HomeMy WebLinkAbout1967-10-17 - Newport Beach Daily PilotOROO MICROJ'I.U(llG BIRVIOI 1010 E. Laoy St.
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Newport Barbor Today's Closlng
't •
, VOL:. 60, NO. 249, J SECTIONS, ~ PAGES
Board Mulls
School Tax
Deduction
By THOMAS FORTUNE
Of flle Diiiy Plllt Steff
H Newport Beach and Costa Mesa
voters continue tD squeeze off t h e
schools without additional money is
federal underwriting of public educa-
tion the answer?
Board members Of Newport-M e s a
Unified School District, without know-
ing the outcome of next Tuesday's $20
million bond election, will consider
that eventuality tDnight.
They will be asked to endorse a res-
<>lution making school property t a x
payments deductible from one 's fed-
eral income tax.
The resolution was drafted by dis-
trict budget director Watter Mrian at
the request of superintendent Leland
Newcomer.
U paued, it would be .followed up by
contact with legillaton who would be
urged to introduce legislation, Dr.
Newcomer said.
Making school taxes inco~ tax de-
ductible would io effect amolll3t to an
indirect Cederal subsidy. Taxes paJd
the district by the looal property
owner would be reimbursed by the
federal government in form of a
credit against bis income tax.
On the other band, the school dis·
trict would not yield local control.
Area voters still would have the final
say on bow much Is spent and elect,.
ed board members would continue to
be acC1>uotable tD the electorate for
school CJ<iminitscatioo.
Adrian sees the proposed resolution
as a way for school districts to break
out of a vicious cycle.
As a result of tax breakt to com-
merce and industry and t?ovemment
p1Jrchase of land that is removed
Crom the tax roU.,. &be tax bale for
local scbool support Ml ........., a.e.
ing·leS!lllned. he argues. · · ·
Consequently.· he ·notes, local prop-
erty' taxes become extremely high
and-bur4onsome. .
Now then, he reasons, the federal
g'lvemment wants to aid schools. but
direct federal grants erode local con-
trol.
So why oot encourage local prop-
erty owners to vote money for schools
by offering an income tax deduction!
This would be consi1tent with the fed-
eral government encouraging 1 o c a l
initiative in commerce and industry
by giving tax incentives.
Newport Chamber
Chief Supports
Big Bond Issue
Newport Harbor Chamber of Com-
merce President John Macnab Mon-
day went on' record favoring the up-
coming S20.7 million bond issue. At
the same time, the top chamber om-
cial took a swipe at a small group of
school dissidents opposed to the meas-
ure. "The Committee for Better Educa-
tion " Macnab tDld chamber directors
at their monthly luncheon meeting, "ls
agairult school bond propositions, ln
cue the public hasn't recognized that.
''You must take a good, hard look,
and not accept any organization at
fa<:e value," he warned. "Thi! is
something we're going to see more
and more of." He stated he personally supported
the seven bond propositions that await
voters Oct. 24 in the Newport-Mesa
Unified School District.
"I think that we. as members of the
business community. will be far
more eHedive If we each go on rec·
ord publicly about the proposals in-
stead of simply issuing a resolution In-
dicating our support.''
Macnab's remarks allowed a t a I k
about the upcoming propositions de-
livered by Dr. Norman Loats, district
assistant superintendent.
"We need one classroom a week,"
Loats said. "If you wish tD remain
free as a country you must have an
informed citizenry, and the schools is
wher e you begin.
"I don't believe that places 11 k e
Fashion Island (where chamber mem-
bers gathered) would ever be built
without good schools to attract these
businesses. It's all part oC the same
parcel. as far as I'm concerned ."
Loots said Harbor Area school chil-
dren are "far above" the national
average in abili ty.
He asserted ttiat passage or defeat nf the bond proposals hinges on whrth-
er Harhor Area voters want their rhil-
drt'n to "have the best," or '·just
barely ~ct by."
\\ ..
ALOHA, MOM 'N DAD -Tom
Allen, filth grade winner of
"Mother of Year" essay con-
test, says aloha to parents, Dr.
and Mrs. John S. Allen, as they
leave for all -expense • paid
week in Hawaii .
Newport Mother
Gm H~r ,'Break'
In Hmeaii Tr ip
By EVELYN SHERWOOD
OI .... DllfY PIW lttlf
Last Mey, 11-year-old Tom Allen ol
Newport Beacll wrote or his mother: ·
"She has seven yelling, self-mind-
ed kids to cook for, chauffeur for and
just to help in every-day problems.
She needs a bttak ! "
On Monday, Mrs. John S. Allen got
her break. She and her hUlband were
off. to Hawaii -sans children.
Young Tom saw to tlie vacation trip
by winning the first annual Hoag Me·
morial Hospital "Mother of the Year''
essay contest. The contest was held
in May.
Why did it take so long for Mom
and Dad Allen tD embark Ort the flight
to Hawaii?
· .. "We had to wait unW the children
were all In school," Mrs. Allen smil·.
ed. "They're now all accounted for
between 7 a.m. and 5 p.m. during the
day and a baby-sitter will watch them
at night.''
The Allens, who live at 2254 Chan-
nel Roect, took a helicopter Crom the
Newport.er Inn to Los Angeles Inter-
national Airport. They'll spend four
days In Honolulu and then fly to the
outer islands before returning to the
mainland.
An anonymous donor provided the
airline tickets and aceommodations
in Hawaii were donated by Rein-
hold Pfahler, president of Tran s ·
Globe Travel Bureau.
Tom Allen 's winnin · essay was se-
lected from more than 15,000 entries,
all submitted by Harbor Area chil·
dren.
Judges of the Mother's Day contest
were the Rev. Charles H. Dierenfield,
Newport Mayor Paul J. Gruber. Rob-
ert Guggenheim Jr.. Costa M e s a
Mayor W i 11 a rd T. Jordan, Walt.er
Knott, John 8 . Lawson. 0 . W. "Dick"
Richard and Judge Stephen K. Tamu-
ra.
Vote On Bonds,
Chamber Urges
Citizens In the Newport-Mesa Uni-
fied School District have been urged
to vote in the Oct. 24 school bond
electlon by the Costa Mesa Chamber
of Commerce.
The chamber board of directors, act·
Ing on a committee report, approved
a recommendation asking voters to
study the issues independently and to
indicate their views at the polls.
The chamber ii; not taking an orri-
cial stand. outgoing president Al Gei-
eer explained at a dlrecton meeting
b<?cause the chamber legislative com·
mittee felt Its study was inconclusive.
• • ' •
• EDITI ON
JUESOAY, OCTOBER 17, 1967 TEN CENTS
LA .Draft Melee Averted
Police Seize 19; Vinlence Erupts in Oakland
From Wire Services
Anti-war demonstrators threw them-
selves in front 0( youtJu reporting for
induction at draft headquarters in Loi
Angeles this mol'Ding, but p o l i c e
averted the violence marking similar
protests in Oakland and elaewbere in
the nation.
Nineteen persons were arrested in
front of the Armed Forces Induction
Center. Three were carried bodily tD
one of the mobile mini-jails and po-
Flrefiglaters Wea'lf
'Blazes Sweeping
Camp Pe~dleton
By CARTER BARBER
Of .... .,.., ..........
Some 1-,000 acres 0( Camp PendJe.
ton were ablaze today aa new brush
fires flared through Southern Califor-
nia -just as weary firemen were
claiming victory ovu the holocaust
which destroyed 60 homes in the
Chatsworth-Simi Valley area.
The bl.au on the ~ Bue near
Oceanside was reported to be a re-
sumption of a fire thought to have
been contained late Monday. It wam'l
Fifty Marines were roused from
their bunks at 5 o'clock thia mornilll
to join seven Ore-fighting unita on tbe
firell:nes. ......--
• Tbe flamea were bQrJda& .1rca.Jb.
aocalled Zulu aunnery taraet area, in
the central section d. the bue toward
the ocean. A spokesman said there was
no danger to any built-up area.
The same Santa Ana wiads which
sped the Pendleton flrea across huo-
dreds of acres of brush also were tan-
ning a 1,000 acre bum near Tecate,
Mexico, about one-fourth mile south
of Sao Diego County.
It was reported tD be out of con-
trol on a C1ve-mlle front The Califor-
nia Division of Fore.tr, uid no struc-
ture& 1Rre periled.
Ftre breaks were baltlly establish-
ed north of the border after the fire
at one point burned to within one
quarter mile of the San Diego County
line.
Although firel'len claimed victory
Mooday over the Chatsworth-Simi Val-
ley blaze, two fires broke out in Ven-
tura County about 2S miles apart.
One beaded toward tbe rugged tim-
berlands 0( Los Padru National For-
est and the other toward Santa Paula,
a town ol 20,000.
Authotitie1 said Santa Paula was not
in immediate danger. The fire was
about a quarter-mile from outlying
homes which were buffered by damp
vegetation around Santa Paula Creek.
Some 800 Orefigbter1 struggled oil
both Cront.s of this new fire through
the nlgbt as the ton of charred land
grew to 3,000 acres.
No control was in sighl
On the o t h e r front, firefighters
strained to keep the flames from Los
Padres' timber stands. From 500 to
600 acres of brush in the national
forest have been consumed.
If the fire gets into Umber it will
be inaccessible to ground firefighting
efforts because there are no reads or
firebreaks.
Still another new fire was reported
near Vandenberg Air Force Base, aod
arson lnvestlgator1 warned of utoo
many fires in too many places" as
they began full scale probes into pos-
sibilities that all of the blazes were
deliberately set.
Ventura County Sheriff's deputies
said it was believed three fires in thr
Simi Valley were started intentional-
ly.
Police Issued an all-points bulletin
for three men in a light blue car seen
Board Rejeets
I ~ -. Air . C81 Plea
For More Land
The Orange Coanty Board of So-
pervifon this IJlCll1liag gnanjmomly
turned down a request from Air CaJI..
foraia to lease a 11«:re me at <>r-
anee CoUlltJ Airport far a .........
ance hue.
J. Kameda Hall. of Newport Beach,
cbainnm and ptt:Sidmt of Air Cali-
fornia, said tbe airliDes will move all
faci.Jjties from Ille airport within tbree
months.
Hull told tbe mpenban the move
of about SO rmploJes and their Wni·
lies would co.t tbe CODDty about '70.·
000 in penonal and sales taxes next
year. The tnOft will not .tied Oigbu
intD the airport.
Dr. A. Renner
Succumbs at 83;
Services Slated
Dr. AJeunder Renner. a Mtive of
Huqary who spent almost three dee·
aides as a physician in China after
esaping from a RuaiaD prisoner of
war camp during World War I. died
at Hoag Memorial Bolpital Monday.
He was 13.
Services will be held at % p.m.
'Jbunday at tbe Latberan Cburcb of
tbe Master bl Corona del Mar.
A promjnmt ~ iD Chi-
na for 21 yqrs, Dr. R.ema-came to
tbe United Slates in 18, sbClrtJy af.
ter the Communist taboftr.
He was a naturalized Americu cit-
izen and served as a U.S. Army pby·
sician at Ft. MacArthur. San Pedro.
Survivors include bis wife. Teresa,
of the family home. 435 Serra Drive.
Corona del Mar: a son. Gabor 0( Del
Mar. and two granddilldren.
Interment wiO be at Paclfic View
Memorial Part.
Balboa Athletic Cente r
Groundbreaking Slnred
The Balboa Bay Club next week will
break ground on a '4()0,000 athletic
cent.er, BBC Vice President Richard
S. Stevens announced tod;.y.
St.evens said the racillty will include
a gymnasium, two four . waU handball
cnurts. weight training department.
dry sauna. whirlpool baths. gtmr
room, cocktail lhl r and a beauty shop.
The 15,00() square (oot Oblong Strll<'·
ture wtU be built adja('ent to the club's
maiis pool and tennia couru. which wiD
be equipped with nipt t.oumarMnt
Ughting and new rpectatar stands.
St.evens said George Hunter, long-
time high school roach afMI t>ran~t
Coast sports official. will manaite thf'
new facility.,
Two years In thr planntng. thr
proj~t will be C'ompleted in the sprang
of 1968, Stevens added
'
Federal Buildine.
On the aame steps Sunday. Mrs.
Ji'1orence. Beaumont, 55, burned her-'
tell to death &s a protest against
American participation in the Vietnam
war.
Cbriltian Hayden, 19, joined about
54 other proteston in dumping their
draft, card.I into a bucket which wu
then tam to the oftice of Rep.
Gesge Brown, Jr. (D-Calif.), to be
fanrarded to Wabiqtoa.
Police allowed the men carrying
the bucket w enter the building but
locked the rest outside. Authorlties
were prepared to disperse the dem-
onstrators but the crowd broke up
after the bucket was taken to Brown's
office.
The violence today was centered on
Oakland.
Helmeted police squads, swinging
billy clubs and firing eye stingblg aas
(See DRAFT, Pafe %)
GOO VICTIM TREATED -Fourteen-year-old Ron ~tthews, who
along with bis brother fell into a slu~ bole in Newport Beach Mon-
day afternoon, undergoes de-greasing treatment in emergency room
of Hoag Memorial Hospital. Aiding victims are (left to right), Dr.
Michael Moses, cast technician Chester Washburn and nurse Valerie
Cobell.
Tar Pit Trap
Trio R escued in Newport Shores
By BRUCE BENSON
Of "'9 Deltr Plllt Sllllf
1be draW'*k tD playing in a tar
pit i.I that you can't hardly draw back
out of it. three Newport Beach boys
were telling their friends today.
To the dismay of firemen and doc·
ton at Hoag Memorial Hospital, the
trio fell into the sticky situation about
5:30 p.m. Monday as they were rol-
licking through an oil field across the
dwmel from Newport Shores.
Their rescue was a total success,
and a tDtal mess.
Meamrblle, Newport Beach police
today reported they plan to investigate
the area and take steps to post warn-in&a against entry.
"I guess they were walking over
crusty -looking earth, that appeared
tD be real bard," 1aid Mrs, Eddy
Golden, 301 Canal St., mother of Ron
Mathews, 1(, and hi.I brother Tom, 13.
"They hipped and fell and started
to get in deeper. The more they fought
to get out, the deeper they went."
Stan Belaski, H. son of Mr. and Mrs.
Stanley Be las Id. 510 Canal St.. tried
to throw biS' friends a rope. He too got
caught in the pit.
Ralf a dozen Newport Beach fire-
men waded to the scene after rowing
across the channel in a plastic boat.
Other teen-agen responded to fire-
men's calls for planks and poles to
help remove the well-stuck youths.
Depth of the tar pit was estimated
by witnesses at several feet in some
places. All three boys fell on their
SUH!lc lfl•rkeu
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock
market cut its losses late this after·
noon amid reports that Ford and the
United Auto Worurs may be really
to push for a settlement of the auto
strike. Trading was acti ve. !See quo-
tations, Pages 14-15 )
The Dow Jones industrial averagP
~lashed a six-point deficit to less than
two and many issues madr strong rr·
coverics. U>sers still outnumbered
gainers.
backs and were described as ·•covereu
from bead to foot with the stuff."
But getting them out was only
half the battle, a Hoag hospi tal spokes-
man said. Cleaning them up required :
-17 gallons of pain t thinner.
-2'h gallons of liquid hand soap and
one gallons of phlsohex.
-Discartltq_g two p i I 1 o w s. two
sheets. two surgical sheets. two pillow
cases and two sets of shower curtains.
Seal's ambulance driver Dan Wad-
sack today saJd the ambulance used
tD cart the teen-agers, and one fire-
man, lo Hoag for mop-up operations
was also "quite a mess though we're
slowly getting it cleaned up."
We ather
Some like il hot. and they'll
like Wednesday's weather on
the Orange Coast. Forecaster
Jack Frazee sees a high of 80,
with inland areas sweltering in
the 90's,
INSIDE TODAY
Sometimes thing11 just get out
of hand -as they are currently
-bul /irr departments have e.r.-
knsive pr ograms in fire prevc11·
tiatt. Ste full page of pictures.
Page 20.
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•
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! DAil V PILOT
CofC Tells Bo~rd:._.G~'.ve Air Cal More Space
Air Callfomia tnday was armed with
a Newport Harbor Chamber of Com·
merce resolution urging the Board of
Supuvisors lo provide the burgeoning
airline with additional acreage at Or·
an~e Oounty Airport.
Olamber directors drafted the docu·
ment Monday on the heels ol a talk
b Air CaJ's Richard Dick, executivf'
,vice president.
"We thlnlc Ai r Californja is an im-
portant tcODClaUc e.oti\y l..D Or1111e
CountJ." Diet Mid. "Wt wqt to atl.)'
hen : afta' all, wt'rt the county's
o""' airline. But wt'vt tot to have
more space. soon."
Supervisors were upecle<J to tackle
the acreage request at their regular
meeting today.
Dick said Air Cal propose~ lo spend
SI million the rirst year ir gi\'en morf'
land to put up a maintenance faelhty
for its ever-growi ng fleet of rour-t"n·
itn• Dtctra tw'bo-prapt. _
"la .. Ur•t ~ ........ ·~ would ooaattUct • ~ ... ....
tnaDCll oMctJ. Latat. .. nil tD •
build two more hangars and olfleft
in order to have three ,ailCNft ·&&ader
cover at once. ~
"Finally, we'd Install a full-blown
tieneral office.•· · ·
Air Cal's maintenance operations
currently are don~ at Ontario. Dick
said continued growth at a rate faster
. NEW SPORTS FACILITY-Architect's sketch shows
what new Balboa Bay Club athletic center will look
like when completed next spring. Groundbreaking
tor $400.000 project is Oct. 27. Structure will con·
Wn gymnasium. handball courts, se paraje health
spas for men and women. (See Story, P~ 1)
,..
Funeral Service
For Nikki Post
Conducted Today
Funeral services were held today
in Corona del Mar for Eunice H. "Nik·
lti" Post. flag maker for most of the
Southland yachting fraternity, who
was found dead 1n her home at 400
Kings Place Saturday night. The at·
tractive owner of Nikki's Flag Shop,
Nrwport Beach, WU 46. ~
Ralph G. Miller. Miss Post's fiance.
·found her Jyinc face down on a couch
in the living room 1'hen be called at
tbe home Saturday about 7:30 p.m.
The coroner's report said Miss p,,st
had bee1I dead since about 9 a.m. Fri·
day. CaUR of death was not deter':l'in.
ed pendinC results of further t.ox1col-
ogic:al examination.
Friends of Mi111 Post said she had
been uoder m~al treatment for an
uker. Rites wen held at Ball% Corona
del Mar Mortuary.~ E. Coast High·
way.
Miss Post i.s survived by her n1oth·
er. Mn. Elmer Hohman, and a sis·
tu. Mrs. Alden Rolerinc, Cochran,
Wisc. MW Post started Nikki's Flag Stwip
m years aio. Besides designing
and making burgees, ensigns and
hoU!e flags for yachtamen. she made
the nnt official nag for the city of
Ntwpol1 Be:ach.
Sl)e was w i d e l y known among
vachtsmen and created house f I a ~ ~ i personal signal!" l for such prominent
vacht owners as .John Wayne. June
:wyson. Barv Goldwater and P:\t
Dougan, owner of the 12-Meter Colum·
bia.
SS0,000 Fire Rips
El Toro Marine PX
P01t eschange saleJ at El Toro Ma·
rine Air Station will continue despite
an $80.000 fire which awept through
the P.X. household goods ~ectlon early
Monday.
A Marine spokesman said the bla7.e
was started by an unknown cause
about 1: l~ a.m. in a former two-story
barracks used for household goods
and toys. An alarm was turned in by
a Ma.OM living nearby who saw
moke rising from thf' roof.
DAILY PILOT
....,.., ...... c .......
a.wt H. W..4
NMltMr
T1t.1us Kee.it .. .,
n-.. A. M•r,hiu ~Mt f dller
Jer-F. C.lli111
'"-' kedl CllY Edller
Jeclr l.. C.rley P .. t NitHll
...._ --.rr AMnltln9 Dlrldor
....,_. ..... OMle
2J I I Wtlf h i Ne II.ff.
Mtirlltf AoUr•m P.O. l t11 1171 tlUJ
Offi~ Offlu1
C•lt #at: D Wal 8't'f Street
L ...... 9Mdl: 111 F°'"I Ave-
llMllei4-,_,., • "'' """'
__ , ________ ,_
Fre• P .. e l
DR.Ul PROTESTS ...
from canJaters. marched Into a crowd
of 2.000 anti-draft plckel.5 today at the
Northern California Induction Center.
At least two dozen demonstrators
fell to the pavement, some with blood-
ied heads as police cleared the area
around the induction center.
Others ~crumpled into doorways with
tears streaming from their eyes. Some
fled across the rooftops of parked
cars, screaming at o!ficers.
Eifhteen demonstraton were treat·
ed for injuries at nearby hospitals.
One policeman alao was hurt.
Ten &rTesta were made.
More than 400 officers were called
out to restore Oliier. lliey moved
down the middle elf the street. With ·
in minutes, they bad sealed off the
block. Newsmen and cameramen
were among thoae clubbed or gassed.
UPI photoaraptier .>ack Holper said.
.. '!'he cops were as rough as I've seen
anyplace. They were indlJcriminate,
belting pbotors. newsmen and demon-~
1tnt.ors alike. J rot knocked down and
sqvirted with a can of gas."
Demonstra\tors, defying a court In-
junction, had staged u all-night rally
at the University .of California and
then re-grouped at the center shor tly
befon dawn. They picketed in front
of police lines, jeering the officu s at
times.
Al one point. a youth tried to shove
tnrough the police line carrying a sign
rrtiding: "Let the individual choose
in which war he glveli his life." Offi-
erri; shoved him back with bi I I y
cl11hi;.
The meleP. brokp out after an offi·
cer with a bullhorn ordered the dem-
nnstrators to disperse from the side·
walk and doorways of the 10-stor:-'.
tan-colored build ings a halL block
from the city hall.
Chants of ''Hold that line" and
"Hell no, we woo 't go." were scream·
ed by the pickets.
Sen. Thomas H. Kuchel CR-Calif.)
denounced the Oakland demonstrators
for comm;ttlng "a libel against our
country," &nd attempting a •·repre·
hensible threat to weaken the people
and the governm ent of the U. S. in a
fashion that the Constitution gives the
right to no man."
The anti--Oraft demonstrations. how-
ever. continued on throughout the
country in the second day of a week
long oationwide proteat against the
draft and the Vietnam war.
At Boston's Arlington Stree t Church,
67 youths. mostly college students,
burned their cards at the altar Mon-
day.
Afterward. 220 more youth~ sur.
rendered their draft cards to clergy·
men. 1'.be total number of demonstra·
tors was swelle<i to 3,500 by students
who arrived from colJeges and univer-
sities tbrougliout New England.
Four demonstrators were arrested
in Chicago after some 250 persons
tried unsuccessfully to push tbeir way
Into the federai building to surrender
their draft cards at the U.S. marshal's
office.
There were 10 arrests al the Selec·
tive Service Center in Champaign.
Ill., following a rain-drenched dem·
onstralion on the University of Illinois
campas. Two ol the youths cla,jmed
to have burned their draft cards.
In Portland. Ore .. three youths wPre
sei zed for disorderly conduct in :\n
antidrait demonstration after they rt·
fused to leave slate Selective Service
headquarters. About 300 more pro·
testers stood outside.
The draft cards of several Amt>ri·
cans in London wound up in the lost
and found department al the U.S. Em·
bassy there after they tried to hand
the cards over to embassy officials.
DAIL T PILOT ..... ,, -· U •rv Metchoolwch••
A Real Way to Cool It
Weather-wise llelen Ro s£czewsk1. Hl. had the nghl 1clca toda' ;i~ Or11n~e r oast temperatures soared into high 80s She equipped 0 hh
splf with lall rlrink. a "".A. hloC'ks of i<'e and a ro~til \IC'sa s wi mm1n;.:
root 10 hril t thP hr:it \\'t'athermlln says she m~' nrcd samf' <'q11 1p
rnent Wedncsd;iy. c
tPll utieip•ll Makel It illlpt'ediel)
to cootlnue Oylng the fleet to <>Nario
for malntena~e. , ·
"I must tell you that we're ' al-
ready . talking with otficiau in San
.Jose about moving the headquarters
and "malnte~l!lce s~ UJI there. And they re encouraging us in ~very way
they can,'' Dlck maintained.
He cbargfld that tbe Orange <»anty
Airport Commissioa has vacillated on
' Japanese Dig
Goll in Tour
Of Viejo Tract
It was apparently a love of golf that
drew Japanese oUiclala on a tour or
Mission Viejo Monday afternoon and
they liked what they saw.
The brief excursion lo the planned
comQ'lunity development was part of
a political and economic atudy awing
through North, Central and S o u t h
Americas.
The group was met by James Toe~
rer, vice president in charge of plan·
ning Mission Viejo. lt included Ume-
k1chi Nakamura. member ol the Ja-
panese Diet (parliament), Sbiro Sai·
ga, Los Angeles consul and Sb1kimi
Kodot.. Tokyo aeneral contractor.
Spokesman for Minion Viejo aaid
Saiga was familiar with the develop-
ment because be has goUed thett.
The group arrived MoedaJ from
Mexico City ad WlD luve Thursday
morning for Tokyo,
Kodota who asked about methods ol
finance. said that a bouse selling for
$21 !!00 he:re would cost about $40,000
in Japan because of the high cost of
land.
The contractor said when houses
arP ronstructed in Japan. the develop.
er dedicates the portion of the land
for streets. He said financing of utili-
ties in Japan is the same and asked
~hether school11 were private or pub-
lic and how they were financed locaJ·
ly.
Lo,·e, Sex Topic
"Cl1angln1 Patterns in Love and
Sex" will be discussed by Or. Ralph
R. Greenson, Beverly Hills psycit»-
anal!'st. at the 7th annual South Coast
Child Guidance Cliolc. meetinc at 8
p.m. Wednesday in the Corona del
Mar High School. The public is in-
vited.
only
WALL
TO WALL
CARPET
CLEANING
Air Cali&nia ,...,..... .. ...
acreage.
'·Now U.,'ft trying to hide belUnd
a 196.1 muter plaa which says avail·
able space lbould be reserved for light
planes. and that land sboWd be .US-
tributed 00 tbe buis of bids.''
Dick Usert.ed-u»t Air Cat "is ob-
viously willing to pay a fair market
price" fOr addHl ... l aicrease.
"I believe tlMlt ~ii beine ex-
' erted from ....,at aNtion fl"OUpa at
the airport wMch feel space is already
al a premium and should be retained
roe smaJJ plane~."
He cited statistics to bolster his ar.
i ument that Air Cal's economic im·
port on the county is far greater than
money generated from the 6.50 private
planes located at the airport.
"The tail Is wageing the dog," Dick
said.
N~port Merchants Seek
Parking Meter Muffling
Sixty-.sis parklag meten iJI N • •·
port Beadl'1 McFadden Square were
put oat ol lel'vice today. but area
merchants say lblt'1 7:Z1 too few.
1be Old Town Newpor1 ~alion
petitioned the city today lo cap dur·
in& the winter moat.ha all m parting
meters in the McFadden -Newport
Pier busiDell d1ltrirt.
_The meten, uys the merchants'
and bulineumen'1 group. ue a busi-
neu deterreat. rather than an a.set
duriq the ..,._touriat season.
·'We're DOt a.yin& that free park·
. inc will cure all our ills." said Mike
Boll wriety store eperator, .. but it
will cure .,.. el them."
Services Held
For Ex-Harbor
Zonta President
)&moriaJ aervicf!s .ne be held at
4 p.m. Friday in St. Andrew'• Pres·
byteriu Chard! for Hein Wallace Ri-
heldaffer. a . who died Friday at Hoag
Memorial HespiUI, loUowinc a long
illness.
Mn. Ribeklaifer sened as esecu·
tive secretary for the fln!. Or.
Charles H. Dierenfteld for the past 12
years. eight of wbich wett spent al
St. Andrew's and prior to that in Min-
neapolis. Minn.
She was president of Newport Har-
bor Zonta Club in ~-
She ia aurvived by a 509. John. ol
Wilmingt.ori. Calif.; mother. Mrs. C.
H. Wallace, Minneapolis; brolher Wil·
liam M. Wallace, Minneapolis, and a
granddaughter. Wibntnp,n.
Funeral services .nu be held tomor.
row la M.lnnupotis. •
The family suuests that friends
who wish may make memorial co.
tributiom to St.. Aedrew' s Church ror
the Helen Riheldaffer Memorial Fund.
W estclif( Mortuary is the director.
has it!
City Traffic E1lgi.neer Robert Jaffe
told the DAILY PILOT the request
will receive serious consideration. "A!!
previously planned. we took 66 meters
out of ~ervice in the McFadden
Square parking island today." he not·
ed ... They won't go back into use un-
til mid-March."
Jaffe said during the nut fpw
weeks usage of .he square's non-me-
~red space.s will be closely observed. ··u we find that more meters should
~ removed from service. we'll •~k
the City Council to take the neces-
sary action ," he ~aid.
Jaffe emphasized:
··we're working together with the
merchants on this ...
Among restaurants. business firm~
and shops represented on the Old
Town Newport Association petition
att Henry's Groceries. Tbt Surfer,
<>c.an Front Cafe. Blackie'• Bar, Bay
It Beacla Reahy. Levallty'a Market.
Swedish Cafe. Seafare Reatauradt,
Little Heidelherg. Restaurut lndont-
•ia 1nd Pelletier:S Variety Store.
Girl K.idnaped,
Feared ~ordered
CHICAGO I UPll -A menial
hospital worker, apparently urged on
by ··some kind of love motive." kid·
naped an attractive coworker a n d
threatened a murder-suicide. C o o k
County sheriff's poUce said today. A
March was under way.
Officials said Miss Betty Richard-
~-23. of suburban Tinley P a r k
State Mental Hospital. was dragged
from tM third floor of the lnstitutlon
Monday night by a man who sluggNI
a woman and shot at a mall' visitor
oa the way out.
Politt searched for Leo Wllliam8.
11. • rehabilitation worker who lived
at the bolpital In connection with
his duties for tM past l ~ years. A
letter' was found indicating Williams
planned murdeMuicide. police said.
t1mc::~~~~::-----~---
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distortion of the carpet pile. The
powerful DEEP STEA.M rinsing pro-
cess ~emOTes ~isture immediately
and hfts the pile to a "like new''
appearance. The need for frequent
profeuional cleani"I is reclucM be-
cause deeply embedded soil is re--
moved and lenes no residue in the
carpet fibers to collect dirt.
THIS DEEP STEAM
PROCESS IS
GUARANTEED TO
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FABRICS UNDER
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WHEN YOU WANT
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Our 21st Y Hr of Service in the Or•"99 County •nd Lonq Beach Arets
2950 RANDOLPH COST A MESA
PHONE 546-3432 ALSO IN LONG BEACH 3390 CHERRY AyE.
t ~--
Dt
So
In
WAS}
anklng
police ..,
tection
assesse•
lht col
the key
West G
The
the defe
Mo nday
tin of \
Karlsru
gence o
ceived .
now in
Marti!
off We6
spy ring
Allied a
defense
Five
one. a •
prison.
ures ab
released
The s·
Ye g v 1
contacte
a week
asylum.
De par
he wa s ·
Gennan
sources
Under
said 'Rw
cials wi•
whom hi
a ult:
-We6i
the five 1
was deg,
gravest
histDry •
-One
Jin. 39. a
Foreign
Sunday i
en's pris
Hoa
Tak.
Newpoi
investiga
tor's lou1
pltal wh:
and cred
A hospi
Small woe
port Bea
several 1
Tarr, 351
ported a
B
NE
•• 'I
Defected
Soviet Spy
In U.S. Quiz
WASHINGTON (UPI) -A high·
anking officer in the Soviet secret
poUce was in sedusion under U.S. pro·
tection today while American officials
assessed his defection. a top prize In
tht cold war e6pionage game and
the key to at least two spy rings in
West Germany.
The State Department confirmed
the defection and supplied bare details
~onday after Atty. Gen. Ludwig Mar·
tm of West Germany disclosed al
Karlsruhe that a Soviet KGB intelli·
gence orncer bad asked for and re·
ceiv ed asylum in the West and was
now in the United States.
Martin said the officer had Upped
off We&t German authorities to two
spy rings supplying the Russians with
Allied and German military and civil
defense secrets "of a high order."
Five suspects were arrested and
one, a woman, committed suicide in
prison, occasioning Martin's disclos-
ures about the case. One other was
released.
1'he St.ate Department said Lt. Col.
Ye g v en i y Yevgenevich Runge
contacted U.S. authorities in Germany
a week or 10 days ago and reqeusted
asylum.
Department officials would not say
he was the man involved in the West .. :
German spying d.i&elosures, but other
sources said be was.
Under interrogation, these sources
said Runge furn.ilbed American offi·
cla!s with a list of Soviet apiu '°"
whom be was c0atact man. Al a re·
suit:
-We6t German authorities arrested
the five persons last Thursday in what
was described there as "one of the
gravest cases oC high treason in the
history of West Germany,"
. -One of the five, Leonore Suetter-
lm. 39, a former secretary in the Bonn
Foreign Ministry, banged herself
Sunday in her cell in the C.Ologne wom-
en's prison.
Hoag Burglar
Takes $850
Newport Beach police today were
investigating two thefts from a doc-
tor's lounge at Hoag Memorial Hos-
pital which netted an intruder $850
and credit cards.
A hospital spokesman said Dr. K. J .
Smallwood, 2011 Westcliff Dr., New-
port Beach, was missing $800 and
several credit cards. Dr. Eric G.
Tarr, 351 Hospital Road, Newport, re·
ported a loss o( $SO.
AUSTRALIAN NAVY FLAGSHIP HMAS MELBOURNE DOCKS IN SEAL BEACH WEDNESDAY
Aussie Tars to Tour Coast
600 Sailors Also Will Vuit Homes
More than 600 sailors of the Royal
Australian Navy invalte the Orange
Coast Wednesday to sample the hos-
pitality of homes in the West Orange
C.Ounty area.
The men are stationed aboard the
HMAS Melbourne, 22,250 ton aircraft
carrier. The ship will dock Wednes·
day at Seal Beach Naval Weapons
Station to take ammunition and stores.
About 600 members of the crew
~iµ be entertained by host families
1n cooperation with Los Angeles at
Home Organization, a group hosting
travelers from foreign countries.
Don Gist, Of Los Angeles at Home,
said the sailors, both officers and
men, will be given shore leave about
200 per night on Thursday, Friday
and Saturday.
Host families for about 110 men
are needed for the Thursday night
leave, according to Gist. Huntington
Beach J unior Woman's Club is co-
operating in. obtaining host families.
International co-chairman Mrs. Pet-
er Greer will sign up host families
in Huntington Beach area. Her phone
number is 962-6221.
The HMAS Melbourne is the first
Australian ship to visit the west
New Vaccine Available
Before Flu Outbreak
New type vaccines against Asian
flu will be available to &range Counti-
ans before the flu arrives-if it does
arrive, Health Officer John R. Philp
declared today.
He conceded, however, that the
county has been unable to obtain any
of it to date and that it won't be able
to stock vaccine supplies for another
month.
"We tried to get some this morn·
ing," Dr. Philp said. ''We could not.
Only five or six drug companies are
making it, and they a.re not yel in
full production."
Dr. Philp said the vaccine, a new
type developed to protect against new
strains IX Asian flu, just bas been
approved by the U.S. government. Lo-
cal groups, however, must acquire it
from the manufacturers, rattier than
the federal government.
The county health officer said there
may be some of the previous type
vaccines still available around the
county on pharmacy shelves, but that
their efficacy is expiring.
"They are only good for a certain
period of time," Dr. Philp explained.
"Besides, they are effective against
the previous strains of Asian flu and
the next type will be different."
Dr. Philp said that there are no
signs of the new Asian Ou anywhere
in the world at present
"There is none around that I know
of," he continued. "We had a little
Asian flu on the West Coast last
year, and the East Coast did not.
Therefore, I would say we were not
so vulnerable to Asian flu again this
year as the E¥t might be. It is a
cyclical thing."
coast of the United States since
World War II, Gist said. The ab.ip
will leave Seal Beach Sunday after·
tor San Francisco.
Commanding the ship. which has
a compliment of 1,350 men and of-
ficers. is Capt. Anthony Monckton
Synnot. He took command o! the car·
rier in January.
Gist said the men aboard the car-
rier already have signaled that they
are anxious to meet the families who
will host then while in port.
The sailors will be taken home for
dinner and treated to an evening of
family life Orange Coast style.
Youth, 17, Slays
Inf ant Son in
Shooting Spree
GRANGER, Utah (UPI)-The three-
month-old daughter of an adolescent
father wavered between "serious to
critical" condition early today ln the
aftermath of a shooting spree in which
her twin brother was killed and her
grandmother wounded.
Arrested oo suspicion of murder was
the girl's 17-year-old father, Keith
Haggard, of Granger, who authori-
ties said had been separated from his
wife. Cheryl, :M, for two .months when
the shooting broke out.
Salt Lake County sberifrs officers
said Haggard broke into bis mother-
in-law's home where his wife and chil·
dren were staying and began .spray-
ing bullets with a .22 semi-automatic rifle: ,.
One bullet struck the child, Michelle
Kay, who was in her grandmother's
arms and another struck the grand-
mother. Mrs. Shirley Folger. tl, as
she was fleeing with the infant.
Tutsday, October 17, 1967 DAIL'! PILOT :J
!!_mnney Resisting
War Resolutioll
•
Splits Governors
ABOARD SS INDEPENDENCE
(AP) -A fight over a resolution en·
dorsing President Johnson.'s Vietnam
policy shaped up today as the floating
National Governors Conference steam-
ed toward the Virgin Islands.
Utab Democrat Calvin L. Rampton
said he would offer his 44 colleagues a
motion backing Johnson's pursuit or
~ war. Be received immediate sup-
port from the conference chairmafl ,
Gov. William L. Guy (D-N.D.), who
said: "I favor a resolution in sup·
port oC the commander in ch.ief."
Hunt Seeks
Model Feared
Kidnaped, Slain
NEW YORK <UPI) -An lnterna·
tional search is under way for
a shapely German model a U.S.
attorney says may have been kldnap·
ed and possibly murdered to assure
her permanent liletH:e in a '60(),000
dope smuggling case.
FBI and federal narcotics agents
have put all major transportation
tmmina1I under aurveillance In this
country, CUada and West Germany in
the search for Miss Erike Rita Bunne,
23, a blonde model who disappeared
from her Manhattan apartment Oct.
10.
Asst. U.S. Atty. Raymond B. Grune-
wald told Judge Joseph C. Zavatt at a
hearing Monday in Brooklyn Federal
Court, "There appears to be not only
a conspiracy lo obstruct justice. but
on top of it all there is the fact that
Rita Bunne has been kidnaped and
possibly murdered in order to insure
her permanent silence."
Miss Bunne, who came lo this coun-
try in 1963 from Frankfurt, was told
by Grunewald last Tuesday she would
be expected to testify at the bearing
Friday. When she did not show up in
court, the bearing was recessed until
Monday for an investigation into her
disappe.arance.
Grunewald contends that members
of an international dope smuggling
ring forcibly moved into Miss Bunne's
apartment last May to await a ship-
ment of four pounds of pure cocaine
from Ecuador. Narcotics agents said
the cocaine would be worth about
'600.000 on the illicit market.
But the plan ran into resistance
from Michigan Gov. George Romne~,
a recent critic of the administration s
war policy and a potential Republican
candidate for the 1968 presidential
nomination.
Regardless of the resolution's mer·
its. Romney said in an interview,
"Whenever there's an effort to use
this conference for matters other than
matters relating lo the st.ates , it tends
lo be disruptive and divisive."
Other Republicans ana Democrats
seemed eager to head off a possibly
harsh confrontation on Vietnam.
"There's no need for any great de-
bate," said Illinbis Democrat Otto
Kerner, pointing out that a confer·
ence of governors announced supporl
for Johnson's position earlier in the
year and that 20 Democratic gover·
n<>rs lined up with the President in a
caucus Sund'8y. .
Also apparently wary or wa.r policy
pronouncements were Republicans
John A. Love of Colorado and James
A. Rhodes of Ohio, who said they did
net think there would be a statement
of policy. :
"After all.'' Love said, "We Repub:
licans a.re just about as divided as
the Democrats on this issue alld they
have a candidate and we don't."
Besides Rc;mney, Govs. N e I s o n
Rockefeller of New York arid Ronald
Reagan of California, both frequently
mentioned aa possible Republican
caodidates for the presidency, were
on boa.rd for Che elgbt~y cruise that
sailed from New York Monday.
Romney, RoCkefeller and Reagan.
along with haU a dozen other govern.
ors, planned to fly home Friday or
Saturday. The remaining group will
return lo New York with the lndepend·
ence, due back Oct. 24 .
There was some speculation th a t
Johnson might fly to Virgin Islands
Saturday to address the conference,
but the chairman of the Democratic
governors caucus, Gov. Harold E.
Hughes of Iowa, said be had not been
informed of any such plans.
·Hell's Angels
Get SA Trial
Four members of the Hell's Angels
moloreycle club, who claimed they
could not receive a fair trial in San
Bernardi.no, will appear in Orange
County Superior Court Friday on nar-
cotic:! possession charges. ·
An Ontario Superior Judge Monday
granted the defendants a change of
venue because of pre-trial publicity.
Buffums' and Rob Roy presents the best i_n shirts for boys
NEWPORT • ...
'I
iO I I ;
'o! ' i I
~
I' ~
#1 FASHION ISLAND
'
• NEWPORT CENTER
~\
Buffums' has been in partnership with
Rob Roy, fa mous maker of boy's shirts, for
m.any years. Each new season we have a
fresh collection of shirts designed just for
us. Sport or dress styles in muted plaids,
bold stripes, colorful prints or solids. The
fabri cs are top quality ••• knit or woven.
Some are treated to never need ironing. All
shirts are tailored with care ••• and sho w
it. Come look them over. You'll agree that
the best shirts for boys ages 6 to 14 are at
(
Buffums'. Store for Boys
Buffums' is the auth orized headquarters for
Boy Scout uniforms and equipment in Newport.
u umS'
• 644-2200 • MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY 10:00 TILL 9:30
A .
• OTHER DAYS 10:00 TILL 6:00
•
4 DAILY PILOT
~tr Tiit OAIL.Y I'll.OT Sia"
More than 1,000 undergraduates
turned out at Ox:f ord, England, over
the wHkend to hear actor Richard
lurton and poet W. H. Auden read
a few rhymes. Oh yes, there ~ay
have been one little added atraction:
Liz smwed up to bear hubby Rich·
ard read. •
Tuesday, Ot tober 17, l 9b7
PROTEST -Jerry D. Coffin
(above) of Los Angeles burns
his draft card in front of Inde-
pendence Hall in Philadelphia.
At right, Christian Hayden
(right), son of actor Sterling
Hayden sits ln on an anti-draft
rally in Los Angeles.
U.S.-Britain Defense CtUe Netirs End ; 1·: : I
; • Anti-war JoUr.lift{ltr Joan BtUz was
; ; : ont of 1corfl haiUtd off by police ot
: 'the Ocskland inductSon ctnttr Monda11
: : ·tDMn tMJi atUMp"d to "Stop the
· : ~ Dro/e." Jut Jocit* tried to endure or-
Rift Seen in -
Mideast Move
In Civil Rights Trial
j .
rat &a fttl~: Su tDG1 tosaed m the padd~ U!ith G amile Oft Mr lips
onct o roae S. Mr IMmd. • "We are through having our
monks disturbed by worldly
tbougbta when they are striving to
attain spiritual aw'akening," de-
clared an officer this week at the
Eihoji Temple, center of Zen Budd·
bism in Fukui, Japaa.
