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP) -Rightist parties that to- gether won a majority of the votes in El Salvador's weekend election invited President Jose Napoleon Duarte's moderate Christian Democrats to join them in a unity government. But lea· \ders of the biggest rightist fac- tion said Duarte would have to go. The overture to the junta chief's party. which was leading in the election returns with just over 40 percent of the votes cast Sunday, came as the army for the second day battled leftist guerrillas for control of Usulutan, the country's fourth largest city . . and China have been under way deaths were probable because in Peking for 2 lh months. the villages hjd been buried. He VILLAHERMOSA, Mexico (AP) -A volcano that erupted in southeast Mexico buried three villages under searing lava and ash, and Mexico City newspapers said today that at least 12 people were killed. A Red Cross spo- kesman ig Villahermosa said officials cbuld not confirm the newspaper accounts that repor- ted 12 to 14 people de.ad alter the Monday eruption of El Chlcho- na l. However, he said some ~UillU~ said three villages of about 100 adobe huts each were buried under a blanket of ashes and bot sand. He said one of the villages, Colonia de GuayabaJ, disappea- red completely. LIMOGES, France (AP) - Terrorists are blamed for an ex- plosion that wrecked three cars and killed five pa11engers on the Paris-Toulouse express train, but t.he blast may have been acci- dental. WASHINGTON (AP) -Star- ting today, banks and savings ARRESTED -Country sin- ger George Jones and a wo- man companion were charged with poasession of cocaine af- ter police stopped his car in Jackson, Miss., for speeding. LAFAYETTE, N.J . (AP) - Weary rescue workers blasted at rock and earth and plowed into the side of a hill today in a last- ditch effort to free a state trooper trapped in a limestone cave for three days. Crews set off two explosives and tore into the hill- side with jackhammers and backhoes. trying to rip away the earth and rock over 48-year-old Sgt. Donald Weltner. The off- duty trooper had been trapped in an underground cavern since Saturday, when he slid into a narrow passageway while lea- ding a troop of Boy Scouts on a spelunking expedition in the 1.250-foot Crooked Swamp Cave. WASHINGTON (AP) Tough mandatory penalties for drunken driving are being pro- posed by the Senate Commerce Committee, which has approved . a bill that would financially re- ward states if they adopt a set of stringen~ standards. DEZFUL, Iran (AP) -Wes- tern reporters on their fl.rst visit in a year to the Iranian side of the war front found the Iraqis had been pushed back 24 miles and non-Iraqi Arabs among pri- soners captured during the eight- day offensive. Battlefield inspec- tions Monday showed the Ira- nians in control of the area due west of De-zful, site of Iran's lar- gest military air base, after ar- mored assaults on positions occu- pied by the Iraqi invaders since October 1980. About 2,200 POWs Violent lVeather will remain Winter storm warning issued for Lake Tahoe Basin. , and 70 abandoned Iraqi tanks and armored personnel carriers were seen on reclaimed territory near this southern city, the gate- way from Iraq to Iran's oil-rich Khuzistan province because there are mounams to the north and marshland to the south. WASHINGTON (AP) -The Reagan administration, caught up in delicate negotiations with China, is holding back a $60 million arms sale package for Taiwan even though it appears to have strong support· in Tungress The princi pal hang-up over the spare parts sale is China's in- slste{lce that the United States explicitly rule out selling advan- ced weapons to Taiwan and at the same time