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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-05-12 - Orange Coast Pilot11 By JOHN NEEDHAM Oftlle~ .......... Land use plans for the new ~~~~pp~vveJ~--· of the park is still years oft. • But the 10,000 t.o 12,000 people who have been turning up on warm weekends at the new park between Corona del Mar and_ Laguna Beach are using th«t.ae• playground now -before facilities and parking lots are even on an approved planning map. They've been using the beaches en masse since the state boueht the land from the Jrvin,eo_.,,_,. a year and a half aio. State planners Will be meetlq ln Hnport Beach Cit)' Councll Chambers from 7 to 10:30 tonllbt prelimluo' plaaa for ntofthei;ok. of can ltne both a1dea of Coast Highway on buay weekends and pedestrians race across the roadway, carryin1 small children, picnic baskets and surfboards. Off.road parking ls provided at Scotchman's COYe, Treasure CMe end the Irvine Equ~lrian Sandwich stller Charlene Johmon wa1 doing buaine11 today at Irvine Company-<>WMd of~ building• after winning a court order stopping the company from charging her a fee. Sandw ich sale s 0 K in l roine buildings By GLENN SC01T Of .... o.lfy ........... Charlene Johnson's indepen- dent sandwich sellers were do- ing business today in Irvine Company-owned office buildings with renewed conviction. Mrs. Johnson, who is married t.o Costa Mesa City Councilman Eric Johnson, learned Monday she wlll win a permanent court order stopping the Irvine Com· pany from charging her caterine business an annual entry fee to serve its tenants. Superior Court Judie Robert Green issued a noUce of In- tended decision ln which he ,tald ~rs. Johnson's sandwich-and· salad business, Lori'• Kitchen Inc., will win a permanent ln· junction haltinl the Irvine Com· pany's proposed Sl,200 annual entry fee. Mn. JobnJOD said the decision means "a little person can fipt and win sometimes." Lori's Kitchen, however, la not exacUy a one-woman operaUon. Mrs. Johnson 1ard •IN bM ao "sales prls" who tote wtcktr baskets of food throup offtte buildln11 where wblte·co1¥r worlcera don't have time to ., ,out for lunch. They serve up to 2,500 people a day. Flve of the HI• f'Olltfa ID Newport Center would •ave been eliminated, ahe Hid, lf tM entry feea bad been lmpoHCI. What la more i~,ortant, lbe aald, ii that UM nauq C.U otber bulldiq oWMl'I im· =~-=-~-==-= u•• rareect u.. , ...-. 1•ar-old bu1lae11 off ti•• man.t. Tiie eourt ,,...... will bl 191 .. ..... ilfter' .... lawYer. ~ l••al flndl•I• ••~ otber paj;erworlt that go aloill with such cases. , It has been a vlct.oriou.a year for the Jobnsons. Mrs. Johnson first received a preliminary in- junction in the same case in April, 1980. A few days later, Ef'Jc wu elected t.o his first term u a councilman. WASIUNGTON (AP> ...... Tbe Reaean adminlstratlcm p~ sharp cuts in Social Security , benefits today for Americana wbo retire early, areater lncea· Uv.ia for people wbo work pat ail 85 and reduclq tbe tu burden for worten who pay mto tb~ ayttem. The plan, announced by Health and Human Servi~• Seerury Richard S. kbweUl.er, ls a far-reacblnt Ht o1 ~· dnlped to ane tbe deldtlde 1y1tem from po11lble bankruptcy. Tbe packace 1t bela1 aub· ILll\td to Con&:~ =•b•rt _..te Majority Baker told the prell.._ y, "It loob cooct poUUeall1" tor the propoeala. ht the NaUGaal eoun.::.;~ s...w Citilent qulcklJ ~7ve DlrHW' ~,. ou..u. wd tbern••·•·• ~ pot alt woul •••• "aD Hormoua bentlll& "4uctt., part.leularly ill Hilif1'11 MflJ Httrement beDift\i, beeaue U\tf. ..,ume tbat. ntlrement Ii a ,• ·Ctater. But the majortly of .,_..,... prefer to lene tMir can aloal the bl1bway, ,.._.. PU'klu .. free. ll'f::-Dave Wheel• of t»M Oranie County Sheriff's Depart. ment, wblcb bu a eontract wttb the •late to police the park area, said the large number of pedettrtans bas created a trafttc ha11nt • "There's nothing Ule1al about U..e ,.ning aloof tbe blcbway between 6 ~.m. and 8 p.m./' • * • • * 1lm _.,. llllY Ml 1 •11A"4<iE COUN I Y t Al II'-ti NIA 25 CENTS Wbeel• said. ''But we have bad a number ol fatal traffic accideatl tbere alDCe the popularity of lhoH -.1aaa1ncrea1ed.'' D ..Wltlon, Wheeler aald, emer,_ey vehicles resPoDdln1 to tr.me accidents have a dlf. lieu.It Ume tramportin~ lnJured p-e-ople to nearby boapltala beeaute ot eoneeated beach trai- t.I!!~• Beach and c.r.a Crystal Cove State Park coa· talna 2,400 acres that include lloro Canyon and Moro Rlqe u well u the beach acreaee that atretcbea from Crystal Cove \t>~ardOameo Shores. FutuN development plans for (See OOVE, Pace AJ) ....,,.... .... Site of new Cry1tal Cove State Park alreadJI bemged by beochgoer1, even though development U a lqng WOJI away. Mi11i.ons. bid for AirCal Audience. looks on as price of ai rline soars and soars fJy f'&EDEBICK SCHOEMERL of ................ A multi-million-dollar btcSdinl war -with the future onenbip of Newport beach-based AirCal at stake -ls captivating a stan· dln1-room-only audience in a Saa Die10 federal courtroom. .\jl'U,.. industry ~eeut.tves, a ~ and fmanclil aulysta watched with amazement and some amusement Monday as the price of the airline increased more than $24 million in five hour,. The bidding has boiled down to a blP..i&kes dram• lnvolvina Air Florida systems and AJr California· Investments Inc. The Investment 1roup was formed by Newport Beach de· velopers William Lyon and Georae Argyros, also part oyner of the Seattle Marinen baseball team. .AlrCal is beina so~u PIU't ot cial reoraaair.Mica -. .-.... ~ seen soon By MA&Y JANE SC.\JlCEr.LO OtWOillf,......, · '• i&ldie Costanza, once the hi&hest-ranklng woman 1n the Carter administration. predicts a senous female candidate for the pl,'elidency durinc Lhe next presl~tlal electioa~ , .- "I expect to see a woman elected president within the next two terms. A woman needs t.o serve aa vice president first, and I expect we'll ·aee a serious woman candidate in 19M," 11be said. The keynote speaker for Women's Week at Golden West Colleie in Huntington Beach Mond~ said her choice would be Juaolta 1'J'•J>.Jtj·tormer Sel:uatary ot Co, er~. •'bftatae she's stroq not In· tlmldat.Lna." Sbe said that "The next few monUit will be crucial for ratification of the E~i,\Jl Bithts ~r::=tdc!.U:·ttfl~~ <See WOMAN, Pa1e M> ' volwatary phenomenon. Usually lt IH't." lebweiker aatd Ule packafe wwld '9l affect mW~ l*'IQD· nel ~Y covendbJ ,~ plaO. Westeate·California Corp., the air~'• parent firm. U.S. Dis· trict court Judge Leland Nlellen la su.,.rviaing the reoreaniu· lion. The initial bid was submitted in a sealed envelope by Air · florida, a major East Cast air • m illion ... $38. 7 million. Al that point Nielsen told Sherman and Air Florida at· t.omey Larey Hoffman that he woul4 not entertain bid lncre· menls of less than $500,000. By the noontime recess the bid price had been driven up t.o $42 . , .Sherman drew gasps in the court when he bid $45 million. carrier which industry observers say has been busy lJ. fluidaUbg certain assets t.o raise the 1cub necessary to cover its bid. The opening bid was $35 million. Air California Investments at· t.orney, Richard Sherman Jr. of Newport Beach, immediately responded, sayin1 he was ''pl•aaed" to offer '35.S million." 1'ben 1.be auction went wld' ven ... $38 million ... S38.5 ... ~ Demd.I Reigel, the 31-year-old Newport pllot who duplicated GleJlD Martin's 1912 fi11ht from Balboa to Catalina llland, dfl. peJled rumors today that~hi• Jou'r&e;i• ln his hdtlielri•di airplane was anytbtne b\lt perfect. ; Rei141, who took off from ',albo~k Sunday mornln1 - 'tire 69th anpiversary· of Martin'• ffil), said fiis trip was aate a1f! enjoyable. "I landed on a golf course over there," the young pilot ex· plained. .Reipl aaid a Catalina resideat ~~!e htm int.o Avalon and ln· uvuuced him t.o Mayor Georse Scott, who runs the city's newspaper concession business. "I had my picture taken with the mayor and he told me I could llll)lt on the golf ~ Jlllfli•," Reigel said . "~be recommended a 1ood restaurant." Rei1el sald Mayor Scott alao tave .btm aome wire t.o fix up a wheel on the 175-pound, 30 bonse power alrplane. . l'oUowtng a picture Milloa with so~e friends who charted benefits, for a projected coet of $6.5 btllloG. -Keeplng the mlnlmum ... fe~ fall beeefltt at 85, ._.Id ol 81 aa proposed by. the ...._. Ways and Means subcommittee • OD Social 6turity. million. But the real show came in the afternoon. Sherman1 opened the bidding at $42.5 million. That drew a $43 mlllion bid from-Hoffman. Moments later alt'er two bids with SS00,000 increments, Sherman drew audible gasps from those in the courtroom etwhen he bid $45 million, increas· ing the size of his previous bid b)I Sl million. S!~man ~d "g.'.f ... m..,.._ DllllYNll ......... HAD A NICE TRIP Pilot ~Reigel the Balboa-to-Catalint. COUIH in a boat, ·Reigel said be headed back to tbe mainland. of-Uvfna adjustment rron\ July to Oet.Ober to savt. about ta.3 bllHon bY. 1'86· Th' •~Uliltra· tioq~ ••ld the av•re1e tmleftc.'ltrY would l• ~l '100 ta tbe first year ilaiet the proPGMI. The 11.2 percent i.Dere#I due UU1 Jul,y 1WOuld not be all~. Pr~sal8 ~W4 mean ran eno~~,,. ~t red~&ri tn eatig'retiremeftt'' White Hpe ..... Larry Spa~ said .-.d honor llll Jlldle ~ te4flc:e Sodd· linrib' ltied.~ ~ .. b' those ilre~ N- • -Lowerint Social 8"urtt¥ h• rllt• on the 114 mllUOD worken now paylnt Into the ayatelb, A T.05 pettMlt= ......... ed t.o tan ltil wo.dcl be pared IOm t and lnea would be reduced from lM current a.a percent bJ ..... "!"" Tn; lick pay for --1· •la @ha of an em~a ..... ~Uy. '''* ..,. l!I l•* ... Tbe adminlltreuti ealew.e. • aavln• of a .• bUUOn ..... P">POl8). , 35 separate trips to the lectern before the day's bidding was balled. That occurred when Air California Investments sub· milled a S59 million bid in ruponse to Air Florida's offer of $58 million for 90 percent ownership of AirCal. The remainJng 10 percent ol ownership, under the bid pro· posal would be distributed to Westgate shareholders when re- organization is consummated. Under that scheme, Hoffman said Air Florida's bid would total more than $64 million. The Air FloridRis maneuvers caught the Newport Beach group by apparent surprise as it unsuc· cessfuljy sought a three-week delay in the proceedings. Air Florida's Jast bid also was , criticized by trustees who were supervising the Westgate re· organization. They said lbe bid WH pot consiaunt with their de· .--~IRCA 1e Another body found in Atlanta ATLANTA (AP)-The body of a black teen-ager found today in a wooded area east of AUanta was identified as that of 17-year- old Wllliam Barrett, who bad been reported missing during the night, police reported. "We are going on the a11ump- tlon that the child was murd ered ," said Chuck Johnson, DeKalb County police spokesman. The case Ukely will be turned over to an Atlanta police task force investi1ating the deatha of 26 other young blacks since July 1979, Johnson said. The string of deaths includes 13 youths whose bodies have been found since Jan. 1. Members of the task force were called t.o the scene when the body was discovered. Barrett was reported miuine by bis mother about the aame time his body was found, and he was last seen Monday afternoon, police Col. James Stanley said. •·w e believe it is related," Johnson said. "It certainly fits the profile of the other" slay- ings. The cause of Barrett's death ·was not immediately known, but the case was being treated u a homicide, he said. Today's discovery wu rem· iniscent of at least six earlier cases in which a body was found by roadside iD a wooded area. 111111 ClllT 1111111 Considerable low cloudi· ness through Wednesday with only partial clearin1 In the afternoon Wednes· , day. Local early momin1 drizzle forecast. Hl1b1 Wednesday 68 t.o 74. Laws tonight 55 t.o 85. 111111 TllAY Tta. ~not oNfl Ori •ra•n•no ~ /or mUUort1 '"'"'°"'· 1n11• colurn11t1t Ioele A,..,...., but flwtl elto 1tol4' tlw jcko Jrom "'· s-. Page Al. 11111 .. .,_...,,... .. ............ i ..... ..,. :J ·1 = . l ,• . • • • • • • I . ' • . , l • I • ' • : i • ,. • • • • • Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/TuHdaV.May 12. 19t1 THE HOLE THING This is the m ysterious sinkhole in Winter Park. Fla .. which is growing silently and causing mon• destruction. Residents have moved their possessions '" ......... from their businesses, waiting for the hole to stop or help to keep it from growing. Reports today indicated the yawning abyss has stablized. at least temporarily. $26 per month benefit cut eyed WASlllNGTON IAPI The Reagan admini ... tration's Social Security reform package would cut retirement benefits by $26 a month for an average 62-year- o Id s eeking to retire next January By 1987. a 62 year-old would lose $232 70 a month under the Reagan µIan by retiring By changing the way benefits a re figured for all workers. the Reagan proposals also would cost 65 year-old retirees some benefits Bv 1987. the average 65-year old would lose S27 10 a month and a top·paid worker would lose $82.50 a month The Department of Health and Human Services gave the follow- ing examples or how benefits would be altered for low wage, average and maximum waj(e earners The maximum wage for Social Security purposes this year 1s $29,700 and it rises automat1cally each year. Among 62 year-olds retiring in January 1982. the low-wage earner now would get $247.60 a m onth. the Reagan proposal would cul that to $163 90 The From Page A1 WOMAN PRESIDENT. • • with its success " Calling ERA opponMt Phyllis Sc hlafl y "a female im personator ... she said. ''I'd like to take ht-r and Anita Bryant and make bookends out of them with a copy of ·Mein Kampf" in between ·· Ms . Costanza. who resigned her S56.UOO-a-year JOb as assis- tant to the president 10 Sep- tember. t978. said s he "got into politics because l wanted to ef feel a change, and I campaigned for candidates I believed in." The avowed liberal said . ··carter failed to make a connec- tion wtth the people during his first six months in office. and th al 's vital. "I disagree with President Reagan on almost everything, but he's making that connection and dotn~ it well He's coming across and it's working " Ms Costanza. who was vice mayor of Rochester. New York for one term. said of her White House duties, "The problems were the samt as a city's I JUSl touched the lt ves or more people "I didn't want lo be the woman who was assistant to the president. I wanted to be a pres- identi'al assistant who just hap- pened to be a woman .. She said her liberal views and meetings with the Gay Task Man hit, killed crossing freeway An unidentified man was struck and killed by a passing vehicle as he attempted to run across the northbound lanes of the Newport Freeway Monday night, the California Highway Patrol said. A spokesman said the man. who died at Western Medical Center. was running In an eastbound direction when he was hit by a pickup truck near th~ junction with the Riverside Freeway in Or~nge. OAANOE COAST Daily Pilat O.lly ~llet Slaff ....... EX-WHITE HOUSE AIDE Midge Costanza Force while working for Carter created problems for her with the Rev. Jerry Falwell's Moral Majority. which she referred to as the "Moral Minority" to ap- plause from the audience Admitting that her views might not be popular in Orange County, she said. "I should have worn by bullet·proof bra." The 48-year-old former private secretary has sold the film rights to her life story to 20th Century Fox and is living in Los Angeles while writing a book about her experiences . Cross burned BORON <AP> -Three resi- dents or this Mojave Desert com- nrJhity hev(l been arrested for In - vestigation of burning a cross on a black family's yard, Kern County firefighters have reported. Thoma P. Haley ~ R®-nN. Weed ,.....,.. ~'5 Or ... C-•I ~1"411111•C...W .... .. .-. F .. , ........ "*' .... liMefef ., ... ••f'llH et11 mey IN ••tHHVCN ~ M. Thomu KMYil ..... Thomas A. Murphlnt _,.... .... Ch•'" H. Looa A..-,i ........... t .... Bernard Schulman ~ c.t1 caratef'IMn ........ ~ ~:.:,oddard Jr. ._lel ,.mMt of copyrlfllt ow ... r ' average worker now would get $372 80 a month . the Reagan proposal is for S2461k>. The max- imum wage earner now would get $469.60 ; the Reagan proposal would cut that $310.50. Benefits would not be affected for 65-year-olds retirtng in J anuary 1982. The low monthly benefit still would be $355.30. the average $535.40 and maximum $679.30. But in January 1987. a retiring 62 year-old who is a low earner would gel S384 40 under present law and S225 20 under the Reagan plan . the a verage earner would get $580.70 now, $348.30 under Reagan's plan. aod the maximum earner would get $755.60 now and $430 under Reagan * * *t From Page A1 RETIRE • • • employees now collect fully on both Social Security and their government pensions. The presi- dent's proposal would reduce the workers' Socia l Security benefit<; by an amount equal to the federal pension Tightening disability as sistance requirements to require that a worker's disability be de· termined solely by medical fac tors The Jaw now allows con- sideration of the wor'ker's age, education and job experience. as well as health. This would save $7.7 billion bv 19Rfl The administration would also increase the wailing period for disability benefits from fi ve months to six months. saving $1 4 billion. And the prOJ<.'Cted length of a worker's disability for him to collect benefits would be in creased Crom 12 months to 24 months. for a s aving or $2.8 billion. Workers also would have to work 7' 2 vears of the last 10 years instead of the preseQt 5 of the last 10 years to be protected against disability This move would save $10 billion, the ad· ministration maintains. Schweiker said the proposals "will keep the system from go. ing broke. protect the basic benefit structure and reduce the tax burden of American workers." Card-counter ban rejected · TRENTON, N.J . (AP> Atlantic City casinos might be forced to give up the lucrative and popular game o{ blacftje,ck or "go under" unless the state Supreme Court overt)ilmS a rul· Ing prohibiting casinos' front banning "card counters" at their blackjack tables. a lawyer says . Resorts Inte rnational la~}'er Joel Sterns said a decls~Qn, ~~n· I day by a three-Judie panel oNhe ~ppellate division of Superior Court would create finan~lal turmoil for Atlantic O_ity caalnos, whJch count heavil)' on blackjack revenues. . In March, nearly 25 perce~ ol lbe Sl5.8 rnllllon in gross re,._ tnuea from Re1orta Intern•· tlonal'a Allantlc City caatno came from its 82 blacklack Ublea. - For a 65-year·old retiring 10 January 1987. here are the figures under present law and Reagan's plan : low earners $477 .10, S447 40 : avera~e $719, $691.00 and maximum $942.80. $860 30 From Page A1 COVE. • • the park call for mort-offroad parking. picni c areas and restrooms The public's sanitation needs now are met by a s prinkling of portable toilets in the three park· mg areas on the bluffs above the beach. There 1s no running water and' there are no con cession s tands Lifei;luard services for the park are provided by the Laguna Beach Lifeguard Department un der a $38,600 contract with the state. acrording to Brun Baird. city marine safely director. Starting nl'xt week there will be fin· lift-guard lowers manned fulHime along the beach areas . ~II i,IS a backup patrol vehicle on duty, Ra1rd sa1d He said his department should be ablt• to provide adequate coverage of the area. He said last s ummer the department manned four towers a nd had a rescue vehi- cle on duty part-time. However. because of increasing crowds. ad- ditional coverage was required. "There 's definitel y a dangerous situation with people constantly racing across Coast I lighway to come down to the beach," Baird said "But as long as they follow the parking restric- tions. they aren't breaking any laws." ,. Syrians fire missiles at Israeli jets CHTAURA. Lebanon (APl Syrian anti-aircraft missile bat· teries fired at high.fl ying Israeli Jets over the eastern Bekaa Valley today but none was hit, according to Lebanese who said they saw the firing. The Chris- tian Voice of Lebanon radio also reported that Syrian missiles were fired. Israel confirmed the rPport Syria had no comment Israel has said Syria risks war if the s urface-to-air missiles aren't removed, but has shclwd plans to knock them out lo give President Reagan's Mideast troubleshooter more time to de fuse the crisis Lebanese c1ttzPns in Chtaura. a Lebunese ci ty near the Synan frontier, sard they saw two SAM 6s blast off from half tral'k veh1rles two miles south of the Lebanese border airfield of Rayak. Associated Press r eporter Alex Efty was shaken out or his bed by two explosions at 4 50 a m From his hotel window. he saw two vapor trails heading toward the contrails of the h1gh- flying jets. The missile ttratls died out before reaching the Jets. The jets did not bomb. Military sourl'es s aid the SA M -6 can destroy targets up to 35,000 feet , and speculated the Israeli jets were fl ying higher lhan that This :s Syria's first use of its Soviet.made s urfaee-to·air mis sites sincP they were moved into the Bekaa \'alley on Apnl 29. s purring the mos t dangerous Syria n-Israeli conf rontatwn since the 1973 Mideast war. ll came while u S l'O\OY Philip C ll abib \\a s 1n Jerusalem on a mission to case the crisis between Israel. which demands thl1 missiles he withdrawn from Lebanon, and Syria. which refuses to move them. The incident appeared to be a display of S:.rian determination to keep their anl1·a1rcraft mis s 1l es in Lebanon und use them if challenged. • It came on the morning alter I sraeli Prime M1n1 s t e r Menachem Begin appealed lo Syrian President Hafez Assad to "retreat from the brink · and From Page A1 SY RIAN MISSJu;s f'IHED Israeli '"'·"targeted w1thdra\\ the m1s!->tle battencs from I 11.'l>anon Begin said Monda:. night tn an addn·ss to lsral'I''> Parliament that the S) nans "ould pose · u danger ll> lsrat-l's existence· and dommatl' all of Lebanon 1f they controlled l.t•t>anon's sk1c·s and its l'l'ntral mountain peab "War would he 1nt·v1table. and 10. the \\Orst poss1bll• conditions for Is rael.· Begin said · Ill-also d1sc:lost•d ht' ordcrl'd hi s air force to destroy lhl' Syrian m1ss1 les 12 days ago but canc•t•ll'd tht' operation first becau-.l' of bad \\ealhl•r and then bel':.tUSl' thl• L'n1lt-d Stall's pll'adt·d for time to soh e the C'ris1s 1>t•<.1tefully Prl's1dent Re-agan later dis· patchl'd Habib, a former statt' de partment under..,ecretar}. on a thrl't.' nalt0n Mideast tour to trv lo avert a Svrtan-ls rach mllitarv ::;howdown." Habib was in Jerusalem today confornng with IHaeli leaders aftl•r two da,\S <1 ( talks in Lebanon and two days more 1n S} ria produced no sign of a break through. Thl' Svnan m1ssll1>s were 1n stalled o'ne day after Israeli jets downl'd a pair of Syrian helicop· ters operating against ls rael"s Chr1sl1an militia allies in eastt-rn Lebanon AIRCAL BIDDING WAR. • • sire that the sale.• be fin anced by cash or a cash equivalent The.• he~1ring was to resume this morning with test 1mon~ from inves tment bankers al. to the exact worth of the final Air Florida bid After that tesllmonv 1s heard the high stakes bidding war could resume anew. unttl one party folds. Present during the an1t1al round of bidding but not participating in it was William Mc Kee reprcscnling I nterna tional Airplane Corp .. a Euro pcan firm that has an inlen·st in acquiring A1rCal Long before the b1dd10g opened at $35 million. McKee said that he felt AirCal was worth about S42 million. M1·Kec.• unsuct·es~fu ll) sought a dt•lav 1n the hid s ale but N1el!.t'll. made it c·lc:<.tr that afte1 eight ,\Cars of s upervising the Westgate rcorgan1£att0n he "as anxious for the ~alt• lo proceed J\1r 1-1onda abo had argued against lhl' sale.· l'la1m1ng the~ wc.•n• lht• vittims of a double cross by trustees of Westgate. Air Florida previously had com mittc•d itself lo s pending $45 million to acquire 86 percent of the.• preforred shares and 26 per cent of the common s hares of Westgate, believing that AirCal would not be dis posed of. The trustees.-however. de tided 1n favor of selling the airltm• after receiving a S34 85 million for the airline from the Lyon Argyros group ~~~~ ~~~~~ • ' i • I• . '. . . - - :· I · Rollie Cohen, 3, listens intently as Bruce Johnston, centeT, and Mike Love of the Beach Boys sing her a melody during a concert in Sunrise, Fla. The Beach Boys recently celebrated 20 years togetheT as a singing group. Kennedy eyes Haig 'list' Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, he or the unfulfilled pres1den· tial ambitions, isn't saying a n ything bad about Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr. these days. In an oblique reference to Haig declaring himself in control at the White House following the s hooting of Pres ident Reagan, the Massachusetts Democrat told a group of education lob· byists: "I don 't want l o s ay a n ything rough about Al Haig. He 's drawing up another order of succession to the presidency and I'm trying lo get my name on that last list .. lt was an autograph hun ter's heaven. Scalpers hawked tickets for $100 apiece and police held back crowds of curious bystancters as the likes of Liza Mlnnelll, Rock Hudson, J oan Fontaine, Sh irley MacLaine, Cicely Tyson, Mike Nichols, Andy Warhol, Lee Radzlwlll, Biil Blass, Claire Trevor and Halston arrived at the Martin Beck Theater . The reason was the long· awaited New York stage de· but of Elizabeth Taylor who is appearing in a revival of Lillian Hellman's drama "The Little Foxes .. Among other opening-night celebrities were Sara Solhern Taylor, the star's mother. and Sen John Warner. the star 's husband, who stood for the rirst act m the back of the theater .... ~ Actresses Tyne ·Daly, left . and Loretta Swit work on a scene in the movie ··Cagney and Lacey,·' in which they play undercover policewomen posing as prostitutes. The fiJm is scheduled to be aired by CBS in the fall. J azt pianist Teddy WUson was listed in stable condition in a Schenectady , NY hospital. Friends said the 68-year· old Wilson was stricken by what appeared to be a stroke a few hours before be was to have completed a two-week show at a local night spot. He is best known for his performances with the Bea· ny Goodman Orchestra in the 1930s and '40s. Rains flood Michigan New Jersey drenched ; snow blankets Montana Co<utal weather Con•lcler .. • clOUdlMu 111ro11911 W9Clnotelrf with only pertlel cl .. rlno In eller-. Eerly mcwn1,.. Clrlu ... Coe1tel low U, lnl-U. Coellel lllgll ... In~ 1•. W-r ... EIHwMr•. 1011111 to IOUlllWOI Wlndl 6 lo 12 llllOll OlllHwlM llOflt urlebl• wlndl n'9hl end mornlno holltl. Wlndl lle<omlno IOVtllwHI IO w.st 10 to 11 knots wllll 1 to 4-loot w•v•s Wedne1dey eflernoon ScMltllwftt 1 .. 11 2 to H .. t uc~ comDiM<I -IO 1 leet 011t•r ,.,., .. , .... ,. 70 I ..,, r Detroit 011hllh Hertford H•lene H-111111 HOllllon lndnet>llt JKklllvlle Kens City YlV ... llttleltod< lOtA .... ._ lOllltYllle Metnpllh Ml...,1 MlhHll- Mols-St.P NHl,..lli. .... on-. .. 42 ,. 11 70 " ... • • 7• 7t .. SI • " •1 " • to .. 11 n 7• 61 J7 .. n }1 ... 71 .. JS .. ,. S1 ... ,. 57 .01 .40 • CM .02 .01 •• .02 V.S. srunmary (uol IMwYot1l u ,. I.to So11t11wetttrn Mlchloen otflcl•I• -•• wemno 1or 11ooe1 we1er1 IO r~ I <-1-y to tlWy COllld telly Ille Cl•m•1• lrom lie.II flood• 111•1 wHh•CI out roed• • ..., IMICUCI UP ..... ,. to11-1no e d-npovr thet l1ro111llt • re<ord ••lnlell In '"" Grendlt.....,.•rM. A Cir-hint r•ln In H•w Jerwy, mo-111i., wnt w•l•r ICM•llno o••r th41 dom of e ruorvolr '°' the llrtl Um• In ne•rly • yoer. Scett.,.94 JhOW•n In lllO So11th brouglll tom• rtl1•1 lo P••chtd lermlend, .. .......,. flrot tonllnued to -n In ""'111 C..-ollne loretll end FIOrlele'• dry lllOll dreoeecl on. T~ rumbf.O lrom 1"41 0111• Vellty to lht mld·Allenllc Coett, whll• 11• lnchet of 1now Menllewd _.. ot IOlllNNI Montone Md -'lier ., ... of the It ... re<elvecl two Inc-ol rell\. Cl .. , .... Pf9••110d O"""""' '" Cllk .... ....,_ lie t-et11'9 IN Mondey ....... .,._., 10 :12 ci.er-·· . . " ~ (eld ..:.::.::., ~-­\h •••·•• \1n1 "'""ft•t Ouh1ded ammJ ---=== IH'Hlll119 ti. record of,, Ht In 1'71. l •IH t-y. rein -.,_ere pr• cllcteel tor Wyoml119 el1d ~oulhern Mont.ne, with K•tt.r.O _,. o•· tr norlhtrn Uteh encl nortlltrn Cotoreoo. Temperatures California, AllMlft'I' Al~ut Al'MrlllO Alfltvlllt Atlente Allen1CCIV Wednotde'I' llllOllld 1111 e ,.put of ee1t1m- todey'1 allglrtly cooler ternper•lllfH llrmlft9hm eflCI IO'*'•ll'f felr WNthtr, 011c9P' Bltmer(k lo.. cOMlcliffellle 'oestal I-,._.. BolM -rMtltl ..... ,_...,. houn Md .... locel clrl.ule. Glllty _.,..,, wlndt lrownaYlle •rt for.c•I for, .. ,_lelns -In-a.ittelO lof'lot MCtlona. C,l\erltlftSC Tiie Hotloftel '#9-r S.rvlu Is CherhtrlWV pre.llCll"9 ,.._ In the _, 10l In Che.,..,.. LOS A""'lft, 74 to M In CNllAI --Chk ... lnttr,,......_e •alleys, In Ille 609 111 CllKl~I _ .. .., ..-. M to ,.. In 11111' dt-Cle•tlelld wrtt _,..lo 100 lft low~ CAiium- • NI Le "'<• .. ff l.U ... .. U H u .. " 4J .. u ... 10 ,. .a }7 41 ... , •2 n n •.et a .. 6S 44 ... .,, ,,. " 0 .u ,. JS ... 4J II .tt u .. .n ff a A .. ., .11 Southern Udif omia mr/ report ............ ....... .., 1 t .. I 1 .. J I IW I I IW We're Listening ••• ~""" Norfolli 16 " ... Okie City )1 w Omehe .. "' .JI Orie,. ti " f'flli.clptMe '5 61 UJ PllMnla " n il'Htsllll ..... .. .. .12 Pll-,11119 •• .. .12 Ptlencl,Ore " 41 lteno 71 •1 S.llleke " 42 IMO~ 11 .. $6nPren 1' S2 Stelll• .. 41 Stlovlt '1 .. StP·Tempe t2 • St Ste Merle • .. Spolleno • 40 .14 T111 .. 11 " Welllllnotn ,, .. .'2 CAUf'OAIOA ..... , ..... '" .., ll'flM .. 74 E11me SJ ... ........ to • L.Ml<HIM as .. Merysvllle u" Moft .. ,.., . , .. 119"1• .. 0.-lencl n SJ .. _ ...... • 41 ltedaluff t7 .. ltMwoefOt'I' t7 " leer ........ 1$ " S.llM• a • SM!'----· .. " ....... tt TMtmel " .. Utllell .. lent-.. .. ... ..., n • ~~ ... S4 ,. • II Cef!IN t• .s UIAr,......_ .. Q '-eteliOI • 74 .. .. ....,.leedl 10 • OMM'te 11 • .... "' ....... ,., .. .. ~ n • SM!..,_.. t1 SS .,,_ .. M ...... AM • .. ~Cnia 1' .. TeMeV...., . , .. I What do you like about the Dally Pilot? Whal don't you Uut Call the rrumber below and your me11a1e wlll be NCOrded, transcribed and delivered to tbe appropriate editor. · Sm, moon, tide. The 11me 24·hour anawerin1 service may bt used to record letters to the editor on any toplc. Mailbox cont.rtbut.on muat in- clude tbelr name ... d lelepboM number f« verinc1Uoo. No clrculat.lon calls, ple.ue. Tell us wbat't on your mlnd. ... ?" ..._., ~ ...... 11•""" ... Al q P'f ,Im ... , ...... u ~~ •:• ...... 4 .. 11:• ..... ... ........... 1:•~"'· •.• ... .. , ................... -•:•Ull .......... ......... u ..... apse op ass ; a 3 Orange Cout O~IL y PILOTfruetday. May 12, 1881 H/F Al ' Rental issue festers Rep. Robinson's vote fulcrum of eviction see saw By GLENN SC01T Of .. .., ........ County. aaJd tt has adopted the stand of the California Apart· ment Association which 1tron1ly opposes the Bates-Levine bill and a similar bill in the state Senate authored by Alan Siero· ty, D-Los Angeles. Carberry said the bill is poorly Oranc• County Assemblyman Richard Robinson has become a central fi1,ure in decidin1 wbetbe.r pro1k>5ed le1illaUon to ettabl.llh causes for evictions will reach the Assembly floor tbla year. Roblnaon, D-Garden Grove, la one of 14 members of the At.· sembly Judiciary Committee consldertna the so-called "Juel cause eviction" bill, AB m . • written and "virtually removes an owner's ability to remove a destructive tenant." Robinson , who is uncom- mltted, la considered one of the swing votes needed to send the bUJ out of committee to the floor. The bill is co-authored by At.· semblymen Mel Levine, D·Santa Konica, and Tom Bates, D- Oakland. Robinson's district repretent· alive ln Garden Grove, Bill Mack, said both tenants and landlords have been busy calling the assemblyman's office. "Overall, we've had more calls from renters," said Mack, who added that he expected that ratio since tenants far out· number landlords. Robinson said he will wait Wl· til after b earing public testimony Wednesday before taking a position. •'This would be a very impor- tant change in the tenant- landlord law and I inlend to treat it that way," he said. At a press conference called Friday by the Santa Ana In· terfaith Housing Association. several speakers said landlords presently can evict tenants without an explanation. That places tenants in defensive posi- AWAITS TESTIMONY Rep Richard Robinson lions where they may be afraid to objeet lo unfair rent increases or substandard conditions, said Judy Fikens, leader of the Orange County Renters Associa· lion. Said William Speer, a representative to the Orange County Housing Coalition: .. It (th e bill l places no burden whatsoever on the landlord who has any concern for the welfare of his tenants." Orange County landlords don't seem to agree. Peter Carberry. executive director of the Apart· menl Association of Orange Landlords also see the pro- posed legislation as another restriction to further restrain lhe growth of rental housing, he said. Economics also plays a part in preventing the need for the legis lation. Carberry main- tained. "It's almost inconceivable that an owner would want to evict a tenant for an un1ust cause." he said. "It's an economic necessity. A vacant apartment Is too costly." At the press conference. however. the tenants' rights ad- voca t es claimed landlord atrocities occur too frequently. Kathy Wolfe, a lawyer for the Fair Housing C6uncil, discussed the case of a Santa Ana woman who was evicted from her apart· menl after she complained to police that her landlord had molested h er 9 -year-old daughter. "' Although the lan<lloro tater pleaded guilty to misdemeanor lewd conduct charges in connec· tion with the incident, the woman lost her civil case lo pre· vent the ev1ct1on. said Ms . Wo lfe, .. becaus e too much burden is placed on the tenant to prove retaliatory eviction." Hospital danger argued Technicians, union rebut 4 safer' Fairview claims By JERllY CLAUSEN Those attacks res ulted in 0t ••Deity.....,. MMf 32.000 work days lost by techni- P s yc bi atr ic technicians at ciaos, said Charles Strong, a Fairview State Hospital in Costa Psychiatric Technicians Union Mesa are angry about com-representative. m e n ts by hos pi la 1 ad · Crinella noted that, during the ministrators who say the techni-first three months of this year, ciaos face fewer dangers from no patient attacks on employees their mentally retarded patients were recorded at Fairview and than do technicians workklg at that no work time was lost as a other state mental hospitals. result. Gathering recently to protest The half-dozen psychiatric statements by Richard Clinella. technicians who gathered last Fairview's executive director, week at thei'r union head· we re me m be rs of the quarters at 1875 Harbor Blvd. in Psychiatric Technicians Union. Costa Mesa took iss u~ with AFL-CIO, one of three unions Crinella's figures. vying to become exclusive They said they had been bargaining agent for the state'• autbortied lo note that Barbara 7,800 technicians. Whltlock, a technician. was La Vonne Evarts, a Fairview kicked on the right knee by an technician for nine years. said angry patient on March 25. for she worked for more than a year instance. at the mental institution in Ms. Whillock. they contended. Norwallc. was off work for-a week as a re· "I didn't get actually physical· suit. ly injured at Metro (in John Knox. a Residence 34 Norwalk), but I have been many technician, was bitten on the times at Fairview," she said. right wrist in early March, and She claimed she has been bit· Teri Cullen suffered two hernial· ten, hit, kicked and had glass ed discs "resulting from direct broken in her face. client (patient ) attack" on Jan. She said she loves her work 11. . "and my group, it's just that it Ms. Cullen, though. admitted (Crinella's comment) enraged later that she was not attacked. everyone who read it. We know She said she was attempting to what we have to contend with on rouse a patient when he lurched a day-to-day basis." backward in an attempt to re· Crinella's comments late last main in bed and pulled her month followed union leaders' toward him . support of legislation to offer Such a n incident, said Nan psychiatric technicians an an· Gerth, Fairview hospital ad· nual 5 percent "hazard bonus" ministralor, probably s hould not for the dangers they face from be regarded as an "attack." patients in the 11 state-operated What does constitute an at· psychiatric hospitals. tack, she said, often is a ques- Union leaders claim there lion of reporting. She said were 2.000 patient attacks last Crinella's statement that no at· year in all of the state hospitals tacks were reported on techni· against other patients and staff ~ians during the year's firs t members. quarter should stand. Among the many attractions of Cleopatre waa the fact that she owned her own Emerald mine. She wu one of the first of hlatorv'• famoua names to adorn themaelvea with the rich. luslrout green gem, which la the birthstone for May. Emer1ld I• one of the oldest known gems on earth and '#89 found In the markets of 1nclent Babylon. Tod1y It la stlll one of the moat adm ired and c~ of gem1tonea. In ancient times many atonea were ml1tak1nly called Emerlfd Jutt tiec:.uM they were green. Even tOday tome Jewelers tend to mislead the customer by .,,.. Ing mianomers tuch u ··even- 1 ng emerald" (perldot) or "Oriental emerald" (green ..