HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-01-25 - Newport Harbor Daily Pilot·~'
. ¥0L. 61, NO. 22, l SECTIONS. 30 PA6ES
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""'4
* Los Alamitos Air
•
Station Included
I'
The Los Alamitos Naval Alr StaUon
squadron calle<l up today by President
Johoaon ii commanded' by Milton Erv·
ing J ohnJon Jr. of Anaheim -who
wu ~!ready in the air when the an·
nouncement was made.
Johnson, a commander in tbt naval
reserve. also is a United Air Lines
pilot, who was en route this morning
from New York to Los Ange lea.
"I doubt il he's heard the news
yet -unless he's also listening to
radio station KF AC." said his wife ,
Hazel. ~ tl\eir home al 1214 W.
' Katella Ave.
Mrs. Johnson was one oL.. several
relatives of personnel m Attack
Squ..tr'GO VA '716 who telephoned
the Air Station for addiUooal in·
formabon after hearing news or the
call up on Southland radie staUons.
A spokuman for the Air Station
said It ha bed no official word from
Wubi.lttoa about the callup, and has
depended on radio broadusu, calls
from relatives and press inquiries.
A spokesman for capt. Lloyd Ruth,
station commander, aald tbe com·
ma.nder's office has had no officlai
word on the c&llup from Washington.
CapL' Ruth late this morning met
with newsmen and said the only word
he bed was what he had learned
fTom listening to radlo broadcasts,
phone calls from base personnel
relstives and inquiries Crom the press.
The spokesman said the squadron
consists of \&bout 20 Skyhawk attack
je& bombers . .Built by Douglaa-McDon·
neU Aircraft, the single-seat planes
operate from carriers, the smallest
ones to do so.
In addition to the 20 pilots, ~ ground
support crew numbers some 62 men.
The Air Stat.ion 1pokesman said the
20 planes were assembled from three
other squadrons headquartered at Los
Alpnitos.
'
Ex-chamber Chief
Hirth May Challenge
THINKING AIOUT RUNNING
Chember's Ed Hirth
ll;y JERQ¥B J'. COLLINS .............. ~.
F«rmer N8W1*t HllrbOt Chamb.er
ol Commerce pre11dent l:d Birth said
today be is thiJlking about challenging
incumbent Dee Cook for election to
UJe City C.Ouncll.
Cook. seeking his third term in of.
fice. ran unopposed four years ago.
There has been speculation that he
might again be the only C.Ouncilmanic
District 5 candidate.
Cook this morning was the first
candidate to take out a nomination
petition at City Hall.
Longtime Newport resident and
marina operator Hirth may follow
him -but not for at least a week,
if at all.
"I don't yet kn-Ow whether ru run.''
Hirth told the DAD..Y PILOT. "And
I won't know for a week or so. There
are other matters pending that could
have a bearing on my ultimate
decision.
"That's what I've been telling
several people," he added.
If he runs. Hirth could prove to
be a formidable foe for Cook.
Acknowledged as the principal
spokesman for Newport's marine in·
(See HIRTH. Page !)
* * * * * * Bidding Now Under Way
For Three Council Seats
The lona political sea.son is now
oUiclally under way in Newport
Beach.
Today was the first day that
nominating petitions for City Council
candldateS"'tould be taken out at City
Hall.
City Clerk Laura Lagios said they
must be returned with the signatures
or at least five qualified voters by
noon, Feb. 15.
other potential candidates. marina
operator Ed Hirth and electronics ex·
ecutive Paul 8. White. but neither
has made a final decision.
Dl1trid 7 (West C.Orona del Mar.
including Harbor Vlew Hilla): Incum-
bent Lindsley Parsons has declared
bis cUldidacy for re-election. To date.
there are JlO indications that Parsons
will be opt)osed in blt bid for a seco11d
!our-year term.
THURSDAY, JA~RY 25, ,1961 TEN CENTS
-
Beached Bunnies
U. S. Army Corps oC Engineers sign announcing sand fill project
still under f.'ay in West Newport Beach keeps beach bunnies on the
beach. but warns them not to go near the water despite recent
balmy temperatures. Pouting under sign (left to right) are Mary
Ellen Kasper. 16. Joanne Kasper. 15. Sanrli Lease. 16, and Sally
Brown, 15, all Corona del Mar. High S<·hool students.
Bobb y's Mom -in Tearful
Plea for Son's Return
"' By THOM BARLEY viC'llOn that "someone would find him °' i... 0 •1" "*" 11•" ;rnd feed him" -unlll his jobless.
Did ~lana Lynn Gorcev, as the flj'nniless mother could get he lp from
prosecuUon alleges. callously abandon hrr family and return to claim him?
"Bobby .Blue-eyes'' i~ a Westmlns~er ' That issue was to be presented fn.
department store with no intention rlay to the seven-woman. five-man
or later re~ng for the 2-year-old Jury by Judge Howard Cameron.
tot who captivated Che heart of the The veteran jurist ended the two-day
county? trial of the tall, trim redhead by
Or did she. as she tearfully pleaded ~skin~ the jury to determine her guilt
Wednesday in Superior Court. leave or Innocence on charges or child
her son, Paul Milan Bell, in the con· (Stt BOBBY, Page !)
-< eserves '
Act Swift Move
To Get Pueblo
From Wire Services
President Johnson today ordered the
immediate callup of more thai. 14,600
Air Force and Navy air reservists,
including Attack Squadron 776 from
Los Alamitos Naval ?\Ir Station in
Orange County. •
Johnson's action was seen ai; a swift
move to back up U.S. demands ror
the return of the USS Pueblo and
its 83 men who were st'ized by North
Korean hijackers.
A mobilization or U.S. Army and
U.S. Marine Corps reserves was also
under consideration today .
In addition to the Los Alamitos
flying squadron, the President also
activated three other California units.
They are the USAF's 349th Military
Airlift Wing and 938th Military Airlift
Group, both of Hamilton Air Force
Base, Fairfield. The other is the
Navy.'s Attack Squadron 873 of
Alameda.
There. wa~ no mention of any im·
mediate increase in draft calls.
The President ordered the Air Re-
serve units to acUve duty to put an
additi~ 372 fighter and transport
aircraft into immediate service.
Tbe action came as two squadrons
oC U.S. fighter-bombers moved from
Okinawa to South Korean airfields to
trlPl.e the American air striking force ~sed in that country. The USS Enter-
prite, with 100 jet fighters, was oo sta·
ti<>ll with a powerful Navy task force a miles off the -.t of Jlladt \(Jet• Df!D. •• -i....,.-
'tbe White Ntose said the Presi·
dent's action was cau1ed br tbe·selit
CKJsness of t-ht situatlon developing
from North Korea's seizure two and
a half days ago of the American in·
telligence ship In lJtumationaJ watus,.
North Korea hu adamantJy refused
to return the ship.
The reserve callup foUewed a top-
1evel straugy session at the White
House this morning. The callup is the
t'irst since the Berlin crisis of 1001.
Reserves were not caJled up for either
the Cuban missile crisis or tbe Viel· !lam war.
Tbe While House said, however, the"
* * *
War With M~xico
Rumors Scotched
.. No, ma'm. We're not at war with
Mexic'o.··
A dozen Ume!i today. harried DAfL Y
PlLOT Mitors had to give this
assurance to worried callers.
Source of v the rumors. it was
reported, wu a l.A>s Angeles radio
station. Speculation was that an an·
nouncer had garbled up accounts of
the United States' determination to
take the stolen Navy vessel Pueblo.
In Mexico, the word "pueblo" mews
''town."
Meanwhile. in Washington ,
Presidential Press Secretary George
Christian was having his troubles, too.
He denied,rumors circulating in Wall
Street lhat the USS Pueblo had been
released by North Korea.
$7,310 Jewelry
Theft Reported
By Actor's Wife
callup did not equate with a national
em_11rgency.
Informed observers said the White House appeared to be dealini with
the current crisis on an bour-by·bour
basis. stiJI hoping the North Koreans
would realize the seriousness of the
situation and decide to release the ship and its 83 men.
J ohnson ordered the caUup aft.er an
early morning meeting with U.N. Am·
bassador Arthur Gold~rg, Secretary
or State Dean Rusk. and Defense Sec·
retary Robert S. McNamara.
Sources said consideration was be·
ing given to calling up Army and Ma·
rine Corps reserves, but no decision
has yet been made. ·
*-* *
Task Force
On Station
Off N. Korea
SEOUL (UPI) -A powerful
American task force ~ by the
nuclear powered giant aircraft carrier
Enterprise sailed today onto station
200 miles oU the North Korean coast.
mllltary report& said.
Tbe Enterprile, the nuclear powered
frigate Trwrton, tbe frig&te Hals~y
aod two or lhree othet destroyers
were reported to have 111ovtd Into
the waters o(f the Korean east coai;t
in a~ow-eC force.Jollowint-&be North
Korean. seizure of the l!SS Pueblo
.and its 83-man crew.
The 75,700-ton Enterprise. t h e
woNd's largest warship carrying up
to JOO jet fighter-bombers, the Truxton
and the Halsey all are armed wiUI
guided missiles. The missiles mainly
are for antiaircraft use. But the Ter·
rier missiles also can bit shore
targets.
They steamed into tbe waters across
the horizon from lhe North Korean
port or Wonsan from Sasebo, Japan.
The carrier had left the port bound
for Vietnam waters. The Tuesday hi·
jacking of ·the Pueblo .apparently
changed its course.
On shore two American divisions
and half a million South Korean troops
were r~ported on higher than usual
alert along the North-South Korean
truce line. U.S. troops were reported
to have killed two Communist ln·
flllrators in at least two brit;f fight•
toda y. '
In Seoul. South Korea'.i; forei,l?n
minister warned North Korea against
more .. barbaric acts." A top Korean
army general told newsmen his troops
strongly favor action against North
Korea.
The South Korean army was put
on the "state of readiness." More
South Korean patrol boats were report·
ed put out to sea along the nation's
east and west coasts. Reinforcements
were reported sent to the border.
He called on the l& nations w~ich
batlled North Korea in the 1950-195.1
Korean war to remain alert for action.
In Seoul, Foreign Minister Choi Kyu
Han told newsmen South Korea will
(See KOREA. Page !I
We•t•er
Sbe noted that candid.ates must be
registered •oters in their coun·
cUmanlc districts for 1 t least three
years prior to the April 9 elecllon.
TIJee of tbe city's aeven d1stricl1
will be on fhe ballot. While each
candidate must be a resjdent of one
of the three districts. voting wlU be
city·•lde.
occ Secret Li's ts Nixed
Theft of $7,310 worth of jewelry
and personal belongings from her car
parked at the Santa Ana Counl(y Club
was reported to sherJCf's dhputies
Wednesday by the wife of TV and
movie actor Richard Denning.
The weatherman's ptilUng the
shade down on the Orange
Coast Friday with cloudy skies
over temperatures of 65. accord·
ing to forecaster Oscar Nichols.
Here is tbe election picture, district·
by-dlstr.ict. thus far:
Dlltrtd I (West Nttport. Newport
Shores): Incumbent Al F~t ha1 an·
11ounced be will tee& bis •~ tenn.
lnnkeepu Sid Soifer and baildiDg 1up-
pl.y necutive Gerard "Jerry" Wooters
have armounced tMy 1ntend to
d\alleftge Forlit. Several other poten·
Ual canclldltu b.ave not yet made
formal declarations ol candidacy.
Dlttl1d 5 (All sides of the Upper
811. plus Irvine Ternee): Incumbe'nt
Det took will stlek election to bls
third con ec:utlve term. There are two
--
By BRUCE BENSON
OI 1111 Ollty '"" ltlfl
Seolresmen Lor two 1uspended stu·
den{ groups at Orang& C.Oast College
today vowed they would ask a cl'ril
court to overturn a acbool district
decilion which aa71 the cluba can't
keep their mtmberabf p Ustt 1ecnL
Tbe ruUna agalut , secrecy was
made unan1Jloua'1 WedDeaday night
by the colleae trustees. It climaxed
a tempest Which bas blown through
t:it. campus since early December.
Seeldnt perml11lo11 to withhold USts
of their members' names from the
college admlnl.ltratloo were Studeota
for Intellectual Participation (Sll>)
and the Young Democrats Club.
Pat Dickerson. a member of both
clubs, said that a vote by "about
90 peTcent of SIP's 40 to-SO members"
was taken that favored ~king court
action.
The Young Democrats Club has not
yet voted on wb.at course of action
it wtU take. But club president Tom
Lankard said he will recommenJ that
the club seek rednas throu&)l the
courts.
He sald he •llo will Mftd a resum,
of the campua. proceedin111 to the
Ameylcan Civil Ubertles Union.
Member& ol tbl. two ltudent ilub~.
wh'ch earlier collaborated on a c-sm·
• -.... t" ...........
p11~ peace rally. fear that aqy
mrmbership Ust could be 11ubpoenaed
by the House Un-American Activities
C,2mmlttee or the Selective Service
Aystem.
They apparently ,,.. worried that
their paclllat activities could eedanger
tt.e1r du.ft exemptions or future
ell!ployment.
Trustee Worth Keene of Seal Beach
~1.gcelted that the members'11P Usu
posalblJ -could be useful to the ad·
m1nlltraUon "a• a means of com·
b11tUng extreme activism." •
fie said other state colll-e ctm·
puMt "t!QUlred the disclo•~ of atu·
(Stt LrSTS, P11e I)
-.
tit tad ,d,. ·~·"'·~ .,:.._.._ ... ~ ..... . . . -....._...., . . -....
Mrs. Evelyn Denning of Corona del
Mar said she lost 11 16.000 di11mond
ring. a mink coat and her "Purse con·
taining 1511 In cash and several credit
cards from the Jocked trunk of her
car.
Helen M. Isbell o( Balboa Island,
whose car was parked next to Mrs.
Denning's told deputies her purse con·
tainlng Sl7 and credit cards.. also taken
from the trunv The thefts occurred
sometime Tuesday, the "' o m e n
reported.
DepuUea iuessed the thJef used a
master key or some type of unlockln~
device as neither trunk showed signs
of forced entry. •
Denning appeared In the TV serif's
"Mr. and Mrs. North.·•
. ....
INSIDE 1'0DA Y
Reforl' yoti &~rt that paint-
lri.g job aL home. you mi9ht
rlicek Sylvia Porttr column .pn
Page JO to aee if it wouldn't be
cMaper to get 8017ll'one else
fl do H,
c..llllrllle ' *"'" 1' ,....,.... »-at M4ltNI , .. ,. , ..... H M~lltNI 1NM w c.-.. " on ... c.e..r • '*" ....._ • ''"-" ~ • 'TA 11 ''"""" '"' " Sr!'fW """" ,. . ............. II St<ltl ..... ,,,,, ,._... ""·" :ca,... ll·N.
""' Clfll • , .. , ' l•t1 ....... n ,....,..... , . ........ ~,,., n .,,..,.,.. u A•• L.,.,.. u ...... 4 L'""" " ......... ... ..... , .. I
'
.,
•
2 OAILY l'ILUI I hur\d.ly, J&nUll'y 25, l9ti8
;Reds' Siege
, ' , .
Perils Aid
ToKheSanh
SAIGON (UPI)_. North Vidnamese
gunnen abelled the U. S. Marine
a.intrlp at embattled Khe Sanh with
mortars, artillery and rockets tod ay
1n a threat to American efforts to
resupply the surrounded baK by air.
Snipen concentrated on cargo planes
and helicopters.
The Communi&t gunners have abot
down three U. S. jets and two CH46
helicopters in four days, using the
same technique they used against the
French a t Dien Bien Phu in HIM
and later agaiMt the Americans at
Oak To and Con Thlen.
The Americans &truck back with
473 bombing attacks against the North
Vietnamese. reported to be two
divisions strong. It was the third
straight day o( record air atrlkes
against the enemy and was sup·
plemented by record 852 bombing
missions in tb~ame area.
Military intelligence reports in
Saigon said North Vietnam armored
vehicles were rumbling down the Ko
Cbi Minh Trail toward Kbe Sanb wbjch
is l l miles below the Demilitarized
Zone and four miles from the border
of Laos. They said the convoys ap-
parently included six to eight tanks. Heavy fighting. meanwhile. wao;
reported on the sandy coastal plains .
near Bong Son about 100 miles below
Da Nang. Troops of the South Korean
capitol division and the 2nd brigade
of the U. S. 1st Air Cavalry Division
reported killing 179 guerrillas in a
fight that began Tuesday and still
was going on today.
Americ an military spokesmen have
predicted a major Communist Of·
fensive -perhaps the largest or the
war -before the tru~ marking Tet.
the Chinese New Year, begins Mon·
day.
Front P .. e 1
LISTS .•.
dent names in all campus clubs.
Club President Lahkard said that
perml11fon to maintain secret lists
would show student3 that the ad·
mlnJstraUon was itrtent oo allowi!>St
them "a iJ'eater and not lesser 1enae
or political lreedom."
_./. Lankard said that d I v u t g i n g
\membership lists would abridge . the
\ Constitutional right to tree assembly.
' But Truatu Don HoU o f
Westmwter arg~ed. that one init ial
reaction to tbe ~t request was
that -,,. IJ'OUPI ha•e somethin1 to
hide."
' "You're not gjV'ing us the same
trust that you 're askJng us to place
in you (by permitting club ac·
Uvities)," he suggested.
Hoff said that "m8J1>ber&ttip fft a
club can be established anyhow. even
without a list. and IC your request
was approved It would give the clubs
the status of ~anent anti-establish·
ment groups. •
Trustee Robert Humphreys aaid he
felt it the clubs can establish they
han ' been discriminated against.
"then we should reconsider the whole
matter.''
But he said that otherwise. ttley
8hould "stand up and take the con·
~equences'' of membership as do other
campus clu b members.
"Far be it from me to want lo
· restrict or hamper the· Y o u n i
Democrats." sajd Htanpbreys. him.tell
a one time Democratic candidate for
politlcal office. "But l dori't see how
' secret membership lislJ would pro·
. mote thf' club.·•
J>ANMUNJOff, .... (UPI) -'*~~{i!~['jll~~ 1'd Korean ~neral known as FT•
Pan &ally lost hiJ tempa.
Maj. Gen. Pu Chung-Kuk cursed.
He waved his fists. He predk i.d
President Johnson would be burnf$l
alive. U. S. Rear Adm. John Victor Slnttlttlrlr-W-niralllllltr .... ~11.i~r
Wednesday had done what othl'l'
United Natiou Armistice Commiss&ell
dele1111t1 bad never done. The meltiDC
of Pall's cool mask came at the b ....
of the ton ol the lite Gen. HollM4
M. "Howlin' Mad'' Smith. tbe tOUllf
Marine wbo lathered · modern ._.
pblbfous wu'fare lD Wot1d War II.
Tht meetmg began quietly erioup.
Smith announced he was going ,to . .
Fr'oM P .. e l ·occ Shulents Back War, KOREA •.•
SHE'S FOR BEAUTY -Peggy Griffith, owner of Newport Hotel,
sets out with paint brush and bucket to spruce up store fronts in
West Newport business area. Clean-up campaign is being under·
taken by Old Town Newport Association, for ,.which the attractive
blonde innkeeper is secretary.
Shops in West ~ ewp'!rt
\
Beginning Big Cleanup·
Week when beach crowds are heavy.
not "look Jdly on North Korea's
. · barbaric acta of aure11ion Jn.
definitely." Ht refelTed not W.Y to
the~bJo Mizurt bot sanctay's vain
attempt· by 31 North Korean mrutra-
ton to a.nualnate President Park
Chuni Hee.
Choi said the uauslnaUon attempt
and the Pueblo 1ncldeDt formed" the
••two m~t serlou1 thrutl the North
Korean Commu.nlltl · posed for peace
1n Korea and the Far Eut. ''
Chol said· a note bu been sent to
U.N. Secretary Genetal 0 Thant ex·
plalnlnc the situation. -
Maj. Gen. Lew Byon1 Hion, director
of plaas and operations for the South
Koreu army, said ill a 1tatement
there are "very 1tron1 feelings" in
the rant and file for action against
the nortb. Lew aaid aovermneot policy
now la not to take offensive actJoll.
..
A m.;orlty of Orange Coast College
atudellta •ho voted bl a student body
etectlon taat week. believe the U.S.
Jlhould stay ·in Wtnam and that mari·
juoa sboWd . tCllMllD iDepl.
Tbe wte wu 4SI No to 21111 Yes on
the q~stion,' "Sboulcl the U.S. pull out
of Vietnam?"
The vote on "Should marijU.na be
legallr.ed!" wa1 405 No to 2llO Yes.
Only 10 percent of the &.522 daytime
students voted in the student body
election.
The "support the war" vote cone·
sponded with resulta on other college
campuae1, includint UCJ, UCLA .ahd
Cal State. Long Beach.
Errol Gerson. 22-year-old native of
Jobanne1burg. Soutb Africa, was elect·
ed student body pre1ident. The busi·
ness administration and marketing
major bas been a member o.f the stu·
dent government for three semesters.
Genoa attended 1Q111 ,Edward vm
HJgh School and University of Wit·
watersrand. when be wu awarded a
half blue for soccer, before cominf to
occ.
Peie lttrd 0,f Ntwpon Beach was
elected vu presldeet;. SuaaA Painter
of Costa Mesa . ..., ~lect.ed president
of the APoclatad "'*'fen• ~ti and
Barrett Hunt of Laguna Buch was
elec~ president of the Aaaoclated
Men st'1(ients.
Senators elected for the spring sem·
ester are:
Br uce Brown, Huntington Beach;
LYn Conry. to.ta-Mesa: Jemette Dil·
· ger. Balboa: BiU Fallon. Huntington
Beach; Chris F1oreani, Costa Mesa ;
Kathy Frater, Laguna Niguel ; Steve
Hays. Balboa Island; Jeanne Kirkpat-
rick. Laguna Hills.
Joe Ufto. Laguna Beach: Richard
Mcinnis, Garden Grove; Sherry Miko·
Jajczak. Orange; Ginny Pttdue, Tus·
tin; Heilto Peschel, Costa Mesa; Al Porco, Gardela Grove; ·Stan Pratt, La-
guna Bead\; Jon Reiter. Santa Ana:
Ed Rooney. to.a Mesa, and Keith
Solomon, Cos.la Mesa.
West Newport's shopping area at
Newport Pier -after decades oC
detenoration from oceanfront weather
and summertime beachgoers - is
ready to fi ght back.
Merchants today were busy sfappin~
paint on their store fr.onts and
refurbishing interiors while workmen
were ready to begin a $28.652 clean-up
The contract wu awuded this week
by Newport citr councilmen. lt calll
for replacing curb and sidewalk
between McFadden Place and 21.llCi
Street: construrllon of a 6-foot wide
sidewalk etoog the ocun side o( the
parking lot; repair and resutfacin1
ef.h-lot _, pnMISOllrfor}.'!'d~l.9-
lng. .
M;!Utary sources in Seoul reported
day long s~l1bes alone the J.25.mile
ttuce line as t:roopt of the U.S. 2nd
Infantry DiviJlon and South Koreans
ran into &ix small U<>lated croups
of would be Communist infiltrators.
Two South Koreans were kill~ .and
elaht Americans and two South
Koreans wounded. Northern losses
were not known.
Fro• P .. e 1
• ua~1 •en · the ~cent par~&
lot sidewalks.
Low bidder on the city sponsor~
contract was R. W. Lynam o( Corona
del Mar. He Is expected to finish
. the job In about six weeks, in time
for the area {o shine during Easter
. r Prom 'P•1e J
·HIRTH .'~.
dustry. Hirth would Ukely have little
difficulty raisi ng campaign funds.
In recent years. be also bas built
up a reputation for community wide
leadership tbroUgh hia service a~
chamber prnid'nt in 1966 and as
chairman of the CUiuns Harbor Area
Res ear c•h ·:Team (CHART), an
organization of business and pro·
fesslonal peos»e c:oncemed with the city's future growth and development.
Councilman Cook. if he is opposed
for re·electlon. would also be expectrd
to mou nt a vi~orous campaign. He
is said to have the backing of so
maliy spllnfer groups in Lown that
he has a solid plank of support.
Another possible challenger or the
colorful muni6 pal lawmaker 1s Collins
Radio Co. executiva Paul B. White.
Several weeks ago, White was of·
fered lfnancial &upport by some pro·
-m inent businessmen in the com·
munlty. But ltbtn ~asl questioned on
~hether ht would run-for office. While
aaid he hadn't yet made up hia mind.
The cOfltract was adopted 'on a ma.
tion by Weal N'ewport Councilman Al
Forgit.
Merchants. meanwhile. on their own
)nitlative have aJ90 begun an utenaivt
reJU"ttaaUon ampalp.
Pe.ggy Griffith, sl!cretary-treasu.rer
ol the Old ToWn Newi>ort. >.ssoc1atio6,
1aid the merchut croup's elforU
seem to be agreeably infectious smce
the cle~up efforts are spreading to
include several businesses.
"There's a definite move afoot by
storekeepers to clean the are.a up."
ab& laid. "We even l\ave ltltrchantl •tarttiac l• sweep their sldewaJU, for
e:wn~e. ''1 peraonally am sweeping mine
and...m pestering otbers to do tM tame.••
Mrs. Gri!Jith. opentor ol the
Newport Hote.1. listed !our bu.slneseH
which so far have begun face-lifting
programs. One of these Is the old
Rein~ Department atore .. now made
over by Bob and Net He_tnstreet into
a bicycle and hobby shop.
Other efforts include Mrs. Griffith's
hote l and the Ocean Front Hotel, both
of which havp been renovated. and
remodelling of The Surfer rettaurant
under the supervision of Fr an Ursini.
Architectural motif for many of the
buildings. Mr~. Griffith .aid, wW
reflect a Cape Cod influence.
NewPo~. Health
Salon Busted
BOBBY .•.
desertion and nan-support.
• Racked by sobs, Miss Gorctv
haJtingly denied Wednesday that she
had abandoned her baby son -tbe
red·ha.ired biue~yed infant wbo was
A Newport Beam health talon jnstantly dubbed "Bobby Blue-eyes" ~tor wu Ira on S31' bail today when he was found wandering ar6\lnd aft.er .~.,,.. U'l'tlted i Wednesday the K·Mart store. ·
for de,..U, IOUcltinl ~undercover Mias Gorcev. 24. tot• a bushed court D0*"8H to_peform a act. 1.. f+ -.ct1W te a ar n Newport tMt she panicked and left aer son
Bucb..CO,ta Mesa V'umc al Court for in the store in the hope that "someone . would ft.nd hlm and feed him". Sbe arr'llpment Jan. 30 was I»rothea told tbt court that she was -homeless, PauJlne Smith, 43. d d · Police Det. John Simon uld that jobless and pennlless but she inten e
an undercover officer visited the to relurn here and reclaim him after
health salon, 7.8:1> Newpcirl Blvd., 00 she found help in her native Cleveland. tip NeaUy dressed in a crisp white ~ nM : 1'0lftan alleaedl.r agreed to blouse and trim black skirt. Miss ~rform a ~letrd aet lJ! uchanie for Gorcev testifled that she arrived alone
'16. In Oranae County la.at year and took
The Ulldseovv offlcer then left the up residence with a Whittler man. bulldllll. and rttutned a abort Ume t ventually. she recalled, she wrote
later with Dtt. Simon to place her to Cleveland and asked that her
under arreat. •ccordint to poUce. • parents send her infant son to
California to join her.
But when "Bobby Blue~yes" Ir·
riv~ in the care of he r brother.
she sajd, her angered lover refused
to support the child -the illegitimate
offspring, she said, of heJ' former
liaison with a Cleveland police officer.
Miss Gorcev said her decision to
leave her son in the Weatminster store
followed bet ejection frOll\ her borne.
her failure to sell her car and re·
jections of her appeals for help by
the County Welfare Department.
"What could I do?'• the white faced
woman asked.
The jury was told that Miu Gorcev
found a job a week later and returned
to Whittler Tu resume ber former
domestic arrangement.. with her
lover. Sbe bid that he paid the rent
and food bills while she, unknown
to )J.fin, saved. mooey for the trip
to Cleveland -where she would, she
11id. find llnanda1 help tblt would
enable her to reclaim her son.
· ( '11J If ii I 1·. D. J.· GARRETT'S
1-'1 Ii ·~ I·':·/· i' 1' 1.\ 10th SEMI·ANMJAL
• Responded Lanlrton: ''The Young
· Democrat& are not just any other
• club, but represent an uercise of '
, our basic political righl5. which are
• protected by none othe r · than tbe Sltell Re1noved OUR llGGEST LAM.P · secret ballot.',.
Trustees moved to deny the student
• requu t and Humphreys seconded ~
'Deni.al wu carried unanimously. -------------. .. Co<Ut)/an Helps Save Buddy
I
• I
DAILY PILOT
....,.. ...... c ......
'leMrt H. 'Wet4 .......... n .... " 1< ... 1/ .....,
Tlltl'IH A. M~lilH ..............
J-F. e.m"' "-1 ._. Cllr l•W
J1elr ... c.,i., , .. , HllH"
1w1w ......_ .W.w1tlllle Olndlr
....,... ..... Offtle
2211 w ....... ll\'4.
Mall'.., M4r•n P.O. a-1171 UUJ
Ott. OHM"
C.la -· m Wtlt kv Sfl'ttt U.-.._,.. »" Mlrflla .. Streff
..,.._ lleedl: • Jll Sl,..t
(_
A Marine explosives expert from
San Clemente played a vital part in
a recent Vietnam drama wherein a
1 live morlar sheH was eitracted from
the stomach or a wounded buddy.
Sll:if Sgt. Ronald .Snle1ow.ki, 30 •
was the Martag engbieer. the COzi>$
.reported today from Saigon.
The drama began when Pfc. Robert
Mussarl, 19, Of' Pennrylvania was
brought lo Ll Edward Feldman. 26,
a M.miAe dodor ol New York, in
a Ont aid ttattb6 nur the combat
base at Khe Sanh.
'' l could bal(lly believe my eyes
when th'1 ~ him 101" said
Feldman. -''I pulled back part ot the big field
dreuing Uld saw a metal pa,. JUat
sticking out of his tbdome:a, Theft
bad been tome bleedin&. Mt.• iibeU must have bten· ac:orchfna l)ol when
it hit blm. ll had partl,y cauterized
tht wnuncl and b4l3 of tilt akin, tissue
enct Madap were &tuck to Jt Uke
JIUt'.
"Wlw;,ft I rtn&Uy .,-aspect What tht
problem waa, 1 remembered the
tamou.s opera&kln D.,.ly two J .. rt
.,. la Vlltaull ta ~ a »n .a
bad ... •• • .. bam ......
Jn a flil)d 1pand
"W'bn l reed .. 1t dllm la the
Sta&es, J ..... *• viii J ....W hh• ~ ...... ttims." .
FUcllnd ad bla aidatallt, Cllltf
Jf Olpltalman JUchanl .uqulU\, 31. O(
AU&nde' ludt. na.. .. u.ir (ftW
el NIVJ ~ qulcklJ lidfted
Mussarl to a larite sand-bagged bunker.
Hudd(ed .in vie far corner, of the
dark bunke.'j Feldman quietly p ve
Musuri.moirpbine to kill the paill. and
~ent for Snlegowski-who might knoW
ho• to ~ the .shell with the least
cha.nee of setting it off.
Sniegowski did-and reached the
bunkeT within minutes. But With only
a small part of the metal showing, be
was unable to determine posltively
what it was.
Sniegowski suspected it was part or
a delayed action sbeU tha t aorm1Uy
blows up 21 hours after imp.c1. An·
)w>ur and thru quarte,rs already had
gone by.
