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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-02-04 - Newport Harbor EnsignLet's Go Ski WWIRS The COITed: RadngWith Audit Your Colors To Gerald Ford Tax Retun1? Aid Business ,_ ,.,., Q.4C o,D 00 o,D u m C'\J Our Tax Tipster ...J <3 A Timely And Furniture c o W(l)>4 Photo Series Lists Your Odds For Exerutives ...J ...JU Q.,..(Jl rae r 4Celc((J See Sporting Life See Busmess See Business V>cro c trcnw -...J cn ...J< al~ • lf"'U tL o-t..JO ...J...J Q.. CD Inc ,::. =>=>c w ClCl -z THE NEWPORT ENSIGN • ESTABUSHED 1948 • 33RD YEAR • NUMBER 26 • (714) 673-0550 • SERVING ALL OF NEWPORT AND CORONA DEL MAR • WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1981 • 25 CENTS Newport 'Gold War' Over CHent Lists ------------------------------------------- U.S.Adcls Fuel To ODFight The city of Newport Beach is waiting to hear whether it and A{DUtrong Petroleum Corpora- tion will have to pay back as much u $1.5 million in federally-defined oal over- charon. The city's share could be as much aa $187,000. The overcharqes were made, the U.S. Department of Energy · aaya, on the sale of oil from 16 wells slant-drilled from county territory under West Newport into dty tidelands. NM.Dwhile, the 16 weU., shut dowa OD a city-won court ordet, wew faillDq to bring iD $34,000 a .... tlaat ...., woUI Onlia- arU~ eaJD, .ccorclioq to u MtiJut. by Bob Armttroog, pr..adent of the plivat. firm that h.• operated them aince 1969. And an Otanqe County Superior Court judge issued dual r..traiDinq orders agai.Mt the city and Armstrong Friday, to keep Anutrono from redrUl· inq, deepening or operaUng the weU. and to keep the city from constTucting any surface storaqe tanb or atoraqe pipes until it baa a court order giving it that riqht. The DOE Nov. 23. 1979, ordered the two parties to pay back $606,000, aajd Joe Devlin, city dJ rector of ut.tlllles. Smce then the overc huq .. and inter- est have qrown, and the oily ha.s no idea exactly how much it owes, Devlin added. Devhn accused Armstronq of failino to provide an accurate accountino of the overcha.rqes. Armstronq, on the other hand, said, "I am conJident that neither we nor the caty will owe any money" from the alleged overcharges. "We are foUowinq on the coattails of THUMBS-Texaco, Humble and Standard Oil Com· (Conttoued oo page 10) AWe& React To Closure Of&dlool& by lattU .. o Luncl-s..den OfJiciala at two local schools that were tarqeted last Tuesday for cla.u;e at the end of th•• echool yea.r were pbalosophtcal thl.l w .. k about the deciaaon "We're stiU absorbing the shock wave," said RM Waddle Sobool Principal Bill Kuhns. "It (Rea's cla.ure) couldn't ha" been avoided," Mid Jt\lhu. "With declan•ng enroU· D\eAt, we have been 1 .. able to oHer tiM ld.Dd of proqyaaa beloo ott.Nclat othet m.iddle tclloolt ln tM c:llstrtct." "l¥eryoae here hae bMa l:lt· Uno oa pJn• and needl• for ,...tal years," aa.td CorDN del War llementary Pranc:tpal IW lappele. "It dldo't come ae a b6v INrprlM. Of cour .. , we'd IO¥e to k"P tbe oelqhborhood ecMol, but I don't think the lt\icla .. wtll be harmed by IDOV· iDt.N Att.ct.nce boundary chenQea Mft IKM ,.t b..n ennouac:.d (C.tt.aMCI oa ~ 12) SHARIAR GHIASI IMAN FOROUTAN Staff photo by Ron Stone . Staff photo by Banv Slobln How (JCJ Iranians View Stonn Over Hostages lrJ )ba RochllD Radically cll¥er98Jll views ~~!.:.11!---...... ~ ... aDiAn INdent. at mine wlth reqard to the •uure and relHM ol 52 Americana u hostages. This 888ms to manor the reported widespread fac- tionalbm between their coun- trymen at home. The stngle common thread apparent an the vtews of these students, however, as theu contempt for U.S. foreagn pohcy toward Iran- an athtude in sharp contrast to theu lack of animosaty toward the Amencan people. Shahnar Ghaas1, 22, founder and spokesman of the Democrahc Assoctahon of lran1an Students at UC lr· vane, whach represents ap- proximately one-third of the eshmated 150 lranaan students there, saad, "The !raman people could no t tol- erate seemg the U.S. em· bauy nght an the mtddle of Teheran conducting spy ac· hvthes " Iran's setzure of the Amencan embasay there, ac· cording Jo Ghtast, "showed that the Iranian people dad not foxget the Amencan- inspired coup •oaioat Dr. Woheanud ..,_ldeqh in 1883," (-fticla i)t' daly 1M • to tile ...,...., reiiJD Of power in lru). '"The Iranian people eaw no raoluUon but to talte over the embusy," he aa1d. Ali Peiravi, 22, a Ph.D. candidate in electrical engineenng who ia a member of the Moslem Stu- dent Auoctabon and the lsla.mic Study Center, aaad, ''We have to look at the hostage sttuabon u a reac- hon to American foretgn pohcy towud Iran." In stark contrast to the posihons of Gh1ui and Pearavi, who assert that the kidnapping of Amencao dtplomats in Iran was devlS ed locally by lramans, another !raman studenl at UC Irvme mamtatns that lramans dad not make lhe decis1on to ludnap the Amer acans lman Foroutan, also a Ph .D. cand1date m electncal engm .. nnq, said, "I don't thmk bamans took the hostages by their own wall I thtnk they were taktng orders from Western fore .. , (Cooti.Duecl on pao• 14) MlsRlg Rosters LeadToSuit For $2 Million by Tlm Roberti Framed by a $2 milhon law- .Wt, a picture of a hiqh- stakea raooe wax between two Newport Beach mvestmenl hou ... Mlliog qold, auver and otheT precaous metals emerged from court documents obtaaned last week by Tbe Ensign. 1o the four-month·old legal battle waqed io county Supenor Court, a two·mch lhack stack of depa.ibona, declaralloll.8, documents and affidav1ts bas been filed a.lleqanq that. -A aal• broker tramee, fired after 10 dayt on the job at Monex IntemaUonal, Ltd., open- ed • rival lima Wlthm two l'lODlM dolaQ bu.UD-wit,b qold and .a.. la'NMOD &.ppM &oa ;,.. ..-. unpe•;'• all•a•IIJ ..:~ i \\ ~ chen I li.ftl; -The former train .. , I ant Alexander, who became chair- man of the rival firm'• boud, conducted a Sunday mommo run to Mone•'• off1ces to rum- mao• through the trasb cans where he reportedly saad the company dumped copaes of 1ls customer hats, hsts wh1ch Monex cona1den "trade secrets"; -Alexander, head of the Newport Investment Manage ment Corporallon, reportedly offered $2,000 cub and a cross country atrlme ticket to an ex-employ .. io return tor has teshmony an the court battle, -An NIMC ofhcer offered to seU a hst of 1,500 proapechve customers, whach was allegedly compaled from the "mtSappro- pnated" chen! roster, to a Newport Beach gold dealer Respondmg to Monex's charqes, NIMC and Alesander den1ed "each and every a.llega hon" conta1ned 10 the lawsu11 Tbeu atto rneys arqued thai the "alleged trade secrets and con hdenllalmformahon are matters wh1ch are. and were, an the pubhc domam (Continued on paqe 11) Airport Plan Flayed, Defended And Newport CouncD Votes Funds To Fight It A deep c haU as developtng between aupervtsora and q rand jurors, who accused the county fathers thta week of playmg pohhca wath the future of John Wayne Atrport. Jurors handed a 16-page cn- lique to newsmen which cJaamed that a muter plan ot a irport ex· pandon drafted by VTN C on· aolldated of lrvme should be · dlaCarded u unrealttt c MNnwhJle. the Newport S..ch Cat, Councal voted u~namously to apend up to $15,000 on new•paper ade •n the county "to build public •uppott aqa1n.t the propoe.d pJ..oa ... The •dt, to be couched In an "hon41!1l. ""~re ialbhaUoa.al toae ol Yo6ce," an •l•ed at alerbng the pibllc to U.e "'.._*" DO._," to. ol ~Dttal P~· erty value• and daruge to toeil bUJn acH••ty •f Ute exp&D· POD pUnt are pt1•1d. Newport C•ty Altonaey Hugh C oHan Mad the ••penClature ot la1l dollars lor th4t ads " J.gal ••"c• thev w11l rve • "nuhhr purpoee" by mformtnq res1dents of the "costs" of the anport ex· pansion The planned 11 ads are ~eheduled to run hom Feb 8 17 an The Newport EmJgn, The Rega ler, The L.A T1mes and The Dcnly PUot Tlle grand jury anaaated thai unprovlnq l~nporl under the maater plan for an •bmated $75 malhon would not provide auffa- caent lec ahh• tor future demands, and that the county a.hould ~Nrch fof eootber req onel airport aile by commas- • onlag still another study of avt.boo aeeda. The grad huy elao warned that the npervU.Ora miqht ytald to ·~ .. ol ~ iD the baa6a 111 cc...aaity" to npand aM ....... "To ,._... to Uwtt pre~~ure woukl M ~We ln • poUt.eal --· aM.t anworthy of tupefYiaOn -.e'-d to repr ... nt ell Oia•~ Cotaoty cihaen• rether thea IUIIill OIMt apecaal in· tereet QI'Otlp, H JUIOII 1Dilsted. Until LIMi tu1'J report Mad lhal. the aupervaaou were merely "aurprJMd that yet anolher study could be recommended " Now, Supervtsor Tom Rtlt"V o f Newport Beac h 11 "annoyed w1th the ed1tonal comment that pohttca w1ll play a pari m our dec11aona." He dented any suc h pwa1ble annuendo, and wad that such a charge "merely adds to lhe confumon wrroundtng the aaaue of atrport unprovemenl "Of courM, the master plan does oot deal WJth a propowd new recponal airport or one lor ~eral a~ahon We never 10 leaded for at to do that The VTN ltudJ wu commaaaoned to tell ua how to b.t improve the count,'• airport fec1lthH to mMt 9rowmg demand• lor a1r hevel," h. Mid. 'I'M JlllJ cl4l•aa that even tl 1M OCNnty ..,ande S7S mt1ho n lu uaptOYe fac hU•. at wall fall far shOrt of accommodahng .,._.D98T loads whac h 1t Ntd .. ., rwech 18 iaU ann~lly bY the year 2000. VTN forf'<:a I a (Coa ...... 08 fNt9e 10) l Freshly·painted and repatred, bookstore IS ready to open. S!Atft photo by Barry $Iobin Aclult Acids Feature For Reopening by Roger Angle Newport Beac h's hr.t and only adult book5tore-the aub,ect of a stx-month legal bat1le thai has reached the state Supreme Court-wall reopen th1s week- end, sa1d Jac k Tupler. manager And 1t wllJ have an added drmenston, somethtng 11 d1dn't have Last Oct 23 when tt was closed by arson "a pnvate vtdeo v1ewanq room, wath a couch and soft prllows, where people can relax and shut the door,·· Tupler aa1d "Whatever happens 1n there happens." Tupler sa1d, 1nd1 c ahng the sto re wtll not restncl o r pohce 1ts customt-rs' ac t1v111es 1n the v1ewmg room upechng a p•cket lme agamst the store when 11 · reopens Fnday or Saturday, Tupler aatd, "ThJS ltme we'll be ready lor them. We're gomq lo orgamte our own pickets " One of lhe organiZers of Fn day's expected demonslrahon, Kathy Helfnch wtfe of Newport Beach busmessman hm Helfnch who led a pac ket hne there Ocl 14, aa1d "We a re trymg to qet evervon~ we can to come down We bope to have some ktnd of demonatrahon f'nday We wanted to have a VIQil but don't know If we CaJ\ wo rk that out A 24 hour vaq1l would really be above and beyond the e&ll of duty "We are alao havmo a.n o rqaruung mHtJng Sunday et 2 p.m. at the porno bookttore.'' she added The Kheduled reopeDJnq ll • reault of ac hon by the atate Sup,.mt" Court, wbtcb lut ..0 stayed •n ecul.er deculoa by I Or•nge County Supenor Court JudQf' I hn K. T•otler Jr Thf' rlrer d«aiion, Nov. 28, held the I mporery etfect ol ntano the atore fro• r f'llnq al all pNeent loca· hon, 2930 w ... Cout H•oa....,. The lower court decwon had upheld c1ty ordanancea, pused 1n August, October and Novem· ber, that aet a moratonum on the openlDg of adult bus1neaes and then reslncted them to a zone that mcluded only Newport Center and the commerctal erN near John Wayne Auport Chaef Juahce ROM Bnd, who stqned the Supreme C ourt order. gave no reason for the ruunq Asautant Ctty Attorney Bob Burnham saJd the court "'baa many ophons It can hear certa1n lSIUes 1n 1he case and then send 1t bac k to the lower courl or 11 can hear the enhre (Continued on paqe 12) IN SHORT Scout Awa:rcla DI.D.aer The~ su .. r S..ver Aw.rda dinnel of tM Oranqe County CO\lnaU of loy Scout. of America will be held at the Dim.,land Hotel Thunday, Feb. S. Awarch will be Qiven to 18 voh1nteen for theJr .. rvtce to tcoutiJlq. Gcuolloe Help S.rvtce etationa are now r• qulred to provide refuellnq .. rv. ice. to .. verely disabled drivere without charqinq hiqber guollne pric•, accordino to leoia}ation which became effec- tive thil month. Help must be provided to driven wboee velUCI• have epecial liceDN plat• to ., placarda identifyino the driver• u .. verely disabled. Q&llouqe tot.led SSM,858, 113 Q.Uoaa, down 3.87 perce.at from Jut year and 2.88 pe.rcent from the pwrious IDOAth. y .. , to elate uaoe il down 2.97 percent over 1979 and 4.98 percerat bom 1978, accordi119 to Emeet J. Dronenburo, Jr., of the ~tAte board of equalisation. kPlau Robert S.dham P.1r10n and Jtate Schmitz will dUiew• the propoeed Oranoe Coat National Urban Park al the nut meetino of the Oranoe Co\1Dty Cout Aaociatlon Fri- day, Feb. 13 at 11:45 a.m. at the Irvine Cout Country Club in Newport Beach. R ... TVatione at $6.50 per per- eon may be made by mail to the Oranoe County Cout AIIOCia· tion, 1C582 Beach Blvd., Suite 224, HuntinQton Beach 92648. Teller To Speak Exempted are Mlf-Mrvice sta· tiona with remote controlled ou pumpe operated by a •inola cuhier which do not provide pump i1land .. rvicea. Abo exempt are convenience 1torn under the same circumllances. The law 1tate1 that auch Ita- tiona and 1tor• ahould provide he;p to handicapped where poeaible. Prla• Wlnn•r Dr. Frederick Rein•, pro- feaoy of phvaica at UC Irvine, i• the 1981 reoipient of the J Robert Oppenheimer Memorial Prize. Dr. Edward Teller will be the featured speuer at the next meetino of the World Afialra Council of Orange County Thuraday, Feb. 12 at noon at the South Coaat Plaza Hotel. Teller will ~peak on "Can the Uni•"Kl Stat" do Without Nuclear Power?" R ... rvation• at Sll per peraon can be made by mail to the World AHJ\in Council of Orange County, 611 W . Civic Center Drive, P.O. Bo~ 1926, Santa Ana 92702, telephone 835-2564. Members of the Corona del Mar High School Key Club helped the Corona del Mar Chamber of Commerce put out 100 flags with yellow ribbons along Coast Highway in observance of the day of celebration for the return of the hostages last Thursday. Shown are Key Clubbers, from left, Paul Harney, 16; Chris Austin, 15; John Wolfe. 16; Eric Freedman, 17; Chamber Prtsident Jerry Stewart. and Chamber flag chairman Craig Ryan. Staff photo by Ron Stone The award il qiven each year to a .cientilt in recoqnition of oulltandiDCJ contributions to the theoretical natural lciencea and to the philosophy of acience. City Gets PoBclng Costs For Moorings I cOWered lncom• Tax Aulstanc• Free income tax aQiltance trill be available through April 15 for all bandicapptfd and Nnior citizen• over the age of 62. Locally Mrvices will be pro- vided at the OASIS Senior Citi&ens Center Mondaya and Thuradaya from 9 a.m. to noon. For appointment. call759-9471. S.rvic" will aleo be provided at the Golden Timerl Center, 1!-C E. 19th St., Costa Mesa Mrmdaye f.rOib t Lm. to noon. ftone il 642-WS. J O.OJIDe Usage u,. of ouo.line in California continun to drop u November Unemployment Drops Unemployment in OranCJe County dropped to 3.5 percent in December from 4.1 percent in November and 3 .9 percent the previou1 year. Goodwill Conference Frederick M. IJnton, pr81i· dent of the Delta Group, Inc. of Newport Beach, will diacu. the art of deleqation durlnq the 1981 Conference of Executiv81 Feb. 9 to 13 at the Sheraton Anaheim. 1'Mevatt.~by Goodwill~ of America a.nd il ho.ted bJ the Joc&l Good- will ...UMIWiota tltctltty in San- t. Ana. by Roger Angle The city bas saved $46,000 a year in neootiations with the county over the cost of policing boat moorings in the harbor. More than a year ago, the county, as a result of a cost· benefit lludy, asked the city for $90,000 a year, instead of the current $35,000 a year. "After Nveral months of meelinCJI and correspondence," David Harahbarger, marine director, reported to City Coun- cil that the county agreed to a Nttlement amounting to $44,000 a year. Mked bow be did it, Harah- ba.r,..er Wei, "W • decided that we wern~l ooino to pay ufo:re""-1 the it would cost u. to perform' that aenrice ourNlvn." The county finally aqreed to e 6-foot Subs e Submarine e Mortadetla e Salomi and e Roast Beef e Turkey Breast e Pastrami e Vegetartan e sausage Cheese e Meatball ($1.75 to $2.75) e Ham & Cheese 173-1121 • 420 lrla Ave. • Co10na del liar A heart to heart gill for yourWentine. • Th1~ V.Jit•nflnt' ~ 0 dy I( I \If' ,,,.. ''"'' vuu ,.,., .. d ""''~ <tpl'C'ItJI ht•.Jrt our pcHet' lam chmd V.:JI<•Iltlrn.• htJ•~ -lmm l.mxll((•\, fMncc• Tht·y arf' f}() t!ach ,md flllt'•"urt• f'-4" x 4" Order by p/K)()<• Wtth MiiSI('f C.Jfd. V1w# AmNIC"rin hpn~s m ()r)(),JV~n Ch.Jrgt• Ftc.'t' gift wr.Jppng .. MJ dt.'llv ry c~nrwh<•rt• m ~'C'ttlk.•rn C~ltlr~rntJ flO C.'cl pill\ Yft~ fd\ ' \ that, be added. The city adminlatera the bill· ing and collect• the fees, while t~e county Sheriff'• Harbor Patrol "makes ture the riCJhl boat il on the riCJht moorinCJ" and otherwiM enforcn mooring regulationa, Harthbarger nid. About a year aCJO, the city raised the feea from $6.55 per venel fool per year to SlO per vetsel foot per year, Harsh- barger noted. The county will now rece1ve shCJhtly leaa than $1.75 per veSHl foot per year or $38,500 on the city'• 578 oU· shore mooring• and 87 centa per vessel fool per yea.r or $5,500 for ata 447 onshore moorinoa. The city tormetly paid $1.20 per foot per yeu for otfahore moorino• a.od 60 cenll for on- ahore moorinoa. Alapoat Schednled A pretrial hM.riDQ 1Jl the could be cut fro.m a ,.ar to two 4-yeu-olcl aU brouQht by montha. Newport Beech and county The county il oppoeed to the homeownert aoaintt OranCJe move on the theory that emo- County for emotional diatr811 Uonal diltr ... or lou of property and property damage allegedly value would dlffer from plahatill caUMd by over-flyino jet aircraft to plaintiff, Robert Nutlman, froiD John Wayne Airport haa ... 