- phlre). TheM end ottier qualify- ing term• ref1r to different OematonH entlr1ly. The American Gem Society atrlctlY forblda the uN of •ny aucfl tetnw that mlaleed the pUbllc, eo you c1n trust your A.G.S • iew.1er In thl1 matter . The Emerald 11 a varl1ty of b mineral beryl. It 11 a wry bMutlful and apt atone for the month of May. Ila lovely oool ... @ 6EM WISE Mary Barr. c.rtltied Gemologist I In commenting last month on labor leaders' s tatements re· garding danger to employees. Crinella said, "They (union of· ficialsl try to encourage people to follow the m by generating notoriety and making claims that the workers are en· dangered . "That," he added, .. is a fairly typical tactic that we will be seeing from all the unions over the next couple of months." At least 12 umons are working to represent workers of all kinds al the 11 state hospitals. includ· ing Fairview. Unions are focusing on the dangers faced by technicians, the difference in pay between them and registered nurses with almost identical training and failure or the st ate to staff technicians' jobs with qualified licensed employees. Fairview's registered nurses earn between $1 ,590 and $1.825 per month. Technicians get $1 ,213 to Sl.451. Fairview is authorized 987 "nursing services" positions Group to pick up old refrigerators The Orange County Chapter of the Refrigerations Service Engineers Society will pick up old , unused , or abandoned refrigerators and freezers May 30-31. RSES i s concerned that children playing in or around these appliances could be caught inside and suffocate. Call Bill Chambers al 750-9448 to have them picked up during the cam pa1gn . green color and interior "garden .. (patterns creeled by lncluslons) remind me of a fresh spring day These In· clU11ions are very characteristic of th11 gemstone and a flawless Emerald ol line color js l/9f'1 rare Indeed . end therefore a very valuable item Most of the fine Emerald mined today comea from Columbia. Other sources ere Rhodesia, Russia. India and Brazil. We do have a source of Emerald in the Un1t1d States too . . in North Caroline ne. Hlddenlte This deposit wp d1aeovered In 1875 and 1n 1970 a rock hound found a 50 carat emerald which w111 cut to 13.14 carats. This atone holda the r• cord for the largeat and finest cut Emerald found In North America. Three other excellent example• of domettic Emet'1lda are Included In t~ collection et the Smllhaonr1n . While we can't 1how you 1ny domeatlo Emeralds In our atore. we do, at the present time, h1ve • very good seleo- tlon of fine Emerald• from other parts of the wortd. Come In and ... our collection f ' ~4 H/F O,.nge Coat DAILY PILOT/TuHday, May 12. 1981 2nd IRA striker succumbs Frencli market gripped by panic BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) -IRA hunger striker Francis Hughes, 2S, died today in Maze Prison, the Northern , Ireland office announced. Spokesmen for Protestant and Roman Catholic militants said the all-out sectar ian warfare that was predicted but never did develop after the death last week of Irish Republican Army hunger striker Bobby Sands could break out now that Hughes ha::. died Violence flared overnight as Hughes' condition detenorated. Dozens of Molotov cocktails were hurled at security forces m Londonderry and police said they returned rire when snipers attacked in the Roman Catholir Creggan district In Belfast, where police and army patrols were attacked with more than 1 ,500 Molotov cocktails last wee k . security forces said they found a storage hut containing 12 crates of bot· ties. a gallon of hydrochloric aeid, gasoline, funnels and cloth twisted into wicks all for making acid and gasolin e b9mbs MUSICIAN DEAD Bob Marley. a Jamaica n regga~ musician, who smoked man· juana on stage, has died of cancer in Miami. He sue cumbed Monday. ------- Murder charged SALEM. Ore. 1AP1 An u.n employed mill worker who "didn't drink very much or cause any problems" has been indicted on charges of gunning down four young people at a crowded rock'n'roU bar. A Marion County grand jury handed down the m urder indictments Monday against Lawrence W Moore. 25, of Scio. MONRO- MATIC ® •Amerlca'S Best Selllng Shock Absorber.· ~MOMROE.Y .RADIAL-MATIC ® •A Great Ride at a Great Price~ ~MOHROE.Y ~ special prlC~ •e SO IOW tnev Jre not vato " coniunroon wtth anv othef couoon or 011Count Of fer MONRO- MACNUM&O® • bigger bore • bigger 011 capacity • bigger piston ~MOHROE.Y Tl1eSe SOIClal prlees Jl'f fO IOW theV '' noc VllO In con)uncqon with anv ottwor c OYPon or discount Offer .,..OI HP&klMINT WAUMTY PARIS CAP> In a new shock trluued by Socialist Francois Mitterrand's election as presJ· dent, investors hlt the French stock cxchanie today with an avalanche of sell orders and de· tared the market's openln.a by 45 mmutes . A half·hour after the exchaose opened, onJy a handful of lques had been traded because sellers far o utnumbered buyers . Brokers were unable to find takers at prlces 7 percent below Monday's close. But there was some cautious buying reported and exchatJge. oHicials said a few stocks - down as much as 18 percent following Sunday's election - were start.1Jlg to attrack msUtut· ional buy~r:;, M itwrrand was elected to a seven year term, defeating in- c umbent . President Valery Giscard d'Estaing, and prom· ised major economic changes including nationalization of !)everal companies. M itterand conferred with his trans ition staff today and planned to lunch with Portuguese Prime Minister Mario Soares, a fellow Socialist and close friend. The panic selling already was 1'cing referred to by dealers as ··Black Monday." Monday's trading was also delayed by a wuvc of sell orders. On money markets, the franc held ~ll'adv but at depressed CAIOUIST ~· ® tt, 1n eo OIYS vou dOn't agree that four MOnrO·MatlC,MOnroe Racllt-Mldc or Maanum 60 ShOCk absorberS give you tne t:>est ride YOU ,,_ hid, Monroe Wll rep&ace them wttn any comparat:Jty Prtced ShOdes at no cnarge. Spec&al IOW pr1Ces PIUS lnstalltton avalable at parttQ>atlng CARQUEST servtc.e statlons and garages. l.OOk tor the CAftOUIS't/MOnroe blnner. IMPOllT Mm AVAILMLI llf MOIT STOlll. ~~ OOOd It .=~'IO CMQUllT AutO Plr'Ult'Om1 ~-~ stf\4C: n2 ... ~ MIV 11, 1"1. A BEACON •U70 PARTS AND t.L\CMINE SHOP 480 M: Mewpod Blvd. Newport leach 548· I I l l C ARQUEST the Right Pl;ice to buy ituto p;ir tc; i.11r,HT ;~;. i' f e F·>il,HT Pfif...1 T' • ~ 1r,HT ,·•IJ'JI' f ltvela today ln early lnt,r·ban.lc tr1dln1. The rate for ull money. which bank1 borrow on • dt)'·lo- day basla, roet to lt..t hi.ah t level 1lnce the 1ummer or 1W74. The hike In the call money rate was In Une with the Bank ol France's eteps that followed stron1 pressure against the franc and the near panlc condl· tlons at the stock t!xc ha nge. On the political front, Mitter- rand'• election left In IU wake an open rift amona con Hrvatlves and communist de· mands for a major role in !''ranee's first leftist government In 23 years. The stock exchange wu packed as dealers flooded the market with selHna orders, but the virtual absenc&' of buyers made it Impossible to quote most stocks. • • The clc,.lna Index dropped 9 percent durtn1 the day. baaed on onJy 12 of the more than 200 la· sues on the. market that pcieted transactions. Amooa the hardest hlt •tocks were those of major companies Mitterrand has said he would nationalize. A wave or panic also hit the French franc and the nation's gold market Monday. La Fayette French Reateurent JOIN US FOR MOTHER'S DAY Sunday. May 1 O. Monday, May 11. former Righteous Brother Bobby Hatfield In Concert Two Shows Nitely 9 p m & 1 1 p m Tickets $1000 Frtday. May 15, Saturday, May 16 8111 Medleys Own Show Band "Vo1oe" -~·.___ featuripg. Lee Ferrell & Gathertne Craig --oa.-w ·-·A no.tJ, CAI.~ IOOWH1141fU.ZJU Jack Anderson oa·11y p·1101~ ! reveals in the The Incredible Greg Topper May 18. 9 pm The Chanteys -known tor their hit P1pel1ne. BILL MEDLEY'S RESTAURANT 18774 lrookhwst Fowttoln Volley Crack into a place of hot, steaming crab legs.Try a generous se~ving of our new spiccJ cold boiled shrimp. Or our famous Popcnrn!Jl '.'.hnmp And then do it again~ It's all you can em. Every day of the :veck. . Each special is served with your ch01~e of a crisp t~)s~d ~::tlfld or cole slaw, baked potato or rice pilaf. and another favorite, sourJough bread . All You can eat. All week long. Alaskan Snow Crab Legs All you can eat . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~11.95 Popcom,.Shrimp All you can eat ............... sz50 New Spiced Cold Boiled Shrimp All you can eat. . . . . . . . . . ... ~ 8.95 Bedfobsler· For the seafood lowr in you: 7801 Beach Blvd .. Bueno ~rk. 99+1241 16811 'Bcnrh Blvd .. Huntington Bench. 848-1956 , 11 30 a.m.-10;00 p.m. Sun.·Thurs. 11: 30 a.m -11:00 p.m Fri &. Sal -" \ . ~UffiU~ Open :hearing vote delayed SAC RA M ENTO I A P > - Newspap~rs and prosecutors have made their pitch before an Assembly committee for open preliminary bearinas in court. But the Criminal J \lstice Com- m ittee, after the testimony Mon· day. delayed until next week a vote on four competing billa. T he bills would discard the 1872 stale law giving a defendant • the a bsolute r ight to bar the public from ·a preliminary hear- ing. They differ on standards to aJlow a closed hearing in un· us ual cases. Rape law studied SACRAM ENTO IAP> -Tbe time to prosecute an accused r,apist· would be extended from three lo six years under a bill approved by an Assembly com· mittee Air crash k iUs ~ starts fire REDDING <APJ With fire season fast approaching and in_ the wake of a plane crash that destroyed a service warehouse and killed four, the U.S. Forest Service may be acutely short o! fire-fighting equipment. Four Forest Service workers died in Monday's cras h of a twin -engine Beechcraft. Fire avoided in Burbank crash BURB AN K <AP> -A light plane crash that le!t four dead at Bu r bank-Glendale · Pasad ena Airport narrowly missed turning into 4l fiery inferno by stopping s hort of a hangar full or fueled airc raft, authorities say. The single-engine Beechcraft Bonanza burst into fl ames on the ta rmac between two hangers after crashing shortly afte r takeoff Sunday afte rnoon. The bodies of the four occupants wer e so severely burned that the CC?roner 's offi ce is still trying to determine the identities of the three passengers, two women and one man. RECALL MISSES -A recall drive against state Sen. Alan Robbins, who is facing sex charges, will fail to make the ballot, said Jan Tuckec. an organizer. of the drive. She said 8,000 to 10,000 of the r equired 27 ,415 voters had bee n collected, w i th the deadline today. Fire still burns BAKERSFI ELD I AP 1 Kern County firefighters expect to spend another day or so putting out the last embers of a fi re that has been burning in 11,000 tons of cott-0n seed since Saturday night. OP-Chemin de Fer-Carters -lzod Calvin Klein-Levi-Her Maiesty-Pacific Tr~il Weather Tamer-Wrangler-Health-Tex Nursery Lamps-Stuffed Animals TEENA'S Big N' Little Kids 26944 Camino de Estrella Capistrano Beach 496-1452 All Citizens May Enttr Wyoming 011 'Lottery' To Be Held In May ONTAR IO . CALIF. (Special) -Hundreds of average citizens will wm 011 lease rights in upcom- ing public drawings con· ducted by 1he S1a1e or Wyomina. Some may achieve overn1gh1 wealth by selling 1he1r righlS to oil companies and retain- ing lifelong royalties on any oil or gas produc- tion Incredibly. most will risk no more than Sl .S and a minimal service fee 10 enler the little-known progra m that offers every American the opportun- ity to compele on an equal basis w11h gian1 oil companies for leases of public lands. lnformalion a nd entry details arc a\ailablc from The H. Kirk Sanders Co . Public Lands Div- ision. Box 3697. On1ario. Calif. 91 761 (2032Carol- ine). Please enclose SI for postage and handling. Oflic1al entry cards will be rushed to pcrmi1 you to meet the nex1 filing period starting May 18th at noon c;'yjew§ On ® j;~~ ~enta/ HealtJi';:#;\1 L,.,,, By GERALD WIN 0 KLEA. D.D.S. ):'./ 1 A BETTER WA y TO CLEAN TE6 H Peppermint Potty ~ Find the whole Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT/Tuelday. May 12, 1981 Al Nlivy baclis burro kil/JJ Unit favors s hooting animals to cut population CHINA LAKE <AP> -The Naval Weapons Center says it favors s hooting wild burl'O$ on Its grounds to reduce the popula· lion, which it says endangers the lives or test pilots and those traveling oo base. The Navy released its recom- mendations Monday on reducing the burro numbers at its China Lake Weapons Center, saying it favors shooting the animals. "Th e r eco mm e nd e d a lte rn ative w it h the mos t favorabl e p h ysic a l a nd econom ic effect on the environ- me nt and the Navy is direct re· ductlon," or s hooting them, a statement by the Navy satd. "It complete re moval by a comblnaUon or live trapping and direct reduction is selected, live trap,tng must be financed by private orga nizations." the statement said "Costs or re- moval are estimated at $S0 a bur ro for direct reduc tion and $500 a burro for live t rapping." Navy offi cials said all of the burros m ust be removed from the base. Me anwhile, a federal court hea ring in Fresno on the issue Mondav was delayed several months to 1ive the Na vy tim e to prepare and pubUsh an environ· mental impact statement. T he Navy said It s r ecom- m en ded solutions in clude : "Complete removal by direct re- duction <shooting>. complete re· moval by a combination or Uve trapping and direct reduct ion, partial removal or burros on center lands and no act ion." Public hearings must be held on the findings T he Fund for Ani ma ls is one of s-everal conse r vat ion ist groups suing the Navy to stop the Nadication proi.?ram HoSpital may he locked LOS ANGELES (AP> As of· ficials began reburying the ex- humed bodies of 11 elderly peo· pie who died m ysteriously al a Perris hospital, sta te authorities reportedly s aid they are con· sider ing license action against that hospital. The Los Angeles Times report- ed todat"that a former director of nursing at the hospital re· peatedly urged hospital officials to contact authorities about the sudden deaths, but they refused to do so. The Times quoted Deputy At· torney General James Lahana as saying the facility's license m ay be suspended, which would mean removing all the patients a nd locking the hospital doors The 11 bodies exhumed were a mong 25 patients who died at Com munily Hospital of the Va lleys' mtensive care unit dur· ing a relatively short time, caus m g a county and state probe ant-0 the deaths a nd s u bsequen t similar deaths of two people a t San Gorgonio P ass Hospital in Banning. P a tricia Christ en sen, the for m er nursin g dir ector a t P e rris. reportedly told the T imes she became concerned a bo u t several deaths even before the arrival of Robert D1at. 43, a temporary nurse who 1s said to have worked at both hospitals when the deaths oc- curred. M s. Christensen reportedly concurrt•d with Diaz's earlier al· legations that nurses wor ked with little supNv1sion at the Per ris hospital, and she said many of the deaths occur red late at night She also said the deaths were characterized by prolonged seizures which could be a sign of toxicity. G OU RMET l\'I ARK E T D E LAl'iEY' BROS. SEAFOOD f'resh fo'iJet of Local Thresher Shark .............................. 1.98 lb. Fresh Northern Red Salmon Whole or Half ...................... 3.98 lb. We wall gladly r1let or ~teak out 'our Salmon Cor no (!Xt ra l'harge Swordfish < Fre::.h Fr111.cn 1 •••••••••••• 5.98 lb. M EAT D E PARTMENT Prime and top chnice beer aged at ll'a't 30 tia~s to lhl· peak or JJl.'rfrction Center Cut 7 Bone Ch uck Roasts .... 1.69 lb. 0 -Bone Chuck Roasts .............. 1.98 lb. FREk. HOM E DE LIVE RY SERVICE '50 00 min pleaSl.'I Your onkr 1~ under romplett· rdn$!rration from our ~tort' lo ~our door 1r1 our rt'fl'lj!l'rated lruci.., Call in thl' mnrntnj! Jnd your onll•r "111 ht• delivered lo your home the same afternoon This ad erferll\ e Wt'd . 5 13 through Tues . 5 19 DELANEY'S MORNI NG FR ESH PRODLCE First of the Season Sweet Thick Meaty Cantalopes . . . . . . . . . . . . 39c lb, So. American Bana nas . . . J lbs. for 1.00 Pepsi 6 Paks 112 oz 1 r<"I! <11l'I hll' .. 1.99 ea. WE AR E NOW F EATURING F R ESH PASTA DELANEY'S WIN E CELLAR [)planf., .. , r rhate Label ('ha mpal(nP 1750 m1l 1 · 2. 75 ea. or 33.00 1>er ca'" We nte Broi.. Le Blanc de Blan<' • eagram!> VO For tm & Ooc-Korbrand S('oresby Sculch 1750 mil I (One litl'r) 3.50 ea. 9.99 ea. <one literl 3.50 ea ( 19741 .. 555ea. ti fl5 ea All hquor ,ind wine plu!> tax Complete t'atrnng serv1t'e. from a sit down dinner party to party trays delivered to your home. Call Delaney·s ('atenng Dl•partment. ask for Tom Martin Store Hours 9·6, Closed Sunday 2920 Newport Blvd., Newport Beach 673-5520 De ntal plaque is a sticky. Invisible rilm that contains bacteria and ill the major cause. of tooth decay and pe r iodiontal I gum > d lAeue. The trouble with removing plaque from leetb Is that you can't see It easlly with the nake d eye. But the re 111 a way to make the "Invisible" show up. Chew a dlscl08lng tablet before bru bing yoar ledh. Re move all the red stain and you'll remove tbe plaque. Here '• a flv• ate p prffechln &o •~ before •ol1t• to bed H eh nl1llt lf )'O• want hulthy t•eth. tooth paste. Place the bristles at a 45 degree angle pointing toward the gum. M ov~ ~h e brush back and forth wllh s hort s trok es. Clean chewing surfaces with short. st'rubbing slrokes. 3 Use unw axe d dental floss to d e an between the teeth and under the gum edges. Peanuts 9an9 evervdav in the "' We invite\YOU to v181t the new LeSportsao Shop 1n South Coast Pla.za.. You '11 love the vast selection of LeSport;sac bags and a.ocessories including the New "Oenera.t1on II"tra.nsa.tla.nttc sail cloth Ba.gs . 1. Make the plaque vl1lble by chowlna a diseloslna tablet. 2. BN!lh your teeth; u.eln1 1 dl'y, aolt·brb lle bru a h with o ut 4. Rinse and examine t h e t e eth fo r any remaining red areas. 5. Brush again using toot h p aa t e, concentrating on the areas lbat still contain pla q ue For best reauli.. don't eat again before iotng to bed Geralcl W•ler, D.D.~.' encl Mlocl.U. 14tl Awcaclo, ~ultt 505, Nf•Por1 ~ath h one: '4t-4f00 l1ily Pilat 842-4321 Lllpon•o louUa aoui »lua 3333 Br1Stol Street Ciosta Mesa, CA 92626 7146671263 I IAlponuo •••'wood 914 Westwood Blvd. Westwood, CA 90024 213 208-8822 • Lelponuo Ian\& Konica Se.nta Monie& Ple.oe Second Level 2133947027 Orange Co•t DAIL V PILOT/Tutld1y, May 12, 1911 - ') For years Orange County esidents involved in federal ourt cases as plaintiUs, efendants, jurors, witnesses or awyers have been obliged to trek 0 Los Angeles ror hearings -a ast waste of lime, energy and gasoline. On June 30, thanks to egislatlon s pon sored by Rep. erry Patte rson, 0 -Santa Ana, rang• County will take the f lrst tep toyvard having its o wn federal court facilities. On that 'd a t e. the U .S. District Court will begin functioning in empty courtrooms at the county courthouse in Santa Ana. By October, the federa l court will have its own quarters in a single courtroom in rented space in downtown Santa Ana. Then plans call for two courtrooms to be set up in leased space. They will serve for the next 10 to 15 years. Eventually, an entirely new court facility will be c~tructed In Santa Ana. Local o ffi ci als have persistently lobbied to have a U.S. District Court located in the county. But the problem always bas been flndana sufficient conveniently located space for the seven or more employees assigned to each courtroom, along with lawyers, jurors and other participants. The present arrangement was worked out by Patterson and a three-judge panel from the federal court in Los Angeles. It was a worthwhile effort that should be appreciated by county residents. Hints for Congress Congress seems to be going down the line in supporting the Reagan economy program. Mem- bers are solemnly weighing s uch money-saving maneuvers as bail· ing out Social Security by cutting out cosl·of ·living increases and ra ising the retir e ment age; cut- ting back on food stamps ·and school lunch programs; and end· ing job training for the un· employed. This month. U.S. News & World Report magazin e offered a few more br ight ideas. How about making som e trims in Co ngress's own $1. 4 billion budget? Take the overseas junkets like the 15-member delegation that journeyed to Australia and New Zealand aboard an Air Force Boeing 707 that costs SS,221 an hour to keep in the air. Or the spring trip to the Middle East for nine senators on a military passenger jet that cost -$100,000 for transportation alone. The Congressoional Record costs $479 a page to produce, but members have no qualms about s ubmitting for its costly pages their Jong-winded "remarks," birthday greetings and squibs of news about the home-town sports team. Then there 's t h e Congressional s taff numbering 19,000 persons, three times the level of 20 years ago. It includes, amon g o thers, 89 elevator operators who are kept aboard at a cost of $890 ,000 a year to oper ate an automatic elevator system that was installed al a cost of $3 million. And there's the 1,200-member Congressional police force that costs about $24 .4 million a year and approximately equals in size the police force of the city of San Diego. There a re some small items, like new desks for the ne w De m ocratic and Republican whips, at a cost of $3,225 aud $2,136 apiece. These were part of $16,000 worth of new furniture bought to replace their prede· cessor's office furnishings that now are in storage. Each year Congress spends $2 million to print a nd mail 1.1 million wall calendars that mem· bers send free to their constit· uents. And there's the quaint practice of providing flagS' that have been flown over the Capitol to the hometown folk -70,000 nags a year at a cost of $6 each, plus the salaries of four full-time e ml>loyees who haul them up and down the Capitol flagpoles so they'll be authentic. Could it be that some home towns at least, would pref er more secure Social Security and a few school lunches? Little lost Americans One of the sadder side effects of war and of the peacetime stationing of troops in foreign countries is the inevitable birth o f "GI babies" -hapless youngsters fathered by, and most often abandoned by, soldiers. In many countries the outlook for such a child is bleak. The illegitimacy in itself is hard for both the mother and child to overcome. And where a racial mixture i s involved, the youngsters, especially in Asian co untries. may n e ver be accepted into society. Denied citizenship, education and health care, and abandoned by both parents . most wind up in orphanages, be longing to no family and no country. By U.S. law, any child of a citizen is automatically entitled to citizenship. But the child must be registere d with the U .S. Embassy or consulate in its country of birth. For the GI off s pring, this rarely happens. And under present immigration • law. little can be done to help. Now Congress is considering an amendme nt to the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952 that could enable some of these children of half .American pare ntage to be brought into this country. It would be necessary to prove U.S. paternity, conduct a bac kground and health check. and find a sponsor who would take full responsibility ror bringing up the child, furnishing transportation and total support. Given the shortage of adoptable c hildren in this cou ntr y today , it 's not inconceivable that such sponsors could be found. If our doors can be o__pened to refugees of all national'ities and races, it is tragic to think that a quirk of the law now closes them to the half -American GI babies. Legislators should be urged lo support the proposed amendment, HR 808. Opinions expressed In the space abe>ve are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex· pressed on this page are th<>se of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is lnvlt· ed. Address The Dall.y Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714> 642-4321 . ,... ~ L.M. Boyd / Brittany's birth rate j !J Brittany since records began has tensify amorous action? Nobody, had the highest birth rate in France. nobody. Still, down through history, .,. ll is also true that Brittany happens oysters more than anything else to °' tobetheprovincewbereinthepeople eat have been named u sex eat by far the most oysters. Thls ls stimulants. l• repeatedly mentioned by those who tC study the relationship, if any, ~r between food and romantic drive. ' Who knows whether one sort of com· eallble does more than another to in· It was from tho electric r~ type of fiah known as the torpedo that the un· derwater bor.nb soi. ita name, re· ports our Language man. ~·,...------------------------~----------------------­,4! y! ,, ORANGE COAST Daily Pilot T homa1 P. Hat•"'l Publisher Thomas KH vll Editor BarlNni Krelbicta Edltort11 Page Editor r .... ----.., Soviets steal dolphin tricks WASHINGTON The Central In· lelligenoe Agency is. you might say. "Flippering" its lid over reports that the Russians a re t raining dolphins for military and espionage miss ions Worse. they stole the idea from us Their inspiration was not the movie "Day of the Dolphin," in which some bad guys kidnapped George C. Scott's talking porpoise and trained it to attach an explosive device to the bottom of a ship. Nor did they get the idea from clandestine visits to Marineland. A top-secret CIA report s tates that the Soviets' fighting fish program "closely resembles th at in the United States and apparently was stimulated by a U S. Navy demonstration of the military value of marine mammals ." The Navy began its studies in 1960 with a dolphin named "Notty," trying to determine whether the beast had any special characteristics that could be built into the design of underwater missiles. One of the Navy's most successful tests involved a dolphin named ''Tuf· fy." which carried tools and messages to aquanauts 200 feet below the surface in the 1965 Sea Lab II pro1ect off La Jolla, Calif. That 's the caper that ap- parently hooked the Russians. THE SOVIET PROGRAM began that very year, and the CIA reports that "the quality of Soviet research has im· proved steadily and in many areas Is comparable" to the Navy's The Top Secret Umbra CIA report, slipped to my associate Uale Van Atta. says the Russian navy may be "lrain· ing dolphins to perform various military and intelligence tasks ... <which J could include attaching intelligence·collection packages and other devices to enemy submarines. and helping divers recover equipment from the ocean Cloor. ·' In addition, Soviet scientists are try· ing to learn more about the way G. -JA-Cl-A-ND-IR-SD-N -.,;; dolphins are able lo locale objects un· der water through the use of echoes. ·'The Soviets hope to use the resuJts of this research in developing advanced sonar systems. more efficient hull de· signs for subm arines and surface ships, and improved shapes for torpedoes." the CIA reports THE RUSSIAN DOLPHIN project re· portedly involves five Black Sea re· search stations including small bio· acoustics laboratories and a dolphinarium Like JUSt about everything else in the U.S.·Soviet competition, each side must com e up with countermeasures to nullify the other's new weapon.. Here the Russians may have opened a dolphin gap. In one Soviet test, according to another CIA report, the Russian experts we.r~ able to "estimate a dolphin's ab1l1ty to detect an object containing an active acoustical emitter under adverse bac kground noise conditions." And this, the CIA explains, "could enable I.he Soviets lo evaluate the poten lial benefits or developing acoustical jamming countermeasures to U .S. Navy dolphin programs " BUT DON 'T TKINK the Navy has been napping on the quarterdeck E vid~ntly . al11;rmed . at the possibility that its Ft~htmg Fltpper Force might be incapacitated by Russian jamming, the Navy has broadened rts marine mammal research to include sea lions and whales ~ In .. Project Quick Fmd." sea lions were lratned to locate instrument-laden missiles and other test ordnance fired into the ocean. and to attach .recovery hardware lo them. And in "Project Deep Ops," a pilot whale and two killer whales dem· onstrated an ability to recover objects from even greater depths than where the sea hons operated The pilot whale proved particularly adept. It learned how to attach a lift bag which inflal ed at hookup to a dummy torpedo resting on the ocean floor 1.654 feet down. Our Blubber Bngade should give the Russians something to chew on. all right. 'Guns or butter' was a Nazi slogan The phrase "guns or butter" has an acceptably dishonorable origin. Paul Joseph Goebbels. the master Nazi pro· pagandist, first used it in a speech in J aouary of 1936. "We can do without butter, but des pite all our love o( peace. not without arms. One cannot shoot with butter but with guns." The phrase became 3 war cry of the Nazis later in that year when Marshal of the Reich Hermann Goering coined the slogan in a r adio address: "Guns will make us powerful; butter will only make us fat." THE YEAR 1981 is the year that this country became a guns-over ·butter country, the only time in our history we have done it in peacetime. The Reagan administration ha s, with great thoroughness. set out to abandon the New Deal and its programs of social improvement and care for the poor. IL has invented a mealy phrase called ''the truly n eedy,'· which m eans someone who thinks like Mr. Reagan determines who is poor and who is not. Representative Fortney Stark. D·Walnut Creek. chairman of the House Public Assistance Subcommittee, has projected Cor the Christian Science Monitor what this could mean Cor various ajd programs in each or the 50 states. Some examples: "In New York, oHicials would be able to respond to 5500 fewer cases of child abuse and neglect. In Missouri, 2300 aged and dJsabled persons would lose home-delivered meals and meals In /,.:... -·, \ I • >,~I,•' CHARUS McCAii t\) senior citizen centen; in Georgia. 1200 individuals would lose community sE:rvlces as an alternative to care in mental institutions, and 5500 children from low-income tamilies in Illinois would lose day care." PRESIDENT REAGAN, over the years. has made no secret of his desire to see the government out of the social welfare business. The president, in his address to Congr ess, defined those whom he believes are "truly needy" as "those who through no fault of their own must depend on the rest of us ... ,(s I read that, most of the poor are bums who wouldn't take a job if it were offered them An acute observer said recently that the Reagan cuts in social spending are not merely a means to economic recovery but an end an themselves. Example: More than 80 percent of Agriculture Department cutbacks will come from nutrition programs designed for the poor. Agriculture Secretary J ohn Block told the House Budget Com· mlttee that these programs include food stamps, school lunches and aid for in· fants and pregnant women. . All this is being tolerated by a tired .public that is willing to believe, at the moment, that lnClation -lhe bill al the . Safeway -is more important an issue than poverty itself. THE REAGAN administration has a strange view of the "Work Ethic," ac· cording to former Social Security Ad· mlnislrator Hale Champion, who used to pound a typewriter in The Chronicle cit y room. This view holds that if a man is able to work and is still poor. then it must be his own fault. Poverty. the poor will discover. has bad days ahead. Right-wingers are invading our bedrooms Oh-oil, the ultra-right gang is letting its hypocrisy show again. If it wasn't so sad, it would be laughable. The ultra·right blathers on about how grand it is to be American and that the government should get off our backs. Even though I am a liberal, I buy that. · America ha s always been a pluraltstic society -a mixture of If lllil MAIR various colors, reU1loua ttMdl, n•· tlonalltles and ethnic oriclna -comlq to1ether In one nation and makln1 lt wol'k. It la UliJ pluralJam that la ooe of the extraordinary upects of the American experience. Yet, &be un-recon1tructed dinotaW'I of tbe far MJhl IUCb 81 Senators JtsM Helm, R-N.C., Senator Jobn P. But, R· N.C., and Rep. Henry J. Hyde, R·lU., want to desLroy that by makina ua all conform to the.Lr narrow vtew of the world and by pushing' Uncle Snoop Into our lives even further than he is today. THESE THREE want Congress to pass a law saying human life officially begins al conc~plion. Sort of biology. metaphysics according to the Great White Washington Gurus. This. of course, would set the sta1e for charging anyone terminating that "Ufe'' with mul'dcr. · Here la one group or citizens trying to Jam its beliefs down the throats of the rest of us under threat of prison or worse. This ia the kJnd of tyranny that axtat.s ln communist and fuclat coun· trtea and is why many of our forefatbert ned to Amertca -the land of the free. Thb Is an invasion or the most penonal part of our Uvea and for the uJ· tra·r1tht to pratUe about 1etUn1 1ov· ernment ott our back• and, tbeni to put it into our bedroom• la the u tlmat bypoc:rtay. &INC& llCOIT of tbeH ullra·r11bt dln1·dcM\p aalivate at the tboutht of a ban!!7, tt 11 ladlcrou to bear 'them talk about t.hetr tendtt and deeop con- cern or human Ult by lnalatJn1 IUt ·-..... _....... ....... begins at conception. Finally, can you imagine what it would be like having the federal bureaucracy turned loose on running your sex Ufe ? You'll probably have to fill out applications, reports, projections and eva(uations before and after or, heaven forbid, during! As someone once said in a sUghUy dlf· ferent context, ii you like the way the government runs the post omce, you love the way lt runs your bedroom. UIYlll A few more palimony 1\lJta and pa9tqe tncreaaes and love lett.ert will detlnlte\y be a thlna ol the put. J .C.V. •..-·---· -• ........ e •I . . . . . . . HUITlllTll lllCH I IDUITlll VllllY DallyPllat Tuesday, Mey 12, 1981 FEATURES TELEVI SION M OVIES 82 86 87 . - ' a J Some balls are that in name on-0 ly but the Viennese Ball really was a ball. See B2. ~ Coast panel rejects-Huntington plan By PATRICK KENNEDY °' t111 Dllrt Pl ... s .. rt The South Coast Regional Coastal Commission has reject· ed the Huntington Beach land use proposal for ats nine miles of coastal area . The Huntington Beach City Council will decad e Monday whether to a ppeal the rejection to the California Coastal Com mission or make alterations in the plan. which was three years , . lb the making. The regional coastal com - missioners rejected the state- mandated plan on a 5-S vote, in large part because the proposal would have allowed hotels and restaurants along a coastal strip designated by the California De partment of F'ls h and Game as environmentally sensitive wetlands. The staff report by the Coastal Commission also criticized the city's land use plan for being too general and for not insuri,ng that there will be affordable housing in the coastal zone. The staff report of the regional Coastal Commission stated that about 170 acres of wetlands rrom Beach BouJevard to the Santa Ana River are .. not identified and therefore not protected as required by ... the Coastal Act." T he rePort also s tated that the ~~~~~~~~ Rear view of two-section modular home which is cau.ring hard /eeling3 in Fountain Volley's Colonia Juarez 11e1ghborhood: Residents sign petitions against · qurckie' pro1ect. city should modify Its plan to •·provide for replacement on a o ne-to-one basis of affordable (housingJ units lost through de molition or change in use .. Confus ion a lso arose over the c ity's proposed coastal buildrng height allowance of six stories Commissioner Ernani Bernardi. a Los Angeles city councilman. noted that the issue was "widt• ope n." He !>aid the building plan should l>4' more specific to insu,re -------_.....,.._ _..__ presl'rvat1on of coastal view· poihls Co mm1 '>si on er Ja c ki e llcather. mayor of Newport Beac·h. noted that it was unclear 1f a "IX story building would be allow(•d on the mun1ci1>al pier ·'If the plan we re more :specific there wouldn't be the!>e problem~ 'of 1nterprt'lation 1 :· she said City offu:1als reJel'tcd thl' sug &!_Stton of several of the com m issioners that the issue be postponed and the dltfere nces ironed out. · We've studied this plan for three years and the three coun- ci I rn<·mbers here today feel very adament about wanting ii dec1s1on." llunt1ngton· Beach Councilman Ron Pattin.son told the commiss ion Monday. ··1f 1t <the µIan > is without your bless- ings, so be it " o.11,,.. ... , ..... - Neighbor Davul Solorzano cries 'foul' when modular home deposited on a l-Ot next door to his house Hut city offictal.scan't help because ti ·sallowed under zoning laws Valley's first modular home triggers objections· Da' 1d Solorzano has been wor king weekends for thr<'e year s to huild his two-story house and he 'avs he was a n gered .,.. hen a work crew wheeled in a factorv built . modular home ne-ct door. Solorzano and about 15 of his neighbors in the Colonia Juarez section of r ountain Valley got 116 ~ignatures on petitions op- oosin~ the modular house in the predominantly Hispanic com - munity On Monda y . t he residents compl ain ed to Mayor Ben Nielsen and other city officials that the new style home would bring down the value of the neighborhood, one of the first de- veloped in the city. But Nielsen. who admitted "I wouldn't want one next door.