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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-01-04 - Orange Coast Pilot. - ffanker , I TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JA NUARY 4, 1977 VO\.. 7t, NO 4, J SIECTIOHS, JI .. AGIS • 3 Longet .Jury Pif!ks ~ De«!lare Her 'Guilty' • • • ~Ex-pal Claitns Heir Aided Kidnap • D9lly -..._. NEW BOARD CHAIRMAN Newport'• Tom Alley _Bi,~ Takes &q,ervisory ~adership ~ E visor Thomas Riley of Beach was elected H177 n of the Orange County o< Supervisors today. ~!jliley's election to succeed a.pervisor Ralph Diedrich as llDerd chairman came on a un· M\imous vote. • The 64 -y e ar-old former Jlarine general's ascent lo the eairmanshlp came 21,<z years .. r he was appointed by then· lfornia Gov . R onald gan lo fill the unexpired m of the late Rona ld pen. at appointment was reaf· ed ln early 1975 by Gov. und Br..own J r. )tlley claimed tbe Fifth Slipervisorial seat In hJs own iiiht la.st June when he won a ~e-sided primary election vie· ~ over three opponents. When t.aklng over the gavel from Diedrich today, Riley pC':aiJed the Olltgol.ng chairman's ~IY and leadership. • ···1 pledge 11J.Y full energies to c b ar•e tbe important ponslb1Uty of the chairman's ce," Riley said as he took r the center seat on the five· -board .• e alao called for coonty gov· ment to seek property tax orm and aatd realignment or f!ll ftve lllpervisorlal districts ~ld be blab on the board's ~es· agenda for um. ,. ~I Bombed ': BAN l'RANCISCO (AP> ce say a pipe bomb blew a b. bole 1n tbt hue ol the c 1coreboard ot J. Eu.ceae. teer m1h SchoOl dur1nc tht tlltma1 holiday. Ofllcer arct Shaw said It wu the bo"Ob planted at the school alx months, but the ftrat to go Long et Guilty, Say 3 ASPEN, Colo. <AP> -With jury selection in its second day in the C l audi n e Lo nget manslaughter trial, two more As pen res idents bluntl y declared they believe the singer is guilty in the death of her lov· er and could not give her a fair tnal. The 3S·year·old Miss Longet was tense and tight-lipped as she stared directly al the pro- spective jurors while each was questioned individually. "Are yor working on a pre· sumption of her guilt?" asked Deputy Dist. Atty. Ashley An· derson of a youn g photo· grapher. "I don't like to admit that. but I guess it's true,'' said Bruce Y affo. He said he learned details of the case Crorn Steve Sabich. brother of the victim, ski cham· pion Vladimir "Spider" Sabich. Moments lat.er, the next pro- spect called to the jury box. a young woman in h er 20s, declared: .. From all that I've read and m y involvement in this. I already have an opinion. That's not fair to Miss Longet. It's not fair lo the court." The woman, Robin Grasher, said she w:>uld require the de· fense to prove Miss Longet's in· nocence rather than the legal requirement that the burden or proof rest with the prosecution. 8olh prospects were excused for prejudice. Two prospects were tentatively seated, bring- ing the total of tentative jurors to eight. Miss Looget is charged with manslaughter in the March 21 shooting death of Sabich. her lover, in the $250,000 mountain home they shared. If convicted, she faces up to 10 yean in jail <See LONGf;T, Page AZ> Don't Touch 'fhe Cargo WEST RIDGE, IU. CAP> -Whiskey, whisky every· where and not a drop to drink -It may be the most fruatrating experience lhared by two railroad de· tecttves. The detec:ti'vu f Of' tbe JOllourl P•clOc llallrOad stood cuard over two whlllcy-ftllid box can that lUid derailed and w~ WJ· der the utnl prohibltloo not to drink OQ tht Job. The whlakef, valued at more than $100,000, bad ap. propri1tel1 toppled on the Lrack1 ln a corttfleJd. I Indian Back Dome I Scudder Assist Alleged o.tllr .,, .. , si.11 ,._ Unidentified delivery man (right> helps Duke Hazlett return six-foot wooden In· dia n to its rightful place in front of Hazlett ·s t urquoise shop on Newport Beach's McFadden Square. Indian was stolen Dec. 22 by a trio of revelers who appare ntly spotted the Indian after leav· ing a nearby tavern. Police traced the In· dian to San Clemente and it was returned Monday. Ford Paekage $10 Billion Tax Cut Sought Again WASHlNGTON (AP) -Presi· dent Ford proposed today a $10.blllion personal income tax cut along wllh corporate \ax re· ductions and an increase in personal Social Security taxes. ~ package is nearly a carbon copy of Ford's lax-cut proposali that Congrus rejected lut year. The White Houae said Ford's propoeal would save $227 a year for a famHy of tour with an in- come of SlS,000. The same sue family earnhlf $10,000 would see t h eir annual tax burden decreue by $166. It allO would lncreaae the in-dividual Income tu exemption from the present ~ to $1,000, uld L. William Seidman, the Presldent'a economic adviser. Uke last year's packqe, the proposal lncludea #.5 blllloo in corporate tax reductJoaa. It alao can. for a $5.1 biJllon increMe ln penooaJ Social Secwit.y toes over a two·)'ear period. Last . year'• prop<>aal called for a $1.85 Social Security taxes. Ford sald his proposal is focused more on middle-income. taxpayers than low-tocome tax· payers, who were the main beneficiaries of tax cuts in 1975 and 1976. The President said, "It (SeeTAX CUT, Paie"2) OC Woman Cited For Packing Pistol Oran1e County 1beriff'1 of· ficen i111ued a cltatJon lilting ch1£1e1 of CaJ't'Yhlt a concealed wetfpon to a Hunllqton Beach woman who aUe1edly tried to board a plane at the county airport wl\h a .22-caliber platol ln berpurae. Searchers Ply Seas for Oil Tanker BOSTON (AP) -American nd Canadian aircraft and a Coast Guard cutter searched to- day for a missing Panamanian tanker with 38 persons and eight million gallons or heavy oil aboard. The search was expanded after efforts Monday falJed to locate the 18, 717-ton, 644·foot Grand Zenith or make radio con- tact with it. Spokesmen for the Coast Guard, the utility expecting the oil, and the ship ·s agent said it wu not unusual for a tanker to • <See TANK ER, Page AZ) Warranla Issued By TOM BARLEY Of~011tr .. lltolS\lft A defense witness testiCied Monday that potato chip heir J ohn H. "Jack'' Scudder of Newport Beach told him he planned his own kidn:iping with two ~en now on trlBl for the crime. Witness Frank Sortino, who later admitted from the witness stand that he is on less than cor· dial terms with Scudder, told an Orange County Superior Court jury that he talked to Scudder. 64. by phone a week after the alleged kidnaping last Aug.19. Sortino testified that Scudder told him during that conversa· tion be had plotted the abduction with defendants Willia m Rudy Wesson. 45, and Ricki Dale Sellers, 20. Both men are being tried for the alleged Jcidnaptng. Sortino. a Laguna Hills resi· dent. testified that Scudder told hJm over the telephone how he had escaped from his kidnapers by faking a heart attack and then !eaping from a motor home parked in Fountain Valley. "Then. out of the clear blue sky, he told me that he had set the whole thing up," Sortino testified. "I was shocked." The witness said there was no response when he asked Scudder· to repeat the statement. Scudder has denied from the witness stand that he' knew anything about the kidnap at- tempt until two men grabbed him as he left his dentist's office in Huntington Beach and bundled <See HEIR, Page .U) Co ast Weath er Fair and mostly sunny through Wednesday. Uttle temperat ure change. Highs of about 60, low about40. INSWETODA~ There' a. no quitioft ti.lat the ltoclc market u on. a lofig los· ing ttreak,.occordf~ to bu,sj,. neu coh'm,,ht MfUon MOlkowUc. P.ag• A11. '"""""'---------""' 1 bUUon increaae in peraODal f DepuUeanld BarbaraLouSpr· in&er, ol 8081 Holland Drive, was cited after the X•ray machine uaed by airpor1 offlclala revealed the presence of the weapon in her . b•naae. FRESNO (AP) -Bench war· rants have been ll1ued for the ar· rest o( two Bakeralleld residents charcect with conspiring to em· beule $18,491 ~m the Bank of America'• Stockdale branch in Bakersfield. Tbe warrant.a name Walter Allen Slade, 31, a former loan officer at the bank, and Jeanette Al.OQet, 28 • \ AZ DAIL v PtLO~ s Tue!lday January 4 isn Congress Opens • I HEIR ••• him tnto a motor home. Scudder tHtlfted that he re· ceived a number of blows in the scuffle and suffered facial injuries that compelled him to re· tum to the dentist's office a few daya later for further treatment. Byrd Takes Democratic Leadership ~ aAKlill CRANSTON Wife Listing Proposed .For 25c Fee NEW YORK (AP> -The New York Telephone Company ·has bowed to liberated wives who want their names listed with their hus bands ' in the telC'phonc d i r ectory. But the firm says it will have to charge 25 cents extra. The proposal, subject to ap. proval by the st ate Public Service Commission, followed complaints that listing married couples only by the husband's first name was discrimiQatory. The current charge for a separate listing for the wife is SI. The protesting women s aid they should gel lisLinRS on the same line -Just like the multi- ple names of a law firm or brokerage house. The telephone company said the 25-ccnt cha rge would be "nominal" considering the cost of processing the <.1dditio nal names. A s pokesman said if the commission rejects the extra charge, the company will ap· peal. The spokesman said the com- pany doesn't care whether the couple decide to have his or her name first. ln other words, in the case of the mayor and his wife. it co uld be "Be a m c, Abra h a m a nd Ma r y " n r "Beame, Mary a nd Abraham." $50,000 Loot In Clemente Home Theft San Clemente police a rc m- vesugatmg a SS0,000 residential burglary that started the new year off m a bad way for the Will iam Barton family Police wer e called on New Year's Day when the family re- ' tume<I hom e a nd discovered that a safe bas had been rifled and other valuables taken. A police spokesman said today a screen had been ripped loose and pry tools were used to open a window al the Ba rton residence, 717 Avenida Colombo. Reported missing from the house were diam onds and other Jewelry. o fur coal and electronic equipment ln\'est1gators s aid l.:, hu rglary occ·urred som e time between Tuesday and Saturday, wlule the family was on holiday Aide Charged. In Gang Fight LOS ANG ELES <A Pl --A top ofCicial in a city.sponsored pro· gram to com bat gang violence faces charges of assault on mem- bers of a rival gaol( at the pro· ject 's headqua rters. The district attorney's office said Monday that Bennie Ray Simpson, 22. coordinator of Pro- ject Loogtable, has been charged with five <'Ounts of assault with a deadly weapon ~lemming from an Oct. 18 gang incident. ORANGE COASr DAILY PILOT 'fPw ~ ........ C•~hl o.11¥ '°°'Of ..,.,,._.. "" ,.,~ ft-fllif'(l ftw> Jrrffw' Pr•"·''°""''°""' b'f l,,..(\f'•"41" (n..\' P\1~1'"'"G Cof'l"to•nv \Ito."'•'" ""'+HOf"" it'' f)il'bft\n,,.d Mo'\Ott¥ tMOVQ~ Ftld•'I ftw (n .. tA ~:,.v:;,~~ .. ~~·;:;::t= "::!:;~ l4'01.A1 ~.e: fl! \ovtf'I Co•,, A \.i,..._ '"'4•&Nll t"' t1nn , .. oubOt.Md '4'tvldan Md 1-ttNlno\ f"t'I ~1,.,-10"1 publlt""""' ol•nt I\ ~ 'l10 Wi!\1 t\•y ··"""' (.(t\t• M-Jw (•ti•o,,_._..,.,_. 11Mor1M-P"'''drt"t •ftd f'Vbtntrwr " Jec,•.c. .. ., V1( • Prt\1M 1tt •'-d ~•I M)M9f1' "ftt.eM•\ ....... , Cd·(m WASHINGTON (J\P) -With the Democral.s firmly in control, the 9Slb Congress to day established two-year residence in th e Cap ito l with n e w leadership and an avowed de· termination to s tart work on Presidenl·e l ect Carter's economic program. Sena te sources reported short- ly before the formal opening of the session that the Democrats elected Sen. Robert C. Byrd of Wes t Virg inia as majority leader , to succeed Sen. Mike Mansfield of Montana. In something of an upset. Sen. Howard II. Baker Jr. of Ten· nessee w as e l ected Senate mi n o r i t y l e ade r by t h e Republicans Baker defeated Sen . .Robert P. Griffin of Michigan by a vole of 19 to 18. Griffin had been assis· tant minority leader. Baker suc· t•eeds Sen. Hugh Scott of Pen· nsylvania who retired from the Senate. Byrd was elected by aeclama· tion after Sen. Hubert H. Hum· phrey or Minnesota Withdrew from the contest. Sources a lso said thal Sen. Alan Cranston ( 0 -Calif.) was named majority whip, the post Byrd has held for six years, and. that Sen. Danie l Inouye CD· Hawaii> was chosen chairman of the Democratic Party Con- fe rence, the third-highest leadership post. Mansfi eld served as majon ty leader since 1961 but did not run for re·election to the Senate last year . Byrd is regarded as a s killed technic ian al moving legislation through the Senate. His views on economic issues are close to Carter's, and Byrd is expected to work closely with the new president. At the Republican caucus , Sen. Ted Stevens of AJaska was e lecte d assis tant minor ity leader. He was unopposed. Sen. Ca rl Curtis of Nebraska was re·elected chairman of lht• Republican Conference :m<l Sl'n. Jolln Tower or Texas was re· elected chairman of the (;O P Policy Com mitlec From Page ,\ l TAX CUT ... is high time to focus substantial tax relief on m iddle-income tax- payers." The proposal received an im· mediate cold shoulder from a key cong ressional leader, Rep. AJ Ullman < 0 -0re 1. who said t he Oc m ocr a t1 c ·controllcd Co n g r ess wo uld wait fo r President-elect Carter's expect· ed pla n to s timulate tht• economy. Ullman . chairman o r lhc House Ways and Means Com· mittee where all t:tx les:?islation origina tes. said , "Ob\•ious ly, we will organize around the Carter recommendation ." Ullman said he expects Carter will spell out his proposals al a CARTER UNVEILS ETHICS CODE-A4 meeting with House leaders in Plains, Ga .. on Friday. Carter has indicated his pro· gram would rocus on job crea· lion. Ford's proposal also would re· duce t axes for a family of four earning $30,000 by $2.56, and by S330 for the s ame family earning $50.000. But a family or four earning $7,000 would see their tax burden rise by $25 lo a t otal of $60, due to a Ford proposal to eliminate the earned income credit grant· ed to low-income wage earners. The Administration proposal last year was linked to com· pensating c uts in spending. But this time. Ford's proposal was initially unclear on whether he would seek compensating spend· ing c uts . Ford noted in a message to Congress that he will be sending up his spending pro· posals with his budget later thl!! month. 1,000 Show, But No Jo~s A~Wl ....... i. NEW MAJORITY LEADER West Virginia's Byrd Front Page AJ --TANKER •.. be delayed a nd te mporarily "missing." "The unusual thing is that it has not been heard from," s aid Coast Guard Petty Officer William Van Valkenburg. He said it is possible that a ll the tanker's radios arc not work· ing. Van Val k cnbur~ s aid it is possible for :.ul'h ... t.mkt·r to ~ink without losing any uf its c<irgo oil and. therefore, have no tell- tale oil ~hck . lie s a id a t anker probably would los e some or its propulsion oi l if it sank, but such oil "may come up s lowly to the surface as a sheen r ather than a slick and dts!'ipate. •· T he Coast Guard said the tanker was last heard from about 60 miles south of Nova Scotia on Thursday. The vessel left Teesport. England, on Dec. 19. It was head e d for the Fall River. Mass., area, the Coast Guard said today. The search today was to cover approxim ately 34,000 square miles of Atlantic Ocean from the tanker 's last known position south of Cape Sable, Nova Scotia, to the Fall River area. The southern section of the search a rea roughly parallels the rich Georges Bani< fishing grounds. A Coast Guard airplane from Elizabeth City, N.C., a Coast Guard helicopter from the Cape Cod Air Station, a Navy plane Crom Brunswick, Maine, an Air Force Reserve plane from New York. and a Canadian military plane took part in today 's search. The Grand Zenith's cargo was the same kind of oil carried by the.Argo Merchant, the Liberian \'CSsel tha t ran aground off Nan- tucket and s pilled 7.6 million i;:allons into the ocean when if broke up under the pounding of heavy seas fi ve days later The Grand Ze nith Clew the American flag unlil about two years ago. Its home port we.ts listed now as Panama City. Panama, like Libetia, is used to register s hips by owners who want to avoid paying high 'American or European wages. Atfo,.ric Scudder identified SeUers as one of his two attackers. He said he could not be certain that Wesson, a former business as· soclate and one time manager or a Corona del Mar bank, was Sellers' companion. Sortino admitted under pro- secution questioning that he is no longer on cordial terms with Scudder due to a difference of opinion whic h led h i m to withdraw from the operation of the ambulance service now headed by Scudder'sson, Craig. Sortino said he called Scudder back on the evening of the day he heard the Balboa Island man's alleged confession and hooked a tape recorder to his telephone in the hope of recording an identicaJ stateme nt. "I tried to gel him to talk about it again," Sortino said. "Ilut he paused for about 15 o.r 20 seconds and then he said, 'Cute, Frank, real cute.' Then he bung up." Sortino's testimony followed the three-day interrogation of Wesson who repeatedly told the j ury that Sc udder was the architect of the kidnap plot that was to put $250,000 into the pockets o( five men involved in the abduction. Wesson told prosecutor Bill Morrissey that he and Sellers were quite prepared to go to prison if they had been caught by police while the kidnap attempt was under way. Wesson said the planning of the kidnap was carried out with the understanding that Scudder 's role in the plan was not to be rc- \'caled by oth{'r con:.pirators if the plot mis fired at any stage or its t'xecution. "We all understood tha t," Wesson said. "That was okav with us because we knew th.;t there would be no problems and we would get t he money if ever· yone did what he was supposed to do.'' ldi Amin Likes 'Entebbe' Film NAIROBI, Kenya <AP)-Presi- dent ldi Amin of Uganda re- portedly has had a private show- ing for his friends of "Victory at Entebbe," a film about the Isr aeli commando, raid on Entebbe airport last July. And Amin de· cided he likes it even though it portrays a <lefeat for his army. Kenya 's daily Standa r d newspaper reported Monday. The paper said Amin initially decided to screen the movie in Uganda "lo show how stupid it is," but instead found it enjoya- ble. Amin was quoted as s aying . "I'm portrayed very well in the film." Huntington 4-Hers Plan Registration The Huntin g ton Beac h Quilters and Tillers 4-ll Club will hold Its registration, enroll- ment and information meeting at 7 p.m . Jan. 11 in the multi- purpos e room of Glenview Elementary School, 6621 Glen Drive, Huntington Beach. For more information. those interested can call the 4-H Office at 774-7120. 0 lolt fttimofed 'oaition Mlle• 100 APWl• ..... lo CROSS MARKS SHOW LAST POSITION OF TANKER 28 People, Eight Mlltlon Oallont of 011 Aboard A~Wl....,.. CLAUDINE LONGET W1TH ATTORNEY CHARLES WEEDMAN All Bundled Up on Way to Manslaughter Trial NB Resident Appointed to Coast Panel Ne wport Beac h resident Judy Rosener has been appointed to the state coastal C'lmmission by Ass e mbl y S p e ak e r Leo :\1cCarthv < D-San Francisco>. 1t W;JS announced today. !\tr .... Rose ner served on the !orml•r South Coast Regional Zorw Conscnat1on Commission since its inception in 1973. r'or the last six months or t hat comm1ss1on's e xi stence, s he sen c.>d as 1b chairman. :\trs. Ro:-.cner , a lecturer al UC lrvrne·~ gradual~ school of admm1s trat1on. was told or her appoint mcnt to the new state comm1ssio11 last week, accord· ing t o :.1 s p okes man for McCJrthy Thl' :-;l'\\ por t Beach resident could not be reached for com- ment on h(•r ;1ppo10tmenl. Will Nixon Go to Carter Inauguration? PLAINS, Ga. (AP > -Forme r President Richard Nixon, who has not been to Washington since he r esigned in disgrace in 1974, has an opportunity t o return for Jimmy Carte r's inauguration. Carter's press secretary, Jody Powell, s aid the Carter staff was following a tradition that all past presidents and their wives are m· vitedtoinaug ura ls. In San Clemente, there was no r esponse from Nixon's staff when _reporters c a lled to find out whether Nixon intended lo go to the inauguration. Powell s aid the Carter staff has heard nothing from Nixon, either. "It has been true wilhout fail that traditionally former presi· dents and former fi rst ladies ar c invited to a ne w president's in· auguration," Powell said. CB Radio, 2 Ovens Reported Stolen Burgla rs broke into a s hed lµld a warehouse at the Orange Counfy Fairgrounds sometime SWlday or Monday, taking l' CB radio and other equipment from one. and two pizza ovens from the other. The thieves forced padlocks to gain entrance to the struc· lure, taking $137 in equipment from a woode n sh~ and the two ovens, valued at $'950, from a steel warehouse in the northeast parking lot at the fairgrounds. according to Costa Mesa police. f'ro• Page A J LONGET .. ·~ and a $30,000 fine. :. Prosecutors have said they m i g ht c all s inge r Aocly Williams, Miss Longet's el- husband, to the stand. But Dist. Atty. Frank Tucker has refU9d to discuss why Williams was • summoned. Williams left for Los Angele£ after the noon break Monda)', saying he expects to return next week. One of three prospects dis- missed the first day, Asp~A Mayor Stac y Standley. adt milted, "l felt lhe defendant was guilty, based on the ilk formation I bad received" from a police officer. ..t . " Standley, reflecting like Tucker the easy.goinf ~· mosphere in Aspen, appeari,t on the stand ·in jeans and ao open-necked print shirt. "People are very frank in Orts community," Tucker sajd of Standle y 's comment. "Tbt!t don't beat around the bush." ' ~ Tuc)cer said be decided thia~ Mis s Long et 's 13-year-old daughter Noel, who was zj· portedly at home when U:ie shooting occurred, was "too young" to be called as a wt· ness. ... Miss Longet says the gun fired accidentally while Sabich was teaching her how to use t~: Noel is one of Miss Longe~ three children by Williams, from whom she was divorced two years ago. llA1t' Cla~t? Douglas Fraser, 60, vice pr~; sident of the United Auto Workers, appears certain t~ succeed retiring UAW .pres-.. dent Leonard Woodcock' when the union's executi\fe board meets Jan. 11 In ~· Angeles. · . ··-f .. om•\ A Mw"""IW M.•l\•O\~ f tlit')r CMtN•M L-Iii<-f' .... A\\i~t•nt Man•ia•nol•t•n OtllCH C..lo""u lJOW.\1 .. ¥\lff .. ~ .... ,. tttllO~•HSttHt Hut~hftlt14"\ &N<t'I tNl \ ... tct\~w•'fl S-'"k "Vo1 .. , llJOl \oP•tlil-•r S."' Of.,.a Fr-..~, WARREN, Mich. CAP) About 1,000 jobseekers showed up at the Chrys ler Corp. Detroit Tank Plant after reports circulat- ed that the firm would hire 700 ad· ditional workers this yecr. But they were turned away by securi- ty cuards because no jobs were available. The Job applicants started lin- ing up at 4 a.m. in subfreezing temperatures at the facility !)ere that baa l,800 emptoyes. Laguna May Fr~eze Building~~ Tetephotte (114)~ C1Htltl .. MYertllllnt Ma-111'1 ~•Nt• V•fl•r ~MOtfto .. , .. ,,o '•-"-•(-<\IO ...... r ...... ,..,,~o,..._.c_,Cottwounlll" 5'0-1210 ~we;!:'~• ~I (~.:.,=~:::.=! "''''" •t •d'I•''''•"'•"'' f\••••n m•Y M fOttttdll'ld WlfM Vl .. f Hl•t fWtfMIUIOI'\ tt '--.¥••'"'""'' r.~~~,l~'\:::!:: .. ::·b: .~::, ~·~ =~:s:r_n6 :~.~ IM••M• ...... u •• , Delegate-Killed PARIS (AP> -Two young men ahot and kllled Mahmoud Saleh, former head or the Paleallnt Liberation OrjJanlza· tlon's delegatlon In Paris, as ho Jett his Arab-lan1uftle bootahop on the Left Bank Monda$ night, pollceaa.id. Tbe Laguna Beach C\ty Coun· cu wtll conalder actfon Wtdnea· day to prevent a constructJon moratorium due to new state coutal zone management Jaws. The council ses1loo wUJ beJin at 3:30 p.m . for routlne business lncludln1 tbe coa1tal 10ne mat- t.er, will receH al 5 p.m. and re· aume at 6 with public beui"" and left over buslnus. Delays tn cban1lns owr from "· the old coastal commission system to the new Ode required under the Coastal Zone Manage- ment act of 1976 will create a rreae on building ol at least a monlb. The council could authorize the city to laaue coasttll development permltl, an acllon requested by the board or realton. However. Dou1111 Schmitz, clty plAMlnf director, haa .recommended against that acUon. Schmlu said in a rt?port to tho council that the clty should not begin JssuJnc the permits until It receives auldance from the reac- tivated south coast zone com· mission as to the requirements. He said the manpOwer and paperwork costs may be so ex· orbitant that it wowd not be in the best Interests of the city lo do so. .. ,. Other council matters includ . -Authorization for a "Lqu.lla Day in Tijuana'' p.._..tatlon ~ the Mexican c:lty'aotnctala. · .,..,.. . ·- -A report by Vice Mayor Jdtt Brand on 1andacaplnc ~ includlna moundinc of 1rasw- areaa at M a1n Beach Park. -Consideration ol plans tCllt Laguna Beac b '• 50tb ao .. ". niversary party Juno29. \ - Orange Uoasl EDITI O~ * * . \ ~ Today's Closin g · .\'·, Stoek , OL. 70, NO. 4, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANOE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 4, 1977 c TEN CENTS 10 Billion Tax Cut Asked Again WAS~GTON CAP> -Presa-V d Al Se ks So • • l s • H •k ~~~i1£~~~~~~~:~~~~~~\~~ r on so e . cia ecunty i e 1ductions a nd an increase in come of $15,000. The same size President's economic adviser. billion in crease in p;rsonal is high time to focus substantial '.})ersonal Social Security taxes family earning $10,000 would see Like last year's package, the Social Security taxes. tax relief on middle-income tax- 'The package is nearly a carbon their annua l tax burd en proposal includes $2.S billion in Ford said his proposal is payers." copy of Ford's tax-cut proposals decrease by $166. corporate tax reductions. It also focused more on middle-income The proposal received an im- that Congress rejected last year. It also would increase the in-calls for a $5.1 billion increase in taxpayers than low-income tax-mediate cold shoulder from a The White House said Ford's dividual income tax exemption personal Social Security laxes payers, who were the main key congressional' leader, Rep. proposal would save $227 a year Crom the present $750 to $1,000, over a two-year period. Last beneficiaries of tax cuts in 1975 Al Ullman CD-Or~.), who said for a family or four with an in· s aid L. William Seidman, the year's proposal called for a $1.65 and 1976. The President saJd, "It the Dem oc rati c~controlled rJury Prospects •• Longet Guilty, Say Residents • Dolly ~i.c ....... NEW BOARD CHAIRMAN Newport'• Tom Riiey Riley Takes ·Supervisory Leadership I Supervisor Thomas Riley of Newport Beach was elected 1971 t hairman of the Orange County "°ard of Supervisors today. 1 .f ~Riley's election to succeed Supervisor Ra lph Diednch as Loard chairman came on a un- jnimous vote. t The 64 -ye ar -old former Marine general"i. ascent to the irmanship came 21~ years r he was appointed by then- 1 ir or n i a Gov . Ronald gan to fall the unexpired term of the late Ronald rCaspers. I~ Thal appointment wa11 reaf. firmed in early 1975 by Gov Edmund Brown Jr Raley claimed the Fifth [Supervasorial seat in has own right last June whim he won a I one.sided primary election v1c- lbr-y over three opponents. When taking over the gavel trom Diedrich today, Riley 'praised the outgoing chairman's 'eoergy and leadership. j "I pledge my full energies to dh c h a r g e t h e i m po r t a n t 'responsibility or the chairman's 1cfnce.'' Riley said as he took over the center seat on the five- inan board. . _or:n:"1-~oast Weather Fair .and mostly sunny through Wednesday. Uttle temperature change. Highs of about 60, low aboul40. INSIDE TOD~Y Tiier•'• ftO que.flon lbat IM lfock mar Mt u Oft. o fono lol- ing atreok .. occordJng to buti- nur columnflt Milton Moakowftt. P.oge Al~. l•dex ASPEN . Colo . t AP> - C laud i ne Longet s oftly murmured today that she was "heartbroken" at the number or residents who have admitted during jury s election they believe she is guilty of manslaughter in the death of her lover, ski c hamp Vladimir "Spider" Sabich. She stared sadly and made the one-word comment when asked by a reporter about her feelings in the second day of a search for jurors among her neighbors in this snowy ski village. She had just heard five pro- spective jurors individually declare they were so convined or her guilt that they could not give her a fair trial. "lt seems like everyone has fi rst-hand knowledge about the case." said a young photo· grapher called as a pr<>6peclive juror. "That's how they talk about it. I try to take it with a grain or salt." However, Like others, Bruce Y a!fo a aid he had been convinced of Miss Long et 's guilt. "I was on a plane ride once with Spider 's br other Steve," he said, "and there were some irh· plications made ... that definite- ly affected my opinion." Defense and prosecution at- torneys agreed to excuse the <Sff LONG ET, Page A2) Searchers Ply Seas for Oil Tanker BOSTON (AP> -American and Canadian aircraft and a Coast Guard cutter searched to- day for a missing Panamanian tanker with 38 ~rsoos and eight million gallons of heavy oil aboard. The search was expanded after efforts Monday failed to locate the 18,711-ton. 644-foot Grand Zenith or make radio con: tact with it. Spokesmen fror the Coas t Guard. the utility expecting the oil. and the ship"s agent said it was not unusual for a tanker to be delayed and temporarily ''missing.'' ·'The unusual thing is that it has not been heard from," said Coast Guard Petty Officer William Van Valkenbu:rg. He said il is possible that all the tanker's radios are not work· ing. Van Valkenburg said it is possible for such a tanker to sink without losing any of Its cargo oil and, therefore, have no tell· tal~ oil slick. He said a tanker probably would lose some of its propulsion oil if it sank. but such oil "may come up slowly lo the surface as a sheen rather than a slick and dissipate." The Coast Guard said lhe tanker was last beard from about 60 miles south or Nova Scotia on Thursday. The vessel lefl Teesporl, Eneland, on Dec. 19. ll was headed for the Fall Rivet, • Mass., area, the Coast Guard said today. Tbe search today was to cover approximately 34,000 square mllet of Atlantic Ocean from the tanker's last known position south of Cape Sable, Nova Scotia, to the Fall River area. The southern section or lhe search area roughly parallels the rich Georges Bank fishing grounds. Indian Rides Again Unidentified delivery man (right) helps Duke Hazlett return six-foot wooden In- dian to its rightful place in front of Hazlett's turquois e shop on Newport Beach 's Mcfadden Square. Indian was stolen Dec. 22 by a trio of revelers who apparently spotted the Indian after leav- ing a nearby tavern. Police traced the In- dian to San Clemente and it was returned Monday. Ex-pal Claims Complicity Testifies Scudder Plotted Own Kidnap By TOM BARLEY Of .. 01lfy ,,IOISl.if A defen1e witness testified Monday that potato chip heir John H. "Jack" Scudder of Newport Beach told him he planned his own kidnaping with two men now on trial for the crime. Witness Frank Sortino. who later admitted Crom the witness stand that be ls on less than cor- dial terms with Scudder, told an Orange County Superior Court jury that he talked to Scudder, 64, by phone a week after the alleged kidnaping last Aug. 19. Sortino testified that Scudder told him during that conversa· tion he had plotted the abduction with defendants William Rudy Wesson, 45, and Ricki Dale Sellers, 20. Both men are being tried for the alleged kidnaping. Sortino, a Laguna Hills resi· dent, testified that Scudder told him over the telephone how he had escaped from his kidnapers by faking a heart attack and then leaping from a motor home parked in Fountain Valley. "Then, out ot the clear blue sky, he told me that he had set the whole lhing up," Sortino testified. "J was s hocked." ... The witness said there was no response when he asked Scudder to repeat the statement. Scudder bas denied from the witness stand that he knew anything aboul the kidnap at- tempt until two men grabbed him as he left his dentist's office in Huntington Beach and bundled him into a motor home. Scudder testified that he re- ceived a number of blows In the scuffle and suffered racial injuries that compelled him to re- turn to the dentist's office a few days l~ter for fu rther treatment. Scudder identified Sellers as one of his two attackers. He said he could not be certain that Wesson, a former business as- Newport's Rosener Joins State Panel Olll'f ...... tuft ....... ON STATE PANEL Newport Beach resident Judy Rosener has been appointed to the slate coastal commission by Assembly Speaker Le o . McCarthy <D-San Francisco>..it was announced today. (Related story Page An > Mrs. Rosener served on the former Soulb Coast Regional Zone Conaer·1alion Commission since-its inception in um. For the laal the months ol that commiuion'• exiale~ce, she aerved a1 lte chairman.) Mra. Rosener . a lecturer at UC Irvlne'a graduate school of adminiatratlon, was told of her appointment to lhe new state commission last week, accord· i n g to a 1pokesm an for McCarthy. Mr1. Rosener aatd she was ~v nattered"· to receive the a (meot, which wUI mean an to her work on the nictonal commtts\on. Ttle r91tonal commiuions went ()!.It of erfett Jaat month and one ot the firat·decl1ton1 factna the slate sociate and one time manager of a Corona del Mat bank. was Sellers' companion. Sortino admitted under pro· secullon questioning that he is no longer on cordial terms with Scudder due to a difference of opinion which l ed hi m to withdraw from the operation of the ambulance service now beaded by Scud~er's son, Craig. Sortino said he called Scudder back on the evening of the day he heard the Balboa Island man's alleged confession and hooked a tape recorder to his telephone in the hope of recording an identical !'tatement. "I tried to get him t.o talk about It again," Sortino said. "But he paused for about 15 or 20 seconds and then he said, 'Cute, Frank, real cute.· Then he hung up." Sortino's testimony followed the three-day interrogation of Wesson who repeatedly told the J ury that Scudder was the architect of the kidnap plal that was to put $250,000 into the pockets of five men involved in the abduction. Wesson told prosecutor Bill Morrissey lhat he and Sellers were quite prepared to go to prison if they had been caught by police while the kidnap altempl <See HEIR, Pagel\2) Congress w o uld wait for President-elect Carter's expect· ed plan to S.tl mulate the economy. Ullman, chairman of the House Ways and Means Com· mittee where all tax legislation originates, sald, "Obviously, we will organize around the Carter recommendation." Ullman said he e1<pects Carter (See TAX CUT, Page AZ) $5.04,670·1 ' Grant to ·t Aid Job~ :l By STEVE MITCHELL 1 Of Ille 01Uy l"llol SUit A grant worth $504,670 to Costa Mesa will mean jobs for about 60 unemployed city residents. City-~ officials are just waiting for the ' money before accepting job ap-f plications. & Costa Mesa has been notified ~ by the Orange County Manpower Commission that it will receive 1 the Comprehensiye Employment ~ and Training Act CCETA) funds to provide public setvice jobs • through September. Part of the grant will be used to 1 extend eight existing jobs , through the grant period. The rest will be used to add 59 other employes through September. Becky Ross. personnel assis· tant ror the city, said her depart- ment will not be accepting ap- plications until the grant is in hand, which "mighl be tomorrow o r might be as late as February," she said. To be eligible, applicants must have been unemployed for at least 15 weeks and lite in a sec-, tion of the city where there is 1 percent or more unemployme~ according to City Manager Frea So¥:i~~~en of lhe 67 CETAJ employes will work for the Newport-Mesa Unified School District in jobs ranging from in- strucUonal aide to media center assistant, Sorsabal said. .f He said an effort has been made"to minimize the obligationl' for the city to continue flll).ding the jobs after the grant exp~ in September , "so the city d~not acquire any additionaJ costs:.... ' Prior to the unilnimous vote , suppor:ting the grant, Vice Mayor' Jack Hammett said he would !Ute to see several of the CETA employes work to help enforce the city's sign ordinance. ,, Sorsabal objected, saying, "[ don't think you want to send <See GRANT, Page A.2) 7 Final-hour · ~ i Filers Join School Race Last minute candidacy 1 declarations in the Newport-J Mesa Unified School District mean there will be contests for three of the four school board : seats in the district that go on the , elecUon block March8. r Only Incumbent Trustee l Rode rick MacMillian, who. represents trustee Area 1 (west I Costa Mesa) will be unopposed in 1 the election. With only hours before the fil- ing deadline last Thursday, it ap- peared three of the four trustee posts would be won by default in unconteated races. However, .-Vickie Ann Bridgman, a housewife,' and Thomas Crosson, an advertising executive, decided to make a race or it in trustee Area 5 (Balboa Island and Peninsula). They will be cballenging incum- bent Carol Martin. And Rlcbmood E. Westlake Jr. became the second candidate ln trustee Area 2 <nortbeast C.CSta Mesa),' where the incumbent, Orville Amburtey, won'heet re- election. WesUake will aquare off &CainatN. C. "Duke" O'Brien. A Coast Guard airplane from Elisabeth Cily, N.C., a Coast Guard belico.,ter from the Cape Cod Air Stallan, •& Navy plane from Brunswick, MaJne. an Alt Force Retirve >plane from New t ' <See TANKER, P .. eA2) --1 Newport'• R°"'""' • ~ _I ~~ROSENER~~> Four CorOlla del Mar residents wtll be vyln1 tor. the trustee seat to be vacated by 1bomas C. Cuey wbo la atepplng down after representfnt tru•* Area 4 for ef.l,bt yean. Tbey are: Retina Von Burier, teacher: Maraaret R. "Pei1y" Carey, teacher; n.ntel J. Wallace, .~ & trlct attorney, aod'. ~ty Jo Balley, hom•makel'. A filth potential ~andldate, attorn•y CUleron II. Smith Jr., did not return candidacy declaraUon . papen t.o the county R41Sitrar ol .to Votenby~eDec.fde~ ~ ' • Congress Opens Byrd Takes Democratic Leadership .... WASHINGTON <AP> -With the Democrats firmly in control, the 95th Congress today established-two-year residence In the C apltol with new leadership and an avowed d~ termination to start work on President-elect Carter's economic program. Senate sources reported short- ly before the formal opening of the session that the Democrats elected Sen. Robert C. Byrd of West Vir ginia as majority leader, to s ucceed Sen. Mlke Mansfield of Montana. In something of an upset, Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr. of Ten- nessee was elected Senate minority leader by the Republicans. Baker defeated Sen. Robert P. Byrd was elected by acclama- tion after Sen. Hubert H. Hum· phrey of Minnesota withdrew from the contest. ror re~lecUon to the Senate last year. Byrd is regarded as a skilled technician at moving legislation through the Senate. His views on economic issues are close to Carter's, and Byrd is expected to work closely with the new president. At the Republican caucus, Sen. Ted Stevens or Alaska was elected assistant minority leader. He was unoppO'Sed. Sen. Carl Curlis of Nebraska was re-elected chairman or the Republican Conference and Sen. John Tower of Texas was re- elected chairman of the GOP Policy Committee. Al'WI....,._ NEW MAJORITY LEADER West Virginia's Byrd Griffin of Michigan by a vote of 19 to 18. Griffin had been assis- tant minority leader. Baker suc- ceeds Sen. Hugh Scott of Pen- nsylvania who retired from the Senate. Sen. Alan Cranston CD-Calif.) was named majority wh.ip, the post Byrd has held for six years, and Sen. Daniel Inouye <D· Hawaii) was c hosen chairman or the Democratic Party Con- ference, the third-highest leadership post. To Win Tax Fuads "'~ w1 .. '"'°,a. Mansfield served as ma1ority leader since 1961 but did not run Try Again Broken Waterbed Replaced CLAUDINE LONGET WITH ATTORNEY CHARLES WEEDMAN Her Christm as spirit ended in a splash, but Angel's New Year started well. All Bundled Up on Way to Manslaughter Trial WIULE BAKING cookies before Chrlstmas1 lS·year-old Angel Anast filled her waterbed. It was a bit overdone-so overdone that it burst and sent a wave of water through her family's home at 25761 Cervantes Lane, Mission Viejo. E'roni Page Al WNGET JURORS. • • Stuck with sopping shag carpets and a broken bed, her father, Zacharia, questioned bis daughter's angelic status. But them anager of the firm where he bought the bed ad. milted it had been installed improperly and returned Mon- day with a complete new bed. photographer for prejuclicc. The slender, dark-haired Miss Longet became tight-1.Jpped and tense as she raced the Jury box where residents were questioned individually by District Court Judge George Lohr and at- torneys. She had been cheerful when s he arrived at the courthouse wrapped m a fur coat as snow fell lightly. Sbe was trailed into the Auto Crash Cuts Power In Newport A careening car that police said went out of control on the ramp at the Arches bridge ear- ly this mormng. knocked out power lo 680 Newport Heights homes and businesses. Jim Kennedy. a spokesman for the Southern CahCornia F.dison Company, said today the people hvm)t in the a rea near the intersection of Pacific Coast Highwa y and Newport Boulevard were without power for about an hour following the crash. Police arrested Robert Neal Bell, 25. of 848 Sonora Road, Costa Mesa on a charge of mis- demeanor drunken driving in connection with the 12 :20 a.m. crash. Officers said Dell apparently was alone in his car when he lost control on the ramp leading fro m southbound Newpo r t Boule\•ard to westbound Coast His,:hway and crashed into a pole. Police said Rell reportefl no in1unes in the mishap hotgun Stolen A shotgun valued by the victim at $1,000 has been stolen from a Santa Ana Heights home by an intruder who apparently entered via the side door. Orange County sheriff's officers said. Deputies said the theft of the 12-gauge Parker double-barreled shotgun was reported by retiree Alvin Stewart Cox. 70, of 2612 S.E. Mesa Drive. He told officers he was out shopping at the time. ORAHOE COAST DAILY PILOT J .. -11 c_, "'"""'"i.o··-o.-•-...- '"'-•• It-# ...... ,. T-•"'·~ ,...._j,,.,.,., o.-. ... '--"'°""" r .. ,. A•ohCeM IMMfl"'(~ c:o.t.-. ... OMoe _.., =:: :~J.~,.._.,.. c courtroom by a smaU white dog which followed her down the street. The dog was quickly re- moved by a bailiff. But the jury selection turned the defendant glum. Pale and wearing no makeup with dark circles under her eyes, she sat with her hands clasped beneath her chin as· the second day of questioning proceeded. "I RATE TO see waterbeds get publicity like that even though it's good for a couple of chuckles," said the manager while the bed was being filled. • Contending waterbeds seldom burst, he blamed the Anaat.s' problem on the bed's lack of brackets. She is charged with "reckless manslaughter," a felony, in the March 21 shooting of Sabich in his mountainside mansion of rock and glass. The close relationships of resi- dents in this village of 6,000 has com plicated jury selection. Every one of 1~ persons ques- tioned thus far said they knew de- tails of the case, and most had heard "a lot of gossip" about it. Mesa Board Drops Project Area Idea Among those tentatively seal- ed as jurors today were a build- ing contractor who had been a tennis partner of 6olh Miss Longet and Sabich and a woman ski instructor whose recent divorce case featured Miss Long et 's attorney representing the woman's husband. Another prospect excused for prejudice was a woman who im· mediately declared she would have be to be convinced of Miss Longet's innocence -thus pre- suming her guilty. "In any sort of court case,· you're supposed to assume the burden of proof lies with the pro- secution," said Robin Grasher. "I realize it's not fair. The burden of proof with me rests with the defense." The Costa Mesa City Council has abandoned its project area committee, calling the advisory group ''obsolete and redundant." Deputy City Attorney Torri Pash alides said the seven member panel, which assists the eommunily Redevelopment Agency in obtaining advice and consultation of people who might be affected by the city's re· development plan, is no longer necessary. Redevelopment Agency mem- bers were divided on the issue of continuing the mini-committee. Toll Hikes Eyed SACRAMENTO CAP) Proposed $1 tolls on three San Francisco Bay bridges would be barred for two years under a bill proposed In the legislature. The Bay Bridge now fias a 50-cent toll. The other two are 70 cents. Council Action In action Monday night the Costa Mesa City Council: -Approved $50(,670 in funds to employ 67 hard-core un- employed citizens through September. -Abolished Project Area Committee which advised city's Downtown Redevelopment Agency -Declined an offer to purchase Smalley and Wakeham school sites from Newport-Mesa Unified School District -Agreed to study the possibility of adopting city or- dinance requiring smoke detect.or d•vices in all residences in Costa Mesa -Agreed to Jend the Community Redevelopment Agen- cy $130,000 to make it eligible for tax increment revenues. Costa Mesan Faces Charge Over KiCk A 28-year-old Costa Mesan was scheduled to face charges of as- sault on a Fountain Valley Poli~ma.a in West Orange Coun- ty Municipal Court today. Joseph G . Evans, of 73S Paularino St., WIS stopped by Of- ficer Kerry Kowalski at9:30p.m. last Saturday on charges of er- \ r atlc driving near the intersec- tion of Garfield Avenue and Rmnkhunt Street. --When the suspect was placed in the police car, he reportedly kicked out the vehicle's with a motion s upporting the panel defeated in a split vote last November. Agency member Dr. Tom Nelson, who supported the com- mittee. said civic organizations can serve just as wen as a sound- ing board for community feel- ings. Project Area Committee mem- bers included Lew Kidder and Or. Nelson, both current mem- bers of the redevelopment agen- cy, and Neil Abrams, J.C. Hum- pllries and Richard Sewell. E'ro"' Page A I TAX CUT •.• will spell out his proposals at a meeting with House leaders in Plains, Ga., on Friday. Carter h as indicated his pro- gram would focus on job crea- tion. Ford's proposal also would re- duce taxes for a family of four CARTER UNVEILS ETHICS CODE--A4 earning $30,000 by $256, and by S330 for the same family earning $50,000. But a family of four earning •$7,000 would see their tax burden rise by $25 to a total of $60, due to a Ford proposal to eliminate the earned income credit grant- ed to low-income wage earners. The Administration proposal last year was linked to com- peruiating cuts in spending. But this time, Ford's proposal was inltially unclear on whether he would seek compensating spend- ing cuts. Ford noted in a measage to Congress that he will be sending up his spending pro· posals with his budget later this month. • CB Radio, 2 Ovens Reported Stolen · windlhJeld. .;,. Bartlan broke mto a •bed ·a a wareboule at tM Orance Couaty Fatrirou.nda ~e Sunday or Kond.,, tattnc • c~ radio and other eciulpmea1 Item one, and two plua ov-. fJ'Qa) the other. The thlevet for* p.iloeks Evans a llegedly kicked Kowalski in tht left thigh upon arrival at the Fountain Valley police 1tatlon. Police said Kowalakt wq not seriously in- jured by the blo•. A s:z.'°° ball wu set for Evans wbopollce say Is a karate expert. Weather 'Fair' Br TIMt Aaaotlated Pnta A"-Ht OcHft Mesa Juggles Cash, Aid.s Revamp Unit lt sounds complicated. but it 's probably the only way the Costa Mesa Community Redevelop- ment Agency is going to ge\ any tax increment money this year to continue its projects. The city is going to lend the agency $130,000 to put the agency indebl. Only then can the council- appoinled agency be eligible for $291 .657 in total tax increment charges. "That's the only way the re- development agency can obtain any more tax increment re· venues," explained City Manager Fred Sorsabal. The agency receives project funds from taxes levied on downtown properties in excess or a frozen amount. Due to a P"Ovision in thE' sljlte's Health and Safety Code, Sorsabal said, if no loan was made to the agency. more than $123,000 in tax increment re- venues would be lost to the agency. At the end of the year, the re- development agency had run up SS,554 in interest on a city loan of $163,050, leaving the a~ency with total liabilities of $168,604. However, with a total tax charge, intended for the agency from excess downtown taxes, the agency stands to come out $291,657 ahead. That wouJd put it in the black and therefore make the agency ineligible for more tax increment monies, according to Sorsabal. •'They would lose out on $123,053,' ·he said. Sorsabal said that the agency may soon be issuing bonds for its projects. .. In that case. the necessity for Fro• Page Al ROSENER •• commission when it meets J an.12 in San Francisco will be whether to reactivate the regional bodies. ''I'm very gratified that I ap· parently received a broad base of s upport," she said. "I did not campaign for the appointment as others have done.", Mrs. Rosener said she thinks her appointment carries con- sidnable significance for Orange County because it marks the flrst time a county resident has served on the state commission, "and with the Irvine coastdevelopment coming up, it's got to be signifi- cant." Fro..PageAJ GRANT ••• hard-core unemployed people out into the business sector to check signs. ''There's enough problems with enforcing the ordinance as it is,'' be said. loat .. ,.,,,. ..... l'oaifion 0 '200 0 MU .. c .. ,..,.... the city to loan money to the agency to keep tax increment re- venue at the maximum level will disappear." Sorsabal said. Agency members have placed the reconstruction of com- mercial properties bounded Qy Harbor Boulevard, Park Avenue, 19th and Center Streets as their priority project. Plans include purchase of re- maining commercial properties along the 19th Street stretch, and contracting with a developer for the complete reconstruction-of that block. O.tly Pllol si.tt PlltW Heads Libra,,, Costa Mesa library specialist Martha Lyons h8.s bee n named branch manager at the Mesa Ve~e library. She was formerly with the Mission Viejo r e- gional libary. She holds a master's degree in library science from the University of Maryland. TONIGlfr BEHIND THE HEADLINES" -Dr. Giles T. Brown lecturer, OCC Forum, 7:30 p.m. WEDNESDAY, JAN. 5 COAST COMMUN ITY COLLEGE BOARD -Regular meeting, 1370 Adams, 8p.m. F.-a.. Page Al HEIR •• ·• was underway. Wesson said the planning or t.bo kidnap was carried out with the understanding that Scudder's role in the plan was not to be re- vealed by other con.spirA_tors if the plot mlsrired at any sCage of its execution. "We all understood that," Wesson said. "That was okay with us because we knew that there would be no problems and we would get the mooey if ev- eryone did what he was sup. posed to do.•· I',... Page Al ~ TANK~R ••• York, and a Canadian mWtary plane took part In toda:V's search. · to 1atn entrance to the •t:ruc- ture, taJdns h.31 Sn. equipment from a wooden abed, and ~ two ovena, valued at .SO, fJ'Ob) a steel w arehouH In t h o nortb111t parltinc lot at the t~. a.ccordln.I to Colla 111111 police. Fa r woathor through rnldwffk. with oulft&ndin1 vis- lbtUty' ls tn atore for much ot Nortl ttn California after l>Ulll• ol t.bt lint ltonn ol the New Year. CROSS MARKSH0WaLASTP08fTION OFTANkEA 21 People, Eight Mallon OaUona of OR Aboard The Grand Zenith's Ca.J'IO was the same kind ot oU carrled by the Ar10 Merchant, the Liberian vessel tha,t r1n acrounct off N• tucket and 1pllled 7.8 mtllloa 11Uons lnto tbe ocean when it broke up under Lbe ~ of heavy seas five da,ys later. -f # of 5 Board · Two of Orange County's five •IUpuvisors. Rnlph Diedrich and •J>hll Anthony, were sworn into :1tew four-year terms of office Monday jn ceremonu .. 'S attended , by government officials and • :urnpaign supporters. 1 --Supervisor Tom Riley. who ~tbo is beginning a new two-year ·1enn, had taken his oath of office :aner winning election to the Soutb Orange County seat m ·June. Board Ch airman D1cdrach opened hls second term in office by taking his oath from M;,i ry Quant, a Brea resident. An aide to Diedrich told roughly 125 people attending ttl(' ceremony tha t it is trad1l1onal for a superior court Judge or lhl· county clerk to administer thl· oath. But, he said, D1cdnch instead -chose a r epresent::ittve of the community he serve::.. Diedrich told the crowd th<: past four years had been frustrating at tames but pleasant "I promise everyone here that I will continue to work ha rd ;is ,J supervisor, .. he said. Superior Court Judge Richard Beacom administered the oath of office to form er Westminster Mayor Phil Anthony, who • ., begin[ling his first four-year term as a supervisor. Anthony thanked his i.up- pe>rters. pledged lo keep his or rice door opc•n lo M'rve con:.ll tuents and said he would work cl,osely with local city officials in .<feveloping sound progr<1ms Bus Bonanza Looms From Super Bowl The Orange County Transit District may earn as much as S4,000 from Sunday's Super Bowl football game in Pasadena. Directors agreed Monday to lease up to <!O buses to Airport Service Inc to c·arry passengers -to the game at a charge of $25 an bour per bus for eight hours each OCTD officials said the distnct is prohibited from operating its own charter service to the gamt>. but is permitted to lease its buses to a charter carrier. They explained Airport Service Inc. has received so many requests for transpe>rtallon to the game they may need as many as 20 OCTD buses to help carry passengers that d.i) Under terms of the agreement. OCTD also will provide hu'> drivers The S25 an hour v. ,1i. based on OCTO'c; co<.ts offw1at ... explatned Driver, 100, Eyes License KING SLF.Y , Iowa I AP > Charles Knowles 1trcctcd the new year with a tough resolution II" wants ln pass his 1977 dnving test ~o he can tool around in h•~ -<>range sports c·ar Knowles '" 100. "M y eyes aren t quite v.hal th!.' doctor ordC'r<'d. · · N'\1Jwk~ co11- C'eded. "It doesn 'l hc>ther mt' to drivl', but thJt \ •~ual test m1J?hl bother me Knowles ~as c1wardNI a lv.o- year license after pa.'lsing hts test last year. but 1s required lo take annual driving te~ts be<:ausc of his age. He turns 101 on Feb 7 _.,7",.,,,,' Oally 1'1 .. 1 St.111 l'"°'o RUSSIANS TRYING TO SNUFF SMOKING HABIT TOO Laguna Hills' Robert Yeller With Soviet Poster Heart's Appeal Smoker Woes Cross Cwtain By ANNE COOPER 01 "'" Dally l'lloC St.111 The child ·s poster urged tn Russian. ··Don 'l kill your hem." It showed a cigarette piercing a heart like Cupid's arrow. Smokers behind the Iron Cur- tain. like their counterparts elsewhere, apparently find it equally diHicult to kick the habit. Robert Valier. a former New York Times reporter rellred to Laguna Hills Leisure World. re· cently v1s1ted Soviet health spas v.here physicians advtse patients that smoking 1s incompatible with medical treatment Cigarette s mokers are advised to Join six-day intensive group therapy sess ions al the spas. If at the end or six days, a smoker feels be is done with the weed forever, he is given a certificate. lettered in red. Sergei Medunov, a councilman in the resort city of Sochi. launched an anti-smoking cam- paign 10 months ago. committed to wiping out the cigarette habit among Soch1 residents School children drew posters. appealing to their parents to stop smokmg and hvc. \'aller sald Papa. don't s moke•·· was let- tered in a childish i;crawl on one banner. showing a small child in a gas mas k tapping her father on the shoulder The Soviets claim 50.000 people have put down tbe cigarette habit 10 Soch1 since the campaign began 10 months ago. With an in - formation program which begins tn kindergarten. Soviet citizens are gr owrng up to perceive cigarette smokmg a. .. a sickness, Yaller said. People in Soch1 , about 1,300 miles south of Moscow on the Rlack Se a. a rf> particularly health conscious. When Valier \I. as visiting. he said 100.000 peo- ple would turn out for an hour's cahslhenics before breakfast. Entertainment at the health re- sort included folk dancing by the Centenaria ns. :.i 38-me mber rl:ince troupe. ranl(tng m age from 86 to 128, s aid Valier. The dancers hail fro m Sukhum1 in the Abakhazaa Republtc. Longevity is common among residents of the area, which lies at the foot of the Caucasus Mountains Valier said the dancers asked to be called "seasoned" rather than senior citizens. They at· tribute their long lives to light meals of natural foods, going to bed with the sun and plenty of hard, physical labor. "The re 1s nothing they have we couldn't have here in the Sad- dleback Valley. if we wanted it badly enough ." s aid Valier. "Their climate 1s similar to ours. But we'd have lo get rid of the smog, the jets. the stress and the additives in our food ... One dancer. Tarkukovna wuria. 128, told Yaller he was married to a young woman of 90 "I guess if my wife were 38 years younger than I. I'd think she was a young woman. too. said Valier. Lethal Soft Drinks Kill 2 TOKYO <AP > Two people died today after drinking Poisoned soft drinks left on a quiet, residential Tokyo street. A search turned up a Uurd poisoned bottle. police said. Police made loudspeaker an- nouncements in the neighborhood all day warning people to avoid any drinks found on the street. The three round all had caps on the bottles.officers said. Akira Hlgaki. a 16-year-old stu- dent. spotted a bottle in a telephone booth while walking with friends. lie tried it. said, "It's rotten." fell unconscious and died shortly after J\ second body was found I ater. Executions on TV? Judge to Allow Filming of EWctrocutwns DALLAS CAP > Exeeutiono; al the Texas s tate prison could be filmed and later televised under terms of an order prepared by a federal judge. Judge William Taylor said Monday that he expected to sign an order today allowing elec- tronic media as well as pnnl media to record electric chair ex- ecutions at the prison in Huntsville. "There could not be any dis- tinction a s far as electroni c media were concerned." Taylor said. His order would nol\allow ex- «uUons to be carried over live televlaion. On Jan. 14. Mark Milton Moore, ~. convicted of a 1973 murder in Dallas; is scheduled to be executed in the Huntsvllle electric chair. Appeals have not been exhausted ln his case. No execut.lons have been car- ried out in the United Slates since 1.9S7. Taylor"s action came as a re- auJt or a suit med by Tony G"r- tett ol Dallas publk lclevis1on atatlon KERA. Garreu, 39, aougbt i>ermlsalon to film an ex- feullon and interview lnmates .awaiUq c.pital punishment. "Vft'y 1fmply, t satd the new" media are entitled lo have nprtHnlaUvoa there. lollowi.na ., ........... 'LET THEM WATCH' TexH Judge Tayfor a policy thut had been followed lor a nom~r ot years." Taylor said. "That Is lh•t the . represen- tatl\'es of The Asaocitt.td Press and United Press lntematlonal would serve as pool reporl~rs and also that there could nol be any distinction as far as elec· tronic media were concerned. Mr. Garrett would be entitled to be there with his camera on the same basis ... that is, as a pool reporter." Pool reporters represent the media, sharing news reports and observations with colleagues Garrett said Monday that he expect.a the Texas Department of Corrections to appeal Taylor's order through the U.S. 5lh CircuJt Court of Appeals in New Orleans. Marty Haag, news director at Dallas' WFAA-TV, sald, "I fear that a circus could be made out()( it. • "I would be s urprised if that many stations carried It, quite frankly." Haag continued. "This is obviously a very serious and profound quesUon and there wlll be a lot of talk about that amona the management before a de· eislon is made here.•• Bob Rogers. news director at KENS-TV in San Antonio. Oally said, ''We will notpulilon." Garrett said he was not t>ven sure his own station would televise an exccuUon. "Personally, I th.ink It should be shown," be said. "But 1\'8 not my declsJon. I simply tum In a story and If an editor kills It, he ltllla It. Tu.day. January 4, 11~n DAIL. 'r' PILOT ,43 Panel N aines Chief County Planners Face Busy Year Laguna Niguel resident William MacDougall wu elect· ad chairman ol the Oranae County Planning Commission Monday by his four fellow com- missioners .. The 62-year·old attorney, who practices law in Newport Beach. took over the helm ot the county planning panel by saying he believed the commission was beginning 1977 in an atmosphere of harmony. "I think th e fumes of acrimony will be ab.5ent from the aroma that s urrounds this commission at least in the 1m· mediate months ahead," Mac- Dougail said. He said the commission races a backlog of major decisions this year. And, be added, "We have the need to look at them in the light or the long-range plans of Orange County. I am excited about what we might possibly accomplish in the coming year." The five-member panel also elected Comm lssioner Peggy Cranston of Yorba Linda as its vice chairman. MacDougall, who has been on the commission about six months, oHiciaUy succeeds former Commissioner Shirley Grindle as chairman. Marines Dema-nding KKK.Trio Defense allorneys for two black Marines charged with an attack on a white barracks at Camp Pendlel<>n wadt the Marine Corps to produce three whlte Marines who are alleged Ku Klux Klan members . David Weitzman of San Fran- cisco. the lawyer tor Lance Cpls. Gregory A. Coffee of Wellston. Mo.. and Ricky McGilvery of Dallas. Tex .. said Monday he may ask continuances until the three Marines are round. The Marine Corps Listed the three men as absent without leave when they railed to appear Moo- day to testify in pretrial hearings tor the two blacks. J\ spokesman for the Corps said 1t did not know the whereabouts of PFC Ronnie Harper, 19. of Pensacola. Fla .. PFC Dennis Campbell Jr .. 22. of Smithcreek. Mich .