Feldman ordered Asquith tt> cleaJ'
all the other wounded and slJ of the
corpsmen not Deeded out of the
bunlter. . ,
"Then I Nd them build a UtUI 11Q\l
around Muuari. sandbags Ci w•
blp ." Feldman ap)ailltd. '1 ..-m·
bered ~m the earbet *7 •·U.-
Anny doctor bid ....... 111 ..
wa.U of aandbep to operate tllirougb
aDd I wanted tD do tbat. '°°' bJ mil• Int a blalie iD tbt -wall jtl. 8ie i..ar.
But ~ J&&at ..,., lime ad the ' -
abelll ,..... •till laDdlnc outaldt."
A,qutth, a NSYT ,.....,.., of 11 JUn
~IW'd tow U! Vlttaam, at the buatt r entnoce
to ~~ Hll1~ euL
·'
....
. •
SAL~ EVER!
187 OF OUR FINEST
LAMPS
~ PRICE:-
l
GO ON SALi
AT WCTLY .............. .
REGULARLY PRICED AT
$29.00 .TO. $199.50 NOY# 1451 T() 991s
THESE FINE LAMPS ARE ALL FROM OUR REGULAR STOCK
We Must Make Room For Recent Purch •••• Macie at LA • Ch"c .. ' k t ~-------......;;..;..;...;....;;.:.;.::;.;:,.::....:.:....::::;::..:.·..::• I ago MU •••
ALSO ALL ACCESSORIES. ~o ON SALi AT IXACnY
Ml"RORS, WALL DECOR, PICTURES I
AND PAINTINGS PRICE
lo
~.H.J.GA~REJl fURNffURE
•
2211 HAHO~ 11 VO.
COSTA MISA. CALIF.
6-i'-0271 '46-0l7'
\
..
I
.J.
'
('
Spanish E8e•
They belong to Karen Lindroth, 19, of Newport Beach, but she's
modeling an old Spanish mantilla, part of the Tedocio Yorba col-
lection which lhe Costa Mesa Historical Society is displaying at the
old Estancia (lhe Diego Sepulveda Adobe), Mesa Verde Drive near
Adams Avenue. It is open from 1 to 5 p.m. Saturoays and Sundays.
The Yorba collection is on loan from Mr. and Mrs. Horacio Serrano;
she is the former Mildred Yorba of Huntington Beach and an Orange
County historian. Featured are articles belon·ging to Tedoci<> Yorba,
Santa Ana alcalde (mayor) in the 19th century, and to his kin.
Kirschke Burglars' Story
Not Told, DA Declares
The mystery ''burglars'' who may
be able to spare convicted slayer
Jack Kirschke from the gas chamber
may also live in Anaheim -but
they certainly haven't told their
stories under oath yet. according lo
the .District Attorney's omce.
Reports that the pair already has
made affidavit~ about what they saw
the night Klrschke assertedly com-
mitted d_ouble murder were disr~ed
Reagan R~eives
Subpoena in Land
~Dispute
LOS ANGEi.ES IUPI) -Gov.
Ronald Reagan has been subpoenaed
to appear before the county assess-
ment -wtalk board tod&IY in a con·
trovttsy over the valuation of land
be o1'ns in Malibu.
But the gQvernor told an airport
newa CUJference Wednesday .that he
did not feel he "coul~ anything"
by iippeari ng.
During a hearing on the matter
Wedne9day, Bryan W. Stevens, 46,
a San Marino High School teacher,
told the board Reagan's 54-acre pro-
perty near the VentlX'a Freeway had
been undervalued for tax pu1l>OHS
by A.sseuor Philip E. Watson.
Watson asses3ed the unimproved
land at fl,500. but Stevens claimed
the land should have been valued
at '87.500. ~vena also charged Reagan was ~en a similar 'break on his 236-acre
ranch nearby. He said the ranch,
aold .to a motion picture studio last
YtM for '2 l'f!:illioe~ lhould beve been
asaeued at ~.000. The property
waa ulelled at fll9,000.
Durt.g Ule prooeedin~tsdn said
he wu not in favor ri "udrd party
pedtlmal'' std as the one brought
by st.veal.
"No cttiien is safe," Watson said.
"U your ne.xt door neighbor gets son
at you, be can fi le a petition and
we will be expected to investigate
all 0( them."
Unruh Oaims
GOPs Using Him
As Whipping Boy
SACRAMEN'l"O (AP) -Democratic
Assembly Speaker Jesse M. Unruh
said toMJ RepubllclM appear te be
ming him Al tbeir .. ~. boy,n
t0 cov« up for fallore 1 of Re11an
aclminiltl"lltioll programs. ·
"J thtnk tbe1 uw metttnl ready •.• to ..,.. ... fltflaret . bf .. ,.,,.
•vtrJtbiDC on me aa their 1'blppln1
boy, .. 'l1lr1* told a newt c:mfsuce.
. '"l'bat'a .U fiCl\t." Unrub added,
''If *" .. Ida .. ..... .... .,,., ,,_,. ... Itek .... Chi peer " ........ "1'41 l9leb IWtMI' "'1 Uilll me °"·,. .,. . ...., aood 11.....-lold repaNr'•
a qy lft8t' two Jl~ felldera
lnMat.t Unmfl Ud tor m e r
D9McJ de Gov. &dmuM c.. Bron
l1IUlt •MW to bllme for Urls ,..,., "*""" tu tnllretlllt
e.-r '~
today by an associate or District Al·
torney Cecil Hicks.
Hicks himsell said he would have
no further comment on the case at
this tim~. and departed his office.
The case turns on the disclosure
earlier this week that Hicks informed
Kirschke'• proeecutor that two JMn
were located in Orange County who
said they saw a man and a woman
leave the Kirschke apartment in Long
Be•ch April 8. the night Elaine
KinchJce, 43, and Orville Drankhan,
41, were slain.
According to ttie two men. the man
was not Kirscbke, who was convicted ,
of the dollble slaying. The woman.
they said, was a blonde. Both drove
away in a gold Porsche.
The two men, located in Orange
County, according to Hicks, said they
were so unnerved by tbota they'd
heard just before Ule man and woman
emerged that they gave up plans t.o
burglarize homes in the area.
Albert~C. S. Ramsey, who defended
Kirschke, s a i d the "b u r g 1 a r s''
previously told him their story. It
did not be.come ~lie, however, until
after Kirschlte was sentenced to
death.
Kirschke. a former deputy district
attorney. has a~ked for a retri~I -
and a hearing has been set for May
7.
H-bomb Search
Moving Slowly
In Greenland
Frem W;tt Services
The two.nation search for four misR·
ing H-bombs o{l Greenland moved
slowly today amid reports lba.t n_ucle~r
scientists assume that radiation in
the area indicates "at least one of
the bombs ruptured."
Alternate speculation was that lbe
burning wr.,ckage of the plane which
carried them melted eftough ice to
form a small lake -which later
frose solld with the bombs inside.
The giant lethal icecube may be
900 feef below lbe surface of the
Jee-covered s~a near T h u--tt .
Greenland, where the B-12 bomber
craabed Sunday, they aaid.
Ellperta ftom the UD{Wld States and
Derunark, wbkb owns Greenlaod, con-
verged 011 tbe ICt'lle today.
They will asalat Air Force teams
alrea4J at the sltt of tbt cruh in
North Star Bay where the Air Force
dbcovel'ed Wednesday "Ugbt, fixed
and closely COftfined ndioactivity In
the form of alpha partlcles. -..tlich
poaed no danaer.''
'J't)c radioactivity was found on the
footgur of t.lle aearch team 111 well
as their Gnenbnd dogsled dri~ers
end thefr Dnl.lh '°ide.
The PtntJpn iaued a 1ta.t.tmeot
late wtdnetday a&.Jln• th.It parta "' ••tt.e _..., ~ ·wtte ldtnUed
amont tbe clebnf'• found "1 the • cond doealed team to rtteb tM
crubltte IOIDB ...,.. mlJea frOm
TMlt •
9'lt Utttt waa .... confu.llOJt at
to Jail wtaat th• stawnut tnd(ca\ld.
PentacoJ\ Cllftlctall reh!Md .. 111 If
ttils m,ut pert fl' a '°"'' ltHlf
11111 .~. but tM7 lidd fl did Dot
refrr to audl reiac.I n.u ii 1'0lllt
IMclillet.
•
•
OAJL V flft.O'r
~ \ .
Reagan Task Force Proposes More .Local Control
• j t
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Cutback&
In 1i.te publlc bealth personnel all(1
rat.mt -plus more local control
over health servfces -have been
proposed by ene of Gov. Reagan's bat fo.rceJ.
1be unpaid advisers to t b e •
Republican iovernor criticized the
State Department of Public Health
foe relying on ··targe volumes" of
federal ·re.search money.
"There ls less inovlvement with
local people," said tt.Je task force .
"Authority is more centralized ln the
ae.te."
The t.aslc force report already has
caused controversy witbin t:tle depart·
roent -where Director Lester·
Breslow wa s denied r~ppointment by
Reagan earlier this month.
The program has been tt\e focus
of argument for a year. The ad·
mlnlslfaUon last August ordered ctrt-
backs ln about 100 areu oC services
because of higher doctor fees and
rising costs.
Officials said about S.000 youngsters
wtlo would have qualified for treat·
menl won't get it, aDd several hur.dred
already have been denied help, local
officials have reported to legislators.
OUicials say children already under
b'Ntment will not be dropped from
the program.
1'h'e task force made oozl'ns of
recommendations. man.y ol which
would allow the reduction o f
personnel.
One official. who declmed the usP
of his name, said he and &0me of
his colleagues believe the task forct>
was Influenced by the Callfornia
Medical Association' and physicians
"'Who don 't believe In public health."
The ta.,k force is one of several
groups of advisers generally from
pnvate enterprise who have been stu·
dying state governmeoh,,,for a year
-looking for ways of bringinJ;
business-like economy to the Capitol.
ThPir reports have been kept secret.
but The Associated Press obtained
excerpts of tbe one dealing with the
Public Heaith.:.Department.
P~ Beck, Reagan's pr e.s 1
secretary, confirmed the recom·
mendaUons b81i been made by the
task force, but added:
.. The governor has not seen ll)e
recommendations. There are golfig to
be recommendations that will talle
a great deal of time to put into
effect. There may b c recom·
meodations we do not accept. There
will be recommendations that we ac·
cept. ''
The task force propose4 ~utbacks
for the progr<'m of supplying medical
aid to crippled children, which
Democratic Assemblyman Robert W.
Crown sa~has been deprived oC funds
by Reagan. Rca~an denies it.
* * * 1:r 1:r * 1:r * * Clifford Gets
Senate Nod
Mental Hefilth Aid Urged .
To Defense Job
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Senat.e
Armed Services Committee voted
unanimous approval today of Clark
Clifford to be secretary oC defense
after be testified that he opposes a
Vietnam bombing halt at this time.
The nomination of the 61-year-old
attorney wll be formally sent to the
Senate for confirmation next week.
Swift approval is tertain.
At a confirmation bearing. Clifford
said he believes the lime may come
when it would ht in tne besl U.
S. interests lo announce a bombing
pause in order lo achieve peace
negotiations.
But ' be added "That time has not
arrived." ,
Asked specifically if he favors a
bombing cessation now, CI i f r·o r d
replied "I do not."
The Wash ington attorney also told
the Senate group that to avoid any
conflict of interest, he will sive up
his connection with b~s lucrative law
firm, withdraw from various private
ventures and sell all stocks in co m-
panies doing business with the Pen·
tagon. 't
By .TACJ\ BROBACK Adler, Or. David Geddes. Dr. Maclyn °' .... o.u., ,...., stMt Somers. and Mrs. William S. Gibbs.
Major expansion in the mental Mrs. Gibf>s residei; in Huntington
Beach and Dr. Somers in Costa Mesa. health program at the Orange County The report ur~ed that the board
Medical Center was urged on th<' Pvaluat, the county's de gree or
Board of Supervisors Wedne6day by responsibility to offer some type of
the Mental ijealth Advisory Board. care ror the 40 percent of the poputa.
In a report "covering the third rull lion under 19. even if stale fundin~
calendar year oC operation of Short· is not provided.
Ooyle state mental health program Mental heallh carr in £the county ,
In Orange County" Mrs. William is costi ng $1.S. million this fiscal year.
Saylor of South Laguna, chairman JI was Sl.2 milUon in 1966-07 aod
of the advisory board. said "in many -i.lhad started with a mo.iest budget
ways, this year has been a disap· of less than $.500.000 io 1965.
pointing one. primarily duf' to the The advisory group recommended
budget policies at the state level." that mental health be a separate
The supervisons. noting that the departmrnt al the OCMC and. that
budget ror mental health care has space be provided for expansion.
increased greatly each year since Coopl'rative funding between corn.
established in 1965, hesitated on an munity groups and the county "might
additional bud geting for the coming be explored" the report stated.
year witho~t further study. INCRFASE SOllGHT The ,..advisory group recommend ed .' ~ .. . .. . that psychiatric services for children An increase m Crisis lnterven.tl(ln
antl teen-agers should be offered and Service" I coun.seling. potential sui~1des
the age limitation of 16 years and and other patients !n mentaJ crises~
older be immediately removed. from the present live days a week to seven is recommended.
SERVE ON BOARD Decentralization or mental health
Serving on the advi sory board. in services should be considered, Mrs.
addition lo Mrs. Saylor. a r P Saylor told the board. "Child Guidance
Supervisor William Hirstein: Superior Service, a plann ed new outpatient
Judge Bruce Sumner. Dr. Sidney .J. service .. must be decentralized ir a
> ---
true community-based program ls to
exist."
In reference to state funding, Mu.
Saylor said her board suggests that
the statf' be asked ftlr a 75 percent
across the board reimbursement l'o
local programs.
"Effort.<; might be made to indicate
Orange County's dissatisfaction wit:h
present funding policies at the state
• level." the chairman stated. ''If coun·
ties are to furnisb the services, the)'
might be permitted some voice in
establishment of priorities f o r
service." •
Russ ian Premier
Start India Visit
NEW OELHI (UPI) -Soviet
Premier Alexei N. Kosygin arrived
today on an olficial visit to India .
Mrs. Indira Gandhi, Indian premier,
an<I Other J!OVernment O f f i C i a } S
greeted Kosygin on his arrival from
Tashkent. capital of the Soviet
Repl'blic of Uzbekistan.
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2640 "arbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
CALL 548-5525
19446"
'•
'
OAll V PO.OT
,~ .. "' .. 0..., .... Slllf)
Police issued a warning to a
Paris burglar that one of the 60
dolls be stole from a former Army
officer's home ls a North ·Vietnam·
ese booby trap. Albert Pepin, the
owner who c o 11 e c t e d the dolla
throughout Europe, A f r i c a and
Asia kept the deadly one in a lock·
ed steel oox. He said anyone pi.ck·
ing up the doll anywhere but by
the head runs the risk of instant-
aneous death if pricked· by one of
four tiny curar~ipped points on
the body. • More than 100 wom~ students
invaded the men's residence at
Nantes University in France Tues-
day night in a sort o! "panty·raid"
in reverse. The coed!, protestin¥ a
new university r u 1 e prohibiting
them from v i s i t i n g their men
friends' rooms, were still staging a
11lock·in" in the men's dormitory at
this writing. Vive le difference! •
GUI/ Hutton, of WataonWlt. imilt•
thr0t.l{1h wh<d a~ar• to be a hor-
rible 1001lnd. Actuall111 it uw car1-f ull11 applied pladic and arti/iciol
blood makeup on Gv11 by Armv
medic! from Fort Ord. Gu11 plat1td
the part of a victim in a mock bui
e~losion during a Civil l)ef eme dil-
aJter drill. • "No one would wilh the job of
president on someQJte they lO'fe,"
said Mltur•n RHPn, daughter of
Gov. Ronald Reagan appearing in
Spokane, Wash., on a speaking
tour. Miss Reagan, 28, said, "I like
having dad around. Being presi·
dent of this country fs a very kill·
ing job." • Two sets of studenta at :Marsh-
field (Mus.) High S ch o..o 1 have
teachers and students confwed
over their names. 'Ibe two sets of
students have names that are tr&n1-
posed u f o 11 ow s: Wllll1m Ed-
w•rdt and Edw1rd WlllltmS, D•
vld Rlch1rdson and Rlchlrd D1vlcl-
son. • A man pushing a shopping cart
forced Whittier supermarket clerk,
Tim le1mon, ~4. to empty the safe
at gunpoint Wednesday. Then the
bandit strolled out, still pushing
the shopping cart containing bags
of currency and coiDs t o t a 1 i n g
$4,000.
'Pressure'
Revealed
~oROmney
. MANCHESTER, N.H. (UPI) -Gov. Geor;. Rombty of Michigan believes
the H1Juh ol a U.S. ship by North
Kwea ii u attempt to bring presaure
on the UblW 'States to iDfluenoe .
American policy in Vietnam.
Ominlog his second "meet the pec>-
ple'f eampalp nring throueh N.w
llampsbiie. Romney said Wednesday
night tbat be was told by world lead·
ers on a pre-<:ampeign tour abtoad
that such pressure would be exerted.
"'Ibey indicated they will bring
pressure on us in different parta of
the world In order to influence the
outcome in V~am." the Republican
Presidential 11plrant said.
"That was made very plain to me
tn the discussions I had and the Ko..
rean incident and the tenseness in
the Mlddle Eut are right in line with ~hat I beard w oo that trip," be
said. Tbe governor ls ampalgning for
votes in tbe state's b 12 Presiden·
till Primary, the fir in the na
Price F.....,·. ~
Charges Aimed
At Publishers
NEW YORK (UPI) -Eighteen
leading book publishers were charged
by New York City in a civil suit
Wednesday with price fixing and con-
spiracy in restraint of trade involving
books used in libraries and schools.
'lbe suit, filed in federal court here,
asked for· triple damages and alleged
that city agencies had been forced
to buy everpriced and expensive edi-
tions of chlldren'a boob.
The defendant.a named in the suit
were:
Harper Ir Row Publishers, Inc.: The
Macmillan C o m pa n y; Ran d o m
Houte; The Bobbs Merrill Co., Inc.;
Dodd Mead Ir Co.; E. P. Dutton
Company Inc.; Gronet & Danlap Inc.~
Holt ~ & Winston Inc.; Llttle
Brown" Co., Inc.; G. P. Putnam'•
Sona; Charlea Scribner Sons: Golden
Preaa Inc.; Franklin ·watts Inc.:
Henry Z. Walck Inc.; Cbildren.1'1
Press ~-j Tbomu Y. Crowell, Inc.;
Wllllam Morrow &: Co., Inc., and the
Vik1nl Pre11, Inc.
Deposit Stolen,
Hospital Ref uses
Child . Operation
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) -Mrs.
Beverly King todaf searched for a
way to finance an operation to save
the life of her 4-year-old son who
wu refused at a hospital after some·
·one atole the $000 admittance fee.
"I don't know what I'm going to
do," Mn. King said. She said she wu on her way to West Jefferson
BOIJ)ital to pay the deposit when ber
puree was stolen.
"My husbed and I scraped to the
last penny to pay the hospital's bill,"
she said.
Mrs. King 9811d her son bas a rup-
tured hernia. Her doctor told her Sun-cay be needed bospitalliation im·
mediately.
"I attemptied to take him to the
hospital then,' .. Mrs. King said, "but
tl\ey wouldn't let me in unW I had
the requested money."
CONVICTION UPHILD
An,..... luclMMn ...
Oregon: :Court
Affinri8R~
Ag~pst~tor
SALEM, Ore. (uPt) -'nle Oregon
Su pr em eC o':lrtWedne 1d ay
unanimousl1 affirmed tbe coatempt
of court cbovlctlon and $300 fine of
a farmer colle1e n.w1p11per editor
who refmed to ten a &:rand jury
her sdtirces fbr' a rf4r1 Oil campus
marijuana UM.
Annette BuchaDan, who published
the artl4le u manacinc editor ol the
University ol Ore1on newspaper in
1966, aaJd lbe would appeal to the
U.S. Supreme Court. ,
Miss Buchanan, Dcnf Mrs. Michael
Conard, publiabed u interview by
eight arionymoua students on mari-
juana smoking and refuled to name
them after abe waa subpoenaed to
appear l>Iefore the Lane County Grand
Jury.
The Oregon court held the "asserted
privilege" to protect news aolll'cea
did not take precedent over a person'c
duty to teaUfy ill court in the absence
of leglalatlve statute p r o t e c i l n g
reporters.
Mias ·Buchanan's attorney, Arthur
Jobnlon, argued at the Dec. 4 State
Supreme Ccurt bearing .that the COD·
stitutidnally protected right o f
freedom of the press was "clearly
~olved." He said the right implied
~m to gather news, includiD&
the use ol confidential sources.
However, the c:Omt ruled the rilbt
to refuH dlsdolure of Dns sources ·
"is subordinate to the duty of every
citizen to te1tify in court." It held
that shielding reporters l!._. the pro-
vince of the legislature . ...,
'lbirteen states presently have laws
protectiDg newsmen in deilln1 with
coafidentlal Dews sourcu, but a bill
to protect report.en DeTer Cot out
of committee during the 1117 MU1on
ol the Ore1cm ltplature.
·"I'm dlaappolnted,0 M1sa Buchanan
aald in Portland when Ille IHrned
of the State Supreme Court dedaloo.
''I think a respoaalble pr... DMCla
to explore any • all· anu ill a
public service capacity," lbe aid.
"'l'lleae thin11 are not icDI to be ~ugbt to lieht by newapepen at
all unless they can use coafldeDti&J
sources."
Gardner Resigm
WASHINGTON (AP) Tbe
realgnation ol John W. Gardner aa
secretary of health, education and
welfare wu announced by tbt White
House today.
National Highs ·Near
28 Degrees Below Zero at Newport .
9
S•a, Moon, Tltla
,.IDAY "nf Ntll • . . . . . • . . . •:ti Lift. 4.J "'"' '°"' . . ... . ... 1:12 ··'"· ·1.2 ...,. 111111 • • • • l:lf •·"'-u ,
.... .._ .,,, • "'· ..,. 2:17 '·"" M an. t'..SJ e.111. kll J: II •.m.
.... ""' O. '•" , L.Ht O. JM. 2' ,... • 1"111. IJ ,... W
<:ostal
lltllt veri.&ie wlndl llllt ,_,.IM
l!KiDr'lllft9 -· to -·· .. to 11 llilols "'b eflt-......... to~
-· 12 to u knoll ,.,...y. ._., ....-,. lfle;Au,.,. cloulls t0fti911t ..W
~f1cley, •
T'"'"reliil'n r~ Ir-e 111111 fl 7J to a 1.. of 4'. Tiie wai.r ""'° .-r•tun -J7.2.
......... ....... ....... ,,_ .. .. "
Ill VlllMf Mf""9 and " le • Ill loww
.. iwn.
SOUTHlaN CALIFOltNl,.,_--
1111 Iii.II delMI llVt --· -todeT. (toufY ,,,_1 .,... lelllelll elld
Fl'lcley. c..i.r -_, ,_,, ....
--· '"*'· I.OS ANCEi.ES AND VtCINtTY-IMJ'99 ......... c ...... M .... ,,_..
IVMlllM ..... ,,. MMltY tllul!Y .......,. .... ,,....,,, C.... ~ Hiii! .._,,
,.. ... ..... • """ ,,..., II.
COUTM. AN'D lfll'TlllMllDfATI VAU.IYl-V~ Mill 0-. M __..... .......... ..... -.tlY
deWY .................. """ ~ ,. ...................... , ... ,,..., ........... n.
-JfnAll• A .. M IMnu• Mill °'"' .... ....,.., -.....,, ....... ...., ,...... .... ,,..,, c.... ... """' "'*'~ .. HfUIUOlt MO DaallT •HfO* -¥.,,.. .... ~ .. .......,
-............ dl99P .......... ....... """ "*"' • .. ,. -....... " ... ....,.....,.. ..... ..... ,. ... ..., .....,... ...
............. Clllltt .... ....., ...., ,,,... .......... .. .,..,. ......... " -.......
11.S. s ....... .,, __ ,.............,_
.. -,...., ·-.......,_ .. Al-~~ ..... -...... ,. ,,_ ........... ~.""'"
-· "" ..-ni ...,,.. ClnlN .... w...• kY .................. ....
""'""' CMtll!VM .. llY '"'" '-"""" Mea.. ,. c-........ ..
..... ,.. AMlt ,,, ..... "" ftWf'CVfY ....... ..,.. Ill .,..,.., MC> ........ ,.. .................. ...
....... otl _...._. .... °""' C.f ....... ___ _.. __
-• ..., -"' .,.. Ill ......... .............. Ill -ICllftlfW ...... -*'-""" ......
Tiii ...,. ... -........ ·-----~M.Y, UM! •• ._ a -.._..,. ----~----.....,., ... __ ,,_,....
..... II 11• ... -.... -....... ,.,.. ,....... ....., ..., .., -_ ............. ....... ~-----E,F·~-==-~ -'-.... Olt.
. . Vt.
.HA'lTWBURG, Mai. (UPI) -
Miuisatppt authoritie1 WedMlday
nJpt arrested 10 men, includ.IDI a
Laurel civic ie.-.. on mwder and
&r1011 cbargea 1n the firebomb ct.etb
of Negro leader Vernon Dehmer. Ad·
dltlonal arreau were expected today.
Five persona were arrnted by State
Troopers on murder and araon iJa.
dictmentl and another five ftH
charled with .-.on. The, were belDC
held in the Forntt County Jail witbout
bond pendiDC arra1gument e~
later today. ' •
Among thole arrelted were Sam
Holloway Bowen Jr. of Laurel, aDe1·
ed Jmperi.al Wiw'd of the Mllltant
While KDigbta of the fUI: Klu JClan, •
Attorney Travis Bact1ey ud ti.la
Clifford Will.,. Jones County civic
leader. Wibon, m.1ed lrtth mmder
and arson, only llenday wu **'4ecl
the Lalll'el Jaycees Di.ltln"'11bed
Service A~jr 1917;
The inclietmenta WIH .. Int It.ate
cbargee returned in 1be Jan.. 10, 1-
nightrider attack • tbt llome • tbe
Negro voter ~ l•acler. H~ever. BoW'erJ and 11 oGMr wb1te
~. including a JJUlllber of thole
indicted Wednetday, .faced federal
conspiracy cbargea in coanectloD With
Dahmer's death.
Obarged with murder llDd a?IOD
wtth WilJon were ~ Vic6r Seawn,
WHllam. Thomas-~ JJIDtl Lyona
and Charles Rlcliard Nobie. Bowen,
Buckley, Deavoan Nix, Howard
Travil Giles and Lawxenee Byrd were
indicted on arson charges.
It wu the first time Wllaon, preli-
de:nt of an artificial limb manufac-
tqrin' firm in Laurel, bad been lllllled
,
B,ritain. tp Give flp . Role
. .
As '~oliceman' to -'W oru:l
LONDON (UP()-ID 116tt1r delletlt, ~ .to tlb," Bmra sbot 1lllCk
l'onlp Secr•tlrJ Gear,. Brown tald -e· aim mmt be to emt a werJd
p..,...... W......., Dl&bt that lnftM"Ct tllrodl tbt UlllW lf6Dt.
Britala II tbrOQCll u a world poliee! tbrouCh tbe Atfutlc All'..,., ad in
DLlllL • tbt futun, witJI a tJlllt.d s......._" be
Ol• 1fTattn 1eedlirl 8Ce'*4 Brti-.;..'*'----------~... of ''nttlltt, OD comm1tmtllta to ·
1t1 .. r=...-. wor111 poUelne ro11 ~ fJ00,000 L.4Jf'SVlT ~:~=.·..:'·~ FILED BY ·PEGLER ~~=':.-= . TUCSON, MIL (OPI) ---De'ftpepll' eohmmiat W't I t b r 0 0 k
.. cwatd11 wblcb lbeW4 PePr m.d salt w.a.11111 la P1JDa
be wwk1DC ....._ fDr their on re-CowltJ S.pcrior Court. fiJdDI .,000 _... .......,, .. BrwD said. and an IDjaDCtloll a,.ia.t tbt lbMriD&
Brown wu NPl'Ylai JD tbe Home of of a Ital• pla1 ber'I Md on uUaaat
Cmmom to attieb,Jir Sir Alec Doul· ttlevialoo. ·
Ju.Bomt, fonMr ~ m.bdlter, and Peller claimed the play ftl~ ftc-
Omlenatln leldlr Ec!nrd Hedi.. tional vernon of blJ l*t ill a libel
Dougtu.Home accuMd the Labor gov· ca:.e involYmc author q u • D U D
enunent of ''ratting" .on its commit· Reynolda.
meota eaat of Suez. Judge Robert RoylJtoo ordered~
Douglu-Home aald plmmed milltary defendant. -American Brolldcuting
pdlouta in Slnppore and Malaysia Compuy, G i l m o r e Broadcaltlng ~ 1971, "are two clear &Dd,tpeci.ftc Corporation and the Ai'IJ.Ona Civic
cOlnmltmenta OD which tbt present -Theater of Tucson -to appear Feb.
1ovenunent bu ratted." s to show came why they should
"So lonl aa '°'1 pretacl you are not be r.eatramed from .talblg the
si.yiq you 1nblbit ~le froI? abow. tatiDI over tbe . t1u they
• a.ooo srtnma ...
• Exfta miJeqe Tu.fSJil rubber
• NtW, VlQdan wnp-aowad tread
BUYNOW-
AND SAVE
USl7~xu
7.7hJ4 7Jhll
L25 xU US.JS . . . '"-" ......
l.l5/9ax 11 ., •• t 0 $21.41
,., ....... ==. .....
• .,, TlturJdly, ~ 25, 1968
1'li!ltS, C~ime ;Almost ()ve~shadowing Vi e_t _W__;,__,;__a _r ~____..;...~
, . ~
'l'u.; Did • ••nect from tu ~ase, Wovemmtllt afOl\I with an loerease that ea but increase federal ' terviewed except one. Rep. about anything ex~ept the
WASRJNG,-oN (AP) home COll~ialeecl the people apt1M11n1 ud the activitiea bad st.rings attached. • ..-vices. WiWarn D. Hathaway. D-prlce of potat o e s , • •
Coqrea1 • Jneben I a 1 ~t ~ · of Adi of •mtut Necro leMu -l"Tbtty waat UM war over Worry amonc voters at M&lne. And be had a Hatba1vay said. "Tb.ii ian't
V ._.,.___ ·-,,._ ......... s•.J. •. r.-.i--d watb and they'd be wUllng to ho rt d b all cheekful of to gue »tnaa rankl u the No. •w-w U'IJ ._.. .. -~~Y --'IUlel a I pa.y for I~" &aid Rep. Ken· me was repo e Y n · apathy -just the stable t 'laal with votca tbeJ"w eoa,n..• priority Ult. Frencb Preakleat Charitl netb J.' way. D-l11£ "But the Congress me!Jlbers in· "I dJdn't find anyone upset, lot that Maine people are." ~~~b~-~ ·~~~ad~·G~ ~~~to~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
add u.. war was ~lJ pall llilt Macl o v el' laid Rep . .I.ck &ctwardl, a.oleel that wben the war's
ov-... -~_:. .._ r tJ. la I e~" liild ~ l'r..t -•·.a.a...: ... People ea n • t over, tbe tax comes off." ~ "' • Hbiil ....,.. "'.,._ "I generally found what anger over riots and c;:riJU. ' / andlrttand •b.f we conUnue t cal\ the Great Society
-"Ptc>We want a1me in th& ~~~C:S !:8 .~~ to llYe De Gaulle gold ft'r •tues.'' said Rep. James c. 1treefa ·stopped aM tbey tba.a ~.. ~ ...,.. ud dea't 1aaill that Cle¥el&nd, R·N.H. "This
••t -.. maybe" ~ • f!llllCt start PQiq itt " was teen in the unhappiness
Rep. »ob.,, D-na. . B~ Jli&MZ "1la WCll'ld. War I debt." ovti" the prospect of b.l&ber
lie and awneroua other As fort.be war, mOlt ean-Stronc ~Uon t1> the taxes and travel restric·
r e pr e s e n t a tiwa ind gressmell aaid they found tu Jlk:reue WliJ reported &kins."