So they banned girls wearing
shorts from tile Temple grounds. •
UNITED NATIONS (UPI) -U. S.
Ambuadtr A rt b u r J. GoldberC
cloaked Im Middle East peace ef.
f<ril in secrecy today, railing sptcu-
lation that be bad found some give
and take among Arab and Israeli dip-
lomats.
Reports of a policy rift between the
United tSates and London cropped up
as Goldberg, a lawyer with long ex-
perience in mediating labor disputes,
wcrted to find a peace formula.
Although British spokesmen h e r e
said reports of a Washington.London
split were "not well-founded," diplo-
matic sour~es abroad confirmed what
has been an open secret for weeks:
tbe United States stands firmly be-
hind Israel while Britain bas drifted
more to the Arab side.
The British are anxious to get the
Suet Canal open.
Goldberg's appointment list today
included more talks with diplomats
hold.in& a stake in the Mideast prob-
lem. Be met Monday afternoon with
Egyptian Foreign Minister Mahmoud
RJad.
MElUDIAH, Mia. (UPO -'l1le ._
(tue ... apedld ...... ill cw
today ............ ...
men to tatifJ !m tbt.ir' on ....., re..
ga.rding dlargea lbeJ umpiaal ...
three young ciril rtgbts .. ._,.,
Nearly 100 dlaracter and alibi wit..
nesses have beell ldwdaled bJ 1be
battery of 1% ddeme atblmie)'s ...
testimony bdote the trial ps • a
all-white, predomimatly female jmy,
probably Wednesday.
Fifty·seven w:itoraa testified..__
day and placed nriOlll ddm n .
who include the brad GI the W II I t e
Knights of the Ka Klax Klan and foar
law enforcement officen. at lpOtl ..
er than the dirt l'Olld near Philadel-
phia, MW., where the FBI aaid three
youths were killed oa June ll, 1114.
Goverment witnesses.. inc..._,
four FBI informers, earlier tntifmed
~ the Klan ploaed the llayiJtCJ GI
Michael Sdlwemer and Andrew Good-
man, both white New YGl'.Rn. and
James Chaney, Negro from Mmdir
an.
The FBI contended the _.. involv·
ed only Scbwemer became fll bis dv·
ii rights actmtiea ill Ml-iwif!IA. and
When Mrs. Jacquelint Kennedy
leaves f or Cambodia in about two
weeks, she'll be accompanitd by Mich·
ael V. Forrelf.al, 40, b<ICMlor aon of
the late dtfeme aecretary James V.
Forrest.al. He is the latest in o series
of flame reports f or JFK's wid-Ow.
Ex-Advisor Sorensen Says
U.S. Should Stop Bombing
• . -
For emaa Clem Jackson was '
plagued by so meny qtM!Sti<>ns
on rhis construction j<>b at Chi·
cago's county building that be
finally ecected this 1i?:
"For your inf ormatron, this
is an information booth being
built."
~ ~··!.U1mll!lmm;;md •
Actress Meredith MacR .. , 22·
year-old daughter of entertaioers
Gordon and Sheila MKRH, Monday
shed her hubby, accountant Rlcherd
l. Berger. Meredith said he left her
alone "inany times" during their
mamage. She waived alimony. He
gets to keep the Studio City borne.
NEW YORK (UPI) -Theodore C.
Sorensen, former special counsel to
Presidents Kennedy and Johnson.
says the United States should suspend
its bombing of North Vietnam a s a
step t o w a rd extricating ttle nation
from a war "we' cannot ever exPl!ct
to win."
In an article in the current Satur-
day Review, ~ Manhattan attorney
said he believes "the President's
friends and supporters tod.ay can best
serve him as well as the country by
speaking out." ·
"There is anady a danger that we
have passed the point of no return
beyond which neither the Hanoi re-
gime nor the Administration in Wash-
ington could reach an accommoda-
tion with the other without the risk
o! being turned out of ofooe," Soren-
sen said.
He added, however. that be thinks
a new opportunity to find peatt may
be provided by the a(Jlroaching holi-
day season.
··we have been able to arrange ia
recent years a Christmas cease fire
in Vietnam," be said. ··u we plan and
work for it now, we can be )Xepaitd
this Christmas to have the firing
cease forever."
Sorensen said be believes the form
of peace oegot.iatiol)s most tikdy to
succeed woufd be a lecn!t confft'enee
with oo mediator, arbitrator or press
releases. He uid such talb might
avoid potential Red C2U.nese pres-
sures.
"We have not given the pursuit GI 1 peace the same eff.orl. ingamity 1 and relentless consist.mcy •e have 1 given to prosecuting the war .....
Sorensen said.
Alamosa, Colo. Down. To 17
Styles are Swimsuits Locally, Raincoats in EMt
Sun, Moott, Tides
WEDNESDAY
Finl !cw
Flnt high
Second tow • Second hlg~ ..
. 3: 14 a.m. 1.2
t :31 a.m. 5.6
.• .• 3:S.C p.m. o.i
. 10:02 p.m. '·'
M-Set• 7:13 Am. lllMS 6:31 p.m.
Sllft ., ... 1:00 A.m. StlS 6:16 p.m.
J:ull Lall 0 . Nt• l'lnl O.
Oct. 11 Oct. 76 NoY 1 NOV. •
Orange Coast
Light va rla"6 wine!• nlt hl and morn-
ing hours be<oml"O WttltrtY I to u
knotl In ef!arnoom. loda'f and Wed• nesd11'. PatcllY fog WedM~Y ....,,,,..
Ing otlltrwlM clHr niotll t nd "'""" dna tllroutfl Wedne141Y.
Y~Y Ill~ thermometer regl> f~re<f 8 l)lgh "' U Ind 8 low ef a7,
The "" te""9reture w111 61.2.
California
l rlght autumn we.Iller continued In SOuthern C.llfornl1 toCln wllh
Jlllta rem11lnl119 cle1r lat! night •ftd tod•Y. Tampwehires wtr• warmer tn-
land arid aPohllY cootv alOftO 1111
CO.SI,
LO& Anotles al(iff etao c.ontl~
Cl@l r. Temperafuru w er e coote<I
allghl!V from MCllld•Y'S high ot 98 to
'5 TM1ltllt'1 low should be ~, A
combll'ftlon of htoh preuure '"'''"'' 111 the dHtrl to the east and low
prt uure over the octtn produced
ou•IY Santa Ana wln<ls. Winds •nd tow humidity mtant en extreme fire
htrtrd In rurt l t reH .
Smee WO fight tn lllf L°' Al'lfl•~
ba•ln tacr.y. a<cordl,,g to th<t Al•
Pollution CM1trol District.
8NCllti were iURM Ind wtrm. Air
trm-•turu rudled IJ to fO, Wiiii•
" . '
" turtHc•n•
\,COOL
w1ter lemper1turu reached !hf htQh
60$, Mount1ln area& were 1unnY •ncl werm. Hloh ,.,,,PH•lur• al resort
llvtl1 -• In llM 10l.
Dewt• ..,.,. hol and clear, H19h
teml'erllUIU IMChed 80 to '° In up. ,,.,. valtfY• 1"4 100 in lower v1llen
lJ .s. Sum ttuary
lffl" M)tked • ?4-slltr trt.• lott~v
from Florid& to the Greet L•k•• •!'O
New E"Ol•nd with hu vltll fl'•c•pll&
lion tal1ls tr !ht Tt"".,set •"" '"'°"'' Ohio River V•lloys.
l!•l"l•ll .tmount• ra~d loom "'"''
lh•n an lr\Ch 4nd & h•ll In l'ld•M~ '"
'"'' undrr an i~h In A18bAm~ And Ark•Mo H&rrlso•1. Ark. ha\ IN'"'
ure<f mt,tf lhan tour In(~\ Of r81"
11nct. $undav
G'nfir811Y, ,..,,,., Wfl1' <.l<>udv f\nd
W••lller wa. mild ovtr th• E••t •n<I
tlur lk•M wert lhf rulr ovrr l"t
WMlern hell of the n1tl0fl. Own>lght
m1n1mums r•l19fd from 17 t i Al•l"O'O·
Colo., to 77 ., ICIY wut, Fla.
Tile weelher 111t1ern wH expec:t..i to hold through Wedntsdn but wilfl
cold frOftl& .. tencling from northwe•I
Florldt lo weslern ICentvcllY •rid i.
coming 1t1tlonery I" M-England
Anotlle1 cold "°"' w•• developing trom Ille Grffl l.11<,eo thr<N91t IC...,·
11> lo lhc Potlfk Nortllwttt
Se\ithern Celtfornta h&d CO'lttflVl"d
het wt•th" with tu•fY winch end
11""' .. '"" ,.,.~, '"",
Temperatures
/;.l~Wt""'lll<f
.Ancl'\~re?'
"""""'• 8Akrr,flfld
B"mittt~ llo•w
Bn>tnn
\,
H 1•h L.o• l'rtc
Al }\
4• 1.1 /ft ~1 ,.,
'O '6
Al JS
4\ 1<\
6,J »
Butfale
Cit~
Cit!c"-"
Cie'w""" °""-°"' Mo!-~""' EUt"dla Fi l,,,. .. , F0<1 _,,,
F f"l!jftC)
14itlef\t .._ ...
Mcus!Ool
tndianapolos
Jadt-lllt June..,
ic ...... (lty
LA•V~
l.O\ "'-~ Lc;i1sv1t1t
Mempltl\
Nli..,W
Milw-Mln'lfllrx>ll>
"4!w Ot\Nfll
.. fW y~
O.t~tand °""''-(fly Om .... Puo ltat>t.•
PM.clelpl\la
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Pif .. ..bo.t<tll ,..,., ... ,.,
lt•e>id ,,..,
II~ lltuff
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~·" l-~"" (ftll ~lllA 0~ s""" ·~tvr s.-1'1•• ,. .... s •"!• ll>•bo•. S'•""' S"Ylri'N
T,.""'C-"
ft--""' W•\tl-1..,fl"•
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Japan PM Ill
AUCKLANli fUPl) -Japanese
Prime ICnril(er EUaku Sato, suffer-
ing tr-om a cold and wearied by
lengthy otficial tours, rated at his
bokl here today after cutting short a
visit to Hamilton Monday. He was to
resiae llil New 7.nland appearances
tomglil.
'
II
a.Ill
--r--·
I
• "
Refpsed Div orce
Kirschke Beat
I
Wife: Witness
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Two wit·
neues in the Jack Kirschke murder
trial have testified that Kirschke ad·
mitteci beating hiJ wife and that
Elalne Terry Kirschke was turned
down by her husband when she asked
him for a divorce.
Kirschke. 46, a suspended deputy
district attorney, is charged with mur·
der in the April 8 deaths of his 43-
year-old wife and Orville William
Drankhan, 41, in the Kirschkes' Long
Beach apartment.
Kirschke' a private secretary. Shar·
on Lyle. 35, of Whittier, testified Mon·
day that Kinchke told her "he had
beaten Elaine until he fin.ally had her
boy friend's first name out of her ."
Sometime between October and De-
cember, Mrs. .Lyle said, Kirschke
said his wife had a boy friend named
·Bill Testimony has shown that Drank·
ban often went under the name of
Bill.
The witness said Kirschke often dis-
cussed his marital problems with her.
She also said Kirschke mentioned
be had bad Drankhan checked out to
make sure "he wa& all right for his
wife: .. a fit boy friend."
Earlier, a Kirschke neighbor testi·
Spying Suspects
Guarded After ,
Foorth Suicide
KARLSRUHE, Germany (UPl)-
Jailers today began keeping peep-
hole watch over three alleged Soviet
agents after a fourth committed sui·
cide in her cell.
Prison officials said any personal ef-
fect that could be used in a suicide at·
tempt bas been stripped from the trio,
rounded up aftef' a Soviet spymaster
defected to the West and reportedly
listed . his agents to U.S. intelligence
of.ficers.
Leonore Suetterlin, a 39-year-o l d
West German Foreign Ministry secre·
tary and one of the persons arrested,
hanged herself Sunday with a noose
fashioned from her pajamas. the of·
fi cials said.
They said visitors to the jailed lrio
have been cut to a minimum in a
further attempt to prevent any further
trouble. Jailers said they were check-
ing the prisoners through peep holes
at least once an hour.
fied Mrs. Kirschke once told her Kir·
schke bad broken some of her ribs.
Mara Herfter said she f1rst le~ned
of the injuries from Klrsehlte at a
December cocktail party. She denied
Kirschke had told her his wife had
fallen in a boat.
The witness also testified that. at
a Dec. 4 cocktail party at the Henter
home. Mrs. Kirschke asked her bus.
band for a divorce.
"Sh~ said he said no, not in the
position he was in," Mrs. Herfter
sald.
Steel Strike
Pact Move
Turned Down
PITTSBURGH (UPl)-A new pro-
posal to settle a lengthy steel haulers
strike appeared doomed today when
the chief spokesman for the strikers
rejected it as unacceptable.
The situation was a revergal of last
. week's positions of the main parties
in the dispute. Last week the ~.<XXI
striking steel haulers in elibt states
accepted an original settlement pro-posal and the tructlng compules re-
)ected It.
The latest proposal, drawn up by a
'mediation panel represeating .even
of the eight states, appeared to be
acceptable to the companies but not
to the drivers.
This made it likely the mediation
panel would be called into session
again to· dra'! up a compromise third
proposal.
The recurring violence which has
marked the long strike codinued.
At least five trucks were hit by.rocks
dropped from overpasses on the Pen-
n11ylvania Turnpike in Somerset Coun-
ty. None of Ute drivers was injured.
Deny Sabotage
ATHENS (UPI) ::..: The Grffk gov-
ernment issued a ~!atement Monday
strongly rejecting speculation .that sa·
botage caused the crasb last week of
a British European Airways jet on a
flight from Athens to Nicosia. All 66
persons aboard were killed.
This is no run·of·the-mill Bour~
Ifs Bourbon with a richer, more rotro'lt
taste. More of the taste that Bourbon
was meant to have.
t
It's Bourbon aged till the years have
rounded out the taste and worn away
the edc;ies..
Ifs Bourbon as smooth as a man could
ask for. With all the taste of old-time
whiskey, yet easy and melJow
qoinq down .
If you know enough to know qood
Bourbon, this one is worth tryinq.
-"-~
ft --
Fit
Three
fornia
20 bOI
the h•
67
In
Bu
Unltec
Thret
the Or.
reports
and tbt
day. N
was Al.
The ,
red Mo
130 mil
K o re
when
aights8'
ed to
vehicle
foot cli
Rep<>
said 40
ed out:J
others
pitals.
injured
were S
from tt
In 8J
a~ider
bus ph
can y
diers a
happen
of Seo\i
were S
In th
ed rep1
today .
school
bers of
prov inc
into a
20 peo1
The
Service
happen
Sa mar
ippines
Mindan
were I
driver,
have l>
away a
Manila
Sh•
Ne
Fo:
NEW
The tr
charge
the as
dent J1
been
ary bu
dicatec
will be
Crim
Judge
chose
date ti'
mise.. t
Dist.
which
hP11rin.
wh ich
delay.
Chie.
Irvin ii
he wit
move
city bt
rison
judicia
statem
"that
ju dice
The
nearly
was a
by Ga
with 1
and a
the P1
retiree
has pl
~···' ~ ... ..... ....., _, .......
Fires Burn Soutlaland
Three major bruah fires erupted in Southern Cali-
fornia Sunday, destroying or damaging more than
20 homes in the greater Los Angeles area. Most of
the homea were lost in the (1) Chatsworth sector;
t
Teddy, Peatag.. Differ
Tuesday, Octoblr 17. 1%7 DAILY PILOT 5
Ex-Mayor Feared
Kidnaped, Hurt
CHICAGO (UPI) -The
surch for tbe former may-
or of suburban Blue Island,
a known gambler who may
bave been Jddnaped, was
being conducted today in
the Chicago area and In the
gambling environs of Las
Vegas.
John Hart. 75, mayor or
this suburb from 1937 until
defeated in a bid for re-
FBI Checks
Miami Body
MJAMI BEACH (UPI) -
The decomposed body of a
man f o u n d in a Miami
Beach rubbish heap has
been identified tentatively
as that of John O'C.onnel
Hough, a Sl Louis attorney
wbof.e name bas been link-
ed with union racketeers.
election ln 196.5, was a
gambler aDd known to car-
ry large sums of money.
Police Chief Arthur Scbal·
ler of Blue Island said Mon-
day when be disclosed Hart
had been missing since Fri·
day evening, "We must say
that we fear for his life."
Schaller said he thinks
Hart definftely was kid-
naped but conceded he had
some reserv.ations.
"Perhaps he wea robbed
and then his body dumped
someplace," Schaller said.
He said all finger,>rints on
Hart's car, found s eve n
blocks from the spot he was
last seen, had been wiped
off, indicating that Hart met
with foul play.
Hart's wif.e, Verna, 81,
said her husba.od bad acted
strangely before be left the
house.
She said he received a tel-
ephone call and instead of
letting her ansnr it as she
usually does, he took the re-
ceiver and told the oaller,
"Well, I'll take care of th1s
and see you later."
Liz Won't Be
Nude, Insists
That's Rude
Welsh
Fleeing
Floods
ABERFAN, Wales (UPI)
-Frightened children who
survived the Aberfan dis·
aster almost exactly one
year ago were evacuated
from their homes early to·
day when flood water pour·
ed new misery into the viJ.
I age.
Gales and torrential
rains brought havoc to many
parts of Britain overnight
and spread across the North
Sea to the Netherlands.
The west coast of France
was also battered.
The storms caused flood·
PORTO CONTE. Sard1'nia Ing. felled trees, severed road and rail linh, broke
(U PI) -Elizabeth Taylor power lines and put ship-
has decided not to strip in ping in trouble.
front of a camera, a spokes-Aberfan was the worst hit
man for the actress said to· village in Britain. About
day. 300 men, women and chil-
"I think nude scenes in dren were evacuated in the
films are utterly absurd," middle of the night when tbe
she wa-s quoted as saying. River Taff flooded SO houses
The spokesman said Miss with up to six feet of muddy
Taylor has refused to follow water. The famiJies return.
the s<:ript for a movie which ed home in the morning
<:alls for her to invite a when the wat~r subsided
man, played by her husband and left ruined furniture and ·Richard Burton, into her carpets. 67 Killed
hi Orient
Bus Crashes
· Viet Cong Recruiting _V p?
Federal agents are trying
to match the fingerprints
and dentures taken from
the bullet-punctured corpse
with those of Hough, who
was last seen Aug. 12 when
he waited out of a Bal Har-
bour hotel.
The Dade County (Miami)
sheriff's office said it won't
confirm the au&pjcion tha~
Hough is the murder vic-
tim until positive idmtifica-
tion can be obtained.
Mrs. Hart said her hus-
band, reputed to be a mil·
lionaire, then left the house
without disclosing his des-
tination. ·
She said sbe did not be-
come worried for alm,ost 24
hot.D"s later because her hus-
band often played cards
with friends and didn't re-
turn until very late.
bedroom with the line, "MY.----------
bedroom is full cl. treasures
-including myself."
The spokesman also quot-
ed Miss Taylor as saying,
"I alao happen to think it
qu ite strange the way wom-
en, even respectable wom·
en, strip for magaz.lnes. ".
MUTUAL
SAVINGS
United heu lateruUoul
WASHING TON (UP[) -
Sen. E.dward !f.. KnaedJ
ilr tllieir J111111i-a....., c:wwwpaed to 7,00I ·--·--I I I _I •• ( _) ••• ', • ' ~' ~ .~. f
Three bus acc.ideufl · Jn
the Orient killed 67 people,
reporta from South Korea
and the Philippines said to-
day. None of the victims
was American.
The worst accident occur-
red .Monday afternoon about
130 miles sollth of the South
Kore an capital of Seoul
when a bus loaded with
sightseeing tourists swerv·
ed to avoid an oncoming
vehicle and plunged off a 30-
foot cliff.
Reports reaching Seoul
said 40 passengers were kill·
ed outright and that two
others died ~n route to hos-
pitals. Twelve people were
injured. Most of the victims
were South Korean women
from the Seoul area.
In another South Korean
accident Monday, an army
bus plunged into a :.>-foot
c a n y o n, killing five sol-
diers and injuring 14. That
happened 60 miles northeast
of Seoul. All of the victims
were South Korean troops.
In the Philippines, delay-
ed reports reaching Manila
today said a bus carrying
school teachers· and mem-
bers of a church choir to a
province festival careened
into a river Sunday, killing
20 people and injuring 40.
The Philippines News
Service said· the accident
happened on the island or
Samar in the eastern Phil·
ippines between Luzon and
Mindanao. It srud p o I l c e
were tooldng for the bus
(!).Mau.). ~· be baa --cret Defense Deparhud
data sbowiq the Viet 0.,
are bavillg lncreuing mc-
cess recruiting guerriJi.. la
South Vietnam.
But the Pentagon deaied
it, and William P. Bundy,
assistant secretary of state
for Far Eastern attain,
said Monday Kennedy's fig-
w-es were inaccurate.
Another~ study nearing
completion indicates the
Viet Cong actually are find-
ing it harder to recruit in
the south, Bundy said.
Tbeir exchange ca.me dur-
ing hearings before Keone-
dy 's Senate subcommittee
on refugees. Kennedy bas
charged the United States is
not doing enough to help
Vietnamese refugees and
civilian war cuualties.
Kennedy refused to make
his recruitment figures pUb-
lic because they were ctas.-
sified by the P e n t a g o a.
which would have to give
Cosmonaut Death Told
MOSCOW CUPI) -The
investigation into the f i r s t
hwnan space tragedy bas
been completed and it clis-
closed that cosmonaut Vla-
dimir Komarov'a death wu
caused by a failure of bis
spaceship's parachute sys-
tem, it was officially report-
ed today.
No other details of Ko-
marov' s death April 24 Weft
made aVaibllk ..,. ......
~JdJ*. pcaidmf ., die
Soviet AadmaJ ., .
eoca. wlllo pcaided al a
news~• 51 Jran
ol Soviet fC'ifwn>
Speaking as a -ezd
Soviet ...... ip was rari9g
towanls Yem.. ICeldy'lll de-
clined .. D'f wlldltt -d-
f.ort will be .... t
~ a IGft 1-dUtg •
v ..... "''' 1 if. driver, who was reported to L;:=L:=~=s;a;:---=siiiiC:il:::aE-.:iiiii~mma::m~ have been drinking. He ran
away after the accident, the
Manila News Agency said.
Shaw Seeks
New Site
For Trial
NEW ORLEANS (AP)
The trial of Clay L. Shaw,
charged witr conspiracy in
the assassination of Presi·
dent John F. Kennedy, has
been set for mid-Febru-
ary but the defense has in·
dicated a change of venue
Enjoy The Holiday•
J'eeing New Placea and
U'f-feeting New Friends
On c.fi c:.71-fatson Jouth Jeaa Cruise
will be sought.
Criminal Di s t. Court
. Judge Edward A. Haggerty
chose the February trial
date Monday as a compro-
mise.. between the office of
Dist. Atty. Jim Garrison,
which asked for a speedy
hParing. and the defense,
which wanted a six-month
delay.
Chief defense counsel F.
f£. This year, plan a care-
~ free escape from the
holidays al home. Sall
to th• peaceful Island• of the
South Pacific where winter haa
turned to summer. Matson'• th,.
'42-dey Holiday CnilM uiling9
ar• perfectly timed: SS MON-
TEREY, November 12 locludes
Thanksgiving In Tahiti ••. SS
MARIPOSA, December 5 inclUdel Irvin!! Dymond then i;aid
he will probably seek to
move the trial to another Christmas and New Vear'• in the
city because, he said, Gar-South Seas ••. SS MONTEREY.
rison made "a lot of pre-December 28 Includes gala New
judicial and in!lammatory
stntements" about the case
"that would certainly pre·
judice jurors."
The scheduled date is
nearly a year after Shaw
was arrested and accused
by Garrison of conspiring
with Lee Harvey Oswald
and others to assassinate
the President. Shaw, 53, a
Year's celebrationa at sea. You'll
see new placn aa these elepnt
liners take you to Bora 8of'&.
Tahiti, Rarotonga. ~ INiand.
Australia, Noumea, Fiji, Niuafo·~.
Pago Pago and Hawaii. Y~'ll
relax In 8l(clu1lvely Fi111t 0....
retired business executive. f has pleaded innocent. or mnrr in formcN,'I: 0 ""
miiimiiiJ.ii;Jiiiiii resernat1011~ coll 642-311 I •••
no t7.dd1honol rhargn
throu.gll
OOMfoftl .. ,_ c:niil9 .. -... maae. ,a":fll a. ... ,.. a.,_,
new friendl .. _ ._olll
friends ............. .,
Lobster C.rry willl A,...._
"**-HalnliM • ,,,, ., ..
ottler .,.ci._. • ....._ .•
flCMllWl9I -...., ..... ,.. .,....... ,.... ......., er-. .. '"• , ................ ..
Pacific?
Sailing .............. ~
ciaco;U.-... .... .....
ingday. Call«.,.___ ,. 0
infcrn rd re .., 11 •
SAFETY INFORMATION:
SS Mrll 1 ra .., Ila All ., • ...-
~ • .. u. s.. .... .._...,
~~-···--.,,.. .. , ..... , ..
''Name just one thing
tdoesn't
more
toda)'!'
How about electricity. Maybe you don.,t
na1ize it, but you're paying lees per kilowatt-hour
for electricity now than you did five yearB ago.
'lbe average cost of a kilowatt-hour of
electricity to Edison customers for residential use
ha gone down 17% in the last five years. That's
bet»•« of the increased use you make of
electricity. I t's like a quantity diBcount.
And your price of electricity has gone
dmvn despite the fact that otir costs for labor,
mat.eria18 and taxes have gone up.
Of oomw, you're using electricity for so
many more things these days that your bill
may mn to be a bit higher. But any way
you look at it, electricity is a terrific
bmpin. Not only because it's
Wei:pemive, but because it lets you
do and enjoy so many things.
If you're an average consumer,
you me our product in about forty
different ways in your home. And
that's not oounting special uses like
. a home workshop or a ham radio
or a alat car racing track.
Where else am you get such
a good boy without even having
t.o ibcJP around for it?
5CF
Southern California Edison
l
I
I
_j
aillil,.ailliMiilrMiillllilW!Mil c:;::::::=~~~~=====~--=--==:::=.-~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
.. --~ .• ' . ·\ .
--
•
ti IJ~1l Y hl(J t Tuesday, Octol>tr 11. 1'701
Finance Chief's Idea ......... _. ...
Now JC Tuition Proposed
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-be to encourage some UC
California's finance direc-
tor, Gordon P. Smith. says
"it may be a pretty g o o d
idea·• to charge tuition at
the state's junior colleges.
Smith, speaking Monday
b e f o r e the Legislature's
.Joint Committee on lligher
Education, also advocated
tightening admission re·
quirements at the two-year
institutions.
During the testimony,
Smith said one result of
charging tuition at the Uni-
versity or California would
~l. I.. T l..Vl.VUl ;::>"°'';) ·
.. i HAPPINESS
·' •. i~ o new
Dishmo\ICr
Jef. 548·5558
Joe CARLOS PLUMBING
students to attend private
colleges. It was the first
time a st.ate offk ial has
publicly stated that one goal
of the administration is to
divert students from l he
public to private institu-
tions.
In making the statement,
Smith defended Gov. Ron-
ald Reagan's plan to im-
pose a tuition on s~den~
attending the st.ate s uni·
versity and college systems.
Smith's claim that the
tuition system would allow
low . i n c o m e, minority
group students into the uni-
versity was disputed by As·
sembly Speaker Jesse M.
Unruh. D-lnglewood.
Unruh said be favors i.n-
creasing minority and low-
income representation in • I
•••••CUT HERE•••••,
I
California higher education.
but added that to do so will
cost money.
"For every dollar you put
into the subsistence it may
take three or four dollars in
increased c a p i ta l out-
lay and operating expense.
You c.an't have both. Gor· ~ COSTA MESA I don," the speaker sai<l.
I
I
I
Costa Mesa
Wash Service
CAR
WASH
••••••••••••••• c
J i
COSTA MESA CAR WASH
2059 H1rbor Blvd. 11t Bay St.
I COUPON
I SPECIAL
Aa911 ,..._ THIO. ROllNS FOID
FREE Car Wash
With GAS FILL·UP-10 Gal. Min.
This was the second hear-1 ing of the committee; Un-
i ruh said there probably
would be more hearings in I November. A report wiU be I presented to the Legislature
in early January.
I
I
I
I
I
I
2 Innocent
In Case of
Marijuana
im WITH THIS COUPON 01 IOc OFP
CAI WASH W"H 5'1AY WAX I CONCORD I UPI) -Two
Northern California men
YOUR I pleaded innocent Monday to
USE OIL co. charges of flying 300 pounds ____ c.•.1.o.11_c_1._u_s_H_•_H____ I of marijuana worth $500.<m
from Mexico to Concord in
the wings of a light plane. I C011po11 lxplret Nov. 6, lt67 • w• ••• -• -•• - -•• •o ~ COST A MESA CAR WASH S
2059 H1rbor Blvd. at Baiy St. ~ ~ :::> u
I COUPON
I SPECIAL
Acrot1 fro111 THEO. I OllNS FORD ~
FREE Car Wash : • With GAS FILL·UP-10 Gal. Min. I
wnH THIS COUPON 01 50c Off
CAl WASH W"H SPIAY W•X I
Richard Claude Scott, 38,
Alamo, and Ronald Bl'dux.
30, San Pablo, were arraign-
ed in Ml Diablo Municipal
Court. Scott was released
on $1,100 bail and Breaux
was freed on his recogni-
Ulllce pending preliminary
bearing Dec. 6.
Scott pleaded innocent to
a charge of illegal transpor-
tation of the drug. while
Breaux was accused of ille-i0 US( YOUR OIL co. 1 ~al possession of marijuana.
They requested a jury trial. I The two men were arrest-
-------------ed by sheriffs deputies Oct.
4 at Buchanan Field.
CllDIT CARDS Hiii
I C.upo11 &piret Nn. 6, 19'7 •• ••• ----·-··· -I COSTA MESA CAR WASH
I ~ 2059 Harbor Blvd. at Bay St. I
Acrou fro111 THEO. IOllNS FORD I I FREE Car Wash I COUPON I
SPECIAL
Airport Manager Marvin
Scott, no relation to the sus-
pect. c a I 1 e d authorities
when he noticed a car park-
ed beneath the wing of a
small plane on the airstrip.
The deputies said they
found several bricks of mari-
juana in the vehicle. I With GAS FILL.UP-10 Gal. Min. Authorities claimed the
I II] I drug was smuggled out of WSTH THIS COUPON 01 50c Off Mexico in the wings of the
3 CAI WASH WITH SPIAY WAX I plane. which Scott leased
I YOUR in San Jose. Breaux was ac-
1 USl OIL co. I cused of pil~ting the craft.
---·C•l•E•D•IT-C•A•ID•S-H•l•ll----I which made a stop at Calex-1 ~~the~~~ c..,.. 1xp1,. ""· '· 1"7 der. before coming to Bu-
• • • • • • CUT HERE • • ._. • • chanan Field.
A free booklet ta
answer your questions
about Annuities
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • • : Ploasosond mo,withoutobll91tlon,1 :
froo copy of tho booklot: "Annuitlos •
••. tho koy to 1 gold on 191." : -~ "' l
•I I
• • NAM£ ................................... : • • ADDRESS ............................... • • • • •• 1 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • • ,._llfect11ren Llfo IM•l'9tlce Compny :
• '" l91t 17tli StNet, S.11tt1 AH, Cellf. • • • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
There co~ a 11mc 1n mo\t men'A liv~ when a auarantccd in-
come ii more important rhan the hope of capi1al 111n.
And that'~ rxaclly whal annuitiea from Manufacluren life offer.
They providt an 1u1omatic, 1uanntetd income for life.
People have aucd ut many questions 1bo111 annu11r~ In the
put. Important quc.stions 'uch as: Can I arr1nge for 'omc of the
money to he returned to my cstalc 1f I die early~ h there 1n
1nnu1ty lh81 "''II tran~fcr 1he income 10 my 14tfc 1f ~he ou1hvt3
me~ How do annu111u affect my income tu? I\ an ann1111y 1
prac11cal way of supplementing Social Sccurny and olhu rcliro-
ment income?
To provide you ~1th lht an,wcr~ we hAvt published an ca~y-te>
rud, c:isy·to-undcr,tand hook let ca lied "Annu111cs ... the key
to 1 aoldcn age." ll's yours for lhe ask1na. wi1hou1 obliption.
Just fill in and rcrnm 1hc coupon below. And if you would hke
to discuu annuities w11h wmeonc, you couldn't find a better
person to talk 10 than lhc Man from Manufacrurel'l.
MAIUFACTURERS LIFE
INSl.RAN('f COMPANY
l ..
,,
J.LP ........ C.L.U •
Acency Associate
t:fUNTINGTON BEACH
Tel: s.47·5621
L S. GlllN'Ntll
Acency Associat•
HUNTINGTON BEACH
Tel: 547·5621
-... .
U>DVICts
Working
Studied
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-
Superior Court Jud&e Rob-
ert J . Drewes ot San Fran-
cisco is studying argument.
in the Qilifornia AFUIO'a
suit to halt the use of con·
vict labor on farms under a
QUEENIE By Ph11 lnterfandl Venue Change Asked
For Murder 1.rials
(AP) -logger who was passing
A Lassen County superior Lhrough the area. '!'heir attorneys said they Judge says he will talte un-think publicity given to the
SUSANVILLE
der submission a request slayings would prejudice
that the trials of two broth-the trials.
ers charged wllh murder be The Lassen County district
held in another county. attorney opposed the re-
Judge Stanley Arnold was _q_u_es_t_. -------
asked Monday by attorneys
for Robert Tidwell, 18. and
hls brother WilUam, 21. to
at.ate plan. 't order the trials to be held
The judge indicated Mon-
day be may ask for further
argument before taking ac-
tion on a temporary re-
straining order be i n g
sought by the California La-
bor Federation.
Charles P. Scully, the fed-
eration's general counsel,
asked the court to bar 1use of st.ate prisoners by grow-0 "'"' r-,,,,,_..._ '-'"'· w..w _.. _......
ers on groundl it violates a
st.ate coutitution provision
against cootracting out of
convict Jabor.
The argument centers on
Article 10, Section I of the . I
State Comtitution w b I c h
reads that "the labor ~
convict. shall not be let out
by contract to any person,
copartnership, company or
'corporation. . . "
.. And your wife dropped by. rm not at all like' you
deec:ribed me, and you'll hear fl'Om her when you ·
get homL No other meesagea."
5 Percent Balance
Promised in Remap Scully contends this is
what the state administra-tio.n bas done. LOS ANGELES (UPI) -groups of dissimilar inter-
Scully poin!N out that an California's 38 congressional ests.
attempt by the state to pin districts should be kept wilh-"More and more we see
its case on the wort4ur-in a five percent population the concept of metropolitan
lougb program wu not the government and as that con-issue bat added evm if it tolerance, a depu~ state at-cept grows , there is a were: tbe admbliltntioa torney general Monday. told change in the power struc·
adicm wu bt •'dim WU. ~ an ~mbly comnuttee ture and it becomes eaaier
tion" ol the pnpam studying re~omnent. to deprive a group of a voice
Deputy St.te Atty Gen Sanford Gruskin said any in the government," Griffin
EUel Raws argued ibe pr0: wider d~via!:f might ere-said.
gram is part of the state'!! ate lega pr ems. . Congressional reapportion·
rehabilitation program but The Assem~ly Elections ment has been ordered by
acknowledged that growers an_d Reapportionment Co~-the California Supreme 1 benefit from the prisoneN' mittee also heard . ~e~ti-Court on the grounds that•
wort.. He aaid the state ~ mooy from Booker Gr iffin. present bounGaJ'ies are
quires growers to hire o«-representative or the Negro not nearly equal as to pop-
duty state guards to super-industrial and economic un-ulation.
vise the prisoners-at pay ion. Griffin and Assemblyman
al $4r5 per day-and t b a t Grilrin said the voling Charles J . Conrad (R-Sher-1
prisoners earn money and power of minority groups man Oaks ), engaged jn anj
learn ~.wt.<"ty. should be maintained in .. , t ti &,.. .. ..,_..,lU . 1 argument over ms es .,
in San Francisco. I The Tidwell brothers are
accused of slaying a Lassen
County ranch couple and a
The Grandest
Mall of All is ...
•• • As easy to
find as your
front door.
5outh f oast ?laza
1~ng e congressional dis-mony.
tncts. -----------·----------------------
T'5timony was offered as' r.·-Trio Killed
In Oeaning
Gas Tank
E N S E N A D A, Mexico
(UPI) -Three students
were asphyxiated Sunday
while cleaning tbe inside of
a large gasoline tank, it wa1
reported Monday.
l h e committee opened!
three days of hearings in
Los .l\ngeles on a State Su-
preme Court order that ,
California reapportion i t s . '
congres~ional district by
Dec. 7. Gov. Ronald Reagan
has called the Legislature 'R:'
inlo a special session Nov. ~
6 to act on tbe order.
Grusk.in tesWied that a -__
five percent population =j-f}~~:::~~::~~~i.iii."1llll•fl1Dj:I; dirrerence among d istricts I::; f #Jli.
would be more acceptable .. · ~-,
under the court order. · · ,• .._., it.>
Griffin said under previ·
ousreapportionment ofstate T'S YOUR MOVE I senatorial districts the Ne-I •
gro community of Watts wai;
so split that voters were
matched agafost other GLEN MAR WEST
The three were students
at the School of Marine
Sciences. Baja California
State University. They were
identified as Luis Terui. 20.
Ve.racruz, Federico Ziel, 20,
Mexico City, and Jose Luis Gonzalez,20.Ensenada, t ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-------------
Their bodies were found
inside the tank by Rubeo
Gonzalez. an Ensenada con-
tractor who hired them to
clean the tank med to store
aircraft fuel. Gonzalez said
he provided the youths with
oxygen masks so they would
not be overcome by fumes.
M.-J.T-.e,
Aaency Associal•
NEWPORT BEACH
Tel: 547·5621
II. '. llictUywif Agency Associa1e
NEWPORT BEACH
Tel: 547-5621
You want action?
The fastest
inost direct
pure jet flights to
Reno
Pacific Air Lines ~the hot line"
Ct!n~•t no ""11 *I Actually this is Pa~1fic's Flight No. 46, but all our Reno and taY ... 10511. •I flights are automat1cally flUtTlbered 711. St.arts you ctf Qabt.)
22 minutes faster
than any other Dight
to Reno from Los Angeles.
o nl $30'!$
ThP f1r)l showgirls you :;eP. will be our 'ileward e.sses in .hot pink They rtre w~ry fetrhing -fot hing you hot
d!1n ks (coffee) or cold drink» (hard and soft). But. more 1mportrint. Pa( 1l1c Air gets you thPrP., m pgtime and
en t1'11e. One 'lhort ::lnp in FrP' no, and then you 11 be in Reno. Only 88 n nuP.o; en rotM. Call your travel
agent for the g0od nC"N'" or cti ll ur:.. 776 1000 ... or 246 8411. r s ni• .. ·~· _.. ,,. 4•2· • , •••••• , 1.~''""'MP•11hankwV•1111o
•
Vetertn1 llt.ry. Amert1 Street,
Ille~. Rol.,y
vine I
(OHi
6:30 I
(Mia N
Club,
Cool a b lbot
104S Bttcn. Sr rl 81
R&nch Hlonw.
H11ntlngt
Lodve.
Ing ton
Society cour.g ,., s•
Hart>to 2380
7:•S
Odd Fel ._ 1 ,,,,,_
!Ulbot .
port f
l.0.0.M a~. long B
~ "" l"l*lk "° l p.m.
w .. rmtr
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1 ..... 11~ Fl
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Mewpa
(OSI• M
Golf Count noon. w~srmlr
bl• -noon.
(0$11 M
Cou11tr
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Kelly
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Kirt E,
G•rCIM
Mr. ~nd t><olher• four ,..,
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Ocl. IS C, Hobb II. Ktl11
A,M . I
R.-~6'-r
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Olr,.rlfl'(I
110 8•<>
0""4114
LI-il. $Ur'
Sh"rp:
Anqelt•;
St-rvic.@s
8roaOw•
Ate>IUnd Vlfow,.,. 8ro.cl•
Cofl• ,.
"'"'"' •31 w . Survlvec
l •slle ' •net bn: Grow.
Tut!.dn•
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Mf
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3.W
Newp<
PEEK
Ft
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SMl'
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WF:Sl'C
For the Record
Jtleetlllgs
TVQOAY
Vtltr-el W0tlf '#Ot I eM -lllary. & lffw Mew ~•• IMP, Am~la11 L .. loll HMI. MIS 'II. t•
St-I, C-11 -· •:• 111.MJ PW •UO:.
llol1rv Club ol ""-' t-. Ir· vine Coa1I COUftlr\I Cl4AI, 1• I .
Coast HlthWI~, (or.... .. -· •::io p,m.
Cnota Meu • N..w""'1 H....W l • Club, Mesa · v.,. '-"f a...
Cosl• ~.-. 4:3t •·Ill'· llolboa ll•y l.i.nt , ..... 11111• ~
10'5 ll1y11* °"'1t, ~
Bttch. 7 " m: S~•I Beach ToastmntHt C~. Ml
ll•nch -· .... 1'~111( c-Hl.,hway, 71• """· Hunll"!llOfl Se.di E•1 ~. E*•
L""91!, ICM C>alfl Av-........
lfllltoll IU<lh. 7 Jt P-"'·
Society '"' ti.e f'rnervalloll ~ E .. cour1_..t ol !Uf'lltt si.. O....·
tel Slftolnt In AIM<lca. ..,_, Hor•~. CAI .... ,..,_ S-.,
?3IO ~· ~ c.... ....._. 7:0 P.m.
Odd Fellows lMee Ne. l&l. 0-.. f4'-
lowt r....-. • _,..... .. ,...., -" ............ l:tt ,.,,... 81Hloa Ski CIUll. ...__ WI. ...._
__. kldl. ' p.l'I\. l 0 .0.M. ~ ... IUL GS E. 111111
Sfl'Mt, C.ta M9M. l·U p "'
l -Beldl-Or-c-,. a..-°' "" Cltltof'llll ~ • ~ "'*lie Acal ...... ~ a.. tell L ,_ Awe.. leoot a.c:.. 7· •
p "'· WIC*UOAY
WntmlMlef T..,_.,. °"*" J.
Ooft'• ltaft!Uke Hw, .. $ I ...
4: IS 1.m.
Cnt:1 Meu.0••• C:O.•I U..... C-
O.le'-tU I . 17111 MJ C... ....._ , ......
l lU. F,._ T-lmMWI CloA llldo-
•rd's Celfee sn.. l4D Via 1.-.
NtwPOrt ...-. 7 1.M.
