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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-05-24 - Orange Coast Pilot....................... er...... Joyce and Jack Boyle disilluaionecl with lnine. By GLENN MX>'1'1' or ... ..,....-...,-- JllCk a._s Joyce Boyle Jive in llvtnt, but thllr rootl ., a.ck to tou1h mldwestern cJtle• Uke Qeve1and and QUcaao. To people Ilk~ th• 1'oylff, Irv1ne w• ~to offer aww hope. It WM a plllQt where the old miltakel weren't aotna to be made anymore. Bu.t the Boylu believe differently today -thank.a to the way they've been treated the put tlx month•. Now they believe nice home. and 'pretty ltfeetl don't make a community. It'• involvement that counts . The Boyles asreed almoet a year -co to tell their houle in the comfonabae or.nu-dllUtcl of Irvtne to &mcrl Extmded Care Servlcet, a non-profit froup formed by parentt to help mentally retarded youth• develop tldllt to take care of thenwelv.. Jack Boyle had been out of* · work for tlx montht at the time. A Sutton repcwntaUve WU the tint to look at the hoUle once they U.ted It for ale. The Boyle. 1ot a cub offer far their aald1'g price two days la!er. · That wu lut July. "Since then," Aki Jack. "lt'a been holy hell.'1 The board of directors for (See IRVINE. Pace A!) IHI DRllGI COAST 1:11m 1111111 Mesa route bypass backed By JODI CADENHEAD or .. .,.., ........ A five-member dty task force has recommended the Coata Mesa City Council support construction of the Costa Mesa Freeway along an euterly rout.e bypusi.ng downtown bWJine9es, which could caute "minimal advene" impada. The so-called easterly downtown bypasa, endorsed during a City Council atudy -'oil Mc:mday, Ja one of etaht alt.emativet for completion of ihe c.o.ta .,_ ~y (Rout. 55) dtscuaaed ln a lenathy draft' enviroamental •tateqient released e#rlier thla year by Cal trans. City Public Services Dlrect.oc Bruce Mattern aaid task force members -all city •taff - cimcluded a route ltralaht down Newport Boulevard would be disrupt ive to downtown buaineaea and local residents living OI\ Orange Avenue, where traffic would De routed during ciomtructioo. 'lbe eaterly route, eltimated at $93 million, will displace 40 , buaineaae1 and 85 dwelllnaa. according to Caltrana' environmental report. It follows Newport Boulevard and IWlnp east of Newport from 17th to 20th atreet1 ju1t weat of Ful1erUsl Avenue. Mattern aaid panel memben believed the 90-Called .. adopted route" favored by merchants, which swinp Welt of Nrwport. would be too costly at $167 million. Peay Reinert, president of ea.ta Me.a Tomonow, a ,roup repreaentlng downtown mschanta. said buatnem people (See BYPASS, Pap A!) Fancy catch A Frisbee player ia 1ilhouetted against the shiny eea at waters edge u the 1un aeta behind him near the Newport Pier. ORANG E COUNTY . C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS A~erican Airlines vows June 9 start BY JEFF ADLER « .. .,..,......... . LOS ANGELES -American Airlines offlclala expreHed ()Qllfldpnce today all will be reedy for a June 9 inaugural flight from John Wayne Airport despite )ffal atumbllnc blocu that have c1elayed pnparationa. The DaUaa-bated airline'• plana to serve JW A were put back on track Monday afternoon when a federal court judge here ordered the Orange County Board of Supervlson to lift a moratorium prevenUJll any new air carriers from serving the airport "Thl1 means we can begin 1~rvlce June 9," American Airlines spokesman Al Becker NB woD't oppose increase in flights ~ .. 81!:8 .... ~LE la a major policy chan1e, Newp:ld BMich M9 ~It wtl1 not atand ln the way of lncrz ttc fllCbtll at John Wayrt1t AJrpcrt from 41 to M ~ ·~=~CCII .. pol.icy cbanae If <>ranee llUp«vllcn Clon't flnd a •I 1'ay to put a permanent freeae on dally takeoffs The move Mcndat m,ht C11De only boun after a federal )acta- cleared the way for American Airlines to bell» fiytnc out of John Wayne -a alp of the incr riDI .,....ue to expand the ahJ;!~re not atvm, ln," uld Coundlman Phil Maurer to the cbem of relildmts who showed up to protest the policy dw\a'e. "We jutt want to brln1 tile county to the table ., we can talk." Newport a.ch, ~ the put two yeara, bal spent nearly $1 million in an effort to pnwnt the counfy fnm mcre.tnc fll&btl at John Wayne. '"If you s-thl8 rwolution." ca"'tioned Newport homeowner and attotney '1'Mmu F.dwarda, "theft ~tve jl.a.t io.t \be first · roUDd 'of neaottatfom. You're belna nalbed into a dedsion." Other re9ldenta beged the d\)' to necotiat.e f« a lepl ~ to tet a peroaanent cap on but wltbont accedlna to ~n lncreue In fll\1!.: from ttie current 41.....clay t. "Negotiate with the county and then If you can't~ It aotna. then talk nUQ:abera." .8lid Barbu-a Lich.man, ptelldent of Aitport Work:fna Group. "You're mlMlnt a ~p. Jur.ilplng a IW'·" Council members, however, revealed that county cupervl8on had pYllD N"'PJl'l BMch unUl (See' NBWPo&T, Pace AJ) • said in the ~wrtroom momenta after the ruling. ''We don't see any problem• with terminal IJ*le. We will have to find some from scrne other operator ... However, county tupel'Vi8on, obviously diapleued with the court'• declalon, atlll are con•ldering punuln1 further legal action. Supervisoc Thomaa Riley tald be planned to .. the board today to appeal the decialon. U.S . District Court Judge Terry Hatter Jr. abruptly ruled in favor of American Airlines atter U.tenina to arauments by atiomeys reprmentiJlC both the airline and the county. He declined, however. to hear arswnenta from attorney• for both the federal pernment and other airlines which ll!l'ft John Wayne. IJ'he Judae, wbo »-conaidered three 1W A a.lrpol't ~ in the pMl two years. arCMtlcally laid the roomful of a~ many with famWar f.am.. 'Tve been on um flJaht before and rve bea'&m to ,....,.,.,,1,.. some of the crew. And I am bemi made lick to my stomach by the aame air pocket:L" Hatter ordered the county to abide by tta 1982 acce9I plan, which allocatet 41 dally departuret asnon1 the five competing alrllnet at JWA. He added be •• no "ratkmal bma" for the aupervilon' declDon to (See AfilERICAN, Pap A!) • HB expects budget surplus Revenues exceed spending for lint time since Prop. 13 By ROBERT BAUER or .. ..., ........ A f!M,4 mi1lior) budaet la beini recommended for tile city ol Huntinp:.n Beach for 1983-84. The propc>Md revenue and aP8QCUna ~ -up about fa.& ,rulJton ffom thi~ar'• llCt\W expendttww -for t~e reduction-of about 10 employees, brinllna the dtY'• permanent w<>ri: fOrce to ~30 ~. well • 1ocal Glcal remalnt. A aurplu1 ot U00,000 ls pndlctled _. ._ d~ II expected to pt incnu. of •~' $1.3 .mWon in~ taJllll and $1.2· ml11km In .... &uee. In addldon, UM dty abould ~ about tll0,000 more In udllty tuel. About 88 permnt °' .. dty'• revel\U. -or ta?.4 mdUon -II I I l ' . . . ' .. I I I I i A2 Orange Coat1 OAIL Y PILOT /Tuet<Say, May 24, 1883 ~'. ,,,... Continued stories NEWPORT POLICY ... onJy May 31 to chaJl&e dty policy on daily night numben. Accorcl1na to council memben. superviaon privately agreed to hold off environmental atudles that could clear the way for as many as 73 dally d~parturet if the city would chanae ita Pollcv. Some form of ne1otlatlons between the city and county now are expected. "I n politics ," a aid Councilwoman Jackie Heather, "timing is crucial. The Ume i. now to do aometh.ln1. Time ll running out and th.la (the policy chan1e) will 11ve ua aome bargaining power.•• Pierce O'Donnel, the a~ who helped the city tum airport expanaion 1ut year in a bitter lawsuit, told the council he is unsure bow much more time lawaulta could buy the city in holding off airport expanlion. "There wifl come the day when the courts will grow weary of our challenges,'' he pttd.icted. AMERICAN FLIGHTS ... impose the moratorium. The board imp osed the moratorium two weeks ago, citing health and safety fact.on at the airport. Supervisors ordered a study be completed by July l to determine what impacts the Commissioners mull freeway alternatives Orange County Transportation Commission members didn't ha'le much to say about completing unfinished portions of the Newport Freeway -except to say they were glad they weren't being~ upon to make a fi.nal decision. Commission members were briefed Monday by a Caltrans official who swnma.rized various alternatives being considered for finishing the freeway, not-ao- affectionatelv known aa the Costa Mesa "dltch." Before a formal public hearing on the freeway is held June 29, the public infonnally will get to review plans on June 15 , when a presentation by Caltrans i1 scheduled in Newport Beach. Costa Mesa residents got a look at Caltrans' plana last week. Construction -which could range in price anywhere from $6 milllon to $167 million -now is slated to begin sometime in 1987 or 1988. Alternatives being considered in the draft environmental impact statement range from doing nothing to the ditch to constrmcting an eight-lane freeway, which would displace 607 residences and 156 buafneaeea in Coat.a Mesa. / Huntington Beach ~ -end.,, un11-_,, 04 monev -f9P0'1ed 1aun 1n • ..-enc:1 burglMy et l(.nlef a.tlool. 1780 ~ Oftw. Entry to .... ~OOI "'"G'*' -· ~ mede lllrOUQll ........ A •••k•nd b•••k-ln •I 111edlG•I edl•••llClot• .,_,_an !tie 11to0 b'odl Of 8-:fl ~ ,._... In .. NPOt'9ll Ion of two mlcroco111putet•. al11 taM typewrll•r• •.n4 en AY..~M rlMllO-tepe ---· .. ......, et 110.ooo; --bottl9a Of llQuOr ......, .. 110. lnli'y - .,, • .., ....... by ~ °"" ...... ......._. entrance of new carriers would have on the alr~ady over- crowded facility. American has announced lta intention to fly four flights a day from JW A. three to De.llaa-Fort Worth and one to Chicago. BYPASS ... are now "looking favor,bly'' at the easterly route and would probably endorse lt later this week. · City Redevelopment Di . .J'Ctor Marilyn Whisenand, who aat on the task force panel, aatd adoption of the easterly route would allow redevelopment plans in the "Superblock" area near Newport Boufevard to continue unintern.apted. Earlier this year, the Urban Land Institute, a private planning group hired by..Jhe dty, recommended the freeway be bullt down Newport Boulevard and a path kept open there during construction. Whisenand said that would be too expensive since it appeared the city would have to pay to keep tr~ffic on Newport Boulevard during constructioa._, · The City Council will consider adoption of a route June 16. BUDGET ... set aside for salaries and benefits of employees. The police department, with 314 employees, is the city's largest department. Public worka has 240 employees and the fire department has 153 employees. A public bearing it .cheduled on the budget June 6 at 7:30 p.m. in the City CouncH chamben, 2000 Main St. Fountain Valley A ~ vi the IOOO bloCll Of o.tttah Clfde rllPOf19 tMI ..,,_ tlMMI NI lrom hie INllboll 8ltd epp-. •l"Y clilWWd " an ,.._,.,. A,,... .._. " -lound by • rl9IQNIOr Body ielt at41ront door ol station; PoU~e suspect overdose of ~ • The ldendt)' of a bearded man ~ta. bodl wt1 dumped on the ~ o a HuntlAgton BMch f~ ltadol) rermlbed a m)'ltery tOday, autborides lald. discovered. H• eaid offlcert AllplC't the '** of death .... ' Taking her cue Deann FM9hour, 12, of Irvine geh aome pool-playing tipe from "Micrp Man," dae robot mascot at the h:vine &71 and Girle Club. He'• owned by club reereation directol' Jim Palmer. KUil~ BMcb police S,i. Ed McErlaln aald no initial indJcattona of foul play were Valley eyes economist for 'lana project The J'ountaln Valley City Council, acting aa the city's redevelopment a1ency, will oanduct a speda1 meeting tonllht to con1lder retainl.ng a land economist to evaluate the Tramp9dfic Development Plan. Thia plan. coven a fannln1 area bounded by Slater Avenue, Euclid S~t. Talbert Avenue and the Santa Ana IUver. 'The sped.al meeuna beOw at 8 p.m. in City Hall, 10200 Slater Ave. · After the redevelopment meetmc. the City Coundl will conduct a study -1on on the propoaed 1983-84 dty budget. IRVINE COUPLE'S 'NEW ST*RT' • • • From Page A1 Greentree Community .A.-odatkln sued Sutton to keep it from Ulina the three beam to hou.e six retarded people and two adult aupervlaora. Board members said the \189 violated the aaaoci~tion'a guidelines req u lri ng single-family residences and aet a dangerous precedent. The board alao sued the Boylee, altbough that wasn't aa well known, claiming they conspired to keep the deal a secret. The Boyles aay that's not true, they told their neighbors immediately . But more important, they say the way Greentree residents bave allowed thelr board to opet'ate ii a sad story that undercuts what Irvine waa auppoeed to be all about. Jack Boyle remembers growio1 up in Chicago when everything teemed to have a nda1 anale: It ~ alW.)'I black veraaa white. Ria father, a public 8Chool tftCher. .....,.. took the stand that lf bi.ck people coW4S afford to moYe next door, then tllat WU line, be Mid. "Well, I feel the same way about retarded children, and I don't thipk •;f!:dy should deprive them a to Uve,'' he said Monday. In Oraqe County Superior Court Monday, Judge Judith Ryan diamlaaed legal a(:tion against the Boyles and another family, the Fee~eya, who aold their hOU9e in nearby Deerfield to Sutton. The Greentree and Deerfield boards bad ~ug.ht $'150,000 in damagee ap1Nl Md) 'Of the two .f.amil1ee, alle81na the sales had lowered property value. ~t much. Tbe Jud8t ~ ahe found 110 1epl ~ for lnclUdfnl Che Boy1e1 anc1 reeneya 1n the suit. 1be Feeneyt have mowd to the sta.teolW~ ~ 1ll\le '8 by no meen1 over. ~rife>~ are l1il1 aeeldna • court order to prevent Sutton from UllDI the ~ fncludina a th1rd home-in Greentree aoJd to Sanon by a bank, wblch wan't named 1n the lawsuit. But for niow, the Boy)a are free from a legal ~ that already baa cmt them fnore than S3,000 in la , &,I. ' ;en Boylee, 1n an act of faith. hive moved Into anotbet Greentree bou9e. They like the achoola and most of the people, and they claim their wiJJ1nlne9s to re.invest ahowa how little they believe claims that a Sutton home Could hurt property valuee. But being made into a vil1a1n bu left ita mark, the Boylea •Y. There have been tripe to the doctor for tran~zera and treatmen\ of high pre91W"e. Now they w<lDMt what tt w1ll take '° make the people of ltvtne reali.m architectural ltllndarda by thermelvea doft't creete a fOOd place to live. Joyce Boyle •YI lt Isn't a houte wlt'h mentally retarded people that will ~entually htqt ~ Yalu. -it'• the .. Archie Bunkertlm" mentality. "ComJn1 to Callfomta: we never tbou,ht we'd run into that," ahe said. "But It'• Wone here." ' drua avercbe. • Oran•• County coroner'• depU1'ee ~ they are awalUna test rel\.&lta befON rullnl on the exaci..eau1e of death. Mcl'.irlai.n Mid ~ at a station at 19711 Bulb8fd Scr-t answered a doorbell late Saturday and di1COvU'ed -the body. 'The people who bad left the body had vanllhed by the time the door wu opened. he l&ld. The dead man waa de9cribed .. • ~ to 40; about 5~ inches tall; weia}ting 190 with reddish brown C\U y hair and a full beard. He had a tattoo of a marijuana lMf on hit arm. He waa wearing blue Jeans, t.enn1s ahoea. and @ beiae 1'-abirt with the I~ of the We.t Qranae <:ounty YMCA Mc!!!rlaln aaid no wallet or other ldentlfication wu found on the body. He said no bcu1lel or other lndlcatlona of foul play were Ren. He said the· man'• finaerprinta have ~ aent to Secramento far poalble identification thr~gh state records. Police hold HB Inan on rape charge A 45-year•old Huntin1ton Beech man baa been arraied en 1U1pcion of abducting and raping a YOUJ'l& woman wt.a. car had broken down on a local street. Huntington Beach police Lt. Bruce y ouna said the man. Joe Anthony Corral, waa placed in Huntinaton Beach Jail Monday and released after poaing $25,000 bell. An 18-year-old Buntln,.ion Beech woman told polite ahe was wal.ldnc to • friend'• home after her car broktt down Sunday ni1ht. She told officers abe ~fu.aedarideotteredbyaman in a plckup truck, then wu forced into the truck and raped in • field niear Beach Boulevard and Atlanta Avenue. Police said the woman wrote down the Uceme m.anber of the truck after the --re.leued. 'The vehicle was tnced to Corral. Laguna Beach Coast :pilot's deatli .myStery lnvesfisaton 'oome up ·empty alter ~uona crash · Two t1M111e llgha. e lht .... llOll end a peilr of ................ ..,... .,.... Of MIOllt UGO • .-•Olen trom • ~ ~ ~IMP Pltked M ~...,.,PM Mondey. ,. An airpl•ne uaah out1lde M-. AN., lalt w.ekend which killed the 31-yeu-old Corona del Mar pilot and hi• ·paaaen1er i-emalm a mywtery, inveatipt.onl admowledpd U>day. three da)'I atud)'inl tM mUbap. Maloney WU pertldpa,tlnl jn an air show spomoted by a group which collects and restores vintqe airplaneL Pyatt dsribed the airplane aa a b1&h1Y unUIUal craft tettond to near·mint condition. She aaid Maloney and Or1an craabed after the show Md ended. lnclud1f\I "The Winds of War" and "Smokey and the Bandit." N.aloney WU a member of the Screen Acton Guild and Natlonal Air Radna Gt"Oup. . A IDUI will be Mid 10 a..m. w~ at Our 1Ady Queen of Anpla Church in Newport Beach. Burfal wll follow in P<mooa. He la au.rvtved by hit pennta. Hazy sunshine Stunt pilot Jamee Maloney and bi9 puaenief, Jamet Orton of Mesa, were kllled Saturday afternoon when the open- oockpit, World War 11-vlntaae plane they were fiyt.na craahed ln the delert. Then •• no 9'P of eltblt' mechanical or structural problema to the tlnlle-englne Ryan PG-22 trainer, Hatloiaal Tranaportatlon Safety Board loveat11ator Jean Pyatt aaid ~y. Maloney, a anctuate of c.cirona del Mat flab Schoo\ and <>ranee Coast CoUeee in a:.ta M._ wa1 clir.ctor Of dMt Planel of Fame*' mutemn at Chino Airport and a co-owner of 11 r11bter Rebullden." a :;;c which Edward and Lou!.e Maloney. two alatera, Ann Linder of Freemmt and Katen HlntDll °' Corona; and a brother, John Maloney of Caron.a del Mu. Coastal Low aloucl9 In lhe nlGllt Md I h tonlglll •nd hay lftlrnoon lllW9Nto• tnd hlgN In ttie upps IOI .. ttie Mec1M1 end -IO II\ lnllil'4 ...... lt11wllete, fro• Point Conception to Ill• Mexto1n llord•' •nd ouJ to 1111111: N&f ;;•I wtndl 12 to 22 ltnclta .... to .... -,,,,., °'*' cOUl•I '[,~~· tll~ Wedi 1S1s. .llGM .......... ~toto11 iu-..-1 to------~ 111-.~toifl••·--1tol ........ CllOU .. _ ... ....... ~~ ·Extended .. .. 13 75 113 70 ., 87 74 71 ~ 83 71 .. 