HomeMy WebLinkAbout1967-11-06 - Newport Beach Daily Pilot/
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Today's Closing
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VOL 60, NO. 266, l SECTION$, lt PAGES ~AY, NOVEMBER 6, 't9'7 TEN CENTS ....
. ( School ~· ·ehief · NeWeomer -.wants Out
Seeks College Presi,dency Alter Harbor Bonds D.ef eated
B1 THOMAS FORTUNE
Ol "'9Delr ..........
Dr. Leland B. Newcomer, Newport..
Mesa Unifted Sdlool Dlatrlct'1 '30,000
per year superiatendent, today an.
nounced be bu •ked to be releued
from b1a contract to accept the prul-
dency oi La Verne Collep.
The board ol tnut.ea will ccmaider
bia request !'ueldly nlg)lt. '"naert
ii DO way really I call ~ml"& DOW,"
lillletl m Cruh
boalll prealdenl Donald Strau.u nid
todlf.
DI\ Newcomer revealed be turned
dori an ofter tram La Verne Col-
lege, located nee Pomona, prior to
the ., mllllOb acboo1 bond e1ectloe de·
feat ho wee.kl a10.
Ccatacted again after .the bond elec-
tion, be told coUe1e trustee• ~ ·had
1dered.
Newcomer bat asked that hie
... --tlon become ettective next July
I t
Graveside Rites Held
#
For Claude ~rame Jr.
Graveside services were held today
at Piclfic View Memorial Part for
auto crash victim Claude PbiWp
Frame Jr., 16, of Corona ~l Mat.
The youth, son of Mr. and Mrr.
Claude P. Frame Sr., 1~ Bonnie
Doone Terrace, was killed Friday
night when b1a small foreign car tum•
bled from Jamboree Road down a 58-
foot incllne:
Deputy coroners s:ald today he died
from cheat injuriea. He was pinned
under the wreckage at the bottom of
the illcline.
A C?orooa del Mar High. Scllool stu.
dent,young Frame is survived by his
~nta: a brother, Scott, and sister,
Betay, all of the family home; pater·
nal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Claude R. Frame of Del Mar; and
maternal grandmother, Mrs. llalpb
Hall, Lone Beach.
Funeral arrangements were under
the direction of Baltz Mortuary, Co-
rona del Mar.
Oxford Term
For Irvine
History Prof
Dr. Arthur Marder, UCI professor
o{ his~ry. baa received an app<int·
ment to serve u vtaltlnc profeuor at
Oxford UniverattJ, Enslaod, for the
academic year 1989-70,
Dr. Marder, a wprld autborlty on
naval hist«y, wUl h on aabbatical
leave from Irvine tbal year.
The Geor&e Eastman visiting pro-
fessorSIUp f.o Oxford la reserved for
American adlolars ol the hiabest dll·
Unction.
Previously, Dr. Marder hM been
awarded three Guggenheim fellow·
shJJ)4. a Rockeleller Foundation kll·
lowshlp. and a &rant Crom the Amerl·
can Pbllo~hical Society.
He bolds three degrees from Har·
vard and 11 the author oi eltbt books.
!
AUTO CRASH VICTIM
Cwud• Frame
Financial Aid
Sought by Clinic
The South Coast alild Guidance
Clinic, an open doorway from despair
for hundreds of children during the
paal ihree years, faces the hard s:eali·
t.y that the door is going to be abut
ti it doesn't get· financial uailtance
-soon.
DAD.. Y PILOT Staff Writer 'nlomu
Fortune. in a three·part aeries of
articles starting Tuesday, tells the
story or the clink that ii a 1ucce11
at its job but in danger of becomlng
a failure 6t the bank. Read It 1n the
DAILY PILOT.
1. Hla four-year contract expires Feb.
1, 1970.
H bis request ii boDored by tbe
boerd be will aerve two yeen ud.ftft
moat.bl ol the contracted' for · foar
yean.
"OpportunHies do not always Come
at tbe t:lld ol contr.acta," Dr. N~ ·comet~.
He aaid bia acceptaoce ol the '
lege ~ II 10bject to bil te-leue from b1s cqrrent comm ....
.,,-•• t break a contract.," be aaJd.
Dr. Newcomer's provisional accept·
.ace. Jras announced Saturday at La
Vernf College's annual board of trustees meeting the morning of the
homecoming football 1ame.
The change of jobs would mean a
homecoming for the 46-year-old school
auperintendent. He was born a n d
grew up in La Verne, a amall city be-
tween Pomona and Claremont, a n d w• iraduat.ed from La Verne College,
where be later returned to teach
courses in education.
La Verne ii a 1mall llberal art.a col-
lege affiliated with the aw.rdl oi the
Brethren. Dr. Newcomer said it ta
pri.marlly a teacher trainlna inatitu·
tion with about 80 percent of the 800
or 700 students studying to become
teachers.
The college president, Dr. Harold
Fasoacbt, has announced be will re·
(See NEWCOMER, Pa1e %)
lWight of Borror
Granny Survived Big Wreck
~ By EDWARD SRJEIJ>S
LONDON (UPI) -''D 0 D'l 1 0 0 k, ...._ Mei> your eyes lbul"
Orudmotber Ethel Cow'land. M, llilMr'ld ber rescuen ud peered at 61 8oodlit wreckage on the train atie
..... been riding.
"Goel, I wish l had kept my eyes
lllat," she whispered. "'There were ~
Wies everywhere."
Ura. Cowlaod was one of the lucky
..... She wam't scratched in Britain's
wont train crash in 10 years.
Far her, the 7:43 from Hastings to
.Jl"d.an was ideal. It had permitted
bet to miss an earlier train and stay
wtth her grandchildren for a fireworks
display marking Guy Fawkes Day.
One soop from suburban Lewisham
)Its. Cowland's happy day turned inoo .a night of horror.
.. I was in a, carriage in the mlddle
ol the train," she said. "SUddenly, it
started ~pine. Then 1t went up and
doW1l "1rioualy. Then it hD"cbed and
tbe upta wut oul"
Peopla te:reamed in the darlmeu.
'Ibey were tOaed lib rag doll.a and
baggage crqbed down from OVfJt·
bead ract.s .
Mrs. Cowland could not remember
her car leavinl the track near the
Hither Green bridge.
"I enCied up in a corner of the cu·
riage," abe said. "I had been thrown
on top of a girl who seemed very
badly burl It WU black, very black,
and I could smell smoke."
There alJO waa panic in the wreck·
age and cries from the injured. In the
darknesa, people screamed and moan-
ed. Bu( one man, abouti.ng louder than
the others, gradually got everyone
quiet.
"This man began orpniUng every·
(See SURVIVOR& Pate %)
·Pd Probes
. . '
I • --. British Train Disast,er
Jack ·s11mmers
\
'Raring to' Go'
From Hoag Bed
''He'• rarin' to go and ii all aet to
ricochet out of here.••
'lbat's bow a Hoag MemGria1 Hospi·
ta! apob9:Dm today ct.cribed the
CODdltkm .r-115-)'eR-old termer New·
port Beadl POiiceman Jehn H.
''Jack" SUmmen, who wu struck by
a car Friday.
It may be awhile before tbe spry OC·
togenartan actually is released from
· the bolpital, however. Be suffered a
broken left knee, X-rays reveeled,
and is now mO'Ant restlessly about
OD cruedM!s.
0 He'a in good condi1ion, but ~e
ol bU aae it's bard to •Y when we oan
let him go home," the hospital official
said.
Summen was knocbd down by a
car driven by Orange Cl>ast College
ltudmt JGbn. Hardy 1..1, at Newport
Bou1eftnl and 29rd Street. Police said
the accident ii lti.D under bwestiga·
tioa. &Immen WI returning to bis home
at 3212 W. BIMloe Boulenrd after a
.long Walk when.he WU bit.
LONDON (UPI) -The detectives
of disaster crawled toclay through the
wreckage of a boDday express train
seeking to find why it jumped the
tracks in a London fog in Britain's
worst railway cr•h of tbe 1960s.
Ten of 12 can in 1be crowded,
speed.inc train jackknifed and bounc·
ed down a mudd)t 20 loot embankment
Sunday night, t1Wng 51 men, women
and chDdren and Injuring Ul more,
according to Scotlaad Yard.
"We don't mow what happened.
There was a Dash of sparks, the train
rocked and then it toppled." said a -
spokesman for the stat•-0wned British
Railways.
Some experts sald the crash was
cuased by days of heavy rain that soft-
ened the embankment, sinking the
rails into the mud -only a min·
ute's ride from the site of Britain's
last great train wreck.
Weeping polleemen chalked the
number of dead o the side of each
twisted carriage. Doctors performed
surgery in the mud 8nd polA?ing rain.
Residents along the tracks southeast
of London yanked survivors from the
mangled steel, lald on blankets and
passed out cups of tea.
'Ibey had done it once before. Sun·
day's nlgbt crash was the worst in Bri-
tain since Dec. 4, 1957, when a crash
just a mile down the same line killed
90 persons and injured 175
The crash SWMlay also was Britain's
second disuter of the weekend. An
Iberia Airline plane from Malaga,
Spain, crashed near London airport
Saturday night, killing all YT persona
aboard.
Out of the train wreckage near
Hether Green bridge and into the fog
and rain Sunday night atumbled pop
singer Robin Gibb, 19, member of
the Bee Gees group whole record
"Musachu.setta" is Britain's current
No. 1 best aeller. Hia bead was
bloodied but a friend said be was .. all right. " .
Behind him the Britiah were dis·
playing the stiff upper lipped cool·
ness with which they habitually meet
disaster. Survivors in one car said
they remembered a woman scream·
iog, "My God, we're crashing." 1'\en
a terrible shaking and tben a man-
no one asked bis name-rising from
the carnage to bark orders for aar-
vivors.
"When the train weot over, tbe
lights went out and it was just a
complete mass of tangled bodies. I
fell down on top of other people and
I could not move becauae of the peo-
ple above me and under me," said
Vera Williams.
The engineer and firem&i fell into
(See WRECK, Pase %)
i,ar~r C:hief No Snooper
' 87 JEROME F. COl.JJNS It i.&n't oecessarOy so, be indicated.
• ... Dell'r ...., """ "Unless and until the City Council
'Ibe city of Newport Beach today advises us otherwise," he said, "we'll
began advertillng for a harbor ad· continue operating on a complaint
mlnlstrator . baru."
Private eyes need not apply. He noted, however. that it will con·
That's the word from City Manager linue to be against council policy for
Harvey L. Hurlburt. who denied re· pier permit holders In residential
ports that the newly created $10,000 a.._a to allow use of boat slips by
a year post meana a major crack· anyone other than occupants of the
down on pier permit violations is i.n abutting upland property.
the offing. "U a complaint Is received about
He emphulzed: such a policy violation," Hurlburt ex-
" If we were just looking for some· plained, "It will be investigated and a
ooe to snoop around the bay, WC' hearing beld 'to determine whether the
certainl,y wouldn't be peylna this kind pier permJt should be revoked. '!bat's
of money. 'lbere are more lmportant how we've operated In the past, and
tblnp for a barbor ad.mlnlatrator to that's bow we'll continue to operate.
do." Whether there's to be any change In
Hurlburt 1a1d a .. mllnmderstand· the policy or the way It's applied is
lng"' oi the nature of the new offi· strictly up to the council."
clal'a duties bas led many oo believe The city manager's views on the
that the city Is about to abandon in· subject today coincided with those
vestlgatloa of illegal boat slip rentals of Councilman Dee Cook, th e city's
on a complalnl bails and switch in· ' long-Ume representative on the coun-
1tead to 1 more eflecUve system of ty..cJ.ty Joint Harbor Committee.
uncovtri.oa violations. "Jf tbe nollcv 11atnst ~ier useajJy
' boat owners not living on the property
is violated, that's cause for revoca·
tion of the permit," said Cook. "But
there shouldn't be any full-scale inves-
tigation. It could disupt the com·
merce of our city.
"The.re are probably u many as 300
or 400 boats tied to private piers be·
lon&int to others ri&ht now. They have
no other place to go. We can't just
chase these vessels out of town."
Cook said the "status quo" should
remain, at least untiT the council set·
Ues the qudUon of a tidelands use fee,
which has been under study for sev·
eral months.
According to Hurlburt, the new bar·
bor adminiltrator will probably be
hired sometime ln January. He said
the city today started advertising for
candidates ln various publications.
"We're looking for someone with a
background in harbor matters and en.
-gineerlng and administraU9e exper·
(Set BARBOR JOB. Pac• %)
~ '
. • ... z-1 ...-• .. ~ '
SCHOOL CHIEF QUITS
Dr. Leland Newcomer
Reagan Says
Let Erosion
Work Begin
By BRUCE BENSON ., .. .,.., ,.., ...
Gov. Jl&bna1d Reagan aees no rea-
•• lor tin1ber _delay ol et. -4"00,008 U.S. Army Corps of tneinffn m>-
lioa coatrol projtet lit Wm Ntwpcrt,
state aides laid today.
For mare the two weets House
-a.ate ~ wc:rb approprlations CC11D1DJttea hew' been tnclRlave over
wbecber to perm.It ·the pNject' in the
face of a presidential fl"eeae on all
new Army Corps' programs except
emergeocles.
The project remained snarled in red
tape today as ttie two Congressional
committees pondered whether to re-
&ard the proposed sandbau.ling and
groin construction job as a new or
continuing project.
Reagan and bis a.idea, however, feel
fnere'f DO q~tion about it.
Said a spokesman for the Gover·
nor :
"The ltate administration had ad·
vised California congressmeo that in
its opinion it is a continui.og project
and therefore not subject to tile pres·
ent freeu on new federal public
worb starts."
HAULING' SAND
Project plans call for hauli.ng of
close to 500,000 cubic yards of sand to
the 38th-41st street erosion area from
Balboa l.Dd the far west end of the
beacbfront. Also planned is conalnlc·
tion-of a 250-foot long steel groln from
• the end of 40th Street oo help trap the
. upcout drift of sand.
The Carpi would use funds previous-
ly appropriat.ed by the state legisla-
ture, including the "700,000 advance to
the federal government for its share,
two-tb.lrda of which will be reimbur1·
ed to the atate later.
Reagan has wired federal officials
urging immediate authorization for the
Corps to inltiate the project "oo pre-
(See EROSION, Pace%)
Weadaer
Sunsblne without sunstroke is
Tuesday's forecast from weather
watcher Emil Kurtz , who tabs
the temps at 70 on the coast and
76 inland. That'• from near to
four degrees above normal.
INSmE TODAY
Not for tM squeamish thta-
te?'Q<>tr is "A Hatful of Ram.''
tht brutal drama of dof>t o.ddic-
«<m at tht WtstminsttT Com·
munity,t Th£4Ur rtvi~td today
cm Page 25.
........ 24 ........ .._ • ~ ·~ 11 c-..iw '6-!t 0.-.. CeMtJ 11 C-la H l'e...,,1 14 c....._.. '' ,...., • .....,. n Ml!Mel .. _ • S.Clel Cl--" .............. , u S.Clel .._ 1>1'
"-,.... '""" ti.ti l'n Celll ll S-Met1rett l .. lt
AM L....... U Ttlnlllell It
Lelltrt • Tll9ttw\ .JI Mffllft• 11 WMIM<' 4 ..._ U MtM W~IM 11 Mlltllll .. ..,., It
.·
'2 DAILY PILOT
From P .. e J
NEWCOMER . • • •
tire at the end of bis 20tb -year •
• ~ ~er, ta.U. crew-cut. plain·
imt ••111 .. c Ire ...
came to work Feb. 11,1968 u the flrat
superintendent of tlle 1 n811VlJ unified
Harbor Area school system. His -.,o,.
000 per year salary made him the
lilebest paid school administrator in
Orange County.
He said when he arrived that hi
thought the area had the potential to
becoine "a truly outltanding school
~tern." He alao said that one of the
~asons lie left Laa Vecas ls becaue
be found himself sptDding less and
less Ume on "pure education."
Defeat of two successive bond Is·
sues hastened his erowiJll ~ant-
111ent with the Rari>or Aria. Lut year
be asked the lchool board to void bis
four-year oontrect and imtead employ
him cm a yec-to-yec buit. 'Ibe board mused.
ALSO CONSUL TANT
· Dr. Newcomer said college truatas
will permit him to spend about one day
a week working u a couultant to
school d.lltricta. He said be antici·
pates hi• cross salary will increase
over what lt is now.
"I'm really looklna forward to get-
tin, back into real aolid....,education."
Dr. Newcomer laid. "I'm essentially
an educator. Originally, I was willing
to do whatever necessary to get the
show on the road here. But the defeat
of the bondl means another few years
of scrambling. I just haven't time for
thal It aeema ao rldlculous in this area
to have to scramble.
From P.,e J -.
"It'a gettmg to the place where a
1uperlntencleot of schoola has to · !
more a poUUclan and busi.nesaman
than edUcator. I'm dedicated to prov-
tq to tbe world that tbe tuchlng
):lrOfeuioe " Che sreatut ol them .lll. by soUy. U I can't do it here I want
to do It aome place e!R."
CRmCISM CONTINVES
Continuing his criticism of the com·
munity, Dr. Newcomer said: "I sin·
cerely hope that my successor will
be more successful than I in modify-
ing what I consider to be the very
wlirped values of this area. Before
I leave, J am going to' do everything
I possibly can to insure that my suc-
ce~sor will have every opportunity lo
br10g about the breakthrough ltlat is
necessary."
He praised the teachers: ''My great·
~st regret is leaving the many ded-
icated teachers who are working
against tremendous odds to give the
y~uth of th.is. community the best pos-
stble education. In my opinion the
teachers in this community are the
most important people bere and they
should be treeted as such if then! is
nC>t to be further deg«>eration of the
achools." ·
He also commended the s c b o o I
board: "I wish the people could real-
ly know ~ time they have put in
and their unity oi purpose in attempt·
ing to cwercome this problem (com-
munity reluctance to vote for school
expan&ion)."
Coast Man Faces
Burglary Charge
Fre®rlck C. Nuetnl, 25, of 405 Bel-
vue Lane, Newport Beach, is in Or·
ange_ County Jail today awaiting
arr111nment on burglary charges
after he forced his way into a Sunset
Beach woman's home Saturday night.
Sheriff's deputies said Lorraine J.
.~xelson, 17062 &th St.. Sunset Beach,
reported that Nuetzel smashed a large
hole In her apartment door to gain
entrace. He was captured later in the
aN!a by sheriff's deputies.
Maryland Loyalty
Oath Struck Down
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Su -
preme Court today struck down Mary-
land's Loyalty Oath for all public em-
ployes on grounds the law is Impre-
cise and unclear.
The v o t e was 8 to 3. with Justice
WUUam 0 . Douglas speaking fo(" the
court.
DAILY PILOT
...,,,.... ...... c:.tlhnle
R•ltert H. WH4
P'l*Ntlltr n.111 .. ic ..... it
ll•tw
1"011111 A. M11r11lii111
"""""" f dll« Jtr•lll• F. C•lllM .,._.. IMcll CllY f llller
Jeck R. Curley Pnl NiJHll
lwlN9 IMMltf' A~ OINdw
.....,... ..... OfflM
JJ 11 W11t hll1H 11•4.
Melll•t A44mu P.O. I•• 1171 UHJ
0th., Offic11
C.... Mew: i. Weet •n ltrett l•--..ctl: "' l'ont1 A-... ..._.,llltlOll l•Cll: • Jiii Street
SURVIVORS • • •
one." Mrs. Cowland said. "He was
wonderful. very cool.''
The man-no one thought of asking
him his name-began leading surviv-
ors out into the chilly, wet night even
before the first rescuers arrived.
But Mrs. Cowland was loo fright-
ened. to•walk. So two men Jed her out-
side.
' ''Don't look, dearie," ooe of them
From Page J
ERQSION : ..
vent damage to seashore properties "
"Agreements for the Corps' involve-
ment in the work have been com-
pleted," the Reagan spokesman not-
ed. "and the federal agency had as-
sured us it lould e~pedite action."
One month ago. Newport officials
had been advised the project would
begin by today. But bidding hasn't ev-
en begun.
Newport oUicials said today they
have shipped pictorial evidence to the
debating federal legislators in attempt
to show that the local beachfront
erosion crisis qualifies as an emer·
gency.
Mayor Paul J. Gruber for the first
time threw the city's weight behind the
request and shot off a message stress-
ing the severity of the situation.
GET JOB GOING
Gruber urged the committeemen to
"expedite the matt« and get the job
going,·• ..-ccordiJl& to City Manager
Harvey L. Hurlburt.
Hurlburt noted the city llself has
stayed "pretty ~h out ol the pic-
ture" until now. He said the Orange
C.ounty Har-Oor District and others
bad remained on top o( the situation.
The mayor's letter was spurred by
the most recent ''slowdown" which de·
veloped last week.
The Corps project h~ been sched·
uled to start · by today. But Presi-
dent Johnson's fTeer.e on non-emergen·
cy new projects h.as Cihllled chances
of any construction within Ule next
few weeks.
Meanwrute. endangered beachfront
property !Tom 36th to 41st streets sur-
vi~ the latest hilth tides with only
minor flooding reported.
WATER ON SIDEWALKS
Sea water overran sjdewalks in the
3300 and 3400 blocks but had expend·
ed its force by the time it met patio
walls.
Property in the 3500 block, where
residents have installed a Sl.IXX> stone
barricade along the beach. withstood
the tides without difficulty.
Six granite groins poking into the
sea along the six-block front were also
effective in preventing further beach
erosion.
But considerable washout was re-
ported upcoast of 4lst street where
the last of the six groins is localed.
The beach there this morning had
fallen some eight feel below its for-
mer level. exposing a bank of sand-
bags and wire netting installed over
the past weeks by resident s.
From Pqe J
HARBOR JOB • •
ience." he explained .
The new aide's first responsibility,
said Hurlburt. will be to develop "a
good record system on harbor activi·
ties. land uses and pie r permi ts -in
other words. to document what we
have in the harlJor."
lie will be responsible for the pro-
cesliing of all pier permits. a task now
undertaken by the .city's englneerlnJt
deputment, and ·will serve as the
city's staff liaison on the Joint Har-
bor Committee.
Hurlburt added:
''We want him to become familiar
with all shores of the bay, so he can
advise the Planning Commission on
the best use of these lands. For in·
stance, there are probably many areas
where we might put In more boa t
slips; there ls ~rtainly a real short·
age
....ML:When we hire ti}m." llur lburt con -
'W'ded, "ll certainly won't,, mean, th e
city wlU lmbark on 1 h1rbor-w1dr
snooping prol(Tam. Ht'll have " lot of
other thin~~ to do "
-
said. "Keep your e,.. llml"
But Mrs. Cowland laad to .e wUl
happened.
"Unfortunately, I clid 1oat.•• *
said. "God, I WiJll I bad bpt •J e,.es
shut"
Bodies were -... • .. twisW
tracband ..................
menl ·Ma. °""'911-ill lilllll a--
"all "of tbem rrirf • ....
Voices called M. "We llll!lllil cnw-
bars. Please Clll • 11111. OQlm. ~
anyone have OiygeD?-"
Then Mrs. C.oWlaDll _. tlle ~
living among u.ia deall lllard the tint
of 40 ambulaDoes to arri¥te at a.
scene.
··~ scene W'U HR.._, oa um
earth," Mn. C'Awlud aid.
·"k * *.
Fre.. P.,,e l
WRECK •••
shock and were ~ to be ques-
tioned immediately aft« die wreck.
Their diesel locomotift -4 two can
had rumbled don tlle tracb. na&
swerving off like tbe Gtller' can.
The $ound of the ctia I trl _.
echoed th:rougbout 8-llt I tn1~ nonstylish indUS1rial and~ .
working class resideatbJ ~ W-rt-
nesses said they at fu";f-a..,g11t it
was SOJDe. gigaatic noise -.. bJ
ma.n to celebrate <Ay Fntaes Olly.
which was just ending.
The day commemorates a~ pW
to blow up the Houses o( .Pwtia......,
an~ u· mar~ed by dlild.rea amng ...
penny for the guy" and. n Amertca
celebrates July 4. with firecrac:b::is.
At the scene cranes lifted ma_....
cars. Under them the crews of 25
fke engines found most of I.be died.
One dl8lk mark re.1111 ·'23:' Saaaed
in Ole mud were a hoe, a partre.. a
broken sili:tcase. a guidebook to ~
lngs. the channel port where ae
train began and the site o( the -
Nonnaai Conquest of Bot.a.in. ,
On the tracks doctors qWctlJ am-
putated a man's leg to 5ave bi& life.
They were too lat.e.
Railway officials said Ule deatll toll
would have been higher if the dilillC
car had been open. It •as cloted •
,cause lt wu Sunday.
.
Leg .Fractured
By Lagunan
Crossing Road
A Laguna Beach man suffered a
fractured leg Saturcby night •'IM!la lie
was struck b>: a car .-bi~ croaillg
South Cout Highway.
Offj~i.ala at. South Coast Commmi-
ty Hospital said Robert H. McGtD.
51 , of 364 Caliope St., is in satitlac-
tory condition today.
Police said McGill was cross1n~ ee
highway at CaUope Street at abeat
7:30 p.m.· Saturday when he ...,.. Wt
in a pedestrian crosswall b) a 9r
driven by Royal E. ~hreM. ~ ti
Long Beach.
Police LL Robert McMUrT3\" said
Behrens was cited for alleged ·wi.re
lo yield to a pedestria.o right of way
in a crosswalk.
ln another accident. Mar~ (' ..
John F. ~bardl 25. ol 930 Clift
Drive. was injured at I ·SS a m. s.-
day when he !Ost cootrol of his m.-
torcycle on a curve.
Police said Leonhardt suflf'red ra-
cial laceratioas when he 5trucli; a
curb at Coaat Highway and Forest
Ave nue, He was taken to the 1-;1 -r ...
di$pensary for treatment.
Police sald Edith J. Walra'""· 44.
of 1301 Bonnie DooM . Terra<'1' Cor·
ona del Mar, suffered minor '"JUl"J
Friday at 10 a.m. when her ,.ar ...
struck by a car driven by ~rlt-i L
Cliff, 69. of 241 Nyes Pla<"e. Tur .,.
cidtnt occurred at South Coast ll jp·
way and Nye1 Place.
Sanitation Meet •••
The boards of dlrectors of Ot •nee
• Counly Janitalion distncu I l ~-l,
6 7 and 11 will meet at 7 '11 r m
Wtdnti;day at the ~uni}· '3nll.•ll0ft
orf1ce tn f ountam _\lallt'.)
'
Search La~hed
F orShepherdDog
Ne•pw1 Bw:ta Pike tadaJ were
wa•'· C fs a .. Genna abep-
llienl 611 wlliclt llil Na-r . Erin. 21.
lad •• b ,,, --51ll ~ ad
Sc t we Drift.
Ertm. ., 511 ...... St.. uicl he
.. ....,... ...... -tbe be9da and
.. '1ila. -a.it ........ -be reached ..... pkt.,...... '
~ --.fC!Bond llllt ~ to a resi+e e at Stlt Seasbon Drlve ~ daell ""' sipt of it Any iaf~
tiD9 I Ep diig flllr dog's whereabouts
m br t.eiqlhoet 11 to pOln headquar-
ters at ~2%11.
If the doe ii ..C fomd sooa, Erlen
will haw lo beg.ill a series of aoti-
rabies shots, potitt &aid.
Peace Officers .
Okay Law Plan
The esttutiw COllllllidee of the
CalifGnU Slatr Peace Officers A.ssoci· ma.. lllftting at tbe Newpor1er Inn,
-............. ., to e9dor'le the
ai1m el a recatlJ passed California
law -aiaw ad I.aw adorttme.nl
Newport Beac:ta Potitt Cbirf James
B. Glans. a mrmber ol the executive
~. Aid loday dis .... law
....... f• a llWveJ of o¥ua1I c:rim·
iaa1 justice pafonaaDce. illcl&Mling
~ .. by lbe ~ Md depart-
~ o( probatiaa, paJ9le ... -cor· J"edila. . .
At die same ta.. Gina. np9l1ed.
tile llW.alWe .. caMs .... .,..., to·
act as a ··ara.miaim belt"' '-the
raeatdt Md •• I 5 M el crialinal ... nlll··--..
• ann ••• Giiii . .., ........
MIGs
SAIGON <XPY-"XUS: A1r ~rce 1 In South Vietnam. The area It betwee"
jet downed t~o -~Ga ln alr co~bat 1 two key bridges, the Canal dea Rapt.
over Ntrtll Vietnam todfy while oth~ 1 des and the Paul Downer, both of
er planea aUacked a s"""awling 111• which have been repeatedly attacked r• by American bombers. a~1:"0.!._'!e'!!11"_~_ 1°tut.skirtshad beeonf The American F105 ThunderchJef
-llVI" VI ur.. UJM pilota reported MIG17 and MIG21 !n-
on ~ Pt:IM!Ofl'• out.of-bounds llst.1 terceptors in' the' area, and one F105
The in!tial 0 .S. Command report of 1 had a brief clash with one of the Red
the downing of two Korean Wlf·vin-l jets, but the U.S. Command said neith-
&age .,M.IG17s by u F4 Phantom jet er plane was hit. .
did not sa,y where tbe doafldt oc-1 A U.S. spolcesinaq said Gia Tbuong
cvrecL They ~· the t'7tll w 98tb is consider~ «fie of t~e largest mm.
confirmed MIG kiJJI for Amvlcan pi-tary stor~ge u,~ in North "Vietnam
lots in North Vietnamese 8ir battles. with 72 storage' t>u,ildings, 11 support
Tbe an:nowicement came af"r the buildings and fight adinfnJstrat1011
command reported that U.S. A.ill Force buildings in thet compound. Re saJd
jets bad raided tbt Gia Thuonc •tor· the American..bo1'bs impacted on the
age area leu tban a mile n.-ui of buildings and i>IJ -.tiaircrl(l lites pro.
the Gia Lam aJr bue, wbJcb is across . tecting the -area. .
the Red River from the heart Han-The spok'esman •d bo\b the-Canal
oi and is North Vietnam '1 ma cMl· des Rapides and D6umer bridgea bad
ian air field. been knocked out in prevlous raJda
CREDrr GIVEN ~d therM pparently was. a backlog
,.__,.,.__. .th ~ .i t 1· o"T military aupplW in G11 Tbuong, ,.d~ICU"Wl ng aown e wo matmg It "a lucrati'8 target." MJ.Ga were Capt. arrell D Sim· ' ,
moods. 33, ol Vei'DOG, Tex.. e alr· _:~OTHER srtuKE t '
craft commander, and lat Lt. eorge , In uother major s~Sunday. Air H. M~1 .Jr., 2', .• ol Be emer, Force ThundercblefJ a raided the
Ala., the pilot. Both are ass! ed t.o f hue Y.en MIG hue nqrtJnreat of
Ulit tactical fighter wing at I , Hanoi and reported damaging at least
Thailand. two..MIG17 intercept.ors on the lfOund.
G"ia 'Lam iJ altCI the only ~ air· ln South Vietnam, 1DHmrbUe, South
field U.S. .warplanet have not -~et at-Vietnamese infantrymen battled Viet
tacked and one ol-abollt fivo ~r tar-Cong troops near Loe Ninh. · cets atilt Oil tbe .Pent.con'• reltricted One American Fl05 wu lbot .down
Jill AJDODC tbe otbera are tbe Hai· durtnf 1be Phuc Yea raid, bat two Jlml docb ml nDrolid tenn1nal ud snpeller41vta Al ~ drove
.. ,.._ -1a Lao Cal, on tbe oa two MIG111 nue a. ''iellJ ...-..... of CG!iaeD'lllt a.a. ~r' belleot*r .......... Jllll.