Cos•• Meu Opfi...kl ~. c.. .. ......,
Golf 1nd Couootrv Chlll. 1191 Cdl
Coursa Orlve. C0t.t1 ~ ll -· w~tmin1ter °"''"'"' ,,,., '°'""' ,. bit ftttl1ur1nt, Wetlm!Mtet. 11 noon.
Co.11 Me.a ltot•rv CIUll, -11.,. ..
Counlrv Club, Cod• .,... ... n -
Fountain Vetlrf E~ CloA F•-
coh' ,_t-MI, 111!1 ~-8M~
Ii""""-" leedl. "'" ......
Divortt•
W4'0ll!Cft ,.,_
Jotf ........ --.. ~ ..,,.. .,.., ... .. ,._ ,,_"" ~ .... .... ~ "' ....... °'""' ~'•trl<le --"" ~ .. .._ Jr.
Miiite ._., """' "' ~ °""""" IC~ly
Wiima 11.f!H \"I TiwMt kft llf!W
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Ka ren L. Toot v. ~ L T•te ''°'' t.....1ine IN•~ " T--.. llo ,,,..,,,,,
At.Wf!'f M. s .... ,, .. va Fr• II ~
OorotllY Virtln.. -n Fr-
JCIMPI> lloll
S"1rleY It. G•leA"' "' F-ica
Galfrtln
0.111 fvetvn No..,,. \'I ~ t.-
OBIT U ARI E S ------------BROOKER
l~nn lroaU<. W Liiie 51~ --...
,.., lleacll. SunrivH ""' ~
Mr>. P111I Sc.hrr~. Mrt.. °""""
Knldlerbod<er, Mrs. Ger..,. """""·
Mri. Ar!hur Hofff,rl>er; ·-· -wll llr-; al&M<, Mn. l.._.. F..--
lft!llOn, •nd -·· .. ~ ...... Cl\lpel ~iCIPl ..,.i .....,,_, J
P.M. W-tclff. West~ -
"'O'lf l "•"' and ~. Oir.oN tw Weotm1na...-_ .. , ,..,., -·
IU~. RENNER
..... _, ..-. 4Jt S,.,,1 O<-.
~ Ml MM. '°'"-IW -· T~: -. ,_...., ._, --,,....,.,lclr8. ...,,,_. ...... -
~.JP.M--' .. ~
, .... di <ti ....... c.-.... -·
F °"'llY ""'"'" ........ -... -· ,.... __ .,...., ___ _
IM Lu_.,, ~ fll 11-e -· ,_ ... ..., .. -~ c-ol (.or-............... . .,_., H2I E, C-....,__., C...
.S... Mii, OirecWt.
POST
FLIPPEN
(Kii Fii-. 111 11th IC., ..............
lludl. Oled Odctltt 16. Senrcin
""nding. Slnltm __,,. RWEU>OFYER
~~" W1ll<lce It~. tl7 ~
Ila, Cosl• Mesa. 5urvlwol ""' -J!>llft. of Wlltn ........ : ,,..._., ~ C.
H W•ti.a, Ml..._...i11 -· w 111;.,,, J. Wali.ct. #~: -
4 ··~·., -~ c.At. Fu-•• _,,lcn will lit MW lot MM-,....,po11,, Tw-.Y. Mfomclfilt -~~-' will be .,... 4 I' .IA.. Fr .... OcL
?Q, al SI. --l'n ..,..,-. Cnurch FMftllv ..,....,, .,..,... -
Will! tNtY mailt _.._lat _ ....
t-le .... "· -Owrdt ..., He..,,, It~_ ... F-.
• W~lelill -tuMv. ~ ~l HOFFMAN
Kiri! E • ....,,__ '"'' aa-Ciordf. Gt•~ G<-ow. Soonolwol ""' .......... Mr. and Mn. G~ A ....,._; -br°"""" G..,_ AJ Jr. -O.-; ,.,.,,. ................ ~
l'l\ln; Dtrllce Ho1*M ...i FrMI a.u.: or1~. Mrt F T. ...,._ S,...,,~1, ........... ". """'. ,,_
f•mllY C-411 F_ .. -· HUBBS
.. "• Bt-<vl HubbL ..... •• .. JS71 W°'lmlMIP< AW , ~ ........ 0....
Oct. IS Survlwd tw ........... !U-
C. Hu-. •"" d"9'>ir'· Mrs v.,..i-. II. 1(111'19. S«rvQ>. ~. M
A.M. 11•11 11.-n ~ ...... R•-urrv Paul elf~ ... ,.....,
tnfnl. PAcHk Vltw ~.-1 P .......
Olr•ct"<I 11'1' tkll l r-n ~.
'10 llroadWe~. COii• Mew. SHARP
O""'°ld J1V SMro. All# 11. fJI IM
Lr-QCld 51., Gosta Mew O..,_ Od.
1J. Survi¥M by w-.... -J.
Sharp; son. 0..-..ld w, Sl\arp. lM A~IH: -,,;ea --~. S.,rvku _,f 1111111 .... ,,. I I' .M.. -
9•MdWIY Cl\epel, with ....... --Atplund olfklltlfte. ,__,.., l'ad'<
vi.w w mori.t Pett., OlrKMlll IW ... Br-~ _,...,.., Ill ~.
(Gii• """1.t. WALKER
"'""" Enar• •-· ,..,, A • '" w. '"" 5t4 .,.. CM!• -Survlvtd tw ........, •• Miu CM9'¥"
l "Sllc W111t~. ol _.....,. IHOI:
•nd t>rotne<. 1111 w•ei. ~
Grow Sffvkn ~ !WW -· Tuesdn, 11 AM.. 9t4I .,_
Cl\eswt. will\ F•-.-~ rthc:lollnt lleH 8r-__.,,
110 llroa<twn . Co-'• -o.....-n.
BALTZ MORTUARIEK
Cnron1 del M•r OR J-ta
l osl• Mt>ll Ml 6-:ct
BF:LL RROADWAY
MORTUA RY
lift Rro1dw1y, Cetta Meu
u um
PACIF1C VIEW
MEMORI AL PARK
Cemetel'J • ...,....,
<laapel
l5et Pldfle View Drive
Newport Beac•. CaUf«8'a
mall
PEEK F AMIL\' OOLO~IAL
FUNERAL HOME f
fMt Betta Aw .. Wfllt~I .ms
SMITH'S MORTUAKI
U'7 Mil• Sl
RantJn(l.M ~Id
.....
I: l.:I.. D. ~ ... Tr-OillrtMI
_,, Eiu-._ " .._.,, ,._ ....... --.-,... ~ ... ,.,.,~ ~ ..... -.~--...,~ ..... s.. ~ .. ,.,.,_ ,.....
IW1ICilllr
-.y ~ ........ K-E-~ 4"fw."' ,.~ -""-(;<-~ F -ft ,..,,
..-.E-'1 t
0-.., A. ~ .. -E. ~ ....
l;ou> ... '-.... _. ~ ..._ .... , ....... Merrill ..,_ F-~L----.. ~·--"-'-,__ I
Silerry u... -... -lM ---·-·· ----.... .,.,,,.
~ ..... -.. ~1.. MIM E,,.., F. D w "' ~ ~ ~ ..,_. ,._, ........ -... ---.. --~--. l'IMdA D. _.,.. .. ,..,,... •· D. --0..a. ............... 1. ..... -. --~ ... ,_c.-. ~warafl
...., -............... lM ........ c;..,. r . "--... ._, M. ...._
....,, ~ la ... c-...c l-la ..................... ~
G. ......
E-~ -.., c.toit v. ....... _.,A.""'*-.,. CM1 I'. '*-F .....
Jadl; "~ ........... I.. ~
UioM ...., ............ e.-•
~ _... •. ~ .. l ... ~ "-.... a.t. .. .-....... -en. Odw» ~ - --~ Ka-.............. ..,_ ---,.._..L ~ .. ~A.. .....
-1 ._.L G.-.. .. -Wil co.-. ~ ,_ OrwY .. ._.,. C.I
Drrf ,,,_,,. L .._ ,.. ...... u.edt .-.. C--. I Co on '°' Uoe L
Ge
, .... -~......,··· F~----~-----=~=&..._.,. ~-----~~ •IO ..... OoULY "NJT:
Navy Officer
Tak~ Post
With Firm
ANAHEDI -Capt. Fran
Lana. USN. Offlr'e of I&-
dullrial Sec• tty, a.tract
Administnatioa Seniicn.
Def~ Supply Atprf.
bu joilled the st.ff of Ow
Autondics Division al North
A.mttia9 Rodwell c.p..
atiolt here.
Cap«. Lanell is .. the
staff of Security Dirttt•
Van Swearingm. handling
special auipmeab related
lo salegaantiq dassiJied
iofonnatioL
1be .. ,ear-Gld Lana re-
tired from the Navy Aai.1
31 after 21 years al service. I
Prior lo his present post.
be was dUef of lbe Y'.elcl
Muaermat Divisioll al tlw
Office of IJadmbial S«arity.
lie fa'ftd as the dindGr
ol tttarity lor the Boreaa of
Naval W~ from June.
lSZ.. •o J ..aary, 1915.
In 1!51. after • aai~:
meat witll tbr U. S. Air
Force ia the Air latelli~
effort. be was the f i r s t
Naval alfteer to rettive the
Air P'ortt CGmmendatiGa
Medal for escbange duty.
PACIFIC
VIEW
N I N O IUAl "4llt c-...,· ,..,_,
.. , "R7F"'I .. o..,..t r-• .s,.,.. ,.
C·~-~,.
LE f.Gll "" r..ntk v-™""'·
WF:STC.:LIFI' \fORT\J-'RY ,,_._,_ ._ .. c...,. .._,
........ ,....,.._ fn•)ot:~~
4'?7 ~ 17t• SC., C..ta Mt'A'·---------
"\ "
'
Spadework
S tudents 'Dig' Ne w School
MISSION VIEJO -1''1fly
st.-ntJ did some a r l e r
M'hool spadework even be·
fan the school has been
built. 'nley broke ground for
the *2 million La Paz Inter·
mediate School. the fi rst
junior high school in this
IJ,OOlh cre new community.
The school will be built on
a z:kttte site across from
Philco-Ford
Name8 New
Plant Boss
the year-old $4 million Mis·
sion Viejo High School. on
La Paz Road, eas~ or Chris·
anla Drive. It will include
seven buildings. grouped
around a large c e n t r a I
patio.
AC'cordinj( to San Joaquin
School District Supt. Ralph
A. Ga~s. the building proj·
ect is to be completed dur·
ina ne.xt summer. The
sc hool will accommodate
840 student~
Students wilo took part In
the Columbus Day iround·
breaking are from the
James Irvine Intermediate
S<·hool in East Irvine. Their
hus stopped at the new
sc hool site on the way home
and the students h e f t e d
shovels and went to work.
New Citizens· Relish
Knott's Farrr~Visit
BUENA PARK -A tour
of Independence Hall at
Knott's Berry Farm high-
lighted the day for 139 new
~Padres
Bill Backed
WASlllNGTON (AP )
The Hou se has approved a I
bill to de signate 145,000
acres in Los Padres Na·
citizens and their f1mllie1
after naturalii.atlon-cere-
momes in Oran1e County
Superior Court. 1
The members of the group /
were guests or Walt.er Knott.
founder, for the tour and •
reception In the Town Meet· 1
. ing Room.
While in Independence
Hall, the new citizens heerd
representations of debates
by the roundin1 fathers In
the Declaration Chamber
prior to the signlnc of the
Detlaration of lndepend·
ence. .
Among visiting celebrities
at the reception were Rufe
Davis, of the "Petticoat
Junction" television 1erie1;
Stanley St. John, impruar1o
and orchestn leeder tnm
Twonto, Ouida, ud David
Leroy Smith, compoeer ad
recordinc art.lat wbo wrote
the new Independence Hall
toftg.
tional Forest in CaJjfornia -----------
z:.iational Wilderness Preser·
as the ftrst addition to the S..11 ••• A....W Lec.ti.11 ... fnltle11 ldelt4!
Save$l.10
on the big one
of the Sure One.
Now instead of paying $12.'49,
you pay just $11.39 for
a 1/2 gallon of Seagram's 7 Crown.
A giant saving on
America'a f•vorite whiakey.
(Avail11bl1 only In California
August 16 through October 31, 1967.)
Say Se.gram's and be Surt.
, ....... °'''' .,, ~. . • • .,. Ch· ~ .,, .. ,. •" h •y '& "p"'"' ft«t-.. G· • ~ ,,._ ;trt c;.r " I .
_, ,
Tu.sd.iy, Ottnl:\fr 17 1%7 (!All Y PllOf 7
HEAi. TH SPJl
~
POINT
' ..
• Waist
Taki' 2" In <f" ntf. Give tM
midriff that 11"&11 look. n·n
makl' PVPrythinc abov;i! and ~bt>low 50 Pf'r cent curvitt.
-r : t~!~ .. 5m~ arra. A~
addfod wf'lfht Ukf' a aponp.
Takf' 2" to :.t" otr. ~ how
~much younger you look! I r . .,."' ...
1Wc'911M' ""4. short aldrta
b8,. thl' ~ -0 ~
ly, tKtl"C.iJlos indudf ICJw-tapPT'in« Ofte9. too. Trtm l "
ln 3" from lhl~
•Tummy
Nn mAttl'r how not ol shape
It 1~. yoU'll -bNUbtUI r.-· aultJ1 hl'N' fuL Cc flat u
a panca k~ ii you like.
• J115tle
Muscle
lni1nirl'11 thr carM"r 'irl's l&mf'nt.
I l.onk Ill f"p lltrfl'tt'hf'd-OUt back
nf vn11 r Aklr111. That's what altttn,:
1111 rill) !ll"f"fi In thla artt1 . Thi'
'nonrr nnr ;rt~ tn tl\r llt'at o( this problem, U11 belt.er.
LAST DAYS
enNll tCNlmy fer •••
°"a ,..,.. .. .._,, ..
Now 3 Conv•nlent Locations to Serve You
• CALL 01 DIOP IY TODAY •
...
Patented Hip i nd Thi9h Trimmers Swi11 Facial Centourint Machi~
•
----OPEN 10 A.M. TO 10 P.M. ----
COSTA MESA ANAHEIM
549-3368 826-0381
2300 Harbor Blvd. S10 S. Beach (Hi. 39)
Harbor Playa Plaza
Shopping Center Shopping Center
ORANGE
639-2441
622 E. Katella
Plaza Rear
Shopping Center
....................... ______ ............... ._ ....
.,
-
8 DAIL V PILOT TuMday, October 17, 1907
Secrecy
Creating
brunks?
NEW YORK (UPl) -If
America adopts a national
policy permitting youth easy
access to alcohol in care-
fully controlled settings, it's
likely there will be fewer
alcoholics, according to a
$1 million federal govern·
ment report.
The report recommends
that liquor advertisements
be permitted to show alco-
hol being consumed by the
whole family, inc 1 u d·
ing children. in a family set-
ting, and urged alcoholic
beverages be made avail·
able to 7oung persons at
a d u 1 t-supervised church
eatherings.
The study, released last
week, q u i c k 1 y received
endorsement from the Na·
tional Council of Churches.
'Ibe Rev. Dr. John L.
Regier, associate general
secretary of the council,
said solutions to drinking
problems "will tend to be
wet rather tilan dry."
This was also the conclu-
sion of the report prepared
by a panel of experts dur·
ing a six-year study, which
pointed out that 70 per cent
of Americans drink. Since
this is the case, the report
said, the positive aspects of
drinking should be accentu-
ated.
Al. a start for permittill&
persona m all ages to pur-
chase liquor, the report rec·
ommended that the legal
drinking age be lowered im·
mediately to 18.
The report. entitled "Al-
cohol Problems: A Report
to the Nation," was pre·
pared by the Cooperative
Commission on the study of
Alcoholism. The comm.is·
sion was established in 1961
and financed by a grant
from the Natiooal Institute
of Mental Health of the U.S.
Department of Health, Ed·
ucation and Welfare.
To back its contention
that self control would be
the best way to elimi·
nate problem drinkers, the
commission pointed out the
few incidents of alcoholism
found among American
Jewish families w h er e
drinking is treated ca~ual·
ly but drunkenness strong-
ly disapproved. ·
The highest incidence of
alcoholism in America. the
commission said, is among
Irish-American catholics
and Angl<>Saxon Protest·
ants where families often
prohibit akxmol and put
drinking in the ''fmtidden
fruit,.. categoq. accarding
to the repcrl.
NY Car Chase
Ends; 3 Die
NEW YORK (UPI) - A
stolen car being pursued at
high speeds by p o 1 i c e
rammed broradside"into an·
othet" v e h i c l e Tuesday
night, killing three of ita OC·
cupants and aerioaaly in·
juri.ng a foo.rth.
The three occupanta of the
stolen vehicle were Bl.so 1er·
iously injured.
WHAT HAVE ·vou GOT
TO LOSE?
646-6166
LARRY
CAIRNS
431 W. 19th St.
Costa Mesa
I ""' .... STATE f'.ARM FIRE A ANO CASUALTY GOWAMT ........ " """* OffU~ _......., , .....
,_"°" fStAND
:> ----
NEWPORT
Courts of FAshiOll • NtwPOrt Bra(h
Ttlephont 644· I '12
Shop Mon. thru Fri. JI! 00 a "' t c
'-'O p m.-SAt 10 00 A.m. lo ti pm.
'....r-. ----!::;... '.. ..
I
i i
~
~ i -ii" ..
I
See J1clcie Douglas, Pan American Stewardess
in • speci•I packing demonstr1tlon:
W ... Oct. 11 DHuf, J:OO .-... .,_
n.n.. Oct. 19-......._, ll:OI IK ... ffeor
M. Oct. ~ leodl, 2:tO-tKelt4 flHf
Ftl Oct. 21 .... ,..,. 7:10 _ ... ,.._
s... Oct. 21_.. A--. 1':00 .u .. ""'
ANAHEIM DEL AMO DOWNEY
444 H. Euclid e A11a,,..im
Anatlr1m Shopplnq ~t!f'-Phont 535·8121
Shop MoncUy thru Saturday
Hiwthomt 811111. at Carson St.
I" [WI Amo Cent.tr
Shop Mo,,day thro ~turi!Ay
JO 00 vn. to 9·30 P·"'·
7425 Flrr\tonr fllvrl. • nowrlfy
Trlr!'hnnr 'll3 QHI
Shop MnndAy th1u s~tllfr1AV
10 OC a m. to o JO p m. 10 00 a m. to 'l JO p m.
-.... ,..,..-
A •
TREND SETTING
"ALCAZAR" IN.
RICH BASQUE
ANTIQUE FINISH
449.95
boldly styled in the fine Spanish
tradit ion ... beautiful three-piece
group by thomasville in deep oak
solids and veneers. group includes
76" triple dresser accented with
deeply carved lattice work panels,
handsomely mated mirror and
full or queen size headboard.
21 .00 monthly.
also available nighf stand, 99.95;
dresser and mirror with king size
headboard, 479.95. ormoire, 259.95.
Furniture. 92
SO EASY
TO OWN
on a broadway
~omemaker account
take months to pay
SIMMONS "CORRECT
POSTURE"·GIVES YOU
THE SUPPORT AND
COMFORT YOU NEED
4 5. 8 8 ea. pc. twin or full
our best-selling mattress gives you
the support you need and the
comfort you enjoy. firm or extra
firm tension and comfortable
button-free quilted top. premium
cotton felt upholstery is quilted
to a decorator floral cover.
mattress or box springs. 5.00
monthly. 60x80" queen size set,
159.95; 72x84" king size set, 199.95.
as shown , full size velveteen
headboard, 69 .95; twin , 59.95;
queen and king headboard, 79.95.
Sleep Strop, 69
NEWPORT *· ~ .. ~., --:-............. ~ ..;
FASHION ISLAND AT NEWPORT CENTER "'~ .....
HUNTINGTON BEACH
7777 Edingrr Aw.. • H11nt1n11ton Buch
Telephone 892-l331
!ihop Monday thru Saturday
in·oo a.m. to 9 JO p.m.
LONG BEACH
l!OO Bellflov.'fr Blvd. e long leacli
Telephone 59t.· l3.33
Shop Monday thru Saturday
10:00 .1.m to 9·30 p.m.
,
' I
I
II
I
I '
!1
I·
I
I
I
I
I
;,f c
seve
ing,
best
f()()[
mad
and
thei
and
cut
thrCJ
han1
guit
The
Frid
II wee:
to ti
L:
PUPPE'
Lucas, i
--uppets
DEAR .
cial ·work
ment o( a
fornia. E1
one hean
ment. I I
tine. It ga
get those
1 know o
working a
compensa
Here's
encouragi
mate bab:
ey fdr ev
world. T}
having a
collect th·
I'd like
I
II
I
I
1,
I:
l
I
11
I
llA ANDEISON, Editor
T_..,, OCL O, 1"1 lta.c:M ,... I
Guild to
YOu the Creeps
Cauldrons. caskets, coffins and just plain creepy atuff . . .
It's haunted house time and the Costa Mesa Punch and Judy Guild
:1( Children's Hospital ol Onnge County will conduct a frightening tour of
seven rooma of Halloween terror.
Following in the giant stepa of last year's successful haunted house,
!(Uild members got busy this summer and famioned all sorts of eerie items.
Then they transformed the old Costa Mesa police department build·
ing, Newport Boulevard and Ford Road, into a weird setting for the very
best of gbosUy characters and scenes.
A witch will greet visitors and guide them through the building. One
room will be a bboratory where a mad scientist will perform his equally
mad experiments, while a dining room will have a witch sening secret brew
and creepy crawler sandwich~.
A ~11 will house a jailbird behind bl.rs, and u feu-lell visiton make
their ny down tbe darrcorridon, they'll be confronted with spider webl
and 1piden and bats &IOwinl in the dark.
lloam and groans will signal the nearby .lick room and an open
cuket will add another scarey Halloween touch. Weird music . will play
through the house and skeletons. alligators, eyes and family portraits will
hang in very possible spol
In the sitting room of old furniture. characters will sit and play
guUars. while a monster will be swinging on a hammock in the backyard.
There children or octopuses (who knows?) will slip down a slide.
A gorilla will bid everyone a frightening farewell.
The haunted house will be open to the public from noon lo 10 p.rn.
Friday, Oct. 27; 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Saturday. Oct. 28. and 3 to 9 p.m. Hallo-
ween. Oct. 31 .
There will be an admission charge of SO cents per person, payable
to the witch at the door or to guild members in advance; All proceed! will
be donated to Children's Hospital. • ·
HAUNTING AROUND -Mrs. Oarl Schaefer cfeft) and Mrs. Myron
Henchler put the fi:lµsbing touches on a witch and her companion
for the Punch and Judy Guild's Haunted House. The guild, under
the direction ol Mn. David Davis. ways and means chairman, and
Mrs. H.erscbler, decorations chairman, has worked all summer fash-
ioning the creepy stulf out oi glue, paint, old newspapers, plastic
bottles and string.
.Countywide _Call: 'Come to the Fair'
"See you at the fair."
Heeding 1ibe call Friday and Saturday, Oct. 20
and 21 will be throngs of Orange County residents
who will troop to the Santa Ana Fashion Square mall
to attend the first CHOC f'Qir.
CHOC is Children's Hospital of Orange County.
the beneficiacy of proceeds from the old-fQshioned
country get-together which opens at 4 p.m. Friday
and 10 a.m. Saturday.
There will be something for every •i' group,
from food and carnival rides to music and cultural
diaplay1. Eleven ooUDty CHOC guilds are spon&"Oring
booths and attractions.
Costa Mesa's Punch and Judy Guild members
will open a Flea Market where such items as furn-
iture, jewelry. bric.a-brae. china, glass, silver, an·
tiques, kitchen gadgets and what-have-you will be
for safe.
An added treat wiU be Don Picard's golden
bear balloon which wiU float 15 stories hi-gh over
the fairgrounds. And the U.S. Coast Guard will be
there, too, manning an educational booth prom<>t·
ing small boat safety.
CindeTella Guild members of Newport Beach
will be up to tbeir elbows in dough when they man a
pizza and soft drink eatery.
The Children's Theater Guild of Newport Beach
will get into the act with a children's play while the
Orange County Dental Society Auxiliary puts a pup-
pet ehow on stage.
Otlher booths among the many will h'Ouse a
Santa's toyshop for the youngsters and boutiques
for milady.
Lucky Ucket holders may win a trip lo the Or·
:ent, a television set, tea cart, scuba equipment,
~rkbench, boats or an oil painting.
PUPPET FARE -Little Dana Lynn
Lucas, is enthralled as she meets the
,uppets who will parade at the CHOC
Fair. Puppeteers are (left to right)
Mrs. Robert Hauck and Mrs. Blaine
Worrell.
Children's Hospital will use the funds to con-
tinue providing the finest care to children of all
races and creeds who nee1:1 specialized care. The
hospital is located in Orange.
INTO THE ACT - ''Dr. Squash the
Doll Doctor" will come to call on all
young viewers when the Children's
Theater Guild of Newport Beach gets
in the CHOC Fair act. The "doctor"
(Mrs. Clinton Hoose) aids a toy IOl'd-
ier (Mrs. Richard H. Pauley) While
Jimmy Oyer and Victor Ballard ~left
to right) watch. _
Weary Welfare Worker Cuts Off Gossips Who Fake Cases
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a so-
cial ·worke r in the welfare depart·
ment of a medium • sized city in CaU·
fornia. Everywhere I go. when some·
one hears I'm in the welfare depart-
ment, I get the same tiresome rou-
tine. It goes like this: "Why don't you
gel those chiselers of( the reuer rolls?
I know ot a case where tbe guy is
working and collecting unemployment
compensation."
Here's a not h er one : "We are
encouraging women to have illegiti·
mate babies by giving I.hem aid mon·
ey fdt every kid they bring Into the
world. These no good tramps keep
having a baby every year so they can
collect the ai<I money ...
rd liktt to say something to evPry·
one who "knows a case." Welfare
agencies don't want to hand out mon-
ey to chiselers. Please give us some
real information like the names and
addresses of people instead of vague
talk. We employ investigators whose
job it Is lo check out fakery and fraud .
If you will help us nail the fakers
we'd appreciate it. but no mortt vague
talk. plea Re -K.P M. h ·
DEAR K.P.M.: I've 11eard tbtt samt
chatter and I am not a welfare work·
er. Tltau 10• for telllaf me what to
say to U1ese people.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a girl
17, one of five children. and thor-
oughly disgusted with my parents.
Mom and Dad have been married 21
years and all they have ever done
since I can remember is fight. fight.
fight. They throw things. yell. curse .
;md lock eacti other out or thf' housP
What's more. they don't care who se1•s
or hears them.
The dey after one of these disgust-
ing knock-down. drag·out brawls they
act Uke a couple of lovebirds -as if
nothing happened. How can people be
so changeable?
I've told my mother a dozen times
that lf she had an ounce of self-re-
spect she would throw Dad out or the
house. (He is the one who starts most
or I.he fights.) She says. "You are
right." but she never does an ythin g
about It.
What can r do to get Mom to throw
Oad out so we can have some peacP
and quiet around our place?-WAR
ZONE
OEAR ZONE : Nothln!f. So itl\'t> nr
" ;'
already. If ynur parents havr IH>rn
hallllng for as long as you can rt"
member, they wtll probably contlnur
to battle for the rest of their lives.
Some people get their kicks from
fighting and making up. It's unfor·
lunate that these kooks don't do their
fighting out in the middle of the desert
"'here &bey could scream their child·
lsh heads off and no one would bear
them, but they seem to enjoy per·
form ing for an audience.
Just remember these ugly fights
and vow that your children wlll nev-
tr have to put up with such stuff.
CONF IDENTIAL TO RELAXED RY
l.IQtJ.OR : rve heard your theory he-
forf:'. l3ub. and it's a poor t'xcuse for
~etlin.I( plastered. Pcrhapll your re·
laxed" state prevented you -from
breakin.I( some hones when you fell.
but ii 1s more than Likely that if you
had been sob<.'r you would not have
fallen down the stairs in the first
place.
''The Bride's Gulde," An.n Landers'
booklet. answers some of the most
frequently asked questions a b o 11 t
weddings. To rtcelve your copy of tbh1
comprehensive guide, write to A n 11
Landers. In care of this newspaper,
enclosing a Ion~. self • addressed,
stamped envelope and 35 cents In coin.
Ann Landers will be ilad to help
you with your problems. Send 'hem lCI
ht'r In <'Hrf' nf tht' DAILY PILOT. tn·
rlol'lnt 11 ~tnmprd. self-addrcssrd ~n·
vrlope.
t
TllfSdU, October 17, 1%7
Shall We Dance-In Swedish Style
Jailr Sa ri4 Falk Ducen Patricia Ollila and Bill
1111'ri1 == uder directiaa d Kn. Eric Wallin fir ... ~. Od. 21, ......._.,dinner dance
., hdilr' i.dp. Ncupmt BwlL Allon BerlltJ'Om
... llil W 0 I he .... will alertaiD. Dinner will be
..... ,..._ I to I p.a ia tbe Newpcri SeUlr' Citi-
Ingredients Molded
For Valentine Ball
1.-y -.ts will OCC1IPJ a. .....,... al reprnart>
ttws fll the West Grove
Ar9 Co-col, Ma Sigro.a
Ptli, ... tlley meet nun-
-.~·· ... ~ ...... kadl ~ ol Mrs.
Bllmt~.
lh. IWely is aerving as
Ai++ m el the VaJentine
a.a~. and cksiDC
.. -dbe plans for the
,....WJ e.811 will be dis.-
~ ..t an COit esti---. ..a....,.... a1 c1ec-• a· will .. ....Ut&ea.
A cllllr ..._ fll blue,
...... lilwr' ... been
I ... 11r .. RoJa1 Ow· ...... Bell. ... ad ..,,..
dJwMdl~tbe
Clllmil ,.,. ~ in
-.... ., ••A4£1M11tl
CYlnHIA MES .........
for the festive f!Vent taking
place in the Sberato.Beech
Inn.
Princesses f r o m each
chapter have been selected
and one will be crowned
qUHD the night ol 1he evenl
Representing their chap-
ters are the Mmes. Paul
Crezee, Huntington Beach,
Bela Alpha Pi; James Pot·
t.er, Fountain Valley, Mu
E~lon; Ted Bennett. Wesl-
mlluter, Xi Mu Mu, a n d
1bomas McDonald. Hunt-
ington Beach, Preceptor, AJ.
pha 'Ibeta.
1be princesses from each
dlllpter •iD be honored •t a
10 a.m. colfee Saturday, Oct.
n. in Mn. Polely'1 borne,
and they will decide on the
types of ball rowna and col·
en to be selected.
Troth Told
By Giles
Planning to marry are
Cynthia Giles and Willlanr
David Johnson.
T h e enpgement an-
BCUICement w a 1 revealed
bf the future bride'• per•
mb, Mr. and Mrs. BW
G&le1 ot Cost.a Mesa. Par· ena o1 the beneclct • elect
are Mr. and Mr1. Bill Jobn-
90ft ol Huntington Beach.
Miu GlJea, a Costa Mesa
High Scbool gradu11te, at-
~nded Orange Coast Col-
lege. Her fiance who grad-
uated from Westminster
ffigh School abo studied at
OC.C and Goldeti West Col·
lege. . .
No date has been 1et for
the wedding.
,.,.,. '
IT'S
YOUR MOVE!
GllN MAI WIST
The Daily Pilot
Orange Coast's No. l Paper:
~j
Rollins-Davis Names Linked
• Newport Vows Solemnized 1n
Honeymooftlna ln Hawaii
·are Robert Allan Rollina
and hil bride, the former
Deanna Ilene Devll who ex-
changed \IOWI and ringa Sal·
unLay before the Rev. Dr.
Raymond Brah8.J'DJ ln St.
A D d r e .... PrelbyteriaD
Qiureb, Newport Belch.
'lbe bride ii tbe daughter
of Mr. and Mn. Wesley
Howard Davll of Santa Ana,
and parentl ol the bride-
groom are Mn. Frederick Cadwallader of Balboa Is-
land and Robert H. Rollins
of Albambn.
Given in marriage by her
father, .. the bride wore a
lace cage over taffeta, fea-
turing bell 1leeve1 and a
chapel train. A pearl tiara
with cry at al teardrops
cau&bt ber illu.aloD veil. and
she carried a cascade of
baby roses and atephanotis,
centered with a white or-
chid.
Wearing moss green frocks
and matching picture hats
wen Mrs. James K. Magill
ol Anaheim, matron of hon·
or, and Min Marilyn Rol-
ll.o1, the bridegroom's 1is-
ter, rt.rs. George P. Meyer
Jr. of Tuatin and Mra. Gary
L. Baker of Garden Gron.
bridesmaid&.
The honor aUfiad.tnt •· . ried a bouquet of yellow am
bronze colored ~
mums, while the other at-
tendants carried smaller
bouquets of the aame flow·
ers.
Attending ct.s best mp
was Ernest J. Horacek Jr.,
while serving as usben
were James H. Rollins, the
bridegroom's brother. James
L. Murphy and WUliam D.
Allen.
Circulating the guat book
to the 250 guests attending
the reception in Balboa
Yacht Club was Mils Dibna
Weinzierl.
When the newlywedJ re-
turn, they will make their
home in Corona del MM'.
The bride is a graduate
of Santa Ana Valley High
School and attended Santa
An.a Junior College. Her
husband is a graduate of
Arcadia High School ud the
University of Soutbml Cali·
fornla.
Club Calendars
zem Recreation Center with dandne fallowing. Mrs.
Nill JobaDllOD ol Huntington Beach ii in charge of
the daDCel'I. and Mn. Don Burlck Of a.ta Mea. the
dinner prep1ntiolll. ~tiona ma,_ be obtained
by Cllllng l'.iDo Ollila. 54M2'70, or ~ IDIJ be
purdlUed It the door .
Reception, Party
W. 9DS I A.•IM
Speaker to Take Aim
At Space 'Big Shots'
Apollo IV. Fint ol the Big
Shots will be the topic of
Chester Hanis when he
addresses the Lewyers'
Wives or Orange County at
a noon luncheon Thtrsday,
Oct. 19, in the White Horse
rest.urant, Fullert011.
A e.no..en cmblml pat·
ty taalPt and patlDck lllP'
per and reception Jaezt week
will commenct the attention
of the young Llldiet Instio
tute of Ble111ed Sacrament
ln&titute 220, Westm.Wter.
Tonight'• aaJ.a will have
judges cboolini the most
original and funny co~
tumes, and the 1ut persons
to be recognized ia mas-
querade, aoccrding to Mrs.
Mike Re.id, cbal.rman.
Games and surprises will
round out the evening in the
church ball. Event begins
at 7::.>.
~sisting Ule chairman
and sharing judges' duties
will be the Mmes. Larry
Powell, Charles Lindner,
Serving refrabme!U will •• I I' 0
be the Mmet. Jd euou.------------------
ao, William Ferguon., John
McRill, J a cl O>llif1ower,
Tom Kaspryzyk., Gerald
Cennamo, Richan! Cum-
stay, Joseph Walulik, Wll·
bur Martin and T. L. Wor·
thy lake.
The Monday, Oct. 73. re-
ception ln Peek'a Family
Colonial Terrace Room will
honor Mrs. Auatia Aker of
Garden Grove for her re-
election as grand director
of the Young Ladies Insti-
tute. She is a past presi-
dent of Blessed Sacrament
lnstit\JU and a J*i diJtrict
deputy.
Chairmen of the 6::.> p.m .
event are Mrs. Powell and
Mr1. Dean Pbillips.
Islanders See Slides
Slides al ~ ml ~
tion ol the Nes,.-t &lml
Part will be ...... ,.....
Thursday. Oct. It, .. .....
hen ol dale Neapwt ..._.
Woman's Aaililly im tllle
home ol Mn. 14 6 ,..._
lw a...._. A•r.._ _.. '* fllar.ir ... rr ..
8le A; I . 8-S .... a,,_._..
A I '"Clln. .... IR
~--..c.-.....,. ...... ........
..... ~rlll-FL
Gifts, Gadgets
Lure Alumnae
Herrls, asslatant to the
vice president of adminis·
tration. North American
Aviation Sp ace Division,
Downey, will discuss the
first full-scale flight test of
the Apollo-Saturn V launch
vehicle s c b e d u l e d al
Kennedy Space Center, Fla.
Before joining North Am·
t!"ican, Harri.; was an
assistant professor in busi·
ness administration at Cali·
fomia Sta~ College at Long
Beach.
Jess Scroggie and Roland·--------------------
Gifts and ga<lget5 will
claim the attention ol South
Coast A I u m n a e Chapter
members ol Alpha Omicron
pt who wi.O gattler at 7:30
p.m. tomorrow in the New-
port Beach home ol Mrs.
Charles Vandervort.
At tbe recent aaJad sup-
per, Mrs. P•trici.I Kay of
Fountain Valley wu rati·
fied u chapter editor.
Mrs. Ja~s Batchelor.
~dent, will introduce the
1peaker.
Members will be greetfld
by Mrs. Walter Steintt.
chairman. and memben of
her hospitality committee.
Sodal hour will begin at 11
a.m.
Cllampagne.
Mesa TOPS
Merging Me.r~ds TOPS
Club of Costa Mesa meetl
at · 7 p.m. in Woodland
School, 2025 Tu6tin Ave.,
every Thursday. Mrs. John
Kazloff, 548-6213, or Mrs.
Leon TOWDJelld, 646-1804,
may be c.a.lled for i.nlorma·
tion.
Unsurpassed in brilliance and extremely valuable ••. nature's mysterious
forces hne created diamonds of noblest colr>r, and they merit our name, ..
COLLECTION BLUE. TheH rare diamonds are not for everyone, but for
the fortunate few who desire lo possPss 1hP ultimate in beauty. Choose an
UDHt diamond or one exquisitely mounted.
11111111
'J. C41rll 1/t cant 1 1 Cll'll 1 Cll'll
Di1mond1 priced from St 111 to auoo
YOUR CHAllGE ACCOUNT INVITED
SLAVICK'S ~J('h.J StNCt: 1tU7
18 FASHION ISLAND e NEWPORT BEACH
'~ ,
,
RENE OF PARIS IS IN NEWPORT
WITH HAND-TIED WIGS OF
EUROPEAN HUMAN HAIR, 200.00
fltEG. 279.00 TO 379.00, SPECULL.Y PIUCU)
FOR THIS EVENT OHL.Y••eF'Aa!l.OCM F'"91UDm TR0s WIQS,
sTYt.m WJTif T1fE Fl.Al• °" PAlllS -'111£ ,
FAMOU5 RINE, IN F'ASHIOIN'S MOST EXCllW CDIPRmS,
FROSTEDS, Too ••• ALL tN TH£ 5~
QUAl.ITY Ofl' RAM: COlfTfN'DITAL HAlll,. ,
MAKE IT A MUST TO MO::T MR. •Elf£,. ,..11) SC&
HOW ADltOITI.Y HE INDMDUALIZES
.vouflt CHOICE OP' T"HIS EXCUISIT£ WIGGUIY.
IN OUR Mlu..ntOY ~.
N tao port Cnlltr
,. •
.·
M
Fe
LIM
Bon
ol l'
!Dirr a.p
Olria
bJ Ml
ster.
Tw
went
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Saint
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Mr.; ol ,,
ancl :
ltnlp
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bond
fitted
lleft
with
qaes
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cbry
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Will
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W. E. Whitlows Reveal
Daughter's Engagement
An open house for Criends
and relatives was the OC·
caslon for Mr. and Mrs. W.
E. Whitlow of Laguna
Beach to announce the en·
pgement of their daugb.
ter, Sharon Jrene Whitlow
to D. S. Gr-ant U.
: A daiay theme witb green
.and gold decoraUona adorn· -
ed their home while the
couple were toasted with
pink champagne. A cake
featured bridal figures and
an engagement ring on top.
MRS. H. It. GILSTRAP
LotA ...... Home
Mormon W.edding Rites
For Howard R. Gilstrap
Luana Leigh Henley and
ffonrd Raymond Gil.strap
al Newport Beach were
married in Sherman Oaks
Cblpel, CJwrcb al Je&us
Olriat ol LaUer-day Sainta
by the Bilbop John H. Web-
ster.
the baek, and held cascades
of yellow chrysanthemums.
J. Robert Nelson was best
man and ushers were Steve
M. Gritton and Hideo Hay-
asbl1 both ol Los Angeles.
The chapel's cultural hell
was the s.etting for the re-
ception. Assisting were Miss
Jan Hill at the guest book
and the Misses Jan Wetzel.
Lesley McKes8Clll, Cerol Ko-
Special guests were Mr.
and Mrs. D. S. Grant of
Costa Mesa, the benedict-
elect's parents; Lt. Col. and
~rs. C. F. Blake of Falls
Church, Va. and family, tbe
bride-eleet's aunt and uncle;
Mra. Ka1hryn Blake of Falls
Church, her gr~dmotber;
Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Blake
and f~ of Orange, her
aunt and uncle, and Mn.
G. G. Phenny Of Laguna
HillJ, hil grandmother.
Lt. Col Blake and his
wife celebrated their 25th
wedding anniversary at the
betrothal party.
The bride-to-be is a grad-
uate of Buscher High School,
MARY HAUSER
January Bride
SHARON WHlnOW '
Laguna Bricte..e.ct ..
Santa Clara wblle her fi.
ance is an alumnua of New·
port Harbor High School
and Orange Cost College.
The benedict -elect left
Monday for one year ac-
tive duty with the Air Force
In Thailand. The couple will
marry after his return.
Reverend's
Daughter
To Marry
Tbe Rev. Jobn H. Hauler
will perform a ceremony
linking bis daughter, Mary
Keith Hauser, and Wl1liem
Thomas Hewett on Jan. rt
.in St. Mary's Episc0pal
Church, Laguna Beach.
Two days later the couple
went to the Loa Angeles
Temple ol the <1wtth of Je-
IUS Quist of Latter • day
Saints foe ibe teating eeT'e-
lDOllJ.
walewski, Flossie Wong and ---------
Oarol West. Aho helping
The daugtiter of the Rev.
and N..rs. Hauser of Laguna
was graduated from Laguna
Beach High School and list
summer was in charge of
the city swimming program
al the school.
Be.fore enrolling in t h e
School of Nursing at Or-
ange Coast College this fall.
she attended the University
of California, Santa Bar·
bal1a aod California State
College at Loog Beach.
Parents al the couple are
Mr. and Mn. L N. Henley
ol Tbouund Oaks and Mr.
and Mn. James Stiles Gil-
strap "' Ne~ Beach. ?be bride wore a white
bonded crepe. floor length
fitted A-line gown with Jong
aleeftl and jewel nectline
wittl organdy flower appJi..
ques •her bodice and
around the bemline.
Tbree layers ol tulle veil-
ing Weft caught to a simple
organdy Sower with leaves
outlined with pearls, and
$be carried a bouquet Of Of·
drids framed with w h i t e
ebry181ltbemums, stepba-
notis and fem.
Miss Mania Brown was
maid of honor and Miss Ca-
rol Ann Shearer and M t I II
Pauline Elzas, both of Tbou-
und Oab were brides-
maids.
n>ey doooed noor length
empire r.tyle jellow crepe
gowns ~th soft gathers in
were the Mmes. Carl.son.
Nelson, Bennett, Grover,
Daines, Call and Webster.
Special guests were How-
ard T. Gilstrap of Costa Me-
sa. the bridegroom's grand-
father; 1be bride's brother
and sister, Tom end Nonna,
and the beoedict's brother
and. wife, James and Mari·
lyn and their daughters.