affirm that the pending parts sale would not be a violation of China's sovereignty. Talks between the United States SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -An unstable Alaska a.ijJnass that has brought violent winds, bitter cold and driving rain to Northern California will punish the area with turbulent weather through Saturday, the National Weather Service says. A winter storm warning bas been ilaued through Wednelday for the Lake Tahoe Basin, where ice, gusty winds and heavy fresh snow -as much as three feet in some areas - have made driving hamrdous. FT. IRWIN (AP) -Cold de- sert winds blowing up to 40 mph dropped off suddenly just after dawn today, allowing 2,300 pa- ratroopers of the 82nd Airborne Division to make a massive parachute jump into the Mojave Desert. Four troopen were Killed when their parachutes malfunc- tioned. High winda that had whipped aero. the sand all night I at Ft. Irwin dropped below the 13-knot safety limit at virtually the same moment the first of the C-141 J.4:.t _transports fr_!>m Ft. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat Claaain.d advertlalng 1141142-5171 All ottter dtpertmenta &42~321 Thomas P. Haley ~ -C-t .. CYIM Olloc., , Robert N. Weed ..._... Thomas A. Murphrne !o$lor L Kay Schultz lllel""-... Dw«lor ~ °"'*..,..• Michael P Harvey. -"91>.-.clor Kenneth N. Goddard Jr. Charles H. Loos ....... ldtlor MAIN OFFICE mw ... ..., st., COit• Mew, CA. Malit.-..:._ 1M0,C•t.Meu,CA.ftlo» CooyrJtM "91 0r-.. C•st ,.,..,.,... .. c-. Ne_..,..... lll""rlltlotla, .-..n.1 ,..._., ... w.MIM-'S lltl'tlft mey ... t~td wtlftoul ..-Cl•I ~m•llllOll Of'°""'"""-· VOL 71, NO.• Bragg, N .l:. came over the eas- tern mountains with the rising sun behind them. SACRAMENTO (AP) -The state Assembly's Health Com- miaaion has unanimously appro- ved a bW to permit Chinese-style roast duck to be hung in shop w indows. The bill, AB2603 by Ataemblyman Art Torres, D-Loe Angeles; flew on to the Ways and Means Committee Monday amid a flock of duck jokes. "Art, are you trying to feather your nest?" asked A.sllemblyman Patrick No- lan, R-Glendale. ''Thia is a new form of quackery." UKIAH (AP) -A man accu- sed of vanda.li.zing a railroad tank car, releasing toxic fonnaldehyde into the eource of dri.nk1ng water for 250,000 northern C"alifor- nians, says he will fight extradi- tion from Oregon. Douglas Ar- thur Collins, 38, has been charged with felony vandalism. Qeanwhile, emergency crews Monday began pumping the contaminated water Into the Ru.ian River to eue the strain on a rain-soaked dam. LOS ANGELl!S (AP) -Jewish 1Mden are .eking the removal of a high 9Chool h.ia=teacher who allegedly told ta that account. of Jewilh tbs durtnc the Nu:l bolocaUlt were "greatly ex.acaerated." German-born Dr. George Aabley repoctedly made the remarks lut Oc1ober while ' aubetitute teachina ln a French clall at North Hollywood Blah School. He wu given a dilCiplJ- nary transfer to Polytechnic W.'rit Llatenlllfl. •• What do you llke about the Daily Pilot? What don't you like? Call UM number below and YoUr "'"'ate will be rec«dtd, tranacr1bed and delivered to Ute appropriate editor. The same 24-hour anawer1q service may be \laecl to record let· ten to the editor on any topic. Mailbox contributors must include lbelr name and telephone number for verification. No rlrculltlon calls, please. TefJ m what'• on your mind. High School in Sun Valley in February after an outcry. BEVERLY HILLS (AP) - Actress Theresa Saldana, banda- ged and riding in a wheelchair, appeared in court today to tes_tify againat a fonner mental pauent charged with trying to stab her to death outside hef' apartment. However, Municipal Judge Jill Jakes ordered the preliminary hearing for Ar~hur Richard