• and PFCCharlesV.Smith, 18, of Houst<>n . T h e government urged Weitzman to use the transcript or testimony by the three men in pre- trial hearings last week, but the attorney indicated he may Insist on appearances again by the trio Coffee and McGllvery ar'! among 14 black Mnrines charged in a Nov. 13 attack on a barracks room in which seven whites were holding a beer party. Six whites werehospitalb:ed with injuries. The blacks have maintained they thought they were attacking a Ku Klux Klan meeting, but got the wrong room. They blame harassment by Klan membe rsforforcingthem to retaliate. Airways Bombed LAS PALMAS, Canary Islands CAP) -An explosion rocked of· fices of South African Airways in tMs Atlantic island Port Monday night. Police today blamed the blast on an organization seeking Canary Island independence from Spain. Some time ago I was invited to address an Investment club whose members are neighbors 1n the Newport Harbor area The subject was "Gold and Precious Gems as an Invest· ment ·· I went with my graphs showing the constantly n8'119 costs of both items. I had kept a dally record of the selling price of gold sinoe It was released from the govern- ment controlled price '" May 1970. My graphs showed gold had climbed Quite steadily to a high In late 1974. Without my crystal bait however, I was unable to pr~ dlci ~hat It would do in the future. As we now know, result· ing from some .. dumpl119" and lntematlona.I trading. the prioe his slipped Quite a bit alnoe then. The price of menuf90- tured gold Items has not been redueed however becell8e the ooeta of fabricating and labor have raced with Inflation to more th•n offset that 011-ference. The prices ot fine gems and large diamonds have more than doubled In the ta.at ten years. That Isn't to sty that you cen sell for twlc:. what you peld You know that you must buy In one market and sell In another If you can hold your gemstones tor aome time ho~. you can make money on them OallYl'lltCIUff-• NEW PLANNING CHIEF Wiiiiam MacDoug1ll Mrs. Grind le, a frequent critic or commission decisions and what she has called pressure put upon elected officials by de- velopers. was ousted a s chairman this fall by fellow 3,300 Kids Out commlssioners. Since that time, Vice Chairman Earl Wooden has ftlled ln as the panel's presiding officer. Mrs. Grindle resigned from her commission post effecUve Jan. 1. citing financial reasons and criticizing the county plan· nine process. Her replacement, former Anaheim City Planning Com· missioner Floyd Farano. at tended his first meeting as a commJsaloner Monday. MacDougall was appointed by Supervisor Tom Riley to the county panel In June. He sue~ ceeded former San Juan Capistrano Mayor James Thorpe, also a critic of county planning, who resigned his com- mission pos t. MacDougall has practiced law in Newport Beach since 1975. He previously was executive direc tor to the national Advisory Commi ss ion on Inter Government Relations and earlier served 24 years as legal cou n sel to the Co unt y Supervisors Association of California. He Is a graduate o f UC Berkeley and McGeorge College of Law at the University of the Pacific. School Tax Vote Could Fail Again COTTAGE GROVE, Ore. CAP> The first school day ol 1977 was just another holiday fJr 3,300 youngsters in this lumber town. where taxes to finance schools were rejected four times by voters urset over the cost and quality o education Townspeople vote aga10 a week from today, and suppe>rters of the levy predict that schools will reopen soon afterward. But the first signs or an or- ganized anti-levy campaign have appeared in the form of pe>sters urging "no" votes. All njne schools closed Nov. 24 . when the South Lane School Dis- trict ran out of money for the 1976-77 school year. On Nov. 2. townspeople had reJeeted a pro- pe>sal #or raising property taxes for the fourth time since May. Oppe>nents claimed at first that truces were too h igh, but have re· cently argued that too much money is going to "fashionable" new teaching techniques, and not enough to "basic education .. They also say the district's four administrators earn foo much S2S.OOO to $29.000 -and are in- sensitive lo parents''wishes. Most students have simply Driver Dies After Crash A 50-year·old visitor from Min· nesota dJed Monday after his car colUded with a parked car and utility pole in Anaheim, police re- ported today. Officers said Lawrence Joseph. Maas of Faribault, Minn., died about an hour after the 7:32 a.m. crash on West Street south of • Eleanor Drive. Police said Maas' car fh·st struck a parked vehicle, then the utility pole. The cawie of the crash is still under investigation, officers said. Mary Bert, Certified Gemelog1st been treating the time off as a winter vacation. but Supt. Ray Mullen said some are transfering to other districts, where their parenta must pay tuition even in public schools. Other families have moved away, he said. The students eventually will have lo make up the missed days. If next week 's levy passes. they will lose their spring vacation and stay in school until June 30, two weeks longer than normal.. Teachers put together an in· terim school, but it has bee n at- tended by only about 100 youngsters, mostly elementary pupils. "ll's not a substitute for school. but more to keep kids in a structured situation where thev won't lose ground," said teacher Jerry Settelmeyer. As in most school districts in Oregon. Collage Grove voters set the budget each year. A 1915 state law set a base budget, and voters must approve any funds needed beyond the base. The· base can grow each year. however. In Cottage Grove, the base was once $770,000 .. Now the school district says it needs $5,5 million, and $2.8 million or this needs voter approvkl .. That's $400,000 Jess than the district requested in the first levy proposal last May and slightly less than voters approved last year. But the property tax here. growing with Oregon's booming land values, is $48 per $1,000 as· sessed valuation, and many voters think that's too high. The school budget gives them a chance to express dissatisfac· lion. Similar p roblems closed schools in North Bend from Sept. 29 tn Nov. 21 when a new levy was approved.. In Eagle Point, the school district used funds set aside for teacher un· employment lo reopen schools. joyed it for eight years but for personal reasons now wished to d1sp0se or II. Even wtlh mv 10'X. finders fee deducted, she was very well pleased wtlh &he transaction I have been asked about firms who offer "diamonds" and "colored stones .. as "invest· ments."' Most everyone has r~ ceived through the maJI pi8()9S ol promoltonal hterature from one or another of these hrms. If in fact they are selling "rnvest- ments," then shouldn't they be subtect to lhe fihng require-ments or the Securities and Ex- change Commission? The s.e c. registration requires the offerer to disclose who they are. their finances. as well as other pertinent In formation which allows "Investors .. to familiarize themselves with the oompany In order to make an informed Investment. CHARLES H. BARR These "p0cket peddlers·· are pOpping up all over the country and are doing very well with their pitch. ti you w11h to look over some of the material we have collected regardl119 these operations, come In. we'll be glad to share It with you. Not too long aoo I was able to ull • large emerald-cut diamond for a cn ent It a 45% l)l'Ofit. She h11d wom It Ind en- Ac~~­....... , We are content to sell our diamonds and gemstones on ment alone and an absolute guarantee that they are as rei>resented. The investment yeu make Is really one of en~ ment for you and your t.mlly. and even liter generations~ wlll wear them with prfde, .. . Al DAILY PILOT . Just · *. '\"\ .~ with Tom ~pldae ~ Gone With ;Wmdrow ;. BOW, ROW, ROW: Listen now . to Mr. Carl C. Meyer, who Uves ; out on Orange Avenue in Costa . Mesa and characterizes himself ' as "a native son and old citrus hand." Reader Meyer writes thus : "In your column of Dec. 30, you have labeled the eucalyptus trees planted along the borders of pro· perty as protection against stronR winds as 'windrows.' "This is a misnomer. They '1.'ere always called windbreaks And not 'so·called' either. This 'was because they broke the force of the Santa Ana winds which is generally the strongest wind dur· ingtbeyear. "They were almost always planted for the protection of the c itrus groves and the avocados as the Santa Ana winds are a winter wind in the vast majority of an- • stances and your annual crops • which grow in the s ummer and mature in the fall do not need this protection. "Look up windrow in your dic- tionary." WELL MR. MEYER, I want lo tell you that the word ''windr<:>w" has caused me more vexations than even you think. 'fu.tday, Janull)' •. 1977 Stranded . • • • • • But Not .tor Long Floating ice b elieved broken loose by a passing barge on Boston's St. Charles River trapped t.ltis dog, who m ay have been spending a pleasant day chasing ducks. Mem- bers of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals came to the rescue. Ethics Rules Told Carter to Lease or Sell Bll3iness PLAINS, Ga. (AP) -Confess· in& t o "some regrets," President-elect Carter pledged today to free himself of any J>Q6Si· ble conflict of interest by Wro.lng over his prosperous peanut busi· ness to tMutees who will lease or sell it. · Talking to reporters out.aide the headquarters office of his peanut marketing partnership operation, Carter said be felt be bad to ·"bend over backwards" because "I don't want to have any decision I make as president have an effect on my income." THE PRESI DENT-ELECT made his comments as aides un· veiled a tough ethics code for top government officials. Carter's own action in trying to build a waJI between himself and the family business was in line with the measures he is requiring of others. "It was a hard decision for me to make," Carter said, adding: "I don't have any regrets aboul il." After a pause be continu.ed, "There are some regrets." He said he plans to remove himself so completely from the Carter's Warehouse partnership, which ig the basis of the family fortune, that be will instruct its trustees "not to even inform me" if they sell the business. At the same time, Carter ex· pressed concern a bout the minority i nte rests in the partners hip of his brother Billy and mother, "Miss Lillian." But he uid be felt certain the trustees would act in a way that would not "upset their Jives too much." THE ETHICS CODE requires presidential nominees, starting with Ca,,lnet members, to divest themselves of any holdl.np that could conruct with their govern· ment duties and to submit de· tailed statements of thelr personal wealth. Jn addition, for the first llJne, they must sign a pledae to re· main in government for their full appointed term, unless dis· misaed sooner.· They also must agree that for two years after leaving governQlent they will avoid any private job that would cause them to deal with their old department.a or agencies on mat· ters that concerned. them as federal officials. • . THE LAND OWNED by Carter Farms wlll be retained in trust so Joog as Carter is presJdent and will be rented for an annual fixed amount. Under the guidelines applying to appointees, those named to the two highest federal pay levels will have to .divest themselves oC any interests that would ·"m0te than rarely" cause them to dla· qualify themselves because or possible conflicts. 4 Emenada Stores Destroyed in Fire ENSENADA. Mexico (AP) -Firemen mopped upa$100,000fire today after it destt:oyed four store buildings and damaged a fifth.. Two volunteer firemen were hospitalized ror treatment of bums. Tbe blaze, blamed oo a short circuit in electrical wiring, flashed first through a downtown ( ] bookstore Monday night. Also T heavily damaged w~re El IN SHOR Ensenada theater, a 1ewelry _ _ st.ore and Harold's clothing store near the corner of Avenida Ruii and Calle Juarez. SMlride Sparla l•raeH Sra•d•l TEL A VIV. Israel (AP > -With a national election only five months away, the suicide or Housing Minister Avraham Ofer after accusations or embezzlement has hit Israel's Mlling Labor party with its fifth corruption scandal in two years. Now that you've jogged my memory. I think I always called all thos e eucalyptus trees windbreaks m yself. l picked up .. windrow" from the Irvine peo. pie who are now grappling with the issue of whether or not to take the ax to the trees. Nixon Joh Bias Alleged Ol'Ut Ofer, 54. shot himself with a .22·caliber pistol Monday in his car near ms Tel Aviv home, the national news agency fTIM report. ed. He left a note denying accusations by the weekly newspaper Haolam Hauh that be pro- fited illegally from government real estate purchases while he headed a government con- struction company. Klsai•,,er-CBS r.iJa De.led Further, l decided "windrow" was a funny looking word that readers might confuse with in· dow. So I decided it should be two words for clarity -thus wind row House Panel Report,s Civil Seroice Violations NEW YORK (AP) -Spokesmen for both sides denied it, but Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger reportedly has been talking with William S. Paley about succeeding Paley as chairman of CBS. A State Department briefing oCficer in Washington sald he bad no knowledge of any such talks, which were reported Monday in the New York Post. A CB.5 spokesman told the newspaper no such talks had taken place. THIS GOT ME a curt note from the proofreader, who suggested I was once ::i,;ain indulging in abysm a l corruption of the English language. Now. Mr. Meyer, you have forced me to dig intomydustydac tionary where I find that "wind- row" means : -A row of hay raked together -Sheaves of gram arranged in rows. -A row of dry leaves. -A deep furrow for planting or cutting of sugar cane. -The green border or a field dug up in order to carry the earth onto other land to improve it (British usage). Thus Mr. Meyer is absolutely correct. We have five defmitions of windrow and not a eucalyptus tree in the whole bunch. That's what 1 get for not looking it up in the first place. I should blame the Irvine people for all ttus trouble. Maybe I should blame the proofreader who sent the curt note. This iB usually what editors do when they get caught up by their own ignorance. ON THE OTHER band, this is the kind or trouble you get into when you use an unfamiliar word. lt turns out be be either wrong or dirty. Mr. Meyer conduded his note by suggesting, "From reading your column In lbe past, it seems you are one of the 'beach peol\'le' aodnotoneofthe 'treepeople'. • Well Mr. Meyer, I'd really like tobeboth. If I can ever get my windbreaks straJght, that Is. WASHlNGTON CAP) -The Nixon administration violated CivU Service regulations hun- dreds of times in a n elfort to get federal jobs for politically favored persons, a House sub- committee has concluded after a 22-month investigation. Meanwhile, the Civil Service Commission, the agency that is Machine-gun Blast8 Kill Four in Beirut BEIRUT. Lebanon <AP> -Six Moslem gunmen in a Mercedes. limousine sprayed machme-gun fire at passers·by in a Christian quarter today, killing four persons and wounding several others, the Christian Phalange radio reported. Christian militiamen chased the attackers thrdtflb the wind- ing alleys of the Dowrah district, stopped the car, wounded Its oc· cupants and took them into custody, the radio said. The attack occurred a day after an explosion outside a Christian mUltia barracks in Beirut killed 35 persons and wounded more than SO. The inci- dents undermined the pre- carious. two-month-old cease- lirein Lebanon. "A quantity or explosives and mes belonging to the Communist Action organization were found in the car," the Phalange broad- cast said. The Phalange militia is the largt!$t on the Christian side in the civil w1r. supposed to insure that non- political jobs are filled by the best applicant, "aided and a· etted" the administration, the re· port says. THE POLITICAL favoritism has "seriously damaged the inte- grity of the whole (Civil Servfce> syste m ," the s ubcommittee says. In its final 246-page report on abuses in federal employment between 1969 and 1973, the sub· committee says ther e was "pervasive manipulation of merit system procedures lo pro- vide preferential treatment for favored candidates for career ap. pointments." It says the White House person- nel operation was the "nerve center" of this operation. THE REP ORT OF 111E sub- committee on manpower and civil service ls expected to be re- leased late this week. A copy was obtained by The Associated Press. The report urges changes in federal personnel laws, including a prohibition on political refer- rals for career-federal job~. which are supposed to be filled by the best qualified applicant. The report says former Presi· dent Richard Nixon ordered White House personnel chief Frederick Malek to look not only for ability in prospective offi ce holders but for political com- patibility with Nixon as well . MA LEK 'S PE RSONNEL operation mainly was concerned with finding persons for non- career jobs, which are openly political appointments. But, the Snow Coats the Rockies Storm Dumps a Foot ·on Utah, Colorado M~ '-"" ~ ... 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Hll,lll t1moera1urts ~I-60 and U-•toreusllor1 1>n>..i.,...1""" ti. t oHI lllrOUQh the S.n "-· S.n G1t1rfel and San B•ri•.rdlPIO V•lftys Mollfltaln NMlf'll shOufd ,..... fair --wltll occa11ona1 claudi<lns lftd northwest wl""" .,.,..._, u -ti "Iii.< -l'IO\lr, Oays tllooM fMCll 1119M ..._.. )j alld 4S. •hlle ,.._..., -.tddtotlto bet_ 11.,,,21. o..rt .,.., too, J/!Oolld M ~ by •lnd'I rll IS to u mlfH per flour, wflll ...,,,,.,.,,""'' '" !tit llOlllt ... Wll'\ _,,,,. lllftl• llear IO Wiii ,_ -•· U..r CleMrn .,_,... bit ...... 11 .. ....,...,..,,...,, ONut.i We.titer l"aw -'90! "'"-" Wtdftetdly. Uflll ¥lrl1t1le wind' nlvM •nd "*11ifl0 lltun. MIOlll WMNtOay In 1111 low to'• C6otal ltm1pera1u,..s #Ill ,_ .. iw .. 11 JO 111d ••. Inland ltm ...,_._, •ITI ran" .,..._ "4 ~ M. TM Wfltr lem .. ralun wlfl 119 ff report says, the White House also referred political favorites or the administration or of certain members or Congress for career jobs. During the four years covered by the report. "The commission consistently assumed an 06trich- like stand in response to repeated and s pec i fl c allegations of political influence, · the report says. A Civil Service Commission spokesman declined comment on the report. Coffee B~cott Spreada We•C.,ard By 'Jbe Associa&ed Press A coffee boycott begun in New York City has spread to Ohio, Massachusetts and upstate New York, with supermar~et chains urging consumers not to buy and providing discount.6 for substitutes -or for coffee. An Ohio supermarket chain. Liberal Markets Inc. with 40 stores in Dayton and Cincinnati, joined the effort by continuing lo sell cof· fee at $2.S9 a pound but launched a newspaper·and-billboard ad- vertising campaign Monday urging shoppers not to buy. Indeed, to scores of trf vlaphll~s along the Orange Coast these words hold no mystery. but are readily recognized •• the robot-stopping phra1e utter- ed by Michael Rennie In the 1950• science fiction flick 'The Day the Earth Stood Stlll." Trivia, you 11y. Trivia. More recently tf'ley have become the motto for a growing number of hardcore Dally 1»t1ot Trivia column fan•~ If you are bitten by the bug of recollection of Insignificant tidbit• from old movies, televlalon •hows, comic. strips or the Hke, then you are a candk:tate for Trivia by T.T. _ The weekly Saturday column atarta .inew on January 1 with new challeft9•• for e>r.nge Coast trtvtaddlct• to match wit• for top place• In the trivia atandlnge • For ·th• ••k• of the competition or for entertaining reading, look for Trtvl• by T.T. In th• entertainment pages of the Saturday DAILY PILOT 642-4321 \ I Can CBS ~tain Success?. By MALCABTD 1 NEW YORK (AP> - Tbe real question about "Who's Who" i.s not bow . good it is, but whether • C~ News can sustain · the quality of the tint edition, which a1rs at 8 tonipl (Cbannel2). A croia between "J>eo.. pie" maauine and "60 Minutes," the stylish first abow dellllng with Riclwd Burton, Leopold Stokowati and a railroad enlineer is -save a quibble or two -superb. CBS NEWS President Richard Salant, who pre- dieta that "Who's Who" will draw a big aud.leoce, ..,... "I'm absolutely COO· •lnced we 've un · derestimated the public -they're looking for (TV REVIEW) something diUeren · t. .. It really is a test. It's a fair lest or what we stand for and whether it can survive." "WHO'S WHO" is not all that different from its antecedents : .. 60 Minutes•' or even the late Edward R. Mur· row's "Person to Person." "" It may face a conflict between trying to satisfy two publics: the one that hangs on gossip and the one that seeks e nrich· meot along with its en- tertainment. ON A STRIKING gray and white set lined with sketches of people in the news, Dan Rather bolds forth as editor and chief reporter along with Barbara Howar and Charles Kuralt, on the toed. The Stotowsti piece treats the 94-year-old maestro, who bas jmt signed a sU:-year record- in& contract, both re- verentially and critical· ty. Shown frail but felst), Stokowsky i.s allowed ln a profile paced like a I concerto to reveal bis many -fa ceted penoaallty. I . ! t l • l I I I I I I l ' I t l 1 I I 1 ' I I I I I t TBE BUllTON seg- ment. was filmed in a New York hotel room, where a surprisingly subdued Mias Howar wafts touch questions acrou a coffee table and lets them float away without determined followup. Sbe aats him about bis reputation as a womanizer and lets him get away with merely conceding be is a flirt. not the kind or man wbo's 0 'nmninc off with everybody every five minutes." USllE DID wbal a good reporter should do." aaya Executive Producer Don Hewitt, wbo alto overuea "90 lllnatea." "She got Richard Burton talk· t.nc." Hewltt'a ri1ht to a decree· Burton dJd talk =c~bout being an "I did a lot of filml wb6cb I don't really ,. member becauae I was sloabed throughout them,·' be told Mias Bowar. THAT'S inter= aad it'• bound to to the atar·c.uera amcmc ua. A greater effort to ruch tbe coat that Miss Howat apparently set for benelf, to discover the man beb.l.nd the myth, mltbt have produced e.en mOl'e interesting ....wa., however. Kuralt'a =couldn't baYebeeD r Wltba wit and Dair that bis fam have come to take for &rlDted Kuralt tu.ms out ao a ffectln1 eight minutes with a Nortb Dako ta railroad allineer. Nona Allen, a J.9.,..,...-S woman ol i.D-~ee, vitality IDd deiennlnaUoa. IN B&Wli I '8 words. CBS bu dlacovered that "real people are aometlmea more in· t.eraJtlnl tbaD aclresael wbo plat real people." So look In comt!c:: ...-. for atories a Jod1 f'oater, Btlly Carter, Andrew Youn&. =·~.,~:. and ' TU!!d!y. January 4. 19n DAILY PtLOT ,4f F ate of 'Space Children' Pon dered MIAMI <AP> -1be year is 1980. Skylab orbits the earth, and space shut· Ues take men and women to the craft where they work and live ln close and stressful conditions. Cao they produce "space children" free of genetic de-fects? Dr, Neal Bricker, vice chairman or medicine at the University of Miami, bas been picked to research just such a ques· tion, and takes obvious delight in the science fiction character cl bis work. "SHOULD WE 00 TO Mars? Can we live in space for lbe three years the trip wW talte ~ Our committee is ~olng to have to answer these questions,' be said ln an lntervtew. Since nothing ls known about space reproduction, lt 's natural to worry about genetic cban1ea, be said, cilln& u ex· amples atranae things caused by weight· leasness -beam shrink In she, the body loses fluids. mucous can't drain, and there Is no sense or up or down. •·we wlll s tudy the biology of reproduction in space." Bricker said, "but I think we'll begin with animal studies. "II' THE ANIMALS can reproduce. that lo it.self will be a slgnificant piece of lnfonnation." Bricker will head the new NASA Space Science Board to which be must name up to Z5 scientists His mandate ls broad: "We must design scientific erpertmeata that will recommend bow the United States should proceed wtth future ex- ploration in space. . .. OBVIOUSLY, 1'llEllE aren't very many experts In this field we're calllna 'Ecology or Closed Enviroornent.' But the government ls gcing to want in· formation on all thia," said Bricker. Chrysler Corporationl976. Dodge Aspen. Motor 'Itend ~·s Car of the Year . .58,<XX> people switched from GM and Foj to Aspen. Dodge. No.1 in Vam. The num cles in America. 42,000 people to Dodge Vans. These are that became s one seller of van type vehi- 'tched from GM and Ford st some of the cars in 1976. We built em and America accepted them.Overwhelmingly. In fact, over 3 ,000 people • Chrysler Cordoba. The most successful new personal luxury car in the last five years. In 1976, 51,000 people switched from GM and Ford to Cordoba . Plymouth Volare. The Volare Wclgon is the best selling wagon in America. 78,000 people switched from GM and Ford to Volare. switched from GM and Ford to Chrysler Corporation in 1976. Join them for 1977. Get out of a car. Get into A CHRYSLER astar. ~CORPORATION c ler Corporation fort977 Now more tbanevec L .. •• 4 PILOT EDITORIAL P GE .. Puzzling Dismissal Oranfe County Supervisors ended 1976 with more of their troublesome hijinks when they ordered CoWI ty Counsel Adrian Kuyper lo remove Deputy County Counsel Ralph Benson as attorney for the Planning Commissision. trade unions, employers and farmers. The trade unions agreed to forego wage increases in return for a government cut in income taxes, along with reduced sociaJ security contributions for both e mployers and employes ln the aftermath of the behind-closed-doors maneuver, s upe rvisors were hard pressed to justify their ouster order. Supervisor Ralph Diedrich, for example. pointed to lost legal battles, some of which had not been handled by Benson. Supervi5or Laurence Schmit said the board is boss and can do whatever it pleases. Supervisors PhiHp Anthony a nd Ralph Clark simply mumbled some lhings that added up to the fact they merely went along for the Diedrich-Schmit led ride. Then, in order to keep food prices in h and while providing the farmers with slightly better prices for their products, the government is setting aside a special allocation for food subsidies . If it works, everyone should have a little bit more to s pend while the wage-price spiral slows down. ~ And Supervisor Thomas Riley la mely said he had heard criticism from a developer's attorney. Of course tidy packages like this mvolve a tidy lit- tle country and an almost 100 percent cooperative, homogeneous populace. Rut it should make a nice vision for the troops on the economic front in Washington. D C., where wage freezes are almost as unlikely as a No rwegian-style winter. Needed Program But Benson's performance drew good notices from Kuyper and other lawyers. as well as from the planning commissioners he serves. And it was particularly interesting to note that none of the supervisors bothered to check with their own com- missioners for a n evaluation of Benson's capabilities So it boils down to the fact that the ouster was nothing more than another purge of an apparent com- petent and respected county employe who may not fit the mold designed by the supervisors and their friends and backers among development interests. About three million California ns -one in every seven -are 60 years of age or older and the percen- tage is increasing each year. Many of these senior citizens could lead much more independent lives with just a little extra help. Jn fact, studies indicate. up to 50 percent of people now in nurs ing homes really do not require s uch care. I Economic Dream Now the state is developing a long -range plan to help more senior citizens achieve independence. When the plan is presented to the Legislature later this year, it will propose s uch practical steps as mobile mini-markets to serve elderly residents; other home-delivered services such as hot meals; Confronting this country's economic can of worms which seems to combine soaring wages, soaring prices and soaring taxes -President-elect Carter and his team might look with envy al the tidy package put together by Norway's new administra- tion . transportation to health clinics; and even adjust- ments in Social Security rules that now prevent rpany of the elderly fromearning mof'e in part time jobs. Such programs are long overdue in a society where fewer and fewer of the elderly can depend UPon family-oriented care. The combination 1s designed to stem inflation while giving wage.earners about 3 percent more dis- posable 1rtcom e. It involved a three-way deal with Israel ArlllS Sales Pose U.S. ProhleID. WASHINGTON -President- elecl Carter is about to be caught in a polit1cal-military squeeze betwC'cn Israel's request for pro- duction ri~hts to the new F-16 fighter plane and the likely re- sistance of four European allies to go all the way with that re· quest The F -16 dispute is only the latest predicament arising over t h ese lon g. standing - an d un - derstandable US de · sires· to help arm Israel for a nother possi· ble war agains t the Arab!. and lo c.'ase i ts economic crisis . Against these laudable goals. however . is the problem of Israel using U S. foreign aid to sell arms on the world market. That practice can conflict direcUy with U S interests and U.S aJ. hes When Israeli defonse minister Shimon Per es arrived here two "et ks ai;:o to present Israel's newest request. the F-16 was at the top of the list. He wanted not only SO of the newest U.S. fighters l(I be financed by the U.S. but also the right to co-produce an<>ther 200. This means Israel would make components and as· ~~mble the plane in Israel. Some defense and diplomatic e,;perts here s uspect Israel also want!; to market s pare parts 1from its own production) La. fore1J(n buyers of the plane - I rnn, for example. This would help fmanre the F l&s purchased rhrough ll S credits for Israel's nwn air force. mE PROBLEM is that the U S. has a completely separate agreement with four of Its North Atlantic Treaty <NATO> allies; Re lg1um. The Netherlands. Norway and Denmark. Thal agreement was pushed hard by the U S to persuade the rour lf you could choose any time and any place In the history Of the world -past. present and future 1 -in which to live. choo5e right , here, right now. 1 These next 10 years are going to be the most fascinating and the most fruitful ever! From the development and applica- 1 tlon of many a nd varied form s of ener1y. social ferment will s ubside and sldet wllt be blue and deserts wtll be gl'ff!l. The future is rushing toward us 80 ·raat· that freshman science textbooks are out.dated by the student's senior year. Most ol us first saw renccuons at the future ln the TV ada for Cbrlatmaa toya . Electronic 1ad•etry undreamed of just montha aio wu already in San· ta'• bas. Now &loot comes an Arabian 'trtnce olferln1 ua • hundred ( EV ANS-NOV AK J NATO countries to agree on the F-16 as a standardized NATO fighter plane. Accordingly, each of the four now has the ri ghl to "co-produce" the aircraft and sell surplus production abroad. The separate deal between the U.S. and Israel could put Israel into competition with the four NATO countries for selling F-16's valuable spare parts <as well as in direct compelillon with the U.S. itseU J. So. it. quiet but in- tensive investigation is now un- der way by the State and Defense Departments into political and military ramifications of the whole co-production deal with Israel. WHATEVER the investiga- tions s how , t hese are the alternatives: risk affronting our NATO allies by agreeing on an additional co-production partner. with future competition on spare parts turned out by an ag- gr~sive. highly organized force or avionics technicians in Israel ; or, deny Israel a cost-saving scheme. risking a nasty fight wi t h pro-Israe l forces in Congress. The State-Defense study will e xplore hidden as pects of Israel's burgeoning arms trade going weJI beyond the F -16. Israel has been dickering with both Austria and South Africa for sale or the Israel-produced K!ir tighter plane -an Israeli- designed body with a General Electric J79 jet engine and some components made In Israel. The changing role of the Kfir is cited by European members of the F-16 consortium as an "ii· lumlnallng study'' for what con- ceivably might happen ln Israel tothe F-16. When Israel decided lo pro· duce the Kfir, the U.S. was in· formed the aircraft would reduce Israel 's need for successive models of American f11hter jets. ( PAUL JiARVEY) mllUoo dollars for help in towing iceber1s from the bottom of the world to supply fresh water lor his desert nation. He means it. Prince Mohamed al Faisal - nephew of Saudi Arabia's king - is governor of bi! naUon'a Saline Water Conservation Corps. ms NATION wants f\.u1heJ' to lndustrialbe and also to develop its agriculture. Both demand large quantities ot water. So far the coet of desaltinC sea water ts p?'Ohibltlv• so. ln the ln· terim, "impOrlln• icebeTia·· might make sense. The prince considered the cost of de1&lllng 700 mlllkx\ gallons or sea water a day, but the capital investment for deaal~ plant.a would run $10 to U5 billion and the optraUon anot«er $10 bllUon a year. U an Iceberg a tnUe long and 800 yarda wide could be towed from the AntarctJe to the Arabian penlnaulll by a fle~t or nve Dear Gloo1ny Gus IC Carter's white appoin· tees resign from their all· white clubs, s hould his black appointees resign from their all -black caucus? · G.J . Gtoomy Gon commtnh Art 1ubmltt1d by t~ff.etl •nd 00 ttOt tttCt\•.trllyretlect tM vitW1 ot tht ••w<P1per Stnd y-pet PH .. lo Gloomy Gu\, 011ty 1'1tot. Consequently, the GE jet engines were approved for export to Israel. The latest ve rsion of the Kfir is described by defense e.x· perts here as "made to order" for export, with Austria, South ·Africa and two Latin American countries as targets. Officials here rule out Austria as a buyer, but not South Africa and the Latin American countries .. Israeli sale of the KJir is illegal without prior U .s. approval, bec@use of its high-technology U.S. components. particularly the engine. Nevertheless, top of- ficials here say Israel definitely is hoping for a sale and for White House or congressional ap· prov al. SOME Congressmen have privately questioned Israel's sale to Chile of the Shafrir, an lsraeli- made air-to-air missile. It bas no U.S. components and can be sold legally, but the Shafrlr would fall under a congressional ban on the sale of a similar weapon to Chile. Indeed, U.S. policy as dictated by Congrns is s trongly biased against arms sales anywhere in Latin America. It is against that background that the Carter administration wilJ judge Israel's request for a co-production deal on the West's most advanced fighter aircraft. The new President wUl have to balance Israel's justifieH needs for military protection and economic help again8t U.S. in~ terests elsewhere, particularly in troubled NKrO. oceangoing tugs, it could then be drydocked and melted to furnish 26.4 million gallons or fresh water at a cost of $2.5 to $S billion a year. The prince has spent 16 years in the United Stales and attended several universities here. He says money for reu1bWty studies wlll be allocated within two months. U tbe 11tudies' ~np a,gree wttb hie own caJcu.latJom.. tho t.owlna ot the keberp.. could beiin withln six yean. ~is on· b' ooe of aevet1l tedmQlotiet the Saudie1 are detennlnd to perf e-ct be/ore their olJ nms out in about 80 ye an. THE PllINCE aaya, "We Jre going to chao1• our climate within the next 30 yean, reduc· tne the averan \Omperaiur. of 100 de1rees Fahrenheit by nine or ~ degree11 and t.hus lncreas-m, ralnlall.'' Jte does not explain preclsely bow. And these for-lnstances are nd.nu•cule coropartd tot.he mind· bocdln& RaD projects upcomt.nc within months. • WASHINGTON .-No govern- ment department teeds to be re- formed as badly atdoes the Cen- tral Intelligence Agency. "But I doubt that Ji mmy iGart er 's c h oice for C l1. director , Theodore Sorenslit, can or. will handle the job effe~vely. One of the mainj>roblems•with the CIA is that i~ bas been the Pres ident's • private in - s trum e nt, operatin g b eyond the sc rutiny o f Congr ess or any otb~t' bod y re - s ponsible lo the public . Thus it was able to get away activities as spyin citizens and plotti of foreign leaders. Itseems to me.t would have been have a CIA c h' who was sensitive to the i · portance of maJcing the agenc accountable for its behavior. But with Sorense "1 charge, we wiUhaveamanwh lsthoi'oughly committed to the p iple of pre- sident! al power. a conse- quence. he is likel to reinforce the notion of the CI as a tool o( the White House. JUDGING from his record. Sorensen is a dev ed servant rather than an i dependent figure. He originally ent to work ror John F . Kenn y in 1952, rapidly becom ing is special counsel and, with the ception of the late Presld en 's brother Robert, his closest ad ·ser. Presi- dent Kennedy called ·m "my in· tellectual blood bank. '\ In that position, responsible for mu nedy's cold war rhet he, for example, w lines of the Kenned speech: "We shall pa bear any burden, hardshlp. support any pose any roe to assure and the suc~ess of Ube That. cred.o propell nedy administration the Vietnam war JlJl other things, to attem t&row1he Fidel Cast Cuba. nsen was of Ken.. c. It was ote the augur kl y price. eel any ·end, op- survlval ., . the Ken· escalate among lo ove.r-1 gt me in SORENSEN wa!S p Kennedy team that c the effort agalnet Cas failed disastrously h1 Pigs. ll wu a long time acknowledJed the luUli Vietnam war. His years in the KennedyWh.I make n9 reterence to sassinatfon plots bein, c atthet!me. · · Mort recenUy, Sorens I ..... ""Yo11·r• new,,.,., .,.,, you M1-~Jonnf' 'ill'. • 'Wow! Just what I always wanted!' STANLEY KAR NO\\' been a New York lawyer . representing among his clients the governments of Zaire and Iran. lt is worth noting that both countries have been intimately connected with the ~IA. The Shah of Iran was put on his throne by the CIA in 1953, and has relied heavily on,the agency for support e ver since. Zaire w~ the staging area for Ute CIA 's covert operations in Ang~a. and"it has served .., an agency base for other activities in Afr\~. IT SEEMS to me that UR? Senate committee that investigates Sorensen before his confirmation ought to probe the possibility or his linkslotheCIA in those lands. For a future CIA director who has pledged to be candid, Sorensen was not entirely lruthlul when be said the other daJ that Cart e r had strenuou s ly persuaded him to taJce Over the agency. It is no secret that Sorensen was lobbying for the as· slgnment and would have been seriously disappointed had he been rejected. He was chosen , I gather, large- ly because of the intemaUonal pressures put on Carter in his selection of key subordinates. According. lo sources inside Car ter 's transition 1roup, hardliners were urging the President-elect t.o create the new post of intelligence czar inside the White House. The role oC this figure would be to supervise not only the CIA but the Defense In- telligence Agency, the NaUonal Security Agency and oth<lT in- telligenceoutfits. · THE CANDIDATE for this job would have been James Schles- inger. whom Carter C!onsldered too hawkish for the posltlon of Defens~ Secretary. But Schles- inger, in the intelligence spot. would have been equally influen- tial on national security matters. So. reportedly. at the behest or Vice· President·elect Waller Mon- dale and others. Carter decided to put Schlesinger in coaunand of energy problems and to pick Sorensenforth e CJA. ,.,. 'L The decision doe~ lltae to strengthen control over the CIA. The agency will be, as it has been in the past , the Presidenes personal apparatus, and the danger remains that, as in the past, it will be misusOO. Humilit')· and Taste The modern attitude I have the least patience with tries to tell us that "good taste" is merely a matter of personal preferenc<'. and that tt is not necessary to cultivate our natural tastes. Now, there may be a few persons who have instincti ve goo<t. taste. just as tlter• ·ar e ia t e"w persons who are born with absolute pitch . But even 'inos t muJicllns have to ac1 qutre a keener sen~e ofpilch through practice. To thtnk that we instinctively recognize the best is fatuous ar- rogance. In a book some years ago, C.E.M . Joad, the British phlloaopber , made this point clear: "GOOD TASTE is not In· stinctive, but acquired," he wrote. ·'All native l:lStes are bad, and good taste grows slowly, through the ~rort to understand what ta bexond us, to appreciate Wh•t we cannot yet understand. It depends on ou.r willing:ness t? be bor6d with what ls good, in or· der that we may become bored witb wbal ts bad and so demand eom~ better." Tbe person who bears Bach and OJ>dl.. it "borlna" neoecb to leam that~ boredom Is In him, o(I( In .Bech. He needs to leam thl1 no1 to become mo~c ''cUJtured.'' which Is a hbrrid • word. but In otder to get as much pJedure out of the music as there I! In IL • Popular music chanau every I ew weeks beuuae lt ls not saU.S- fyifti; lta abaUowncss soon an. noys us. Popular DO\ldl mid\ be produced ln bulk, beeauee nont ·r:1.. thern 1lve enou1h plcaaun1 to (SYDNEY HAR~S) last more than one reading. They provide sensation, not nutrition; which is why we call them sensa- ti onal. BAD TASTE is alwa,yB cheni· ing, because it cannot 1t1nd Itself. Those who follow their personal preferences soon, find they have no preferences except for getting rid of their o.td ones and finding new ones equally un· satisfying. Good taste, in Joad's fine words, "must be approached by a process ol trial and error, a willingness to learn, and the humility which is prepared to ae· cept 6n rat th and the Juqment or others what it cannot yet dare to reject on Its own." Try that Bach once more, friend. ORANGECO~n DAILY PILOT Ro""t N. W~ed, P11bU.,_ Thomas KtevU, Editor Barbara KrtilJfcl1. Edltorlal Pagt Editor Th' edltorJal page or the Dally Piiot seelu to lntor~ a.nd irtlmulate rudera b1 lltdenUna on this page dtveru t'Ommentary nn topics of intere.t by 1yndlc•t· ed columnbll and cartoonlatl, by Pro\·ldlng a forum for re.den' vre~s an~ by presea~~ this new11papt't's opinion• and l~as .on t'Uf'ftf'lt iopfct The ~al opinions of lht' Dally PU~ apJM-1r only In the editorial colufNJ at tho • lop of the paae. 05'io-. tx· prr11:scd by the ~otu~ and cnr\OOnlal.$ and letter~ AA .. lhtir own and no tncl'onMMnt tl lhtlr ¥iew• by the Dally I'll~ should be loferrtd. Tuesday,Jan.4,1'11 Drug: Hope Allays Fear Scientists Continue To Dispute Laetrile .. B)' llOD ANGOVE SACRAMENTO CAP> -The Krebs family has been ln patented remedies since the early 1900's, when Ida M . Krebs of San Francisco registered a cough drop trademark, "Sure-Shot.·· The label said, "Sure-Shot Stops the Bark," and pictured a hand firing a pistol into the throat of a bark.ine dog. MRS. ~REBS WAS THE MOTHER of Ernest T . Krebs Jr., a biochemist who in 1949 patented Laetrire, an extract of apricot kernels tbat is pro- moted-by some as an anti-cancer drug. Kreba, 65, coined the word Laetrile from chemical names involved in the substance, a slight vartaUon of amygdaJin, which occurs in about 1,200 plants. ·In an interview, Krebs c huckled about ( ) "Sure-Shot," no· longer MEDICINE made. He preferred to _ _ talk ~bout Laetrile. KltEBS SI\ YS ANIMALS WHOSE diets ar~ rich in plants containing amygdalin have little or no cancer -and the same is true for such humans as aboriginal Eskimos, the Karakorums of West Pakistan, and cE'rtaio American Indians who live on native foods. Krebs said Laetrile "does not displace surgery when it's appropriate .... There's no magic about it, but it's very useful." But health officials say Laetrile appeals to cancer v\ctims who -given little hope from scien- tifically proven treatments -grasp at any alternative. LAETRILE, AMYGDAUN, prunasin, other cyanogenic glucosides, as well as the trademarked • Vitamin Bl7, Aprikem, Bitter Food Tablets and others, are essentially simjlar. But none has been approved by the U.S. Food , and Drug Administration, which says there's no ·scientific proof of either their efficacy or their safe- ty. The substances have also been specifically banned from importatiQn and interstate commerce. Or. Joseph F. Ro6s of the UCLA School of Medicine and the California Cancer Advisory Coun· cil, wrote recently in a scientific journal: "THI; PATIENT WHO SEEKS and accepts triatment with Laetrile does so largely because of fear of death and disability Crom cancer, and because of dis illusionment or distrust or orthodox '·physicians and treatment. .. · "Many patients sense a f~ling of frustration . and hopelessness conveyed, perhaps unconsciously • by the physician who tells them the nature and pro'. . bable outcome of their disease -a natural feeling on the part of the physician who is discouraged by his re- . cognition that be cannot cure the patient. "Patients sensing this hopelessness frequently . •are unwilling lo abandon hope ... , "Dr. Ross said. , IN 1959, CALIFORNIA ADOPTED one of the '.most specific state prohibitions against the use of ,amygdalin and the like for cancer. About a do%en other states now have similar statutes. A federal prohlbtlon covers the rest. • f, Only Alaska has a pro-Laetrile Jaw, passed last year. But the state attorney general says federal i·laWstill bars Laetrile. Amygdalin Crom bitter almonds is said to have .been known to Egyptians and Romans. It was jsolated by French researchers in 1830 and re· ,portedly was first tried for cancer in 1845. In the 19206, it was used on cancer patients in San Fran· ,cjs~o by Krebs ' rather, the late Dr. Ernest T. Krebs .Sr. ~.-. ~ (M:RWf:IGlfl'? I Learn What Makes Editor'• Note: loft~. a patented derlvalnJe of opncol ~rnels tbot ill 81lPP(>rlers 1ay c.:Jn cure cancer, 1s (J1I intensely duputed aubstance. This article, second in a unes. explores scientiftC aspects of IM dlaput e BUT LITTLE MORE WAS heard about it untll the 1950s. Early in its history, Laetnle was commonly called a drug. Arter adoption of the California law, officials said there was a change 1n terminology used by Laetrile promoters. They say there was a retreat from the cancer· curing claim since it was spec1ficaJly unlawrul to prescribe Laetrile for cancer. lnstead, proponents called it a "nutritional substance" and '·a vitamin." GRANT LAKE OF TllE California Department of Health calls the switch "a subterfuge" and "an abortive attempt Lo circumvent the Jaw." Krebs brought out Vitamin Bl7 in 1970. But the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and the American Institute of Nutrition say there is no such thing as a Vitamin Bl7. Chemically, Laelrilists say, each Vitamin Bl7 molecule has two units of glucose, one unit of benzaldehyde and one or cyanide. THEY SAY THE BENZALDEHYDE and cyanide, both poisons. are harmlessly locked chemicallv and are prevented from harming normal cells because of the presence of the enzyme "rhodanese," which they say is absent from cancer cells . Their conclusion: "OnJy cancer ... cells con· lain the enzyme beta glucosidase which 'unlocks' the poison .. .inside the Vitamin B17 cell, freeing it to kill ore the cancer cells." But authorities say such rationale "is spurious and based on erroneous promises." SAID DAVID M. GRE ENBERG of the University of California Research Institute, "There is no evidence that there is any pronounced dif· ferential between the rhodanese content of com· parable norm al and cancerous tissues." The claims that Laetrile Is nontoxic is also dis· puted. Authorities say that Laetrile is ilbout 40-fold more toxic when taken by mouth than by injection. And under FDA regulations, the burden of proof of s afety l alls on the applicant, not the government. KREBS SAID IDS RECORDS on safety experi· ments on animals were destroyed in a laboratory fire. But he said be took iotravenous doses of three to 13 times the therapeutic dose, and others have taken even more without ill effects. Scientists say so to eo kernels or bitter almond, the plant most heavily laden with amygdalin, could be a fatal dose. And they cite cases oC persons who wound up in hospital emergency rooms after trying to take amygdalin by eating apricot kernels . In 1973, the .FDA issued a warning that five capsules of Apikern or t.wo packets of Vitamin Bl7 contained enough cyanide to be fatal for a child. AUTHORITIES SAY TESTING continues to yield negative results and would have been aban· doned years ago if it hadn't been for political pre· ssure. Laetrillst& frequently cite experiments by Dr . Kanematsu Sugiura, 83, of, the Sloan-Kettering Institute in New York. In 1973, raw data indicatinq Laetrile was beneficial in mice tests was leaked without laboratory pennlssioo. The institute says no one else h¥ been able to duplicate those results. Therefore, they cannot be considered scientifically sound. SLOAN-KETTERING REPORTS it is still do· ing the same kind of tests, and so are the Catholic Medical Center in Queens, N.Y., and Southern Research Institute in Birmingham, Ala. The results are still negative. -The Undora Method 1 One person whoshouJd have data is Dr. Ernesto Contreras, a former Melt.lean army pathologist who operates one of the two cllnlcs in Tijuana, Mexico, that treat about 2,000 patients a year. The Laetrile promoter wh<> set Dr. Contreras up in an office about 12 years ago, Canadian Andrew R. 1 L. McNaughton, said the results or seven years of 1 trials on humans were sentto the FDA. So Effective A complete program to instruct patients how to lose weight easily, then how to montain their leon weight Doily theropv. with audio and sub-liminol visual aids to promote mohvotion and encouragement H.CG. a tat mob11tzing substance. makes it eOSief tor patients to lose weight without fottgue or exceSS1ve hunger Lindora·s very special diet. designed tor r~ ~ b>.\ crd ~oved eotng hcbts Behavior modiftC01ion techniques to learn weight control. Lindoro's easy-to-follow maintenonce program to prevent regaining . The entire p rogram is under the strict supervision of medical doctors. specialists In bonotrlc medicine. Coll IOI 1nlonnott0n Monday ll'llU ftldoy 9 AM 10U'M-2PM 106PM NEWPORT BEACH 640-6831 f-(l/"O) ltn j COSTA MESA 557-1893 I\ l• •:>O Vf'>•r::I·' ~r()IP S!Q<'IO 8'ti I Son lemordlno • E. Long 8eoch • M1S$1on Hills • HowthOrne • Orange • Newpol1 8eoch Gorde!ll Glove • long Beach • Pasodeno lo Habra ·Woodland Hills • Sherman Ooks West CoV\no • Fullerton • rltverslde • Santo Monico Costa Mesa • Pomona • Cerritos • Hollywood 1t~~Q~ LWldOIO M«kOI Ct'llc:I ore owned and odn'Wllsltted bv M9dicd Ooctoo tnot r1ttl!lcl tt'WW procilco to 8oll0111CS All C.hc Pllf10mll(, Ooctots and N\AeS ae leerued bv tne $tote OI Calfomc. BUT PA UL SAGE OF THE FDA 's litigation un· it said only "about a doien of Dr. Contreras' best cases" were received. He said in eight of these cases in which the pa· t.ients were still living, American investigators ex - amined all records. "The National Cancer Institute didn't rind , evidence that Laetrile was doing anything," Sage said. "They've lost hands.down in the scientific forum." ···-~--... .,.,._._.,......... ... . . ... ~ • ruesdny, Jonuary '· 1sn DAIL y PILOT A 7 Dy ea Keane Mother God? SexUt Purge Urged LOUISVILLE. Ky. CAP) -A group of Presbyterian students and teachers believes it.'s time to purge sexist language from sermons and re- ligious publications and recognize God the Mother . "There are some places in the Bible where we feel God is more like a mother than like a Cather," said Thomas ParSOfW, moderator of the group at Presbyterian Tbeolog1cal Seminary here. "In thoae instances, perhaps, }le should be called God the Mother." . The group has recommended that omcial publications of the seminary sabstitute the word "humanity" for "mankind," "sisters and brothers" for ·'brotherhood," and "clear cut" where the words "black and white Issues" are used. In a slatement with the recommendations, the group urged that the new language be adopted "in a ll ofCiclal publications, chapel services, classrooms and lectures" at the semJnary. . 111 wovldn't want to hibernate all winter. I'd miss Christmas." Many Happy Returns to you onourSOth anniversary Our 50 years of growi since 1927, was made possible by people like yourself. Our many friends, who are savers, borrowers. employees and business neighbors. Friends are essential for success and for a full life. We're grateful to our old friends, and we're looking 73/% Realize Nowearn I • 08 06% an annual yield ot • o bVC~ing dolly . s1o00 ~ baf..tnce 6 .,,,., #'nlnirn1Jm fedftral reguf.ioo,,e otrmf w.et\dt.l~'' ft~.,.. <•lli~acx;oultfl~tfl:•'fJhft/ a.If~'"'' • w~•ainttll' t.OUC.ton W't fteJ9$1 •.vn""9' Fovr foc::etlo"' In Oren11• County . EyE.RyTIME 11tE Roosl'ER CROWS yolllMONEy GROWS forward to making new ones in the years ahead. Drop by any Republic office lo leam how you can put your money to wori< in the most favorable savings plan to fit your needs. We've had 50 years of substantial experience helping people make better tomorrows for themselves .... SANTA ANA 17th St. West of Newport Freeway (714) !>41-5286 ANAHEIM 202 Anaheim Plaza, 500 N. Euclid St. (714) 956·8290 LAGUNA NIGUEL 30232 Crown Valley Parkway (714) 495-0850 WESTMINSTER 134 Westminster Mall/Bolsa & Sen Diego Fwy. (714) 894·5347 Hud Otllc::e: AL TADENA 2246 N lake Ave. (213) 791·'!81/681·6611 T-lve Locallont: AL TADENA • ANAHEIM • ARCA DI • BUABANK CLAREMONT • HACIENDA HEIGHTS • LAGUNA NIGUEL• LOS ANGl:LES PASADENA • PICO RIVERA • SANTA ANA • WESTMINSTER lnsurttd, charterttd and svpervrsed by eg&nc1es ol lhe United StaJos Government -·-l SAVINGS ACCOUNTS INSURED TO $40.000 ~g_\J .... --- - For your convenience. all offices are apen Saturday I i I • • " J p .. • . .. I I DAJLY PILOi Tunaay, Jat1uary 4. 1m _o_u_E_E_N_1e ______ a_v _,h_1_1 -'"-•e_,,_a_nd...,.i Cordova, ltf a Che1nistry Grant Told ...... .,.,..,. ... , ......... ~ Assemblymen Open Offices The Orange Coast's two newly elected as- semblymen have announced plans for opening of dJstrict field offices. Ron Cordova (0-EI Toro) says the field office for the 74th Assembly District will be located in El Toro and Dennis Mangers CD-Huntington Beach) will open his 73rd District office in Huntington Beach. CORDOVA'S 0Ff1CE will open today in the Horn.e Savings building at 23861 El Toro Road. The office. which will be headed by Cordova 's ad- ministra tive assistant Lee Walk.ins, is in suite 206. The phone number Is 830-7474. Mangers said he is temporarily located in the offices of bis predecessor, Robert Burke, a t 17732 Beach Blvd., suite G. The phone number is 848-1168. ORANGE COUNTY Class Set For Bikers Dr. Larry E. Ovennan. associate professor or chemistry at UC Irvine, and t he U CI Department or Chemistry have been awarded a 135,000 grant by the Camille and Henry Dreyfus Foundation, New York. The Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar Grants are awarded for the benefit of younc faculty members who have s hown e xceptiona l promise In teaching and research. Under lhe terms of the grant, $32,000 is reserved for use by the raculty member and the remainder goes to lhe 1.nsUWUon for cmeral support purpo&ea. Dr. Overman, a 33-year-old oi-ganic chemist, ls Involved in developing ne w m ethods for aynlhHlaing biologically active molecules, indud- i ng anti-c ancer agents, toxins. analgesics and other ITllCdicinal and experimental compounds. A Costa Mesa resident.. he joined the UCI chemistry faculty In 1971 after spending two years at Columbia University on a N ationaJ lnstitµtes or Health postdoctoral fellowship. ouAL1TY 1n1urance at reasonable prices! "I'd like to report a couple of obnoxious moguls." After the end of January, Mangers' offices will be in the Sand Dollar Financial Court, 16371 Bea ch Blvd., suite 221. The phone number will remain un- changed. Motor bike courses for botJJ beginning and ad· vanced riders will be of. fered again for college credit beginning Jan. 25 through the combined s upport of Saddleback College a nd a l ocal motor bike dealer in the Saddleback area. AUTO HOME OWNERS Deatm Elsewhere MANGERS" STAFF will be headed by his ad- ministrative assistant Ken Willis and includ~ of- fice manager Ardis Brown and community rela- tions specialist Kathy Bode. Honda Mission Viejo, 26371 Avery Parkwa,, provides registration in· formation and tuition for the six-week classes. Minimum a ge for re- gistration in beginner courses ls 13. MAH11D ova n ........ '116. PU YIAI $25,000 ••• ~'!'~~".. 56 7 • YUllLY $ k 6 6 $50,000 • • • • • • • B •. BERKELEY <APJ Michael T . Mana, 57. son of the late Nobel laureate Thomas Mann, died at hi s O r inda hom e, Univenily of California : ••at•• I $TAffl'OH .J~E IECICE", ,.. 1ldeM tll ~M Hiii~. Cl lllomi._ Pl .... -0.C-)I, IW. "' SI~ 11 ..,. 0 ..... M • ._ ~ -· YIYed "" Ilk ---Mr. -Mr'\. Harri\ l•c h r ot L1•un1 Mllh. C..llorn&.; two -. G¥J 8eca.r. Erl< BtcU r of So\llMi,1<1. ~ brolh<'r Erwin h<l~r el Tw •enc•. C• ~erYIC•' 1J Moo" ·nru.ar~•v January & •I P.clllc Vi.w ~ ,,.. l~rment Paclfk v-~ Pit\ Pt.Cl FI C VIE W M O"T UAAY NtwPort Bt•<h dl•e<Cor'lo. -.11'0. MACNlll ELLt. RUTH Mt.OIEZ. ,...._ ol Co\ta Mtw, C.111« ... I . P-... , Doomt>oor 1' "''-S-•1-"" -Rodney H«l'lel ol C0\11 -... C..: d•u9hlen J•vn1t H•cher otl c.M• Mow. C• Ol•na Hac.,.c tll C..11 Mt~• C• "'''" M•r v llwwt .. C.0.1• Mew Ca Eva LOU _,, ol So<lo<a Ca lwo bfolhet\ -. M. Threet ol Hunltngton B .. cll. CA.; Bern•rd M Tf\r••t ot Ar _ _,_..,., Strvttt\ w ttl br-h~ld W@d.,..,...y January ~ •I , 00 PM .. , SMITH TUTHILL L t.MB Wnlcltll ~ with off*< ••nl (..ftut ti !.tnHf\ ot C.tvery (h.epet Co't• Mii'>\.~ C• Prtv•lf _... •~rment to ~ At E 1 loro Ct,.,......,,.'W' !,t,\ITH TLJTHILl Lt.MB WO\l<lttl °'1l0fl dtre<lor\ •4& '818 SCHIFF MOR TON ll08toRT ~CIHFr 1onq·11mt rt\1dent nf Nt'llWPC>r\ &-«". C..lltc>rru• P•ued •w"y Janu.ry 1 1~71 ...... WI\ I rtt.tl ft\tdle lltYfl\fn'W'"I br<*er •nd ~mt>tr of the rt•I ..,,,Alt bodfd Hp t\ '\Ut'#l¥ed bV hi\ bfl!IOvf!'G w1t1J Audrt Rebet<• Schiff •I'° bt"IOv"'d •ttther ot lwo dnUQN~r\, \/i.. vlan S<htll tno ~tll<lr• Sll .. ftr "'" N orm1n Schiff . 1dor•d thrf>~ qranttc.h1!11rt n, Wenelv. ~8ry•n ,.,,a llandl Our orolher co H-rt S<Mt of Oatld\ r,,. .. a, \1U t ( Oorothv c1armon. 11.•n••' City, M1,,.,..,1 In l•N Of llowt" la,,,lly reqtanl\ - Oon!. lo Cf\~rltv Mt"torl•I s.rvk e\ >MH be N ld 1n l(•n\•1 (Hy, Mi\\OUf'I CATI°' r "ORA A CATICIC, ~ ... •¥ Oo<tmller 18 "'• •C •te t1 yeen 5uf'vlvW bv el•~f'ltf'r .P4trkl1 9'.l'l1CW" 01 H•Qtrrn•n. f4Ullo, e r•n•l\OM Willia m C Lyn" 8 u wl on of H~rrnMt. tCS.t\O. Mt<h•tl f &u•'on 01 L~9una Nl9utl C• 11•a11cl· O•u9r.t•r\ M r\ G•ry SO\lfJh of ~-BH<I• Ca Mr\ Pa"' """' Of (.,,,, .. ¥t\• (• f11tl 9rt•t Qr•P"ldUuldf'PI\ M r• C•t1c• ••t • Ntl>tP o• Htw H•mP'"''f ~ , .. , ~t o• c .. 1tto1n1• tor •• ..,..,... ...,, '"'" hY\IMnG JOY.pl'! W (•tt<• .._ft '~ ''-'''""'' M•vor of ~" &fol'ntrdtrw> (,f'4'#!,ICJI' \ffYI(•' ••fp l'\fllj .. , Pttc1t1r V•~'lltl C•m,.ltt'I' Dn FfUU Y O•r•l'Tlt>t'' l\ tilt • "' 10 ~ AM (.>,,,.,,,.d ov 8IO'll¥f"f Orotttt•f\ AA(y1uJr• \ant., -'"• C .- llf Uf IT GQACE l1l6l(11 , ... ., df'nt 01 ~vnl•r.qrt>tt 9,.,,,.,, (" \vrv1Vf'd bv """° CJ.luqh••r Md• 'f &.tnOO H1.1nt1~0f\ 8"'f' ~ ( • 1•11' \Ot'I JO\rf)l't A l••01r t o' f>.uarnou"t (.1 onfl brot,.,.r Stf'vr-Potl#ffttf/ o, ''""""' (~ fl~ Q'endcn1tdrtn fOYr (Jff'A, qr.nioOtHOrt"n "''''"'ion J,.,,..,,.,., 4 T~~h 1 ' a. 1 If PM R~ry 1 ,., PM Tut\d .. lf 01td•Y 6rott'l•r\ O\ii~I ~ul'\•rttl m•'' W rdM\dAo;' l..,.v.11ry ' 10 110 AIM \1 Simon & '""'° (Atf"Ol•f crw,ctit •iti"t•nqton S--..-h CA Ot•1<1•t1rtq F Atft•r Thom•• 4jt~Qr OF M il"lt•rment A.ti ~I• 0-mrr~,., l 1)""4 9.,. ft ,, <.• O•,._ tl>tJ tw 01lfM• 6rOI"-'' Mf)rtu"''f l,.tl ~.,,.. f)l11f H\lf\t1ngrf"W\ ff"'·"" (.t Ml 1111 JOHo;SoH ftl)f' • J()HN\0N •''l' 11 'f""\•d-'>"t • ..,,, '""'o" o ..... ,,, r" p~,,.,, ,....,"" \AlurdA'f ,.,,•iA'l• , Utl \u,.., ,.,,.,, l»'f o~ brll')I'"""' H•t r., JO""'O" l)f Nl')r o ( • O"'f \1• l•r "•"'"' IO""'o" of ~o"o"".t C• ~,. t •ftt\ #111 0, Ptl'ld W•tM•'d"'f 1....,,.,... S 1~7 al I~ JO "M OO<Mv f" •tn•fv L•'••OOd C"•Pfl Jtl• W-rufl t.vt <af C•t\01\I, Lonq 9oac11 Ca IHJl 0 1 _.11 l.llllWIS EDOt.11 OEN TON 1.EWIS, '~ of N.._t 8H(ll Ca lllo•n•• Pa- officials announced Mon- day. He was a professor of German at UC Berkeley and the author of aix books, including a biography of his father. -Y January 2. 1'77. Sur1rt'4d •Y Iii• wlle Eie.onor O. Lewi•; llro-JoM J. IA'WI• ot s. ... Francluo. Cl. -.Y W....•day J•ftuery S. IT71 e t 1:JO PM Our L•dV Quon ol AnQtlS Cll.,rch Ma\\ 01 CIH"llen ..,,l•I l'llwrMMv Janu.ary 6, 1'71 •I •:JO AM. Our Ladf °""" ol .._u... ~ al Pacific \f1tw Memorial Park. l •tt1·l•r1eron Corotte O•I M•r '*-r•t HOf'l'tie Olre<tor\ '" t~ of 1-.. -.11 .... , mo t>e -10 The HM't 1"11..0. NAYNIE KEITH lll(NT H"YNIE. ~clont ol 0.-, C.alltorflla. Pa~-•-Y JMoMry ,, ltn, He ~ "'"'1....,"' '"' wllle ICM!oe ~.,,.i.; two *>5 O..rles lljl,, Kr.,.tc: "IC.llenl A. O""'"""'; ~ Catfty Haynie ol Or-; Vt<.i .Jo Ella" ICrentr. s.~ wm .. -~., .-.., ... co.oo AM at $MITH TUTH ILL LAM& Both said the field offices will be open from 9 a.m. lo S p.m . Monday through Friday. The two assemblymen, who will be sharing a condominium in the Carmichael area with another freshman, Assemblyman Bruce Young (D- Cerritos >. say they plan to spend weekends in their districts and be available for meeting with consti- tuents on Saturdays. THE TWO SAID they plan to fly lo Sacramento on Sunday night and return to their districts Thurs- day night so they will be tn their ofli ces every Fri- day. During the legislative session, mail may be sent to the fi eld offices or to Cordova's and Mangers' Sacramento offices addr~ssed to the State Capitol, Sacramento 95814. Cordova's Sacramento office phone number is (916) «s-7222. Mangers' is C9t6) 445-8377. THE EARL'S l'LUMllMG HEATING . AJI COHD. er ......... ..,__1 Sl.tf\l•Ct In You' Ate1--C.lt MtSStON Vlf.JO ~aga ca .... l>O C.P .. l••n~ 1 • ,, A..lv,. "·· J 495-0401 cosr4M~ .. 1~~6 .. _rtBI"" 1• '.I IJ- . 642-175 °11"" COLUGl STUDIMT • StHtiLI Ofll 20 • s1so. P&Ylil STORE KEEPERS FACTO.RIES APARTMENTS CONTRACTORS ,.... ....... .._. s..t..,. Ir L.- ccmr JOll ••• _... P' al aMp ,.,.... ffrtoo .-c .. YACHTS LARGE BOAT DISCOUNTS EXTENDED c;RUISING TO MEXICAN WAltRS COMMERCIAL BOATS BOB PALEY .. MOITHOC-546-3205 & ASSOC, INC. SOUTHOC-642-6500 'Wtn11tCtft ~ wltll p--"" 11 Stade ~ offtc'-''-lni.r'Mftl H«llOf -*'° "e\I Memerlel Park . $MITH '""' TUTHILL LAMI 'l't .. 1<11" Owptl ~~ ltAY Show Gams• JOHN EDWt."0 RAY,~ of co.i. -· C.lltornla. Pu --Y _,.., 1, 1'11 al IM -of U ~ Sut'vl-.-, hh w1tt .Jae_.... ".., Of °' .... """'e. <"""'e" 11-..... Rese~~h !llwrry 11.., ot w .. 111n91on; s. .. -'IA4 11(....1 ~rr of Sltlnl• A .... Ml•• -K .... ., MO._ ol El Toro; •™' surriWIO lly "'1tP~<,.Uc.t'f'en O•n Dutro; C-anov CM,.,, Ktvln .i.n .. n. l(r1, ~--•II o! Co'&W Nitta. l>roltwr Biii R•V 01 or._; a l .. Mr al\d M" E F Sc~ultr ol T h011\Al\d O a h ; two QO'-llilor*" 110 .. ,,.,. "'°"""" of El Ton, Jellray "" ol ~I• 11 .... Fri-\ may call T-y ).._.., • 1,,,,.. ' 00 A.M to •·oo PM .. SMITH TUTHILL LAM& Wotclllf CN~I Sftr'#1c,..., Wtdnt\d"Y Jar"1u11ry S, at 10 00 t.M ol SMITH TUTHILL LAMB Wt\1t•iU (..ni!ipel wU~ lt'I• Or-F . Ken· ton 8t,.hor• of tht Centr~t 81blt" Churt h off~••t1no tritf!''"ef'!t H.,bO< ",,., Mernon•t P•r ~ SM ITH TUTHILL l."M8 Wt\lctlll Cn•pel Ot~l~ .... -KllLLETT CLARA. ANDERSON IC E LLETT re· "-t ot L.>4u,.. Buell. CltolorNt P-.Wd t way Oeumt>oor 11 1'76 •• i... -Of 101 ., .. ,, Su•v•wd by EC ICl'l~tt ot i....o.-Buch. ~ Prl•M• fMn1ly \,tr~•tt\ tnu,nm•nt .t ~ l•tr'I Vf~wt C~mt-te-r';'. A tltnd• (Al to'"'• S,h•tl,.,. l•Quf\a Be•<" Nil1'11i1'''1 director\ ELLIOTT V£AHE 00HAl0 ELLIOTT rMI dPnt et Newonrt B•• h C•llfonu1 P~Wd ••I Y Jll"tWrt ) 1977 He I\ """'~ ttY ru-. .,,,., N•om• Ethan. ~·r )~.,, (tOOit• Of Corort.1 drf it.Mr \on Joru\ G (lllOf1 (Ill TU\l•n ~IC 4f"•~l\1lctr~"1 S.-r\'1(tt Wlff be ~,..,,.,,. w1tt\ 1nttrm,.nl oll ~t•fn V1f'w C•m;olfl>rv AH,.nd• C.J1fornla 8.att1 8trqf'ron Co,.on.i oe• M•r F°Uf'fl'r•f H0'1'1~ CIH'f'C'O'~ CA"TEA I tCIM CARTER, ruldt"I ol lAq\lf'\tl Hiii\ C1Hto,n14 Pen~ eway OP<tmtwr ,., 1'14 Survived Dy flh wtft ,-,..nc:~ H'llm\ C•rtttr, son 8~ I( carter Jr ol lllc~mond C.lttornl•; two Qr •nd(f\lldrtn K Im Ann•tt• C.,ttr. Oa•ld W C.rter, llOlh of Hun- tlf"Oton &l•ch, C• two \i\ter\ Mr~. It A M<Cl•n•olla~. F't .,nfe .. II M •qulrt , both of Shr•veoort, l.oul'\I~. M•morltt' \#nt1Cf1, wUr ~ ,...,.. 1 00 PM Thur\d•Y Jan ... •v 6 11 P.,.lflc v .... Cll.tC.1 Offlcoall"G 0. w 11111'" p.,.~,, of T"9 CO'TWftUnOY C"urc"' 8-t ff\e B•v lftttrrnt"' ff•r1••c Yt•--., ,._ • ..,.,.ort•t ••r• PACIFIC VIEW MEMORlt.L PAlllC.. ...... 00f1 fiMt•f" dlr•ttOf'1 .... 11'00 MALLllSS MAIEL G M"LLESS ... ...,., _, '*""M'Y l 101 lov1f'llQ rnottwr Of Aii't\ Mt"UI.,.. 0 Nfttl of O•"A P&t"1 C... '-'" J•<•u• M tNUN t of New Hr\iltY •tWt \t•nl•v M•llf"t\ of '"· dl..wootltt mottwf" ,,. .••• f1' Petf'ie:lt J 0 N•lll t.ho '""'lv"<I lly two "" '-" •"Cl w~n oralldc~ttdran Rowry T-.., .wnl"'I J-ry " nn at 1 lO PM at The C ... M I of 0'0..- ~ Hiiis Mortuary, tun Allele Penway, ~9<1N Hiii\, C... i:.,.,., .. Eleven UCI under- graduates. recipients of s p ec i a l rese ar c h fellowships, will present lhe resul ts or their re- search effo rts at a cam- pus sympos i um from 2:30 to S p.m . Thursday in Room 534 of the Physical Sciences Build- ing. The stud e nts were chosen to participate in the Physical Science Fellows Progr am on the strength of research pro- posals they s ubmitted last s pring. T he pro- gr am, sponsored by UCT's School of Physical Sciences and the UCI Committee for Instruc- tional Development, pro- v i d es th e s t u d ents laboratory s pace and equipme n t un der the direction of faculty ad- visors and financial sup- port during the summer. They include Ramon Ferra, a senior from Santa Ana, chemistry; David · Murphy, junior, West Covina, physics; Phillip Nunn, junior, Los Angeles. mathematics: Margaret Kline, senior, Sa nt a M o ni ca, c he mis try: E lain e Karchefski. senior, San- ta Ana. chemistry. CS~C3 om mJ0 ~(ll] lE!l:l mm~ ill OffiVO[)~ ~VJ[£]~8 YOU'LL UKE DOING BUSINESS Wl11f (JS. WE ARE A LOCAL. "HOME GROWN" SAVINGS AND LO~. . . ' -"':. ~ r ~· ; ' ' - ,,, tt \f ... "''O<J•r ~ •k '"''"""' ,:H ·r.,l.·°""" < ,,,,m-11" o~ 8JI FVtk.ood .. Pin ,/1 f • <>r• n /r, ,, .-.S., Ir 'nrd I 111•:" o• ),,,,,,I•( 1 ~r •''•I'•'"'' In f•I ,,.., ~t ''''"-I; 1Jw rri11nur~ lo 11'c "''"' /• ,.,d V on.I r,.""' ,1r '' 11 r1• h1 tnu,., f\nt1• 1i1~ fr-, r 11L ,. f r• I/ I •If 1111~ f•fHlt d• ICY ,., .. ~,.. ,,.,,, ~f' C'"°'Oflf' thr 4th n/ Jyt\ t-v ·~,,'°" n11 tf.t 0Mv • C·3~ <""'"~ ol~,. I"":."'''' fk: P• und :J·M ... lh ,,.,. """"'·O t ,,,,(Id .. '¥~"'" ftnll'f,. f"N"" Oo• ~ u .,,,,_ trod ~,.,, Art'tlfi'lt •''"' ttc, l'••f ( ,,,,,._ l .rl/ r •\l~•·'I •1ol l~."" ""''-'"•'.J'"-'"''1"'''•/l'"·'••111h t• '~ ·~hl"t r, ,. r '''•'•'lfl"'llt {Prfff-/Qhr' , ... ·tNt"' In"' I?,,,,,~ n ,, ... n41· ... Tndov "•"~"'"" "L""°' n.o..d-<J/ ,,,.,..rd """"'l< and jltrridly ............ f 11 rt' t• ,, 11<11 t• ,,,,, I 1 m "''•' I """'''. c· ,,... ''"" • ·"fl,,. , lt•••l l'f /)1)1 I l1hrl f, H•I'> .-----------· :" .. ~=:..~~~.::11:· ;;.::,.