The newlyweds honey-
mooned in Palo Alto and
Donner Lab, and are mak-
ing their home in Los An-
geles.
'!be new Mrs. Gilstrap is
a graduate al Thousand
Oab High Scbool and pres-
emly is • .enior majoring
in Eng!isb at UCLA. Her
husband attendee! 11amilton
College, New York; Brig·
ham Young Univentty and
is an alumnus of Stanford
University. Presently he ls
a second Yeat law student
at UCLA where he is active
in the Moot Court Honors
Program.
Peering Around
MARRIED 1N St. An·
drew'a Presbyterian Qmrctl
were Barbara Burrow and
Roes A. Wilaon.
Parents ot the .C'01118 are
Mr. and Mn. F. C. Burrow
of England and Mn. Muriel
Wilson and the late Mr. John
Wilaon of New 1.ealand •.
Leslie M. Hibberd, th e
bride'• cousin al OoMra Mesa
gave her in marriage and
Mn. Hibberd was her ma-
tron al honor.
But ma na Donald B.
Lamy of Senta Ana.
The home ol the Hibberd&
was the setting . for the re-
ception. Following, the cou-
ple left tor Fiji on their
honeymoon. They will make
their first home in Auck-
land, New Zealand.
Special guests at the sin-
gle ring ceremony were the
Misses Laura and Linda
Hibberd, Mrs. Lamy and
children, and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Downie o! Hermosa
Beech.
J. C. fiumpfm11~ J11w11lr!J
/iav, o/f-,,J 'luafif'I
lo tL, l.a,{,o,. ana . /or
Of/Ill' 2 f 'Jllal'' • • •
• Diamonds e Wotchu e JttDtLrv made to ~
esmlifto • Fine JC1.0Clrt1
J. C. Humphries
Jnoci.ra
1823 Newport Blvd .
Cost• Meu
5-48-3-iOI
B'nai B'rith
L'cba'im Chapter o( B'nal
B'rith Girls meets in Tem-
ple Sharon, Costa Mesa, the
first and thW Tuesdays at
7:30 p.m. Miss Nancy Wer-
ner, 546-IMB, may be con-
tacted for further informa-
tion.
Her fiance, the son of
M.r6. William H. HeweU of
Long Beach and the late
Mr. Hewett, attended Long
Beach City College.
lf .,.,,.. ~for f»e ililil'lJOlt> weftwt
wl fllW"'tioD oE m tmderwire, this is tbe bra
for,_. Jt d.. a DeW fabric with that
'T8icRd Cotton Look:° 'What me\es Jt IO
dil J? We've hooded nylon ~t
k> a Nmd ~of DACflON
~er-NYLON-OOTION roe extra
Cength, support, and shape retention, mbanced
hr the Pol)'ester FIBER FILL lined petal
lifts and Wldttwires. -V .. neck, LYCRA
Spwlex elastic bltek Md low cut uoder anl
eompl• the picture ol this daintily
~ed bra. FuJJy adjo~ub&eshoulder
lb'apa ~ Baonel lined and~
with soft ""'°" tricGt.. .. ,...,..,.
C 32-40 at $6.00
D·DD 32-42 at $7.00
1717 I. Ced Hwy.
C.... .. M.,
,.._ 67J·1tl0
• M Mdef C~
H y-. hi s.-lecetl.tt
I
........... 17, 1-1 °"'1l Y PILOT J J
Fashions Showing!
Tickets are now on sale
for Fall Fashions, a lunch·
eon and showing _to be pre·
se nted by Xi Mu Zeta Chap.
ter. Beta Sigma Phi, ac·
cording to ticket chairman
Mrs. Donald Miller.
All proceeds from the Sat-
urday, Nov. 4 event, which
will take place in tbe Cos-
ta W.esa Gou and Country
C lub, will be donated to
•
...
LONDON
BUS FOR
CHARTER
Quicksilver shines through the night
flag,es of silws ipte white llac3* ••• 111ile allar • Ciiis
are illuminated will a .. w twilld"°llC • J -s 'its I llJ
hdew ""°"· sizes 1111', DL9 Desi,.n' Cildl
u IDS'
..
Newport •1 Fashioo Island Newport CPOttr e 644·22C"Jil ~ lbt., Thurs., Fri. 10:00 611 t30 Ofter days ro:m llt t.tl
.
!
-.
' ,
'
J! DAILY PILOT Tutsd.\Y, Ocl.Ober 17, 1967
FUND-RAISER$ RELAX -Taking a moment to chat are Mrs. D. S. Stylianou,
Krs. J. Simon Fluor, hostess, and Mrs. Phillo Tozer (left to right), fund-raising
campaign chairmen for the Orange County Association tor Retarded Children.
Mrs. Tor.er is chairman of the Newport Beach area.
Investing
'Accounts'
For Topic
Goals Served With Tea
To Campaign Chairmen
Orange Cowity Chapter
members of the American
Society of Women Aocoont-
aMI will be aaked wi.y Not
lnvat in Yourself wben t11eJ attend tbe aixla an-
..i pablic relatiom ... Ing al tbe society 'nmndly,
Oct. 19.
1be women will gather at
1:45 p.m. in Coda's restau-
rant, Buena Park, to bear
Wendell N o b I e, Glendale
Federal Savings and Loan
Auociation's community re-.
lations director.
Newly-appointed chair·
men for the Orange County
Association for Retarded
Orlldren fund-raising cam·
paign met at ta for orien-
tation la the Santa Ana
home ot Mr1. J. Shnoa
Fluor.
Mn. J'laar, t b i I 1Uf'I
residmtial chlUman, an·
nounced the 1911-38 goal
ftmd ii sm,ooo and that her
chairmen will be responsi·
ble for recruiting door-to-
door volunteers.
Money raised will support
OCARC projects, the Hope
Haven schools and the Hope
Haven Training Center, tbe
association's sheltered work
shop, rehabilitation a n d
training facility. OCARC al·
so l>J>Onsors the Hope Haven
Village thrift shop.
<»-hostess at the orienta-
tion waa Mrs. J. Douglas
Uttlej<iln of Orange, and
also on hand was Mrs. D.
S. stylianou of Santa Ana,
lut ,.... rtlideotial chair·
man .
Recetviq their individual
community Ulignments
from Or&Jlle Cout cities
were the Mmes. K. G. Wil·
son, Fountain Valley: Nor-
man Warner, HUDtington
Beach: Dean Whitaker, La·
guna Beach; Philio Tozer,
Newport Beach; Ima Nau-
man, San Clemente, a n d
Ray Mercer, Westminster.
Those interested in volun·
teer work m a y contact
OCARC at 541-4458 for fur·
tl:>er information.
The public relation.I aes·
sioa is conducted eech year
to acquaint the business
community with its mem·
bers, and with the aims and
goals of the accounting pro·
fession society.
All interested persons as
well as accountants and
those associated with ac-
countants are invited to at·
tencl.
Reservations m a y be
made by calling Mrs. F.dna
Stennett, 521-5252.
Washin_9ton Rites Link
Altman-Gardner Names
Churchwomen
Plan Morning
Bpok Review
Woman's Society o! Chris-
tian S e r v I c e at Christ
Olurc:b by the Sea, Newport
Beach is presenting a book
review and worship service
for their Day A p a r t
on Thursday, Oct. 19, from
10 a.m. to noon, in Goodell
Hall.
1be Rev. James Lambert
will review James Michen-
er's book "'lbe Source" and
following will be a discus-
sion period and services in
the suctuary.
Coffee will be served and
the public is invited.
Oh, with what
flair we color
your ha ir
with
Alvin Louis Altman Jr.,
son of Air Force Maj. (rel)
and Mrs. Alvin L. Altman of
Irvine, claimed ~ary Qltb.
erine Gardner as bis bride
during ceremonies perform·
ed by the Rev. Richard Red·
man in the Open Door Con-
gregational Church, D e e r
Park, Wash.
The ~. daughter of
Mrs. George Gardner of
Dee' Park and the late Mr.
Gardner, was given in mar-
riage by her u n c 1 e, Art
Clarkston.
She wore~ floor length
empire satin gown and a
matdling satin redingote.
Mesa Lodge
Mesa Rebekah Lodge 40'l
meetA al 8 p.m. every fll'St
and third Tuesday in Odd
Fellows Hall, 2476 New-
port Blvd., Costa Mesa.
MISS CLAIROL~
• • • because our experts ore artists
ot custom-blending ••• know
how to put color excitem6f1t in
your hoir so it looks perfectly
notvroll And cover every smitch of
gray, to bootl
Miss Clairol halrcolor
retouch including
shampoo and set... $8.50
~
Her fingertip illusion veil
was caught to a satin bow,
and she carried white car-
nations, centered with gold
and yellow talisman roses.
Karen Cain of Spokane,
the bride's attendant, wore
a gold satin gown and car·
ried gold carnations and yel·
low chrysanthemums.
Atunding the bridegroom
as best man was Gilbert
Knepp and ushe!' was David
Paulding. Both are station-
ed with the bridegroom at
Fairchild Air Force Base.
After honeymooning at the
Grand Coulee Dam, the new·
lyweds are at home in Spo-
lca.ne.
The bride is a i;raduate of
Deer Park High School and
attended a secretariaJ
s c h o o L Her husband is a
graduate of Ramona H i g h
Scbool, Riverside and River·
side City College.
IN cosr A MESA . . .
HAltlOlt SHOPPING CENTER
KI 9-0757
WITH OR WITHOUT
APPT.-OPEN EVERY
EVENING I SUNDAY
PERMA TRESS IN HUNTINGTON BEACH •••
6 PTS. SHOP,,NG CENTER VI 7·106)
SPRINGDALE-EDINGER CENTER
197-1593 BEAlfrY SALONS
j
Son Diego HoneyfJ100n
Newlywed Kleins Home
Bouquet& ol while lt.ock
and cbryaanthemum1 adorn-
ed the altar of st. Andrew'•
Presbyterian anudl, New-
port Beech when ta. Rev.
Dr. Charle& D'.erenfteld r'8ld
the double riDC nuptial rit.
linking carol Ann Getes and
Jolm Day Kleln.
'Ibe bride, daughter al
Mrs. Maxine Gates Of Co1·
ta Mesa and the late Mr.
Robert Marshall Gates, was
given in marriage by her
m a t e r n a I grandfather,
James Hoffman ol Hes·
per la.
She wore a full length
gown of white brocade with
a chapel train, and her el·
bow length illusion veil wu
caught to a crown « seed
pearls and crystals. Form-
ing her cncade were wbi1e
roses and baby1 breath.
Wearing avooado ~
brocade and crepe frocu
and oarrying pink rosel ml
carnations were Miss J1J41
Kay Jones ol Q>sta Meta,
maid of honor and Miu
Jonne De Lano rl. Tustin and
Miss Cecilia Abbott of Co&-
ta Mesa, bridesmaids. A
forest green gown was worn
by Kathy Krebs of Sunny·
meade, the bridegroom'•
niece who served es flower
girl.
The bridegroom, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Hugo Klein
of Fullerton asked bis broth·
er, Roy S. Klein to be bis
best man. Ushers were Skip
Pattereoo and James Wrlgbt
both al Fresno.
C1reulat1Dg the guMt book
durint the reception ID tbl
churcb's Fireside Room wu
Miss Mitzi Golding of Colla
Mesa.
MRS. JOHN DAY Kl.&9
DIDl' .. C. I
Special guests were the.==========I
bride's grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Hoffman and Mr.
and Mrs. Guy E. Knoop of tfl'r.~~~
Howell, Mich.; N'.r. and Mrs. llllaililllii'fj
.. ....... ..........
"THI HONIY POT"
.,
... ii. ii IPICIAL MAT1Nll
.. ii Iii ii .. .:'!.!.:!m
~ORT -
9UINLTS 1.00
SECOND SMASH
WEEK
F01t ADULTS
Donald L. Krebs of Sunny· ...,.., ......... _ ...._ ......
meade, the bridegroom's "WOMAN,...,.. ~ii!iii:==:::=::I .,. *1lltJl'rNlllEl>B6§/JJ~/ilU'#lfl
"DOWT MAii WA_. • ~...II.:.
Betrotha I 1~~~7..--.... iiiiiiiiii.,,.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiml 'IJ!!C,~~-ca __ ./1, !!~~·
Revealed -_"f!P
Workshops Tel I
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• CHILD WITH 'AH NT ONLY •
LAST TIMI TONIGHT
"TWO FOR THE ROAD"
"ZORBA THE GREEK"
STAlTS WIDNlSDA Y
PENETRATION
Nearly 1veryon1 ru clJ t~,
DAil Y PILOT, hom1lown..111w1-
p1pu for the F1bulou1 Oren9•
Co11t
................. ._ • .__,,.,_ ...... ••Fiii I SS i
M'MnW. Bll'I F •
uar.-.. -. .... z ..
w.&-.ni.1:9 ..
UUfH CORSI ..__T....., _.. .............
...._.._as-.•z•.a
la/ts •. •
Wiff Rf THl JJRIGHTUT $TAI'$ filWilC
Tllll LDPEZ _ .... ,..
through Now. 7 ..••................•.
111 El & 10111
starting ~-8
---~••ftl, ....
rr PLAYS AT TWO
IDWAllDS WXUIY CINIMAS
.................. ................. -. ...... .......... _ ............... . ................. -... --......... ....... -...... -................ ...
I ·No. 1 Poper: The Doily Pilot
!.__~~~---''-----------------------~ ,
PEANI
GOI
MOC
(
MU
Ml
0
DI
PEANUTS
GODO
JUDc;E PAUii
MISS PEACH
0
D
DElllE DEERE
(.Jl.IEN etG SISTUS SPEAK;
UTilf &ROTHERS .JIJMl' !!
atfo'n
M/%tlJIU1 '9P• ... OWMM•
ly Gus ArrloMi .
ly Harold Le Doa
t
J
i
ly Frank lolle
TU E~DAY
ocnma 17
......... IQ. ,,,,, .....
....... tllm: IQ (II •>..,........, .... t..e..
-~ I ' 7 t tQ °" ....,Qilc:t ......... .. ...... '-... .... .. Clllrilill ......
• .. CAROUIQ.. "~ I-* tH COLOR! GORDON '
MKRAE. M11J JONESI ll•ra.t--=• iii" hit I (911JiaO ...........
..... Mtlr .... ............ llllcL
8...., tQ (ID lnia.) • .._._.ta CID*) ............ ....... ...,
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.....
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•• ...._ .... OD ..., ................ .. ........ ,..... ... .....
Tlltfde. OcC*t 17, 1967
.... .._.......WO
0--0 ~n. MICIJ. PUMl!RI -Melvyn Douglas and Shirley Booth •mmmMll • ... ,... star tonight in "Do Not Go Gentle Into 'nlat Good ~ 1111111 J ' hw Night" in color at 9:30 on Channel 2. The 90-minut. =.::.. ~ c ~ 1.: ': drama. season premiere of the CBS Playbouae, con· ....._ 11111.,.... -_.. .-cerna an elderly man who resents the empty atmoa. ........... • • 1 a II....," phelt Of waiting for death . llE llJk ............... _________________ _ ., ., .. ...... ....
e:. • ..,,_. .... CIOllllLJ ....... _.
TELEVISION VIEWS e lldllltl .., <JD *> ... •Cl>• Rllln • tll ..... ... tiil.Pllil ........... ,....
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Politics New
TV Subject
....... Cll...., .. • ...... ..... ''------------------'
en.nu tQ Ol llilJ '11::1:.:~ ..= ly CYNTHIA LOWRY
............. tQ Cll _, r % , .. ...._ff -.. NEW YORK (AP) -With election day 1p-11..,.. • .._ •......, proaching and a preaidentW year in the. or:it •.....,. -.,..._ ._ •••II• ...... ._.• televllon's bard pressed sketdl and oomectf
• NII If.. .. .. ~--.... · . d0ii .. DOW ban a sabjec:t tbey can get their bill pDt • n 0 I 5 t.,,.. ...... . . plDI tnto: polWca.
....... • ._ .. • 11 • Bob Hope's wrtetJ lbow oa llG*i lllald, tar .......... """"** -.. ... .. ..... ... .. tmtaace. dnotld about laaJf Gl ..............
• ._ • • • llltJ palltbL Rope's opmtnc mcmolop• rK!ld lr'OaDll •FU J .::~"'!'*la OD*> with on&llnera tmt bit em-yoae tram JlomM1 to
..... Beapn, from the White Home to De Gaulle -Ind
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..... .. ..... .. ....... ....... ~ "' -RicNrd ftllM o..-\.., ,_. ~ ~ ,....,, ·~
IOm8 oi the remarta were abarp-tioDIU*t ..,. tor
Hope.
TH& PRINCIPAL lketch of the ~. ~
WU I little drama about I C&Ufomia polWcal }M)ll
-played by Hope with 01ar and derby -hanJ':J
for a movie star candidate to pit 11alnlt the
candidate, a ohlld star. The 1tetdl actually wu
hand-tailored to ctve guelt star Debbie ~ldl
an opportunity to do a Mrles of tmprtlllona, but
the over-all effect was to aattrtze a nbject that bu
already been pretty well covered, includln& lketchu
in variety shows.
Sund•y night the Smothers Brothen on CBS were involved In a comedy sketch pegged CG a poll
of presidential preferences, the sort of thine that
Ste.e Allen enjoyed doing in bis variety &bow dlaya.
· HOPE, WHO can get away with almott any.
thing because he plays no favorites and ho been
doing lt for ao long, takes a brofld comedy ·~
pl'Oldl to his pollUcal remark.I. Tbe Smothen
Brothen material b11 a teener cutting edit that
could inruct some wounds.
Whether It ls because there II eumnU, to
much competition in the television variety field now
or because Hope has only one show a month to
contend with, his program is brighter, better written
and better produced Ulan in recent aeuom.
The political sketch bad point and purpose. Mt.
Reynolds was great ln a lethal tmpreslfon ol 7Aa
Zsa Gebor but somethng leas in Imitations of Shir-
ley Temple, Carroll Bater and Pbyllll Diller. Her
best moments were in a dance number -she ll
surprisingly good as a song-and-dance girt
HOPE'S MOST amusing stetdl wu pokfnt fl1n
at hippies with the help of Eydie Gorme and Ste'fe
Lawrence. But the subject Is fut become a cllche.
CBS's ''Carol Burnett Show'• which started rs continues to improve steadily in content and
f rm. It went well Monday night with an unllbly
blnation of women guest st.an. There WU
Phyllis Diller with her u111al monologue about
bomewifery, fang and in-laws. Gwen Verdotrllllt a
charming and whimsical dance number. Bobble
Gentry sang in her very pleasant, d1st1nctlft style.
CAROL, a very funny woman, worb well and
with discipline with Harvey Korman, one of the
regulars in the show. They were both effective In a
bit of nonsense built round Dr. Jekyll and Mr. HJde.
Recommended tonight: "Do Not Go ~tie tnto
That Good Night," CBS, 9:30 • 11 EDT, M~
Douglas and Shirley Booth tn an original dnma
Loring Mandel about a man ouWvlng bJI
nesa.
1111 • ........ ,...,......... ..... ............ Ill .......... ------------------... ,.,,.,.,........ <.,...,, ·u -'" SIMllMJr.
.... .. ...... ... • .... ..... ,. l&I"' ""*" '50 -........... ,,, .... ....,.
...,. ~ ......... .,,.,..
WEDNE SD A Y Diet .....
llM ................. (llilrlW) '3J = ::::.-:-~~-:
DAYTIME MOVIES .......
-~ ............ ,..., ~r,._ ,._, .,._ ......
Dennis ilae M~e
lt:tl ...................... ...., • ,...,. """*"
• • '
(lrw) ....... u. ... -. ""\ '51_...., ..............
....., I BtQ........,. <dmld ..._ ..... ....._ .... wJ ~ ,.,.., DllMlll ,..,.
ON A PINHEAD
"..,,., ~"· ...... _ "'"" .. 1no1111et ..,. c...m.tt ......
.... lieH ef • "' .... 4i4 '" .... ., ,..1y ........ -Fw n..
~ecer4" ... ._,.. .. tk DAILY PILOT? Y"'d k -,n .... Iii-
-di ~ -U9 ,ec:li ............. -
, . '
1-1 DAJLY PILOT T1mrta,y, October 17. 1967
T~. Octobtr 17. 19&7 DAIL V PILOl J 5
Tuesday's Closing Prices -Co~lete New York Stock Exchange List
fl DAILY PILOT
From Runway 1o Footlights
Mesa Beauty Queens Making Debutl in Thetder
torwtnirntly located i1 the hurt of Saft
Francisco •• , 1tZ block flOl'll airline bu&
terminal.
Lu1unous rooms 111411 suites with lV.
Dnve·in eari&e. Home el the famous
2._hour PAM PAM bstuant. Enter·
COAST QUEENS •••
Pamela Brown
What happens to beeuty queens when they ru
out ol beauty contests?
Well, they don't all marry Sou.lb Amaitaa miJ..
lionaires. Some of them gravitate into the theater.
Two lovely cases in point are GiO Dahl ad
Pamela Brown, both of Co&ta Mesa. who tbil week
make their community theater debuts in Saa CJ&.
mente and Huntington Beach, respectively.
Gigi, the reigning Miss California World ud
milder ol some two dozen previoul beauty titJel.
prays the young wife in the comedy "Newer Too
La~." opefling Thursday at the San Clemlete n..
ater.
Pam, Costa Mesa's last "Miu 'nnlel" and ab
quent photogenic target for the DAILY PILOT cam-
era, will play Susie, the romantic lead iD die 8~
ington Beach Playhouse product.ion ol "Boy Meets
Girl," opening Friday.
The transition from runway to .Uge tbouJd be
an easy one for both of the 20-year-old beaatia.
Neither is any stranger t'o the bright lights or aftet-
tionate glances from the gallery.
And their presence shouldn't hurt the bos: office
either.
• •• NOW ACTllBSIS
Gill DIM
b inment ni&htl1 fl tllt d1slinct1vt l~-=i __ _.l!..8112'.!~:=m!E:l!E!!:z:El!!ll!all!J!Slllllm=limma ________ __,"""'!!!!llBl .. !ICllB:l--I
aerent Lounre. fnll $10 liqle
HOTEL
BELLEVUE AWARD WINNER
liitMJ l Tnle( ata. le f'tll!CI• The DAILY PILOT bas won
b Cell w r-rv•lloM: ~ ,,,,f m o r • awardl f r om the •·······•-•II Orup CountJ Prea Club than any oths aewspaper.
Each Rrnfl
Custom M acfr
For You.
I See By Today's
·Want Ads
e A pnvatt boat tlhp it
ava.llable!
e A party h111 bttn draltl'd
and thPy IV't l'<laitiang
thrir '63 Stingray!
• The~·· 11 itor~ hand
tied European witt_pvith
raM')'!nit caiw at a tremen-
dous avmgs !
• Whe~ to find a llllall
drop table and 2 iokt up-
holaleNd chain, an near-
ly new and .eiliDI at a
modeet price.
e A boy's gold rolonld 10
•peed bike ii lost!
Holiday
Plav Sets .,
Auditions
Auditions will be held ~
night for a Thanksgiving
play entiUed "Mayflower Di·
ary" which will be presen~
ed in the Orange Coast Col-
lege auditorium over t b e
ThankSgjving weekend.
Director Larry Johns will
hold readings for the pr<>-
duction at 8 p.m. at the
Children's Theater G u i 1 d
building, 1518 Newport Blvd.
The cast is predominant-
ly male and will be com·
posed primarily of adults.
Included among the roles to
be filled are those of May·
flower captain Christopher
Jones, Miles Standish. John
,.. Alden and various sailors
and lndians.
Further information re-
garding the show may be
obtained from Mrs. Leslie
Petersen at 548-3361.
The DAILY PILOT
Covers Boating
Best in West
UrJ!JQUG
• in
:J)ejign & St'f Ang
NUGGET · GOLD
·~ WEDDl~G RINGS
I
U.H
Now 2 Great Stores To Serve Vou
H••tba@.e• AwarU
Billi£ Dawn Role
Again a Winner
BJ TOii nnJI ...........
Billie 0-. .,. a ..._ ............... ,,. ......... ,. ..
"Ban Yi1 11 .., .. ....
WOil ,., llclm8J -Aca&-em1 Anni ia ..._ pllid
off iB a belt adr1!9I tnw*J ror Mari1ya Uaptnm Al-
bert.lea al Cbe Bmdillgtoa
&act.~·· ..al awards~.
Marilyn. wbe llad ..ty a
handful ol liDes to lier' credit
before die Ganoa ~
cooiedy. sbared die spat~
light with lier'._....., a..
Alber'bea. ...........
best director "' Ille ..... ror bia prod9ctiM • ·-n.e Rainmaker." Alberbm .._
starred .. llarilJa • • 'Boro y est.enlay ••
Jotepb C.-r calledel lie
best actor trapllJ f« -role as the fatber ill •-nw
Rain.maker ... ~"Raia
maker'. ..m.r ... 8 ••
Lambert who ._ best lllP"
portiJll actor' ....... fer -portrayal ol die reticelt
deputy.
The best supportimc ar-
tTess ol die te-.. ..
Greu Smida ror lier' ... as
the toppled pillar ti t II e
churcb ia '"See Bow Tiiey
Run.'' Colill Gtliv« ._. a
best cameo actor ......a f•
the same play, wtliJe ~
dry Snitzer was ...... bat
cameo 9Ctren for • role as the &emtor's wife ia
··Born Yesterday."
Nib S.W.1'119daip-
ed lht set. far lb! ,,..,_
....... l9C ...... ..
paa..-W.._..•
Ille• ........... , _. w ... R .,._
~ lllleM' ... llit --,
11w p1a,i-e wiJl ..... I
its _.. Ra1011 Friday night
widt ~ opaiJlg .. Ow com-
edy "Boy Meda Girl... di-
rected .,,. a. AlberUaL
'Kind Lady'
Planned at
High School
Tbe Sall Qetnewk Bigb
Schoel ...... dlb wiD .. '
ib ---N.-. 17 with ~1 pr•aetioe ol •• Kied Lady,"
a myli«J~
Diredell 1'J fllarioa Syka,
die ,.., .m (alme Janet
s..,,..e as n ddaiy
.... wt.. tllroagla her
Did illlntioas. fmdl her-
.. • aptivt ,,, crilllina1I ..... -.w.
~ leader ol the band
wil .. pb,ed by It.art Haa-
•h-while BrGllW'ftl De~ s. ,..J. nae womaa'• sav-..t. ~ Gau.per. ltathy ar..... ad Cindy Fernald
will lie -ill Gtber maj« ,...
CeMpletillg the cast are
P8m Beta. N811CJ eo,te. Ed a-w.. JeaJI l>avis. Bob
llliHKlwll, Scott Duncan,
..... Umellroot ud Mlb
c.tis.
A-"'ant dired« for the I
play ii JottlyB Witt. Mikt ..... '"° be stage man-I
tl!f#I. fte pndDctioll wi 0
.. ~ iJI the San Cle-.... lliClt Sdlool mditori-....
2nd Concert
On Wednesday
11le seelJIBd of the after·
-concerta at UCI will present a program of cham·
bet masic al 4 p.m.. Wed·
..say. ill rme Art• Room
111'. Tiie eonca1I art open
free .. the public.
1be program wiD consist I
"" qaartdl by Haydn. The
..aria• are Rolla la Mc· 1
lt.ay ad Joalfllle Aasmus. 1
riolim; Evdya Bue¥r. vi-i
ola; -~ Armstroag, Yiokmedlo.
IB"S R flBJl y I lf ,_ have aew neighbors
« ._., of anyone moving
.. oar area. please ten us I • that we may ntmd a
friendly welcome and help a.em to bttomt acquainted
18 their MW mrroundingl.
TUI A YlAI
TO PAY • l.ANIAMntCA18
MASTll CHAHI
II r1111o1 lei0
Ynitor
HARBOR SHOPPtNG CENTER HUNTINGTON CENTER
2300 Harbor Blvd. Beach & Edlnpr
Coat• Me.. S4S-9485 Huntington Beach 191-5501
Open Mon., Thur.., Fri. Til 9 p.m. ...... _...,111119 .. rm;mare~•·l*MlilMrti9ililltE~
Almost Everybody Along The Orange Coast Reads The Pilot
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1913 HARBOR BIND .. COSTA MESA e Ml 6-7119 e Kl 9·2033
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Coacb John McKay &ot his top rat·
' ed University of Southern Callfornia
football team down to earth today aft·
er ill spectacular win over Notre
Dame with the warning that Jt laced
another rugged foe in University of
Washington this week.
McKay told the Southern caUfornia
Football Writers Association Monday
that his Trojans wquldn't win against
Washington if they didn't play well and
he refused to give any credence to
the theory that the visiting team is &t
a disadvantage at Seattle.
"U we are the kind of football team
~.~. weatht!r is going to affect, then
~e not a good football team," he
T . .
UDlSlaD
Predicts
Saow Times
MEXICO CITY -One of the great
world distance runners, Muhamed
Gammoudl of Tunisia, offers his opin.
ion on exacUy how much this city's
7,347-foot elevation wlll affect per·
formances in the long runs of 1968
Olympic Games track and field com-
petition.
Gammoudi OaUy predicts unusually
slow times for bla specialties -the
5,000 and 10,000 meters.
He op1nu tbat the sold medallat In
tbe 5,000 will nm 1omewt.er. between
14 minutes flat and 14:10 ••• consJd·
Exclusive
erably slower than Bob Sbul's win·
nJng performance of 13:48.8 in the
'64 Games at Tokyo.
The sllghtly-bullt Tuniaian says the
10,000 meter winner will probably be
clocked in around 30 minutes flat.
When American wonder boy Billy
Mills upset a classy field to win the
Tokyo gold piece, be ran 28:24.4, edg-
ing the hard-luck Gammoudi by four-
lenths of a second and Australia's
Ron Clarke by 1.4 seconds in that
not-to-be-forgotten duel.
Gammoudi believes there is an ex·
'?llent chance that someone will
•1111111111111•
WHITE
WA.SH
fllllllll.llllh
eL.IJOI WMITI
score a seemingly ·tmposslble double
victory in those gruelllng events a
year hence.
And he isn't discounting blmse\f as
a thteat to bag the two triumphs.
However, be indirectly puts Ken-
ya's Kip Keino in the favorite's role.
"He who adapts himseU best to the
thin air should be the winner," Gam-
moudi confides In a mixture of Span-
ish. French and English.
"Keino will be very difficult to beat
because he is used to this kind or al-
titude in his native land. He has speed
and strength. It will be very difficult
to outrun him, unless they turn out to
be unusually slow tactical races.
"The Columbian (Alvaro Mejia) is
a threat in the 10,000.
"Clarke is the greatest in the world,
but that won't matter her*! in Mexico.
What about the Americans?
Gammoudi is not discounting the
Yanks, especially after Mills came out
of nowhere to upset him in Tokyo.
"I believe your little boy, Gerry
Lindgren, could be very dangerous. It
depends whether he tries to double or
concentrates on une race. He could
cert•inly win either the 5,000 or 10,-
000 If he is ready for the altitude.
"There wil! be many. mo.ny sur-
pclses in the 1968 Olympic Games,"
the genial Tunisian concfudes.
Sees
McKay, however, paid tribute to a
"Iant~stically great" effort by his de-
fensive platoon for the 25-7 win over
Notre Dame.
"I don't think anyone could have
seen a greater effort,'' be said. "No-
tre Dame bas four of the best col-
lege linebackers on any team. But we
think our linebackers performed ex-
cellently. We couldn't have played
better defensively."
And, speaking personally, McKay
said it was one of the most pleasant
experiences of his career to take a
team back to Notre Dame for the first
Trojan win there since 1939.
Coach Tommy Prothro of UCLA said
•
that the ranks of the undefeated were
dwindling every week and it would
take a real effort on the part of bla
Bruins to remain ln that category thla
Saturday when they meet Stanford at
Palo Alto.
"We were happy to come out of our
gr.me with California undefeated,"
Prothro said. ''Cal ls a tough, hard-
no!ed and well organized team.·•
Prothro praised his quarterback,
Gary Beban. for a fine game although
California followed t b e pattern of
most UCLA opponents in stacking lts
CJefenses to keep Beban from running
outside.
"Even when Beban can't run as
u ... , .......
LEGAL TROUBLES -Stern faced Cassius Clay, former heavy-
weight boxing champion, leaves federal court in Houston, Texas, with
his new chief attorney Chauncey Eskridge where his former chief
attorney Hayden Covington filed suit for $284,615 which he claims
Clay owes him in legal fees.
Clay Splits With Lawyer,
,
Hit With $284,615 Suit
HOUSTON (AP)-They played out
another episode Monday in the trials
of Cassius Clay, the continuing saga
th.at ask& the question: Can a poor
kid from Kentucky grow up and find
happiness as unemployed heavy-
weight champ and unpaid religious
leader?
In this installment the champ came
to court to make a break with his ex-
pensive lawyer. The lawyer was two
minutes ahead of him with a brand-
new lawsuit seeking $284,615 in legal
fees.
The lawyer is Hayden Covington of
New York, who argued last June be-
MARCIANO WHIPS
GENE TUNNEY
Rocky Marciano will meet Ma:.
Baer next Monday evening in the com·
puterlzed "dream fights" belng car
ried over KFW?. radio each Monda~
night at 6:30.
Marciano decked Gene Tunney fou
times Monday night to advance in tht·
16-man heavyweight tournament.
The fights are programmed through
computers and a "live" fight is creat-
ed. The championship bout will be
carried December 18.
The figbts are broadcast over 400
stations across the United States and
Australia.
fore U.S. Dist. Judge Joe Ingraham
and a jury that Clay should be draft-
exempt as Black Muslim Mjnister
Muhammad All.
The jury disagreed aDd Ingraham
sentenced Clay to five years and $10,-
000, freeing him under $5,000 bond un-
til the boxer's appeals are settled.
Clay asked Monday and won Crom
Ingraham permission to replace Cov-
lngton's Houston associate QuiMan
Hodges with M. L. Plummer, w h o
then signed Clay's bond.
The appeals, which could keep Clay
out of jail for years, would be han-
dled by lawyer Chauncey Eskridge of
Chicago, if the fighter has his way.
It was Lt:krldge the marshal served
Monday in Covington's lawsuit. Cov-
ington wa~ched that happen, t h e n
left for his hotel, where be sad Mon-
day night that Clay bas not succeed-
ed in firing him.
"I am his attorney of record until
I am substituted," he said.
"I don't maintain that I am, I am."
Clay said or Covington. "I don't
1 now how he feels, but as far as I
am concerned, he's the best lawyer
!n the world. We were just denied jus-
'ice in ocurt. He is due his saluy
and should get it, but I don't agree
,\•ith his salary."
In August, Ingraham denied Clay's
request for permission to honor some
old contracts and fight abroad. He
was made tQ surrender his passport,
and he cannot work in the United
States because the World Boxing As·
sociation claims to have stripped him
of the world Utle.
Pre-Olympic Competition
Yanks Collect 1st Medals
MEXICO ClTY (AP) - W h i 1 e
Yoshinobou Miyake of Japan was hav-
ing some troubles despite winning a
geld medal. Randy Matson and Char-
lotte Cooke ~asJly collected the first
two golds for the United Stales in the
Pre-Olympic Games Monday.
Matson of Pampa, Tex., put the shot
s.; feet 2'r'• inches, well off bis world
record of 110-n~. and then sprinted to
catch a plane back to his stu<lies at
Texas A&M.
Miss Cooke of Washington, D. C ..
stuck around after a more satisfy.
Ing performance of 52.4 seconds in the
women's 400 meters, a Games record
which was her career best and only
a half-second o(C the world record.
"I got orr to a fast st&rt." she said.
"and then let my body do most of the
work from then on."
Miyake was not so happy. He
wasn't mad because h i s name WM
misspelled. Nor did he complain ~out
-
official results being slow.
But that mov ing floor is just more
than a man can stand.
"The floor is no good ," MiyaJ.
shouted after almost popping a bu'
ton in two futile assaults on a worl
weightWting record.
''It's like trying to 1 i l t weight 1
an airplane or on a boat.''
Miyake equaUed his featherweigl
Otympic record in the jerk on hls wa)
to Japan's Hrst gold medal in his re-
hearsal for the 1968 Olympic Games.
but failed to break his jerk world rec-
on.: or the snatch record.
WeightllfUng Is held on a reinlorc·
ed theater stage,
"I can't break records here because
the Door shivers and gives." he said
"The floor is no good."
Some athletes still had <>ther rea-
sons for compl.iln1ng as the shake·
down o! the Mexican Ol ympic Organ-
iuog Committee went fntt; Its th ird
day. Official results still were slow in
coming at the track and field compe-
tition. adding to worries of zthletes
. ho came to check their perfonnancc
1t high attitude.
Today. Cina ls at the Olympic stadi·
~lm were on tap in the women's shot
put and long jump and the men's pole
mutt, 200 meters and discus. A field
of 'l1 fought through three heats for a
place in Thursday's 1,500-meter fi.
nals.
Lightweight lifters took their turn
on the quivering stage at Insurgentes
Theater in the only other decisive
competition of the day.
Yachtsmen hac! their jecond regat-
ta at Acapulco. water polo started a
I· -day run, women gymnasts did free
tea m and Individual exercises and Cu·
ba continued to attract local attention
in basketball by being the only for·
eign entrant.
Seattle
well as we would like, be makes an
outstanding contribution througb bis
leadership, his passing and the threat
of hi1 running," be saicl.
Beban was named UCLA player of
the week while defensive sU:r Adrian
Young was chosen USC player of
the week and end Jack Stiow was bon-
o:·ed from the rankl of the Los An-
geles Rams.
Snow made three catches that coach
George Allen termed exceptional, two
of tbem for touchdoWDJ.
The Rams coach franlay admJtted
he wu satisfied to have come out of
Baltimore with a tie against the Colts.
"Thil is the first time I can recall
TutS<lay, Octobfr 17, 19b7 OAILY PILOT J7
Test For SC
a team being doW?l 10 points to Balti.
more and ".:oming away with a tie,"
he said. "We get another shot at them
at home later in the season and the
tie still keeps us in the running in our
Division."
Allen s~d Baltimore quarterback
Johnny Unltas played one or hls best
games for a team be lenr.ed "prob-
ably the best in pro football."
The Rams meet the Washington
Redskins Sunday at home and Allen
said they are led by one of the three
top quarterbacks in pro football , Son-
ny Jurgensen . JOHN McKAY
.. Trojans Strengthen Grip
On ·Top Spot • Ill Grid Polls
NEW YORK (UPI) -Southern Call-
;"Grnia, whose rating as the No. 1 team
in college football wasn't expected to
survive last Saturday's invasion of
South Bend, Ind., has tightened its
grip on the top spot with its 1967 season
now at the halfway poinl
After last week'• 24-7 triumph over
Notre Dame, even though the Trojans
were 12-polnt underdog,, Southern
l!ali!onlia received 21 lint p1aee v~s
Crom the 3$ member United Presa Jn.
ternational Board of Coacbea. T h e,
loss knocked Notre Dame, last year's
.:ationa! chdmpion, from fifth to 11th In
•. 1e ratings.
Purdue, which also has beaten No-
~re Dame this season ood crushed
Ohio State 41~ last Saturday, re-
mained No. 2, while UCLA, which
faces USC Nov. 18, held onto third.
But the t•ther seven places were all
shuffled as a result of a sprinkling of
upsets and Colorado and Alabama
jumped into the fourth and filth
ploces in the ratings.
The Associated Press ratings were
identical to UPI's throtJgb the first
four rated teams. But AP lists North
Carolina State as No. 5 and Alabama
sixth.
Colorado, conqueror O{ Missouri 23--9
in a key Big Eight Cooie.rence show-
down battle, jumped from seventh to
AP RatillfJ•
T-Pllln•
1, Sot/IN'" Clllfomf1 (ltl .• . . S..O 4D
2. Purdue (7) • • • . • .. ....... ., o.o ,..
l. UCLA . ............ S..O Jl.S 4. CoCorldO .. . .. .. . • ..... • o.o 2&0
S. North CarollN Slelt (U .. .. • • S..O 2'7
6. Ai.betN ..................... ).O.I m
7. TeN>Hlff • . . .•. .. ....... M 10f
L C-ef• ....................... ).I II
'· Houslol> •••••••••••••• •••••••• l-1 ., 10. wYamlnt .. • • • • . • • • . . • • .. • • . S..O 1'
OIMn rK.tlVlne YOln. lb1" e1-l\lbttk111YI
Ari,_ Slate. Armv, Allbum. lrl.,,.m "-· ,,..
dlene, Loul•l•nt s .. 111. MldllM11 J11tt, Mlnntwlt. MluiulpPI, N ... ,. Nebralk•, _,., G1ro11 ... Sl11t,
NotA Dame, PtM Stilt. ltl<lt. TUI&. Tua Tecll.
WHhlnflon,
V PI Rating•
T._ l"el11h
I. S.UllltNI C11lfor11le 12'1 •• ••• .H UI
2. Pu•dUe Ul • •• .. . . • • . • • •• • • • ~ 310
3. UCLA 111 • . •• • •• • •• • ........ H 292
.. (olo(ldO .............. ~ 7GS S. Al•betN . . ......... , ).6-1 1 ..
'· Norlll C.1rolln1 Stilt ........ u 161 7. Ttnncl-........ , .. M 91
L Georel1 . • • .. . .. • • • . • • l-1 IJ t. Wyoml"V . .. . . • . • • • •. • ~• n
10, HOUslon • • . • .. . . •• . ).I '5
Sec~ 10 -11, Notre Dlmt (2011 12, Ml<hl .. n Slate (17): 13, W .. hltWIOll (1'11 14, lndllN (Ull
U, LSU (Uli 16. Ml._, (1)1 17. Mleml, Fi.. ('I;
II. Mlabsl#I (Sii 1', Navy (411 ~ (lltl ,.._
Sl•lot, 1Mllr1.it1, Flor"9 ()),
OtMn -.1v111e ""'" -V1'91nla TtO!, Arrm. Ritt, AUtlllfn, TU ii end AtfJon. $l11t,
Allen Raps
Face Mask
Penalty
LOS ANGELES (AP)-Los Angeles
Rams coach George Allen bas urged
a clarification of the fa ce mask grab-
bing penalty and possible reduction
of the punishment from 15 to five
yards.
Allen's comments came Monday at
the Southern California Football Writ-
er's weekly luncheon, the day after
the Baltimore Colts almost beat the
Rams with the aid o( three l>yard
face mask penalties.
The three penalties came with less
than two minutes remaining In Sun-
day's game as quarterback Johnny
Unit.as was driving his team into at
least field goal range with the score
tied, 24-24. Clarence Williams picked
off a Unitas pass with seconds re-.-malning on the clock and the
two Coastal Division teams tied.
Asked to comment on the face mask
penalty, Allen said he felt it was a
good rule "if the player does grab an
opponent's face mask." But A 11 e n
added that he felt 15 yards was too
stiff a penalty If a player just brush-
es the mask.
''We coach our defense to rii;e high
in the air in rushing a passer.'' Allen
said.
"In doing this we may brush the
face maak but not actually grab ii.
''Where grabbing occurs out In the
open and thPre' s no doubt about the
call, the rule Is good."
fourth in the standings with a 4--0 rec-
ord.
Alabama advanced from sixth to
fifth after stopping -Vanderbilt 35-21.