The Gia 1'lllalll ....,. area iJ on "It wu OM ol tbe ..,_ :rmcue
tbt mala tlllll'tbaalt raBrOad and bllb· penetrlUou mede la tbe nr ta North
way from CGmmunis1 OliDa to Haaol Vietnam," a U.S. spoteamu Wd.
OYcr wtlich military 1upplies come lJ'be Fl05 wu the nsth U.S. combat
tor North Vletumeae ~ ~tine ~ auounced lott ov• u. Dartb.
I
Legislature Opens ~ee~
1
TO Discuss Re~pportion
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Tb41 state
Jegialature reluctantly belina 1 spe·
cial reapportio.nment 1q1lon today
with tour Democrats -lncludl.QI Rep.
Richard T. Hanna (D-Hun6ngton
Beacb)--ftgtltia:g for allpmenta that wm help tbem in thelr ~pated
tou&b ~lectioo CMnpe.ipt next
year. .
White· a.ate• Democrats are ·deter·
mined to retain control of CaW9rnia'1
congressional ctelegatlcm, resurgent
Republicans are insisting on a redis·
tricUng plan that will give them a
better chance of unseating Democrat·
ic congressmen next fall.
The Democrats now enjoy J 21-16 .
majority with one vacancy. l i
Hanna iJ one of fo11t Democratic
congressmen wboee poUtic:al future.
may be rkllng on the outcolJ}e. The•
others are John Tunney of Rlterside,,
Don Edwards of Santa Clara a. n d
James Corman ef Loi Angelu.COunty.
Lel)aJ,atorf w~ fap:ed ~cl to the i
Capitol hy last month's Stitt Su-
preme Court decision which f o u n d
present district boundaries, drawn by
Dance to Recall
Ruu Revolution •
UCI student. will duel at Gateway
Plaza on campus 1'MldaJ aoon in
c:-amenuntion el the IOda anoiver·
..., of tbe ~ updllncJbat re·
nlted in the ovei tin ow ol the Runlan
tJar.
Tbe · "Bollbevik BevolUtiGP Day
Dance,'' with music by "The l:lectric
Qi.air," is spomored by tbe student
10¥er1llMDt. I
the Ul81 Democratic-coatrolled legis-
lature, do not meet U.S. Supreme
Court "one man, one vote" stand·
ards requiring each congreasman to
represent ge.oerally the same number
of people.
The court aaid that if lawmakers
don't do the job by Dec. 7, the jlldgea wru do it tar them. ...
Ref>ub~ Gav. Reagan, w\O was
forced to ca1J the session, publicly is
remalning neutral. But his aides said
he would be. unhappy with any bill
rig~ed to permit Democrats to retaiD
control of the delegation in the event
of a hla 1968 Republican ataln'ide
victory. ·
R4'agan exprwed the hope the sea-
son would ~ by Thanksgiving.
Assembly Speaker Jesse M. Unruh,
(D-Ingrewood) said, "if we can't agree
in two or three weeks, we can't agree
at all. 1 would be inclined to adjourn
after three wee~. After thet we 'd
just get into ~ AU;tisu 4ogfipt."
Republic Ans -contede ibe ,,arllsan
makeup of the legislature prevents
them from hurting any Democrats. -
Democrats eontrol the Aaaembly 42-38,
while the GOP bas the edge in the Sen·
ate. It is split 20-2Q with Republican
Lt. Gov. Robert H. Finch casting the ·
deciding vote in case of a tie.
But the RepUblicus want the new
boundaries to r~main as close u pos·
sible to the present lines. They oppose
new lines that would give a speclal
break to troubled Democrats.
A bill authored by Jack Fenton of
Montebello, chairman of the Aasembly
Elections ~ R~pportionment com·
mjtt.ee, would change every district
but two, bringing them to wlthin five
percent of what the court &aid is an f deal district, abput 413,610 population. •
0
OMEGA
Your <>rMQG
Salta & Service
Ag1ncv
FREE
$1.99
HUN'TfNTON CINTll
HACH l IOINV!t:
HUNTIN•TCN HACH
..,,
sJ."'"' l•C9Hctwd ••!din from 112S I• I Y•rltfy ..... ,_
PIT
YOUR
IU~
AS
held t
coot.e1
pancy
ea,tt c
Avent
An
barrlt
vioual
court
City
plans
week
furtb•
Bua:
er sb
deciali
Frida:
.
F~ ¥idtms · -.
Superior
Beach Bull __ .._.
Raps
~ -RUie
By MARGABET BALL . °'""~ .... ...,.
A Superior Court dedlion P'r1day
held the city of Huntingtoo Beach in
contempt of court for refullng OCCU·
pancy of an old bulldinl'-ai 1he DOrth-
ea,tt corner ol Main ~t' m! Ocean
Avenue.
An order .prohlbitlng the city from
barring entry to the building bad pre-
viously been issued by the superior
court.
City Atty. Dale BUib said today be
plans to We several actiana within a
week or eo to brine the iuue into
fun.bk examination by tbe court.
Buab said, "We wlil rake tJie prop-
er st.,ps to have the recent" errcmeout
declalon nverled." He added that
Friday's decision bas notblng to do
Bonnie Li
era of tbe bulldJn1 at 182-114
SL are MS'tba Holt and Mu
MtiselJ ·. Help . . . .
Is · . A vliilahle .
Vidlm., ........ ~ea-. ., ................ , ......
,., .. ,,. lillf ila Pd' .,_ ..... ,.
Bcm am .... .._ C.S-Vet
ic-... npmt ....... to ...
offldals ta , ....... It 111'1 w. ta
Palma Aw .... , ...... 1711.
.......... nm;, te belp with ·tt1e
H!i ...... of 6'lr ....... -to •ti-
tle tblir ...... cW1nl,.. Aid
Jamea E. ~l ' , 4lrecW ti •
..... -daln. ..,,. ...... ....,
al Mela Ila; .. _. ... ....
eaaet•11 ...... ...._ .... . ., ...
Pa ................... .
atrudui• a .. an ca lll!P11 .tar a
perCllll ..... ~.,.... flWD tbe
federal SIDall ..... .Mm ......
1lmL ,,. OJI $ 'I» raaltl ,,.. ..
bara area'a _., belll MpwW a
diAster .. ., .. SBA. wM2 IDIDI ..,_ ......... ..,.. ...
'w'g•~-....... wtat.-
ance.
Tbe'SBA_ ...aa ea be ~·at
tempenr:J ... at ml N. Jlrolld: ,,.,, .. Aaa, .,., GplD8d tDda1
-received 6 money bigs ~
from Coro a ~el Mar to"ay.
Was orie them yours?. -
Make Bonnie Undfo YoUr mnn .... mnnpen pat. Her•Bonnte Undla "'°"" ..
Bagi" art the envelopes like to save by mafl send to Glendale F9dlfl'll' I In Newport Beach. They're a venllnt and M#tJ way t> _..at the nation's
second largest Federal.,. and only Federally chm1119d, luplf\'flld Ind · '·
insured savings auoclatlon In Belch. Gee )10Ul' own tUpply
of "Bonnie Undlo Money Bag retum mall ... pcellrge paid
both weys. They're much more dable 1han meuaoes In bottles.
21~1 E. Plc:tflc Peat HI
(It ......, lodewnl)
Newport .. ch
Plto•s m-iaso
.•
. . ~
" .
. ,
MOftdly, Novtmbet 6, 1%7 DAJL Y PILOT 3
bnn.lnaUon to overcome our preeent
edYUlaie in strategic wtapona. ThJJ
diftlOpment prove11 1he Soviets Jo
• accept the notion, atlll popular in
.me American ctrcles, that m.llltary
teehaoloo standa on a. plateau."
CUrrtnt Dtfeme Department plans
are for a $5 bUlion Sentinel ahleld,
dlrected primarily at the threat ex·
peded to be poleil in the mo. by
tbe nlatively un.sopblltlcated Red
CbiDeae missiles.
But Sentinel will take three years C9 bQlld and, accord}U to Defense
s.cretary Robert s. McNamara, the
ltmlians may have the.tr o r b l t a l
bombardment system re~ to co by
~year. .
McNamara baa ateadfutly remt·
ed any U.S. ·COm.mltment to a more
extensive ABM system, ·one provid·
iq a thicker defense lbield .,.imt a
&sleep at WJteel
beny Soviet attack. He contends the
f'O blWon such a ayatem would COit
would be wuted Wcaaae tbilre ii no
shield· that caMOt ~ penetfatied by
an .offemlve miJalle. In any event,
U.S. 1uperiorit1 in offeDJive m.llllles
la enonDOUJ, be .• ., •.
But Jacluon claima Ruaaia'1 orbital
bornb 1y11em po1t1 a crave threat to
that superiorUy.
The new Soviet 'Weapon. be aald,
apparently, la dealped to evade the
U.S. defensive ayttem t.boup, ~ Mc-
Namara stated, Lt~ appareJLUy be
detected almost from lta firing point
by the MW U.S. ovei-the·horizon ra·
dar.
"It falla into the category of terror
weapons. This la the moat disturbing
aspect," said Jackson.
'lbe Wuhington Democrat said Sun-
day that it wu "wilbful thlnktnc" to
2 Countians Lose Lives
believe that the United States could
reach aereemeot with Rusala on Um·
ittnc nuclear arms. "Th~ alp.Weant point," be said, "ls
that the Soviet Union baa now led ~
way in the development of three nu·
clear weapona systems-the ICBM
(interconUnenW balllitic mlsJile), UMt
ABM (antiballlsUc miaaJle) and DOW
the FOBS (fractional orbital bomb6
ardment ayatem)."
Sen. John G. Tower (R-Tex.), llke
Jackson a member of the Senate
Armed Services Committee, aald the
Russian weapon meant "the United
States had better get into the defense
busine11 in apace in a big way-and
immediately. And if we cannot count
on the Adminntration to reallJe the
gravity of the altuation, Congress
muat limply tab natten -into its own band.I.,,
UCLA Drops
I
To4thMteri
ln F. reewa~ Accidents .l ~ ... .-aam.lfuldeat: Tying OSU
comp•tat qa1Dat Canon G. Colllu,
C...ty Traffic
Dea~ Ttb i• 111
1~ ela.DlaADa.
Federal Aid
Means Fewer
Road Deaths
SACRAMENTO -An utimated, 1,·
Jr.. za. of 2SI02 Hoover St., Oranae.
wu killed e•ly this morning when
be apparently dozed di while drivlDC ~ near El B<rno St. San Juan 200 traffic accldenta will be prevent-
Cilpllt.rao ' • ed bec&Ul8 of the federal iovern· · . meat's apparent declalon not to with· Hambley, • sailor based in San Di-bold highway comtntctlon fUnda from •Co. nn into the rear of a truck. Its California next year, a at.ate offtclal
driver, Joe Martinez, +l, of Wasco, declared today.
Calli., wu not held. Gordon c. Luce, atat.e tecretary for·
Gary D. Jacobson. 28, of Garden bustoe11 and trauportation, referred
Grove, WU tilled early Slturdly to • itltement by TrllllJlpOl'tation Sec-
wben bis car aJammed Into a guard retary Alu Boyd that diabunement nil. in tbe Torrance area. lifter ht too of u much as half ol future federal
appaeaa, fell uleep, accordlnc to iu,bway c:cmtruct1an r.da mipt be
the CHP. 1ndeftnltely delayed.
'rbe Hambley tatalitJ brou&bt the ''One ol the ultimate evill 1he ftnan-~Ttd toll 1• 0,.-aqe County lo four. cla1 slowdoWD woWd have caUMCl in
qtbera occurred Friday J11Cbt. California ii 1,_, traffic accldeatl,"
Al ~ alUinnatb .'l. one .of them -lAJce explained, "'and people would
on Brfltol street at Segenitrom Way have beta killed or terloualy injured
ill Jlnta Ant -Santa Ana police to-in at Jeat tao of them.
(Even if you
didn't know it.)
Tennnsee moved one atep forward
and UCLA took two atepa backward
aa the Voluotffrs replaced the Bruins
in the runner-up poaltlon behind South·
em Cellfornia on the latett dec:tion
day in The AslOclated Pren' major·
coneae football poll today.
1be Top Ten, with fint..ptace votes m pareothe8ea, aeuon recorda and to-w pointl OD a 10.9-8-7~2-1 b~is:
1. Southern California 39 8-8 399
2. Tennessee 5-1 D
3. North Carolina State 8-0 28.1
4. UOLA 6-0-1 274
5. Purdue 1 g.1. 248
&. lndlana 7-0 1m
7. Wyomlnc 8-0 ~
8. Oklahoma 5-1101
9. Notre Dame 5-2 •
10. Bmtca 5-2 If
~ recelvinl vcMI, listed alpha-
beticairy: Alabama, Army. Flodda
State, Georiia. Miami, Fla., MiJlne. •ota.. Ore&oa Stat., Penn State, Syra.
cu1e, Tuai, Yale.
You may be surprised that people own the Gu Compeny (11 they do-_, lllf_,,.
owned company-in America). All kinda of people, from all walb ot life.
You can own a share in the Gas Company i.Q one of two way& Fint, yoa could
buy a share, for something around $30. That'• the direct way. Or, if you looked
into it, you might find that your penaion plan. life insurance or union is a Gu
Company owner. And thus, eo are y~ in an indirect way.
Either way, the Gu Company worb for you. Aa an investor-owned oompey •
. regulated by the California Public Utilities Commia-..
sion, we depend upon ¥our support. And every day we ~
do ~ur t>.est tl> ~ it. • -" · A ..
80UTHERN CCUNT19 QI. OONIPAH'I
~~-tN'9ClllD~ •
~ • i
1
I
I
4 OAll Y P'll.OT ...... eh .. IF 6, 1"7
~ .. ,,. .. -.~ .......... -:1 -..~. '
111\ree-time iDeht ~· winner • Bobby Schnlhlt, 1', tUmtnariJ.1 IUI·
71 pended from San Anlelmo. Calli:;
• • • Boy Scout Troop 125 becaUll he
ref used to hne &ii aboulder·lenlth
hair cut, said he isn't I hippie 6ut
"a kid who ll.kea being a Boy
Scout." •
CAPS DNNB.DY, P'lL (AP) -A • .....,.,._. "p 1 D b a 11" aat.elllta
MIN4 ~ tbt tlobt toda1 ...
llacCelalU1 •aid to one of America'•
buttlt IP9Ce "'"·
-Strike Delayed
By Meatcutters;
Talks Continue
B<J%Ur tM boudt hound ii ont hi·fi
fem '°"'° bod Md "" earful -an fa.ct bo"' ton fvll -111 the Lot A"Ot~'
Hig1' ficklftv Show dntO ta G dole
S•l'ldor· fh did1&'t '"" '""' to core ~ iJ G VJOOfrr ii a dog crlld f "'°'''° rri.a~~~ftOt.
•
Rogtr PatffrtOn spent the week·
end in Los Angeles preparin1 to
return to Eureka today where be
allegedly made a plaster cast last
week of a footpnnt of Northern
Calirornia's 1 e c end a r y ''Bigfoot
Monster." The cut, twice u big u
Patterson's own me 10 feet, be-
longs to the "hairy female beast"
or "one of her kinlol.ks,'' Patterson
insisted.
•
Herbert C. Little of Charles-
ton, W. Va., just bun't been
able to explain the ah1ft from
daylight saving time to atand-
ard time to bis mixed·bC'eed
pup, Snoopy. The h<Nnd \lied
h> take up-his 'ri,gll by the gate
to hia pen at 4:45 p.m.~ waft·
ing to be fed at 5 o'clock. Now
he appears at the feedinl spot
at 3:45.
•
Mrs. Brenda Spencer is just p<>s-
sibly one of the only Oalifornians
ever to make a Superior Court
judge her !>ook.ie. She,__ in effed,
made an even money oot on her
ex-husband's Dec. 16 wocld'1 heavy-
weight champiooship match again·
st Jerry Quarry. U Thad Spencer
wins she gets $10,000. Thars the
deal the Oakland judge agreed to,
as an alternative to her acceptance
of a $5,000 lump sum alimony set·
tlement on the spot in her divorce
suit culminated in his court. She
gets nothing if be loses.
Poverty War Rages
~ ..
WASHINGTON (UPI) -'Ibe bittet'
fight over Prealdent John1on'1 war on
poverty headed for the House noor
this afternoon with a Republican ac·
cuslng the Democratic leadenhlp of
dooming the proposals to "torture
and mutilation."
Traffic Slows to a
Heavy Snow SquallS Hit Northea.tBn StaUI
S11n, Mooa, TUia
TUHOAY
Finl lllOll . •• •• . • . • • 2:JO a.m. U
Finl lclw • •• • . . •:fl • m. J.A s.econd lllgll IJ:'4 1t.m. S.2
5e<ond !Ow • • • . . . . . l::M p.m. 4.1
~ ·-12:11 p.m. s.t& 10:1' p.m .
'" .... •:17 ··"'· lets 4:$7 '·"'·
F.lnl &. P:llfl ~I O. /, New
Hew. I Hew. .. Hew. 24 Otc. I
co .. tai
l'911t varleble winds becoml"V ~" .. -1 It to 1' kflllt& "' eft..--...,., ...-TWINY. Ver·
le)le clolldlftnl wllll -pelel\Y
•• ,,., montlllg foe llul "'°""" -..,,._
Valtnlrf'I ..,,,,.,.1vree -• e
111911 flf a eNI e IClw ftl ... TIM -
..... ..,.ivr. -"~
_. In IN a.. 0.M'h _. "*'""
-Wffll oea.lolltl dOUd"--Temwetvr• rtllCMf II In ll#el Vt lltY& eM • Ill ..... Vlllfn. A poulMNIY tA ,.Ill Ill Gllltrel C.11-
forftle, llul ceftllnved dry ... en.r II• loutNrn C.llforllt. elld """'9'•
IWn M-•I ..,_ ebow --· .. 1111 ~ ..,. .......... .....,
Ill' Ille U.S. W..!Mt hrff~.
IJ.S. s .........
Httvy -...-11& ~ .., IO
2 .... fA -......, Nefll ~ .. , .... ....., .......... ~ .,.,
eelftrn lllOru ol Ille or .. t Uk4J. Ti.....,...,."" 11\ef• _...,"'
Mn! ....,.,.IV<'et PlvftoinO -tlrouOllt l,.lfk '9 1 crewl.
flle ert• llerdftt 1111 WU lflt •&I•
tm ,,_ fll Lea. !rlt 111 Mrtl!Wt&I
Ollie •llf ,__.iwlll• •1111 •lefre.,.,. ......,,. ....., v--. the 11.,.m ClumP.
"'., lftcNt., -.. ~. Olllo, tM 21 lllCIMI el llMYYlllto H,V, TwolNtofMOWWe&~en
Ille l'Mlll •• ~ .. Nf1Mrfl
··---"""'
,.
:NUoR ·.Predicts Rough
.
In Order to Win GOP • • ominatton
1t • : i • • » • JI ...
JI • G .. • • .... " . " .... • •
NationalGnard
Strength· Upped
To Control Riots
: : WASHINGTON (UPI) ..:_ DeftDM
: : SecretarJ Robert s. McHaaan au-: = t11111 bled the National Gurd todaJ to
0 •• ..-... 1J5 .... ud ~ -to pro-
• • ride tniDl!d trOOll' far "" coatrol. • • "' • .......~ llpecl • order' permtt-: : ti11C lbe Natiollal GUlll'd ..S .the or&ID-
" .. .... ..., reaen9I .. atlMd bJ 3
: : percmt tbe total abmltb autbotlaed
11 .. for tblm bJ Collar-. '!'bl autboriled ~ : .-ncm-an 400,000 far tbe pard and
11 • --for the reafr'ftt.
n " " • "ID tM cue of tbe ArrW NaUonaJ : : a a a r cl, tbe 3 peran& addlUoaal
lt D ::-:: will be Ulld prilnllrt1J to pef'-~ : :1hmentcn:ua10:. ~~.: ~ : -IJDAller) reqllated to eccGmpliab state
11 a ml.lslGm." tbe Pentacon aafd. :J : " There wu no muMdlate 1tatement
" ., about where the new unltl would bt :! : .a formed. lndicaUon1 ,,ere that &bey wlll
•• • be iD states where rlot1D1 la Consider·
: : eel a JIOl&ibllltJ or where f!ie NltJon·
... 12 al Guard wu deprived of combat unlfj
,"/ : ba a recart nationwide reoreanlzrtio~
chart the likely winner in
They feel, howev~, that u
Cout governor, Reagan willlb1N
•troai support la the 1tate.
ltrength there II untested.
SOME CHANGES
Nixon carried Oregoa. alo
New Hampshire, Wisconain,
Nebrub and South Dakota
loring 1960 race for the Dn!l!~!Y
Daughter
·ro Testify
Salem Riots
Ebb, Guard
I
Force Cut
in an
Sun-
n for Ne po
• wtiUt
drunk
olence
with John F. Kenned)'. Bat ei&ht
)'M11 ban made ICllM ~ that
are ciuncwt for tbl polltical ltrate-
liltl to compute.
A1l1 prbnarJ .Weep by Nlzall would
be celou1attd to •ue the "can't
win" label pOIDed' m bim an.r bia
1te2 defut for iovemor iD CaltlarnLa.
It a1Jo mjpt lnfhMnre P1i't1 moder·
ates to tab a frelh loot at wbeN
Nlzon ltandl on tbe iuuel.
Tbe GOP IOV•liar-wbo llltl blm·
..... madlratll bat bu .willbeJd
coallDitmeat to U7 .... ndld. taid u Niz"• ,... the prlmmiM Md t,or..
pedoet RomDlt'• cban191, tlM mode ena. m10t wtn 11ne up beJi1bd the former vice pruid«Dl a1 an ~
tin to a.a,~
Life A~es
s~·Ethics
Of 'Whiteumh'
Plyinouth Mail
Trial Launched
BOSTON (UPI) -A willowy, blonde
laoaltwtfe aad two men 10 Oil trial todA1 eccUled ol beln1 part of t h e aaac tbat pulled the Mtlon'1 tarc .. t
cub ~. ·tbe fU lllilUon Plym· outbMlll~. ·
TbolDa ~· ~ '1, and J 0 b ft J. KtlltJ. II. boat ~Dted b1 DO-t.J defeue • ..._,. r. Let Dalley,
ud Mn. P•trlela Dtaf. erlot 32, a moth-er ol four, ,,... lbdicttd.Jul.J 31, Jmt
two ... belon tbe aplradon of the m,. .. federal atatut. °' llmltaU.ona.
TM tdal •• ......_.,ed to open bl U. 8. Dlltrtet Court at 10 a.tn. EST.
Altboaita a mAIQ N 110 post.al tn.
vt1U&1tor1 were at one point wort•
Inc on Ute cue, noae ol the loot, con.
1l1Un1 of used bllla oC rlnall denomln·
aUona, haa n• beela. recovered. Of.
fldala admitted earlW this· year th•
coat of the lnveatigatlon had far ex·
ceeded th• amount Wien ln ttie rob-~. \ -.. -
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m
rf
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U!
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llJ
tr
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bt
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at
w to
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pa
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pre
set
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wh
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fro
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1
for
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the
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of ...
-
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'' .
.,
I LEN GRAD. USSR
With paint and
government bas graCeful old city
to oelebrate the
fA>th versary ol .the rev-·/
oluti it gpawned. A lot of
resid ts couldn't care less.
· ol historic buil •
the formw capital of /, Ruuia sport new
paint jobs In pinks
Jlowa and bluee with f
trim.
gna, post.era and slogans
to hail 50 yews of
unist power.
t night, gas torches
flame oo the parapets of ·
Peter and Paut Fortress,
cl1'5tllig an oily glow on the .
waters of the River Neva.
In front of the massive
green and white winter Pal-
ace, where Lenin's Bolsh~
viks captured the Russiib
provisiooel government ¥d
seized power in 1917, w~k
men put the finishing touch·
es on a huge reviewing s;md
where Soviet leaders , Will
hold forth during a sJ19Cial
commemorative visit. ,
In the wee hours '1 the
morning the broad, clean
streets echoed last week
with the sounds of annies on
the move, just as t!rif did in
the autumn of 1917.
But today the measured
clomp of boot on bryck came
from troops rehearsing for
jttliilee parades.
The official preparations
for the celebrations were
hectic but the· anniversary
c a u ~ e d little excitement
among the 3.6 million inhab-
itants of Leningrad.
Mostly, life goes on nor·
mally.
In the glum early mom·
gs, thousands of. sour-
' aced workers pack like sar-
. dines into trams and sub-
ways on their way to work.
Well-dressed scboolr ·chil·
dren lay wreaths at th~
countless monuments to
Leftin and other heroes of
the revolution that dot the
city. .
,\nci in ·the early nights. tn ~ chill rain, huge crowds
of Leniograders, who seem
uturally more open and
ious than their coun-
. eu in Moscow, flow
ering up and down the
Nevsky Prospekt.
"Yes, the celebrations.'' !axi driver said in halt·
J'!n$?lish. "It's a big oc·
, but ... 0 and shrug· ..
b shoulders.
. ~y young Leningrade~s
more interested in
g rorward than back·
at events of the past.
.v jam youth cafpc: like
Beliye Noch.i (White '
) tO talk and do the
ist. The clothes are ersatr
od. the music rock 'n' ro,
I\ the hair ts sha~gy. ·
"'What this countrY needs.
kie youtfr'said. liJs less ta
&nd more actlofl." .
~ may not know
t free delivery
ith all popular
quors, winet and
· es-alw•1l ple on ~ce.
1 us ml.lfl, c s, dips,
rty meat.a an spreads,
& clgaretl Ask him
o er for a drink · d call us
a ft"OO demo tration of
o great denv4) . Call 646-
791 1 E-Z-lh-T · quor, Pla·
ce~a-19th, a Mesa.
I
I
I
I
l I I I
I I
• MondlY, November 6.1967 DAJLY PILOT &
Had Its Moment • Ill History 50 Years Ago
iag B•mten 1bougbt w I t b one of tbe world's ttro au-Nevertheless, poOOcaUy
de:macntlc Ideal. pe(-powera. the Soviet Unfon belongs
At lllll time Jhwi•• From a nation . ..._ cw back in another age. It is,·
11.mpq lo¥eca ibeir....,..... wu getttq advict from a despite all the things that
ftkS W beea blnlb ad. ao-caDecl mad mont, Rupu· iqay be said in its favor, a
bndal -au of a.n u-: tin, RuaaJa bU 'JM,trated political despotism. The peo· ~ tbe elite. How theJ love space. The roa8'lll b' Uiat pie have no sense of democ-it,... .. ,.-of It, wJib llr-tb at tbl"Scmla·b ave racy or self-rule ltdvea for.act...,. la 1C1f · , --~ma lllBllld ---~ But, for that matter,
-. • •6-tbeJ · throughout their hiJtoey
Jl • 11 IA ,,_ --_. ...,. trted tie ..... alll& ill1ti-they never did. And under
,...................... tnq:~·edqcllellemall-stalin, who executed almost
...._.._a lll1; ..w a II_.. -. UYIDC e-11• dolt"t all his old Bolshevik coat.em ...__,, . _,.. ,,.. ·-u . . am ..i, tt .. t1llllld 9llY .... a.. 8"ieb porar1es, the Soviet Union
....._ J'ND a utiali .i-U.. ~ •1Ddul-had one of the wont terror
ao1t IDldilmll Ill.., tr'Jad.,._..~ reigns in history. ...,. a m7 a .. hc••w lllOCllt By simply surviving it be-
came a bulwark of world
communism which g r e w
elaewbere as the years pass-
ed. But while the Soviets
preached Marxism t be y
have never i chieved com-
munism.
While encouraging com-
muniam elsewhere and ev·
en impolbig it -as they
d i d in Eastern Europe -
tbey are now denounced by
the Red Chinese as the be·
trayers of communism and
Marxism.
Sunday, two days before
the revolution's anniversa-
ry, Red-China's major news·
•• ·emore1ts
papers called the Soviet
leAders renegades. Tbt Chi~
nese ctalmed they, anc;t not
the Soviet Union, are n o w
the focal point of commun·
lBm.
Jand in the mlddle of the 17·
th Century, the French rev-
olutton in the 18th cen-
rury when tbe Jacobins had-
their own reign of terror,
Hitler's mad regime which
followed the German revolu-
tioe-after World War 1-all
.ev,entuall;y were replaced by
m~~ate, democratic s~ eties,
Will the Soviet U n i o n
change and become a demo-
cratic IOCiety with no die·
tatorshipt It willt '-JC it f~·
lows the pattern bf tbeljiijiiijiiiiiiiiii great revolutiODI of modern
times. Those revolutions
have been m ovl n g from
West to Eut .
All of them wel'9 U.rta·
id starting out -ctOmwell'a
Puritan ~volution in Enc·
m._1s ··._•ep cba11ging,
. e· better die
·Merce.des~BenZ 250Sl0o . .
..
The new '68 models are out, and.now's the timi wbeA milUcm.tl, people mah the bis
decision on their nat car.
In ~ $6,700 class, sboUld JOU buy one
of the all-new, alJ.different dreamboats?
Or should JOU buy the almost unchangfd
Me~BenzlS()S?
The dreamboats will "do more for your
ego. 'But the 2SOS will do more fer your
dri$.g, your pocketboOk-and your~
of mind.
Nonew-carllllp
The ms has stayed unchaoirf since its
I 1965 ~t. It's free of the "bugs" that (:811
keep its all-new rinls shuttling beck and
forth-to the shop for adjustments.
And because Merades-Bcm refuses to I play the "planucd obsoJescmce" game. JOU
enjoy another relid: the ~ that
your 2SOS won't suddenly be ahoved out of
date, just when it's nic:dy broken in. Its
l~k.s are mt.ant to stay JDOde? for.~
Behind the ballyhoo
Strangely enough, your 250S is fitted with
more. tnJe engi.neerina advances than any
of those ars that boast of beins "all new"
every year.
Perhaps it's not so snan,e at all. Most
car makers are so busy dttaming up ways
to make their products look. new that they
ignore fundamentals.
"People can't su than-so wh, bother
making big technical improvements?"
seelllS' to be the attitude.
· Mercedes-Benz bothers-because
~Benz believes a car sbauld be an
efficient machine, not fashion merchan-
dise. And devotes it.s mginceriog brains to
perfectina that dl"rieocy.
Th~ telbna proof
Dri~ the 250S after you'11e spent a few
miles in one of its $6,700 rift1s.. It's the
sURSt, most dramatic proof JOU can find
of what tedmital superiority means in an
automobile..
Seek out the kind of potholed back road
you'd try to avoid in ordinary can. Don't
spare the 2505: aim for the bumps and dips.·
An amazing thing happens. YOU stay in
your seat, the wheel stays in your hands,
.
Tiu Merctufu·B~ ZSOS-an investmau, not an Indulgence. Clip coupon for more facts. -..
and the 250S never wavers or pitcheS or
rattles. Things are uncannily calm.
You're riding on an uncanny, fully inde-
pendent suspension system. Steering with
a recirculating-ball mechanism that lias its
own shock absorber built in. Cradle!i in
a,rigid "unit" body that has been welded
10,000 times, studded with rubber cushions,
studied with a· stethoscope to find and kill
the structural Baws that mean noise~
Mercedes-Benz engineers think these
advances mean more than all the st}'ling
frills OD earth.
Braket that don't (ade
. Tbe2SOS glides serenely over smooth roads,
of coune. In fact, an American writer in
Germany reported, "There is as little inside
noise at 100 mph as at a standstill."
But say an emergency arises. Can you
atop?
You can stop the 250$ so well that brake
fade is almost unknown. The car draws
down to smooth, straight-line stops-stop
after stop after stop. Check the technical
specifications: brawny, 101..;-inch disc
brakes are bolted to all four wheels. There
is even a tiny valve in the brake system to
balance front and rear braking forces. And
a p«>wer assist does the work-not your leg
muscles .