· either :· shook his head and told the citizens there was nothing ci ~Y officials could do. State law passed in 1973 allows modular homes on any vacant city lot without restnction, he said ·• 1 ·m the one taking the big- gest loss." said Solorzano. ··1 work every day, every weekend and then see this thing go in next door If I'd have known this was to be allowed, I wouldn't have Foothill airport weighed Santiago Canyon latest county site being studied Sanliago Canyon in the Orange County foothills 1s the latest s ite being l'Onsidered by airport plan· ners for a regional airport. Orange Count y S upen·1sor Bruce NC'st ande said Monday the Three w~en h e ld in chiftl sex abu ses Police have made three addi· tional arrests in 1 heir probe of alleged l'hild pornography ac· tivity at a Huntington H~r home. canyon site also s hould be re- viewed by the county's blue rib- bon committee appointed recent- ly to examine possible airport sites '"This site has the potential of servicing 20 million passengers per year. o r 83 percent of Orange County's 1995 air travel demand. and could even replace all com · merc1al jet activity at John Wayn<' Airport." said Nestande. Santiago Canyon is on a plateau about 2.5 miles east of the Anaheim Hills and two miles north of Irvine Lake. The land is owned primarily by the Irvine Company. morethan55CN ELratings. "Of all the airoorts in the re· gion, it <Santiago Canyon J prob- ably would have the least im- pact," Paisanosaid. After passing above Irvine. the jets wouJd fl y oyer undeveloped parts of the Irvine Coast, he added. Irvine Compan y spokes man Jerry Colhns said today "it would be premature for us lo res pond in any way but neutrally "We can s ay, however. that it is a provocative consideration." Collins said the rugged San- tiago Canyon land is not planned for development in this decade. The Santiago canyon is not new to SCAG planners. however. It has been considered since at least 1973 as a possible site for a general aviation airport for private or non-commercial flights. built my home ·· Glenn Nt•v1tt. owner of LCS Homes Inc . which 1s building the modular home, a lso was at the c ity hall meeting .rnd he as ked the residents to be patient because the home would look nice once 1l's completed . ' He said the l.fl67 -square-foot home would be sold for about $140,000 Dallr ,.I ... St.ff ,,_. REAL GEORGE This is George Thyden, coordinator of the Civil Defense division of the Huntingtor: Beach Fire De partment A photo an Mon.day's edition incorrectly identified another person as Thyden. · ·coml' ou1 to our factory. see how wt• build these homes," Nevill offered. No one asked d1rcct10ns to his Fountain Valle}' warchou"l'. however · ·1 might as well build a bird cage and hang hy the trees if you guys are going to allow this." said Jim D'Amato. who recentl) built a 3,200 square-foot home in the neighborhood. Clint Sherrod , planmn~ and building director for the cit). agreed with Nevitt '"Whe n it"i. finis hed it w!ll look a lot dif- fe rent than 11 does now and you'll feel a lot differently about it." he told the residents Cit.> officials said the modular home 1s the first tn f'ountam Valley Gifte d Huntington pupils get choic·e Gifted elementary students in the llunlington Beach City School District . who are now. grouped together al a single site, will have the option next year of receiving special atlention at their neighborhood school The nc\\ Gifted and Talented Education 1GATE1 option has been approved unanimously by the d1slrict 's trustees. Currc·ntly, the district's GATE students in g rade!> one through five rt•ceiH special instruction at Le Hard School Next year. the cla sse~ will be moved to Eader School. The n<'w program option was needed because the district no longer will provide free transportation to the centra l GATF, sehool at lhe end of the current term. fall. the district will provide t he neighborhood school option. Dishno said. In this program GATE sill · denh will attend regular classc!i at lht:'ir neighborhood school but will receive additional .. enrich m ent ·· instruction beyond the usual class work The GATE program 1s de - signed for students with high in- tellectual abili ty in general and those who show special talent in a pa rtiucular s ubject, such a!> mathematics Dishno said the district cur re ntly has 653 GATE stude nts in grades one through eight. with about 225 of them in the elemen tary grades GATE youngsters in grades six through eight at tend special cla s;;es a t their regular middle school Huntington Reach police de· tective Ed McErlain said war rants wer e scr\'ed on three Orange County women suspect- ed of engaging in Sl'X acts with a 13-year old girl and a 9-ycar-old girl. Arrested last Thursday and Friday were Teen a Lucille Schoobs. 21, a waitress who re- s ides 1n Costa Mesa : Irma c· a r i 1'1 o J i m e n e i • 3 s , a housekee p e r who lives in Anaheim. and Patricia Marie Lo rn bardo. 20. a cashier who lives in Los Alamitos. Mark Paisano. executive direc- tor of the Southe rn California As· soc1at1on of Governments, s aid today that its planners began searching for new sites after a proposal to locale a regional airport off the Long Beach shoreline met negative reaction last October He said planners are looking at Santiago Canyon a nd Stuart Flats at the Marine Corps ' Camp Pendleton. Also under review are ways or improving ground access to airports in Ontario and Palmdale. he said. Roosevelt joins push for Amtrak Duane Dishno. thf' district's director of special S<'r v1ces. said bus tra11soorta11on for GATE students cost about $51.000 this year. lie said the district, which is experiencing serious financial problems. can no longer afford to provide this bus service. Because not all parents may be able to transpor t their GATE students to Eader School next Fire fi g hter c harged in . I arson fraud Ms Jimenez and Ms. Schoobs we re released after posting bail; Ms. Lombardo remained in Orange County Women's J.U to- day. authorities reported. Orange County Peputy Dis- trict Attorney Marty Enquist, who ls prosecuting the case, said the three women will appear at West Orange County Municipal Court Friday for arraignment with John Steen, 55, his wife Christi, 30, and Mary Yvonne Plunkett, 22. or Lone Beach. The Steens and Ms, P lunkett were arrested April S when Hurt• tington Beach police raided the Steens' Venture Drive home in . Huntington Harboul' and seiied videotapes and e9'ote>(lr~phs described as child pornography. Sergeant McErlaln said the additional arrest.ti were made alter detectives studied tbe material confiscated in that raid. Nestande. who is the Orange' County governmenrs represen- tative on the SCAG executive committee, said the Santiago Canyon s rte i s attractive because it is close to the county population base but s till far enough away not to cause the kind of noise problems t h at plague neighbors to John Wayne Air.Port. Planes would approach the airport from the east, over Prado Dam, and would take oft to the southwest, he said. The nearest homes under the flight path are seven miles away in Irvine, and jets would be 4,000 reet high by lben. By comparison, jell takin« off over Santa Ana Heights are about 500feetolftheground, he added . SCAG Director Pllisano sald no homes would receive nolae above the state's maximum allowable level of 6S CNEL <community noise equivalent level>. He said preliminary reports Indicate there wouJd be "very few" "1th James Roosevelt of Newport Beach joined Orange County·s seemingly never-ending fight for Improved t r ansportation systems when he was sworn in M-o nda y to the co unt y Transportation Commission. Roosevelt. 73, the eldest son of Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt, got an immediate taste of com· mission action when the flve· member panel decided to lobby congressional leaders against pending cuts to Amtrak service on the West Coast. The group decided to send res- olutions to California delegates a nd ranking committee mem- bert asking them to contlnue Am trak service betwetn S•n Dle10 and Los An1elea -and through Oune~ Coun tiy - should passeoger ~r.Up tervl~ be reduced. Atntrak official& warned l._.t week tl'lat pauenaer t ralns would run onf y aJong t he heavily traveled Boston-New Yor k- Washlngton, D.C., corridor if the ' Reagan Adm101strat1on's pro posed $61 5 million budget for the 1981-82 fiscal year is passed by Congress. Thomas Jenkins. executive director of the county com mission. said Monday he thinks e nough West Coast pressure can be applied to win some service along the Southern California route The "San Oiegan" is the busiest route outside the eastern corridor , he s aid. Meeting with reporters afl~r the commission meeting , Roosevelt said he th.inks his con- gressiooal contacts can belp Orange County. Now a business consultant, Roosevelt Wfl& a Democrat congressman for 12 yeatS. I L1ke another commlH\Ol'\et, CouQtY SupervJaor Thomas Rile~ Roosevelt also Is a retired brlgactter general in the U.S. Marine Corps. RUey nomCnated Roosevelt (or th commission seat. Murc hinson rites tonight J a,mes W. Murchinson of Hun· tington Beach, who worked as a srupyard welder In Long Beach. died Saturday at age 67. • R osary will be conducted at 1:-30 p.m . today In the mortuary c hapel at We s trntnster Memorial Park . A Mass of Chr\$Uan Burial is scheduled for n a .m. Wednesday at Saints Simon and Jude Church jn Hunt- lnlton Beach. Burial will be a\ All Souls C~metery in Lona BHch. He is survived by hi.a wlfe .Esther. his ion G or1e Murchinson, bis d auehters Hetty Crimi, Gail Powell. Kath i • •W l 111 a m 1 a n d M a r h 11 en Murchi nson, and three grandchildren. ... A Long Beach firefi ghter was arrested Monday on suspicion of arson and insurance fraud in con- nection with the burning of his 1972 Porsche on the grounds of a SealBeachschool. Huntington Beach Fire Capt Roger Hosmer said the fireman. Mi chael Ciccarelli, 31, of Long Beac h, was in Orange County JaiJ on the charges arter a n investiga· tion by the Jolnl Powers Arson Control Unit. The Joint Po\vers unit lr\· vestigates arson incidents In Huo- tington Beach. Seal Beach, Foun- tain Valley and Westminster. Hosmer said CiccarelJi is charged with setting fire to his auto Feb. 13 on the arounds 01 McOaugh School. 1698 Bois• Ave., Seal Beach. He said the arrest was made by Jolnt Powers anon ln"estigatot'!I and Seal Beach police, in coopen,- Uon with the Lona Buch 1'"'ire Department. The value of the burned auto was notlmmediately known. ,, . • , Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Tunday. M1y 12, 1811 .---------------~ --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- l I IOVTH COAST, WILD COAB'I': Restdeot.a alon1 t.hlJ heal ol all poesibltt cout.I cot • little preview tbla pHt weekend or what's coln1 t.o happen this summer when ln· land climes turn hot, mu1aY TIM MURPlllll and amoegy. We get buried with visiton, that's what. Few folks can remember when there has been s uch a rush to the beaches so early as the second weekend ln now tlon may be llke In July or Au1ust. Jt looks like we've bad a state beach park happen before we were ready for It to happen. '- AS THE SITUATION now stacks ~·the Oranae County Sheriff s Office wlll be charged with keeping the peace along the s horeline while the Califontla Hlehway Patrol tries to keep traffic moving and parking under control. For visitor comfort, there are only a few scattered blufrtop porta-polties along this entire coastal area. As for any road or safety improvements, you have to remember that this ls a stretch of Coast Highway un· der the jurisdiction of our ··Sure took lhi! guy a long time lo get to tM 'beach.' Zeb" May. But it happened, Seal Beach to San Clemente. One rather sudden develop. ment was evident in the heavy popularity of our new stretch of state beach park between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach. You may not have thought that state park has happened yet. AS A MATTER of fact. one slate official was quoted re· cently as suggesting that nobody would be using this virgin stretch of coastline for at least three years. 1 have news for him. The three years is up, whether the calendar says so or not. Apparently the word has spread among the beach lov· ers that the spots from El Morro to Crystal Cove to Scotchman's Cove and points nearby are fully open for people use. And here they caaie over this past weekend. Every available shoulder along Pacific Coast Highway between Cameo Shores and Irvine Cove was used for parking. Visitors were run· ning a gauntlet of SS·mile· per-hour traffic as they at· tempted to s print across the highway, lugging ~urfboards, scuba gear. picnic baskets and small kids. You s hudder in con- templating what this situa· wonderful Caltrans. So you can forget about that. State officials have con· tracted with the city of Laguna Beach for lifeguard service along the beachfront. Laguna lifeguard officials are already preparing a series of new guard towers along the strand and other support equipment. YOU ARE LEFT to wonder. however, about emergency aid along this stretch of beach. should an accident occur on the highway or in the surOine. The area is almost at a point of no return for getting a vie· tim to the hospital. Should an accident occur on a crowded Sunday after· noon, say, in the vicinity of Scotchman's Cove, is the am· bulance going to try racing through downtown Laguna traffic to South Coas t Medical Center i n South Laguha? Or would you be better off to tum upcoast. chance the Coast Highway Bridge at Newport Bay, to make a run for Hoag Memorial _Hospital? SOMETIMES IT might look like a no·win choice. All factors considered, it seems we abruptly have a very large and popular beach park in our midst for this coming summer, and we are ill-prepared to cope with it. Vknnese Ball is a real ball BY SANDIE J OY ... ...., ......... Lota ot balll are held alon1 the OranaeCout. But few of them turn out to be balls. Often a po1h event ls dtslpat.ed a ball, but after all the sociaUJJn1. dinner and omctaJ procram, most often the sue.ta put on their wra1>1 and head home. Friday nleht was different. THE BALL WAS a ball with couples revolving about the dance noor t.o the strains of waltzes and fox trots. The occasion was the second an· nual Viennese Ball, a $75-per· person bla c k ·lle benefil sponsored by the Pacific Sym· phony Association. The evening began with a re· ceptioo in the lush atrium ol the Marriott Hotel, Newport Beach, where guests ereeted old friends and made new ones. The gentile atmosphere was enhanced by the s trains of a string quintet under direction or Jonathan Dysart or Santa Ana. Greeting guests at the reception was Global Van Lines head Edward Schumacher, whose wife Floss was ball chairman. Among those enjoying the re· ceptlon were Jo Anne and Gene Mix andtheir guests Mr. and Mrs. Frank Tomaino. Mrs . Mix drew plenty of attention with her falrytale·lype white off.the· shoulder ball gown; the same one she wore for the recent headdress ball for which her entry was ''The Great Waitz." Definitely a gown lit for Cinderella. ALSO ENJOYING the cocktail hour and talking about the Newp0rt Beach Arts Festival which opens Saturday at Fashion Island was Jean Tandowsky and her escort Dick Dim moll. In all, approximately 400 persons attended the ball, which moved from the atrium into the hotel's Pacific Ballroom, done up with twinkling lights and elegant crystal centerpieces topped with pink peonies. mauve lilacs and white babies breath. Ballroom decor was done by Charles Paap who always does s uch a beautiful job for the annual Christmas Candlelight Concert to benefit the Orange County Music Center. Paap, who attended with his wife Carolyn, had the peonies flown in from Northern California Joining the Paaps at their table were their guests, Pamela and George Schreiber, who are get· ting together for Mrs . Schreiber's grandparents' 7oth wedding anniversary party. Dinner, arranged by Leslie Cot· ton of Newport Beach, began with cold poached salmon and artichokes, followed by roast sirloin with Sauce Bordelaise, Potato Bemy. Asparagus Hollan· daise and Mushroom saute in Sherry and butter. Topping the meal was a light apple strudel with whipped cream and then, Cafe Vienna. Throughout dinner guests were entertained by the music of the Murray Korda Monseigneur Orchestera which, to the delight of all, played classic, danceable waltz tunes. Korda himself was unable to attend since he was playln& al a party in the nation's capital hosted by Second Lady HAPPENINGS Vienneae Ball Chairman Floss Schumacher <top leftJ oversees wt-minute arrangements. With her is her hiuband Ed and sister Carol Lee of Irvine. Among baU gueata were (l~jt) Jean Tandowaky and Dick Dimmitt and <bottom left) Mr and Mrs. Gene Mix and (bottom right ) Mr. and Mrs. Jamea Latta. ·Barbara Bus h. The after-dinner e ntertainment began with a waltz exhibition by Mr. and Mrs. Donald Olson of Corona del Mar who won the waltz contest at last year's Viennese Ball. Tke Olsons, who dazzled the audience with their fast tu.ms around the floor. enjoy dancing so much they have a ballroom in their home. The waltz contest followed, judged by the Olsons and Mr. and Mrs . William Vorhees. This year's winners were Arlene Bullard and Ernie Cruz who caught the judges' eyes with their controlled presentation. Dick Crawford of K F AC radio emceed the after·dinner program which was highlighted by a vocal presentation by soprano Dar· rellyn Melilli. She used John Kander's "Mar- ried" from "Cabaret" as an OP· portunity to present Ed Schumacher with a bouquet of posies, suggesting he offer them to his "somebody wonderful." The Schumachers will celebrate their 32nd wedding anniversary May 16. They were joined al the ball by Mrs. Schumacher's sis· ter. Carol Leeor Irvine. Among special guests was Dr Keith Clark, conductor or the Pacific Symphony Orchestra. who used the occasion to perform a song he wrote for Mrs . Maurice Mulville, ball general chairman. Among those on the ball com· mittee were Mrs . James Nagamatsu or Anaheim ; Mrs Eugene Moriarty of Santa Ana: Corona del Mar, Mrs. Lock Gee Ding a nd Mrs . Robvt F. Montgomery, both of Newport Beach, and Mrs . Warren Kramer of Laguna Beach. Guests included James Barrett of Newport Beach, who hosted a pre-ball party at his Promontory Point home, attended by Felicia Bukaty, Mr. and Mrs . Kent Alex · ander, Dr. and Mrs. Matthew Jenkins, Mr and Mrs. Richard Smith. June Elliott, Mr and Mrs Willi am Hood , and J e rry Richards. ·Aquarius: Look at investments Ms. Melilli, Introduced as "the flower of Orange County," of· fered a versatile performance of pop, classical and show tunes. When she sang Gounod's ·· Ah! Je Vieux Vivre" from "Romeo and Juliet," t.he audience was almost s pellbound at the control in her voice. Mrs. Vernon Hunt, Mrs. Keith Clark, Mrs. Edward Nance and Dr. Jerry Samuelson, all of Fullerton; Mrs. Robert Schulze and Mrs . Daniel Prlmac of Orange; Mrs. Phillip Quarre of Anaheim, Mrs. Ernest Jechart of Costa Mesa ; Mrs. Donald Canedy of La Habra. The ball committee also in· eluded Mrs. Steven Balback of AMONG OTHER guests were Mr and Mrs. Donald Canady, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Murphine, Mary Disney Jones, Mr. and Mrs . Ralph Kerstner, Mr. and Mrs. James Nagamatsu, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Nance, Mr and Mrs. Phillip Quarre, Mrs. Elaine Red· fi eld, Mr. and Mrs. Homer Reed, Mr . and Mr s Norman Smedegaard. Sen. and Mrs. John Schmitz, Mr. and Mrs . Charles Ringwalt, Georgia Spooner, Mr. and Mrs. Glen Stillwell, Judge and Mrs. Raymond Thompson, and Mr. and Mrs . Carl Karcher. " . Wednesday, May 13, 1181 , "By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 21·April 19): void sensationalism; key now Js to maintain s teady pace. ocus on employment, regain· ing sense of direction and com· • ing to terms with recalcitrant relative. TAURUS (April 20-May 20>: Steer clear of slipshod methods. A void scattering forces. Focus . on challenge, c reativity, · •• children, speculation and special relation.ship. GEMINI <May 21 .June 20): f Revise, review, correct past mistakes and rebuild on solid structure. Restrictions are tern· porary -know it, proceed ac· cordingly. CANCER (June 21.July 22>: Be ready for change, travel, variety and careful analysis of relationship. Trips, relatives and "special calls" dominate scenario. LEO <July 23·Aug. 22>: Em· phasis on domestic situation. money and ability to work effec. lively with available material. Family member discusses budget and possible purchase or luxury item. VIRGO <Aug. 23·Sept. 22): Techniques can be perfected. Trust your own judgment, lntui· tlon. Define terms, outline policies and take initiative. LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 22): Ac· cent on production, challenae. intensified relationship and added responsibility. Hidden re· sources surge to forefront. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Emphasis on completion of as· signment, exrression of love and fulfillment o desires. Focus on hopes, wishes, aspirations and business arrangement. SAOl'ITAIUUS CNov. 22·Dec. 21 ): Be ready for new start in new direction. Highlight or iginality, independence and your own style. Career OP· portunity is magnified if you are willing to revise procedures. CAPRICOR N C Dec. 22.Jan. 19): Special communication aids in resolving dilemma, helps you to regain sense of direction. Journey could be on agenda. AQUARIUS (Jan . 20·Feb. 18): Review investments. Don't s pread assets too thin. Open lines of communication . Perceive potential. Delve beneath surface Indications. PISCES (Feb. 19·March 20): Be aware of the subtle legal nuances. One close to you com· plains about restrictions, delays and petty annoyances. Wlw can you trnst any more? For some reason, this country has suffered a "trust receaaion." I see it in our attitudes toward the government, consumerism, and national institutions like the phone company and the six o'clock news. I'm one of those people who want to believe everything I see and read. I want to believe Peter Pan can fly. Or that Chrysler will pay dividends next year, and that the woman who uses Oil of Olay and wears a 43 on her T· shirt is lying about her age. to doubt them. but I can't help it. I never take my children to a pediatrician whose office goldfish have died. I never leave my dog with a vet who says, "What seems to be her problem?" <The dog's name is Murray.) I never trust a bank where all the fountain pens have been ripped off, or a restaurant with no garbage cans. I don't trust people who say. "Trust me." I don't accept drinks from a urologist with a 11ense of humor. I become very suspicious when a garage mechanic has clean fingernails or a doctor carries bis Instruments in his gym bae. IRIA lllllCI .n many broken promises and too many washer repairmen who have retired to Hilton Head on m y service calls . I even looked with suspicion on my husband the other day when he said to me, "Erma, you really look like you've shed a few pounds ." _'1le has problem uith sexy niece I want to bel1eve that my car will never be recalled, my pre· scr1pt1on has been taken by some· onf: other than a research monkey, and that my plumber will Indeed show up on Friday. June 12 • after lunch. I want to believe, but I can't.· Sometllhes. I think I 'm getting paranoid about people who have given me no reason whataoever I wish I could go· back to the way I used to be, but during the past 10 years or so, there have been too many political bribes, too manv broken warranties, too I looked at him closely. He was the man who drove an Edsel with a McGovern bumper sticker on it. Who wouldn't spring for an 81,, percent loan 10 years ago because houses were going down. Who bought Nehru jackets in five colors. What the heck! You have to take a chance on people once in awhile! DEAR ANN LANDERS: ; · Please help me with a very personal problem. I can't 10 to anyone l know. When you read my Jetter you will underttand why. My 18-year-old niece 11 a aexy, voluptuoua <•oocMooklD1> Clrl. She comn t.o my Plate Qllite often. I bav• aeen Vera drlU bait a ftlt.b ol vodka and act perfedl)t t0ber. Once, wlMn J commem..S on it, IM 1ald, "ll taket a lot t.o kollk mt out, Mt , wbtn lt bapptDI , I doa'l emembeJ' a t.b.lnl·" Vera ha.s been teaalng me for a long time -fluhina her body and tellina ri!que st.ones. A few weeks ago sbe drank an awful lot of booze at my place and passed out on the bed. I didn't believe •he was reaily out and I 1UU don't. I bad a few drlnks mylell and I am ashamed t.o tell you that I undressed her and took some lnde(ent liberties. (No In· ter courae. > My eocascience botbtred me a • lot, IO J apololized. to her a Mtk later . She didn't speak t.o me for 1 month. Now ahe bu 1&arted to comt by my place a1ala, Md la twe,et upte. What do you make ol Ulla? Do you bave any advice for t.r1 Poet abe need Mlp? U to, whet kmd? -PUZZLED IN asu Deu .ltuu: Wht • ru11J ...... to ...,. awa1 ,.,... .. ucle. You don't aay bow old yoa are, Baster, or wltetller yoa are married or 1tn1le -ba& aay PY wile pous &llat m•clt boose for bit niece aad fool• aroud wt&.ta her 11 a UU1e kinky. I tblak r• bolll Deed belp. Art exhibit due May 22 A 105.work exhibit by such artists u Andy Warhol, George Se&al and Richard Avedon wlll be on display at the Newport Harbor Art Museum beglnnln& May 22. "suuol /r11dom.. p1'11mt1 o The exhibit of American artists Is titled dt//~uU decUton /or t.-n-ogn• and "Inside/Out: Sell Beyond Likeness." There l• no •i...-1 -• A Land.fl' I' 1 admission charae. ·~' -...... M 1 0 ,er A cataJ~e and colorJi::te"' or the works to do..,,.·te>«Jrlh odtnc:e tn Mr M1D boo~. ''High School Sfz oftd How be display will be av lable at the museum to DtOI WOh 11 -A Giddf /or THM book1t.ore. The museum ls located at 850 San 01td Tt.ffr Portnt1. •• Tor tocla Clem~te Dr. boo~ • ..,., fO cnt• plu o Jong, The exh.lbttJon wm run t.hto\llb July u. ttomp«I, Nl/-oddrw1Nd 9"Nlopl to IO Allft Loftdcrt, P.O. Bos lltsl, CITlllMS IPICIM. ~Cllk_•_·_'"-·-•_1_1· ____ .;.....;..._~•"· OPP ALL .. W..,T-...W•O., call '42-H71. '11t • lew worita to work fer • " .. MAMDLlll ................... 'RUFFELL'S UPHOlSTllY . .... .._.._ ... ttll MAllOa ..... COSTA .... _ 141-t 116 BEDWETTER LET THEM HAVE A DRY BED .,,_.,._ .... ,.._ ..... __ IM'"4flf .. ~. .... r. ......... _ _.._~.--... -... ......... ..,......" ........ , ......... =----·-·"'· .. ---.... -........................ ~ .. --... _ ................ ~ ....... ,. -.... .,. ................ , .. ,... .... .. _...,_ ....... __ -.._ . "Equally Eff«tlw for Adu/rs~· r·--------------------' Mell to: 'AC"1C INTWfllNATIONM., l.TO. I 311 l'lrtl 8tl'MI I Ntl!OOM. WI 644&1 ! 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' 1J --~ ~ ::.,}a ''. 1 =~.~ 1':.1;11:1 j -~·! ~ ~ 1 ~J: ~r I ·' J ~;· T~: '• ~·= DAILY PH.OT ~~'\ ~~~ ... ,~ Teen wages " "' • stir concerns Would you, a s m all-business man, hire additional young and Inexperienced warkers to help you this summer Uthe law would allow you to pay them less than loday's all-lime peak $3.35-an hour federal minimum wuge'' If your honest answer i~ that you would take on more l~n·agers It you weren't compelled to pay them so steep a minimum wagt', you would be help- ing the United State:> take a giant step towHrd reduc· in~ our swollen tt>e11 age unemploym ent rate. The overall unemployment rate among teen· agers of both sexes Is 19 percent in contrasl to a job- less rate of under 6 percent among men 20 years or older and 6 6 percent among ~ adult wom en . Among minon t y l cens. lhe ---------~.:io-·,c rate skyrocket!! . T to an almust un SYlVIA poe·11e z be I ievablt• 37 l _ percent BUT WOULD YOU, a pe rsonnel manager in charge of hiring at a major corporation, start favor- ing more young unskilled over adult uns killed if a two-tier minjmum wage were in effeC't? In short, instead or adding to your total work force by emµloying extra youngsters. would you try to add to your profits by penalizing the adult who mus t be paid $3.35 an hour and taking on the teen- ager at a lower wage? . Ir your hone:>t answer here IS that this would be your inclin:ition or, at lh1!> point. you simply can't be s ure how you would react, then there are inherent evils in thl' wholt• eonccµt of a specu1l submimmum wage for youngl'I "orkers And the proposal s hould be ignored Would vou, a teen-ager in sc·hool. with an indif· ferent to poor rcc·ord ur arhil'vement and eager to ente r thl' labor market, <1wt s chool if more jobs became availa!Jlt• i'll> a n•sull or a two.tier minimum? I ' • l ~ • t. \ IF YOUR i\NS W.:R is •·yes," then school dropout rates among Hi and 19-year -olds would rise . As more JObs bec<1ml' available at lowe r wage rates, more teens would leave school permanently The new JOb opening:,, crea ted by the spec ial youth minimum wage would not reduce the unemploy ment rate The exµe rimcnt would be a failure --~ The whole theory of a federal minimum wage has been the target ur fierce tontroversy in political and economic circles for almost a half-century The more recent proposal that younger workers should be paid a special s ubm1n1mum has prompted a bitter debate on its own. ....... ""'=================:::::===================··~ -.... 'STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES '1 AMERICAN LEADERS -.. May11 NEW YORK IAPI Sain, 4 pm proc.a •ncl nel cl\anQe of Ille len moll acllw Amerlcon Stoc• E•chenQe hwn lrtcllno net10N1lly at more 11\on " Hud,8011 ti 294,600 2S Te11t1AlrCp 27',SOO lf\41 G11t1Con o 719,-71~ Tul>OIMea 11•.JOO ·~ HouOllTr ~.000 ~ 1n11r~m SYI ... 100 I R•noerOll t1 .llOO ll'Jlt •.t. Synln Corl> 11 • .acl SS~ • l4I OeloprOO 6.J,100 1)1'> 'It Wano 8 tt ~ 40 1 UPS AND DOWNS NEW YORK (AP) -The lollowlng 11$1 lllowt Ille N-'Yor._ 5100 E~Cf\6"9t SIOClll MIO w .. rents 11\ol ..... -.... the mo•I --Ille rnotl INlled on i:rcent of cllanOt rtgordle\l .. wofume °'No ~Ttt 1rec11ng i.1ow " ••• 1nc1- -· Ntl -perc.nl<191 cNnoo ••• ,.,. cllfler•nc• t>e1-ttw pre•lou• cio,11>9 ~le• •nO 1CdoY'I tf.sm P<IO N.,,,. Lul Cho I GllAn pfA :It + J t M•IMHll El nl/, • S .. 3 ConlC-•11> VJ 4 GTFI t.1lopl •4 14 S OhEd •.S61>1 J?"" 11/2 • EwanPI! I «1P1 10 " 1 Fatrc~ld Of ~>~ • 11'> a Cook unit eh • ..., ' Oyqlt 2p1 ""' • "" 10 CorrlerG 14 "' II PtonHr~I 31141 • '"" 12 EIMemM pf '"' ' " ll Kane Mill 10'4 • V. :; ~il'!t-.. ~ .. : ' ... .. ....., 4.SOpf ,,.,., • ,,,., N.,,.,. I l-enstn 1 VonDorn Co 1 AmAlr1n w1 • Hetencurl A S Am Sl Fla • W11rlllar 1 Colon,,_,.,, I Petrl<kPlr • ICCPl USDI 10 ChorWrCo WI II EAL wtO 12 ....... Co I) CelllrnO.le 14 GTFI pf8 11 CennMG It AIH-• OOWNS L•\\ c,'j'f,., llllo 1\4 '~ " 1•"'4 -1'1\ 14\"> '"' 114 ... 20"-..... 11\Jlt ·~ ,. ,_. '"' II> ~ ~ 11\lo '"' "" ~ :g~ ,~ .. 1 GOLD COINS Pel Up 9 I UP I• Up t.J Up l.l Up 1.3 Up •I UP •.I Up •O Up S.t Up S.I Up $ l Up 51 Up SI Up SI Vp •.t Up 41 Pel 0 11 )$ 0 Oii II 0 Oii ... 011 ... 011 1.7 Ott 1.l Oii 1.2 Off .., Ott ,. Otl 7.J Off '·' 011 7.1 Oii 7.1 0 11 1.0 Ott • I Ott • 1 NEW YORK IAPI Prl<el late MoNe• of 001<1 coins, <amp.or~ will\ Frlctn 't prl<e It,....,._, I troy OL, ~.H, Oii 57.U ....... IWI, I troy Ol., UOf,jO, Oii U ts ,,,..,... IMf, I troy or , HOUO. oll 11 JS, • Mexlc. so Dtto, 1.i troy o&., w11.n , oi1 ••. oo, Allttl'letl 100 crown, te02 tro'f 01 • 5o<llO u , off sr.oa. Source: Dool<·""•••• NEW YOAK IAPI Flnel Oow·J -• •WV' I"' Monday, -y II STOCKS JO Ind JO Trn 15 Ull .S Slk lll<lllS Tran Ulllt U SI• 0Den HIQI\ Low Clo.. Ola .,. .. ., • ., •ff t3 _,_..._IJ" ... S3 .... , -tl 410 -.. ., IOS 91 106 '1 104 17 I~ "1 + 0,0: 111 02 l7' tl JIO 92 J12 *-5 05 3,"4.JOC 1,20).JOC 6'0,10CI S,INt, IOll • "' . "' ,. "\,;. ·-· .,..~"' ·' . , ·~~~~~~~~~~~~~-1 -~ WHAT STOCKS OIB NEW YORK IAPI May II Adv•nct'd Dec1111.ct lln<h•nQed Tol•I Is-.. .. New ~IQl\S New tows WHAf A .. ( a OIU NEW YORK 1.l>PI Mey 11 METALS ToctAy 204 .,. IU .,, ,. 10 Pr•v oaJ, U2 ()j ,.., u 11 Prev oaJ, ~ JOO ,,. ,, • c-u~a1 cent\• PQuncl, U S dntl,.. lions lHcl 36-ll C*'lh a pound ZllK ,.,4 c•nh a Pollllcl, dtllwered Tiii W.6015 -1•1' w .... <-II• 111 Alu ml-1' cenll a"°"""· N Y llMrc•ry t410 00 per llHk Pl•tl-M'6.00 lroy or . N Y SILVER Handy I. H•rmen, '11 l40 per lroy ovnc• GOLD QUOTATIONS le-..; mornlno llalno 1"117.00, ofl M.00. ltMllll allernoo.1 llal1>9 Mt4.00, off '' 00 ,.,,,. t lttrnoon 11,1no UJt.15, 11p '" n Fr•nlllvr'· ll•lno Mlt 01, Ofl "4 01 ZllrlO. lale efle,,_, ll•lng MM 00, off w 00. Mii 00 .... .., , ... ... ·-. ... ' lo.. Yf H•11•1J • H•rma" only delly quote ' "494 00, Off " 00 IJ ' .. 1.,..1w<1. only ~11y qwte ...., 00. ott ••oo. 1.,..1-.i: only dally QllOlt la11<tco1t1C1 '103 :It, off .. » SYMBOLS = ':tZw~ ~~ '~.~~: ~?~~~ .,. .,,,,.,., °'-"t' b•Md 0" .... IMI ~ .... .. ,, Of Nm•·•nnw.1 d•cl1t1t1on SCMctef or e.111,.. 11 , ~ Ot peym.nta not 6H1;natlld a ,...., .,.. '°""''*' "'lhe roOOWtng fOOtt'OIM •Allio •• , •• 0-U hM b-4nn1.11I ,.. pli\,9 •tock dl'l-.o c_.,.1.,g .,,._ I 0.Cllfed Ot P.t tO 1t1 0'•<•0•"0 11 fftOf"th'I M>oclMeO 0t ~O oh•r olOC• O·•-or Splol 14> tp9td dw ,.., O••.a.t'ICI OtfttfWd ....,,_, or f'O ICtlOn taen at *' O••.oend ,.,...--0 -~ or pe.d lft-. ,.., -" KCV4't1.11-t1 ......... Mtf'I •t ::::"" ~~ = :::: . .::=.: ~ (' -'" -"'~ad·"O ,, .._, .... -...,, """-on •• _. ... _ "' •• 0•1.,.,.,..,,. -' o,; .... ,..,,_.. Of ., "Ohl• y f . --~ .._tnhM 11-S....tntwH W••' ct.d..C.H.O wd~W"•" c1111r10"'" ••Wt\en i-... ._,,.., ww-Wttt'I weuant1 •w-Wnno"' ..,,...., "' •dlt-E ·-ltlOllllOn ~ £ ..,IO The ptl<'O 01 a 1toek u t """'""° 01 !"" 11 ,.,..,_,. -"O'~"-.d by dlvlOong llW 1-1 ''flt 1-11• ~ llQ~,. 11110 16tl Hie PttOe _,, ._,.,..., Jeno ranee is out. Jnf0r11lell ....... ,.....,, p· I ~. is in. Read the Orange Coast newspaper that keeps you in --the informative 642-4321 Daily Pilat "' ,,.,...., ;,,. C\.J I ... ~ .. ,.,.. 1 ., , '"'" '"' •1 ... .. II 1 .... 1> ·\ 't -EVENllG- t:OO .-••• ..we WONOel' WOMAN Wond•r W oman'• 1tr91\Qth, at>tMty and qulCk 9CtlOt> .. .,.. hundred• ot people from • d11astrou1 eoclcMnt at an emu-...nt pan. (Patt 2) CJ TlCTACDOUOH ID M'A'8'H ~= ,,• Ouf•ng • COid anap. a pair ol tongj0hn1 t«tt to Hawt< aye lrom home t>eoomea • much·IOUOM·•ll•r com· moO•ly Cl) GOOD TIMf.8 Florid• and Jemaa have to c;orne up with s~oo Ill 1>•11 Wh4'n J J 11 arrHl9d on an ellege<I arm•d IObbery char~ BRAIN SURGERY -Marie Hines un· dergoes surgery to have a nerve switch implanted in her brain to relieve back pain in "The Body Human : Breakthrough 2000' · tonlght at 8 on Channel 2. •mi EU:CTNC COMPAHY(A) Cl) C88NEW8 ®) ABCHEWS 8:30 0 JOKER'S WILO ID WELCOME BACK. KOTTER When Epstein IS caught smoking tne other s-01og1 ,.... on 1119 tuk ol breaking him ot n11 ne1>1t Cl) 8EN~Y HILL Tn..a mull be money tn comm41<Cl911 but not with &.nrty In charge fl) KCET NEW88EA T '11) ITUOI08EE 'Friends' Scuba d1ve1s Nk:O.. and Damian Eide mire e•plora the Cayman tslends Cn1cego 0111 Scoull play earthl>ell IAI NEWS @) BARNEY MILLER A wild eyad gurtman 101ce1 Barney and II•• men to do time tn their own 1011 CHANNEL LISTINGS in the company ol a loOny ve n1tttoqu111 •nd hi• Obtcene dummy 8:&6 IJ EOOOAIAL 1:00 IJ C88 NEWS D N8CNEW8 D HAPPY 0AY8 AGAIN Fonzie 60'-lo watch OV8f the pr9gf!Mt Wlie of a lrlen<I whO le out ot 1own D MCHEWI .. 0 llOLLIFfl tD M•A•a•H Bolh Char .. , and Klinger develop romantic ltal1<1n1 wh1!9 lor1191tlng IMtr trou- l>ln at Roele't Bar Cl) ITRUT8 OF 8AH FRAHCl8CO P8ftonet knowled119 OI a polilic1•n'1 wile lead• Stone to ballell• that the man'a apear-gvn deeth wu not acci08fllal fJi) OVEAEA8Y Widow Women Alone Gueall Mar!<><ie GuthlMI Or Hetona Lopatt, Ginny CoK !Al 0 KNXT CBSt Lll'> An41•1.-., D ti.NBC 1NBC1 Lo-. AnqelP'> U KTLA rtnrl 1 LO'> Anq,..1e., U MSC TV 1ABC1 L o., Ange11•., { "FMB 1CB!::>t ':),1n 0 •1:!9<.J 0 'I.HJ TV (Ina I LO'> A ri ie·e., HI 11.C~T 1A(jC1 5an D"•qc tD KT T\! 1 lrir1 L "l<; AnqPlt• Cl) "GOP rv 1 lnl) I l <J!o Angf:'lt·~ al KC...Fl rv 1PBS1 Lo-. An4t>l1:'> '11) ti.QC[ TV 1PB't1 H u nt1nq1o n Be,1c h '1\) MACNeJL I LE.HAER ~ Cl) TIC TAC DOUOH ®) MERV OAlfflN GU41111 Patricia Davis. EdJa McCturg, Donna Dia. on 7:90 8 2 OH THE TOWN Holts St•v• Edw81dS. M.,O<ly Rog9r1 v1111 an unusual nightclub In s.,, Fernando Valley. a report on 1n. tr~ ot chlld stealing: obMrve how lor- etgn VII!'• are treate<I wn.n they 1nalt LO. Ange· ... D FAMILY l"EUO D SHANANA GUHi Jayne Kenn.oy U EYEWITNE84 LOS ANGELES Hostl Inez Pedroza Paul Moyer V1llt Old Sao Juan. mHI • homlClde C09 Wllh an unlorg•ttable 11ory ol one tnumptl on cr11TM, Dudley" g<>411 windsurf· I~ UI FACE THE MUSIC ID ALL IN THE FAMILY Mike and Glor•• teacn Edith • method by wt1ocn marr141d pe<>91e C911 hghl fairly EZl) MACNEIL / LEHRER REPORT '11) NEW8 Cl) P.M. MAGAZINE A visit with Olymp+c speed ll<et•. ErlC ~ 1:00 II Cl) THE 800Y HUMAN: THE 8IONtC 8REAICTHAOUOH Aevolullonary braa~ 1hrough1 In tne held ol • ¥$ IMdiCIM .,. ..,, "' ltllt ..,_.., ,_,..,,. or1 Ille ut• ol ._ .. lllOnlel end ~ Plll«IHd l*'t• wttl!ln the h\iMMI t>ody 10 dMI With COl'IOlllOne 01a•I011lly t11gurabla Alaonoer Scourby nan el" 0 OIAN MAlmN'I OOMIDV QAMIC Ortor1 w-., Ftlltlk SI~ ".. loO Newl\trt. Ooffl DaU.111&..r!O OO!dta HllW"I .,. among lllOM '"'""ed In thi. IOoll at 1n. world 01 Ametlcan c~v. O..n Mt1Un hOtll • MOYll t • t "Pl~hO· (1960) Antl>orly P.n<lrlt JaNI Leigh Oitect.O by Allr.O Hltcheook A y<>ung wom- 1111 ~nter1 • peychotlC 1i111er 11ter 11 .. 11no • 11ro• aum of mon.y trom ,,., ~ D 9 ~PVDAYI A t>.ca 1niury knockl Mar Ion out of the Laoe>ard Lo<1119 bowllng t1n11a arid taavn Howard with tna t11k of finding e repllC8· ,.,.,.,t lor he! 0 MOVIE • • '"' "SIMltlt Nighl. Lon9- ty Ntont I 1969) Lloyd 8rldg4111, Snlrley Jones A p11r ot llrenga" s..i. comfort from each other u IMY undergo ~aonal er•-on Chrlatmaa Ev• 8) P.M. MAGAZINE Cnocolate pudding wres- tling, I vdll Wllh Oodge< b ... ball m911agat Tommy Laaorda, arid hla wile Jo. Judy Jernudd trek• down We11ern Avenue to d11· c;ounl snop tot furniture 1111<1 meior •PPll9neal Or Whllaker rev•al1 SOITM 1urprl11ng new1 about eog•. Chef Tell makea a low-lat 1oma10 u uee g) CONDOMINIUM Bue<I on tn. novel by John D M.cOonald An impending hurricane lhraalens the hve1 ol the raaldents ol an t•Cluaive coodom1nlum bulll by a grff<ly and 1rtespon1lble corporation Starting Ba1- bara Edeo. Dan Hagg•rty and Steve Forrfft jPart 21 fii) NOVA Tne Water Cr1si1 An 8ll8m1nat1on OI 8Ctd r&tn tn the Adirondack•. wat•r 1ecycllng 1n Calllorn1a and contaminated wells 1n Masnclluae111 •• present· e<I IRI '1'i) MYSTERY Sergeartt C11b1> The Detective Wore S11i.. D•awe<s Serl)*ant Cribb 11 plunged Into th• sh&dy world ot the ovllawttd bare<l-1181 llOhl g1rne /Part ., 1:30 U ®J LA VERNE & SHIRLEY A r101ous angel provides a downhearted Laverne with a 1urpr1s1ng new v•ew ot the world a a 0 ' $ a c o as o u 0 a a u a 040¥%0004 TUBE TOPPERS • THI °""'1'\AHI "t "" l'toota Of r 11e eo. .. '1.. Ult• .,... ,......_ gt oup. ol the Mtdell9 hll • ti00e NYOMO "'•10t -.... THI WOlll.D MVONO NBC 8 8:00 •"Dean Martin Comedy Classi~." Martin hosts a look al past comedy sketches ati well as some new ones with guest 5tan Orson Welles, Frank Sinatra and Bob Newhart. KCET@ 8:00 "Nova: The Water Crisis." Acid r ain ln Adirondack Moun· tains. California recy<·ling and con laminated wells in Massachusetts are presented in this science show. CBS fl 9:00 -"The Five or Me ." David Birney stars in a two-hour movie about a man tormented by multiple personalities. <See story below). 