• ..... I.We c....
&.We .. e 1401 L C:... Hwy. c-.. .... .
• 111J ......... '-" ... ., ........ .......
Nnaton were retpODdiaf to t r a 1 t r at\ •a a a d u.rQalbolt the couJdry -l\ep. Morris Udall, D-~ Associated Preu survey 4isilluaioDDreat at 1-ome -ti.at many Democrats-and Ariz., aald the spending sen· The DAILY PILOT
on what voter attitudes they but 'a determination not to . a few Republlc ... said tbe1 timent be found waa con·
found at home dW'ing their end the · col\flict without an _:M::D:::e:,:ved:::.....!pe::o:=!p:'..:le~w~o~ul!!d~g!.o --!tr~ad~1~· cto5[::~Don~:,;·t~ra~is~e~la:~x .. :.'.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!_~B~e~s:+ _:i~n~W~e~s~t __
recent month-long recess. ho1M>rable settlement.
Rep. Tom Railsback. R· "I ran into fewer 'invade
.Ill, reported when be men-North Vletuam and bomb
tioned crime in a speech them bacic into the atone
at Gales bu rg, Ill.. a age' people than those for
waitress t o o Ir the Ooor neco~Uon," said R e p . '-~way from him and angrily Aodlew Jaeobs Jr., D-lnd. ~acribed b6w she1d been "But the laraest number are J~ck and robbed iJl wbat unhappy tbe war e.i&ta,
she thought was her :ate would like to get it 11ter
'-. 1leighborbood. with, but have few sug·
MORE PIKERS ·gesttoos on bow to do it." __ Rep. W.R. Poage. D-Tex., ~ -anger ner crime was disagreed.
lkt.ed by nearly all con· "The majotity of our peo·
gi:essrnen surveyed. kid it pie would like to move
waa reflected when Presi· faster and get it over with."
cteftt Johnsoe's State of tf\e Poage said. "The doves are
Unl6n appeal Wednesday in the minority."
night for stiffer anticrlme
measures brought m o r e STRONG FEELINGS
cheers from congressmen The congressmen a 1 s o
~ than any other proposal. found strong f e e 1 i n g s
. Rep. Graham Purcell, D· against Johnson's proposed
'Texas Rangers Face
~gislative Gunfir~· ·
SAN ANTONIO. T e x • casions a8'I became !mown
CAP> 7 'fb-.TeJu Ra,.aer . ~ as "~ De~ ~-
a iW'estei:Mt:yte s t a t e ans." • -\ .;
pollcemb ~t• •'h 4-year-...._ -old rt1p11tatloe 6lr t.ighness. The Ran.,.. .. e fought -
ws ambushlld lalt summer Indians wltttout m e r c 'I •
by criticism and may race making raids on villages
mon oL the aame kind of and shooting · at anytni,ng
trouble th.ii •Pfing, that moved. They killed
Tbe Rangers were .hit by warriors women a .n d
serious crtticisnl !rom n;iany chUCren.' helpflS,c to d(lye
1,fdes ._ £ro JAd~ r ights the _tribes frqm the stale. ~oupe, ttie AJl't'.;.,CIO. U.S. .. tn the cas• of the Mexican sena~ at.ate le~lators bandits. who plagued Texas
and church organlations -untn about 1919. historians
after the! made dozens of record numerous incidents
arresta .10 a ·farm labor o( · summary executions of
dispute in the Rio Grande bandits caught on the Tex.as
¥.aUey · side of th eRio Grande.
,Criticism is nothing new But. • Jbe-htstat\an
fdr lae Tr.us Rans-rsu·..W 11Dft. the llafr.fil used on
the t(4 )'~~ t.hey ~atlo.~ lbe-)fctl~s wh~•wel'e 111e
tl\e state ~lice in Ttxas.-against th'em hnd against
thel!. n~pn has escala~ed the ranchers and settlers.
and declined. ~th the nse It was an era ... ·ol sudden
and fJll of criuwm. death.
Stephe
1
n F. Au stin, the ----,.-~-JHm-.-.,---
prioclpa Ang10 co1onizcr of f AT oyrnwtl6HT Tex.as. named the firs t Tc~· ~ft' L
as RaogerJ ln 1822. Ht A•lillbM wtllltlff • ~' ~
... lected 10' m"" -to defend llM!, -~ at1M w-Y• "" ...,, • ,..., .... .., _. er .,_ -tbe Texas frontieJ. Fourteen 11.•ct<. 111a ..,...... ewr.:1t1 w""""
Years later, the Ra~ers. •11"-«>*IM• 11 • ""v ,...., "'' .. allY 1wal_.. O«lllH ~ Y9WI' so-called because t e y "'"'"• ... were-'9llf' ....,. "r"".....t" -idety. we r e 1or ...... w... vw.., 1an, -we1111 .......... .. ..... Gaol "' .. ·-...... " ... formally organiied into a .... _. ~ _.. si.• ..,. 11 ...
senµmIBtary group, :., "",:.::-:::•,:.;: :.=.:
Jn the vears that followed, .. -.,,,... ..... •t '"' ... ~ """If ..... ... ...,,... .......
the Texas Rangers batued cwnnu 11 .... "'"' "'" ,_...,..
Itdiau, Mexican bandits "'cuWJOao·s Hu• non and ,~ all aver T.~as. llM NIWPOIT II.YD.
They 1'i.ned U.S. expeditions MAIL OUllS Ftw•-rnto Me~ on severM.oc---·--------
O&incy prll'ld!IS Ms ol 14fC fOld wfth ................ ,..
TIWM dltl'l'llOndt fn i.: maiquite ~
and 1 center diamond. 119'
~ WHKDAYS 9 to 9 SATURDAY 9 to 5:30 ..
POUR A WHAT?
Kenn RI.a
Interior Vlnyl
A fine irttarlor p•i..t 111•.I•
H peci•lly f., u.s by • b•tch ol .
che111i1try 1chool dro,ouh. W•
love it lu111e it's 111•kln9 ut rich I,
in whita •nd color,,
3 99
(iAL
TireJ of brHlrl~ fin,.rn•ilt
•nd b•ndin9 t•ble lrnlva1
trying to 91! the froren
food p•cke9et open7 (Quit
Htin9 II Tlli1 h•11dy safety
u1+t., will '• the tridt
nutly •M •ickly.
19'
Cllnclo Wlntlow
CLIANIR
Ju1t 1h•lr•, .,,..,, •Ill w1,.
clHn. The .. ..,,.., to 4•
windew1, 111ln.,1, re4ri.erettt1(
0114 •II 9'H• •M b•k-4
e11•rnel oltjech. 11 UH It en
'"Y .. fe, ~ It j111t tjliet'kles.l
22.ea.
c..
WAftR SOnlNIR IALT
s.,,.. e14 lea et !fie um• oW ..,..., •-tf'~ ~ic• which It •Mwt IO 1. lt n ... --. ~;, :.1 ;• Iii•~ 1014 eltewhara "4iuu1• wt
/;•;~{ ~ 'o• t tjli0fl4 0 lot ef 111011.Y •II
··:?• {t 1 fo11cy ltot. Soft•" ttjli for 1111. ,
',f-
59'
ntt. ....... r..,1r.J.o ...
•' • .,. .. ..,,.. (Mt ...
tt.4e ~->. llt 104 ft.
rell wttl 4. • let of •r••
..... llO •••• 11, •• , '•"•
.. ... e ftyi-t "'•·
'
POUR A
FLOOR
Seamless Floor CoverlnCJ
Tl.At's right folks, pour a bHutlfuf IH ,,,IA11
tile floor i11 '"ln11te1. Kit co'"H in choic• ef
1ever•I '"°'.," colors, stop I• and ... our
di1pl•y, loolr ti.em over, pick on• out, talre It
home, and preato, (you're worn out •lre•dyl
• new floor with a minimum of effort A11d
expense. You cen domp •nd +romp thit stuff,
won't hurt it, ru lly rugged, •nd it 11ever nH J1
wu in9. u .. indoors or out.
20 Sq.
Ft.
35 Sq.
Ft.
5"
999
PAN and ROLLIR ... Sn
Th e rnoJar~ w1y to p•lnt
(hire 10111eb0Jy l, sturdy
•lu111inu111 p•n •nd big 7"
roller, both for the price of
one. Cu do • wi ll in
minutu,
7"
Sl.e 59c
SHELF BRACKOS
Gray tft•meled 1tael, complete with
n1ou"lin9 htrdw•r•.
4x5 .. 7c
Sd ... tc 10112 ... 24
611 ... 11 12114 ... 24
719 ..• 14 12114 ... 29
7 PllCE BRASS FIRESET
You 'II be stunfted
whan you 1H this
( prob•bly got • hot
co•I in your •Y•·)
Complete Ht for •
lot lau flt•n you
coull .... ~. it, I bel,
1688
ANTl·FREEZE
Fin t the non-fictlon ftovel,
entl ftOW comu Anti.Jr•••
in S11n"Y Calffornie. l ut wa
just lu rned th1t it r•iut
the boiling point for a1lr•
p1otectlon Oft deHrt or
111out1t1l11 trips. (So buy
some •ntl !eh • trip. I
188
GAL.
Blue Lustre Carpet
CUANIR
1.98
~;;:::=::1~~~ 1/t·hnotl ········ 3e69
.............. 5.98
WI l!NT
SHAMPOOllS
$1 .00 POI 24 HOUH •
·'
. .. . . . -. ~ .... ~ ..... ' ,,.. .:.. ..
SUNDAY 10 to 5
.., We .............. , ........ ,,,..... _. ......... .....
,. -awtc-. eltel
lw Hany HIHtn....,., tit t
GLIDDIN GRllN LABIL
SPRID SATIN
CLOS.OUT
This p•int i1 fresh and 9ood, buf the m1nuf1c.
turer 9ot 1ick of the libel ind 11id, "Bf H ch, get
rid of this ind design • new one.'' So we go+ •
few 91llon1 here end few qu1r+t there, ud we've
cut the price by one buck to mak• room for the
stuff with the uw libel, In whitt ecid 1om•
colors, supply limited, so hurry.
Closeout 491 1 .. ular
"" .... Special . •AL
I '~r.Jv:, .. ~ 0 \:iZV • .,,,. ··~
FURY Y4·1N. DRILL sn
•-'
l I piece drill kit includes Fury V.." drill, fitted
1tHI cHe, st .. I bench d 1nd, buffing whHI, I 0
sanding discs, rubber beckin g p1d, 6 piece
•d•p+or set, 9 drill bits, end I limb wool
polishing bonnet. (How sweet.) A good buy from
those fine folh up in Mirylend.
No. F-75 11 88
PROPANE TORCH TANKS
n.. big '" 01. refill, fih • n
al•nd•rd tipt. Useful fof toldarint
•"d other jobs of tht same lflr.
1Wh•t11
TEXACO MOTOR OIL
II\ 20 i nd JO wei9hts. f1dory fresh, not
recl1imed. Detergent and non-deter9ent. If
you drive a lot, you can save 1 bundle ~y
changin9 the oil yourself. al\d the motor will
thank you. IA talkin9 mo~r7 we do nHd I
vac1tion .,ound here. I
' • •• r;
·-....... 9',
r-
(
.. )
. .
8 DAll. V PILOT T~. J.iniwy 2.5, 1968
Van Thieu Speak•
Halt Demn.nded
T_ o Aggression
Slt:IGON . CUPll -Pres!·
dent Nguyen Van Thieu to-
day demanded a halt in "all
Communist aggression" as
the price for an end to U.S.
bombing of North Vietnam.
Thieu, delivering his state
of the nation address to the
South Vietnamese conaress,
specified that bis terms in·
eluded an end to North Viet.
namese infiltration "as well
as .guerrilla attacks, sub-
version, sabotage and ter·
rorism ln South Vietnam."
He clearly referred to the
Viet Cong as well aa re&ular
troops of tbt North Vlet·
nameae army.
Tbieu 11Jd the oiler a1lo
i n c 1 u d e d "proportional"
bomblnc reductlou in ex· cb&qae for parti'al reduc·
tlo~ in Communist military
acti'<llty. "U the C o m m u n l 1 t s
reduct infiltration to1etber
with other aureum and
1ubver1lve activities t n
South Vietnam," be said,
"the bombilll of NorUl Viet-
nam can •llo be reduced
in the same propol'Uon."
· But be warned that "lf
the Commwlitll maintain
their aggressive amblUoiu'
the bombing pre11ure would
have to be increued.
Hanoi bu llJd there must
be an "unconditional" bom·
bing halt before peace
negotiations wUl be COi\·
sidered. Tbleu's statements today
were more far r~I
than condttlona lald down
by President Jobnaon in hia
State of tbe Union me11age
laat week. The U.S. Preti·
dent 1ald the bombing would
be 1topped in exchange for
peace n.etotiation1 but b
added that North Vietnam
"mult not" take advantage
of a pauae to escalate lta
mWtarJ activity.
. Icy Response Given
:Draft Card Burners
WASHINGTON (AP).-·
The Supreme Court hat
'liven a cool reception to
,coot.entiom the 198& law Eating it a c:rtme to burn
;draft ca.rdl Wiii a eon·
sreuJonal "act ol llysteria"
cleaig:ned "to punish 1hole
beatniks." lnle American C 1 v 11
Liberties Union also ai'CUed Wednesday before the high
court th1tt drattcard burning
ii "symbolic speech" pro-
tected by the Constitution.
Both arguments put forth
by ACLU lawyer Marvin M. JC ar p a t k i n drew icy
relJ>Onses from the juattces.
K a r p atldn malntain&d
Congress passed the teglsla·
tion to puni$h conduct it
contideffd unpatriotic. "The
only lecltlative p u r p o 1 e
here," he said, ''was in
atamplng out dfssent."
But Chief Justice Earl
Warren wondered if a
1o1d.ier who brote h 1 1
weapon ln Vietnam could
be considered to b a v e
performed an act ol 1ym·
bolic s~ecb.
And Juatlct Abe Fortas
drew a parallel to a
diuenter throwing a brlck
through a White House win·
dow or his "quivering body"
Jn .front of a train carrying
troops.
·War Wounds DoUble
As Deaths De~rease
' .
, SAIGON (UPI) -The
Vletnam war cost United
States forces 218 w killed
laat week and raised the
war's · total U.S. b a t t 1 e
deatba to 11,ee?, mWtary of.
flclalt saj_d today.
A ~esmaa aald tM
number tilled repretemed
a decrease from t b e
previous week, wbmi 271
died. But 2.211 Amedcani were wounded last week, up
from the 1,798 wounded in
battle during ibe JnVious
week.
The oftkiala aaid that. 948
of the wounded were hurt
badly enough to b e
bospitallz.ed.
North Vietnamese and
Viet Cong dead totaled 1,842,
jhe spokesmen said, mean· lnl that at least four Com·
munists died for every allied
battle death.
South V I e t n a m e s e
authorities reported losing
198 men killed laat week
,.00 other allied forces said
19 of their men died.
The number of Gls wound·
ed broughl to 103,993 the lot.al wounded ao far in the.
~. Of that number more
-than half -56.217 -~·
quired hospitalization.
The official.! allct repomd
a total of m Americam ,.... u.w .. miutns.
New Quakes
Hit Stricken
Sicily Ar~
P ALERMO, Sicily (AP)
-A 1tzong new earthquake
struck western Sicily today,
and at leaat three deaths
and many injuries were
reported.
Police at Trapani said
ttley had recf.!ved word by
radio that a police tergeMt
waa killed in Gibelllna, a
town deltroyed in a
diu.UOU. quake Jan. U .
They Mid they had UD•
conf1rmed reporta t w o
firemen al!o perished.
The casualties w e·r e
reported amooe r e 1 c u e
workera who have been
11truggll.ng for 10 days to
extract bodies from the rub-
ble of a dozen towna in western 6icll1 lllllUered by
the earlier quakes.
PoUce said an unspecified
number of injured were
reported from the new
quake in Gibelllna, l n
Montevago, the town hit
hardest by tbe Jan. 15
quake. and in Partanna and
Santa Nlnfl.
.Ccutro May
Give Title
To Brother
Fall and Winter
M~· in nrt-riad styles, lair
rics and colors!
There ·are some
for r;ery occa·
sion in a wide,
wonderful range
of ladies' sizes.
SHOE ClEAIANCE
UP .TO .. 75% SAVINGSi
LADIES' & GIRLS' LO~ Al I MIN'S
s,1rt S~H. sll,_er~ aH 2·s 0 lms Id cam I styles ill !rjskJ httl1 fl1~s wl.-a _.1111y for w•ic• 111
ntls tf n111 h11U IN ••" _,, $9.99 1 ,air.
"'''· lnat snf 111 ,,,.rt11lty.
llOIS Hf • VU IVTS OI CDTUl
men'S short sleeve
SPORT
SHIRTS
WHITE
FRONT $ REG.
2.97
EA.
Spl~ selection of •;ty shirts~ carefully tailored.
of ~1~ conted aitto11 shirti,.s in a spirited
choice of solids, stripes, plaids, tattssalls & print!.
Miiiy n pant llflSS. ('.okn ft Slllili" IS
w_ell • blsic. ~wn nf hi-boy ailiars.
StZeS $, M, L. ~L.
...
'
0
.. ...
• . .
OR
·WESTERN
1JEAIS
FS
0
R
. .
Ton .. • . of Sf!looth, sleek, stretchy nylon.
~me bnght. solrds: some sizzling stripes.
Zip_.back cl9s1ngs. Sizes S, M, L
JfAllS . . . sJim-cut Western styfings witll
back yoke, drop pockets. Excellent selection
of staunch fabrics in 1 P<Ofusion of popular
colors. Sizes 8 to 16.
}Vt
~-
1
~· l
'
\
SAN PBANCISCO (UPl)
-TM ftlture If two pro-
.ua.t SU FrUdlco ~·
'
k-.-clau dwpd wttb ~lq a~..,,......,
wel"bed ti14ay by atllte
I '
medical euamera ta a 'Wblll tbe1 c o • tr a e t • d
closed-door Mllion. Oermaa meulea.durin& tbt
Tbe U-memlM!r ~ att. elllJ-tlll tlpteoUet.' . Bolla pllyllclans -on tn.I
-Dr. J. Pau\ Sbivelyt!:ef =~atst. '1
tal, and Dr. ·Seymour
. a staff member at st.. tfancls liQSl>ital -
defended the abortions and
sakl no la\VS were violated. l·lf Sevenotherdoctorsgoonl.'l~..;.;;;;;;.;;;:;;;;;;;;.~.;;;..--..--.--.;;. ......... ~:...J
Bludgeon
Death Probe
trial later on st mi 1 a r .,H<*l it. Hot.c:1a11Uis! • hun't done anY'thlu yet
~J::i, and Smith said.P. &nd you'n siviaa her pointa already!" -,
operations. APf.!OVed b 1 ~ commattees, wen ....,. ________ _..._;...._ ____ .......:::.__
aecessary to preserve the. mental bealth ol the ex-
E!dant mothers and were
commOJS practice" i a
boapilall throughout t b e
state darial tbe 1914-e
measles epicem.ic.
"I felt it •• done to save the We ol the motber and
J felt it wu peif ec:Uy le1at,"
Smith said Wednesday of
one of four thtrapeutjc·
abortions in which be
participated. I
More Negro Stud~s
Urged at Colle ges ..
the-NsponaibilltJ ol the
ileulty.
One of ~!! r~ents to\d
'AtDeadend' :~ :U.C-.Jnt.::i an abortion after belal ex-
POied to tht m • u te 1 l>ecame 1be did not want
SANTA ROSA (AP) -
Two state colleee tru.&teta
want to aee the ltate col·
letea offer Jl\Ol"e cocine.
end Pfotrlml in e
deYelopment of N e r o hiltorr and Negro eon-
temporary culture 'and pro-
blems.
And committee ·member
,X..WS H. Hei~ae 1aid lt
would be incon4istent for tM
tru;tee11 to pau policy
statements ia tbls .....
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
Detectives said they were
sWl stymied today in efforts
lo find the slayer al. a'.n
assemblyman's secretary or
even a motive in her vicious
bludgeoning death.
"We're a'tffi UP. a dead·
end," said Sheriff's Inspec-
tor Howard DuBois.
Miriam H. Martin, 41. the
mother of three boys, was
found near death Tuesday
Sacramento. Sbe d i e d
minutes later en .(oute to
a hospital.
The Assembly adjourned
Wednesday in memory 1 ~
Mrs. Martin. p e r s o n a 1
secreHlry for six years to
Democratic Assemblyman
Leo J . Ryan of Burlingame.
A coroner's pathologist
said she had been beaten
on the bead 4:0 times with
a blunt instrument. A
broken wrist and hand in·
· juries pointed to a possibl~
violent struggle-with her
assailant.
SF News Talks
Break Down
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
The s1lutdown of San Fran-
cisco's two da l l y
newspape:s entere<\ Its third
• week today with no im·
mediate prospect ol further
talks to settle it. Latest
negotiations broke d o w n
Wednesday. Officials of the San Fran·
clsco Newspaper Printing
Co., which publishes both
the Hearst;9wned afternoon
Examiner and t h e in·
dependent morning Cbroni·
cle, caJled a news con·
ference and announced two
days of talks had been
broken off. • They accused
the Mailers Union of stall·
ing.
another.
"1 wanted to bav~ an
a&ot'tion; I had tlJ bave an
abortipn," she tilttified. "I
can't am my dauahter all
she needl, and I just
couldn't have handled two.
This was the o~ way."
Smith's one.day hearing
followed two days o f
testimony in the case of
Shively, who testlfted he
was involved in six abor·
tions. three of which he
performed.
Shively said he felt the
six abortions "were legal
in that they involved the
health and life ol the women
Involved."
W aterfields'
Daughter
Recovering
VAN NUYS CAP,-The 17·
year-old daughter of actress
Jane Russell and former
U>s Angeles Ram football
star Bob Waterfield was
recovering today a f t e r
swallowing 19 sleeping pills.
Tracy Waterfield. adopted
by tht!!' couple in 1951, was
d e s p o n d e n t over the
Waterflelda' l m pen ding
di~rce, Miss Russell said
after her daughter was
briefly hospitaUted Wed-
nesday.
'lbe girl fell unconscious
at her desk at Van Nuy1
Hlgb School.~ W S en to Valley, Receiving HospitaJ
and was later ansferred
to the care. a private
physician. I The Waterfie1ds. married
24 yean, are curreoUy
dJscuuiog a property set·
tlement.
Legislature in Action
Edward 0. Lee told a
trustee committee meeting
on the Sonoma State CoUece
campus Wednesday: "A lot
of o• problems . . . stem
from tbe fact that · Uiese
needs a.re not being met
fast f.OOUgb ."
William A. Norris said:
"We must ~ that in
the put we have shorted
this subject.'' adding th•
trustees s h o u l d "assert
i;ome leadership by means
of policy statements" c~
for courses in ' • b 1 a c k
&tudies."
But James F. Ttiacher.
chairman ol the Educational
Polley Committee. said be
was "hesitaant to intrude as
a trustee body" t n t o
academic planning which,
he said, should be primarily
O!.aocellcr GJen s,.. I>Utnke
said eftortl 1n this area are
being mlldl at several cam-
puses, including CaUfornia
State College at L o s
Angeles, San F r a n c l 1 c o
State College and San Jose
State.
Lawyer Asks
Hearing on
Drunk Count
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Attorney Rexford Eagan
wants lllf State B a r
Assoc~on to a e t t 1 e
whether he was Intoxicated
•hile defending Anthony
David Dontanville on 1
murder charge. . • iJ . d A new trial wis ordered . Miu e Teste for Dontanvllle a1ler Dist
, ~· Evelle -4. Youneer bad
V A N 0 ENBERG the court be WM tn-
(UPU -'Ibe Mr Force ur-:ned Eagu wu unde:
ly today launched a the inOuenC'e of alcohol dur·
M l n u t • m a n I I t •· ini tbe trial. The new trial
t.ercontiDelltal b a 11 i 1 ti c 11'lll belin Jan. 29.
mbsile down the 5,000-mile Dontanville, a Pasadena
Pacific tat range. landscape gar4ener,. was
The launch ,Pas conducted c<invicted of m u r d t r l B· I
by combat crews of the Cecilla, 7, and Roherta
Stratqic Ah: Command's Ullrlli, f. of Altad~na. Their
3Mth missile squadroq at bod.Jes were found in a
the base. No otber detailJ weed-choked lot in the W.U.
were ven. district of Loe Anl{elf's. · -
Spring T erm
Starts Tuesday, Jan. 30
AU-Day Classes-Kinder1arten thru 8th Grade
8 TEACHING THE 4 R'1 WITH PHONICS
• DOOR·TO·DOOR BUS SERVIOB
8 BEJOD AND AFTER SCHOOL CARE
Call Or write~
HAWTHORNE
CHRISTIAN SCHOOLS
.. '90UNTAIN VAL.UV
1683!5 Brookhurat SttMt
Fountain Veney, Cellfomla 92708
(714) H:i1·3312
DAY. SERVICE
&\:MENTO CAP) -A ....,~ beaded by a
~•••wif• and .a nune h4J IUIWd lta dri\18 to lnatitute u ~ to recall Gov. ~. IUl'le •
Committee cochairmen
'Ofot Koupal and Nancy PUrr WeH papers with the
llCn&llrJ of ltate Wednes-UJ for tbelr "Recall Rea-
IU Comllll~~" •
The commitlet bal reiled
'2,000 fGr ltl drive ud • a moatlt II ...,...., plecli.
el haft CCllDI "&om tbe Ut-
tle people ll'IUDd tbe date;,,
Mrs. Koupal aid. "And thb time we'U do -u~· U..y told newameo.
Last year the oomrnittee
failed to collect the neces·
ury 780,414 si&natures. This
year, said Mrs. K o u p a I,
from Roseville, "the oom-
Tbe petiSioD they plan to
elrculate statewide arc•
Rea1u•1 ~.u. saytn, be
"ii not competent In mat.
ten ol iovenunent and pub-
lie lffalra."
• I at this low pr.ce.
•' .
\ QUALITY TAILORED
4-SEASON SUITS IN
DACRON .and WORSTED
32.95
comparable value s 45
· NOW .•. Robert Hall introduces the one suit
you can wear 'round tM clock and 'round
th. calendar in perfect comfortJ In a
iull·weight blend of Dacron polvuttr for
greater stamina, greater shape-retention,
and wool worlttd for IUIW')' look and feel.
he supple hand. Selection? In a word.
t«rlJ!cl From sharbJdns to 9tJiPes . :.
&om plaids to solid hop.sacb, and there's
more. Regulars, ahortJ, longs.
COMftl1I AL TUA n ONI INCLUDID'
LAYAWAY PLAN-HO IXTU CHAROI
BB Iii
•
US E O UR FREE LAYAWAY PLAN
GARDIN GROVI, 12372 01,:.,.n Grove ltvd.
Before You Bay
Any· Color TV ·at,
Come In And See
SYLVANIA
COLOR TV
SALE
C'1U-Rldl £bonyflnlsh.1!1Jc ICFMn s4 2 9 95 color TV, 295 aq. In. picture. only '
You could buy the most expensive color TV oa
the market today, but you still wouldn't ret a
brirhter picture than you ret with a SylvaniL At
any prlc&.
That'a because Srlvania hu the Colorbrirbt 8P picture tube. And no other tube gives you abrirhter
picture.
Sylvania pula their Colorbrirht 85 picture tab. in 53 models.
In their 18·inch, 20-inch, and 23-inch &eta (eada
measu red diagonally).
CF4SOW - Contemporary. Veneers
·and select solids with walnut grai n
finish. 295 sq. in. viewable picture
) area, 7 In. oval out-front spea~er.
Va.riable tone control.
CF10W-Contemporary. Walnut
veneers and select solids, 295 sq,
In. viewable picture area. Deluxe
overhang top. Variable tone control.
SALE $49.995
DAVIS-BROWI
Your lxctutfw SytV•nlt DMw
In the H1rbof' ArN -411 E. 17th St.
COSTA MESA •
..,
1
! . . . .. . . . .., -. -......
/ ..
8 DAIL V PILOT '
Cana .. igaers Meet
Waller Knott, newly appointed chairman or the 1968 Easter ~1 Drive in
Orange County, chats with Freddie Ve scial of Orange, tM county's Easter
Seal "Child of the-Year." A goal of $7 5,000 has been set for this year's drive
which. ru ns March through April 14. Proceeds from the drive go to the Re-
habilitation Center for Crippled Childr en and Adults in Orange.
BEATH NOTICES DEAT H NOTICES
CHAPMAN
Wllflem I'. ~"· IU» Har11tr SI.. Mldw•V ~ltv. Died Je,..,1rv 13.
Survived by IOll, Wllllm Unde,_1 -...........,, •• ,.,. ciw., •-.,.. lleymond Ctla....,..ni thrM 1lsten. e .... 1e ,.,..,.,.,. MArlorw Ho11ooo1v •"" ""'tine Willl1ms1 two graNl(llllclrlft
•lld tllrM erut .. r1ftdclllldren. Slrwkn. J'rldo, l p.m., PMlt Femlly Colonlel
Fij-ej Home.
CLARK
Walter c1..-. ~ 74. el m
WHlmlMI.,., Nowpor1 llHdl. Died Jenuery 24. S<!rvlcu pelldlno. lltll 1...iw1v Mortuerv, lit llr*"IY• C.fl Mesa.
ROYSE
Trlu•• !. •ov ... ,,, 11.-av. No. ., Cost1 Mn•. Died Janu•rv 1•. S...Vl••d bv husband. Edwin; son.
Joti• W. Aevse: dewl\ler, ll1(11tl
·-· bo.. .. ... _ .__.., ..... -,,..,.cltlW i.. i-. Strv!Ca _. dlM l oll 1.-...Y ~.. llt
l rMdwov. Coste ~.
KRAUS
Mrt C-11• Kreus. 1U1 l'•rlt Clrc19.
Coo .. M ... Died JeNllrt 2•. SurviVod • .., da119111e<. l«Ndette IE.,,, llr•
erendcllHdr•• ...,. •'-" 1 r • • t • grendclllldr~. lenlka •"" lnr.rmefll
to "" lleld '" New Y pr11. 111 ltz MMtuerv. t7ll Suwlor. C'•t• M-
twwerdl"9 dirtelen.
BALTZ MORTUARIES
Corona del Mar OR 3-Nst
Cotta Me11 Ml i.tuf
BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
UM3ro1dwa1, Cotta Mua
LI 1-3433
WARREN
CtWlrlH C. w.,,...., 7$45 F1irwn Drlv ..
Yucu ••lie¥. Suf'Ytved IW llvM -lhomlt A. Werrlft, Ne,._1 Beecti.