11tant county counNl, Mid. been ..t fo r Feb. 6. A trial date hu been Nt for Superior Court Judo• Ray· March 30. rnond Vincent ia ac:heduled to rule on a motion by the bomeownera' attornay to pare down the number of plaintiffs in the 1uit from 80 to 10. The pretrial hearinCJ had been 18t for lall week but wa a pollponed on the county's request for further hme to prepa.re a r"ponae to Santa Monica attorney Jerrold Fadem's motion. fadem, repreeenting the reaidenta from Santa Ana Heiqbta, Dover Shores and Bay Shores under the fllCJhl path of the airport, said that by eelect- inq 10 representative plaintiUs for the trial (with the Judgment applying to the remaining 70 p)aintifft) the time in court Altpoi t Plan To Be Pre8ented County official• will present a public slide ahow on the con· troveraial airport Master Plan, and Noile Control and Land Use Compatibility (ANCLUC) Plan Thuraday, Feb. 5. Norman Ewera, p)anninCJ of· ficer for the airport, wiU answer questions during the 8 p.m. meeting at Mariner's Branch Library, 2005 Dover Drive. The plan, which may be voted on by the Orange County Board of Supervilora Feb. 18, projects an increase in average daily departure flights from the pres· ent 41 to 55 by the year 1995. It alao projecta an increase in terminal eize from 27,000 square feel to 240,000 square feet, and an increase in the annual number of passengers from 2.56 milJion in 1979 to 6.1 m•lhon m the year 2000. It also calls for new zoning requlallons for Santa Ana Heigbta, including the purchase of residenc81 or aound Insula- tion for hom" theTa. The city Qcl var~ ci~ qroup• have protelled the ex· ~on plane. Copa .. are available at city branch libraries. Irvine Enclonee ftew AbportPIIm Tba propoaed 'master plan for John Wayne Airport CJ&ined an endoraemenl from the Irvine City Council Last week. It waa a qualified endor ... ment, however. City officials said they would alao Uke to ... a plan to improve the road tystem around the airport prior to ap- proval of increased service levels. SPOftSpoDaon Allport Meeting . An environmentalist- reaidentialist group that is op- posing airport e~pansion is holding a public meeting on the countyts Airport Master Plan. AU sides of the issue are ex· peeled to speak, said SPON President Jean Wall, mcludinq aarport manager Murry Cable, Mayor Jaclue Heather, and per· sons from Ma nners Community Asaociahon. The meeting lS scheduled for Tuesday, Feb. 10, at 7:30p.m., at Promontory Point Clubhouse, Watt saad. Cable, HeatberTo Dlacua&Abpoat The proposed airport master plan w1ll be the topic at a town meeting to be held Fnday, Feb. 6 at 7:30a.m. at the Sheraton Newport. Speakers will be Newport Beach Mayor Jackie Heather and Murry Cable, airport manager. Also attending will be Hugh Cofhn, city attorney; Water Gilfillan, city airport onaultanl; And Doug Wilson, aclminiltralive oUicer. Cost for the breakfut il SS. ReNrvatioDJ cap be made at the Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce, 644-8211. Grant Goodeve of the television show e'tght Ia Enough signs autographs for Kim Fine. 13, left. and Joy Broome, 14. both of Ensign School in Newport Beach, during the celebrity luncheon held Saturday, Jan. 31 at the Balboa Bay Club to honor top readers in the recently concluded Multiple Sclerosis react-a-thon. Students from over 100 schools in Orange County railed over $70,000 as a result of the read-a-thon. St.H photo by Barrv Slobln b,-JOha ........ D A pl•nned coaununity &Oo.lnQ for tllelma. Cout wu approv· eel by the Oran9e County Plan- n1D9 C~Jon help· tnv let the ataoe for develop- mnt of the coutal area. The aoninv will QO to the Board of Superviaora, which NrUer bed approved a 1 .... ~peeific Local Coa.at&l Plan for the 9,424 acrea of once- embattled territory. In ita approval, the com.mia· lion overrode a county ataJJ ob- Jeotion to the incluaion of ofiice IJ)ace u a MCondary u.M to two touriat-orienled commercaal projecta planned &lonQ the cout. The CeWomia ~out&l Com· miuion ataH bad &lao queationed conatruction of oUicea, m · cludlnQ profeu1onal, medic41 end admmiatrahva. facUJtlee, ln an area surround.d by perklend durtnQ a preUrrunary revaew oJ the Local Coaatal Plan. lrvtne Co prOJect menaQer Rlck Cermak saad the ofhce u.aea were needed to mcreaae the ecooomac v1ab1laty of the .. asonal. tounst facilihea by in· teqrahnq them wtth year round uaes. He saad the ofhce parkanQ could also be used by beacb- Q08fl dunng weekends. The Coastal Commtu1on'a maan concern, accordanq to Cermak, was that there was no assurance that the development would not turn out to be prunaraly an offace complex. But he added. "I thsnk we can per· auade the Coastal Comm1aaion that th.OM UMe are not ooino to dominate." He aaid that ~ office uaee would be dea1gnated a aecondary uae, which in the lanquaQe of the local coutal plan would Qive anyone the right to appeal the uaea to the Cout&l CoJDJDi.aaiOJl. In brief, the zonmQ would allow: -1.733 mole-family hom .. on 30,000-to 60,000-aqu..re-foot lots adjacent to Corona del Mar; -267 unJta of medium-denaity development on two parcela totahnQ 58 acrea; -5,000 acrea of open apace; and Actions -two commerCl&l developments encompaaang 350.000 aqua re feet of (Igor apace in addition to 2;d'Oo hotel beds. The largeat commerctal proj- ect would cover 90 acr" at the- corner of Pacilic Coa.at Highway and propc>Md Pelscan Hilla Road mteraec:hon at Cryat&l Cove. by Tom Bennett DeclarinQ that "ripe tomatoea and rotten eqva are for aale in the back for $1 apiece," Michael Faacher, executive director of the California Coa.atal Commia- aion, faced a room full of bia arch-enemiea-California builders-Monday nivbt and de· f1antly told them the California shoreline 11 the place moat "feasible" for affordable boua- inQ. The larQe crowd Qathered at the Airporter Inn for a dinner sponsored by the Orange Coun· ty c hapter of the BuildinQ In· dustry Assocaation listened polit~ly at firat and then Qrew more restive by the moment. Fischer told them, "In the Coastal Zone, 11 is moat feasible to include low-and moderate- income unita, becauae the profit marQm there IS large enouQh to mclude those additional costa." The Coastal Commission ia forb1dden to apply 1ta requue· ment for 25 percent affordable housing U a developer can prove it ia not feasible to comp· ly. "But 1 don't know of any pro- ject ever rendered mJea.aible because of Coutal Commiuion requirementa," Fiecher laid. He told the buildera he end MICHAEL FISCHER developera, including former Ir- vine Co. Preaident Ray Watson. worked out a rouQh formula defininq "feasibility" as yieldinq 12-20 percent on the total coat of a project. "There ahould be no argument between ua," Fiacher said, "on the need for reaale controls; on the incluaion of low-and moderate-income units m lar9e projec~; and inclusionary hous- inQ in condomuuum conver· aJona." Gordon TippeU, BIA proqra.m chairman, addreaed Fiacber afterwarda, aayino, "You've madeaome a.uumptiona during I your apeech, Michael. I hope you don't think our polite ailence meant we aQree wtth you." Othera were leu cord1aJ. A member of the audience sa1d, "If you people (in the Coastal Commisaion} qat Involved 'in; aay, automobiles around here then we will have to have af- Jordable Rolls and affordable Mercedes." Fischer referred hardly at all to the Local Coastal Proqram for the 9,370-acre Irvine Coast, beaded for a hearing soon under a July 31 deadhn w1th the LCPs of two-thirds of aU Cllles and counties in the Coastal Zone (including Newport Beach) shU to be processed. Fischer did agree w1th Peter Herman, adrniniatrahve atde to Supervisor Tom R1ley. when Herman asked from the au- dience whether the Comm1s - lion's staunch Lnterest m resale controls-and Oranqe County's staunch oppoa1hon to them - maqht endanqer pauaqe of county LCPs. However, an Irvme Co of· fic1al Mid aiterwards the aub1ecl of reaale controla miqht be con· aadered a moot pomt for the ap- Grier Retires As HuDNin Services Chief W.roaret G1'ier, the con- trovel'aial dJ1'ector oJ the coun- ty'• Human Se1'Vic .. Aoency, ba.a handed the aupe1'Viaon another controveny. the battle. Jtnown u a hard·drivinQ, no- nonaenae adm.iniatzator and ac· cUMd of ahowinQ httle feeling for her aubordmatea, Miu Gner often wu embroiled in con· troveny. And aha aeemed to relish it. She waa named to head the unwieldy, trouble-plaqued Human Servicea AQency more than three yeara aQo. and 11 has amce been in almost constant turmoil. lfe1' aurpri.H reaJonation eUec· tive March 1 leav .. them to find ~ auccesaor to complete the reorganization of the unwieldy 11uperagency. ReStrooDIS 'Considered' It won't be eaay, aupe1'V.-on sa1d, addtnQ that they don't have any idea who would want the JOb, or bow lonQ it will take to imd her replacement They indicated they would QO nahonwide for recruitment. Gner, 60, w11l have com- pleted 32 years of county ser- VlCe when she leaves and becomes el1q1ble lor a S47.000 annual pens1on She started as a aoc1al serv1ce worker m 1949, took most of 1955 off, became a probahon of- hcer on her return to the county payroll, and m succession became a probahon oH1cer, 1uvemle court referee and about 15 yeara ago was appomted ch1ef probahon oU1cer by the late Supenor Court Judge Karl Lynn Davta of Newport Beach. The appomtment by the Judge was unexpected. The auper- vlsora always had chosen the c h1ef probahon ofJacer, apd 'hey c hallenged the authority of the court to do ao-and lo~t The Citt Council tarQeted four potential aJtea for public rutrooma as it continued to d.iacuu ita Local Coutal Plan Monday ntQht. The counc1l chanqed the wordinQ in the LCP to state that at wtll "cons1der" pllicing reatrooma at West Jetty Park, Las Arenas Park, the Balboa Branch library and between Oranqe Avenue and the Santa Ana R1ver rather than mandahng that restrooms be constructed on those allea. Counctlman Paul Hummel, m malt1nQ the motion to the chanqe the wordinQ, stated that the placmQ of reatrooms on the beaches needed "to be thouQhl out in i~ entirety" before they were actually built. The councal alao left ataelf open to placmg temporary reatroom facilltiea at the 11tes rather than butldtnq permanent facillhea. Councilman Don Streuaa aaad temporary reatrooma might be awtable for Home Financing 2nd Trust Deeds available now! Purchase a new home Make cash available from your present home Fast, Dependable Service Linda Flynn at 832·5200. the ailea aince they are only needed three months out of the year. In otber acllon, the counc1l voted to amend ala LCP to m - dacate "support" of Costa Mesa 10 that city'a b1d to build a sma ll c raft manna rn the West Newport/Sante. Ana RIVer area The council asked also for a staff report to be cons1dered at 1ts Feb. 9 meehng on an lrvme Co. proposal to ded1cate 58 acres of the mouth of B1q Can- yon m return for breaks from the c1ty on the developer's other construction proJects 10 Newpo 11 Beach. The council also changed three undeveloped parcels at In sparation Pomt to res1denhal land usea. The onqmal draft ol the plan called for the lotr~ to be earmarked for "rec reahonal open space" and to be purchas ed wtlh alate funds Councilmen Hummel and Strauss voted agamst the -:haoqe ---------- prox1mately 2,000 estate-zoned uo1ts planned fo r the cOdal The un1ts may sell for as muc h as $5()9.000 ap1ece And on the subject of af- fordable hous1nq, Ptke OUver. publlc pohcy analyst for the Ir - vine Co , sa1d ''several Silas," all of them outs1de the Coaatal Zone, are bemq cona1dered for off-s1 te sahsfac hon of Coastal CommiSSIOn requirements. What had transpared was an mtense evenmq a qu1ck course 10 Coastal poiltacs-in wh1ch BJA member!> ch1ded F1sc her, and he rP.sponded by defendmq the Comm1ssJon's record approval of 5.000 hous1ng u01ls and 97 percent of 40,000 per- mits applied for s1 nce the c rea· lion o f thP Comm1ssaon by the C oastal Ac t m 1972 No slatP agency has process ed d S manv perm1ts w1th as great a n app10vdl ratE' as we have," F1scher sdtd The CommiSSIOn over!.ee!> 1.100 m1les of COdstlme I 3 mtlhou tC res I rom O rPgn n In Mex1cv. u!l lcHQ£' ar. are~:~ a f> New Hamp~ohn£_ _ 1/iUJry hnl'S a..\. In Hilary lmes & associates 416-31st Street Newport Beach 675-4374 "Let me show you how having one insurance agent can make life stmpler than havtng two or three .. CALl ME • .. ,.,., .. ~ ,,.,. f Willi It,.,.,. That project could have 1,500 hotel rooms in addition to 250,000 aquare feet of commer· ci&l apace and a 50,000-aquare· foot conference center, ac· cording to company plana. BuilchnQa could nH 10 atonea above grade. The other 11te at the exten.a1on of Sand Canyon Road would be 35 acres. The development could include 250 hotel beda and 50,000 square feet of com- mercial apace with a four-story he1ght hmitation. On another taaue, Cameo Shores resadents obJected to a 28-foot (two story) be1Qht llJIUt on the res1dentaal units propoaed for an area adjacent to theu homes. A apokesper10n for the Cameo Communaty A.saoc1ation. Audrey Moe. aa1d they had earlser en· dorsed the plan under the un- pression that homes would be hmated to one atory. "The aup· port of the aaoc1ation baa been V.I.P. ERVICE No. it didn't snow in Corona del Mar last week. However. one local resident went up to the snow and brought enough back to make this snowman. which stood at 405 Heliotrope OVet the weekend. It was cold enough, however, for snow to cover Saddleback Peak in the Santa Ana Mountains and to make local residents shiver Friday night. S11H pholo by Barrv Slobltl betrayed," abe a&id. The aaaociahon ulted for a 14-foot Umit, fearinQ that two atonea would block ocean views from homes and a community park. But the cotlliJUISion backed t.he 28-foot limitation, while in· dicaUJlQ that ruidenta abo~ more appropnately addr ... "their concerns to the commiuion at the tune of lite plan approva.la. The I1'Vine Co. had requested a 5()... foot Umit. A service facility with executive lounge and free coffee while you wait for your car to be serviced by fac- tory trained person- iiiiiiii nel. (71•) 636 2333 For Appointment F»ORSCHE+AUDI NOTHING EVEN COMES CLOSE FREE! BLOOD PRESSURE TEST Whale Cruises Wflti.OAY~ 10 4\M \\ lt f\( ~()\ 9 AM& 1 PM Adull' ~R \ h1ldr~n J Come to FULLERTON SAVINGS 2523 Eastbluff Drive Newport Beach Office 644-7173 FEB. 2-FEB.13 Monday· Thurtday I a .m. to 4 p.m. Frkllly I a.m. to I p.m. A Tough Dedsion The closing of Corona del Mu Elementary School and Rea Middle School laat week wu an inevitable result of the decline in enrollment taking place throughout the Newport-Mesa Unified School District. Every time a school is proposed for closure, and quite a few have closed in this district in the past few years, parents at the school complain loudly that their school shouldn't pe closed. They want it kept open, even with a reduced enroll- ment and smaller classes, so their children will not have to attend a school in "another neighborhood." Most of these parents are the same people who com- plained loudly about high taxes and poor prO<}rams in the schools. They fail to realize two things: Small schools are more expensive to operate, and small schools are limited in the quantity and quality of courses they can offer. In addition, neighborhood schools are a recent phenomenon, caused primarily by the extreme growth rate of the past 25 years. Prior to that, nearly all children attended schools in another neighborhood with a few schools serving a large geographical area. The Newport-Mesa school district is correct in closing schools and consolidating programs as student popula- tion in the district drops. It would be easy to keep the schools open to appease parents who want to keep their local schools and teachers who want to keep their jo.Q, and teach smaller classes. It is more difficult for those affected, but better for the district as a whole, to retrench to fewer schools which can offer a full educational program. -LP The First Step It might be said that as much for image as for cam- paign promise, Ronald Reagan's first major decree has been to abolish federal controls on oil production and pricing. It was a move interpreted as setting the tone for fur- ther deregulation of industry, for moves giving business back to business and thus reversing the Big Brother edicts of the Carter Administration. However, Reagan's action wu·ju.mpec:l on immediate- ly, and not surprisingly, by tho. who oppoee hia political philosophies and interpreted this deregulation as a step toward gouging the co.nsumer. It should be pointed out, before such argument gains credence, that the controls were to be removed, anyway, next fall. Whether Reagan wu in office or Jim~ my Carter, the limitations on production and pricing were scheduled to be terminated September 30. So, lifting them was not Reagan's idea. Lifting them sooner was. We will see gasoline prices rise. And since this means an increase in the cost of living, it will not sit well with anyone. There is another prickly aspect of this: the stag- gering size of profits reported by the leading oil com- panies in the last 18 months. Since it was possible for the companies to reap such profits under regulation, some observers are saying, why not let them use these funds to hunt and produce more oil rather than deregulate and thus increase the amount they may take from us at the gas pu mp? The subject is more complicated than this easy excur- sion into its implications. For the moment it is necessary to regard this act as the beginning of the turnaround which everyone hopes will slow, then throttle inflation. It is the new regime's opening gun. It is the Big Change at its inception. One thing for certain: It should not take long to find out whether or not this is going to work. Within a matter of months the oil companies will be making their public reports on how much money has been taken in-and how much is going out in exploration and production costs. And, more importantly, on whether or not we are becoming less dependent on foreign oil. -BRS 2721 E Coeal Hwy . Coroo. d•l Mar. CA 92625 Publl•hed ""kly on Wed~y ld1lonaland S.t.. phone 673-0550 CtrcuJ.t10n phone 556-44eQ HDIBDT W SUTTON . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . • Publ•~•r !UHT srtoes • . . . . . .. .. .. . . . . . . .. ld1tor ULAND POUND . . . . . . . . , • . • . . . • . . A.loe•a .. ldllor LARJtY PAl.MIR . • • • • . . • • • ....••.• Ad .. tU.tlnv Director JIAN HAWIU'ItTON . . . . . . • • . . Societyud r-.lon ldltor NURRA Y OUUUC • • . • 8pot«ft9 W.ld.ilot JIOGIR AHGU. JIW llOCHUN and rt:M ROIDlTS . . ltepotMn !AMY SI.OI'" and RON STONI . Photoqrapb•n DA.LJ HIPW . . . . . . . . . . Production W.n~r T•• f( •.. ,.,.. £~..-,.. (Usrl 441 170t -............. .,_ • ,.. .. ...,.., ~ -••' .. ," •1411~"' ho a'"',.,~~ tlat..f W..• 14 1 .. 1. • .lf..4 '" r-••"''-' A 2101'11 "' S..,.tiOit C...tt h 1 1~0' Coalftly <If ();#.... .... .. Of c.J.e.t~le ..... by , .. _ lkre<Jt 10 cfMittW 1\1 fWilll .... all I ••l·l• ""'"' .. , .. ,.,_...., ...... ,,. , , ... , ,_,.. .. ,.,. ._..,......,.. .., •u e .... "' .....,..,.. ..._., • .,.. .,.w.~ •" I VIA• _ .. ,...~C' .. , -.._, •• ..