8) CAROL IUNCTT AHOFAllHOI Slllll "Strietly For The 9lrd1," "Fun In A Drug· •tore." "Tn• CrulM ... t-00 8 Cl) MOVIE "Tll9 Five 01 Me" IP•em- ier•) O.vl<I Birney. 0.. Wellac• A man tormented by mu111p1e p«aonalttte& ...i.1 p1yc111ewc help lo find out wno he truly 11 and what 11 happening to him D MOVIE "TM Star Maller" (Perl 21 (Prernle<a) Rock Hudson. Suanne Ple8hette The •tory ol • HOiiywood direc- t or wtlh a kn•Ck for transforming 1ngenuea Into 1ntematlon81 1tarle11 and a periehan1 tor merrylflO hll CfMlions II lold U QJ& THAU'I COMPANY Jack •nd J•net lu•n •nlo delKlivH when Cindy ':'!}'lle<loully v•nl1ne1 W MEAVORlfflN Guells: Patrtcla Davis. Edie McClurg. Donna Ot•· on, John Jamn Aicnard Morris. fL) MYSTERY Se•g••nt Cttbb The Detective wo1e Silk Drewe•s' Sergeanl Cnbo •• otunge<I Into tna lhady world ot lhe oullawe<I l>ated·llSI llQhl game (Part 41 ~ NOVA TM Water Cnat• · An examination ol llCld rain in tl'le Adirondacks wal., recycling 1n Calllotnla and contamlnat•d well• 1n ManachuHll• 11 preN"t ed IAI .. .30 0 ®I TOO CLOSE FOf\ COM FOAT A ttlkettve ghoat at • M811C• g1ve1 Murt., the 1mprees1on tn•I Htnry wH wtlh anotn.1 woman while 1n.wa1aw•y 10:00 U ®J HART TO HART Whtie holpll8h:ted with a Jtignt concusaton. Jennifer WllMllN a alaylng, bul cao'I get anyone -· not .ven Jortatnan •• to t>eNeva her omm HEW• ft) PRESEHTE ·voces De Verba eu.na • An u•mlnatlOll ot IM dll· terent lelln group1, thlllr n11tory. customs and cul· lu•a 11 preeenteo 10:100 NEWS 10'30 (D NEWS Cl) INOEPEHOEMT NETWOAK NEWS fii) VlC 8RAOEH'8 TENNIS FOR THE FUTURE Tne Overhud" Vic Br•- 111m helps viewers change thetr overhead snot hom a num11ta1tng hendocap to a 1>()1nt · ICOrtng weapen Jewt ctw .. uana and .........,. •• an(I llOW lhay nave tnltuenoed MCh oth<H a1•Hamlntld 11-00 9ueooo NIWI eTAATMK MC<:oy .,..,.,, a lirTM wero ~ ~81\0H hlltory ellml nattng the fnterpt!M Aft<! llf'"dlnt Kitt. MCI &ooc* 0 NIWLYWID GAMI .., M•A't'H O<Mrn1 9lld nlgl'ttm•1•1 plag.,. tM overworked 4071lh Cl) MHNY HIL.l TM Thi• M11lk•l-I ride mg.in into enoth9• MC• P9«1• with pretty ma1den1 &l) DICK CAVUT Oueet Hatr~ Belaionl• (Ptrt 2 ol 7) 11:3011 Cl) BASKETBALL N8A Pl•voff, rlfll't 11•,_ HOUltonatlloolW\ D TONIGHT Hoar Johnny Caraon GU41811 Lorn• Palle1aon Jim S1tHorO. 0 9) A8CNEWI NIGHTUNE 0 LETS MAKE A DEAL t8 NXHUM8ARO Cl) llARETTA Tony reams w1tn • 12-yHr Old 10 prevent her lather from parocipettng 1n a Jewel Mill fJI) '1:)" CAPTIONED ABC HEWS -Ml>NGHT- 12:00 0 MOVIE • • • "Marnie ( 11164) f1pp1 Hec:tran Sean Con. n .. y U ®l MOVIE • • Beoy Blue Martn• 119781 Jan·Mocnaet v.,, cenl. Glynnis O'Conno1 0 OUNSMOt<E tD MIS8ION: IMP08818l.E U:30 U TOM<mAOW GU41$IS Sec•el••y OI the N1vy John F Lanman J1 Robert Mitchum Cl) ONE STEP BEYOND Echo · Paul Martin teet a t8Hlly1ng v1s1on shotlly altfll n. nas t>een acQu11 led ot murd6f'tf\Q n11 wile •·TCIUQI '°' Helllh HCMll 0.-IJmcMon eno Sta- cy H11nl ditcuM Ille 11M Of ecupre1t11t• point• tor maintatnlng n.a11n wtlh g-1 OlhOn MOlll'\O • MOVW • • • ' Majot Dllndee' 119'$1 CllMllon HMlon Rlcftard HMfla -~.,,. NITWOMNEWI t:30• MOV!l • • • ''TM Sava119 lnno gen11 (1H II Anthony Outnn Yot.o r.111 t;411 Hewt t:N NEW9 2:GO D NEW9 8 MO\llE • • * "My Cousin Rec;n.I" ( 19$3) Otlvl8 0. HIVlll1no AIChllfd Bu1too 2:10 1 NEWS 2: 11 EDITORaAL 2:20 fJ MOVll • • ·~ The Judg9 Ana J ak• wyi.1 ( 1972) S.tta • Dav••. OO<iQ McClure 3:00 Cl) NEWS 3:11 8) MOVIE • * * Or Jelcyll Af\<I Mr Hyde 119411 Spencer Tra- cy 1norid S..aman 3:&6 11 NEWS 4:000 MOVIE • • •,, ·01 Love Ano Desire (1963) Merle Ot>eton Sr-...e Cochren A Wedne•day'• Doyf lme ftlo.,le• -MORNlfG- 11:00 Cl) * '> Three TeaH Steer• ( 1939) Jonn wayMJ CatOle Lan<111 11:30 0 • •••"Gano War I 19581 Ch••tes Broo1on, K11nt l1ytor -AFTERNOON- 12:00 Cl) • • ·~ Tne Charge At Feathfll Rlvllf ( 19531 Guy Mad•IOO Vera Miles 1:00 (D • • '> "Fhght From AShtya" ( 19641 Yul Brynner Richard Wttl· mark 3:30 O • • , rne Court Jest er I 19!>61 Danny Kaya Glyn11 JOhns JOHN DARLING by Armstrong & Batiuk OUR 'w'ERY SPECIAL. GUE.SI ON OARLING-TODAY IS CHANNEL. ONE'S OWN SPORTSCASTER, MIKE. MAJO~S/ ..... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~-. MIKE, YOU STARTED OUT Al A SMALL 5TATION IN INDtANA, AND THEN WENT Of'-.! 10 a.AL 'TIMORE. NEW JERSEY. AND DETROIT 0EFORE FINALLY COMIN(;- HEc:tE ! WHAi SEEMS 10 BE THE PROBLEM IN HOLDING- DOWN A -.>OB? ? -• 'SOD lin1 ion ~ Los and >atr } s. .old . to .. hat the .Wln at 1TY ren !be ~e rk at- 'ed ral I Q, ·-•• ·Birney plays many roles1 Savo~y savings. j, v, :e !<t By JERRY B CK AP T•I~ Wrflff LOS ANGELES In "The Five of Me," David Birney plays "a man who went to sleep at 7 and woke up 30 years later'· to find he had no idea what had happened to him Birney's character is a man tormented by multiple personalities in the movie. which CBS will broadcast tonight. "Dana is the personality that li ved out most of his life," said Birney. "lie went to sleep as Henry Hawksworth, and when he finally wakes up again he's Henry again. But he lived out most of his life as Dana" His other personalities are Johnny, a ~adistic hell-raiser whose antisocial behavior occasionally David Birney fleftJ and James Whitmore in ''The Five of Me " land Dana in jail; Peter. innocent and childlike, and Phil, a Korean War hero. who Is what Birney calls the "rescuer personality. He seeks help from a noted psychiatrist, Dr. Ralph B. Allison. "In therapy." Birney said, "It becomes a struggle between the personalities for control of the body. Certain elements of it sound like -a horror film. but it's absolutely true. Well. it's dramatized truth." The movie was adapted from the bOOk by Henry Hawksworth, who told of his bewilderment, torment and finally escape from the multiple peraonallUes. The book was written wllb Ted Schwarz. Lawrence B. Marcus wrote the screenplay. and the movit waa directed by Paul Wendios. "It's unlike 'Sybil,' whtc.h aho t.old of multiple personallUes, in that the 1t.ory ts st.retched out over a period of Ume," Birney uld. ''It start.a after the Korean War, when he's 22, and takes him until he encounters the therapist who chan1es hJs life. ''For ttlm, We was juat a sel'let of blackouts," tbe act.or said. "It must ha•e been lerri!ytns. Two hundred years a.ao they'd have accused lilm of witcbcrlft.." Blrney 91ld, "Certain th1D11 wou.ld trt11er the aubmersion of one penonaltty and emer1eae. of another. He'd come home at Dana and bl• mother would menUon some t.oy1 ln the cloaet. She'd leave the room and l)e'ct revert to a 7-year-old." tn preparinl himself for the role, Birney 11Jd be 1pent a lot of time wtth biJ own T·1tar-0Jd daugbter. Kathi n. "Your body is different," be aald. "There trt certain things you can't do because you lose your flexibility. My daughter can bend over a nd touch the floor with her head. Kids are active, always moving They machine-gun their attention." The most diHicult personality to catch was the rescuer_ "It was hardest in the sense that he's not readily identifiable," Birney said. "He gets into the body the term they use is 'comes out' whe n the body is in physical jeopardy The only idenlifying characteristic is a slight limp and a Southern accent." Birney is winding up a role in the CBS miniseries "Valley of the Dolls," and this s umme r will tour the East in "Talley's Folly" with his wife, Meredith Baxter Birney. Birney and his wife regularly spend their sum· mers on the boards. Last year he directed "A Life in the Theatre" in Los Angeles and toured with "My Fair Lady." He has not been in a series since "Serpico." but said be was offered a lead in a pilot for CBS He turned it down because of a commitment to his alma mater. Dartmouth College. "In "Valley of the Dolls," he plays Lyon Burke, a director. ''In one way or another he is in· volved with all the women in the script," be said "It's nice to go from something as substantial and painful as 'The Five of Me' to a flat-out com mercial piece. Birney said he likes to play a variety or parts. "You get to shape your life, instead of havi ng it shaped for you ." he said Falwell group 'not majority' OJAI (AP) -Television Is too sensitive to criticism from the Moral Majority, which does not represent the views of most Americans. "Roots" producer Stan Margulies told a television workshop on s~ial interest groups. After three days of discussions. some of the television industry's top decision-makers decided Sunday that guidelines should be set up so all -------AIOUT 1 s199GREAT I 9 DINNER I g Gooct lo• 1nror pieces ol 1u•cy '!Olden b•own Kentucky 1J Fried Cn1C:11en plus single s,.rv1ngs of cote staw I O m astted polatoes artd gravy and a roll L11n11 lwo otters z oe1 purchar.e Coupon gOO<l only tut com1>1na11on wn1te1 I dark orders Customer pays a11 applicable s;ales 1n 1 C2C Ollar e~ptre!l May 24, 1981 1 Prices may vary at par1tc1pa1tng toca I 11ons Good only 1n ~· Sout'1e•n C11tl0<n1a 1 INl!!!falMtlll .. PMl.l~"lf where you see tt d t.1 ~ ~ 0 AIOUT 1 $5 ftft SUPERI ! e 7 7DINNERI e z e Good for ,.,,,.,. ptecH of Juicy, gOlden 1>rown Kenluclly Fried Ch•cklln. with tour rolls, 1 large cole slaw, a large masheCI polatotl and a medium gravy L•mll two ollers per purch•H Coupon goOd only IOI combm111on while/ d i nt OldefS.. Cvttomef P•YS •II applicable sates IU Ollar eaptrn May 2•. 1981 C2C Pr1c;es may vary at par· 11c1pat1ng tocauons Gooo only 1n Southern Ca1tlorn1a wnere you see Amer1c;a 5 Ftavor11e Window Banne1 0 I ~ e 0 • U I I ...-fittd · Americ:a s Flavor1te ~ Wtndow Bannlelrll'll• ~--~::::::::.-=---. PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE special interest groups will be treated the same. '1CTmounusr111u NAMISTATIMINT P'ICTITIOUUUSINISS PUBLIC NOTICE '1CTITIOUS 8USINIH "Television Is overreacting to pressure r.,.1011_.,.,._tonl•dolfl9ti..slnn1 iroups now because it has ftad a Cree ride for such .. a tong time," said Margulies in one of five reports delivered Sunday, the last day of the conference. "Now, many groups are discovering the way to get a free ride is to attack television. We are not persuaded that the Moral Majority is a majority." The Moral Majority ia a national or1anlzatio1 founded by the Rev. Jerry Falwell of Lynchbur". Va., advocating a back·t.o·biblical-morallty move· ment ln America. The STOUP has joined a campaign by the Rev. Donald Wlldmon, whose National Federation for Decencr la mooit.oring television programs with the goal of boycotllng sponsors of pro1ram1 it does not approve. Moral Majority and Wildmon's groups were t he only two special Interests specifically criticized by tbe symposium participantl. Moral Majorit)' and tht Federation for Decency were not represented at the conference. Bud Vorlttn. partner of Norman Lear in Tandem ProductioDJ, 1uneated meetings be aet up around the country for an exchan&• of Ide.a between tpt pttbU.c and the Industry. ''You coutd 10 out and hold a alv -and·take wltb the people," Vorkln aald. "It wouJd 1lu the preasure IJ'OUP• an opportunJty to vent tbelt frustration. Lt would 11vo people an opportunity to be beard." P AECIS14JN PRODUCTS ~MPANY. no E 11th StrMI, (.otta llMM, Cal ifom4• t»V JerOfN u. H•lelerton, 1400 Cl•Y Strut. Newport IHa<h. C•lllornla u .. > ... Thi• ll<IMMtl 11 <ondu<WO Dy an In· Olwldll•I .19,_ l.H He!Wton flllt ti.I-I WM tlll!O with ,,. C-IY Clar'li of O..tn91 Countv Ort,..,.rll 17,ltll ,. ... P\IOllll'lef Or_,.. CNtt Dally Piiot, Apr.>1,2t,11My S, 12, ltl1 IW .. 1 P UBLIC NOTICE NAMISTATIMINT NAMISTATIMINT , ... lotl-11'19 PHIOn ,, OOlno DUtl· NOTICllOl'AYAIUl81LITY Th• 1011-•no --I.I 00"'9 """ no t u o,. MtNU~ •••otn MN aa SHEWARD & SON$ & SONS, Pvrs....i ta 9-<lilrl t104 t.i ef tM OAIAM CHILD PHOTOO"Al'H'f', ~•wporl FaDrl<. H•rOware Al· lnl•rnal "•Ytllllt (Off, notice 11 •» I!. t11tl Strfft. CO.ta MeM, CA 1oclato, Cublco, 2U 21at StrHI, 11eraDy glwnttlal"'8.,,,,.,et r9"0rt lot t2•21 NewPOrl 8eech, Calllornle taU tlle <•lllflCNr ..... r ltlO af Danlafl Cllffr ICevl~ C. Wtl\h, OS W ltth Str .. t, T•rry A. Shew•rd, 2'-l•Vt'-'· Com mitt• tnc.,,a prf•elt lwndatloft, Coate MIM, CA '26?1 · Newpcirt Bee<:h,Calltornla•2 .. J la avellalll• et the 10\lflllelon't prl,.. Thi• W.IMH 11 conduct.cl l>Y an '"' Tiiis ~""'I• CCWIChlClld l>Y .,. In-clpal offk• tor ln.-<tlon Ourl1111 r• dlvlOV•I. dlwlOut l .. ,., llualftaSI '*"' 11'9m ... ,,,. to 4 IC Wirt c:. Wtlll'I T.,ry A. SNw•rd p.m. Dy any cltlff'I w11o -Ill It Thi' '18~ WM Ill• with , .... Thll tl•t-1 w•' fltl!O with Ille within i• daYt ett .. t,.. del• ol 11111 county Clm of Oran99 Otunly on cout11rC•trllafOr.,,.. ~yon,...rll IJllbllcatlCl'I. All'll '4. 1w1. 11, IWI T ... ,_..,,,. 1Wlnclotl oltk• It ,., .... ,1..,.. localed ., 22' ~., ..... Str•t, .... ..,llOfl P11Dll ..... Oranaa CO.II Delly Pllol, P111>1r1""' Or.,. CMn O.lly Piiot, 8tacll CA n..o All'll H . Mey s, n, tt. 1t11 1t1t-t1 Apr.21,H,May S,lt,!M I 1811-11 Th•'prlnclpat ~r of the foun-- PUBLIC NOTICE :'~~~,.I.'"~&,:'.-. PUBUC NOTICE Cf'A ....... u .... A..._1.,..CA_, P11Dll .... 0-enttt C-1 Oatty Piro., May 1t, 1•t lttMI PUBUC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUI 8UllNIH MAMI STATIM•lfT TM leltowl"I --ar• •Int O..tl· -··· ALL·l'"llGH·l f<OAWA"OllH" INC., • C•lltornl• corportllOr\ "" H Atd Oum S4rael, An8f't91m, CalUOf'nl• ,.,. ALL·F•EIOHT l"ACl<&"S, INC .• a Callr..-1118 c..._atlOfl. IU I N. ".cl 01Hnllreet,,..,,..,,.1m,ca11~• .. Tllh -'Mt6 la conllllclM llY I cor· jl(ltallon AIM'r...,. l>e<W~ In<. WllllMIM. AMfl\I, """lllOWll Tllh llM-1 wet fllld wltll Ille e-n· c.ltf'tl oe o.. 8"t9 '-'"on-"'" 11. "''· -.......--a secs s Ci U U 5 t a s s 3 21 Dilly Piiat H/F TUESDAY, MAY 12, 1981 COMICS C4 CLASSI Fl ED CS Newport Harbor's John Moffet, the defending 100-yard breaststroke champion, is No . 2 in the nation in his specialty. Viva Valenzuela! His screwball is working well. C2. Raiders • remain forl981? LOS .. NGELES CAP> -Federal judge Harry Pregerson set up a trial schedule indicatin1 that the World Champion Raiders will remain in Oakland for the 1981 season. As the antitrust trial of the Loe Angeles Coliseum-Oakland Raiders vs. the National FootbaH League opened Monday In U.S. District Court, the judge told prospective jurors, "I'd like to be finished by the end of July.'' LATER, IT WAS adHed that the claims for damages, if the Coliseum and the Raiders win the first round, might take 4t least two more weeks. Some of the 147-member jury panel assembled fidgeted when told the projected length of the trial. Fifty were excused on the ba s is or vacations. work schedules, other business mat- ters and the fact they had served their allotted time on the federal jury panel. Newport's Mo ff et No. I in his event The Raiders want to move into the Los Angeles Coli seum, vacated by the Rams when they shifted in 1980 to Anaheim , about 30 miles south or the Coliseum. Breaststroker hopes to lead Sdilors to CIF 4-A swim champwns~ip By ROGER CARL.SON OI .. o.lty l"tMC Slaff EAST LOS ANGELES -For the superstars, the regular season in any sport can seem pretty routine at limes. It's only when the blue chips are at slake that things get in· te r esti'ng , and for Newport Harbor High's John Morret, a 16-year-old junior. you might say Friday night's CIF 4·A swim finals here at East Los Angeles College have gained his atten- tion. The defending champion in the 100.yard breaststroke and a third place finisher in the 200· yard individual medley as a sophomore, Moffet is the ring leader in the Sailors· attempt to dethrone Mission Viejo Hiah. six- ti me champion. Mission Viejo, stocked with !lWimmers imported from OUt Of the state and out of the country through the Mi ssion Viejo N ad adores, finds its pinnacle threatened for the first time in that span. The 6.0"'1. 18(1:pound MoCfet, has bes~ or 55.04 and 1 : 59.33 in the breast and indo prior to today's prelims. ,When Moffet relocated from Claremont he had a look at Mis· s ion Viejo, but opted for Newport Harbor High's pro- gram . "l didn't like the almospl\ere at Mission Viejo," says Moffet. "It was too intense." Moffet, a good bet to be mak- ing big waves at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympic Games, l\as already earned one berth as an Olympian with the 1980 team, but or course, did not compete in Moscow because of the Olympic boycott by the United States. It's simply a matter of training for jobs Olympic athletes aid youths By CURT SEED EN OI tlle o.tty pt• SUfl "A lot of people mis take this for a sports program," former Olympic decathlon champion Bill Toomey was saying recently as he munched on fresh fruit at the plush Co ta de Caza clubhouse. "But training for the Olympics Is no different than training for a job," the Laguna Beach resident continued. Toomey, along with several past and present Olympians. have created Sports Directions Foundation, a sell-motivational program geared towards tile in· ner-city youth. THE GENTLE, rolling, lush green hills of Cota de Caza in Orange County's back country Is a far cry from the ghetto areas of Newark, Miami, Indianapolis and Richmond, Va., but Toomey and other foundation members don't mind. Olympians like 1976 gold medalist Steve Reddick, 1952 de- cathlon gold medalist Bob Mathiu and former British de- cathlon champ Barry King plan to focus on cities like those. The foundation has managed to grow under its present con· tract with the U.S. Department o( Labor. In a nuts hell, the pro- gram uses Olympic athletes to assist summer youth employ· ment programs. The main objective is to help participants identify and work towards career goals. ' TOOMEY CONTENDS that the Olympians can draw on their athletic experiences to de· monstrale the value or setting realistic goals and making a "sustained effort to achieve them. ·'This is probably the first time someone has utilized Olym- pic athletes like this," Toomey notes. "The Olympians are forgotten athletes. It's really a pity tl\at some of them just fade into the woodwork." "You have to reallze that ... many of the Olympic partici· pants sacrificed employment to train for the Olympics. After the Olympics, they came back and couldn't find jobs," notes King, another catalyst behind the . Sports Dir~tions Foundation. Still, Toomey and King ex- plain, the emphasis is on the youths. By June 23, some 560,000 youths will begin takln& part iJ) the newest phase of the founda- tlon. In Orange County, Santa (See OLYMPIC, Pa1e CZ> His bests in the 100 and 200· meter breaststroke are 1 :03.83 and 2: 18.78. ··You know you never meet your goals." says Moffet. "You a lways want more. But I'm always happy with a best time." His goals for Friday nig ht? He's not saying. but it's obvious he has set his sights high. Moffet is unique in a way, almost totally disdaining weight lifting as a st epping s tone toward big things in swimming "I'm dropping times without using weights," explains Moffet. "That's something I can fall back on later." really got the good attitude He's so strong in his upper body he doesn't need to really get any bigger. It m ight impair his stroke." ' The '84 Olympic Games are three years away and Moffet says it's not that far away "It's always in the back of my mind," • he says. "I've been thinking about the Olympics since I was in the seventh grade." When the lime comes for the Olympics it'll be the breaststroke that carries Moffet into the limelight, as it already has, bul the Sailor s ay s sometimes the one s troke haB its disadvantages. "Sometimes I really get sick of it," he says. "But it is where my main talent lies.'' Why the breast.stroke? "It's His high school coach, Tom Milich. says Moffet is a long way from maturing. "He'll de· finitely develpp more. I don't see him peaking until al least his second year or college. There is · a lot of room to grow and he's iust my body type -limber John Moffet <See MOFFET, Pase Page CZ) . -~-·~ SNEAKING ONE IN -Fernando Valenzuela's Dodger · teammate, Jay Johnstone, slips in to foil the young pitcher's view through his . camera in New York last weekend. OCC clinic · features Knight Bobby Knight, one of the na· lion's most prominent, con- troversial and successful college basketball coaches, will be the featured speaker at a basketball clinic at . Orange Coast College Friday and Saturday. Knight's Indiana Univer.sity teams have won NCAA cham· pionships in 1976 and this paBt season, in addition to the NIT ti· tie in '79. The Coach of the Year in '7S and · '76, Knight is the youngest coach to reach the 200 and JOO. win plateaus. Presently he's at 333·118. He has been the Big Ten Coach or the Year six times and was the coach of the United Stales entry at the 1979 Pan American Games in Puerto Rico. Knight will di sc uss his philosophy, organization, fun- damental offensive and de· fensive drills, game preparation and other facets or the game. Players wlll be available for Knight to use for demonstration and there will be question and ans)Ver sessions, as well as training films to illustrate pro- per execution and techniques. Knight's schedule calls for 10 hours of instruction over the two days. ·The clinic, designed for coaches at all levels, will also in· elude former California Coach Pete Newell. The NFL, which one<' tried to get a change of venu e, gave the court res ults or a league. com missioned survey showing that 78 per cent of persons in the federal court's seven-county dis· trict were aware of the Raiders· controversy. There was no action on that matter as the jury selection pro- cedure continued. It was expect- ed the NFL would try to reopen the change or venue issue. TO SPEED UP the selection. the court issued a 30-page ques- tionnaire for the pros pective jurors to fill out. _. The many questions included, "What, if anything. you know, have read or heard about: Pete Rozelle, Al Davis" and three others. Rozelle. the commissioner of the NFL. opposes the move and Davis is the managing general partner of the Raiders. Neither was present during the start of the jury select,ion. Rozelle will come from New York when his turn comes lo t estif y. Davis was in Los Angeles but working on the Raiders' training situation. Both allowed attorneys to speak for them. The legal staffs will study the questionnaires submitted by the 97 remaining prospective jurors and the judge will question some Individually as the court seeks 10 jurors for the lengthy trial. As rew as six could vote at the end of the trial. Angels play Milwaukee MILWAUKEE -With a two- game winning streak under thelr belts and Manager Jim Fregosi still at the helm , the Angels will be looking for some revenge tonight when they open a three- game set with the Brewers here. Milwaukee. which belted Angel pitching in winning two of three games during the Angels' recent homestand, will send Moose Haas (2·1) to the mound against Ken Forsch (4-1). The Angels, 15-16, are looking to reach the .500 mark for the first time since May 1 when they were 11·11. The team currently trails Oakland by nine 1ames. The Brewers, 14-12, are 2~ games behind Eastern Division leading Cleveland. After the three-game set here, the Angels will move to DetrOit for a three:eame series. Ex-Dodger Doug Rau, recel\t- ly brought up from the Angels' Redwood farm club, will be making his first start since June 3, 1979 on Saturday. Honey drips down ring posts with Cooney's victory BW T""'7VJ/ fJ J!J!;k,~e1118LEY • NEW YORK <AP> -Brtn1 back Shirley Temple. Let's hear U.O.e WUnc love IOlll• of .leu- Mtte McDonald and NellOll l:d· dy. Drink a tout to mom, Kate Smltb and apple ple. Heavywel1ht boxina appa....U, la headLn1 lnto a new and fresher era. No more =~· 18dodo and bombast. No • Ins and 1nappln1. u1lY Hmea, taunts and lnlultl. lt't lolna to be ao sweet that Oil• can alm01t feel honey ddppln1 down the rlns poe(a. The man who will set the tenor for the new a1e is a handsome, dimpled hero named Gerry Cooney. 24-year-old aon of a former Brooklyn steelworker. His trainer is a puckish little man named Victor Valle who serenades his pupil with a modified rendition of Eddle Can- tor' a "Sonny Boy.'' Cooney Is mana1ed by two real estate men. •·r don't 10 around bragginl how &ood I am. I Uke to so to the om and work bard," uld young Cooney after he de- molished veteran Ken Norton In 54 seconds of a scheduled 10- . round fight at New York's Madison Square Garden aimed at establlshin1 a c~Jlen1er for either of lhe two relsnin& heavywet1ht champions -Mlke Weaver (WBA) or L~rry Holmes <WBC>. · It they witnessed the le11 than a mlnute of sclenllfk destruc- tion -and lt'a naive to believe tbey didn't, Uve or on cable TV -the two titleholders must have apenl a 1leeples1 nl1ht. Gerry Cooney could be box· ln1'1 dominant force In the Decade of the El1hties. • He ls awesome. Unleashed in the rin&, be ls a fierce gladiator who now hu won every flSht as a professional -25 of tbem, 22 by knockouts and most, as ln the case of Monday nllbt'• eyelaah- blinker, ended before spectators had aettled in lhelr chairs. He ls also a bis, Sood-natured kid -one of four brothen with two 1l1ter1 -from suburban Huntlnctoo, Loos Itiand, who likes to' walk the 1treeta of hla vllla1e and awap pleuanUiea w.lth the net1hbon. If Hollywood ever wanted to pick a filhter for a movie, It "'.:'w'•111ti.;11.;r~1.;,tt11~~"t: .. ~:t$1!'\,.t:'l._..,~~..!;_ . would use the Cooney mold ,- 6-5, 225'1• pounds, darkly g<>9d· Jookinl with a clefl ch~b, dimples when he 1mlles - which is often ·-dark hair cLCrl· ln& down hh neck and brown, nasblq eyes. After hil swift triumph over Norton he leapt around the rins, bands held hi1b, wavin1 to his wildly cheerin1 and adorln1 public. He resembled a tyke who bad Just alpted a bike under the C.:bnltmu tree. When reporters SOUCht to 1et blm to expand on bl• M·tecoftd (See COONEY, Pale Q) -... -- • -... ...---~--·~-........ ~---,..........-· --l:"'P' • _...,. ------· ....... ~------ • OtlftOI Co11t DAILY PILOTITu.td1y, M1y 11, 1111 pai--------------------"'JillJ Rocke tball or ugly, Rocke~s force ~Its From AP dlspatcbes BOSTON -Del Harris eaUs It m Rocketball. Billy Pa ullz calls ll just. plain ugly T he brand of basketball being played by the Houst~m Rockets may not be ver y stylish, but it certainly hws bee n effective, The Rockets. who were only 40·42 during the regul11r season and are seeking to become the first team with a losing record to win a National B a s k e t b a I) A s s o c i a ti on championship. have split the first four games of the title series with the Boston Celtics by hitting the boards hard. playing gritty defe nse and car efully controling t he te~­ po of each game. They bounced back from Saturday's 94.71 embar rass- m e nt wit h a so l id Head performance Sunday, when a 28-17 edge off the offensive boar ds helped them to a 91-86 victory to even the s eries al 2-2. T he best-of.seven series resumes tonight in Boston Garden, with Game Six in Houston's Summit on Thursday night. A seventh game, if needed . would be played here Sunday a fternoon. "Ri ght now I'm s ta rting to think that this is a fairy tale that's going to come true," said Rockets forward Robert Reid, who has hounded Boston star Larry Bird throughout the series . limiting him to 53 points in four games and just eight points in each of the last two games Quote of the day ··There's a pretty good selection on TV up there." North Carolina linebac~er Lawrence Taylor, the Giants' top seleclton in the NFL d raft. on the advantages of playing in New York ' Carew seeking 12th All-star berth NEW YORK Infielder Rod • Ca rew of the Angels will be trying for his 12th consecuti ve All-Star game be rth when the ballot boxes open Saturday for baseball's mid season classic Tt11s summer's All-Sta r Game will be played Tuesday evening, J.uly 14, at Clevela~d's M unic1pal Stadium. the s ite of three previous contests . The balloting, which st arts Saturday and concludes .July I , will select t he starting lineups, exclusive ~f pitchers~ for t he t wo lea gues as the fans have done since 1970. Carew. the all·time leading vote-getter, has been elected to the American League team 11 yea r::. 1n a row . the first six as a second baseman and the last five al first base The next longest streak belongs to Steve Gar vey. chosen as the N'at1onal Le ague 's starting first basem a!l4 the last se\en years Besides Carew. the only other players to be nominated each year since fan balloting began in 1970 a re Pete Rose of the Philadelphia Phllhes. Willie Stargell . Pitts burgh Pirates' J o hnn) Rench, Cincinnati Reds : Reggie S mith, Los Angeles Dodgers . Reggie Jackson, New York Yankees and Carl Yastrzemski. Bos ton Red Sox From Page C 1 Ryan Whiff• 11 •• Aatroe wtn HOUltOft'1 Nolu A1H 11.rudt OYt I.I 1 t batlet'I, lbt Wrd tlmt he hu wbJlled IO-Or·more ln 1 aam•. and J.e Cru •lammed a two-run homer, paclnj the Astros to 1 J.O •lciory over Clncln· natl Monday ruaht In Na\aonal Leaaue b11eb1U action. Ryan, 2· I . the third most p roll!k strikeout pitcher In baseball history. struck out five in the first two lnnlrll S In poatlna hit nrst complete aarne of the season . Brute Benedld drilled a r un·acortn1 slnJle with lwo out. In the lOlh tMln1 to give Allan\a a 3·2 win over Pit· tsborgb In the only other Na· t lo n a l Leag u e g am e . . . Bump Wiiia rapped rour bits, drove In three runs and scored once to lead Texas to a 9-1 romp ove r slumping R11on Kunsas City In American League action. Rick Honeycutt won his second decision over the Royals In 11 days and Is 3·0 for the season . . Joe Charboneau'• first homer of the year a tie·breaking two-run shot in the seventh Inning, powered Cleveland and pitcher Be rt Blyleven to a 3·1 win over the Chicago White Sox. Blyleven picked up his fourth s tra ight win and fourlh complete game ... Gary Allell80n drive In five runs wit~ a pair or singles and a double and lllck Miiier tied a major league record with four doubles to pace Boston to a 7-6 win over Toronto. Former Angel relier pitcher Mark Clear picked up his second win a n er taklng over In the fifth inning . . . N •· tional League umpire Ed Vargo wi ll undergo surgery Wednesday on his hand . . Third baseman Bob Horn e r of Atlanta will be sidelined three or fo ur days with a s prained wr ist . . . Milwaukee tr aded catcher Buck Marti.Dez to Toronto for a minor league out- fielder. Baseball today On this da te in baseball in 1970: "Mr. Cub" himse lf, Ernie Banks. cracked the 500th hom e run of his d is· tinguished career , tapping PatJ arvis forthe m ilestone shot in a 4·3 Chicago victory over Atlanta at Wrigley Field. Today's birthdays: Hall of Fame c atcher Yogi Berra is 56 Cincinnati catcher Joe Nolan is 30. Detroit infielder Lou Whitaker 1s 24 Fullerton's Mullally to Boise? Boise State llni vcrs1ty says 1t • will announce its new athletic direc· tor at u ne ws confe rence tod ay Reports m Boise are that E. Michael Mullally, now athletic director at Cal St ate (Fullerton>. will be named Lee Trevino and Ralph Guldabl, who claim a pair of U.S. Open golf crowns apiece. have been elected to the World Golf Hall of Fame The Wa s hington Huskies must play a t Oregon Wednesday to make up a rained·out double-header and must s weep the t wo ~ames to win the Northe rn Di vision Pac·lO title . Mrs. A.J . Foyt, Sr., mother of the four-time Indy 500 winner. d ied Mond;iy in a Hous ton hos pital . Veteran Uni ver sity of Alabama football coach Paul "Bear" Bryant, s ays receiving an honor ary degr ee is like gelling a battlefield commission . . Paristo, a $10,000 supplement al entry. and A R un were added to the held for the Preakness Sta kes, the second leg in the Tr iple Crown lo be run Saturday 10 Baltimor e Television. radio TV: Basketball Houston at Boston in t he fifth game of the NBA championship s eries. 11 :30 p.m .. Channel 2. R ADIO: Baseball Angels at Milwa ukee, 5·30 pm .. KMPC <7l0J, Montreal at Dodgers. 8 p.m .. KABC <790 ). OLYMPIC ATHLETES • • • Volleyball: backyard rivalries An a College will probably be the site where each day 50 youths will be released from their high sc hool wor k experience pro· grams to take part in what Toomey calls "a n en richment opportunit y that young minority kids aren't accustom ed to." The youths will s pend six to eight hours a day in an intense program that will quite simply improve their chances of getting a job. •·Eighty per cent of this is classroom work," Toomey adds. "The sports part of the program 1s t he personal c h a lle n ge ' something that shows aggressive· ness, desire and the belief that these things are possible. We want to cr e ate a self image, des ire and attitude to create job interview skills," he adds . T HE KEY IS motivation, and who tetter to activate the minds of less fortunate youths than legitimate heroes from the sports world can do the job. Other objectives of the founda· tion include : -i mproved se lf·d is clpllne, sel£.r~ce a nd persisntence in · working towards gdals. -Improved knowledge of the jo b m ar k et , r ea l istic a lternatives a nd the education required ror certain jobs. -improved communications skills . · The program. Toomey points out again, ,ls two-fold. Not only From Page C1 MOFFET. • • knees and ankles( aays MoCfet. Currently Moffet ra nks No. 2 lo the natJon to breaauuoker Glenn Mllla, a 19·Ytar-old In Ala bama, and he ls No. 7 ln UM world. But Friday night, his cbanca of belna No. 2 ran1e from 1Um lo none. The only real question l1 wUI Newport Harbor'• team at.Ul bt No. 2? • do the youngsters t>enefit, but so do the Olympians. "You have to remember that th e Ol ympic ath l e t es d id something for their country, and after that, they're fo rgotten," he explains. IN 1980, Toomey a nd those •'forgotten" people took the first s tep towards getting t>at•k into the picture . They traveled to In· dianapolis, Richmond. Va .. and P h ila de lphia , a mo n g o t her cities. and the praise has been pouring in since. "T he Oly m pic Experience Motivational Program (the ear· ly version of Sports Directions Foundation> was one of our most successfuJ efforts this summer," noted Harry McFarland, the ad- m inlstra tor of India n a polis ' d ivision o r e mployme nt and tr aining, in a letter to Toomey. Added this young participant from Newark: "I thought l was crazy. that l needed psychia tric he lp. Now a rter this week 's experience here, T know who I am a nd what l want out of lire." ,, . QB K emp signs Ram contract From A.P dlspatchea The Los Angeles Rams an- nounced the signing of four free· agent players Monday, lncludln1 q uarter back Jeff Kemp, son ol U.S. Conrresaman a nd former pro quarterback Jack Kemp. Je(f Kemp, who was r11aed up In the recent Natlona Football League dra ft , p l ayed at Dartmouth. Also 1lgned were Elbe r t Roberti, a cornerback from Savannah State; M1h Brandl. a wlde receiver from UCLA: and Rick Parma, a wide receiver from San JOH Stat~. The Rama opened tbetr IPJ'ln& mtnl·camp Mondo. ,.,lb •• fookln and a aruatt.,.buc ot veterans ln au.odaoe.. The remalncMr ol tM Yetttau wlll report Wednn d o . Tbt cam'P conclwla Tbundl.>'. Laguna Beach High risks its unbeaten and No. 1 status at Cos ta Me sa whil e Newport Harbor and Estancia resume a growing vo ll eyba ll rivalry tonight as the second round of the CIF playoffs unfolds at 7. A l so in action to n ig ht is Mar ina, which hosts Loyola after winnfog its fi rst-ever CJF playoff competition Friday, and Fountain Valley is on the road against Santa Monica . Laguna Beach, led by Lance Stewart, has been ranked No. 1 in the CIF since befo re the season began, but Costa Mesa is cons idered a threat t o the Artists' season in a similar man· ner as a year ago when Laguna was upset in the second round by La Quinta. The Estancia·Newport Harbor due l <a t Ne wport ), whic h m atches the 1980 finalis ts again.st each other , Is also a Sunset League-Sea View Le ague con· frontatlon, besides the Newport· Mesa School Districtissue. Ma rk Barre tt, a co-most valuable player in the Sunset ~eague, paces Newport, while E s tancla's game revolves around Brad Elligood, the Sea Vie w League's MVP. 'Marina showed its ability to survive unde r pressure with It.a five.game victory at previously unbe aten Los Altos F rlday, capped by a 20·18 decision ln the final game. Andy K lusamann lead s Mar ina l~>night and a vlctory would aend the VLkJn&a a&aloat the wlMer of the La11.1na Beach· Cotta Mesa contest. Fountain Valley, with Rey Gubernlck leadln1 the way, ls at Santa Monica, lh• Bay Lea1ue'1 champion and conqueror of A{cad.la ln the Clnt round. toUfte.al.n Valley, co-cumpton ln the &Imel Leape and Ute tea1ue·1 No. 1 repreaeoLlilV.. elhn laated hl1hly-re1arde d lnlne to the nnt round. --_....