A note of reassurance: Mercedes-Benz
mounts tires to the 2505 that have be.en
test-proved safe, even in continuous JOO
mph cruising under maximum load at
normal air pressures. And mounts them as
standard equipment.
is it big enough 1
Check the dimensions of the 2505 and you
may ask, is it big and roomy enough-as
roomy as those sleek $6,700 rivals?
The 2505 is more compact than other
cars in its class. Two feet shorter overall,
for example. But so sane is its design, so
shrewd the use of interior space, thBt it
matches them for room in all vital respects.
And as you'd expect, the 250S provides
rich physical comfort. Seats are deeply con-
toured and plumply padded. A built-in
ventilation system lets you enjoy con·
stantly replenished fresh air when all win-
dows are shut.
And as you'd also expect from Mercedes·
Benz, the finish is superb. No flaws or jag·
ged edges. Even the underside of the dash
has been fully trimmeCl How nice, to own a
car you can be proud of.
From SZS, 785* to S4.Z84*
You may be able to afford a Mercedes-Benz
without knowing it. Below are suggested
retail prices* for 7 of the 13 Mercedes-Benz
models:
600 Grand Mercedes - - - - - -.$25,785
2SOSE Coupe ••• -• -· -·-. -·-9,210
2SOSL Roadster -• - - --• -• -6,568
230SSedan ·--·-·--··-··-5,143
230Sedan .... "·-·-·----·-4,511
200 Diesel Sedan • -• -• -•• -• -4,493
200 Sedan .......... -- -.... -- 4,284
~ut Cocst port of .ntry, uclusillc of tronSportllllolt cNuiu,
of'floru, sUIC ~ loccl WLJ if <ln)I,
Note: Mercedes-Be.nz pioneered many
important safety features, UWlY years ago.
Dual circuit brake lines, disc brakes and
other items have been standard equipment
for years, too. But work continues to make
Mercedes-Benz; cars even safer-both in
avoidina trouble, and in protectina you if
trouble should occur.
Olp coupon for brochure
Find out even more about the 2SOS-cllp
and send the coupon below and get your
free, 28--page color b~ure.
Qr better yet, visit our showroom soon
for a test drive in the unchanged, unri·
vaned Mercedes-Benz 2505. --
······-···························· • Jlm Sleme111 Imports rnc.,
120 West Waner Avenue
Santa Au, · CallfonJa ff7f11
Please tend me the me 23-page brochure
OD 6 Melceda-Beoz models.
Name
Address
• City • . -------: State
• . =------• Zip • ••••••••••••••••••
C Copyrisht 1967, Mercedes· 8ellJ
ot North A.muica. I.nc .. N. J.
• • • • • •
JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS, INC., 120 West Warner Ave ., Santa Ana, Calif. Phbne: (714)-546-4114
----· ...
f MILY PILOT ............ 1"7
Costa Mesa's Monthly HONOR ROLL~WHO'S Wli.0:·1
I
CITY DIRICTOftY OF THE CLASSIFIED MIMllRSHIP. ROSTER OF THI COST• MISA CHAMliR OF C M
Dlremry of Bualne11, Profetalonll, Induatrlal. Semce IDd Wboiuaie 1lnna and Inc!Jv1daaJJ ta tbt Cotta M• llttropolltlD Tradtq Are•
1 •
IOlllT J. TOlllT. .......... MC& HAMMm, A1hl llr•••· 'IMOMAI CHANIMll. ....._ ......., ,....., ~ ............ ...... .......... c.... .._~ .... ,,.. ...
YICI CHAllMAN f •tllMT CIWIMAJI
A..... C1 In.. ef C.... "-e C-.... ~ ef Ce IJM ....._ CH lrtN ef c.... ile. a.... ef Ce ' I .... 0.... 1, 19'7 te s.,..-. .. It, 1f'8 a..... ef Cem11 I U
Aviation and the operation of our Orange County Airport a mstJtute one of the major industries ln the C:O.ta Mesa
areL When appointing Tom Olandler Chairman and Bob Thrbet Vice Chairman of tbe Olamber's newly formed Avi&.-
tlon c.omndttee, PnlSdent Hammett atated, "'It-Is time that this section of Qrup County live recognlUon to ttUa
sleeping indua1rtaJ giant In our mldlt. The Airport coven 525 acres. hOUlel over[€tel,y owned planes, and laat year
ranked )ltk in tbe •tion In« .,.....ta, Two airlines p-ovide 23 flic,bta .-clll to ftlioal '"'tern dU., lncluct. tnc Sao l'tUldlco. s.n Dleco. r.-~ P11om1x and Las ~ •• ~ c.nmw. wm meet wtth om.. dM ol the Cauatr, GI tbe ~.. __.. paupa end the --. to tlle 0
.... _....... and ..._
tuce .. :--:-..... pr1•1-I ...... Uy caal:ronl w. ,...._ ·s a c ..-,.n -.. ~ .......
OOfft 24 ~..!.!!'!: on a z!!Mwn4 b , ...... ~~-5'S-MI O. "'*-l'ra 1• Aa.tM
COLLI OU Souttwn Cellfof'llll Col9M ,. , ,,.
Or. O. C. Mel ~
1S2S "-'
COLLIOIS-IUMlotl
0r-CM1t ce1111e •m• 21t't ~ K Dt • .....,. L ~ .... Dr.,,__,._ ••W-Dlll. Der ..... Clelllllt .,.... It. ICtell-Ollll " ...... ~
COMMlllAaY "'9 9"CW.tSn ('"""""91 OlllN .....,.
J.K.--~tttPU..
C~f,NYtM •. w. McCtleea .... ....,., w.c.o.o-r 1Sl c. ....... ..,
~nu °"__.. ..... Del,..... 0-.. ,.._,..
C~STII Cel Cl"' (lllllr"9 Cl. '1Hnl IC.O. .-...o... al'-,...,_ ,_,_ .....
,....~ .. .. a-.c.w ...... --.~ ..., C. T. Wetn11 V" --~~,.,
~KTRIC ·-•ledric ~ '#. J. ic..... ow.-.. w. 11111
CCMTUCTOU ••ll'lAL ._ ••• o.Mt'lll ... ...,, .,
s.itMrll C.l1flmle ...... c. I(. •Idle,.. ow-
1• ~ Ml9 J1S
"" .. 94/llMrl~ •. II'. Gamtt. ,.,.._ MD H....,
W.T.~ OMl~C...
1712 WeltmlMtllr Ave. Wn""'""" .... 142 lo .,....,
0-w~llM"lu~~-C..
772"71• G. DllNfY °"""' 21• M..._ ~ MliNllll o.ot•M.Helllttlft&S-~ 0-.. M. ""8Wlll 111 ,.,._ '"' .... ""' ''"" •• A. IMf Olel C-lnidtoll Co. -.IDL W-u '•h' ...._ ~-142 &1'7.-2
Gordon G. MlwillWUlll • ~Inc. Gordon o. Mell! .... ,, ,.,.......,
SC2·72P7 .a Welt a.-cw ...
J. o. bY ""-,. hit "'" •. J.1tey~C.,..wrll Sefltll &~det ,......,..., lllltttutlOMI 14f.tt11 "'*"' ........ ltldlenl McAMnl o.r.r.-. ......
a.ltll Co.t ~ Ce.
"'""'' w. ~-,.,.., 1111 ...., lt1'Wt
K. J. "Jlmmlt" Wied~ • lulldtr •• UMllt
Ill .. .._ '""" COMTUCTOltt-f'A.llrT .... a
OltYWALL. a..w Inc. s.unt C. M. Ew!M ,.,.., l'O ._ 1a1
CCMmlACTOU-a9MOOCl.1..._
ALHUTIOMI
AllM lllllden 60~ ._ II'. Gerntt ,.,_ UD "-t
c~o•~M•n Mn.u. .. ~ Menuf•dvl'lne ~1UI t.Wte~ $1"1 lo $llt9I Moetel
"· D. ~ °""'*' 1612 5-rlor \.OMVALUCINT MOl .. ITAU kYYltw Coml•ltt<*'lt ~ .. 6049IS MS Tllurlll Street c.fe ,,_. C.CW-'--1 .._,.. ..
~ 6'1 Ctnter ltl'Mt kine C.W•lllcent .... 11.1 ~ f .... ~. Admtnlttrttor 1•w.r wwrrttt. IMI• Nia
~ COIMSTICI. ~Cl _,.. ....... ~
,,,., .. HanNfl C-11ca '4MDIM
•ulfl .,..,.,., Owner tn l!'Ht 17111
COIMSTIC MAWl'ACTURllt
IMe CeoltY ee.n.t\ca ,Inc. '41-m> s.r1 Ceo1eY ,. ...... "'9 ,._.,.,... Aw.
COUllCILMl....C:ITY 01' COSTA MIU.
Wiiiert T. "-*~vor ~ -WINerf T. Jorden Al'Clllttclt
Cahltn Ilardi. Vic:...<Mvor SM-Dl7
-HIWMl'ltt
A l . l"l'*iey• C.CIUftClllNll ~1 -~
llOblrt M. WllMft, Councllm'" -"""'"'' -~ o..... A. Twaw. C-'lr'Na
~ 16CI Mlf>orce Of'.
~:ml COUNTU CLUa Mttt v ..... Ceumy Ctw s.41171
s. G«lntc; Oen. ""''. JllllCll* .._ •d.
CltATIMO
l"r.-f'•ll Crate Ct. s...w F. E. Decbn <>-r ... W. 11111
CHOIT Rll'OaT•e Crtdlt lurttU et W.lttrn or ..... CountY .-c1 J. Mtwtt Mer. 7" w. Miii
DATA .. ltOCllllNe lt1 ... rt1H O .. t CM!let•fltn 6<1t-1'U
J. 14tllleflno ''"· t2I> Ft lrvlew !Id.
OATA l"•OC:Ull ... llRVl(I
ICl'f' .. UNCM T•NNIN•
HtrMf SYl!tme l!~lltt MW9'j
ll. D. Cloud 111 mt Herilet
Suite tit
OILICATIHINI K.i..,•• Hou1t -' Ctrfted 8tef JJ3J arttivl-5olltll Cot•I ,.,.re
Abr ....... kffl•"• .,.,~ .. 2M2 OlllTAL L.A.0.AT~Y
Sout!I Coat! l)<lfltel Labera!Or1
54f.2002 ... D. "°"" c.-t
""" Tout, c-r Wm. SNk..,..ere, C-WM "-1 al¥d.
37.SOO PER MONTH -450,000 PER YEAR DISTRIBUTION OF THIS MONTHLY DA l·L Y PILOT
.. \ .. ..
r.wo PAGE
~. ffi1t.f ,.,. t.t.41M
,.~--MELW. E. MJUB
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CAll It. IOSWILL, A4Mlmttl¥•
AMhtt...._...I_., S.l'tllc.t
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JOHH H. COHHILL, ''"'"••t
C..-1 a..w.let
JOHN '· INDICOTT ilM9"'-Y1ce llrultl...t
ltMMt lkctrMlu Cer,.retl••
WHNll QCHll ' Direct., ef "'Wk l•latleM
A+ft•tf• a ........ Cef,-rttf"
Mloll• SyiteN DM1I••
JOHN C. UOHHAllDT. Ow11.•r c •••• Of•petY ~ ...
SOI.DON A. MAlTIH, OwHr ~S..1~M~&tetn
ROY M•qAltDLI. ltatlter
W•ll1 eJ McCt~le lffftan
DIRICTORI
MRS. LUCILU ''NICLEY,
C..OWMW """'-Cott• Me••
"-er111ny •
DOMINIC RACITI, Ow11er
Cede M•H Jewelry •"" LN11
NATI lEADE, Ow11er
Hori.et Tire elNI Service Cuter
JACK REINERT, Ce.OW11er
lel .. rt' • o.,e!'f111e11_t St0to
KHM RIMA, Ow~.,
K•rm lll111a He,.were
MELVIN I. SCHINKll; Dirtciot
A .. nrtlalq tlMI '11lllle Rel•tlont
Collh11 Retllo Co1111p•11Y
JOSl'H H. STEEtMAN, 'ro1ltl011t C>nte Ce1111ty lanlr
RAY WALLACE, Sectat.,.,.e....,.1 ....... ..,
Coit• WeH C...ty Wat. District
CONN&L amv&OLl'rS TURN . .:-On September 30, JohD Connell, left, Presideat tL Connell Chevrolet,
~ keys to the new Ottlclll C<* Mesa Chamber of ~e car f\>r tile <Jiamber's ~ year rt, 1967 to September 30, 1988 t1> Chamber Pl'elldent ~ Geiser (Sept. 29, 1967), center and Nick
1.ieaer, l:lecutive Manager. Elell year a different local car dealer. ~umisbes the Chamber with JD. "Official
Car." Al Geiser Rid, "John CODDell'1 1enen.ity in. donating tbe uae of this car for a 12 month period is typ-
bl of the interest and type ol aigl'elllivenees which lw built 4he Chamber's Membership and strength to
itl presen! high level ol leldenhip and.one of the fut• growing Chambers in Orange County."
....,..,.. ..... "4-1119
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llUTAURANTS -C&.aAMINe
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1taSTAUllANT~N ·~ COrrt 2n3 F•lrvlew, It. l . ,.~.,. OWner
HSTAUllANT MINUt
lttt"'ur•nt AMnlll crt All!lrlC:t Sll!lllY "O;" AlnaMW, 0Mw ~,;I lttrbor IMS., ..... Ma
USTAUltANT TAVIU
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MlllOll W. May, Ownw
173' '-"°'
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Crri lrol. ltOOflftl ~
0. Crank Pru.
12' C-relal W•'f
lM ltooflftt Co. 1'35 5-lot Aw.--441-1122 Vernon U., Owner
RUIHll nAMPS a • I ltUllller Sltmpe & l"rllll .. ~ M. • E. ~ Ow!wa ., w. lflll It.
llUHllM C~laCTIOtl De•r• ltllbbllll Service 6Cl-11tl
H. J. Oltlnt, 0-
2113 c.-IAl"ITY IQUll"MIENT
v. •. ""*'-Ce. 60..sm o. ~-°"" v.~. ,.. w. '"" &AIUOo\TS Meutate Syateml
1f1' Plocantle--5•3-
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SAil LAUNDllY 6 ltll"Alll
ll"ICIALISTS 6 MAltllla
SUl"l"Llls-aOtta & SAIL Cl.OTN eoas1 Mtl1ne se ... a. Sef'vtc:e
Jtlwl c. l.MllMr'6 0..-2065 Chtrte 11.-t-'O-SMI
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knll*\I a.er OW-81'-"4CM11J 1711 l'i-ila -WllllMI A.
smith. P""*"'· ICallll I . Carll~. vtc.~8"*"' IAVINOS AND LOAN
ASSOCIATMNIS
Callfllt11l1 i:.dtr•I S.vlftl• a. l•11
Au«l•tlon S.."°9 vet Hedler
C. M. WesdOrl ANf, 'VP I. Mir· o_., Stvl"llll I. LOllll Auoc.
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20C W.Jtcllfl Or. N.1.
Marlnet'1 Stv""9 I. lOllll A-.
6<12..-0 T. llok• b. VP, Mfr.
1S1 s Welldlft Or. .. •••
Muluel S.vlftlt & l-Anoe.
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Wm. It. StmmoM, Mall-
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Pacttk; Savinll & L-AN«ltlloft ~ arlJllDI Strlfl. so. co .. 1
Pfau. Joe l'-.-.arenei.
INllHtr -~ lAW l"°I" AND HllVICI •• .,., Sew Sllotl 646-7*
RtY illacluNll Owlltr 2122 Hartlet ~NOOL-VOCATIONA'-'CIY·
PVNCtlo-OATA ll'tlOCllllH
Harbor btllllll Enllrprltes
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Jofln McN-a. 0-.r tlC\IRITIU Robttt E. Htrllltoft
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IHVICI ITAftOtl 6 IAIAel
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Ctcll E. C11rry. Owlllr Siii.ViCi STATIOff & COMl"llTa
l"1tavaNTATtV• MAINTSMANCI
HllVICI
lt•nltlll't Swer SllOll Smllct JUI Hertler llW~ H~ I . lt.,.lfto Jr .. 0--
llltVICI ITATIOM
e.ucM.INI 6 Oil lrld'f'• vui.. $llOll s.rvic.
J4t.17AI L.. J. Ir~ °""* 104$ 11 Comlllt c a J rnco '9fwlel ••• J. l..i. Glulel OW.. Jiii ust 17'1t
Les Carlw It lcMltld
MJ ... ,., ""' -s-..u Lfflty v. Cl,. -o-w. Doll'• AllWf'lclll ~ H. W, (Oonl 1<"'11 OWlllr 1llt Herber
bAJL Y 'Jt.OT 7 ·
CLIFFORD M. WISDOllF
Aulltent Vice ,,.1l4'111t.Menetor
Callfw11l• Federal Stvl11t• &
Loen As1Ml1tfet1
JUHIOl CHAMHR DILKATE
WA't'NI TOSCAS, Ault. M¥. '•dflc Tofa,S-c...,.liy
JUNIOR CHAMIER ALTERNATE
DON MecAUISTER.
R.,. & l11t.'I. S.let M•11ator
Dv11ee11 lfocttonlce
.. •
' '
..
CHAMBER MEMBERSHIP INCLUDES MONTHLY LISTING IN THIS DIRECTORY AT NO EXTRA CHARGE
1 a i '
.,. 4 •
1
·--'·------k ..... --
l
8 DAILY Pll.OT
· Racial Unrest Seen
.•
. .
In Tuesday's ·vQting
New Regime Plans
To End Civil War
SAN'A, Yemen (AP) -
Yemen's new Republican re-
gime indicates that it will
seek r~ciliation with the
Royalists and an end to tbe
5-year-old civil war, after
its oust.er of tbe president
who seemed determined to
keep fighting.
The new regime came to
power Sunday in a bloodless
coup while Presiden~ Abdul·
lab al-Sallal was out of the
' country. It said its goal is to
"correct the situation" in
Yemen.
Cairo's Middle East News
Agaicy quoted the new acl·
ting president, Abdel Rah-
man Iriani, as saying con-
tacts were under way with
pro-Royalist tribes with the
aim of bringing them into
the Republican fold .
Iriani is : conservative
and is be~ved to have greet
influence with ~ warring
tribes.
The new premier. Mosben
el Ainy, said all tribes have
expressed backing for the
new regime. He also said
Yemen would follow a "gOOd
neighbor" policy with all
lister stat.es, including the
neighboring monarchy or
Saudi Arabia, which backed
the Royalists in tile civil
war that began when Sallal
led the overthrow of Ye·
men's 11-century-old mon-
archy in 1962.
Egypt sent 40,000 troops
to Yemen to keep the Re·
publicans in power, but its
lo::ses in the June war with
Israel forced President
Grunal Abdel Nasser to
agree with King Faisal
of Saudi Arabia to end their
involvement in Yemen and
trY to restore peace there.
Sallal had obstructed the
Yemen peace commiuion
•sponsored by the two na-
tions, and it appeared that
Sallal's oust.er, if not engine·
ered by the Egyptiau, muat
at least have bad their blell·
ing.
Aden Street
Fight Rages
ADEN (UPI) -Sweeping
aside a weak native army
and 2,000 sobbing women
and children chanting for
peace, rival Arab nation-
alisu today opened up with
mortars, bazookas and ma·
chine guns in a fresh out-
break of pre-independence
fighting.
Houses in Aden's batUe·
scarred Shiek Othman Dia·
trict crumbled in the heavy
weapons fire. Aden officials
said the death toll, alrendy
high, soared.
The weak South Arabian
Army was apparently belp-
1 e s s as bazooka shells
slammed into rival strong.
points and machinegun fire
raked streets in the teeming
district.
The Army bad tried to en-
force a ceasefire agreed up
on aft.er a column of 2,000
sobbing, wailing women and
children chanted peace slo-
gans and marched through
the littered district.
SOUTHERN FEDERAL'S
CURRENT ANNUAL RATE 0 '"
5% EARNS 5.13%
WHEN COMPOUNDED DAILY
AND HELD FOR ONE YEAR
514% c:Miliutet, s v .. r T""' CO!llrxl. .,.uHlples cf f lOOO
8 INWRANU TO SIS,000 • FEDERALLY CHAllnitfO ANO
SUPERVISED • we PAY EARNINGS ON YOUll fUNOS FROM
OATt U CflVTO TO DATE Of WITHOlAWAl e fUNOS Rf·
CflllfO ON 0-ICJOltl TM( IOTH Of ANY M()HTli (Altlol
FllOM 1')1( IST • SAVE I Y MAIL, WI --'llY lpSTAGI. IOTH WAYS, A CONV(. •
MllN1' WAY TO ~Vf. •
S( ''I I HERN F EDEf~A L
..
Store Houn 9:30 a .m. till 9 p.m. daly
Fashionable Jewelry
Big selection of meny styles of earrings,
necklaces, ropes, bracelets or pins in
many colors. Buy now and save!
.25-2.22
wow•"~ Corduroy Coats
Wide wale I 00°/o cotton corduroy with
acetate lining. Smart fash ion colors.
Ideal for these cold morn ings. Sizes
12-16.
ori9. 16.00 Now 12.88
•••u· Sports~ear Special
Big selection of nylon stretch ankle
pants with stirrups, I 00 °/o cotton knit
tops with short sl~eves and I 00% acril-
an cardigan sweaters.
1.99-3.33
•••u· Flannel· Sleepwear
I 00°/0 cotton flannel 9owns or pajamas.
Machine washable .. Comfy and warm
for cool winter ni ghts. Sizes 3-14.
1.99
Girl' ·Fall Dresses
Smart styles in solids, plaids or stripes.
Grou'-I 0;:80 Now 1.99
Group II ~~t
GrouD Ill 0:.i~o
Now2.99
Now3.99
Hussein Makes Peace Bid
THE MODERN
sary of the Balfour Declara.
tlon that new borden mlllt
be negotiated betweell 1sr ..
el and her three Areb ~
bors.
FUNERAL AND BURIAL CONCFPI'
~--ii 0.. B rfijvl Plocc"
t •
cnrrrr:&T LOTS t KAli80LGll C&if 19 I'rom flllO S Froftl t't6 1
rstminstrr 11tmnrial if ark
-
.Mw t••197-Ce•1•117
CQlllfYl'lfUimM.A•I---· • I la ...... ,__. ud 1'wia1 Clldtr o-iept
cntmlY·MAUSOLIVM
PUNUAL NOMI
CHA~U.CUMATOIY
COLUMIAllUM
Yl1MAMS &AWN
elimimta die oced for 'proassioos dsoup
heavy traffic on overcrowded highways, family
and fri01ds ali1'e may now pay their full se-
sp«ts by attending the burial .servic:e, u well
as th~ chapel IUVice, all at one beautiful ~.
at ls cost.
14801Ii1410J RACH llVD., WISTMINSTll
2u ...... 1.un
... N~ Plaid Sport Shirts
Penn Prest means you never iron. Ivy
styling with button down collar and
short sleeves. Size med . only.
orig. 3.9a Now 2.50
Men's Knit Jacket
I 00% acrilan bonded knit -a year
'round fabric. Beautifully tailored with
an excitin9 wrinkle resisting texture.
Olive or bei9e. S-M-L.
ori . 9.99 Now 7 .88 ·
Men's Cords
Penn · Prest wide wale corduroy. You
never need to iron. Mod style, wide belt
• loops in olive, gold, or blue. Sizes 29-34.
Orig. 6.91 Now4.88
Men's Suits
One button coat, continental style pants
in 55 °/0 orion and _.5 °/0 wool blend.
Black only. Sizes 38-39 ... 0-42. Buy
now and seve!
ori,. •2.9s Now 28.88
Men's Wool Suits
Neat looking two button style with
matchin9 vest. Blue-grey only. ·Sites
)8.39-40-42 reg.
orig. s~.n Now 39.88
714 ~ J-2421
aon· Terry Velour Shirts
Crew neck style with short sleeves and
pocket. Machine washable I 00°/0 cot-
. ton terry in blue, white or yellow. Sizes
6-16.
ori9. 2.•9 Now 1.99
S"HADMO"f-1 Bedspread
A realistic three-dimensional bed-
spread that looks like e real sports car.
Machine wash,ble. Twin bed size in
red or blue
NowS.88
Accent and Area Rugs
Machine washable viscose rayon pile.
Reversible for lon9er weer.
27x48 orig. ~.9• Now 3.88
36x54 orig. 10.u Now 9.88
44x70 orig. 16.91 Now 13.88
Poly Covered Bowl Set
Unbreakable, chip-proof, end color
fast. I .. piece set from 1fi pint to 3
quart size. Bowl cover for each bowl.
Timely 9ih idea.
I
Special Price 1.99
Super Size Towels
That fash io n touch in fash ion right col·
ors of cotton terry velour in gold or
olive.
orig. J.oo Now 1.99
. .
' :.: A~ . r::
der' t...aa
meed
d..n
.lall ,,. t
~
rollbe
drlcl
brie1.
i.mpd dent .
rle, l Vea
099ltl
preail
the• court
defm
be 111
Vettel
ter ln
retri&
Mel
at Sa
so he
i:etria
man
:'"1
wtiDm
ab
K•
Ne
Fe
I ·Ff
VOi
\
TMfrOI
t•l•phc .,,.,..,
9'gned.
to UMI
1t1nd. Ther•'• the fron
IMkelo
..
~hPoll
Seen in SF' . .... / ~ M8yOPRace
·neath Row·· .
Man's Word
F.-eeellfer '
' •
The front P9Qel J your new
telephone directory have
alf been completely rede-
'9Md to make them e•er
to UM and eater to under·
atand. a .. for yourulf.
There'• 1 whole new look In
the front of your book ••• to
,meke IOold••* for youl
' .. ~ h;ficTll._
Stril[e Must I •
End-Judge
----,----------~,
Mon41J, th I t I 6, 1967 DAIL y I'll.OT •
Payr!ll Plan? Dlily 10·9, Sll·S.10·7 Prices Efldt1 Mll-1•1 .. C... Mesa Sllrl °"' ~
-Reagati to Study
Tux P:roP!Jsal
.. , .. '
......... ..,..
LAIP IHllEI , . 11-
0ur lteg. 96c
ltulfy boudotr ~el in wtllte,
• pint, blue, yellow. ... .......
&.lilt w .... Plaid BEDSPIEAD
4.96
Our'1te9.'S.66 .•
Twin or full In ..t plaidl. J(acJt.
tne wash.
O'Cedlr Deluxe SPONIE MOP :.· ·~1·· 9'7 ...
11'. •• • •
. Our .... 2.94 .
Metal ICJU~ plate, replaceable
IJ>Oll&le bel4, wood handle. .... ......
Llllt . ............... ..
Tool Assortment
.99-
V11ueete2.39
Oboole ~I clip, hack saw, hammer, pllen, more.
'= ...... .
' Men lhert ·SleeYe
DIESI SHIRT ...
1.22
~,... 2.50
22" ~/78" cotton. "No lnMl .. 8pct OI' IDlp-tlb, white.
MINI WIAI .....
All..,._r
l111l1te~ Boots
2.47
Our Reg. 3. 97
w~. 8. eyelet boots in.su·
lated for warmth. Green.
llOITINe .0001 DIPT.
..... .....
&.lilt
c:.tt ........ 118 IUINEI
'·1.57 : 0.-.... 1.17
21x'11 ball runner ol ~
pUe.
"*-., Oii
LUBE & OIL
1.99
3 DaysOnfr
Includes your dM*e nailable
brand name 20/!G wt. oil&.
AVTOMOJIH 19T.
.. j
a.,. •• .,
.... ...
Hllll-WIPES
' 41'
Our ... 47.
Plt:blt ol 10 .... Ne .... --:::· .... Llil.& ...
W.llST WITCH
7.~8
hill ..:. ~tc:!' -I
J9ll' fattclr7 .......... ....-..y.r. .... ....... Llllt
. L..,. Tr•uhhr
.WALKIE TALKIE
4.97
All Steel
TIASH CAN TOTE
4.96
Our .... 6.96
sturdy an.et tote bolds 2 CIJIL r..y to lllemble.
PATIO .....
GET READY FOR K MART'S ANNMRSARY SALE.
NOVEMBER 9,.10-11.12
MIDNIGHT SALE FRIDAY, ·NOY. 10, A cacus OF RIN 11
. 4 YAWE PACKID DAYS
DRAWING FRIDAY NIGHT FOR ·llG PRIZES
• FRH~TABU T.Y. Fii llCYW •fl! •IZES ,_All DENIDlm .
NEW ROLi -Bill Buuell. player<OaCh oi the Boa--
ton Celtics Basketball TWn, makes hil dramatic
debuf u a mechanic tonight at 7:30 on "Cowboy in
Africa, .. CJiamel 7. Th1I hour-long color series stars
: Chuck Connon. , .. . .
: ; TELEVISION VIEWS
: ~ Still Much Life
In Television
• • By CYNTHIA LOWRY
AP Telwltion-Redlo Writer
NEW YORK (AP) -"PBL." the ezperbMIUI
series undenrritt& by a Ford Foandatian ~ad
broldcut Sunday night Oil I special network ti edo-
catJonal statioDI acrou the nation, dwotlld aD of lta
time to I ''blact·wblie dialogae.,. Jt WM tcJacQ, _.
troftrstal ml undoabtedly stepped OD tOll, lill It
succeeded in shedding some llg6t • 'ftll ~ 1-t.
The program aet the stage by a ~
of political campaign.a where race is an issue -tn
Gary, Ind., Cleveland, Ohio, and Boston, M.uw. 'nlen
it moved into the high point of the program: a film..
ed "confrontation" ol aitcago Negroes and wb1tea.
, There opinion, emotion-c!W'ged, ranged from holtlle
: threat. by Black Power exponeota to one anp-y
·white woman who uploded in eusperation with.
"I want white powu." A vocal, toQ~g Negro, Russ Meet, earlier
bad done the narration of LfiJm made in Chicago
slumS undeTidl dfi'ection. His fttry and hatred spew·
ed out then and even more during the "confront.
tion. '' One Negro wm:nan who bad started with calm
reason was so stung by a white woman's talk of
integration that she retorted. 'Tve been integrated
too' long. rve got these freckl~ and red hair u a
result of the rape of my great,.gtandmother ••. "
Wbile the ta1k, often jumbled u many spoke at
one time wu more emoti()Jl&l than reuoned, the
confrontation wu exclttng televisfon. Actually, neither Negroes nor whites made good
cases for their caOlel. Immediately afterward, Har-
vard research psycblatrflt Robert Coles preseoted
his "analylis•' of the session. He found the present
Negro movement" not IO different from the lrilh
50 or 75 yean ago," and compared the Negro n?
voh to "the breaking away as a drlld does wben tt
groww up and goes away from h1I family."
The ftna1 portion of the program Wll de'f'Oted
to a play, "Day of Absence," performed by a com-
pany ol Negroes in white face -a m1nstrel show in
reverse. 'Ibis told in bitter, broad satire, the calamity
that befell a Southern town when suddenJy all lta
Negroes disappeared. No menial jobs were perform.
ed. and It painted an ugly picture of incompetent,
foolish wbltes. Although it made itl point nry
quietly, the play went m amd on.
. There were occasional breab in the program
; tor local station identifllation, and twice there wu a
break eailed "a word f~ comumer."-Tbe!e breaks were in the form of commercials, but one
told viewers that the least expensive pain killer wu
as effective as the expensive tlnd and the other that
long dgarettes contain harmful lngredlenta. They
wen the sole glimmerings of humor in tile two and
onMalf houn, and the humor in them wu certailJ.
1y on the 1t:tppy aide.
The program wu too long -the play could
have been cut sharply -and tended to be heavy·
banded. But it Wll an interesting, ambitiOUJ begin-
ning. And it certainly wu not bland.