74 1'1 11 n . to 10 ...... --restores vlntaae · Famlly memben aaki Maloney obtained bJa pSat -Uoenae at the _,e of 16 and WM a Rt..11\t Man in aeveral Hollyw6od movlH, He al'so leaves two .uandparenta. Alice Ovtncton of [rvlne and Edna Maloney of Pomona. -By STEVE MA.RBt.'I NATION Reagan steps up lobb.,:ing as MX missile vote nears BJ TM AIMdaMd Preti W ASHINcm:>~ -With both ~of CcnD'ell Medina toward clOM votet on the controvenlal MX miMtle, a ltepped-up lobbytna campalcn by Premdent Reapn could Up the 1CaJea ln favor of ti» new weapon. ~ on both II.dee of the i..ue •Y arm twl8UJaa by the president, who invited about 60 Houae members to ctµmer l4onday nlaht. would likely •.produce the votea to win approval of the 10-..m.i millUe. "He'• ,...Uy ~ Ul"d 00 thia. '1be Dnaldent can be pretty penullldw," -1d Rep. Lea Aapm, l>-Wla., a former MX opipODent who now suppona the mlallle u a way to reldl U"IDI control aareementa. "It'a c:klee, but lf a vote were taken riaht now, we'd win." Canadian film disclaimer barred SACRAMENTO -A federal Judae hu ordered the aovemment to atop requ1rina dJa:la1mera on three Canadian films about nuclear war ancf ecid rain that the U.S. Justice Department conaidered political pro~ The films, "U You Love Thia Planet," an Academy Award winner on the medical conaequences of nuclear war, and "Acid Rain: Requiem or Recovery," and "Add From Heaven," which de9crlbe the d.a,nage cau.ed by sulfur dioxide mixed with rain. were produced by the National Film Board of Canada. The disclaimers, ordered under the 1938 Foreign Agents Regiatratl.on Act, were reqWttd to aay that the filma were prepared by registered foreJan agents and the oontenta were not neceeaarily approved by the U.S. government. Holiday death toll predicted CHICAGO -Between 350 and 450 people nationwide are expected to die ln traffic accidents during Memorial Dey weekend, the National Safety c.ounctl aaid today. The safety council al.lo estimated that betwe«l 17 ,000 and 22,000 people may suffer disabling lnjuries ln traffic accidents over the Memorial Dey week.end. The death toll on Memorial Day weekend last year waa 341. The record three-day Memorial Day toll waa ~ in 1972. STATE Lobbyists fight tax bill SACRAMENTO -Lobbytata are mounttna a major campaign apimt Gov. Georp Deukmejan'a loophole-closlna tax bill. Senate Prelident Pro Tem David .Roberti said Monday after aparka flew in the upper hou8e aws bil efforts to apeed the bill along, ''I would like to cloae acme additional loopholea and spreed the pain of taxea to everybody." The bUl. which paaed the A.aembly lut week ln a linale day, includes provia:iooa to eliminate aales tax exemptiona for auch items u candy, commercial tapee and~ bottled water, guohol, amuaem~.;_ cuato~ uter programs, vending machine and aokl ailver coma. · Religious TV station shut down GLENDALE -l'l.rebrand putor W. n.apne Scott abut down hill Glendale TV station at midniaht on, orden from the Federal Communicationa Commi..ion but vowed to bLut the FCC with cable telecMta. Scott, pMto1" of the Faith Center Oiurch in Glendale, haa pNllChed a ~ bMed on love of God and batred ol pemment bureaucrats durin& a Jana Jeaal ba~ with the. FCC. ~ ~t claitm Scott may have enpged in financial irrefularities du.rina broadcut fund appeala. It revoked the statloo's llcenle when he refu.ed to cooperate with an FCC tnvestiption into the allegation&. Manson admits murder role • SAN FRANCISCO -Charles Mamon, more than a decade after he waa .entenced to die f« the murden of actreea Sharon Tate and ftaht others, still iDlista, "I did not bl-eek the law." But in an interview with KOO radio, MaDIOll admita mending his followen to the bou.e where Mila Tate and four othen were found beaten, ahot and stabbed to death in 1969 in Loe AnaeJes. '"I'lm 18 the fint itme rve ever heard that he baa ~tted this," aaid Vincent Bl•ll!cwi, the fcnner Los Angeles C-ounty deputy dl.ltr1ct attorney who proeecuted Mamon. Third condor chick hatching SAN DI!X)O -A third California condor ia about to hat.ch at the San Diego Zoo after surviving "very traumatic clrcumatancee" when it wu abandoned lut month by its perenta, 100 offldu •Y· The dUck, ftnlalinc to break free of the ea. hid knocked a bait-inch med holed in ita abell, and w expected to emeree from the ea today or Wedneeday. WORLD Saudis seelc to persuade Syria DAMASCUS -Kina Fahd of Saudi Arabia 1mt an envoy to Dune..• today to m Syrian Pr...mdmt Bates Awd to reconsider h1a oppoeltlon to the U.S.-1ponaored troop withdrawal pact between Lebanon and llrMl. Informed aourcee here aa.id Saudi Arabia waa attempting to 10ften Syria'• oppmitlml to the Lebeneee-IaneU withdrawal accord and perauade the Damucua 1ovemment to aaree to a • lhnultaneoua military withdrawal wtUi llnel from Lebanon. Syria haa rejected the plan, and i...l hM Mid 1be 1*t will be voided lf Syria doe. not 10 aJona with It. Turlcish travel office bombed BRUSSFJ .s, Bel8lum -Bomba ~ .;=r,"8!, the Turtdlh tow1ll office and at a travel ~ in 1'uitWh ~ lltptly inJurina tlMt travel~ manapr, po&e Mid. The Annmtan Secret-Army tor the u-.-.of Armen.la claimed NlpClnllbW'ty tn a call to the PNnctl ~ -.mcY. Afl«Jt» ~P....e in Parta. It ta one of aeveraJ .-OU .. ftcht!Qa to·~ _the Ml" 7-of more thm 1 JJUlllon Annens.n. II) 'JWkey dUr1ni Worid W• L . WASHINGTON (AP) -'nMt Supreme Court, in an embanaaalftl Mtbeek for the Reaaan ad .. lnl•~•ttoo., rul41d today that th• federal aowmmenc may deny tax breab to acboola that practice ractal cliaa1.mlna~. By an 8-1 vote, the court decfded that the lntunal ~-~ nMY withhold tax-ex'fmpt 1tatu1 for 1uch ICboob even ii Che reda1 polldes are dlc:tate4 by aincerely held rellpua beliefs. Emergency care The admiNltreUoe, touchlnc CMf • pailltlml ~. blild aouiltlt to rrioke tt.er1a;~~IR8 lllWkY on ~ that eon,Nll aid riot apectflC'11y auddbi the aaency to bin tax bN&IU tor aclMIOll that dlmimlnatit. ~ dedllOfl 11 al8o a ~t for Bob JonH UniveUlt)'. ln GreenVille, S.C., and O'oldlboro Olriluan 8choola ln Gold,borq, N.C. Doi> Joriet b•J:• Interracial dattne and 11\terractal ftlAlriaae of ft.a atudents. l'•wer than a ('I Huntington Beach paramedics care for San Makardilh, 25, of Stanton, injured Monday afternoon when her Volkswagen eollided with another vehicle at E.dinger Avenue and Boin Chica Street. She wu treated and released at Humana Hoepital Huntington Beach. 11,000 flee homes in flooded South By fte A.In el.Itel Presa . More . than 11,000 evaaaeea waited for •l'ollen riven to recede ID ~ and Taaa toct.y •• week ol llrv1al at.mma -includlna tormdom that killed 10 people -pve way to fair aides and offered the recson a chance to dry out. At leaat three tornadoes touched down Monday in TeD8 and Loulalana, alon1 with another ln Pmmlylvania, but no injurlea were reported and damap ,,.. minor. Offtda)a aid. About 0,300 people were driven from their home• b7 fioodwate.n in Mimlmlppl, and another 5,000 ID 1'exm. but the pattern of violent weather appeared to be over, at least tempanrily, Huah Clowtber, a ~ wtih tbe NaUooal Weather Servlce'a Severe Quake rattles Paso Robles Storm• Forecaat Center In Kamm Oty, Mo •• aid ioday. "It loob like thqll be aetUna a respite for a time," Crowther aaid. "There'• nothln1 very major in the weather picture for 'rex.. Jo11etana and Mlaamippl for the next couple of «Uya - ju1t aome aca 'tcered thu:nderstonna.'. In IOUtheMtem Texaa, where tornadoea be8inn1na Friday 1eft about 1,000 -familfn homeleu and ktlled 10 people, 0,000 relldenta were evacuated a1ona the Su Jacinto IUwr about SS mi.1-nortbeMl ol Hou.too. The river ... flood.fnc four f9'l deep over a dam cm Lab HOUltOn and jl.m half a foot below a record lewl racbed in 1979. One Teltan died Sunday nJabt In a 100 mph l\llt, and two othera were killed In flood- related acddeota. oftidaJI aald. ~ple died in Mlwtastppi uOOodin&uuu...., authorl .. mid. Since Wednaday, offldab have ~ ,.. ...... n1a11!d deatbl acrcm Dbde. Orange CoMt OAILV PILOTITUMday, May 24, 1H3 dot.en of lta e,300 students were b1Kic ln 1981. It beaan admltttna black married at"9dentl in 1971 and atncJe blacka ln 19'70: Gold1boro retune to enroll blacka. "Hi1tory buttreaae1 101tc to make clear that to warrant exemption '4nder federal tax law '11 lnltitutkln must-fall within a catepy apectfied . . • and must demon.tnbly aerve and be in harmon)". wUh the public lnternt," Chief JUltioe Warren Housing, gas fuel inflation flames WASHINGTON (AP) Riaina plOline and houaing coeta aent consumer pricea up 0.6 percent last month, the biggest jump in nine montha, the government aaid today. For the first four month.a of 1983, however, conawner pricea l'09e at an annual rate of just 2.1 percent. Many economiats aay inflation for all of 1983 could match -or better -1eift year's 3.9 percent and one analyst called the April increue ''a temporary bli .. r:;.,,.gely reaponaible for the April rbe, the Labor Department aaJd in today'a report, WU a 4 percent me ln paollne prlcea, the reault of the federal government'• nickel..a-pllon tax hike April 1 and a general flnning-up of retail prlca Ga1oline pr~ces, down aenerally ·for the 1ut two years, liad tumbled a full 1 percent in March. Alao responaible for last month '• increase in the Conswne~ Price Index wu a 0.5 percent gain in housi.r\i prices. Food prices we.re up, too. but tbe o.a ~t me wu off from March'• 0.6 percent bike. l'reab fruit and ve1etable coau, ttflet'Una the acarctUee br'Ouaht on by unuaually cold and wet condttton1 In mu~h of tbe country, rose 1 percent, down from the whopping <t.4 peftlent E. ~er wrote for the court. .. The lrutUutlon'1 purJ)Off muat not be It at odda with the common community CONdence aa to undermine any public benefit that rp.ICbt otherwile be conferred," he UJd. Th•:• an adminiatration had o y aupport.ed the IRS poUcy nytna tax e?Cempdoqa to achool1 tnal practice racial d11crimlnatlon1 N bad the Ntxon. Ford and Carter admlnistradonl befor,. But tbe Rea1an adminlltratlon reveraed tbe policy ln January 1982. increue of the previoul month. In the lut two months, fresh veaetable prioea have ri9en 17. 7 percenL Medical care coats matched their 0.5 percent lncreue of March, well below the pece llUCh prks had aet ln the precedlna montha. Even ao, thoae cmta have soared 9.9 percent in the lut year. c.omumer prices overall' have rilen a modest 3.9 percent in the last year. If April'• 0 .6 percent aeaaonally adjusted ~ held ateady for 12 straight montha. the yearly advance would be 7 .2 perce1h. The annual rate reported by the deprtment ia baaed on a more preclae calculation of monthly prices than ~ filW'e made public. Conawner price9 roee a tiny 0.1 percent ln March after falling 0.2 percent ln February abd rlslna 0.2 percent ln January. Students, teachers protest in Paris PARIS (AP) -Thouaanda of atudentl and teachen, ~ of them wearin1 their acarle.t academJc robes, rnan:hed on the National Auembly today from three directions u legtala ton debated a controversial univentty refonn bill. The larcest of the demonatrationa involved about 10,000 people, includ.lna nearly 100 law profe.on, half of them dr-..ed ln their fur-lined robes. It waa orpniled by the National Coordination of Students and Teac~er1, an alliance of five organizatlona c1oee to France'• ameervauve oppamldon. A aecond cofumA of about 1,000 =· arouptna moatly Wtillt ta, left liaD an area ~ near Parll' Lyon train ... tkln. A third IJ'OUp, involvtns about 200 independent atudenta, marched to the Natklnal A.....,bly from a ~Jc::' point near the Austerlitz The National Coordination march began in a carnival atmoaphere with atudenta repreaentina inatitutiona raJl8lnl from the Sorbonne ln Paria to the law achool in Marseille. Moo appeared to be well-dttsaed and middle clua. The column WU led by a llDe of about 60 students wtth linked • arma, followed by a loudapeeker car leadln1 the chant: "Students,'' to wbk:h the crowd twponded. .. .,.. anp-y ... J • • I I I I ' I I I I \ .. A4 Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Tu.day, May 24, 1883 NSW YORK (AP) -On lu lOOtb bUtbday, tbt Roeblin8 IN comln1 back to the Brooklyn Brtd,e -when one brllllant foretiear died, another lOlt hJa health and tbe famlly name became embrined ln iu.tol')'. Men than 1&0 memben of the Roeb1fna clan tram lbc countriel and 24 1tate1 are expect.cl to attend a family r.u.nion today timed to coincide with the ~· centennial cel9bration. A1l are dMcmdenu of John A. Roebllnc, the dealaner of the NY salutes • • engineering marvel of '831 ?fl:W YORK (AP) -The Braiok1yn Brfdet. wbme 80Uina fll'8DI• tDwen and ancefu1 ateel cablH tn1ptred paJ.ntera and poeta. ttlmmekan aDf1 fllmfl.tm men, plllMd the century mark today, 1t1ll recoptsed u an en1tneerln1 ma,vel from a proud. youna Amerb. 'l"bowland9 of marchera, many in period cost\UDel, pended thil morn1na acrom the 1uapenaion bridp that Unked th• nation'• fir'lt-and third-J.arp.t cit.tea on May 24, 1883. For today'• featlvitlea, the bridle waa featooned with American Oao and red, whii. and blue buntlni. Crowda at the parade'• ~ point cheered u the marchers paned, and bailoona were re1eued into the air. "I think th1a ii a tribute to America,.. said Mary RoebllD,I. widow of the 1rand1on of enpeer Waahiniton Roebllna, who built the bridp. She wu perched on a ~ drawn waaon, much like the one that carrfed Roebl1n1'1 wife, Fmlly, the tint penon ever to ride acro11 the bridae. She carried a rooeter in her lap, a 1ymbol of victory, for that openlna ceremony. brtd1e . Two are dlrect cs.-na.nta ot c.ot. w~ A. Roebllna. who ~y 6uilt Uw bridle that waa once tlllled "the Et1htb Wonder of the World." The bridp, whklh lpaN the Eut River between Brooklyn and Manhattan. II the tocua of oen~ llCtlvldel iacludlna a pende. a ~ Cllel*lfty ' an4 firewwka dilplaym I ' But ,to the Roe~nl•• th• fntivitiea are incidental. The f amlly ha• never had a full reunion, and many member• have not met. "I just look forward to~ my family an~ looktnc -1 th• Brooklyn Bridie," H id Ted Schildae, • sreat-IJ"Mt-arandmn of Jonn RoebUna ana a San Frand.lco enafneer -the only pnctic:lng eflilneer in the family now. "John A. and the colonel had to have art in their heartl and llOul.a to build the most beautlful bridp ln the world. It'• s-rt of the family's gene1," Mary Roebllnl. the banker widow of Washington'• grandaon, told Town & Country~· John A. Roebllna. one of the pre-emiftent encineen of hJI ap, Clied in 1889 from tetanUI after a docking ferry cruahed hb tea u he surveyed the area around what would become the brtdae'• Brooklyn anchonp. His 10n Wuhtnlton took up the challenae. and ..-ved u chief engineer of the bridle durinC iu 14· year comtruct.ton. For most of that timt, and for m uch of bit life afterward, Wuhln1ton Roeblina waa an invalid -cut down by "the bend a," or decompre11ion siclme91, which he 1uffered tn the cai11on1 uaed to dil the brldlre'• foundation. Hii wife, Fmlly, relayed hJa lnltrucUonl to the bullden aa he watched with field ,i.... from hll home ln Brooklyn. "It~'• 10UrCe of sreat pride," uld . "I would •Y that the Brook yn Bridge and the work of John Roebling ii a put inspiration." That's ugly Mike M1ll'ta• of Ir.vine 1howa off hil winner in ugly n~ktie conteat at Phelps Men'• Store in Fuhion laland. More than 300 out-of-1tyle cravats were turned in to the 1hop for donation to the Aailtance Leape of Irvine. Murtaugh got a ISO gilt certlf icate -which 1houJd cov~r a new tie. Dr. Krieger of UCI named to academy HB Chamber grants hoq.or -I 0 scholars UC Irvine Encliah prot_.- Murray Kriepr of Laauna Be.ch baa been elected to the American Academy of 11\.rta and Selene-.. He i1 one of 77 people named thla year to the wwterny. One of the pioneers in establlah1nc literary theclry .. an academic field, Krie1er ha9 written eiabt bookl and edited three others. Other UCI profMl'll'I ln the academy are Michael Crozier, eoc:lal adence9; David Euton. political 1cl'ence; Harry Eckateln, political science; Elliott Montroll, phy11c1; Sher w o od Rowland,· chemistry; Frederick Reinel, ~~~~nd Howard bloJoo. • l ~.a.rs-•& •DIM fUa Pru• .... ................ ·~·~ ..... • lllMll A WW&e • We ~·AD fUa ·Df:?iil : ~DR.ATCOASTHWV. ' Ten studllnu from h1'b '*=hooll ln Huntin1ton Beach will be honored Wedneaclav at the ChamW of Owamerce'• "Salute ~Youth"~ Redpmu of ~ Cbunt. of Commerce lebolanbtpa wtll be Stephanie Jeoq. &.-n Schwan and Leta Lynde, all from Huntincton Beech WO School and"'lCimberly Tom .na Susanne Miller. <>c.n Vlnr. Students eelected I.or the $100 1ervtoe award• are ~ Waldhauaer HuoUn8tcio Hlah; Julie ~. Oceln View; bealie Hall, Marina:• Cindy Charleton, J.dbon, and Vicky Helm1ch, Wlnt.enbufs. Tbe lunchecn w01 be held at the H\lbUftat.on BMch Inn. 21112 Padflc Co.t w.hway, at 11:45 a.m. 'l'lckMa at $10 ellCb may be ~ by c:alllD8 the dwnber office 1ha dJmwlnrl ii tr. and open to the puhBc. IC will b1ctn at 8:80 p.m. ln Room J'UO ln the MedJca1 SM-vw I buf1dtnl at UCL Author to appear in Laguna Author Tedd Wallft wW relld from h1I lai.t novel. "Louie and W<1tl111!A." TbW'lday at 7:80 p.m. at the l'ahrenbttt 451 Uled book annex ln Lacuna 8-c.h. The book ii Walton'• third JM>Vel. Bil ttnt. "lml.de Movea," WM the a.abject of tbe fl1m "1 the ame name. Tbe J'e8dlna, whk:h II tr. to the public, '61 be followed by an autocrapb party at the annex, &08 SOfath C.oMt fflabway. Mesa traffic board meets A ~uest to PtOhltih trucb on Royal Palm Drive from Baker Street to llm Avenue will be dilcu.ed at 10 a.m. Wedneeday when the Costa Mesa Tnttic C«nmwton meets at City Hall. 77 l'ldr Drive, The comnd8llco .. wtll comlder a request foe ~ lanea on Adami Avenue between Harbor Boulevard and Fairview Rold. CbanceHorsetsLalJUJJa tallc Dr. Pau laltmu, ~ chancellor of UC San ae., wOl ~ at the Lacuna Beach HiCb Scbool lll:nry Wectne.tay at :SO jj.m. topk 11 endtlild, "Do N« Walt far tbt Tooth l'ldf7 « Godot." Student art and ml.Ilk w01 campltmmt the ewntnc. J'or ln£ormat.too. call 8arkn CarMa, "94-8Me. Treatment saVi.ng vision Doctors aim helium ion beam to figb_t eye cancer SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -behind the Ntina or ICl'eeJl that machine worldna on parUdea of With nidlaUon equivalent to one receivee imlges of what the eye helium •tripped of their million X -ray1, University of aeea. Previously, Char Hid, electron&. "typically the tumor' California reaearchera are radioactive cobalt-60 }la. been 1tope srowtni immediately. In claimlnl 90 percent 1ucceu in \.-cl to tr.t the diee..e, but that from I& to.._, man&M It beslm ••-f healthy tiuue la d•troyed u to lhrtnk. ID about tow-pel'Olllt t.reauul a type 0 eye cancer well around the tumor "and of the cm. the tumor cmtllnllld affllcting 1,SOO people annually. be .... __... ....._ '--~ -Tbe reaearcn team led by removal of the eye may .... pow - -.,_ -tD us UCSF Ocular OncoJocy DlNCtor required anyhow." 1wwwed." Dr. Devron a.a.-_........f that, Ma11acbu11etu General a~-The new method, UliJ\I the Hospttal atartied ullna bJdrctm of the patients treated, not a cyclotron or atom-1ma1nin1 beams to treat eye cancer In 1975. II.nil• one bu de~eloped new twnon that haw apreMI from the R .1 , d . , ~=from ucsl'.and 1 eys evot1on the La ,irrenc• Berkeley Labontory NpORted that in more h h d ~f~r::;0~~i::,~:.rtn!r!:!! to yout onore eyatpt of 20-100 or better WM tJAM.-d. The report aald a beam of heliWQ klOI II dellvend IO pre d8ely 1bat MU'bY ti-... tlalvee no radiation at all. The-technique UHi ener1y of 280 million electron volta, Cliar wd. The unlvenity said the cl1nlcal rwult of the treatment will be ~~ the Archiv .. of bo o ' melanoma 11 a mal11nant tumor of th• ptamented layer of the eye Oranie County Surr.rvllor Thoma• Riley and h 1 wife, Dnma Jane, wW be honored thil week durtnc ceremoniea ln lrvlne for \helr work with unclerpdvileaed c:hildren. They will be preeented wt1h the f1m annual Youth Servk.9 Prolrain Humanltatian Award. A $20k-plate dinner Friday will be held at the Recl1try Hotel. o.trman of the ewnt ii builder Karl O. Beraheer and mui.r of ceremomu wtll be oamed1an Marty Allen.. Ber1heer aaJd the IWeya of Newport Beach are beln1 bonond tor tblll' '4very quiet but effec:ttw work and deYudan to unclerprtvlleaed children and otben In dileaw. 