---... .. ·-----~ ... -----~ -.. Viva Vftleniuela is Dodger cry . Sc r ewball makes hitters look foolish FernandQ Valenzuela I Qualifying controversy hits Indy INDIANAPOLIS !AP > The motors a t the Indianapolis Motor Speedway may be quieted by a wet track. hut the sound or controversy can st ill be heard in Gasoline Alley. The track was closed for the second stralqht day Monday by rain and cold temperatures However. officials for the May 24 Indy 500 were busy trying to resolve questions about the lineup for qualifying atte mpts presented by three dri vers TWO OF THE THRE E Whit tington driving brothe rs, Don and 8111. along with rookie Phil Caliva spent most of the day hoping to hear that their posi· ttons in the lineup for qualifying atte m pts had bel'n improved The ques tio n o f position becomes vital because it de· termines whether a drive r can try for the pole position or 1f he eve n gets a n opportunity to m ake a four-lap qualifying at· tem pt. Rules for the race guarantee every driver who dre w for a qualifying position and took his place in line at the start of Saturday's time trials wall have one chance to qualify for the pole or the race. Other drivers could g uarantee the mselves a chance to be among the 33·car fastest qualHlers by lining up behind those who dre w for posi· lion As soon as there 1s a break in the bne, with no one ready to make a qualifying attempt, all guarantees are over T HE WHITTINGTONS drew for position. but their cars were not in line when qualifications began. Chief steward Tom Bin· ford said that m eant they had lost their guarantee to compete for pole position. Caliva's situa - tion was different. lie did not draw for position, but said he had the car on the track and was ready to take his pos ition behind the last driver going for the pole. "T here w e r e abo ut 30 people who can verify we wer e at t he right spot al the right time," Caliva s aid Monday while awaiting word from r ace offi cials. "Som eone m ade a mis- ta ke in recording. We didn't file a p rotest be<':iuse we didn't know there wa:. .i question about our position until we saw 1t in the newspaper today ~ ByHALBOCK . ,,...,.. __ Fabulous Fernando. His numbers are outrageous, his e motions are Invisible. and his ,etrect on baseball thh1 youna !leason is enor moua. Fernando Valenzuela has the:: National League standing on its c.o llectlve ear and the Los Angeles Dod gers ·are doing rartwh~el11 . T HE ROOKIE left handn from Mexico is 20 years old and pitches like somebody who's bee n doing it fore ver He has a screwball that makes veteran hitters look foolish and poise that is dis arming Viva ValenieuJa. Manager Tommy Lasorda. who once was a left-handed pitcher . of somewha t limited success, has handed Fernando the ball seven times this season. Valenzuela has returned a vie tory each time and has negl ect· ed to give up any runs in rive of those starts. He has surrendered two runs in 63 innings for an 0.29 earned run average. Add on to that 17~ scor eless innings last September for a major league E RA of 0.22. And before he reported to the Dodgers. he had a string of 35 scoreless innings at San Antonio of the Texas League, so that for t he l as t 1 15~ inn i ngs he's pitched . his ERA is O 16 He leads the league in si'< pitching categories and is one short of the rookie record for consecut1 ve victories set by Dave ··Boo" f erns of the Bostorf Red Sox in 1945 THE COUNS EL for the Na tional LeAgue Hillers Associa· tion would like a word 1n S panis h , of course with Valenzuela, who speaks almost no Englis h. Lasorda was winless in his major league career but still s ees s i milarities between himself and Valenzue la. "We look alike, don't you think?" the manager said the othe r day "See. two arms, t wo legs," Until Las orda started JOgg1ng a couple of months ago and trimmed some weight , he did look like Valenzuela. The Mex- ican is thick-bodied with a bar- r el chest. It wa s suggested to Lasorda that the pitcher looked .. well , err ... chunky "To me. he looks like Ro bert Redford in the face and Charley Atlas in the body," decided the Dodger manager Fernando forever Lasorda has picked up enough OV faces Tustin; Mesa plays Tritons Ocean View High's Seahawks take the ir CIF 3·A baseball playoff hopes to Tustin Wednes· day afternoon and Costa Mesa hosts San Clemente in the 2·A division , each against similar third ·place finishe rs. The wi ld card games a re set for 3 o'clock. O cean View will play at Anaheim F riday if it wins Wed· nesday. while Costa Mesa gets a s hot at St. Be rnard if the M u s t a n gs ge t pa s t S a n Clemente. Spunlsh to • .,, by when he has to communlule with his pitcher . One or the few occulons he had to viglt the mound came In Houl ton d uring Shutout No. 3 Mike Ivie, just acquired by Ute Astr o!i , wuiS the butter in a tight spot and Lasorda .wusn't sure Vule nzuela was fam iliar with the baseball tradition of trades that move pla ye r s from one team lo unothcr overnight "I J UST WE NT OUT to ex· plain that I vie was the same guy he·d gotten out in San Francisco the week before ." said Lasorda "But I didn't have to tell him COMMENTARY He knew who was up and he re· m embe red how he'd gotten him out before " Vale n zue la has a strange pitching technique. lie sa ys he's unaware of it. but at the height of his windup, he looks away from the plate, !>eeming to train his eyes on the peak of his rap. "We think hl' has notes writ· ten up there," !>:11d Lasorda. Ill!> impact at the gate has been a wesom e . Last Friday night. he drew almost 40,000 to Shea Stadium where ordinarily the Mel!> might have ex.peeled a bout 15,000 llt' attracted about 10.001) more than might have otherwise been e,xpected for his prC'vwus Lwo star ts a nd the Duditcrs have a lrea d y an· nounC'ed a sellout for his next s tart. Thur4'ctC1y night against Montreal TH ·~ C'l.UB ALSO has ordered 10,000 Fernando Vale nzuela dolls to sell in Dodger Stadium. It 1s not Lrue that when you wind the doll ur. 1t pitches s hutouts Pa rt of r erna ndo·s charm is his youth I le 1s succeeding at a diffieull cr aft and making it look easy I le has an engaging s mile and seems to be genuinely en· )Oy 1n g himself. desp ite t he language barrier . Strikeouts and s hutouts , a fte r a ll , a r e un- derstood in any tongue l.asorda can communicate with his ace lefty but his trips to the mound are li mited Catcher Mike Seosc1a Valenzue la 's re- g ula r receiver, ran be' expected to v1!-tit more frequently and he revealed what his con versations with the pitcher are hke "I have heard him use three English words," Scosc1a said "They are, food. beer and light beer "I speak a little Spanish but I havl'n't had to go to the mound l f I do. I 'II JUSI pal him on the back and say •food , beer and light beer ... NCAA p layoffs set R IVERSIOE <API Atotalof 20 te ams have received berths in the NCAA Division II baseball playoffs. Regional pl ay wi ll take part at six sites starting Wednesday. In the West. at San F rancisco. UC Rive rside <36·20> races San Fra ncisco State < 37· ll l in a best· of-f1ve series:..;.·-------- Baseball standings AMERICAN LEAG UE West Division W L Pct. GB Oakland 24 7 .774 Texas 16 11 .593 6 Chicago 14 12 .538 7'"l Angels 15 16 .484 9 Minnesota 10 17 .370 12 Seattle 10· 19 .345 13 Kansas City 6 16 .273 131n East Divis ion Cleveland 14 7 .667 Baltimore 14 10 .583 l 'ri New York 16 12 .571 I '7 Milwaukee 14 12 .538 2112 Boston 13 13 .500 3'"1 Detroit 12 16 .429 5'~ Toronto 9 19 321 81~ NATIONAL L EAG UE West Division W L Pct. GB Dodgers 20 9 .690 Atlanta 16 13 .552 4 Cincinnati 14 14 500 5112 San Francisco 15 17 .469 611) Houston 14 16 .467 61,'i San Diego 10 20 .333 IOI.Ai East Division St. Louis 15 7 .682 r t.iladelphia l8 10 .643 Montreal 17 10 .630 Vi Pittsburgh 11 12 .478 4 Vi New York 8 16 .333 8 Chicago 5 19 .208 11 MM!Ny'ak - Allant.e J, Pit~"' t ( 10 lnl'll"Otl Hovtl°" S, Cine-II 0 ()Illy,..,,. IC-led T....,'•0--lrM! (~rlt M l at ~I-+41. n Pitta_., l:soi-M l al All.-ita (Nl'*N 1-11.n ClllU90(,_..ttl1-1 I At Cln<lnMtl IS..O M l, II 11 L...it ll<onc" 2-21 •I ...... -11(- M~,t". Varll tzac,,ry J -)1 •I Sa n Dit to IE~~=a1i1~~ 1·21 at S.11 ,.,_._ (Al•a-•Jl,11 .J I .\. . . .. "18UCNO'nCB PlJBUC NO'IV'I '""••• CllMl•T w nee ,.ICf,..,.,. ..,.. ... IYA'H WCMJ ...... tA Ne llAMe ITAT ... lfT TMe~u .. ..-.. Tk , .. ......_~-ate ..... ....... _ ........ OltMJU'O .... CAVM, RAOIO CONTltOU.•O HOt • ~~-...... llH, • w, 1t•1 ltftllt. CM1a -... KATHl..UNO'lfatU...,,_V tell .... -.0 w11•r•••· tll• ....... ,., ,, • .,.... er ... w.111-.a.. 1. ICATHL8111 O'Mlll.L IMO'tV .... ,,_ ~ MliM#ft, Qt ......... ...., fl..,. ,... "-cl9f'll ef 1111• '-' .,., tor en er•r ,....,..,.. "'•me tnm ~rrv WeyM YM °"911. ttl A IC•t"'-0',_.11 I_., .. ICe.._. ,.._, Mrwt. C.C. Me6A. Olllfwllle O'lll•lll. '2U1 IT II HlllllHV OROlllll D .... ell lllla NIMU It ceNluc;IM rt • ...,._ ............ Ill .... _...,.. f1M1'1tl •"• .... _, ..... !Illa ,_, M ~· '"'. ~c;. Wlll'-L J11M "· '"'• In vi. ~rNrn of tlllt MM-... lllN #llll U. DejMlr-J le lllOw ,_ wt.y tlllt Cou11ty Cletll OI Or81199 Count'f °".!My ""*luUorl tor~ .. -11*"4 I.'"' _ .. .,..... ,.,,_ IT IS FUlllTHl1'.0ROlllllD 11184 e P~...,..., 0r8ft0t C.O.al Delly Pl191, ,..., et Wt _. 18 ,._ c-.. Mey J, II, It, M, '"' ,_.., ~· ..... --..... .., ...., -· cn .i ... _... •lw • W. M Y et YM ...... lfltMV. 0.lly PlleU MWllfl"' Of a--el drtlll•I'°" pr!Mtf lfl U. C-l)'OIOr ..... P UBUC NOTICE Oeltll: #My 4, '"' fllCTITIOUI IUMNlll O.WWH. ""-' NAM8 ITAT~811T ~ ~ , ... fol-I~ ,...._, ert fflftt PYDllthM or.,,.. Coe.al Delly l'li.t DllllMU H : '· • • 12 It ... '"' 111,..j Ill C.H , ~ w. ""' ScrMt, c;.te ,..., •· • ' --... Cell......W. t»f1 PUBUC NOTICE L.,fy We yM v .. o.i.n, u • A Flower st.-..t. C.l• """· Cellfon\l• ,,.,, Ill_._ CH IO Wllll""a, UtO I . fllc:TITIOUI eu1111111 ... _ A•--. Mehelm. CAlllOtftl• NAMC ITATI M8NT ttt01 T ... , .. _"O ...,_ It Cleiflt llual-Tllla IMl"MU II <Oftdv<llHI lty e MU at: omeral -1~P. M IHIATUAI OltAPHIC$, 1"41 u try W. VM O.litt1 S•lt1Clrtn LAIM, H11ntl11tlOll ... ,... Tiii• ... ...._ ..... Ill"" wllll , ... c.11...,,... c_,, c1er11 o4 0renee c_,, °" ""'' Tlfne>lfty J, 5"9111, JONI So11141rltl 1, 1"1. L•"•. HunllftO\Oft keel!, C.lllor11I• ..,~ .. , .... f'11DU....., Or .... CMtt Dally f'llot, Tllla lluslnna ll <-led!>¥ ell lfl olvlel11el. Timotlly J ,_,,, Tftll a~ "" llltd wttll Ille Ctwnl'f Cltfk OI Or._ C-ly °"Mn I, IMI. ,. .. , ... ""olllheel Or-Coot! Delly Pilot, Mey S, U, It, M, 19'1 to.HI PUBLIC NOTICE P lc:TITIOUI eUllNllS NAMll ITATIMINT l M IOll-lng ... ,_, la ootno 11u.i· fltHH. COPY CENT EA, 3400 Irv Int Ave1111•. Nt•porl &.«ft, Celllornla ttMO KlyOllo ICoJlme, t H-V•ll•Y Ro.a, Pomcin., Celll0<nla t17t6 Tllll lluslnn• It <-leO b'f an lt1· dlvtelw•I Klyollo Kojima Tiiis Jlel-1 w•s Ill.a with the Cewnly Clt•k ol °'"'Ge C-tw °"Mey May S, 11, It,», Itel io.7 .. 1 PUBLIC NOTICE NJ.7MM IT AT 8M8 111T OP AeANOOHMI N f OflUll Ofl PICTITIOUS eUIJllll U NAMI Th• lol-1119 ~ .... eoenelotltel , ... .... ol ,,. flctlUGUl bw•IMOI nem• SHAN DI 'S OI LI et HU a. erhlel, CHIO ...... Cellferel• mat. The llctltlous llullfltU na mt reltn td to aboW ,..,, flied lt1 Collfll y °"'tnm. HRIEA SHANDI. IUO Porl Carney Pt•<•. Newport •••<II , C.llfo•nl• nMq JOSEP+miE SHANDI, ltJO Por1 Cart1 ty Pleet, N•wporl lt•Cll, Ceillornla nMO. Tiii• lluslnns wu c-ucled by .,, 1ne11v10 ... 1. TM• •letam.nt w• llled wlln ow Cownly Cl•rk of 0•"'9'1 County "" Mar< II JI, 1"1. '· '"' PIUMI lllalwlo•y FlllnQ l'te -UOO fllltt» Pwbll"'9d Or1119t Cou t O•llw Piiot, Pw1111"'9d °'-Coe•I °""' PllOI, Mey s. 12, It, 16, "'' '°~' Aprll 21, Mey s, n . "· "" "" .. ' DEA TH NOTICES r ,.ACIAC VllW ..-.O•IAL rAAIC Cemetery Mortuary Chapel-Crematory 3500 Paci he View Drive Newoorr Beach 6'4·2700 McCOllMK:ll MOUUAllH Laquna Beach 494·9415 LaQuna Hills 768·0933 San Juan Capistrano 495·1776 , HAUOll LAWM-MT. OUVI Mottuarv •Cemetery Crematory 1625 Gisler Ave Costa Mesa 540.5554 l't•CIHOTHIH l&L •OADWAY MOITUA•Y 110 Broadwav Oo41e Mesa 642·9150 ,_Cl l90nt91 swmtl' MOITUAllY 821 M11n St Huntlniaeon 8Hek ~ • ~.------·--------·· =--- 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D a a a 3 a !SSJJJJ 2 2 3 6 -' , H 1f: cal " Orange Co&1.t DAILY PILOT/TUftday, M1y 12, 1981 The marketplace on the Orange Coast Housu For S• ....•.•.....••••••..... .•..•.••....•...........•..•....•..•.............•.........•...•............................ ~...,.., I 002 C°;4PMrol I 002 G........ I 002 ~al I 002 G ......... IOOJ EQUAL HOUSING • QPPORTUNITY P•hherlt Motke: ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1!~~~~~m~9~~ linancln1 avaJlable 3 Bdrm with bonus room off maater suite RV iac- cesa, dou.ble detllched garage. Supet hom e, super fina.ncl.ng 187,950 . Owner aoxlou11 Call S46·2313 THE REAL ESTATERS ASSUMILARGE LOAN on this excel value. 4 ......•..•.•............••.•.....••.••.••••..• n MACNA.8-IRVN: REALTY u ·-.. --- •ALIOA ,!HIMSUl.A IA YNONT Sl.29,000 2 bdrm. 2 bath condo. assuma ble loans. owner will help finance. Boal slip. For appt. to see. Mrs. Calla han 642-8235. 1f9W110:rt s.ach 901 Uovl!r 1J1·1ve .Harbor View Ctlnwr 642 8235 644 ·6200 All real estate ad· ver t iaed i n thi» oewapaper la subject to the Federal Fair Ho\.IS· lng Act of 1988 which makes it ille&al to ad verti.se "any preference, limitation , or dis · crlminatlon baeed on race. color, religion, sex, or national orl&ln, or an intention to make any s uch preference. limitation, o r dis · crimination." Bdrms, large pool, gas ---------.. •. firepll, new carpets. On- This newspaper will not knowingly accept any adver tising for r eal estate which is in viola lion or the law. ly 1116.500 Call 97s.s:no today ALLSTATE REALTORS -------- SECLUDED RETREAT ---------• Assume $74,000 m loans. ERRORS: Adnrffa.n thotlkt ct.ck their ads dalty and report •~ ron lwclatety. The DAILY PILOT cn ..... 1 labllty for the flnt lncornct lftHrtlo" ORiy. $916 per mo pays all. Walk to South Coast Plaza. 3 Bdrm. l(ourmet kitch., plus formal llv· ing. Secluded patio and comm pool. Twnhr.e as kin g $97,750 Ca ll 963-7881 THE REAL ESTATERS Home.forS. ••••••••••••••••••••••• lliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiill-- • Gneral I 0021 I .E. INVESTOR •••••••••••••••••••••••I Always wanted lo invest RAJlE O,,ORTUMITY in Real Estate-but don't l~c ....... ot-sHORES think you ran" I.el " ,.~ Golden We~l Realtor:. Lowest priced fee sim· show you how to invest pie opportunity. Great with little cash & no "Tc assumable 1st TD En· nant Problem~" Call joy afternoon sun and now ror more details views from wood deck. 3 Goldeft WHt Rltr. beautif ul private (714)848·8S88 beaches. Only $549,000 1~~~~~~~~~ Call today, 673-8550 1-: THEREAL ESTATERS DECOllATOR CONDO $119,900 Winding greenbelts lead to bright single story condo. Exquisitely de· corated with custom wallpaper and cabinetry thruout. Formal dining room too' Owner will cooperate with flnanc· ln~. Won't last at this pnce, so call now. @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 114·63 '-6990 $69,950 BARGAIN Security gated 2 Bdrm o r 1 Ddrm. dl•n townhome Pool, sauna. spa. super sharp Va· cant Owner anxious. Call now. 546-2313 THEREAL ESTATERS AGENTS YOUGET~RE FROM TIIES'rORF. Jack H. Lesch. Mgr 675-1771 2 UNITS WOULD YOU $94,900 B E L I E V E Super investment! Two 575,000 2 Bdrm units. one with fireplace' Current ID· 3 Bdrm fixer upper, come-$740 mo Fmanc· located on huge lot in in&! One year home pro-Tustin Call 752·1700 teclion p lan incld ...... lllllllllllll• Hurry, this won't last! ,Ji.a~ ~!!I M6·7l7l i-i&&t~ THE REAL ESTATE:RS CAMEO SHORES ..._ _________ 1 Outstanding ocean view 11 home on fee land. 3 OCIEAHFttOHT 2 Bdrms, 2 ba. unfum. New. $8SO yrly. IAYRlOHT 3 Bdrm, 1 ba. unfum Mint cond. $850yrly. CHAHMa FROHT 3 Bdrm. 2 ba, uufum . S7SO yrly. associated BR OK £ R', IH Ill TORS Jill' W 8•1ltJ•1n t • · ,,.,,., t STROUTO MIEWPottT HACH Charming 4 Bdrm. Cozy Ii ving room features : wood burning fireplace. Owner will help finance. Only $209.900. Hurry. call 673·8550 THE REAL ESTATERS bedrooms. family room. formal dmmg room, s bath, gorgeous pool Large lot in prestigious area $725,000 SELLER HAS ANOTHER Rome and must sell this beautiful home 1ocated in excellent a rea or Tustin. Step down Uvlng room. fa mily room , space Je kitchen. 3 big bdrms, ust recently re· model . One year fret! home p rotection plan Call today. 752-1700 THEREAL ESTATERS UPPER BAY Light and cheer y 4 Bdrm. 3 liath family home Large covered patio $220,000. Roy Mccardle, RMr. 548-7729 MOTICE how Dally Pilot Class ifled ads display their messages with leg1b1hty and Impact'! Our ads. we are proud to say. really g e t r es u I t s P h o n 1· 642 5678 ON WATER CORNER-SUP-VU Woods, warmth & selec:tfve dKor In good taste. Mon In today and ettjoy sumrMr on the lay with yow boat at Y04/tll' door. 2-story 4 bed, with decks, balcony & privacy: le ade d CJla u , crwnin<JS & all amenlffn.. SI ,200,000. fee. OCEANFRONT EXQUISITE Fobulo-.s architectural master plKe on CortMr. Mew wood & CJlass, custom oc* cabinets & meticulous detail & ct.car In this 2-story home with gourmet kitchen & sp&endJd master suite. Terrific VU of sea & surf from this 2 bed. tam.rm. home pNs 2 bed. rental unit. You could make this a slnqle family home. $975,000. ON WATER-VIEW SUP Start buildin9 this rernod91 tomorrow! All plans and jMrmits approved by the city. Owner will assist with fincmtclng. Fabul ou s Newport location with tremendous view of McM lay. Boat 5'1p for lar«Je yacht. Fee land. Has exlsffn<J 2·story home but plans and permits are included in sales price. Best priced on Bayfront. $995,000. 63I·1400. WATERFRONT HOMES,tNC RlAL ESfAlF "•i.,,., Hvot•I• Ptt•rw"., M .. 11,,1..,,, 1 ''' 14Jt> w t•M~I It ... , ~r .. (1111• li._,,nh 631 -1400 u·, M,uu•· A"• 0...11 .. ,.. t.l.11od 673-6900 CE BIDBBE ELlllfS CD. OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE OUTST AMDING IA YFROHT HOMIE Love I y Custom· Built Home On Promontor y Hay Living Room. Form al Dining Rom. Den1Ltbra ry. Spaciou s Ma ste r B e droo m Overlooking Bay Has Fireplace & Luxurious ly .\ppomted Bath. Three Other Bedrooms & Maid"s Room & Bath. Pier & Slip For Large Yacht. $1.850,000. EXPANDED "E" rt.AM Lovely Turf Courtyard Entrance. End Unit Three Bedrooms Plus Large Family Room. Eating Area In Kitchen Maste r Suite With Extra Closets. Three Patios For Indoor·Outdoor Living. Storage Galore. Great Financing. Large Assum able Loa n. New Price, $249.500. A 'Joy Of Newpor t " Listing BLUFFS Very Desira ble Th(ee Bedroom, Two Bath. Tastefully Decorated. A Highly Up graded Airy End Unit With Sun Deck On A Cul·de-Sac. Owner Will Carry Large Second Trust Deed . Call To See & Submit Al l Offers. 759 9100. ® ·--, ...•• , ..... 759-9100 # 2 C otpoHt• rtfto MewporlC......- •..••..•....• .__. ........ ·········•··•··•••···•• WHAT MOH COULD YOU ASIC FORi Beautiful Oak fl oors. over 30 trees, u pool and :;pa. 2 fireplaces. 4 bedrooms. 1 21".l baths, family room, move-in condition. good financing. What mor e could you ask for? Price'! Only $375.000. U,_.l()U~ 11 M~' REALTORS. 675·6000 2443 bun Coul Hlghwily. <.mono del M ... WE HNL 47 Of THE BCST AGENTS IN T< ~N W ESLEY N . TAYLOR CO. H.EA L TO RS si uc c 1H46 A VERY SPECIAL. HOME with features that an.' hartl to f111tl l o d a y . L a r g e . o v l' r s i t e d I o l . lmmac·ulate landseaping front & rear, cozy works ho p off ~ ear garage, wood-burning f1 r~plart• & a '""''m, friendly fel'ling throughout . ee Lhts 2 bedroom & den home Now $183.000 Call for appoinlmt>nl. WESLEY H. TAYLOR CO .• REALTORS 2 I I I San Jooquin Hill1 Rood NEWPORT C ENTER, H.B. 644-491 0 "WESTCLIFF" $129,500! $6500 total ca::.h nl't•ded to clost: esl'row Ll'asl t!Xpen:.1ve condo 1n Newport Beach Private atlull l'ommumty ('all fur mor e details 546-2313 THE REAL ESTATERS MESA VERltE UNREAL Hundreds of flower:. everywhc rt· and ... u11 filled rooms make lhrs :J BR home a must tu 'iel' A real valU1• ,1l $141 'IOO Cull now foroletatb Cl) SEA COVE PROPERTIE S 714-6 3 1-6990 GREAT IN\'ESl''.\1E.:". I 3 B H 1 B;1, S72.!IOO Alt sum a bit• f 111,111• 111~ 4' !>l!ller v. al<,u t.111\ paper Call IOI ll•rrns i52 6-199 Plan Ill Realty BEACHFRONT LANDMARK! NEWPOR Owner Is offerln9 o SAM-what is it?? A "shared appreciation morlCJOC)e." Call Aultin Dayne or Jac kie White for ct.tails A new way to own this ucellent beachfront home with ov«" 6000 1q.ft. lnctudin<J 2 lar«Je 3 bed. homn, plm a 2 ~. rental + C)"Ht suite. Built with quolity & d~co r ate d beautifully . 631-1400. PENINSULA POINT COTIAGE On tM CJreeft with the privacy of a pane. , yet walk to Bay or Beach. 3 bed. 2 baths . for the builder or decorator. Best priced for quick sale. $295,000. 631-1 400. NEW HARBOR RIDGE-STATELY : 180° VU of Bay. Ocean & nlqht llghts. Jl Magnificent quolity & clfloll throucJhaut this 5700 1q. ft. residence. Still time to select your own decor for this formol, home with 4 bed, library, format dinln9 rm., immense fam. rm. and 9amorous' master suite with fireplace, wndec;k 1auna & spa. lmpressin and cUttom for tt. particular homeowner, in the best, Oradition of this Lo-.11 XIV Manor hous•.) Sl.995,000. 63 I·1400. WATERFRONT HOMES, INC REl\l l Sl A. TT Sd~" HtnlAh1 ftrupHt\I M.m-4 ..-t "' /4311 W Coast Hv..11 Nqwpo11 Be6<i1. 631-1400 ~.~ •••.....•. ~....,.. '" •••••••••••••••••••••• •muc• ·= OC ONT Oolce "'°"*' '9••• 1 bdrm. I bath up, J Bclrm. 2 t>.lh down. Can con vert lo~ ler1er home ~a WfL HELP-... J .. 8 at in ...... ..... ..,,,. .~ •• 1 ---- E·Z DUPLEX . CONYllSIOM Collll Mua R ·U Remodeled" lldtm 2 t» home with flreplac~1 copfHfr ~lumlrin1. Cou1G be converted lO duplox. on1r 1112,0001 cau to '"· &44-1111 t 11.a UNIV.PAO • bedroom. lilt bath w /tr pie t_"" bakony oft J bedroom• $140.000 Bcitt but dr'I the market but nff!ds a lkU. paint. 71 l·Jlt I D POI 11 Than ~* frlng over $50,000 per year! Find out how Join Wl 1&t 7PM Thursday, May 14 al The Real E1talan1, 28M 1-:. CoHl Hlahway, Corona ::J.s.·..., lo. Julia, ,fJ:kff&~ -...---. .. . 0 $ 0 s a 0 5 $ 0 0 55 (!BOS 5 JJQSJ!OOC!i Ora MMDA-. Wide channel vle~rom •Pff'Uo&&Jar architectural ~ bdrm, I 1*h pool home. S Ip or 2 1arae 001t1. ••nu·~ Sl,495, • By VlllM~t. LIDO llUHOUll PAYllEHTllT50/mo Featurtd 911 ~ tbtf11o~y LoftltTHbr'Stmct.tu.. Spacious 4 Bn home on corner lot ~/mOllntain \tlew. Hu&e bonu1 «111 JV~ t bar, brlclc patio for entertalnln1,; tradJtlonaf apa'c!'idu«;tUllom 3 bd~. 3 .it1.D. wit't'' lit •1 c am Hli bath home, newly decorated. Priced to Monu Vl•ta . c M Dr .. a BR. den, a aa. a 1-W maintenance yard . Quic~ ec>Hta1lon POHible. $299,500 Jo)',.. ~J'*Od 6'2·~ (fftl). sell qul<lkJ)' at St~. MUAt see. ~=·,.;, ~,.J~Af.9~!'1 NewlrremOde d 'bdrm. 2 bath PNJ ·" ......... awnot I Tw .,.., woo...,.. n~-1 l1e recreation. r<>0m & ~ paUoe. Be.efll' C':~u~ t~tho~lt f7J.i7t1 o d -·-celllng1. Great !or entertalbh\f. wJth It, 3 Bdrm•. iri c_....._ "' tb uti taQ lna 38R t'()Jldo near the park '420,000. Best prt~e for the money. tlmllr,. uvtn1 room•,11 •••111111·.··.··"···.·.".·.··.·.···"'•"'•' .tnd pool. Premium lot baa privao~. a · ·~ • .,.,,,. i1•oted OO •one o f ~· palio Vt4toan4 sweet fronlag41 rlNINSU• .& POl ... t ......... 0.... WMttUff'• lart•l lot• 0.... -~· ... on a Oul·de·HCt Ji,, the lowest priced ll!'r" "} ~ "1 for mnlnaum privacy. 3BR8 In W1v.tb-',.. • Panoramic )>ay oi ocean view at t.1r~• ... wnable flrtt, u•».: ~ .-"'ae .• 107,500. Dun w~dtCe, from prime lar1e lot, 4 bdrm, OW balaou.Callutfor ,~ ' Johnson 551·8700 (H92) 3 buth cu11tom bosne. 3700 iq, lt. deta I•. Proudly ortered Ju•t t:ume for ium-b'riM featuring marine room, entry, living at:~·..._.. merl Th.II cbarmlna , C&mpuaV&ll4')'C.ot.er WOOdbf1tWtVU1U•Cen \er room , dlnlng room, built·lfl• •tJ.., ::t7w't00 Uy ~::,"\.':n~ri· ~·~t: 7 &a.1414 Ml 8'700 Sl.385,000. b k I h d ar. 1 y 1 t1 an ~-......_ .... __ 101 .. BIL L GRUNDY. REALTOR ~ • , I I J I • • 1~. '' I', ' '' ~1 n.w,,;,,.1 REALTORS 471-Hll CHARMIHG CDM DUPLIX. Walk to bffche1. Jcfto9'1 md....,. frOM tM1 I• .............. 3 •• _. ... ,,, 9INI 2 .. ,.....,.,.It, COLI OF MEWPORT RIAL TORS 25 IS I. Co .. t Hwy .• CoroM .. Mw 675-5511 1taloed aJw wlndo•• --"' H .. H ASSUMAl&.I overlooklnt b••ullful ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4Hr home w /aJ>ll, •Int R 1olar heat.ed ~ and OCIAM & CrTY YU cond. llee,000 462.-..0. 1pa. Aod. for t.be avid 1 yr MW. Lart• a 1ty, • .,........ pboto1rapher, a t'om· trflc . DC>.OOOdowo. owe IHllV. pa• H......,_Yae.,H... ll'&hl1 4-1nble Iara• corner Jot. Newly de cor1ted family home on fee land Too many •merutles to mention. • Br PaJermo. "'49,000. Ownr/A~~ ASSUMIVA p&e~ •m room with LI It 12 ... ~ C1ll Biii ... ... cuMor1l ~abliMlta 1lnk, ait. Ml·IN7 • l,,ra • Hdnn 2~ U• home H(MU'alt. •'t'•&er ~r. - ---- -lo prut11lou1 Univ U1hl ... i.cuoc:lvtaliiat· SHAU CONDO Park, •t.ePI from pool " ed. Beautllw waJlparn a bdrm, 2 bath, pool, 1reenbelt. A11umable and &evelon lhruou A 11ear So eo .. t J>laa• flnanclna.1 Call for de· unl•ue tll~n with 1115,000 · Wiii contldt~ tall• cedar 1kyllaht 11Dd r•· &eHe option to purrh .. e cuHd Ut1fitln1. Thl1 Broker, S.4-0llM cu1t.om laed hornt 1, • ---. mu.t to "°''Offered 11t Nice lbr Home by Own•r. 1199.900. Yor an 1p&>Wst· AHume S70K at 9\1i% Ill mentto•.caUf40..Ji51 T .D. Price SJGS.OUO. Call 8'4e·I082 e-f(/,r~1 Ii l<t r.1 r v 111.J /IHllJ . '.. HERITAGE Rl/\UURS With ao.ooo down, you can 111ume thl1 103 loan of 18t.SOO•nd owner will carry the balance. LOCATIOM- 1911,500 la full price tor NOW I. LOCATION Jhla a Or I~ Ba -pool homo. Don't ml.11 thla _ _. _______ 11 th• time t.o 1r1p thla J lr.1. IL lre111i1....., opportunl· ASSUMI l••n In foreclottur11 wr bee. C..te. ly, 6M-26;60 ~ notd 1n offer 3 Bdrm + H I & h in .. x r I u 11 v e AMAMC-iad-on. 1118,000 Turtlerock, 3 a;M1llo view Terrific loc:atlon , of mountain It city mlnutet to 1hoppln1. • RED CAR~ lil(hl1. Entry toy"ropelll 1choola and ~c~atlon ....-vi to upper level dlntn1 Over 220Chq.ft..Sepat1te 754-1202 room / llvln& room / Th11 5000 Sq. Ft : Home 1it.1 on Linda Isle. A private auarded Community in the heart of Newpart Beach. Boat slips for (3) 55'·70' Yachte. For Sale or Trade, · ' . We are developen so submit land or other Real Estate to owner Jim Thompson. 17141121-1210 IJIJI lta.IUJ 11001 J12-J710 CHARMH IH OU> ILUffSI Highly .up&ruded Franciscun model situated io lbe moiJt de8lrttble section ot Old BlutrtJ on ll beuutiful expanse green belt. Home fe1tluret1 imported parcelaJn fixtures throu.ihout Mex· tcan tile in entry and kitchen, 0quullty plus carpcllnu. custom shutters, de· signer wall covering11 & drapes, mar· blc floor in buthroorn;, ahm Included waitht!r & dryer and refrigerator. The ultimate ('Ondomlnium style livanf(. $239,500. Young Park 551·8700 1111 l > 1-t.u Chmpu11 val!~ Cori!Jlr WOl'ltllJPltlgll Vllli14t1t 1:.mw11 '782-1414 15el 8'700 --------• llave you rtud loday'a VACANT... I Cluu1fwrl Ad117 It not, mutu bdrm, lovely flreplace, larae kitchen / Po o I En r Io 1 e ~I~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ nook, f1mHy room/ bar, coortyatd Atllna aeparate bedroom wing and, lonely. 2 bdrm r on· you 're miulns t~ bti.c. do cute •• can ~ need a ba r1a ana ant.own' c om pany . Supf'r WHtcUU loeat.wn Vtr~ conven ient Poor, fireplace, bar, nicely de t-orated S129.~ move rlttht in ? I\ lllvi~mn or llurl>or lnvf'l!tm1•nl ('o PATHM'SDAY OBJGHT Surprlu Did &i •how him thl13 br, 2 b11 , fi.mly hom• "~cny utt'rlor •Pl You muM ... ~ Ow huie m1tr at bHI stone frplc 54~ IM91 • REALEb'TATY, R t\L,.S1'ATE llllS 11LllOINGYOU7 Save •om• of that pr•· clou1 monsy •quit pay 6 rent! nut lhill aom • return on your how· Hpenlel. Owner wlll ht p tlnaMe! Htrl up &i down unit. Vu•anL Owner moti vated ! ~9491 ~Wll•llle REAL F.STATP. ---U1•VHTtH 'YOUIMVlll ntn ., .. lO apend your lelaure lime! Three well planrwd loU In thla ff• aide community In B•J• Rudy for immediate Clfljoyment Call for com pJ.ete d.tNla! Owner wUI ,._Ip fln•ncel ~IM9l ~ .... 181 REAf..l!STATE ~ 't4'511UHO 0 I I ' "J .. ~ Waln on front and 1ldee t I tf , ... ot waa.rfront. fhrff! bedrwom1. Two IMtllt. 'Nio "' 1ar,,_. You own the land. Pl• and float will •r.· fllmodate °'"" bo1 • l ee Y tr1htl1 lwu . ..... Jll·7JN tU. ...... ~1oC.OHM'1 CJutln.d.. I& ..... Hf '>IDINl1A1 Fll AI f ',IAlll '>I UVll.f .. LIDO ISU Completely remodeled cuittom homt! with the best in quality & tm~te. Used brick. French doors. Wood & Pt!~ hardwood Ooors. 3 BR. include a large masttr openine onto a prlv?te bAJcoQy,. ~.ooo. IN NEWPORT.CENTER 644-9060 RCTaylorCo 640-9900 oovl• sHOas SNCTAC"9LAI VllWS Thii; home must be seen to believe. On <>Xtra large lot wlfft~ courtyard entry pool.,A bedrooms 4 bath custom home. All1ume loan . $950,000. 1142,500. Owner• •n•· 2 car garaae + bonu1 ---- 101.11, 1ubm.lt an off era EASJSIOE room Community pool / lnlN I 044 H,. •101 v•w HOMI 540-JUl 1pa/tennia , ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. ~" .. · Monteao 4b1 . 2ba, Fet• . , . HERITAGE THlGOODLtH ASSUMAILI ltt Land , loan ouum 10% ASSUMABLE Near be a<'h / ahop1 / at7'ft'~ 3br,3bMhome. 675 2139 .AalOILAJCI WOOOlllOGI Perfe<'llon und privacy l.n ttu1 a Bdnn 0111.1 den 'f mmlntaln Uq hide•· .,,y'', with aecurlty Owner wUI help flna.n cc achoo la Under market C n try k I 1 I 1 e yd ----;;.;,..;......;;;=--~ 38drm2bath,1pa Only at 12fN .OOO Lowdown" C reatlvt' ;In Only Townhou.e rondoonblutf $12'1 ,too.M&-tUll term• Paul Jlid1ey 1143 500 Oy ownH an Newport De1&rh with kt l\l TOH'> . IASTSIDI ~ A&ent 832·3910 559 5493 · euy waUc to ocun " be"ch Ownt:nh1p of 3 bdrm, 21,1 ba unit Ind l1e pool,J11<·u:r.zi, 111un1U1 " ll&hle t.ennl1 court• $189,000 with $50,000 down. A•k for Suun 640 3796 or Brure 760 6060 day11 , Ml·:!~ l!Vt!ll., wlu'lch. ' Ill•. pool ind lennl1 1110.(IOO. 2 8d 2 81, S1JT 000. Aatc for Robert Milliken. -~~t~t'oo~!~~!r W~~=f Ing 4 Bdnn 2'Ar Ba in Bodeaa Pla11, 28r, 2Ra, lrvlne'a co'tooy Club. family rmj t'Omer lot, W11lkto comm pool ten· auumab e at 13"!. nl1 court•. schOOi., ~hop ~IM!,900. Ml· 1183 719-1616 ---RVM~ II~ '\I •. I H ' ow.a WIU OWNH wfl CAUY C Cu1tom bit l2 yn old 5 AUY ArTD --------•I Br 4ba with larae poten rclng. Priced to Hll Call ~BIZ 8 leech I 041 or det•llli. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Adult occupied home 6 fl.UjlASTSIDI tl•l In Jaw •r· 32001q tt futu,tn1. low main· llO ... SlH.OOO + t25 1 / l(traae. ~a~c=~»l!:;.;e·~:;:: With IUMOO In uauma S'l75.ooo e l1 f.r--:1.1t HI id I Y ',',1 .''Hl'J bdrm Ck>M to private ble lo•• ranatna from Ow./~ 541-0JIO hmUy •l•b. F'or •nap-q~. fn,oo TWO·STORY CONDO 90lntml1nt &o 1ee. call 1'u•lly S · ~O 11.51 e 1t.ory pac:jou1 3 Bedroom · unltt w B'• "'''•M•• Loob Jutt Uke •model' Turtlerodl Yi.ta '. HERITAGE NEAL TOR~ I LIY&CONOO Owov ~ to 1cll th11 2 lJdrm 2 bath homt• New ca rpcl1, paint , l•rae mt.lo ~tu 17th Street/ W~h:UH ahop11 11111.500 642-5200 A PETE BARRETI REALTY Pl.US off·a&n« parklna. Atrium cio.e to South I 5010 DOW ... On to'JC300' Jot. Cout Plaza Low 1n '' " 644-7:11 I lerHl loan available 3 BR 2..., 811 lwnhme, 1134,aO, TARBELL, preall11lo1.11 area Remu REALTORS s.o-1720 Really, Fred <;1b1on ---71'4·"9·1MOO D .. PoW 1026 -. ••••••• •••••••••••••••• Ora nae Tree Condo, Plan • 2100 1q ft uf &uded 5, 2 br 1 b• St03,AOO Call MISA YMDI lhruoul, up to Qdr, 2Ya "2·I~fter7pm ~ 8d 3 Ba mdl~Otlditlon Ba. Fully l•nd1c11ped ,__.._ __ L._-L ...,.,. ooo ·~11 f Robe w /POOi • flrepll, lt'P ~.....,. •"' ......,il 'VI or r1 1lde yud w /pt.)' aru 0.,.. "- Mii ken. 831-12118 1103.000 aaaumable loan 2 1tory 4 bdnn, dining at. low Int. tw,000 p p rm, added den w /wet RVM~ I•~ \I I t •I•-., ·,o~ BY OWNER Prinonly.w.t-21M7 bar, 1lep1 lo p»rk, --comm pool Ii tennil. /\a lftt-.ttM•hecll 1040 1um.bl e loan. Owner ••••••••••••••••••••••• wtll at1l1t In flnanolnf. •ASIUMlt•/itye 121(),000. f'ce . Asi , _ _.__.. ---_ Xlnt l"lnuqlflll c.,.... .. ..._. I 022 '310.000 4 8dl% ba flt,000 VA M0·55GO. 1.tl lll01000 w /10% dn. ~'!J.nc:onl)'. BlcrTSl.-, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 87S•0071, {7 lA)~l2J ,,_., ...... _ ...... ~ Jasmine Creek decorator 2 Bd 1 8~, 179,~00. ~•1 plan I on areen· An•h•!nL ~•k tqr t>ettimmac aouoo R 0 b er t 11 ll ll-en . ~''"' -~~ '31-l3M. -r UOO•,,, IJI/~. ffMAMC_.. CDMCOTTAGI PUISIMCOMI or 3 Br 2 be home with l1o l 1ted mailer bdrm /parent retreat or ln·law quartel'I + 2 br cottaie Art'! way you ct.Kribe It • It'• charm· Ina, up •• dale and btewUfuJly detor1ted. Priced at Sll0.000 with very lptct.I flnancln1. CAUPOl-ALS '44-7211 /Jn ·~·r11 Lnll I ( f. /\'1'il J( 1/\1 1 •, RVM~ f' ~ \j • •If' THISHAICIS Weathered l't'd a r ahake1, that 11 Cwitom dcalaned 3 bdrm, f1m rm, 2 batha Y.xtcmalve uae of wood glau 4t ceraml~ UJt Jk!11m <'ell Ina. frplc ttllS.800. Mlaaion Realty 1714)494 0731 Mallt lchfToww View I Bdrm rondo, up &rad ed 15•: do wn , owner wrll 1·ury I-' IP 1215 ,000 furn111 htl1 497 130$ t.o,uoa r harrn.-r St 10.000 2 blu to bt!ac.:h I Hr 497 4laJ Age~- 0CLU4 VllW DUPUXFtXMI Brana your pal11tbrU11h " broom to1avti tason thla dirty d•w"r J l'rl~ L11· 11una Ueact\ duJ•lc:x w /attached ii•r•"t" Sub· mil offer ! 759 1.501 or 752 7373. ~ .... 11.11 REAl,. f"-'iTATF. --:,.......,~ ~ Ll1••... IOIO ....................... w ... ,..,.. lhlple. Wttlt 1oat Dock Could be Newport'• lowest priced w1terfroot home wllh ln('Ome unit loo ' Cati for lnlo Broker, 983-8lll2 DUPLU °"WA Tll Dodi for 10' lo.t 3 at 2 Bdrm11. 2 frpk1. dectt. and patio C /1.1 H.wport Clltr 640.017 PIMTHOUSI -.. UHl9U1 COHDO with boat dock, pool, 1ecurlty + 180 dea or ean..:.. CatallnM, bay view r·H IMnd M50.000 Smith Meyer, Hkr. '40.1317 541-7113 OCEAN!IAY VIEW z Bdrm , 2 ba condo. Ma1nlflcenl ocean and bay vlewm Pool , jac u:ui, clubho u se. 1275.000. Own /A at $48-1638 OCIANRONT $410,000 T~I• flrtt lime offerina 11 an etlate Hie One ol Newport Beach'• flneal vlewa. 3 bdrm• home with aunt apt or 2 unlt11 Realonom1ca 875 8700 OWNER OESl'EHATI!: I Br • 2 Br rondOll, low down + terms. John 5'().4646 BY OWNER Lease~· llatbor Rid e condo 15&0,000 wit 150,000 cuh. 159·880.1 VERSAILLES 2BR, wlk to bch, low dwn, no quallfylna . l140K . 730·2270 dy1. 642·2682 1¥ I llGCANYOH 4 '8drm1 Iba, larae pool. Intimate J1cuul off matter aulu and lot.I of bulltln1 lnchMSctd lo lhl• family home neJUed on •quiet cul·dc·Hc. P!•cal flnanclni. Owner 11 motlu\ed. '791,000. Call M0.71Uor1'7~Z3ll Aft. HAllOllJOGI I Br. I Ba. Aalume le .. • optlon. HOK down . A1em lteve 75:-1920. Secluded I Br, 1p•, dtck1, beamt, f1m. Xlnt co nd . owe 12%. '190,000. 04&-lde. ,.,. .......... , c .... ...,.., WaUrfroal~. Multi· MllUon t View: 40' 1Up 1vall. '400,000 u111ma· b.. all now I f'7J.OMI. To Place your ''f'Ht Retult'' '~ .. Directory ad ..•. Call Now 641-1671 ...HI • ' llliUIA lfACH /IDUTH CDllT Diiiy Piiat TUESDAY, May 12, 1991 FEATURES TELEVISION '. M OVIES 82 86 87 The posh~iennese Ball was a special evening of dining , dancing and greeting friends. . . B 2 . ~ I 1 . ' D I . a ~ Pendleton School battle lines drawn · The Orange County Committee on School District Organization will meet Wednesday lo consider a proposed transrer of school dis· tricl territory on the Camp Pendleton Marine base Meanwhill', the San Diego County Board nr Education says it won't <:IHtnf.!l' boundaries so thiltlrC'n of Marines at Camp Pcndlt'ton rnn go lo San ClementE' II 1 g h S<.·hool Although the \Olt•, lakt:n Mon day, was un<1nlmOU!>, the issue even 1f the Orangt.' County board turns ildown Wcdnt-sday is ex· pcctcd lo go to the slutt• Hoard or Education. Nuclear disaster tests set Public agencies in two coun· tic!> will be testing pre paredness for a possible nu«ll'ar power plant disas ter, but chances are the public won 't know about it. Participating 1n the day long exercise Wedni:sd.iy will be of· flc1als from San Clemente, San Juan Cap1i-.tr;1n1> and Camp Pendleton, al> well as state agen· c1es and the c·ity of Oceanside. Southern Cal ifornia Edison Co . which operates the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Sta· lion three miles south or San Clemente, will announce an "ac c1dent " at the plant that threatens to sl•nd radioactivity over heavil~ populc11cd C'oastal areas But a spokpsmari for federal monitors of the tc·st suid there WIJI bl' 00 t'\ ;J('UatlOO Of thl' publu: I n stead l h l' e' l' r c 1 s e " 111 s trJ\'l' for coordinat1on. ac curacy and rrc.'d1ble informa· 11on " ·There "as t'haos, lwdlam. m1sinformat11m anti c•onfliet :ll Three Mill' b land. · S<11d Verne Paule, a s pokesman for the federal Emeq(l'nl·y Manage· menl ag1mc~ A test of San Clemente and the c·o unl\·s com mun1 cal1ons svi-.lem~ was tonducted earli1•r this year in COOfll'ration with the power station owners A public hearing tn review ho~ well Wcdrwsda ~ s test goe., 1s scheduled m·xt Monda) al San Clementt· Cit~ 1 lall Marine l1e ld in rape try Laguna Beach 1n' ci.t1gators have arrestl·d an El T or o Marine on suspicion of attempt· ing 10 rape a 1...iguna Hills woman last month Kt•vin David Noffsinger. 22. an Ohioan stationed at llw :ur base, was arrested Monda y and hooked into Orange• County .Jail with bail st•l al SJll.11110 Police !>ai d hl· dragg£'d hu; \'ll' l1m into an alley behind the 1300 block of South C1>ast ll1ghway before she est':.iµcd his advances CUP s tudies biker d eath California lligtlwu) Patrol in vestigalors art• µrobing the death of a Lt1 1i\Una N i~uel motorcyclist, who was hit and dragged b~ an auto after falling from his cycle in Capistrano Beach Daniel Ross 11cntsch , 31. of Laguna Niguel. was pronounced dead al the scene of the late Sun· day crash on Const lllghway Parenll! of high school age stu· dents li ving on the base. located within the Fallbrook Union H.ieh School District in San Diego Coun· ty, want their ch1ldren to attend San Clemente High School. The parents want to Join the Capistrano Unified School Dis- trkt in Orange County so their children can <.1vo1d ~111 hour·long bui-. ride to school 111 1-'allbrook San Clemente I hgh School 1s a 10 m1nutetr1p Transfer petitions ha"e been filed by the p:.irents with the state Board of Edut'at1on. the Orange C'ounty ~khool Ruard and the San D1qio County Sehool Board to h11ve ·12 acres uf the base removed from the Fallbrook School Dis· trlct If thf transfer is approved by • the Orange and San Diego county committees on s<'hool district organization, the Capistrano dis· trict will gain about 120 high school students. f<'allbrook receives about Sl.700 a year from the state Cor each of the students, as we ll as federal funds paid to school districts in whic h there are large numbers of military dependents Fallbrook administrators don't wanl to lose that money. The Marine parents say that forcing the children to attend classes at Fallhrook is a hardship KITCHEN FIRE Orange County fire inspector Mike Chenard inves tigates gutted kitc he n at 29141 Pompano in Laguna Niguel following Monday blaze. County firemen v.c re passing by when they spotted s moke. Damage was estimated <.it $25,000 damage to duplex occupied by Frank and Sharon Sulli\'an, w ho were not at home. Cause of blaz:e was believed to bl' faulty wiring in re frigerator. Teacher firing before board • issue I Laguna Beach school trustees will meet tonight lo rt'view a de· r1:.ion b} an administrative law 1udgc upholding th<' school dis· I rtl'I °' mtl'nt1on or firing eight tt•achcrs next yi>ar Tht•y will he ai-.kNI to adopt t hi' 1uclgc·s decision .incl lay off Laguna youth rops in matli A1lam Wantz. son of Mr and Mri-. James Wanll of Laguna Beac h, lied for fi rst place in a ret·l'nt state~1dl' mathematic~ contl'Sl spon sor<•d b y the California Mathematics League of Pasadena. Wantz, a sevc•nth grade slu <lent :lt Thurston Intermediate School In Laguna Beach. took rirs t plaC't' In lht• Orungc County competition. then w<'nt on to lie for the highes t sc·or<' in the state runoff Marilyn Wahlquis t, Wantz's m11th teacher. said the seventh grader is the firs t ~tudenl at lhe school to reach th(' st ale level ron petition ., tea c her~ Barbara II arding, Richard Kelley, Dee Namba , Pe nny Siavelis. Roberta Tench. Ursula Wallace, Maria Barnett and Nancy Morgan Th<' teachers, with the excep- tion or Morgan. reques ted a hearing last month before state administrative la~ Judge Robert Neher in an effort to save their JObS The leachcrs received layoff notices in March. Dis trict of fi<"ials said the firings were necessary to help make up an anticipated $500,000 deficit in n£1xt year's budget Attorneys for the teachers argued unsuccessfully that there were cuts that could be made, other than firing the ini;tructors, lo balant'e next year's budget. ln testimony before the Jaw Judge, district off1c1als said teacher salaries and fringe benefits would amount to about a $27 .000 savings per teacher. The board will meet in ad- ministration offices al 550 Blu· montSl. at 7: 30 pm on both the youngsler1:1 und their fomilie:i. Parents say their childr~n are unable to parlLC jPate in after sc hool activ1t1es because transportation isn't available. In add1t1on. students have to wake up a n hour earlier to meet the bus tha l lakes them to school. The parents maintain that money should not bl• the primary consideration in deciding the transfer request. They say the welfare of the students 1s the is· sue Under a tuition agreement between the Capistrano and F;Jllbrook district!