C. lll1tcllet W1rren, Cost• t.lfta,
tnd Melor G. '" Warrtn. lust1n1
two •lsltrs. Mrs. llernlce Foote, Cotti
-·· •lld Mrs. Effie lat!, Or•no• l oo: I M nlM 9 r1n dc h l l d r e n. S..rvlcts, Frklev, 10 lO e.m~ Wttlclln Cllapet. l"llh lltv. W1rren G. SIUder
olllct1ttno. tntor,....nt. F 1 I r h • v • " M-111 Par•. Directed 11\1 W.lclitl cr.-1 Momierv. -
• JAMESON •-t J-,., \,.am-A._.d G~~ ~ .011111 J1nu1rt u. S<ltYlwu Iii' husbMd, Cllarln A. .J•-1 thr• sons, Cert, M1nlllll
-Hlrol<l 1 "''" bro ti\.,.,, Fred, !rnesl •lld Peul Marfin; sister. Mrt.
#o¥v W1INr I tlll\1 t «.,ldclllNrhn I N ......,. gru\ .. 9t1ndclllldren. S..rvic .... lllursdey, I •.m,, PMk F1mlty C...,.111 ,......,.,Home.
Fire Calls
C.Ounty Bars
Checks tor
Child .Aid
SANTA ANA -Or.ante
County's r~cent decision to
accept personal checks in
payment for county services
doea not apply to child ·~
fOl't cbar1•s proceued by
• b11 office, DJ.st. Atty. Cecil
H1HJ 1aid Wr*asday,
"That recfDt e o u n t 1
deci!ion meant exactly what
it saJd -payment for coun-
ty services," Hieb com-
mented. "My dee's d\ild
support division acts u ·a
trustee for child 1u~
"•"""" ... <" payments and would be l :Q a.m. Wednesd.tv, •1to:Mn tire, 'bl 1 af 211.52 tt•-Len• respons1 e 1or any per"" 1•~:.,:,;:,; L!~ 1"vastlo•11""· 1"" check that was not accepted
''0:.";'ao.,~.~;·· Main s1rH1 ,,,. by the bank."
-· -...... -...
. .
--~----~ ... ----
GAllE
I ,
. ~ ·~ .
.• Only the namH of the stock8 &t'f" c.bansed. end th~ money ill pl&y-douih. to pro-
tect tJw tnnocmt. ~~Id. ~ tbe wl_ldcat l!Peculator. • Corner comes with ita
'own~ ~ comput.l!ri.Ud stec.lr market quotation boa.td. • Not even
the shtt'Wdeat ~. can outaueu the Comer computer. • lf ~ were pla$~:
every night. the pet.-n of t~ price changes would not re~ for )'Mn!
coaNEJFS ... We ....... iee. 1
• Eveey ~r 1ame ls ~t~ lo meet your pvery ~talion or" yoUr m~ ..
refunded. e, W'(Y ,pnae at &Der ia-unconditionally ~~ ~ oat full .1Wl4 " ~ .. ~ .,.
.>.1
~
' 2043 rwESTCLIFf DR.
' 'NEWPORT BEACH ·
PHONE 642-2248
DIRECTLY BEHIND COCO'S
PACIFIC VlEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery e Mortuary
Chapel
5: 'Jr,:tm., me<tlcal •Id. .., l rusll Hicks stressed. that, "in
6; 10 • m •• """"''' 11d. 101'1 H•l•w• the light of recent com· 7,:1v: m. -· 1,,..,.,,.,,lo'I, m plaints," only money orders s1r.., •nd Ocean Avon~ and cashier's check.t can be HJ W. 4tt1 St .. hw•uwa ,_ •
F-t•ll• v111rt accepted by his office. , 0,..11 M.ti. a Fri. 'til 9-C~ve&ff11t T~
3509 PacUk: View Orlve
Newport Beach, Calllonda
144-Z70I
''
22
•.m. Wed!IHdflv, kitchen
11
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10 '' 1 IT\. W-oy, 11Ubllc 1u l1t,
PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL
FUNERAL ROME
1801 BelA An .• WatmJnatf'r -..ms
SMJTB'S MORTUARY
12'7 Mail St.
Runtln1t4>11 Beacll
LE M539
WESTCLIFF MORT'JARY
U7 E. 17th St.. <'·1n& Meta
l4M3U
144n Starfie St
1.51 • m , car fl••· '6?0 G<irdtft c;,..... 111'111. S s1 1>.m., ,..,.dl"'I aid. 1"'11 0 1-.1 Pllcl 7 .35 • 111., mt<1lc1I •Id. 11731 C""-"t St. ,.,. •aec• • lJ • m. W1<1nesdn. 119111 1fanderf,
\2J70 LOI Alomltos lllVd.
("ta INM
1.U •.m. Wtdr>esdev. l•IM elarm.
ltlll $1retl •I'd Wlllttlor Av....,. .,.. ..m... -,.,.. m "'· ,..... SI.
I » t m • 9ran flr·t, 11th StrMt
lndTUllln Av-
1135 ,,m., tat.& 1lerm. lolU l"l1<entla
Avt
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SATURDAY-TM s.10,GIO SANTA MWA H.lndic:ap
M 1·1fl' mil•/,, fillia .,,, IMrrs.
TODAY-The SJOpot ARCADIA HIA4i<q
1·114 miltS on lht grus ('l)llrst.
NE:Yf TIJESDAY-TM $20,000 PASADENA StAka.
Nint mn. Dtri1y Doublt. Firsl 1ftt If Jt~ P.M. . ' RLstfvrd sols miihhlt. Pknly of P1rhn1.
TlturougltM' RM:ing ~Uy, r.-., ,..,,,. S.Jwday.
ONLY a . lllW DA·Y:I un
Of oua IANUARY
c
A I ~
~ RI ,s.n
111•
'*1ai
quh
ber .~ ::
l'fbe ·T
prer
Inc.
Ala
;1h of .
rub
·the m•
due
,th&
fort JRec ::to ma
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Coast Firm
!' . t Reevea Rubber, Inc., •
1Su Clemente b a• e d ~echanicat rubit:ef .
• 91.anufacturing f I r m , , 7 ,
.quired !be American Rub-
~tlon'1 plant in
, Alabama, ·tt,WU I
'<.1nnouDcecl by &evea',pna. '
.dent,"'-A./F-. !'fbe p,ice WU not dJlcloled
~· Tbomu F. Burnet, vice .
rpresident of Reeves Rubber',
Inc., stated that , i t·• 41
-· plant .Jill "' ho 10peration in M.ddi. ms that Jt 11 curnntly 1n .. pfocels
of beina converttd ·Jrom· a
:Irubber Door tlk plut ta ·~the prod uc ttcrn OI
mechulcal rubber ~
.ducts. He also INWmced
,that Keith Dah'{qllllt,
i!?""erly Al•• m-for 1 . .,-eves, bu been ,piemobW :jto a:eneral pro 4.u·e t l·oin
maoaier of the AibertriDt '.plant --
' ··A11n...,.ft. ,.. •r .
!.Riehm! E. McFarland
·'has been named adver-~ ·tlaing manager for 'nae
: Irvine Co. McFarland,
• who has spent 18 years
; in -advertising, previ·
:, pt15ly wu account di-
; rector f o r McCann.
: Eri~on, Inc., Los .An.
~ a:eie1 . ..
'
:_Greentr~
'!fo txpand
Ground bal been broken
and 1Ub1tantial proare11 bu
. been made on Greentree's
on manufacturing • bead-
-• •t -lludJ, Sidney Braqdt, ' tit • CODI·
PlllY'• praident~.
Greentree· ~leCtrcinlcS. a
. Bell. H...,n Cd., niaDllaC·
b.nl and marnta ·m•sa.te·
tlpe 1IDder, 1tbe AmericP
Brand !Dlj u well as
lDIDJ of U»e aaUon'a private
. · label reeardlng --Tiie r,,,. II a major ...,,ii.
ol Iubr~ ,.,. ra. 111< tlpe -1ri1lliitb'. . : . .
UJ'J •~l .
' 11 1111111 .... . M u ,. '· ··
M1.J15' . ' '
Ctsll Mm Ylillr . ~·" .
• Se. Ced Vlsln ~', • """'Yllllr' c... U:.ti.C:: __ ...,. .. ... ___ .... .
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I
-. .......... . .. -' -~ .
•. • •
-· -·2', 1"8
_,, __
tttCA • ZENITH
PORTABLE COLOR
, Ullf-VHF ·. Colol "fier "'""·
H;rndy eye
lev el oven
plus big" 23"
. master OYe!I. .
quick-set au· ·
tomatic .timer ..
. Pot-watch
surtace unit to
keepfoodfroin
burning. Slee!t
contemporary
styling.
. -~ ~~~~~:~' ·. . .
·. =~flid _ '$2 79 ·.rop·to biJttom s~elf ~--2 ~· $-299'. c'.....m.o . · ·space,S111Jerstoraga 4:1 4·7 _ ~-•;teaf'oit . door, 2 crispers, · . .
, . ,. . , .. . ~-. . , gh~ meat pan! . '--" -~~~-~~~~(.--~-~"'!"';~------------------~-.------___ , ________________ ..,._ __ .;.. _________ . ______ _
. IK!AvtaQR-1 llCA ·vtaOR I JlCA COLOR : G.l DllUXE G;t. DELUXE: 13 CU. FT. : FAMOUS
S1Ei ·EO· ·I· COl.Oli TV I'· TV, RADIO l 6 SPEAKER ,poitJ'ABLE l CHEST-TYPE l 2-DR. 17 f::
CONSO lt I. CoNSOLE ·: & snREO l-snREO SET DISHWASHERl FREEZER : REFRIG. ~ s)'Sln. Ml/RI-~ Me Mrtl!' pllosllborss tube l ' 25,ooQ volts, 6 speakers, I Maple lh1is)td cabinet, Comes ta U.. table on easy-I 13 cu. JI. freezer wit h I Top.of-Ihle de'luxe rrodel
FM Stereo rJlio 4-s~d 1 ' autDrnatic color pcrifier. I ~ 511. in. screen. 4-speed I 6 spe1ktr system, solid roll casters! Flush away I counter balanced lid. Air· I with all the roost desirable
changer. Selld State ain-lane control . Col0R i1l I pllono, AM/FM-FM sleNO I stm AM & FM tl!Mr, 4-drain. floor sample only, so I tlow quick freeze. Exetp· I featur~. Some avail&ble
plifier & Mer. I cabinet style. I rllio · I speed c..... INrry rieflt in! I tional value! r in colors.
COllP.AT41t.11·· I COMP. AT Mt.II I OVl 111. 749.11 . I COMP.Af 299.11 . fAllTAITIC I UT I COM,, AT 179.'5 I COM,. AT 3H.9S
$329 ! '529 ! $659 l $239 $94 l $139 l $287
. '
DAILY I ~( I MULTIPU
MULTll'U I. · ..,... · • . I CALCiuM
PlUS llON 1 : ~BAU : 1 ,& 11011 • -..
.22. IN.
LIFELIKE
FALLS
.99
MATIAG
PORTABLE
.DRYER
Electric dryer operates oa
standard current. Heeds llD ·
venting. Safe for all fab-
rics.
n11111c YAlUI ' $97
TIME·ALLELECTllC TIMEI
·YOUR
CHOICE
ALL-TRANSISTOR
· IADIO-PHONO
Pliys all piputar size
records. mandally,
Two J" I 6'' PM
speakers, crysta l
stereo cartri dge,
sawtlire needle.
W.f. llG. 24."
1996
Pre· set to tum on liglrts, air conditioners, heaters. t!le--Visions-ma~es evel)' appllomce avtomatic. #KT·75.
YOUR
CHOICE
MGM CARl'RIDGE TAPE
PLAYER
... * STOii HOURS *
DNLT .. 11 •ootf t1 I N
SATIIRlllY~ 11 to 1 I'll!
•
lll!IDAY .11 ,. • PA
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J ~ DAILY PILO_T _____ f __ T1_""1d.ly __ • _-.., ___ 2S_._l'il68_
by Louis R. Benny
Prttident
UNIVBSITY OLDS
2850 H•rbor llvd., C.M.
546-5550
BaUery go dud? C.f't It
cbuged up again, but also
try to find out why it went
de:id. Bad cell? Left the
lights on overnight? Or do
you have a dead short in
your wiring? If you don't
correct the problem. you'll
have another dead battery
soon.
Keep up to date on your
drlvln1 laws. They change,
usually each year. some·
times oftener. Ask local
police ror a summary of
the \aw changes that ef·
feet drivers In your area.
Study them'
The new antl-smni law
which rrqulru ~moggers
on all 168 cars etrects
Guam as well. To residents
there It's a ridiculous law.
The island is 40 miles long
and only 13 miles wide.
and it's sUJTounded by
thousands of miles of wa-
ter and fresh sea breezes.
You couldn't get smog to
stay on Guam If you man -
ufactured it there on pur-
1>9se. says an editorial in
tl\e Guam Daily News.
They want exempted.
EcoDOmy? A $1500 car
In t ood shape could be
your answer for an eco-
nomical second car! Li·
cen11e less. insurance less.
depreciation less. costs
less ! See us at UNlVERS·
ITV OLDS in Coi;ta Mesa,
about a used car. Remem·
her, "We are never satis-
fied with a saJe ..•. un-
til you are"'
01n1erou1 Orlvlng Blun·
der No. 35: Leave the car
nashllght home for the
kids to play with. You
won't need it fo r night
trouble!
!Wake surf vour wind-
shield wiper ·blalies are
in good shape. Clean with
straight ammonia. Replace
if 1lhey streak.
IMPORTANT
ANNOUNCEMENT!
-
ff om ntu: ocrrnmts dtport-
mm/ cannot npen yc>t1r new,
in.•1,rod Mercury Sacing,,
IU'COOnt in /~,. time than ft
toke8 1100 to drink the cup C1f
cufee we provide to nU of
WE wrr~L Cl\' E YO U:
Anotbu C111> ol c:olft!
Mercury wants to
keep all of our
sawrs happy.
•
•
• 'u"4f1 ..m merest ftam cs.t• of
,_lpl "flfnd9 rwel* I>)' tM 1-ntfl
of ti.. month ~ 1nte,..t from tM
ftrat. lnterttt .comJ*llMfM Mtl)o-
.._ llCICINtta ~.
MERCURY SAYINGS
......... •1• llMtt .... ,...
()11 ....... l ....
' •
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. r'
·r Ra ilroa d
P romote8 Leahy
C. ~dwarc1 Luhy, of
Bu~n• Park has be•n ap-
pointed assistant district
fret1bl and pas.sMaer •lftt
for Soutbt:rn P1clflc Co. bl
Or11t11 C.Unty Wflh MM•
~ at Anaheim. ~ Pt Moran. d1.ertd
.,...,, ... , Aaai1 .... '"""
ct.s ll ·ltd c. Jta,llJ'
wtto becoma IPldal rat.
aniltal lft SP'i ~
Dlatrtd ... Iii L 0 I ~
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. .. . . ~ ..... ... ...... -..... ~-..-·-----.-·--~---.. ----... -1.,, -
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I I I
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'HOME ENTERTllNMENT CENIER
/
2666 HARBOR BLVD.
'
L
I •
&
-.
t ·
'
Music Rei
.Sea to ills
From the county's sea cities t tfle rolling hills northward, there
is promise of music in the air as th Orange County Philtni:monic Society
initiates its continuance fund drive eb. 1.
Solicited by more than 0 volunteers,1-the fund helps the Society
bring Lo the county the · t classical orchestras in the world.
Future members o he Society may contribute their aid in seven
categories: sponsor, pa on , donor, sustaining, supporting, regular and
junior.
Their suppo also helps underwrite free youth concerts. the Debut
Orcbe~tra and ifornia Chamber Symphony. The grants·in-aid program
financtaUy ass· gifted senior music majors at UCI and Orange Coasl
College. ,.,;
Jo Vibert, drive chairman and Society vice pretiident, maintains,.
"The c 'nua!_lce fund is really a fund for our musical future. It makes
it po le for the Philharmonic to sign internationally famous orchestras,
co ctors and soloists a year to 18 months in advance."
Mrs. John M. Owen is continuance fund chairman for the women's
co~~ttees in the Harbor Area, with Mr.s. Harry M. Baker co-chairman.
Assisting are the Mmes. George H. Ochsner, Alta Bahia; Phil Lansdale and
Miles Larson, Balboa; Sanford M. Dickey m. Bay Shores; Warren Gib-
bons, Beacon Bay; Ira Smith, Cameo Shores; Lloyd A. Johnson, Costa Mesa,
and Gerald P. Forrest, Eastbluff. __ • .
Also the ·Mmes. Bonnie Egan, mghlanders; Phillip Thomp50n, Hunt·
lngton Harbour and W. W. Nelson. Admiralty; William E. Harrison, Island·
er; Claude Jones, Marina I; Millicent C. Salisbury, Irvine Terrace Associates;
Roy H~llberg, Irvine Terrace Group; C. R. Payne, Laguna; Robert C. Vor·
dale, Lido Isle; Tom Doyle and pavid C. Davis, Mesa Verde; Curlis Bluemke,
Newport Shores and Kenneth R. Swift, and Victor F. Malzahn, Upper Bay.
The new-season is expected to include a minimum of five concerts
by the Los Angeles. Philharmonic Orchestra, two yout.Q. concerts and a per-
formance by the Pittsburgh Symphony under directi<nfl'of WUlia'll Stein·
burg. Other guest orchestras will be announced later. Season ticket sales
begin in mid-September.
·'
EVERYTHING'$ UNDER CONTROL -Piloting the
continuance fu.pd drive of the Orange County Phil-
harmonic Society is John A. Vibert of Laguna
Beach. The dJive for fund.a to support the Los
Angeles Philharmonic Ore stra's appearances in
Orange County begins F 1. Countywide women's
Ink>rmation about the continuance fund, current and planned con·
cert seasons may be obtained from the Orange County Philharmonic office,
201 W . .Coast Highway, or by calling the office weekdays between 10 a.m.
and noon and 1 lo 4 p.m., 646-6411. ·
committee are volu11t ·ng to aSAist in. the pro-
gram.
Opera Lovers Honor ..
·or. Popper in Bal ,.6a
Mingling in the Balboa Bay Club at a recent
and Mrs. Jan Popper were more than 100 Newpo
arts whose hostess was Mrs. Cora Peggy \l{allace.
Dr. Popper, professor of ml.16ic and dir r of the opera workshop
at UCLA, is in Newport Beach as musical irector for Mozart's two-act
opera, "Cosi fan tutte" to be presented~n e Studio Theater at UCT, Feb.
21-24, 28-29 and March 1-2. He will previ the opera Feb. 4 during a buffet
at 5:30 p.m. in the Balboa Bay Ol~ua . nde. d by '!'embers and guests. ,
Receiving-with Mrs. Wallace d the Poppers were Dean and Mrs .
.E. Clayton Garrison, Dr. Maurice d and Prof. Colin Slim. Dean Gani·
son is stage director for the opeta and Dr. Allard will sing the role of one •
of the wooing 90ldiers; Gugliel~o.
Among the gue6ls e~ the sunshine around the pool before en-
tering the dining room wJiere.fres_b spring nowers centered the tables were
UCI Ohancellor and Mts. Daniel Aldrii;:h Jr., Vice Chancellor and Mrs.
Roger W. Rossell, Brig. Gen. and Mrs. Thomas Riley; Messrs. and Mmes.
Alan Stoneman, Q.. W. Richard, lack Groth, I.JoJ<t.. Aubert, Orvilte Bell,
Thomas AllinSQlj and Moseley Jones. · ~
Others Were the Mesm1. and Mmes. Roy Woolsey, John Porter,
Albert Max,ied, Roy Bartholomew, Wilfred Berls, Sydney Bartlett, William
Muon, Alan Grubb, William Ouimette, David Melillli, George Farmer and
John Condon, and the Mmes. '1halyn Arena, Virginia Atwill, Millicent Salis·
· bury, Frederick Prescott. Clyde Patterson, Norman Huff, Mary Graham,
F11eJWalker, RobertRamse~rtine Treat.
Due for a delightful treat· are those invited to the opera preview.
The ~Y Dr. Popper captivates audiences with his entnusiastic narration
and 1J likely to bounce often to the piano to demonstrate vocally excerpts
from the opera. . Tim .......... Loo6ely translated, "Cosi Can tutte" means "women are like that.''
The comedy concerns two swains who bet that their fianceea are trust-
worthy even to the point that they could not be swayed by their own lovers
disguised as strangers. The siltert' maid, a conniving soul, manages to dis-
rupt proceedings, not to mention constancy, but love, 16 usual, conquers all.
OPERATIC OPTIMISM -Caught In a ruomerit as li ghthearted Peggy Wallace, brunch hostess, and Dr. Jan Popper, honored
as the Moiart opera "~ fan tu\~' in which they are involved
are (left to right) Dean E. Clayl'Oii Garrison of UCI, Mrs. Cora
guest at the brunch in Ute Balboa Bay Club and musical director
of the opera slated next month at UCT.
Fat People U~ed to Unite,· Eat, .Drink ... and Enjoy <Life??
DEAR ANN LANDERS: What giVes
you tbe right to iDlult people and
call 1t ''advice?" Through the years
you have pr'inWd, 1evwal cruel met
hurUul letter• about rat people but
the last cme 1'19111 ibt .. BM. The
notioo that • W'Olmft woold eat herself
out ol lhape ln order to dilCOUlag•
her husband'& lo\<e matlng wu plain
cruy. J:' nearlY PUed when you
&IJ'eed witb the •OOiey slaler·in·laW
that blr bucb mltbt be rtlllt.
It'1 ~ WI fllt peuple stood tip
for o.nel'Ya. I MY' 1 o you Alan
Landers, and to otbers who can't
reallt the \lidous berbl. ltwe us
alone. Our l1ze II a bl&hly pe1'IOfta1
matter. II we'd rather e• and ft\Jo1
Ufe than walk around h,f lf atuved,
mean atd 1k1My, wtiose bulitltH It
it?
~".ft"en pictures of you, bUt onl1
the bead. l wonder •bit the rest
ol you k>c>lm like. It wouldn't aurprlse
m~ U you are a fat lady who ls
trylftJ to fool people by prtAtlnt •nutat
letters.
1 know you 'U never publish Urls .... one but I feel better for bavin& written
it. -WELL UPHOLST!:llED AND
NOT ASHAMED
OEAJt WELL UPHOLSTERED :
.Now Ui• ,.. Itel be~ 1• Nd• a
-..Cit ti IMfe ... rewud '""'" for Lelli., •t tfl.
DEAR ANN LANDERS~ My hus·
b&nd has thrff brothers, a sister,
an ex·wU• and all children by that
sq.arrt.ge. WlM9 he and bit wlfe •ere
dl~orctd ht ~ lier lve~g she
asked for and bu been Jobany-o11·tbt·
Spot with the t\tpport checks for
several years.
Not one member a« his family has
lbown t.he aHgbtat Inter~ In ttu~
man even though ti. ls diabetic and
in poor bd.JtJt. Kt hN Ql"Vtt received
10 much as a card on hi• birthday.
Father's Day or Cllristmns. When hfl
u11ed to call his children on tht
telephone they hung up in his ear.
He doesn't call them any more .
When my husband passes away l
will hawe to make the burial &r·
rongen mts. Should I notify his
reladves? He has asked that l not
do so. What Is my duty?
A HOUSE DIVIDED
DEAR H.D.: Your bu1band'1 wt1.b·
ti •Me.. take pr~-ecle1Ke over evt· tom,~ It la obvloa1 "'" lie It Ml contMlerff a member ti Ute fanailJ.
Wbe• lte r,11e1 awa1, notU1 Ute aewa-papet •• , ttlallves wm leant of bl•
MiUt aM pUJ comf to thf runeral Ir
they •IA ...
DEAR ANN LANDER!\· 0 u r
dau&bter la 18 and In her first yP.aT
of coUeee. Judith fK an 1ttraclln
..
.. ' ..
l[irl. a reasonably bright student, hM
a nice figure and always dated fine
young men when she was ln high
school
When .Judith came home for the
holiday\ she announ<:ed Utat she Is
in love with a 23-year-old college stu-
dent who as divorced and has four
children. lie told her some dreadful
things about his ex-wife which makes
me wonder why fie allowed her to
keep the children. Also. how can he
• pay support money and go to colJege
when he has only a part-time Job?
So many things do not a,dd up that
t am frightened out of my wits that
he is a four-llusher .
I always thought bur dau"hler w&11
a level-headed. feet-on -the-ground type
but T was mlsta.ken". How 5hcl.uld I
handle thls 1dtuatlon!
-SLC
. ... .... -
OEAR S.L.C.: You b ave ... doubtedly let Jadltb know how ,..
feel about the youg man. Now ..
It and ktep quiet. If all the motHrl who propelled their daughters blll
poor marriages by HHln& were ....
tnd lo end they'll r~acb from llttf
to maternJt1. '
• What Is French kissing? Is It WT.-
Who should set the necking llrilli
-the boy or the girl! Can a~h weddinl succeed! Read Ann Lan •
booklet, "Teen.age Sex -Ten
to Ctlol lt." Send 50 cent. in
and a lon1. 1elf·addressed,
envelope. •
Ann Landen will be atad to ~you with your -problems. Seid _.
to her In cart or the DAILY Plllrt
enclosl6'a a stamped, ttlf-14drt1Hd cnvelopt. . -1 ~:
\
I
\
r•
....
·)
•
·"J
. . .. . --·-~~-------~-~·? .... ~ • ·\
\
-. -J4 «WlY PILOT T....._, ,,_., 25, 19'1
Parental Views· . ; · .
117 PATRICIA McCORMACK
NEW YORK ( UPJ) -So -your
teen-agers can't talk ·to you about
alcohol, baby sitting, bicycles, cats,
daUng, dress. employment ·and voca-
tions. go-earls, mini b I k e I ,
motorcycles, money, mar r la I e,
movies, television, 1 i l e r a t u r e,
narcotics, parties, dances, properly, recommended hours, the woes of life,
1moldng and you name ·it.
Well, then, all you moms and pops
"--.. of America, do what next comes
naturally. Don't just .ail there with .
7our Ups glued. Get together with
other parenta and the town fathers
. -and teen-agers.
First, have oo band the "Gulde r.:'"JiK' Parents and Youth" put out ,by
I~
U. P'ulltrton ~mission on Youth
at Calilonla State Collett a l
J'ullerton.
ll's a you-me kind ot sulde covering
all the topics ~ntioned above. To
each queaUoo Utert are two aides
uposed -the parental one; the teen·
age one. It gives each party a JiirnpinJ
off place for that mlsslng !DjP'edient
in many families -talk. "
Kenneth R. Doane, director.for tlie Fullerton Commission oa Youth.
reporta that copies of tbe guide bav•
been distributed to each student.
srades six through 12 .iJl Fullerton
aobools .
Many communities before have
come up with codes for tetn·aaera.
.The parents, meanwhile, went to the..
(".:
... 'American Hiitory Month Observance
..
·" During ft!bruary -American Hiatory Month -cola and Mn. William Rabbitt (left te riPQ. Mcipi-memben of Col. WiDlam Cabell ChapW', Daupt-enta will be the f9cilitiea at Uct. high IC1*la ba the
en of the American Revolution will be making thtir Newport-Mesa Dtatrict IDd Costa itt1a -·lfMn>ort
annual contribution to llbrariQ in the area. Copies Beach library branches. Aleo of int.tit ;aiWtbe
, ~ of t<Chriltian'a History of the ComtJtutlon" are be-display of a ~ American ~ iq lbrlnm u.
,.-'. ~r readied for diatribution by Mra. George D. Bue· brary, Newport Beach. ..
~! ..
f OC Women -~~~·· ~ ..... ..
.. ·Marching :.: .
: J=or Money
. 3. ln Orup County more
_ V&b UOO women and men ; ; *" matJni Gnal prepara-
' for the a a n u a 1 then' ,March Jan. 27.31
ral" f\mds.for tbe Marcb Dlmea.
• ._la lldcUtioa to briJlglng ln
.-IDOct mone7 for tbe '.1lmda of Dfmea cJJDP&lp,
{ • mlftb 11 a big •factor • tM National P'oundaUon'1
le Uc tducation pfOll'am.
-,.I· !ht J'oundailoa rePorta
th United States now r .... ~ed .;o 17th place ID UM jr~odd lJ\ regard to
ia.fant m 'o r t a 11 t y and
• premahirity. Btrtb defects
~ . dfect one or every 16 ?iabies
/born.
Tocl11 more tbaa 90 Birth
• Defee!b Centers are aup-
• JOl'ted b7 Ule campalgn
filoney, fncllldlq one in ~ans• eowity.
-I
\ -_, -
!.--( -_!.,.
-I
'Jot Down'
Legal Talk"·· .
Aulstut OrlDle Olaah Clerk: Johll Lewta will 1ped:
~ to members of OC
IAgal Secretarie• A:uocla· tioD.
Wilhelmi ill Santa Ana
will be the ••ttlnl fOr .. ( social hour at e:ID ,._. •
clioner at 'l·a. ,.. ·
• Lewis ,fill' I lt C Q I
Superior and A p p e-11 a t e
Court Procedures. A rttl·
dent ol Santa Ana for 20
)'Un, Lewil stud.led at
Wetla7an UlliTenitJ, Cena.,
Santa Ana Collep and UCI. Rt Ml beea with the clerk's
• Cll1jlloe lee • ,... -1n . Ida pn..6t polttloa I• ............
NO. I °"• ......... ,.,.i., _.,.,., ......... ...
.....,. U11tt.4 SW. le th
Atta Le ...... ...._ .....
4elty ....._. ef ... DAILY ,..LOT e114 .. rM4en .. 11 .... _ .... , . .._,
' .
• I > /'-And reen~gers'
~ ..
4 . •
FINAL' CLtA~aANCt ... ON :AU: HOUOA Y AND
FALL MERCHANDIS,E.~OMS SO
pusnc: . tr·~l. HIJU> .l.TO>-tELIEVE. ii
EARLY ,FOR BESr. iAR.<'iAINS. . • .
1 oRloN KNrr . vetouR . _tory<;>f..f c~etiet". . · · : . -~ I I
DRESSES ·.. -~·$Pi r .sgao · 1
OVER I 00 DRESSES EACH STORE . ; / . ~ JO" P . 1 REGULAR TO 20 00 i. • • • • • I I f j ,, • ;
~~~~~
WOOL KNIT SEPARATES :: ·: · ·
FROM 'A FAMOUS MANUFACTORER : I
MISSES ,. . JACKET '16°' :·. ! ': • ......
J ·SKIRT '10" r l • ··~ •
SJZES-> CA PRIS 'ti" . . . .. •: ,..,.
KNIT · HRENCA I COTTON
CA PRIS
AssORrai' $1$
I COLORS
-
'.
..
.
.
. . . . . . . .
.
• t
.
j
------~-..c, .... ~ • ., 1 'P\*tbO ft.·-~
~-~--'----_._~ .
' d
•one-atop' ~hopping
J
at i ts .~i:p.estr.
OPll llllSDA Y & MOIJAY EYElllGS 1ll 9 .
• •
~s RION HAllWARE
S W£RCllFF SHOES .
s Diel VEllOIS . . N
'S VET AS lfilMATE iPPAl·EL ,
S HUMPTY DUMPTY
CHILDIENS
S SAVE-ON DIUCS
S JEAN DAHL . .