'n. Youth 8erYicm Propwn la a private, ndll•r.;!jfit ~-that ...,,. llei and c:b.ddrm ln er-.. O:iua~. Rile~ ia 1upervtaor of the county 1 fifth dlltrkt. whlch includel Newport 8-:h. I j1 II I I, r 'I -· DC-bound FULLERTON (AP) -Fotb around Orangethorpe Avenue who amelled amoke over th• weekend am relax. It WM jwt the J\&llert.on Jl'lre Department burnJ.na down bulldinp. And they'll do It again Tueeday or w~. Two arsonists set 1 0 f ir~s, threaten homes Several homes on Santa Ana canyon Road were threatened by arson-caused brush flrea last weekend, officiala said. 'nwyr. torched • • trainina nerd8t, aatd ft.re Capt. JArrY GNen. "Well, we•,_ no&~ but it II rather odd," be Htd afte..r • Saturday'• pi.nned ..... • '"nle amOke attract9d a lot of \ apectawra. We 1>um1 down a two-awry \Vltb ~meat and then a~ and. two-car praie." The ·smoke alao attraqted a crew of ti.refiabten from ~ Anaheim who tbouabt the bfaie WU the uauU unexpected tyi:-, About 30 J\allertm firetlehten acramb1ed around the bntJd~ hefting hoaea to quencbte equivalent of a aecond-.iahn fire. 'nie N:>u.a, whkh ltlll contained f1,1rnlture, were 1otn1 to be demolllhed for condom1niUIJW.) Flreflabten did a slow bum on the ltrUctUn!I, •tUna fires and then puttins them out over a ntne..hour period bei1nninl at 9 a.JD. • ' f 1 l Huntington Beach's Clancy Yoder joins the Washington, D.C. staff of Rep. Dan Lungren, R-Long Beach, today as an intern Firetiahters from the Anaheim and Orange fire department.I battled the 10 amall blazes, whlch witnesses said were started by two men throwing "8hted flares out of a car, according to Anaheim Fire Investigator Michael Doty. "The aingle-awry with the gange was lit four di' five Ume9 before we f1naUy burned it to the foundation." uld Green. • I Dllllr ......... .., LM...,... Pension plan changes prompted lb.is picket line at Lear-Siegler · Energy Product& plant in Santa Ana. 1 II ; \ · on senior citizen affairs. Yoder is '-resident of the Council on Aging 1Whicb represents '}4~ ,000 Huntington Beach senior citi.zens. About six homes were threatened by the fires Saturday on Santa Ana Canyon Road between Lakeview and Lincoln, Doty said. . At one point, two firee were deliberately aet to keep firefighter. on their ioe.. "We added a little flalr to it," Green joked. Machinists picket union ~ I ~ :1 "There was still aome moisture in the brush," Doty said, and firefighters were able to control the fires in aboUt 20 minutes. "If it had happened about two or three weeks from DDW we would have been in trouble," he added. .,It went well,'• he added. "What our guya leamed out of it wu actual fire experience. We don't very often pt a chance to have actual, )ive bu.ma. except for the real thing .•• "M09t firemen like fire ... they like that live type of action." . .. An investigation into the incident will continue. Beware plane t with no wat e r 1 SAN DIEGO (AP) -Mlsmanaaement of Eerth'~ natural resources is causing water ahortagea, saya oceanographer Jacques-Yves Cousteau. "The greatest threat to the environment iB mankind and it ii getting out of band," Cousteau said. "Our life and our future depend• on this t>lanet's water system -thla water machine. We find ouraelves in a paradoxical situation: We are a water planet with no water," said the oceano1rapher, who.e televis i on d ocumenta ries haye ahown the underwater world to millions. He said that among the Great Lakes, once the United States' mmt abundant aource of fresh water, only Lake Superior still baa water pure enough to drink before it's been treated. Couate au aald COUSTEAU Saturday he plana an lnve1ti1atio n of the Mimiasippi River late next summer. He wouldn'~ de9cribe his planned investigation, but noted that the celebrated river ia badly polluted. • C.ou.teau flew from Part. to San Diego on ~y to accept the 1983 Undbergh Award for ~Charles Lindberlh's concern for creating a better balance between ~ growth ana pr~rvlng the environment. 'the award was ~ted at a dinner at the Hotel del Coronado by the Charles A. Undbe.rgh Fund, Inc. Granta of $10,580 each alao were pn.ented to 10 Youtl8 .Oentlata workina to reaolve conOicta between techno1oa and the environment. Over the past few years, the volume of 411 calls and the cost of handling them has increased dramatically. So dramatically, in fact, the Cali· fomia Pubbc Utilities Com- mission has granted Pacific Telephone the authority to start charging for this service. Be . . with yourA=ling period, those of you who made more than twenty 411 calls within the month, were charged 15¢ for each call over your twentieth. These new ~argesae~ ~- on your May bill. (Directory Assistance calls outside MemberJ. of the International Auociation of Machlni1t1 picketed their union 1ut week at the Lear-Siegler Ener1y Products plant on Dyer Road 1n Santa Ana. The day of plcketinl wu juat ,. The $10,68() WM the aame amowlt it oott to have Llndberah'• "Spirit of St. Louis" built by Byan Aeronautical Corp. in San Dieao in 192'7. The dinner._ held In the ame rocm where Lindberah wu honored 56 year• a10 after his hl9toric traolCOlltbaental fliabt to Paris. yo~ area code are "You dorlt have to dial not included.) 4ll tojindnumbmfast.'' ©BI TU A RIES L. M. Harvill d ies Funeral aervtces are ecbeduled for L p.lh. :t.=if for Fountain Valley resident Leonard who died lut Friday. Mr. Harvill. 60, a ptpe flttlr, wu a member of ~ Flnt Chriatlan Chwch of Fountain Valley w~ bia lalt ritet will be conducted. . He ta surviwd by hJt wtfe, Rac:be1. and ION and David, all ol Fountain Valley. J'rienda ma: call at Pletce Brothen' Smiths' , 627 ~ St., Huntington Be.ch, until 9 o'f°d' t.onJcht. • · bert Ga!nor, 58 . Memorial eervtc. Wtll be held Wec:m.tay f« GJbert ldmowit Gaynor, a 12.-yur ~t of ~ _U-. wbo dMd Kay 4 at the .,_of N . Mr. Oalci:fa '' 1\lrvlved by blt nephew, Ir, and b.la olece, P.uida A. ~Of Ami• len, N .Y. will b9 held at 10 a .m. at Pierce 81" tww Bell Jkoad"Y llortut.ry a.:apei. Charges don't apply to hospital patients, hotel and motel guests or customers who use public phones.NOC to persons with certifie_d physical disabilities who canilot U$e a directory.' lnfor~ . · mation regarding disabiljty certifi- cation may be obtained by call· ing the local Pacific Telephone business office. Weteali1.e there are times when you have to use DII'ectcxy Assistance. But for those tiiileS · when it may nOt ben~liere are a few hel~~ ~ one of the waya employees have protested what they claim la a lack of union cooperat:kln In their drive to change the company'• union-aponaored pension plan.. More· than half of tbme in tbe unio!l bar19lninl group have voted to give each employee the ' rtaht to Choole to remain In the I LAM. pemlon plan or have hia '" penalon depot1lt made into an • Individual Retirement Account.' aald the employee'• lawyer, Roger' Schnapp of the Rutall & Tucker law offices in Coat& Mesa. ----(,~- • r..r I ". I . . • • , ~· Orange Cout ,DAILY PILOT/Tu.day, May 24, 1883 ... Stop bickering, get to \Vork For the thouaanda of area resldenta. who rely on the education and tralnlng avallable in the Cout Community College Di.strict laat week'a .rein.atat.ement of 19 teaching positiom came u aood newa. Administrators restored full faculty stalling to agriculture, biology, chemistry, marine adence and water technology. They alao brought back pem>nnel in library terVices, music, nur-1ng and humanities. There are still 67 layoffs set to take place at the end of the semester. The reduction ln staffing is necessary, say administrators, because the college faces a $5.5 million deficit. Although r¢ud.ng the staff will ease that red ink, it won't eliminate it. The entire issue has caused a small furor. A citizens group, the Taxpayers Alliance to Save Community Colleges, has organized a recall effort to unseat four of the local trustees. The American Federation of Teachers, which represent.a the faculty, has been at odds with the administration not only over the layoffs, but over its members using class time to lobby against the actions. There is also some internal dissent among members about the way A.Fl' is handling itseli in this situation. The administratars say facts are facts. When you don't have enough money, something's got to give. Reinstatement of the 19 formerly lost jobs, although it ~ould have pleased all 1.he fighting factions, has brought on yet ahother squabble. Who gets credit for the comebacks. Administrators say they've saved $1.2 million because a number of other faculty and staff have chosen to take the college's offer of early retirement. The teachers union praises it.s members who have choeen to sacrif.ice their positions so that others might work. The Taxpayers Alliance says the trustees backed down _ because jhe _pfeS!.ure __ of the,.~ move got to them. _ _ _ ~ The re.al question here is ll\Yho cares wJiY?" - .. r I. The college must serve the public in two ways. The first is by providing quality education and training to citizens in a variety of fields. The second is to be responsible and prudent administrators of the tax dollars which fund these programs. U the energy expended in name calling, recalling, and 8elf praiae were used to creatively work out a reaaonable budget for the college, the faculty, the union, the Alliance, the administrators and trusteee and, most importantly, the studentl who U8e this fadlity, would have already put this cria1a behind them and continued on with the fine btISinea of educating and be.\ng educated. Op1n1ons expressed tn the s1><1<e ab011e are thO\e ol the Daily Ptlot Otoer 111l!ws e• 1>reH e<1on1n1s page are lhose or thl!tr autl\ors .ind artists. Reader comment is 1n111t· ed AddreS$ The ::>a1ly Pilot, P 0 . Bo• 1Sf>Q, Cost.t Mt!S.t, CA 921121>. Phone (714! 1>•1·•321 MAILBOX Grandparents' rights To the J'Al1or. I strongly urge your affinmtive SUppc:c1 of Aaemblv Bill 300, a ''grandparents' rights., measure that will give grandparents the ability to be heard by a court on the 1-ue of vlaitation rights in a domestic proceedjng. Aa an experienced lawyer dealing in the field of family relatioo9, (I w• amona the tint ~ ol lawyen certified by the State Bar aa a Family Law Spedaljn in 1980), I am of the firm opiJ\ion that leRialation is, Good work To the Editor: We applaud the dedslon of the State SOa.rd of F.qual.lzation to deny Robert Schuller'• tax exemption foe his commerdally "klCt!ldul Crwtal Cathedral. Schuller'-;-1-&ry· addrem laat Sunday, 8 May, to hla crowd of foDowen came throuab to ua 1em auWble people -the ..newhat pathetic tirade of a man who baa been caught in an enormous deception and ia 1mlng control. Jf we are .to believe anything he aaya. one lhoddng statement bean elmer examination. Schuller, in one of bla more lucid llatemellta, said that only twenty-three of hla more than one thousand church Ktivities are c:u.rren1ly being q\lelltioned. Juat for those twenty-three actlvitlee he bu evaded over $400,000.00 in property tax.ea. It haglew tbe mind to stimate the total tax evasion when Schuller'• more than one tbcio•nd .ctivitiea are probed by necewry in thia field ':a,~~ Mildren experience near relationahipa with their grandparents. Situations often art..e where the cuatodlal parent ia using the children • a pawn to vent their own emotional marital problem1. In my pl'llCtice I have seen many brokenhearted grandparent• whose grandchlldren were spirited away or where reasonable visitation WU refu8ed. In tbae CMa, the real vk:tiJm were the innocent chlld.ren. Mll..AN M. DOSTAL the Board of Equalization, the State Franchi8e 'l'ax Baud and the Internal Revenue Servict. It aeema reasonable that these agencies will want to lnvestipt.e, amona other thmg1, ponible Ule1al deductlona ,of "love offerlnp" h1a followen have made to hia entertainment center. In the final analysia, Schuller tmy have done IOIDle good. Hla blatant operation bu alerted many government aaenaee that he and other ~ of re1la:lon are ayatematlcally cheating honest ta.xp9yen by claimlnJE Illegal deductlona ana exemptlclm. All people like Schuller thrive on publldty, the media lhould live leis prominent coverap to their antb. MM likely they will then fad• away aa will any puallte when deprived ol a bait to feed Oft. HERBERT G . SMl'l1I eo.tiM- .[1. lliJll /Minute mirror Another Cuban connection W ASIUNGTON -Alarming intelllgence reports out o1 Nicarqua warn that Fidel Castro may already have sent Cuban troope to help the Sandinista re8ime fight U.S.-bldced rebels there. One report put the number of Cuban troo.-at 1,000; another estimated 2.~-u theee reports tum out to be accurate, the Cuban milltary buildup in Nicaragua could live the Sandin.iataa the edie they · need to crush the auerrilJu of the Nicaraguan Democratic Force. Thia much la known about Cuban atrenath in Nicaraaua: ~ are at 1eut ~.ooo dvili.an adviaera and 1,500 military and aecwity advt.en. BUT THERE ARE alao WlCOftfirmed lnt.elligence reports that a aubatantial Cuban mllltary force arrived in Nicaragua two weeks aao. headed f« the key town. of Ocotal. If true, thia developroent could lead the Reqan adminiatration to beef up it aid to the "contras," u the anti JSandinlata rebels call thetmelves. The war would then --.ala&e daqel'ou.aly. I Mnt my a.ociate Jon Lee Andenon to Central America for a finthand look at the situation. He wpent a week inaide Nicarqua with a taak force of G.! -.IAU-.. -.1111-.-~. l~ contru and went along on an ambush directed at the SandinJ.ata militia. He picked up some evidence, impoaalble to confirm independently, of a Cuban pt'etlenOe in the combat 2lCll8 of nor1hem Ntcencua. One Nbel IJ"OUP commander, who calla hbme1f ~ndante Sereno, Mid h1a men kWed two Cubans carryl~• Sovlet- made AK-47 submachine IUDS and "tome atrana• machines" that tumed out to be te1evialon camera "I didn't know what the contraptions were," Sereno recalled. "I waa afraid they mtsht be bombs. I fiddled with one until a p-ee11 llaht came on. It teared me, ao I sprayed them with my machineJun." The green ll1ht ,._. t taallet•'• ''on•• "8::nal How did he "know they were Cubena? They were obviously hot Nar.,uana. he uld. They were tall, bl. and beatCfed. Sereno ta1d be bad fo\ll)lt With Cubanl when he Wll will) lbe lepndary Commander Zero - Eden Pastora -durina the Sand.ln.lltu' revolution apinlt Anaatulo Somoza'• national guard in 1979. Furthermore, Sereno aald, "before the ambuah we could hear them talking, and they had Cuban accents." The two . cameramen, presumably fllmtng the action for Cuban and Sandin la ta TV, had made the fatal rn1at.ake of carrytnc anna for protfdion. Another lnddent involved an 18-year-old squad leader nicknamed ''The Greek." Be WU polnted out aa "the lban who killed the Cuban lady doctor.'' "She waa a doctor at the govenunent ~tal in Ocotal," a guerrilla uid. ' She treated me once.'' Another young rebel aaid lhe WU known U "the fat lady," and added: "But ahe wun't juat a doctor. She carried a gun." THE CUBAN WOMAN waa rtdina in a jeep that wu part of a Sandlniata convoy ambushed by · the rebel.a. When the ambuah at~rted, ahe yelled at tbe prrillm: "Dop of &.pn! You will all die!" The Gn!ek aa.ld he lobbed an RPG-7 (rocket-propelled pnade) at •e jeep It waa a direct "1t. The Cuban connectton la a major worry for the young conW... They've heard rumora that Caatro bu already aent A fragile mechanism BJ ANDY ROONEY SAN FRANCISOO -There are acme problems with time we haven't wCrbd out. Watches are men aa:urate and cheaper than they u.ed to be, but they haven't been any help at all when it comea to thi.no like dayU,ht-•..tna time ard movtna ~een the dltterent time ... ln the United Stat.. On our croaa-country helicopter trip we have now ~ tnto Pac:Wc time, eo we're three hours earlier than we wen when we left home. U you fly acrom the country ..i to west or Weal to eut OD a comemtdal airline, the chanae comes suddenly. You leave New York at 9 a .m. and you're lll Loa Anae1-five boun later, in real houri, at 11 a.m. It makes for a very nb, bia day. On the o&ber band, the trip f.rcm Loi Anae1ea to anywhere oo the l'Mt o..t maka • d' ster of a whole day. YOU 1eaw at nine tn the IDGnlblc and pt to New Yock. Atlanta or Orlando at five ln the attamoon. 1be day la abot. You'w napped, eaten and drunk too mueh and ,-,~ dayll1ht-aaving or time zone changee. It seem.a unfair to IO reJJati)e a friend. -1111-..,---§t I know perfectly well what'• going to happen next, too. In about three days. after travelinl you feel tentble. Thia 11 the end a few hundred miles nor1.h to of our second week of thia either Por1land or Seattle. we'll terrible and WCJDderful trip and be9d the bUd eUt. rtn alUN wbm the dme chan8e baa been very we l'D to bed ln Butte. Momana. psdual. but rm stfl1 waJd.na at S my Swila-~ lnNlr watch a.m. New Yon time wherever will Unally have lfven up on we are. That wt it wa1 5 a.m. Eutem da~n!: .... vb>C 1ime and in New Orleans, ·• a .m . In . will be on daylljht.-aavla(i Denver, and here I am lltdna at Ume. For the next two weeka rtl my typewriter shortly. after 3 be conf\Wng my lnper watch a.m. ln San Fhndm>. For aame with time 110oe chan;. beaded reuon my clock haa adjusted eut.. itlelf for~to-bed time but it All countriea lhould be long ham't Ii.elf to when I and thin 10 the Ume IOOe ta the ought to aettina up. [ ao to same everywhere. U you ao to bed between 1I p .m . and another dlWltry you'" wil11na to midnlPt. • I do at home, but I accept 10rnetbinl to radlcaf aa awabn after about four lioun different lanauace, dlffereM sleep.. money and different dme. It'• tr BAS ALWAYS amawd me haw delk:at. all our inDel' clocb are. It we treat them rlaht. they know wbat time it 11 better than our watchea do, ao I hate to confuM mine' with cuea llke . part of the~« ~vel. But a time liOM ~ in your own CDUD1ry la nothinC but a pain in the neck. You ••t know when to eat, aleep or ~o to the bathroom and you cant find y~ fawrtw prolfUD8 Qll'televlaton. I '\ .. mt.ilea to the Sand1nlatal, and a "realment" to reinforce the ~at~tal. At present, the rebeb a.tel. they're doing wen a.pinlt the mJllUa becau.e it la laraely m.