>. the pupils prC'viously had been allowed to at tend San Clemente High School However. in September, FalJbrook administrators de· cided the district could no longer arCord to aJlow the students to at· tend i;c hool oul!.1de the district. The Camp Pendleton parents r eacted by keeping their children home from school, and took Fallbrook to court. But they lost the tourt fight lo continue the tui- tion agreement and the children were ordered lo report for classes al Full brook lJmon J hghSchool Followmg the court decision by a San Du~go Municipal Court Judge, several parents sent their c h1ldr<.'n lo live with grandparents and friends outside the d1i-.trtt'I rather than give in lo the court 's directive In February, the Capistrano Unified School District board came out in favor of the transfer. sayrng the needs oflhe youngsters s hould be considered before state funding. Parents s ay if the finding by the Orange and San Diego county school district organization com- mittees is not in their favor, they will appeal the decision to the s tate Board of Education The Orange County Committee on School District Organization will meet at 7 ·30 p.m Wednesday at 1300 South Grand, Building B. in Santa Ana to discusi-. the mat- ter Capo homeowners sued 13 face fines for building seawall without permits Citing what 1l called a "fla· grant disregard .. fur the law, the California Coastal Commission s ued 13 h o meowners i n Capistrano Beach 1 Monday for t'onstructing a s eawall without obtaining proper permits The homegwners. who could bl' fined as much a s Sl5,000 each, rt>s1de along the 35000 block of Beach Road According to the lawsuit, con struction of the i.ea wall has "m aterially c hanged .. the C'haraclcr and stability of the beach area. Its con..,tiul'l1on, legal papers assert. was suggested at a May 1980 meeting of the Capistrano Bt•ach Pro1>erly Owners As· :soc1at1on M ak1ng the propo:sal, the suit aUcgcs, were James and Bever Iv Trindle. who said rock could be trucked to the beach to create a sca~all in front of the homes on Beach Road Trindle. 1L 1s alleged, told prop- erly owners it could lake up Lo l wn years to obtain nl'cessary permits Trindle and his wife arc defendants in the suit. Tht> work on the sea wall took place mainly in ea rl~ June 1980 and 1n September, when bulldozers pushed up sand at lo~ tide over tons of rock shipped in I n a d<\ition l o fines, the laws uit sl eks a court order re quiring removal of the wall Named in the suit, in addi· lion to the Trmdles. are Richard Ta y lor. William Ren wick , George Gregory, Byron Short, Francis Tomlinson, Victoria Reynolds, Edward Blunchard, Mrs W'illiam Walters Jr . Patri cia Fleming , Robert Townley and Rick Nickels Foothill airport weighed Santiago Canyon latest county site being studied Santiago Can yon 1n the Orange tounty foothills 1s the latest site being considered by airport plan· ners for a regional airport Or:.inge County Supervisor Bruce Nestande said Monday the caoyon site also sbouJd be re- viewed by the county's blue rib· bon committee appointed reeenl· ly to examine possible airport sites ''This '>Ile has the potential of ser vicing 20 million passengers per year. or 83 percent of Orange Col.lnty's 1995 air travf.'I demand, and could even replact-all com- mercial Jet acll\ 1ty al John Wa) ne Airport.·· s aid Nestande. Santiago Canyon 1s on a plateau about 2 5 miles e a s t of the Anuhc1m Hilb and two miles north of Irvine L<ike The land is ownt'd primarily by the lrvine ('ompany Mark Pa1sano. executive direc· tor of the Southern California AS· soc1at1on of Governments, said today that its planners began :.ca r t' hang for ne w sites after a pro posal to locate a regional airport off th£' Long Beach Capo couple hurt, robbed An elderly Capistrano Beach couple were assaulted and robbed in their home Monday evening by two assailants who took S25 in cash The victims. Orval Cox, 80, and his wife. Mae. 74, were taken lo San Clemente General Hospital for treatment of injuries Sheriff's Ll Wyatt II art said the two sus pects a IT)an and a woman knocked at the Coxes' front door purportedly to ask directions However, they forced their way into the house and hit Cox on the head wilh a handgun, knocking him untonscious When Mrs. Cox attempted to telephone police, her arm was lwis ted ~horehne met negall\•e reaction las t October He said planners arc looking at Santiago Canyon and Stuart Flats a t the Marine Corps ' Camp Pendleton Also under review are ways of improving ground access to airports in Ontario a nd Palmdale. he said . Nest.Bode. who is the Orange County government's represen- tative on the SCAG executive committee, s aid the Santiago Canyon s ite 1s attractive bct'ause it is close lo the county population base b ut s till far enough away not to cause the kind of noise problems that plague neighbors to John Wayne Airport Planes would approach the <1 1rport from the east, over Prado Oum. and would take off to the southwest, he said. The nearest homes under the flight path are seven miles away in Irvine, and jets would be 4,000 feel high by then By comparison, Jets taking off over Santa Ana lleighls are about 500 fcetoffthe ground. he added SCJ\G Director Pa1sano said no homes would receive no1i.e above the s late's maximum allowable level or 65 CNEL (Community noise equivalent lcvel 1 lie said prel1m1nary reporb indicate there would be ··very few" with more than SSCN EL ratings "Of all the airoorts in lhe re gion . it CSantiago Canyon > prob· ably would have the least 1m pact." Paisanosaid. After passing above Irvine, the jets would fly oyer undeveloped parts of the Irvine Coast, h£' adde d 1 rvinc Company spokesman Jerry Collins said today "ll would be premature for us to respond m any way but neutrally "We can say. however, that 1l is a provocative consideration." Collins said the rugged San- tiago Canyon land is not planned ror development in this decade. The Santiago canyon is not new to SCAG planners, however lt has been considered since at least 1973 as a possible site for a general aviation airport for private or non-commercial flights. Laguna's elderly offered discounts The Senior Citizens Club of Laguna Beach and the Chamber of Commerce have compiled a Ust of 82 city merchants who offer dis- C'Ounts to senior citizens. Included are restaurants. pnarmacies, bookstores. dentists and repair shops. The list and senior discount cards are available at the Senior Citizens Club at 515 Forest Ave In Laguna Beach. Filmwriters unrkshop set 3 30 p.m Thursday atthe school. Two experts in the field of child abuse and sexual exploitation will address the forum in the science· math bwlding, room 113. The workshop fee is $10 For in· formation call 831-4700 Ttro arrested indrog bust Two persons were arres'led and an estimated $5,000 in cocaine was :;eized in a Laguna Beach hotel. police said today • Roosevelt joins push for Amtrak_ A filmwriters workshop de· signed for scriptwriters or persons who have a script concept will be offered at Saddleback College in M Issi on Vlejo this sum- ~~J two-unit class wlll meet (rom 7 p.m . to9p.m . Mondaysand Wednesd~s from May 26 lo JuJy 15. Members or the city's special investigations team arrested Carol J. Wood, 22. of Garden Grove and Savior "Sam" J . Car vana, 24, or Huntington Beach following a n a ll eged dru g transaction between the pair and an undercover officer late Mon-· day. James Roosevelt of Newport Beach joined Or1nge Q>unty'1 seemingly never-ending fight for improve\.! lrans portalion systems when he was sworn in M-o nda y to the cou n ty Transportation Commission. Roosevelt, T3, the eldest son or Fronklin and Eleanor Roosevelt. got an Immediate taste of com mission action when the five. member panel decided to lobby congresi.lonal leaders a1t1l1UJt per(2inJc ' cuts to Amtrak service o n the West Coast. 1 l'le sroup decided to 1e11d res· oJutfons to CaUlornla delegates ond ranking committee mem· bers aiiklng them to continue Amtrak servic.-e between San Diego and Los Angeles and through Orar.gt> County s hould pas!lenger train service be reduced. Amtrak officials warned last Wl'Ck thot passenger train~ would run only olonl( the heavily traveled BoS\On·Ncw York· Washington.DC .. corridor tf the Rea1an Administration's pro• Po· ed $615 million bud1et for the 1981 82 ttsc:d y ar Is passed by Congress. Thom11!I J nkins. executive director of the county com · mission, said Monday he thinks enough West Coast pressure can be applied to win some service along the Southern California route. The "San Dlegan" Is the bualeat route outside the eastern cor ridor, he said. Meeting with reporter& alter the commission mee ting, Roosevelt said he thinks hls con· grenlonal cootacts can help Orange County. Now a buslntu consultant. Roosevelt ·wu a Oemocrt•l co11gre11man for 12 years. · Like another commissioner. 'i • County Supervisor Thomas Riley. Roosevelt also is a retired brigadier general in the U.S. Marine Corps. Riley nominated Roosevelt for the com mission St!8l Roosevelt said he hopes to"lld as a liaison betw~en the com· mission and Congress, where he said he still has contact with Democrats and Republlcens tn both houses. He added that more polltitaJ preuure and pubttc atteotk>«t could alter Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr . 'It "ultra · cone~rvative" approach to tranapor lalioo financi n g ln Callfomio . To register. students must pick up a fine arts contract for special studies workshops ln the ad· Mission and records office and ta ke l<tothefirst class. Abuse of cml.d SodJJ.eback topiC A seminar on the sexual U · ploltaUon of children, spoQsored by Saddlcback Coltt&e ln Mlallon Viejo. will be held from 8 a.m . to The om cer . who waa wired for sound, was in a room at the Surf and Sand Hotel, police said. Site COtTeeted "Estate Plannin11 " a lour. week course that teaches senior clUiens bow to aetUe lbelr estates and bow to avoid probate, will meet In t.he Laruna Beach City Council ch1mbers ••127 at1:30 a.m . The wronf loca 11 lilt~ In t h e S1dd eback CoUe«\ catalog. .. r . ,., Ji • • • • •• 0 0 • • • 0 • • • q • 0 • .... Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT/TuNday, May 11, 1811 ' • ,.l • OUTH COAST, WILD COAST: Realdenta alona thll beet of all possible coastt cot a llttle preview thll past weekend of what's 1oln1 lo happen this s ummer when i n· land climes tum bot, mu11Y TIM MIRPHIJll and smoggy. We get buried with visitors, that's what. Few folks can remember when there has been s uch a rush to the beaches so early as the second weekend in n ow Uon may be Hke to luly or Auauat. It lookl Uke we've bad a s tate beach p a rk happen before we were ready for lt lo h•Pl*l· AS THE SITUATION oow s tacka up, the Oranae County Sberlftla Office will be charged with keepin1 the peace along the s horeline whlle the California Htahway Patrol tries to keep trarnc moving and parking under control. For visitor comfort, there ar e only a few scattered blufftop porta-potties along this entire coastal area. As for any road or safety improvements, you have to re m e mber. that this is a stretch of Coas t Highway un- der the jurisdiction of our .. Sure took this guy a long tame to ~t to tM beach, Zeke" May. But it happened, Seal Beach to San Cle'"'ente. One rather sudden develop- ment was evident in the heavy popularity of our new stretch of state beach park between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach. You may not have thought that state park has happened yet. AS A MATTER of fact. one state official was quoted re- cently as suggesting that nobody would be using this virgin stretch of coastline ror al least three years. I have news for him. The three years is up, whether the calendar says so or not. Apparently the word has spread among the beach lov: ers that the spots from El Morro lo Cr ystal Cove to Scotchman's Cove and points nearby are fully open for people use. And here they cam e over thi s past weekend. Every avail able shoulder a long Pacific Coast Highway bet ween Cameo Shores and Irvine Cove was used for parking. Visitors were run- ning a gauntlet or 55-mile- per-hour traffic as they at- tempted to sprint across the highway. lugging surfboards, scuba gear. picnic baskets and small kids. You s hudde r in con - templating what this situa- wonderful Callrans. So you can forget about that. State offiCials h ave con- tracted with the c ity of Laguna Beach for lifeguard service along the beachfront. Laguna lifeguard orficials are already preparing a series of new guard towers a long the s trand and other s upport equipment. YOU ARE LEFT t o wonder, howeve r , about emergency aid along this stretch of beach. s hould an accident occur o n the highway or in the surfline . The area is almost at a point of no return for getting a vic- li m to the hospital. Should an accident occur on a crowded Sunday after- noon. say, in the vicinity of Scotchman's Cove, is the am- bulance going to try racing through downtown Laguna traffic to South Coast Me dical Center in South Laguna? Or would you be better off t o turn upcoast , chance the Coast Highway Bridge at Newport Bay, to make a run for Hoag Memorial Hospital? SOMETI MES IT might look like a no-win choice. All factors considered, it seems we abruptly have a very large and popular beach park in our midst for this coming summer. and we are ill-prepared to cope with it. Viennese Ball is a real btill !tSANDIEJOY t,u--Jb:r: a.re held 1Jon1 lb• OranseCout . But Int of lh•m turn out to be ball•. Often a poeh event la de1lp1ted a ball, but after au tbeaoclalhlJll, dinner and otflclal pro1ra m, moet often the aueat.s put on their wrape and bead home. Friday ni&ht was different. THE BALL WAS a ball wtlb couples revolvtnc about tbe dance floor lo the straina of wallies and fox trot.a. The occasloo wu \he aecond an· nual Viennese Ball, 1 S75-per- p er son blac k -tie benefit sponsored by tbe Paclfic Sym· phony Association. The evening be&an with a re- ception in the lush atrium of the Marriott Hotel, Newport Beach, where guests greeted old friends and made new ones. The 1enUle atmosphere was enhanced by the s trains of a string quintet under direction of Jonathan Dysart of Santa Ana. G reellng guests at the reception was Global Van Lines head Edward Schumacher. whose wife Floss was ball chairman. Among those enjoying the re· ception were Jo Anne and Gene Mix and their guests Mr. and Mrs. Frank Tomaino. Mrs. Mix drew plenty or attention with her fairytale-type white off·the· shoulder ball gown ; the same one she wore for the recent headdress ba ll for which her entry was "The Great Waltz." Definitely a gown fit for Cinderella. ALSO ENJOYING the cocktail hour and t alking about the Newport Beach Arts Festival which qpens Saturday at Fashion Island was Jean Tandowsky and her escort Dick Dimmott. In all, approximately 400 persons attended the ball, which moved from the atrium into the hotel's Pacific Ballroom, done up with twinkling lights and elegant c rystaJ centerpieces topped with pink peonies, mauve lilacs.. and white babies breath. Ballroom decor was done by Charles Paap who always does such a beautiful Job for the annual Christmas CandJelight Concert to benefit the Orange County Music Center. Paap, who attended with his wife Carolyn, had the peonies flown in from Northern California Joining the Paaps at their table were their guests, Pamela and George Schreiber, who are get- ting together f or Mrs . Schreiber's grandparents' 70th wedding anniversary party. · Dinner, arranged by Leslie Cot- ton of Newport Beach, began with cold poached salmon and artichokes, followed by roast sirloin with Sauce Bordelaise, Potato Berny, As paragus Hollan- daise and Mushroom saute in Sherry and butter. Topping the meal was a light apple strudel with whipped cream and then, Cafe Vienna. Throughout dinner guests were entertained by the music of the Murray Korda Monseigneur Orchestera which. to the delight of a ll, played classic, danceable waltz tunes. Korda himself was unable to attend since he was playing at a party in the nation's capital hosted by Second Lady HAPPENINGS Vienne1e Ball Chairman f?lou Schumacher rtop leftJ over1ees l<Ut-minute arrangementl. With her is her husband Ed and 1ilter Carol L ee of Irvine. Among ball guest1 were (leftJ Jean Tandowsky and Dick Dimmitt and rbottom left ) Mr. and Mrs. Gene Mi.x and (bottom right ) Mr. and Mrl. James Latta. Barbara Bush. The after-dinner entertainment began with a waltz exhibition by Mr. and Mrs. Donald Olson of Corona del Mar who won the waltz contest at last year's Viennese Ba ll. Tke Olsons, who dazzled the audience with their fast turns around the floor, enjoy dancing so much they have a ballroom in their home. The waltz contest followed, judged by the Olsons and Mr. and Mrs. William Vorhees. This year's winners were Arlene Bullard and Ernie Cruz who caught the judges' eyes with their controlled presentation. Dick Crawford of K F AC radio emceed the after-dinner program which was highlighted by a vocal presentation by soprano Dar- rellyn Melilli. She used John Kander 's "Mar· ried" from "Cabaret" as an op- p o rtunity to prese nt Ed Schumacher with a bouquet of posies, suggesting he offer them to his "somebody wonderful." The Schumachers will celebrate their 32nd wedding anniversary May 16. They were joined at the ball by Mrs. Schumacher's sis- ter , Carol Lee of Irvine. Among special guests was Dr. Keith Clark, conductor of the Pacific Symphony Orchestra, who used the occasion to perform a song he wrote for Mrs. Maurice Mul ville. ball general chairman. Among those on the ball com- mi ttee wer e Mrs . James Nagamatsu of Anaheim. Mrs . Eugene Moriarty of Santa Ana : Corona del M ar . Mrs. Lock Gee Ding and Mrs. R o bert F . Montgomery, both of Newport Beach, and Mrs. Warren Kramer of Laguna Beach. Guests included James Barrett of Newport Beach. who hosted a pre-ball party at his Promontory Point home, attended by Felicia Bukaty, Mr. and Mrs. Kent Alex- ander. Or. and Mrs. Matthew J enkins, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Smith, June Elliott. Mr and Mrs. William Hood . a nd Jer ry Richards. Aquarius: Look at investments Ms. Melilli, introduced as "the flower of Orange County." of- fered a versatile performance of pop, classical and show tunes. When she sang Gounod's "Ah! Je Vieux Vivre" from "Romeo and Juliet." the audience was almost spellbound at the control in her voice. Mrs . Vernon Hunt . Mrs. Keith Clark, Mrs. Edward Nance and Dr. Jerry Samuelson, aU of Fullerton: Mrs. Robert Schulze and Mrs. Daniel Primac of Orange; Mrs. Phillip Quarre of Anaheim, Mrs. Ernest Jechart of Costa Mesa; Mrs. Donald Canedy of La Habra . The ball committee also in- cluded Mrs . Steven Balback of AMONG OTHER guests were Mr. and Mrs. Donald Canady, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Murphine. Mary Disney Jones. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Kerstner. Mr. and Mrs. J ames Nagamatsu. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Nance. Mr . and Mrs. Phillip Quarre, Mrs. Elaine Red· field, Mr. and Mrs. Homer Reed. Mr . and Mrs . No rm a n Smedegaard, Sen. and Mrs. John Schmitz. Mr. and Mrs . Charles Ringwalt, Georgia Spooner, Mr. and Mrs. Glen Stillwell, Judge and Mrs. Raymond Thompson, and Mr. and Mrs . Carl Karcher. Wednesday, May 13, 1981 " By SYDNEY OMARR ARI ES <March 21-April 19): A void sensationalism : key now is to maintain s teady pace. Focus on employment. regain- HOROSCOPE Ing sense of direction and com- ing to terms with recalcitrant relative. TAURUS <April 20-May 20): Steer clear of sUpshod methods. A void scattering forces. Focus on c halle nge, crea tivity, children. speculation and special relationship. GEMINI (May 21.June 20>: Revise, review. correct past m !stakes and rebuild on solid structure. Restrictions are tem- porary -know at, proceed ac- cordingly. CANCER (June 21·July 22 ): Be ready for change, travel, variety al)d careful analysis of re lationship. Trips, r elatives and "special calls" dominate scenario. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Em- phasis on domestic situation, money and ability to work effec- tively with available material. Family m ember discus ses budget and possible purchase of luxury Item. VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22 >: Techniques can be perfected. Trust your own judgment, intui· lion . Define te rms, outline policies and take initiative. LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22>: Ac- cen\ on production. challenge. intensified relations hip and added responsibility. Hidden re- sources surge to forefront. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Emphasis on completion of as- signment, expression of love and fulfillment of desires. Focus on hopes, wis hes, aspirations and business arrangement. SAGl1TARJUS <Nov. 22-Dec. 21 ) : Be ready for new start in new direction . Highlight o r iginality. independence and your own s tyle. Car eer op- portunity is m agnified if you are willing to revise procedures. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19 ): Special communication aids In resolving dilemma. helps you to r egain sense of direction. Journey could be on agenda. AQUARIUS <Jan. 20·Feb. 18): Review investments. Don't s pread assets too thin. Open lines of communi c ation . P e rceive potential. Delve beneath surface indications. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Be aware of the subtle legal nuances. One close to you com- plains about restrictions, delays and petty aMoyances. Who can you trust any mnre? For some reason, this country has suffered a "trust recession." I see it in our attitudes toward the government, consumerism, and national institutions like the phone company and the six o'clock news . I· m one of those people who want to believe every(hing I see and read. I want to believe Peter Pan can fl y. Or that Chrysler will pay dividends next year , and that the woman who uses Oil or Olay and wears a 43 on her T- shirt is lying about her age. to doubt them, but J can't help it. I never take my children to a pediatric ian whose o ffice goldfis h have died. J never leave my dog with a vet who s ays, "What seems to be her problem?" CThe dog's name is Murray.) J never t~ bank where all the fountain pens have been ripped off, or a restaurant with no garbage cans. J don't trust people who say, "Trust me." J don't accept drinks from a urologist with a sense or humor. I become very suspicious when a garage mechanic has clean -fingernails or a doctor carries . his ins truments in bis gym bag. IRMl IDlllCI 1r:. many broken promises and too many washer r epairmen who have retired to Hilton Head on my service calls. I even looked with suspicion on my hus band the other day when he said to me, "Erma. you really look like you've shed a few pounds.'' He has problem u:ith sexy niece I want to belleve that my car will never be recalled, my pre· scription has been taken by some- on e other than a research monkey, and that my plumber will Indeed show up on Friday. June 12 , after lunch. I want to believe, but l can 't . , Sometimes, I think I'm gelling paranoid about people who have given me no reason whatsoever I wish I could go back to the way I used to be, but dur ing the past 10 years or so, t here have been too many political bribes, too m.anv broken warranties, too 1 looked at him closely. He was the man who drove an Edsel with a McGovern bumper s ticke r on it. Who wouldn't spring for an 81h percent loan 10 years ago because housea were going down. Who bought Nehru jackel.8 Ln fiv e colors. What the heck! You have to take a chance on people once in awhile! , ' -···· . DEAR ANN LANDERS: Please help me with a very personal problem. 1 can't 10 to a nyone I know. When you read llllAlllR my letter you will undetstand why. . My 11-year-old ftlece l• a sexy. voluptuous <1ood·looklo1> llrl. Sb• comes to my place quite often. J lulve HeO Vera drink ball a flftll of vodka and act perfectly IOber. Once, wbtD I commm&ed Oft It, abe Hid, "It tall" 1 lot to tonk m• out, but when lt bappen1, I d on't nmember 1 lhina." Vera has been teasing me for a long time -nuhing her body and telling rlsque stories. A few weeks aio she drank an awful lot of booze at my place and pa11ed out on the bed. I didn't btUeve abe waa really out and 1 1tlll don't. I had a few drink.I myself and I am aa6amed to tell you that l und.reued her and took aomt tndteeot Ubertiet. (No ln· tercoune.) Mt conactence bothered me a lot, 10 I apoloctaed lo her a week later. Sbe didn't speak to me for a month. Now she h11 1t1rt1Jd to come "1 m1place11aln, and la 1w .. t11ple. Wbat do you make of Udl? Do 7ou _bave any ad vice for berT .DMt ... need help? 11 IO, .m.t lllndT -PUZZLED IN ESSEX Dear aun: WW.at •• really ......... ., ••• ,.,....Mr \ a ncle. Yoa don't 11y how old YCMI are, Baster, or whether )'CMI an m arried or 1ta1le -b•t HY PY wlto pous &.bat mecla booae for hi• niece and fool• aroud wttb ber la a UUle kinky. I tlalak yoa botb 8"d help. Art exhibit due May 22 A 105-work exhibit by such artist.I as Andy Warhol, George Segal and Richard Avedon wUI be on display at the Newport Harbor Art Museum beginning May 22. .. S-.i:ual frHdom" preamt1 c The exhibit or American artl1t1 la titled d'fllcvll cffdrion for tiffl.a~• and "Inside/Out: Self Beyond Llkeneas. '' There i. no .. _. A L..onUr I' admlHloo charae. tn.1r JlllNftLt. nn 1 0 1"' A catal:ru· and "Olor -tera of the worka to down·tHOrlh ade>kf fn 1wr MID ~ '" r-~ldft, "High School s.z end How be diJplay will be available at the museum to Dftll WUh n _ A Oukll /or THU book1tore. The museum ia located at A50 San and Tlacfr Parenti." for '"" Clemente Dr. bookld, #ftd 50 cntt f)laa 0 lonQ, The exhibition wlll run throu&ll July 12. atoms*, •lf-odtlr1Ufd "'"'!opt to r.=~~;:;R:;;C;;;;;;;;~=;i;;=::;;;:::;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;-.t ,.,.,. Londer1, P.O. Bos JltSI, snc~S 'RUFFELL'§ .... c_hk_•_. _m._•_11_. ____ _.. .. 1"9 OPf ALL .. UPHOLITllY . Cell 6'2• H 71. Put • te•wrd1 tOWOfll fer t ....... ,,.._,WM. 0., s..t fr--. ..... HAii lfU MUOI an. MANDI.Ill .i .,, ..... ._.. MW4t4 COITAMHA -141-11- BEDWETTER LET THEM HAVE A DRY BED ,,.,,__.,.. __ ..,.. __ ..,._ .... _,. .............. --...-.--... -..... ......... _" __ , .................. ...... ---·-·""·--.-....-_....,...,..,.. ................. -~ ... - -.......... -...w •• --............. --,.·-""··-~-....... -.............. . "Equally Eff«tiv. for Adutr.~· r·:.::;:;.;~:.;;;;:-T~~;.;~ LTD. 1 311 Flrat Sll'MI I ~OON, WI 5'451 I t : l'AllENU' NAME : : A°°"US : : CITY 8TATf __ Zll'-: I NONI I • • • IRVINI Tuesday, May 12, 1981 FEATURES ·TELEVISION MOVIES 82 86 87 The posh Viennese Ball was o) 0 . a special evening of dining, dancing and greeting friends . . . B 2 ~ Coalition to fight sludge dunip plan A group of homeowners has formed a l'Oaht1on to oppose Orange Count} Sanitation Dis tn c·t plans to dr) waste sewage produ<'!s north of I rvrne "Tht• c:oaht1on 1s µart1cularl> concerrwd thal thl' ..,tudi:tc (will lead t11 1 ... 1~mf1cantl~ increased lt·Hlsofthcs, nol!>l'. trutk traffic. odor-; and l11rds thut l'Ould pose a h;1u.ard 111 Fl Toro '\1arine Corps Air Stat111n jets, ..,a id Hal Maloney, of Irvine, the coalition co-rhalrman H e l;a1d he and other members intend to attend two public meet- ings the Orange County Sanita- tion U1strict will hold in Irvine this month to t ake public com· ment on the proposal to dry the !>ludgl', north of Irvine The meetings will be held at 7 30 p m MiiY 20 al Turtle Rock Elementary School and on Muy 28 at lrvinc High School. Ray Lewis. ch1er engineer for the county Sanitation District, ex· plained that sludge must be dried before it is placed in a sanitary landfill. This drying process is now conducted at Coyote Canyon Landfill localed in the foothills near UC Irvine. Lewis said that the county's lease will run out at the landfill in a few years. and lhe county. con· Dell, ............ .,., Rk Mnl It ....... ONE TIRED KID Kl'\ in J.aCounle. 6, of Anaheim has his \.\ork cut out for him as he treads the tin.•:-, at Irvine's llerita~c P ark. It's a tricky paslime -one false step and you'r e in a hole. Anthony case delayed A p11· t 11.tl n11·1·t 111g '''I for to din ht'l\.\l't·n In irw :\1.1)or Art i\nthm1} ·, dl'fl'"'l' attorney und the prm1l•cul1n~ attorney wa!> postp<>nl•tl .ind .1 Ol'" 1lak was sl'l for tlw pn·hm111<.1r~ heannjl. of tilt' ;1ssault "1th a deadly Wl'UPOl1 ('HSl' Tht• l\.\o attnrr11·~ ~an• to ml't'I som(•l 1nw th1 ... \H'l'" The d;1l 1• for th<.' pre Ii mmary hl'aring in 11:.irbc,r Court has bel'll (·hanged from May 22 to .Junl' 12. said William Dougherty of Tustin. who has replaced Bill Crosby as Anthony's main al lornt•) Dought•rty s:11<I he's in the pro· <:C'sS of rcvi(•wing the cast' and "asn'I ready this morning to ctiscuss 11 with the prosecutor Crosby said Anthony decided ·Roosevelt joins push for Amtrak Ja"ow.., Hoose\t'lt of Newport HC'arh Jrnned Oran~e County'i; seemingly never ending fi~hl for i m p r n v t' d t r a n !. p o r l a t i o n systems when he was sworn in M on d ay to t h e ro unt y Transportation C'ommission. Roosevelt, 73. the eldest son of fi'ranklin and Eleanor Roosevelt. got an 1mmediall' taste or com- mission action when the Clve- mem ber panel decided to Lobby congressiona1 leadens against pending cuts lo Amtrak service on the West Coast The group decided to send res· olutions to CallCornto delegates and ranking committee mem· bers asklnR them to continue Amtriak ~c..·rvlc b~tween San Olego and Los Anaeles -anct through Orange County should pu11scntter train service ~reduced. Amtrak ofliclals w:.rned last week that pauenger train• would run only alonic the heavily traveled Boslon·Ncw York Washin,Wn. O C • corridor It the Beagan' Adm1nistralion's pro· posl'd $615 million budget for the l9e•-82 fiscal year is passed by Congress. Thomas Jenkins, executive director of the county com · mission, said Monday he thinks enough West Coast pressure can be applied to win some service a long the Southern California route. The "San Diegan" is the busiest route outside the eastern corridor, he said. Meeting with reporters arter the comm iss ion meeting. Roosevelt said he thinks his con· gressional contacts can help Orange County. Now a business consultant. Roo11evelt was a Democrat congressman for 12 years. Uke another commissioner, County Supervisor Thomas Riley, Roosevelt also Is a retired brigadier general In the U.S. Marine Corps . Riley nomlnated Roosevelt for the commission seat. Uougherty should be the main defenst' counsel because Do u gherty is a ce rtified criminal law specialist and he tCrosby> isn't Crosby had said that he was goi ng to try to reach an "cquita· ble disposition·· of the case with Deputy District Attorney Pattie Manoukian that would eliminate the need for a trial. Irvine Ma yor Art Anthony has pleaded innocent lo charges of assault with a deadly weapon and use of a handgun in the com- mission of a crime arising from an a ll eged April 9 attack on his wife, Ela1ne. She reportedly was beaten in their Turtle Rock home and suf· fered a s uperfic ial g unshot wound to her head in the inci· dent. At the mayor's May 1 arraign- ment before Harbor Court Judge Donald Dungan, Mrs. Anthony asked that he be allowed to re· turn to their home. Judge Dungan honored the re· quest and dissolved a restriction placed on Anthony's release from Orange County Jail that prohibited him from residing with his wire. Mrs . Anthony has refused to file a statement with police about the alleged assault and re- Portedly doesn't want to testify against him In court. Mayor Anthony hasn't at· te11ded a City Councll meeting since the alleged aa11aull. Mrs. Anthony 11td over tM telephone today that she doesn't expect him to attend tonl1hl's council meclln1. He was un· available for comment. sequenUy, will need to find a new place to dry the s ludge and bury trash Bet' Canyon, located in the footh1lls north of Irvine, has been selected by county super visors as the site for a new county landfill But county sanitation district of· ficials have yet to designate which of the five sites north of Irvine will be used fo r the pro- posed sludge drying facilit y. .. No one wants sludge in their area and no one wants trash in their area. but these facilities have to ~o somewhere," Lewis said. ·'There will be trucks but other rears of odors. insects and un· sightliness are unfounded. There will be no health hazard or con· taminalio!1 of groundwater." He said that once the public nwetings are held m I r vane, the Board of Director~ of the Orange County Sanitation Districts will con,Uder which of the five sites sho~d be designated for the waste-drying facility. All five are in the foothills north of El Toro Marine Corps Air Sta- tion. Lewis i;aid that he also is study· ing the possibility of dumping the sludge in the ocean. composting it or burning 1t. -RICHARD GREEN Foothill airport? Santiago Canyon site review urged Santiago Canyon in the Orange County foothills 1s the latest site being considered by airport plan ners for a regional airport. Orange' County Supe r visor Bruce Nestande said Monday the canyon s1tt• also s hould be re viewed by the county's blue rib bon committee appointed recent· ly to examine possible airport sites ·'This sill' has the potential of servicing 20 million passengers per year. or 83 percent of Orange County's 19!>5 air travel demand. a nd could C\ en replace all com ni erclal jct a('tiv1ty al John Wayne Airport," said Ncstande. Santiago Canyon is on a plateau a bout 2 5 miles east of the Anaheim l111ls and two miles north of l rv1 nt• Lake. The land is O';Vned primarily by the Irvine Company Mark P<11sano. executive di rec tor of the Southern California As soc1alt0n of Governments, said today that its planners began searching for new !iiles after a proposal to lo«ate a regional airport off the Long Beach shoreline ml.'t negative reaction last October lie said planners are looking at Santiago Can\•on and Stuart Flats Store study to be eyed in Irvine The I rv 1ne City Council tonight will consider spending $5,000 for a s tudy to determine lhC' historic values of the 72 year-old Irvine Country Store and a number of other buildings in the East Irvine area The Irvine Company, which owns the buildings along Sand Canyon Avenue near the Santa Ana Freeway. has agreed to pay an additional $5,000 for t he study. City road widening pla ns threaten the existence or the bu ildings which authorities say a rc among the oldest in the city The City Council 1s also to con sider tonight whether lo ap- prove· A development plan for a $2 I million animal pound in the City ThL· purchase of seven ucres of parkland in Bommer Canyon from the Irvine Com- pany for $268,286. The company 1s offerint? to JZ1ve the c1tv an ad ditional seven acres with the deal , for min~ a 15-acre park in the canyon in the Turtle Rock section of Irvine -U the Kiwanis Club should be allowed to hold a parade on the 4th of July at the Marine Corps' Camp Pendleton Also under review are ways of improving ground access to a irports i"n On t ario and Palmdale. he said Nestande. who is the Orange County government's represen tative on the SCAC executive committee, said the Santiago Ca n yon site 1s attracti ve because 1l is close to the county population base but still far enough away not to cause the kind of noise problems that plague neighbors to John Wayne Airport Planes would approach the airport from the east. over Prado Dam , and would take off to the southwest, he said The nearest homes under the night path are seven miles away in Irvine, and jets would he 4,000 feet hi gh by then. By comparison. Jets taking off over Santa Ana Heights are about 500 feet off the ground, he added. SCAG Di rector Paisano said no homes would receive noise above the state's maximum allowable level of 65 CNEL ~ommun1ty noise equivalent level >. He said pre liminary report!