NBC will cancel "Maya," the child-oriented
action series ftlmed in India l!IOme time in Febru·
ary. The ahow suffered from low ratings.
Berommended tonight: "Love Andy," NBC,
10.11 PST, Andy Wiiliams, first spedal ot the sea·
son with Erroll Gamer and Henry Mancini; "The
Big Valley," ABC, 10.11, Barbara Stanwyck in a
story that gives her l!IOme elbow room for acting.
Den•i• the Menaee
[]][][] 1
M O NDAY
~·
• L.A. TV DEIUTt JERRY * ~as 'THE IEUIOrl
•• ra.. ... ""' ... ..,. <Cll!MdJ) ao -JenJ llllh.
Alea c.n, .... a... Ill
Btrlt. City lflddl9r.llff.
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TUE SDAY
DAmME MOYIU
u.A•cm111111 ........ m
cal .... ,..., .. a.. "'"'"' ,.., .....
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...., ..... .. Illa Oldlestra.
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... (C) ""' ., .. Dr ...... J::> '44 -C.ry CooPtr. ...
................. llMlt'" (,. •:J18"'tlrT7 0.. ...... (comedy') 'tO
llllllClt) '50-ltoel Cowlfd. Mat""' -tcel!Mltt Connor, Wilfrid HJ'9 ll4lll1H. . I W11111. Slllrltr Eato11.
, ON A PINHEAD
ff 1111'+ ~11lte flle 1TMt thlllf •• lllter~llt ffte Co11dltutlo" 0"
"'-~•-' ef • 'i11, AMli 414 Y" e¥W tttUy rH4 tfl• "For Th•
~ feahtre la th• DAILY PILOT7 YM'lll ~. n r'11Hd how
M8d i.f.,_tlM · W9 ... ,. .. W. e llMll If"".
DEllll DEERI
1M>1CrS NIU /
HOW MUQ.4,' ~e' •
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lit llrl
PEEK I
FV
7801 Qel:
SMl'I
Ba
WESTC
4%1 E. 1
·N
1
)few T...t
ence haa
with tM
-to prO'
relieve Pl
bemorrho
Tt1ta b
in cue &f
TelitYUlf
For.The
PllotVbltors-
'~i r,:~U:
OBIT11 ASIZ8
UGBTER
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IAL1Z MOM'VARID
.Ctrea 4lel Mar OR MGI c..ca .... Ill~
la..L BROADWAY
MOllTUUY
lit lnM•aJ• Ce1t1 Mesa
UWGI
PAaJ'IC VIEW
MEMORIAL PAll
Ce.-, :.":r""'
Siii hdfte ~Orin
Newpef\ leadl, CalUorala
l7Mtl1
PEEK FAMILY OOLONIAL
FlJNERAL BOMB
T801 Qelta AYe., W•tadM&H mms
SMITH'S MORTUARY
lf7 Mata St. ear..:d
WESTCLlf'll' MORTUARY ......
42'7 E. l'ltll St., <'MU M ..
Aoftwtls
Now Possible To Shrink
Painful Hemorrhoids
And Ptomptly Stop The Itchint.
Relieve Pa.an Jn Moat Cues.
Jtfew Teft, M.Y. {lfeclal): Scl·
ence lt•• touad • JMC!lcati••
with the abnley, is l'llott C&Mll.
-to prca-...1tl1 ekf ltthinr,
n lieve pain aed ntull1 •hrlnk
bt'monhoide. '
Trata by do('t.or\ p..0"41 thst
in case aftu cue, while renlly
nllev1111 pain, actual reduction
" .,__ -
.
of the Inflamed hemorrhoids
took place.
The aecret is Preparation H•.
There'• no otller for mula
like it! Prepa ra tion H a lao
1oolhu irritated tiuuu and
h~lpa prennt lorthu Infection.
In ointment or l\lppoaitory
form.
~-lltid•ecl ,..,._ Of .... nm. Ila's Oo.. ...
tbe • weeb lllded Oct. 1
&IDOWlted .., . '"1J,'lld,8,
comptnd wftk fnt.-.m
for the lite period Jut
year, Normu Chandler,
chairman and dlief execu-
tive o(ficer, announced to-
day.
For the 11 -.u enW
Ocl 8, e.arning.s af~ tpu
aimounted to -.m1• ..
41 cents per .bate,. u
\
fllolidly, ~ '· 1967 DAILY flfLOT 'J J
MeKe-•e ReUeves SI•••
Ginrii Hullt Foods Has New Boss • '
Frigidaire .Gas / _
..
-,f Children'
like
to
read. • •
••• to live the joya or W-mnM! tbe Pooh,
play with Uncle W-Jllfy,'
«'! with CindeNUa and
renl with ad'f\!9taa1
you and I han .lmdJy .C.
I'm B. Dalton, BoobeR&
Sinee childhood, I Mft
been captivated with
this delightful world.
To abare in my deticht
I .have t'aref ully telectecl
books and en~
for childn•n from in.fanq
to young 11dulthood.
All are catrgorir.ed by
aae and ioterMt in my
colorful, rarpet.ed l>oolcaMp'
wit.bin a bookahop.
Brine the chiktrm in •••
l•t them brow1e in their
book&bop while you bro.,..'
in yours. I ( you eaa'i
come in, r:\11 or write me.
l 'm B. Dalton, Boobeller."
rFa..'lhion Tdand
1 Newport. ('enter
Newport BeSc:G. Calif orn.ia 92660
.~1
Dryers wiih _D~,. __.
Gire!
• NEW! True no-iron dryinc for snodern
no-iron fabrics!
• NEW! Some rnOdefs even tailor drying
time and heat to the flbric-
automltically!
• Wide choice of models to match new
Jet Actian Washers -prices for fMfY .. ..._ on the d ,,.,.,,~.,
CHECK 'THE _
FEATURES ON
THIS GAS DRYfR
... ... , .
THIS MATCHING FRIGIDAIRE
2 SPEED . WASHER IS ANOTHER
•G VALUE AT DAVIS.BROWN
ONLY
516888
HURRY-40R THESE VALUES
·THEY W°"'T LAST AT THESE PRICES
* A*_..., DAYIS-IROWN'J wonditional
s ,._ w 1t1r •....-Y .. PLUS
a 5 par Sllpply of TIDE. 1
\
, 411 · L ·· 17th·-COST A·· MESA
646-1684 --
. . \
. ...
--
:\
The Complete Penney's
at Newport Center ,
Cocist Highway at Ma~Arthur Blvd.
...
rhe Coniplete Pe~neY' s
at Huntington Center
San ~ ••• ..,--............ (Rt. it)
Two neN Orange County landmarksl Which will you visit first?
IOTM llOOEl AND MORE BEAUTIFUL THAN YOU EVER DREAMEDI
wah everything fo r one-stop shopping convenience! You con
even have your car serviced by ou r experts, while you enjoy
leisurely shopping for your family and home in the spacious
elegance of either great new Penney's. Come a long! Don't
miss our Double Grand Qpening c.lebration ••• at Hunti ngton
Center ••• and fathion Island.
Come, bring your Penney Charge Cardi
J • ~. • .... , -
SHOP-AU. 1Hlll WON>llfUI. NIW DIPAITMINTSI
Fine furniture, lawn and garden nHds, Sleep Shop, home
fumiihings, maior appliances, TV's, ster.Os, fine i-welry, paint
and hardware, spotting goods, boats, toys, typewriters,
musical instruments, morel A beauty salon, a portrait studio,
r•taurant, plus a big new Auto Center at botti ltoresl And
lt'a..al bacloM by the Penrwy notne, your msuranee of quality
and ICltisfaction.
You never ICIW such fabulous valuesl
" . -.., .
r
. .
.., .. '
°])EA
.eks
•lll _.r
~,\tte1
fpo11 trjg. (
£ . ']jit~ all
I ~
• lllCllt I
... Din
I .Uve.
our o!J lien 0-. mo
ltapaU1 ... ,.
\
"UADIRS '~OID -Leefinl througb aome of the Junior-Great 1Jtfb program·JDJ~al are the Mmes. Geatft.I. Johnaon. Bobert
.-.antyre and .Franklin Remer. They're getting .r.eady fOJ' class -
-So that they may be experts ln holiday entertaining the suprt.
1nl1.v-easy.· way, Udo ;tale Woman's Club members have engaged an aulhority in the field. ' · -
Jack King, autbor, ~ winning cook, instructor ind food ex·
pert will· demonstrate chafin,g dish ct>okery, showmi bow to prepare
Ill.Ch world-famed delserta u Grepe Smettes, Cbemes Jubilee and a
variety of Fruits Flantbe.
His lecture, vibfcb wi,U fQllow a noon luncheon Tuesday, Nov.
, 14, in Udo Isle Clubhouse, will emphasize how ·\o prepare meats with
little or no effort, underlining fun without drudgery. The talk will
eover many facets, the u~ of. herbs and spices, salads, new and better ways to prepare fowl, games and meat, desserta and cooking with
-i>irits~ to name a f etlf. . • •
The epicurean delight, entitled Instant and Easy Gounnel En-
tertaining, promises to captilate this audience as it has done in the
past ~ years with an Soutllla~ groups.
And Mrs. Arnold Dovey, president, forecasts women will .be en-
ticed t.o dust off their chafing dishes and tantalize holiday guests with ·
these recipe.utreuine the lost art of cooking.
, Piece de resistan~e will be sampling · the delicacies after the
lecture.
An additional highlight of the gathering will be inrormal model· Inc of faabions from La. Galleria aJ'lld hairpieces from Tobj of Hair De-
s;.~era during t\Je preluncheon puncb bowl. Mannequins will be from
tbe "Model Section, under the direction of Mrs. Warren Rose, chairman
' and'Mn. Ridlard Mailander, co-chairman.
Reservations may be made by calling Mrs. J. H. Johnston at
873-1342 or Mrs. Buster Bruce, 675-3735. A special hospitality table ii
betna reaerved for new mem~ra.
INTER.EST KINDLED -W"rt.b IOl'DeWhat of an euaer·
•tion Mn. Gerard Shucbter waits with fire bole in band
in case the flaming dilb., prepared by Mrs. E. Terrance
Monn and Mrs. Arnold Dofty (left to right) gets a little
oat ol band, while Diet Green and Bob Kelly (back·
~
..
Booked l,.
Adulta wllo will be ~ucting a unlqye reading
PJ'Oll1m for )"OUDgltera-wtn be taking part in book dis-
maicww themselves thia week when they begin a Junior
Grat Boob Leader Training C1w in Costa Mesa.
Jin. John Nolu, Great Boob dlairman of the
Friends of the Llbnry, announced that Howard C: Will
Jr., Gl'Mt Books Western Program admiJiistrator.._ will
CGDduct the eight.week course. •
The fint session begi_ns at 9 a.m. Friday, Nov. 10,
In st. John tbe Baptt.st School. · ·
· 'ftle training ii ~r parents and teachers who will
'-I youngsters in gradee .s.12 durtnc tne Great Boob
DilmWoll Program.
Area training ia 1pomo.red In cooperation with the
Gnat Boob Foundation of ~national no&
.............. orpDilltloa t.d to~:; _.. ~ llDdentud a world that II etwr
illll -eeu'flln ,,... tlae Junior (Mat Boob~ ,...,
Nllll'I 1ti111J tlle wi'ltinp of aome·ot '• wtwt a.U.. .nd then diJcua them with their. peers under
ldult 1-lenbip.
Kore ttian e.ooo CalifOmla yoottia have participated
fll ::~ and some 50 percent of them were led
by who IUCCellfully completed the Foundation's
. trainino.Lr COU:::PI were 1~ by parents, trained by the
foanUtion, on a voluntary bub •·an. eJ:tra-cunicular
pn>Cnm.
Inqutriea about the p_fOIRID may be' directed to Mr&
Nolan, 548-7254.
grou.nd, left to riglat) are ready to rush in with their
he]J>. The Lido lale women are· trying their culinery skills in anticipation ol the d\afing di!h cookin'g demon·
stration to be presented Nov. 14. ·
Little Sympathy, Empathy Can NarroW th'e Great . Divide :·
EAR ANN LANI5tRS: A few
1'.itks ago I went to a funeral in a
.,ii Midwestern town ~ population
ai:lder 500.
·After the funeral services the pro-
.. .(lfllion beadfld toward the tiny ceme-"9· On the way we passed a field l armer was planttng grain.
, be stopped hil tractor, ~ wn, removed hls old straw
· Jiit\ and stood with hls bead bowed
• !r!the proceaai~)ad pused. • struck me u being Ohe of the
t heart-warminJ geiturei I had
1ttn in years. In the large city where
I live. a funeral procession passes oar oUlce almost every day. I have seen small children make faces at
"' mourners in the cars. I have seen
impatient motorists honk their horns -1 -.. __ r .
.. -..
ANN LANDERS [il
and cut ·in front of -a lte•ae. No re·
1pect. No c:onaJderatlon. No klhdneas.
Are people cbaneing or are city peo-
ple dMferent from small town people?
-JUST INQUIRING
DEAR JUST: A little If eacb, my
frieltd. A little of eadt.
The trlal: Plalpdff (whole family)
versus the defendant (Tabby the
Houaecatl.
Charge: Murder of Bella. a pet
parakeet.
Def enders argue: It la tnstinctiVt'
for cats to kill birds. Tabby is tbere-
DEAR ANN LANDERS:
the judge and jury.
fcn innocent. _
You are Prosecutor argues: Tabby knew bet-
,The time: 5 p.m
. • Tt}e,J>lace: 1.Jv"'" toom.
ter.
The trial raaed for one minute and ~ ¥ -:z3.-teconds. ~~: Tabby f6'md ,
I
/ IUiltJ fl mardtt in the lint degree.
Setwce; Banishment.
I am ...,...ing the case to a higher
court. You. Ann Landers. have the
Pft8' to ~ the dedaion.
What is Jf1fJr verdict! -DEFEND-
ER OF TABBY
oqa DEFENDER: I mue· ..
,.. )llllcmelll .. u.e cr...a ., a.
...._.. lllfwmau ... F• t1aaple: ••Bela • llter cage er ... lllt
-el .... act!
U Bella was .-ef lier tact, T.W.,
Is ._, ee& Be 61 wU& eame an.
IU'dJ. U H•f-Id BeBa .... , Ile,
la ., ......... Ott pll&y puty.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I~ an S.year~ tifl who just got Ouf of
a home for unwed mothers. The fath-
er of my child wa 10 years my sen-
ior. bad two ex-wives, three children
and never did an honeat day's work
in bis life. He gave my father a nice
fat check and I agreed to put the
child up for adoption.
I learned yeaterday that the dirty
crook ii aolnc with another 18-year-
old pl who Hvea ~ miles from here.
She Is a close friends of my cousin.
The llrl knows about his two ex-wives
but she does not know about me. I can't aleep nights worrying •bout this
poor kid.
I'm lhaklng a carbon copy of this
letter, Ann, and I would like to send
It to her (anonymously, of course)
wJth your reply .. Yes tr oo! T SORRY '100 LATE
------··-· -· -...-...------~ __ ,_.,, ----------
DEAR Lt\TE: No. Tbe Clrl ~
ably UoWI aboat )'OU and ftiurea , ..
tried UllllCCetlfuJty to trap the py •
MllMI yev eW11 bealneu ud eaea-
lrate ~ mUinl a We for yevtelf.
How far should a teen-age couple
go? Can necking be safe? When does'
it become · too hot to handle? Send
for Ann Landers boOktet, "Nfui.DI
and Petting -What Are th• Limits?'
Mall your requeat to Ann Landers in
care of your newspaper encloalng 50
cents in coin and a long, stamped.
self-addressed envelope.
Ann Landers will be &lad to help
you with your problems. Send them
to her In care of the DAILY PILOT.
e~lnt-• ffltadd.ressed, 1tblped
envelope. -
\ ~
-·,..
I -1 DAILY PILOT
Narrowing
MRS. DAVID E. RANNEY
Exchl,... Vows, ltingl
Something for Everyone
Enticements ·Promise.d
9259 sms 11)-11
""11fMi ... 11f4
Arrow seaming nicely
narrows the waiJt ot a
jumper that goes out in the
,vening as a dress. Beau-
tiful blouse has cuff collar,
tie .
Printed Pattern 9259: Mi•·
ses' Sizes 10, 12, 14, 18, 18.
Size 14 jumper 2 yards 46-
inch : blouse 1% yards »-
inch.
SIXTY FIVE CENTS la
coins for each pattern-add
15 ceo.ts for each pattern for
special handling. Send to
Marian Martin, the DAILY
PILOT, 442 Pattern Dept.,
232West18th St., New York,
N.Y. 10011. Print NAME,
ADD~ with ZIP, SIZE
and STYLE NUMBER.
Handcrafted
Works on Sale
Handwoven clotblng an d
gift type articles will com-
prise a fashion show and
bazaar to be presented by
South Coast Weavers Guild.
Guild members will mod-LJ~"!'"'f"I
el during the style parade,
become sales clerks dunng
the bazaar and then serve
tea during the fund-raising
event 11cheduled for 1 p.m.
Thursday, Nov. 9, in the
Santa Ana Public Library.
DD
See 100 more fashions to
sew in all aius ln our great
Fal-Winter Pattern Cata-
log. Dresses. culottes, coats,
separates, holiday styles.
~t one pattern free -clip
coupon iD Catalog. Send 50
centa.
Proceeds will support the ---::-:-:---:--.-.-.--:--------~
THE
program of encouraging cre-
ative design, originality and
good craftsmanship in hand-
weaving.
SHOW ROOM
• PRESENTS
EXCLUSIVE H~R STYLING BY
EP'
_SOUTHERN ,.CALIFORNIA$S AWARD
WINNING STYLIST
2111 NEWPORT BLVD., NEWPORT BEACH
675-3502
• I
•
Fowr~ Food for Talk
•• ,.,;1Sf
"l1'":J.! •
•I ~ 'Pair
···.-~ '"'It.or
brat
n., .
",,... .;.
'.,,
t •
._1 •••
. . .
'• .. J• ... ~
~;·' ....
....
. '
(
.; ...
. • ,; :-:-t
. , r .. . .. F
. " (
. •·. . . .
~.~t~~=store Features Festival AH
''. ~ 'Paintfnal by 13 artista from the 1987 Festival ot. " ._..&.n9 were featured in 'Barker Bl'Ol.'1 downtown ... ~ ~ery.u part of·their 87tb anaiverury·cel&-
bratlon. At the second annual weaentation Char·
. ~· . ,,,.. •
.... ,· '" ..
,,.
. I. • .!
.... _ ... ·-...
892-"71
HUNnNOTON llACtf
644-2313
.
ean , tor '°"' appoh•!!•"!nt ',. .. ~,, ......... ...... w..-..... rush ·~~ .,
Our New Phot~mph Studio
Opens Next Wednesd~yl .
01'
OPENING . SPECIAL! .
H~Rday Gift Portraits
' of Y.~ Family ·
. _ ~ at spectacuklr savings
only 4.9·5
mlC)nifieent I I 1 I .. " salon portrait
(l1rge.u half this news.,..per p.9eJ)
of as many es four people
H•lp us c•lebret• the openin9 ~f our newest
stores 1nd photo9reph stvdlosl Discover how o~
::: . 2. talented pho+o9r1pfoters cepture your f•m"! s
. ·.. ~ "'°'t n1tur1I expressions. Hive the fine f 1m1ly
'"' portrait you'v• elweys went.cf . . • end save
. , : .. durin9 Penney's big o,,.ning special!
CHARGI fTI tob time to pay ot Penney's
HUNTINGTON llACH
NIWPO•T llACt4
'
--------
' ..... --
-----~ . ....._ ____ _..........~-.-.~ ...
Jack ·Nichols, Bride
Select Lagun(J-.. Home
·Hawaii Setting
ffome in Leoua Beach
.followtnf a ~ ht the San .B.nardinO ~
taim are newlywed J.ck w. Nictioll ua bis wide,
the bmer Kiaren Kovac •.
Pareuta of the tr.idll eau·
pie are Mn. Ems ltCMIC o(
Arrowbear Lake am the
We Mr. K0\18C and Mre. Merle Hamby of Hunttng.
too Park end Charles W.
Nichol.a ol St. Paul.
Dirdog tbe ccupie in
their ex~ ol vow• and
rinp Wiii the Rev. Dr. P9lll w. Kopp in South Gate Ffnt
Baptist Chlrdl.
Gtwn in marriale by a
famly fr i e n d, Chaplain
Henry A.ndenon. lbe bride
wore • gown of Freadl L9:e .·
and aatin IDd ·a tiered BJu. A
aion veil, blld in pJa» ·by
aatin petala. She Cl8ITied
bea«ber wUh sfwlt«•pis
and c~ crdikll.
Wearing Jae Mier COWD11
were Mia P8me1a Ne*ln
ol ffunlUJ&toa·. Park, mUl
of honor and b MllMI Pat
Simon fllld Karen ......
bridumalck.
Vern Bbl lel'Ved u bellt
man. while ulbere were
Richard Nkh>la, the ~
, . groom's 1bro~ber,.Pet.er
A I h P k • . t w a Noona and Robert Wal· et a --er ins 0 e . ~,, ..... h guest
----'--'-. .bOolc --the reception in An~ FebruarY wed· . South Gile Woman's CU>
dini Ja Banll wm, link · ,wu Mn. Jmnee Rowley,
· AWba PMt:l5 al Bmula
MRS. NICHOLS
Redt.s Vows
-RlaUr4 '· Lie. 11111hMDI11 tb1 clm<-
W Of lfn. Ox dalJa Pllf.
t1111 m ltmldt c. Petldw,
boCh ot Oolta ...... u.
ftaice ii the IClll of .Kra.
Evelyn tM ot OIJoJo, Tu.
and the lat. Mr. Lie.
Kingston Lyon ~afries
l n Long 8each Ceremony
'!be future bridil ii • er•
uate of Newport Barbar
High School where lbe WU
active Ut tbe Girla' Atllletic
AwodllMon a D d .mdeat'
body llCtlvitiea. b ...
WM eomnwnder ol the drtl
team.
The beoedict-elect attend·'
ed schools in Texas and
L<-riwne and bas been
MrVing w t t b Coast Guard
for 8eWlll yean. P!le1mtty
be is stationed oft the Viet-nam coast.
After biJ discharge in
ALITHA PBICtNS
,~ ...
Yellow and white drys-
~ (antbemumit t.nlted IDe aJ.
~ of the A4oba QM!pel,
LOng Beadl, when Jo Ann
Jlcearty and Kingston Scott
Lyon exchanged 1hei!' wed·
Cling rings and vows in a
ceremony conducted by Air
l'orce Chaplain (ret.) A. H.
Atdns.
'lbe bride ii the daJgtl-
t.er· of Mr. and Mrs. T .. J.
McCarty of Azula, and l)er
. hulJband ii the IOD of Mr.
April, the couple will make
their home iD Souu.n Cali·
fonUa.
IDd Mrs. L. K. Lyon of
B~ Beacm.
Given in marriage by her
father. Mnt. Lym selected
Yesterday's Squares
a cbantily lace over crepe
gown, ~ style, '8Dd
wore an eJbow-lengeb veil
edged with the same lace
and held m ,:Uce by a pearl
and crystal crown. Sbe car·
ried a bouquet ol wllite or-
chids and carnations.
Mt.11.et McCarty .attended
the bride as maid '1 honor,
and her gown WU white
lace over gre4!n taffeta. 9le
carried • Ollll"Dad.on bouquet
of tinted .green carnations.
Serving ·u the bride·
groom's belt man was Rich·
ard Aldrich .
FoUowtog the ceremony
tile newlywed« WeFe tout·
ed during a wedding Dldl·
eon in the~
Inn. H.cmtington B e a c h .
Scouts Now Swingers
---ey-wdlrbe at home in
Long Beach, where the
bridegroom is a t at i oned
J b o • r 4 *'6 USS Ve1Jey
Forge.
By GAY PAULEY Wetta riot." 1be said, ·them were dating and with
N E W YORK (UPI) -''there were Mveral G 1r 1 ill morals _. 1ex. divers!-faster to keep up. And we Don't all toda • G i 1 ~ need to break down more c Y 1 r Scout ~ in the Mea ty ol reHclanl (brought on w.alls to get into e.reas we =:. square. OaU her. a Dunne the rtota, the gjrlJ in . pmt i)y 1he ''God is haven't traditionally serv-
Her wwkl iJ much more atayed JJitb l1sfer ICOUU deed" dilcullon), their re-ed." ·
Mondly, NMmbff 6. 1%7
Delphians Club
XI Delta Nu Chapter of
Delpbians meets the first
and third Wednesday at 10
a.m. tn Mariners Library.
Newport Beach. For eddi·
tlonat. in.krmation contact
..Mn. Rot>ert Rove, 545-4015.
I(
DAJLV PILOT JS'
Auociation
American Association of
Retired Persons meet.a ev-~
ery third Tlnrsday at 1
p m. in the Senior Citizens
Clutilouse, Newpcrt Beach.
FOREVER
. FREE
FROM
LJN:W ANTED HAIR .. .
SL.EEK,SMOOTK HAIR.-tr'R!E 8EAUTV CAH",aE
YOURS WITH OUll ICKEE ELECTROLYSIS
METHOD. IT'S THCG&H'ft.t:; MODERN WAY
TO PERMAHIHT KAia MMOVAI. FROM l'ACEt
ARMS t LEGS, ASK POii A COMPUMEHTAft4/
CONSULTATION WITK OUll TftAIMID "l'SC:tnUCIAH•
IN ou• HAUTY SAL.OH. ~~~
\~~RTCSNTCR
At Buffums', stockings ~
go to 11 lengths to look
f eshionable. Our Hos-
iery Bar looks like spring·
time with color blossom-
ing everywhere, marvel-
ous laces, intricate nets
and delicate -crochets.
This fall. legs can look so
many wonderful ways, ..
they'll never again be
just a means of support!
Now, t.gs run t°' the
cdorful eo¥8f&Cje of tM
opaques . . • they' re
bright and right with the ..
shorter, swingier skirt ..
The derkling tones ere
good company for the .
new-found browns, and the l:iacf-agaln blacks.
Fashions for .,67 demand leg coverings ••• and
that look must be achieved with th'e non·lranspar-
ent look of tbe opaque nylons. _:_
than cooties and campinir . ~ Watt.a. When it was IMialll w i t b acUts (1he To those who worry about
and crafta. Sbe'a "with it,r. over! daey all went ~ .. ,._.,.. llP"), and civ· today's generation, with ifs
abe'a Uenly aw~ of. the belping dean up, taking B rlcbta. headlined hippies, unwed
myriad toclal and economic care of babies and doing all The Girl Scout slogan, mothers, drug users and
problem.a facing . her• com· ·the Cllbtll that bad to be "Do a Good Turn Daily" school dropoUts, Mrs. Price
munity 8Dd her world. And done. NOw tbia ii a real ex· bas not Chlaced aince tbe says, "I could not be in
lbe cares deeply about oth-ample qi ~ ~.o w n cqanilaticm · wu founded in scouting unless I bad the ~er people and what she can walla between people. Savanaab Ga., March 12, confidence that young peo-
do for them. Mn. Price told ol sitting 1912, by Jllllette Gordon pie can face today's prob-
Fishnets used to be fishermen's gear • • • now
#iey're leg gear, an·d certainly not for catching
fish! You can wear them in poster-bright eolors,
white-whites or almost whites • • . but how ever
you wear them, they're .meent to ?e mated wi!h
casual fashions. For spring. legs will come out 1n
crochet coverage . . . and Buffums' is alr.,ady
collecting f c!lscinating paytems from all the (ash-
ion designers. As you begin to collect you~ 'hos-
iery wardrobe, remember . . . two pairs· of
stockings worn -at the same time are almost . es
good as three! Begin wit~ a basic s~eer. stocki~g,
cover it wit.h a ribbed knit and top 1t with a fish-
net. The effect: tweed. The look: fabulous with
richly textured wools !
in _.... • ..MDior ll'OUP in Low • ..ButJtl image bas bad lems and turn things for the
· '!be new le b e 1 for the Sl ·t::i, to find what actu· to alter wlli tbe times, Mrs. .good. The more I talk to the
three millJon girls 7 to 17 ally the Orts' miiida Price 19)4 ~ "We find our-young people, the more I see
ye.arr of age ia pinned on by Am: 1:.ue. dilturt>ing aelvea nmmng faster and the majority a.s good."
none other than Mn. Holton -==~_:::::::::::-:......::==.:::!._::.:..:...:=-:=:=~==--=.::_--~_;_-:=~=-=R. Price Jr., the national
president of Girl Scouts of
tbe U. S A.
"lt'.a a .myth_ that IC'OUts
are s q u a r e " said Mra.
Price. "And I'm a p-eat
myth d.l.apell«. We don't in-
tend to change the image Of
acouting ee a build« of
character. But we do want
people to know tbat today'•
scout Is more deeply tnwlv·
ed with problem.a around
her than she was even 10
years ago. I've never seen
sud\ a deeire for aervice.
"Today's gir)J know IO
much . . . read so much.
Young people are more
aware of the have-nots and
intend to do something lbott
l~" W.us. Price cited fM re-'
·cent conference i\l ~
polls of Senior Girl Scouts
from all over the country
~nd from all economic, eth·
nic end religious groupe.
1 The purpose: to find how
1 scouting could help bridge
the opportunity gap between
tboae from the inner city
and the slJburbs.
>.. one girl from Arkansas
commented toward the ead
of the swion. "We talked
all night. We decided we're
' . the. generation that's go-
ing to change everything."
Mrs. Pr.:lce. during a bual-1
ness trip 'o New York, told
also of just one·. other way
today's scouts are "involv-
ed."
.. At the Ume of the
Breck
PllMANINTS .........................
"" ..... ,..,.... ...... ..., -... ............... ~ ....
lreck "Horlz.on"
UM lredc "Enduring II" ,....
INdr "lffutiful"
-
10 ..
11"
15 ..
~ M COlllll• · • • .... ----s...-... _..._.
~ -1"'91 c--..
• I• COSTA MISA · -.._.., C:..,. II t .. 711
• IN H9'1mN•TO .. llACH
I ,...._ C..-" MNJ ...
............... Ctr.
1t1.a1tJ
o,.. 9"fY...., ....... . .... ., ........ .,, ....... .
Penna ~,,.,,
~llAun SALONS
' ----------.,_., .. ____ _ ·-·-·.. I
After five, legs dress up in exquisitely patterned
laces . . . or they' re on the glow 1n Antron
shimmer-ers, that glimmer with golden or silver
highlights. The metallic look is here to delight +h.e
most discerning eye. Belle Sharmeer goes a bit
more glamorous by adding a glittery bit of d~
sign' to their glistening leg fashions . Now, a girl
con dazzle in more ways t.hon one!
Buffums' has a complete selection of basic sheer
hosiery in your favorite styles, and your favorite
colors. You can select Agilon nylon . . . woven
to stretch up and down end all around to assure
fit ond comfort. Or. you con select Contrece.
woven to stretch one way . . . ond famous for
fitting like a second skin. If you prefer the com-
fort of support stockings, you con select from
mony styles. Support stockings are not like they
used t o be. Now, %ey're so sheer and fa shion -
able, only you and your Buffums' sales girl know
you're wearing them!
When panty hose first appeared on the fashion
scene , they were welcomed by all the women
who disliked garter discomforts. Now, Round the
Clod .has improved the ponty stocking ey creat-
ing a ponty hose with refills. When the hose runs,
they con be replaced with a new pair which have
been specially desianed to hook onto the panty.
'Panty hose with refills are completely new, .,nd
the comfort is the same as ever! Also new
Belle Sharmeer's Thigh Clasp hose. An elastic
:>and that dings, but doesn't bind . keeps your
stocking in place all doy. Never slips. slides or
loses its place.