~ Jatne s B as hki n , junior, Tucson , Ariz., che m istry ; Richard Phillip a , s enior, Anaheim , chemistry; Alan Rice, senior, Anah eim , physics; Dominic AffinU.o, aeolor, Sacramento, physics; Charles Marlow, junior, Newport Beach, chem la try, and Gerald Harrill, first-year graduate st ud e nt, Orange, mathematics. tALTZ-IH•HON fUHHALHOMI Co<onadel Mar 673-IMSO Costa Mesa 648-2424 HUllOAOWAY MO•TUAIY 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 642-9150 McCOIMICIC MOltTUAlllS Laguna Beach 49<4-94f5 Laguna Hiiis 788-0933 San Juan Capistrano 495-1776 rAC!JtC fllW MIMOllAL PAIK Cemetery MortuatY Chapel 3500 Pacific View Drive Newport. Callforn1a 6«-2700 ,_,AMILf C°'°'41.Al fUHHAL HOMI 7801 Boise Ave. Westminster 893-3525 SMTNI' MOITUAIY 927 Main St. Hu11Ungton Beach 538-0539 SNl'TN TUTHK.&. lA)9 OUI WllTCLW CHA,.. Moftu.ry •• 8<4M888 427 e. 17th St>, CoetaM ... 0111• Pofnl lnlumonl In •~-111.....il\, ,,,.,,.,.. o·eon-.._ Hltf\ Mo<11Nry dlt'9CIOrs McUaTNY t.OAIU McCARTHY, rt~l ..... 1 of SMI• Ana. C.lllor,.lt. PHMd •••Y DK-""' :JO, 1'76 Siie h "'""-b'I -her Lff Wal-er ol Stenton, Cl. Servi<°' •!Id Interment lo be orfvatt. SMITH TUTHILL L"M8 WutcllU °"'"'' director\. M6-41t. IN APPRECIATION ........ PORT MESA CONVALESCENT ~OSPITAL 1~ alllff end petlents. .-es this opportunity to thank the entire community and especlllly the following for the conc.m and thoughtfulness shown the pallanta during the Christmas S.ason: Calvwy Chapel CubScout Peck 1305 lrvlne Baptlat Church Manne~ Church Protestant wo,,,en's leligue of El TOf'O Rancho la Sl•ta Sewing BM Saint AndreM Pr~an Chruch We wtah all of vou a very happv and ~u• New y..,., II you ar. looking fol' a NM y..,·, molulfon w. augg.tt that you mlgtlt edopt a tenlOf cltli.n In our convaleecent hoapltal for the coming YI* to ti.Ip them In m.ny PoMlbl• WllYI and be rew•~ by the good feeling and aatl1faot1on you wlll gtt'from,.heiptng thoert who m.., fMI not>ody car. tor them. It may truly bring . you a happy new ye•. .. Ovr Adltl•<'l>lro#I!• Stoff. J•//r •· Poul. Mo'I· Jar><. Girr. •nd 81/1, dMU" ""'"' ft>t fUllJlf Updrul0'1. (}11f fttJrlillnnal t~, .. Cf'lllflh tt a'MI /""°' fWlu. o rvun"' U;11n.-rl fl.>" murot o' o f,ot,.t,,~p. WE PAY HIGH INTEREST ON INSURED SAVINGS. lflli:T ..... A(';COUIH t t MAT ••rt'fC)Ulll._tOI '"" llf.l"T •nt • -...... "".,.'-''"' •rtc.O-~....,,,,,, ....... ............ ., .......... '-""'" .. We are easy to find-easy to get to-and great to do business with! Come In today ••• and mett yow neighbors at lntne Savtnp. $an0..,."""" J • 111\ll'HUA\lll!Qt . oe i ,. "•""" Mir"''-. '; + 18552 MncArthut Boultvafd. Irvine (714) 1ll·64M I'-> Monoltyfhun.i..yQ~ r...i.yt• • . \ otOUV.~ IAYINOI "°"""''. 0...1...-o.i ·-5.25~ 5.39% "4V•"d• t'r11111nra'" M Of•ftltt .~ '~·\.'9. '~ .... ,.A._..,._.,,...c_,,,...,,,....,... ...... A-C•.nu..,t ... , ....... """-1\l••l'l"V._t . ,._.._..,..,..,.....,. to1 ll)"• .. • •.• u, ..... ,, s•.ao•• .... --''~"°•"'·· ~'""'·~· ''ono""" A-•-• .,~..,,._... --.. 5.75~ 6.5o~ 6.75% 1.so .. 7.75·· -------------- 5.92% 6.72·:. 6.98% 7.79~. 8.06,. r I • J ' l I l t j ' # ( ' ' f • . • t • ' LM. BOfld Yo11ng Love Analyzed In a study of 500 college coeds. one out of every five said she'd been in love three or more times between lbe ages of 12 and 18. And almost four out or five -71 percent, to be exact -said they were in love at the Ume oC the survey. Most everybody experiences that thing called love or something like it, so these statistics may not be too il- luminating. Whal l lhougbt more curious about the fin- dings was the fact they indicate women do not seem to be as concerned as do men with physical appearances. Fewer than half the girls in this poll could specify certain physical traits they preferred io their men. The men themselves were far more sure of what they wanted their girlfriends to look like. The foregoing comes from the same research, pre- viously noted here, which purports to prove the average person falls in love seven times before marrying. ~ Q. ··vears ago l read how many times I'd have to stroke cat"s fur on a cold day to generate enough electricity to hght a 75-watt bulb, bull forget .. "!" A. Approximately 9,200,000 times TRUE PITCH Electronic tests indicate the better violinists rarely play on true pitch more than 40 percent of the time. And the most gifted professional singers. this research reveals, do not often hold exact pitch longer than a tenth of a second. Juke boxes came into existence the same year that Franklin 0. Roosevelt first took the presidential oath of office. although he was n"l to blame, I don't mean that. You may be relieved to know lhal if your skull is average, you can depress its width in a vise by about 10 pe rcent before it cracks GO'nlAM You've heard New York City referred to as Gotham, but do you know why? Washington Irving wrote a s hort story about a town so caJled, noted particularly for its Collies. The name's early application to New York City was sardonic. Horse exp«!rts talk about bloodlines as though there were a difference between the blood of thoroughbreds and ordinary horses. Do you know what? There is a difference. In the thoroughbred's blood, the red corpuscles contain more hemoglobin, are smaller, and are far more numerous. When compiling the membership list of the ··My Name ls a Poem" Club. let us not overlook those CaJifornian.s known as Alister McAlister and Monte LaBonte. ln early baseball parlance, a "bonehead" was a runner who failed to touch second base. · From that. says our I..anguage man, comes the word "boner." An ex pert who ought to know contends the only big game animal th.at has never been hunted successfully with bow and arrow is the rhinoceros Addreu mail to L.M Boyd, P.O. Bor 1560, Costa Mesa. 92626 (;111 a prohlr m • rht•11 lffltt• to Pat Dunri Pot Will cut red laP<' r1etl111<J the onsu:er!I a11d action you net><l to sol&:I' mN1wtw.<1 m ym.:ernmenr and busi· ne!I~ Motl 111111r r11w\r1011.~ tn Pat {)unri At Your Sernc<'. Ora11qe c 'ua.,1 f)<Jli11 P1lol P.<J Box 1560. Co.<rta Mesu (',\ .1121;26 Include yotJr telephone nu mhn Tlir· 1'1111111111 rippear.'1 daily except .'iaturdat/!I 'l'ftlftetl'• l'b1aH11 Ea•ed DEAR PAT I purchased a Singer Stylist sew- ing machine <Model 61 more than five years ago, and t·v~ had nothing but trouble with it since. I have writ~n to Singer repeatedly and the macblne has been serviced many times. but the problems con- tinue. The ma.chine won't sew without bunching the bobbin thread. skipping stitches or breaking the thread entirely. Last January a Singer represen· tative from New York informed me that the machine wouJd be fixed again I'm still waiting. M.M .• Huntington Beacb l'our sewing machine now bu been picked ap aad ls belnJ repaired. The Qaatomer Relatlenl DepartmeQt of Sln1er Co. (313 Underblll Blvd., Syoeset, NY 1 lt7l) was contacted abotlt yollJ' pro- blem. After several pbone calls, a spokesman re- poned tlaat your maddDe would be repaired. The -1y reason offered for the delay was that your pllloae number bad been misplaced. Retpou~• Tree-91etedou , DEAR PAT: J bought a very small Washington •.'" navel orange tree last summer. ll's grown quite a .. .. bit already. How big will it get, and what kind of • fertilizer does it need? I 'd also like lo know the ! name of a seed company that spetiaJizes ln herbs. t J.H .• Mission Viejo Your orange tree will Jrow to a height or ZS to 30 feet. accordiag to a nursery contacted by A VS. Feed U. ammoah1m sulfate fertlllzer ln late wlnter. It c~• be pruned lightly at any time, but save heavy pnm· lDC utll early spring. George W Park Seed Co., Greenwood, SC %"'8, apeclallzes In herb seeds. Greewl•g l•r • 6•• a!C1 DEAR PAT: I'm a new Call(ornla resident. After hearlng about the.! delights of the avocado, l • bought some and put them in lbe refrigerator. They turned brown. Does this always happen, or did I buy some bad avocados" P.T .. Hunt1n1ton Beach The avocados were good. but >'°'* '-.lured "em by chUIJa1. Fre11bl)' picked avocackNJ a&ored at tem· paatatt1 below ff degl'ffS F, read poorly to cold 1&on1e. J9 addlUo• c.o bl'OW1llng ol Ille nesh, ~Y Sep.rated Sen. Donald W. Riegl e <D · Mich.), whose . affair. durin~ his ntst'-marr1age beearne an issttt in his campaign Jast fall, an- noun ce d his s econd wife Meredith wi ll seek a divorce. SAVE TAXES Tuesday, January 4. 1077 _ D~ILY PILOT A9 Tip: 'You Stink' SEATTLE <AP J For $5, Rich Fowler wtll cu.II up your boss and tell him -anonymously -that you hope hls socks rol. He'll also deliver any other message to anybody. as long as it isn't scandalous, s landerous or obscene. JDS BRAINCHILD, Confiden- UaJ Communication Service, is a scheme to make money from other people's cowardliness, he admits. "The last. company where 1 worked there was a fellow, ac- tually a good friend, who sat al the desk adjacent to mine and he didn't use any deodorant," said Fowler, 31. • 'l didn't know how to tell him without hurlln& hls fetl lngs .•. "The other people in the office feltthesameway andl'maurewe adl would have chipped in rive bucks to have somebody tell him. 'look, the people in .YOtU" office like you, but how about. trying a little Old Spice in the momin&!' " THAT E PISODE, AND news of a similar message business in San Francisco, got Fowler and his wife Gina s tarted in business l.n mid-December. He said he uses common sense in bis deal- ings and consults a lawyer if a mess,.ge seems out or order. "If a lady calls and says, 'Call Mabel and tell her her husband is running around with Joan down the str<'el and she should know 1t,' I won't do It." he said. Not all the requested messages are negative. "MAYBE A PERSON wants a raise but is too s hy to tell the boss. Or say a new guy in the of . rice bis first day is kind or shaky. Have an anonymous caller call and tell him , 'It'll be a better day tomorrow. Han~ in there.'" Fowler, who has also sold life insurance and worked with senior cltizetis, said be expects heavy buslneas in love notes. ''A feliow called last night and wanted to cJve his wile a bit of an erotic message and be wanted lo keep her guessing who it was from," Fowler said. SAVE TIME SAVE AT FIDELITY FEDERAL NOWHERE ELSE CAN YOU FIND All THESE FREE TAX RELATED SERVICES! Ifs all here at Fidelity Federal ... your convenient One·Stop Savings Center. Income tax preparation PLUS real tax savings through the use of bona fide tax shelters PLUS the highest Interest allowed by law on your Insured savings! INCOME TAX PREPARATION To start. let us Pfepore your normal personal 1976 Federal and California income tax returns absolutely FREE for ftrsl time usefs with o Rdellty Federal account of SS.000 or m<Xe. $2.500 In additional deposits required for repeat users. Other state returns con also be prepared at o nominal tee. Check with our savings counselors tor fur ther quallflcotlon details. Personal. private tax: conference, plus computerized pceparotion of your returns to help assure you toke ad- vantage of every possible deduction to keep your taxes OS low OS possible. LIMITED AVAILABILITY Appointments ore ltmited Assure yourself of o choice selection by booking your reservct1on early for January or February and get o valuable free gift at the some time. FREE FINANCIAL FILE. This usetul organ izer is available only at Fidelity Federal. Made spect01ly to our design it's yours free Complete wrth nine built-in drvrders to separate ond organ- ize your bills. recalpts and other finonc1ol papers Perfec t t or your tax documents. loo. FREE TRUSTEE FEE NO TRUSTEE FEE ON IRA DR KEOGH ACCOUNTS Start now to reduce your 1977 income loxes by opening a tax-deferred retirement account. By opening your ac- count now. roiher than at year end. you·n also dete< taxes on interest credited to the account durlng the entire year. l.R.A. (INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNTS) for Any Employed Person. If not already covered by a qualified retirement pion, set aside up to $1.500 earned income each year exemp1 from current Federal and California income taxes. No cur- rent tox on inter.est earned. either KEOGH RETIREMENT ACCOUNTS for Any Self·Employed Person Set aside up to 57.500 of earned income each year exempt from current federal income taxes and $2.500 of California state rncome tax. Interest earned also exempt from income taxes until withdrawn 1n retirement years. OTIIER FREE SERVICES EXTRA BONUS. Fidelity Federal Pays 73/1% (equot to 806% compounded dolly) on any balance l.R.A. or Keogh Account. AND All THESE FREE SERVICES, TOD! * free notarizing • Fr•• travel••' cheques Free document copying Fr•• Savings Bond redemption AND WITH SPECIFIED BALANCE ACCOUNTS Free money orders free collectlon service for trust deed and other notes ond leases free sofe deposit boxes Free Operation Safeguard for Identification of valuables • Free checking accounts Free MoneyGard for o check month. and mony, many more • Save by moll -postage paid both ways MIG.HIST INTEREST Your sovlngs account at Fidel- ity Federal earns the highest interest allowed by low on in- sured savings! 7%% per yeor 6 veor C8fllfteote Accounts Sl.000 mlnmUm A~ Yield 806't 0 7Y2% per yeor d year Cerl•fteole Accounts Sl 000 minmum Arrvot Vlek1 7 ~'lo · 6%% 6X% per yeor per year current role pet year 2'h year C9'!1fico1e l year Certificate Possbool< Accounh Accounts Accounls SS minimum Sl.000 mlnmum Sl.000 mlr'imum Annual Yield 530't' Arrool Ylelel 6 08'l. • ArnJOI Vlefd 6 72'l. ' "lnt91pJI ~ (tgllo/..,.,., ''"' «•,,. "" ~· 10' Of"' V""' ,.-.,,,_,.,.....,, •'9"'11'°"' r"'C)Ult ~sto•lllOI Pl"'Qll.., IOI-'•"""'°'~ ""Cl/l'f!!1t(leol•• We plan to save you TAX DOLLARS. Let us show you how. FSf )C ---....-.----......__ ..... _ FIDELITY c7~SAVINGB ANO LOAN Al IOCIAflON 21 offices to serve you statewide COSTA MESA NEWPORT BEACH 1855 Harbor Blvd. 645-4420 1 •dopa bitter tal&e ud IOl\en H evea&,. Doa't atTe ep oo avocado.. bat Mxi tJm~ let &Item ripe• at '•••••llliiiili•~••lillii••••••ill•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••mlla ... ,.... &empera•u~. ·-. j ·-·. • r .. I ,, I. . . .............,, ___ .,_ I . AI• DAIL v PILOT Tuelday. January 4, 19n I Only Home offers America's h;g best interest plus the security of America's largest \Y/e pay over a million dollars in interest C\'ery day, seven days a \\'eek. at the highest rates allowed by letw. J\luch higher than any bank can pay. In tact, our 73~% account (.~.06% annual yield:;:) doubles your money in less than nine years. ,.\J'JNUAL ANNUAL TERMS RATE YIEL0° 7%3 ~'* 8.063 I} }Ca~. $1\JO\I ,,,.'"""''" 7 ~3 ):o:c 7.79 3 I v~a". SllJUO '" morr 6 %3::'* 6.98 3 ~ _. vcars. SllH~l or fllOft 6~3 f.a:c 6.723 1 \CM ~111110 ,,,. mor' 5% 3 ::u:c 5.92 3 ~ n·uuho.. s~oo •>ff'Tll'f(' 5~3 5.39 3 R~ar r"""°-)k Accnu11t \\ ·l"" Intl•' ·• , 14t\f"\, ,k,,~ J.~ h 101l f".,)tflt;l1nnl k• ,,.._ \-C•r Y,, I nl.• 11 Ii-• , ,,j, ,.,rh.!1 ..... ,1. "" lt"ml "'""'''"'" """ wh k'll Cll'"'""'t IM(11lmtM'<'\t f'-,,.thlt, Come to Home Savings and let your money earn the most. Any less is second best. Security besfns at Home. Freedom from worry-that's what Home Savings is all about. We' re America's largest. And our strength is your strength . Our more than 7 billion dollars in assets stands behind your savings account. Safe, sec ure Home Savi ngs. In all our 87 years, no one has ever lost a penny at Home. Yes, we do fec\ture our free services. If you don't know about them, it's because Home is more famous for highest interest and security. But let us tell you all about Home's free automatic loa n payments, save by mail service, free traveler's checks, money orders, note collec- tion and others-with qualifying balances. And Silver Circle, with reduced rates on entertainment and special travel privileges. Take advantage of them all. Free1977 Calendar. "Ttme'' is the current theme in every Home Savings branch. Pick up your beautiful illustrated full-color calendar. Sec our exhibit of ancient Aztec, Chinese, Hebrew and Egyp- tian calendars -and how the days got their names. And take home a free book about the exhibit. SAYINGS AN D LOAN ASSOCIATION AMERlcA·s LARGEST Number One in the Nation in Botta Savinss and loans. Open Saturday, January 8, 9AM to 1 PM. Member: FEDERAL Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation. Accounts are insured to $40,000 for an individual, up to $560,000 for a family of four. Member: FEDERAL Home Loan Bank System. NEWPORT BEACH 190 Newport Center Drive Near Fashion Island 640-6100 EL TORO I LAGUNA HILLS 23861 El Toro Road 837-511 1 t l WESTMINSTER 15069 Golden West Street · 714~897·3515 ' \ ' ; • I oi ' 20 P ercent of No,...al State Begging For More Rain SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The weekend storm, u wet aa lt looked and as fiercely as it was delivered, wasn't 1ood enouab for Callfomialarmera and water management people. "The picture hasn't really changed al all," said J. Dietrich • St.roeh, manaaer of the wat.er·short Marin Municipal Water Dtatrlct. "We've 1ot the growid aoaked to the point where rlll\off would be a algnlflcant factor if the rain continues.'• THE STORM GAVE Marin 300 million 1allons, brinling to 4 billlon aallons the total ln storage. But normal for this time of year Is 11billion. "It's been wonderful, but we certainly don't have enough yet," said Fred Heringer, president of the CaUfornJa Farm Bureau Federation. "We need a lot more and I hope the public doesn't con- sider this solves our problems or their problems.' THE SAN JOAQUJN and Sacramenty vaileys have recejved only 20 percent of their normal rainfall, Hering er said, addlng: "If you look at rainfall data over the years, there ta ~Y a 10 pe.rcent chance we'll get a normal amount. When we don't get Nov- ember and December rains we never have enough." Historically, January Is the wettest month of the year, December Is usually the second wettest, and February the the third wettest. A SPOKESMAN for Pacific Gas & Electric, which counts on re· servoir water from rain and snow to provide' the puah to power turbines, said, "The rain Is good, but we need a heckuva lot more of it." The San Francisco Water Department's system got 800 million gallon.1 or water from the s_torm, but was lookinl for an added 30 billion eallons to get in really comfortable shape. · Arthur F . Gustafson, meteorologist In charge of the Redwood City office of the U.S. Weather Service, said he didn't see any new rainfall for Northern California unlil the last part of the week. HE SAID A HIGH pressure system of the nature that shunted storms away from California for more than a month showed signs of building in the Northwest again, but he added that It could dissipate quickly. "The principal effect of the rain has been to reduce the demands on our reservoir system for early irrigation," said Jerry King, speaking for the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation. The bureau has been releasing 6,000 cubic feet a second from depleted Lake Shasta for early crop watering, but will be able to re- duce that flow by a third on Wednesday, said bureau wals!r opera- tions manaeer Dave Schuster. Murder Retrial Manson Follower Held as Witness MIAMI (AP) -A member of the Charles Manson .. family" has been a,rrested here as a material witness ln the Los Angeles murder retrial or Man son follower Leslie Van Houten. Dade County police said they picked up Linda Kuablan in Homestead. south of Miami, after Lois Aneeles police told them Mon-• day where to look for her. Miss Kasabian,27, was being held in a MlamjjaiJ today while she decides whether to fight a return toCali!omla, police said. Float • .,.,.,_ f'lle. Pretat PASADENA CAP)-Rick Chapman, bullder ofninedlaquallfied Rose Parade floats, bas fUed a protest in the matter with Tournament of Roses officials. The floats were dropped from banner award competition because [ J they arrived late at the judg-S ta 1 e ~area. tournament officials • d. But Chapman, president of Festival Artists, Inc .. argued Monday that some of his floats were delayed when cars blocked a street. and that others were late because police escorts weren·t available. - I~ P~*U& 'No C••tat' LONG BEACH CAP>-FormerComptoo Municipal Court Judge Joseph Armijo, 38, has entered a no contest plea to drunken driving ch are es stem m Ing from a car ·motorcycle collision in October. The jurist, defeated 1n lut November's elecUon aftel"'his arrest, m tered his plea on Monday before Long Beach Municipal Court Judge W.H. Winston Jr. Wlnston placed Armljoononeyear probatlon and fined h1m $315.SO. 3 Dr...,,..u S••• Be9Jlftab -• LOS ANGEL ES CAP) -Thrff druggists are suine Kaiser Foun- dat.ton Ho.pitals and several affiliates, charging Kaiser sella pre- scnption drugs for lower prices than retail pharmacies can afford to charee. The class-action antitrust Suit was med Monday In Superior Court by Mario De Modena and two other pharmacists. It alleees the practice has been going on atleaatfouryears. BIJ~lwt-ThreatetU l11•ate REDWOOD CITY CAP)-A man whob.eld twohosta1es aboard a parked jetllner for 14 houn threatened ateUow prisoner with a pocket knife at the Sao Mateo County J all, sheri rt•s deputies reported. Palm J. HlnMDt, 37, wu subdued by five deputies after holdina thelml.fe to the throat()(~ Hicks, 20, who received a minorcutdur-illi thescuffle. Deputy Robert Brown sald Monday. lfinnant, a former Unlted Airlines employe with a history of men- tal problems, bas been char1ed with extortion, Jddneplng and aasault because of the attempt.edbijacking Dec.14·1S. 6-rd OW. of St•fl It'•-• LONG BEACH CAP) -A 17·year-old security cuard has 4ied of stab wounds he received tn a fl.lht after eJecUng two youths from a rock concert at the Long Beach Arena. Tb• e uard, Brian Grave1of Buena Park, wu stabbed tbreetimes durin1 the scuffle early Monday, police said. Police said the two youths~ \een told to leave the concert earlier for creating a disturbanc~"='-abd Graves and his partner caucht them trying to aneak back tn when uie fight broke out. N••d tr•n•portatlon t Tueeday, January 4, 1917 ~AL.Ml• •OHSTAOT H"IMIU. 'Most WatcJ,allle Women' Rosal yn Carter has been named America's "most watchable mother" and Elizabeth Dole ''most watchable wile" by the International Society of Girl Watchers' J><?ll for 1977. Others s~lected were singer Lmda Ronstadt; television's "Bionic Woman" Lindsay ·wagner; actress Mariel Hemingway ; skater Dorothy Hamill; golfer Sandra Palmer; newscaster Jane Pauley of "Today Show"; Olympic gym- nast Nellie Kim; and attorney Lynn Schenk of San Diego. Brown Names 2 to Coast Unit LOS ANGELES (AP) -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. has appoint· ed two members of defunct coastal boards to serve on· the California Coastal Commission. The new commission, which is to regulate and plan for the future of the state's 2,000-mile coasWne, is the successor to the interim state Coastal Zone Conservation Commission set up by a voter initl ati vein 1172. Appointed to the new board on Monday were Melvin B. Lane of Atherton, publisher of Slll\set Books, and Naomi Schwartz of Santa Barbara. Lane w as chairman of the in· terim state board, wh.lle Mrs. Schwartz was a member of the South Central Regional Coastal Commission. Both of those boards ceased operations last Friday. DAILY PILOT ~ J J Son Jailed In Slaying Of Famil . y Sl'OCKTON (AP) -An or· thodontist and hia two dauchtera were abot to death, hla wUe wounded, and their 1$-ye&r-old son wu charged with murder, ahertff'a investleators said to- day. Commander Arch Scheffel of the San Joaquin Coonty Sherift'a Office said the youth wu taken~ the county's juvenile ball aaa booked for tnveaU,aUon of tbne counts of murder and ooe count ol attempted murder. SCHEFFEL SAID the bodies were found. a f ter the son telephoned police at 11:41 p.m. Monday and reported the shoot- lngs. T he youth 's two slaters - Susan, 19, and Carol, 18 -were found shot to death in their up. stairs bedroom in the two-story home. They were pronounced dead at the scene by a neighbor who Is a doctor. Opdahl and his wile, Patricia, 43, were found wounded in separate areas of the downstairs. He was shot in the torso and she wu shot in the head. OPDAHL DIED early today at St. Joseph 's Hospital lnStockloD . Mrs. Opdahl was in stable con· diUon at the same hospital, a nunlng supervisor said. Scheffel nid all f~ were shot with a handgun, but he declined to say what caliber. /. WHY IS A SWEET GIRL UKE MICHELLE WORKING TO CURE ''AN OLD FOLKS DISEASE"? Miche{le Tandy of Huntington Beach is six years old, but .she shares the misery of many senior citizens - more than 20 million -who suffer fr om Arthritis. But through treatment from the Arthritis Founda· tion's Juvenile Arthritis Clinic. Michelle can now walk without her braces, and hopes to live a full, produc· tive life. Part of this prod uctive life will be helping others-through the Arthritis Foundation. She is the 1977 poster girl for Orange County, and will assist Entertainer Pat Boone, 1977 campaign chair- man for Orange County, and others in the Arthritis Telethon February 5 and February 6. Fosters Freeze stores throughout Southern California will be official collection points for the Foundation during the Tele· thon. Through the Foundation, research continues seeking the cause, the treatment and the cure of this crippling disease. If you would like to follow the lead of 6-year·old Michelle, if you would like to know more about Arthritis, its symptoms and it s treatmen~ if you can help the Foundation with your time or your contribution, call Th• t\rthrltl• Fotiadatlon Orange County BrAf\ch H. Laws~n Mead, President 900 North BroadW&y n. •~ ..... ,-..... Santa Ana. California 92701 Telephona 547-5591 Number 37 In a series of public service advertisements sponsored ?Y Avco Financial Services, Newport Beach, California ( ' ' ' I ' . ,4 JJ DAIL V PILOT Tuetldey, J.nu!ll} 4, 1m • , Tonight's 1V Highlights CBS 1J 8:00 -Who's Who. The pre- miere episode of a new CBS News series OD interesting people from aU walb of Ure. Dan Rather, Charles Kuralt and Barbara Howar profile thelr subjects. (Review, A5) KCET@ 8:00 -Tell Me If Anything Was Ever Done. The life and works of Leonardo da Vinci is examined in this special narrated by Dr. •Jacob Bronowski. KHJ tJ 12:00 -"Marty." Ernest Borgnine won the Oscar as best actor of 1955 in the movie version of Paddy Chayefsky's TV drama about a lonely butcher. Bt!tsy Blair co-stars. TV DAILY LOG TUl!SDAY BVEMliiG ,. e o m C3 m Nice ..,. "Onct A Sn11c~" Disguised as a pr°'tltutt. Pepper taku Oii tht dan ~ HSIC"IMflf ol solv1nc tht slayinc o1 • _.., ~ttd poilc;r clllff ltflo II~ otltftdtd l!lt foul ulldel'tllOl'ld cltttltan u lllovlt: (lhr) "MllllOR Doll11 Leas" (com) 'JZ-WC fttlds • (afl CJ.)) 111 ... Ml•. ,_ ... • Mm Critfia SJIOll m rw1inl111 f» IMiul V11111J m 11&1r\ aaa.a c--. s,.cw m ~ Wttslliac -9:3G-o (ITT'> m> CJ) OM Bly fl A Ti• No 1ntormahon amlablt at Ollf press hmt m lh'li•: wrott•kl11" (l'.ll5l Seigel [ 1stM1e1n 's him. '°'uses on events lud1ng to mutiny aboa•d lhe llllSSlln Battlrslup pnrw:e Porem•1n and is bawd on an adual occuoence duttftl tbt rt.ofuhon ol !90S m EspectlQIUr 76 10:00 0 (1]1) (})) (J) s.ilck The en ga~nt ol Ptte's ~It -i heart to 1 man lit dlStrusts U!lds Pete on 1 lrtn1~ trail to 1evul lhe man's tru1 motives Q t2l1 (S) 11QJ ID l'oliu Sfory Stoll Hrlands sta1s a\ Jostph Wambaugh (trt1to1 of Pohce SIOl'f), who 1s us1111ed to probf lhett clla1gn agautst 1 leltow ol11ter (l)llonlrm U (tajJ CJ.)) 'ltJ hmllJ ~It lawience. lwtd af the llollshlfe 1ou11ne. detidts to seek tmOIOJ men I m 11ews ~~· fDDBela.._ -10:30-•m m ... fn 81t11t alld o.111 °'A SDf Antma· llOll alld IC>llr pholOl'JP'tt shotr how lQf11hsts nu 111e 111yittnCM Ille tydo ol slm. Tiit SOKlll also ~!ldih "PllSIB" atld "blK• llolu .. '77 Contro~ Tighten lllfll 11011 RECORD 1960· 1976 F~ Drugs, Can Covere d by New Laws 11 ..... --------------"'t • By UM A.uotb&.ed Prall C:OO.umen are b4eginning the new year with tighter controls over the food they eat. the dru,gs they take and the can lbey drive. C 0 NS V MER -;:::!~; ~:~f ~,.;;t:k~~ ( J ~ml""1 th• uH of won!.• su<h •• WOl'<b cannot be used If lbe pro- duct conlahu add1llves. lnclud· ing seasonings or prescrvat.Jes. 10+--------------- At'tion by the exet'utive, legislative and judicial branches of government at the federal level covered a wide range ot topics in l.976. Here is a rundown oo some of them ADDITIVES: The Food and Drug Adminislralion (FDA> banned Red Dye No. 2 and ended it.a provistonal approval of Red D)'e No. 4, used In maraschino cherries. and carbon black. used to color llcorice. The a&ency okayed the use or R«I No.~ in ex- ternally applied drugs and COS· metics. but said carbon black c~ be used in food. drugs or makeup. AnUlru.st: Congress enact.eel a law allowing state attorneys general to bring antitrust actions on behalf of the citiz.eos of their states against alleged price fix· ers. This is important in cases where the amount involved for any one consumer Is small -say lS cents -and themore is not worth going to court over. The National Canners Associa· lion announced a plan tor l:.1bel ing Clllllled fruits aod veietables to give consumers a better idea of bow much llquld the product contalns. The association plan calls tor discovering the ''solid content" or the product berore processing. * Advertising : The Supreme Court overturned state laws pro- hibiting pharmacists rrom ad· vertising prices for prescription drugs. The Justice Departmeat and the Federal Trade Com· mission also took steps to end bans on· ad vertislng by pro- fessionals such as doctors and lawyers. Cars. The Energy Polley and Conservation Act. which took ef· feet last March. sets mandatory fuel economy standards starting al 18 miles per gallon for 1978 can and rislng to 27.5 miles per gallon for 1985 models. Another law, applylog to used cars, makes it a criminal offense to tamper wtth an odometer or to incompletely disclose mileage. LEASING: Congress enacted a law requiring leasing companies to give consumers a written statement. before a contract is signed. descrtblng extra charges such as license fees, the extent of warranty. insurance coverage and the number. amount and due dates or payments. Meat: The USDA proposed al· lowing the use of mechanicaJJy deboned meat and low tem- perature rendered meat in bot dogs and som e sausages. Consumer groups fought the pro- posal, a court ruling overt\m\ed tbe USDA, and the department formally withdrew the regula- ti005. *"'-'" ,.,.Wl......-CMf' Inflation's C'o•rse lnfiatlon rates in the United States from 1960 through 1975, with an estimate for the rate in 1976, show the highest gain was in 1974. when the Consumer Price Index bit 12.2 percent. If the estimate is accU.Cate, last year's will be the lowest rate since Aer osols : The National Academy o f Scleoces said fluorocarbons used as pro pellanta In some aerosols • particularly personal grooming products, threaten the ozone layer protecting the earth from harmful ultraviolet radiaUon. The FDA. with jurlsdictioo over most aerosols containing fluorocarbons, proposed that such products carry warning labels. saying they could harm the environment. The Consumer Product Safety Commission started procedings Jot an out· right ban on fluorocarbons in the products it supervises. CREDIT: Tbe Equal Credit Opportunity Act was expanded to make it illegal for creditors to discriminate on the basis of race. color. religion, national origin, sex, marital status. age or because all or part of the con- sumer's income is from public assistance. The law. effeclive tbls year. also requires creditors to tell consumers why they were turned.down for credit. Mortgages: Legislation was passed requiring fmancial in· slitulions with more than $10 million in assets and operating in large urban areas to provide in· formation on mortgage and home-improvement loans. The aim is to eliminate red-lining. lbe practice o ( refusing to lend mortgage money in old or pooc neighborhoods. 1972. I Real Estate Class Schednled at OCC A course to prepare .student.a tor the state real estate license examination will be offered at Orange Coast College for the first lime durlq tbe spring semester. which starts Feb. 1. Fair trade: The last of the so- called "Falr Trade" laws went out ot existence in March. thanks to federal leglsJatioo making il U· The Dine-week course ls designed ror penom who want to prepare for the state license exam. It meets Tuesdays and Thursdays from 4-6 p.m. . legal for manufacturers to fix prices of consumer products sold by retailers. A team-teaching approach will be used by PauJ McMillian. a real estate broker and appraiaer, and 'lbomas Osborne, a real estate broker . AIRLINES: The Supreme Court. in a case Involving Ralph Nader. ruled that a passenger wbo has been bumped from an overbooked flight may sue the airline for damages. Food labels: The F'DA i.&sued a final regulation regarding a un iform procedure for li$ting food ingredients on labels. The de- adline for compliance is Jan. l, 1978. although manufacturers may change labels earlier if they want to. One ruJe requires that fats and oils be specifically ldeo- tifed. such as "cottonseed oil" in- stead of simply ·'vegetable oil." The Department or Agriculture Warranties: The Fl'C issued rules to implement 197S legisla· lion on warranties. Under re- gul ations taking effect this month, written warrantJes for products costing more than $15 must contain descriptions <A the parts or components covered, statements of what the warran· tor will do and information on aeUling disputes. Spring registration runs Jan. 4 through reb. l by appointment. Open registration, on a drop-ill basis, will be held Feb. 2-10. Registration appoint, menta may be secured in OCC's admissions and re- cords oUlce. For registration lnformaUoo, phone S56-S772. OCC counea are tuition-free to penom wbo have lived in California for al least ooe year. sw. dents pay a $5 beaJth services fee at tbe time ot n- gistraUon. Robert D. Spargeoa, Newport Beach, bas re· tired from Sootltena Callfonda Gu Compuy after a 39-year career that included Z1 years in public relations. He joined the company's distribution department in San ta Ana in 1937 and, after service during World War II, returned to the custom er service depart· ment. lo 1955 be moved into the public relaUona department and retired as the utility's communi- ty relations coordinator. • 5'Ult0&0.. J aa es E. O'Comor of South Laguna, president c:l the Coa ataJ Maaldpal Waler Dlltrlct, bas been appointed to tbe board or directors of the Metropolitan Water District of Southern Calllorola. • ll1dule1 G. DeNleala, Mission Viejo. bu been named diviaion vice president ol manufacturing operations for the Bwsiness systems division of Pertee Computer Corp. He ls the division's former manufacturing operatklos manager • • lf:rrl Shaw. Newport Beach. baa been elected chairman Of the board and president of lbe Deslp P!ua A.Noclatioa. Re is a lawyer with Virtue and Sc:beck, lnc., Newport Beach . • • llobert e . Laq1alud, branch manager of Fldellt1 Federal SaTilap ud Lou Auoelatlon'• Colt.a Mesa branch. bas been appototed assistant vtce president or the association. • County Firms Tell Progress GHwaltar Opeal•9 sa.cetl Gibraltar Savings bas announced the irand q>ening celebratloo for lt.s Newport Beach office dUrin& th.ls week, according to Margaret Gilbert.. manager "Tbe Great GUderslee"e <Hal Peary>. free books, carlcatureJ, wine and cheese tasting, a ltt· lure oo how to mate money, and refreshments are a few of the blghUgbts planned," she said. The new office is at 2700 W Coast Highway in Mariners Mlle Square. . -I GaeU..e C...-ptlo• Run CaJllornia motorists continued to break records for gasoline consumption In October, according to a recent report by Iris Sankey, ot the State Board of F.quallzation Usage was at an all-time hlgh for October. 3.t percent greater lban October 1975., 3.9 percent higher than October 1974, and 1. 7 percenl more than during September IAlfl-a Hiib Bra~• 011.aflftl Gibraltar Savin~ bas received approval from rclUlatory agenclt'8 to open an omce in Laguna Hills, accordJng to Herbert J. Young, chairman of the board and chiel executive officer. The new branch will be Glbrallar's fitl.h office in Orante County and 6Qh in Callfomla. and will be a fr~tandlng building on Et Toro Road near Moulton Parkway. Nee Owtlei t o Opea Gmeral Floor and Wall Company will ~ soon in the Irvine beadqua.~ or lt.s parent com· pany, Jerry Smith and Sons, toe Tbe new tlrm bu been alJPOinted by Com· mtttlal PlasUca <InternaUonllff..td., Haddonfield, N.J .. a member ot the Nairn lntematJonaJ Gr®p of Cocnpan.les, to be ex.elusive IOUtbmi California dts. tribuior of Jt.a new Cos)ltred 200 emboued a.nd cusblooed sheet •lnyt. which wiU be UIU'Od~ to the American market early ln 197i. , Over The Counte r HASOUst*Js lip • aad Do..,.. MUTUAL FUNDS Pott. uo u.o Up lU VP n l Up 11 • uo Jt. Up IU UD 11.; uo 11.2 Up 116 Uo 14.J Up "J UD I• J Up "J uo l)J Up IJ.l lib Tl.S Uo IJ S Uo tJ.S uo 12 s Up tt s uo 12 s Uo lJ.S uo ti. Up 11.• Uo 111 Uo ti I Up 11 t NEW YORK IAPI Calvln 8ulloc;lt• Atn Ldr • 11 9 •1 Int ln>nt t •J I 1t ML ~ 14 0. U 03 N Horii 1 7' NL Sl'mt .. , S6 NL -n. IOI'-"" -8ulk:lt tl SI u n Emplr "., . • Inv Oulcl .... NL Ml. ,..dy I 00 NL Pro """" \.91 NL~·· SI '4.•I t4 ll I«'-. woolllicl by C-I ... 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January 4, 19n l /N DAILY PILOT A 13 Hedge Clipped Losing Streak T11tnbles Values By MIL'roN MOSKOWITZ As we move into 1977 and lhc Wall Street soothsayers point up the great stock market opportun1Ues that lie ahe•d ot ua, it may be useful to cast a backward glance. As months go. January ls euphoric. The market nearly always goes up. But we've already had seven Januarys in the 1970s and this decade has been a sobering experience ror any lnvestor who hitched a ride on some of the highfllens or the 1950s and 1960s, ex· peeling them to con· tinue their spectacular ascent.s. To say that these in· v~tors have been disap· pomted is to put it gently. Money Tree Anyone wbo invested $5,000 m IBM in 1950 saw that stake mushroom to $286,000 by 1970. A 1950 INVESTOR WHO PUT $5,000 tnto Avon Products would have had stock worth $2.3 million by 1970. And the canny or lucky investor who sunk $5,000 1nlo Xerox in 1950 would have had securities worth $2.9 m1lhon by 1970. Te rrific! So much for hindsight. Whal 's happened since L970? The following. J\ $5,000 INVESTMENT IN IBM m 1970 would today be worth1ust about the same about. A 1970 investment or $5,000 in Avon Products would to- day be worth about $2,500. And a SS.000 investment In Xerox in 1970 would now fetch 3bout $3,500 on the market. THAT SUMMARY SUFFICES TO EXPLAIN why thousands of investors have deserted the stoek market for savings and loans, lotteries, the race track and Las Vegas casinos. Of course you would have come out all right if you had really made those investments in 1950 -and stayed with them. However. ii you made new investments in 1970, you could well be a bitter person today. For example. between 1960 and 1970 the stock of Holiday Inns climbed a fantastic 1.400 percent. A $5,000 investment wouJd have grown during that decade to about $75,000. But since 1970 the shares of Holiday Inns have been more tban halved in price. A $5,000 investment made in 1970 would today be worth less than $2,000. A BIG MOVER OF THE 1960s WASS1mphc1ty Pattern, up a whopping 1,100 percent. Its performance since 1970"? Down more than 50 percent. You would have Jost more than half your investment. Syntex is another old skyrocket that has fizzled. After appreciating 600 percent between 1969 and 1970, Syntex shares have 1ust managed to stay even during this decade. Among the other companies whose shares have dropped in value since 1970 are Coca -Cola, Polaroid, lT't, Nabisco and Green G.ant THE STOCK MARKET USED TO BE depicted by Jts friends as a hedie against inflauon. If pnces went up, the th~ry went, then prices on the stock market would also rise. Since 1970 the value of the dollar, in terms of what tl can buy, has been eroded by more than 20 percent. And if you had any of your dollars in the market, the chances are excellent that the erosion was even deeper. What 1977 will bring, no one lcnows. But there's no ques- tion that the stock market is on a long losing slreik. Stocks ·Hit Again By Profit Taking NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market retreat~ steadily today in the face or profit laking after its strong ral. ly in tbe fmal weeks of 1976. Trading was active. The Dow JoQes average of 30 industrial stocks was oCC 11.88 points to 987 .87. Losers o utpaced gainers by close to a 3-2 margin among New York Stock Exchange-IJsted issues. Analysts found no special reason for the market's weak- ness in the day's ecooomic news. Stock• In The A~rican Le ader• Spotlight NEW VOAIC (.t,p). S.ltt 4 11 m prlct -Ml ,,,.~ of 11111 llllHn moot K • tlwt N... Yotk Stock h Cl\6nof l~wtt. lradl"9 Mllon•ll'I' at '7'0•• I'*'., Oct ...... Ptt.. ...... 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"' Ott • I s"' ~ Oii i 1 s•-. ~ Off • o 11:\0 , .... °'' 6 0 ' '" °'' it ,,~ '" Off ' 1 ,, ... _, .. E H 12"41 -¥oo h ,,.,, -... f ,. ·~ -'I\ Oii J . """ -tlli Ott J; • _,..,..Off SJ Syntbob hi S. .. , In lull OIVIOENOS. "'~..wiu.1 Vfll~•· OIM• Nl\9 ld•nllllf'O <•I Pluu•tta. (bl <1r<l11r•o or cM+tJ w t.-r thl\. ., .... , no., :r.~~~~~·,J~ h:.~~~~',.!i. ~~~~ ;,~~ \'1)1 'P••d I" tt/4 U \ ( thh Olu\ \ll\f '° PJ'lt't '" 1or1 (QI •nnv,..1 tAt•~ µtu \IMk "'"'"""d. Cf\~ Ptljd Ulh Y"M •11t,..\t f11vf~~NJ bMllt~ hlP"rctntl"\tOC'f P1l•d1,, tQ't 0 10ft (4'1'1 In \lock !)hid 1n t~H lq 1 '" t.•n•ruolw ~~~:;.'1r:.,~;:;,~ 1: t::' 3.~~~~(t~~w!~'w~~·,~· ~·~di: ~~1:·r~:~l'~C~ I'll ~ \IO<~ A\• muho r~ r~:;:~r;: ~~:~~~.~?.:Z,:';~ro l•tl ~··•ortc.. NOW OPEN . LONG JOHN SILVER's_ DROPPIN' ANcllOR IN COSTA MESA WITH FREE TREASlJREs ALL MONTH LO I . ··c ·· .:: --~ . ~ TREASURE A SPEC~~EEK FOR E~~UR WEEKS! Jan. 3-Jan. 9 free G,•t t) Pirate Dlo ubloon h ry mea w1r f!Ve 10-Jan. 16 Jan. . n fly-Id champ10 Grab a wor f when you ing c;aucer rFee h & Fryes hasc a 15 pure Dinner 17 -Jan. 23 Jan. ·n Kangaroo A free Capta1 when vou d is yours recor h & Fryes Dinner. buy a F1s 31 Jan. 24-~an. T Shirt free pirate h Get a b buying a Fis transfer JUSt y & Fryes Dinner. ...J I -- 'D > ii So•r•'• Q j • It .• '""'Ir"'• 0 :i: "'* o-. W e're having a Party at Long John Silver's throughout the month of January-and you're invited! Come in and taste the fish that made us Famous, and also collect a treasure-one every day for 31 days! Be sure to Pick up your free Grand Opening Party Calendar at Long John Silver's . Join us this month for games, contests and prizes galore. For the fun of it. <>.,en 11:()() AM. to 10:0() P.1'1. Sunday. ThuJ'Scfay ll:OOAM. to lt:Oop.M. Friday&: Saturcfay \ r:lohn er§®~ SEAPoon SHOPPES 3095 Harbor Blvd. in Costa Mesa Just South of the San Diego Freeway. Across ft:o.rn Fedco. • I• - crew Coca.Cola • C00ts Beer • fnglen0ok Wrn« -..... ll Class Key: Love By DENNIS McLELLi\N Of llM Di lly Pllol SUit .fe left Koblenz, Germany shortly before the tum-of-the-cen- tury. H,iring on a square-rigger out or Amsterdam, be set sail on a lire of adventure at sea. Ile was 16. He went 'round the Hom three times before jumping ship in Boston and working his way West. The tales he told, seated in his favorite easy chair, filled many a rainy afternoon or late evening hour for his children and, finally. his grandchildren. The specifics of Uus sample grandfather's Life are not typical. But the opportunity for a new generation to hear such firsthand accounts of times now relegated to dry hi story books is one of the adva ntages · o f h av in g a grandparent. "GRANDPARENTS can offer a perspective on Life to their chll<iren and grandchildren," says Joan La Montagne, who will teach a class called Being a Grand Parent. "It is tremendously valuable for children to hear fi rsthand ex- perienc es or histo r y . Grandparents can give them that perspective by just telling them about their lives." Those taking the course, of- fered by Coastline Community College, will gain a new perspec- tive on how to handle children. The field has changed in the years since they reared their own family. Mrs. La Montagne, a Newport Beach resident, is a licensed marriage, family and child counselor. who received her masters in psychology in 1973. SHE R ECENTLY completed two yea r s a s director ot'Eal'ly Parenting pro- gram at the North Orange Coun- ty Child Guidance Center. She teaches parenting classes for Coutline Comm unity College and the Red Cross. S h e al so h as two granachild!'en. She said she was astounded that the skills she picked up while I Joan La Montagne, who will teach a class on Being a Grand Parent, takes time to read to Kevin Donaldson (left) and Jeff Pickett. BEA ANDERSON, Editor teaching parenting made it much easier to de al with her own grandchildren. "ln the las t 2S years there have been a lot of advances in handling children," she said . "I just found it fascinating and figured other grandparents would too." Her nine-week class. which begins Feb. 10. includes lecture· discussions on a variety of topics ranging from Communicating With Kids, Having Fun With Grandchildren, Relating to Your Children Takes Precedence Over Grandchildren and New Kn owle dge of the Youngest Years. Mrs. La Montagne said one or the most important things she has lea m ed is the value or prai6e. Many parents scold their children when they do something bad, forgetting to compliment them when they're doing something good THERE MUST BE BAIANCE, she said. She believes it isn't necessary to use punishment in managing Tuesday, January 4, 19n ' children's behavior. WithdrawaJ ol reinlorcement is an effective alternative, she said. This is accomplished by prais- ing the child when he's doing well and pUJ"pOSely fgnoring him when he's not behaving correctly. ''As soon as they're behaving more appropriately," s he said, "notice this and give them praise and attention. " It also is important to listen for bow the child is feeling and to be open with your own feelings , whether positive or negative, she said. It enhances the warm feeling between the grandparents and children, she contends. OPEN COMMUNICATION also applies to the relationship between parent a nd grandparent. Parents aJso must learn to treat their adult children as adults. One of the most common mis- takes is when the grandparent In· terreres with the parent's authority over the child. The grandparent should sup. Bl port the parent in his authority over the children rather than conflict with it. Mrs. La Montagne said grandparents usually have as- sets in time, and possibly money, which they dido 't have when they were struggling to raise their own family. "You can offer enrichment to the family." she said, adding it can be through time and Wl- derstanding. "It's a lovely thing to be able to do that .... THE TITLE of her fint topic's The Golden Opportunity: Tfe Best of Both Worlds. "That's why it's so neat," she said of being a grandparent. "You can have the pleasure and yet you don't h ave the full responsibility. I think parenting is the most demanding occupa- tion there is. "The greatest contribution a grandparent can make is offer- ing love from an extended fami- ly. It is this additionaJ love that they have to give. It is a primary value for the grandchildren as they grow up." !Style~ Look Compatible By MARCIA FORSBERG Ol I ... O•tly 11'11.c SUH Mini-skirts and wh.ite plastic boots look as foolish today as a beehive hairdo. Few women still don th.is out· moded trend and many dress m the fashionable outfits that look so great on store window mannc· qwns But ~auchos aren·t for ev erybody. and blazers seem all wrong ror certain fi~types Plaids and prints might & out of place for some women, JUSt as ruffles and lace can be. Decldin~ what your image is. pulling your look together and carrying your style with con- fidence isn't always the easiest thing to do. Cynthia Garner can help. She's an "image maker." She's not going to dress a con- vertible·dri ving tennis player tn flouncy skirts accessorized with a parasol. And she's not going to put a sophisticate m denim over· alls. SHE BELIEVES in following an individual's natural bent, the urestyle, likes and dislikes or a woman seeking her own personaJ image. Ms. Garner and partner Boise A. Taylor are the founders of En· tourage. a private consulting service for organizations. cor- porations and individuals. Ms. Garner taught at John Robert Powers for a year and a half, specializing in wardrobe and visual poise. Her mother was a seamstress who stressed "dressmg up," she said. He-r fuhton, make-up and grooming background led naturally to her current en- deavor. She defines "image" as "the physical, visual reflection or one's mental attitude, which is Jmages Need Updating When Ali Lassen attended a meeting for !!Ingles s he dis· covered two thin gs : be dldn 't have any needs to meet. -There were others whose J')eeds she could help meet. The Huntington Harbour resi· dent said she never returned to a meeting. Instead, she launched a new venture in which she works with women, "who have been housewives for many years and now are suddenly single and re· entering the job market." So many just don't know how to project thems elves, she as - serted. While see)ting employment, she said, often these women. some )Vbo haven't worked fo~ 20 yean, Just don't know bow to put &betnMlves In front ol the public. "They don't know bow to say, "Here I am. Here are my saleable quAllUes' ." · I Mrs. Lassen believes qr&t lm- presaloM are lasting ones; that people are assessed by their out· ward appearance. Often the im· qe la outdated and not a true · rellection or the person. she said. "When you don't keep your Im· age up to date, you operate at a 1 ,.reatdisadvantage,"sheaaid. • "'nM purpose of my business is .,,. belp them cr eate an ap- • pearance s uitable to their lifestyles and needs." Although here approach is not psychological in nature, Mrs. Lassen said, they do feel better about tbemselves and have more self-confidence when they com- plete a course. The founder-director of New Images -Unlimited offers in- dividualized no-nonsense help and works with small groups in four 2-3 hour seminars over a month's time. She uses consultants ln a varie- ty o( fields, offering lessons ln grooming, apparel. hair care, posture, poise, nutrition and physical fitness. "Charm schools are good, but expensive," she said. "Many women don't have the time or the. money for them." With ber service, fees are re-· U()Oable and she takes the class to the people's homes, sbe ex- plained. - "We talk about fashion lines, what loots good on the in· divldual, and how to work around mating clothing. "We don't su11est a new wardrobe. or 1oin1 to a health spa to lose weight. We work With where the penon is at the mo- ment. "We keep lt simple, workable and dependable,•' shesald . All L•11en . At the end of the seminar, Mrs. Laueo sald, each person has de- .t.ermined her personal lmqe and whaU.1 rlaht for her. (SeelMAGES, Pa&eB!;) carried over in how we dress ourselves." In determining an image, she takes into consideration the ac- tivities. profession, personality and desires of the individual. THERE ARE FIVE basic fashion-personality types: -Sophisticated. "Her clothing is simplified in design and struc- ture, her jewelry is simple and subtle. She has an ljflCluttered look. Her hair is usllally short, her scent is clean, healthy and fresh." -Town and Country. "She is very close to the sophisticate- almost on the borderline. She is more casual, enjoys slacks and gauchos. wears more solid com- binations, no prints. "Her hair is a little longer, her make up is healthy, earthy, with an unmade-up look. Her scent is woodsy." -Gamine. "This is a mod look. It's one quick to outdate. A gamine doesn't wear what's not in. It's costly and faddy. "Her hairdo and make-up are - more extreme. She wants atten- tion and accessorizes a great de- al. She goes for scents like grass oils and mus k oils." · -Rom antic . "She likes feminine lines, rurnes, full skirts and dresses. She wears floral prints, dotted swiss, ribbons. Her hair ls usually curly, either long or short. "A romantic's jewelry is · pearls or pendants. She likes · heirlooms like antique shawls." -Exotic. "This Is the most dif- ficult look to determine and to ac- quire. She wears a lot of colors with a lot of !lash. but bas to be careful not to appear vampl.sb. "She wears shiny fabric, cos- tume jewelry, low backed outfits, fa.be lashes, extreme hairdos and make-up." Ms. Garner said it is important that a woman know her loot, and sbe should be able to carry ol1 at east thJ:ee. different ooa.~We need.veraat.lllty for excitement." IN LEABNING to be totally coordinated, ·'the American woman must be educated on bow to shop," she said. Wlth a workable basic wardrobe of 15 items. a woman cab have "50 diflerent loob just by acceuori1ing and coordinat· lnc." declared Ms. Gamf'I". Image maker Cynthia Garner pulls look together for men and women by helping them determine how to p roject themselves. She is one of the founders of Entourage, a consulting service. Sbe advised that a woman shop for buics only twice a year, choolillf cloUU.D1 for winter-fall and spring-summer. When each aea.aonal wardrobe is two solid colors, acceasorlzing is easler, sbeeald. Buying matching s hoes, bandbat and a bat to cool'dinate with a four-pieJ:e suit contributes to the achievement ol a tolaJ loot, abe revealed. T~ an In-depth inventory of tacb item in the 'clOlet belpll reduce mistakes and eliminates cueuwork, said Ms. Gamer. TBESAMETECBNIQUESfor shoppm, apply to men, too. "In a busineas situation, he'll probably want to loot credible, aucceuful and 1nt.elli1ent. He can UM clothlnl to Jl")mote bis imace," shesaid.. Ms. Ganter mentianed that U.. moat apparent factor In "baW.C 11 all .to1etber" ls attitude. Con- tldeacela tbekefword. '' .l. -112 DAILY PILOT TueSday, January .C, ,917 Hitting the Trail OAKLAND CAP) -Thanks lo some special saddle cear. paraplegics and quadriplegics are trading wheelchairs for horses and hitting wooded trails here twice a week in a special recreation program for the ban· di capped. "Horseback riding is perfect for 'the disabled as a means of getting them out in the country and away from roads," said Susan Sygall, 23. head of the Outreach Recreation Program sponsored by the neighboring ci· ty of Berkeley. "The whole object is to put some good legs under them and to get them out and let them see some tnuls." said Steve Young, who teaches the disabled riders. The year-old program, funded mostly by a $17,000 grant from the city, features swimming, gymnastics. dancing, archery, yoga, camping and self-defense for the disabled. Horseback rid· ing clasi:.es were started a month ago. ''H ey, baby!" Lester Freeman. 63, shouts to his brown and while pinto mount as he speeds around the arena at Grizz. Jy Peak Stables. • Anolher riding student 1s Phil Morgan. 34, who was defending his naUonal water ski speed tiUe four years ago when he broke bis back in a 105-mile·an·hour wipeout. "This ls too good to miss," he said as be urged his horse, Cherokee, to a faster trot. M05t of 20 disabled adult riders are restricted now to the corr* and a barn where a 3'>-foot ramp was constructed to facilitate mounting and dismounting. But several ride well enough to trot, with an escort, over the hundr~s of miles of trails in the nearby East Bay Regional Parks. Stable owner Young said that paraplegics, who are paralyzed• from the waist down. are held in the saddle by seatbelt-type straps. Quadriplegics. however. who also lack use or their arms. re· quire a special saddle with a steel back support mounted on a regular saddle, plus s houlder harnesses and waist straps9 To date, there have been no fallil, Young said. "It's pretty weird. but it's a challenge to do these things," s aid Freeman, a former bartender and truck driver whose legs were amputated dur- ing an illness. ''The biggest problem is ap- prehension about the horse," said Young. "but that disappears quickly." He bas trained eight horses to respond to voice com· mands and subtle hand move- ments, since many of the riders have limited use or their arms and hands. Lester Freeman Rides Pinto Contests Begin Year EL CAMINO REAL JUNIORS: The club is sponsoring its annual King Neptune-Queen Am- phitrite contest. Children 3 to s years or age are eligible. En- try and rule forms are available by contacting Mrs. Gerald Farrell. Votes are cast by putting pennies in canisters bearing the child's name. Proceeds will be used to purchase equipment for the new Dana Point park. Winners will be rrowned by reigning monarchs. David"Saling and Kristen Newton, and then will lead the Festival of Whales Youth Parade at 10 a.m. Saturday, Feb. 12. A.)60 on the agenda-will be Donna Baker, light opera star . INSTITUTE: New 1976 laws from school ad· ministration lo criminal codes, firearms, juvenile court, plea procedures and bicycle re· gistration will be reviewed during a one-day in· stitute at Golden West College Saturday, Jan. 8. Sponsored by the college administration of justice program , the institute will take place in the community theater from 8:15 a .m . to 4:30 p.m. Weddings ~ and Engagements ' The $5 cost includes a digest of all legislative changes in the criminal law area. Instructor will be Walter D. Posey, an Anaheim attorney. To avoid rhs appointment. pro!>pert1,·e brides arc rem1ndc•d to ha ve thl•1r \1rdrling s to ries 111th hlat'k and \\h1tc glossy photol!raphs to the Dail.1· Pilot Peo ple Department one ''eek belore the" cdding . . STATUS OF WOMEN: The California Com· mission is sponsoring a workshop on Pathways to Work for Women, focusing on employment for minority women. The session will begin at 8:30 a.m. Saturday, Jan. 8, in Davidson Conference Center, Universi· ty of Southern California. Workshops will include information on career planning, application and oral interview techniques, resume writ.mg, job rights, career charting and assertiveness training. ANNUAi, CONTEST:. To enter the California American Mother contest information is available by "nhng to Mrs. Marilyn Cham· berlain. 5162 Vineland Ave., North Hollywood 81601. Deadline for selection is Monday, Jan. 10 .. CHRISTIAN WOMEN: A Cashion show is planned after a noon luncheon meeting or the Saddleback Communities Christian Women's Club. The session is scheduled for Tuesday, Jan. 11, in the El Adobe restaurant. Jnformation is available from Derald D. Hunt at GWC, 892·7711, ext. 468. HARBOR KEY: The auxiliary will spoUight itsthriftshop at a lOa.m. meeting Tuesday, Jan. 11, in the Shark Island Yacht Club, Newport Beach. A fashion show wiJI feature clothing from the shop. While some will meet high fashion stan· dards, most of the clothing will run the gamut from out-of-date white elephants to new stock contributed by merchants. The thrift shop benefits Orange County child guidance centers. AMERICAN PARALEGAL ASSOCIATION: Margaret Lovig, legal assistant at a Newport Beach law firm. wiU speak during a 6 p.m. meet· ing Tuesday. Jan. 11. in Carrows Hickory Chip restaurant, Santa Ana. CHILDREN'S THEATER GUILD: Two Chinese folktales will be presented when the guild meets Tuesday, Jan. 11, in the Studio Theater, Costa Mesa. Pictures rccci\'C•d aftl•r llwt trmt• will not be used. For engagement announc<'ments il is imperative that the story, also accom. ' panted by a black and white glossy pit'· ture. be submitted s ix weeks or more he fore the wedding date: othcrn 1sc 1t v. 111 not be published. To help fill requirements on h'lth v.cd· ding and engagem<'nt stones. form:; arc ;i1·a1lable in all Daily Pilot oHiccs. Fur- ther questions will be answered by People Department staff members at S-i2·U 2l. Evening Dress No Sleeper Barbara Walters once 'elated how she was in- tled to a state dinner in he Philippines. The din· 1er was to begin in 10 ninutes and Barbara 1ad not brought along a on~ dress. She was 1bout to decline the in· 11tat1on when she had a lash. She would wear ter red bathro~. th~ .aving the day. l have two acquain- . ances who have worn lightgowns lo dinner 1arties. One was on the ·ampaign trail and also tidn't have a long dress ind the other just hought her nightgown oo pretty to waste in .>ed. , Don't those stories jll!t :~urn your stomach? l don't have a \ightgown ln my drawer i hat would get m e 'hrough an eighth grade prom -or a house call from my doctor, for tbat matter. Somehow, I can· not imagine myself showing up for a state dinner in the Philippines in a pair of blue scuffles, a flannel robe with a stomach button missing, spit-up on the shoulder (the baby is 18 years c!d) and pockets bulging from nose tissue that smells like vapor-rub. I took a tum the other day through the lingerie department and frankly, I can see how they got away with it. I've never seen so many beautiful gowns and robes in my entire life. "Here's one that's a luv," said the salesperson. She held up a satin gown. (The last time I saw anything that nar· row, there was toothpaste in It). "I'm afraid not. I have made it a rule or thumb that I do n ot wear anything to bed I have to wear a girdle under." "What about this ooe?" she asked, holding up a transparent bit oC nylon. "I have also promised myself that I would never wear anything in bed tbat you had to wear a coat over.'' "What did you have in mind?" she asked. "Something with To pla~c your message before the reading public, phooe Daily Pilot Clauif!ed, 642·5678 THE WHOLESALE WAY TlllS • SHltUIS • HOUSI PLANTS mow noiwl.E rsn • Tiil FlllOWINC: Black Pin•. Tams Junipers. Nandlna. Aballa. Oleander, Mor-... Iris, and many mote. ··~ $31iimdMD ... _. S.D. W111l1salt Growers 11'22 WAlttm AVI. POUMTAIM VA.LUY PHOMIH .. MJt s l eeves, a I turtleneck .•. and a zip- in floor." Then she held up a .· ~~, robe that was a knockout. Let me put it AT WIT'S END another way. H l had ----worn it to the ball when my husband was elected Governor, it's something I'd wear again to his in- auguration as President. "I'll taJce it," I said im- pishly. Last weekend, I took the plunge and decided to wear It as an evening dress. As I entered the room.· .. all eyes were upon me whe n rtiy husband looked up and said, "Hurry up and get dressed. We're leavine in 10 minutes." Whatya wanla bet? Barbara Wailers could have worn th•e same thing and looked like a million dollars. 20 % OFF SALE 1 on custom decorating·} ilt ·.'., Draperies Bedspreads · Headboards Boudoir Chairs Come In or Call For Decorator Assistance 23 Fnhlon l1t1nd, Newport BHch • 944.aaeo • ' Virgo Be Aware WEDNESDAY JANUAllYS By SYDNEY OMAR1\ ARIES (March 21· April 19): Lunar posl· Uons, asfecl coincide now with Jegal affairs, contractual commit· ments, partnership, pro- posals of marriage. Stick to facts; be aw are of Cine print. TAUR US (April 20· May 20): Check written material. Be analytical. Refuse to accept superficial explanations. Full Moon position ac- cents short trips, re- latives, calls. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Highlight domestic adjustment which leads to tranquility at home. Money, acquisitions figure prominently. You can beauti.f'y surround- ings at reasonable cost. CANCER <June 21- July 22): No need to be dejected -cycle is high and you land on your reel. Steer cl"ear oC scheme which promises something for nothing. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Emotions are intense - you tend now to act on impulse. Key is lo ex· amine various aspects or situation -bring forth light where previous ly only heat existed. VIRGO CAug. 23-Sept. 22): Friend who ponders rates, taxes, purchase price confides in you. Key is to give frank opi· nion without signing papers or taking on ·another's financial otr ligation. UBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Be direct, indepen· dent, original, express and create. Accent on achievement. career, promotion, dealings with o n e "in charge." Finances are involved. SCORPIO (Oct. 23· Nov. 21): Follow through \__./') From 81 Landers Due to cir· cumstances be· yond o ur control, Ann Landers wlU nOl appear today. on bunch -learn by teaching. 'Rise above pet· ty details, Jealousies. Look beyond the im- m e d I ate. Enlarge horizons. · SAGITl'ABIUS CNov. 22·Dec. 21): Movement, involvement, expansion of interests -these are spoUJgbted. You lQ!