-de up of, "cannon foclder" - untrained peasants fOl"Cled into aervkie b)' the Sand1nla1,a "But if the Cubanl come in. tb1nca w1ll be more difficult for ua." a rebel ie.der-admowledged. BIDDEN COSTS: Government aud1ton are having a touch time trylna to tndl the cmt of FBI undercover operatlona to the proverbial bottom line. Offlclally, the G-men spent $10.8 mDJJoo on such c1andeatine activities from 1979 throuP 1983. But that figure doem't include the penonne1 costa, which are Uated on the boob only by type of crime, not by investigative .technique. Nor does the $10.8 million include the c.wts of 4jefending ~ la~ filed ly ~ ~'::,~~for the FBL All of i.t J>wwnber, 29 suti, bad Miia .JUed .......,.... a total of •411".3 million tn ~ llx were aeitled at a total cost ol tl.l mlDlm Sewnl Weft dlent' Id The payoff CiOSta didn't lncbrde the .u..r1. of the suvemment defeme attomeya. It mJ&bt be better if we kept the same time, msi to w.t, and jmt llOl u..s to the fact that it 1eta U,hter earlier and dark earlier in the Eaat. When a nlaU"--called from another time :;:!J,°': wouldn't llave to 10 that hMirww of "What Ume 1a tt tberer TSE PEOPLE in thia oountry are divided bet1'een tbme who love dayl.Jah.t.-uvtnc time and thme who ha$e u: 'lbe laYsw are people who can't set aoma In tbe momlnl until tbey"ft baa tm.. cups ol colfee. The batien enjl1J setttnc up in the marmns Md enjoy aoUla to bed at nleht. We are toe real 100 percent Americana. Dl'Ve Wrtpt, one of the PJota. baa a watch that can show what Ume It II ln .wral .anea. It aJlo haa a calendar, can act u a stoPwatch and • an. alarm In the mornin1. At first l wa• im...-cl I tboulbt that WM tba .rb. ll:ind ol watdi a~ ~t to haw. Tben, one et dlnn•rt Dave wu ~ ua what eaae lt would do. It turned out the watd\ ~one ol U... tune8 f°' an alarm. Md be hll lt let to pa.y UJlbde." Would JOU tn.wt your life In a bellt•i** tor a month to a pilot who aWalilila fJllerj mom1nC to the u.y -.illlid of . "Dlxle," pla~ by a watd\ made In Japan? TIE ClllT Ill TIE mm TUESDAY, MAY 24, 1963 ANN LANPERS ENTERTAINMENT TELEVISION . I • 82 83 BS The aging brain. • • LOS ANGELES (AP) -Re9earch on the braina of old rata lndicata that elderly humans should keep their bralna atimulated to delay the mental aging procle99, a ldentiat aaya. "Keep uaing it or lose lt," aaid Marian Diamond, a 6~-year-old neuroanatomy profesaor at the University of California at Berkeley. "I mean, it's as aimple as that old cliche. " ... We are challenging the iaolation of the elderly by saying that the brain has thia potential to atay healthy during aelng If given a ,stimulating environment.," said Diamond. People can keep their bn1ns stimulated with Cl'OISWord puzz1ee., ponery or politics," she added, "just IO long as lt'a aomethlng to keep the mind stilnulated. ,, Diamond, who has reearched rats for two decades, ii no\ hesitant to extend the conclusions of her study of rat braina to humans bealuae "a nerve cell la a nerve oell la a nerve cell. . . . They are aimilar in rata and man." Her most recent research involved 900--0ay-old rata, an age she said corresponds t.o BO-to 90-year-old in humans. All the rata apent most of their lives In dUll, uninteresttna c.aee. But at the aae of 786 days, Diamond moved aome of them to apeclal "enriched" quarten -cape f.J\habtted by u many u 12 fellow rata .nd equlooed with toys that were chanied dally. r . . 'The point ia, a nerve cell ii designed to receive 1tim~ and we have round that it will. respond poeitively to thoee stimuli at any age.' She aaid thla experimental FOUi> of rats al80 got "tender lovtna care. We held them a lot, and we just eort of gave them a little more attention." The control group of rata 1pent their daya ln standard ca,e1, with no toya and no more tlwl two companiON. Accordins to Erma BOmbeclc, tlie wbole world is trylnj to buy a little time, bat she's still into a 25-liour d11y. See B2. l Use it or lose it Then all the elderly rata were killed. Careful examination of their braina lhowed that the cerebr,al cortex averapd e percent th.icker ln rata that lived ln an "enriched" environn\ent compared with thoee ln 1tandard cqet. 1'he bra1m of the ''enriched'' rata allO contained 9 perqnt 1-1 of an ~ p(ament called llpofua:in than dfd the bra1na of the-~ rate. "'nle point la, a nerve cell la designed to receive IUmull, and we have found that it will respond politlvely to thoee 1timull at any a,e," u1d Diamond. "We actually ahow that it will tncrepe lta dlmeruiioru. . . . We found the most chanp ln the bra1N when the toya were cbanaed dally. The old rate were really curioua about What WU oominlE ~xt." Woiklna clmely with rata, Diamond uid lhe geta to know them well. "Same are mean and nut~" 101ne are quite .weet -just like with people, ' lhe uld. But lhe draws the line at chwnmine98 and doesn't give her rats name9. "No, no," Diamond Mid. "I wouldn't want to do that. I wouldn't want to become fond of them, becau.e later we take their brains." D 0 Alzheimer's . Disease. • • Not a normal part of aging • Early symptoms or Alzheimer's Disease include epitodic alteratiom or behaYior' changes in peno-lity traits and behaTioral problems. By LU\EN E. u.EIN or ... .,.,,.....,. Mr. Dlvt.r MW tiny little men on the floor. They diltnci.d him, and oft.en he ut watching them m.teet; ~; ~p.lr. trt-.!M~t the senior center. Mr. &t#rs Mid, "My wile wu givirJ8 money to the nelahbon. hJd.lng it Jn tM w~ b&tker and loang her pUne. So I rook her pune -and her ~y -away from her. Then ahe wu always Mying I 6tale ber money. --- -tnim "".lbe 36-Hour Dly" by Nancy L . ~ llDd Peter V. Bablm, M.D. The two lndividuala described above are 1ufterlng from Alzheimer'• Dlaeaae, more commonly known u While dementia. It la estimated that the dlaeMe -which caURe incurable changel in the tt.ue of the brain -affecta from ~.ooo to 1.5 nillUon middl .. aged and older ArnerleaN. Yet, whlle Alzheimer'• Di1eHe ls not ~blycmeofthei-t-and mast f of the dlllee,. of old ~ on *8ing have been mee at UC ~ ~and putk:lpatlna in the arcellua L, J~ on~· a ~ Prosram for beeJth _1, 1'lnt of all. they uy, when you're d18cuaslng Ahhel...,...• 1>18eue, it'• prot-bw better to talk about '#hat ft la not the '#tuit lt •. AldMimer'1 la not a nonnal part of~-It ia not cau.ed by bardenina of the arterie1, as ~ 20 yean -CO tbouaht. It la not necemarily tary. Alzbebner'• Di.ue affec:tl ~y a lm8ll por- tion of the older pOpulaUoo. rmearchen have found. °"1Y about 5 to 1' iJerceot of older penona develop .a.ae dementia.. When it does OOCW', ta on.et la ~ In the .ewrltiee. At a ptoll'lllll held on the UCI campu1 thla 1prin&. opera in neurology and psychobiology c(ltlcuUed the symptoms and treatment of the "'-· . One of the~ with Alzheimer'• Dl11 r n la in the Uon that a problem eldm, laid Stanley van 6en oort, dean and profemor of neurolagy. How doee one tell the difference between a:lmple ablent-minded:nell and the creeping onaet of dementia? I "Generally, If you think you're having dlfflculty and everyone e1ae thlnJa you're fine, it's okay," van den iNoort uid. "But lf you think you're okay and everyone tt.e t.hJnb you're nol, then watch out.'' ... y sympt.oma al. Ahhelmer'1 Dl8eMe include episodic alteratJona of behavior, chanae1 in ~ traita and behavioral probleml. van den One man he lmew of w.. walldna home after chun:h and .uddenly Dlu.opi into a foot of water in a nearby lab wtth b fPod adt on to pick up a rock, be said, Othera 1>e1in loalng thlna• or expenenrtna chrcmc t~ Many times, prominent, Intelligent people begin havtni epblodea of confUlion which later become more frequent. Penonallty changes include the Alzheimer'• patient-becomh*I extremely atteched 1o his or-her mate or becomln& au1plciou1 and paranoid, especially if he or lhe hu a backgiound of paranoia, van den Noort uid. Tendemeu, care and loving is 1tttaed in management of the dlaeale, he u.ld, the kind of care that ia bard to provide without tightly knit family 11l'Uct:UreS. The environment which IWTOUDda an Alzheimer'• patient lbould be busy and li&ht. he said -keeping a televlaion or radio on provides good IUmulua foe the patient. Nancy Mac;e, co-autbot of "The 36-Hour Day," a18o participated in a program on Ahheimer'• Di.aeue at UCI, focualn& on tho9e who are caring for lenile penona. By and lar,ae. lhe uid, Amerlcanl are doinc a much better job deeUng with Ah.heimer'1 padenta than they realize. She aald her tt1earch and experience refutes the popular notion that the elderly in thla country are '"warehou8ed" in nursing homes where they are not well cared-for. "About two-thirdl of Alzheimer'• patients are with J~. ·~~~',"Mace u.ld. "Moat are dolna -. ~elNI~ of copln1 with a very difficult aituatSon." She 1afd her bell recommendation to "~" la that they aimpUfy thll9 ln ~ deallnp with .enUe pel.,.,... Rather than try to reMOD with Al.sheimer'1 padenta, wboee abmty to remember and understand ill impelred, Mace aid, lhe recommenda gMna simple, ~ to undentand lnltrUctiona. The people carlna for the patients, many of whom are elderly :' or relativel. ale often taxed beyond their ty, Mace laid. Often. after montha of giving inteme care and attention to the aenlle~. it la the 1J10U8e who dies. '"l'aldni time out, away bun the care of the confuaed pers>n. la one of the 1in8Je most important thlno that you (the care-giver) can do to make it pmlible for you to continue to care for 90rneone with a demenq lllnem." Mace uid. Research into treatment and prevention of Alzheimer'• Dl.eae hu turned up few substantial . clues, said Carl Cotman, UCI profeaaor of psychobk>lOI)'. Recently, two dnAP ~.!\ a teem of docton at New Ybrk Univenity M <:enter appeared to improve mental function in ::u:i~ti. but DO coocluaive evidence hu been For now, glvln& the moat comfortable, comforting environment for Allbei.mer'1 patients la the best t6at can be hoped foe, opera aaid. Locally, Alzbelmer'I l>i8ew famild.:'J>poc't grou.-have been establlabed in Oranae dda The group'• purpoee will be to provide alppol't to relatives of Alahelmer'1 patients and aupply informed apeaken .nd filma on the d-... Foe men lnfonnaUon on the groups. ~Mary Kay Murl.u at 845--6587 or the AIVM1h1wr'11r- 0Wce. 631..024~. ~idney failure ••• When medical heroics cost too much 'Our trainlJll is to keep " patienta aUT~. Moet or a1 will do wlaate•er we ean to keep a petieat ali•e.' .. t l l Orange Oout DAILY PILOT/Tuelday, May 2,, 1983 he rules have changed IUIA IOMIKI DEAR ANN LANDERS: I moved to DJ1nota from Georgia about lix mon\ha qo and can't pt over the rudene9 of Y ank.ee men. They It.and in elevators with their hau on and aet off ahead of the ladies. Where I wu brou_cht up the men always removed their bau Qi elevatbn and never walked out ~ of a female. Pleue ttm1nd the northern aloba that aome women atlll appreciate 1ood manners . -SOUTHERN BELLE TRANSPLANTED. DEAR BELLE: Tile Hlet llan cllaaaed. MapoUa Blouom. 1$ ll no loqer coaaldered poor mauer1 for a man lo ll:eep Illa laat oa la aa elevator. Also. lo1le dlctatH tllat Ille peraoaa cloeest se tit• elevator door (male or female) esJt flraL It lllUes Do aeue for tile mea to a&ud like woodea Iad.lau. blocktag tM pe~way. wblle tile women try to wall aroand dtem. Suprt,aed at GlJ advice? Odtera wW be, too, bat It la correct ud 1en1lble. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am the mother of five children. The first four are beautiful and bright. The last born, now eight months old, is severely handicapped. I am juat as proud of my youngest as I am of the others. It makes me sick the way my friends, relatives and neighbors fail to include her when they inquire about the other children. Please, Ann, say smnething about this in your column and tell me what I can do to get my little one accepted. She is handicapped -not dead. -HEARTBREAK IN N.Y. DEAR N.Y.: Yoar friends need to be educated, and yoa ·cu llelp do tlle Job. WlteJa tbey fall to meation yoar you1eat ctild, It it becuae tlley mbtakenly feel tllat tbey are aparlDg your feeUnp. Wilen yoa brin1 ber into tlte coavenatlon ud proadly report on Iler proaresa, yoa teacll thm a valuble leaaon in buman relations. Don't ml11 tb1t opportulty to belp tJtem learn ud 1row. AT WIT'S ENO It med 1o bit the tqcenttve for buytna a product or a ltl'Ylce waa to aave _you money. Now the w~ wqrkl II dedkated to an ev.n · rarer oommodiZ;-..:r· I have never bad eo DJ:AR ANN LANDERS: PJ.eue Drint. my let~ ~)' people in tn eavtna me Ume and !n your column. I ®'l't want my bu.fiend to knoW I rnaldnl my fJW!!r1 minute count. 'lbele't the wrote to you about th.la. He opem every piece of roa~ that wW = 1w: sleep in 30 days. mail that C'Ome9 to the hou8e, whether it's~ '111.en' _..,_ ht to York •'--t ···"' to hhb or not. Abo, Ann, there must be othen who eave ~a=~-And a ~tfoner u:; .;tll have the ¥me problem and would like to know the repair apllt enda and make my hair tat tn 10 daya. 1tnawer. . . . U I nm a mile every day for the ..i of my My ·~ refulea to-draw up a will. l 11:ronaly life, I wW pot only feel wcnderful. but will a4cl suspect he 11 wpentitioua and bel1evee if he inUe1 10 year. to my ute. It.I dcrvote just 16 .Qllnuta a a will. he will lall over deed that very ru.ht. We day to the c.we of my akin, men wW fJock to llaht both have children from previoua mama,.. u well my ctgarette even tbou&b I don't smob. A pouch aa children toeether. Some get along with theli' of atropnoff dropped in boil1"8 water will live father. Others do not. We own aome property me a meal 1n five mtnuta, savir\i me three bours together (not completely paid for) and have aavinp of preparation. . and cl}eddna account.a. jointly held. ........u I.,, __ u I I want to write a will and I want my hu.band ' My oven will clean 1~ u ~· get a to do 90 also, but he la stubborn u an ox about thJa phone With the rtaht atuU built in, I can •ve matter. Pleaae tell me what to do. -MUM'S THE minµtes each day by not havfnl to dial the WORD IN OONN. number myself. DEAR ·MUM: IDJaeri~c:e laws vary accorcllq rm alwaya hearing people aay there aren't to state. In llllnols lf a mu diet wltlloat a wW, lala enouah houn 1n the day. U there were any more, wife pta bait of lala estate ud lail cUdre set Fd pua out. I can ~ when i::fle Ulled to baU do one ~ at a time. NOw we Joi lilt.fJD to ·Don't let tbe ox prevea:J.oe from -1~--~e music at the same, cook and talk on the phone f d .... _ rt .....,, .. .,._ almultaneoualy, and eat dinner and watch TV. peace o mlD ... t it ptf 11 youn. See a lawyer 1 did aome fancy mathematk9 the other day ::.:~ce and draw •P yoar wW. Never· ml.Dd aboa& • and figured out the followln": , Usi.na a one-coat paint on my houae would Going to a wedding? Giving one? CW •tanding save me three days. up Jn one~ Even jf you're alreMJX married Ann Buying a detergent with the finiahing rinse Landers' "New Bride's Guide • wiJJ •n•wer already 1n it would aave a minute and a half each quflfltiolv about todlly'• ~. For • copy, M!fXI week. 12.00, plus a Jong, aeH...add.rt!stl«l, •tamped envelope A cold tablet that faced to my bJoodatream (31 cents postage) to Ann Lmders, P.O. Box 1199~. would •ve me two days' sick leave a year. Chica.go, DJ. 60611 . A food prex-:ir wtth 30 attllehmenta would ave me 8eVa'al howw a week of cbopplni and ~· one-etep floor polf.lh would .. ~ me· tWQ houn a week. I added all dMJ9f topther and~ all the product:a I didn't nMd. like maid~ me a nan...moker in four 'dayt, ~ • bledtul of hair 1n 60 day. to combat ftlY baJdniem, and a Gee coll&r that outlalted all h othen by two monthe. I oomput.erbed bow much Uine l needed to work, play. aleep and maintain mY9f}f. Then l avenpd out how many ddn8'1 I could do at one time and flnaUy fllured out with all the ti.me-eaviJll devk:a and products. I had 16 extra 8eCOnd.a 1n my life. Then I subtracted the Ume lt took me to computeriz.e the whole mesa and you know aornethina? I'm into a 25-bour day .,gain. ·POr SHOD BY ASHLEIGH BRILLl_ANt How can I do what•s expected of me, if nobody ever expects anyfhin9 of me'? • ~I T rou1 HIAL1H Organize your coupon savings with the Supermarket Shopper. each Wednesday and Sunday in the RUFFELL'S UPHOlSTERY, INC. TON~ (12:15 A.M. SOLD OIJT 2:45 A.M. SHOW ADDED DR. PETER J. STEINCROHN Dear Dr. Stelacrobn: I have a daughter and a son (13 and 15) who have picked and bitten their nAils ao c.lo9ely that the fingers are inflamed. I keep after each of them to give up this ridiculous habit, but they don't stop. My husband is very strict and puniahes them, not so much physically, as taking away privileges such as TV and going out with their c!MP!M'tes. Do you have any remedy for such a condition? -Mn. U Dear Mn. U.: Not knowi.Qg the facts, I'm not fingerpointing -but I think it's important for you and your husband to stand back and try to take an lmpartial look at yourselves. I know it's the fashion to blame parents whenever there ia a problem that develops in a child. Neverthele9a. it's often so true that auch hablt:a develop 1n younpt.ers who have been under continual st.re.a in the home. You ay your husband is strict. Is he too strict? How do you handle your growing youngsters? Parenta forget that adoleacence la a change of life, an important turning point in the life of teenagers. Therefore, I suggest that you loosen the check-reina 1f nece91ary. Don't try to modify their nai1-c})ewing and nail-picking habi~ by chewing them out, or by naaging them. S&t down with them and have a eerious two-way conversation about bow thinp are PD.I in the home. If nece.ary, call for the help of the family doctor to talk with them. Most children &et over aucb habiU in .un,, but parents often can hasten the appearance of healthy-lookinc nails by relieving exceu tension ln the 4 home. Dear Dr. Stetacrolm: What ii the esUmated world population today? In view of the w.e of the PILL and other qenu to control~. I wppoee the population hu fallen. At lea.t., Engagements Crosby-Landrith thia is my opinion and backed by a bet to buy my boa a box of candy qain8t getting a raise. -Mi9 Q . Dear Miss Q .: According to figw9 put out by the Environmental Fund, the world's population is continuing to grow at the rate of 2.2 percent. Population ia now 4.15 btlllon. It ia growing fastest in Africa, Asia and Latin America. So you aee, Mias Q , it seems that your boa wins the bet. Dear Dr. StelDcrolm: Whenever I move, that is try to atand up or sit down, my bones crack. Not juat anna or legs. but everythlna cracka. la lt due to a vitamin deficiency? Shall I take multivitamins? I eat a well- balanced ·diet and mm. recuiarly. rm still in my 30'L -Ma. L . Dear Ms. L.: I can only gueea that the cracking and mapplns i.a due to ligaments inatead of the bones themselves. It'• not uncommon. In moat cate:S, it disappears or leaem without treatment. U it pel"liata and bothers you, better visit an orthopediat. • • • Acne i.a a stubborn d1-which tries the couraae of both cb1ld and parents, and a1lo the patience of the doctor. But' 1t la an important condition and ahould not be underrated, aaya Dr. Stemcrohn 1n bit booklet, "Acne: A Family Problem." For a copy write him at tbla newspaper enclml' l50 cenia md a ST AMPED, SEL -ADDl\ESSED ENVELOPE. .D-. Steincrohn we.loamet qc.retUoru from taklen. He cannot antWW .U lndivldua.lly but wUl Include UM»e of geMral Jntereat 1n ht. oolUll?JL Send your quefiions to him, ln care ol che D•ily Pilot, P .O. Box 1'80, Co.ta Mew, CA 92828. Mr. and Mn. George R. Crolby of Fountaiil Valley announce the enpaement of their dau,hter, Marianne Croeby, to David Edwin Landrith, .xi of Mr. and Mn. Hobert N. Landrith of Sunnyvale. A l>ec. 17 wedding ia planned. The couple attends the Univenrlty of Aruona, where he ia co-captain of the bueba1l team. McComb-Shepherd A July 27 wedding 1n the Loa Angeles Temple of the O\urch of Jesua Cbria\ of Latter-day Salnu 1s planned bJ s~ Rae ~b and Kenneth Jamllla Shepbenl 'n.elr parenta are Mra. Howard D. MCComb of N~ Beach and Mr. and 14.ra. Georae U . 