Alabama now bas a 3-0-1 record and
hasn't been beaten since the opening
game loss to Georgia in 1965.
North Carolina State, whlch boosted
jt., record to 5--0 with a 31-9 triumph
over Maryland, jumped from 11th to
sixth in the ratings.
Tennessee, which warmed up for
the Alabama game (Tennessee lost to
Alabama 11-10 last year) with a 24-13
victory over Georgia Tech, climbed
Claulrin Scores 24
Crom 15th to seventh in the biggest
jump of the week.
Georgia. upset by Mississippi 29-20,
fell from fourth to eighth in the rat·
ings while Wyoming, which blanked
Utah 28--0, -:limbed from 13th to ninth.
Wyoming is 5-<i.
Houston didn 't play last week but
but with five of the top 10 teams los-
ing, that was a good way to ad·
vance. The Cougars moved from 12th
to loth.
Last ye:ar Notre Dame and Mlcbl-
gan State were 1·2 in the nation but
this year they're 1-2 in the second
10 with ND llth and MSU 12th. Both
have lost two games and their na·
tionaJly televised clash a week from
Saturday won't begin to match the
drama of last year's "game of the
century."
Washington, which meet.5 USC
thiJ week, moved rrom 19th to 13th
while Indiana, which is 4--0 for the
first ti.me since 1910, jumped from 18th
to 14th and LSU, which lost to MiamJ,
Fla. 17-15, dropped from a ninth-place
tie to 15th.
Missouri. which dropped from eighth
after losing to Colorado, and Mja~
Mississippi and Na vy, who all didn't
even receive votes last week, hold the
next four spots in the ratir.gs and Ne-
braska, which was tied for ninth last
week but lost to Kansas 10--0, fell to a
20th place tie with Penn State and
Florida.
Amigos Lose 3rd Game, ·
Dallas Posts 129-125 Win
DALLAS, Tex. (AP)-Tbe Anaheim
Amigos of the American Basketball
Association have no victories in three
tries so Car this young season but one
thing is apparent: scoring is no prob-
lem.
Mond ay night the Amigos lost their
third straight ABA game as Dallas
scored a 129-125 victory, despite being
outshot by two field goals from the
floor.
Thirty personal fouls , coupled with
35 points Crom the foul line by the
hosts, spelled defeat to the Anaheim
team.
The shooting of Dallas player.
coach Cliff Hagan and former Duke
All-America Bob Ve~a also helped.
Hagan, an all-pro for the St. Louis
Hawks of the National Basketball As-
sociation, scored 20 points in the first
quarter and wound up with 35 in all.
l'o~ & Mrs. l'a%
Verga tallled 34, including 11 of 13
from the foul ll.ne.
Steven Chubin wo.s high for Ana·
helm with 24. Seven-foot center Larry
Bunce baa 20, former Los Angeles
Laker John Fairchild had li and Ran-
dy Stoll 18 for the losers.
Wednesday the Amigos take on In·
diana.
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The long season is over for Carl Yastrzemski. The Boston Red Sox
!ilugger and his wife, Carol. visited Roosevelt Raceway in New J ersey
Monday night, mainly becau!\e it was Carl Yastnemski Night al the
track. Yaz made the fifth race presentation and was honored ln the
wi nner's circle.
'
J8 DAILY PILOT Tutsday, Oetobtr 17, 1967
Golden West
Preparing
For Hornets
A bystander whispered In-
to Ray Shackleford's ear
tMt the Rustlers stand a
cood chance or knocking off
Fullerton two weekends
from now.
"I think you're right."
the Golden West College
Tourneys
On Tap For
Fishenllen
coach whispered back.
Taking advantage of their
first bye of the sea.son th1J
weekend, Shackleford gave
his gridders a well-deserved
day ofl Monday.
"We'll go back to funda-
mentals beginning Tuesday
and start familiarizing the
players with Fullerton's of·
ferue and defense begin-
ning Tuesday," Shackleford
sald.
The Rustlers, after an
impressive 28-0 victc-ry over
Riverside Saturday, should
be at peak strength for 1he
blockbuster with the Hor·
nets Saturday, Oct. 28. FuJ·
With the 1967 billlish sea-lerton is the nation's No. 2 ranked JC power. son on the wane, anglers are FullerU>n had to scrap
already making plans for all the way to knock off
tbe winter and spring tour-Riverside by lS-0 while the
nament swine. Rustlers breezed past the
Scheduled for Acapul· Tigers.
co November 30 to Decem· But thea, Fullerton beat
her 3, is the International Santa Ana Saturday by 34-7
Light Tackle Tournament wbi.le the Rustlers were held
with some 35 locel sports-to an 18-3 wlnni.ng spreed.
men competing in this clas· Shackle.ford's defenders
sic. -led by &afetyman Jack
The Ma.stet's Tourney is Olson -knocked River·
again ICheduled for P al m side's pualng jllme for a
Belch, Florida in January, loop. Olson intercepted
bot witb DO firm date Ht. three puael.
1ben. Dick Wllta jut U• 'lbe oat major loA ftom
aounced tbe tblrd &DDUll ea-I.be R1wnldll h1 la ....
bo San IAIClll llltenational 'Benaon, • fullbact Wbo dis-
Blllflah Toarnament for June located an elbow and wU1
16 to 21, 1988. be out four weeks. Tom
Felix McGinnis, Newport Westgate, wbo 1 tar t e d
Beach, bas been appointed against RiversJde, will or
to the Tournament Commit-course do 10 again against
tee to serve with J. William Fullerton.
Rewalt, Bermuda, as Chair· Steve Farmer, Don Jones
man. and Bill Parsons -all lim·
In the 1967 venlon of the ited lo light duty against
Caho classic, some seven the Tigers -will be ready
Newport area anglers par· to go full bore against the
ticipeted. Hornets.
He's A Rainbow
Fred Watkins, halfback on Orange Coast College's
team last aeason. is now a leading ground·gainer for
the University of Hawail Rainbows. Watkins, a 5·9,
16S.pound junior at Hawaii, is from Orange. He is
cu:rrenUy a at.art.er for the Rainbows.
Rigney 3rd in Voting
The Big Win
Contrary to reports you may have read else.
where, the pass defense USC employed at South
Bend, Ind., Saturday was no dlfferent than any coach
John McKay had used all along.
The reason Notre Dame quarterback Terry Han-
mty looked so ratty (he threw five interceptions),
according to one who should know, was because the
Trojans placed special emphasis on their pass rush
Saturday.
Our source fur this information ls Gary Magner,
the 225-pound USC tackle who played on Orange
Coast College's 1963 national champion Rose Bowl
team.
"We knew we could beat them by stopping
their passing game," Magner revealed Monday night.
"Our c:oaches wanted to make Hanratty feel
that be had to get rid of the ball in a hurry every
time be dropped back to pass."
A Dlff eren.ce In Claas
Newport Harllor'• CJaamplons
Th• difference betwHn the Trof •n group
that visited South Bend Saturd•y •nd the outfit
that w11 badly be•ten there In 1965 11 OM of
cf 111, Magner uy1.
Overjoyed members of Newport Harbor High
School's water polo team are all smiles u they are
presented the championship trophy for winning the
recent Inglewood Water Cmtlval The Sailors beat
Fullerton, 6-5, in the cbampiomhip game after first
beating Beverly Hlll5, Downey and Oxnard. The un·
defeated Tars also won the Corona del Mar tourna·
menL They are the CIF'a first.seeded team.
''Two y.1r1 •go I wu one of 1 lot of aopho-
mor" who mad• th•t trip," the ex.OCC 1t1r said.
Feather C~la Sees l'ictorp
''We'd never 1Hn anything like the w•y
thoH f1n1 are back ther..-they were •II over'
the field w•lting for the Notre D•m• pl•yera to
come out. We were awed -•nd m•ybe 1 little
Intimidated-by it all •nd it affected our pl•y." Fr8Zl•er The other sophs on that team who are now reg.
ulars with Magner were Ron Vary, Mike Scarpace,
Adrian Young and Toby Page. And those rookies
Tourney
On Tap
MEXICO CITY (AP)
The World Boling Coun<'il
announced plans Monday
for a three-man elimination
to fill the world feather·
weight championship vacat·
ed by the retirement of
Mexican Vicente Saldivar.
Ramon Velazquez, secre-
tary of the council, said the
figbten to take part in the
ellinination would be Mltsu-
nori Seki of Japan, Howard
Wlnstone of Wales and Jose
Legra of Spain-the t o p
three featherweights in the
WBC rankings.
Saldivar, 24. announced
his retirement from the cen-
ter o( the ring at Az~ Sta-
dium Saturday night alter
atopplng Winstone in the
12th round or Saldivar's aev·
enth title defense.
Velazquez said arrange-
ments f o r the elimination
were made Sunday night by
Teddy Waltham, secretary
of the British Board of Box-
ing Control, and Luis Spota
of Mexico City, president of
the WBC.
Winatone will meet Seid
within 60 or 90 days at a
site not yet detenpined. Vel-
u.quez said.
The winner or that bout
will meet Legra within an-
other 90 days to determine
the new champion, the sec-
retary said.
Store To Host
Ram QB Star
Roman Gabriel, quarter-
back for the Los Angeles
Rams, is scbedu1ed to make
a personal appearance at
Silverwood's new Falhlon
Island store from 7: 30 to 9
p.m. Thursday.
He will autograph pie·
tures, answer questions on
professional football and
pass out college and pro-
fessional football schedules.
OCC Set For Tilt In Key Test were even Jess prepared for the South Bend inferno
than the '67 rookies.
At Riverside CC
"This year, we already had the trip to Michigan
State under our belts. A midwestern college game TADioht Isn't like one at the L.A. Coliseum. At the Col.ileum. ----e you1J bHe 40,000 rooting for us and maybe 15,000
rooting for the visiting team. At Michlgan State or
l>HILADELPHIA (AP) -Notre Dame, you'll have 60,000 people in the sbd·
A week or 10 ago Orange
Coast College football coach
Dick Tucker climbed way
out on a limb and predict-
ed that his Pirates would
win the remaining games on
tb~r schedule.
His fair weather forecast
was made shortly after a
stormy trip to Ml San An·
tonio College where ,bis
charges were handed a
sound 2S-O drubbing. The
next foe was a pifilul and
winless aggregation of first-
year footballers from Cy-
press Junior College.
Well, the Cypress ga~
I"
Coast
Harriers
In· Victory
The Orange Coast College
cross country team fought
through 100 degree heat and
forest fire amoke to tum
back two tough teams yes·
terday and win the OCC
lnvitatiooaJ-tbeo, as U thal
weren 't enougb, pustied the
bus home when it wouldn 't
start.
OCC racked up 30 points
to topple Rio Hondo, with
45, and Cypress with so.
OCC swept the JV divi.!ioo.
The Bucs. one of the
hardest working squads in
the Southland, ran their
race, took 10 sprints up the
Back Bay sand dunes after-
ward, pushed tile bus home
and then lilted weights tor
45 minutes before calling it
a day.
John Partridge took first
overall in 21:48, two seconds
olf the OCC record despite
the heat. Hal Bosworth was
second for OCC; Russ Gar·
cia, fifth; Jerry Rankin.
10th; Terry Schmitz, 12th:
Randy Hile, 13th, and Lar·
ry Hemming, 16tb.
Joe Frazier, the No. 1 or ium and 60,000 rooting for the home team. It's pretty turned out to be sometbtng No. 9 challenger for the It>nely.,.
less than a-laugher for h i We asked Magner to describe "'McKay's pre-Tucke.r and the PU'. ates as eavywe ght title, depend· . 1 in -• game message to his p ayers. they were forced to 10 all g on .. .,ose ratings you 'No Balene11'
out to come up with a 14-45 rate, places hia unbeaten "Firtt of •II, you must .... tiu we went back
victory. But Tucker l!n't record 00 the line tonight in there tremendously confident. We lcnew w.
backing oU Irom his earlier a scheduled lO-round fight were better. McKay doesn't 9lve you •ny of
prediction as OCC g e t s against upset-minded Tony that psychological b.loney -he alw•yt lo.lcs
d to la R·v id C't Doyle. ua In the eye, •nd tallca Intelligently. He's not an rea Y P Y 1 ers e 1 Y Frazier seeks h1's 18th vi·c-Coll F 'da t RJ ·cie emotion•! guy, he just told us to go out there ege n Y a VeJlt · tory in the first fight pre-ind bHt them.
"We played a good game sented at the new Sl2 mH-"But when he finished, he turned to the
against Cypress. They're a lion Spectrum, which open-manager •t the door •nd told him he didn't
team that can make you ed several weeb ago to a w.,,, ua to IHve the loclcer room unt1'I ti..-look bad." he said. jazz concert. A lot of .. jau" ""' "It wa.s actually one of is what Fraz.ier says Doyle Notre D•me players were Nnt out."
our finest oUenslve efforts. ha.s been spouting when the Two years ago, the Trojans had to fight their
we had some 500 yards of Utah heavyweigbt claims way onto the field. The student cheering section
total offense, but we just he'll spring the biggest up-was all over the plaee, waving banners. jumping
couldn't seem to score. 'l'lie1' "nt of lhe year in boxhtg. ~p and down and generally behaving like asylum
penalties really hurt us at Ranked No. 1 by RI n g mmates. Things were more orderly this time, but
key points in the game." Magazine and ninth by the not by much.
Tucker added that he was World Boxing Association, Magner and the Trojans of '65 remembered all
soarewhat disappointed with Frazier is in one or those ev, loo clearly their departure from Notre Dame St,ad·
the development of the erything to lose, nothing to ium after being beaten, 28-7.
B\les' passing game, but in-gain situations in taking on 1'There were people around the locker room door dicated he sWJ plans to Doyle. He's fighting for a · h dk h' d 1•:-start PauJ Lemoine at quar-SlS,000 guarantee. and tr he fa~~~~.7 an ere iefs an te wig us to wipe our
terback. wins the expert.a will say he W OCC's star ha 1 f back, knocked over another sWf. e asked Magner to compare USC's current
Frank Welrath, is still suf-If be loses? Do picture Ls chieftain, 0. J. Simpson, to the Heisman Trophy
fering from an injured an-necessary. winner of two years al{o. Mike Garrett.
kle and will be a doubUuJ The 1964 Olympic cbam-"O. J. is • wonderful b.11 player. He's very
starter against Riverside. pion, Frazier's main victor-much lilce Mike was in that all the publlclty
HLs replacement, W a y D e ies have been over Oscar hnn't given him • fat he.cf. He resembles
TlDlin, turned ln an out-Bonavena of Argentina, Mike • great deal in his person•lity ind
standing perfor m a n c e George Chuvalo of Canada character.
aaainst Cypress. and Eddie Machen and ''They're both different type1, so you un't
Saints Pad
Advantage
In Ratings
Doug Jonee, a pair or over· ull one a better runner than the other. Gar·
the·hill veterans. He 's a rett did hive more moves, though."
bard hitter, evidenced by lS LHCkfl Red Shirt knockouts, and h.a.s shown be can take a punch. He was Magner has seen more football than most
floored twice by Bonavena, junior college transfers. He red-shirted at USC in
but got up to hammer out a '64, but made all the road trips. McKay told him
vJctory. that year he would be activated immediately if an
Frazier, under six feet, is injury weakened his tackle corps.
expected to enter the ring at But it didn't happen, so Magner is in his fourth
200 pounds, while Doyle, a year on the varsity.
handsome 6-Coot-4 helter He was asked if he intends to seek subsist,
with a record or 19-4-1 in-ence ,!rom professional football next year.
Santa Ana High School's eluding 10 knockouts. says , I've thou~ht about it," he admitted, "but powerful Saints padded he'll be at 204 for his "quick the d (th ) b t their lead today in t h e shot at the limelight." Y e pros ave 0 make it worth my white.
DAILY PILOT'S Orange The WBC dropped Frazier I play at 220·225 now and they'd want me to put on
County prep football poll. from No. 1 to ninth in ita a lot more weight, I'm sure. Everybody from the
The Saints were atop the ranking when the former freshman manager on up gets inquiries from the
heap last week, too, but Philadelphia meatcutter re-pros at USC and l haven't heard from anyone so
this time around they have f111ed to enttt tile current maybe they're not interested in me '
a 23-0 pasting or No. 2-heavyweight el lmination "If I don't play pro football ·that's OK be.
ranked Anaheim logged In tournament to determine a cause I'll still have a business administration de-
lhe books. The Saints post-successor to deposed Cai· gree. from USC and that's as good as anything in
ed their historJc victory sius Clay. the world, as far as I'm con~erned."
Williams 'Manager of Year' Partridge, Bosworth. Gar-
cia. Rankin and Schmitz all
won trophies for their ef·
forts.
over the {eared Colony last1piiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.ili.iiiiiiiiiii;iiii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimi
Friday night before 10,000
at Santa Ana Stadium.
Anaheim dropped to t h e
third station. losing its fee·
ond spot by a whisker over
up-coming Servite, w ho
knocked Long Beach P o l y
from the unbeaten ranks.
HUNTINGTON.BEACH
SERVICE STORE
NEW YORK (AP) -Dick
Wllllams, a former journey·
man ball player who took
over the lowly Boston Red
Sox from a one-time great
aecond baJeman and direct-
ed them to the top o! the
American League, was an
overwhelming choice today
as the circuit's Manager-of·
the-Year for 1967.
Wllllams, a rookie field
bots, was named by 324 of
the 3'11 b~eball writers and
broadcasters wbo particl·
pated in the annual Atsocl·
ated Press poll.
Eddie Stanky of the Chi·
cago Wblte Sox was second
with 35 votes followed by
Bill Rigney of CaUfornla, 15.
Mayo Smith of Detroit drew
nin e votes and Minnesota's
Cal Ermer had eight.
Williams replaced Billy
Herman. former Chicago
C!Jls' standout lnfielder.
a1 the Bo~wn skipper art-
er the club had finished
t ,
•
ninth for the seeond straight
season.
The 38-year-old St. Louis
natJve was bought up from
Toronto or the International
League where be acewn-
ulated his only two years of
managerial experience. He
guided Bos~n to a pennant
victory with two conse·
cutive triumphs over Min·
ne~ota on the regular sea-
son's final weekend.
While slugging outfielder
Carl Yastrzemski and ace
pitcher Jim Lonborg led the
way, Williams also utilized
to the club's advantage the
talents of a number of play-
er he helped develop at To-
ronw. They included out-
fielder Reggie Smith, sec·
ond baseman Mike Andrews
first baseman George Scott,
third baseman Joe Foy and
catchers Russ Gibson and
Mike Ryan.
The Red Sox were in flJU1
place in mid-July. They ral·
lied. however, winning 31
of 48 games and took over
the lead on Aug. 2&. During
most of the final month or
the campaign, they engaged
in a slnling race for first
place with the White Sox.
Twins and Tigers
Under Williams. who play·
ed every position except
catcher and pitcher for six
big le.ague teams starting In
1951, the Red Sox finished
with a 92-70 record. Thia wu
20 games better than in 1966
when they wound up only
one-hal( game in front or the
last·place New York Yan·
kees.
Stanley's White Sox finish-
ed in the No. 4 spot, two
games behind the co-run-
ners-up , Detroit and Minne-
sota. Rigney's Angels were
strong fifth-placers. only
71,l games behlod the lead-
The competition disap-
peared for the JV race and
OCC ran it alone. wilh Rod
Mitchell taking f l r s t in
24:54. Finishing in order
were Tom Grimshaw, Dave
Stephens, John Cruickshank,
Warren BUM, Pete Figgatt,
Peul Meira, Bruce Morrison
and Glenn Cook.
Orange Co11t area teams
listed among the county's
elite 10 include Weslrr ''Isler
(fifth). Mater Del c sixth)
and Newport Harbor (10th).
The rankings:
Team
1. Santa Ana
2. Servile
3. Anaheim
4. Tustin
JV Football
i-. " owW1... S. Westminster H._, K411Wr • 0 0 G-0 6 M t D I Wn19rn 6 1l 0 1-H . a er C
ei _,,:an " °"":"o 1 ._,, 7. Troy
L•"""" •ttch o 11 o 0-11 8. Orange
L"un• •••ell -Touc1tdowns -9. El Modena Dout ~mllr m
Vote'
30
19
18
16
14
13
11
R
4
1 1an _, ow.mn 10. Newport ~1tmlm~r 1 6 o 7-11 -==========-S<lnl• ,_,.. Vlllley 7 7 0 ._U ~
w"1,.,1n11er: Touchdowns -Sieve ONLY FOR t. JEN7 llw. hit Dn•n-m IV1
PAT'• -~ ~.:.:;:... 1'11• DAILY "LOT •porh
Marine • o o 1)-lt tn11011 It «1en11ltely not
Hun1tno1on lttt<h O O o .._ I "for rn•n only," The H t• ers. Mirr,..: T~MowM -''"' Blain tion offen more encl better Red Schoendienst. wholle ~~;.~:~~· Wt"4tr•r. PAT -Ren<ty cover19e of lool aporh
St. Louis Cards defeat· C.eton. .. ~'=, •v Oilerr;ro1 0 ,_70 th111 1ny other new•peper
ed Boston. In a seven.game Foun111n v.11,,. o o o o-o «lhtrib11teil 111 thh "''"·
\11 Id ..,A I d Sew. i.y 0..nt1' Whet mother «10 .. 11't II•• 'Tot' ~r es. was name cos•• ~ o o o "-' te rucl ebout her aon'•
~/Chasls II lubrication
/011 Ch1nae
(Major Brand)
~/Brake ~ Adjustment
~/Bearing ~ Pack
EDINGER NEAR BEACH BL VD.
Au.a m• Hntlette• s..,,1 .. c...-
Good Monday thN>ugh Friday
BetwMn 9 1.m.·S p.m.
PRICE INCLUDU
OIL AND LAIOR
lltl'i. U .U YALUI
~, .• ,~
: CALL~ l NOW! !
~ ~ ~'!~,,~
BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
Mon. fhru Fri. Only 9-5
A-lce11 ..... ,_......, ._.. Hff,
N• "11clll er ........ ""'
I Safety Check FOR fASTER SERVICE-CALL FOR APPOINTMENT
PHON!
842s4495 Store Hou rs Mon. thru Fri. 9 •.m. to 7 p.m.
Sit. 8:30 to 5:00 National League Manager-E•••...:•• • o o ,_, towc'"'ownJ ~.~.y~~stw~. ~~=~~-~~---------~--~-------------------------~ ' I
-
I
Cll
• -.. Ill .. ,
'°' Cot
HOI
Tel
Ew
"" Net
Ktl
let
5
YH
f.1,(
l rl ...
"" Nel
Hat
ldk
Tor
$m
' -a.:
Ind
lrlt
D•I
Mh Edi Pet $lo
" ' \ lttt o ..
$1r
·~ Hoo
Cot
Gal
A·l
Adi A
" old ..... ,.,.,
u
Tiie
Hui
• .. )
12.C ...
WI,
COii
Tin
" Tn. ....
' Md ... IM
Hit! Tin
" ,.
I
• okt. .,.
Mo Rr
Tin
" • oW
Irk Lot
Cri
T"' • "" bid
• ....
"' '" HJ
114
'" 117 ...
lM tu
IM
HCCMID ltACL I 1114 ....._ J vur OW. elW -.. c...,._ ,n:io a.oao. ,._ a.-.
llrllllt SP99d fO """"' ti• lle•Nllt eo,, lM ~I 1i.
Arganl"'9 Queen U ~I 1te
Net'• iOfl (M MllMl 111
Honey hlll (W ~) 111
ldi. Fu,,. ID H&lll IM
TOfl'l'1 ..... (R 11'-1 114 ~ Stir .... u ,._.., IM
TlUID IACL 0111t ...... ~ -
:;;., CIA"'*'I ~lea M.2flL ,._...
lndle11 S..., (E ltllftlllMl ;a11J
ll'llfl E"'flfrt IW ~ 114
Deir You Ill Ya111 111
Mio& Lt .. MllJJ Sett.nt 1U
Edeft'' a--cE Mell!Mt 111 NM Buc:U (J ~) 117
Storm .... (D ,.WOii 1'7
~HM llACa.. 6 ~ J _, 4 ....... old _......_ ....... a.a
lttoel Fleet IW Hemdll 117 o .. "'8 KNIM IA Y ........ I hi
Strite Me "-ro A-Mock« (J Selen) m
Now Flowlr (0 Y......., 117
C:0U. Collreo-IW ~ 117
Gellllftt K... II Trvl•I ll7 A·Lf11t11 Led (M .,.._, 117 Admiral a-co ... , 111 A-<. 'Mll11..........,. .... ...,_
Fl"1f llAC:L ........... ,... ,_
old INidtfl llJllh. ...... G..a
"rlftc:itse E"*-IW l4lnMtl) 116 A·F•lr Edld CM ......_, llJ
A-o.I CletD lM ~I 11'
1'\IOor "" IW ......,,_, lM ~ J-. (A ._, '"
Del Mar
Entries
~TH~~J
~ :.::;-.:= MITHOD
TAKE A GOOD GRIP
ON. THE CW85HAFT
I f .. I tht b•t way to comblne
the handa on the club.haft Is to
uH the Vatdon, or overlap, grip>
Thie grip flit the hands together:
anu9lyand occupl• I• spoceon
the club the.\ orry ptner orthodox
grip. The thumb of1ht left hand
flts snugly Into the. pal"'.' of the
rlght hand because of the unlqut
'locking of the flnge11 ~" Illus·
trotior.).
When this grip ls combined,
you should r .. 1 moat pr•ure in
the laat thrH flngers of your left
hand and the middle two tingert
of your rlght ~ee shadowed areas
in 1111.etratlon 12).
10-11
Amold Pci1-r'l "H01¥ TO IMnO'Vf YOUR PUTTING.• A eOf1t of
this hint-podced boolclet ls youn for~ when yov enclci.d Cl stCll!lf*I,
· •lf..odd.....t -1cipe •lane with your,.~., to >irnold Pcilmtr, IA
-ofthis,_,..,,..r.
DEEP SEA FISH REPORT
RACE RESULTS
Ml. MU --.n ntDAY, OCT. ti, ,.., a.r ......
PllST IACll. • ......._ J _,
4 veer 4lld INlcletlt ClelmN. l'Ww
*2MO..
,._lt'f .._ ~l 7M La t.9
Wlfllllanlttl U Tnilllllt S..-JM
(~ Cour ...... (W ~ 49
TllM-1.11.
ktltdled -El Gtf9 erw. I.Mr 1'rvtt. .... Oenar. c..tllf C-· --·
..... """ ......, ... "" ta LI ..,._ a> ...., !UI Ml
u..-.... ~<•._,11 UI
n...-1.11 ..,I. ~ -...... O'tt.I"· A -ll.. CnlMl8liM -"Y.
a
TRADE
17.S Newport Blvd. __ 64&1666
9541 Garden Gme Blvd. 638-8200
1629 loni ltlCll Blvd. 1213) 430-9789
929 l ffBt St. -547-9431
ovt.ft 60 MMCO $H0'5 IN CAllFOllNIA
••--.OPIDP:
-~---.... ---·-"° otfllW pk:liup IMS JOU m. smoottlnen ofcd..-tnpet .. fourwttetls plus Inde-pendent Front Suspension. It's • 1rt1t ciomlllnatloftl [llCluaM with Chtw"oletl --·----·-.._.., the MWlt ttylnc-•nd the most
pntdlcal. 'The io. tlhouetta helps prcMde
rwd hddlf'l stabllty, letl you see more of
Ttltre'a no atronaer pickup anywhere.
Btn.ath that stt.rpolooldn1 Interior there's
a ..,...tlllcbess ef lltMt IMtat In critlcal cab •rees. Aeebide body lfde panels 1nd tallpte are double wall, too. (And thert
art no exttrrMI welded Joints lo rust!) Thl1
ttudt't not Just 1tron1-lt'1 411ouble *°""
the roed a!Wad. And, In tddltlon, that bl1 ,,., window tostJ you nolhln1 extral 111'1•••• .. ... IJIMl-1
,.here's 1 •le chalet ef •ftllMt In Chevy
pickups. Sixta and V81. A brand·new 200·
hp 307 VS la standard In V8 models. ..............
There are more Chevrolet dHl•rs throusti·
out the country, ready to keep you1 truck
wortc1n1 and eunln1t Get • '68 Job Tamer --you can't 1•t all this 1nywt1ere elsel -m-·aa JOB TIMER TRUCKS
Tuesday, Ottobtr 17, 1967 DAILY PILOT J 9
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NVflCE LEGAL NOTICE --------------NOTICI 0,. HIAltfNO T 1•11 T 1*1 NOTICI OF TltUSTll'1 Ml.a
NOTICE IS HERHY GIVEN lf\11 1111 SU,.ltfOlt COURT 0' 'VII MOTICI 0' TltUSTll'S SALi! Ne.. JUI
lo.rd o! Supervlsoo of Ille County of STATI OF CAL.f,OltNIA "o• T.O, H•. TS itt•'7 NOTICI! IS HEREllY GIVEN:
Ore119e, $lilt o! C.llfornll , l•o by R... THI COUNTY 0' 01.ANOI Oft Nov.tmber 3, lh7. 11 11 :00 A.M.. Tlltt on Frk11y, CCI. 21, HU el h
eMIOll dtll(f "" )rd deV Of Octot>er, .... A *'I TITLE INSURANCE ANO TRUST COM• llou< of 11:00 A.M. •t ... meloo .,.. ""· clecl•r9f "' ln11nllon 19 .,.,, .. Ille NOTICI 0" NU•tNO OF ,.,..,.,ON PANY, •• duly 1ppolnled Trutl .. Ufl. tr.no lrOflllnt on EHi El'N ~. contlguo•n Uftll\Cor-119'1 1trrllorv OF ... OIATI OF WILL ANO der and PUf'llllftl to 0...S of Trust I.I Hlbrl. (OUlll'r of Or.,.. ,, ... ., lltrelNfttt deterlbff te Ofetlh C-IV CODICIL. ANO FOR L.ITTl•S O.led Ju,,. I. I~ ••t<Uled by JOHN C1lll01nle, ol Ille UI Hellra City H.tll
St1MI LIQlllfnt Mefn ..... l\Ce Dltlrltt No. THTAMINTAIY E. McLOUG+iLIN AND !'RANCES G. louted •I 201 I!. Erne .,,_, ........
10 e.MI lie• 11.,911 Wldne1dey, the 1t11 dtY IEllele ti l'ay 8r0Wfl. alto k-H M<LOUGHLIN, llutblnd end wife •nd Mid, FlltST CHARTER FINAHCIAL
.. Novtm~. '"'· ., the "°'" ot t ::IO ,,., s. ,,_, •loo .. _ .. Fey ~th ttcorded JUl\t "· ,...., In book 1Gll. CORPORATION, • ~et\ol\, •• ,,..,..
o'dodl A.M. of Mid clay •I 1114 Cham· llrown, Oecutlld. Piii• m. of Ollkl1I RKOtd• In Ille '" llftder Deed .. Trust IA ...... ,... btr' Of 1111 llof"' Of 5u11trvbon Of Ille NOTICE IS HERl!IV GIVEN Th• t Offke of Ille County llK"Order of Or· amou111 Of UO,J00,00 elleQ/ltd W llOll-
C.ounty ol Oranot el 11\t Or1noe County Al\tN llrown het flled herein e petition 11199 County, Celffornlt, WILL $ELL AT lltT Nll!UUI ANO llENE Ntl~N.
AOtnrntstrttlOll IVhdlftf, SIS-Pt ~-tor '"""' ..... Wiii .,.. Codkll -.., PUBLI' AUCTION TO HIGHEST eto. Huolleftd ..... Wife. A(ld ~ ... mort SlrHI, '" the City el S.ntt AN. IHUlllCI Ltt .. n Tu1amcni1ry lo "'' DER FOR CASH (peyeble ., time ol J11111ery " '"' '" ... ..,, ,._ • Calll01nfe, 11 fhe llme aftCI piece ll>r Ille Peittlontr, rtftrtnce 19 Wlllcll fl m•O. wle In llwtul ,,_.,. ol !tie United Of Offlcltl 1tecons. ., Or•lll9 Goullfy,
heerlne llPoft the -llon Ill uld •~ tor furtt>er perllcufere, end 11111 the time Stett ll 111 "'-IC6by of Ille wnt (per11· C..llfornle. el _..left OeM ti ,,,.,
MUllOll Ind •II Cit>ltc1foM 11111'4110 II elld •ltc• Of lltarlllt Ille ..me hH Ileen lno loll enf•enc.e Ill Tiiie lnwr111CJ1 AM ERICAN SAYING5 ANO LOAN As..
wt.fell lltnt anCI plao. .n , .... , .. led ,.,. Mt fOf OU. 'D. '"'· et t ;lO e.m.. In Ille bulfdl"O louted ... Ille Nr111-t cor-SOCIATION, • CO<PW1111'wl " ........ ton1 mey •-t 11\cl bt llHrd. counroom Of Dtl>emn.nf Ne. 7 of Mid ntr Of Elllllll a/Id Mal11 St.. SeM• llclerv. 11¥ ,.._ of _,.," Ill ..
Al •n" 11,,.. pr10f to Ille time flAed court, el 901 ~Ill llteedwey, In the AN, C1llto<nl1, elf ""''• thle end in-tMl•mclll or pef1Wmena "' alllloet...,.
Iv< he••lno. •llY lfl11resfed ""'°"' mev Cit;. of S.nte AN, CelllOl'ftle. ter•I conw vtd to end now IMkl by MCUred thereby, tnCI notlca of ...,..,,
fll• wllll Ille Clertt of "" Boerd of Oettd Cid. f, 1"1. It under 11lcl Offd ot Trull Ill Ille eftd l_.lclerf's tl«'floll M -•
SupetVl-1 ot Ille Counl'f ot Oren.. W. E. ST JOHN, covnty Cler\ prOf>trly 111\iettd In tM city of New· be .old Ille ~rtv 11t<e6-low -
written Cit>lecllon• to !flt ~ •n· ,.., M•I......,.. por1 llHch, In w ld County 1nd Stele tcr!Nd. hevln. bMft ,_.., • pr ..
llt1ten011 Wiiie/\ oblectlon1 wlll be con-lltl w .. 1 lewt1y l lft. deacrlbfd H : •kled tot 11¥ lew •NI more - -
1ldt1ed by the IOtrcl of su,,.,,,rsors et Mtfl"'411e. calll. Lot 37 of Trect Mo. 1011, In Ille monlll• lle•fno •l•llMCI '"lnct tucll re-"'-llmt •I'd piece fl•ed IOI' heiring. Tll. UUI 7U..Sll clly of NewPOrl llocll, county of cord1tl0ft, wOI HM 11 pubflc ~ •
The bounderle1 of ll>e ftrrllory pr-d Allernl'I' f9r """...., Ore11ge, 11111 Of C•fllornf1, u ,.r Ille hlOl\HI bidder tor all\, peyelllc i. to be •-nd ere deKrlbtd 11 tollowt: PUbll111td 011no-Cout Deity PllOI, map th•rtot recorded '" bo<* J6. ltwflll ..-v Of Ille United SMtn fll
Alf !Mt rMI HOOtrty In Ille County Oct. 10, 11, 17, 19'1 16",.7 peges l7 to 40 lf'ICluslv• Of Mite•~ Alntrlu 11 Ille time of wi.. .,_
of Or1noe, Stele of Ctlllornle, lltlno 1.,,_,., Me11t. In the otflce ot lflf werrenlY .,.,., ... OI' l"'Plled ts M tit ...
tl\et porlloft el lllocto 7, t. f, 41 •nd LEGAL NOTICE cout11Y rt<Ol'der o1 Mid county, ,_...,IOI\ or fftCUml>t-. Ille lftHrftl
" Of !fie lrYlfte 5'lbcll•ltlon. ,.... mep Seid wle wllf tit medf, but wltt>out Cotlwl'ed to end ,_ held 1w II ••
lllt'90t ,_,,... Ill llooll I, ,.efle M covenant or werre11tv, txprtll OI' lfn. IUdl Tnn'". In Md te Ille IOI_..,.
ot Mlsceo-. ltecOf'd MAPS. record• IU,.l~~o•f HiOUltT 1141ec1. rtt1rdlno 11ti., oouenlon, or ,,,. dHUlbtd pr-rty 111 Ille CWMy .,
of Mid C-tv, Cles<rlbtd a follows: STATI OF ALtFOllNIA cumbr•ncft. to ,...,. the rtmelnl119 Prln-Ort "041• M•te Of C..lffe<llle: lleglnnlne ., Ille motl Wtt1'erly (.Ill'· FOii THI CIJUN y 01' OllAHCJ• ''P<I' 1um of ""' not• st<Ured by The ._.... •• i.r1y lOt. 1'MI ., ""
11er ot 1111 ltftd Cltscrlbed Ill IN .,.. He. A..Jl2t4 Mid Offd ot Trust. toowll: S12,40J.<14, IOUlhtMltrlY 12 lO 1et1' of Ille 11«111-Mltetloft 1o Ot•not County Street NOTICI 01' HIARl!IO wllll lnlernl from 10-12·'6. es In MIO westtrt 2lO Oii ' tert of Lot 117 '"
LltMno Melnlwlanct Dl1trld No. 10 g~ :rL.'{'~.:CD F,?0\ ~~i~ note provided, edv1ncn, It env. 11n61r Trect to. :iOo. In Ille cllY ,,, Coif•
edople41 .. lltsolullon No. •1-190 llY lllt Tl$T~AMINTAllY the ltrml Of Mid Deed Of Tru•I. ,..,, MeM county of Orenge ..... "'
8otrd of SUptrvl-• ol Mkl Orenoe e1t1te of Esthe~Hubberd ltlchler cllergtt end upe,.n ot Ille TruslH Ce111cirn1e n Pff m• ;_..... Ill County Oii Merch 1, 19'1; thence, S. '''°. llr>OWn n Est H. IUChler, 11.0 •nd ol the truslt cr .. led by H id Deed booll 14 'iieotS 11 afld n of M~ 40'Jl'l2" W~ elong lllt Soulh-llerll' k_,, •I Ell!\« 11 ler, decused of Trusl. ' jltOlonoetlon or Ille NOl'ltlwttterly llOU~ NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVt:N 'r11e1 The -lc••rv under ••Id tHed or .. -. Me~ ~ ""<M ~~"' .. dtry ttl ulcl ennexetiOllo 7Q.OO Ifft to KelllerlM ll, Fordtrbrwe<I. •lao know11 T,....I, b'f rt-Of 1 bre•dl OI' de· COIH\ly ,_.,.. "' u.,. ,,,_.....,
tM Nof1'1e*tlltf'IV line ol Mec.Arlt\ur •• K•tllerl,,. Rkllltr Fordert>tuten "has feull 111 Ille obl191tlons stcurl(f l!ltrel>•, for Ille llUt poM Ill N~ff\a "'-CIDlio.
aoulewrd, 100 feet In Wkttf1. •• .. fllr.' l\eftlft I "'lllOll for probele of lltrtlotOf'e VltcUled end dlllvt<ed to 11\e tlOfll MCUred ~ Wld Oeed of Trwt ..,_
W'llled In IN Dffd to Ill• County ol 'l'o.' 1~~ ~~tt':':'1 .. 1:'~'..,.''l: underslgMd • wrltttn Otcllretloll of cludl~ fees. nd ~ .:."" :-""' fll
011nee rtcatdecl Jenuery 10, 1'43 111 Ptlllloner refe<enct to Wllldl 11 m•de Oef•ufl 1nd Dtmtnd for Sale, and the rull• • ... W
Book ... "* 641 Of Offld•I RIC· fOr furftlff per1kulers •nd Ille lll'M wrttttn nollct "' brHCh •nd tltcllon to Oiied lflll 27111 dec ...... ~ITSeE........ ""
ord,, rtcOrdl of ••Id Orenge Coun1Y1 •nd place of Mering .... Hryle hH been OUM lllt ulldtrtljlned to "" H ld l!rGI>' FIRST """ !Mllce, ...... Mid NOrlhHtterlY 1111e. set for Octoller 17. , .. , •• , ft:IO •. m,, In •rlY lo ulblv Hid obllgellons, •nd FINTANCIAL C.OttPOltATION
N. 4''22'12" w. 312.« lttl to !flt the cout1room of Oeper1mtnt No. 1 91 fhtrealltr, on July 3, tH1, Ille ul'ldt" •• ru1t• Nonhwtslerly llOUnd•rv of Ille l1fld Hid (OUrf, •' Ml Nor111 llroe<IWeY, In signed ceu1ecl .. id notice of brudl Iv J. IL Hem-.
dn<rlbed In Percel I ol lhvlsed b · Ille CllY of S.nte Ane. C•lllornll. •nd of tl«110ft to be rteorded In boolC 1" Al1ornrf In Fed 1111111 "A" In the qullclelm d-lo Ir· Otl9d October •, lfff. Oii peoe 71l. Of .. Id 01tlclel llecorda lJ71l I I I C le ~ ,.., W, E. aT JOHN, ' · "UOlltlltd Ortn111 eo.t Delly ~. v ,,. ndustrte omp x rtcor_.. .,... County Cltrlt, Oete: Oc1ol>er '· ,,.7 October l. 11. 17 1"7 IS1~ tober 21. 1"4 lo lloolc n7t, P-Getv .... 11...... Tiiie lnwrenct end '
'42 ol .. Id OlflcJet Rt<orctu ltltnc•. 414 Ntt111 N_, , .. .,,.,. Tnnt Comp•nv --------------
•'-u ld NorfllMtierlv lloundery, N . ..__, 1.-cll u uld Trvttee LEGAL NOTICE
.O'J1'•" E. .0.00 '"'· N. Jl'S5'U" C•ltftnllt Tt1L' f46.ltt1 llY Elmer w. HelnMr.
W. m .n '"'· N, ll'U'OI" E. 265.• A= .., ""'"...... Aulhoflled Oltker llOTlCI TO caEDrTOllS leet. N. lS'32'10" E. lltt.16 feel. N. o:=. ~ .r.~"r" .. ~oasl D~lly l~~'i Publhhed Newpor1 Herbor Ntwt P-• SU,.Hlott COUH ~ TM•
:rf'.50'5CI" E. 790.11 feel, end N . .0'3" 1 ' • ' 6 comblMCI wllll 01lly l'llol, Ntwp0r1 S1'ATI OF CAUFottNIA ,_
SI" E. 420.tl '"' to the NorlheHlertv LEGAL NOTICE lt1ch, Ctlfl.1 Oct. 10. 11, :IA, 1967 THI COUNTY OF oa.... line Of ••kl Block 11 tnenu. ••onv Mid 1'1H7 .... A~
NorlheH lertv llne. s. 49'21'05" E. Esllle of FANNIE SAalN. ~-im~-:i tv"' ~ line .:''t\•1 r::i ·::: NOl'ICl·::-r:1olTOU LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN .....