=ate lost object, find ways of cutting expenses, make deal with partner or mate involving expen- ditures. CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Go slow - lime is on your side. Know it -refuse to be rushed Into judgment. Important to read Cine print -take nothing for granted. ~QUA RI US (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Be ready for change of scenery, for excitement of discovery, for good reading material, for inspiration which aids in getting your own thoughts on paper. PISCES <Feb. 19· March 20): Change of at· titude towards Camily member is indicated. You are more in tune with one who seemed uJ. tra-conservative. You make progress towards ultimate goal. If January Sth Is your birthday you are in· quisitive, a natural teacher. detective -you should try your band at writing. You are serious, Joyal. attractive to op- posite sex. ... Images "She has had enough grounding to make de· cisions and not be con· stantly dependent on others for advice." Mrs. Lassen also gives lectures C ·'these are more general") al various college cam· puses and at business establishments. such as banks and savings and loan companies. With the latter. she said, lectures deal with "projecting an image of confidence to depositors. "We go into psy- . chology of color and how different people re- act to it. Reds, for in· stance, create a high emotional response," she said. Mrs. Lassen also will conduct a spring lecture series. entitled Create a New Image -Invest- ment in Yourself for .Your self. at Orange Coast College. Jt will start Feb. 6. UPHOLSTERY WMY•W.t ....... IUJH..-.ttwd. Cott. M.--541 .. JS . Income Tax Service by H&R BLOClt THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE Open a new certificate savings account with us for $5,000 or more and we'll have H&R Block prepare your 1976 federal and California individual income tax returns free. This service includes special schedules for itemized deductions, interest and dividend income, sale of property, pension income. income averaging, and many more without additional charge. Or open an account of $3,000 to $5,000 and the charge is only S 15; a big savines. Present Mutual Savers can also qualify. Call today. Appointments are limited. Free Income Tax Service is just another reason why you should have your savings at the Big M. Mutual Savings and Loan Association. C.plstrano-San Clementa•: 570 Camino de Estrella/493·5651 Corona del Mar: 2867 East Coast Highw1y/675·50JO Fount.In Vali.y•: 17900 Masnolla Street/963·8396 Sent. Ana: 631 North Main 547·9741 •Open S11urday1 10 AM to 2 PM IOOMER INSIDE WOODY ALLEN FUNKY WINKERBEAN TANK McNAMARA NANCY veNJ. rve 11ee"' MAJJe V1a~s1~.lr I~ cHAIZ.Gt ~ AL.I. ~f OTHflZ v1Cf-I f'rZ£S1~~s. by Wm. f. Brown ond Mel Casson 1'tt~N ~ A2f. AA'NOLO'S 1Hf '<'OU 50 ONl.Y vlCe· ot~ft6~o? ~£,1oe"11 . by Joe Mar then by Tom Batiuk t-J)T 10 MGJflO~ .... R>RGG.f If. ,;., THE VIRTUE OF VERA VALIANT DR. SMOCK MOON MULLINS DO ME A l=AVOR--- TAKE TH IS ASPIRIN COME IN AND SEE WHAT I DID TO YOUR UNITED feature Syndicate ~turoaf• Puuie Sot~ed· ACROSS wo1ds 50 Consumed t Card game 51 Raspi.1g 5 WOfsh1p sourl<l 10 Not moving 52 Aoa11 on quickly •oace 14 Ste1h1n 56 Two pas· 11sort Hnger t 5 Bed slleels. bicycle tte. eo ~odule 16Ustd1 loom tit Hol1d<1y 1 7 E•ll1b1ttd per!Od unl1ktness 64 Engl sll 19 Mimicked co111po$er 200.Clatu 65 As~11gus 21Cetu11nwlfl· parl dows 66Neg~I 23 Rtll$h8S 6 7 0Nlnl) bild 26 ·-· sen10n 68Appears10 1? 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Abe<. umbla so1red 55 Make a . 42 Comoa.. 6 Asunder: 31 Nikola···-: recording point Comb. form AC 57 Coln 43 Causing 7 roronto"s develooer 58 Send lorth llotr0t prov. 32 Mistake 59New York .., U Soll atustt 8 Ot>Oe 33 Cut a Wheal team 45--· lh• 9 Supported 38 Wear mg 82 Behold Sailor 1 o lndundates teas 63 Curler's cap 4 7 Novu: 2 1 1 Run easily 39 La··-··. ------T'P j.~7.l "',. r r E ~!! o "' r ,. s s £ ~ T 0 NE 'i'M i1° T H ( N K T 4N IC S HO NA L I EH I f RN ES T N V N S I 11 l" () 11 '4 0 0 L £ I 0 I S P SAL A l l Lt T I N U I IT E l ,. "' s s 0 N' S I T E T E r,. ( : T ' E E I P1 '°' D K l u N () A ~ I ll 4 f R S 0 £ 4L•" I IR S If ,,_ E 4 -I IA 0 P L s T 11 IN I(. p I t C E "v 0 OU ') r E L l EN rvrir 1" 15 l rs 1K 10 "' S T fff iiT ---- FAVORITE LAMP TUMBLEWEEDS MISS HACH by Charles M. Schulz ,.......-------, SOM£ OF 711E 8£.ST Si'ORIES I PREDICT THAT SO.\\E l'VE E<E~ REAi' WE~E ON DA'< A CEllE.l.L 60)( Will CEREAL BOXES .. ~,\~ !(OU~ WtN THE PULITZER PRIZE! 1-UVE 1V 1tJRN A.W PA6E 5 ! r CAN TELL YOO Tll15 MUCH I r GOT POSITIVE PROOF' THAT YOO'RE INNOCENT •.• TAAT YOO HAO NOTHtN' TO 00 WllH MUGGING THAT GOY IN THE PARl{IN6 LOT! ---• by Tom K. Ryan by Men TUllC!ay. J1nu1ry 4 19n OAJL Y PILOT a by George Lemont "fHE! t:>IR"fY OL-17 M AN'"" 2.0 7 HAS RAt..t-r el7 .' • • • • by Ferd Johnson .. My husband felt it 5hould hoivc been on the Chri~tmu ~ instead of under 11." DENNIS THE MENACE .... I ,_ .. DAILY PILOT Victory Is Worth A Stamp OF FAME.:.Hasely Cra\\'ford ot Trinidad and Toba10 became tbe ftrst person from his tiny iiland nation to win an Olympic ~edal when be copped the JOO.yard dash in Montreal last summer. 'JtecenUy, bis country issued a 2-5 • c e n t s t a m p s b o w in g Cfawford winning the race. OF MEMORIES-lvo Van Damme of Belglltm pkked otr tllt>er m edals la U11e 800 and 1.Ht·meter runs at tbe 1976 Obmple Gama. New 'Zealaader John Walker. lold medaUtt In tbe 1.seo. said atter tbe race tbat be eon· 1l4ered V aa Damme the mu with the most po&eDtlal to be a doable winner at the 1980 <iame. in Moscow. We'll never know bow that WHITE •• WASH -GlENl't WHIJE predletloa wUI tarn out. Van pamme was killed In an iultomobUe accident last week. OF FOOTBALL-I change my vote after the debacles in the ~arious bowls. Pitt g~ts my nod as having the best college foot· ball team of 1976. USC and Michigan simply weren't that Impressive when they met each other in lbe Rose Bowl as SC fumbled twice an~)Michigan had four bobbles. True, Pill played a woefully Eak schedule. But when they d meet tough teams (that only ppened twice), the Panthers were tough. They lambasted Notre Dame. 31·10, at the lat· ter's field. And they humbled l>enn State, 24-7. SC could only down Notre Dame by a 17-13 f Ount. OF P.RO G R ESS-San Oemeate High'• varsity basket· ball team baa Improved Im· meuurably since tbe atart ot t111e aeaaoa and Ila tz.84 win o~ hott Xatella ud n .11 COil· 49eSt ot toa1111 St. Aatboay are Dot to be sneezed at. OF RED FACES-Those ~ho · ced the photo of Big Canyon esident's cup golf winners in turday's Daily Pilot should le that Kay Nebb won the' ampionship. Jean Mallory was runnerup OF QUOTES'-VSC football acb Jobn Rob..._ said alx ya a10 b e wu wary of clflgaa'a air attack. Arter el•I Mlcblgaa'a paula(! me at tile aoae Bowl. lnMe lllad more re..-to be ry of MlclaJ1aa'a baDd. At st It nae to play. ------=--o--=-=--~--~~ ---=-~ .. ~ -- Tuesday. January'· 1977 • Pro Stars . . Practices., Arrive; Closed Leave ll to Al Davis to'leave nothing to chance. The mysterious, sometimes sinister, and always secretive head man of the Oakland Raiders Monday sent his advance troops to the battleground of Super Bowl XI a day before the team's ar· rival to scout the training facillUes. The troops: Head coach John Madden and all his assistants. Their mission: Checking all the nooks and crannies at UC Irvine. That might not seem like such a big deal -but Minnesota coach Bud Grant can surely understand the Raiders' apprehension and thoroughness. Remember Super Bowl VIII in Houston? Giant does. Hi5 Vlk· ings were totally unprepared for what they found when they ar· rived, namely a blah school field assigned to them for practice. And it look a 20-mlnute. bus ride every day to get the Vikings there from their hotel while the Miami Dolphins could simply stroll across the street to their faciliUes, the Houston OlJers' practice field. ·'Sparrows in the showers," Grant mut(ered after getting his first look at the Vikings' workout scene. It became a cause celebre -and Grant became $1 ,500 poorer when National Football ,, ........... .. 810 REACH-Nebraska's Brian Ranlts grabs rebound away from South Carolina's Stu Klitenic (right) during Monday night's collegiate basketball game, won .by South Carolina, 54-49. League commissioner Pete Rozelle fined him for bis editorial comments. No one knows whether the Raiders are pleased with their UC Irvine tra!nln1 camp or the Marriott Hotel in Newport Beach, a lO·minute bus rlde away -and if Madden ls any sort of diplomat, we'll never know. It's already known, though, that Grant doesn't like the idea of the Vikings l>eing quartered at South Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa, 20 minutes from their training camp, the Los Angeles Rams' ln· season training site at Blair Field in Long Beach. Practices will be closed to the public. . The problem, Grant points out, is that it's perhaps a two-hour bus ride north from Co6ta Mesa (and from Newport Beach, for that matter) tD Pasadena and the Rose Bowl, the scene of Sunday's game. So Grant and the Yikes will be pulling up stakes in Coeta Mesa on Friday and sequestering themselves in Pasadena for the final 48 hours or so . To reserve 40 rooms in Pasadena Saturday night, the Vikings were forced to pay for a minimum or three nights. which • figures to roughly $4,000 -l)ear· ly '100 per player. The Vikings also will be billed for their rooms Saturday night in Costa Mesa. Grant, who was fined $1,500 in Houston three year& ago for criticizing lockerroom facilities, said last week be was looking forward lo the "first class" faclliUes. The practice field was wet Monday following a much· needed overnight rain in Southern California. More pre- cipitation was expected around midweek. However, sunny skies and a 60-degree temperature Monday should leave µie field in good shape for Minnesota's first workout. Both teams began work with a photo session this morning, • followed by afternoon practices. · The Raiders also may be Jess than thrilled with their loca· tion. It is understood that. Mad· den and his players will check in· to a motel near Pasadena a day or two before Sunday's game. * * * Both Teams Haunted By Failure A history or failures haunted the Oakland Raiders and Min· nesota Vikings as they arrived Monday to begin preparations for Super Bowl XI. The N atlonal Football League extravaganza will be Sunday al the Rose Bowl In Pasadena, where a record crowd of more than 104,000 is to be on hand when one or these teams fmally she$ the loser's image. llege Basketball Slnce 1970, when pro football's merger was finalized. the Vik· ings have the NFL's best record, 75-22·1 for .770. The second-best record belongs lo the Raiders, 71·21-6 for . 755. Princeton Upsets Notre Dame .PRINCETON. N.J CAP> - ard Frank Solwinski scored points and a tenacious Prin· defense helped the Tigers a 76·62 upset over eighth· ed Notre Dame io college ketball Monday night. lwinskl had a perfect shoot· night, hilling six-for-six from the floor and the foul line. ough he was forced to. the nch for about 10 minutes ause of foul trouble. Former M arlna (Huntioeton ach> High star Rieb Brannlnj, freshman 1uard for the Irish, 11 points ln a atart.lng role. ftlC• 8reese LEXINGTON, Ky. -James hit a layu~ and two free a for ~ rare four-point play 1: 22 lett In overtime Mon· night to send third-ranked cty lo a M-59 victory over gta In a Southeastern Con· e college basketball game. t , w reserve. drew Kentucky y from a one·polnt lead when stole the ball, scored a layin made both of bis lrft throws after an intentional foul by Georgia's Pete Fusi Only 15 seconds-later, Lee again was at the free throw line in a one-and-one bondS situation and made them both for a 62·55 Kentucky lt>11d, and the Wildcats held on for the victory. 'a..aCollect• AUBURN, Ala. -Freshrt)an Kent Looney hit four fr~ throws in the final 31 seconds to give Alabama a 74.71 victory over Auburn in a Southeastern Con· ference basketball opener Mon· day night. The Tide overcame a five·polnt Auburn lead in the second half after the Tlgers came from behind to take a 62·ST advahtage after a steal by Bubba Price. The fourth-ranked Tide boost· ed ill record to 10-0 and 1-0 in SEC play. llla,..tteue Kolb MILWAUKEE -Guard Butch Lee pumped in 18 points, sinking HVen of hla first 10 shots, to lead 12th·ranked Marquette over Georgia Tech, 63-45, in colleie basketball Monday night. Aft.er a slow start, Marquette, 8-2, sank six of seven &hots over Georgia Tech 's zone in a run of 12 successive points to go ahead to stay14·4. Lee then scored Marquette's next 10 points. four jumpers from the ritht corner and two free throws, triggering.a 14-4 spurt as the Warriors opened a 28·12 spread. Olcelt• Leaf& lJNL 1' LAS VEGAS -Eddie Owens and Reggie Theus combined for 46 points Monday night, leading n inth-ranked University ol evada <Las Vegas) to a 113·91 basketball victory over the University of Colorado. Owens, a 6~ forward, scored 24 points and sophomore guard Theus bit for 22 point.5, sparking the Rebels to their 11th victory in 12games. The Rebels raced to a 21-8 Jead after the opening nine minutes and coasted to their 49th strai1bt home court victory. So why the loser's image? Well, this is the fourth Super Bowl for Minnesota, and the Vik· lngs haven 'l won one yet. The Raiders have won the AFC West Division title nine of the last 10 years, but this Is only their second Super Bowl. That was lo 1968 when they loll 33-14 to Vince Lombardi's Green Bay Packers. When Minnesota kayoed Los Angeles to capture the NFC championship, the first thing Fran Tarkenton said was, "We're going back to the Super Bowl, and we want the world to know that tbls time we're going towlnlt." Thal was as close to a guarantee as any quarterback bas given since Joe Namath said the New York Jet&' would win Super Bowl III. He WU right. That was the year before Min· nesota 'a string or Super Bowl dls· appointments began. In 1970, the Vikings came into the game with a 12·2 record and were sub· marlned by Kanaas City, 23-7. In 1973, they were 12·2 again but . came up short ln the bl1 aame, loslnc to Miami. 24·7. The next year, the Vlkln1s finished l<M and lost the Super Bowl to Pit· llburl.b, 16~. Pitt No. I Grid Team; USC Seeond t BJ ASSOCIATED PllE8S =Tb Steelers failed to bring a l UUe to Pttttbutah this but tbt Pltt Pantben did. Barely one weet after tbe de-~ pro cbamplon Steelen were eliminated ftom the Na- -.ai Football Leap playolle ft• unbeaten and untied Eeralty of Plttabur11' Pan· were cbOltll todQ u wtn- ol coll••• football'• national plonabip. =-~ whJch wrapped up lta first wlnninl ttaaon ln $8 years &1 by routlq Georata 2'1-3 I l __, --- ln the Suiar Bowl for a 12·0 re- cord, was an overwhelming and near-perfect wlnrter in the As· aociated Preas' naUonal cham· plomblp poll. The Panthers received 59 of 62 first place votes and 1,234 or a pouiblt 1,2'0 points from a na· Uonwide panel of sports writers and broadcasters. lt was their f1nt national champiooab1p in 39 years and second 1lnce The AP poll ort1in1ted in 1938. · Pitt.. ninth in the preseaaon poll, moved up to third place by wlnnin& its opener handily aeainat Notre Dame on the road 31-10. The Panthers then climbed into eecond place behind Micblian on the third weekend ot · the season and took OVeC' tM 'GP · apot wben the Wolvednea wtf't upset by Purdue 18-14onNov.t . Southern California, •blcb won 11 aame1 in •row, lncludlo.S 8 14-6 triumpb OTW •m:tn the Rose Bowl, after It.I opener to Missouri..-. second ln the final rriblct. The Trojans received the other three first place vote• &net 1, tll DOU\ta Sn movloi up from third In \he ~ .... ,~ RAIDERS ARR IVE -Otis Sistrunk leads a bevy of Oakland Raiders football players as they arrive at Long Beach in preparation for Super Bowl Xl Sunday. The Raiders are staying at Newport Beach's Marriott Hotel and working out at UC Irvine. Sports in Brief , : . ,, .. Lawther to. Coach ' Pro Soccer Team Derek Lawther, who coached the Fountain Valley Eagles to third place in the National Youth Challenge Cup finals last year, bas been sel~coach of the recently formed \..alifornia Sunshine of the American Soc· cer League. The 40-year Lawther, who re- sides in Fountain Valley, has an extensive background in the American Youth Soccer Organization, is a United States Soccer Federation coach, is the director or coaching or the California Youth Soccer As· sociaUon·South and bas been a pl ayer-coach for the Santa Monica Soccer Club the past two years. Rodger• Sip• SAN DIEGO -Former Helsman Trophy winner Johnny Rodgers ended four years in the Canadian Football League and signed Monday with the San Diego Chargers of the National Football League. Chargers owner Eugene Klein said Rodgers, the Chargers' No. 1 college draft pick in 1973 . agreed to "a long series" of one· ·year contracts. Pitcher Kiiied MILWAUKEE -People as· soclated with the Milwaukee Brewers expressed shock Mon· day upon learning of the death of relief pitcher Danny Frisella in a weekend dune buggy accident near Phoenix. Frisella, 30. played for the New York Met&, Atlanta Braves, San Diego Padres and St, Louis Cardinal s beforct Jolnlng Milwaukee last June. Frisella was a passenger In a dune buggy which overturned on a country road. Rusdan• 1t'l11 SAN DIEGO -Russian hockey veteran Vladimir Petrov scored · one goal and had three assists as the touring Russian all·starteam beat the San Diego Mariners or the World Hockey Association 6-3 in an exhibition ..game Monday night. AU Dl.,orced CHICAGO -A Circuit Court judge has granted .a divorce decree to the wtfe of beayYwilgbt boxing champion Muhammad All, which provides that the prize fighter must pay her benefits close lo $2 mtnion. Seel& Collect MELBOURNE, Australia The top four seeds all won ln straight set.5 today and advanced to the third round of the Australian Open tennis cham· pionships, Top-seeded Guillermo Vilas of Argentina beat Nick Saviano, s-1. 6-4, 6-4, Roscoe Tanner eliminat- ed Pet.er Fleming 7-6. 6-2, 6-1, Arthur Ashe beat Dick Bohmstedt 7·6, 7·5, 6-4, and Ken Rosewall of Australia defeated. Ion Tiriac or Romania M. 7·6. 6-4. UCLA Guards Benched Townsend, Spillane to Start LOS ANGELES CAP) -Coach Gene Bartow of the UCLA basketball Bruins is preparing for the upcomlna Pac-8 con· ference campaign by inserting veteran guards into the lineup to replace sophomores. ' "I was very set in my idea ln regard to sophomore gulrda in late November," Bartow said Monday at a ne•s eoftference. "But on the bast• of our last four games. It ia obvious that Ra1mond Townsend ~d Jim SpUlane have been playing a.rult!r well ... He'l start Townsend. ajmlior, and Spillane, f senior, at the guard position &falnat Orecon Friday night. SopbOmores Roy Hamilton and Brad Holland maMed the atartlnl politl~ at the season ~s start. But Bartow told newsmen be believe• the ToWDHl)d.Sptltane combination "bas been rDP•lnl the ball wlth more cont\deoee and authority.'• Defendla1 Pac-8 cbamplon UCLA aoea Into coaf erence play with a 10-1 mark in ill noncon· ference 1amu, euctly where LbeJ were a year ato..,. ... Bartow, bowe'ver. saya this team needs more polish. "On the basis ot oo.r December play (a loss to Notre Dame and seven victor.lea> we are. not where we were a year qo. · •'When you think o! loelni Richard Washington, Andre McCuter, Ralph DroWnaer ancl Gavin Smith, It would becliffl~~ ·to be where we were a year ago. ''t think our le•guewW beytry well balanced and I'm MIN U>' ot \II who-have 12 .t11111 will fed we'll be conferenee ~Gal,' Ba.rt.ow added. "Tbere wt11 be that much balance wtab ..adf playln1 14 conferen~ p.mec. Even the teams t1lat bue tblp toufhest time aN cU8' to ·~ four or five wins .. " • , f •· Tipoff Tot;iighl South Coast Play Opens South Coast Leaeue basketbaJJ actlon opens tonlcht OD four front.a and in each instance there is a dedded favorite, led by league favorite Corona del .Mar. Tipoff ln each game is al 7 with Corona del Mar at El Toro, Costa Mesa at Mission Viejo, Dana 1:UUa at La1una Beach and University at San Clemente, Tuesday, Januery 4. 11>n DAIL V PILOT' Alamitos Santa Anita Entries f!:f!£e E,!!!rJ.es Clo.tr & M ... "lrtt ~ll II:& """'1'•9tr tSelttol "~T ....... y l'lr.1 ..... 1:0 l'lltST ltACI -.00 V"cll-J Yt•• "°'" 0 11mt11t ,.,,, .. '''°° O••rnone c:.t::Mull IH•rll "7 GI-I IWrhthll 11• Lolw "-'" n, .. ..,,., 111 Sornotnw .. IW••dl ••• TllTW ,_,IC.Ill 111 OoG1111 rC.roou1 m S'-rlut IMll<"•lll t71 Mo•1"9Moo~ fl..IOIWMI tit Het• Olt•l• ll•r tRoughl 122 llCOl'ID ltACI -400 VI'"" s year Old "'81dlM C..111 D•tCI Pvrw Utotl P.tetll< Dr .. ,,. IOreyerl 117 J.,.nlto Trv IH.,11 121 M.try Ell• (Vauonnl 111 Win ll'or Me Oldlt I Ada or I 111 Snvor Rittle lTreHu•tl 111 Curt'\ C.IP<l• re;, .. ,., t 121 CIH\y JttlM)O IW•Uon I 111 MYMotclPrin<tHIRouohl "' WiMlnQ Kid IC••dOU I "I • l'lltfT 1t•C• -I I I• moth ' A l'lffWd t.OOl ICo,.Nrol year etdl & Ill> Cl•tmlno Pllrw n.trt•nlh H-IOINl<Ot•I 111 .-_ O•lm1"9 pric• $.t?SO "'-"Y P•1• l~., ... , 11>¥11 8'14ot IPlltCi•l 111 A WllYl'Oll' (C.. .. l'l>t '" ,,. lllh• o. °"'l•I" IC.mo .. 1 ti• OUvoWr••I" IPl1tt•,I o.<M•tor Ye•• !"e,..) "' 5cttlfl\l IH81't'lll \U ::i Mlnc:e-.1 (StHe") 110 I'm• O...rm« IC4tll•f'ff•I A"°"91"9 Solrlt 11.emoerl) •O 11• Ollllt Lorre!~ (Cora.ro Jrl •1' Torl..ollt (Vt•9t••I ttJ l'alr -$q11.t•• IM•"°'"-VI llJ Vt..i.o lOllvert!\) IU Ton Ol Oltta n<o tGont.tl•il II\ Wllrp\ •no Ch••n• tvnoil "' E1rty L\tlll (Plerul Ill H~D ""'' -• lurtonq>. ~ year old• & vp Cl••m>nQ P\if\~ Ml,500. Ct11m1no o•l<e \11.~ S.lll><ed Rel91t (Plr\Uy Jrl Tim Jrm tDl•ll Mlr4dero (U•l•nitdal SIXTH "ACI -• l11rton9'-J Wf' Old INIOt<I <Oil\ & t81cll~ '°"N ,,o,oco ••• J""l• ICA•l.tMd1 t '!I lltvl1ta IMllt'I01I I Antoine I llamlru I 1 I I PIH1r.tltW<t ICoroerot \._! Zeke tTorol 11& T•bJK IC.ntpa•I 1Nl Monty or E•h IMtHerou•> lit• PlktMtl (Sho4m•'•r1 \II Orovcou Pt•c• tV•roer•' ftl Tequlf•Sun•lw (Pincavl Ill C••lbolf'l C P••r<t I I .. , M.tcu IOll•••nl •It Aaide from the Sea Kings of Corona del Mar, Cot\a MeM, San Clemente and Laguna Beach are tabbed to win tonight. Corona del Mar features a 1-2 pun.ch of 6-S Jack Tuz and 6-7 Alex Black and the two have accounted for the majority of CdM 's point producUoo. SUE ENOUIST ON HER WAY TO THE PLATE. Pinle Sllp IKnloMl .,, THIRD RACE I~ V"'d•. J ye.tr Breve •nd Darln9 I0 1nocol1t R•p;d R•llOll IMCH•rou•I NewStamo (Ramtrttl Co•!lc>V Bob ICorMrol HVINTH RACI -•furl-flJ tow•ncc. l Yt•r old' brad In C.tllorfll• PwM Sll,000. I Black has a 20.8 aver age, Tuz is hittin~ at an 18.9 rate. And with El Toro unable to oCfer any de· fender higher than 6-2 Matt Simpson, the Chargers ol coach Wendell Witt will have a tough time con- taining these two. Aside Crom their scoring ability, both will have the advantage rebounding. El Toro, with Junior Bob Charles (S-10) and 6-1 senior Mark Hill, hu good shooting, ability and quickness. San Clemente Athlete No. 1 in Softball D~aft Olcl\t. uo Allowanct PurH UlOO S<outAOOUI !Tru•v•tl Mortel I.OU (8roo .. lit>d ' Rotkel Tin-tMv1nl 0.-11 Slur INlcOdemu•I 0101.eit*\ R~h.ino tA:l<h•ro' t Mr Mot,. 8•• 1Rouo"1 !il'ort ROCll•t ll.1p111m1 THIRD RACE -• lurlono•. J Vfd• t '' oto maiden t1t11e,. Ct••tn•ncJ °"'"" : :: \4SllO. Oalml"'! or•ce U0.000 Vl••ra<llo tC.l••I 111 tn I\ .. 0.re IGont•ltJI 111 '" Ol<I Note (C.mou 1 • t7 "' Tero• April IW••dl Ill 1n Grounct10 CAa1nir~1l '" ,OVRTH RACl aro .. ,d, J .... olds & uo Ct•omlnq Pur• 0000 O•lm111Q or1<~ 'to ooo Molly Mullin IMe,,.I 111 CJ•"Ka IMOi•rQt.M:) Ill ProsDl:1"0U'\ I rrtent f Toro l tt' 0ew Frtt!nd (S,fM.,I 111 Ri9111 °" WltHe IBv•f\ ... -1..lllltGoFl .. I IRl<hM<t1• R~I Ta\! (Htr1) •n Wt'_ Way Corrlo•n IM•-ne•1 t11 •22 0.Clltr's H-r IPl••UI Ill W•ter OrOI'> tS.lltr>I w 11.2 1 Red SenwliOft IGonit••.i 1 Cr Gol>oll e. <Toro> ,,, • hi• 8 Bold CH09uezl "'t Hot H """kY IM<Harg ... 1 ,,, Mr C...liOtllce IPln<•yl llO MAldaM ICfttaneol 114 ., l(ftlQlll'~"•lltt (011•.tr•» \0 A question mark in the Corona del Mar camp is 6-2 guard Paul Akin, who has been hampered with nwnerous injuries since bis Junior season. Costa Mesa has a similar height advantage in its test at Mission vtejo, where the Diablos of MV coach Dave King are unable to fi eld a team with anyone over 6-2. Costa Mesa, meanwhile, bas 6-4 Gary Wills, 6·3'11 Stan Miller and 6-3 Steve Parrino. and that trio figures to have its way on the bo~rds. Parrino, who is averaging 19.7 per outing, may be in a guard's role with the loss of ballhandler Tim Young, wbo quit the team recently. Laguna Beach's Ben Bacon (6·6 'f~ I will be the dominant figure at Dana Hills, where the Dolphins feature an attack similar to El Toro and Mission Viejo -bustling and quick, but without height. Bacon bas averaged 18.0 points per issue and will have a 4 'h-inch advantage on the boards. Dana HiUs lost to Laguna Beach by 19 last week in tourney play. After posting a S-8 non-league record, Irvine's University High will get a severe test in its opener at San Clemente, where 6-4 junior Roger Poirier will be amidst a SC trio of 6-6 Ted Hettinga, 6-7"7 Bill Neely and 6·6 JOhn Carson. Too, the Tritons of San Clemente have t\\o quick guards in Tim Dunham and John Stephens. Dunham was MVP at Katella (Anaheim ) High's recent invitational. won by SC. &tancia Tabbed For Cage Crown It's a two-team race in Century League basket- ball circles, which gets under way Wednesday evening. Costa Mesa's Estancia Hieb E agles and the Vanguards of Orange's El Modena High are the favorites with Tustin and Santa Ana given the best shots at making things tough for the Eagles and Vanguards. The return of 6-7 junior Doug Jardine to the Estancia attack gives the Eagles of coach Dave Carlisle additio n a l firepower. It was thought Jardine was out for lbe year with mononucleosis, but he's College Ba&kethall .. ., • ..,. It.ft VeO•\I 11) Col<Y- returned and he lped Estancia to the consola· Uon championship of the Monte Vista tournament. Earlit::r the Eagles won the Huntington Beach tournament with a ~ win over Warre n of Downey and Estancia owns an 8·3 overa.11 re- cord. The Eagles may have the best guard in the league in senior Ray Orgill. an all-league selection as a sophomore before a back injury erased his junior season. And with 6-S Pete Neumann and 6-2 Jim Price, the Eagles have a solid unit and are con- sidered the tea m to beat for the crown. El Mod ena j unior Steve Trumbo (6-71,'z) is t he Vanguards' ace, backed up by S-10 guard Dave Donchey. CENTURY LEAGUE PREDICTIONS By HOWARD L. HANDY Of, ... Oalty l'llot Sl•tt Sue Enquis t gained her start in athletic com- petition as an outfi elder for the San Clemente Hi g h Sc h ool boys baseball team When s h e e nte red UCLA two years ago, she turned to wom e n 's softball and immediately became a starter in the outfield. Recently she was the No. 1 choice in the rn- tern a ti ona I Women's Professional SoftbaJI As- sociation dract but she says she will finish two more years at UCLA before turning to the pro fessional game. When the 19-year-old San Clemente resident was drafted by the pro circuit, t h e Pen nsylvania Liberties took her but a I most Im· mediately traded her to the Connecticut Falcons for a catcher. Her credentials are impressive. As a freshman she won the coveted Golden Glove award at UCLA and last season . she batted .431 for the Bruins and drove in 16 runs. But her biggest thrill came in the summer. "I played in Stratford. Co nh . with the Raybestos Brakettcs and we won the national ASA champions h ip," she says. "We wer e the un· derdogs going into the tournament bec ause most of the previous year's team had been drafted i nto the pro- fessional ranks.·· Enquist. along with three teammates. was selected to the first All· American team as an outfielder. She was the second leading hitter in the tournament with a .410 average. "It was a relief not be· ing the favorite in the na - tional tournament." she says. "lt really took a lot of the pressure off us. We weren't even expected to make it to the finals ... t l 1. Estancia She is attending UCLA on a scholarship for her softball ability and it all came about with a newspaper article In the Dally Pilot when she was in high school accordanl{ to her mother '°""'•Cl.tr•1l ~nJM•Sl .. w ............ s,. ,.,.,,., .. UC 111.,.niO. I\ UC. D.tv•\ 111 .. _ .. ., ...... " ..... •~SI •·••ller\fl•ld~t ri ""'Me•t<o" W N-~·tlc.o .. ~ 1•••' SI IOI S.n 0..00 ~ .., UTEI'., eo.,,,.'4 IA'°'• IOlt<.tqel 11 St -•' ...... 1• ,,,,_SC " l r.te .. y'4 --l't6J C-91• TH1t41 0.•t ,._,,, n Wl<1t•le S1 e• Al...,,..1• Avtlurn11 ll~l•~Puy•I "'M•-i.. C11_..1,1,S1e1-•s F10rl"'11t7 Mh ,•n•ocM" II K""'1KJI' .. OM•t•• ff IOTl I.SU IS, MIHIH•Hll .. l.OU'MI .. 1', ll'IOfld• St 1\ 1011 Mitmollll St 11. s MIHl\yjM>i II So.ltltCMOllM S4 Ntl>U\~ • ., Tenntt-n. V-rDlll" Vl"Jl'lla '1, O•vld10ft • W.tl Vlrvllll• 112. 9udneH 11 ~ $t "· Col9<11•" ~nul0fl'6, NO!re O•M• u Jlllode ISl-10, l..S•llt • t S.,r a<vM fl. Cor NI t • t Saddleback ( ln Action 2. El ~odena 3.Santa Ana ... Tustin 5. Foothill 6. SA Valley 7 Orange 8 Villa Park "Nothi n g but 1tood Newport in Action Newport Harbor High's Sailors continue their preparation for Sunset League basket- ball baUle with a non- 1 ea g u e t i ff with Anaheim's Katella High. The game ls billed fOT 7 o'clock and features two DeBusk will be trying lo avenge a 63-61 defeat to Katella in December tournament action at Huntington Beach High when 6-4 Ray Donnelly hit the winning basket with no time left. teams with s imilar Pacing Katella is 6·2 styles inasmuch as both All-Orange County like to run and both forward Chuck Greene. figure to use a man-to-who is in the 20s con· man style of defense. sistently . Newport's although Newport also balanced o ffense ln- uses a 1-3-lzone. e lud es, 6-3~ R o lf Newport Harbo r 's Schwalbe and 6-4 Rob Tars of coacb Jerr1 Galey. lh.mgs have happened to Sue slllce that article ran an the Daily Pilot when she was playing for the boys team at 16 ... m.om Jane says. "UCLA found out about her through the article and she got a scholatship . Then her coach got her to play for the ama te ur team in Connecticut in the sum- me r and the pros found out about her there. "And it all came about because of the article the Daily Pilot ran on her several years ago. We are very close to your newspaper." l s there any com- parison between the boys team al San Clemente and the UCLA softball team? "It's hard to compare lhe two." Enqujst says. ''l enjoyed playing with the boys baseball team at ttie time. ll was a whole lot different atmosphere. "I played with them mafoly because competi· lion was better. 1~ helped me learn the fundamen- tals of the game better becau~e the coaching for the boys was al a much higher level then than 1t was for the girls soft baJI team." Ln high school she also played tennis, badmin- t on , bas k etba l l and volleyball. "I just pla)' softball and rugby at UCLA and I surf competitively dur- ing the winter. Surfing is competitive and rugby keeps m e i n great shape-it's an endurance contest," ~nquist says. Enquist reveals that the Bruins ha.ve lost pitcher Melannie Kyler to Arizona State University but says they will be strong and have their own field for the first lime this season. Kyler played at Golden West College the last two seasons. Perhaps in two years lime. the salaries of the women's softball pro- fessionals will be much higher a nd she will make c9nsiderabl y m ore money than she would by signing now. B~u t a d e g r e e i n k.inesiology is her cur· rent goal and everyttung after that will have to wait. .-·, Ro<ktl IDrev•• ::: H6~ Muto (Sellers! "' Fllt'I City INlcod~mu• • a.mno <W•''°"' 1..Ull•'• Jo'•• cc .. c1or•' OMdy 0•"8 (Mytttl •n tit •n "' '"'"H••cE •OOY.trdi IYH•old'> .. uo FUUe\ & m•re\ AllOiNMKe. P\lr .. SISOO Oolfl•llGo IKnlontl MIH Bunny Moon 11.ll)ll•m t HIVO Mo•• Fun IW••O) RI~ !Crto>Q9rl Nulhe• Anoe• IV•119Ml El•Copv IMflHI fl .. I N Flt•lo !Hartl tmp•e•"••tr ITr .. •ure• "'411 hit <Ad•lrl F•\IJucly (ROUQhl tn 1n '" 119 1t9 11• tit '" JU ltt SEVENTlf RACE JSO v.ord\ J....,, Old\ A uo Allow•nce Pv..e VIOO TheWroQhl- TruTru'lOobUI IR>ch.trd> lie "'8rry IC..111 V•ttev Wotr\l•r 1Cr•'"9'• I Jet'\ 119'11d Udy IWArdl Too BllQ Too (W•tM>nl Pa<llk D•n IH•rtt Mr C.Opr> IC•rdot•I O..tl JeS1tt IMy1e1I Wlc-t<IWar•lo• IDrtve<I SVn Shine ITreuu,. t '" ,,, 11• 117 11• '71 '" It• 119 ,., I EIGHTH RAC.I • lSO v•rd\ l v .. , Old\ Allowenct Pur1.e "00 V•O•-JoM IOreyod Eluti .. Hornorr IW••dl Tiit C.ndld••• IH•rll MOOn'\KlndaN•n IBvtr" Rootn Queen IB•oo-u Cllllidlp 11.ll)llam l EXCWSIVE HEADQUARTERS. EXCWSIVELY YOURS. ,,, CofP')rate Plaza In Newport Center.11·, A Umfted opportunity to bulld ~. your own corporate headquarters In this prestige environment. Lush landscaping. Ample parking. , CORPORATE PLAZA. • J .. , ,,,, Los Al Results Doc'• E•D••H IW<19hl I Mr.W1rTwl\t ITrthU•PI MM'\ Bio Star ICMdora I Lt li'leur (NlcO<le_TU~) oconH "Ace •OO ,.,.,, J , .. , 01d, • UI> Cl11ml1>9 Pur-. ):IOOO Cl•imlf'lll prlc.-\2000 W..l~Utr'\Gotd llroohl Contocl your broker or Charles L. Buchanan Commerdol 01vlslort The Irvine Companv (714) '644-3288 ,, ,., f'or Monday "llST "ACE •OO urd\ J v•~· 04d m.ttOtn\ Ct11m1nq Pur,.. i1IOO Pr•'fO'\\ Booot• IW•tson SOCi •oo 140 IN 1 od•,,,U'\ U 40 10 4(1 K11>9 Neph,,,. B•f\ IC•uoer I S.tm'l WOftdtr M•n IW••d' '" "' !Ma Tru, IM141 tVi-M l.."'kyMlck IT••••un I '" NEWP ftf.'1:. c SEVENTH U CI JSI) wd J ~~~!~~~~!,...,.,, ·:~ ORT -l~ ENTE ,..., "'°' & uo Cl•ntlf"<I 411.,.._• lloCenv.,., IAd.t•r ·1• •• Pur,. \7000 P•rrCt-l~r •Garra '" by 1HE IRVINE mv1FW>J'f Cllrc Pat Go IW11son1 A1urt 81r Go IHerll 127 \pttL•rlil l8rOl'Jk\I •00 s1 "° 11 00 1., l..tO \ l•hv 1 l..•P'lam __ ,~"~===A=o=•="=•::' =p1=o=c=e=fo='::b=u="=n=•'=•=1=n=o::D=e=ll=•=' en=•::1r::on::rn=en::'::'°':::::peop1::::::::•::·:= l -<"90 t M••rl • 70 l 00 _:;'-'-''-=-'--'-''-"----- TolTW 21 I) .. 1.0 R•n V•l.,I St•d~. <.o ~''••ll•n Go Min ' ~O"O Dal Oonv ~ Ft~t 8t"" M t\I ltUI,.. T1ckl• K1D1y \ O·•mt>nd U l••CI• I Prt1t<t\\ ec.o.io • .. ,,.,.,,..,,... .. Hid \•• 00 Sl!COlfD llACE 110 y•rd• 1 yt1r Old\ & up Cll.fHn1no Pur\P \?000 C•\Uct~lrlD IL•cm•ml ,,00 •llO •.O 8old Torn&<IO IMyl"l ~ l10 • 20 °" Sr••nt IVauoM I I 00 Tlmt> '8 •l At to A•n T 19,-r Oorrunoo. SIJl>*rfln•. ON' and On1v, K09 Dt ROOQ, Natlw Tw"t Sc'llttled Over Time, KniQlll fllte, E•ote \..anding. Joe Frailer THI "D llACll 8/0 Vdfd\ l veu o•a1 '1111 Cla•mlno Pu"~ USOO N,.w Ruler CV8uQhn1 R •O S.O •OO On t,_ ._.OV,,. fM1lr ,,,.111 S «> 4 10 Bu•uo !Adair I l 60 Tl""' '1 ~ ..lloO Ran ROVdl P,n 1 G<dd';'1 Rock.ft PiPOAI \ 8rAI P•o~· ... Chit Met M.t"•' S<r"ICMd Q\,U)" ( ""•0"' (1W1\ T1tvlO' 'OUlllTlf llACI. UO '"'"' J VP•' ntO\. Aliow•n(t' Pur~• \.4ll00. E"'v llo1enqo 11.lpnam• r• f'I 6 60 4 IO ,.,_, H-•• IH.,11 ~IO 3611 Countrv lowr fN1coo•mv\' 'IO "-,, 0 Aho lhn M ~COM Boll, Mu 0.&mOnd, P81>P<I\ Ut\I C'll•nu Mtt \(r&tthf'\ ,tllTH llACE JSO y•rd\ J .,.., Old\ & uP Cl•lm•nv Puru SlOOO °"" GolCIQuest '"'''"' 1'0 • 00 t.IO U11ct~ Jtmmv ll(nloMI •IO 360 Town Detcon tHaro l.00 Time -1• 11 Al\O Ran S~lp'\ Coll .. Cup, Or>•ln' """"· P•rr B••' Al.,que S<r.tlclled Frtt 8.t" SlllTM llACI! -3SO ord\ 3 Yffl' old~ & vP. Cl•lmlno. p,.,.., \7400. "lyl~ Da•ld IWArdl .. 10 100 '·'° Mu Tru (Nl<Od~mu\I 6 00 4AO Tr\liY Pouv IC••dou I 10 .o Time 11 .. AllO R.tn Oat Rtl Cornet Mon Go'\ Clterqer 011 l.•m•f< Aer. '1el01t AllQel Oii Ver "A" ""''"" ,,.,.~Go C.Jun No '<••l<lle\ u lpet• -•·'"''*'"' Oa~ & > Um1t's lteQd:rdi Trf'•sur• I • JO To-18 1J .-1'° !It•,, W•' C"'' ·~ EthO Rl)tkel L•uncrt•r Moon Ac11on 1(1"'~ ctoci.:~t W•ruJ V1ttoro Jet MJ,.,,. NO Kr41tt.hfo\ E IGlfTlf RACE lSO vercf\ J vear Oldi f. uo Cl•im•ng for Fllll8' """""" .... Pu~»~ CioM1uEIMt ll.IOflaml uoo "'° • ., a.,. Br a.by <H••ll 1 oo 1~ lOnQ A Go I Frey) s 60 Tl""' It •7 Also R•n -Prte"• H•ll Moon. t.ot· '• A•tro, W1• Copy Fancy A•t•lr. Go Mou J•mes. Min Ooubte S.•w. 01\lant Merlan Scratched I.ea Vandy Gori, AouQh Minnie, Time lor Love, Quin ry·~ Kitten u EU <I• -•·Go M•n Ehlt .. l·Br By B•by, paod SS44.SO. lflNTH RACE JS() yua• l •••• olO\ Ct•1mu-.9 Pu"" S'UOO l.Adtl'\ Kindl Man fNlcodcmu\ soo 170 ''° Koeo th<! Cltanq• IUp,,am' S m 1.0 Cl•ar W1"9 IAd•lrl ~ 10 f,,,,. II SJ Aho Ran Native O••t FU'\\ Pat, "Ir Rebel T rovbte le•rHn. Joi Roehl New• Trlolt B•l9M, Sier t.ot>lencs.• ~r&tched ,..,,,, Polly Moore, (l'uc.-en for D•l\nllr Yoo~ Li" Et l.AICh U Encte -,_t.atln Kl..,.. - & M'u Pal, u P••t '" M Att~ncunco 6.0ll 1 COMPLm OUNCU COUHTY COYHAGI IKl..i.t: ....... '-'· s..c......., .. ,....~. D-.,.,.. .............. a.etfllM-.,LA.- 2 1140NfH TO MONTM HNTAL Wll 3 HO DIPOSn' 119u1an OH •mom cmn ' 4 OHLT $11,10 Pll MONTN TOT•&. COST ,~,...., 5 NIW COM,ACT UNIT SIU lllf• J 4 I VJ ) ' WOtel MUSA•I PA.US ALSO AU AYAIWU 7 Mill mt MAINTINANCI 0 llr\IH i r fOU N'T\' 1: 'OlffT l l I l'HONf SlllVlff "" , ~WELC.c?ME I ~H SOUTH COAST PLAZA / MINNESOTA VIKINGS NFC C.hampions 4 In Residence This Week at SOUTH COAST PLAZA HOTEL until SUPER BOWL SUNDAY January 9, 1977 .. .i • .. ~9l. y Ptl.DT .. LQ,gunti, .Me~a Casts Set Another year brings more new staae produc· tians to the Oraqge CollSt, and two local theater ~ have allDOa.DCed the casts,f oc their upcom· ing J anu.ary shows. Intern rission Tom Titus First on tbe boards, openlric Jan. 18 for ~ weeks, wUJ be the Orance Coount,y premiere of Oliver Ha.tley'a M'lmi·.utobioerapbical comedy .. For the Use of the Hall" at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse. Dou& Rowe. farmer manaclng dlreet.or of the Laiuna group who retu.med to stage ''The Petrified Forest" for the playhouse Jut season, ls in the director's chair for tbe Hailey ~. Featured lD the nrst. act are Faith Kortheurer •-..;~~~~lli:l==========-md Totn Titus as a middle-aced ~le retunU.nc to the bridal suite in wbidl they spent tbelr hooey. -------------~~--­ moon. Shirlee Roberts and J.D. Reic:belde.rfer perform in tbe s~ .eque,nce as a subu.rban boosewif e and her old .sweetheart. now a Hollywood producer. ·~ .. Nothing less than rhe most e.ftila~ting enterta.inment ol the film year to date.~ . • '"'' .. ., M'\ \'<.JM li\th Cast members will be llarthella Randall, Julie Haas. Bob Engman, TelT)' Soreison. JaequJe Mof· felt and George Woods. Tbe set is cleslg.ned by- William Pbillips with lighting by Carl Callawa)(. Lo Reece Tolt serves as st.age manager . "FOR THE USE OF TUE Hall" will be OD st.age Tuesdays Lhrougb Saturdays at 8:30 from Jan. 18 through Feb. 5 at tbe playhouse, G06 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach. Reservations may be ob- tained by c~lling the box office at 4M-074S after l p.m. Opening tbesa.meweek, on Jan. 21 , for a three- weekend engagement will be Neil Simoo's populu com~y "Plaza Suite" at the Costa Mesa Civic IF1illlliiliillliiii;-Playhous e. Pati TambeJlini, reeen.tly named woman ol the year in theater for 1976, ls directing the trilogy set in!'~ York hotel room. .. 'President's Men' Best, Say Critics NEW YORK <AP) -The New York Film Critics Circle has awarded .. All The President's Men·· three of its top prizes -best motion picture of 1976, best director and best supporting actor. Basoo on t.be boot by reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, the film depicts the investiga· lion of t.be W<at.ergate conspiracy involving then· President Richard M. Nixon and m embers of hls administration. Alan Pakula was named best director for the movie, and the best supporting actor award went to Jason Robards. who portrayed Benjamin Un.11Jlel•. executive editor of the Washini:ton Po!>! under wbom Woodward and lk rnste1n conduct~d lhC'1r in· vestigatioo. The ltlm critics fell .. '\rt" nrk .. ": .... th<' :-.l«·omd· best motion picture' of th e :-c;.ir. ;.ind 1b screenwriter, Pa<idy Ch:i~l"f:-.1..~. \~on top honors for his depict.ion of n<'l v.m k t<•k\ 1swn Hobert r>e Niro w:1:-. ~cle('ted as the year's bcsl actor for hi:-. role a s a cabdnv<'r in "Taxi Driver." NorW<'j!!Wn artor Liv L'llman won best actress _I!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!~!!!~!!!~!!!!!!~~~~~~~ award for hr1· rll!C' tn .. Vace to J<~ace," and Tali.a Shir<' \\ :-i" rhn!'l'll bl':>t :-.upporting actress for her rolt• m ··Hnd., · e-*lll CM£IA .... ,ot, .... .u • ._. ... MtW-f ... OM &t)AJW ~~(W~b~ rf!!_.:_~4 ~~i: ENFORCER CIMOOCUITlR (PG) H.61601 A1•0~C01i1•11l1U '"*u. • u ot clNn• • n . 11 " ' •, , •. _,. ,l'lf'> • n-t<-fNF('PCfl? ·--BIG FEA TUREI O•h I I\ f f'!l'I \ ''-J 1f'. • I\ I MATtHES 11111 EVEH DAY • ~9HAGCJY D.A." 1, ........ "RIDE A WllD PONY .. , .. 7:2S lMUl'AES-OAANOE CO S0111 cmzm stst SO. COAST P ZA ltlU11tt1UI ~1-1111 Ill"*"" 'VWTifOM MAM" (I) ?:,., ...... ,,,__.,....,. "3 tAYS OF THE CONllfr tllt'~~T~>9Mctl-1 ... SO. COAST f'lAZA ~11•11U1SI ~11111111~­ UD Zlf'PIUM THI SOHG llMAJMS THI SAME" ,., .. .,.. "'',,__,,,_~11-.11 • 4 SU FOa ToutSS.f"' lyHol J..- plwl Tw• H .. Swf Sllottt 1S6l W SUNFLOWER I w or 8AISTOl c M ~005t4 .. THE SILVH STllAIC"' rrGI ~ CITY Cl:HTRl C.IHfMAl> S..~ FRWY CM.UICH£STER U(J Q.0 . FRWY ICITY DR. E.>C.I • WAlTDtSMIT'S · "n4I SMA••Y D.A. •HM "alOI A wrLD PONY"' THE TlltaD S~ FOCUSES on Laurie Lambert and Jack Winenbacher as the parents of a relue~t bride. Steve Beckham will play the ~boy ~ the flrst two acts and the groom in the third, while Susan Shaw enact.s the secretary in the first act' and the brid.ein the third scene. "Plaza Suite" will be st.aged Fridays and Saturdays through Feb. S at the Community Recreation Center at ~ west gate of the Orange County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa with an 8: 30 cur- tain. Tic.ket orders are being taken weekdays alter 1: 30 at SS&-.S391. CALLllOARD -Auditions for the musical ''The Fantasticks" will be held Saturday at 1 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m.. al the Westminster Commuoi· ty Theater, 7272 Mapte St., Westminster ... Sondra Evans is directing the show, which calls for six men, one girl and a mime, all with musical and dancing ability ... BACKSTAGE -South Coast Repertory will open its Aeling Conservatory classes Saturday for yaungsters in the 8 to 17 .age bracket and an evening conservator)' for adults OD Feb. 23 ... call 646-3252 for further inform atkln.. . . 11Wholesome back to nature ... Would make John Denver might} proud!" -· '· . ' 1 Tbe Adventures of the WILDEMESS rAMILY t ••• u.··••'" lt-J , ...... \'1"'.& .. • ,,.. " l°OWltl•l•"'"' .. "'llt.<4 MOW SHO'MHG UMITED lHGAGlMUIT •• \OUTM co• n Ch\.!•~., .. ~~ tlOO«liNt \ t ..,,_.._. ''· l'••"' SHKQ.&Cll IUIA C1Toro~l-~81!11l ~.t-'tAlUf -\l•l ... ut •!>00 f'l (.tNfNO Pl•t • 1.,,,.,\.4. ,,~ .-..Vil , ..... ff1 &> l llf1'o ......... 11-\1 UUMANl_W«>W,_ oei..T 'AClllC. WT\.. t•\\if\ •CC.,.. 11M1CK.ELODEOM" CPGI . 11METWORK11 IRJ "THE SONG REMAINS THE SAMr IPGI CHfLDUH'S "1'HESHA9GYD.A.· PttlCIS ... IDI A WIU> PONr IGJ ---ADYINTVllS OF A wn.oateS FA.Mn. Y a:" ....,Sta SUPIR IMYISal"' C•I .""MAIATHON MAM"' W "OMI RIW ova 1'HI CUCICOO-S..,. "CAnr(IJ -rHIA.,. Of &OOr (IJ .. ROCKY11 Grand· Opening SO. COAST PLAZA of a New Seafood Restaurant '• di*';;~~! 1111:2~~) ,_,..,.._ 'IMI AOYiNTUIU Of 1Ml 'Wk.OflHUS fAMILY tee ..,., Aft,.,,....., ....... CUNIWrwoDO nt1 INIOICH111 IWI MIGM YILOCITY ,., ... , ..... ,... .. " Q.MMflW009 1MI IMIOICOt11 '"" HIGH VILOC1T'YIHI IOQCY" ""' IUINTOlfa ........ ..... ..-_...,.__.". MCICllOOIOH,_. ..... DllVl.tN" 'IHI 'A'D.Ja'NWJ I OP THI WILDllNISS fAM T • PUii • PltCIO •AMA C.-0 A COl.Ollll JAL9CO....:A,_ ...... U.llOC* .. .. ... .. • . .. . • ~ •, . t P\IBUC HOl'ICE PUBLIC NOTICE '"'11ce .,o ciown.aC'TOltS c.aw ... "°" .,.,.. .._. Oltt'lct: lr¥1M """*I k,_ Ottlrl<l ... O...llMt 1.••'Cloop."' e111w-•ya1 J.., ... ,Y. 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(~ ........... , ...... ....... .-.... .........•.. t••······························ .. -~ p DAILY PILOT Tu.day, January•. 1m The Thai That Binds Crown Prince Marries Hi& First Cousin From AP DUpa&dilel Crown Prlnt• v~ ma.rrted a flrst C'Olllin in lhe ttrat royal wedd!n.g tolevlled in Tballaftd. Crowda throughout the country celebrated the marrta1e of the M-year-otd heir to the throne to lt·year·old SomHw•ll KJ&-..,....,., There were parades. danelng and ofrerlng ol rood to Budcfblat monks to gain merit for lhe givers. Tbe traditional ceremony wu performed by the bride· croom's paternal grandmother, Princess Sangw an, at her palace in downtown Bangkok. She ... ' if paured purifil!d water on the • hands of the couple and anointed VtJIULONOICOIOI their beads with comecrated paste made of white powder and perfumed water as conch shells, gongs and trumpets sounded. • Cobra and bis friends got together to glve a "helping band" to Blue Bass Base. Fire destroyed the home of Citizen's Band radio mthusiast Blue Bass Base. 39-year-old lames lkCaUom, an unemployed carpenter in Plymouth, Mau. So Cobra, whose real name is Todd Hopwood, ( J decided to put the PEOPLE Citizen's Band to work to _ _ help Mccallum, his Wile ------- and three sons. He and friends set up a collection center in a supermarket parking lot and began broadca.!ting ror donations. Hopwood said about 100 CBers, in- cluding out-of-slaters and travelers, donated about S.,100 and "four or five vans full of food and clothes." .. Surprise: Mayor Tom Bradley is running for re-election. Bradley, who last month turned down a Cabinet post in the Carter administration because of his "Jove affair with Lo6 Angeles," made the expected announce. ment at a Press Club news con- ference. The m ayor began his cam- paip wilh an attack on bis ma- JOr opponent, state Sen. Alu llGbblDa CD-North Hollywood), foe using "unethical tactics" in preventing a reform of state re- development laws and said the Bradley administration bas 1uoLev "built a record of solid, booest perlormance." • Utah state Sen. Douglas Bischoff, who gained national attention at the Republican National Con- weotion In the summer by ripping out the New York delegation's phone on the convention floor, re- signed. Bi.scboff, a Salt Lalce City Republican, said lhe preuures of bis optometry business prevent him from continuing in the Utah Senate. During the convention Cracas, Bischoff entered an argument between a RGoaJd Reapa supporte r Ind Vice. President NellGa Rockefdln. Bischoff PUBLIC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE saJd he pulJed t.be phone out when be saw Bocl&:efeller refuae to return a Reagan poster to the detegate. BlSChoff wu removed from tbe floor, but re- turned shortly. and Rockefeller uld all waa forgiven. • "lllA UIUu" Cuter. Preaideot-elect llmmy Carter'• 78-ye.r-old mother, was released from the Americus-Sumter County Hoepltal alter 12 days of treat- ment for painflll muacle spas1n5 inber legs. Miss Lillian smiled and waved to reporters and friends waiting for her in the hospital lobby and said sbe is looking forward to getting her dresses ln order for ber trip to Washlagt.on for her son's loauguratlon as president Jan. 20. 'MIUltLLIAN' Her departure from the hospital was delayed. by a beating problem at ber home in Plains and s he worried that the hospital might charge her for another day lf she stayed past noon. No extra charge was assessed. • Prince Andrew Dew to Canada and six months In a private school where he may bave to sleep out in the Canadian winter and take his tum at waiting on other stude nt.a at meals. Buckingham Palace. as usual, made every ef- fort to shield the 16-year-old son of Queen EUaabetb D from publlcity. His seat aboard the BriUsh Airways flight to Toronto was booked under the name "Mr. Cambridge," and be was kept off Heathrow airport's VIP list. The rugged, good-looking young prince, second in line to the British throne, carried only two gym bags and a black briefcase as be was driven to planeside to board. 'Ibe ~Lot bis baggage had been sent ahead. .. Artbar FledJer, conductor oC the Boston Pops Symphony Orchestra, has been named by President Ford to receive the Medal or Freedom, the nation's highest civilian award. The Wbite House saJd that "due to a clerical error," Fiedler's name was omitted when 21 other recipients of the medal were announced oo New Year's Day. Fiedler and the 21 others will receive the medal from Ford at a White Ho use ceremony Jan. 10 . PUBUC NOTICE PVBUCNO'nCE ,.CTITIOUS eUstNaSI .. AMa ITAT•M•NT T"-followlftQ --.... °'*IC! !lo.Ill--··· STUART NAIOEfH PttOl'OGRAPHV. '11 Ftlr Or .. a l()C, O.w IMt.a, CA '1'1& 51"'"'1 Neldetll, 4'1 Fair Or • • io., Colt6 -.., CA '16,. Joeft A~a NelcNtll, 4'1 !'air Or • •ICM. Colle Maw.CA. '1'16 Thi• bu•lnen I• co11011t1..S ll't • Qll<Wf'al pem.nMp !.1"'"'1 N•ldtlll Thll \let-I W8\ flllld WOii tlllt county Clerll ot Or•nll" County on ~Jt.1'76. - PVBUC NOTICE P\IC)lf"*I °'-eo.•1 o.llV Pit«. 1------------J_,., 4, II, 11, U. "" SM-16 PVBUCNO'nCE PtlBUC N011CE PUBUC N01'C;B ' I • .... -· • J • - I 1 -- ._ .... ,. ..... --Tiie ....... ~on UW 0...,.. C.... =~ .... -.,, .. -........ -.... .....__, ............. -' ,_,...., ............. ~ ..._ ...... ..._ DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS -..-.. ....... -·-You Con Sell It. Rnd It. [ ) Ont Coll Service ~rode It Wtth o Wont Ad 842•5878 Fast Credit Apptoval ...... .-.... -·-, __ ..... - so WHATS NEW WITH YOU? Only the Delly Piiot 19ally t .. 1. you what'a new In your local community ..• ever, day DAILY PILOT AVCOPlYMHT UO "VlPO HR SE~NQMPLYMO U OREMAN) 0 S 0 P U l E X t M G T 0 N P 0 C P F T C A J H J W C H A H C A S A l E H C f N 0 S W A 0 8 X 0 I P Q T S N U U W I 0 V T 0 N I X E l Y A U U S O T T B E T E U T W P R I 0 0 C E P A C E H £ L S N R E S Y U P t f R N R C N K A A 0 0 H 8 C C Q U L V 0 0 T 0 H I C H C S 8 E R H B 0 S T 0 P. Y R V U X U C 0 N E C I I I S T U R 8 A I 0 S E T A N R L U 0 V X W 8 E P Q U ~ C E l H L 0 D Q L G 0 E N S T U R 8 R I T U A E N A M T E R l 0 R 0 C N 0 C P T V N T 8 0 N £ W P L Y N A T E " S l S A U 0 ~. Hoddllt _. .,.,_ .,,,.., ~ bid!• WWII. •1 ~ 0t ~V. ,111411 Mdt ttld ~It In. ~ Boston Nontucket Qufncy · Cape Cod Ntw Bedford Sa leftl ~ toftcol"d Plyt110uth Sturbr1dge ~ Lextn9t0ft Provincetown Wutff eld • TOllOrrow: M1a.tstern States I· 1"i"t1 Ii II • ( Q T A 11 My ""',. WU • oiut ""'" . I I I I . ~~~:~w.:k.~ ... 1· ....................... __._ .... I o ~;: :-~ ~ ~ ~· -~1< ............ , .... 1002 ...... • 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• OM THI FAtaWAY New cqstom home in Big Canyon riabt on the 1olf course. 3 bedroom, 3 biths plu.s f amUy room with wet bar. Lota ot J'ood decking. 3 car 1araa•. Tculy a 1ood value at .,000. A CCIUWIU. l.ullll CO. 644-1766 • -Tueedey, January •. 1m DAILY PILOT fl9 ~-~-~ ....... ~-~·~······· ~-~~ ....... 1~:~~ ...... . ., .. ,.. 1002 •••r.. 100 Ge••_. t002 G -• IOOZ ••......•••.........•.. . . .. ... , .. .. ... ............... . .•.••.•••.•..............••.•................ --------------------NEWPORT ISLAND DUPLEX New listing ln a prime rental area. 7 Year old duplex shows pride-of. ownership thruout. 3 B<lnns .• 2 baths each. Water sports are a few feet away. $162,000 ~ WE'VE MOVED ... to our new olfice at 450 Newport Center Dr .. Great Westem Savings & Loan Bldg .• main fioor (plenty of park· ing ). New phone 759-001 I lmlOOMSI Westcliff area t Boat or trailer storage apace! Lg. yard! Price re· duced for quick sale! Now SJ,35,000. Roy Romey 642-8235. CX26 > "'OMI .oa 1"I MONIY -1WO llOI 1"I SHOW!'" Land, Iota of land -so thil boule can IJ'OW ... 3BRa, 2 bath. fonna.l din- ing room, used brick ftreplaee In liv· ma room, beautiful poal. med brick patio a. stained llW wtndoWI an J• • raw of U.·'ameidt'81 Uiil dwminl bome '-toctrer. $110,000 fee. Sandie Fix M4 82C)O CX2'1) I ' SAU.YIOUT .......... has joined the sales staff of Select Properties . Sally has been active in local real estate for the past several years and brings an abW1· dance of energy and enthusiasm to her work. Sally is an avid golf er and an avid real estate pro, For truly prof essiooaJ servicing of all your real estate needs. call Sally at 751-3191. c;::SELECT I PROPERTIES 1002 \\' 1-.~1.J, y '.'\. TAY~LQR CO. IU<A l T Ul\.S ·-.i111·t· l !l·H~ UDO ISU NOMI FOi UASI Enjoy life in this lovely 2-sty 3 BR & d~n home. Spac. LR. formal dining, kitchen bar. south patio. Massive mstr BR with large sundeck. Cptd & draped. $1,000 mo. unfum . ...J:llS..Ja 4 ' ... .._. IT CIHla. M.E. 644-4t 10 1002 Gt•ral IOOZ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 31DRMS $39,500 Sharply upgraded, richly lndsc pd 3 bd, l~ ba. Green belts. rec area. comm pool, all (or under S.OK. Loan assumable or new VA·FHA terma. , , MS-9491. ~ Walker r. Lee Real Estate CE 110111 ILlllS ca. ovEn 50 YEARS Of SERVICE L901U UTm1., CMtlt ... , 3 Bed.room + Lounge. Decorated in Greem & Blues. Entry Paneled. ~lve WalJ Coverings. Powder Rm Hu Sun>rise Hidden Laundry Area. Xtt'a · Lge Patio. Street to Strada. Be.med Celling in L /R, Vaulted Ceilings Upetain. $149,500 . . ... .. I ••• DM.Y PflOT llHolllft '-W. ....... fo.-W. ...... For S-. e>-.ra..I...... ...... ,_, '•111 ...... Uwfu '¢ 1 f -= ... •--.----..;..;=.:._ ______ ...,!T~u.d!y=:z::~Jen:.::UMX=.r..'::·..:,.:.'"'~ •• • • • • • • • • • • •••••• •• • • • •••••• •• • • • •• •• •••• •• • • • ••• ••• • • • •• ......... •• • ••••••••••• ·~. ••••• ••• •• • ••• • • • ........... • ••••••••••••••••••• I I • .._...For W. 1 WIMl• leodl I 040 lr-lile I 044 Mewpcwi lffdl t 06' '--.....,.,ty 2000 Mewport .._.. l 16' Mete JU4 Ml-H lfor ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... .. .. ••••••••••••• .. • .. 0-PoW 1026 BEACH GlANT Blk~ t.o TURTLEROCK Broad MIWPlllMI U.yshores. ~arleate. G1•r.. 1002 G...... 1002 ... H .................. ueach' Le Vd 4 hr moor. 3 Sr. LR. OR. fR. tUNITS l·BR . & bunk roorn , .............................................. Near Marina Specious FIR. O/R · Bkr ' l'hn,· FP. 2 m!llr !&ultes. eit W•f•OilltCoado Sant.a Ana Five 2 bdrm comp fu.m ~ MOC\th -ntNc T.AMl .. Too of'ten in this bu.,y life. our thinking as done in the bath tub or at the wheel of a car. Why not establish thinking as a wortbwhlle part o( yOUr day ... or week? And when it comes U> bWUig or selling real estate in '77. take advantage of our ''think tank" at Harbor Realty. 673-4400 • DIThlmof ...... lliuctl rrtCo. ocelll\ vie ... duplex. 3300 llQ.8377 or 963 G87G Qws1te lndscpna. ammac 2 lk. l • ty tr1 lnel. &< 3 1 bdrm Pnme pro Rtaltor ~.$$27 11q. rt or 1lv1na area uparoded mt. atrium lomull dln·rm 80' 8011l perty su~ ooo. u~ eu Ve.rde area 4 br, 2 $137.000 3 Y&ARS MEW w1whulpnol. 5762 Sierra '11 p $ 2 0 0 . 0 0 0 down ....... u..fwW.a.d ba, ('rpti, dpra, blt.m. II• 4 Hdrm. zi;, bu. l:1m rm Cli~ll. $103,500 l'"ee Land. Pb 552 7091 llU GaUHDY ••••••••••••••••••••••• ccmer lot. encl. bade yd A.MCHOtlAM w/welbar. (.;lean & ~!;93 or 752.9478 MEWPOITll.ACH llA.LTOtt 6754161 G-rtll 3202 ~~yl:JQUUDMIOla tHYISTMEMTS s harp S88.7SO Ph - ---Bluffs 3 Br, 2"'-buths , •••••••••••••••••••••••r.---------- 171414f 6-77 ll 586-4761 . eves 8'6·4288 L.agi.ct lffch 1048 large family room. E Tri·level condo. 3 Br. • lbr, l b&. patio -Bric ••••••••••••••••••••••• Plan. Unobltru(led view IESORT r•or. Groat locauoa. lrvln• 1ara1e. No pet.a. ~ &Toro 1032 COMMERCIAL of Back Bay <'n l11rae 32 UNITS on 4 acre• In Ave., WJon UnJv. Dr. to rno. '7$1~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,,...... I 044 LOTS a reenbell. Like new downtown BlG BEAR 3 Woodltf'eam Coodoo. un· Ml.SA Vl:llDE i br + , ~ke <>or .... t.. Nc:wl com· •••••••••••••••••••••• • P 1 p . ( C t oood. Walk to pools. For blks. from lake. Income IHtlUT'YN-41 • MOO./ por mo. l•mJ•~. ,. ba, dbl. sar . u.. ... ..... 1 r me •c• It' oas sale bv owner/a"ent. la SS0.000. yrly. Sales • '>I • pleted 4 bdrm .. 3 b11 .. on PRICED TO SELL. by Hwy. locaUon. Two C·l ., " _. · frttb paint At tood lakefront. S99,9SO. owner. S85.000. lmmed lots & three ft·2 lots . SlS9.~. &44-6529 eves . .,..te 11 S240.000./ $60.000 lWIHlrollen M2$.54-712tR ltor · 644·583l occupancy. Luxuey 2 BR. Total pack1tge: 1231.ooo. 752·5041 days. down. Seller will carry John Carey M&-1414 H library, RancboSanJoa· MORIMSR~ .. LTY .... _ U .i..-..wi balance at 8~P. Owner LaeE&stalderamllyhome Fo.lrltoiftVall•y 1034 quin Condo. Fully op 5"' .-w ••-s-T tw desperate, needs cash or t.6oal"-d lZK avaUable w/3 bdrma, 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• poinle d , an<'ld u1r * 494-8057 * Newport Hats . home. trade. baths ram rm 4' quiet 547 3987 or nrt. 5pm & xlra Ir~ lot w1m any CAU64S-6646 ••••••••••••••••••••••• cul-de·•ac location. SUPER LOCATION -wlcnds544·571>4 LAGUNA posslbillues. ~ts of eit NOUSEWANTEDonyrl)t St0-81K4orM6-'7'711. HIDEAWAY trasbere.CALLnow e f R~TIG€ ++1 Lhasa Apso •me Beautiful 4 bedroom TURTLE ROCK 2 Bedroom •-den 1·n J UMITEDllOKERS --HOM€~ abo. smmo.673·~16 ~ Walker G l 1:c Heal (i;lafe home. only 2 years old. DISCOVER the secluded "' ohnCareyGRl846·7414 COf'OllCI Me-. 3222 H~e lot. rn.ooo. ganjen patios ot this well ;:::!f.onp:~~~~~c~e& RED THI DUCKS 7\ Unit Apt Project.. Costa •••••••••••••• .. ••••••• n111tt~ttmm ~~~iryRho:~· 2 BA tree house. One mile to .. Ir om th t I a e , Mesa. prime location. to •S. ot Hwy, newer. 3 br. , ___ .....;;; ____ _ I lfL *ma£f~ singjefai town & beach. All this ror wa.t.erfrontdeck: 2-sl;. .. 5 bebuillln 1977. Excellent 2ba, fplc. lndry. no pet.a, MF.SA VERDE-4 Br. a Ba. ~~~!'! .......... !~!~!~~~ .......... !~~ 962"447' " RL~RANDVlSf~1212 only 164.500. Call now to BR. & playrm.: 3 ba. tax sheller benefits for ref.,gar.,S495.675-e900 cpt1. drp1. fam rm. see6'5-4i646 Xlnt cood. Wallt to pools, 19T7. Reqwres S320.000 ln ); kllcben bltn1. ll• r m FAIRWAY ~&oc:u.n.$96,500 January . Builder. frplc, fned yd. ref. MU ~ t AFOUMTAIM TO~HOME C4YWOOOREALTY <TI4>M2~ mo.$38-5014 • '" COURTY .. RD Lake & Night L1gbt e' f R€HIG€ • 548-1290 . Br a Ba Condo. Eecl u •• ~ Views. Most popular _ _ HOM(~ f'-M Mesa · d 111 ooJ is the view from the Rancho San Joaqwn 3 br SPY'-' •55 HILL llRMI paN 00.:..~ar ._al ! .. l '1· ~c~~s~::i~~r ie~~a~~ plan. uncompro m1 sed DJN. Newport. N.B. Brand~= 4 br. 3 ba. fOURPLEX UNTAl.S ~'Jez;· -·-• evs. Luxurious 4 BR. home. Family rm. & formal dining, with view toward Harbor Island. Boat slip. $i25,000. Bill GRUNDY, REALTOR ).\) Buy\od• [),,., "-j f\ 67) 6 161 ed home. The spacious view fro!" every room $49,500. Lovely 2 br • apt. ram. rm. poea. lae/opt. 3 Bedroom, 2 bath and 2 recreation room & huge S20.000 m cuslo'!I. up Oen side ol Hwy. Views Byowner. 7S2·5391 ""-'~m 1 bath -"· Fowl• Ytley 1U4 grades Wood ce1hngs .,......., ~vu • u ... ...,. JASMINE CREEK'S •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• pauo are ideal ror enter· ...... urlty. system. Auslom' 61·3595/494....-. Agt Will consider exchange. ~ • llG C ..iLWYON most popular model. LG 3 BR 3 BA frpl laining. Enerf(y saving wood entry. Ultimate MONARCH BAY """ Private patios. extra Plan 2 with 2 bednns & dsbwlr. Many uwa•: gas kitchen and wide lot Rancho llome. $l2S.OOO Pw CMlk View large units. Creal invest· den. A bargain at. 188$ S3i5. 714•963•45,9 or w 1th R V acces s Wkdys 752·0206. eves 11 Owner l la MoHCO Model ment potentl~I. per mlh. on yearly leaae. SSl-1545. Ast. No'"· posslbiliLH'S /\l S72.900 wknd5 7S2·8182 Lovely Br. 2"" ba. fam OPEN SUN I ·S Includes all amenities ... -----''------- you should see this Cine t g 11 ·ng room & Orby appointment I I 1 Clubhou5e. pool jacuili, 3 BDRM, 14'1 Ba. PNIU1e home TODAY I TURTLE HOCK :,'ar':te edutl~g room w I #6 Rue Ve~ • Qual~ tennia courts. area. ••oo m o. A1t . 531·5800 JBR. ram1ly rm. Plan I, beamed ceilings. Healed GRANDVlSTA Rl..TV Place ~l.$46.-1103 GtMrOI 1002CostaMeso 1024 lntenecrtionalR.ol great vu. Lot.s or xlras pool set in ocean view. 768-12J2 640.4111 Plopwvtt.a ON LARKSPtJR .. 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• &tateM.tworit By ownur $9 l ,500. Excellent condition. 7'2•1920 bdrm. 2 bath, no pets. LG. Bonus Rm. J BR. 2 COVIHGTOM l~~~~~~~~~I 644-4646. Guarded private com-"E"PUN MOOOUAlln 11aa. one car gar. $315 per BA, frpl. dabw.hr, cpta • 4 .. LEX CHOICE munlty $164.500. Ph Comp. redecor .: on cul TRIPLEX· Hunl'g Bch. 2 mlh. yearly lease. Very drps. Call a bout our ...-£ ..iLSTSIDE f lwtilM)IOft IHch I 040 499-2716 de sac tst Time offered ntce Christmas Bon111. 1395. $I 2l,SOO 5"' 11a ••••••••••••••••••••••• TURTLE ROCK r · R b Blu t.o ocean prime toe · n~ or SU·t:MS. 1700 sq. Ct. owner·s :.ulte 4en 2~A home near S&S Resale Speciahst.s. 3. RB>UCB> ---------1 orsale.J Bed 3 a .. ram Sl20.000. Agt. 557·2378 ON BIG CO RON A Agt.NoFee. with ltreplace plus three Weslchrr shoppin g & 4or5bdrmmodelsavail. OWHER4HXIOUS :~a~~~.1:: pnneled _a_ft_._5.:..p_m_. _____ BEACH.BREAKERS Br r huge bedrooms. Three 2 schools. Playhouse in re· somew/pools. 968·4602 This lmaginallvely de CORllN ASSOC. Have cash buyer for 200 DRIVE .. Fabulous View. 3 paUo~~ 8,:t,.,P~lbh:: bedroom. 2 bath apart ;~r!:!~c,tttt/~!.11:~ _P_enru_·_n"""""gt.o_n_P_r_o.._pe_rt_l_e_11 siitned Plan 200 opens llHffon 759-0226 +a\)t complex, O.C . I bdrm & converllble priv ownr .-S mo lae ments. 5 car garage see this fine family ---------i throughdouble doorstoa ---------1 Mirumum 8 yrs. Good den. Fabulous view. $650 918-23sz ' · · Best buy in this VERY bome,6'S.664G dramatic tiled entry. A 1---------1 loc. Batooslngh Realty, permth. Yearly lease. popular model. Call to-REMODELED vaulted beamed ceiling CANNERY VILLAGE ~1·5331. '"1111111•• IHclt JJ.40 day 646-7171 ~ f R€'TIG€ soarsupovertherormal HEAVENLY 2 Bd.rmhouseinC·ltone. ONlST.AVENUE.loold ••••••••••••••••••••••• ()l!{Hlll9•11SiUNrofllNl(I ' ) COTTAGE dlrung area and laving 165000 10 18 New un:.. Corona del Mar··2 bdrm _______ _ [.. ·,~:II~!. ··11,·.~1 --HOM€S room. The bnghl and A new all sblngled bome • UDO ISLE • 1~ tmlt w/garage. laundry FOR LEASE: H edrm,I :s ---· .. -· _ Brand new carpels. cheer)' kitchen tncludes nestled on a heavily O facllitiea & refrig. $400 ba brand noo I\. '~ drapes, pajnt and leaked a separate breakfast wooded lot. 3 Bdrms .. 2 ...... 2 Bdrm.+ den: fr~lc .. 2 rann Countv permth. Yearly lease. ~na ~ W/J~ar '* 2s.-•HMM• floors. Enclosed garden nook plus a slidlni: pass ba., Roman tubs. decb. patios; beamed ce 1· hv· StlllHmelfO hoos;~11 r-room highlights th as thru window to lbe out. $1S9 500 Ing rm. Sl~.000. me c eco ors COLEOFMEW'POIT gar. S52$/mo. lac Id& 536 950 on l lot~ Full of Eastside · ~~· ~~~~~~~ and opUons. Excellent aa.rdeuer. Nopeta. Blfl d 'u & d Ow-m.SSS.000. ~~crt,~~.ul~~ h;~~: ~ ~~ede~~~r.n~r1:~~1; areas.WUlexchange. 2515~E&~~~dM FOR~E:lbednn,2 ht!ule~~r~ og I C· 3 -..00./2 lath fireplaces. Just a short room with wet bar. Other GRACIOUS HOME 6·7r55 I '1 · ba, brand new 1900 eq.ft. Ilg !"'C pat 0 area' Obi garage. Fenced ._ {ro If exciting reatu~ lnC'lude In choice area. on quiet I' ll'llu-~I :r '~..,.i .... home w/fonaal co m PI 1 men t th I s yud. ---.1so. Terms. waJ.. m go course in ... a I ' ..-. ~.. r et 1 1 lo y tow ....., one 0 r Hunt 1 n gt on central air. cust.om s haft street: space ga ore . .,..__ 2 Bedrooms. large open wia. rm.. am rm, w spac ous s r n· RoyMcC_.. Beacb·s finest areas. All p t g d d Incl 5 bdrms 3 baths r-d · I bar S575 /mo lncld& ~~~·edU ~ouen~re.:0a:e'nyg. hdtorlllOHe___. lhlsforonly$83,000. ~a\1~e~lslz;~~::J de~l.hllul ra;nily rm.'. PIC1p!1il:ltla bleamr iyng =· prdener:No ~·t.a. ~ -,...... • th ga en kitchen comb·~a. 45th ST. hdusi•e 752·1920 arge amt Y or 1 R~ Hffy '---· ha ce to a l "~"'-u~-548 77~9 wl D (anlalllJC Vi('W or '" •"" ........ St I u•~ 0 d shwasher _...... nen: s your c n ,.,e ~"" ....,.._ • a lion. Formal dining rm Duplex. owner occupied 1---•l " ...... ro. m.. 1 ~e tax deductions & a HOLIDAY Orange County. Reduced 3 & 2 BR . YI Blk. to butll·tns. fl replace. 841-1611 savings accnt s tarted. Mesa Verde 4 br. 3 ba. tosellal$132,500 tei~~dl:~!ep.e1:ayu~~~. ocean. Blt·lns, dbl. Rar. 16tO160 UNITS WashderG&ooddrye r lln·~~~~'!.~~~~·-~·-•-•_•_-_•_• sm dn pymnt possible. fnro/din'g &. Uv'rm. 2612 ' R u ed L "l·"'e locat on - r I SPECIAL Many extras. Won·t last ecen Y r ecor. JtC. '""" · • B b f;46.7711 . sq. t . Lge 15x40 p~o long at $95,000 brick patio. ll Yrs. old. Fi U ~. montb. 640-8358 r. 2 sty, 2~ Ba, lw. W/Jacuul, coverd patio. Take4 Bedrms, Den and Youowntheland! 1xer puers W/W cpt, ram rm. super 3 car gar. xlnt schools. Family room, add pool, Bl Gii W ALICER OK. Nickerson f ans· Mix 2 Br. l ba house. Month to clean ! $415. 9G·ll571 ~ Walkr.r E lee Real lstule ~OOo~Y appl. 556-t434· Jsuacuz~~~re~aggs:t~~ --------1 M"~~ REALTY 675-5200 :} ':t~ luni6. ~·~ct· ~a::'y' month ~~14. a.EAN 3 BR. 2 BA. frpl. 1---------1 per r1I . ~u t/ • • ..... dshwahr. 2 car car. $MS. ---======--i3BrHome,den w /pvten· lovely neighborhood on 499·2800 U001SLE.JBR,2BA.2 wehavetwo80wlitcom· Lar1e 2Br +fam rm 71.,1163-4569 or 531~ GIOIC.IAM tranc~. 2 car gar. {rplc, private.treelined Culde lsltla-Qllah7 •-HiU IOSO Drs frm bay. Ten'ts will plexea;onehas four 20'1; w1decorator appta. Act.NoFM air cond, newly decorat· Sac. pay only $92,000 and This home would make ......,...-• stay. Ownr. 640-llOU~. lbe other live 16'•0wner Fri>lc. gar & yard. X111t COLONIAL ed. pool 51 lol off street happine111 is sure to a nything In "Beller ••••••••••••••••••••••• will selror exchange in· quietstreel. ~/mo. P~ Br bouM avail. now. 2 SIXllDROOM exit, quiet cul-de-sac. follow! Homes" look like the BeauUlulLagunaHIUsfor dividuaUyorincombina· 631·1400Agt. baU., CJ>U, drps. Blt.ns. HEAi IUCM close to everythlnJ, prin II Santana Winds just blew saJebyowner. 