S ROBERT· -ERKL~Y MENS _
$·CHARLES H. BAIR JEWELERS
S LA GALLER·IA
S BEAU HOretE FURNISHINGS
S HICKORY FAR.MS
S BAKERS WESTCLIFF C~A
S PAPER UNLIMITED ·
S DEDRICK TUX SHOP
· S PLUSURE COR·NER
S MONTGOMERY, CLEANERS
S PLAYBOY HAIR STYLISTS
S MARKET BASKET
S WESTCLIFF BARBER· SHOP
S COBBLERS BENCH .
S DR. LOU IOY ELDER . .
S IANK OF AMERICA . .. .
SPORT EDWARD· .
l ·ESTAUIANT .
)
J
I• ~AILY '"'Of T~. __, 25, lM
. Juniorland Performed .
· j At Hi-iinx Meeting
"Allee in Junlorlaod0 aa · llcKlbbeD. . •
orti1u1 •kit wrlttea, pro-Club IDlmbln; ta ...
duced, directed and 1ta1ed ...... perb mini la tbt
by the South Coast JWllar produetloe, ..... reapollli-w o m a n • 1 Club, wu ble Lor all c:oetuJne1; PfOlll
presented during Ill-Jim and •tac• de1lpl.
Nlgbt ln which all Loa Cer· GDMta ol honor at the·
· rltoa Diltrict tiPUor clul>I metttn1 laeluded memben
. participated, of tbe lpOUQl'iDC MAiCll'
The. South eoa.t club MrV· clubl ill the diatdct
ed u ~bolt with the South
Gate Junior wom~·· Club Go I den Ba I f for the event, an annual
J anuary conference.
Mrs. Robert S o m m a ,
president of the Fountain To G, ,. tte r · Valley group, preaented the
. welcoming addreH a 1l d : Mrs. Wllllam Ha ye I ,
: chairmaQ. Darrated 6e Utt
: prepared by Mrt. J o n
l hink Final
IAU
•
THINK •••
Jtaln tnhl .................. ...... ...
Dtnin' and dancing will
relp at the annual Golden
Ball ecbeduled by Moose LodCe 1457, Cotta Mesa on
Saturday, Jan. 'rt, in tbe
lodae. 4lt14
Dinner will be served
from l :IO p.m. to 1:30 p.m.
with ducinl from t p.m.
to 1:30 a.m., eceordlng to
Bill Maher, chairman. a.et
will be Fred Sdenb. All MoOl9 memben end su-U ... welcome.
Mesa Seniors
~ llSIMdtJ Becreatlon in Colta Mela ii the
..... o( ad!'"= eo.ta Mesa lmdor meet
• 11 a.m. nery 'naelclay.
BUSINESS IS B~D!
EVERYTHING IS QUIET!
IT'S ALL OFF SEASON!
DON'T YOU llUEYE IT! • • •
THE SHOWROOM
IS
• AUYE • HAPPY • SUCCUSFUi. ,
COMI -OUI .. cumm. Mr IUrffOl~lllHf I 2111 Newpelf IW .. Newport leach ....... .,~
..... -------
Values From Our .._..r ~~·
.. .. .. ~ --..
BUSTER BROWNSc:: ..
'J Not Al Sizes In E~ery s+p
644-2464
;
Volunteers
• ~ ·Pick Theme
. . .,. .. .,,..,.......,........,... .. -,.---~
Seafll'lq Maaonlc Temple
in NetrpOrt Beadl S. tbl
settma place for Barbor
Star Chaptlr Ml, ~ al '
Eutern Star. ~· m be r 1 pt,bs at 8 _p.m. _ tbe NCODd
and fGurtb TlllldaJt .
I
' ,
SU"er Cliarm1 50% o11 .
.._..jil•eaeljeW,._.,..
... r1 • .,....,......• •••e•._
CBAllLBS B. JAall '
.Je-t-4
OU'fDOOR LIGMtS
.,
...
..
.....
....
...
COvers Boating
Best in West
·LIST 3. DllS ..
· · JANUARY
UP TO'./·
OFF -...
ON THI fOLLOWING
FAMOUI NAMI . Bii.ANDS
~~ ~L ~ ~~y
Cole., caw,m.
• I
vernon
SPOITSWEAI
w ......... 17 .. & '"'•
Five Ways
Look, and look aiatn five
times! Sew five pretty, new
dre... baled on the same
tUJ·NW, hlgh yoke line for
a little prl'a partieJ, Easter
pm'8dlna, IChool, aummer. Prtntecl Pattern 9173: New
Children's Sizes 2, 4, &. Size
8 iatts 1% yarda 36-lncb.
SIXTY FIVE CENTS In
coinl for each pattern -
add 15 cenu for each pat-
tern for first-cla11 malling
and ll*lal handling. Send
to Marian Martin, the DAI·
LY Pnm, 442 Pattern
Dept., 232 Weit lath St.,
.New York, N.Y.10011. Print
·NAME, i\DDRF.81 w i t b
ZIP, SIZE and STYLE
NUMBER.
-•
,.. ..
Altruse Club I ~~~~~~~~ Memben of tae Attruaa I;:
Qub Cll Newpcst Hafllor
bav'e 1elected the Mela v.-. Qoatry Clab fOr
tbelr meeUq place .....
Ooncratu!atorJ -.U• to lUehard MaeGrttGf, Oeorte COGd ud fourth Tuuday at u 8:30 p.m.. 1111. Donald lir'tlttllllll recetvt.nc field wen., .., lltpldu, Tbomu Duncaa at 54l-4eoe will ._atloba bl Vittum · ltoMebaum a ad QwlM a.nnw quatiQu reprdlnt '-======:::s::~ • 11'1 HW' U.S. d KteDaD membertblp. 111 Onnte Coanf1 have Ul )iiiii~·iiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-iiiiiiiiiii ..a fGr the Junior Woman~
JULll Mcl'HIUON
Te~
An·nounced
All Aprtr61weddllll in St.
A n d f e.w ' s Presbyterian
Cblfrcb, Newport Beach, . ii
beinl planned by Julie
Elaine. McPberaon a n Cl
Richard L. Turner.
· Mil• McPber1on,
daughter of Mr. and Mra.
C. R. McPhenon of Bun-
tinlton Beach, la a graduate
of Coata Mesa Blab School
and attended Orange Coalt
College.
Her flance, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Leon Turner of
Westminster, iJ A graduate
of Bolsa Grande H I g b
School. He atudied at OCC
and Golden West College.
°"" ef Buntlqton Beac:b '1 Mn. wmram wu.on,
~cbaJrman.
ftt AmerJeanlam com-
mtttle allo la baklnl M • ..._ cookies to be 1lled
at a party for petlenta in 1-Beacn Veterans'
llolpltal on Sunday, Feb. 25 .
· Ok project.I ol the com-
JDltiee 1nclllde donattng a ,_,.., ma1u1De aublcrip-
tloa and band!nlldt "acut-
ftt1" to the veterant, can-
ned l ooda ad clothing· to
tbt D&llll1 Davey Caravan
apomor'td by the Cotta
lltM Junior Chamber of
Commerce, and funda for
the &lvation ·Army bus
tund. ..
'Ill• Harmonalres from
Huntington Be1ch B i g b
Sebool 'presented a musical
prosram at T u e 1 d a y • s
meettn1 of the club, at·
tended. .by put pre11dents
and eoordiaaton from the
,._..i memberlhip.
A clonatlon to t h e
Ha r mona i re1' camp
1cholarlhlp fund w b r c h
sends a jUnior boy and girl to Arl'0\1rbear Music Camp
was made by the Juniors.
'lbe bolpltallty committee
for the meeting i.Dcluded the
Mmes. Robert Westerman,
Edwin Hume, Ro1 Johnson,
Sacrifices Pay Of/-
Education's Reward
DALLAS (UPI) -Mr. munlcatle with ignorance.
and Mn. Louis James Willie Yoa cu IO to school aome
of Dallas, were determined way." ·
to give all five of their lliilmiil-&iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii._iiii
children a colleae educ;,ation. NEWPORT SHORES
And ttiey did. IEAUTY SALON
Willie wu born the son
Of a 1lave, on an east Texas SPI CIAL sro
farm 75 yearc a10. He said SAYE , all the t;ime be WU tending
cattle and hoemg cotton, be ON ALL PllMANINTI
WU tbinklDg "oi bow I could INCLUDU mu ....
be aomebody." IHAIDOO. II\' , ••
Willie left the farm at 19, COLOI sncwms
moved to Fort Worth as ne..,. IT1lHT WUT .. Wf'OllT IUCll
' U~ TO
..
·-
a meat packer, then to '"' c-1 ...,.,
Dallas u a Pullman porter.\~;i~P=het~ .. iieiMi:I ~15i20iii:=tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~==~-=ii:ii~;iiiiiiiiiiiiiii Ht an4 bis wife and 4ve c:tiU'ell 'liv'4 J.D a · farm ,
boc11e they buDt ID OM: CUf · ...
W..+cllff Plaza
Willie 18id, "While my
chlldrep were la IChool, I
bought Only wtlat we need·
ed." 'llM careful bud1eting
paid off. Al WlWe and his
wife had determined, aµ flw chDdren went to college
and GI! to graduate work.
. His • youngest ~'
Mary Virginia, wbo received
a muter'• degree ftOm
Syracuae University, now
tucbea ~ in New York.
His IOD, Alfred N., who
received a bacbe1or1 degree
and did prelaw work at
Morehoµ.se Collefe, now la
a technical writs for a Loa
Angeles eJectronicl firm.
<llarles Vert, who receiv-
ed a ~ate m plJdlology
from SyraduM, DOW beads
bit unlvwlitJ'• Jlf1dM>logy
dlparCmtllt.
Joeepb R., who Neeived
a DDS degree at Mebmy
Medtoal Md Dental OoOege,
now la a dentilt In BOUiton.
Loula JaDlel Jr., w h o
received Im tnalta'a
h University ol Michigan,
DOW ii first vice pnlldtnt
of • mrmlnlbam, Ala.,
firm.
Willie stated, "I Ile awake
now •t ni&ht and th1nt of
the aacrUlees I made. It
bM paid off. I am Jll'OUd
of my ddldren, and tbey
are proud of me."
Willie 101 before &a)' of
1hem make a decilkln, tbey
.Ull call home for advice.
Now tbat the ctiknD
have tamnw ·ot their on.
Wlllil .US, "1 bay ftllt I
want," IDd he dlbblee in
real illllle work, ''Jmt to
keep .. busy.'' *" WUle, blnelf • col·
i.,. lfllClaate, takta WI
Tit'W of tbe Nttr0'1 t tar equllty: ••o.. people have a lonl
way to IO· It la 1oin1 to
t.U• 9dUClltion to aet along.
You Ja1t c aaoot com-
Thinlc Final
IAU
THINK •••
-~'11
IN .. FINA~ 3 .DAY REDUCTION
OF . SALE SHOES
\.ADllS'
Dil\SO
.· DilS
MEN'S
SHOES . . ......
.... and
Otllen '
.... to $39.95
LADllS'
LIFE
STRIDE
90
Please All Sil• Fi11l-lo E1c~111• or 11111.~1
1os2 lmne
Weetcllff ftlau
. . .
... ..... ...__
., """""" .......... THI t
.·
J8 DAil~ PILOT """'*'' .....,,, 25, lM ' 'I
.. . " ...
CCl61e -· ,..,..POrt kecll encl •
L..lllUN &Hdl Nrenl·lffdler orNnl&e-
llonl will _, 19 Ille DAILY PILOT "°' --· lfltorm.llool ,_, .. rectr.,..i Ill' IM aoci.tv dec>erfl'Nlll,
or w -lllM er• .. ,.,.,,,. -
10 Mn. G.red Slnllh, 2112 Ceni,J ..
"'-· ..._. IMd\, w " -Jft.
Californie PT A
Mrs. J. L. lb.le ·
President
COMING UP: Paper drive
'Read All About It!'
from I to a toalCbt and
from 7 to 9:30 a.m. tomGt·
row. Parenti are needed
to belp load the tnicb.
Mrs. L. R. ac-a 8l ~
31164 ma, be caUl!d fOr
Sharing ttie much needed profits of Rea PTA.Student Council's monthly
paper dnve are (left to rigbt) Mrs. Keith Kellogg, ways and means chairman,
steve Bulla, student body president, md Charles Benton, publicity chairman.
This drive is the primary fund·niaiDI venture conducted by the PTA. An·
other drive ii tdleduled Feb. 9.
Thro\llh efforts of Finle1 School PrA and the student council, a licience kil
was purcbued for the m~IJ'ad• das.ses. Inspecting the new equipme11t are
(left to right) Yvonne M~a, Doreen 1.-0nf and· Mrs. Raymond WoWrom.
..
VOll ....... ' lel'Victs.
Papen •• .. M ded ta 12-lndl llMdlll. . eon.,. Pk. PT A
lln. s_.. leUfer
~t
COMING UP: Mrs. Bruce
H~ "8JI and means
cbaitmaa, mnounoed ice
cream ·wW be told from
J100D to l/·•· svvy .ec·
ODd • -D feurth Wed· naday ol tbe ll¥JIDlh.
REPORTS: Two parnt-in-
fonnatiaa ...unca wen
condaeted to a c q u a i a t
perents wiCJa ldaoGl actlvi-
(
..
. U.. PTA bolted • • . El ,Toro M arlne l)and .
psformed for the entire
ltUdlmt body and perenta
lut weet . .
CM High PTA
Mn. 0.. luer
PrelAdeat
COMING UP~ Faahion lhow
'11unday, Feb. 15. Tlctets
now ar~ ca sale. lnforma.
tion ii availabie by calling
Mrs. Richard Oliver, 546-»tt or Mrs. D a v i d
Splckelmlre, ~ . .
. . ~Dior parent nigtlt
'lburiday, Feb. 8.
REPORTS: Polley com·
n\itt.H, CODliMing 0 f
teachers and students,
met with the PTA ex-
ecutive board to uwss
tbe 1111olling on campus.
Lindbergh PT A
Mr1. llOkr;t Vlr c1lk
President
COMING UP: March of
Dimes drive will take
place Wednesday, Jan. 31.
Hetpers are n e e d e-d .
Voluntffrs may call Mrs.
U.old . H o tt I , &te-6302,
MJ.s. Richard· Taylor. 548-
02SJ or ?fU"s. F r e d
Boehlke,548--0534 .•• Plans
Presidi~ PT A
Mrs. ~· Bradley President
COMING UP: Mother -
daugbter falbion show at
7. p.m. Saturday, Feb. 3,
at Davis Jr. mgti School.
RF;PORTS: Students have
contributed to a toy col-
lection for t.be childr~ at
Fairview State Hospital. -R•a PTA
Coarad Scbeafer
President
COMING UP: .Paper drive
Friday, Feb. 9 .... Board
meeting 9 a.m. Monday.
Feb. S, in ttie teachers'
lunch room.
St. John Aux:
Mn. Vlcter Clarke
Preslderit
COMING UP: Trading
•
T een-Og& Misses Vie }or Crown
lffteue pjck se•• 'plead two Snow Qta•a ~. (Wt to right) Dawn LiW. toJus and~Wllct111. lJoth studelltl at Kai1er Junior High School are amoq
21 teen-age TJinl for the "'111 titWat the PTA Winter Won-
derland c aJ Feb. i ll'om 2 to 5 p.n a the sci.~t =-~ dent and 'ltini" Steve Metcalf ha bil hodJ-full u;,r, ;'}:11:im . . . . ..
MamP 'CoUectli:>n day Fri· Victoria PT A ~, 'Feb. 2: Mrs. Ray MIJ· Jen Kdly
K-artia is cbal.rman. . • Preiident
• Sprldg paper drive Sua-COMJNG UP: HoJ>crary life
d11111, Feb. 25. ~ .. I..-ti REPORTS: Proceeds deriv-mew....,£1&.l&f' presenta on
ed m>m the lµncheon for gram w . ibclude a skit Thursd~Feb. 15. Pro-
auxiliary members and by Mcbera and -Ile
guests will benefit the Harbor ~
school. accordinl to Mrs.
Victor Clarke, president. Whittier PT A
. . . Health committee · Mn. w: IJ. )klder
beaded by Mra. Fra¥
Jancelt asslated at the lm· Pretldent
mUJ1ization clinic for first COMING UP: "Fun and
and fifth i?adel. Fancy Free," a dellabUul •
• full-length color ~
movie about Bonco, •
bear and Mickey md the
be,anstallt , 1rill be
presented at 1:50, 3 and
7 p.m. Friday, Feb. 2. Popc0rn and popelclel
will be Met for 10 cema
each, boCdocl • centa.
Ticketa are 2D centa for
the tint nwtac <so
primary. n.deab may
catch the tut bus home),
25 ·cents I« tbt J u d
f"p.m. 1Kowfla&. Mblt ad·
milsion is· SO cents.
-Schools Benefit From Ya1-.i ed Project~
Cook PTA
Mn. J. L. White
President
COMING UP: Dime-a-dip
ctl..rm« fl'Clm S to 7 p. m.
Tuelday, Jan. 30, in the
eatet«ium. s " ._ d ii It
meatballs, b o t d o I s •
salads, vegetables and
homemade catea will be
served: Public ii invited.
FY High PTA
Mn. JOteph Dltte
President
COMING UP: B o a r d
meeting at 7:• p.m.
Tumday, Ju. 30. In tile
indullrlal a r t 1 depart·
ment. Ned ·Jednoralaki,
de p artment dlairman,
will lfve an Oftniew of
the curriculwn. Anyone
interetted in Industrial
and. manual arta ii invited
to attend.
REPORTS: Mn. Joseph
Dltte, president,
represented tbe PTA at
CPT-PTA conl«ence in
Los Angele&.
Goldenwest PT A
Mrs. Jerry Satllerla.M
President
COMING UP : Dltne or two-
..
For the '!J()Ung al Marl
~/Ill
c)/ift~
~-dip dinner from 5::.1 to
7:30 p.m. Friday, Feb. 2.
Aasisting Mrs. Peter Nol·
ing, cbalrman, are the
Mmes. Jft'l'y Sutherland,
Frantll.n B r u m m t t t ,
Ralph Feather and Sam
. DeRose. Public is invited.
Day will be observed •
•. PTA carnival on Satur-
day, March 1&.
REPORTS : Quyaom
K aboldwal, Afgbaniatan
American Field Service
atudent attendinl Hun--Harper PT A tington Beach H i I h
~... Douctu MeJen School, wu featured at r-President tbe unit meetm1. Mrs.
C 0 M JN G UP: PTA Gilbert Turnbull, presi-
m e Dl b er S will be dent. announced Richard
marching for tbe March Golding wUl eobduct a
of Dimes on Wednelday, new match cl:us for
Jan. 31. Re&idents are p&rents In F e b r u a r y •
asked to turn on their More information can be
porch ligbta. obtained by c.alllng Mrs.
REPORTS Film . bi...... Turobull at 847-1467 . . : m w "" • Mrs. Chester Wagers Harper students a n d t e a c 1re r s participated, and Mns. Ronald Litteral
Springdale PTA
Mn. Ridanl Pierotti
President
~es of lcJ cream by
ways and mean•
chairman Mrs. Robert •
Cardinal. Committee help.
ing Whitt are the !l...mes.
BitUt Mattbew1, Jerome
Balltee and 0. M. Hardy.
Alternates are M r 1 •
James Budd.ingh and Mra.
Elmer Mat.ao. Ted Tony,
buildingeducatio'nal
REPORTS: Gueat ,speaker
at mlit meeting waa Dr ..
StanMy Hame.n. A flbn 011
LSD wu shown. Mothers
of third graders. served
refrestunent.s. '
Tamura PTO
Mn R. T n---leader and Mn. R. T.
· Pi.~~1 Hamey, Pl'O . ~t
REPORTS; Ridwd White ·are aclvilorl. Any on e
baa been a p p o I n t e d wishing to make IU.g.
chairman of Special Gifts gestiona to the committee c o m m i t t e e . Recom-may contact White at 847·
mendat.ion of gift or gifta1-;'iiii649Siiiiiiii.iiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ totaling '200 will b e1•
presented to the general
membership in February.
Mone.y wu raised through
Think Final
SAU "Make a Mi&btY Reach," TepreSented ~PTA by . mating popcorn at the ---------was lhown at u 11 1 t Kiwanis C ht 1 d r e n ' s
meetiftg. <Juiltmas Party. Sisterhood
.. , d V PTA Temple Sbel"on 's Mee' ow w. Oak Yiew PTA Siatemood meets Ute fourth
Mn. Gilbert 'hnllul1 Mrs. Rich•,. Keu.,1 Wednesday of the month in
Preaident Temple Sharon Religious Co ... ,..,..G UP·. B o a rd President m .. 1.n • SCbool, Costa Mesa, at 8 meeting at a p.m. Tues· REPORTS: Movie1. "LSD
day, Jan. 30, in the home 25" and a narcoucs pro-_P_·m......,..; -------. THINK •••
ot Mrs. Gordon Dussell 11;am were preaentecJ at The DAI\.¥ PILOT J tklJ\I . . . Di~-a-dip dinner uru£ meeUna by1 a C II ~
at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. rep re 1 e ntadve from Covers &..ting .~I ~ •
fl, tn 1 be catetwium, Orange ~ Sheriff's Be~t ,·n w,st· ...... ..,..
followed by nit meetl"". --=Depertme~:=::nt.=------~:.:;£..:_:..:.:......;;:...~::_-~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!~~ Past presidents and put
honorary life members
will be special l'Jlltl. The
11188 b o n o r a r y life
member"" will be in-
troduced and Founden
Party.Set
' ONLY
.,? • 505
l99. fl.SO
HNrt·ahaS*I apoQn end
'n(' dish In aiMirplaW for
miml,. mita. tthahn. Gift
~
to
£1•••*• .... model' '1 Sdea-j,.
Stitdl.JIOdable-
... 119.00
modtl 11 AutJamiltie
2'.ia·7.la ~
.58.00
INTRODUCfOBYBPECIAL ... 199.00 ' 98.00
c.au Jlllf Damt.....,.
a DO obliptimJiiam
. • '"
.. •
Earth mo.me ~t
b.u belUJl 1He pnperation
for coaatruction of a 240,000
square foot buUdbac on
Colllns Radio ComP1D1'•
l»acre Newport B • a c b
property.
Tbe~w two-story
buildlnl 11 the tJ#rd ltrUC•
lure on the CoUipa' Jam-
boree Road site adjacent to
the UCI campus. Total floor
space atitbe looaUon will
be increased to nearly
400,000 square feet. Some
Increase ln employment is
anticipated.
The new structure will
house light manufa<:turtnc
operations, engineerln&
laboratories, olfJces a n d
material handling space.
Several areas will be en·
vtronmentally -controlled
f o r microelectronk pro-
duction. Completion i s
scheduled late this year.
The facility is belhg
des.i,gned and built b1 Collini
Planning & Deslp and
Construction divisions bead·
quartered at D:-llas, Tuas.
Mesa Office
Wins Contest
-.,,,-.,~--..
NEW MATERIALS -Earl G. Spangler, left, of
Spangler Proceaet, Newport Beach, and Ronald
L: Tropp! a Lockheed manu!acturlng research en·
gmeer, dilcusg tJie new compound Pyro-fonn which
their companies jointly developed. The compound
heles form ceramic dies used in materials which
can withstand aerodynamic heating.
Spingler Helps Develop
New Ceramic Material
3 f'ROMOTID IY PIRST NUltJCAN TITLI 1NSURANCE A TRUST CO.
Richard D. Otttmtr ~ L. Alhley Thom11 C. Catty
The promotion ol three
meDJben ol the tr u 1 t
departmlllt ataff of Flrlt
American 11tle 1Dtunnce •
Trult Co., Santa Ana, baa
been uaoow:IC9d b1 aw1e1
A. Pot1c' Jr., vlce prealdent
and t:rult officer.
1'bt1 are Tbomal C.
Casey of Corou dill Mar
and a.Int L. Aablil1 of
Santa AP, eleYaMd to trust orµeert, ad JUclulrd J).
....
-...-.. • ee·te -........
}
• \
-
\
I
'
t
,
' I
DAILY PROT EDITOBfAL P A.GE •
Fight Evil ·with Evil~
Soaring arrest statistics on high acbool and college
students con'(icted for ille1aJ use of marijuana, LSD
and dangerous drugs are spreading an aura of alarm
across the adult community.
For parents, Utile comfort is found in the news o.f
the day: A 19-year-old suddenly suffers convulsions and
dies after gulping methedrin&-known as "speed" lo
U6ers. Another youth leaps 1 from a second-story win·
dow, apparently crazed on drugs. Fedetal agents selu
300 pounds of D)arljuana from three college 1tudenta
on our coast.
The reports go on and on.
Virtually all competent authorities agree that nar·
cotics and hallucinatory drugs are insidiow evils that
could cripple our society and bring permanent dis-
ability or death towers.
Police fte cracking down on narcotics peddlers,
pushel'6 and users. The State F.ducation Code govern·
mg (PUblic schools was amended last November giving
trustees t:be authority to act against student narcotics
violations either on or off campuses.
The alarm of pannts, educators and law enforce·
men t is justified by the record. The counter-attack is
necessal')'.
Yet how the adult commqruty is""burdened with a
new re5ponsibility. We must assure that the pendulum
of justice isn't pushed oU center by hysteria or witch
hunts that automatically brand all accused young peo--,
pie guilty simply upon accusation.
Recently, Tustin Union lligh School District trus·
tees expelled four girls apd three boys becawe they
were "suspected" of having smoked marijuana. Now
the evidence placed before the school board may have
clearly demonstrated that all seven deserved expulsion.
Bul likely this will never be known publicly because
tbe board hearing was held in secret.
And the board president, in announcing the ~·
pulsion decision, gave an ominous tone to the entire
proceeding.
· He was'"quoted as explaining, "Ours was an admin·
..
lstrative declaion; we don't htte to sit in judpnent like
a Judge. We can accept he&r11y evidence or anytbinC
else to make up our mind ... ••
Other educators alon1 the Orange Coast were quick
to chime ill. "The welfare of the other sludepts ls the
prime consideration," one declared. '
·vet In the righUul campaign to stamp out one evil.
the adult community muat take care not to create an·
other. Row will that vut majority of well behaved
youni people view the justice meted out to their ce>Q-
t.emporarles?
We spend years attemeting to teach our atudents
that the United States guarantees the accused ii inno-
cent until proved iuttty; all persons are entiUed to a
full, fair hearing; and Justice is tempered with mercy.
Will public utterances or actions of adult authority
1ugge6t to their minds that justice for young people is
different? Thal it ls based on hearsay, rumor or idle
go"ip?
Clearly, we must /rotect the majority frQm the
corruption of drugs an narcotics. But we need not, in
the process, create a generation of cynics who believe
justice in a free society is an Idle platitude, to be preach·
ed but not practiced.
Help f or' the DebtQr
Consumer credit in the United States has reached
the astounding total of '95 billion, of which installment
credit accounta for •75 billion: Credit cardJ and com·
puteriied accounting systems have helped make con·
sumer credit an essential part of the nation's economic
system -but at the same time piled up more debt
than many families can handle.
Help is on the' way. A landmark study. led by J. C.
Pen"ey Co. and supported by labor and consumer
groups, will result kt establishment of family financial
counseling 6ervices nationwide. This could improve
family security and economic stability.
•
..
·~~
~ ~ • ·r ~"i~;I~·. "~~ J-~.
HAM LE\
Playing a Game
With Words
An lilea for
Reducing Air
Pollution
Wild Rumor I • Worse Than Bad Neecs
One of the games I would play
with the children when they were
young was "opposites" -a simple
device of testing their verbal powers
b1 living them wordJ like ''bot" or
"wet" and ui.ina them to name the
opposite.
Imqine my surprise when, many
years later, I read in a learned journal
that this Is one Important test given
by. JllYCbologlsts to d e t e r m i n e
acbliopbrenla in the small child; in·
cipient schlzopnrel'l'lcs, apparently,
have a great deal of trouble In findint
tru. "opposite" words.
AT ANY RATE, as the children
got older. the w. ordl tot harder, and
belare we finall.r.. abandoned the 1ame,
I bid gathered a number of words
wboae oppoaltes had been lost -they
were antnown or never used by most
people ucept a few musty specialists.
Everybody knows what It ls when
animals "hibernatl", that Ja, 1leep
through the winter; but whal do we
call tbe oppoai_\e when they sleep
through the summer?
Mott of UI know that a certain
type of argumentative writing CJt
speaking Is called "polemics"; but
what la the opposit.& of a "didactic"
the writing or speaking J.a deslped
to reconcile and harmonize view·
points?
AND EVERYBODY knows 11capita1••
writing, in which all the letters are
separate; but what do we call the
opposite, when an the letters in a
word are written to run togettrer?
What I.a tile oppos ite of "central"?
Of "zenith"! And ff that which cannot
be accepted It 0 unacceptable," what
is that which •ul be accepted? And
whit 11 the opposite of a "didactive''
form of education, which drills the
student in the aubject?
Word• vanish or die for many
reuons: sometimes they ouWve their
usefulness, or art replaced by others,
ot slmply hana on limply in negative
... -lib th•~· .. in ".lrno potent," the "kem in "unkempt "
the "trepJd" In " , " the "ruth"'
in "ruthle11," which at one time were
all words in common ~·
MORE SURPRISING ii the declille
ol whole caterorles of words from
the living language -as, in English,
we have lOlt most of the adjectives
pertainlng to "shapes.'' Only ardent
puule-50lver1 know the word& for
"n e e d I e-1haped," "beard·ahaped, ••
"bell·ahaped," "ring-ebaped," "heart· 1haped," "cross-shaped." "wedge.
shaped,'' "sword·• h a p e d.'• "fork·
shaped," "splndle-shaped," "spiral·
shaped,'' "strap·sh~ ... and many
others.
(Answers : hJbernate -eativate;
polemics -irenics; . pr!Dllng -
curalve; central -·diatal; zenith -
nldir; unacceptable "'-irrecusable;
didactic -heuristic; acer o s e,
barbate, campanulate, circinate, cor·
date, cruciate, cuneate. e n s a t e ,
furcular, tualform, helical and lorate.)
Law and the Rioters
WASHINGTON -'P r e 1 I d e n t
Johnson's decision to leave the pro-
blem of ract rioters to local law
enforcement officials has presented
a strong new wearn to Senate op-
ponenu of one o his major civil
rights proposals.
'nley are now using the President·~
anti-crime statement in their fight
to kill or drastically alter legislation
i.nt.inded to protect lndlviduala tn the
enrciae ol a wide variety of civil
rights.
Headed by Seti. James Eastland.
?>-Miu., cbalrman of the ~ate
Judlc:lary Committee, tbeae opp6oemta
a.rt attacking the 1dmlnlltratioo'1
measure in the Senate. where it is
now be.Ina debated. The croup IJ
\ clrculatine a memorandum charting.
''Tbt provillona of th1a CclvU rigbta)
bUl coaJd be Uled to harass and deter
)Ocel law enforcement officen. ••
TD F.ABl'l..A.ND 8J'Oup memo Wis
• .. -1'.;" s A > ~ \,. • • • t
• • .. ' 'If:_ \
attention to the President's declara-
tion in his State-of-the-Union address.
"'Iboee wbo preldi dil<>fde:r a.nd thole
who preach yiolence muat know that
local authorities are able to resist
them swiftly, to real.st them sternly.
and to resist them decili•ely." Then
it warns:
"It la manifeaUy unfair to put these
k>c:al otfician in the front line ol the
strucg)e to maintain a IOciety or law
and order while placing them under
the terrible omnipresent threat of
being balled Jnto federal court · on
a criminal charge because tbe at--
1omey teneral determines they had
uaed an unreuonable amount of foree
In Suppttal.ng I riot."