1: of u 1:' lllOdtrw;, end db:•nf ..;,II-SU,UIOlt COllU O' THI ---credlton ot l!>t ..,..,_ Mn*f ~
weste<ly 30.00 1"1 ltltrelrom meuur· ITATI OF CAL.ll'OltNIA FOii l'·nM ltlll ell penons "8"'"9 de.,,_ ..-llW ClltTl,ICATI 0, IUSINISS. ll>e uld dec:edlftt ere ,...,tr .... flle td el rlgllt..angleu l!ltl\Ct, etong Mid THI COUNTY OF .OIANO• 'ICTITIOUS NAME fhtln, wllll Ille ,_...-y _,_ Ill Ille
perellel fine, N. AO'l6'W' E. 1'4$.16 Nt. A S1f2S The undtrtltned doeS ctr111V &ht Is olllct of Ille C1er1t of Ille ....... .,,~
Itel to tM Northwui.rl" prolono•llon Est•te of MARJORIE II. STEFFEN, condUcllll9 • blllll!Hs •I let East l11h court or .. pr-111et11. ..n11 Ille _. f0t "'-,..!_Of'1ht•~ly 1f1d,,.N~kl ..':ft O~~~E IS HEREllY GIVEN to !tie StrHt, Cost• Me ... C.lltomle. under 11\e .. ry VOllCIWn. IO Ille "'*' ......... The 1 •~~• •-... 11 ..,.,.,.esm y llctllloua firm twm1 of THE SECOND Office crl Illa AttorM'VI. Freo*llll .... prolong•llOll, s. 4f•lf''3" E. I0.00 !al uedltort of "" ...,,,. Nlmed iHcedeftt TIME AROUND •ftd !NI .. Id firm II FrM!llfl. 117 E. , ... ,.....,, OMI• .....
to Ill• most Norttltflv '°'-of Mid !Mt •II --MVlllO clelms ... Intl Clllll~ OI Ille '°'-'· penon. -C:.llhltftlt, alcfl " .. ,.. " ..... Lot tot, eftd en •1191• POlnt oit tM Ille Mid ~ are reqylred 10 Ille Nmt 111 lull Ind place ff rllloenc» II -" tl!9 ltllllll....., .. Ml .....,.. bOUl\Clllry Of wkl Ptr<fl 11 IMflCl, !Mm. wllfl lht _,.ry Yellc:Nn, Ill • flOl!ows• llitttlllllfll .......... _, ..a. ........ •'°"I wld boltlldltV· •lollO Tiit "'°"""' IN olflo fl Ille c'*"t fl Ille ..,. -• .. .......... ..-.. ...... __,_ IMltflV ti.-ti "'" 1• Incl Ill Gf llttM tllUtf, ., .. ~ ...... wllll ... . . Marll'fll "• K'111< 20IJ Ho1'4MY -wlltllll ti• llllitlllie .,_ ,... -Mill Bled! t. tftll .... Ille Nonll> _.,., _,..,.., .. tM _.,...,_ ......,.,. llucll. Cl.llfilrflla. 11111 fl Ille ..nc., "*1,.. llAe., L4f "' e1 .... 1toc11 " "" ..,_ " 1111 ertortll'A. ,,._. De• ~ as. ""· ~ 'i:::t" a *'·
41, 1. .-1t'C3" I!'. NU1 •t 10 tt>t lttt«11 • Deur.-. lvl19 • 111• M 11t1e ., c..n='!" ~.,:"Geullly-., 1119 ~-~ "= motl EHtertv «<fWf of !fie . Nottll-Mtltl SINfl, Stflll Me..Glllfemlt, wllldl 0. ~ ,$. 1"1 ~ mi e MIMI _..., -ltrly ~•If of Mid LOI 1111 II ,,. pl•ce of bus'-' .. tht ..,,,...,. NM•ry Putlllc In ttld ior Mid ,~ ... Frlllllll* ... F,....
t!t"flce, centlflulnt •!Ollv tekl llound-•toned Ill •II metten ,,.,..11111no Ill Ille perlCIMllY •oPtared Merltvn A. Ktv9 111 L ,_ '"-'
erv, s. .o•a•w• w. S?IUQ IHI to "'''' ot .. Id Cite-. wttl\ln 11• ..-111a --10 ,,.. to tit Ille ,.nOll ..,_. c.ta Mel-. c..lllw'lllll f11D
Ille motl Sou1htrfv corner ot tllt efl11 the first PUbllcetlon Of 11\ls nollct. 111me b .ul>Krlbed to tllt wllnln lntlru· Tell Mt-mt Nortll-torty one-f\111 of Loi 111 ot Delld October J, 19'7. ment and ecll,_ltdlled .,,. eMCllltd AtterMy fw ......,
.. id lllOclt •1 tnel\U, conllnulng Jem-. w. $1tlltn '"' wmt Publltllecl Orenge c.-1 Dellv ,.Mot
along w kl llOUfldarv, S. 40•Jl'U" W. .Admlnlllrttor of tl\t 1!1t11e (OFFICIAL Sl!ALI Sff~ M ifld ~ So M. 17, ftti 1HO.Oll feet to tilt bf91Mlno ol • tin· of IM •boY• nemecl decedent Joupll E. Divis l.M...,
""' CU"'• on Mid bOUndlry. con. llAGIL, ltlCJAN & DAVIDSON Not•rv ,.Ubllc • C11lfonil1 ---
U •• Soutl\eHtt<I" •nd llevlng • redo 1111 H"1ll Mllfl Street PrlncltMll Office 111 tus til 2000.00 fftlf lhtft<e Soulll-ter-Jenll AM, CetlMit• Orenoe C011n1Y LEGAL N011CE
ly, •lont w kl curve. 11\rougll • «,,.. Te...-: 147""5 ,,,., Commlu lclft bplrn
tr•I engle of 13'00'00", • dlst•na ol All'lu e.n L O••NIM Ju,,. 21, l'10 IA• *
4.$l.1't '"11 thence lellQlftf to .. kl A~ fw A...wstr-,.ulllllhed O C I 0.11 Piiot 910TIClf TO CllDfTOttl
cvrv• •nd '°""""'"II •lonO Mid boun. Publlsl\ed Oranoe c-1 Dtlly Pilot, s ttmbe 2'."": ~ >.. Y 10 11' SU,.lllto• coun OI' T1l8 dery, S. 17'll'?S" W. 1!14AT feel to Oct. 10. 11, 14. ll, IM7 1611.., 1:', r • r ISsw; 11'ATI 0" CAUf'Ott•IA
"" Nor1heulerlY 11... of Ille l•nd f'Olt TMI COUlfTY ~ .....
cie.cribect. '" ll>e o...s to lht Orenoe LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE Me. A _, Cooi•ty Flood Conlrol Ofmfct rt<ord· Eitele tt1 LOWRY MOITOH. OtclMt>
111 .11nu.rv ll, 1'6S In lloolt 71'5. P•Ot IAlt • Jll 9'1.
S7J of seld Otflcf1I Records; lhenco, NOTICI TO CRIOITOU ,.*fl NOTICI! 1$ HEllEIY GIVE• ti ....
l lonl ••Id NorlllHSltrtv llnt, N. JU,t:ltlO• COUltT 0, THI ClltTll'ICATI OF IUSINHI credllOll of Ille •boolt ~ ~
61'11''1" W. tJS.16 '"' lo the fl49in· STATE OF CAL"OllHlf. l'ICTITIOUS NAME Iller ell ~ """' .. cltl-...-r
"'"' o! • l•notnl curw concevt 'o" THI COUNTY OF OllANGI The ut>de.,ltned do cenlfV tMY .,. "'-w ld --· ere ,..,1r ..... fll• N 0 r I 11 t •• I • r I .. •nd hevl"9 • ... A • ,...,, conducflnt • Minns 91 tllO WHI c ..... !Nm. wltll IN -rv -... "'
red I us of to0 OO Ji!,tt; tMn«, Estel• of CHARLES ELWIN DAVIS, Hlghw1y, N«wp0r1 ltKtt. C.t Olornll ll'le ttlflce of tM c:lel1I "' the ....... -H11rtl\-terly, 11onQ w kl curv•• ~ ed under Ille tlcttlloul flf"'I -Of lllled court • .,. le Pr-1 lllMI. wllll Ille
"'1ougll • C.t"1'•1 •nvlt of S'tt'40", • N~~·ICE is HEllEllV GIVEN to the SPAlllCY'S SICI $HO,. encl tllel stl41 -wry -.. to .. --...
dlitance of S6.n Itel~ "''~· ienotnl creditors o1 the 1boYt MmM deOtCMftl firm 11 com--.! ol Ille tollo'Wlnt __,., td •1 The olt1ce of tier ,._,,...,, J..-
to ukl cvrve, N, » 4t'OI w. S65.3I Ille! ell Ptrton• llevl119 clelms egelnll wi.-namtt In IUll elMI pleca OI rnl-"· LI d d Y• 1'65 W•t !Cfttle •-
-to "'-beQIMlll9 o! 1 lang«nt the w ld dtA<l«ftl are requlrtd to Ill• CMflet •r• " tol!ows: Alllfltlm. G•lltotnl., '""'°' h 1119 .,.._ CUl"ll c:onuv• NOl'llltHterly •nd hell· lhem, with the "9USHrv vou<Mrs, 111 Ooneld I . Al\cl'eddln, '1f1 ... _. of but'-of Ille ~ Ill •fl lftt I redlu1 ot 360.00 !tell tllence, lllt olll<t of lht cltrto: of IM lboVt ell-view or. S.n1e Ai141 C..llfoti!l.tl F. L. matter• "'1•1111,. IO .,. -• fll Nl4 NorthtesterlV •I on o ••id curve, 1 'J ... SI 'J .... A L deelllltlt, wltlll11 .ix -lfW .. ltlrough • central engte of 35•.0-55". lllltd court. or lo present fllem, w "' Andrt1ws '·• .,, . -... ..,.~ ong llret publlc:lllOll GI 11111 ..otlc:L
1 di 1 of 217 '1 fttti ltltnet Ille ...cnurv •ouclltt1. le Ille under· IHCh. C..lltornle1 Jay II. lonlllty, tllt 0.Nd lepl~ 22. 190 I•-•;:::-wld cur~. N :io·ce•a.H w: 1lontd et 11\t Offko of !Mr ettorners. w. Coeu Hltf\w•y, N.-1 BeKll. Miidred E. ~
"'-" IHI lo !tie bHINll"9 of • le,.. SPENCl!R end COLEMAN, ft11 TOI· C•lllornll. Mrnllllltrlfrlll fA tlW ho
pent curvt conct•t EHterly •nd hav· rt nc:. 8oultv•rd. Twrence, C.llfornle. Oettd ~I. 2', 1"7. 1111 of Ille ....... ..nect Int • redl1n of l2J.ot lrctr ll>ence. whldl Is Ille !Mec.e of bu1INM ol Ille OoNld ~Fedden ~
NOl'llltrlY •loftO Mid CU<Yt lllrOUQ/I • UNHrt'9ned In •II m11ten .,.11.1nl"' "' Jn •. LOftlllty ,...., ,. L...., central 1no1t of 4''tl'4 " 1 dlsl•ft<t Ille a l•lt of u ld dt<'tdtflt, wllf\1~ ,,,. F. L. Andrtwt Jr. A_, • .. ...,..
of 2t0.lt lfttl thence, te~t to u ld monlll• •fl~ Ille flret PllbllcellOll ol Stele of C111f0f'11l1, Orangt CCIUMY: "'' w..r Kele .. A-N 2''15'4?" E 124 :n Ifft 10 thl1 nollc;1 On ~Mmber lt, lt'7, ti.fort me, a A-C......,... ~rvtNorii.eett.rly tine' of · .. Id bloc!< Otltd oClober '· lff7. Nolerv Public In end for .. Id Stele, per-Tth J;:n.
71 11\tft«, fttvlne .. Id Nortlleasltrlv Wlkl1 V. 01vl" Admlnbtr1lrl• 1on1ily •PPHred Oonlld McFed*"• Jay A_., fer A•IMh41wttll
tine ol Flood Control lend, •lont o1 tllt Estele ot tht ebove R. L..onoltv and F. L. Andrew• Jr. known Publ"11td OrallN Coest Deity f'llot.
ukl Not1ht .. terly 11 ... of llloek 7, M. lllmtd ~ lo me to be Ille --• wlloM nemes Seof4mlltr 2' -Octdler &. It. t7, .,..,,.,... w. 122.41 , .. , to !tie Soulll· "t:NCllt ANO COLIMAN ... JUbKrl~ to Ille Within IMlrutnenl 1"1 IS0-41
.. si.rtv une of u ld MecArlt\ur &ou· mt Tern11<» •~ and edtnowfed9ed lhty uecu1Wd tile --------------tenrd1 !Mnce. 1 .. v1111 11ld bOUnderv T..., .... , C•llfenoll ....... N. lf'IS'J6H E. 7'1.ll 1wt along wkl T•r (fUI m.Bft (OFFICIAL SE.ALI LEGAL NOTICE
Scluttltest~tv line to 1t1e 11e9111-AllenWY'I lw A-lltretrbl Soni• ll. belle
111ng of • 11,_,t curw Ill Mid ,.ut>ll111td Ore,... Cout Deity '"°'· Hotery "lllllk .,,. • ~·IY llne, ainc:ave Wn~••v. Oc1otler 10, 17. 24 21. 1ff7 1'"'47 ~'T~ru'i!:'te;',:,.. NOTICI TO at•DITOlll
end lle•l"O 1 redlu1 of 7150.00 tnll LEGAL NOTtrD J e""erv l4. l'10 IU,.l•tol COURT OP T1t9 ""1\ct, N01'111erly, el°"I u ld curve, '-.C. "'I • • I IOI STATa 0, CAUl'OIUllA lflrough • central •nol• of '8'10'11". """' sNd Orenge c-1 D• IV ... • FOi TNI COUNTY OF OllAll98
• d lat•n<• o1 2551."6 '"' to 11\e ce"ter· ,.... Oct. l. 10, 17, U, 1''7 19347 Ne A.-t
""' of Red Hiii Avenue u 1t1own on cl•Tl,.CATI OI' IUSl!IHS, LEGAL NOTICE E'tai. Ill ltUSlEL.L M. l"OllD. Dto>
Ille mtp of Tract 011 reconltd In FICTITIOUS llAMI ct•Md.
llootc 131. Pega 4 end 5 ot Mlial-The underilgntd .,_ certify 111ey .,.1--------------NOTICE 1$ HEREIV GIY!N '9 h
l•neout Me,,., record' of .. 111 Coun1Y1 conducll-• builnts. et JOl·Mlrlne Ave.. IAI "1 crtctllc" of Ille ·~ nemed 49aedent llleftU. N. 40'.o'O." E. •long .. 1c1 .... su .. 11110• COURT 0, 1'HI Ille! •II l'ff'SOf'I NU"'e clellN -·Mt centerll ... 11 tl , .. , to "'• moot SOUlll-1111-lslend, Ctlllomle, uftdlr , ... fie· STATI O' CAL.,OltNIA "" .. Id dlCedtnl .... """'""' .. file efly conwr Of 11fd e1111txelloll; thtnce, llllous firm Nmt Of LIT·WICIC CANDLE FOil THI COUllTY OF OltAllOI tr.em. wllll Ille M<:ftstry ~ "'
•long the bound•rv ,,, Hkl •nntxetlon: SHOP !CANDLE GLAMOUR> •r>CI 111•1 H•. O.lllM Ille office of 1tle deft[ ., ......... -
Ind Cllfttlt111lll9 el0119 u ld Clt"19rllne, :.~'.'':t.!:. c=~ 1~1 :C, f::'': IUMMOHS tllled cout1, or to -r .._, •""
H. 40"~" E. U3.2t f .. t Ind N. rw~ldenct .,. .. fOllowl! 10-.11 IN neceuery Voudlen. to .. ...,..
WWW' E. 132Q.11 twt1 llltne•, OPAL UNA I OCKOVElt, "'-lnlllt VS. t19ntd el lht oflke f/#,..,. •rtorMV, -· lee•l"9 u ld cenltrllne, Ind cont11111lng E•tlvn F•ulo, 2l3 • Corti Ave .. llOllERT ORVILLE BOCKOVER Oeflfl. itono seld bOUNltrv. N. "'21'1l" ll1ftlct lslend. Celll. d I ' wn E . ._.,d, 1 .. N. YIM st .. lolfte
W. 1322.IO fell. S . .W31'65" W. 1320.14 01ttd Sfpt 12. 1'67 T~nE ,.EOPL.. OF THE $TATE OF 1212• HollY"Od. Cdllf. fOll2I. wllldi l9
E
'
F
'
,. the piece of Ml-ttl lie -...__
...,, -J . .o•a'Sl" w. 119.0I' ""' .... vn IU ° CALIFORNIA. ed In •II matters ~"""' .;-;;.-:;: to Ille llofnt Of beOlnnlne. Sl•I• of C1fllornle, Orenoe County: To the ebovt nemtd Oe1"'°4!11l: l•I• of wkl dtadltlt wltlllfl * ,._..
Contelnl"O en •••• o! 7'0.747 ecres, Oft StPtemller 22. 1H7, before tnt. • andYou1_9!;!, ~*'c-d1111r•Kllntedof '!... ~.r ener tM first _....,~..,,, crl 911a --more or .. ,.. Noterv Pullllc In •nd lor .. kl Stele. ·~-· .... _.. .._ ....,. ,....... --
DATED: Oc....._r l. IH7 111r10N1fly •Pl»••ed Evelvn Feulo 111med e>lelt1tlll flltd In the ebOvt efto Oeltd ~ n. 1"7.
llY OllOEll OF THE llOAltO OF SU· known 10 mt to be ll>e PtnOfl Wl!oM tllltd COUr1 In "" •bov• lftflllff Ktion JIM L., Font • ...,.ltllttr9-
,.E•v1so11s OF ORANGE COUNTY, nerne Is sub>crlbed to the wtlllln I~ broUthl et41lMI you In u ld court, wttt.. lrl.11 crl ... &lltt _, .. CALIFORNIA. slrumcnt .;,., ad'.-ledged .,,. tlltclll-Ill TEN da'l'I alltr the strvlce Oii you •tlwe NI ....... ....... ($£AL) td ltlt ume. Of !Ills tummont, 11 1trv..S wllllln Ille MAltYlfll a. HOWA•O Vi. E. ST JOHN (OFFICIAL SEAL1 •boY• netntd county, 0( within THIRTY .... N. YIM SlrMf, SelM 1'11
County Clwtl •lld EdWln A. Fllllllurn d•Y• It MNtd tlsawtltn, Ht.,....., c.11..... ,... eJl.olflclo Cltr1t Notary Publk • Ctlllornll You ere lltrebv notified tlltt unleu Tll: 11111 ~
Of Ille loerd ot Supervisors c.ountv o1 Dr•ne• vou so eppeer end t n1wtr, 1tld IM•I,.. AlltnleY fet ,.,..,....._, •
or Ort"'Je Coun1v, MY Cornmiulon e,..lrtt tiff wlll teke ludomtnt tor •nY m-y Publllhed Or-Coett Del"
C11ftornle Aprll 1, ,.70 or dema~ demlndtd In Ille compl1lnl September 2' lftCI OCIWW a. .......
It. 17.
·~ By Mebtl L.. Ceslellt "vblllhed Drano• Cont Deity "llol, ts i rising Upon contrKt, Of' wlll epply 1'U
OtPUIY •-... to the ccur1 tor env otl\tr rellft ci. --------------,.ubllllltd Orenot c oesl Delly Piiot .,..pitm ... r 16 •nd Oclober l. to. 17• manded 111 Ille Cot11Pl1l11t. LEGAL NO'MCE
October 17 Ind 1•. IH1 1621-'1 1U7 lUH7 0.ted July ], lff7.
LEGAL NOTICE
,.aem
C•ITtFICATI OF IUSINHS
FICTITIOUS NAllill
The undersigned dOtl cerllfv "" Is
Conducting • bulln"s et 617 S. Hert>or
11..i.. Anel!elm, Celllornf1, under tllt
flctltlou1 firm neme til POOL OWNERS'
SHO,.PING GUIDE encl tlltt H id firm ••
compeieff of !flt followl119 peraon. wllost
Mme In full end piece of re•ldcl\Ce is
... folloWs: Herold !. Heyt, 10fS5 WrlQ!ltwood ~. North Hollywood, Celflornle,
Oetect Ocloti.r 12. 1961.
Herold E. H1Y1
$tete OI C1lltornl1, Los AngtlH CounlY:
On Oclobtr 13, 1'67. belor• mL • Noltrv Public In end lor ••id Sllte.
-tonelly 1ppurtd Herold E. Hays known to mt to be lllt perlOll whost
neme Is subscribed to the within ln<lru•
""nt 1nd ecknowledgtct ht tXKUltd lllt .. me.
(OFFICIAL ~EAL)
Net Gllbtr1 Notary Publlc-Cellrornl•
Principe! otffce 111 LCll AngtlH Countv
My Commlnfon E~plres
Ftb. I, IU•
Publlslltcl Orenee Coa1t Oelly Piiot.
Oct. 17, 24, ll Ind Nov. 7, 1967 166HT
LEGAL NOTICE
"·USM Ct:ltTl,ICATI OF IUSINISS
FICTITIOUI NA.Ml
Tht undersigned -. ur11rv he I• ~uctlng • bullntu et l6' W, 1911• SI.. COlll Mt w. C..llfort1I•. ulldtr Ille
lltlltlou1 firm ~-ol MY BAllllER SHOP •nd thll u ld firm 11 com-td
Of Ille IOllOWlno person, WhOle name
In lull and piece ol 1ulO.nce 11 •• fol· lows;
L. C. uwrtnce. IH W. Hiii St.,
No. '7, Ntw-t lleach. C:.lllornla.
Dei.o 0c1o1>er 1'. tf67.
L. C. L1wren<t
Stele of C•lllornle, Oreng• Countv·
On Oc1. 16, 1ft7, btfou mt , 1 Ho!•rv
"ubllc In end 11>r u ld Slete, oerson1lly
•PPM""" L. C. L1w"nce k,,_11 to "" 10 bt 11\t f)etlOft Wllo\t ftfn\t 11 lllb<Crlb-
t!d ~ the within fn1trumont t nd •<·
kllM!otdgtd tit ue<ultd Ille Hmt.
(OFFICIAL SEAL)
ROStllt c. Knox
Nolory Publlc-C1lllornl•
Prfnc1p1f ornce 111
Ort1101 Coun1•
My Commln lon E•Plr& JulY 1. 1'61 Publll/lfd Ou no• Coost 0111., Piiot.
OclObtr 17, 14 JI, end NOllHnbtr 1. "" 16U'1
LEGAL NOTICE W. E. $T JOHN. Cltf1t T lll'I•
llY Merit S. lluns NOTICE 0 , ._, • p !Mputy Clt r11 -... ... _,., "LUNlllTT & l'\.UNICnT llEAL "IOl'll•TY AT
CllTIFICATI 0' IUSINIU, 411 011 .... Ave., "· o. lu lff ,.ltlYATI SAi.a
'ICTITIOUS NAMI "'"'""""" leedl, C:tlll. I• llM ~A= ti ... ..... Th• underslg,,.d doe• cermv lie h ""9Nt: Ja..MM " "4-1111 et ce11---•· i. _, ,_ ...... ,. __
conductlne • butln•u el 301 Merine AttenMyt "' f'lillllllff tf Ora;;.-:-' --•
Ave., 11111oe l•l•nd. Ct lllornl1, und4r ,.ublilhed Orlntt Co11t Delly Piiot, In tllt M • t I• r f1f tM E•'"' .,
the flclfllout firm neme o! Mlt, MIT· S4j>lembtr 16 end October ~ 10, 17, EDNA H. llARTA. eke EDNA HEit·
TY'S end lllet wld firm Is composed 1"7 154H1 MINE BARTA, ~ EDNA H.
of Ill• loflowlnt person ........ n•tnt In ,.AYNE, Dt<UMd. :.:!.:'net PllCI Of resld911<• Is •• fol· LEGAL NOTICE Nelke ts fl«ebV .,....,. tNt llle ..,
Ed~erd •. MJtt--A t is COl'll • dtrsl.,..., wllf Mii •I prlYelt wit. .,. ~ " "-·Y .. ve.. IA• • or erter tM 23rd dtv of Oct.,, 1"7• llelbOll lllend, C.llf. NOTICI TO CltlOITOllS el !he o!Oce ot llOLLIN L. McHITT, o~:.~P~'."~rir.!'~n l"7, SU,.l!ltlOlt COUltT 01' THI 34tO Wllshfre lll•d., Rm. 12111, City GI
S t ~ ( lff ' 0 c ITATI OF CAL.,O•NIA LOI Anveltt. County of Loi A .... les. tee "' • orn 1• ran" ounty: ,Olt TNI COUNTY OF OllANOI Stele of Celllor11I•, to fl'le II,_. and On StPtembtr n , 19t7, belor1 me, • Ht. A•Jnft tint bidder, •nd subject lo ... ~Inn•
Notary Public In end IOI' Mid Stele. E1t1te Of EARL A. TUltNER, De· !Ion by stkl ~riot Court, ell !lie
Ptrsonelly •Ppeered Edwtrd A. Mitt· cHMd. rfQlll, tlti. end Interest of w ld dtcleoed man known to mt to bt the PtflOft NOT c I ~1r':rn':1 '!ncf':ci'!::~~ wlltl· crtdll.!s E ol s,,:e.':,!,!Y .!!,:Nd~~ :,\,,111e.~me1n:,:,e111 Ille~ ~I =•~'911!;
cuttd tl\t u me. ....,.., •x• 11141 111 11erson.s hl•lno clelm1 11elnst H id dt<tlMd lies ecqulred lly _,.
(OFFICIAL SEAL) the H kl ~nl .,. required to fllt lion ol lew Of otllerw!M. ....., tllen -
E lllem, wlfll the lltCll .. ry -.chtrl, In lft tddlllon 10 !Ml ol stld ClecMIM dwln A. Fllhtlurn !he oftk t of the Clerk of Ille eboYt •~ el the time of dMlll, Ill eftd It 111 Ille Notery Pwlk • Celllornla tllltct cour1. OI' to PrtHnl tt>em. '#Ith "'9 certeln rttl propertv 'lllHltoe In Ille
CC"1nl'( of Orenoe Moeuery vouchtn, to Ille uncltnlQMd City of N.-t llffdl, <Aunty ol Or
My Commission Explrn et tllt otnce o1 hi• attOl'nevs. Hunolti, •1199· Stele of C111torn1a. ,..rtlcultrl•
Aprll '· lf70 Hurwllt & Rtmer. P. O. lox ins. New· described 11 lollOW1. ID-wtt: Publlilltd Orellft COHI 01flv Piiot. "°'' llt1ch, Celltorn••· t?UJ. Whltll II Lot ,., Trett JI01 •1 per "'"' ...
Stpltmlltr )l •nd OctOl>tr 2. IO, 11. Ille piece of bu1lneu ol lhe under· flit In llocll 111, pegn :17 •1111 ll olt
"" 15""7 s1t11td In 111 melltn P<!rttlnlnq to the MIKtll•ntOUI Mlll9. ltteonts ol w •d
LEG OT Hiiie Of .. Id dece<lent. wlttlln 11• County, lmprovtd with I 1iorv, J bed-AL N ICE rnonlM •fl•r Ille first publlcetlon Of 11111 room houst •1111 enldltd 2 u.r o•r
--------------nolla. -•nd swimming pool, kMW!' ec> f'.""1
CHTl'ICATI 01' IUJINISI
Flctltltut N•-
Tho undtnlol\td dolt ctrtllY lie h condvct1110 t buslneu •I t0"6 Germeln· der W1Y. lrvlne. Celllornle, under lllt tlCllllOUI llrm n•m• Of THE l'LACK
SHACK and 11111 s1ld llnn Is com-ed
ot Ille lollowlno person. whole n1m1
In full •nd p11u ol rnldence 11 •• IOllOWl!
01ttd 5tPltnlber 22. IH7. cordl119 to 1trtet llUmOt<IM • .,._
JoM A. Turntr. Adtnlnl1lrt 11 llOS Wnl Pembroke UM.
IOI' of tllt ESltle of the T trmt of ..... Us/I 111 lewtut ,,_y
t bOvt n1rMll dt<"'nt ol IN Unlltd St•lft on con!lrmetlon •
H-(tl. H-111 & ·-Hit, Off part Uih Ind belenct t .. A~ et Lew dtnctd llv note HCUrtd by Mori•• ..
ue 121\d llrMt or T rus I Oted on the property ao "°"" N..,.rt kedl, c.a111tn11 n~ 0< ,..,, cash •lld Nltnct bv euum•
Tel: '7).t02t !Ion of unpaid IMll•nc• of firer t nd •
Att-1'1 fer A<l,,,l111ttreltr Stcond Oetd of Tnnl nolft Of r~
Publltlltd Orentt Cout Oallv Piiot, Ten per cent of •mount bid to be deo
Alen A. Coffey, ~ wn. lrvfne, Ct lllom le Oe ltd Sep. 15. IMJ
Genn•lndtr September 2' 1114 Ocleber ~ 10. 11. PO•lled w1111 bld,
IU1 I~ II PUrclll-refln._ ......... !.=============== eny bonus tor pev«f til tJtllf"'9 ~ cumbrenc11 w ll be ptld lw PUnNMr, Alen A. Colley
STAT( OF CALIFORNIA,
ORANGE COUNTY·
On Stol. u . 19'1. bt•• ,.,., • NC>'
ltry Publk '" Ind tor H id St•••· Pf• son1llY •PCW"Ul(f Al4n A. CofttY known
10 l!lt to bl! Ille ,er.on ~ nemt
h •ub1crlbtd lo lh1 wllhln lnmumtnl
tnd ecknow•eclotd tie txecuitct Ille umt
ISN ll
Orm•ll VM1n Ult Noi.rr Public
My C('tl'lmlulon l!llPlrn
M~r<h '7, IHt
Publltli...t Or•llO@ Cont D1ll1 l'llot.
Sealtrnl>tr U end Otl-r l. 10, II.
lt&1 USH7j
ONLY FOR MEN?
The DAil Y "lOT t porh
Hctio11 h defi11lhly 11et
"for 111e11 11nly." The H f!•
t lo11 off1r1 more and better
covua9e of leul aporh
then •ny other newtp•p•r
d htributecf ;,. thit ute.
Whet "'other cfoe1n't Ii~•
to r••d e boul her 1011'1
touchcfownt
:.....::==.==================
lllds « ofl•n to be In wr111.., oncl
wlll be .-lved el lht t!OreMld olo
Ile. •I .,,., lime Iliff ""' flrtl publl-
UllOn hertol •nd bel~t NII of Hit. T~1 undtnlglled rHff"lts !ht rlO/ll ,.
rtltel 111'1' and •fl bld1. D11e<1; Oc1o0er Sfh, 1tt7.
NOEL E H, 'AYNE
Admlnhtr11« of IN Wiii
o! u fd cle<tdent.
ROLLI N l . MCNITT, AM'ORNIY
)toll Wlhlllrt l•le•w.. ~.. I*
LH Allttlrt, CllfferftMI, _,
Tell JIJ·->51
Publl\lltd Or1nge co .. 1 Delly P1i..t. Oc1oetr 10. II, 11. lff7 ltU.'1
:;(I llAILY P1LOT T ..... ..-17.1"7
Aa n .... 1purt froM .. -aw ..... TNe",
.... .... burning
...... ca.e ..... ...,
... at once, lraln1 II
.... "' lo quench ... ... (abowe) whlle-(left)
tlley allow '"•Ir In•
8tnlctor to reHh be-
•••111 Ill• fl••H to
ntletl off th• ltfPPfJ .......
I N a buaineu when errors can mean diaut.er, the more training
a penon receives the bett.er hia ehancea for survival It ii with
this in mind that the County of !al Ailgeles Fire Department eend.s
rookie firemen through an intensive •ven-week training coune to
1earn, tbro1:1ih actual 1lre conditioni, the dangers they'll face on
the job.
... The rookie, at the 1pecially-prepared Oil Fire Training
Grounda In Del Valle, r.Jifornia, ii walbd tllrougb red-bot flmw,
choking llDob and 1lllMnb1e i..t behind • eurtaiJl
of water from fog nom1el. With him, lt.ep bJ •p,
followa a aoft-trpokea training captain who guidej,
point.a and instructs on the ''how" and "what" al
aaf ety and action.
Thia program gives to each rookie the "feel" of
the n<mle position and the back-up politi~hunutBng
out BliCh problems 11 a raging oil-tank~ a ftamlng
trail o! guoline in a gutter, a barning .butane leak
and the 1'Chriltm11 Tree", a mar.e of broken pipes all
1quirting flaming fueL ·
To do the job properly, be bas a apecla1 fog noale,
wat.er and his own know-how, learned in both a...
room 1ecturee and In the "pits", where flames eome-
thne lap about bia feet u be slowly advances to abut
off a supply T&lve.
When tbiA training period fa finished, the Ibi-
den~ ·no longer tan be conaldered "rookiel", but !rt-
men trained to react, when dealing wfth the reality al
actUal fire, in a way that minimia mistakes which
might create diluter for all
• I I f
..
.,. ..... ....... ... _ .... ......
~ ... ---f:lmllr J ......
~MJW
.-.. J
R ASO ........ .......
iQallt .,
.. E.
IBll' -..
IFTUU , PW; .
dllll9 • , ... ....
~: ....
....
c. .... _,
99RI ....... ...... ..... ... • ..
Lt
Olllr .. .. .. --"' .....
~ ....
8-7 ....... ,... . ... , ...... .... .... , ..... ..
Ollir •
Weldt ..... r.-... .... .. ... ..... ......
aJU!S
IDml
&Op
OI u
All ... ....
~ ...-....
~ .. ..,._ ..
*U
H ....
-
I
HOUSIS fOtt SALE HOUSES FOR SALi
TutSd.ty, Oct.-17, 1'61 Ml..YN.11' ZJ
1000 HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSES FOR SAL Kt:NTALS
1100 Houw ,..,....... -1-11------~1 I :;:,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;j. I lOOO COlta Mesa •---L. 1 .. "" ._ ~-• 1000 CHMral 1000 I• Genera -----Huntlneton --... -c:o.ta Mele 21• II t' -· ._.. 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1----------------~~~ ~~---Immediate
I• ,_. ..... ._.._._,_~ LOVELY .., • bc1ra a...,t UHfUllli 2 Ir .... A a' ,
VIEW
IAYl'ltONT
Vllit our new maanUlcenl
'View-Point" Serlee bomea
ln the tioelt locatJOQ
tn Newport Beach
from $122.500 • sise.soo
OP~ HOUSE DAILY J.D1
1318 Galu:Y Or.
Doftr' Shores
IBn'AL a11ES1
Jan REDlXE> -Owner
--. "'c.t .. -olff!r ... ~ ... ....,,, two bed-IDIE•fta
$511 d ,, ....
_ 1,. lath dgpl -with
Wit-.. ldtdien indudlnc ----------·
,,. DJU AU A YEnJLUf.
Pc , .tSlli-. .._
Ma ... ,,. ....am-• n d lad lay View
*ten. 1..-sit JWllll room • r.tate type 3 bedroom bome
...-. bedlouma. Double m OaltrJ atmo.pbere wtth
mrparta wttll ......_ Needl f!Vft"J modern convenience
.._ .. Jar top nataJa • m»ect for bones. The Ideal
... Jomdaa la nctDmt. lane tr the penca Wbo
""" ...... 0 •• , $28,950 • -the wide open ~· an. .,.. a alt t to llJ.ODD. Owner-will belp fl.
dlllll'9 aup · c • W. J_....,_.__
•••w....._ ••c• ..... ,...a._ .. --......
•
--..... Better harry m.nce. .. t.t c6r -acde!t 646-7171 • 546-2313 aWllllC .......... Open ...... tfl 9
OWIB'S lOSS
,'' • Jjl I
~' \' \ •1 1 \\
I '1 (
Oil W 11 ,._, ,.._ Newport Harbor Entrance
ms 0.-~ c..na .. Mar, Callf.
A'ftl 5llEST PAlllNCi and IOAT SUPS
Wiiy Not Eafoy n. ·c.-a.W•" Way of Life
THI ADVANTAGES WILL SURPRISE YOU
Y• cm~ and get fee title -or leue lf you prefer.
ALL .... Mft WATERFRONT VIEW. All bave two bedrooms
aad bro Wk. -wrrD LARGE PATIO.
YOU -~ INVITED TO INSPECT OUR FURNISHED MODEL
.., SH.SOO cmcl Up-I.ease $420 Monthly & Up
,.111 6 73-1788 for fmther Information
I
REAL
ESTATE
LOANS
6.2%
INTEREST
LOWEST IN
THE HISTORY
30 YEARS
REFINANCE
OR
SALE
' Slntle Family Only
ALSO
NEW
90%
OF
SALE PRICE LOANS
LOANS TO
$60,00J
FROM OUR
INSURANCE
ACCOUNT
Sl"1I• Family Only
CALL US FOR
• 9041. of value °' refinance
lo.ns on single
family
• Leese Hold
Lo.n
• LAncl Lo.ns
• Apt. Lo.ns
• Commercl.I
LCMtns
• Tract Lo.m
• Construction
Loam
Loans over
$100,000
On Single Family
SATILER
MORTGAGE
COMPANY
Exclusive Agents for
one of the largest ln-
iurance Company I
S.vings Ir Loans for
the past 19 years in
the Herbour Area.
SATILER
MORTGAGE
COMPANY
336 E. 17th St.
Costa Mesa
Ml 2-2171
or
Kl 5-4506
HOM£ Oii THE Hill Possession DOWNTOWN DUPLEXI tum., W'911hrtt~. .. -. • ...,. a.s ,...
Larte 3 bedfoom1, 2 b 8 t b $22,500 fWl price I c.rpeted, wW, U..S, lllftiWA.'e. Blllt -.. ddlra.
Thb fabuloua 4 BR home home wilb mcloeed patio. draped It: IOme fumlture in-elec Ol"lml-Hes ~ Ot.. .._ I I LE.._ •
overloob a ~autilUl Paci-O>mpletel)' carpeted 6 drai>-eluded 1n tbll fabulOUI PIO mo. er,..., ...._... _ta.11M. _____ --=-~-.,~-•
tic <>c.an, haa Iota ol prio ed thru ·out. Larp walled price. Neat le well main-~ J • 1• al .........
v-.cy with lovely front patJo yard wtth miry for bOat or t&1ned • OWtW'.I' will pa.y BACHELOR OCwt/M* dll & Drll!m 1111 Dr ~ by llDdlcl.plni. trall~r plua ovfl'llled 2 car poinlt FHA or VA. on.1y * • IHCL unu HJ.-Dis~
kwtly delicned ldtchen bu prqe, ~block to 1boP-PACIFIC SHORES ms Hartmr BWAG-aa II • ,
i.&Jt • inl Including d.lab· pine. $21.500-$2.~ down, ll!AL TY • .. 5
waaher, l&rp Wnily roorn F.H.A. terms. ~ 847-&'186 142.2511 Newpert IMdt !m IWt IL& Im
ls 1eP91&te dlnlDc room off 546-2313 646-7171 EYN. 538-3451
the kitchen mU. thl1 an Open !>.tea. 'tU 9 BEA<DN 3AY 2 Br. 2 .._ J • 2 ._.. ._. 06--.
Ideal family borne. Owne-Kille a bed. .,t -.S. New .... A_.
la ftex.l>le OD term&• will HEATED-POOL Boatallp. rr,lc.. llJQll ,.._ ~ I ,_.
tell fOf' ml,y $3900 down. 4 BEDROOMS + DEN + $D5 lft' __.. ...
A.lkfng price '38.950 A VA DININO ROOM Balboa 2J9 C-. ..........
app"alal la $S7 ,500. When + 2 luxurioua batha, m.. cozy 2 B1l Olttqe. Frpl Pr-* ._.. mD IO.;llillf
el.le can you ftnd a home BUILDER'S R~ ter bedroom II hu,e, with 1 blk to bay A • e ea L • m» Gtall
Wee th1a with OCEAN VIEW Work'a all done • 3 bl& private bath with door to Avail to Jatr i.t. SUI-. llllfTALS
at thla prke Uld still OWN BRa a: 2 t.tbl, 1ar&e tam-alunnJ.nc COVER.ED PATIO, Utll pd. lOC 'L' a. IA-Im Afa Fw , , I 111E L.ANDT "" room W/w --Ung to romantic warm wattt rft:-
"Y -..... ' SWIMMING POOL. HAPPY or v•,,,_ ~--..... 41•
overaized pat.lo, ftttplace, =::.::::======~ --------t JCJa.. co:Ts
~ WAJ.LACI!
~~ ~ ~;,s~~famC: ~';~ L..,... .... 2195 SUS CASIJAS
down moves )'OU In. Extra WALKER A LEE, 7m F.d-BWE Lqaca a-la. l Bil. r. ; 1 , 1 • .-UALTOltS
5464141-
nice qulet Ol«.a Mesa )o. ~. ~. 3 BA. paala, ......_ JriwUt YACIMICY
cation. Call Ha1tage Real "YmRANS.. be a c b.. $215 mo. (JU) DD Dim ...... CJI. '°'*' ...... E1tate ~1151 833·'1391 er <ntl -.21Jl Q ... -,m...,
t MONmS NEW -S13C $!iO DOWN a: Cb1a 3 BR 2 RENTALS
Real cork floora.whlte =~:-:i~ ~w~ ~ Uah:s '*r• tt\ .,./w, c:uamJc tile tifrulD ' -r ~ MORE FOR
YOUR MONEY entry • pain' lb/out drp9 la )'QUlS. Pinnt.a Of $165 General -
mA • $18 000 • DO polnta per mo. includes all. _$_1 __ 7_,..51,....--,w=-.. ---=u':""r,-S At lut, a diance to bu1 • s SWf 'CM. 642-3184 TUDEWINDS Ill TY. Vaca ,_ Jar .._. ._.. trul:ylarpbome!~Bactc • 142..5011 142-5012 • ,oar',_.... • ............. e..r. <>wr 2,400 Ill· tt., wtth Mesa Verde 1110 GI NO DOWN rail8I. NiticaL rr.-• • llld um. a,.._...., • bedroorm and 3 b&tha. llmdrath PO .. m C4JI. e .... ......_ • ft ..._
Large f:am1lY r 0 0 m with 0 TU. tlM laNDord ca ~ • -am ...
flttplace. l.Dwe9t Pr 1 c e d 5 IEDR OM ~ 3 Bil. cpta1drpt, c:..ta ..._ ai• ms ~ ..._ J94RIDI
hom• tn tllJa area with • MODEL HOME paUo, caMSNlc St. ~ -.. 1 --l'mL ~~w= ~ lmmtdlate Occupancy ~:MttitRi.;E~LW-Newlf D111Med =~~
LEE, 200 W..tcllff Dr., $40,700 8'7-&m seo.«m sn,.3959 2 Ba wtda cmpart. '::;_-:r IWlWJ .,.._. l A 2 a iiiiM>-iiiim.t.iiim•Open&1•E\."eeiiii~·-1974 flamlnto Drive -----~ ar ~ U:... l'W:a • 1W. --. 11111 lteplbUc Homes 546·1017 Huntlntfeft w ., pall. m &. ail a ~
MONEY MAKER Golf Course a.auty Harbour 1405 :_:-a S:. ~ ~ 1 m c-.. ...._
Com Maa Trtp1a M .. Vent. c.c Fairway WAftBEftNIT LOT Avocado. --. ... DI .-. .. ... Good lteotal record borne; t Bil, dell; ~"In. lllU"llVIU Ast-..__.
ud ac ttnudna sc.m TnL Own. ~!1585 •a•• a.&Uf 1-11r. c:;.. Call to ... SOlc100 Mndtnc 34 ft. a.o.t FOil Belt. l -.... '-,... ........ CUil DOii, llllfor Col .... Partc 1115 :rc. Y.;.=:; '=: = :tt_ e;. ~ =..._a......,
lkt. .,.... o au e 1 aw ... ms IPM:mlm • 9'0IU'm 2 iTaDw.cwem""'1 Col111 Ptiltl -..u. m«> 1n.zm. 1 ,,,_...., -• -. ......... • ...,.. r:va. m.w "CllMler1I•• ,_.., --. • .._. .._ _.. ::!1C•••1ez s---2 ..,... '--Pount• v.ee., .... ~........ 1 -.. 2 -.....