4 Br, 2 Ba. S-Cle•nh 1076 lion. Exchange up now-m>. 9112·3533 Formal double door en· only. 546·0403 eves . Roberts through! The decor or ram rm w/Wel bar. cpts, ••••••••••••••••••••••• :!1, appointment In our try to classic old world $72.~ this .. Deane Home" is drps. immac. Lrg well I U its !ice only. PS: We have Cotta Mesa 3124 or.! Baare'aadl,~ ec:t°>.!hab rbarm. Large Jiving ~_;._ _______ , Realty oo4.hlngbullstclaliSand developed yard. Call ncome n smallerunitsloo! ••••••••••••••••••••••• '"'""' • ~ "" .. room with noor to ceUlng u-... rde aJI 3 Bedrooms are big ~ ror appt. 4 Ek. 2 ba. Fam nn. frml gar. $300. Ph:640-SCM8. fireplace Banquet si'led l'flGM Ve :=.:: and bright! The walk LogiMaHkpet 1052 Nr. the Ocean l!IQll~ll Din rm. love ly area, LARGE2aty.3br.2V.ba .. formal dantng room Is 4 + 1~~~~~~~~~ from the rnm1ly kitchen ••••••••••••••••••••••• _ • .,..___ view. nr. bch. S750. fam. rm. frpl, d.ahwlhr. ·r~~~nhe~~1: :~~1~f~~ I-~~°w~4b%!i~!~~.l~~ SHIER 6 UN ITS ON TH E ~ l-~~ ~~~~!.~~~ k1tcMn. Family casual Family Room HUMnHGTOH you leave without wanl· MOTIVATED BLUFF-Winter & Sum· 752·"20 EastSide-3 Br. 2 Ba, buae '714-... or $31·9$4$. entertainment room UkExeceaU~~~l.ePa:....~~~~ LAMDM4JU( inJlt!Trylt-you'llsee. mer rentals. Cood In· woo ouatUt IUoD4 Cam/game r m •. lg yd, ASt.NoFee. I k d lllUU'C uuhUCl\l Upst.air• t Br Condo. C.a1l RB>UCEDTO vestment properly. w/lncdenclpool,freshly1...;.;:::.;...:.....;...,;...;.""'----- o ver 00 s g r oun s . yard, parquet entry and Possession 311. $1S,OOO : s121 SOO SMS,000. OME & INCOME! 2 painled. $395 mo. Veey nice 2Br., l~Ba . Guest quba•~· Sweet_,P-dlnlnlroom.3fullbat.ba. caahtoSl.8,000 loanap· Red<!~3380tReaJtor •~ I bd• .b ~onllot,3Br.&2 833-3821,644-7003 Condo. Fireplace, laun· ingopeo ........ ters .. rs PV •lone hearth , prox. Appl only Eves .,.... ..,.,ve Y 4 rm ome, 2 UNITS-NEW. near Br. Try $10,000 dwn. dry .ervtce ar.a maln· lo maulve bedroom aeparate 1ame room. :r. ..Q-91i6-2583 Prin Woodbridcje heated pool. Situated in a ocean. 3 BR. 2 BA S88.500. full price. Prin 3 BR. 2 ba. fam. rm. frpl, tenence free. anmo. su1te1. Hurry for this OnJy su.500. Call m..,,,.! .. : · · beautiful, private area. owner'• unit. 2 BR. 1~ only, pis. Kent Rogeu Comp. lndscpd .• rncd. 963-8738 ··G<Joe Wllb 11le Wind" S40-l720 1_...___uru_.:..Y·-----t Crosc.ir:l Tennl.s,JQZ,rec.center, BArentalunlt.Sl02.800. Rlty.848-8300 yd,2car gar.,culde1ac.1..:.;~~------ c:harme'. Call963-7881. Owner'• Prld•: Giant 4 • Beach. Buy lhia super JAY w. YEATS $400. 645·29'18. 831-9081, 8 New 2800" Ole roof tux bm ~H 1~9JVtJ0=;y bedroom 2-1tory. 2"" NIWFOR 19 7 home & enjoy lhe good REALTORS 499-223'7 BEACHOuplex.2-1 Br. l to5pm In superb neigbbrhd. c [.1~~~·11·~1 baths, 1eparate lamUy A hom h 1 h life. Ba. Ullill. Hu Mxl27t,t . Br, den. ram rm. I b•; I i ' a room, buffet dining, 2 from~ ~c~~ ~~; ~~~~ .----.CURTlSeAADlfY OCEAN HILLS, Vac. 2Br, ft. kit w/~m to build S2U 2 Br. T.K. Kida OK. c ar gar. U25/m o . •;• + years old, 1prlnklers fiahing. swimming, boat· ~CO..REMJOAS 2be, aJI blt.n1. Vlew . one more unit. 10% dwn, Fee 751·3773. front and rear. $81,500. lng. Fantastic view or 113C:::: ~4584 Cpta/<lrps, dbl gar . go ful: prlf: ~5.000RoPrlo Main Rentals, 540-5370 i . .._.--S-8--T-H_Ki_da __ _ Tarbell, Re ali.o rs , lake and mountalo:i!l•--------1 &2-pooli.$32S.llt&Ja1 ony, P · eot gers S2352Br TH Kid• pet....., r. · · ,IJ9l8 MESA VERDE 4br, 2ba, 11112-SSM Quietcul-de·aac location. VIEW + Sl 00 cle an u P Rily. 842-8300 OK F . . . ' OK. Fee • ram.rm home on over·o --.....,-_-R_S_A_C_R_l_F_l_C_E_·.1 Highly upgraded. 2 PllV"CY&-OL Ownr /AI\. 4~·4271 o Cl E U M~~ent.all 540-$370 MalnR.entala.M041TO med lot I x.1 l "'"'"' BDRM., 2\.'J BA. Ready "' .-v 213/996·17116, aak Co eClll m p! ' net~.Prt!cs r!. Prestige alrium model. forsprin&1977. Monarch B4y Terra<.'e 4 BOB. Andyou'vegotawlnner ! OPENHOUSESlJN 2BR Coodo.•Ul*'•cleaab ulckaalea1S&"7 000 Sunken living room. bedroom. family room & ,,_.,_ 5 separate houses. l tae Mesa Verde. 3 br, 2 ·ba. = =·J:°''l888 ti• q • • ceramic entry , 3 den.Privateoutdooraet· C-"ll lot HB. near hospital. crpt1drp1, Ip., FR.•-"'-"-·..--·-----bMroom.1. formal din· ting.Greatforeoler\ain· _..,.. cwo Owner t lll rans• d /w L •• 28r 1285 Yard It*• .~, .•, I ,.,I ,, 1d •, ' , • : • ' J I Ing. bearty fireplace, ~OA . Ing & family living, ••••••• .. ••••••••••••• mua ae 0 com· 75Hl600:.MSLa~ador · ·OK ·N ldlJ.--oewly painted. Tarbell. D 'WSA-Many extras App't on· plet.e excbanie. $13!4,000. P8Ct • r ,_ ... C.... .. ....,. 10221--------Realtors.MU854 'l<Jtl~ ly. Sl619.500 · · Charming 2700 sq. ft Craig Clark, Agent. 1165. 1 Br duplex ~ uUI. llC·a533or $3&4Dl --·•••••••••-••• ---------1 i..r, 48R. on approx . .,., acre $4&.ZSS.S Single•. Fee SU . I bd r m towobo•••. nlYATI MESA VERDE S48~·50fu~~::~e~~~:~~ ou.8600 Formal din. pan1d fa &acbcomber,811·2011 WHber. d ryer , di •· llACHACCISS g;)J" rm w/wet bar. Prof'! 1 _._.a-... -t... 2•00 .,.~5 ,..., bwaab e r . lrl1. d.bl Immediate sale . 496-7222 131-0836 ldacpdgrouods.SUM,500 .._..,_.~ 6 "' "" prase. Walk to bell • 4•a.c1111Ced !9 950 Gor&ecMa3 beciroomcon· ~~~~~~~~~I *IOMDllALTY• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 21>r. de. gar. 1ard, shopp1n1. neo dlo. toSIOt.500. ' do. l\.'J baths, dining lf513C\MPU5J>a·fR'lllfE GALLEltYolHO¥ES Loh-Cotto Mffa $295. mo. 1175-8258 or 535-1189 n. priee u rldJt. the A 3 room 2 Balb area, country kitchen. MillicMIVJtto 1067 1714)131 9491 2 vacant, l w/older 114&-41148 •--------- k>ca\lon Is 1treal. the famoua''T'' Plan home. Call today, Tarbell, OPENgAlLY ••••••••••••••••••••••• • houae,nxt.doorl.snewer Beaut. new 3 Br J Ba, _..,. bdmt Lt giant, the Near achoola. library Realtors. 982·5SG6 SA.M. T 6 P.M. conat. Can be bought aaa Mesa Verd• Sbr, 2b•. w/boftua rm. bltm. cloee J1lf'd i. poot slzed, the and cburchea. Extra Plllllc Notice Add A Counle 3 Actft +new L500eq ft. pauck1a1e or 1snfeparAa~. ==~'/is~u. 3100 tobch. 8118-2989 <TW l a ad la fee . the amenltlH -• louly Ot.Bedroomstotfiillove-Br,2bahm.wlthCom Ca orinore or. ••· 3Br2Ba,Fam Rm,lplt', baJUl.rooma arw two and •wlmmlnJ pool + t1 GoYerntnent ly starter bome on a pool $89 5001 Owner 67a.7801 EXECUTIVE Home c br, dahwshr. lndey rm. dbl .. ,.,._cet&Ntoo. ~ate l»UY yard. CaU Al I h &.o.I HEAL TV COMPANY h ugll, beautifully -.24aa. ' 2 ba, new cpta. drP9 41 Jlt, new cpta. nr twy, 644-7211 ...,..., .. ~u bl N WOODIRIDGE landscaped lot. Thia u-.a 'TA r:lnd paint. Secluded area nr. 5Cbla & ........... $185 mo. -1 IL ,.y..,a e to anyone. 0 h k oot d h me er.-..•-INllU-U'"fl So "--·t Pl I -' ,..,,.. ... , loll ta Low t TOWHHOME s a e-r e o _,,,_ . ...,.... air:a. mm .... 842.7549 . =•t !v:riable, tare Thl.abeauUfulaBRls lhe w t flreplace Is in a ••••••-.. •••-••••••• Laguna. extra lar~e lot Occp'y. Eve:53l·~ 1--------- of QUALITY LOCATION Owner· 3Dr Adu I neartown.Large treesdi IBr28a,nrbMch,allope, -over peyment.a, 3 & 4 least exri;osive rer\nll and close to aboppin&I 'l'wnblei nr occ. Pool aountry setting. $23,500. 3 Br. 2 ba. Super locaUon. icboola, paUo Is cpta. -=---'------r ANmME ::l'.:~mes, hulT)'. ~01,.t;; .. e 'j_1l!t9.; nse~~~fr '82.500· tmmed ai. occupancy Tl~494-161 I Close to beach. new 137s . .nea l a _. ... D NEW .. _.. • """" "' $39,950 Pb~ landscaping. very clean, ~" you hurry you may sUll tt t•o...rt. S4f>.~ 3br. 2ba, cpt1, d'''· 4 BR + DEN l4STSIOI i.llltla•.I ~~ ~~t~~~c c~~~ I!&· I=~ ~~ ..... !~~ .. ~ ......... ~:!~ ~ C.M. 3br, tam.rm, :.#'s~.~~· f..c.ct. lbeidealcomb\nalloool m E. Magnolia. Drive Uool Walk to lake! The ___..., tltts ZBR.2 Ba,oewlydec.l SNOW l.comlni!&tbealr washer/dryer. nu. ! 1n~~ to1"l•, •:ea~ bylhlacbarml.ng3bdrm. __ '"f_l _ .. _c_._... ___ •_"_1 ~·~C:.:dr0~1~~;Y c:s'&.~ P3i.;m Degree ocean view Is amoti·freel Big Beer. ~or845<934l ~13Brb~d ":\~ ~ ..qhborhOod. featurtni bomelscallto.... LAHDMAU OC28) woo oua.ut.PH ...,. Public beach acceu leued laundromal. of· 3 er. 2 ba. Quiet cul·de• bcb u"fot lnc' srdnr . all the latest k.ltcbetup-Gtl WALllll 4 BR. ram rm. R v UI• Uarper'752·1414 Mew-rt leadt IOH $125.000. 4'2-e700 Prine n~. 2apta. S.W.500 sac street. Cloeo to all MM231. nntotment1. overabed lllALTY 675-5200 d d 1--------•I ._. only. schools locra OCC & So •---------i&race. l&Ole rooma, I •lorase. upgra e , ••••••••••••••••••••••• CoastPlaza.54e-ne3 28r, + 11. tam rm. fr1>1c, bat.ha, atep dowa wet· Owner 96MOl9. ,. YS TO OWN IJG CAMYOM ~Creek Condo. bar, mlDi ocean •lew. All CUSTOM Break out o r thr apt. V11W • $215,000 ves 31552 Toto Loma CON DO· Z 8 R. 2 Ba. Sf10, walklnr dlstallce to dweller mold I& own this View Ncwrr:,rt. Bay to Ln. ·u...en oft Wat St. Palm Deaert. Deep Cnyn ~U~~· ~~sM r0~~1t ~a t.c~C:.~:: :i.U~~t!~•eh. Onl>: SOLBVEA1sTunA a o r • !f~•1:er~ec~o'~~1~~~ f:Y~:.~im:o't~a:~v1en"~ ~~tt:b..h7~~"~il' ~~io3 lk.:? ba. ~mo.MM8JIRJtr. •.Br. l.Ba bcMM.11. 7d. c.1•'4-721t • Prlvacr·no tall hou.e• room wlt.h VIEWI Mar· Cyn, 3blka to bch, i.o ' • SUS. Bll:r. No fu. bedroOm. formal dlntn1. aide Of" back.. COYereci lo-bl• n~r:;· Paoeled old., lot 11. llOX.8$. Sho Sp~l~~ .... ~:R~~a:ie ~: ,_~•-•_·m_1 _____ _ :,Jn 'j I atrtucn, fam\ly room. tlo d formal Wet ~ 0-.-••-e .. u•n-care pti ••erase oor .. __ ctft. • ~I mh. ... byqirL Rd.54$-7359 I Br, J be. Oce.-t.• I . I 4 IDIM +4!00L ·• "'·'°°· 0-·-~,..,., r·~ opener, uparaded ....-• ..._c1oua .. tc en.. ICbOOI neutral urpe\ln1 as pantry . Extra Iara•--·-~._._._ Ouplex28r, ba, epa. 1ml . .-,mo.-.ntl. I' ~ , ' L f I ... '!......!...I' I ,'v. i ~I I l I 11 I ,'\ • ' , ~ loc•U9D nr. I ,. ~ ... : -----u~ room, H peraw b'wy, 1cbJa lubop'I · For Ola. 1 8{, 2 ba. ProC de· WO.call HOMI!! • INCOME! 2 ~. Pooili pa.rklUle '7l-7601 bou.les on l lot, 3 Br• 2 Jd. $189,500 oy cnamtr. Br Try sio.oou dwo, 4toO Roxbury, Cameo 11 .. V.,-de >ltory. '88.500. tull price. Prin Shara. ()pen Sun t.C. Ph s Br , 2·~ ba, m • l\Y ()Oly. pl.I. Kent no1er1 144.(140. amtn!Utt SIMl.700. Pnn RUf.IMMaOO Prlv• llJ¥elf• Ulib''lll..-0 B&ACH Coti.10. Oftb Lout ru1deat waota ~· bt oner I bJu , to ocHa, f$000. ..... .,. utpla. C4J1 Br W. -on al CS. AC. chm. hall price MIM)OO. a r••· Pr itt only. do ••••·()pea Set •~n. J)rin. Oftly. pl•· Kent bro1rM1 ..... f?l-mO IC>-'PM accen Rll1. IM8-8300 dnpee; Z bdrm., famUr multr w1n1. Ola1Hd ---....................... fncd yd,..,.. SZ50+dep. ev•NI 4m nn.: commutllty pool• ,view paUo. Load• of •::::;:_•:::::_~•nun• .._, .. , sal1 3107 MW184 aBrUla.IM,Jl..Md..,11: park. 9112,500 awaae. 3 Car garage. ~~~ 110 ••••••••••••••••••••••• C ldD. Nopeta. Call now tor per•onal .....-_. ctouttBr,2Ba0tean· •Honeymoon ottage• l .aa prev1ew. 752·1700 •••••••••n••••••••••• front home. P'rplc, wabr. Br. irnall den. bnak/11t 552A70 O#tr. '~ 9·11S1"-'°"~ SEU' CONT'D, lx:21t, 1111 dryer. dAhwahr. 2 car nook, way off •lreet .... .,_,. THE • -.., ~t M\rttlh*d In gar '750 mo. Avail JH ftoelbly pelnted, wtr pd. ..... •• Jijl42 lldt. ~ult whh awoiflf 16·Jult 1. No peta. 1210mo..91C).11189 ·~ ................ _ ••• VJLU uoo. l13 ~aft T PM. I Bf. rtateet beck yard, a 8 r. a be \OnlM!ue•· REALT~S • .... .....__ Jl24 0'15. mo. Wat.er SMtld.. No Sp1rlctln1 HW eead. ""' u !lflltf --ano. C all "Ll1_~ ... ctu1•n~ ada ••II t>i1 ..... -.................................... , .. .,.. . .....,.. •1.17tor ......... ~ ualfled Ad• Hll bl1 Item.a. 1ma11 lt•m• or aQY l&.m. Ml·Mta l~nu tmall ltem1 « CDr ffOlllt. 2Br ffOUI•, · t Br. lllll1. pd. Dpls.. Sbr. short terns ""tal.1---------- anr ium. Ju1t call Dl.lples, 114'.000 O'""r. ~O~-~-·-o poulbty 4 moa. '20Q. mo. Find what you w ta ~. 1~ ..... n~.~-· ~. OallyP,1°'Cla.Mln.dl. . . . ---..... . •.. ,.. ... _... ... . . ....._U.faurJ•d U.tw 'hd ....... s,_...a..d At*hwalsu.fwo&. AflalwtahU..... Al••••umn. ru-cset.January4, tVT7 DM.YPl\.OT llJf ....................... ··••·•·•··········•··· ........••••........... •····•··•··•··········· ............................................. . ..... H44 ~... 3250 ,, I .. 3101 Ceeh.... llU , ... ,. ..... ,.4 .__ 4000 .................. 4100 .. ,... uoo .......... .••••••... .. . ..... ... . . . . . . . ... .. . . . .. ..•...•. .. . .. ... . . . . . c--. .... ...... Ja..22 ......... • •• _,., •• • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~!SAVAlLABLJ!: J Dr hOute. lmmacula~. l Br. a Ba. lncl. uUI Nr ••-•••-•••••••••••••• Mull~ i~·b;~~~ ........ •••••••••••••• Nbl&t'rOQm, UIA tAue or Rent, Ille In· LOST, Sin. brown Poodle. u .. la lrvtoe Vllla1e CJo.e to abopt. Good beecb. Im 111.S W. S.I End 1ar. paUo. pool. k.llcllpnv Female. dust.rial lUOO sqft. 17' ~ ''Coco", Reward. Mue la•• 4IM--01.22 rent 1144-091t ,..,.._,. olhces. Acroaa tr OC - W.haribomsuvalJ. for ntll bbOrbood. S.SSO/Ls Blvd 1162·0505. Winter ra .... ~ Like new, no pet1. •O&JYl PAJtl(• $\JO mo. ~~73 ,,,.., heavy pwr\ 1ood fh.ltlt'll!arb.N0-1(11 Walmrt&cNare ~7•2 1l t,'!!:~• AnH-,..IS Roomtorrenc.Stoomo. + AirPort Call 146·4731 UlST.Old£ai~a. It--* Oil Homes ~ MO. FREE RENT· C.O. .. Mw "' 6 --~ = "~ 11~. Co&y 1 Br. Singles Nu 2 •JJ Bdrm .. blt ins. kit.ch priv, female. Hiittt Dys, 54().4713 Evs. male, ('Ollar no t.tp. Liit( ~ Univ Pk Leaae IBr. 28a. newly ••••••••••••••••••••••• 0 . K . f' e e $I S . CllU. dri». t ncl. ~•r . all Bch.nearbeach.. 538-4089 Bch. C all 494·TeU. ~ale Col.Patil oalnted w ide. aeparat.t-SMALL &ch apt.. quiet CORONA DEL WAR Beathcomber, 831-aOll nu 1714) M7-7:166. to.am ........ /l•Yfft/ Reward TwtleRoclt lam·rm, c enlr•l 1ir Non amk.r. yrly '155 lncl 2 Br Townbo 1 1 5pm. 7dys. Mod~rn. qwet rm & ~ --------- 1 bdnn, )'OUr tbol~ ot J C'Ond. $375 mo. Rusty uul. 67~; 975-*" Pooi S::· 11> c. 2 Br w/gar. $230. New bath. nr bch. pvt entry •••••••••••••••••••-•• Found 2 ~pita. e to If ftomSMO to$tOO. :Mt-1811:2 ColtaM9N 3724 ,lCIUUI. eocean eriit.lptncdydw/patio. SlSOmo.644~1.28 ......, wboJd,I .lbl'ownon bdrm_, )'GUI' rhol~ ot 1' 1 _ ~ 3252 ••• .. ••••••••••• .. ••••• 6 ~~ _!'.1~~·~!084!h ~~UApd. 2~~ .. 0 " N.!:._ Hamlllon/BrookllohS1u·al .JOTEL 12~ wll II t 0,. twltJ SOOS 0 Avltmor• 1 Tarr. CM 11 ~Sll$.tof'75 _,......._.,....... t.o.....,.,.,._,.,....,~c · .-._""" , call unWD l~ • ...,., 3ba, 1ar. pa ml • · n.: .. ••••••••••••••••••••• wner p eaae c• 'bdrm~ Cho.Ice of e ••••••••••••••••••••••• $40.00WHl(&UP 644-all 638-4121() cbUdok.$3M 962--0718 ::~:: ~3 ~~ COf'flllSHOf' M5-9874a1Upm. fftmlM50tol550 OCEAN Vtl';W, adult •Stud1o&l BRApta __ ~ ......._ ........ lBtS210.Slv"refri&.No 3 br. 2 ..... bo, 2 car aar. msg. N.ETS$2000.MO. Found: Male Collie. Tn Mo Feeti community apse 2 Br' •TV & Maid S.rv Av all •nw.n.w.•~--... -clUldreo ot pets. 731 W. dsbwahr, frplc, 1385. 2'n Perfect Mom & Pop loca· Adult. AUao Villu, Mta· IAMCHllALTT den.2 Ba. lie. 1475 mo. •PbooeServ.Hldpool CUTI l.8lb,,\JXC.67J.7787 bJk:stobcb.~~ acaHo.lewtolt 4UO Uon.FreestandinabuUd· alon Viejo. 5815-1889. llf JOOO ~ ~~~or•~!v~M ••••••••••••••••••••••• i .. s with I t of ll Sll&-1929 .,._...,,.... .............,, One bedroom, one bath New Twfthae Apt. Frl>lc. 2 bdrm. fireplace,.,.. mile BIG BEAR CABIN .... P enry par · --------- • ________ ,TOWNHOUSE 2 Br, apartment&. South of pootJacuni.2br.l'>\ba, from beach. l year old. 2Br, trplc, sips 8. wk. or inl1 · !!,~_.V>',._~ ll'Goodartlc FOUND: MaJe. b!ll curly _ •wffplng ocean view. SUSCASITAS hl(hdwah¥· Close$2~0beach patio & balcony, au 96(M803 wkend.64o-:l.565 .~:"'!".,! 837•~..;,,. h.airPoodle/Temermia, *"8"'11•A&.S * M50Call528-6889. Minutes to NB. 1 BR an s opa. .. per w/Wuher dr)'erbookup ....,.....,,,._.. .._.,., med ''· Dana Pt 1 BR. den ...... · • .. $47$ ......_ Vlefo 3z6 7 furn. Adult.a, no pets. month. Aak for Mlssl, Ad:ulta. $$rs. lGam~pm: l Br apt..11tove. cpt.s, drps. to,...._ 4300 Alto Wreddl9a ~ ' ==:~.:::::::::: = ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2J l0Newport 81vd.CM. e7S-231l. Ml-2nl0 ~~~>'· pool. U H 11800.MONE'f FOUND.Great Dau. 28&. .............. $ot2$ 2 Br Alito VIiia. a/cond, HOUDAY PLAZA Elside 2br, lba w/cri>ts. Meeda Roo-..te7 Orange & L.A. Counties male, vie ltlh/Coa1t 2 Bil, 2'41 Ba .. ~ ... SSS<> fri>lc. fresh paint. N Deluxe l br apt$180 mo. THI IASIL Ll4F drpe, atove. $210/mo. 1._.,._ ~-CI2A:rts iJHuMmD locatioas. Ful.l,y licensed. Hwy HB S3S-4289 JBR..JBa ........... '500 pets.AvaiJnow.$270 mo. Adultsonly,oopets l9'S Newly redecorated 2 Mgr.:548-91!8a 1 .. rr_. 3142 AProlesan'IRoommaie Agt.83'1""2JQO ' . . JB1l, Den .......... 8»-8740. Pomooa Ave, AP'. 15. bd.rmt 1 ba apt. Poot n & --...... ffDIU t rtt JBR.2ba ........... $S'7 Ne&roeech.Adwt.s.D>O. l BR. new Ci>ll & drJ>s, ....................... ReferraJCompanycao t10••• ~ ~·~ JBR,P'R,2~ba..... Mniportleodl 326' OCC Special! SSC5. UWa. mo. SttO. 998 Valeoda. S33ll Nr: Harbour, 3BR HELPYOUFINDTllAT Net.113.SOO.mo. JBR.2 Ba ........• , ,1435 ... •••••••••••••••••••• pd. Fee "46-0113 S40-80nor~ 2BA Triplex. Bef 8am or RJGffI' ROOMMATE Sao Francisco alyle. 1 ANSWERS IBR.2Ba $.$CJOffARO TO Fl ND MaiDRentals,546-S370 a1Upm;2U/~2Gll6 832-4134Sincel971 Penoo ope.ration. Busy •aa .... _··········· Easlbluff Exec home. u--2b lbaf J bl'--Eaata1de Townhouse 2 MaU 1oc. Only $Sl 000 ll"Ol1ic -Twble -•un..•a............ br 2b t Sof STUNNING Lg l br ,...,... r. ri>c. ""'·BR. 2 Ba lio 1nc1ry Woman owr•6Sw/carto • · Agent -Betray-JBR,tBa ........... $400 4 ier ~ am ':·d t garden apt: Pool rec garage. Adil.It.I, nopeta. hook -~ ....._ 3844 s hare C d M h ome full price. with t.erma. JNTOaBAR SBR.FR. .......... $425 :U.t·w:i'k c{t s~~· area.$21.S.7lO W.1sihst. 1385.6'0-1&40 up. · ••••••••••••••••••••••• w1same. Rm. board & Agt.983'1-4200 My uncle wu a &re•l • 28 R. 2 Ba .. den .... f'7 b . t i I b. u talrs R NEW beaut aptg. 1 & 2 WOODBRIDGE nomlna.l salary to right COCKTAILS maetclan.He ~walk ::::~~& ......... f'l ;1:!,'~0 ·~:e~ ~eucs: $150 B1chelo_r. nearly ps 811 ~855:'°°· BR. Applications being PINESAPTS person. N1gbtor day ph; Ne'WJIClrtBe.ch down t.be atreet and tW"D .. · · · ··.. MCMmSorMS-2240 new. all uUhUes paid. ta.kei, 1980 An&belm St... t. 2 & 3 bdrm units. 6T.M725 Pl b t 100 JNTOa BAR. UIR.38a........... Adults.nopets.548-1098 2 Br 1 Ba ar atove C.M. 9am·4pm dally. Designed like early p ua • ••r • dl · ---------~ ~~~~ea'" ..... $5? HV Hm.a, Carmel 3 Br $150 Bachelor .... utll + refrta, no' ctlldreo or ~3229. California bungalows. Woman,62,.:anta~eto T~~~~srte_:., 0 1 · ~:~M~~: • ......... +FR. nr park & school. Po. o I F ~ e $ls pets. Avail. $300 mo. New Eastald 2 BR. 1~ From $2 7 o. 11 S sharefmy ~bire· Briat.ol Sao An '5.50mo. ?S2-06IT Beachromber,631·2nll . lm-0821;640-0789 ba.,'frpl. pci:.'rearyard. ~~ ... -,.0t .. ~~!:$:30 =i::~~ p. COMl•clwcaa'-7 ~TIUate'eva: ta a . ~ Bluffs 1-levcl 3 BR. 2 ba. From $360 Agt. days -~ .. SS2-0;oo "'""' Over 500 Active \ocal1---------red hill~ . ~52·7500 ~,, Lovely greenbelt & pool. $225. Auracti".e 1 & den, CodaW... 3124 ~-1000· a.l.ghtsSSZ-0507 Roommate Needed. MIF. bus. Uatinp. Pleue caU Lost. Dec. io. altered ffNIA 644 133 patio, gar. qwet ad It , no ' Share rent Sl3'T.50. Nice 2 or stop by for free lDlo. maJe Beagle. cbollc ~~~~~~~~~l~-:;;;:-gt~;;--~1 ;-;;-~:; peta.2234 RutgersDr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2.8r w/gu $215. Nu cpta, BT.CM.645-4093Charlie . All catepies It types, cbain. VlcCdM beaches. -Condo 2 BR 2 Ba view Bellut.l!ul brand new 1 br. water pd 157S "C" 1148 We ruaraat.ee to pleue Ans 's to "Eagle ... JBr,Zba,ooculdeaac,l( wet.bar f~plc tennis' tlwdlagtowleaclt 3740 free stand'g frplc , Orange. Pb btwn 1·5: ...................... Femwantedtoshrlge2br you. Reward for r eturn )d, c:loae to acbls & prlt. poot $47S 64s.azi7 ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• c:bhwshr, many windows. 6JS..tl20 ant:ront. near Vktor ~. ~ blk to bcb. $115. 751·1741 714/6'13-2152 U7S, la t mo. only . . . SMALL BEACH HOTEL adults, no pets. $23$. ffuao'a. Two 2-BR apt., 545-4604/793-1378 UNJTEDBUSlN~ -------- $$J.'IG>aft7PM HVH 2 br&denor3 br. RoomsS30wk. 6'5-8256.979-3376 Dlx2br·Vu.$22S. tncl.utll.$395/':iOMo Maleroommate wan•-.. to INVESTllEN'TS Lost, fem. Doberman. $S25. Avl. Jan 8lh AptsSl~/mo.536-7056 + mai.DL help. Adlt·no TURNER ASSOC ..,.. l52SM VetdeDr E blk/tan. Jan l, K·Mart, NEWER S BR. 2 BA. cpts, 1144-4887 eves. Newer 2 Br Apt w /pvt pet.a. Cpl pref. 673-0512 Realtors "94:1177 sb.r. 2 Br. 2 bu twnhse. esa CM. Daya IM> S7s.&960/ drpa, frpl, dahw.shr. logunalffcll 3748 paUo&gar.$275. eve Relsreq.Afl6,548-4514. <acrossfromKoaaLoa> Eve 831•21n paUo. $375. 714-963-4589 Blfi CANYON View of ••••••••••••••••••••••• 631·3900 Agt. ...... 3152 Suite 106.. Coet.t Meu 1--·------- or531·9S45. Agt. No Fee OoU course & lake. 2 br 2 $250. Furn beaut. lBr apt, BAY MEADOWS •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• Roommate to share 2 UBI Open 7 ~ LOST: Ma.le lrlsh Seu.er, ---------1 ba, upgraded. S6SS mo. or bch. Reap. empl'd CASAVICTORJA Spac.cheery&cozy1&2 &aBR,2904lAloma.off bdnnlrvlneAptw/male. M--C ...... UST wbt.oncbeat,Zyn .. ana. IRVIN£ Steps to Tenn. crt, pool, adlts. UtH pd. "94-4200 I & 2 BR. uni or furn, gas Br apt.s, encl gar, close to Crown Valley 1 child Non-smoker ~1·2697 or _. _.. • to "Brandy". Vic. Lag. 2BR,1Ba ........... $375 1acuui,1«.644·544J •-Hfh 3750 &wtrpd.Adlts,nopeta. beach & college, Many OK.83l--08S? (Msg>ll42·3589 8eacbloc.E-Z$3200.mo. Deb, 12/SO, Reward. ZBR. l Ba .•.•.•.... s:sso --r--Pool, ~ nn. sec. gate rac11 avaU. No tu• or ---n....-.a....1 ... 0 oet: Help run. Pa.rtnen Dys: 21.S-7a:>8'10l, evea: 2BR.2Ba ....... $32$-375 NEWPORTHGTS. ••••••••••••••••••••••• S25Victoria.MZ-8970 pet.s.Fr.$220.646-0071 leodl 3869 ~-.. 4 0 spliL Try $10,000. dowa. ~ ' 2 BR. 2 Ba ....... $375-S25 3 Bdrm 2 ba• .. din rm. 2 AllCIA PLAZA ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Agt. ---------•BR. 2 .,_ u .... """" • .. ., 3 Br 2 Ba apt, bltns, cp•a U11 711 ~7..a 1 s _ ... ., .. _ lost 2 -_, .. • • oe ....... _........ car g..r. $l600 monthly. ScenkMounlain Vlews patio, fplc, $300. 25iS BR, :J Ba Condo. 2 Car ·~ .. ............... 1 • uou _2BR.2~ba ..... $400-62S Outelde pets only. Agt. Large, dlx adult 1&2 CaaadeHermosa Orange CM 673--0053 pr, frplc, tennis, view. PRJNT1MGPLANT =~:;:·c::f!: ~ 4 BR. 2~ ba, furn · · $:585 845-~.MZ-t603 Bdrm Apts. Furn & Wl· 2br apt w /ftrcplace, 1 ~ • · SC7S. lae. 675-31123 • ~BR ., ... 0 -$7..,,""" r .. ,.th d'-'"-e full service faclll-Newport Penln. call • .............. ~ um. ._ . range, oven, .,.. 2br, cpta, drps. bltna, p•-..a~IT .-..6 48R.,3Ba .......... S600 WS 2 Br. T.H. Pool. Pool Jacuui Billiards hwasher. $320. Also 3 br adull, no pets. $200. mo. _"s;nrv ~=-,...... ty. 3 Way partner split. 67~3731 or ZU-273-ml BlGCANYON SinglesOK.Fee ssi..slSlorSal-6130 <sep.bldg>S3TO. MW4l7.84M865 APAITMB(TS .t:.,._ ldea1 for exp. operator. _Coflec:t __ • _____ _ i aJJR .. Z~Ba ......... $700 Ma&n.Rent.tls.546-5370 25211 Stockport, Lag UIOW.Wllaon lor2Bedroomsand ;/---So.OrangeCo. loc. Aaa· LOST· R d r ru ..... _ ... , .... , br od 2 b ./--tng 189900 wl.tb terma ewar e m. •HOWAYAIL• lls ............... a new "· Townhouses _,.....,___ Agt • · · Slameae Cboco Pt. THE BLUFFS, $500 lo Sorry,nopets. ISTMOMTHAtH 1 ba. Beamed ceillags, FromS23950 .1 _...-. Uli 751·3741 DeclawecU11payedi.DS . .....,per_,.. tt.wwtlHdt 3769 BSydTanh•n tree slaod'g fri>lc, blt.ns, OpenUD~lY C&tPluu"a.~70t9. •·-u..,.,.., ~ 2 br. l~ ba from $295. Air Many windows, $29S. Spa.Pool.s·Tenols BIG CANYON. $750 to ....................... rood, pvt patios. Adults. MS-8256. £rl9..3316 Across from Fasbloo t.a.lf 9Mip •odl LOST Slbenan Hu11ty, Sll9Sper month •e.~:r IUY See M t""" u ff ,_,A_.. t J bo Only $82i00. down. 16 Sta· fem, bUc & wbL Reward. HASTIMGS&CO ....., gr -.., ... eyer. o Mesa Verde 2Br 2ba UP· ,......... a am ree oo •UfOFREE RENT• lions. Many more to a.~. Real MO-Moo Somepeoplesayyouget l.9Ul.Wkdaysll-5,wknds stairs w/gar.' Ne wly SanJoaqul.oill.s Road. 1·2-3 Rm. offices from boose •--------- ton what you pay for! W,e of· 10-4, 642-0282 decrt 'd . $2501m 0 . 1714'644-1900 $12S per m o . Adj . Ull · Agt. 751•3741 LOST pet Cocllatiel, ~Y Newport Shores 3 BR 2 fer more. And the pnce ls :146-741.S °' see 15'5 Cor-Alrporter Hotel. No leue w/yello• bead In vie No ....... ~"'--"--.__ aA bch & t 'is less. Membership ln a Lge 3 br. 2 ba townhouse riander •Da.UXEe req.833-32231'Unooo -.-CH .,. Udo i.i & Ba Shor · "T'1£;J~A1Cll'\'H'~ ~near eon ' Health Club. A tennis lnquietcomplea.Garage · Easlbluff 3 br. 2 ba. ,.___ IC"Bt e Y ea. OPEN DAILY beams, frplc. fam·rm, club. Free tennis lessoos. & peUo. Adult.I only. No 2 Br. 2 Ba, gara1e. $2:1() Lease. Ind. spac. master 60* PY SQ FT Orange County's best Reward. 6'13-el08. IA.IL T06P.M. ~-Unique Homes, Billiards. Swimming. ~..:r. $32$7 · 6'S-3a8l or mo. 1835 CClrtander st. suite. din rm & dbl 1617Wl:STCUFF·NB =.tion.0E,,:~ OJ>eH 1 raUon. LOS'Toffwbtshagy dog. -:---:-----:---11_:.:.:....:.:.:.:. ______ , Golf Driving Range. _,.....,, 7Sl·l652Mgr. garage. Au lo door AGT.Ml·5032 _,.,.,. m · ~ e P run. med aiie. "Muffin" W.l View, TurtJerock Terr. 3 Big Cao,yoo 2 Br Twnbse. Saunas + /ire a l ac· 2 ....... Di •. 1 1 to opener avail. Pool & !2_!.000. down handlea. on New Years Eve, Br • Pam Rm. beaut. '"'--•--u~ view. Will dft-u·-htJ-· Sun ay BBA-._, ce .,.c ean, c ose E. Side sm. dunlexes, 2Br •'-Ad 1•-150 I W &..Uff Dr ''6• u _....._ V1 um-. •mo. '7SZ.()S)7 cor" .. a-"•-to"ault. Pvt comm'"'-. P~rtJ~· w1lh live ba~·. shopplfl&. Adult.a only. 18a, Pvt peUO, garage, recrea_,.. area. u "' "·~ • Uli 7Sl·l741 !!'!".='... ew """"'"area. -Free Sunday brunch. No pet.a. &&S-89311 no dogs, ref. $225 \o $250. only:; :::a~n;,YS3«l. _Newport Financial Ctr _...._ • New Pat.lo Home, 2 br. 2 $795. mo. 6'2-0346. Large 2 br, l ba cottage. S52-8343or9'79-4132 Managed by ~~Space PIZZA-$1000. Gr LOST: IAog ba1red calico - be + xtras. Swinuntn1. Harl>or Vie" Hmes. 2000 YourrentdolJarsgoeven EocJ. garage. East C.M. 2 Br Cpts/drps Bltns GranadaM(llltCo. Calloa Manager Fraocblse t7pe store. rat, answers to "Mold" . a-as. Jacum. Adult.a. 1q ft. 4br, 31.\ ba , 2 rur.ther• .. A t errific Adulta only, no pets . Kids. OK no~ ......... · m4>MZ-Mllext3" 3600 Sq. ft. S.ats 180. KinpRd.area.SCB-a49 lAe MOO. mo. $.'SO. dis· fam .rroa . nr pool , ten ~ • .. .._ -G o wtb are Tr1 eountforJao.l·S24·"34 1cbools. abop'g, $7SO ~ona~n:a~':~Je':i m>.548-~2978 IAYNOMTHOME U~~:1 ~~r~.~ mooo down~· Loat : Welmaraner '2 Br 2 Ba. lax a ... over· M).-0790 st.arr that cares, and Nice 1 br, frplc, pool, NEW Spacious 38r, 2ba 4 BR, 4 ba. $2000 Mo )'Tly THE EXECUTIVE Uli . . 75 I J74 I f om ale . 9 m o a • -friendly nelahbors. adults. oopet.s. $230. mo. apt. frplc •-dlx , ...... ~.. STIPS ... Oltl!•CH • Mc.Arthur/Fo rd Rd. loot-Ing Newport Bay, 3Br,2baw/fencedpabos. • S48-C7S7 646-379B .. ~.,.. • ..,.. SUITE. Rent includes tl!&--J -~~ Darkgray 640-2677 wttb balcony 4' lplc. Bell loc•t.loo. $500/mo. Models open daily 1~7. or 631-$00 38R,2ba .. unr.lt25 (/time recept., pbone & ........,,...,...._ ----'--·----- m-az34 Sorry,nooneunder2l&Ad I bedroo be 38R,Zba.,unf.$400 mail ser vice, util & NetaS2100.Mo. Lost: VOW1g All WbJte ---------:1-fln=:..:.1400.:::::..:.:~~·----no pet s . Roo mmate u t 2 m •m Cuu 1 Br, avail now janitorial. Secy's & ofc Misc. st.eel. Woriting~ Female CaL Declawed. 2 Br. 2 Ba townhouse. ESPECIALLY LARGE !le'rVl~ available. Moo· ;~I pet.apt~ 5458 Gar+all mdrn conve· equip aull. Newport wtth contractors. Help Lake Forest Woodalde · Poot clubhouse. $385. 48r +Den. Frontv1ew tb·to-moathoccupancy. · nqa n leoces. $200 /mo Center.64().S.70 run. Requires no·ex· Dvpmt.Reward.788-1823 Ava.II. now. 551-1429 of water. boat.I & close to EAST'SlDE RUSTIC, lite 673-1023, 675-ll»t perieoce. Owner will ------------~--0-0--a_nv-_E __ , everything! $575/mo. OakwoodGardeoApts oew, 1 Br, adulu. no Clean lge lower, 2 Br ln 4 me location in Hunt· tra1D.. Good lel'm.&. A.gt. LOST: LacUea ti.lrloom "'vu uo:u.uv Ag\631-1400 peta.$200.646-0505 Plex, c ..... , drps, .. u, loaton B each on s:.n..caoo ring, lo Robloson'1, ESTATES 880Jnine (at 18th > .,.. • Broo«hurst. 800 square Faabion Jal. Reward. • Cape Cod Waalalngton HOUSI (71'~ BEAlrrlF\JL new Bacb adults, 00 pets. $220. reet. Single, garden type DBJ/IHr"Wl.e GS-1187 Eft. Coilect. md1.ffilbl7uppd'd. 3 wtn4AIOMUS apea.. fireplace, relng. ~7485 LIDO lSLE WATER· st.oreoroffiee.Goodex-Corned Beef/Pastrami. illta SJSO Br. 3 be.. fam rm. den, .._._ 1700tSthSl(atOover) incl. $200. 645-8256 or 2 Br 1 ~ ba patlo FRONT 3 Br, '650 mo. posure, ass(aned park-Sandwlcbes. Jdnt abop•g ifi* • wet bar, $91,SOO or lmely 4 uu.nu., 3 ba. (114>64.2"8170 979-3376 gang' e, uW pc1.', Adults, Lease.673-8886 Inc. Call Mr. Plw:nmer ceoter Joe. Tremeodoua ••••••••••--••••••• -/IDO.m-tem (9-S)or liome Willi C"l•t floor l $240 343 116M7e7 pot en l I a I for DrinJdngproblem! • t:; bJ Ill Wes& Yale t:;'~°bo~~;~&; ~:r~~~!:-:e:,:!. ~~:;:e~ z.~.;,.!~c~~: ~~-~-95l6 · 2bli:!; :~n7~0:~ DILUXEOFftCES ~~operator. A(l. ~~~= extra bdrm. sot apart AgentM&-3255 DW, no pets, S33S, Pb 2 BR drps Kid.a OK bcb & llrkt. $295 mo. Comm! & lndaU apaces, !WtleroSGi..NewJBr frommaio bowie.ctio•c:e 631-0d& ,cpl. • . 123~ 38tb St. (lOam· 2Cl0to.2000sq.ft.Aalo" ...... wcmt.d 5010 PREGNANT? •beet stl'Mt '72$/mo Westcliff area. Yearly MOBILE HOME Retit or Nopeta.f,IOOmo.5'8-003 4pm>or671-308Saft.:tpm aa35<aq.ft.LagNiauel& ••••••••••••••••••••••• Caring confidential a.. •• 131 1409 leae at $525 per mo. Rental purchase. Adu.It, Mi 1 VI j counaelln1 6 referral __ .,. ____ . ----1 8 ..._..,oxtla•.... llwllll4oeleocll 3140 UPPER DUPLEX 3 Br, 2 IS oo e O areas. IHYlSTOlt~R · ,~ Secured comm. R~~ • EA~tl nopeta.SS4-TT38aft. 7PM ~ • l 2eR .. ••••••••••••••••••••• Ba 2 bib to beacb YTlY Handy to S.D. Frwy. Seeks pt~blp loc: :!c;,r~~o, adoplloo 4t ..... C'N'. lot. 2 br. Z ba, OCEANFRONT APT. lbr. l'rt bath m::&sn. air de'. t4ewlaltitP..t& S380mo.642..J188. • Call: 831-1400 Travel Ageocy. P.O. t74: APCARE UT·ZS&l etl(.drp, eltt. aar. dr I n.r. 2 Ba. big yard, bl1ns. wuiter rental to 6·30. luxe, adulta. •imo. De.luxe a br, 2~ ba. alt. Oceanfront 1 e 1 BR lux BaJboa Inn. S2SO. mo. loci. _CdM __ 92162S _______ r---------~. Sleoa tOpvt.. wnn fJ>lc.s~lobeacb..$525 $225. mo . Utll Incl. 1919 Anaheim St dblgar paUofrt>lc nu pt.SBA lY in Id uUI l05 Malo Sl.Balboa ~tol.om 5021 •SHARON'S* .;''~ ~~ J!:u!f~ yrly IJ73...at93 MB-1930or673"7M4. 546-4141. Mar. Dave. · Alaba~a, SS6·346S or ::fi.~ yr · c 67s..87.o . :;;::--.! ... •••••••••••••• O\Tt'CALLMASSAOE 1 Wllwttd)'S Westcllffbeaut.3br,2ba. SGIA~ 3716 S36-171B ,.. .... -.t.ot0:50 ft,..__ IJ ~&-....TJ)'s -.m. • · or 1bops Mariners •••-••• .. ••••••••••••• BR. _.. br ba ,._, .. _ Waterfront condo. 3 BR,......,..._ sq . ..,.,..., ... --• ... ~ Gaiu.. Us>-Scht partt.Mso 646--2389 2 ea. 2 ba on the ~an 1~ 1ara1e,nor-... or 3 • l '>\ • .. .,.c, pa...., 2~ ba .. 2~ rar gar., drp~, A /C, janitor, LOANSAVAlLABLE .. THE EXPERIENCE" ' '"''d 4&, J ba, ram rm ' . Furn. $100.. unturn aoo: =e~6 Si4 ~sJ~l I encl. gar. AvaU Jan.l . auto. opener. 41 Ft. boa pang. Mast.ers673-4120 Creditootlmportant Adult motel. Cloaed ~ PYt rear yard. s-a..... l27' Totahecwity,efevatora, c JI. . . l. $365.84M890 slip. S650 Month. May OFFICE SPACE, N.B. m.4883Bn*er cimdt TV. f'or R.-va· • .A'f'llil 1,.m. m> mo.·-........ -.......... rec.taalities.-..2835 · Nr Hamlltoo/Broot.burat lease/option. D 3 YS 1649 WestcUlf Dr. AJr. Mwloj ttS. Trwt Uom,645-396'7 lie/opt ••aU. ~ or No. Seo Clem. Spec ca· 2 BR Garden •pt. Frplc, 2br, 2ba, gar, patio. Sm.l 897..a546; evea. 848-1937 pvt. tAlilet, etc. Two Wlits 0e9di SOJS ' al.mt QJaa/OCJl V\I J Br. Zba. dsbwabr,pool,p¥t.patJo, cb.ldok.$28$.982~ 2Bryurty w/orwl 400sq.ft.ea.S200/mo-no ............ ••-••••••• •KAREN'S* i ......___... ~... fambm. sa.131-1013. nr. lrvlo• fod. Area. boat dock i:Joo xt.ras. One unit J.300 sq. 0l1I'CALL~AGE , ........ _ ~4 •..a m -au Newdeluxebeachapt.l& m2'SJ rt 2 toilets as is lftl~~ 6PM2All &as-lTllO ·--............ S-Jam u.tw I .. u JBR.quletarea. · $•ioo1mo PACl FIC ~~IO • C1'1ittw 1271 .... ._ ................ LAROE 1 ft 2 br. apts. 980-l&:M Luxury adult apt. In lb REAL E.STATE, Gene Ahe>WTI>Lw AIOIT10M ....................... G .. ltOZ DlsbW'llhr. pooC. AduJta. Bluffs 1400 aq n 2 Br Hill 642-0200 Fain!at Terms &lnce l.M8 ,._,.._., __ cl "" l.mmecWate 2 Br 2 Ba .... ·-················ From '210 mo .... pd. l.4e l. z Br. 2 ba. Adil.Its Ba rPI pool • • Sal9et-Mtg. Co. -Referral I BDJUI. NW« hom fJUD rm. back yd avaJ Zllt WAl&NOMT 118 Scott Pl , off Placea. only. no pets. Pool, iioa.~ E • ~ P APPROX BOO sq. ft, C-2 al '4Z.JIJI S•5-06ll ~=~~~-:= louted la Portafln Jaal &290mo.Ci2·ST11 Butltlna ta dl"p5 8 U..tCH073 Jacmsl. From SZ20 mo. pa · vs. 130 E. 17\h St. Suite T. ---------1-----'----- .L•cua. 2 Batlu, . . 8-Q b 'e,,ec:k. .,.a e. IJl.S'lMaanolla,962-1800 OCEAN vu. )'Tty 2 Br $250/mo.DoyleMS-0419 SAVISS MA.SSAGI .,.t. ftnpj&C9, oc•a.n view. Qaltm Exee 4 BR. J Ba, 2 M UC I I · NEW 1 br fri>~ bum Ba dplx, paUo & yard. Prt wl.U bu ..... l:acltllitDl r•m. home at car pr. Panotamlc Vu. 3&01=AVE NB cell bttna' I • olle S3SO mo. 6'4·9780 o Ground Floor &/or 2nd ~~.wz.3571 MUii MODILS .~,-• Qa.rclar.No~.-.cus J•c ...... ·TY· · ........ • ~~..!.~ Y 642.3639 noor. Next to Sec. Pac ----------f ESCORTS . . "' ~ ....... gar.-· ..... _.... Nat'l Bank. Jnclda uUI. -2 BDRM. ROME, lge.S...._ )210 '7M610 b ba bltna SBr,2Ba,carpet6drp1. Amploprimg.188E.17lh OUTCA.LLOMLY "'?'-** •Joeeu vlew .... •-••••-•••••-••• N~l!:,28 ~1~$375• Walk to n.y & oce&n. St, Coeta Meaa. Ph: lltl211d11H.oma 6Jl.Jlll a•,IJv. rm. wflb ftNPJ•ce. NO n:g Nr. ~ln1. Arrowhead New Dix cbld/tm pet OK · maia,~. _642_.m_o_. _____ 8~% ~r---------- W/VI c...,.t tbruout. w.,...6Blistol.4 r,2 LdefJ'OOt. dock. 3 br, 3 \-821M9l6 • 111t_,...__.,. 1176 lmooPadtkf'\nuc:laJ ncreaae your Hlf· · 1'Mdmtwl,..•oven. ba • .-mo.~ ba. bllo1. asoo mo. --Exec Sui..._s ~ ..... •-· Uf ·!'!MZSllo. w·-· A I= . 1•91 ZU/541~1116. I Br ... $21.5. 2 Br ... PS ........................ w .... .... ~ I 2MD WANTED w"'--'-.-.u: e ·~1 "'""' -.... 6 uw -'. 2 bib bch. Call •SPARKLING• ou ... you ... eal.stc us tn ,..,,.,.__ ~ BQDM • D&Tff "'~••NH• ... ••••••••••••• lallioaftilmd 3106 "-J=,...._,. .... --lb t j t "C to pr'Olletly present SlJ,500, }Q'K, ten9t. LrJ DOT .o.YTLJQ u&oo&QE _.. ... 'i. unLI . uvuu I STORY' bt 2 ba ,,... ....................... -"' ..._ .. ,. ~u. =-ltd~ 2aCib ~ ~:: )'OU?' bus lmqe in pleaa· equity, Unl""8lb' Park. ~ ~ ...t.=oc;,~~.~.·.~ •. oittT.; cpUcdrps, frPL eor. lot. l·BR, C&f1>, blt·l.na, prh. moat opotfmu l Br, peta OK. $210 mo. 3 $225 •• $235. Ston • llJI sutTOUfld1ftp W/effl. PrtncOQJ.y.-.5* ~=-~~~~ ~ ..._ Fuc.ed yard. Boatglfle Cllllaboutour declt. Gara1e. Vear COITWIUllles.Areladlg blkl bch. W ·Uth St. retrlg. lSO·UZ w. cleat stc'I aervlcea? AJ umc1111uh/ " Mo. a.rtalmu Bonus. MSG. leueOllly. S300Moolb llDIO•lhmn!. ( 7 t c ) t e o '8 S:, Eacalooea, su Clem. ldeaJ Fwy ac~sa. dnt Pw Dlrjt/ •PALM RltADER• _ MbseOMUAlTT n4·1111MM9 or &31·9545. MD-.644-25'3tlo~P.M. wotllflllS.ondm.-: <213>431·"18 '912,101J =.~nr O.C. Airport. I.oat&,._. l20,..adlngforS1o .J ~ PMOMI 4'4"0731 A#. No~ llltoe P'fd111 •• 3107 tM. Famg PGOlt. ... ~ ••-•••••••-••-••••• Paat. present 6 future l .. • Joccazl.tal.ftl-~ 1 Br. Oarqe. KJd8, .., ....... 'at •d u--·-IV~.wtubavere· ... c... ,..__U_c_<.2_1_3_) ... __ wo __ .........__ 164 • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---·OK Fee w"Ls'Ld -o .,. ..... v..., ..-Nk!e famU:r uu.u. Oftl,y • .,.,. .. W JUJ ~to Bch. $13$ UtJJ pd. anGllllC910cMJhola M.111 lient.aJ..s.o.siro -::::::= ... :::.. cepllooiat nc. 17U .................... _ _ ,._ ...,_ l.n.n Cretcoeat ....................... G•r. awl'•· FM. ..,_....._-..., THE EXCITINO Oran1e. CM. $41)..7088 Artie ta ll Crafteme I I = & t'?~ 8"dt.. J BR., 2~ BRAMt>N'EWSBr2'>\Ba, Malil~.54041'7'0 ~and--Cll PetOK Eva aeeded for wtnd z:1• t~ bsid&-lllo. 'Pie ~mJlromDoMne ~ tBr.$180.Pee PM.MMISAAPTS. · --Sais major 1bop'1 n Pin It • TtTRNUASSOC. St. BCb II Dua Wb::i. 28r1Be."°"9~J11.1, -.,Moltef llalnRet.ala,540..$170 MINtn'DTONPT •at........ 4450 cm.er.. ......., -·"-••·-·-a.hon .et·IJ7'1 sc.iJg per mo. 834-8282: No pees. Matute OD• Mtyltlg Y'f*'rt loolttg BCH. ....................... Sdn tit It .,,,,.........__.._._ ~ .......... 111 NPll.DHOJJ~ ly.$27S.~ ftlr.fWnlinll...... Sl1U Br. pr. Pool. klcla Bacb.1MBB. Nl:WPORTBCl(STORS ... 0 t wlH 7005 , ___ ,._,_.. Onlcntlllo8'droclTI OL,._., fromUlllS. .-A"GaS.....an>llo. IOA,... ............. _•••••• ,1 tJllO, Cloq la. Ylew.: Br. L.tJaH Nt1ust, SZJOmo. NJC9 l 8r. a.p. llaill ......... -.aao ~ .. NoPetaDr. J W (21a)m·Tl'Ol C&.4SSI$ .... 1.-.1 na. Vft ..Sl&lta, permHUt •dU.•1 QO MalM!o. 1'81 Je J~ LAGOON VILl.A dbl car. Pacifle bl pate, IOf 8a7 l\H, OlllcelQPM t.00tl8Q). l1Brn1.'ll&•11rr'.tiaml .. '..~Slme', <.$8.ltaButotNewport 100Sq. rt. ~c. avl. Pae. StartlnaJanlO,lm -: wa.,. .. --~. Bs.lboalWID. Now...... " ,,,_ Blwt.1 ~~· QOOmo.Call: SpOl~_.!J1'1e J~ • ...,.,, dryr, .... ~ :-::--:::'"':":."-:-::-:-==--::p...:.=....:.==:::..... __ .JI Ka . SJ.ts. Ml-'fMI. S4f.M> -54841'51 ----~\JA..Ro» "'Iii. ~ drps, at.es--·· I Br 1 ~ Ba, atud.k>. saoo. t alUPll. """ Dn ~ "41 ,.. w PW\ belt. a.poolt, ten· WOODS'l"Rl:AM a br + Br l Ba upper. $181). Yr--..;....,--------1._ 4000 BaJboa bland: retail, toteacb)'OUtboproper f "2., llTHITIMI .. • NtWtty, Antl now! bolwl.2.,., 1 )'r.old mdt Cy, mo to mo. No~ NEW 1,2 & 3 Br. •pq ........................ eomn:lerc. or off I cs salehandllnlot all or,.,.. ... _.. to cbtdt "-.0. hl 6 lalll + SlOO. Bick Bay CpLI d.rsie m.>'lj,.,,._ Variom l:f.8. tocatl(lne. ROOMS szs wk \I.I> Vtlth apace. Otr•u.et peril· oftio.ta. FotcletaU.uaU: the Oall"'Pllol Rt•P -:~~t, ... ~?~At7~.· bllftt. "'"· ••S·tso: ,..~ ........ ......._ H.. "*Ott. ~IU to Jlhchen. m~ wit up lnt.. Approx.* aq. ft.: '7M1f1 =~ ~. :..c:.~t~ II ...._,. ._,_. _ ....._ .. 14 -----_.,.. Sl!IO. Keat._.. t)'. •eta !Ml-t'TU pnv. rett room. Rltr. --------~ ,.,... 1v.. -· .. ~ ..... IOI. ~ •••••••••·-•-•••••••• IG'*300 -· ~ISUMoo. to Fri U lhet0¥0U m&ihtClOI~_, •n-, .. _ ........ ,. ~ ROOM •Qultl peraoa. '?be futett dn" Ja 12-a(J~ 1o.&r asrvl ' ._ Jbr ..,.mer. fuwt draw In the &:'-' ..._ .,.._a, J BA rado ApL 1 M.t. to 0oot1n1. pn entr', ••• Have IOft'ltthlnM 1ou want Weet. . .a Dallt Piiot wltb u *' In tM J -• -~~ "OOd ~~d~~"°' ~~~~·mo =.~,.;.~ blk. t:.· ·~·lOJC. Laaua• ~.::r=ec1 ada do ~:;:r•d Ad. P•oo• :a_~ •eqo.,., l •• .,. OM.., fin.Of l'"Add lt ... Bulld IL.Diaper it ... Hammer it ... Carpet IL.Cement IL.Wire lt...Hoe IL.Clean it ... Move IL.Press l t...Paint it ... Nall it...Plaster it ... Fix It. .. SERVICE DIRECTORY Plumb 1t. .. Patch 1t ....... pe n ... Remooe1n Roof It... L andscape it ... Tiie it ... Trim lt. .. Sew •t .. Haut It... Add It ... Plant it. .. Alter lt.~Leitrn I ...,.•c•R.,. c:.p.tSenlu e-.t/Coeeoia•k ,._... -• 11 • • •. '·.:._ ~ ~ , ~ ... ,.... -· • ........•.........•... , ....................................................................................................................................................................................... . APPUANCl:RJtPAlR Carpet Manwill lay yours Concrete Drlve way1. All tyPoS wood 6 bloell. HaWirlg, ~.,*-P E!Cpr 'd Laadaopna. Mo• l a I · Ha• It• a · NTBSftAJMTIMCiii ROR SAYJ:RS P'WM· 110-&rvic.CaU or mine. Repalr!I & walkways & patios. Free FrH eat. Area ref a 17/up. T.....-ort. Sprinkjers· 1nat&ll 6 re· An1tbln1 Anrrhre, E1'per'd, Reu Rate1. BJNG ldlEATIRltfG . ..,.._ (Tl4 l 5492'2.2 clearung t.oo! Guarwork e.t.Arearefs.557·~. ~7-228Sor~713t &u.fut.f,...•l pair. Concrel~ & bricll eecUTlt\lell.l'utupt>, f'ree Eat. Call Geae atl. $10 Kr. _..Ir A111'CJ._td._.~ al b•&&er a.vlilas Fr est .--JUC .-:a•• ~ work 8.4S .?078 aft s. ory re•• WI a to• m~ RLIJable s.r.. WA • 64.5-3646 -_.. -1-II Malone 54WIMS,8TW714 flhtrca.1. 14'•0JH. • •••••••••••••n••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4iet rid ot •tll If , Palnllna·P•perbanclna. nt..aiao Architectural fc Struc W11CareCar-pel Cleaners Uc'dOayC1re for lnrants WEEOINC·a.EANUPS .............. Bo((ert • 0 Brian MOVING! X·Allled IOU cabin~\ refln'I · Lic'd, ---------turaJ Plans Rmdl & 0 .. SteamCleanorShampoo &toddlers. Lovlng care. •WffklyMainteoance• ,.,..,A tud't .... •--d Land1captni. C1tm lnard 1tatewld•/local. freeest.Joem.,.. ...... new oonat.rucUon. t:lesid. AlsoUphohstery-Allwork Magnolia & Adams. HB. ~e:.t. gu.9901 ~~ 1 • _...,.. · work, s prinkler lo· Free..t.Dave~lOI ••••••••••••••••••••••• I Com · 11 I ndUA l rl a guar. Refs/MC. Free est Avail Jan 18th. 962·3277 stall/repair. Comp I ....,.,.~ Repaln • Compoaltloe 940-~ ReaaRates·MS-3716 eo..trodor Experienced Gardenlng Ha•nler >I maintenance. Com'l·1,........,.. .. ..., ....................... SblDll•a. l111pectloos. Service &: Cleanupe. Qua' ••••••••••••••••••••••• R e s i d . H a u I 1 n g , •••••••••••••••••-•••• Vt:RY NEAT PATCH hwrd/Uc:d. Low price&. tr ...,........ Sleam Cleaning, liv·rm, ... •••••••••••••••••••• work. Mille548·2049 Want a REALLY CLEAN treework. aod lawns. Painting Int/Ext Reu JOBS•TEXTURS .-..... cwMJ.-•••unn•nn•n••H•• din·rm & hall, avg rms. LEE M. JARVIS G..,.ral SenlcH HOUSE? C-11 Gingham Reas-.-0702 depend~ble Jl"ree e t' F'ree Ellt. 893·14'9 T••laa..•--'- Expr. mother will babysi1 ~ :;~:rr. ~::r::r:~!: ~~Jrs &. Re~~3~~~ ....................... Glrl. f'reeeats, 645·51%S Um.-'I Call Jay MS-~ 1 . PATCH PLASTERING .......... ::fu. •• -.. &.Jve TLC. My home. odoriie.lSYrsexp.Good HANDYMAN·HomH & WanlaREALLYCLEAN ••••••••••••••••••••••• Doo' ••AU.TYPES•• CANOPYTVSVCCO. _C __ ._o_a_y_s_64S-85 __ 12---t re£s 531-0101 u G«>rge PiJrner&Sons ,Apt1. Conscientious HOUSE! Call Gln«ham Free Est· BlockwaJl1, For~be !::11'~<>gled.; P'l"Me.t. S40-MZ5 lltR.at.eS•n•d ..-..U Senlce E AddstRmdl(~alnt/Plans Craftsman. Ph: 64$-0302 Girl. Freeesta.845-Sl.2'3 slumpstone. brl ck. ralr U:,..~ea to: e~U Uomel Addit.ioos ~-at Fair Prled•Lal ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sf AM CARPET Sml.IObs·Llc dS57.fi932 Resld/Comm'I Reas RI h rd l hi ' • · --8' Sq Ft. Upholstery GI....., CLEANING BY ANN Uc 328586. Bob 7so.93s4· c a : ·prasure co over blk walla. ,... .. •-Typlna at home. ony kind. Too! Ph546-686t,821·78S7 .......... ••••••••••••• EJiperienced,wlthrefa. ~ ' clean first, do tbey? tlt,lowrates.-...-·-•·••••••••••••••-•• Reu. rates, ~ plt>ku~ _ • a.ctricGI Sklploader. dump truck, After 5 PM, -.oe80 Uc/lns831>-55$$ Ceramic TWn1: abowwl, &del. ~1 /COM:r•t• ....................... baulinii. tree work. grad· Fireplaces-Planters I n t. I kit. eot.riM. ~ ....... . C.,."'91 ....................... ELECTRICAL SERVICE lng.demo.etc7Sl·3930 HOUSEC.EANlNO BricltCoocn!t.e Patio ~5::•:.ti:r:si: ... ~ .... ~·~•;••n•n•u SmjobOlt.M2·11» ••••••••••••••••••••••• SECURITYBUlLDERS CALLS $1Sf br. Call BlocltWalls BBQ Pita ur P~ MB · epalr. N · --'-------- FINISH REMODEL & All phases concre te. SU-8233 ~ Byreliablecouple Refs. Eats.646-0464 Paper·Palat a> 1" ••P pi pe , l n1lallatlo• Trws.nke Rpr Sma ll Job ' OK blockwall a!'d custom , .. ••••••••••••••••••••• Rell 961-5813 . . ~ Diie Jan SaYe S: services. G . Gldle1. ••••••••••••••••••••-• Reu. 979-0379 " · brick edork. Licensed and SEI.:L l~le items ~Ith a YOU HA VE lT READY Dependable lady' w /ex pr. C::Wl: Oestifked f3°09• Sat. Guar: No ,;ait. P'ree 6'2·9315· R•moula, trl mmi••. borld 1' 64S.203l ~~JJotCJassi!Jed Ad. l'U.HAUL IT AWAY wants housecleaning Oii aJ: ce~~~~ ~/uf:. Est. HO-aOOG ..... SELL Idle 1tema Wttll • prunln•. free a t. Ue d Want Ad Help., 642-5678 Sell Idle items 642 5618 · · Tl M 643-6306 regulM basis 84'1 ·3637 Many local refs MS-SSlZ MM724 Dally Pilot Clualried Ad. Full.)' lnaured. &U..-e ~W..e.d ....................... 7100 Sdtoolt& !He4pW..ted 7100He4pW-.d 7100.....,W..ted 7100twpW..e.d 7100 HelpW-.ct 7100HetpW-.ct 7IOOHttitW..e.cl 710 _.,,_.._ 7005 ................................................................................ , .......................................................... ·····················4 ....................... S.bysitt.er my home. 16 COUNTER WOMAN Electronic &IP.ply Store Gt•rat Office LET ME introduce you lo HUaSIS AJDIS .RHI Eat.It• 00 YOU MEN WOMEN mo. okl. WestcUH area . IOYS AND CillLS ll AM to 2PM Moe thru needs e•per d counter Bedine Fashions the f\.ID ~. lftCd, WW..,.. Nnt> • maaaa« for TRAIMFOR TIKlS approx IOam .apm for Dady Pilot routea In Sat. Apply · at Stax 1aletpel"$00.~. ~ Tk, ~':?t!i·:"~ pflime job. Must lite If nff. Park S.perig your Hui S.letie olc~ IARTENDIMG Occas other days. Arch Beach area of Burgen.811GW.10lhst. SJUOOal~ d •lids clothes & people, have Con v . Hosp. 14~ Eaper. lo •II p•u ... TWOWEEKCLASS 64.5-1870 Laguna Beach. Must be CM. EXEC. SICTY ~akllll: mu![tk:~ork· 2-3 eves & car~ phone SuperlorAve. N.B. AvaUaow.CalllelMI. NATION-WIDI:: JOB Babysitter. Mon & Tues. at least 10 years old. COUPLE Soc Sec to tor construction & real Ing with numben. Xlnl avail. Interested in earD-1--":"MUl=:=-:SIS=:-:._-::OIS:=:--'ll~~~~~~~~~ PLACEMENT my bome. good pay ex· =a~1• ask for mo¥elftlo~b00aect;re-~::~; ~=~i~~~YUC~':!: benellts. N•pt Ce~ter }"R:""S3STev•c!;lrat Exper'd. Good· -· ... ~ ASGSOOl56ANJO~E per. So. Cst. Plaia area . cieve board. rm • aal. pany. pald lnlurance ud h~c d ~oat i cl R 1 li8 :e ,.':~°!i 'T!'t er., C: 8-)'Yiew Cooa•. Roms*• Att.ractlni, o•• IS. fQf SSG-29J8orS40-7l3l IOYS AND GIRLS for taking ea.re~ couple vacatioo. Mu1t be cape· • 1 one or app · 963-1470. 205.S Tbllria Aw. C.11 HEALnt SPA. we .ut OPPORTUNITIES B b · If k 10 to 15 ye:ll's. Earn In thelr 80'1 547 TUIUn ble of handling wide 844-1.230. E .O.E. MZ·Jl505. train right penoa for AMERICAN 7 ~3CJ1~~~~e r~·F.s tlv~ Christmas money . S20 to Ave, NB. Pb:. 548-4108 range~ respomlbWtiea. GEHEllAL OfftCE i----------.uy tun job. llr O.., I A R T E N 0 E R S mg. depend. Own transp. MO per week selUng sub· COUPLE to manage. Ex· Including public rela · For Trade Aaaoc:iatioa. Librsy 'fam~ : ... _~ __ >_1_5Z_·9Ml __ . __ _ SCHOOL 831·1548. scnptions to the Daily ..,.... & refs req·d. 12 Units tionlbe. .:.,,,, souimered.lrEaqveulalmoapy· 80 wpm, --t spellin&, W d t . .,._ --rd -'" •--'-•~-AMaST E thsl SA Pil t T anspo talion ,,... ·~.., ........ e oee ea erg• 1c , .-.-.. ,.._ • ........ ._ __.. .. "'""" 11~ •. n .. B b •tt t o . r r unlurn .• Costa Mesa. 2 nnrtunJty employer. CalJ grammer . Expr pre-artlculat .. peopl" mature perao• •t,-.•P· 834·l960 a y11 er. ma u re proVlded. No deliveries Br house for yard care & ...,.. ferred. 5 da,., 9·5. ts:sc .. .. lltud f 11 M -.A&.MIDAY Schools Co811tToCoast woman to s upervise or collecting Phone management No orsendresumet.o:Jac.k mo. Pb for inteniew w/dynamicpereooaliU. e orpc19ton. fOf'H.&..ae.lt.or.lluatbe l2,5:3CJ, most afternoons. 536-9712 h 1 0 Torre. President. Torre s,57.1970 lhal we can train to iJI. Verde Conv. Hoec>, 9lll ll ti / 1 l 7075 2 children ages 8 & 4. ~-~re n w n er • C.ooatruct.ion, 1101 Dove ----------t traduce our product to CentwSt. C.M. • rac n • P ••ua JobtW..tecf. MtUl hove own transp. BOYSAHDGIRLS ....,,..__ St, Suite 430, NB. CifM.MAIMTINAMCI cuatomera 1n Calif. & MUISESAIDES pbooevou~e.Utelypiq. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~ Mission VieJo · El Toro DATA PROCESSING 752·1?30 Ha.PEit ~· WOf'k 8 h rt a & ,...~. •~s = w°: .. ~Pf:!:. Mature refined woman a rea. Earn your own KEYPUMCHt o~ rm. ln our omce ~.,_..., Jy. Jan $ ar 8 after U :OO desires live-m pos. as Barmaid wanted. no ex· money selling sut»crip· EXEC. SICRITAJtY .. .,..·s <(~ntry & Vehi· 0 . C. Airport In · ALLSfflf"I'S 223 Broolrlnlnt companion aide or home per necess. Good pay $3 Uoosaflerscbool. Forln· TERMIHALO R Toaut.exec. Y.P.&aut cle main · skills. Call friendly ore at-Exper. prerd. Wiii traa =~Bea$ KEY mgr.rormotherlcss hm. hr. Lil Aggie's Bar, rormatJon,caU830-09lJ Musthavemln.llmo'son v .P ln Nwpt Ctr ore. _S56-__ I42_L _____ --i mosphere. Creative op. lnterestedindivlchwa. REALTORS Best ref. 67S-779'1 847-5411 the Job ex per. Prefer ln· Xlnt sh & typing skilla & Girl Friday-We need 2 por. for men & women to Lldo Convalescent Ctr Ma&.W~ 7100 IEAUTYSTYUST CASHIERS dlv.wtknowledgeorlBM pleasant penonaUty re-sharp gals looking for makeasmucbrnoneyaa l.S5SSuperiocAve .__,.. Wanted for self service 3774 Unit. Hrs 8:30-5:30. q'd. Mual be able lo han-""30 hr a wk jobs w/e•· you deslre while retain· Newport Beacb M&-TTIM ·~-ftU•sr •••••••••••••••••••••••Mus• be good w1·th Goodo~rfor"dvance """ I -• b 1 ~_.,,_ • gas stations. Part-lime & ment. ,,,..,t co -:.. .. nefi't.s·. die a wide range ol re~p. per. In rwmlng a s mall ng an A.Int aae 111 ary. P ti ....._.. It for sailboat co. rr )'OU AAAAAAAAAAAA natural styling. Follow-full·time openings In .,., & work w I m In omce. Dulie1 Include Perm. posltlom availa· ~ me,....,..., wor & bavet.be abl.Uty toba.adk SECY/GIENOFC ~not nee. Take over Costa Mesa. Here is a Sal commeosurotew/ex-pe I . p r . ble. Advancement lo deUvery.S3br Accounun. g/Recept d1entele. 837 ·4250 & . r nor E 0 E WUI be in su rv 11on. re er in-~-phones, correap. manager•· al po11't1'on 83$-0ZU, ext UIJY a busy switchboard, caa perfect opportunity or ""' · · · · · dlviduals w/3·5 yrs ex-& asstSting ln ship & rec. do Ute typin.. baYe a .Employers Pay All f'ees 837-8719 Lake Forest you housewives. middle ~rC:tt}!!~ aJp~~~ per .. bul will consider ex-tr you're looking for a available. Work eves or P..ttW .... 5-9PM. wholesome rront otc ap- Lh: Reinders Agen('y llWHG CLERK agers or semi retired le tremely bright recent perm. pos.ttlon call ror 1mominlervnglews. cFoorntapecl~. M•I· S3hr. S3l·'856. peara.nce, work well un· 4020BlrcbSt. Ste 104 supplement your in-DELIVERYMAN for ear-grad wtxlnt skills. All appt & intervw. The -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.I der pressure lote public Newport Beach 833-8190 Hong Hospital has a cur-come. For more in · LA Ti appUcanls will be tested. • ........ ~. !Wgsl 833-8098. Time Life • c:om.act cft are' extremeJy _Ca_ll_ ffco_r_A""p'--pt_l_Es_t_a_b_'65_1 ~~~~: g>Ut at:~~~f for ma lion co II Pa rt ~m~~'cl'~ute. 2 Hr.~~ Good co. benerits. E.O. E. ~ ~aEnm· espl.olny~~ Equal Op. PA YaOU. CUU punctual call Ann Sm.ilb. ACCOUNTING in our credit ore. Hosp. Time. Inc. 213/925-0431. d a Y . M u s l h a v e CalJ for appt. ~-GUARDS ·,,.,.~~~~.,,~~~~! The Jolly Roger, Inc. iii 54&-IJTU. SR.ACCOUMTIMG/ exper. prer·d . F ttime CLEAMIHGLAOY economical car. Adults EXEC.SECRETARY CottaMHa -looking for a full--Ome~~~~~~~~ PAYIOLLCLERIC days. Contact Personnel. 5 Nltes a wk. GPM ocolnl1~: ... !"o so~clttlng.te"01 TO PRESIDENT Fash Permanent. Full & Part-LJQUOR clerk. exper. ~~f~~cl~:r~~m~J'a'ri[,.· Receptionial Good k d 645-8600 NB E 0 1': 2 ""AM Bo d bl .NB .,...,ons. s mns r •-J Financ1·a1 Serv. f1'rm. Ume. Pbone •-traosp re· Laguna Beach. Pref OUT-·0~ acctng bac groun • · · · · · :...., · n a e. · He ..,_ 0126 .,, "' w/large computerised "' "': including payables & Boal Manuf Compony ofc bid~. 40 Hrs. Stead) -·-· a_r_e_a_. """'-·-----1 Good career oppor. Very 'tad. Retired welcome. mature person. Call Mr. payrolJ, quarterly tax,. S600-FREE JOB payroll req'd. Xlnt co. UNEFOREMA... work 644-0606. DENTAL chaJlenging. Xlnt skills ll 546-0274• ofc hrs l0-2, Sheppard at499-iSIU . turns & <>lb« payroll re· New~. New Year. N.B. benefits. Sa 1 com· For medium 9 I zed Cieri al RECEPTIONIST req'd. 7S wpm typlng. ioo,_Cl_osed __ W_edn __ e.d_a_y__ LOAM SECRETARY lated duties. This paai· prestigious de. Ute l)'J>t E.O.E. Wlll be interview-sa ~ts. us i;:;.t 1x· .....,....-:1r · . 646-5411 Dr. N.B. Suite 200. Lg. busy beauty salon El cxper. belpfuJ. Previoua to deal effectively w /all public. Peraonabte &; mensurate w/exper. ilbo M th ~~~ 1 Exper'd,N.B.olfice wpm sh. 369 San Miguel HAIRSTYLIST R. Eatate/&crowtrllle Uon requires the ability Ing: Meet" Greet u.e, Ing Jan 11. 18 & 19. Call per. II 835-9316 or A 1977Wl NER .~ Toro, 5116-2216 banking exp. pref'd. levels or management. well groomed. All<> Fee rorap1)t.640-4S80. JackWUken. 6 Mo's olc exper. & you DEHTALASSISTAMT 1--~ll!:V9~~1D~m~ ... ~G~-·I~~~~~:_ ___ Good ty""ng skills. CaJI Must be available to Jobs.CaUCootrolCareer - IOOIOCEIPEI "Win" thls job. N.B ofc Chalnlde, fuJI time. X· """' " ror app[. 832.5200. Saa· work overtime when r•· Employment A&ency. • APPRAISERI CAREEROPPTY. Lltetyp\ng.Career spot ray certificate. nee.. SICtlETAJtY HIEADIUSIOY tiago Bank. Tu1t10 . q 'd . Salary co m · B8SOIS. Goodspotwfftnanclal in· h """c FeeNegotAl.so FeeJobs salaryopen.~ WesuaU Corp. bas an r~·UPMJ>.... EOE mensurate w/exper 1---------f'llll c arge, to ... ~ mo. Call Control Caree1 --"--'--------1 lmmed. vaAancy ror ex -~•' "'" · · · Ple•be apply In pe-·. sthuUon for Real Estate Multiple ledger exper. E I A o-•L " N-""ed, d t ---------'"" ,...,... ~walser famlhar with: thru financial statement. mp oyment gency snu.. pedlllng secretary to ""'" aor banquet ep · LYM 3-1 I :30 17042 Gillette. Irvine UCEPT10MIST I FHLMC Forms. Com· Accounting machOC" mlnii-s.56-8505 ___ . -----Dea ta l Sec I Recept. work ln bwiy stock room. Expr nee. Mu1t speak Charge Nurse & Medlca· Sa.m·Spm MOft thru FM. pany car provided. call computer exper desira-C LE R K in H . B trainee. P(time. possible Must have al least l year F.ngllah & Spanish. App. lion. F fllme. Apply . TYfttST ACCUJ'ate typist. rnature persoo.alily & rront om ee appearance. Able t.o deal pleasantly w /visitor traf· fie & heavy telephones . Recentexper. pref'd . Rive-Ide 686 """"' '-'xl f -'---la•ar. $2.~ nor hr. ...1 evper. 111· purcba11111· g ly in penoo at the sales p .. s l , a •• '"""" "' ble Call ror appl. 1714) drugstore. ptUme. Ex •u ... ~ -r-... A ar.. uperior. 44.. PEOPLEPERSON 1•8 '"n Equal Opply ....,.,_.., lrv ... -·.. 644--0811. or stock room work . dficebtwn9am s e · \ c N 8 " " ~1 per notnecess ,,,.7 _,.. ---------1 Al I H 1 up nor ' v • · · Exec needs pfthne as· Employ M1F. -· · · · Drug Store Clerk • .ea hrs. Sh ould be familia r rporter nn ote 642,z.no in bs • __.,KEEPH CLERIC TYrtST (iA"I _ ... _ .. _) Prefer e"· w/marine parts. If possi-18700 McArthur. Irvi ne ----------1 aoc1 , . ~ .. ~_.supply. hi· A/lECCURI '""'°"'M be ood Sal dept "-I rul ·-1 .. ,......nd lob " ble. Please call Ms.,_________ LVH'S,P(TIME y cap11 .... '""".S73·2223. F9~·d typ1·na • """l .. •••••·--t. "•t g CS eztv>r UC p • ,_. n Ca ;v , 8CC0, ... cl)oo-1.1 ~•<> ""ll fO ' ..._..... " "' ""'~ n.»h"""'"' ...... .... d T 4 s 5..-0 pm ,..... " ,. ....... ~'"' r HELP wan•_. ,.._.._ .. 7·3:3CJ & 3·11 :30. Med.ica· STACOSWITCH, INC. iag Small co Good wrt num.,.,rs. strong e· TY pe . w . Photo. Please CAil Mr. moreinlormal1on -..~ .. b• •• r I l 1 . N (' w p 0 r \ tail. w1lli.11g to handle Protice~y "trig. 10 Key l>etenoo. IMl2·51M7 . Counter persoa. Over 18. lions, Treatmenta. Hunt llOme clencal functions. add by touch. Formal ---------Apply in person. Ken-ln gton Beach Coav. PHONE s11 r~ Marine Engineering, 897 exceileot working cond.i· olc. C.M. Call Beverly #3 Floral Designer. p/lime. lucky Fried Chicken. Hoep., 18811 F1orida St, ~ W. lahSt, N.B.64$-3$32. tioaa. Experience a at\4,IMS-5800. llectrooica Elq)er. nee. Apply. 295? Laguna Beach. _HB_._84_7_-35_1S_. ____ 1 Phooe Sal•• peopl•. 1139 Bater. Coeta Mna 549.104- ASS841L8S .-t. lrvme area. Send -Harbor Bl,CM.549·0857 ti--------•IMAlD Wanted. Seacllfl male or fem.ie, 16 to 65 •• will train lsl & 2Dd MlarJ history to. P 0 CoUect1ool lo 11000 JOIN us GAL FRIDAY P /time for HOSTESSES Motel. 11161 So. Coaat yearsol age. Guaranteed F,qua.I Oppor Employer !1'-~. A PYP I Yh ;.~. ~ 1"63. lrv1ov. Ca Sales Reps $100 public acct. ore. Musl be Hwy, Lag. Bcb. 494-4892 ~;,11e;;,':t ~fi.m~:::: ,..~regor ac t..,v,. ... , J r.Aecountant $7~ accurate W/figures . Daya&= MAN.e~·dtodellver& Suite O, Costa Mesa. UC.-rlOHIST Fasb lal Financial Sen. firm. RecepttSec:y. front desk. Exper. Ref1 req'd. Type 60 wpm. 35 Sa• Miguel Dr. N.B. Suite ~. USStPlacentlaAve,C.M. BOOKS G«lOfcClerk '60I> IN 77 operate 10 key add·g. PART--1 E """'"' lrvi p 1 A h & -, tostaU major appliances. between S:OO &8:30 p.m . A.w>n•l•Rep St.darts _,.ME1e?th~ta'g!!1acy mack_l.I C tllype6w2r0iter Full lime . Mual be 646-4223. .. OR ova H•tewi'fff & swl:oa vua ~~l470 Die«>n Electronics is a :;u I a : 4 . 506 Apply In Persoa strong. dependable & EquaJ Opportunity MO DPtll MIC Mo .. _..,• - -----~ growing dynamic com-___ m_e_. -----3PM-SPM Thurs. Only work Saturdays. Fringe Employer It you ·re new to Orange Co , temporarily du.con- u.nw.ng your education, recenlly d1 schoraed Crom lhe ff!'\llct? ot ror any ruson seeking tem- porary°" career em piny nwnl. CQM1der lh11 uni· qoe °""°" You can earn Slt6'8WlB Rued on )'our proch.1c- l 1v1 l y C omm + lnttntJvH & extra profit shanna bonus. On the }Ob trainlnl(. Tremendous potential to reac h 5Ul*"W'3or1 &i manage. ment posltlof\S. Must be ~ble • ambillous. ror appolntmeat only call Million DoTio.r corp. -pany In the Printed GARDENERASSIST. benefit.a. needa men & women of College or H.S. gir l , Circuit Board Industry. For apt complex. N.B. Tiu. R--ben OunlapAppUances Re~1·rmen a ny age who e njoy mother 's helper . Our outstanding com-Reliable. Steady work. lllV vu 1.8UNewport81vd,CM PHOHI apea&lna w/otben & who Pleasant home. Mon, pany benefits include 644-060ll. (. lee S4IM'180 SOUCITotS 1 exp r • l trainee .,. bored withe average Tues & Wed. after den~I insurance. cash __ G_eneral ___ Of_fi_~--Man ck wife n...secs b needed by commercial • rwiolthemilljob& school 1175 mo+. Mast lncenllve ~Cit sbarino 151 I.Coat~ com-'--care.Jbo-... ... Eas1 pleasant eve!Wlg residenU-al1tyle re"'••ra .. Ave transp No smok '" Mature woman tor gen'I ........ ., "'"""' "" ....... wnrlt 4.9 Mon-Fri. Need _. .... · · .......,..am. allfled can· w.w-rt •~a. ....ian•-. 2 or _.......... daJ• a "" ma Int co. In New-. To •-g Big Canyon area ,,....,. olc.f knowledge of ac-,_. ·r---"' "" '""'"• LS P"""le immed CaJJ .,..... No a ct ual :selling 1n-w · · didateB are encouraged week. If vou e"'"'J do.1.... .....,... · qualify you must be am· ed • 640-5335 counting procedures & J ,.,.. ·~..., a.ft 2pm. Mon-Tbun, OI' volv "' no selllng ap----·-----~ &oapply in peraon. Inventory control. 3 . .,., Equo.J Oppor Employer excellent work please (TI4) 540-5'84. bilious. conscientloua, Pointmen\s. Work w/one COOK . DINNER Part da k 8AM lPll write this buay eouple,i---------well groomed • bave a al the moel popular & ume. country club. Top •IMSPICTOIS ~O:r w ' · ·.---------t including references at: P/t Sales. Ste).f70 wt arp. higbdegreeofmech'Jap. 11uccessrut prodUC't.a on wages -.w1 ask fot· lst&2nd shifts. Requires • JJouaekeeper wanted . Oassi.fied Ad 11m. ()ally Men. ladies, studenta. Utude. Ex-per pref'd U. the market today. An in· Chief 6 months prevlou. ex· Uve·ln. Room. board & Pilot PO Box ueo. Cos~ Eves/Sat. 554.7951, eJectricaJ&plumblrt1t'e· expens.ive prodoct who's1---·-----·-perienceoo PCB. General Office small salary. Spanish Mesa. ea. i12Q6 831>-71196. ~ pal r s . Lie e a a e •• name Is a household A4't rtl a-.n-.A speakingOK.2chlldren6 welcomed. We pa' word thruout the world. COOi DR G ..,.....,, ,_,... ft 8. Call eves. 970-0175. MAT U RE W 0 MAN Pun:lwlng & A/PQabla mileage-you fvrila Work in a youthful. p•l9T ........ 1 * 1 LLI M Req'saccuratetyplng. <Yorba Linda. Anaheim p/tlme to welcome exper. Previous bankina trana4tools.Coml*»&, friendly atmosphere &s ftl~c··~h'• :=TMEott :l.llf.'!o:~'~:e~~~ .... Hllls __ are_a_._> ____ -1 oewcbaomers..,..'1. .cbo1nthact exper. belprut. Sb req'd tlon commeuur at•, have fun while you earn -~ • 1 1 D 1 ln mere nts .... ex.a e rs. +good t,)'plng skills. Call w/exper. Our e.rnp!o)'981J• top pay. You receive a .......... lat 1hif\. Prevloua ex· superv 5 on. ut es · )iousekeeper. mornlna• Need car, lite l)'ping. tor appt. 832·5200. San· lmoworthiaad. elude typing ad copy. only. Call 648-3304 afler 547 ~ B k guaranteed salary + e.x· 3111l8Newp0rl 81. CJ.t. perlooee operating memos. correspondence, &PM. Near Wilaon " · · tlaao an • Tu1t10 . U Clu.alified r_. a tll'6cf ~!.~~Y.._I~~!!.. c~~:--------• automatic drill rnachini various reporu. phone Newp:irt. MATVtllWOMAM 1_£_.o_.E_. ______ l"fJIWDeloAdt821.~ u ........ 1 ... ,,....__.. ""'"' ~ (oilowup. Apply National 1----------1 r U .. "l .. A .. •-k ln 1--------Pilot. PO Box '*· c.11. t.U •other locenUvn. COOKS Systems Corp., 4381Ill0 USE KE E PER. or 51-' ,........., eep g, na1u -912S21S. Xlnt advance ment •SIU( SCl ... IR Bircb St. N.8 . <Near Fttlme. Apply, Mesa some cooking. Muat c::r:::::"'o'LL.11 • •--------- • --l•J•9•·1•1•1•3--•I =tiel for both men Ellpeneoce Preferred, lrd •hit\. Mlnlmum JJ O.C. Airport), Verde Conv. Hoep. 961 drive. S-7 day1, will dlft. ""'"'" ButNotNecenary mo•th1 experience.•----------Ceater&.Collta Mesa. cusa salary wtrlght par· For a blgb qua lltJ ~~ Day&NlghtSbifts Know Solder maau endl•-------• t,y. Refs~. Ideal loca· sailboat manu!. co. ~ 4'1l'OMOT1V£ DPIUMCID ftMTSMMf Rolls Royce &i BMW. On· ly dealer experience<! nffd apply. Apply In pe1'IOn at 1$40 Jambortt no.ct. NeWJIC)rl Beach. ~ut.omollve New Dec.aJJ Shop needs Mtp. Top wqe1 paid. Engine Stamen. ens palnlcn, bufftn • )IOllahen, Ul>-bol1Hry ab,ampooera, Ho eiper. ~. You re· Available char~ers. General Help IMSl'fSHlf'PtHG D.-J tJon on waterfront. t.g Knowledge • expel'. lD . t " ceivc rutl pay while bemf A111>b' ln Penoo HIW OPIHIMGS we have openlnaa lo an _lk_h._494_-M_u _____ , electrical & rnechalcal .._ -;, ~ ~ = :ro:v:•~rs~lfn. s..115'? No. t •HYDIO OftHATOR Larte Orange County In· .ti lllrl dept. Salary open MEC*MIC &y11t.e'k'8 ~· :•J wdU ....:: ~ IY 10 mmJi n. by Fwy from 3446 EOp. Oat Ewy, ClodM lat s hift. Prefer ex· dependent Insurance w/90rne exper •• but will worklnit or not. check u a ~ e u IJ· _ I ~ual por mp yer perlence operalln1 aaency opening new train. Xlnt company th.ls xlnt opportunity. ment n carpentr) I.I.•~ I I surrounding com-Hydro & eleclroverl facllltlea ln Fountain btntflt.3 Automobiles. Class A lie. flol1blng. Ability to ~ =fr'·J':'t ~=:s~t i~~ Cooks, fullltp/Ume. Over machine&. . Valley & Fullerton la Delholllc COi? req'd. $400+ per wll ::::~tsioo a/~t~n;~.~~ JOIMOUl•IOU, veatljJalc this unusual 18. 1 Yr colfee ahop ex-seddna traJncea le ex 929...._,, C.M. possible for good m•n. Call Bob Oalu, at Wo havo an openin1 tor oppor Contact Renee per. Rel1 req'd, Charlie's •ltlSTOM ~r·d office help. ~3 Jl'tont end align ex per., We$t.tlail Corp. 549-97U. a n e t Pe r I • n ca d Rolli. 831-8098. Ch.Ill, 54&-03.U. TICHNICf4H ltHt,...,lh tut1eu:p1. elec. exper etc. •1 aletpe~. Ouldattt~~ 2nd c.tS..a.rt& KITCHIMMAM CaU581-8764. --------na wor..•n& coo rvuo 8 0 RE t> H 0 M E · COOKS ahlll. Koowledae ol lilttHl .. ,1 .,,,.. 1 Mon thru Ptl. Exper ---------•_, ...... ,.ESTA.Tl and excellent com· MAKERS? Unll mlted MaJe or .Female over 18 dryn ru~"~&itli for pref'd b t Dot nee l\pp mlaak11uJJUt. ()ppor. for pel'tlonal • to worlt olpLI. Apply ln PC1;1req .... _.. .WOCW-Clen \)'.I • u . . MID IXIC/SICY sru HOMES CALL FOR _"'.., "'' ,..,.. ...._., •RIXCllCUIT .,_, ,.,.._ •· m, .. ,_ . ut wy, .,... 67~7601 dll9C* •rccll~up. de· 1..,. A at Jlllf bot8l,Cll lf.S.. lll'IC> •----•-•-ward wtt"'-··t penon: $521toSllOO ~)' ~~WPelColcan, H3pm· 1'1"''"1 It lnaurance H · tNTERVIEW ucrlflclng ramtly -... TICHMICIAM ~~hg;;,:re:~"" ~Beach. ~= ~~;:: l£llll r ~1~:~·~~f:0:1--1_7_Jo __ ~5....1'!:..1-ri_1er_CM __ • -1 1.1t11Utt. R.cq\11,...abillty Startlllllt:DJATELY Lau.nclroi:ut Atletldant. wtd.)'s. I ._..•.a-AMYTIMI • • apen to men or women. COUNTER Help Part ~ to bulld nu clrculll AllComl)UY Benefit.a Na P/l\me. tm-1eeo •1--------·1 •W ~ l*earcb AN~, tu&arW ror lnwr"' call Mra. lull tJme. AJIPJ.1 ln ~"· from start to Raia.fl wllb 17.00 8rookbu.rtt&. 208 8'75-03)6. lho, perm. p/Ume few LA °"9'np ~la OrOJ• woman. put WM. Cell AYON s-...a.. t•AIY..,SS? Ba ao AYON R~PftESl!!NTATlV~ • ll4!et people. payoff holl· da,)' blllt • &tart NVlfta apla Leta talk aboul ll. Call M>-70t1 or Z.nllJI 'f·JD. Hob .. ,,.. IST 1041 -E. ftac Cal '""' "ftlUtUeau-rvlslon. FountalnVallev ,,ma home delivery In -~ .i--ee ......... MM~M IAM 'IAll .. "'· • · -... . ..,. ..,.... UIUollFedera( LAYOUTPASTIUP NewPort ll CO.ta ~osa. ~ 'j;;";"\ 0 n "c ~d __, .• ~t (1,2:50) CdM. • r DICEOM S.vin&I BuUdlna .uTllT Mull have deptndabJe Sal~ latAnatH .. Count•r Help full" 6 c.IWy 149 .. 164 "1ll·U1111t.• TJllilll m•o· car ld>e reliable. Sl1S to 111 tftvtt\meet.I. We ... I r. I~ I~ • •-------p /tlm• night ahlfl • Elecfroftlcs datory. P1tlcH pro· s:t.'!Omo.541·tnO. IDd lilt $.1 to sis millloo r1 1111 MUIW IR•'fW ahltta. APPb' l85Z2 Yon Karman Cllrcader. Oood spelllnl Man\t TrM. ptrtn. £am dollars per month. Sal• l'..U OPPO«TUMITY Jae• ln Thi:! Box. 120& Jrvlne.CaJlf02'7l4 OEN'LOFFtCEGrRL neou Apply lUO S17S·S200 wll , Fuller =rupled IH\ 1ear ~I llaoekt Clften wbe.n y011 BabrSt. Colt.a Meu. tNearO.C. Airport> s.181')' o:::id:rmaMnt Placutla Ave, Co1ta BruahSall'l.SM·mt. l~ ottl~. to to liily flit. .. ,.!ah_,,.,. Dally M'----11 IJ(JldUon. ..... 10 to 100 c:\ eornmlaaioe PUo1 a ... in;d' .. Ms te mi. Wt.tat draw In lbe JuuutY a.,.,..caota .,._ 1---------1 MODELS ll)Ul. vld.o ~ ,.._._\he <>rut• Coal w .. 