-. ............. ._ ... ..t ................. ._ c.. •• ~ootur'"'' -.o .,., -· ••ae,~ w." .. ' II •• ••..1•• "" ""'"'"' ........... G--.............. . ......... a. ...... c. .......... ,. .. _,_,.. liN"--•-~~, •~ ........ c .... ._ ~to ,. •M ••t ''~ Letters To The Editor Rep ly to Kappele To the Editor: In my estimation, it would seem that Nr. JCappele ("A Prin- cipal Replies") ia suHerinq from either a convenient attack of amnesia or an acute case of hypocrititua when he states that where a child ia educated is an incoDMquential part of a child's education and that the conC4tpt of the neighborhood school is of little or no consequence. Five years ac;JO a man and his wife requested an interview with Mt. ltappele who wu then the principal of Marinera Elemen- tary Sc~. This couple luid- jut moved to Newporl B.ach from Northern California Wlth theiz two p,..achool-•ged eons and were tryinCJ to decide whether to plac:. their sons in the public school system or 1n one of the private achoob in Newport Beach. After talldng to the principals at the two major private achoola in Newport Beach, they came to speak to Mr. Kappele. ln that meeting with Mr . Kap· pele, the father stated bow im· pressed he was at the early ages that the private achools were teaching courses in language and advanced math. Mr. Kap· pele replied that the "pubhc school. could do the same if thev chose to po .a," but aaid . "I can ... no advantage to rusbinq their education." Jn Mr. Kappel•'• words, "We could teach a chimpanzee calculus in the third qyade if we wanted to but what is he goinq to do when he gets to the ninth qrade wath all the other children? The child will either lose interest alto- gether m a math class made up of classmates his own age who are two or three years behind him academically. or be will be put into an 11th or 12th 9rade math class where he can fun c- tion academically but will be totally lost both emotionally and socially." The mother asked what other major differences could be ex- pected in the educational ex- perience of then two aona in the public schools versus a private school education. Mr. Kappele's reply to th•t queahon was to J point out the "emohonal ad· vantagft 1n.herent an the local neighborhood elementary achool" u opposed to the commuter-type prwale echool. The irollic thing about the m .. unq lh.t tho.. two p.rente h•d willa )II,., IWppele wu that 1>.-.d upon Nl'. Keppel•'• vaew. on tlwt relative value oJ • neigla.bik~ public educahon over a pri._ate educ.Uon, those per•nta decided to place the\t children in the N•wport·NeM UDihed Public School •yalem. The •INainc;J pert ol thU atory 11 that tlDbebowa to Mr. KeppeJe, tlae um• of thOM two parent. jut beppeoed to be Tom and loealiDdWUI~MS. .. ., Q uick 'Copter To the Editor: (Tbe following was sent lo Charles R. Gross, Chief of Police, Newport Beach) Dear Chief Gross: On Jan. 25, 1981, I had occa- sion to make an emergency call to the Newport Beach Police Dept. becauae someone was vandalisinq my property in Corona del Mar. While I was on the telephone to the police, it wu no more than a few seconds when the police helicopter was over my home, and the intruder was apprehended shortly thereafter. I want you to know, my wife and I feel extremely MCure k.nowinq there is this type of protection in Newport Beach. Yours very truly, Richard W. Johnston Special Letter To the Editor: At a tune when the popularity of the family unit is at an all lime low-and living in an area where divorce prospers and "livinq together for financial reasons" is normal, I felt a need to send you a copy of our Christmas blessing written by our 24-year-old son. It made our everung special. May your New Year be happy and healthy. Ann M. Gusta.Don (a proud and happy mother) Editor's note: the son's letter lolJows: Christmas bas always been an occasion for our family to qather all its particular parta, no matter how diverse. and put together one of the most beautiJul units I can imaqine. We are genuinely unique but there IS harmony in the whole and we do care for one another. Down through time we've lost a c haracter or two, but we've held fast to tradlhon with some c;Jreat recruits. There is strength, spark, funk and fun here, we can and we do make things happen, JUSt like "T'' and John Wayne we are a rare breed. We love one a.nother, we respect one another, we •re 'loyal to one another. we help 1 one another, we care about each other. The power of the positive, ou~ destination is the bri9htest star. Wonderlove "T'' is here-- there ia no more fear. Let's come t09ether more olten than juat once a y ear! Robert Thoma.a Gustafson Dec. 24, 1980 Parb Not Needed To tlae lditor: J wu •m•zed to rMd an arti· cle OD •d4itional p.~b for Newport Beach in an iuue of The E.migu. Where bM Wr. Whitley been for tM put eneral ,.a.ra? Hu he been .U..p lib Rip Van Winkle? The voten of Newport Beach .trcmqly defeated u iD.itiatin on thia nbject in 1977, bui.oq their opinion. OD the co.t of pur- chuinq Mid land and the high co.t of m.ainten.ance for same, at a time when we could fonee a major tiqhteninq of available money to do all of th ... thmg.. Further, there wu no proof of our needin9 more and biqCJer pub, and there u very Uttle UN of OUJ' parb today 1 8llC8pt for our beach•, and we con· atantly he&r of the high co.t of keepinq up our beech•. Counc:ilman HWIUil81 wiaely pointed out the hiqh ID&intnanc:. CQita which are in· oreui.Dq 8'Nl"J cLay, ud pointed out th.t, "The co.t of mainttin- inq the beach• 111 ferocioua." w. pr...atly haft 25 pub const.ti.AQ of 100 •cr. ol lud, and 224 acua ol beaches foz a total of 324 &OJ'• oi pub and bMch•. . Uainq the city's own fiqur• of co.t pez acre per yee.r, the m.ainten&nce co.ta m1Ut be well over $1 lllillicm per y•r. No wonder no ODe e&me to Mr . Whitley'• pub tour and luncheon. He ahould stop tryi.Dq to in- cr .... our p.rkla.nd and work toward reduciDg puk m.ainteAUc:. eo.te and impro.. the conditl.OD.I ol our be.chee. I . Silcock Newport Beach CONSUMER CORNER O..z Consumer Le.que: t.•t w .. k I had my c•z tuned by • loc•l dealer. To.&a, U atop- peel runninq. I b.ve Oaly put 127 mil" oa the cat llDCe the . h.an•up. They wut to CMIQe me another $146 to tix it. Wb•t rMlly burna me, t1 dwlt ._, w•Dt to ebarQe $.25 to dMD the I)Nirk plugs ~ j~ put iD IMt week. 1 don't kl).OW a )Ot ~ut o.n, but I waot to fl9ht lo:r •1 CODI.u~Wtf rlQhll. become loWed and NtqUire c:l«mJ1)9. But ow ~It ltca poJd oil. Yot~r cor boJ o live- year or 50,()()() .uJe elldaiotU worronty undv w#aic:b you are CONTfKI. fte c:o.,pooy & 8Nn CONribg the CCIII ol the low truck. • \ • JOORt.IAUSI 'S JOURNAL by Jlm Feltoo At times, it wu like a cloud· bunt, and between 7 and 8 a .m., the level in the amateur rain-gauge on the lront porch rose a full inch. "A louay day for a funeral," ahe said, and I countered with the opinion there was no such thing u a good day for a fun,ral. Aa you get older, death becomes more familiar but no more friendly. Our art director aaaociate, Dick Stow, says he now reads the clusilied obituaries in the paper every morning, and i1 he doesn't find his name there, the day is going to be all ri9ht. Dick Spooner's name was there l.ut week, and two weeks ago, so was Eileen Strock's , and in such a very brief time we lost two friends we admired im· mensely. In separate ways, they enriched ua all, and they left this corner of the world a far better place than they found it. Each was so utrerly selfless. ln her many years of social action, as a doer in music circles and as a journalist, Eileen Strock never uked. "What's 111 it for me?" She wu always overworked and underpaid, but she loved peo· pie, workinq with them and wrltinCJ about them, and like Dick Spooner. she wore a perpetualsm.ile. For EUeen, the unile cloaked more than her share of personal tragedy. When I wu asked to be editor of the Newporler-Mesa News, Eileen returned as the associate editor. She had 10 many credits. She wrote about the social K:ene, about the people of Newport Beach, longer than anyone elM I mow, ud ahe c:Ud it with such a quiet qyace. Aa AdW Steveu.on wrote about Eleanor ROOMVelt, Eil .. n Stroclt would ra.ther liqht a candle than cune the darkness. Eileen always worked for a newspaper that had more friends than finances. She particularly ple&led the publisher when she and I worlted toqether, because he wu fanatically lrug.I. She saved every paper clip that came in the mail, took large manila envelopes and converted them into file folders, used the backs of press releases as copy paper. She not only WTOte and edited copy; she pasted up pages, made her own type cor· recbon.s. Nothanq was thrown away; there bad to be some use for it. And through it all. her qreat humor sustamed us aU . And that was really what she moat had in common wtth Dick Spooner. There was a b1t of p1x te 1D Dack, and you never qutte knew when the elf was going to assert ttseU. He bad an 1mpash smale, and hiS eyes were almost IDlschievous. Pohbcans who took themselves too senously and the community conKJence not aeriously enough, were his favonte targets. In political strategy meehngs. Dick was quack to spot an oppo· nent's weaknesaes, and be often suggested unpnntable barbs. The net result wu an at· mo.phere that brouqht everyone together, u air oi good humor th•t io.apired fanatical planning. Aa Mayor Jackle Heather aaJd, "He wu the Pied Piper to us all." The Ma10nlc a.nd mahtary Mrvic• for Dack Spooner brouqJU together all the eJeme12ts oflua rerur.bhle Ide Hoaorary paJl.bearera included the .tAte eena.tor. the sl•te ... mblywoman, the county npe.-..or ud the mayor. And the o.h•pel wu tuU of thoae who repreeeoted Yi.rtU&lly eYery level of local eodety~b\aa1n ... politb, •uic, t.w-ud • SO. J'MI IIIPreed In •9•· Ya.JUo~at MJ lMTe wu • toudl ol ~ la the way U.. weatMr cle&nd la h.IH lor tM IUlil&ry , •• ~ ntee. The Alr Force ..... ., h1ia9 8CI\I~ berbd e ~JDQ Ml•te to lA. Col. Jtic:Mrd Spoo.Mr. WheD tJae -~ ... Oft'. the ollicer aa ca..rv. w.J.bct erot.tDd J*•· ._. •P tM 8PeOI a.la.. H.d I&IMa Sb-oct bMia tMre, .a.. wo.~c~ ... ,. pecbd the"' ur. end toud e .. lor them Rasa B-.. WltlaCitJ PnJ I UDD George Hoaq, D, apuk-pha9 hmd-raiMr who hMded the ef. forti that r..Wted iD Hoa9 Memoria..l lbpital Preeb,terian, wu honor.d by a proclamation fro yor Jackie HNther . , who wu co-ch.t..ino.ao of the u.ildio9 com.mitt .. and later r..tdeot of the board of d.U ton, ••• the aubject of a "rout-tout" by the 552 Club Monday, Feb. 2, the proclama- tion said. The hospital opened S.pt. 15 1952 "due to alar9e de(JTM to' the efforts" of Hoa9, the mayor said. The 552 Club's Clambab w .. k, throu9h feb. b, wu alao honored by another Heather proclamation, which mentioned the Hoa9 Hackers }lj. jinx, Run for Hoag, and Cro.by Southern Pro-Am GoU Tourna- ment. Abo this week Heather pro- clamations honored Coutline Community Colleqe, on ita fifth anniversary, declared February u Children's Dental Health Month, and •t Feb. 10 to honor the International Slurry Seal Association, which will bold ita 19th allllual convention here that day. Bike Safety Newport Beach Police Officer Bob Anderson shows Pat Moreland, 12, left on bike, and Greg Migdal!, 11. nght. how the po4ice radar gun works during a recent bicycle safety day held at the Eastbluff Branch of the Harbor Area Boys Club. StaH photo by Ron Stone n.. ... port ............ II • .,.. , ..... , ••••• ,_I Dlstrlc:tBargalulng ..... lt'e that time of year aoatn when u.nioD ~. and eebooJ admint.traton lit down at the buoainin9 table to .huh oat th.U difference. in contract neqotiatioos. Teacher and claaifted employ .. barg&i.Ding ~ODS could .tart later tlua month, depend.iD9 on when officiall of the unions preNnt their initl&l contract propoea.b. Repr ... nlativ .. of thr• ~ehool employ ... • u.n.lona, echool bo&rd mem.ben and tehool adminiat.raton met Thurs- day to hear a tpeeial pr ... nta- tion on how one echool d.i.atrict 8Jiloothed out the proce.. Livermore Superinteudent of Schoob Leo Croce and barg&l.D· ln9 repr~tau .. JMDM IDler Mid ODe way they imPTQYed the climate of Jle90tiation wu to hold baroainin9 .. iou in Auqut, .tt.r the elate budoet hu been p.a•ad. Traditicmally, employ .. neqotlalioos start in late winter or Mrly 1prin9, before the d.ittrict bow. how much money it hu to offer in ..lary Deootia· tiODI. School board preeident Lm Wayman, who beard the preteD· tation in San Dieqo and invited them to appear hare, aaid one of his OTMt concerns it "the effect the negotiation proc-hu on .U of u.s,,. including "the pomtive or neqatift way public edw:.tion it view.d by the oom- aumlty, paJWDf., ltad.ata, tMchen and .taB ... Althou9h WaJID&Il aid U..r· more'• imprcwed Jleqotiatla9 proc:.. would not 1» directly trauferabJe to Newport-W.. echoole, "it's 9ood to beu U...t altemativee do exm whk:h Jean everyone feelin9 better for their efforts." Jean Harmon, adminilltratin .ude to Supertntendeut John N1coll, Aid, "Their n .. ap- proach wu bued on mutal in· terMtl and a histOTJ of bitter bar9aining over ma.ny years. I'm not sure we're at lh&t point." Lut yMr a state m.ed.iator wu called in to ....alve the dif. ferenoe8 betWM1l ech.ool dBtrict and labor union negotiators. .Moore Faces Ptellndnary Headng by Roger ADgle TeUord "Tim" Moore, 36, who authorlti• aay b.u confeued shooting his 19QJDJDate, Stanley Donald r..pui(la, 45, ill their Spyglut Hill home Nov . 5, fac• a preliminary hearino Friday. Moo.re pleaded not guilty to a murder charge in the shooting. !apinda'• death ended the 18- year a.uociation of the two men and their partnership in Newport Peycholocpcal Laboratory, an educational letting and evalua· tion service, according to Glory Lane, who d..c:ri.bed herseU as Moore's fiancee. Souroee cloee to the trial and inveetigation said there were "eitenuating circu.m.tancee" in the cue. Moore worked full time for Huntinqton Beach Union High School Dt.trlct and part time for Univenity of Ca.liJomia, lrvme. F.pinda worked full time for Orange Unified School District. Moore w.u rel....d before Ch.rl..t.m.u on $150,000 property bond, u.sing Ius half interest m the houae, at Number 8 Jade Cove. At one point in bail reYlew hearmga, an attorney for Moore brought a pcychiatrt.t into Har- bor Municipal Court to t..nfy that Moore would mc.t likely not commit suicide and woWd almo.t certa.in.ly appear for trial. At another point, Rubor Municipal Court JudCJe Seli.m Franklin said he wu "tempted" to relea.M Moore to the cutody of Mn. Lane, of l.aCJU.U Beach. Judge Fra.nldin rel1ued three tunea to lower bail from $250,000. It wu lowered finally bySuperiorCourtJudo- R•chard Beacom Dec. 18. Moore wu releued on bail after spending 43 days in jail. MID-SEASON SAVE 20% TO 33% ON LUXURY CARPET --- INSTALLED WALL TO WALL. CHOOSE FROM 60 FASHION COLORS. 14.99 TO 21.99 SQ. YD. ------------~-- Choose from 6 dtfferent carpets . Sale pnce rncludes: ca rpet. felt or rubber pad and normal installation. Call your nearest Broadway store for Shop at Home Servrce. Carpets. 32. • 99 sq. yd. installed 15.99 .... ,d.inst~ K....-n•a llllew Spirit nylon plu h Orig . 20.00. 1 5 e 99 aq. yd. inatalled Declfde ._ nylon xony plush Ortg 24 00 THE BROADWAY vou • Nt •G .-. o• ... o oo s r o •£ ' 21 • 99 .... yd. tftat.eled Royel Cellfomlen T rever a • potyc tcr. Oug 33 00 ! I IN THE SCHOOLS q.n • .., .,....., 12:30 to • 3:30 p.a. Jddaya, Ba,..- I.oriW>q c...,.,, 2531 Orcb.rd Drt .. , S...lo A... H.lqhlo. " .. $11MIIIlon -Coadoalniwa ll\&M9e .. DI 7 lo 10 p.a . Taeodoya, Corona '-=================~del War Hlqh School, ''It' a eno1'11l0Ualy 1i91Uficaat, ""' only ill t•""" .. olallon. 1>\at alto iD tenu ol eDCOUJ-o-meAt to'otlwr func~JAq ... utleo." · laDt," ooc:ordb>q to R.clli•ld. "W• _,.thriiW "-Yo•d worcla." The S.Venb'OIM have agreed to JUieb aU colillrmed pledg• from other donor• up to $6 lllillioD, in addition to a praviolU donation of $1 million in cash a.ad a live-acre p~~rcel of'land valued at $5 mJlllon. The center will be located on the eutern eel~ of South COast Plasa, next to the South Cout Repertory ThMtar in Co.ta W.N. center, other large donation• are ltlll being aolicited. Although he could not attimate how Dtuch money hu b<Mn rail- ed toward the eventual mu•ic center conatructioo, it l.l ez- pected to coet about $40 million to build. lD addition, center organiseu hope to rai,. about Sl9 m.UUon for a permanent en- dowment fund . ED.lp School Salad Bar A -aalod bar 1o ill -·•· -. at lrlai(ID Nlddl• School ill Newport S...cla. _ TM hu, iDaloll.d durillq ChrWI:Iau v&eation, fealutw~ Jet- toe., al.d ~. picklM, chuu ud mNta: at 10 centa per OWlCe. TM but h.n been in opera- tioll iD high .chooh for aome time but this il the fint time U.., have ap~ in local middle.~~ehoola. UCJ Israel Tour A prQ9reJD OJl 11ctivitift and toun availllble during the aum.- mar in brae1 will h. preeent.d by UC Irvin•'• Jewish Student UDlon-Hin.l in UCI'• UDlvonity Center Sunday, Feb. 8 111 7 p .m. The progia.m il free and open to the pllhlic. For more informa- tion ca11833-9117 . CoastllDe Cl.....,. S...ral cl•nn will be offered dllrlng-the sprinq MmMter in N-rt Baach by Ccutlino Community Coll.qe. Classes, tim.• and location• are: -Mari.ne Mammals, 7 to 9 p.m. Tu..daYJ, Corona del Mar Hiqh School. -R..t Estate Math, 7 to 10 p .m. W.dnesdays, Newport Har- bor Hiqh School. -N .... ritinq and ...porting, 6:30 to 9:30 p .m. w-claya, lMwpoit H.orbor Hlqh School. Titer• l8 no fee for the (\ll.uMI. for JDOTe ta.formatioll c&lllhe admtllion• oftice at 863-0824. Winners of the Good Citizen Awards from the Cabel Chapter of the Daughters of the America!" Revolution are, from left, Stephanie Webster, 17, of Costa Mesa High School; Janet Prichard, 17, of Newport Harbor High School; Cara Francy, 18, of Estancia High School; and Karen lmbernino, 17, of Corona del Mar High School. Staff phoco Slobio That •U the r...,O..