If you haven't been aware of what's been hap-
pning to hosiery, we hope you visi t Buffums' Hos-
iery department. It will be the nicest thinq th~t ~
happened tcr your leqs since nylon !
..
....,._,.,.. ·~ •'-. ...... . .
J f OAll Y PILOT
New Life
· Mis$iOn
Announced
COit.a Mua•a ChriJt ~
can Chmch wU1 joJn IO Gflb.
er churehel ol tbe Lutbena
Cbu:rcb-Mlllouri 9Ynod •.
tile Southern ~ J»>.
tffct OD WedDeldQ, New. 8,
ibroaCh Sunday, Nov. 11..ta ~ New IJfe Million. ·
' Guelt reaom-ce .... fGr
the million. will bl Ile Rev •
.iobn llumaey. pMtGr ol Re-
deemer LGlltlm <hlreh.
South Gate. Be wlB CODduct
, ffl"Yioee Wedneedey trough
Friday at 7:• p.m. and will
conclude with a l!M!l'Vke ol
rededicaUOn 91ld l'eCOllleCl'•
tion on Sunday.
Purpote ~ the mialon ii
'to help tbe d!urd1 8Cxengtb-en its program for memo
bers of the conerecation.
Socll1 t.o oblerft its 15lh anniversary,. .. congrega.
tion has a total member-
lhip ill UCell ol 1,160.
Listening .-
Explored .-
Are you llaten1ng?
Why we are poor Ult.en.
era and wa11 to lmpove
Jllltedng abiUtJ ..m ... •· p1cnd by Mn. Ca1'ta Ol·
cot& ftm Ille JlrHI bi a
1wcwlmbop • d1namte
lpWinJ and Jl.¥ri'W at
111 e um-meeting oC Lu
Olu Toutmlatress CWb of
Hundacton Beach Wednel-
day. Nov. a:
Mrt. Marie Fouts will ·be
t.oastmistreu for the 7:3>
p.m. meeting in thtl Mer·
cury SeWJlga and Loan
Assn. buiJding, and will in-
troduce Mn. Ok!oet, who al·
so will toudl on .-eu of semantb, oral cnmnmnb.
~on and eemittvity train· mg.
The public fl always in·
vited t.o attend and addi-
tional information may be
obtained by calling Mn. Jo-
seph NebeJ*Y, 962-4M8, er
Mrs. Phlllip B11lington, 847·
1496.
Demonstration
Mrs. &belt E. Roper wiil
. Offer the use of her kitchen m her Irvba 'Cove bolbe' t.o
fellow Moodiay lrf«Dinl Club
memf>eis of Lquna Beach
for a cootlng demomtratioa
at 2 p.m. 'J'hursday;.Nov. 18.
M;r's, Carol Heim, home
economlat ·for the · Sc>Wbern
California Edison Co. will
prepare hollda) fooda while
dub memben tate notes.
Guests, whO also will be
able to aampJe the goodies,
are limited to 25, and res-
ervations may be obtained
by calling Mrs. John A. Gil·
let, Facta and Fattasies
obairman, ~7.
St. Andrew's Presbyterian
CJMach, Nnport Be a c h
WN the lflttiDg fer the dou·
.Ne ring ceremony linking
Cbriltine RiD8blom and
John J>Jctem. The Rev. Dr.
<llarles Dierenfield per·
formed the rites.
'!be bride, daughter of
Mr. IDd Mn. Allan Ring·
blom of Newport, wu given
in marriage by her father.
Sbe se1iected an empire
gown of wbtte stain peau de
Mlle wffh pearl beading trim
on the bodice and sleeves.
Her three • petaled satin
headpiece ceugbt her sboul·
cler length veU. llDd Ille car·
ried white ?Olel and baby'•
breath.
A might pink crepe em·
pire gaW1l end pint feather·
ed carnatloDa were ae1ected
fU' tbe bride'• Bilter, Mrs .
Douglas· Cameron O! Oat·
land who served as matron
of honor.
Bridelmaida were the
Milael Pat PUiler and Sue
G•uber of Newport Beach
md nom. Feweett ol Sepul·
wda, 1be bridegroom's cou-
sin. Junior bridesmaids
were Karen and Robin Ring-blom, the bride•s listers.
All l"Ol'e ligbt pink frocllr
and carried pink featt>ered
carnations.
'lbe bridegroom, 10D of
Mn. Alex Laaw of D a 1 y
City, uked Douglas Cam·
eron tO be hia be 1 t man.
,.,,,.,,,..
ELECTROl YSIS
For the ultimate in
efficient hair removal ~--..... nL .. a.:f· we use the Dual-aclion "1m ft'ttUUllJU, Electro-blend method.
~~ Phone f« CompU·
mentary Consullatioo.
/ · Beauty Stooio .,r Buffums·
Newport §1 Fashim Island Newport Center• 644-2200
. REVIVAL CRUSADE
OR. & MRS. CLIFFORD MUSGROVE
Nov. 5 through 19 _,... AltWa ,..,. .... St.l
lllle Teedtl.. NtWry ef N.,_ M...,...
Nightly except Mond1y & S1turd1y, 7:30 P.M.
CLirly Look
-1ops -Mop
In CQnteSt
I
L i1ht u p JOllr Mir
~ith. •tre1kl of fr~:t'
1n1p1red by Clairol
~le tCRS of hll .-;..ry llf-'ii4t
JOll ha1r. ClairdlostrlW, by Oii •·
pert hair ailcrists llClades li&f*nina and
Ben Brond6 1.-II.IL Ask lbca
Picbre Pertect• 111111t colci rinse fer
keepin1 flosti11$ kiJM UI. Get ready
fer the holidays, Clll •· ._, Sbllio
\
\
;
tNTEllNATIONAL STERLING
su1p1t1 the perfect Christmas 11n ...
_and saves yu 122.IQ ea a service for i.
Nothing would be m·ore welcomed than a gift of sterling silver ...
and you couldn't pick a better ti!N to buyl International Sterling
has lowered the .price on =a complete set of service for 8, incl&Jd,.
.in1: 16-teaspoons, S.pl~e f~ks~ S.place kn ives, 8-salad forks,
1 suaar spoon, l butter · knife, 1 ~avy ladle; 1 tablespoqn,
l ·pierced tablespom, l •fad serviD1 ·-spom, 1 -cold meat ·f«k.
Choice of 13 J)lttefns (8 shown-abM). fn· a 47.piece. service fir
8 with free c1'91t • JRislHeilttant.·wrap..AM.• to tlUI
Si I verware.
PATTERN
M .. llqve
J.., of Ale
MM•elMll•
P'relllff Ito~• lellet
wi1,. a ...
Ctyatel
Rlie, • .4,
Snewllelie
Velei1!1I•
,1110 .._..,, __
1t.,.1 Dmlth
-
\
• REG. o-,o STQPC IPIQAL:l'llCI . ...
' .
..
566.00
---
, . . ,, ...
1u};FiJMS1 SaLVEll CLUI
~OTHING ao•••o lllTEllEST
110 CAllllYINI CHAIGE ~
5.00 pel month up to 120.00
7 .00 per month up to 160.GO
10.00 per month'" to 240.00
15.00 per month up to 360.00
I
.
AS L'ONG AS 110 YEAftl TO PAY
... ..
J .
,
......
.
~
.
. .....
'
. . .
.
'/'
i
'
-' ..
1·
: . -.. ... : -... . i. .
E
~ ... .. . . . ; •<t • ... t! . . . . : .. .. .
1 . ----:
• ...
-~ .
...
Foursquare Church
1734 ORANGE AVE., COSTA MESA Newport •} fashim I ,_.,fl-+ C te 54•-2200 ... ... w w .,.,.,. , s .. "' ~wt""' en re .,.. . . ·e . ~~~~~~~·~·~·~·-·-·-~~-~---------~l ~~~~~l~till9~~-~s~00till6~ ~~~~~~·~·~~~~~--W•§.
; ------!I • -
• • ..... ' . f , : , ' .,... • • .. - -... ~ ·-:"!"· 1 ~ ~ : ----
• I
. ,.. _ __,. ___ ..__ ___ -_...__~_ .... _
· .. J
He1
eve
• '
. ,
!..
.:I
· Sunpl
·Sa
Eisht
HI.(
Chooe
:Puli
'Four
·Pun
Bir l i
Finl.
"Spec
·Chll
Horm
:ea
Beech
Ap
From
., ,
etT Tiii .....
UIATfll
ffiASTER 1
TM flellt,.._ef,.......tll1 ..... clrMtofy h ..... 111
.... _,.lzWf Mlll•..cl to .... them eaferto UM
Ind ..... " underllMd. ... ..,.. youl'Mtf. There'•.
wt'°6t new took In the frdtt d your book ••. to make
, k>oklng ..., tar you! @ hcific T .........
Here'• your chance to pr01'e to you;r.ell that El ·Rancho offer•~ IGIUlaction! •••
even to includin:g the egg• and. ~ 1ea1oning1 in compJetely ~n-ready meat loal !
• -.
. "
..
I ' I ..,.
El 'tancbo meat lolt Is a delillltfal blend ot pnciAion
lfOUDd meatl, juat tilt right •leninti ••• and fl'tlh
whole ...... Nll4T to be ,.u.d .. lbape, and
alipped into the cw-. Another ~ tw jou to be
pd 109 dMJle to .,, El RaDchdl
'1 llFli .. Albl
· Metrecal Shakes ...... ~..... 49' Peppers ... .-....................................... 1 s~
SimplJ add milk ad abake your dietary drinkl B~ beautiful Bell Peppers ••• juat risht for ltuttihfl · -s · 11 ~ . s, 39 on· · · '):;I&. 19 an a . . ions ..... .. . . .. . .. .................. -i~ c ............. ·:........ .. . . . . . . . . .. .. . .. . .. .., . . .
Eiabt ounce aile ••• at a aavin11 to you of tsc I Swelt 8pu.ilh variety ••• add M1t to so many thinp r
11.C Fruit Drinks .................................. 4 .. .,
Chooee TOur favorite flavors in b~ 4e ounee cam t
: Plrlna Cat Chow . : ......................... ~ .......... If
·Four pound bar ••• you •ve lOc and Kitty feta a treat I
·Purina Dog Chow ............................ : ......... 69'
Bir five pound bar-nutrition your pet needa t-
I " •la•••
lundt . MeatS~ ..................... : 4 • S1
Bonnel'• ..• 6-<Js. ~ ••• choose fram AU Meat Bolopa,
Cotto Salami, PlekJ6.Pimlnlo, Olive or Pure Pork Loaf.
·:finish FOIDHUIBI ............................ ,,...._ 7r Ill
.. Special le offer" •• at Bl Rancho'• reduced price, bay 8 and aaTt I c::I . Pri~ In effect at all ltortl
Kon., TUM., Wed. • , • New. I, '1, 8
· Chlll 'n' Beans ........... ~ .......................... 3 ... '1
Hormel'• ••• 16~ ounce cana ••• euy to ae~e, eaay to enjoy I
; Baby Food ........ ···'· ............. 12 ,. S1
Beech~ut ••• your choice of baby's f avorltel ln strained varletiN I
A I St . d I 49c .-.:s..t&•...,.Dr.(lllltlc.tw) . pn e-ru e .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. . .. PASABA: 320 ~ <:olcndo lwd. • ml PWDEIA: Fat & Huntinaton Dr.
From J:pperldge Farms ••• a treat the whole family will enjoy l Dllt IWI: 2727 Nlwport.M • 2555 Eastbluff Dr. (£MUlluff Wiatt Center)
.. • "., . '
•• "· :c
M~, NCMmbtr 6, 1967
••
DAILY PILOT Ji,
. .
"'
· .~u/~
Then "Y. • 'f*l.f low rnonthfy rate
on • course lndlvldually deal1n.c1 fo . r yoy
INCLUDE .
ANEW
··SLIM .
F;IGURE;; = IN YOUR
HOLIDAY
rtANs-...
CHICK THE LIST llLOW FOR. YOUR
INDIVIDUAL HllDS
*. ·--.. -· • ." • '::J ¥*
.f ACILITIEJ.
FOi MEii ,
ANDWOMEI ---.
Ate f~~e in
on/, 60 lo 90
. JagJ
THRll OF OUlt MANY LIACILITllS IEFOll ~IR
622 E. Kat.II•
p~ ....
Shopp'lng Centw •
' -
' .·
_ ..
' I
18 DAILY 'ILOT
r .
c.
Figl!-res High As
LEGAL NOTICE
By CARL CAUIENWN
Introduction al -all-new, ltghtwe90t. ..,.. per-
formance v..a mciM. _.a
wide raqe of tpm1:I car ..
tiooa bighlipt 1be Pl:J•lat
Barracuda for JS ll C9-
tinuea with the tpJl'ta ,_.
back., convertible ud ._..
top coupe models 1-lllf
engine lineup ,..,.. •
new 340 cubic ildt ,.... •
. plant exd!lai'lt .. a.ra..
cuda in tile Pb• .. ...
The,. ii ..... .-..
pact ......... .
per(Grw • 1 'SC
l!!qlDel ... .. .. t ••
thine-a.is Jar. • ~ .. a
ux;.u. JlfOftZ
THE NEW
1968CARS
After aohll over aJI the new ~Y..,._ Ill ~
your aporter lticka bis neck out lo•Y dieJ ...,..,_.
a doubt. the 1naziieat,bnt t~.m/at cua ..._
jaded eyes have ever teen! Score one IMc '-ft• fer
Detroit!
If you'N ill the mlrMt thia yen, eoacrata1 W.W
1u1peta you ltaw -from EuQdi119. That's wlillt t1ae
amart imidera do Saves time ud money. ud ii .we
convenient. Executiw lee-for lnl-'**-dwy'11e
the bi11e1i They carry 'em all • ., tbey'B put YOll ia tlae
ma-ke and model that suits )'Oil..: DO favoritilm~ They'I
pey top cash for your praent ear too.
Thia oorrelpoodent knows of DO bett.r ...... cS.l ia
town than Executiw'a .. Ideal LIMe'" .• et..... teday
for fu 11 detaila.
~~!!tJl!!Y~
IN
·OIAN61
COUNTY
Kl 7-J011 •
.. ''ma• Baa*'* ......
Tiie 225 cl. ... -
e.i. V.a an d I • _.
1111 mc..1. .,_._._. ................
an v.a ii • c11111.. Tiie ·-t.
1mn1 • ...
lllM ·v.a11r .. ,.... ........... , ..
SC t ·-• ii 4 I L lamftlC•Fa I I ............... __ ...........
.illile3'i 2. ·-· ..............
..... ., .. a j ................. ........... ...,._ .. ... ,.... ....... . ..,llilr ii t • ' .. .. ............. ., .. ,. • .., .. 's. .....
YW llUIY
amiiunJNE •a•rw--1
Ac .. lrlfru ---.-..,. te r. -ff t~e .... G«mmJ .....
pirnt nr• ~ v• a .,. ... _.a ............
Tiie 11r11et nm .. ..,.. ae
~., ••·r. _. ......... Yrs' Pg -. ...... Acal-.. v ... ............ vw ..
211 I a llr I '• Clli-lrnia.~ dr.c .._ _
... arW ...... ,_,.
•• 'lrt .t a. a ;'•
-tatillC --ii 1--
. bwg. vw,... -----.. dnd (108 ...... iltglmJ.
CllEV POWU ii .....
AT GUND PIUS
A ........ Clliffatlet -
lleftr .eems .. -...... ...... ,..., • ii pllllc-
ilc thrmtelw. .. a.e ...
P«t "' Ille ... .,.t ...
ftl'J iltaaaillc f8 see ._
wel die Clle9 powaJI 11>
perf«Jlled a Biua side ii
Ille r'ttll!lll Gr-s Pm. Of
Ille ....... starters. 21
• bad ClliffJ powr. Of Ille
11 fillilbers. 12 lll8d Cllny
,.,,._. ..S a.e+auld pow-
ered an nm J.U-6. Of tlle
21-Esi* rs-1J5~ pe-..n4 an Mired ,,._
tllenceartfbe I al
wrtitinf .... , -,... m•t ... w •nan:,_
U. liUle t.m .... a..y
pn1iciptti-
Got Mashed Ja the Market?
~I ' • '; -t . -
. .. . .
Crossword PU11ile
AUTO SHOW
CBAIBMAN NAJID •
Ernie Eldalepp ol .....
Baick in Santa AM bu
... named cbalr.-" tbe fourth unual-~
CAaaty lnterDatic..i -Sbo.r by tbe ~ra:Dllt Cla-
ty llokr Car Deala'I ,.
IOriatioa. apomora of t la t ....
To be beld at the new
Ccmftntioa Center in Ana·
beiJp from Dec. 1 tbroalb
Dec. 10, 1be show will fea-
tan all of the 1968 models
al domestic and imported can. Opening nigh\ al ~
abow will be an invitational
premiere CC>-&ponsored • by m Oninse County ..,_,
al b National AsliltaDce LNs-with proceedl. 10-
ial tD the League's vilrioul
J*1e+4uopic programs.
New Revenite
Record Told
By Mesa f.D.
move,
Patte!'IOn said all win-
dows and doon must be
closed to . mnre perfect •
watlon of ~i:m. "It iJ im to make
a fore t d eatry into any
ba1ldlnl wWn a Vandllsm
·la turnecl • -operatlni properly .. ' Patterlcle Mid.
ACROSS
1 Montreal's
subway 6 Cliff ,
10 Euly state of70 .I.cross
14 69 Actoss,
In England
15 Salt: Comb.
tom
16 Voice .17 Exacting
11 Work: Comb. form 1' Thrust ·
with pointed
We~pon
trik 20 Gas UAW S . e 21 :~\:er
condition
F d 22 Source of Costs or ' .. 23 t°~tidtno
• s-11111
$7 4 Mi)lion . 25 ~::1~os & Banff
Fard Motor Co. and con-
IOlldated subaidlariea •• $'t3,too,OOO or 18 centa a
•bare Jn the Wrd 4(uarW " 1Jr7, Jleory Ford U, cbalr-
man of .the · board, dd Ar·
jay Miller, precldent, have
announced. In the thiid
quarter of 1IN, CODIOlldat·
eel 1Mt llCOIM WU '86,,800,·
000, or • eenta a lbare.
Tbe loel, 1n the third ~
ter wu caued bit the Jtrike
of the UJltted · Automobile
SP,lngs 27 As.signed colony to a
.nation's
charge
31 Angler's Implement
32 Street sl gn
abbrev! a ti on 33 Weary
35 Sub]act
39 Vigorous , person
41 Negative reply 43 • antico: A black
•rbl•
Atlantic Research Corp. ol Worbrt, AnrCIO, which c.ta M begu Sept. f, AlthOQlb a . e1a has repclrted new •ll'e.tmeDt with the
. .
« Ovtr a!Ml ' 'dOM
46~, 6.g. 48 MU'S
ntcknllll• 49 Exel•. tJf
-~tl. 51MJP ... b,.s
cortc•n 53 HQ.iaftotd rtmishlng Item •
57 Asttoklgw
5t Leoal phiase:
2 wcrds 59 Percussion
Instruments 61 Monitor llurd
65 Comet
feature 66 Appraise
67 Central u.~. city 68 Oiiier
69 Fravance
70-Brew· 1111ster's
71 ~lt~ct
coloring job 72 Le'sset: ,Word
element
13 Opponent
DOWN
1 Time. of day
2 -Ad1111s, actress 3 Japanese
admiral
4 Devastated
5 Callfom ia
fort
d mcfiromt.and rev.mu UAW wu eoocluded Oct. for tbe st rune montbl of 2Z, · i:etUJDPdon of vehicle · h.-+-+-+-!1--
tbe year ~ for the tFalrd • auembly baa been delayed
quarter ending Oct. 1. Tbe pend1nt raolutlon al locel
firm manufactures m1llOe plant lauea. Throu&h Sept.
parta. 30, tbt atrlke bad rectwced
Net income for the ant scheduled Ncrtb American
nine months of 1967 reaebed ~on by 218 000 can • a\]-time higt-Of .... ,. trucb and trac~. '
1Z1 ~ 98 cents per ...... Lo1ff.a ftom scheduled
COlllpared with St .584,Mr •· October ~uction were
71 cents per share net · ti-an ackllUonal rr1 000 unlta
come for the similar period n ,wW take coUrdtrablc '* tJme alter reaumpdon o:
Operating revenues for the operations to a~ fuJ'
first nine months were a-production, IO f\ulther pm
•.I02 as compared Wfth · ductiOD iollea are expected.
revenues Gi '49.4&8.966 atbe ~ of WI loft procluct.101
aimilar period or 1989. wd1 affect fourt.h qoarter
New business o r d er 1 newta.
reached a record $76.-.0 Cont0Udated telea in thr f~ nine months compaMCI thlrd quarter of 1967 wer
With $57.351.<XXI in buaiaell rJ,o.11,900,000 --<:<>mpare
booked during thf first nlD• w I t b tll,353,500,<XXI tn tht I
months of 1966 thlrd quarter ol. 1966. I
. ,.. '\
r .. • .--~
.
6 Placed
under
COVIi'
7 Anxiety
8 Author
of boys'
books
9 Fan 10 Extinct animal
11 Elevated structu,.
12 Set.out
13 Va!Janta ·
21 Form of
passive
protest: 2 words i• Totem pole 26 Drlnktr
27 lpvented
21 River of
England
29 Eltigency
30·11rus 34 Former premier
of 54 Down: 2 words. 36 W. He11Jisph· ,,. CO\lrltly
111'161
37 Aroused
to wrath
31 ~ollectlon
otrules 40 Resisted autKDrity
42 C1r111onles
45 Family ,.,mber 4rniren-so Kfnd of auto
-62-llttlt Olct Harry
53 Enterfa~td royally
54 C0111mon
Market member
'5 Elevate 56 Report
catd tnliy 'O Hypothetical ICUiiiilJ..;.. particle
of matter.
62 Violente offeet ing &J Utterance
to attract attention U None at all 67 Spanls~ ,c;h..,
...
~--·--·
I
,,,,_ OAJLV Pn:br J 9
Prices -Comfllete New York ' Stock Exehiange List
..
--
20 DAILY PILOT Mond.'q, Nowmber 6, 1967
\
\
..
Announcing Gustom Crec;lit. · ,
·another new Bant<Americalfd· seMce.
• t •
As a new service to highly Rainy day money -fee each time you use Custom How cu J• .-ury?
qualified BankAmericard• A Custom Credit Account is · Credit and a monthly Servi~ If your financial standing is
customers, Bank of America simply the BankAmericard · charge on the outstanding sound and you have snf6cimt credit
is now making available the way of insuring that money js balance: 1~% for the first references, you areprobablydigib)D
convenience of a Custom Credit immediately available to you $1000, with a declining rate for a Custotn CreditAaxltlllt.
Account This new plan lets to meet emergencies or take on additional amounts. Even if you don't
you use your BankAmericard advantage of unexpected Custom Credit consolidates already have a--...~---....----:-
to obtain extra cash-justby opportunities. It allows you to extra expenses in your oraBankofAmCricachrtting
writing a check. You and your write checks for more than BankAmericard account, an. account-it will take just a
family will have a "line of your checking account balance. efficient and convenient way · few minutes to apply. Why nor
credit" from $500 to $5000, When you do, your account to manage personal finances-look into it-
to draw on as you need it is automatically replenished And it won't cause you at any branch of
with cash-in multiples of any extra paperwork. Y0u'll Bank ~f
-,.-$100-which is then charged to still receive only~enormal · :"'
your BankAmericard account. BinkAmericard and Checldng · Am81 IC8
The cost? Just a l 3 transaction Account statement& -· • .1
-.. ~ y
.. I .II
' > • . .
-----·-----~-
____ .__
•
I
1.-
,...-n ,,.
e... ....... .... , ..... c ne
Diil .....
mmal ~ .... JMh
~ .... ....
]
..
f ..
.
j
BO
Mimi
it WI
Be
()pm ....
Cl • a
fil
co .
Mondly, th \a 6, 1967 DAILY PILOT JJ
Pirates -Stir Up a Hornets' N~st, Lose 39-7
ed away, administered all thOH lea·
aona, uaing subadtute teachers for the
malt part to l9t the point acroa.
One would have to shudder at the ~gbt ol Wbat D11lbt have ~ to coach Dick Tucbr11 Pint.el had
the Hcrnets not been crippled by the
loa ol dx injured regulan I
~ it WU, HOn>et ICl'Uba filled _
mlghb' well 11 the Fullerton offeoae
reeled off 643 yllda -388 of wblcb came via the air lanet. It>'°" tboupt the halftime flreworb d.laplay wu spectacular, you wlUld
have been fUrtber dazzled by Ule A
aerial worts pl'Ovided by the Bl111 ud
Gold.
And you migfl\ have wondered why
tbe Orange Cout llCOOdary WU UD·
·able to cover Hornet recelvers u tbey
stood u lonely u a homely lirl tn a
beaut;r ~ lot most of the eve-•· '1bn .... Um. wbelL tt Hellled
the Pirate marchlna bud couJd haft
dooe aa well deffllldtna 11.m.t &be
pustng game of coach Hal Sbeiblct'•
wonder•.
Sherbect dkl pey oae subtle compll·
tneDt to b1I vaoqalabed foe -bl took
no cbance1 on tbe Redcoat. comina
to Ile, leavini bit fint unit Oil Ole
attack -throWin1 tboee ~ bombl untll the lA4t 3:22 of 1*Ulltltl.
And small wonder! Hla f~ ...
only tud.la1, ._7~
"ctually, there ftN twd occ111oiw
wben it ... mec1 ~ that~ c.o.t would bA1t 1hfiiOl.net Of.
IAIJlll without a lot1 et 34 ..•
the openin1 kickoff and ear)1 In tbe
third qUll'ter.
TralliJJ1 »O at halftime, Tucker'•
forces aPllUfld reecSy for burial rltu.
However, the, ~arill nturned
tO life momtall ilD tbt ~ ,erlod
Wbee AD.oaat"ence nctn• ·l'raat i
Weirath hurdled the llne ol 1csimmaee
and dashed 53 yards for a toucbdown.
Paul Lemoine converted and ft WM
20-7 with 1.2:03 left ill the ltama.
And, after cootaJnint the Hornet.
cm the next aeries of playa, 0r_,.
Coast again went oa tbe atta~ 1)e
Buca blitzed to the FuDertoo 2S bt6lre
Welrath fum~ IDCl the BorDeta • covered.
ruuert.on then zipped .,. ,.... "'
e.lgbt plays with IUbltJJute ~
back Jim Fusel toaiq a '7.ylrd
•coring bomb to ~lit the driW9.
That made it :16-6-lllld Sberbeck'a
troopa bad the 1ituatlae well bl bd..
Fuse!, also a reeerve ID Ids prep
playlnJ( day1 at Anaheim Bl,cb, WM a
pagslng marvel He threw for m
touchdown.a and complet.ed 15 oi 2.1 lt-
teJnpta for 310 yards.
True, blJ ncelven wwe ael11la
(See 0CC. P .. e II)
Soul-. Grapes by 49ers? · . . •.
LA Accused of. Illegal · Signal Calls
SAN rRANCJSCO (AP) -A &rim
,..._ ICaDd that stopped the San
Ptwilco 4l!r'I six iDcbes abort of the
'dlalt led tea 17-7 victory for the Loa
A .... a.n. Sanday in a aavage
• E ... Wttle. ,,.
a. Flwia» coach Jack CbriJt.
........ with the need to win the
a ' ' 1 a ..-es fer a apot at the
ftg 1 ] I w i.c-·· Coutal
Did I •-Vaa:•ed .. Ramt
............ aJlllC. _. ... a-.. AJleB bllppQJ a .... ...,.. .... beatudwa1 .. .._,.... We wre lucky.
'Dey..,.. a.. bell an over the fteJd
fllllt jmt dlllll"t ICm9 CID QI."
"The Rama ,Ot UI to ~ump of&ldel
repeatedly by callini oat the map
count, wblcb la compltiteJy Illegal,"
CbriJtiamen said. ''The Bean 1tled tO
do ., end it IMDll IAI AJtcelel fa pick·
iDg up a lot of Cblcago'1 old babUa."
Coach Allen used to be the Bears'' de-
femlve coach. ActuaDJ tbe 48en did tcore on a
wt .. Jard tloaebdowil drive with OD-
11 17 ---left ill .. ant pmod, but that WU all.
Thi Nit of the aft8I D001l WU a 1tor7
of t.rutraUon for the 4lera and a Plf•
Ulan crowd of U,lM -btaut at
Kuar Stadium ID five J'Ul'I•
h ........ Open
Sudden-death Pressure
Doesn't Crack Wysong
B<lfOUJW (AP) -Dudley Wy-
WC 8Cldr IHI I a Coif ball U if afraid
it ..... ...., to bit • back.
Be ...W tbe f]G0,000 Bawallln
()pm 1'Nitomnerd playiDg 10 IMMlly
Ille lllid be WUD't ture where the ball
...... .n.bebltit.
Bal ..,._ lt came down to the final
Miii. a.. quiet Tuan refuted to fold ..._ a. birdie pnuure ·o1 veteran
Bill.Y C.,., ad Wyaoog won the
.._ &It prbe in a sudden death ,..,..
W1wc ..s ea.,.. finished the 72-..._ .._umat, played over the 7,· •>•• W.._ course in brtJ.k trade willdl a..t made the coconut treea
dmee w,ana.ty, tied at 284.
Tllllt wu foar 1IDder par for the ,...,......_
om;, faar otber players broke par, O.C Saden, Babe Hiskey, Deane
Baa.-aml Tam Weiakopl, who tied ,_. a. ldrd spot with 11f1, t b r e e *'*-be!dml tbe leaders.
Dlf ..... damnpion Ted Mablena
'd t II • even Pllf 218, after an
91 5 I t....s 71. Arnold Palmer ..... eat .... and acored 72-74-74-n-m fir a Ja.place tie and '1,150. ..... a.:.r;• chect WU Wysong'• _..... fbe vidory only h1I sec-
..S. Bl ... tile Pboenix Open lut ,... .
"n,,.. a. ume atorJ here," be
said. "I played great the week before
and couldn 't win, and at Pboenlx I
ju.at tlddled around and WOil the tour.
namenl Last week, I felt real lood.
but when I got here I c:mlda't &et Ml
over the bell."
INtM'/ wi-• Ille 9100,oot H"1111M Ollellt DudlW wnoi.. ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . • 72 ... ,..,,... .. 9111\' ~. 112.a .................. 71.71.,.,,...... Ttm ~. SS.I• .•••..•••••••••. .,,.,.7)-."7 o... ...,..... -.1a ................ n.11.n.12-111
1.t11 Hlltrf, ts.I• ..............•... ,._,,._11-311
°""9 ~ u.1• ................ 7).1'.71.n-117
1tw ,...,... a.m .................... n.i.11-1a-• ..,, v-. a.m .................. 11.n.n.n-• Ted ~. 12.fJS ................ ,._,._71..,_. II. H. Sa& Sl.'7S .•.•••..•.•••••••. 7..._,._7._ •
Gew'M ~. U.125 .......•.•.... 11-.74-11-7'-29' H. Htnnlfte. U.115 .. , ................. 7S-n·11·7'-•
Tany .Hdtllll. U.121 ................ ~11*-• Slwe a.tey, 12.125 •••••••• , ......... 1>7'-71-75-219
LAu ~ Cl.7't .................. 7>7•7•.,...,,.
Jalwl setwe, '1.7• ••.•••••••••..•.•• , .. , .. n.-.2'0 Jim Gren!, tl.SSO .................... ...,,.., .. ~
CAlllle L.co..-. '1.SSO .............. n-n.n.n-m o. 'D1dl1-. 11,uo .••••••••••.•••. n-1>*n-a NMld ,. • ...,.., 11.uo ................ 7>7"1•~
Larry %.eltlMt• Sl,Ull ....•..• , ....... 71·7•,,..._2'2 .,_ en.n.ion. 11.1• •••••••••••••• 74-1>7"47-tn
T°"""' JIOllll, Sl,la •••..•........ 7).72-74-7>-2'!
