Page 4 - The Michigan Daily- hursday, May 19, 1983 Activist housewife nabbed in LOS ANGELES (AP) A 51-year-old housewife who headed a booster group called Ladies Assisting Cops En- thusiastically has been charged with selling PCP to undercover officers posingas high school students, authorities say. Lois Szukala, who once joined a petition drive supporting tougher penalties for drug abuse, was among 228 alleged drug dealers arrested through the Police Department's "School Buy Program." EACH FALL and spring, the depar- tment installs youthful-looking rookie officers at nine of Los Angeles' 55 high schools. They pose as drug-hungry students, and at the end of their 3 - month stint, help in a single-sweep roundup of drug contacts. Szukala was arrested at her home in El Sereno on April 29 and charged with seven counts of selling PCP, a hallucinogen known as angel dust, and one count of selling a substance she represented as the hallucinogen. She faces a May 31, Superior Court arraignment and remained jailed yesterday, unable to post $15,000 bail. POLICE Capt. Robert Taylor, head of the Juvenile Division which runs the 9- year-old school buy program, said yesterday that a student cop at Lincoln High School was led to Szukala by her 22-year-old son's girlfriend. The girlfriend, a 15-year-old runaway, hassheen charged with possessing PCP for sale. THE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS ARE A GREAT WAY TO GET FAST RESULTS CALL 764-0557 drug bust "The officer was offered PCP and taken to her house by the runaway," Taylor said. "She(Szukala) didn't work at the school-she was a housewife, a m'other and a community activist who worked with LACE for about eight or nine years. I KNOW she had a very good reputation in the community and within the organization," he said. He added that she once canvassed door-to-door for signatures supporting stiffer drug- penalty laws. Szukala was appointed LACE president in February but resigned af- ter her arrest, said Police Capt. Clayton Mayes. Her colleagues in LACE and police at the Northeast Division, where the volunteers worked, described her as a devoted activist. "This was an absolute shock to me," said Capt. Dick Stevens. "The tragedy is that the woman spent hundreds of hours in police community work, cooking in the kitchen for banquets, coming into the station and making cof- fee and sandwiches during emergen- cies and leading the effort for her neighborhood watch program to prevent crime. "What might have caused-her to get involved in something like this com- pletely baffles me," Stevens said. "She was a friend." LACE member Esther Nunez, an eight-year acquaintance of Szukala, said she thought the woman was duped by girls she had befriended. "The girls had a lot of boyfriends over to Szukala's house" Nunez said. "You wouldn't believe the people that would come through here .... "She's a good person;" Nunez added. "She always got involved and like to help people. She hated to see kids on the streets and would counsel them and tell them to stay away from drugs." IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Senate conmittee rejects budget WASHINGTON - Ina surprise move, the GOP-led Senate Budget Comm- ittee yesterday rejected a bipartisan 1984 budget compromise and adopted a modified version of a low-tax, high-deficit budget backed by President Reagan thatwas defeated by the Senate just last week. The $149 billion budget, which goes to the full Senate for a vote today, calls for raising only $2.6 billion in new taxes next year, virtually the same as Reagan requested in his 1984 budget proposal. It would increase defense spending 7.1 percent next year, compared to the 10 percent Reagan wanted, and would spend $11 billion more on non-defense domestic programs than Reagan sought. The plan projects a record deficit of about $191 billion in 1984. Despite arguments over who is to blame for soaring budget deficits, the House quietly went along yesterday with Reagan's request to increase the national debt limit to almost $1.4 trillion. Senate OKs immigration revision WASHINGTON - The Senate approved yesterday a major revision of the nation's immigration laws that would make millions of illegal aliens already in the United States eligible for U.S. citizenship. The 76-18 vote came over the objections of Democratic liberals who charged that serious new discrimination will result from the enforcement arm of the legislation, which provides sanctions against employers who knowlingly hire illegal aliens. The measure, introduced by Sen. Alan Simpson, (D-Wyo.), would be the first rewrite of immigration laws in 20 years. It is intended to stem the tide of illegal immigration and grant amnesty to undocumented foreigners now in the United States. It is almost identical to the immigration reform package approved last year by the Senate but not acted upon by the House. A slightly differnt ver- sion is now pending in the House. The measure offers legal status as temporary residents to illegal aliens who entered the United States before Jan. 1, 1980. Those who entered before Jan. 1, 1977, could become permanent residents and then, after five years, could apply for citizenship. Syria vows revenge over Lebanon's peace pact signing Syria yesterday vowed to take revenge on Lebanon for signing the U.S.- mediated troop withdrawal accord with Israel and slammed the door on President Reagan's envoy Philip Habib saying it had nothing to discuss with him. "Syria and the Lebanese National Front will not let the agreement go without retribution," the newspaper of the ruling Baath Party said in Damascus. In order for the withdrawal pact to take effect, Syria must agree to simultaneously pull its 40,000 troops out of Lebanon along with 10,000 Palestine Liberation Organization forces. Lavelle cited for contempt WASHINGTON - The House voted unanimously yesterday to cite former Environmental Protection Agency official Rita Lavelle for contempt of Congress because she has refused to testify on possible wrongdoing within the agency. The 413-0 vote followed arguments by both Democrats and Republicans that Lavelle, by ignoring subpoenas, was in open defiance of Congress' con- stitutional authority to oversee the workings of government. Lavelle, fired as assistant Environmental Protection Agency ad- ministrator Feb. 7 by President Reagan, was the second top agency official cited for contempt as part of congressional investigations of the Superfund Toxic waste cleanup program. Anne Burford, who resigned as EPA ad- ministrator March 9, remains under a contempt citation the House voted in December. The citation against Lavelle will be forwarded to the Justice Department for presentation to a grand jury. Contempt of Congress is a misdemeanor punishable upon conviction by a maximum fine of up to $1,000 and as much as a year in jail. Minorities lead mn mayoral races Longtime political powerhouses were rejected in city elections in Philadelpia and Denver and in both cities minority candidates have a good shot at the mayor'a job. W. Wilson Goode, the son of a sharecropper, predicted yesterday he will become Philadelphia's first black mayor by beating Republican John Egan and Independent Tom Leonard in the November general election. Goode on Tuesday beat Frank Rizzo, an ex-cop and two-term mayor who was attempting a comeback after a forced retirement under city law. Denver will get a new mayor for the first time in 14 years, with a young Hispanic lawyer and a veteran politician facing a June 21 runoff. Federico Pena, 36, a former state legislator, polled 48,102 votes, or 36.4 percent, and Dale Tooley, 49, a former district attorney, got 40,733, or 30.8 percent. With none of the seven candidates winning a majority, a runoff was required between the top two finishers. 4 4 Why call the air Ines? Some airlines put you on "hold" and forget you, plus they can't give you the competitions lowest fare. call 769-1776 instead We charge only the airline rates and give you more service. Fast service...no waiting...lowest airfares available we check all the airlines. Vacation specialists, hotels, cruise ships, tours, car rentals, Amtrak, Eurail passes. FAST COMPUTERIZED RESERVATIONS Confirmation in seconds! Our computer prints your ticket and itinerary instantly. 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