• of Wn. Willluo Jt.dlield, Oraa~ Cou•· ty Mule Ceater boan:l chair- man, to an $11 mUUon qift hom the Henrr S.C,eratrom famUy of CoMa MeN, the lint of many .. ;or donatiou expected to he pledved to the center. ''The donation W monetarily u well u pa:ycholoqically impor- FIRE CALLS The Newport Beach Fire De- partment laat week anawered 87 calla, includint~ 45 medical aids, 22 fire calls, and 20 .ervice calls. Forty-two p81'M)IU were treat- ed by paramedics and firelight- era, for injuries or illness due to vehicle accidents, heart attacka, overda.e$, fire and other causes. Property losses due to hre tota1ed $2,950 for the seven-day period ending Sunday, Feb. 1, 1981. For the year to date, the department has answered a total of 373 calla. One week only. According to Ed Sebeck, financial director lor the music AddiUonal major dooationa will be announced soon by center offici all, S.beck Kid. A aerie• of fund-raising drivea i8 currently being planned. RE;UGION Church Concert Robin Adami, a tenior at Estancia High School, will be featured in a Oute raclta.l in the next Harbor Christian Churc h concert Sunday, Feb. 8 at 4 p .m. She will perform worb by Erik Satie, Bach, Ernest Block, Bruno Incerti and Francis Poulenc. The church is located at 2401 Irvine Ave., Newport Beac h. Sabbath Services Students of the Isaiah Hebrew School and the reqional Jewish High School will officiate at the monthly Sabbath Eve servi ces at Temple Israel Friday night at 7:30p.m. The temple is located at Har- bor Christian Church, 2401 Ir- vin" Ave., Newport Beach . Sweetheart Gala Temple Bat Yahm will hold its annual Bon Vivant Sweetheart Ball Saturday, Feb., 1 at 6:30 p.m. at the Park West Clubhouse in Irvine. Participants will divide into qrouJ>' and 90 to the home of a surprise host and hostess for an eleqant qourmel dinner. After dinner the groups wilt meet at the clubhouse for dessert and dancing. For more informatio n call the Temple offi ce at 644 -1999. When you save 20.00 to 70.00 on our Simmons Correct Posture/Backguard mattresses, • you'll save 1/2 on matching boxsprings, too. You know if you stan with a matching set, your mattress and boxspring wilt test much longer than mismatched pieces would. But these days it's harder than ever to pan with your doflars. So we've taken the strain out of buying a complete set bY, offering our best-seNing Simmons COfrect POS1ure/Backguard mattresses at a savings of 20.00 to 70.00. plus an additional 50% savings on matching box.springs. So now's the time to invest in a quality name like Simmons at these prices. Offer ends February 11 . Atso see our apecilll purchase Bnutyrest'" priced 80.00 to 100.00 less than ony othef lleoutyr .. t • on oor floor. SIMp Shop, 69. CORRECT POSTURE Twin Ful a-Kine Reg. .... Reg. .... Reg . .... Reg . . ... ... ttrlll 129.95 , •.• 169.95 , ..... 279 .95 --· 377.95 117 •• ......... 129.95 M.l7 169.95 M.IZ 150.00 Zl •• ~ Ill.• .... 259.90 174.12 339.90 214.12 429.95 .... .. .• CORRECT POSTURE Twin Ful o-Klfttl IUPIIEME Reg . .... Reg. .... Reg . .... Reg. ,... ......... 149.95 , ... 1 •. 95 ••• 311 .95 ., .• 389.95 ...... ........ 149.96 H.f1 1 •.• 14.17 168.00 .... , •.• let 299.90 214.12 371.10 114.12 479 .96 ... QUI BACICGUARD Twin Ful o-Klfttl OR BACICGUARD Reg. .... Reg . .... Reg • .... Reg . .... IUPIIEME ... ttrlll 1 •.• , ... 209.16 ... 388.95 ...... 41i6.95 ......... 1 •.• IU7 201 .16 .. .17 200 .00 ... 244.00 let 338.10 Hili 419.10 IIUt seUi ., ... ••• Ouoon IOid 1ft 2 ....... -~. King IOid In 3-ploce -only. DWAY 00 D S I 0 . ( • t Sm;Prlsei.Meaa Dumps Coroaa. FoulS, Cold Shooting FoD .Sea Kings 51 -48 followillo an une~ted loa, sporta feu ud pundits often point an .ccu.aino finoer at one factor or uother in their efforu to uplain the upset rationally. But one thlno Corona del M.u Hioh School's varaity basketball team can't be accused of ia lonorance. After all, coach Jack Errion's Sea Kinqs knew that every team 1n the Sea View leaoue wu out to oet them. CdM alao knew that those teams would try to "surprise, swpriM, and surprise" the hiqhly favored Sea Kinqs by us- inq every trick in the book to upeet them. Furthermore, they knew the rHt of the See View Leaque teama were below their caliber, and realistically, the lea que race should be a tip-toe through the tulips. Surprise! What Corona del Mar didn't know, Costa Mesa High School did. That is-the best surprise is no aurprise.1 Costa Mesa, a team which entered the game with a dismal 0-J.leaoue record, 4·12 overall, pulled the up .. t of the year, dumpino the overwhelmingly favored Sea Kinqs, 51-48, ot Corona del Mar . While leaoue rivals such u Estancia (slow down qame) and Irvine (run and oun) earlier tried, unsuccessfully, to surprise the top-rated Sea Kinga, Costa Mesa came right at Corona del Mar. No tricks, just buianess. Tim Parael'a scrappy Mustangs never led in the game until two minutes remained, but Costa Mesa's ability to keep close throughout the contest proved to be vital in the win. Corona del Mar, which easily defeated El Toro earlier in the week (69-40) to move their record to 3-0 in league, 12-3 overall; ran into foul trouble early in the game and then went ice cold in the final period to drop only ita second home game in three years. The Sea Kings were led by JefJ Pries' game high 20 points, while Mark Spinn added 14. Ken Bardsley tallied 16 points for the victors, while Roqer Lackey added 10 and Scott McKeeS. Parsel saw the agqreaaive play of McKee, and the overall play of Bardsley as the keys to the win. "It wu really a tremendous ef- fort by everyone ton1ght," sa.id the elated Parsel. ; He also saw the emotional fac- tor of a potential upset as work- ing in the favor of the Mustangs, as it was a highly spirted Costa Mesa crew that picked up a win . The turning point came at the two minute mark when Costa Mesa's Steve Cook, better known for his talents as one of the top wide receivers in Orange County football, hit two free throws to put the Mustangs up by one. Spinn countered with a hoop to put CdM bac k on top, but then Bardsley re-tall1ed to g1ve the lead back to Mesa. When Steve Moore's jumper fell short for Co rona del Mar, Mc Kee h1t two chanty tosses to put the Mustangs up for good. The win marked the first (Continued on paqe 9) Even On Skis, He's An Upright Citizen .,.., Vael. FOfd raced In • cheri~ event to raile fundt for • hosp4tal. He c.tfted hie ,., ever tnp through racing gates "a lot of fun .·· OLDEST AND FASTEST.-Saturday's 'Run For Hoag' 5K and 10K races drew thousands of ~ts to Irvine, including everyone from 74-year-old Tom Pekin Clefl), the oldest runner; to Charley Christensen fright) who beat out Newport's Brian Hunsaker to win the 10 K Photos bv Steve c.na.n Thousands 'Ran For H by Dan Logan cool and as the mass of runners In its second year the Run For took o ff at the c annon they we re Hoa g has become one of the framed by the snow-covered most popular area races. Last mountams 10 the d1stance year's event drew more than a The fm1sh of the lOK was the thousand runners to a course on openmg of the fl oodgates Fusl the Newpo rt Bac k Bay Th1s year came Charley Chnstensen of the race was moved to Irvme Huntington Beach 1n 29 46 a nd over 2,000 runners took Bnan Hunsaker of Newport part, over 700 m the SK a nd Beach il mshed second 1n 29 57, more than 1,300 m the lOK. four seconds a head of Dudne Proceeds from the race went Waltm~re of Fullerton Then to Hoag Hosp1ta l. The race was there was a mmute's lapse underwritten and staffed by the before the soud stream of run Cahforma Fust Ba nk ners began. John Blan's dual The course was a new one fo r c hute hmsh syste m was hard most of the lOK runners. It prea.sed to keep up w1th the started o n the c rest of a small flow. hill behind the Beckman ln-Many of the runners were atrumenta bu1ldmo on Carlson hrat-tnnen in both races, and Avenue. From there 1t passed many of the fh:al-tuuers were uor, picked up the b1 h path p1eas.d that they had completed and c rossed under the San the distance. D1ego Freeway, d1d a loop to "The leaders went out very Barranc a and returned to the fast, they bu1lt a b1g lead early." hmsh v1a the b1ke trail and sa1d Ron Kurrle, the fift h place Campus Dnve iln1she r 1n the lOK. "It's a qood The morn1ng was clear and course, flat except near the very e nd." Barb1 Ludov1se , a Corona del Mar res1dent who runs for / O range Coast CoU99e, wootthe 10K m 36:53 . Jen01fer We~ oJ El Toro hmshed second in 37·46. Robert Smythe of Hunhngton Beach won the 5K in 15:38. Cynl Oblouk of lrv1ne H1gh h01shed hJth 1n that race 1n 16·04 In the women's d1v1110n of the SK Fran Solomon oJ Corona del Mar opened a long l.ad to Wln 10 17:SS. Sand1 C.rter bnsabed second in 19:46 on the Sa.n 01eqo Creek bib trail coune. The race orqani&abon didn't go enhrely smoothly; the fool trafh c went OYeT the top ot, rather than under Nlch•L.on, thereby mterfenng w1th the reQular tr•ff•c The ~rlung pro blem for the hundreds ol run ners' cars al.o caused tempers to fla re , but 10 general the event went off w1thout a h1tc b Sailors Coming On-Win Two by John Ireland press to take a halftime lead ol I O.Lavallade Oh , what a difference a week three, 35 32. O.Lavallade has led West can make DeBusk's c rew never looked m1nster to a 1 3 mark, but md•- It's JUSt seven da~s to most bdck followmg that ta keover, v1dually he has ave rag ed weU folks, but to h1gh school basket coastmg to as b1g as a 15 pomt over 20 potnts a game m 1ea~ue bailers a weelc represents two lead belor~ w1nmng by the 13 play games-64 m1nutes that can turn point margm To go along w1th th1s the a season around "I thmk when we st cHied It> Sa1lors are forced to do battle Last week, those 64 mtnutes handle the press better c1 nd w1th Westminster tn the u ons turned a round the season lo r the showed some pallence 1t madE' den, away from home Newport Harbor Sailors whose the ruffe re nce," DeBusk c:a1d Thtngs don't look to get a ny two qu1c k WI'•" put them nght As usual, 1t was Everh.nt easter follow1n g the Westm1nsler back 1n tht> thtck of the Sunset lead1ng the way for thE' Tc1r s, game, as Newport ts set to host League "''c-"' c1fter two qu1c k sconng a game h1gh ·24 po1nts Ed1son 10 a rematch of the openiDg losses almost ended the R1clc C1acc1o added 18 kr the Sunset League opener wh1ch Satlors SMson m a hurry Sa1lors wh1le Mal Durlcee t.dd 12 resembled more of a wreathng COCtch )errv DeBusk's Tars, However the b1g ddleren• e match than a basketball 9ame the delendtng Sunset Leaqu£> came 1n the form of reserve th 1s Fnday champtonc; Cl pened the year pomt guard Dave L1ttle wh• The Cha rgers captured the w1th losse<. ll leclque reh~·ved Durkee, and got cl hrst meehng between the two powerhousP" F'oullldtn Valle-. buckt>l and four key ass1sts 73 66 But that was at Echson, and Edt!>lln , but regrouped t. L11tle may need to be ret~dy tu wht>re cues of foul plav and defeat equallv louqh M.u1na J 1 go agaan toniqht when Nt>wp<J rt poor ofhctahng were heard Hunttngton Beach last week Ill tangles w1th yet another tup th roughout the game Th1s hml', move 1nlo a thre-e way <.econd ~;"ponent 1n thll anc redtblv thmgs hgure to bE' watched a place lte wtth Ed1son and bd1"nced Sun•t race, httle hght~r by the men m the Manna Wt>s:manster H19h School &ebra slnpes "Those w1ns rE"allv put us back The Loau poula • .ohd bst Ton1ght's battle w1th ITI the hunt dt 2 2 .. DeBusk Sdtd break oame, ....... u .. one of Wt"slmmsler IS St>l to start at "When wt> slcHied wtlh two the top -.vrers m ctll of OtcliiQP 7 30 p m . as IS tht> Satlora honte st ra1q ht losses. we mtq ht havl' County 10 •nlor Lettleor M1ck game with Eduon on Fnday. ~j::;~~~~:~t·i.·:::;~:·., en.by Southem Tees Off ·~lim E'" Fi,. fonDer amateur tedm C lub N c h w1t b ...... w .... ,. "1 thmk thmgs are on the ch&mpiooa .Ul '"k repectl For some local golfers lbe upawmg lor us now " bc.on in the •venth annual Crosby South•rn ts p ractically • Newport b.at the Vtlt1ngs of $25,000 Croeby,..Southern pro tred•hon Bob Pohst, a 14 han· Manna rather eas1ly, 63·50 aa .,at tot•!'Dam~ •• t wh1ch runs dtcapper h om Santa Ana Coun- (behmd the 20 po1nta of aentor FrtciQ ead S.turdey at the lr try Club will play m the touraey Cory Everhart), but the real .tM CoMe Country Club for h1a sev•nth hme, whkle • ahowatopper came a(Jamat Hunt-Ple'tou.a amateur team w1n Harlan Eu ckaon, a 10 bandaeap· moton S..c h, a tea m that Den UIOe9 72 con flrmt>d entnes per form Btq Canyon w•fl play entered the 9ame w1th an .,. ... Seattle Man ners base '" h1a s1xth •mpresstve 11 4 mark and w1t h ball .... owner George And w1th the uc-epUoa oJ w1na over suc h h1 ghly renlted ~. Will w yman, Tom John Curc i, the other aaa purw .chools u !chaon and ICateUa. Talbot, and J1m G 1anuhaa all and hosp1tahty aponsort of the But aa DeBusk will be the tint fro~a 819 C.nyon C ountry C lub, tourn•ment' A r9yr0e, ).J ,"uer. to teU you, the SunMt Lea9ue •• aDd Berry Hallamore, lasl yea r'\ Bob Gray, Charley r, laJI. aa wa ld and woolly aa the C ol tJtliat, lt01n the Santa Ana Coun dall Presl y, and Geor9e ~ oredo Rap1ds m the aummer try Club. wall play tn the two-dey ...... And to aay the :em ,·. auyt .. lno Amateur entries from 19 ar•a Non·ellempt pr aa .._ can happen clube will pubc1pate, w1th B•o w11l eomplet the be&CI. .. Newport took the Ollen 1n 1m Canyon CO\l',hy C lub lead1fln 1nelude playera u....-to pr .. tve t .. hl""· 72-59, desp1te th-way "f11D 2J ent " -:.ner lfy for the S.n 0..,. '-'~~-· tra1hn9 by eome e'oht potnta al local clubs lftnu.nc.~ ooUet• "' · cordant~ to Gene th• end of the brat quarter. Irv1ne Coa., Country C lub (15), Southern N wpott ~-llv "" ·' w tne d1f· S.n• Ana Country C lub (7), cated U..t ,... ... ~~~ f r~ tD the ..cond per1id, llnd Cotta W... Co untry Club, }gs& PGA, 1•1 when It o••'"e the alwaytll I NMa Verde Country Club, and and 1172 Bob llopt tro~.abt me Hunwu.-luu h the Rancho San loaq\.ll n C ounhy e kamptoa, hO Wll ~li··.llll·l SKIWAYS Sc.Mi•• copy il cWMed whea U.. editor hal to fit rNf)'tlWa,g oe t.U pt.Qe, and at , r=======7================l]i* (SSYC). SA.IOT C-t-Robert LaW II f (IYC); 2. s .... L~t!tdOII (IYC), l . ,..,_ an WhnehollM (ISYC). ADULT SABOT-1. J.c.lne Smtlrt IIYC\: 2. it.. nor• Fonyth (IYC); 3 IWN Ll~:~­ boll (IYC) UDO 14A-J. Ch&d bylobbi.Siclbler It wu nice to hear the jubila- tion i.ll the vole• of Juhe, who c.U. froJD June Mountain to let aki journelilll know what's ooinq on at th• "other" place up Highway 395. Her reporl ol pawly !allen snow, snow pack d•pth, and what lilts and runs were open meant thai all of the Sierra raqion was enjoyinq the long-awaited arrival of enough snow lor qood sldino. Ski news means so much more now that winter has finally arriv - ed. It haa been a long wail and let \ll all hope that c ontinuous excellent altiinc;J cond1lions throughout the W nt will afford some compensation for the drouqhl of '80-81 . Now that the anow 1s real as well as man-made tn the local mountains, at may be hme to put your children under the supervi- SIOn of a ski club. They ca.n make altiino painless for the parents who have no desire to s.lti themselves, and c an be an inexpensive vacahon for the parent who can't afford to take their children to fancy resorts. The member has the ea:- perience of competent mstruc- lio.n, competition and racing and a camaraderie with his peen. The clubs are orqanized for t._e beoinner to advanced to the Mnous proapeetive racer. oo• of U.... deleH.oo ..aiOllll There are S.turct.y trlpt to loc-.1 Snow Su.llllllit ucl Sllow Twuc hetl (BYC); 2. Row LoJu.,.tl (BYC); MARINE SCENE mountain•, weebnd trlpt to V.U.y-.the two giaott ol Mammoth and June Mountain ~them c..u.fornia akU.aQ- and vacation tnps to Colorado, .. ,. e:r.cluded from a ntYiew ol L=========================::JJ 3. Dudley lohnton (IVC). UDO 14 8-J. GeorQe Fulton (SSYC): 2. Will T•mpl~~ (IYC); 3. Dan•lutt (IYC). Utah, Northern California and local aki arMa. It ...., ap. by Nary Wagn« occasionally, even to Europe. propriate to include tb.ftl at lhi• Newport B.ach will be well "Newport Beach i• the second Bltnard Slu Club is nationally time, lD celebration oi the r• reprnented by two top OO.ta in most active yachtino area in the orQaniaed with tbe Southern cent WHother pe.tlema. the Southern Ocean Racing Untied States," Mimi Dyer, edJ· Cahfornia diviSion head-S~~~C~W &taait lt.u Uw:.....dlt• uow-Conference which beq1n1 in tor of the United States Yacht quartered in Malibu. Bliuard :!!::~·:::: ::.:.=~.:. ~-Florid• thia w .. kend. John Ab-Racine;~ Union publication told cha_rtered, and supervised bu1e1 of._ trail. .ucJ .kiwayw.. billh ~di· r•n of Balboa Yacht Club will be me on the phone the other day. pick up membert on S..twde.y t"'-1 pu~ .,.., .ud ~ • Uunl racing hia Tomohowlc and Wil-Therefore I wa1 not too aurpris- • • morninqa at Costa Mesa S..n •tory k) leu Botto. Locl9• with iAdoor liam Pow•r of Newport Harbor ed when I heard that local and Fuhion Island. in Newport and Ollltdoor..,Unv to t&b &d'fant•9• ol Yacht Club will he competinn in yachtsman E. T. "Ted" Hinshaw D --h r I h I the paDOraalc va.w. .. u.MC . or urt er in ormation Their-~ SUMNIT IXPRESS,. hl.a new •2 foot High RoJer. had been appointed by the call (213) 457·2541. rUAiiiQ aQa!IIIJI.ia ,...,; COIIlblaatioll bua The SORC is a series of six Olympic Commillee as the 1984 Our own Mogul Sin Club hu and 9.,.,..ranteed Litt t'-:k ... ..,. .old •• races which alar! with a race Olympic Gamea Commissioner been around for many yN.n and Tieht•o•. Tb.co.fortableb-deput from St . Petersburg on Florida's of Yachtinq. has an envu•ble record of ho• r..ruo. lalaad ato\IJid 6 •·•· and depart the aki .,.. et 4 p.111• For huU .. r West Coast and continues down Hinshaw, a director of the organization and succus. It illlonMtioa uU (714) &72-0604. the coaat, around Key West and USYRU, ia a staJf commodore of guarantees achve participation SNOW SUNWrt, B;q Bear up the florida Keys to Fort the Lido Isle Yacht Club, the for members, instructors and 7 cbahlifts, 3 ~u.riac;:e Wll Lauderdale, then Miami and fin-Association of Orange Coast supervisors. Its programs are Ele'f•t~: 7,000'-8,200' varied to suit every level of in-Adult: 514; Chlkl! 59.50 ally to Nassau in the Bahamas. Yacht Clubs, the Southern Calif-Saow~. ni9btlkil•9· More than 80 boats are entered ornia Yachtinq Asaociation and leresl and ability. Throuqh the Saow V•lley h.u •11•:.:citinQ new .. , and this is the lOth anniversary the Lido 14 Fleet No. 1 and has years many have qradualed hom .c:bool direc:tor. Scott Wi..Liin<o~lwo~t~, 1977 o( the presliqioua yachting raced various dinqhys in New-beinn members to becominn World F.-tyle Ballet Cb.a.ptoa, wiU • • b ·-,..,._, •-d u event port for a number of years. qualified instructors. teec 0' unpnwe , ... II t ... ucip n.. · LASf.fl:-1. Douo TueU. (BYC); 2. John PernlC'Ir (BCYC); J, G~o~tlierrno S.llanole (ABYC). LASER 30 PLUS-t. Chud Fowler (CapoBYC). 