LAI Tl'Mle, 11,1a .................. 7S.7..,.7>-2ft
Jedt ,led<, llJt.jO .................. 7S.7>72·7>-2n
llan COi ........ ·•IUD •••..........•.. 1'-1•1>~
TOl'NTIY Wt, MIU ................ n-7•12·~
Ollll utttlr, •12.Jt •••••••••··•···· 74'72-7>n-.nl o., .,_, Q2j ••••••••••••••••••• 1 .. n.1•n-2N °"" CNne .... 1725 ••••···•··••••·• ,,.,,.,.n-94 Dew ttlc*toll. 112$ ..•••••••••••••••• 76-1>7).7)-JN
Fl'Mll ..,,._. MUI .............. 7•10or.7$-2H
0--.. 8olltllt, Nl:t.• ••.•..•••••••• 1•1W .. 1t-as
8111 Gll'T'ltt, NIUO ...•.•.•••••.•••.• 7S-7J.7a.ll-1'S ..,. "°"'*"" .. ,,.. . ............. 72-7'-JS.7'-"5 .. MtC:ellltlr, •1uo . . . . • • • • • • . • . . n.n.,.,,_,. ttocb nion.-. 9'1t.a .•••...•••.• 1•n-1•1 .... m DICk Cnwfwf, ................... ,.,,., ... ,.._"'
D. Doutt.., MIS •• .' ................. 1>1>,.n-2"
Jtlwl F·fllll. ........... •••• ........ ~1.-n-JN
IC.in'Nt Zltl9r, .. ••·•••••••···•·••• 11.n.:n..~
A free.IWtnllnl trawl· In tbe atandl ~ in usable ~· after bem-
erupted bl tbe cJoilng mimdee. .. .utchlng. .
· A ltCODd 48lr ioucbdoWD 1flll ~ After the 48er touchdown on a n.
ified bJ an Off-clde penalty, ODI of • yard p1111 from John Brodie iO Jo h n
tbat bad Clartat1aDlen c:ryiQC "anf.alr.0 David Crow tbe Ra!DI tied It m the
Tbe outcome Wt the R.mlAD ~ MCOnd with a 85-yard drtn. Dick Bau
ODd pJJa w1tb a f.1.t recorcl and San 8COred on a on&-yard nm.
Prancilco tldrd wttb U. 81Jffman II 'fte Rama pounced on Brodie ,_.
tops with I vietorlel, DO a. l8d I tlma behind the line and forced blm
ties. ..., a damaglq fumhJe ua two i.
Beddtl lollaa tbl baD pma, Ill Wc:eptiou .
4lerl Jolt u,bt tad llaatJ •""· DI Mudor made one bdwc.ptloe
....., ildfered a broba wt folwm CID the Ram one 7lfd ltne. Tbe otMr anc111 out for tbe MUOtL ' by Mazie Baughan ~ to Bruce Gol-
Ram quarterback Roman Gabriel MU'• 27-yard field goal ID the fourtta
1uffered a aubed rltbt knee but ap-period.
...... ....,
Amigos Try
For Rebound
At Denver
DENVER, Colo. (AP) -The Ana·
helm Amigos of the American Bas-
ketball Aaloclation, who have yet to
put tOgetber back-to.back wins, will
be trying tonlpt to abate off their
back-to-back Jones of 1be weekend.
Anaheim, U, cloaa a three-game
road trip agaln.lt the Denver Rockets,
M. foBowtnt 1oiaes ol 104-10.1 to the
Kentucky Colonela Saturday and 119-
M SundaJ to the Minnesota Muskies.
Tbe Minnesota game wu the worst
drubbing of the aeuon for the Ami·
IOI. 1be Muskiet racted up 12 pointa
befcn the AmifOI a~ oa the score-
board.
Anabelm trailed by only nine fOlnta
at baWme but, by the ~liamr
mart. the margin bad widened to 21.
Ben Warley'1 22 points for Anaheim
led all acorers but it wun't enough to
~me 19 Poillts each bi Muskies
Bon l>erry, Don Freeman and Les Hunter.
ANAN•IM 0 ,. T MINNISOTA
...... 4 ~ 11 HuniW Dll!llll 1 1-t , .-.m.r .... rdlllf 2 ~ • Denllll
.... ) .. • Smllll .... 2 .. , ICltltr .._ 1 14 ) ,,__
Ollllllll ' .. ,, • ·~ ....... J w 10 .,,.,,., .,_ t u 7
..,..,...., 7 "' 22
0 P' T • ~7 ,,
' ... 16 7 u 17
1 2-2 4
4 ~ 12
' 1.. 1' ' l·I 1J • 24 1'
.......... 0 •
TOtlll '1 27_.I fl Totel1 .. 31>-'4 11t
-•l'ICllldel -thrtHolnt 119tft. 111-lfldlldla IWD tllf'....,.t llelllm. -~ ................. n ,. " ~ " Ml...... . ............... ,. 71 • 31-11' ...., .... wt -Ml,,.., .. timer, Ketler, Fn• -· Tetel f8ull -AMIMlm & M1"""°'9 Jl. ~-a.m. •
Costa Mesa's.
Mike Durbin
' Wins Keg Title
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio CAP) -Mlke
Durbin of Costa Mesa, Cal1f. scored
an overwb~g 338 pins &mday
night in capturing the Profeuional
Bowlers Association $30,000 Youngs..
towu Open.
Durb~a !1Dal pin count for tbe * pm, ~ent WU 9.SU..
Thia included eoo bonua fins he picked up for winning 12 0 his 18
tames la Sunday's m a t c b game finals. ·
Ed Bourdaae M Fresno, Calif., WU
the runner-tip man at 9,204 and Jlm
Stefanich o1 Joliet, m., finished third
with 9,107.
Stelanieh bit a b game on open-ing day.
The victory waa the second of the
year for tbe · M-)ear-<>Jd rookie and
was worth $3,000. This was the first
time in the hlatory Of the PBA that
a first.y._. man bad won two t.ouma-meota.
-~ f.54 IUOO I ' c.tlf. '·* II.sot Jilt\~"· f,IWSl.2te ~~ , ... •1.1• ~ Mot II.I. .. Midi.
'·"' 11,050 ~ ..... , ....
I.Ni mo
l ,f12 ...
~ le!Ylnt .... .,.
·!'r.ntwldt 1,111 MOO J~C.llf, ltJ n l.&57 11•
811Y ·-~· •.an .,...
~ .... 9"1
&,t02 1651
1.10 NU ~Midi. U I ....
l".-t Wfflll. lai.
RAMIREZ ROLLS
ANOTHER 300!
Anaheim'• Bob Ramirez made Call·
f ornJa bowling biJtory at Costa Mesa's
Kona Lanes recentiy.
He rolled a 300 game in the second
straight meeting of blJ Oruge O>un-
ty Open League.
Never belore bu a bowler toned
300 gl.mes in succeutve meetings ol
a 1BDctioned Calif ornla league. The
odda ol such a feat are rtagaerlng
when coUd.erlng the milliou ot ieaaue 1amea bowled annuaDJ.
NO STOPPING HIM -'lbere W11 no stopping Fullerton qaarfa'bact
Jim Fuael (12) when be ltepped beck top-. .,mat Orange Cou&
Saturday night Pin~ defender Pm1 Warren ('72) tries in vain .to
disrupt the Hornet whiz. Faael threw m touchdown strikes and
}>IS6ed for 310 yards.
Tlae 'Flit• Qurter' ..
Bruins Got Off Lucky -
With 16-16 Deadlock
Glancing at the fifth quarter ot var·
iou.s weekend footbell duels:
Don't feel sorry for UCLA just •
cause th& Bruinl Md their tea10D
record marred by the 1&-18 tie with
Oregon State S a tu r d a y at the
Coliseum.
U you watched the game objedh+
ly, you likely came up with the con-
clusion that UCLA WU lucky to break
even for its afternoon'• effort.
Oregon State got two tough breab
from offidalJ -one on the Bruin
goal line when re& aald the B_eaven
miJsed a touchdown by about tbne
centimeten.
Had they been credited with the
tally they would have bad at least a
13-0 lead (pending the coavenlon at.-
tempt) and it'• doubUul the lethargic
Bruins would have ever caught up.
Then they got another quiet whilt1e
on the only UCLA toucbdawn march
of the aftenloon when they reco•ered
a fumble at their own lt, Clllly to have
the -zebra men rule that the play bad
been blown dead before the bobble--
in which cue the wblJUe bad to be
blown while the Bruin back wu lti11
being tackled.
Off Saturday'• showing agl1mt tbe
Beavers, it ti mighty bard to bn.-gine
the Bruins dumping USC in that No-
vember 18 showdown.
But then It hardly teemed likely
Troy would bow to the Bruint in 19115
and 1986 -yet It happened.
* * * CGata Mesa ~ f..atall eMdt
Ndl Peek bat ....W w.-..1, baUfal tllree 'fSdMies ... a tie
already &1111 ae .... , wlllS •1Wta
· Mutuc 111CCe11 for tile lat& *-aeaaou pat tecet1ter •
ftlt ~lJ wbl M Bna l'rlUy .111,w
ucl &lie M 'ftl"&t ner Newpert
. * * * Nlct Ug1esich, former Budngton
Beach Blgb grid boa, bat found the
toot to bl.I llkiDg th1t year at West.em.
Bit Pkmeen own field goal wiDI '1fW
Long Beach Wi1lon (1~7), Newport
(J.0.7) lllld DmdingtDl Beech (U:JJ).
And they p i c k e d up their flttb
tlne-polnter ot the leUOll in the 1"3
IDu to Westminster.
* * * ,.. F'1IDl!rMa .IC'a Ina Malm WM
tile teln n1111lltcle fll' &lie S.-.
WHITE
WASH
1 ··=MM
* * * Trojan followen are DerVOQS about
th1t week's trek to Beaver COUDfr1
u USC meet. Oregon State in~
vallia. However, SC can easil:J mat:b
tbt' Beaven• .,P uaeta.-liDe ltre8'*
and speed.
Rest easy Soutbem Cal loyall.ICI,
John McKay's lads will have lat 6
aatioa in coatroL
10,000 on Hand for Celebrity Goll ·
caDllTY OOLfll ..=Slnaer !'rankle Avalon wu one of more than eo ce1e11ritia ~paling in Sunday's Orange County Celebrity Golf
Cl-* et Cotta Mesa Golf and Country Club. The event provided a
field dlJ fer aome 10,000 fans who followed the celebrities around the T to obtain •urer•phl. "' •.
BJ DA VE SIDDON
AD eetlmated 10,000 penon.s ftre on
band.
Coveys ol pretty &trla in stretch
PID$I ranced the sreem and fairways
Olllnl movie atan, televlaloa-pro·
4lucerl and famoua atblttes.
Bardet of boys ogled the pretty girls
tn ·stretch puta.
Wldreft earted bithtr and yon seek·
tng autots'apba from the famous and
near·famoua u parents and grand·
parenta looked on with approval.
There were even a few golf buffs
on band for Sunday's Orange County
Celebrlt1 ~If ~sic at Sos~ Me~
Golf llld Country Club.
But toll wun't really the name of
the game. It wu "Where'• the celeb-
rity? See the celebrity. G« the celeb-
rity' s autograph."
lnddental to the whole affair wu
the fact that TV producer Don Schwab
won the Celebrity Flight ( G?011 Divis·
loo) with a score ol 73, a1 actor Jack
Kelly, 11n1er Howard K~l and COW·
boy actor 'Bob Steele tied for second
with 7'71. \
In the Net Division comedian Buddy
Leiter took first place honors with a
62, with actor Frank AUet.ter, slngers /'41 Peterson~ Eddie Dean tieln~
for second with a 65, and adon Bm
Bixby, Richard Arleft and Steve
Rainel tielng fOT third at 86.
The Team Dlvtslon of the Celebrity
FD.gilt WU won by the team led by
Angel lecood baseman Bobby Knoop
in a playoff after his team tied wtth
teama led by Petenot1, and actor Paul
Newland.
Don Crowell won the Guest Flight
( Groa Divialon) with a 72. Former
tennis great Tony Trabert woo the Guest Fllght (Net Division) witlf a 63.
The event was staged for the bene-
fit of mentally and physkally bandl·
ca~ chll~in. ~Or~&e County.
I
P..uctpatlnt eblrltiel tncluded:
Coda MeH Women'• Club; ea.ta
Me.a Junior Women's Club; Falrvitw
State BOlpftal; Garden Grove Wom-
en's Club; March ol Dimes; MUICUlar
Dystrophy Aaoc:iatioa; Callfonlla M-
90Ciatloa far Neurologically Handicq.
peel Cbfldrea; Orange Cout Alsocl•
tlon for Ret8l'ded Cbildren; John Tr•
CJ cumc, and the South Coast ~
Guklmce Clink. •
The Celebrlty Clauic was termed a
complete nccea by Ronnie Reif, C..
ta Mesa director ol goH, who 1ald the
event would be staged again next year
CIO Oct. 2).
\
·•
'Spoiler' Newport Ruin s :
Lions' Title Chances, 1~·6
T9UI ITATllTICI .....
................ , 7
................ ' s ...,..,............. ' . T_..,_..,._ 1 ft .,.........,,...... n 1-"' =-=----1: : ............. -
2:50 remaining befcn hlter-m,_.... B.amum ticked tbe
atra point for a ICM> lead.
A 27·,-.rd DMdle-tbrnd-
inC na bJ lllnod blCb-
lighted the drift.
Troyano'• second pickoff
of a Lion aerial thwarted
Weatmlmter's strongest
flnt ball threat which car-
ried tbe Lions to Newport's
15 before the intaception at
Football
Staitdings
tbl m. In the waning mo-
menta of the half..
After three poueulon U·
clwl.Cel in the tldrd quar-
ter, the Llom' vaunted de-
feme pusbed the Sailors
back to their own goal and.
a bolt of Westmimtier U...
men rushed in to block a
punt and recover the ball OD
Newport's five.
Tbe Lions needed onlr one
Pll1 after tbJt to llbt th e K.Weboai'd a ~'Baynes
acored. "•"14Ma: trailed 1M u Bob Bed coovenioD
attempt wu ~ to the
righl -
Momeota later, _1.be Sail· ors had edged ~-to 't h e
one, but tunbaciJehn Brit-
tlqhain finally pushed
through on the Tan' final
chance.
South Gaw Puts Nails
In Ranger Coffin, 3.1
By GLENN WBITB
Of .. Deir ...., .....
TORRANCE -U n de-
feated South ~ drove the
flDal nan into the coff1n of
1be 0DC&1>roud <»an Rine·
era by ~g the four·
time defending Pacific ~
cer LNpe champions, 3-1,
SundaJ aft.ea noon at Soutb
Tarrance Hl&b Scbool.
Ancl, United Coast Rani· e:rs allo took a Jou, fal1iDC
to the South Bay Kickers,
3-0.
It ... the third league.
defeet in four at.arts for
coach Brian Mccau&1Je1'1
invaders.
McCaQ&bey blamed llree
defemlve blunders for t b e
setbact i.s South Gate ex·
ploded for three goals in the
la.st 15 m i n u te s of hos·
tillties.
The Rangers, wtio bad
controlled play up until then, were bursing a 1.0
lead. Jackie Ogilvie set up
the trally 17 minutes into the
final half when be brouebt
in a corner kick.
Bert BID'DI took the kick
and slammfld it in from
elpt yards out to end tbe
scoreless deadlock.
It looted like Burna' ef·
fOrt would hold up until
South Gate unleashed J t 1
attack.
Wltb 15 minutes to pi.,.
the W i D D U S potted the
equallzer. Then a m.i.na1-
l a t e r, while the Rangen
were regrouping, S o u t h
Gate struck again to make
it 2-1.
The final goal came with
one minute left in tbe con-test.
Mce.ugbey refused to rap
bis players' performance.
"We actually did q u l t e
well," be observed. "It was JUlt three mistakes that
cost UI the game.
"We're not falling apart
because of all the loqea.
1bings just haven't cone
our way like tbey used to.
We expect t.o have Leif
Werne.id and Jim McWll·
Hams (two former stars)
baclt soon and then we'Q
be okay."
nu. Sunday the Rangen
return to Newport Beach's
Mariners Part t.o meet Bell-
flower at 2:30. ·In the 12:30
""'Preliminary the Uni te-a
Coaat Ranaers take on Ana· Wm.
StiU Sweet to Witt
.occ .•.
<c.u...t rn...,.a)
botbered bf PlrGt .,...
era and theJ dad mu. a
few dtlflcult ut.cbel. Bat
~uael's toa. ~ ,.._ ..
ally bullseye-perfect.
H1a touchdown UltoWa
were for 17, 12, 52, '11, 18 and
47 yards. u there 11 anJtbh\I iood
that could CGGM out ol nch
a deblldte for Tucker It could
be the 418cottr, ol a qur--
terMet ,.. .-& c--· ua!:~:=ei;.g
l:ncoMisteDcy ol1he yearlllll
Lemoine, it loob. lll{e ftesb-
man BW Jenkins II the bat
field geaeral OD Ule squed.
Be hN come in late ID tbt
adlon tor OCC's last two
games and bu been lmpru·
live with ht.a J'UJUdnC, pau-
-and polled leedenblp.
T1IM ITATtrTICS OClC ,~
"""" ..... ~ 11 ' ,.,.., .... ..... 7 lt
,....., ......... ""' 1 • Toflll flrtt clowns lt 21 v ....... ._. ~ 13t • ,., •
y ........ ._. .-WW 120 -y.,. ... » • *' Y'""' ._...... 317 SC ~----. ., '--~ 17 It ,_ Md .....,ct,... • 1
NIHMlr .ti flllllb S ' A-..e ...,_ Sl.J IU ,......_, .. v.,. ,.,..~ • • ~ 1 •
~.. 1 • --·---er.. "'"' • • 1 .... 1 ...... \4. , ......
.... MIMIAL lfATlfTta ausM ... ...... c..
Tea Y• '(L ..... lf 111 • u ' ., . .., 7 ll .... ' u • ,, , ' • u
1 • 1 "·' t • 1 u > 11 f M .. m • u ........
1'Ca Y• 'n A• It • • .u
1 • s M • 16 1 u , If • ...
t sr • tu 1 2' t JU
1 I t ·U 11 111 I &A
IN DIVIDUAL '-"SSINe
~c...,
L.molne ..... ,,.
w.i.-1111 ,,.,.,,,.
Tot1l1
,. ,c '"'.,. ... Z2 ,. • llt ... ,
I 1 I 1 1.•
1 ••• -' 1 • t ..... •T1 t l:ltMI , .. .,..
PA PC Pltl Ye HI. D U l Jll Ml
1 , • ltl.•
I I t 111.• , , . · ·-fl It,,..,,.
,._....,... " 1t
,._.......,. 5 ' ,._..,. .... aor r :a •
.... ~..... 4 s ....,,....,. au au
..... 2 2 ~....... lt.
Winning Doesn't Bore FJC
...... 1 1 .......... 1 1 ......... ........ .., .... , ....,.... s 7 • 1-'11
*Dtf11*M. ITATIITIC$ -10 .,. YL A• n • 11 u ' ...... I I t •lA ' ..... M ft M U ........... fta .,. YL ,..._ rn :; : .: ~
....... ' .. ' u ,.._ I• t IU .... 1 1 • , ..
Ttlllll • \411 W J.J __,..,M. PAW
.......... ,_...,.
r..-
••• 1 ,A PC,_.,. N.
• t I UI .m
6 t I t -ti• au•• ..............
• J f " ... •t 1 .• ,., ... ........ ,_
, -
By DA VE SIDDON ...,,. ...
There 11 no diluting t h e
sweetneu of victory. Even
for a football team that baa
managed to put toptber an
almost monotonoua 1trlnt of
conaecutlve triumphJ.
For the Hornets ol. Ful·
lerton Junior eou.,., Sa~
urday'1 3t-7 win over Or·
ange Cout CoUece wu the
Jett> straight without daleal
It would seem that by
now the players would ac-
cept wlnnlng as a matter of
routine. But this wu not the
case .
They left the playing...fteld
at Anaheim Stadium as Jor·
fully u a team that had Jut
won itl first game. Th e
drelaing room was filled
wttb whoops and shouts u
the players slapped one an-
other oa th• back in aelf· congraculatlom.
"Wt're No. l ," a burly,
.,....tlq lineman bellowed.
HJ.I teammates chorused lA
acreement. Jf the shout could have
been beard down the b a J l
where the Orange Coast Pl·
rate• were dressing under a
pall of 1toom, lt is almost
certain there would have
been.J»O voice' raised in d.Lt-
1enL
Fullerton had deJDODltrat.
ed beyond any shadow of
doubt that it deserved ltl
No. 2 rankinr amonc -W·
tJonal Junior college srtd
powers, and that even t b •
claim to No. 1 mllht be
le<imate .
Coach Hal Shtrbeck WU
not at all 1urpr1Hd at b l 1
players' unrestralnecl Joy at
wlnninl yet another ball·
game. "Sure we've won a
few 1ame1 now, but each
new win meant u much to
us a1 all the rest combined,"
he sald. "It waa partlcular-
qy 'food te wJll thi1 fal'Dt
(See BOIU!, Paie ZS)
After 48-21 Loa
GWC Coach Issues
9, 747 at Big A
See Bamhler Win
......
..-.vPfL.9f,...., ..... ._
NOT THIS TIMI -Golden Wiit flaabr Bob G...,
ii caught from behind by a Ml San AJJtoaio tactJer
tn Saturday ni&bt'a 1ame between the two IMalrD
.COnlerenc& scb<dl. Grey ecored a toudJdown but
Golden West was beaten, 48-21.
State, 16-5
l
(
ca,_
°"'9 Clllca --. ....,
t... • .... ......
Oet
Ollt a. ...
La .... r.
... = .... ~ .... leltt ~
°"""' ....
lllfl
ICafl Ollll .... ...
·!Cell
Miii
---II
T• TtlW Tm
T11111 ....
T• M ,, .. .... ... Aoustlft
THI ... ., .... .._
-c T.., .... ,
TUI
McAI ....
AIM T-
NWI c... dllc • =
B
(C.
apl
aDlf
Tb
out t
the
h1I c
UDlta ....
'T
ol CIC
ftnt
oar ..... ...
pus!
IJ'OCI '"T -a,.u
aenl
Th
dine ....
hDi
jmdo
·11
tom.
playc
cenl
put
nentl
"We'
oar I
Jy. 'I
aleep
just
off." u ·
MU<
form
of& I
Ful1e
rant.
Jun1G c:e11tu
• -= I -
.....,, It 3 6, 1967 DAILY PILOT 23
Pro .Bt1$ketbal4
Grid Standings
Eagles, CdM
Lock Horns
For Crown
Cross Country ln.,itatioruil
Gar.den Grove Wins Crown.
MUTUAL
'.SAV ING S
, ••• ',1.'
•L:miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~
AMlatCAM LIMUI ...... .,.......
W &. T f'd, Pt1. OP s a t .1u m 112
4 I 1 .JTI ttt 115 I I I .JIS 11 S 1'1
J I 1 .31S 1'2 tlS
1 ' •• 10 1' 112 ..... .,.....
....... 1 1 • .175 2'1 "' llllDl11e 511.m•HI a-tl!Y . • J • .m us 1• .,..._ , ••• 111 , • ., ............ ...... ,., ....... ,
141111 .. as,. M'-11' ~ CllY 4 New Yetll 11
Olk1eM "· 0.--11 ....... ... ....... et IMW Vn .......... .,_
IC-. Cttr .. ..... ...Mllllll ... o.._.
1l..Y 8TEVE E¥0VJCll bolster next year's 1quad. billed ._.. aJI.. a. .._ ..,.. ,._.. • ., .. '· po=t, ~~.:in °fc; °'*°"''..,...., ''We have a fairly yoaQt Rwwf ...... Bfllda'• Palll i'l'= =-fi."--i;jp
the ~ p'•-i& for tbe Gardo Graye Hilb'• var-team... Suess c la i m s.. WUll8I WM lie area's llp . u ~ ~ t:•. w. ,..._. "'~&"-~inv tbe 1lty Cl':OH countzy lorcet "which had very li"'· "1.. l.9dMdMI fl al • 19er • Ire L. n=.r;... ,.. ..::'...::.
UAlo u.wt ,oung -abbed "'~ 0V ... 11 "-st 'UC 1U6 ........... ~ ..J.---..... , .... ldlOOl's history. ... -er-.a """ meet experience before the -_. .--• .._ a _ _. .....,.. .,. ....
TUetda)' tbe Eagle varsl-piece In th6 n1ntb annual season began." l :G eftart. B • • t i • ,._ '----.,._ •.a t. v-.ci..
ty water polo forces square Weatm.f.nst:er Invitational Suess' dista.nce men cor-Be8dl,.... •• 1 .,.. =.:··~is. a. =:...4-a•~
off acatnst al-.ya potent <Xou Country ~ Setur· roborate the maxim that aD.. _ ~ "'-~-del M-'-• wa .... -day and-proved. they w j 11 ""'ere t's no s·u .... ti ... •-•-Gae Bllll "'-c.ta -... \.NllW.---"' .._ ha to be bea~ arded w ve WM< ~--llesa -ee aat i.:.t t . ......, a: I.~ a Pl • fr.cu •'--• win de•·rmine ve . ref exper1·e-. •• t b e y ba0 • .., -w-... "~ w in e upcom I •--•-. '"'" -. •• "'=' * ' • .. a I --1. ta ......_ a i. ...... • i. ..,.._ Irvine Lea••11e cbamnl· U11m1t di-'ay...a '"ed '---._ -.... ......., ....... ~ ... ...., ... .,. Two ween ago tbe Grove · -in "" mar. ......,.v.-..-fllillt lillle abdl la t:e ti .. onsbip. Boin squads a.re 3-0 hurlers nabbed tint place ment since the conunence-_ ._ embiag ,, , 'Ill 1. a. ~ & ......-. •
in league action. in the fir oel 01'.. ment of 1be eeeson. r;-....S,... ...._. IMt '· _,.: :t::"'n~ ._., ·~P'd. .. u'.!?11~.!t'~.~~ty~'sbearethae County 1n:fta=.a11. ~ 'lbey took eeventh iD the ,_.•1 lrrile i..,. diam-:: ~1 ~....., '=9i' ~""" I J :Bl i · ~.!'d'oa"°:tb -play slat-J u n 1 or Mike Davia of . ea; 1 Y season Loq Beldl ..-.,. Sia a ' , ii ae = t::::;: ~ ~
§"'" I 4 I I\\ .._..... G~ Grove collected ibe · lnvttationals, second in lbe ._.. ftnllf;J ..._ ..., .. "''-" 1 eel to get under way at 3 mid Co de .. _ • .. = • ~°': ........._ Dl¥'f'-f : \\ p.m. in the Sea King Waters. faates time a r OU nd 1fle -season rona l -1ll'a I. ":'4. 1. La ....... .._ ---.. two-mile tract course u be lllvitationala, and capped it .. ,_ ~~ .... 1. .._ •=-
st. Louis 11 .m -t:~MeM v.as1TY 1 J ! t::l completed h clrcuit iD a with two first placea in the • ~ Vm: 1. ..,..=l-~ J11.
t; ;:..• 1
1
l ~:i ~ I.= [Jt_•m Dew M1fi.r ut be;;; bladng 9_:25. past two weeka in sim1liar ~~Y ,,......., ...:.. !:-*I l\rl =: l m=: 2 i '.II ;~ Wllt;!l., 'ifJ'. ~h. Mot1e1 151, G a r den Grove's croas meet situations. .:. t~1!. ~.~ T.. ...... ..,.., ~ •..-• ,. • oountry tutior Robert. Suea1 .Finishing over...U runner-• ... / = c.w m.. ~, ~· "' ~ • r'I'#. ~"'i{irfcJ: m t~IMM 11 l t::I attribute. btl-·team•• sue-w to Garden Grove wu '· ... ~ --. 1 c... 9: C1' 11::-LA1u~1s 1\t 1!9' <•re~:i-r.,e::•: ....,. Mc:C~ eett in ~ meet eompett. Valencia with a comblDed f'&~":Fr,:J(.t'7"' tt:11• 1. ........... ._ 2. ta .....,_ w.
.. y, 1 0 121 .. ~~.!!:¥•1•: ~~-.. "ri tion to bis b,arrien .hiard team time of 50:.1.• with ....... ..=:-l.-'=e.
. T ._ WGrawf --· es nunster's defendl .D g ~ llr. C...S.I ~ ~ ,._. _ ,..
lob Paley
-IMSURANCE
• ·AUTO • MARINE
• HOME • BUSINESS
•LIFE
642·6500
474 E. 17th ST.
COSTA MESA
N-~.n I 107 ............, Hlftl,..,1._I(,,., .,,......., ' "1-aMt'-·"'· W t . -...., 1,. ... ,._.. W... ._, 9:11. 1. o ... 'b...Pa:'Um·· --&
No • ~Mete f If l::f Four Of hil. tpp .IJx run~ CIF championa 1 .. _._ tt F;G•J'.::.a.. ... '·~ .. t"-. .... 4 J.iir.: ~--0 •• _ 1 ·J:.~ ~-•t ""&ti Mell -.: ••llftOll· ,,,, will be to. out for ....... -..... -• ~----~~;i\.:t '~ l~ ... ii'·iiii·;;~~iiiii~~iiiii~~ier::s~jiiiiijii .. ~r·e·turnioiiiiii~'•·iiiii.iiii~·iiiiiiiiiiiiiithirm·~d~wimtbiiiii~am•~cDi•iiiii~iiiiirii;jiiiiiiiiji ..... ili ... ic.ii&.i•i11:ifiliii.i0i',ii._i~itii:.Ttiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~
·4~,ct ...
lndllN 1 2 .771 '5 ! I :m l~-. ~~--r.+·111 M r· -i , ~ t\\
Im 1 i :• ·I Hout* 1 s .m •\\ ......1 ..
"'-· -:::L......-=:.-ta
---lfeeka• ~""
Football Results
BORE ..•
apin.lt • fine team like Or·
ange Cout."
'lbe coach went on to poJnt
out that )»e believed thia WU
the flDflt combined effort
bls oHemlve and defensive
Ullltl have put topther all
llUOIL
"I'm particularly proud
ol our offense. 'lb.la WU the
tint •tartmc uslgmnent for . °"' freahman quarterback. Jl'Ulel (Jim), and be did
an outltandlat job of
pustn1 ud directint o u r
ll'OlJDd rame. .
"The entire teen just did
one whale of a f1ne J o b
aplnat a real tough oppo-
1*ll"
Tbt victory all but
ellnched the Eastern eon.-
ference cbamploaabip f o r
FuUirton and a berth in the
junior college playoffs.
"Wt woWcl certainly like
to make it all the way to the
pla.yolf 1, but oar main COD·
c:ern rit!lt D 0 W ii getting
put our next two oppo-
nentl," Sberbect · 1 a i d.
''We're not takinc any of
oar upcomiq sames llgbt-
Jy. There can always be a
lleeper lying in the weeds
just waiting to knock us
off." ·
U tbe remainder of t b e
season goes according to B F tb U form, u.e tinala ot the pt.f-ee oo a
offs may find No. 2 ranted i.-l:l "' ~ I , _,.
Fullerton facln& No. 1 ~ • f' i · e-1t
r.--..o.Jd In the· ~.;a_ Junlar coDep 1ame of the • "
-catury. er: *' · 11; ,1
•
CGS11 llESA 1745 Newport Brvd. 646-1666
--tSU 8lrdlli Gtovt Blvd. .63U200 ._ lfJCll 1129 r:;Boch IUWI. -1213> 436-9789
Ulm -129 t t St. 541-9431
t --" ' OYD ilJ MMCCT OW IN "ltAl.tf'O"NI~ • -•
..