-........ --·~·~ •Oll..~Rr ...... hrf9ct Paceeetter comer Jot. &p.cloua Uvmc 3 BR. 2 ba. cpta, drpa. bik NEAR New l ._._ ...._ m I!. !NI ar ..._
3 bdrm, 2 ti.th, lmmae, room with tJoor to~ wall ll'ftll)n. Nr fft aH. Uda ..... • 4lllet Clllmt.1========1
quaint Olklnial, top neilh-brtck fireplace. Larp ram. 51'~. 1..ow •. ~ El Sol No pm. ua -. --. .... ,_, ._. 4m
baltlood, be&u1iful sromda-UJ room addition, lhq car-~-IC745Ql. -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 Hunyl $!2,000. pednc. $23,900 on1J 1~ N.a ....... .._. JD•
~'1).,.f+.t down. £.Z F .H.A. tams. Garden Grove 1475 TOWNBOOIE ....._ • IUr. ~
""-v. 2 LOCATIONS e VACANT e Fam or UafllrL? BIL. 2Vs W. Oc11 fHll
1700 Newport llvd. 10152 DEWEY DIUVE. bA., frpL, ~ ..... wa.. 2 ... 1 ..... ~
646-'171 4 Br--2 Ba. Frpl. (.')ta. 0rp9. ID&. 2 car pr.,. ...... .-L ..._ sar-..
RUSTIC-IAMBll& 2790 Hart.er llvd. m.~ ... * Owner, m-taJI = -:_;.:-• ...._ 1a-1115 m-19 ...-. 546-2311
Latuna IHch 1705 OC'IWD'Raft J Bil. J ... BOOIO' 2 -c..... -% Bit A den bame 2 bUha, Newt,~--J>llJla. a. .. '1dl. .... CA ._ THI·~ ~J t;AL .
E . ~T ATEP .:.;
latae ldtc:heD A dlnmt ana Ouc:4iJll& 2 llta. ' 2 * .._ SDI --,_, L
with fireplace. $22,000. ~ lDdrJ r-. ....... ,.... 09 •• ..,.. ID-ms Welh-Mceardt. ltltrs. er A ....._ ,_, • VIEW.,~ • ~ mo Newport BJ\fd., c.M. · mo. 'f:rtr. -.na 2 ~ • , • ~
548-1129 EVei. ~ Newport_ leech_ 1200 · •ROOM flillle ._ 1 Wr • ,._, .. u' & Yemtr
dela ~ ~ I I l6ee SSZ111 Aftso I P.JI. 4 IR-No'°9wn 0.1. e '"nfE GOOD LIFE" e ,.no...._._. 2 ~ U Jl£Al1ID"OL
1
.._,
SZ?.500 WATERnlONT home w I · · • ...... C.... Biii ..,_., ............ PJI:
2 bathl. Most dellullie llv· Pl1• allp A dock. ID a prt. LOS PADRES New 1. _... .. JIB. sm, HHm. IMCJJ.
•-• '__,,, lot -tde9l for va.te community; nlcelY R• •LTY 4 BR CJ--' ir., S-___. _ ......_._. ..... ....,."'.., nJRN. J Bk, 1~ betbl. Re---~ - -ou1door tun A mfil!rt&lnlnc. l BEDROOMS, 2 8A111S 2 ~ •••••• $IJ5-. ._ -.-_
Elegant ftreplace. 0" n er ~ to ~.S001 _ _!,.: New home, TOTAL PRJCE stt.mt air. -~-::_a:.,
de.pe!'ale! 5t0-1'72>. -or ...... _,. ONLY $28,000, 11.300 Down ··-""· ~ .,....,.
TARBEU.. 2955 Harbor YOU OWN nlE LAND 895 • Gltlme7re St. '!I:•~ Ht._ h nlO • IDftll Bldldlll AIL
• .._7849 OWNER e Lacuna Bdl. 49Hl33 ---1111 W. a.a.ca lhl RE~.!S~ONS 4 BR., 2 be.. hmib' rm. <Next to nc Toe nwtiet) 2 BDRM a-. .._., cmp.. m-..
w/trp.,dba.rm.: ~CODd. et111 A decm1trl. SUI-. VA . Everyone Ellg!ble ,_ -'--..,_ .. _ _. ~-water ,uL 54l-Ulr. ,.~ ... ..__ .-G. D. BUCCOLO ............ -. 1--._._ WEED IT AND REAP -_. --
tD ICboois tn Bick Bay Unique 2 BR A dea. 2 BR. - --
Oflidal V.A. Manacement aru.. $35,l:IO. W/W ~ta ...... UY rm. c:-....... nso • co.ol.IDO APTS
24 Hour Sd'Ytce BY OWNER 59-UM i1u9 wan.. lDUltft -. PDl1BOaSE FCJR2f
642-4162 LOVELY 3 BR. 2 Ba.. Jilame dee*. modlldtcb, nap A C..... ... Mw 2 Bil.~ $Z» DRIVE IY cm 2 Jots; caw u 2 apts. ove. di.Ip. clfertd u la 2 lllt. J ..._ mnm _ UNl\JIUC
Rm. to bkl. Neu Sq A $24.liiO • Low Dn. Ml..san ~ $251 -2 + den • •• • ·' 2101 Oranat ocean. WW ffll all or ~Int. Rlt;y amt. · SaUlbary ftea11.;r 2 ... 1~ a., lrJile • 2 BR .......... 22l Palma' or trade. Can park tn real'· BLUE Lagoon Omdomlntam m4ml l.&m:B POOL
For additional . lntonnatioD IL 411t Owner mms 3 BR. 2 BA. $37,.500 l1llfmn -I!. Ollllt llw7 m.-
MAHON RL~· 541-9313 CUST S1*ni1b Duplex. 3 A: 4 at $40,000 Far n. (213) 3 BR.. 2 i.a.. --.,1uwww; Mal Afll. U11. .._.ad
1'1'7 Onn Eft 14MHS Br. 1 b1lc to ocean. Fri>lc, 833-7398 or <n4) 499-2131 CpCa.. clrllpm. Will timL .... M , Ill 0 "*I
p . Ra:O, d-w. SS2.~. By Own-DRAMATIC ocea.n vtewa Mar t..da. m&J 0.-...... AM131. DAVIDSON Realty er. 123 4ht St. m.sm. 2 BR. tam. rm. 2 BA. $.1UllO • -· -·•·• 1-m. ~ m.
CUSTOM 2 &u.s by ownu, Ocean Lo ctn. Wanm 4Mell/lW .... ........ ms ......... .t ...
NV &.t 3 BR + dlalnc front Sood Ira. priced to cu.tom 4 BR plus den YEARLY ..._ ,. ..... a& --+family. Qarpeta. dr.-sell! f75.-068l as.1510. siooo Down A Amame pq-PIO per a. Pn&r-l • 1 -
2200 Ill· ft. rnents. * 49H292 aldft-*1t.. Rm. 2 Br, 1" _ ..... _______ _
Rltr. mo Huter SB. CM Newport Hgta. 1210 RENTALS e.. Sep. lllowwr A:~ a.&Ut .a. .... .a ~ ~-&M-J.244 EXCEPT. dean · by own Houeet Fumlthed IQOID. Fraet •~,.a... llllil. lld. Al· t1f. Ill E. NEWPO-T HllGHTS ae.a JDIPd Nr Bari>or m ~ ron:et ar ..._ ..._ ...... ...._
3 BR. $22,950. LO DOWN 3 br 2 ba Obi. trplc. General iooo =::.:::. =..: e W e
NEW cptl, dnpea; 1% Ba. Elec kit Ip pa.tlo w/tnes :;;;= Nat1b a., llf QnL lw. We G51 ~. tncd. )'al'd. Nr .. New-Ideal doc YU'd ~.950. IRYINE TEii.ACE m4a ·
part Schls. By Owner. &C2·7311, MS-HS6 ---~--====-anzuuL I.GB i.a.
2C11 HOLLY LANE MS-1143 CORNER DX> 1q.ft. 3 Br, 2 JBR.Admr.ulillwdhame, HvdlaJlf& .... ,_ am.! A:; 81i7 a .....
IMMEDIATE oc:mpuey 2 b&, fun rm, fflll. nr ach1a, $390 mo. 1'17 leue. -~ .-, ~
bomea, 4 BR. 2 bl. Eut-1er1sat1onal buy • $29,950. ~ RaJty Doutl• S,.. C....
bluff. vtew. low ptioe, M&l'-Owner. Prine: only. 546-5276, OQ17 2 ..._ J Bil. l~ .... ...... GS5
tin, Rltr/owner 6"-0600 or ~mo. baths, dllle canee. aict.
m.1l8S Rentals .. Shi 2005 .tve llftls. Rec Clf.llla ... ~ ..._ 1111& 1clt 1 Corona •I Mar 1250 ----,. -pool. l!mll caurt. • ·,_. •Alt." .. "'-R. ..,._
Cost• Mesa 1100 -------•IMA.LE. 2 BR apt. Fiim. wo11t. Oltld Oftl' u Olt. sm. Oii ewa. men -------Priced to S.I! M2-4111 aft T PM on Tue-$1$. Fenblll name. Jfr • na -.. ta ,..._ LEAVING State. II)' Lola. '111un-Fri. All day wknda. Warner a Bolla Oka. .. .....,. ...... ~
Your Gatn • ~ to ~u OPEN DAILY 1 ·5 CHARGE m nun-21534 m.a llmr. 5IJ.IZ'1J Fut! $23,000. 3 lldrm, 1 %
Bath. ~ fireplace. 421 Narcluus General 30000enenl Jm 8 nil IDDO ~ Brick fenced &: 3 BR, 2 ha home, frplc, db1
1
___________________ • ______
1 floocMlabted with cowred pr. S28.SOO • Xlllt terms!
rotnp\a room . GA.at lot Ruth Seeley, Rltr.
66x200'. Be1utitDU1 land• in Park Ave., Bal. I.sl.
caped. Lota of trees lbclud-61M766
lnl ellht fruit tr'HI pl\11 '!!!!!!!!!!!!!l~!l!!!l!!~~-· 1
decorative lhnJbl. NO hliti * OCEAN VIEWI * Clty T a x e 1, but ntar CAMEO HJGHLANDS
ectioola • lhopptna. ml 3-Br. Den, 2-Ba. Cpta, J:>lnjw.
Canyon Or., O:>lta M... $36,000 * Owner 173-2549
842-5688 D~ Owntt. $3,000 Lender's R-.... for our equity. 4 BR, 2
Vacant, redecorated IM!d~ b&tha, tilt-Im, 2 frpka, cpt.
A out, covrred s-tlo. close Fine location. mm Eve.
to 1Chool11. Under marlttt at Lido lit. 1351
onlY SZl,500 • llUbmJt )'OUr ---------
t.enna. THI ll!ST
Paul Jones ltMlty quality, location, deli&n,
Mf.J.286 Eve. 538->E materiala. 5 bd.(am-d~ * 5 BEDROOMS 4% ba • ! cu IU"Bt kftch.
Panoramic ocean view on Oor St.ISL -SS9.SOO , __ ... All fior "" ...,. R.. C. CREER, Realty ...,,.. YoU own, .....,,~ 3416 VI lJdo 173 mD OPEN ROUSE SUN U·5 a .
USl Glen1111cles Terr, c.M. LIDO ISLE Agt. 873-8550, 549-~
MODERN 3 BR.., 1" ea., 4 II., 2 laths
cpta .. drpa.. bit.Ina; Eut· $45,000 • $4500 down
aide location. ~.900. George WllUamlllft, RJtr. e OWNER 54'1-tm e 673-4350 OPEN EVES.
3 BDRM. den. 2 frplc. le ~!!!!![!l!!!lll!!!!!!!!!!!!m-~~ toe. ~ roof. Split rail JOIN the ~ ID the
fence. nlA or GI $22,500 DAILY Pn.or WANT ADS!
333-1267. 142·5611 -------
'LYAU I r I I
rwESOA I n.y IOY .... ,«: i.1. r 1 I' 1 r !:th::-='.:.· .:a.= -.................... -----1Mtevw 1rW &m... ...-r::.
INETAll I"'°"'! __ ., ftlr r •. ~I I r 1• 1 ~$!=.~5 •;m,0 r r r r r r r r r r l
!5-I I I I I • I I I' I f
SCRAM-LETS ANSWEIS IN 9000
• l
T wtdiJ, Octobft 17, l 967
.u:ft•AL.S REN ALS
~ FwNehect Apts. Unfurnlahed
,_ ..... ___ ..._ ____ 4355 Coste Meu 5100
~···········~----.-.-" £!TRAC 1 BR $140 Yrl,y. ---------Plitit,. pnp. util pd!
Ill A Y__,i11
••• , 4-r! ......
....... _ .Nair u ol c Ir
-rime .. "w4ifwl ,. ....... _
,_
v
FllOM
$)58 .._
e Fii1..._
..... Di'
. ::•c..-anr.-
~ • y_.o-Pat• , .. ,. a..-..
. ·--
ll6'~ AGATE
'h ,. •• Sb Buch 4400
BLOat from ocean 1 6 2
Ba ..,ts. 2 1M"' old, beat-
-,_., buil( -inl, rec. ,__ m.ercom muaic. $125
-•• SJMS7t SJ&.1530
4705
. 1'lm. ~ unfum, 2 BR
2 BA. AD el«. bit-ins.
PANORAMIC VIEW, O\ltr-
lldlial Allio Beach. $185
?JQ.. Wftiey Dr. 49S-3755
* ¥1LLA MESA *
All Utilltles P1ld
Extra Large 2 BR.
Deluxe Aph.
FURNISH.ED AVAlL.
• Closed dootlle garages
• Children's eection
e Fully equipped play&rnd
• f'orced air heat
•Heated pool and
• Recreation area
• Private patios
• Walk-In cl<XSets
• Single story * 719 West Wi110n *
5000 * Manager 646-1251 *
·-~~~~----
t.ly locition
0.. to lhoppint, Park
..,. CW. & Girls Club
• SJ ...... s Br'• -2 Ba
• ... faDI • Pat/SfteD
• .....,. lmliY/lndrJ fac'ls
• Adlllts A: hmily aras
1M5 ANl*m Ave.
CM.. ~5'169
5100
a..EAN, quirt 2 BR., new
ca">. drapa M a t u r e
allilla. Avail. Nov. 10th
HARBOR
GREENS
BACHELOR • UNFURN.
from $100
Incl. util.
1 • 2 & 3 BDRM.
FURN. & UNFURN.
Heated Pools, Ould Care
<:eater, Adj. to Shopping -
2700 Peterson Way. al Har-
bor le Adams. Costa Mesa.
546--0370
!!!!!!!!!
LUXURY
LIVING
Ja.B BocbeRtt 642-9'703. SPACIOUS 2 &: 3 BR
............... Y 1 BR.. Oarpeta. dra-2 bath AptJ. Built-ins. car·
,... ~ ..-r/dryer. pete. drapes. Quiet llvine-
........ • ,a... • Di&-3117 CJnnarnon
8 PlwwdL ~ Open. Rental Mgr. Mra. Ouisten1e1
2 .... ~ l'rplc, 546-1034
...... .... 117 Victoria·
,_s.em ___ =· _,.~_,.,.=--·---* Contemporary *
"'~y DEC! FURN· UNFURN
JSI Tulip Lane/642.Q92 Spac 1 &: 2 BR, priv patio
cpm, Drpa. Bltn&. nm. frplc. all kitf'h bit-ins, pool
2 BR.. Carpets, drapes. Car-&: cabana, 8Sx180 Pitch &
J1Sf.. • mo. Sm child OK Putt, l ·story. From $120 mo
!fe pda. &&-1255 1577 OROIARD DR.
(just oU Santa Ana Ave.)
Call 546-6261
TIME FOR
Completely
Refurbished
....._J CK CASH
Adise T.-cw, THROUGH A
1 It 2 Bedroom Apta
Swim Pool, $95 &: $115
2621 Harbor Blvd., C.M.
546-9081
,---.. ...
•c 1r ,.,
Cwfi w .... , ..
FMaY SECTION
WITH
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
I'
NEW 2 BR, luxwious, all
elec. crpt.s, drps, GE kltch.
O>lor antennas. Encl. gar.
Nr bus. Only $1.23. Adults.
U> E. 20th St.
1-2 BR., cpts, drapes, bit-ins, mm pool, gar. No children
<r peu. Nice area. AJso
tum. apt.r.. available.
642-800.
2-BR. DUPLEX * Bltns,
Drps, Cpt.s, Oosed garage.
Yard. Quiet. Adults only.
SlZ>-Mo. * 548-4.573
2-BR. DUPLEX * Bltn11,
Drpe, Q>ts. Clos-ed garagp,
Yard. Quiet. Adults only.
s:tz>.Mo. * S4S·99v"7
l ·BDRM. patiJ -apt. Bit·
ins, w/w cpts.. dra~.
Q u I e t street. Adults, no
~ts. $99.5(). 548-1322
RENTALS RENTALS BUSINESS Y. ANNOUNCEMENTS
AptL Unfurnished Aph. Unfurnished FINANCIAL and NOTICIS ----Newport Beach 5200 Misc. Rentals 5999 Investment Opper. 6310 P1rson1la 6405
CARI BE SINGLE Camge. $20 lNVESI'MENT Pl.AN $110· DO 100 need mu.actor duo-
BOAT SUPS AVAIL 20tl Pomona No. 4. Hu GOOD FOR ANYONE • In&'! nlE A.POU.O SJ!:X,
2 &: 3 BR • 2 Ba electricity. Eaey l~eY. ANY AGE. ~ TET • "'M-'c ID tbt
irom $225 mo. 64.2·56&3 Cowltr')' CUb Manner''. call
e Htd ~Im Pool REAL EST ATE lnvat. W1nted 6315 Rudy. m.e-56a
e Indoor Parking Gener1I HAVE MONEY to INVEST SERVICE DIRECTORY
310 Fernando, Bal PeM ..&.lMN
(On the Bay 2 bl trom Ftn')'l Income Property 6000 1n buainess u wo ..... ,. part· ner. 813-2696.
DELUXE 4 BR. 2 ba, Ocean e HOME .tc INCOME e v
View. f'rplc, 1 blk from New, deluxe 3 B.R. 2 Ba. Money to Lun ~20
ocean. $235 mo. 12l~l.lt bom! .-ep. 2 BR. duplex. PRIVATE MONEY
St. S75-S16'1. Xlnt loc. $43,000. * ht le 2nd LOANS *
BEAUTIFUL 3 BR, 2 ba, bit· 3n Woodland Pl., C.M. J ack Srolth Co. alnce 1949
In kitchen & dshwshr S200 (nr. 20U\ &: Tustin) 1323 North Broadway, S.A.
mo. yrcy lease. R. Sewell. Bldr. M9-399T 543-8311 1nytlme
(Horvath Rltyl 675-1977 EASTSWE Costa Mesa, Near ---
5250 shP"PPlng. 4 modem duplex· Money Wanted ~~~~ 81by1fttlng '550 Corona del M•r es on Iota back to back on 2 ---------
3 BR d 1 2 street.a. Pride of ownership IN~R wanted to back EXPERIENCED babysit-
• Lge. · I.IP ex; expa11alan of 1.Dcal Auto ter $15 wk. My Home. Cent ba., bit -ins: S200 Per with ample aquare footage R··pair, maintenance, and CM M r • ~ "' ..A fo mo-units By ........ar " . • , ....,, ... en :r-mo. 514 lru 675-5009 r •c • ""''~ • appliance repair f1rms. Ub-64U>ll3
213: 79M484 361 Osle Apt. B. 642-1.298 era! Terms. Actlve OI' inac----------WILL babyait inf.ant in ID)' BLK to ocean & bay. 1 BR. 8U$ln ... Rent•I 6060 tlve. 646-9895 Eves. home. Mon-Fri. for worit-
Shag ww cpt.,, beam cell----------WANT: $6000 2nd TD, 10% Ing mother. Nr Ed!nier It
Ing, 1 adult. no pets. $125 lllboa lslind 3 yn, BRlboa l&land duplex. Edwards, Reta. 347..qr47
yrly 67J. 7629. QuttJ ER 675-3<XXi. . New Storts "•• SPAC, 1mmac. 4 BR. duplex Av 'lablt ANl"!Ul..INCEMF.NTS
Cpts., drps.. bit-Ins. S2SO M . ~•Pr• im ' -. and NOTIC~S Yrly. 673-240'1 Eves. aru>e Avr:, e u.,o\;auon
Balboa 5300
1..ARGE 2-BR. * $135-mo. * NEAR N.H.Y.C. *
Frpl. Cpts, Stove. Refrig.
~7th St. * 6734374
H~n!ingt_on Be~ch 5400
Rooms for Rent 5995
ROOMS FOR RENT
$22.50 per week &: up
Heated pool • Maid service
Utilities furnished
TV -Kitchenettes
MOTEL TAHITI
548-2129
ROOM for employed woman
in O>ndo. Nr Tustin I< 20th
Sallft>ury Realty
67~
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Retell Stort or Office
Prominent location Bal-
boa laland, 410 aq. ft.
w.w. carpet. noo per
mo. Rltr. 642-9555
St. Car. Use of klld\. pool --------$60 mo. ~. 646-1547.
LARGE quiet room to single
man. S75 mo. 20172 Redlands
REALTORS
673-4400
Dr .. Santa Ana Hgt1. l-11111!1!1111!1"'~~~11111111111!!1!!1!1!1~
54f>.8639. lncluatrl1I Rental 6090
• Alr-cond., priv. ba., TV, ---------maid serv.: nr. airport & *NEWPORT BEACH*
shop. M~2ll4 New 30x100 Bldg.
ROOM for Student or empl O'head gar. doors.
person. Unena I< Pvt-bath. yd. SfNCe.
Cd.M. 673-485l eves. All power 1v1ll.
Pvt. ent. pvt. ba. Close Reas. to good tenant
to shops, quiet st. • Owner 642·5394 • SIS week •..••• 548-5750
LOVELY ROOM/Pvt HOME FOR lease; healed I: cooled
for Employed gentleman. 3600 sq. ft. ln beaut. in· sso. • ~lnl eves. dust. bldg. $390 Mo.
$12.50 up w/w CIJl>eU, kit 1796 Monrovia Ave.
priv. avail. Semi pvt alter C.OSta Mesa. 673-8417 Evei.
4, 646-83.59 546-5680 2 &: 3 ROOM air cond of-
F'URN. room inc. Util. In apt. fices suita $65 I: up. Also pr. ba $70. 370 Rochester, o£1ices + M-1 storage space
CM 0400-2800 eq • ft.) ms. 1c -----1 up. Hlg. Bch. 847-2300.
• ~1-1 2400 SQ. F"l' .•
Lighl mfg. Storage. etc.
16th & Placentia LI 8-4272
Lots 6100
Found (Fr .. Ads) 6400
BABYSITl'ING, So. Coaat
Shopping It Bear School
area. Avail : ~ WttJc.
M0.2675.
BABYSITIINC/MY HOME
1 CHD.J> ONLY.
Newport Beach/6'73-81.2S
* * * * *
Wbn 1¢J• W...tr WI ''Y c;.rT
5"CIAL a US.ICA110N FOil
NATUU.L IOM SWAl'PUS
5pedll ..... ,.__5 ..... _5._..
llULU-...... ..i.--
·---- -• --. ......... -19 .... ~ ...... ~ ................ -... ..__.._ FOS ..._. -raADES Ga.YI
"IONI Ml 5'11
Te P1Me y.,,, T,..,.t hi I r M
11lADE
83' GOLD PLAft:I> SCB)O.
Nm far bQfJ'oat home ar
property. Newport Beoda.
54Mm <Ende lllaney)
* *
JUVE Ml oaes rs-1-1.
free • c:IMr. s.. Lm <JWo..
po a-Q. ·-= llplt free illclllmr ....... Onulp
~hlll.JcmslOtJllJ.ml
EQUITY in 2 1'1'**9 •
Cll.2Bradl•~flllila.
·-IDllllilr .... -... ...............
-.e3
JBR.,%%Ba..OI '!
Paft ............. fclr '11>' ..
i.-.cr....ua..1.-•
..... low ... Rllr-5IJ..aMJ
Ewes.A: ..... ~
PAUii SPllDtGI Clo. ~
PfJlFlrl'! J ~ ......
Aatia air a.I. ,.. ...,
lMll! lat. pa 'lrM9 -• ...... pnp. TD'• I0-1%t'l
SPECTACUIAR Sq Vo CID
Nwpt lee llmrllEllpit J ... u. Gdll lled. a.a. Jllr.
tX1 $11-ell -tilled llDck. RE, Cir. ! f1Ul'il.
HAVE.: W Amme •/-17 ... ..-..r .... in ..... cmd.. rm: ... Ollr.. ., .... ..........
n.ADEllr ....... ......
.... J ....... *ie
-.. 11111 a ca 111.a
lll5 -........ c.n ...,_ OJ.. 5t5CD .,_
time. .... ,. .........
""1:RADEB"S PARADl!E"'
Dtoa,. -a ~ a Sllled Deft. P.O. 8-m5. Dllib
JIDal. "" Ilda, Call.
* * *
LARGE R-1 L0r on cul-de-
sac street Ea.ltaide Costa
Mesa. AJl utilities in, no
bonds. Only $1500.
USE THIS HANDY POST AGE PAID
li ~-
f' p
Rltr. 1830 Npt Blvd., C.M.
646-3928 Call Eves. 67l-45Tl
W. E. Lache1111yer
• Urgent aale needed! •
R-1 lot, Salton City. near
beach. $3,250. Owner 642-3589
Eves, wkenda.
MESA Verde Goll Course lot
Fairway view. By Owner.
642-2945
R-2 Big lot It Hse, plans
8 units. Owner must sell
Luw dn. 675-1393. 494-4779
WANT AD ORDER BLANK
ANO REACH THE ORANGE COASTS BIGGEST MARKET
s sHoi1··woiii>s.i4Aii··c;·NE .. Li"£~0--i1·ms··nwt·i·u•i-
I 4 1 11 TOMI .... .... .....
----
$-4.JO ... $1U5 $15.90 ----
'5.10 $1.21 $1110 .... -----
$6.00 "'' $15.55 $2.UI
PAYMENT ENCLOSED 0 SEND Bill 0 10 ..... COSJ ,.....,_ ..... ...
• [)()[S 1lUS KAN I DON'T GET TM~ JOB ?'
R. E. Wanted 6240
WILL trade $5500 lol in Palm
Sprangi. aa down on sman
single or multiple ir. New.
Port area. 54Hl004 l'Vea. .-....... l..w..,... ....,_ -,._ ..... . rubllsh for .......... ll•y•, bt9innin9 ............................... .
--_ .. _
a.. ..
r .....,
Ne.,..
MK.Artis ....
COAST HWY.
COIONA DB. MAR •
[71 .. ~1445
1HE
~
I , --
BUSINESS and
FINANCIAL Cl••sif.ic•tioft , ••••••••• , ••••••• , , • , , •• , , •••• , , ••• , , ••••••••••••••
N•rn• •••••••• , ••••••• , •• , • , , • , , , •• , , •••• , , , , , , , , , , , • ••,. ••••,, •
Addr••• •••••·••••••·••·····••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
City •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 'h•ft• •••••••·········••••••••
CUT HIRI -PASTI Otl TOH Dn1LON
n. _,, .,, ,_ .. it .. ... ........................ .... .... .,,.,... ... .,..
..._ AM $JM -*• ii ,_
..._ -.,f DAil T PflO'f .__..._._w,.. ,,_
---·-··-··-········-······---··--·-···...--·-·---··---·--
BUSINESS REPLY MAIL
flrtt Cl-PVMll Ne 11, c..t. ..... ~
Orongt Coost DAILY PILOT
P. 0 . lox 1560
Cotta Meeo, Colif. 92626
CIHalfJ.d Dept.
t ' '
SlaVU
Genera -oRivEv
R.tpt.lr c
~
Heullft
rRE!
Ln'!
SAL\
OR
·'•pert
Paintit
INTER
Dt'MEJ
ret. n m-a
eanaht
l.amto
iNTEii ,... ' CCllDI
PiPm
las· N
~· INTE
A't'lft&'
mat'\.
PROF£
~ .... ..
.. --.--...
Tiie, I & I
*Ve o.t.
pairs.
Piute
~
1085
Job v
ACCOt
All pt
.. Ta>
Re' ere
WAN'I1
Cao c
Experl
Job v
BC
12 y ..
eom
HOUSJ
11"1· 173-90
NURS1
cook.
rana.
DAY ..,u. own . ......
Me
Y<XJN
to nu
2 BJ
'Mll1t
Help -s.a.
Caret!
firm
tual
Noe
Np
Sa.DI
II
N
Ma.st
drtri
YI
-c
Hl
DI
00
2'
El
fer p
MEO
No I
nece
PAR:
job
cu.
SER'
full
cw et
Tueday, October 17. 19•7 DAILY PILOT ~3
SllVICE DIR_ECTORY ~__!.~EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMENT JOAS & EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOY~u:H1 JOBS a EMPLOYMENl JV~ & t:Mt'LOYMcHJ
General Sentc. 6682 Hel, W•nted, Men 7200 ~Ip W1nted, Men 7200 H11ln Wanted, Men 7'200 Help W•nted, Men 7200 Help W•nted Help W•nted, Afenci•, M. W. 7550 ~
DRtv!:wAYS SILK-<X>ATED WorMn Women 7400 "-:..::-::t:. ~c:n'".~ Robinson's YOUNG MAN -
1~~ --
........ ,730 Production Scheduler wm be :',~~~ for • Loo:~:~ ~0~0:1oRE
7400
HlDB:B:R G :BlR
FREE • J'REE • FREE
LITE RAULJNG rott
SA.LVAGABLE ITEMS
OR CASH. MHl.10
YCWftQRJ ' career po<io11 tn the One of the taatm grow-n1;nr E d d d f h' Cona1,11ner Acceptance xperience mon nee e or mac 1ne De1)artment of our Or· In& finance companies
Secretary P JDRSON N:mL Dana La.bontork-a bu an
CJl"ll1nc fir • •UflO.
papher. Tbla poiddon re.
quires at ae.st one ynnr
~rimct ID gmeral of.
lb wmit ID • bard &ooct. maiMacturinc induatry.
~ 1;ypioe and
lhortbiind llkilla are a
critical ~Cl' in lh19
)lb. ..,,.rick
BRJac • BLOCK • STONE
PLANTERS • SLATE
CEMENT weft. 6.16-2915
INTER ot Ext. PAINTING,
DtMED. SERVICE. Local
rd. FREE est. MS-1627
1ST ~ PaJntmi. Rea·
..iahl;y Priced. Exterior A
lntertcw. ~1555.
INTEJU0R EXTERIOR rut A neat, 1 BR. Apt,
complete $19. SC.2866
PAPERHANGING Ii: Paint· Ins· NolHmlon; 20 yrs. in
~ Beacb. SJ6..3759.
mn:RIOR. E>.'TERIOR
A ftl"a&e 1 Bl' apt.. labor It
mat'). $69-50. 642-7528
PROFESSIONAL pe.'J?tin(.
~ J.'Ti<:el! Frtt mi·
smt& Rdda. 536-0360.
Hai opening• for
• M1inten1nce
Engineer
Experienced
Perm•nent Posltlont
Excellent hneflh
APPLY
Newport Store
Monday thru Friday
10 AM. to .. P.M.
An equal opportunity
employer
Tail or ·fitter
Must be experlencl!d on
quality ta.ilorlni. Perma-
nent position, excellent
benefit&.
Apply lo-4 p.m.
Robinson's
Newport
Fuhim Ialand
Newport Beach
An equal opp«tunlty
employer
,_. Semm 6910 --------.
POOL CLEANING
CALL PAUL * ~. e WILLIAMS e
Mawllc poal .nice ITS-llll
s. ......
ALTERATIONS. CUstom
llCl'k. Stnart holiday clothes
LoW. Hostdler 548-not.
Alteration---642.5845
Neal, accurate, 20 yrs. exp.
Tiie, Unoleum
& M.rble 6975
* Verne, the nie Man * o.t. work-lnlt&U le re-
peln. No job too 1mall.
Plutft patch. Leakini
~ repaired. S47-1957.
JOBS & EMt'LO Y Mt:NT
Job W.ntM, Men 7000
Aax>UNT * F/C B}(l{PR..
All pbueS thru Statements
• ·llilor /finer
·~ ,.,.,,.. ..... Potltfon1
Extre fringe ...,,.fits
Sil YERWOODS
45 Falhion l1l•nd
Newport Center
Newport h•ch
Mutt h•v• S•vln91 &
Lo.n experience. By
•ppofntrnent only,
cont.ct
MRS. RAINIO
Mariners
Savincp & Loan
64~000
Ii: Tua. &-yn Experience. --------Re'erences. * 646-9171
WANTED SKIPPERS JOB
C&n do Full Maintenance.
"' INSPECTOR
Predsion Parts
loading and scheduling. Call or apply an"e County branch. baa openings tor two " Clerk Typiata that are at anxious to I e a r n and $130 Wffk Hlary move 10 more respons-
Engineering Dep•rt·
AG:BlNCY
CLA;.VAL CO. Our lntHnatlonal corpor-
ation will canaider:
ible posit.Iona. Must have
ability to meet ~ pub-
lic. some 'YP1nr aldU,
and intel'ftted ln a pe"'
manent Potillon. G o o d
ata.rtlnc aalary, va:-eUent
benefits and tralnln1 pro-
gram. Thoee Interested
are urged to cootact
tMnt. CIMllengln1 •nd lnt~eatlng position 902 W • 17tla Street
for mlfure aecret•ry Costa Mesa, ec.f. Foremost in the vital, expanding field
of automatic valves and controls.
17th & PLACENTIA
Cosa Mesa 548-2201
An equ1I opportunity employer
EnCJin• Lathe
Machinists
Turret Lathe
Machinists
MlllillCJ
Machinists
Drill Press
Operators
Designers
AND DRAFTSMEN
to $6.50 hour + O/T, I yr Program
Secret clearance req.
Hunt. Beach ArH
PLEASE CALL OR
RUSH RESUME
Aero Methods
Tool Grinder 8912 w. 01,ymplc Blvd.
BEVERLY HILLS, CAL.
HardlnCJ• 213 BR 2·9611 & 87S.1112 Chucker Operator ------
Shop Dispatcher
SOME OPENlNGi
ON DAY SJUFT
45 Hr. Min Wonc Week
STEADY EMPLOYMENT
PROFIT SHARINC
J. C. Carter Co.
671 W. l 7th St.
Cost• Met1
5-48-3421
-EXPERIENCED -
Line Assemblers
Hardware, plumbing, elec·
tricaJ.
Mold Shop ,.,........
Nl&ht ablft !: 30 to Mldrdaht.
Applr. -
Columbia
Yacht Corp.
275 McCormick Ave.
Costa Meaa
~7070
1. hlgti acbool graduate,
2. Ex.C.I.'s, 3. college
studenta not returnin& to
school tbla aemeater, 4 •
out of state applicants
sincerely Interested In
establlshlfli residence in
Orange County.
F o r Interview appoint·
ment call 53$-1183, 10
a.m. to 3 p.m.
MR. COUNTRYMAN
AT 642-297'l
SIC Fln•nce
1932 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
SECRETARY
MOLDING Part Time
M.chlne Oper•tora TypJ.ni, llgbt bookkeeping,
Plastic, ID~. Perma-aome dictation.
nent P01llion with eood CALL 642-5151
pay. Excellent work condi-FOR APPOINTMENT tioos. OYertlme and all .
1 r i D i e benefit.!. Immed-OFFICE WORK
late opening on all shifts. PART TIME km to l·pm.
Experience desired b u t MON thru FRI. $2-HR. Are
wiU t.'Oflsider trainees. 25 to 35, preferably mar-
CAL I FORNIA rled. Basic knowll!dge of
Injection Molding Office Procedure nee.
Costa Mesa 546-4460 646-3936 FOR APP'T.
AD equal opportunity SECRETARY Full time.
employer Immediate opening. Office
Cerrier Boys
10 -14
BALBOA ISLAND ONLY
CIRCULATION DEPT.
manager ability, strong
typini and .1horthand capa-
biUUes, 10me bookkeeping
deairab!e. Send resume to
866 W. 16th St., Npt Bcb.
e HOUSEKELPER, li~in,
with engh-.rfng H•
perienc:e. Aitove Hef'o
•ge typing .net short·
h•nd akJlls. Good Of'•
pnJz.r. Age '9qUI .....
rnent 25 to 40. Apply
In penon .-.kdays
or Mnd r..ume to
P ... aonnel
rnent.
U.S. Divers
Company
3323 W. Winter
Satdi Ala
Deily Pilot permanent. Must have driv· --------330 W. BAY, COSI'A MESA
MH12l
'
en Uoense. No smoking. 2
adults. Waterlront on Udo.
Plain cooking. Mlwer at
once. 673-8S95.
HIGH IChool a;ltl. lt home-
~ _. rw an ~ "'°"'· c:oup1e bn alter acbool l"OUDd nmina opponunlt)' Wed, Tbun A Fri. Own
Part Time Wort
wttb Avon. can coiled ~~lpOUa ' EH..
HOUSEKEEPER
EXPERIENCED
Apply ill pawcll
8et-.een I It f! JO p.m. Hunti,.._.._.
ConwelelciMtHllf ....
um~
llundn&1on 8-dl
No ptlme calla .... _s.»_Sl&O~~-,,-----·aouSEKED>ER 1t es>mpml-GOOD JOB ion: uve·in: middle aged. --u-,..--11-Aicle---
Pensionen 2 days per week. Ugfit work; lor elderly
Moat bave car, or 00 drink· lady; room, board It &al Part time. Expeiieuce
An equal opportunity
employer
en, Phone OR 3·2289 ~ pl'eferred but not nece.-
--------========-MATURE babysitter, intanl, nry. Contact
AgenciM, Women 7300 MY HOME. 7:30 am-5:30 M.ry Dudley
537-2383
SALES
~A1TIES * Lead1n& Independent speclal·
-Ultl de.aline In over 100
• mutual fundl. expanding ID
Oran&e County. Th.la la an
OJ>i>Ol1unlty to eat•.. dignl·
fled proleulonal aeWng full
or part tlme Investment
exp not n~ssa.ry, we train.
M7~. Mutual Fund In·
veators Inc. 2100 N. Main
Santa Ana.
BUSBOY
Part Time
APPLY J.S DAILY
newport
personnel
~.agency
ProfeuloMI Servi~
for the employer
and th• •pplic•nt.
833 Dover Orin , N.B.
642.i110 549-1743
llOf»I ~ n:uJf(}ff1. AQJlf:r
... MSW'°" a.VO..• Htw"°"' KACH
,. __
pm. S daya, Ute hcJwe. Westrnln.lter
y,wk~ Rdrrmces. Community HOlpitaJ
~9247 193-4S41 -----• CLERK F'EMALE ELECTRONIC e APPLY IN PERSON: ASSEMBLERS
Drlv•ln lriquors & SOLDERERS
100 P acltit-Cat Hwy./lm. ~rienced with printed
NURSERY School Teacher drcuit boards.
needed. Hours 7-4. Write Dyn•mic Design Corp.
Box M 683 Da11y Pilot atal· llS7 & EdiDger
ing qualll.icalions. Santa Ana SC7·3935
BABYSTTI'ER 6:30 -AM. Hous•eeper
to 4:30 • PM. 3 tit S Huntington 1Jltttc011UDD-
. DAYS WEEK. 962-14-n. nity Ha.pita!. Experience
HOUSEKEEPER/ 3 01 4-preferred but not nec-da~15 week. Own trars·rH-essary. Contact:
lien. Refttenc:ea. ~. Muy Dudley
'46-0241
.mm ...
I M111t1111eat
I Professioul
I Scielllfic
~Temicll
RESUMES for OS
Res11me Referral
Roster •.
If you .. ,,. ......
INQUIRE BY CAL.LINC
m.1234
OR
VISIT
DANA
Hostesses
~
Full • Part nme
~ A lf"ldlt Shllta
APPLY 3-S DAILY
SUCI SHOP
2305 E. c..t Hwy.
C.....delM.r
ed In -..._.,,... •--------
tunities .. tt.r ... IAIMAIDS •••
rive -FILE YOUR • • • md 50-GO DANCERS RESUME WITH USl poo per wee1r.
No ret.Taf .... ... , __ G6C ___ ._m-9'1a __ _
made witfaout ,.,..
prier .,,1.,aL
Miii YCIUI nr111111•11mm•
TOQAY
.! c L ~
G 0 -., ,, .,
NEW FACl'ORY needl llade
needle opentms • bad flD.
~ -~odudiau Place. Newpirt Bddl..
~+u•••Mi+•
Call lor app't 49MOID
J... Men. w..... 7500
MALE ar female ~
wida lollowiac. for e PLAYBOY SALON e
WeltdUf Plaza, NA 54148
ee.q, SalDD H.B. lor -1e
I ltatiiam. ID abp. caster.
Flundac anlL S6344f
Qqile for llanilpn
for .... ApQ
%?11 Newpmt BMl. 5CM755
ScheelMnltrvctl 7400 ~ • 675-0445
Jeb Wutted, Lady 7020
BOOKKEEPER F /C
Ma.chine I b 0 p. Experi-* *
enced only. Permanent. --------Top w a g e s, <*lstanding
SNACK SHOP
2305 E. Co11t Hwy.
&tysitter.U ve in. +Salary. 841·1473
Med Assta (2) •••••• to m1 c;:wt 1g..21 OtiJdmi 3~ t.o 2 "'."Es-sc--ro-w--Secr,----e-t-..,-, Stenos 12) .......... kl $C't.i ,.._ SU..'C>l
Typist. YOUl'l_C_·_· ~ )(1._7S_ht · jjj"tJsEK.E ..._!P __ ER_U_v_e_in-.-NEWPORT BEAOi
~
B IBM
12 yn expel'. Xlnt refa,
Very capable and
eomcientioua. ~1213
HOUSEKEEPER. Uv~in
pref. Have 10-yr old boy,
f73.907'-
NURSE COMPANION, good
cook. Wanta work In La· cuna. et-2529 rm 202 eves.
DAY wortr, bouleket¢lg,
IJl)tl. O:loldnat. All areas..
own tram. 541·9863.
,,_ Wanted
Men & Wemen 7030
benefit.. Call tot appoint·
ment.
54S.J 15 or 549-1139
An equal opportunity
emp~r
• Boat ASMmblers
• Bondera
• Molders
(Lamlnatora)
e Woocf1hop helper
JENSEN
Mllrln• Corp.
235 FiM:her
Costa Mesa
540-3440
YOUNG c:pie w/yr old .i>n
to manace Apt.I. In exdl for --------
2 BR unf Apt. Nb yard
work. 5t&&9'l
Domlltfc tt.lp 7035
UVE INS
Employer pays tees
George Byland ~C'f
1~ E. 16th S.A. 547-0095
Chlne.e • Engl.IA • French
MAINTENANCE ·
MECHANIC ExperieDced Maintenance
Mec:hanic, day .shift tor fac-
tory equipment and all
around factory handyman.