2 DM:Ir Kno pf (C•poBYC); J Graham G1bbon (JYC). SNlPE-1 Peter N•wbre (BCYC). THIS- TLE-I. Robe11 &II (BYC), 2. St_. Thomu (FYC); 3 Rob Van't Raet (8YC). LUD!RS 16-XUcN., Be• Hromedb (VYC); 2. Ludic:tou•, Jerry Moulton (SSYC). SANTANA 20-1. Builet, 01d BHlWn (BCYC), 2 Moc,Pelello, Krm McRn IBYC). 3 G.orQe Dav'" (BC YCl £TCHELLS 22-1 So~o~,.nil, G eolhey Lord (NHYC). SORD-1 Van· t~. Dw:lr Swa1d (LSf); AndHJrno, Bob Sodaro {BYCJ PHRF A-l Shdlelaqh, Ralph Wmt rode (BYC). Fast Compony, Rob Willr.omton (BYC). J Hoodlum, Mok• and c.ndv Schacht•r {BYC) PHRf B 1 Summf'tl>f>F. Bob Ma11hall/Scott Schock rNHYCl. 2. A nlat•' Alll'n Andrew• (BYC). J SP<ukle, Ale• h vu19 (BYC) PHRF C I Vottu . Bruce Tw11chaU (VYC). 2 L.mq, W.,llv C h.tiiQ M.uc Schr..,-e• (BCYC), 3 T•m1•odo, D<~v• w ,th.tm• (VYCJ ol baDe~: ud/ormaqui .. Ull9 u wellu The series will also serve u Incidentally, the moat active I In lact, Moqul has been promot• ud m.aint•ill prol.-ionaham In an elimination .eeries for the Ad-yachting area m the U.S. is De-VOYAGERS YACHT CLUB !around so lonq, it LS astoundinq the Ski Sehool.. miral's Cup, a biennial race for !roil, abe said. Can you believe Campb<tll'• Sloop R•poua SNOW VAllEY, Runni .. Spn••• lOR S ·• •11 8 (VYC) to me that it is possible that ll -•-1,w•· beals from different countries it ? -p u .. ," •n rown <:-n.-.. PHRf W1Jd One, Leo forh•nl thPre could be a second qenera-ll .... ..no.: 6,100'·7,8U' held in England in the middle of UPCOMING [VENTS-Sou!tl Shore tion of membership. (It l& Adult: 515; Child: S8 the summer. Three United States v .. c ht Club w1U hoi(J rh• wcond r•c• ol slalistics like thai, that malr:e one SnowmakiliQ boats will be selected by the BALBOA YACHT CLUB ttlen W'"rer Hrbar h• Sene• on S ... turday wonder at the whirlwind pasaaqe Gold W 'A.'. • U.S. Admiral's Cup committee SUHIIST SERIES and &h'" C or.nth•an Y•chr Club •nd •• ... •· Final S•anding• L•do i•i• Yo<h• Ci··b ••II •-• •h• Vo lo' of lime ) For further mformation uun .. "' m•u<o~uralinQ b th · f · h " "-daily fl rQht• lrom Orn9• County to Lak•J Y ear per ormance tn t e SABOT A-1. '"" 0 111 (LA YC}; 2 tme RPqall<~ lor 1he ln••de Claun bo!h J call 645-3366. T•hoe. SORC. Joann Norman (BCYC), 3 Wo rth Houqh S .. lu rd.ty ""d Sundu ----------------------~------~~~-----------~~~----------~==~~~~~~~==~~~------- ~turned backtheeloek cnpriee&l Enjoy Old Fashioned Savings with the Dollar-Saver appearing next week in the TilE :'\'E\\'POJ{I' Er\SIGN Save Hundreds of Dollars on Merchandise, Services and Entertainment . With this Handy New Book! BEACH Now you can get personal service and discount rates! Now that KBS hill" otf,ce tn your town . you can start g•ning the bell of both worlds when you trade stOCks : the personal serv.ces of 1 tutt-aerv,ce bfoker. at rates yoo would expect from a bare-bones Mdtscounter~ (lilllhk:h KBS II not). Next time you Wl!nt • tnlde, give ua • Cllll. You'H be tmpressed wtth t<BS We have conhnual contact wtth tour brotcert on theN. Y.S E. noor. and are member~ of every maJOf' exchange We have the very latesl equipment tn 0411 own back: offices. so you get your e•ecutiont and conftrmattons quk:kly And, even more impottlnl. you'll have your own pefSOf'llll represenlahve. a peqon whoM opet"tise you'll come to know lnd rnpect. So try KBS- ... ,. re.ty to help save you money WIWtouf • cut in leMcel! -I ... --";-.,1 = ":-.,1 ~Ret• I 11 sa 1111.17 U!l.31 MemH lyi'ICn 11 1 12 112 ... 27$.00 E F Hunon , .. 00 115.00 ..... ...,. t tl 00 t$3,00 ...... O..t'l 'Nin•r 11004 IA.OO ..... P•roe~ 112.00 110.00 ...... -t i$.M 116.00 ..... • -... 111.11 Qu.cl!. & Reilly .... 107.37 117.82 ~ """"*' ........ .,., .. .. .... , , ... , __ ttiiO-> ~---ltiCI'IIIrllt ... ~ -. ... ,__.,... ..,......, ..... ...,.,..1P"' 01'1 u Clcfoooit IIIlO Thla chert telle pert of the atory. M you can .... you'l M'lte money when you tt ade wirh KBS. But you c!.n'lsee the service you'l be getting. That's why we're eager to hear trorn you. Give us • call! ... lia&*Y: 8oye, Southwod, I M 1 N.Y.s.a .... .._,.lrt'e ... ..._... M....,_SIPC I I I-I--1 Qly I- I eeo ''"'W1 c.n-Dttw. -2:15 ..... ,.,. ..... c._ (714)144 211J tnOIMtu-.011 1004U.JJII .. I I I I I I I I ··-------------------· I to pay --- I I, ~. ~­... ~ '!".:" ... "':' •.• '=~=~·~~~~~t~·~.\~-=-~-~--~-~-~ ~ .... ,,, .......... , ........... ,_._ ... _~ .. -· ..... - - Citizens Service. Why tax yourself again'! Citizens Income li"' Preparution Scrvk:c t..."tlukl sa\'l' ytlU time. hcatl- aches and maybe hard'10amed laX dolla"' as well. Citizens ofrers qualified S3VC~ L.."t»Tlplctc prepanuion of their lt~KO Federal and California individual returns . Your returns are lhonlllghly analy1..cd It• maximi7..e k.ogal tk.."C...tR."- tions. They're <..'Offiputer-<.·hecked In maximize acrura..:y. And they're hacked by yet1r-m1md f'l-;l":'imml•l availahlc any time you might ever need lhem. The COSI or Citizens I net lOll." lllx Prcpanuitm S..·n·il."C ltl our savings customers is surpri~ingl y relL\itlmthle : fcl.~ and discounts depend on I he comple xity or your rt!tums and your tOial Citiu:ns deposits. Cu.'<lome"' 62 yeurs ol age. or older. receive an addirional senior <..itizens· dis...~lunl . Don•t miss out nn a henutiful way'tn pay your ta)l.t"S. Citizens is scheduling private appointment~ now to have retum< prepared between January 26 and March 31. 19111. So call or drup l>y while the best times are still available. Then lei Citizen.< relieve a taxing situation lor you. Beautifully. So muny hl:'(lllli/il/ Wll)'' tu s:wc. NEWPORTBEACH:3300WeotCoaotH~neorl'tewpottBW •• 631 ·9205. • The HwwJKWI £Mjp Weclcn411y. P*cwt ,, t•IJtaee 8 =-============-=.::=::=.::=--::._:=:==:=:====~ 'fml .. relay equad faced perNpe U..toG.Ps• ~ 01 lite ...e, 9oiDo b.cleo lwNMI A. the A YSO pl&yoif MUon CODtiJua•, the beet ud the re.t are lUll 1Se1D9 w.eded out. 3.() ~, Cet!IJeJ H\IDUDCJtoD Be.c:b. Dt.WO. I t Gr..taoppen (DoD lv.rett) lo.1 2-0 To W..t Hllahoqton Beech. f..ad et 11 a a . TN bci~qel.a end CdN Sllrf wall pl.y ewey-111'-&Od oppoa.nta w-.• u.rao DO\&Aeed u of pr-tuae PREP SPORTS a~ wcla pow.raoa-u Nair, C.OieluU&I ud Serra. ~loa 57 had a rough w .. Jr. ead of U with only thr .. of it. eight tMm. adnncing to the next ru.aq of competition. Re.ult. froaq lut w .. ltend'a action ue: GIRLS Dtn.Joa 31 R.oloo 57'• Purp .. P~pl• lat•n (coached by Jim Hllh.r1) loet 1·0 to Pou.ntaln Valley. Dl.taloa 4; Fa.lcona (Fr~ Brook.) l01t 1 0 to WMt N~rt Dlrialoa St R.d.loala (Gerth PUnt) won SAC'aPaaade Rwln•OnOCC by Marc:ua Diets It wu a parade, of sorts, last Saturday, when Oran9e Coast Colleqe's basketball team faced Santa A.na. The o.nly paradin9, however, wu done by neither Ooats, nor bands, 'nor clowns. It was, in· stead, done by the Dons, as they took turDs parading to the free throw line enroute to a 59·48 win over the Pirates. OCC actually led with 11 minutes le.ft, 35·26, before the roof fell in. Wednesday's game against Cerrlta. {away at 7:30 p .m .) figures to have significant bear· inq on the conference standings, as will Saturday's, against Mt. SAC at home. JOYS Dtrialoa 3: CdN Suf (Bill R•111bardt) WOD 2·1 cw•r Tuatin. Dlnaioe •: Rowd._ (Tom W.rumoto) 1011 1·0 in cw•r1un• to West N•wpor1 Dlnaion 5: Stribn (Roland lt•Uy) lo.t 6·1 to So. HllfttiJUJton S..cb. Dl•lalon 1: Th• Cobra (Nilre Souc:•lr) won 1-0 on a ~nelty lraolr over C•ntral Hunhnqton S..ch. The Cobra will plAy Nor1b Hunhoqlon S.ach Saturday at CdM Hlqh School R~1oo 97'• Dl¥\~Wo 3 Bo,. found tba qoloq ro~~qh Sulldey, loeu!q to C.ntral HuahtU.Jloo S..Cb 6 0 Tb• IMm, made up ol 13 and 1• y .. r. olda from W•t N•wpor1 S..cb bed look ~ lmpr.-lv• lo outd~tancinq So Hunt inqton S..Cb tlw pr•VlOu• w .. tr, •·1 •• ld110n Haqb Sobool Scorinq qoala an that 9ame lor Wnt H•wpor1 wer• Petar Meech~m. Scott H .. dlnqton, •nd K•lly Me CunaJf Nc Cunlff ecor~ two qo.l•. the hrat on a ~nalty h eir. by John Jrelcmd World Clau track atara beware! The Harbor Area Ia booming wath up and commg proepecta. The date waa last friday, the aile was the Los Angelea Sporta Arena and the event was the preatiqtous Sunklst Trac k and Field Invitational. Beach Swim Times Told Four swimmers from the Newport Beach aection of the Beach Swim Club looged im· pressive times at the Loa Alamitos Short Course 'AB' The meet featured some of the world's top track and field stars from the professional and col· leq&ate levela (i.e. Renaldo Neiam1ah, Greg foster, Evelyn Ashlord), as well as the top prep athletes from the Southern Meet Jan. 24·25. Though short on .wimmers, 23 'AAA' times were made, quahfy. inq those ea.rmng them for the Junior Olympics in April. G-glnG Smith and Amy No• .. ky-each had AAA tunes an th• 50 lreestyl•. 100 fr-tyle, 200 fr-tyl•. 50 breast stroke, 100 br•ut slrolr.e, 50 baclr stroke, 100 back atroh, 100 fly, 100 an· diVIduaJ m~ley, and 200 lndivtdual medley They swam tn the Gtrla 9·10 'A' dav~ton aty ... 27 10, AA.A, hlth, 100 frentyl•. 59 21 . AA.A, thu·d. 50 breut stroll• Larry Zubrtn-sw~m an the Boys )).12 Calafornta, seven from the Har· 'B' daVlalon H~ mark. wer•. thud, 100 bor Area brMSI •trob, 'A', hJth an the 50 breut Corona del Mar Htqh School atrob, 39.2'1 senaora Candy Stoughton, It' NB'&ArftwJW Harfo rd and Shawn Gallaqh r, DJ u well as four members of Buya Jlllarb:aers Newport Harbor Hagh School's male relay team traveled to Los George Argyros of Newport Angeles to compete with the Beach bought controllinq tn· best. lere1t in the Seattle Mariners It was Corona del Mar's Baseball C lub last week. Stoughton, otherwise known as Argyros, a builder and "the Sea King flash," who stole developer, .is a member of the the show, talung first place m Big Canyon Country Club. the 880 yd. rated race w1th a The new Maraners owner ts hme of 2:17.9 seconds. It was Al•x Crenshaw-had oreal aucc-an expected to be in Newport qutle an impresaive a chaevement baa farst swam m .. t lor S.ach, com~tanq Beach this weekend to play an consadenng Stoughton as m the tn the Boys 11·12 'A' davaaaon Haa tames the Crosby Southern Golf Tour· madst of basketball season. at.d The Se.11on reMAined too9h for a 9ood thr .. quarlen of the a tore1qn ellchanoe proor_am_, -JJ race~ but .. ,. tbeD outluted by away from lr&lnino. the tbr" eclloola to finiah fourth HartJord and Gallagher each with a Ume of 3:36.9 . took part in the aule run, a race which pitted some of the top athlete• m the state, 10cludlng Edison's lughly touted Mnior, Jon Butler. BuUer won the race, aa many expected, but Hartford pres· aured the Charger throughout the race and ended up faruahmg fourth with a tune of 4:21.1. Gallagher finished close behmd, talung seventh place with a lime of 4:26.0. Newport Harbor Hlgh School's • • • One team that is well into league play is co.ch Robby Conn's Corona del Mar a.oecer squad, the de.feading Sea View leaque champion.. The Sea .Kinqa opened league play last month, and now bold a 2-1 league mark. The always a(Jgreuive play oJ Terry Peter•n, Bnan Keroohan and Scott Swan played a maJor role 1.0 the team'• next win, a 2· 1 decision over Costa Mesa . CdMDUDlped (Continued from paQe 7) league w1n of the year for Ca.ta Mesa, and moved the Mustangs mark to 1·3 for the year The loss dropped Corona del Mar's Sea Vaew League mark to 3·1. Earher an the week agaanat EJ Toro, Corona del Mar was an top form, trouncang the Chargers by 29 points, 69-40. played for Ernon in the vac tory Corona del Mar closes out the open10g round of league play tonight at 7:30 when the Sea Kmga travel to University to tak" on the Trojans. and places were. hut, 100 andavadual 1 ~I 1 08 namen · also spent the entare summer ou ----------------------------~m~~~~·~;~·~lO~·~AA~A~·~f~ou~r~th~·~50~fr~~~----------------------------..... --------- Pries once agam headed the scoring for Corona d e l Mar wath 20, whale Spann added 16 and Moore 14 Jun1or Chns Lynch led an a rray of other scorers wath 8, a s Pveryonc on the team Univeraity features, among other things, a hiQhJy talented front line, includin.9 6-7 Tim McLaughlin, one of the top- rated centen in the county. Under new coech Jeff Cunruno· ham, University eaters the game with • 2-2 league record and a chance to tie lor the Se.J V1ew I lead with an upeet. PROTECT YOUR TREASURES AND YOURSElF with 1 poured on lite r~inforc:ed concrete AMSAFE welk·in vault _, system which f1aturn our tpeCial door to give you ufety from fire, burglary or vlohnce. ANY SIZE. New Of okS construction. AMSAFE • Security ~us pNct of mind. Cash, LNM, FiMnct. AMSAFE models It 2915-A Redhill, Irvine 714/549-2836 end fM06 Brighton Wrv, Beverly Hilla 213/275-0993. STAY Rent a spactous. luxunous house or condomtntum So much ntcer to come home to after a day on the slopes The two-bedroom condos sleep stx people and the three and four- bedroom houses can easily sleep two or more whole families. WHEN YOU SKI PARK CITY. An authentically restored s1lver mentng town nght out of the 18CX>s. Park C1ty ts the honest new cold spot rn the West Easy to get to by plane or tra1n Only 30 qu1ck mrnutes from down- For more information and our weekly rental rates. JUSt town Salt Lake C1ty P.••• Cft'r contact Park Ctty Accommodations. P 0 Box 2025. Park Ctty. Utah 84060 (00'1) 649-6201 and (714) 640-8729 Individual and Corporate Investors TRUST DEED INVESTMENT I ~h Yields/Secured by Prime SOuthern California Coastal Begion Real Estate • Umited Partnership Programs 1 ) • Pension Accounts ·IRA and Keogh Plans ' \' Owtr .,_,Million of Experience in Trust Deed Transactions Since 1969 'Nnoport Equity 'Funds. Inc Lioenled Broker ~nee 1871 2 Corporate Ptaz.a, Newport BNch. calif. 92880 714· 780-8080 f Red Hibiscus.!\ bnght and tt.>..,f\ 1'-lt.>nu nf h1ht~Cll" nr ,mg•' fW'-'1 <mcllt>n t"n m,,.,., Almond Pleasure. An e'<ottc bl~nd of llllllo)n1(111 <~nd lh11ural ,llrlllllld 0.1\CII ... e:=:, ........ - -- • Clllg Teas. • - Quietly ChamomJie. A soothing blend , ,f rl,,unnmil•· lemon grass and orange petals. TOMty Spice. A heat1y, specy blend of chicory and cinrk'nl(JJr Gadle Orange. A gentle blend of orange petals, doves and cmn.1mnn • BIAAttac:UHoualngSults no Or-c .... ., eb.optor ol 1M hlldlog Joduotry A..ociatioll at Southem Califor· ola lool -k ...u.d for tho Board of Su.pervllors and OrAJi9e County G.rand Jury to ttd...ct a "full-ecale iDvatiga- tiOA" ol the County l..Qal Aid Society. The 81A chapter charqed that the Socie_ty U uli.Dg federal ravenu•Wring fu.nda received annually through the superviSors to "fila a rub of hotuinq· oriented class action au ita." Philip Bettencou.rl, uacutive director of the Oranve County BlA chapter, said ib a state-- ment, "Our concern u business people is that these public funds, oranted to provide per- sonal civil leqal services to the poor, not be diverted to ap- parently more glamorous class action houaing lawsuits. "This bas the effect of under- mininQ local home rule by removinq housing policy from elected officials, local citizens and property owners and send- ing it to the courtroom lor deter- mination." The Leqa.l Aid Society and the Western Center lor Law and Poverty have bJ-ouqht suits on (Continued from page 1) puaenger load of 6.1 m.iUion by then. The jurors said that the study they want ahouJd pinpoint a reqional airport site and two others lor qeneral aviation. Riley ezplained thai the county •uperviaors have long sought such facilities and have several sites under consideration. Riley added that "the grand jurors didn't have their facts straight." And he recalled that "other grand juries have crilicit:ed us for ordering other studies, including this oue." Amono other studies was one done by Quinton Engineering 1n 1963, which is the basis for developm~mt of the ~irport under its present confiquralion. Another study of airport needs was made in 1968 by land plan- ner William Pereira, who decid- ed that the county should have an aJrport bio enough for transcontinenl&l airliner Mrvice; present flight J.i,aMl.ia...approa- imately 500 aif .;ilea for aU car- riers. The qrand jury also recom- mended that there be a long haul airport. In 1970, Pa.nons Engineering .-ugoeated BeU Canyon as the site for a new regional airport, but that was rejected as imprac · tic aL Supervisors' Chamnan Ralph 8 . Clark, of Anahe1m, JOined Riley in blasting the rury's com- tnents. He held it to be ··In - conceivable that the Orange County Grand Jury could sug- gest still another a upo rl study." "The master plan 1s not a magical document; 11 IS a step toward a solution ... and after years ot paralyz.inq mac hon, I believe there i& merit m taking a first step," Clark added. bea..tl ol iAdi.nd.W. lA Orugo County ~ the cili• of Jr. Yine, Newport Beach, Laquna s..c.b aocl San CM.me.ote. The plaiau.tf:t won an impor· tant roWld in the lrrio.e w.it (Stocb va. city of lrviu) lh• .. weeb ago when a Fourth Diolrict Cowl ol Appoab judge rulttd the liz low-income penon~ biiVe leoalltandinq to cballenqe the city'• &onino practx:.., which they say prevent them bom gettinq hou.ing i.n Irvine. The judge'• nalinq overturned a 1979 summary judqment that had dismissed th• lawsuit durinq pretrial discovery. Bettencourt charqed that this lawsuit and others like it are arqued at public e:apensa. "Ironically, more tu:payer lunda au then upended by these same communities to de- fend their poeitions," be said. "We don't thinlr: that's in the best interest of housing, the peo- ple of Orange County or our local governments. "We are asking city officials to joi.n us in opposinq la:a han- douts to political action groups and the sponsors of class action lawsuits." The Legal AJd Society is noportedlJ ln line for grants of ovor $300,000 lA lodoral lwlcb hom 1M Orange Coun11 Boord of s~J)OrviiOro lA lioc:al 198.-82. ~rtechan,execuUYe diroetor ol tho "'""'" Loval Aid Sociaty, uld he had oot ... a a copy of the BIA'a p,.. rei .... annou.aci.ng ita call for a grand jury inv"tigattoo. "The suit. we b.ave filed are nol clau action lawsuit., they are nonnall•wsuits, '' Cohen aa..id . "We are cballenqino certain actions UAdertaken by the various cities. If we are wronq, the courts will teU us." Cohen termed the BIA's call for an inve~tiqation "absurd ." The chaJ"g" "make it look u il the county doesn't know what it is doing with ita money," Cohen Aid. "In fact, the county very carefully drew a contr•ct with u.s, which it monitors throuoh its revenue-sbarinq of- fice. furthermore, a repreaen- ta.tive Gf the Boarti of Super- visors ia very active on our board of directors." His group, Cohen said, "will litigate only as a lui resort. But we're not goinQ to be bullied by heavy-handed tactics." C.M .Man Held In Assault A Costa Mesa man was ar· rested Ja.n . 