THE SAFEGUARDS -To rule out
th1a "thre•t." the Eut1and will
•ttemft to add to the admlm~'•
clvD rlehtl proposal an amendment
writtee into a atmu.r bill Oii tbe
Howe floor. It provides:
". . . nolh.l•I within this ~tlon
thall be constrM eo u to deter
DJ law tnlorcelMDt ofOcer from lnt\aD7 carrytnc out &he i.wful duties
ol lUa omc. and ao aucb oftker •haD
be c:omAdertcl to be in YSolltfoD of
...... tor CUT1inc oat .J: lawful
4""" °' * omc. or ~I lawf\11 Ol'dtiDlncel a8'1.J1w1 ol tbe U.S. or ~ polltb1 sut.dlvtdoat. ..
IA ldclttoa to tl'dl ~ for ,ocal ... enforcement omeen. the
Saftland troVP wlU try to add to
the Senate bW another Hout-pUMCI
Mneftdment. ~ped to .. -. ..
the bW lan't uat(t to prot.ct qltMdl'I
todl u H. flap Bron aid 8lioUl1
carmJch1t'. tht 81ac-Pow• r
mlJHant.,,
' I
To the Editor:
Smog is one of our worst problems.
partrcularly in California, and I have
an idea that I believe can help in .
smog reduction. If you print trus let·
tet, perhaps the idea will come to
the attention of someone who can
do something about it.
The gasoline engine is ideally suited
to powerfng automobiles but It has
the serious drawback that the exhaust
contalna large quantltles of air
pollutants. A turbine Is eminently
unsuitable for this pw1>ott, for many
reuons. but has two things to recom·
mead it: quiet operation and very
low pollutant content. Neither powe!'
plant alone is the answer; my ~a is
to combine Ule best features ol both.
MY CONCEPTUAL automobile
would have a small gasoline engine
to power the car. It would be large
enough to provide good performance
but would not be as blg as present
engines because il would have to do
leas work. Only normal enaine tuning
and ma intenance would be required,
and an engine that wa. burning oil
or wasting gas -althougti it would
not 'be economical -would not con·
tribute additional pollutarQ to th• air
Tbe engine exhaust would not go
through a conventi11na1 muffler but
would feed a small turbine. Additional
f~l for the turbine would be required
but could be kerosene or something
similar. The turbine would bum up
all the pollutants and unburned
mpterlals in the e11gine .e~aust, and
Its own exhaust would be clHn. Also
quieter.
ONE PURPOSE of the turbine ls
lo eliminate pollutants. This It does
because of higher temperatures and
continuous burnl'ng. Its secondary
purpose would be to drive a generator
that would supply all electrical power
for lbe car and accessories. Jt couJd
also, either mechanically or throu&b
electric motors, drive such ltems u
the fan, water pump and fuel pump
for the engine. The turbine Is the
smog eliminator and tbt pOWer Jt
produces ls not wasted but Ia used
to provide necessary I u n c t I o n 1
normally supplied by the enpe,
re1ulting In a smaller engine.
Conventional turbines are tlesiped
tor alrcratt and ~ too exi-Jw.
However. the requirements tor
automotive use would be far Jeaa .ad
tomeoM fbould be able to come up
with .1 small, fnexpenslve lurbtne for
this purpose. American inaenllity
beln1 whit lt la.
THE AUTO MAKERS. of! ln-
du1trle11, aoceMOfy manwacturtra -
no oee would be hW1 by this delip
I e~pt for mutnu manulaclalrwt),
and tbe total fuel cost of two powtr
plants abollld not be Increased since
the tftline ls smaller and the ad·
diUooal turt»Jrlt fltel 11 not u O ·
pen1lve. lniUal COit of the comblnaUoa
-uclotlve ol research and deftlop-
meat -abou1cl D0t Ucetd that Of
lht monlttr en,ints we l>IY for todQ.
I bopt that publlcatioa of this lttta' wm. pot the Idea btlON pollution coe-
trol peoplil Ind oct.I fto CU
evatutt It and do aomtthfnc •bout it. Alter au, ttd1 .,... lJ noted •
Its aatomotfve Innovators.
R. C: SANFORD
Ways Newspapers Serve
BJ BARRY FERGUSON
Ua.Hed Pre11 htuutMu.J
Frem Edtter Is Pllbtt1her
One of the oldest stories newsmen
tell each other involves the yo ung
reporter who was fired after his first
assignment. He was sent to cover
a wedding linking two of his city's
leading families and when he returned
to his offlce he reported to the editor :
"There wu no story. Th e
bridegroom failed to show u~."
Tbe editor sensed immediately he
did not have a potential journalistic
geniu& on his hands and advi!ed the
young mao to seek another line of
work-, .
Que1tlH Ne. t : How many ~raons
wouJd flav€ read the .newspapet ~story
ff the bridecroom bad showed up and
the marriage gone according to
schedule? Probably about a fourth
of the newspaper's subscribers.
QuesU.. Ne. ~: How many read
about the bride's being jilted at the
altar? Practic.ally ev.erybody.
AU OF WHICH goes to say that
th~ore unusual news is, the bigger
it u . Or, as John B. Bogart, city
editor of the Ne" York Sun, put
it years ago: "When a dog bites
a man. that's ndt news. But when
a man bites a dog, that's news."
Who decides what is news? A recent
letter received by UPI implfed that
American editors gathered in secret
once or twice a year and dedded
what they would print and what they
would not print
It is true that Amerlca.n editors
do meet frequently and discuss neft.
But they don't decide what to print
because often they can't agree amon'
themse1ves. What they are trybtg ti>
Hnd out is what you. the reader of
the newspapers. consider to be news.
For iJl most cases you make the
decision as to what iJ news. •
You uy you doD't like violace
In the news. All rilht. let's tell a
hypothetical story about you.
YOU CAN WALK out of your front
door at a o'clock one morning, and
on the sidewalk of the house on your
,left you see Jim Brown ki11ing Mrs.
Brown as he departs for• wort. On
• the porch of the llouse on your right
you see Mrs. Smith attacking Bill
Smith with a meal cleaver.
ff JOU believe there is too much
violence in lbe news. you must be
consistent. You must turn your b1ck
on Mrs. Smith Ind. her melt cleaver
and devote yom full attention to the
klning Browns because a family kisa
is nonviolent.
WW you?
Of course. you won't. The reason
you won't 11 that it is human nature
to be attracted by violence. We are
born viol .. l If you have fDY doubts.
put a 2-Y.ear-old boy in a room filled
with bre&kable objects .net leave him
alone for an hour. The 1'hOlt process
of growin1 up and being educated
is nothing more than an attem11t to
put a veneer of civilization and
reatrai.nt on the violence that is at
the core ol all of us.
IT IS NO ACCIDENT that pro-
fessional football, one of the most
violent of sports. ls allo one of the
most popular. War, of courae, is the
ultimate l.n mlenee and the buman
race seems unable to get aloq
without it.
What about good newa and bad
news? Well, which ls which! The
seventh game of the World Series
wu good news in St. Louil, bad news
in Bott.on. The impending divorce of
your best friend ia both lood news
and bad news. A family ii breakbtJ
up and that's bad. But two people
have a better chlDCe fer bappiaeta
-or think Ibey do -and l!Mit'1
Sood news.
But ii you believe the bid news ,
of the family breaking up should be
suppressed, you don't discuss the
divorce with anybody. Or do you?
When bad news Is suppressed, worse
news often result.s.
BURGLARS WHOSE misdeeds go
unreported feel encouraged to step up
their activities. Publicity is a deter·
rent to crime. which is one reason
the FBI floods the nation with pictures
of criminals it wants to arrest.
Wild rumor is worse than bad news.
A' newspapel' does a l!ervice to its
community when it reports Ult precise
number of typhus cases in town. For
otherwise rumor would have It that
an epidemic was under way and there
would be paaic in the atreets.
The press. television and radio bave
been criticised for publicizing hippies
and ignorlnf the millions of young
Americans Who behave themselves.
If you are opposed to teen-agers ta1c·
ing LSD and smoking marijuana and
want to do t0mething about il bow
are you going to accomplish anxthln~
unless you flt)d out what's going on
from ~papers. television and
radio?
OF CO\)RSE IT is untrue that
newspapers, diminish or suppress ll*f
news. 'nle other day lhe UPI carrt~
out of Washington a .roundup of na·
tional and international good news
that occlll'ftd in 1967.
Good · ..W. can be fo.und ln. the
weddina · uno11neementa, M births rec~. the commurdtJ-cheat dme
that exceeds & quota, the accounts
of tbe bllh school and college iradua·
tion, a cJty counc11 drive against
slum1. iDd a forecut of fair and
mild fr• tt.e local weetber bureau. It'• d men in t1'e peper. But
so ii ~ and md new1. and
tfril 1eatttMion need f8'l no chagrin
over the fad that the newspapers
print it and we read it. For it is
a human instinct noted centuriu ago
by a wite histori.al'l named Plutarch
•ho wrot't: "m news ioei quiet and far.•••
A voiding a Flappi11:g Mouth
' . • I
Since th1a lJ the m°'t dangerous ~
of centuries, you'd think that as a
safety meisure evt1ty baby today
would be born wtth a button on its
Up.
Tbis wawd help it to avoid that
sreate•t of human perils -• big
open Oappln& mouth.
Most woes. don't jult hlppe1t to peo-
ple. They are made to bappen. People
talk thtmtelftt into trouble becauae
they don't keep their trapt sh•
They lnsist on sa1Gi1 tilt wronc thint•
at tbe wronc time -u ll they bad
De.r ,.
Gloomy
Gus:
I ' • • • -• • .. ,· ~ . .: ' ~
an inborn appetJte for disutet.
FOR EXAMPLE. 1f yov really wish
to enjoy 1 carefree Lta. awn are
a fft remarb to ncrid Uaat can
lead only to trouble:
''Let me ante acroa 1be lab ant
and ... ll tbe ice ls UdCk eaouO
to bold ut."
"It's only 10 mUet men. rm 1lll'e
there'• ~ Pl 1n .. .... .. let UI tbat far."
"You don't scare me oee 1fttle bit.
Bmttt. My motto la. the lllqer they
are the harder tbtJ faD."
"AD rlOt, W't tab ft tt court.
II YoU don't 8e lt, • IUI ... "
"lf yw bura 10Ul' draft card, 111
bunt miDa. We can •hra11 tell tbl aovenlDtnl we wer.. JUlt kidding.''
"~MADGE, ~1.ff. Vear. ~ JOU ..... Out • """
"If _..., -vtlda& elN 1911 wat .... .,_, HD OI me 8hf. Ir .... ~ ..,... ........ Just ..... .....
twldGl:q •1 tbwnbe.. •• ·
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~----.....;.... ___ ...._ _____ . tad " nar... .
''Even ii this Is a one·way street.
'ft can prob9bly go ahead a couple
of blocks more before turning off.
'l'Mrt iln't. muob. traffic at tbiJ bour ...
'~JUST BECAUSE we're married.
Mable. that doesn't mean I should
spend my whole time at a cocktail
perty &aWna to you alone. U you
feel a bit feft. ovt of Jt, you can always get attention by going to the
center of the room and at.anding on your bead."
"I'll volunteer, Sarp, Wbat'1 the
mission?" (
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Sullivan
~· • .... ,
... , . --
egr.Oes Pract~
'
"
hi dae Jadcleat. 'Ibey &ccUHd Prtlley
of lkipptn1 practice, ~~ bOIUle towwd teammates and of the coach. . ·'l •
Preli.y coiiteaded be W4J l::.Ul#ld
for rttuela1 to cut bi.a busily ~le
hairdo.
About to of the 40 Nearoes on
ICbolartbipa treateMtl to bo7cott
all atbletica UDleu Herrerias, two
ualltmt football coac:bea and the
aUll.UC btisi.ness manager were fired.
In \be 9-ce ol the bijter controversy,
Herrerial' called a regular iracUce
fOI', Wednesday afternoon. saying "if
only t.be whites show up, that will ~ ~ t.emn."
Matson
: '
Tboucb all members reported,
Presley wu not as confident as the
coach that all problems had been
cleared up. He declined to sty what
the remaining issues were.
Relening to Negro student move-
llMllt for reforms in the athletic
~t and on the campus in
,_..al, Presley said, "The movemm~
Is atlll roing on."
Prealey said everyone oo the team
hopes to play as well as before the
d.labannony developed tut week. He
added that the Negro threat ol defec-
tion from all sports apparently has
ended for the time being.
LA. Open
Prefers .Qlympic
.. Pros Begin ·
Honors -Firing-Away
COLLEGE STATION, Tex. (AP) -
Randy Mataon, the tped ng Texan
wbo b tne world's champion sf\ot·ptit·
t«, thinlu that wina.ing the Sullivan
~is the second nicest thing that
happen to him.
Winning a gold medal in this year's
Olympics would be the nieest.
The 8-foot-81h inch, .,_pound Tuu
~M senior beat out three women
in different fields to win ttfe•sulliv&,i
Award as the outstanding amateur
athlete ol 1967.
"I was real surprised to learn that
I have been named to receive the
Diacd. I feel Ilke it is perhaps the
highest award an amatef athlete can pl .
''The goJd medal in the Olympics it the ooly thing tbat would surpass
it," Mat.so11 s.a1d Wednesday.
Matson, who is more than twice
die weight of his two closest rivals,
received m points Crom l , 0 0 0
amateur sportsmen, sports write.ts,
broadcasters 1aod former Sullivan
. Award winners in the poll.
Billie Je<m King of Long Beach,
reco~ as the world's No. 1 woman
tenrus player, received 579 points;
Debor.at "Debbie" Meyer, 15-year-old
1Wirnming st. from Sacramento, had
518; aad Peigy Fleming of Colorado
Sprlncs. world figure skatl.Dg queen,
received 486. .
Vallely.Top
,
EC Scorer
John Valleq, one of the great·
est oUensive• performers in the
history of the EasteNl Confer-
ence, bas a wide lead today In
the EC's indMdual scoriJlg race.
Vallely is rolling along with a
25.t average aDd his Orange
Coast teammate. flruce Chap-
man, ls right behind bJm with
a 21.3 average.
Golden Weat'• Mike Shelley
atandt seventh with ID 18.4
mart. Ollie Martin, GWC auard,
ls •i«Mh at 17.9.
Vallely becaJM the first play·
er in Or&Jtfe Cout b1story to
IUrpul the 1,000 point m.rt for
twf) senons tut wttt.
He's lnvolved in two cruclall
for the Pirat.ef thLs weekend a•
the 8\11:1 bOlt daageroUI Chai·
fey ·hiclQ-aieht ... travel to
Mt. SAC ~ eqalng. prance c..a., Ml SAC a41 Pun.MD ... ,_.ocked for the .
circuit leld.. ~ c-ren-e ..,., Lea*n
John Va!Mly, OCC 2U anc. Qdipmu, OCC 21.3
, ... Mal, JICC 2>. l ., ... J--. Cltr1ll 11.•
... l.lllliw. C>'ll'etl lt.' ,._ , .... llC.1 SAC 11. 7 -.nn11ewc •..t ow. Mmtba. owe 17.t
Tom Wlln ' , a..a., 17.7 o .......... sue.a~ 17.t a.a., ana.~• SAC 17.1
Beb ..... ;CUfftJ t•.t
QarD M11tltJ', atn; la.I sen. GdJN .... Ana 1e.1
.Ma ~ cypn. JU
Shatterini· NCO(ds ever since he
was at Pampa, Tex., High School,
Matson l1eltered his own world mark
last April 4 when be burled the 16-
pound ball 71 feet, 51,i inches.
Weight Ufting is the way Matson
pl'epates for the shot put.
"Gotta build up my atrength. I
now bench press 400 and do 45o in
I
Lakers Invade
Cincy Tonight
In TV ·Cfash
I A
CLEVELAND (AP) -The Los
Angele! Lakers hope tonight to extend
their three-g~, winning streak,
startedlutwMk~ioterrupt.edby
the Nati01Jal Basketball Aaaoclation's
all·star game.
The LaUrs will battle the Cincinnati
Royals on the neutral cow1..
Los Angeles, with a 25-22 record,
Is third i.n the Western Division, 10
games behind St. Louis and 41,i back
of San FrancilCO.
The Royals an in virtually the same
spot. They own a 24-23 record and
r .... Jat .. TV
C~I 5t • P·•·
are third·in the !:ut, 10 pmea behmd
Philade~.
IA their tbree previous meetings
thU RUOft, Loe Angeles hM won
twice.
The encounter, the flrst for the
Lakers since the all-star break after
their 154-U,, drubbblng ·of Seattle,
1lpla the start of a tlve-111ne roed
trip will ,.,nes on four conaecutive
ntpts.
Aler tM CiDcllmati tame. the
Lakers pl.a, the Boston Oeltiea Friday.
the. Detroit Piatcrls Saturday and the
St. Louil Hawks Sunday before cM>Gng
out the ~ Tuesday in Seattle.
,'the Labn will return to the FOl'Um
Feb. i to Jace the Superaoolcs.
the squat . • • but' a fellow always
w11nts to be atrooger. That'• the only
way to improve tllrowia& the abot, ••
he said recently.
Matsoo bas thrown h diJcw 213
feet, gy, .inches, an u a off i cl a 1
American mark, but be bu given
it up, for the present at lealt, because
be says it interferea .witb bis prepwa·
tions for the shot put.
SPORTS
CLIPPED
SHORT
Froa tM Wini fl AP/UPI
ST. PAtJL.MINNEAPOLIS -Who
will have the distinction ol being the
No. 1 draft choice in professional
football'• 1968 coJle1e player draft
next Tuelday?
Baning an unforesee.n llth·hour
trade ol their bonua selection, the
Minneaota VlldQ8s will make that pick
Tuesday. Aod the Vikings ami't
sayin1 who they may tab.
It could be Kevin Hardy. Notre
Dame's giant defenalve tackle, or
linebacker Fred C4rr of Tex.as
Wes&em, ot quarJ.ert>ti Gary Bet>an
of UCLA. • arfeeeive tackle 1loa y_, ol Soutilern Cal.
sn& wr ..
LOS ANGELES -The Loa
AD1ele1 K1111s doa't llave t. face
tlleir Hr&llel'll rivals, tlle O•kland
Seall, for more thu a month -a8Cl tlaey probably couldn't be H y
llappler.
1'fie Xtnp, hangtJ1g OD precarfOUI•
ly t. second place In tbe National
Htcby Lea1ue'1 Western Division,
havea•t fared wen agalnat the laat-
place Seal• rttently. ne twt teams
meet a1aJ• March 7. TJ9e &1J11s llave beea able tt put
Mt Me 1oal ,.,, Ute Seala' 1oaUe,
CMrle Hodge, I• their last three
erie.a&en. TUt goal ca.me Wed·
.eMay aJpt at the Fonm but
Oaklaad ""the 1ame 4-1.
Before tbat Hod1e had J>lan.ked
Loa Aagelea M and M . On tlle
sea .. tbe Kla11 have a M-1 record
a1a1Mt OaklHcl.
Amigos Snap Mether Die• ~CE -Dovie L. Abraham. ' long L>smg• mother of raclnt drlnr Parnem Jones, died Wednesday in Torrance
Memorial HospitAI after a long illness. Skein, 106-96 Sb&;i~0~·. besides JOO:S. indude
. /another son Paul. a atep-son. ·Gary OAKLAND (AP) ~ The Anabeun Abraham and her hUlband How~d Amigos, trab from •UQg their way Abruam', . '
alJioet out of the c~J4t ol the 'nit faDeral wUl be Friday. Americae B;illketball Mloclation's ·
Weatenr Divistcm, take on the' Oakland
~; ..!°: ~v~°!* of catching GLOBETROTTERS
pe~enn~·: s=~s~~ VISIT ANAHEIM nesday nigbt, defeated the Mavericlts
10M8 to map an eilbt-1ame lolitlg
lb'ealc. ANAM•IM MOUITOtl e '1 T
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J w ' J ).J 10
2 u • , >2 •
.a M ' I M 1 I~ M t \I
t '1 T
Atltft ' 1·1 11 lldttf' a.I i H 11 ,rerlw
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The world -famed H a r l e m
Gtobetrotters -ln their 42nd season
-vllk Anaheim'• lavish Convention
Center tonight for ID 8 p.m. game
a1ainst the New Yor• National.a. Trotter atan Meadowlark Lemon.
ca.Heel the clown prince of basketball.
and sprtag.Jegged Jackie Jackson will
be OD hand •
A limited supply of ticketa was
available dUI mornJna.
PA.\U>ENA (AP) -The Gki ID•
nual IM Angeles Open Golf Tourna-
ment cot-under way today with Arnold
Palmer, tbe defending champion, the
main 1utet of .his brother profession-
als. The ~. tramp\anted fr o m
nearby Loi ANeles, .,... Brookside
Park,• revamped course located ad·
jacent to Pasadena's famed Rose
Bowl. For thl4 ~ Brookside
measure• 7,<rU yards, with par 36-35--71. '
Palmer, who first won the Los
Angeles Open in 1963, made it two
in a row • year ago with a 72-hol::.
1COre of 21118. Tbe site wa the par-71
Rancho Municipal layout In West Los ·
Angeles.
. Whether Brookside will be easier or
tougher remains to be seen during the
four._ round.I of golf coming up. But
the pro1 didn't exactly alaughter
tb.lnp in Wednesday pro·am.
Orily 11 pros managed to break
par ln their individual efforts, while
Palmer had a 73 and Billy Casper
Leading the way three-under a72. *
par 881 were Mason olph, Charles
Coody, Howie Johnaon and Dave Hill.
Al Geiberger, Dave Marr, Charley
Sifford aQd Steve Spray made the
tour in BO-degree weather in 69. while
the 70 group included F'rank Beard,
Gay Brewer, BOb Goalby, Tommy
Aaron, George Knudson and Bruce
Crampton, ... -
" Russian Says'
Athletes' Roles
Predetermined
,
MOSCOW (AP) -A Soviet educator
has examined the careers of top
athletes and found that men do their
best every third year of theJr lives,
says the official Soviet news agency
.. Tass.
According to the6e finding, reported ...
Saturday, women excel during the
years when their age is divisible by
two.
Valentina Sl\&poshnikova . a master
of pedagogical sciences in Leningrad,
also said she was determined that
sport.a successes are often made
around birthdays.
"The conclusions I drew at first
glance verge on mysticism and often
cause a smile," sbe said. "but I am
sure that all this has a quite real
physiological basis. We have simply
run into a' field -of a science in which
much has to be clarified.·•
She said she thought that patterns
she found are related to embryology.
Mrs. Shaposbnlkova studied the
hves of more than 200 European and
world chEUpions and record holders.
She said her ~·sties show that
most future stiers e born In winter.
trackmen in sumn1 and Nordic com·
bined events stars in the fa ll.
Often. she said, it was possible to
trace a rhythm of ups and downs
in performance from early childhood.
She reported finding optimal periods
within a year and evet1 a day.
Ae<:ording to Tass. "The theories
of Mrs. Shapos~ have aroused
interest tn scientific circles, though
most contradictory opinions have been
expressed."
. .
Dissension Str.ikes at UCLA
ft ........ ,,.
Elvin li~ea In the Bndas' 71-69 loss
to HOPaton. ltlt lie rame for 1ood
wttb 11 mlnutet Wt In tbt ftnt half.
ffa1't• had ecor..s 10 polntl and
w.t•to~ ........
Wooden alH 1.-., WOD1t mate the
Brullll' noocoalennce rGed O'ip to
New York thl1 WMAnd because he
didn't pracUct Wtdneldly.
Mike Lynn • Nrt •!Mey.
Wooden 1114 l*'f .. not been
clilmlued.
Lecey'a Cat.her, !'.dllr Sr., reported
that b1a IOll ,... burt .., • ttatdMl!t
-A.
-0 ·.,j .. ... -..... ,.. --
Wooden made to sports writers Mon-cb.y. •
And Lew Ald.ndot'I Injured Jeft eye
Is not upected to keep him from
the two weaend pmes in New York
City .•
UCLA quoted the 7-fe>*l All-
Am-erlc•'• doctar Wednesday as
taylnC Aldndor 0 1• matin1 Im-
provement but still hll mlnlmal dou·
ble vltton."
Alclndcr was hurt Jan. 12 In a
game asllnat California.
The 9rulM play Holy Croai Friday
and IOlltClll Ooile&e Sa~y.
-..
OAJl Y' PILOT
DAILY l'ILOT ,...._ -W LYie tc.lfll
STRETCHING FOR REBOUND -JeH Cunningham (4l) of UCI
leaps up to outstretch over Westmonl's Dave Bregante (13) in a
battle for a rebound. Cunningham popped in 23 points, aiding his
mates to a 90·87 victory. The Anteaters (12·3) play arch-rival Chapr
man Saturday nighl al Villa Park High .
UCI Wins, 90·87
Anteaters Withstand
Frantic Westmont Rally
By GLENN WHIT!!:
01 Ille Detty 1'11•1 Stell
UC Irvine withstood a frantic West-
mont raUy to cam its sixth straight
basketball victory and 12Ul triumph
in IS outings as the Anteaters bagged
a 90-87 verdict over the invading War-
riors Wednesday night.
Now coach Dick O&vls sends his
forces against tough Chapman Colle~e
in a Saturday night duel billed for
Villa Park Hlgtl's gym.
Westmont appeared to be a soundly
beaten outfit with UCI owning a 75-54
lead and 6:40 left to play. Davis
emptied his be11th and even •the
reserves were holding their own
against their foes from up Santa
Barbara way.
But then strange things began to
happen.
Westmont's press began to take it11
toll. and Ule Warriors went on a
devastating shooting binge. They
scored 12 of 15 baskets attempted
while UCI suddenly found its offense
In trouble, thanks to offensive fouls,
turnovers and missed shots. Wh~ Ule losers pulled to w;thin
nine (82-73) Davis got his regulars
rendy fo.-duty. And by the time the
count had been reduced to 88-8-\ with
40 seconds remaining, the tlrat .rfllt
was back In the game.
· UCI withstood the1 deliberate foul-
ing attack JS Dave Fontlus canned
two of four gratis tries, keeping the
hosts safely ahead.
the ni~ht with 36 points, getting 26
the last half.
Westmont blistered the n e ts at a
69 percent clip the final 20 minutes.
Mike Heckman was a st<:mdout for
the victors. He shared Anteater scor·
ing laurels with Jeff Qumingham at
2J. And in the Urst ha.If be put OD
a dazzling show of outside shooting,
inside accuracy, and keen defensive
plays.
In a span o.f 70 seconds he blocked
two shots and scored two buckets.
Westmont led only in the early ~
p;oing, holding a S-0 lead before Uct I un~ed and later securing a 12-12
tie before falling behind for good.
Tim TiftWresbmen bagged their
ninth win against four losses. blasting
We9tmont jayveea in the preliminary,
75-45, avenging an earlier thrashing
suffered at ~ hands of the Warriors.
UGI l"I WllTMONf 1111
ft ll t fl't ''"'' .. wnci." 1 2 ' 1 ICMtt•I 4 2 4 10 CllMl"Of\t m 10 > 2 2J $t1Mt l I 2 1 Hl!dCmfn t S J U Wrev 2 5 l I
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Tolals M II M to TOl•ll ll la U f1 "effl._ acwe UCI Jf, W.S-1 Jt.
UC I ''"" C1SI WHTMOMT l'Nlll (., ltftltfi. fttllll'fllt
51mm$1\• S I 1 10 s.tll<rl ~ J a 11
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lt"tto 1022ltwrJIOft 1021 Je-I I I J Glfllbff 1 t t t
'
Dave Bregante was the big gun
in the Westmont rally. He wound up
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a111 bft: hf · , .. 1~~5~ 'l.f ? i I -" .. , .~J [ •i -t •• ~ U•1 -Ir~~. If~_ ... ,_ ... ·_ ·t.f..::\., ... ·. ~:Ji: -'lf ,;ill •tl ... ~f~,rii hL .
I 'sit~lil __ :_,_,;i,._~i_fl ~.111• .. '.c r _. .1.iJ. .. >:rF:M. l.t~, t121p~
Ii 11 -tlai11 Ill . 11 I ... r_!.! 1.~. l.l~t ~r · ~ -
~018-SS a •c •s ::t• •a• i 1( '11: l. r fl :I-. a-f ~ g., 0 t"hol~ 11!1 .. 'l:I ~ --..· I -' r~i•I 6 · ~ ~s ... ile:s r1· ~bn ( Ui!t!!;lia:rfiiri!
f · = f Ir ·~!1'r ·~u~ If 1!r!~ri~;~;i~~J ~ ~ ~ ,. l ~IB ; ••~I i ~a~ 5: .. 2 1= ~ .. --I' I :•.,. i:; I .,s-'ft ,; 4!11111• -~~~-·•~•·~~~~a! ill~ !li1! ilal ff;r f~r ! ;:f ·
~feit'S~ll!'t"~~~bts:br~f f ~~i·~1 i~ Er !i; l:li~J~~ ( _ 11 ---.
••••;1a•i•~•~¥;:!f_;:!_a,etn~!ll.' ::Jtlr!~ ~,11 [lfl ~>-! 9-(f!(I= -3. ~ ~:~ :J
__ _ __ _ _ ____ ·--_.I ll~:J1 11 r ,, ~ • .If i .. s::_ _ , . !1!1.-, ..
. · . ' .• -• .. . .. . . -. I f .• t f i~ ~ 'ii;Ui!ir~r :!1!;1 :tr'!' l j .i . . . .. . .. -.. m •
L .a-.--___ 1.. ... . laaHanllan .. 11H11 f1,..tJ~1-i;.a,J l.UJ i:.tlfrf · ·: .... ··· ,, .. , --.--w --ru -· n · -1»r --•
r am a~ •-•-~ •
(.
''"''" ltAC .. 1 111' ....... M.1d911 .,,.., ... ,. .... ~ ....
,A-Le......._ U ~ 11S lltwr ~ U Trvnllol tlS
'T"""8od Hiiia II Valemytle). 11S v-l"rfnolM (J GofttllleJ) 11110 lrm IM'W Gred IM YC&D) 11S ~ ·-1• MeMll) 1lS 1 ,Dtll't Dwbt Me (A ll>IMdU 11S ....., Ir._ ID l"ltrClll 11S
l 1'1111 c:ndlet (D Va~ 115 !>end'/ Jewel <• Ttn'-:110 m ._ '"'1111 (l ll>llQy Jl1 111
•#Mr( Vella CJ Selle"') 111 . .... ........
A llllilldlw ID Hell) '1f ~ • ~ L ~ tnfi\M llltry.
Big Upsets.
11$
llS
lU 114
ltlll 111
11• 111
11•
ANNAP01'IS (AP)
Navy'a foo~ team pve
up 25S points in 1917 and
.scored only 206 but the
Mid.sbipmen won·• o· m e-big
faD'lel.
The Naval Acade my
eleven opened by beating
Penn State 23-22, toot the
mMJure ol Syracuse 27.14
in it.a foa:rtll pme and upset
Army by 19--14. The Middies
won five, loat fow &Del tied
one.
• \' • ..... ..., •ldl .......
'llPAllNG POI DUTY -Orange CO ut a.ru prep golfers meet with Irvine
Cout Cowl.try Club pro Raiph Evaiu (center, seated) and other linb officials
to plot out work arrangements for the = assignment in the Los An-
geles Open. Pictured in the gathering ' • , left to right) ia Newport Har-
_ bor Hi.th junior Lewis Wright,. Gene Carter (Corona del Mar coach), Steve Dye
(Newport coach). Seated ....... Gordon Kent,.~preijient of the "Blj>lorer Post, .