Jackson, 46, of Aberdeen, Scot- land, cloeed to the public at the • request of the defense. Miu Sal- ·da na, 27, appeared pale and drawn and was silent as a nurse accompanied her into the cour- troom. • Diamond Is the most popular gem used In the symbollc ring given on the occaalon of a cou- ple' a engagement. It seema en. appropriate choice becauM dla· mood Is the most dorable natural aubetance known. tt is 10 on the Moh'• Scale of Hardnees ... bVt that realty doesn't tell the whole atoty. The Moh'• Scale la merely a group of mlnerall arranged In or- der of locr..-ig hardnele. Scfatch hardnees can be mea- sured with greater precision by ,.,,..,. of an r.tNment known 81 a Sclerometer. When teated by lhlt modem eclentlllo Instrument. dlemond la found to be 1..0 ttmea herder than corundum (rubles and aepphlf•) which Is the next hardeet mineral Knowing that diamond It the hardest and moet lmperlehable of .. pna. we would truly hOpt the tentlrMnt ttlat motlvat• the gi- ving ot a diamond would be tqUally dUrable and llltlng. The metrltfle Of light and dla· monda It one that fiat Inspired ooupee tor ~ It II a mer- l'legt rhet holds a special ~ . -that the peMIOMI• fire and exciting ~II wll newr die. No wonder It It the choice of IO l'fteny romantlcl. ,,, Wlr .,,.. •• , UNHARMED -Jennifer Balsama, 9, fidgets as she and her mother, Deborah, answer questions at the Carlsbad police station aft.er the girl was found unbanned. Jennifer spent 14 hours in captivity, and polide believe she was taken by a man who has assaulted eight children io Los Angeles and Orange counties. @ &EM WISE bfilllance, dispersion. color. acln· tlllatlon and luster. and these all : result from the gem's Interaction with light. Brilliancy and dispersion are both attected by the 1tone's clar· lty and Its proportions. An over- abundance of l"'ernal marks will Interfere with the paasege of light IS will the wrong Po$1tlonlng of the atone'• facets. A clean. well-cut alone wlH allow the maximum ba· lance of brllllance and dlspertlon &llllanoe is the reflecllon of white ~om the 1n19flof of the Slone. llon, allo known as fire, Is the brMklnQ up of white light Into a ll11h of apeotral colpr1. The color of the atone also playa an Important pert here. The ablenoe of any COIOt In the dl9mond max· lmlzes Its brllllence. A yellow or l>l'own tinge ~ the stone. Sclntlllatlon and luster are al- • fected by the qu911ty of ~ stone'• P<lllltl. Sclntlllltlon It lhe fldl of . light from the aurtact that Is PfOtTIC)ted by rn<Mmtnt. Lwt« la Mtry 8wr c.r11fted Gemologist lhe gleam th•t 11 rtlleoted from BA RR. the rao.t surt1ce 81 you oeze c:t1- ~ •t the ston.. Soon to be wad? Llaht up your ll'f9I with • dlllmond. tf'a the ldMI "'"' to start a metl'tag9, to .. Iha way to a lt9tlma ~ ~ ar'ld The dlemond le depelldtnt on light tor -bNufy. For diamond'• • ' . .l "-uty !let In tf;e quality or ltt • ._ et ~ .,. • gll\ of loYe. enytlrntl ........ ......, 111••mr.•.w111.,,,... .............. .. .. • Orange coat DAILY PILOT/TUMdey, March 30, 1882 N Cl Dow Jones Final UP.67 Q081NO at.• Air Irvine plans aervice9 to Lo8 Angeles Interna- tional Airport from John Wayne Airport, aubject to Civil Aeronautics Board approval. The. service, designed particularly for executives · who have to make connections at LAX, is to be avai- lable on request sev~n days a week. One-way fare is · $36. ~ Air Irvine is located in the General Aviation Terminal at 19531 Airport Way South. Bank op ening set Huntington National Bank (in organization), a newly formed community bank in Huntington Beach, ls scheduled to have Its grand opening on Wednesday. The bank is located at 6531 Bolsa Chica St. Azpne pact revealed Nelson Research & Development Co., Irvine, has