28 for allegedly assaulting a Newport Beach polic e oUicer with a deadly weapon. Jn a scuffle with two NBPD of- ficers in a liquor store parking lot, the suspect allegedly pulled the qun out of the holster of one of the officers, police detective Mike Hietala said. The officers, Sgt. Doug Fletcher aad patrolman Robert Jacoby, Hietala said, then knocked the gun from the suspect's hands. The two policeman had rolled to the parking lot at 2994 W. Coast Hwy. around ~ a.m. Wednesday, responding to a report of a man passed out in a car, the detective said. When the officers went to wake the man up, the suspect "came out fiqhhng," he said. Michael John Feeley, 21, of Costa Mesa, was booked at city jail on suspicion of auau.lting a peace officer with a deadly weapon in connection with the incident. Feeley, who is now beino held in Orange County jail in lieu of $5,000 bail, is ICbeduled to ap- pear before Ha.rbor Municipal Court Judoe Calvin Sdu:n.idt feQ. 10, Jack Sulhms, deputy district attorney, said. AI the hearing, the O.A .'s of- fice and the defendant's at- torneys will discuss the suspect's pleadinq to a cha.roe of assault with a deadly weapon aqaia.t a police officer, Sulluns said. If the matter it not resolved, the case will be •t for preliminary hearinq in court, be added. Punk RorkerTrlaiSet For Feb. 23 Two police-described 'Punk rockers" who are accused in the nearly tata.l stabbing lui June 12 of a chauffeur here are ~~ehedul­ ed to have a pretrial hearing Friday and go to trial Feb. 23. Both are c harged with assault with intent to murder and assault with a deadly weapon with likeUhood to do great bodi- ly harm. David Paul Owen a.nd Rod Glenn Sherard, both 19 and botlt of Huntinoton Beach, •re accused·of.at'-ckioq·De.oial 1 Harm1, 25, u put of a qroup of acme dozen teenaqera on Walnut Street in WHt Newport. Ha.rms had been driving his employers' limousine, carrying bve female paaaenoera, when a beer bottle struck the car. The chauffeur confronted the crowd, then wu beaten and stabbed. He underwent emergency heart surgery to repair • hole in his left ventricle. BWngual Grants.AreAwallable Grants lor students who wish to become teachers in a bil· lngual classroom are available from the California Student Aid Commission. Priority filing deadline ia feb. 12, although applications will be taken after that date if funds are still available. Applications are available at high achool counseling and col- lege financial aid offices. Students must file the student aid application for California, listino CSAC Bilinqual Grant 0275 under qu .. tion 42. STRETCH "" YOUR DQI.I. ABS_· with the Dollar Saver! a Sutton News Group Presentation It's a super inflation lighter guaranteed to save you $MONEY$ Appearing next week in the THE NE\VPOKT ENSK:iN (CODIIAoed--l) pe.Diw w&lc.tl .,. J&qbtinv the .... bellle, u lo tM IIAio of Califol'llla, .. AnulJODQ' N.id. "Our tob u COQtractOI' S. to m.nimlae tlle .. OWll of profita to 1M eily," be odd.d. The city hu bMn tryinQ Iince lut Nay to take that job away from AnulroD.q, toe ...... ill proportion of the profit.-it wu vetting on•eiQhth-&nd ... It bicb for a naw operator in the fu.ture. Armabonv UJ11 the city wantt hiro. to qive up the rigbta to two other l....a on the property, throu9h which ha report.d.Jy could make u much u he does on the city weU., or about $800,000 a yar. Armstrong hu fil.d a declar- atory relief action in Los Anqel• County Superior Court, ... kinq to protect his ric;rht. to thOMleues. "That W the crux of UU. thinq," Arm~trono said. "The city continuoualy read• only part of the contract. It doe1 aay that we are auppc»ed to hun over to them the rivhta to operate the weU.,_and here W the important part-provided that we do not heve to aAiqn riqhtt to other leases." The other leases allow Arm- strong to drill into non-city land from the tame well sites, Arm- stronq said. He hu three wells that CJO into land under the old Pacific Electric Co. riqht of way alonCJaide Cout Hiqhway. The land ia owned by the city but the mineral riqbta are held by the state, which leases them in tum to ArmatronCJ. "There W room for 10 to 15 new walla there also," Arm- stronq aaid. "Our projections .. Some more reasons: • aro oqa&lly groat lro. 1M ... _, ,_ ....... 1M Poclllc lloetric louo .. 0.., .,. from tho cll1 1-. although tho potoaU.I of 1M cil1 1-Ia qreater wttb oew exploration," A,...rong oold. Under the other 1 ..... Arm· etroa.o operalH t1uee wells that drop ltraighl down to dr•w oil from ben .. th land owned by Beeco Ltd., a com~y headed by Bill BonniAg. ' "The aond.Uion the city ub, that we otve up !hOM lea ... , U silly," Armstronq "Aid. While that iuue remained to be settled in court, Armatronq reiterated hi.a charqe that the city doa~n't know how to operate the wells. "Seeking the lowest bid won't auure the city of the meet money," he aaid. "Thi.a oil field is too complex. It is cloee to the Newport-Inqlewood fault, which is actually a number of splinter faults. "There are 13 separate levels of production. It's a chopped-up mess. You have to have a very sophi.Jticated oil operator there, not some driller from Lono Beach or Huntinqton Beach, like the advisors the city has now." Armstrong also said "the real romance of those wells" lies in the pouibihty of new oil pools under the lideh10ds. "I don't know why the city says it doesn't want to drill deeper or further out," he said . "The wells that are there now are just a..bout pumped out." Friday. the city, Armstrong's lawyer and DOE representa- tives from Washington testified at a DOE hearing in Los Angeles. Armstrong's lawyer, Bob "Buck" Buchanan, said Armstrong didn't actually sell the oil in question, since it wu owned by the city, Oevlt4 roporlod . Attonaey Nib Wceo.rm.k:k, rapr .. ntlnq the city~ •r9ued !Mt tho oily Ia willlog to pay ib a4-r• back, that Arm.etrong certilled the oil for Mia and wu paid •ven-elghtha of the money. Thomu 0 . Mann, actinCJ deputy director, Office of H .. rmq• and Appeals, is ezpected to iuua a deciaion in two wHU, Devlin u.id. The city and Armatronq have $1.5 million in a joint etcrow account at Security Pacific National Bank in Newport Ceater td cover the payback, Mid Devlin. The problem, from the city's point of view, i1 that the money is lumped toqether and the city can't pay back ita share until Armtlronq agrees to pay hJs part of the over· charQes, Devlin Mid. "This problem could drao on for year&," be added. Roger Angle Cluunbei'ToHear Fk:ker,WaU Bill Ficker, president of the Oranoe Coast Association, and Jean Wall, president of SPON (Stop Polluting Qur Newport), will debate at the next meeting of the Corona del Mar Chamber of Commerce Tuesday, Feb. 10 at 7:30a.m. in the Sherman Gardens Auditorium. Ficker has been an advocate of planned growth while Watt has been a leader in the slow growth movement in Newport Beach. Jim Wood of Un1que Ho mes will be the moderator. The event is open to the public. For reservahons at $2.50 per person call the Chamber of 1 Commerce at 673-4050. K Valentine Red Plate A tradition among the early American families was that when someone deserved specilll praise or anention they were served dinner on the Red Plate. Today thls custom returns ... the perfect way to acknoNfedge a friend's spedal triumphs ... celebrate a birthday ... praise a }ob weU done ... reward • goo! achieved ---Of simply say are Spedal Todey. .. Start D tradition. B.D. HOWES and SON An old friend visits, good report card. Mother's Dll~ Homecoming. Won the gome, New baby. Gradu- atk>n, Engagement. Father·s Day, Annivenaries. FINE JEWELERS FOR FOUR GENERATIONS N(WPOIT llACH J.411 \I .a l tdo I 67';-!711 l(l'l \'-1,!1/' ,.,V.f"ll-..\ "'I\ K\~K•N~ Jkli '-''-"'~1"·' ''''~''(IVO ''~"'"I OWII DIY-INIDII-01JT •Qedrhglcc • "' io ' I ._ ... Interest compounded on your dally btllance! &mlnter•t •• the rate of 51.4~1 No monthly cttaroe if your balance Is $750 or morel Nominal fee of $3 per month if -!.:.-· belance Is lowort c.~~ .. ,., ............ ....., -hill Ill II lt .. tb•C,81•1-.CA-1 (1'M)IJ'I..m1 --In L..auN ........ -.atoa • telirttonl&hore .. (213l.u&-t421 1Ahlte~nore •.. l74-l1tt • .....,_ ............... en~ ~···-.. UDO • ..... ~ .......... 1154Zt2 ---~...... -o11t ~-..ch ....... ,..,. IMCbow• ....... n• • ~ ............... 1101• - Client I Jets tbt 90 percent of their N.I.t e&me lroJD the cllentl OD tiM Monea liltl through mid· November. The Jl.wport EDslp Wech•••I.IJ'· F.a.-t t . 1• ._ ll (ContiDued hom page 1) 1D a eepuate courl action, Aleu.Adu'a NIWC 1ut w.ek wed & formeJ employM, acoua~ mg him of t.Uiag Jt. co.afidentJal u.t of pro.pectift cuat01Dera lis d.aya &.Iter the a-employ .. ud t..tifled on belW.f of NINC' a l~al adveraary, 'Nonex. AJeu.nder and N'Jl(C are ~eheduled to face Judo• Luis Cardenu Feb. 11 on a contempt chaJ'ge brought by Monex attor- ney• for allegedly diaoheyt.ng a Superior Court order buri.ng N'INC lrom using Monex client liab and contacting Monex cuatomera, and ordering them to return all copiea of the Birch Street invfttment lirm'a client lilts. Monex-selJ-bUled u "one of the world'alargeat precioua me1ah dealen" -filed 1\llt Oct. ~asking for at leut $2 million in punitive damagea from Alexander, NIMC and the American Gold O.alen Auocia- tion of Newporl S..ch. In the suit, .Monex allege• that elther Alexander took the "con- fidential" client lilt• without authorization or that he, and NIMC, "trespaued" upon prop- e rty leased by Monex to "rna· appropriate" the lists. The luit also charges the gold dealers bought the allegedly "stolen" client lists. Monex attorneys claim, in court document.s, that the lists "are extremely valuable to .Monex and would also be to a competitor as they contain customer names, telephone numbers and, in some cases, market information about the customer . . . The lists have been compiled through yea• of advertismg and investigation . . . Monex bas undertaken strict security measures, in- cluding the shredding of out- dated lists, in order to preaerve their confidentiality." trade, the IU.lt alleqee. The Nona IU!t aJ.ao '"b dama~ from actual builD .. loeaee to be det.1"Dllned later on the grou.nda that the dafendenlt "m.i.aappropriated" the com- pany'a "trade aecreta, 'J thereby g&iDing an "unfa.ir competitive adv41\tage" and "interfered" with Monera pra.pecUva cldlomera. No trial date baa been aat yet in the lawauit. The gold dealera agreed Oct. 30 to a court arrangement drafted by the .Monez attorneys to return the inveatment firm'a client lists and refrain from con- tacting pra.pectiva inveatora whoee namea were pulled from the lilts. In a court declaration, Charlet Gr .. r, a partner in the American Gold Dealen Auocia- tio.n, tlated the company in~tructed ita broken to quit using the client liab six days after the lawsuit wu liled by .Monex Oct. 3. In a deposition given by Jeffrey Raskin, Alexander's part- ner in forming NIMC (who later aold his ahara oJ the company), Raakin teatified that Alexander bad 15 carbons from computer print-outa listing the .Monez clients' namea. Raskin testified Alexander had told him he "got thoae out of the garbage." AJez. ander called Raskin one Sunday morning, picked him up and drove him to Monez to ahow him that the investment firm was dumping the lists in itt truh, Ruldn further depoeed. In the deposition, Raskin stated: copying the nam• down at a Ume). But they w.re constantly quitting or ~ng fired or-they were ju.t young glrla about 18, 19." . Jla.ald,n t .. tified that it took the girt. about two montha to copy the nam .. by bud from the cu- bont of the Monea client U.ta. He alto t .. ufied he Nw Alex- ander and other NIMC broken uaa the Monex lilts to call proa- pectlve cuatomera. On Oct. 30, a temporary r81tra.ining order wu granted by Judge Robart Green, barring NJ}.fC and Alexander from uaing the Monex client list to contact pra.pectiva cuatomera and demanding that all original and copiaa of the U.ta, and "all other document• which contain the namea of Monaz cuttomen" be returned to the inv•tment firm. The court order wu i.Uued after .Monez produced declara- tio.na and affidavitt from nina of itt cuatomen, who ttated that only through Monax could their inveatments in precious metala be known, and claimed that they were contacted by NIMC repre- Mntativet trying to get them to do buainea with NIMC. The .Monex attorneys also sup- plied a declaration from the company'• compliance pirector, Gregory Wallter, who ttated over 50 .Monex customers had complained they were contacted by NIMC. On Dec. 15, Judoe John Trot- ter iaaued a preliminary injunc- tion barring NIMC and Alez- ander from using the Monez client liatt or information from the lists to tolicit business. Declarations from three former NIMC employees, who all ttated they reaiqned Jan. 9 from Alexander'• inveatment Hrm becauae oJ ita "unethical bu.sineu practicet," were also fUed in court in wpport of the contempt charge. In a daelaraUon qiven by Alexander, the head of NIMC at.ted, "I did not requ•t the broken to qo back through the (Wonex) lead ah .. ts and com- pare thoee na.m• that were Monaz c\Utomen with thoee in the boob (of proepects they had aheady contacted). J did tall them U they inadvertently con- tacted a Monex cu.tomar they ware to immediately apolooize and than deatroy the perton'a nama and addrftl alip." In a declaration, Marvin Lager, an attorney for .Monaz, tlated that "on Jan. 20, Samuel Robb called, who Mid that after filing bit declaration Alexander contacted him and wanted Robb to give teatimony Ob defendant'• behalf, in return for $2,000 cub and an airline ticket to Robb's Arkansas home." Lager further declared that an "a:dramely agitated and ner- voua" Robb bad told him that Alexander's attorneys had also wanted him to give tettimony, noting that a "side deal" could be made with Alexander. Si~ daya after Gu .. t aiqned a declaration on Wonax'1 behalf, NIWC filed a SJOO,OOO lawauU agaiut him, and his new employer, Jnveetment M.talt International of Newport S..Ch. The au.U ~ that Gueat foln· ad the rival farm, taking with him a "~rat and conlidenhal" lilt of NIMC'a cliantt and proe- pective cuatomara. Attorneys for Ale~ander and NIMC rat~S>Cnded that Monex'a raqueat for a contempt order amounted to "privata barau- mant" and that the decla.rahona of Robb and Beina.r ahowed Alexander attamphng to comply with the tarm.a of the court order. Court papers hled by NlMC attorney• charge that "these two gentlemen being greedy m then own ngbt sunply m&llltam- ed their customer leads for then own pertonal benefJ! and a.re now trymg to lay blame on NIMC." NIMC lawyers argued that Robb and Bemar's declarahons do not alate that Alexander or NIMC officers "authonzed them or encouraged them"'to violate the court o rder demanding that all inJormabon pulled from the Monex chant lists be turned over. , OnFeb.l9 The state COMt&l Co-•18PoD baa c:let.yed Wlhl feb. 19 voting on a controversiAJ gravity Jlow aawar Line propc»ed to run along the edge of Upper Newport Bay Ecoloqlal R ... rve. The gravity flow line it the cheapett of thr .. altamauv .. propoaed by Orange County Sanitation Oittnct 5, wh.ach w - ed for the continuance, a c- cording to Mayor Jackie Heather, a member of the dutrtct's board of du ectort and a member of the Regional Coattal Commiuion. The 9,000~foot grav1ty flow llne ta ast1mated to coet $816,000 to bu1ld, plut $2,200 • year to main tam. A aecond alternative, an enlarged pumpmg atation n .. r Jamboree and S.n Joaquin Hllla roads, would catt $1,085,000 to bwld, $12,000 a year to main- tatn and $31,400 a year to fuel. The third alternative, which hu bean mpported by Friends of the Bay and other environ- mentalma, is a 95-foot-deep tun- nel wh1ch would follow Jam- boree Road for 4,500 f .. t. Save Money! On lnw111ce AUTO-LIFE-FIRE COMMERCIAL-BOATS 642-1741 awom..a DJL11a...r.ll._ FARMERS IIISUUIICE GROUP no job i1 tH ..,/! CALL US 01111 e 151-1112 Alexander said the client lists allegedly taken from his com- pany were worth upward. of a $1 million to a nval who could tap NIMC's protpectiye cuttom- era for their preciou.a-metala "I went, wallted up with him, looked into the garbage can, and be pulled out three or four more sheets of these na met. We then proceeded to go through the garbage, and no more- nothing more was there but those three or four theets, and he told me, 'They probably dumped the garbage.' " Rulrin alae t•tified: "Some girla were hired, and the namea were put up on win- dowa (to the nam .. could be In declarations, Marc Guetl, Samuel Robb, and Thomu Beinar claimed that while Alez- ander told them to return the lead abeets after the laWtUit began, the NIMC chairman also told them that they could keep the nam• of the customen who they contacted from the Monex client liats in their pra.pect boob, aliating of pe.raona iDter- eelecl iD baJm9 predou ...... tlnucavlt-tni!IC. ,._ tii:IM .. ore lOO~ PrinciPII! end Interet* Retutned on IIIM~B E'*Y Trust Deed Sold to tnvestcn. Elect nul & Gen•ll ContriCtOfl Stitt l.lc.. 1363251 2 7 32 EAST COAST HWY .. SUin A CORONA on 11M 14tel . KAT&.LA. ORAHGI. CA. 92667 trade. , Both NIMC and the gold dea.lert mailed literature to and phoned Monex client•, uting the list to ... k the lnveaton' buainesa in the precioua-JMtala r .. d from the carbon~), and they would ail back and write down the name, and they would put. the name and p hone QUip'-' down OD a a..d ... ......... _ ....... 111 ••• diD9: tJIItll wo• an "Unally 011110ftl wouM a. A ftw words fiiiJf • .. ·~ cMon C fui teau eRa tau UJnt .. One of the best pt.ces to eat In Oranse County~· Restaurant Crldc, L.A. nmes. ....... &IMI french Cu ..... LMMia&IMioe-er .....-~ for lesetv&dons 71 4/110. )81 0 23642 EJ Taro Road EJ Toro. CA (In S.ddleback Valley Shopplns Cen~' =~ Marie Callenders and Car Wash) • ...-..... !1!~~ ... ~~ ICJient 1ne s Day Speonl ~ -/beverly hills so lon , IJlt Jtr•OIIOn lf 1 ~rt-rEX i1c 1~-· ~.1 LJIPtteVJr,Jf ~F . I ,, '"'-{ r r• • E"'r ~ yPor~ r>xr ~:rtAr ce /t ll AJ< .. ;r 1 ~~ 631 -3386 Newrx.)rt &-=-o c h AUDQ MARCUS -NAIL SALON- FOR THE ENTIRE MONTH OF FEBAUAR'r .d>c .. r,., .. uJ .:. v.d eSc~ S11 o oo 1NLLUCII>8 I"RI:E ~ C ~~ -FOI"'~ afonJ elf.Ll 1 • .,,...,. .. s I 'S 00 !NO. ...