Evan!, Danny Bibb-(CdM playetl:_ ' ·
" ' PEANUTS LOWRY WINS ·ToU·RNEY
(C...ttned from Pace %%)
T,belma Rutkoskie and Roy
Womack, Betty Briley and
Ray Finan and Harriet
Glalwille and Bob Speak
picldng up first p 1 a c e
awardl.
Second went to Beverly
White twice ud J a c k
Gouclte, Lori Banks . and
Jack Ifmts, Betty ~ey and
Pat strong, and Frank
Becker and Blanche Casb
a.nd Jim Miller with a best
ball of eo.
1bird place finishers at
61 were Lori Banks md
Fred Van Wagner. Fran
Beatt;y ~om Weller, Bea
Anderao.n Md Lloyd Lyons,
Norma Becker and I. Per-
ruocio, Pat Kraft and Art
Klaft, Harriet Glanville and
Bank Gowdy and Pat Kraft
and John Head.
RACE RESULTS
'>
1 ... ,, ..
....,. .... (9erdl) ltA , ..
(J ........ , , ..
A411. AIM ... -~ W... J'm'• ~ ...... """' ""'
Bee Cage
U..CC>'
(1') --
(1') ..... "''· m c (1f).....,
II) • <•> V1llll
1147 0 I•> °""' ._... .. , ,......... """' ......
I. '--• --,. ...... '°"'
..,.,, Mr • .._, c.iw ,.,.
~-AMINlfM.
llVmrnl UCL ' --., 4 ,_, ... Md ... Al...._,._.,....
....... (J L.M!Mr1) -ltM ... Gey l'vrwlt CA ,......, ..... ue •-l-lMY~· " ,_. Tim.-!• ~I. ,. ....... _ ...... ~ ......
All'• IMt. CMlt ,_ ._ ...... ~:.. ...... ,,.. ....... -.i
kt.tdled-•eed Mee.
l .. MTII UCL NlfNt M ....... en turf. f lllles & -. • .,.., eldl 9lld W. C'-lfled ,,__., ,._ 110.000.
l.ul Del Sol (~) ... 1• Ut A·Hw.....,ly CllOlr CYCll&t) 7... 4IO
Sllot'9 IL "lftctY Jr) ,JM T'"-1.14 I/fl
Aleo ltAI~ -A.Court Clrallt, Nl¥ldl Low, All's """--z.tulllfl, I~, h,._,,a Deugllter ti, 'rllldlle M.
A -llftkcrOft • W._, entry. Ho~
n1a.1,.1
All WATll llJfltt
• ........... MM ....... 24• thrt 111 ............
Sii IEITIU l
1745 Newport Blvd. 646-1666
1641 llr*n llml Blvd. ~ 112;1 law leldl ltvd. _1213) 431-9789 129 f. fist St 547,1431
J
25 \Prep Golfers ...
cnTtfltCATW w ew ... .. ICTittout ...... ....
TMI UNDl•ll ... ID ... ....
T~WorkLA
c.tlfV ................ ...,.
0 ................ ....._ ........
'' "'· o. • ... n& ........ "" ... Pen ~"LY'==·-= !Ml .... """ .. ....... -.. .......,. --........... Ml I .... llllCI ti ,....... ... ....... ....... i~ In char-of tbe pro-..... hr. A.lei..-. ton • ._... .,... ~ •v ...... , MIAlaf! ViflO. ~
TnntJ·ftve Ne ,,-P o"f t aided by the club'• Explorer -~= i:l _. 1111a .,.. *"
Harbor and Corona del Mar committee. STAT• ~~ .. ~':14 , :
High School golfers, enrolled Tbe younc men are atu· COUNTY °" OttANGI \ •
ln t1 • l.,.__ ~ dytnc eveb-pbue of 10U· 1.!!!' t=. o:!.. •.:.~A.O. , the na on a unt ...... t' ore ing, lnclucl.lnl ~lf ahop .. '$,., ,.111111c ·~ ~11111 ..,= ._.: GoU Po~t, will be con-u I b ,._ ..... ,,.. ,.... ,....... ........ opera of\, c u o u 1 e ;i..loMd ,..J. ~ ..,_. ~ aplcuou.a lD re¥! Jackett to m an a ct m e n t , coune r:-:' ~ ~""".:':".:..,:
mllHon1 o! t e\l e v I a Ion maintenance, tournament., a .,..-."' -...-., w
viewers c~yl the acor-aupervldon and profesalonal •di~ • "" .... , "-_...
lng placards at e 42ndl'Los golf. ~N .. ":iTNHS WMHfo.o, I .._ Ange~· n.....n If Tourna """'· -"' ""-the ...... LA ...._.. ... ""' ,.... * ..,._. ""' -"'t"' • ~--WIU 119 , u.JW ' ' ell\ci.1 -I tlll 411'1 IM -llt Illa • ment this w tend a t Open tournament the Post c.rtlflcate flfoat .-. •'"""
Pasadena. • membera have served ~· IOFF1c~;..'~ -
The Explorer I Post in Official Placard Buren .... ,,., Pllbltc -~
senior scouting was organi.z. alM1 Scoren. ~~=
ed slx years a• by the . Eaeh yeu their pJcture ~::';....,...
Irvine Coas.t Co\i..htry Club • appears with the tol.D'Da-Publlt!IH 0r-c... 011r ,,...,
and is comprised c\f the golf meat offtc1al.I in the pro-J•"· n •nd FMI. 1• a. u. ,,. 1"•
t.eam members of both high gram with a atory of their LEGAL NOTICf
school.a. achievement. which haa
Their goU coach~. ~ve brought nattonal fame to the
Dye and Gene Carter, are Harbor area.
3 llAYI \1NLYI
'"
LEGAL NOTICE ·
•
• •
....
'
{
' ' "' . ' . . . . . .. ~ . . •••• i1'.. • • • • •
VAltllTY -Onon Welles guut stirs on tile "Dean MlrtiA Show" tonJ&!rt, ill color, at 10 p.m.
on Channel 4, do1ng a magic act and a ~·
ean recitation. Otber gueet.t are linger-dancer, Joey
Heatberton, comial &I> Melvin and Prof. Back-
wards ana county and weltern· singer, Back °""•
and his Buctare>o1.
TELBVlllON VJiwS
Lee Bouvier
DeJ>ut 'Flop'
THI ADA" ATION from Ute old ~t m rie
•• a alow•moviDg drama in wMch the ftve in-
cipall teemed to roam constantly around be•11~
fully tunlllhed ~. _pourinl and tipping driJ.W,
and talking, talking, talking. All ezcept Laura, 'Wbo
· actually bid few lines, whidl Miss Bouvier detver·
ed bl tile ~ttve, almost canttoua manner di the
9tlr Of a bigh school play. ,
-Sbe wu not; however, the only one wNo bad
. tNable in the framework of an implausib-, mGr-
dtr ltOry. George Sanden was .wck in Urie trole of
a miclcllHpd bon vivant wboM ,flfltejt ~be had
~"lMiab Farley Granger wu the amonl ~gtaolo fD whom ta~ wu attracted while be ,.., fJeT-. lnl an dfair with her 11111t. Arlene · s; as .
the aunt, 1ru not treated kindlJ by the. cameraa
bat did succeed in making her anpleuant ~haracter
aeem faintly human. Robert Stack plaJ'!_ d the de-·
tedive in the wooden, exprmionleM 11.lfle be first ~
adopted f~ •-nae Untouchables.." --f
· AS SOON u we learned at m.ld·p«'nt tbat the
mmdered pl 'Wll not t.ura, the sbOW'eettled down ·to permittin« the main characters to ten J:iel. Tbe
reve1'tion ~ ol the murderer at the edd of a very Iona two noww seemed lo come u Mi antidirnn -Mila Bouvier's family connec~t· and her re-cent decilion to become a profess· performer
caused UDUIUal interest in her ini · telmston ap-
·! peannce. It 11 unfortunate that rr the plunte tn a stamng role, lince it takes e and ezperi·
• • ence to convert nen a devoted ateur into a proleaional
IT IS EVIN more unfortun¥, that ebe -and
her fellow performers -had 111" awtward mater· 1al wttb which to wort. ~·the ,,..., tllp-•
ed m llnlfmd, w• hu~ IDOll1lted, tbe •. cllDll'a wort 1n1 maeven. and; ..-. depa ol color
nried U~ froa~I tiabt to .,.., dark tont!lt even cbncin1 la tbe middle of
IC'eDelf.
"t.ura" WU not lnr . . at shakes IS. a SUS·· ~ tale. Min Bouvier d not emerge as a lat· • ter day Sanh Bernbardl t tt w11 ltl1l intereat-
ing to watch her debul -Lau.ra" wu a great
fashion 1bow. Mist .no. er's costumes. from
negligees to street clothes, ere ldP fllhlon.
~.
. .. . . ,, .
..
]
'
JUDGE PMKll
• • r
I "
I
•
)
' -
~
I
•
(
:tfill •iffi . . . ,,
~'k
f• .. I u
"
1f
ptl 111 . i
..
111111 lllES * Piil F•
.• •n1111111·
M.80 8T~8
llllllJ.1£111E
-~··--~~-GOLi' PIUVLmOU
ParadlM Valley C.C.-COUl1HyTl"Meportatfon
P"Oft HOnL~"nOHe .....,....,.,....Tf'AV&~-
ti9~COMI~
thl grrot Americcm comtdfl
THE ,flME OF YOUR LIFE ' \ ............... er... ...... : ............. ~ c.-. •• i .... 646-1111 ' SCI.._ ................. ._.. ...... .....,, ..
. PIC'NUI ROM THI WALLS OP POMPlll
a.. ............ ' -............... ....,., ...... ,,....... ··-
_r...
-ONI SHOWING IACH IVL AT I P.14
MATINll SUNDAY AT HI P.M.
LIDO r NEWPOIT 11.ACH
67J.IJIO 67J.70a1
AT THI INTIANCI TO LIDO ISLE
I See by Today's
Want Ads
• Here'• Moethial --• • Olm'n-"' wtre ....
illC 8IC:ldne 9'lr Ille • --• ~ ~ can !lad a re--
.,aidlM' nW Eut ODMt
"Sll:llQllek'' ,, i t ll JleW
equipment. ........ lllo
• Qdm9e Jank -..... .
wry a ca "!19ble
e A coat nellll a perm.
neat .... -tbQ'Jl tr* riallt partJ. . e . . . . .and YOU llllaall!
tee tbe on.mp ID Tft.AD.
ER'S PAKADl!Z!
e Hen'• a '"Wlllte" IDCltai'-
eycle, .. Ill Jtanpry,
only 1400 ....... troe
barpial
ON A PNfEAD
. .
................................ c ..........
.. ._.Ill I ""-... M ,_ ._ ,..., 1"4 lie -..n.
~ ......,.. ...... 11 .. DAILY rtL01'7 Y•'4 .. _,,..... ._ .................. _,... .............
Springfield
BandatUCI
l)C)('IC)J ~
f.11 i \ .\ c • ' )
NOW AT lofuW flmCIS
F Be f . ..... ................. . or ne it s. ... s... .. htM14M:JI
S1'IVE ii" __ B::;rr= a:HH !:.. tbe Rne1atloa Ill UCI'1 ...,., .. '--• -~
campua Hall Friday ni8btl~~~~~~~~~ll bl a benef1t cancert for the unlvenft1 A11oc1ated
Stadenta' Uni·CamP pro-
lfam.
The concert will start at
I p.m. with doors opening
et 1:30 and 1eets bl each
ttetioD ~OD a firlt come, fint HrVed batiJ. ·
Tbe ' eoacert, which will
teator• a p11chedfllc ll&bt
lbow by Plcc.utJ,y Limited,
if the f1nt In a aerie• of
eVent1 planned by tht UCI um.camp group to raile the
Df!CftlafJ M,000 to~ fO
Sooth.em Calffornia chSdren
to camp 6111 1mnmer.
)09"'
'Glau HoUBe'
Drama Carded
..,A <Bala Boue Shat.
tend," -ori,mat pllJ by Ed BaJdw1n, wm b e
pNl8Dtecl 8'turday nllbt at
tbe UCJ Science Lecture
HaB b)' tbt Operation
Bodtltrap Co m m u Di t 1
Warbbop Tbelter.
gjiJo
--llACll -• ... -............... _ ... .....
Tiie I p.m. production
depkltl 111e m today'• blackr-;;;=::;;==:=;;;~;11 petto. It will be fanowedl,.; bJ •~d l1e a 11ion ~h~---· u4 ... aadlmct.
Gena in Role
(;.-Rowtmdl bu been
M for the ••o.mtller'1
Haftll" -smet ot ABC's a.rlloll'• G«t.1111, ll er ftnt ,..t atlrrtq role
stnce WpDlmilftl ber coa-Unulnl ...,_.... bl Pey-
toa ~.
Kookie Baek
HOUYWOOD (UPI)
Edd ·~" Bnnn re-tm'Md from lt.11 wtalre bl
1tlrnd la -JtaJlaa wttt.
ll"lll, lltelt ti whk:b la "'l'be X1111D1 Gnad. ..
I'll.Ill"-·"'-
"BRILLIANT
CINBMA ART."
.,
---.~. _ .... ,_
He
mctles 1.'ondon's I ... '°" tlln$ to cool
it and call
blm"Sir'1
"IT"
~~
"THI NODN llADI'
....... ,., .......
tOMll
Mllll0-19' ..... ~ AIC.-~ , .. ...,.
"TO Sil. WnH LOft"'
s.1118 ~ --SWlt "MOU 1MAN A
MllACLI"
c...-e e.-' .......
"'f"I WIClD DllAMS
OP PAULA ICMULTr
0.-... 0\11119
~ "lftlWIL&.YI'
Fln1I Wtebl lndt Soon
Week Nlpts 7 a 10 P.M.
s.t .. A..UIJ. 1~7-10
H •ATlt S. tM f1llulou1 ....... cmA.,. J4H
ltecnatltftl of Noah end the Arie, Adllh & Eve,
S.rth'1 S.Crlflce • Mtny Othert.
-.*** SIEPIDIJYD·AYAGARllB ........... DlftllD=l\·•muN
-·---1\1\AUU\11 • .;;; •• , ftlFJl ·IKJWlPAm
• n 11 u111· . Q11A tSaJIT ...........
-.h 7'1r~ .... .,--........... ._
...... -........ JW.flk1r ...
Five y .. ,. In
ttt. ~kl
Positively L..t Week
Week Nights 7 PM.
Friday from 6 P.M.
S.turcl1y & Sund1y
from 12 Noon
"11-8.NIElqut_lf'
"BREllilFAKING!" ~ .. -"*"'° .,,.
.... n II IF! ...... ......... , .
. """'·'°"
'
Protect )'OW.'lelt aplnst m. ~ renta. 'rake advant-
llP ol lnonUft( rental m.
c.'91De· Twe to ctiooee from:
i;. 4 ~2 bt.tha Up
3 'Bedroolnll-2 betbl down.
Low .... ~t-M'J,500
2. 2 Bedrooms · l bath Up.
2 Bedlrooml • 1 bath down.
'38.250
Both an IOnS t.mi Leuebo&d.
Pleue ll/l'for Mt. Robiae.
113-m>
'i.!,,-.:C"
2025 W. Balboa Blvd .• NB
Achllt Occ•piecl
. leallty
Spartdlrc freab home for
the dllcrimlnating buyer.
Lovely patio 6 garden with
eeay maintenance. Walk 1D
"boppl.rc area. 3 bedrooms,
2 baths, 3 yean new, cnly
$32,500.
Mary Harvey
c.1n.n ...... 1 c.. .... c.-...... ,
N-9 ..... ~ ...... Oii ...
---==--.=.......=. ---
VIEW--$61,500
LARGE S Bednlom.
immaculate condition. Maanificent 'fiew.
OPEN SUNDAY 1 • S
llOO PelCldor
VIEW & IAYfltONT
BA Yl'RONT 60', Pier I:
noat. lit time ottered. 4
BR, immaculate • at a low
SM,900.
iohn macnab
642-1235
-------s1a1
OUTSTANDING
INVISTMINT m a 3 bedroom home on a
well land8caped lot, aep-
arat. double 1arage in a
Jovel.y neiibborboocl in New·
part Belabta. 11ie borne bu
tarp liriQr room, 2 nice
.,..., beautiful carpetint
throushout, fireplace, din-
lni room, secluded patio. It
la priced to aeU b)' 0"1ler,
Call
FREE POOl
With thi• dlok:e eutalde 2
bedroom atly American
home. Hur~ ~. hard-
wood noon. WOl'Uhop. Take
OYeT bis FHA loan and pay n&O per month. PITI P'.960
Full Price. Call Rottman Co.
546-82'l2 day or night.
DA YIDSON Realty
VACANT
3 BR + family, l,. bath,
carpet•, drapes, e tl> 1 e to
school• and shops.
Rltr. tJ50 Harbor SB, CM
546-5460 Eve.. 549-1008
PROVINCIAL Taste! Y OlJ
can't l>fet this cosy 3 BR
Mesa Verde home. Dble us-
ed brick frple, shutters In-
side A out, mlJI)' excltinc
decorator piecet, an mod-
em bit-Ins. MESA VER.DE
REALTY.~.
I ..
$120 , .........
Includes tu.ea cm dill ~
three bedroom. 2 bath tatt..:
ily home. You wUl eaJatt tie..
~ • aoothlnc b ar chr o Q,,.4 •
t1oon, the ~ ~
yard surrounde4 bf maf6f.
, tenance free block ~
You'd bettier take a -• On.ly $19,960 fUll price.
I' \I I · \\ I I I 1
~· \f:\\lll
h I \ I • ...
1093 Babr, C.M. 5(6.6W
'!!!!!!!l!!!--!!!!!!!11-·· $165
per month covers all. 4 \>ed-
rooms, 1~ baths. NO DOW1'
OL Large (amily room. I
car garage, hardwood floan.
IT WON'T LAST AT $21.9111.
Colesworthy & Co.·
"' 642-7m •
1904 Harber 81.\l!t .. C.M. -Next to Snack Shop Jr.
OPEN DAILY .W ..
2983 Java Road
fat Yea Verde ~
across from FAIRWAY
large 3 I: family ~
ty reduced for quick ~ •
immediate poaession. ~
eon ... Realty 546-5"'
"Foreter View'' ,..
Model borne by I V A JC
WEU.S. 3 BR 2~ Mths.
family room, l:uxurloul cd'-
pets I: drapes. Landlcaped.
Roy J. Ward Co. j41-!9
EXPERIENCED
REAL E.5T ATE .
SAi.EsPEOPLE
Corooa del Mar ' m excesa of two mJWoo ~
Jan worth of _property to .,.
aold -XJnt Ccmmflllaa .,ti!
DeLancy Red Emt. -
2828 E. ()>Ut Hwy 673.a?re
WAITED
Have cull buyer for 14 f#
JDCll'e units in Costa Mesa,
attLJ>rde S~
Rltr. 646-38'l8 Eve. ~
*LACHENMYD
UBS nan
I MODELS TO m<>ast
SB~~ ~.
b'Oln $23,900
Georce Williamaon, JUtB.J
673-GO OP!lfl."VS
lacll ..,
Nev new Y, ln CdM HS cllllb
3 BR, 2·beth. DR, Ubnry,
bltns, tirepl. Leeee -optMn oK. Only '21.aoo owma
54s.a9
• .. . . . ........ . • I ...... ••••••• ... --..-...-... ,. ..... ,._,. •• ,. ... ,_, .. , 't ......... ,... ··-' ..... ., .... • ...... .. r-•• . ..., ..... ~ .......... .-................ ,, ,. -
..
%6 DAll. Y PILOT
I ,.
.. .
Everyone H•s
Someihing Th.t
SomeoM Else Wants-
HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSES FOR SAL! HOUSIS •OI SAL.I RINTALS
1 too ttun11,..... -..di t• a 1111tr1no leech 172.S Aiift. ""'-nh•M' 1000 M_B_A_YEID--E-$7.00 TOTAL DOWN-l'OR ale or rent. executive ........ aoo c-.... 1100
INC.UDING ALL CLC6ING l;ne home, la3t LR, 2 br, .;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;=;J JOJDAt Pl.AJA ML,_ J 11t ._ Ja!i8.. .. " C=..
•----·• 3 8 ,. ..__ _ __..... COSTS TO VETS · mildnl, other extna, Ila• Parle LW. DELUX1: ..... 1 la. ft. vi.w J-. _ __. _ 1 ' .... ~::m, ;..J;;~ Better llvhll In Smoc 1l'te ed la lanai. •prof. ~~ ~ ,s.ctlen ~ Allt A25. + .al. '* to ~ ~ ar & .. ~.. ·
on lovely cul de sac ltNtt. area. 4 hu&e bedrooma, plus ed leclced yard, lcwely crui.t Cpta/l)rpl, Bbllnl, tinplace, n_... fU01. ~ •• W. ~ prieH. 111· •~ 2 6 JU. l~ ~
Only 3 years old. Proftalon-la.mlly roo1D .• 2 baU.-wttJi lb'ftt. 642-79Crl Clonuaullity Pool. ..,.._ ...... ~ No • a o,m lat a la • ~ .-. 2 -i..
c;.,,.ral 1000Geft•ral . ~ \
WE NEED
YOU! -"y , __ _. ___ _.. --iRi.1--new bMutiflJ.I aood carpet.. l.2BR-lb9!ht·DIO/Mo. ctiD*t.a, •-. .,...;..;,. ..... 111-------.................. ~ ..... u...._. 1"-....1--1 i )a.A .--. ---veer_.._,, _ _.-="' ...... nstocn drapn and carpet.'. Ina wfth mat~ dnpes. ~·" um Hv 2. s Bil• 2 batJ» • IPllt 1". 1111 ......_ CM, .,.. ~· ---In a few short years SPRING REALTY has 0n1y $33 450 LUlh landlcap1111 lllrrOWlde $250/Mo. Cett Mlle ~ :;r ~ All FROM •·50
;become a leader in sales on the Palos yerdes $.33. 400 this endoted ya.rd. Buy o1 I Bit, 2 ba. Cpts, drpt, 1 3 BR. ~ batb1, ,.._,, • 41~ Sl5 • Bal·..__ ~... 'Mer. 11111 Maple, #3
,Peninsula. because of U.s new a~gress1ve ap-I t))e month. Aikin& $19,200. FV area. $250/Mo. - -ptYU' MIJ'. 2%14 Co.llep #2
•proach to Real Estate Marketing. Spring SPRING _ "-.~. •u after 6 pm OMy fllO 8ALSOA * ~ LGJ Bft. Galqe. Sln&Je unit sells both development and resale homes. -.. ,. lack a.y AIM L....._ T••••we 1 Bl>RM Apta. Olckr folks 2 8edroOm pra1e bltns S90
we have now expanded to another prestige Realty Co. HouMe Fvrnl9hed ~.::· 2 beUI, Uldln. mt Jolee ~:,.. 1lil =. ':w:. E. Balboa ea 642-mO '
Office locati·on in NewJort Beach, Orange L. -.. -i Nnr ..-..... •• OIOJCE MESA VERDE Ri-642·7252 AnytlrM lent•I• te S ... re -fB.38l5l E\'es: ~ ---..-Co. Area. We offer pai on the job tra~g, ··• HUN·fu:_~CNEBEACH IAY a •EACH KARIOR TOWNJt008I I Bil Dnltn. lqcJ&ed pr. professional !Danagement ~nd a stimulating vr,, • CIRL Roommate wtd. ltu. 2ZlT llu'tlaf 119d., C.K Sl.25. ~two pets. ~
environment. If you are licensed and moti-• For Lease 7682 E.O~GEJl dd\t or workint strt. CM· a.Icy, Inc. SUS~ C a.~a.•-
vated to earn $12,000 yearly and interested. wltll option 4 It family 842-4455 OPEN EV'FS. NB area. 1146-1719 alt 6~. Retda1 peJll . ~·~ ...._,.,. Belch 5200 t_ room Pacesetter In "Upper e G·' EN M & 8 • a wknda. 2025 W. Bal~ Blvd., NB New-Uaitl Now Realllll in joining an all male career minded orgaru· Mesa" area. Recently •re-:.5 ~ l"w1allhed Ba~ •' CAalll • iation. we want to talk to vou. Call Jim Gull· novated. Vacant approx). YOU own the land! i'EMALE m mo utUltiu 3 BR. 2 Ba.; nr. W~ ... ; ud 1 BdnD U.nlt8 ~AT SUPS AVAIL let.or Ron Walldau 642-7252 SPRING REAL-mately February 1st. Two a&ory with llviq rm . paid. House to lhce. can Plaza. Spartcllna new blt·llla, mo Newport BWd. 2 A 3 BR • 2 Ba
TY CO. 1801 Westcliff Dr., Newport Be~ College RHlty 544-SUO d.inq rm.; ldtch. bas bit· alter 6 PY C.d.M. 673-l«i4 carpet; redecontioo, plul MldaU!oe bl' Hotpo1nt from S'Z50 mo. •
C Continued from
PaCJe 25)
EASTSIOE-CLOSE IN
Perfect in every rffllt'Ct -3
bedrooms 1-kinC size -2
baths -botb Wlht showers.
New vinyl noon in ldtcben
& balbs. Excellent carpet·
l.ng and drapes -Large llv·
ing room with stone ftttplace
-new all electric kitchen -
Stparate IUV!ce room 220 '1red. 1 block to shopping Ir
ilhoob. -$29,950. Easily
Qna:nced.-
RESIDENCE --
PIER AND SLIP
;; year old 3 bedroom, 2 baths.
New built-In• In kitchen, car-
pets and drapes, newly dec-
o;ated throu&hout. Pier A
al.p for boat up to 42'. -
t .500 or owner will trade
cnaller Newport Hei&hts
me. -Try anything.
646-7171 544-2313
; Open Ev .. 'tll 9
t!SHE Q EAL
·E .STATER . .-:
VlEW AID
t RB.ilATIOll J you enjoy FR.Fml AIR, a
PEACEFUL HA VEN and
Cle G1lEEN HIU.S OF THE
WPD BAY call ua tri:ll*d-
liatel)'. Just 1tep outaSde W.
~o bedroom, 1" bathbame Jilh puttJ.n& sreen. 2 poo1.a,
tadmlnfoa A abua1e board
~t all with NO MAIN·
1'ENANCE, and you hue lt.
Lock it up and ao for a trip
4nd be assured it wfJJ be
\here when )'Oil return.
CNLY $27,950.
r 220e.1.,.. ...
r Eves:Call ~
Children'• P.,ldlM
12' x 21' Den
th &}au doors to rambling
tios and lm'ie encloled
"'11' yard. Llvina room with
I REPLACE, 3 BED-
. , 2 BATiiS. DINING
OOM. F'.A. heating, 2 car
arage. CUl de sac atrttt.
.... STEAL at $71,750. Excel·
r a··~
fcOSTA MESA omCE
~ '20'.?9 Harbor Blvd.
.9491 Open till 9 PM =ts .
l BR Hom-.-$11,950 Vi baths, cpts/drpa, bll· pn.s, doubl. raraae. ,
~IR Home $27,750
baffis, tam. rm. frplc:.
ice Eutal41e location.
S· IR Homt $41,950
ftEW 3 batba, tam room. 2
C8. dining room.
.. a.Mceardle ltttn..
N.wport Blvd., C.M.
11'21 Eves. 6*4&8f
In lto¥e, dlsbwa.sber; 3 Bil, bdwd. 1ln. Ada1tl A teem $22.SO \AA. Up •. ~p~~ CAMEO SHORES O..,.r1tt-Movlng E1it rumpus rm. (may be 2 ,.._,..,., a.ach 2200 only, no pets. $240 Mo .• bid. WY-. ........
Mesa Verde Republic Home more bdrm1.); 2 baths; .fut.. ._1 ...... _ C water A la1m mowina. · •Studio • Id -. TENNIS-ENTERTAINMENT 310 t Bal Ptllll VIEW Beau 3 BR, 2 ba home, din ly land.leaped: dJdiiondrD, --~v-. ~ • lad uw. A ,_. ..,.,. IOLSA-CHICA a HllL (On the Ba)' 2 bl trom !'errJ)
with S bedrooms, 4 batha rm. 2 !)8tloa. lullh lnd.cp'g, patio $27,500. Owner 879-9.152 '2 BR home with llip DELUXE 1aree home In ex.-e Maki Servtce • TV ...U. ADUL~S 147-1414 BEAU lge 2 BR Studio tne
step down Uvini room ww epta drps. • .1r1"8 $33,500 Eve. fadlltiea. Lease at . clU.llve B•.,..__. P-' built • New Cafe a a.r n---"' A L eo..n.. t a. .._ ~--'"~ .. ,..._ __ --$300/mo. or Lease/Option ..., ... ~-._, • ...... N~port ..-.... ,._ -* FUIN 2 IR =.:' _}'_.t·1111....., .,.?.. ,'!., ~ fonnal dlr4ng area 195J "._.....,." Or. vorw-. ADULT HOME 673-JS"l S48-6956 Ina, carpeWd. A lmmacv-.,, ~-u1""' -""" ncma ,.._._ ,,,... ,_ -
recently l't'deconted sts.3267 l BR 2 beth, lar(e cuklHac BA y a BEACH late! VJ(Ut $«11)/mo. • LARGE 1 BR. fl.Ina or..... & IACHEL"'R is. S201 Rinr St., NB. Apt.
inside It out HUGE R-4 tot. Small bouae. Jot Includes covered peUo, Realty, Inc. lease to quallfled tenult.. Luse Bachelor flam Gr • Utila indudeG..,.. 8 . Avail Feb lat.
heated IWimming pool Cub deal onzy. room for pool, PMeled llv· (Rental Dept.) Prindpals 4'Gly plee.1e. Rutb fQrn. Nflce Jllmlture. Gu, 6 Hr. ~ SPACIOUS. COiUiOltiiileO 2
a sreat family home! 2190 Placentia Ave. CM Ins roo~ fireplace, fenced 2025 w. Balboa Blvd., NB PardoU Rltr. Ki•. lnclry. 2850 lA Salle, IC-BO I02 Knoxville Apt I); H.B BR near Bay and Oc-.