> indicate I here would be .. very few ·· with more than 55CNEL ratings ··or all the a1ruorls 10 the re gion, it <Santiago Canyon> prob· ably would have the least im pact:" Pa1sanosaid After passing above Irvine. the jets would fl y oyer undeveloped parts of the lrvint· Coast, he added lrvine Company spokesman Jerry Collins said today "it would be premature for us to respond 10 any way but neutrally. "We can say. however, that it 1s a provocative consideration " Collins said the rugged San· Liago Canyon land 1s not planned for development in this decade. The Santiago canyon is not new to SCAG planners, howe\ er Fundrraiser auction set The South Orange County Chapter of Young Li fe. a non-sectarian youth organization operating in local high schools. wi ll sponsor a fund-r a1s1ng auction May 16 from 6:30 pm to 10 p.m Ite m prices range from $10 to $1,000, including hand·.:raftcd gifts and vacation packages. Researcher lectures on jet noise effect A Stanford researcher Jee tured on the effects of noise as testimony began in an Orange County Superior Court trial challenging the John Wayne Airport. Karl Kryter, a phys iolog1cat psychologist for the Stanford Research Institute, was called to the witness stand by Jerrold Fadem, attorney for airport neighbors suing Orange County for personal damages caused by emotional stress. Kryter told jurors that an· noyances caused by loud noise can cause blood pressure Lo rise. adrenal glands to activate and heart rates to increase. H re- peated too often. he said, the stress-related reactions are · almost certain lo have unwant- ed. undesired health effects on some people." To show how jet noise can c r eate lhe a nnoyance. Dr K ryter played high fidelity re- cordings of Jets fl ying over a Newport Beach house. The jet noise was superimposed on a re· cording of Hat Holbrook im· personating Ma rk Twain. Kryler said the recording showed how jet noise can disrupt household activities. Lawyer Michae l Gatzke. representing the county. at first objected lo the recordings. lie noted that the house where the tape was made was not included among the parties involved in the laws uit. Ju dge Ray mood Vi ncent , keeping lhe jury chuckling with a few Twain1sh witticisms or his own, eventually a llowed the tape to be played but only as an ex· ample or what Kryter called "masking" of conversation by louder noises. Gatzke and F adem both agr eed that later testimony would involve taking jury mem· bers to specific homes to hear the jet noise from the airport. The trial is expected to last from two to three weeks. Fadem said he pl ans to call about 20 witnesses, including several neighbors involved in the suit During a break in the hearing, Santa Monica-based Fadem said he plans to show that airport neighbors' health is endangered by the noise. He said the only legal rem edy 1s to s ue for monetary damages although their real hope is to force the county to decrease the noise. Repair work cuts power Workmen attempting to repair , Irvine's electrical transmission system Monday night were forced to cut off power to 1,500 homes in the Woodbridge area of Judge orders two separate Irvine trials Harbor Municipal Court Judge Richard Luesebrink approved two separate trials today for three Irvine building Inspectors accWled ol accepting gratuiU.. Manuel S. Linares, 34, of Corona. wilt be tried June 30 on several misdemeanor count.a of solicitation or acceptance of grMuities by public omcen. Daniel 8 . Bullard, 80, of Costa MeH, ~d Arthur W. Peck, 51, or Anaheim, who face lesser count.a of the same offense, are to be tried on July 21. A pre-trial meeUng for the two hH been set for July 6. the city at 8:40 p.m., Southern Ca l irornia Edison Co . spokesman Les Ritter said to· day. The lights went back on In the homes al 9 p.m .. he said. Ritter explained that 60 to 70 electricians worked throughout the night to fix problems iq the utUity's power delivery system, which was m a lfunctlonlng throul(hout the day Monday. The first problem began at 7: 17 a .m. when an underground electrical vault exploded, caus- ing 1.500 firms In the lrv'ine In· dustrial Complex-West to lose. elecLrical service. Although power was restored to most of the firms wlthln the hour, Irvine City Hall and the police 1tallon were wlt.hou.l elec· trtcal eervlce until 10:80 a.m. An emergency generator Wal used to r>l't)Vkfe minim al power ln the dty offtc and police staUon. However, the U1ht1 '"" dim and there wasn't enoup oe>wer to run copy ina macblnt1, \ I type writers or coffee machines, city workers said. About 150 city employees were sent home for a couple of hours after arriving for work at the blacked out city hall Monday morning, said Mike McNamara. city administrative services director. At t2:1s p.m. Monday an un· derground electrical switch felled, blacking out 30 firms in the industrial complex for 45 minutes. The area affected by the out· ages Monday in the industrial complex was bounded by Jam- boree Road , MacArthur Boulevard. the Sa n Dluo Freeway and Barranca Road. Ki.tter said workmen "were moppin, up" this mornln1 and electrJcal service was normal throughout the Irvine atea. He aajd that the industrial complex d.rewl more PoW•r than any oth r par\. ol lrvlae aod ha1 nad several outaau over lbe tut two year1, • • ., .. L Orange Cout DAll.Y PILOTfTut1d1y. May 12. 1981 Future right now SOUTH COAST, WILD COAST: Residents aloni th.la best or all possible lbasll aot a little preview this past weekend or what's coin& to happen this s ummer when in- land climes turn hot, mugl)' TOM MURPHHH and smoggy. We get burled with visito~. that's what. Few folks can remember when there has been s uch a rush to the beaches so early as the second weekend in tlon may be like In July or Auaust. It looks like we've had a state beac h park h appen before we were ready for it to happen. AS THE SITUATION now stacks up, the Orange County SberlH's Office wi 11 be c h arged with keepin g the peace along the shoreline while the California Highway P atrol tries to keep tr affic moving a nd parking under control. For visitor comfort, there are only a few scatte red blufftop porta-potties along this entire coastal area. As for any road or safety improveme nts, you have to reme mber th at t his is a stretch of Coast Highway un- der the jurisdiction of our "Sure took thi3 guy a Ieng time to get to the beach, Zeke" May . But it happened , Seal Beach to San Clemente. One rather sudden develop· ment was evident in the heavy popularity of our new stretch of state beach park between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach. You may not h ave thought that state park has happened yet. AS A MATTER of fact, one state official was quoted re· cently a s s ugges ting that no body would be using thls virgin stretch of coastline for at least three year s . I have news for him. The three years is up, whether the calendar says so or not. Apparently the word has spread among the beach lov- ers that the s pots from El Morro to Crystal Cove to Scotchman's Cove and points nearby -are fully open for people use. And here they came over th is pas t weekend. Every available shoulder a long Pacifi c Coas t Hig hway between Cameo Shores and Irvine Cove was used for parking. Visitors were run· ning a gauntlet or 55-mile · pe r-hour t raffic as they al· tempted to sprmt across the highway, lugging s urfboards, scuba gear. picnic baskets and s mall kids. Y o u s hudd e r in con · templating what this situa· By SYDNEY OMARR A RIES (March 21-April 19): Avoid sensationalis m ; key now is to maintain s teady pace. Focus on employment. regain· HOROSCOPE ing sense of direction and com- ing to terms with recalcitrant relative. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Steer clear of slips hod methods. A void scattering forces. Focus on c halle nge, c reativity , children, speculation and special relallonshlp. GEMINI <May 21-June 20): Revise, review. corre ct past mistakes and rebuild on solid structure. Restrictions are tem· wonderful Caltrans. So you ca n forget about that. State offi cials have con· tracted with the city of Laguna Beach fclr lifeguard service along the beachfront Laguna lifeguard officials are alr eady prepa r ing a series of new guard towers a long the strand a nd other s upport equipment. YO U ARE LEFT t o wonde r , however , about emergency aid alon g this stre tch of beach, should a n accident occur on lhe highway or in the s urfline. The area is almost a t a point of no return for getting a vi{'· tim to the hospital. Should an acs:ident occur on a crowded Sunday after· noon. say, in the vicinity of Scot chma n 's Cove. is the am· bulance going to try racing through down town Laguna traffic t o South Coast M e dical Center in South Laguna? Or would you be better off to turn upcoast. chance the Coast Highway Bridge at Newport Bay, to m ake a run fo r Hoag Memorial Hospital? SOMETI MES I T mi g ht look like a no-win choice. All factors considered, it seem s we abruptly have a very la rge and popular beach park -in our midst for this coming summer , and we are i ll·p~epared to cope with it porary -know 1t. proceed ac- cordingly. CANCER CJune 21-July 22). Be ready for c hange, travel. va rie ty and careful a nalysis of re lations hip. Trips, relatives and "s pecial calls" dominate scenario. LEO <July 23-Aug. 22 l. Em- phasis on domestic s ituation. money and ability to work effe{'· lively with available material. Family membe r discusses budget and possible purchase of luxury item . VIRGO C Aug. 23-Sept. 22> · T echniques can be pe rfected. Trust your own judgme nt. intui- t! on . Define terms . outline policies and take initiative. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Ac· cent on production, c hallenge, intensified relations hip and added responsibility. Hidden re· sources surge to forefront. SCORP IO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Emphasis pn completidn of as- V ienne By SANDI•: JOY OttlMOellrP4•Ui.tt Lots of hulb un• twirl 111111 • tlw OrangeCoa::.I But few o( lht•m turn 1111! 111 It•• balls Often u poi.ht''"''' ' ''''"l),l11u1t·d a bull. but ufll.r all ttw ""''r.11111111-: dinner and ufflc1<Jl pro~1 .11n 1110:-.1 ofte n the gul'sti. put on llll'1r wrap and heud homl' Friduy night was d1CCi•r <'nl THE BALL WAS ,, hall \\Ith touplcs revolving ah11111 ll11·1t;i1111 floor to the str:rn1s ul w111lJL' .11111 fox lrols • The occ·as1011 v. us I he "''l·11nd ir nuul V1enncs1· Rull :i '":'1 JI• 1 p l' r s o n h I a 1• k t 1 ,. Ii 1 11 •·I 1 1 sponsored li\ thr l',1nf1• "' phony Asso(.'1atwn The evening l>L·gnn v.11 h .1 11· cept 1011 111 tht' I ush at nu 111 of t ht' Marriott I lotl'I t•v. purl Bt.>u< h Whl'rC J.:Ul'Sls grec•li'd old rrw111t , und made rww ones Thi• g1•11t1·PI atmosphc•r<' \I as f•nh.1111·1 d t.1 th1 'strains of " ''' 11\1.! 11u111ll'I 1111tl• 1 dirN:llOll or J11n.1tha11 I)\ s.1rt I Santi.I J\na C n•ettng gu1·s1 :. at l lw 11·n·pl '" was Global \:an I 1111·-lel' ' Edward Sl'hum<iL'ht•t v. h11~1 v. 1 Floss was ball d 1a1rm .Ill Among thusl' enJO\ ing t ht• " <'CPllOrl \H'rl' .Jo Anni· .uul c;, II• Mi(<andtht•irgu1•1;h,lr rnd\11 Fra nk Tonw1no !'II r· .\I 1' d11 1 plent~ of ..1llt'nl11rn 11 llh h•·1 fairytale t) p1· wh1t1· "'' th1 shoulder ball go"'n. 11t1· 11111· 1111 stw wore for 1 ht· rP1·t·11 t h1 :u.J1lr , ball for wh1c·h h l'r t•nln w '" Th, Great W<11l1 l>d1111t• II .1 t'''"" fit forCtndC'rdla · ALSO E~JOYI\(; t 111· 1·1wk1ail hour and talk1n).! .1ho1il tl11 Newport B1·:ll'h ''"' 11·~11\,I v.hich open.., S<1l11rd I\ .11 F.1-.1111111 b la nd was .lt':.111 T..intl11\\ •1\1 a111t her escort 01 C'k D1mmo11 In ttll. aµprox1 rnnlt'h 11111 persons utlt.'lldl•d !111• b.tll wlt1d1 movec.J from th•· atrium llll11 th•· hotel's Pac·1fa· BallMom d11n•· ''I' with lv.i nkhng lights illld !'11·~•;in1 crystal eent1·rp1erc·s tnppt d \\lt!i pink p<>on1t•.., mau\ ,. lil,11·~ OJ'"' v..h1te hab1<·'> hrt·ath Ballroom tlt'C'•ir \ht.., dnr11 lt1 Churlc•s Pa:.ip v. ho ;ii\\ " rim· sud1 a bt•:iut1ful iob fort Ill' .111n11 ii Chris tmas C'..indll'llJ.!hl < 1r11· .. rt111 benefit thl' Orani.:1• <'ou1111 \T u.,, CC'nlt'r P:iap Y.ho 1tl1·1ult-d t\111 hi s wife (\1rol\ n. had tlw I·• n, flown in from "1orth1·rn { .tltlon11.· Joining th1• f';i:.ip' al 1tw11 lalil1 wc•re their guc·'>h P·1m1 I. .inti George s,·hre1lw1 "'ho an· g•'I t I fl g t () g (• I h l' r f I I \1 r ' S{'hrc·1ber s gran<lp;u 1·11h 701t1 W<!dding a11111\·1·rsa1'.\ pu rt\ Dinm•r. arrangl•ci It I 1 ,111· !'111 ton of ~t>wpo1t Ht .1• h t.1•1.;.111 w11t. {'O l d p11;11· Ill cl '·' I I II .11111 art1d1okt·s follcm •·al 1 1 1 1 :-.1rl111n with "altt'L' l\•11 d1 l.11~1 Pol<1lo Bt•rny 1bpa1 ug11 .. II •lla11 dai:-.l' and \1u'ihrou111 111lt 111 Sherry and hutll'r f'11:•1• n~ tt • 'P1Cal \\-<IS a ll~ht "''"'' Sii ttd•' Wllh Whlppl'll e'l't'.tlll ,1111! lft1 I l'a f c \'imn:i Throughout rl1n111·r J.!ll• 'ls"'. 1 l'ntc•rtam1•d b~ I h1· m 11• tl 11! 1111 MurriJ) K1Jrda ;\11111 1·1..:111 '' Ort ht·!'tt•ra \\oh11 h. lo 1111· c!Pl11 11 of all. pht)'l'<I d<1s~11• d.1111·1•,1tih \\ allz tunes K11rcla h1111 1•lf v. 1 urwbll· to a1l1·111I .,Ille 1• 111• \\.a pla)' ing at " p,11 I\ 111 th•• 11.111ori . capital ho~kcl 111 ...,, 1·111Hl I .uh signmenl. <'Xpn.·s-;11111111 love• ·•ll•I fulfillm<:'nt ol dc>s1re' F1w11• 1111 hopes . \\o lShcs asp11 allons . 11 l business arrangcnwnt SAGITTARllrS 1 'l/ov :>:! lk1 211 · Be rPady for nl'V. ,.,1,,r1 1 1 new dir<'c·t1nn ll1ghl 11 onginalit~, indPp1•111lc•111•1• ;inlf your O\\o n sl~ll' c.,rc1r 01 port unity 1s magniflt'd 1f ·' •>u .11 ,. willing to rl'Vl'>l' JlrfWNlllrt'S C APRIC'OR"l 1 l>1·c· 22 .l.111 19> SpeC'1al c·nmm11n11 at1on .i11I in resnh11w chl<"mm.1 twlp~ ~·· 1 to regain s1•nst• •)f dirt•1°t1<111 J ourney C'ould h(' on a~c·ntl.1 AQUARlt lS 1Jan <:'II 1't Ii 1>' R eview JO\<-slmcnts 1>1111 1 spr ead ai.sc•t s Inn I h111 Op1·11 I i n es of c• nm mun 1 t'.11 1e111 Perccivr potenl1al l>~l\1· ben eath surfH<'(' rndH·at tons PISCES 1 Fl'11 19 \1.irch 201 Be aware ol the s uhtl<' l<:~<tl nuances. One closl' to } ou t·om plains about rcstrktion:-.. oelay~ and petty aonoyanC'PS .He has probleJn with sexy niece t>EAR ANN LANDERS : Please help me wilh a very personal problem . I can't go to anyone J know. When you read 111 lllllll my Jetter you will understand wby. · My 18-year-old niece ts a sexy, voluptuous <1ood·lookin1> lirl. Sbe comes to my ptace quite often. I have seen Veta drlnlt ball a fifth of vodka and act perfectly sober. Once, when I commented on it, 1he said, "It takes a lot to ltonk me out, but whell lt happens, I d o n 't remember a thlne·" ~ •I _...., _ _...--=- Vera has been teasing me for a long time -flashing her body apd telling risque s tories. A few w'eeks ago she drank an awful lot or booze at my place and paased out on the bed. I didn't believe she was really out and I sUU don't. I had a few drinks myseU and I am ashamed to tell you that I undressed ber and took some indecent liberties. (No in· lercoune.) My conscience bothered me a JJ>t, so l apologized to her a week later. She didn't speak to me for a month. Now she has started to come by my place aealn. and is sweetu pie. What do you make of thls? Do you have any advtce for her? Does she geed help? If~ what kind? -PUZZLED IN1 U Dear ._..: n at .a.. really lleedt II • ltaJ awa1 fn• lier uncle . You don't say how old you are, Busler, or whe the r you are married or single -but any guy who pours that much booze for his niece and fools around with her Is a UUle klnky. I think you both need help. "Se:iual /reedom ·~ pre.,ent& a di/ ficult decuion /or tern <Jgtrs and their parents. Ann lAnder1 oJlen down-to-earth advtce an her new booklet , "lligh School Ser ond Tlou1 to Deal With It -A Guide I or Te~u and Their Parenti " For eorh booklet , lend 50 cenu plau a long. 1tamped, 1elf addressed tmvrlof>t': In Ann Landen. P 0 Boz JJ9S5, Chicago, Ill 600U. Cati 142-5671. Put a tew word• to work tor ou " ,, r • .. a eal ball \1 II .1(1 .. ,. ' •II I d 11 11111111•1 of • •iii 1•1 I Iii Ill ti i11•1 l11t ' I • 1•I1 I JI .it I ltw IS 111 •t11 I I ,I l "11 I rill ' ,, I ""' lt11I11 t I I· 1111 .i c "t I 'lttlh1• 1/lf,tl 11· 111 I t 1,i1,11t11! .to! I tl)1•1il I 1 I < • Ii Cl 111 I I If I I 1 1111111.e rlcl \1 <ir !VI rs Lock Gee ll 111i: ..tnrl \lrs Robert F :\!11nlgornt·n. both of Newport 111 ,1r h and Mrs. Wa rren Kramer tort .. 1i.:11nu Bc>ad1 <: 111·"l" inC'ludl'cl James Barrett nt :\ e· \\ pm·t lkal'h. who hosted a 111 • I .ill par l) JI his Promontory l '1111 ti h11nw. ul lt'ndcd by Felicia 11111-..11~. Mr a nd Mrs . Ke nt Alex· .1nd1·r Dr and Mrs Matthew ,l1·11k1ns. \1 1 and l\tri. Richard S111\1h .Jun<' Elliott. Mr and Mrs. \\ t111,1m llood. an d J e rr v 1<11 h;irrb · \ '10"\(, OTllF,R guests were \11 .incl \t1·s Donald Canady, Mr .11111 \1 rs f11m M urph1ne, Mary 111 ... 111 \ lone·-.. !'vfr and Mrs. ILt11o11· "l'f"l1wr :\fr and Mrs. lam•·..,' 1ganwt~u. Mr and Mrs 1-:d\1 .1111 '\ann·. :\1 r und Mrs. l'h1ll11• t/uar rt'. \1rs Elarne Red· f11•ld \Ir :inrl \frs llomer Reed, .\l r a n II M r s N o r m a n S111 t·tl1•g,1arcl. St•n a nd Mrs. John :->1·hrnll1. :\Tr and Mrs. Charles H1111~v.alt Ut•<>r~ia Spooner, Mr . .and :\1r-. (,ll•n St1 ltwell. Judge and '!rs ltavmond Thompson. ind \Ir a11d \l rs Carl Karcher isl <111v more? I I "" I t • 111 I I I , , 111\ , lt1ld11·r1 tn ,, II t I II I .t ,1\' "" <1111 "tilt .• \\ h 11 1•1•111s 111 lw I h d •' rt.11111· • •r 1 , • I'' 1111 ril\ .. I r11n1 ,1 1• I \\I It I 111-.1• •If h11rn1Jr 1. I'•' 101h wht•n ,1 1111•1 h.11111· lt:t!'> C'IC'all • • .i.. 111 .1 rl111 tor (.'Ut 11t'' I ' I 11111 111 1'11 111~ gym bllA .. IR MA BDMBICK •• 111.1111 hrok1·n promises and too m:11n \I Li"ht•1 r!'pairmen who h.11 ,. rl'lirt'Cl to llilton Head on ,,1, • n 1r<• ea lb I "' e•n luok<.'d with suspicion in rn, hui.bancl the o ther day 1dl<'n ht> said lo me. ··E rma, you r 1 all' look like you·ve shed a It•"' pcnmcfs ·· I luuhd al him closely. ije I 11.1111 Ir ll1l1\ 1ot < 1111 i .\ 1• I I 1•1111lcl 111 hat k to lht' \ 11 t 11:wd h• tw ltut <lur inr.; Uw 11.ist 111 , ... 1n, m s11 th<'rt' huvt• 111 • 11 1011 111.1111 )lolil it· al hnbes. lc•lt m.1111 hr r•l;i•11 11 arrant ll'~ too v. '" t hf' man 1~ ho drove an Eds el \11th :i MC'<:ov<.'rn bumper st 1ekc•r OD 11 . Who wouldn't spnn~ for an 81-a percent loan 10 yt•ars a~o because houses were voing clown Who bought Nehru Ji.lt'kt•ts in five colors.· Snm1·1!mp:, I 1l 11il• I 111 J.:• 1 1111~ f1a1 1n1 111 •• 1i11111 1 •"I ' "1111 h H t:t\C'O 11!1 110 It 11 1111 \\ h 1h •t \Cl \ lll;.i \111rl.. c h1flll h ""''" .1rt1o;to; I!'! Ancl\ W:u 11111 . 1: ... 11,•t' SL·~· 11 .rnd flit ti.,,, "'"'!<11111 will he on clt .. pl,I\ . I th• '\1 'I" rt II 11 '"" \11 \111..;1•um h1•1• 1n11mi.: \1 ·~ ,., Tlw e \h1ti11 ol '\01Cl"11 .111 .1rli' I• 1s 11111 d I .. lns1tl• ( 1111 : ... •Ir Iii 111d I tkf'r11·:-.~ . I h1•1 (' I 1111 ,1dm1s,111n • h.1r»1 !\ 1.il,1111 Ill 111<1 11 1111 lM• l\'1'.!. 11f tlw WVI 1->S lo lw tl1"pl.1 •11 "111 hr .11 .1\l,1hlt .ii tht• rnuseum hnol., ... ton• 1"111 11111 • 111n I~ lw•att•tl 111 M!°)(1 :;in ( lt•m1•11 1• I 11 l'tw t•xl11!•1i 1111 11 ill run lhrnUJ(h .Inly n SlNtOR C ITIZENS S,EClAl 2S~·o OFF 41.l SlAYICU M-. fuu,. WM 0..., HAIR HAHDUAS "'••I.~,_ • UJ l•U I / RUFFELL'S Ul'HOLSTERY s. ..... -......... 111 IUJ HARIOI alVD. COSTA MISA-54f·I 156 What the heck ! You have to t ukt• a ch anC'e on people once in a "'hilc' BE DWETTER . LET THEM. HAVE A DRY BED n>o ........ flit 10" ........ I ...... __ lllo ...Col h ·-·· f60 II itn 4!tftid 1e thll l•f'tou• ,, .... ,,.. t "4 ""'"• M lllllilitt•e, ...... j ••t"nQ I• ..,.O\tt ft ca" UUH C°""*<•tM .. ~ ...... ,.,.. -.m1 tf'lai t1tl I Mf•tM"9 It t M ""Hdl4N ~.........,... .._, not CN••d ,, Oft•ftk -...Ct Of -MM, Uft M ............ eur "" ··-·-·"'~ -Whet "' All ---'• ~--II .......... , ___ ...., ... -..-_ r •M:~70-;:~~~7;T~::;T~~.;;:~TO. 311 firal Slreel Ntl<OOM WI ~57 • Cqually Effective for Adults~' ~·! !'.t.nf.,TS NAMf ----------: ~· ~OvtRTISlD ... PAUIJI IWAllllE i'CJOl1FSS ------------I I t:tTV ______ STATE ___ ZIP--: Pt<ONE-~------~ AOI--I IAol94~: WfHflP~OMf()n •,;fJ, 11, ••. ·' -. DlllJPlllt D ~, Tuelday, May 12, 1981 FEATURES ·TELEVISION MOVIES The posh Viennese Ball was 0 Dlllli ClllT 82 86 87 a special evening of dining, dancing and greeting friends ... B2 ~ I . Too rich to rent, ·too poor to buy A Sacramento housing consul- tant has handed Newport Beach city counci l members the statistics but a Newport school teacher has presented the cold facts of house-hunting. "I'm a tenant in a building where I'm going to be evicted because I'm not poor enough," Elizabeth Mead told the council Monday night during its meeting al City HaJI council chambers. She said her apartment build· ing in Eastbluff is being turned into subsidized r~ntal units ror low-income families. But &he said she is too poor to buy a house. She displayed let- ters from developers , newspaper real estate ads and information on house lotteries in an eUort to prove her point. 'Tm discouraged." she said, "and I'm at the top of my salary scale right now. I just hope to God you do something to provide housing for people like me." Council members answered by conditionally approving a set of policies tailored to provide cheaper housing. The policies. offic1ally known as the city's housing element, call for higher densities on un· developed land and relaxation of condominium conversion laws. Newport has been cnttc1zed by state officials for not provid· ing a fair s hare of affordable hous ing and , by law . mus t formally approve the housing element by Oct 1. W ard Co nn e rly , th e Sacramento consultant who pre- pared the housing document, acknowledged some or his ideas are contr-0versial. H e said by a llowing owners or rentals with four units or less to convert, a new stock or cheaper ho using would be provided There are nearly 9,000 such ren· tal units. "Most peo ple can't a fford new homes," said Connerly, "but if you allow conversions and let people exercise their options, the m arket wall react." He s aid allowln & higher densities a nd encouragmg de- velopers to construct smaller units also could provide a stock or r easonably priced hom es. A spokt:s man from the Irvine Company, Dave Dmohowski, said has firm is willing to comply with s uch proposals "We believe it can be done without federal assistance if the den s ity is hi £h e n o ugh," Dmohowski s uggested. adding prices could be brought into the $80,000 to $100,000 range. But council members warned housing policies are likely to be revised before final approval as given. probably next September. Sid Soffer , a Costa Mesa resi· dent and a Ne wport Beach property owner. gave council members some r1nal thoughts .. It's always the people in the middle who a re squeezed," he said. "So, the answer is to work less and i;!et a ~overnm ent s ubsidy or to work more and get rich " Foothill airport? Santiago Canyon site review urged Santiago Canyon in the Orange County foothills is the latest site being considered by airport plan- ners for a regional airport Or ange County Supe rvisor Bruce Nestande said Monday the canyon site also should be re viewed by the county's blue rib bon committee appointed recent ly lo examine possible airport sites "This site has the potential of servicing 20 million passengers per year. or 83 percent of Orange County's 1995 air travel demand. and could e\'en replace all com- mercial jet activ1ly al John Wayne Ai rport. .. s:11d Nest ande Santiago Canyon 1s on a plateau about 2 5 miles east of the Anaheim Halls and two miles north of Irvine Lake The land 1s owned primarily by the Irvine Company, Mark Paisano, executive di rec· tor of the Southern Califorma As sociallon of Governments. said today that its planne rs began * * * YOUNG TROUPERS -Students at Costa Mesa's Woodland School rehearse for their production of "The Wizard of Oz," to be performed Wednes day and Thursday at 10 Delly ...... Slaff ,._.. a .m . and 7 p.m . From left are Chuck Remley as the tin m an, Melissa Worthing as the lion, Lois Kulikov as Dorothy and Sarah Acord as the scarec row. New fight for FDR's son Researcher -testifies • • on1et rwise Newport's Roosevelt joins county transit board A Stanford researcner lec- tured on the effects of noise as testimony began in an Orange County Superior Court trial c h a llenging the J ohn Wayne Airport James Roosevelt of Newport Beach joined Orange County's seemingly never-ending fight for improve d tran s p ort ation systems when he was sworn in Mond ay t o the co unt y Transportation Commission. Roosevell, 73, the eldest son of Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt. got an immediate taste of com· mission action when the five- member panel decided to lobby congressional leaders against pending cuts lo Amtrak service on the West Coast. The group decided lo send res· olutions to California delegates and ranking committee mem· bers asking them to continue Amtrak service between San Diego and Los Angeles -and through Orange County - should passenger train service be reduced. Amtrak offi cials warned last week that passenger trains would run only along the heavily tra veled Boston-New York Washington, D C., corridor if the Reagan Adm1mstration's pro· posed $615 million budget for the 1981-82 fiscal year is passed by Congress. Karl Kryter. a physiological psychologist for the Stanford Research Institute, was called to the witness stand by Jerrold Fadem, attorney for a irport neighbors suing Orange County for personaJ damages caused by e motional stress. United Way funds distributed in area Thomas Jenkins. executive director of the county com- mission. said Monday he thinks enough West Coast pressure can be applied to win some ser vice along the Southern California route. The "San Diegan" is the bus iest route outside the eastern corridor, he said. Meeting with reporters after the commi ssion meetin g , Kryter told Jurors that an· noyances caused by loud noise can cause blood pressure to rise. adrenal glands to activate and heart rates to increase. If re- peated too often. he said, the s tress-related r eactions are ''almost certain to have unwant- ed . undesired health effects on some people ... Twelve human service agen- cies based in the Newport Beach and Costa Mesa areas have re· ceived United Way funding for 1981 , according to Jerry Blum, allocations chairman for United Way of Orange County, north and south. Club of the Harbor Area, S63.480 Roosevelt said he thinks his con· and Voluntary Action Center, g r essional contacts can help Orange County. Now a business ~rs2;: the Orange Coast YMCA, consultant, Roosevelt wf as a $108,000 ; Center for Creative Democrat congr essman or 12 Alternatives, $38 ,000; Child ye~~~~ a nother commissioner . Guidance Center or Orange County, $55,500; Family Service County Super visor Thomas To show how Jet noise can c reate the an n oyance. Dr. Kryler played high fidelity re· cordings of ~ts flying over a Newport Beach house. The jet noise was superimposed on a re· cording of Hal Holbrook im personating Mark Twain. Association, $146,016·. First Step Riley, Roosevelt also 1s a retired b · d" al ·n the US Kryter said the recording The o rganizations are the House or Orange County, toe., riga 1er gener 1 · · M · Corps Rt"ley nomt'nated showed how J. et noise can disrupt Am erican Ca nce r Society, $17,100·, Girl Scout Council of artne · R It f th ·s.,·on household acti vities. $423 ,665: Boys' Club of the Orange County, $301,000 and ooseve or e commi ,,i Harbor Area, $111,500 ; FISH-Youth Employement Services, seat. Lawyer Mic hael Gatzke , Ha rbor Area, $17,000: Girls ' $16,254. Roos~~ell said he hopes to act representing the county, at first as a ba1son between the com· objected to the recordings. He mission and Congress, where he noted that the house where the N ll • h said he still has contact wi~h tape was made was not includ~ e~orti:u s switc Democra~.an~ Republlc:n.s m . among t~~ i:?_arties •IJJ~.,olved in \ . ~ , , ,.,~ bqi+5 ~ ......... ~~ tt~~~~he 1 ...... __ , . ·,,; .._ ~'",( t. ~.~·~ .. ~N ·J... ·" \-~' ... ~ ~T\'r' I )'} ~~ .. -J • pre:s~~:1-;'~ta~ubllc aft':~t~o~· Judge Ra y mond Vincent. On a .. , a 1J •ssue could alter Gov. Edmund G. keeping th~ ~ury ~h~~kling wit.h II fl 11 B r o w n J r . · s · · u I t r a . a few Twam1sh Wltt1c1sms of his conservative" approach to own, eventually allowed the tape transportatio n financing in to be played but only as an ex· California. ample of what Kryter called "masking" of conversation by louder noises. ' Ii ......... • 0 ,,, e ONTARIO AIRPORT , ... e SANllAGO SITE AIRPORT SITE? Santiago Canyon eyed searching for new s1les after a proposal to locate a regional airport off the Long Beach shoreline met negative reaction last October He said planners arc looking at Santiago Canyon and Stuart Flats a l the,. Marine Corps' Ca mp Pe.l)dleton Also under review are ways of improving ground access t o airpo rts in On turio and Palmdale. he said Nestande, who 1s the Orange County government ·s represen· tative on the SCAG executive com m iltee. sa id the Santiago Canyon s ite is attractive because it is close to the county population base but s till far enough away not to cause the kind of nois e problems that plague neighbors to John Wayne Airport. Planes would approach the airport from the east. over Prado Dam. and would take off to the southwest. he said The nearest * * * homes under the flight path a re seven miles away ID Irvine. and jets would be 4,000 feet high by the n. By comp<mson, jets taking off over Santa Ana II eights a re about 500 feet off the ground. he added SCAG Director Paisano said no homes would receive noise above the state's maximum allowable level of 65 CNEL <community noise equivalent level 1 He said preliminary re po rts indicate there would be "verv few" with morethan55CNEL ratings "'Of all the airoorts ID the re· gion . it <Santiago Canyon ) prob ably would have the least im pact:" Paisanosaid. After passing above Irvine. the Jets would n.v oyer undeveloped parts of the I r v1De Coas t, he added Irvine Company s pokesman J erry Collins said today "it would be premature for us to respond in any way but neutrall y "We can say. however. thal 1t 1s a provocative consideration .. Collins said the rugged San· tiago Canyon land is not pl anned ror development in this decade. The Santiago canyon is not new lo SCAG planners. however It has been considered since at least 1973 as a possible site for a general aviation airport for private or non-commercial flights . Newport readies marine charts A marine chart of Newport Ha rbor. lis ting w a terfront r esta ur an t s . hi s tori ca l land marks. yacht clubs and boat yards 1s being made available by t he Newport Harbor Area Cha mber of Commerce. The cha mbe r has printed 75,000 of the cha rts, available for JO cents each They can be or- dered by calling 644-8211 AirCal to test jet County to allow 10 flights to cut noise AirCal officials were granted a uthority today lo conduct up to 10 practice flights this month at John Wayne Airport for t h eir new DC-9-80 jet. The Oran ge County-based airline is s~heduled to take de livery of its first supe r -80 jet at 2 p .m . Friday . The county Board of Supervisors agreed today to allow the total 10 reh ear sal flights for the first of the jets which are expected to cut down noise over airport neighborh~s . The jet is sch eduled to go into service on June 1. s ub)ect to the s uper visor s ' approval. Administrators to retire early? School a dministrators will be encouraged to retir e earlier than age 65 under a new policy ex· pected to be approved tonight by Newport-Mesa School District's board of trustees. The plan calls for retirement between ages 55 and 65 if an ad- laid off at the end of this school year. Also facing layoff are fuJI and p art-time admi nist rators, t eac he rs, nurs es and psychologJsts who currenUy fill the equivalent of about 50 fulltime posts. Orange Coast fisherman Art Mello thought he bad hil busi- ness affairs all locked up by 8 p.m . Monday. That's when Newport Beach city council members 1ave him permission to anchor his 56-foot bait barge stocked wlth anc hovies off the Balboa Peninsula. spot ln the Newport Harbor for Mello's live bait boat. The com- mittee recommended anchoring the barge 600 reet off E St.reel on the Peninsula. Mello, who operates a ball boat known es the "Mona Llsa'' ln Dana Point harbor, agreed to pay $300 a month for use o! state tidelands. 3 stagings set for 'Goth pell' U atzke and Fad em both agreed that later testimony would involve taking jury mem- bers to specific homes to hear the jet noise from the airport. 1 mh1istrator has worked 10 con- secutive years in the district and is at the top step of the salary schedule. Other items to be considered when the board meets at 7:30 al Harper Community Center, 425 E. 18th St .. Costa Mesa, are: -Plans to increase school bus tees tor parents who don't pay the full SlS-a -monlb charge because of their depressed economic coodltions; But at 11 :30 p.m., lon1 alter Mello and his bait sQpporten had left City ff all, the council changed It• mind. Thus, Mello'• plana to aell bait to locaJ fishermen asaln are in Jeopardy. Orieinally, the Newport Beach man bad sou•ht permlulon to anchor hla ball boat off Balboa faland. 8ut resident.I there 11Jd lt wouldn'l loolr nlce. A city committee wu uked to come up with a more •ult.able But Dan Kllllan, a Balboa Peninsula resldent who ad- dre11ed council members 1n tM final minutes ol. their meetln1, said the councU had Jumped the tun. He said realdenh on the Peninsula hadn't had a chance to comment on the ball barse plan. On a unanlmou1 vote, th• council aereed to reconsider the item and discuss It a1ain later Lhls month. Three performances of the musjcal "Godspell" will be 1taged this week by Newport Harbor Hlgh School drama stu· dents. The SO-member cast wUJ ptt· aenl the musical on Thw-.day. Friday and Saturday. AU •hows begin at 8 p.m . at lhe high school auditorium. The musical ia directed b~ drama lnst.ru\!tor Joe Swift and student direct.or Carol Sorenson. Tickets are $3. For furth r in· toTmat.loo call 675-571.2. The trial is expected 'to last from two to three week$ • .F'll~l1l uid he plans lo caU at)O\d, 20 witnesses, includJng s~veraJ • nelghbors involved in the ault. During a break ln the heatln&. Sant. Monica·ba"ed Fadl"~ Hld he plans to show that alo><>rt nel•hbors' health ls endanW~ by the "olse. He said the only legal remedy l1 to aue for monetary damages althou1h their real hope is to force the county to.d~crease the noise. The once-rich district is f ac- ing financial crisis as the result of P.n:ti0sition 13 and court de· qla,pna leveling out income amon& •11 districts io the state. Jhtl r lng ad m ln i str a tors sooner than they orlstnaUy an- tlclpated will re.ult tA rew•r layoffs In years ahead, a dlltttct •PoktsW<>man pointed out, IJlhe distric t. already haa ·notitiecl more than 400 non· teaching full and p&rt·thpe employea, more than a Ullrd of the tcM1 force. that they may be -Recommendations by a citizens committee for luture use ot Rea Middle and Corona d~ Mar Elementary schools to bt closed in June because of dis· trlcl-wlde decline• in enroll· ment; -Authorization tor 11.Y'Ott of an additional ts full •na part· time non-teacblos ernployeei because of bud1et ratralnt.1. 