-:lli8 A"'IC MANIO..A' -r<OR,__ Noaek's bas Just the Right Gift for Your ~ALENTINE TANURDS alARMS PEN~ TRAYS UGtrrmS BRASS OIOSS Pf.NS GOBLETS PEW'I'Dt S1L VER HOU. WARE ARMETALE NOA£K TROPHY 11e E. 17&. 8 1., Ne. 117 &-,,_ " ... ·• ~ f.nftt.l .:= .. a.Mesa ...._1 14 1 •coPPER RE·PIPING' The.re are different methods of lnstaWng copper pipe. At Just Plumbing we bel.iew each home must be gtvm the Individual attention and care It claenla. If you are considering having copper pipes Installed In your home. call a few plumbers and flnd out what a good PRICE Is . . . Then call JUST PLUMBING and flnd o ut what a good JOB Is ... FREE ESTIMATES. 642-4111 JUST PLUMBING Calif Stott Con!f Lie. No 3~ Serving N.wpon a.ch end C~ta M .. A sensational spring '81 from FRANCES HENAGHAN A pastel palette of new looks with the perfect balance of color and shape. Thursday, February 5 Informal modeling from noon to l p.m. Sportdress Department, Upper level \ ::\eulport Equity 'Funds ·Inc Licensed Broker Since 1971 (714)7~ ........ ,~,. r•-r C.l.l !loeRwwpootl:aolp (Cootlauod hom -1) .-.. W o juol dQo'l bow ollhls polD.t ... T11o .hlvh oourt vrplod • wri\ ol 011poroodeu on lho roquool ol boobto.re aHomey Joe.hua Kaploo ol Leo Ao.,.l ... ltopJ.n. had aroued that the boobtore had been continuoudy ill opeia- tion since Jt opened Oct. 8 or 9 (allhough.ll hu boon cloood since the fire dct. 23), and th..t continued clOO.Oq of the book- store would work a financial hardship on the owner, Thomas Wade, Burnham said. The bookstore and video ta~ center yrill be open 24 hours a day, with private security quards from Pro-S.rv Security Systems in Costa Mesa on duty "from dusk till dawn every niqht," Tupler said. For its reopening Frid{ly or Saturday niqht, pendinv city building department approval of remodeUng construction, the store will feature pomoqraphic film stars Candy S.mpl• and Uacbi Oioard, who will aiqn autographs and qive out photo., Tupler said. "If people want to, they can have their photos taken with the two ladies," Tupler said . In addition, the store has com- missioned an artist to paint a 35- foot mural alonq the aide of the Special Morning Edition *Volume I* . Sunrile Senlce at Carl's Jr •• Thousands of breakfast· hungry folks fa ithfully flock to Carl's Jr. each morning for Sunrise ser· vice. It's Carl's own Sun· ri se Sandwich ~ -toasted English muffin, egg. cheese and your choice of bacon or sausage. "'ollcliag -lo oorthbound bailie oa ~ illglawoy. Tllo aurol wtll deplcl ao on• cleoll llomoa p.uu._ J)OI.oo, with ceahuioa CJU&fd ud ••I· nude woman qeliDlng, with the CGU..., Ia lho bockgrouod. The atore hu been the •u.bject ot much CODtroveray here lD the pul. Allho plckollioo Ocl. 14 Helfrick a.od hil brother, a C.thollc prt.t, and .om4f citi~ sent carrleclliqna that Nid, "Don'tlaploit S.z" and "S..ve Our Hom..". Helfrich aid then, "The thin91 th_,-•11 deaecrate one of God'• qrHt .. t qiftl, aes." Store owner Wade could not be tNched for coDllnent thia week at two Hawaiian Gardena telep.hone nwnben· he had listed on buain ... documents. A woman who answered one of the nu.m..ben identified herself u hia 1iller. She Mid, "Thit ia our parent.' house; Tommy Uvea in Nevada. I don't know when he11 h. down here avain." She aaid abe didn't know which city in Nevada. • Store manager Tupler said thU week he wu Qlad to be ready to r.open. "We'UJ entitled to free speech, for one thinq. Ji'or another, people want what we aelL While we have been closed, we have turned away hWldr.d.l of quys-and women, too. A lot of people want this stuff. Anybody over 21 should ·~ '*:/ \· I ! ' [!arlsJr.j , Copyrighl 1981 be .Uowed to purohu. U. "There u• sto,...m 12 other ciU• i4 Oranqe CO\U\ty, ~ 1Dclud1n9 Anaheim, GArden Grov., S.nta An.., Whitti•r and Fullerton. Why not h•re?" A pueerby, C....y Thomas, 26, of N•wport SNell., l.lid, "I ~ don't ... anythino wronq with their reopening. I don't beUeve that adulta should be told what they ahouJd and abould not .... "I don't thinlt kids shouJd be allowed in, but ther•'s a aiqn riqht there that says, 'Adults Only.' Nobody holds a qu.n to your head forclnq you to go inside." Meanwhile, city officials i.ndi· cated they will do everything leqalJy pouible to light the store's presence in Newport Beach. New Budget BDI lnti'Ocluced Assemblywoman Marian Bergeson of Newport Beach has introduced a constitutional amendment which would cut off leqislative salaries if the June 30 deadline for passage of the stale budqel is not met. Berqeson pointed out that in seven of the past 12 years, the legislature has mi ssed the deadline, wh ich is mandated by the state constitution. Fo recast: Bright & Cheery ~tar Carl Karcher Entcrplises DS LEAVE HU " By the dawn's earl y lighl: Carl's Jr. Sunrise Sandwi<'h and . yoar choice olbreaklast beve-rage. An a.m. meal worth leaving home for! Further investigation reveals other mouth· r:-----------1!!!'1 watering morning menu More Tastefvl News!!! en-~~~ morse ls at Carl's Jr. Hot· I Sunrise Breakfast Special iust 99• I cakes, omelettes. golden I hashed browns, scram· Present this coupon juice (orange or V-8 1. I bl ed eggs. bacon. sausage .• at the Carl's Jr.. listed Limit one coupon per I Or. for those with below and save on a customer. pl ease. Continental tastes, fresh I complete breakfast. Offer good I sweet rolls or toasty Our Sunnse throug h English muffin s. I Sandwtch .• and al this loc.ation: I That's breakfast at your chm ce of I "lk ff P\1 E 17th St .• at I Carl 's jr.-always a great m1 , co ee or Santa Ana Ave . in way to start your day. ,.. .. ..,......, Costa Mesa ~~·~.:.;;.couPON -----.J (Continued from a»o• 1) for Rea-arH atudeot., but the Bo6rd of !ducaUon i.s looking at a proposal that would have all 6th, 7th a.ndr8lh qract.rs livinv north of 19th Street att•ndinQ ToWioklo Middle School, all 71b and 8th graders south of 19th goinv to Ensiqn Niddl• School and sixth qradera eouth of 19th attendinq Whittier Elementary. Kuhm said he had "no slronq feelinqs" about where the students should be transferred, but he said the "apeclal needs" of junior hioh 1tudents would best be served at the middle school, rather than at the hiqh school-leVei. The school board last week scrapped a proposal·that would have combined qrades 7 throuqb 12 on the district's lour hiqh schot>l campuses. All Corona del Mar students will be transfened to Harbor View Elementary, a move Prin- cipal KappeJe called "wondet- ful. 1 think they're happy to qo in a group anywhere," he said. "Harbor V1ew is an excellent and weU·kncnm echool."' But Ha.rbor View Perenl· raculty Oroantsatton Pretident Norilyo Boao Mid lho movo would cau.M 183 Harbor View shadenta to move to AAderMn School. "lt would have been better iJ they had waited another year to ciON Corona d•l Mar. All th• new stu.d•nla could have been housed without movin9 any Har- bor View students," she laid. "But next year's sixth qrade class is ao Iaroe that many of them will have to be moved to Andersen, and then to Uncoln in another year." Corona del Mar PTA Presi· dent Ann Duncan said she was "disappointed to see the school close for nostalgic and emo- tional reasons. But lor financial and educational reasons, il'l probably a better move." She said she bad favored keeping the school open one more year, but "now we'll just have to accept it and work together with Harbor View to make a smooth transition. Sometimes kids adapt betler than parents do." According to Beth Linton, Rea Breatwood is PJ'A pr.-de.ot, 80Jil• .,.nata ~ to uk the board to neoa· udtir a .. ·• clotu.re. "We've had .ome proqram cuts, ~ut the tNch•n:' extra ef· fort made U.P for lt," sh• Nid. SolM Rea t .. chen y.,. vQlunt .. ncl to INCh journalism, yearbook and vocal mu.sio on their own tim•, to offNI budvetary proqram cuts ca1.1Hd by declininq enrollment, she sa.id , . "We just don't know if the 1tudenl.s can qet the same kind of J)eraonal attention anywhere elae," abe said. ·One Rea parent, Jean Wallace, who attended Rea school in 1958, said she feared the "peer pressure" that could re1ull if West Side C011ta Mesa 1tudents go to school with children from Balboa Island at Ensign. No plans have yet been made at either school, but parents and school offiCials said they ex-. peeled to hold ooodbye ceremonies. "We usually have a family picnic on the last day of school. It will probably be a little biqqer this year," said Kappele. Our Interest Checking Account will pay you 5-1/4% interest. Compounded daily. • You see. it's never been our style to let money just sit around and do nothing. maintain the minimum balance.) And with a minimum balance.' there are two ways to set up your lree checking account at Brentwood . Check Return: With a $500 minimum balance, we·ll send you your cancelled checks along with your monthly statements. Check Safekeeping: With a $300 minimum balance. we'll store oopies of your cancelled checks and mail you a monthly statement listing your transactions by date and check number. (Of oourse. with bothser· vices there will be a monthly service fee if you don't .. N ... ........ _ IID..uitaD,.__,... Why . and your .,.,;,;,~ in anc>thei? 1nterest on all at Brentwood. And a senior citizen receiv1ing any recurring payments, please ask us about how our Interest Checking Account can benefit you. Let's talk finances at Brentwood Savings. 3140 E Coast Hwy . Corona del Mar. CA 92625. (2t3) 760-9200. PRECISION MORTGAGE SERVICE, Inc. offers lnvestots Secured 2ND and 3RD Trust Deeds HIGH YIELDS . you receive - INVESTOR NOTES CURRENTLY AVAILABLE L-n Numkr A. .... , ... , lote T.O. ~ool-TerM Moftthtr, PeyM•f'lt IL 365 $50.000 20% ht 12 $1U.OO IL 369 $150,000 21% 2nd ' $2.625.00 IL 346 $17,000 21% 2nd 12 $297.00 IL 360 $111,600 20 % 3nl 6 $1.976.00 • Original note • Deed of trust • Fire policy endorsement • Title insurance policy • Appraisal • Prepayment penalties IL 379 $100,000 20% 2nd 12 $1 ,666.00 • Fre.e collection service • loans for 30 days to 36 months FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, PLEASE CALL JOHN NIXON OR GEORGE RYDER ~------------~~------------------~~~~~---r~~~~ • j ) I ' ' I ' l I ( f ' ' c io l Sondy Neugebauer 13 a prin- cipal in Conc:epU m, a Newport Beach daign 6/udio specializing Jn pro/88/Jionol oH(ces and private residences. by SaDdv Neugebauer Yean aqo, a biq d .. k. com- fortable chAin and briqhl lightino were conaidered adequate com· ponenll for AD office environ- ment. Times changed and office space became more homelike. Trends too appeared with super- graphica, c hrome and glass fu r- niture and distinctive space dividers. But while change was (ADd ia) welcome, there's more to be considered i.n creating An offlce environment. Specifically, color, furniture and 1ll arrange- ment play a critical role m work productivity, the effechveness of a buai.neu executive. and the way in which that execuhve ts perceived by others. Considerable psychological research and testing has pro- duced some a.mazmg nuallces regarding color selechon. Red, orange and bnght yellow are regarded AS produc mg energy and excitement. Some o ffices have utilized these colors 10 hallways, employee lounges and cAfeteriAS m o rder to discourage l01terln'!· SIN On the other hand, work apace predomi.nated by these colors can decrease productivi- ty. Teall at Yale Univeuity iD· dicate that bnghl colors dull wits alld Affect all levels of men- IAl activity, ancludino problem solvi.ng and decbion making. Red u the bigqest villain. The more this color predomi.nates in a room, the qreater u the emo- tional stimulation and in- terference wtth reAson and memory. To counter thi.s, for ex· Ample, a combination of red and blue might be used for the library of leqal offices. The red would p rovide stimulation while a heavier emphasis on blue would produce serenity. Color is Also perceived dif- ferently because of culturAl THE VISmNG EXPERT bentage. As symbols of mourn- ing and ev1l, black, v1olet and purple meet d1sapproval in a number of Middle Eastern coun- tries. A business tra.osacbon with a client vtsiting from such countries would be off to a poor start an an ofhce with any of these hues . Probably the biggest error m the selection of off1ce furniture has to do more w1th s1ze than color. It 1s often noted that ex· TAX TIPS TAX TIPS is a service sup· plied by Boron, Lesley, Thomas, Schwan, and Postma, a Newport &och-based firm of cerlilied public accountants, SJ»Clolizing in lull and com- puterized services lor smoll and medium busi~s. If Th• IRS Calls Many tupayers, wh1le matlmg their federAl tu return, wonder what theu chances are of bemg audited. The rather rough numbers look hke th1s. U you have a non- business 1ncome of less than $50,000, your chances are about one in <40 of bemg exammed II your non-business income ex- ceeds $50,000, your c hances could be as h1gh as one 1n 10 II you are m busmess lo r yourself and have net mcome of under $30,000, your c hances o f ex- anunahon are about one 10 30 If your net mcome exceeds that hqure, your chances move up to one in 20. These are rough hgurea And have a number of variables includmg the nature of your busmess and the part of the country m wh1c h you .ue located. There aze two b.u1c types o f IRS audits. The first and least comprehens1ve is an "office audit." The office auditor will U8;Sill.!~~ak tor aubstantiatioll on alliiiit 'DWiil)';r 0 sP8cilic iteJU. It's pouibJe that thu type of audit CAll be as simple u mailing copies of cancelled checu to the office auditor. Unlea the audttor IS proposmg a sizable addJ11onAl tax, you may not need professional help. A "held audtt" 11 muc h more comprehensive, and IS often conducted at your place of busmess. In add1hon to substan- hahon for VcHtous expenses, 11 may also mvolve pomts of law. Cons1der engaqmg professional assastance al the outset of the aud1t. You need not necessanly at- tend e1ther of these forms of ex amanatlon II you s1gn a lull "Power of Attorney" 1n re fe rence to the tax returns 10 queshon, your represenlahve can then act fully 10 your absence. The "Power of At- torney" should stale whether or not your representative c.1n con- sent to c hanges m your tax .Uab1hty w1thout your further permiSSIOn ecuUves invariably request a bioo•r chau for each advanc• ment up the corporate ladder. For some, thia request could be a mi.slAke. Small-statuzed people become even smaller m larqe furniture. How authoritative can a top executive appear if he (she) 1a dwarfed by a chAir? It's more effective to fit the chau to the individual ADd then add the impression of height by using low-sluno chairs for visitors; placing the desk and chAir on a small dais; adjusting lighllDg, etc . II a conversational area IS re- quued 10 an execultve office, it is necessary to have a clear 1dea as to the purpose for the area. Serious business discussions lose impact iJ one is engulfed 1n an overstuffed chAir o r sunk mto a cloud of down. On the other hand, a personnel duector mtght find employee counsehng to be more empathetic if the fur· nilure selechon is comfortable and rea.ssunnq. Furniture arrangement can foreshadow the execuhve's perce1vtK! management style. For example, the placement of a desk in such a fuhion as to block v1sitors' chaus against a corner subUy 1mp.Ues that the executive 1s m a pos1hon of power over the VISitor. Com- mumcahon efforts 10 th1s off1ce are apt to be one-s1ded ADd directive. On the other hand, a furniture arrangement wh1ch allows the executive i.> tucn from the desk and face vuutors im· plies that the office occupant 1s open fo r conversahon and a more qive-and-take dJalogue. Thu same eflect can be achiev- ed by using a glass table as a desk. Because of its trallsparen- cy, the business per10n cAD talk oyer the detlr. ud..•Ull t» requded u accessible. One final thought. The v1sual requirements of a job m1ght re- quue some cQnstderahon. A bookkeeper who looks conllnual- ly at vertical columns 10 a ledger m1ght become dtscon- certed 1f verticAl stupes are used on a wall covenng m h1slher oUtce VISually and psy- chologically, there needs to be a break 10 the pattern. By the same token, a secretary trac ks a hon zontal typmg elem•nt. lmagane look1ng up from the machtne and seemg the bonzon- tal lines of decorahve wmdow blmds Th1s makes lor vtsual dascomforl An o lhce envsronment shouldn't be c reated 10 a vacuum There's a prachcal and log1cal reason lor destgn selec- tion. And 10 loday's compehhve marketplace, 11 makes sense to talce advantage of all avenues wh1ch mJght mcrectse employee e ffectiveness The ,..wpart ~ Wed••dgy. r ..... , •· ••a .... Jt 1r======================11 Ae~ to Newport BMc.b, bu bed rice p1 •••• lor U.. BUSINESS BRIEFS Southena Ca.litomJa UM. Americo Couac:il all.iie t.. nrance: Wal .. r B. Gerba of Newport IMcla, cJa&i..nua of tile boerd of Padhc Wuhl.al W.t.