8--nl of San Dteao. The couple au.Ma Brigham Y ou.na Unive"'ty In Provo, Utah. )1 - ..., ..... •••l' .. htw -4 hwe 1922 H4HOl llVD . COSTA MlS4 -54a.1 U6 JUMBO 16 oz. MARGARITAS SI.50 with LUNCH or DINNER COMBINATION #1-24 on Me"u COCKTAILS WELL DRINKS $1 .00 wtth lunch or dinner cqmblnatton #1·2'4 on Menu Good Tues .• Wed., Thur• .. Sat., Sun. 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. · Daily Luncheon Specials ~ .. $2.95 1768 Ntwport Blwd. Costa Mesa 645. -0324 hrUw tlRtar BE THE .EIRST TO SEE --A S,,eellll Sii•.,,_• el "Bet11r11 •I ~e lefll" Fer I'•• Sur .,.,.. •tt.z Wednesday Morning, May 25th At 12: 15 a.m. SOLD Our 2:45 A.M. SHOW ADDED Tickets Now On Sale ~t Edwards Newport Cinema Box Office for Thia Special Pre-Showing Only. Regular Prices: General Admiuion '5.00 Children '2.50 To Be Shown In 70mm 6-Traek Dolby I: ... .omar..a ·1 _ NEWP.CRT BEACH <714> 644·°'60 _ Near Coaat Hwy. & MacArthur ' NEWPORT CENTER .} "u 'lo -;: _, 9 ICNXT ICBSI 8 ICNBC (N8CI • IC{f LA (Ind ) .ICABC IABCI e KFMB ICBS> D KHJ ·TV Unc:t.> e KGST CAICI • K frv 11nes.1 • ICCOP· TV !Ind.) e l<CET IPBSI e KOCE (P S ....... --1 "'ft'Hl:r .,J4 •• iD'1UMi.O .. ) ·~ "'lf&WK• lA••"'""r' r l'•<'t~· •, 'I 1 ~i .-. • ._ ":wlm=."U= ~Jt;" .. - •t r. ... "" n •' .· ·. '• .· .• . 0rtngt COMt DAILY PILOTITUlldey, Mey 24, 1913 - ~ ~JJTAR>( ~ ~I MID AIOWM1:$ NA ~r <NM To~ '!-_____ ...... 6·,af · G:\Rt'lt;l.D I; THE F..\MIL\' CIRCtS by 811 Keane "I'm going to be in the schoof play, Dahling." M.\R'l:\DLKE ·~ "How come he's your dog when he brings you the paper, but he's my dog when he wants to go out?!" I TMINK VOU SMOULO TAKE Ht( S066ESTIOH BIG GEORGE II I ~~- by Jim Davis by Virgil Partch (VIP) uay the w1y, your cat doetn't chlH blrda, doe• the?" by Hank Ketcham er&•· t• N~diid. N0111 ...... t:>IU · OAQH .,.. .. WE8T -~ .. ,., ., ... c:>U4 <:1AUHI oan oltt• tQH tA'IU IOUTll •&&UH <:1 QI otu . ., .. The biddlnr: N.-tlll'Alt &.-. w.- INT P ... I+ P .. , .. ow. ....... ... OpeDin1 lead: Three of t . GOlll 011 lllOGI BY CHARLES H. GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF ...... ftli tbt Htd t.o iNb W. urk oa Ult uUNaJ • eeeae. How.v.,., •Mit U1t A..ncan Coatract ~ Ltafut btJd I&• 8pri11 Clwnploukipt la Haw.a, M eou1d -relit& &ht .llU'9 of eo111 di•.. u4 Joined tMu•ecll of brktp playm OD UM pl.lsrlaap to the tint of the Jtar'• tbrtMt of tbt mut.r Pol•t. On thl f1rtt boucl &bat TOIDIDJ .t'JaJ-4 In ~ma· mtnt eompeJltJoo. ht found u •sot.le lite to convert bl.t eipt fan trieU Uito tlx. That bad not failed to •e an lmpreuJon on Wett. Thia wu the eeeood boucl of tbt eet, and Weat had DO qu.ahu In eonvertfnr hia partner'• .sat t1Jtct a bid &ru•p break madt 01 Teaa7, ..... Ma~hll Daft1 Duek to ~1 Moue • Weft Jed a low d1b, aad dumaiy'a kins-~ to U.. aee. Ad11b..,~totht qutH, ucf J'tlt thlftad to I bWt. ,....., played low ftOa the tabM, aad Eut't tan w .. taken bJ t•e queen In tht doatd band. Tht ten of dlamondt wu run to the kln1. and Eut caahed the ace ot bW'U before edtlq with a bean. The defendera had foW' trim in th• btU, and It looked u il they aurely would ret at leut two trump trlw. But that did not make allowanee for Tommy'1 ti· tnordlnai, talent. eel ... .,, .......... ... , """ ... --' wt.: 1tr -tM q .... of 6 · JDC>Ddl. Re aM chuiiilJ wwt. DOW clown to Ulrw ...... eaeb, a11d W..t. t&W Md fiw. When Tomm1 led ldt lut dub, Wen wu loreecl to ,.a low. Dulllllly ovemdred ~ the nine. The jack of dlamonda wu rtturatd aad I • Tommy ruffed in tiaacl wtUi the killrl Weit could do no better than overruf1 wtd1 tt.e .. and retu111 a trump. S. 1 there wu no deflediA1 Tom- my from hit 1ppolntecl wk. He played low from dum.m7, WOD tbe ten In band ud ~ doubled eontrut wu home Trwnp Coup Tommy bad double of two 1padet to peQ&.ltie1. He did not know Tommy ruffed the heart. ruffed a club In dumm7, e1th· for a Ws> ICOH. SHOE BABBLE t'l'NK'' ··~"£a8E..\.N ~NG ·~~ ... ... I~ t ~R AtWoN£ 'fA\."1'4~ O\Jftl.a& 1'~ ~AM,~~~~ ~1\.l. ~f\.CAU."f f~\\ .. 1'~\S ~ t by Jeff MacNelly by Lynn ~ohnston '/aJ'PE.1He. aiL'/ GiRL He'e, ~ ~ =! <,()(.) ARE OJLMINA11N6 A 'JEAR 1HM HAE-> BEEN 80TH E.XUTIN& AND EUENTFOl ! lME DESTIWC:OON Of lHE ~EMISTR<.' l..AB CDNE.5 IMMEOIATEl<J 10 MIND ... • 4 • It ' c . . Home tour .slated A tour o f a mulUmilllon dollar drum~ on Newport Beach'• Harbor Ridge will be one of the featuree of the annual ''Bes\ of the West'' home tour 9Cheduled later thia yee.r in Orange County. The tour is expected to draw building and design profelaionals from throughout the U.S . to view examples of bow lOFal practitioners are aolving new problems in home building, aucb as how they make effective use of decreasing apace. The tour is set for Sept. 28 -30. It is aponaored by the Sales and Marketing Council of the Building Induatry A..ociation of Southern California. It will include stops at new affordable homes as well as fancy ones. The tour, which includes accommodations· at the Newporter Inn and a harbor tour on a yacht, will cost $625 for professionals ($800 including spouse) if deposits are received by Aug. 3. Call the BIA office at 54 7 -3042 for more information. Mobil honors Plaza Hotel The Weatin South Coast Plaza baa been awarded four at.an in the 1983 Mobil Travel Gulde. It mark• thE 8eCClOd major award for the ea.ta Meu hotel ttUf ,.er. The Four Star award mew the travel guidE recognizes the Soutt Coast Plaza hotel at ''Outatanding -Worth i Special Trip." Given annually, th« award ia considered ODE of the most prestigious ir the food and lodgint industry. Thia year the Mobil Gulde staff lnapected and rated more than 20 000 esiabliahmentll llCIWI the United States and Canada. 'lbe South Coast Plaza earl.ler received the 1983 4-Dlamond rating from the Autcwnot"" Club. Texaco refinery and site ol new Al:kylation unit Texaco lets contract Refinery unit to be relocated in Lons Beach E&L Associates, a subsidiary of Ebaaco Services of S&nta Ana, has received a major engineering contract from Texaco. The contract la for replacement of existing Alkylation facilities at Texaco's Lo. Angeles refinery with an Alkylation unit relocated from a Texaco facility irt Ch.ialgo. An Alkylation unit ia uaed in the production of high-octane, lead-free Rebirth of gaaollne. Texaco aa19 the new unit will al80 help improve environmental conditions surrounding the Long Beach refinery. The total cost of the relocation project ls estln)ated at $40 mllllon, with E&L handling engineering, design, procwement, reloCation and construction wofk, both on-site and off-Cte. The project la expected to be completed in May 1984. 'farmette' SWEDESBORO, N.J . Vice President Mike taking it around tbe -Depreaaion-atyle Mallott aaid Monday. country as a concept," "farmettea" -new U .S . Home, which aald Strudler. homea with just enough o'W n a 4 8 8 acre t1 of He aaid' bia firm 1ans farmland to help feed a property here, is eellin8 to build ther , _ _E_ family -are 8elllng ao homes on tracta r&nlinl ano .uonrJIC'tte well in New Jeney that from 1.5 to 11 acrea, community ln Texas. He developers aay they may althouab only UlCl9e wttb allo aaJd negotiations are try the idea In other more than five aaa can under way to purchue ataa.e.. qualify for the tax break .. ~din central Florida. "There'• a tremendous "What we're try1J\I to P a t Q u l n n , a movement back to the do is abow what you can apokeawoman for the rural areea." aaid Robert do on a farm of five acree a ta te Depa r tm en t of Strudler, a senior vice in tennl of raislna your A1riculture, said tbe president of U.S. Home own food." aid Strudler. f.armette plan "aves the Corp. of Houston, one of "lt'a a tremendous new Jand from hem« turned the nation'• lar1est market which atvea over to another uae. homebuilding firma. recopition to a revenal We're in the buslnem o1 Each farmette in a in the trend" aavln1 far1nland• and development uaually baa 'nJe campany took the retaininl farmtn1 aa a more than five aa. of n a m e o f th e d. e -viable &ndu.try.0 land for rai8ina crope or veloem~nt, ~ve Acre. But ... e poJn•-"" out anJmala. Owners who and lndependenCe from llJ• ~ sell more than UOO the title ot a ~k by that moat 1armette worth of farm products Depreaaion~ra author owners would have to annually can qualify M.G. Ka1ns who wrote =1;!1'e1nw!.!!'~:..~~ under atate law for tax about how Americana u-.-LllC'--. savings through lower could •tart their own Fannettes have been as a e a a m e n t a f o r farm to become aelf· auoce.ful in a •pit.rate farmland. auffideot. u1d Mallott. development in Upper In th1e 24 houri after "We'll probably be Freehold Town•htp. U.S. Home opened ita·------=--__;:;,_......._ ________ ...:_..1 model farmhou8e in thla southern New Jersey community, more than 700 people li.tened to the firm'• aales pit.ch for the homea, which range from $75,000 to $120,000, includ.ina the cost of the land. .... "We opened up yesterday, and we eold 10 homes," U.S. Home TO START A FORECLOSURE 24 hr .. Service RESl>OOIAI. COMMERCIAi.. ll>USTRIAL . ' WES PAC RECONVEYANCE Ac;...,.~ New business seminar slated for Santa Ana (714) 955-0696 A wmin.er for lndividuUI oomiderina ltarting a new t..me. will be held Tbunday, 8:45 a.m. to 4 p.m., at the Republic Savtnp & Loan. 2400 E. 17th St., Santa Ana. 'The lf!IDinar, sponeored b_1 Service . Corpe of Retired Executives, the Active corp of Executives, the Santa Ana Chamber Of Cammerce and the 0 .8. Small Bulillem Adm!nlstradm, will focus on such iaaue• aa personnel problems, aite location, borTow1ng money, record keeping, increllling aaJes throuah advertitinc and promotion. inllUrance and ~ prob1ema. . For information call 838-2709. McCObelea MOnv•••s Ltiguna Beech •94-9415 Laguna Hills 768-0933 S.,, Juan Cap1sttano •96-1ne "•aoit uw-...MY. oun MoftU91Y • C.n-.*Y Cren.IOry l82SG1_.., A", Costa~ 540-5554 nmas . ...,.... G""!lf. lae .• woddwidt ~ and conatruc\ion or11nl11tton, hH finally aMOWlCtd ~ a~tment of a new pnlldent to weceed 0eorM P. Shults, who~ lMi year to become U .8. Secret•rY of State. ~ tbe pott II 41dea P. Y•tet, a 30-yea.r veteran with the oompany who w• previolqly preeident of Bechtel Petroleum. y ·-will be rephlced in that polltion by Jolla Nterttoet Jr. • • • Huntinaton Buch rsid~t Job D. Jut ... of Coldwelf Banker Real llltate M~ement Services h•• been awarded the CertUled Property~~ by the lnatitute of Real btate M1u,.,,,...,l Janwn la preeently ~ 23 projecU fol' Coldwell Banker. • • • Boll••• AatomaUoa baa announced tnlplemtntltlon of • new tr:alnlnl and la1e8 aid prosram for ltll authorized dealer network. The new prosram utillta a .na o1 video tapee to de1cribe and demonstrate the Holland Automation product line. • • • Doq Dien bu been named manager of Tlte Wa.relloae Rettaarut in Newport Beach's Udo Marina Village. Deitz, who started with the company in 1975 u a -busboy, replaces Jou Macbetll, who l• transferring to a new Warehoule in Stockton. Dletz is a re8ident "'" NeWport Beach and 1 graduat.e of Orange Coast College. ••• Smltla-SlulU ••d Auoclate1, a psychotherapy group wtth offices in Laguna Hill• and Fullerton, baa announced the HaoclaUon of Kare• Scllalmaa with the orpnir.ation. Schulman wu formerly executive director of the Jewish C.ommU'1fty Center of South Orange County. • • • The board of directors of the Hawaii ~fttl has announced the tppointment of Joel Sal~ar1 to the po11t of pn!Sldent of tha airllne. · He rep'lacft Micllael Hartley. Hawaii Express often cH.::ount fares on full terVi.oe round-trip fllghta between Los Angeles and Honolulu. t: ~' ••• Bell Ir Hewell'• Irvine-bued C.mpeter 0.tptat Mlerofilaa DlvWM haa announced the addition of In Dan to the eMtem relion .... Raff u a CX>M ule9 ~. .. -.-- TM Metal Pl'MllCU GNlp, a wholly owned · subsidiary of Enntt Is ,_.... i.aenau.ai. bu relocated tta Aeicurate Mold DtvWon to new and Laraer quarters to Garden Grove. Coldwell Banker'• Commercial Real Estate Servtcea handled the transition. • • • A.merteu Pacetetter of Newport Beach hM reported a net km of $539,000 on revenues of $13,727,000 for Che three-month period endinl March 31, 1983. Tb.la contruta with net Income of $53,000 on revenues of $15,482,000 for the aame period last year. • • • Mart D. Merrill, a=e nal ~er for MarCllt • MJWclaap, i.e.. ewport -bMed investment real estate , bu announced the aale of the Greenbrier Af.artmenta In ann,.. The JllOl*ty mld for $ .15 million to two private Oran,. County invnton. The Greenbriw la a 32-unit Mmpkx • •• Herbert W. Clauey of Dana Point baa been named uaiatant vice prelldent and pel"80'lmet' officer for V alenda Bmik, with ottlma In lrvtne and N~ Beach. Chaney was fOlmerly with Met C.mp.. i.e. . J'~t ti;§ NASDAQ SUMMARY l lr NEW YOAK (Al'I -Molt .u .. ~ ~ "'="w l~led~H • ~ ... '"' im = .... Im ... ~ "+'lot 4-.. + ~ y, ... • • 4 .~ ~J7W.IS: I .::... . ~ Ji :1: -"" •1·16 .... I\' 5 ........... ~ .. ~ .... I\'> .. "' . ..\....... . .. .. ... . ::: ·:::::::. ·:::: .. . , .................. . t Ill!. _. ::: .:::" :: : ~: ·::. :: ..... i ' .. . .• . I • :1 .. ' .. .. . Ii I 0ranoe Coat DAILY PILOTIT\leeday, May 24, 1883 NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS euou1 IOMt INCl.~O• HAOU Ollf , ...... " ............. ,. f'A(ll•tc, ,. ••• llOITOIJ ••• HOlf .... ClltC111114TI noc. •a(NA .. et A .. b lllNll110 av 'fflll .. HO A .. O lllHt .. aY ' GM ordered to pay for patent violation BJ Tile Auoda._. P\wt W ASHINGroN -The Supnme Court rui.ct today Chat General Moton Cori>. m~ piey more tbm tll mlWon ln lnw.t charaea for lnf.rtnClDI on • 1>9tent for mak1na automobtle bu.mpen. In a 9·0 dedt.lon, the court u.1d that t.he car manu.factwer muat J>9Y lnien.i chara-dati.nC beck to 1948, when It wu sued by the developen of the bumpers -Devex Corp., 'rechnop'ap,h Inc. and a IJ"OUP of tndlviduala. General Moton contended that any lnterftt clw'p9 ahould beatn frcm the date ot a oouri f1nd1nl tbat It infnn,ed on the pi.tent. All iold, General Moton waa ~ to J>9Y $19.8 million. l.ncludfnc U 1.02 million In Interest accrued prior to the judgment. Plea to Congress on liousins WASHINGTON -A leadtna b~ finance expert Monday called on Congre. to take prompt action ln reeolvlJll two 1-ues that could affect the availability of credit for FHA-iruaured and VA- guaranteed hO\&l1ni at a time when demand fet the programa ta at an historic high. Dr. Mark J. R.Jedy, executive vice president of the Mortgaae Bankers Aaaociatlon, urged the House Appropriationa Committee to resion credit Umit cellinp for the Government National Mortaa1e Auociation to a level auffldent to meet expected demand and to move quJcldy to extend the lnaurtne authority of FHA. whJch expired Friday. Securttiee auaranteed by the Government National M~ ~tion (GNMA) and told to private inveaton aenerate funds to make FHA-~ and VA-guaranteed mortgages. Trend to lower salaries LOS ANGELES -The Merchant• & Manuf.ecturen Amodation repor1a , .. aurveya ebow • strooc trend toward reduced overall w~ and -1ary budaetl for 1883 in CalitomJa. The downtwn ia COlllistent with major oollective baft'plning llettlemerns 1Jr prtvaie ·tnduinry ·d~x . January-March 1983. Aa the avera1e waae adjuatmenta of mlnua 1.4 peroent ln the f1nt contract year repraenta the first. negative adjustments of the 15-year history of the lle!iea of reports. In ita juat·publlabed survey the uaoctalion contacted aome 500 pu1idpmUJl8 member companies repl'e9entaUve of wide cnm .ection of the state'• industry to detennlne 1983 budcet outlay. fot variow employee cl...tficatiom. And aDCOrding to M & M'a survey findJ.np 1983 merit budgets generally avera,e 7.3 percent for act"C9-tbe-board i.ncreues, down 2.2 percent from 1982. Dollar slips, gold liiglier LONDON -The French franc rebounded from an all-time low aa the U.S. dollar retreated apimt most major currencies in early trading today. One exception was the Rona Kong dollar, which slipped to a record low 14.1 centa in Asia despite government support. On Monday, with markets ln Canada and many European nations cloeed in ob9ervance of holidaya, the dollar roee to ita bicbest level of the year aplmt most !)Jropean cu.rnndea. But the dollar pve pound in late U.S. tradini Monday• traders cashed ln on the currency'• recent 1a1n1. HJgh lnt.en!st rates ln the United States have made dollar-denominated lnvestmen'8 attnctive. WHAT NYSE DID .. ~ YOllK IAPI -,r D R 'l WHAT AMEX DIO HEW VOllK (Af'I _, 2l 5 '1 TUESDAY, MAY 14, 1881 I Baylor's tip did it Advice gav~. Carew hew outlook By JORN SEV ANO °' .. .., ......... Toward the end of last .euon, Don Baylor appr'Cl91Ched Rod Carew on the aubject of hitting. It's not what you think, though, u lt was Baylor who was giving the advice, not 1eek.ing it. Cronically, their little chat just may be I responsible for Carew'• torrid atart this aeason. · "I just told him with no one on he was the best hitter I had ever 1een with two ltri.kea," explained Baylor, who i.s now wearing a Y~ uniform. "But I said if there's a IUY on bue, you become an entirely different hitter. You swing at bad pitches, you swing at pitches in the dirt, you don't swing at Rod Carew-type pitches. "All I told him to do ia take the same basic approach with men <>n bue." Apparently Carew listened. Because not only did the American League's leading hitter up hi.a average of .450 Monday night ,(with a pair of singles in four tripe to the plate). he a1lo drove home the pivotal run of the ball 1ame in the seventh lnnlna aa the Angela blanked the Bronx Bomben, 3-0, before 37,712 at Anaheim Stadium and a few thousand more watching local teleYis1on. "No matter how 1ood a hitter you are you need 90IDeOne you can talk to," aa.ld Carew of h1I conversation with Baylor. "He helped me out. He was easy to talk to. "Last year I put m)'M!lf in a position where I felt I had to come th.rough. I had to pt t.. hits. I put premure on m)'Mlf and that'• the wont thina you can do.'' So, Carew came into this aeaaon with a different approach, and a different attitude. The result? Well, with men in 1eorlna position, Carew is current!)' hitting .529 (18-for-3.f) with 21 RBI. Not bad for tomeone who bu always been (See CAREW, Pace C!) Dotterer Trilogy almost fulfilled Indy rookie knows life's • • • By CURT SEEDEN oftMIWIJ ......... When Mike DOtterer and hia L Stanford Cardinal teammate• r open-play in lhi! NCAA bueball regionals this week it will mark the beginning of the final leg of what might be called the Dotterer Trilogy. You aee, after he left Edi9on .High and beaded to Stanford to play both football and bueball. .Dotterer set three goala for hirmelf. And be had four years in which to attaiD them. "I told myaeU I wanted to go to a (football) bowl game, I wanted to play in the College World Series and I wanted to graduate," Dotterer recalls. , pr1or1t1es INDIANAP~S (AP) - Patrick Bedard, at 41 the oldest -of sbr rocrktn tn· Sunday'• Indianapolis 500, learned a long time aeo to avoid what be callt a race driver's greatest Wualon - that bad~ happen only to the other PY· "All of ua, toCDetime, get our first gl.lrnpee of mortality," uya Bedard, who will start hJa first Indy race tram the middle of the sixth row. "I know I'm not made of lron and steel. He. gets lift from weights By ROGER CARLSON or .. ,..,,......, · He'• not exactly a miniature, but conaldertna hJa feata, you have to think of anta wlien you think of Costa Mesa ~~ball standout Rl~hard 1 'The two-way tackle la fut beooming a le,end around the Muat.anp' pncUce field for his feata u a strongman, lifting weighta in numben that ooinclde with 9DIDeOM twice h1a m.e. At 6-1, 212 l>OW'lda. and considered the core of the Muaian.a' offensive and _ de!cmstve. linel at t~e. be broke every - record at a recent p:>Wetllfting meet at FAperanza, benching 335 pounds and ~ 465 pounds in the lqUal. He a1lo ded 515 pounds on a deed lift. "He WM juat a little fat kid at one time," aaya hia coach, John Carney . "Now, be'• 212 pounda of muaies and brains itnd and we're really excited about him.'' . .To prove lt WU DO fluke, a w~ later he competed at the C.plat.rano Valley Invitational and benched 365 pounds (a 30-pound improvement) and added 10 pounds to the 9C1uat (475), breaking all.of (See BE GETS. Pace C!) In a few weeks be will have reached the graduation pl. He had to go to Japan to meet another of the goels. And '1e and is his Cardinaf teammate. will have to 10 to Omaha, amon1 other pYces, to reach the tlnal Mike Dotterer ~·1 first had that reaizatlon walkln& acroas the street in Newport Beach, ln 1972. I wu hit by a car. That reordered my prloritlea. It got rid of the chlldlah thought that nothing bad wW ever happen. "Secondly, when aomethlng like that happens, you realhe what'• important lD life. Auto raclns la a whole Jot more important than [ thouaht it ...... Costa Mesa High's Richard Schlesinger has no tn:uble at all in holding up halfback Ben Moore. .., ............. eoel-But rnardlea of Stanfo~'• fortunes fn the NCAA bMebe.ll playotfa. th1no will aoon chanae fot Douerer. Jle'll no~ have any goal.a -only option.. A bunch ol them. wm be be drafted a third time in June and sign with a major league buebaJl team! "Now I'm hitting .260 •and 'when you compare it to my lut two years, well, that'• not indicative of what Mike Dotterw can do," Dotterer aaya. What can Dotterer do? wen. be can lmprov& on theee career bueball ltata at Stanford: 670 at bats. 236 bits, 29 doubles, 13 triples, 15 homers. 