1 a Dally Pilot ~Ftoappl,.. Yoa doo'l need a Jun to IAP1 ~. mat'U:N. Pbotocrapller needs training, Wrtte to '*' '· AA~-..,ut Cla11lfled Ad Phone~~~~~,~~~~~ .. draw fut'' when you To aart •ft• \he Ne• cluuismallc attractive Berman. Proldta&, ...,.,·~· PhoneMZ·~ ~ • Place aa ad la tho Dally Yur f44"1JO, flfuro model. Conlacl Quall P1•ce ~. t~ ~2 5&71 .._ _______ ~. _:-_ ·~ .. l>l1at WHt Adil Call n()W le..JI ......... 1._ 8 II Hatntlton ,1u) 1400 Qwu1 St .. ., ... UI, ... .. . __ ,... MZ·5eft WaJll Ad_. C.11842-'819 ea.MT& r-!!......, -ma 941,-71 M7·TSM,. Newport Bt•cll, CaW. •• • °'~ ... , t --'--- '· - ....,W..e.d · 71DOIHetpW.+ed 7100tWpW..t.d 7100HeepW..t.d 7100 '"'•c:n IOIO"* ... • IOS:> Tuwtay.January4.111T7 OAtLYPILOT PJJ . ... .. .. . . . . ....... .. . . . .. . . . . . . . .. .......... . . . . .. . . . . ....... ...... ... .. . . . . . . . ..... ... . .. .. ..... ..... ... .. .. . . .. .. ...... .. .. .. . .. . . . . . . .....;...;.....;.~~,.--'-----------------=--- ..... 1060 Mhc•••... IOIO Mhal .. IMll IOIO ~~~ SALES ~fMolCSerrtl Hotpotnt autom•tlc dll· UOOISLESALE •••••••••••••••••••• .. • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• IHSIOE SAUS P'aab lal fl'tllancl&I Sen. bwuher In &ood coadi· Bt•ut entry Ena. dln. , IOI. ESTATE CmlO CONYEISHll C...t loClt c-.-•..t nrm Mual !lave exper. lion. ISO. CallS48·*5. nn Ht, 8 uptllslrd chrs· WANTED CARPET NEW 70 yd.a Challenaln& position Refs req 'd. Ht San LGE Mayta& Washini lighted china cab bm TOP CASH DOLLAR r-1nL~~Jl&ah.521!0 with t.hct world'• largest Miguel Dr, N.B. Suite Machine. 18 mo old l80 velvet patchwork klnll· PA ID F 0 R Y 0 UR sokS· ce. mu.st & moat rapidly growing *· 54M9ll6 u . bedspread· new bdrm JEWE.l.aY. WATCHES. ~5806------ ~SPRWJST manufacturer of quallly ensemble: Amer anti· ART OBJl!;CTS. GOLD WeatlftlbooMSide by aide lcJt boats <as well as com· STC>ae ltM Cl.BK lkydff 1020 QI.Ml des&. lrt. amOW>l of 642-347\ S ILVER SE RVI C £ refrla. $400 . Kenmore • H YOU have substantial experience in all phases or condo conversion and are prepared to become Vice President of a dynamic. expanding company with spectacular growth in the investment field (Salary & profit sharing), Write I ) ... ,_ 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Franciscan Hacienda ---------• P'INE FURN le AN Wu ...... rt ... lb ....... • ... , Pele · ru.u.Jlmum yrs Westaall Corp. hes a Je..try 1070 '""' "' ••~ • .,. ex per . bu i Id I n g va .... n .. .,. ror 1 ''""rson USED. REBUILT & !Hilt. dishes· little earls TJQUES. 64,S.2200 atools. S2S pr A.Mort. od fiberglass boat ts) with with" alleut l yr';xper. Guaranteed. All types. bicycle like new. Ph ••••••••••••••••••••••• d'I n·ends 846 .. .,ll a ft wood int erior <s '. in stock room work. p&N. repairs. Trade·ins 673·9443 17S S767 WANTED LUCMaAelTAeS sPM Knowledge of plumbing. Marine stockroom fX· a«t'pted6ll·2lOl SAVE' JAN SALE. New TOP CASH DOLLAR ~yourbuslnCM card.•--------- electrical. engines & per. preferred, but will •NEW-USED BUCES• & used rurn. appl ••. PA ID F 0 R Y 0 UR Send one card for each Aa ...... ntry A well or .. t11g plus one spare. We Mhc•••uw ~ • ... ~ · · consider sallln° bulls Buy-Sell· Trade misc. Wiison's Bargain JEWELRY. WATCHES. 1011 ~ Don Berman, President, QUAIL PLACE PROPERTIF.S, 1400 Quail street, Newport Beach. oaru'zed .....,.,..nable sell ,. 0 return permanently Wcmhd " • ..... ~ with a real knowhow. AP· Parts & Repaln Noolc. 2 Stores-MS & 1114 ART BJECTS. GOLD. starter who enjoys peo-1 l , .. _ ~ l l s 1 LV ER s ER v 1 c E sealed allracllve laf & ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pie. de._,1 work •-paper PY o .. oo re« on s at Skateboards. W. 19th, C.M. 642-7930 & · t ti 1 1 w ..,.. hJ d """ .. 275 M c k A Cy I FINE FUR N •-AN s rap. mee ng a r ne ant ...... w le reaser. yr Work. Who Is a n ev . c orm c ve. ce&Co.2488Newport SCB-3262 .. • 10 · tan.. d b ... .. Cost M Bl d c TJQUES 64S 2200 · . reqwremen . n e· ol port. cr1 " o ... er perien~ sailor wUI find a e.'a v · · M. M2·?9lO WATER BED. Complete · -vent loss & thef\! For a baby llem.aM2·8S3l ~~~ a rewGardmg future. Call Girls Schwinn blke, never w/hlr. Qn size. 4 mos old U•tttodl 1075 peraon11 alized tragbencloH Bob ates al Westsall I'elephone Salesgirl. & used, 3 spd. $70. Call 1450 value. sell $380. ••••••••••••••••••••••• wa paper . a rlc or I Corp. (714) S49-97U. Outalde Sales Rep Cor 833-3259. <213)43'·3860 Rec. Morgan mare. broke "Day Glo" paper & we .... W..ttd 7100 HetpWanhd 7100 ________ _,gourmet foods. F!Ome. to ride ck drive. blk will back & trim your ••••••••••••••••••••••• "•••••••••••••••••••••• Must be u les oriented. Ladies Huffy bicycle. like Man's valet chair. parade Morgan gelding. tags. Or try two cards ~~----~ Call 7Sl-1893. new, white, 3 spd. $5. En&. Western <714> backtoback. SALES 6'2-3086 540-2279 after Sp m. 338-lOU PRICES: 'll MANREMENT: Vice President opening exists ror ag· . gressive Apartment Management pro· T...,._.S*a. $2eaor3/~ SPECIALIST R.E. Uc req. Work from c-roslr 6 Pc Uv Rm set. cont.em· Madlln1ry 8078 4/Stags~.60ea. . yourhomesettlngappts. !••I•••• 1030 Po butcher blk arms ........................ 6/ll tagsSl.SOea. Hyou'reaggr"sive,am· for our sales stare ••••••••••••••••••••••• mustsell.4~ RossForkLlft123S0.3whl 10ormoreS1.40ca. bilious & exper 'd in sell· Salary. Commission. & Contlllex semi-automatic. Inner Space king slie pneumatic tires. lifts. Sales Tax Included SSSCASHFOI Good used rurn1rerr111 rnrs & stoves 546-0768 1011 • •••••••••••••••••••••• Conn Mln.C>-Matic elec. orxan. excellent coodl· tJon. seoo. P. P. S32· l.2S8 · fessional. Must have managed over 2000 units, be ready to move up to : Presidency of company quickly and have a following. Salary plus profit Ing Fine Jewelry, we Bonus+ffo1pllallut1on Zeiss tessar, f 2.8U.V. water bed heater & SOOO lbs. 14' vertical, just NO CARD'! may have an opening for benem s for the right filter. Leather case. vibrator. Sl7S. 67~3772 overhauled. 3 Cylinder Draw your own or send Fender Telecaster Guitar you in our tine Jewelry person. (213)872·1"2 Shutt.er needs cleaning. fork hfl, hard rubber name. address. phone & " super Reverb Amp. • sharing. Our staff knows of this ad. Dept. Xlnl co. benefits. ~.Dent. 4.94-8566. 4 Pc Walnut Bdrm set tJrcs In front $750. single we'll make one card per al. 673-2:188 bef &pm. Apply In Peraon Tai.ER Dogs a040 Beautiful cond1lion. ure in rear. UFTS 3SOO Sendtag. A:h!: ~:c!oney or-,.._ 8017 Submit resume to: Ad #812. Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, C.M .. Ca. 92626 Mon thru Fri 10am-4pm .. .ror our lovely NewPort ••••••••••••••••••••••• 548-7145 lbs. 12' vertical. 874 W. derto: ••••••••••••••••••••••• J.C. Pa.HEY CO. Beach office. Need ex· AKC G Id R t . l9th. CM. Ph 64S-Ui91 24 Fcnllf• l.a.d perien~ person to work o en e rieve.r PILOT PIUHTIMG . Wes~ Pet Center. ~ ~----an fnendly atmosphere. ruypetl>S·~~~i:u· WHY RENT ~laMoul 8010 P .0 .BoxlS60 WBrlo ~!.d,.,.s AlathrgeSsAt. -CocnpeUUve salary and • ""'&· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Costa Mesa Ca 921626 '"" ... c r ur · · • Equal PP Employer benefits. Call personnel, Lbasa Apso Pups. AKC FURNITURE ? ' . ~LIMM tt,lpW..ted 7100tt.ipWant.d 7100 m/f 64S-S333forappt. Ch. s.ire & dame. Gold BUY 3 COMPL ETE Dog House. New cslm Beerdrafter.holdaV•Keg•---.-"'--"'---1-0-90-••~··•••••••••••••••••• ••••••••• •• •••••••••••• 1 l I mjlde for med to lge dog. of beer. new cond. $200. _.. ..-Restaura.nt SALES equa opp Y emp oyer show males. 831·9097 rooms or A LL NEW Sdlid Creme. shingle ext. 673-5276. Call alt llAM. ..••••••••••••••••••••• ISADORE'S Is accepting AN OHIO OIL CO. orrers SALES TELLEll P /TIME German Shepherds. 7 mos CurnitFUU. PRICE 67~:.>85 Ebony Baby Grand applications for door PLENTY OF MON EV We need a sell-starter Branch o!c seeks bonda· female. (3) 3 mos-2m. lf. '70 Yamaha 100. 4100 mi. CUSTOM Good cond. '495• penonnel. Apply 3PM-plus cash bonuses. fringe (male or rem I lo set up b le Teller l o work 646-0142. 64.5·2801 OML y $399 Dirt/street. $350/bsl ofr. wovll!..a WOODS 64S·SOSO fPlldally. E.O.E. benefits to mature in· obwnl salesT fon:e wildh our p/Ume. Exper. pref'd. DOG 0 8 ED I ENCE No Credtl Credit Needed 2 Gas lawnmowen. com-a-. Baldwin Acrosonlc piano. ---------i dividual In beach area. e p . r e m e n ous Coolact HJldaTerranove EasyTerms Avallable 1 h led $35 SO%T080%0FF Very fine cond. Must RETAIL SALES In Mis· Rega rdless of ex · future . Call NOW ! (714)644-7255. CLASS to start Wed. J.an FREEDELlVERY &ar~ · ea. Over401n·stockpatterns aell.Reas.ofr.SSl·2083 si o n V iejo & San perience. write H.F. 640-0432or548·1951 Western FederalSavlngs 19,7:30pm.Nwpt/lrvme ••SEEAT •• Al1JOMINl-BUnds Clemente. Approx 20 hrs Read. Pres . American Secretaries 2744 E. Coasl Hwy, CdM area. 546-4928 CURTIS 4x8 POOL TABLE 64S-89SO 833-9770 Lewi4' Ptano service\ bas ~~~·~~irxg:r:oeec~ Lubricantci,Co .• Box696. l.EGALWAYS'I EquaJ()pPorEmployer FrfttoY• 1045 RMFwlllhre Good condition. Balls & RADIO Control Electric sever al reconditioned lOAM·7PM. Apply al Dayton.Ohm4S40t. <2>'nWinner; TB.LltlS ••••••••••••••••••••••• &lllhrion rachlncl.$200.673-7495 ModelPTBoat.overlft. upright planoe, America Foto-Mat Corp. 768-4171 SALESCLERK For the legaJ secretary Banklngexper. only. S.O... w..-.. 1165 Hcwbor II. CM 2 drapes. lined. gr/yell. long, siren. water can· " Eu~an, check my or~3950. Fabri c expr ne e. "TRAINEE." To ContactDobCrelghtoo Runs. 963-S373 Cal645-4151 12'. $20; 6'. SIO. 96". ~~.~speeds,etc.0Very prices. guna41M-8440 ---------• Anaheim & Costa Mesa. S600/Fee Reirub. 70 typ. rrvine NaUonal Bank Good.642·llOOOeves. ~ticated toy. ver StinewayGrandS'6". RHUUEF S.pervllor. 3·11. LVN 74. full or p/l1me. M esa Verde Conv. Hosp. 661 Cent.er St, C.M. 548-SSM. Call Mary646-4040 Ing, sh 70. Frnt ore ap-833-3'100 Free to you: l ~yr $1800 r e placement. Ebony, x.l.nlcond. pear. r 0 r N . B. c 0 . old male Irish Setter Dining.Rm table, 8 chairs. Trimmer lawn mower. Sacrifice $500. lncludes S3llC)O 631-03:29 SALESGIRL Complete training pro· TEL · Part Ume. No sell· 557·1744 solid Walnut antique. 2 67~7 everything. 67S·3e82 or TV, l911o, lmmed.Pfrlmeopenlng gram. mg._noappt's.Surveyto Mix Ten1er 1 year w/ washer & dryers, 645-2:200 uam Ster.ct IOtl r l·r· d I I I •••• Business owners. 8 Hr d b ' d •"·ene La d ta 0 ,...-Se SIOO W h ... .,. orqua11e saesg r . , week SS /hr Mr og ouse. goo wr. w. mps,en '°""'"' t . aser .. ••••••••••••••••••••• Motherhood Maternity For tile exper d Legal Ho ~ S49-fs19 · · watchdog, loves chldm. ble.ca.r,645-2955 $100. dinette sel sso. Gourmet butcher block COLOR TV 19 .. Console RN'S Shop Laguna Htlls MaU. Se~retary-to $900/ Fee wa · :;38.-0MS, Water cooler $20. Lamps table, never used, Pict & sound but 0~ a.rg.Position _7_68-_!:l7_7o ______ 1 ~~~·ph80 :raPg~~·,J~53~jTYP IST ·GENERAL Y.Lab Y,Shep.fem.4y,Garop5* 8055 &misc.847-0572 831-161% wrk'. $40. 7SH1892" Weekdays & Weekend • · OFC. Pfrlme PoSltion Ill ~ Shots Pl rut ••-••••••••••••••••••• ~7434eves s SALES a must. S.A. co. Career very busy Nwpt Bch mos . . ay . Garag full ff 1 BeauUful SO gal Barrell Air hockey, like nu $:50; •--------- Challenging Sf!ltioo for Ready for something spot. Free & Fee Posi· Architect's ofc. Heavy 962·3S34 clr t:. ~s uatt' ~!~~~· Aquarium for home or hardly used, Hodaka dirt I'nc 2050, rffl to reel tape £%~e in ivuduals . new" Exciting ~round lions. Call Control typing&phones.Needed Fwwlhre 8050 bike. etc. S81-230S restaurant.Seasoned.for bike lOOcc . $120. Call deck. S300/besl orrer. t efits, insurance. n rt 'ty In wide Career Employment Tues Thurs Fri 9 SPM yU' fresh or tropical fish. 892·7284. 64S-Q97 PartrS..perior OOt'Orjlpold Jui:ii t Agency,556-SSOS. C • b . • · · · ••••••••••••••••••••••• an me. Oak bed. oak cash re----------·---------- 1445SUperiorAve. open ie . o1nouream all twn 9 ·11AM. **IBUY** Hide · b d di gtsler.m1sc 640·8S8SaJt RADIO Contro1Modell2 1oah&Mariwe -Sch 642.2410 now! Call 640·0432 ° Secretary /Receptionist 6.11 ·1700 . 11 e · van· s meter Sailboat. 6 Ft. .__. ·---· S48·19Sl nd De t I A · t tr Good used Furruture & hotplates, lamps. copier. long •a1'ls beautifully ......,,.. ... ----------i 8 n 8 ssss an or V"n Driver . mu•t bn s•~1 frplA ore ch • " · •••••••• • •••••••••••• SAILBOAT RIGGER. N t B h 0 " "'Appliances-OR I will ."""' ~. r.many F IH E W OOD . Pine Makeoffer ortradefor ? • • W ood w o r k i n g • Don't drop the ball! Get a e w P 0 r e 8 c quallflable for Class 11 sell or SELL for You. items. 67S-4002CdM. $OS/chord slacked. del. 67S·3662or64S-2200 G1111ral 9010 fiberglass, electrical. job with a low.cost Daily Orthodontist. 6424611 license S3 hr. 30 hr per MASTBS AUCTION Hones 1060 54().7023 646-1413 .. ••••••••••••••••••••• Mari n e r Yachts. Pilot Classified Ad. SECRETARY Wk.536-5352. 646-8686&133·9625 ••••••••••••••••••••••• HousefulofFum.Wasber RADIO Control Model 12 ~1393. Pbone&U-5678. Efficient and accurate. WAITRESS . cxper'd hrs F Sal Old nat lop lrunk 42" de-& Dryer, misc bsbld meter Sailboat. 6 Ft. 65 WPM, It shorthand. 7:30 t o 3 :3o. Good ry a Daily Pilot or e: 2 P<>nies &show ep, 32" across. $SO. Lrg It.ems. '73 Nimrod Tent long, salla beautifully ca reer 0 r .1 e n t e d . personality. Please ap-Oassifled Ad to buy. sell quarte~':.s8,:.1091 bureau w /6 dwrs $30. Trlr, sips 8. 2020 Wallace, Make offer or trade for New port F1 nan c I a I ply: or rent something. • 493-6072. apt. B. C.M. 548-4906 ?? 67S.3662or64S-Z200 Coenter. 644-6457 for appt. Ice Cream Ahoy SECRETARY 7640 Edinger Ave. RB Exper'd. part-lime, 5 hrs Waitress Food/Cocktalls. per day. N.B. Architect-Apply aft 4pm, Sid's Blue builder. 540-0644 Beet, 107 2lat Pl, N. 8. SECRET ARY P /T W AITRISSES Far• Ad la W__.. Wortd Varying evening & wltnd Coob & Dlshwcnlten hn. Calls.56-1421 Exper prof'd. Apply C411 SM 64Z.5'71. Ed. 330 SECalTARY 2 · s pm . D e n n y 's ·' Boot It! 711 4 £,Aec.B~ Fash Isl Fioa.ncial Serv. Restaurant. S29 Aveolda " "'-'ft8 70 h Pico, San Clemente. 1ll'1D •• ,.,,.... wpm, s 90-100. :& San Mi1uel Waitresses full & p/lime. Dr. N.B. Su.ite 200. Laguna location. Over 18. l Yr coffee shop ex· SICUTARY jUCEP'T. per. Refs req'd. Charlie's Const.ruction exper. Sta· auu. SG-0.lSl. ble. O.C. Airport area. --------- Res . 968·7465. Bus WAREHOUSE 540-2842. WORKllt SECRETARY Exper. helpful, bul not SH & typing, gen'I ofc necess. 2031 S. E. Main work. SmaU electronics _St._l_rv_ln_e_._546-_290_1_. -- co needs efficient girl. WOMAN SS.SO, houn. s to Call for appt. 545-7108. 8 PM . Tidy up house, •SE<:llETARY cook dinner for bachelor, RECIP11,......15T must be pleasant. salary YI"" • open. Please· call 640-1667 Beautirul Irv. oUlce ---------needs model image, fmt Woman over 6S w /car to office penoo w / strong s h a r e C d M h o m e skills, smiling telephone w tsame. Rm, boa~ & v o i c e • v i v a c i o u s nominal salary lo nghl personality who enjoys person. Night or day ph: faisl pace heavy people _673-4 __ 725 ______ _ :;:':i~s~~es~~~:! WOMEN needed for w/photo & ulary re· bousecleanln1aervlce. qui.rement.s to: ltolablet ltog Ir Mop c:a..l&dAd #Ill 54'-0757 Dolly Pilot PO loll ~ 1560, Cost• M•••· ••••••••••••••••••••••• C& 92626 .......... IOOS Company will contact ••••••••••••••••••••••• =u:~~~ for Wonderland Of Anti SI. SECRETARY Clll9 Fu.11Ume. 1 Girl ornce. H UGE w arehouse Varlous Interesting crammed wtlb over 500 duties. NB. 548·2888 music boxes, nlckelo· t---------deon pianos, circus or- SECIETAIY /IA9llt gans, wall c locks, Snuglt h1to cuddly boots Gd •kills. Salary com· grandfather clocks, after • ll«tlc day' .menaurate w /expr. Ph fascinating anUques. Curws ot color race 1l'Wld 481-0tll Laguna Niguel Over $1,000,000 Worth low 04' high boots with draw-l\mertcan lntemaUona l &Irina toPs. Crochet In 3 SECURITY CJUAIDS Galleria; 1802-T Ketler· :.=!d.0~.~t:!~1fl, t/!!:'~ lmmed. empk>ymentfuU Ing St., Irvine. Tel. Sim s. M, l Included. 4c p/time. l:rvloe area. 754-tm. Open Wed thru Oitt oftheplusuresol $US tor etch ~tttm. Md ~tlea&°!e=r.Unlrorma S.t.9AMto4 Pll.Vlail! ~ I ~ •· 1-•· f u ......... -ttem or, ... , ... •~· n•u. r .,. nee .• __. 10 I 0 -• '"'"' .... 11: °' tn ~ _,,... "• ....... Unlversal rotectlon ~wu•c" Oltflt I-• tlllat ti'' ,_ lO elrtNll end lland1tn1 Sen t.. Sernce. 122S W. sth St. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~111 multi · eolo<n &tripe ~Ice 8r<>o1c1 Santa Ana. Interviews REFRIO&liATORS ~solid pents i.lsy.Sewl Needlecrall Dept. 105 bra 10am·12 n oon 6 WASHERS-DRYERS nttd Ptttt1119249: Mlss.s' D1tiy P1101 1:31M:30pm. R«oodlllons·Repros " Ines 8, 10. IZ. 14. 16. 15 Box 183, Old Chelsea Sta.. ---------• Frgt O.maae. Ouar/Del. :~ ~!s 34~~.~d~trds New York. NY 10011 Pnnt Service Station Help, 29 Yrs In Ora.nae Co. s..ci Sl.25 for tatll palttm Nanni. Address. Zip ftOme. Exi>er'd. lt or DUaJ• .. ,.s Add 3S<' for tlCll pettent fOt P11tem Number. over. 3Ul Jlarbor Blvd, """"' flttt-clns 11rmtll 111nc111111 lltOR£ tlt1n ntr befortl 200 Colt.a Mesa. WJ Newport BJ, CM ._.lit ' dMIJm__plus 3 frH Pl111ted lrt-CALL541-TTIO side NlW 197& NttDUCRAfT SEWING MACHINE•-------......_ Mtrtert Marlin CATALOG! H.ts t¥tfYtlllna. 75, OPERATORS. lmmed. WAii B-DIYll ~tern O.pt 442 ~~ .tat ._..,.. · $1• ooenl.ngs nt' O.C. Airport, i..te model, euper dolua. 1*IY Pilot l'ICMh Wlf*tl>e ... _ 1.00. al'CKIB Bl N SA (LS. llulll·C)'Cle, Ulte new. m · W•Jt 18th st .. New =. fl"1..,tb 1.00 ~ Perl. cond. Sacrtne9 at York. NY 10011. Print Stw + ~w ·-:~ •-~-~--ua.------1-• $225 for botb. Call NAME. ~DORE SS, ZIP ........... I leek ·· -1a owwrrt""9' ~ TSl S1'1T l tZE and STfLE n..,erCl'MIMt~1IO Clerical IMlp want9d.1---·------ NUMB6A. .... Crtell•t ... _ JIG Typing • flllns In VrW..U01houael"fhfa. II ,.. ..... "" " pt 1 lntllt Crtelltt a..-·-1.00 purc hulnJ·1htppln1 1.reen. td eond. S1!S. _..,.. tretf StM 111• ftr l•ttH-Mlctta• IMl t.00 dept. Ault~ ~tc:hu. 83'1-lltl J!.....~=1111'::': ~-,;::::~-::J =.~:io1: alnSt,J-Ke_n_m_o-re-.,,-.-,-h-er-.-.-d ......... ~ 9f ,_ ...._ C.-.. ~-· 114 1.00 --------• dr1er, e lect.rte. bo&b :r ~1.it~ j.21 ~,,r.s=,'J~ : M~rS::C~~!ee. $100.GJ.JemaftAr.,,. t.:. Crlfb IM ..._ llllt 11..a 12 1 Prolleeacy w J t l1 In Don't five lap U. 1hlpl ...._ = · ~-11 lllltl ~TMt1 II JI•· rormel ofe. C.11. Cell "Lilt' It lo el••ln.d. 111111t...... -• ...... tt Jlffrltlip lie Beverly 11, aft tOAM. SbJp to 1bo,. ,...wt.el M$-90. eoM?t. ------~--- )r TO OUR WOMEN IN BUSINESS A TRIBUTE TO THE COMING Sunday January 23, 1977 in the Dally Pilot ORANGE COAST'S SUCCESSFUL WOMEN BUSINESS PROFESSIONALS Our s.tute to BuelneM 8nd ProfeNlonal Women la an exceptlonat opportunity to Introduce • new or longttme •aoclate to the people of the Orange C08at, or to honor awards or achievement•. ·' Don't ml•• being pert of thl• ePecf•I advertising opportunity. Deadnne tor r..vtng apace I• Jan. 11. C•ll tod•yl ,OAl~Y · PILOT 642-5818 • .. .. ltJ4DM..YPILOT T~.JtnU!fYC,1977 Alllos,IMpomd ..._t.,01e.d ..._..,IN'tld .... UNd ...... UMd .;::::i;....,.;:..;;;.;..;;.;;..;......-;;.;;;..;. __ ~ ____ ;.;;.;:=~;..;;.;.;:; ... ;::;4 ....._.......;.:..~ &-A • ••• • • • • • • • • ••• •••••••• • • • •• •• • • • • •••••••••• •• •• • •• • • • • • • •••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• GssAr.. 9010 .__.. -~ 9915 S./._. 91 60 ....................... Ho.d9 9727 '-"ct. 9750 Yoho 9772 C1•1c Ford MlillhM ••••••••••••••••••••••• ......................... ,.. 970 1 •••••••••·•••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• a:~~?~~~~o~~c~~ 28'GMCMOTORHOME ••••••••••••••••••••••• ......... W '76 '66 Porsche 911. '71 911 ''6~De¥111e '74 Torino w ,n. 6 paas. 74P0aD loc\g, siren. waler can · Slpg 6. Wntr rates. Pvt RARE •62 HOMD 6 C•-Eng, reblt trans & rear ltoctl N Gc*t rack. new radials. M.000 MUST ANG non. 2 apeeds, etc. Very pty833-26UI, MASERATI A _. • ~Kon I's. $3700. Ttlt. AM /FM Stereo, 6 ml. Clean $2850. 673·2Q8, 2 dr. autoJNtlc. powe aopbiattcated toy. Over' 64.2·409'7 Nwpt 3500 GT COUl'f OVY I 00 way ... t. A.IC. Pwl' Win· 67S.24a0 eves. 1aeerln1. ~~· redlo S1800 re PI ace m en l. GMC Late iJ, xlnt. cond.. 5 Spds. new u~. Dor To CMow Ft·o•ll · u Porsche 9 l l L. <Sows. Vin.Y1 top. auto dr. ..,5 GraMda Gbl• • dr •beater. C I Sacrifice S..'500. Includes sips 6• 118,900. 1238 roni wire wheels. ruel In· restored, mint cond. lock.a. ~f~te. auto An· ~wr 30.000 Mi •. xtni $2499. , ::S.~ina. 675-3662 or Polaris. NB 8J3..2616 Jection. aluminum body UNIVERSITY '8llOC> 968-3462/~ •SALES tenna ...... .,.,14 . ~-South Cout PlusTu•L•~ _________ ,;;----T----9-7-1 Xlnl cond. Very r11!il' Olde•able 197STUGA •SERVICE "TJEIDondo Car Leutna. IOO West --....,.._ ,.... I 0 21.lmMi.Toohotfor,my Ho8do Can • GMC Cbocol·•-B r own. ••-=•s•u'-Allpwr.newUres Coast Hw y . N 8 . """5S ••••••••••••••••••••••• r T de 0 r 4'......... ....... tnW .c...tc. "182 ... "' .... 3.-T w 1 e · r 8 Trsb loaded. clean. lo ml. ~-498-7~ _,.. ..... 4 .. , -IOA IMG --0 Sn•rtanTrlrHme SO""''"'·-.g lamer. Pan O-----'------,., ... ~Sis ._... ,_ · ..... uuu 2850 Harbor Blvd must sell. C•ll wkdys '"'"" --· •69 FOID ~ $2,000/bsl orr tera. Lotus. Etc or ?" Costa Mesa M0·9640 Lou979-2:s33 ft-.ll '72 El Dorado Convert. • THEODORE ~ • ROBINS FORD .'llbU HAll ~OR ~ l v II StartlngJan.10. 1977 FOC' lnlo call 847-0937 Pvt ply. 675·3662 o . -•er, Flre Blue Mlst/blue lntr. Cty. S.,. WtL SPonS<>redBALbyBt.hOeA AMfo Senlce,P.+s ~2200 74 Civic. auto. new tires '62 Hrdtp cabriolet , xlnl Ser~«; & ft,ri: 'f°w open X.lnl cond. All extraa. Auto. trans.. air cond .. ~~~~!!!~~~ &Accntoriff 9400 IMW 9712 AM /FM cass .. brkes . condt.hruout.$4700. Eves :nve~~nce. or your ~.Ph673-5716 pwr. steering, pwr. seal •• 87 Eccon 6 cyl. 3lpd. 28 0 to~w:R~ADRON & ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• $2500./ofr. Lvng entry. 64&-6837. radio. heater. CZD~> mpg, rad io. Radial•• sale~~g:C~~~s ustom VW Fdstback Reza00-5457. •'68 Porsche 912. Must 9917 SI 199. ctea.n;S900.559-5075 of boats. For detalla call: lumber rack. $SO. or beat Jagger 97 l O sell. Reduced to ~-Ph1.1Tax11 l.J ceose 673-5717 otrer. 960-2071 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call (1 >642-ss.61 '87 camaro is Must.ant a. hardtotJ, on.I)' 8..000 ml. S.'-400. .. mint cond. Pvt ply. 544-9582 aft 7 PM '73 XJ-12 4 dr, white ~ OriiinalOwner. for Sak w/blue leather int.. foll Rois loyce 9756 327 Auto, $IMO. M0-05SS '77 BMWs ·-· .. ,. 000 Mil... ••••••••••••••••••••••• .__.. u --1--. •••••••••••••••••••••• pwr QI. &Jr ...., ..-:S *1 DEALER IN US A --. _._ Alsti / Perl. cond, orlg. owner. • . • '76 Camuo 350, a uto ......... • 9030.-1 ContactHaroldStandlsh. ROY 19M lft)o(C.M.~ AM/FM. P/S, P/B. air, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ClcisMcs 9520 HERE NOW Custom W""ave Carpets, ~ nu tires. lo mi. Mint. 8, Fold'A" Mabo•any boat ••••••••••••••••••••••• "' CARVER .-(93..,_c U<& " btwn 8am-3:30pm Mon is Volvo 242. 29.000 mi. _._.. ......... ladder, $SO. several used 1921 Chev Truck. Reslora •'rl. 962-8841 ROLLS· ROYCE AM I FM stereo. air. 1968 Camaro Convert. oldsalll.S10.24'Bahama ble, all partS available. • IMWRESALES .... _ _._ 9 7,.8 ~~---... #. SSSOO . 832·3831 8·5. Good"·~. new ... -·ks, boatcover,$30.675-4002 Motor runs. Asking ....uuu o11 --..-· ~" ........, '"""' ---------1 $18SO. 874 W. 19lh St. CM. 7~~ 0 0 CS· 4 s p . · ••••••••••••••••••••••• ........ 541·5586 att S. clutch. *150(). 645-29SS IB Johnson 20 H.P. OUl· _MS-__ 168_1 ______ I ~22002J .. (53SRKK >. Cl0$l0 SUNO-.YS 67 It. blue 4 dr wagon. board electric start S27S. 4 MA....-• D • 9550 Straight body needs 496-7598after6:30 P.M. ""'"" n••s '7 3 3 · 0 CS· 4 s P · ELEGANT 1964 Rolla some eng work. flOO/ bsl Clltnol9t 9920 ---------1••••••••••••••••••••••• <967KLM l. R o y c e . F u l I y ofr. SS&-3&lO. ••••••••••••••••••••••• loah,row..-9040 1974TOYOTA '73 8a..,ari a ·4 s p.. UP H OLSTE RED ·74 I mpa l a Coupe , ••••••••••••••••••••••• I """-RUIS.... (680PPM> /CHINCHILLA IN Bos Wb I '3" ._""""' UIL • 7 4 Ba v ·a r i a . 4 w · · AM/FM. stereo, cruise THEODORE ROBINS FORD 10b0 ~IAllllOR lllVO , COST.a. Ml ~A O•l / 0010 7SFORD '65 M111tana. R&di. Pl•. p/b. 6 cyl.. mags, new Urea. $795 or make olr .. 495-0632 af\ llpm. GRAND TOllMO Mustana 10 Beyl. P /Str + 4 dr., auto. trans., pwr. brks, air. R&H, WSW. steer ., power brakea, vinyl top , to mi, vinyl roof, radio. heater. P r I o w n r . S 1 II 9 ) / (743MAT) <n4)'94-4163 an 6pm. $2999. Pl\11 Tax ar Uceue '71 ll111tana. ~.ooo ml. Good cood. Orallle · THEODORE $2.000. S7S-Cmf l!J:ish~p.J~~·~oto~ 4wheel drivew/rollbar. C348LFM) sp.· ZISOH•--&. 11 d. C R ~ D 1 BL. Y Aldos.UMCI cootrotWtwbl,alr.A/1', with only lOhours. $1400. custom wheels & tires iS2002·A.:(0341 ). ~ • BEAUTIFUL. Price ....................... orig. owne r . S32SO. a.•able 9tl( rirm. Replacement value w/only 22.ooo miles· '75S30JA-A.·<906MVG>. Colla W.S0 641-5700 ~Slli~a lAN~· G1•ral 9901 673-3388 ...................... . ROBINS . FORD S2100.Call642-...a2 LlKENEW! C490MPRI. SADOLEIACK 759--00'77 ... ••••••••••••••••••••• "ro-9 ~Chev Sin w111. '14 2dr Olds. Cutla4 ;ono HARBOR 6lll0 COSlA MISA b•l1 0010 Sale l'rice-$1999 i4 Maida RX3 Coupe, 4 Supreme. 411.000 ml. all 14' L F /G M MIRACLE MAZDA VAUEYIMl'ORTS spd, under wmty. very T__.a 9765 AT. • PB. rac AC. 4 nu b ~ 500. a;~~~-sta'rt. ~~~t 831-2040 49S.4949 clean83'7-J202 .:!.:~••••••••••••••••• llres. Sl.OOO/orr. Ask'g , 945 pwrl _!.A. S1.•cubpeelior ·•-21SO Har bor Blvd .• C.M. 962·31138 I 1.....--..L.. ....... ,.. un trailer. xlnl cond. $1575. 645-5 700 M9rc~ 1ff1 97 40 -S3900. 49S-4637 olfer968-0290 '77 '60 Corvalr, 2dr, auto. ••••••••••••••••••••••• J • • • •• • •• ••• •••••••••••• ....____..... 996 i1 Ch PU 1t'a T · d New tires. xlnt body. 75 UMCOLM ttt-n USED BOAT WANTED · ev · · on. 51 e ....... •xlnt.--.962-0362 TOMA.IC""'-••••••••••••••••••••• 18·22' 1/0 riberglass. tanks. O/S tires, Exit & 1958MI% 190SL TOYOTA ·-.-.. "" ..,..,.... .. rlsh/sld w/trlr5S2-0282 ~nd, slereo. shell. $.1500 I ST • HOAOWAY COUPEROADSTElt $ 9925 Full power Including ' fll'm. 499-2976 SAMfA AMA vinyl top, tilt wheel. 22' Trojan Sea Breeze, d ruJ 835·3171 Hardtop & sort top. HERE MOW &6Cbevy-SYSS72-S499 cruise control. AM /FM bait tank, VHF. just '73 Toyota Lan c ser, THEuuaMAr.OfllVIHQMACHHtt! Onginal leatherw/rad10 6t TBlrd·FWJ088-~ XLNTBUY tape. air cond .• looks hauled. painted & eng many xtra s. $3900. u ED w· Aclassic! OTX775). 66Ply.Cpe-63().JSH-$699 '68 4dr Ou-ys Newport. good! <J.Jc.087REC) tuned. CGA inspection. 557-7742art.6pm * 5 IM t* SADDLEIAOC •NEWCOLORS 66TBlrd-SBM602-$799 Pwr . AC. Xlnt cond $66l 6. $3500. ~ '73 8avaria-<906Lv·n y AWY IMPORTS •NEW MODB.S ~~ Bues::rfi73-S899 tbruout. sm. 673-0193 -..... --.-... -,---- 1Tndrs 9560 ~=~~~: 831·204a495-4949 HugeSaving.sonALLre· 68T0l~xEWU~C)99 Cou•••tal '930 GUSTAFSON· C........ 9050 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Closed s.nc1ay malo1ng new 76s & 67Cad.SD-920BSW-$1l99 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Will trade ·7~ Honda 2SO OSI 1 LeCIM Demos. . 71 Nova·789CRB·S1299 i4 4 Dr Sedan. Looks & LI NCOLN MERCURY 16800 B<'ach Blvd. Huntinglon Beach DOMTIUY AIOAT motorcycle in xlnt eond, ORANGE COUNTY'S New • Used The Better Bargain 68 Fr81.rd-WF04()().$1399 runa like new. Loaded. ror used truck. 642-1738. OLDEST MARQUIS TOYOTA 71 Unc.-467BSX-S2699 wtextras. Orig owner. 842-8844 OVER IOO MISSJON VIEJO 72 MGB·l64GIM·S2799 ~.Alll2.~05 ~ MERCEDES 831-2880495-1210 72 Mk.IV·975MXlf.S4499 Cor""9 9932 \II OH DISPLAY 74 EIDor.-438NPE-$6899 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mercury 9950 '74-C-10. Chev PU. 350 V8 JOI~ ~-~~t;: 8~m:!e~pii All new. exclusive IONA 151·9818 YACHT & SAILING --------1 CLUB. Callr·Hawaii. '66 Che vy 6 cyl truck C lubhous e, Party, cmpr. Ndswork. $600or cruises bst olr. 631-1291 art 5 NO RENTAL FEES Sales-Service-Leas mg RoY Carver.Inc. Rolls koyce BMW 1.S40 Jamboree Newport Beach 640-6444 FREE Salling lessons. i6 TOY~A SR 5 Pkup. 5 Umited number charter spd, radio. buck. seats & Capri 971 s memberships available. 8 trk. 493-8590 ••••••••••••••••••. •• •• CALL NOW m4>49IHl681 '71 Chev 34 ton PU Auto, '76 CAPRI House of Im~ ·11 Corolla. oew paint. CALL 642-0795 74 ce..v ,.... ••••••••••••••••••••••• clean. sooo. --------1 '76 MOHAICH AUTHORLZ D 840-3168 4 s pd. AC. Loaded ! C I h V MERCEDESDEALER ----------tAMC 9905 Cherry. Lease /Buy. omea w l ·8 . 6862 Maoehcster, '70 Corona 4 dr deJu.xe. ••••••••••••••••••••••• SeoslbJepymts. automatic. r adio .It rr I beater. pc>wer steering & Buena Park " • viny roof. 39.000 '&8 AMC Javelin. 4 Spd. BRITISH CAR CO. bra.It•. air cond. Look at 523-7250 orig. owner miles. Sl2SO. map. huelers. Sharp! 2131990.2525 this price! Yours ror Im· On the Santa Ana Fwy. 673-3388 '675. 673-529$ 7141694-2854 mediate deli very. !Lie. 1952 MBZ JOOS Classic Vollswoget1 9770 '70 AMC JAYELIM 274.MMN>. Coupe-One of only 86 pro· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 dr. hardtop. tact. air . COUIJ9' 99ll 4516. ATLAS Qrvslet-JPty-"' Open Daily & Sun. 'UI IQ PM 2929 Harbor Blvd.. • Costa Mesa 546-1934 9961 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 74l'OMTIAC GRAMDPRIX v~. auto. air. power alr., dlx. b~akes, pwr. wtnd., seats, landau lop, aumf. Cs:!OM'TQI $4499. Plus Tax &i License THEODORE ROBINS FORD 201>0 H ARBOR lllVO loah. Sal 9060 new paint. radio. gd 4 Cylinder. great i:as ••••••••••••••••••••••• tires. gd cond. $2195. Ph mileage, ready to go. Hobie 16, trlr, new trans & 494.a780 Ser. GAECSK-24542. duced that year ' Must i 4 VW Convert. ~M/FM pwr. slr'g. & seats. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •::rin:lfi:::nr2:r.:or.. see to appreciate! Pri. lape.$3795. bucket seats. R&H. '76COUGARXR7 UU~l'°"r;:>UN CO~TA MESA h41 0010 ply. 581-7446. Phone549-0351 anytime (8SSAUZ> Co mes w I lb V • 8. more. Sl,42.5. 6'6-8255 or v.. 9570 $3886 LI NCOLN MERCllRV 16800 Beach Blvd S81·7505. • •••••••••••••••••••••• IUILD YOUR OWN 1975 GMC SURFER VAN GUSTAFSON. LINCOLN MERCURY 16800 Beach Blvd · Huntington·Beach c •-·sic:Merc•des '68VW Panel Van. Panel· $1399. automatic, rad!o & KD · di I tires d Plus Tax •·Lice""4 heater. piower steenog & '75 "'-tate Wagon A/C 1970 280SE Cnvt. Xlnl mg, ra 8 ' runs g "' ·~ brakes, vinyl top. air ~~~~~~~~~ """ • • cond. $17.500. SS2·7091 $1600. 675-1112 cond .• looking good! -AM/FM, R/R, nu radial Huntington !k-.tch tires. $2400. SS2·3092 aft. $ Youn ror immediate de-t .... aaq 9952 l ivery . <Ser .••••••••••••••••••••••• 842-8844 . IEAUT. WESTSAIL •73 vw Super Bug. WORLD CRUISER Automatic. air cond.. "60 Mercedes 2208. reblt AM/FM 8 track. new Hundreds or proud sunroof. portholes. de· engme. 10.000 m1. SHOO brks, lld edition mdJ. See THEODORE ROBINS '72Vega Wgn. NewstJ beJt FORD 6A93HS43713). luxe tnm. chrome wire •---------960-2810eves. · ~UW\/"'-l 0 w n er s are b a nd wheels & 8 lrack stereo. i6 Capri Black Cat. Dix, ---------to apprecJate. ......,., "" ruushmg their Westsails (0749>. loaded. 11.000 mi's . 7 5Ml%lOOD _oC_r_._962_-05_16 ____ -1 in their spare time . SADOLEIACIC u.wi. 831-9795. Very Clean. (7'5LWH> •gg vw Camper Van. New 'JOt>O HARBOR Bl VO CO~fA ME SA b~'2·0010 $5416. GUSTAFSON There's no reason you b s2500 b t 76 .AMC GREMUM can't do it too. Take ad· VAWY IMl'ORTS Colt 9717 HOUSE OF ~~~~~r/" / 5 6 Cylinder. automatic LINCOl N MERCURY t!i800 Bc.1ch Blvd Huntmqton BPactl vantage ol winter & ear· 111·2040 495-4949 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IMPORTS ----------1 trans mission, ra d io. ly spring deliveries oo '74 Dodge Colt Sta Wag. ·m Bug, clean. new tires. heater. pow~r steering & 842-8844 specially priced semi-'H Ford . Reblt e ng ., XlnL Lo mi's. Fact air. 213/921-8588 Gd cond . $1100 cash. brakes. air conditioning.•==;..;;..;.."--'"----- flnlshed 28' tbru 43' map. 11ew tires, fully Pvt pty. 846-1491. 7141523-7250 552·7622 an 6PM. roof rack. •74 COUGAll XR7 Wests.all packages from cu.st.om interior. Super 97•0 ---------A6A465EU163SO. V-8. auto. air, p /str. & SB9QS.ror hull ANDdeck! dean.S1295.67J.5925 Dahm ' 75M1%240D '73 VW Bug. New paint. $2616 p/dlx. brks .• p/wind .• Attend our builders' . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Clean. Buy/Lease. Sensl· New c I u t ch. Re a r R&Jl WSW. tinted glass, roruma Mon. & Wed. iOForctyan.60.000mi,3 DllVEA blepymts.(860NBM >. radlals. Xlnt condition. whl. covers, landau top eves. to find out about ~· cpt g, 6 cyl. $1755. • $1899. or best orfer . 1735LFS> fmlshing packages ld:ac· N6-2l25 anyt.lme LITTLE... HOUSE OF '763-2319 $3999. g>:J1s~~:~~~t!~t1:c! 1:'.:t:=.Ds.Js.100 Van. SAVE A LOT IMPORTS '61 VW, new eng, c.-uslm. PlusTax&Llcense Village Center. Suite 2Gl. ~24211 SHOP &COMPARE 2131921-8588 50 ::_~1. or bsl ofr. Pb: 9935 3432 Via Oporto. Newport IAaWICI( DATSUH 7141523-72 ---------i '74 Gremlin. 'ood cood. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beach. 92663. 67S.5l90 W. W..e.d 9590 SanJuao Capistrano 1974 240 D. xlnt cond. fully 74 VW Bug. for sale, lo ml. new tires, ess tha '68 Dodge Coronet, good •••••••••••••••••••••• 131·1375 49).1375 AM/FM stereo, $2100. 3-0.000. Asking $2100 transportation. $450. LASa CASH FOi CARS! loaded. $8950. Pvt ply. 848-9471 $48-1340 49S-4500 1112199 Race xtras & Doi 4.96-0461, 1·634-0414 fbgls cntrbrd $725. Top $ tar S paid for '66 VW Sqrbck. New ena Clldlac 991 646-L089or645-2180 clean uaed cars, trucks & '12 MBZ ~. 6 cyl, 4 dr. Uloodual carb) new brks, •••••••••••-••••••••• ----------1 CorveUes. A.ak ror Paul 56,000 mi. Xlnl cond. 1 b '63 Dodge Dart Station Wagon, 1'W11 good, $295. S38-9l5S 14'HobieCatllkenew. O'Neill. SPICfALS $!850.492-M32af\5:30. ~l~. ute • SSSO. AabngSl200/t>nt orr. HOWMtDCMnoe.t 8210' Door. 4 speed. ••••••• Call76MSl. DovearQuallSts. (735'7U). hG 9742 '68Sqrbck. Very good. Lo (!) 9940 NEWPORT BEACH NOW 12195 •••••••••-•••••••••••• mi. llblt. 18,000 m i. Xlllt it HOllECAT J.S Metw WEPAYTOPOOLLAR 88800VESTREET 1975MGMIDGET trans.673-3172 l ll"' f\. smaller venlon FOR TOP USED CARS Near MacArthur 4 speed. AM /FM radio & '63 VW Bus reblt eng & ~~~:C,&,!t~ ';!; FOREJGN,OOMESTIC &JamboreeRoads o nly l 5,ooo miles . transm1ssl~n. $6()()/best ••••••••••••••••••••••• 7SFOID GllAHADA Radio & beater. 2 dr., power steer, & brakes, auto trans .• 34,000 miles. C249NBW) ntru Great ror boys orCLASSJCS U l-1100 <999NKK>. airer IMI0-2!i611 fint cat Very fut. S600 U your car Is extra clean We Price-$3599 --·-------• NabeJS 67>3662 or 645-2200 . see us first. TOP IUYB MIRACLE MAZDA '68 VW Super .BeeUe --------t IAUEa IUICI See 111 first, ar lull To ztSOHarbor Blvd .. C.M. 1700CC Engine. $3599. '74 Aquarius 21'. VHF, 29125HarborBlvd. dailarpaidlorlmport.s. 645-5700 11000 Call646-8189 Cadillac Genoa. NB slip. Loaded, Costa Mesa 979-2500 COSTA MISA .....,._ 9744 '72 VW Bus 1 pass. wht & Xlnt cond. $4800/bll. D .&.·JSUM ......, """d AC AM dio J t Plu.a Tu 4' Ucense • THEODORE 751-4808, 963-5455 WE BUY " ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ sas'.3377 ra • x 0 2845Harbcw Blvd. 1973 MGI Roodshr --· -----UDO 14. & trlr, Ullman CUAMCMS QlstaM.. 540'341 •--A, .... /FMstereoB ·ee vw Bug. Strong run· sa.ils, Hall No. 2611, race & ,..._IS .. •...-. "'"" nued, cover, asklna '"._, 7SDATSUM210% track & wire wheela. nlng. new brks. coals Sl • ._ N I S bo lal4COT). Asking SllSO. Pb 494-4824 .• -1. ap es a t , 10.ml, 4 apd. AC. AM a....a... &..1.--..53.,99 yeUow, standard rigged, NMIMfil FM. Str. Lease/Buy -..-n...-6 xlnt cond. Askinl 12k>. """" Sensible pymta. MIRACLE MAZDA '68 VW Bug. Red. 14.000 ml. $SOO casbt rlr m 494-19'7 Joan 1113-290'1 CllJIOLET BRmsH CAA CO. 2150 Harbor Blvd., C.M. Laatt 113541. Lite blue, 2828Harbor Blvd. 213Jll0.2525 645-57oo •·.7-4_D_u_be_r_4_D_r __ -w-,-gnn-. xlnt cond. S'12S. 831-1291 COSTA MESA 7141194-2154 'S'T MGB GT. Xlnt cond, AM/FM, air, ,lo ml. xlnt after5 546-1200 ---------1 low mi., wiltll, radials. shape. Pb873-~716 ·~= ..... / DAlsWI "14YJ 260Z, 2+2. new cpl & pint . $1500 otr. 9772 .... 9070 TOP DOLLAR air, auto, mags, AM/E'M, '97-3965. VolYo PAID metallic bronze. Sharp. .. .. ••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Slip Space ror 25·35' fiber1 lus sailboat. Newport Beach.17$-7213 IMh.SllOf ... totO ••••••••••••••••••••••• BOAT STORAGE $30 monthly, rree launch. Sail/Pwr . Newport Dunes.~lO 1'r•1ra tallow ••••••••••••••••••••••• ......... =-, Seu 9150 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '14 Hoada 380. CB 4,000ml. tJOIEDlATELY Pvt Ply. "995 .. 493-5450. 197' MGI loodshr FOR AU 4 speed, ate.reo & rack· FOREIGN CARS Im DATSUN B2lO IJKENEW! C2t9PHC>. CALLORCON£lN ~e new. approx 24,00C S.Pria-$4.Stf TOS!EUS llU,S28)C).~ MIUCl.IM.UDA MIWPOl1' INP<*TS PW 9721 ,.,_ .......... _Bl d c M 3100W.CatHwy,NB -·••••••••••••••••••• 2150 ..... ._. v " · · . '4J..'401 641-1700 MUST SELL! '" ... GT. '75 124 Sport C®pe. lo Chrome wlres. nu·tittt. _m1_· _. m_s._14S3_1_84.2_!_..a854 __ , AM·FM. Vert lo-pyrnta. '75 Flat Xl/9, xlnl cond. convertlblt1, AM I FM cassette. • apd, $4200. ~ 75 Pl.ATXlt 418CKY BRITISH CAA CO • 213/990-.2525 • 7141894-2854 77 VOLVO HER~OW •..WCOLOIS •MIWMODILS Huao savings on all r&o maln log new 741 Ii Demos in stoc:k . MAAqUIS VOLVO lll.SSlON VIEJO Looks • runa Uke new.1 ________ _ tD). C.OUl'I llat Wbeels. AM·FM, 8 '70MelGT track. Sensible f>ymts. WI.res. Sharp. EtUoy lo- Cberr)'. Can Leaae. pymt.s.3117BTN. 13 I .UIO 4tS. I Z I 0 OIAMGICOUMTY VOi.YO EXQ.USIYELY VOLVO Lart•t VoJvo Dealer ln Oranae County t BUY or LEASE Need c.ll. '71 Yamaba IDOtol"Kooter $275 flrm. C.U Loete49f.171l PuU Dr... '14 OT 750 •iukl. Bouaht new Ju. '11, .iot C!Olld, GtW Ile. new tu.ne\ao, n°" tlrel. G.200. ea.llttt. UMlllll 72 Yam.ti. in. Good dirt bike. $250/bat offer. ISWl10. Hodaka IO, lood cood. '125-7 Yn old. c.u~ TOP DOU.Al PAID PO&CL&AN I IPOIT CARI ALLMODILS ~: .. ' ,., ' ' '' •,. •. • • t-4 I f / '' . --~,·' ·~1 . ----- 4TOMYO. BRmSH CAR CO. llAITISH CAA CO. 213~ 213/HIO·H21 714~2'54 DIRECT , __ 71_4_/19_4"2_8_54_ Opel "14 Fiat 12A Wan. Auto. ••••••••••••••••••••••• air. 21.000 ml. $28$0. '70 ~GT. ~ W9$. 846--0816 '746 •• Flat 850 Cpo. Lo mi's, '89 GT. re.al •harp! Seo lo 'VVM:t. S. •• .._...__ .Runs ll'eell. 30....o mp1 appc-eciate. $16$0. At\. e '~ ITIOt __ _ 95.644-.5838. orwknds,d8·7MS Anaheim 750-2011 ( rn i\ N \ 't l ( )l I~. I 'r VOLVO "12 f'1at US Sport Cpo. to 'T3GT, radial Ure!J, while, nu. $1300/bct otr ' apd, id cond $3000. Sell Uunp raat •iLh Datty f'Jt.OGOS ISM1t6 Ptlot Wa nt Ads. Quality and Price Guaranteed Lca\ing Specialists Preferred Ra1es Llrgest Selection of New & Used C.1dillaC\ in Orange County Open Sund.iv Cadillac Master Dealer 2600 Harbor Blvd. Cost.i Mcs.i 540-9 t ex;> Nabers CacJilJac , ROBINS FORD ••1f1,.1t) •tl\QfH>R r.lVO ((Hiii M l~/\ 1,.1:1 0010 7Sf0l0 CMAMTOtllMO $9UIUWAGOM AM-FM stereo , auto tran1, alr cond.. power steering, power seat . power brakes. power Wtodows, l111aa1e rack. •5HUJU 13878 $3199. Ph• Tax 4r U~nae THEODORE ROBINS FORD ;,i 'tf,\M~!f >M HI °"'n [()'.Tr. \It"\ rol2 ()(110 1'71 CADILLAC SIDAH DIVILLI '9.000 ortC1.nal miles. to auperb condttlon l '72 LTD Hardtop. vinyl, \024 PKDl. equipped. Slloo. 962-8274 SADDUIAC. orS34·2lM4 (Lou> Y AUIY IMPORTS 'Tl Ford Rancbero OT. 131·2040 4tM949 R/H. a.Lr; pwr. w;shell. a---------1 Wbt letter Urea. 43,000 1974 Cs ••c ml.SZ2115. Pb 846-0882 Brouah ~m. Metalllc .. HT Mustani. VS. AC. blue. vlnyl top. blue n..i--· .. 000 erwbeCl velvet lnlerlor. ..,.,..,.. ... · .... • LOADED • f\aU Power. M>-SIS'I. Low mileage! 11...tOOO. '72 Font LTD. Jdr, PS, ~. 6»1110 -r.;ves. PB.AC. 81tofr. ....... e7N2Jt . .. radials. AM/FM stereo. '66 Must Conv e r l. lowm1oo neweng.AM· Completely restored. col· lng $t2SO. 494~ lectors item. Tran & eng 1--........ ------- overhauled. New palot & i 4 Vega, 3 spd Htcbbk. top. Ownr must sell. Bst 70,000 mi, gd cond. ndl 1_olr,;,._··..;..962-.;.._;537~4-· ___ _, b<lY wk $1000. 831·2235 9100 Aatos. M•w 9100 ''SPYDIR'' the new '77 Che!J Monza Speedster! No.1125~ ONLY55 I OQ NOW! IMMIDIATI DIUYllYI OMLYS 14583 Mo. 1""0...,,.,0Ny1141..111•-"""..., .. 'oo-....-tor .,,,,__.,...... __ ...,._ __ ,,,..OWi_,... ----•oM\' .. , 00. 0..-ll"IOt•°"" P-..&. 1c:a..c.. ... ...-...: ( I• ·B11ntington Beach Fountain Valley EDITION A 6"ter11ocn1 ~. \·. Sto~k~ -VO L. 70, NO . .4, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 4, 1977 .;..--~__;,~~__;,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-,-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--TEN CEN 1 ·10 Billion ·Tax Cut Asked Again I WASHINGTON <AP> -Presi· Fi d Al s ks So .· l Se • · H •k Congress would w ait for ' dent. l'.ord propose.d today u or. so ee c .. a cunty .. e President-e lect Carter 's expect· $10-balhon personal t.ncome tax • 1 &t &t ed plan t o ·s timulate the ·cut along with corporate tax re· econom y. ductions and an lncreai.e in come of $15,000. The same size President's economic adviser. billion increase in pen~on al is high time to focus substantial Ullman. chairman of the personal Social Security Laxes. family earning Sl0,000 would see Like last year's package. the Social Security laxe~. lax relief on middle-income tax· House Ways and Means Com- 1'be package is nearly a carbon their annual tax burden proposal includes S2.S billion in Ford said his proposal is payers." m1ttee where all tax legislation ~opy of Ford's tax-cut proposals deerease by $166. corporate tax r cducuons. ll also focw;ed more on middle-income The proposal received an im· on ginates. said. "Obviously, we that Congress reJect<."<1 last year It also would increase the in· calls Cora SS. l billion ancrease in tax pa) ers than lo" -income tax· mediate cold shoulder Crom a will orgamze around the Carter The White House said Ford's dividual income lax exemption personal Social SccunL} taxes payers. who "ere the main key congressionAl leader~ Rep. recommendation " ~roposal would save $227 a yc;ir from the present $7SD to Sl.000. over a two-year period. Last beneficiaries of ta>. cuts rn 1975 Al Ullman (D-Ore.l. who said Ullman said h(• e>.ix-cts Carter 1ora familyoffourwithanin said L. William Seidman. thl' year·~proposalcalledforaSl.Gfi andl976.ThePresadent said,"IL the Democratic-controlled ($t-eTAXCl 'T .PagcA.2l 'Charges fpelay ~Lice me ~. i. Huntington Bead1 City Council :.Owembers delayed uction Monday on an appeal by the American ,.Jnstitute of M as!>age w~o u : wrinkle developed as the rnsull ·of a police invc~tigalion. Abid und Judith Hussain have been seeking a city business license lo operate a massage and physical therapy school al 19480 Beach Blvd .. the only operation or its type in the city. they say. After a 10-week course in such classes as anatomy, physiology and ethics. the Hussains told or plans lo turn out massugc t<'l'hn•· cians to work 1n health sµai.. athletic fac1liL1ci. and massage 1 parlors. The license had been hangin):! . fj re because u permit frum I.he $tale Department of r-;ducation had not been gr anted for the llun· tington Beach locution. Aln attorney for the llusl>ains said a perm it had been !(ranted !Or Costa Mesa but the proposed School site in that city had insuf !lc.ient parkin~. _ Pet. Ron Pomeroy or the Hunt· · ton Beach Police Department he has been investigating rges that II ussain had al fegedly issued fra udulent t' cliplom as for m asscusc~ and masseurs. lie said he h ad taken the al l egations to the district al torncy's office lie said com plaints may be pending A ma sse use form (•1 ly employed in Co!>ta Mesa told city councal members that ~ht• thought the diploma~ "crc not authentic. Hussain de nie d the charges ~nccrn1 ng the <hplomas Councilm<in Ron Shenkman asked for a two -week delay in ,granting the business license to !•await additiona l information kDm lhe district attorney's of-1~e. I "l can 't vote yea or nay at this p oint. .. hl• s aid. 'Tm torn ~tween statcmcnl" of a sworn r~ (See PROBt:, Page A2l 1~ Woman Cited lFor Packin~ Pistol (,Orange County shcriWs of 'liters issued a c1t4.llion lasting ebarges of carrying a concealed ,weapon to a Huntington Beach !!'Oman who allegedly tried to jlM)ard a plane at the county 1afrport with a .22·caliber pistol in ~rpurse. • Deputies said Barbara Lou Spr-~nger. or 8081 Holland Drive, was d.led after the X-ray machine wed by airport orrlcials revealed ibe presence of the weapon In her 'baagage. . . . Or~nge Con sf"' Weather Fa!r and mostly s UMy through Wednesday. UtUe temperature change. Highs of about 60, low aboutt-0. INSIDE TOD" Y thnt'• no qauatiors tbot tM rtoclc m4rkd ff on.ca long Jo$. blQ atrftJk,. occordJng to bufi. ,. • ., columnht MUton MOflcot.oit&. P.og• A{l. AU •• AU •• •• ''"' ..... Al l>IJ ~ •• •• APW!rco-lo CLAUDINE LONGET WITH ATIORNEY CHARLES WEEDMAN All Bundled Up on Way to Manslaughter Trial Prospec tive Long et Jurors Admit Bias ASPEN. Colo <.\I' 1 With jury selection in sts ~l·<·nncl day in th e Claudine l.nn~el manslaughter trial. twn morl' As p en residl'nt s hluntl\' declared they belie\'l' lhl• sing••r is guilty in the death of her Im· er and could not give her ;,1 fair trial. The 35-year-old Miss Longl'l was tense and tight-lipped a !> she st.ared directly at the pro· spective jurors while each was questioned individually. "Are you working on a pre- s umption of her guilt?" asked Deputy Dist. Atty. Ashley An· derson of a young photo· grapher. "l don't like to adrrut that. but l gue'ss it ·s true." said Bruce Yaffo. He said he learned details of the case fr.om Steve Sabich. brother of the victrm. ski cham· pion Vladimir "Spider" Sabich. Moments later, the next pro- SeaJ ·Beach Councilman W'ill Resign • Seal Beach CouncUman Harold Holden, 82, wants to select his own replacement and then resign office. ms request will be pondered by fellow COWlcil members al their Jan. 10 meeUng. Holden, a veteran of seven years oo the councU, announced his lntenUooa for a cond1Uon&l resignation on Dec. rJ. He cited ill btalt.b u his reason. He t.ben pl'oposed that Letter Marshall be appointed to fill out his term of office. Both men are Leilu.re World ruldenb. Holden's term will not expire unw March of 1918. He could not be reached for comment today oo whether he will resign if the council does not honor bis re· queat. The Seal Beach councU voted 3 to l to table discussion on Holden'• resignatlon. Coun· cllman Ruuell Gray, also a Leilure World resident, voted q_!lnat tabllng the nutter. \ spect cnllC'<l tu the .111r~ bu\. a youn g worn n n 1n hl'r :.!'1~. declared : "l•'rom all th al I've read nnd my involvement in this. I alr eady have no opinion. Th:tl's not fair to Miss Longel. It's not fair to the court." Thl' woman. Robin Crasher, ~nut :-lw woulcl require the de- ft·n~l' lo prnq• ~1 iss Lnngct 's in· miccnn· ratlwr lha11 ttw l<'i:!al rcquiremcnt th .11 t hr h11r<l1 ·n 11f proof rest\\ 1th the 11ro~N't1t1011 Both pro:otpccts wcr(' 1 \ rusNI for prejudice Two pro ... pccls • were tentatively sent('{). bring Ing the total or tentative jurors to eight Miss Longet Is char~ed with manslaughter 1n the March 21 shooting death of Sabich. her lover. In the $250.000 mountain home they s hared. re convactcd, she faces up to 10 years in jail and a S-10.000 fine. Prosecutors have said they mijlhl c all si n~er And y Williams. Miss Longet's ex- husbnnd, to the stand. But Dist. Atty. F,rank Tucker has refused lo discuss why Williams was summoned. Williams left for Los Angeles after the noon break Monday, saying he expects to return next week. One of three prospects dis- missed the first day, Aspen Ma,vor Stacy Standley, ad- mitted, "I· fell the defendant was guilty, based on the in- formation I had received" from a police officer. Standley. refl ec tin~ l ike Tucker the easy.going at· mospbere ln Aspen, appeared on the stand in jeans and an open-necked print shirt. "People a re very frank in this community,·· Tucker said of Standley 's comment. "They don't beat around the bush." Tucker said he decided that Mlu Long et '• 13-year-old d111uihter Noel, who was r e- portedly at home when the 1bootln1 occurred, was "too young" to be called as a ._it· ntts. Ml1iit t.oneet aays the aun nted accldentally whJle Sablch wu teachin1 her how to use it. Noel I• one of Miss Long et 's three children by Williams, from whom abe wu divorced two yeara a10. • I Huntington's Bonfa Irked by 3rd 'No' He Mulls Ci ty Suit Ove r P ay By ROBERT BARKER 01 '"" D•••v P1to·1 St•fl For the third L1ml'. the Hunt ln)!ton llt•ad1 Cal~ C'owwr l re Jl'('tc>d :i pa~ r;11M' for C11y Al· tornt'y Don H1111f~1 ~tn11<l;.1~ night and Bonfa !'\:JHI 111cl:1~ 111··, i.:oing lo see his allOl'lll'\ ;d10111 11 ''I'm nol say1nl! I ;in1 coin).! lu sue and I 'm 1111! "·" 111:.. I won't," Bonfa :-a11J · I 111 g11111;.: to find out what m~ ll•J.!al n ghl ' are." Bonfa was left 0111 of a :-:d.1n boost granted to otht'.'r d1·pari ment heads on two m·<·:t:-11111:- prior to Monday niAhl. The issue cam e up ;1g;1111 when all seven members uf thl' city council were pN>Sent Councilwoman Norm:J (;11111, cast the decisive vok ag111n,1 the pay hike , joinin g \\llh Ri chard Siebert. Ro11 Slwnl..111.111 and Mayor Pro Tc111 H1111 I' 11 tinson. Mrs. Gibb!' "a~ al!'.1·111 1111 Dec. 6 when thl· 1·111111nl d1• adlocked J .J on ltll' 1111 n"''' Mavor llarrH•tl \\11·dl'1 'l<'d Bartlett am! ,\I C1w11 wl1•1I '" in creaS<' Runf.1 ' :annual :-alar~ of $38.!)00 h\· I p•·l'<'l·nt n·lroact1ve 111 .Jul~ I \11111 ;11111tl1C'r two per· l'1•111 boo ... 1 ""l'l'll\ c· .Ian I. ~Ir~. c;1bbs :-aid she didn't think that Bonfa. as well as some other department heads, should receive pay increases. Siebert repeated today his con· tentior. that city employcs should not be granted auto'malic pay in· creases. ~ Mrs. Weider ask('<I I h:1t a r<· solution h<' ronsid<'n'(I to h:tV<' lh<' crtv".; 1'l<•C'lt11al1• s 1•1 lhl' ... alary riir Lht• city auornc) al the llm<' of his or her clcclioo. Ronfa said today that the Four nl'~ah''" votes w~re "poht1cally motivated. d1scnminalory and puniti\'e " He contends that the four members voted illegally in fatl· mg to vote the increase for t he posillon and not the person. "I don't think the people of this city want to see an elected of· ficial treated as a second cla~s cilizen s ubjected to dis· criminatory treatment." he said. "This action impairs the in· dependence of the city attorney and tends to weaken the syiHem of checks and balances." Mesan Facing Charges in Cop Assault A 28-year-old Costa Mesan was scheduled to race charges of as- sault on a Fountain Valley policeman in West Oraruie Coun· ty Municipal Court today. Joseph G. Evans: of 735 Paularino St .• was st.Qpped by Of. ficer Kerry Kowalski'i'9:30p.m . last Saturday on charges of er· ratic driving near the intersec- Uon of Garfield Avenue and Brookhurst Street. When lhe auspect was placed ln the police car, be reportedly kicked out. t1'e vehlcle 's wincbhleld. Evans a lle1edly kicked Kowallkt In tbe left thilb upon arrival at the Fountaln VaJley police atatlon. PoUce said Kowalald wu not seriously In· Ju.red b.v tbc blow. A $2,500 ball waa tck. for-Evans wbopollcuay I• a karate ~-pert. Otatly Ptlot \l,tft Photo\ CASTS DECISIVE VOTE Councilw oman Gibbs TURNED DOWN AGAI N • City Attorney 'Bonfa -Supervisor Rile·y Takes Board Reills Supervisor Thriir1.1~ Rile;-. of Newport Beach ''a., ,.1,·ctro 1977 chairman of I hr ()1 .1111-w County Board of Surwn '"'r~ loclay. Riley's <'1<·1·11011 lo succe~d Supe rvisor H ;1I11h l>icdrich as board ch:iirman t·amP on a un-animous , . .,, l._ Th <' l"i 1 \' 1• ;1 r · o I cl form er Marin<' l?<'ll~·ral's ascent to the chairman:-ihip came 212 years aft er lw was appointed by then- (. a I I r 0 r n i a G 0 ,. . a 0 n a I d llc•;igan to fill the unexpir ed tl'rm o f t h e l ate Ron-aid Caspers. That appoifttment was reaf- fir med in early 1975 by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr . Riley clai m e d the Fifth Supervisorial seat in his own right last June when he won a one-sided primarv election vic- tory over three opponents.' When taking over the gavel from Diedrich today. Ril<'y praised the outgoinl'( chairman's energy and leadership O.lly Pitel Pllolo NEW BOARD CHAIRMAN Newport's Tom Riiey "I pledge my full ener~1es to discharge the important responsibility of the chairman's ofrice." Rilev said as he took over the center scat on the five- man board. He also called for county gov- emment to seek property tax reform and said realignment of the fi ve supe rvisorial district'! should be high on the board's business agenda. ror 1977 . Tiro Grove Women Held office on West Coast Highway. A trio of Garden Grove resi· dents -including two teenage girla -were arrested early to- day by Newport Beach poUce after they allegedly broke into an In custody on burglary charges are Adel berg A very Farr, 22, Kandace Marie Gammill, 19, and June Helen Garone, aJso 19. Plan Expanded Young P-E yes Presidency POMONA CAP) -Last summer, 6·year-0Jd Andy . Weikel and his 10-year-old sister . Shauna, decided to express their admiration for Jimmy Carter. They sent h.imaletterandincludedapoemtohisdaughter,Amy. Both letter and poem were answered. Monday. Andy received another piece of cor- respondencefrom President-elect Carter. It was an in-vitation to the inauguration. Mr. and Mrs. Keith Weikel saJd unfortunateJrthey won't be able to accept the President's off er. but Indy plans to keep the invitation for his scrapbook. • And although he intends to write more poems, his amblUon ha!! been expanded somewhat. "I've thotight aboutit," the 6·year-old said. ··And I think I 'd probab}yllkcto be president.·• • Al DAILY PILOT H/F 0 Lo at fstimote d ~oaition Mi les 100 AP Wort11MIO C ROSS MARK SHOWS LAST POSITION OFT .ANKER 28 People, Eight Miiiion Gallons of 011 Aboard Oil Tanker Missing With 38 on Board BOSTON (AP> American and Canadian aircraft and a Coast Guard cutter searched to· day for a m1ss111g Panamanian tanker with 38 persons and eight million gallon:. of heavy 011 aboard. The search WU!> cxpand<:d after effor ts Monday failed to locate the 18 ,7 17-lun. !i44·foot Grand Zenith or makr· radio ctJn· tact with it Spokesmen for the Coast Guard. the uti lily expecting the oil. and the ship's agent said it was not unusual for a tanker to be delayed and temporarily "missing." "The unusual thing 1s that it has not been heard from," said Coast Guard Petty Officer William Van Valkenburg He said il 1s possible that all the lanker·s radio~ are not work ing. Van Yalkenburg s:.ud 1t 1s possible for such a tanker to sink without lostnl! any of its cargo oil and. therefore, have no tell- tale 011 slick. lie said a lanker probably would lose some of its propulsion oil if it sank, but suc:h 011 "may come up slowly to the surface as a sheen rather than u slick and dissipate.·· The Coast Guard s:ud the tanker was l;.i st hl"arrl from about 60 m iles south 11f Nova Scotia on Thursday. The vessel left Tccs porl, England. on Dec. 19. It was TAX CUT ... v.111 spell oul his pmpos:ib .1t a m<'Pl1ng v.1th J lou"l' kad1·r" m Plains. Gu . on Fnclny. Carter h;.is indicated his pro- gram would focus on job cn•a· lion Fnrcl"c; proposal also v.ould re·· duce laxes for a ram1ly or fnur CARTER UNVEILS ETHICS CODE-A4 earning S.J0,000 by $2S6. and by S330 for th<.' same family earning $50,000. . But a family of tour l'i.irning $7,000 would sec lh<'1r tax burden rise by S25 lo n totnl of $00, due to a Ford proposal to eliminate the urned tn<"oml' <"rc<lit grant- ed t.o low-income w~1i.:c earners. The Adm1n1slralion proposal last year was linked to com- pensating cuts 1n SJ)('nchng Rut lhis time. Ford's proposal was inillally unclear on whether hl' would seek com pensatanJi? soend mg cut ll Conf ah Begins NEW DELHI, India CAP) Jn. dustry ministers from 22 de- veloping <"Ountnes began a five. day conference today to find ways to ensure mdustrial and ttthnolog1cal cooperation 11mong Third World countnes. ORANGE COAST t< ' DAILY PILOT ~~~~~"~, ':,':,:.';:':!: ;;,=. eo.,, ttvbttUU"'t (oMO•f'lw ,....... .. ,. •tt•ho-t\ it Pl'! pv'b#I\,.,.., "4io~•i; lr\to.....-flrt~y tOt ~t.t Miliu Nfo._.., ,..,.,,. Mwtt•JNlfl'l"t """"" f't'fo~ I••" V•tlt" l•wlftll \111ddl~;' Vtlt." '9nd LMIU'Vfit*<ll'llt \out"C04'f \\•Nl .. ,MO"'itltofl! l•Oft '" DW'btt~ ~·114'•••' .,.. ~ .... , '~ r,;~~:~:::~"t.~:.~~~.~,~ ... 1-W.\t ... , ·-... -Prnldtnl• ... ~, ..... J .... <-• Vt. 11 ~1CfiMt .t~ c-,......,_, Mt·""" TtlleM"tltHofO lttit .. no.-•• ...,.,.... M<i ..... ,..r_ 0• ... >M "-< 111<-f' IUH A\'4"•' Mll\•••Pli!I l0ii1.-., ._._ ..,. .. o.._ ~. r<11 ... """ttMtOfl ••9Cfl ome. 1i11ft.t(11~11 Moltl ... A_, f'O ..,_,,.,.,._,. Offloe• I.A~ e::.-:." ;;.~~':';::~~,.., s..-~v.1,., ttiot•l.A ,..,_ ·•~o._,._ .. T ......... Pt•t•.U·UU Clu1tned .\ctHrtlelng tu.M1I ~-HwrtftO.•ftt4 c°""''"""""""in MOo1no ~:"J:J ~'t!. c:.:i-.. <r.~.~':1.~. 7::~1:Jv::.·:r:~~··~P~~·.~.iw~~,,~.~ :1 '°""' ... ' ...,,.., M<-..... Mtl•r. ....... Chi• Mtt• t 1llf1•11l1 htur •llfn .., ,.,,,., 1) it :.::r •.. N, ;;~.:;:' _...._, 1111111 •• , l headt!d for the Fall River, Mass., area, the Coast Guard SCI Id today. The search today was to cover approximately 34.000 square miles of Atlantic Ocean from the tanker's last known position south of Cape Sable, Nova Scotia. to the F3ll River area. The southern :-;cct1on of the search area roughly paralkls the rich Georges Bank fishing grounds. A. Coast Guard airplane from Elizabeth City, N.C., a Coa:-.t Guard helicopter from the Cape Cod Air Station, a 1'\:J\'Y pl.1111• from Brunswick. Maml'. <111 ,\1r Force Reserve planl· from 1\1·\\ York, and a Canadian m1htJ1 y plane look part 1n Lollay's search. The Grand Zl•nllh .., l'argo was the same kind of uil carried by the Argo l\Jcn·hanl, the Liberian vessel that ra11 aground off Nan· tucket anti '>Pilled 7.6 million gallons 11\111 th<.· ocean when 1t broke up undl·r the pounding or hc;n y sea' I I\ t' days later. Tht' c;1and Zenith flew lhc Aml·riea11 flag until about tw11 Y£'•1rs ago. Its home port "as listed now as Panama C1tv. l';.in;inrn. like Liberia, ·is u~1·d to n'g1slt-r ships by owners who \\':111 t t o a v o i d p ;.i y i n g h 1 g h 1\mt•rtt-;111 or Europc<.1n wag1•s. APWirepM10 IJA W Cld,-f?' Douglas Fraser. 60. vice prC' sident of the United Auto Workers. appears certain lo succeed retiring L'A\V prl'Sa· dent Leonard Woodcock when the union ·s C'xcculi \'C board meets Jan. 11 in Los An~elcs. l di A min Likes 'Entebbe' Film NAIROBI, Kenya CAP> Prest· dent Jdi Amin of Uganda re- port~dly has had a private s how- ing ror his friends Of "Victory al Entebbe," a film about the Israeli commando raid on Entebbe airport last July. And Amin de- cided he likes it even though ;t portrays a defeat for his army, Kenya 's daily S\andard newspaper reported Mond ay. The paper said Am.in initially decided to screen the movie in Uganda "to show tiow st~id it ts," but ins tead found it enjoya- ble. Amin was quoted as saying: 'Tm portrayed very well in the film .. .. Huntington ~Bers Plan Registration The Hun tington Beac h Qu.Uter1 ind TiJJers •·H Club wUI hold ita registration, enroll· ment U'ld lnformatlon meeting at 7 p.m. Jan. 11 in the multi· purpoae rioom ol Glenview Element ary Scbool, 6621 Glen Drive, Hunttn.aton Beach. For more fntormation, t~e lnterested can call the 4·H Otnce at '77f·1120. Se.don Opens .. Byrd, Baker Head Senate WASHINGTON {AP> -With the Democrats firmly in control, the 95th Congres:. today established two-year residence in t h e Capito l wi th new leadership and an avowed de- termination to s tart work on President-elect Cart er's economic program. Senate sources reported short· ly before the formal opening of the session t hat the Democrats elected Sen. Robert C. Byrd of West Virginia as majority leader. to succeed Sen. Mike Mansfield of Montana. In something of an upset, Sen. Howard II. Baker Jr. of Ten- nes:.ee ~as elected Senate minority leader by the Republicans. Baker defeated Sen. Robert P Griffin of Michigan by a vote of 19 to 18. Griffin had been assis- tant minority leader. {Ja.ker suc- ceeds Sen. Hugh Scott of Pen- nsylvania who retired from the Senate. Byrd wa~ elected by acclarua- t1on after Sen. Hubert 11. Hum- Do1i't To uch, The Cargo \\'F-;ST HfOG E. Ill. (,\('J \\'111:.kcy, whisky every- \\ here and not a drop to drink -1t may be the m~t frustrating experience shared by two railroad de- te<'t1vcs. The detectives for the Missouri Pacific Hailroad s tood guard O\'t'r two whtsky-fillcd Lox c.1rs thal had dcr.1ill·d and \\Crt' 1111- dcr lhl' us ual proh1b1twn not lodnnl. 1111 thC JOb. Thl' "h1:-.kt•\. \'alued at mcn1· tl1Jn Slo0,000, had ap· 11ropri.1tcly toppled off the lr.•l'ks in ,1 cornfield. phrey of Minnesota withdrew from the <:,9ntest. Sources also said that Sen. Alan Cranston ( D-CaJU.) was named m ajority whip, the PoSl Byrd bas held for six yeari;, and. that Sen . Daniel Inouye (0. Hawaii) was chosen chairman of the Democratic Party Con- ferenc e, the third-highest leadership J>OSt. Mansfield served as majority leader since 1961 but did not run for re-election to the Senate last year. Byrd is regarded as a skilled technician at mo\'ing legislation through the Senate. His views on economic i:.sue:. are close to Carter's, and Uyrd is expected to work cloo~ly v.1th the new president. At the Republican caucus, Sen. Ted Stevens of Alaska was elected assistant minority leader. He was unopposed. Sen. Carl Curtis of Nebraska was re-elected chairman of the Republican Conference and Sen. John Tower of Texas was re- elected chairman of the GOP Policy Committee. F r o m P age .-t I PROBE ... officer that complaint.:. may be issued and the concern for due process on the part or the ap· pellant." Mayor Harriett Wieder, Mayor Pro Tern Ron Pattinson, Richard Siebert and Ted BartJett join('(] Shenkman in delaying the de- ns1011 for two weeks. Al Coen and Norma Gibbs vol· ed against the dl'la~. Coen :.aid the council was not tlw propl'r forum to prejudge an 1ndl\'Hlual. Mrs. Gibbs :-.aid llwn· .._ nothing pending in l lunt111~tr111 Beach and didn t want 111 111 l' judge the Hussains. Ocean View to Sell Math Instructions Ocl•an View (elementary) School District trustees in Hunt- tnJ.!ton Beach have approved an aj.!r<•cment with a private firm to '>ell the district's math instruc- twn:. program to other schools arro:-.s t f\c country. Thl• clts1r1ct w1il initially invest S,'),.5'>11 for 1 h<' clC'\'Clopment. pro- duct ion and marketing of the math proJ!r.1rn known o::. System for Conl1n11011s ,\chievement in Math C. C,\:'ll l The d11;tr1ct ht'J.!an 11:-.in:~ SC:\:'ll last year as a pilot pro~ram 10 teach math in kindcrgart('n through the eighth grade. "About 70 percent of our students now use the prOJ?ram." said Monte Mc Murray, assistant superinten· <lent. "fly the second year or sales, y111:r <hstrict should recover its m111;.il 11westmcnl." said Dale Dutton, prcs1cl1•nt of fnformallon- F'..ducat1on. the• firm which will parka,cc thl' m.1lh prnJ,!ram, The district may stx111 lloublt' its initial in' estment or SS.000 if s ales continue. Dutton told trustees. The math program will be used to help seventh and eighth grade students who are having difficul- ty with their basic a.rithmelic skills. McMurray said. Each program unit, as packaged by Dutton's firm. will cost about SlOO. By agrc<'mcnt. the district will reap about S20 for each package sold. The mon1•y would go into the distnct gc:m·ral fund. McMurray said Dutton :-. firm has sold s imilar t'llu1•atw11 packages for l'\c\\p1irt Mesa School Oi !.tri c-t. 01•1•ans1d<· Unifi ed School Dist rJl't and Swel'twatcr l "n1on I lti:h School D1stncl nl'al" San U1cj.!o Th1; ~cl1ool official said this is lhe hrsl time Ocean View has marketed one of its programs na- tionwide. "We are not In the marketing business." said Mc Murray, "but if sales are successful, we ma.v expand the package." Search Widenin g s ,\ N D I r: G 0 C J\ P > Scarchl•rs say they will take measurements today to sec if tracks found in a canyon on a Ba- ja Califor.n1a mountain were made by two massin g UC Berkeley students. Kenneth Wilcox. 30. of Syracuse, N.Y .. and David Marcus. 24, of Pasadena, have been missing since Thurdsday. APWl~to NEW MAJORITY LEADER West Virginia's Byrd NB R eside nt Appointe d to Coas t Panel Newport Beach resident Judy Rosen er has been appoint('<i tu the state coastal commission by Assembly Speaker Le u McCarthy W-San Francisco), it was announced today. (Related story Page All> Mrs. Rosener served on the former South Coast Regional Zone Conservation Commission since its inception in 1973. For the last six months or lti'llt com mission's existence, she served as its chairman. 1\1 rs Rosener. a lecturer a t t:C Jr\'lne's graduate school of adm1n1slration. was told of her appointment Lo the new state comm1ss1on l;ist week, accord- i n g t o .1 :. p o k es m a n f o r McCarth.\. I Mrs. RosC'1t\'I' :-;;:iicl she was "very flattl.'rnl .. to recch·e thl' appointment," l11d1 will mean an end lo her --·orl-1111 '"l' rq;ional commission. The regional l'o1111111s,1on'> \\ cnt out of eff eel I asl n10111 h ,IJld one of the first decisions fal•111;.: 1 he ~I all' commission when it nw1·h .Jan. 12 in San Francisco will h1• "lll'tht•r lon.