- New Offlc:ers Microdata Inc., Newport Beach: Gerald W . fleDUllq is the new group v1ce president, marketing and sales. Far West Savino•, Newport Beach: La Vonne McShane bas been elected corporate aecretary. C onrad and Assoc1ates, Newport Beac h: ~chael A . Harrison has been promoted to partner lD the certlfled pubhc accounting hrm. Bateman EJc bler. H1ll R1chards Inc.: John B. Sham· burg of Newport Beach has been pro moted to hrst v1ce pres14ent. He IS res1dent manager of the Newpo rt Beach oHice. New Positions Target Marketing Com- mumcaltons, Irvine: Stan Cheren of Costa Mesa has been named sales d1rector. Target 11 a d1v1ston of Sutton lndustnes, Inc of Newpo rt Beach. Ph1lhps, Brandt, Reddtck, lne., Ne wport Beach: Donald C . Cameron wtll work with the company prestdent m program- mmg and processing of develop- ment plans through government aqenc1es. Carl Karcher Enterpnses, Anahe1m: Don B. Mc Dougal has been promoted to director of manufactunng. Paul D. Berman has been named duector of cor- porate plannmg. Ron Boraz1o has been. named d1rector of ar- chitecture Sutton Jndustrtes, Inc .. Newport Beach: Donna L Con· nally has been named market research superVlsor. The com- pany publishes three local week- ly newspapers and 86 weekly ed1taons of the Pennysover Cox and Burch Adverhsmg Co , Newport Beach· Nanc1 Now1ck1 Roberts has been nam- ed art duector Business Activity Merc ury Property Manage- ment, lrvme: The farm has relocated to 18001 Sky Park South, Su1tes C and D, lrvtne. V1ctona Stahoo, Newport Beach: A new men u 11 beioq te~ted at the Newport !llteeh restaurant Ford Aerospace, Newport Beach : A $6.5 mtlho n contract for depot eq\upment to be l.lMd for maintenance and re96Jr of S1dewinder mJSatles LD Utah has been awarded to the Aeronutroruc Div1a1on Carl Karcher Enterpn ... · A new nulr~hon pamphlet 1s available free at aU Carl's Jr . r .. taurants. West Houston Properbes, Ltd.: The hrm bas taken a three· year lea.se on office 1pace 1n the Manulacturera Bank buUdmg, 1202 Dove St., Newport Beach Southern CAiiforma Edison· Earninqs 10 1980 were $3.50 ~· share compared w1th <4 .56 per sha.re in 1979, according to W1luam R. Gould. chaumAn and chief execuhve ofhcer Net 10come totaled $318 m1lhon on revenues of $3.7 b1lhon an 1980 compared to revenues of $346 m1U1on on revenues of $2.6 btlhon the previous year; Golden West Auhnes, Newport Beach· Duect flights from John Wayne Orange C oun- ty Anport to La1le Tahoe w11l begin Feb 4 . All fhgbts will be made ustng the new De Havilland Dash 7 auc raft. Flights w11l also ongmate from Los Angeles lnternahonal Air- port and from San D1ego Amencan Home Thnlt and Loan, Newport Beach: More than $1 .5 m1llaon 10 thnft Iran sactlons and loans have been ar· ranged 1n the hrst three months of operahons. The fagure 1s 30 percent above pro)echons, ac- cordtng to John G Rmaldo, chaarman of the board The of hce IS located 10 Buena Parle Beverly Thompson Interaors, Newport Beach· New chents are Conhnental Development for 1ts Bayport pro,ect 1n Hunhnqton Harbor and Rampart General C orp m lrvme Honors and Appointments Public Relahons Soc1ety of America, Orange County Chapter· Thomas S. Santley, second v1ce presadent of pubhc relahons for PaciJIC Mutual ufe InsurAnce of Newport Beach, hM.bee.a a!.dd pretMient Au Force A.uoc1abon: Davad Graham. manaqer oJ m.a.rket research and planruno for Ford wrance Co .. U. bMD o•med chajrman of the COllllC'U, the major tsade .-oc::iatJoa of Ide m.urance comp&.D.i .. iD the United Stat ... Orallqe COUAty Cham.ber of Commerce: Richard C. Holm- gren, CPA, a partlleT in the a.a- Uona.l ACCOUlltinq firm ol Wain Hurdman and Cran.tou.n of Newport Beach, baa beell elected ch&~rman of the boa.rd of the chamber. CalJforrua Jewelers A.noo.- hon: Mary Barr, owner of Charles H Ban Jewelen of Newport Beach, haa been elected second v1ce pres1dent. Pub.Uc Relations Sooety of Amenc.1, Orange County Chap- ter: Patnck Anderwon, seDJor v1ce pres1dent of pub.Uc rela- ho ns for CochrAne ChAse and uvmgston of Newport Beach, has been elected to the board of d1tec tors. Newport Harbor-Costa Mesa Board of ReAltors: Paul FrADklin has been lDitAlled u pr•Jdent for 1981. Other oHicers ue Charles Fergusoll, hnt vice pres1dent; Dan WAlleAbne, M - cond v1ce president; and Bill Fuller, .ecrelary-lreuurer. On the board of d.uectora ue Jane Boyd, Vug.n1a Cieck, Terry Ireland, Joan Lively and Juhe Sturdevant Newporler lnn, Newport Beach: The Inn has woo a first place adwevement awud for employee relabona from the Amencan Hotel and Motel Assoc1ahon SeverAl local buUdino u - ecutives were amono the oHioers elected to lead the Buildinq In." duatry A.uociabou of Southern CAWorDla tor the ne"Zt yeu. Vice presidents mclud.e Pub I . Bryan, BryAll Publication.s Inc .• Newport Beach, membership; DaVJd Stein, the Stem-Brief Group, Irvine, cbapten aDd councila; and W . Scott ~addle, the Bicldle Group, lrri.De, .tat. lec)ia!AtioD. Amono the ft-.. preG.denbal iKhl.ton will be Frank Huv.b-, Aroea ~ m.lll aDd ... ~·-· IDe., eo. w..., ..twt.K tor d.part- .......... ,,., I tal W~; and Piktt oo .. r . tAe lfYiDe Co., Newport Beach, ad~ for depart.mellt of state lecpdatioa. .~ Earn <ta ....,• On Passbooks "~ LYI of as little as $10 9% Annual Yield· 8.50% Annual Rate NO TERM REQUIREMENT THRIFT BY MAll • Yield tatMMd o.. lnte,. .. ._..,.~.-.ted "'onUtly to tfte Paubootl IMief\Ce end belf19 "'elntetnea for of\e.,.., ,.,,. .. ,,. 'Y tN t Olft _,_ '" .. '••• fro"' tt\e 1 st of .... 101t01ttft Pasabooll lnte,.., Ia co"'""ftiCied daft~ eltd credned "'ontftly FOR CAliFORNIA RESIDENTS ONl V *FREE CORDLESS EMERGENCY LITE PERFECT FOR POWER FAILURES. BLACKOUTS AND OTHER EMERGENCIES Operatea on 2 ''0'' batteries (•nctuded) Pull off •t lights Put back . .r s off Complete with wall bracket featured each week in the fashion pages South Coast Thrift a nd Loan A'\\ociation •SO,OOOto '750,000 INCOME P80PERTY SECONDS ........ .., ..,..at • ..... eCe erclal ........... ·~~'c.--it ... ta .-.....v ... ••··· ., ........ ,,..... ......... c .... ..... Coaeaaow .................. ae. lot'"' ... ""' ... • v •«-1<1 h , ... '(1 "" p""' I Jilt• ""' lnll'tt••il II lVI'"'" I fcH 1 ¥"f'.U 1)1 lht• A""" tl R.t•• 90DAY CIIITIIIICA n 13. % BASED ON • EFFECTI\1£ .NNUAl VIELD ANNIIAl RAH MINIMUM ..... INVUTMINT e INTDEST PENALTY FOR EARLY WITHDRAWAL-INIIRESl REVER'n TO ft. e THIS IS A U.ITED OFFER % .......... . A ... Al YlllD ¥2% ANNUAl RATE ourh oa t Thrift and Lo~n A s > iation 1411 wne ~ lt¥tl.l•"'••• ....,. a INr/ s-. AM "* 979-7081 •FREE WHEN YOU •.• Open a peaabook account with 11000 or mOM. thle em .... IRCY light Ia VCM!I' FREE. Um._. qu1nt.Jtw9 offer~ onty while aupptr Ia~ Hl(lH INTEREST PLUS FREE GIFT A RIAL VALUE FIIOII ••• '-14 Weda allay. r.a.acat 4. 1•1 TIM ••port IMip I. POUCE BLOI;IER Monday. I em. 21 CRIMIS Boatinq equipment valued at $1,097.18 was reported ttolen from Thomas Anthony Nelum in the 1200 block of WMt Cout Htqbway ... a doberman pin- sober valued at $289 was report- ed stolen from Ruuo't Wonder· ful World of Peta in Fuhlon 11land . . . Two paintings valued at $2,000 were reported stolen from the Comark Co., •ooo MacArthur Blvd . . . A atained olasa window depictino a flow- ered tree and two femal" and valued at $2,500 was reported stolen from Donald Chrittian Jacobs in the 100 block of Aoate. Tuesday. Jan. rJ CRIMES Jewelry and silver valued at $12,455 were reported atolen from Gordon Thomas Graham in the 1900 block of Poet Carney . . . A wallet containing $20 and 18 credit cards was stolen from Mary Louise Osterhout in the 2500 block of Eaat Coast Hioh- way ... Hand toola and fire- works valued at $800 were repoued stolen from Kathy Malia Byers in the 200 block of Hohday . . . A 14-foot Rhicua Palm weiqlung 300 pounds and ~alued at $2,000 was reported stolen from Adalea Helena Myers in the 3400 block of Via Lido ... Stereo equipment and a TV valued at $1 ,687 were reported stolen from Richard Bradford Morton m the 400 block of Orange. w ed.D .. ctay. ra:a. u CIUMIS A ;ubage clispoeal, tbo.....r door, aluminum window frame and .-orted plpee valued at $655 were reported atolen from V•tMill" Condoe at Caon•Y Lane and Scbola PJaaa . . . A surfbo.rd, wet suit, Penian roo and Holley carburetor valued at $650 were reported ltolen from Rebecoe Van Dyke in the 300 block of lrla. ARRESTS Craiq Warren Fowler, 28. of Newport Beach, wu arrested on suspicion of committino a burg- lary in the 100 block of Aoate . . . Daniel Brian Lawrence, 29, of Las Vegas, wu arrested on suspicion of drunken drivino in the 200 block of Grand Canal ... Robert Jam .. Beck, 25, of Leucadia, wu arr .. ted on su.picion of committino a burglary in the 100 block of Aoate . . . Donald Terry Oberloh, 25, of Fountain Valley, waa aneated at bit reaidence on suspicion of committing a . burqlary. Thursday. Jan. 29 CRIMES $-COO worth of clothing was report~ stolen from Tina Maria Morae an the •100 block of Sea- shore . . . A 28-foot Skipjack boat valued at $30,461 waa reported stolen hom Edward Albert Taylor in the 2200 block of w .. t Coast Highway " .. A $500 gold bracelet was reported stolen from Irwin Gellman whiJe be was walkinq alonq the 2100 THE TELEPHONE POLL bloc of WArlD•n Orin. ARRISTS HOward Dan W.lloy, 58, of N~ la4ch, wM arTMted on •uplclon of dnmbn dnvJn9 •I 22lad St,_. and The Arcade ... Wlll1am Staaley Craio Jr., 20, of Santa Ana, wu an•led on auaplcion of poueuing amph•lamin ... Frlday. }ClD. 30 CJU:MES Two bnefca ... , a bottle of wine and a aix-pack of beer valued at $-457 were reported stolen from Margaret Elilabeth Jones ln the 3800 block of Sea- shore. ARRESTS Rooer Hammond Shears, 31, of Beverly Hilla, wa• arrested on au.picion of drunken driving at &utblu1f and Cacao . . . Henry Jouph Mannella, 26, of Newport Beach, was arrested on 1uspicion of drunken ddving at 22nd and West Ocean Front ... Carloa M. Rivera Jr., 34, of Chula Viat.f and Jesse Emmanuel Falco, 39, of Loa Angele1, were arrested on auspicion of pouesaino amphetamines for aa.le at Pac1fic CoMt Highway and Bayside . . . Edward Claude Starkey, 22, of Tustin, was arrested on suspicion of drunken drivino at Newport and Industrial ... Juan Mendez Moreno, 21, of Santa Ana, was arrested on a~picion of drunken drivino along the 2000 block of Balboa. Satu.rday. )an. 31 CRIMES Two TVa valued at $700 were reported stolen from Barbara K. Edwards in the 500 block of Nar· ciaaus . . . Sis knives and two pistols valued at $780 were reported stolen from Tom Groog in the 2~lock of Riverside ... A qold bracelet valued at $1 ,700 was reported stolen from Roberta Bhnder in Cambria Dnve ... A red 1962 Porsche 356 was reported stolen from Richard Ernest Therell lD the 900 block of Newport Center Drive ... A red 1971 Datsun L.:::=========================:=:=!.J12-aOZ was reported stolen lrom Thla w .. k'a quHtJon Do you thmk the county should conduct anoU:er study related to the expansion of John Wayne A1rport, Oranoe County, as recommended by a county Grand Jury? (See ltory on paoe There will be no rino. There il no need to talk. The "bano up" sound you hear it your vote being recorded. Bob Anton Cozad in the 1800 block of West Balboa. ARRESTS Thomas John Stewart, 29, of Newport Beach, was arrested on suspicion of drunken drivmg along Pacilic Coast Hiqhway. Do you favor increasing the city's bed tax from 6 percent to To vote YES, call 875-4860. 8 percent? Sunday. feb. 1 ARRESTS John Theodore Stetson, 69, ot Balboa Island, was arrested on suspicion of drunken driving at Santa Barbara Dnve and JamborH. To Yote NO, c~ll 175-7010. Call anytime betwMD DOW and 8 a .m. Monday to c .. t your vote. YES NO HERE'S YOUR PART-TIME....,......., TIRED Of' WUBJJeG TIIOK DIRTY CLOTHES? -LET 0'1 DO IT POll YOVI FAMILY WAIR. nVFr U'D f'OLD ••. P ... mcr p,_ 01t Ha_........ r ost Dry ClMDiag lerriee CORONA del MAft LAt11fDRY ~ £.C....IIwy.• .. ,_ ....... o..,_. ...... ,_.. ._ f n.ranr;.u W1U~All SI7.F , .. t, '' IINI I'• M.Jl 2 , .. ,., I I Ill\ 1111 .... 2!,, 11 • II lfl7 41 ""' 2 ~· '" I 11101 "' 'le.)J l ~1 ~,,I' llt•14J. lU l Jl • I, Ill "ti 11.. U•'• t·t.11V llM .'ill I • IH •• •u• ~ ... II~IU fU) AD Other MlchelbllWes 25 "lo oU our Reg alar Prices r----F'REE! I , ELECTRONIC WHEEL I ~ BALANCE Is ..... hrchase of • 1 MICHELIN TIRES 1 L !DialS,.,... .. -----------------· --' .. . . . .. .. r ...... ,.., 'I .. ~ . ..,. ~ atartiq. •to off . ..._..,.., C.W.."-to. 67!!.. .......,.,. . ............. ~ .. ,... ......... . ... .... ,._ ..... ,J ....... .. ...,.....,._,....-,. .... ., . ..,., ,... ....................... ... Clam HIWICIAL ' lAX -YJCES -Specialize in pret)arlr11 business and indiv•dual financial statements. payroll and sales tax returns. corporate and Individual income taxes -Complete bOokkeep•na dlent personnel trammg -Professional and eHic•ent services. 2091 .,.,,.... Cettt-Drtwe, lulte 100 lm,.., CA 92715 (714) ad-1201 L.e .. _ .... _,... _ __, -·\.Je -· ...................... .._ ................. I ) .,.. ·-.......,_._ ...,..._ ....... -- , auch u .AJD•rican-bated ba.nb and mulU-natlonal corpora· tiona." Foroutan wa.a hultant to grant thla interview aince he fMred that hit political view. toward Iran might be r.,.nted there, • tbu. Jeopardlzino the aupport he receiv .. from Iran for ha educ a- tion here. However, he offered two p<»- lible theori• to support his view that Iranians did not make the decision to bold the Americana boataqe. First, "The American plan wa.s to ruin Iran because lran wu oetting very powerful militarily, politically, and economically under the shah. The U.S. did not feel that it had enouoh con- trol over the shah, who stated that be wanted Iran to be the fifth power in the world by the year 2,000," Foroutan said. Accordino to Foroutan, the 'ahab waa considerino removino Iranian usets from American banlcs in his la.st years in power, thua icritahng Amerlca.n and Western big buatn"' interests. Foroutan, 23, auogeats that the political ruin of the shah and the subsequent kidnapping of the American diplomats in Iran was the brainchild of "pro- Western forces who needed a leqitimate reason to block the transfer of Iranian assets from Western banks to somewhere else-that's the fast theory." A second possible theory. ac· cordlng to Foroutan, Ia that the Iranians themselves did not • make the decision to kidnap the former hostages but that "Western forces, American- based banlca and multinational corporations, saw the policies of President Carter as a block to their economic 1n terests abroad.• ThereJore, FOIO\ltn Mp, th ... Waetem loroee plott.d the Iranian RevolutJOD end the MiiUN of AJDerioan clipJOIUt. lher• 1D an atteaapt to qeo•rate anU·C.rter •ntt.ot 1n tM United State. wbJch would ultimately leecl to Car1•~• political doWDJ.U and the elec- tion of a pr.Udent more .,m· pathetic to the int•r"t. of bJo buain ... . "We ... that it (the po1itical downfall of Carted hu worked," be aaid. "Carter was one of the moat intelligent, boneat pr-.idents the U.S. ever bad a.iDoe F.D.R.," Foroutan added. Both theori .. propoeed by Foroutan, then, include the alleC}ation that w .. tem-baaed economic inter .. t. manipulated Iranians to Mile the American embuay in Teheran. Gbiul, who doe. believe Iranians made the deciaion to seize the American emba .. y in Teheran, maintains that the ldd- nappino of American diplomats by Iran was not an act of ter- rorism. "Terrorlam can only happen to innocent people," he aaid. "I do not ... that all of the hostages are innocent people becaul8 some of' them were spies. So I don't consider it an act of terrorbm," Ghiaai said. On this issue, Foroutan agreed with Ghiasi. "Any em- bassy p4traonnel can be labeled as spies, because their miaion b to oather information bom the country they're in," be said. Gbiaal aasecta that reports by some former hoataoea of mis· treatment by their Iranian cap· tors are the product of the im- agination of the hoataoes coupl- ed with diatocted reportinq by the Americ an media. "Some hostages who were 'e•"'-' wtda JtUiaa C'ilhlre eA<1 witla ...._ r.wohatioe ..... not .urpriMd b; tM t.atiiid Of lra· a1ana towa.rcl the U .S. Olbeu. who .. r• aew&, tta.D.~Mrred to han, .. ,. not fewthar wUh Iran'• .. tutlon aDd d•veloped e MV&fla laaoe of lralana. n... ar• tb. oue complat!Uog of mittrMllllent," he l&.ld. ''The U .S . media Mya the bottao .. were trMted the same way POWa were treated," be ac:fded. "We have evidence that th•y have eateD well and slept well, not like POWa Jn other cou.ntrl ... They had good Muslim caretakera." The thrH students interviewed a1ao differed on the state of &f. fairs of Iranian domestic politics. According to Ghiui, there are two faction~ competing for power in Iran, the faction led by Pt"Jdent Banj-S.dr and the fac· tion repreaented by the Islamic Party. Ayatollah Khomeini, the rellgiou.a leader who returned from Paria to talte power as the shah wu de,POMd, belonoa to neither faction, he said, since Jthomeini wishes to restore unity in Iran. Ghlui identifies with the Islamic Party, b\\t acknowledges that it has made SOJDe errors. ' On the other band, Peiravi does not consider Iranian politics to be factionalized. Rather, there exist "diUerences betw .. n Bani-Sadr and Kho· mein.i in their approach to prob- lem~. Sadr it Western-educated and ia more flexible . Kbomei01 it very firm." be said. While Ghiasi sugoeats the ex- iltence of two strono factions dominating Iranian politics, and Peiravi seems to flatly deny the existence of factionalism in Iran, Foroutan maintains that there are at least "10 facuons that op- pOM Khomeini." Absol_utely po one pays more 1nterest on checking accounts than Bank of ~ Newport NewJ)9rt Plus Accounts at Bank of Newport have an annual yield of 5.47%~ Why not stop in today and make arrangements to earn more interest tomorrow. Our New Account representatives have complete details of this special new service. •Interest yteld t>arntng" <.omputatton l!i bas{'d on all deposits and tnterest urn•ngc; rematnmg o" dept,,,, for a full year. i~ Newport 8e¥h, Caitomla MAIN OffiCE: Pacific Coast Higtlway .11 A~iado · 760-b(ll) DOVER OfFICE: Dover tll Sixteenth Street • &45-5333 LIDO OFFICE: Thirty•se<:ond Street at lafayene • b7S-633J """"""" II>K Remember Liar's Dice? Each player throws five dice, then hides the results from the other players. One player calls out a number and each succeeding player has a chance to "raise'' the number: or challenge the last call. A new version of liar's Dice is being played in our town. It's called The Airport Game. The stakes are very high. The game opens with Mariners Community Assn. bidding 41 daily jet flights out of the county airport. Newport City Council raises them to 55 flights and 3.5 mil· lion annual passengers. The Airport Noise and Control Land Use Compatability group IANLUC) raises to 55 flights and 6.1 million. The Master Plan group, play· ing as ANCLUC's partners, agrees, as does a firm called VTN, which had been paid by all of the players (and by county taxpayers) to be consultants and to set the rules for the Airport Game. Some folks through VTN shouldn't be allowed to play, because they had been part of the Community Airport Council. CAC, made up of businesses around the airport, likes BIG numbers. The game was really heating up when County Supervisor Clark threw in a figure of 62 flights. Before he could tosa in a passenger number, he was challenged. "You've got to be kidding us," some of the other players said. "Those figures are unreal. Suddenly, everybody was challenging everybody else's numbers. So that's how the Airport Game version of liar's Dice works. We've got to find out who's telling the truth, right? So we are going to hold a meeting with all the players . Eve ryone is wel come : AIRPORT MEETING, TUESDAY, FEB . 10, 7:30 P.M ., PROMONTORY POINT CLUBHOUSE ... INVITATION LIST: REPRESENTATIVES OF MASTER PLAN. C.A .C., A .N.C.L.U .C., CITY OF NEWPORT, MARINERS ASSN., COUNTY SUPERVISORS. ALL OF US . All OF YOU. PUBLIC INVITED .