99 RBI and a career .352 averaae. He'a in · fourth place on the all-time Cardinal doubles lilt and be•a in third place on the all-time Stanford at-bata list. aaid Bedard. who s&arted out :SJ writer and ii ltill a columnist editor-ai.-1.arp fOI' Car & Driver ~ racing aporta can ln 1972, moved into the Formula Ford aeriet in 1978 and first came to lndianapolla in 1981. He did not make a q•aallflcation attempt 1hat year or ln 1982, but be put hia March-Coeworth racer into Sunday'• 33-car atartina field with a four-lap qualification averlge of 195.941 mph lut Dodgers in control . . . so . is Fernando Will be lliln with the Oakland Raiden who choee him ln the April Nn. draft? Will be ... with the Oakland Invaders who picked him in the usn.. draft tn January? wm be opt fOI' graduate acbool at either Columbia ot Syncuae and continue hia education ln public policy? . It'• to the point now that the optiona are almost overwhelming Dotterer -be'• having trouble concentratlnl at the plate. "[ Wal up to around .315 (batting avente) at one time this year. 'then the football draft came around and [ atarted thinkina about what l waa eolJll to do. My concentration juat wamn•t there. . Football, on the college level, la over, but he can feut on hla 9ellior atatiatks: 113 carries, ~3~ yards gained (tope on the team), 4 . 7 rushing average, eight touchdowns, 26 receptions and an 8.8 yard receivinl average. Such numbera open the door for a future in the Nn. or the major lea1ues, but there are otheit optiona. ''The public policy graduate programs ~b~epare me for work ln the aector and I'd uke to combine that dearee with <See D01TEJlEI\, Pace C!) Saturday. . Bedard, who lives ln New • York, la 20 yean oldet" than the youn,aett rookie, Al Umer Jr. "[know the end will come aomewhere alon1 the Une," Bedard aaid of the constant danpr in ractna. ..But, aa they aay, you can pt bit by a truck while you're cnmlna the ltreet; I did get hit by a car. But to avoMI the tblnp ln We you r.lly want to do la fooliah. rm not amna to worry about lL" For the record, Bedard baa never been injured in a r8Ce car. PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Fernando Valensuela think• control la the ma.t important thine a pitcher cafl have, and there waa little doubt the 22-year-old lefthander had it Mcnday m,bt. Valemuela pve up only four bits. atruck out ll!'Yen and wa1bd juat two in leadlna_ ~he Loe Anaei. Dbclpl'9 to a -u victory aver the Pbil8delpbia PhOllea. "I think oontiol II the ~ aHet, and my control waa excellent tonl1ht," 1aid V1Jen1uela after' the pme. He laid be •• nbt •tided with hll motion early in the ~ but .. now throwinl llDOOlhly. "At the art, of the .-m. I wun't followin1 tbrouah properly,'' be aaid. "I've Knee stopped Rish his· tracks • Ill There wu ooe very noticeable at.ence 1n tenm of CIF -l-A tndl and field ~ fOI' the big ahowdowna at Cen'ltoa Colleae recently -Marina Hilh sophomore Chip Rish. Riab, who awept to titles in the 100, 200 and 400 meters, ln addition to anchorina the Vikinll' 400 meter relay team. failed to qualify in the 100 at El Modena Hlah in the prel1ma and acrat.ched from the 200 because of a bone apur ln hla knee. An earlier inflamation reared lta head and it waa recommended that he not run at all in the prellma. Minor (arthoacopic) aur1ery la anticipated and be la expected to be back to 100 percent in Ume I« Marini'• football .aaon, where be flaurea to make the VUdnp a deflnlte threat ln the air aa a wide NC91wr. Marina ii p.a, to need all the help it can pt. The non-teecu• echedule includes Ellpenma (Pete Yoder & Co. fioally cane PAEPSPORTS ROGER CARLSON South), defending CIF Bil Five Conference champion Se.rvtte, c.enwry I.eaaue t.ou&hle Foothill (Ted Mull~'• crew), La Quinta and Milllkan before 8un1et Lfflue play. • • • Foothlll alao tangle• with Fountain Valley on Sept. l~. • 'nlw.tay, on a nlcht lolded wtth key pni.. While Foothill and Fountain van.y ~ at Huntlnl'on 8Mch. 1l'4l8on wll1 host Sa ~~pow~ V'8ta at OraJll9 Coal\ • • • Newport Harbor HJah'• recent cwleavon at the CD' swim f1nl1t ~a comment -the SaUon flniahed eecond to nlne-Ume -l-A dwnpkln Millfion VlQ> for the third ~tive par -wbicb ii tantamount to three st.naaht c:rowm on the belia of pre- Millkln DI~ daya. '!be dllfllerve ~ ihey've earned, but they're In another arena entirely comiderlDc the -a.rnbttloua AAU L': of the N~ whkh feeds ,the Allo =~Toro standout Cl'aJa Popp, a alx·tlme All-American In awlmmiq who doubled at the 4-A ~ , ~ ihe 20()..yard iDdMdual rndit)' in 1:50.21 md the 100 tn.tt In &7.17. =' by s~ he opClld tor uo ... • • • kWiit m,b'a ncll and &Id ~ .. ...o:Y·tbt '*'. tbe .. :v... ~ may~ tn Or~• County la ..nu:.;ot ~ tbt bllt ,. tbt ~ ... (leeama,hfeCI) . Corrected 1hat, and th1np are amna much better now ... Until Monday ni&ht, the PbWJa were the only Natiooal 1.-,ue t.-m Valennaela had not beatilD in three full I? I I Dn9 in the majon. The vtct.ory pve him a &-i -.i record. indudinc three ahutouta. "He'• only 22 yean old. but be Cltcbff like he'• been in the eecue for 1~ years." aaid Los Anl'eJea Manaaer Tom LMcrda. "He can allo beet you with the bat. He'a no Ibach at the plate." Valenzuela had a linPt and a double in four at-beta Monday ~~ Dodaen. who oWll the bmt record In the major i.cu- aU?-11, IDIJl'ed ID the tlm lDn1ng oft kmr John Denny, 4-3, wban Swve Su opened wttb a triple and ICOl'ed u Ken LandreaWt IJ"O'UDded out. n.y added a final nm in the ninth ol1 relleYa' Ron Beed when Su lined a ~t linlle. drivtnc in c.-a1cher Stew v...-. '!be PbDlie9 thnatmned In the Hcond lnnin1 when Ivan D&J-.. lfnaled wttb one out and Wiii forced at l900ltd ~ Dann~ Pate .. then lln to t but Gary_ Matthewa sroun ln1io a fialder'I make. In the .-ventb, M1b Scbmklt ~with• walk and, aftel' TClft)' Peres struck out, 8cbmktt wet to lleCOQd on Bo Diu' lol'I fJy b.n to cmter. 8'li VNenP•la retlnd Garry Maddox on a ~to 4iDd the tnmna. ~ aDoWecl onlY l9WD bita . !:at ~t lnnl!Wl whlle atrildnc ~ PhlWll hwe Id ICONd • run la H lluw•a• and have ooDectld OD1J M hf1a ID tlM&r lMt 11 1amH. Don Baylor Baylor: He's not forgotten • fl ·-I I I I t f t I C2 First class ticket carries big price fl'rom AP dlapatekt CINCINNATI -Outfielder Ill Cesar Cedeno, who refused to_ fly home from Chicago with the Reda becawie he didn't have a fint-d.ul ticket, was suspended Monday for three days without pay and fined for outbursta against Manager Russ Nlxon on Sunday. The Reds issued a statement that C.edeno had received the "customary" f1M ad.mated at $100, and wo~d rejoin the club for the aame here Thursday with the Pittspurgh Pirates. The c lub statement refe rred to Incident• of "misconduct" at the ballpark and at the airport ln Chicago between Cedeno and Nixon. trainer t.11')' Starr and Steve Cobb, traveling .Je(fttary. ca.Mo Nbcon ·met for 1 lh hours You tell 'em Jack! Actor Jack Nicholaon, an avid Lakera fan, i:eacta emotionally to a referee's call during the recent playoff serietf with San Antonio. Monday with club preaident ·Dick Wagner and atterward, P,rivatety with Cedeno. · A' · · 17 · · . Cedeno refused to board the commercial 8 wm m mn1ngs Tim Wallet-1la1Dmecl a ti•-11: tnak1JUr two-run hcmer ln the qbth lnnlnc To _J)OWer Montreal to • 1·1 National Le.,u• vlctoey over San Dlqo Monday nlaht. The former Untvent~ HJch and Saddleblick Collele Ital' ~ .. a 1-0 l!ltch deep lnw the left field bleechen fOC' Ma fifth homer ot the~ •.• Oeorp ""*hit a fOW1h-home run and a tie.~ llCrl6oe fly 1n the el,lhth to lfve the New Y«k Meta a 4.3 .in ovet a., J'rancUcO . ' • WaJU ~··two-run double In the 1txth save Clncinnati a 2·1 triumph Ofts' St. Loula, handlnf the Cardinali tl\._lr fourth 1traiaht defeat . . . Bob Horaer and Cla•clell W.....,toa drove in two runa WALLAat and Atlanta pummeled Pittlburfh pltchin& for 12 bita en route to a 6-3 triumph . . . Ray KalPt drove in two tWll with a slxth-innlna double to carry Houaton to a ~2 decision over the Chicaao Cubs • . • Roll Cey of the Chlca10 Cuba, who hit .5~5 with three homen and eilbt RBI last week, wu named the NL Player of the Week . . . Meta catcher Jolm SteaJ'lll will report to the team'• mlnor-1~ training complex in St. Petenbur8 ~ay to con':h'ue rehabWtation on his injured tight elbow' ·easeball today 1935 -The Cind.rmati Reda defeated thE Philadelphia Phlllles, 2-1 in the first night game in major league history. 1936 -Eighth-place bitter Tony Lazzeri drove ln 11 runs for the New York Yankees with three home runs and,a triple in a 25-2 pounding of the Philadelphia A's. Two of . the homen were srand alama. following a weekend aeries with the Chicago 17-lnriina marathon with a twCH>Ut fiiaht on which the Reda returned to Cinctnnatt RJctei Be•derso• -ended a II Cubs. • ~ that drove ln Du Ateyer from 76 J When Reds traveling secretary s~ Cobb .x.ictbuetopveo.klanda~-4wtn ers' ohn~n hospitalized gave Cedeno a boarding pua for the coach over Milwaukee Mrl.y um monUnc· The game, C I ea m o n J o la n t o n , th e • section, the outfielder demanded a first~ five hours and 17 minutes~. wu the kJnaest Philadelphia 76era' 6-10 reserve tick.et, then tore up the one he wu given and in the ~ th1I eeaon. Dave W.. had two center, wu hospitali:.ed Monday with stonned out of the airport after Nlxoo refuaed to Jxme n.ma fw O.kJand ... De9alt te.aN and an acute urinary tract infection, intercede for him. Du combined on a 11.x-hltter and leavina his statUI for Thunday'1 ~ p!njt tn "I tried to talk to him, but he walked a~y." . Bal McRae and J• Wadi.la the National Basketball Aaocla\lon pl'ayoff1 -~!{~~!~~a-:.J?y~. ru,ht ~~ ::::.~, _ each homered Monday niaht againat the Los Lakers on a "day-to-day" bm UlU &II\ w• ~. -s --.._ _ ~ . .j.a ~-· _ CraiJ._Mar1oL..aays..he..haa held dlr""'4oa8 that he should be shouting at me acroea the American wiaue Weal --about the~ heactc.wdrof''the"l:Jnited Sta._.,_, airport. It belongs inside the club." • victory over Tex a 1 . Football 1.eaaue'• Denver franchile, but hu Quilenberry pitched the final made no decision ... Clarlt Evert Ll•yd Quote of the day 1 ~ 1nn1n8t. allowtna one bit defeated Katlay Horvatla 6-4, 7-6 and captured tn ~ up b.19 nfnth •ve the Gennan Open tenn1a tournament ... The Jolm Elway, on the situation ln which he tried to hand-pick the tam h7, wanted in· the National Football League: '1 euem If I look at it realistically, they might aay rm a spoiled brat." ... T••Y Armas homered Soviet Union's Gallu SavlDkova set a world twice and drovt In ~ runa record ln the women's d1acus with a throw of _____ u Boston 1topped CbJcaao, 240.... at a tnd< and field meet on the Black Sea CM •• • 6-4 ... IAl9 Leal and RaMJ coast ... The San Diego Socken won the Major Moffitt combined to pitch Toronto'• third hlcio« Soooer League championship with a 3-1 comecuttve lhutout and En.le ftttt bit two of victory over 'Baltimore, their second l1.rallht title Birmingham wins, 23-20 the Blue J~ tour bm:nel'a In a 4-0 victory OWll' Detroit . . . Tom Bnu•tkJ homered tWfice and drove in flve l'UIUI while Gary Ward'• two homers knocked in four rum aa M.tnn.ota cte.lt Baltimore a 12_. aetblck ... 8°' ......,.. and BUI CHdlll combined on a seven-hitter aa · Seattl\' beat Cleveland, 3-2 . PONTIAC, Mich. -Scott N<JCWood kicked a 46-yard field goal at 4:32 of overtime to give Blrmln8ham a 23-20 victory aver Nlchipn in " USFL game Monday night. DOTTERER TRILOGY • • • sec adds 2 coaches From Page C1 a law degree," says Dott.ei-er. But I've been th1nking about a Jot of ideas ... like if I end up p)aylnQ foou.Jl tn Los Angeles. l cOuJ.a go to night law achool at Loyola. "Actually, it just dependa on where I play. U I waa to play with the Yankees (who drafted him earlier) it would be quite convenient to attend Col~bia. BAYLOR ..• From Page C1 too -if I ever make it to the majors. "I think I have the ability to So ~f Coll play major league baseball as uthem omla ege well as NFL' football, but that's bas added two coedlt!9 to lta ataff -llOOCel' coach nm Conrad and not to aay I don't have a long way women'• ""--1.. ... tball ClOliCh Sheri to go, .. he adds. '" Lazzarini. ~. Dotterer had to go to Japan for' c.cnr.d II a former player md the Japan Bowl to reach one of coach at Blola Univeral~ hil three collegiate goals. He WU Bk>Ja teum reached the ln on only one play becauae be m NA.I.A playoffa four 1imea in was 1till recuperating from lix years. He hM been out of 1hulder 1urgery. Since the collegiate COllCb1na tlnce 1980. Card.lna1I never made lt to a bowl 'Tm lookina foe a forward to u a team, Douerer had to lettle complement Jim Roule, a pUe for a apot on a boWl-bound all-and a cquple more aood l*:ka." atar team. aays c.cn'nd. U he decides to tum hil option Lazurinl bu been an .m.tant of playing in the NFL Into a pl. women'• c:mch at Azula"Pad& he ha• a 1ood atart. He bu the peat two yeara. already attended two Raider "The pl'OIJ'8ID needs eorneone mini-camps at El Seeundo Junior who can come ln and build it High (the Raiden' camp), and from the around up," aa1• coachea have taken a Jone look at 1.,uzar1ni. 'Tm an expertenced him at running back and on recruiter, now rve aot to find ~ kickoff and punt returns. lfrJa foe SO:." The avenue• are mind-~· =-ooc::' =~ Fresno State, uncle and gr,ndfather are former major ieeaue:a. Fullerton vie And woul4 you believe, there'• one more option. TEMPLE (AP) -Briabam Becau1e waa born in Young, Fresno State, Cal State- Saakatoon, Saskatchewan, Fulla1on and Ariaona State will Dotterer baa been lnvbed to play meet ln the doubJe..JJ.mlnadon for the Canadian national West D re8lCJna1 of the NCAA baseball team ln the Pan bueball tournament tbia American Gama He c:ould a18o weekend. Brlaham Younc ~· play fw elthe~ Canada or the ~d. The opm•~ pme U.S , tn the 1984 Olympe Gama Fri ay in Arhona State'• ln Loe Anplee becaute be hu ·k match• Fr.no Stat. dual dUienlblJ>. aaatmt J\1llet1on at 4 p.m, At And, of cot.ane, there'• alwaya 7:30 p.m:.1. Antona Stat. plays the Oakland Invadera of 'he Brtaham YOW\& USFL .. . The loaert ~eet at 4' p.m. ''U I 10 to srad acbool « lf 1 . S.~y and the wt.men at 7:30 gutlcfpate. In pro athledo it'• p.m. Important for me to become . J'or ~u.soua rrr c-t11 tbse will proffdent in whatever I ~.'" be no 1amea -Sunday SI BYU •)'I Dottetw. "I haw to fOC\9 on remain• in the touroament. a inl1n objectlw and not have a There will be two aamH lot of ot.hel' OOftflictinC alciMU..~' otherwlff. The tournament ffa addt, ''LUii ~ be a lot CODllDLa UD"1 thft9 of thi fGW' ...... if I~ had GM dMllDt.'' MW c.o.J.-. Television, radio TV: No eventa 8Cheduled. RADIO: Baseball -D o dgen at Phlladelphla, 4:35 p.m., KABC (790); New York Yankees at AnaeJa, 7:25 p.m., K.MPC (710). th•re'• talk about uuparadlna" " with • fP lfft, to ..U. lt availabJe for ~dal MU rneeta ln 10~ •.. arid maybe ewn tM CIJ' 3-A prellml. • • • ~P t.ketball on the national leYe1 h. a new twilt -time outa will be Umlted to no man Chan two ln an&1i:lf. But, Cll'nia will not idheS"e to the • edda ch.an&e1 ataytna widl Shit~ five dme ouw per pme wttli the COM"bes lfven an option M to . when they can take thilm. The 1tate re1lon-.J baaketball tourney 1 than~fully, will not lnclude .. at larae t..,m' anymore. Juat champlohl; thank you. • • • • Jim Toomey ii retumlnc to Lacuna Beach Miah .. ita track and fleld COlliiid\ aftef a ... ,..... at.enc. -a apan ln which the only .vidmce that . theft WM indeed a track OI' a field at l....iuna ~ WM the ~of hwdler Tony Walc&er. ''We~ aotna to have to atart all~.·· •ys Toomey about the ArU1t.' once.formidable propm. • • • Ml11lon V~e '• Blll Crow and Capi1trano Valleys DI.ck t are "looklna f« bodJes" for an alumni foo game billed for June 10. The firat practice la scheduled for JWle 1. lnteretted partie1 1hould contact the coacbe1 at their retpective achoola. Star sailors race T1ie Memorial Day week.end wW atart a busy three montha for Southern California Star aa.. l&llon. A large turnout la expected at San Dleao YllCht Club for the 22nd annual compeUtion for the RoWna Bowl, donated by Chick Rollinl, veteran Star. ClUI ._uor. i After the San Dieao event ma.ny Star allon will be trallerlna their 22·foot craft to San ha.ncbco for the District 5 champlonah.lp June 10-12. 