..
I
--., -.hill-A~ply--
nylon cord
Four full plies of heat-tr~ated,
tension-tempered nylon cord
give you lots of extra protec-
tion against 'bruises, cuts, road
shocks, heat, mcisture, and flex
damage. Gives you peace of
mind.
50'}1o off
~!UC sale 12.47 600/650xl3 tr• me . 600/&t0xl3
Plus 1.80 Federal Tm
Aegularty 21.N sale 13.47 700xl3 fi~ ai.ze 670xl3
Plus 1.93 Federal Tax
Jlegularly 25.N . sale 12.97 &t5/695xl4 fits alze
600/650xl•
Plus 1.93 Federal Tax
BeguJarlr 2fM 68Sx15 fits ai.ze
590/600x15 sale 13.47 Plua 1.88 Federal Tax
Fits moat inodela: .comm. CbeTf IL Dart. Fakal
Fairlcme, Valiant, Comet. Olda F-85. ~ Must~ t.=r.i :::.s'tl:.. ...
B~arty 31.9'
e25x14 fits m. aoox1•
Plus 2.38 Federal Tax
Begularly '3.94
855xl4 fits me BSOxI•
Plus 2.56 Federal Tax
B~uJ•ly '31.94"
81Sxl5 fits size 710xl5
Plus 2.33 Federal Tax
Beqularly 33.9'
e4Sxl5 fits aize 760xlS
Plus 2.53 Federal Tax
sale 15.97
sale 16.97
sale 15.97
sale 16.97
Fits moet mod.els: Buic:k, Chryaler, Dodge, Mer-
cury, Oldsmobile, Pontiac, Thunderbird.
All lllltf ..................... .... WltllWlfnllMl.-........ u...-
50'}1o off
••• I "IJ.N
735xl4 Jill .. 700xl4 sale 13.97 Phw 2.D8 Federal Tcu ......... .... sale 14.97 77Sxl4 ... 750.d4
Pim 2.21 Federal Tcu .
••;Awl• alt 735xlS fill me
640,16.iOdS sale · 14.47 Plus 2JN Federal Ten .
........ a.M .
775xl5 fill li:m 670xlS sale 14.97 Plus 2.23 Fedld Tcu
F'dl ..a modeJs: Ford. Clwnolet, Stw.w.at-. Rambles-.
Plymouth,
-=r~-=s~ ...
50'}1o off
~111M I
*88Sxl4 fits size ~H sale 19 22 Pim 2.84 Federal Tax · •
Sefablt 4IM
=~Sxls &ts .ue sale 20.22 Pim 2.n Federal Tcu
Fits mort modeJa: Cadillac, Electra, Imperial, Lin-
cdn Continental
•A ftlli1able In whitewall onlr.
All --wbitewaDa P-e add 2.SO each.
Without tradHn. pi-add l.00 each.
We prices plUa Federal E:lciM T 01
Just Charge ltl No Money Downl Take Months to Payl
rugged
perm.atuff
tread
Wide, deep, long mileage tread
compounded for greater com-
fort, designed for greater trac-
tion, more starting and stop-
ping power. Permatuff fights
heat buildup, too~ Run cooler
at high speed.
----mgh
perfo~ance
proved
Subjected to a seriea of gruel-
ing torture tests to make sure
that you always get maximum
performance. Vanderbilt Pre-
mium tires hold up, eTim under
the most adverse driving con-
ditions.
36month
' guarantee
Our best advertised tire, Van-
derbilt Premium is guaranteed
36 months against wear-out.
You get a guarantee against
all rood hazards and manufac-
turer's defects, too. There's no
limit on months. miles, or driv-
ing conditions. For life of orig-
inal ·tread.
rm BXPEltT mm MOUNTING • FREE SAFETY cm • PIEE WHm. IOTAT!Olf EYEIT S..1111.F.S • nrz l\MciUllE IEPADI FOil UFE OF ORIGINAL TREAD
co
AUTO eEnTrES
..L. __
r
may co I01lth coast plaza. 3333 .hn.tol sL cost.a mesa: 546-9321
~op in ~to centre mon<JaY; tues.day
and wedn91day, 8:3> a.m. to 9.ll p.ni.
I
\
'
I
I
DAil Y PILOT .._...,, Nowmblr 6, 1967
I ~ IOUNTIPUL' IKIPPER -Miii Unda K ella of Long Beach ls not reaDJ tbt -
per of the 8Uoot ICbooner Serena but she adds zest to the promotion of the
Loq BMdl to La Pa yacht race which gets under way next Saturday at noon.
With or wtthout Klas Kell!, Serena is a favorite in the 1.000 mile La Pu nee.
i. P az Classie
Mesa Sloops in Big Race ·
Siz (!olmnN1 ·IO lfoopa NCS tak• tbe fleet .. .
Jll'Odacld ta tbe Oal&a ~ 710 mn. don the ... af
pa af l!olarnNa Yaditl a.Ja CIUfanda ...... 1!i1ir
wlll edit tpice to a. i.• turn .. .,._. ... .. ==~~:: trtd1blllttowllllwM• .... "' a. clllllc .... UD: tbe part ct La Pa. ..... -~~ fromthe~toi. .. _
1-1 Ylldlt . =~ ......... Tbe Co1unibfa-50I doml:
mte lie ~ fleet ct SERENA lABGEIT
start.en In tbe race and are Largelt elltrJ 11 tbe s.r., apected to put Oil • lively boat.(cr-boat battle over the na wb1ch II «Qledld to bl coune wh1cb lDcludet a ~ first to ftnlah In lbclat m
mile beat to wua.er after daya If wind and .. an
turning the point at Cabo fawrabJe. Tbe 1••..tn.rler ct tbe fleet u u..-.'11d to fin. San~.clua race la ex-isb within 10 days.
-+-t to de -• bet Here ii the eairJ Ult: .._.,..... vuopweeu AL V I E N T 0 (Alberg,
tbe three Cel-3111, products 35) Bm Dalepl, LBYC. =~~ Marine al Costa ANlTRA ('lo.loot aloop)
Robert S. Lint, SeltUe YC.
SCRATCH BOAT ANDALE (Cal-32 sloop)
Scratch boat m tbe fJeet 11 BW stewart, St. Franda YC.
Ken De Meuae'1 1.1-foot ANGELIQUE (i...) R. S.
IChooner Serena from S a n StelfenlOll, Aeollan YC, San
Prandlco, ~-al two Frmdaco.
tb1a YC.
!'BAM II (C>ffjbarMD)
Narbl Nelaaa. USYC.
IRllll 1111'1' <X•> Jd
llllllrm. L8YC.
aJBAa r ::>Dea llld--~YC. MA iiiJBiiiiii ( e . ft.
at.ell) Car ltolllnltM, Slllta
Bartma YC. MtmNEER (Bounty.fl)
lrvlDa Loube. Richmond YC.
PMAOO MANANA Il ( 40-a. btch) Bill Ervbl, LBYC.
PILOT (Karlner-40) Fred
SIDier. LBYC.
QlJERJDA U (Columbla-
50) James Feuerstein, Del
ReyYC . RAPTURE (Columbia.SO)
George Stur... Newport
Barbor YC. SERENA (83-ft. schooner)
Ken DeMeuM, St. Francll
YC.
SIGAME (Cal-31) Sid Ren-
k°.!:, pe1 Rey YC. ti!MOON (Columbia· 50)
SA Firm
A .• ~
B~ndix
Honolulu races and a par-ASTRAL (Cohnnbla • 50)
tlcipant in the lint La Pu Come1lul Vudlrstar, Seal Hall • Wiliams, NBYC. 1 SUNDOWNER (Cal • 38)
F.d Sundbe.rg, California YC. nice two years ago. Beach YC.
Three Newport Harbor en-CAPRICIOUS Il (Cal~)
trill are al.lo in the line-up. Ben Wi1Il8JDI, Loll Angeles 'lbef:.nAllea .Kelly's Cal· YC. 40 trett from Bahia CHRYSOPYLE (45-
0arintblan Ya c b t Club, ft. yawl) Dean M<(risoo, St.
Georp Stur1t1' Columbia· Francis YC.
VECI'OR (Columbia, 50)
Herb Johnson, Oceanside
YC. VIVANT (Oal-tO) Mort
Haskell, Alamitos Bay YC.
9 Rapture, Newport Harbor CONQUEST (Cal-37) BW
Yacht Club, and the Cohun-PoDy, LBYC. WEATHER
bla-40 Simoon, co-skippered CYGNUS (Columbia· 50) 1\e DAILY PILOT ''fb tile bJ Jol:m Hall and Stan WU· Ernest Chipman, LBYG. utl.ul _,.._ ,ktllN , ...
llama al NHYC. Sb:nooo wu EL PRIMERO (Cal-35) • ce•,•ct "'41'! feetw,.., a. a... B winner i:n tbe Krank Hooytaaa, LBYC. tlelty ,,. '•t• 2. It • ''". ttie1t11 111'1 B.aaolulu r.ce. EN~ (Cal-to) :.!,. hlclttt , .. ,. , .. if• •
The course of the La Paz Allen Kelly, ·Bahia Corin·~-·------------=....,.,,,..=--=-------
i•
• ••
. . ,i •
~ .
ADMIT IT!
NO ONE VACUUM CLEANER
HAS EVER BEEN DESIGNED
TO CLEAN YOUR HOUSE THE
WAY YOU REAi I Y LIKE IT·I .
TW1 ny •ER .. .a.a ·,.
f?TWO *
VACUUM CLEANERS
AN UPRIGHT PLUS A
CANIS I ER FOR ONLY
'88
POWll MASTEi CAIHSTEI
VACUUM ~J SHIQEI fer tH
ltnt~cll•lll .................... ........ rt
• ...... lllDllMe*tllll. ·~-..,.~ Wll&hsonlyllk
• P'owtrdlll control pro¥Jdel "Jwt riCllt" _... for wtry ct11nin1 !*.
• ~lltlf5 ...... J ::-'
•A T,.._ Martt Ill Tiie SI-t.mHny
'"""',..,,,.. lllAat COSTA MISA IM ~ ~,, ... ClllTl._.,·tlfl e.t1aou eaov1 IOUTII COAST P'LAIA. JIU HISTOL -.... UJI
HAll01t·c111n1t, UM HAllOI -.149-lltS
OOWNTOWll IAllTA ANA OllMell ,LAZA ClllTllt. '"' CllAP'MAM-4»4tlt IUIMA P'AIUC
hlMA f'AJtlt C.NU"-.. Oii 'nll MALL , ... LA MlltAIM aLYD. -LA 1 .. 11
LA MlltADA CllllTH
' .
-W. 4111 IT. -Mt-)Mf
'
• PorilblM1 .. easy.-bll
picbn
•E&SYto• ~tl>f'Dllfft
' . .......
La Pmz TIUae .. : ·.
'Tempest' WinsLAY~R1µ:e ,...... ..... ~
S21Joof ......... ........
ed by Jim i'ACJ. .. ..
ovwall and a.. 8 wlllller
bll.-Aqelll Y.at Cllll'1 JO.ma. La' Pu T-.o 1p
race. lbl u... _. a.a
,.... "' .. HmtMlr ... ....
'lbe .... -pllCl4 ,...... l*t at tlril tap of ......
for the llltlre ..-.
Second . ID latardaJ'1
La Pu pr..-w11 ......
a.pm..•1 Cohn-HI • •
~ Lema Buda Yec:llt
Club, 11111 8llrd wu Att
Walker't CaMI ~ C.
brillo 11..a Yadl& Qllb.
'l'be· i,• J1!1i1t i. Pll J9CI
.. andll' wiJ aa:t ......
at noon from 1-c 8-=b
Yacht Club. OMI l'tlllltl
for r.a Pa tlmMll;
a.ASS A -(1) .J#,....
(CaMI) Barry ......
LAYC, ET I.Ma, CflJDOI;
(S) Cllpridou D (Cal-eJ
Ba W1J11am. LAYC. l:T .._er a.-; <•>.a.
..n(La)Al .... U.
YC, ZT 1.H. er a-.
aA8I a-(1) T i!t 11t (Oil .. ) .la JDilllr, l 1'C n .._ er a.i.: et> =·O' ''•.::>=. er a.ua:~ (c.&.
DaYia Captmea
Saint Ckrero
r=:J~ .., . LlYC..
a.All C-(1) • n aw;
Cl) ...... ; (J) pp IJ
D (CIUIJ-. ...,. .......
LA1'C.
a.All D (J) -Dllb m
a) "'-(OC , ••>
...... Uk t~ I.ATC; (I) ...,. . .
I See By Today's
Want Ads
e A Jlttla eld lldJ a a.ta
.... ... • cam,er t8at
• lbe ........... be bl
sr-t -...,.,, 8'Wll
tndeltb& ...... .,
' e ·w .......
...a. -ll·laltt
• Wha'e ,_ em pt a IOOd ••a Q*9lpot ~ aD1 -
•• part wtD all their ~
-JDlldMnbip la ... "Newpirt Beach Tellll
~ ....... ........
lluJt
, J. Plrtr .... land....,
OWD ontF & tlild ftWll tile
....... "-wpart.
-
• I ..
'
•• • J ' •• -... . ~ ,.
·-------------
-D,
~
TH
A!
Tf.
--t-i -• HQ
«!er
~
t: I
11
c:::::
jOf 'a FA:.
RO
old
STt
Wb
in&
all
uq
dra
lanl
00
Ha1
han
bed
ver -JOO! ...
edl
~
Roe
Har
SU
Tl[
a.
N•
. Dellt and
Bl1a plat
.. 2~
. wot'
'"lit . Cl
I
Spet1
1%
Eu
pett
Dool
Pb
loan
lnl 646-
(
·I ...... v
' Finl
• chm:
ed l
dral
WW
Walt~
WI
•
I ..
I
Here .. ... ct.
'\ brid
and
Allll
am&
Will
Dr .•
N
2G
Otcu maa rooa
JtOQ
trMI
TM
$30,5
545-tt -I I
Hmili
l'OOlf
LM
"'"' ~
m ~) Tree
ti.th.
"' JOU. 1:;. --,
>
' DAILYPIWT
WANT ADS
THE BIGGEST SINGLE
MARKm'PLACB ON
TH! OltANGI COAST
-CALL DIRECT
,.,.,,,, I,
i2oo sa: "'· !OF J,UXUIUOUS 1JVING
4 BEl>ROOMS + DEN +
FAMILY ROOM+ DINING
ROOM + S BATHS. 3 yt9r1
old a n d bmnaculate 6 ~ING In f!Y«'J det&ll.
White brick flreplace in Uv·
ln1 room, wet bar in den,
all electric built in ldtl."hen,
exqulllt. • carpdillc a n d
~ A pendlM la
.......... .., .... It.~
DOOi V AWE cml:J $31,500.
W .ALltDl 6 LEE
.. a.tar ... _,. 091a llll 1 PM ,,,.,.. ... ran
. -
Have been built tntD tbls
hCldlOlne caRlm home· 3
Mdroom. 2 bMba plm eoo-
wrtatiie deD sifea IP9C8 for
.a...d famll1 acttrit, and
room for privacy. HnTY
• ...... roci .... 8pullb kidt
ext.w. railed beartll ftre.
place, .., beam cefDnc.
Room tor pool. N"'llO!'t
H&rt>ar HIP School Dbtricl
$3,800 Dn. CJ'. COLESWO&-
• THY 6 CO. tG-mT Next to
Snide Sbclf Jr. ()pm Evei.
Newport HelCjllts
DellahtAIU)' deen 2 bedroom
and family room. 2 batbL
Briabt lt\ftnc room witll are.
place -Ema )up Jot with
1• 2~ car pnp and au.cbed
wutbbop wtUl aDq •
J. ~· $14,900-Low taxes. ANJ13 • '*7171
' Opeft ... 1'11 '
• l .,,,, 1 -• I tf. ~ .. J -.· .•
... ~ --! • I ~· •, , ~ ~ r • •
sw11 .. se.
~deu3.,.._,
1 ~ badla Clft lMJe apper
Eutaide lot, belllUfuil1 car-
peted • clrQed, 8IW vinyl
floont -ln .,..... izz.•.
'2.000 down. A"'8M 5" ~
Joa.ft JlTO per modb IDclud·
lnl tun. 646-7171 ~2211
Open ..... ''TH ' --T H F t4_1 L -~':.. I .
1-:'·T•'f.
Mill vii§ ii2,fi0
' ) Tr... UDed etreet S bedrm· 2
bath. Vacant • rtacly for
~ • JOU. Hla_J_ou will be ~ .aa1n. 54():fm ' •
1AUtl,L -lit.rilar
.INTEREST
RATES
ON
REAL
ESTATE .
' LOANS
ARE GOING
UP i
TODAY
WE HA~
6.2%
IN1DIST
LOWEST IN
THE INDUSTRY
30 YEARS
REFINANCE
" ALSO
NEW
90%
OF
SALE PRICE LOANS
.LOANS TO
FROM OUR
INSURANCE
ACCOUNT
Slnfle f •mlty Only .
CALL US FOR
• 90% of value
or Nfiunce
loans on single
femily
• Le ... Hold
Loen
' • L.nd Loans
• Apt • ..lo.ns
• Commercial
Loens
•Tract LMns
• Censtructien
Low
loans over ·
$1qG,OOO
On·Sfftlle l'lflllly.
EaclusJve Ateftfs for
OM of fhe lerpd lft.
uance Compe1ty I
S.vfnts I t.o... for
the pest " yHf'I in
the H-'*" ~.
SATTEER
MORTGAGE
COMPANY
336 E. 17th St.
Coste Mesa
Ml 2·2171
or
Kl 5·4l06,..
.. • • of' • I • # • • ,. ,. '
.....,, No .... 6, 1967 DAILY PILOT
Brutal· ~Hatful of Rain'
i
Full,, Frank Drug Drallin
Three ABC
Programs
Getting Ax
NEW YORJt (AP) -The
AmerlCID Broldcutlnl Co.
will drop tbrte televiaJon
prop1.1111 -two at t.bem
new tbla lfflOD -in the
next two montbl and mu,
aome 1hlfta bl iU dedule.
I epokeanan add Tb--'•v nl&bl . -~
Canceled we "'!be Le1·
end of Cuter' and "Good
Company,'' the new aerie•,
and "Tbe Iron Bene," now
in itl leCond MUOll.
''The lroll Bone" wln
have ltl final show Dec. 9
and the foJJowint week wUl
be rtpleeed bJ "Ballywoocl
PIMce'' a varletJ abow DOW
seen Tuesdays.
"Good Oompt1n1," a later·
daJ ...m at "Penoa to
~ .. wlil -with the Dec. 21 ...... .ad tbe
time period will bl ntmDlid
to """"" ....... Jo. caisncr•·-,.,,.. WllDd "' OuW'' · wm ~ nplactd Ja. 10 wttll
'"Tbt A..,..," a Brttfl'I. m8de ....., ued belcn u
a replacemenl
''It TM.el a Ttdef.," a u-
tiric......,. ..n., will
have tta ~ Ja tbe net-
work'• --im.. 11P Jan. t "'1ell ..... ~ srama will be mond into
1ltW time apoq ..
TSae ~ sirocram• hid HCIAMCI P*' NlelMD
ratiql.
BYTBOMMB'ft
-............
"A Hatflll ti Raia'" II • Ulb'brut.ota..,.,....
an~ with ltl flll _.
frank trutmeat ti .. ...
tu1eful tbeml, ....... ,
tqt.W•mkh~,.._
the theater ..........
end of CDe ant ad. Tbll ..nit &Ga ol a .,.
vefwan'• llddlc:tN • ..,.
'S.top WorLl' Sl.atR,d
At Cyprea Colkge
ACADE~Y AWARDS WINNER
81!E IT
WITH
80Ml!ONI vou
LOVl!I
.......... ... , ......
featuN It
7:JOINb
-Mllanmcr • rnw TAY\a ....... .,..
~IWOMIN" ---
4POR T
11111
Hllfl
pit ycmelf 11 Oll placer
. \
ONLY FOR MEN?
1\e DAILY PR.O'I' _,.,.. ........ .......,, ... .............. ,... ... .................. .................. ... .., ........ ,., .... ..w ..... ..... ... ..... ..... .. .................. ......... ,
Tiii lll11iltff lt1~11ts .,
Ora1p Co1d Coll111
.. ~--:..-:.; "'""' -
THE A1iiciiii1• .. a , .
JOSE. F.ELICIANO
I '.M. -fllUDAY, NOV. 10
PITllSON GYMNASIUM
OIANGJ COAST COWGE
1'1cbts we ......... et OCC l11bt.,.. It $1.sd'
with AIOCC Ard. $UO O...r11I Admllllon.
J
S.. It ..... Lt,...t
Sc-la °'i• ~ : .....
SW C..ae,._Vlf• Mies
~--· "ntl .. ..., II ~ '
..
------'----_....__~__.._------~-----~~-------
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MondlJ, NOWll!lber 6, 1967
, .
DAILY PILOT
(· JohnsOn Goes Long Road Fronr· Master to Petitioner
~
' • . . t'
I '.
I
'". [
' ... ! .
: . ,. .
, •''~
,, J
1.•,,'
1 • . ,
' ' : ..
I ;
I " Ii •
: • '~r
I I .
I .....
I.
I
I .. r
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•
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tndividual tenator waa more
like)¥ already 1.ndebt.ed to
bbn for a put favor, like
JabMcm11 be1p in aeWnc tbroUCh aome Jegialatlon the
....-wanted.
Jl'ULL AGREEMENT u be couldD't set full
.,..anent, Johnlce w a s wfllblC to compromlle. He
toot special pride tn this.
It w11 oae of bia favorlh!
aetlca, perhaps blt moet
~cme. ma pbO~ about iet· 1lDC l~ through tbe
Sen.ate WU almple: He WU
reallltlc. Be dlan't operate
on Cload t, inliltine that a
~orilv of the SenMe bad to gtw him exactly wMt be
wanted u be wanted it.
I! necessary, be w11 wt:ll·
1ng to •tue t« 1eu tbaD all be wanted in order to
get some of it, bellevinl
that in time he could gel
tbe rest of it.
An outstaDd.lng example la
the 1957 Civil Right& Act,
the first such legislation ap-
proved in thlJ century. No-
body before Johnson had
been able to do it
It waa the product of com-
promiae, wlodlng up being a
lot less forceful than t b e
civil rigbU measure the
SeDate started out to con-
sider. Negroes were unhap-
py about it, and some were
intensely angry at Johnson.
SOUTHERN RESISTANCE
But Southern resistance,
which had been able to
block every other c i v i 1
rights bill in this century,
wu broken and could never
be the aame agUi. T h u s
the 1957 act, less than per-
f ect, ,, ... toot ta ibe door.
Other dY1l rllllD w fol·
lowed.
Now tf one wUl bother to
look at ....._ l'ft uld this
year It ,...., )let a IUdden
lhift of pcrllo• • many
think; tbel'J ..._ bem oth·
er 1Ddl~ •• •
What I felt Dd ll'bat I
feel now WU 1laat we · are
:ts~\;°~-:~
Nm• -..:::-; 108,000 m.,n. er -.mil· I.Ion. We .. , 11UC to
solve it that ....,. So I'm
tryil)C, in m1 .~.way,
to find au. ... wtllcb
will lead to ICllQI IClrt of
di1en18'•meat.
The ll1nl tbat concerns me u mucb u U1ihing
else today ii 1be complete
shift by tlUa ....,,._atlon
-men lcr 1fbala I bave the
bigbest re1ard, secm.y
Ruak, Secretar, McNUDlra
and tbe ~ blmMU-
ol the justlftcatloll of o u r
milit.ary pr~
Thia Juatiftca"• up until
two montbl *ID bM be9ll
that we waDtecl to ... that
these V»biam ... · people
co~baveu~~ ermnent of ·hir cb
withQut a IUD at their bead.
We deCrled Oommunlat ag.
gresston from. North Viet-
nam wbldl ~ tbat.
SMART POLITICS
Now we ... told, ob. ..U,
the reuon ,.. art ftChtfq
there ta '° we woa't have to Ogbt oa Mllllll :Beach.
Now I'm N'J mart 1n pol·
itics, but it seema 1D me
that the Viet Cant can tab
that tuue, aacl tat.a. tUt statement ·ad red u c e
TOMORROW IS REBEL'} =~a~~i~g~YH~~~~~:C, '::~:~; 1f" to problems and soothe hurt feehngs. people who
HE TO. Mr will explain and reatsure and inspire. Our community is
lucky to have many people like that: carir1g for homeless LP HIM 8 • • children, watching over the younisters of working
GIVE,' TUC. UNITED wr•v .. :~~=~~!~i~~~r~~~~e~!~~=-~:r~ ~ -,~~ . . _ . HI· them carrion tb&S ~lf·unportant work.. . .,
When your neighbor asks you to help, give to the
United Fund or Community Chest in your community
....
I 10 ISack to whet form·
er Preddent TrumlD a D d
Pruldent Eilenbowtr said.
that the 1IDd JDllll of Alla
la JlOt tbe piace to cmun!t
troop1 ••• Now -."ve aot-
teb Into th1t tblnL fD1o fh e
land mau of Ab. I'm not
IO sure we're right. I'm
afrllld we're 1f1'0D&. ID fact.
I bow we're wrong.
In ' tboee Senate )'eU'I
Johnlon. completely Cll top
of domel1ic problemt, WU nner not.eel u a foreign af.
faka aat.borit)'. Be . dldn't
.. to be, lince farelp al·
fain bllll had been worked
OYW 1n detail by apedalilltd
CCJIDmltteet before reeching
tbe Senate for a vote.
1'bell JobDloa moved out
of the SemU aDd mto ttie
vice pntldtDcy and flN111
LDto .. praSdtDey where
tbe_eroblema were quite dif.
tereot. u Johnlon learned
1D a hurry, particularly with
Vietnam.
'l'DIE ON IDS SIDE
For • wbU.e tlm• WU on
.bll lidt, Jettint blm aUD run ~from the
White Roule. 'Jbe proof Wll
what Mpptned in 1986 after
the )'tar.-rlter electiona
1ave Democ;rata over-wbelmJnc control of both
Bouse and Sea.ate.
In 1911 Ccmcreaa achleved
ita most Jll'OCluctlve ;yeu,
rammlnC tlttoup a miracle
of letltlatiGD under JobD·
1C1D'1 ~ and maDeU'f· eriftS.-He ltOl b.a time for
that. Vietnam was only jUlt
beOnntnl to boll over.
Congreis tapered "' in
19116, m~ = be· CIUH by tbila bad
become IO deepl.1 Involved
In Vietnam· Bit dJfficultiet
we compounded bY the
1968 elecUom 1n wtlich Re·
publicans recaJnect 41 seats
from the Democrats.
His lack ol expcience in
foreign affairs wG ooe of
Bat It's Still Aroand
the blaelt .... ,. Oil bJa
beck at .. ftr1 ~
~ WU '91decl 1D
blnc!ltnc U.. V...... ,,.,.
IDltMd ol. betnc • JMIW,
he hid to dtPtDd on eov-
mimeDt uperta to advile
him. IJa Prtilideat Joba F.
Kennedy before him, he
WU someUmel fir from
p-acefu1 with fQrelp prd>o lema,
ADd bit by bit, .. he lot
more deeply IOUecl In for-
eign alfafrl, bJa lf{p OD
~ dfmtnlebecl He
baa coateued lt without
aa,yiag it in IO mat!f wordl.
llll DeWI caaference w~
nea9f waa a Jood aample.
There be did whet be had
done at leut CIDC9 before:
He crlttdzed Coasreu fot
dragglnc lta feet on major
leli&)eticm be wanted.
For JobDlon to beve done
this when he wn. in eon.
grets lJ untbiD.Uble. But he
went furtber. '
No prealdent could bave
more tboroUCblY .sm.ltted
hil trutr.aan • trytnc to
bend eon,.. to bia wU1
than Jolmloa did 'Ibunday
when be made a public
appeal to Americans to put
preuure oa ~ ....
·Mail PO"':rwgraphy Dented
WAlllINO'JUf CA.P) -1DA1 bl _._Id In dldd-~ · ~ .. iDI .......... ad9lltiled ...... 1tMll ii obeCIDI. a eaallww*1 lap.w ID the followlng yeu-,
Olurt rul1q bAve put a blC complalDtl to postmaster• dent In the maiJorder por-dropped nearly to lf0,000. A
nocniphy b u 1 i n e 1 1, the Callfonn pub)ilber of .nud-
1ove111ment'1 dllef · postal ilt ma1u.inff was convict·
8lemb uya. eel la8t February of send·
Complaiatl about •em-iDC oblceDe matter into m mall ban pluqed 30 Ion. And complaints. dur·
percent, <J:Uef lDlpector ing the fint three month•
Beary B. Molltap -.id. of tbe current fiscal y&ar
al.Doe the _Court are around 17,000--a 50 per·
ra1ed U moalla ato that cent drop from the corre-
lurid advertWng may be tpOIJdJ.as period Jut yeer.
wei&hed aga.lnlt the de-MORE OIRCtJLA TES
fend.ant in oblcenlty trlals. But if the postman la de-And 20 legil1at1ve ~ ,_ JI • ~ to combat pornogr• llverlne ~as giueDJlVe ma-
.J..y have IOUDded a further terial, someone apparent· .-l:y ii circulating more. It'a alarm to the commercial the oPntoo of Montague , a ~n of smut. • quiet, solemn map who sel-
l think aome of these dom laulba tbal "there's dealers have bad second •men ~. pcrnogra-~ since the (linzbur'I ~ toda case," Montague said tn an pby -• tloa Y Interview. "They're await-even If tt'a ot moving by
Ing further developments--mall. 'lbe ads are iD girlie
...... for now thev've decld-maguinea inltead of mail· .,.. ~ boxes."
eel it might be wller to Montague and other fed·
keep their l/bJf.f out of the _, offidals deilne . bard· mall." cnu
COMPLAINTS RISE
From 1962 to 1968, Mon·
tague I a i d, complainta
about offensive--lf not le-
gally obeceoe -mamnp
d1mbed from 52,000 to more than 197,000.
The Supreme Court, up-
holding the obscenlty-by·
me'1 conviction of publlab-
er Ralph Gimburg, rWecl
In Mardi Itel that advtt-
USlq del1ped to titillate
core pornocrapby u that
~ctinl actual sexual re-
lationa or perveraions. Vir-
tmlly all of the bard-c<re ma~ ii pictorial. liDce
the courta have all but
elimlDated tbe poasibility
oI oblcelllt)' ftndJnga for
printed matter.
Moptap believes COD·
gresalonal preac~ a 11 o
baa bad a daqieninc effect
on would·be mallen of aex·
oriented advertising. Coo-
,,.... la tClllllktlrtai I .a•
.. ol. blDa .. would pro-
tect pQlta1 .,... from
offemive maitincf.
SIG~ LAW
And Prealdent Johnson
bu signed llJt(f law a bill
empowerinl him to crate
a 10.member colmlllalion
to repcrt bJ JaDU11'7 1970
on a strategy a&anilt por-
nocrapby. 'lbe com.mllllion
won't be named for at least
several weeb.
'Ille trend in commercial·
lzed mall order activity
below the level of "blfd.
core" pornography, Mon.ta·
gue said, is awaf from
photos and film toward
boob, maguines and pem.
phleta. Most · of the maillnga
•bout whlc:h poltal patrons complaiJa are not legally
obscene, Montague uid.
Many involve ada for aex·
a.id deVicel, couehed in
pteUdo-medlcal t e r m s.
Some are tblnly veiled in-
vitationa to join .. correa-
poodence clubs," lending a
lurid new meenlnl, in the
postal 1nsptction budness,
to the frieDd1y old term
''pen.pel."