$92,500 landacaplJli. $4250 MOTe m. EVeL 546-1177 r-... m4 ., • ,.._;_drps bJ irw. Yesl
Call Wally Hallberg "'"'"'enta n 44 ..... -th. 309 33rd Fumlsbed 2 BR. N ... __ --_.. ..... "... · t· 'Y Evea: 642-4290 Meta Verde 1110 ~ ... 96l-44n vwqe....,.Rw Utll. pd. $155 mo. can ewport _.. • .-. ~~~ .... · ROO~t& Apta for Rent Sl60. 6"1!>-5749 or 6'TJ.l.91S
--------Esta•-m--.... ... -6 642-0596 Ol' sto.'346 «• ..-TO ...._. .. .., ' cuo...-,..., Dy, wk. mo. sn,ia. l It 2 BR 2 Br lower Dplx, Nr oc.a. EVERYONE llhould see thla '"' .. -vuau .... , 540-6030 _, ""-c.IU.. ,...,, BO cblldren or P • t • ~ bile bc::b. All linens a \llila. Frpl pea drga '
REALTORS
673.4400
---------
beautitUl FOUR BEDROOM H.B. Sey ar Jeqe •BR, 2~ 119, "LeMe $150. %.tf4.A 8tata COMP•..., M,_, •gar, c • '~ N"' -. ~-~ .. ..,, ,._ ,...,,.. v.u:.... ref. Sl50 yrly. Avall Mar • .,, ~ :::!0= pur= 9UICK MOVER CONN ., Mar mo ~ ~r; m..~ :r .: AYe. wv•f'll6-I lll • Utb St HB 536-4170 D 38th St 213: Ml-1921 bull~ In ba.r, ~ famUy JI.lit Hated 4 BR 2 bath, BR &~5011 daYI A wkqda. ONI llDIOOM I ADULTS Only. Utila pd! ~ BAY I Lovely ~ 1-Br •
U al inum ~ 2 .. clean A attr. Near e.m. Bristol aree, I 11111 CAMERON WW . _.r, Pa .. -, .,CA..-. room, 2 bat.hi, flnlJhed dou• carpe • um COVe!'ni n2 Jfello~, Corona cJe ud .i..-.,.., '-!""' uu .--1"1 ble prqe, all bul.ft.\nr., nloe patio, cloee to acboola 6 0 1 M -n•• Back Bay J240 an -... _... per ./ <Or Untumlahed) INCL • urn.1 ~.
patio, outdoor llfhtlne A ex-ahoppq. Be quick on thla B• efAL:r. .,,.,... '" montb. Abo lft our bet.ch. 542-2481 eves. pertly ~ Owner ()(le! Only $71.SOO. AC•" • 4 BR 2 ba. Back Ba)'. l"r'pl, 288S Mendola or 565421. Laguna D 3 BR 3 ba. Frplc
purcbased a 11ew home -P1ul Jones ltNlty HOUMet Unfurnllhed d/w, ww, dr.pa, 'Jll)ol, tncd yd. ATKINSON PEEBLER APTS ool. patio $250 mo or~
will sell for only $24,950. Al-147-1266 Eves. IC-5844 C t ~ llOO 2 Yl"I old. S2:i0 mo. S.7985 1 Br Furn, lndr:J, adults ~~VI~~ ~d ~~ .~ dn p~t. R.ltr. S'IS-21m 4'
IO ~y uawne matins I OS • Corw 4tl Mir nso 687 Victoria. CM. 5G-6131. C.out Rwy. ~ Beach XTRA larle living rm Ir t:n ~~ ~ lDcl~ Worldnt1 Min'• frlen4J WISH to rent 2 or 3. BR • WII..SON WEST • 4M-9ll'J6 bl'. stove, rdrla xmt ioc. Y
to IODle 11 a "dill"! Bat to BL.ACX 5'0-llSL $17,950 t\111 pr1ce for 3 BRa house or duplex with yard 2 BR, A d.en 2 ba, trplc, 1 Br., Utll .fd! Hid POol! OCEANFRONT beautilulq leue •. mOJTT
many the problem la "fill". 1% bath, newly painted lq for 2 small cblldrm. Up to elec ldtch, 1 1'Ut to bcb. Adults. •mo, Ml-52'1I f\lmlabed 2 BR 2 BA, 3 BR-% BA. Nr oceen 'Ir
THE Pill
U fOU have more kidt than I ·-1> ... , 6: out Ir ,JWW sold carpet-$125 without lease. Ex. local Adults. $275. No pet.a. E.tllide 2 BR. Elec bltna, leue. $350. ~ dlopc. $190 yrly. No pets.
bedrooms we have Three ... -... • -lni· F.aq tmna. references. 64&-Mn r7J..21664 patio, PJ'*I•, Adults only. S48..('M97 wkd)ia, 673-6769 eYn --·B n..1-... ...ii .u .. 1291 , ALi "'
"Uk1 new'' 5 BR I beth Pacific Sbcc'el Realty 3 Bedroom 2 bath, carpets, ~ ..,._ -,,_.
ho _...... •• "'--. E ,.. ... -d-fl I --"' built Lide l•le 3351 BACH '8 •. u-u .,_ .,.,. Apta. Unfurn!tW 5250 -Coren• del Mar mes .. _ new carpe.., 3 LG BR. 2 ba, fain rm, ~ _._... vn. --•• pea, rep ace, ...... . .... ...,. , ...... ~
buie built-ID ldtcbma, f.a.m. -nee porch. Newly cpt'd. ins. Walle to tchoola and * 2-BR.. DEN. i.BA. per mo. Depolit required. General 50db
ily l'OCllM, land9caped • Xlnt flnancinc. Oner. TOP Sa• _.._. •N aboppinr;. $1'15 per montb. S!Dft, ReJr11, Dbll! aar-ms Panoria St. n.. I ft. f
11Prinldettd yards A a total 54f>..(1254. "'.,.....,.. 642-01'17 age SS.mo. * ~ l 8R. ADULTS. Want Dft VEN DOME -* u.AP.ARnaTMENTSe ~· *
down payment to f\t iJJDOlt Now 4 fMl'I In a row few C.EAN Modem 2 BR near appredatlte S75 mo. tmanl.
any pocketbook. SillO total Newport leech 1200 1iuntinaton Beech. Board of Wilson It Hart>or $110. Unf. Huntl ...... leech MOO 541..al wtekda,ya.
down-a.ald.n& $28,500. R.ealtora·1a 'witb Paul Jonta Stove. Refric. inc 2 childrtn 1 BR rum Abo 2 BR uni JAN. SHCIALI SPECTACULAR VIEW
•
COATS PIER A. MD FLOAT Ralcy. Shoalda't you Ult No dop. Or $125 furn. LOVELY ex lrs 3 BR, 1119· Cpta. drpa: bltna. Mo"· 125,\ 2 WKS FREE ltENT Waterlrosu-ntfv~lab·,~t & For you boat lo¥en plus a where the actbl Is! ~ Deya &42-2531 Eve. duplex, m nykln qit, drpa, Shalimar Dr 5e38llO Mab reservatlona NOW ,... ,. .. w
WAL LACI dellgbtM larp waterlnlnt Pwl J~ Realty • NEWLY DF.CORATED :v,~ud, g:;. ~ ~ BAaiELOR ~ incl utll. Nr Newly Redetoreted 2 ~E2. =~ 8~w.
llEALTOU bome. Owner la~ ara M'l'·U66 ~es. &42..sa44 e Lup 2-BR boQle. Cance park's. $195 mo. Adult Harbor Shop Ctirter. SCMm a.. .. ah111.-., Park M20. Mo. A up -SS&.:il.O up
546 4lft~ M 11 • t aell. Tremendous POOLS! POOLSt • Fqec:I. SOO "Corlr' Ml-6391 evn. 131-1.m a.,. CWr & Girfe Club 2525 Ocean Bl•d.. CdM .'°"'9 '""'""' terma offered. ExcepUonal 5 BR 3 bath Executive Home. e 133 B. 21at stJaf Rear. JlSO LOVELY J JIR.. 1~ ... Bacbelor e ........ J ... -2 Ba '13-1188 -for flD1her lDfo ~ at '80,000. . Alao S Bit 1• ba1' • Al low S BR, 2 ba, i.car p.rqe, 2-cty OJJldo, Opel, dr1ll; fumilbed: .., ......_ • 8'rb Pool • Put.I.,._ Her}n&ll Trott. Mg.·
41 $25,500, drpa, -cPt's. bis fenced 1tove. ref.rl&. washer, dryer. • MUC85 e • npl Jndi•llndl')' fac1la HAFFDAL REAL TY back yard. CiJdm welcome. Pvt patio A puit'1, Po o 1, e Adults Ir Family areu 1 lllTS -"Hom~ to Match Income" rzio mo. 546-0rll clbbee, tennis ct. 19830 Bu· Newpet1 ... ch 4200 1145 Aftahelftt Ave.
Have 7 dfan onUa ln &ood 1740WAltNER142-4405 MESA VERDE l bdrm. l~ ah3.rd. 9G.4lOJ. .,,. OCEAN-POIT C.M. &:2-2SZ4
rental lttl. Showa excellent ·~ ~~~ BY Owner. 3 BR. 2 ba, Bola ~a~ carpen-ted drya~ I Free Rerit1I S.rvlce
n.
----------
net retum. Owner "t1tb\a ,,,_..,.u vrLf"I "'"~· Pk ~..... 10 mo. r. •dff· Wallcer A Lee lDc APARTMENTS anxious to sell with mini-REDUCED •-·-•,,.,, 3 BR 2 • Nr Oougiaa, mA. or bt & last. 54().1774. '1682 ~Al ... A:. . ltlALL Y NICEI
.
ON TEN ACRES IENT
J Roome,.._mlture • ~... save $1000 ·.Auume 51'"· .......,. ... mum down or will tract~ part Ba. borne on 2 Iota; can use 89'2-l~. UTIL. pd., 2 br. Fam 11 y, ~ Beach Bachelor A 1 Bit Alt.
ot equity for cleall 3 bedroom u 2 apts. Rm. to bld. Near ma tr adlll, 1.2 cbld. Frpl., IC-4455 Open E\'es. Completely Fura. $25 ....... l a 2 BR. r urn A Unfaro
Frplcl I Pri/Patioe I Pool.I
TennS. • Contnt'I Bldst. •
bole .PUtVGfffA. home in Newport or Costa 8-)' It ocean. Wlll ee1I all or Fount1ln V1lley 1410 Indy., $140 I $50 refnd. dlllt. MODE.RH l BR HOUM. * Htd swim POOL
Mea ar8. Call fOI' detatla. ~ Int. or trade. 121 4lat St. Yd care, trees, 2335 Elden. Ww cpt.s, adulla onJ1. No * COIDpl R«reation Room
l'ULL OPnON TO BUY
No depollt o.a.c.
62,000 OWNER 673-2719 "AS 1s• 1 BR. Rear bowie. rro. Stove pets. Ooee lo ~°'"" : =~:=t-~ BELOW niA $21,400 appr. 17094 LAUREL, F.V. 6: refrts avail. 5ngle work· $115 per mo. Call 5.16-2615 * Refrilentor
Hone of C•lllrs
517 'W. 19th. CM. 541-lCM
9IXI Sea LAne, CdM 544-2811
tM&cArtbur or. Coall HWJ)
:l93 E. 17tb St. 646-4494
Evenlnga 541·1875
H~RIOR VIEW
HILLS
Corona del Mir
Loak • built homes located
In the Soothland'a most d•
slrable A fucinatinc area. Sc.boor.' Calif, lrv1Pe Cam·
pus just momenti away.
Semlbl>' priced from
$33.900 to $43,500
LUSK HOMES
DirectJona: MacArthur Blvd.
from Paci.tic Cout Hwy. ar
Newport Fwy. Tum on San
Joaquin 1Ji11a Rd •• tbeJ1 fol-
low aJina to modtl aree.
ASSUME GI 6% • 3 BR
Carpet, drape9,. mcloHd
Heated pool. Walle to' beach.
Owner 962.45'17 after I lJlll
Spadoua 3 BR 2 BA. faml-Good 4 BR home, carpets., toe lady pref. ~ Maeno-LARGE :: Sk., C'Oftvert. den. ~ kltd\61, bltlna trp. let drapes, elec. blt ·Ina., aer-Ila. Apply 3IO M~UL few blocks frotn oceu. $165 • ~ nnae Cott Mela 5100 2 BEDRM apt .• frpl., view,
lot. Owner 548-!M09. vice porch, near 1cboo1, 3 BR. Eutakie. Cpta, dr\11, lea.. No peta. Mrs. ea.. : ~ ~ , __ f______ baJcoOi A NI deck. SMilD ~
ST AND out value. J BR. ~ VACANT · $23,950 • reduced bltns. Avail Feb ht. $170. groin.. .5J6..251t. $llS • $135 mo. ~
BA. tam. rm. lee ft1c1 yd. from ~R9!°8 THIS' 422 Walnut * 146-ms Huntl_._ 210 Cedar St, Newport HAllOI Lido Isle
123,500. 10% dow11. Ml).2!M3 $PINDELL REAL TY 2 BR. fenced yard, M-1 ione, ........ ..-. <acroa fnlm Ocda)
WESTClJJT Olodominlum W t M li ~ ~ mo. H1rlaeur --6G-Gl3 • llEENS 2 BR, 2 ba. frt>lc, bit-In kit· $34,950. 1509 eomwau ~. amer a ap a. 1'1'90 Whittler. CM IAYCLIFf MOTEL cben. MWl1 dee. $225 JD().
Prine. only~ fMf;9194 SUNSn IEACH 1455 2 BR Bouae iD C.ourt Pvt. :: BR CONDOMINIUM. All szs Wkly up. J..ndry, 1V, RAOJEJ.(JJl _ tJNFURM. Also· Dtlwce .B&yfront 1325
Dover Shotts • BY OWNER Patio, ww cpta. drpl. dlap. buflt-im, twlmmlna pool, Maid""· C'l5 N. Newpcn ...___ $l QO mo. Wiest, Bier. 6'1>272l.
5 t.b', 4 119, tpeet bay SMALL 0 C E A ?-: FR O N T 911-D W. 11th St. 646-55115 tennla t9Urt Ir 20' boat dock. W1NTER Special! For sep. lTVllll U'Pm'AIRS, 2 BR. 2 BA, frp1c 1
View, trl-lev. 642-2290 home, 5th Street. fireplace, 2 IR. Gar.,. $115 e:/mo. Bltr. C'AD M\lrn7 1 Br. btd pool. nr bell~ ~lnd."a~tnmJRNa8~~ .... • • Cllltd. drpa. blt-.lna, nfris .
DELUXE NB Duplex fully !~h °!,.0 ~anGE~ ..... ~na Adult.a.. • Mf>.5729 MT~ Nl'..2531 or evea. to $120. S.-J035, ~ • • ~nm. $225. mo. Leue. 673-1112' ·.!
leased Nr ocean and lhcp. ueac '-·ol'N· .,....,, .. • __ ...... --*2 !~ to oceu a..tacl . Poa1a. ChUd Care Huntl_._ leech 5400 1 Low dn. S4&-<m7 wlld)il 'Ul S. S. AN a.a-.. l630 NNc•WlfllpefllArtrt ~ .... vv uu.1.... $125 ~ ........ · ..... s.m. Altf aa10 m.e1 w.m · .......... ~ • Sbopplns -I
Newport Hgfa. l210 3 HSE Oii ~ac A-1. Qec TOWNHOUSE Leaae or SaJe: ~°'"' Yr-round :: = ~allt ~ 2 Br for~. $4440 total Unftlndsbed. 3 BR., 2~ MICE dean 2 Bedroem ....-. ..... IEACHWOOD · ~ ACRE 5 Bedroomt, 3 Bath yrly lnc· Xlnt l:nVnt. 548-TlG ti.., frpl., ~ .• clnps, bit· home, hDced Jard. C09ered ,!.!'~ ~ ~ 54Hl1I 1
CUJ-de-Sac St Death~ ha-m.. 2 car pr., beated tJOOl patio. Wall to wall ~ .._... -··~ ApalitNllt H .... s · 1
band forcea Ille. $45,000.' Tuttht 1640 ~ Aft 5 ptn A wlmdt stove._ buUt-ln dlah'tnlbet. S BDRM. 2 Mtbl, cm MY. PrMtSp Mdlr9a j
64G-7041 br 842-1221. Owner. call: l46$S1 One cllll okaJ. Jl35 water NEW.~~ 8a·T1• Private patloa. Near 8e9cb.
3
Mr: Walter. SANTA a.ARA • Gershon I AVAIL FEB, JST. ?!,~..U.ble F-eb. L C....... .. Mir 42IO u &l'llUlftUE Golf and Sboppina. .,!
Bn. fam, din. 2 ba. cust Imp. 4 yr. 4 B~. 2~ be, V.-atierfroat. ad.boat, 3 BR. ,,_.,,,;,, ""' .... ,..,. 3 IR 2 betha. frplc
home. Top Hats 'c>catklb. ~ 2400 aq ft. $34.950 FP. 1 2 badll .... to Be.cit, te. =1 = ___ == ..... ====3705= Wiater ........, Jtadala 5AIDIN Am. 2 IR' 2 beths,,..... ·j
Wl
yrs old. $31,000 w/109' down. 544-elS6 niil club, PoOl (Npt Sin) .......,.._ JAMAICA INN HOTEL 1 Bit • Wilk fn c1ee1fs 1
1
j
Coat1 Mee. l 100 Bier. 67Wll50.. ~lCll rm mo. Ml-21m. MON~ BAY AREA M br • U mo, m.G PwtlDia aanoandiriCI W
--------L..,... lwh 1705 NO matter .... a '8. 1'llO 2 BR & ,_,~be, cpta. drpe NEW 1111eWw A1fO. <Je. CJ1 ruJUfJSHED BAatELORS (.2:. ~ ~~ j 5.3$::\i. c;;-c::v::IVI~~ ....,!~ ...... ~Mon ~.!'.rr"':,,~= ,':}..':'.,,.,"".:"',.."';,. !:;:>..;:•.,.-'"'"':'.;:;!.:.;•BR 14H1111 or.-W ;I
vea new bullt-ln kitchen Oceu vi~. cuatom 4 Bdrni a.at, blt on 4 le\'ela. 3 BR., Carpets, dr1lpn. prate 2 BR Townhae. Lee $130 mo. i
wfth,blrdl cab ....... -l'A 3 betba and aleyroola. Ul' fonnal dJn rm. IW1kt'D Uv c..t, Mlle J100c..ta Miia ... Cella .... 11• 11th a Senta Ana. C.M. W&lller. dryer incl. Cpta. ~I
.._.., .,..._ 1' SlmpJ ~ 330 -nn, F\amltine Fplc. cut MM233 ' · · 646-SiS4.2 Cal M'l'...cl.I evn. A wlmda. tuma~. Larre lot • ll US ee e ... .....,,,. maJtie floon. Truly UDUIUal
wtth block wall. ~ IM,000. Owner '15-07Sl i*erlne at $55.500. d.11' -0 il '-j ~ TJ .-C ~ ~~!1111!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11\1!!!!! a.EAN 2 BR..,._ Cpts, drpl,
642-790f Lide .... 1*51 MlllklD Rlt1. CM.a731 P'-" l.'Qt.I ~,., 'ft· J;l<r ~ bltns, tJOOI. lddl OK, Sll5
• 3 BR. 2 Ba., eep. den: lnlse 11lree bedroom, 2 IJPlta1n S l w-r. Sercsmb mo. 962-%10t Jot, baut. lndlepd. 1000 Sq. G000 LOCATION w/bath. 1 <or den> w/bath 0 •• w .... ,, ?eel WonlhaltforaChcJctc ./ ADUL~ oo1y. UTILS lld! ,
It. brlck/concrete .. tlo, '91> Cbannblc 2 Bel, bit.Jn kit ~%9. Ses-r-te -. I 1'7676 CAMERON
al. aMdf gal'Clecl, bmt.atn: ,.tio. Much '* o1 QuarTJ trance. Uv!nc rm w/~ ./ COr FUrnllhed)
lrlck planttn: ..,. ~ ni.. M1&tlt trade far laraw place, din rm, llDall laun-
Jd.: lath/pluttr: ..... (bd.. bame Gil Udo We. .. ,ftl .., .... prep. 10~ down.
fin.): RllW bplc., llM-bw. I\.. C. GRElll, Reabar Owner-. $21.SOO • • • $7T12
By Owner-. $2S,8. .ac7t MH Via Udo rB-tfOO I BR hocne, 2 BA, pedlUed
Priced to~-Qum. deD. uaed brick flr~ IQa 3 BR, l~ba, -... oo ..... lllan4 lSSS 1.U'te ll~ room. II.rte
Ip quiet lot toiaS c,_, BALBOA Jll.Alf'D praCf. Ocee.n Ir ~
bltna. •1-hH• C11*. Pr°'*'1 Prictcl view. ~. $31.500.
marble "8ltiel, .11t dbl ..,, ud F\Duced ... m•
,,,,i lndlcpd ' a t I o. 152 ,..,,._ ,_..St.~-..._~ ._-~I Jlr, 1" '-· '--... ..__. _....., Wfttle ,..... ... ""' to :::::::z:::= .___ 110i
So. .., • M ~ •• ODO ====:== DD •priced ..... ~ IXTMOttDtNAIY
R..11~. Bal la: IDalT V11W1
UW. S llEDROOll BCM1 "" .... Olliiil9I. ~ ' ..,_ ....., .. ..,
,....,Dz ....
.. , I • I 2 i1f --·-..., nn.LPRQ 111;9
~Oil Oiied
1MS n:Llmf U'.Al.ft
CJU) ...
'
IOOMS POil UNT
$12.50 .. week ••
ltlated ,... Mail ....
W1t11s fumWM
TV KltdMDett.
Von:L TAHlTl
~2129
$50 Km ,, / llltdl. fV wt
llldr7 Jrtv. Ht .oa:. wan,
Inc woma JI • 3D aal,y.
540-l83I • , l I
• nua: J\*11 Locatt. • arca&·JI •• Ulla.taar,QI ~ -
-----~-------·---
PARAMETRICS, •n
•t•bllahed commw-
cl•f firm has Im~
•te openlnp for the
following perm•nent
positions:
Experience ~\r.;.t,
Llber•I fringe IMtneflts
' PWMETRKS
BUSBOYS
Dey shift, over 18.
Apply in person
-9-11 and u
REUBBI E. U£
NEWPORT BEACH
: l t I 8S£ decr'ew requlred. Ex.-•
~ as l\eUabWI.)'
~ bl• cimslt ana-
l)'lil ~Will~
sider Cll'C\llt Deslan Enf"
jneer ...... to.en-
ter field t( ~illty.
WUl pe$rOl in small
profealonat aroup where recocJlltloo of c:ompet·
en«;e ii CObll)lClloUI. Will
be expelled to all pbasea
of reUabllJtY and will re-
ceive tralblnC that will
lftpue bldMclllal f o r
mut.aC!;lnellt.
Apply "'" Ch•mber)ln
· COUIS
RADIO (OMPANY
19700 J•n>bo,.. Ro.ct
Newport luch
ISU600
All•qp!.ca"'I Nviewed on
merit with • ., blu toward
Race, Color, Creed or Sex.
IUTRUMBIT
TKHlllCIAll
Auembly, calibration
and repair. ~ence in
camera repai/ deairable.
'·~ i•Ji.te ~ for M~·-lblpedtior ex·
perienced In tbe ~ I
tiOn of complex ma-
chined parts. auemblya.
and 1111><1111embl$1, close
tolet:ance toolln& • 0 d
fiXM'el. 1?11 lhlft, per-manent.
COLEMAN
EnginHrint Co., Inc.
3121 W. Ctntr•I Ave.
Sent• An.
546-1600
An equal· C1>portunit)'
miployer
IOBISOll'S
lewporl
ttn . .,_... (ett:
• litdlen Porters
•Pol Wnher .
• Bus'°'
• Janilon
• Stock Men
Applv,. Personnel
10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
PASHIOH. ISLAND
Newport leech
An equal opportunity
emplo1er
TBBYPE
OPWfOR
Two years recent heavy
teletype operience pre-
ferred. M\Jlt be able to
work any lblft. ' Apply Pit Folsom
133-0600, Ext. 2111
COlllS
RADIO co.~
19700 Jembor• Rd.
Newport leech
All applicanta reVlewed on
merit wltb no blaa toward
Race, Qilor, Creed or Sex.
Yount Fry Cook
or Kitchen Trainee
Seek1na ........ llllltldaal
witb .QDe '° ... ,.....
11\ the --of plmt .. lip ucl ~ .. .,... •
Dltftt relocatioft. w t 11
work ii) fadJIUes ll'ff °' I
_ rapldlJ Al he com-
paey.
COLLIS
RADIO CC»tAIY ~ I ·1
19700 Jimbo .... IW. I
. •Newport leach . i
applicants re.Ylewed an
merit witb no biu toward
Race, Color, Cteecl or Sex;
R·adiographe~
(SECOND SHIFTI ·
Muat be capable of operat. •
Ing 150 KVCP equipment,
film denlopmat A:~
pretatioa. Mlnlrnum 3 y~·
required. Mu.st have work-
ing knowledge ol MlL-0.
60'l1 MIL )g, TR-'453 A
AS. TM standards.
PACIFIC
SCIENTIFIC CO.
1346 S, S~te Coll'ie Blvd., :
Anaheim PR 4-St211 ·, An Equal OpportuDity _
t ~ ..
I : l ' .
I
I
I I I l
I
I I
i t
I
EmploJel' : :
DISHWASHER
DAYS
APPLY IN PERSON
S.11 AND 3-5
Monday t.broQgh Frldq
181181 E. l&
NEWPORT IE,ACH
EXTRA CASH -Men, no m'.
feetmeflt • wor'k run CJI" pert I
time •llinl ttithe~~;11 KNAPP A
SHOES. !lira• 1r1p c.lOlllllllll•!
siona phm boaua1 plm
insurance. ~OUI .iboe
perlence NOT MCellllU'Y -
Mite R. L. .le.llllim, Kna,P
Bros. soo., 6401 E. notllla
St., E. Loa AnJeles 22, call-
fomia.. '
SELL .1!
Collier
1!---t..-.it-I I 5115.,......,..... .. :(1
HlahestC .......
& Profit Shlrfftl
No chargeblldtl 53t-UM
SALESMAN
Combination new and
cars, ln new Rambler areo. :
cy. Excellent com · + beoelita. Experience help.. I <
tul but not f!llentlal. See Mr. •
Speer; 1969 Harbor, c..M.
MAINTENANCE Kan • : Janit~. Can be ntirtd, l :
salary op,en. N e" p or 1
Harbor Qmyalelcent HOIPl-
tiJ 1555 Superior·Aft., H.B.,
Wr7765
BUSINESS
for YOUNG, INTD.UGENT
mu with lales abillt1. K.
be 25 to 35 Jn. ...... l.DI
JANITOR ap. iii am. dam
upwc:dr •• ..,..
empl., t:rtnp 1llDtf. m.ust
(Equal oppt.)
COOK'S HELPER
PermaJlmt. Good future .
WILL TRAIN. m'5llO
!.
• L • • ' .,•., : • •• J 1 .... ~ -. "'"" • • t • •.IW f' \: • I • .,,,~, ... .-, •
"""
(
Hat openlnt1 for: ~tll\y Other T,te l Non-Fee
Poaltlonl m Beach arM.
ProtHlional CounselJ.uig.
• Reltef Coolc
Gaynor
Employment Agency
•' 225 E. 17th, S.A. S42· T~
' 866 S. H&rbor. Apah 6J5.653l
• COUftter Girt
Apply 'er"Mnnel
10 a.m. to t p.m.
SCREBIED
. CarMrs for Secys. &
Bkpn. in Or•nge Cnty.
S:U.7484 ~
Scrttned Penc>Mel Agency
901 Dover Dr., Newport Bcb.
MOORE ENTiRPRISES
Personnel Agency
444 Newport Blvd .. N.B.
Phone TODAY Ccrr
an appointment far a more
REWARDING FUTURE.
6-42-9080 for appoint.·
7400 ,, _______ _ .
S.vlnt' & &.o.n exper·
.,, i.nce required.
:. APPLY IN PERSON
, ..
~-,
f ·-.
I
MARINERS
SiYings & L0al
1515 W•tcllff Dr.
Newport leach
!·: General Office ! • Responsible woman experi-
' ..., enced In 10 key adding ma-
•,, chine. type mln. 50 wpm. 5
DOOCI •
day week, permanent. A~
ply Ina; 8 a.m. to 12
l: Corp r-. Flbe IHI Division
.,:. I <J
I
l88ll Flberglau Road
Huntington Bach
OFFICE GIRL
"FRIDAY"
r:xper required -Elec type.
writ« 610.key Add'g macb.
Houri appNX 10 U, 5. Must
be Sharp 6: NMt &!Jlle~.
Send letter with Qua!Wca-
ti<llll 6 Refermcea to
HOUSEKEEPER • COOK
Ne9t. mature lady, 50 oe (111-
er, for 3 adulu; from 12
noon t.hru dlnner. N ewpcrt
aru, 547~ or 644-1234
TELEPHONE Solicitor Ex-
per. Wed from home. E11I·
l.Y earned S50 to S'l'5 Wk.
l'reida Roa Interiors, m-sro
WOMAN To worlc ti! Donut
Shop 1 p.m. to 9 p.m. Apply
)JI penon. no phone calls
P'et-· Wlnch'1J'• Donut ~ 2!M1 Jbtbar M•d.
LIVE-JN bRkpr child care
Pvt rm • bL s~ ~ wk.
~ • re.fa. PlO mo.. ~ T..,..,_ Selel; C\111 «
~; top comm.l.alion. rcw App't. 545-700
FASHION ISLAND
Newport .Beech
An equal opportunll)'
rmployer
COWNS
UDIO CO.
IBM
K•YPUNCH • le
'ROGRAMMING • p
INDUS. DRAFTING • 4
GROC. CHECtftNG • h
'TIONIC MS!MIL Y • •
PIX/TYPI • n. t
West Coast PRIVATE PARTY WAN'TI ~ Nf'WPOT'l Blvd. TO BUY P I A N 0 FOR Behind TClllY'• BJda. Mat'la. _ __,,_,.........,,,,,__ ___ _
,. • ...u~ PENGUI!f IO'S'' Dacron ~. eo.ta Mesa ~ au.. Equip. for rac:tnc·
Te!evlsJon l205 OPEN DAILY t to 4 Trlr. Vf!q aood cond. ~·
OME wiodow-type air cool-
er, compJ w/water coawe·
Ilona, 'iS hp roofbr, 2 · apds.
l ~ yn old. Paid S200 SAC!
$80. 962-3&(1.
Misc. WMted
Fumitu,..AP,Uancet
Color TV'._SMr'Ma
-TOOLS-
531-1212 ., 1934555
(Alk for Art)
Mlrlne -.,1,. 9035
MARINE batteries IOlid at -e -~1.aroant. ma. See m •a CAWllt SPICIAU
bdlr'e . Martne S.t-Ford, Chev •. Dodp, GMC
Sbap, MOO w. Olut ~' SlltS Hlway, N.8. IU-4235 y
New awdllary 110 McO.illoch
dleHI pMrator: Low price
'899. Mllrine Battery Shop,
2i409 W. 0iut HWJ. ta.ms
iUJoo~ 33 BOOM
Like New. Sell or nrap
~--anytime .
-·-CAMPERS '" 14 lantal!tic Doer ....
all modlk redlced
fl1ll ltand • Ol>ell "*'
/$85
' s yr. tped&l bu* tennl •
•
'trade9~ --------OPEN ROAD
F ACl'ORY Dau;cr
83D S. HAIUIOll BLVD.
Santa Aila {114) 511..-0
TRANSPOITllS
IUSES-CAWllS
IUNllAM Wiiiy 'IO ALPINE, $8; R • H, ..,.,.. NmllC c:and.; loob
lbarp! New tifts A be~. Yoar v~ • Plr'lelle
Sil E. Walmat. CM~ :. = ~ ~..:::
TOYOTA 673-1190
TOYOTA VOLVO
............ r-:--
. 1961 VOLVO'S
T,Y Our Deel
I
l
.. • ~ ..
I
?
( -
...
'" llVIU
'6J llYIW
'911 power IH ftcfefy elr eett41tt.lllf.
..... , 1111111.
WAI Intl .ffOw s1ats
·•e UDll&C
•
'65 CllYJll llWPOIT
....................... ,.w ............
f.ctety efr. 16,NI llflte. . WAS $1695 _
Nowsms
''5 IAWI LTD
WAS $2495
,NOW ~195
,..., ........ fect.y t lr. 41Mt ......
WAS $1195
"" ,..., •"' f..., ... ii ....... ..
''·'"""'"' WAS $4491
tfl>W s3995
,..., ................ ......
WAS $3791
NOW s3295