'Ille IUM11ce 8eliel will be aaJled out of St. J'randa Y echt Club. Next On the apnda for the Stan, the oldest one-dellp "1linc clee, will be the Pre-Olympic • l!Mttta.atl.,gqa. BcldwJYl,y,alhAV& ~-• ·--~-= The cl1max will be the world champ6onabie_ for the cl.ul at Califomia YllCht Club, Marina del Bey, Aug. 14-20. Driver still stable BAKDtSFIELD (AP) -Auto nee driver 1lm NOODe'I', 18, of Lu V epa, contbaued in stable coodltlon Monday after IU.fferia8 .vere burns S.~ nleht tn a 'five-car nee cntb. NOCIDlll' w.. hurt durtnc a main event open ~don llllOck car nee at the Mela Marin nce ·and .au.ffered .econd detlJ"" burnt on 20 percent of bll body. . Drtwn ol four of the vehk:1e9 tnvolYed in the accident ran to aalety. Nooner ai.o -=aped from hil car but hil cloChea were on fift. ----------- ~ . ' • • MA.10t1t LU•• aTMe9Mll •....,-;:;1& W L ,_ -D 11 .680 11 ,, .1521 , 21 ,. .1521 1 11 ,. ..... 1'4 1t n .w 4 11 22 .405 "' 11 11 .an N ....,~ llolllofl 12 ,. .17' Toranlo II 11 .m ........ :017.171 '- ....... 20 17 .141 1'4 .._ Ycwtt ID 1t .1'3 2'4 ~ ,. 21 . ..a 4'4 o.wolt 11 21 .447 IS .............. M9lll I. .... Yon e Toronto 4, o.lrall 0 ...._..,2,......__4 Bomlof\l.~4 ~Qlyl,1' .... 2 o.llllrMS S. .._. .. 4 I 11 '"'*'Gal lelltlleS.~2 . ~---.... Yon (tiWr t4) Ill .... (fonlc:ll W).11 o.ttOft (UjcM C>-4) et TOf'Onlo (MofgM N).11 ~ (& C..-0 14) .. e..tllnor9 (llotciONODt 4-2). II 9ollUI fllrd 1'-1) .. ClNDllOO ~ 1-4). II l'ex• (Smfth-1·2) al Kanua City ~1,1).11 ~evelend (SorenMn 2-11 al 8Nllle (Y~ll-3).n Miiwaukee (H•H 1· 1) el Oallla11d (~~1).1'1 *.::::-'~ Oedeer9 Atllnt• W L ,_Ge l1 11 711 2' 11 ·"' 1'-' Sen Frllfldeoo ~ s...oi.oo Houetoft ,. lO .417 9'4 11 22 ·* ~ 11 n .4:1t 10'4 ,. 24 429 11 b.ST ....... ,. ,. .Ml " 11 145 St. LIMI PUedl.,._ ~ 19 17 .529 .,. ::;:t 14 20 .411 4'4 Cl*9eO 11 22 405 5 14 aa an • .............. ar......a.at.LcUa 1 ~2.Ptl1 ....... 0 -Yon 4, a., l'nndloo a ~a, a., °"911 1 Alllnfa I. PMltlurVh I Hol-Wlft a. CtllCIOD 2 T .......... D._.,. (Pen• 4-,, •• """•O•IPlll• ~1~).l'I Sen DMoo (L.ollW 14) .. Won ..... (!#.,, 0-1). n Sen f'rMdloo (l<n*OW 2•2) al '-Yon (Lyndl 2•11, n • . 81. Louie (L•"olnl 2· 1) 11 Cl11Clnn1U l~M).n PIUalMHgll (McWliuam. 44) al All.ante (CenlpW).11 CtllCIOD <"""'-' 1-2) .. Houa40fl (Socm 0-1). n AlmNCAM UIAQUS CA.I:= I, y-=: ~ .. ,... .., ... c.ww. lb • 111 ~a a o 1 o , __ • .. 11, ~. 11t 4000 ....,._, Oh 4 0 0 0 WlnMld, • .. 0 ,. l.,...., d 302, .... .. 4020 ADJman.:. 4000 ic...p,rf 4010 Mimi. )b 0 0 0 0 arn.t.r. • 4 0 1 0 Y....._rf 3000 ~.d 3000 Gnd\.2b 4000........_,., aooo .......... 3010 0.-c: 2000 lloonl,c 2110 Tocalla au• a TGUlll 1t o • o ............. .._ Yon 000 000 000-0 Celfof"'9 100 000 IOll~ 0.... -Wlr"*'ll M -L,_ (4>-0P -.._ Yorll 1, CllllbNa t. l09 - .._ Yon 7, CellarNe 7 29 -e.,. 2. c.-. --....... (I), 900lta (2). ._._. ., "•••eo ~~ 913334 ZMln (W......, • • 0 0 , 0 T -:tit. A -'6.711. ~ ....... .. ,,.. ... --2 c... 140 .... 2 a ... ,. ,. .., , ,. .. ,. o.ai-,... 27 ... 11 n .... ....... -,. . , 7 ..... ~ 10I ,. ao 7 .. .211 ... • 12 1 I .m ....... ., 11 ,. I 17 .... .... 1• 12 • 2 12 .. Ortdl 111 ,. . I 11 .M1 a.tr • 0 11 0 ., ..... :-..:e.. ., 20 • I 1 .no 12' 11 n • ,. .1'1 ~ ca 4 7 I a .14' = ,.. t I 0 • • 143 21 4 a 0 1 • 111 "'=" ti I 0 0 t .000 1..111 200 .,. .... 1• Zf4 MCllma •• ••W-4 ... ...... ... t1 ti 17 4-1 , .. 7-. ..,. • ,. ..... 1.71 IOlllM ..... t1 • ~1 J..11 OW.. ... a I I CMI J.. 1' ...,.. .._ ... ,.awa.a Mt ... .. ,, 10 ,,... 4.411 .-.i IO IJ7 e 10 W '-IO ........ ,. , .. 0 • 0-1 I.All Cor-.a 1 12 0 I Ml Lt4 OClllt ,. 41 23 ,. 0-t .. T,_ _,. 14 I ' 0-1 7AI TOlllt •1 .. 111 17' ia-tt .... MVD: Wiii 4, ...... t, ...... 1. MATIOULLUQI• ..... =:J:l a.~..:..... •r•.. .., .... Aoie,11 4020 .... Jlt 1111 ....,._, .. 1010 ~1111011 adwNdl. ae aooo ....,, 11 40bo ,...., lb 4000 cau.nro.,. 2000 Olea. c 1000 lrodl." 4000 ~ d 1000 ......... rl 4000 ~ 2' 1000 ....... rf 0000 ~-1010 ......... 1110 ._...,,..,. 1000 ......._. ao10 Gerda.. 0000 " ........ ' 4010 ='P: ~;:: , ..... p 0000 r~ ao40 TOlllt a41u ............. ~ Ale tOO 000 001-1 ... .... 000 000 000-0 C11M1e.., ••• • -~m •-MU•••· LOa-LH A11.:io~ .,,. a 11" ._v--.... • ta •w 111} I ,_,.... .......... . ... ., .. v1 1"1 cw~ • ' o o ., no, ,,. · · °"1 ,,,...... ... , , ' •• ..... 111101 T.:..t:te • ..-.. .... ............ , S... Clleoo 100 000 000-1 II 0 Monttwil 010 000 Ob-S t 1 Dre-..clllf, Del.eon (I) elld T Kennedy: ~~. ~don (I) encl Caner. W- Oulllcllaon, 4·1. L-brev.ctl)', t-S 8- Reerdon (4). HR-Mon1rMI, WeHec:tl (II). A-11.114. ...... ~, St. Louie 010 ooo 000-1 a o anan.a 000 OQ2 OOX.-2 I 1 AnOujlor, VonOlllen (I), ..., (I) and Potter: Price, 8c:Mrrar (7) and llardellO. W-Prloa. 3·2. L.-AnduJar. 3·1; 8 -8cllener (11. A-10,708., A*-1.C-.I CtliCeOO 000 000 , 10-2 4 1 Houeton 100 002 OOlc-3 1 1 J.=:~~·1.~·= W-J. Nllllto, 2-4. l-Troul, M . 8-DIPtno la). HR-CfllCIOD, J. o.¥19 141. °""*" (f~ A-1.111. REAL DTAtt =~Hlllt &1_1 ... lld &lbM ,...., ....... Cofllttr_ • .., .. C"'UllllM M., c ....... °""""""'' II T""' fownt.aln v.uc\o HW>uncwna...~ """'· ltarbwr '"""'' ......-·-~llollo ~" ..... ........ _ -...v •. ,, ~t'{-:...8::h -~ l'•P""r-· s.n .. ,.,.. !'Mvi flt•h i;..,,n "-"" iw ...... a. ...... Tt.aun w .... .,...u, ~ ..... ~ ......... , "'""• A~•'f'U. ftt ... h t>n .. t'h __ ....... , .... --.. ..... ,, l.a~ ,.,"""', ............. 1\ ........ lfftinl~ 1aup1i ~.,. u,,,. ... '"-"'"""'"""' .... .,.,,. ........ : ... '"' tndw.tn•I t>rt,.,c i. ........ ,, ..... ~. Mubi~ llom-Pari.. Moun\ain 0.... Ora~·t .. o Out nl Count\' °"' "'s ..... """'"'"" p.,_ ;'.'.:!:;'>' H=.':r RENTALS 1i-r-...i _u .. 1....- ,.UUllll,.,..~.., ... Uni~ l ......... t""' l._,U,.I T_n,__,..,,. 11......,.._.u,., u..,. ... """ o...p.._ ""' ~IOP\ut\WW A_,,_...IJN "'* """ .. u .. r -""""'"-It·--... o .... ,......_ s--.. "--v •• u.u.. ""'.,... . """" .... '° ShAr-t> •111-ft..aW.,,...i u.,,....r .. "°"'' Olllw 11.MIAlli -"-'* 0 .....,, .......... 1-..-... ~---~MTS IDOi 1004 1006 100'1 1011 IOU urn um 1031 I~ llMO 1042 IC>« lC>tl '°" IOtl '~ IOd'I IOU IQll 10'11 lllC ZlOO 1M ...~ 3tOt ...... .. ......... JOOf ............... :ion ....... tNll~·.. :.014 S. hu ~. I< h•,,_,_., :IO II Tr"'•·I ·~)II ~It .... .... ... BILL GRUNDY. REALTOR \ ~ • ., I I • , ' , ' ' " f I ---for Tueed1y through 8aturd1y publlcatlone: a:ao p.m. ,,,. ~ day. "For Sunday and Monday publloaUone: 12:00 noon~- ..... •1111.1111. ColtaMIW•..._.,,__ 2 Mp-.rate ho"'•• on lot. A ll'IUll .. for 111,000. c.11 now. 1$ THE REA L ESTATeRS ....... ••a The popular "Carmel" model. Tine bedrOOIM. Spaotout patio. Luxu- rtent ......... Proper1y In top oOndltlon. You own theNUiliT ., ... wa.nu1.1• •• ::1-1illa~LBIF DftOYIDT ILlp W..,o..i •Jub.w......i .. 2 . ' Neorl11 hol/ of alJ Dciil11 PUoi read.Ta havt uud tM clanjfled uctkm to bu11 or tell a product . T~ \DI 110\.\I. Rf _,\I r) ...... fllt ... , yr Old 2M ~. --1-.. ---.= .... =- 2" be. 2 -*tell Q#. • .. POOi & Jee. f1M.OOO bl 11111 Pl • owner . '"Sd .. 9 142-8111711 .. lllOI ~ r ~ •, •tepe to I ~iiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiii~ beedt, •1a,eoo. I• II ... ~ty .651•1177 View OOftdO I • 2 Ba. .. '° beMltl S,161,600. .... R&"M~ ........ 8ayfront w/ coneld. ooeM. 4 bt, u ml. Pftce mo-Need llllClnllll • mo. to perform on 11\1. ~ti tMn. °"" t10K eq. ouet. hm. a In•. •o perform . 147-ao22. · HERITAGE R E llt l nP" j PETE • BAAH~ T ! REALTY I I l -PAIH 14 f~POR' AP4Hllil l ll .'. .,.. .. ~· .~, , .... ...,,Illa, ti 4BID (Mareh 21-April it): Cheek fli!M •1 ~of ODI Who WoWd be a~~ ....,,.. now aN lmpoftant -... DioD1ie • 1bl1 .... . not merely .. you Sd.-11• t>Min. l'oew Ulo on ••• ~ conceminC lnherltance. hidden val"t\51U~pr11un:o.= IO): o.t necr11u·y ~; Be awan ol ri&htt. ~ Leem rui. before atwm,.. to w..11 ~ Accent allo on public relation•~ JJOHlbl• partnenhlp1, marital atatua. Omeff, Qpdc:om natives tfolun J)l'Ominefttiy, GDONl(Ma)' 2_1June 20): ,.ou'll attnct people wbo lbaN your bllllc ~nl,.,... You coUJd touch on universal theme. Popularity lncrffFM; health improves, bulc chorea are completed. l!mph .. lt on peta, dependenu, proepecta for employment. Ariee .. tn pktu.re. -CANCER (June 21../uly 22): Focua oo mroenc-, creativity, cban1e, travel and a variety of .......... FeeUnp dcratnat.e k,p: -nwmbs of. -te •x aeu to beut a1 matten and ldajol' -dediton--la at band. Leo, Aquar{UI perm play key rola LE(> (July 23-Au,. 22): Truat flnl tmp1 d'U regarclin1 property, persona. You'll learn by teachina -s-t experlenom .erw now • reUab1e guldea. Intuitive Intellect l• honed to ruor- abaprne9. You'll know what to do. when to do It and your felpome9 will be lnltantaneout. VIRGO (~q. 23-Sept. 22): J'oro. tend to be IC&tt.erecl -be Mlectlve, maintain 1elf-esteem. Remember tt90lutlom concemlna body I.map. Meeu be aware of nutrition, need for proper exera.e ¥d rest. Gemlnl, a..Pttariua nattv. fJcuN ~tly. LlaRA (Sept. 23-0c1. 22): By s-Yina attention ·~ deta11I, you wure profit. FOlt.'W on ,.....nc11na, revunptne material, preparlnc a freeb f()l'JDat. Neede4 mataial will be Joaated. ,key penarme1 w01 be avallable. Money pkture II men encounclDI that oNinall.Y. anUdpated. • i.SCOBPIO a;>et. '2i-Nov.· .21): SlpUlcant ~ occur; ll)ember of oppalit.e Id beaomM val»ible ally. Take lnttiadve, make penonal ~rancN, be dfnct ID a~ and applU. BfCbll&ht confidence, wear t ooloft. trust huicML~ttartan ~ k*1 wtdi~po= for t.i.t: LC:: adjustment .. pert of~. lndMdua1 who Md been ow of. qht will be bldl In ~· Sec:nt .. revealed, mlltakn ae foraJ.ven and TOU 1et proverbial aecond chance . CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan-. 19): Focut on penuuion, dlpl.gmlcy and • .-atioftal comet.dL You meet crlata, otiltaclea an overcome and •· poWerfu1 penon aidl ln fulfUlh'tl ..._ Youil let ~cbtage view, you)ll have Inside track on profitable enterprile. · AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Roadblock proves beneficial becaUN delay worlus In your favor. You'll have chance for promotion. added ptoduction and you'll be rewarded fer ~ rnponatblllty. l\elation1hlp arow• 1tron1er. commitment la made and 1uperlor lauds your ettona. PISCES (J'eb. 19-March 20): You atUw:t wider' audler>ce: oeoole are dnwn 1IO you. your work ta received with enthualum. Project can now be CCl!lpleWd. Jona dlatanot comm'«Dlc:adoo relatm CD philOlophy, law and pomtbi. eea journey. An.. t.lbra pmor. play Uy rolea. _.....,.... . ._..,,.._....,. l .j I I r I. I 1, • Orange Cout DAILY PILOT!Tu.ed.y, M8Y 2•. 1983 , ACROSS 1 Drive 6 " ... ought to 47 Mr. Mer'* 49 Rubbish 53 Patron - .,_ - -" 57 Commerce 9 S. Afr. prime 58 Corday•a minister victim 14 Noggin 59 Smidgeon 16 Plat• 61 State 16 Door pan 62 Turkish 17 Lab chemical dee,.. 18 Queen of ~Single the gods 64 Oi«lnlt• 19 Gentry 85 Oaltted 20 Gwyn •t at 86 Olah out 22 Fell btiek 67 Ma. Maxwell 24 Europeans 26 Prepared 27 Beginner 29 Wrong: pref. 30 Even if: Var. 33 or,wnout 37 Kind of dog 38 Have fun l9Gorge 40 LocelaNp 41 Jewish month 42 Wiidcat: 2wda. 44 Particle: abbr. 45 Nobleman 46 Fine fabric DOWN (ONHH t ':HHRC,. ~ . . . ' .. )4 ~ I Z fJ'J ! I I J I I \ I . ~ I t 6 ... 1111' ff ( '' t 1 &IV 2 -Summer LMng/An AdWdlllng ~to the DAILY PILOJIT"'91day. W. 24. 1888 • . • I I J . ' Surfing becoming sophlSticateC:I JEFF Sportswear that niakes ·the man.' Summer Uvlng/An Advert~ng aupplement to the DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, May 24, 1983 - 5 ...., ............ Surfing has p0wn from a part-time lpOrt into recopized · . , athletic eompetitioa along the Oranp Coast: . I I • I ,..._ 8 -Summer Uvtngl An Advertising supplement to the DAILY PILOT /Tueeday, Mii)' 24, 1983 >IK BIKE CO. ,. • QUALITY 10 SPEEDS • MOTOCROSS BIXES • BEACH ClUISliU • PAllTS a ACctSSC>elES w•TM.,... 144'° Oalver Drlvc ~l'tua) • Irvine, CA 92114 . 1.-Ati.L ENTRIES MUST BE 12 YEARS OLD OR UNDER. 2. ALL ENTRJEs MUST USE A 81A x 11 WHITE PIECE OF PAPER. .. 3. OEAOUNE ON W!DNESDAY, JUNE 15th. 1983, WINNERS WILL APPEAR IN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22nd NEWSPAPER; 1· ANY TYPE ~ ARTISTIC WORK ACCEPT ASL£; • Summer Uvtng/An AdvettJling 1UPP1erMnt to the DAILY PILOT/Tueeday, May 24, 1983 - 7 ... . ... , ~ . .. . \ 1 • . '\ ' f • E ' e:::: '' } 8 -Summer Uvtng/An Advertising tupplement to the DAILY PILOT/Tueeday, May 2-i, 1983 Yipesl S~ripes By CBRmlNE DP.C&ER ..., .... c.. ' .... Bright. euy, striped and c:ooL The. a.re the watch words for Onmae County's l'uNner fMhlm scene. "Fuchaia, turquo!ae, briaht red and white are the colon lor the pmpner of '83. Ji.t • polka dots dcwninated Ian Y'IV• look. ltripet will tab owr thJa ytm In men's, women'• and chOdren'a clothtng. "Women's clothfnc thJa 'Y""'"' la more femfnlne and even more ca.aual. The whote look la very COOtdbiated. We're lhowiDa over- ab:ed tops with narrow-leaed panta. Cotton, .UU. rayons and' m1xWres of tbeee fabrica an wbara popular," said Sue Brlaaon, ees&etant IDfmcer' for A Propos, a Fuhicn 1a1and Store for women andjunkn. A~ sport look cm ..Oy be tmned Into a ........ f'IMMj.t.le by addfnl • llnm jlcUt and different llX!ll .... Evening wear la flouncier -more fun with abort dreeeea or mkl-<:alf In llllb QI' • lilbt knit, said KMby Feller, Ann TJY1«'• South ·a..t Plaza JDUMt&el'. ~bernlhww pt lhoner, bathlnc adta are ptntnc a few lndi. of material. ~ to .Brillon. ''They're more flatlert.DC Olia year. They do more for moat• f1cuaw.. Sulta aren't cut up • hilb on the hips u laat year. And they're not 80 th1nly cut in the front either. There'• even more one-pece aulta that 1Mt yeer," ahe said. Men will ai.o be apleeblDC OD the • briabt cokn. •l?fo man old-fMh•caed c:o1cn. Men are buyln1 ~ri ht blue., yellow, brilht .eve , " aald Faride' Ka-nt, manacer J~ clothee at.en in South c.o.t P1ua. For cuual .venina weer, men will be dad in alJk lbPU. Dlea~­ frmit ~and maybe i c.W j1cbt, Kueml predk1a. For day- time p)ay-Ume • aor>d ~ wl11 be abort aborts and a striped cotton T4Urt. Kueml palnta. wry CIOOldlna1ed p6ctu.re for men ... ~work. "I'd put toaether navy blue pants, a cream-colored ahlrt, a camel~ liahtwelaht jllcbt with • tie to blend it all ~ ... m. aid • abe looked aroUnd her stare. • ,... haft widened to about 1hrw lncMI acrcm the wry boUcm 1he dMl8m will be new ltrtps. plaidl ancf otb.er exc1tina-loo'ldn1 pattama. Children'• wear &•nerally mlmJa what the "~ kids" are wearlna. Or~e County la no ~. They•re weartnc briabt colon ~.=-..r:.:-~~ •gnmer, acoardina to De u.. owner pf Blµel>erry Park, a chtldreD'• store in Northwood Plala. Irvtne. Ltttle Iida an cWnancJtnC more c1re-aDd lklrta tbJa 19M'· ~ 't put a pm of jllmi9 on_; - L§ Summer lMng/An Adwrtlllng eupplement to the DAILY P1LOT/Tueec:tay, May 24, 1983 -9 , ....-:'.: _....._..,...,.......,. •••• .........-----,.. "WW:: -~~--.... • --..... -U,--,T""'"" -~··..-.~.,·~ .... L f'\'_ .. ~ .17. " .. -•-..---r ._....,.,.......:.. ~~..: . .-~ ~--:.-.. ~-)', ~-, .. ~ ,,.. \__, ,, -..,, -.T .... -\ -: -•,_:-• y .. -· ... ;-.. --~ .... ----i:.f -.. -• .. .. . ,.: -. .. .. ~ -· . .. I . / .. ·c::~ast grea'.t pla~e-tc> pla~ • r:ou~ct "' • ._ -# G~lf courses ·abo~nd for all talents and budgets weekdaya, $12 wee.__.1da. Fea lower after 3 p.m. Cart $12. Pro la Monti ~ Mea ven1e c..arr a•. 3000 Club Howe &.cl. ~Me.a. Phone: 549-0377. Private club. Green fee: $15 weekday.. • weekends. Cart $8. Pro ta Art Schtlllna . ............ Part ....... a., 10401 Wanwt Aw., l'ountaln Valley. Phone: • ~.Public~. Green fees: $8 Welrdap. ·~2 weelrendt. c.an $12. Pro .. JliiilQy~ ' ( weekend&. Fees lower after 8 p.m. (c.aune Ja lighted). Prq .. John Leonard. a..-lu ......... One Sandbura Way, Irvine. Pbane: 833-3519. Public courM. Green fea: ta cm weekda)ll. $19 week ... (tncbaclhlC cart). Cart ~YI $13. Pro la Jeff Nyaren. • .. 302 vs. automallc. tilt. .. cond .• I ~t door locks, · aux. tank."'* cooling gauges . . (Ser.A14926) • IHI DRlllil COAST TUESDA y I MA y 24, 1983 Mesa route bypass backed By JODI CADENHEAD or .. .,..,,... .... A fi\'e-memher d ty task force has recommended the Costa Mesa City Council support oonstruction of the Coeta Meea FreewaY. along an euterly route bypusing downtown busi.nes9es, which could cause "minimal advene" impacts. Th e so-called easte rly downtown bypa11, endorsed during a City Council study aeesion Monday, is one of eiaht alternatives foe oompleUon of the Com Mea Freeway (Route M) discu11ed in a lengthY, draft environmental statement released earlier thh year by Caltrana. Qty Public Services Director Bruce Mattern a.aid taak force memben -all city staff - concluded a route straight down ' Newport Boulevard would be disruptive to downtown buai.neues and local residents living on ~ Avenue, where traffic would be routed during comtruction. 'Ille easterly route, estimated at $93 million, will diaplace 40 busineues and 8~ dwellinRs, accordtna to Caltrans' environmental report. It follow. Newport Boulevard and swinp east of Newport from 17th to 20th streets just weat of Fullerton Avenue. Matt.em said panel member1 believed the 90-Cal.led "adopted route" favored by merchants, which swings west of Newport, would be too costly at $167 million. Peggy Reinert, president of c.o.t.a Meu Tomonow. a group representing d o wntown merchants, aid bosinew people (See BYP .A.a, Pqe A!) Fancy catch ; A Frisbee player iA 1ilhouetted againat the shiny sea at waten edge u the sun sets behind him near the Newport Pier. 'New start' sou~ed by old prejudice By O~ IC»TI' or .. _,... .... Jiiek and Joyce Boyle live ln lrviot-, but their root.I 10 btlCk to tou1h mldweatern cltiet like Cleveland and Chic.,o. To people Uk.e the Boyles. Irvine w• eupl)C*d to offer new hope, It WU a place where the old mllt.akll weren't IOlnl to be made anymore. But · the Boylee believe differentlJ today -thank.a to the way they've been treated the p.aat 1lx month•. Now they believe nice bomn and pretty· streets don't make a community. It'• $nvolwment that counta. The Boyles aareed al.moat a year • to sell their house ln the comfortable Orwntree district of Irvine t,o SuttQn Extended Care Service•, a non-proflt aroup formed by parent• to help mentally retarded youths develop 1kUJ.a to tau care of thernaelv•. .Tack Boyle had been out of work for li.x months at the time. A Sutton repraentaUve w• the flrlt to look at the hou.M once they liat.ed It for ule. 