-:activatc the region: ii h1K11t''-· "1 'm very gratified t h:il I ap· parcntly received a 1.Jro;1t1 h~1st• of support." she said · I cl1d nut l'ampaign for the appo1111111t•nl <is olhC'rs havedone." l\lrs. Rosener said sill' lhm\..s ht·r appointment c;.i1 I'll"• 1·on- s1d1•rable significancl' frll'' lrange County because it m;.irks th1• first time a county resident ha' Sl·rH<l 011 the state commiss11111 ";.ind with the Irvine coast rt1·,·d<11Jme11t coming up, it's got to I"· s1gnih-C'i.inl. .. o .. ,., P,!M 51•11 ,.,,.,,. ON STAT E PANEL Newp ort's Rosener 2Teens RobFV Woman .:, ... • Two "polite" teen-age bandt\t robbed an 80-year"°'d Fountat• Valley housewife ln her home Monday nieht, policeaaJd. All they eot was $10. Suye Tanaka ot 11074 Lavendff Ave. answered a knock 1t the door at 9 p.m .. police said. NO young men appeared and soUc1U ed contributions for a church. They soon left. Mrs. Tanaka, who speaks lltUe En.gUsh. pollce said, was later surprised by the two men who eq· tered her home through the back door. ' One ot the teenagers flashed a .38 caliber weapon at Mrs. Tanaka while the other youtlt pulled t h e cord Crom the telephone receiver. Mrs. Tanakn said the two youths were very polite but look $10 in cash from her. Both suspects are described as male while, about 18 years old, five feet six inches tall, weighinf about 160 Pounds. · One suspect had a long red Afro-style haircut and wore a red jacket with a blue shirt. The other bandit ha d short brown hair and C'arried a .38 calibdt pistol with wooden grips. Plwne Book Bm.m to Lib, Lists Women .. .., • • • . .. ::i NEW YORK CAP) -The New York Telephone Company has bowed to liberated wi\'el who want their names listcl with their husbands' in the telephone directory. But tP,. firm says it will have to charge 25 cents extra . The proposal, subject lo ap- proval by the stale PubliO: Ser\'icc Commission. followW complaints that listing married' couples only by the husband's first name was discriminatory.'·~ T he current charge for a separate listing for the wife tg $1. The protesting women said· they s hould get listings on the same line -just like the multi.i pie names of a law firm of. brokcrag<' house. .,, The telephone company said' • the 25-cent c h arge would be . "nominal" considering the ce>St of process ing the additioojt names. ·I The spokesman said the com.. pany doesn't care whether the couple decide to have his or her name first. Jn other words, i n' the case of the mayor and h~ wife. 1t could be "Beame; A b r a h a m a n d Mary ' ' o'r "Beame. Mary and Abraham:: !· Bingo F ee Weighed by Valley Counci.l .. • The Fountain Valley Citf.' Council will consider setting an annual fee for bingo games al: their 8 o'clock meeting tonight a~ city hall, 10200 Slater Ave. The council will consider ~ annual S50 foe for charitable Ol'· ganizations who wish t.o hold an unlimited nu mber of bingq games during the calendar yea~-.. According to a proposed or~ dinance. an or ganization would be required to pay a $25 annual fee Ir not more than four games are held within the city. A ree of $10 would be charged lo groups who want to hold one bingo game, city officials said. Ex-pal Says Heir Admitted Pio' By TOM BARI.EV 001 Ult Oally Pllol 51•11 A defense witness testified Monday that potato chip heir John H . "J ack" Scudder of Newport Beach told him he planned his own. kidnaping with two men now on trial for the crime. Witness Frank Sortino. who later admitted from the witness stand that he is on less than cor· dial terms with Scudder, told an Orange County Superior Court jury that he talked to Scudder, 64, by phone a week af\erthe alleged kidnaplng last Aug. 19. SortJno testified that Scudder told h.lm durlng ~at converu- tlon he had plotted the abduct.ion with defendants William Rudy We11on, 45, and Ricki Dale Sellen, 20. Both men are being trted fOf' the alleged lddnaping. SortJno, a LaguJ)& HUis ~•· dent, testlf led tbft Scudder lold him over the telephone how he had escaped from hll kidnapers by faklnc a heart att.ck and thtn ltaplnc from a mo~or home parked ln Fountalh YaU~. ''Then, out of UM clear bfue aky, he told me U,at be bid Mt tbe whole tblnc up," So~ • testified. "l was shocked." The witness said there was no resJ>()nse when he u ked Scudder to repeat the statement. Scudder has denied from the witness stand that he knew anything about the kidnap at· tempt until two men grabbed hJm as he left his dentist's office ln Huntington Beach and bundled him lnto a motor home. Scudder testified thal he re· ceived a number of blows In the scuffle and suffer ed racial injuries that compelled him to re· turn to the dentist's office a few days later for further treatment. Scudder identi!fed Sellers u one of hi.a two attackers. He said he could 11ot be certain that. Wesson, a former buslnesa IS· aodate and one time manag~r or a Coron• del Mar bank, was Sellers' com panion. Sortino admitted under pro-aecutJon q uestJonln, that he la no toncer on cordial terms with Scudder due to a dilference of opt.t\lO b which led him to wttbdrJw from Ute oe>c:ratlon of UI• ambulan ce aervlct now headed by Se~dder•a eon, Cr~•· Sortino aafd he called Sc~ back on the evtni1'1 d the d13 be heard the Balboa Jeflliil mll\·a llJ•ced coneuafon and hooted a tape recorder to h.1a tdepbone 1n the hope of recording an identical) statement. "I tried to get him to talk ab<>Ut it again," Sortino said. "But he paused for about 15 or ro aecondA' and then he said, 'Cute, Fran~~ reaJ cute.' Then he hung up." . ~ Sortino's testimony lollowea the three-day lnterrogaUon of Wesson who repeatedJy told th~ jury that Scudder was lhe, architect or the kidnap plot that was to put $250,000 lnto lh.e pockets of five men 1.nvotved In the abduction. Wesson told prosecutor 811~ Morrissey that be and Setted were quite prepared to 10 ~ prison if they had been caupt b1l' polJce while the kidnap atte~ was underway. ¥, Wesaon •ald the pllMlu ol~ kidnap waa carried out wlth undentandlnc that Seuddef role in the plan wu not to be re- vealed by otbet conapira\ora ~ the plot mien~ e t an.v at.ce it.a execution. • "We all u.nd eral()()(f that.\,.. Wesson uld. "That wQ ob~ wtth ua becauto we krwfr thaf there would be no problems ~ we would 1et the mOM)' it e~ - )'One did Wh.at. be WM luppoeed te ' do .. , . . ·Laguna/South Coast ED ITION * DAILY PILOT A.f tt•ruo ou N.l:'. Stoek~ ,. V OL. 70, NO. 4, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 4, 1977 TEf'.4 CENT $10 Billion Tax Cut Asked .Ag~ WASHINGTON CAP> -Pres1 · ~ d Al s ks So • · l s • Hi•ke Congress would wait for• dent Ford proposed tode1y a or. so ee c .. a ecunty President-elect C~er's expect~ $10..billion personal income tax • ~ &I ed plan to s timulate the ·cut aloog with corpor ate tax re-economy. personal Social Security taxes. family earning $10,000 would see Like last year's package, the Social Security taxes tax relief on middle-mcomt tax-House Ways and Means Com-I duclions and an increase in come of $151000. The same size President's economic adviser billion increase in personal is high time to focus substantial Ullman, c hairman or the The package is nearly a carbon their annual tax burden proposal includes S2.5 billion in Ford said his proposal is payers." mittee where all tax legislation I copy of Ford's tax·cut proposals decrease by $166. corporate tax reductions. It also focused more on middle-income The proposal received an im-or.iginates .. said, "Obviously, we that Congress rejected last year. It also would increase the in· calls for a $5.l billion increase in taxpayers than low-mcome tax-mediate cold shoulder from a wtll organiie around the Carter ' The White House said Ford's dividual income tax exemption personal Social Security Laxes payers, who were the main key congressionctl leader, Rep. reeommendalion." l proposal would save $227 a year from the present $750 to $1,000, over a two.year period. Last beneficiaries of tax cuts in 1975 Al Ullman. (0 -0re.), who said Ullman said he expects Carter .forafamilyoffourwithanin· said L. William,,Seidman, the year'sproposalcallcdfora$1.6S andl976.ThePresident said."It the Democratic·controlled <SeeTAXCUT,PageAZ) l iFolloms Diedrich Riley Elected Board's Chief Ditty P•t.ot ,.._.o NEW BOARD CHAIRMAN Newport' a Tom Riley ~a Faces I 'Moratorium Building The Laguna Beach City Coun ell will consider action Wcdnes· y lo prevent a construction ratorium due to new state slal zone management laws. The council sessi~ill begin 3:30 p.m. for routine busines~ luding the coastal rone mat· • will recess at 5 p.m. and re- e at 6 with pubhc heanngs left over l>usiness I ,Delays in changm11 over from tft old coa!ltal comm1ss1on em lo the new one required r the Coastal 7,one Mana"e· t act of 1976 wtll create a e on buildin~ or at lea.'lt a th. The council could authorize the o issue coast.ii de\·eJopment its, an action requested by board of realtors. However, po.aglas Schmitz. c1ly planning P!"~ctor. has recomme nded .,.anst that action. SChmfti said in a report to the ~ii that the city should not begin lssuin" the permits until it l'fffRves guidance from the reac- li-ted south coast tone com- ion as to the requlremenls. Be said the manpower and work costs may be so ex- t that It would not be in 'besl interests of lhe city to do <SeeCOAST, Pa1eAZ) Co asc \\'e a th e r • • Fair and mostly sunny ihrougb Wednesday. LiLUe : temperature· change. Hl1bs of about 60, low about tO. I • 1 INSIDE TODA l' Thne't no quc1tton tbat the dock morkft fa on a long ro. #lg lfrtok,.~cordmg to bwf. ~ ""' colum11ht MtUon 'MOlkotoil~. Pag~ A/3, •••ex A• ~,. ... At) •i ..,... .. At ,.........., All Alt ............... A4 ..... =:r:c-r Al 8J ll•t 9J =-~ .... Al "'"" Al TN'lltlte Alt .. ,.......,.. .. Alt.I> ..... A4 It ---,.. .. Supervisor Thomas Riley of Newport Beac h was elected t977 chairman of the Orange County Board of Super visors today. Riley's election to s ucceed Supervisor Ralph Diedrich as board chairman came on a un- animous vote. Th e 64 -yca r -o ld former Marine general's ascent to the chairmanship came 21 z years after he was appointed by then- C al if or n i a G ov . R onald Reagan to fill the unexpired te rm o f the late Ronald Caspers That appointment was rear. firmed in early 1975 by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. Riley cla imed the Fifth Supervisorial seat in h1~ own right last June when he won a one-sided primary election vie· tory O\'er three opponents. When taking over the J:(avel from Diedri ch today, Riley praised the outgoing chairman's energy and lcadersnip. "I pledge my full energies to disch a r ge the important responsibility of the chairman's oCCice." Riley said as he took over the center seat on the fi ve- man board. He also called for county g-ov· ernment to seek property tax · reform a nd said realignment of the five supervisorial districts should be high on the board's businl'SS agenda for 1977 LB Trustees Mml Blast On Serrano The board of trustee~ of the Laguna Beach Unified School District may consider at a 7:30 meeting tonight whether to Join in a statement condemning the state Suprem e Court's action last week to uphold Serrano statewide school financing. Ken Peters . chatrman . of Schools for Sound Finance, a statewide coalition or wealthy school districts of which Laguna 1s a member. has asked that member distric ts draft s uch statements Serrano financing is expected to hurt we~lthy districts by re- distributing state contributions to them and Increasing fonds to poorer districts in an effort to equalize the quahty or educa- tion. Schools for Sound Finance re- leased a blistering s tate ment following the stale high court's 3-2 decision upholding Serrano. That stat~ment said \he court action sign als "the eventual chaotic destruction of public education in California." The statement further called the court decision "a cruel hOax o n poor c hildr e n and minorities," arguing that most actually live in districts above. average in wealth. Schools for Sound Finance stated that "the only hope" re- maining for decent education lies wtth the leg1slature. 1' no reform com es Crom th at quarter. the coalition stated, "we see only bleak years a.head for the future or echtcatlon in California." Laguna Schools Su_pt. Robert Sanchis said today he tbou1ht the statement "premature." (See SERRANO, Pate AJ) Camera, Case Gone The theft of a '475 camera and cue ••• reported to Laguna Beach Pollce Monday by Maria E. Boulddil of Lacuna Beach . Mlal Boukldla told officera the Minolta camera waa discovered miJ1Jn1 from her Thalia Str~t residence in mid·'Deeembtr. It ls believed entry was via an un· locked wlndow. ·1 lndlan Ride• Agait1 Unidentified delivery man (right> helps Duke Hazlett return six-foot wooden In· dian to its rightful place in front of llazlett's turquoise shop on Newport Beach's McFadden Square. Indian was stolen Dec. 22 by a trio of re\'elcrs who apparently spotted Lhc Indian after leav- ing a nearby tavern. Poli ce traced the Jn. dian to San Clt'rnentc and it was returned Monday. Ex-pal Oahns Complicity Testifies Sczuhhr Plotted Own Kidnap By TOM BARLEV O! lho D•llY Plk>I Swll A defense witness testified Monday that potato chjp heir John H . "Jack" Scudder of Newport Beach told him he planned his own kidnaping with two men now on trial for the crime. Witness Frank Sortino. who later admitted from the witness stand that he is on less than cor- dial terms with Scudder, told an Orange County Supenor Court jury that he talked lo Scudder, 64, by phone a week after the a lleged kidnaping last Aug. 19. Sortino testified that Scudder •told him during that conversa- tion he had plotted the abduction with defendants WilUam Rudy Wesson, 45. and Ricki Dale Sellers. 20. Both men are being tried for lhe alleged kidnaping. Sortino, a Laguna Hills resi- dent. testified that Scudder told him over the telephone how he had escaped from his kidnapers by faking a heart atb1ck and then leaping from a motor home parked in Fountain Valley. "Then. out of the clear blue sky, he told m e that he had set the whole th mg up," Sortino testified. "I was shocked." The witness said there was no response when he asked Scudder . to repeat the statement. Scudder has denied Crom the witness s ta nd that he knew anything about the kidnap at· tempt until two.men grabbed him as he left his dentist's office in Huntington Beach and bundled him into a motor home. Scudder testified that he re- ceived a number of blows in the s cuffle and s uffe red facial injuries that compelled him to re- turn to the dentist•s oCCice a few days later for further treatment. Scudder identified Sellers as one or his two attackers. lie said he could not be certain that Wesson. a former business as- sociate and one time manager or Hot Race Predicted For CUSD Board \, ' I .... ' By ANNE COOP ER Ol Ille O•llY P'llM S\llfl The March 8 Capistrano Unified School District trustee elecUon will be a hotly contested race which may establish a new precedent for the district - teachers on the school board. Tb.is was the prediction Mon· day of Tony Leon, presi,dent of the Capistrano Unified· Educa- tion Association <CUEA).,,Leon's election forecast followed h.ls an· nouncement that CUb mem· bers ratllJed a lwo-year'tontract Monday by a unanimous vote. He uld about 1TS teachers at- tended the ratiflcaUon meeting and approved lhe contract sUpulaling an 8.4 percent saJary hike "algbt unseen." Leon aaJd the unanimous vote was a demonst..rallon of the tuche11 · confidence ln the CUEA~esott•th\t team. "We told tbem we had a fair, equitable contract. In fact, I can ••Y Without reaervaUon that we hav~ UM beat contrect 1n Orange t HOT a ACE. Pace Al) \. a Corona del Mar bank. was Sellers· com pan ion. Sortino admitted under pro- secution ques tioning that he is no longer on cordial terms with Scudder due to a difference of opinion which led him to withdraw from the operation or the ambulance service now headed by Scudder's son, Craig . Sortino s aid he called Scudder back on the evehing of the day he heard the Ralboa Island man's alleged confession and hooked a tape recorder to his telephone in the hope of recording an identical statement. "l tried to get him to talk about it again," Sortino said. "But he paused for about 15 or 20 seconds and then he s aid, 'Cute. Frank . real cute ·Then he hung up " Sortino's testimony follow ed the three-day interrogation of Wesson who repeatedly told the Jury that Scudder was the architect of the kidnap plot that was to put $250,000 into the pockets of five men involved in the abduction. Wesson told prosecutor Bill Morrissey that he and Sellers were quite prepared to go to prison if they had been caught h)( police while the kidnap attempt was underway. Wesson said the planning or lhe kidnap was carried oul with the understanding that Scudder's role In the plan was not to be re· vealed by other conspirators if CSee HEIR, Page A2) Ford Prays ForCongre-. WASHINGTON CAP) -PreSi· dent Ford marked the opening .or Congress today by attending a trad.itlonal church service where prayers 'Were offered for peace and lor Jtwmalters to Improve the quality' of ure. About 400 persons, lncJudlng memben of lbe new t5th Congress, the Supreme Court and other aovernmenl officials, Joined Ford al the 31Jt annual Servtc~ol Intercession and Holy Communlon al the National Pre1byterlan Church ln northwest WaJbinfton. The chief executive took Com· munfen with other worshipers. Cle1nente ' Chief to Resign? San Clemente Police Chief Mel P6rtner is under pressure lo sub- mit his resignation Wednesday lo City Manager Gerald Weeks. The effective date of the re- signation is up in the air. Weeks maintains it is to be May 1, but. Portner indicated he may seek an extension of the retirement until Mayofl978. Chief Portner, SS, will have completed 25 years of service to the city and is eligible for an early retirement May 1. • Portner was made chief in July 1974 after then·Chief Clifford Murray left the department abruptly following a private con- sultant's probe or the force. The chief's retirement appears to be the latest in an ongoing tug or war with the City Council. A year after his appointment, Chief Portner was threatened with demotion, an action the City Council. through the n-city manager Kenneth Carr could have taken while Portner was un- der "probationary staius." However, the year-long proba· tion period passed without action by the council. - Council members have in the past been critical or the depart· ment for a rlsing crime rate, the ' number of personnel on disability leave, and for labor friction with , officers who last year attempted to contract with the Teamsters Union for wage and benefit bargaining. Weeks said Monday he thought 1 Chief Portner had done a good job. "When he became chief, he in- herited a lot of problems, there was a lot of turmoil. He's performed with the best interests , ofthe city at heart and I think he's well respected by his m en." Weeks said. Weeks said he would be' 'solicit- ing the views and feelings from each of the council members on the qualities and abilities the new chief should have.·· He said he expected to begin recruiting for the pos ition sometime in March and appli- cants from throughout the state and possibly the entire western region would besoughlforlhejob. Weeks said he has no plans lo re- organize the police, fire and lifeguard services into a single public safety department. o.llY~twff .... PRESSURED TO QUIT? Polle• Chief Portner CONSUMER 1.'~~!.e'!1 D/J~he Oruae Count~e of Coosumer Attain 1W1U be available from ttoon to 2 p.m. each Tbur1d~t the Laauna Buch Clt,Y.HalJ. Tbe represtnUv• lrill of. fer advice to conawners · and lf needed m~late complalnta between con· sumera and butlnuamen. A 2 DAILY PILOT TuHdrt, January 4, 1977 Se.don Operas Byrd, Baker Head Senate WASHJNCTON <AP) With the Democrats firmly In control. the 95th Congress today established two-year residence in the Capitol with new leadership and an avowed de· termination to start work on President-elect Carter's economic program. Senate sources repe>rted short· ly before the formal opening or the session that the Democrats elected Sen. Robert C. Byrd of West Virg inia as majority leader. to succeed Sen. Mike Mansfield of Montana. ln something of an upset, Sen. Howard II. Baker Jr. of Ten· nessee was e lected Senate minority l e ader b y th e Republicans. Baker defeated Sen. Robert P Griffin of Michigan by a vote of 19 to 18. Gritfin had been assis- tant minority leader. Baker sue· ceeds Sen. Hugh Scott of l'en· nsylvania who retired from the Senate Byrd was e lected by acclama· lion after Sen. Hubert II. Hum· phrcy or M 1nnC'4'0ta withdrew rrom the contest. Sen. Alan Cranston ({).Calif.) was named maJonty whip, the post Byrd has held for six years, and Sen. Daniel Inouye <D· Hawaii) was chosen chairman or the Democratic-Party Con- ference, the third-high~Ht leadership post. Mansfield served as majority leader since 1961 but did not run for re-election to ttie Senate la.st year. Byrd is regarded as a skilled technician al moving legislation through the Senate. ffis views on economic 1ssuus are close to Carter's, und Byrd is expected lo work closely with Lhe new president. At the Republican caucus, Sen. Ted Stevens of Alaska was elected assistant minority leader. He was unopposed. Sen. Carl Curtis of Nebraska was re-elected chairman of the Republican Conference and Sen. John Tower of Texas was re· elected chairman of the GOP Policy Committee. Thompson Winner In C USD District? Voters in the Marc h 8 Capistrano Unified School Dis- trict election will probably vote lo fill only two of the three availa- ble seals Crom a field of six can· d1dates. Unless at leasl 25 voters in the district petil1on for a write-in candidate in trustee area 7 CM is· sion Viejo), incumbent William Thompson will be appe>med to another four year term. He is presently running unopposed. If no write-in petition 1s filed by Jan. 27. Thompson's name will not appear on the ballot. ffis ap· pe>intmenl will be automatic, ac- cording to Charline Jaggers. county election s ection supervisor. Unless Thompso n i s challenged by a write-in can· didate, voters will elect trustees for areas four and six. Trustee area four. <'Urrently represented by Jan Overton, includes Dana Point and the coastal area of Laguna Niguel. Mrs . Overton. 35, wa5 recently elected to complete a term, when Stephen Smith resigned. She 1s a housewife and lives a l 2529l Swanway Cour t in Dana Point. Ch:illengmg Mrc; Overton for 11tree Crates the fourth trustee area seat are Basil Roman. a university pro- fessor who li ves at 32451 Seven Seas Dr. in Laguna Niguel, and William Manahan. 35. an elementary school teacher in the Saddleback Valley Unified School District, who 1i ves al 33001 Buccaneer St. in Dana Point. Manahan lost the Nov 2 elec· lion to Mrs. Overton by three votes in a recount which over· turned his earlier eight-vote vie· tory. Incumbent Bob Hurst, 42. a re· aJtor who has served two full terms on the school board. lives at 23911 Stillwater Lane in Laguna Niguel. Hurst represents area 6, inland Laguna Niguel. llurst will run ag:unst Robert Bachelor, 29. who t e uches elementary school in the Sad· dleback Valley Distnct and live-; at 30731 Pasco del Niguel in South Laguna. and Pal Mancini. 34. an ms urancc m an. who li\'es a t 29082 Aloma A \'c in Lagunu Niguel. Although t r ustees represent specific areas m the Cetp1slrano district. their elc<'t1on 1s d1stnct· wide * * * Fro•PageAl Of Shoes Gone HOT RA(:E County," said Leon. "It was with In Cl this understanding that our emente members ratifie~ the contract_." A burglar made off with three crates of various .;11·'<! rubber ~andals Monday from the Neat Toes factory. 116 Rincon Court, San Clemente. pohre salci. The manufacturer valued the loss a t St. 700 It was unknown h<iw the thi('f got into the build· In.It In anotht•r poltcr matter, three ramp Pendl(>ton marines were in 1·u!llody tod:ly 1n connection with rharges lodged aftc.-r theft or an un~pec1f1ed amount or candy from the Miram ar Theater, 1700 N F:I Camino Rt•al Police said only that the amount or concesllion ~land sweets was "extremely large." A full Inventory will be taken. Booked for s uspicion of burglary and receiving stolen p roperly were Oennis J . Langwell. 19. Brian F. Hamilton. 18, ind Joe l~odridgc. 19. • ORANGE COAST DAILY. PILOT ~..:~~~~"r.:=..=;:-.:::;.= 0..il -...i111fllflf C.mHft1 ,,.,... ... ..,.,_ ... IMA'Jfl.r.d Mondt, fMfv.,. '''<HY , .. Co\r• :~v:,~~:,~:~ ~::::='~ -:=~.~::. }~=~~~~·.~=~·;: t~~C:..~~~"t.T:.~ ... ~~,.»' """'' ... ._ .. __ ... "*"t•rW "*'....,. , .... c;_ Yl(•Pt ..... t_Gt_ .. _ n ....... ....-1$1 .. ,_,& ,....,....,. -.... ,..c ..... ~14L-11'-~IUll A"t\tM t Mia~ .. , .... f • ..,, L11un1 le1c;f'I Offlc;e f'-Ott11""''s.-1 """"""" .. "" "0 ........ ,.JI Office• (Mii ..... >•W.\t l1yS1.-H""1_.., .. •<~ lttlt -~-vo•d -191>•0 V11'9y t\IOl l..o ~•I 11-•1 .... DI_,,_,, Ttt.,ltollt (?14)1Q-a21 Cla111fted AdYertlll"I IQ.1171 "911t1t .. eci. All 0.-:rt-nt Ttltplto111 4 ....... '""'"'ft(lt-M ffl.OtJO <The contract 1s not yet ava1la· bte. because lawyers for lhc teacher association and the school district have been polishing the language of the document. Leon said > The CUSA president s aid teachers are developing a new awareness that extends beyond the classroom. ll<' saJd CUEA "'ill support William Manahan in the March trustee election and may suppe>rt Robert Bachelor as well. Both Manahan and Bachelor are elementary school teachers in the Saddle back Valley school district. Leon said he expects other can· d1dates to challenge the ap- propriatene!l!I of having tejlchers on the school board, but ~e said ~reater connicts oC interest have existed in the past and not been questioned. "Bob Beuley's wife was teaching in the dl~trict when he was a trustee," he said. "The chairman of my department at Dana Hills, Fred Newhart, Ill, was hired by the dlslrtct when his father. Fred Newhart Jr .. was a trustee." Leon said he thinks it most ap· propriate that teacher concerns ~ represented on the school board. "I know Bill Manahan, who is a reading specialist, has reaJ con· cerns about the new Projecl LEAP (LearnJng EKperience Ap- praisal Program)." he said. "Who is ln a better position to evaluate a program like this. whicb is having &reat impact on our children, than a teacher?" Leon said the changing role of t.cachers is only one ot many chang~ be sees ahead ln educa- tion. He said the g~at.est sJngle change may be the shift of the tax burden for publJc educoUoo 3way from lndivldual propert.y owners. "Individual taxP.ayera are about taxed oul. · he nid. "We're at the point now thal & teacher comlna Soto the Capistrano achooJ dlstrfct with nve to elght years teacb.lna CJ[· perlence can't afford to llvo here,'' I •~Wl-IO NEW MAJORITY L£A0£R West Virginia's Byrd 10 Seeking Board Seat In Laguna The field in the race for three seats on the Laguna Beach Unified school board has ex· panded lo 10 with the entry of two men shortly before the close ol candidate Citing. Bruce S. Hopping. director of the nonprofit Kalos Kagathos Foundation, and J . Scoh Souders, an attorney, are the last-minute entrants. Two of the seals al stake are currently occupied by Jane Boyd and Dr. Norman Browne. Neither will seek re-election. The third is held by Michael Sagar, the current board presi- dent. Sagar has filed for re- election. Candidates include a slate or three -a man and wife team and her sister who say they hope to bring a new enthusiasm to local school administratioo. The three are Jim Hoenig, a re- al estate manager and consul- tant, his wire Mira, a primary grade teacher currently doing volunteer work at Aliso School, and her sister . Kay Hunte r, who has taught adult education and is pursuing a doctorate in education at UCLA. The other candidates are busi· nessman William S. Kentle, s chool volunteer coordinator Marylyn Pauley, retired school 01stnct employe Kaymond C. Lawson, and university pro- fessor Michael P. Onaorato. NB Resident Appointed to Coast Panel Newport Beach resident Judy Rosener has been appointed to the state coastal commission by Ass emb l y Speaker Leo McCarthy (D-San Francisco>. it was announced today. <Related story Page A 11) Mrs. Rosener scrvl'CI on the former South Coast Regional Zone Conservation Commission since its inception In 197.1. For the last six months of that commis sion's existence. she served as its chairman. Mrs. Rosener, a lecturer al UC Irvine's l(raduate school of administration, was told of her appointment to the new state commission last week. accord- 1 n g to a s p o k esman for M<-Carthy. Mrs. Rosener said she was "very flattered" to receive the appe>intment, which will me~n an end to her work on the regional commission. The regionnl commissions went out or errect last month and one of the first decisions racing the state commission when it meets Jan. 12 in San Francisco will be whether to reactivate the regional bodies. "I 'm very gratified that I ap· parently recci ved a broad base or !IUppe>rt," she. said. "I did not campaign for the appointment as others have done." Mrs. Rosener said she thinks her appointment carries con· siderable significance (or Orange County because It marks the first time a county resident has served on the stat.e commiggion, "and with the Irvine coast.development coming up, It's got to be signifi- cant." 2 Employes Quit Lag11na ' Two Jong-Ume L:lguna Beach clty employc11 wlll be leaving their municipal posts lh1s week. Sob Ingram, who has ~en with the clty for more t.han 23 years, wlll leave his poslUon as muntctpal .ervlcu proJcct coordloat.or to become a.sstatant city engineer ror the clt.y of Jrvtne. 5enior bulldlns oCndal lames Wlnten wUl teUce Friday after 12 yeara •Ith the clt,y. Far~ing Preserve Proposed San Juan Capistrano city coun. cilmen are exp~eted to lake the flr5t steps Wednesday ln an in- novative procedure aimed at pre- serving farming ln the 200-year- old community. The council ls scheduled to meet at 7 p.m. at. city omces, 32400 Paseo Adelanto. Thomas Merrell, city planning director, has prepared for coun- cij consideration a schedule or development fee s lo be earmarked for agricultural pre· servation and 101t1at1on or a general plan amendment. deal· ing with sa\•ing farming in San Juan. In ao ordinance to be in· troduced at Wednesday's meet· iog, developers would be re- quired to pay $500 ror each re· sidential unit built and $2,000 per acre for com merc1al or In · dustrial d evelopment. Fees would be due when a builder takes out a building permit. U adopted. the ordinance would generate about. $250,000 a year ror th~ next 10 w 12 years, said Merrell. ll is possible to estimate this revenue, be<:ause San Juan has adopted a growth management system which restricts the number or residen· tial building permits to be issued each year to 400. The proposed ordinance in· eludes a provision whereby the buyer of a new home selling for less than $50,000 would receive a refund of the $!500 ree paid by the builder. Merrell said this refund'was in· eluded in an effort not to penalize purchasers or lower priced homes. All fees generated by lhe or· dinance, if it is adopted, would be held in a special agriculture pre· servation fund. Expenditure of the funds could commence only after adoption or a general plan amendment designating specific properties to be preserved in farmland. Merrell has proposed that funds collected might be spent lo provide buffers and fences around the farm properties, to refund owners of the farmlands tax and assessment monies, to promote sale of farm products, to provide employe housing as· sistance and, if necessary, to ac quire farmland. The proposed development fees are expected to generate on· ly a portion or revenues needed for agricultural preservation. Merrell said. "Additional revenue measures will ~ proposed in order to more equitably spread the cost lo all city taxpayers and supply lhe re- mainder of necessary funds." he said. The proposed general plan amendment de51gnates two specific properties for long.term or permanent agricultural land use. They are: (l) about JOO acres in the vicinity or Del Obispe> St. and Caminodel Avlon. southwest of downtown S;in Juan, and C2 ) about 180 acres north of Oso and Trubuco Creeks. In the northWC!>l section or the city. From Page A I TAX CUT .•• will spell out his prope>sals al a meetmg with House leaders in Plains. Ga .. on Friday. Carter has indicated his pro· gram would focus on job crea- tion. Ford's proposal also would re· duce tues for a family of four CARTER UNVEILS ETHICS COOE-A4 earning $30,000 by $256, and by S330 for the same family earning SS0.000. But a family or four earning $7,000 would see their tax burden rise by $25 to a total of $60. due to a Ford proposal to eliminate the earned Income credit grant· ed to low-Income wage eamer5. The Administration proposal · ta&t, year was linked to com- pensating cutR in s pending. Fr.•Pag~Al HEIR ... the plot misfired at any slagc of its execution. "We all understood lhet," Wesson said. "That wu okay with us because we knew that thtte would be no problems and we '4ould get the money U ever- Yone did what be was supposed to do." Search Widening S AN DIEGO (AP> Sea.rcbtr• aay tbey will take mHaurementa t~ to •ee ll tracks lound fn a c:woo on a Ba· Ja CaUlornla mountain were made by two mlHlnc UC Berkelo• atudenta. Kenneth WUcox. ao. of SyraC111e. N.Y .• and D avid M aroua, 24, of Pqadena, bave been mlulng line• Tbunladay. J loaf faNMo,.d '••ffton • • . Alle11tk Q 200 OtHHt MU .. 0 •'W'~ CROSS MARK SHOWS LAST POSITION OF TANKER 28 People, Eight Mllllon Gallons of 011 Aboard Oil .Tanker Missing With 38 on Board BOSTON (AP) -American and Canadian aircraft and a Coast Guard cutter searched to- day for a missing Panamanian tanker with 38 persons and eight million gallons of heavy oil aboard. The search was expanded after efforts Monday failed to locate the 18, 717-ton, 644·foot Grand Zenith or make radio con· tact with it. Spokesmen for the Coast Guard, the utility expecting the 011, and the ship's agent said it was not unusual for a tanker to be delayed and temporarily "missing." "'The unusua' thing is that it has not been heard from." said Coast Guard Petty Officer William Van Valkenburg. He said it is possible that all the tanker's radios are not work· mg. Van Valkenburg said \l is possible for such a lanker to sink $50,000 Loot In Clemente Home Theft San Clemente pe>lice are in· vestigatlng a $50,000 residential burglary that started the new year off in a bad way for the William Barton family. Police were called on New Ye:ir's Day when the family re- turned horne and discovered that a safe has had been rifled and other valuables taken. A police spokesman said a screen had been ripped loose and pry tools were used to open a window at the Barton residence, 717 Avenida Colombo. Reported missing from the house were diamonds and other jewelry, a fur coat and electronic equipment. , Investigators said the burglary occurred sometime between Tuesday and Saturday. while the family was on holiday. LB Activities For Seniors Make Move Laguna Beach senior citizens activities formerly conducted at the city hall annex at 570 Glen· ney re St., are now held In facilities at city hall, SOS Forest Ave. Senior activities are split between the city coan~il cham- bers and the new Human Affairs Department factllty Immediate· ly adjacent to city hall at 515 F'orest Ave. Activities for January include macrame, c reative writing. Spanish, French, folk dancing, bowling and free legal services. Income tax assl11tance. proper ty tax aid and a blood pressure clinic are planned for later in the year. Further information I!! avalla· ble by telephoning Bob Porter at 497-~42. without losinit any of its cargo oil and, therefore, have no tell- tale oil slick. · He said a tanker probably would lose some of its propulsion oil if it sank. but such oil "may come up slowly to the surface its a sheen rather than a slick ~ dissipate." · The Coast Guntd said the tanker was last heurd from about. 60 miles south of Nova 1 Scotia oo Thursday. ' The vessel left Teesport, England, on Dec. 19. lt wa"S headed for the Fall River, Mass., area, the Coast Guard said today. The search today was to cover approximately 34,000 square miles or Atlantic Ocean from U>e tanker's last known position south of Cape Sable, Nova Scotia, to the Fall River area. The soulhern secUon of tfie search area roughly parallels the rich Georges Bank fishing grounds. r A Coast Guard airplane from EUiabeth City, N.C., a Co~ Guard helicopter from the Cape Cod Air Station, a Navy plane from Brunswick. Maine, an Air Force Reserve plane from New York, and n Canadian millt8.l'f plane took part in today 's search. The Grand Zenilh"s cargo W3$ the same kind or oil carried by the Argo Merchant, the Liberian vessel that ran aground off Nan- tucket and spilled 7.6 million · gallons into the ocean when it broke up under the Pounding or heavy seas five days later. Fro•PageAl SE·RRANO. • Also on the school boat d agenda are proposals to ap- prove math textbooks for next year and the 1977 summfr 11chool program. A Tl-e board a lso will discuss the possibiUty of holding an ex· tr a meeting every month for use as a study session to dl5· cuss such topics as scho.11 financing and programs. No ae- tion could b e taken at su'th meetings. 'r If approved. the first ~ludy session would be Jan. 25. ·h .. ~·· E'rO#IPageAJ ~ COAST ... Other council matters inclu~ -Authorization for a "Laguna Day in Tijuana" presentation by the Mexican city'& officials. · -A repe>rt by Vlco Mayor Jon Brand on landscaping changes including mounding of gr1&ssy areas at M aln Beach Park. -Consideration of plans for Laguna Beach's 50th an- niversary party June29. ... LB Citizens Meet=:; The Laguna Beach Cllizae' Altlance wlll meet at 7::.> p.m. Thursday at tbe Laguna S~ Motel to dlscuas house constro«· tion de111lgn •Undards. Coud· cilman Jon Brand will att.cnd die session. 1 .d· Piao Expandetf Young Poet Eyes Presidency,: POMONA (l\P)-L8stsummer, 6·year-old Andy . - Weikel and his·~year-old sister, Shauna, decided to express tbelr admiration for Jimmy Carter. They sent 1 ~' hJm •letter and included a poom to his daughter, Amy. • " Both letter a nd poem were answered. ·: .-, Monday, Andy received another piece or cor-_, respondence f'rom Presldcnt-clect Carter. Jt was an lnl , vilaUontothelnauguration. •h Mr. and M rs. Kelth Weikel said unfortunately they 1t, , won't be able to accept the President 'fl off e-r, but Andy"'•· planstokeepthelnvitalionforhisscrapbook. '"""" And although he intends to write more poems, hi!'''~ .. ambitJon bas beenexpandoosomewhat. 1"·•• "I've thou,iht about it." the 6·year-old a aid ... And t:.:d think I'd probably li.k~to be president." ....... .,. ' Irvine EDITION 'l'oday's Closing . N.Y. Stot.-ks • • * * -ORAN~E COtJNTY; CALIFORNrA TUESDAY, JANUARY 4, 1977 I-TEN CENT l · OL. 70, NO. 4, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES fJlO Billion Tax Cut Asked Again WASIDNGTON (AP)-Presi- t dent Ford proposed today a 1 '$10-billion personal income tax ~ ·bit along with co~ate tax re-l ductions and an increase ln t personal Social Security taxes. ~ The package is nearly a carbon ' copy of Ford's tax-cut proposals F or_d Also Seeks Soci'al Security Hike that Congress rejected last year. The Whlte House said Ford's proJ>OSal would save $227 a year for a family of four with an in· come of $15,000. The same size family earnlng $10,000 would see their annual tax burden decrease by $166. It also would increase the in- dividual income tax exemption from tbe present $750 to $1,000, said L. William Seidman, the ~ Follows Diedrich •!-------------- Riley· Elected Board's Chief O.ilyl'llet-t• NEW BOARD CHAIRMAN , Newport's Tom Riiey r-.1 ... _:..._ . , 1 ~o LJUCatwn I , . 1Foumlfor 1 Pre-school About 60 Irvine pre-schoolers are without a school now that •tlley are evicted from their lbrmer quarters and no new f acllities are rented yet. The pre-schoolers belong t1> the Irvine Community Nursery School, a parents· ~rative school that is run lfjth one paid director and the VOiunteer assistance of mothers achooled in parent education Classes. The pre-school has operated out or St. Matthew's Lutheran Church in lrvlne for the past rive 7elrs. but was evicted last J'.QObth wLen the church decided llOoperate its own pre.ubool. The eviction was not unexpect· 1ed, but pre-school organiz.er-5 do 1aot yet bave new permanent. t •arten. According to Marsha Kaye, ~ of the parent officers ol the ,pn-school, the youngsters were lapected to move into the new multipurpose building at Vniversity Community Park. I llowever, several snags have artaen and the state licensing board refuses to grant! the school a license at that location. Pat Fiero or the Irvine com· •ilnity sel'vices department ex- CSee NUBSERY, Page AZ) . .. - Coast 1 f Weather , Falr and mostly sunny 1-through Wednesda,y. Little t temperature change. Highs oC about. 60, low about40. ~ INSIDE TOD& Y • l TMre'a. no queatioll tbat U.. r flock marled i6 on. a long lot- • btg .irfak,.occO'f'dJng to buif. neu columnflt Mllto" 1 MoakowiU.P.Q11eAIJ. Supervisor Thomas Riley of Newport Beach was elected 1977 chairman of the Orange County Board or Supervisors today. Riley 's election to succeed Supervisor Ralph Diedrich as board chairman came on a un- animous vote. The 64 -year-old former Marine general's asc;ent to the chairmanship came 2~:i years after he was appointed by then· California Gov . Ronald Reagan to fill the unexpired term or the late Ronald Caspers. That appointment was reaf- firmed in early 1975 by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. Riley clai m ed the Fifth Supervisorial seal in his own right last June when he won a one-sided primary election vie· tory over three opponents. When laking over the gavel from Diedrich today, Riley praised the outgoing chairman's energy and leadership. "I pledge my fuJJ energies to discharge the important responsibility of the chairman's office," Riley said os he took over the center seat on the five- man board. He also called for county gov- ernment to seek property tax reform and said realignment of the five supervisorial districts should be high on the board's. business agenda for 1977. Skateboard Course Rolls Away Again? A special committee will re- commend Wednesday that the skateboard course in University Community Park be moved to a new location in Rancho San Joa- quin. The recommendation will be heard at the 7:30 p.m. Communi- ty Services Commission meeting in the City Council chambers. . Commissioners will make thell" own recommendation atler hear- ing the committee report, but a final decJslon will not. be made unUI the City Council considers lhe matter Jan.11. The curt-ent location of the popular skateboard COW'M' -in· side University Community Park directly behind the new Peters Townhomes -is the cause of the problems. Since the concrete skateboard track was installed · several months ago, new homeowners in the Peters t.ownbomes hlve com- plained of nojse, vandaliam and large numbers of teenagers gathered out.side their backyards. After hearing numerous eom- pJaints by homeowners, s,be City Council formed t.be skateboard committee, consisting ol several liomeowners, a representative of the skateboarders, an Irvlne police lieutenant, a community services commissioner and As· sistant. City )If anaier Paul Brady. The committee is recommend- lng that the course be moved to a four·acre site olt MJchelaon Drive, within the Rancho San Joaquln developmenl The 1lte ii between the toll course and the gas staUon beinl built Oft the corner oC Michellloo and Culver Drives. Tbe ne~t. resibenta would be thole In Park Weat Apa.rtmen..ta. act0t1 the atn«: Br11dy aald the 11te appean tdeal because of tu JsOlatlon tro1n resSdenta and the ltd t.bat ::eJeneHI area la llre11d.Y betn.c for coif, tebllll and otb« 1porte. TM committee II SUUeetb.ll that tb• nlltlo1 akat~boarcl <SeelDTB,hleAJ) President's economic adviser. Uke last year's package, the proposal includes $2.5 billion In corporate tax reductions. It also calls for a $5.1 billion increase in personal Social Security taxes over a two-year period. Last year's proposal called for a Sl.65 billion Increase in personal Social Security taxes. Ford said his proposal is focused more on middle-income taxpayers than low-income lax- payers. who were the main beneficiaries of tax cuts in 1975 and 1976. The President said, "It Indian Rides Again is high time to focus substantial lax relief on middle-income tax- payers." The proposal received an im· mediate cold shoulder from a key congression'BI leader, Rep. Al Ullman <D·Ore.), who said the Democratic-coqtrolled Unidentified delivery man (right) helps Duke Hazlett return six-foot wooden In- dian to its rightful place in front of ., Hazlett's turquoise shop on Newport Beach's McFadden Square. Indian was stolen Dec. 22 by ~ trio of revelers who apparently spotted the Indian after leav- ing a nearby tavern. Police traced the In· ctian to San Clemente and it was returned Monday. Ex-pal Cl~ Complicity Testifies Scudder Pwtted Own Kidnap , By TOM BARLEY 01 lhe O•llY Piiot $1aif A defense witness testified Monday that potato chip heir John H. "Jack" Scudder of Newport Beach told him he planned his own kidnaping with two men now on trial for the crime. Witness Frank Sortino, who later admitted from the witness stand that be is on less than cor- dial terms with Scudder, told an Orange County Superior Court jury tbathe talked to Scudder, 64, br phone a week after the alleged kidnaping last Aug. 19. Sortino testified that Scudder • told him during that conversa- tion he had plotted the abduction with deCendants William Rudy Wesson, 45, and Ricki Dale Sellers, 20. Both men are being tried for the alleged kidnaping. Sortino, a Laguna Hills resi· dent. testified that Scudder told hirn over the telephone how he had escaped from his kidnapers by faking a heart attack and then leaping from a motor home parked in Fountain Valley. "Then. out of the clear blue sky, he told me that he had set the whole thing up,'' Sortino testified. "I was shocked.'' The witness said there was no response when be asked Scudder to repeal the statement. Scudder has denied from the witness stand that he knew anything about the kidnap at- tempt until two men grabbed him as he left his dentist's office in Huntington Beach and bundled him into a motor home. Scudder testified that he re· ceived a number of blows in the scuffle and suffered facial injuries that compelled him to re- turn to the dentist's office a few days later for further treatment. Scudder identified Sellers as one of his two attackers. He said he could not be•certain that Wesson, a former buslness as- Newport's Rosener Joins State Panel Newpoz:t Beach resident Judy Rosener has been appointed to the state coastal commission by Assembly Speaker Leo McCarthy (D-San FranclsCo), It· was announced today. (Related story Page All) Mn. Rosener served on the former South Coast Regional 1.one Consenation Co111m1ssion since its lncepUon In 1913. For the last slx months ol that commission's existence, she served u lts chairmatt Mn. Rosener, a lcrcturer at UC lrv1oe's graduate school of Mtmlnietration, was told ol her appointment to t.he new state eommJaalon · last week, accord· lnc to • •J>~kesman for McCarthy. Mn. Rosener &ild ahe waa "ft!')' nattered" to rec.tve the ~ment. -Ytbicb will mean an end to her work on' the regjooal commlaalon. Tbe rellon1l commiaiom went oat ti ..,-ect lut mo.dl .S onef:A tbeftnt d«lllODa f atlnl the ltaW I CIM&oSl!NU, .... AJ) ,_ sociate and one time manager or a Corona del Mar bank, was Sellers' companion. Sortino admitted under pro- secution questioning that be is no longer on cordial terms with Scudder due to a difference or opinion which led him lo withdraw from the operation or the ambulance service now headed by Scudder's son, Craig. Sortino said "he called Scudder back on the evening of the day he heard the Balboa Island man's alleged cQnfession and hooked a tape recorder to his telephone in the hope of recording an identical statement. "I tried to get him to talk about il again," Sortino said. "But he paused for about 15 or 20 seconds and then he said. 'Cute, Frank. real cute.' Then he hung up." Sortino's testimony followed the three-day interrogation or Wesson who repeatedly told the jury that Scudder was the architect of the kidnap plot that was to put $250,000 into the pockets of five men involved in the abduction. Wesson told prosecutor Bill Morrissey that he and Sellers were quite prepared to go to pri30n if they had been caught by police while the kidnap attempt was underway. Wesson said the planning of the (See DEIR, Page AZ> Cross Country Meet Planned All Irvine boys and gtm.._ ages 8 to lS, may participate ~e 1977 Irvine Crost Count.cy Meet to be held Saturday. Slgnups will be taken Saturday momiqc prior to the croa coun- try eventa. at University Com- mwty Park, BeecJrtree Line. Tbe ~· elibt lln1Jben in each divltlon ~JU be eliglble to participate lit tbe Orqe County flnall. Top q_uallfi .. lo U.. meet wW be ellJlbl• to proceed to the Sout.bern Calif ornla cbam· ptonahips. Check-in wilt be 10 a.m. at~ cowte, wttla~walk~ at. 10:30 a.d •\the Ont event acbedul ..... U :l.5 a.m. l'or more infHa•~Uoo, pbone 75t.a839, • Congress would wait for President-elec;t Carter's expect;- ed plan to . stimulate the economy. Ullm an , chairman or the House Ways and Means Com· mittee where all tax legislation originates, said, "Obviously, we will organize around the Carter recommendation." Ullman said he expects Carter <See TAX CUT, Page A2) Long et ' Guilty, Say 3 ASPEN, Colo. (AP) -With jury selection in its second day in the Claudine Longet manslaughter trial, two more Aspen residents bluntly declared they believe the singer is guilty in the death of her lov· er and could not give her a fair trial. The 35-year-old Miss Longet was tense and tight-lipped as she stared directly at the pro.- spective jurors while each was questioned in di vidua.tty. "Are you working on a pre· sumption of her guilt?" asked Deputy Dist. Atty. Ashley An· derson of a you·ng photo. grapher. "I don't like to admit that, but I guess it's true," said Bruce Yaffo. He said he learned details of the case from Steve Sabich. brother of the victim, ski cham- pion Vladimir "Spider" Sabich. Moments later, the next pro. spect caned to the jury box, a young woman i'Q h er 20s, declared: "From all that I've read and my involvement. in this, I already have an opini-. That's not fair to Miss Longet. It's not fair lo the court." The woman, Robin Grasher, said she would require the de· fense to prove Miss Longet's in· nocence rather than the legal requirement that the burden of proof rest with the prosecution. Botfi prospects were excused for prejudice. Two prospects were tentatively seated, bring- ing the total or tentative jurors to eight. Miss Longet is charged with manslaughter in the March 21 shooting death of Sabich, her lover, in the $250,000 mountain home they shared. If convicted, she faces up to 10 years in jail and a $30,000 fine. Prosecutors have said they mi~ht calJ singer Andy Williams, Miss Longel's ex· husband. to the stand. But Dist. Atty. Frank Tucker has refused to discuss why Williams was summoned. <See LONG ET, Page A2) Ten to Seek Tiro Iroine SclwolJobs Ten Irvine residents, iflCluding one incumbent, will battle March 8 for two open seats on the Irvine Unified School District Board. All 10 residents med nomina· tlon papen last week and are vy· ing for the seats cWTenUy held by Trustees Charles Boulanger and Frank Hurd. Hurd ia running for re-election, but Boulanger, the fint president ol the school board, has decided not to run again. The candidates, in alphabetical order, include: -Dorothea "Dottie" Blaine. No. 2 Lupine, a county ad· minlstraUve analyst. -Fred Gahm, 3671 Provin~ cetown Circle, a purchasing manager. -Robert L. Gray, 5020 Corkwood Lane, general mana1er of a sportin1 goods firm. -Frank Hurd, 18161 Dewberry Way, Incumbent. -Catherine Larkin, 4861 Fla1atar Circle, a b«MwUe. -Ron Lunceford, 3821 Avocado St •• a PIYcbolollst and 'IOdolotllt. . -Robert Q. Shupe, 3812 Beaver St., an~. -EUllene SIJND•~ 4922 Barkwood Ave •• u ~adOG ad· min.latratOr. -Tbomas C. Wlllon, 4968 PaHo Rqad, a 1chool ad- mlnittrator. -LoWI c. Z.Jda, 14182 llattan St •• a 1aleaman. ' ·-~ A 2 DAIL y PILOT Tllflday January 4, 19n Try Again Broken Waterbed Replaced Her Christmas spirit ended in a splash, bul Angel'sl'lew Year started well. WtULE BAKING cookies before Christ.mu, 15-year-old Angel Anast rilled her waterbed. Jt was 1 bit overdone-60 overdone that it burst and sent a wave or water through her family's home at25761 Cervantes Lane, Mission Viejo. Stuck with sopping shag carpets and a broken bed, her lather, Zacharia, questioned his daughter 's angelic status. But the man ager of the firm where he bought the bed ad· mitted it had been installed improperly and returned Mon· day with a complete new bed. ''I HATE TO see waterbeds get publicity like that even though it's good for a couple of chuckles," said the manager while the bed was being filled. Contending waterbeds seldom burst, he blamed the AnaslS' problem on the bed's lackofbrackelS. Fro•PageAJ NURSERY SOUGHT. • • plains that the license was re· fused to the pre·school group because they could not have "ex- clusive rest room use" at the new building and that the size of the room was not sufficient to handle the number or youngs ters enrolled in the school. Mrs. Fiero said city staff mcm· bers arc now trying lo find a new location for the pre·school, but have come up with nothing con· crete yel. She said the school may be able to use either the University Com- Irvine Plans Signups for Rec Classes Irvine residents may register for all city recreation classes - except tennis and racquetball - Thursday night and Friday at Irvine city hall. Signups will be taken from 6 to 10 p.m. Thursday and from 9 a .m. to 4:30 p.m. Friday, in the city council chambers at the new city hall. 17200 J amboree Blvd. All registrations will be on a first-come. r1 rst-served basis. with late registrations being ac- cepted all next week, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the community I services department at city hall . munity Association clubhouse, a facility within the Irvine Unified School District or a store front in Irvine. "All I can say is that we're try- ing to help them find a new loca- tion and that they appear to be a good group," Mrs. Fiero said. Unless a new location is found quickly, many or the youngsters will be without a pre-school, ac- cording to Mrs. Kaye. "Certainly we can relocate some of them in other pre- schools, but t here just aren't 60 spaces available in other schools at this time of the school year," she added. A,,ontic Session Opens Byrd, Baker Head Senate WASHI NGTON <AP) -With the Democrats firmly In control, the 95th Cong r ess today established two-year residence i n the Capitol with new leadership and an avowed de· termination lo start work on President -elect C arter's economic program. Senate sources reported short- ly before the formal opening of the session that lhe Democrats elected Sen. Robert C. Byrd of West Virginia as majority leader. to succeed Sen. Mike Mansfield of Montana eAKElt CltAllSTOH In something of an upset, Sen. Howard H. Baker J r. of Ten- nesse e was elected Senate minority leader b y the Republicans. Baker defeated Sen. Robert P. Griffin of Michigan by a vote of 0 l••• fsiimoted 'osifion Mi lea 200 APWl,. ..... 10 19 lo 18_ Griffin h ad been assis- tant minority leader. Baker suc- ceeds Sen. Hugh Scott of Pen- nsylvania who retired from the Senate. Byrd was elected by ncclama· tion after Sen. Hubert H. Hum- phrey of Minnesola withdrew from the contest. Sen. Alan Cranston (D·Callf.) was named majority whip, the post Byrd has held for six years, and Sen. Daniel Inouye (D- Hawaii) was chosen chairman oC the Democratic Party Con- ference, the third -highest leadership post. Mansfield served as mnjority leader since 1961 but did not run for re-election to the Senate last year. Byrd is regarded as a skilled technician at moving legislation through the Senate. His views on econoauc issues are close to Carter's, and Byrd is expected to work closely with the new president. At the Republican caucus, Sen. Ted Stevens of Alaska was elected assistant minority leader. He was unopposed. A,.Wlrc•htlo Sen, Carl Curlis or Nebraska was re-elected chairman or the Republican Conference and Sen. John Tower of Texas was re- elected chairman ot the GOP Policy Com mittee. CLAUDINE LON GET WITH ATTORNEY CHARLES WEEDMAN All Bundled Up on Way to Manelaughter Trlal Oil Tanker Missing With 38 on Board ~ BOSTON (AP) -American and Canadian alrcralt and a Coast Guard cutter searched to- day for a missing Panamanian tanker with 38 persons and eight million gallons of heavy oil aboard. The searc h was expanded after efforts Monday failed to locate the 18, 717.ton, 644 -foot Grand Zenjth or make radio con· tact with it. Spokesmen for th~ast Guard, the utility expecting the oil, and the s hip's agent said it was not unusual for a tanker to be delayed and te mporarily "m issing." Scotia, to the F all River area. The southern section of the search a rea roughly parallels the rich Georges Bank fishing grounds. A Coast G11ard airplane from Elizabeth Caty, N.C .• a Coast Guard helicopter from the Cape Cod Air Station, a Navy plane from Brunswick , Maine. an Air Force Reserve plane from New York, and a Canadian military plane took part in today 's search. Fro"' Page A J LONGET ••• Williams left for Los Angeles alter the noon break Mond~, saying he expects lo return next week. One of three prospects dis· missed the firs t day, Asp~n Mayor Stacy Standley, ad- mitted, "l felt the defendant was guilty, based on the ip· formation I had recei~" fropi a police officer Standley, refl ecting lik~ Tucker the easy.going a~­ mosphere in As pen, appeared on .. the stand in jeans and "'1 open-necked print shirt. "People are very frank in this community," Tucker said of Standley's comment. "They don't beat around the bush." I There a r e s pecial interest «:lasses, such as ballet. belly danc ing. dog obedience, guitar, a nd Pounds Off I Permanently. a weight-reduction 1 class. Sports classes are also being >ffered, including karate, golf. .umbbng and gymnastics, track md field . volleyball and yoga. CROSS MARK SHOWS LAST POSITIO~ OF TANKER 28 People, Elght Miiiion Gallons of Oil Aboard "The unusual thing is that it has not been heard from," said Coast Guard P etty Officer William Van Valkenburg. The Grand Zenith's cargo was the same kind of oil carried by the Argo Merchant, the Liberian vessel that ran aground off Nan- tucket and spilled 7.6 million gallons into the ocean when it broke up under the pounding of heavy seas five days later. Tucker said he decided that Mi ss Lon get 's 13-year-old daughter Noel, who was re- portedly at home when the shooting occurr ed, was "tao young" to be callC<I as a wit· ness. For a complete hst of activities ind the limes they will be of- fered, contact the recreation de· Jartment, 754·3639 At Last, Ma Bell Rea/,izes Wives ' Rig/us NEW '\"ORK CAPI The New York Telephont' Company has bowed to lib{'rall•rl wives who want their names listed with their husbands' in the telephone di rectory. Out the firm says 1t will have to charge 25 cents extra The proposal, subject to ap- pro\' a I by the !'\late Public Service Com m1ss1on. followed complaints I hat hstm~ married couples only hy the husband's first name was <hscnminatory The current charRe for a separate listing for the wife is Sl The protestms,t women said they should get hstini;ts on the same hne -just hke the multi- ple name!'\ of a law firm or brokerage house. 1'he telephone company said the 25 -cent charge would be "nominal" considering the cost of processing the additional names. ·- OAANOl COAST DAILY PILOT ,.... °'-'"'' O.lty "'""· ...... -... ,,._. blMd Ow~*'' ..,.,.,~ h. fNblhl1wd tw tfw Ottl"l9f Coe\t ~1\l'll""G '°'"~•"Y SfMf't1•f'dtl~ ..,. ,_,_,u(f.•d MoNt•'f '"''OVQft ''"10.., •or ~·• Mr--... HtWOOft 8"Cft. HV#l41ftlll0f't .. 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(AP) -Former President Richard Nixon, who has not been to Washington since he resigned in disgrace in 1974, has an opportunity lo return for Jimmy Carter's inauguration. Carter's press secretary; Jody Powell, said the Carter staff was following a tradition that all past presidents and their wives are in· vited to inaugurals. In San Clemente, there was no response from Nixon's staff when reporte r s called to find out whether Nixon intended to go to the inauguration. Powell said the Carter staff bas heard nothing from Nixon, either. "It has been true without fail that traditionally former presi· denlS and former first ladies are . invited lo a new president's in· auguration," Powell said. Books Sought In Irvine Parents at Tur tle Rock Elementary School are asking Irvine residents lo contribute books to be sold at a book fair at the school later this month. B-Oth used and new books are needed for the book fair, set for Jan. 15, from 9 a .m. to 2 p.m. It wtll be open to the public. Mooey raised from the book fair will be used to bolster the library and media center at Tur· Ue Rock School. Books will be ac· cepted from now until J an. 12, from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the achool offices, 5151. Amalfl Drive. 1,000 Show, But No Jobs WAJlREN1 Mich. <AP> - Abo\U 1,000 jooseeken showed up ·at the Chrysler Corp. Detroit Tank Plant after reports cltt'Ulat. ed. that the fltm would hire '100 ad·· d.ltlonaJ worten Ch1I yecr. But they were turned away by ae«:url· ty tuarda because no JObt were available. The Job 1ppllc•.,ts IWted Un· ll'\I up at 4 a.m. ln sutitreain• tem~a\wu at the faciUty here t.hathaal,IOOemp~. Front Page Al SKATE •.• course not be tom down until a new course is completed. Also, they are recommending that the new course be built using park bond interest funds. The new facility would cost about $19,000, according to Brady. The assistant city manager noted that the developer of the ·adjacent townhomes, J .M. Peters, has offered to demolish the existing course and return the area to a landscaped condi· ti on. Brady said the council should consider accepting Peters' offer and also might ask him whether he would finance the relocation. The new site. referred to as "Lot G ". is an extra parcel owned by the Irvine Company. Brady said the Irvine Company had eartter offered to give the land to the city as park land. since it was formerly a dump site and cannot be used for residen- tial development. Fro"' Page A J HEIR •.. kidnap was carried out with the understanding that Scudder's role in the plan was not to be re- vealed by other conspirators if the plot misfi red at any stage of its execution. "We a ll understood that." Wesson said. "That was okay with us because we knew that there would be no problems and we would get the money if ever· yone did what he was supposed to do." He said it is possible that all the tanker's radios are not work- ing. Van Valkenburg said it as possible for: such a tanker to sink without losinll any or its cargo oil and, therefore. have no tell· tale oil slick. He said a tanker probably would lose some or ilS propulsion oil if it sank, but such oil •·may come up slowly to the surface as a sheen rather than a slick and dissipate." The Coast Guard said the tanker was last heard from about 60 miles south of Nova Scotia on Thursday. The vessel left Tecsport. England, on Dec. 19. It was headed for the Fall River. Mass., area, the Coast Guard said today. The search today was lo cover approximately 34,000 squar e miles of Atlantic Ocean from the tanker's last known position south of Cape Sable, Nova Froat Page Al ROSENER •• commission when it meets Jan. 12 in San Francisco will be whether to reactivate the regionaJ bodies. 