Phone Penonnel Manager,
Huntington Beach. 847-3531
Pformanen~exper.Uve ·m --------
Far F.ut Agey. 642-8703
H.lp Wanted, Men 7200
Salesmen & Mltnagen
Career' opport7 with leadlna
firm afterlq OTel' 100 mu,
tual flmda. Full or pt time.
No oper nee, we train.
Npt Bch olflce, "2-6422
Santa Ana oftioe, 547-8331
lnftston Financial
Servtcea. Inc.
No Experience
Necessary!
Mutll have clean Callfcrn.la
drfTinl ret"Ord· Apply YELLOW CAB CO.
lMi E. 16tb St.
Costa Meu
CARRIER BOYS
GOOD ROt.ITES
AVAn..ABLE
HUNTINC."TON BEACH
DAILY PILOT
• 6C.ml •
Night Dishwasher
Over 18, apply In person
only. SURF It SIRLOIN
5930 Pacific Ost Hwy.
Newport Beach
DRAFTSMAN
-Mech•nlC1f
EnglnHrlng---
To work on special seals for
aerospace applications in
Newport area. 646-0136
MAINTENANCE&: REPAIR
WORK. Large Apt Bldg in
So. Laguna. Permanent.
To Age SO. CALL:
Mr. Kinsman, * 499-1177 8 to .4-PM/M0t1 thru Fri.
Or Call 499-3471 Sat & Sun.
SEMl-retired or retired gen·
lleman for part time work.
Apply: Pacific Smoke House
2620 Newport Blvd. CM
SER • STA ATI'ENDANT.
DISHWASHER/DAYS. EXPER/FULL TIME P.M.
ODIE'S RESrAURANT Union Sta. I Cbr. Superior
2U E· 17th St./CM. 6 Placentia. * N.B.
E1ectronk: T4!Chl\idan FRY COOK I 1-yr. EXPER.
for protot;ype Ii: Q.C. $2 • HR. start. • DOG-
Call Kay 633-7070 HOUSE COFTEE SHOP.
MECHANIC; ven.'atile exper. * 562 W. 19th. C/M.
No automatic tranm. expc>r. EXPER. Serv. Sta Attend.
necnl&J"Y 449 W. Btl.y, C.M· Graveyard shift. Union Oil
PART TIME * Unusual Sta. Magnolia & Warner.
job tor man over 2l with 11.B. etir. * ~8 eves. ___ FU_RN_l_TU_RE __ _
SERVICE station attendant Salesman. Xlnl oppor.
full time. Experienced. SEAL'S • 1100 IRVINE
over 21. 490 E 17th St. c.M. NewPOrt Beach. 642..()262
' t
FRY COOK
Experienced
Fult time, dayt.
Excellent salary
Ir company benefits.
Apply betw Z.S p.m.
SNACK SHOP
3444 E. Coatt Hwy.
Corona del Mar
TRAINEE
Youfli man 18 to 28 to
work In Order Depart-
ment of our Anaheim of·
fice. $130. per week saJ.
ary. Must be able to start
work immediately. Call
for a.ppolntment 9 a.m. to
3 p.m. 539-1184
FIREMAN • City cl Foun-
talr, Valley. $590 -$726 plus
unlfonn allowance Grad,
from high sch1 plua college
credits oc t!.Xpetience. 21 to
31 yrs. S'S". Apply before 5
pm Friday, October 20,
1967. CITY HALL, 10200
Slater Avenue.
"'LEADMAN
For assembly electronic
comp<>Mnts and prin!ed
circuit b o a r d s. Experi·
enced In supervision ol
Rlrls.
Dyn1mlc Dfflgn Corp.
1357 E . Edinger
Santa Ana 547·3935
Parking Attend1nt1
18 to 25. See Fred Ballantine
Five crowns Parking Lot,
Corona del Mar Q.istomer lerv., t pe •• $lil 1, FOR J .. WULT. Ecrow e:xper ar comparable
--------Set-y. no SH •••••••••••• $3.'iol flll>-MO. * 642-22.12 businesa e.xper desired. WiD-
Tralnees/lns •••••. S~$300 · ingnesa, dependabWty and
Shoe Repair
All around man. Apply
Personnel lG-4 p.m.
Robinaon's Newport
Fashion Island
Newport Beach
An equal opportunity
employer
Busboys &
Dishwashers
Full At Part Time
Apply In person;
Bob'1 Big Boy
154 E. 17th St
Costa Mesa
Houseman
Experienced preferred
but not necessary. Coo·
tact
Clerk Typist • • .. • • .. .. $325 8 MA30 to~PMBABYSrrTCR desire to learn are prime re--
J R Pi : .... · * S20-wk. quisltes. Call Byrd Smith er • • fl'C~ Rcl. Req. 633-7459 NIB. Doris Walke, 64Z-Of70
Associates Agency WI'D! Babysitter. My Home. Brush-O\emical-Ola-Sales--
1882 Newport, CM. 642~ ~r or out. CaU VI, FULLER BRUSH SCREENED Opport. mother's Ir ~
Career Opportunltlff
All Level1
642-7484 ~
Saeened Peraonnel Aiency
901 Dover Dr., Newport Bch.
Help W1nt9CI,
Women 7400
SALAD WOMAN
Must have good basic know·
ledge of salad preparation.
Hours 6 am • 2:30 Mon.
thru Fri. ~. ext 2036
EARN MONEY I Studio Girl girlJ aervJce estab customen
Cosmetics !Coata Mes a) $2.00 per hour
547-4629 or 541-4588 Call S3Ml$ or 5t6-ii3l9
--· J. C. PENNEY CO. : :
I t
Newport Center : :
I t Newport Beach 1 ,
Cf)
0 0
Mary Dudley
Westminster
Community Hospital
893-4541
LIVE-IN • Housekeeper &
child care: priv. room &
bath. $200 mo. 5~ Day
week. Permanent; refer-
ences. 540-9212 Weekdays
LIVE in I out woman to
help workine Mom with
house & children. H.B. area
847-5602
j I
OPENINGS NOW: 1 .:'~"::;~_:.
I I pandi .. o.--.. Coun-
~ I ty bull,_ commuN-$2.S~/HOUR FASl-OON Stylist. Must have
Part & full time car: ~lex.Ible hrs. Earnings unhm1ted. Call alt S:SO, U you are neat and aggres-7744080
slve and willing to work ~--:-=--------.,-evenings ~ll pm. BEAUTY operators or halr
Call 87S.2303, Mr. Jonas styli~ts. Full or part time. Huntington Sch salon.
847-0614.
HSEKPR to live-in & help
Gardening/Yard Work care tor invalid lady. Ag e
/lull time, Apt House J0..55. Sal $240 mo. Ocean-
Newport Beach. Salary open front home. 548-:S751, 545-3410
CALL 494-1268 WAITR.ESS/E Y. PER . for
FOR
HOUSEWIVES
MOTHERS 1 ~ t
SALES POSITIONS~~
ty • • CMtfral refer.
enc:e point fOf' ....
qwlifled MM.11
ment, P~I.
IC you can spare a few bouts each
day, desire employment in regular
schedule with outstanding benefits,
enjoy showing and telling about
crisp, new merchandise.
APPLY NOW
I
I
I
I
I
I
1 Scientific and Techni-
1 ul penonnel Interest·
I edinnewend.,.....r
I opportunities.
I
KEY. 'UNCH • It
PaoGUMMING • ,
INOUS. DIAFTING • II
GROC.. OtECKfNG • h
I ~vnlC ASSEMBLY •• NX/TYPE. ft. t
West Coast
T..-&1u&Sch11ll
1117 s. Maia St., I.A. •••
545-716'
um ear. er. m.. G.C. b.e
537-7112
Buntincton Beach, cant.
SMIUS m N. Lemon f,d,Jr
776-2'00
9Jdtien ....... lcadam
M.TJ.
....... Scheel• e IBM Procnmrmbw
• lBll Kenandl
e PBX 1)pinc
541-2672
ANl'fA'S PRE • SQIOOL
" DOW' taking Rqiltra. dom for Kinderp.r1en •
Precbool Ao 2 tin ...
Full 1earDlns prucram.
2111 mt1RIN AVEIOI.
PHONE: ~1444
INDIVIDUAL Jeaons (1
trial). Olllc:mt 10 • Le90D
1)piac School. 173 Del Mar
CM. 541-7159.
COMPLETE Secmaria1 or
Bnlsbup. Poll,y Prial Bull-
MIS CoOege. sa-f723
MERCHAHDISI FOR
SALE AND TRADE
Fumffun 10GO
3801 E. Coast Highway, '!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I
CdM, after 6 p.m. REAL EST A TE
DAYS or EVENINGS.
ODIE'S RESTAURANT
212 E. 17th SVCM.
OPENINGS IN ALL DEPARTMENTS1
1 There will be ne
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY I 1 applicant fM refer.
HAND TIED EUR0PF.AN
Hatr wtc with canying
Cur. Med. lmfth Alb
~. Recently purchas-
ed 11 $475. F'IDelt • v ail • t
SJZ). ~.
SEMl·Retired man to work
full or part-tlme In hard-
ware store.
11.W, Wright Co.
126 Rochester, Costa Me!.a
MAN or WOMAN COOK
to operate small
Cafe & Cocktail Bar
Salary or Leiu.e
2376 Newport Blvd. 548·9755
' ROUTES AVALLABLE
In
Westminster tor boys 1~14
Good Profits • No Sunday
Delivery 642-4ln
-Englnelnstalll t1cm-
E.xpcr1cnced
LUHRS BOAT CO.
8'19 W. 18th St .. C . .M.
CARPET Clraner. M u st
h R v e eXJ)<'ricnre. C: n n d
wagei., frlnrr benefits
54!)..2425
Shouldn't you be with Walker e SHAMPOO GIRL for
& Lee! Free information. Beauty Salon 3 days week,
Phone or write WALKER & <preferably youn~). Corona
LEE Inc• 2629 Harbnr Blvd. de! Mar. Cnll 675-3420.
54!">-3029. BABYSITTER for 5~ yr old
BOYS 10 . 14 boy. Nighl5. Room & board.
Good routea! • Good proflll ~p. student pref. Balboa.
BALBOA PENINSULA 540-6153
DAILY PILOT i-W-:0:-M-A_N_lo-..,-Uv-e-:-ln-, .,..he-lp-wi-tb
0 642'"4321 • housework & c~ of chll·
EARLY A.M. Newspaper dttn. Must not be over 50.
auto routes. Approx 2h hrs. Laguna NillUel, 499-3844.
pn morning. No collections. HOUSEKEEPER. Live In or
Sl'IS & up per mo. Htg Bch out. Full or part lltne. t boy
art>&. 847-2300. l:i, Salary open. Refs req.
BOYS 10. 14 Ml 6-2598 all s.
Laguna Beach. So. Laguna NEED person lo live In a nd
Good routu! • Good proflll! babysll, "pproxJmately 2.~
DAILY PILOT hrs pt'T "'k Ph. 892-1164()
• 642~:t11 • -Dental Assisfant
-Bo1t-A11embl;;;-Cha1rs1c!C'. J-;xper ont.y.
Nn 1>Xper nee. fi42.AA30 r,·18·5602
APPLY IN PERSON I 1 r•la.
ALL STUDENT POSmONS RLLED1 1
APPLY IN PERSON
9 A.M. TO 3 P.M.
MONDAY THRU FllDAY
TO
J. C. PENNEY CO.
Newport Center
24 Fashion Island
Newport Bee1ch, Calif.
I Mllll your resume •••
I t TODAY
I t
I t :HlCBlCRGlCR ~ t I t PJDRSONNlCL
CARVED frultwood tora It
chair. Louia IV st~. cham-
pagne brigie brocade, but·
ton tufting; margquetry top
t:aftte lble. Loe.is IV.
646-5143 Eves.
QUEEN SOFA-BED. Uke
new! Coat SJOO. Sac:rifice! mo. 5#-3987 I. .AGENCY r CURVED SECnONAL
j t 902 W 17.&. Sftr -+ 3-Pc ~lge-SlOO. * Needs l I . TW ... cleaning. .. >1~1602
t Costa .._.__ Calif WHrTE fonnk a dlnlnst set I ....-u, • •ilh 6 <"hairs. Good condi-1 11 Jn. S 16. 646-901'6 a! I f'T S.
j t 646..()241 SMALL dro,>-lesf tblt . t. 2
_ J llOld 1rphol rhalrs. $30. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Nearl,y new. 642-0272
U DAILY PllOT TlltSdiy, Octobtr 17, 1967
;: • JOIS " EMPLOYMENT J08$ " EMPLOYMENl JOas & EMPLOYMENT Joas & EMPLOYMENT JOIS & IMPLOYMINT JOIS & IMPLOYMIHT .IOU & IMPLOYMINT..,. " IEMPl.OYMINT JOBS & IMPLOYMINT
-~~-W•'!_t.4, Men 7200 Htlp Wint.ct, Men 7200Help W•nted, Men 7200Help Wint.ct, Meft 7200 Help Wanted, Men 7200 Htlp Wtnted, Meft 7200 Help W......, MM 7m ...... W ...... MM 79 Help Wanted, Men 7200
HAS
NEW LONG RANGE PROGRAMS
* * * New long range programs have created unlimited opportunities for engineering and pro-
duction personnel at our new SPACE SYSTEMS CENTER in HUNTINGTON BEACH. Here is
your opportun ity to get in on the .ground floor and insure your future through the develop-
ment of new technologies and skills. NOW IS THE TIME TO CHANGE AND ADVANCE YOUR-
SELF.
I ADMINISTUTION I
Ellclrlcll Fllflltlta Eqiller
Emlltnt opportunity for a faellltits enginter who lik• di·
wnlty of functions and mponsfbilitits. Your auignments
will iwolw Initial design, inhoust and vendor coordin1tion,
tnd OMight Inspection of electrlctl power systems for pl1nt
facility construction. A deQree with several years experience
clesirtblt.
Excellent futurt growth potential for the career minded
man.
l•ufacturhag P111ners
New progrtrns with 1 projected manufacturing schedule of
10 ytars havt created unlimited opportunities at all levels
of manuf ecturing planning.
To meet schedules we are developing a new electronic data
processing system in our planning department which will be
your opportunity to develop new skills, broaden your exper·
ltnct ind prepare you for future adVllncement.
Thert tr• immediate openings for planners who can analyze
eoointtring drawings and det ermine the sequent• of man-
uftcturing processes, assembly, i nd inslallalion for variO\n
components and systems.
Cali•ration Spaci1H1I
Development of calibration techniques and procedures based
on tht use of company secondary standards for test, repair,
modification, calibration and certification, of general purpose
precision mechanical, electrical and electromechanical record-
ing indicating, and measuring devices and company working
st1ndards.. Recommend and participate in design of nonsland-
ard mechanical and electromechanical test instruments and
laboratory equipment. Perform repair and rework as neces·
11ry to n sure that devices under test meet calibration
specifications.
Project Tool Engineers
You will be responsible for the overall tooling and manufac·
turing plans and policies, proposal and pre-production con·
cepts, and for the manufacturing engineering design budget
ind schedule control. You will interface at the management
level with the Program Office, Engineering, Planning and
Manufteturing in establishing divisional policies regarding
facilities, equipment and manpower utilization, as well as
budQets and schedules for all programs. Req uires a well di-
versified, highly versatile and extremely capable man with
directly applitable experience and 1 BS degree.
l•ufacturing Engineers
You will formulate basit technical policies, manufacturing
pre-plans, master manufacturing plans and apply advanced
manufec turing processes and methods to resolve probl ems
of producibility, interchangeability and technical delays. BS
!ngineering.
Mfg, Engineers-Electrical
Qualified candidates will be required to design and develop
test equipment and test procedures for exacting measure-
1nent and performance evaluation of complex electrical,
eleclronic and electro-mechanical systems, subsystems and
components. sm.
• .I MANUFACTURING I •
EaP.tlc .......
DegrH: BA or BS • luslnm Administration. Pltn, tchedult
and follow up engineering tab. Mlintaln progress t~
tion report st1tus and eootdiftlt1 des91 lthdlle criteria.
Determine schtdul• requirtments for work ptektges in a
logical sequenc-t utilizing tvalltblt manpower to the best
advantage consistent with progrtm requirtments. Prepart
various status reports.
Co~l Prop...,.
Programmers with 1 minimum of 1·2 yurs txptrience in
Cobol. Assignment will bt in Engineering Dita Processing,
Programming Management Information on • major space
program.
OyarheMI . Cost A1alyat
You will bt required to review, investigate end analyze En·
ginMring Overhead Cost Manlgement Systems; creatt im·
proved procedures for th t forecasting, budgtting a/o con-
trolling of indirect costs; 1nalyzt ind determine the tffeet of
organizational changes on overheed cosh. Must hive know·
ledge of 1ccounfing and experienct In Estimating, Overhead
Cost Control a/o Direct Cost Control.
System Cost/Effaotlv•m
You will identify, analyze and synthesize system costs for ex·
isting and advanced systems and relate costs to: (I) perfor·
mance and effect iveness of design approacha ind design/
operating procedures amt (2) to contract incantives. Any of
tht followi119 backgrounds would be preferred: System en-
gineeri119, operations research, txptrience in project office or
financial control, interdisciplinary degrees (sciencejbusineu),
or an advanced degree.
PERT Analyst
You will participa te in a Ma jor Manned Spacecraft Program
with responsibilities in following mas:
• Coordination with Associate Contmtors i nd government
agencies.
• Interpretation of graph·type schedule and bar·type stalus
data for preparation of sequenced and interrelated PERT
network.
• Preparation of PERT data for input to electronic data pro-
cessing and ana lyzt i nd corrfct technical problems in-
volving data processing inputs.
• Analyze electronic data processed outputs for program im·
pact due to indicated problems and recommend correc-
t ive action for management consideration.
• Preparation of charts, graphs and narrative reports from
PERT data.
Requires 3-5 years experience in us. of Pan, with USAF
PfRT Ill experience preferred. 2 yem college with major
related to one of the following ueas: I.E .. M.E., E.E., or Bu~
iness Administration.
Budget Analyst
Your duti es will bt budget evaluation, forecasting of all func·
lions, financial presentations, pricing and contract data co-
ordination, fiscal funding review data compiling, i nd analysis
of related and miscellaneous advanced contracts studin. Pre-
fer a college graduate with degree in Business Administrat ion,
•CA:ounting or allied field with two to three years experience.
l • If&. ~·' ....... , ...
VOi.Jr respomibilitill wUI lnetum the -.. lftd ... hp mt
of test equipment for .....,,..,.... lftd ..,._:a ...a.
uttlon of mechanktl, tllctnMlllChlnicll, ftuid ftllW, ,....
matic systems, suMyltems ·and eotnp)lllnlL 1SME.
lfg. R ...... bgileln
Qualified candidates will dewlop advllltld mlftUflcturiftt
techniques in the treas of composites, non-metallic ~
and forming. under the guidance of an Assisflnt Chief (n.
ginetr. Yoo will htve m inistratiw ind engineering ,..,...
sibilities for project control, including CO«lfmation wittl
operating end ldministrative deptrtments.. This raponsi>ility
will involve budgets, schedules, development of procedures
for departments, direction of li1ison activities, reproduction,
technical writing and technical reporting. An engineering «
business degree plus proven related experience in the fields
of engineering, process and management will be required.
lmmedi1te opening 1t 111 ltvels for mechtnic.11 and alect~
·mechanical draft5mtn with t minimum of 1 yur current .,.
perience.
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Produdion
INSPECTOR, MISSILE FINAL ASSEMBLY ....
JIG & FIXTURE BUILDERS "B"
SHIPPING & RECEIVING
STRUCTURAL ASSEMBLERS, GENERAL
TOOL DESIGNERS
OPERATIONS CONTROL ANALYST
STATISTICIANS, DETAIL
WEIGHT ANALYST
"' 9 PAID HOLIDAYS A YEAR!
"' FAM ILY HOSPITALIZATION
COVERAGE
"' $7,QOO LI FE INSURANCE
....,. COMPANY PAID PENSION PLAN
.., PAI D VACATIONS
.., EXCEPTIONAL SAVINGS PLAN
"' EDUCATIONAL BENEFITS
"' COST OF LIVING ADJUSTMENTS
• FOR IMMEDIATE AID PERSOIAL ATIEITIOI •
1. Come in for a personal interview to our offices at 5300 lolSI Avt. HUNTINGTON BEACH, 0t
2. Send your resume to W. K. Cable with the p0sition you ere lnttrtsled In.
I •GllEElllG I
Dallglll MSSD offln the stnldunl daignet • twOld l'ilnge of
~ it1 wHnislile miBills. llunch wt.ides, space
booam, peybd shntudJ, re-entry systems Ind structural re-
leltd\ with condlnt ~to ICMnced m1teritls and tech-
niques. The ..._ will -responsibility for 111 aspects
of his desiglt, induding llllt,sis. ntn selection. stor1ge
lift, ..... and allt: .. ,.., • follN his design through
de ··~-·· testing, piodlidian tnd performtnca testing. W. llftlt ·., 'rle ......_... for enginem for design
zdg-•11 in:
• Ml;or" Sfrudwal •'-:tlia • Fibroua c.orr.posites
• Thennll Protecfiat .,_ • Hant7co116 Construction e "'-raVelfef
A ,........ ol a IS ill ct ME or Al is required.
P•11•1l l11k H I UH••li• SJL .
Desigll and .., ~ ,...... resfrJint Ind ~
tion~ 1• tfor~enwwww..,t.Art Engineer~ Degree
nf I ....... of 2 ,_., apaience in reYted ~ is re-cpmf.
fliPI ._ Et (J••ll l11lp
Anllysil. design and fat frl!lfd UN equipment including
utility ...._., Uaoll, par1lblt fighting, aftty equipment) Ind,,......, equipMnt °'7gill1t kit, ..ral kit ind physical) .
Art &lgi-ing Degrll with 2 ,_,, -rienct in related wort a required. -r .... , ...... ....,.
You wil perfos-. ._. .,_,_ Mllysis for design studies on
.,._;. tnd .aM .-. for fhennll control of manned ....,,,, through long dumiorl of cwbihl flight.
DOUGLAS MISSILE & SPACE SYSTEMS DIVISION
An equal opportunity employer
C. S. Citizenship Required 5305 BOLSA A VE. HUNTINGTON BEACH
McDONNELL DOUGLAS CORPOUTION
YOU "91 n COtNG TO
DOUGW lU.S.D.
MEI
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MERCHANDISI FOR
SALE AND TRADI
Heaclqua.,.,. for:
• Showroom S.mpl•
• Pactory Cloeeovts
• fNlght DUMted
No I>on-lluk tllnU OAC
SpaDi.b • Modnn • X.ple uv. Rm. • • • • • • rnn s&us
D!netta • • • • • • • fnn $ll.95 Bedroozna • • • • • !'rm $59.95
ApprovM Fumlture
2159 Ha.rbOr Bl, CM 548-9660
Store Eq\ll~t I012
IOOK STOii
FIXTURES
Boc>kcuet. tables, chain,
c::beckataDCl. can 5'8-tna
momlnp only.
GARAGE Sale • Boutique.
Oct. 21 • 22. 210 CbWns.
Bal talaDd. (}lite!' thna al·
~)
1100
RENT
MERCHANDISE FOR
SALB AND TRADE TRANSPORTATION DAILY PILOT
DODGE
---·--o.J
.,,._ VI t!lli&iDt. automatic
... ..... poftr .teer. SUPER SPORT
'67 DODGE ~::
Sportunan bus like new, loft
mileage, radio. beater. ~
$2595 ••
Toyota Vol~ .
.. ndlo • ......,., u
S 1895 Muina bl u e. Automa c
Jeep M.q;, L ~~ . ~FORTS ~ tr&nlmillioa, power .~
lnio VS enOne•
$2595 • ~·
1966 Hari>or, C.M. 646-.
FALCON
2121......., llwL c....-. 546-120a COllll CHEVROlD FORD
'5' OIYIOlfl'
WA&Cll
2121 H1robr llvd.
Cost1 Mell 546-1203
'62 CHEVROUT
'65 FORD · .... ... ...
Convertible XL, factory flt
<X>ndlUoning, power stee~
• brakes. Rill. No. 9Z1Ss
NOV & $1nS or $67 mo.•
A •atttt tax &: Uc. ~
Coupe. Standard transrni> Saddleback Docl
lion, radio and t>Nte.r. 1401 North Tu1tln '•
$795 S.nt1 An• 547-93
Freeway Minutes From
Everywhere ;•
'1il QIRYS/NEWPOR.T. •Dr· Auto. Pwr • steering,
RAH. sm>. * 646-3001
CONTINENTAL
'51 FORD RANCHERO
Runs good -New pal~
$400 * 673-5613 ·~
UN COLN
YOUR NEW ~ ~
Rambler Dealer~
In . :
Costa Mesa :
And we'tt bft'fl 1o .U,
. HOUDAY ~
DAILY PROT"EDITORIAL PAGE
Time to Come Alive
Rejection of all bond issuets "just oo principle" and
without regard to need or actual cost bas reached a point
where actions by m'OSt of the minority voting in too many
instances can only be called "bllnd''-or even ridiculous.
Latest examples were bond elections in Santa Ana
and Huntington Beach.
Santa Ana voters, for the second time in six months,
rejected a $25 million bond issue to finance capital im·
provements in anticipation of a popuJation double the
present figure in 10 to 15 years. They did so d<!Spite
assurance from city officials that no tax increase would
result because repayment would be made from curTent
revenue without a tax rate boost.
Huntington Beach, the county's fastest growing city,
is approaching 100,000 population (versus 11,000 in
1960). Its need for school constructiun and operating
funds is obvious. The $22 million bond issue voted down
there would bave decreased the bond interest and re.
demption by 10 cents over five years while the tax over·
ride would have cost less than 2 cents per day increase
for a typical property taxpayer.
Rejection of well-planned long term programs, in
fact, increases costs. In Santa Ana, as the ety manager
correctly points out. a majority of those oOng 129 per·
cent of registered voters) have put their ~i!y on a crisis
basis which can't help but cost the taxpayer mO[e kl the
long run.
It's the same virus of regression which has made
Onnge County the symbol tor the rest of the state and
the nation of ultra-rightist negativism in opposition to
those wh<> would conserve the best of the past while
m'Oving progressively into the fast-changing world of the
Space Age.
Not to support civic progre.c;s and public education,
much less to oppose them altogether, is to be blind to the
fact that all property values and security of income jor
all cltiuns of all ages depend on them for advancement.
(Thia ii statiatlcaDy supported by various comprehensive
studies.)
The answer to the problem in Santa Ana, Huntington
Beach and everywhere else will come only from an
aroused electorate.
Allowing 29 percent en eligible voters in Santa Ana
and 21.6 percent in the Huntington Beach Uaion High
School District to decide issues so vital to the cities' pro-
gress and well·being is decision by minority. Hard core
NO voters (the "blind" negativists) have turned out while
the rest allow themselves to be governed by apathy.
It's time for all registered voters h> come anve, get
the facts on each election is6ue, vote YES when called
for (as kl these two recent elections and the forthcoming
Newport-Mesa Unified School Diatrict electi'on), NO when
prudence so dictates, and give the Orange Coast true
democratic process -decision by a true majority.
UC Starts Second Centm·y
The University of California, ofttn rated No. 1 aca·
demically in the world, suffered tarnish ol its image
through student "activism" io the last two years of its
first 100 years.
Now UC is embarked on its second century under
new and promising leadership. Preserving students' iden·
tity as individuals instead of impersonal numbers in a
hu;,e computer in the face of enormous size of student
bodies will be among the greatest challenges as the sec·
ond century begins. ·
It isn't over-optlmhm to believe that UC's great res-
~oir of talent will find the right answers, given a little
time.
Ol' Elbie Jay Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Older, 1fuer Rep•WIN .. Are Alflll'C!~
...
Teaches 'em
A Lesson
Howdy there, folk!. How y'all?
1 lme tor oootheT" tee-vee visi t with
the rootln'·tootin' Jay Family -star·
rlllg ol' Elbie Jay, a kindly cuss who'd.
never cut a friend. Nor a friend'i ap-
propriation.
As we joln up with 01' Elbie to-
day, he's sittin' in the parlor readln'
the paper. That's his pretty wife, Bird·
le Bird, with him. She's curled up
with a good seed catalogiie.
ELBI E (Shaking his head): My, these
here columnists keep saying I've !oat
my toU<:h w i t h my many, many
friends over in Congress. There's not
a particle of truth in that.
Birdie Bird: I'm sure there's not,
dear.
Elbie: The trouble is my many, many
friends in Congress res~t my judg-
ment. and admire my wisdom too
l'l"Uch. It's getting out of hand.
Birdie Bird: They do? I mean I'm
sure they do, dear.
Elbie: Why, just you look al the way
• they keep wanting me lo take over
their job and cut $5 billion out of the
budget for tnem. 'Course. I could do
it for them in a lick, but they got to
learn to stand on their own two feet.
Birdie Blrd: I'm glad you don't want
i.ny more power than you've got,
t:ear.
Elbie (nodding): I guess I'm just a
twrn humble man. Bird. But what's
more import.ant is that my many,
many friends in Congress have to
learn how lo cut the budget them·
selves. (Frowning) They've got to
learn how to take the screams of pain
or those who lose their jobs in the
process. The yowls of pain. the angry
tl.rades, the bitter criticisms
Bird: lmagir.e your friends wanting
you to do it for them.
Elbie: Why, Bird, they're so des-
perate for my help they say they
won't give me my tax increase until
I tackle the job myself.
After the purchase of land l.n
Orange County by North Ameri·
can Rockwell for an industrial
plant, can the county board of
supervisors still say this is an
agriculture-orien~ county? v. R. s.
Tlllt ... ..,,. """" ,.....,,, ..-... ..
_.,., .... .. hie -..-. s,_,
,.., "' ....,. " • ......, ... o.11, 1'1111.
Bird (clasplni her handa): Oh, Elbie,
whJilt are you going to do?
Elbje (with a smUe): Do7 Why, It's
obvious they've got a lot to learn
about budget cutting. So, first off.
I'm going to i h\lw th em by example
what a joyous job it can bt. And high.
ly rewarding, too.
Bird: But that sounds impossible.
Elbie (bumming to hlmseU): Just you
hand me that there Army Engine-
ers' budget tor pork barrel projects.
Bird: This one, dear?
Elbie: (happily): Yep. Now, let's see
here's a big dam for my dear fr iend'.
Congressman WiJbur Mills, who's
showed he respects my judgment
most. (Elbie makes a big blue-pen·
ciled slash with a gay flourish .) I'll
humbly show him bow I don't give
a dam. My, there seems to bt a pet
project on this list for every one of
my many, many fr iends. !He slash·
es away a t a great rate.) Practicing
economy can sure be fun.
Birdie Bird: Oh, you're wonderful ,
dear.
Elbie: I guess I'm just a born teach·
er, Bird. And when l think of my
many. many friends , I can't help but
want to teach them a lesson.
Birdie Bird: You're so generous, EJ.
bie. But are you sure these men
are your friends?
Elbie (with a beatilic smile): That's
the lesson, honey: If they're not. they
won 't be back next year.
WELL, tune in again, folks. And
meantime as you mosey down the
windin' trail of Ufe, remember what
Elbie's ol' granddaddy used to say:
"Take every man for your friend.
And U'n be ain't, take him anyway."
Most Costly Inaugural
WASHINGTON -President John-
son's 1965 inauguration was the most
expensive in the 176-year ttlstory o(
this quadrennial event.
lt cost $1,597,000.
That UI $421,000 more than Presi-
dent Kennedy's elaborate anl.I exuber-
ant cerem11n.ial induction in 1961. The
$1.176,000 price tag on that was a rec-
ord up to then.
Not only did Johnson's inaugur:al
cost more than any other. but it took
in more money -$1 ,642,000 as against
SJ ,455,000 four years previous.
However, the high outlay for the
Johnson e\ ent resulted in a consid-
~rably smaller surplus.
TUE CLAIMED surplus is $90,~.
Bilt the actual surplus was only $44,. aoo. The remainder came from a $5(),. «n> donation ~rom the Kennedy inau-
gural surplus. This totaled $222.000. of
which $50,000 wa~ put In escrow for
the 1965 event, and $172,000 was given
to WashJngton's United Glver11 ,Fund .
Thi! $90,000 Johnson surplus was
d•st>tu sed 1omcwhat diflcnnUy. JlaU J t
•
was deposited in a bank for the 1969
in .. uguration, and $45.000 contributed
to the Society for a More Beautiful
National Capital. a favorite project of
Mrs. Lady lslrd Johnson.
. THESE AND OTJfER interesting de·
tails are contairred in s:m un publicized
report. that Dale Miller, chairman of
the 1965 inaugural Committee, has fl.
nally submitted to the Prtsident -
two years and nine months alter the
event. Former Treasury Undersec-
retary Edward Foley, chairman of the
1961 inaugural CommJtlee, published
a comprehensive report in September
of that ye<sr.
Mi!Jer. a Texas lobbyist and close
friend of the Prc~ident. does not ex·
plain the extraord inary delay. But In·
ferentially he dcfend11 the costliness
of the .Jo:inson ina ui:-ural by arguing
that pomp anct rercmony are pr oper
f0r these occasions.
Hobert S. Allen
j
Some Are Talking Party Into Tr'ap
WASHING TON -Among the older
and wiser Repablicans the impression
is growing that some of their col·
leagues are talking the GOP into a
trap which could snap shut hard on
the party's chance to win the presi·
dentlal election in 1968.
The more some of the Republicans
talk the more they appear confused,
diffuse and inconclusive on the cru·
cial question of a war which will not
go away merely becatae the United
Stat.ea la holdlng a presidential elec·
tion.
Political issues have a way of be·
coming greatly simplified, ln fact
overslmplilied, as election day draws
near. By election day in 1964 Barry
Goldwater was a trigger-happy ec·
centric who would drop the atomic
bomb. abolish Social Security, and cru·
cify the farmers.
IF mE PRESENT trend continue$,
the Republican candidate in 1968 could
appear as a wishy-washy, timid. in·
decisive nincompoop who could not ~
trusted with the s~ty of 600.000
troops on a far-ofl front.
The older Republlcana recognize
that it is unwise to ignore thJJ dis-
tinct possibility. They recognize that
Democratic Chairman John Balley
merely scratched the surface ln his
recent remarks to the Democratic Na·
tional Committee. Tbe7 have to rec-
ognize also that Democratic cam-
paign organiutions, using TV and ra-
dio commercials, can arouse more
basic popular reactions while the
presidential candidate hlmseU can re·
main on a loftier and more noble
plane.
CHAIRMAN BAILEY, who is not
by far the most eCfective orator in
Democratic ranks, baa confined him·
self 10 far merely to saying that the
Republicans are playing an "oppor·
tunist game." and that does appear
to ~ the case. He refers to the "quiv-
ering" candidates of the GOP who
are trying to convince us that both
more and leas can be done in Viet-
nun at the ume time.
These relatively mild but effective
remarks are a mere curtain-raiser to
what will be .taid later oa, and Sen-
ators Everett M. Dirbeo and. B u g b
Scott are quite right to be appreben·
sive of the ultimate raults of a stu·
tained Democratic attack if the Repub-
lican party takes an equivocal posi-
tion on the war.
CRAlRMAN BAILEY ii right about
another thing. Politic"1 conclitiou will
be ltwplJ diflereat when the Repub-
lican candidate ii nominated and be
is compelled to Uke a firm stand oa
the war. At prdellt there ii only one
firm political at.and oo tbe war and
it has been mOll effectively and clear-
ly outlined by Prttideot Johnson in
his speech in San Antonio, Tex. on
Sept 29, a speech wbicb be will un-
doubtedly repeat time and again be-
cause it ls the most reasoned justifi-
cation of the war •bicb be bag yet
uttered.
Inasmuch u there are presently
some prominent Democratic dissen~
en to bil policy an gnbalanc"Jlld iJD.
prealon ii giwn of the natun ol bll
support within bis own party.
BUT WREN A RepubUcan candl·
date, du1,y anointed by biJ paey, 1J
compelled to utter an equally upllclt
and clear view, there will have to be
prominent Republican disse.nten al·
so -not merely 'dissenters in gener·
al, but Republicans whole spedfic
views cannot be reconciled with those
ol the Republic.an candidate f Ol' presi-
denl
'Ibis ii bound to place the presi·
dential contest in a different light. Di•·
aent within the Repubtlcan party will
inevitably lead to the concllllion that
a Republican president either will not
know what be will do about the war in
Vietnam, or that the question will be
so surrounded by controvefSY that
he will be unable to take effective ac·
tion.
No such doubt will be evident on
the Democratic side if the letter and
spirit ol wbt President Johnson said
in San Antonio iJ accepted u the shape
ol the future, as it no doubt will be
~
'They Have Not Been Deserted~
To the Editor :
My friends and neighbors of the
Ora11ge Coast and I heard on the
news yesterday of a movement to re·
turn the draft cards that are not
wanted. Also there was a rally at the
college against the war in Vietnam.
It seems strange to me that they
always get on TV or the lront page
o! the paper, but the parade in L.A.
upholding the war and our boys was
hardly mentioned. Wby should we sit
back and let the Hippies and the rest
of these blood-sucking leeches with
yellow stripes get by with brealdng
any law that gets in their way be·
cause it interferes with what they
want to do ?
THEY WANT PEAC,E, so they say,
but they don't want to fight for it.
They want a free country as long u
someone else will die for it.
Well , I don't go along with that. I
believe peace, freedom and a free
country are everyone's fight. So why
don't we start a movement and flood
the papers with letters. Let our boys
!mow they have not been deserted.
All they hear about right now are the
draft dodgers and the rallies against
what they are sent to do. So come on
I '
By George
Dear George:
I am a bachelor 'Z1 years old
and I find that I am terribly
embarrassed when out in public
by the current mini skirt style.
ls something wrong with m.e?
CONCERNED
Dear Concerned :
I don't know. but if you don't
get out of that silly mini skirt
and wear some trousers people
are bound to think 'so.
Dear George·
Every tim(' I slap my boy
fr iend he Ines to k1.~r; mr.
I. I. Dear I I
Somr proptc can seem 10 do
anything ni:ht
. --'• . ~ ,.,,..,, ' ---~) '-i'. . .. ,. . . ', ti: ~ ...... _ + ~'1C'
"· • > ' • • t " . .... ~ . . ' . ~*-".. ~jirl .
1.lttW• rrom rMdln .,.. •-· Ntrm.tll'I wr•
en ilflOlltd OlllW'I' thttr INIMIH In 311 --• ...... The ,..,.. •• Clndlftte lettef1 te f" -• •im~ llbtl i. rae"'9CI. An lttttre mull lftdllde tlONlln •lld m.1fllnt eddreu. but ,..,,_ Wiii" lie
wlltllleld Oft '"-'·
people and wr ite.
May~ if we are lucky we might
crowd the leeches off the tront page.
MARY PERRYMAN
KllNI Tee,..qer•
To the Editor:
About 1 :30 a.m. Sunday morning we
were awakened by someone knocking
at our door. When my husband an-
swered there were two teen-age boys
who asked. him if we owned a cat.
He sald yes, and the boy informed
him that be bad hit and run over
the cat with bis car as the animal
ran across the street, and could my
husband pl~ come out and loot at
the injured cat.
THE YOUNG MAN and his com·
panion thought the cat was seriously
injured and near death. My husband
immediately took the cat to the vet·
erinarian. The cat ia now home re-
cuperating after a abort stay at the
animal hospital.
At this time we would lite to ack-
nowledge and commend these boys
for stopping to seek belp for tbe cal
They could have driven off and left ,
the cat (under a parked car wbeft it
had crawled) lo die of shock w iD-
juriea.
THEY RAD CAU.ED tbe police and
the S.P.C.A. office for help. but to
no avail. So they knocked on our door
looking for the owner ol the cal
We don't know the identities of the
young ~en but want them to know
of our gratitude and appnc:Lation for
their kindness and persistence hi set-
ting heip.
MRS. A. J. BIGGS
Bl~ Era
To the F.dttor:
Future hiJtbrians may look upon
oqr "hippie" phenomenon in either
of two ways, and the w.ay they record
jt right now. They may refer to it as
the "Epoch of Indecision," heralding
the same degeneration and soci.al de--
cay wbicb caused the fall of Rome.
OR rr MAY FORM a new chapter
In our history, tilled "The Amencan
Renainance'', ~ the rebirth
of undentand.lng,. and belief in man
as an individual. 1be manner l.n which
we as the majority treat the mliguid·
ed minority in our midst will be
faithfully recorded, for it may well
indicate the success or failure " the
democratic way of life.
GEORGE MALSBARY
'How NOT to ... ' Books Are Needed
Referring to a paragraph of mine
about those "How To ..• " books, one
ot the editorial writers remarked that
there seems to ~ a need for some
"How NOT To. . . " books that would
prove more valuable to the public.
The only one that comes to mind ia
''How Not to Play Chess," by a Czech
expert, written many years ago, which
actually taught me more about lbe
pitfalls and dangers of the game than
any manual of positive instruction.
Experience teaches us In a negative
way : We learn how not to strike a
match or climb a fence when we are
young, by getting burned or ripping
our trousers. It's only after finding
out all the things we must NOT do that
we eventially discover the right way.
A BOOK TELLING American11.
for Instance, how not to speak French
would be immensely benerlclal; where·
as. most of the current texts simply
begin with instructln~ the readei: to
move hls mouth and shape his vowels
In a wholly impolls1ble fa shion.
'rhls is as true In philosophy as it ill
Jn any craft or art or sport.
When Socrates wanted a deflnltloo
'
~"'f& I ( • ''I ,
{ .. '-··'. -. __ ..
o{ "courage," he went about it ln a
negative fuhion: by explaining all
the things It wu NOT. Hit studentt
kept offering definitions and be kept
showing how they were wroog.
The truth can rarely be approached
directly. Chesterton ten. that when he
first ~ame Interested ln religion, he
read everything that he could find
agatnt it None of the rebuttals to re--
ligion satisfied blm, and by a process
of elintinaUoo be arrived at a central
core of belief.
ONE REASON. J think. that our dt·
fense of CJ.pitalism is 10 ineffectual
with the outside world is th&t we can-
not promote :tg potltln thtogs until we
know its aegatJve things.
It Is not enough lo procUlim Its
benefits: we have to understand its de·
fods. to reaJi1.e the wrong ways In
which It u n operate. Only lhc.-n can
our defense o( it be intdligent and
constructive.
And I happen to think that the most
beneficial book that could be written
for Americana today might be called
''How Not to Be I Patriol '1 Only by
avoiding the liDa and errors of Jin·
goilm can we really help our country.
1.p1r1;1t.J9
Tuesday, October 17, 1967
Th• tditorfaL pag1 o/ Ult Dail11
Pilot 1er1u to ff\/orm and 1hm-wat.c f'tcukrl by prtHnting th~
nnorpopn-11 optniOnl and c~
mntarv on topic• of mU1ut,
ond tfgnificanct, bJ1 providmg o
(OTUm for th1 uprtsi1on of
our rea~r•' apinioru, and bJI
presenting tM diverat oi1w-
pointa of fnJormed ob1~roer1
ontt spoktsmen on topfc. o/ th•
d(Jy.
Robert N. Weed, Publisher
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