2 3 0 • .. . .... L Orange Cont DAILY PILOT/Tue1day, May 12, 1881 Future right now 80VTB COAST, WILD COAST: Re1ldenu along thla be1l of all possible coast.11ol a lltlle preview this past weekend of what's going to happen this summer when In· land climes turn hQt , muggy TOM MURPff 111 . and smoggy. We get buried with visitors. that's what. Few folks can remember when there has been such a rush to the beaches so early as the second weekend in lion may be Uke ln J'1Jy or Au1ust. 1t look.a like we've had a state beach park happen before we were ready for it to happen. AS THE SITUATION now stacks up, the Orange County Sheriff's Office will be charged with keeping the peace along the s horeline while the California Hiabway Patrol tries to keep traffic moving and parkJng under control. For visitor comfort, there a r e only a few scattered blufftop porta·potties along this entire coastal area. As for any road or safety improvements, you have to remember that this is a stretch of Coast Highway un- der lhe jurisdiction of our ··Sure took th111 guy a long time to get to the beach, Zeke" May But it happened. Seal Beach to San Clemente. One rather sudden develop· menl was evident in the heavy popularity of our new stret ch or slate beach park between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach. You may not have thought that stale park has happened yet. AS A MATTER of fact, one state official was quoted re· cenlly as suggesting that nobody would be using this virgin stretch of coastline for at least three years. I have news for him. The three years is up, whether the calendar says so or not. Apparently tpe word has spread among the beach lov· ers that the spots from El Morro to Crystal Cove to Scotchman's Cove and points nearby are fully open for people use. And here they came ove r this pa s t weekend. Every available shoulder a long Pacific Coast Highway between Cameo Shores and Irvine Cove was used for parking. Visitors were run· ning a gauntlet or 55-mile· per-hour traffic as they at· tempted to sprint across the highway, lugging surfboards, scuba gear , picnic baskets and small kids . You s hudder 1n co n - templating what this situa- wonderful Caltrans. So you can forget about that. State offi cials have ~ tracted with the city of Laguna Beach for lifeguard service along the beachfront. Laguna lifeguard officials a r e already preparing a series of new guard tower~ along the strand and other support equipment. VO U ARE LEFT to wonder, however. about emergency aid along this stretch of beach, should an accident occur o n the highway or in the surfline. The area is almost at a point of no return for getting a vie· tim to the hospital. Should an accident occur on a crowded Sunday after· noon, say. in the vicinity of Scotchman's Cove. is the am· bulance going to try racing through downtown Laguna traffic to South Coast Medical Cente r in South Laguna? Or would you be better off to tum upcoast, chance the Coast Hi ghway Bridge at Newport Bay, to make a run for Hoag Memorial Hos pital? SOMETIMES IT might look like a no-win choice. All factors considered, it seems we abruptly have a very large and popular beach park in our midst for this coming summer, and we are ill·prepared to cope with It. Viennese Ball i,s a real ball By SANDIE JOY °' .. ...., .......... Loll ot balls are held alona the~ OrangeCout. But few of them tum out to be balls. Often a poeb event ls deai&nat.ed a ball, but after all the socializing, dinner and official program, moet often the guests put on their wraps and bead home. Frida)' night wu different. THE BALL WAS a ball with couples revolving about the dance floor to the strains of waltzes and fox trot.I. The occasion was the second an- nual Viennese Ball, a $'75-per· person bla ck-tie benefit sponsored by the Pacific Sym. phony Association. The evening began with a re· ception in the lush atrium of the Marriott Hotel, Newport Beach, where guests ireeted old friends and made new ones. The genteel atmpsphere was enhanced by the strains of a string quintet under direction of Jonathan Dysart of Santa Ana. G reeling guests at the reception was Global Van Lines bead Edward Schumacher. whose wife Floss was ball chairman. Among those enjoying the re- ception were Jo Anne and Gene Mix and their guests Mr. and Mrs. Frank Tomaino. Mrs. Mix drew plenty of attention with her fairytale-type white oH-the· shoulder ball gown ; the same one she wore for the recent headdress ball for which her entry was "The Great Waltz." Definitely a gown fit for Cinderella. . ALSO ENJOYING the cocktail hour and ta lking about the Newport Beach Arts Festini which opens Saturday at Fashion Island was J ean Tandowsky and her escort Dick Dimmott. In a ll, approximately 400 persons attended the ball, which moved from the atrium into the hotel's Pacific Ballroom, done up with twinkling lights and elegant crystal centerpieces topped with pink peonies, mauve lilacs and white babies breath. Ballroom decor was done by Charles Paap who always does such a beautiful job for the annual Christmas Candlelight Concert to benefit the Orange County Music Center. Paap, who attended with his wife Carolyn , had the peonies flown in from Northern California Joining the Paaps at their table were their guests, Pamela and George Schreiber, who are get· ting toget h e r for Mr s . Schreiber's grandparents' 10th wedding anniversary party. · Dinner. arranged by Leslie Cot· ton of Newport Beach, began with cold poached salmon and artichokes. followed by roast s irloin with Sauce Bordelaise, Potato Berny. Asparagus Hollan· daise and Mushroom saute in Sherry and butter. Topping the m eal was a light apple strudel with whipped cream a nd then, Cafe Vienna. Throughout dinner guests were entertained by the music of the Murr ay Korda Monseigne ur Orchestera which, to the delight or a ll, played classic, danceable waltz tunes. Korda himself was unable to a ttend since he was playing al a party in the nation's capital hosted by Second Lady HAPPENINGS Viennese Ball Chairman Fl.osa Schumacher (top left) oversees last-minute arrangements. With her is her husband Ed and sister Carol Lee of 1 rvine. Among ball guests were (l.eft) Jean Tandowsky and Dick Dimmitt and (bottom teftJ Mr. and Mrs. Gene Mix and r bottom right ) Mr. and Mrs. James Latta. Barbara Bush. The after-dinner entertainment began with a waltz exhibition by Mr. and Mrs. Donald Olson of Corona del Mar who won the waltz contest at last year 's Viennese Ball. Tke Olsons, who dazzled the audience with their fast turns around the floor. enjoy dancing so much they have a ballroom in their home. The waltz contest followed, judged by the Olsons a nd Mr. and Mrs. William Vorhees. This year's winners were Arlene Bullard and Ernie Cruz who caught the judges' eyes with their controlled presentation. Dick Crawford of KF'AC radio emceed the arter·dinner program which was highlighted by a vocal presentation by soprano Dar· rellyn Meli Iii. She used John Kander 's "Mar· ried" from "Cabaret" as an op- portunity to prese nt Ed Schumacher with a bouquet of posies, suggesting he offer them to his "somebody wonderful." The Schumachers will celebrate their 32nd wedding anniversary May 16. They were joined at the ball by Mrs. Schumacher's sis· ter , Carol Lee of Irvine. Among special guests was Dr. Keith Clark, conductor of the Pacific Symphony Orchestra. who used the occasion to perform a song he wrote for Mrs. Maurice Mulville, ball general chairman. Corona del Ma r , Mrs . Lock Gee Ding a nd Mrs . Robert F . Montgomery, both of Newport Beach, and Mrs. Warren Kramer of Laguna Beach. Guests included J ames Barrett of Newport Beach, who hosted a pre-ball party at his Promontory Point home, attended by Felicia Bukaty, Mr and Mrs. Kent Alex· ander. Dr and Mrs . Matthew Jenkins. Mr and Mrs. Richard Smith, June Elliott, Mr and Mrs. William Hood , and Jerry Richards. jk ·Aquarius: Look at investments Ms. Melilli, introduced as "the flower of Orange County," of· fered a versatile performance or pop, class ical and show tunes. When she !lang Gounod 's '•Ah! J e Vieux Vivre" from "Romeo and Juli~t." the audience was almost spellbound at the control in her voice. Among those on the ball com· mittee were Mrs . James Nagamatsu of Anaheim ; Mrs. Eugene Moriarty of Santa Ana; Mrs. Vernon Hunt, Mrs. Keith Clark, Mrs. Edward Nance and Dr. Jerry Samuelson, a ll of Fullerton; Mrs. Robert Schulze and Mrs. Daniel Prlmac of Orange; Mrs . Phillip Quarre of Anaheim, Mrs . Ernest J echart of Costa Mesa; Mrs. Donald Canedy of La Habra. AMONG OTHER guests were Mr. and Mrs. Donald Canady. Mr. and Mrs Tom Murphine, Mary Disney Jones, Mr. and Mrs . Ralph Kerstner, Mr. and Mrs. James Nagamatsu, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Nance, Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Quarre. Mrs. Elaine Red- fi eld, Mr. and Mrs. Homer Reed, Mr . a nd Mrs . No rm a n Smedegaard, Sen. a nd Mrs. John Schmitz, Mr. and Mrs . Charles Ringwalt, Georgia Spooner, Mr. and Mrs. Glen Stillwell. Judge and Mrs Raymond Thompson, and Mr and Mrs. Carl Karcher. • • Wednesday, May 13, 1981 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIE.5 C March 21 -April 19) · A void sensationalis m ; key now is to maintain stead y pace. Focus on employment, regain- porary -know 1t, proceed ac· cor<lingly. CANCER (June 21-July 22>: Be ready for change, travel, variety and careful analysis or relationship. Trips, relatives and "s pecial calls" dominate scenario. ~ HOROSCOPE- LEO <July 23-Aug. 22): Em· phasis on domestic situation, money and ability to work effec· tively with available mate rial. Family member discu sses budget and possible purchase of ing sense of direction and com· luxury item. ing to terms with recalcitrant VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): relative. Techniques can be perfected. TAURUS <April 20-May 20): T rust your own judgment, intul· Steer clear of slips hod methods. lion. Define terms, outllne Avoid scattering forces. Focus policies and take initiative. o n challenge, creativity, LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Ac· children, speculation and special cent on production, challenge, relationship. intensified relationship and GEMINI (May 21-June 20): added responsibility. Ridden re· Revise, review. correct past sources surge to forefront. mistakes and rebuild on solid S.~RPIO ~Oct. 23-Nov. 21): 'V'Uctlltt. Rfttn~ • ;·.:. ~li'Ptt~-:: ~ L ~ °' ... signment, expression of love and fulfillment of desires. Focus on The ball committee also in· eluded Mrs. Steven Balback of hopes. wishes, aspirations and bus iness arrangement. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22·Dec 21) : Be ready for new start in new direction. Highlight Wlw can you trust any more? originality. inde pendence and For some reason, this country to doubt them, but 1 can't help your own style . Career op-has suffered a "trust recession." it. portunity Is magnified if you are I see ~ in our altitudes toward I never take my children to a willing to revise procedures. the government, consumerism. pediatrician whose office CAPRICOR N (Dec. 22.J an. and national institutions like the goldfish have died. ERMA BDMllCI <CJt. 19): Special communication aids phone company and t he six I never leave my dog with a in resolving dilemma, helps you o'clock news. vet who says, "What seems to be many broken promises and too to r egain sense of direction. I'm one of those people who her problem?" <The dog's name many washer repairmen who Journey could be on agenda. want to beUeve everything I see Is Murray.) have retired to Hilton Head on AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): and read. I want to believe Peter I never trust a bank where all my service calls. Review investments . Don't Pan can fly. Or that Chrysler the fountain pens have been 1 even looked with suspicion spread assets too thin. Open will pay dividends next year, ripped off, or a restaurant with on my hus band the other day lines of co m mun i cation . and that the woman who uses Oil no garbage cans. when he said to me, .. Erma, you Perceive pote ntial. Delve of Olay and wears a 43 on her T· I don't trust people who say, really look like you've shed a beneath surface ln<licatlons. shirt is lying about her age. "Trust me... few pounds .. , P ISCES <Feb. 19·March 20>: I want to believe that my car I don't accept drinks from a 1 looked al him closely. He Be aware of the subtle legal will never be recalled, my pre· urologist with a sense of humor. was the m an who drove an Edsel nuances. One close to you com· scrlption has been taken by some· I become very suspicious w~n a with a Mc G 0 v e r n bumper ;>lains about restrictions, delays •. one other than a rJ!.StUM . garage m echanic has dean stic~er on .... U.. W~o woul~n ·t an!pett, ~ft. ~-v'fr'~ ' ~. afttR ~~,~~,.+·f~~.~~:::....:~~fflrt ·--~'Pl'rc~t-ra~ will indeed show up on Frtday, bis instruments in his gym bag, years ago because houses were June 12 . after lunch. 1 wish I could go back to the going doWl\. Who bought Nehru I want to believe, but I can't. way I used to be, but during the jackets in five colors. Sometimes. I thJnk I'm getting past 10 years or so, there have What the beck! You have to paranoid about people who have been too many political bribes, take a chance on people once in He has proble1n uith sexy niece DEAR ANN LANDERS : Please help me with a very personal problem. I can't 10 to anyone 1 know. When you read . ~ ----lll-1111-...-.f: my let1er you wlll understand ·~· My ~year-old niece 11 1 MxY, voluptuout (8ood·lookln1> Sirl. Sbe comes td my place quite often. I have left Vera drink balf a flftb ot vodka and act perfeetly aober. Once, when I commmted oo lt, •he said, "It take• a tot to konk me out., but wb•• It bappena , I don't ,.. ...... a tJWll ... Vera hu been teuin1 me for a long time -Ouhlni her body and telling risque stories. A few weeks ago she drank an awful lot of booze at m1 ~lace,. and passed out on the bed. I dJdn't beUeve 1be was really out and I 1tlll don't. I had a f•w drinks myself and J am u hamed to tell you tbat I undrelaed her and took some Indecent llbertlea. (No in· tercourse.) My CONCtence bothered me a lot, 10 l apoloCiled to her a week later. SM didn't 1pealt to me for a mont.b. Now she hat •tarted to come by my place ...a.n. and ll 1weetup6e. What do you m;ke Of Uall? Do you baw any adViee for Mr? Doff abe DMd belp? U IO what klodf-PUZZLED 1N Jiiiu .,.., ...... :.._. ... .....,. ..... ....... , ..... ,'rt-... aac:le. Yoa doe't HY bow old yM are, 8-ter, OT wlletber yo.a are married or 1ta1le -bat aay 1111 wllo poua &ht macla boose for Illa aleee a.Del fooJa aroa•cl wltla lter 11 a UUJe klaky. I "-lair 1• ltotb aeecl help. can Ml-M71. hi • ltw word• to nrk tor oo: • given me no reason whatsoever too manv broken warranties. too awhile! Art exhibit due May 22 A 105-work nhJblt by such artlsta as Andy Warhol, George Se1at and Richard Avedon will be on dlaplay at the Newport Harbor Art Museum beginning May 22. The exhibit of American artists 11 titled "Inside/Out: Self Beyond IJ1tenea." There ll no admission cbarae. A cata101ue and color poetera of the worltl to be displayed w111 be avallabl• at the muaeum book•~. The museum ll located at 850 San Clemente Dr. The exhlbtUon will run , ......... , .. July 12. ·auFFELL'S UPHOLITllY . .... .._.._ .... lfll tiA'llOl &YD. ' COtf.A ... IA-148-11 .. BEDWETTER LET THEM HAVE A DRY BED n....-....... -..... --.... -.... -,. ........... __ ,,_...,11!'4 ___ ,_ ............... ".__,,,.._ ................ ..... .................... "" ........ ..._ .......... _ •. -., ....... -............. -....-.·-.... -........... -......... Nl ___ T•R .... If'.• ..... ., ... ---· ... -.-. "Equo/IV Efft1etlWJ for Adults~' r····----------···----..... '«>: 'AC"IC IHTUINATIONAI.. '-TD. ! 31/ "rat Street/ ~OOM. ~I 54451 I : PAllEHTI' NAMI : : AOOfllSI : I Cit\' ITATI-ZIP--I I I ·~ ~'--' : • Pecilflc 1"'9t!IMIOMI I.If lt11 I~• c:?. : ,\I ' \f •. -' N •••• Dow Jones Final Up 7.39 CLOSING 970.83 Would you, a small-business man, hire addition~! young an<l inexperienced workers to help you this summer if the Jaw would allow you to pay them less than today's all·time peak $3.35-an-bour federal minimum wage? • H your honest answer is that you would take on more teen·agers if you weren't compelled to pay them so steep a minimum wage, you would be help- ing the United Stales lake a giant step toward reduc· ing our swollen teen-age unemployment rate. The overall unemployment rate among teen· agers of both sexes is 19 percent in contrast to a job- less rate of under 6 percent among men 20 years or older and 6.6 percent among ~ adult women. Among minori- ty teens. the -~~~~~~~~~ ~_::-rate skyrockets , to an almost un· SYlVIA PDRTIR ~ ,. b elievable 37 ., _ percent. BUT WOULD YO U, a personnel manager in charge of hiring at a major corporation, st~rt fa~or· ing more youn g un skilled ov~r adult unskilled 1f a two-tier minimum wage were m effect? In short, instead ol adding to your total work force by employing extra youngsters, would you try to add t0 your profits by penalizin~ the adult who must be paid $.1.35 an hour and taking on the teen· ager at a lower wage? U your honest answer he~e is that. this woul~ be your inclination or, al this point, you simply .can t be sure how you would react, then th~re are t~~erent evils in the whole concept of a special submm1mum wage for younger workers. And the proposal should be ignored. Would you, a teen-ager in school, with an indif· ferent to poor record of achievement ~nd eage~ to enter the labor market, quit school 1f more Jobs became available as a result of a two-tier minimum? IF VOUR ANSWER is .. ye$," then school dropout rates among 16 .and 19 year-olds would rise. As more jobs became available at lower wage rates, more teens would leave school permanently. The new job openings created by the special youth minimum wage would not reduce the unemployment rate. The experiment would be a failure. The whole theory of a federal minimum wage has been the target or fierce controversy in political and economic circles for almost a half-century. The more recent proposal that younger workers sh~uld be paid a special subminimum has prompted a bitter debate on its own. • STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS Bun' Remo Pee G .. E •mer T.,T IBM c-0111< ClllttSV<t Mobil .rw Corp ~~~c,::r MIQ GullWest Soi>v Corp Conau Pow Int T .. T US Ho,,,. S70,100 147,100 461,000 ~7.400 420,,j(IO 331, TOO *2},600 711 ,600 uuoo Us.too 1411,400 13',700 233,000 Ul,fOO 211,200 \6 +"" ·~ + ""' -I"> .. "' . ~ • \It + ~ -II> .. " + II> . "' -~ UPS AND DOWNS UP'S Last ChQ Pct. METALS ~IS~ Ctftlt • pOund, U.S. dn llr,. Ilona UH 3'-31 cenll • POOind. Xl"c A614 cents• oound, clellvereo. Tiii "·'*Met••• w"' CO-lie lb. Ah1ml_,, 7• C"11t a pound, N. 'I Mercury $40 00 O<tr llestt. P'lath1wn ~56.00 lroy or • N Y SILVER I ' I I I I . I I .--!. 'I "" .. r I .. I t r " .... .. , . l•~ ... .. i't •11• Mr. ..... .,,, 1 ..... n" + l~ Up 11.7 20 + 1~ Up •.• '" + " Up t .4 •1111. -------------1 I•} JI/fl + 14 Up 7.7 ~ • J'll. Up 7.4 ~ • 1a. Up 1.2 11'41 + ~ UP 7.1 2 + .... Up ~7 it + 2 Up 6.7 271/!1 + 111'1 Up S.t U~ • t't UP S.I Jf\4 • 111'1 Up U t i'\ + l'I UP S.6 7tV. • 4 Up S.S Jll.-\ + '" Up U JOI'\ • 11"> up s.t II\\ + "' UJ 5.1 DOW NJ Nenw l Mobll -. ~~ 4 c;er111i. • S HOfteleMOt 6 NVFCo ' C.rll119 9 Fuct ... I.~ t JoyMf9 t 10 SffentAtl pl . "I' II ~AmMIO + I a-... 1 ,• :: ~ ~ u ~~~7-= :1! ..... • 16 FllmweYt. K.... 17 Alrtln Frt las~¥. -°"' 01t"~ t.s 4 -~0lfU n .... -'" OH •.s ., .. -,.. Off •.i ,, .... -21"> Oii u V!-~~ H !JY, -~ "" u --' 8a 5.2 '"' -..,, S,2 U.-"' I 5.0 TV.--t' '11 4,, i'F~i" ~-tr 1--.. u 1W. -" 4.S GOLD COINS NEW VOtltK (AP) -PYICe• fete Mofldey ti 901d ColM, <empered wllll ,,,tcley•a jltica. IC,....,._, 1 troyoi., UOt.1$, off t7,1J, ..._.. ...,, I troy 111., pit.to, Off 11.U • ..... .... 1 V.y oa,. 110UO, offt1.U, MHl<M to,._, 1.2 tl'Oy ot., MlUS, off •:..,.... 100 (~ .teot ll'OY Ol., ..-.u, ... .,.oo, GOLD QUOTATIONS L.....,_1 momlnv 11w1nv ~1 oo, ott 66.00. L•-: •IW.rnoon ll•tno $-tM.00, off st.oo. ' '" P'•rta: •flernoon llalno UH.SS, up ·:" J •1~:!i.11tW1: 11.11111 Mel.01, Oii $14.01 ..... zurlcll: late •H•,,,_, ll•tnv .-.oo, Off $9.00, $487.00Hked. M•11•Y a Hume11: only delly quot•~'~" 1 ~.00, olf $9.00. 1 .......... : ~ly O.lly CIUOle ~.00, Off q n.oo. ·' 1!,..i-· OltlY Clelly C!Wlt l•IM'lceted "'" uoi.>., Off • ..,, .. SYMBOLS Piiot Logbook -Da·ily p·ilat'· Candid commentoriew ercluaivtl!I in Che I :. ... Orange Coat OAiL V PILOT/Tuetday, May 12, 1981 ii I I I· SI).\\ -EVENltG- t:oo .~ •• NIW8 - WONOE11 WOMAN Wonoer Wo"'tn 1 1lr9n0th, ablltty anO qulCI< K lk>n HYH hunOrecll ol 1MQP1e lrom • d11u1rou1 acc10en1 a1 an a"'uMmen1 park !Part 2) 0 TIC TAC DOUGH • w•A08"H IMOltlne .,. _, In flllt .,,.a., foeuelng on the uM 01 •-•· bionlG and 'i°"'" putetlbd PAtll within the hi.,,,.,, bOdy 10 dffl wllTI QOl'dlllOfl• pre111ou1ly lncuralll• Aleaanoer llcOUfby ntrr .... • ~MNnlH'· OOMIOY Cu.MIO Ot-eon w ...... Frll/llC Sine· tra. too Newt\Mt, Oom DellllM and GOidie Hawn -8fflOftO 1'*41 IHl\lfed tn 1hla took II 1ne world ol Ama<tcllf\ c;om.dy. 0.ltl M8111n hoill1 -~ •a* "PIVCl\O ( 1MO) Anth<>fty Perktna Janet l elgll Olrecled by Allred HllCl'ICOc:ll A young wom- .,., -ountara • payoho11e klllet .,,., •laallng • latge eum of ~ lrom ,.... emp!Oyef' 8 Ill HAlll'ltY DAYS During a coto snap. a p1or or longjOllns Hnl 10 Hawk· eye lrom home ~om .. a much-soughl·•llet com· modfly .., 0000 TI-..E8 Florid• and J1me1 have 10 CO'l'e up Wllh $500 In t>aol when J J 11 arr11led on an •llegeo armed ro1>1>ery ctla<Jt_e BRAIN SURGERY -Marie Hines un· dergoes surgery to have a nerve switch implanted in her brain to relieve back pain in "The Body Jfuman : Breakthrough 2000'' tonight at 8 on Channel 2. A back ln)11ry lonOCk• Mar Ion oul ol 1ne Leopard lodge l>owhng linlll Incl IMVM Ho.trd with lhe INI< of finding • replace· men• forhet 0 MOVIE • • ·~ "Sllen1 Nigh I. Lone ly Night" j196Q> Lloyd Btldgea. Shifley JOMt A pl lr Of llrtng¥t -k comfort from H eh Olhe• a1 lhly undlfgo peraonal crlMI on ChrlalmH Eve Q) P.M. MAGAZINE Chocolal8 puOOlng wrea· lilng, 8 vllll wolh Dodger buebllll m•n8Q8f Tommy LHOrd•. •nd hit wll• Jo, Judy Jernudd 1re1t1 down WHta<n Avenue 10 dla- coun1 &hop tor furnllure and major 9')pl11nce1. Dt Whllaker rav1a11 some 1urpr11lng nawa about egga, C"8t Tell makes a IOw·lll lomllo HUCa fDW ELECTRIC COMPAHY(A) Cl) C88 NEWS (ID) ABC NtwS UO 0 JOKER'S WILD • WELCOME BACK, , l(OTTEA When Eps1.,n is caught 1mok1ng, the Other Sweathoga lake on the 1uk of breaking him of his habl1 G) BENNY HIU. Ti-e must l>8 money on c;c>mrnerclals, bul not wolh Benny In charge Oi) KCET NEW88EA T m STUOIOSEE "Friends' Scuba Oovers NICOie and Da"'lan E1oe- m1re ••P'°'• the C•yman l1l•nOs Ch1c•go Gort Scou11 play ear1n1>all (RI (J) NEWS ®J BARNEY MIU.EA A wlld-eyeO gunman l0<ces Barney and hos men to do lime on lhelr own 1a11 CHANNEL LISTINGS In the eomp•ny ol a loony ven1rlloqu111 and hit ob-dummy 11:158 U EOITOAIAL 1:00 0 C88 NEWS 0 H8CNEWB 8 HAPf'V DAYS AGAIH Fonzie iigr-to welCh Ovef lhe pregnlt'll wife of • friend whO la OUI or town fl A8CHEW8 (ii 8Ull.8EYE Q) M •A•S'H Bolh Cfltrles end Khnget oevetop romlt'ltlC 11 .. sona wfllle forgenlng their lrou· l>los •1 Rosie'• B•r &I) STREETS OF SAN FRANCISCO Personal knowledge ol • po1111c11n'1 wire leads Slone to bel..ve that the "'en's apeer-gun Oellh was no1 accidental fl;) OVER EASY Widow Women Alone" Guests Mw,or .. Gu1nr1e Dt He!Onl Loptla, Ginny Cox tRI fJ KN!CT 1CB::>1 Lu., Anqt>le<> CJ KNBC 1NBC1 Lo., An1;etc-o; 0 KTLA tlnti >Lo., Anqele!. 1J MBC TV tABCI LO!. Angele!. { ... FM B 1CB!:>) ::>.111 Dol!qo 0 l\HJ TV 1 Ind > l 0'> An wt.•., tO' l\C~ r 1ABC1 ':)an Ou•4,, Q) K TT'v 1 Ind 1 lll'> An<jl'l1•0., &I) KCOP fV1l11ll 1 Loo; An4elPo., fl;) KCFT rv ,PB'>1 lo., AnqPil'!. m i<OC[ TV 1PB•-,1 Hvnl·nqton BeJCll "1!) MACHEJL / LIHMR REPORT Cl) TIC TAC DOUGH ®l MEIW OAlfflN Gue111 P1trlcla O•vll Eole McClurg. Donna Otk· on • 7:a0 IJ 2 OH THE TOWN · Hoala Steve EOw1r01. Melody Rogers V1sl1 •n unuau•I nightclub In S•n Fernando Valley; • raporl on lhe tr•gedy of chlld stealing, ol>l«V• how for aign VIP's .,, lrealed w1ien lhey Vlltl Los Ano-- let 0 FAMILY FEUO 0 SHANANA Guell J1yne Kennedy 1J EY£WITNE.88 LOS AHOEl£8 Hos1a Inez Pedroz1. P1ul Moyer Viall Old San Juan, meet a homicide cop wllh an unlorgetllble llory or one lriU"'ph on crime. 'Dudley' goes W1ndaurf a FACE THE MUSIC Q) AU. IN THE FAMILY Mot..e end Glorta teach Edllh a method by wtllCh marr Hid people can f ogf'tl f8llly " fI;) MACHEll / lEHAER AEP<>fn" m NEWS Cl) P.M. MAGAZINE A v111t wtlh Olympic speed stealer. Enc Heiden J:OO IJ (I) THE 800Y HUMAN: THE &IONIC BREAKTHAOUOH R1vo1ut1onary l>re•k· lhrougha on lhe roe1c1 or G) CONDOMINIUM Based on the novet by JOhn 0 MtcOof'lakl An Impending hurr1cant1 thrHlent lhe lives of the 1eatden11 of an exclusive conoominlum t>uoll l>y 8 greedy and 1rrespon11ble corpo<ehon S11rrong Bar-i>••• EOen, Oen Heggerly end Steve Forrest (Part 2) Ol) NOVA 'The Welar -Ctosts An e•amlt\aUon of acid raon 1n the Adorondtekl water 1ecyc1ong on Calttornoa and contam1na1ed wells m Maasachusell• IS present. ed (R) m MYSTERY Sergeant Crobb The OeteCl•v• Wore Soll< Drawers'' Serge•n• Crot>b IS plunged onto the shady world ot lhe outlawed bereO-flsl hghl geme (Parl 4) UO fl 0)) LAVERNE & SHIRLEY A riotous angel provtdes a downhear1ed Laverne wolh • surprllltlg new voew ol the world Birney plays many roles; By JERRY BUCK A"Tel..,h*Wrlte< LOS ANGELES In "The Five of Me," David Birney plays "a man who went to sleep at 7 and woke up 30 years later" Lo find he had no idea what had happened to him. Bimey's character is a man tormented by multiple personalities in the movie, which CBS will broadcast tonight. "Dana is the personality that li ved out most of his life." said Birney. ''He went to sleep as Henry Hawksworth, and when he finally wakes up again he's Henry again. But he Lived out most of his life as Dana."' His other personalities are Johnny, a sadistic hell-raiser whose antisocial behavior occasionally David Birney fleftJ and Jame• Whitmore in "TM Five of Me." certain things you can't do because you lose your flexibility. My daughter can bend over and touch the floor with her head. Kids are active, always moving. They machine-gun their attention." The most diflicult personality lo catch was the rescuer "lt was hardest in the sense that he's not readily identifiable," Birney said. "He gets into the body the term they use is ·comes out' when the body is in physical jeopardy The on ly identifying characteristic is a slight limp and a Southern accertt." Birney is winding up a role in the CBS miniseries "Valley or the Dolls," and this summer will tour the East in "Talley's Folly" with his wife, Meredith Baxter Birney. Birney and his wife regularly spend their sum- mers on the boards. Last year he directed "A Life in the Theatre" in Los Angeles and Loured with "My Fair Lady." He has not been in a series since "Serpico," but said he was offered a lead in Ii pilot for CBS. He turned it down because of a commitment to his alma mater, Dartmouth College. "In "Valley or t he Dolls," he plays Lyon Burke. a dfrector. "In one way or another he is in· volved with all the women in the script," he said. "It's nlce to go from something as substantial and painful as 'The Five of Me' lo a flat-out com mercial piece. Birney said he likes lo play a variety or parts'. "You get to shape your life. instead of having it shaped for you," he said. Falwell group 'not majority' OJAl <AP) T elevision is too sensitive to lancl Dana In jail; Peter, innocent and childlike. ___ _,, ...... ,_~ ·~....:.:..>~ WeJ hero, who i•.what·Bi~y calls tbe "rescuer personality. criticism from lbe Moral Majority, which does not represent the views of most Americans. "l\oots ·' producer Stan M arguiles told a television workshop on special interest groups. After three days of discussions, some of the televiliOJl ~~' .~,.4eQisJ9.4l·tJ'V'lror~:fM:~~ Suuday ~Mt guicfelin@rllJOOfa "f)e •~ 'l1P ~ · Sf'll special interest groups will be treated the same. I • He seeks h~lp from a noted psychiatrist, Dr. ~ Ralph B. Al1ison . "In therapy," Birney said, "it becomes a struggle between the personalities ror control of the body. Certaln elements of It sound Uke 1 horror rilm, but It's absolutely true. Well. it's dramatized truth." The movie was adapted from Ult book by Henry Hawksworth, who told of his bewilderment, torment and finally escape from the multiple personalities. The book waa written with Ted Schwarz. Lawrence B. Marcua wrote the screenplay, and the movie wu directed by Paul Wel\dkoe. "It's unlike 'Sybtl,' which also told ot multiple personalities, In that the story ii st.retched out over a period ot Ume." Birney said. "It 1lartl aft.tr the Korean War when he's 22, and takes blm unW he encounters ihe theraplst who chanan Illa life. ''For bJm, life was Juat a am" of blaekout.1.'' the actor said. "It must have been tentt1ln1. Two bulldred years a10 they'd hive attUH4 bim or • 1 wttchcralt ... Blmey aaid, "Certain tbJnt• we)uld triH• the 1ubmenlon or one personallt)' and emtrsence or another. He'd come home u 1>an• and hla mo&M.T would mention tome toys in the cloMt. She'd IHn the room and he'd revert to a '7·1ear-oW." 1• .,...parlnl lllmaell for the role ... ,..,.., tald be spent a lot ol Umt with his own 7-year-old dauabtu, Kathleen. "Your body lJ dtlfel'enl," be uJd. "'There art ''Television· ls overreacting to pressure groups now because it bu had a free ride for such a lone time,'' said Margulies ln one or live reports delivered Sunday, the last day of the conference. "Now, many 1roups are diacovering the way lo get a free ride is to attack television. We are not persuaded that the Moral Majority Is a majority." The Moral Majority is a natJonal prganizaU01 founded by the Rev. Jerry Falwell of Lyncbburi., Va., advocating a back-to-btbUcal-moralily move· ment in America. The g.roup has joined a campaign by the Rev. Donald Wlldmon, whose National Federation for Decency ls mon1torin1 televillon pro1ram1 with tht 1oal of boycotUn1 aponsora of programs it does not approve. Moral Majority and Wlldmon's groups were the only two special Interests speclllcally crltJtiHd by the 1ympo1tum part.iclpanu. Moral Mt.Je>tt&y and the FederaUon for Decency were not represented at the conlerenc.. Bud Yorkln, partner or Norman Lear In T1ndem Productlont, l\llletted meettnas be aet up 1round the cou.nlt')' for an exchaqe or ldeat betwem tM '"*bile a.nd the industry. "You tOUld ,o out and bold a 1lve·and·takt wllb ~ people.' Yorkln aald. "fl would live the preuwe 1roupa an opportunlt7 lo vent tbtlr fruatraUon. It wouid ''" people an opportunity to be bunt." • TUBE TOPPERS NBC 8 8:00 -"Dean Martin Comedy Classici." Martin hosts a look at past comedy sketches as well as some new ones with f(uest stars Orson Welles. , Frank Sinatra and Bob Newhart. KCET@8:00 "Nova. The Water Crisis." Acid rain ln Adirondack Moun- tal ns, California recycling and con l!tminated wells in Massachusetts are presented in this science show. CBS 8 9:00 "The Five of Me ... David Birney stars in a two-hour movie about a rnan torm ented by multiple personalities. <See story below). Q) CAllOl IUAH«TT ANOl'AllHOI Skill "8ttlclly For The EMtdl," 'Fun In A Drug ''°'* The Crulae e-oo e MOVlf "The Flvt Of Me' tPrem· 18••1 David Birney. OM Wallace A men 1ormenled by mulllple pe<sonelol ... -· plyChllhlC help IO 11no out wno he 1tuly •• l!tnd whll 11 htppenlng 10 him 0 MOVll "The St., Maker" (Parl 21 tpremlerel Rock Hudson. Su11nne Pleehell• The story of • Hottywooo ouec tor wllh a lmack lor lran•lotmlng lngenuea Into tntlfnlllonel ttarleta •nd a I pench•nl 101 merry1ng h•• c:tHtiOnl II lold. fl®) THME'8 COMPANY Jtck tnd Janel turn onto 011100ves whan Conoy my11 .. 1ou1ty vantahea Q) MERV OAlfflH Guaata Pt1r1e1a Oev11 Edie McClurg. Donna DI• on, John James RIChlrd Morris fll) MYSTERY "SergH nt Crol>b The Oe1ec11v• Wore Solk Drawers Sergeanl Crtbl> 15 plung.ld 1n10 th<! shady world of the oullaweo l>8'ed-llal llghl game (Part 4 m NOVA 'The Water C11111" An exemlnallon or acid r aln In 1h• Aduondtckl ... ,., rec:yGlong on C1Mfornoa and con1am1n111d we111 on Maaaachusetta 11 p1-n1- ed IA) 9:30 IJ 0 TOO CL08f FOR COMl'ORT A 1a11<et1ve gholl at • wane• govea Mur.et tne 1mp1es1ion lhal Henry wH wllh enothet woman whlll •he wa1 away 10:00 IJ Ila) HART TO HART White hoeptlalozed wllh a .,oghl concu111on Jennotw w11ne1H1 a slaying, bul c;1n' I get anyone •• nol •ven Jonalhan •• 10 bll•eve ,.., (ii &I) '1!) HEWS fl:) PAEBENTJ voces De vt;°ba Buef\1" An e•amoneloon or thl dlf· lorenl Latin group1, theor history custom• end cul· lure 11 presen1eo 10:100 NEWS 10:30 Q) NEWS &I) INDEPENDENT NETWORK NEWS Oi) VIC BRADEN'S TENNIS FOR THE FUTURE The Overhead Voe Bra den helps vo..,ets change lhf!or overhead 5hol lrom a num1ioa1ong handicap in a pom1 SGo•onQ weap0n JOHN DARLING Gnt11CHMT\AHI The ~aooie Ot The 9oolo" The lht .. O•HI rellgklul QfOUP9 Of lhe MIOdle £111 .iew. Chr1111an1 lt'ld Mollem1 and hOw lhey heve itlhuenced Hcil olhet ., ••• am~ tt:oo1••000 ..wt ITAAT1'El MGCoy entet• • tlr'ne w11p and ct>enQe9 hlllory ellmt· nattng the Enl•PfiM 1no llrandlng Kirk ltlCI Spoc~ 0 HEWL YWt'.D GAMf tD M•A'l'H ()(eama and ntOl'lm••*' pleg11a lhl overwork"d o4017th ., 8ENNYHIU Thi lhr .. Mulkll_. ride egatn Into another HC•· pade with pr ally m11den1 fl:) DICK CAVETT Guest Ha<ry Belafonte tPart 2 ol :2) 11:30 1J CJ) BASKETBALL NBA Playoff, 111111 9•"M Hou•lon-Bo.Ion D TOHIGHT Holl Joh11ny Carson Gues11 Loma Pall11aon Jorfl Stalford IJ (!]) ABC NEWS NIGKTLINE (ii lET'8 MAKE A DEAL .., REC HUMBARD &I) BAAETIA Tony leama wllh • 12·Y••• old lo pt1ven1 ll8f ra1her lrom par1oc1pa11ng on a 1ewel he111 fI;) m CAPTIONED ABC NEWS -Ml>NIGHT- 12~0 MOVIE • • • Marnie ' t 19641 Toppo Hedrft11 Sean Con- ne•y 0 (1.}; MOVIE • • Bat>y Blue Ma11ne t t976) J11n-M1chael Vtn c:onl, Olynnoa 0 Connoo 0 OUNSMOl<E Q) Ml88IOH. IMP08818lE 12.300 TOMOAAOW Guasts Secretary ol Ille Navy John F Lehman Jr Rol>e<t M11chum &I) ONE SlEP BEYOND Ecno Paul Marlon MH!l a lf!rtllyong VlllOll ShOrlly afler he has been acQuot led ot murdertnQ hos wolo t:OO G NYCHIC ,..,OMIH.+..,.. WOM.DMYOHO "Touch FOf HMIOI" HH11 Oemtfl• lin\pllOn ltlCI It .. c;y ~nf dllCUM Ille 11 .. Of ac:upr-•• poln1• IOI IYlllnfelftlnO "-ilh with OU-I 0.1\on Molino • MOvtl • * • "Maj0t Ouncl"" I tN&I Ch8flton H"10t'I Aic.llatd H.,r!a -~ ~NEWt 1:80 (I) MOVlf • • • "The Stvage Inn(). centt" I 11161 I Anthony Quinn. YOko Tani 1:41 8 NEW9 1:1a e NEWS 2:00 0 H£W1 • MOVtl! *a* ·My Cous.n Rachel ' ( 19S3) Olivia oe Havonano Rochatd Burton 2.10fl NEWS 2:18 IJ EOfTOAlAl I 2:20 U MOVIE • •·~ The Judge And JIU Wyle<' (19721 Belll Davia Doug McClure 3:00G) NEWS 3:115 Q) MOVIE • • • "Or Jekyll And Mr Hyde" t 111"4 I) Spencer Tr•- cy lngrod BerQman 3:88 0 NEWS 4:00 0 MOVIE • • ·~ 0 1 Love Arod De•or• \ 1963) Merle Ooeron, Stove Cochran A M'Pdnt-•dat1"• Do11fimt-M ot"lt-• -MORNl«1 - 11:00&1) *'• Threele•H • Steers I 1939) John Wayne Carole Landot 11:300 • *'• Gang War' (1958) Charles Bronaon, Kent Taylor -AFTERNOON - 12:00 &I) • • ', The Chargto Al Fealher Ro.er I t9531 Guy Madison Vera M•IH 1:00 Q) • • 'Fl1gn1 From Ashoy" 11964) Yul Brynner R1C:hol•O W•d mat Iii. 3:30 0 • •', The Coull Jeat &r t 1956) Danny Kaye Glynis Johns by Armstrong & Batiuk ...-~~~~~~~~~~~~~--. OUR VERY SPECIAL GUE.ST ON OARl.JNG-TOO.-.Y IS CHANNEl.. ONE'S OWN 5PORT5CA5TE.R, MIKE. MIKE, YOU 51ARTEO OUT Ai A SMALL 5TATION IN INDtANA, ANO IHEN WENT ON 10 BAL ltMORE, NE.VIJ WHAi SEEMS TO SE THE PROBLEM IN HOLDING-- DOWN A .JOB? MA.JOR5/ JERSEY. AND DETROIT BEFORE. f:='INALL'< COMING- HE~E. ! Savory savings. -------AIOUT 1 s199G.EAT I 9 DINNER () g GOO<l tor three pieces ol 1u•cy qolden brown Kentucky ~ Froed Chicken plus single sprvongs ol cote slaw. O m.islled pol•toes and gravy and a roll L•mot two otters Z per purchase Coupon good only 101 cornbonatoon while/ I dark oroors Cu5tomer pays all applicable 5ales tax I Oller e1p11e~ May 2• C2C Proces may •arv al partoc1pa1ong toca toOn1. GoO<l only 1n Southern Calllornoa I I I -------ABOUT s5 9n SUPER. e ~DINNERI z Good lot nine pieces ol 1u1cy, golden brown Kentucky • ~ Fried Ch1ck1n, wo1h lour rolls, a large cote slaw, • l1rge ::::> mashed polaloes and • medium gravy L1m11 1wo ollers O per purchue Coupc>n good only tor combination while/ U der1l orders Customer pays all applicable s~ I Olle1 eKp11es a.. --W- May 2-4 1981 C2C .... ~..!!=:.·----l P11c:es mav vary at Pd• tocopatong l0<.<11tQns Gooo only 1n Soulnern C.tlolorn1a where you see Ameroca s Fla•ottlt• Window Banner --·-----~ 2 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE l"ICTITIOUS aUSINESS l"ICTITfOUSaUllNHS NAMI $TATIEMENT NAME STATEMINT Th• fotl-tnq ,,.,_, ts doing l)usl-Tl\t IOll-lnq Pel-' Is doln9 bull· M U-WU" SWEET PEA ANO CO. 110~ ISL.ANO REALTY CO,. 4'1t Patk Ptlarson Pl 6•0. Golla MtH, CA 'nnut, 8•100a Island, C,alllornla tUli n .. 1 C•rrl• 5uMl'I l'ttlcller, 2700 Ptlt<SCll ROBERT HALL JR .. " Goleta Pl 640 ,GoltaMtsa,CAttOl. Point Drive, Corona dtl Mar. Tl\ll bUllneu II conduCltd by 4111 In. ::.11fornl1 dlvlduel. ' Tn11 IJUllntu 11 conctu<•d by an In· c.rri. S..Own Fletotner jlvld11al. Thi& stal-1 WH llltd wllh 1ne R_, Hall Jr County Clerk of or .. oa C:O..nty IHI Tnls .... _, Wal llltd wlln .... Aptll n , "" CoYnlY Cltrk ol OrMltt County IHI ,, .... 'prll 74, 1'11 P1o1bllsh9d Orange eo.s1 Oally PllOl, ,., ... , Ai:>rll u. M9y s. 11, "· 1"1 1912·91 P11bll1hed Or~ C:O.tt Delly Pllol, ·~ ~-:.~ "';.~~.f;~ ,. .. "CTITIOUS IUSINIH NAM& ITATIMINT •prll 1', May S, t~,'~. '"' t~-tl l"ICTITIOUSaUSIHESS NAME STATIMENT PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE 01' AVAIUllLtTY ,ICTITIOU5 IUStN•H 01" ANNUAl. ftE"°ftT NUU STATIMINT Pu"uanl to Se<llon •104 (di of lht Tiit IOll-lnq perton h de>lng bu•I· tnltrn•I Rtven11• Code, nollca 11 neu as. htrtby ~ ll>at , ... •MU•• r_.-t KA THLEEN A . ZACCARIA, I« Ille c.a1..-year 1'IO of Brother Coro"'I~, J600 er....-111. • 1"2, Nll<f'tffl• Olfls11an MIMlon•,. prl•tlt I.a Pal"" Cllltomla~ IO<lndalloro, IJ 1vallable al lhe found•· KA fHLEEN ANN ZACCARIA, lion's ptlncipal of1k• lor •-lion j.ocl or.,,....,_,., •IM, L..e ,...._ durln9 re(IU!er l)Utlneu llOUrs from tO C•llfomtatOIZI. •.m. to 5 p.m. by any clthen whO r• Tnl1 bullneu I• conducled bY a11 In· Qlll•ll II within tlO Gay• alter Ille d•I• dlvldual of thll P\lb41'911on Kalhl.., Atln Z.Ccatla Th• found•4lon'1 principal offk• '' Tl\il $1•1-1 wti flltcl wllh the tocattd al , ... Tu1tln Ave., Cotla County Ctt rlt ol Or.,~ County on l'Msa, CA 91627 Aptll 2•, '"' l"l-J The prln<lpel ,.,_r of the loun· delloro Is MlchMI C. Ow1ll-. Publifhed 0rllrl9f Coell Oally Pllol, Mkl'oMI c. owellatt>t APf'il 21. May s. n. 19, 1991 ,.,,._11 Publl1nec1 Orll9 CoaJl Oallv "'lot. r -- May 11, 1'1' •• --:-,. ;. ~~~~ .• :-:.s ____ _....__ __ _ PUBLIC NOTICE Tll• followlnq per_, lsdolng bUllMH H : Th• 1611-1"9 Pl'rl<HI Is Oolnt buJI· NOTIC• 0,. AVAIUalLITY l"ICTITIOU5 IUSIN&SS NAM& STATEMINT Tl\e fOll-1"9 perton ll CIOlno bull ntU as: PRECISION PRODUC TS COMPANY, 2JO IE. 17th SlrMI, Cosla MHa, C.llfornla 93127 J•r-u. Haldet'-, 1.00 c•av Slrtat, H•wPorl B••<l'I. C•lllornla t7Ml This buSlnn• 11 CondU<leCI by an In· dlvldual. Jeromt I.ff Helder toll Thi• Stal-I wai llltd "'"" Ille c;....,ty Cler\olOr .... c.unt'ton~il 17, '"'· ,,..,.. Publl•ned 0r.,... Goasl Dally Pltot, Apr. 21,Jt,MeyS, ll, 1 .. f IPf"'I PUBLIC NOTICE ntUH O"ANNUAltt•,.CHIT SH EWA RO & SONS & SON&, Pursuent 10 Se<llotl 6104 (d) of the Newporl l'ebrlc, H.,dwert Af· lnlarnal Revtn111 Code, nollct h soc fain, C11blco, 111 1111 SlrHI, hereby g1...,.,...,. _,report tw Ntwpor1 a.ac11. ca1"orn1a tMl the caleftdoW _, 1• of Oelllsll ChMt Terry A si.wartl, 16» la)'$llO<e. commlll• Inc:., • prtvett t__,.11_,, HewPorl llH<I\, C.lll0tnla f*l It o•llllDle et Ille foundelon'a prln· Tlll1 bus111tt1 ts coneluctecl by w> In· <11181 ollla for lnW!KllOn Clurt119 r• dMClwel t .,18r 11ut1M11 "°"" lrom t • m . te 4 ftl'f\'A.$hlwartl p.m • .,., MIY clt11.., Wiie ,.....,..11 II Tbl1 1181-1 wat llltd wllh lht wllhlfl 1a din tftff Ille -ol llllt COVflty C .. rk OI Or .... G..,my on Ai:>r1I ""bllcttlen. 11, "" The feuncllloft'I prlnc:INI of11ce It ,,_ touted et m wa1nu1 Str•t, ,...pen P11blfJhtel Oranea Coe1t Oally Piiot, leech CA f2MO Apr, 71, M, MAO, r2, '"' 1171·11 n .. 'll"lflelpel men199r 91 -roun· PUBLIC NOTIC£ :~~~;':.' .. ~~_.._ C"A ....... If ...... AtNMlM, CA,_, flvbll.-Of'Mtt GMtt O.lly ,.,!04, Ma't 12, 1'11 U2H1 PUBUC NOTIC& ,te:TlTIOUt eUIUtHI llAMa l"fAT•MllNT Th<I flllll#I"' ,.,_ II Willt Wtl ....... ! TACO NACHO, 1 .. 1 H.,.._, 11 .... , c .......... c.llfwN• ttU1 MertM Gem...,, lt1' W•llace, Cetta--. Qil...,..tMD Tlllt ........ ,, c~ lly e11 lft 111wi...1. ~~ ORE•M CHILO PHOTOG.-APHY, '" e 11111 SlrMt, Cotte Masa. CA mn Kevil' c. Wall!\, us w. "'" Street. Coste Mtta, CA "2621 Thi• Mitw'9" ConduC-by an In· dlvtd11a1. l(tyln C. Wellh Thll Me~ WIS filed With 11\a ,_,., Cieri! of O•.,tt C.ounly on Atlfll U , "81 ,, ... P11CMllNCI Or-Goasl Oally Piiot. Aptll lt, May 5, 12, 1', 1 .. 1 1971·11 PJJBUC NOTlCE "ICTITIOWI &USfNISS NAMll STATaMENT flla rollOWlftll --.,. doln(I bUll· nano: ALL·FftEIGHT FO"WARDERS INC., I c.t"°""'a c.o,._alloft. U-41 N lteel OUM Ml'Mt, Atl-1111, CalifOfnl .... ALL·l',.EIGHT PACKERS, INC. 41 Callr.rnl• <OfPOr•tlon, 1+41 H. " Ololt'n '1• .. I, Nwllwlll'I, Callfornle '*' Thl1 DutlM'll II <onckKltd "' • cor Plfatlon All·'"'•"" hckart. Inc. Wllflltl\M. Memt, ~ Tllh fttttl'l'tf'lt WM Ill .. wlttl C-y CIH1I• Or.,.._ CeuMy e11 -.r 17, 1ttf. Ill llullllllltf Or11119t CO.ti Dally "' Ajlf. 11,11."""" '· 11.1•1 "