Al fcr erotica and por-
nogra]lhy e n te r 1 n I tti.
United States from outakle.
a Cu.stoma Bureau olficlal
aald there bu been no
great cbange 1n the volume
of matmial conflacated by
~n.
N a111e the President
JFK W mn't the Youngest in Office
By WARREN DUFFEE Not unUl James K. Polk
WASHINGTON (UPI) _ was inaugurated In 1845 at
U you want to ·teat your age 41 c11d the country have
friends .iten they sound off a president under 50. Pollt
about poUtica, ask them to was the 11th president.
name the youngest man ev-Of the SS men who have
er to bold the presidency. beld the pruldency, the av.
A ftW may mow the two erage wu 64.3 years old at
youn-.,t. But anyone who · the time of bia first inaugu-
can r•: the five youngest, ln ration.
orde1 •r not, qualifies a& a Tbe records abow the av-
real expert on U. S. pollti· erage age a llWe lower for
al blator)'. Jnlidenta Inaugurated since AJa •ven touper teat ls 1900 -but not much. The to n ,. me the oldest preai· 11 beliM!DI office in this
dentr -either at th• ti.me century averaMll 52.3 JMl'S
of tbi.r first tnauauratton, compared with W for the 24
or at the time· they left the who were tint inaugurated
White Houte. before 1900.
Only the two youngest
TR YOUNGF.ST pruidentll, 'lbeodore Roose-
Theodore Roosevelt wu velt and Kennedy, ue
the nation'• youngest pres· among the under-50 group in
ldenL He wu 42 when be the ~ century. The same
succeeded· the 111uainated lime span allO includes
Wllllam McKinley in 1901. two over eo -Eiaeahow-
John F. Kennedy, elected ·er and Barry S. Truman,
and inaugurated at 43, waa who wu ,aeartnc '81 when be
the youngest ever tnstalled
for a lull term. Teddy •as
4a when be began a , u 11 Back LBJ term of his own 1n 1tOS.
Willlam Reilly Harri.Ion,
at •• WU the oldeat man Ike Urges ever inaugurated. He lived
only a month after taking
office 1n 1841.
Dwight D. Eisenhower, OT·
i&inally inaugurated at 82,
wu 70 when bis second term
expired 1n January, 1961 and
thus wu the oldest man ev·
er to bold the presidency.
The widespread belief
that tile nation was headed
by younger men in lta ear-
lier days lan't blatorlcall.Y
correct. Maay of the found-
inl fathers were l n d e e d
young, but the youngest
weren't elected to the high·
est office. •
NEW YORK (AP) -For-
mer PreaJdent Dwight D.
Eiaeahower urgea "more
thlnkJng and le.a quarrel·
Ulg" over the nation's Viet-
nam pollcy and says Wk
about hawks and doves
"doesn't mean anythlnf."
Speaking to newsmen be-
fore the annual dinner of the
West Point Society at the
Americana hotel tut week,
be also said he had no
speclnc advice for PresJdent
Jobnaon ou the conduct of
the war •
succeeded F r a n k 11 D D.
Roosevelt in UU.
THIRD YOONGEST
Ulysau S. Grant, the Ct·
vll War mll1tary hero, waa
the nation'• third younseat
chief exe<:11Uvt. He wu ts
when be began tbe Ont of
two terms. Cleveland wu
47 When tnaucur.W f<r bll
flrst wm and thua ruh
fourth.
Following In otder of
youth were.Franklin Pierce,
48, James A. Garfield, the
HCOad pruidlnt to be -..
suslaatesf. 49, and Polk, ~
GarfNld waa 15 ~1 youn. •
er than Polk when be toot
the oath.
James Buchanan at 85
waa the second oldeat presi-
dent at Inauguration, and
Zachary Taylor wu ~
at 66. Following 1n order
were Eisenhower, 82; An·
d{ew Jackson, only 11 daya
ahort Of 82; John Adams, ei.
and Truman . 'Buchanan, who left office
at 88, rank.I second to Ela·
enhower 1n aie at the end
of hia tenure.
Truman and Harrison
were both 18 but the form.
er wu aevei:al months old·
.er wbea bis term expired tn
11163 than J{arrlaon wu wben
be died In olflce.
Jecbon, Taylor and John
Ada.ma were e&-plua when
they let\ otlice. Jackson
aerved two terms, Adam•
one and Taylor died in of·
flee during bla first tenn.
Of the seven oldeai., only
Willlam Henry Harrison and
Taylor died in OffJc:e. Two
of the seven youngest did
not aurvtve their t e r m 1.
Both were ususlnated.
~ were .. Garfield aJld Kennedy. •
Lookt
Awa
local ..
Je1e
~
l'OOll ... ....
witll.
frmt
tea °'Cl ,_
UT,I
[)
•
1. I)
i. J:> 3."
" Le ,, .. S.·Nt .,, ~'Ne
...
• , T. i4
R
I
. CJlalc .....
Idle
Jill
Dy 1
pd
com
Woo ..... .. ...,
11111
eoGI
mar
• l
146-'
\• Que
ID :
pral
Con
2 ...
Prtc
fer.
fl
"i
1..S . -
--2.
• Ute m.,
CA -
,
'!
'i L Eter)ODI -..ie
2-Excelleat Jocatioaa ~
3. .,, • 30 yesr loa .
t.Lowclon~.
7th' S.·No ... ooa1ll. .,, , ~!No .:row , ...
, • T. 24+5 belbocaa
, .
..
. ••
-
' -
,\
.... ~
letall SteN or Offlee
Prcmlnlnt katlon Bal-* IaJand. flO lq. ft. w. w. carpet. $100 per
mo. IUtr. "2-9555
~' r I ..,....,, -~ -
..
--
•
l1COLORED female dOi
:w111te tip tall, mlxed breed \
~ ''Tootlie" 60-9339, 533-f.156 ~fOl
6401
MtldlJ, Nowtinbfr 6, 1961
* * * * *
,
SERVICI DIRECTOIY I~ & IMPLOYMENT .,.. • 8".0YMIN1 JOI$ I EMPLOYMENT
PlumW"I ~·~• ;-._,_ !!'!!PW-....,Mln1100He1pW1"'9d~!.!!_ * SAV-ON PLl1lllBINQ *;.;;z -----..;.;..._;,.. __ _
It ft.emod-~ * I 'a~
.. ~ • sami • ua•llVRI\ TKllllCIAIS
TJle, Uno..._
I MarWe
....
.D1UMIS. ._
Ai +r••-,flf ~ ....
DUNCAN
111' z• sMt1s
= tboaJd have .one tlo four years ez. tn SoUd State dJeital and analog dn:uttr1 to calibrate, ~ and troubleshoot
electrolilt test i~ents. Education should
tD$de one to two years ol technical training
beyond QI. blp IChool lnet
0.1ly (Ollrol Tedlnlcllns
The idell appUcaat should have two to three l:!'! aperimce bl the calibritiotl and main· nee ol feneral laboratory inltruments.
Cal 833-1235
or visit
DANA
L ti oratories, Inc.
2401 Cu.. Drive
lrdle, Calfonla CNel!r 0r.,.. County Airport)
An ........ rtunlty lrnployer-
----------------
PRODUCTION
1,
JOU I IMPLOYMINT JOIS a IMPLOYMINT
~p Wlft!"t.~ ~ Help Wantetl
MG~ TIAINll w......, .. 7400
• $tledy f.mp1oymeat
• <-... ~ •la.r7
No pnv\ou ~Jience nee>
MMQ'• Ou~ rrtnp
Bmeflbl, ~---kMtl . Paid Vacadoo. AGD 25 to
Typid
t 50, In Good pbyllcal condf·
tlon. * ALSO put tima. Sat>
vdaT • 8\&odv 1fl0rit· avaU.
able. c.11 for an •ePOtnt.
mtnt Sal or Mon. thr\I. Frl.
.... lldth~ It llelt 2 c .=
9 to 5.
TIC TOC MARKETS
642-.5921 -s.-...... -na _MaMgl ___ n_
OU.. opporlJ with I leadinl
flrm offerlni onr 100 mu•
tuaJ tunda. Full or pt time.
No f'xper nee. we train.
Npt Bch o1ftce, 642"'422
Saota Ana omce. 547-83!1
i.vuton J'IMnclaJ servtees. hie.
-REAL-ESTATE
Shoulda't Yol.I ht wttb Walker
A Leet Free information.
PbOne Of write WALKER I:
LEE Inc. 2S29 Harbor Blvd.
~.
-MAilftENANC~
MSddleapd couple for Apt.
bollle J~~--1*
LAMINATOR, ~·Boat
A.uernblen • will tnln
542.Q30 Befatt 3; 30
SERVICE Sta Attendenta,
Full time I: Nliht Man 1691
Pt.cent!& <Cor. W. 17th) CM
~t•, Women 7300
Gen Ofc to $450
Prefer 3&-45. Gen bkkpg dut-
ies. Type 60. AblUty to ~le
public. lttt relm) I
Receptlonf1ts $325
Min 1 yr exp. Attractive.
(apllt tee)
BookkMptf' .. $600
U/40. Tbru T.JI., no P a 1.
Accnti'~ (.tee relm) .... ...,,..,..
~keNUftd .....
hrNd. lxcelt.nt-.
ptny benefits ""1
ct..nce for edv1M9t "*''· ,,.. holplt.11 and lffe lnevrance.
Profit .tMrt,..
111"SPORT
DYUM~ INC.
3131 W. leoerttNM
S.nta Ana
546-3131
PART lM
mlEI r., .. , .........
requiM
APPLY In PlltSON
MARllEIS
SIYlllS' 1111
1511W ..... Dr. ... .,.... ....
Malt .......... wai'k ... ' ard. Go tin T .B. IH Ii TJpe1---,---...;....---1.,,
• w .... d.o.e. (lplit ree> H.._._ ....... .s 1-
A•• F .. POlftlons RI~•
Newport
P•nonnet Agency
133 Oo¥•r Dr., N.I.
· ' 64N170 -..
Secretary • • • • • • .. to $90 wic
Clerk Typllt •••••• to $90 wk
REUBBl l UE
NIWPORT llACH
Bkpr~ ••••••••••• $400
Girl Fri/Qk ~ ..... $300 --------•
---·-·----------·-·-·-----·
...
•
J2BS &
l Help\\
rWom
~
I
• Opeoin da;y, •
ab1lta.
Starth
$1..59 I
Apply
H
5oo
N•wp
°'
Arey
. u .YOl
Comp
cellent
wcaw:
enced
' aewin&
may DI
. ftnt
preeec
. plus t
WICatS. .,.,..
A.I Mr •
Ill
" r. Corne1
Huri
EJC
Chi -s.
• Small .,...
• Free
• Uber.
App
H
D
Ollu
lOi
Tq tU
al Dtn1
PenoflDo
ONT
NewpoE
Pacifil
McA
Month
Bnlsb-i
FUI
Opport.
itirla ler'
1
Call • __....__ Mcnm:
dl1ldna
man IJ
~baud
52l..3tl5
COUNTJ
at u.c .
• COnl • =
.Prln
•Ma • Inl!
• Lin
• Ser e Pl.I
• Cl•
N1t'I.
220 \
-·~.RE1
OpenJnc
tice foi
have U
abnd.
dimt1a1. Corl> in
HUS
Wbo WCI
lllreex
up per
)'OUl' O'
<.wPU
544 (
Al!Ply Sun. $--
CPLE
tmall I
and M
out. 64: moo
like to l
·~"' • ->----I,
·Assemblers
HUGHES
5oo Superior • .,.,
Newport luch, C.llf.
.... ~
Mr. Jehn l'errero
• M•tntwance 'Mu
• IMpeetDrs
• Lmninatora
• Ekreenera e Platen
• Qeanup Glrll
MASRI
. SPKIAlllS co.
I ..
. .
.. ......... w_ ......
..... A/B. •• l_I ........... _ . .................
•'Srcn era ... • --~ CD-lm .... •Pll
()t\JLY PILOT EDITOBIAL PAGE
Victory for California
Smoc 1w becoa.e a ~ • ~ me&-=~t ~re~ln &ouu.-!° =.,.•...: anywhere ei.e due to a comlliDatina of • meaupolil
bu.lit on automobile moblllty and an ~
mountain combination ~ to ~
1mog accumDlation.
So It WU a fire alarm to ~ wlM9 Rip.
John Dingell (D-Micb.) succeeded In geWng the~
Commtrce Committee to kill an m'endmmt oftend
by Sen. George Murphy (R-Calif.) . ....,.., mnend--
ment would permit California to adopt IDOft sta iugmt
pollution standards without approval of tbe fedenl
government.
Dlngell's substitute amendment, which Dingell
acknowledged wu drawn up in its original form by
representatives of the auto indultl'y, wmld haft pt"e-
empted auto pollution control for tbe federal pel"D-
ment It would have denied Califoraia. witbo8t fed-
eral approval, the right to go beyond federal .tandantL
It appeared that the amendmmt ........ fail ~
the impact of the heavily financed and bigbly infJD.
ential automobile industry lobby.
But mas&ve protest was mounted by Southern Cali-
f'O.mia's press, radio and TV. 1be tt.IUlt was imprClliYe
-even overwhelming
For once tbe California cong:reuionaJ drlepficm
WU united OD a bipartilan buil. M.ore"tbm -·-letten and postal cards came in an avalanche cm
Waahington.
Tbe effort by both the people and their repre-
sentatives bowled over the best lobbying effort the
automobile industry couJd put forth. In tbe lbowdown
vote in the Home of Representatives, California's po-
sition won out by a 1SU8 vote.
Now, when the bin beoomes law, California will
-ave tbe mtbodty lnm Cciacresa to solve ita own air
poUu:tima pnNmw. • tMy ilm>lve the prime source, ibe motor car. ·
Tbe vidory k cme for ~~e County u much as
for the nit ol the ltate. for-2.IOO tons· of pollutants are
beinC cfilcharged into tbe ~·· air every day. Of this ~ mto. coatrtbate 1,700 tons of carboa
mm:IODle. • tw of hydrocarbons, and (along with
IOUl"CeS of electrical power) 1IO tons of nitrogen oxide,
Cmthwrlng mfwdutim ol Orange County hU
meant a conli•hac here•• iD 1mog -to the point
where crops OD tbe Intne Ranch and elsewhere are
arioady tllreatenld. Unabated.. this threat will ex·
tend to lm:ma life hen, u ID tOt Angeles County.
AD who contrtbated to the unexpectedly strong
prc>California YOte Ja Coagrea deaerve the thanks ud
amgratD1atioDI ol nc, residaat of the Golden State.
Wrong End of the Day
Every year at tlU time Ye lose an hour of day.
light. It isn't that we reaDy 1ole the hour when Day-
light Savinp nme ~· ft la 1imply a matter of not
baving it CJD the rigid end of the day.
ActaaDy, DST mabs DION aense in the winter
tban in the ..... mer. It would 'make the evening traf·
fie c:rmb safer, tt waaJd afford more ahopplnf con-~ give cldldnn mon time to play outaicle and
give Dad time for a couple of eutdoor chorea before
dinner.
There really im1 macll UJODe wants to do with
that boar al dayti&bt first tldDa in the morning. That's
a good time to. sleep, ut bnakfut and get drelled.
AD the way with DST? '~ I HOPE '{OU WON'T NEEt> ANV FUEL OlL. '-·
Birth Control
Rejected
8e CW 1111111 'W .. u ~-P•H ef lTRI~ 11..clOIU
By Africans
KINq Will.LIAM'S TOWN, South
Afrlca .:.. Here on the c ~ a • t ol
the Indian Ocean. the all~ Cis-m.n Territorial Autbarity, whim ii
incting ttl way to eeH..gownment,
• lhowed tta tndepad!me bJ bockiq
the world trend toward adDptinc birth
oomrot M a policy to 1iMt p-owing
popn' .....
Tbe local Ueernbly, which ia COID·
posed "' 25 chief• and deputy cbiefl,
wted 2-' to I agam.t a proposal by
the Soull AtictD government that
"a plu be bml fw-bir1ll control''
for thk ar.'1 half mi.Woo blact resl·
den ta.
The ~ propoaU, offereil
by Olief J . S. L. Malefane, ol the
Kbotia region. was the first attempt
ol South African authorities to get
Africana located in the propoled Ban-
tu natioo-ctates to adopt birtb control as their poHcy.
THE VOTE, WHICH caught th e
South Africao officials who adminis-
ter this area by surprise, followed a
two-hour free-swinging debate simi-
la... tc one in the U.S. Senate.
Member after member of the ...
sembly rose to denounce the propoaal
u being apinst the long tradition
and culture of their tribes and against
God'a plan for 1beir development.
nie on.alaught was 1ed by <lief Z.
P. Siw1D. ol King William' a Town
region. Gesturing wildly with bU hands
u be talked, Chief Siwanl warned
that my effort to force birth control m the black man in South Africa
would bring disaster to the entire
comtry.
Another tribal chief, who had left
hU wtfe to tend to ms eight cbiJdrea
and t..ge herd of caWe while be
Dear
Gloomy
Gm:
You'd tldnt that IOIDe of tbe ~
bowilC adaba Oftr .. willa aD
of ...... aper ieDcie., woald haw
__. that amp ;..,..eats
OOllC& aiDc their "iildll I lfNe"
~ cbiJdrm cm flll1J U.e
advene reacticm in fbme tend-
er, _. opinialHormillC aUDdL
-T.T. L ,.. ............ --. .. _ _. ......... ---...r .... ,_.,._ ........... .....
practiced the ....... clemoa'acy.
Cautioned tile I ,.,._ Ol9l their
wives would lme raped ._. tbem if
they voted for llirUa eclllllrol
WIEF T. V. NGOllA, fll N"IEUWe
region. aid tile ~ el lie pro-
polal •oakl be like ...._ 6e devil
to come and lift wtaria tltifir YiJlaces.
The D to J vote. wllidt is al aa
adviaor) Dllb.ft. will be .. waded to
lbe Soallt Africm ··=---ia Pre-toria by Qwnmiuimer Gmeral J.B.
Abraham.
Altboagb per...ilj l8ftrintg t b e
measure, Abrabam will nccnmead
that the wisbfs of tbe drids be re-
apect.ed. Be ...,. dds ... is 81eCa-
...., to CODtinae to baild 1Ip the tnrst
be(wem lbe blacb mil Ute aD-wbite
South African gowamawwt..
A .giant of a ma, tbe -pCGDd
Abraham received a st""'inc Ofatiora
from tbe dlids 1l'lilm be addralell
bJir fiM.l 11--N;J I-· sfatiltc:
''111ia _.., JDt"'ilc ... )'OIIl'
actiam today an I I A !I' lliJesbme
in your long mada tonnl lelf.p-
ernmmt. AD o•u4d•.s irl Africa are
watcbing your paoow _. mm;y are
jealous of the good. f\el'4I I 6ip that
exiata btt1ll em bid _. wlrite mm
here.
''WHllE WE GUIDE ,_ towanl
sdf-g011amneaf;. y.-r views will be
retpeCted evaa ..-we may not
agree with JOU. ..
PAUL ICOrT
'They E~~er Lile'
To the F.dltor:
Some of us at work have been dis-
cussing .the reactions of different peo-
ple in the time of stress aucb as these
fires. And there are a great many
of us who are slmply mad at these
"sick" people (surelY they're not
well I) who fO nlDning to a tire when
tt>k1 to stay at home.
With all the firN we've been hav-
ing throughout Celif ornia f can't help
but wonder bow 10me of these "curl·
osity seek.en" would feel if they knew
that they were p0e111>Jy resPonafble for
the deal> of tomeone due to their
blocking the road to the much needed
help of fin fichUn and to ambu-
lances.
IT'S DIFFICULT for me to con·
ceive tt>e idea that one oould sleep
well at night titer becoming aware
of the fact that a human We or valu·
able property wu Jost atmply due
to tbelr aelfbb curiosity. Being irre-
aponsible about one's own We and
property Is one thing but being 1bat
way toward ~· ii another matter
altogether.
MR& JERIANNE DANIELSEN
c1a.,..1 .. Meta
ro the"EdBor~ . I
Wt wera oae ·at the many fam1lles
. ~,
-·~
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in Orange County to haft tbe oppor-
tunity of.,..baviJlg some of the Aus-.
tralian navy men from tbe ''MeJ.
boume" at our bocDe f« a buffet
cl.inDer.
Many or our nrigbh«s W'fft • band
to welcome tow' of tbe molt charm-
Ing men I've ever met.
SA TUBDA Y NIGHT tbalt same
men were ._, guests at tbe South
Coast Juni« Womea'a a. annual
muquerade party. The men were
dreued u Australian Navy men. How
original!
After the danoe my hmband and
I were their guests oa board tbe MeJ.
boW"De for coffee and cake. I peT·
sonally have nev« bad a more en-
Jo)labM .two ... ' ...
MRS. FRANJ( FLECK. JR.
t
Senate Resolution Would Be Futile
WA.SHINGTON -Mon than 50
members ol Cbe U.S. Senate, reflect·
iag their on frmtratlon ad that of
mucb of Ute CiNildrJ, baft prepared
a raobdima wllicla eaDa 1llMa the Pres·
ideal to sallmit Cbe VW:Mm problem
to tbe Uailed Na&M ad request
that mtau•klul bodJ of aolve il
This bu • fiDe rlaclnc IOUnd to il
But rullty mabt H mceaary to say
that in effect it Is little more than
ukinC eva)Ullt to c:mtriliute a good
celebration to Moeber'1 Dq.
Tbe leUton mast Dw that for
a decade ar more Bo Qd Minh'• most
bitter CWMSrnmaUool bne been di·
nd.ed toward tbe UatW Nations. lo
addition, be repeatedly ... aaid be
will paJ no attentioll to tllie U.N. or
uy ol its requests or petllltla. He ii
not a member. Be has Mid be does
Dot wiab to be a member. In many
otbel' atnements ·be bu given tbe
United Nations the back of Ida hand.
811 POll'l10N JS very much llD
that of OliDa. Both have expreued
att.er ad eomplete contempt for ..
United Nations. 'Ibere may be a~
Uhl psyebological backlash iD tbele
attitudes. Neither North ViebWD nm
CbiDa baa been invited to become a
member of the U.N. Indeed, 'China
bu been pat up for membenbfP. lu
tbe dub for at least a half dolen
timea or more. Each time the black
balls have been in the majority. In
addition, neither Peking nor Hanoi
seems ~e much respect for Sec.
Gen. U. 'lbanl On the basil of the
fact& alone the Sen.ate resolution is
an empty one.
IT IS NECESSARY to ana.lyu the
situat19n a bit further. U the Senate
adopts a resolution and sends it to
the U.N., it will add the subject to
debate. U one auumea that it should
be adopted by the General Aasembly
and referred to the Security Council,
the Ruaaianl prompUy would veto it.
One does not really know the fuJJ
meuure of Ruaala's likes, dislikes,
1uspiclona or doubts about China. But
it II a piece of absurdity to think the
Scmtt.I do not have political flab to
try •• well as do we here in the
United States. They cannot too strong-
11 diauaoclate themselves from the
Red Chinese. Indeed, It ls a very in· t.ereatinc situation in which Peking al·
most weekly abuses the Soviets in
the most violent language while Mos·
cow's reply ia always much more
muted IDd less violent
THE KREMLIN LEADER8BIP DOW
is engaged in a very tryiq and dlifi.
cult tut of maiDtaining world leader·
ship of the Communist party. What-
ever U really may think about 8aDoi
and Peking, it cannot deaert them,
even on • United NetioQI resolution
introduced by the Senate of the Uai~
ed statea. Moscow's troika leaderlbip
will of neceaaity have to beat the
drums and make a out sounding
off in bebaU of the two Communl.lt
nation.a if the iaaue nacbes the floor
of the U.N. 'nle Senators certainly
must be aware of tbis.
A conaem\11 of cHplomatic circles
here ii that if there ii qy one real
poutbilltJ of brlngtne about necoua-
Uons, the way must' be left open for
the Rus1lana to do what they can in
that direction. It certa1nly ii not in
the self I.oterest of the Soviet Union
to have turmoll and chaOI in South·
east Asia. 1b1a 1a especially true at
a time when the Chinese also ba1re
their own form of internal combus·
tion.
ONE OF THE GREAT dreaml of
the Moscow policy ma.ken ia to have
a China wblcb will join in economic
treaties and mutual self-defense agree.
men~ with Moscow. The most knowl·
edgeable observers here believe they
now aee that Mao Tie-tune and tbe
Communist party apparatua In China
have lost their revolution. Mao ~
self aeema to reallze this. Be mm.
and more ia calling OD tbe UIQY to
reitore and malntaln order. Tbe army.
not the party offlclall, now controll
about two-thirds of CbiDa. Tbe party
bureaucracy bu been pretty well
~ a1ao la evidence that the nbn-
bJe.footed Chou En-lai, who. Uke Ana-.
tat Mltoyan in Russia, bu been able to survive all party purgu since the
time of Chiang Kai-abet, 1a goiq
&Joni with the army.
IT 18 NO'l' believed the anny wallta
to move into a war in Soutbeut Alia
or into ' a world war with the United
Stat.ea in ibe for~ future.' Tbe
army ls very anxious to obtain new
Soviet ann1 and equipment, and ita
aJrf orce ii eapeciallY dfflroUI of re-
placing ita agtng and aomtwbat ob-
solete aircraft with new RUlllan de-
signs.
At any rate, the propoeed Senate
resolution can at best be only one of
thole teatures hopefully desfped to
make the people th.int that tbe mem-.
bera lignlng It are ener&'lticall11r)'-
ing to do something about peace. In
fact, their resolution can do more
harm than good. ·
Desperate Need: A Vietnam Answer
Everybod;J wanta the war in Vlet.-
nam to come to an ~-
Tbe trouble ia that nobody -from
tbe molt militant hawks down to tbe
molt pedfiltic of the doves -.eems
able to come forth with a.ny reallltlc
and pramising way of bringing about
.. end to the fighting.
"Stalemate" ia a word increuin«ib'
beard iD recent weeks concern.inf Vid-
um -and no scheduled escalation
of American military power. ne nnr
pacification tactics or no peace-feeler
suggestiona promises to crack tbe
stalemat.e.
Even U.S. commander Gen. West-
moreland ia admitting puzzlement
over tbe nrpriaing ability of the Com·
munist Viet Cong and North Vietna-
mese to tab everything U.S. forces
haft thrown at them and still come
back for more.
ACCORDING TO A Washington'lll·
alysis reported by NEA Syndicate.
American troop atrength in Vietnam
IOOft will pan the hall-million mark
. . . de•tba have passed 12.000 . . •
nearly 75,000 Americans have been
wounded ... more than 800 aircraft
haw been lost . . . the war is betaC
waged at a cost of $2 bilUon per
month ..•
Yet at tlU moment there are more
of the enemy, better armed and man
daring, than nrer before. Helicopt.era
continue to be abot down on the out.-
atr .. of Saigon. Soviet-supplied rock·
ets are mating U.S. bases more vul-
nerable to bit·and·run attacks by the
Reck. Tbougb the gallant US. troopt
can take the Initiative anywhere they
choose. the country still bclon~s to
tht Communiat guerrillas at night.
11IE UNITED STATES. as one wrlt-
ter put it. "presents the picture of a
mmc.Je.bound giant bogged down in
a IWIJDp. flailing about with an a.,..
some atreDgtb that makes makh~tlcu
of the jungle." but gaining little or
DO pamanent progress.
Yet ii "stalemate" a fa ir word!
Whatevv Jbe CQll -up ~ now,.and
in the (uture -have we nnl prevent·
ed the Communists from tai..1ng over?
The ~er to that question iJ in
tbe ~tive.
But will the amwer still be "yes"
tf circumstances continue as they
are? Theodore Draper, a research fel-
low at Stanford University's fa.med
Hoover Institute on War, Revolution
and Peace, does not believe so.
IN A NEW BOOK on the matter
of communism and aggreN!on, Drap-
er aays, "No Commun.lat bid for pow·
er which forces the United Stat.ea to
pay 1uch a high price for 'victory'
can be said to have been defeated .••
"The idea that the frultration of a
Communist bid for power in South
Vietnam will be IODle kind of decla·
ive setback for communism in South·
east Asla, or even the world, ls •
politic.al fairy tale:• he continues. "U
the Communists of Other Impoverish·
ed, dim1nutive Soutbeaat Allan coun-
tries could be sure of making us spend
so much blood and treasure tn frus-
trating tbtm, we might well be f.ced
with an epidemic of aucb wan."
DRAPER WARNS agalut pttinC
into future Vietnams.
Draper'• ii a worthwhile wamtng.
indeed. But lite everyone elle{ tbe
StanfOrd scholar runs into a blank
wall insofar • coming up with any
ideu on bow we can get out of the
mor111 of the Vietnam we aJreM1
are .. in Southeut Alia. 'lba.t Ja th•
amwer the nabon desperately needs.
Chleo (Caltf.) F.ralerprlle-Reeord
Trap in Every 'Phi"losophy of Lile~
TIMagbta at Laree:
£very so-called "philosophy of life"
bu its own special built.in trap -
conalsting of the fact that if you try
to live by that philosophy atoae. yoy
will inevitably push it to an absurd
and dangerously falae conclusion. • • •
World War II succeeded in destroy·
1ng Fuclats, but it did by no meana
deltroy fuciJm, which under other
namea la stronger than ever in the
world today; World War Ill may de-
stroy Communlstl, but It Is nalve to
believe that it could destroy commu-
n!Jm -for in the Jong run, force is
alway• f\lWe against Ideas and ldeolo-
etes. • • •
It ta depressing that. on the whole,
the most "religious" letters I receive
from reader• are also the most nar·
row , the most intolerant, and the most
self·rlgbteou.s -three attitudes that a~d be sharply inconsistent with the
genuine religious outlook. • • •
The man who I.a preoccupied with
the question of his virility Is the man
least able to achieve a mutually sat-
Jafying. man.· woman cel.4tionshlp: .a
the uJUmate case, the Oon Juan is
perpetually neetng from his fear of
homosexuality. . . "
A few thouaand years from now.
our deacendenta may refuse to be·
lieve in any theory of evolution hold-
ing that they came from the angry
and childish primates of the m
Century. • • •
When a parenf 1ay1 of a child,
"He's bright and could do much 'bet-
ter if he'd only Cry," the parent
doesn't understand that child very
well : indeed, . bas etven up under-
1t.andlng for exhortation. • • • ' Most of us Uve with the comforta-
ble delusion that our bad qualltiea
don't really affect our good qualities
-wlllch ls like believing that a box
of candy Isn't aclulterated If It's Ught.
ly sprinkled with strych~. • ••
Stanlslavsld remarked that "the
aim of the theater 11 to penetrate the
soul o( the audience" -b~t what
happens to the theater when tht one
U)ing ~· .audleace doesn't wan.t JI to be penetrated ? • • •
Once a docbine is fully clear to its
adherents, it can no longer be fu111
believed in. • • •
One bit of advice more f\ltile than
any other l1 telling someone bow to
"relax" -for the art of relaxation
cannot be tranamltted, it can only be
acquired from the l.nside.
Monday, November 8, 198"7
rht •dJtonai. pag• 01 Chf 0aa,
PiLot Htk.t to mform and 1tm1-
caatt tfladnt bl/ pt'Uf1\tfnQ WI
MWJRQ~r'I opfnionl and cont-
mtflta~ Oft toi>b of mitred.
'lnd dgmftcance, b11 protrlcU"f' •
forum for tht czpre'"°" of our rta<Urr opmions, aftd bv
prtsf?ltmg 1"' dJvtrH OlftO'
pointa of tn/~d ol>tlffWfl
cmd spokesmen on ~ of ~ ~.
Robert N. Weed, Publl1bC'
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