'Tm very gratified that I ap· parently received a broad base of support," she said. "I did not campaign for the appointment as others have done." Mrs. Rosener said she thinks her appointment carries con· sider able significance for Orange County because it marks the first time a county resident has served on the slate commission. "and with the Irvine coast development comlng up, it's got to be signlfi. cant." Plan Expanded Young Poet Eyes PresUlency POMONA (AP) -Last summer, 6·year-old Andy' Weikel and his 1().year-old sister. Shauna. declded to express their admiration for Jimmy Carter . They sent him a letter and included. a poem to his daughter, Amy. Both let ter and poem were answu ed. Monday, Andy received another piece of col'· respondence from Presldent-elect Carter. It wu an in· vitation to the inauguration. Mr . and Mrs. Keith Weikel said unfortunately they w0n't be able to accept the President 's offer, but Andy plans to keep the lnvitatlon for bis scrapbook. · And although be intends to write more poems, bis ambiUonbasbeenbxpandedsomewhat. ,.I've thought about it." the 6·ye&r·old satd. "And I think 1 'd probably like to bepresldent." . • r I I Signups Set For Tennis, Racquetball Tennis and r acquetball buffs may sign up Saturday for classes being oCCered this winter by the Irvine Recreation Department. Signups for both sports will be taken at Harvard Community At h le t ic Park. in th e multipurpose building, from 9 a.m. to noon. Tennis classes will be held at courts at Racquet Club Park. University Community Park and University High School. Classes are either Monday-Wednesday, Tuesday-Thursday, Tuesday on· ly, Wednesday only or Saturday only.-Some are four weeks and others are eight weeks. Each class costs $10, plus a can of new balls. . Racquetball classes will be held at University Community Park. Lessons will be either Mon- day-Wednesday or Saturday on- ly, with both intermediate and beginning classes offered. For more information regard· ing classes and locations and times, the recreation department ph_one number is 754-3639. Ford Prays For Congress WASHINGTON (APJ -Presi- dent Ford m arked the opening of Congress today by aUending a traditional church service where prayers were offered for peace and for lawmakers to improve the quality of lile. The chief executive look Com· munion with other worshipers. OC Woman Cited For Packing Pistol Oran1e Count y aherilr'• of· ncera l11ued a cltaUon UsUng cbar1et ol curylng a concealed weapon to a HunUnitoa Beach woman who allegedly t.rted to board a piano at the county airport wiCb a .22-callber pistol In ~purse. l>tputiuaaid BarbaraLouSpr. ln1er, or 808l Holl.nd Drive. was clt.td after the X-ray machine i.ed by airport officlall.revealcd U,. pniMDCe of \he weapon ln her bae1a,e. Miss Longet says the gun fired accidentally •While Sabich was teaching her how to use it. Noel is one of Miss Longet's three. childr en by Williams, from whom she was divorced two years ago. From Page A J TAX CUT ..• will spell out his proposals at a meeting with House leaders in Plains, Ga .. on Friday. Carter ha!! indicated hjs pro- gram would focus on job crea· Uon. Ford's proposal also would r'e· duce taxes for a family of four CARTER UNVEILS ETHICS CODE--A4 earning S30.000 by $2.56, and QY $330 for the same family earnihg s.so.ooo . But a family of four earning $7,000 would see their tax burden rise by $25 to Q total or $60, due to a Ford proposal to eliminate the earned income credit grani· ed to low-income wage earners. The Administration pr'oposal last year was linked to com· pensating cuts in spending. But this lime, Ford's proposal was initially unclear on whether he would seek compensatin~ soend· ing cuts . Ford noted ·in .a message to Congress that he will be sending up his spending pro· posals with his budget later this month. Hiking Pair Lost in Snow FRESNO <AP> -Fo"r Southern Californians stranded in the snowy Sierra Nevada over the New Year's weekend h"e been round safe. but a sellffh began today for two other min· ing youth". ,, Tom McCullough, 19, and bis brother Bi:yan, 17. both of Fresno failed to meet tb•lr father Sunday at Cartwri1bt Reservoir after a week-long bike from the high Stern ranger l,t.J· tlon, Fresno County aheriff'a fe- putles uid. Fresno deputies comple~, a rescue or another party near Shaver Lake on Mond~y. ~t Grigsby, 13, of Sherman Oaks anct Chris Whitmer, t1. or .Y'I' Noya were round safe in \Ml" camp. . _,.J ..... Tuesday,8 Closing Price~ NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS ~11110•~ lntluOt Ir-·"" I~ H•w Yo•~ MlclWHI P~tll(, POW, ... Ion D!trqlt .,.. Clnctnll<lll •IO(~ u(~Uncl r-lod by,,.. H•tlon•l AuocleUOtl Of S«Mrlll"' Dt•I•" anci '"'"""' Tueec:lay, January •. 1977 l /N DAILY PILOT A J 3 Hedge CHpped Losing Streak T11mbles V aloes By MILTON MOSKOWITZ As wo move into 1977 and the? Wall Street soothsayers polnl up the great stock market opportunllles that lie ahea(l otua. ft may be useful to cast a backward glance Al months go, January is euphoric The market nearly always goes up But we've already had seven Januarys m the 1970s and thas decade has been a sobering experience ror any tnvestor who hitched a ride on sotne of the h1gh01ers or I.he 1950& and 1960s, ex-~ peeling them to con- tinue their spectacular ~} :::. Money ascents. • To say that these in-< • Tree vestors have been dlsap pointed is to put it gentjy Anyone who invested $.S,000 in IBM lJl 1950 saw that. stake mushroom to $286,000 by 1970 i\ 1950 INVESTOR WHO PUT $5,000 into Avon Products would have had stock worth $2 3 million by 1970. And the canny or lucky investor who sunk $5,000 mt.o Xerox m 1950 would have had secunt1es worth $2 9 m11l1on by 1970 Terr1f1c' So much for hindsight. What's happened since 1970? The following A $5,000 INVESfMENT IN IBM in 1970 would today be worth Just about the same about A 1970 investment of $5,000 in Avon Products would to· day be worth about $2.500 And a $5,000 investment m Xerox in 1970 would now fetch about $3,500 on the market THAT SUMMARY SUFf1CES TO EXPLAIN wby thousands or investors have deserted the stock market for savings and loans, lottenes. the race track and Las Vegas casmos. Of course you would have come out all nght 1f you had really made those mvestments m 1950 -and stayed Wllh them However, 1! you made new investments m 1970, you could well be a bitter person today For example, between 1960 and 1970 the stock of Holiday Inns chm bed a fantastic 1,400 percent A $5,000 investment would have grown dunng that decade to about $75,000 But smce 1970 the shares of Hohday Inns have been more than halved m pnce A $5,000 investment made in 1970 would today be worth less than $2,000 A BIG MOVER OF THE l960s WAS S1mphclty Pattern, up a whopping 1,100 percent. Its performance since 1970~ Down more than 50 percent You would have lost more than half your investment Syntex as another old skyrocket that has fizzled After appreciating 600 percent between 1969 and 1970, Syntex shares have 1ust managed to stay even dunng this decade. Among the other companies whose shares have dropped m value since 1970 are Coca Cola, Polaroid, ITT, Nabisco and Green Gwnt THE STOCK MARKET USED TO BE depicted by its fnends as a hedge against inflation If pnces went up, the t.heory went, then pnces on the stock market would also nse Smee 1970 the value of the dollar, Ln terms of what 1t can buy, has been eroded by more than 20 percent And 1f you had any of your doUars m the market, the chances are excellent that the erosion was even deeper. What 1977 will bnng, no one knows But there's no ques, tton that the stock market Is on a long losing streak. Stocks Hit Again By Profit Taking NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market retreated steadily today in the race of profit taking arter its strong r aJ. ly in tbe fmal weeks of 1976. Trac!mg was active. The Dow Joqes average of JO mdustna1 stocks was off 11 88potnts to987.87. Losers outpaced gamers by close to a 3-2 margut among New York Stock Exchange-listed tssues Analysts found no s~1al reason for the market's weak· ness 10 the day's economic news. Aneerfea11 Leader• What Stoclu Did NEW YORI< IAPI Adv•ncn 0.CllM\ U"<llln9'l<f Total IOU"\ N•w 197' /1 lllQll\ '"w "'• 11 lows Prev ~r"'V O~ 'ltl 6-16 -0 8 •'l:J& nu Ill XIS I W'1A I AM~.lt UIO NEW YORI< 11\PI AdvM><tt Ot<ll"'S \ln(l\111<19(1 Tot•I ISSVI!\ Ntw 1'7' I I 111011• NfW lt/IP11 IOW\ Pf9V '1,od~y a.; ns n1 7", H I '16S 9n •• • '>II I • I Orange Coast EDI TI ON 'rocta,·~s Clo~h11i( .. .Y. Stoeks * ~ N TEN CENTS - jOL. 70, NO. 4, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 4, 1977 I 0 Billion Tax Cut Asked .Agairi . I 1 WASHINGTON <AP> -Presi- 1 dent Ford proposed today a $10-billion personal income tax ''cut along with corporate tax re· : ductions and an increase 1n V d Al S ks So • l Se • H•k Congress would wait Cor i .r or~ s·o ee cia cunty i e !'des!~~'!!-e~~cts~rm~;!t~x'7~~1 personal Social Security taxes The package is nearly a car.bon 'copy of Ford's tax.cut proposals that Congress reJected la.st year The White House said Ford's p,roposal would save $227 a year fbr a family of rour with an in- come or SIS.boo. The same size family earning $10,000 would see their annual lax burden decrease by $166. ll also would increase the in· dividual income tax exempt.Jon from the present $750 to $1,000, said L. William Seidman, the Folla~s Diedrich .1 Riley Elected Board's Chief Oellf PllOI P"°lo NEW BOARD CHAIRMAN Newport's Tom Riiey -I 2GG Women, 1 Male Held In Burglary A trio of Garden Grove res1- E, nts -including two teenage ls -were arrested early to- y by Newport Beach police er.they allegedly broke into an bffice on West Coast Highway In custody on burglary charges JU'e Adelberg Avery Farr, 22, Kandace Marie Gammill. 19, and llone Helen Garone, also 19. The three were arrested by Etrolmen Timothy Riley and cbael Jackson and Sgt. Jim rson apparently moments fatter the burglary at 401 W. Coast )Dghway. .t ... ~olice claim the three had 10 weir possession several items from the office. including an ant1- (l'Oeclock and a calculator. • D etectives said they got a ~rch warrant ror the apart- ment shared by the two girls and located some additional p1~es or yectroni c equipment they ljelieve were stolen In other com- Q>ercial burglaries in the county Faculty Seeks Aid r SACRAMENTO (AP) -A froup of college professors wants tJle state to reallocate more then 41,million to prevent what it said ~d be professor layoHs and ~ademlc program cuts. • Orange Coast f 1 . ,: ,, ~. Weather ; • Fair and m ostly sunny (.through Wednesday. Uttle temperatu.re change. Highs or about 60, low about.CO. INSIDE TODA. Y 1 • Thtte't no quettfoft tbtlt tM 1 ltock market ii on. C1 long lol- Jng .tr~ .. accordjrtg to~ ·not columnht MHfon MNkotrnti. P.oge AJ.t l•dex I'• IJ At All ... ,. II II "' ,.. .. AlttJ 11 .. Supervisor Thomas Riley o( Newport Beach was elected 1977 chairman of the Orange County Board or Supervisors today. Riley's election to succeed Supervisor Ralph Diedrich as board chairman came on a un· animous vote. The 64-year-old former Marine general's ascent to the chairmanship came 21h years after he was appointed by then- C a Ii f or n i a Gov . Ronald Reagan to fill the unexpired term of the late Ronald Caspers. That appointment was reaf- firmed in early 1975 by Gov Edmund Brown Jr. Riley cl aimed the Fifth Supervisorial seat in his own right last June when he won a one-sided primary election vic- tory over three opponents. When taking over the gavel from Diedrich today, Riley praised the outgoing chairman's energy and leadership. ··1 pledge my full energies to discharge the important responsibility of Uie chairman's office." Riley said as he took over the center seat on the five- man board. He also called for county gov- ernment to seek property tax reform and said realignment of the five supervisorial districts should be high on the board's business agenda ror 1977 Searchers Ply Seas for Oil Tanker BOSTON CAP> -Amen can and Canadian aircraft and a Coast Guard cutter searched to- day for a missing Panamanjan tanker with 38 persons and eight million gallons or heavy oil aboard. The search was expanded after efforts Monday failed to locate the 18.717 -ton. 644-fool Grand Zenith or make radio con· tact with it. Spokesmen for the Coast Guard, the utility expecting the 011, and Lhe ship's agent said it was not un1l5ual ror a tanker to be delayed and temporarily '"missing'' "The unusual thing is that it has not been heard from." said Coast Guard Petty Officer William Van Valkenburg. He said it is possible that all the tanker's radios are not work- ing. Van Valkenburg said it is rJossible for such a tanker to sink without losin~ any or its cargo oil and, therefore, have no tell- tale oil sll~k . He said a tanker probably would lose some of its propulsion oil if it sank, but such oil ''may come up slowly to the surface as a sheen rather than a slick and dissipate." Tbe Coast Guard said the tanker was last heard from about 60 miles south ol Nova Scotia on Thursday. The vessel left Teesport, England. on Dec. 19. It was beaded Cor the Fall River, Mus., area, the Coast. Guard said today. The search today was to cover approximately 34,000 square miles of Atlantic Ocean from the tanker's last known position south of Cape Sable, Nova ScoUa, to the Fall River area. The southern section of the search area rouglily parallels the rich Georges Bamk fishing .srounds. .A Co.st Guud airplane from Elizabeth City, N.C., a Coaat Guard helicopter from the Cape Cod Alr Station, a Navy plane from Bruntwlck, Maine, an Air Force Reserve plane from New CSeeTANKER,-P1geA2> President's economic adviser Like last year 's package, the proposal includ=s billion in corporate tax r tions. It also calls for a $5.1 bi ·on increase in personal Social Security taxes over a two-year period. Last year's proposal caUed for a $1.65 billion increase in personal Social Security taxes. Ford said his proposal is focused more on middJe-income taxpayers than low-income tax- payers, who were the main beneficiaries of tax cuts in 1975 and 1976. The President said. "It Indian Rides Again is high time to focus substantial tax relief on middle-income tax- payers.·· The proposal received an im· mediate cold sh9ulder from a key congressional leader, Rep. Al Ullman to-Ore.), who said the Democratic-controlled - Unidentified delivery man (right) helps Duke Hazlett return six-foot wooden In- dian to its rightful place in front of Hazlett's turquoise shop on Newport Beach ·s Mc Fadden Square. Indian was stolen Dec. 22 by a trio of revelers who apparently spotted the Indian after leav· ing a nearby tavern. Police traced the In- d.ian to San Clemente and it ·was returned Monday. Ex-pal Claims Complicity . Testifies Scuddsr Pwtted Own Kidnap ~ By TOM BARLEY OttM D•ilf PllOI S ... ff A defense witness testified Monday that potato chip heir John H. "Jack" Scudder of Newport Beach told him he planned his own kidnaping with two men now on trial for the crime. Witness Frank Sortino, who later admitted from the witness stand that he is on less than cor· dla1 terms with Scudder, told an ·Orange County Superior Court Jury that he talked to Scudder, 64, by phone a week after the aUeged kidnaping last Aug. 19. Sortino testified that Scudder told him during that conversa- tion he had plotted the abduction with defendants William Rudy Wesson, 45, and Ricki Dale Sellers, 20. Both men are being tried for th'e alleged kidnaping. Sortino, a Laguna Hills resi- dent, testified that Scudder told him over the telephone how he had escaped from his kidnapers by fakjng a heart attack and then leaping from a motor home parked in Fountain Valley. "Then, out or the clear blue sky, be told me that he had set the whole thing up,'' Sortino testified. "I was shocked." The witness said there was no response when he asked Scudder to repeat the statement. Scudder has denied from the witness stand that he knew anything about the kidnap at- tempt until two men grabbed him as he left his dentist's office in Huntington Beach and bundled him into a motor home. Scudder testified that he re- ceived a number of blows in the scuffle and s uffered racial injuries that compelled him to re- turn to the dentist's office a few days later for further treatment. Scudder identified Sellers as one of his two attackers. He said he could not be certain that Wesson, a former business as- Newport's Rosener Joins State Panel Newport Beach resident Judy Rosener bas been appointed to the state coastal commission by Assembly Speaker Leo McCarthy CD-San Francbco), it wu announced today. CRA!Jated SlOJlPageAll) Mrs. Rosener served on the former South Coast Regional Zone ConservaUon Commlsa!on Sinct tts lncepUon in 19731 For the last six monthi ol that commission's exlat.e!ce, she served as its chairman. Mn. Rotener, • lecturer al VC Irvine's 1radµale scboot ol ~attailon, wq told other appointment to the new atata commission last wf!ft, accord· tng to a spokuman tor McCarthy. Mr•. Rosener said abe wu llter'ed" to "'"'ve tbe ent, wbJeb. will IDMll ~ Jle1' work on the ~al eommlAton. Th• Nlional commlulont went Dill"""._..._·, oatottlfecllaatmOt\thandOneof ON STATE PANEL akftntdecilloft1faetnathestai. Newport'• Roe.net ) <See &OIENE&, hCeAI) ' . t· sociate and one time manager of a Corona del Mar bank, was Sellers' companion. Sortino admitted under pro- secution questioning that he is no longer on cordial terms with Scudder' due to a difference of opinion which led him to withdraw from the operation or the ambulance service now headed by Scudder'sson, Craig. Sortino said he called Scudder back on the evening of the day he heard the Balboa Island man's alleged confession and hooked a tape recorder to his telephone in the hope of recording an idenlicaJ statement. "I tried to get him to talk about it again," Sortino said. ~·But he paused ror about 15 or 2n seconds and then he said, 'Cute. Frank. real cute.· Then he hung up." Sortino's testimony rollowed the three-day interrogation of Wesson who repeatedJy told the jury that Scudder was the architect of the kidnap plot that was to put $250,000 into the pockets of five men involved in the abduction. Wesson told prosecutor Bill Morrissey that he and Sellers were quite prepared to go to prison U they had been caught by police while the kidnap attempt C~e HEIR, Page A2) economy. Ullman, chairman of the House Ways and Means Com- mittee where all tax legislation originates, said, "Obviously, we will organize around the Carter recommendation." Ullman said he expects Carter rSeeTAX CUT, PageA2) 4Jnget Guilty, Say3 ASPEN. Colo. (APJ With jury selection in its second day in the Claudin e Longet manslaughter trial, two more Aspen r es idents bluntly declared they believe the singer . is guilty in the death or her lov- er and could not give her a fair trial. The JS-year-old Miss Longet was tense and t1ght-hpped as she stareJ directly at the pro-. spective jurors while.each was questioned individually. "Are you working -on a pre- sumption or her guilt?" asked Deputy Dist. Atty. Ashley An- derson of a young photo- grapher. "I don't like to admit that. but l guess it's true," said Bruce Yaffo. He said he learned details or the case from Steve Sabich, brother of the victim, ski cham- pion Vladimir "Spider'' Sabich .. Moments later , the next pro- spect called to the jury box, a young woman in• he r 20s. • declared: "From all that I've read and my involvement in thJs, I already have an opinioO. That's not fajr to Miss Longet. It's not fair to the court." The woman, Robin Grasher, said she would require the de- fense to prove Miss Longet's in- nocence rather than the legal requirement that the burden or proof rest with the prosecution. Boll\ prospects were excused for prejudice. Two prospects were tentatively seated, bring- ing the total of tentative jurors to eight. Miss Longet is charged with manslaughter in the March 2l shooting death of Sabich, her ' lover, in the $250,000 mountain home they shared. Ir convicted, she faces up to 10 years in jail . and a $30,000 fine. Prosecutors have said they . CSee LONG ET, Page A2) 7 Final-hour Filers Joins School R 'lee Last minute candidacy declarations in the Newport-, Mesa Unified School District mean there will be contests for three of the four school board suts in the district that go on the election block March 8. , Only incumbent Trustee Roderick Mac Millian, who represents trustee Area 7 (west Costa Mesa) will be unoppoeed In the election. With only hours before the fil. ing deadline last Thursday, It ap- peared three of the four trustee posts would be won by default In uncontested races. How ever, Vickie Ann Bridgman, a housewife, and Thomas Crosson, an adve~ing executive, decided to make a race or it In trustee Area s (Balboa Island and Peninsula). 'Ibey will be challenging incum- bent Carol Martin. And Richmond E . Westlake Jr. became the second candidate in trustee Area 2 (northeast Cost a Mesa), where the Incumbent, Orville Amburgey, won't seek re- election. Westlake wlll square off against N. C. "Duke" O'Brien. Four Corona del Mar residents Will be vyln1 for. the trustee seat to be vacated by Thomas C. Casey wbo lt stepping down al\er , represeaUni tnutee Area 4 for I eiaht years. They are: Regina 1 Von Burier, teacher; Mar1aret R. "Pe11Y" Carey, teacher; • Daniel J . Wallace, d~y dis· trict aUotntY, and· ·&etty Jo Balley, homemaJter. A fifth potential candidate, attorney ' Cameron M. Srnlth Jr., did not ...ium candidacy declaraUon papen to the county ~ar o( Vat.en by thel>eo.ao?"°'• .. ,. .. Al'Wl..,.holo CLAUDINE LONGET WITH ATTORNEY CHARLES WEEDMAN All Bundled Up on Way to Manslaughter Trial Fro• Page A J WNGET JURORS. • • mi.zht cal l singer Andy Williams , Mi ss Longet's ex- husband, to the stand. But Dist. Atty. Frank Tucker has refused to discuss why Williams was summoned. I Williams left for Los Angeles after the noon break Monday. I s aying be expects to return next I week. One of three prospects dis- missed the first day, Aspen Mayor S tacy Standley, ad- mitted, "I felt the defendant was guilty, based on the in - formation I had r eceived" from a police officer. Standley, reflecting like T ucker the e a sy-going at - mosphere in Aspen, appeared on the stand in jeans and an open-necked print shirt. "People are very frank in this community," Tucker said of Standley's comment. "They don't beat around the bush.'· Tucker said he decided that Miss Long et 's 13-year-old daughter Noel. who was re- portedly at home when the shooting occurred, was "too young" to be called as a wit- ness. Miss Longet says the gun fired accidentally wh.ile Sabich was teaching her how to use it. Noel is one of Miss Longet's three children by Williams, from whom she was divorced two years ago. Plan Expanded Young Poet Eyes Presidency POMONA CAP> -Last summer, 6-year-old Andy Weike l and his IO-year-old sister. Shauna, decided to express their admiration for Jimmy Carter. They sent him a Jetter and included a poem to his d aughter, Amy. Both letter and poem were answered. Monday, Andy received another piece of cor- r espondence from President-electCarter. lt was an in· vitation to the inauguration. Mr. and Mrs. Keith Weikel s aid unfortunately they won't be able to accept the President's off er, but Andy plans to keep the invitation for his scrapbook. And although he intends to write more poems, his ambition has bcmexpanded somewhat. ''I've thous; ht about it," tbe6-year-old said. "And I think I'd probably like to be president." Newport Sets Sail In Nautical Course Newport Beach re!\idents in- terested in sailing -be it learn- ing the basics of bay sailing or perf ecttng the refinements of ocean sailing -may register for January classes sponsored by the city's Parks, Beaches and Recreation Department. Beginning and intermediate sabot salllng and advanced catamaran classes will meet on· OftANOICOAST H DAILY PILOT ~.:t.~:.!..«>::~r. :::i:::.::;..= c...l l'llOll ....... ~.,. ~-odl·-... pljMI--•'I' '"'°""' ~rl<lly ,.. C:O.tf ~ ... _ ...... H ... -... ·-111,_. lllft Ylllty, ln.lftt, \ecldl--V11!ty 1...t ~=~i:f:'~'::l'"~~ .......... pff41 ... I"' tlMll II It l» WHI Illy ~.C.iaMew,c.1-1111-• ·-·--"" .................. ,..., JtcllR.CW1irf VICI """1-•I -0.-al Mtflili"' '"'--t•ll ..... f.ttltt ~ ............ ............ 1 ... ~N.i.-.._.. ... Hf • .............. __ ~ ' ce a week for ten weeks on Mon· day, Wednesday, Thursday or Saturday_ Registration will be held tonight from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. at city hall. The classes begin the week of Jan. 10..15. Beginning sabot classes are $22.SO. Inte rmediate sabot classes .are $27 .50 and advanced catamaran sailing lessons are $32.50. The ocean sailing classes. which cover such topics as navigation, anchoring, rigging and reefing, meet for one weekend, six hours a day. The course costs $58.50 and the first course will be offered the weekend of Jan. 15-16. Fol' further information on sallfne classes or other winter recreation programs, contact the PB and R department at 6'!().2211. FordPmys ForCongreu WA.SHINGTON (AP) -Prat· dent Foro marked the openln1 ar eon.sraa today by •ttendint • traditional churc:b service where prayers were ottered for peace and for la.ttnak.era to improve the quality of Ut~ About 400 persons, fncludlnt n\emben of the new Hth Con1res1, the Supreme Court . and other aovemmeot o(ficl•ll1 Jotned Ford at the 3J.at annuu Service of Jnt.rceaston and Holy Communion at the Nattonal Pre1b1tertan Church. Congress Opens Byrd Takes Demncratic Leadership • WASHINGTON (AP> -Wlth the Democrats firmly in control, the 9St b Con g r ess today established two-year residence in the Capito l with new leadership and an avowed de-.. termination to start work on President-e l ect Carter's economic program. Senate sources reported short- ly before the formal opening of the session that the Democrats elected Sen. Robert C. Byrd of We st Virginia as majority leader, to succeed Seo. Mike Mansfield of Montana. In something of an upset, Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr. of Ten- nessee was elected Senate minority leader by lhe Republicans. Baker defeated Sen. Robert P. Griffin of Michigan by a vote of 19 to 18. Griffin bad been assis- tant minority leader. Baker suc- ceeds Sen. Hugh Scott of Pen· nsylvania who retired from the Senate. Byrd was elected by acclama- tion alter Sen. Hubert H. Hum- phrey of Minnesota withdrew from the contest. Sen. AJan Cranston CD-Calif ) aAt<eR CRANSTON was named majority whip, the post Byrd has held for six years, and Sen. Daniel Inouye CD· Hawaii) was chosen chairman of the Democratic Party Con- feren ce, the third-hi ghest leadership post. Mansfield served as majority. leader since 1961 but did not run Memorial Mass Set For Lawry's Exec A memorial mass will be read Thursday for Edgar Denton Lewis, 66, vice president and director of Lawry's Food Inc .. who died Sunday in Newport Beach. Mr. Lewis resided for the past seven years at 2224 Vista Doran- do. Newport Beach. For many years Mr. Lewis maintained a residence in San .Marino. He served as vice presi- dent of Barker Brothers prior to TAX CUT ••• will spell out his proposals at a meeting with House leaders in Plains, Ga ., on Friday. Carter bas indicated his pro- gram would focus on job crea- tion. Ford's proposal also would re· duce taxes for a family of four CARTER UNVEILS ETHICS CODE-A4 earning $30,000 by $256, and by S330 for lhe same family earning $.50.000. But a family of four earning $7.000 would see their tax burden rise by $25 to a total of $60, due to a Ford proposal to eliminate the earned income credit grant- ed to low· income wage earners. The Administration proposal last year was linked to com- pensating cuts in spending. But this time, Ford's proposal was initially unclear on whelhe.r he would seek compensating spend- ing cuts. Fo rd noted in a message to Congress that he will be sending up his spending pro- posals with his budget later this month. Fro• Page AJ ROSENER •• commission when it meets Jan. 12 in San Francisco will be whether to reactivate the regional bodies. '' l 'm very gratified that I ap- parently r eceived a broad base of support," she said. "I did not campaign for the appointment as others have done." Mrs. Rosener said she thinks her appointment carries con- siderable significance for Orange County because it marks the first lime a county resident has served on the state commission, "and with the Irvine coast development comjng up, it's got to be signifi. cant.'' /di, Amin Likes 'Emebbe' Film NAIROBI, Kenya (AP)-Presi- dent ldl Amin of Uaanda re- portedly has bad a private show- ing for his friends of "Victory at Entebbe," a film abouttbetuaeli commando raid on Entebbe airport last July. And Amin de· clded be Wtes it even. t.bou&b it portray• a defeat for bis army, Kenya's dally Standard newspaper r eported Monday. The paper said Amin Initially decided to screen the movie in Uganda "to show bow stupid it ls," but lnalt!ad found it enjoya. ble. Amin was quoted as sayinc: "l 'm portrayed very well tn the fllm.'1 Toll Hikes Eyed joining Lawry's in 1960. While living in the Los Angeles area, Mr. Lewis was a direc· tor of the National Conference or Christians and J ews. He was also a member of President's Council of Loyola University and was a current member of the Balboa Bay Club, Irvine Coast Country Club and Rotary Club of Los Angeles. Mr. Lewis is survived by his widow, Eleanor, and a brother, John J. Lewis of San Francisco. Rosary will be recited Wednes- day at 7:30 p.m. at Our Lady Queen of Angels Church, 2046 Mar Vista Drive, Newport Beach, wUh mass to follow Thursday at 9:30 a.m. Burial will follow a\ Pacific View Memorial Park in Newport Beach. The family has s uggested memorial donations to the Heart Fund. Auto Crash Cuts Power In Newport A careening car that police said went out of control on the ramp al the Arches bridge ear- ly this m orning, knocked out power to 680 Newport Heights homes and businesses. Jim Kennedy, a spokesman for the Southern California Edison Company, said today the people living in the area near the intersection of Pacific Coast Highw ay an d N e wport Boulevard were without power for about a n hour following the crash. Police arrested Robert Neal Bell. 25, of 848 Sonora Road, Costa Mesa on a charge of mis- demeanor drunken driving in connection with the 12:20 a.m. crash. Officers said Bell apparently was alone in his car when he lost control on the ramp leading from southbound Newport Boulevard to westbound Coast Highway and crashed into a pole. Police said Bell reported no injuries in the m ishap. Railway Reopened BANGKOK, Thailand CAP) - The first train from Saigon to Hanoi in more than 20 years ar- rived in Hanoi t-Oday, the Viet- namese government radio re- ported. The broadcast said the train spent three days and four nights on the newly reopened l,OOO·mile R eunification Railway. AlftNttk ~ ror re-election to lhe Senate last year. Byrd is regarded as a s killed t echnician at moving legislation through the Senate. His views on economic issues are close to Carter's, and Byrd is expected to work closely wilh the new president. At the Republican caucus, Sen. Ted Stevens of Alaska was elected assistant minority leader. He was unopposed. Sen. Carl Curtis of Nebraska was re-elected chairman of the Republican Conference and Sen. John Tower of Texas was re- elected chairman of the GOP Policy Committee. olll'WI......., NEW MAJORITY LEADER , Weat Virginia's Byrd Try Again Broken Waterbed Replaced Her Christmas spirit ended in a splash, but Angel's New YearstartedwelL WJDLE BAKING cookies before Christmas, lS·year-old Angel Anast filled her waterbed. It was a bit overdone-so overdone that it burst and sent a wave of water through her family's home at 25761 Cervantes Lane, Mission Viejo. Stuck with sopping shag carpets and a brok~n bed, her father, Zacharia, questioned his daughter's angehc status. But the manager of the firm where he bou.ght the bed ad- mitted it had been installed improperly and returned Mon- day with a complete new bed. "I HATE TO see waterbeds get publicity like that even though it's good for a couple of chuckles,'' said the manager wh.ile the bed was being rilled. Contending w aterbeds seldom burst, he blamed the Anasts' problem on the bed's lack of brackets. . · .. .. ' liberated Spouses ~ Win Place in Book · NEW YORK {AP) -The New York Telephone Company has bowed to liberated wives who want their names listed with their husbands' in the telephone directory. But the firm says it will have to charge 2S cents extra. The proposal. subject to ap· proval by the state Public Service Commission, followed complaints that listing married couples only by the husband's first name was discriminatory. The current charge for a separate listing for the wife is $1. The protesting women said they should get listings on the same line -just like the multi- ple names of a law fi rm or brokerage house. The telephone company said the 25-cent charge would be "nominal" considering the cost of processing the additional names. A spokesman said if the commission rejects the extra charge, the company will ap- peaJ. Shotgun Stolen A shotgun valued by the victim at Sl,000 bas been stolen from a Santa Ana Heights home by an intruder who a pparently entered via the side door, Orange County sheriff's officers said. Deputies said the theft of the 12-gauge Parker double-barreled shotgun was reported by retiree Alvin Stewart Cox, 70, of 2612 S.E. Mesa Drive. He told officers he was out s hopping at the time. Fro• Page Al TANKER ••• York, and a Canadian military plane took part in today's search. The Grand Zenith's cargo was the same kind of oil carried by the Argo Merchant, the Liberian vessel that ran aground off Nan- tucket and s pilled 7.6 million gallons into the ocean when it broke up under the pounding of heavy seas five days later. l•sl ftfitrtefefl '•'"'°" 0 200 MUH c ... .,...... The spokesman said the com- pany doesn't care whether lbt couple decide to have his or her name first. In other words, ia the case of the mayor and bia wife, it could b e "Beame~ Abraham and Mary" or "Beame, Mary and Abraham:· Will Nixon Go to Caner lnaugiuation? PLAINS, Ga. CAP> -Former President Richard Nixon, who has not been to W ash.ingt.on siaee he resigned In disgrace in l!J'111, has an opportunity to return for Jimmy Carter's inauguration. • Carter's press secretary, JodY PowelJ, said the Carter staff w4,c; following a tradition that all paS\. presidents and their wives are in· vited to Inaugurals. rn San Clemente, there was no response from Nixon's staff when. reporters called to find out whether Nixon intended to go to the inauguration. Powell said the Carter staff has heard nothing from Nixon, either. "It has been true without fall that traditionally former presi· dents and former first ladies are invited to a new president's in~ auguration." Powell said. Don't Touch The Cargo WEST RIDGE, Ill. CAP) • -Whiskey, whisky every- where and not a drop to drink -It m ay be the most frustrating experience ' shared by two railroad de· •• tectives. ' The detectives for the Missouri Pacific Railroad 1 ~tood guard over two ' whisky-filled box cars that '' had derailed and were un· ' der the usual prohibition , nottodrinkonthejob. The whiskey, valued at more than $100,000, had ap. · proprlately toppled olf the tracks In a cornfield. p,.... Page Al HEIR ••• wuuaderway. . Wesson 1a1d the Plannini of the kidnap waa carried out with '.!t! understanding that Scuddelilf role fn the plan wu not to be re- vealed by other complratora I( the plot ml•tited at any ataae <'if its execution. . SAtMtAMENTO. CAP) - Propot.ct $1 tolJ1 on three San Francllco ~ay brid1es would bo barred tor two years under a bill Pl'OPOled fn t.be leaillllure. Tbe Bay Bridle now bu a 50-cent toU. 'the ot.bu two are TO c.ienta. CROSSMARK8HOWSLASTP081TlONOFTANKER 28 People, Eight MllHon Gallon• of 011 Aboard "We •11 understood th•tt~· Waaon saJd. ·~Th~t was okay with us becauae w~ know tW there would be DO Problem• .na we would get the money 11 ever- yone did what ho wu •Ul>POIOd to do." J -' I Saddlebaek A t•tet•noon 1\. \'. Stoc k s EDI TI ON , I O L. 70, NO. 4, 2 SE CTIONS, 28 PAGES O RANG E COUNTY , CALI FOR NIA TUESDAY, J ANUARY 4, 1977 TEN CENTS I 0 Billion Tax Cut Asked Again, WASHINGTON tAP) -Presi· dent Ford proposed today a 1$10-billion per sonal income tax {cut along wit-h corporate tax re 'ductions and an incre ase in personal Social Security taxes ,The package is nearly a carbon copy of Ford's lax-cut proposalb that Congress r ejected last year. The White House said Ford's proposal would save S227 a year for a family or four Wllh an In· Ford Also Seeks Social Security Hike come of $15,000. The s ame size family earning $10,000 would see their a n nual lax burd ~11 decrease by $166. It also would increase the in- dividual income tax exemption from the present S750 to $1,000, said L. Wilha m Seidman, the Preside nt's economic adviser Llke last year's package, the proposal includes $2.5 billion in corporate tax reductions. lt also caJls for a SS. I billion increase in personal Social Security taxes over a two-year period. Last year 's proposal called for a Sl.65 • billion increase in pe rs onal Social Security t axes. Ford said his proposal as focused more on middle-income taxpayers than low-income tax- payers . w ho were the main beneficiaries of tax cuts in 1975 and 1976. The President s aid, "It is high lime to fot'lL" substantial tax relief on middltHncome tax payers ." The proposal r cceivt-'<1 an am mediate cold ~houlder from u key congressaonar leader. Rep Al Ullman ID-Ort'.), who said the Democra11c-cont ro ll ed Co ngress would w nit for President -elect . Carter's expect- ed p lan t o s timul ate the economy Ullma n , ch a irman of the House Ways and Means Com- mittee where all tax legislation originates, said, "Obviously, we will organize around the Carter recommenda tion." Ullman said he expects Carter <See TAX CUT, Page A2) Follows Diedrich Long et Riley Elected Board's Chief ' Guilty, Say 3 ..... O.lly Piiot P"°to NEW BOARD CHAIRMAN Newport's Tom Riley -Toro 'Dream' i Aqua Center Comes True I The Rona ld W. Caspe r s \Memor ial Aquatics Center at El Toro Hi"h School was dedicated 1with fanfare. plaudits and a l'lplash Monday I Several s peakers sa1 d it as a 'dream com e tr ue ' e The idea for the SO-m eter lymp1c pool was conceived b} obert Bosanko. the school's rst pr anc1pa I. before the school as opened an 1973 A comm1tt€'t' e community res1denLo; brought s idea closer to reality by ra1s i moral and fina ncial support I Supe rvisor Ronald Caspers championed rundan" for the pool before hio; death at sea m 1974 Hts s u ccl'ss or. S upe r visor Thomas Rtle). continued the caut'le and succ('ssfully fought for revenuc·sha rm)( run<l'l to support the project • Service Arca 6, th€' Saddll•back Valley Unirted School D1stnct Jnd communtty contnbutors also ~lped meet the $650,000 tab on the pool project. Construclton was finaJly beJ!un io December. 1975 Although 1t was scheduled to be completed an .lune, problems with the builder delayed the 0Htc1nl opening until Ulls week. It is. said Supervisor Riley, a aymbol of how the rounty and <See CENTER, Page A2) "or :~:ecJ .:a~I ---_,...,..,_ I We ather Fair and mostly sunny through Wednesday. Uttle t e mpe r a tur e c hange. Highs of a bout 60, low about40. , INSIDE TODAY . Toot '$ no qutalton tbol the .tock market fl on a kmg loi- Jng ltTeok,. accordmg to bu.n - n us c olumnh t Mi lton Mo11wwilz. P.agt A 13. IDdPX .llllY-S.,.,,k• 1.--.-Cll "' _,, ... AIJ I t ,..,... •• &.~ .. ~ "' ...... ~-, AU IMflll• .. ,, Ml ..... I N~ A• a..lllW , .. ,. =Cetl"'' •• =kff ts ", II s.wtl •.. , •• Sitt" ,,. .... ," AIMI E' ..... ,. ..... , .... AU ,.,_ .. TMa19" .. A1MI .... _ •• ---It ......... .... ......... ,.,. .. ' Supervisor Thomas Riley of Newport Beach was elected 1977 chai rman or the Orange County Board of Supervisors today. Riley's e lection lo succeed Supervisor Ralph Diedrich as board chairman came on a un- animous vote. The 6 4-y e ar-old for m e r Manne g ene ral's ascent to the chairmanship came 212 years after he was appointed by lhen- C a l i f or n i a G ov . Ro nald Reaga n to fill the unexpired ter m o f t h e l ate R o na ld Caspers. Thal appointment was reaf- firmed in early 1975 by Go\'. Edmund Brown Jr Riley c lai m ed the Fifth Supervisorial seal in his own right last June when he won a one-sided primary election vic- tory over three opponents When laking over the gavel from Diedric h today, Riley praised the outgoing chairman's energy and leader!'!hip Indian Rides Again OtUlf P1lol St~tl PMto ASPEN. Colo. \l\PJ With ' jury selection in its second day in the C l audin e Lo nJ:c t · manslaug hte r tr ial. two more As pen r es ide nts blun tly ' declared they believe the singer • is guilty in the death or her lov- er and could not give her a fair 1 trial. The 35-year-old Miss Longet was tense and tight-lipped as she stared direclly at the pro-. spective Jurors while each was questioned individ ually. 1 "Are you working on a pre- sumption of her guilt?" asked . Deputy Dist. Atty. AshJey An· ders on or a youn g phot o- grapher. l "I don't like to admit that. but I guess it's true." s aid ~ Bruce Yarfo. , He said he learned details of J the case from Steve Sabich, brother of the victim, ska cham- pion Vladimir "Spider·· Sabich. I "I pledge my full energies to d ischar gl' the i mpo rtant responsibility of the chairman's office," Riley said as he took over the center seat on the fi ve· man board. He also called for county gov- ernment to seek property tax refor m and said realignment of the five s upervison al dastncts should be high on the board's business agenda for 1977 Unidentified delivery ma n (right l helps Duke Hazlett return s ix-foot wooden ln- di an to it s rig htful pla ce 1n front o f Hazlett's t urq uoise s hop on Newport Beach 's Mc F adde n Square . Indian was stolen Dec 22 b't a t rio ol rc\'dcrs who app arently spollCd the Indian artcr leav ing a nearby tavern Police t raced the In· dian to San Clemente and 1l wus returned Monday Moments later, the next pro- spect called to the jury box. a y oung woman in.her 20s . declared· ·•From all that l 've read a nd my involvement in• this. 1 already have an opinio,.,,.. That's not fair lo Miss Longel. It's not fair to the court.." ) The woman, Robin Grasher. s aid s he would require the de- fense to p rove Miss tonget's in· nocence rather than the legal requirement that the burden of proof rest with the prosecution. Ex-pal Claims Complicity Both prospects were excused for prejudice. Two prospects were tentatively seated, bring-j ing the total or t entative jueors to eight. 14 Candidates Seek 2 Post s For SVUSD Testifws Scudkr Pwtted Own Kidnap By TOM BARLEY 01111• 0•11 y Pllol St.If A defense witness testified Monday that potato chip ht'ir J ohn II. "Jac k " Scudder of Newport Beac h told him he Fourteen candidates will battle planned his own k idnaping wi th for two seats on the Saddleback two ml'n now on tnal for th<: Valley Unifi ed school board. The crime. election is March 8. Witness f rank Sortino. who Fi li n g for s chool boa rd later admitted from the witness hopefuls c losed Dec. 30 stand that he is on less than cor· The 14 candidates arc dial terms with Scudder, tolo an -William Koehler , incumbent. Orange County Superior Court 24252 Encor vado Lane, Mission jury that he talked to Scudder. 64, Viejo. by phone a week after the a lleged -Gerald Klein, cluropracter; kidna ping last Aug. 19. 30602 Hamilton. Trabuco Ca· • nyon Dennis A Sm ith, incumbent. 25182 Las Bolsa s St . Laguna Hills -Mary Pta illips, vice president of finance. ::.;R22 Jeronimo Lane, El Toro. -Michael Patrick Clancey, at- torney. 25235 Cinnamon Road, El Toro . -Ste v e n L . Hac k ba rth , philosopher of education, 25674 Po Ave., Mission Viejo. -Willia m L. Kelly. college ad· ministr a lor , 26481 Ver acruz Lane. Mission Viejo. -Ma r vin Silver. telephone directory sales representative, 24051 Salero Lane , Mission Vi1jo. -Arthur E. Kraus, r etired business consultant. 331' B Via Carrizo, Laguna Hills. -J uneann Decasas. percep- tua l m oto r d e v e lo pme nt specialist. 25776 Paricles Drive, Mission Viejo. . -George Brebner, small busi· ness owner , 25491 Pina ta Circle, Mission Viejo. -G~rge L . Bennett, business consultant, 25461 MacKenzie St., Laguna Hills. -James T. Manion. financial consultant, 25211 Stockport, LagunaH111s. -Warren G. Kessler, carpet cleaner and private investigator, 25789 Marguerite Parkway, Mis· s ion Viejo. Water Bid Nixed SACRAMENTO (AP) -Los Angeles• bid tor m ore water from the Owens Valley has been op- posed by state Alty. Gen. Evelle Youn1er. Younger intervened Monday on the slde ot ln.vo Coun- ty, where Owe ns Valley is located. t Wate r bed Supplies Stole n in Viejo An intruder who apparently had a duplicate key to the front door has stolen waterbed sup· plies valued at $500 from a Mis- sion Viejo store, Orange County sheriff's officers said. De puties s aid the theft was re· ported by offic ials or Creative Waterbeds. 28570 Ma rguerite Parkway. They s aid a former employe of t he company is as· sistJng them with their inquiries into the theft. .,...,,... ........... 8!!8PR!cmENT CUEA'• Tony L.on • Sortino testified that Scudder told him during that conversa· tion he had plotted the abduction with defendants Willlam Rudy Wesson. 45 a n<i Ricki Dale Sellers. 20. Both meo art' i>eing tried for th<' alleged kidnaping. Sor tino. a Laguna Jlalls resi· dent. testified that &udder told him over the telephone how he had escaped from his kidnapers by faking a heart attack and then leaping Crom a motor home parked in Fountain Valley "Then. out or the clear blue sky, he told me that he had set the whole thing up," Sortino testified "I was shocked." The witness s aid there was no respons e when he asked Scudder to repeat the statement Scudder has denied from the witness stand that he knew anything about the kidtfap at· tempt until two men grabbed him as he left his dentist's offi ce in Huntington Beach and bundled him into a motor home. Scudder testified 'that he re- ceived a number of blows in the scuffle and s uffer ed facial injuries that compelled him to re- turn to the dentist 's office a few days later for further treatment. Scudder identified Sellers aR one of his two attackers lie said Teachers Eye School Board On S. Coast By ANNE COOPER Ot Ille D•llV ,. ... $l.tf The Marc h 8 Capfstrano Unified School DistricJ. tru5lff election will be a hotly tontested race wblch m ay establish a new precedent Cor the district - teachers on the school board. This was the prediction Mon- day of Tony Leon, president of the Capist rano Unified Educa· Uon A&soclatlon (CUEA>. Leon's election forecast followed hla an· nouncement that CUEA mem·. bers ra\ilied a two-year contract 1 Monday by a unanimous vote. He aatd about 115 teachers at· tended the raUllc1Uoo meeting a nd approv•d the c ontract 1tJJ)U)•Un• an a . .c pereti0t. salary I ~~·ACE,P ... Al) he could not be certain that Wesson, a former business as- sociate and one time manager or a Corona del Mar bank. was Sellers' com pa nion Sortino admitted under pro- secution quest ioning that he 1s no longer on cordial terms w1lh Scudder due to a difference of opin ion whic h led hi m to withdraw from. the operation of t he ambulance service now headed by Sc udde r's son, Craig Sortino said he called Scudder back on the evening or the day he heard the Balboa Island man's alleged confession and hooked a tape recorder to his telephone in the hope or recording an identical statement. "I tried to get ham to talk about it again." Sortino said. "But he paused for about 15 or 20 secondr-. and then ·he s aid, 'Cute, Frank . real cute.' Then he hung up " Sortino 's test1 mony followed the three-day 1nterrogation or Wesson who repeatedly told the jury t hat Scudder was the architect or the kidnap plot that was to put $250,000 into the pockets of fi ve m en invol ved in the abduction. Wesson told prosecutor Rill Morrissey that he and Sellers were quite preparC<i to go to prison if they had been caught by police whi:e the kidnap attempt !See H E IR, PageA2> Miss Longet is charged with :- manslaughter in the March 2t ' s hooting death of Sabich, herl lover. in the $250,000 mountain home they shared. If convicted. she faces up lo 10 years in jail , and a $.10,000 fine . l Prosecutors have said they mi~h t ca ll s inger A nd y William s. Miss Longet's ex· 1 husband, to the stand. But Dist. Atty. Frank T ucker has refused to dis cuss why Williams was summoned. Williams left for Los Angeles after the noon break Monday. : s aying he expects to return next 1 week. l One of three prospects dis-; missed the first day, As pen . Mayor Stacy Standley, ad·f milted. "l felt the d efe ndant! was guilty, bas ed on the in·I formation l had received" from / a police oHicer. Stan dley, r eflecting like I Tucker the easy-go ing at - mosphere in Aspen, api>eared on the stand in jeans and an open-necked print shirt. "People are very frank in this community," Tucker said of Standley's comment. "They don't beat around the bush." Tucker s aid be decided that Mi ss Lon g e t 's 13-year·o ld daughter Noel, who was re. porled ly a t h o me when the shooting occurred, was "loo CSff LONG ET, Page A2) 'Jry Again Broken W~terbed Replaced Her Chrlstm as spirit ended in a splash, but Angel's New Year started well. · WHILE BAKI NG cookies before Christmas, lS.year·old Angel Anast filled her waterbed. It was a bit overdone-50 overdone that it burst and sent a wave of water through her family 's home at 25761 Cervantes Lane, MissJon Viejo. Stuck wlth sopping shag carpets and a broken bed, her father. Zacha ria, q uestioned bisdaugbler 's angelic status. But the manager of the firm where he bought the bed ad- miUed It had been Installed Improperly and returned Mon- day with a complele newbed. ; 1 "l HAT E TO see waterbeds get publicity like that even though it 'ft good for a couple of chuckles," said the manager while tbe bed was beingfllled. Contending wat.erbed.s seldom burst. he blamed tbt An as ls· problem on the bed's lack of bracketa. -..., -·· , . AZ DAIL y PILOT SB Tu41sday. January 4. 19n Session Opens Byrd, B~ker Head Senate WASlll~(iTO~ IAl'I Wtlh the Democrats firmly 111 control, t h l' 95l h Coniirt!ss today esla blti.hcd two ) l'tlr r1:s1dcncc 1n t he Capitol wi t h new Jeadersh1p and an avowed de· t erm111a t1on t o sturl 1.<ork on P res i d c n t e I t• t l Ca r t t· r 's economic pro~ram Wtf e Listing Proposed .For 25c '\f:W YOHK 1/\1'> The :'\t'\\ Yori. Tl'lt•phum· ('umpc.1ny hJs hO\H'd to llht•ralc·d \\IVCS \\ho \\:int lhl•1r nJrncs listed \\1th lht•1r h u!>bands' 111 the ti•lt•phont> d 1 rt>t·tory Bul lht• firm SH~ s 1t w1 II h,1\t' lo chargt· 25 cents t•xtr;i The prc1pm.al. subJ<.>ct lo ap JH11\ a I by l hl' s t all' Pub! ll" Sl·n·1t't• ('om m1ssw11. followt•d t•11mplalllls lhut l1st 111i.: murned <·ouplt•s uni) by the hu:-.1.Jamrs first n~1 ml' was d1scnm1nator} Thl' c·urn ·nt l'hargc for u scparult• listin g for lht· v.1fc 1:-. SI. Thl· µrotc:-.lmg \\Omen said tht•) should i.:l'I listings on the saml' lmt• tll!'>t hkt' lht• multi pk nam t'!'> of a law fi rm or brokerage housl'. The telt•phonl' t•ompany s~ud the 25·tent l'har~t· \\UUld he .. nominul" cons1dc·nng tht' Cn!->l of 1>rot·c•:-.:-.1ng tht• ;idd1llnnal names ,\ !>pok<>sman !'>a1tl if llw <·mnm1s..,1on n 'Jc-t'l<., Lht• l'\tr:.i d1.trge. lht• t·ompan.' \\Ill ap JIE',il I hl' <.,pokt•!>mJn s.uLI tht· c1)m µan~ tloesn"t t·.irt• \\hcthcr the· 1·oupll' ll<'c11lc to h<•H' his or her nanw f1r!->l In olht•r \\ord1.. in tht• <'a'>t' of ttw ma)nr and hi'> \\lfl', 11 coultl ht·· lkamt•. Ahrah J m .ind ~ar)·· or · R1•.i nw. M :..ir' .ind Abraham · Senate sources reported short· ly before the formal 'lpemng of the session that the Democrats elected Sen. Robert C. Byrd or West Virginia as major ity leader , to s ucceed sen. Mike Mansfield of Montana. In something of an upset, Sen. I loward H Baker Jr. of Ten- nessee w as elect ed Senate min o rit y l e ader by the Republicans. Baker d efeat ed Sen. Hobert r Griffin of Michigan by a vote of 19 to 18. Griffin had been ai.sis· t:mt minority lead er . Haker suc- ceeds Sen. Hugh &otl of P en 11!_;ylvania v. ho r<.>tired from the Senate. Byrd was elected by acclama- tion a fter Sen Hubert If llum· phrey of ~1 1nm:sota "1thdrc"' from the contest. Sen. Alan Cranston <D·Cahf J was named m ajority whip. the post Byrd has held fo r six years. and Sen. Da nie l Inouye < D· Hawaii I was c hosen chairman of the De mocr a tic P arty Con· fercn ce. th e third -hi g h es t leaders hip post. Mansfi eld served as maJOri ty leader since 1961 but c.llu not run for re·election lo the Senate la!>t year. Ilyrd is reg arded as a s killed technician al moving legisla tion throug h lhl' Senate. I Its viev. s on economic issues arc close to Carter's. and Byrd 1s expected lo work closely with the new president. Al the Republican caucus, Sen. Ted Stevens of Alaska \\as e lect ed assist ant minority leader . lie was unopposed. Sen. Carl Curtis or Nebraska was re-e lected l'ha1rman or th<' Republican Conference and Sen J ohn Tower or Texas was r e- elected chairma n of the GO P Pohl'y Committee. • D•llY Pilot St4U """to ON ST ATE PANEL Newport's Rosener NB Resident Appointed to Coast Panel Newport Beach resident Judy Rosener has been appointed to the state coastal commission by Asse mbl y S p e ak e r L e o McCarthy < b-Sun i''ranc1sco}, it was annou'nced today. CR"elatM story Paj.!c/\Jl ) Mrs Rosener. served on the former South Coast Regional Zone C.:onscr vulion Commission since its inception in 1973. i.·or the last six months or that commiss ion 's e xistence , she served as its chairman. Mrs. Rosener. a lecturer at UC Irvine's graduate school of administration, was told of her appointment to the new slate commission las t w~k. accord- in g to a s p o k es m a n for McCarthy Mrs. Rosene r ~aid she was "very n attered" to receive the appomtmcnt, which will me~n an end to he r work on the regional commission. The regional commissions went out of effect last month and one of the first dec1s1ons facing the state commission when it meets Jan.12 in San Francisco will be whether to reacti vate the regional bodies. O~lly Piiot $Ult Photo ., RONALD W. CASPERS MEMORIAL AQUATICS CENTER DEDICATED Speakers Cited Comptetlon of El Toro Pool Aa • "Dream Come True." Confab ~~ns ~F.W DEi.iii India 1 '\Pi In duslr~ min1.,l<'r' from 22 <It.' 'cloptnj( countra•:-. ht•i.:an a fl\ e day confrre nt·e today to find wa}S to ensure m<11111tnal .incl trchnolog1cal coor rratwn :.imung Third World counln<'s ORANGE COAST '" l1?Jl£1Ql!tll '"'"Or_,,~ ('t.-,l OA1ly Ptl"t •lh ...,.,.,"''''""' "'"''"'N>Nrt111 ,,,,,.,,_ out>t1v.Mn,t,.nr..nlloo (.,.."I. ""b'l,.,1.,. ( .,,.,., '"• "''1l•""" P'd•h,,,., '°" fh•Dtl\.f'l•f't llil\1'11\d•' '"''"'4" r t1d4V tor c ... , '" ~ ... ,.,.,.l)r'),, f\#•t I\ Hul\t•"'qt"" "'°"',. I,,,,,.. '"'" V,.1 ,. • I•"'"'" u•d•11fllt-I w I> v .. 11,,., ""'' ~ "''lll"IA I'• ... 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'· --- Woman Suing Over Accident A Leisure World res ident who claims she suffered sen ous in· Juries when a luxury car and her bicycle collided on Calzado Drive s ued the alleged occupants or the auto for $50,000 Monday in Orange County Superior Court. Isobel J . Pummer names Min· nie and Allen J . Shafran as defen· dants in her laws uit and charges them with responsibility for thl' accident on Feb. 3. 1976. Mrs. Pumme r s tates her bicy· cle was s truck with such force that it was hurled 20 feet while she landed on the hood of the car and then was hurled heali fi rst in· to a nearby planter. Thief Gets S 1,870 Loot at Viejo Home Jewelry, coins, stereo equip· ment and power tools were car· ried off by burglars who entered a Mission Viejo home via the un- locked garage door and then pried open the door into the Jiv. ingroom. Orange County sheriff's or. flcers said Fire Capt. Theodore/ Col yer Foor, 45, of 26261 Papagayo Drlve, valued the loss at hls home at $1,870. Ho and his family were nway at. the Ume. f"ro• Page Al CENTER ... community can \4lork together to make the Saddleback Valley one of the finest communities. Bosanko cited the project as an example or the kinds of things which s hould be done in the future. Why not build county. libraries on high school cam- QIJSes, he asked . Although Mrs. Caspers held a front row s cat for the c eremonies, s he declined to speak after being presented a commemorative plaque. Numerous other people, in· e luding school and county of· ficials and community sup· porters, were presented plaques ·or appreciation. · The ceremonies ended when Robert Mosbaugh, president of the Associated Student Body, jumped into the water. Other stu· 'dents soon followed him in. The pool will be used for the ·school's physical education and llPorts proarams. It also will be -open 25 hours a week for use by community residents. Faculty Seeks Aid SACRAMENTO (AP) -A group of college professors wants the atat.e lo reallocate more than $1 million to prevent what it said would M profeHor layoffs and acactemlc pros ram cuta. Fro•PugeAJ HEIR •.. wa.s under way. Weuon said the planrung or the ·kidnap was carried out with the understandlnr that Scudder '::. role in the plan was not to be re· vealed by other conspirators if the plot misfired at any stage or its ~xecutlon "We all undc r1>tood that," Wesson said. "That was okay with us becaui.c we knew that there would be no problems and we W9uld get the money tr ever- yone did what he was suppose<! to do.'' Hiking Pair Lost in Snow FRESN O <A P l F our Southern Californians i.lranded in the snowy Sierra Nevada over the New Year 's weekend have been found safe, but a search bega n today for two other m1si. ing youths. Tom McCullough. 19, and his brothe r Bryan . 17, both of Fresno failed t o meet their father Sunday at Cartwright Reservoir after a wcek·long hike Crom the high Sierra ranger sta· tion. Fres no County sherifrs de puties said. AP WlrtphOllf. Fres no deputies completed a rescue of another party near Shaver Lake on Monday. Scott Grigsby, 13, of Sherman Oaks and Chris Whitmer, 17, of Van Nuys were found safe in their camp. CLAUDINE LONGET WI TH ATTORNEY CHARLES WEEDMAN. All Bundled Up on Way to Manslaughter Trlal Oil Tanker Missing With 38 on Board BOSTON <AP> American and Canadian aircraft· and a Coast Guard culler searched to· day for a missing Panamanian tanker with 38 persons and eight million gallons of hea vy oil aboard. The search w as expa nded after efforts Monday failed to locate the 18 ,717-ton, 644·foot Grand Zenith or m ake radio con· tact with it. Spokesmen for the Coasl Guard, the utility expecting the· oil, and the ship's agent said it was not unusual for a tanker l<> be delayed and temporarily "missing." "The unusual thing is that il has not been heard from ," said Coast Guard P etty Officl'r William Van Valkenburg. He said it is po~sible that al l the tanker's radios arc not work - ing. Van Valke nbuq.! :-aid 1l 1s possible for such a tanker lo sink without losi n~ any or its cargo oil and. the refore. have no tell - tale oil sli ck. He said a lanker prohably would lose some of iL<; propuls ion oil if il s ank. b ut such 011 "may come up slowly to the surface as a sheen rather than a slick and dissipate."· The Coas t Guard said the tanker was last he<1rd frClm about 60 miles south of Nova Scotia on Thursday. The vessel lt'fl Tccsporl. England, on Dec. 19. It was headed for lhe Fall River , Mass.. a rea , the Coast Guard said today. The search today wus to cove r approximately 34.000 square miles of Atlantic Ocean from the tanker 's last known pos1t1on south of Cape Sable, Nova Scotia, to the l''all River area. The southern section or the search area roughly parallels the rich Georges Bank fishing grounds. ' A Coasl Guard ajrplane from Elizabeth City, N.C., a Coast Guard helicopter from the Cape Cod Air Station, a Navy plane from Brunswick. Maine. an Air Force Reserve plane from New Toll Hikes Eyed SACRAMENTO (AP ) Proposed Sl tolls on three Sa n Francisco Bay bridges would be barred for two years under a bill proposed in the legislature. The B,ay Bridge now has a SO·ccnt toll. The other two arc 70 cents. York. and a Canadian m1 hlary pl a ne look par t in today's search. The Gr and Zenith's cargo v.-as the same kmd of oil earn ed by the Argo Merchant. the Liberian vessel that ran aground off Nan- tucket and spilled 7.6 m1lho11 i::allons into the ocean when 1l broke up under the pounding of heavy seas five days later Vocational, Adult Classes May Get Limit Saddlebac k Valley Unifi ed School District trustees will con- sider an agreem ent Limiting the district's adult a nd vocational education c ourses· when they meet at 8 p.m . Wednesd ay in Los Alisos Intermediate School Trustees deferred considera- tion or the agreement dunng their last m eeting. At that time. the y c o mplained tha t the Regional Adult and Vocational Education Council was an addt· l1onal level of bureaucracy. The council was established by the s tate legislature last year t o e liminate unnecessar y dupliration of adult education courses and services. The ag reement being con· s1dered by the trustees is con- sidered the first step toward the council's goal. Other members of the regional council, including Capistrano, Irvine, Laguna Beach and Tustin Unified School District-; and the Saddleback Community College Distric t, already' have accepted the agreement. Trustees also will be asked tn extend the ope ning dale or the new Laguna Hills rngh School to September 1978. Originally, the school was to be opened by the second sem ester or the 1977-78 school year. Robert Ferg uson, dJreclor of planning and development. said a delay in the checking of plans by the Office of the State Architect has caused the change in the construction schedule. In other sc heduled action. trustees will consider authoriz· Ing landscaping improvements at Linda Vista and Santia~o Elemenlary Schools and execut· ing agreements with architects for new elementary schools in Mission Vie jo, Laguna Hills and Aegean Hills. Plan Expa~ded Young Poet Eyes Presidency POMONA (AP) -Lasi summer, '6-year-old Andy Weikel and his IO-year-old sister, Shauna, decided to express their admiration for Jimmy Carter. They sent him a letter and included a poem to his daughter, Amy. Both letter and poem were answered. Monday, Andy received another piece of cor· respondence Crom President-elect Carter. It was an in· vita ti on to the inauguration. Mr. and Mrs. Keith Weikel said unfortunately they won't be able to accept the President's offer, but Andy plans to keep the invitation for his scrapbook. And although be intends to write more poems, his ambition has been expanded so=t. "I've thought about it," the• r..old said. "And I think I'd probably Uketobepres ~'I \ ,. Fro'" Page A J LONGET •.. t ~ young" to be called as a wil· ncss. Miss Longet says the gui fired accidentally while Sablcff was teaching her how to use it. Noel is one of Miss Longet '~ three c hildren by Williams: from whom she was d ivorced two years ago. f"roM Page A J . ,• HOT RACE :~ hike "sight unseen." .I Leon said the unanimous vote was a d e mons tration o f the· teachers• confidence in the, CUEA negotiating team. "We told them we had a fair, equitable contract . In fact, I can say without reservation that w~ have the best contract in Oran~' County," said Leon. "It was with this unde r s tanding that our membe rs ratified the contract."· <The contract is not yet availa •. ble, becaus e lawyers for the teacher associa tion and th6 school dis tri ct have been· polis hmg the language of the docume nt. Leon said.) The CUSA pres ident sai\ teachers are developing a new awareness that e xtends bey<>!\i the classroom. lie said cuq will support William Manahan in the March trustee election and may support Robert Bachelor 45 wel I . B o th Manahan anA Bachelor arc e lementary sch<><\l teachers in the Saddlebaok Valley school district. Leon said he expects other cait. didates to challenge the ap- propriateness of having teachers. on the school board, but he said greater conflicts of interest have existed in the past and not bee" questioned. · "Bob Beasle y 's wife wa:. teaching in the district when tw was a trustee." he said. "The chairman or my department ~t. Dana Hills. Fred Newhart, Ill, was hired by the district when his father, Fred Newhart Jr., was a trustee ." Leon hid he thinks it most ap- propriate that te acher concerns be r epresented on the s chool board. , ··1 know Bill Manahan, who is a reading specialist, has r eal con- cerns about the new Projet:t LEAP <Le arning Experience A~· praisal Program )," he salt[~ ''Who Is In a better position ~b. evaluate a program like thls; which is having great impact o~ our children, than n teacher?" • • Leon said the changing role bf teachers is only one or mattt.' changes he sees ahead in e<!ucli:' lion. He said the greatest s1natP: chan~e may be the shift ofthe fill( burden for public educatiQI\ away from individual property owners. • "Individual taxpayers are about taxed out," he said, "We're at the point now that. ~ teacher coming into the Capistrano school district wlU\ five to eight years teaching f!i. perience can 't afford to llye here." • Fro.PageAJ. · TAX CUT •• : will spell out b is proposals at' a meetlng with House leaders tn CARTER UNVEILS ETHICS COD£--A4 Plains, Ga., on Friday. . Carter has Indicated h.IJ p a:ram would focus on job crta~ Uon.