'n.e Boyte. aot a caah offer for their ukir" price two days later. That wu last July. "Since then," uid Jack. "It'• been holy hell." The board of directors for (See IRVINE, Pqe A!) CIAIT 110111 ' ' ORANG E COUNTY . C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS Alllerican Airlines vows June 9 start By JEFF ADLER or ... .,..,,......., LOS ANGELES -American Airlinet officials expre11ed confidence today all will be ready for a June 9 inaugural flight from John Wayne Airport detpite legal 1tumbling blocks that have delayed preperationa. The Dallat-baaed airllne'1 plans to serve JW A were put back on track Monday afternoon when a federal court judge here ordered the Orange County Board of Supervhors to lift a moratorium preventing any new air carriers from terving the airJ>!)rt. "This means we can bealn 1ervice June 9," American Airlines tpokesman Al Becker said in the courtroom rnomentt after the ruJ.ina. "We don't aee any problems with terminal' space. We will have to find some from t0me other operator." NB won't Qppose increase · in flights However, county superyison.. obviously diapleued with the court'• decltlon, 1tlll are conaidering punuing further lepl action. Supervi8ot Thomat Riley said he planned to aak the board today to appeal the decision. U.S, Dittrict Court Judge Terry Hatter Jr. abruptly ruled in favor of American Airlines after llatenlng to argumentl by attorneys representing both the airline and the county. He declined, however, to bear arswneJtts from attorney• for both the federal eovemment and other airllnea which serve John Wayr11e. By IT8VE MARBLE or .. ._,.. .. In a major pollcy change, Newpoc1.aeach hu qreed it will not stand in the way of lncrealliftl fllchta at John Wayne Airport from 41 to ~ dally. At the ame time, Qty Council memben wamed they'll consider re9Cindina the policy cban&e lf <>ranae C°()unty supervi8ors aon•t flnd a legal way to put a permanent freeze on dally takeoffs. The move Monda~t came only hou.n aft.er a Judae cleared the _ wa7 for American Airlines to be8ID flytna out of John Wayne - a tip of the t.naeastna pnmure to expand the ahJW!•re not givinl in," taid ~ Phil Maurer to the doRm of residentt who showed up to pl'Otelt the policy chanae. .. We ju1t want to brln1 tne county to the table ao we can talk." Newport Beach. over the put two years, has spent nearly $1 mW.ion ln an effort to prevent the county .from lncreasln8 fUabta at John Wayne. ''11 you pall this raolutton.'' cauUaned Newport buneowner and attorney 'lb>mu Edwards, "then you've "just lost the first round of negotiatiom .. You're beiDI rwhed into a decision. .. Other residents beaPd the dty to De90tlate f« a lePf apeement. to set a permanent cap on flichta but without accedlna to an tncreue In fllgbtt from the current 41-a-day limit. "Neaotiate with the county and then lf you can't aet lt Fine, then talk nwnben." aid Barbera Liebman. president of Airport Workina Group. "You're mi8SlnC a ttep, jumping a gun." Councll members, however, revealed that c.'OUDty tuperviaon Md llWll. Newport Beach until (8" NEWPORT. Pqe Al) The iudae. who w camidered three Jw A airport cases ln the put two yean, IU'CMticaDy told the roamful of attomeya, many with fam.U.iar facee, "fve been an thil OJcht before and rw begun to recosruze aome of the crew. And I am belna made sick to my 1tomach by the tame a ir pock.eta." Hatter ordered the oounty to abide by its 1982 11CCeU plua, which alloc ates 41 daily departures amon1 the five compet.lnl airlines at JW A. He added he aw no "rational bMis" for the aupervilort' deda1on to (See AMERICAN. Pap Al) Suspect charged in freeway killings By JEFF ADLER or .. .,..,,.. .... Randy Steven Kraft -the Lona Beach computer operator who homicide lnvesttaaton In three states believe may be a -..peci in more t.bu 30 alaytn,p -WM formally charpd ~y with Che murden of five men. Oran1e County Central Munk:t,U c.ou.rt Jud&e Robert "Thomas ordered Kraft b•l" wttbout ball and t1et a ,.Jime 17 ~t date on the charps. 1be 38-year.old auspec:t ... only once during a brief court hearing, a cknowledgina he undentood the lmpllcationa of postponing the arraignment hearing ln Santa Ana. Garbed ln the yellow jumpsuit of an Orange County Jail inmate, Kralt forcefulll said, 0 1 undentand ~t. yea. 8-ldea the ~ of W1att Loalna. Eric Ch\&rd\, Geoffrey Nelson, Rodger Devaul and Terry Gambrel, Kraft also is ctwwed wtth a variety of felony ~ lncludine mutlJaUftC OM . of the victim•, sodomy and robbe,-y. Following the heerina, Kraft'• attorneys -Bruce Brid8Jnan and Doualu Otto -told reporters they have interviewed their cllent for a total of 20 houn llnce hit anwt. . '4Tbe th1np be'• bem chuMd ·with are at rilh' &net-to ibe klnd of J*IOft we know him to be," eakl. Otto. * ' Kraft wa1 arrea\ed near Ml1~lon Vl•Jo May 14 '91 Callfornla Hlahwa)' Patrol officll!ra, who pu&d hJa car over because it had been movlna erratl~y. Bes1de Kraft, they ditcovered the.~~~of Teny a.mbnl, a 26-,_,-wg J:1 TCll'O Marine, who police alle,_ wu atranaJed. peputy Dlttrlct Attorney Bryan Brown Nld the county Sheriff'• Department haa oronJ,Jed a •1pedal eeven-man ... fotte to ect .. a d..nn, ~ for lnformatkln ~ to the~ i NEWPORT POLICY .. ~ only May 31 to change dty policy on daily flight numbers. According to cpundl members, superviaors privately agreed to hold off environinentaf studies that could clear the way for as many aa 73 daily departures if the city would chanRe its Policy. Some form of negotiations between the city and county now are expected. "In politi cs," said Councilwoman Jackie lfeather, "timing is crucial. The time is now to do something. Time la running out and thla (the policy change) will give ua aome bargaining power." Pierce O'Donnel, the attorney who helped the city turn back airport expansion lut year ln a bitter lawsuit, told the council he is unsure how much more time lawsulta could buy the city ln holding off airport expension. "There wiH come the day when the courts will grow weary of our challenges," he predicted. \ AMERICAN FLIGHTS .... impo&e the moratorium. The board imposed the moratorium two weeks ago, citing health and safety factors at the airport. Supervisors ordered a study be completed by July 1 to determine what impacts the entrance of new carriers would h ave on the already over- crowded facility. American hu announced its intention to fly four flights a day from JW A, three to Dal.las-Fort Worth and one to Chicago. ~~.~!~ . .!!.~~~~ 1:.,:,u:e , a private the easterly route and would planning group hired by the city, probably endorse it later this recommended the freeway be week. built down Newport Boulevard City Redevelopment Director Marilyn Whisenand, who sat on the task force panel, said adoption of the easterly route would allow redevelopment plans in the "Superblock" area near Newport Boulevard to continue uninterrupted. Earlier this year, the Urban and a path kept open there during construction. Whiaenand said that would be too expensive since It appeared the city would have to pay to kee p traffic on Newport Boulevard duriJ18 oonstruction. The City eouncu will consider adoption of a route June 16. Commission mulls freeway routing Orange County Transportation <Arnmission members didn't have much to say about completing unfinished portions of the Newport Freeway -except to say they were glad they weren't being called upon to make a finaJ decision. Commission members were brieled Monday by a Caltrans official who swnmari7.ed various altematiVt!s being considered foe finishing the freeway, not-so- affectiona te ly known as the Costa Mesa "ditch." Before a fonnal public heenn8 on the freeway i.a held June 29, the public infonnally will get to A .14 ca1e1 dlemnond w«tt1 U.295 -...... "°"' lta hiding 9'IOI uncMr ...... bed Ill•......,_ on a.no OalW ~ 811ro1ua brok• Into • tr•ll•r at • ~ 1119 81 500 IMrc:fl Ill end m4lde off wlltl S1,7t7 WOtUI ol IOOlll Coastal i... --"' tM nlalYt Md '"::'!~~:::onlgllt •nel w .. ..., .n.moon ......... ...ea•• lnd ...... 111 .............. .,........ Md ,..., ao 1n .,,..,., .... l!l•••"•re, lto11t ,olnt Co ... ,1101' 10 tit• MHIHn bor••r encl out to 11tlle1: Nwl 11 .... 11 to 22 llnOll .. , '° • toclll - -.,.., ooHt•I ••••,. tll~ n• 111111;. LMlllJ, ..... --~111-. .... 10w1a ....... , .. -. ....... ..... ...... ,.., .. eou• ,, .... , ............... .. ., ............. ~ review plans on June 15, when a presentation by Caltrans ia scheduled in Newport Beach . Costa Mesa residents got a look at Caltra.ns' plans last week. Construction -which could range in price anywhere from $6 million to $167 million -now is slated to begin aometime in 1987 or 1988. Alternatives being considered in the draft environmental impact statement range from doing nothing to the ditch to con strmcting an eight-lane freeway. which would diaplAOe 607 residences and 156 buah~ in Costa Mesa. Costa Mesa Son-. prl90 • IOCll end '''* S7 .85 worth of QHOllM lrom tll• Segeretrom CorpcnllOn Ill '318 ,.,_ Aoed. Irvine A "*' Ill NI .... I09 '°"**' 01)' 1 •IO ......,., ..._ 1u1s ~ 9'oed. ot sa.- 200 Morldey. polo9 Mild. ,,. "*'· wtlO hell • IWMlgun. ordaNd ,... ~ In tM '*'* to Illy on IN lloor and a ...., to QM Nm _.,, llWI he lad on .,_. lrWWliQaton 8llld. ...., _....,"'*'•~on...,,. -,.,....., Mondliy, the ~ told poflo9. ,,_ ...., ~ got lnalde IM ...... lly ~. wlndcM. Taking her c~e r , Deann Frea¥our, 12, o( I"ine gets some ' pool-playing tip& from "Micro Man," the robot mascot at the Irvine Boya and Girls Club. He's owned by club recreation direetor Jim Palmer. l..acu.naDI wW have a chance to revlew the, city'• 1983-84 apendlna peck• at 8:30 ton.i.ht when tne LaaUJia Beach City Council ~ta for its flnt fcnnal look at the budset. . • Amona 1"1m for <lilcullion at Cl ty Kall are projected expenditurea froqi the $8.8 mill1on pneral fund porUon o! Trustees eye • conversion Pian. to convert Corona del Mar High School Into a campus llel"Yin8 ands 7-12 by 1984 will be dilcl•r d when the Newport- M-IC!M>Ol board meeta at 7:30 tmi8bt at~ E. 18th St., Costa Mea. Paced w·it b decll n l ng entollmenta, truateea are revlew1n8 ax P1am. for the to-called Corona cfel Mar r.one. All ax recunmend cbure f>f Eutbluff Flementary School and five recommend including M'Venth and eighth Faden from other echoola on the c.oro.i. del Mar High School campua. The IChool now 9l!l'Wl8 gradee 9-12. The c:ltatrict expecta to aave between POQ 000 and $450,000 by claaina doob. Five of the ()pUona call for cbing Andenen Elementary, two call for clmina Harbor View Elementary ana one for cloalng Lincoln Int.ennediate. IRVINE COUPLE'S 'NEW ST ART' . . . From Page A1 Greentree Community As8odation sued Sutton to keep lt m.n us1.ng the three home9 to hou.e a1x retarded people and two adult supervisors. ·Board membera aaid the uae violated the aaaoclatlon's guidelines requiring single-family realdencea and 1et a dangeroua precedent. The board alao sued the Boyles, althouah that wasn't as well known, claiming they conspired to keep the deal a secret. The Boyles say that's not true, ther told their neighbors lmmed ately . But more Important, they aay the way Green t r~e reaiden ta have allowed their boa.rd to operate is a sad atory that undercuts what Irvine was auppoeed to be all about. r Jack Boyle remember• growing up in Chicago when ... : Laguna Beach everything aeemed to have a racial anale: It. wu always black versus white. H.la father, a publJc achool teacher, always took the stand that if black people could afford to move next door, then that WU fine, be aaid. "Well, I feel the aame way about retarded chUdJ'en, and I don't thlnk an~dy ahould deprive them a p to live," he said Monday. In Orange County Superior Court Monday, Judge Judith Ryan dismiaaed legal action against the Boyles and another family, the Feeneya, whd• aold, their houae in nearby Deerfield to Sutton. The Greentree and Deerfield boards had aought $750.000 in ciarnaBM against each •of the two families, ~ the aalea bad lowered prop•rty values that much. The judge aid ahe found no legal grounds for lncludinl the Boylea and Feeneys ln the auit. The Femeys batt moved to the state of Waahtnl\On. The mue ii by no mee.na over. The two.bou'dl are sdJl lleeld.ng a court or11er to pfeVent Sutton from ullbia the ~ lncludlna a third home in Greentree aold to Sutton by a bank. which wasn't named ln the lawsuit. But for now, the Boyles ~ free from a legal meal that already baa cost them more than $3.000 in la~ra· fees. '!be Boyles. ln an act of faith, have moved into another Greentne bou.e. 'l'hey like the schools and most of the people, and they claim their willlngrie9s to re-invest ahowa bow little they b~Ueve claims that a Sutton hdme could hurt property values. But being made into a villain has left its mark, the Boyte. say. There have been trl1>9 to the doctor for tran=zera and treatment of blah praaure. Now they wonder What It will take to make the people of Irvine ~allze architectural stalMiarda by themaelvea doo't create a good place to live. Joyce Boyle says lt lan't a hou.ae with mentally retarded people that will eventually hurt property value. -lt'• the .. Archie Bunkertmn" mentality. "Coming to California, we never thougbt wetd run into that,.. abe said. "But it'• WW. here." -• the tu. 7 million munJctpat budpt. In hia budpi m slt'n to the council, Qty Man.teer Frank ou.tllned aever-1 propoaed chan.ea. A brief aummary by departmen&: -Police: A reorpntr.aUon of the depenmeni, wftli a reduction of man.acement polltJons. will be off.aet by tncreaied atafffna of a part-tl,me crime prevention· officer, a part-time animal ahelter attendant and a police dlspetcher. -Fl.re: A major increue ln the coat of paramedic aervlce - provided by the Orange County ' tire Department -ii a critical oonoem, Frank says. The county wania to increue the cost of the aervioe from $134,000 to $2",000' per year. Other proposed fire department co.au include an adcUtlonal $9,000 for overtime and funch for equipment and re-gra~in~ of fire roads in undeveloped areas. -Municipal services: ProJ)OMd 1a the pun:hase of two traffic countera, new aound system equipment for the council chamben, and $10,000 reaerve for dump fees. -Community development: Purchase of a word prooesaor, portable panela to divide work 1paoe, and $50,000 to hire a conaultant to prepare a aped.fie plan for the central business diatrict ii propoeed. Mystery body dumped at HB fire station The Identity of a barded man whoee bodl wu dumped on the doontep o a Huntington Beach fire ataUon remained a mystery today, authorities said. Huntington Beach police Sgt. Ed McErlain aaid no initial lndicationa of foul play were discovered. He aaid officera suspect the cauae of death waa a druR overdoee. McErlaln said firefighters at a staUon at 19711 Buaba.rd Street answered a doorbell late Saturday and dlacovered the body. The people who had left the body had vanlahed by the time the door waa opened, he aaid. The cte.d man waa dacribed ..... ~ to 40; about 5 feet. 9 inches tall; wetghlng 190 pounds, with reddish brown curly hair and a full bard. He had a tattoo of a marijuana leaf on hia ann. He was wearing blue jeana, tennia ahoes, and a beiae 1'-.birt with the hut.ma of th~ Weat Orange County YMCA. Mcltrlaln aaid no wallet or other identification waa found. Two dhllrlQ llglWa. • llf'el .... llC»I and • pe of blnoQiln. wtth a IOI.II ~ ol ~ SSOO. wwe etolen trom • Legune 8-fl ...-d ...., perlted .. Mein llMctl ..... Monday. Coast pilot's death. mystery Investigators come · up empty alter Ariiona crash An airplane CJHh outalde M--. Ariz.. 1Mi week.end which killed the 31-yea.r-old Corona del Mar pilot and hia paaaen1er remaina a mystery, lnvatiptons acknowledpd today. Stunt p&t Jamea Maloney and hla ~er, James Orton of "-Meaa, were killed Saturday afternoon when the opeo- cockplt, World War 0 -vtni.ae ~~were fiylng c:mbed ln 'lbere were no a,m of either mechanical or ltructural problema to the stn1le-enatne Ryan PG-22 trainer, National Tranaportatlon Safety Board invea\11ator Jean Pyatt aald today. three ~ swclyina the ambap. Maloney WU partlclp11d.ni ln an air show aponll>l'eCl by a group which collect• and reatorea vintage airplanes. Pyatt delcr1bed the airplane aa a highly unusual craft rmt.ond to near-mint condition. She aaid Maloney and Or1an crubed after the ahow b.d ended. M.aloN!f• _a .r;nduate of Corona del Mar lflh School and ~ Cout Colleale ln eo.ia Metia, WU direCtoc of dle ~J'ame air mU8eum at auno and a co-owner .of" i&hter Rebuilden,'' a company which n!SlOfte vintaae ~ Family mernben Mid Maloney obtained hill pilot 1klen8e at the ap of 16 and WU a ltunt man ln aeveral Holhtwood movtH, includinl '"Th~ Winda of War" aqd "Smokey and the Bandit." Maloney wu a member of the Screen Actora Guild and National A.Ir Racina Group . A ma.-will be Mid 10 a.m. Wecm-iay at Our t.dy Queen of Anpb Church ln Newport Beach. Burial wil follow In Pomona. He la awvtved by hia perenta, Edward and Loube Maloney: two •'•tera. A.Do Ltnder of ~t and Karen Hinton at Corona; and a brother, John Maloney of c.rona clel Mar. He alao leavea two arandparenta. Allee Ovlnltori ol frvlne and Edna Maloney of PomoN- -By STEVS MABBLE ' . J ~ f I I l Dow Jones Final . UP 18.48 CLOllNG 1,211.cM GM ordered to pay for patent violation By ne AtlOClaied Preti WASHINGTON -The Supreme Court ruled today that General Moton Corp. must pay more than •11 million ln inierest charae-for infringing on' a patent for mak1na automobi)e bumpen. In a 9-0 decialon. the court said that the car manufacturer must pay interest dw'ges dating b9ck to 1946, when lt was sued by the developers of the burnpen -Devex Corp., Technopapb Inc. and a group of lndMduala. General Moton contended that any lntereat charge. should begin from the date of a court finding that lt infrlnaed on the patent. All told, General Motors was ordered to pay •19.8 milllon, including •11.02 million in intere1t accrued prlor to the Judgment. Plea to Congress on housing WASHINGTON -A leading housing finance expert Monday called on ~ to take prompt action in raolvtng two t.ue. that could affect the availability of credit for Y.HA-lnaured and VA- guaranteed hOWling at a time when demand for the programa la at an tu.toric high. Dr. Mark J. Riedy, executive vice president of the Mortgaae Banken Auoclation, urged the HO\.l.M Approprlationt Committee to restore credit limit ceilings for the Government National Mort1a1e A.saociaUon to a level sufficient to meet expected demand and to move qu.lddy to extend the insuring authority of FHA. whkh expired Friday. Securltle1 auaranteed by the Government National Mortpge A.9ociation (GNMA) and told to private inve.tors generate funds to make FHA-inaared and V A·guaranteeci mon.g.agea. Trend to lower salaries LOS ANGELES -The Merchant• & Manufacturen Amodatioo reports its IUl'Y'eya show • strong trend toward reduced OVtta1J wage and salary budgets for 1983 in California. The downturn la consistent with major collective bargaining settlements in private Lnduatry during January-March .1983. As the.average wage adjustments of minus 1.4 peroent in the tint contract year repre9enta the first negative adjustments of the 15-year history of the 9eriee of repotU. In its juat-published survey the auodation contacted aome 500 partk:ipatlnc member compeillee representative of wide crou 11eet.ion of the state'• industry to detel'J1l,ine 1983 ~t outlays for various employee claalficationa. And according to M & M's IUl'Vey find1np 1983 merit budaets generally·~ 7.3 pen::ent for acn:m-the-boe.rd i.ncreaael, down 2.2 percent from 1982. Market to take a holiday All U.S. stock and commodity markets will be cloeed Monday in obeervance of Memorial Day. Banb and U.S. aovernment offices' a,19o will be cbed. The weekly Treasury bill auction ia 9Cheduled foe Tuellday, but could ~ if c.oogre. <tic.. not agree on ra1l:ing the t oeWng. METALS GOLD QUOTATIONS SILVEI ....., . ...-. .... ,.,-...-. N'tO... ............ .... -