announced it entered into agreements with three companies for the development and formulation of products containing azone, a penetrant which pro- motes the delivery of drugs into and through the skin. The agreements cover specific product formula- tions of az.one with pharmaceutically active agents. The three announced are with Smith Kline Beckman Corp., for two products; Bristol Myeri/Co., alao for two products; and a United Kingdom-based company, the Pharmaceutical Division of Imperial Chemical Pro- ducts, Ltd. (ICI), for one product. Bre wery d eal eyed DITROIT (AP) -The Jos. Schlitz Brewing Co. of Milwaukee, which lost $20.6 million last year, is considering a proposal that would allow the Stroh Brewery Co. to purchase a majority of Schlitz stock, the two companies said. The Detroit-based Stroh said Monday it offered to buy 67 percent interest in Schlitz, the nation's thLrd-largest brewery. Stroh is the seventh-largest U.S . brewing company, based on sales of 9.2 million barrels a year. Shakeup at Wick es SAN DIEGO {AP) -Nearly half the directors at Wickes Companies have resigned after a seriefi of major divestitures and personnel changes announced by the San Diego retailing and building-supply giant during the last month. The executives who resigned Sunday after a board of directors meeting included E.L . McNeely, 63, longtime chairman and chief executive officer, and J ohn V. Drum, who was named president of the company less than two weeks ago. The company announced Monday that. effective immediately, Sanford C. Sigoloff, 51, who has a re- putation for saving struggling companies, would take over as Wickes e.hairman, executive officer and presi- dent. Foundation ponders sale PHOENIX (AP) -Lack of a dividend on Del E. Webb Corp. stock may lead the Del E. Webb Foun- dation to sell the corporation stock it holds, corporation President Robert K. Swanson said. The independent charitable foundation is requi- red by law to distribute to charities an amount equal to 5 percent of its assets each year, Swanson said. He said• Webb stock makes up virtually all of the foun~tion'a assets. .STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS Ill'# YON!~-...... "°"" --.... dW'lt ol ... ----Yori<,_.. ...,_, ~ ,,,,,, -._, ---... ~ol---IC--lllll:a c-.. -lr*""V .. ......., ., --......... -"""'9 ... ._.,,, .. --. Scllltt ..... ,,=,1'00 10 ') -~ Qr1ISo Mil •• '~ ... S.,G ff~ ·~ B: °'IOO ~ ao,100 t~ "" 429,CDD ,.._ ... ~ 01.200 13Vt 3'4.lDO 21'4 -~ =.T:-: ~= ~ ::j " JZ ... K.adllt m.oao '1'4 . " E'! m:: ~ ··~ 2SVt ,,_,,""/lT 24',IOD 2914 ... ~ IA0,1'00 ~ UPS AND DOWNS _,,, YOM IN"I -n.. -no 1111 ._ .. ..,y __ ._. ... .,.,.. __ _ ................. ___ .,._ _ .. _.o1_,.....-.. _ .-..-. ...... -···---_..,. c11 ... , .. 11• If•• ~ .._..,. ......... ~-. PMI ...,. ...,., _,,_ L,;.,, I tO,GI 1\11 •• HlluOllTt ,.,. 1~ • " _,.a 74.ACIO ~ • ~ ~ 9 10,400 '°"' + "' ...... .... 1ll4 +"' .. ,_..,... $1,JDO 1\li -... "-'t1M A 52,tGD "" -\It ArnlWi ... tCIO """ -~ ll!IN'Clr9 ~ ,_ -"" ,_, IWlu Jt, tCIO I '4 METALS NC:W YORK (AP) -Spot nonferrou• metal priOM today: c.....-74"·77 <*Ill 1 pc>\lll(I, U.S. delttnatlOnl • ...... 2'42 -'* • pound. Z1M 37-40 cent• 1 pound, Olllvered. Tin 18.6478 M•t•I• WMk compolit• tb, Akulil t 1e-n cent• 1 pound, N.V . ......., 1395.00 per ... ......,..13us.~ ITO¥ OL, N.Y. • SILVER Hendy & Herm1n, h .oeo per troy ounoe, GOLD QUOTATIOMs L.eMMt mMnlflO lhllno ts1t .&0, ort 12.75 • .._.. attemoon ftJOng t3tuo. oft IUS . .... IS28.82, oft IUS. ""*91111: 9320.83, oft 13. 1 t. z.I* L.ete lbdnO Nt1.00, oft '4.00 bid; 1321.00 ... . . MeMJ. a ~ onlY Cl•lt~ qvot• ai11.eo, oft .... n . la 9 t • onty dlllY ~ ti tUO, oft .11. ..... .,. onty ~ --.........., ~.Q. oft ts.83. .